PAGE THREE HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, LexsnS Muppe Guy Shaw, Lexington Farmers warehouse manager, was in the city this morning on business. He cor rected thiB paper on two errors in reporting recently. One in which he waa quoted as manager of Mor row County Grain Growers ware house, and the other in which Shaw and McMillan were given as Pontiac dealers at Lexington in connection with a car accident. Scott and Martin, De Soto dealers, were the parties, not Shaw and McMillan, and the car was a DeSoto, not a Pontiac. Mr. and Mrs. Foster Collins made a trip to town Saturday from their home on Camas prairie. It was necessary for them to dig out of three feet of snow, after having been isolated for a month, and it took them from 5 to 9 o'clock that morning to make the mile and a quarter distance up the hill from their home to the Heppner-Spray road. The Phelps ambulance made a trip to the Boardman project last night to bring Elmer Tyler to Mor row General hospital. Mr. Tyler is suffering with septic sore throat and running a high temperature. The trip waa made under consider able handicap due to snow and cold. Lawrence Redding passed thru town Saturday from his Eight Mile farm on his way to the George Shane auction sale on lower Wil low creek. The mercury had dropped to 12 below at his place the night before, with sub-zero weather prevailing all week. Carl Ulrich is acting as solicitor for the WPA-health agencies toilet project in Morrow county. Several orders have already been received and construction of the buildings Is under way at the county sheds. Installation will be started just as soon as weather permits. Mrs. John Anglin returned home Sunday from Yakima with her husband who motored over after her. She had been at Yakima for several weeks while undergoing an operation on her nose. She re turned considerably improved in health. Jack Harding, barber for the last several years at the E. E. Clark shop, went to Corvallis this week to accept a similar position. His place here has been taken by Harry Hu ley who recently disposed of his in terest in the Lexington shop. Miss Frances Rugg, student at Pacific university, Forest Grove, and brother, Anson., Portland busi ness college student, spent the week end at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Rugg of Rhea creek. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Beckner were Heppner visitors Tuesday from the south lone wheat farm. Winter has taken good hold there, with wheat fields well covered by snow to a depth of several Inches. Gene Engeiman, salesman for a Portland movie distributing firm, visited at the home of his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. John Turner, when in the city Saturday on business. Ralph I. Thompson was down from the upper Willow creek farm Tuesday. He reported heavy feed ing of sheep, though weather has been favorable for the job. Mrs. Clyde Denny is conducting a hemstitching business through the Frances shop. She was In the city Tuesday with Mr. Denny from the Rhea creek farm. Miss Mary White and Mrs. Vir ginia Amorelli went to Weiser, Ida ho, the end of the week to see Miss White's sister, Miss Frances, who was ill. " R. K. Drake was in from the Hanshew Sand Hollow farm Sat urday and reported a foot of snow over his district. Dr. J. P. Stewart braved the win try roads from Pendleton yester day to make his regular call on lo cal eye patients. Want Ads FOR SALE Hay; S miles down Rhea creek from Ruggs. J. A, Wetzel. 50-52p HEMSTITCHING At Frantes Shop. 60-2 Well Improved 40 acres near Sil verton, Ore., to trade for partly Irrigated sheep ranch and pay cash difference. Write Homeseekers Agency, Sllverton, Ore. For Sale John Deere tractor, 160 egg incubator. J. D. Eklebcrry, Morgan. 49-50p MEN WANTED for Rawleigh Routes of 800 families. Reliable hustler should start earning $25 weekly and increase rapidly. Write today. Rawleigh, Dept. ORB-84-S, Oakland, Calif. Would like to know whereabouts of Trade Llchtenthal, Lizzie Lich tenthal, and Mrs. George Blahm as they are holrs to Insurance of Rob ert Wall, formerly Andy Llchten thal, of 2625 East Slauson Ave., Huntington Park, Cal. Direct Re plies to Robert Wall at this address. 