HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPP.NER, OREGON, THUR SPAY, JULY 18, 1935 PAGE THREE o SBFal NEWS T. H. Dean, former Morow coun ty resident now a member of the police force at Hood River, visited friends and relatives here a few days this week, going on out to Hardman for a visit with his sister, Mrs. O. E. Johnson. He reported conditions good at Hood River with the construction of a new postofflce and enlargement of apple packing facilities. Both apple and pear crops will be good this season, he said. H. L. Stiles, assistant cashier of United States National bank of Portland, who had just returned from a banker's school at Rutgers university in the east, was operated on in Portland the first of the week for appendicitis. Mrs. Stiles was in Heppner with her mother, Mrs. Josie Jones, while Mr. Stiles was in the east, and returned to Portland in time to meet her husband. Roland and Evelyn Humphreys arrived Saturday from an extended motor trip in the east, accompanied by Miss Ruth Bell of Washington, D. C, who will visit at the Hum phreys home. Roland taught last year in a college at Westchester, Pa., and will return east early in September to study the coming year at Columbia university, New York. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ingles of Port land were calling on Heppner friends Monday while making a short visit to the city on business. Both Mr., and Mrs. Ingles spent their early days in Heppner, Mrs. Ingles formerly being Miss Lila Hicks whose father, A. J. Hicks, was one-time editor of the Heppner Times. D. A. Wilson returned home on Monday from John Day where he went last week to relieve Johnnie Farley, manager of Wilson's store there, while Mr. Farley took a short wedding trip. Mr. Wilson reported the weather exceedingly hot in the John Day valley. Mr. and Mrs. John T. Kirk of Vernonia were in the city Monday for a visit with Mr. Kirk's brother, George Kirk. Mrs. Kirk is visiting at the home of her daughter, Mrs. F. B. Ritchie in lone, while Mr. Kirk returned to Vernonia Tues day. C. J. D. Bauman and Elbert Cox motored to Walla Walla Tuesday afternoon, picking up Glen R. Had ley at Boardman and taking him to the veterans' hospital at Walla Walla where he is undergoing treatment for heart trouble. O. M. Clark, newly appointed representative for Watkins prod ucts In this district, and W. P. Lut trell, came over from Hermiston Tuesday, Mr. Luttrell helping to acquaint Mr. Clark with the Mor row county section.. E. N. Gonty and Jim Archer re turned Sunday from a three-weeks motor trip which took them Into Canada for a visit at the home of Mr. Archer's mother, whom he had not seen for 25 years. They report an enjoyable trip. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Cash and children were in the city Tuesday on business, coming over from La Grande where Mr. Cash has been assistant manager of the J. C. Pen ney store since leaving here several weeks ago. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Ferguson, Kay and Mary Lou, left the end of the week on a vacation trip to Gold Beach and a visit at the home of Mr. Ferguson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Ferguson. Calvin L. Sweek, circuit judge, and J. S. Beckwith, court reporter, were in the city yesterday from Pendleton, taking evidence in the divorce case of Roxie vs. George Sperry. Mrs. S. E. Notson arrived home yesterday from a visit of two weeks at the home of her daughter, Mrs. V. M. Sackett, in Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Sackett brought her home by car. Scott McMurdo accompanied Fin ley Grabeal to Pendleton last eve ning and remaned overnight at the home of his uncle and aunt, Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Leach. Mr. and Mrs. Joel R. Benton ar rived in the city Monday evening from Fort Benton, Montana, for a visit at the home of their duughter, Mrs. Robert Jones. Rev. Joseph Pope was able to re turn home this morning from the Heppner hospital where he under went an operation last week for ruptured appendix. Earl D. Hullock visited a few minutes with Heppner friends Sun day evening on his way home to Redmond from a visit to Kenne wick, Wash, Miss Juanita Leathers arrived the end of the week from Portland where she has been for several weeks with her mother. Billy Blddle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Blddle, underwent an op eration this morning for removal oftonslls and adenoids. Mrs. Harold