Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, July 06, 1961, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    lone'Fiirei'vorEis Dospfey Draws Crow
. u. n hot f Prt- h
ly LORRAINE BALL
Th beautiful firework dl
play put on by the Amrrtfin
legion tw at the lone turf field
on July 1 i well attended.
Fpectalor came from lone, Leu
infton. Heppner, Arlington and
Condon a well xUitors from
Portland. The spectacle I bril
liant hues of rnL green, blues
and yellow thrilled young and
old for am 45 minute.
Mr. Cordon White and daugh
ter Lona were Portland visitors
for the week end.
Church Picnic Well Attended
The combined Hope and Valby
Lutheran churches held service
In the mountain at 11:00 a. m.
on Sunday followed by pot
luck dinner. Among the guest
attending from the lone and
Klghtmile area were Mr. and
Mra. Arthur Stcfanl Jr. and fanv
lly. Mr. and Mm. Carl Bergstrvm,
Mr. and Mm. Arthur Bergstrom
and family of Portland, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Dobyns, Mr. and
Mra. Frnest Lundell and Bonnie
Morgan, Anna Llndstrom. Mary
Swanson and Carl. Johan Treed-
. . . . W A.. .
j IMIN rvrovmwm
Taa ! Mmacthai cUb will
mt m Julf II t tha horn
Mr. Saaaath Staous.
aon. Mr. and Mr. Herb Peter
on. Mr. and Mr. Robert Peter
mm. Mr. and Mr. Donald Peter
aon. Mr. and Mr. Oscar Peter
son and Gerald. Mr. and Mr.
Henry Baker. Mr. nd Mr. Rol
and R.-retrom and family. Mr.
and Mr. Raymond Lundell and
rfitiiphKT. Mr. and Mr. Art
n- . f.miK- 1 nil Carl
. - r tirien PJOrr wmi--
on and children. Mr. and Mr. norm, f n,.r parent.
uni n.u Urn ami fmllv. Mr. I.. l .-i...
c i i i . " ". w . ... . - -
tf Huston and Mr. and Mr.
inhn fwevtrom. Marilyn and
Gerald.
Mr. Cordon White and daugh
i-r Lena and aon Gary return
a last urrk from a trip that
took them to Texa for a family
reunion and to Mexico my.
While In Texas they weathered
x,m wvere munuer iono.
They also observed some tor
nado alert.
Vacation la East
Mr. and Mr. Paul Pettyjohn
FIRE
Presents a big risk at Harvest Time. When
it strikes your crop it
RUINS
Everything in its path and may destroy a
whole year's income and labor. The smart
RANCHER
is prepared with adequate insurance. Be
safe - Don't wait - insure today
AT
TURNER. VAN MARTER
& BRYANT
Heppner
Ph. 6-9652
and rnana returned home '
Friday evening from vacation
.I.. i t.-.u th-m to Detroit
till. "
by plane where they purchased
a new car. They motoreu
Magra FalU. New York ana on
t, Missouri to VlslI wiin on
iwiihn't father. oah retty
i.,Kn Thov alko visited Washing
ton D. C. coming back through
Nevada and California
Mr and Mr. Je Mason t4
Prlnevllle visited. lat week with
hU sNters. Mr. Clara Ktncaia
and Mable Cotter.
iti-n Kilter vUited at the
Mr. ana
Mm. Hugh Salter, during the hoi
May.
xtit HuL-h Salter returnel
home last week after spending
several day at the home of her
in and fam ly. Mr. ana Mr.
Gaylord Salter. She assisted with
the care of her grandchildren.
Mr. Hod Mackenzie I at rtome
fi..r mu-mtlni! several days In
ninnwr Memorial hospital.
Mr. and Mr. Chuck iiuason
an.i famllv finished moving their
belongings to Bend on July i.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde irawioru
n.i rnmitv ( snendins a few
day with relative In lone dur
ing the holidays.
