Page 8 Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, October 1, 1953 IUS TflfJG S M30 UMA TULA TANGLE FRIDAY lone Defeats Heppner 19 to 6 Last Weekend For the second year in a row, the Iono Cardinals proved their prowess on a football field by defeating Heppner's Mustangs. 19 to (i last Friday afternoon on the lone field. Both teams played a hard clean Came but Heppner's lack of man power showed up before 1he game got very far along. In the first half, lone ran up 13 points before Heppner could find pay flirt. In the third period the Mus tangs finally got their offense rolling and Jim Green went over for Heppner's only score on a quarterback sneak The extra point was missed. lone added another touchdown shortly to tiring the final score to 19 to G. The name cost the Mustangs another player, Bill Hughes, who will be out for t ho rest of the season wilh a badly torn knee ligament. First Home Came The Mustangs will play host to Umatilla Friday afternoon on the rodeo fiehl in their first home' game of the season. The kickoff is scheduled for 2 o'clock. Mus lang coach Steve Trukositz's ten tative starling lineup will be Dick Kononon, Kd Brosnan, Jim Wight man, Larry Mollohan, Jack Mori agle, Dick Williamson, Jim Hayes, Skip Ruhl, Jim Green, Lyle Jen sen and Pete Andresen. Jerry Haguewood is a possible alter nate starter for liuhl. lone's Friday game will take the team to Sherman county to tangle with the Moro squad. (i Lt. and Mrs. George Kennedy visited in Heppner recently with his sisters Mrs. James Ware and Mrs. Carl King and family. Lt. Kennedy was enroute from the Presidio in San Francisco for Germany where he will lie sta tioned ftir 12 months. His family will join him later. Bill Healy hag returned home from Portland where he was re ceiving treatment for polio at Good Samaritan hospital. M A Ii( T A NO LA ST A HZ A fight pic tures will lie shown at the Star Theater, Oct. 8-9-10. Scientists at OSC Plan New Approach To Insect Control j OREGON STATE COLLEGE A new approach to the problem of insect control that may greatly improve insecticides of the future, will be launched by Oregon State college scientists this fall. ; The first step in the new ap-j proach calls for a thorough study of the body chemistry of the various insects what they do with the food they eat anil how; they get energy and growth. I Once the intricate body proces ses are known, the OSC research workers will set about to design j and synthesize insecticides that; will block fine of these processes and kill the pest. Processes not: found in humans fir animals will be concentrated on to avoid any outside danger from the post poi sons. In the past, various insecticides have simply been screened to find out which fines would kill the insects most effectively, Dr. Vernon H. Cheldelin, OSC bio chemist explains. Little has been known, however, about how they act to kill the insects. Less is known about how the insects develop resistance. DDT, for example, was once a trcmenduously effective fly kill ed. Today, the resistant flies shrug fiff the chemical. The new OSC study will pro vide greater understanding: of the resistance development in the insects. New strains that are re sistant can be compared to nor mal insects and suitable changes in the chemicals designed. OSC biochemists and entomolo gists will team up on the project. The biochemists are Dr. Cheldelin and Dr. Robert W. Newburgh. En tomologists include Dr. Paul O. Ritcher, department chairman; Dr. H. II. Crowell; and A. J. Me diums, on leave from the Cana dian government. The work is a project of the OSC Science Research Institute. Cockroaches, some flies and milk weed bugs will be the initial test insects. A $15,000 two-year grant to support the research has been re ceived from the national science foundation. It is the first na tional foundation grant at OSC. Aid is also coming from the Du Pfint company in the form of a $2000 graduate fellowship. Careful Handling of Market Cows Advised i I Better care in handling old cows going to market this fall will pay off in dollars and cents for the cattle breeder, says Ed Coles, Oregon State college ex tension livestock marketing spe cialist. Coles explains that a recent study has shown greater care Is taken while handling younger, higher-quality animals than it Is while handling old cows. A large percentage of cow carcasses are unsaleable after trimming out bruised areas due to im proper handling. A record total of old cows has been held back from the fall markets, the specialist reports, and it is expected that when herd culling is completed old cows will be marketed in large num bers. Lowered prices will likely result and every effort should be made to maintain the value of old cows by proper care in hand ling before slaughter. Local News In Brief i s &,mrw?jLz n ij ifceWorld'sfinest If3 CONCERT 4 ni 9 Mt m mx Writ pr ? i-'v;; THE ONE AND ONLY U.S. NAVY BAND WILL PLAY TWO PERFORMANCES Saturday, Oct. 10 IN HERMISTON HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM MATINEE 2 P.M. Adults $1.00 Students 50c EVENING 8 P.M. Adults $1.50 Students $1.00 TICKETS WILL BE ON SALE IN HEPPNER NEXT WEEK ! Sponsored by Hermiston Kiwanis Club Proceeds for Youth Activities Program BOARD MEMBERS MEET Board members of the Rainbow Girls met Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Mary Van Stevens, mother advisor, to plan the year's activities. Others present were Mrs. Roy Quackenbush, Mrs. Les lie Grant, Mrs. Claude Graham and Mrs. Harold Beckett. LOST billfold containing valu able papers. Please call 8-7284 lone. Reward. 