THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEFPNER. OREGON. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 28, 1922 r PRETTIEST GIRL IN UNITED STATES i SAVED LIFE OF Mrs, HARDING pa en rorn Poem by f'l ' 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 aiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit; f A. M. EDWARDS 1 WELL DRILLER, Box 14, Lexington, Ore. 5 Up-to-date traction drilling outfit, equipped for all sizes of hole 5 5 and depths. Write for contract and terms. Can furnish you 5 S a w w nTin nr.. i- All T "" lTTrl f TT T all steel. Light Running, Simple, Strong, Durable.. Tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiuiiiii: Pioneer Employment Co. With Two Big Offices PENDLETON AND PORTLAND Is prepared to handle the business of Eastern Oregon better than ever before Our Specialties Farms, Mills, Camps, Hotels, Garages, Etc. W IRE BI SH ORDERS AT OCR EXPEX3E , y p V ! Vx- i f A T f A s $ it, I W w JMMf tip 7r r fertlaaa Osse 14 M. It. Peaaletea lit m. W.e Mp Oiilj Employmenl Office in Eastern Oregon wits Connections in Portland The Byers Chop (Formerly SCHEMPP'S MILL) STEAM ROLLED BARLEY AND WHEAT We handle Gasoline, Coal Oil and Lubricating Oil You Find Prompt and Satisfactory Service Here EMM OU have been walking in the sunny fields of prosperity. Life seems secure. Youth and strength are careless and forgetful. You have spent money as you have earned it. Suddenly a flood of hard luck f comes rolling toward you. Will you be overwhelmed by it 9 A BANK ACCOUNT IS A SAFETY ISLE. START ONE TODAY! Dollar deposited In thii batik draw interest at 4 per cant. They ara aft dol lar! busy dollar. A imall bank account serves a an lncantiva to sav, aave, Sara If yon hava only 'n111 tin pot aside, deposit it with a today. All large fortune bad (mail begin nings. The biographic of all rich men atari with their firrt bank account. YOUR BANK CAN HELP YOU FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK Heppner Oregon Mary Katherirle Campbell, of Columbus, Ohio, was crowned National Beauty Queen for 1922 in the Annual Pageant at Atlantic City. She is 16 years old, 5 feet 5 inches in height, and weighs 133 pounds. She swims, rides, dances and goes to school. She tri umped oyer 170 other American beauty win ners from as many different towns and cities in the U. S. Secretary of Agriculture Points Out Reasons and.. Gives Farmers Views. FARMER EARNS LESS Brunt of Cost Borne by Others Than Strikers and Employing Capital By HENRY C. WALLACE, Secretary of Agriculture. Editor's Note: Henry C. Wallace, secretary of agriculture, knowa the work and the reward of the farm both from a personal viewpoint and from a viewpoint gained by national dealings with agriculture. He holds in the following that the majority' of .farmers are weary of the industrial unrests that make trouble for every one and he also shows that the agri culturist has woes of hi own that strikes would not benefit. At this time when everyone is pon dering over questions of wages and conditions of employment in the or ganized industries, there is much food for sober reflection in contemplating the wages and the conditions under which about one-third of the Ameri can people, namely, the farmers and those who live on farms, are work ing. Let us consider first the matter of wages, or income. The value of in come, whether it be in the form of wages, or of money received for sales of the products of labor, is represent ed not in dollars and cents but in what that money will buy, in other vords, by its purchasing power. It I' rather startling to thinking people to compare the wages paid the workers in the organized industries with the vages received by the farmer, as re presented in the price he gets for the things he grows. A few specific illus trations indicate clearly the position in which the American farmer finds imself in relation to workers in - .ese industries. Take for example, the average wage eceived by the coal miner for mining a ton of coal. In 1913 this wage per ton would buy 1.1 bushel of corn in Iowa; in 1921 it would buy 2.5 bushels of corn in the same state. In 1913 the ton wage would buy .7 of a bushel of wheat in North Dakota; in 1921 it would purchase .0 of a bushel. Ir. 1913 it would buy 4.7 pounds of cotton in Texas but in 1921 it wouid pur chase 8.5 pounds of cotton in the same state. In 1913 the miner' wage per ton would buy 7 pounds ol nog in Nebraska; in 1921 14 pounds. In 1913 the miner's ton wage purchased .8 of a bushel of potatoes in New York; in 1921 it would bring him 1.2 bushel. In 1913, 11 pounds of sheep in Wyoming; in 1921, 18 pounds. In 1913 1.6 bushel of oats in Illinois; in 1921 3.1 bushels. In 1913, 2.4 pounds of butter in Missouri; in 1921 3.2 pounds of butter in the same state. Some Figures. If we take the average yearly earn ings of railroad employees, we find that in 1913 the wage for a year's work would purchase 1492 bushels of corn in Iowa, but in 1921 the average yearly wage of railroad employees would buy 4112 bushels. The average yearly earnings of railroad employees would buy 1028 bushels of wlsat hi North Dakota in 1913; in 1921 it would purchase 1466 bushels. In 1913 it would buy 6449 pounds of cotton in Texas but in 1921 it would purchase 13,934 pounds. It would buy in , 1913 102 hundredweight of hogs in Nebras ka; and in 1921 237 hundredweight. It would buy 148 hundredweight of sheep in Wyoming in 1913; and in 1921 296 