Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, July 15, 1954, Page Page 6, Image 6

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    Page 6
Win Over
Puts Legion
Playoffs; Game Here
The Heppner-Ione Junior Amer
ican Legion baseball team will
meet Miiton-Freewater on the
local field Sunday for the dis
trict championship playQff, by
virtue of their win last Sunday
over the Hermiston squad. Hepp
ncr's season record stands at 4
wins and one loss.
The Heppner-Ione team came
out on top of Hermiston 10 to 6 in
the final season game on the
Hermiston field, but the boys had
to play an extra inning to get the
win At the end of the regulation
7 innings, the score stood 6 to 6,
but in the eighth the locals rap
ped out enough hits to bring in
four runs and tie up the game.
Both locals and Milton-Fr.ee-water
have the same win-loss re
cord, 4 and 1, each team having
lost one game to the other, and
ih playoff game promises to be
one of the best of the season. It
HOSPITAL NEWS
New Arrival To Mr. and Mrs.
Tcte Cannon, lone, a 7 lb. 11 oz.
girl born July 11, named Cathleen
Ann.
Maior Surgery Mrs. Rachel
Dick, Heppner, dismissed; Mrs.
Nevada Kight, Hermiston, dismis
sed; John Flanagan, Stanfield;
William Dungan, Hermiston; C.
W. Roundy, Heppner.
Minor Surgery Mrs. Betty
Craig, Kinzua, dismissed; Linda
Thornburg, Lexington, dismissed;
Phyllis Thornburg, Lexington,
. dismissed; Mrs. Vern Batty, Hard
man, dismissed; Victor Bowman,
Kinzua, dismissed; Darlene Nar
die, Condon.
Medical J. P. Garrett, Fossil;
Al J. Redder, Condon; Henry A.
L'mry, Monument, dismissed;
Miss Katie Minert, Heppner.
Out-Patients Eugene Heliker,
Lexington; Mrs. Betty WllHelm,
Heppner; George Hermann, Lex
ington
FOR FRI., & SAT. JULY 9-10
SUNKIST LEMONS DOZ. gfjg
Jumbo Size
PAPER TOWELS
PAPER NAPKINS
Northern
BEEF ROASTS LB. QQp
Chuck Roast " V
Order Your Locker Beef at Wholesale
Prices.
Heppner iiarket
Loyd Burkenbine, Owner and Manager
Vacation Shutdown
HEPPNER CLEANERS WILL BE
Closed from July 17 thru 24
FOR VACATION
The office will remain open that garments may be
picked up, but no cleaning will be done during the
week.
HEPPNER CLEANERS
Hermiston
Nine in
will start at 2:30 on the rodeo
field.
Should Heppner-Ione come out
of the tussel with the district
title, they will play the winner
of the Eastern Oregon district
here, probably the following
Sunday.
Thn iTormtston eame was a
thriller, especially after the first
innw uhon both teams were
rough and committed many er
rors. Drake and uougneny in
ched for Heppner-Ione, wan
Dougherty tagged as the win
ning hurler, Groves ana uaviu
son caught.
After the boys settled down, the
contest was one of the best the
boys have played. The Morrow
hurler struck out and Denny
Swanson was top hitter with 4 for
4, and one of them a triple, mc
batteries for Hermiston were
r'N,.ii and Miles. Ditching and
Tolar catching. Miles was charged
with the loss.
Tips Given on Use of
Thawed Frozen Foods
Home freezer owners are often
concerned with the problem of
what to do with thawed food if
the freezer stops running
.If the food still contains some
ice crystals, it may be refrozen
safely, staled home agent Maud
rvccwnii of Morrow county. How
ever, she adds that the quality
may suffer. It is often wiser to
cat' food that is completely
thawed rather than to refreeze it.
Be sure to cook it thoroughly.
Often fruits may be frozen safe
ly. They usually ferment when
they start to spail, but a little
fermentation will not make them
dangerous to eat although it may
spoil their flavor. So, if fruits
still taste and smell good, you can
refreeze those that have thawed,
rv vmi mav wish to use them in
cooking or baking or for making
PKG' llC
PKG.
