Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, September 28, 1933, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPT. 28, 1933.
IONE
(Continued from First Page)
has been employed the past year
or more.
Several hunters have returned
from the mountains. Among those
bringing back their buck were Art
Turner and Ralph and Walter Gib-
Clifford Christopherson with his
mother, Mrs. J. W. Christopherson,
and his daughter, Marjory, have de
parted for Portland where Mr.
Christopherson will have work and
where they will make their home
this winter.
Mrs. Delia M. Corson returned on
Friday morning's train from a va
cation spent with her son, Eldred
Corson and his family in Chicago.
She also spent a part of her time
visiting with other relatives in other
points in the middle west
T. M. Benedict and son Dode of
Ontario were business visitors in
lone over the week end.
Dr. Bruce and family of Port
land stopped in lone for a short
time last Sunday to say hello to old
friends They were on their way
home from the Pendleton Round
Up. Dr. Bruce used to practice
medicine In lone some twenty or
more years ago.
Mrs. Hugh Smith and son and
Miss Bonnie Smith have gone to
Redmond for a visit of several
weeks at the homes of sisters of
Mrs. Smith.
Services were held at the Congre'
gational church when Rev. Pollatd
pastor-at-large, came over from
Condon to fill the pulpit here last
Sunday evening. With Rev. Pol
lard was Mr. Brown who sang two
special numbers during the ser
vices. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Howk depart
ed Saturday for Portland. During
their absence their children are be
ing cared for by Mis Lucille Bris
tow. Mr. and Mrs Charles Battersby
of Portland arrived Saturday for
a visit of a few days at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bryson.
Geo. Winslow of Tillamook, Ore.,
Oregon Grand Master of the I. O.
O. F. lodge, paid the local I. O. O.
F. lodge an official visit last Satur
day evening. Members of the lodges
at Heppner, Lexington and Morgan
were also present At the close of
the meeting refreshments were
served
Another wedding of interest dur
ing the past week was that of Miss
Mabel Smith, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Smith of this city, and
Dan O'Hara of Kinzua. The young
couple were married last Saturday
Sept. 23, at The Dalles. Mr. O'
Hara is employed at Kinzua and
they will make their home there.
Willows grange held their regu
lar business meeting in their hall
at Cecil, Saturday, Sept. 23. A num
of communications were acted on,
one being the resignation of the
lecturer, Miss Edna Lindstrom,
who expects to be away the rest of
the term. Mrs. Hila Timm was ap
pointed to serve as lecturer for the
remainder of the year. Several
good reports were read by various
committees, among them being a
summary of the cooperative activ
ities such as buying and selling,
which have been handled by he
committee through the local store
at Cecil. This report was given by
Mrs. George Krebs, chairman. An
agricultural report given by Bertha
Cool, chairman of that committee.
was quite interesting and several
talks were given by members on
the subjects such as fleldpeas, crest
ed wheat grass, ladak alfalfa, and
spring seeding of alfalfa where the
old stand was frozen out last win
ter. Communications to Willows
grange concerning the Bonneville
dam project were turned over to
the legislative committee.
Alfred Balsiger drove over from
Moro and spent the night with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs P. G. Bal
siger, then drove on to Pendleton
Saturday to attend the Round-Up
MORROW FOLKS GET
'KICK' AT ROUND-UP
(Continued from First Page)
Final Work Being Done
Wheat Acreage Contracts
With the September 25 deadline
for filing wheat contract applica
tions past, the big job of county
wheat allotment committees is
getting under way, as approved ap
plications come in from community
committees.
Between now and December 1,
all of the work of correcting the
applications, publishing each grow
er's acreage and production figures,
making the necessary adjustments
so that county allotments will agree
with official wheat production sta
tistics, publishing the grower al
lotments and maximum acreage
figures, preparing the contracts and
getting them signed, and properly
preparing all of them for sending
in to the Agricultural Adjustment
Administration, must be done. De
cember 1 is the deadline after
which no contracts will be received
at Washington.
