HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1932.
PAGE THREE
X
RHYTHM
Looking back, the record would
be something like this:
Unbounded optimism; "new era";
everything's going to be all right
Collapse; disillusionment
Fear.
Fear compels thought "The fear
of the Lord," says the Bible, "is the
beginning of wisdom." Until we
are thoroughly scared we do not
start to recover.
Congress was thoroughly scared
when it convened last December,
and it has been the most sensible
Congress in a long time. Business
has been thoroughly scared, and
more constructive business think
ing has been done than for many
years. Bankers have been thor
oughly scared, and we shall have a
sounder banking system.
The greatest impression that this
experience has made on me is a
fresh realization of the rhythm of
human existence. The race does
not move in a straight line forward
and up, much as we should like to
think so. It swings.
It swings too far to the left
bumps its nose, and swings back,
too far to the right In the course
of these great swings it edges for
ward. But most of us fail to sense the
rhythm. We are looking for a fix
edness, a finality which does not
exist. We do not realize that
change is the one unchanging fact
In the universe; that because a
situation is so today is the one sure
reason why it will not be so tomor
row. In these depression periods we
question everything. We probe
with doubts. We react And the
reaction is beneficent.
For twenty-five years we wor
shipped "scientific progress." Now
we wonder whether a lot of this so
called progress did not consist
merely of filling up the world and
speeding it up. We begin to won
der whether less things and more
thinking may not lead to the hap
pier life.
In education we have been devot
ed to the practical, to training men
and women to do things. We are
swinging back to the old fashioned
idea that education is an enrich
ment of the spirit and not a filling
of the brain.
In government we have multi
plied laws and bureaus and taxes.
Now the worm is turning. The tax
payer rebels; government must
simplify, deflate.
We had a great period of misdi
rected idealism, a passion for edu
cating everybody, "improving" ev
erything, enlightening the world.
Now we are beginning to suspect
that the older civilizations have
fully as much to teach us as we
have to teach them.
Action and reaction, ebb and flow,
trial and error, change this is the
rhythm of living. Out of our over
confidence, fear; out of our fear,
clearer vision, fresh hope. And out
of hope progress.
r Imam)
MARKHAM
I went to Carnegie Hall the oth
er night to the celebration of the
eightieth birthday of Edwin Mark
ham, the poet. A spry little old
man with white whiskers, he was
as vivacious as a schoolboy, as he
read some of his own verses from
the platform,
Markham's most famous poem is
"The Man with the Hoe." I believe
that poem has done more harm, in
implanting a false social theory in
the minds of impressionable youth,
than anything that has been writ
ten In our time. For this poem is
based upon the theory that the toil
er in the fields is unintelligent be
cause he has been forced by the
more fortunate part of society to
be a toiler. Everybody who works
with his hands, according to the
Markham theory, is a victim of cap
italistic oppression, whereas the
records of humanity from the be
gininng of time prove that intelli
gence has always lifted its posses
sors out of the ranks of toilers, as
it lifted Lincoln,
SHORTHAND
If I had a son with intelligence
enough to take advantage of oppor
tunities, I would see1 to it that he
became an expert stenographer
while still a boy, whatever else he
might study.
I was reminded of this field of op
portunity the other day when I sat
on a platform in New York where
"Al" Smith and Mayor "Jimmy"
Walker were the principal speak
ers, and George B. Cortelyou was
chairman of the local centennial
celebration In Union Square. Geo.
Cortelyou started life as a stenog
rapher. He was a young man of
unusual intelligence. Mr. Cleve
land wanted another stenographer
at the White House and young Cor
telyou was sent to him. He was
promoted to executive clerk by Mr.
Cleveland, then President McKin
ley made him first assistant secre
tary, and then secretary, and Pres
ident Roosevelt continued him as
his secretary. When the Depart
ment of Commerce and Labor was
created, George Cortelyou was the
first man to hold a cabinet posi
tion as Its head. Then he was Postmaster-General,
Secretary of the
Two,,, n rH f!hAirmn.n of the Re
publican National committee. And
for the last twenty-mree years ne
has been president of the Consoli
dated Gas companies of New York,
and one of the city's most influen
tial and respected citizens.
AnH he is onlv one of many suc
cessful men I know who started
life as stenographers.
JOBS
The "War Against Depression"
campaign, backed by the American
Legion, the Federation of Labor
,i Mm AannHatlon of National Ad
vertisers, has got more than half
way toward Its goal, inese ener
started out in Febru
ary to put a million men back at
work. They nave aireaay iouiiu
jobs for over half a million.