Anderson, who was quite ill for several days at the home of Mrs. Ada Cason, was able to return home Sunday. Dr. J. P. Stewart, Eye-Sight Spec ialist of Pendleton, will bo at the HEPPNER HOTEL on WEDNES DAY, JULY 24th. Mrs. Elmer Ball, whs able to re turn to her home Tuesday after being confined at Heppner hospital. Alva Jones has been spending several days this week at La Grande on buslnoss. Mrs. Dick Morman and baby re turned home yesterday from Hepp ner hospital. I Mr. and Mrs. Harold Van Horn and son,' Jesse Tinsley, arrived home the first of the week from a several weeks' motor trip to their former home in Missouri. Just be fore arriving at their destination they had the misfortune of wreck ing their car, though all escaped with slight injury. They missed the recent severe storms and aside from the accident the trip was en joyable throughout. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Van Horn of Kansas ac companied them back to Heppner and are seeking employment. Miss May Doherty and Miss Phyl lis Pollock, local teachers, returned the end of the week from a trip east on which they attended ses sions of the National Education as sociation meeting at Denver, Col., and expected to make a bus edu cational tour in the east The ed ucational tour, sponsored by a mid west college, was cut short when the concern sponsoring it went bankrupt. Mrs. A. Q. Thomson arrived last evening from McMinnville and will spend a month to six weeks here while serving the local public as agent for the New York Life Insur ance company. Her daughter, Miss Beatrice, is employed in the secre tary of state's office at Salem for the summer, and her son Billy is working in California. Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Rasmus mo tored to Dayton, Wash., Saturday evening for a visit at the home of Mrs. Rasmus' brother and family. Eastern Washington, like eastern pregon, was found to be swelter ing under the heat, but crops of the section appeared to be excellent. Mrs. C. C. Patterson, her daugh ter, Miss Mary Patterson, and grandson Baird departed the first of the week on a motor trip to Pennsylvania for a visit with rel atives. J. G. Barratt returned the first of the week from Montana, where he went to look after his shep on summer range In the vicinity of Glacier national park. Glen Jones is hobbling about with a sprained ankle which he received last week as the result of an acci dent on the train on which he was shipping sheep east Mr. and Mrs. Ray P. Kinne and son Dickie departed Sunday for Portland and Seattle on a two weeks' vacation. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Rube W. Voile at the home of Mrs. Ada Ca son in this city Saturday, a seven pound daughter. Frank Roberts sustained a sprained ankle yesterday when he fell from a scaffold at the CCC camp. Cousins Ellis and Ted Thomson left Tuesday night with the C. W. McNamer sheep for Chicago. Logie Richardson and W. W. Smead returned home Monday from a week-end visit in Portland. Arthur Keene was a business vis itor in the city Monday from the lower Rhea creek farm. Peaches, apricots. Half mile W. of Umatilla on highway. Walter Bray. Good Cottage Cheese Easy to Make at Home Cottage cheese, a nutritious and easily digestible protein food, is made in small quantities for home use by a very simple process and with ordinary equipment, says Dr. G. H. Wilster, professor of dairy rnanufacturing at Oregon State college. Dr. Wilster offers the fol lowing suggestions for obtaining the most palatable product by the easiest method. The first essential, he says, is to start with good quality milk. Al though left-over milk that has be come sour may be used if it has not developed a bitter flavor and if the whey has not started to separate, fresh milk is more satisfactory for cheese making because it is possi ble to direct and control the sour ing. The best method is to allow sweet skim milk to remain in a clean, warm place at a temperature of about 70 to 75 degrees F. until it clabbers, when It should have a clean, sour and pleasant flavor, Dr. Wilster explains. This ordinarily takes from 25 to 30 hours, but the process may be hastened by adding one or two tablespoonsful of good flavored sour milk to each gallon of fresh milk. When thickened and clabbored, the milk is cut into pieces about two inches square and stirred thorough ly, being careful not to break up the curd too much. The next step is to heat the curd. This is most conveniently done by placing the container In hot water to heat it to 100 degrees F. The curd should be held at this temperature for about 30 minutes, during which time It should be stirred for a min ute at 5 minute intervals. The curds and whey are then poured into a colander or strainer over which a piece of cheesecloth has been laid. After about five or ten minutes work the curds toward the center of the colander with a spoon, raising and lowering ends of the cloth to help make the whey drain faster. To complete the draining, tie the ends of the cloth together and hang it up until the whey ceases to flow in a steady stream. The curd is then ' emptied from the bag and worked with a spoon or butter paddle until smooth and about the consistency of mashed potatoes. Sour or sweet cream may be added to increase the smooth ness and Improve the flavor, and salt Is added according to taste, about one tcaspoonful to one pound pf curd. One gallon of skim milk makes about li pounds of cheese. Pay-As-You-Go Plan Tourist Traffic Up By A. L. LINDBECK Salem. A pay-as-you-ijo plan for financing the new capitol build ing is gaining support in official circles here. Advocates of this pro posal explain that there is nothing to prevent the legislature from making a direct appropriation cov ering the-state's share of the cap itol cost With the Public Works administration advancing 45 per cent of the estimated $3,500,000, ten tatively fixed as the cost of the new building, thav state's share would be $1,925,000. The fund to meet the appropriation could be raised thru the regular annual tax levies which, it is now estimated, will permit in clusion of approximately $800,000 In the yearly budget for capitol finan cing. In -its recent '"progress report" the state planning board estimated that it would require two years to "omplele the capitol after the con tract is let In that event there would be at least $1,600,000 avail able out of current revenues to ap ply toward construction costs, dur ing this period and the remaining $325,000 could either be borrowed from other state funds now lying idle in state banks and earning no interest, or trie construction pro gram could be extended Into the third year. Governor Martin who 'has dis cussed this plan with some of his advisers raises the objection that it would impose an unfair tax burden on the present generation in pay ing for a building designed to serve for many generations. Sponsors of the plan, however, counter with the argument that it would save the taxpayers from $300,000 to $500,000 in interest charges which would be added to the cost through a loan or bond issue. The opinion of Attorney General Van Winkle holding the proposed rental plan for repayment of a PWA loan to involve a violation of the constitutional inhibition against state indebtedness was not unex pected in view of repeated rulings by the Oregon supreme court dis approving similar schemes by coun ty and city governments in their efforts to circumvent debt restric tions. With the rental scheme definitely "out" two alternatives are avail able to the capitol builders. One is the proposed legislative appropria tion with annual tax levies within the six percent limit. The other is to resort to a special election for approval of a loan or a bond issue. Because the statutes do not pro vide for the sale of 15-year bonds as had been contemplated by the state highway commission in re financing its Coast Highway bridge bonds, motorists of Oregon will be stuck for an extra $400,000 or more in interest charges over the 25 years which the new state issue will run. R. H. Baldock, state highway en gineer, had figured to save approx imately $2,000,000 by exchanging the .present PWA 30-year revenue bonds for 15 - year general obligation bonds. The law provides only for the sale of 25- and five-year bonds but even on the longer term paper it is believed there will be a saving of approximately $1,600,000 in in terest due largely to a lower rate. The commission is advertising $3, 000,000 of 25-year bonds for sale on July 25 and plans to float a short term issue of five-year bonds cov ering the remaining $1,200,000 nec essary to finance the bridges, later. Governor Martin has no intention of setting himself up as a court of appeals from the supreme court He made this clear in a statement this week explaining hla refusal to grant executive clemency to Thom as Black, Malcolm Samuelson and James Hanlon, convicted