HEPPNER GAZETTE icrr- . nag. p-S" GAZETTE-TIMES Heppner. Oregon 97838 PhoM 676-9228 nvtinw v www The Heppner Gazette established March 30, 1883. The ncppner ine mppiiir v"' V. . ,Q ,aifT rnnsiiritid February 15. Times esiaDHsnca nuYcinw' - J912. NIWSPAPII PUIUf HIKI ASSOCIATION WESLET A. SHERMAN HELEN E. SHERMAN - ARNOLD RAYMOND Shop Foreman Printer GAIL BURKENBINE RnclptV Circulation I ZT Subscription Rates: $450 Year. Single Copy 10 CenU. Published i"eryThurcday and Entered at the Post OHice at Hcppner, Oregon, as Second Class Matter. ..... f,m.. o m Office Hours: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday through Friday, 9 jn. until noon Saturday. Support Cancer Crusade The month of April has been dcslKnatcd as cancer jnfl month throughout the nutinn by the president of the United Slates, and this brings about the local crusade, which Is being conducted in this area April 114. Volunteers for the American Cancer Society will canvass the area for the purpos of collecting funds to fight the ells ease and to help educate the public by distributing literature related to the seven danger signals of cancer and the research which Is being carried on to combat it. Much has been done In past years in cancer research and without public assistance, progress In research programs will be slowed considerably. One half of all cancer could be cured, but, due to Ignor ance and fear, people fail to visit their physicians for regular health checkups, and the result Is that only one third of all known cancers are cured. a -i Anyone whose life has been touched by this dread dis ease, whether directly or indirectly, knows that cancer can strike swiftly and at any age. The slogan for the 1968 crusade is, "It makes sense to know the warning signals of cancer; it makes sense to give to the American Cancer Society." Further cancer research, made possible by public dona tions, legacies, and memorials, may someday save your life, or the life of someone you love. Be prepared to greet the crusader when she knocks on your door. Remember it makes sense to give. G. B. Glen Ward. Morrow county game agent, along with five other game commission officers in the state, traveled to Edmon ton, Alberta, Canada, to attend meetings of the Northwest sec tion of Wild Life Society, which were held Friday and Saturday of last week at the University of Alberta. The group left the preceding Wednesday by car and returned home Monday, March 25. GREEN IL. .. hi Jii't'i.'rr. -'for S4Lui -,, ' rrTwi nnrririn n mmmmm uu r s. 'r; '''i i .v- 1 1 '" 1 1 Grain GrovcrSma FARMER OWNED AND CONTROLLED Petroleum Division Lexington. Oregon -TIMES. Thuradoy. April 4. 1968 I HEPPNER - NATIONAl NIWJPAMI fe"'c6'' riuuMi g'Tfrrm EDITOR AND POBLISHEH ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER REGGIE PASCAL Linotype Operator RANDY STILLMAN Apprentice JIM SHERMAN Pressman Mr. and Mrs. Norman Supple and family entertained visitors at their new home last week, when her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Williams, and his mother, Mrs. Thea Supple of Lakeview, arrived for a week's visit. Joining the group at the Supple home over the week-end were Mrs. Supple's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Duane Haven, and two children, Lori and Brian, of Portland. if1 C(hW WEED and FEED PLUS It's fertilizer...and nsecticide...and weed ki!ler...all in one! New from Pacific, 22 12 lb. BAG $945 45 lb. BAG 45 Sure $ fertlhzer Your Local PACIFIC COOPERATIVE mm m i s (0 (PHI S3 Chaff and Chatter Wes Sherman ONE OF OUR more distant sub WTlber Is Mrs. Archie Polta of The Oaks. Ilorndon on the Hill, Essex, Englund. So fur as we know he has no relatives In Heppner. has never been here, and has no local connec tion except that she is pen pal of Mrs. voug urue. Mrs. Druke. becoming well acquainted by letter, suoscrira-o to the Gazette-Times for Mrs Potts, and the English woman has continued taking It. The other dav wo received J nA,.lnnn nt nfllMTq III the mall They were from Mrs. Potts. Two copies of the r.ssex weeiuy News were included, together with one copy each of the Thur rook Gazette and the Sunday Telecranh. Accompanying the papers was this note: '"We have received and read and circulated your paper now for more than a year and are always surprised In the differ ences of news. So I thought 1(1 retaliate and send you some of ours- . . 