1 LIBRARY u or o EUGENE, ORE 07403 Barney Malcom Dies Of Heart Seizure James Byron (Barney) Mal com. 4H, president and owner of Heppner Lumber Co., died un expectedly at his homo In Hcpp. ncr early Tucsduy morning, February 28, after suffering a heart seizure. While preparing to leave with Mn wife, Mary, and daughter, Gale, about 0:30 a.m. on trip io San Francisco, ha auddonly became III and lav down on a bed. Mrs. Malcom aummoned doctor, but her husband lapsed Into a comu. The doctor arrlv. d wllliln a few minutes, but Mnleom never regained con sciousness mid died some JO minutes after the doctor came. Funeral services will be to day (Thursday , Man-It 2, lit the Heppner MetlindlMt rhurrh at 2 p.m. with the Hov. Melvln I- B. (BARNET) MALCOM '67 Pool License Depends on Vote, State Indicates The Stat of Oregon nmv not 1-sue a 1967 derating license fur the Heppner municipal swimming pool unless a bond Issue In approved by voters for reconstruction of the pool, ac cording to a letter from A. D. Smythe, associate sanitary en gineer of the Oregon State Board of Health, to the City of Heppner. The letter, dated February 21, sold, "We were pleased to learn these steps have been taken and that the probability Is good that the deficiencies nt the pool will be corrected by next year. "However, a date for voting on the proposed bond Issue was not Indicated and we feel It would be prudent to withhold Issuance of a l!Hi7 operating li cense until the bond Issue Is actually approved by the vot ers. "We would be grateful if you could Inform us of the sched uled date for the vote. We will Iksuc the 17 operating license providing the vote on the bond Issue Is favorable." At a recent meeting of the elt v council, the swimming pool committee had recommended re building the pool following a cost study by the engineering firm of Clark and Gruff. Cost on the complete reconstruction Job was estimated nt $104,400. The council considered ways of meeting the problem and fi nancing the Job. A bond Issue to finance, the work was con sidered the mast feasible, but it was pointed out that an "ed ucation campaign" would have to bo conducted to Inform the public of the need. No definite action was taken, however, and It is expected that the council will consider the matter again at Its March meeting next Mon day night. The pool was operated on a temporary license by the state last season, although the Board of Health had indicated that It was sub standard and that cor rections must bo mude if it were to be continued in use. Racing Slated For Skiers Sunday At Arbuckle Mt. Skiers from burgeoning 4-H ski clubs In this area are plan ning an afternoon of ski racing at Arbuckle Mountain Ski course beginning at 2 p.m. on Sunday, March 5. Knees will bo held for all age groups, and other skiers, be sides those belonging to the 4-H clubs, are welcome to enter In their proper age classification. Prizes will be awarded to the winners. Principal Alan Martin who has driven one of the ski buses all winter will set the slalom course for slalom racing. Four H club leaders, Dick McElllgott and J. G. Stephens, are also making additional plans. Jaycees who have maintained a snack shop at the ski facil ity this year will again sell re freshments to . spectators and skiers. Ski club leaders urge parents and all Interested spectators to come and watch and enjoy an exciting afternoon. l , j . ;fn far j?,. - . ,u I 1 t v. ' ' Dixon officiating. Vault Inter ment will bo In Mountain View cemetery, Tacoma, Wash., with concluding service there Fri day, March 3, at 11 a.m. Malcom, who came to Hepp ner In June, I960, operated saw mills at Heppner and Spray un der the firm name of Heppner Lumber Company. During tho past few years he had expand ed and rebuilt tho mills. The Spray mill was virtually des troyed In the December, 1904, and January, 1905, floods but repair were mado and the mill resumed operation at a later date. Scc1altv of the sawmills is the production of 2x4 muds. Before coming to Heppner, the Malcom family lived In Katon vllle, Wash. He had operated a Sawmill there until it was des troyed by fire ami in tho Im mediate two years before com ing here, he operated a truck ing firm out of Portland, al though continuing to live in l-.atonvlUe. An ensign In the U. S. Naval Reserve at the time of the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Mai com went through the Japa nese attack there