Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Ione independent. (Ione, Or.) 1916-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1927)
X THE IONE INDEPENDENT Published Every Friday by W. V. HEAD, VAiw I'ubliOicr When Voif VL-it Heppner Eat At the Elkhorn Restaurant Good Meals Ikst of Service Lunch Counter Dr. A. H. Johnston Vashington's Early Adventures ENGELMAN HARDWARE Now Assuming New Significance Sl'BSCRUTlOX One Yew "ix Months .hree Months ....$1.50 ... .75 ... .50 IONE, OREGON i ill Kntered as second class matter M 'he postofi'ice at lone, Oregon, under art of March i, l(C9 FriJay, Jan 28. 1927 He wist with sweo': A fool nt forty is a tool imlecil Ynunx- GOING HOME By the laU Frank L.Stanton of the Atlanta Cc nstitution. Adiu, swet t friends', I have waited loptr To hear the message that calls me home, And now itcomes witn i low, sweet song Of welcome over the river's foam: And my heart sha'l ache and mv feet 6hall roam No more-no more: I am Koinn home! Home! where no storm where no hmp st raves, In the litfht of the calm, ettrnal day; Where no willows wcp over lonely graves And the tears from our eyelid? are kissed awav, And my soul shall sigh and, and my feet shall roam No more no more: I am iroing home! Good dye, protrl world! im Roinp-.home; , Thou 'rt not my friend and I 'm not thine. Kilph II'. Emtrson. t t t t . - r t NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice It hereby n'v-n that the tltlil.TxIlftli'd. UN SUHTllltlliil'llt of HniikH for the state of Oregon, lx In charge of the hkncIm and uffalrw of the Kank of lone, Ioni', Oregon, for the purpoMe of lluhlitllon. All pereon who have i-IhIiiih nifiiliiHt uhl Hunk are hereby notified to iiinke leidl proof thereof, by filing: n duly verified claim, im by law provi ded, with the Deputy Snerltiteiiileiit of Bank In charge, ul the office Hank of lone, lone, Oregon, on or ln-fore the 14th. day of Aqrll, 1927. Date of flrnt puldicntioii . Jan. Htb. 1927. lint of bint publication . April FRANK C. URAMWEI.L SL'I'ERINTENOENT I.K HANKS. Valentine! at Bargain Prices. Bullards Pharmacy. EVERYBODY'S COINCI CALIFORNIA bids you turn back the calendar to summer and come pley in the warm sunshine. At an added Inducement tat Union Pacific now offers specie I low round trip fare and assures ycu a marveloui journey on th: finest of fast trains. Connect k ui via Portland or Salt Lake City, MAX I YOU BMBAVATICNS VCVt J. W. Howk. Agsnt, lone, Oregon. lli! Jack Farris Dcrnutician. It Pays to Look We I Specialist in Bobs. -I l' W0 A D. HCMURDO, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office In Masonic Puilding iTrained Nurse Assistant Heppner 0;egon PHYSICIAN & SURGEON I'hone-Office Main 933 Residence Main 402 HEPPNER . OREGON lOSH, Tll-S AYS Mini Mir AYS From 9:!0 to ll):tlil A. M. LEGAL NOTICE SUMMONS IN THE CIRCUIT CUURT OF THE STATE OFORECJON, FOR MORROW COUNT!'. BRIsTOW&JORNSON, A Corporation. Plaintiff, V8 HALLICK STANGE. Defendant. Ti llallli k Stance. Difriidmit IN THE NAME OF THE STATEOF ()l!KiiX: You Hre hereby required to npiienr and iiiihu yr the coniplalnl filed iiifiiliiet you In lb, above enti tled action on or before the Bull day of January. lir.'T. Mux more than C weckt from the date of the flml puli. Mention of this Muniiiioim, and If you fall no tn nimwrtr, for want thereof, the l-laltitlff will take Judgement n- U'ahiHt you for the hi t U2 (Y lib in(cret t hereon i t the rateol mt cent ht iinauiii from January lt. lc'l. mid for the Mum of fx 2.' nltli Interest thereon at the rate of I -rivnt per ji it ii i in from Septem lier M. I'i2, an I for the further mini off l."i7M. with Interest thereon at the rate of li per cent per annum froiil Svptei,il.r p, l,24. mid the sum of .;.tm mtMrney'H an l for idaliiiiffH com and iliMbniM-. Ill IIIBexiM lid.d III Ii!h ncll.in. And j on are hereby fiinla r n-ill fled that the lihiintlff lnm nmuJ ... I writ of nit nhim at m l. i.,i ,. the thir l day of Nou-iiile-r, !I2, In Hie ab . entitled ac.loii, and Iimh cali-ed the Sb,.riff of h, (MIIIIv mid State to attach the following deMcrlbcd ierHolial property, belotie;. lug tot oil. located in l f ' ".in ty, Stale of Uregon. to w it: :i7j:i2 : attached and Karnixbeil In (he hand' I of Ward Craven, of lone, Morrow ( futility. (reKoii, and one xpottid rmr, ib burned. And by virtue of mild writ of at- tin linii iit and the Jinlgemeiit herln- alter to lie attained, the plaintiff, w III cauw K.i Id perMonal property to Ih- o!dby MalilMicrlif, in t,H manner prewilMil by law, for the purpONeof iili-fAlag Hn Jiidneme'it. I hi Kuiiiii'iiiiih U publlxhed pur- Hiiant to the order of tin, boaorable iile l t V, W. ridpa. Judge of the above entitled 1'imrl, duly made and entered on thelillli day of December, I92U, dinctliig tlmt the publication ! made onee n ti (.HL f, jHlx utfU cotiMcciitllely In the lone i Independent, and the flrnt pnbllca. nun Herein Im made iniiHiiatit to nab! order on the I7lh day of December 92'1. F. II. lIlllllllNIIII, Altotney for the rialullff. I'oet Office Addrt-HH, tn, Oregon. Iec. 17. 