Thursday. March 1. 1963
rovMn
lZETTE-TIMES
HEPPNER. OREGON
Marcia Rands Enters
Finals in UN Contest
Marcia Rands, Heppner High
school junior, will represent the
school in the final speak-off in
the United Nations Pilgrimage
for Youth speech contest, on Sun
day, March 10, at the Pendleton
IOOF hall. The public is invited
to hear the finalists give their
original essays at 2 p.m.
Contestants represent most of
the public high schools in Mor
row and Umatilla counties. The
winner will be given a month
long, expense-free, educational
bus tour this summer to the
United Nations. This pilgrimage
is sponsored each year by all
lodges of the Odd Fellow fra
ternity. District chairman for
Morrow and Umatilla counties
Is Mrs. M. N. Kirk of Hermlston.
Miss Rands is the daughter oi
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Groves,
Heppner.
Holly Lodge to Serve
Smorgasbord Dinner
Holly Rebekah Lodge, Lexing
ton, will serve a Smorgasbord
dinner in the IOOF hall Satur
day, March 16, between the hours
of 5:30 and 8 p.m.
The ladles are not only going
to extra effort to have tempting
and unusual dishes to offer at
the smorgasbord table, but for
those who find something that
is unusually tasty, the recipe
for the dish may also be bought
at the dinner for 25c.
Dinner tickets will be sold for
$1 to adults and 50c to children.
Mrs. A A Dunlap, Grass Valley.
visited Monday through Wednes
day with her daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Art Wat
kins. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Munkers
accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Riley
Munkers and family to Echo
Sunday to visit at the Glenn
Sherer home Mr. Sherer is re
cuperating from recent throat
surgery.
BOWLING BITS
By JO PETTYJOHN
SOME VERY interesting things (taking all four games. The hero
up-noiaer ior me co-op guys
was Vern Munkers who ended
are happening in the mens
and women's bowling leagues
this past week, and with six
weeks of play left, things are
a long way from being settled!
How one team can be way up
and really bowling up a storm
and the next week hit a slump
well, ask the Turner, Van Mart
er and Bryant gals.
Then take the Lexington Oil
Co-op guys. They forgot the
whole idea of the game until
the last two weeks when they
have jumped from seventn to
fourth and now to second spot!
Guess they wanted to give others
a chance!
The Padberg gals started slow
this half and since then have
been "bowlin' " everyone over
while MCGG started off with a
bang then decided they liked
sixth spot so well the first half
that they would try for it this
half! !
0 0 0
LAST WEDNESDAY Padb e r g
Machinery took three out of four
from first place Eagle Valley to
move Padberg from fifth place
to a tie with Sheets for second
with a 19-13 record. Burns ended
up with a tie for first with Eagle
VaIIpv after thev swept past
Turner all four games. Turner
is in fifth with a 17-15 record
and MCGG is still In sixth with
o 1R.1R record disDite a 4-game
win over Echo Meat Market last
week. This week the gals will
be bowling in the Echo city
tournament and resume league
play Wednesday with lots of fun
nd competition ieu:
vBta Kilkenny (Turner) had
hinrVt carina and' hieh eame for
them with a 464 and 176. She
was really trying lor mat iree
case of Coke and missed by
one pin, needed a 177. Jinxed
maybo? Helping Padberg's cause
was Iris Campbell with her 474
series and Joyce Espy with high
game ot lob. or we iviwj
tofm T.nis Hunt had high series
and game of 422 and 172.
o o o
THE LEXINGTON Ull v.u-up
tnarr, rnmo un with a clean
sweep over the Heppner Elks,
ud with a 598 series of 222, 169
and 207. You might say he
"carried" the fellows! Art Wat
kins (Elks) had high series for
them of 509 and he tied Vern
Viall for high game of 188. Bi-
County won one and lost three
to Bricks Supply to hold onto
the cellar spot. Bob Kilkenny
had high series for them of
503 and the high game of 223.
In one of the games the "splits"
sort of hit the team as Bob
ended up with a 123 and Wes
Marlatt squeaked out with a 99.
Who was it said those splits
were next to a strike? ?
WE HAVE THE FOLLOWING SIZES
LEFT IN LADIES AND GIRLS' SHOES
IN OUR
2-FOR-l SALE
I
CM
No.
