Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, July 02, 1931, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES. HEPPNER, OREGON. THURSDAY, JULY 2. 1931.
PAGE FOUR
THE HEPPKER GAZETTE,
Eaubluhed March SU. 1883;
THE HEPPNER TIMES.
Established November 18. 1897:
CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15. 1913.
Published every Thursday morning by
VAWTER and SPENCEB CRAWFORD
and entered at the Post Office at Hepp-
ner. Oregon, as second-class miner.
ADVERTISING BATES GIVEN ON
APPLICATION.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Tear f
fit Unntht - 1.00
Three Months .75
Single Conies -OB
Official Paper (or Morrow County.
MEMBER
n ToreiIstateII (
A PROMISING PROGRAM.
Autocaster Service.
ALL sorts of people are putting
forth all sorts of schemes de
xiimert to nrevent a recurrence of
the industrial depressions such as
we have been going through. Most
of the schemes are merely schemes,
put forward by people who do not
really know what they are talking
about There seems, however, to
be real promise in the suggestion
of the National Civic Federation to
rail national congress of selected
delegates from every line of indus
try and business, and from the
ranks of all the important trades
as well, to formulate a program of
industrial readjustment and to cre
ate a nermanent organization to
maintain the proper balance be-
tween production, distribution and
consumption.
The suggestion originated with
Matthew Woll, vice-president of the
American Federation of Labor, in
a letter to James W. Gerard, former
Ambassador to Germany, who is
chairman of the Commission of In
dustrial Inquiry of the National
Civic Federation. Elihu Root, Am
erica's most distinguished "elder
statesman," is the honorary chair
man of the Federation.
Under such auspices, any move
ment for public welfare starts off
with a fair chance of success. Every
intelligent person knows that all
that is needed to keep business and
industry on an even keel, and labor
steadily employed, is cooperation to
that end between all of the ele
ments involved. Capital alone can
not do it, management alone can
not do it, labor cannot bring it
about But if all the groups of
thoa three elements of business
and industrial life get together and
ap-rpe on a Droeram, it is pretty
likely to be a program which stands
a chance of success. Its value will
he increased if the farmers are also
included. And it will be lessened in
precisely the degree in which poli
ticians take oart in it
The advocates of this movement
are referring to it as "the Ten-Year
Plan." They figure it will take ten
vears of experiment, trial and er
ror to arrive at a working basis
which will be reasonably certain of
accomplishing its purpose. If some
method could be devised to compel
all of the interests involved to live
up to their joint agreements there
is no reason in the world wny some
thing of this sort should not be ef-
fective. And. as the gentlemen who
are active in promoting the 10-year
plan point out, unless intelligent ac
tion in this direction is taKen, me
alternative will be the government
stenDine in and regulating business,
socializing industry in ways which
are entirely foreign to the American
conception of individual rights and
liberties.
AN HONOR DKSKRVF.D.
Autocaster Service.
IN awarding the Capper Gold Med
al and its accompanying honorar
ium of $5,000 to Dr. L. O. Howard
for distinguished service to agricul
ture, honor is given where honor is
due. Dr. Howard, in his long ser-
ice as chief entimologist of the
United States Department of Agri-
culture, has done more than any
other living person, not only to
awaken the farmers of the nation
to the necessity of combating in
sect pests, but to develop methods
of overcoming the ravages or in
sects and to set up bars against
their entrv from abroad.
As Dr. Howard has trutnruny
said so often that it is an old story,
the great war for possession of the
earth is the war between man and
insects. Unchecked,, insect life
would destroy all other life. Great
progress has been made in the war
on insects in the past forty years,
but an enormous amount still re
mains to be done and only unceas
ing diligence and unremitting war
fare will give the nnai victory to
man.
It is not only the agricultural pro
ducts that insects threaten; it is
human life itself. When Dr. How
ard began his research the grass
hopper and the Colorado beetle or
Dotato bue were supposed to be the
farmer's worst enemies, ivieitner oi
them has been completely subdued,
and the pink boll weevil still men
aces the cotton crop of the South,
to say nothing of the Gypsy moth
and the San Jose scale, and the
hundreds of other familiar agricul
tural pests. We know that the mo
squito is the sole carrier of malaria
and yellow fever, that typhus fever
and the bubonic plague are carried
by fleas and that the common house
fly spreads typhoid germs on our
food.
