PAGE SIX HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1932. IONE (Continued from First Pag) distance who were present were Mrs. Hattie Van Schoiack, her daughter May and her grandson, all from Portland, Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Hamblin and Mr. and Mrs. Ro ble of Hood River, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Van Schoiack and children from Umatilla and Mr. and Mrs. Cleve Van Schoiack of Heppner. Miss Gladys Brashers who has been a student for the past year at the La Grande Normal school, is at home for the summer vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ray motored over last Thursday to bring her home. Miss Myene Lindley has been spending her two weeks' vacation at the Willard Blake country home. Miss Lindley is a sales lady at Liebe's, Portland. James E. Burdett, president of the Oregon Taxpayers' Equaliza tion and Conservation league, and Mr. Galloway, who is also a mem ber of the state league, called on Laxton McMurray, president of the county league, one day last week as they were passing this way after having transacted business in Hepp ner. Mr.- and Mrs. John Bryson and two sons and Mr. Bryson's father, J. H. Bryson, motored to Walla Walla last Sunday. Here the party from lone was met by Mr. and Mrs. Bert Bryson and daughter of Clark ston. Wash. All enjoyed a picnic dinner. Mr. Bryson, Sr., accompan ied his son Bert when he and his family returned to Clarkston, and plans on visiting in their home for two months or more. The annual strawberry feed given by the Masonic brothers was held Saturday evening in the lodge din ing room. The affair was well at tended by members of the order and invited friends, who did full justice to the delicious ice cream and strawberries, cake and coffee. Following the "feed" dancing was enjoyed. Music was by Charley Botts and son Robert Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lovell and three sons from Estacada were ov er the week end visitors at the home of Mrs. Lovell's brother, Lonnie Ritchie in lone and the home of her sister, Mrs. Bob Allstott on Rhea creek. The Lovell's are for mer residents of lone, Mr. and Mrs. La Grande and two children from Richmond; Califor nia, were recent visitors at the home of Mrs. La Grande's sister, Mrs, Clarence Biddle on Willow creek. From here they motored to Baker for a visit with Mrs. La Grande's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Salter. Mrs, Biddle and son Billy and daughter D a r 1 i n e accompanied the La Grandes to Baker. She returned home Sunday. Twelve members of lone Boy Scout troop No. 63, the scoutmaster and several members of the Ameri can Legion and auxiliary motored to Lehman Springs Friday, return ing Sunday. The scouts making the trip were Junior Mason, Denward Bergevin, Harlan McCurdy, Eugene and Harry Normoyle, Ellis Petty john, Maurice Feeley, John Farris, Bobby Morgan, John Ray, Elwayne Lieuallen and Francis Bryson. The scoutmaster is Alfred Balsiger. Others in the party were Earl Blake, William Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bergevin and Betty, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Beckner and Mt. and Mrs, Fred Mankin and two children. The trip was a most enjoyable one. The scouts established a regulation camp. Revielle called them from their slumbers at day break and retreat was the signal for them to retire to their quarters at night They built a bridge which passed inspection, but one member of the party made the statement that swimming and eating seemed to take up most of the boys' time, The camp cooks were Fred Mankin and William (Baldy) Hayes and it is no wonder those boys ate, for the two gentlemen proved themselves to be excellent cooks. Earl Blake acted as life guard. From all mem bers of the party we hear words of praise for the courteous treatment they received from those in charge of the Lehman springs resort, and appreciation of the moderate charges for the accommodations. Mrs. Elmo McMillan and daugh ter of Salem are guests at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E, Swan son. Virgil Esteb who has been spend ing a year in study at Linfleld col to attending grand chapter in Port land this week. Mrs. Homer Lyons of Salem is a guest at the home of her mother, Mrs. Helen Farrens. Handiorafti'rs Meet. The Matteson Handicraft club held a meeting on June 9th in the schoolhouse. The song, "The More We Get Together" was followed by the regular order of business. Un der old business several members reported that all reports were up to date; under new business, mem bers were given copies of 4-H club goals, to be learned for the next meeting. Several are now working on letter racks; others on magazine holders. Demonstrations were prac ticed. One visitor was present The next meeting will be on Thursday, June 23. Edna Hughes, Reporter. EYE DOCTOR COMING. Dr. Clarke, Portland, EYE SPEC IALIST, will be in Heppner, all day and evening, on his regular month ly trip, FRIDAY and SATURDAY, JUNE 17 and 18, at Hotel Heppner. SEE HTM ABOUT YOU EYES. Consultation free. Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Morgan and son Milton were visitors in the city Tuesday from their home at lone. Milton, who suffered a broken arm some time ago, was here to receive attention at the hands of a physician. WRITER SEES SIGNS THAT THE UPTURN HAS BE6UN lege, McMinnville, has returned lone for the summer vacation. Mr. and ,Mrs. Dean Ekleberry, newlyweds, were given an old fash ioned charivari by their friends Monday night at the W. H. Chand ler home where they are staying at present The jolly crowd gath ered at the George Krebs home and went to the Chandler home in body. There were treats and every body had a good time, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ritchie who have been making their home in Heppner for some time have moved back to lone, their former home, Rev. Williams of Condon will speak in the Congregational church Sunday evening, June 26, and not Sunday morning as announced last week Mr. and Mrs. Carl Allyn who have been in light housekeeping rooms in the M. Jordan home have now moved Into the Congregational parsonage, The O. E. S. Social club are lay ing plans for an old fashioned cele bration In lone on July 4th. come and enjoy the day with us. There will be a picnic dinner at noon and races and a ball game In the after noon. A big dance will be given in the evening and during the dance the Social club quilt which is on display in the Bert Mason window will be raffled. School district No. 35 will hold the annual school election on June 20 at the school house. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Grimes and Mrs. Helen Farrens returned Sun day from a pleasant visit with rel atlvea and friends In Hard man. Garland Swanson is spending few days with home folks. He will return shortly to his studies In the Eyerly Aviation school, faalem Mrs. A. A. McCabe, worthy ma tron. and Mrs. J. W. Howk, treas urer of Locust Chapter No. 119, are President's Son ' v :- - if Richard F. Cleveland, whose father, Grover Cleveland, was twice President of the United States, will make the speech in Democratic Na tional Convention nominating Gov ernor Albert C. Ritchie for the Presi- fpr-icv. By CALEB JOHNSON. Up to a very few years ago Stock I Exchange prices interested only a comparatively small number of peo ple. Until the war we had no large class of investors in America. When the war came along and the Liber ty Bond campaigns began, millions of people for the first time paid out money in exchange for pieces of pa per for securities. After the war they found they could sell those securities for something more than they had paid for them. They had n't expected to make a profit when they bought them, but they did make a profit, or at least got their money back. It was easy, then, for bond salesmen and stock jobbers to persuade the same people to buy other securities, and for a while the security markets kept going up, so that speculators could sell at a profit Within a very short time we became almost an entire nation of stock market speculators. And then the bottom dropped out. It dropped out because stock prices had gone up to figures which had no relation whatever to the value and earnings of the compan ies in which they represented shares. The minute international disturbances unsettled internation al trade and the market for com modities suddenly got narrower, re sulting in the slackening of business and industry, shares should, in the ory, have dropped to their actual values. Instead of that, they dropped away below their actual values, and because it necessarily takes a long time to bring about economic re adjustments, and our country alone could not cure the situation, be cause so much of it hinged upon the economic condition of Europe people who had tied up their mon ey in stocks and wanted to get it out began throwing them on the market at whatever price they could get, and that sent the market down still lower. And as is the way of human na ture, people who have thus sudden ly found themselves in a difficult situation have been looking in ev ery direction