'Thurrock Is our local, Essex the county, and the Telegraph our national Sunday paper. "I hope we don't all appear criminals. It sometimes looks like It bv the papers. "But we couldn't publish In dividual doings as you do, no nmnirlnn in nnnulation. Best wishes, Mrs. Archie Potts." No, we wouldn't say that the emphasis is too heavy on crime news, but there is a tendency to play up the dramatic Just as some of the metropolitan pa pers in the United States do. Some of the headlines we note are, "Woman Praised for Brav ing Flames," "Postman Stole the Mail," "Disaster!" "She Lives in Fear," "111 Quit Says School Master," "Watch Out for These Thieves," "Keep an Eye on Drunks Warn Police," "Tack led Berserk Axeman," and "He Bought Sweets Then Died." But we've picked out the sen sational ones. Others are like those to which we are more ac customed, "Vital Airstrip Reop ened at Khe Sanh," "Shell to Cut Manpower," and "Popula tion Up by 880." Some of our home town read ers, especially those who came from England or have English ancestry, may wish to read these papers, and we will save the copies for them. Mrs. Potts hits it on the head when she points out that daily and even large weekly papers can't include the "individual doings." The most enjoyable thing about a small weekly is devoting attention to the Indi vidual and the items about him. One of the sad things about the computer age and this time f avnanlino nnnillatinn is that the individual is losing his identity. rtna Htiliunrlr hntwppn the in- HivlHiml nnrl the comDuter is the small weekly paper. You can taKe your copy ui the Gazette-Times and fold, mu tilate or spindle it to your heart's content, and we'll still love you! If you nave company, take a trip, or come home from the hospital, we'll print it. We appreciate Mrs. Pott's thoughtfulness in sending the papers. . , NEW AUTOS are coming out with all kinds of safety equip ment to help alleviate a nation al problem too many accidents. Manufacturers could go a step farther and help on another na tional problem littering. Much of the littering done in this modern world is that toss ed from cars. A rather substan tial part of a person's life to day is spent inside an automo bile. When he is home, he has wastebaskets and garbage cans into which he throws trash, but too many don't follow the same practice when they are in cars. Litter bags obtainable are of the improvised variety. They or dinarily hang on a cigarette lighter knob. Plastic litter bas kets often are hooked over a ventilater cable. If enterprising manufacturers provided built-in wastebaskets, they might educate families to use them constantly over a per iod of years. They would be handy, convenient, easy to emp ty, and easy to keep clean. If parents train a young child j: IEW, BRILLIANT i . -i - .i...h.....v .,.....r,.. . .v .y. COLO At the new SALEM 745-785 Commercial S.L RESTAURANT. WITH carefully on the matter, ho will get so that he won't even throw a cum wrapper out of a car but Instead, will seek out the litter basket It there Is one! AND WHILE we're In 8 suggest ing frame of mind, we have another thought for those who find It a chore to write letter. Try getting a tape recorder and M-nding messages buck and forth between relatives and friends by this manner. If you haven't used one very often, vour own voice will sound weird to you, but it sounds nat ural to everyone else. On today's market and right here In our I'll old home town vou can get tape recorders to day at a very reasonable price. You can buy 3-lneh tapes that will carry a long