r PACK FOUR THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 4. 1923. 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 i!illlMllllliillllllllltilllllllllllllllllllllIIII!limillllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIjf I A. M. EDWARDS " 1 WELL DRILLER, Box 14, Lexington, Ore. Up-to-date traction drilling outfit, equipped for all sizes of hole and depths. Write for contract and terms. Can furnish you 1 CHALLENGE SELF-OILING WINDMILL 5 all steel. Light Running, Simple, Strong, Durable. niiiiuiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiS 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. M IRE HUH ORDERS AT OCR EXPENSE Pntlul OSta Peai41tea Oa 14 H. tteoni St. Only Employment OSce in Eastern The Byers Chop Mill (Formerly SCHEMPP-S MILL) STEAM ROLLED BARLEY AND WHEAT We handle Gasoline, Coal Oil and Lubricating Oil You Find Prompt and Satisfactory Service Here LOOKING Thus, periods of prosperity are marked by increases in commercial as well as sav ings deposits. Periods of readjustment, with their accompanying problems of un employment, show themselves in a de cline of commercial deposits and a slight change of savings deposits. And as times become better and the future looms big with possibilities, bank deposits grow again and business comes to life. As we look ahead the best advice that this bank can give is: "GET YOUR FINANCES WELL IN HAND. BUILD UP YOUR CHECKING AG COUNT. PREPARE YOURSELF TO MEET OPPORTUNITY WITH A CASH RESERVE AND CREDIT POS SIBILITIES." FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK Heppner Ill B. W.s It, Oregon with Connections in Portland AHEAD NATION'S industrial situa tion shows itself, as a rule, in the statements issued by the banks of the country. Oregon Iowa Girls Win Trip Abroad Boelah Rodger mad Kathnrn Boli baugh ol lows art two country misses from Iowa who won the can orof contest at i The International Livestock Show at Chicago. Their prise is three enonths trip to , Europe with .all expenses paid. iThey 9 competed against farm girls from erery state. (They win demon strata their ability 'in csoning in de vastated tones of France. I E Campaign of Misrepresentation and VilliBcation in Connection With Proposed Picking Rouse Merger Launched to Arouse Farmers Against Wallace and Administra tion Given Quietus by Publication of Facts. Washington, Jan. 3. A campaign of propaganda for the purpose of misrepresenting facts and attempting to arouse criticism of the adminis tration has been completely discred ietd by a statement issued by Secre tary of Agriculture Wallace relative to the proposed merger of the Armour and Morris packing house corpora tions. For the purpose of getting for themselves considerable publicity and demagogic credit for guarding the rights of the farmer, certain rad ical members of the Congress aided by radicals outside of Congress, have been charging Secretary Wallace and the Harding administration with ap proving a proposed merger of Ar mour and Company and Swift and Company. It was charged that Secretary Wal lace and the administratiqn were guilty of usurping power and author ity in giving their approval to this proposed merger. It was charged that the merger would be a violation of anti-trust laws and that the ad ministration was playing into the hands of big business by giving its consent in advance to a consolidation that would be in violation of the law. The radicals first assumed and then charged that Secretary Wallace and other administration officials were conniving with the interests that were desirous of violating the law. The radicals then proceeded to use their own assumption as a base for a campaign of villification for the purpose of arousing agricultural in terests against the administration. That the whole propaganda was false from the beginning is clearly shown in a formal statement which Secre tary Wallace has issued. This state ment sets forth that while the Sec retary was apprized of the desire of the packing concerns to form a mer ger, the Secretary did not give his approval of the merger, neither did he express any opinion regardnig the legality of it. His statement sets forth the fact that Mr. Armour did not even make application for an ex pression of opinion by the Secretary. Secretary Wallace's statement fol lows in full: 'Mr, J. Ogden Armour came here and stated in an informal way that his firm had under consideration a proposal to purchase the physical assets of the packing plants owned and operated by Morris and Com pany. The full details of the pur chase had not been worked out, but it was expected that the purchase price would be paid part in cash, part in preferred stock, and part in common stock, approximately one third of the amount in each form. Mr. Armour submitted an extended Living With Her New Daddy Now THE KAISER "a' Here it Princess Henriette at play on the grounds of her new daddy's exiled retreat at Doom, Holland. She is the youngest