Size Pairs
4'2-5 26
5Vi 20 FV)
6 Narrow 46 I
6 Medium 30
6 12 Narrow 53 aa
6V2 Medium 27 wm
7 Narrow 41
7 Medium 14 1
7V2 Narrow 20
Vi Medium 14 ()
8 Narrow 30 Jgjj
8 Medium 25 ps
8V2 Narrow 22
8V2 Medium 22
9 Narrow 26 x&w
9 Medium 20
9Vi 9
10 11
ALSO
CHILDREN'S
STRAP OXFORDS
90
Pairs
CHILDREN'S
COWBOY BOOTS 19 Pai's
Boy's, Men's Oxfords 59 pairs
Boy's, Men's Boots 37 pairs
ONTY'S
Heppner Ponies
End Good Year,
15, Lose 5
Junior high basketball closed
out action here Saturday after
noon with a double win over
Condon. This concluded a very
successful season for the teams,
with the eighth graders having
a 7-3 record and the seventh
grade team ending 8-2.
The two teams played round
robin schedules with Pilot Rock,
A. C. Houghton, stanfield, Con
don, and lone. The eighth
grade's losses were to A. C.
Houghton, Condon, and lone. The
seventh graders lost to A. C.
Houghton and Stanfield.
Scoring was fairly close be
tween the Heppner teams and
their opponents with the eighth
graders having 306 as compared
with 249 for the opponents. The
seventh grade team had 222 to
211.
Individual total scoring had
Jim Doherty, eighth grade first,
with 90; Roger Leonnig, 68; Steve
Wagenblast, 50; Mac Hoskins,
33; Jeff Turner, 28; Rick John
ston, 28; John Cox, 3; Nalbro
Cox, 2; Bob Harris, 2. For the
seventh graders, David Hall was
high scorer with 101; Steve Pet
tyjohn, 37; Kit Anderson, 27;
Russell Kilkenny, 18; Bill Mc-
Leod, 12; Bob Dobbs, 11; Gary
Ball, 6; Earl Ayres, 4; Tim Loyd,
2. Others on the team were John
Van Winkle, Ivan Adlard, and
Mike Lane.
The boys will have two weeks
rest before going into baseball
and track after spring vacation.
The track will be expanded this
year with Don Cole handling the
coaching duties. Tom Hughes
will coach baseball with six
weeks of action slated.
In the Condon game Saturday
the Heppner eighth grade took
oft in high gear to lead after the
first period of play, 18-9, and at
half time 26-16. The third period
saw the scoring a little closer,
with Heppner canning 18 points
to Condon's 12. Coach Clint Agee
sent in his reserves in the fourth
and they made two points to six
for Condon. Final score was 46
34. The Condon team had pre
viously handed them their sec
ond loss of the season. Jim Do
herty led the scoring with 18
followed by Wagenblas t , 8 ;
Leonnig, 7; Hoskins, 5; Turner,
4; Johnston and John Cox each
ft' tl ':.;
ft f L4j v, '
III' T - vss V i
" V k s
LOYAL HUDSON of Redmond,
a victim of cerebral palsy, has
been named Oregon's 1963 Eas
ter Seal child for the Oregon
Society for Crippled Children
and Adults. Seals will be sold
March 7 through Easter Sunday
throughout the state.
Wayne Harsin Takes
OSU Short Course
Wavne Harsin of Heppner
completed a special three-day
sewage works operator short
school recently at Oregon
State University's School of Engineering.
IMlnety-tour sewage treatment
plant operators and city offic-
trial wastes. ,
The training program is held
annually at OSU as a service
to cities, sanitary districts, and
private utility companies. Spon
sors with the university are the
League of Oregon Cities, Oregon
State Board of Health and the
State Sanitary Authority.
Purposes of the school are to
promote efficient and economical
operation of costly sewage works
systems and to reduce hazards
to public health incident to the
disposal of sewage and indus
ials from across Oregon attend
ed the course this vear.
with two points. Also seeing
action were Bob Harris and Nal
bro Cox.
In the first game of the after
noon the seventn grade team
squeaked out a 27-26 win over
the Condon team. Condon led 6-5
at the end of the first and Hepp
ner caught fire in the second
to score 12 points to Condon's 4.
Condon came back in the second
half to pick up 7 points while
Heppner managed only 4 on 4
fret throws. Heppner staved off
the Condon rally in the fourtn
quarter as Condon continued to
outscore them 9-6 with coach
Tom Hughes using his reserves.
Steve Pettyjohn and Bill Mc
Ltod were high scorers for the
seventh graders with 7 each;
David Hall, 6; Russell Kilkenny.
4; Kit Anderson, 2; and Eail
Ayres 1. Others playing wen?
