Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 17, 1963, Page 4, Image 4

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    4 HEPPNER GAZETTE-TIMES. Thursday. October 17. 19G3
County School
Principals Meet;
Brubacher Talks
Morrow county school admin
istrators held their monthly
meeting Thursday afternoon, Oc
tober 10, in Riverside High school,
Boardman. Attending were Ron
Daniels, Riverside High school
principal; Leonard Herrick, lone
elementary school principal;
Michael tolar, Irrigon elemen
tary school principal; Gordon
Pratt, Heppner High school prin
cipal; Hillard Brown, Heppner
elementary school principal;
Gene Harryman, lone High
school principal; and Wayne
Brubacher, Morrow county
school district superintendent.
Business session was held In
the Riverside High school build
ing from 3 until 5 p.m. After
the session, Principal Daniels
was host for a dinner for his
colleagues at the Hitehin' Post
Restaurant in Boardman.
Supt. Brubacher was a guest
at the October meeting of the
Riverside High school Mothers
club prior to the administrators'
meeting. He spoke briefly in ie
gard to preparing now for the
ever rising costs of sending stu
dents to college, and the need
for better educated students at
the end of their high school
careers since the entrance re
quirements academically are al
so rising steadily.
Brubacher complimented the
patrons of Morrow county on
their Interest in having good
schools.
"It is a sacrifice to obtain ex
cellent opportunities for your
children, and although it is diffi
cult to see immediate good re
sults, the struggle in the long
run will bear fruit."
The superintendent emphasiz
ed the importance of parents
helping their charges develop
good study and work habits at
an early age.
"It is too lato to study only
during one's senior year in high
school and expect to be equipped
with a background of knowledge
and sound study habits to meet
the stiff competition of other
eager and ambitious college stu
dents." "The ever-increasing tide de
siring college entrance is crowd
ing the inadequate building fa
cilities to the extent that a
smaller and smaller percentage
is able to get in . . . especially
to the preferred institutions."
Principals Attend
Elementary Meeting
Hillard Brown, Heppner Ele
mentary school principal, and
Leonard Herrick, lone Elemen
tary school principal, attended
the annual fall conference of
the Oregon Elementary School
Principals association in Eugene
Mondav and Tuesday.
Among addresses given were
those bv Dr. William Lucio, pro
fessor of education, University
of California; A. B. Cummings,
principal, Estabrook School, Lex
ington, Mass.; Dr. H. Harrison
Clarke, professor of physical ed
ucation, University of Oregon;
Isadore Pivnick, director, school
community improvement pro
gram, San Francisco; Dr. Arthur
S. Flemming, president, Univer
sity of Oregon.
Business sessions and a panel
discussion on "Leadership of the
Elementary Principal in Effec
ting Change" were also on the
program.
Among resolutions passed was
one urging the State Department
of Education to sponsor a sales
tax initiative for the State of
Oregon with a property tax offset
feature. It was recommended
that details of the sales tax and
its allocation and property tax
offset features be determined "by
the best thinking of selected ed
ucational, business, and profes
sional leaders of the state."
Founder's Program
Observes Soroptimist
42nd Federated Year
A program in keeping with
commemoration of Founde r ' s
Day of the Soroptimist American
Federation was presented by
Mrs. William J. Thomas at the
luncheon meeting of the Hepp
ner club last Thursday noon.
Mrs. Thomas, a charter member
of the local club, reviewed the
history of the founding of the
organization, now world-wide in
scope, and in its 42nd year.
"The association was born on
the west coast," recalled the
speaker, "when the first club
was organized in Alameda,
county, Calif., on September 21,
1921, with Stuart Morrow as the
organizer. We are the youngest
of the large service clubs, but
with greater membership than
any other. Expanding to the east
and then to Europe, a club was
organized in London in 19241,
and one was soon formed in
Paris through the leadership of
Madam Suzanne Noel. It became
an international organization in
Washington, D. C, in 1928."
Each club is urged to keep
in touch with a sister club in
Europe, Mrs. Thomas remarked,
and support of the Foundation
Endowment fund is primary in
this year's program. Youth schol
arships for advanced education
and research hold priority in
local, national and international
programs.