on December 7, 1941. He had received a com mission In the Navy in 1940 af ter attending Washington State College for two years. As a lieutenant commander. Malcom was captain of an LST at tne time of the D-Dav Invas ion of Europe from Eneland. and three other l,ST's were also under bis command. He served with the Navy in both the South Pacific and Kiroean theaters during World War II. Ma com was retired as a captain in the JMavuI Reserve. He was born January 27, 1919, in laeoma, mn of Mr. and Mrs Ola F. Malcom. He spent his tmynood m Katonvllle and graduated from high school there. On August 6, 1947, he was married to Mary Hamilton In Tacoma. Malcom was elected a com missioner of the Morrow Coun ty Port Commission In Novem ber, 1966. He was a member and former director of the Heppner- Morrow county Chamber of Commerce and recently was named a director of the Mor row county Rodeo board, repre senting the Chamber of Com merce on the board. He was a member of the American Leg Ion, of Heppner lodge No. 358, BPOK. and of the Wrangler club, A man with many friends be cause of his congenial person ality and optimistic outlook, Maleori took an active part- in all things constructive for the (Continued on page 4) AARON SMITH Aaron Smith Dies In Auto Accident In Norfolk, Va. Aaron B. Smith 21 STfl.a In the U. S. Navy, died Tuesday, reoruary its, in nonoiK, vu., following an auto m-eirient While on liberty, according to a iciegram received by Mr. and Mrs. C. K McDowell. hl fnst.-r parents, in Heppner. No details of the accident wore given. Smith had been serving on the USS Weeks, a destroyer, and had recently returned from sea duty. He had expected to ship out again on the, destroyer for a month's cruise In April. Information contained in the Navy telegram said that the body would be brought here by Navy escort following services aboard fhip. Smith's sister, Cvn thln Smith, who has - been serv ing with the Women Marines at Norfolk, Is ulso coming here to r.sslst with arrangements. Mrs. McDowell said that she expected that the body would be flown to Pendleton with the escort. Arrangements for services here (ire pending. Mrs. McDowell said lhat the family Is planning ser vices in All Saints' Kplscopal church, probably later this week. Smith was a graduate of Hep pner Hl;rh school with the class ot 1964. His sister, who is 19, graduated with the class of 19ti(. Aaron had lived with the Mc Dowells since he was In the eighth grade and Cynthia was with them since she was In the sixth girade. During his high school days, Smith wan employed for some time at Central Market. He play ed football for Heppner High and engaged in other school ac tivities. Ho entered the Navy soon after graduation and took sona,r training at San Diego, Calif., completing the basic course there in March, 19G5. Judge 83rd Year THE mS ySiir Heppner, Oregon 97836, Thursday, March 2, BOB HARRIS (left) and Gary Wells (right) of Weast High school congratulate each other while Hal Whitaker, advisor el the Heppner High school FFA chapter, places an affectionate hand on the shoulder of each young man. This was following the annual Heppner High chapter FFA banquet in the high school cafetorium last Wednesday night Harris, chapter presi dent, was master of ceremonies and Wells, state sentinel of the FFA. was guest speaker. . (C-T Photo). Year Reviewed, Awards Presented At FFA Banquet Highlights of the past year In chapter accomplishments were reviewed and awards were pre sented at the annual rarent and Snn Banquet of the Heppner High chaptif, Future Farmers of America, in the high school cafetorium last Wednesday evening. Gary Wills of Wy'easl High school t nd state sentinel for the Future Farmers, in the nrlnriiuil address vi the evening, spoke of changes taking place in the world it'd the increased burden to produce food to supply a pop ulation that is exacted to reach six billion neonle bv the vear 2000. Staling that "massive famines In the world are predicted by the late 1970"s or early 19S0's, Wells told the FFA members that the lob of orodueinu foi.l foi this ever-Increasing demand depends on us. "America needs von who will step forward and meet the chal lenge oi our limes.' he de clared. "The need for trained men and women was never as great as it Is today." Wells concluded his talk by saying, --.Agriculture Is truly the strength of America. Into our I"-fnds will be nlneed lho future of