THE GAZETTE-TIMES. IIEFPNER, OREGON. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER SO, 1922. The Gazette -Times THE IIKITNKR C.A.TTTK. rMaVM-wi March SO, 18? 7. TVS SiKI I N! l: T!VK?. FteV'i'1ir4 November IS. 181 Consolidated February 15. 1912. fublied mry T.ur.-.y M .rrirsr by VAWTER AD srEXCER CRAWFORD and entered at the post t'.e m Heppner, Oregon as second-class matter. OFFICIAL PAPER FOR MORROW COUNTY AYc Should Spwd Up Safety fly Richard Lloyd Jones EVER since the advent of the steam engine we have been speeding up, and uhile that speed has come with inestimable henefit. it has not come w ithout its measure of attendant harm. When the legislature of New York was first asked to grant i franchise for eighteen miles of steam railroad, the right to build this first railroad was not granted without a bitter opposition which contended that it would be unsafe because the engine would scare so many horses that an unwarranted toll of death would result. The railroad came and those who opposed it were right in their death toll predictions. The engines did scare the horses. There were runaways, and what is worse, there were wrecks on the rails and an ever-increasing list of accidents have been re corded as the iron ribbon mileage multiplied. But for all this we would not erase the railroads from our maps; we would not go back to the days when even a king would cry "My kingdom for a horse." The threshing machine has cost many a thresher an arm. But we would not go back to the days when we flayed grain on the floor. Mill machinery and foundry furnaces take their human toll. But we cannot do without them. We Ry sky-high and all too often we read of a fallen flyer. It is the price we pay to learn how with safety to use the swifter way. The auto brings its price in limb and life. We pay it and speed away. We have been impatiently seeking speed. With the same impatience we must seek safety. The cost of speed has reached such alarming propor tions that the "Safety First" slogan was born. Observe, we did not cry "Cut it out," nor did we even plead "Slow down." We do not want to slacken, much less to stop. On the contrary, we want to speed up. That is progress. But we must speed up safety. The National Safety Council reports that the compiled figures of preventable accidents in 1920 show a death toll of as many people as live in the State of Nevada. In other words, in one year we wiped'out by accident one whole State. That means . that it is time to STOP something. It is not speed we should stop. We must stop recklessness. The man-eating threshing machine has gone out of fashion. But the fool at the auto wheel is busy. Fatalities from reckless auto driving average thirty deaths a day. We have speed laws, but they are defiantly disobeyed and the violators when arrested are too often dismissed with a modified reprimand or a petty fine. To endanger the life of another is not a light or laughing matter. We must adjust ourselves to the auto as the horse did to the train. We make the train run on schedule, limit its speed on curves, slow down at the sign of caution and come to a full stop at the STOP signal. So must we make every auto driver do. There is but one way to do it, and that is for every community to impose drastic penalty for ev ery offender and for every community to promptly get rid of any officer that fails to arrest the offend ers and every judge and magistrate that will not impose the full penalty of the crime. If it is a crime to take life, it is a crime to en danger life. Speed up safety. It is the duty of every town and county government to get indig nantly busy on this all important job. We cannot spare our people in whole state-ful lots. expenses, and there is a strong spirit of retrench ment in many counties and cities and budgets are reduced from the estimates of 1921, and state esti mates will be reduced. One state official estimates that $250,000 a year can be cut from the administrative charges of state departments without lowering the efficiency of the service. The budget estimates from all state departments are now in and the State Board of Control is revising them. It would be possible before the legislature meets for the old and new Governor or any state official to go over every function of state administration and find just what it costs, what money it earns and turns nito the state treasury, how many employed and at what pay. With these facts in the possession of the Gov ernor office, that officer could decide what might be abolished or reduced or consolidated with some other function, what salaries might be reduced or increased, and after receiving suggestions from the people, publish the same. The facts of each department should be given to all the newspapers of the state, not just the Portland newspapers, with the recommendation of the Governor in each case, and the legislature would not dare ignore the recommendation to apply business principles to the situation. The buck can no longer be passed on adminis trative reform. Two $10,000 commissions have been created in the past, and one has a long report to lay before the