Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, October 06, 1918, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Heppner Herald.
S. A. PATTISON. Publisher
An Independent, Newspaper
Entered at the Heppner.Oregon,
Postoffi 'e .is second-class matter.
Term3 of Subscription:
One Year $1.50
Eix Months .75
Threa Months 50
FRIDAY, SEPT. 6, 1918.
Herald Will Soon Come Home.
A temporary building has been
erected by the Herald on May street
opposite the paper's location before
the fire and the new plant will be
installed there within a week or so
and publication of the paper will be
resumed on its own plant in Hepp
ner The Herald has been operated
under many difficulties since the fire
and the publisher is aware that the
service has been very poor. The new
plant, however, will be much more
complete in every detail than the
old one and tho publisher expects to
be able to render a very much better
service than ever before. A com
plete news service from all sections
of the county wlH be the aim of the ,
publisher and every effort will bo
made to make of the Herald a real
medium of local news of the entire
county.
A considerable number of unpaid
subscription accounts are still stand
Ins on our books and as we need
every dollar duo us at this time to
assist in nuinliiiK the heavy expenses
incident to installing the new plant
and In resuming business we respect
fully request settlement of these
accounts.
I.lliccf v Loan Campaign Sept. 15.
Little old Morrow county proposes
to go over tlie top in the coming
Fourth Liberty Loan campaign at
9: a, in. sharp, Saturday, September
28, the dale fixed by the national
managers fur tho campaigu to open.
When tho court house clock strikes
that hour It will be all over but tho
nhoutlng, according to plans now
completed by I'hatrnmii Shiitt and
his hi -lpct's. The advertising cam
paign opens tills week and nobody
will he barred from buying all the
bonds he wants at any time until the
campaign closes with a big whoop,
on the day and hour aforesaid.
A whirlwind campaign will be
launched to continue for a week or
liiiTc some time between Sept. 15
and and able am' entertaining
t.pcakcr will visit all parts of the
cuuii:,v to urge bond purchases.
nil-: run.
N.'t week will witness the Sixth
Ai'i.ru! inhibition of the Morrow
I'oiii ty i'alr Association, and while
the tm II Is not In the best condition
to i;,:eitln tlsllors us It would like
to, I. Is hale to predict that every
lsl!i r will he given a hearty wol
rolne uud treated In the very best
limn rr pi ssihle.
1 1 ti yearn I'alr will be a "War
Fair'' and c cr llittig tending to
and . In u lulling the big war will he
pr,iii..i utly featured.
'! .' I". S 1 1 pal tineiit of Agrl
mlr..;c III have mm t xhlblt at the
l,.lr ,n will I'liiiipett'iit lin-trm tor
ii t . 1 1 led ui cr; wh,i will tell the
I c ; .. mail f,.ts worth knotting.
1;. In:-l,l ilub exhibits will he
hi., r ami hitler than hit before,
'.Hindu !l'r. Anu tli hii Hand, on
id I..' !. -I m i:.u iMtl.um of Its Wind
i n tie lin t lll In- priMi-iit durlii.t
II lilt' meeting Mini the collii'l'ts
in by lis h.uul will In' Midi worlli
li e iiilii.' i.iliiit.t hi t barge. .
J. UK- liiitiiK Albeit. a iiete.I
i i. nii vm iiivl will iiUk le present
ami i:iii' it.,Hy entertainment", .
fi'iitmn ef Mix Albert' ringing ii
l.i r wiII!kih' u lng any iiiK, oUI
or i'i , upon rcisi. t
M-u.j hi r spl.Midl.l feature ate
l-i ii.k. ii 1 1 1. M k ' .1 amitl lug that the
ii.eitilig will I e well worth while.
FARM OH FOILS
ENEMIES AT HOME
MAKES FOOD SURE
Bumper Crops Stiffen Allied Line,
Morale Country Districts
First in Liberty Loan
Only the farmers, know the ex
treme difficulties which hampered the
production for the allies this year
of the bumper crops necessary to
feed the troops battling at the Euro
pean fronts and the civilians working
for them behind the lines.
The public has heard few reports
of the widespread sabotage which
has worked for the benefit of the
Hun, whether practiced in the name
of German propaganda or I. V. W.
"education". But enough was re
vealed at the trial of tne I. W. W.'s
in Chicago to show that few regions
have been free from destructive
agents who made frequent use of
scores of ingenious arson and dyna
mite devices to destroy standing crops
and stored grains.
What everybody does know is that
4 i farmer made good, and with the
L.j;iservation through the Food Ad
::iiiJ!jtration's supervision, kept the
Johnny Yank in Prance, the French
i'oilu and British Tommy with un
limited supplies of good wheat flour.