In unearthing the facts about in
sect pests and particularly in de
veloping means of combating them,
Dr. Howard has developed a long
and poorly paid career of public
service. He is entitled to all the
honor that can be paid him.
Things Arc Picking Up
-By Ted Broun
Y pernor up (m yAwWlMM
I FIVE MP BOTTLER WWWtMM&4 W
&0XE AHEM OF mOjTj
4
HABITS OF CRITICAL
OBSERVATION.
Dr. Arnold Bennett Hall,
President University of Oregon.
In a recent national campaign one
of the national campaign commit
tees issued several million copies of
a card which on one side promised
the laboring men that they would
cut down the cost of living until it
was reduced to the size of their pay
check. On the other side of the
TISfTr theirTrair be' , more than perfect circu.ation of the
poultry, milk and other necessities blood in the body; and, very many
of life that the farmers sold. 1 was times we physicians meet witn var-
called in by one of the national iations from normal, which may be
campaign officers to criticize the called "imbalance, or engorge
campaign literature, I canea at- ments here and mere, wntcn may
tention to that fact that the prom- vary from congestions to actual dl-
ses on the opposite sides or tms iations of the vessels organic dis
card were contradictory. They ob- ease.
viously could not lower the prices People with big abdomens are
of poultry to the wage earner and sufferers in varying degree from
DOCTOR
JOHN JOSEPH GAINES,M.D.
Blood Imbalance.
Nothing should be appreciated
I believe without accurate figures,
that one-fourth of the blood volume
may flow in a great tidal-wave to a
ponderous abdomen from overexer
tion, overeating, etc.; and, that this
condition reacts heavily upon the
heart and brain; of course the veins
of such an abdomen become much
dilated from the constant sagging,
making possible, if I may use the
term, "abdominal apoplexy." And
here it is that the "tubby" abdomen
is a very troublesome luxury,
' Methods of correction are slow,
blood imbalance. There are great discouraging, and are seldom per-
vet raise it for the farmer.
The campaign officer smiled wnen many veins that traverse the ao
this was called to his attention and dominal wall and visceral content
said, "Well, it is too bad that we put there situated. Anything that may
them on opposite sides of the same cause "rush of blood" to these
card." At the close of the cam- blood-vessels, produces immediate
p&ign the same officer told me that an(j very evident effect on struc-
no one else, not even their political tures elsewhere. A big meal is an
opponents, had called their atten- example overeating; intense deter--l
tion to the impossible character or mination of blood to the stomach
these two conflicting promises. Yet and bowel, depleting the brain for
Ave million copies had been sent out the time being, causing dizziness,
throughout the country. cloudy vision, staggering gait, stu-
This was a striking example or POr, with heavy feeling throughout
hew most of us are lacking in the the already overfleshed abdomen.
he bit of critical observation, we The symptoms may amount to a
don't observe inconsistencies in
campaign literature. We permit our
selves to be misled by preposterous
campaign proposals. We buy ad
vertised articles where the adver-;
tisine on its face shows glaring in
consistencies. We accept beliefs
that ripen into convictions in the
temporary helplessness, a not very
enjoyable feeling in elderly persons.
sisted in to get the relief possible.
Carefully practiced exercises are
productive of results. Of course free
daily evacuation of the bowel MUST
be maintained. Here it is that
starches in the diet must be cut
down to a minimum. Indeed, the
diet must be just what is needed
and no more. In chronic cases pa
tients who are short of breath and
puff with slight exertion, may wear
a well-fitted bandage to support the
sagging, indolent organism. I per
sonally know a man who declares
he couldn't "navigate" without his
abdominal support, which holds the
dilated veins within bounds.
prevented such a measure becoming
operative in them. In order to raise
the fabulous one billion dollars per
year in beer taxes, it would be nec
essary for each man, woman and
child in the part of the United Stat
es where such a law would have
been operative to drink two and
one-half gallons of beer per day.
