Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, August 25, 1932, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUG. 25, 1932.
PAGE THREE
Mr. and Mrs. John Anglin, daugh
ter Rachel, Mr. Sowers, father of
Mrs. Anglin, and Marie Scrivner
returned Saturday afternoon from
Portland where Mrs. Anglin un
derwent an operation for removal
of a goiter. Mrs. Anglin is doing
very nicely. On their way to Port
land they crossed the Columbia
over the Bridge of the Gods and
traveled down the Washington side
to Vancouver, stopping long enough
at Beacon mountain to climb to its
top. This was well worth the ef
fort, Mr. Anglin said, the mountain
being two miles high by the path
and affording a wonderful view
from the top. From Portland they
motored to Hillsboro, Forest Grove
and Banks where relatives of Mrs.
Anglin reside. Mrs. Anglin went to
school In Banks In her girlhood
days and she enjoyed visiting rela
tives whom she had not seen in 20
years. The old house where the
Sowers family made their home was
visited. On the way, home the Mt
Hood loop was traversed, the route
being described by Mr. Anglin as
most gorgeous. "But say," said the
Angllns, "we were sure glad to get
back to Heppner."
J. W. Maloney, democratic nom
inee for state treasurer, came over
yesterday from his home at Pen
dleton and spent some time shaking
hands with friends here. Judge Ma
loney had just returned from Chi
cago where he attended the su
preme lodge, Knights of Pythias, as
official delegate from the Oregon
domain. He said the Pendleton
lodge Is completing a new hall
which they expect to dedicate this
fall.
George A. Klinski, representative
of a Portland company which re
claims old gold, silver and platin
um, was a business visitor in Hepp
ner the first of the week. This type
of business is popular at the present
time, Mr. Klinski said, as people
are afforded a means of turning In
to cash their old jewelry, tooth fill
ings and numerous other articles in
which the precious metals are used.
J. B. Huddleston, who served a
long stretch as local agent of the
O.-W. R. & N. company, but who
some years since retired to the
sheep ranch near Lone Rock to take
a lesson In the Intricacies of sheep
raising, was transacting business
in the city the first of the week,
looking hale and hearty. He was
accompanied by his sister, Miss
Bess Huddleston.
Take advantage of the new low
prices on Permanent Waves, $3.50
and up. Coxen & Chapin, phone
1112.
Piano owners: In the future I
will make regular trips to Heppner
and will be in position to take care
of tuning and other work needed
on your piano. Will give same sat
isfaction as in the last 15 years 1
have served this territory. Orders
may be left at Gazette Times office.
Jack Mulligan, Pendleton Music
House, Pendleton, Ore. 23-24p.
E. A. Back of the bureau of en
tomology, U. S. department of agri
culture, Washington, D. C, who is
studying insects affecting wheat,
corn and wool, and Perez Simmons,
of Fresno, Calif., who is conducting
dried fruit Insect Investigations,
were in Heppner yesterday morn
ing on a field tour.
George F. Thompson of Walla
Walla and Andy Rose, Pendleton,
representatives of the Walla Walla
Grocery company, were transact
ing business in the city Tuesday.
Mr. Thompson is president of the
Walla Walla Lions club and was In
terested In the progress of Lionism
here.
Make that appointment now for
that Permanent Wave. $3.50 and
up. Coxen & Chapin, phone 1112.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Bloom
arrived in the city Friday after
noon to take up their residence in
the Jones apartments. Mr. Bloom,
city superintendent of schools, at
tended school at the University of
California, Berkeley, for most of
the summer.
Dr. Fred E. Farrlor motored
over from Pendleton the end of the
week and. visited with friends. He
was accompanied home by Mrs.
Farrior who had been a guest for
a week at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
W. P. Mahoney.
Henry L. Sulste and mother were
In Heppner yesterday from their
farm in the Pilot Rock territory, at
tending to business In connection
with making final proof on a home
stead taken up by Mr. Suiste in this
county.
