Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 15, 1968)
HEPPNER GAZETTE-TIMES. Thursday. February 15. 19G8 Square Dancing Set At Grange Hall Br DIANA KINCAID IONF Don Arkell of Pendle ton will be canine square dune vh In lone lit tho Willow Grange hull on the 2nd and 4th Friday fvenlnuf. There will bp lessons for beginners and dunces for those who have done some mi u ii re danrinn before. The t'roiin will meet from 8:00 p.m until 11:30 I). in. with lient pot lurk Mi!ltr to follow. Tills J-rldav evening a special practice wsMon will be held with Mr. unit Mrs. Darrell Wil son in c-harue. For further Infor ination please call 422-7523. Mrs. Irene Dfilzell, master of Willows Grange, announces there will be a potluck luncheon on Sunday, February 18, and meetinc at 1:30 p.m. for all CraiiL'e niemlx-rs. C. O. Burdick of Mikk.ilo Grange will show slldrs of Hawaii. February hol idays will also be featured on the program. On February 16, Home Economics club will meet for an all d:iy meeting at the home of Mrs. Marlon Palmer who will be assisted by Mrs. Lee Palmer. On Tuesday. February 20, be ginning at 7:00 p.m. there will be a school of Instruction for Rainbow Girls, led by Mrs. Rob ert Irby of Olex who is Grand Deputy of International Order of Rainbow for Girls. On last Friday Frankle Engle man was taken to Pioneer Mem orial hospital for observation and treatment. Ho was glad to be home with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Engleman to cel ebrate his 7th birthday on Sun day. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Palmer were Mrs. Bob Parsons and girls of Beav erton, and Mr. and Mrs. Line oln Nash of I eDDner. Local residents who attended the funeral services of Mrs. Betty Hausler in Enterprise last Wednesday were Mr. and Mrs, Gene Rietmann, Mr. and Mrs, Omar Rietmann, Mr. and Mrs, Roy A. Lindstrom, Mr. and Mrs, Edmond Bristow, Mrs. Pete Can non. and Mrs. Ernie Mcabe. Chris Rietmann, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Rietmann, celebrated his fourth birthday on Sunday with a dinner in his honor. His Grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Omar Rietmann were dinner guests and accompanied the family to Pendleton for a mo vie. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Crabtree took Mrs. Blanche Scheelar to her homo in Salem last Thurs day. The Crabtrees also visited with Mr. and Mrs. Dave WU son in Tacoma and with Ron Crabtree. Ron, who is employed In the Aerial Ladder Detach ment of the Seattle Fire Dept., has .lust completed a six weeks training course. Before returning home they stopped in Bellevue, Wn. to see Mrs. Crabtree's brother and family, the Larry Sehcelars. Several neighbor girls who stopped by on Monday afternoon to share the 4th birthday cake of Mary Kincaid, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay Kincaid, were Kim, Kellie, and Kris Pet tyjohn, Lisa Meyers, Sharon Crowell, and Tami Jo Dockter. Ladies of the community are reminded that on Monday nights tho volleyball team plays at 7:30 p.m. Anyone interested is invited to join In for fun and exercise. SCHOOL NEWS Andrew Hanner, representa tive of the Oregon Council on Alcohol Problems, talked with grades 7 through 12 this week. His interesting program featur ed demonstrations. On Tuesday lone Student Body officers Chris Lovgren, Eddie Sherman, Willa Johnson and Jodi Snow, drove to Heppner to meet with tho Student Body of ficers there. The group was ac companied by Harold Beggs. Tho G.A.A. basketball team will play Heppner there at 6:00 p.m., on February 15. the Jun ior High game, scheduled with Irrigon here on February 16, has been changed to February 15, at 1:30 p.m. On February 16 the high school basketball team travels to Umapine, with play beginn ing at 6:30 p.m. G.A.A. will play on Saturday morning. February 17 at 11:00 a.m. In Pilot Rock. Also on rcb ruary 17 the high school will play Umatilla Here at b:JU p.m Ekstrom Presents