PAGE FOUR
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1932.
BOARDMAN
RACHEL JOHNSON
Mrs. Shell fell from a chair Mon
day and broke both arms and in
jured her back. Mrs. O. H. Warner
gave first aid until her sister came
from Umatilla to take her to the
doctor. At the time of the fall
Mrs. Shell was standing on a chair
reaching for a package on a high
shelf. She will remain in Umatilla
with relatives.
An interesting program was giv
en during the lecture hour at the
Grange meeting Saturday evening.
F. A. McMahon, state policeman of
Arlington, S. E. Notson, district at
torney, and Chas. Smith, county
agent, from Heppner, each gave In
teresting talks. Mrs. Alfred Skoubo
sang a yodeling song. After the
program ice cream and cake were
served.
Miss Lucy Case, nutrition spec
ialist from Oregon State college,
will be in Boardman Friday to dem
onstrate new methods and short
cuts in canning. She will hold the
demonstration in the kitchen of the
school cafeteria from 10 a. m. to
3:30 p. m., Friday, July 22. All the
ladies are invited to attend.
A Grange picnic will be held in
the Red & White camp ground on
Sunday, July 31, to which everyone
is invited.
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Michael and
Autry May and Richard of Port
land, and Mrs. J. H. Johnson of
Wasco were guests several days
last week at the J. R. Johnson
home.
Mrs. Tom Ferraty of Biggs visit
ed last week at the Bottemiller
home at Castle Rock.
Arthur Porter who has been In
Portland for the past two weeks,
had a serious operation on one of
his eyes last week. At the present
time he is getting along nicely and
hopes to be home the last of this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. I. Ellwart and
daughters of DeSmet, Ida., visited
several days last week at the Mike
Cassidy home. Mr. Ellwart is a
brother of Mrs. Cassidy.
Mr. and Mrs. Bauman of Umatil
la visited Sunday at the Alfred
Skoubo home.
Mr. and Mrs. John Jenkins and
Elvira and Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
Packard returned home last week
after a two weeks' motor trip thru
southern Oregon.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Pattee and fam
ily of La Grande spent the week at
the Olson home.
Deibert Johnson, employee of the
Western Union Telegraph company,
spent the week end here with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. John
son. Mr. and Mrs. Bill LaLonde and
Miss Katherine Harper spent sev
eral days last week in Yakima.
Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Allen and sons
of La Grande are visiting this week
at the Jess Allen home.
Mildred Ayers i3 spending this
week at the Rev. W. O. Miller home
in Umatilla.
Mrs. Claude Coats entertained
her Sunday School class of little
folks at her home Thursday after
noon. The party was given in hon
or of Mardel Gorham and Vernon
Russell who had had perfect attend
ance at Sunday School during the
months of April, May and June. I
Those present were Betty and Reva
Bottemiller, Allan Dillabough, Stan
ton Hadley, Chloe Barlow, Asta,
Erna, Elnora and Delmar Skoubo,
Leita and Milton Surface, Gerald
ine Healey, Francis Skoubo, Doris
Blayden and Echo Coats. Games
were played during the afternoon
after which sandwiches, cookies
and punch were served.
Mr. Wendall of Willows came
Monday to take up his duties as
section foreman at Coyote. He is
taking the place of Albin Sundsten.
Mr. Sundsten's future plans are not
definite but he will probably work
on the section at Coyote until there
is an opening at some other place.
Mr. and Mrs. McFarland of Uma
tilla visited Sunday at the home of
Mrs. Shell.
I
nnBsmi
Club Girls on Big Tour. '
Four dresses of their own making
are giving four 4-H girls an educa
tional tour of shrines of American
history which is to cover 3,500 miles
and last for three weeks. Each of
the four was winner in their class
at the national style revue, a fea
ture of the National 4-H Club Con
gress in Chicago last December.
One of them, Annette Yonkelo-
witz, of Hoopeston, 111., was named
national champion. Her winning
dress was a tailored wool outfit. Her
three companions are Louise Mor
gan of Buchana, Ga., who won on a
cotton school dress; Helen Louise
Thomas of Amesville, O., who won
on a semi-tailored silk dress, and
Mary Marley of Ashland, Mass.,
who won on an informal party
dress.
The tour started at Urbana, 111.,
and continued eastward to Wash
ington, D. C, where the party
dropped in at the last day of the
National 4-H Camp. While in this
vicinity the party will visit the
homes of Washington and Jeffer
son. Homes of favorite American
authors are also in the itinerary, as
well as the sites of major engage
ments in the Revolutionary, Civil
and Indian wars. President and
Mrs. Hoover will greet the tourists.
