Peg 4
Hcfpprer Gazer te Times, Thursday, August 1, 1957
Boardman Due For Dial Phones On August 3
Gardening Days Are Salad Days
By Mary Lee Marlow Miss Zelma Cowan, Jimmie Mill
Boardman will soon be using Jer, Lester Norman, Bobble Tayl
dial telephones. Walter Karnoff. I or Martin and Douglas Shattuck,
owner of the Eastern Oregon Tele-i Jerry P. Kurt and Barbara
phone Company at Pilot Rock. iGantenbein, Roger Garvlson,
Ukiah and Boardman, has had ; Rosemary Deulin, Marie Potts,
his crew busy the past weeks Lorelei Hamilton, Colleen And
getting the new phones installed. mn and Douglas Healy.
They will be officially in use at Mrs. Walter Hayes accompanl
11:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3. ed her sister, Mrs. Louise Le
Trace of Echo, to Spokane, Wash.
last week to visit at the home of
Mrs. Hayes' son-in-law and
Mr. and Mrs. John
A special meeting of the Tilli
cum club was called by the pres
ident. Mrs. Dewev West, for Tues
day night of last week, to make:c!auhtor'
plans for the dance to be held in:Balcllno-
Heppner Saturday night, Aug. 31 Mrs. Allen Ely and children
in honor of Boardman's Princess Ricky and Renee of Moses Lake,
Lorena Coder of the Morrow Wash, visited at the home of Mr.
county fair court. The princess is and Mrs. Elvin Ely two days last
sponsored by the club. Music for week.
Mary Ann Rands Is attending
summer school in Portland.
Mrs. Edna Whor of Manning,
Iowa visited her aunt, Mrs. Vera
Pruter, last Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barlow of
Washougal, Wash, were weekend
visitors at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Claud Coats. Barlow Is Mrs,
Coats' cousin, and the two had
Scott, Miss Zelma! not seen each other for about 25
Elvin Ely daugh-1 years.
the affair will be furnished by
Joe Banana's band. Sandwiches,
coffee and punch will be sold.
Mrs.Ronald Black, vice-president,
presided in the absence of
the president. There were seven
members present, and Mrs. Ron
ald Haas was a guest. Next meet
ing will be Aug. 13 at the home
of Mrs. West.
Miss Jean
Cowan, Mrs.
Eileen left Monday for a weeks ( Members of the Crusaders
stay at the Cannon Beach Bible group of Community church were
conference. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mil-1 given a surprise picnic by their
ler left Tuesday to attend the. loaders Miss Jean Scott and Miss
conference also
Miss Barbara Anderegg was
hostess at her home Wednesday
evening of last week for a barbe
cue supper for the young people's
group of the Community church
Zelma Cowan Wednesday of last
week, when they were taken to
the Umatilla city park. On the
excursion were Mrs. Elvin Ely,
Eileen Ely, Dorothy Rash, Brenda
Billings, Linda Daniels, Judy
Present were Miss Jean Scott, Risley, Leonard Bedford, Patty
REGULAR STYLE
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Heppner Gazette Times
Miller, Faye Disbrow, Irene Potts,
Toni Taylor, Ruth Rupe, Karen !
Anderson, Chloe McQuaw.
Mr. and Mrs Earl Brlggs went
to Othello, Wash. Sunday to vis-;
it overnight at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Mulligan. j
Mr. and Mrs. Harry King and
daughter Phyllis of Hermiston.'
were visitors at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Marlow Saturday.1
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Eades and
Mrs. R. A. Eades visited in Pasco
Wash. Sunday at the home of Mr. '
and Mrs. Charlie Woolley. Mrs.
R. A. Eades remained there for
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Marlow
were called to La Grande Mon
day by the illness of Mrs. Mar-'
low's grandmother, Mrs. J. H.
Dockweiler.
Mrs Eugene Risley, and child
ren Judy, Butch and Melodie, !
left for their home at Anchorage, '
Alaska Saturday by plane from
Portland after visiting the past
two months at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claud Wor
den. Mr. and Mrs. Worden took
her to Portland Friday evening.'
Mrs. Jewell Loop and daughter
Cathy, and Mr. and Mrs. Ike
Hinkley accompanied them to
Portland. i
.Mrs. Bob Zerba and children
Debbie and Dennis of Athena vis-'
ited from Sunday till Tuesday
at the home of her mother, Mrs. I
Blanche Jones. Her husband i
brouhgt them down Sunday and1
returned home that evening. j
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Allen went
to Sunnyside, Wash. Sunday to'
visit at the home of their son and
darjghter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Stewart vis
ited in Estacada over the week-
1.-..U ol iuC uuuie ui mis. siuw-1 Mr. and Mrs. Henry Krebs.
art's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar j Arlington, were guests of Mr.
Veelle, Sr. anfi Mrs. Rnhprt I.nwp nnp Hav
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Johnson and asr WOpk
oaugnter uuree, and Sharon
McKennay of The Dalles visited
Mr. and Mrs. George Weise and
nthpr frtanrlc horn MnnHa.r I
Mrs Omega Pnvett of Ava, Mo.
was a recent visitor at the home
of her brother-in-law and sister-
n-law, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Rippee.
Toivo Simila of Portland spent
the weekend here with Mrs. Sim
ila and children, who have been
staying at the home of her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Adolf Skoubo,
for the past six week.
Cecil Hamilton and Delbert
Carpenter spent the weekend at
their homes here from Belling
ham, Wash. Other visitors at the
'Carpenter home were their son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Carpenter and child
ren Johnnie and Anne of Seattle.
Members of the Sugar and
Spice 4-H cooking club and the
Hop and Scratch poultry club en
joyed a picnic at the sand dunes
Tuesday afternoon of last week.1
Mrs. Everett Daniels leader of
the poultry club and Mrs. Myron
Watts went with them. Present
were Patti Partlow, Linda and
Cheryl Daniels, Toni Taylor,
Anita Garner, Karen Anderson,
Brenda Billings, Diana and Carina
Malone, Charlotte McKenzie, Al
berta Carpenter, Anna May Mc
Quaw, Patty Miller, Jack Taylor,
Billie Getz, Jimmy Hoffman,
Kerry Daniels and Richard Watts.
David Skoubo is visiting in
Kennewick, Wash, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kunze.
Visitors at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Russell Tuesday of
last week were Mrs. Russell's
sisters, Mrs. Richard Nelson and
daughter Lila of The Dalles, and
mrs. Cecil Raines and four child
ren of Mt. Vernon, Wash.
o-
Mr. a"d Mrs Eddie Cunderson
and family are spending a week's
vacation at the coast
l - ' - .SiammaA .? '.. . - Skj
If you're a home gardener, surely nothing's more satisfying than
being able to enjoy the products of your green thumb. Gather in the
"fixings" for a crisp, cool salad bowl, and you'll be well rewarded
for your gardening efforts.
Fill a basket with your choicest garden lettuce, vine-ripened
tomatoes, cucumbers, scallions and radishes. Wash and chill these
garden treasures, then toss together lightly with a perfectly seasoned
dressing.
One of our favorites is the Tomato Soup Dressing, given below.
It has a tantalizing flavor that lends real zest and sparkle to garden
fresh salads. This dressing is easy on the calories, too, for it's made
with the non-caloric sweetener, Sucaryl, rather than with sugar.
Simply by the use of this sweetener, calories have been slashed from
45 calories to just 28 calories per tablespoonful. Best part is, you
just can't taste the difference. For, without adding a single calorie,
this sweetener gives cooked and baked foods a naturally sweet,
sugar-like flavor.
Whether you're weight-watching or not, we think youll enjoy
this sweet yet tangy dressing:
TOMATO SOUP DRESSING
(Low-Calorie)
Vi cup salad oil 2 teaspoons Sucaryl solution
1 cup vinegar ' or 16 tablets, crushed
1 can (101 ounces) 2 tablespoons chopped onion
tomato soup Vi teaspoon garlic salt
Combine all ingredients and blend welL
Makes 2 cups or 44 tablespoons. Each tablespoon contains 28
CALORIES; 0.1 gram protein; 2.6 grams fat; 1.1 grams carbohy
drate. If made with sugar, each tablespoon would contain 45
CALORIES.
Mr. ctd Mrs. Herb Hamilton
and daughter left Monday for
their new home at Klamath
Falls.
Ea$y Come, Ea$y Go,
1$ $ame $ad $ong
Fatter paychecks lined the Am
erican worker's pockets last year,
but his money went out as fast
as It came in.
Mrs. Elvera Horrell, extension
agricultural economist at Oregon
State college, reports that wage
earners made more money, but
they spent it and more, for both
durable and nondurable goods.
Houses, automobiles and major
household equipment were am
ong larger expenditures. More
people now own their own homes
and cars but they still have a lot
of unpaid bills, and continue to
pile up debt.
In the national survey reported
by Mrs. Horrell, a buy-sell bart
er seemed to link together sales
and purchases made last year.
A third of the people who bought
houses sold another house at the
same time of purchase. Four
fifths of the people buying new
cars and half of those buying
used cars sold or traded cars
along with their new purchases.
Ftewer trade-ins were made
on used car purchases because'
many of the used car buyers
were younger people entering
the car market for the first time.
Clear Sharp Olaea-Qlon
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BERGEVIN
IONE, ORE.
A
HOW TO RETIRE
YOUR EQUIPMENT
and yourself
WoulJ VOll lit an .1 V
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equipment? And at the same time would you like to
build retirement income for the years when you no
longer want to work so hard? Your Equitable man
can show you how to do both.
Since 1890, farmers, ranchers, and other busi
nessmen have found that Equitable programs are the
iu ciunciu muuey management, it will
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t iii v.iuai uonars ana cents, to learn
rka A-t- r- . ii
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IOUITABII IUIIDINO, POITIAN0 4, OIIOON
Plrase let that I et roll Information about Equitable
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THE BOARDMAN K UcVt :
tillicum club k'j'' , r :: n
honors : . s l-'ll?-
i MORROW COUNTY V,tj&-wS ' '"'T'
FAIR & RODEO ' ,: 'P 'i
Lorena Coder r. 'i-siX N
o m u r ii f ip (F (F
ivy nv t irwi H iv-t
ph A Ml tf r?
ii f . ii
: Saturday WITH THE MUSIC OF
A Kin UIC Dllk.lLI
A Juur,v,n
!J ' r-A.n of pasco
hn
Mnivlt yewr
IQUITABLI
MPRI5IHTAT1VI
WILUAM K. MORGAN
39 S. W Dorian
Pendleton, Oregon
Phone: 4334
PAVILION Dancing 10 to 1
I HEPPNER Admission: $J.50 per person j
Stmt AJJnsi
R.F.D. N...