During the business session
final plans were made for the
card party held at the Episcopal
parish hall Monday evening.
Mrs. Jim Thomson announced
the invitational visit of Supt.
and Mrs. Wayne Brubacher at
the meeting today (Thursday).
Two senior girls are invited each
month to be luncheon guests
of the club.
Grain Growers
Name Nominees
Three men have been nom
inated by a committee as can
didates for reelection to the
board of directors of Morrow
County Grain Growers, Al Lamb,
manager, announces.
They are Walter Jacobs of
lone, E. H. (Tad) Miller Jr. of
Lexington and Elmer Palmer of
Heppner. Terms of office would
be three years each. If they are
elected, this will be the second
term for each of the three.
Charles Dolierty, Al Fetsch,
Archie Bechdolt, Gene Maleski,
Stanley Kemp, Robert Jones,
Raymond Lundell, Leo Ashbeck
and Larry Lindsay have been
nominated for one year terms as
associate directors. Associate di
rectors are usually re-electod
once, then new candidates are
named to build up a large num
ber of experienced men as can
didates for full directors as open
ings arise later, Lamb said. The
advice of former directors and
associates has also proved val
uable to the local association in
past years, he pointed out.
Election will be at the annual
meeting of the Grain Growers
to be in the county fair pavilion,
Heppner, in the evening of No
vember 18. At the dinner the
grand champion 4-H steer will
be served to members and
guests.
Mrs. Myrtle Duron
Dies in Clarkston
Mrs. Reason (Myrtle) Duran,
cousin of Mrs. R. G. McMurtTy,
died in Clarkston, Wn October
8 and funeral services were Fri
day, October 11, with burial at
Medical Lake, Wn.
Mrs. Ruran formerly lived near
Heppner in Blackhorse canyon
in earlier years. She had been
residing during her elderly years
in a nursing home in Clarkston
and had been in poor health.
Students Attend
Workshop Meet
For HS Officers
Five Heppner High student
body officers attended a student
council workshop at Pendleton
high school, Monday and Tues
day, October 14 and 15. The
meet was for the high school
officers and Region I schools.
There are 38 schools in the region
and 29 of them were represented.
Region I encompasses Morrow,
Umatilla, Union, Baker, Wal
lowa and Grant counties.
Students attended var i o u s
meetings at the conference wheie
they discussed problems which
confront student organizations
and high school officers. Such
things as building better student-community
relations and
how to make students feel at
home in high school were dis
cussed. The bulk of the day Mon
day was spent in these meetings.
Monday night the students were
treated to a banquet and dance
at the high school cafeteria.
Tuesday, student leaders heard
Wallace McCrae, president of
Blue Mountain College, speak on
"Destination Graduation?" After
McCrae's talk, the students ad
journed to various group meet
ing to make summaries of the
preceding day's events. Follow
ing these meetings, a business
meeting was held and a sum
mary of the conference was pre
sented. The conference was then
adjourned.
those students from Heppner
who attended the meet were:
Bill Sherman, student body pres
ident; Steve Peck, vice president;
Gail Hoskins, secretary; Jennifer
Brindle, treasurer; and Stuart
Dick, sergeant-at-arms.
The workshop was sponsored
bv the secondary school prin
cipal's association of Oregon.
Gordon Pratt, Heppner High
principal, is one of the directors
for Region I and accompanied
the students to the conference.
There are eight of these regions
in the state.
A spring meeting of the same
type is tentatively scheduled for
May 4 in Baker.
Three Burglars
Get Sentences
Of 1 Years Each
Three California men, convic
ted in two trials in Morrow coun
ty circuit court this week of
burglarizing a watermelon stand
near Boardman, were sentenced
to two years each in the state
penitentiary by Judge William
Wells who presided at the trial.
Andy Mack of Firebaugh,
Calif., was found guilty Mon
day by a jury which deliberated
about 30 minutes. Robert Abrams
was his defense counsel and
District Attorney Herman Winter
prosecuted the case.