Another thing that they've found,
,m,.v. a ennd manv wise people ex
pected they would find, Is that there
hps nhnnt as many men out of work
who don't want Jobs as there are
who really need tnem. we ar
learning for the first time the true
extent of America's leisure class.
New York Central started twenty
hour trains on the same day. I went
out on the first Pennsylvania train
and came back on the New York
Central's new speeder, as a news
paper reporter.
Later, the running time between
these two cities was cut to eighteen
hours, but the twenty-hour sched
ule was restored during the war.
Now they have got it shortened
again, and the other day I saw the
start of the new eighteen-hour train
out of the Pennsylvania Terminal
in New York.
I think, and I found' some rail
road officials who agreed with me,
that one of the next big things af-.
ter we get back to normal econom
ic conditions will be such an im
provement in road beds, rolling
stock and motor power that a 15
hour schedule between New York
and Chicago will be possible. Many
trains on short stretches of perfect
track now go at ninety miles an
hour. It is only a matter of money
to maintain such a schedule for the
990 miles than separate Lake Mich
igan and the Atlantic.
cows .
My country neighbors who sell
SPEED
Thirty years ago, on June 15, 1902,
I travelled from New York to Chi
ooTi on thn first reeular train that
ever made that trip In twenty
hours. The Pennsylvania and the
AMERICA'S MOST CHARM
ING LADY SPEAKER IS
CHAUUTAUQUA HEAD-LINER
Miss Lethe Coleman Speaks on
"Courage"
This Girl's Handy With Tools
lilli-lfc Mgt!"'1'""'" !Z'"m zM&$s
Is ,f,-v-.-!.i, r-T-sy i mm&m
Peggy Stengel, 17-year-old redhead of Pittsburgh, earns pin-money by
whittling little ships,' houses, etc., and putting them together inside of
bottles,
milk are having the blues. They
are only getting about three cents
a quart now, which is less than it
costs to produce the milk.
The explanation is that dairying
has been, in many regions, the most
profitable farm operation for the
past few years, so everybody is go
ing into it and there are too many
dairy cows. Farmers who depend
on dairy products alone are finding
themselves in the same position as
those who depend on wheat, or cot
ton, or tobacco alone. The only far
mers I know who are not in trou
ble are the ones who grow a little
of this and a little of that, who
keep a few cows, a few pigs, a small
flock of hens, a small orchard and
a small berry patch, and approach
the agricultural problem from the
point of view that the first thing
they must get off the farm is their
own living, and then if they can
get any cash for their surplus they
are that much ahead.
There are exceptions, of course,
but they are mostly, so far as I
know anything about them, farm
ers who haven't had to borrow mon
ey on their land or their livestock
and so don't have any interest to
pay.
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
To the Republican Voters of Mor
row County: I hereby announce
that I will be a candidate for the
nomination to the office of County
Commissioner at the Primary Nom
inating Election, May 20. I prom
ise, if I am elected, I will do all in
my power to cut the expenses of
the county and carry on the work
to the best of my ability and for
the benefit of the' taxpayers.
CREED OWEN.
(Paid Advertisement)
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
To the Republican Voters of Mor
row County: I hereby announce
that I will be a oandidate for the
nomination to the office of County
Commissioner at the Primary Nom
inating Election to be held May 20,
1932. ARNOLD PIEPER.
(Paid Advertisement)
So universally popular is Miss
Lethe Coleman on the Chautauqua
nlntfnrm that the management of
the Associated Chautauqua Com
pany, America s largest Chautau
qua institution, is repeating Miss
Coleman over the circuit this year.
Miss Coleman has the reputation
of being the best looking, smart
oat, drpsspd. and most personally
attractive woman speaker on the
popular platform in America, fene
is a university graduate and in
.tructor who has taken up plat
form speaking in response to de
mands from her friends in all
parts of the United States and
Canada. So insistent have the
calls become that she has left al'.
other work to devote her time co
this.
For the coming season she has
prepared a new address on "Cour
age," which sounds an optimistic
note to the men and women, boys
and girls, who have been buffeted
about by the financial difficulties
of the past two or three years.
In the address she is reminding
people again of the trials and diffi
culties that have faced America in
past decades, not only during the
time of the pioneers, but during
the time of the pestilences, panics,
finna nd droutrhts. which the
n.on,n,nfliora nnd Grandmothers,
and fathers and mothers of the
nresent generation overcame.