Proqram The lone Lions Club met on Monday evening at the Masonic Hall with Harold .snider as pro gram chairman of the month Films on plant Hie In the arc He and soil conservation were shown by Herb Ekstrom. The meal was prepared by members of Eastern Star with Mrs. Omar Rietmann, Mrs. Roy Lindstrom and Mrs. Herb Ekstrom, Jr., serving. Funeral Service Held At Enterprise Church For Betty M. Hausler Memorial services were held Wednesday, February 7, for a former Iono and Heppner resi dent, Mrs. Betty Maxinc Haus ler, 39, at the Enterprise Com munity church, at 2:00 p.m. Mrs. Hausler died Thursday, Febru ary 1, at the University of Ore gon Medical School hospital In Portland, where she had been a patient for several weeks. Betty Maxlne Ahl was born June 16, 1928, in Silverton, Ore. On June 26, 1954', she was mar ried at Bandon to Joe Hausler, who suvives her. Other survivors include a son, Joe Jr., at Fort Lewis, Wash.; six daughters, Cathy P., Betty S., Carol L., and Robin M., and Rheda D., and Jennie L., all of Enterprise; her mother, Mrs. Kathryn Ross of Silverton; three brothers, Phil ip Ahl of Silverton and Eugene Ahl in California. Also three sisters, Mrs. Paulene Donaca of Independence, Mrs. Ruth Knight of Med ford, and Mrs. Barbara Laudahl, of Grants Pass. Mr. Hausler was a former high school teacher in the lone and Heppner schools. Mrs. Hausler was active in the communities and was a past president of Beta Omega Sorority of lone, HHS Girls Edge Pilot Rock 23-22 By SUE CHALLY Pilot Rock lost a heart-breaker to the Heppner High girls bas ketball team on Thursday, Feb ruary 8. The final score was Heppner 23 and Pilot Rock 22, Brenda Steagall was the heroine or the game when, with live seconds left on the clock, she connected with a hook shot from the foul line area and won the game for Heppner. Pilot Rock made a valiant try from the center line with one second showing, but missed. HHS is the first team to defeat Pilot Rock this year. High scorer was Sherl Brock with 10 points. Other plavers were B. Steagall 7. V. Steagall 2, G. Drake 2, J. Barclay 2, D. Bennett, J. Smith, E. Greenup and J. Rugg. The Heppner Junior High team reminded the high school girls of their first game as they were outclassed by Pilot Pock by a score of 48 to HeoDner's 16. Heppner Grade school fared a little better, although losing by a final count of 67 for Pilot Rock to 17 for HHS. These teams show a lot of spirit and the girls will be looking forward to having them on the HHS team later on. lone Tips Pirates But Meets Defeat From Weston Five It pays to advertise. In one of the hardest fought games of the Morrow-Umatilla B league basketball season the lone Cardinals defeated River side at lone In double overtime Friday night. 79 to 76, but the Cards, having gone through three of the ton B teams In suc cession, went flat against West on Saturday night at Weston and lost, 57 to 49. The solit kent them In third place In tho circuit with an H-4 record behind the Pirates with 9-4. McEwen Is still running first with only the season's one loss to lone. The Cards face another tough week-end, playing Umapine at lone Friday and traveling to Umatilla Saturday night. The Riverside game was a well-played contest on both sides. In the first overtime, which started with the teams deadlocked at 68-all. Jim Swan son and Frank Halvorsen each scored a field goal to match a pair from Riverside. In the sec ond overtime, Chris Lovgren made two free throws, Halvor sen two field goals and one free throw. The Pirates made four points In the second overtime, lone nit At oi 7a tries irom the floor and Riverside made 31 of 68. The Pirates had tho edge in rebounding with 49 to 47 for lone. At Weston, the Cards' shoot ing average was good but they only took 47 shots, making 19. Weston made 19 of 45 and won the game at the foul line with 19 of 28, as compared with Ione's 11 of 17. Halvorsen had 16 rebounds for the losers. Turnovers were the