YANKEE WHEAT
FEEDS ALL ALLIES
On top of this the farmer set tho
pace for fie rest of America with his
subscriptions to war funds
It was
the agricultural districts that first re
ported their quotas oversubscribed
in the Third Liberty Loan.
Doubtless it will be the farmers
who first report "Over The Top" in
the Fourth Liberty Loan, in spite of
the fact that the loan will be twice
the size of any previous.
This sounds easy, from superficial
consideration, since the Third Loan
came at a time when the farmer
needed his money to put in and har
vest his slimmer crops, and was with
out receipts since last summer and
fall, and had been called upon in
the Second Loan as well.
Hut it would not be a simple mat
ter, even if tho Fourth Loan were not
larger than the Third, because the
government is calling for Increased
acreage on all crops, and especially
on wheat, the great WeBtern staple,
to provide) for the army of five mil
lion American troops with which it is
expected to crush the Hun utterly
next year.
BIG ARMY NEEDS
GREAT CROPS
For winter wheat alone, it is pro
posed to Increase the area by 45,-
UOO.UOO acres. These figures provide
for a minimum of 513,000 acres of
winter wheat in California, 690,000 in
Oregon, 754,000 in Washington, 37",
000 ill Idaho, 250,000 in Utah, 46.000
in Arizona, and 5,000 in Nevada. This
is an increase of eighty per cent
over 1917 acreages for Washington,
but very much smaller increases for
the other states of the Twelfth Fed
eral Reserve district.
In presenting these figures, the De
partment of Agriculture points out
that it is absolutely necessary that
tremendous wheat crop be brought
In next year to renew somewhat the
reserve supplies, accumulated from
the record crops of 1112-1115, and de
pleted through the dependence of all
the allies on us.
There is no doubt in anybody's mlnJ
that the American farmer will re
spond Instantly and effectively to any
situation pieseiitcd to ti i ui. as this
one. by the government.
There Is no doubt that the native
wit and courage of the American
farmer will unit natural ami criminal
enemies to lus letory crop success
as his sous are outwitting ami out
fighting the Hun from the Yosges
to I'icardy.
FARMS ANSWER
WAR LOANS FIRST
l'lieie is leant of all A doubt that
the Amen, an farmer will l.ig III bin
resiMinse to the call of the Fourth
Liberty I jinn bciaiin' of his Increased
rcKpi.iislbiiitU's In other dirti'tluis
It was Oregon, whoso orchard
fai in and c attle overshadow all her
other weiilln, which first hoisted tin
"1 hi .1 l iberty l.i Mil Honor Flag In
tin' Went, slid It was that other
pinch agricultural tale. Iowa, which
l.iiely no-id OiiY.oii out of firm pine
In t tii' list . cant run" for the honor.
Iiutli iireguii and Iowa iil be the
;v UI ni.uk for all other slates tc
kli. ol at In the Fourth 1 . 1 . - r t l.onti
rue A tht k horse prooil will win
tin' acclaim die the flint Ul
to (lit Its IJ I' ( II.
The aiinwcr of tin nation to thf
American nii'tl tank tif raisin ths
Ainel n Mil sifrd Fourth liberty lnn
imut be prompt and in erw helming
With Ann'riUi tuHip glorying In lln
laurel wrested from the ItoaMeil
( tra'ncl fighting nun of tht
I I. Hum at bom cannot return t
li nut bat e response to lb cat:
Umi I!, em.
Uit cry man da bit stars.
AMERICAN FOOD
SWINGS LARGE
United States Sent to Allies
141,000,000 Bushels
of Wheat.
CREDIT DUE TO WOMEN.
Allies Got 844,600,000 Pounds More
Meat and Fats In 1917-18
Than In Year Before.
AMERICAN FOOD SHIPMENTS
TO ALLIES
MEAT.
1916-17 2,166,500,000 lbs.
1917-18 3,011,100,000 lbs.
Increase. 844,600,000 lbs.
CEREALS.
1916-17 259,900,000 bu.
1917-18... 340,800,000 bu.
Increase... 80,900,000 bu.
In spite of a subnormal food supply
In this country the American people
have been able to ship to the Allies
as well as our own forces overseas
141,000,000 bushels of wheat, besides
844,600,000 pounds of meat, during the
year ending June 30 last This has
been made possible by the whole
souled co-operation of the people,
who, besides practicing self-dental,
have speeded up production and re
sponded nobly to the appeal from
abroad.
