Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1930)
PAGE EIGHT HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCT. 23, 1930. IONE. (ContinMd from Ftrat Pur) They returned Sunday. Carlton Swanson departed last week for South Bend, Wash., where he has employment. He was ac companied on the trip by his aunt, Mrs. Millie Newton, who was return ing: to her home after a visit here with her mother, Mrs. Katie Pet teys. Mrs. James Cossman who has been visiting with her mother, Mrs. Katie Petteys, is returning this week to her home in Eugene. The sophomore class will have a party Friday evening at the school gymnasium under the direction of Miss Florence Emmons who is spon sor for the class. Please remember the date of the grade school program and carnival to be given Friday evening, Octo ber 31. All pupils of the grades are in the program and an evening of merriment is promised all who at tend. Mrs. R. E. Harbison of Morgan has been receiving treatment in the Portland Medical hospital. She re turned home the first of the week. Frank Lundell was one of the hunters who brought home a deer near the close of the season, wis VUl was a fine four-ooint buck. Mrs. Charley Botts and two chil dren Frank and Ida. srjent the week end with Mrs. Clarence Nelson at her ranch home. The special meetings at the Pen tecostal mission under the leader ship of Mr. MacDonald, closed Sun rtav niffht Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rietmann wpre host and hostess to the Wo man's Topic club last Friday eve ning at their pleasant rancn nome. Invited guests of the club were Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Manoney ana mr onH Mrs r. W. McNamer of Hepp- ner, Miss Maude Knight and David Rietmann of lone. Five tables of bridge were in play. Mrs. McNamer received first prize for the ladies and Mrs. Smouse second. The next business meeting of the club will be November 9 at Mrs. Henry Smouse's home. The next evening meeting will be November 21, at Mrs. Fred XToTilrin'a Our football team journeyed to Condon last Friday for a game with the Condon boys and came home with another victory to their credit The score was 26-7. The outstand ing plays of the game were made hv Earl McCabe. Irvin Ritchie and Francis Elv. The line-up was the same as in the former game. The boys who made the trip to Condon in company witn coacn lucKer are Claud Brashears, Joel Engel man, Paul Smouse, Virgil Esteb, Leo Lieuallen, Norman Swanson, Earl McCabe, Norton Lundell, Mil ton Morgan, Dorr Mason, Johnnie Eubanks, Barton Clark, Irvin Rit chie, Ordie Farrens, Berl Akers, Norman Everson and Robert Botts. Friday afternoon our boys will meet Lexington on the Lexington field. U. of 0. to Greet Dads On Campus Saturday University of Oregon, Eugene; Oct 22 (Special) With friendly competition between the various liv ing organizations growing keener everv dav as to which one will have the largest number of Oregon Dads here for the Dads' Day festivities on October 25, and acceptances from dads pouring in from all over Oregon and many points in Cantor- nia, the University of Oregon is looking forward to the greatest an nual day in the history of the uaas association. More than 600 are ex pected to attend. Those from Heppner who have been invited to attend Dad's Day in. elude L. E. Bisbee, Fred Casteel M. D. Clark, Dr. J. Perry Conder, R. R. McHaley, W. P. Mahoney and Frank S. Parker. Silver loving cups will be present ed to the women's and men's living organizations having the most dads here, in proportion to the size of the house. Presentation will be made at the huge banquet Saturday night in the men's dormitory for dads and their sons and daughters. Dr. Ar nold Bennett Hall, president of the university, Paul T. Shaw, Portland, president of the Oregon Dads, and George Cherry, Enterprise, presi dent of the Associated Students, will speak. The gridiron clash between the University of Idaho and the Uni versity of Oregon on Hayward field will furnish entertainment and ex citement Saturday afternoon. A special section has been reserved for the dads, who will have their own cheering section and leaders. Trains bearing the guests will be met, and the Dads will be person ally conducted to the campus, where they will be officially registered. A Dads meeting at which officers for the coming year will be elected and various problems of students and parents will be discussed, will be held Saturday morning, followed by luncheons at the various fraterni ties and dormitories. culosis association throughout the state to help their various county associations increase their seal sale returns and to improve the pro grams financed by them. The new 1930 sels will be on dis play at the meeting. I REPORTS FROM OVER STATE (From State Market Agent) THINKS IT GOOD REMEDY. Chairman Legge of the Federal Farm board expresses faith in the marketing act and tells the farmers: It is too late to question the effi cacy of co-operative marketing. The nation has set its stamp of approval upon it and has blazed a trail for every farmer to folldw. You know something is wrong with agricul ture. There may be many and var ious remedies. Still, the govern ment is behind only one, and re gardless of your opinion you might just as well get on the wagon and drive hard. We're all going one way, and it would be just as hard to make progress in the opposite di rection as for one steer to run against the rest of the herd. Re gardless of what measure of suc cess the present movement may have, the farmers made a distinct step forward in the passing of the marketing act" FILBERTS PROFITABLE CROP. The Pilot, published at Ranier, favors the planting of filbert trees, saying: "A Columbia county farmer has just made a shipment of two tons of filberts which were taken from 800 6-year old trees utilizing 12 acres of ground. In 1929 these young tree3 produced 1500 pounds of nuts. According to the usual in crease, the trees should double their yield the coming year, we are told. with a material increase with each bearing year. The filberts bring a good price with a ready association market, as only a small percentage of the American market can be sup plied with home-raised nuts." There is plenty of good filbert land in western Oregon, as it is generally understood that they will thrive wherever their less aristocratic cou sin, the hazel nut, grows successfully. RI SSIA AFFECTS MARKET. The wheat market continued un settled tiuring the week. Continu ing heavy offerings of Russian whpiit ni T.Ivprnnnl and rjrosoect of increased supplies in the Southern Hemisphere were the principal wakening factors in the world mar kets. Nearly 5.000,000 bushels of Russian wheat were included in the world shipments during the week nnrt fnrthpr offerings were being prssed upon European market The prices at Portland aeciinea aooui lc, with No. 1, Hard White, Big Rond Rliiestem or earlv Baart quo ted sacked at 88c; soft and Western White at 76c; Hard Winter, North ern Spring and Western Red at 74c Der bushel. Offerings from farm ers continued light Venereal Disease A Menace to Health (From State Board of Health.) that are usually classed as venereal are gonorrhea any syphillis. A third one of less importance is cnancroia. me spe cific micro-organisms of these dis eases are given off from open les ions upon the skin or mucous mem branes. Each disease is produced hv the entrance of discharge from an infected person directly into an open wound upon tne SKin or mu cous membrane of an orifice of the body. There has been a popular belief that a vnnereal disease is of merely temporary importance, and concerns only the person wno is miecieu. There is often little aiscomiori or gross evidence of disease. The sev erer symptoms often subside prom ptly, and the patient maybe able to mingle with society without ex citing suspicion. But the specific germs remain in unhealed and un noticed lesions and are transmitted to innocent persons, especially to a wife by an uncured nusDana. Gonorrhea Is entirely too preval ent. It affects all ages and all class es of society. It is the cause of blindness of the newborn and many surgical operations on the female genital organs. It causes sterility in hoth men and women and is the cause of many chronic diseases of the joints, bladder and generative organs. HI ATT & DIX "THE RED & WHITE STORE" Cash Specials FOR SATURDAY ONLY BROOMS, $1.25 broom for $1.00, and a prize goes with each broom. SERV-US COFFEE, in 1-lb. vacuum pack tin ONLY 39c. RED & WHITE CATSUP, per bottle 19c BLUE & WHITE OLIVES, per can 19c SUGAR, C. & H. Berry, just think, per 100, $526. SALAD BOWN MAYONNAISE DRESSING Money back guarantee, xi Pint 15c, Pt. 25c, Quart 45c. This product can only be bought at independently owned stores. Try our Vegetables, always fresh from the Frigidaire. HIATT&DIX "THE RED & WHITE STORE" Quality Always Higher Than Price Delegates Will Attend Christmas Seal Institute Delegates from Union, Umatilla, Wallowa and Morrow counties will meet in La Grande next Tuesday at the district Christmas Seal insti tute being sponsored by the Oregon Tuberculosis association in coopera tion with the Union County Public Health association. Mrs. Saldie Orr Dunbar, executive secretary of the tuberculosis asso ciation, will be principal speaker at the conference which will open at 10:30 at the La Grande hotel. Mrs. Albert Hunter of the Union County Health association is in charge of local arrangements. The La Grande Neighborhood club is cooperating very materially both In the Insti tute and in the coming Christmas Seal sale, plans for which will be formulated at this meeting. The state and national anti-tuberculosis activities will also be reviewed. The work of the public health as sociation In thiB county Is made possible by the annual sale of the tuberculosis Christmas seals. The institutes are arranged by the tuber- MUNSINGWEAR SIN HOSIERY MILADY'S HOSIERY PROBLEM SOLVED ECONOMICALLY WITH MUNSINGWEAR EIGHT NEW I No Lustre Women's Chiffon Silk; Picot Top; French Heel. Charming new colors of Brown Leaf, Muscadine, Sable, Gun Metal, Nightingale and Caresse $1.95 Womens All Silk Chiffon; Picot Top. French eHel. All colors. $1.00 Full Fashioned French Heel, Women's All Silk Chiffon. All colors. $1.50 Pure Silk; Lisle Top; Blue Tip service weight Variety colors. $1.50 SPECIAL PRICES on odd and clotting out numbeini (2.95 numbers for $1.65; $1.95 for $1.50; $2.25 for $1.45; $2 for 98c M. D. CLARK (EazettO: TOmraes IF coamrse IPflHOne 882 LET'S STAND BACK OF EASTERN OREGON'S NATIVE SON PHIL METSCHAN Republican Candidate for Governor For years the people of Eastern Oregon have wanted a Governor who is familiar with their problems, who appreciates their needs and is acquainted with their desires. , Phil Metschan was born and raised in Eastern Oregon. The eastern half of the state never had a more loyal friend than this man, who knows Oregon better than any other man now before the people. Agriculture, irrigation and stock-raising are major industries in Eastern Oregon. The city-born man who never lived on a farm, never had to milk cows on cold frosty mornings, toil long hours in a field has no conception of the problems of Eastern Ore gon. Easter nOregon needs a friend at Sa lem. Phil Metschan is that friend. In him Eastern Oregon will have a Governor to whom it can go with the assurance that the people east of the mountains will get a square deal. Eastern Oregon should throw its whole hearted support behind its native son, for if he is defeated it will never again be able to convince the people of Western Oregon that its demands for a square deal at Salem are sincere. The independent candidate for Governor is attempting to blind the people of Eastern Oregon to the value of Phil Metschan by raising the cry of cheap power without cost to the taxpayers. That cry was raised for the purpose of misleading the public, be cause the independent candidate for Gover nor cannot make good his promise. Ask any banker. Eastern Oregon is not interested in a local quarrel in Portland. They are inter ested in their own problems. Conditions in Portland have nothing to do with the con ditions of irrigation, agriculture and stock raising in Eastern Oregon. t Attest jMMiwiiw '711 "fiiiiiiiHiiiiinlriHit'i''' " r I Cheap power in Portland and in other sections of the state can only be obtained through aid of the federal government, and the aid of the federal government in devel oping power resources will never be procur ed by electing an independent candidate, whose only object is to destroy the Repub lican party. Phil Metschan is a Republican. He knows more about the affairs of government than any other candidate now running for Gov ernor. He can work quietly and efficiently with a Republican Legislature at Salem for those things in which Eastern Oregon is interested. Election of an independent candidate will lead to endless quarreling at Salem and will halt Oregon's progress. Eastern Oregon is on trial before the rest of the state. Defeat of Phil Metschan, its native son, would be the greatest blow that could be struck at our future. (Paid Advertisement by Morrow County Republican Central Committee. C. L. Sweok, Chairman)