Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, July 09, 1953, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Page 2
Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, July 9, 1953
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES
MORROW COUNTY'S NEWSPAPER
The Heppner Gazette, established March 30, 1S83. The Heppner Times, established
November 18, 1897. Consolidated February 15, 1912.
0? NEWSPAPER
BLISHERS
SOCIATION
ROBERT PENLAN'D
Editor and Publisher
GRETCIIEN PENLAND
Associate Publisher
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
ASSOCll-ATl'eiN
U J
Iublished Every Thursday and Entered at the Post Office at Heppner, Oregon, as Second Class Matter
Subscription Rates: Morrow and Grant Counties, $3.00 Year; Elsewhere $4.00 Year. Single Copy 10 cents.
'1
HOSPITALITY WEEK
The past week in Salem was
highly exploited os "Hospitality
Week". Clerks were awarded
prizes for being helpful to cus
tomers. Tourists were asked to
til lot the prizes to the champion
wheedlors.
The original plan of "the week"
was to have natives be nice to
tourists, but the thing just bub
bled over and everybody got to
being civil to everybody every
where. Even motorists were po
lite to pedestrians.
"The week" almost stagnated
slate work. State employees were
so busy bowing, apologizing and
thanking co workers that a lot of
lost motion being stored up for
vacation got splashed all over the
place.
All this and the top of the tour
ist season here when within a
State Penitentiary convicts who
were stricken with trichinosis
last week are out of the hospital.
Pork sausage is believed to
have caused the outbreak. Sam
ples of the sausage taken three
days after the outbreak was test
ed but no trichina was found.
This disease is contracted by eat
ing meat, particularly pork, that
has not been cooked sufficiently,
the doctors warned.
JOBLESS BENEFITS HIGH
Oregon workers got $16,853,519
in unemployment benefits during
the fiscal year ended June 30,
This is 20 per cent more than
the benefits paid last year and
the second highest amount on
record. June benefits were $865,
784, or 69 per cent more than in
June 1952.
PETITION RESTRICTIONS
Soliciting signatures for initia
tive and referendum petitions
during hours that a person Is
being paid by any employer is a
violation of Oregon law, Attorney
General Robert Y. Thornton ruled
this week.
The opinion was requested by
David Robinson, chairman of the
state employment practices ad
visory committee of the State Bu
reau of Labor who is a leader in a
move to block the referendum at-
week travelers from 40 states! tack on civil rights law passed by
registered at tourist guide head-1 the 1953 legislature,
quarters in the Capitol, Thornton explained that for an
If you want to know how to get i employer to permit an employee,
your townsfolk to feeling like, during working hours to solicit
they have always been actingjslfmature.s would also be a viola
like heels, just write to Clay
Cochrane, secretary of the Salem
LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
Letter to the Editor:
I would like to make a few
corrections to the article in last
week's paper on "Shakeup in Po
lice Dept.
The shooting took place be
tween 12:15 and 12:20 not at
1:15 as reported.
Nobody at any time, hit Patrol
man Cooper during the argument
beside the bank. The only time
Cooper had to defend himself was
at the Pioneer Memorial Hospital
when he tried to refuse admission
to one of the parties concerned.
As a result of his actions at the
Ice Cold Cream Navy Style
Chamber of Commerce. He will
send you the "know how" for
putting on a "Hospitality Week"
if you think your town can
stand It.
TRICHINOSIS AT PEN
All but four of the 72 Oregon
tion of the law which prohibits
paid workers from seeking sig
natures. STATE POLICE EXPAND
Sixty-five new traffic and game
officers were added to the State
The new trainees will be as
signed to a preliminary school on
the Oregon State college campus
prior to assuming their duties.
Most of the 65 will be assigned
to traffic operations in various
sections of the state.
Appropriations by the 1953
legislature made possible the
augmentation to the department.
STATE POSITIONS OPEN
Vacancies and anticipated
vacancies in several high-pay
state positions were announced
this week by James M. Clinton,
state civil service director.
Competative examinations will
be given for collections agents,
salary $309 to $379; rehabilita
tion agents for the blind, $336 to
$110; accountant II, $336 to $410;
accountants executive I, $394 to
$177; accountants executive II,
$177 to $570; Accountants execu
tive III $551 to $651.