Not until after the contracts from
a county have all been sent to the
Wheat Adjustment Administration
and checked over tnere, can any
grower in a county receive his ben
efit payments. The wheat growers
of Oregon will be entitled to ap
proximately three million dollars
on the 1933 crop, two-thirds of it
this fall. Naturally they are an
xious to get their payments, but a
great deal of work must first be
done by the county allotment com
mittees.
One cause of delay in some coun
ties is that many applications have
not been made out correctly. Some
growers did not understand that
they are entitled to include as land
seeded to wheat, wheat acreage
which could not be re-seeded be
cause of weather conditions, or
which was prepared in the manner
customary but could not be seeded
because of unfavorable weather
conditions.
Other growers failed to under
stand that volunteer wheat har
vested for grain, wheat cut ripe
and fed without threshing, and
wheat allowed to ripen and hogged
or pastured off, should be counted,
as well as wheat cut when ripe and
threshed. Some growers put in
only the acres actually harvested
and threshed in figuring their acre
age and production.
Some growers, on the other hand,
included wheat planted and cut for
hay or pasture. Such wheat can
not be included. However, acres
of wheat proven to have been seed
ed with the intention of cutting for
grain but which through necessity
or some unforseen situation were
cut for hay or pastured off, may be
included in the average acreage
seeded.
County allotment committees are
expected to have to work several
weeks straightening out individual
applications, preparing the data for
publication, figuring individual al
lotments, adjusting their figures to
agree with official county acreage
and production statistics, getting
contracts signed, and other details.
miimiHiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiHiiiiii QphfTftl Lunch Important
0. S. C. Specialist Says
ern men were thrilled with the
show, and especially lauded the In
dian display.
The folks from here were gen
erally enthusiastic In their praise
for the show, besides pleased at
seeing so many friends from other
places as well as so many from
home. Seen from here besides
those already mentioned were Mr.
and Mrs. B. R. Patterson, Mi3s
Marjorie Clark, Miss Helen Cur-
ran and her sister, Mrs. Jared
Aiken of Oakland, Cal., Mr. and
Mrs. L. E. Dick, Mr. and Mrs. C. W.
Smith and family, Mr. and Mrs. R.
B. Ferguson and Kay, Mrs. J. G,
Barratt Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Gor
don, T. T. Quinn, Josephine Ma
honey, Gretchen Chapel, Mr. and
Mrs. H. T. O'Donnell, Luke Bibby,
Miss Reita Neel, Miss Juanita
Leathers, Miss Miriam McDonald,
Miss Mary Patterson, Gale Fergu
son, Steven Thompson, James Mon-
ahan. Bill Kilkenny, John Kelly,
Vawter Parker, John Parker, Troy
Meredith, lately of Galax, Va,
Marie Becket, Jap Crawford, Henry
Cohn, C. J. D. Bauman, Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Hayes, Richard Hayes,
Miss Doris Cox, Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
Cox, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thomp
son, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Cox, Miss
Nancy Cox, Mrs. George Starr, Jack
Starr, Add Moore, Alex Wilson, Mr,
and Mrs. Burl Coxen and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Doollttle, Ray
Massey, Wrex Langdon, Roy Gen
try, George Cason, Louis Cason,
Gene Mikeeell, Basil Brookhouser,
Marcel Jones; and of course there
were many more from here besides
many folks from other points in
the county.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Snider and
family, recently of Heppner and
now of La Grande where Mr. Sni
der la manager of the Union Oil
station, also expressed pleasure at
seeing so many of their Morrow
county friends.
Superior 20-disc drill for sale. C.
At Heppner
CHURCHES
CHURCH OF CHRIST.
JOEL R. BENTON. Minister.
Bible School 9:45 a. m.
Morning services 11 a. m.
C. E. Society 6:30 p. m.
Evening services 7:30 p. m.
Choir rehearsal. Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.
Midweek service, Thursday, 7:du p. m.
