Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, December 21, 1933, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    PAGE THREE
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, DEC 21, 1933.
IL(DiiS3EIiippaifl!k4
Miss Audrey Beymer, who was
one of the grade teachers In the
Heppner school last year, is now
taking physical education at the
university. Miss Beymer is also
manager of the girls hiking club of
the university, and is getting a lot
of pleasure out of the job. Miss
Beymer arrived home the end of
the week and is spending the hol
idays with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Beymer on Hinton creek.
Real estate was much on the move
in different parts of the county the
first of the week, owing to the pre
vailing high winds. Joe Devine, in
town Monday from his farm out
north of Lexington, reported the
worst dust blows he has experienced
during his residence of many long
years here. Similar reports come
from other sections, and it is feared
some considerable damage has re
sulted to grain as a consequence.
C. N. Fridley of Wasco was here
on Friday to attend to business at
the court house. Conditions for
growing crops in Sherman county
have been ideal during the fall and
winter, he reports, and farm work
has been moving along in a fine
way. Mr. Fridley owns consider
able farming land in this county,
near Lexington, and he was pleased
with the conditions here.
Chas. Becket, who was in town
Monday forenoon from his home
on Eight Mile, reported very high
winds for Saturday and Sunday,
and much dust flying from the sum
merfallow fields. He just recently
returned from Portland where he
was called by the serious illness of
his father, J. W. Becket, and reports
that the senior Mr. Becket was
much better when he left Portland
early the past week.
Al Rankin, proprietor of Hotel
Heppner, has departed for Sunny
California, his destination being
Sacramento, where he will spend
the Christmas holidays with his
daughter and her family. He may
decide to drive on to Los Angeles
while In the south. Mr. Rankin left
Monday morning, and while he is
absent the hotel will be in the hands
of Doc Byland.
Superintendent E. F. Bloom and
MVs. Bloom returned Sunday eve
ning from Portland where Mr.
Bloom was called on business per
taining to school matters over the
week end. Miss Jane Pollock made
the trip to Portland and return
with Mr. and Mrs. Bloom, enjoying
a visit with relatives in the city.
The Business and Professional
Women's club met on Monday eve
ning at the home of Mrs. F. W. Tur
ner. The music committee was in
charge and the program consisted
of Christmas carols. The ladles also
made up a Christmas box to be pre
sented to one of Heppner's needy
families.
Mr. and Mrs. George Schwarz ar
rived home from Portland Sunday
evening. They have been spending
some time in the city while Mr.
Schwarz was under the care of a
physician. He has greatly improved
in health and feels he is on the road
to normal physical condition again.
B. B. Kelley reported a pretty
hard freeze at the Willow creek
ranch on Friday, Ice forming in the
creek to a thickness of one-half
inch. A similar report was brought
in from Hinton creek and it can be
said that Heppner had its first touch
of winter this past week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Rice are leav
ing this week for Brush Prairie,
Wash., where they will reside in the
future. Their new home is some
12 miles north of Vancouver. Mr,
and Mrs. Rice have been making
their home here during the past
year and a half.
Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Ferguson de
parted for their home near Gold
Beach on Friday last They were
accompanied as far as Portland by
D. B. Stalter, who will spend the
winter in the city with his daugh
ter. Mrs. Elizabeth Van Valken-
burg and family.
Spencer Akers drove up from
Portland during the past week, be
ing called here on matters of busi
ness. He is a guest at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Barlow, his
son-in-law and daughter, and ex
Dects to return to Portland this
week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bleakman ar
rived in Heppner the end of the
week from Packtown, Wash., where
Mr. Bleakman has been engaged In
highway engineering work, and will
spend the holidays at the home of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
Bleakman.
Ernest Hellker of lone brought
his daughter Harriet to Heppner on
Tuesday to receive attention for a
badly sprained ankle. Miss Harriet
Is one of the star players on the
girls' basketball team of lone school
and received her injury while play
ing.
While adjusting a license plate on
his truck the first of the wecK
Claude White of Lexington received
had cut in the riKht hand. He
came to Heppner to have the mem
ber cared for and the physician took
several Btitches to close the wound
Mrs. Lena White and daughters,
Mary and Frances, arrived from La
Grande on Saturday to spend the
Christmas holiday season with rel
atives in this city. The young la
dles are attending the Eastern Ore
gon Normal school at La Grande.