of assault and battery in connection with the longshoremen's strike in Portland last summer. "To interfere in these cases would be the grossest abuse of the power of my office," the gov ernor declared. "Rather It seems to me that the authority and power of this office should be exercised to uphold our courts and law en forcement agencies in the mainten ance of the law of the land." George Smith, prominent Rose burg sportsman and hotel owner, is slated for appointment to the House seat left vacant when Representa tive Wm. W. Knight accepted ap pointment as assistant district at torney for Douglas county, accord ing to grape vine information reaching the capital this week. The same source of information has it that Walter Fisher, Roseburg dem ocrat, is facing a lot of opposition for re-appointment to the state senate. Fisher who lost his senate seat because he was a member of the state bonus commission, has re signed from the commission In or der to again qualify for the senate post A huge tract of timber compris ing 350,000 acres In eastern Coos and western Douglas counties and another tract of 50,000 acres in the southern end of Coos county were closed to entry except by permit through a proclamation Issued by Governor Martin Monday. The closure was recommended by Lynn Cronemiller, state forester, as a precaution against forest fires. Tourist traffic is on the up-grade again. June registration of out-of-state automobiles totalling 14,720, exceeded last month by more than 100 cars. Registrations for March, April and May, however, were be low those for 1934, One of the oldest documents in the oflicial archives of the state Is a commission signed by John W. Davis, territorial governor, ap pointing Noah Hubcr as prosecut ing attorney for the second Judicial district. The commission which Is done in longhand throughout, bears the territorial seal and is dated June 5, 1854. Acceptance of the appointment is dated July 12, 1854, which makes it just 81 yean old this week. The document was un earthed by Secretary of State Snell in rearranging the official records of his department , More than 96,000 full time work ers are now employed in Oregon industries which have accepted the protection of the Workmen's Com pensation act, according to records of the Industrial Accident commis sion. This compares very favorably with the 81,630 workers on the com mission's records a year ago and the 69,793 employees who were holding down Jobs In these same industries at the depth of the depression in 1932-33. Peak of industrial em ployment in Oregon as revealed by the records of this commission was in 1929-30 when 111,252 full time workers were under the protection of the Compensation act Negotiations between the com mittee appointed by Governor Mar tin and trustees of Willamette uni versity for the purchase of the uni versity campus for a capitol site are understood to have reached a stale mate over the matter of price. University students are under stood to be agreed to sale of the property but at a price which will permit purchase of a larger tract and replacement of the present buildings with new and more mod ern structures. Estimates as to the amount necessary to cover this pro gram range from $500,000 to as high as $1,000,000 with many legislators known to be opposed to even the smaller amount as the price for a new capitol site. Friends of the university see in pie present emergency a splendid opportunity to unload the school property as a preliminary step toward expansion of the institu tion. On the other hand state offi cials regard the campus as an ideal capitol site, susceptible of land scaping into a beautiful setting for the proposed new state house if it can be had at a price which the state can afford to pay. Grants Pass is the tourist gate way into Oregon judged by records of the automobile registration de partment. More out-of-state cars register at the Grants Pass office than at any other point in the state. For the first six months of this year 7913 foreign cars secured visitors' permits at this Junction of the Red woods with the Pacific highway. Ashland, with 5199 registrations, was second and Brooking with 2004, third. Other registration points report the following records for the six month period: Arlington, 1448; Clatskanie, 83; Forest Grove, 54; Free water, 178; Hillsboro, 57; Hood River, 315; Independence, 7; John Day, 163; La Grande. 690; Marsh field, 326; Medford, 1697; Milton 90; Newberg, 67, and North Bend, 65. " Official Oregon was pretty well scattered about over the state on Independence Day. Rufus Holman state treasurer, was the orator of the day at Port Orford in Curry county. Earl Snell, secretary of state, made the principal address at the Salem celebration. Governor Charles H. Martin spent the day quietly on the McKenzie river, leav ing the oratory to his pinch-hitters, with his secretary, W. L. Gosslin, speaking at Albany and Frank Mc Culloch, utilities commissioner, J,wlsting the tail of the American eagle at Mt. Angel. The governor had 14 invitations to speak on the Fourth but turned them all down. WHEN kidneys function badly tnd you suffer bsclctche, diiziness, burning, scanty Of too frequent urina tion, getting up at night, swollen feet and ankles; feel upset and miserable . . . use Doan's Pills, v Doan't are especially for poorly working kidneys. Millions of boxes arc used every year. They are recom mended by users the country over. Ask your neighbor! ::THE SEASON'S:: ::Hffi:: Fresh Fruits Vegetables Complete Fountain Service BEER and LIGHT WINES Elkhorn Restaurant ED CHINN, Prop. AH Counties But Harney Now Aid Extension Work Every county in Oregon except ing Harney is now supporting some phase of extension service work, according to the annual report of F. L. Ballard, vice-director of ex tension, filed recently with Wash ington D. C. officials. The past year saw a record breaking demand for services of the organization and notable accomplishments, the re port points out. Closer coordination in adminis tration helped overcome to some extent the handicaps of lowered in come end demands of many emer gency projects, Director Ballard points out. Despite the emergency work, substantial progress was made toward the accomplishment of long-time objectives in Oregon agriculture. Expansion of irrigation in the Willamette valley, continued de velopment of the small seed indus try, and further encouragement of alfalfa growing In western Oregon are among many major accomplish ments listed by Ballard in his re port. Jumping alfalfa acreage in 10 years from 2000 to more than 30,000 acres means an estimated saving of $200,000 annually to dairy and livestock men in 13 western Oregon counties. Four-H club work and home ec onomics extension projects contin ued to meet with increasing favor during the year. Membership and completion in 4-H club activities continued to increase even though the country as a whole showed a falling off. Leadership throughout the year was given in emergency programs to insure bringing to Oregon far mers the benefits available under the agricultural adjustment act and Receives Relief From Rheumatic Suffering Mrs. Ivan Yargus, Belknap, Iowa, writes that her 20 years suffering from rheumatic, neuralgia, and neu ritis pains has been quickly reliev ed by taking Williams R. U. X. Compound. She states she also takes Williams S. L. K. Formula to eliminate the cause. Williams R. U. X. Compound and Williams S. L. K. Formula are sold by the Patterson & Son Drug Store. ( General Trucking ANYWHERE FOR HIRE INSURED CARRIER H. E. COLE, Heppner Heppner Transfer Co. Anywhere For Hire Hauling Bonded and Insured Carrier ROBT. A. JONES, Mgr. other recovery programs, the report points out. Drouth relief and farm debt adjustment work were either directed or furthered through the extension service. Extension service income for the year reported on was $64,441.32 be low that for 1930, making necessary heavy curtailment of many projects excepting the AAA and similar ac tivities which were largely sup ported from special funds. 9 t Is 2 3S- "-"2 5 f 5 in 5 fit i; PJ 5 gfj (0 Sir f? ?i i 3.s I O FORD PRICES REDUCED WHY WAIT TO INVESTIGATE AMERICA'S FASTEST SELLING AUTOMOBILE? Never have you had opportunity to get so much car value at the money. Come in today for a demonstration. car BARGAINS We have automobiles from $35.00 up. Cars in good condition ready to run. IF IT'S AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE YOU WANT SEE US! Special prices on parts and repair work dur ing JULY and AUGUST. Blackburn - Jones Motor Company Heppner Gazette Times offers to subscribers, new or old mu a m nam 2T Yet, slrl This Is the first Urn hi history that many of these maga ilno have boon offeree to the public at Mien an amazing price taring, ACT QUICKLY! THIS NEWSPAPER I FULL YEAR AMD 3 OF THESE FAMOUS MAGAZINES! 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