If you have not a church home,
the Heppner Church of Christ in
vites you to come and worship
with us. You will find our Bible
School interesting for both young
and old. For the coming Lord's
Day the sermon topics are: For
the morning service, "In His
Name." And for the evening ser
vice, "Who Toucheth Me?" Come,
you are invited to test the welcome
of this friendly church
METHODIST CHURCH.
JOSEPH POPE, Pastor.
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
Public worship 11:00 a. m. Ser
mon, "Too Busy With Discussion."
Epworth League 6:30
Evening worship 7:30. Sermon,
"Suitable Rewards."
Monday evening at 7:30 Rev.
Thos. D. Yarnes will be with us to
hold our first quarterly meeting.
All members and friends of the
church are invited.
Choir practice Wednesday eve
ning 7:30.
Prayer meeting Thursday eve
ning 7:30.
You are always welcome at the
services of our church.
ALL SAINTS CHURCH.
The Rev. Thomas Lewis will
again conduct services next Sunday.
Morning prayer with sermon at 11
m. Services at Cecil at 3 p. m.
Services at Hardman at 7:30 p. m.
There will be no evening service in
Heppner, according to announce
ment by Rev. M. G. Tennyson, dis
trict missionary.
1k BMW
rrMTkTTTTrhmy
J0HNJ05CPH GAINES,M.D
Commercialism vs.
Health
Enough of commercialism kills
Babylon died of commercialism,
Egypt suffered the same fate. Rome
collapsed, once being ruler of the
known world. Let our own Ameri
ca beware. Let everybody think.
It is commercialism that tells the
people what to eat people with all
sorts of STUFF TO SELL. I have
seen the farmer sell his wheat for
thirty cents a bushel to have the
bran stripped from it and sell back
dollar proclaimed as health
to the farmer In fancy wrapper for
food! No more false claim was
ever made, and for money!
White bread has been called
food stripped of all its nourish
ment, by the cereal-exploiters. Lis
ten: White bread is one of the
most wholesome and safest foods
obtainable. If it is home-baked
all the better ... It is a grave, rep
rehensible mistake to buy most of
our nourishment "factory-made."
One reason for the impoverished
condition of many people is, they
pay out all they can rake and scrape
together for "service," that they
had better be doing themselves. No
life is so productive of ill health as
a life of inactivity IDLENESS
God willed that all men and women
should work and He provided us
with everything good with which to
employ our hands.
I don't believe in copy-righted
pancakes, and synthetic, machine
made butter. I ate a service of
fried chicken at a first-class cafe
teria yesterday; this bird must have
been killed by a freight train run
ning over it But it looked tempt
ing on the outside.
One only has to recall a platter
of country-fried fowl, to appreciate
the difference!
There is no living so vile as ma
chine living.
EXAMINER HERE 4TH.
E. R Thurber, examiner of op
erators and chauffeurs, will be in
Heppner, Wednesday, Oct. 4, at the
courthouse between the hours' of
1 and 5 p. m., according to an
nouncement from the office of Hal
E. Hoss, secretary of state. All
those wishing permits or licensi;;
to drive cars are asked to get In
touch with Mr. Thurber at this
time.
NOTICE.
No trespassing or hunting will be
permitted on Dee Cox and D. O
Justus land in Morrow county,
Anyone found trespassing or hunt
ing on this land will be prosecuted
to the full extent of the law.
DEE COX.
D. O. JUSTUS,
For well, windmill or plumbing
(An adequate school lunch Is Im
portant to the health and well-being
of every child and teacher who
must have the noon meal at school,
says Miss Lucy A. Case, extension
specialist In nutrition at Oregon
State college. For the child who
is not adequately fed at home, the
school lunch provides an opportu
nity partly to make up for the de
ficiencies of the other meals of the
day.
While the noon lunch is related
to the remainder of the day's food
program and varies with condi
tions. Miss Case suggests the fol
lowing school lunch plans as ade
quate under most conditions:
Xunches not including hot dish:
L Bottle or jar of whole milk;
carrot sandwich with whole wheat
bread; egg sandwich; gingerbread;
apple.
2. Bottle or jar of milk; cottage
oheese and tomato sandwich with
whole grain bread; cup of baked
custard or rice pudding; cookies.
