HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEB. 4, 1937. PAGE THREE "Hood River" Bills Would End Tie-Ups From Strikes Grange and Farm Leaders Diyided In Support. With' the coast maritiirie strike fast becoming history, , attention turned to steps to prevent a recur rence of the disastrous tieup now being taken by measures introduced at Salem and frantic efforts of labor leaders to halt this trend. Bills now before the legislature would require unions to have the same legal status as the concerns with which they make wage agree ments. It is being contended that under the present setup unions have no legal standing, are not responsi ble for their actions in courts of law and keep no records by which even their own members can tell whether they hire paid sluggers and killers. The laws being introduced at the in stance of the Hood River apple grow ers with wide support throughout the state are fashioned after the Brit ish regulations many of which have been in effect since 1871. Bills now before the legislature in elude the following union regufo tions: Require unions to be corporate entities with legal responsibility " Requires 60 days to elapse after . ' employes make a formal demand for wage increases before a strike ." can be called. , Require compulsory arbitration by both employers and employes, Outlaw sympathetic strikes. Do away with the legal proviS' ions under which the supreme court recently held it illegal to is sue an injunction against picket ing establishments where no strike was in progress. Ray Gill, master of the state grange ! and veteran champion of the grange- labor alliance, has taken a firm stand against all the proposed labor bills and with Morton Tompkins is lead ing a strong fight against the pro gram despite determined support for the measures from granges in all . parts of the state. The fight for the labor regulation program is being led by Hood River crowers who have traveled to all parts of the state boosting the pro gram. Joining in the fight are farmers and grangers from all sections. Woo growers of the eastern Oregon sector , have a special lobby at Salem back ing the bill. " Wheat growers of the same district are represented. Med ford pear growers who suffered in the recent strike also are on the job. Turkey growers of both western and eastern Oregon who lost heavily as the result of the ship tieup are join ing in the fight and cherry and berry growers whose processed fruit has yet to move to market and who stand not only to wait many months for their pay but to take sizeable losses are also up in arms. Washington lawmakers at Olym- pia have a very similar situation with the Yakima growers duplicating the fight leadership of the Hood River contingent in Oregon. As the time nears when it will be possible to ship wheat, more bitter ness has developed over the fact that it is now snowbound in eastern Ore gon and Washington and may be held there for some weeks yet. Thus the weather aids the strike in delay ing the time when the growers will actually know what they got for their grain. LEXINGTON By EDITH EDWARDS Alex Hunt has been ill the past week with an attack of influenza. Beulah Nichols left Friday eve ning for Portland where she will undergo a major operation. ' Duane Johnson and Lyle Allyn were among those confined to their homes with bad colds last week. Lawrence Beach spent the week end at home. The item in last week's paper con ' cerning a basketball game between lone and Lexington was a mistake. This game was to have been played last Tuesday evening but was post poned. 1 Lexington suffered another cold spell last week when the mercury dropped to several degrees below zero on Friday night and to 27 below Saturday night. A tractor school was held at the Jackson Implement company last Saturday, beginning at 10:00 a. m. Lunch was served at noon. The program consisted of lectures and motion pictures. A good crowd attended. The Lexington school has had quite poor attendance for the past week due to the cold weather, drift ed snow, and colds and influenza. Mildred Hunt entered the Hepp- ner hospital Friday, suffering with complications following an appendi citis operation. A no-hostess meeting of the Lex ington Home Economics club will be held at the grange hall Thursday, February 11, if the weather permits. Those attending are asked to bring either cookies or sandwiches. Mrs. Lee Sprinkel of Heppner vis ited her daughter, Mrs. Vernon Scott, last Thursday. There will be a dance at Lexing ton grange hall on Saturday, Feb ruary 20. The grange meeting is scheduled for Saturday, February 13. Mrs. Orville Cutsforth left last Friday evening for Springfield, Mo., to visit her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Pettyjohn. W. B. Tucker