Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1927)
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPT. 22, 1927 PAGE FIVE A 1 4 v 1- J iHtfaSt' fjAs 4' h 1 1 Look What a Little Civilization Will Do Nanny, a fonr-monlh-old monntnln shwp, has bw'ii changed from one of the wildest to the tamest creatures in the state. M'hen she was about a month old she was nicked up by the cowboys of the Heart-Bar Ranch and raised on a bottle until she has become so tame that she follows Mrs. A. It. Swarlhout around like a pnnpy. I'pper left anny standing beside the Pontiac Six road ster. Fpper riffht In the San Bernardino Mountains near Blif Meadows. Lower Mrs. Swarthout demonstrates how she raised 'anny and anny seems to enjoy it too. This tIcw was taken in ' Barton's Flats, San Bernardino Mountains. Would Require Year to Travel Oregon's Roads How long will it tuke to motor over all the ronda in Oregon? This casual inquiry coming from out-of-atate tourists brings but vague answers from the persons questioned. Frequently the visiting motorist an nounces that he will be in Oregon for a week or two and wants to see all that he can nf the state in that time. As a matter of fact, few people in the state of Oregon realize the ex tent of their highway system. From figures of the existing roads in Ore gon compiled by the Oregon State Motor association, a motorist travel ing 150 miles a day would require al most a year to traverse all the roads in the state. In fact, approximately 133 days wouldbo needed, as a total mileage of ail roads in the state is to.ou. Should the motorist decide to make the trip morely over the state high way system, the tour would Uke ap proximately thirty days. The total mileage in the state highway system is 4,408 miles; while the counties boast a road mileage of 46,546. Whiie it is the general belief that only paved ronds represent the ulti mate in comfort, there are hundreds of miles that a-e highly enjoyable to travel and the equal of any paved road in cemfortabie going. Should the tourist care to travel on surfaced roads of the state in addition to the paved roads, 73 days would be needed, as the total mileage of paved and sur faced roads in the state is 10,945 mile;. In addition to the mileage enumer ated above, there are thousands of miles of roads leading from every county and state highway into the doorvard of evjry ranch house and mountain cabin in the state, forming a most comprehensive transportation system for every individual of the state. A Bad Trait Jeweler"! don't like that new clerk you've hired." Manager "Why not, sir?" "He takes things too easily." Mcbbe SoMcbbe So Milkman "It looks like rain." Customer "Yea, it doj;a, but it has a faint flavor of milk." COAL PKOSPECTS GOOD. Canyon City Eagle. Fred Shoemaker was in town for a brief time this week and reported that everything was moving along fine for the development of the coal fields of the John Day valley. There was a delegation here from Portland ami they inspected a large new vein of coal that had just been struck. All were optimistic. The district is show ing up much better than contemplat ed and the mptter of financing it is no longer a problem. Coal men firmly believe and do not hesitate to express the belief that it is just a question of time when one of the moat Important coal fields of the west coast will be developed In the John Day valley. In addition to the prospecting for coal, equipment will be added to explore for oil. There are good indications of oil, according to .geologists and those who have been instrumental in fringing other districts to the profit able producing point. In Sixty-Six Years William 5. Lreamer went to work 66 years ago as cashboy far a New yoik store at one dollar a week. He is still with that store u floor walker but at clerk he waited on Mrs. Abraham Lincoln, Mrs. U. S. Grant, Mrs. Grover Cleveland and Mri. Roosevelt, mother of T. R. General Conference Need Says Dean Allen of U. 0. University of Oregon, Eugene, Ore., Sept. 21. A general conference of the United States and European powers, with a view to adjusting international debts and other affairs, is' vitally needed, declares Eric W. Allen, dtan of the school of journalism of the University of Oregon, who has just returned from a tour in Europe in company with a group of 44 news paper men and students. The conference should aim towarl definite results, tomewhat along the lines of those accomplished by th: Dawes plan, the ucan states. Euro pean powers are willing to listen to reason, and willing to reason on many points now at issue, and a meeting with the United States would be a great step for better understanding and progress, it is felt. While in Europe conditions weie studied first hand by the party of which Dean Allen was a member, and a general trend toward stabilization on continental Europe was notice 1. Tnis was particularly true in Ger many. Here the currency is "real money," business is returning to nor mal, and the German people seem well satisfied with the present form of government. There is practically no danger of a return to imperial rule, it is said. Fiance has also made a remarkable recovery since last year, and their outlook can now be regaided as opti mistic, the dean says. A general feel ing of friendliness toward Aijie.icans, which was heightened by Colonel Charles Lindbergh's flight, was noted there also. Conditions in England are not as bright as on the continent, the dean says, but the people realize they have a great national problem to face, and are facing it resolutely. LIVE FOOD. From State Board of Health. Without vitamines a food is dead. Vitamines are essential to life. An adequate diet necessitates definite quantities of all of them. Man can not make the vitamine. It must be taken in the food either from animal or vegetable sources. There are a large number of vitamines, but only S'MATTER POP by c. m. payne TOUGH GANG, TOO! five or six are recognized at the present time. Vitamine A is known as the nati ophthalmis vitamine or "fatsoluble A." It is found abundantly in milk, butter, egg yolk, liver, kidney, pan creas, fat fish such as salmon and herring, and in glandular fat organs. It is uneftected by boiling, pasteur izing, or canning. Cod liver oil con tains 250 times more nf it than is present in butter fat. It occurs in green leaves and the growing shoots of plants, especially in spinach, cab bage, Brussel sprouts, lettuce, etc. In cereal grains the germ or outer bran layer contains it, -" it is ab sent in the endosperm which is the part usually consumed in food as rep resented by white flour and polished rice. The lack of vitamine A in an imals causes deterioration in health and a liability to acute infection, par ticularly alfecting the lungs and eyes. Vitamine B is the antinueritic vit amine or "water-soluble B." It pro motes growth and its absence induces poulneuritis or beriberi. This vita mine is found in animals, seeds, leaves, and tubers. It is found abun dantly in the bran layer of all cereal grains. Yeast is rich in this vitamine. Vitmaine C is the antiscurvy vita mine or "water-soluble C." This vit amine is particularly abundant in or anges and tomatoes. Green vegetables possess it abundantly, and the fresher they are the more they possess. Milk is poor in it. Fruits also contain it abundantly. Vitamine D the antirachitic (rick ets) vitamine. This vitamine is one of the factors directly concerned in the prevention of rickets. It occurs in cod liver oil and in most fish oils and egg yolks. Sunlight is another factor in preventing rickets. Vitamine E is the reproductive vit amine, it is necessary for the normal healthy reproduction of animals, and is present in vegetable oils and mus cle tissues. Vitamine P. P. is the pellagra pre vention vitamine, and is a new dietary factor particularly associated with yeast. It is important to remember that if the food of nursing mothers does not contain vitamines in abundance the infants will not develop properly, and wrll be predisposed to disease. It is comparatively easy to prepare diets from ordinary wholesome food?, which JgwfareseM FRIDAY SEPT. 30 Final return limit Oct 31 Your last opportunity to go East on exceedingly low round trip summer excur sion fares. Liberal stop overs going and returning. Agent will teU tou exact fare from your itr ft ad help mip out your itinerary. will contain several times the mini mum amount of vitamines on which normal nutrition can be maintained. THE PRINTER'S DREAM. "Last evening I was talkin' Witn a printer, agtd and gray Who told me of a dream he had, I think 'twas Christmas day. Whiie snfozing in his office, The vision came to view, For he saw an angel enter, Dressed in garments white and new. Said the angel, I'm from heaven, The Lord ju.-it sent me down To bring you up to glory, And put on your golden crown. You've been a friend to everyone. And worked hard night and day, You have printed for many thousands And from few received your pay. So we want you up in glory, For you have labored hard, And the good Lord is preparing Your eternal, just reward.' Then the angel and the printer Started up toward glory's gate, But when passing close to hades, The angel murmured, Wait. I have got a place to show you; It's the hottest place in hell, Where tne ones who never paid you In torment always dwell.' And, behold, the printer saw there His old clients by the score, And grahbirg up a chair and fan, He wished for nothing more; But was bound to sit and watch them. As they'd sizzle, singe and burn, And his eyes would rest on debtors Whichever way they'd turn. Said the angel, 'Come on, printer. There's the pearly gates I see,' But the printer only muttered, 'This is heaven enough for me'." Selected, SENATOR STEIWER LEAVES. Senator and Mrs. Frederick W. Steiwer, daughter Elizabeth and son Frederick Jr., left yesterday on the Portland Limited for Washington, D. C, accompanied by Mrs. William Roesch, Sr., mother of Mrs. Steiwer, who will make her home with her daughter during the winter. Senator and Mrs. Steiwer have not yet chosen a residence in Washington. No announcement has been made re garding Senator Steiwer's choice of a secretary bjt this announcement is expected within the next few days. Pendleton E. O. Brilliant Cus Judge "Thirty days" Speeder "Oh, I know that one! 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