Mrs. Walter Corley and niece
Elaine Gaarsland are visiting In
Corvallls with Mr. Corley'a sla
ter. Gladys.
Mr. Harold Snider and son
Larry have returned home from
the Pioneer Memorial hospital.
Mr and Mr. Paul tbKipi
Pettyjohn have moved Into their
new home recently vacated by
the Hudson. They nave pur
chased the house.
Mr. and Mr. Martin Jannsen
and family of Vancouver, Wn.
spent the week-end with his
father. Gus Jannsen.
A 3 Ellis Ball spent several
lavs leave with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Ball.
Marsha Ball returned the last
nt tho week from St. Anthony
. i.. i cho rorantlv i l.ir.ta Th "Orppnn
IlOSOIiai vwii-ic irpi;oil mumv... r---
nnHoravnt surcerv on her left rv,iiar Man" will be easily rec
ognizame Dy nis inuonui i.ibv
lrwl r. n. He will give away
at tnrir hne
tollowlng the Itreoi. on .-a.
urday evening,
luring the weekend, the
Western P'l lett h.Vf
N--n moving fr.m thnr J..ne
home, with Mlowup nrw
moving In n Sunday evening
and on Monday.
State Fair Invites
Trompolin Artists
Four lone irannwllnr artUts
hae U-en Invited to -tform at
the Oregon State Fair. Salem.
S-itcmber 2. according to Mchln
01,-iit, stat fair talent show
chairman. Tom Heimblgner. 14. son ff
Mr. and Mr. Ry Helmblgner.
lone; and JoeM 14. Mark 13. and
rrank iialvorsen. 10. sons of Mr.
an1 Mr. Lewis Iialvorsen. lone.
nn.ititnrtod before the fair talent
committee on June 27. This com
mittee is Inviting each county
It their best talent for
an evening performance at the
fair.
The four boy, trained by Ray
n..imhlin.r. have been giving
r,i,iiif m-rformances for about
a vcar. They Jumped at various
school sports activities, making
a hit at the state class B basket
ball tournament at Bend In
March.
Rnr-nntH- thev were Invited to
norfnrm at the senior all night
party at Redmond, sponsored by
the senior parents.
Dollar Man to Give
Cash to Shoppers
Soon to become a familiar
figure In Heppner area grocery
stores Is the "Oregon Dollar
man." Between now and the fall.
h will visit local food stores,
oiviniT wav thousands of silver
dollars, In a promotion designed
to encourage tne purcna.se oi
arm
Mrs. Arthur Bergstrom and Oregon payroll silver dollars to
.--.i.. i ..idHnrr u-tth oil norsons who have bags or
Mr and Mrs. Carl Bergstrom and packages of Oregon's White Satin
..... .AI- nrnrnrv haKptS
other relatives in the lone area
this past week. Mr. Bergstrom
from Portland on Sat
urday. The family attended the
Valby Lutheran services and din
ner in the mountains, returning
to Portland on Sunday. Their
Stefani. returned
home with them for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Lnris
nhrnn and daughters of Rock
Creek spent Saturday evening at
the Don Ball home.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Boyce were
Sugar In their grocery baskets
and answer a simpie question
about Oregon. The sugar firm,
through Its big modern plant
at Nyssa, contributes more than
$12 million a year to the state's
economy. Nearly $7 mUliork of
this goes to Oregon farmers who
hold the world's record in the
highest crop yield per acre.
Speed and death are two words
that always travel hand in hand
on the highways.
Atk your deiler about a rttl eool astrs-tost pptlon-ChsvroIrt sir conditioning.
V
Impala Convtrttbk
Summertime -and the savirfis easy!
