Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, August 01, 1935, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1935.
TODAY and
FRANK PAR KIR TS. Sr
ST0CKBRID6Egs(.
Opportunity today
Whenever I hear young people
complain that there are no oppor
tunities for them I begin to wonder
Just what they mean. Often I dis
cover that they think of "oppor
tunity" as a chance to jump right
out of school into a well-paid, easy
job, with short hours, long week
ends and generous vacations.
It is true that that sort of oppor
tunity no longer exists. What is
more, it never did exist
There is always a place, though,
for the intelligent, industrious and
ambitious boy or girl who really
wants to work, is not afraid of long
hours and low wages to start with,
and has good health and good
habits.
In these times it often takes more
time to find such an opportunity
than It did a few years ago, but the
seeker who gives up after one or
two discouragements demonstrates
that he is not the sort of a person
employers are looking for.
camps assigned to the Soil Conser
vation Service in the NortliT.'cst
and because of facilities for in
spection and the attachment of ex
tra equipment, officials said.
Convoys of trucks have already
been dispatched from Pullman to
Boise, Idaho; Worley, Idaho, and to
Astoria, Oregon. The trucks to be
used by the camps are either one
half ton "pick-up" trucks, or two
ton trucks for heavier duty.
At the present time there are 20
SCS-CCC camps pending comple
tion in the Northwest area under
the direction of the Pullman office
of the Soil Conservation Service.
They are established in type study
areas where there is sufficient worn
to be done to warrant a 200-man
camp. These camps are a part of
the nation-wide movement to re
build our depleted soils.
Maintaining a vegetative cover
on the soil aids in reestamisning
soil structure and also creates fa
vorable mechanical barriers against
soil erosion that will absorb rain
and lessen run-off. Ravine and
gully control in grazing and farm
ing areas are further types of ero
sion control to be practiced in the
anti-erosion movement
BftUCfBAftTON
-10 rites of TH
STER EXECUTIVE
Luck
also goods
At Heppner
CHURCHES
Supplying a wwfc-lo-Mk injpjifioa far ike eT- burdened who will fad
mrr nmmn trill yralfcted m tl CTpmmcM at The Mm Nohody know.
CHURCH OF CHRIST.
ALVIN KLEINFELDT, Pastor.
Bible School 9 :45 a. m.
I have a friend who started his
business career at the same time
that I did, in the same town and at
the same wages $12 a week. Now
he is the head of one of the largest
business corporations in the world.
I asked him once how he had
climbed so far.
"Luck," he replied. "That's how
most folk got wherever they are.
But don't misunderstand me. When
I say luck' I don't mean blind
chance. Luck has to be stimu
lated." He stimulated hs own luck not
only by mastering his own job but
by preparing himself all the time to
step into the next higher job. He
made it a point to keep in perfect
physical condition and to indulge
no bad habits. He studied ways
to make a good impression on his
superiors and associates.
"Window-dressing is as impor
tant for the individual as for the
store," he said, "but you've got to
have the goods on your shelves."
Morning services
Eveninir servceB
Choir rehearsal, Wednesday 8:00 p. m.
Midweek service, lhursday 8 :uu p. m.
Morning sermon, "Some Nine
teenth Century Discoveries in Religion."
Evening sermon, "The Divine and
Human Part in Conversion."
Baptismal service, Sunday eve
ning.
A stranger passing some mines
n Pennsylvania, asked a little boy
why the field was so full of mules.
These mules are worked in the
mine during the week," replied the
boy, "and are brought up Into the
light on Sunday to keep them from
going blind.
A person will become spiritually
blind unless he comes into the
Church one day in seven and view3
the light of the Word of God, and
Christ, who is the light of the
World.
Help
for ambitious
Under my friend's direction, the
great corporation which he heads
takes pains to help its 60,000 or
more workers to "stimulate their
luck." Every employee who shows
signs of special ability, and of am
bition to get ahead, can count on a
helping hand.
"The only way to run a big busi
ness successfully," my friend once
said to me, "is to show everyone in
the organization the door of hope.
and encourage them all to find their
way through it That, and to put
just as much in their pay envelopes
as can possibly be done.
Boy
now on job
The son of one of my village
neighbors has been doing odd jobs
around my country place lor three
or four years, after school, Satur
days and in vacations. Last month
he graduated from our town high
school, with high marks.
"What are you going to do now,
John?" I asked him. He dropped
the handle of the lawnmower and
straightened up. ,
"I'm going to college," he said.
"I don't know how, but I'm going.