daughter of the former kaiser's new bride. dtoAtw, If J6 1 1 IS: : S J? ti I MM m Ml Z M qj 4 I statement prepared by his attorney dealing with the law and facts ap plying to the proposed transaction and containing certain arguments. This statement contains a discussion of the Packers and Stockyards Act. as well as of the Sherman anti-trust law, the Clayton act and the Federal Trade Commission act, as they bear on the proposal. He submitted an other statement which is in fact a brief on law points. He submitted also a mass of detailed information, compiled mainly from public records and showing the purchase and slaughter of animals by the various packing concerns, the volume of the business of each over extended per iods of time and indicating the points at which there is competition, both in packing and in the distribution of meats, between Armour and Company and Morris and Company. "Contrary to what seems to be a general opinion, Mr. Armour did not present an application for the priv ilege of merging these two plants. He came to me with the frank state ment that by buying the business of Morris and Company he expected to be able to add largely to the volume of business of Armour and Company, and thus effect large economies in the administration of the business. During the war when there was most urgent demand for the largest possi ble amount of meat to maintain the allied forces overseas, most of the large packers made extensive addi tions to their plants at large expense. Under conditions which have prevail ed since the war the volume of busi ness has not been sufficient to enable them to run their plants at full ca pacity, and, as is the case with many other business enterprises, this has left them with an overhead expense out of proportion to the volume of business being done. By adding the business of Morris and Company to that of Armour and Company, Mr. Armour stated that they would be able to effect economies running in to many millions of dollars each year and believed that because of such economies they would be able to serve the public more efficiently than at the present time. He said that he would like me to make a careful study of the proposed transaction and of the papers submitted, together with any other conditions which might seem pertinent to me, and that he hoped ( that such study would lead me to the conclusion that the action he pro posed would in fact result in benefit both to producers of live stock and consumers of meat and that I would not oppose it. "Such authority as I have in the matter is found in the Packers and Stockyards act, which carries also the authority which the Federal Trade Commission previously had over the packing industry. There is nothing in this act which specifically prohibits the purchase by one pack er of the physcial assets of another. The question to be considered, there fore, is whether the purchase pro posed would bring about conditions or actions which would come within the prohibitions of the act. "From time to time unfounded statements have been made intimat ing that there was disagreement be tween other government officials and myself with regard to this matter, On Monday, November 27, I had a conference with the President and with the Attorney General, At this conference the proposed purchase and sale was considered. There was no thought on the part of any of us that anyone connected with the govern- ment would, or -could be expected to, approve in advance such a transac ME AT' J If nmrrT iV WHAT r J 1 1 MUrr UiUiffl v X r i . fin v. S I I III as i. u a I I I I I aa . x ) VdLL -VOU SEE ) L 1 WAS THNKING ) I , CHRISTMAS WASAJ'T ) n$7W ABOUT THE a f THNKJNG about M V , t tion as has been proposed. Such a suggestion hat had no sanction. The question discussed was whether the purchase by Armour of the plants of Morris might in and of itself consti tute a violation of the law, or wheth er it was a transaction of a sort which would warrant any of us to take action in advance of its consum mation. In response to an inquiry from me ; the Attorney General transmitted to i me an opinion dealing with this mat-1 ter. j From the time the matter was first suggested, I have been making investigations and accumulating in formation which might serve as a basis for reaching an opinion as to the probable effect on competition if the proposed purchase should be con summated. "There seems to be no occasion for ction at the present time." Accompanying the statement of Secretary Wallace was copy of cor respondence between him and Attor ney General Daugherty in which the Attorney General was asked his op inion regarding Mr. Wallace's author ity or power to take any action re garding a merger which was not an accomplished fact. In response to this letter of inquiry, Attorney Gen eral Daugherty in a lengthy opinion set forth Secretary Wallace's powers under the "Packers and Stockyards act." He stated that this act author ized the Secretary to