I'M.r. nrR
THE UAZKTTK-TIMKS, HKPPXEB, OHK., THIRSDAY, Jl'XK 10, tlVJO.
THE GAZETTE-TIMES
The H'tr'T "!ti'tl. Ftbllshd
M:irch J.'. UJ
1e Hfppnr Timra, KitftMtahed
Consolidated February IS, 1911.
Published e-ery Thursday morning by
and entered at the IVitoffloe at Hepp
ner, Oiegon, aa econd-clae matter.
AIVEHTISHi; RATE G1VBX OR
ArrLU'ATlOX
SfBSCRirTION RATKS:
Ona Tear II 00
Bit Montha 1.00
Three Montha .71
Single Copiee. .OS
MORROW ( Ot'STI OFFICIAL PAPER
Let's Begin Again
All observers agree that the only
thing worse than war is the getting
over it, and yet how poorly have we
prepared for this day of trial:
While the war lasted the whole
power of the people and all their or
ganized energy were directed to a
single object the winning of the
war and we had definite programs
of procedure. The Army and the
Navy had each a program. The re
lief work twent according to definite
plans. We had a definite program
of food production and another of
conservation. We lived for a com
mon purpose, and we worked accord
ing to a definite program aimed at
perfectly definite and desired ends.
Now we are at loggerheads one
with another, and working at cross
purposes after a fashion that would
have lost any war. We are neither
producing with efficiency nor con
suming with sanity. Any business
that should undertake to operate as
we are conducting our affairs, both
public and private, taken as a whole,
would certainly go to smash, and that
right speedily.
Hindsight is always better than
foresight; but had we been wise we
would have held a great public con
ference immediately upon the cessa
tion of hostilities, to take stock of
the situation, to take account of the
state of the nation and to make a pro
gram for reconstruction, just as we
met and made programs to meet the
conditions of a ten years' war, should
the struggle continue that long.
Such a conference would have no
ted at once the disturbed condition
of manufacturing industry, especial
ly concerning such necessities as
housing, clothing and food. It would
have noted that practically no houses
had been built for soma four years i
or more. It would have noted that
thousands of working families were
now living in separate houses that
heretofore had herded in close quar
ters, and that the shortage would at
once become acute when the demob
ilized soldier brought his wife and
babies away from their father's house
and sought again living quarters for
his restored family life. Seeing all
this, it would have laid do'wn as the
first great activity the building of
houses, whereas more has been said
about roads than about homes.
Such a conference would have no
ted that the fibers of the country had
gone into uniforms and war material
and that four million men could ex
change uniforms for civilian cloth
ing more rapidly than the readjust
ment of manufacture could be made,
and it would have directed public
notice to the need for special atten
tion to the clothing industry and to
economy in wearing apparel.
Such a conference would have no
ted that in twar thousands of young
men always leave the farm not to go
back, and it would have called upou
the country for the most carefully
worked out program of food pro
duction. It would have maintained
for a time at least the machinery for
buying and transporting the great es
sentials.
But nothing was done, and instead
of using our labor in the production
of essenlals it went first of all into
such nonessentials as the manufac- j
ture of luxuries of all sorts and ex-
pensive clothing, not because they
were the goods most needed but sole
ly because orders iwere stacked high,
because the public was bent upon a
holiday in celebration of victory, be
cause it would spend money like wa
ter and because an opportunity was
at hand to make profits in the man
ufacture of what the country wanted
most luxuries.
And we have lived in a fool's par
adise for over a year now, spending
most of our public thought in try
ing to placate this group or that
group and keep It at work that we
might make more dollars and spend
more money, while the very founda
tions of a well-ordered economic life
were slowly breaking up.
It is not yet too late. If Instead
of having so many "investigations" to
find where small faults lie; If In
stead of so many "commissions" and
"boards" to hear complaints and ad-
Just differences; if instead of spend
ing our energies In finding fault If
Instead of all this, Congress or the
President, or the people in their civil
capacity, twould call a great national
conference for the purpose of making
and publishing a reconstruction pro
gram, it would do more to stop our
Insane spending, our bickerings over
small matters, our speculations at
the expense of the future It would
do more to put us quickly on a sound
economic basis than will ten years of
this kind of blundering.
The world Is full of men who can
make such a program, and here and
there is an Individual banker or bus
iness man who raises his voice in
protest against present conditions.
What lie days is sound, but it lacks
official and public sanction and bo '
doei not get recognition.
