Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, February 13, 1930, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1930.
PAGE THREE
Honesty in Business
I graduated from college when
muckraking was in its greatest
glory.
The magazines and newspapers
and reformers had filled our youth
ful minds with so much distressing
Information that we hardly knew
whether the world was a safe place
for us to step out into or not
We looked askance on all the fel
lows in college whose fathers had
made money. To be sure, the fath
ers seemed decent enough old cod
gers when they visited us at the
fraternity house. But we felt that
something was dark and bad in
their past somewhere.
A business man was a being with
out conscience or intelligence, like
a slot-machine. You gave him a
nlckle and he gave you a nickle's
worth of goods.
If he took your nickle and with
held the goods, then he was a suc
cessful business man.
We know better now. In fact,
I believe it could be shown that the
greatest force for righteuosness in
the United States today is nothing
more nor less than the once malign
ed BUSINESS.
Business is the greatest ally and
promoter of Honesty. And more
and more I have come to feel that
Honesty is, after all, the corner
stone of all the virtues.
Nothing has Impressed me more
than this: Get to the top of a big
business enterprise, and nine times
out of ten you will find an idealist.
You will find a man who has long
since ceased to be interested in mere
money-making who is staying in
business because of what he wants
his business to do for his employees,
his community and his country.
I do not say that Business is per
fect. Far from it.
But I do say that the time is past
when the young man -who goes into
business needs to feel that he is
making a selfish choice a choice
that cuts him off from service to his
fellow men.
"Be not slothful in business," said
St. Paul, "fervent in spirit; serving
the Lord."
Many a man, building a big bus
iness in America, has, as a by-product
of his building, strengthened
the character and lifted the ideals
of hundreds of his associates, and
helped in the regeneration of a
whole community.
And the number of such men the
idealists of BUSINESS in America
is increasing very fast.
FRANK PARKER 1
PARROTS
Parrots have come in for a lot of
unfavorable publicity lately because
of a strange disease which has at
tacked several persons and which is
attributed to infection brought by
certain parrots from South Amer
ica. Physicians and health officials
say there is no danger of catching
"parrot fever" from a bird which
has been In the family for any con
siderable time.
The parrot is probably the most
Intelligent of all birds, and the fact
that it can be taught to talk makes
it almost a human companion. And,
like human beings, parrots develop
personal attachments to such a de
gree that they often pine away and
die when separated from their par
ticular friends. Don't let anybody
kill your parrot Just because a few
parrots are suspected of being dis
ease-carriers.
FEMINISTS
Ganna Walska, the Polish singer
who has been married to two Amer
ican multi-millionaires, has convinc
ed the U. S. Customs Court that a
married woman can have a legal
residence separate from that of her
husband. That saves Ganna from
paying duties on French gowns im
ported from her Paris "home,"
though her husband lives In Lake
Forest, Illinois.
This decision is hailed as a great
victory by the ultra-feminists, whose
purpose In life seems to be to break
up the American home and put
married life on the plane of the
cheapest Illicit love-affair. Because
this "modern" idea runs contrary to
the most deepseated traditions ev
ery expression of it gets a lot of
publicity, which is probably what
Ganna and the other feminists
want But It by no means follows
that American family life Is In dan
ger. Home and babies and a hus
band with a good job are what the
overwhelming majority of American
girls still want In marriage.
STYLE
The fur coats and silk stockings
worn by the American stenograph
ers who accompanied the delegates
from this country to the Naval Dis
armament Conference at London
made a greater impression on Eng
lish newspaper men than anything
else about the delegation. Londoners
never saw working girls dressed
"smartly."
The young women from the dif
ferent departments in Washington
who were taken over to do the cler
ical work for the delegation were
not picked for their beauty but sole
ly because they were the most effi
cient at their jobs. In any part of
America, city or country village,
they would attract no special at
tention. We are so used to seeing
our girls well-dressed and "smart"
in manner and appearance that we
do not realize that nowhere else
in the world do any but ultra-fashionables
and actresses on parade
wear the latest styles in clothes.