This shows how the wets try to de
ceive the people.
The wild assertion of the wets
that the bootleggers are for prohi
bition is discredited by the fact that
Dan Serritella, who is known to be
Al Capone's right hand man in the
Illinois senate, voted for the repeal
of the state prohibition laws. It
a matter of common knowledge
that Al Capone's big "racket" is the
bootleg racket. His recent convic
tion upon a plea of guilty simply
establishes the fact in the court
records. If the bootleggers were in
favor of prohibition, Dan Serritella
would have ben voting to sustain
the prohibition laws. So, when some
wet tries to work this old fraud on
the people, just ask him why Dan
Serritella voted as he did. Another
of their frauds is that they want
prohibition repealed "in the inter
est of temperance." A large ma
jority of the wets will admit, if
pinned down to the point, that pro
hibition would be a fine thing if it
could be enforced. If they would
be honest about it and would put
half the energy they use in trying
to tear down prohibition into help
ing to enforce it, there would be
a decided advance toward success
ful enforcement and real temper
ance. ,
Alice stopped in Alpine for a short
visit with friends Sunday on their
way to the home of Mr. McDevitt's
father, Bernard McDevitt of Juniper.
Mrs. Anna Schmidt and son Al
fred were Monday evening visitors
at the G. L. Bennett home last
week. '
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Bowker mo
tored to Heppner Sunday evening to
visit with friends there.
A number of the young folks of
Alpine attended a party at the
Bartholomew home on tsutter creen
Saturday night and had a lovely
time. I
Mrs. Ed McDaid and Bill Mc-
Daid were transacting business in
Hermiston Wednesday.
Miss Ruth Bennett spent Satur
day evening visiting with friends
in Heppner.
Rudolph Klinger and son Ken
neth were looking after business
interests in Lexington Monday.
The nersistence of the weatner
man in sending a little rain each
dav is interfering with the wneat
men. Willard Hawley, Bill Doherty,
Bert Michel and others have been
ready for a week to begin their
harvesting. Mr. Hawley has a
brand new International uweniyj
and 1800 acres to cut so he is par
ticularly eager to get started.
Dorothv Dohertv and Margaret
McDaid were afternoon visitors at
the home of Doris Klinger Monday.
Misses Camilla and Peggy Kil
kenny visited at the Doherty home
Thursday forenoon.
Olin Ritchie who has been wom-
insr in Alpine for the past several
weeks left for his home In Lexing
ton Wednesday. .
Alex Lindsay came home from
the Charles Morehead ranch where
he has been helping with the hay
ing and is now working for Willard
Hawley.
Mrs. B. P. Doherty, Mrs. P. J.
Curran, Mrs. Ben Doherty and John
Doherty were callers at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kilkenny
Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. John Haddox drove
out from Heppner Sunday to visit
at the home of Mrs. Haddox's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Bennett.
John Conrad was a business vis
itor at Heppner Thursday.
The Doherty combine was hauled
out into the field Monday and is
now all set for harvest.
Herbert Shaw and daughetr Rose
Helen of Heppner were callers at
the Dan Lindsay home Monday.
Miss Camilla Kilkenny made a
short call at the Clary home Tues
day of last week.
Mrs. Anna Schmidt and Alfred
were transacting business in Echo
Saturday.
Mrs. P. J. Curran and Mrs. Ben
Doherty and children called at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Irl Clary
Wednesday for a visit.
Art Schmidt attended the dance
in Echo Saturday night.
as the place, of hearing and settlement
of said lliial account, and that all per
sona having objections to said account
must file the same on or before said
date.
S. E. NOTSON, Executor.
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT.
Notice is hereby given that the under
signed. Executrix of the Last Will and
Testament of Catherine M. Farnsworth,
deceased, has Hied her final account
with the County Court of the State of
Oregon for Morrow County, and that
said Court has set Monday, the 3rd day
of August, 1931, at the hour of 10:00
o'clock in the forenoon of said day at
the County Court room at the Court
House at Heppner. Oregon, as the time
and place for hearing objections to said
HnhI Hccmint. ami all nersons having
objections thereto, or the settlement of
said estate are nereDy requireu 10 me
same on or before the date Bet or said
hearing.
