HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1931, PAGE THREE IP John Golden, who is a swell fel low as well as a smart one, told me that when he was In Chicago pro ducing "Turn to the Right" one of the theatre attendants came to him and said a visitor wanted to Bee him. "What does he want?" asked John. "He wants to read you a play." John threw his hands in the ari. He was having enough troubles putting on one play without letting some unknown author inflict an other. The author returned two or three times, but John refused to see him. When the job in Chicago was done, he 'boarded a train and shut himself up in a drawing room, tired out There came a timid knock; the door opened, and through It walked a young man with bushy hair, who looked fresh from the farm. "Mr. Golden, my name is Mc Avoy," he said. "You were too busy to see me in Chicago, so I found out what train you were tak ing and I bought a ticket and want to ride with you as far as Cleve land. I want to read you my play." John fussed and fumed, but final ly surrendered. The young man started to read, but John's tired mind absorbed nothing. After a while the young man said "Any time you are not interested, I'll stop." "You can stop right now then," John answered. With a pained look, the young man put away the manuscript and started for the platform. The train was pulling into Gary. He stepped off, took another train, and rode pa tiently back to Chicago. When the next theatrical season opened in New York, John saw in the papers the advertisement of a play called "The Potters." The author's name struck him Mc Avoy. Could it be the same young man who had bored him from Chi cago to Gary? It was the same young man. The play ran for months. IF John had listened to McAvoy he would have added another hit to his list of successes. IF, when I was editing a maga zine. I had taken time to glance at a certain manuscript which came in from an unknown writer, I should have had the satisfaction of publishing "The Sport of Kings," the story that started Arthur Som ers Roche on the road to fame.. IF I had listened Carefully to what the president of a certain big company was saying to me one af ternoon I might have made a great many thousand dollars. If ... if ... if ... we all have these bothersome little words in our record. It's folly to waste time regretting them. The only in telligent attitude is to say: "While I could have done much better, still I have had my share of good luck, and shall not grumble. Only, in the future, I'll try a little harder to keep my eyes and ears open." For it is very difficult to tell when some wild and annoying visitor may be trying to force fortune up on us. LODGE Time always brings out the truth. We are beginning to learn a great many things about Henry Cabot Lodge that we did not know during his lifetime. The "scholar in politics," as he loved to be called, became a conspicuous figure when, in 1919, he led the cabal in the Uni ted States Senate which prevented our ratification of the Peace Treaty of Versailles. His personal venom against Woodrow Wilson was ap parent at the time. Now it turns out from disclosures made by ex Secretary Fall that Senator Lodge expected that the Republican Pres ident elected in 1920 would make him Secretary of State, and that he was immensely disappointed when Mr. Harding picked Mr. Hughes for that position. "I have known Henry Lodge since boyhood and I do not believe that he ever harbored a single gen erous impulse," said the late Presi dent Eliot of Harvard to a friend not long before his death. ECONOMICS The man or woman who has a job and whose wages or salary has not been reduced since the depres sion of 1929 is better off today than two vears aeo. In fact, a dollar will buy more today, in almost all of the necessaries of life and in every one of the luxuries, than at any time since before the war. The one exception is rents in the big cities. About four-fifths of the people who work for a living In the United SUtes are still employed regularly and at the same pay as before. About ono-flfth are out of employ, ment or on part time. In Oklahoma a mob of uncmploy ed raided a grocery store the other day. In one rural county in Mas sachusetts, where I saw the rec ords. 99 new automobiles and 54 new trucks were bought by farm- ers and village people during the month of June. These economic inequalities offer a problem which it Is going to take more than one session of Congress to solve. RAILROADS One of the biggest jobs that con fronts the Capital is the rebuilding and refinancing of the nation's rail road system. Practically all the rail roads today are in bad shape Hnan daily. The success of the German ex nerlment in running an air-propell ed railroad" car at the rate of 130 miles an hour means, to engineers, that all railroad transportation methods will have to be enormous ly