legislature. Another is to report on the expediency of the Washington administra tive code. No corporation or private business would hesi tate to put its affairs in order, and while dealing fairly with all faithful employes and necessary ser vices, would not fail to adjust its affairs to the abil ity of the people to pay, and make every depart' ment prove value received for money invested. l he Manufacturer. Harold Dobyns, Govt. Trapper, Is Promoted Harold Pobyns. popular trapper of pmlatory animals in the county has received an appointment as assistant predatory animal inspector, and is leaving for Portland to confer with Stanley Jewett, who is head of the work in this section. Mr. Dobyna will he in Portland until Pec. 7, and will then go to Olympia, Wash. He was here yesterday for a short time be fore leaving for lone where his rela tives lire. Mrs. Dobyns and their small daughter, Patricia, will remain at lone for a month. Mr. Dobyns is rated as one of the best trappers in the United States. The office of the biological survey which conducts the government trap ping of predatory animals wrote Mr. Jewett that the thesis on trapping submitted by Mr. Dobyns was the beat that has ever been turned in to the department. Since 1916. Mr. Dobyns has been trapping in this county, and during that time he has killed 50 bears, about 1000 coyotes, 100 wild cats, two lynx, and though porcupines and badgers are not on the predatory list, 1000 of them have been killed by this one trapper in his service here. Mr. Dobyns was busily engaged is his work when the news of his ap pointment came, and this month he had already caught 27 coyotes. He has now picked up his traps, and is on his way to the new job. "Bolliver" is entering on a long va cation. Bolliver is the faithful bay horse that has carried the trapper over the hills for six years. Mr. Dobyns says he has ridden Bolliver enough milage during the last six years to take him three times around the world. The horse is not for sale, the trapper says, he will be turned out and will spend the rest of his days as an idler in green pastures. Mr. Dobyns says he isn't sure that he will like the speech-making part of his new job, but adds with his characteristic smile that he is "go ing to do his best." Mr. Dobyns reports that there is very little snow in the mountains now. He says deer tracks are rather numerous in places along Meadow creek Pendleton Tribune. It will be learned with regret that Rev. John C. Hall, pastor of the Con gregational church of lone, wilt close his labors here January first, after three years of service. He is as yet undecided whether he will accept one of several pastorates open to him in Oregon. Washington and Colorada or go Kat and return to one of hia form er fields. lone Independent. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hunt were in the city Saturday from their farm home in Sanford Canyon. Future Outlook for Oregon TTTHAT policies shall control in the organiza W ' e next General Assembly and in the ' ' new state administration that will be in con trol of the affairs of the commonwealth for the next four years? The people do not want an old-fashioned legis lative session starting with fifty thousand dollars wasted on five- and ten-dollar-a-day useless clerks and experts and ending with an orgie of log-rolling and midnight sessions for big appropriations with out formality of rollcalls. The people do not want four or five hundred new laws passed creating new jobs and commissions, creating new places for pets, and imposing new taxes, fees, license? and permanent burdens on the taxpayers. All candidates have run on economy platforms and the people demand action. In California a Governor has been elected who as state treasurer has resisted expansion policies, salary raising and padding payrolls, and his plat form is business polities in state affairs, death to parasites, but retaining all useful and necessary state emploves. In Washington a new state administrative sys tem has abolished 71 boards and commissions and 2S4 state employes in administrative service, mat ing a direct saving of $1,734,719 in the past ten months, and a yearly reduction in state payrolls of $133,902. A commission of prominent men was named early in the year to report on the Washington ad ministrative system. Will they submit a report of any kind favorable to reform on new lines, or will they uphold the present system which has resulted in checking state development i The people demand a cut in the total of tax rates, without weakening the efficiency of our state gov eminent, without abandoning a progressive high' way system or impairing our educational system Washington ras increased ths emcienry of state government by an entirely new system. Millions of dollars taxes are delinquent in thh state. Single counties have had to bil in fifty to one hundred thousand dollars of taxes on lands, and continuing old methods will turn this state over to the tender mercies of socialism and communistic radicalism. Confiscatory taxes are eating up the prosperity of the producers and the property of the people, Continuation of such