conversation, and they are inexpensive. You can use the same tape over and over with care. When you play the tape from a friend or relative, It la as If they are actually visiting In stead of sending a communica tion. It's a great system for spe cial occasions, too, such as sending greetings for Christmas, for birthdays, and for other spe cial events. We started doing this with a friend who has been 111, and It has been very pleasant to "vis it" back and forth by recording when distance prevents making a trip In person. Pioneer Ponderings Br W. S. CAVE WELL One Might Do? Tf nno rtnllar mnlit circulate fnct onnllrrh It UnillH takp Car of all our business transactions, but a warehouse full of curren cy under lock and key, plus stagnant bank balances and un folded bills dormant in our wal lets, can strangle our economy. Money must move io insuie prosperity, but It must move in nmHiinfiirO omnlflUITlPnt. One Of the problems of present system is the presence oi too many peu pie being compensated far be mnA thir nrndtirtive contribu tion. The work they do today has no measurable value tomor row. T fnpl that we have too many "thinkers and tink ers". We have carried mem along by deficit spending, ana by so doing have brought on the present money crisis. The remedies being proposed are coo late and too drastic to have pub lic ennnnrt The reaction in Eng land to an austerity program is a foreword to wnai win iiappeu in this country. Hydes Are Parents Of Infant Daughter Mr. and Mrs. Jon Hyde are an nouncing the birth of their first child, a daughter, born Thurs rfmr March 91 nt Kmanuel hos pital in Portland. The little girl weighed 9 10., l oz., ana nas been named Michelle Kim. Mrs Hyde is the former Rogenia Wil son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Wilson. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs Hubert Wilson, and maternal great grandmother is Mrs. Cora Wilson, all of Hepp ner. Maternal great grandpar ents are Mr. and Mrs. Gayle Per kins of Dufur. Paternal grandparents of the new baby are Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hyde. , , Mr. and Mrs. Wilson traveled to the Hyde home last week-end to visit their son-in-law and daughter, and to become acq uainted with their new grand child. IN EVERY ROOM Phone.- (503) 363-2451 S4 - HOUR COFFEE SHOP THE EDITOR. Athlete Honored Dear Wes: . The enclosed clipping may be of interest, as reported In the Sun Jose Mercury of recent date, cspeciullv to your many sports minded readers of the Gazette Times. It reminds me that East ern Oregon and Morrow county In particular have produced mUn.. fiiitutiintlnir nirfnrmers. such as Dick Huhl. Dallas Ward. "Pappy Havseert" MCAilisier, General John Beckett, among others. These boys mado their fine marks In football. I recall that In mv own active athletic years. Buck Bradshaw of The Dalles and Tommy Boylen of Pendleton were outstanding bas- nn thd UniVfTttitV of Oregon varsity. Boylen actually was an fccho inna wnere nis ju ther was a big sheepman of lUca uAare nlthnnnh I believe Tommy was a graduate of Pen dleton High school. Dave Wilcox, who has brought fame and glory to Vale and another Willow Creek, as a pro fessional football player with the San Francisco 49ers and this past year's winner of the coveted Eshmont Award, Is typ ical, I think, of the Eastern Ore gon athlete who can never be completely divorced from his inborn heritage of a "rough and tough" background, as Mr. TO The Rhyming Philosopher WORTHINESS NOT ALL MAY REACH THE PINNACLES OF FAME OR LEAD HIS CHARGING TROOPS TO VICTORY. NOT ALL ARE BORN TO WIN A STATE'S ACCLAIM, AND LEAST OF ALL PERHAPS FOR YOU AND ME. THOUGH SOME ARE TALENTED ON FIELDS OF SPORT, AND OTHERS HEAD THE HEIGHTS OF INDUSTRY WHAT RECOMPENSE HAS HE WHO FALLS FAR SHORT OF BEING KNOWN BEYOND HIS FAMILY? TAKE NOTE OF THOSE WHOSE ONLY PASSIVE SKILL IS BEING HERE. AND BY THEIR PRESENCE SPARK THE INSPIRATION TO INFLAME THE WILL OF THOSE WHOSE RESTLESS SOULS MUST MAKE THEIR MARK. SOME BATTLES MAY BE WON BY BRAWN ALONE; BUT GREATER ONES BY HEROES STILL UNKNOWN. SPARE JUST A MOMENT'S PRAISE FOR THOSE WHO TEND THE FIRE THAT GIVES THE TEMPER TO THE STEEL, AND THOSE CONTENT TO STAUNCHLY BACK A FRIEND IN TIMES OF NEED AND HONOR HIS APPEAL. FOR THOSE WHO SERVE WITH WILLING HEART AND HAND HAVE PROVEN WORTH, BECAUSE THEY UNDERSTAND. HARRY W. FLETCHER ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 1 1 , I i ' jji W sv iiiiil I 1. 