48-22p W. Leghorn baby chicks 8c. Cus tom hatching $2.25 and $3.25. Write or call at hatchery. Salter Hatch ery, lone. 47-52p For Sale 16-ln. dry wood, near highway, $3.50 cord. Harry French, Hardman, 43tf. Maternity and oonvalesoent cases eared for In my home. Mrs. J. B. Caaen. ttf. nmog Nat Kimball, sales agent for the Federal Land bank, is in the city today from the Pendleton office. Francis Nlckerson left for Port land the end of the week to take u position in a service station. Jim Furlong who has been a student at Mt. Angel college, re turned home this week. HEMSTITCHING At Frances Shop. 50-2 THE Hehisch Published by the Journalism Class of HEPPNER HIGH SCHOOL Editor Marjorie Parker Assistant Neva Bleakman Humor Kattiryn Parker Grade News Everett Crump Class News .... Erma Van Schoiack Boys Sports Marvin Casebeer Girls' Sports Necha Coblantz Girls' League Louise Anderson Personals Dora Bailey Club News Beth Vance H.H.S. Editorial "The essence of patriotism lies in a willingness to sacrifice for one's country, just as true greatness finds expression, not in blessings enjoyed, but in good bestowed. Read the words inscribed on the monuments reared by loving hands to the he roes of the past; they do not speak of wealth inherited, or honors bought; of hour3 of leisure spent, but of service done." W. J. Bryan. As we read this inscription, let us compare it with our school and work. It is essential that we be loyal to our school as well as our country, and we can readily see that the patriotism our school receives is from the willingness we sacrifice for it; therefore, let us strive to work for a goal of higher ideals for the betterment of our school and country, not only when we are in school, but when we are outside as well. Our work outside of school counts just as much as our cour tesy and willingness In school. Mr. Evans has been ill at his home with the flu. Gordon Buck num substituted for him. Bob Scrivner Is confined to his home with scarlet fever. Several basketball boys, Includ ing Jimmy Farley, Riley Munkers, Len Gilman and Willy McRoberts, are ill. Miss Peterson spent the week end. in Portland. Miss Mary White, the sixth grade teacher, went to Weiser, Idaho, last week to see her twin sister, Miss Frances White, who is very ill. Mrs. Paul Gemmell substituted for her. Mr. Bloom returned Sunday from a business trip to Portland. Howard Bryant had the misfor tune to cut his head while playing basketball Saturday night La- moyne Cox was taken out of the game because of illness. Jimmy Furlong, student at Mt. Angel college, is visiting his par ents and friends previous to going to Corvallis to work. Buddy Batty is ill with measles. Friends will bo pleased to learn that the State Athletic Board of Control approved the application of LaVerne Van Marter to be eligible to compete in athletics next semes ter. Students who drop school are Ineligible to compete in athletics on the first semester of their return unless the board passes favorably on the case at the time the student leaves school. H.H.S. Grade News The first grade students are be ginning with a new unit of work on "Winter." This study includes the reading of snow stories and poems, original Rtories and a bulletin board display. A new pupil, Evonne Bleakman, has been enrolled in the first grade this week. Valentine's Day was a very busy day for the second grade. The stu dents made valentines for their mothers and fathers. In the after noon they had a Valentine party. The third grade students are making health charts. Each day they fill out the blank spaces on the chart if they have obeyed the health rules of the class. The fourth grade students are learning to dance the steps of the Don Juan Minuet Election of the seventh grade class'offlcers will be set for Friday, February 21. The officers are elect ed for a term of two months. A citizenship meeting was held in the fifth grade Monday morning The meeting was not completely organized but the students expect to have some Interesting meetings in the near future. H.H.9. Cliuts News The girls in the Home Economics class are fitting their dresses which they are making. The Farm Problems class Is be ginning work on the gas engine. They are finding many more prob lems than they ever dreamed of. The Biology cluss is studying in digestion. Because of so many absences, the typing classes are being held up In their work. The students of all typing classes have begun to take flve-mlnute timed writing tests every day In ad dition to the regular ton- and fifteen-minute