No one can hear Miss Coleman
in her nresent address and not feel
a little more optimism and a little
determination to conquer the
present difficulties. Her very
presence itseir radiates a gumm
warmth and hei address is a cmr
ion call to renewed progress, in
dividually and collectively.
High School Athletes
At Corvallis This Week
Oregon State College, Corvallis,
May 3. A host of outstanding high
school athletes representing all
parts of the state will arrive here
this week end for the sixth annual
Oregon state high school track and
field meet Saturday.
The athletes and their coaches
will be housed in the halls and fra
ternities. Tom Bruce of La Grande,
chairman of the reception commit
tee, has completetd all details to
assure every comfort for the visit
ors. Preliminaries will be run off at
10 o'clock Saturday morning in the
100-yard dash, 120-yard high hur
dles, 220-yard dash, 220-yard low
hurdles, shot put, discus, javelin,
and broad jump.
Events in the afternoon program
will be the 100-yard dash, pole
vault, high jump, discus and shot
put, all at 2:00; mile run, 2:10, 220
yard dash, 2:25; 120-yard high hur
dles 2:40; 440-yard run, 2:55; jave
lin, and broad jump, 3:10; 220-yard
low hurdles, 3:15; 880-yard run,
3:20, and half mile relay, 3:30.
Points will be given the same as
last year with five for first place
winners; four, second; three, third;
two fourth and one fifth. Points in
the relay will count the same as in
the other events.
Prizes will consist of gold med
als for first place winners; silver,
second, and bronze, third. Plaques
will be awarded the schools plac
ing first, second and third in the
meet and also the winning relay
team. The Windnagle cup will be
presented the winner of the half-
mile event
Ralph O. Coleman, director of in
tramural athletics here, will be
starter of the meet
FOR COUNTY SCHOOL
SUPERINTENDENT.
I hereby announce that I will be
a candidate for the nomination to
the office of County School Super
intendent at the May Republican
Primary Nominating Election to
be held May 20, 1932,
MRS. LUCY 28, RODGERS.
(Paid Advertisement)
FOR SHERIFF.
To the Republican Voters of Mor
row County: I hereby announce
that I will be a candidate at the
Primary Election, May 20, 1932, for
the office of Sheriff of Morrow
County to succeed myself.
C. J. D. BAUMAN.
(Paid Advertisement)
FOR COUNTY CLERK.
To the Republican Voters of Mor-
Phoenlx Homemakers of the
Phoenix extension unit won the Or
egon label contest by turning in 484
varieties of labels from Oregon pro
ducts which they had used since
March 25. Applegate homemakers
with a total of 315 varieties ranked
second. One member of the Phoen
ix unit collected 220 labels. The
contest marked the close of a series
of meetings on Oregon products
conducted cooperatively by Lucy A.
Case, nutrition specialist in exten
sion, and Mabel C. Mack, Jackson
county home demonstration agent
Prizes of Oregon products were
awarded.
POLITICAL
Announcements
FOR REPRESENTATIVE, 22ND
DISTRICT.
I am a candidate for the nomin
ation for Representative, 22nd Rep
resentative District, comprising
Gilliam, Morrow, Sherman and
Wheeler counties, subject to the
will of the Rcpubican voters at the
Primary Nominating Election, May
20, 1932.
EDWARD E. RUGG,
(Paid Adv.) Heppner.
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
To the voters of the Republican
Party:
I hereby announce myself as a
candidate for the office of County
Commissioner at the Primary Nom
inating Election to be held May
20th, 1932.
FRANK S. PARKER.
(Paid Advertisement)
row County: I hereby announce
thiit I will be a candidate for nom
ination to the office of Clerk of
Morrow County at the Primary
Election to be held May 20, 1932.
PAUL M. GEMMELL.
(Paid Advertisement)
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
To the Republican Voters of
Morrow County: I hereby announce
that I will be a candidate to suc
ceed myself for the office of coun
ty commissioner at the primary
election to be held May 20, 1932.
G. A. BLEAKMAN.
(Paid Advertisement)
FOR COUNTY CLERK.
I hereby announce to the voters
of Morrow county that I will be a
candidate for the office of County
Clerk on the Republican ticket at
the Primary Nominating Election
to be held May 20th, 1932.
GAY M. ANDERSON.
(Paid Advertisement)
Henry J. Bean
Present Chief Justice of the Su
preme Court. Formerly circuit
judge and district attorney in Pma-
tllla and Morrow counties.
