1 1 iRAtr o or i EUGENE. ORE. 07403 St. Patrick's Day Dall John Day Group Featured at Firemen's Ball The Heppner Fire Dept. U sponsoring a "Fireman's Ball" on March 17, St. Patrick's Day, at the Legion Hall in Heppner. Live music will be featured by the "Wild Country", a group from John Day. Tickets are $1.00 per person and the music mill start at 9 p.m. Proceeds from the dance will be used to purchase fire-fighting equip ment. Everyone is invited to attend. The W.W.Weatberfords of Lexington have bought Mrs. Ralph Thompson's house on Court St. SucccssStory Ted Toll advertised his 1963 Dodge Pickup just once in the Gazette-Times and SOLD IT. You never know till you try. You too may have the same phe nominal success. Call 676-9228 to place your next ad with the Heppner Gazette-Times, the paper with reach. County Gals Chosen for Court The royal court for the Arlington Rodeo has lovely Morrow County young ladies. Marci Linnell is Queen and another Boardmanite Bobbi Acock is a princess as is Mickey Hoskins of lone. The tryouts were last Sunday. U of O Degrees Awarded Three A graduating class of 709 candidates for advanced and baccalaureate degrees will be presented at the University of Oregon's Winter Term Gradua tion Convocation Friday, March The convocation will be at 3 p.m. in the ballroom of the Erb Memorial Union. University President Robert D. Clark will confer degrees. Speaker for the services will be Dr. Louis Perry of Portland, former president of Whitman College who is now president of Standard Insurance Company. His commencement address is entitled "Bridge Over Troubled Waters." Candidates, who if they suc cessfully complete all require ments at the end of Winter Term will receive degrees, include 68 candidates for Doctor of Philosophy, five candidates for Doctor of Education, five for Doctor of Arts, 150 for Master's degrees, and 491 for bacca laureate degrees. The candidates include the following from Heppner: Patti Jean Healy, B.A.,History and Sara Lynn Miller, B.S., Speech Pathology and Audiology. lone: Teresa M. Stefani Turner, B.S.,Sociology. NOT HEPPNER'S JERRY GENTRY In the March 1 Justice Court News, the Jerry Gentry fined for no motorcycle endorsement is not Jerry Dean Gentry of Heppner. Don Robinson Home Don Robinson came home from Portland a week ago following surgery on his ankle. He is getting along fine. For awhile he will be getting around on crutches. In Texas . Mr. and Mrs. Randall Peter son, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Palmer and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wright returned home last week from Dallas, Texas. The men are members of the Columbia Basin board of direct ors and attended a meeting of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Assn. down there. Mrs. BUI WheaUn slipped and fell on the dance floor Saturday night at the Legion Hall here. She broke ber leg just above the ankle. G-T Ads Psy Big COth Yocr! THE (GAZEUT Heppner, Oregon Introducing f.liko lloucll, Now County Agent m fc-i I I i v v -FA V' Mr. and Mrs. Mike Howell and . .. j ..n( Murrnw Countv extension servicer .-II inu uTnivLM e - starting June 1. Morrow County is looking forward to the arrival of its new 4-H County Agent. Mike Howell. He will arrive June 1 to take over his duties. Mr. and Mrs. Howell and their daughter Cristin will be visiting in the county during spring vaction from the University of Idaho. . . Everyone is invited to drop in at the County Extension office on Tuesday, March 20 to meet the Howells. .... Mike and his wife, Jeanne grew up together at Fruitland, Idaho. During their school days they were both active in 4-H and FHA and FFA They were married their sophomore year at the University of Idaho where they graduated last June. Mike in Agriculture Education and Jeanne in Home Economics Eduction. Their daughter Cristin Dawn is 24 years old. They expect their second child this fall. . Jeanne's interests include: sewing and clothing pattern design, water skiing, gardening and green house work, upholstering furniture, house decorating and design, snowmobiling and trflvding. Mike's interests are working on automobiles (old and new) working with livestock, water skiing, photography, snowmobiling and being with his family. They both have an ambition to learn how to fly. Best of all they like small towns and that's the kind Morrow County has. Heppner Housing Shortage A public meeting was held Monday night at the Morrow County Courthouse with the County court, Heppner City Council and Allen Nistad, Kin zua Corp. official. Builders, bankers and building and loan people were present as were Oregon Dept. of Housing rep resentatives. Employment at the new Kinzua Corp. veneer plant at Heppner has filled all the homes here and at Lexington and lone. Some workers even live in Hermiston. Allen Nistad of the Kinzua Corp. told of his firm's invest ment of three million dollars in their new manufacturing plant and said the firm contemplates an additional investment of another $3,000,000 in the next phase of their program. Skiing ....Excellent 5 h A YOUNG SKI ENTHUSIAST Last weekend saw excellent skiing at Arbuckle. Due to the press of spring work on the farm, the lone Ski group will be fn Accident A collision on Sunday extens ively damaged two cars on Gale and Baltimore Streets. No one wf injured. Cars belonged to Blanche Wise and Lloyd E. Johnson. Mr. Johnson was cited by city police for failure to stop at stop sign. David Mitcanm has been ill and was in Portland recently for tests. 11 r 1 97836, Thursday, March 15, 1973 Cristin. Mr. Howell will be the new Aired He said his company was not going to be able to install the new plywood mill at Heppner unless Heppner would build sufficient and suitable housing for the 125 additional workers it would bring. In effect, no new housing, no new mill for Heppner. Mayor Sweeney explained Heppner's acute water problem and of their hopes to correct the problem. Mr. McDonald of Clark & Groff Engineers is here for a study of the problem and said that the need was another storage tank and pipe line tie in with the Courthouse well here. Judge Paul Jones told of the well at the Fairgrounds which produces about 400 gallons per minute. He said he hoped some Continued Pg. 2 on Arbuckle on Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. They are making the trip by private cars. Hospital Sherri O'Brien of Pendleton was admitted to Pioneer Me morial Hospital this week and is still a patient. Dismissed were Janice Goch anour, Heppner; Jack Chitty, Heppner and Donald Hough, Heppner. LIMITED TIME ONLY Home ttends Heritages nnly tS.M. .S Close Call Everyone is heaving a big sigh of relief and thankfulness that the Columbia Basin build ing didn't go up in flames Saturday night. Bill Gentry says as near as they can figure out the insula tion on the wire from the transformer to the building broke down and shorted out. The transformer overheated and exploded about 12:45 Satur day night. Bert Corbin down on the street was the first one to see A Tusk? Mastodon or Mammoth? . 7 ti,. tuck ns it lnnkori at the U 1 1 JN ( t r A 7-'4 t I1V- M.a - o i , ft Neiffer digs cautiously. Tom Shear waits with the shovel. Tom Shear photos. . . ; v. -r ii nin fnnt tuck ovnnserl It i lie iiiiK w. that lived in this land 5,000 to Council ... t. - ,,. i wjr w: 4 --ri PGE Carty Plant The Oregonian and Oregon Journal yesterday reported that the Oregon Nuclear and Ther mal Energy Council at their Tuesday meeting approved a site application request by the Portland General Electric Co. for a proposed nuclear power plant at the Carty Resevoir near Boardman. They deferred for a period of 30 to 60 days a decision on the site's acceptability with prox imity to the Navy Bombing Range, pending studies by the Massachusetts Institute of Next Movie to be March 31 About 100 people turned out on March 11 to see "Little Big Man". It is hoped that the audiences will continue to grow so that this movie project will be able to continue. The next movie will be on Saturday, March 31. It will be 'The Reivers" starring Steve McQueen, and rated PG (Pa rental Guidance). There may be a matinee that afternoon, but it is not definite yet and will be announced later. Grain 173 a r hot (FOB Lexington does iot include warehouse ) courtesy MCGG White Wheat Red Wheat Barley 2.454 bu. 2.42 bu. 73.54 ton Marje Gardner is heme after having been called to The Dalles by the serious illness of her father. E3EHP at Columbia Basin the flame and turn in the alarm. Bill said it was lucky that a lot of the firemen were Just getting home from the game and weren't in bed yet so got to the fire fast. He heard the explosion and said "Oops someone hit a pole". He dropped the town lights momentarily until he was sure that no one on the fire was in danger. The eaves of the building caught fire. There were about 95 gallons of oil in the transformer that burned and ran towards the ; building. Vegetable oil is circu beeinning of the digging. Duane - - mav have belonged to the eleDhants u . 10,000 years ago.. Okays Technology and Atomic Energy Commission. PGE has expressed a willing ness to harden the plant to withstand impact of a plane crash if necessary. Council had asked the Navy to control flights on the western corridor of the bombing range. PGE has already ordered substantial hardware for its new nuclear power plant in Morrow County which they would like to have producing electric power in 1980. WEATHER By DON GILLIAM Hi Low Prec. Wed. 56 37 Thurs. 56 37 Fri. 51 39 Sat. 53 37 Sun. 50 27 Mon. 46 27 Tues. 49 32 .05 .02 .02 March of Dimes Contributions Down The March of Dimes Mothers March contributions are down considerably this year from past years. Only about $233 was collected in Heppner, with $1105.15 being turned in from the entire county. A movie "Beyond The Bells" is to be shown Sunday night at 7:30 p.m. at the Heppner Christian Church. It is the story of a missionary with a savage tribe in Bolivia. -1 15 cents Number 4 lated in a transformer for cooling purposes. This transformer served the Columbia Basin building and doesn't affect any other part of the system. Monday they had a small generator working that supplied a few lights and the coffee pot but no heat. Tempor arily pole mounted trans formers may be substituted until another 3-phase 208 voltage transformer can be located. Because of the odd voltage, Bill said it was a hard one to locate. 5000 Years Old? 1 1 Al . AtlltA Shades of the past, maybe 5000 years ago maybe 10,000 years ago came to light this last weekend. Dick Meader scoop ing out a silting pond on the hill behind the Hospital turned up an elephant tusk that measured 9 feet 4 inches in length. It was under 6 to 8 feet of clay soil. During his years of excavat ing he has found numerous specimens of bones, teeth and tusks. So when he exposed the base end of the tusk he knew he had something big and interest ing. With the help of Tom Shear, Duane Neiffer and Neil Poulsen from the High School, his wife, Inez and daughter Tami, the giant tusk was slowly exca vated. The crew dug carefully with small instruments and their hands until the earth was removed from all around the tusk. There was evidence that the tusk curved to almost three quarters of a circle. However the tapered end disintegrated completely when exposed to the air and they tried to move it. . The ivory tusk like a tree has rings and grain. It broke in five sections as they lifted it to the panel truck that was to bring it into the school. Three sections placed on a plaster of paris base have been fitted together and sprayed with an epoxy to stabilize the condition. The three sections weighed about 300 pounds. The other two sections will be placed in front of the curved larger piece. The crew worked Friday night and again on Saturday 4Mi hours and were guests Saturday evening at supper of Mr. and Mrs. Meador. Pieces have been wrapped in ' Dlastic to prevent contamina uon wnn aimuopiraiv nAninne Ttmv will ho pnt tion with 1973 atmospheric wuuifciuuo. " - jnt0 the University of Oregon to be carbon dated. The crew was thorough and systematic in taking pictures to record the excavating progress. People who would like to see the tusk, may see it Mar. 28 from 7 to 10 p.m. in the Art room at the Elementary School.1 Planners Talk on Zoning At Tuesday's meeting of the Morrow County Planning Commission, there was a con siderable discussion on land subdividing. Orville Cutsforth inquired about the sale of land in tracts of small sizes. He pointed out that there were quite a few small farms in the north part of the county of about ten acres in size. County Planner Del Smith said that sewer and water system regula tions were intended for some control in subdivisions. He defined this subdivided land as a parcel of land divided into four or more parcels of less than ten acres each for the purpose of transfer of ownership or building development, whether immediate or future. Chairman Mrs. Dorris Graves wondered if Morrow County people wanted to main tain the esthetic values in the mountainous areas of the county. She feels small tracts would be difficult to control, causing problems with sewage disposal. Attorney Dennis Doherty told of a Lane County case where homeowners objected to pollu tion from a feed lot. In spite of the owners' investment of some $290,000 in the feedlot, case was won by the homeowners and the feedlot developers were en joined from using a 55 acre effluent holding pond. They had planned to dry the effluent and sell it for fertilizer. Open Houoo at Farley r.lotoro Jim Farley of Farley Motors Is hosting a 25th Anniversary party in honor of 25 years of doing business in Heppner this Friday. Everyone Is cordially Invited to come In and see the 1973 Pontiacs, Bulcks, GMCs and Fords. Coffee and dough nuts will be served all day. Champagne punch will be served from 4 until 5:30 p.m. They're going steady - Caro Ct Jim Farley The March 11, 1948 edition of the Heppner Gazette-Times had a front page story headed "Annex Added to Service Sta tion By James Farley". The story went on to say that construction of an addition to the Shell Service Station at the comer of May and Chase Streets is being completed this week by James J. Farely, owner. Building was built for the purpose of providing Pon tiac service to the people of the community, the station hence forth to be known as Farley Pontiac Co. JAMES FARLEY Twenty-five years In the same block, same man. same business but different name. When Jim Farley started his automobile business in 1948 he called it "Farley Pontiac". He opened up in what is now Leonard's Mobil. In 1951 he changed the name to Farley Motors. In 1955 he moved into his new building where he is presently doing business. He added Ford in 1971 and discontinued Rambler and Jeep. Grasshopper Threat Grasshoppers may again be a problem in Umatilla and Mor row Counties. A recent meeting was held in Hermiston to discuss the problem which centers in Northeast Morrow County and Northwest Umatilla County. 10,000 acres must be signed up before the Federal program of contrpl will be performed. The government program of control is limited to range land. Immunizations Mar. 27 On March 27 immunization clinics will be held in Board man, Irrigon and lone. If any parents have not returned the card to the school noting which shots their student needs, that should be done immediately. The Tine test (tuberculin test) will be given on that date in Boardman and lone to 7tn ana jgtn graaers ana m neppirci iu ,l iui gi auci 3. xhe third clinic will be held in April. That will be the last time this year to take advantage of this service. Rep. Jack Sumner was here early this week from the Legislature. He briefly visited his ranch and on Monday night attended the school district budget meeting. Legion Notes 54th Birthday Heppner's American Legion and Auxiliary will note the American Legion's 54th birthday here Monday night starting with a 7 p.m. potluck dinner. The American Legion Posts are celebrating the 54th anniversary of the founding of the organization. The American Legion has long been associated with civic life in Morrow County, with posts at lone and Heppner. According to the April, 1948 issue of the Heppner Gazette-Times, the Legion Hall in Heppner was dedicated on Saturday, April 3, 1948. Festivities opened at 3 p.m. with vocal and instrumental selections provided by Karl Gabler, Don Rippee, Jim Orwick, Harriet Ball, Bill Kenny, Billy Cochell, Mrs. Charles Ruggles, Beverly Yocum, Merlene Henderson, Beverly Maness, Barbara Slocum, Corabelle Nutting. Pete Pinney was guest speaker. Post Commander of Post 87 was Willard A. Blake. A.J.D.Bauman was master of ceremonies. Earlier that spring, Ione's Legion Post erected a fine roomy post headquarters building that is still used for many important events of the area. , iL . The American Legion and the Auxiliary work together for the community good. The Legion was founded in 1919 in Paris. Here's the Preamble to the Legion constitution: For God and Country, we associate ourselves together for the following purposes: To uphold and defend the Constitution of The United States of America; To maintain law and order; To foster and perpetuate a one hundred percent Americanism; To preserve the memories and incidents of our association in the great wars; To inculcate a sense of individual obligation to the community. state and nation; To combat the autocracy of both the classes and the masses; To make right the master of might; To promote peace and good will on earth; To safeguard and transmit to posterity the principals of justice, freedom and democracy; To consecrate and sanctify our Association by our devotion to mutual helpfulness. There have been other changes up and down Main St. he recalls. When he went Into business, Charlie Vaughn had the Heppner Garage where Central Market is now. Bank of Eastern Oregon has come to town and moved into their new building. First National re modeled their building. Gilliam and Bisbee, long time hardware merchants went out of business and Case Furniture Is now his neighbor. Changes There have been many changes in cars in those 25 years. Cars are lower and lighter and easier to handle. They cost more and have more power. Henry Ford said "You can have any color as long as it's black". Now the sky's the limit. The upholstery used to be artificial black leather now its plush and colorful. Horse power has increased 400 percent. There's power this and power that. Cars still run on four wheels and gas. Employees In point of time, Walter Edger has worked the longest for 20 years as parts man. Alice Soward, office manager, has worked for 13 years. Clarence Baker has worked 8 years as mechanic and Dan McBride, body shop and Oral Wright, mechanic, have each worked about a year. Jim Farley grew up in Morrow County. His parents were Mr. and Mrs. Peter Farley. During the war he was with the army in the European theater. In 1946, he was married to Louise Anderson. They have two daughters, Tricia who is married to Mark Halvorsen and Shanney a senior at Heppner High School. The Halvorsens in La Grande have two daughters, Alisa and Angee. Jim has been active in the Elks and served as exalted ruler in 1954-55. He also served a term on the tax equalization board. He likes ranching and horses. He has a ranch in the Eight Mile country. He has won numerous trophies with his horses. In 1971 Appy C won first place in Performance at the Oregon Trail Appaloosa Show. Sanitary Land Fill Study John McDonald with Clark & Groff Engineers was in the county the first of the week. He met with the garbage disposal people and inspected the facili ties. He is collecting data for a cities-county sanitary land fill. He will be working with Del Smith, county planner. Target date for the completion of the study is July 15. Brandt Fined Ronald J. Brandt of Irrigon was fined $350 plus $5 penalty Monday in Judge Henry Kaye's circuit court here. Mr. Brandt was found guilty of a charge of theft in the first degree in connection with disappearance of Morrow County's channel iron. He does not have any previous record.