It'll pay you plenty to pad over to your Chevrolet dealer's One-Stop Shopping Center and get in on all the
excitement there. Because Jet-smooth Chevrolets are outselling every other make of car, he's able to turn on the
savings like nobody else in town. Have him fit you with an elegant Impala, a popular Bel Air or a budget-wise
Biscayne. Or maybe with one of those six sweet-going, cargo-craving Chevy wagons. Just bring along your desire
to own a lot of car at an easy-to-own price. Chevy ana your ,,w"L PlrwJo
Chevrolet dealer will look after the rest nicely, thank you. jei-SmOOUl lIievrOlCl
Chary Conaxr Mona CM Coup
Save-a-bundle buys on Corvairs, too! The climate couldn't
be better for getting into one of these. Yessirree, Juicy July buys
on the Monzaa with their family-atyle sports-car spirit ... on
the nimble, nickel-nursing Corvair 500a and 700's ... on the
6-Passenger Lakewood Wagons . . . and on those Greenbrier
Sports Wagons with up to twice the space of regular wagons.
Need more be said? Your Chevrolet dealer Is the man to talk to.
See the new Chevrolets at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's
FULLETON CHEVROLET COMPANY
Baton Twirling
Lessons lo Slart
t,itnn twilling logons Mill W
started July 15 at the muie
ftx-m at the hij:h -hl with
tWdn Hunhif.s as titrutir.
HuUhlis. atfrnt f.r Standard
Oil t'o, I an outstanding per
f.rrnrr. He state ihampion
jmriUan Ij-fU-M dium major
ihne sp-rate tlnses in recent
cat ad has tr-Ietl In the
Ut-ktctn states r'ng exhibition
He was national 4 and iham
pion drum major In l!Mi.
Tlie W-n U-t local young
sters uWI lust from four to sis
w.rk. They are on'n to all ages
f: .n 5 jears up. the only re
i ilrement. Hutihlns s s. Is to
hrlng a baton and be on hand
st 9 a m. for the beginning les
son. A'tcr learning to hold and
twit!, th students Mill te mov-1
i d to the city park or courthouse
hmn for their Saturday morning
instruction where there Is more
room to toss.
A .V) cent fee will If charged
for each lesson.
Batons will b at the music
room on consignment from a
music store. They may be pur
chased on the 15th at a cost of
alun.t S.100.
Htrma gazette times. Thut4jy. July . ixt 4
NEW BOOKS IN THE HEPPNER LIBRARY
First Graders Need
Birth Certificates
Th Orecon State Board of
Health has asked all parents to
obtain birth certificates as soon
as possible for all children en
tering Orgeon schools for the
flist time this fall.
Dr. Richard H. Wilcox, state
health officer, said most Oregon
schools require such certificates
before a child is enrolled.
Requests for certificates should
list the full name of the child
and his parents, as well as the
date and place of his birth. The
fee for a full photostatic copy
of the birth certificate Is $2.00.
However, a birth registration
card adequate for school admis
sion can be obtained for $1.00.
Orders for Oregon certificates
should include the fee and be
mailed to the Vital Statistics
Section, State Board of Health,
P. O. Box 231, Portland 7, Oregon.
Parents of children born out
side Oregon should get their cer
tificates directly from the state
health department In the state
ih h rth occurred. Dr. wuc-ox
"Di. Tarn Da!y't Tht C't
BcokO lr Tom l ry hs ert
i.i.J the lemli.J Amertcsn"
dr .od rrn lie bcliexeJ lit
h ! ing his frw men In under-j-ilv
licked tU tt the world
particularly In southeast Al
ll f..unde an ureamatlon
'r,luxi" to IIm" tnonrV to
achieve llMt end asul traveled
iilit remnt.. Aati IUAL'eS to
establish n.let h. Itals. to
tiesit the l k. to train others to
carry on this work, then to go
to another needy tillage and
start the process all over again.
His amazing stor Is fully told
in Ibee three famous look. In
"Is liver l' from Kvil" he tells
h!W th I.dey saga started.