Our wonderful Pine Oil Wave for
only $4.60. Coxen & Chapin, phone
1112.
F. M, Akers, Eight Mile wheat
raiser, was transacting business in
the city yesterday. With, harvest
over he Is among those who would
appreciate a perceptible rise in
the market price for his commod
ity. Mr. and Mrs. Walter La Duslre
returned to their home at La
Grande Monday, after an over
week end visit at the home of Mrs.
La Dusire's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
R. W. Turner.
Henry Smouse of lone, president
of Morrow County Grain growers,
transacted business in the city the
first of the week. He reported har
vest over with a fair yield.
Mlsa Mae Gentry, queen of the
rodeo, underwent a tonsllcctomy at
Hoppner hospital Monday, from
which she Is reported to be mak
ing good recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Cason were
down from their mountain farm
home the end of the week doing
some trading.
Mrs. P. W. Mahoney returned
home Saturday from a visit of sev
eral weeks at the home of her par
ents at Albany.
For unusual bargains In new and
used pianos write Pendleton Music
House, Pendleton, Ore. 23-24p.
Mrs. Mary Reid returned home
Saturday after a visit of several
weeks at Seaside.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pet
erson at Heppner hospital Sunday,
a 9-pound boy.
Have that Permanent Wave for
Rodeo, $3.50 and up. Coxen & Cha
pin, phone 1112.
See S. H. Shannon for cabbage
for kraut 24-25p
Piccard
up he goes
Professor Piccard has been high
er above the earth than anyone else
ever went and came back. He
thinks he can go even higher to ex
plore the stratosphere.
If the Professor went high
enough, beyond the layers of gases
which travel with the earth in its
revolutions, he could stand still In
space and let the earth revolve un
der him, coming down thousands
of miles from where he went up.
He would have to go at least sixty
miles up, however, instead of ten,
and even then his balloon proba
bly woud still be within the range
of the earth's attraction and would
travel with it.
It is not beyond the realm of pos
sibility, however, that travelers of
the future, wanting to get to the
other side of the world in a hurry,
may just go up a hundred miles or
so and let the earth move under
them at the rate of a thousand
miles an hour until the spot they
want is under them.
That sounds fantastic now, but
no more so than any kind of air
navigation sounded a hundred years
ago.
Marconi
achievement
Senator Guglielmo Marconi, the
inventor of wireless telegraphy, an
nounces that he has been success
ful in developing an ultra-short ra
dio wave which follows the curva
ture of the earth.
Marconi, unlike some other in
ventors, has always been careful in
his public statements. He never
announces that he has something
until he has actually tried and
proved it, and he never makes pre
dictions unless he knows they are
going to come true very soon.
This new discovery is of import
ance because it means that radio
communication is going to be more
reliable and less expensive. The
shorter the radio waves, the less In
terference there is from Btatic and
other causes.
Marconi told me several years
ago we have been friends for thir
ty years and more that it would
not be long before radio reception
would be perfect at all distances
and under all atmospheric condi
tionB. His newest discovery is a
For Women
Traveling Alone
THIS BANK ADVISES:
American Express
Travelers Cheques
T
Ao insure
her 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.
You can secure these
Travelers Cheques at
this ban before
starting on a trip.
They are issued in
convenient denomin
ations, and cost only
75c for each $100.
Farmers
and Stockgrowers
National Bank
step in that direction and probably
what he had in mind.
Silk
. Japan resumes
I lunched the other day with the
head of one of the largest mercan
tile firms in the world. He told me
something which illustrates perfect
ly the Interdependence of nations.
"Japan is hard up," he said, "be
cause rayon artificial silk had cut
into the world market for Japan's
principal export, which is natural
silk. The dressmakers of Paris,
who set the fashions for the world,
have decreed that woolen materials
will be the height of fashion this
coming winter. But the ladies' gar
ment makers of America, catering
the masses, don't think the ordin
ary American young woman will
wear wool; it doesn't sound as ex
pensive as silk. So the American
manufacturers have developed a
fabric which looks like wool but is
made of silk. It can't be made of
rayon, and it takes four times as
much silk to the yard as the stand
ard fabrics now in use.
