Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, August 04, 1932, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1932.
PAGE THREE
Chaa. Swendlg, manager of Hepp-1
ner Farmers Elevator company, re
turned home from Prairie, Oklaho
ma, the first of the week, having
been absent from Heppner ten days.
Mr. Swendlg'a trip south was to at
tend a family reunion, at which
gathering there were 25 members
' of the clan present He was accom
panied home by his father, John
Swendlg, who will make a visit with
the Heppner relatives.
Mrs. W. P. Mahoney of this city
and Mrs. Geo. Rugg of Pilot Rock,
president of the sate Auxiliary of
the Woolgrowers association, de
parted Wednesday for Portland. The
ladies go to the city In the interests
of the campaign being put on to
push Oregon produots during the
month of September, and will see
to It that Oregon lambs receive the
attention the industry Is entitled to.
Mr. and Mrs, Raymond Ferguson
and children and Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Schwarz enjoyed the week
end on a trip to the coast at Gold
Beach, where the parents of Mr.
Ferguson reside. Returning home
they went south as far as Crescent
City then on north by way of
Grants Pass and Medford to Crater
Lake, arriving home late Tuesday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nickerson
and Adele and Francis returned
Tuesday from the coast. They ac
companied Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Clark
last week and spent -some time at
Port Orford, Gold Beach and Ban
don. Mr Clark who is shearing in
the coast country, will be home
next week.
John Brosnan, who went east the
early part of last week with a ship
ment of lambs for himself and Dil
lard French, returned Tuesday from
Kansas City where he disposed of
the shipment. The top lambs
brought a price of $5.75 on an av
erage weight of 82 pounds.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Turner and
daughters, Miss Jeanette and Miss
Anabel, were week-end visitors in
Portland, returning home late Sat-
urday evening. They were accom
panied by Misa Ruth Misslldine,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mis
sildine of Blackhorse.
Phyllis Jane Pollock, daughter of
Mrs. Glenn Jones, will enter Reed
college at Portland this fall, having
just been notified of her election to
the freshman class of that institu
tion. Miss Pollock was a graduate
of Heppner high school with the
class ol 1932.
Mat Halvorsen, pioneer wheat
raiser of lone, was in town Wed
nesday. He has been laid up for a
time from an injury to his knee, reT
ceived while running a disc. The
cut became infeoted and caused a
lot of trouble, but Mat is much bet
ter now,
Mrs, Laxton McMurray of lone
was a visitor In Heppner Friday.
With her son, Nolan Page and Mrs.
Page, Mrs. McMurray had Just re
turned from a very enjoyable vaca
tion trip into portions of eastern
Oregon and Washington.
W. O. Dix and daughter Virginia
departed Sunday for Portland to
loin Mrs. Dix, who has been attend
ing summer school In the city.
From there they expected to have
a trip along the coast before return
ing home this week end.
Attorney J. J. Nys came home
from the coast Thursday last to
look after his office here. He ex
pects to return to the coast and join
his family now located at Gearhart
where they will be until about the
first of September.
Frank Fraters was n town Tues
day forenoon from the farm on
Kitrht M e. where he is now in tne
midst of combining his wheat, The
crop is turning out pretty good,
Frank says.
Miss Jane Simas of Klmberly is
visiting Mrs. Bonnie Cochran in
Heppner for the week. She came
over from her Grant county home
with her father, Joe Simas.
Mrs. B. G. Sigsbee and daughter
jr.lninn rnme un from Portland on
Sunday. They returned to the city
Wednesday to be at the bedside of
Mr. Sigsbee.
Mrs. D. O. Justus and Mrs. Ralph
Justus were in the city a short
while Tuesday afternoon from the
Justus ranch near the head of Hln-
ton creek.
Mr. and Mrs. 'Fred Mankln of
lone were visitors here Wednesday
forenoon, They state that harvest
with them Is Just getting a goou
start.
Mrs. Frank Riggs, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Clark, arrived
from her home at Eugene Saturday
evening for a visit with her parents
here.
Miles Martin, north Lexington
wheatraiser, is now in the midst of
harvest on his own farm. He was
looking after business here Satur
day.
Tn exrhnniTfi. sot of dual wheels
and tires for !29 Chev. truck, for
u.t nf nlne-ln wheels. 0 30x5 tires.
practlcaly pew. Fred Mankin, lone.
A at.ponz American Fire Insur
ance company desires to appoint!
agent in neppner wrni expciem;
Insurance men. yvrue una pijer.
llnrrv Dlnires. manairer of Lex
ington Farmers. Warehouse, was
looking after business affairs In this
city Wednesday aiternoon,
Mr nnd Mrs. W. B. Barratt are
up from Porland for a visit at the
home of their son, Garnet Barratt,
and family.