tests given at inter vals during each week. H.H.S. Club News The "Pep" club has decided to assist In arrangements for the tour si i nament to be held here March 6 and 7. The club will cooperate with the Lions committee in selling tick ets. Season tickets will be 75c for students and $1.25 for adults. Plans for the "H" club and "Girls' League carnival, which will be held in .April, are being carried out Work has been started on the skits and plans made for the booths. H.H.S. Girt' League Meeting The Girls' league meeting held Friday afternoon was called to or der by the vice-president. Norma Becket Instead of the usual busi ness meeting, the afternoon was de voted to a talk given by Dr. Tib bies. His subject was "The Import ance of First Aid and How to Ad minister it." This talk proved to be both interesting and helpful. The next meeting will be held in March. H.H.S. Boys' Sports The Heppner High school is look ing forward to the basketball tour nament to be held in our gym March 6-7. There will be some very fast games played these two days and we assure the townspeople a very exciting tournament. February' 28-29 Arlington is hold ing a tournament for sub-district 13-B. The winners of this tourna ment will come to Heppner to com pete in the district tournament. The teams that have a chance in competing in our tournament are Umatilla, Boardman, Arlington, Umapine and Athena. The loss of one of our best for wards, Howard Furlong, set our team back; however, the team is progressing very nicely and by the time of the tournament they will be able to hold their own with the other teams. -H.H.S. Girls' Basketball The second string of the high school girls' gym class played a game of basketball with the seventh and eighth grade girls before the opening of the Heppner-Ione game last Thursday. The grade girls were defeated by two points, the score being 22-24. H.H.S. Humor Do you know That the Coach wears bedroom slippers in public? That Ruth Green once got in a gravy bowl? Any new jokes? If so, tell us. Why Jimmy Driscoll gets so much publicity? . That the Pep club had a candy sale Saturday night? That Kay Furlong once broke a cow's tail by tying it to the fence? Boyd R.: Did anyone ever tell you how wonderful you are? Dois A.: Why, no. Boyd: Where did you get the idea, then? Marie B.: How do you say this In Shakespearian English: "Here comes a bow-legged man"? Mr. Evans (after thinking quite a while): Ah! Behold! What is this I see walking in parenthesis?" KING . . human nature Edward VIII became King of England on the death, of his father, George V, without even a mild pro test from those of his subjects who still believe that the throne belongs by right to the family of Stuart. Less than 200 years ago, in 1746, the last battle fought on British soil resulted In the defeat of the army led by Charles Edward Stu art the "Young Pretender," grand son of King James II, who had been deposed and banished in 1688. Until 1901, when the present King's grandfather succeeded his mother Queen-Victoria, there was a constant fear In England of anoth er "Jacobite Rising" to put the House of Stuart back on the throne. Fingerbowls were long banned at important public banquets, lest some secret adherent to Stuart cause, in drinking the toast "To the King" should hold is wineglasj over the flngerbowl and so drink to "The King over the water." In late years the Jacobites have contented themselves with gather ing at the statue of Charles I in It always works Just do what hospitals do, and the doctors insist on. Use a liquid laxa tive, and you can bring yourself to clocklike regularity without strain or ill effect. A liquid cun always be taken in gradually reduced doses. Reduced dosage is the secret of any real relief from constipation. Ask a doctor about this. Ask your druggist how very popular Dr. Cald weirs Syrup Pepsin nus become. It gives the right kind of help, and right amount of help. Taking a little Iras each time, gives the bowels a chime to act of their own accord, until they are moving regularly and thoroughly without any help at all. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin con tains senna and cascara both natural laxatives that form no habit. The ac tion is gentle, but sure. It will relievt any sluggishness or bilious condition due to constipation without upset. TODAY and FRANK PARKER fPN. hL STCKKBRID6Ej. II SOLD Trafalgar Square on January 20 each year desouncing the reigning monarch as a usurper. This year, however, they postponed the de nunciation to March 27, so as not to annoy the mourners for King George V. Some of my Canadian friends tell me that their Jacobite "Society of the White Rose" has a jolly time at their annual dinners, denying the claim to the British throne of the monarch at whose call they would all go out and fight for the Empire. Human nature is funny in most of its manifestations. WOMEN bonus Nobody knows exactly how many American women took an actual part in the World War, but there were more than 14,500 of them regularly enlisted in the military and naval services of the United States, who are entitled to a bonus on the same basis as the men who served. They are mostly members of the Army Nurse Corps, enlisted nurses who served in the Navy hos pitals, and survivors of that inter esting corps of young women who were given the rating of "Yeoman" in the Navy, and went through the war in uniforms, doing clerical work in the Navy Department in Washington and at the various na val bases. Probably fully as many women did war service overseas in the volunteer organizations, such as the Red Cross, Y. W. C. A., Salvation Army and the rest, and several times as many were engaged in war work on this side; but only the ones who were on Uncle Sam's payroll are due for the bonus. Folks who have the idea that all women are pacifists, don't remem ber the enthusiasm of the women of America the last time we went to war. WEALTH . . . hard job When young John Jacob Aster III quit his $25 a week job with the steamship line of which his half-brother, Vincent Aster, is vice- president, a lot of people spoke sneeringly of the "idle rich," jump ing to the conclusion that the young man was nothing but a "playboy" after all. But to me his explanation that the 48 hours of work every week took up so much of his time that he couldn't attend to his personal business affairs properly, sounds quite reasonable. 'In times like these," he said, "you have to watch things pretty closely." He has had to learn HANOVER, N. H. , . There's plenty of "winter" up this way for the 26th annual Dartmouth Winter Carnival. The election of Queen wit nessed the coronation of Miss Ann Hopkins (above), daughter of Presi dent Hopkins of Dartmouth College. The Man Who Knows Whether the Remedy You are taking for Headaches, Neuralgia or Rheumatism Pains is SAFE is. Your Doctor. Ask Him Don't Entrust Your Own or Your Family's Weil-Being to Unknown Preparations BEFORE you take any prepara tion you don't know all about, for the relief of headaches; or the pains of rheumatism, neuritis or neuralgia, ask V'or doctor what he thinks about It in comparison with Genuine Bnyer Aspirin. We say this because, before the discovery of Bayer Aspirin, most so-called "pain" remedies were ad vised against by physicians as being bad for the stomach; or, often, for the heart. And the discovery of Bayer Aspirin largely changed medical practice. Countless thousands of people who have taken Bayer Aspirin year in and out without 111 effect, have proved that the medical findings about its safety were correct. Remembei lUii: Genuine Bayer Aspirin is rated among the fastest methods yet discovered for the relief of headaches and all common pains , , , and safe for the average person to take regularly. You can get real Bayer Aspirin at any drug store simply by never asking for it by the name "aspirin" alone, but always saying BAYER ASPIRIN when you buy. Bayer Aspirin I Eastern Winter Queen May Enter Penrose, 2nd 1 DEVON, Pa, . . . Boise Penrose, 2nd, (above), nephew of the late U. 8. Senator and O.O.P. boss, Is expected to soon announce- himself a Eepublican candidate for congress from the 4th, Pennsylvania district young that it is easier to make money than to keep it. Heir to one of the largest fortunes in America, he has discovered that everybody is trying to take it away from him, and that he has to do his own watching, instead of leaving the guardianship of his property to hired men. I know a number of very wealthy men. Most of them work harder at the job of keeping their wealth from slipping away from them than the rest of us do in trying to make a little more. HOUSING ... for poor I've been hearing a lot of talk about low-cost housing for the poor, but I haven't seen anything