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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (April 6, 1922)
THE ti A ZHTTE-TI M KS, IIEITXER. OREGON', THURSDAY, ArEIL 5, 1922. Girl Bank Clerks Schooled To Give Robbers Battle rf ' n - " ' " " " " " " '" " " Poem h? .- L. MONTERESTELLI Marble and Granite Works PENDLETON, OREGON Fine Monument and Cemetery Work All parties interested in getting work in my line should get my prices and estimates before placing their orders All Work Guaranteed The Byers Chop Mill I Formerly SCHKMPP S MILL) STEAM ROLLED BARLEY AND WHEAT Afu-r the 20th of September will handle Gasoline, Coal Oil and Lubricating Oil You Will Find Prompt and Satisfactory Service Here To the Automobile Public I Have the NO NOK self-adjusting bearing bolts installed, and eliminate your bearing trou bles. They have been tested and give perfect satisfaction. Made for all ears and trucks. WE SELL ZEROLENE OILS 15c per quart. Over 5 gallon quantities 570 per gallon Differential and transmis sions filled at 15c per pound. Fell Bros. 1 Block East of Hotel. Auto Repair Shop. (A 41 J K Davltght robberies of banks in Eastern cities have occurred with such frequency recently that the Comm 'cial Trust Company of New York Cty asked the police department to school its clerks in the use of firearms. The photograph shows three ot the young women clerks receiving instructions from Policeman McCullity. Community Service teslejctotfesla TO SEE SOLUTIONS WORLD PROBLEMS Institute of Politics at Will iamstown Prepares for Sec ond Meeting Next March THSHF. ' 'IF" in life is either a triumph or gadd-eat. ?$MJ!p$ IF we are prepared for a situation, iB&ffiiji we triumph. IF we are unprepared, it means defeat. Nov; there is one essential in which every bus iness, or Individual need be prepared. It is in a nw banking connection. Many folks (even some business firms) think of a bank only as a place to deposit money for safe keeping. This, of course, should be the last consideration. First, good banking connections place at the command of the customer valuable knowledge and experience of men Kpecialized in business alTairs. They also put him in a position to receive the financial asislance and active co-operation of all departments of a commercial banking ser vice. So be it either a small individual saving de posit which will draw 4 per cent interest or the opening of a new business account, we wel come you and place at your convenience all the modern banking facilities of this institution. FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK To Discuss Reconstruction, Pa cific Ocean Problems, Poli tical Consequences of Present Peace By Harry A. Garfield. Editor's Note Hurry A. Garfield is president of Williams College, of Williamstown, Mass., one of the old est and greatest institutions of learn ing in America. In the Institute of Politics there is gathered some of the master minds of th; woi'd. Mr. Garfield was instruments la the or ganization of the Institute and is one of the leading sustainers of it as well as being active in the discussions that arise. The gathering of representative Americans at the first session of the Institute of Politics drew from Lord Bryce the remark: "I know of no other country in which such a large gioup of prominent men and women could be held together for so long for the study of international rela tions." From sa.ch an indefatigah'e traveller and close observer of men in all parts of the world, it was a high tribute to Americans' interest in problems oi international politic?. The second session of the Insti tute, whicn is to be held in Ar.;u',t at Williamstown, will duplicatj the first in so fai as the general sub ject of the lectures and conferences is concerned. Courses of lectures on various phases of international re lations will be delivered by scholars and s:ate-men from South America, China and Japan, and Central and Western Europe. Public announce ment of the list will be made as soon as it is complete and the particular subjects arranged. There will be many new names among the Round Table leaders. From the experience of the first session, the emphasis will be directed this summer even to a greater extent than last to intimate and free discussion in Round Table conferences. Subjects to be discuss ed in conferences will include the economic reconstruction of Europe, the problems of the Pacific ocean, the political consequences of the peace, as well as some of the more