"As a result," my friend contin
ued, "Japan is getting larger orders
for silk than she has had for years
and the price is going up. And be
cause of the prospect for this addi
tional revenue, Japan's military
party is making plans to go ahead
with the conquest of Manchuria,
for which there was not enough
money available a few months ago."
The idea that any one nation can
stand alone is as unsound as it is
dangerous.
Television
on its way
One of the experts of the Bell
Laboratories, who is working on
the problem of television, told me
the other day that he thought sci
entists and engineers are getting
very close to the day when it will
be possible for anybody to see the
person one is talking with over the
telephone. It Is being done now,
as a laboratory demonstration, and
the problem is to reduce the cost.
As for radio television, broad
casting on a screen events actually
in progress, that is a long way yet
It would be Interesting if anybody
who had a proper receiving set
could see the next Olympic Games
without having to travel across a
continent or an ocean to do so. No
body who has had even a glimmer
ing of what is going on in the re
search laboratories is willing to say
today that anything is impossible.
Politics . . . how it's done
I asked a small-town official the
other day why he had favored a
measure which clearly would bene
fit only a few and would not do the
town as a whole any good.
"I don't like it any better than
you do, but I have to get myself
re-elected, don't I?" was his frank
reply:
It is the desire for re-election
that makes most office-holders care
less with the taxpayers' money.
Since most of the voters in most
DANCE
at LEHMAN SPRINGS
SAT. NITE
Murray Powers 6 His Band
....................
V
TEACH THEM
ECONOMY
Q,( Money on
How to Save a
m TAnci
..:t Roxes
Ligation
Coiw-
. u
t, t 1 Rails
n
ray
Fountain
J. C. Penney Co. Inc.
communities are non-taxpayers,
what difference does it make? That
is the politicians' way of looking
at public questions.
The movement to give men long
er terms in office and make them
ineligible for re-election does not
seem to be making much headway.
It is worth thinking about I be
lieve it would be a good plan for
all office-holders, from President
down.
Bruce Barton
writes of
"The Master Executive"
Supplying a week-to-week lnjpiratlon
for the heavy-burdened who will find
every human trial paralleled In the ex
periences of "The Man Nobody Knowi"
DAYS OF DOUBT
Another young man had grown
up near by Jesus' home in Nazareth
and was beginning to be heard from
in the larger world. His name was
John. How much the two boys may
have seen of each other we do not
know; but certainly the younger,
Jesus, looked up to and admired his
handsome, fearless cousin.
We can imagine with what eager
interest he must have received re
ports of John's impressive success
at the capital. He was the sensa
tion of that season. The fashion
able folk of the city were flocking
out to the river to hear his denun
ciations; some of them even ac
cepted his demand for repentance
and were baptized.
John's fame grew; his uncom
promising speeches were quoted far
and wide. The business men of
Nazareth who had been up to Je
rusalem brought back stories and
quotations. There was consider
able head-waggling as there always
is; these folks had known of John
as a boy; they could hardly believe
oASol
emn
Thing
It is a solemn thing this
final occurrence. Those
remaining are confronted
at once with many unfa
miliar problems. These
may be solved. There is
capable, willing assistance
subject to your immediate
call. And it is kindly,
helpful, and considerate
which it should be.
Phelps Funeral
Home
Telephone 1S32
Heppner, Oregon'
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en Aa. 00
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Pen Ink , ;4c
re 0 to
that he was as much of a man as
the world seemed to think.
But there was one who had no
doubts. A day came when he was
missing from the carpenter shop;
the sensational news spread thru
the streets that he had gone to Je
rusalem, to John, to be baptized.