Food Administrator Hoover, In a
letter to President Wilson, gives a
brief summary of the results of food
conservation in the United States and
of the activities of the Food Admin-
lstratlon to this end. The conserva-
tlon measures nave been put tnrougn
practically on a voluntary basis which
Is regarded as a splendid tribute to
the patriotism of the American people.
Meat shipments were increased 844,
000,000 pounds during the first fiscal
year, as compared with our meat ex
ports during the year before America
entered the war.
"The total value of these food ship
ments," Mr. Hoover wrote President
Wilson, "which were in the main pur
chased through or with collaboration
of the Food Administration, amount
to, roundly, $1,400,000,000 duriug tho
fiscal year."
In 1916-17 the United States sent
the Allies 2,100,500,000 pounds of
meat In 1917-18, with voluntary con
servation practiced In America, and
aided by extra weight of animals, we
sent the Allies 2,011,100,000 pounds of
meat, an Increase of 844,600,000
pounds.
Wheat Saving Enormous.
When the Food Administration bo
gan operations In the summer of 1917,
this country was facing a large deficit
In wheat Counting In all carry-over
wheat from the 1016 crop, we had at
the beginning of the 1917 harvest year
Just enough wheat to take care of
America's normal consumption, not a
bushel of surplus.
At the close of the 1917-18 harvest
year the Food Administration's olllctal
reports showed that our total wheat
shipments to the other side had been
141,000,000 bushels. Every bushel
shipped was wheat saved by the
American people from their normal
consumption.
In cereals and cereal products re
duced to terms of cereal bushels our
shipments to Allied destinations were
KJO.Stm.ooo bushel. WI.'.xhi.ikki bushels
more than the amount sent In 1916 17.
Included In these figure are l.l.'.HMt,.
is sl bushels of rye ami the MUxxi.tsx)
bushels of saved wheat. In addition
we sent the neutrals dependent on ti
I0,i m, iii m bushels of prime breadstuff,
"These figure do not fully cotixcy
the volume of the effort and saerlnVt
liiade during the past year by tho
whole American people," the Food Ad
ministrator wrote. "I am sure that
alt the millions of our people, agrtcul
torsi as well as urban, who have con
tributed to these results should feel
S very detinue mitlsfiullon th.it III a
year of utiltrrsal food shortages Id
the Northern Hemisphere, all of thus
people Joined together against lcr
innujr cam through l the new har
vest. Hot only with health nttd streliKth
fully maintained, but wl'h only leu
porary periods of biinUiiip.
it Is difikult to d.siitigiiKh bo
tween various s.imi.ui of our pnple
the homes. puMlc -uHt i ( luces, f.d
trade, urban r in.Mliullur.il impul
lions-In i -g irdlt for the'
results, but no one will deny the die
llisnt pin t of the Aim 1 1. mi wuiiicu.
Subscril'v for the Hera J.
SAYS RISK IS EXAGGERATED
Official of Explosive Factory Denies
That Occupation Is oa Danger
ous as Is Generally Believed.
In a paper read before a medical
association in the east, Dr. V. O. Hud
son, medical director of E. I. DuPont
de Nemours & Co., manufacturers of
explosives, recently made some in
teresting statements concerning the
risks connected with the manufacture
of powerful explosives. He asserted
that the dangers of that industry were
greatly exaggerated. As a mutter of
fact, railroading shows much higher
injury and death rates than the manu
facture of explosives. Of the acci
dents which occur in explosive fac
tories only a small percentage are ac
tually caused by explosives. Four
fifths of the accidents are due to care
lessness or negligence of employees
who disregard the precautions neces
sary wherever men are worldpg with
tools and machinery. By increasing
the share of work done by machinery
and reducing the number of wor'-ers
In proportion to the increased use of
mechanical appliances, the manufac
turers of explosives are striving to
diminish the hazards connected with
their business, says Popular Science
Monthly.
Barge Whistle Calls Birds.
A striking exumplo of wildbird In
telligence has been observed on the
Panama canal in connection with the
underwater blasting that is carried on
there. A barge has been especially
equipped for drilling blast holes below
the wnter and depositing charges in
them. When a blast is ready the craft
moves off to a safe distance, and he
fore setting off the dynamite the barge
whistle Is blown several times to warn
all vessels in the vicinity. Instantly
numbers of wild birds may be seen
coming trom all directions, snys Popu
lar Mechanics Magazine, the reason
being they have learned that in.uiy
dead and stunned fish rise to the sur
face of the water following each ex
plosion. To them this particular
whistle is like a dinner Ron;;. More
remarkable still, they readily distin
guish between this whistle and others.
C!mal ,vorkmcn and nritive9 nl,0 sll.,re
in the harvest.
Don't Get Tired So Easy.