policies by an old-fashioned loot legislature will meet with stern rebuke by the people. An inefficient machine-ridden legislature, or ganized on the old lines, pursuing old methods, with reckless, careless, extravagant, incompetent lead' ership will not relieve the plight of the people, nor promotv) the development of industries, or bring settlers to Urceon. Great promises were made during the campaign as to what could be cut from the overhead of state The Farmer Wins the Election PERHAPS the most significant phase of the recent election is summed up in a public state m . : . A i M - r ii -i' . incut issucu uy mr. jiay Oliver, rvasmngiun representative of the American Farm Bureau Fed eration, as follows: "The entire membership of the senate and house agricultural blocs was returned to con gress by a safe majority. We consider this a full vindication of The American Farm Bureau Federation's legislative programme, as well as - that of the blocs, and proof that the legisla tion was in line with public sentiment." Mr. Silver's analysis is obvious, but it tells only part of the lesson. The result evidently heralds an awakening of the public mind to the fact that the real pary in which Americans are interested as a unit is the American party whose backbone and sole platform is the prosperity of the man who tills the soil and keeps the world alive. Twenty years ago no one could conceive a Dem ocratic farmer rejoicing at the election of a Repub lican to Congress, but likewise twenty years ago we could not conceive Illinois listening to the opera in New York as per radio today. The world moves. Blind partisanship is giving way to common sense, and we are coming to see that such matters as the national budget and the tariff are not properly placed in the sphere of poli tics. The farm is in this category of national fac tors that must be safeguarded and developed re gardless of party if the nation is to progress, and fortunately the farmer has sensed this fact himself. While the great cities have poked a great deal of fun at the farmer and smiled at his ingenuous sim plicity, seemingly he is the only force in American life that has displayed enough common sense to organize along intelligent lines and sufficient acu men to make good. The legislative success of the farmer may be traced more than anything else to the fact that it has been based on justice, and is for the common good. The State Highway Commission has made the Wallula cut-off, so-called, a primary road, and will thus be able to cooperate with the government in completing that portion of the Columbia Highway to the Washington state line. The Commission was "forced" to do this, according to the statement of the Portland Oregonian. IT'S TOASTED one extra process which gives a delioious flavor LUCKY STRIKE VCIGARETTE, (Sleep, , Baby, Sleep By John D., Jr. JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, JR., has again laid down the laws of good citizenship. Save your pennies, he says; don't run an automobile un less you can afford it, don't have a phonograph un less you have money for "such luxuries," work eight hours a day conscientiously, obey the author ities, don't violate the speed lawsexcept possibly during working hours and respect prohibition. Thus the young multimillionaire revamps the re actionary rules of life laid down by the rich for the poor for ages, the recipe that has spread the spirit of socialism further than anything in the world. Young Rockefeller is possessed of so much wealth he cannot count it. Certainly he never worked and produced it. Doubtless its beginning rests on "thrift and saving" by his father, but it has swollen to countless millions without work. The youhful Croesus says that thought of a six hour work day is puerile. Naturally the man whose bursting bank account is swelled every minute by picking off a percentage of the production of countless thousands of men is not enthusiastic about cutting down their hours of work. Every little bit helps. His allusion to the phonograph as a luxury dates back to the dark ages. The phonograph has saved the sanity of thousands of lonely women on the farms and given joy to millions of men and women from whose sweat the Rockefeller millions have sprung. Mr. Rockefeller's Bible class doubtless sits with mouths agape but the public Bible class, consist nig of more than a hundred million people, will be more deeply interested if the young man will tell them how the farmer and the miner and other use ful workers in the world can get a just return for their labor, and how the people can prevent the amassing of fabulous fortunes by those who don't work for them. Having thus expressed ourselves will the spend thrift possessors of talking machines now turn on that charming record entitled, "Sleep, Baby, Sleep." Shell Fish! DO YOU ENJOY SHELL' FISH! Oysters Clams Crab Served in any style to your order. Our Sunday dinners are an attraction and should appeal to you. Save the wife extra work Sundays by taking din ner with us just bring the whole family along. Elkhorn Restaurant Heppner Gilliam & Bisbee's j& Column j& Live Cecil News Items. Jack