Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 25, 1971)
HEPPNER GAZETTE-TIMES. Thursday. Ttbruary IS, 171 160 Attend Big FFFA Banquet William Arthur Installation Held Many friends gathered Sun day for the Impressive Servlre of Installation for the Rev. Wll Continued from pace 1) ,lan Arthur or the lone united . . ii nurcn or mrist. Hick Drake, star orecnnana cominir to net a modrraiur plaque bv First National Bunk, was the Rev. John Hall, Mini. nnd medal from FFA rounaa- ier oi counselling iiur inn rnntmimllu film ri.,ir.l H,.n . )n. ' Kirk Robinson was named Trokk Murn of hp ,(). Star Farmer ana rcceivea a UCC presented bnckeround data plaouo by the First national for the new ml ,.n,i tho FFA Medal. For Live- born at Spokane I- T f - vt.x k Farmlnii he received a "k Plaque by the Bank of Eastern Og""- returned to Spokane OriL'on and an KA weaai. , , . , ,i., r ,. , Outstanding Livestock Grower "du.al from ml ho won tne sc -- i"-- L'minnry at Tasndena, was ordained at the Community Congrepar Inister. He was j Y&'mm , t but grew ut! J I if- J t i MICHAEL D. BENCE Michael D. Benge Still Missing lone Students To Attend Science Symposium Fifty-eight teachers and 153 student from hich schools a cross the state have been Invlt ed to participate In Oregon's second Junior Science and Hu manltlcs Symposium March 11 13 at Oregon State University. The first symposium was held last ApiII at OSU with the theme "The environmental Crl sis: Can Man Survive?" This year's theme will be "The Cris Is of Change Can Man Adapt?' The 2's day conference will include lectures by srlenee-hu mnnitirM experts, wide-ranging discussions on the theme, re search papers by selected stu dents, nnd a session on career opportunities in the biological " . . .. I li.fTA fVijirn nnrl Ihn L-nM.. Tim for the second year he won me rotating plaque from the MKcS ,w is Michael D. Benge. row County Livestock urowcrs, - ' f Mr. and Mrs. Terrel L. Benge inir. and humanities and social son, and physical sciences, engineer nnd was again announcea as innin i ,,' of lone. Mike Is one of some, ionce. Darrel E. Wilson, teach vrZ'Jo In Nov.. ISfifl. He served ! thV f fr,m r,f"n r T hk Farmer degree. L.u..,i, ,.,ii io i,Hng or are prisoners of the .North viiuiiii uiiiii iWT.i tft niivii id, mt, .., . t.., I Vietnamese. Kyie Kooinson r,--vcu o-- Wfls j, Q Ionft nai rim.u - Rev. Arthur presented a pa ter as uuisianuing r ptr whIch shar,,d a D)lckgrolln( Carl King, tor rarm s nome 0f ns religious decisions nnd Electrification projects awarded doctrinal beliefs. This was fol a medal from the FFA rounaa er; Cherl A. Carlson, Clint Krebs Jerl D. Snow of lone. Leather Lumbers were told by June McRoherts how important the border Is in leather tooling tion. Mike had worked with the Montagnards In the Central Highlands of Vietnam for about six vcurs. He was hichlv thouc lit ku o rtl,.cvl,,n r,nrlH In ' Of hV IhO Inolllltaln IHOPIO and " '" lll.t llllg. onw v, ..j v.....w.. ........ . '...I V,,,,., . ., o nnOorn which he was questioned about j '"'" '-'..."?"; i m?- ei ' ,"h7 H J was i-viTi aoopiim d u iiui- -" Ivo chief there. nre working on their fair proj- Mike was missing early in Members are David Mc- of lis;s aficr a Viet Lacnian, Jerry centry, una jmc- Koherts, lan Marshall, Knthy Marshall. Teresa Hughes, Rusty- Ted Uellamy received a Home I this paper and other matters re Improvement plaque from BanK Mating to his concept of the mln ixt K;isiim Oreeon and the FFAllstrv and Droeram of the church. xi.wlnl Dinner Follows renruary c.., B..n,.m awnrrted a The Deaconesses hosted the 1 onK auacK on n.n inuoi placiue for Swine Production by eongregntlonal potluek dinner.; Vietnam the Bank of Eastern Oregon, and Musical entertainment during! A fair flood of letters to Han- the DcKalb t... ,.,.icio.,Hinti con nr no n r. ann nirs. unrrei James, i nev mm tin mi i.ii ii 1 1 vtii ik i ..... . o i v , , . . sang "The King of Love My. North Vietnamese. More are be win. I 1 n1nnA I Mlt'Dni' U IS ULX'UIIlUailK.'U UVI about Local Students Receive Honors A total of 107 Oregon State University Juniors Including