2. ;)l, Jan. 7, 14, 21, 2 C. L. SWEEK Attorney At Law First National Dank Building Heppner Oregon '"' I pi 1 fh$ yhti i XL! I MOWS NT OVCftTMC uraki WILL' rli .Vi.'i i if- By HENRY BOTSFORD iiwrn . ' i c, wrii iiiihu ceiuurj a;n I three quarters a new Imprest nai recruuy Decn arouseil In the earliest military ailvcn turei of George Washington Mi. When barely twentyne yeara old. In 17i3, WjshliiKton aa sent by C v eruor Dluwbldla of Virginia Into the far northwestern wilderness that Is. noribwest'rn Fennsylvania to warn the Frcnca that they must cease their t fTorts to occupy that reKlon. Recent researrhia have given a new histori cal significance to that eipeditlon, during which Washington, always reckless of his personal sufety, had one of his narrow escapes from death at the hands of a treacherous Indlnn guide. The French at that time occupied Canada and claimed the, M!sllp;l and Ohio Valleys. Though the fringe of English spuaklug cnhuiles along the Atlantic contained the chief Kur. pean population, France maintained soverelRnty over most of North Amer ica area. Tbey were apparently de termined to occupy northwestern Penn;-lvanla. partly became it was known even then to be rich in petro leum. Region' Wealth Known Pioneers and mimlouarh.-, Hng ll.ih, French, German and Dutch, had all reported to their governments that the petroleum was of gri-at po tential value. Tbero Is, however, no reu-on to believe that Washington knew of Ita existence or value until bis adventure of 17i3. Then he learn id that the oil had Ion- h. en used by the Indians and the pioneering whites for fuel and light, for medicine and In mal.lug war paint. Washington was a much Impressed with Its pohhIIiIII Uea that he later became owner of a hrge area of oil-bearing lands. Al though the petroleum Industry In Ita mo:!ern form was then undreamed of, Washington was so sure thut a f r tune resided In his oil-bearing lands that In his will he limed them as ma; mo -it valuable holdings. In the prop erty sclmilule attachud to the will o wrote: "This tract was. t: lun up by Gen eral Lewis and my. Jf on account of the bituminous sprln? which It con tains, of so iiiflaui. iable a nature as to burn as freely xplrlts and nearly dlffcuit ;o exu ;;ulh," The Will of W-iSlngton Some historians i . !. re that in nn ariler will Waihlpr. dedicated this 'biiruing spring" ti- iie pjbllc. At my rate, It had p. r- I from his nwn- rsh!p before his (luiU I In sidd this tract for IMM.OuO. I:ci. suspecthig It mlKht revert to I1I.1 tutute under a mortgage, he wan. d h! heirs that should It do so Ii v (mid bo worth much more than th CO.OO1). Although Washln: ' llrst knowl edge of petroleum gained within a few miles of the i':ice whero the lirst oil well in the .: bl was drilled, that first well wu vt npeti"d until one hundred and ;t years later, H59. In that yenr K'. i. In Laurontlne brnka bored the flrl well. Just south nf Tltusvllle, I'eniiF. : aula, and really started tho niudnrn pi troliuim Indus try. A Osvelopmc -t Wonder Today the Amerlc::i luilustry Is the major part of the wi.-ld'a oil business. Americans are dliec.ing oil devidop tnonls all over th" warld. It Is all part of the huge p- tblem: to make atire that the tnr.i'.uwa shall see America'i roriulrenitn'.a met. Every decade the proditc"o:: of petroleum has doubled. Sclmeo and techni cal progress have reet nil demands. Foreign Investment n-d dcvcbipment are In tho nature of Itnuinuice fur the future. In the days of Drr':e nnd tho Indus try'! beginnings pet" l-um's value lay l. iMprlcapts and kurosepg. Jbe age i WUJ rrti tri yMri i of machinery was outy beginning ilk It- 1.... .,!... A .1 I " i'ii 1 1 lun.u.io uviiiauu lur iniiit canls. while kerosene, though the best lllunilnant ever known, wa dangur ous because poor refining left gasoline that was liable to explodo. It Is dim cull nowadays, when the world Is be lug combed for more petroleum to 'Hike mora gasoline, to reallie that gasoline