technical phases of international law. The Great Leaders. Among the leaders of the confer ence groups are many of the fore most authorities upon world finance, Mr. Frank A. Vanderlip, former pres ident of the National City Bank; Mr. Paul M. Warburg, a charter member of the Federal Reserve Bank; Mr. Oscar T. Crosby, a former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury. Regard ing the problems of the Pacific, the leadership of the discussions will fall upon at least two of the technical advisors of the government during the Washington Conference upon the Limitation of Armament, namely, Professors George H. Blakeslee and Stanley K. Hornbeck. The most prominent authority upon Canadian history, Dr. Adam Short of Ottawa, will assume charge of the questions arising out of Dominion Autonomy within the British Empire, a subject which has recently been brought into prominence by the creation of the Irish Free State. Our relations with the South American countries and their relations with each other will form the topic to be discussed in con ferences led by the Director General of the Pan-American Union and Pro I fessor John H. Letane. The political p situation in Europe, especially in ! Central and Southeastern Europe, .will be handled by Professor Charles 1 H. Haskins, Professor Robert T. And Now Henry is a Hansom Cab WW i-U) Pans beat us to it. Not only has the famous hansom cab been motor ized, but the French did it with our f: own ' Henry." This motor hansom cab recently made its appearance on 4 the streets of Paris, and immedi- lJUw ate'y came ,nt0 popular favor. IFW IIIIUUJ.III1U1M1JUI 3Mr ffy I 11 WOULDN'T MARRIAGE TAKE BETTER IF THE BRIDES TROUSSEAU INCLUDED A FEW GINGHAM APRONS. ft -U '.- ,VMd .1- 7's COPYRIGHT 102? Pt9 AUTOCASJTR 5HV. CO A VALUABLE ASSET Politeness is a simple thing, and doesn't cost a sou. ... It puts the polish on a king, or any common plug, by jing, the same as me or you. We re hvin m a Christian age, where courtesy's required and when I meet a sore-head bear, with con stant growl and rumpled hair, it makes me awful tired. . . . Whenever I go in a store, or other business placeand when they treat me impolite, it simply makes me want to fight, like spittin' in my face! I never could quite understand the tight-wad or his game. . . . And when, by chance or accident, I find myself inside his tent, 1 don't repeat the same. ... I don't aspire to regulate the hab its of mankind. . . . But, if I might, by deed or word, land hard on some ill-mannered bird, it would relieve my mind. Lord, and Dr. lsiah Bowman, Direct or of the American Geographical So ciety. Some of the newer aspects of international legal development will be discussed by Professors George Grafton Wilson and Jesse S. Reeves. The combination of the formal lec ture with the informal discussion by a small group of specialists in a sub ject of Politics may perhaps be sail to be the inventor. The lecture per mits a scholar or administrator of distinction to present the informed opinion o' his countrymen upon the problems which they have to face; the c' .Cvisi-ion groups offer an oppor tunity for extended debate upon those same problems. The advan tages of this combination are appar ent, especially when as was fre quently the case last year, the lec turer attends the sessions of the con ference and has an opportunity to explain and defend the point of view which he has previously presented from the lecture platform. As to Membership. Membership in the Institute is open to all teachers of history, gov ernment, and economics in colleges and universities throughout the coun try and invitations are extended to others, who by reason of special training or experience in the field, are able to contribute to the discus sion of the subject in hand. By this means it is possible to group together in the Institute along with the col lege teachers, representatives drawn from other learned professions, from banking and international finance, from the army and navy and from the active service of the government in its great administrative depart ment. Different points of view are :n this way. represented, the legal md financial, the military and the tcademic. The membership of the Institute 's necessarily limited by the accom odations which Williams College is 'He to offer. The maximum of 300, therefore, cannot be exceeded. But it should be understood that the public is cordially invited to attend the lectures during the session of 1922 