speeded up In the course of the next few years. The whole railroad situation calls for leadership of a kind which Is not now in evidence. If Daniel Willard, president of the B. & O., were twenty years younger he could supply it. Somewhere In the railroad field there must be a young man who will come to the front In the next year or two and lead the railroads out of the wilderness, LATIN A magazine In the Latin language has just started In New York. The purpose of its publishers is to re viv and maintain Interest in the study of Latin, which is the root language from wmcn rrencn, Snnnlsh. Italian. Roumanian, and, to a very large extent, Eugllsh, are Horived. A hundred years ago Latin was the world's International language, The educated men of every nation spoke Latin, so that a traveler could find someone with whom he could converse. Gradually French began to supplant Latin, and in Europe today French is the tongue spoken by the more cultured peo ple of all nations. In the world of business, however, English is prob ably more widely spoken than any single language, and the study of English is now compulsory in the upper grades of the common schools in probably three-quarters of the nations of the world. Nevertheless, no person has a right to call himself an edueated man unless he has a working knowledge of Latin, which is still the international lnaguage of scien tists. CASE Anna Case, the opera singer who has just married Clarence Mackay, head of the Postal Telegraph and Commercial Cable System, has long been known in musical circles as perhaps the most generous of sing ers of the first rank in her attitude toward ambitious young musicians. For years Miss Case has given not only lessons in singing at her own expense, but free board and lodging in her large apartment in the West Fifties to a number of young wo men whose musical talents she deemed worth cultivating. Her marriage to Mr. Mackay is the culmination of a romance of several years standing. As he is one of the wealthiest men in America it is to be expected that Miss Case will now be able to do a great deal more for young singers even than she has done before. Veteran O.S.C. Educators Honored by State Board Rewarding the devotion of 36 and 23 years of their respecitve lives to the service of Oregon State college and through it to the agriculture and industry of the state, the State Board of Higher Education has conferred the rank of dean emeri tus on Dr. Arthur Burton Cordley, dean of the school of agriculture, and on J. A. Bexell, dean" of the school of commerce, according to word received at the college. The appointments will take effect Sep tember 1. Both men have been deans of their schools since their organiza tion 23 years ago, and both have developed them to the point where they take a leading place among such schools in the nation. Both men are known throughout the state and both have contributed in a significant way to the industrial and agricultural progress and pros perity of the state. i Dr. Cordley, according to the res olution adopted by the board, has made three scientific discoveries since coming to the college in 1895, which have alone been the means of adding more wealth to the state of Oregon than the total cost of the institution to the taxpayers thru out its history. These included his discovery of the life history of the codling moth under Oregon condi tions and a successful method of keeping the pest under control; his discovery of the cause of apple tree anthracnose and its control by the means of Bordeaux mixture; and his invention and development of lime sulfur spray for control of ap ple scab, a method now in universal use. Dean Bexell was among the first 'J for th 1 1 ifliie Kancu Hart vat Made from PURE Artesian Water Morrow County Creamery Co. men in the United States to recog nize and emphasize the business aide of farming, and is the creator and publisher of a system of farm accounts that has become standard throughout the country. He is au thor of several commercial texts and a number of bulletins, some of which have been published by the U. S. bureau of markeU. He has served on many committees and commissions for the promotion of sound business methods and com mercial education in Oregon. Upon retirement from active ad ministrative duties, both deans ex pect to devote the major portion of their time once more to research studies Dean Bexell In the field of commercial education, and Dean Cordley to plant pathology, partic ularly the study of cherry diseases now a serious menace to the Ore gon crop. YOURSAVINGS WILL BUY ' YOU A HOME 1 58 Reputation is a large part of your collateral for credit. The man with a bank account enjoys them both. It Is mighty easy to save mon ey, once you get the habit. Pay something into your sav ings account every week BE FORE you pay anything else and the way your account will