State 'Hello' Program Greets Visitors; Chamber Takes Part Oregon's two famous slogans Relax In a Stute or Lxcite mcnt" and "Slav and Tlay An other Day" are Joined by i third motto this vi'iir in nrepar ation for the expected Influx of ,(XX),000 visitor during the tourist season. The new slogan, created bv the State Highway Department's Travel information Division of ficials for Operation Company's Coming 1968, is: "Help 'Em tinner Longer in Oregon." By a happy and not-so-strange co incidence, the slogan's initials spell "HELLO" a short and friendly terra perfectly suited for vregonians. Heppner-Morrow county Cham ber of Commerce Is participat ing In the HELLO program. Its special events and community affairs committee, of which Le Koy Gardner is chairman, has distributed "Hello" lapel but tons and posters to welcome vis itors and inform them that the local people are happy to give them tourist Information and I ,yX 1 FOR THINGS TO SEE AND DO IN MORROW COUNTT CALL LeRof Gardner. 678-9218 FOR VACATION INFORMATION help make their vlsita here more pleasant. At the same time the com mittee has distributed booklets describing things to see and do in Oregon during the summer. This year's Company's Coming campaign Is a departure from past years In which community clean-up was the dominant theme. First publicized in 1967. the 12 page booklet for tourist lists points of interest and dates of special events for most areas of Oregon. The state la divided in to tour regions for handy ref ctence by the out-of-state vla iter. More than 20,000 copies of the booklet were distributed to touriest-orlcnted businesses In Oregon last year. Gardner has copies of the booklet and other materials available to those who would like to participate In the Hello program. He points out that a visitor staying an extra day or two in ine community is a great help wnen multiplied bv hundreds. If every visitor to Oregon in 19C8 lingered only one day longer. the state's revenue from tourism would Increase by approximate ly $80 million. Salvation Army Seeks Public Aid On Fund Appeal Follow-up letters in the final phase of this year's annual Sal vation Army fund appeal are being mailed this week, accord ing to Ted Smith, chairman of the local service extension com mittee for The Salvation Army. The mail appeal this year was necessitated by the sudden pass ing of James Rover, Salvation Army service extension repre sentative, who had been sched uled to conduct the campaign in this area. Smith reported that response thus far to the mail appeal has been good. However, he empha sized that success of the fund ing program depends upon all in the area responding to the appeal. "Without a complete return It will not be possible for the Sal vation Army to continue a full scale helping program for the coming year for those in need in the community," Smith said. Through the Savation Army extension program, some 23 dif- lerent services are provided, with the local service extension committee coordinating the pro gram. The Salvation Army meets needs wnicn no other pro gram is equipped to do, includ : ing provision of emergency med ical aid, transient welfare, farm fire relief, disaster aid and care for unwed mothers, among oth ers. Smith urged those who have not yet contributed to mail their checks as soon as possible to Bill Siewert, treasurer, Bank of Eastern Oregon, Heppner, Ore gon. Any who receive follow-up letters after already contribut ing are asked to be tolerant as it does take time to cross check .the records. Smitton to Retire; Robert Pool Named Robert Pool, 30, presently res ident bridge engineer at On tario, will replace Laurence (Larry) C. Smitton as district maintenance superintendent at Pendleton, it is announced by Forrest Cooper, state highway engineer. Smitton is retiring after more than 40 years with the State Highway Department. His re tirement will be effective July 1. JiHiH. Pool is a 1959 graduate . In civil engineering from Oregon State University in Corvallis He is also a registered profes sional engineer. After joining the Department in 1959, he served two years of military service in the Army. Pool returned to the Depart ment in 1962 and worked on the Astoria Bridge as an assistant resident bridge engineer. He worked in La Grande in 1965 and moved to Ontario in 1966. With headquarters in Pendleton, his district contains mast of Morrow and Umatilla counties. Church to Have Artist Speaker Ben Larson, immediate past president of the Oregon Art As sociation, Portland, will be a special guest speaker at the Sunday morning service of the Heppner United Methodist church June 16, according to an nouncement by the Rev. Melvin Dixon, pastor. Mr. Larson will present an il lustrated sermon in oils or pas tels during the morning worship service at 11 o'clock. The pub lic is invited to attend. The church will go on sum mer schedule on Sunday, June 30, with the exact time to be announced soon. Bible study and prayer fellowship are held each Thursday evening at 8:00, and the pastor invites members and interested friends to attend. Adventist Church Members Attend Camp Meetings Elder and Mrs. H. E. Preston returned Sunday from Walla Walla. Wash., where they had been in attendance at the an nual camp meeting of the Upp er Columbia Conference of Seventh-day Adventists which be gan June 6 and ended Saturday, June 15. Also In attendance from Hepp ner were Mrs. Iva Booker, Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Jones, Dr. and Mrs. Harold Huber, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Crasser, Mrs. Orlin Hus ton and Mr. and Mrs. Marion Biddle. A "wild man from Bornoe" who is now a devoted Christian and a member of the Seventh day Adventist mission in his land, told (through an interpre ter) of his life in his land and of his conversion to Christian ity through the ministry of El der A. G. Youngberg over 30 years ago. Dressed in his nat ive head-hunter's attire and car rying his sword with which he cut off heads previous to his conversion to Christianity, he expressed to the congregation on the camp grounds his apprecia tion for the missionary program of the church in his country, according to Elder Preston, local pastor of the Adventist church. Elder Preston will bring to his congregation a report of the camp meeting at the morning service Saturday morning, June i, he said. lttH m iiiii'JrXVEK GAZETTE-TIMES Heppner, Oregon 97836, Thursday, June 20, 1968 Sec. 2 Serves in Vietnam Army Private First Class Ste phen R. Part low, 21, whose par ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Part low, and wife, Gloria, live on Route 1, Roardman. was assign ed May 30 to the 101st Airborne Division near Blen lloa, Viet nam, as a rifleman. Giles French Writes of Morrow Post Offices Br GILES FRENCH Morrow county residents did very well on the few Questions proposed to them recently; the answers to most of them were found by women of Morrow county when they published their account a few years ago. Appended is a list of post of fices once in Morrow countv and would any who think of them selves as old timers be able to locate all of them? Now a list of old post offices is not necessarily historical even though It Is from such things that history is written. Transpor tation changes have made it pos sible to concentrate twenty-five post offices Into five without re ducing the time it takes to mail a letter. What Is Important or seems Important to this writer, Is the way people lived In the days when two dozen post offices were fell to be necessary. Con- POST OFFICES IN MORROW COUNTY (U before Morrow indicates establishment In Umatilla county) (W before Morrow Indicates establishment In Wasco county) John McCabe, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernie McCabe, and Matt Murray, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rod Murray, are spending the week at Perry's Sport Camp, located near vernoma. Mrs. McCabe took the two boys to the camp on Sunday, June 16, where they will receive a week of special ized basKetbau instruction. sagr Oregon visitors bring new dollars into our economy dollars that help create new jobs, dollars that buy local goods and services. If we make our visitors happy, they'll