Two others, Paskel Junior Ma
son, Firebaugh, Calif., and Glen
Lavell Eastridge, Compton, Calif.,
were found guilty Wednesday
after the jury had deliberated
about 35 minutes. John Kott
kamp of Pendleton was their
defense counsel and District At
torney Winter was prosecutor.
These two cases were tried con
currently. Charge against each of the
defendants was burglary not in
a dwelling resulting from the
entry of Locust Grove Melon
stand, Boardman, on the night
of August 1. Mary A. Nelson
filed complaint and the three
were arrested by state police.
They were indicted by the
Morrow county grand jury and
were held in jail since their
arrest in lieu of posting bail.
The trials were set after they
entered pleas of innocent.
Mason and Eastridge based
their defense on a story that they
had picked up a hitch hiker who
had burglarized the stand.
It was necessary for Sheriff
C. J. D. Bauman to call 10 per
sons from the street for jury
duty Wednesday after the reg
ular panel was exhausted. Sev
eral were challenged by Attorn
ey Kottkamp because they had
served on the jury Monday. Of
the 10 called, however, only one
served.
Sheriff Bauman was scheduled
to take the prisoners to the
penitentiary in Salem Thursday.
IRRIGON NEWS
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Trimble
and Pattl and Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Haskins, all of Hereford, were
overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Ben McCoy Tuesday evening.
Wednesday, the group went
shopping in Pasco.
Ben McCoy left Sunday morn
ing for Tooele Army Depot near
Salt Lake City, Utah, where lie
will spend a week inspecting
different phases of work there.
Mrs. Bessie Dunn of Pasco
spent a week here with her son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. LaVern Christiansen and
family, after spending six
months in Kingston, Jamaica
with her son, Kelsey Dunn.
E. A. Stephens and sons, Clark
Stephens of Umatilla and Joe
Stephens of Portland, spent
three days hunting near Wal
lowa. They reported seeing sev
eral deer, but didn't get close
enough for a shot.
Every forest fire costs you
money. Your tax dollars are used
to pay for the men and equip
ment needed to fight forest fires.
This is only the beginning i
the cost to you through use of
your tax dollars. Loss of timber,
jobs, watersheds and recreational
lands continue to take your tax
dollars for years to come.
JUSTICE COURT
September 27 Burton R. Kel
sal, Corvallis, no vehicle license,
forfeited $5 bail.
October 6 Kenneth L. Zorza,
Hood River, failure to tag deer.
Fined $25 and costs.
October 7 David H. Jackson,
Portland, hunting without a non
resident license. Case continued.
October 7 Alvin Ray Yates,
Hermiston, driving while license
suspended. Case continued.
October 7 Franklin Glen
Adams, Pilot Rock, borrowing
deer tag. Fined $25 and costs.
October 8 Kenneth Turner,
Heppner, no vehicle license,
fined $25, $10 suspended.
October 9 Kent Richardson,
Heppner, pleaded guilty on a
charge of drawing bank checks
with insufficient funds. Fined
$50, placed on one-year pro
bation, ordered to make full res
titution of checks written.
October 10 James E. Wilson,
The Dalles, depositing trash or
debris within 100 yards of a
stream. Writ of arrest issued
October 10.
October 14 Walter H. Baldock,
Portland, permitting unlicensed
person to drive, forfeited $15
bail.
October 15 Charles T. Claflin,
Oswego, borrowing deer tag,
fined $25 and costs.
October 15 Thomas G. Bun
ten, Hermiston, shooting from
public highway, fined $25 and
costs.
October 16 Lee J. Stone,
Heppner, no operator's license,
sentenced to four days in the
county jail.
Hermiston Bills
Art Teachers'
Regional Workshop
The Oregon Art Education as
sociation has scheduled a reg
ional art workshop for elemen
tary and secondary teachers at
the Hermiston Junior High
school on Saturday, October 19,
from 8:30 a.m. to 3:35 D.m.
Saturday morning from 8:30
to 9:30 will be devoted to the
viewing of exhibits, registration,
and a coffee hour. Registration
charge is one dollar. A no-host
luncheon will be served at the
West Park school at noon for
a nominal charge.
The workshop will Include
paper sculpture, puppet making,
crafts, bulletin boards, and
working with clay.