In American Magazine an author
says :
"The thing that makes the 'tired
business man' tired is his belief that
lie is tired. Believe the contrary.
There have been times whi n you work
ed ull day tind all night on a stretch.
It did not kill you.
"Work itself, as the modern busi
ness world is organized, cannot pos
sibly 'tire out' the man of avernge nor
mal health. If it could, Edison would
have been deud at the age of thirty
five, Bell would never have produced
the telephone. Henry Ford would not
be now a king of the automobile busi
ness, Herbert C. Hoover would not be
controlling and directing the nation's
food supply today, Woodrow Wilson
would be in a sunltnrium, and Gen
eral Pershing would be taking a 'rest
cure' instead of commanding Ameri
can soldiers in Franco."
Effect of French Language.
A writer In Scrlbner's Magazine
peculates ut some length on tho ef
fect the French language will hnve on
our own when the soldiers come bark.
He snys: "One of the most prolific
sources of new words In a lungunge Is
an attempt lo iisitni new Ideas. Amer
ican soldier in Franco will absorb
inu.iy new Ideas from their contact
with the French and British; there
will be many new similes of meanings
for Ideas denoted by old words. .To
express these the men will Inevltiihl J
adopt French word or use FnUsU
word with a new shade of inclining.
I have not yet Collected any examples
of this; but It must take place, and
one who watches the literature that
follow the war will see many rxiim-
ples. If tiny lire not observed before."
Practlco Handwriting.
For years business people have de
pended on the typewriting machine
for their letters, and have neglected
their handwriting. The dearth of ma
chines I now bring generally felt, es
pecially In commercial houses, and
once more It has become necenry to
be aide to write clearly mid legibly.
For the first time the other day the
Ii I of a big business firm took the
trouble to get specimens of the hand
writing of his stuff of fenmle clerk.
There v ere -:tr. . 'y ; . h muH
write ii rv.uly cm.. I 1ml. I. "People
won't take the time to r-ml a bu. ;ci years or nuy on ct.p pay met t
tie letter uuie.s it i lega.iy written," i plan Komi whtat ut, a sunk farr.i.
wit his (iu.niloiis comment. j Prefer aUmt !'"" nores whxc
i land. 2i acrpp i;trztv. Ian-'. I
Dr. Terror. socialist of ' av s!o' "H-pmeU
,, ... , .,, . . .. . r.and e such a pl.ice t.j kimwJ u i-
I.'rt.and. wul I ,n H.PJ'n. r, vant!ttH, Li quire of or addrf.
anam Wi'dnea.lay and IhurMay ; PhullCuhn. Hvt pnc. Ore. h(
?( ptmbtT 1$ and ll, at lUr-
nard-s rcmm ho,!,,. A Ion- ,u hiat-bs, , ,i. well fur-
tm,ent Sntur.iy. iM-pUmhT 20. " J.'"'"" ln J' U lik'n' r'"
Cunsult hirn. 1 "rl,r M Si. Mr..
Fredvrlc la charge. Ildil
FRANCIS A. McMENAMIN
LAWYER
Roberts Bldg. Heppner, Ore.
Office Phone Main 643
Residence Phone Main 665
DR. J. J. CALLAWAY
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
6 Roberts Building
Heppner, Oregon
At Lexington Tuesdays anil
h ndays.
Watch paper for dates
DR. J. G. TURNER
EYE SPECIALIST
Portland, Oregon
Regular monthly visits to Hepp
ner and lone.
DR. GUNSTER
VETERINARIAN
Heppner, Oregon
Licensed Graduate
Phone 722 (Day or Night)
DR. R. J. VAUGHAN
DENTIST
Permanently located in Oddfel
low's Building
Heppner, Oregon
S. E. N0TS0N
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office in Roberts' Building
Heppner Oregcn
DR. N. E. WINNARD
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Hppner Oreg.in
DP. A. D. McMURDO
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Telephone 122
Office Patterson's Drug Store
Heppner
Oret ti
WOODSON & SWEEIC
ATTORNEYS AT-LAW
H"rpner, Oreg
SAM E. VAN VACTOii
ATTORNEY-AT LAW
Heppner,
Oregon
LOUIS PEARSON
TAILOR
Heppner,
Oregon
ROY V. WHITEIS
REAL ESTATE, LOANS.
INSURANCE
Heppner,
Oreg
The
Carnation Case
la tie Storeroom
Ii
"The Answer
to the
Milk Qusstion"
On the Farm
WANTED -To lease for a tun
i - . .
! tni nnsisssssssssaiai.pp rns t
i liiMT si ii f .. it. .3,1 ,"'
!
I