Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 01, 1964, Page 8, Image 8

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    1
College Sfudenls
Leave io Enroll
For Fall Term
n
Msny Jtmr.x pct-ie tn lhe
narr r rw crrviUM In cl-
letfe ti the fall term, with iff- K
ular (Um itk tuning In w l
of the uif UiUi.-n ruHis this
Week,
Mt of lt ear's graduates
ol Itepprter Huh who have start
ril rwllree wrtr named in a prey.
1hi kltaty. Miwr, howrrr, mi
Unit IHituquf, wru t rntvlled
a fr-hmn at Oregon tl
leee cf Kud (hn Monmouth.
IVset returning l.i CVK this
. !)Hf ar Cintt-r ami li.k Siting-
i V : Kesri ly fclak. and gvttin
t ' Vl i her tVgrr there in the spring
Li LA I 'a " SkUr' n Tuikrr.
I i iiirnng a irrmmjn ( me
DtCX ICHL of Lestngtoa, and l'meritv of (ivn, Kugene, is
former Hrppaer High loulball tJtnnv Uui Turnrr. Lrungton.
tar. la termed bf Cooch "ta1uAi of Si. faul t Kluvl in
Tommy frothr of Orvoon -Walla WalU. Others returntng
Slot 0BlrairT m n at the or entrting I nlrri!v f tregor
has ersr l' transfer, are Laura i
tr
I tor; iniih. u
1 a. a 1 t 1 111 A 4 i i 1 J ft. li I . J
fvir III!! IPi.kl v
a atiiiaii ii ana a
III Ptt 1 1 I I 1 I I 111 I
hi. M ;
i -.
fit
lc Sum-
bst llobockfi hs
coached.
Coach Says Ruhl
One of Two Best
OSU Linebackers
OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY.
Corvallls (Srxx-iah When Dk k
Ruhl arTtvixi on the Oregon Slate
campus three yean ago, he came
unnoticed and not to play loci
ball. Now In his third season as a
member of the Oregon State foul
ba' squad, the farmer Hepner
high school star Is one of the
team' co-raptain and a star!
linebacker on the Beavers, defen
sive platoon.
Ruhl's story U unusual In to
day's competitive college recruit
ing. He was not soueht after, al
though he played tn tho East. Merlin Hughes.
West Shrine game at Pendleton) At Eastern Oregon Collgee of
after his senior prep year at Hep. Education. La Grande, are Jac
pner. iqueltne Brlndle. Bruce Moycr,
An Oregon State assistant coach Larry Green and Kit George,
saw Ruhl play at Pendleton and . Shan Applegate has returned
iicvurRea mm io come to ' to Carroll College. Helena. Mont.:
school here. But the Beavers, Sharon Dixon to Asbury Col
along with other major colleges. lege. Wilmore. Ky and Shirley
ma noi consider mm wormy or at orison to tsngnam loung im-
net. Ann Jonea. Unda Van
Winkle. IWer tv.herty. Mike
Smith. Bill Co, and l-arry Tib-
itiea. i
i:-turnin la Oret;n State Col. 1
lege are Konnle t'reik. Ken
ljgcett. Llbby iVan Scholarkl f
Fenton. Don Oark. Carol Ander-!
son. Uu-k Ruhl and iVnnu Kerg- j.
un. 1 1
At Itftland State will he B-v- f
erlv lawtin. Judv iS4hmidtl N
l)rt!icll. Judv Hamilton. At IVrt- L
land University are Martha lv-'
hertv. Bill Xton.iKle. Louise
Pointer and Hank l"olnter. lon.
aid Van Winkle is enrolled at !
Portland Bulnes fniversitv. )
Also at Portland State is Jean 1
Collins. t
Returning to Pacific University J
in forest Grove are Shannon
Mahoney and John Cleveland,
Bob Kager 1 In his second year
I,
it i ii
M I ' 1
mmmmm mmmmm, - jinn- , n i
Prize Winning
Flower Entries
Viewed by Many
Beauty was Indeed the bus.
net 'f the lone Order riub at
a hi-Wy fucrcwrui f !wxr sew.
poniwircd tv the club an pre
nletl In the lone school cafe-
tor In m Sunday afternoon
5wcctake was mn l-y Mrs.
William Rawlins, with Mrs. Pled
Martin as runner up.
A delphinium grown y Mrs
Victor Rletmann was given the
special award fr the tet lion.