has gone to Port land to be with his daughter, Beu lah Nichols. Robert Cutler and Mrs. Roy Camp bell are quite ill at their homes with bad colds. Anyone wishing to contribute to the Red Cross flood relief may leave their donations with Miss Dona Bar- nett or Mrs. Elsie Beach at their re spective business houses. The honor roll for the high school is as toiiows: irara. six weeits: Wilma Tucker, Zelma Way, Dan Dinges, Ellwynne Peck and Kenneth Peck. First semester: Wilma Tuck er, Zelma Way, and Dan Dinges. Mrs. , Trina Parker of Lexington who is spending the winter at San Diego, having gone down with Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Leach and daughter of Portland, reports the weather un usually cold there. Much damage has been' done, to citrus crops and beautiful flowers and shrubs. Mrs. Parker left Lexington December 26, and with the Leachs started south on the 28th, going down the coast highway and making it to San Diego on the 31st. In February they expect to go into Arizona and Imperial val ley, returning to San Diego where they will remain until March, when they will . return by way of San Francisco to visit Dr. and Mrs. R. E. White and Miss Opal Leach who is spending the winter in San Leandro, CAMP HEPPNER NEWS. The Soil Conservation service has purchased a Caterpillar diesel ID-7 bulldozer which was shipped here from the factory at Peoria, 111. The tractor will be used by the local CCC camp to make channel improve ments in this county. Harold Tonole, formerly SCS clerk of the local CCC camp, has left for his home town, Cottage Grove. Mr, Tonole is planning entering Univer sity of Oregon at Eugene where he will take up clinical laboratory work, The local SCS is utilizing one of its bulldozers this week to clear the Rhea creek road from snow so that the farmers in that vicinity can get to Heppner for supplies. 4-H CALF CLUB REPORT. Mrs. Adolph Majeske was hostess to the Lexington Calf club during its first meeting of the new year held January 1. Due to cold weather the crowd was slow to gather and a short meeting was held after which Mrs. Majeske served . a delicious lunch of chicken and ham sand wiches, cake and coffee for the old er folks, cocoa for the young folks. During the meeting each member recited the club pledge. The secre tary read the minutes and the leader a letter from Dr. Allen, assistant state club leader. The February meeting of the club will be postponed until the weather breaks. Joyce Biddle, Reporter. Excluding the lumber " industry, the Pacific Northwest produces only about one percent of the nation's manufactured goods. RANDOM SHOTS (Oregon News Bureau) Joseph K. Carson, formerly of Hood River and now mayor of Port land, is champion for free bridges across the 1 Columbia river at the Bridge of the Gods and at Hood River. Mayor Carson has asked that the tolls on these bridges be can celled in the interests of trade and commerce. Mount Angel college is planning a golden jubilee for early in April this year. Mount Angel college was opened in 1887 by the Reverend Adelhelm Odermatt, O. S. B. In 1892 and again in. 1926, the institu tion was destroyed by fire and re built. Valuable eld books, dating back to 1540, and collected by the Catholic clergy, are now housed in the museum. The tusk of a mastodon, believed to have weighed at least '20 tons, was recently unearthed by highway crew workers near Holdman, in Um atilla county. Almagated Sugar company of Og den, Utah, has purchased the 185 acre Greig ranch, near Nyssa, for a sum reported to be $15,000 cash. Im mediate construction of a warehouse is planned. Five thousand acres of beets have been signed for 1937, it is reported. Gold mining by dredge, which has been active in the John Day and Baker districts, will shortly be start ed in the Oscar creek section of the Jacksonville country, according to reports from that part of the state. Bishop and Sturdevant, owners of the dredge, state they will begin op erations immediately. They have recently spent $25,000 on equipment, Out of bread, out of meat, and out of pretty nearly everything else in the way of food and supplies, three hundred residents of Cove, Oregon, made contact last Friday with the rest of the world after being shut in by snow for two weeks. Snowplows failed to break through the huge drifts and for seven days Cove was completely isolated from even its nearest neighbor, Union, only nine miles away. ' A 3-year refunding plan for de funct Astoria city bonds has been agreed Upon by the bondholders' protecting committee according to announcement from the downriver city Saturday. . BOARDMAN By LA VER.N BAKER Mrs. Helen Doney's six-months old daughter passed away Monday morning of bronchial pneumonia, Funeral services were held in the community church Feb. 2. Inter ment was in the Boardman cemetery, Boardman basketball boys won the Irrigon game last Wednesday evening. The game was played on the Boardman floor. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Barlow have a new baby girl named Carma Dar- lene. She was born January 30th. The town team boys tried a new thing last Saturday evening. They played both the Stanfield town team and the CCC team in one evening, winning both games by a large score. Silver Tea was held at the home of Mrs. Theron Anderson Wednes day. It was well attended. Mr. Walker and daughter Mabel returned home Sunday after spend ing some time vacationing. They went to Chicago where Mr. Walker purchased a new Lafayette car and then motored to Louisiana and back home by the southern route. They stopped in Los Angeles and visited Mr. Walker's son. Church and Christian Endeavor were postponed Sunday evening due to the cold weather. Tom McEntire visited on the pro ject Sunday. He attended the land meeting at Heppner Saturday. Mr. Kristenson, Mr. Smith, Mr. Healy, Mr. Skoubo and Mr. Slavin also attended the meeting. Bob Harwood has been sick this week and could not attend to his work Monday. . James Farley was on the project Sunday buying hay. - He bought from Mr. Flickinger. A very interesting game was played on the Boardman floor be tween Arlington high and Boardman high Monday evening. It was a hard fought game with Arlington winning with a score of 31-18. The second teams played also with Arlington winning. , , BUYS ABSTRACT OFFICE. George Fell has purchased Grant county abstract office in Can yon City from Neil Niven and took possession this week, states Canyon City Blue Mountain Eagle. For the past 25 years Mr. and Mrs. Niven have conducted this business and they will retire from the active and exacting work it requires. George Fell is the son of Dr. J. H. Fell and last fall sold his sheep business at Courtrock and with Mrs. Fell will take up the business where Mr. and Mrs. Niven left off. PORTLAND MARKET. Poultry prices have tumbled as the result of heavy shipments to the Portland market. Turkeys contin ue in fair demand because of the low prices. Dressed meats continue fair ly steady with demand good. Higher wheat prices are expected to follow the ending of the maritime strike. However, most of the heavy holdings are snowbound and little early action is anticipated. Egg prices continue firm with storage holdings light. the CHANGE IN TRAIN TIME. Effective Feb. 7th eastbound Pa cific Limited No. 14 leaves Arlington 25 minutes earlier, at 11:47 a. m. in stead of 12:12 p. m. UNION PACIFIC. Daisy Bevans, Clackamas county representative, is the sponsor of a bill that would forbid the use of pretty girl pictures in cigarette advertising. CARD OF THANKS. We wish to express our deep ap preciation and thanks to our many friends, who were so kind and help ful to us the night of Norton's acci dent, and during his long conval escence; for the many beautiful flowers and cards with words of cheer and well wishes sent him; to the doctors and nurses of Heppner hospital who were so faithful in their care; and our many friends in Heppner who offered us the hos pitality of their homes, will never be forgotten by us. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Lundell. AUXILIARY TO MEET. The American Legion auxiliary will meet Monday evening, Febra ary 8, at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Alva Jones. All members are urged to attend as business of im portance must be taken care of. Dally till May 14, special low round trip fares to the East. Return limits on Stand ard tickets 30-days; Intermediate (Pullman-Tourist) and Coach tickets 6-mo. ECONOMY, COMFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY! Union Pacific's combination in service to satisfy every traveler. Ultra-modern equipment, fast schedules, delicious low-priced meals, air-tempered luxury, interested personal attention. EXAMPLE: Round Trip to Chicago From Heppner Junction UNION MEETING SET. The Union Missionary society will meet at 2:30 the afternoon of Fri day, February 12, at the Episcopal church. . ... .. 48-9 Give G. T. Want Ads a trial. When you buy Insurance, do you know the company or only the policy? We have in our files the Insur ance Commissioner's reports on all companies. Get information without obligation. A. Q. THOMSON, Phone 202 In deluxe adusfobe char Coach. 6-mo. return limit. Correspondingly low fares to other des tinatibni In the East-Midwest and South, Stopovers permitted going and returning. Porter Service and Free Pillows In Coaches on all trains. For Information and reservations sea LOCAL AGENT X v.W THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY ffjjj