John Van Winkle, Tim Loyd,
Ivan Adlard, Bob Dobbs, Bill
Stockard.
CARPET
Dry Cleaning
-NOT A SHAMPOO-
NO COLOR CHANGE
NO SHRINKAGE
REVIVES COLOR
RAISES NAP
NO ODORS
NO MUSS
NO FUSS
LOW COST
TWO PLANS AVAILABLE
DO IT YOURSELF-
By renting our equipment and dry clean
your carpeting with the new HOST pro
cess. OR
we Will do the complete job
FOR YOU IN YOUR HOME
Free Estimates on Either Plan
Phone
676-9441
For Free Estimate
HEPPNER
CLEANERS
Thomsons Are Parents
Of Second Daughter
A second daughter, Deina
Leah, was born February 22 to
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Thompson
in a Portland hospital, weighing
6 lbs., 8V2 oz. She joins another
daughter, Kelly Lynn, nearly
three years old. Mrs. Thompson
is the former Mona Howard, a
graduate here with the class of
1957.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Howard, Hepp
ner, and paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Warren Thomp
son, Sr., Portland.
Mrs. Phil Mahoney and Mrs.
Lowell Gribble were in The
Dalles Monday on business and
had lunch with Mary Van, form
er Heppnerite.
Program Headed
By Redmond Boy
Loyal Hudson, a 12-year-old
victim of cerebral palsy from
Redmond, Ore., has been nam
ed the 1963 Easter Seal child
for the Oregon Society for Crip
pled Children and Adults.
The smiling youngster, son
of Mrs. Penny Lister, is well
aware of what the public's
purchase of Easter Seals each
year does for the state's phy
sically handicapped yo u n g
sters. He has attended Camp
Easter Seal, the society's sum
mer camp for physically handi
capped youngsters, the past
three summers.
The camp is located on Ten
Mile lake, near Reedsport, Ore.
The society's annual Easter
Seal sale will get under way
Thursday (March 7) and con
tinue through Easter Sunday.
Peg Bracken, Portland author,
is state chairman.
In addition to Camp Easter
Seal, the society operates the
Children's Hospital school in
Eugene, where children from
over 20 counties receive special
education and therapy; two
mobile therapy clinics which
t;tke physical therapy to areas
of the state where therapy is
not available, and an equip
ment pool, which suppl i e s
special equipment to the needy
handicapped.
Miss Bracken estimated that
400,000 Oregonians will receive
Easter Seals in the mail and
she appealed to them to "give
as generously as you can, re
membering that every Easter
Seal you buy helps a crippled
child."
Mr. and Mrs Alva Bradley and
family, of Dundee were week
end visitors at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. David Eckman. Mrs.
Bradley and Mrs. Eckman are
sisters.
Mrs. Ben Anderson and Mrs.
Clive Huston returned last Thurs
day from a week's visit in Port
land and Albany. When in Al
bany they visited Mrs. E. R.
Huston, now 91 years of age,
but active and in good health.
Mrs. Max Buschke and Mrs.
Carey Hastings accompanied Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Connor to Port
land Saturday to attend a buy
er's market on Sunday. The Con
nors visited their sons and their
families in Forest Grove, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Connor and Mr. and
Mrs. Wendell Connor. Mrs. Hast
ings and Mrs. Buschke were also
guests at the Roger Connor home.
ANNOUNCING
NEW HOURS
FOR OPERATORS
Verle Green
Dotty Edwards-
MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS,
SATURDAYS
TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS,
FRIDAYS
AMMMA MONDAY THROUGH
Jeanne Saturday
Call For An Appointment Now
JEANNE'S SHOP
Heppner
Ph. 676-9480
NOW SEE WHATS NEW AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER'S
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features as 4-speed stick or Powerglide Monza Spyder and the all-new Corvette
transmission, Positraction, tachometer, high Sting Rays. Just decide how sporty you
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want your spice plus the luxuries of a full- power up to 425 hp in the Chevrolet SS,
Bized family car, try the Chevrolet Impala including the popular Turbo-Fire 409 with
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Pictured from top to bottom: Corvette Sting Ray Convertible, Corrair Monza Spyder Convertible, Chevy II
Nota i00 SS Coup, Chevrolet Impala SS Coupe. Super Sport and Spyder equipment optional at extra eott.)
See four entirely different kinds of cars at your Chevrolet dealer's Shomoom
Fulleton Chevrolet Company
Heppner, Oregon
4: