vN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER F. B. BOYD. Owner and Publisher Subwcriotlon Rates. npv. one year n n hs . $2.00 $1.00 .75 (Jil. i'wbiuary 25 1927 THE SOUL OF BUSINESS Says an exchange: It is a common practice to accuse industries of de stroying the beauties of nature. In some instances the charge is justi fied. But on the other hand, many great corporations beautify property and waste land. As an illustration, take our great hydroelectric plants. The dams and buildings which they construct are works of art, and as substantial in their character as the canyons and river banks which surround them. It they were in some foreign country rn-' a w hundred years old, they w uld be advertised as attractions for tourists on a par with castle-, which now draw travelers from all f.arts of the world to see them. The same policy of beautifying their properties applies to our railroads their right of ways, their bridges and their stations. Generally speak ing, their holdings, in conjunction with public utilities and modern large industries, represent the best kept premises in cities and towns or in the waste places over the country. Many persons will dump rubbish and tin cans on their neighbor's lot and think it good riddance. The av erage large industry with progressive management, disposes of its trash, beautifies property wherever possible and commemorates unusual or his toric points in a suitable manner. o The magazine, Nation's Business, reflects that remorse await3 the busi ness man today who fails to read the signs of the times, for, swiftly comes change inevitable change. The old base-burner went down before the furnace. Stove manufacturers learn ed to make radiators. Automobile bodies today come out of many a former carriage factory. Leather workers switched to traveling bags from harness when the mad race of change became too swift for old Dob bin. The tinkling music-box lost its popularity, and cabinet-makers prac ticed their art on phonographs. Then science broadened the field by intro ducing radio. The far-seeing black smith of 1900 learned to tinker with that "new-fangled horseless car riage," and now an up-to-date gar age and service station stands under the spreading chestnut tree a home ly memorial to the vision and adapt ability of American business. o Hides are now tanned by electric ity in Germany in half the time formerly required. Just how far Am erica has advanced in the tanning in dustry, we will not attempt to say, but we know of one hide that was tanned in a woodshed with a hickory elm second growth sprout, about the thickness of your little finger and about four feet long, and tough! We can whisper that it was. o The "dirt fanner" is being sup planted by the lion farmer down in Southern California. The dirt farm er is still "pailing" cows to pay off the mortgage, while the lion farm er is growing rich from selling his surplus stock to the Hollywood movie producers. John Q. Tilson, representative in Ontrress said the other duv: "If ever what we call 'liberty' fails, and any form of despotism, either of the many or the few, comes to the peo ple of this country, it will be more on account of the tendency for mul tiplying laws than any other." In view of the fact that retains from rented reservation lands are greater for the Indian owner than accrues to the renter, it would seem that this is not the proper time ior the department at Washington to move for higher rentals. Marshal Sun Chaun-Fang's horde gave the Cantonese army a Sun bath the other day that had the reverse of the desired effect the Cantonese turned around and licked the stul'fin' out of Sun's troops. o If it won't cost the country any more to help agriculture through op eration of the MeNury-IIaugen bill than it costs the country to support protection for manufacturing indus tries, let it stick. George Hobbs, Redmond high school boy, raised an $1155 crop from three and one-half acres. Looks to us as though George was preparing to pay his way through college. The manufacture of chewing gum is by no means a shoe-string indus try, when it can shovel $25,000 into a swimming contest without sticking up anybody. o Portland Telegram: Now some body who wants to interfere with folks' sleep wants to know if the man who is driving a golf ball all the way from Mobile to California is replacing all the divots. o The little narrow gauge Sumpter Valley Railway has been heard from it has just retired $160,000 bond? through earnings. Well, one Jack Delaney has been eliminated from the Tex Rickard show at Madison Square Garden. Next! The "Flu" has hit Ellensburg, and Ellensburg is not located in Spain either. SEED LOAN BILL IS PASSED Grain Growers and Cotton Farmers Will Be Benefited. Washington, D. C The $8,600,000 seed loan bill was passed by the sen ate with provision for cotton farmers is well as northwestern grain growers. With the approval of Senator Ner lx;ek, republican, South Dakota, amend ments were added to permit loans for obtnlning seed in cotton states and for sugar cane crops in Florida and Louisiana. As sent to the house, the bill stip ulates that $5,000,000 shall be for farmers in North Dakota, South Dako ta and Montana, and $2,500,000 for the drought stricken areas in South Caro lina, Georgia and west Alabama. The secretary of agriculture would be in control of the loans with power to fix the terms. Beauty and Good Indeed, the beautiful is insepara bly united to the good and the true, . . . for the very nature of the sense of beauty is such that through It we gain a clearer concept of the oilier two values. The history of the race has shown that at the height of materialistic success, the desire for artistic enjoyment has been a potent factor In bringing a people back to tin higher Ideals which underlie a peaceful intercourse between nations. Herbert Sidney Langfeld, In "The Aesthetic Attitude." Dagger Pledge of Fidelity When a Druse woman marries she presents her husband with a dagger, over which she has knitted with her own hands a red woolen cover, enclos ing It completely like a sewed-tip purse. The dagger Is a symbol of the death penalty she must pay If she Is un faithful, while the knitted, sewed-up cover is the symbol of the law, by which her husband himself must not unsheath the knife unless all her own male relatives are dead, but must re turn It unci her to her father or broth ers, who pronounce and execute the sentence. Asia Magazine. CLASSIFIED Baby Chicks Rhode Island reds, McRaes strain $18.00 per 100, none better. S. C. White Leghornes $15.00 per 100. O. A. C. strain, Barred Ply mouth Rocks, $18.00 per 100. Good layers mated to O. A. C. cockrels. Why send away for chicks when you can get just as good at home. Order early. 15 per cent books your order for chicks. D. C. McFadyen, Athena. Piano for sale vicinity of Athena. One of America's finest pianos to t o sold at bargain. Cash or terms $10 monthly. If interested in seeing the instrument write C. F. Hendiick Piano Broker and Adjuster, G6 Iont Street, Portland, Oregon. Weaving Mrs. Henry Booher is prepared to do rug weaving. Lost Large brown and sable Col- Jie. Name Meldrum Rt. 8 Spokane, Wn. on collar. Reward for informa tion or recovery. Geo. R. Gerkin, Athena, Oregon. For Sale Twenty-one head young mules 3 to 5 years old and ten head good young horses, F. J. Watkins, Fifth Street. Athena. Oregon. For Sale One leuther Davenette, some leather rockers as good as new. Phone 454, or call on J. F. Herr. Now is the time to clean up your rubbish. Hoggard has two teams to do it. Good netted gem potatoes at $2 per sack. Good fresh Swiss and Jersey milk cow with heifer calf, giving 40 to 45 lbs milk per day. A. H. Swant. Phone 31 Fit Weston. Hell & Dickenson, draymen, have acquired a team of horses to do gar den plowing and other work as re quired. Special attention will be giv en to spring plowing, fertilizer and dirt hauling, cellar excavation, etc. Call on us to haul away your winter's accumulation of rubbish. Horses and Mules George Shaver of Tnion will soon be in Athena with a car load of good, young, broke Horses and Mules Wait for this bunch, it's a good one. See them at Bolin's Correl near Lumber Yard. U. S. Authority Sees Ample Motor Fuel for Long Future LX '' HARRIS tt EWIN6 r- : MASKSAT AN OU-WELL 0 A i MR.. HILLS IMPROMPTU SKETCH OF EXPERIMENTAL OIL AN OIL DOME SHALE DEDUCTION PLANT The V. 8. Bureau of Mines is confident that motor fuel supplies vill be ample for many years to meet all needs of the country's mil lions of automobiles. Harry II. Hill, chief petroleum engineer of the liureau, here tells the reasons for this conviction, and sketches the advances in industrial methods uhich justify his opinions. By HARRY H. HILL Chief Petroleum Engineer, United States. Bureau of Mines. ONE reason why there is no rea son to worry greatly about motor fuel for a long time ahead is that people are worrying about It. Interest in such a question at the right time, is the best Insur ance against disaster. The President and the Federal Oil Corporation Board have done what was needed, at the right time. We know that most petroleum has come from rather limited areas and that even from these only a small pro portion has been: taken out. Oil pro duced by gas pressure capable of lift ing it to tlie surface when we drill holes Is but a small proportion of all the oil contained in the sands. Even from the best pools recovery by the old method.) is small, perhaps one half in the most favorable conditions, oi'tener one-sixth, or one-seventh, or one-tenth. Hut a considerable part of what still remains in the ground can be recovered by methods now estab lished a'i technically and economically practicable. Producing oil from coal and shales and by mining the oil bearing nands is entirely possible. Experiments are going on in these directions, and It we ever have to fall back on these re sources wo will bo ready. For a long time, however, the present methods of exploration and drilling, with improv ing processes to assure larger recov eries, are likely to suffice. An Oil Dome Illustrated I am no draughtsman, but maybe I can draw something that will help ex plain. Here's a rough drawing of an oil dome. The shaded part at the bot tom Is a deposit of oil bearing sands with an Impervious rock stratum i.bove. A wild catter drilled the hole A H and Kas pressure caused oil and gas to flow. After a while the gas pressure wasn't tmJlleient to keep up the flow and they pumped until ulti mately even this ceased producing. Nevertheless, most of the oil was still left sticking to the wand grains. Then tho operator drilled the well C P, which flowed tor a time, but most of the oil was still down there In the sand. K the gas pressure could be re stored more would (low. So the oper ator injects r;m lata one well, restor ing, the pressure and causing the oil to resume (lowing from the other. After a time the (low will stop again, but still much of the oil will be left. In some lieUls it has been possible to obtain additional amounts of oil by Introducing water in some of-the wells and forcing tn oil to others. The ad dition of a chemical such s troda itth to the water may assist in removing the oil from the sand grains, but nei ther plain water nur water containing chemicals should be introduced into an oil sand except a a last resort, for it is likely that the water, which travels faster through the eaud, will get to the open wells ahead of the oil and when the How is resumed under pressure water will come out. Everything Saved Nowadays The gas escaping f;om an oil well carries with it a proportion of gaso line, which in the old day was lost. Nowadays it U extracted from tho gas and saved, while tue dry gas can be forced back into the ground to main tain pressure. One of the menaces to most ol! pools is the inflow of subterranean water. Water (lows through the oil amis faster than oil, and by surround ni.tht bctt.mi the well keep ita oil out. How to shut off the water and permit the oil to run out Is a prob lem with which, the engineers have long worked. They have made great progress and so increased recoveriee. In earlier times most oil producers carefully guarded all information about their wells and experiences, but latterly there is co-operation in theee matters. Geologists and petroleum engineers, once derided by the "prac tical" oil men, are more and more accepted as guides and mentors. New knowledge Is constantly increasing re coveries. As to Mining for Oil In Lorraine they have dug shafts down to the oil eanda and actually brought the sands out, like coal from a mine. But U's costly. Another mining process is to sink a shaft to the oil sands and from its bottom drive tunnels in all directions through the sands. From these tun nels small perforated pipes are driven into the sands, which drain the oil out of tho sands. It flows to larger pipes hack at the foot of the shaft and thence Is pumped out. This requires installing an expensive plant, but in some fields the high recovery that is assured might justify the cost. I understand the process 's about to be intsalled In a few Melds in this coun try, some companies being convinced it is practicable and profitable. Oil can be distilled from coal, and much work is now being done along this line. But more appeal has been made by the plan of extracting oil from shale. The shales of Scotland have been worked for three-quarters of a century, and they are almost un limited in this country, richer in oil than those of Scotland. Kentucky, Ohio, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Wyo ming and California are particularly rich U shales. It is just a question of the cost of extracting the oil. Con gress has given $180,000, with which the Bureau has installed a plant near Rulison, Colorado, to distill oil from the Colorado River Shales. It Is calculated that 'the shales mined "at Rulison will produce about, a barrel of oil to the ton. The Use of Oil Shales In Scotland they are working shales that produce about twenty-five gallons of oil per ton. The seams are from three-and-a-half to eight or ten feet thick. In Colorado are seams many times as thick and containing much more oil per ton. Reduction of shales involves an enormous mining opera tion, and after the oil Is extracted the vast tonnage of refuse must be dis posed of. So it is expensive compared with producing oil from wells. Ben E. Lindsey of tho Bureau of Mines Experiment Station at Bartles ville, Okla., Is confident that explora tion, better recoveries, better utiliza tion and deeper drilling would furnish enough oil to meet all requirements for at least twenty-five to fifty years. If It ccuild bo extracted in that time. P.ut as a practical matter this will not be possible. Within that period there will be times of shortage, when oil from shale will be needed to supple ment the oil from wells, etc. Meantime federal and state govern ments and the industry are co-operating In an astonishing range of inves tigations and studies. These activities cover such a wide field that even an enumeration of them would run Into tiresome detail , "Step On Now" Get Ready to Plow With iver an I . Plows Oliver Chilled Hardened, Deep Suck, in 2 and 3-bot-tom Gangs. We have in stock the New 95, with its Heat-Treated Beams-the last word in plows. ROGERS & GOODMAN ( A Mercantile Trust) The Athena Hotel J. E. FROOME. PROP. Courteous Treatment, Clean Beds Good Meals Tourists Made Welcome Special Attention Given to Home Patrons Corner Main and Third Athena, Oregon Real state Insurance Farm Loans Cheap Money B. B RICHARDS, Athena At Finch's HOOD RUBBERS FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN CATTLE KING HIGH AND LOW TOP RUBBER FOOTWEAR FOR MEN Cleaning and Pressing G. W. Finch, Prop. Main Street, Athena, Oregon THE KILGORE CAFE GERALD KILGORE, Proprietor Short Order Lunches and Meals served at all hours. Ice Cream and Soft Drinks. A full line of Candies. NONE BUT WHITE HELP EMPLOYED Gerald Kilgore, Proprietor - - Athena, Oregon THE ATHENA MARKET The Best Dentistry Done Without Pain Dr. Leach Bond Building, Pendleton. We carry the best Meat That Money Buys Kippered Salmon, all Kinds of Salt Fish. Fresh Fish, Oysters, Crabs, Clams, Kraut in Season. . . : A. W. LOGSDON . Main Street Athena, Oregon. J. L. Harman Blacksmithiug Oxy-Acetylene Weld. Delivery and Truck Bodies Manufactured Main Street Athena. Oregon WATTS & PRESTBYE Attorneys-At-Law Main Street. Athena, Oregon State and Federal Court Practice ESTABLISHED 1865 Preston-Shaffer Milling Co. DRS. A. D. & R. A. FRENCH OPTOMETRISTS French Optical Parlors 15 E. Main St Phone 65S WALLA WALLA, WASH. Foley's Kidney Cure mahts kidseys end bl'ddsr right AMERICAN BEAUTY FLOUR is made in Athena, b Athena labor, in one ol the very best equipped mills in the Northwest, of the best selected Bluestem wheat grown anywhere. Patronize home industry. Your grocer sells the famous American Beauty Flour Merchant Millers & Grain Buyers thena, Oregon. - Waitsburg, Wash