For Stiln Fries. 25c each. Wm.
Drlscoll, N. E. Hoppner. 21-23
Hillln
Eclipse .... long one due
The next total eclipse of the sun
will be visible In most parts of New
England! on August 31 this year.
The moon's shadow will pass across
the face of the sun In the afternoon,
about 3:28 o'clock standard time,
and the total eclipse will last for
almost three minutes. Most total
eclipses last only a few seconds, so
astronomers are looking forward to
this one and hoping for clear weath
er. In the expectation that their
photographic Instruments will re.
veal more than is yet known about
the elements which exist in the sun.
Outside of the black disk of the
moon's shadow Which obscures the
sun's face in a total eclipse, huge
flames shoot out, sometimes as far
as 100,000 miles, from the body of
the sun. These are burning gases,
the colors of which, as seen through
the spectroscope, tell what they
are composed of. It is known that
a large part of this flaming mass
which we call the sun is Iron, heat
ed to a point where it vaporizes. Al
most every other mineral found on
earth has also been detected in
these sun gases, but science is still
trying to learn.
Whether the sun is getting hotter
or cooler is a matter of great im
portance to all mankind. A drop of
a few degrees in the average heat
received by the earth from the sun
would mean a return of the Ice Age,
when glaciers a mile thick formed
as far south as Kentucky; an in
crease of a degree or so in sun heat
would start palm trees and sugar
cane growing in Labrador.
Fat
jazz king loses
A couple of years ago the fattest
man in the public eye was Paul
Whiteman, the . famous orchestra
leader, who weighed more than 300
pounds. I dined with the ' Jazz
King" the other night, the first time
I had seen him for several years,
and was amazed to find him weigh
ing less than 200.-
"I eat just as much as I ever did,"
he said, "but I divide up my meals
differently. On the day when I eat
starches, for example, I don't eat
meat or fruit. One day I'll eat only
fruit, another day only meat, It's
the mixing of all kinds of food In
the stomach at one time which
makes fat"
Maybe it won't work for every
body, but the diet system that the
present Mrs. Whiteman worked out
and made Paul adopt before she
would marry him, by the way
certainly has had a great effect in
his case.
Wood . . . worth fortunes
Ever hear of Andiroba? Or Cas-
tanheira? Those are the names of
some of the new kinds of lumber
that have been cut on Henry Ford's
Brazilian rubber plantation, and
which have been brought to the
United States for use In cahinet
making. Other rare and new va
rieties of tropical woods which
may be expected to come into use
for making fine furniture because
of their beauty of color and grain,
and their hardness, are Muiracoa
tiara, Abiu Branco, Massaranduba,
Amargaso, 'Angolim Pedra, Sucu
pira, Mamrella, Pau d'Arco, Jutahy,
Uxy, Tatajuba and Tauba.
The pursuit of new and rare va
rieties of wood fit for the use of the
cabinetmaker is one of the most In
teresting fields of adventure, In
which hundreds of men are engag
ed. A single log which can be cut
for veneers may be worth thous
ands of dollars; a shipload of cer
tain South American woods would
be worth a comfortable fortune;
There are still millions of square
miles of forests which have never
been explored, and the men who
can discover in them new sources
of fine woods can name their own
price, almost, for their finds.
Soil . . . and soilless crops
They've been experimenting with
"soilless" farming at the University
of California, and have proved,
pretty conclusively it seems, that
most crops can be grown without
any soil at all. All that is needed
is water and fertilizer.
All that makes one soil different
from another Is the kind and quan
tity of plant food nitrogen, phos
phoric acid and potash that each
contains. Immense crops of celery,
potatoes, berries, tomatoes and oth
er vegetables are grown in some
parts of Florida where the sandy
soil -contains naturally almost no
plant food. Fertilizers do the work.
It is hardly likely that the staple
crops, wheat, cotton, corn and the
like, will ever be grown commercial
ly except on soils adapted to them
but it is entirely possible that most
of the vegetable and small-fruit
crops of the future will be grown
in wire baskets suspended in water,
in which the essential plant foods
In their proper proportions have
been dissolved.
"Ike" . . with a "double-0"
Up till 1929, for thirty-five years
or so, any letter addressed to "Mr.
Hoover, The White House, Wash
ington," would have been delivered
to "Ike" Hoover, who has been the
major-domo of the Executive Man
sion since the days of President
McKinley. Few people outside of
Washington realize that there are
two Mr, Hoovers in the White
House, for Ike is still on the job,
and the next tenant of the White
House will probably keep him there.