Let's back up and begin over again
Li-t s suppose that the war is Just
.nor and I Iiat f are giing at the jol
of scttir.s our national affairs in or-li.-r,
j'iim as a business man would re
construct li is business after four
wars of disruption. The tiling can.
et he done. We may do infinitely,
worse than to acknowledge that we
:.ue made a bungle so far. and be
ui over asin before we learn to
hate one another worse than we ever
haled the Hun. Country Gentleman.!
Babies and Bacon
l'.abies cannot live by bucon alone.
Statesmen have been so intent on
bringing home the bacon, and fath
ers in getting their share of it, that
both have neglected the babies.
Mothers are reminding them that
they have appropriated $4,000,000
to protect hogs and cattle from dis
ease and not one cent to keep babies
healthy.
Babies must have feed. But as a
nation iwe are not so poverty-strick-
en that when we have provided our
children with something to eat we
must leave them to shift for them
selves. If we do, it is beause we we
are careless and indifferent. Babies
need care. They must have healthy
mothers and intelligent mothering,
since improperly prepared food or
thoughtless exposure frequently costs
a life. A large proportion of the
quarter of a million babies (Who died
in this country in 1918 might have
been saved if their mothers had been
taught how to take care of them and
how to take care of themselves.
The Sheppard-Towner Maternity
Bill, for the purpose of keeping ba
bies healthy, proposes to appropriate
$2,000,000, to be gradually increas
ed until it reaches $4,000,000 an
nually. The money will be used to
provide medical and unrsing care at
home, or, rwhen necessary, in a hos
pital. More important, still, it will
be used to promote public health
nursing, consultation centers, and
other methods found successful in
teaching mothers the hygiene of ma
ternity and infancy, especially in
rural communities.
Motor Truck Line Experiment
There are 600 motor truck lines
between the country and the city in
the United States today, carrying
mostly food products one way and
bringing back necessities from the
town, village and farm.
The motor truck line appears to
be the only relief from railroad con
gestion, anyway the best relief for
perishable goods from the farm to
the city marts.
Not long since the U. S. govern
ment made a most interesting test.
Two identical consignments were
made the same hour, one by truck
from Lancaster, Pa., to a consignee
in New York city and the other by
by railroad from Lancaster to the
same consignee. Each consignment
consisted of 1000 dozen of eggs and
5000 baby chicks.
The motor truck arrived at the
consignee's door in 12 hours. Upon
examination, eight broken eggs were
found and four, of the chicks were
dead.
The railroad consignment arrived
in Jersey City, across the river from
New York in four days. The con
signee was notified and he had to
send his own truuck across the river
to Jersey City to unload and load up
again his consignment. Upon arrival
at his store door in New York city it
was found that hundreds of eggs
were broken and half the chicks
dead. "
We understand that the truck
freight bill iwas the larger but no
doubt it was much smaller when the
broken eggs and dead chicks were
counted,
We hope the railroads will come
out of their slough of despondency,
Going Away?
We've all been sticking pretty
close to home for tliree
years now.
But this will be a "goiri-ftway" year for many
a vacation a t rip a rest well carncil.
Such jaunts mean luggage!
If you have sufli needs we ask tlie privilege of show
ing you our lines
Handbags to Wardrobe Trunks
Thomson Bros.
but in the meantime here's hoping
those tii'O motor truck lines will in
i rouse to timm. and more. i
Slat's Diary
Krida - just got home from a par
ty 'Wlch 1 attended tonite. J. K. was
there & we played
1,. -f-r A game called post
I ;.iOIhee wioh mostly
f ISJ is kissing who Er-
' j . .-jj.er you want
v- ; -.s
'i,lr"ipi'"' m" turn come
I called J. E
ter a i ct. stamp
wich is 3 kisses
. : o ,i i
'-2& thought may Be
sue nouiu get mad.
so hen she come
in the room I sed
now if you dont
want me 2 kiss
you turn yure hed.
She diddent & I
did. Man O man
it was just like
berrying yure face in a handful of
fresh Dewey vilets. & I used 2
think ice cream was good. Wen I
went out they ast J. K. to call a
kustomer & she sed nutliing doing
Im sold out & she cum out with me.
Guess May be I aint strong. No
sleep for me tonite.
Saturday Had a nother lite to
day with Slimey Lukens. Come home
kinda mussed up & ma sed to me
youve ben fiteing agen & lm asham
ed of you & I replyed if she cud see
Slimey she would be mighty proud
of me.
Sunday after Sunday skool Jake
& me found a nest of little bitsey
Robbens wich had just a little bit
of hair on there backs. The cutest
little things.
