Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1954)
Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, January 7, 1954 Page 7 LOST OR STRAYED white mar ked with black English Setter bitch. Answers to name of Tippy. Please notify Bill Blake if found. 43c IT'S smarter than ever to be seen riding in a new Ford. FOR RENT OR SALE house on Gilmore St. See Esther Burn side. 42-43c FOR RENT furnished 5 room apartment. 101 Chase St. 42p LOST one Dodge truck wheel with 750 by 20 ten ply tire. Lyle Van Dusen, Monument, Ore gon. 43c WE do fender bumping and paint ing. Drive in when you dam age your fenders. Rosewall Motor Company. j W ATKINS DEALERSHIP Make . . i flenn .1 1 ' up iu juu a momn ana more it you qualify for the Watkins dealership in Morrow county. Car or truck required. No money required. Write J. R. Watkins Company, 137 Dexter Ave., Seattle, Wash. 39-44c FOR SALE Spark deluxe heater with thermostatic controls, also Coleman oil heater, both in ex cellent condition and complete with new pipe and draft con trols. Phone 6-9975. 38tfc FRONT tires wearing Your car may need a front end correc tion. Drive in and let our specialist check the front sys tem on your car. We will make your car drive straight as a rail. Rosewall Motor Company. SI WILLIAMS AUCTIONEER LIVESTOCK FARM SALES Bonded Member Nat'l. Auction Association. WESTERN SALE MANAGEMENT Phone 6532 Hermiston Box 87 WATER Well Drilling A. P.-De. Rosia Contractor. Box 1665, Heppner or phone 6-9213. 35tfc FOR SALE seed beardless bar- ley. See Ralph or Bill Scott. 43-44p Mercury 1949 Sport sedan with overdrive, radio and heater. Pay $325.00 down. Rosewall Motor Company. FOR RENT nice three-room ap artment. John Halton. 42-43p WANTED electric train, useable for parts. Call W. W. Weather ford, phone 6-9731. 43p Chevrore7T94lTSedan. This two seated car for only $195.00 down. Rosewall Motor Co. NEWLY decorated furnished ap artment for rent, reasonably priced. Howard Bryant. 42-43p DR. L. C. RICHEY, Optometrist, 207 S. Main St., Pendleton. Of fice Phone 609. 48tfc IF you need a pickup you had better look over our stock. We have one half and three quar ter ton jobs in the late model Ford and International. Some of them are big enough to haul a cow and clean enough to drive to church. Rosewall Motor Co. WANT to be well read? Get Read ers Digest at reduced rates now. It's a mark of distinction. Call 6-9129 A. Q. Thomson. 43c TWIN dryer and automatic wash er by Westinghouse. Baker Plumbing and Heating, phone 6-9964. 36tfc FOR RENT Four room unfur nished house in Heppner. Electric water tank installed. Lexington Cafe. Lexington, Ore. 42-43p WANTED 25 dirty cars to wash every day with our Washmo bile. Wash job $1.50. Rosewall Motor Co. 3 BEDROOM apartment for rent, stoves furnished. Call 6-9686. 39tfc. WILL care for child during day, in my home. Mrs. Calvin Sher man. Gilmore St. Heppner. 43p ROSY SAYS: We appreciate the nice things you have said about our new 1954 Ford car. We want everyone to test drive this wonderful car. A demon strator is waiting for you. ENGINEERING WORK land sur veying, logging roads, reser voirs, timber cruising. Vern Ten ) leson. 908 'A E. 2nd Street, The talles. 28tfc. Dodge 1950 tudor. Pay $325.00 down. Rosewall Motor Com pany. NEED FINANCING? Our ABC financing plan is available for anything we sell, lumber, build ing supplies, tools, paints etc., in amounts up to $1,000. No down payment, up to 36 months to pay. Ask us at Turn-A-Lum Lumber Co., dial Hepp ner 6-9212. 7tfc FOR RENT 2 bedroom modern apartment, furnished or un furnished, reasonable. Top of Baltimore St., Mrs. A. Q. Thom son. 43-44c THE new 1954 Ford has power window lifts, tower seat ad justment, powr steering. imier brakes, and plenty of power under the hood. FOR SALE Registered Polled Hereford bull, 3 yeais old in June. George Griffith, Morgan,! Oregon. 42-43p, Homelite Chain Saws 5 brake h. p. 30 lbs. SAWYERS SUPPLY Pilot Rock, Oregon Guaranteed used saws 43-4Gp Keep your eye on our used car lot. The good buys are coming in now. Rosewall Motor Com pany. PLUMBING and heating supplies, we sell and install. Baker Plumbing and Heating, phone 6-9964. 36tfc WE undercoat cars against rust, dust and road noises. Rosewall Motor Company. LOANS ON STOCK AND WHEAT RANCHES AUTHORIZED MORTGAGE LOAN BROKERS for Prudential Insurance Company of America DODD INVESTMENT CO. See or Call PHONE 6478 HERMISTON, ORE HELP WANTED woman wanted for finishing and office work Apply at Heppner Cleaners. 