Art Instructors will present the
demonstrations. Each teacher
will have an opportunity to par
ticipate in two sessions. Partic
ipants in the paper sculpture
session are encouraged to bring
a sturdy sharp-pointed scissors.
Mrs. Betty Champton of Herm
iston, vice-president of the Ore
gon Art association, announces
that Dr. Margaret R McDevitt
will present paper sculpture
which will include ideas for
Christmas. She is supervisor of
art in Salem schools and form
erly lived in Morrow and Uma
tilla counties.
Mrs. Ann Berry from Mil
waukee schools wiil demonstrate
puppet making. Mr. Arthur Mey
ers of the Portland schools will
demonstrate bulletin boards. Mrs.
Mary Jo Albright, Corvallis
schools, will demonstrate crafts
from waste materials. Mrs. Betty
Feves, Pendleton artist, will
show how to work with clay.
Teachers from Eastern Oregon
and Eastern Washington coun
ties are invited and encouraged
to attend the sessions. Any in
terested person may attend
states Mrs. Crampton.
Keene Hospitalized
Arthur Keene, rancher in the
lower Rhea Creek area, was hos
pitalized October 7 in Pendle
ton to undergo a series of X-rays
and tests. He had surgery Oc
tober 14, and his wife reports
he is progressing well. He is in
the Pendleton Community hos
pital and expects to be home
soon.
Don't Miss
The Bus !
Don't let lack of ready cash cause you to
"miss the bus" on some of the best oppor
tunities that may come your way! Oppor
tunities to make an exceptional "buy" . . .
opportunities for profitable investment. The
only way to have the cash you'll need
when you need it is to start saving NOW!
OPEN AN ACCOUNT TODAY!
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION
BOX 739 PENDLETON
KRESKY Wood and
Oil Heaters
BUCCANEER DELUXE FORCED AIR
WOOD HEATER
With Automatic Heat Controlled By Thermostat
and Forced Air Circulating Blower
KRESKY NATURAL DRAFT
Circulating Oil Heater
(Available with electric ignition and forced air blower)
Slash Your Fuel Bill By Use
of Kresky Jet-Type Burners
CASE FURNITURE CO.
HEPPNER
We Accept Tradeins
CONGRATULATIONS
t5$ ' 0$fs H"$ l I
To ART
DYCK
AND
Bowl
iesta
AND OUR SINCERE THANKS TO THE PEOPLE OF MORROW
COUNTY. PARTICULARLY TO THE FOLLOWING LIST OF SUB-
SCRIBERS WHO HELPED
TO MAKE POSSIBLE
OPENING:
THIS WEEK'S
RANDALL PETERSON
JERRY DAGGETT
P. W. MAHONEY
AL LAMB
WAYNE LAMB
JOHN HANNA
CARL SPAULDING
DAVE BARNETT
WAYNE BALL
CLARENCE ROSEWALL
PAUL HEINRICHS
DALLAS REA
RON LEONNIG JR.
FRED OTT
CLAUDE BUSCHKE
WES SHERMAN
WILBUR WORDEN
GENE COURTNEY
NATE McBRIDE
EDDIE GROSHENS
TOM HUGHES
DR. L. D. TIBBLES
KENNETH CUTSFORTH
RAY AYERS
EARL AYRES
CLINT AGEE
FRANK ANDERSON
JIM BLOODSWORTH
C J. D. BAUMAN
FORREST BURKENBINE
CHUCK BAILEY
W. A. BLAKE
JOHN BRANDENBURG
MRS. MAX BUSCHKE
HOWARD BRYANT
DON BENNETT
PAUL BROWN
E. H. SCHUNK
REV. RAYMOND BEARD
ELTWYN HALE
JOE HAY
RANDY LOTT
HAROLD LAIRD
GILBERT LUJAN
BILL SOWELL
CONLEY LANHAM
PETE McMURTRY
ROD MURRAY
JIM MYERS
WES MARLATT
TIM MOORE
ED SCHAFFITZ
TED SMITH
TERRY THOMPSON
ELMA'S APPAREL
JACK VAN WINKLE
DR. WALLACE WOLFF
HARLEY YOUNG
JIM MILLER
KEN TURNER
MAX BARCLAY
PAT CUTSFORTH
FRITZ CUTSFORTH
ORVILLE CUTSFORTH
ROGER CAMPBELL
BOB CAMPBELL
LYLE COX
MARY DOHERTY
JERRY GREEN
DEAN HUNT
FATHER C. BRUCE SPENCER
L. B. LEDBETTER
JOHN L. LEDBETTER
BOB LOVGREN
ARCHIE MUNKERS
VERNON MUNKERS
E. E. PECK
IRVIN RAUCH
GENE ORWICK
DON TURNER
ELDON PADBERG
DON GREENUP
JIM BARNETT
RAY BOYCE
E. MARKHAM BAKER
CHARLIE O'CONNOR
PETE CANNON
HOWARD CROW
LOUIS CARLSON
BOB DeSPAIN
HERB EKSTROM
CATHERINE EMERT
DON EUBANKS
LEWIS HALVORSEN
JOE HAUSLER
ARNIE HEDMAN
BOB JEPSEN
WALT JACOBS
ART LINDSTROM. JR.