He manages the President's domes
tic arrangements, bosses the cooks,
chauffeurs and servants generally,
and his official title is "steward of
the White House,"
Somebody asked Ike Hoover the
other day who he thought would
be his next boss. He replied:
"I don't know who it is going to
be, but he will have a double 'o' in
his name, the same as mine."
Bruce Barton
writes of
"The Master Executive"
Supplying a wmk-to-WMk inspiration
for the heavy-hardened who will find
every human trial paralleled in the ex.
periencee of "The Man Nobody Know"
In Late Afternoon
It was very late in the afternoon
in Galilee. The dozen men who had
walked all day over the dusty roads
were hot and tired. The sight of
a village was very cheering, as they
looked down on it from the top of
a little hill. Their leader sent two
members of the party ahead to ar
range for accommodations, while
he and the others sat down by the
roadside to wait
After a bit the messengers were
seen returning, and even at a dis
tance it was apparent that some
thing unpleasant had occurred.
Their cheeks were flushed and their
voices angry. Breathlessly they told
it the people in the village had re
fused to receive them, had given
them blunt advice to seek shelter
somewhere else.
The indignation of the messen
gers communicated Itself to the oth
ers. This back-woods village refuse
to entertain their master it was
unthinkable. He was a famous pub
lic character. He had healed sick
people and given freely to the poor.
In the capital city crowds had fol
lowed him.
"Lord, these people are Insuffer
able," one of them cried. "Let us
call down fire from Heaven and
consume them." The others joined
in with enthusiasm. Fire, from
Heaven that was the idea! Make
them smart for their boorishness!
Show them that they can't affront
us with impunity! Come, Lord, the
fire
There are times when nothing In
man can say is nearly so powerful
as saying nothing. Every executive
knows that instinctively. To argue
brings him down to the level of
those with whom he argues; silence
convicts them of their folly; they
wish they had not spoken so quick,
ly; they wonder what he thinks.
The lips of Jesus tightened; his flna
features showed the strain of the
preceding weeks, He needed that
night's rest, but he said not a word.
Quietly he gathered up his gar
ments and started on, his outraged
companions following. It is easy
to imagine his keen disappointment.
. . . Would they never catch a true
vision of what he was about?
Down the hot road they trailed
after him, awed by his silence,
vaguely conscious that they had
failed again to measure up. In the
mind of Jesus the thing was too
small for comment
"And they went to another vil
lage." Eighteen hundred years later an
important man left the White
House in Washington for the War
Office, with a letter from the Pres
ident to the Secretary of War. In a
few minutes he was back in the
White House again bursting with
indignation. The President looked
up in mild surprise. "Did you give
the message to Stanton?" he asked.
"Yes, and he tore it up, exclaim
ed the outraged citizen, "and what's
more, sir, he said you are a fool."
"Did Stanton call me that?" he
asked. . . . "He did, sir, and repeat
ed it." "Well," said the President
with a dry laugh, "I reckon it must
be true then, because Stanton is
generally right"
The angry gentleman waited for
the storm to break, but nothing
happened. Abraham Lincoln turned
quietly to his desk and went on
with his work.
Next Week: "Boyhood Background"
Copyright Bobbs-Merrill Company
TO EXCHANGE.
1300 acres; around 500 farming
land; about 200 acres can be irri
gated and free water rights; most
of it in wild meadow, some in al
falfa. 50 acres of fall rye, excellent,
75 acres of spring wheat not so
good, balance summerfallow and
pasture. All fenced, well watered
with 12 springs and creek. Lots of
water and shade in pasture. Ranch
located 4 miles south of Union, 19
miles from La Grande, county seat,
on Oregon Trail highway, 9-room
house, fireplace, lot of water, shade
and orchard. Excellent site for a
tourist camp. Other outbuildings
fair. Price $30,000 with crop and
(S.
8$
S53
IS,
35
S3
For Women
Traveling Alone
THIS BANK ADVISES;
American Express
Travelers Cheques
t To insure
hep against the loss or theft
of her travel funds,
To provide her with a ready
means of identification.
To assure her the personal
service of the American
Express travel organiza
tion which will care for
her safety and comfort
wherever she may travel.
Vnn rnn secure these
Travelers Cheques a
this Un before,
starting on a trip.