hundredweight In 1913 it would buy 1087 bushels of potatoes in New York; in 1921 1918 bushels. In 1913 2174 bushels of oats in Illin ois; in 1921 51U9 Dusneis. in ivm 3309 pounds of butter in Missouri; in 1921 5285 pounds. In 1913 the freight revenue per ton mile received by the railroads would buy 14 bushel of corn in Iowa. In Is 13 1 bushel of wheat in North Dak ota; in 1921 1.1 bushel. In 1913 6.1 pounds of cotton in Texas; in 1921 10.5 pounds. In 1913 10 pounds of hogs in Nebraska; in 1921 18 pounds. In 1913 1 bushel of potato in New York; in 1921 1.5 bushel. In 1913 14 pounds of sheep in Wyoming; in 1921 22 pounds. In 1913 2.1 bushels of oats in Illinois; in 1921 22 pounds. In 1913 2.1 bushel of oats in Illinois; in 1921 3.9 bushels. In 1913 3.1 pounds of butter in Missouri; in 1921 4 pou nds. Price Go I'p. In fairness it must be taken into account, of course that before the corn, wheat, hogs, sheep, cotton, but ter or other farm products get to the consumer' table, a good deal baa been added to the price which the far mer received. This margin betweeen the farmer or producer and the con sumer has greatly increased during the past eight years. At the same time it is also fair to note that a good deal of this increase baa been due to the increase in the wages paid the people who handle these products in connection with their marketing and distribution. The foregoing compari sons show, however, that the wages of the farmer as represented by the prices paid for his crops are lower than his wages were before the war measured in purchasing power, while on the other hand, the wages of the workmen in organised industries, are considerably higher than they were before the war, whethter we measure them in dollars and cents or in pur chasing power. The fact is that the farmers of the country, numbering almost one-third of our entire population, have borne altogether the heaviest burden of de flation. They have endeavored to get relief by all lawful means. They have appealed to the Administration, to Congress, and to every other agency which they thought might possibly help them, but while making these ef forts to avoid their heavy losses, they have not stopped working. They have kept on producing and in the face of extraordinary low prices they have this year grown one of the largest crops in the entire history of our country. I Believe M Law. The farmer believes in law and order. He believes firmly in govern ment He believes in fairness and jus tice between man and man. He be lieves in working hard and producing efficiently and he does all of these things in which he believes. The farmers' wages are not paid re gularly every week or every month. Instead he must receive his compen sation at irregular intervals varying from three months to a year or more depending upon the nature of the crop. Neither the rate of wages nor the hours of labor are agreed upon in advance. The consuming public pays, but It makes no agreement whatever as to the amount it will pay. The farmer is urged to produce ab undantly, but the price he receives for what he raises is determined after the amount of his production is known. The buyers naturally drive the closest bargain possible. The more the farmer produces, the less the buy ers want to pay, and thus, strange as it may seem, we have large produc tion actually penalized. Very often, in fact it is the general rule, a large crop brings the farmer fewer total f -WW ' V 1 9 i . i r4 - i iC ' ! til BOBBED HAIR My little niece ha bobbed her hair which make her look a trifle queer about her upper story. . . . For the was mighty well supplied with what we call th woman' pride, in fact her crownin' glory. ... I couldnt say that she's improved, by whackin' off tbe curl I loved it mak her look so sassy I But when she' had 'em off a spell, she may look sweeter who can tell? or, mebbe, twice a elassyl I'm shor-an-certain now that I could never be induced to try to wear luxuriant tresses. ... I would n't want to face a gale, with skypiece like a hoss's tale, or hooked up in long dresses. . . . An' so that little niece of "mine can occupy the flrin line in front of my affections. .. . A fairy-neck an' dimpled knee can shell my works, an' captur' m, in spit of all objections! But still there's drawbacks to the game, and little resk about the same, it's useless to deny it . . . Therefore if I wa Teeny' Ma, or other dame that I have law I dont believe I'd try it) pest and plant and animal diseases. ' He must plant enough to make sure that there will be food for all with the certainty that at the same time in unusually favorable seasons, the re sult may be a large surplus and that this surplus which cannot be hidden probably will cause price lower than the actual cost of production. The far mer must be willing to accept these low prices with the best grace possi ble and adjust his living expenses to meet his reduced income. If other national groups would work as the farmer has don our ec onomic troubles would soon be over. Price would soon be adjusted to their normal relationships. There would be work enough for everybody and just wages for all. But there are many people and groups of people who think only of themselves and how they can profit the most at the expense of the community at large and especially at the expense of the farmer. The farmer is sick and tired of this sort of business. He sees no reason why such disputes cannot and should not be