Dated this 1st day of July, 1931.
MARY H. THOMSON, Executrix.
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT.
Notice is hereby given that the under
signed administrator of the estate of
Albert Williams, deceased, has liled his
final account with the County Court of
the State of Oregon for Morrow County,
and said court has set Monday, the 3rd
day of August. 1931, at the hour of 10
o'clock in the forenoon of said day at
the County Court room at the Court
House at Heppner. Oregon, as the time
and place for hearing objections to said
final account, and all persons having
objections thereto are hereby required
to Hie same with said court on or before
the time set for said hearing.
Dated this 1st day or July. 1931.
CHARLES WILLIAMS.
16-20. Administrator.
Professional Cards
A. B. GRAY, M. D.
PHYSICIAN ft SURQEON
Phone 323
Heppner Hotel Building
Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted.
WM. BR00KH0USER
PAINTING FAPERHANGINO
INTERIOR DECORATING
Leave orders at Peoples Hardware
Company
DR. C. W. BARR
DENTIST
Telephone 1012
Office in Gilman Building
11 W. Willow Street
DR. J. II. McCRADY
DENTIST
X-Bay Diagnosis
L O. O. F. BUILDING
Heppner, Oregon
W. C. T. U. NOTES.
MARY A. NOTSON, Reporter.
Sunday School
dk Lesson nu
International Sunday School Lesson for
July 5.
THE GIFT OF THE HOLY SPIBIT.
Acts 1:6-9; 2:; 8.
Rev. Samuel D. Price, D. D.
During the next six months the
lessons will be in the Acts and the
Epistles. Jesus set forth principles
pertaining to the kind of a life that
He said should be lived. The Acts
of the Apostles demonstrate that
such a life is possible. In His as
cension to heaven there was a con
scious loss to His followers, but He
had promised them that a wonder
ful experience would come to them,
and In preparation for this event
directed that they should abide ten
days in prayer.
The place was probably the room
where the Passover had been ob
served and the Lord's Supper insti
tuted. Many think that this was
the home of Mary, the mother of
John Mark. All the apostles were
present during those days and in
addition many who were aggressive
followers of Jesus. All did not un
derstand the fullness of teaching
which the Master had presented
Some were still looking for the er
ection of a visible kingdom that
would overthrow the power of hated
Rome.
On the day called Pentecost the
dlpsensation of the Holy Spirit be-
ean. There were spiritual ana vis
ible signs, described in the lesson
text. These manifestations are mere
Incidents compared with the divine
tower evidenced in the preaching
of Peter, who explained how pro
phecy was being fulfilled In their
midst The sublime truin oi me
Trlnltv of the Godhead is evidenced.
Christ was declared in the Old Test
ament and His life was known in
the Gosnels. Even so, the Holy Spir
it though always present, came Into
special relationship with man on
that day of Pentecost. His minis
try Is to make the work of the sons
of God effective.
When the Association Aeainst the
very face of evidence to the con- Prohibition Amendment asserted
trary on every naou i.u v. ,,,., , .
tlv is due to our failure to rorm ' " """"s
the habit of observing and observ- as the gasoline industry and the au-
ing critically and intelligently. Like tomobile industry, it was simply
the habit of thinking, tne naoit oi arawing upon its imagination ior
1 critical and intelligent observation facts. It has been shown that if
i is a habit that will be of increasing the situation had continued as it
value as the years go by, whether was before prohibition down to the
applied to the most technical pro- present, increasing with the in
jects of research or to the most crease of population, the American
commonplace problems oi aauy me. cinniters wouia De spenuing nine
billions or dollars a year on liquor,
x3.0oi.a tw n man with imaer- l he most mat tne most arcient wets
BUD 'n' BUB
ination so lacking as to say that in congress have ever charged was
romance is dead. If so, then let less than one third of that amount,
him steal silently out of the pic- which, if correct, shows that the
ture for the IT grandma of Angel- average drinking is much less than
us Temple has taken unto herself before prohibition. But the official
the Rev. G. B. Hudson or JNew lorn
City and whom by "inference," she
promises to obey until the Creator
sees fit to them part Ana, my cnu
dren gather about and hear this
strange story of romance: urana-
ma Kennedy rode out of the west
she had quarreled with her famous
daughter, the IT girl of Angelus
Temple; she was lonesome and sore
of heart. Pa Hudson rode into the
West. He was lonesome. Ma and
Pa met. They wooed. They won
And on the hills of Longvlew,
Wash., overlooking the Queen of
Waters, and In the bright moonlight
at 2 a. m. a friendly pastor said
the words that made Pa and Ma
man and wife. And, Ma put over
a heck of a good story by eluding
the reporters.
