Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, June 28, 1956, Second Section, Page Page 3, Image 9

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    9
Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, June 28, 1956
Page 3
Boardman News
Continued Irom Page 2
Shannon and Mrs. Ralph Skoubo.
Mrs. Roy Partlovv accompanied
them as a guest, and they were
joined in Pendleton by Mrs. John
Walker. Following the tour the
ladies had dinner and attended a
show.
Mr. and Mrs. William Garner
and children Dick and Anita left
last week on a two week vacation
trip to Fort Morgan, Colo., to visit
Mrs. Garner's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. C. M. Jones and other rela
tives.
Mrs. Leonard Bedord entertain
ed a group of children with a
picnic party at the city park on
Wednesday afternoon in honor of
her son Greg's sixth birthday.
Present were Mrs. Bob Stewart
and Randy, Linda and Jody Ta
tone, Kathie Loop, Karen Gron
quist, Kathie Mead, Gary Hiigel,
Sharon Jones, Cheryl Mills, Mark
Vannoy, Teresa Thorpe, Susan
Hiergera, Jimmy Lilly of La
Grande, and Leonard Bedord, Jr.
The Home Economics club of
Greenfield grange met on. Wed
nesday of last week at the grange
hall, starting with potluck dinner
at 12:30 p. m. Hostesses were
Mrs. Florence Root and Mrs.
Claud Coats. The club voted to
have an ice cream social at the
hall on the evening of July 14.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Shattuck
and sons, Stanley , Martin and
Douglas attended the annual Pio
neer picnic at Cleveland, Wash.,
last Thursday.
Eddie . Kunze, Kennewick,
Wash., visited at the home of his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Kunze, last week.
Mrs. Mollie Dillon, Washington,
D. C, was a visitor last week at
the home of her brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Dillon. It is the first time they
have seen each other in about
forty years.
Recent visitors at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kress uvrc
Mrs. Kress's brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Myer,
and her sister, Mrs. Evelyn Pal
mer, all of Portland.
! Mr.atul Mrs. Dean I'richard,
Crescent City, Calif., were over
night visitors at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Wys.s on Wed
nesday of last week.
Ronald Black attended an KFA
instructors' conference at Wnl.
Iowa Lake the first of the week.
On Wednesday Mrs. Black nod
doughter Diane, and her niece.
Janet Oveson, Wallowa, who hns
been visiting here the past two
weens, lett tor Wallowa to join
Black. They and Mr. and Mrs.
Crawford Oveson and family of
Wallowa left for Tooele, rt.ih.
to visit Mrs. Blacks and Oveson's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. . Oveson.
The Blacks will also visit his
mother, Mrs. Clyda Black at For
hon, Utah.
Jerry and Jimmy Mallery, Seat
tle, Wash., are visiting at the
home of their grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Claud Coats. Their par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Mallery,
brought them last Thursday, and
left Friday mornin? for San
Diec;o, Colif. .
Mrs. Harold Raker returned
home from Portland last week
after being there a week follow
ing plastic surgery on her face.
Roy Ball returned homo from
the Good Shepherd hospital in
Hermiston last week, where he
had an appendectomy.
Mr. and Mrs. Gib Califf, Esta
cada. and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas'
Califf, Hermiston, were weekend
visitors at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Stewart.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Morlan, and
two daughters, of Leed. S. Dak.,
visited at the home of their son
and .daughter-in law, Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Morlan, the first of
the week.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Tannehill
and daughter of Eugene, visited
at the home of Tannehill's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Tanne
hill, this week.
Monument News
By Martha Matteson
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Slocum drove
to Hermiston Friday on business.
They were accompanied by Mrs.
Lois Bleakman.
Mrs. Joe Wheeler and son Bob-
! by were in from their home at
Court Rock. They visited her
! folks, Mr. and Mrs. Fred McWil
lis and niece Mrs. Earl Lewis.
! Roy Bowman and Darrell Far-
1 reus drove to John Day Friday
on business,
i
' Verne McCarty, Harold Rey
nolds and Willard Gilman took
two truck loads of lambs to the
Portland market Tuesday.
i Tom Ross has been hauling
, river gravel for cement work on
the school grounds. They are
.building more sidewalks and
walls.