LLOYD MORGAN
MELVIN MELENA
POWELL PETTYJOHN
TED PALMATEER
JOHN PROUDFOOT
DARRELL PADBERG
KEITH REA
JERRY DOUGHERTY
DON EVANS
GAR SWANSON
GEORGE SCHNEIDER
HAROLD SCHNEIDER
HARRY O'DONNELL
LOWELL GRIBBLE
ED GONTY
HOMER HUGHES
ALLEN HUGHES
MARIE HULLETT
MERLIN HUGHES
JIM HEALY
BERT HUFF
GENE HALL
LOY HARSON
BOB JONES
LYLE JENSEN
ROSELLA LINDSAY
BILL MARQUARDT
CARL MARQUARDT
MORROW COUNTY CREAMERY
RILEY MUNKERS
ARNOLD MELBY
HARLAN McCURDY
DR. C. M. WAGNER
VIRGINIA OSMIN
BUD PECK
ELMER PALMER
HERMAN GREEN
CHUCK STARKS
BILL SMITH
CALVIN SHERMAN
TURNER, VAN MARTER and BRYANT
PAT KILKENNY
GERALD SWAGGART
GARRY TULLIS
VERN VIALL
JIM VALENTINE
DICK WILKINSON
MIKE WHITESMITH
HERMAN WINTER
CHARLES WALKER
ART WATKINS
HUBERT WILSON
DAVID McLEOD
DAVID BAKER
HERB PETERSON
JERRY SCHUBERT
ED WILSON
BILL SCOTT
JIM LINDSAY
EDDIE GUNDERSON
FLOYD JONES
JODIE MORRISON
FRANK HAMLIN
MAURICE BROWN
DON BELLENBROCK
EDDIE BROSNAN
PAUL BROWN
BILL BARRATT
SHIRLEY COX
BILL COLLINS
KAY CORBIN
WINN CRIST
BERT CORBIN
HOWARD CLEVELAND
GEORGE CURRIN
HELEN COX
PAUL DOHERTY
JIM DRISCOLL
ED DICK
FRANCES DOHERTY
ROBERTA DOUGHERTY
HARRIET EVANS
HAROLD EVANS
FULLETON CHEVROLET
FARLEY MOTORS
LeROY GARDNER
DEAN GILMAN
ERNIE McCABE
CLINT McQUARBIE
RON LEONNIG
BARNEY MALCOM
FRED NELSON
NORMAN NELSON
DR. JIM NORENE
MARLYS PHEGLEY
OSCAR PETERSON
HOWARD PETTYJOHN
RAYMOND PETTYJOHN
GENE PIERCE
JIM PROCK
JACK PLOYHAR
JoANN ROBINSON
BUCK RUHL FAMILY
C. A. RUGGLES
HELEN RUGGLES
BETTY ROOD
KENNETH SMOUSE
FRANK TURNER
HARLEY SAGER
WAYNE PROCK
BOB KILKENNY
Earl Joy, Hank Higgins
And Bob Henderson