settled in an orderly and lawful way without the interrup tlons of service which cost him, and in fact all the rest of us, so dearly. Brig. Gen. C. E. Sawyer, personal physician, to President and Mrs. Harding, 'and Dr. Charles Mayo, prominent Surgeon of Minnesota, photographed as they left the White House after ministering to' Mrs. Harding durmg her serious illness. dollars than a small crop, and what is more, often a large crop sells at less than it cost the farmer, on an average to produce it The energy and the in telligence with which the farmer pro duces his crops, the number of hours he works, the expense he incurea in producing crops none of these is considered in determining the price he receives. The farmer, therefore, works on faith. He carries all the risks of weather, heat and cold, of flood and drought, of storms, of insect PEAKING OP TUA4ES Vg LIKE THE "TUN" IN OPPORTONITf- a- TRY IT'. 0 by IevMA. MATTHEWS D.D. LLD. W. W. Howard, Butter creek stock man, was a business visitor in Hep pner on Monday. HOMEY PHILOSOPHY for 1922 When you get a sliver in your fin ger it's likely to cause trouble if it's left there. As a matter of fact, after a er will force it out whetber it likea it or not It just don't belong there One way or another it's got to get back to where it came from. When it doe then both sliver and stick are better off. They're itronger. The chances are both liver and tick must pass through all sorts of ching- e before they unite again, mats the price they pay for getting away from where they fit. It's always best to find out where we fit an' not try to break in where we don't belong. Mr. and Mr. Frank Lieuallen, Rhea creek farmers, were in Heppner for a short time on Monday. SUPREME BENCH 1 11. Former Senator George Sunder land, of Utah, is the new associate Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court time old mother nature sooner or I at-' ' ed Justice J. H. Clarke. 5 FALSE HOPE -Sin on every side is growing bolder, and the very delusion contained in the statement, "The world is growing bet ter," is of satanic origin, and is for the purpose of putting to sleep the forces of righteousness. Human nature is incapable of moral improvement by any process known to mankind. The only thing within the power of God that can change human nature is regeneration. Reformation cannnot affect its character. Regene ration must precede reformation. Those who have been regenerated are of course growing better; they are progressing; they are growing more Godlike. The good are getting better, but the bad are getting worse. The ungenerat ed, the unwashed, the unsaved are more skilled, subtle, and powerful in the practices of sin than ever before in the history of the world. The corrupt are becoming more sci entific in their corruption, and more determined to practice corruption. There are three great stubborn facts confronting us. FIRST The fact of sin. It is the most stubborn fact, the most awful fact, and the most destructive fact in the universe. SECOND The fact of salvation. There would be no salvation if we were not lost. You can't save some thing that hasn't been lost. The sal vation provided by the blood of Christ is the ony fact that is constructive, redemptive, and recreative. THIRD The stubborn fact of de praved, lost human nature. This great entity known as sinful man cannot be improved by external processes; he cannot be redeemed by education, or evolution, or any other of the delus ions. He can be saved only by the re generating act of the Holy Ghost. It is the duty of the church and of every minister of the gospel to preach the awfulness of sin, the absolute certainty and power of salvation, the judgment that awaits the unrepent ant, and to denounce with all the pow er possible the hellish delusion that the world is growing better. Awake! Strike! Preach! And reach the unsaved, for they are growing worse not better. nonE SWEET HOflE Atlantic To Pacific t I Tl Doolittle. U. S. Army aviator, left friend, at Pablo Beach, Fla, one erening recently, ancl . dined with fther in San Diego, Calif, the next, going from ocean to ocean in bout 21 heuri BJ"- r fHe lOCAl IfsAVIAtG THE .AEIGHBOH'S CHILD VflTH t WHILE THEY 60 vll I'll i Suppose DO THE BEST I CAA1- H'f SLEEPY. I'LL A LULLABY I T J 'C V J X. ypfe i 0)PNv you 6o VYE OH-BAB -BEE J TO SLfcEP? & & BYE - GO TO Xfif BAD . W . ' ' VtoME HOWLS HERE' OUC "Get AvJAM FROM THAT PHONOGRAPH HXi N1 TO BREAK A REcoacT' NOW YOU seND os ONB1. wEU Print it fo YOU1 HARDEMAN MeAJ(atfdtUka speaking of quality Every few days a Hardeman wearer tells a Hardeman dealer how well Hardeman Hats wear. Many have been worn every day for two years and still look fine. How's that for quality, just try one on. Made on the Pacific Coast D. A. Wilson BETTER HATS FOR MEN G.-T. Printing Is Known For Its Good Quality IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I Reduced Cash Prices I 1 After August 1st, our prices will be: 1 Cleaning Pressing $1.50 -Men's Suits $ .75 1.50 Overcoats " 75 I 1.00 Coats , 50 .75 Pants 25 1 1.50 Ladies Suits, plain '.. .75 1.50 .rrr. Coats .75 1.00 Skirts, plain 50 1 1.50 Dresses, plain .75 125 up Pleated Skirts .75 up 1 Hats cleaned and blocked... : $2.00 Fancy Dresses, 25 percent lower than city prices I See our line of Fall and Winter Woolens at I J $30.00 $35.00 and $40.00 J; f LLOYD HUTCHINSON I I Where rLEAN 3 I "teP i a s iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH