HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THUR SDAY, AUG. 21, 1930. PAGE THREE WISE MEN I spent a day In the research lab oratories of the largest electrical company in the world. If two hun dred years ago anybody had predict ed the marvels that can be seen there today; the God-fearing citi zens of the time would have burned him as a witch. For example, as you know, the metal radium is constantly giving off little particles which are called electrons. The electron is Infinitely smaller than the atom. Indeed, the atom is a comparatively big propo sition, a sort of universe with lots of electrons flying around inside it. Of course, neither the electron nor the atom can be seen by any Instruments which we have yet de vised. But listen to this: The sci entists in that laboratory have rig ged up a radio apparatus, attached to a loud speaker, which is so deli cate that it can detect the flight of electrons through the ether. I held the dial of my wrist watch against the microphone. The fig ures on the dial are radium coated. And I could hear the electrons pounding Into the loud speaker like a shower of hailstones on a tin rdof. On another floor I sat in front of a motion picture screen and saw talk ing movies of three great scientists of England, Sir Ernest Rutherford, Sir William Henry Bragg, and Sir Oliver Lodge. Each one of them was photo graphed in his own laboratory. Each proceeded to perform certain experiments and explain them. It was thrilling to sit In the living pre sence of such men and to think how valuable those pictures will be to future generations. Suppose there had been a talking movie of Archi medes demonstrating the lever, or of Newton explaining the discovery of gravitation! But what stirred me most was not the experiments which these men performed but the spirit of their talk. Sir Oliver Lodge, for example, picked up a little weight from his laboratory table and let it drop with a thud. "That experiment," he said, "is the simplest that one could pos sibly perform and yet there is hard ly an experiment about which we know less than we do about that." And, he added, "You are not to suppose that you understand things because you call them names." He proceeded to talk about the mysterious properties of "empty space," and he concluded with this paragraph. "If ever we find, as I think we are beginning to find, that life and mind need not be associated with matter but can inhabit empty space, then life will not be subject to the troubles of a material organism and existence will be perpetual." As contrasted with many of our smartest wise-crackers who know everything, these wise men of sci ence admitted frankly that we are only on the furthermost borderland of knowledge. And that anything is possible even eternal life. W. C. T. U. NOTES. MARY A. NOTSON, Reporter. The Literary Digest poll showed a combined vote for repeal and modification of prohibition of 53,537 and 38,624 for enforcement, in the state of Iowa, thus placing Iowa in the wet column. In the recent Re , publican primary in Iowa, two can didates for governor, Dan W. Tur ner and Ed M. Smith, who were ap proved by the drys, polled a total of 342,228 votes, while State Senator Otto Lange, who ran on a plat form opposing the 18th amendment polled only 22,445. Turner's vote was 228,488, and Smith's vote was 113,740. The Digest poll showed Florida wet by a vote of 34,782 for repeal and modification and 15,921 for enforcement. Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, outspoken dry, daughter of the great dry leader, William Jen nings Bryan, received 39,960 votes in the Democratic congressional primary, to 10,590 votes for DeWitt T. Deen who ran as a wet. The Di gest poll showed Pennsylvania wet by a vote of 379,296 to 147,557, more than two and a half to one; yet. In the primary election, Pinchot and Davis, pronounced drys, won by big majorities for governor and sena tor, respectively. The dairymen and Ice cream deal ers seem to have good reason to .thank prohibition for part of the increase in the consumption of ice cmam. The Industrial Bulletin states that the people of the United States eat almost $1,000,000 worth of ice cream a day, a total of $350, 000,000 per year. The Senate committee investigat ing lobbies and lobbying took a look in on the activities of the Associa tion .Against the Prohibition Amendment, which had proclaimed a "nation-wide revolt" against pro hibition. It developed that the membership of this; organization from whom no membership dues or fees were required amounted to only 150,000. The Association had raised by c'ontributions the sum of $424,091.30 to carry on their work of defeating prohibition. Of this great sum, $321,260, more than 75 per cent, was contributed by 52 men. The investigation revealed that these 52 men were millionaires and multimillionaires, and that they hoped to be relieved of paying in come taxes by repealing prohibi tion and having the Government again tax liquors, thus making the poor fellows with a thirst pay the taxes for them. A nice bunch of patriots they are. FOREIGN LANGUAGE SAID AID TO ENGLISH STUDY Foreign languages, either modern or dead, may be irksome to the high school student but they prove valuable in his mastery of English, a survey of results of placement tests in English at Oregon State college indicates. Records of 310 entering freshmen have been studied, showing that 133 were deficient in English, 117 were average and 60 superior. Of the first group 44 per cent had had no foreign language study, in the sec ond group 21 per cent were without it, while in the superior group all but 5 per cent had taken at least one foreign language course. S. E. Graves, north Lexington wheatraiser, was transacting bus iness in the city Tuesday. He re ports harvest well over with, and was evidencing no gloom over the showers. UUATSHALLn The question of what to serve puzzles most every housewife. It really takes hours of time to plan 1095 meals every year meals that will please an d satisfy the entire family. Let MacMarr Stores make It easier for you! Just come to the store wit h a pencil and pad of paper or just leisurely look around anil plan your meals from the hundreds o f suggestions you find on the shelves and in the displays. You'll be delighted with the ideas you w ill get from actually seeing these inviting foods! Friday, Saturday, Monday Specials MILK FEDERAL BRAND A WESTERN PRODUCT 12 ttins 98c COFFEE MacMarr Quality RIend, more popular every day. ..This star alone sold almost 100 lbs. of this Coffee lost Saturday. 3 lbs. 8105 Pay CASH for YOUR GROCERIES and BANK the DIFFERENCE SUGAR PURE CANE C. & H. BERRY SUGAR PER 100 LBS $5.59 COCOA Hershey popular brand for breakfast, lunch and dinner. PerLb.Tin25C SOAP Creme Oil or Camay. Two popular toilet soups. 4 Bars . . 25C RICE A Real Good Quality Head Rice. 10 Lbs. . 78c BEANS Mexican Red, a very ec onomical, strength giving food. 10 Lbs. . 75c FRESH STOCK - LOWER PRICES - SERVICE - Our Slogan MACARONI In Bulk Fresh supply just arrived. 6 Lbs. . . 39c SYRUP Our Best Cane and Ma ple Syrup. Per Quart Per Gal. ... ... 49c $1.45 Pancake Flour A Spcrry Product of Superior Quality. 1 0 Lb. Sk. 65c FRESH VEGETABLES AND FRUITS AT LOWEST PRICES HONEY New Crop Pure Extracted 10 Pound Tall $1.25 FLOUR MucMarr Brand, A Sperry Pro duct Now the most popular flour In the West 49-LB. SACK .. ... $1.49 BARREL $5.89 SOAP Crystal White, for many years the nation's favorltet laundry soap. 10 bars 39c Salad Oil In Bulk, same quality as in the can. Bring your own container. Per Quart 39c Per Gallon $1.35 Open Evenings Till 7:30 o'Clock for Your Convenience Phone 1082 STONE'S DIVISION Hotel Heppner Bldg. FRANK PARKER ACCIDENTS The most dangerous occupation, according to an industrial survey of New York, is window-cleaning. The chance of an accident to a window- cleaner is nearly nine times as great as that which the artisan making fine machinery and instruments runs, the latter being the least haz ardous occupation. Everybody who has ever watched the window-cleaners at work on the outside of a skyscraper has shud dered at the thought of what would happen If the worker's safety-belt broke while he was cleaning the thirtieth-story windows. The belts do break, occasionally, or the clean er's foot slips and he falls to his death. Window sash made wtih a pivot ed interior frame which can be ro tated so that both sides of the glass can be cleaned from the inside are use in a very few buildings. They cost a little more than the ordinary kind, but in a completely civilized world their use will be compulsory. FINGERPRINTS Every reader of detective stories knows that two individuals never leave the same sort of fingerprints, and that the fingerprint records of the great police departments are or ganized so that the Imprint of any known criminal can be referred to at once. Few realize that in the Depart ment of Justice at Washington is maintained the largest internation al collection of fingerprint records in the