Lieutenant junior grade! Wlcy
was a Na-y dxior stationed In
Asian waters when Indo China
leil to the CommunUt. At the
Xavv'a order he and his medical
n.en built rcfuc.ee camps In Viet
Nam for the escapee from lorn-
inunlst terror s.cklng a passnBO
tc friM-dotn. Tlie things he saw
and learned In Viet Nam he
never forgot. They determined
his whole life. In "The Fdge of
Tomorrow" rr. Pooley tells how
he went back to Asia, to the
little kingdom of Laos, to con
tlnue his medical work In the
primitive village of Nam Tha,
five miles from the border of
Red China. "The Night They
Burned the Mountain." tells of
his experiences In Laos In an
other remote village called
Moung Sing. There he waged a
fight against an enemy even
more murderous than Commu
nim mivprtv. Icnorance or mal
nutrition: his own battle against
cancer.
"Where the Bad Fein Crows"
by Wilson Rawls: Tnis nean
elves a convin
cing picture of country boyhood
life In the footmus oi me vjium.
tt !, it U the story oi
yiHiisg Mly Cdmim ami Ids re
citing overtures wtttt Ms to
renote -n hound. td Vtn
and Little Ann, Tl;e not of a .ir
dirt farmer. oung Billy sjcrl-fu-rtl
rtery other re-reation and
worked hard t.i earn hi pups;
the hounds learned to outwit
the moM wily nmi with their
multitude of amazing truks In
futrnt and liver, and kt only
unce, on the niht when a moun
tain lion threatened lUlfy s Me.
Here Is a Hi M v sentimental
novel written from the heart, a
lory sure to please the vat
audleme who like! The Year
ling'' and "Lassie Come Home
Morrow, Umatilla
Bank Deposits Gain
Bank debit for the IVndleton
area. Including Umatilla ana
Morrow counties Increased by 81
per cent In May. 1W1. a com
oh nsl to Aorll. 11. and In-
eteasiHl by 10G xr writ a year
ago. according to the Bureau of
Rulnea Research at the Uni
versity of Oregon. Eugene.
Debits for May. 19C1. totaled
$.11,219,710 for April. 10C1. the
total was $23,809,130, and for
Mav. l!H"fl, the total amounted to
$2205.797.
Oregon with 2,10 banks rejKirt
Ing had an Increase In bank
debits in May. 1901. of 10.2
per cent compared with April.
lOi-.i mi it an Increase of 3.9 per
cent over May, 1900. Total debits
rwi.,(v in Mav. 1901. came
lo $2.165.023,1M. for April. 1901,
the total was $1.9)1.19 ana ior
May, a year ago the total was
$2,03,22!),frl0.
Bank debits represent the dol
lar value of checks drawn
agaltwt the deposit accounts oi
.. ii. i.i, .iia ami business firms.
lllllis niuwi.. ,
Bank debits are considered good
Indicators of current business ac
tivity.
BUY YOUR BATTERY
NEEDS NOW
ALL TYPES Or BATTERIES IN STOCK
6 8 OR 12 VOLT
For Cars. Truck. Tractor oi Combines
8 Volt As Low A $995 Exchang
TERMS TO SUIT YOUR NEED"
FORD'S TIRE SERVICE
., HEPPNER.
fin At
ORE.
N.
1
MJB
COFFEE
LB- 59c
2 LB. CAN
$1.17
LEAN AND TENDER
SHORT
RIBS
FINE FOR BARBECUING
LB-29C
PICNIC SHOULDERS
LB 39c
REG. 69c OPEN PIT
BARBECUE SAUCE 49c
LEMONS
6 F0R 25c
YELLOW
DRY ONIONS
4 F0R 25c
SAW REG. 29c
TUNA FISH 4 FOR $1
BEST FOODS
MAYONNAISE
' 59
LUCKY BUCK SPECIAL
10 OZ. FLAV-R PAC
FROZEN PEAS
BUY 6 -GET ONE FREE
AT REG. PRICE
MAYFLOWER
WE CARRY A COMPLETE
LINE OF DAIRY PRODUCTS
We Give
Gold Bond
Stamps
FREE DELIVERY
PHONES: 6-9922
and 6-9943
I
Pbona S-9S21
Heppner
Mot & Mais St