Candidate for reelection as jus
tice of the Supreme Court Position
No. 2 on the nonpartisan Judiciary
ballot. Election May 20, 1932. Re
publicans, Democrats and others
all vote together for supreme court
Judges,
Asks the support of old and new
friends of all parties In Morrow
County.
(Pnlrt Advcrtlspmi'nt)
"I Had to Take Some
Kind of a Laxative
Every Day, ' ' He Says
"This new 8ariron
treatment brought me
the irt and only re
lief I ever ot for
stomach trouble and
constipation that 1
suffered with tor
twenty years. I had
to take some kind of
pursatlva nearly ev-
cry night.
"Four bottle ol
Snrgon made me feel
like a new man. I now
eat with a hearty bp
petite and the Fills legulated me thor
oughly. I am now In bettor shape phy
sically than I have been In twenty
years." Myron P Harwood. 70 Lenox.
Rochester. N. Y.
What Sargon did for Mr Itnrwood It
has done for many thousands of other
grateful men and women throughout
America. No wonder it Is called the
medtclut with a million frlendal
I tm -mmm
Ik A :M
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Because MILLIONS
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GOODYEAR
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30x4.50
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28x5.25
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30x5... If .45 14.08 (2.00
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32x6.. 26.50 25.50 3.20
36x6 29.20 28.20 3.35
34x7.... 36.40 35.30 4.35
38x7 ... 39.60 38.40 4.75
Heppner Garage
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GOOD USED TIRES
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FOB SHERIFF.
I wish to announce to the voters
of Morrow County that I am a can
didate for Sheriff on the Republi
can ticket
I was born in Morrow county and
expect to die in Morrow county.
But while I live I wish to mingle
with, and serve Morrow county peo
ple. If it Is the will of the voter to
elect me. I will serve to the best of
my ability, enforcing the law at all
times. GLEN R. HA-DLEY,
Board man, Oregon.
(Paid Advertisement)
Earl Bronaugii Jr.'
for
Attorney General
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
Fifteen years legal experience la Ore
gon . . . Three sessions in Oregon
Legislature ; . . Born and educated
in Oregon : : .World War Veteran;
MY PUDGE:
FULL EFFICIENCY WITH
STRICT ECONOMY
CPald Aer.)
LA
Vote for
JJ, J.O.BAILEY
I r TJ (Stat Senator)
yL h j Supreme Court Judge
( 4 J Foaition Ma S
. Qualified Vigorous Ptogttssin
jr. Is oonsclantloue and haa the conf Idenee
f. V ni reepect of all the people.
iAAa aA PaM A4v.
N ' -V i '
'-.fr
1 ' ,
Sa.
She is Remembered
V.
Mother's Day is Sunday, May 8. ;'
Go to her if you can.
But if you cannot, what is more truly personal than
your voice?
Counties, states, oceans are spanned readily and clearly.
How much your voice will mean to her ... on Mother's
Day and many another day.
The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company
MacMarr Stores, Inc. wVSd
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100
LBS
SUGAR
FUSE FINE CANE
$4.85
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95c
MAC MARS XAXO WKEA.T
49-LB.
BAG .
TIOEB LILT BLEWBED
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Prices Effective Friday -Saturday -Monday, May 6-7-9
PRUNES 10 lbs. 55c
25lbs.U5
Largt 40-3O of frash pack
Oragon drlad pruna
jfv at afe Amerioa'a fin. a. aaaf
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BACON per lb, I7icruci:cc il iq
Raal Eastarn corn fad, mdlum weight, vry laan VilCCOEa IDs IOC
COFFEE
MacMarr 3 lb. 85c
Airway 3 lbs. 59c
Li I Eastarn mad
laOrn ivteai h it or ytllow
9-lb. Bag . . 29c
Be
ans
Mexican Red or
O. N. White
10"39c
Canned Goods Sale
No. 1 CORN, PEAS, ST. BEANS, TOMATOES
Ho, 24 KRAUT, HOMINY
IOTins.I.OO
Brook&eld Mild Flavor
OYSTERS l"Xp'k
SALMON 3liMA,"k
10 Tins . . $I.OO
Li A I T AMERICAN BRAND
IV1 MLI Lrg. tin
3 large tins $I.OO
Sell 3 (J a)ll r'"9 yUr Wn COnta'n,r
Per Qt. 29c Per Gal. 98c
Toilet Tissue 9 '" 49c
Lirg. roll, fin quality