Ervln Anderson, who Is one of
the rising young farmers of the
lone country, was looking after
business in Heppner Tuesday.
W. P. Hill, Willow creek farmer,
Is reported on the sick list.
Clever handmade gifts at Mahrt's
Electric Shop,
Mrs. Edwin G. Coppock of Los
Angeles is a guest this week of her
daughter. Miss Madge Coppock,
commercial teacher in the Heppner
school. Mrs. Coppock will remain
until Sunday in order to be present
at the marriage of her daughter to
Mr. James G. Thomson, Jr., of this
city, the announcement of this hap
py event having been made to
friends of the young people during
the past week.
While at work on the road Mon
day, W. E. Mikesell of this city was
thrown from a fresno, receiving se
vere bruises and injuries to his
back. He was brought to town to
receive, some medical attention, and
will be off the job for a time.
Milo Rill, little son of Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Rill of Eight Mile,
was brought to town Monday, very
ill with appendicitis. He was oper
ated on immediately and is now a
patient at Heppner hospital while
recovering.
Mrs. Evelyn Olsen of Condon,
who has been a patient at Heppner
hospital for some time, was dis
charged on Tuesday, going to the
home of her sister, Mrs. Opal Chris
topherson at lone, to remain a
wnue. iii
Claude Huston, Chas. Huston,
Dan Barlow and Noah Clark were
Eight Mile farmers in the city on
Tuesday afternoon. They were in
terested in the proposition of a new
bank for Heppner.
J. G. Barratt was in Portland this
week. Mr. Barratt, who Is a di
rector of the Pacific Woolgrowers,
was called to the city to attend a
meeting of the association held
there Monday.
Mrs. E. R. Huston has returned
to her home in Heppner and is rap
idly recovering from the major op
eration which she underwent at the
hospital in Albany several weeks
ago.
Emil Carlson of Gooseberry and
Oscar Peterson of Lower Eight Mile
represented their respective dis
tricts in the city on Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Cutsforth
were transacting business in the
city Monday, coming in from the
north-Lexington farm home.
Jack Hynd and son Herbert were
doing business in town yesterday,
coming up fom the Cecil home.
Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Parker of
Heppner flat were shopping in the
city Tuesday afternoon.
Highest cash prices paid for live
stock. L. J. Huston, The Dalles,
Ore. 27-34p.
BOARDMAN
By RACHEL J. BARLOW
Miss Margaret Galley, first and
second grade teacher, was absent
from school this week on account
of illness. Mrs. Albin Sundsten was
the substitute teacher. Miss Galley
went to her home at Hubbard on
Tuesday.
The freshmen entertained the
rest of the high school and alumni
and faculty at a party in the gym
nasium last Friday evening.
Vawter Parker was a visitor in
town last Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Brown, Mrs.
Bryce Dillabough and Miss Mabel
Brown spent Saturday In Walla
Walla.
L, E. Albritten was on the project
last week and bought a large num
ber of lambs.
Miss Rhoda Shelenberger of Ir-
rigon was visiting friends in Board-
man Sunday.
The communtiy church will give
program of music in the church
Saturday evening, December 23.
Everyone is invited to come.
Public installation of officers for
the Boardman and Irrigon granges
was held In Irrigon Friday evening.
An interesting program was given
and a lovely lunch was served by
the Irrigon grange.
Carl Nelson of Portland is visit
ing friends here this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Royal Rands and
Donna Jane returned to Boardman
Saturday and are living with Mrs.
Shell. They plan to build a house on
their ranch where they will move.
The basketball games played In
the local gym Wednesday night
were well attended. The freshman
boys were badly defeated by the
eighth grade boys. The game be
tween the high school and town
teams was close. At the end of the
game the score was a tie and after
five more minutes of playing the
hieh school boys rolled in a few
more baskets, making the score in
their favor.
The Alumni society sponsored the
turkey shoot last Sunday. The se
vere dust storm which came up at
about noon spoiled the day, but In
spite of it the alumni cleared quite
a large sum.
Ruth King, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. W, O. King, was taken to the
Hermlston hospital last week, where
she is seriously ill with Intestinal
flu. Mrs. King has been staying
with her.
Mrs. Gladys Fortier and Norma
came from Eugene Saturday and
will spend the holidays at the Frank
Cramer home.