interfere only when the law "had been or is being violated," and in the opinion of the Attorney General "to constitute a violation of the law within the mean ing of this act there must be some thing more than a mere statement of what a person or a corporation con templates." The history of this incident is par allel with the history of countless other incidents which are taking place in connection with the radical movement to breed a spirit of unrest among the people and to create among them a suspicion of the integrity of their public officials, particularly the present administration. It is well within the bounds of truth to state that at no time in the history of this country has there been such a wide spread and well-organized campaign of false and malicious propaganda directed against the government, against public officials, against the courts, against law and order, against thrift and industry, as is now being conducted by political demagogues, who seek not the public's good but merely their personal aggrandize ment and free publicity. Campaign Against Bad Stocks The world-wide wave of crime is not confined to the strong-arm frat ernity. Swindlers who prey upon inexper ience were never before so active or more successful, the most usual me thod employed by the sale of stocks promising fabulous and immediate returns. State blue sky laws do not stop it. Salaried women art especially sought for by this cult. During the last few years billions of dollars have been raked in by these people, whose victims have nothing to show for it. The favorite time for special acti vity is dividend periods, when much money is being distributed, and es pecially the end of the calendar year, when the crops have been harvested. The safest thing for the inexper ienced is to buy only from local banks or welt-known bond houses. Beware of any investment which purports to assure or make probable returns of more than 6 or 7 per cent if bonds, or 8 per cent if per ferred stock. The Manufacturer. FOR SALE 19 head of mules, 8 coming 3-year-olds; 11 2 year-olds. R. K. DRAKE, Eight Mile, Oregon. Phone 23F3. Grand Champion Hereford Weighs 3100 lbs. -AUTaeAVTE.8.- i. .hI.,?rrlnnldrh00d-0rdKC,rne,dAby in,, w i ;Z i. L V "nuiuig ins nonors at the Amer- K. I Livestock show in Kansas City this month. He is the heaviest I'u.l cvtr shown, weighing 3100 pounds. OILIE FB6P 1 IT WAS NEW YEARS DAZE" FOR FOLKS'; The new tariff on small soods will mean better prices on clover, grass seeds, vetches, etc., and should stim ulate to a considerable extent the seed business in Oregon. O. A. C. Experiment Station. Inquiry in considerable volume is reaching the experiment station about how to grow alfalfa in western Oregon. Grimm alfalfa has been very successfully produced on the college farm and it will be profitable when the acreage is increased to 50, 000 to 100,000 acres in western Ore gon. O. A. C. Experiment Station. Cabbage that is unfrozen and therefore available for marketing is found either in a storage warehouse or buried in the field at this season. Cold air storage is a satisfactory method of keeping cabbage, although some shrinkage must be expected. Refrigerated storage is naturally su perior to air storage. Crops of cab bage in home farm gardens or In commercial gardens may be stored by plowing out a furrow in which the cabbage is placed, upside down, and the head and the greater part of the stem covered with soil. Cabbage thus buried on well drained land will keep well until the opening of Bpring. 0. A. C. Experiment Station. Seed for Bonny Best tomatoes the variety of tomato usually grown fur maturing a crop in May in green house hot beds is sown about Jan uary 1. Five months are required from seeding to harvesting. Most growers use (ice inch pots for grow ing the plants in their final stages previous to transplanting to the beds. The market is strong for fancy hot house tomatoes through May, June and July. March 15 is the best time to set the plants permanently in the beds. -O. A. C. Experiment Station. Experiments at the station at Cor vallis have shown that hay put into storage in the summer months in creased several pounds per bale dur ing the winter and usually reaches its maximum in February or March. It takes up moisture from the moist air and the bales are considerably heavier at mid-winter than they are at mid-summer. The hay generally goes back to nearly its original weight the following summer. Grading Means Money. Grain grading and the grading of other crops will be a special feature of the farm crops work of the winter short courses at the agricultural col lege. This work will briefly review th edevelopment of grades and stan dards themselves and how to apply them. The principle of grading grain, hay, and potatoes will be outlined and several laboratory periods will Sen - J'.N- f Versailles, Ky. JM9T tOLP V 6BACICXIS TaL'. FARM POINTERS ' THANttAVIMG 0t THttY THAT'S OVER A MONTI FIAWCE HA JA(;o . NM rf c Ac-rfft TEKKIBCB VK I I cuo.crtA AND WU ACE iUST WORWim JoL Poem by JANUARY. Though she's fickle and contrary, there's a charm in Janooary, to the feller that's accustomed to her curves. With a north wind skallyhootin' and her temperature pirootin' in among a feller's sensitory nerves! And, when she fights a duel with the lit tle jag-o-fuel, that's waitin' out-o'-doors to keep ye warm, O, it takes a cheerful giver, and an optimistic liver, to demonstrate old Janooary's charm But wen the neighbors gather in defiance to the leather to taste the joys of settin' by the fire, there's an institute of learnin' where the home-fires is a-burnin' where pa triotism is parent of desire! Then we find in Janooary, not a bandit gaunt an' bleary, but a bosom friend be devoted to actual grading work. This will be but a part of the gener al farm crops program which includes some of the most important phases of grain, seed, forage and potato production. Several farmers growing potatoes on Weston mountain this year got a 121-a per cent increase in yield by using landplaster on the cut potatoes. This treatment appears to preserve the seed pieces in the soil and Is es pecially effective in rather cold, damp soils where sprouting is slow. I 1 601 FOREVER (Sunday Oreffonian.) The most that can be expected from the pending project to revive the old pony express, designed as a means of invoking interest in a memorial to Mark Twain, will be a feeble and fu tile simulation of the real thing. It would not be possible, even if it were desirable, to reinstate the conditions that made the pony express the ro mantic and peculiar Institution that it was in the decade of the fifties in Oregon and nothern California and in the sixties on the great western plains. It would be even more dim cult to recruit the human material essential to the enterprise. From Ben HollidflY, the executive spirit of the first exprvns between St Jo and the Pacific coast, down to the hum blest hostler in his employ, these men were sui generis. They were not created by accident. They were the product of a searching process of selection which ceased to function when occasion for it had passed. Yet the comparative modernity of this now almost forgotten phase of our history is apparent from the cir cumstance that the early files of The Oregonian contain the practically complete annals of the inception, the romantic fulfillment and the final de cline of the pony express. Almost a decade before it achieved its larger notoriety and became the theme of frontier saga and fable, it had its be ginning in the necessities of the min ers of California and southern Ore gon. Prior to discovery of gold in Jackson county a very rudimentary means of communication had sufficed for the needs of the people. The tele graph was not realized until some time afterward. An agricultural pop ulation, dwelling in its Arcadia, put small emphasis on rapid transit. Ef fective development of commerce be gan with the gold era, which created demand for fast mail and particular ly for a means of transporting treas ure far in advance of any which then existed. The pony express out of Roseburg, by which mails were carried between that point and Gardiner on the coast, where they were taken by schooner to San Francisco, contributed an epic to the history of the west long before Ben Holladay as the right hand man of Russel, Majors k Wad deli organized the longer route across plain and desert. The latter stands out in the kaleidoscopic drama of the period because of certain striking cir cumstances. The story of the J0,000 wager involved in the first mad race across the continent is still a classic It was doubtful then whether con gress would consent to granting an overland mail contract or instead would vote a subsidy of 910,000,000 to the steamship company then oper ating by way of Panama, which would have meant a delay of twe weeks to the people of Oregon and Californi The promoters of the pony express bet that they could send a mail sack from St. Joseph to Sacramento, 1950 miles, in ten days. In the literature of close finishes there are few stories that compare with this news account of the arrival of the first pony rider, taken from an early issue of The Ore- gonian: DEMOCRATIC CHURCH. You are frequently presented with the statement that the church is com posed of classes. There was never a greater falsehood uttered. The most democratic Institution on earth is the church. Tho Bible says that we are all in cluded under sin. Thore isn't any mun who is not classified as a sin ner. Home may lie about it and say thoy are not sinners and some may lie about it and say there is no such thing as sin. Hut both of those state ments are infallible proofs of tha ex istence of sin and of the fact that we are all included under sin. That is democratic. Those who are saved are saved by Christ! therefore all Christians re liaidless of their name, are sinners :iaved by grr.ee and