as they were in 1921. While the members of the Institute last year numbered only 138 there were frequently from 800 to 1,000 persons oresent at the lectures. The Col- tl mow pa.you'he to take a walk with nnv llSi,- ftr it a if r EBE careful of mxjb manners . we've. J iAjiL-W" - t , HUMh I Hfir tJust moved pn this Jrr DYeo. a'-? l 'fC'' 0,0 ' KMOW you OlON'T WANT) II I VeS BUT THEY POA4'T 1 r A. Live in rue same SQuAaey vo ve m the samb Wireless Calls WkeB Dinner Is Ready Good-hy to the well-known dinner hell on American (arms. Wireless calls instead. Daniel Talbot of Florida has equipped his plow with one of the small radio sets and when official Washington time is an- nounced he goes to dinner. He also receives market reports and current news of the day as he keeps busily at his work. fit-" 'i t OK. 4 ii .vVi i . - La- " Mil IV rA : i lege dormitories are reserved pri marily for members of the Institute, but ample accommodations for those attending the lectures can be se cured at the inns and hotels. Farm Notes For Eastern Oregon By F. I. Ballard, Assistant County Agent Leader. There are sixty-three varieties of wheat grown in Oregon where the sowing of fourteen varieties only would add greatly to the profits ob tained by farmers, since the utili zation of so many varieties causes loss, first, in failure to sow the var iety best adapted to the particular district in question and, second, be cause of the occurrence of mixtures which reduce the grade and there fore the price received. Of the sixty-three varieties grown in the state, forty are grown in eastern Oregon and in this part of the state concen tration on five varieties would mean hundreds of thousands of dollars ad ditional in profits of eastern Oregon wheat growers each year. Much progress is being made in eastern Oregon in remedying this situation. The county agents in ten counties have planned extensive field demonstrations for 1922. These are so arranged that the superior value of certain varieties, notably Hard Federation, Turkey Red, and Hybrid 128, will be plainly evident. Last year this work was carried on in seven counties and the results were effective. In Union county Hy brid 128 was grown by fourteen far mers. A tour of visitations was held as well as several field meetings on the ranches. The result was that this fall five carloads of Hybrid 128 were sown instead of the Forty-Fold usually grown. Why this change? Because Hybrid 129 is a desirable, t.'on-shatterinn variety that yielded five to seven bushels per acre more than Forty-Fold, grown under the same conditions on the fourteen Union county farms. Farmers stw their neighbors har vesting higher yields and were con vinced. This is the plan followed in every county. In Morrow county an iliu'tration of the progress being made in stand ardization is found in the fact that a survey made through elevator man agers and warehousemen in 1919 showed only 14 per cent of Turkey Red in Monow county wh'le last year these same men reported that 55 per cent of wheat in Morrow county is Turkey. The following varieties are being stressed in the counties listed as fol lows: Morrow: Turkey Red, Hybrid 128, Federation; Umatilla: Certified Hy brid 128, Jenkins Club, Federation, Triplet; Wasco: Turkey Red, Feder ation, Hybrid 128; Union: Hybrid 128, Federation; Wallowa, Hybrid 128, Federation, Hard Federation; Malheur: Hybrid 128, Federation; Crook: Federation, Turkey Red; Deschutes: Federation; Lake: Fed eration, Turkey Red. QUALITY SEED POTATOES FOR SALE. Prices f. o. b. Heppner and Lex ington : American Wonder, $3.75 per 100. Rural New Yorkers, $3.75 per 100. Earliest of All, $4.00 per 100. All first class graded seed. E. D. PAXSON, m9-3t. Box 216, Hood River, Ore. Shoe Repair Work E. N. Gonty Shoe store is now prepared to take care of all shoe repair work. There is a good man on the job. Bring your shoe troubles to Gonty. Adv. FOR RENT Furnished house keeping rooms. See Mrs. Mattie Ad kins. Adv. WANTED Small house with bath. Advance monthly payments guaranteed. Inquire this office. 2t. Bryan at 62 Hopes To See Earth Dry -'flhtf'vifi'tf'ffi i V 3 ,m hi "x&f'X tig A, 1 V frtteM WML V A fx'"'? Observing his 6 2nd birthday March 20th, in a speech commemo rating the birth of N e a I Dow. founder of the prohibition move nt e n t , William Jennings Bryan said he hopes to live to see , the whole earth dry. This special pic ture wa9 posed at Mr. Bryan's birth day dinner in New . York. Heppner Oregon AUTOCASTt