Chaperones are accompanying the
party.
Moving pictures of the party and
scenes enroute on the tour will be
offered for distribution to every 4-H
club in the country later in the
year. In this way club members all
over the country will be able to take
the trip, too.
ON OREGON FARMS
Oregon river bottoms, is proving
successful this season on the Frank
Hall farm near here. This system,
installed through the cooperation
of the Oregon Experiment station
and County Agent C. R. Briggs, is
being used by Mr. Hall to irrigate
10 acres with a supply of water
amounting to only about 70 gallons
per minute. Cost of equipment
was $t50, which is considered ex
ceptionally low for an overhead
system.
Hillsboro Strawberry growers of
Washington county are going ahead
with plans for improvement of their
business next year despite the pres
ent disastrous price season, reports
County Agent W. T. Cyrus. Sever
al growers are making plans to take
advantage of the newly offered cer
tification service for strawberry
plant producers, or will follow meth
ods suggested for developing dis
ease free stock for their own use.
Grass Seed Growers Organize
Astoria A cooperative market
ing organization is being formed in
this county to handle the bent
grass seed of the members. The
capital stock type of organization
has been decided upon as the best
for the local circumstances. Bent
grass seed has become an import
ant seed product in this county
where a type of grass somewhat
different from that in most other
bent grass sections is being grown.
Market demand has been slow for
the past year but it is believed that
a good marketing organization will
aid in moving the crop.
IN OREGON HOMES
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii
At H
eppner
CHURCHES
For Sale, 3 well-broke mules, sev
en and eight years old, weight about
1300 lbs. Zephyl A. Harrison, Top,
Oregon. 17-20
G. T. Want Ads Get Results.
Eugene The Lane County Agri
cultural council which represents
organized farmers here has definite
ly accepted the request of the coun
ty court and Red Cross to assist in
the local relief garden and food
preservation plan. A comprehen
sive program has been worked out
which brings into close cooperation
the extension service forces, the
county court, Red Cross and other
agencies to effect the preservation
of sufficient food to maintain at
least the minimum standard during
the six months non-producing per
iod. Sheridan Farmers of this region
have expanded the area under irri
gation this year. W. H. Brandt has
established some six acres of irri
gation on a new farm he has Just
purchased. He will get the watetr
by gravity from the Old Mill ditch.
O. F. Danials has added four acres
to the land he irrigates from the
same source. S. T. White, county
agent, assisted in establishing
these systems.
Pendleton A movement to estab
lish actual pasture grass demon
stration plantings in dairy regions
of this county has grown out of re
cent meetings held by County Agent
W. A. Holt and Roger W. Morse,
extension dairyman. Plantings of
sweet clover, Iadino clover, meadow
fescue and orchard grass are plan
ned. One planting of sudan grass
has already been arranged. Im
portance of pasture in lower pro
duction costs was emphasized by
the dairymen.
Marshfleld Ground shell to be
used as agricultural lime is now
available at the dock here at $5 per
ton, which is well under the price
of ground limestone shipped in. Lo
cal men interested in agricultural
development assisted by County
Agent George H. Jenkins have car
ried this project through from a
mere idea to a successful coopera
tive industry in which sea shells
are dredged from the bay, ground
and sold direct to farmers.
Corvallis A system of overhead
irrigation for pasture land which
is said to be well suited to uneven
ground such as is found in western
Gresham New Methods of pre
paring familiar foods and sugges
tions for the use of wheat as cereal,
dessert and meat substitute dishes
are given as the most popular foods
and nutrition helps received by
Multnomah county homemakers en
rolled in this project which was su
pervised by Frances Clinton, home
demonstration agent.
Corvallis An eight-page leaflet
giving directions and time tables
for home canning has just been Is
sued from the home economics di
vision of the college extension ser
vice. It contains detailed instruc
tions for canning various vegeta
bles, meats (including poultry and
fish) and fruits, together with ex
plicit time tables for use with the
pressure cooker and hot water bath.
This leaflet is a preprint of a por
tion of Ext. Bui. 450, "Home Food
Preservation," soon to be issued.
The leaflet may be obtained upon
request from any county extension
office or by writing Claribel Nye,
state leader of home economics di
vision, Corvallis.