I've got to work my way dad can't
help me, with my seven younger
brothers and sisters to bring up
but I'll find a way! I'm going to
hitch-hike to New York and look
for a job."
I smiled at his enthusiasm, but
did not discourage it Neither did
I encourage the idea of a country
boy seeking work in New York
these hard times.
"If you get there, look me up,
John," I said, and gave him my
New York office address. Sure
enough, a week later John showed
up.
I thought of my friend of whom
I have just been talking. I wrote a
note to him and gave it to John.
"Try your luck there, I said.
Next day I got a letter from my
friend. The head of a great com
pany had personally interviewed a
green country boy and he had
given him a job!
Now it is up to John.
Stimulation
the asset
It is easy to say that John was
lucky in knowing a man who knew
a man whose company hires a lot
of boys. The answer to that is that
I wouldn t have sent John to my
friend if John had not been "stimu
lating his luck" so far as I am con
cerned. for four or five years.
Unconsciously, John had been
demonstrating to me that he has
the qualities of intelligence, ambl
tion, resourcefulness, industry and
most important of all character
which could not fal to open the
door of opportunity for him.
. I was glad to hand him the key
to that door, for I believe John will
make good use of his chance. All
I did. though, was to shorten th
time it might have taken him to find
his opportunity.
CAMP-CLOSING RUMOR FALSE
(Continued from First Page )
supplied with trucks within the next
few days, according to information
released at the regional offices at
Pullman this morning. One hun
dred eighteen trucks have been rt
cleved in Pullman for inspectlo
and the addition of necessaray spec
lal equipment and will be conveyed
to the camp areas in Washington
Oregon, and Idaho.
Pullman was selected as the re
celving point for the trucks because
it is the headquarters for the CCC
E. Society .
11
. 7 :00 p. m.
. 8 :00 p. m.
Bible Critics Misunder
stood There are, of course, thousands
of fragments of the Bible or parts
of it of more or less value. Among
these are certain "palimpsests," or
manuscripts, which later fell into
the hands of those who wanted the
parchment for other purposes and
erased the Bible text and wrote
other books instead. Chemical pro
cesses have been used to restore
the Bible text and in some in
stances valuable readings have been
discovered.
This recital of the way In which
manuscripts have been found brings
us to the mention of a class of men
of whom the average layman knows
very little, and most of that little
is wrong. These are the Biblical
critics. "Criticizing the Bible!
What columns of rhetoric have
been printed, what floods of ora
tory have been poured out by those
who could not have told, to save
their souls, what a Biblical critic is
or does. '
There are two kinds of Biblical
critics. The terms lower and high
do not mean that one group
claims or is admitted to be more
important than the other, much less
that there is an assumption of ar
rogance on the part of those that
are "higher," but that one kind of
study follows the other.
The lower critic is a man of tech
nical skill in the deciphering of an
cint texts and manuscripts. He has
critical ability, that is, the ability
PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE.
ALFRED R. WOMACK, Pastor.
Sunday:
Sunday School 30:00 A. M,
After Service 11:00 A. M,
Evening Service 7.30 P. M.
Tuesday night, prayer meeting
only, 7:30.
Thursday evangelistic service 7:30
"WE WELCOME ALL"
IONE
(Continued from First Page)
iness or the ciud was transacieo.
and a social time enjoyed. Those
present were Mrs. Frank Lundell,
Mrs. E. R. Lundell, Mrs. Ida Flet
cher, Mrs. C. W. Swanson, Mrs.
Clel Rea, Mrs. Ella Davidson, Mrs.
E. J. Bristow, Mrs. Victor Riet
mann, Mrs. David Rietmann, Mrs.
E. G. Sperry, Mrs. Ernest Heliker,
Mrs. J. E. Swanson and Mrs. Elmo
McMillan.
Miss Mary S. Cotter of Austin
Minn., is a guest of Mr. and Mrs
M. E. Cotter. Miss Cotter has been
attending summer school at the U.
of W. and will spend a few weeks
here before resuming her duties as
a high school teacher in Austin.
Alfred Balsiger accompanied by
Mrs. Byrd of The Dalles spent Sun
day at the home of his parents, Mr,
and Mrs. P. G. Balsiger.
Miss Helen Ralph of Salem was
in town Saturday. Miss Ralph has
signed a contract to teach the fifth
and sixth grades in place of Miss
Bonnie Ruth Thompson, resigned,
Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Koehring and
children accompanied by Mrs. Paul
G. Balsiger departed on Monday for
a short trip to Seattle. They went
by way of Ellensburg to pick up
Mrs. Elsie Combe. They will make
short stops at Mt. Rainier, Seattle,
and Galvin' in Washington, and in
Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Harris are
enjoying a camping trip. They will
visit Washington and Idaho points
and perhaps go as far as Montana
before returning home.