Monday Jake found a tooth
Brush & washed his teeth and wen
teecher seen him she was very Su-
prized and wanted 2 know iwot was
the matter with him.
Tuesday Squeaky Stone has got
the meanest pa in this here hole
town, his pa give him a dime if he
wood go 2 bed las nite without his
supper. Wich he did. And this
morning his pa charged him a dime
fer his breakfast before he wood let
him eat any. Sed he et 2 much.
Wednesday pa hvas out pritty late
las nite & ma locked the dore on
him & wen pa tride 2 get in he cud-
dent. Finely ma went 2 the window
& sed wot do you want & pa anser-
red & sed I want 2 stay here all nite
& ma sed. All rite go ahead and i
stay there. Wich pa did. It was!
was a nice w arm nite tho. But pa
diddent seem to like it much. j
Thursday teecher was explane
ing how you cant add trees & men j
not take ottomobeels frum horses j
and etc. & Jake ast if you cuddent i
take milk frum cows & I sed ma cud
take money frum pa's pocket. If'
he was Asleep. , j
ALL M THE WEELTS HEWS
Mrs. Frank Burgoyne and little
son of Lexington were visiting with
lleppner relatives on Tuesday.
Leo Hill, local garage man, went
to Fossil the first of the week on a
business trip. .
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Finley and
Ralph Finley of the North Lexing
ton section, were visitors in Heppner
on Wednesday.
R. W. Snyder, the Black Horse far
mer, was a Wednesday business call
er in Heppner.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Buschke were
in the city from their Rhea creek
home for a few hours on Wednesday.
Messrs. Mink and dinger, promin
ent wheat farmers of the North Lex
ington country, were business visitors
in lleppner on Wednesday.
! II. Fred Tash and family motored
over to Walla Walla and spent the
i week end at the home of Mr. Tash's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Tash.
Miss Anna Doherty is the nehv
stenographer in the law office of P.
A. McMenamin, succeeding Miss Lor
raine Groshens, who recently resign
ed. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peterson and
Elmer Peterson of Gooseberry, were
callers in Heppner on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Frad expect to
leave Heppner about the first of July
for the coast, either Seaside or New
port, to spend three months enjoy
ing the salt air.
Peter Curran expects to leave the
last of the week for Whitney, Ore.,
to spend the summer months with
the sheep.
FOR SALE!!
HOLT Self-Propelled
COMBINE
16-ft. cut. Run 50
days last season
MUST SELL TO CLOSE AN ESTATE
The Farmers Savings
Bank
Walla Walla, Wn.
Washing
Made Easy
with
Electrically
Operated
Wringer Attachment
Come in and let us demon
strate Eden superior qualit
ies to you.
E. J. Starkey
Agent
Oilman Bldg. Heppner
. .March 3, 1920, the Ford Motor Co. advanced the price of Ford cars because of the increased
cost of production. No specific announcement was deemed necessary at the time, but it has de
veloped that misrepresentations and misquotations of these advanced prices have been and are
being given out. So to safeguard the public against the evils of misrepresentation, we herewith
give the present prices:
mime prices ure au t. o. t. Detroit
FORDSON TRACTOR $850.00 f. o. b. Dearborn, Mich.
Any of the Dealers whose names are listed below, will be pleased to receive your
ing the assurance of the best possible promptness in delivery.
Frank Turner finished up a suc
cessful season's run with his shear
ing plant this week.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Morgan of
Little llutter creek were Heppner
visitors on Wednesday.
M. L. last- returned the last of
the iweek from Oregon City, where
he paid a visit ,o his mother.
Mrs. Stephen M. Irwin returned
Sunday from a visit with relatives
at Yakima, Wash. She was met at
Arlington by Mr. Irwin.
Two furnished housekeeping
rooms $10. Water and light paid.
Inquire the Gazette-Times office.
Chas. Thomson and two sons, El
lis and Karl, accompanied by Miss
Jennie Black and Mrs. James Far
ley, all of Heppner, are visiting with
Mrs. L. E. Cohn of Pendleton. Mr.
Thomson is a member of the firm
of Thomson Bros., mercantile com
pany of Heppner. The party expects
to return to Heppner today. Pen
dleton Tribune.