pyramid will surprise you. Most all of our rich men started with a small amount Ford only had an idea. The Fanners Is here to help you. Farmers and Stockgrowers National Bank There is No Substitute for Safety LEADING THE DOWNWARD TREND IN FOOD PRICES U. S. government record show that food pricea have steadily declined1 since 1929. Daring this two yeu period of declining prices, MacMarr Stores have led the way with greater values. August, 1931, finds oar stores still leading with lower prices! It will pay yon and pay yon well to shop at our stores today and every day and share in our greater values. Prices Effective SAT. & MON., Aug. 8 & 10 Nut Chocolate Bnrs Whites of three eggs, seven ounces powdered sugar, one and one-half squares of chocolate and one quarter pound of Jordan al monds. Beat the whites of eggs until stiff and add gradually, while beating constantly, powdered sugar. Fold In melted chocolate, cooled slight ly, and three-fourths of the al monds, blanched and chopped. Spread one-fourth Inch In thickness in a buttered dripping pan, sprinkle with remaining chopped nut meats and bake in a very slow oven three quarters of an hour. Cut in finger shaped pieces and remove from pan. Pie riant 1'le "" " Take the yolks of two eggs, one cup sugar, two heaping teaspoons of Hour, butter size of walnut. Put in saucepan and mix thor oughly, beating the eggs up light, then thin to the consistency of thickening; now tnke one cup of pie plant and pour boiling water over it and let it stand while you get the first mixture and pie crust ready; then pour off the water from the pie plant and stir it in the mixture, then turn it into your crust and bake without top crust, then take the whites of two eggs and make into a meringue and spread over the top. Unsweetened Custard. 1 egg 1 cup milk 1 Few grains salt teaspoon beef extract or 1 teaspoon unthickened meat gravy. Break the egg In a small bowl, add salt and beat slightly. Scald milk in top of double boiler, pour over egg, stirring until well mixed. Mix In beef extract or beef juice and pour into a baking cup, set in a pan containing 1 inch hot water and bake in a moderate oven just until It has set. Serve warm, re moving any brown crust that may have formed on top. This is not a cheap competitive flour. It is the best hard wheat mm MacMarr-West. -Made in the : Per tall tin 7c Per Case $3 Fluffy and white, and always fresh. J MALT Large Tins, Rainier Brand. 3 TINS 95C PICKLES Fancy Dills in No. 10 Tins. PER TIN ... 49c SALMON Fancy Pink for cold lunches. 4 Large Tins .... 49c SOUP Campbell's Any Flavor. tf PER TIN tIC SYRUP Pure Cane and Maple. Per Gal. . $1.45 SOAP Crystal White, 10 Bars, 88c, CASE . VY HI It?. $3.59 BEANS Mexican Reds good and clean 10 LBS 45c STARCH Corn or Gloss in 1-lb. pkgs. 3 PKGS. ... 25c Dressing Best Food Salad Dressing. FULL QTS . 39c Tomatoes Solid Pack. OAs 6Lg.2'2 Tins OuC FLOUR MacMarr Pancake. 2 Lg. 25c Pkgs.35C Sardines Booth's lg. oval tins In mustard or tomato sauce. 6 TINS 55c Hotel Heppner Bldg. Phone 1082 - We Deliver Union Pacific Employees.. a 9-million-dollar Market for OREGON (JnION PACIFIC employees in Oregon were paid $9,147,094 in salaries and wages dar ing 1930. More than three thousand four hun dred families, a total of 20,719 people, received their support from Union Pacific. Think what that means to Oregon's home market to the development of her growing industries to the consumption of her agricul tural products. The preservation of this vast home market among Union Pacific employees is dependent upon the continuing prosperity of the Rail road. Every shipment made by truck weakens the Railroad structure and affects railroad employment. SHIP AND TRAVEL BY RAIL Four and twenty play suits dirtied by mud pies Goodness ! What a lot of clothes to wash in the summer time I It's such a job when you have to heat the water in the range or furnace. But it's no task at all when you have an electric water heater. Turn the tap any time and out pour loads of gloriously hot water! No fires to make not even a heater to turn on and off. Is such a convenience expensive? Oh, my no! About 10c a day heats all the hot water needed for the average family. Besides, an elec tric heater is safe there is no open flame, no overheating, no forgetting, yr There's an electrical water heat ing system for every home and every family. No matter how large your demands for hot water, we can furnish you an electrical heating system that will be en tirely adequate and satisfactory. Complete equipment and instal lation for as low as $5 down. Modernize your present system If your present water heating system, whether fuel or electric, is unsatisfactory, we can modern ize it so that it brings you all the conveniences of the modern elec tric system. Call our office today. ELECTRIC HE ATER JJd own Pacific Power & Light Company "Always at Your Service0