Po4
Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, July 5, 1956
Club Sponsoring Safety Campaign
By Mary Lee Marlow
The Boardman Tillicum club is
sponsoring a Fourth of July tele
phone safety campaign. Each
member will call four friends
on the phone and ask them to
drive carefully over the holiday,
and ask those four people to each
call four more, and so forth.
Mayor Joe Tatone urges all citi
zens thus contacted to give full
cooperation to the campaign.
The club met on Wednesday
night of last week at the home
of Mrs. Ray Gronquist for their
regular meeting which was post
poned from Tuesday. Mrs. Zoe
Billings was taken in as a new
member. Committees were ap
pointed for a picnic to be held
some time in July. Food plann
ing, Mrs. George Wiese, Mrs. Bob
Stewart and Mrs. Don Downey;
games, Mrs. Harold Baker and
Mrs. Gunnar Skoubo.
The Rev. Walter Duff, national
chairman of Village Missions,
Hickman Mills, Mo., was a week
end guest at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Miller, and was the
guest speaker at the Community
church Sunday morning. He will
spend this month at the Cannon
Beach Bible conference.
The annual flowtr show and
silver tea of the Boardman Gar
den club was held on Wednes
day afternoon of last week in
the Community church basement.
Mrs. Arthur Allen was in charge
of arrangements. Mrs. Tim Rip
pee and Mrs. Nate Macomber
poured.
Mrs. Florence Root was award
ed first for her Day Lily, ruffled
Petunia and Deutzia; Esther Reed
daisy by Mrs. Effie Miller; gla
dioli, Bob Miller; Peace rose, Mrs
Nate Macomber; flower arrange
ment, Mrs. Rollin Bishop; Hawai
ian Tears, foliage plant, Mrs. Ef
fie Miller; Marigold, Mrs. Arthur
Allen. Judges were Miss Jean
Scott and Miss Zelma Cowan.
Hobbies were also exhibited at
the show.
Mrs. Mary Healy went to Hepp
ner last week to visit at the home
of her brother and sister-in-law,
Mr .and Mrs. Joe Hughes.
Mr. and Mrs. Nate Macomber
attended a birthday dinner at
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Arlington on Wednesday night of
last week in honor of Macomber's
brother, Al Macomber.
R. B. Rands and Keith and Den
nis Gronquist were overnight
visitors in Portland one night
last week at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Pat Healy.
Mrs. Don Doekendorf and
daughters Jane and Mary Beth,
Santa Barbara, Calif., are visiting
at the home of her mother, Mrs.
R. A. Eades, and the home of her
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Eades. Other visi
tors of Mrs. Eades Friday and
Saturday were her daughter, Mrs.
Charlie Woolley and daughter
Mareia, Pasco, Wash.
Mrs. Harold Dotson went to
Roseburg last week to visit at the
home of her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Kent
Campbell.
SSgt. and Mrs. James Valenti
are the parents of a son born June
24 at the military hospital in Han
ford, Wash, He has been named
Daniel Andrew. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Valenti, Gar
field, N. J., and Mr. and Mrs. C.
C. Clark, Newport, Wash. Great-
grandparent is Munzio Valenti,
Lodi, N. J. The baby weighed
seven, pounds, three ounces,
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Morlan
returned home from Corvallis
Sunday where Morlan has been
attending summer school at O. S.
C.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Carpenter
and children, Forest Grove, were
weekend visitors at the home of
Carpenter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Delbort Carpenter.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hayes ac
companied by their daughter,
Mrs. John Baldino and daughter,
Gloria of Spokane, Wash., left
j Sunday for Twain Marte, Calif.,
io visit meir son arm uauiuer-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Hayes.
Barbara LeTrace, Echo will assist
Mrs. R. B. Rands in the store
while they are gone.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Miller went
to Gresham last Thursday where
they visited several days at the
home of Mrs. Miller's brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Gaede. They returned home
Sunday. Mrs. Effie Miller who
has been visiting her son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Baker at Corbett the past
two weeks, returned home with
them.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cudd and
(laughter Brenda, Portland, were
weekend visitors at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Max Vannoy.