for a miracle to hap pen that would put them back to where they were without any effort on their own part. The government ought to do something about it" Well, the gov ernment has been trying to do something about it and a very large part of the activities in Washing ton and in the capitals of Europe and in the headquarters of the League of Nations for the past two years has been tne effort to do something about it. But as each step in these governmental and in ternational attempts to restore the economic balance has failed to work a miracle over night, the at titude of the stock market has be come one of distrust of every gov ernmental effort and activity. It must always be remembered that the people who went into the stock market to make money went in with the idea that they could get rich without working. A very few do succeed in doing that, but the great majority of people who play the market always lose in the long run. If, when the market crashed, everybody who owned stocks had just taken his medicine and said, "well, that's that," and forgotten about It, and kept right on work ing at his regular business or his job, we wouldn't have any such dif ficulties as we have been going through. But that, again, is not in accordance with human nature. What the people who set out to make money without working want is something that will restore the fictitious profits which they think they made, or should have made, in that effort. Such a restoration of security prices probably never will come about. It is extremely doubtful whether the present gener ation will ever see the list of Stock Exchange securities selling at such high prices as they were selling in the Spring of 1929, But down In Wall Street they are still looking for miracles to hapepn, and the other day stock and bond prices be gan to go up. What started them up was the announcement that a syndicate of bankers, headed by Thomas W. La mont of J. P. Morgan and Company had raised a fund of $100,000,000 In cash with which to buy good secur ities, bonds and stocks, not for the purpose of speculation, but because they are good investments at the present prices. That was something that Wall Street can understand. It was their At Heppner CHURCHES own people, spending their own monev. who were talking.. This was not some governmental scheme promoted by politicians at Wash ington, but it was the decision of hard-headed bankers that the time was ripe for them to buy. The mere announcement of this program has had a most tremen dous effect upon the psychology of the investing and speculative pub lie. So far as New York and the stock market people are concerned it meant the definite beginning of the upturn. It reassured the peo ple who had been hesitating about buying for fear that prices might go lower, and it encouraged the people who owned depreciated se curities to hold on to them in the belief that their prices will go higher. It was a remarkable example of the psychological effect of a gesture on the part of people in whom the investing public has full confidence. I am writing this because, in the past few days, I have become con vinced that we have not only reach ed the bottom of the depression', but are beginning to come up, but there is no use in expressing an opinion of that kind without some facts to back it up. Too many people have been saying for a long time that the upturn was just around the corner. It is nearer than that now. It is right here. The immediate effect of even a slight rise in the stock market, if the higher prices are maintained is, among other things, to stabilize the value of stock market securit ies as a basis for bank loans. This in turn should enable a great many persons who could use money for productive purposes but have been unable to get it, to obtain loans and so start bank credit into circulation again. The banks have plenty of money but they have not had enough demand for properly se cured loans. A great deal of the recent hesi tation on the part of business and industry about going ahead has been the doubts naturally raised by the political hullaballoo in Wash ington, as to what form of taxation would be adopted in the new rev enue bill. That is all settled. Was the gvernment going to economize? That has been settled. We have bal anced our budget and the govern ment's credit is not going to be un duly strained. There was a lot of undercover talk for a while about the possibility of the United States going off the gold basis. There never was anything to that, but the imagination of a terrified few, but it had its