Mrs. Bert Mason motored to Wal
la Walla Tuesday afternoon to take
her son Junior to a Boy Scout
camp. This is a preliminary camp
to get lined out for the Boy Scout
Jamboree in Washington, D. C
which will begin August 9. Junior
is one of forty-five boys from Blu
Mountain council who have signed
up for this trip.
Miss Freda Anderson of Hood
River has been elected by the school
board at Morgan to teach the pri
mary grades in that school during
the coming year.
Clarence Linn who has been
working in harvest near Porters
ville, Calif., arrived on Sunday to
visit his parents, Mr. .and Mrs. P,
J. Linn, for a week. He will then
go on to Washington for the har
vest season.
The Murray brothers who are
harvesting on their place north of
town spent the week end at their
home in Milton-Freewater.
Mrs. J. W. Christopherson and
granddaughter Marjory of Port
land are visiting relatives.
Miss Eetty Seely of Arlington is
at the home of her sister, Mrs. Jim'
my Farley.
CARD OF THANKS.
We wish to extend our sincere
thanks to the many kind neigh
bors and friends for their kindly
help and sympathy at the time of
our bereavement.
W. P. Prophet,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kistler.
Mr. and Mrs. William Whitson.
August Clearance Sale Dresses,
hats and coats greatly reduced
Cut ran Ready-to-Wear.
Peaches, apricots. Half mile W.
of Umatilla on highway. Walter
Bray.
to judge critically, for criticism is
nothing more or less than the sci
ence of correct judgment
To the average layman a manu
script of the 14th century may
seem as ancient as one of the
fourth. It may be more soiled and
show greater sign of age. But the
critic does not look simply at the
wear and stain. He is a judge of
parchments, of methods of tanning
skins, of kinds of ink, of styles of
making letters. He distinguishes
between "uncial" and "cursive
Greek; between "pointed" and "un
pointed Hebrew. These lower
critics are not widely known; they
are not highly paid. Their work is
a strain on the eyes and a tax on
the mind, and they dread publicity.
So mainly they bleed within their
armor and are silent, but all the
time their patient work is clearing
up the obscurities in translation
and giving us a better knowledge
of the Bible.
The other group of searchers are
the literary or historical or higher
critics. Who wrote these sacred
books? Ezekiel claims to have
written his own, and Baruch is de
clared to have been Jeremiah's
scribe. We may infer that most
of the books of the prophets were
written by the men whose names
they bear. But all the rest of the
Old Testament is anonymous. Peo
pie have rushed in to declare that
certain books were written by cer
tain men. Most of their guesses are
guesses.
...
1 Next Week: Our Debt to Jerome,
ANOTHER GREAT ICE
AGE MAY BE ON WAY
If
It Happens It Will
in Distant Future.
Be
Boston. Another great Ice iif:e
may be on its way, similar to that
of more than half a million years
ago when a frigid glacier sheet slid
over Europe and the American con
tinent, but don't be alarmed, if it
happens it will be in the distant future.
This was the assertion of Dr.
Harlan T. Stetson, Harvard astron
omer, in a radio address in which
he discussed the effect of the west
ern dust storms upon solar radia
tion. Dust storms and volcanic
eruptions might even help to bring
about a new Ice age, he says.
It was Doctor Stetson who a few
years ago revealed the results of
his study of more than 5,000 earth
quakes, and the finding that the
gravitational pull of the moon was
responsible for practically all the
deep-seated quakes, Including the
one In India last May which took
thousands of lives.
Doctor Stetson pointed out that
during the great Ice age, our sun
and the planets were at a spot In
space which appears through tel
escopes as a large black patch like
a horse's head. In the constellation
of Orion. Since then, the sun has
been speeding away from that point
at the rate of 400,000,000 miles
year.
Doctor Stetson said:
"Perhaps back in those dim days
of geologic history, when the giant
Ice sheet slid over Europe and the
American continent, the sun and
earth were enveloped In a cosmic
dust cloud so dense that the par
ticles screened off the sun's heat
to a disastrous degree, lowering
our temperate climates to below
the freezing point the year round.
Who knows but that in some dis
tant future day the sun may again
penetrate one of these cosmic
clouds of dust, and the earth fall
In temperature until civilization
will migrate Into the tropics In or
der to continue Its existence?"