nemesis for the Cards as they lost the ball 16 times. lone was without the services of Eddie Sherman who has been ill with near- pneumonia. He may see some action this week-end. Scores: Heppner Hoopers Whack Wahtonlo By MARX TUIXIS Heppner was out for revenge on their home basketball court last Saturday against Wanton ka, and succeeded by trouncing tne Eagles, 57-37. RIVERSIDE IONE 19 16 16 17 4 476 18 22 18 10 4 779 RIVERSIDE 76 Fg Ft Pf Tp Phillips 7 6 4 20 Schmeder 6 0 4 12 Lesperance 0 111 Baird 11 5 5 27 Hobbs 6 2 3 14 Lamb 10 12 TOTALS 31 14 18 76 IONE 79 Fg Ft Pf Tp Lovgren 6 5 2 17 Halvorsen 11 6 2 28 Swanson 12 2 2 26 Ball 2 0 2 4 Nelson 0 0 10 Palmateer 12 5 4 Wilson 0 0 10 TOTALS 32 15 15 79 IONE 10 6 19 1249 WESTON Lovgren Nelson Swanson Palmateer Ball Halvorsen Wilson Peterson TOTALS 17 19 6 1557 IONE 49 Fg Ft 2 0 8 0 4 5 0 0 Pf Tp 3 7 1 0 0 17 2 0 19 11 18 49 Mustangs Blast Sherman Quint By 76-32 Score By STEVE PETTYJOHN Outstanding defense and team rlav cave the Mustangs a 76- 32 league victory over the Sher man Huskies. The game was played on the Mustangs' home court Friday. Tho Mustangs led the whole game, scoring when they want ed to and holding the Huskies to long shots. Consecutive quar ter comparative scoring was 23 7. 13-7. 23-9. and 17-9. Scoring for Heppner was even ly distributed with Dave Hall high at 11 points and Bill Mc Leod right behind with 10. Everyone on the Mustang team scored. Two Huskies tied for their high, each with five points. The Huskies were not even close in the rebound stats, as these were also evenly distributed among the Mustang players. This was the second straight tromping given opponents by the Mustangs as they brought their league record to 2-2. They will meet the Huskies on their own floor February 24 In the Mustangs' last league tilt be fore the tournament. HEPPNER 76 The Mustangs played a hard. fast game, driving down the floor at full tilt and keeping wantonKa on a keen edge tne whole game. Both the defense and offense were too much for the visitors. The Wahtonka five could not work the ball in to easy shoot ing position and had to revert to 10 to 25-foot shots In order to get on the scoreboard. Offensively the home team worked together with precision and played the ball right under the hoop many times for points. Heppner had two boys who tallied double figures, Dave Hall, leading with 20 and Kuss Kilkenny providing 13. HEPPNER 57 Fg Ft Pf Tp McLeod 5 0 2 10 Hall 5 1 0 11 Kilkenny 3 2 3 8 McCabe 2 2 16 Stillman 2 115 Pettyjohn, L. 2 115 Pettylohn, S. 3 3 19 Kilkenny 3 117 Healy 1113 Ash beck 4 0 5 8 Kemp 10 12 O'Donnell 10 12 TOTALS 32 12 18 76 SHERMAN 32 Fg Ft Pf Tp Boyer 113 3 Coelsch 2 0 2 4 Sondenaa 10 12 Rathbun - 12 4 4 Woodrum 0 3 13 King 10 12 Byars 10 0 2 Tsubota 0 2 3 2 Weedman 13 2 5 Carlson 2 12 5 Paulson - 0 0 0 0 Richelderfer 0 0 4 0 Fg Ft Pf Tp McLeod 2 2 2 6 Hall 8 4 2 20 Kilkenny 5 3 2 13 McCabe 2 3 2 7 Stillman 10 12 L. Pettylohn 0 0 0 0 S. Pettyjohn 0 3 4 3 Dobbs 0 0 10 Healy 0 0 0 0 Ashbeck 2 0 14 Kemp 0 0 0 0 O'Donnell 10 12 TOTALS 21 15 16 57 WAHTONKA 37 Fg Ft Pf Tp Matheny 4 3 3 11 Speck 0 0 10 Schmidt 0 0 0 0 Bliss 0 0 1 0 Busick 5 1 3 11 Herman 12 2 4 Hare 0 0 5 0 Wilkes 2 6 4 10 Smith 0 0 0 0 Meyer 0 0 0 0 Nichols 0 12 1 Tenold 0 0 0 0 TOTALS 12 13 20 37 SCHOOL LUNCH MENUS Heppner High School and Elementary School For Week of February 19-23 Monday, Feb. 19 Sliced beef with gravy on rice, caDDage sal ad, rolls, fruit cobbler, milk. Tuesday, Feb. 20 Spaghet ti, rolls, salad, green beans, plums, milk. Wednesday, Feb. 21 Turkey or chicken with noodles, rolls, mixed vegetables, milk, fruit. Thursday, Feb. 22 George Washington Pizza, Jell-0 salad, whole kernel corn, celery sticks, milk. Friday, Feb. 23 Peanut but ter sandwiches, vegetable soup, cake, salad, milk. TOTALS 10 12 23 32 WESTON 57 Fg Ft Pf Tp Tucker 3 10 1 16 M. Evans 3 0 2 6 Dallman 3 6 4 12 R. 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