agriculture. Into our hands win ne placed the greatest chal lenge evi t- known to man." Bob Harris, nresident nf the chapter, was in charge of cere monies tor tne evening and In tiodueed Hul Whitaker, advisor, who made the annual awards. Steve Wagenblast, a senior, whs named as chapter Star Farmer and will receive a tro phy from the first National Bank as well as an FFA Foun dation medal. He also won achievement awards fnr liv. stock farming with a plaque from the Morrow County Live stock Growers and an FFA med- Rl, and for beef project with ;i plaque from the Bank of East- em Oregon. Uavid Hall won the scholar (Continued on page 8 1 Speech Meet Set Also at La Grande La Grande will claim tho nt. tention of Hennner Hlirh Rtn. dents in more ways than one on marcn 4. in audition to the district basketball tournament that nleht. the district sneonh contest will begin at approxi mately nine o'clock in the mor ning. Bv achlevlnir either n first- second, third or fourth place win in the district contests, these students will be entitled to enter the state contests wnich will be held at the Ore gon State University campus in Corvallis on April 1314. Verina French is entering hu morous Interpretation and after-dinner speaking. Marsha Sowell has decided to enter po etry reading and Kathy Melby is going to compete in serious Interpretation. cores Legislators on Tax Issue MILO PRINDLE Conference Picks Prindle to Head Oregon Loggers Milo Prindle of Eastern Ore Eon Logging Company and Kin zua Corporation was elected president of the Oregon Logging Conference for 1968 at the 29th annual conference Friday r.t Kugene. The Heppner man succeeds H. Frank P.iimsey of Timber Access Industries, Corvallis, as head of the organization. Prindl:- served as vice presi dent of t(u conference this year and was program chairman for the event, which started with entertainment Wednesday even ing,. February 22, including a co-host dinner and dancing at the Eugene Hotel, and contin ued through Saturday- Theme of the 29th annual conference and equipment show was "Cruiser to User." W. D. Hagcnstein of Portland fave the keynote address last Thursday, and stated that Ore gon's forest industry brings in $1.5 billion of new money to the state each year and employs 85. 000 people with a $551 million annual payroll. Hagenstein Is president of the Society of American Foresters and is ex ecutive vice president of the In dustrial 1 orestry association. Mr. and Mrs. Prindle, after re luming to Heppner following the conference, made preparat ions to leave later in the week for the Western Wood Products conference in San Francisco. Opening Event Slated at Del's Grand Opening of Del's Mar ket, now under the manage ment of the new owners, Mr. and Mrs. Del Piper, is schedul ed at the store in Lexington this week-end, they announce. Free coffee and doughnuts will be served all day Friday, and a door prize drawing is scheduled at 4 p.m. Friday. Two turkeys will be given away. Mr. and Mrs. Piper bought the market from Mr. and Mrs. El den Padberg of Lexington. Piper served as manager of the store for the Padbergs. E--TFIME 1967 ! , Linda Tatone Named Boardman Princess Linda Jo Tatone of Boardman, granddaughter of a man who was instrumental In starting the first North Morrow Fair, has been selected princess for the Morrow County Fair and Rodeo for 1967 by the Boardman Til Ileum club. f hoice of the 18-year-old bru nette, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tatone of Boardman, rounds out the 1967 court. She will serve with Queen Verina French; Princess Ruby Fulleton, chosen by the Wrangler club; Princess Maureen Doherty, rep resenting the Lexington Grange; and Princess Berniece Matthews, repre s e n 1 1 n g the Willows Grange, lone. Linda Jo's grandfather, the late Charles Wicklander, was responsible for the first North Morrow County Fair. She was born in Portland and moved two years later with her family to Boardman. The new princess began riding at an early age and got her first horse when she was four years old. During her young cihldhood she participated each year in the North Morrow County Fair and Rodeo. The Tatones, who are mem bers of the Umatilla Sage Rid ers, now have eight horses, three of which are Linda's two being colts which she has raised. In her Rodeo court appearances, Princess Linda Jo will ride "Sheilah,'' her Arabian-quarter-horse mare. For eight years Linda Jo has been