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P2BCU5B.' UL! 15 .
n
Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, July
MARK HATFIELD, (right) denn cf students at Willamette Univer
sity and candidate for state senator from Marion County, and
William Schantz, (left) Willamette University and University of
Oregon student, talk over with Senator Guy Cordon the itiner
ary of an educational trip the two young men are embarking
upon this week. Tney win go to
to Spain.
jams, jellies, and preserves.
Meats and poultry, however,
become unsafe to eat when they
start to spoil If the odor is poor
or questionable, get rid of the
food. It may be dangerous. Ex
amine each package of food be
fore you decide what to do with it.
Be careful about refreezing
vegetables, shellfish and cooked
foods. Often vou can't tell by the
odor if they are spoiled. Bacteria
multiply fast in these foods, even
at 50 F., so don't refreeze any of
these foods when they have
thawed completely. As with
--- f -
meai aim iuumy, u ii.v
question about the condition ol
the food, get rid of it! ...
Whi.n vnu refreeze thawed foou,
do it quickly. If your freezer is
' - j
full of warmed foods, take the i
food to a commercial locker plant
to get a quick refreeze. Chill to ,
0 F. or below before taking the
food back to your home freezer,
and wrap it well before moving It.
To refreeze food in your own
freezer, rearrange the food to get
the warmer packages against the'
refrigerated surlace, it possioie.
Pile the packages so that the air
can circulate around them. This
means quicker freezing.
Jesse Beardsley of Portland has
been visiting at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. William Farra.
THIRTY YEARS AGO
From Files of the Gazette Times
July 17, 1921
The Legion swimming tank
was open to the public Sunday
afternoon and a large numher of
people took advantage of the op
portunity to take a cool plunge.
S. E. Notson will depart for
Seattle Sunday to attend the con
vention of the Interational Anti
Crime association, convening in
that city.
E. N. Gonty and family return
ed from Portland Friday evening.
Mrs. Gonty and children spent
about a month In the city and he
went down in the car to bring
them home.
Dr. and Mrs. John Huston are in
Heppner on a visit at the home
of Dr. Huston's perents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. R. Huston.
Orin Wright was displaying;
two large rattlesnakes in town1
Sunday. He caught the varmints
near his place on Rhea Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Reid and
daughter, Lois and Marjorle,
Clarke departed Saturday by car,
for Yellowstone National Park on
a vacation trip.
turope, vismng nom i umm"u
Chief Joseph Days
Celebration Set
For End of July
JOSEPH Wild West entertain
ment, rip-roaring action and pio
neer fellowship is scheduled to
prevail during the three-day long Last year's parade was witnessed
ninth annual Chief Joseph Days by some 30,000 persons, according
celebration here July 30, 31 and ! to an' Oregon state police esti
August 1, according to President ; mate
Montia Witty of the sponsoring , " J T , .
irssyLocal News In Brief
Witty call for the famous night
ixtgcdiii uii.dui; ji, iu n..uu.o,,
. . T. . 1 . f 01 ti ir nnmrioB
. tnree rocleo perIormances, a pan
if breakfasts and nightly danc-
ing at the local Hell's Canyon
. o11 .
hall.
Indians from
at
NorthWest tribes will start arriv-1
lng tnlg week t0 pjtcn tnoir tepees
,
--,-...,..
&4m&4BW)&&tmiuwiinMv mmtmt
Have you been thinking you can't
afford a new Buick? Listen:
If you can afford any new car, you can
afford a Buick and a look at the figure
on the price tag proves it.
Look again, and you'll see that this is the
local delivered price of the new Buick
Special 2-door, 6-passenger Sedan. Com
pare, and you'll learn that this price is just
a few dollars away from those of the so
called "low-price three."
But dig a little deeper if you want the
real clincher. That's when you find that
those few dollars more you pay for a Buick
buy you a lot more automobile.
