Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1958)
1 Heppner Gazette-Times Heppner, Oregon, Thursday, February 20, 1958 Founders Day Is Observed By lone P-TA Wednesday by ECHO PALMATEEH The P TA meeting was held J Wednesday evening at the school j eafetorium, superintendent Dal- j las Shockley showed an Empire; Machinery movie of the St Law-! rence Sea Way before the meet- j ing. At the meeting conducted by Mrs Wallace Matthews, pres-! ident, the flag salute was given j and the prayer by Rev Charles I Wilkes. Mrs Earl McCabe gave i iiTuii un me spagnem teed and the cake walk recently held oy ine f-ta. 15o.46 was cleared. Fredrick Martin told of the an nual school meeting being chang ed to the first Monday in May cum mat one rural school board member would be elected at large. He also explained the pos sible drivers training program in Morrow. The members of' the P-TA favored this program. The following were elected on the nominating committee, Mrs E M Baker, John Hatfield and Mrs Bed Akers. Mrs Harriet Hall was chosen queen and Don Berg .".trom was chosen king for being teachers having the most narents from their rooms present at the . meeting. Mrs Hershal Townsend presented them with the crowns. The program with Mrs Phil Emert in charge, consisted of a panel discussion on teen age problems. Dallas Shockley was the moderator and those on the panel were, Lloyd Howton and Ray Heimbigner, representing the parents and Mildred Seehafer and Jim Swart, representing the teen agers. Mrs Lewis Halvorsen had charge of the Founders Day program. She introduced the past presidents who were present. They were, Mrs Franklin Ely, Mrs Omar Rietmann, Mrs E M Baker, Fredrick Martin and Ray Heim- Digner. Mrs Earl McCabe repre-1 Pettyjohn sang Bless This House sented Mrs Victor Rietmann who accompanied by Mrs Cleo Drake, Canned Peas On Parade A V J Willows grange held their reg ular meeting Sunday afternoon. Initiation was given in the 3rd and fourth degree for Mr and Mrs Lee Palmer, Marlene Griffin and Sharon Crabtree. A pot luck dinner was served at noon. G Hermann is a patient in the Veteran's hospital in . Portland. He is expected home this week. Mrs Hermann visited him last ' week. Mrs Gordon White and daugh ter, Lona, and Jo Ann Turner j Sam spent the weekend in Portland. I prize They visited White's son and The Topic club met at the home daughter-in-law, Mr and Mrs of Mrs Norman Nelson with Mrs Charles White. Mr White is leav-1 William Rawlins as co-hostess ing this week for Montreal, Can- Friday afternoon. After the busi ada to attend the toy fair there , ness meetinc The roll rail u-.i Sweet, Early June . . . tiny to large . . . the parade of canned peas, as you prefer them, are all on the grocers' shelves for ex cellent menu nelp the year around. They take a favored spot dressed up in pimiento egg sauce. For a quick-to-do favorite meal from canned foods, add country fried ham with small whole potatoes browned in the ham drippings, Apple Betty for dessert, and at the last minute toss greens from the refrigerator for salad. Peas In Pimiento Egg Sauce 1 can or jar (2 oz.) pimientos 1 cup rich cream sauce ; 1 hard cooked egg 1 can (16 to 17 oz.) peas ' Add chopped pimientos and egg to cream sauce; mix. Add drained peas; heat. Four servings. CANNED PEAS GO WITH: Chicken or turkey; fish and sea food; meats of all kinds; cheese and vegetable casseroles; other vegetables buttered, creamed or scalloped; and salad combinations. was a past president. They were presented with corsages and bout onnieres. A skit on Founders Day was given by Mr Heimbigner, Mr Howton, Walter Jacobs, Ernest McCabe, Robert DeSpain, Leo Crabtree and Gene Rietmann. Refreshments were served by Mrs Paul Pettyjohn, Mrs Charles Wilkes, Mrs Edison Morgan, Mrs John Botts and Mrs L F Leathers. The room was decorated in the theme of Lincolns birthday, Val entines day and Washington's birthday. 54 friends pleasantly surprised Mr and Mrs Omar Rietmann at a house warming at their home Sunday evening Feb 16. Mrs Paul AUCfiOII We Quit Farming To Become Distributors of Phillips Combine Wind Reel on., Feb. 24, 10 a.m. FOLLOW THE SIGNS 2o Miles South of Hermiston, Oregon 20 Miles Southwest of Echo, Oregon GRADER Austin Western Diesel All Wheel Drive Model 99M D 8 CAT & DOZER with P 25 unit, condition good 2 TD 14A TRACTOR condition good, 6 roller track frame INTERNATIONAL WHEEL TRACTOR Model C with Hyd. Scoop OLIVER 70 with Fork and Mower AC WHEEL TRACTOR Mod el CW with 16 ft. Stubble buster JOHN DEERE WHEEL TRA CTOR Model W with irri gation pump 55H JOHN DEERE COMB INE overhauled ready for field 18 in. tires 55 JOHN DEERE COMBINE overhauled ready for field COMBINE International 51 overhauled V belts SEMI TRAILER 24 ft. new 900 rubber STEP DECK SEMI TRAILER 24 ft. 900 rubber 2 INTERNATIONAL TRUCK TRACTOR L 182 308 Motor, INTERNATIONAL TRUCK L 172 Flatbed condtiion good DODGE TRUCK 2-3 ton good CHEVROLET TRUCK flat bed, new motor K 5 INTERNA TIONAL TRUCK SERVICE WAGON INTERNATIONAL PICKUP L 110 Good PICKUP SERVICE WAGON K 1 with tanks and pump PICKUP L 110 G H PLOW 24 ft. good CALKINS CHAMPS set and Hitch 24 ft. ROTARY HOE 12 sec. JOHN DEERE WHEATLAND PLOW HAY