Scappoose Women of the home
economics unit in Scappose recent
ly sponsored a ways and means
meeting for opening a school cafe
teria in the grade school next fall.
Representatives of various women's
organizations of the town were
present. Mrs. Ada Mayne, nutri
tion director of the Oregon Dairy
Council, outlined possible plans for
this project.
Stanfleld "I use newspapers on
my table when cleaning vegetables
or fowls of any kind, thus saving
the time of having to clean the ta
ble top," writes a Umatilla county
homemaker who believes in plan
ning "short cuts" in her housework.
Corvallis Eleven servings of can
ned vegetables, seven servings of
canned fruit, and two servings of
canned meat per person each week
are provided in the "1932 Canning
and Storage Budget for Western
Oregon Farm Families" recom
mended by the home economics di
vision of the state extension service,
Corvallis. This leaflet suggests the
number of containers of various
products which these farm home
canners should fill in order to re
duce cash expenditures for food
during a non-growing season of 40
weeks as well as other similar infor
mation. It may be obtained by writ
ing the home economics extension
service, Corvallis.
CHUCH OF CHRIST.
JOEL R. BENTON, Minister.
Mrs. J. O. Turner, Director of Music
Bible School g: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
Not Genius But Work.
"Arise therefore, and be doing."
I Chron. 22-16.
This was David's parting word to
his son, Solomon, who was to suc
ceed him on the throne of Israel.
Solomon was a gifted, brilliant
yung man, who might be tempted
to rely on his wit rather than work.
That would mean failure. There
fore it was indeed wise counsel his
father gave him when he said:
"Arise therefore, and be doing."
Wit, shrewdness, craftiness, with
out work, never accomplish any
thing. We are very fortunate in
any degree of genius we may pos
sess, but if we depend on our gen
ius rather than our industry, we
are destined surely to fail. If we
think, we shall remember we have
seen many a brilliantly endowed
man surpassed by the man of plod
ding industry.
Genius is not to be altogether dis
counted. Without a certain degree
or genius, no amount of labor could
nave produced a Shakespeare, a
Newton, a Beethoven, or a Michel-'
angelo. But some of the greatest
of men have been the least believ
ers in the power of genius. They
have been men of toil and persever
ance, holding on with indomitable
will to their objective.
Back of all success and achieve
ment lies an astonishing amount of
incessant toil. It may sometimes
seem that men are succeeding and
accomplishing things with very lit
tle effort, but this only seems so. If
ever there was a man who could do
things with ease and facility of
touch, it was Sir Walter Raleigh.
Yet it was of Raleigh that Queen
Elizabeth said: "He could toil ter
ribly." Whatever genius successful men
may possess, yet they depend on
their work more than on their gen
ius. When asked for the secret of
his success, Turner, the great paint
er, replied: "I have no secret but
hard work."
Not genius, but work, hard work,
accounts for most of our successful
men. And moreover, the greater
part of the contributions to the good
of the world stands credited more
to hard work than to exceptional
genius.
And successful Christian living
is not genius, but constant, loyal,
consecrated HARD WORK. No
person ever lived a successful Chris
tian life by sitting down to sigh, or
to sing themselves away to ever
lasting bliss; nor by going about
with head in the clouds, in a sort of
rarified, super-critical attitude re
member It was the Pharisee that
set the fashion for that sort of
thing; and suffered stinging rebuke
from Jesus Christ.
There are folks today taking
glad advantage of the present world
situation to weep and wail them
selves into places of ease and do
nothing. The Old Testament gives
us the word for success: "Arise
therefore, and be doing." Jesus
Christ said: "Be ye doers of the
Word and not hearers only." To
be a successful Christian one must
WORK at the Job all the time!
Do you have a Church home? If
not, then we invite you to come and
worship with us. In our Bible
School you will find just the inter
esting class for yourself; and in the
deeply Spiritual, yet friendly atmos
phere of our services of worship,
you will find what you need most
for the upbuilding and maintaining
of Spiritual Morale. For the com
ing Lord's Day the sermon topics
are: For the morning service,
"Christ the Saviour." For the eve
ning service Miss Ruth Benton, a
returned missionary from the In
terior of China, will speak. This
will be a most interesting and
worth while opportunity to learn of
missionary problems and situations
in China.
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, "Jesus' First Sur
prise." 7:00 p. m., Epworth League.
8 p. m., Song service and gospel
message, "The Glory of Going On."
Wisdom and understanding
these are the principal things, not
riches, not knowledge, not comforts,
not happiness. All these have their
desirable sides, but wisdom is above
them all and points the way to get
ting the best and most they offer.