The three boys' basketball teams
motored to Umatilla Saturday eve
nlng where they played and came
away with two victories. The Mid
gets, eighth grade boys, although
much smaller than the Umatilla
boys, were quicker and showed their
skill at making baskets and won By
several points. The Umatilla boys
defeated the local high school team.
The lineup is Marvin Ransler, cen
ter; George Graves and Edward
Compton, forwards; Delbert Mack
an and Swan Lubbes, guards. Sub
stitute, Allan Chaffee. The Board
man town team won their game by
a large score. Their lineup Is Ray
Barlow, center; Dallas Wilson and
Buster Rands, forwards; Vernon
Rood and David Johnston, guards,
Pine for newsprint
Since wood-pulp paper was first
made in my home town of Stock
bridge, Mass., sixty years ago, it
has been believed that only spruce,
fir and hemlock fibers were suit
able; pine had too much pitch in it.
One result of that belief was to send
the big paper mills that make news
print, or ordinary newspaper paper,
farther and farther into the Cana
dian forests, as the more southerly
supplies of spruce were exhausted.
All the time there were millions
of acres of fast-growing "slash" pine
on the sandy lands of Georgia, Ala
bama and Florida, mostly going to
waste. My friend, Dr. Charles A.
Herty, famous chemist, began some
years ago to do some experimenting,
and he discovered that this southern
pine contains no pitch until it is
fifteen years old. He made some
paper from young pines and it
looked good. Last month he shipped
three carloads of wood-pulp, made
from young pines, secretly to a big
Canadian paper mill. It fabricated
perfectly on the fast machines and
seven Georgia dailies printed their
entire editions of one day on it.
Power man made
People think of Boulder Dam and
Muscle Shoals as the great sources
of enormous power. But the other
day there was completed in Brook
lyn the largest single power unit in
the world, except Niagara Falls.
That is the new steam plant of the
Brooklyn Edison Company, which
can generate more power than any
body ever dreamed of getting from
the Colorado River or the Tenes
see. It is a false notion that water
power is either plentiful or cheap.
C. P. Steinmetz, great electrical en
gineer, once said to me that if every
drop of water that falls on the sur
face of the United States were to
generate power all the way from
the mountain-tops to the sea, the
total power developed would not be
as much as was then being produced
by steam.
Any water-power project except
the very largest, and few of those,
takes so much capital investment
that the interest on the capital alone
amounts, often, to more than fuel
would have cost for a steam plant
of equal power. But I suppose poli
ticians trying to get appropriations
for local projects will keep on mak
ing the public believe that it will
benefit by developing water-powers.
Knees
in automobiles
Some of the new 1934 automobiles
will have a new sort of front wheel
suspension, which some bright press
agent has described as "putting
knees on the car's front legs." In
stead of a front axle, each wheel
will be independently supported
with its own spring arrangement to
take up the shock. The idea is that
bumps will not be transmitted thru
the frame to the whole chassis.
There is no doubt it will work,
for several European manufacturers
have been using the same idea for
years. Indeed, most of our new
automobile ideas come from Eu
rope. They had four-wheel brakes,
high-speed, small-bore engines and
streamline bodies long before we
did.
The reason for that is that Eu
ropean cars are made in small quan
tities, as a rule, and the makers are
free to experiment with new engin
eering ideas and designs. They get
enough for their cars so they can
take a chance.
Talkies there's hope
The two most popular "talkies"
that the American motion picture
people have produced in a year are
Special
Oysters
and
Shell
Fish
NOW IN
SEASON!
For a good
meal anytime
go to the
ELKHORN
RESTAURANT
ED CHINN, Prop.
"Little Women" and "Three Little
Pigs." Artistically, the best motion
picture that I have seen, is "Henry
the Eighth,' 'an English film.
Hollywood is still possessed with
the Idea that to be successful a pic
ture must have more than a trace of
Indecency. Yet the proof that the
public is not as sex-crazy as the
movie people think they are as
many of them are themselves is
found in the success of these three
pictures.
I am beginning to be hopeful
about the movies.
Radio . . . something new
Something new in radio music Is
promised soon. Nobody who listens
to a great orchestra over the radio
today gets the music as it sounds
to thOBe in the room with actual
players. The reason for that is that
the radio picks it up from one spot,
while the listener in the room hears
it with both ears and gets the basses
on the left, the strings in the middle
and the horns and tympani on the
right in their true relation to each
other.