active in 4-H work, having belonged to a riding club for two years. This year she is serv ing as a 4-H Junior leader for a cooking club. ' -- In 1964, she became a mem ber of the Good Shepherd Lu theran church and she taught Sunday School for a short time before the church was displac ed because of the John Day dam. When younger, she was a member of the Juvenile Grange for several years and is now a mem b e r of the Greenfield Grange. Princess Linda Jo is a junior at Riverside High school in Boardman, where she has been a very active student She was carnival princess and treasurer of her freshman class.. In her sophomore year she became head majorette and a probation ary member of the National Honor Society. This is her third year on the paper staff and her Mustangs io Meet Grant Union In First Round In District Meet Heppner's Mustangs will play Grant Union oi John Day in the first round of the dis trict tournament at La Grande at 9 pan. Friday night it was learned at press time Wed nesday. The Prospectors defeated the Hilanders, 50 to 45. in a playoff game for the third spot for the western division cf the Greater Oregon League Tuesday night crt Vale. With a co-champlonshlp of the western division of the Greater Oregon League in their pocket, the Heppner High Mus tangs will open play Friday night at 9 o'clock In the dis trict basketball tournament at the Eastern Oregon College gym In La Grande. As a result of a coin flip at Condon Monday night, the Mus tangs will be matched against the third-place team in the div ision. Grant Union and Burns, who ended the season in a dead lock, each with seven wins and five defeats, were in a playoff game Tuesday night at Vale to determine which entered the tournament. Grant Union edged the Hi landers in overtime at John Day Friday night, 55 to 53, to gain the deadlock. Sherman county and Vale, the lone entrant from the eastern division, will open the tourna ment at 7 p.m. Friday. The flip at Condon was be tween Coach Bob Clough of Heppner and Coach Pasco Arri tola of Sherman. According to the league arrangement, the winner of the western division was to open tournament play against the third place team of the west, and the second place team In the west was to be matched against the winner of the east Vale. The two ties for top positions In the west complicated the matter. Sherman and Heppner, Number 1 HEPPNER 10 Cents PRINCESS LINDA JO TATONE second year as head majorette. She is also a member of the band, Pep club and Girl's Ath letic association. Linda Jo's interests are var ied. - The activities she . enjoys most are riding and water sports. She also loves music. Al though she likes cooking and sewing, she prefers outside work and often helps her father on his farms and on the range with his cattle. Linda Jo works in her boutique shop in the summer and after school in the winter months. She also gives baton lessons. Being one of two children in the family, she has a younger brother, Jody, ' wh is 15 -and Is lmeresiea m Decerning a jock ey. Her grandmothers are Mrs. Dominic Tatone Arlington and Mrs. Charles Wicklander, Port land. Princess Linda Jo's great grandfather, the late Charles Dillabough, was one of the ear ly pioneer settlers of Morrow county. I WEATHER February 22-28 . , . By DON GILLIAM - Hi Low Prec. Wednesday 57 ' 31 Thursday 57 29 Friday 48 29 Saturday 52 36 .01 Sunday 57 28 Monday 59 29 Tuesday 65 38 Final Basketball Standings GREATER OREGON LEAGUE Western Division : '. ' : . w l Heppner . 9 3 Sherman 9 3 Grant Union 7 5 Burns 7 5 Enterprise 5 7 Madras 3 9 Wahtonka 2 10 Final Results: Wahtonka 55 at Heppner 87, Burns 53 at Grant Union 55 (OT), Sherman 66 at Madras 51. who shellacked their opponents in final games Friday, settled for a co-championship, and each school will receive a tro phy. They could settle their problem on tournament pairing by the coin flip at Condon, which they did, but it was tougher for Burns and Grant Union since only one could go, and this meant the playoff game at Vale. Coach Clough, after the decis ion at Condon, said that he didn't know whether Heppner was better off playing the west's third place representative first or playing Vale. He expressed the opinion that the team that goes to state will have to beat Sherman County, led by Its ace, Gene Lanthorn. At the same time he said that his team is ready to go. Mac Hoskins, high scoring center for the Mustangs, suffer