all Christians are 1 lro beneath the wintry vest. ... V here we find congenial labor, swappin' ideas with our neighbor, and adopt in' the conclusion which is best. While her breath is mighty search in' where the naked trees is lurchin' and there ain't no hint of mercy in her grip, yet the maple-sap flows sweeter, and the spring shall dawn completer, at the final crack of Jan ooary's whip. Then, rally all ye merry, to the call of Janooary. Awake, an' taste the real joys of life. No season more entranciu' with fid dlin' an' dancin' Brace up, an' get acquainted with yer wife! At 4 o'clock the went-bour.d ex.trcwa mUnt be In tine rumen to. The nix in ha patmtil and th minute are beinv counted. Hiilf paxt S. Will the brave ritler be on hnnd? Aa yet there in no lUrri. With thirty min ute to s)re, Kuttiiell want to double hii bet. Then a cloud of dutit U seen ; it grows into a pwk. The riiier wivex hi hat. The ,Klle nhout. The pony ex prow ban croued the ureal American deitert. Vic tory I There are atill twenty minute to pare. Those were the times of the great open spaces, mostly appropriated to the uses of motion picture actors nowadays. On the eastern trip one rider missed his way in the snow of a canyon for four hour "Then he started with desperate vitror, on find ing himself, to regain the time that he had lost." Another was caught in an eddy on the Platte, his horse was drowned, the rider swam out, recov ered his mailbag, and trudged to the next station, from which, says the annalist, "his flight was taken up again." Flightl We ahould say it was one. The schedule had been so closely estimated in advance that it was adjudged a prime feat of horse manship to gain an hour in 60 miles, but a rider did it. Buffalo Bill once covered a stage of seventy-six miles including several crossings of the North Platte, when he found that the rider beyond had been killed by In dians, so he kept on for eighty-five miles more and then returned, mak ing a record of a round trip of $22 miles without stopping except to change horses and to eat his meals. Another rider's performance of 116 miles in eight hours and ten minutes with eleven changes of mounts, long stood as a record hardly likely to be excelled now. With less concern for dramatic particulars, the pony service had been maintained up and down the Willamette valley since 1862. It re ceived new impetus, notwithstanding the growth of stage transportation, when the transcontinental route was opened by Holladny. Esprit de corps was stimulated all along the line. The Oro Fino gold excitement gave Portland express connection with Idaho and eastern Oregon in 1KC1, by way of The Dalles. The riders were an especial breed of men, such as we are not going to be able to recruit for any fancy ex hibition of fast riding, though the hippodrome be as big as all outdoors. They had a rider on the southern route, as a writer in The Orcgonian then related, "who got too big to sit on a pony, but he proved exactly the right build for holding up stages." When he worked for the pony ex press he was the acme of honesty. But men were chosen for certain ponderables of character which ad mitted a queerly mottled bunch to the ranks. One who had to "kill his own Indians as he went along," as said another Orcgonian correspon dent, was apt to develop a complex of some sort. Of such were the men who for the pure glory of achieve ment cut down the distance between the coasts from more than 2 months to less than fourteen days. Mary stopped milking the cow to tell the hired man she had found a real friend in her girl chum who has alt the good things in life. "I used to think she was awful mean," said Mary, "but she's the kindest creature In the world. When nho bought four diamond rings and had three others given to her It seemed to me she might have given one to me. We went to the red school together. But she learned not to give, and I learned to be envious. Then I went to school again among the daisies and along the hedgerows and they taught me the truth. My friend had let mo seo those rings and enjoy their beauty and thnt's all she got out of them herself. She kept from me the wor ry of guarding them. imcltettes by evMA MATTHEWS D.D. LL.D. under grace. That is democratic. There is only one qualification for Joining tho church; namoly, belief In Christ. The rich and tho poor, tho hlh and the low, tho learned and tho ig norant, the wise and the foolish, the good and the bad, tho young and tho old, the pretty and the ugly, are all members of the church. Christ Is tho Savior of all. And we meet In thb common place to wor ship Jesus Christ. Thero In a com mon worship, and a common prayer. Tho man in overalls, and tho man In broadcloth, the woman In satin and the scrub woman In her apron, can sit down In the same pew, sing the same hymn, repent tho same prayer and worship tho samo Christ who died to savo all. The most democratic Institution on earth is the Church of Jesus Christ,