3. Bottle or jar of whole milk;
string bean and peanut butter
sandwich with graham bread; sal
mon sandwich; raw pear or tomato.
Lunches Including hot dish, sup
plemented by other food brought
from home:
1. Cream of mixed vegetable
soup, chopped meat sandwiches, ap
ple, cookies.
2. Boiled potatoes with milk gra
vy, egg and tomato- sandwiches,
peach or pear.
i3. Creamed salmon, bread and!
butter, apple sauce, cookies.
Serving a hot dish lunch at
school is one of the most practical
projects in child welfare any com
munity can undertake, Miss Case
says further. The serving of milk
at school supplies a food which Is
fundamental to child health, and
in many cases children would oth
ehrwise have to go without milk.
Means of financing and manag
ing the school hot lunch dish, reel
pes for 40 hot dishes arranged for
schools of different sizes, recipes
for 62 kinds of sandwich fillings
made from common products, sug
gestions on child feeding and guid
ance and other practical helps are
all included In bulletin 455, "The
School Lunch," recently issued by
the home economics extension ser
vice at O. S. C. This bulletin can
be obtained free of charge from
county extension agents or from
the college at Corvallis.
Barton
Bruce
writes of
"The Master Executive"
Supplying a wek-to-wek Inspiration
for tha heavy-burdened who will find
mry human trial paralleled in the ex
periences of "The Man Nobody Knows"
Market . useful purpose
If the City of New York carries
out its threat to impose a tax on
all stock sales, In addition to the
present Federal and state taxes, the
New York Stock Exchange de
clares it will move to some other
state.
I don't imagine the exchange will
move. All of the lower end of Man
hattan Island has been built up
with towering sky-scrapers which
house the great financial interests
of the nation. They are there be
cause the Stock Exchange is there.
We hear a great deal about specu
lation in stocks and many people
have the idea that the Stock Ex
change is nothing but a great
gambling house. But three-fourths
of all the business done there Is in
the purchase and sale of securities
for investors and banks, Insurance
companies and large estates. These
are not gambling transactions in
any sense of the word.
What the Stock Exchange actu
ally is is the world's largest open
market in which anyone who wants
to sell shares or bonds can find an
immediate cash buyer, and anyone
who wants to buy them can find
someone who will sell at a price
If there were no such market nine-
tenths of the people who have saved
up a surplus would have no way
of putting it to work.
Art Reid's idea
My good friend Albert T. Reid,
cartoonist for Publishers Autocas-
ter Service, is all worked up on the
subject of American art. He told
group of people at the Chicago
World Fair the other day that the
work of foreign artists is being
foisted upon the people of Amerl
ca because a lot of wealthy peopl
have the absurd Idea that Euro
peans are better . artists than
Americans.
That isn't true, and nobody
knows it better than Mr. Reid, who
is vice-president of the American
Artists Professional League. I agree
with him fully, for I have had many
opportunities to compare the work
of American and European paint
ers and sculptors.
I like Albert Reid's Idea that the
history of the United States ought
to be recaptured by the painters
of America, and our scenic beauty
spots preserved on canvas.
Fraud
in relief ranks
W, Valentine, Lexington. 26-29g work see Guy Shaw, Lexington, 30p sleep.
A few months ago a young man
was arrested near my home town
for driving an automobile while
drunk. He had three other young
men in his new Packard car. He
was fined $50, and promptly paid
the fine.
The point of the Incident lies in
the fact that this young man and
his three companions are all sup
posed to be so hard up that woi
had to be found for them in the
Civilian Conservation Camp in our
county. They are being paid by the
Government, fed and clothed and
lodged by the Government, on the
pretext that they have no means
and need work.
I have no Idea how much of this
sort of fraud is being practiced, but
my observation of a good many r
the people who are getting relief
from the public funds Is that they
don t need it half as badly as many
who are too proud to ask for help,
It takes 15 days for the average
human body to recover from the
loss of two consecutive nights'
RED HAT, GUN MANIA
LAID BARE BY CHIEF
(Continued from First Page)
THE MASTER
So we come up to the end. To
the final tests of a man's living
How does he bear disappoint
ment?
How does he die?
For two years it seemed almost
certain that Jesus would prevail.
He himself was sure of it We
have marked the dramatic success
with which his work began. We
have watched the crowds flock
about him in the market-place; we
have heard the cheers that greeted
his victories over shrewd antagon
ists, and the murmured awe when
a sick man rose and walked.
Reports of his triumphs preceded
him everywhere so that men com
peted for the honor of being his
host, and there was friendliness In
his audiences that made almost
anything seem possible. And why
not? If, by accepting his message,
men could be lifted up, transformed
into sons of God, heirs of eternity.
why should any be so stubborn or
so foolish as to oppose? Surely such
Truth must conquer.
If you read the story carefully
you can see how his tone and man
ner grew in confidence. In hours
of exalted communion he stood face
to face with God, felt his own son-
ship, knew that he could lift the
hearts of men as no other had ever
lifted them. The knowledge thrill
ed him with ecstasy. "I am the
Way," he cried, and he called on
his friends to free themselves, to
cast their burdens upon the Lord,
to believe more, rejoice more, ex
pect more of God. Those who lis
tened in those days were profound
ly impressed. Even the most cal
lous yielded grudging admiration.
"Never man so spake," said they.
As for the multitude, its enthusiasm
would brook no halfway measures.
They would take him by force and
make him king.
Then came the change.
His home town wag first to turn
against him. Picture, if you will,
the enthusiasm with which he
planned his visit to it. Nazareth
was little and despised, a jest
among the wits of the day. When
he healed a sick man in Caper
naum, it pleased him to think that
the report would be carried back
to Nazareth. When he drove the
plunderers from the Temple he rc
alizd that, In the fame whioh had
come to him, his home town would
have a share. He had lifted the
little village out ot obscurity. And
now, in the height of his glory, ne
waB going back.
Next Week: Facing Defeat.
ON OREGON FARMS
Ladak Compares Well In Yield
Prineville A check-up on the
trial planting of ladak alfalfa on
the E. N. Hall farm of Powell
Butte showed that the first crop
yielded 1 1-2 tons per acre, as com
pared to one-half ton of common
and one ton of Grimm per acre, ac
cording to W. B. Tucker, county
agent The quality of ladak is also
considered superior to other va
rieties because of its fine stem and
heavier leaf.
Lake Men Control Liver Flukes
Lakeview Cressler Robinson,
livestock man in south Warner val
ley, and Ned Sherlock, East Side
woolgrower, each report excellent
kills of snails which harbor liver
flukes of sheep since treating their
wild meadow and marsh areas with
copper sulphate obtained through
the county agent's office last spring.
Both plan to continue the practice
next" year.
Grasses Seeded on Slash Land
Canyon City A new series of
grass nurseries has been arranged
by County Agent R. G. Johnson on
cut over pine lands owned by the
Hines Lumber company, in which
several varieties of grasses will be
sown on slash land with no land
preparation whatever. Four dif
ferent plots have been selected
two on land cut over for two years,
one on one-year slash, and one on
slash that has just been left. The
plots run from one-half acre to two
two acres in size. Western wheat
grass, slender wheat grass, crested
wheat grass, quacK grass, ana per
haps a couple of others will be sown
if seed can be obtained, jar. jonn-
son says.
SHORT AND SNAPPY.
The wise person Is one who trains
himself to do more than one thing
well, thus providing additional out
lets for his abilities.
Many men seek fortune in order
to be independent; they should
rather seek character, the only true
source of independence.
Every player in the game of life
holds a winning hand at some
stage.
A regret for the mistakes of yes
terday must not blind us to the
tasks of today.
Authority can be conferred upon
you, but not wisdom. It has to be
earned.
No man can tell what the future
may bring forth, and small oppor
tunities are often the beginning of
great enterprises.
A half-million, farmers lost their
status as landowners In the last
three years.