Ernest K. Wyland, Hardman sheep
man, was in the city on Wednesday
El
Another Royal Suggestion
MUFFINS and POPOVERS
From the New Royal Cook Book
BREAKFAST is too
often eaten as a duty
rather than a joy. The suc
cess of the day nay depend
upon the spirit of break
fast The Royal Education
al Department presents
some breakfast dishes that
will send the children to
school with a hip hip hur
rah and his majesty man
to his daily duties with the
"up and doing" feeling
which knows no discour
agement Muffini
enpa flour "
I teaspoons Royal Baking
Powder
1 tablespoon sugar
U teaspoon salt
I cub milk
I eggs
1 tablespoon shortening
Sift together flour, baking
powder, sugar and salt; add
milk, well-beaten eggs and
melted shortening; mix well
Grease muffin tins and put
two tablespoons of batter in
to each. Bake in hot oven 10
to 83 minutes.
Egglest Uuifina
I cups flour
4 teaspoons Royal Baking
Powder
I tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup milk
I tablespoon shortening
Mix and sift dry ingredients,
add milk and melted shorten-
"Bake with Royal and
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
Runabout . $550 Z:":":?Z
Touring Car . $575 Z":.T.r.!!
rfYIITsP JiirrO dUal electric 8turtln8 md lighting
VVllUJC Ovy Hysttim and demountable rlm $8150
Opfloy. JGrTElk W"" dUal electrlc Btartin "nd lighting
VJdlCtll pO O system and demountable rims.. $075
Truck Chassis
with
(With pneumatic tires and
THREE EXTRA FORDS FOR
Chas. H.
Ford and Fordson
Main Street
IiiHlNt on (ieniilne
Hooking after business matters. Mr.
Wyland says the sheep can.e through
the winter in good shape. The sheep
I w ill be started for summer range
on Sunday, but before entering the
reserve they must be inspected, so
Mr. Wylund was here looking for the
proper official to do the inspecting.
Hard man wasn't overlooked in the
big rain which visited every section
of Morrow county the first of the
week. Wm. Lowen, Who was in the
city from his ranch in the Hardman
hills on Wednesday, reports that
a heavy rain fell there.
Dell Allstott was rushing around
town on Wednesday looking for a
competenti sheepherder to take
charge of his sheep Iwhile they are
on summer range In tlie John Day
country. Mr. Allstott expects to
start the sheep to the mountains this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Blackman left
on Saturday for Portland where they
will spend several Weeks before re
turning to their home in Sun Fran
cisco. Mr. and Mrs. Blackman en
joyed a visit of two weeks with their
many Heppner friends while guests
BAKING
POWDER
Absolutely Puro
TOTAL
$600
solid tires and clincher rims
demountable rims $640)
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Latourell
Sales and Service.
Heppner, Oregon
Ford Parts
at tlie home of Mr. and Mrs. Phlll
Colin.
Condon and Maupin base ball
teams will play at Autelope on Satur
day, June 19, for a purse of a thous
and dollars. Maupin Is said to have
an exceptionally strong team, hav
ing won all of the 11 games playeo
this year. The tlwo teauu have
agreed to play only home players.
New KI14! Pole on Court Howie Law.
During the past week a new 60
foot flac Dole has been erected on th
court house lalwn directly in front of
the building, inconvenience In rais
ing the flag on the pole at the top of
the court house was largely responsi
ble for the court ordering a pole erec
ted in the yard. The new pole is set
firmly in concrete.
FOR SALE
I am offering for sale at my home
in Heppner, Oregon, the folloJwlng:
I Home Comfort range
1 Extension dining table
1 Singer sewing machine
1 couch
5 dining chairs
ltp. MRS. R. J. HOWARD.
ing and beat until smooth.
Bake in greeted muffin tins
in hot oven 10 to IS minutes.
Com Huffing
cup corn meal
li cups flour
i teaspoons Royal Baking
Powder
teaspoon salt
I tablespoons sugar
1 cup milk
I tablespoons shortening
legg
Sift together corn meal, flour,
baking powder, salt and su
gar; add milk, melted short
ening and well-beaten egg;
mix well. Grease muffin tins
and drop two tablespoons of
mixture into each. Bake about
35 minutes in hot oven.
Popovert
I cups flour
teaspoon salt
Jests
i cups milk
Sift together flour and salt.
Make well in flour, break
eggs into well, add milk and
stir until smooth. Pour into
hot greased gem pans and
bake ii to 35 minutes in a
very hot oven. If taken out
of oven too soon they will
falL
SENT FREE
New Royal Csok Book eon
Uinlnr scores ot delightful,
economical recipes, many of
them the most famous la
use today. Address
aOTAI, BaJEDfO POWDKB OO.
IIS ralua Sued
YeckOMS
be Sure
order pled
'