Mrs. Doris Kingman drove to
My, Neitfitlv.
V .... pw
hti
"Why, Harriet! I hardly rec
ognized you. You look so much
.fatter in that mink coat!"
Lone: Creek where she loined
Jessie Scott and Betty Ward and
small son Tonie for a trip to
Pendleton.
Mrs. Bud Eneall of Cottonwood
was in town Tuesday visiting her
daughter Mrs. Earl Lewis.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Kelly drove
to Heppner June 17 and left their
four children with his mother
Mrs. Lena Kelly. Mrs. Kelly en
tered the John Day clinic Monday
for surgery. She is reported get
ting along fine.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Flower
and Bob Kelly drove to John Day
Wednesday.
Mrs. Earl Barnard who has
been a patient in the John Day
clinic for the past 10 days, under
went surgery Friday. She is re
ported fine.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Banta of
Parma, Idaho and their twins
Mabel and Maynard were here to
visit her brother Maynard Hamil
ton. They had lunch Thursday
at the Matteson home and on
Friday at Lee Slocum's before
leaving to visit his daughter and
one of his sisters at Prineville,
whom he had not seen for 25
years.
Danny Jones was in from the
Navy the past week visiting with
his father, Lee Jones and sister
Choicey Van Detta and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Durst
drove to John Day Friday to be
with her sister, Mrs. Earl Bar
nard who is in the hospital there.
Edna Moore and two children
have returned from Roseburg
where she has been visiting her
daughter Nita Cork.
Miss Eleanor Scott of Vale,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Scott and
Dale Matteson of Long Creek,
Mr. and Mis. Bob Kingman,
Monument and L. J. Matteson of j
Cecil all met at the Matteson
home for a picnic dinner in honor
of Bob Kingman's birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Boyer
drove to Pendleton Friday for
the funeral services of his uncle,
Claud Reesing of Stanfield.
Word was received that Louise
Scott of Top is now out of the
hospital and is at the home of
her uncle Jack Hynd of Pendle
ton.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bastian
and children of Camp Five were
in town visiting over the week
end. Mrs. Kitty Asher and Mrs. Jim
Stirwalt are visiting Granny Grlf
fith Saturday afternoon.
Donald Gilman and Brownie
Roach are home from college at
La Grande.
Long Distance Nation-Widc
Moving Service
Mayflower Agents
Padded Vans
Penland Bros.
TRANSFER CO.
Pendleton, Oregon Phone 338
HERE'S A HOUSE
WITH WEARY WIRI
NG...
Mk
VS8f;-
D. A. Short, your Telephone Manager for Heppner
urn V ! s,
A telephone helps plan for pleasure
Here's a picture of a family starting a pleasant weekend vaca
tion trip. And here's hpw they planned it. His wife called the
sports shop to see that their tennis rackets were restrung. She
phoned the cleaners, too, about that suit she wanted to wear.
And they arranged, by telephone, for the neighbors to feed the
cat. He called ahead for reservations and they're off. Sure
this is a special occasion. But even if it's everyday, the tele
phone is always ready to do so many things, so quickly, and
with so much convenience. The men and women of Pacific Tel'
ephone work to make your telephone more useful every day.
Like to take a trip at $0.0008 a mile?
If you could journey across the nation at the rate of eight-hun-dredths
of a cent a mile, you'd say it was pretty low-cost trav
eling, wouldn t you 7 Well, it
costs no more to send your
voice traveling cross country
from right here in town. For
only $2.00 plus tax-that's the
station-to-station rate after
six o'clock on weekdays and all
day Sunday you can have a
friendly three-minute tele
phone visit that will bridge as
many as three thousand miles.
Isn't there someone who would
like to hear the sound of your
voice tonight?
Be
If you look that number up,
it'll never mix you up
Take just these four numbers: 3-8-4-9. Know how many ways
you can mix them up to get different combinations? Maybe
vou'll be surprised to know
there are 24 possible ways to
arrange those four digits. Just
goes to show how easy it is to
get confused about that phone
number you thought you knew.
So why not make it simple?
Look up that number you're
not absolutely sure of. You'll
save yourself-and other people-lots
of time and trouble
over wrong numbers. It makes
everybody's service more
pleasant. Pacific Telephone.
93
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