'V . PIXY PIN-UPS EXCLUSIVELY AT PENNEY'S 9 a.m. Hrubv Indic ates In his comment herein enclosed.. Art Crawford Kingston Way Sun Jose, Calif. U3130 Exeerpls of the clipping from Dan llrubv's column. 'Out On A Limb.' from the San Jose Mer curv, follow: ,.. "KEDWOOD CITY-Dave ll cox. the 4'Jers' rampaging line backer. Is boyish, shy chaP most at home chucking bah Into the burn loft or teaching a fractious mustang whos boss. "A onetime rodeo hand. u cox sat quietly through a ban quet Wednesday night at the 1! . . fi... viio i uloo hon- IUH1WOUU V-Jljr , Yoi-T orlng him as winner of the 1907 Len fcsnmoni awihu. "Dave grew up In Vale, Ore., a rowtown on Willow Creek near the Idaho line. Grid scouts refer to prospects from that reg ion as 'rimrock savages "When Wilcox completed his rookie season with the 49ers (1964), he stopped by his alma mater, the University of Oregon, to say hello. "I remember Dave was unde cided whether to start working in Eugene or to return to Vale, athletic director Len Casanova explained. "I asked him where he had lived In the Bay Area. "And he said, Shucks, I was plum down the road In Red wood City.' So, I told h m, "Dave, when you use words like that I'm sure you'd better go home to Vale.") Cas, who coached Wilcox, had xnmminr-tinns fltlOUt poking fun at the eastern Oregon town. "Buck Shaw is nere iuniKi and he came from a small town (Stuart, Iowa) Just like I did 2 DAYS ONLY MONDAY & TUESDAY APRIL 8th & 9th BUILD BABY'S PHOTO Beautiful 5x7" photograph, for only Do your baby-bragging wifh a beauti ful phofo . . . "worth more than a thou sand words." Get a completely finished photograph for only 59t. You will not be urged to buy but if you wish the re maining poses they're yours for 1.35 for the first, 1.25 for the 2nd and $1 for any additional. AGE LIMIT S years. One or two children per family will be photographed singly for 59 1 each for the first picture. Each addi tional child under five, 1 .50. to 6 p.m. (Ferndale. Calif.) so I know how Dave feels." W Cusam.va, "I don't think Valo Is more than fur blocks In siza and yet It has Iwo one-way streets can you Imalgne thut." "Wilcox U one of 11 children. His father is 80 years old and rises every day at S a.m. "One of Duves brothers Is blind." Casanova said. 'But, like the rest of tho family, hes a tremendous person. And what a sense of humor. .... "He raises pigs and by the use of his hands keeps tabs on all his animals.' "Casanova said Wilcox plays football with one thought. " 'if you are pleased at what vou did yesterday, then you haven't done thing today." i COMMUNITY U ) BILLBOARD Coming Events OES SOCIAL CLUB Saturday. April 13, 1:45 p.m. Heppner Masonic Hall EASTER MONDAY CARD PARTY Monday, April 15, 8 p.m. Episcopal Parish Hall Bridge, pinochle, prizes, des sert Public welcome FOOD SALES Morrow Co. Jaycee Wives, Friday, April 4, 3-6 p.m. Central Market Legion Auxiliary Food Sale, Saturday, April 13 RAND TARNIVAL Sponsored by Elementary and Grade School PTA units Saturday, April 20 Fair Pavilion. Lots oi iun ioi Dinner, Carnival, dance BOY SCOUT PANCAKE FEED Saturday, April b, i noon to 6:30 p.m. St. Patrick's parish hall CnnncnrpH hv TrOOD 661 Support the Scout program HIGH SCHOOL PLAY "Arsenic and Old Lace," 3 act play Monday, Tuesday, April 9, 10, 8 p.m. High School Multipurpose Room Tickets $1 adults, 75c all stu dents SPONSORED AS A PUBLIC SERVICE BY C. A. RUGGLES Insurance Agency P. O. Box 247 PH. 676-9625 Heppner ALBUM WITH Non-glaro lights get natural smiles.