SUMMER SCHOOL LARGEST.
Twenty states, three foreign coun
tries and two territories are repre
sented by the 839 Btudents now en
rolled in the largest summer session
ever held at Oregon State college,
according to Dean Ellwood Smith,
director of the session. Registra
tion this summmer exceeds that of
last by nearly 200 students. Cali
fornia contributes 106 students, the
largest number coming from any
state outside of Oregon. Washing
ton is second with 63, Idaho third
with 22, and Montana fourth with
20. Other states represented are
Arizona, Wyoming, Utah, Texas,
South and North Dakota, New Mex
ico, New Jersey, Nevada, Nebraska,
Mississippi, Michigan, Iowa, Illinois,
and Georgia. Foreign countries and
territories are Holland, China, Can
ada, Hawaii and The Philippines.
For Rent Two apartments In
Gilman building. 16-tf.
government figures reduce the busi
ness to a fourth or one third of
that.
Referring again to the proposi
tion of the wets to raise a billion
dollars a year by placing a tax on
beer, just remember that a billion
dollars is twelve times as much as
the brewers ever paid in any year
during the old saloon days. The
American people, in order to pay
that amount in beer tax, would need
to drink twelve times as much beer
as they ever drank In the preprohi
bition days. Moreover, if the wets
had succeeded in getting the mod
ification of the Volstead act permit
ting the sale of beer passed by con
gress and such a tax had been lev
ied, it would have been operative
only in twelve states and the Dis
trict of Columbia, the other states
ALPINE.
MARGARET McDAID.
Mrs. John Nirschl and daughter
Juanita of Pendleton are now visit
ing for a few days in Alpine with
Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Bennett
John Doherty, student at the Uni
versity of Oregon, returned to his
home in Alpine Sunday to spend his
summer vacation.
Irl Clary returned home Wednes
day morning from Portrland where
he spent several days o business.
Mrs. John Callahan of Pendleton
spent Monday visiting with friends
in Alpine and Juniper.
Claud Finley began hauling his
Wheat on Thursday. Mr. Finley is
probably the first this year to haul
his wheat.
Mr. and Mrs. John McDevitt and
Four Smith-Hughes Men
Found Best in the State
Four Smith-Hughes teachers have
been chosen from among the 34 In
Oregon to receive the honorary title
of Master Teacher of Agriculture,
according to Earl R. Cooley, state
supervisor of agricultural education.
These men ar Ralph Morgan, Clo
verdale; Jens Svinth, Bandon;
George Blinkhorn, Lebanon, and
Walter Leth, Newberg.
The selection was made by 10
Smith-Hughes teachers, cooperating
with the state supervisor, and an
nounced at the annual conference
of Smith-Hughes teachers at Ore
gon State college, June 22, 23, 24.
Following the conference, the teach
ers are remaining at the college for
an intensive two-weeks' short
course in agricultural education.
Mr. Cooley, in his annual report,
announces the establishment of two
new Smith-Hughes departments in
Oregon high schools for the coming
year. These will be at Albany in
Linn county, and Merrill in Klam
ath county.
having state laws which would have children, Catherine, Junior and
AGAINST WORK OF
ALL KINDS
By ED KRESSY
VA KNOW U IC4NT muZB) THEy WORK PI6GW iM QAZDENS off)
WoPLE WHO' POAJT TAKg y (qoLFIM' OMUmB
( ADVANTAGE oFXf5S LQ .AF"LJ J&pp
Holidays jJBSmmk
4
QM'Go To "THE OFflcB T(?
I UkC THEY PO Ort wfk 0AYS.,
MY ONLY CUMCLUSIOH (S,
"7 '
Mrs. Crabtree Oh, I wish I'd
thought twice before marrying you
Mr. Crabtree Huh, I'd be satis
fied if I'd thought only once.
Myrtle Dove -You are beginning
to take some things for granted.
shall have to be a little firm with
you.
Fonda Love Great! Let us make
it a partnership!
Frank A. McMenamin
LAWYER
905 Guardian Building
Residence. GArfleld li)49
Business Plione Atwater 1348
PORTLAND. OREGON
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND STROEON
Trained Nurse Assistant
Office in Masonic Building
Heppner, Oregon
P. W. MAIIONEY
ATTORNEY AT LAW
First National Bank Building
Heppner, Oregon
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office In L 0. O. P. Bnliding
Heppner, Oregon
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S BALE.
NOTICE is hereby given that by vir
tue of an execution and order of sale
in foreclosure, Issued out of the Circuit
Court of the State of Oregon for Lane
County, May 2Uth, 1U31, upon and pur
suant to a decree duly given and made
by said Court on the 18th day of May,
11)31, in a suit pending therein in which
Jesse G. Wells, as Trustee, was plain
tiff, and the Eugene Bible University,
a corporation, et al, were defendants,
which execution and order of sale was
to me directed and commanded me to
sell the real property hereinafter de
scribed to satisfy certain liens and
charges In said decree specified, I will
on Friday, the 3rd day of July, 1931, at
the hour of one o'clock P. M., at the
front door of the County Court House
in Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon,
offer fur sale and sell at public auction,
for cash, subject to redemption as pro
vdled by law, all the right, title and
Interest of the defendants and each of
them In said suit, and of all parties
claiming by, through or under them or
any of them since the 15th day of Oc
tober, 11126, In or to the following de
scribed real property, to-wlt:
Tract No. 1. South half of Section 18;
All of Section 19; Southwest quarter
of Section 2(1; Northwest quarter of
Section 29; all in Tp. 2 S. R. 25, East
Willamette Meridian. 1280 acres,
more or less, in Morrow County, Ore
gon; Tract No. 2. Southwest quarter of Sec
tion 3; Northwest quarter of Section
111; Northeast quarter of Section 4;
all In Tp. 2 S. R. 25, East Willamette
Meridian; 480 acres in Morrow Coun
ty, Oregon,
together with the tenements, heredita
ments and appurtenances thereunto be
longing; subject, however, to a lease on
Tract No. 1 In favor of Gene Gray and
a leaHe on Tract No. 2 in favor of
George N. Peck, both of which expire
November 1st, 1932.
Dated this fourth day of June, 1931.
C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff.
Date of first publication, 6-4-31. 12-16
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned has filed his llnal account as
the executor of the estate of Ray G,
Slocum, deceased, and that the County
Court of the State of Oregon for Mor
row County has appointed Monday, the
Cth day of July, 1931, at the hour of 10
o'clock In the forenoon of said day, as
the time, and the County Court room in
the Court House at Heppner, Oregon,
AUCTIONEER
Farm and Personal Property Sales
a Specialty
"The Man Who Talks to Beat
tho Band"
O. L. BENNETT, Lexington, Oregon
J. O. PETERSON
Ijvtont Jewelry and Gift Goods
Watches - Clocks - Diamonds
Expert Watch and Jewelry
Repairing
Heppner, Oregon
F. W. TURNER & CO.
FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE
INSURANCE
Old Lin Companies. Real Estate.
Heppner, Oregon
JOS. J. NYS
ATTONEY-AT-LAW
Roberta Building, Willow Street
Heppner, Oregon
J. Perry Condcr, N. D.
20th year In praetloe in Heppner and
Morrow County.
HEPPNER HOTEL BUILDING
Office Phone 02, Residence Phone 08.
Heppner Sanitarium
Ilncnif q1 Dr r'ry Con4r
HOSpildl physician in charge
Oldest Institution of Healing and
Oldest Practicing Physician In Mor
row County; with the least percent
age of fatality and greatest percent
age of benefit.