Results of Kansas Quiz
Pain Heirs of Old West
Dodge City, Kan. The heman
West has come upon bad times. In
the parlance of the day when quick
shooting solved disputes and "neck
tie parties" made court districts
unnecessary the "grass roots have
gone loco." The grandchildren of
some of the straighT-shootlng per
sonages who made Front street
lively place are traitors to tradi
tlon.
A general information quiz was
held the other day and "quick on
the draw" was defined as ability
to sketch rapidly.
The historical society whose
membership Includes the blood kin
of those roisterers of the short
grass who enjoyed sending bullets
through plug hats has taken this
lapse to heart and will publish a
glossary of frontier colloquialisms.
Girl Sketches Surgery
Work to Help Science
Cincinnati. A girl who decided
early In lllfe she did not want to
be an artist has grown up to be
one and a very unusual one at that.
She is Mary Maclel, medical artist
for the department of surgery at
the Cincinnati General hospital and
the college of medicine of the Uni
versity of Cincinnati. She Is the
only person In her particular field
In Cincinnati and one of 100 In the
United States.
Her task Is to watch operations.
make sketches In the operating
room and then transform them Into
delicate detailed drawings or paint
lngs. The drawings are published
In medical magazines and text
books or made Into lantern slides
for lectures.
Drawings rather than photo
graphs are used In this work be
cause, Miss Maclel said, If an op
eration was photographed, hamls,
scissors, forceps, etc., would be In
the way and make It practically Im
possible to see the procedure.
This "New Deal" Rates
Place in Postal Guides
New Deal, Mont. This date line
designates a town that soon will ap
pear on all Montana maps in the
United States postal guide.
First of 18 mushroom towns that
have appeared with startling rapid
ity as work on Fort Peck dam has
progressed, It occupies a spot that
little more than a year ago was
nothing more than another bit of
Montana landscape.
A recent survey reveals that
about 1,000 men, most of them
heads of families owning their own
homes, compose the population of
the 13 mng'irnnm towns.
Syndicated Sermon.
To within living memory Id Eng
land, such a large number of min
isters were unable to prepare t
sermon that the secret writing and
syndication of these discourses by
professional writers was quite
business, writes John Duerr, Ox
ford, Ohio, In Collier's Weekly. In
1870 London still had 12 concerns
that weekly supplied sermons to
about 1,500 preachers, the copies
being printed "in imitation hand
writing" In order to fool the con
gregations. Feeble-Minded Lack Judgment
The feeble-minded may have good
memories, but they are Invariably
lacking In judgment; while those
with a hereditary trait of Insanity
have generally poor memories, but
only in msrked cases Is the Jndg-
ment Impaired. From this, says
an authority, comes the working
formula that the feeble-minded have
good memories, but are lacking In
ludgment. and that the Insane
reason well, but have poor memories.
Wood Duck Clever Bird
The wobd duck Is one of the most
accomplished birds In America. Be
ing a member of the waterfowl
group, It can swim very well. It
can dive, too. The wood duck also
Is a fast flyer. Although It cannot
actually climb a tree, It can walk up
an angle. Nature, however, has
given It another accomplishment.
The wood duck can land in a tree
or on a stump. Inasmuch as this
species likes to nest above the
ground, this trick is necessary.
Deportation
American-born citizens cannot he
deported, but there are cases on
record of the deportation of natural
ized citizens. In these cases the ac
tion Is taken only after a court trial.
Aliens, of course, can be deported
for certain crimes, Illegal entry, an
archistic endeavors or if It can be
shown within five years after arri
val that the aliens became public
charges from causes existing prior
to arrival.
S. F. BOWMAN
MONUMENTS
Representing
BLAES1NG GRANITE CO.
Odd Fellows Building Phon. 161
PENDLETON, OREGON
Police Pay Own Way
Newcomerstown, Ohio. With gas
oline funds exhausted, police here
have been operating at their own
expense since January. Already
they have given a dance, earning
$.10 for a special fuel fund.
WOOD FOR SALE
LOW PKICE
General Trucking
Anywhere in the state, any time
WAITER R. CO RLE Y
Phone 184 lone, Ore.
Miniiter Is Foret Ranger
Tulare, Calif. A minister in the
winter, Uev. Arthur nice, of the
Tulare Congregational church, will
become a forest ranger In Yospmite.
He held the same job in 1033 and
1!)R4 while a pastor In Salt Lake
City.
Does Your Typewriter
or Adding Machine
Need Fixing?
See
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES
Expert repair man calls regular
ly. See us for office supplies.
LAURENCE CASE
MORTUARY
"Just the service wanted
when you want it most"
Fish Are Used to Clear
Lake of Mass of Weeds
Pelping. -The center of the cam
pus of Yenchlng university, Asier
ican missionary supported Institu
tion near Pelping, Is a shallow or
namental lake. Some time ago It
was noticed that this lake was
rapidly becoming choked with
weeds. Ornamental qualities were
greatly reduced, and freshmen
raised objections to being thrown
Into the weedy waters.
Faced with the problem, the
business department purchased a
large number of "grass fish." These
fish, true to their name, are vege
tarians, spurning worms, flies, and
the small fry when they can browse
off succulent seaweed or nibble at
grass hanging In the water.
Like other grazing animals,
"grass fish" have prodigious appe
tites and multiply rapidly. Within
a surprisingly short period the lake
was cleared of weeds.
It's Rumored
WE HAVE NO FEEDS
Give us a chance to prove to you that we
do carry
HIGH QUALITY FEEDS PRICED
TO GET BUSINESS
Morrow County
Grain Growers, Inc.
KENNETH BLAKE, Mgr.
EFFECTIVE
RHEUMATIC
RELIEF !
Quickly and effectively, often
within 48 hours, Williams R. U. X.
Compound brings relief to sufferers
of rheumatic pains and fevers, and
lumbago, neuritis, and neuralgia
pains. The Salicylate treatment of
fered In Williams R. U. X. Com
pound is of recognized value, and
many are finding wonderful relief
from Its use.
Get a bottle from the Patterson
& Son drug store today. If the very
first bottle does not satisfy, your
money back.
Home Furnishers
ATTENTION!
STOCK REDUCTION SALE
Cash values you cannot afford to overlook.
Terms within reason
August 15 Opening
Case Furniture Co.
Morrow County Creamery
Company
Manufacturers of
Pride of Oregon Butter and Ice Cream
When you patronize your local factory, you
are not only helping the home factory, 8 local
farmers who are helping to pay taxes, but are
helping yourself.
For the month of May we paid
$4300.00
for Butterfat. Do you think this is worth
keeping in the community? Is this worth encouraging?
Albers premium
LARGE PKO.
27c
Catsup
oz. bottles
2 FOB
25c
APRICOTS
Fancy pack
Walla Walla
2 254 TINS
29c
FEDERAL MILK, quality
TALL TIN W
'Vr fiTIH f IrlL"1 UUCP:
FRI.-SAT.-MON. PRICES We reserve right to limit)
AATC
v.r I w II unsumassed
X
JELL WELL 4 nn
3 PKGS ill
PORK & BEANS
Large Size
HOT SAUCE
6 TINS
PICKLES, Dills
QUART JARS
STRING BEANS
Case $2.29. No. 2 Tins
CORN FLAKES
2 PKGS
SHORTENING
3 LBS.
10c
25c
19c
10c
15c
39c
nfll
31!
r ITii
. COFFEE .
"A blend for every taste" and a
"price for every pocketbook."
AIRWAY ... 3 LBS. 50c
NOB HILL . . 3 LBS. 69c
Dependable, 2 Lb. Tin 45c
5c
23c
SOAP, Palmolive
PER BAR
PICNICS, fancy
PER LB
TUNA FISH, White fZf
Star. Large SizeAtJ
VANILLA, Imit. JJJg
PEAS, early small -j fig
fancy sieve. CAN JLUV'
Case. $2.29
SALMON, tall tins ff0
Alaska pink, 2 Tins MVs
SARDINES
3 OVAL TINS
BEANS, Idaho small
whites. 10 LBS-MATCHES-
CTN
TOILET TISSUE
Waldorf. 4 FOR.
PRUNES
No. 2Vi TINS
SOAP, C.W. or P&G
10 FOR
MUSTARD
16 OZ. JAR ....
FIGS, Black or white
LB
CANTALOUPES
6 FOR
POTATOES
' 25 LBS
CORN
Fancy Golden Ban
tam. No. 2 Tins.
2 TINS
28c
25c
49c
23c
19c
10c
35c
10c
10c
25c
35c
FLOUR
$1-59
laid Bbl. $5.85
Sk. VJ
Safeway BW. $6.25
Sk.
Ore. Maid Bhl
P.N.BUTTER
Armour's No. 1 qual
ity, fresh supply,
2 LBS.
33c
SUGAR
Sea Island pure cane
LIMITED SUPPLY
101b. Cloth bag
59c