BALER Model M.M. JOHN DEERE WEEDERS Set 5 and Hitch 12 ft. Weeders, almost new, cen ter drive JOHN DEERE WEEDERS Set End Drive J D DISC Set 3 Deep Furr ough Drills and Hitch, al most new TERMS CASH Set 4 SHOVEL DRILLS and hitch, International, al most new DISC DRILL International 716 with grass seeder GOBLE DISC 24 ft. 2 DISC TILLERS Int. 7 ft. SIDE DELIVERY RAKE In ternational MANURE SPREADER Case like new 2 POWER MOWERS 72 ft. booms, 750 gallon SPRAY RIG self propelled, capacity FARM HAND on Intern'l Chassis, shop built INTERNATIONAL PLOW 4- bottom SWEEP PLOW 32 ft. M.M. JOHN DEERE PLOW 4-bott- om 3 OLIVER PLOW 4-bottom 6 SECTIONS SPRING TOOTH HARROW 16 SECTIONS DRAG HARROW GRAIN AUGER 30 ft. with transports GRAIN AUGER 32 ft. GRAIN AUGER 10 ft. , CALKINS WHEAT TREAT er BRIGGS STRATTON GAS Motor 5 H.P. GAS ENGINE 8 H.P. 1k HORSE GAS MOTOR Wisconsin 1H HORSE GAS MOTOR Briggs Stratton DUMP BOX AND HOIST 5 yd. good 5 STEEL GRAIN BEDS 200 bushel and up HAMMER MILL Intern'll and Pipe like new ROUGHAGE MILL J. D. No. 114 2 ELECTRIC MOTOR 1 & 3 HP 16 DRAG HARROW Sections 6 SPRING TOOTH HARROW Sections PICKUP REEL for John Deere 55 Combine BG HYDRAULIC PUMP ad apter for TD 14 mounting INTERNATIONAL 269 MOT . OR COMBINE MOTOR (Harris) COMPLETE Set of electric shop tools FREE LUNCH Sale to Be Held Under Cover in Case of Rain Van Buslrirk & Lloyd OWNERS BILL DIPPLE, Auctioneer CARL HUNDRUP, Clerk a money tree was presented to the Rietmanns with Rev Floyd Bailey making the presentation. The Rietmanns thanked every one for the gift. The evening was spent in playing cards after which refreshments were served. Mr and Mrs Rietmann have just completed remodeling their home on second street. in Wasco last week. Members and friends of the Garden club were entertained at a luncheon in honor of Mrs Leo nard Carlson Tuesday, Feb 11, at the grange hall given bv Mrs Kathryn Yarnell and Mrs Omar! Rietmann. Women of the H E Cj of Willows grange prepared and served the luncheon. The tables! were decorated with a bouquet of j candy striped carnations and: white snapdragons and red cand-1 les and valentines. j At the business meeting of the club, it was decided to send some planting to Champoeg State1 Park this fall. i The club decided to hold ai plant sale in the spring. Several members brought valentine arr angements and corsages. Mrs EsteD received the door where he has j booth Mr and Mrs John Proudfoot at tended the funeral of a relative answered by naming the biggest problem in the Morrow county (Continued on page 10) The source of Olympia's consistent good taste . . . .... A M!t (' t j i V DEER ! utH If GIVE for YOU u LOVE ' '--" mrtll in nifi i ii'ltm I "Its the Water Oly OLYMH ltWIN(J COMPANY, OLYMPI. WA.HIN.TON. 0 .A. w v Better to be safe than to b sorry! DON'T LET FIRE THROW YOU FOR A FINANCIAL LOSS Ar your farm buildings and tfisir contents adequ ately insured against loss by fire? Better let us check your overage. Fer all types of farm Insurance overage, see us. Turner, Van Marrer & Bryant PHONE 6-96S2 INSURANCE HEPPNER How Standard's busy transportation system helps hold down prices of petroleum products i wm$m(w 77m ww&F fejte w&ZmdmA 3tviymC SypMal fefctw Siwi Wwmm miMm wm wmmM famfflW J Mil i 1 $xW& 1 Twenty-six Standard Tankers plus others that we charter sail the seas to keep crude oil moving to refineries and more than a hundred finished products returning to customers. A supertanker, carries a crew of 40 to 50, can hold enough gasoline to run your car over 10,000 years. On inland waters, tugs, barges and smaller tankers take over the transport job. Rivers of crude oil and finished products flow through 3364 miles of pipelines that Standard oper ates in the Western hemisphere. In addition, we pay to send products through pipelines owned by other companies. They in turn use our lines. Through these "steel arteries," oil is pumped over mountains, as high as 9500 feet, under rivers and through deserts. Miles of leased railroad cars, thousands of trucks, trailers, and semi-tank trucks move our finished products to distribution points, service stations, airports, marine stations, farms, factories and military installations. Standard either operates or leases nearly every form of transportation to keep vital oil supplies moving. What's today's biggest travel bargain?-petroleum's journey from well to refinery to you, a trip that often covers thousands of miles by land, water and under ground. To keep the "fare" low, Standard serves the Western hemisphere with an intricate network of tankers, trucks, tank cars and pipelines. They move oil in huge quantities carefully scheduled to match production at the well, refining capacity and our customers' needs. This far-flung transportation job is done at a cost so low it amounts to a fraction of the price per gallon generally less than you pay to mail a postcard. It's one way we work to keep down the price of the gasoline you buy. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA plans ahead to serve you better Petroleum progress means . . . Transportation to deliver the 55 more oil U. S. will use by 1968 1958 380 million gallons per day 1968 590 million gallons per day GL