world, comprising photo graphs of the fingermarks of more than 2,100,000 persons who have been accused or suspected of crime. Some have proposed that every child's fingerprints be taken when he first enters school, and preserv ed as a permanent record of his identity. There are many cases In which such recrods would be inval uable, but we are lax about such things. Half of the states do not even keep a record of births. BOOKS No more than three or four per fect copies are known of the first book printed from movable type, Gutenberg's Bible. The United States of America now owns the finest example of this precious vol ume. The last session of Congress appropriated J1,000,000 with which to buy the Vollbehr collection of rare books, for the Library of Con gress, which contains not only this famous Bible but more than 3,000 other splendid examples of the work of the earliest printers. It has been estimated that it would cost more than $5,000,000 to duplicate this col lection, if duplication were possible. A thousand years from now men will point to these books and say: "Here are the seeds of our civiliza tion. It began when man learned how to duplicatet knowledge by printing and made it free to ail sorts and conditions of men." RADIUM The world's most precious metal, worth $2,000,000 an ounce,' now comes exclusvely from the Belgian Congo, in Africa. Originally dis covered in pitchblende ores in the Joachimstahl, Austria, radium was for a while mined commercially in Utah, but the discovery of a bed of very rich uranium ore in Africa has put the other producers out of business and enriched the prospec tors who made the lucky strike. The cost of radium is due to the difficulty of extracting It from the ore and the danger in handling it Radium's value is due to the fact that it is constantly changing Into other substances, and in the process gives off rays and emanations. These have effects upon the human system similar to those of the x-ray. Its use In medicine is still in its In fancy, but commercially, as the ba sis of luminous paint for the hands of watches and clocks, air naviga tion instruments and the like, the demand is large. A single ounce is enough to supply this industrial de mand for several years, but no amount of radium as large as one ounce has ever been assembled in one place. COLOR In the Middle Ages the rich mer chants of Venice spent so much money in painting their gondolas in brilliant colors, trying to outshine each other, that an edict was pass ed by the Council of Ten that no other color but black might be used on these floating vehicles of the Venetian canals. And alt gondolas have been painted black for five hundred years. Some have wondered whether there might not be a revival of the old Venetian rivalry in the gaudy colors of modern automobiles. The matter is one of personal taste.. Conservative people and those who do not court attention will always prefer black or plain blue, while the spirit of youth and modernity will continue to express itself in gay green, yellow and red cars. Rev. and Mrs. Glen P. White and daughter, Miss Mary L., visited at Fossil, their former home, from Monday until Friday of last week. Ton save so much every wash day with the trmaxi dasher and Droner now only The Thor saves your clothes. It saves your time. It saves energy for pleasanter things. It makes washing and ironing a pleasure. The washer cleans away the spots and dust much more gently than you can do it with a wash board and three times as quickly! The ironer, too, has decided economies. Slips, towels, sheets, napkins and table cloths speed through it in a third of the usual time. It re quires no pressing or lifting from you all you do is feed the pieces through! Now, today, you can wash and iron this easy, economical way. For today the greatly im proved Thor washer and ironer is priced below regular and both are yours for only $1 down, $8.40 monthly ($149.50 cash). down t ffKEE lOWIEfl. We want you to learn how easy and simple and speedy Thor ironing really is. Run one of our snowy guest towels through the Thor ironer and the towel is yours! Come in today for your toweL THOR PRim-rOR 1 LIMITED TIHC OILY Famous THOR Washer $1 down, $5.65 monthly; $ 99.75 cash. Attachable Ironer . . . $1 down, $3.25 monthly; $ 49.75 cash. Table Ironer $1 down, $4.70 monthly; $ 79.75 cash. Washer 9 Attac)usbleIroner$i down, $8.40 monthly; $149.50 cash. Washer & Table Ironer . $1 down, $10.10 monthly; $179.50 cash. IPancafiic IPweir & DjagDirt (Codsoddoidddd