LINCOLN
Appreciation of Lincoln's great
ness is felt today throughout the
Nation, both North and South. In
his own time even the Nroth did not
appreciate him. Dr. Albert Shaw,
the distinguished Editor of the He
view of Reviews, brings this out
graphically In a new two-volume
book which reprints the most com
plete collection ever made of the
newspaper cartoons, campaign pos
ters and other pictorial representa
tions of Lincoln during his rise to
fame and his tenancy of the White
House.
Even without Dr. Shaw's Illumin
ating text the pictures show Lincoln
as more grossly maligned and bitr
terly lampooned, even in the house
of his friends, than any other man
who ever rose to the Presidency.
Only after his tragic death did the
people of the North begin to realize
that a great man had led them. We
are prone to forget that no man ap
pears great to his contemporaries.
LIGHT
Fifty years from now the world
may regard the discoveries made in
our time about light as the greatest
scientific advance of all time. Light
cures disease, ordinary sunlight,
light produced In various ways by
artificial means. Ordinary window
glass keeps the healthful part of
the sunlight out of the house. New
kinds of glass let it In. In fifty
years every modern home will be
equipped with the new glass and
illness will be less common.
Light stimulates growth of both
animals and plants. An English far
mer proved that exposing young
pigs to ultra-violet light made them
worth double their farrow-mates at
six months. A French scientist re
cently grew strawberries in a cel
lar, ripening in half the normal
time, using artificial light. They
cost $5 apiece, but the time will
come when out-of-season fruits and
vegetables can be grown In the
North by artificial light as cheaply
as now in Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. George McDuffee
went to Pendleton Thursday to take
Mrs. Lucy McCarter to the Eastern
Oregon state hospital. They were
accompanied by S. E. Notson, who
made the trip to confer with James
Alger Fee, circuit judge. Mr. Not
son did not get an opportunity to
see the judge as he was in Portland
at the time.
WHEAT GROWING
POINTERS
(From tillage and production report
of Eastern Oregon Wheat conference.)
No. t
of lerlei of tour article!.
Always sow good, clean seed free
from weeds.
Grain certification work has been
of value and should be continued.
Spring wheat is always best sown
early. The most profitable rate for
Federation Is 3 to 5 pecks; for Hard
Federation and Baart, 4 to 6 pecks.
In Jefferson county sowing thinner
is advised.
For sowing hay strips it is best
to use the same variety as the rest
of the fteld. That is, If white is
main crop, use white wheat in hay
strips; if red wheat is used for one,
use it for both.
Use of copper carbonate dust is
strongly recommended for treating
wheat for smut New methods are
not profitable for farmers to try un
til thoroughly tested. Copper car
bonate is not recommended for oats
and barley.
As new strains of smut have re
cently been found in the Pacific
Northwest, it Is recommended that
investigations be continued and If
necessary enlarged by state experi
ment stations and the U. S. depart
ment of agriculture to determine
the prevalence of these strains, their
effect on different varieties of wheat
and treatment necessary to control
them.
Inasmuch as development of smut
resistant and hardier wheats has
resulted in creating hundreds of
new varieties in the last few years,
and inasmuch as it has been neces
sary for farmers to test some of the
most promising of these, we recom
mend that farmers do not rush to
the growing of these wheats on
large acreages until they have been
more thoroughly tested and approv
ed by the experiment station and
extension service wrokers. We need
better varieties but we also need
fewer varieties.
(Continued Next Week)
NEW POSSESSIONS
When you purchase new things for your
home, don't overlook the relation between
your purchases and your insurance cover
age. It's an easy matter to double or treble
the value of the contents of your home with
out noticing it.
Check up on your contents fire policy
TODAY.
F. W. Turner & Co.
Representing Reliable Companies.
EatYourWay
to Health
Vitamins, Sunshine
and Health Come to
You in a Pound of
BUTTER
Butter has been an Important
part of the human diet since
the Arabs first learned to
churn it In a goat skin a
thousand years ago. It is
now an article of food pro
duced with the aid of th
latest achievements in the
science of animal nutrition,
bacteriology, and chcmlstrv.
and comes to you pure and
unadulterated, the product of
American farms. And the
price, too, is not great.
"There is No Substi
tute for Good Butter"
Morrow County
Creamery Co.
Thi$ advertimnent it tpontertd by the Oregon
dreamery Kjptrmort nimwtvn
USED CARS in many makes and models some of them practic
ally as good as new as far as service is concerned. Offered at
Remarkable Savings
to the discriminating buyer.
Come to our show room while this sale is on and see the
wonderful values we display. Drive away an exceptional bargain.
2-1928 Chevrolet Coupes
1 927 Chevrolet Coach
1 927 Chevrolet Sedan
1 926 Chevrolet Coach
1 927 Oldsmobile Sedan
1 928 Dodge Six Sedan
1927 Star Coupe
1 929 Chevrolet Truck - run
only 500 miles
All these have good rubber and paint, are thoroughly recon
ditioned, and are guaranteed "With an 0. K. That Counts."
A Few More Bargains:
3-1926 Chevrolet Tourings 1926 Ford Touring
1925 Star Coach 1925 Ford Coach
FERGUSON MOTOR CO.
BETTER CARD SOUGHT.
Seeking adoption of a report card
that will be uniform for all schools
in Morrow county, Mrs. Lillian Tur
ner, chairman, and R. E. Jones of
Pine City, L. E. Marschat of Board
man and E. A. Brown of lone, mem
bers of a committee appointed for
this purpose, met Saturday after
noon at the Morrow county court
house. Mr. Brown will write to
many schools in various parts of
the United States to get cards, that
will give ideas for the adoption of
the card to be used here.
DRINK MORE MILK
Wise old Mother Nature made milk
for children. Into It she put every
thing needed for sustenance, and In
the most easily assimilated form.
So, Drink More Milk. Let the
children have plenty. It It the
cheapest food you can buy.
Alfalfa Lawn Dairy
WIGHTMAN BROS, Props.
Phone S0F3
Rich R. McHaley, who has been
here for several months looking af
ter the J. H. McHaley estate, left
Wednesday night for his home in
Prairie City. He expects to re
turn to Heppner in about three
weeks.
For Sale Second hand heating
stove, wood burner, good condition.
Inquire at Patterson A Son. 38 tf.
WANTED Plowing, with tractor,
any time. Frank Stone, Hermlston,
Ore. 4tt-51p.
A FINANCIAL
GUIDE
One of our checking ac
counts will give you a per
manent record of your
income and outgo. It will
help you control your ex
penses. It will aid you in
quickly realizing your am
bitions. Talk with us about itr
TODAY.
Fanners & Stockgrowers National
Heppner Bank Oregon
THE WAY TO A MAN'S HEART IS THROUGH
That well-known phrase of Grandmother's time is still true and the mod
ern housewife still finds that tasty, appetizing foods are a sure path to
every man's heart. What better way to prepare these good foods than to
select them from reliable, up-to-the-minute food stores? And of course
that clearly means MacMarr's!
Features for Friday & Saturday, Feb. 14-15
SOAP
Crystal White Brand
10 Bars 39C
LYE
American Brand
3 Cans 25C
BON AMI
Dandy for Cleaning
Per Can 14C
Pan Cake Flour
Sperry's Brand
9-lb. Sack ...69c
BEANS
Red Mex
10 Pounds .. 79C
CORN
Standard Yellow No. 2 Tins
6 Cans 75C
Soap
Citrus Brand
IOBars....37c
Soap
Lux Brand
6 Bars 45C
OldDutchCleanser
A Dirt Chaser
3 Cans 19C
Beans
Navys
10 Pounds $1.25
Tomatoes
Standard Grade
No. Tins
6 Cans
75c
MILK
Darlgold Brand
Per Case ..$4.89
CHEESE
Cloverbloom Brand
5-lb. Brick .$1.50
SHORTENING
Crescent Brand
21b 39c
LARD
Swift Product
41b ..83c
81b. .....$1.45
BANANAS
3 1b.
Nice and Ripe
25c
WHEAT FLAKES
Carnation Brand
PerPkg 39C
Fancy, Wrapped, Red Cheek Pippin
Apples, Per Box $1.89
Phone 1082
STONE'S DIVISION Hotel Heppner Bldg.