We are sending a quarter of a
million men into the woods to get
them out of the woods.
DONT BE A COW ARB
Face facts you have no lease on
life. Protect your family and
build up an estate at the same
time.
MRS. ANNA Q. THOMSON
Office in Mahrt's Electric Shop
The same evening at camp, Har-
ley Matteson was in a blue funk. He
was not able to console himself
about having missed a big buck
which almost ran over him. He
was not in the habit of missing
such shots.
The party was congenial, and the
time spent in camp enjoyable. They
were huting beyond Long Creek
and as they started out Sunday
tney were caught In a heavy show
er. It was then that Tom discov
ered he was without chains for his
car.
Mark had chains for his car, and
was able to negotiate a long, slip
pery pull which confronted them.
Dusk was at hand. Mark sensed
that Tom would have difficulty
witnout cnams, and waited. In
Lime .naney came aragging up
aiooi, picaing up half the moun
tainside at every step, it seemed.
Keturning to where Tom was stall
eu uiey ueciaea to pitcn cajmn.
Hunger was upon them and they
iannea a small fire into life in the
rain, and soon bacon and eggs were
sizzling in the frying pan It was
a feed fit for a king.
The prospect for getting out Im
mediately seemed hopeless, and
they pitched camp for the night
The next morning Mark went out
ahead, and by relaying the single
set of chains they reached a ranch
house where they obtained the i
sistance of a man on horseback
get them on out to Long Creek and
the highway.
It was hard work, but jolly fun
withal, as Tom realized with his
car again wheeling freely on the
solid road.
Trade and Employment
EXCHANGE
(Printed without charge.
continued on notice.)
Dls-
To Trade Young turkeys for
wood. Mrs. Chi is Brown, city.
Geese to trade for fresh young
milk cow. Lana A. Padberg, lone.
To Trade Wood and pigs for
wheat. W. H. French, Hardman.
To trade Cows and hay track
and carrier for Van Brunt grain
drills. Leo Gorger, Lexington.
One 3-bottom, 14-ln. gang to
trade for rye or wheat. W, P. Hill,
Box 526, Heppner.
To Trade 5 head good mules for
good horses; aslo saddle mare for
work horse. Troy Bogard, Hepp
ner, fone 6F12.
To Trade Horse for wheat or
wood. Wm. Kummerland, Lexington.
Will trade for boy's saddle pony.
A. F. Majeske, Lexington.
For trade Dairy cattle for sheep,
wheat or barley. Roy Nelll, Echo.
Two fresh heifers with calves to
trade for hogs or sheep. John G.
Parker, fone 17F3.
To trade Fresh milk cow.
Schulz, Heppner.
Max
To trade Pint and quart bottles;
also three 100-gai, barrels. Max
Schultz, Heppner.
On Oct. 1st the price of the G. E.
Junior Refrigerator advancei. On
Oct. 10th all Monitor Top G. E.
Refrigerators increase in price.
You can save money now by
purchasing from stocks on hand.
Present prices withdrawn afttr
above dates.
mm
PACIFIC POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
ALWAYS AT YOOR SERVICE
A FEW FACTS
Over 50,000 people employed In
the production ana selling of
W ATKINS PBODUCTS
Founded 65 years ago 1868-1933.
9.000 Dealers 36 factories and
branches.
Evey Watklns Dealer an indepen
dent merchant In business for nim
self.. A few territories still open.
If interested see
J. C. HARDING, Watklns Dealer
IONE CASH
MARKET
Fresh and Cured
MEATS
Butterfat, Turkeys, Chickens
bought for SWIFT CO.
Phone us for market prices
at all times.
Phone 32 IONE, ORE.
Headquarters for
MONARCH
Canned Foods
4$m$m$m,m$'
HUSTON'S
GROCERY
Heppner
Oregon
Check Up on
Your Printing
Needs NOW!
Paper Prices
Going Up!
f
rom
Orders filled
present stocks giv
en advantage of re
cent low prices
Heppner Gazette Times
GOOD PRINTING