It U .I,IKI I. ....!
4 cf V horticulture ethibits was
coiiien Ave giatioius spike
grown by Bill Rawllnm.
tVt single exhibit In the de
sign clavMS was a -trktal ar
rangement made lv Mr Raw-
i llns from ted ehidloll and Curtis
Rice chnsanthemums before a
m rren, using a dmp cloth of j
,1 emerald green velvet.
Of special enjoyment to the
lar.'e crowd In attendance was
a flower arranging content In
which Mrs. Norman Nelson
placed first with a delgn of
red and pink dahlias with scotch j
broom. SHond went to Mrs.
arry Andrews of IV ho; third to
Irs. Tom Huston of llardman.
i L .11. M I H . li..
Gar Swanton, lone. Ktrst In the
.won by Jeanette I.ujan; Mcond
'by Barbara Palmer; third by
Theresa Turker. and honorable
mention to Darlene Warren.
Attracting much Interest and
comment was an unusually
large display In the junior div
ision. Kathy Crum won sweep
stakes for the older Juniors, with
Charlie Rawlins for the 4 to 7-year-olds.
Judged best of 48 en
tries In Junior arrangements
was an "outdoor scene" on a
Icookle sheet by Mickey Hosklns.
1 u
i r.
VU!tU diuUf tka r4
In I'smv an.l KrnnewUk
Mr .rnla llut.-n. ktim Matwi
(tiaffee and M. I hel JVIwanU
Ibey tUitetl In the homes 4
Mis lluion's daughter, Mr
llrnuan paisrr in Pawn, and
with Mr ihatfees t-olhrf and
taitulv. the Howard liouihs In
Krniiewltk.
Ot. 4 Hr. U 0. TllJUl
iiM-d la pMftlsnd. lUturday
I l.rtr fecit and daut.tr In law.
Mr and Mis. I TibMe.
tbrlr other .. Iiry, and Mua
Judy M-rvbuuea all of l ueene,
ti attend the U t4 O vs. Pitts
burg f4bll gan at Mult
ninah Maillum lr. and Mr.
liMdes tvlwi ird Imhm hunday.
This 4-H Operator Uses:
SAFETY RULES
DRIVING SKILLS
MECHANICAL KNOW-HOW
-... ,
KlsSn-aUs"'"1 Ins,i,U,' IRV1N MANN. JR, of Stanfleld- R.pubUcan candldota for atoi.1 Several deullful floral de-'
7 " ... . MoraBtatl tram Ih. 28th rfl.lrt-. on hand Moadmr lor liKn. about the rooms Were
Amon? those enrolled at Blue
Mountain college. Pendleton, are
Archie Ball Jr.. Julie Pfelffer.
LeRoy Gardner. Tom Pointer and
th. afflrlal Mwnins f RomiKllran hxvVrnrrrr. an Hmdbh'i made Dy rcaipn Manin Wno
Mala strst Mann is pictured ot the right Mrs, Mann and amV
Larry Lindsay (left), bis campaign manager, were also present
to participate. Toe big sign a dots u head quarters proclaims
the RepubUcana partisanship.
football scholarship,
After a year at Bobe lunior col-
lege, Ruhl came on his own to
Beavervllle. He moved In two
doors away from Bob McKlttrlck.
lAU assistant coach, who re
membered him from the Shrine
game and encouraged him to
come out for football.
Euhl did and In time had won
himself a scholarship and a
place in the Beaver grid plans.
As a sophomore on the 1962 Lib
erty Bowl team he played full-
back and averaged 45 yards on I
31 carries. Last year he was a I
center and linebacker and thlsj
vear ne is specializing as a line
backer. "He and Jack O'Billovich are
the - best pair of linebackers
we've had in my 10 years at Ore
gon State." Head Coach Tommy
Prothro says.
Buhl and his wife, Susan Joan,
have a two-year-old daughter,
Dana Marie. His parents, Laurel
and Faye Ruhl, live in Lexing
ton. The Beaver co-captain is
majoring In physical education
and will graduate this year.
The husky 6-1, 203-pounder is
considered a fine "bonus" by the
Beaver coaches. Three years ago
they didn't want him. Now they
feel they can't do without him.
vcrslty. Provo. Utah.
Bob Huffman is in graduate
Wren Harris has a graduate fel
lowship at Purdue University
GOP Headquarters Onlv 43 Donors
Officially Opens Contribute Blood
(Continued from page 1)
Mrs
ns.
Morrow county Republican
headquarters on Mam street In
lfnnn. ,.tt,r-l .11.. ttnn.
work at the University fo Ore- day with In in Mann, candidate h'-Mr- V,rn0" ""-.JV
eon TVntAl Srhnoi Pnriinnrt nnt lf. n..nt.tu.. tholAI Fetsch. Mrs. Arthur atki
r- - - . - - f i t ' ' i oiaiv i t 1 v 1 1 1 a 1 1 - ii uiij iii i ( , i .
ffith district, attending. 'arence oauman. hiij.hik
Mann was introduced at the """ul
HeDDner-Morrow County Cham- 'Thank you s" were also Is
ber of Commerce luncheon by I sued by the chairman as fol-
his county campaign chairman, lows
Larrv Lindsay. I Tn rr Tffni-rtr uhn mneunt
County Republican Chairman ed to helD when the reeular doc-
Don Turner announced that Mrs. tor who comes with the blood-
La Verne Van Marter. Jr.. will be mobile was unable to be here,
in charge or the o.u.P. neaa- t the women of the Metho
quarters, which will be open dlst church. Mrs. Kenneth Batty,
irom l to b p.m. eacn aay ex- Mrs. Howard Bnant and Mrs
cept Sundays from now until Barney Malcom who served re
November 4. freshments of sandwiches and
Assistance win be available doughnuts.
or an KepuDiican voters neea- To the boy, ,rom the hlgh
uaiuti""-""" io school. David Hanna. Mark Mur
Places or neip in voung aosen- ray Gxo Pierce and Larry
UDI1U19. i'UO. vail I'lai It IC- MlAalh urhn omm Ia h. n Itn naH
and load the truck.
lert-a mat me ueacuine is i .-. . ,. .
tober 3. Telephone number at ? in;."yY"La''"
uai iiry cai'i in iuv irvi uiuucrni
TO OBSERVE
NATIONAL 4-H
CLUB WEEK
from Portland to be on
hand for the show.
A special exhibit of 125 named
varieties of dahlias from Mr.
Rawlins' collection, attracted
visitors from Heppner, HermU-
ton. Echo and Stanfleld.
In table setting division, first
In breakfast settings was won
by St. Williams Altar Society;
urst in luncneon by lone ita:
and first in dinner settings by
Home Kc club of Willows
(ranee. Other winners ui-rn I
(Topic club. Beta Omega sorority.
Women fellowship and Rhea
treek Grange. In this section
the Heppner Flower Grower 4 II
club presented an exhibit of
"How to Make a Nosegay Table
Centerpiece.
Serving as judges were Mrs.
Kay Hisatoml and Miss Alma
Rohrman of Pendleton, and Mrs.
Ken Tcllcfson of Mllton Frec-1
water.
The I II Trader program kas Irslaed well er a mllli yeaiks
! drive safrly. handle the Mf marklaes ass keep tkem la wwk
lag ertler year areand. The krsjert Is Unaed aad serled y
the Cooperative intratUa hervlre. la this state and S9 etkers.
ednratlonal aids aad awards art provided y the Anerlraa Oil
Foundation.
With today's big Investments In farm equipment. It Is vital
that tractors are adequately maintained and put to maximum
use. points out 411 Club leaders. A breakdown could moan
financial loss on crops.
There Is always plealy to do la this project, even for Ike
beginner. The program Is divided Into fvar sections. The Irsl
year participation srqnalntt the member with Ike tractor and
safe rules for operation.
Second year members learn to operate the tractor and what
it takes to keep it going. Care of battery, iprk plugs, cooling
system and tires Is taught Operating coats, including fuel and
lubrication also are studied.
Improving Your Skills" is the title of the third unit. This
emphaiics highway safety, power takeoff, brakes, power trans
mission, winter rare and ownership costs.
The fourth year and advanced unit goes late detail oa
machinery care such as servicing and maintaining Ullage tools,
planters, harvesters and sprayers, fly the tlmt 4 H ers have com
pleted the fourth year, they nmally have assumed responsibility
for not only the farm tractors, hot ether machinery as welL
Over the years thousands of young 411 farmers have been
recognized In various ways for doing a superior Job. The pro
gram sponsor this year again will provide an eipensepald trip
to the National 411 Club Congress In Chicago for the state
winner. Coilega scholarships worth $-300 each will be awarded
to the top 12 members across the nation. They will be designated
by the Ki tension Service.
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY
the headquarters is 676-9454.
If
drivers
aim to (urb teen-age accidents
Guest for the past week at the
Avery Taylor home has been
Mrs. Taylor's father, Harry Wil
son, of Hopewell, New Jersey,
who left Tuesday for Sandpoint,
Ida., where he will visit his son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Wilson, former Hepp
ner residents.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie R. Babb
left Tuesday to spend the com
ing months at their winter home
in Apache Junction. Ariz. They
will spend a short time with
their niece and family. Mr. and
Mrs. W. C. Hagerty and daugh
ter, In Sandy. Utah, on their trip
south.
work.
I know the committee under
the guidance of Kenneth Cuts-
forth spent many hours tele
phoning possible donors" the
chairman said.
To Lyle Jensen for running the
loud sneaker to remind the
people on the street To Gordon
Pratt and teachers lor dis
missing the girla and boys from
the high school classes to help.
and for the loan of typewriters.
To the Bank of Eastern Ore
gon for sponsoring advertising
in the paper.
To the Elks for the use of the
building.
C TOTAL DRfVFJtS 85,600,000
(ALL ACES
raA mm ' tmoca ta.s)
TCTtt FATAL ACCIDOiTJ ' HOW
TUX-ACE TOTAL 7,400 (13.7) J)
(f TOTAL DRIVERS IN ACCIDENTS ... 20,000,000 '
ff TEEN-AGE TOTAL 2,900,000 4-5
Motor vehicle accidents are the leading cause of death among
persons under 25. Young drivers have the highest accident and
death rate of any other driver age group. These appalling
statistics are the concern of 4-H boys and girls enrolled in the
National 4-H Automotive program conducted by the Cooperative
Extension Service.
The Firestone Tire & Rubber
Company sponsors the program,
providing awards, educational
literature and other aids. Also
lending support are tae National
4-H Service Committee, the
Automotive Safety Foundation
and the National Safety Council.
Local club leaders working
with the young people urge
them to complete projects and
re-enroll to obtain the benefits
of the three-unit course. The
first two units are designed for
the pre-driver The program
attempts to develop acceptable
driving attitudes and to teacb
fundamentals of car mainte
nance. Firestone offers awards foi
county, state and national win
ners. A traveling trophy goes U
the county having the most out
standing automotive project ir
the state.
This year's state winner wll
attend the National 4-H Clul
Congress, and will be eligibl
for a $500 college scbolarshij
1
CALIFORNIA
TWO STYLESnOTI!
GliOW! Lengthen 2"!
One full size. 4" cuffs.
nrEVKON PLASTIC
SOLES! Breathe!
Take hard wear! Pro
tect feet
COTTON KNIT WITH
PENN SET Retains
shape after repeated
laundering, won't
shrink.
FINEST CONSTRUC
TION! Cut longer and
wider for extra -comfort.
Long wear!
ELASTK3ZED ANK
LES! No bind! Keep
sleeper feet from
slipping.
PRINTED TOPS
SOLID BOTTOMS! Do-
lightful variety of
colorful prints.
VISIT
DISNEYLAND
Attractive accommodations just
minutes from Dlsne y 1 a n d and
Knott's Berry Farm. All units have
free TV, air-conditioning and heat.
Spacious grounds with heated pool,
pJay and recreational area.
L
n pi fi
redl
3 p
my ma
raw
Excellent restaurants and shop
ping centers nearby.
Credit cards honored.
POLYNESIAN
Motel
641 S. Brookhurst
ANAHEIM. CAL.
FREE!
fom sBptrs
ucedlS sove I57 m,
Writ, for llltrolur and ntw TRAVEL GUIDE
lilting fin mottli horn coast to coott, lnqc
M and approvod bjr Congroa of Motor Hotoli.
Penney's know that mothers know best!
Over three generations of mothers know
Penney Toddletime sleepers have long
been the talk of the town! Penney's In
sists upon top quality specifications,
uses rigid laboratory tests for shrinkage,
washabllity, wearablllty, comfort and
fit! Even at regular prices they were
made to be a great buy now at this
special price the savings are super!
SIZES 1 TO 4 REG. 2.19
SAVE 1.17 ON 3 PAIRS
SIZES 3 TO 8. REG. 2.49 3 FOR $6
Before you spend more "COMPARE TODDTiTlME