i HCrrNEI CAIETTETIMtS. ThuttdaT. rt T. I Raymond Promoted At Gazette-limes; Operator Added ArnoM Raymond. Ilnotytw op erator al th : Tlmi for cen year and foreman !ir the pat three ean, ha been promoted to the iouton ( dvrttinlng nianasi'nr beutnnttig January 1. Mr. ami Mr.. We Sherman, publishers. nnoum. ili will alo handle wmmwwl printing. Coming lrim Chewelah, n.. to take the position of linotjpe operator 1 larl Abrahams, who al started a of the firt of the year. A former Corporal tit the Marine. Abrahamon a' service In the Korean war He cat nod experience as a linotype operator, after attending a trade utiool. at MetaWne Fall. Ntu on a Piedmont. Caltf.. newspaper, and tn other location. His wife. Joan. I a local sec retary at Chew-elan and I graduate of Holy Name college. Siokane. The Atrahamons have four children. Stephen. II. Char lene. 6. Tort. 4. and Raymond 2. The family will remain at Chew elah until the closo of school this ear after which they plan to move to Ileppner. At present time. AbrahamMn 1 staying at the Ueppner Hotel. Thev are members of the Cath olic church, and he U a member of the American Lesion. Rav E. Smith, a veteran in the printing and newspaper busin ess. Is head printer in the plant. He returned to the Gazette-Times in Julv after previously working with former publisher. Bob I en land, for a number of years. The chances are expected to rive the newspaper and printing plant a better balanced ora tion with resulting better service to the public and printing cus tomers. Raymond's assistance as advertising manager is expeetel to relieve the owners of some responsibilities so that they may devote more time to the editor ial and business aspects of tne business. , ' Raymond will be available to advertisers for assistance tn set tine up advertising programs, helping with planning and mak ing layouts. Any firm or Individ ual desiring such help V call the Gazette-Times at The staff change w ill mean more attention will be given to early news and advertising copy and cooperation of the public w ill be appreciated. Potter Installs Chamber Officers r..t.i TV.ti.-r tunerliitendent cf Morrvtw county hoil. tnil- led new officer or me neprnrr. M. iu Cour.tv iluH.U-r .i i'M meree at the regular meeting Monday. . . Kandati !Ytcron Uk the cav el president, and Al Lamb w.i retired from the pM after a war 'a wrvlce He. reevKed commendation from Potter and a round of appl.uise from the niomU-r llarlev Young wa tn Mailed find vice president. Her man Winter second vice -president, and Jack Locke treasurer. Jerrv Sueenev. who was un able to b present, will Usxine secretary, succeeding Wcs Mier h, tutu served 3' years. The rctiung secretary aloj commended fr hi wvik and) was appl.iu.i.M nv me k""1' Potter In a talk prior to the nl Mallatlon tol I of l! e background of the V S. Chamber of Commer . .... ..Ki.k-iiv and aocomPlsh- menu, and discussed the work and importance of the local or ganization. Lions to Present Player Awards j Two who participated in the' Llon-Jaycoos-Chamhor of Com h ikithall eames on IV- comber 18 are in line for Most s Valuable Player awards from the lone Lions club. Lindsay Kin caid of the club announces lion McClure. w ho led all t scorers w ith 21 oints that he i made for the Javcces. will get the MVP award for the "young men's" game, and Dr. A. D. Mo Murdo will receive the prize of. the "old men's" game. The Doc . tor was trainer for the Chamber l nf rnmmereA team, and maybe the reasoning is that his ability to keep a team on the floor mad his the most valuable. The Old Lions defeated the C of C. 8 to 6. and the young Lions defeated the Jaycees. TO to 60. Aftpr ihre weeks of calcula tions, official scoring has been announced. It was as tonows: Hnnnnir Don McClure 21. Jerry Jonasson 4. Harley Sager 9. Chuck McKtnnon Z. uyie Jen sen 5. Wayne Lamb 0. Wayne Ball 14. Clarence Bare i. t inn rrol Xfiller 2. Francis Rea 23. Gene Doherty 17. Gene Docktcr 11. Gordon Meyers o, Rollie Ekstrom 1. Marv Tadberg 3. Dave Barnett 0. Leland Mc Kinney 2. Larry Rietmann 2. Keith Rea 4, Kenny Brenner 0. Les Matthews 0. and Lindsay Kincaid 0. Individual scoring for the "old men's" game has not been an nounced in order to save embar assment to any of the partici pants. File cards and guides, 3x5. 4xf and 5x8 at the Gazette-Times. HiliMhlljilti N i MV ,V . Ml rWX.." "A ' .UV vr.'V , 'i 'd'tt Vf s vv f co.v - .4 .. AMPHIBIOUS? S XXA rV-V VW fit -t CW- ,v-s - o rr r . w ."' St J0!tf7HCJ!OV... ... orrx si of : i iuivy t '-2$ Underwrite your country's might- Buy U.S. Savings Bonds I Look For I BRAIDED RUG A ll It3 I H I V f II I 'I H a COMING B I THIRD WEEK I IN JANUARY 8 CASE FURNITURE CO. I 249 W. Main - : S76"9432 Final Services Held December 29 For Mrs. Mclntire By MARTHA MATTES0N MONUMENT Funeral mt vicv were held In Monument Tuesday. December 29. for Maiy Tiosa Mclntire of Hamilton who t'ied Christmas Day in the John Dav hospital, at the age of .H5 years Born to Mr. and Mrs. William Henry Thompson near Oregon City on August 20. 