effect in keeping men or big means on the anxious seat, so they were actually afraid to risk their money. That is all over. It is perfectly clear that we are not going off the gold standard. There are two more things which will have to be over and done with before the business and Industry of the nation will get back into full swing. One is the political nomin ating conventions, and after those are over I look for another sharp although perhaps not very prolong ed rise in the stock market. The next is the Presidential election, and, whichever way it goes, it will be regarded as having at least de nned the country's policy for the next four years, and so another element of uncertainty will have been removed. In the meantime, the government al agencies, the Reconstruction Fi nance Corporation, which have been entrusted with the job of loosening up credit and saving some of the railroads and big In dustries from ruin have been doing their Job pretty well. The Federal Reserve Banks are cooperating to the best of their ability under "the law. It has been, In many ways, the most curious depression In that it has been largely a state of mind. There has been a lot of unemploy ment, but almost nothing approach ing actual starvation. A great many people have stopped buying luxuries, and have taken reductions In salaries and wages, but on the other hand there has been a gen eral decline in rents and in almost all commodity prices, so that by comparison with three years ago the living scale of the majority of the people has not been greatly re duced. And I believe that I am perfect ly safe In saying that as I write this, early In June, 1932, the worst Is over, and we can look for fair weather ahead In business and finance, METHODIST CHURCH. GLEN P. WHITE. Pastor. Mrs. C. R. Ripley, Director of Music 9:45 a. m., Sunday School. 11:00 a. m.. Morning worship hour. Message, "Not Looking but Trusting." 7:00 p. m., Epworth League. 8 00 p. m., Song service and gos pel message, "Knowledge of God." No man wants to be a failure in life. He wants to make the great est success possible. The merchant, the doctor, lawyer, all aim to be successful. Surely we ought to strive to be successful Christians. . Salvation means two things: leaving some things and clinging to other things.- When we leave sin and unbelief we enter into Christ; when we leave Christ we enter into sin and unbelief. Many Christians fail because they do not leave their sin when they take their Christian vows. A man can be a success B.t nothing by giving only half time to that work. If we are to be success ful Christiana, we must give Jesus all our heart We must let the world know where we stand on ev ery question. Sinners see Christ, not through "the eye of faith, but through us. We must study our Bibles to re ceive food for our souls. The Bible is a weapon. We need it to fight Satan. If we are successful Chris tians, we must have access to God, We should go to Him with all our problems and sorrows and wait on Him until He speaks back to us. Let us so live that we can hear His welcome words, "Well done, thou good and faithful servant." A welcome awaits you at all our services. to develop one's latent powers and possibilities. But whatever else we may say about it we do not need to surren der to physical affliction. It may handicap us, but it does not neces sarily preclude the possibility of achieving something worth while. The cases cited above are only a few out of a long list of those who bear witness to what may be done under the handicap of bodily distress. "There was given me a thorn in the flesh," says Paul. Yet what a career he achieved in spite of that thorn. If you have been given e thorn in the flesh, you will gain nothing by whimpering and com plaining about it To surrender and give up because of it would be an ignoble thing. Instead of doing either, you should accept the chal lenge of the thorn and in spite of it, prove yourself. Let the thorn be a challenge to prove what you can do, in spite of infirmity. The same grace which was all-sufficient for Paul, is available for every per son, under the shining sun of heav en this hour, the grace of Jesus Christ; with it you can battle thru and win in spite of any thorn in the flesh. - We invite you to come and wor ship with us if you have not a Church home. Be here this Lord's Day for the Bible School and the Communion Servics. Smart Student if "A V 4" J ' Vera Dawson of Mars, Pa., is only 20, but she won the degree of Master of Arts fa -the University of Pitts burgh, finishing a four-year course in three years. Miss Mary Patterson began her vacation fom her duties at the Far mers & Stockgrowers National bank last Thursday. On Friday she and her mother, Mrs. Blanch Patterson, departed by car for Portland and Unalaska, Wash. Miss Evelyn Swendig is supplying for M'ss Patterson at the bank. NOTICE TO WELL DRILLERS. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the City of Heppner, Oregon, will receive bids for the drilling of a ten-inch well for said city, all bids must be filed with the under signed City Recorder not later than June 24th, 1932, at the hour of 7:30 P. M., at which time said bids will be considered. The successful bid der will be required to furnish bond for the faithful performance of the contract. The Council of said City reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Dated June 7th, 1932. E. R. HUSTON, City Recorder, Heppner, Oregon. CHUCH OF CHRIST. JOEL R. BENTON. Minister. Mrs. J. O. Turner, Director of Music. Bible School 9:45 A. M. Morning Worship 11 o'clock Senior and Junior C E 7 o'clock Evening Worship . 8 o'clock Choir rehearsal. Wed. eve., 8 o'clock Church Night Thurs. eve. 8 o'clock In Spite of Infirmity! "There was given to me a thorn in the flesh." 2nd Cor. 12-7. Milton was blind. Beethoven was deaf. Helen Keller was blind and deaf and dumb. Michelangelo had a broken nose. Pope was made so crooked by disease that he was called an interrogation point. Al fred the Great was afflicted with a disease that did not allow him an hour's rest Homer, Virgil, Horace, Pascal, Dante, Cowper, Hawthorne, Car lyle, Bacon, Livingstone and Rus kin were all invalids, semi or con firmed. It is marvellous how many men and women who have achieved great things have been tortured with some physical infirmity. Naturally we regard bodily af fliction as a misfortune; but oft times it is a misfortune which proves to be the shrine of a larger fortune. Often the brightest char acters and the greatest successes come out of physical suffering and mental travail. It seems as though suffering is many times necessary The Season's Choicest Offerings of Vegetables Prepared the way you like them are available any time at the ELKHORN RESTAURANT ED CHINN, Prop. INSURANCE PREMIUMS FINANCED TERMS ARE REASONABLE See FRANK TURNER dime Pavilion : Heppner Fai WVT Saturday JUNE 18 Extra Trousers $3.00 Only When ordered with suit. Regular $7.50, $10.50, $12.00 and up to $18.00 values. TAILORED TO YOUR ORDER BY OFFER ENDS JUNE 30 Th Store of Ptrsonal Service Hinninn Circulate fYour cMoney in Your Own Community You Can't Help Appreciating RED & WHITE QUALITY Quality and Service considered Red & White Food Stores give you More Value per dollar. (We reserve the right to limit quantities.) A few suggestions lor that PICNIC LUNCH as a SATURDAY SPECIAL 1 lb. Pyk. R & W Coffee 33c Potato Chips 5c a pkg. Peanut Butter, 2 lb. jar 29c Any brand Pork & Beans, Sardines, Lunch .. Meats, Pickles all kinds and sizes 10 Pet. Off The weather having turned warmer perhaps a hint of the many articles that might be used in your favorite salad would be appreciated : Mayonnaise Canned Cherries Nuts Salad Dressing Salmon Marshmallows Maraseino Cherries Shrimp Gelatine Dessert Olive Oil I'ineapple Asparagus Paprika Fruit Salad Beets Crab Meat Tuna Fish Peaches Tea Dab's Macaroni Pickles Cabbage Lettuce HI ATT &D IX Quality Always Higher Than Price STAR THEATER Beginning January 1st, all evening admissions 40c for adults and 20c for children. Sunday Matinee at 2:00 p. m., one showing only, 30c and 15c. Show Starts at 8:00 p. m., Doors Open 15 Minutes Earlier THURSDAY and FRIDAY, JUNE 16 and 17: LIONEL ATWILL and GRETA NISSEN In "THE SILENT WITNESS" MYSTERY PLAY Our Gang in FKEE EATS and PATIIE NEWS. SATURDAY, JUNE 18: BOB STEELE In "NEAR THE TRAIL'S END" DRAMA OF THE WEST Also Cartoon Comedy, Voice of Hollywood and Horace Heldt and his fumous ( iilifarnlans. SUNDAY and MONDAY, JUNE 19 and 20: JACKIE COOPER nnd CHIC SALE In "WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A FRIEND" ADAPTED FROM "LIMPY" BY WM. JOHNSON Also Mickey Mouse in BIRTHDAY PARTY, Pathe News and WILD WEST OF TODAY. TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21-22: "SYMPHONY OF SIX MILLION" With IRENE DUNN and RICARDO CORTEZ. FANNIE HURST'S "HUMORESQUE" OF THE TALKIES Also THE NAGGERS GO RITZY and A LESSON IN GOLF COMING NEXT WEEK: Geo. O'Brien and Victor McLuglen In THE GAY CABALLERO, June 23 and 24. Buck Jones In THE RANGE FEUD, June 25. Joan Crawford In LETTY LYNTON, June 26 and 27. Warren WHIIum nnd Sidney Fox In THE MOUTHPIECE, June 28 and 29.