The state offers interesting
work, forty hour week, paid sick
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FAB EASTERN WATERS (FHTNC) Open house aboard the small
seaplane tender VSS Corson (or students of the Iwakunl (Japan) De
pendent School, means grins for guests and crew members alike, plus a
big dividend of strawberry ice cream. Norman A. Partain, commis
saryman third class, I'SN, of Houston, Texas, is flanked by two first
graders from the school for children of military personnel; at the left
is Lily Fujimoto of Iwakunl, and at the right, Tim Stodgell, formerly
of Independence, Kan. (Official U. S. Navy Photo No. 410049)
safety officials expressed doubt
that the relatively low June fig
ure will have any effect on the
over-all toll for the year. As soon
as vacation season gets into full
swing, they said, deaths in acci
dents probably will shoot upward
again.
Summer-time accidents con
sistently result in high death tolls
because motorists overdrive their
ability where speed is concerned
and often drive when they are too
tired to concentrate on traffic, the
division concluded.
CHIROPODIST. PHOTOGRAPHER
DUE HERE
Dr. W. O. Holderness, chiro
podist of Pendleton, and Mr. G. L.
Coles, portrait photographer of
Coles Studios in Pendleton, will
be in Heppner, Saturday, July 11,
in order to offer their services to
the people of this area.
They will be at the Heppner
hotel all day.
. o-
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Gilman
and sons Lance and Brent of
Chula Vista, California are here
to spend the month of July with
their parents Mr. and Mrs. Harlan
McCurdy and Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Gilman. This week they plan on
going to Lehman Springs for a
few days.
o
USE GAZETTE TIMES
CLASSIFIED ADS
DR.
EDWARD K. SCHAFFITZ
OPTOMETRIST
Next To Hotel Heppner Entrance Heppner, Oregon
TELEPHONE 6-9465
OFFICE HOURS:
Mon.Tues. Wed. Fri. 9:00 A. M. to 5:30 P.
Thurs. Sat. 9:00 A. M. to 2:00 P. M.
Evenings By Special Appointment
M.
ANALYTICAL VISUAL
Broken Lenses Duplicated
EXAMINATION
Glasses Fitted
New Use For Bedspreads
I
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r it,, i j. "
fecial
i ' M iWVl
r i
. "- at
Pudot-liappy trick for a smart ensemble chests covered with bed
uprvad fabric.
A new idea widely used by smart decorators is introduced In this gay
plaid bedroom. Repeating the gay Scotch theme of tha ready-made
cotton bedspread and matching draperies, this clever young homemaker
has covered the two little bedside chests with the fabric of another
matching bedspread.
She chose two inexpensive unpainted light wood chests sold In most
department stores. To cover them, she used a twin-size bedspread I Fron
this she had enough material left over to cover her window seat cushion.
According to The Cannon Homcmaking Institute, a twin-size ready
made bedspread contains more than six square yards of material. Com
pare this economy with buying yardage of equally sturdy decorative
fabrics. You'll quickly realize that using ready-made bedspreads to
cover chests or to upholster slipcover chairs is a real budget-stretcher.
Police Department of June 1, with Je?ve' retirement plan plus soc
four of the group assigned to the ial security, promotional oppor
tune" beat, Salem. (unities, vacations with pay and
! 'credit union privileges.
SCOTT NOMINATED
In his first address in Salem
since he was state treasurer Les-
ie Scott last Tuesday spoke of
the changes from flail to the
threshing machine and the com
bine; from oxen to tractor; from
flood to flood control and from
self reliance to the dependence
on government for subsidies. The
taxpayer is subsidizing butter
while he is eating olea, he said.
Near the end of his talk, some
one, in a auiet aside nominated
Scott for'u! S. Senator. Within
seconds he was saying, "I nomi
nate Salem as the most desirable
home city in the world."
CAPITOL SHORTS
A 30-day quarantine on bring
ing dogs into Oregon from Ben
ton and Yakima counties in
Wash, was imposed this week by
the state veterinarian in an at
tempt to prevent the spread of
rabies. . , Congressman Walter
Norblad and family will move in
to a new processed-log home be
side a stream 18 miles from
Salem. . . A drive to bring back
prohibition to Oregon has been
started by the Oregon Anti-Liquor
League. . . The long rainy season
during the first six months of
this year caused a 24 'per cent
slump in gas tax collections, com
pared with mid-year figures in
1952. . . There have been 91 cases
of violation of Oregon's 4-year-old
fair labor practices law before the
State Bureau of Labor. . . Oregon's
traffic toll this year threatens to
be an all-time record 149 deaths
in the first five months of the
year.
f'JIMff 1
HI III "km .
tail ;-A
hospital, Police chief Gomillion
removed his gun.
Cooper was being invested at
the time the acident occurred and
would have been removed from
office in the next few days.
The council were divided in
their opinion to keep Patrolman
Cooper on from the very first.
The council and mayor had
been warned on numerous occa
sions about the handling and
pulling of his pistol. Also that
the man was dangerous and
would eventually shoot someone.