some from this area have been honored for outstanding scholar ship. The recognition came from the university's chapter of Phi Kap pa Fhi, national scholastic hon orary, at a special Junior Honors Accolade. To qualify for the recognition, students had to have a B plus or better grade average through their sophomore year. Students honoied included John Edward Rawlins, Science, of lone. Spaghetti Feed At HHS Friday The sophomore class of Hepp ner High School is getting an early start on their fund rais ing projects for next year s prom by sponsoring a Spaghetti Feed. The feed will be held at the high school cafeteria on Friday, Feb. 26 from 4:00 to 6:30 p.m. Admission prices will be $1.25 for adults, $1.00 for students, and $.75 for pre-schoolers. Janet Gentry is chairman for the dinner and will be assisted by Mrs. Griffith and other soph lone JV's Nip Heppner Frosh, 64-62 To End Season lone JV's squeaked by Hepp ners Frosh 64-62 despite John Boyer's 30 point effort for the Frosh. Heppner's Super KnaU stayed with lone until the last quarter when the JV's made their move, outscoring the Frosh, 19-22. Mike Bergstrom hauled in 23 rebounds and tallied 18 points for Heppner. Only three other Super Knats scored, Barry Mun kers 7, John Healy 2 and Mike Prock with 1 point, lone produced a balanced at tack with all but two of their players scoring. Hamlett led lone with 16, Wlnkelman and McCarty 13 each, Jay Wright man 9, Ashurst 7, Pettyjohn 4, Carlson and Gutierrez with 2 each. SANDHOLLOW SEWERS The Snndhollow Sewers met Feb. 16 nt the Ken Turner home for the first meeting. We learn ed the fundamentals of sewing. Our leader is Pat Dougherty. President is Cindy Dougherty, sec, Cheryle Turner and news reporter, Lori Turner. Next meet ing we are going to make an oven mitt. Lori Turner, reporter William Baker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Baker has re- Rusty McP.oberts, reporter ' meal omore class mothers with the ceived a promotion from PFC to cooking and serving of theSp4 since his arrival in Vietnam 'Just before Christmas. NFO Presents Arnold Paulson The Morrow County NFO has announced an Interesting sem inar scheduled next week in Pendleton. Featured speaker Is the famous Arnold Paulson from the midwest, a noted economist. This seminar starts promptly at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday, March 6 at Blue Mountain Community College. Along with tickets for the seminar will be a luncheon Included. Tickets at $10.00 per person are available from Jack Sumner, Heppner. It is suggest ed those going take along note book and pencil. (Ed. Note: We heard him a year ago and wholeheartedly recommend him. He'll make your hair stand on end!) Heppner Sponsors Bowling Tournament Heppner Bowling Assn., will sponsor its first tournament Feb. 27-28 at Fiesta Bowl. The 15 teams registered for the week end event are the teams that bowl regularly at Fiesta Bowl which includes teams from Kin zua. Trophies, and cash prizes will be given in team events, singles, doubles and all events. Bowling at its best will be seen this weekend at the Fiesta Bowl, stop by to watch. Mai K miner ruueivcu a plague i -- - - - - . rnl i . . I Mrs Mnrllvn Rletmnnn i II SOU lle loncerneu I from tne BanK or eastern ure- j - i , ,-,,, , ,,s(1 urisoncis ,i ppa Mal fr Form Rev. and Mrs. Edward Cuttinr tne lrt a,m' nt OI 'llP!e Pr oneis ' M.thnHiJf and if you wish to write, w e 4 Tom Cutsforth was awarded Church were among the guest identification of m n MinlclAI'O nitunfllniT inn tf7 ---- a plaque Horn thcsanK or fcasi- "t "'prisoners held, humane treat Inter- Dip .11 . . H1iniL.fj.ro ffsn1 .HIT ' ' I ' of town came from Condon, The ''"mps. Dalles, Ingle Chapel and Feder ated Churches of Milton-Free- water, Beaverton nnd Waverly Heights, Portland. a piaque irom me cairn ui jsi- - ------ lnt.:" nt th -' prisoners held, humane ern Oregon and FFA Medal for Cutting read the scripture nt the. privileges and Farm Placement In Ag Produc Sunday evening service follow-1 ,n.m inspection of ing dinner. Ministers from out, n,u,"n'u m. pnuon oi tion. Greg Greenup received a plaque from the Bank of East ern Oregon for his outstanding Sheep Production. UP Railroad Award It was recently announced that John Currin is to be award ed the Union Pacific Railroad $100 scholarship. John plans to attend Washington State Uni versity at Pullman. He will study Animal Science. SPRAY NEWS Letters should be addressed to Office of the President, Repub lic of North Vietnam, co POW's, P. O. Box 30, Portland, Ore. 97207. The 4 H Sewing Class The 4-H Sewing Class met Feb. 10 at Pnt Adams' house. We elected officers: president The delicious beef dinner was sherrill Adams: v. pres. Jimmy nrcDarcd and served bv Miss a i time- Linda Kahr and the Future reporter Darla Hilliker. We are the Gooseberry Rd., when he Homemakcrs of America chap- ordering our sewing books, and drew out on the shoulder when ter eirls. d.ritno tn M riht nwav. We he met a truck. The shoulder Empty School Bus Tips on Gooseberry The lone bus driven by Bill Lane was involved in a minor accident Tuesday evening en route back to town. He was a- bout 14 miles south of lone on are also thinking about making tovs for the children's hospital, William Schlichtina. son of The meetings will be every otn Mr. and Mrs. Dick Schlichting, er Wednesday at 4:00 p.m. The left yesterday for boot training name of our club is the same nt the U.S. Naval Trainine Sta- as last years: Mr. ana Mrs tion at San Diego. 'Stitches. HOTEL OUR FISH and CHIPS ARE BACK! Truly A Gourmet Delight Prepared in Our Kitchen From Whole Halibut And Dipped in Our Special Batter ?1.50 Lenten Season Shoppers Special Tuna Fish Sandwich' Til 5 P.M. 39c was soft from the recent rain and the bus went over on its side. The fact the projecting rear view mirror was not brok en off would indicate the bus was probably going very slow or had stopped. The bus was empty nt the time. Principal Jim Bier, in charge of busses, said the bus was brought back into Heppner for a thorough safety check before it would be put back into oper ation. It appears the damage was minor. I Here for Hynd Services Among those coming for the Herb Hynd services were Mrs. Doc Severinsen, Mrs. Hynas niece of New York, Mr. and Mrs. George Shaw from West Minis ter, B. C, and Judge and Mrs. Rho Blcakman of John Day. Doc Severinsen who was tap- ng in Lainornia was 10 ny 10 Portland and then drive to Eastern Oregon to pick up his wife. Episcopal Church Women served dinner following the services to more than 100 peo ple. J FABRICS polyesters $7.00"6.50-5.00 yd. AND COTTON DOUBLE KNITS 3 A yd- BASIC KANDEL PATTERNS UNIQUE NYLON ZIPPERS El mas Apparel PH. 676 8426 HEPPNER New York Store's yJ lFO bv! iuJ liS A Close-out of Short Lines, Broken Sizes, Name Brand Quality merchandise. Hundreds of items have been placed on sale at prices cut to cost All sales final No exchanges, no refunds, and no mail orders. Quan tities are limited so shop early. 3C jOWBOY BOOT SALE A complete clearance of all 1970 Discontinued Styles of Men's, Women's, Youths, Boys', Girls', Infants. Acme and Durango Cowboy boots. A terrific selection to choose from. These boots are all first quality, and all boots are from our regular stock. There are not all sizes in every style, but there is a complete run of sizes in the selection. Note: Quantities are limited to the existing stock. SALE PRICES START AS LOW AS flu IN INFANT SIZES (4 to 8 SIZE SCALE) if WRANGLER Select Irregulars in every color you'd want! Straight leg western jeans with front and back pockets, in easy care, 100 cotton denim. Take your choice of black, brown, dark green, white, light blue, new blue, blue denim, red, wheat. Sizes 56-20 . , . Permanent Press Men's Slacks Tapered leg style, all first quality. All Nationally Advertised Checks. Solids, and many different fabrics, including Hop Sacking. All Permanent Press and completely washable. 444 3,, $1200 ri 3 Pair for $10.00 BOYS' Wrangler Jackets First Quality, Full Length Zipper. Heavy weight Denim. Tan color only. REG. $4.98 THEY LAST $022 Use the free parking lot one block away at S. W. Main and Frazer W YORC STORE S. W. Emigrant and Main Pendleton. Ph. 276-4551