Mrs. Gladys Sargent, Portland,
is visiting this week at the home
of Miss Jean Scott and Miss Zel
ma Cowan.
Mr. and Mrs. Newell Vaught,
Richland, Wash., were weekend
guests at the home of Mrs.
Vaught's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Elvin Ely.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alward, of
Kenncvvick, Wash., and Mrs.
Charity Hawkins, Tacoma, Wash.,
were' weekend visitors at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kunze.
Mr. and Mrs. James McKenna
and three children, Dodty, Wash.,
are visiting this week at the
home of Mrs. McKenna's father
and step-mother, Mr. and Mrs.
Ervin Flock.
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Coats and
grandsons Gerry and Jimmy Mai
lery, Seattle, Wash., went to
Hardman Sunday to visit Coats'
brother, Jess Coats.
Mrs. Lulu Stevens, Portland, is
visiting her son-in-law and
Food Industry Adds
Jobs; Farmer's
Share on Decline
Population increases and grow.
ing demand for conveniences in
food paackaging and processing
have added nearly one-half mil
lion new jobs in the nation's food
marketing industry since 1950,
reports Elvera Horrell, Oregon
State college agricultural exten
sion economist.
The trend of built-in food con
venience is causing a wide gap be
tween prices farmers receive and
the food price tag at the corner
grocery, the. economist says. In
1955 farmers received only 41
cents of each dollar spent for his
produce the other 59 cents
going for rising costs of getting
food from the farm to the fam
ily table.
About 400,000 more people were
working in the marketing of farm
produced foods last year than in
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Zivney.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Moller
and daughter Patty, accompanied
by Miss Jean Scott and Miss
Zelma Cowan, went to Trout
Creek Bible camp near Corbett
last Saturday to get their son,
Jim, who had spent the past
week there.
1950. And each food processing
and marketing employee's earn
ings averaged about 28 percent
more per hour than in 1950.
Retail prices for domestic farm
produced food now averages 20
percent more than in 1950. Home
makers can trim the grocery bill
by using time and energy for
more home-processing of food,
says Mrs. Horrell, or time and
energy can be saved by paying
for the services.
OSC to Test New
Forage Crop Pest
Control Chemical
A new "highly effective"
chemical1 for control of insect
pests in forage crops is schedu
led for test this summer by Ore
gon State college scientists to
see if the treated livestock feed
results in any harmful residues
in meat, eggs or milk.
The possible boon to hay and
pasture crop production needs
only clearance with the U. S.
department of agriculture food
and drug administration as a
safeguard of human health. It
has already been shown that
animals are not harmed by am
ounts of the chemical needed to
control the pests.
OSC was selected by Shell
Chemical corporation, manufac
turer of the product, for a $35,
250 research grant to complete
tests before January 1 for an FDA
ruling on commercial distribu
tion of the material.
The grant will be administsred
through the agricultural research
foundation at the college, accord
ing to R. W. Henderson, assistant
director of the OSC agricultural
experiment station.
Varied dosages of the chemi
cal will be used this summer in
feed for about 50 head of dairy
and beef cattle, hogs and sheep,
and 50 laying hens and fryers.
Milk and eggs will be tested
each week for traces of the chemi
cal. FDA is especially stringent
on purity of milk because of its
wide use as an infant food.
Half of the meat animals will
be slaughtered at the end of a
12-week feeding period and
chemical tests made of tissue.
The remaining animals, along
with the dairy cows and poul
try, will be tested for an addi
tional four to six weeks on feed
that is free of the isecticide to
learn if possible residue deposits
decrease.
OSC scientists heading the
project are L. C. Terriere, agri
cultural chemist; George Arscott,
poultry husbandman; David Eng
land, animal husbandman; and
Roger Sprowls, dairy researcher.
o
Phone Your News to 6-9228.
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