ed a sprained ankle in the Wah tonka game here Friday night, but he has been taking whirl pool bath treatments and Is ex pected to be ready. With Russ Kilkenny getting back in stride after his knee op eration and some of the young er players on the team Improv ing rapidly, Coach Clough said that his team appears to be at top strength now. He didn't an Boeing Lands To be Talked At Hearing County Judge Paul . Jones spoke out Monday In strong re taliation to legislators who had charged In the current session In Salem that the county is charging too much in taxes for the Boeing lands In north Mor row. The judge spoke to the Hepp-ner-Morrow county Chamber of Commerce, declaring, "By the tone of the newspaper articles they indicate Morrow county Is gouging the State of Oregon. They know better. What they are saying is that they want preferential treatment at the ex pense of every taxpayer In Mor row county." The statements In the legis lature were made by Democrats Al Flegel, Rosc-burg, and James Redder, Medford, who strongly pushed for a review of the Boe ing lease on the grounds that it is a poor investment and that the State Is losing money on it. Tuesday it was - announced that the Oregon Senate Plan ning and Development Commit tee will investigate charges that the state is losing money on the contract at Boeing. Main interest of the Investi gation will be to "determine what has happened to Morrow county land values," Sen. Ted Hallock, chairman, was quoted as saying. At the same time he said that the committee is "not on a witch hunt" against Boe ing, adding "the company has kept its good faith and done nothing." Among those who will be called to the first hearing Mor day, according to Sen. Hallock. are Judge Jones, Ccwm boners Jack VanWlnkle, .VViter Hay-s and Assessor Rol "ionrtjon, v j , In his Monday' 51V Jurj Jones said that tbalUit appraising the lanffl- itfw : - ' northern part of the coumy was discussed by the Board of Equalization last April, and an order was passed authorizing-v the study on some 235,000 acres " of range lands. ; Because of developments In the northern part of the county, some of the acreage has been commanding higher prices. The county has secured serv ices ot an independent apprais al firm to give an Independent appraisal, he Said. ' ' The judge said that if the leg islators believe the state is being overcharged, - "they all have - the right to go to the Board of Equalization or to the State of Oregon." "If we were to tax their lands for less, we would be overtax ing the other taxpayers in Mor row, county," he continued. "I was amazed when I read the article. The people down there should know better. They make the laws." The services of an Independ ent firm for the appraisal were sought the Judge said because (Continued on page 4) nounce a starting lineup but he opened against Wahtonka Friday with a rather tall five Hoskins at 6-3, Kilkenny at 6-3, Steve Pettyjohn at 6-1, Jim Doherty at 5-10 and Dave Hall at 5-10. ' Vale's Vikings, considered a shoo-in all season for the east ern title, came close to defeat last week at the hands of the Nyssa Bulldogs. They managed to win only by a score of 39 35. But the previous night they took Payette, Idaho, 79-53. Their season's record is 16-5. A num ber of the Viks include those seen when Heppner played Vale in the football quarter-finals, including Rick Johnson, their backfleld ace. - Vale, of course, Is the virtual unknown for Heppner. The Mus tangs are well acquainted with Sherman County, Burns and Grant Union. The Heppner team has defeated each of them at home and lost to each of them on the road. - Other than to hint at the power of Sherman county and ! to say that "there are four good j ball clubs in the tournament," coacn uiougn naa no nrm pre diction for the tourney's out come. ''We're not overconfident," he added. The Mustangs will not stay overnight in La Grande this year. They expect to leave about 3:30 p.m. Friday and will re turn after their 9 p.m. game. They will go back to La Grande Saturday, and the time of their departure depends on whether they win or lose the first game. Friday night losers will play in the opener at 7 p.m. Saturday and the Friday winners will plav at 9 for the title. "We've decided that we're going to La Grande to play bas ketball," the coach said, "and we feel that we can do better if we came home Friday night and get a good rest." 'I