Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1957)
Lexington News By Delpha Jones Mrs. A. F. Majeske and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Wright of Arlington motored to Randle, Washington on the weekend to visit with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mounts. Stevie An sted grandson of Mrs. Majeske returned home with them for a visit. Mrs. Bert Darnielle and child ren motored to Stanfield on Sun day where Mrs. Darnielle stayed for a week's visit. Paul Breeding of Portland ar rived here Sunday for a visit with his parents Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Breeding and where he will be employed during harvest. Mr. nad Mrs. B. J. Doherty ent ertained with a picnic lunch at their ranch home on the Fourth of July. Those attending , were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mathews and children, Mr. and Mrs. Friedrich and son, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Jones and children, and Mrs. Bob Dav idson and children. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Miles and daughter motored to San Francisco last week and to Or land where they attended a wed ding. Miss Phyllis Nolan returned to her work at Eugene after a few days visit with her parents Mr. and Mrs. M. V. Nolan. Phyllis motored up with Mrs. Don Camp- bell and children who are visit ing here from Eugene, Rev. and Mrs. Norman North rup and daughter Peggy returned Saturday from the Christian church convention. Mr. and Mrs. E E. McFadden and Frankie were Hermiston vis itors over the Fourth holiday. Inez O'Neal spent several days Clear Sharp Glass-Gloss Kodiak PRINTS m "Big as a Beat" BOX 6 COOS BAY, OREGON WE Supply Postage-Free, Addressed, Mailing Envelopes 1 QUALITY PHOTO SEfitttCB & Near as Tour MAILBOX 8 EX. roll rn. Dev. 4 Print VW 12 75c EX. ROLL We Finish All Sizes Bolls and Negatives . . . Including Color Ever dream of tossing a coin into the fountain of Trevi? Ever picture yourself dancing the tropical night away and see ing the moon come up over Kingston town? If you're like most girls working today, you have. And vacation dreams like these can come true. Your two weeks with pay or three months away from schoolroom chores can become once-in-a-lifetime thrills. And here's how. Sign up for Payroll Savings where you work! Or make arrange ments to buy U. S. Savings Bonds regu larly where you bank. The rest is automatic. Any amount of money you stipulate will be saved for Safe as America... U. S. Savings Bonds Th, U. S, Cowiww awpayl thu aduvtUnunl. Tkt TreMwy tor thtir fttriont donation, tht Aivrlmnt Corned mi Answer is a gqdJL SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Brent Border, Pastor Saturday Services: Sabbath school, 9:30 a. m. Sermon, 11 a. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday, at 7:30 p. m. Bible Studies. VALBY LUTHERAN CHURCH Services second and fourth Sundays, 11:15 a. m. last week in The Dalles with her father and family. Miss Dora Sue Davidson is em ployed at Moyer's cafe in Hepp ner. Mrs. Sperry and grandson Lee Padberg returned to her home in Portland after visiting with her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Padberg. Mr. and Mrs. B. Swift of Idaho were visitors with her brother and family Mr. and Mrs. Pine Thonrburg last week. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hays and children have returned to their home in Corvallis after vis iting her parents Mr. and Mrs. Earl Warner. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Warner were visitors in Walla Walla the Fourth of July. Mr. and Mrs. Lebert Wright of Pendleton were visitors at the Newt O'Harra home over the Fourth. Don Cutsforth of Corvallis is employed at the O. W. Cutsforth ranch. Linda Whetmore returned to her home in The Dalles after several week's visit with her aunt and family Mr. and Mrs. 0. W. Cutsforth. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Carmichael have returned home after a trip to Portland. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Peck and son George were Portland visit ors Monday. Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Wetzel were visitors last week at the Mervln Leonard home. The Wetzel child ren had been spending a week in Lexington with the Leonards. Norman Miles who is with the Coast Guard and stationed in California is visiting his mother Mrs. Ethel Dunbar. Vs '('w you each payday and invested in Savings Bonds. YouTl be surprised how fast your Savings Bond nest egg will grow. The main thing for you to do now is to stop just dreaming about strolling up the Champs-Elysees or cruising down to Caracas and to start making these dreams come true. Start investing in Bonds today! And now Savings Bonds pay better than ever I Every Series E Savings Bond pur chased since February 1, 1957, pays 344 interest when held to maturity. It pays higher interest, too, in the earlier years, and matures in only 8 years and 11 months. Now, more than ever, it's smart to save with U. S. Savings Bonds. HEPPNER GAZETTE Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, July 1 1 1957 ALL SAINTS' EPISCOPAL CHURCH 7:00 a. m. Holy Communion 9:30 a. m. Holy Communion. Wednesdays 10 a. m. and 8 p. m., Holy Communion. ST. PATRICK'S CHURCH Heppner Rev. P. J. Gaire, Pastor Masses Sundays, 6:30 and 9:30 a. m. Weekdays, 7:30 a. m. ST. WILLIAM'S CHURCH lone Masses Sunday, 8:00 a. m. FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Gale and Center Charles V. Knox, jninister Worship 9:00. Bible school 10:00. ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH Gale and Willow Willis W. Geyer, Pastor Sunday school 9:45 a. m. Morning worship 11:00 a. m. Evening service 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, Young People 7:45 p. m. Thursday Bible Hour 7:45 p. m. LEXINGTON CHURCH OF CHRIST Rev. Norman Northrup, pastor Sunday school 9:45 Evening service 7:30 Prayer Meeting, Tuesday 7:30 HOPE LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner of Alfalfa St. Merlin W. Zier, pastor Morning worship 9:30 Sunday school 10:30 Adult class 10:30 IONE COMMUNITY CHURCH Rev. Floyd S. Bailey, pastor Morning worship at 9 a.m. Church school at 10 a.m. Everyone welcome. HEPPNER METHODIST CHURCH 8 Church Street L. D. Boulden, Minister Sunday School and Morning Worship at 10:00 a.m. IONE NAZARENE CHURCH Charles Wilkes, Pastor Sunday school at 10:00 a. m. Morning worship 11:00 a. m. Young peoples meeting at 6:15 p. m. Evening worship at 7:00 p. m. Prayer meeting at 8:00 p. m. on Wednesday evening. o Weekend houseguests of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Green were their daughter Marilyn and Mrs. Green's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Giles Van Housen of Union, Ore. C.partmm tfcmfa. TIMES SPECIALIZED TRAINING GIVEN AT PACIFIC TELEPHONE School is out for Oregon's 377,- 000 elementary and high school students. But for the craftsmen and women of Pacific Tele phone's plant department in Oregon, classes will go on thro ugh the summer months. At the new centralized train ing center on Portland's East ,side, telephone employees learn how to construct, install, oper- jate, maintain and repair the equipment that provides many 'kinds of service for hundreds of thousands of customers in the state. 1 Known as the plant training school, this year-around technic 'al institute has as its motto, j "Learn By Doing." And Pacific Telephone employees come from 1 all over the state to do just that. Students from more than 20 : Oregon communities, in addition I to tiiose from the metropolitan Portland area, have attended the school so far this year. In the first five months of 1957 over 56,000 training hours were recorded. C. B. Scott, plant training supervisor, estimated that close to 150,000 hours of training will be completed by the end of the year. A telephone man with 17 1-2 years of experi ence, Scott directs training for the company's plant people on a craft and management level. Classes are taught by training foremen selected for their techni cal knowledge and teaching ability. Instruction ranges in length from several days to more than 25 weeks. Both new and experienced em ployees are trained at the school. Rapid advances in the field of communications makes the de mand for specialists greater ev ery day. A look at the school's curricu lum gives a ready indication of this need for trained specialists. Courses are taught in opera tion and maintenance of local and long distance switching equipment, teletypewriter, tele photo, complex telephone syst ems for business and industry, FCC radio requirements, micro wave radio fpr television and telephone use, local and long fire prevention Y jBlSl 1 means . .MmRi i PORTLAND SCHOOL distance equipment testing, splic ing, construction and mainten ance of cable and other "outside plant," mathematics, electrical theory, electronics, drafting and many other subjects. There is even a class to teach the teach ers how to teach. "Training," Scottt points out, "is going on constantly in all the other departments of the company, as well as our own, for the benefit of the employees, our customers and the company it self." Oregon Wins Award For Pedestrian Safety Oregon's 1956 pedestrian pro tection program has won a first place award from the American Automobile Association. In Oregon's classification of states, New Jersey, Maryland and Delaware were in a three-way tie for second place and Cali fornia and Colorado received honorable mentions. State officials said the award was made on the basis of reports submitted covering Oregon's ped estrian casualty record, accident records, legislation and enforce ment, engineering, safety organi zation, school safety and public information. The 1956 pedestrian toll in the state was 53 deaths and 1267 in juries. This compares with 67 pedestrian deaths and 1298 In juries in 1955. James R. Banks, manager of the Department of Motor Ve hicle's traffic safety division and LIVESTOCK MARKET Cattle Hogs Sheep SALE EVERY TUESDAY 12 Noon On U. S. Hiway No. 30 NORTHWESTERN LIVESTOCK COMMISSION CO. JO 7-6655 Hermiston, Oregon Frank Wink & Sons, Owners Don Wink Mgr. Res. Hermiston JO 7-3111 A pan" of water is often enough to douse the careful fisherman's campfire. But the careless sportsman can start a raging inferno that thousands of men, with the most modern equipment, can't control. Forest fires burn an average of 25 million acres of America's woodlands each year. Fishermen know what these fires do to trout streams and good trolling lakes. They also know how nine out of ten fires may be prevented by obeying the law of the woods For more than300 years, Americans have found good fishing where the trees grow green. Do your share to pass on our outdoor heritage to tomorrow 8 sportsmen. Help keep fires out of our woods. HEPPNER PINE MILLS, INC. executive secretary of the Oregon Traffic Safety Commission, was also given a citation by the AAA for "leadership in pedestrian pro tection." Banks served as contact man for the state. Official presentation of awards will be made to Governor Robert Mr. FARMER SAVE 15 ON rain Fw INSURANCE Insure your grain crops now and SAVE 15 on your premium for at the termination of the policy you will receiwe a check for 15 of the amount of the premium. Be Wise, protect your year's income at LOW RATE! DON'T WORRY Insure Today! Turner, Van Martor fir Bryant INSURANCE REAL ESTATE PHONE 6-9652 HEPPNER Page 3 D. Holmes later this summer. o Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Widdows and two sons, Tom and Jerry, of Quincy, Washington, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hamlin on the Fourth. Mrs. Hamlin left on Monday for a week's visit in Port land. YOUR