was omo a nuisance and a menace. The Internal combustion en dine created the demand for gasoline, now the primary product of petro leum. The demands of millions of m tur curs Increasing constantly, Inven Hon and chemistry were set at work by the captains of the Industry to make the barrel of petroleum (urn out a larger and larger proportion of gas ollne. This was done by the cracking process, through which every year now sees a larger proportion of erode oil turned Into gasoline. High and Growing Demands Today well nigh Z.DoO.OOO barrels of petroleum are required every day to f.tl fy the demand for motor cars, tractors, trucks, buses, artificial gas plants and the Innumerable by prod ucta. Invention Is t,.i.istantly flmlini new uses, as enterprise Just aa ton. stantly finds new supplies of petro leum. The wonderful and rather mys t rlous fluid has revolutionised social liJilt.t and Industrial methods; yet It l oniy two-thirds of a century sine the IndiiKtry had Its feeble bcglnalni In the Pennsylvania oil country. This year the country will use ahoui .-i0.000.090 barrels of petroleum. Tht cuntry will use 700.000,000 gallons of r ..illne and will e snort l,9oo,00u r.ore. The production, processing and r-.arketlng of p-lroleiim . probably r-cond oaly to agriculture among American Industries, Ituunilly, 70 per cent of tho world's p ttoli iim Industry Is American. Tea t.llllniia of capital It Invested In It I jlf the valuation of the national rail ri.nd system. It employs Just about 1.000.000 people. The petroleum pipe I ne system, grldlroulng a good share 1 f the country, arrfgai". at"-!! 85, I 0 miles. Petroleum revolutionised t ival warfare by bringing in the oil I nniliig ship: It is fast revolutionising 1 ..'reliant marines In the samo (ash I m. Multiplication of motor car, 1 clung with the Special taiatlnn 0(1 t::nlr gasoline, has made possible tht ii.oili rn hlchway system. A True Social Service Perhaps the most nearly revolution ary result of Drake's modernization of 'he petroleum Industry la to be found In the change It has brought In the life of rural America. It haa carried the city to tho country, the country to the city. It has, by making possl" hie tho cheap and quick transporta tion that everybody . nowadays en. Joys, enabled country and city to know and understand each other as they never did before. It haa brought' social and educational privileges to country dwellers that a. few decades ago seemed absolutely denied to. them. On the one hand It has en abled the cities to spread out Into sub urban areas and the gone of country estates; on the other, It hag enabled the people of the open country to have neighbors, society, church and icbool privileges, Intimate acquaintance. It is a historic fact that tho tenden cy toward division of Interest and un derstanding between city and country Is Ihe most serious internal menace to tho security of nations, to the Integri ty of society. More than anything plan, country and city need to know and understand each other and each other's prob lems. The easy transportation, the ready opportunity for association and Bcnualiitunce that have coma with the Age of Petroleum hnvo made pos sible, In this favored country at leant, exactly this new Intimacy and understanding. Everything in the line of hardware. If wc havn't got it we can get it quick. ENGELMAN HARDWARE IONE, OREGON IONE HARNESS SHOP Drop In nd I00K over my - Line of WorK Shoes. I have a good tocK of Cloves and Harness Supplies. V , ..... . rvepairina at tveasonable Prtce. : A a a a i . . . . , ...... X 1 TTTTTTTTfmmmttMMtlMlts : J I ION!; MEAT MARKET li rresh and smoked meats; Poultry and fish. When you have anything in onr line to sell see us. T. E. Peterson, manager, lone, Oregon Under New Management IONE HOTEL lone, Ore. Refurnished and Strictly Up to Date. Commer cial Table First Class. A home away from home, with best meals in Central Oregon. Nice Rooms. Farm Implements VULCAN and OLIVER PLOWS, SUPERIOR DRILLS, FAIRBANKS MORSE ENGINES, MYERS PUMPS, STAR and AERMOTOK WIND MILLS. WINONA WACONS. PAUL G. BALSIGER lone, Oregon ., , orrrDP Tlir ftoi? BEFORE THE FIRE H. C. WOOD REAL ESTATE & INSURNCE IONE, OREGON F. H. Robinson Attorney and Counselor at Law Will practice In all the Courts IONE, OREGON HmHm 4- Good Service. MORROW GENERAL HOSPITAL Min Zeno Wentfall, Graduate NurHe. Superintendent. A. II. Johnston M. D.," Phyaictan In charge. Rates Reasonable Dr. F. E. Frraior DENTIST Oftice: Odd Fellows Builditt Heppner, Oregon. .A J