James declared that those who
lacked wisdom were to seek it from
God. If we stop and consider the
problems of the present time, with
Him whose ways are not our ways
and whose thoughts are not your
thoughts, we shall gain wisdom not
to be had by reading the daily pa
per. Because we live In a day of
crisis, when our generation is stand
ing at the fork of the roads and
must by its choice determine the
way for those who are to come af
ter us, it is vital that we should
seek that wisdom which is alone
the gift of God. The wise man fears
God and works righteousness and
only he is wise. "Happy is the man
that findoth wisdom and the man
that getteth understanding." Prov.
3-13.
"Sho is more precious than ru
bies, r.nd all the things thou canst
desire are not to be compared un
to her." Prov. 3-15.
FOREST FACTS
Rlnndhnnnds are being success
fully used by the U. S. Forest serv
ice in tracking down ana appre
hending incendiaries In the nation
al forests of the eastern states.
All the crops in the United States
annually remove about 6 billion
pounds of plant food rrom we sou,
while erosion, largely man-caused,
mom 21 times as much each
year, says the U. S. Forest service.
On July 1 a total of 154 employees
Hot Oil, Shampoo, Marcel, $1.00
Special. Coxen & Chapin, phone
1112.
A picture everyone should see
THE WET PARADE Star Thea
ter, Sunday and Monday.
3 years for S5 where can you get
more for your money? The G. T.
STATIC - " By Albert T. lieUi
YO U HtA.RD ME TELLYo
The Season's
Choicest
Offerings of
Vegetables
Prepared the way
you like them
are available
any time
at the
ELKHORN
RESTAURANT
ED CHZNN, Prop.
of the U. S. Department of Agricul
ture was retired from duty under
terms of the recent economy act
These men and women had reached
the government retirement age.
In order to prevent confusion
with the Crater Lake National park
President Hoover on July 9 changed
the name of the Crater National
forest to the Rogue River National
forest. This forest is located In
southern Oregon with headquarters
at Medford.
Try a Gazette Times Want Ad.
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HELL
25,000 miles in circumference
Is it burning now? Will it purify
the soul and make it ready for
Heaven? The Bible is clear on this
subject, and all of these questions
will be answered
SUNDAY, July 24
At 7:45 P. M.
Big BrownTent
North Main Street, Heppner
All are Welcome.
J. M. NERNESS, Bible Lecturer Bring the Children
Lexington Farmers
Warehouse Company
Dealers in Flour, Poultry and Dairy Feeds
Sperry's "SHURE LIVE" and Scratch Food for Baby Chlx.
ALSO ALL STOCK FEEDS.
General Warehouse Storage and Custom Grinding.
LEXINGTON, OREGON
Don't Take a Chance
insure Grain NOW!
See FRANK TURNER
Circulate Your cMoney in Ofour Own Community
Wheat Harvest
NOW ON-
At this store you will be able to supply
all needs for staple groceries. Then, too,
you can have the best of the season's of
ferings in all fresh fruits and vegetables.
GET YOUR HARVEST NEEDS HERE
SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY ONLY
FLOUR Per Sack $1.00
2-Lb. Jar PEANUT BUTTER 29c
1 Lb. Red & White COFFEE 33c
Blue & White COCOA 16c
2 Bars Soap, 1 sherbert glass free 20c
2 Blue & White Broken Slice Pineapple .... 35c
1 Pint Red & White MAYONNAISE 24c
HI ATT &D IX
Quality Always Higher Than Price
STAR THEATER
HEPPNER, OREGON
Admission, Children 10c, Adults 25c, for those coming in before nine
o'clock. After 9:00 p. m., admission will be 20c and 40c.
Show Starts 8:00 p. m. Doors open 7:45
FRIDAY and SATURDAY, JULY 22 and 23:
KEN MAYNARD In
"Range Law"
Live wire Western.
Also Our Gang in SPANKY; ATHLETIC DAZE, Sport Review,
PATHE NEWS REEL
SUNDAY and MONDAY, JULY 34 and 25:
"The Wet Parade"
Based on the. book by Upton Sinclair.
True to life picture of liquor In America. Propaganda for
neither wet nor dry. A picture everyone should see whether tem
porate, prohibitionist or for booze. Light thrown on a national
problem.
Also Mickey Mouse Cartoon, Travelogue and Putho News.
Th Store of Personal Service C