29p Guests of Mrs. Lucy Rodgers and Mrs. Sara MeNamer the past' week were Mrs. Agnes Wilcox of j Portland, Mrs. Carl Feldman of: Sunnyville, Calif., Mrs. Emma Evans of Seaside and Mrs. Rod-' ger's nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Don Martin of Seattle. , Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose Chapin spent the weekend with their daughter, Mrs. Clayton Slyter and family, In Seattle. j HOSPITAL NEWS ! New Arrivals To Mr. and Mrs. Roger Campbell, Lexington, a 8 lb. 9'2 oz. girl born Sept. 30. To Mr. and Mrs. Yzaguirre, Ordnance, a girl born Sept. 29, named Mi nerba (deceased I. Medical Peggy Applegate, Heppner, dismissed; Lolah Wil son, lone, dismissed; Edgar Mor ris, Heppner, dismissed; Rex L. Sweek, Monument; Otto Llnd strom, lone (deceased); Janis Ca vender, Hermiston; Mrs. Ear lene Bailey, Heppner; Archie P. McCowan, Heppner (deceased); Dale Olson, Heppner, dismissed. Minor Surgery Warren W. Jobe, Kinzua, dismissed; Clarence Medlock, Arlington, dismissed; rt A TT A.ln! nay rtyers, nepi'ii; numi v-ai-i nin, Condon. Major Surgery Mrs. Rosetta Palmateer, lone. Out-Patients Ellis Gross, Heppner; William G. Standley, Herjniston; Carl Maley, Heppner; Max Buschke, Heppner; Carolyn Trarnell, Spray. Mr. and Mrs. Al Troedson visited Mr. and Mrs. Ai Lindstrom at their ranch at Morgan Sunday. Mrs. Orville Gross of Klamuth Falls spent last week visiting at the home of her son, Ellis Gross and family. Mr. and Mrs. George Primley and Mr. and Mrs. John Beckman of Sumner, Wash., were overnight Miss Loleta Vogt of Pendleton started work as a registered nurse at the Pioneer Memorial hospital Monday. She is residing j iL rt i i i. in uie uanow apanmeni. mi . . . . M, and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Daggett 5ndEarl soward. They left Saturday children Kenneth, Lee and Kay noon t0 vjsjt Mr. and Mrs. Alva arrived in Heppner Sunday night FtreoPe at Powen Butte. Mrs. from Thunderhawk, South Da-1 cl0war(j js a nieCe of Mr. Beckman kota and are guests of Mr. and 'an( Mrs Primley Mrs. James Healy. j Mr. cnd Mrs. 0rville Smith Mr. and Mrs. La Verne Van sppnt jast at their summer Marter had as their overnight home on 0rcas Isand. guest Wednesday September 23, j Mr. and Mrs. Harry O'Donnell, Marshall Fell of Burns. Oregon. Jr attended the wedding of Fell, personal director of Hines Charles Daly and Yvonne Jerrard Lumber company is a former at st Mary's church in Pendleton Heppner resident. Saturdav morning. Jack Van Winkle and Mr. and Mr. and Mrs j0hn Pfeiffer Mrs. Bob Jones left Sunday for have m0Ved into their new home Eugene, accompanied by Roy nn Morean street which thev Carter who is employed there Bob Jones Is stationed temporar ily at Fort Lewis, Wash. Mrs. W. C. Van Winkle of Lexing ton spent the weekend fishing at Lake Pend Oreille in Idaho. Miss Coleen Connor has re. purchased from Conley Lanham. Lanham and family have moved into the Lanham apartment building. Mr. and Mrs. Whitmer Wright had as Iheir guests Wednesday through Friday of last week, Mr a delegate to the Triennial confer ence of the Country Women of the World. She told of the differ ent educational problems of the other countries. There were 26 countries represented at the con ference and 900 delegates. Many of them wore their native dress. Mrs. E. M. Baker, also, a delegate there will show films at the next P-TA meeting. Mrs. Alfred Nel son had charge of the program. Other items in the business meet ing conducted by Fredrick Mar tin, president, were the discus sion of a teachers scholarship, it was decided to give a 4-H scho larship, it was voted that all P TA meeting to be held in the cafe torium. Mrs. Nelson told of the tentative program for the year. Mrs. Claude Riley, the P-TA magazine chairman presented paper corsages to subscribers to the magazine. NEED Envelopes. Phone 6.9228... signed her position as secretary and Mrs. Stanley Cottingham of in uie county scuooi supeumen- cedro Wool lev. Washington. dent's office to leave for Spo kane where she will share an apartment with Miss Leila Mc Lachlan, formerly of Heppner. Mrs. Allen Hughes will replace her in the county office, assum ing her duties October 1. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Grant and family spent the weekend in Cor vallis where they visited their son, Mike, and attending the Oregon State-California game. A student in chemical engineering, Mike is a member of the Oregon State band and has Theta Xi fraternity Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cleveland spent Wednesday in Pendleton on business. Mickey Lanham, Mike Grant Gerald Bergstrom, Kenneth Tur ner, and Junior Stout have left for Corvallis where they are at tending Oregon State College. lone News Mrs. Norman Nelson gave a pledged very interesting report of her trip 1 to Toronto, Canada in August as Would you like to Help the Bluebirds Buy Campfire Ceremon ial Jackets? COME TO THEIR CAKE SALE At Thomson Bros. Grocery SAT. OCT. 3 2T0 5P. M. r IE FINE CAR alf the fine car price , .net s '.s lg5g4 J0S. Duplicating America's costliest cars, feature after feature, Ford is worth more when you buy it . . . worth more when you sell it! FKW MINI 'I KS on the tele phone calling the dealers who . sell America's finest cars w ill teveal there are at least eleven nuxlels among four makes wilh price tags over $ 1,000! Now the interestiiu; thing is that in feature alter feature the l'oul car duplicates each of these fine cars, ami for less tlum half the fine ear price! Look under the hood of the most expensive cars and what do you find? 4 V-tt Kit nine! Well, the Ford car has a Y-S, too. In l.u t, it has h.ul a V-S since 1932, ami since that time Ford has built more Y-N's-liv millions - than all other ni. uml. ictiueis combined. Ami there's mi other builder in Ford's price range that's seen lit to oiler one et! Hut the engine, as fine as it is, is onlv one of many things that nuke a line car tine. tiilmiialie ahifline, for etnmplf. All the fine cars offer it in one form or another because it's one of the things that make a fine car fine. Nut if ou've never diKen a Foul with Fonliimatic ou ve missed one of the liner things of hie. This amaing tiausmissiou not onK docs away with clutching and sluitnig loiewr it gives you exactly the amount of power you want, when you want it automatically. f ide ear power sleerine, tin). The big, heavy costly cars offer it for the same reason they offer power brakes. It's a man-sued job for a 120 pound woman to handle a cur weighing two tons or more without it-especially when parking. Our "Master-Guide" has two distinct benefits. First, it gives a hydraulic power assist right down at the wheels and just cfidigi to take out the work. You don't relinquish one particle of control-rather your control is more com plete and far easier. Second, being hy draulic, "Master Guide" power steering absorbs those fatiguing steering wheel tremors caused by ruts and roads in bad repair. And you don't pay a fine car price for "Master-Guide." Hut there is another fine ear fext' turf the Ford ride. Books have been written on the subject of riding quality in an automobile, but the payolf comes on the pavement or lack of it! Many people associate a comfortable ride with excess weight, but it's not weight alone that makes lor comfort. If it weie, those big five tou bucks which you see every day would be the most comfortable ve hicles on the road. Without bciiii; technical we can tell you that what's been done with the suspension and springing svstem gives the Ford a softer ride, a smoother ride than many cars which tip the scales at better than an added half ton. W mr aUout room? Here's an inter esting point. If you've felt that only a costly car offered enough room, von just ought to sit dow n m a l-ord even -that the appearance of a Ford Car leaves very little to be desired. It is "at home" wherever it goes and it goes everywhere. liut what tdtout Ford quality? Does it too match the fine car? Is the sheet metal of the body panels as thick? Is the finish as good? How about the trim and things like that? Well, as far as we can determine, the sheet metal is identical in thU kness ' in practically all instances. As to finish we believe Ford's baked-on enamel has no equal in any car. Ford upholstery fabrics and trim are less costly, but they're less delicate, too, and if any thing, more durable. How then is if possible to give you if you're out-size and six feet four! this fine car at half the fine car price? The so-called big car is bigger on the outside, but unless you buy a limou sine with those little jump seats, it's not one passenger bigger inside. I isihility is another fine ear Font feature. We say Ford cars oiler "full circle" visibility because they all have huge, curved one-piece windshields and a huge rear window to match . . . phis side windows that mean every passenger gets room with a view! How beautiful is a Font? A great English poet. John k'eats. once wrote "Beauty is Truth. Truth Beauty" well, he could have been writing about our car for its beauty conies from honest, clean lines in every dimension. In fact, we think most people agree even our competitors Part of the answer lies in Ford manufacturing skills and knowledge as evidenced by the Y-8 engine, l'art of it comes from the ever increasing numbers of cars Ford produces and the economies they make possible. And, part of it comes from Ford's willingness to give greater values than might be expected in cars sell ing in Ford's price range. And that's the Ford idea. FORD Worth more when you buy it... Yorti more when you sell it f Rosewall Motor Company