A radio engineer who has been
working on the problem for one of
the big broadcasting chains told me
the other day that the solution has
been found. It is only a question
now of waiting until the big audi
toriums in which the great sym
phony orchestras perform are
equipped with the new system of
picking up the music as it really is
produced.
Oregon Now Grows Sweet
Potatoes in Some Districts
Sweet potato production In Ore
gon may seem strange, but A. G. B.
Bouquet, professor of vegetable
crops at Oregon State college, Is
authority for the statement that it
is entirely practical in certain lo
calities and under certain condi
tions. A frost-free season of 120 to
130 days is the first requirement.
Professor Bouquet has raised
sweet potatoes of high quality on
the experiment station farm at Cor
vallis. On the basis of his tests and
the experience of some other grow
ers he has prepared a circular on
sweet potato culture in Oregon
which has been issued by the exten
sion service. It may be had free on
request
LOCAL STUDENT SELECTED.
Oregon State College, Corvallis,
Dec. 20. Charles McMurdo of
Heppner, freshman in physical sci
ence at Oregon State college, has
recently been selected by Dr. M. Ell
wood Smith, dean of lower division,
to be on the student council for
lower division of arts and sciences.
The committee, selected from four
major schools of lower division of
arts and sciences, will plan future
school meetings and act with Dean
Smith in solving student problems.
WINTER TERM BEGINS JAN. 2.
Eugene. The second or winter
term of the University of Oregon
will open Tuesday, January 2, it was
announced here by Dr. Earl M. Pal-
lette, registrar. All classes will be
gin on Wednesday, January 3, when
all students are expected to be on
the campus. Classes for the term
will end Saturday, March 10, and ex
aminations will be held from March
12 to 16. The term will not be
broken by any holidays. Spring
vacation will start March 16 and the
Spring term will begin March 26.
John Brosnan of Lena was look
ing after business here on Tuesday.
Aside from the big blow of this
week, the winter has been ideal out
his way.
The Book
the first line of which reads,
"The Holy Bible,"' and which
contains Four Great Treasures.
By BRUCE BARTON
Genesis and Geology
The higher animals are evolved
or created, whichever term suits
you better. And last of all, man.
His place at the top of the pyra
mid of creation is the same in both
Genesis and geology, the difference
being that Genesis compresses into
six hundred words what science ex
pands into hundreds of volumes,
and Genesis has a reason for man's
creation and a goal for his life,
while science throws up its hands
with the blank admission, "We do
not know." . '
So we have man and woman
launched forth upon a brand-new
planet Science locates the begin
nings of human life in the fertile
and fragrant valley of the Euphra
tes. Genesis is more specific, nam
ing the beautiful spot the "Garden
of Eden," and identifying the first
couple as Adam and Eve. Let us
take a running look at these two
interesting people and the more im
portant of their descendants, for in
the Old Testament, as in all other
historical records, the history of
peoples is principally the lives of
a few outstanding individuals.
A lecturer on woman suffrage
once challenged her audience with
the oratorical question, "Where, I
ask you, where would man be to
day if it were not for woman?" To
which a rather thick voice from the
rear benches answered, "In the
Garden of. Eden eating strawber
ries." Adam, our first ancestor, does
not make a very brave showing.
He and Eve were given the run of
the Garden, with permission to eat
any fruit except that one particular
tree. They ate the forbidden fruit
and when God discovered, them in
their transgression Adam took ref
uge behind Eve. "The woman whom
thou gavest to be with me," he ex
planied, "she gave me of the tree,
and I did eat." A cowardly excuse
which profited him nothing. For
their sin they were cast out, and
the Garden was closed to them. No
longer could they have food without
effort.
"Cursed is the ground for thy
sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it
all the days of thy life; Thorns also
and thistles shall it bring forth to
thee; ... In the sweat of thy face
shalt thou eat bread, till thou return
unto the ground; for out of it wast
thou taken: for dust thou art, and
unto dust shalt thou return."
Eve had two sons, Cain and Abel.
As a shepherd Abel had nothing to
do but sit on the side of a green
hill and watch his flocks grow fat,
making money for him the while.
Cain was a farmer, and any one
who has ever worked on a farm un
derstands why farmers in all ages
have been discontented and will
realize how Cain felt.' In his jeal
ousy over Abel's easy life and calm
demeanor Cain slew him, "Am I my
brother's keeper?" he demanded in
surly tones when God made inquiry
for Abel. The question has come
down through the generations as a
text for a million sermons.