43 -44c SEWING and Alterations. Will call for and deliver. Lennie Louden, phone 6-5313 43-46c WANTED Ironing to do in my home. Phone 6-9635. 36tfc DON'T be caught with your anti freeze down. Drive in for a free test. We have the real McCoy if anti-freeze needs sweeten ing. Rosewall Motor Company. CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank my friends for the lovely cards, letters and words of cheer at Christmas and during my illness. Mrs. Lana Padberg 43p Legal Notices NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned has' been duly appointed administrator of the Estate of ANNA CRAMER, de ceased, by the Probate Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Morrow, and has ac cepted such trust. All persons having claims against said es tate are hereby required to pre sent the same to the administra tor, at the office of J. O. Turner, in Heppner, Oregon, with proper vouchers attached within six months from the date of this notice. Dated and first published this 10th day of December, 1953. EARL D. CRAMER, Administrator J. O. Turner Attorney for Adm. Heppner, Oregon. 39-43c County Agent News . . Continued Frem Page Two smaller herds and the farm milk cow. Ruffle the animals hair as the five percent Rotonone is dusted on the back so that the powder gets down to the skin. It will take about three ounces per cow for thorough coverage. By treating your cattle for grubs now it will insure you against the annoyance of heel flies in your herd next spring. In addition, you will be helping to do your share in conserving part of the 12.700,000 pounds of meat that are lost annually from grubs. Last week, we stated in this column that the ACP Handbook would be in the mail this week. They are being stapled now and mailed as fast as possible. Last week we discussed the B l prac tice which provides for establish-' ing permanent grass or grass-legume covers on mountain mea dow lands. The B-2 practice is for the initial improvement of vege tative cover on range land for soil protection. The federal cost share payment provides 50 of the cost of seed not to exceed $4 per acre. The practice provides for seeding adapted perennial grasses, perennial legumes or other range forage plants neces sary to provide an adequate soil protection on range land. Seve ral grasses and legumes are ad apted to this practice in Morrow county. Perhaps the most com monly seeded grass under this practice would be crested wheat grass at the rate of six pounds per acre. On good soil in the heavier rainfalls, intermediate wheatgrass or pubescent wheat grass could be substituted for the crested wheatgrass. The alfalfa might be left out in some cases, in which case, sheep fescue or bulbous bluegrass at the rate of two pounds per acre should be seeded as an unckrstory jrrass. There are many potential areas for this range improvement In the rewprty. I NEED Letterheads, Phone 6-822& I f" " .-'u.'ui'! . - . . f4. V "7 I J about THE MFN OF THE BATTLESHIP MIGHTY MO (uss Missouri) IN ONE WEE EAT 560 GALLONS OP SOUP, 17 000 POUNDS OF MEAT, 75,000 POUNDS OF VEGETABLES, 3,500 LOAVES OF BREAD, 65,000 POUNDS OF FRUIT, AND 5,250 GALLONS OF COFFEE. TWO 0ESTROVER JARVIS CREWMFMBERS UNDERWENT APPENDECTOMIES during a BRIEF "CEASE FIRE" WHILE THEIR SHIP WAS BOMBARDING THE NORTH KOREAN PORT OF WONSAN 14 Tltv.t 4N Self-Feeder Silo Designed by OSC; Cuts Costs and Labor A low-cost, self-feeder silo is cutting out $100 a month labor for "forking" silage to 60 head of cattle at Oregon State college and can be built for as little as one-fourth the cost of upright silos with comparable capacity of 300 tons. Designed by Joe B. Johnson, OSC animal husbandman, and L. W. Bonnicksen, agricultural engi neer, the pole-frame constructed silo is simply a coered shed 70 x 21 feet, 19 feet high, and open at the ends. Making use of the trench silo principle for easy unloading and packing, the silage is trucked in through the open ends and dumped on a concrete slab floor. It is distributed by a tractor blade to a height of eight or nine feet. This permits clearance between the top of the stack and the roof for the tractor to work back and forth in packing silage. When the packing is completed, the tractor is driven off the stack j onto a truck bed through use of loading planks and then moved to an embankment or ramp for unloading. As the silo is filled, the open ends are blocked off with mov able feed racks 21 feet long that will handle 12 animals at atime. The cattle press forward moving the rack ahead of them into the silo. Net result the critters eat their way through the silo and nobody lifts a