tangi ble, so far, that convinces me that new houses can be built with high priced labor, at a cost that will en able the lowest-paid workers to pay the necessary rent. They've done it in England by buying cheap farm land a long way from town, and paying building trade workers about one-third the wages they get in America. I've seen some of the European low-cost housing developments. They are all based on land values far below ours, lower labor costs, and remission of all taxes on lands and buildings for twenty years or more. Even then, the very poor can't afford to live in them. It seems more reasonable to me to encourage the modernizing of old houses for the use of the lower income groups, and the building of new homes for the ones who can afford to live in them. GLARE killed Every motorist knows that the chief danger in night driving is the dazzling glare from the headlights of cars one meets on the road. A young Boston scientist, Edwin Land, has developed a new trans parent material for headlights and windshields which is said to elimi nate Ihis dangerous glare entirely. NEW PERFECTED HYDRAULIC BRAKES VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE FULL-FLOATING REAR AXLE make Chevrolet the world's greatest truck value NEW PERFECTED HYDRAULIC BRAKES always equalized for quick, unswerving, "straight line" stops NEW rULL TRIMMED DE LUXE CABS with clear-vision instrument panel for safe control OTEVMDLET TOUGESS Heppner FERGUSON MOTOR COMPANY Oregon The principle of "polarizing" light has long been known, but up to now it has required expensive ap paratus to reduce light beams to a single plane, and so, as it were, take out the dazzle. I hope young Mr. Land's inven tion will do all that is claimed for it. I like to drive at night, but I dread it more and more, as cars multiply, speed increases and head lights get brighter. THE Family Doctor Those Little Boys Last week an anxious father brought his little lad of seven to my office with a really well-fitting, surgical-looking bandage about his head, only one eye peeking through. There had been a fight at the coun try school-house and it seems this seven-year-old got a shade the worst of it The teacher, good soul, had applied mercurochrome from her kit, put on the dressing and hurriedly took the boy home in her car. Removing the dressing, I found an abraded wound not skin-deep, extending from the inner margin of the left orbit, almost to the ! os;SfD si o 5 55 2 i a 3 s? a13 2s 2 (jQ o 8 $ O (fllll OHIO pKClF4 The truck with the greatest puUing-pouvr in the entire low-price range . . . the safest truck money can buy . . . and the most nomical truck for all-round duty that's the new 1936 Chevrolet I See these new Chevrolet trucks subject them to any and every competitive test and you will know that they're fie world's thriftiest high-pouvred trucks and therefore the world's greatest values ! CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICH. 6 NEW MONEY-SAVING O.M.A.C. TIME PAYMENT PLAN ft Comjwn Chevrolet' faw delivered price " low monthly? rwrvmml. A E N E R A L MOTORS VALUE NEW 1936 point of the nose; it had oozed blood rather freely, and blood alarms even a school-teacher. The slight wound had been treated thor oughly with mercurochrome. You know what I did? Well, I removed the bandage which waa so snug and efficient as to be almost disabling in itself. I prescribed an ounce of the teachers antiseptic. I told the .father to leave off all dressings and paint lightly with mercurochrome about four times a day. Within three days the wound had healed. Now for the conclusions: All small, minor wounds, involving no important structures, heal better and faster IF LEFT IN THE OPEN AIR. Had I continued to keep over-heating dressings on that boy's face, he would have been coming, back today for attention. Keep your small wound clean with any positive antiseptic, and use as few dressings as possible. They shut out air. JAPANESE OIL Mrta I U. 3. A. FOR HAIR AKO SCALP Olfcrwrt In Ordlaary Hair TMks IT'S A KAlf MfOICINIf iOc III. FEEL IT WOUKI Al All Drviflglm Writt Itr rati iMtM TIM Trafll IM TM Hilr." Nallnul Ktmtt) .. In Yrt that eco NEW HIGH-COMPRESSION VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE with increased horsepower, increased torque, greater economy in gas and oil and rULL-rLOATING REAR AXLE with barrel type wheel bcaringi on ILg-toa models