They are issued; iri
convenient denotnin-.
ations and cost only
Ibc for eacn ?iuu.
to
8$
Mrs. C pley
cAnnounces Fall Opening
Studio of iano Inttruftion
September i, 1932
Offering a complete course of piano in
struction, to include :
PRIVATE LESSONS
With a class In History of Music and Music
Appreciation, Two lesBons each week for
$4,00 a month,
PIANO CLASS INSTRUCTION
For beginners. A comprehensive class study
of the beginning principles of the art of
piano playing, including practical keyboard
experience.
MUSICAL KINDERGARTEN
To give the pre-school. child an appreciation
of, and Interest in musio, preparing him for
further study,
PLEASE APPLY EARLY. Phone 623
Put up your fruit
with a NATIONAL
STEAM COOKER
18-qt., $15.00 at
GILLIAM & BISBEE
Go to Gilliam & Bis-
bee's for your FRUIT
PRESSES and JEL
LY GLASSES.
West Bend Alumin
um Ware the brand
that stands the test
FLEX and QUICK
STEP Varnish none
better for floors or re
touching up furni
ture" and bric-a-brac.
GILLIAM
&
BISBEE
We have it, will get it
or it is not made,
equipment $5000 indebtedness;
$16,500 25-year mortgage, 6. Place
is well adapted to dairying, cattle,
and sheep. Wish to exchange for
wheat land. Address Harlan Jones,
La Grande, Oregon. 19-23
MORROW BOY WINS.
C. W. Smith, county agent has
received word from L. J. ALlen, as
sistant state club leader, that Gor
don Akers of Eight Mile was one
of four boys who tied tn the Judg
ing contest in placing dairy cattle
at the recent 4-H club summer
school. The Purina Mills company
of St Louis is awarding Gordon
one of the Purina hand axes in rec
ognition of his proficiency in the
contest
Mrs. Josephine Mahoney Is in
Portland for a stay of a couple of
weeks.
WAREHOUSE SOLD.
At sheriff's sale on Saturday the
Henry Heppner warehouse, more
recently owned by F. R. Brown and
by him sold to Heppner Trading
company, was purchased by the In
terior Warehouse company. The
sale price was $3623.81. Foreclos
ure proceedings were by W. O. Bay
less, who held a mortgage on the
property.
PEACHES Early Crawfords rip
ening Aug. 3 to 15; other varieties
later. Price 2ttc. Edmonds Or
chard, Umatilla. 20-22
W. F. Honey and son John Honey
of Gresham were in Heppner Mon
day on business. Mr. Honey, Sr., is
the owner of considerable land in
this county.
Try a G. T. Want Ad.
Make Each Dollar
Earn Its Keep
Each dollar working releases $10
worth of credit and credit is our na
tion's lifeblood.
MONEY is only of value when
working. Money spent wisely or in
a savings account is working.
YOUR NEST EGG here in a Sav
ings Account earning interest, will
provide ten times as much credit to
local business.
Fir& National Bank
HEPPNER, OREGON
Farmers
and Slockgrowers
National Bank
This is the Season of the Year for
PRESERVING AND
CANNING
FRUITS AND
VEGETABLES
Let us Know Your Needs
'
OUR GENERAL GROCERY STOCK
ALWAYS FRESH AND UP-TO-DATE
PAR
The purest and only concentrated
soap
LARGE Qff
PACKAGE ....Utft
MACARONI
PRUNES
Large 40-50 size
10 LBS 45c
Coff
Edwards' Dependable, vacuum
packed and dated.
2"S 59c
Or SPAGHETTI
Fancy cut
TIN .
.10
LBS.
45c
MALT
Buckeye, the vacuum packed malt;
one of the best and priced very ec
onomically. M TINS.. S1.00
Corn Flakes
Kellogg or Jersey Brands I I
J PKGS.
25c
P. N. Butter
Fresh and economical
23c
Pure full ceam Oregon loaf,
specially priced at
PER
LB. ...
16c
LBS.
CVDI ID Maximum Cane and Maple 10-lb. Tin $1.25
3l KUK Very delicious. 5.1b. Tin . . . 65C
Tpe Gazette Times' Printing Ser- AM
vce is complete. Try It ? t , w r , t , ,
I YV
HUSTON'S
GROCERY
Heppner
Oregon
NO. 10
PAIL .
LARD
74c
Pure hog lard, freah stock
always
Coff
MacMarr. always the best; quality
unsurpassed
3 lbs 89c
FLOUR
Down go the prices!
4Q-LB. SACK OC
"7 MAC MARK J
JO-LB. SACK
" PRIMROSE ...
85c
P"S5E SAYINGS FOR FRI., SAT., HON, AUG. 5, 6, 8, Inc. deliver
1082