Hynd, mayor of Cecil, left on the local on Sunday for Portland. He was accompanied by his sister Miss Annie Hynd, of Rose Lawn Heppner. Constable John is again kept busy. F. H. Halferty, who has been spend ing the last few weeks with his moth er Mrs. Mary Halferty of Shady Dell returned to his home in Portland on Tuesday. Misses Mildred Henriksen and Vio let Ledfprd of Strawberry ranch visited at the home of A. Henriksen of Lexington on Saturday and Sunday. Miss Annie Hynd and Herb Hynd of Butterby Flats, were the dinner guests at the home of Mrs. Geo. Henriksen on Wednesday evening. Johnnie Shufelt and Earl Henrik sen, two popular gents of Rhea, were the guests of Herb Hynd, of Butter- by Flats Wednesday evening. Herb Hynd of Butterby Flats, ac coinpained by Annie C. Lowe of the Highway House were transacting business in lone on Thursday. Mrs. G. A. Miller, who has been visiting relatives in Battle Ground, Washington, for three weeka return ed home Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Funk and daugh ter returned home on Sunday from Portland where they had been taking in the sightv Mrs, Tocom returned to Portland Sunday after spending a few days around Cecil and Heppner. W. E. Ahalt and son Harold oi lone were calling on their Cecil friends on Wednesday. W. T. Benedict of Lyle Wash., was calling on hia old friend Henry Street- er on Saturday. Walter Pope and Geo. Krebs of Ce cil spent a few days in Heppner dur ing the week. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Farnaworth of Rhea were visitors in Heppner on Wednesday. T. W. Lowe of the Highway House spent Friday and Saturday in Hepp er. Mrs. Geo. Henriksen was a business caller in Arlington on Thursday. Marion Van Schoiack, of Arlington, was a Cecil caller on Tuesday. Mr. Harbinson and F. C. Maloy were Cecil callers Thursday. W. Osborn was a county seat caller on Monday. uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IllllllllllilllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllW WILL you have your old suit fixed up, or buy a new one? Either way, see Lloyd Hutchinson Where They LEAN LOTHES LEAN Come in and get the County Agent's machine for the dry treat ment of your wheat Copper Car bonate. The work is perfectly done and economically. Get your order in early as it takes some time to make one. We have sold all kinds of grain drills and have decided that the Kentucky double-run feed is the best suited for this territory. Come in and look them over for yourself. The Revolving weeder is the one that gets the weeds. If your are going to use the dry treatment for your seed wheat, you can not afford to pass up the Calkins machine. Gilliam & Bisbee Sillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllir; lilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllUlllllllllllli I Central Market I 1 FRESH AND CURED MEATS 1 Fish In Season ITake home a bucket of our lard. It is a Heppner product and is as good as the best lIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllR Let's Play It Over Again That's what you both will say when you hear the latest Brunswick hits fresh from Broadway. They're catchy and tuneful and the dances are so jazzy you can't keep your feet still. Come in and hear the wonderful Brunswick Super-Feature records today. If you haven't a Brunswick Phonograph this will be a good time to learn how it excels in tone, the utter absence of vibra tion or metallic suggestion. Models are beautiful, the range of prices suits every pocket book) payment can be arranged in accordance with our con venient monthly plan. Say to Father "I want a Brunswick" Then explain how comfortably he can get it for you and bring him to oar shop to hear it He will enjoy a Brunswick Just as much as you and your friends. Everyone who appre ciates the best music should own a Brunswick the favorite of musicians. 2311 -"Tricks" 2317 -"Panorama Bay" "Dancing Fool" "Thru the Night" 232 "Tomorrow" "I Wish I Knew" 2318 "The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise" ' "Eleanor" . 233S Why Should I Cry Over You." "Gee, But I Hate to Go Home Alone" Jack Mulligan Sherman-Clay & Co.'s Representative, at Harwood's Jewelry Store Odd Fellows Bldg., Heppner Sheet Music Phonographs , Records Music Rolls Cooking Utensils V CLEAN For quick results on all metalware use SAPOLIO Cleans Scours Polishes Maaafactarara Eaack Menu's Seas Ca,, Hew Tstk, U.S. A. nCZnCDOCOOEDOCJOL No waste XXZJ Blankets OREGON CITY WOOL EN MILLS "HUDSON BAY" Virgin Wool, and no bet ter blanket made. For a cheaper blanket we also carry the "FRESNO" a standard P brand. PENDLETON INDIAN ROBES AND SHAWLS Fine Showing in Artistic Patterns and Colorings. Sam Hughes Co. j Phone Main 962 Good Printing Is Our Hobby The Gazette-Times Announcement Extraordinary THE LADIES OF THE FEDERATED CHURCH will hold a Bazaar and Fancy Work Sale in the Church Parlors Friday, December 15th SPECIAL FEATURES HANDKERCHIEF BOOTH Case, Cason and Notson's 63 varieties of Handkerchiefs APRON BOOTH Aprons in endless styles FANCY WORK Hundreds of fancy and useful articles HOME-MADE CANDY The kind that melts in your mouth WAIT FOR IT