fork. Johnson says there has been no silage spoilage this year at the ends or sides and only three inches on top. Next year he plans to top off the stack with hay and bedding that will be used ahead of the moving feed WHEN THE GET THERE WITH THE 4-WHEEl-DRIVE UNIVERSAL When you must get through ... get a 'Jeep'. The Universal 'Jeep' will take you through spots you would call impassable without the power and traction of 4-Wheel Drive. Now the new 1953 UNIVERSAL 'JEEP' powered by the llurrkam F-Head Engine, has 20 greater horse power. See it today at Farley Motor Company HEPPNER your navy L WW . . THE MFN OF THE CRUISER USS LOS ANGELES amidst theiw bOMBARDMENT OF WONSan HARBOR, LOWERED A SMA! L BOAT 10 TAKE ICE CUE AM TO THE DUG IN ON Prices Hit New Seasonal Highs at Hermiston Sale HERMISTON C. L. Warden of Boardman topped the market at the Hermiston livestock auction Friday, with a ISO lb. boar sell ing for $23.25 cwt., Delhert An son, manager of the sale, report ed. Three new highs of the season wefe set in prices paid. A fed hoi stein steer weighing 1375 lbs. brought $17.10 cwt. to Bill Walker of Hermiston, and four fat hogs, weighing 785 lbs., brought $28.00 for George Montgomery of Her niiston, an increase of $3.00 over the previous sale. Two mixed ewes weighing 200 lbs., consig ned by Robert Weems, Stanfield, brought $8.50, up $6.50 cwt. Volume of cattle consigned at j the sale Friday, 189 head, was almost identical to that of the post-holirlay sale a year ago,1 Anson reported. This compared with 408 cattle at the pre- Christ-' mas sale Dec. 18. Also consigned were 48 hogs, compared with 116, and 201 sheep at the semiweekly sheep sale, compared with 65. The decline in volume, combined with a broad and active demand, rack. J Another advantage of the silo is that it can be adapted for other uses. Poles used are pressure treated and should last for 35 to 50 years. Bonnicksen and Johnson are making further im-1 provements by building a lean-to on each side of the silo. These i can be used for loafing and feed ing or other uses. GOING'S gTfD accounted for substantially high er prices on almost all animals. Increases included canner-cutter, up 60c cwt.; Utility, up $1.68 cwt.; and veal, up $3.25. All hogs were generally higher, with feeder pigs up $3.50, to a top of $29.25. Fat cattle were in strong de mand but short supply, and fat lambs, also in demand, were lacking. Grain fed cattle and steer calves are also in demand. While packers predominated at the sale, feeders were also well represented among the Oregon, Washington and Idaho buyers. Quality of animals consigned was generally lower, no cattle grading higher than utility and stock cows dropped from $133 to $115 por head as a result. One consigner is expected to sell 100 to 500 bred ewes in dis persing his flock at the sale next Friday. Calves: Baby calves 7.50-16.50 hd.; wearier calves, steer calves 16.50-18.25 cwt.; heifer calves 14.. 75-16.80 cwt.; veal 18.5Q-2l.75. Steers: Stocker steers 14.5016. GO cwt.; feeder steers 16.60 17.25; fat slaughter steers 1910-20.50 cwt; fat grass heifers, 15.50-18.00 cwt. Cows: Dairy cows 90.00-137.50 hd.; dairy heifers 48.00-66.00 hd.; stock cows 93.00-115.00 hd. Slaughter cows: Commercial, none; utility 11.50-12.78 cwt; canner-cutter 7.78-10.50; shells 6.50 7.28. Bulls: 11.50-12.60 cwt. Hogs: Weaner pigs, none; feed er pigs 27.50-29.25 cwt.; fat hogs, heavy, 26.00-26.80 cwt.; sows 20.-50-22.10; boars 19.00-23.25. Sheep: Feeder lambs 13.7814. 35 cwt.; fat lambs, none; ewes. 5.50-8.50 cwt.; no bucks. GUN CLUB TO HOLD MERCHANDISE SHOOT Another in a series of winter merchandise shoots will be held next Sunday, Jan. 10 at the Mor row county Gun Club, officers said today. Mr. and Mrs. Russell O'Donnell have returned from a trip to Port land over the New Year's holi days. o NEED Envelopes, Phone 6.9228... FULLETON'S BEST USED CAR BUYS 1952 CHEVROLET Fordor Sedan 1951 CHEVROLET Sport Coupe 1949 CHEVROLET Station Wagon 1949 CHEVROLET 2 Door Sedan 1948 CHEVROLET 2 Door Sedan $1675 $1295 $995 $975 $795 Trucks - Pickups 1952 CHEVROLET Half ton Pickup 19S1 CMC Half-ton Pickup 1950 FORD Half-ton $1250 $1125 $1025 1950 CHEVROLET 3i ton pickup with 2 -horse rack $1050 Day or Night Towing Service Phone 6-9921 FULLETON Chevrolet Co. 1954 FARM PRICES EXPECTED TO STRENGTHEN, SAY OSC EXPERTS Some strengthening of farm; able weather conditions, Wood prices may come in 1954. The: expects Oregon farmers to have general business situation holds) about as much money to spend the key, says Dr. G. B. Wood, ; in 