1S78. she was the youngest of a large family o' eight brothers and one sister, oil preceding her in death. She came to Grant county as a .mall child, was married and raised a family of six children. Officiating at the services was P.ev. Gary Patterson of John Day. Soloist was Mrs. Neva Jones Concluding services were at Monument cemetery with Carl Driscoll of John Day in chatge. Pallbearers included Earl Lewis. Frank King, Louis Corley, Ernest Johnson, Harold Reynolds and George Stubble- finM Surviving are three sons and two daughters. John Johnson of Port Orford, Wn'.. George John sop of Hamilton, with whom she made her home; Zella Gien ger. Monument; Velma Camp hoii Ronrt- Crvstal Burlinname. Mik'alo, and Cliftci Preston. Prairie City. Roads and bridges in the area are gradually getting fixed and everyone is back in their homes again, cleaning up the mud and trash. Schools started again Mon day with Mrs. Neva Jones and Mrs. Lydia Gertson as substi tute teachers for Mrs. Page Du laney and Mrs. Boyd Hinton. Mrs. Page Dulaney flew back to Missouri December 29, as her mother and sister had been In bad car accident Mr. and Mrs. Leo Flower drove to Hardman Saturday to attend funeral services of Oscil Inskeep. He was a cousin cf Mrs. Flower. Rho Bleakman drove to Hard man Saturday for the graveside services of Buster "Red" Bleak man, his cousin. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Slinkard of Kinzua visited New Year's with her folks, Mr. and Mrs. Rho Bleakman. Mi. and Mrs. Boyd Hinton left Saturday for Portland where she will enter the Oregon State Medical hospital for surgery. Mr. and Mrs. Abe Gates and two daughters left for their home at Chlcu. Calif., alonj; with her brother. But Leathe.s who goes to Chico University. Thev spent the holidays with h -r j folks. Mr. and Mrs- VAayre Leathers, ami a si-icr mm ' ily. Mr. and Mrs. Mike 0:le if Kenton, Wn. A few friends gathered at the R.-x Dick home Friday night to honor Mr. and Mrs. Dick on their 2fth wedding anniversa.y. Cailvle Stewart and daughter. Mrs. Edith Musgrave, drove to Portland Tuesday to visit Mrs. Merinda Stewart who is in the hospital there. They came home Saturday and Mr. Stewart to turned Sunday to his Job a teacher at Bonanza. L-o Flower and Bill Chance drove to Pendleton by way of lleppner last wek where Leo had the cast removed from hi foot Students returning to colleges last week were Mary Emery to Calowell. Ida.. Sonja SweeK to Llr.field at JUcMinnviue, juuy Cavcnder to Corvallis and uon Capon to La Grande. Mrs. Jessie Scott tooK ner father. Elmer Matteson to ren- dleton Saturday to see n s brother, Harley Matteson, wno . i c- Anthnnv hospital recover- Imf from surgery Sunday morn ing. January o. Complete Line of HAPCXINS (for ANNIVERSARIES, COFFEE TIME, WELCOME, OTHERS FOR ANY OCCASION Also: Personalized Wedding and Guest Books, Match Books Monogrammed Playing Cards THE GAZETTE-TIMES Your Home -Owned :ank EasSern OregoB- ANNOUNCES It Will Pay Interest kjt 3 u On Savings Accounts As Of January 1, 1965 fli i I DEPOSITS MADE Before January 10 Will Be Paid Interest From January 1 Intett Paid Quarterly SAVE WITH YOUR Local Independent Bank and Keep Your Money at Work In Your Own Community HANK OF Wjzastem Oregon HEPPNEB ARLINGTON I0NE MEMBER. FEDERAL DEPOSIT .INSURANCE CORPORATION Ihf irorW'j leading acoustical experts made the If st. The U. S. Auto Club certified the remits: ot20mph...at40mph...at60mph... The 1965 Ford rides quieter than a Rolls-Royce! ulidMW Tkt r-H mmm wt. m Aim M. 4 -n mt dJwl nttm M ,m t.4 m l.lw 4 4 ""t" MM4 fa f-'":'. p-. J' " m. : in in''- Tim iiri-Tiiiwr'WTitiiriir 1 ...and now lefs talk about some other Ford surprises . . . Test-drive a Ford and you're in for some surprises. leading acoustical consultants conducted tests In which 1965 Fords (Galaxle 500 Sedan, XL and LTD Hardtops) with 289-cu. in. V-8 engines rode quieter than a Rolls-Royce. Hicse tests were certified by the U. S. Auto Club. When you feel a 1965 Ford In action-with the strongest Ford body ever ... a revolutionary new frame that "tunes out" vibration . . . new ultrasoft coil spring suspension-you're bound to be im pressed. But the ride Is only one of Ford's surprises . . . New gwept-back iastrument panel adds five inches extra knee room Transmission tunnel is lower for extra foot room. Trunk has more space than ever-holds four 2-suitcrs standing upright. Handy new "reversible" Ignition key works cither side up. Hot but hushed, 289-cu. In. V-8 is standard equipment in XL and LTD models. Smooth, thrifty all-new Uix Six in other models the most powerful standard Six offered by any car in Ford's class. V-8 options to 425 hp. All Ford automatic transmissions have three speeds, not two as in some competing cars. Result: you pass faster, shift smoother, save on gas. Fully synchronized manual transmissions you can even shift down to first without clashing gears. New Ford LTD 4-door hardtops have 10 courtesy lights. 5 ash trays. Upholstery treated to keep its beauty with Scotchgard stain repellent. Luxuries you'd expect only in the highest priced cars. Surprised? Vou will be . . . when you visit your Ford Dealer and test-drive the Quiet One. Do it soon I tm )M co. FKJOUCTSOF C&okf) MOTOR C0UPAW Test driveTotal Performance '65... best year yet to go FOID MimiUIC FALCON FAIAIANC FOM - THUNDf HBIHO mWMW AUTO SALES, Inc. HEPPNER, OREGON I