John's reception of Jesus was
flattering. During the ceremony of
baptism and for the rest of that day
Jesus was in a state of splendid ex
ultation. No shadow of a doubt
darkened his enthusiasm. He was
going to do the big things which
John had done; he felt the power
stirring in him and he was all eag
er to begin.
Then the day closed and night
descended, and with it came the
doubts. The narrative describes
them as a threefold temptation and
introduces Satan to add to the dra
matic quality of the event In our
simple story we need not spend
much time with the description of
Satan.
We do not know whether Satan
is to be regarded as a personality
or as an lmpersonalization of an in
ner experience. The temptation is
more real without him, more akin
to our own trials and doubts. With
him or without him, however, the
meaning of the experience is clear.
This is its meaning; the day of su
preme assurance had passed; the
days of fearful misgivings had
come.
What man of outstanding genius
has ever been allowed to escape
these trials and doubts? For how
many days and weeks do you think
the soul of Lincoln must have been
tortured? Inside himself he felt
his power, but where and when
would opportunity come? Must he
forever ride the country circuit
and sit in a dingy office settling a
community's petty disputes?
Had he perhaps mistaken the in
ner message? Was he, after all,
only a common fellow a fair coun
try lawyer and a good teller of
jokes? Those who rode with Lin
coln on the circuit testify to his ter
rifying moods of silence. What
solemn thoughts beseiged him in
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.
Vinegar
Pure Cider vinegar, excellent
strength
PER
GALLON lt7l
MALT
PAR
The only pure concentrated soap on
the market.
PER LARGE Qff
PACKAGE . OeJi,
SALAD OIL
Pure, fresh, sparkling
Bring your own container. Qff
Per. Quart 25c, Per. Gallon V V,
Crackers
2-lb. caddv salted Snow
flakes. CADY . 25c I
PHONE
,082 SAVINGS FOR
those silences? What fear of fail
ure? What futile rebellion at the
narrow limits of his life?
Next Week: A Man Comes Out
Copyright, Bobbs-Merrill Company
IN OREGON HOMES
Medford How to prepare meals
for 75 to 85 persons in a shorter
time and with less effort than is us
ually taken for a camping trip for
the average family was demonstrat
ed recently by members of the
Jackson county recreation club at
their summer camp at Dead Indian
Soda Springs resort, according to
reports. Irish stew for Sunday
dinner was prepared in two 18 quart
pressure cookers. In addition to
those supplies brought from home
&
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
Honey
Finest quality pure strained honey
NO. 5 PAIL NO. 10 PAIL
49c 85c
BUCKEYE BRAND
the double vacuum malt.
U TINS 81.00
BACON
Eastern corn fed, well
streaked
fed, well
i9c
PER
LB. .
10
LBS
Ch
Oregon mild full cream loaf cheese
PER
LB. ..
18c
FRI., SAT., HON, AUG.
food cost only 10 cents per person
or a maximum of 50 cents for each
family. This county recreation
group is directed from the office of
Mrs. Mabel Mack, home demonstra
tion agent
Oregon City Sixty-five families
have taken advantage of the two
Clackamas county canning kitch
ens one at Oregon City and the
other at Milwaukie. Seventy-five
hundred tins of fruit vegetables,
meats and fish have been canned
some for individual families and the
rest for the commissary that will
be drawn on this winter. This food
relief work is supervised by Thel
ma Gaylord, home demonstration
agent who is a member of the state
food committee, appointed by the
governor's relief council.
Try a O. T. Want Ad.
LARD
Pure, fresh hog lard, priced
low.
i:...75c
STANDBY A product
of Blue Ribbon.
3 S $1.00
Coff
MAC MARR Heppner's favorite
quality coffee
3 lbs 89c
MACARONI
Fresh stock Elbo cut
49c
Potat
No. 1 spuds, fresh dug, and such a
price.
PER 100
LB. SACK
81.00
26, 27, 29, Inc. deuver