Next eWek: The First Families.
Employment Fund to
Aid U. of 0. Students
Eugene. A fund of $600, made
available to the University of Ore
gon from money collected last year
for the state-wide relief fund, will
be used to finance projects here
which will provide employment for
a number of students, it was an
nounced by Earl M. Pallett, execu
tive secretary of the university. In
every case the work will be allotted
to students who must earn money
with which to pay registration fe
next term, it was stated. StudenU
will be given only enough work to
earn the amount they actually need
for fees, so that as many students
as possible may be aided, It la point
ed out.
Last year each member of the
faculty and staff here contributed a
day's pay each month to the govenr
or's releif fund. The unexpended
balance now on hand has been al
lotted back to the various institu
tions to provide jobs for students.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Young, lone
residents, were doing some Christ
mas shopping at Heppner Wednes
day afternoon.
,:,i,..... ,... nr:....--.,-j,
ANNOUNCING
delco Radio
Long and short wave
Mahrt's Electric Shop
How to Stop a Cold
Quick as You Caught It
Tikt 2 Bayar Aspirin
TMttt.
Drink full glass of water.
Repeat treatment in 1
hours.
If throat is sore, crush and
dissolve 1 Bayer Aspirin
Tablets in a half glass of
water and gargle accord
ing to directions In box.
Almost Instant Relief in This Way
The simple method pictured above
is the way doctors throughout the
world now trent colds.
It is recognized as the QUICK
EST, safest, surest way to treat a
cold. For it will check an ordi
nary cold almost as fast as you
caught it.
Ask your doctor about
this. And when you
buy, see that you get
Dot Nof Harm Hi Heart
the real BAYER Aspirin Tablets.
They dissolve almost instantly.
And thus work almost instantly
when you take them. And for a
gargle, Genuine BAYER Aspirin
Tablets dissolve so completely,
thev leave no irritating par
ticles. Get a box ol l
tablets or bottle of 2 1 or
in A IM l nny
fcty drugstore.
yv. r wk i i n i
MORE
TURKEYS
WANTED
We are receiving Turkeys every
day now up to Christmas. Birds
packed and shipped from here
graded and Federal inspected at
Portland. Checks by return mail.
BRING YOUR TURKEYS TO
Morrow County Creamery
Company
COME ON KIDDIES
TO THE
Xmas Matinee
A FREE TREAT
from Heppner Lodge 358, B. P. O. E.,
and the Star Theater
Showing
"BLACK BEAUTY"
also a dandy comedy
2:30 MONDAY, DECEMBER 25
All Bills and Guests Come and Enjoy
CHRISTMAS DANCE DEC. 23
Joe Bibby's Dance Band of Gass Valley
NEW YEAR'S DANCE DEC. 30
Bud's Jazz Band
A dandy time for all 75 cetns
May we wish you
one and all a very
Merry Christmas
MANAGES
Bacon
Eastern corn fed,
med. weight, well
streaked.
PER LB.
20c
Sugar
PURE CANE
16 lbs.. 83c
100 . S4.99
i tirk VJ&i
Jello
A real dessert for
Christmas
4 Reg. Pkgs
29c
CANDY
Satin Mix very best 2 lbs. 25 c
Many other varieties at bottom pricei
In sanitary cellophane bags, not open for clnst to get in
COFFEE
"BOASTEB TO CONSUMES"
AIRWAY, 3 LBS. 55c
NOB HILL, 3 LBS. 73c
Dependable, 2 Lbs. 55c
CHOCOLATES
Extra fancy assorted Chocolates In
fancy 2'4-pouiid boxes. They are
SL PER
BOX
95c
Nuts
All new crop. AH vuricties
to rhoose from.
PEANUTS, Per Lb. . 10c
WALNUTS, Per Lb. .20c
BRAZILS, 2 Lbs. . . 25c
MINCE
MEAT
Korr'a Best
2 LBS.
23c
Tobacco!
16-oz. P. A. In Xmas
package
PER
TIN
85c
SOAP
Crystal White,
Harmony, P & G
20 BARS
75c
ORANGES 19c doz.
Yellow skin, juicy, medium sizes
Bananas, 3 Lbs. 25C
Swt Spuds, 6 lbs 29c
Medium size
CELERY, 3 bu. 25c
WU bleached
SAVINGS FOR FRI.-SAT., DEC. 22-23, INC.