enjoy themselves more and stay 4onger. The longer they stay, the more our area benefits! So, My HELLO! HELLO means, Help 'Em Linger longer in Oregon. How? By being your usual friendly self. By being helpful. By telling visitors of the things to do and places to see in our area. By showing them that Oreoon is the vacation place! Ask our Chamber of Commerce how you can help. Call LeBoy Gardner, 67t-d2l8 IF DISCONTINUED. NAME COUNTT 1st POSTMASTER MAIL WENT TO Established Discontinued ACTON U Morrow 7111879 61918H8 ADAMSV1LLE W Morrow Silas Miles Hardman 491884 63018H5 ALPINE U Morrow G. H. Parsell Galloway 1031884 7271894 ATWOOD U Morrow H. Thompson 10221883 11201888 BOARDMAN Morrow 7131916 still CASTLE HOCK U Morrow Boardman 831883 5161926 CECIL Morrow Louis Balsiger 711902 CECILS U Morrow James Rast 1031867 8171870 COYOTE Morrow Irrigon 6171904 5151912 DAVIDSON Morrow G. Davidson Eightmile 4261893 8271897 DOUGLAS Morrow L. Morgan 123118SK) 2271906 EIGHTMILE U Morrow Heppner 9101883 341941 ELLA U Morrow Frank Ovtatt lone 4241882 9301910 FARRENS Morrow Lillian Page 591908 1211909 GALLOWAY Morrow J. J. Galloway Echo 7311886 9301915 GOOSEBERRY U Morrow - I. R. Esteb lone 1031884 1311918 HEPPNER W Morrow G. H. Stansbury 231873 still IONE U Morrow Aaron Royse 5261884 still IRRIGON Morrow Frank Holbrook 11161903 still HARDMAN U Morrow Out 1943 to 1946 6151881 extant in '55 LENA W Morrow C. E. Hinton Heppner 611J873 8311942 LEXINGTON Morrow Nathanial Yeats 11111885 still MIDWAY U Morrow Henry C. Myers 10271874 211881 MORGAN Morrow A. C. Morgan lone 2271906 1311955 MOSADA Morrow Alice Albright 9231915 order rescinded PARKER'S MILL Morrow Mr. Maxwell Hardman 641907 12151925 PETTYSVILLE U Morrow A. C. Pettvs lone 12241878 319 1887 PETTY S Morrow S. P. Jones lone 1191900 5151901 SADDLE U Morrow Mr. Douglas 11201882 12211890 SALI NEVILLE U Morrow Mrs. Benefid Heppner 191884 421886 SEPANEK Morrow Bertha Sepanck Echo 821917 9141918 SINNOTT Morrow S. Osburn Hardman 4291916 2281918 STOKES Morrow D. Bailey Umatilla 5261897 4251899 STRAWBERRY Morrow J. C. White 371904 123119081 WILLOW FORKS Wasco Amanuel Pettys lone 631872 122418781 alder Bertha Sepanck, undoubt edly a woman of some enterprise and ambition, living six miles northeast of Lexington. Perhaps her home has been swallowed Into great wheatfields, but Ber tha Is there In spirit. She. like Frank Ovlatt, who opened the post office at Ella where it did business for 28 years, are a part of the background of Morrow county. Like ancestors you can't get rid of your background. It Is there like the rings in a tree trunk Indicating a part of your growth; It is a part of you. Some people almost always young people try to lose their backgrounds, to be something else, pretend to be ashamed of grandpa. It Is impossible, every one is the product of his an cestry and his background. That Is the reason history is import ant and to understand history is to understand one's self. Change yourself if you want to and if you can. But knowing what you are and how you got that way is a good thing before chanpini? it. POWER CONTROL ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE WE REPAIR: Electric Motors Power Tools o Hydraulic Jacks Alemite Equipment 421 S.E. 4th Pendleton Pbone 276-5862 r Save Money and Enjoy Spring-Time Freshness with a new Frost-Free Electric Freezer or Combination Save money by "freezing" your gar den's surplus fruits and vegetables. Easy with an electric freezer; not messy like old-fashioned canning methods. Buy seasonal specials when prices' are low, Your electric freezer keeps them fresh until you're ready to serve. Reduces shopping trips, tool Unexpected guests are no problem when there's a freezer filled v.ith good food. It's almost like having a supermarket in your own home I Electric Freezers quickly pay fori themselves with the money you save by home "freezing," and lower prices on seasonal specials. Examine the wonderful new freezers and combination refrigerator-freezers at your favorite appliance dealer, Colunito lasiii Electric Ce-op "Serving Morrow, Wheeler and Gilliam Counties"