ft PAGE TWO THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HF.PrXER. OREGON. THCKSIVy! FKHHUARY , I0. OURWEEKLY LEGISLA TURE FREE LANCE i ir.tr.viuction of bills, without un animous consent, of by Ways and Means committee. Six bills reached the Governor but they are mere ormaiities. Of the $100,000 for the returning soldiers and sailors oni) ! 15000 has been drawn by the com 3 The third mission. There Is a growing feeling v. , ... i i i., i,h that patriotic appeals that are only veek of the legislature closed ith fired gaUery full of only 323 bills In the House and 12S spectatcrg Rre not a safe guide in In the Senate, about half as many as making demands on the legislature. usual, and this is the last day for The State Highway had a public hearing Thursday night in which' all criticism against that body had a fall airing, and the Com mission came out with respect and conf.iieuce, so far as could be judged Time for Sp ing W c i k Approaching The time is rapidly approaching when it will be necessary to begin Spring farm work. ARE YOUR IMPLEMENT POSSESSIONS SUFFICIENT FOR YOUR NEEDS.? The world needs food, and more food, and it be hooves every farmer to raise as large crops as possi ble this year. LET US HELP BY SUPPLYING YOU WITH UP-TO-DATE, LABOR-SAVING FARM IMPLEMENTS. Gilliam & Bisbee Morrow County's Pioneer Hardware Dealers by the large crowd present. That their program for a larger bond Iftue financed by a motor vehicle tax wiU go through there is not a shaJow of a doubt. The consolidation program was not reached this week but is to be Commission ' staged next week. The bills have been introduced by Weeks, Sheldon and Idleman, and opposition to aboltsmng useless Doarus. commis sions and ex-officialdom generally are quietly making plans in the dark to defeat the whole reform program. The whole consolidating program has not been Introduced at this ses sion but bills will abolish 210 "hon orable" out of 250 who are holdin,; offices where they get all the way from fnilage and pet diem to fat salaries. The Consolidation com mittee appointed by the Governor are working for the best and most practical reform from the standpoint of the taxpayer, attacking irrespon sible ex-official boards first. They say they will compel a showdown and if reform bills are defeated they will go to the people with them. Representative Burdick of Bend is leading the fight for higher salaries for Judges of the Supreme court. Of course, with that would go a great many other salary raises. The Burdick bill proposes to raise the seven Judges from $4500 a year to $6000 and claims Oregon pays smaller salaries than any state in the nation. The facts show we have more judges and pay more per capita for the judiciary than any state in proportion to wealth and population. Never has a judge re signed because he could make more in private practice. The appropria tions for the judiciary asked at this session total $494,536. Fees earned $14,400. A domestic relations court is to be added costing about $20,000 a year. There are bills to create more district judges and raise a number of other judicial salaries. Two bills in the interest of the general taxpayer require county courts to advertise for bids for county supplies. One bill requires a list of all printed matter in form of blanks and blank books required , during year to be made up and sealed bids taken for same. The I other bill requires that when the county buys supplies or equipment such as road machinery, rock crush- lers. motor trucks, or anything cost ing over $500 they shall advertise for sealed bids. At present this is the law of Multnomah county and all first class school districts. Both are good laws. The bills to build state political machines are before the legislature, one that all state work shall be done only by state employes, a regular force to be built up and permanently employed. The state civil service bill, championed by Bishop Summer of Portland, would make all state employes permanent. They would be in for life and a pension system is a part of the program. The House passed an Important bill to exempt moneys, notes and ac counts from taxation to make it easier to get capital into Oregon. With railroads under government operation and most of the utility corporations fighting for their ex istence the only remaining subject t(. legislative attack is insurance companies. So a grist of bills has appeared, which if all enacted will make it hard for some smaller in surance companies to exist in the state. Oregon has but one successful fire insurance company that actually naid its first divident this year. To enact all proposed laws means to keeD capital out of insurance bus iness in Oregon and insurance funds out of the state. Four woman bills are championed by the only woman in the Assembly, Mrs. Thompson of Hood River. They are bills to raise the age of major ity for women to 18 years, married or single, the Domestic Relations ouri. for Portland only; requiring women to perform jury duty the same as men and to be drawn on juries the same as men, and the teachers minimum salary bill. The latter is drawing some opposition. Many small country schools that would have an eight months school at fifty dollars a month for a teacher would have loss than a six months school at the minimum of $,75 a month. The demand for this comes from city teachers, but the bill is one of a group of school laws that are ground out each session raising school taxes. The usual job of recodifying the code, that comes up every five or ten years at a cost of from $25,000 to $50,000, is again before the session. f this travel. This cash remains in crease these revenues Is by a de- the Pacific Northwest. It is not sent velopment more potent than any i.er c. mm ulity, but remains here that has gone before w hich will re o help every individual citizen in suit in the coming here of thousands he development of his business, and of men and women, who will see us iu the payment of his taxes and the as we are and who will In a large Tourist is absolutely the forerunner measure either remain permanently f the settler, the new investor and or leave their money for invest ut for any raw material, nor for any ments. the manufacturer. Travel by rail was discouraged Some Idea of the number of letters last year and aa far going abroad Is American soldiers write home may concerned there will be nothing be gained from the fact that a single doing this year. The war is over item passed by the Y. M. C. A. pur and tlie people have the money and chasing department in Paris, in one a desire to travel. We have so far month was for 100,000,000 letter expended $112,000, to attract atten- heads and 100,000,000 envelopes tion to the greatest asset we have which are expected to last the sol and we only need to keep up the diers three months. It is thought work to secure returns based on that this may not be enough now this expenditure far beyond the de- that peace gives the doughboy more sires of the most avaricious. To time for writing letters. illusVate: the Park to Park High- 5 10) L o at the Jones Ranch 1 MILE SOUTH OF THE ALPINE SCHOOL HOUSE IN SAND HOLLOW THURSDAY, February 13, 19 THE FOLLOWING LIST OFPROPERTY WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUC TION, BEGINNING AT 11 A. M. SHARP. 6 mules, broke to work, 4-7 yrs. old. 6 horses, broke to work, 4-7 yrs. old. 1 milk cow, 5 years old. 1 2-year-old heifer. 1 2-year-old steer. 2 yearling calves. I 2-year-old Holstcin Bull. II small shoals. 4 dozen chickens. 8 turkeys. Harness for V.) head of stock. 24 collars. 1 set heavy double buggy harness. 2 sets single harness. 2 saddles. 2 wagons, nearly new. 1 steel wheel truck wagon. 1 Peoria grain drill. x 1 Walla Walla weeder. 1 26-foot harrow. 1 2-bottom, 16-inch J. D. Plow. 1 3-bottom, 14-in. Canton Clipper plow. 9 pairs of leader bars. 1 Ford car. Lumber and barn. 1 double emery stone. 150 good 2nd-hand sacks. Heating stove, bed, chairs, tables, small tools, chains, etc., too numerous to mention. TERMS : $10 00 AND UNDER, CASH, BALANCE 8 MONTHS WITH 6 INTEREST ON APPROVED NOTES. Free Lunch at Noon SALES UNDER DIRECTION OF The Farmers' Exchange of the Inland Empire HEPPNER, OREGON F. A. McMENAMIN, Auctioneer. F. R. BROWN, Mgr. and Clerk. 0RE60K THIS YEAR way Association at a recent meeting in Spokane reported 10,000 mach ines entering Spokane over the Yellowstone Highway with an aver age of four in a machine. Sup pose these machines were gathered together in Spokane la one day. j You know what it costs you to! travel. Take this amount and multiply it by 40,000 and look at the total and this is the way this new money that costs us practically noth ing to get flows in a steady stream into our lay. House Bill 76 calls for another appropriation to cover the coming two years, for the same amount asked for two years ago and dependent upon Washington and British Columbia following with the some amount they gave previously. No appropriation has secured more for Oregon or been better adminis tered. That work is under the con stant attention of some of our lead ing business men who give their time free of charge and pay their own expenses when attending the meetings of the Board of Directors. The state revenues are used to de velop every other asset, either by maintaining departments, enforce ment jjf laws, maintaining institu tions, and the building of roads and bridges and the simplest way to lu- E. Nordyke was up from Lexing ton Monday, being called to the city on business relating to the closing of the estate of the late Jane Pen land. MK. SlU KTi: COMKS TO THE FKOXT Tells His Friends and Neighbors Of His Kxiterienro. Every Heppner resident should read what Mr. Sliurte says, and follow his example. He has used Doan's Kidney Fills and speaks from experience. Is there any need to ex periment with imitations or untried kidney medicines? C. W. Shurte, says: "Several years ago I was more or less subject to bladder trouble. The kidney secre tions were unnatural and too fre quent in passage. During these spells, my back felt weak and lame. After taking a few boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills, I got over the bladder trouble and my back felt as strong as ever." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidnoy remedy got Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Shurte had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Oregon will act as host this sum mer to the National Editorial As sociation as one of the results of the activities of the Pacific Northwest Tourist Association. This body of men and women is made up of the brightest minds in the newspaper world and the results that will ac crue from a publicity standpoint are beyond all computation. During the past two years the Tourist Associa tion representing Oregon, Washing ton and British Columbia has spent $112,000 to attract tourists to the Pacific Northwest and the results have been far beyond expectation when war conditions are taken into consideration. That Oregon has re ceived the greater benefit over the other commonwealths is evident in the attendance at Crater Lake. There are 11 National Parks In the United States and all but two showed a de crease in attendance except Crater Lake and Rainier National. Crater Lake showed an increase of between 26 to 40 per cent and nearly 50,000 people visited Rainier National while all other parts of the Pacific North west were Included in the various phases of publicity. The total expenditure of 'the tourists and vacation seeker per an num Is not less than One, Billion Dollars and it is to secure our fair share of this immense revenue that this association exists. . It is safe to say that within a very h'ort time the Pacific Northwest and It can be demonstrated by figures can derive from Fifty to One Hundred Million Dollars of actual cash from the encouragement J. 0GDEN ARMOUR IN WASHINGTON POSE f 1 W 1 it 4 "Jf i .! - art 4 a J?" vu-v s ! z Rivers & Ackley AT HEPPNER GARAGE Auto Machine Shops WE REPAIR ANYTHING Your Batteries Recharged We have just installed a complete and up-to-date de partment for the charging and repairing of batteries, and this branch of our business is in the hands of an expert. Complete Stock of Battery Re pairs on Hand AND ABSOLUTE SATISFACTION GUARANTEED See Us at Heppner Garage Running Again Now doing business again after the fire at the old stand OUR LIGHT BREAD IS UNEXCELLED ANYWHERE. TRY IT. THE HEPPNER BAKERY W. C. BOWLING, Proprietor. This is the latest picture of the man who virtually controls the livestock packing industry of the world. It is J. Ogdmi Armour, prpRldfnt of Armour & Co., as ha appeared at Washington in the re cent Investigation. He furnished tercsting testimony. Peoples Cash Market r FRESH AND CURTD fcTATS; POULTRY AND FISH C. D. Watkins, Propr Heppner, Oregon if