1954 as during 1953. head of the department of agri-j M. D. Thomas. OSC extension cultural economics at Oregon agricultural economist, explains State college. Oregon farm incomes hinge on Wood .a member of President ! Prk'es and production. Prices for Eisenhower's national advisory agricultural commission, explains that farm and business prosper ity tend to parallel each other. When business or consumer in comes are high, people buy more food and are willing to pay high er prices for it. harm income is expected to continue below the levels of re cent years, although Wood be lieves the price cost squeeze, ac tive since 1951, may ease a little during the coming months. Farmers are producing more than can be sold at "high" prices, explains the economist. Possibili ties of expanding markets are hopeful bul not too promising in the short run. If the farm plant is to produce to capacity, says Wood, farmers will face lower prices than in recent years and lower net income. Higher market, ing costs and shrinking exports will be important influences. Both price cuts as well as cur tailed production are likely in the year ahead. Government Price and market ing assistance may take on new "appeal." the economist indicates. Production costs should be down a little and with reason- BUSINESS-PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY FRED L. GRONEMYER, D. M. D. DENTIST 103 Gale St. Phone 6-9944 Heppner City C I MeeU First Monday OUnCII Each Month Citizens having matters for discussion, please bring them before the Council. Ph. 6-9618 Morrow County Farm Bureau Ilea. Mcetinc 4th Tuesday I Lex. Center 2nd Tuesday lone Center 3rd Tuesday j. 4 SEWING MACHINES Sales Service Accessories Free Home or Store Demonstration 2nd and 4th Wednesdays GILLIAM & BISBEE FRIGIDAIRE Sales and Service Repairing on all makes HEPPNER REFRIGERATION PHONE 6-9223 Nile or Holidays Phone 6 0G56 PLUMBING 4 HEATING Steam Fitting GILLIAM & BISBEE Earle Gilliam, Plumber Phone 6-9433 or 6-9780 JOS.J.NYS ATTORNEY AT LAW Peters Bldg., Willow Street Heppner, Oregon Turner Gr Anderson ATTORNEYS AT LAW Phone 6-9213 Hotel Heppner Building Heppner, Oregon MAHONEY AND FANCHER ATTORNEYS AT LAW Collins Building Phone 6-9141 Dr. L. D. Tibbies OSTEOPATHIC Physician & Surgeon First National Bank Building Res. Ph. 6-9210 Off. Ph. 6-C9616 A.D. McMurdo, M.D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Trained Nurse Assistant Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon SANDERS Insurance Agency Harold A. Sanders Jr. All Lines of General In. tJatel Heppner Bldg. 4 most products depend on nation al and world not Oregon sup ply and demand. Oregon pro duction depends mostly on wea ther and growers' responses to market condition, but planting restrictions will be of new im portance in 1951. Knowledge of domestic and foreign demand, government buying, marketing and produc tion costs, and confidence will help maintain farm income and keep financing sound, says Thomas. INSTRUCTION CLASSES SET Instruction and information relative to the history, meaning, worship, program, Bible teach ing and purpose of the Frotestant Episcopal church will be given for the next six Sunday nights beginning Jan. 10 at All Saints Episcopal church, Rev. John R. Reeves, rector announced this week. The series will prepare a per son for Confirmation if they de sire it, he said, but there is no obligation. Those who do not have a church in Heppner are especially invited, (lasses will start at 8 p. m. . t i Dr. E. K. Schoffitz OPTOMETRIST Next to Hotel Heppner En trance Telephone 6-9465 F for all I LU II LIU) occasions MARY VAN'S FLOWER SHOP GENERAL Carpenter Work Louie's Workshop Formerly Bailey's Cabinet Shop CLIFFORD M. WAGNER, M. D. Physician and Surgeon 103 Gale St. Phone 6-9114 ZAAT&SONS LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS MacNamee Residence Chase Street OUR ADVICE: Worth Much, costs Nothing J. O. PETERSON Latest Jewelry & Gift Goods Watches, Clocks, Diamonds Expert Watch & Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon Turner, Van Marter and Bryant GENERAL INSURANCE Phelps Funeral Home Licensed Funeral Directors Phone 6-9G00 Heppner, Oregon PLUMBING BAKER PLUMBING AND HEATING Frank Baker, Owner No Job Too Small or Too Large ESTIMATES FREELY GIVEN . , Morrow County Abstract & Title Co. INC. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE TITLE INSURANCE Olflc tn Potert Buildluf C. A. Ruggles INSURANCE AGENCY Phone 6-9625 Box 611 Heppner, Oregon MONUMENTS -MARKERS- Eee Oliver Creswick Phelp Funeral Hprne f I