Yet for some unknown reason was
allowed to remain on duty as
long as he did.
Sincerely,
Wade Bothwell
(editor's note information in
last week's story was from the
official police report filed by Pa
trolman Cooper.)
o
Traffic Fatalities
Below L'jst Year's
For the first time since January,
traffic deaths on Oregon high
ways have slumped below last
year, the Secretary of State's
traffic safety division reported
Friday.
June fatalities totaled 30, as
compared with 45 last June. The
June toll, a tentative figure
brought this year's traffic count
to 179. Last year the state had
recorded 185 deaths for the same
period.
Safety officials said the lowered
figure may be partially attributed
to generally unfavorable weather
during June which keep weekend
traffic below normal.
Unfortunately, safety men said
the decrease cannot be credited
to better driving since reports in
dicate motorists were convicted of
more than 4,000 driving viola
tions, which cause 94 of all ac
cidents, during the month.
With better weather ahead,
Long Distance Nation-Wide
Moving Service
Mayflower Agents
Paddea Vans
Penland Bros.
TRANSFER CO.
Pendleton, Oregon Phone 338
Km
PflIJ
OREGON
HOTEL &
1 50 outside rooms
$2.00 and up
Special weekly ratet
WASHINGTON AT I4TH
H. P. KUHN, H. A. MATHESON, OWNERS
Yourhome bate of restful com
fort and ease in the center of
busy Portland. Enjoy superlative
service and convenience plus
at the gracious CARLTON
where each guest is an individual.
PORTLAND. OREGON
On o tfeee points
of comparison...
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STAR THEATER, Heppner
Thursday-Friday-Saturday, July 9-10-11
THE LAWLESS BREED
In Technicolor, with Hock Hudson and Julia Adams, the sensational voting stars of
liend of the River". Based on the original autobiographical manuscript "The Life
of John Wesley Hardin" the greatest guniightcr of them all.
Plus
UNDER THE RED SEA
An exploratory adventure with spectacular underwater photography presented bv
the sponsors of last year's "Ron-Tiki".
Sunday-Monday, July 12-13
NEVER LET ME GO
Clark Gable. Gene Tierney, Bernard Miles, Richard Havdn. Anna Valentina A good
motion picture, solidly built on a story as topical as today's headlines
Plus
WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRLS
With this year's ".Miss Universe" international beauty contest now in progress
(July IMS) in Long Beach, California, we bring you this beautiful featurette with
Technicolor shots of the spectacular parade and the judging of the beauties from
all nations taken during last season's contest.
Sunday shows at 2 p. m. 4:15 6:30 and 8:45
Tuesday-Wednesday, July 14-15
THE TURNING POINT
William Holder), Alexis Smith, Kdmond O'Brien, Tom Tullv. It's the action-packed
story of big-time gangs and how they got away with emything until they killed a
cop! That was "The Turning Point".
... IN NEW AND ADVANCED STYLING The new long,
low, sleek lines of the 1953 Chevrolet set new standards
of beauty in the low-price field. Here you will see
easel ill detailing and a richness of appointments always
before found only in much costlier curs.
. . . IN H1GU-POWCRED PERFORMANCE -77ze most pow
erful engine in the low-price field! The entirely new
1 1 5-h.p. "Blue-Flams" engine in combination with new
Powerylide brings you new high-compression power
and a wonderful gain in economy, too. In gearshift
models you will find the advanced high-compression
lOS-h.p. "Thrift-King" engine.
... IN SMOOTH, SIMPLE AUTOMATIC DRIVING-Expect
faster getaway with Powcrglide's new automatic starting
and passing range . . . and ne economy, too. Chevro
let's new Power Steering takes over 80 per cent of the
work of steering, makes paiking unbelievably easy.
... IN ECONOMY AND VALUE-Now, you'll get many
more miles out of every gallon of gasoline. You'll save
on over-all operation and upkeep, too. Yet Chevrolet
remains the lowest-priced line in the low-price field.
... IN AMERICA'S FAVOR-Again this year-as in every
single postwar year-more people are buying Chevrolets
than any other car. In fact, latest official registration
lUures show that Chevrolet is over 25 7c ahead of the
s.vonJ-place car. Nearly 2 million more people now
drive C hevrolets than any other make.
'Optional t extra cot. Combination of PoncrgliJe automatic
t,!,s;risMVn and 1 i 5-h.p. "lilue 1 lams" engine available on
"I ..-Ttn" anJ Bvl Air models only. Power Steering available
i., .,11 models.
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MORE PEOfLE BUY CHirTc .... .
UI tK-v'LETS THAN ANY OTHS2 CAR!
Fulleton Chevrolet
Company