They buy a whale of a lot more power
Buick V8 power plus the new economy of
Power-Head combustion.
They buy a lot more luxury and comfort
and solidity more room, more glass area,
more frame strength, more tread width,
more ride steadiness-including the
million dollar "feel" of all-coil springing
and torque-tube stability.
They buy, too, the most advanced styling
of the time, and the great panoramic
windshield, and the surety that such fresh-
- WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBIIES AM BUILT BUICK Will BUILD THEM
15, 1954
in a village adjoining the rodeo
grounds. Most of the Indians will
be Nez Perce, Umatillas, Cayuses
and Walla Wallas, with a scat
tering of Yakimas and coastal
tribe representatives expected,
along with some British Columbia
tribes.
Some 500 costumed Indians and
whites will take part in the pag
eant, reinacting the territorial
Indian history of the- Joseph
country. An Indian princess from
the Umatilla reservation and one
from Lapwai, Idaho, will be
named before the opening show.
Outstanding rodeo circuit cow
pokes from all sections of the
West will be on hand to com
pete for the $4500 purse during
the three afternoon performances.
One thing is certain, they will
have their hands full attempting
To ride and rope animals of the
famous Harley Tucker string,
which include some bulls and
broncs that have been ridden very
seldom during the current rodeo
season.
Close to $100 in cash and mer
chandise awards have been post
ed for the twp Chief Joseph Days
Parades. The junior parade, a
new celebration feature, is sche
duled at 1 p. m. Friday, July 30,
with parade chairman Tom Keene
explaining all youthful partici
pants will be given a ticket to
that day's rddeo.
Saturday morning's senior pa
rade on July 31, starts at 10
; o'clock and is expected to be
more than two miles in length.
- . i .
Tom Hugnes oi i-aus L.ny, son
()f Mr and Mrs Joe Hughes, is
1 spending the summer visiting his
nal.pnts and workine for Al Fet-
i - ,
sch.
USE GAZETTE TIMES
CLASSIFIED ADS
V.
and only a lew dollars more
than tlie low-price cars!
9. uqkboUL
Br Biu PaUiion
i ll r 'i nr , rv.-ec
J
-Darling, meet Miss La
Vere. Our new farm hand I
thought!"
Mf.andMF7onacDDi
and family of Portland, former ,
Heppner residents, were weekend j
guests at the home of Mr. and j
Mrs. Willard Warren.
a
Be With the Majority
PAY IH "FULL"
BY THE 10TH
WATCH FOR
"ACCOUNTS FOR SALE"
Pioneer Service Co.
Oregon - Idaho - Utah - Nevada
Division Offices Eugene, Ore.
No Commissions Debtors Pay Direct
This New Buick Special V8
2-Door 6-Passenger Sedan
actually costs less than some
models of the "low-price three"
-come in and deck the prce
looking beauty will stay in the style
parade for seasons to come. (That means
a better deal for you come resale time.)
Is it any wonder, then, that Buick now
outsells all other cars in America except
two of the so-called "low-price three"?
Come in for a demonstration - this week,
for sure. And learn, in the doitv, what a
big trade-in allowance our volume sales
can bring you.
SUPERINTENDENTS TO MEET
A workshop for state county
school superintendents sponsored
u., hQ ctnt dpnartment of edu-
cation, the Oregon .assoiation of
county school superintendents,
the University of Oregon and the
Northwest Cooperative Program
of Educational Administration
will be held in Eugene from July
19 through 24.
State department personnel as
well as U of O instructors and a
representative of the U. S. office
of education will take part.
o r
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Soward
and Evan and Wayne Soward
have returned from attending the
State Christian church convention
at Turner. Marvin Soward gave
two or three vocal numbers at the
I nnnvont nn and WAS PUeSt SOlOlSt
- Vi;. - Chrlstlao .
Salcm on Sunday morning.
Virginia Gonty had as her
Ruest last week Jean Leibrand of
The Dalles. '
3
"Drive From Factory
Farley Motor Co.
$365
Save Up To
See Your Buick Oealsr.'