OREGON HISTORICAL SOCIETY PUBLIC AUDITOR I U M PORTLAND . 0 R E . VXSBB Volume 53, Number 15. New Corporation Seeks Possibility of Wells Springs Gas Portland Men Have State Permit to Sell $15,000 in Stock. A new corporation to succeed the late Wells Springs Oil & Gas com pany has been issued a permit by the state corporation commissioner for development of the natural gas possibilities in the vicinity of Mor row county's historical resting spot for covered wagon immigrants who followed the Old Oregon trail. Co lumbia Natural Gas corporation is the new organization, with C. E. Cole and Arthur S. Olson of Portland as incorporators. The incorporators are both Port land bond salesmen who became in terested in the possibility of devel oping gas at Wells Springs on a com mercial basis through reports of ge ologists in whom they express con fidence. Both Dr. F. M. Handy and Carl J. Schilling, geologists from whom they asserted they had re ports, were said to have looked fa vorably upon development possi bilities at the spot. Dr. Handy was cited as doing competent work in the Rattlesnake gas field in eastern Washington and in Idaho mining de velopments. Schilling did mining geological work for many years in South America, later graduating in petroleum geology from University of California and doing development work for several years with major oil companies. The corporation is capitalized at $100,000, with $60,000 of its stock go ing to leaseholders. Its present per mit calls for issuance of $15,000 in stock which may be sold, all pro ceeds being held in trust with a lead ing Portland bond attorney. No ex- penditure of funds is permitted until $5000 has been raised. Only 20 per cent of the money from stock sales may be expended for salesmen's commissions and overhead expense, the remainder to be applied to actual development work. "We have taken every precaution to make this set-up ' clean," said Cole when in the city Monday. "Un like other wildcat development schemes which have incorporated under the laws of Delaware or some other foreign state, we have incor porated right here in Oregon where the 'blue sky' laws are strict, and our every move is under close scru tiny of the corporation department." No false investment hopes are held out to anyone buying stock, as plain ly printed in red ink on the face of the stock application is the assertion that the venture is outright specula tion. The reliance of those purchas ing stock must be placed in the in tegrity and reputation of the geolo gists whose opinions are given. It is the hope of the incorporators Continued on Page Eight Heppner Places Third In Tourney Shoot-Off Heppner tied with Corvallis for third place in the shoot off match of the Oregonian telegraphic shoot, held in connection with the state trap shoot at Salem, Sunday. Portland took first and Salem second. O. G. Hildebrand of Wasco and D. C. Math ews of Pilot Rock assisted Dr. A. D. McMurdo, P. W. Mahoney and Luke Bibby in making up the local squad. The team score was 471 out of a pos sible 500. The Portland team, head ed by ace F. M. Troeh, broke 480. Salem's score was 473. Dr. J. H. McCrady also took in Sunday's shoot. C. H. Laiourell, for many years president of the local club, shot in the Tillamook ranks this year. Next year's state shoot will be held at Bend, it was reported. Mayor Jeff Jones returned home Tuesday from a several-days' busi ness visit in Portland. HEPPNER, Ripley Was Right, , Says Roy Ekleberry To Judge Johnson Many times folks are prone to look askance at depictions of Mr. Ripley, whether they could possi bly be true. And seldom is per sonal verification by someone we know possible, as the whole world is Mr. Ripley's workshop. An un usual incident of this nature oc curred this week. Roy Ekleberry of Morgan walked into the office of Judge Bert John son just as this worthy was glanc ing over Mr. Ripley's "Believe It or Not" offering in Wednesday's Oregonian. He chose to comment on the depiction of the moving of a courthouse in Nebraska by train. "That's sure enough true," Mr. Ekleberry vouchsafed, "be'cause I helped load it onto the train, stood guard over it one night and helped unload it." Then he proceeded to tell the judge just how the feat was accomplished back in 1899. WHEATMEN PICNIC AT MORO ON 26TH Reld Day at Experiment Station Part of Eastern Oregon Wheat League Event; New Grasses Tried. Wheat farmers who attend the picnic at Moro sponsored by the Eastern Oregon Wheat league will also have an opportunity to inspect the branch experiment station dur ing the trip. In addition to the experiments that have been run for over twenty years on methods of growing wheat many kinds of grasses are being tested to find the best one adapted to this area. More acres of crested wheat are being grown than any other but some of the other grasses may be better under pasturage conditions. Combinations of grasses and grass and sweet clover or alfalfa are being tried. Crested wheat under actual pasturage conditions may also be seen. Mid-Columbia farmers are accus tomed to seeing the charts that show what has been done in wheat experi mentation, but many of them have not seen the plots from which the information is derived. Crop rota tions, depth . and date of plowing, rate and date of sowing may all be seen along with the results obtained. Of major interest in this day of soil erosion problems is trashy sum merfallow and disking instead of plowing. This has been tried for several years on the Moro station and the results will be shown on the field day which will be held in con junction with the wheat growers' picnic, June 26. Every effort is being made by the officers in charge to make it a day combining pleasure and business for every farmer attending. ACCIDENTALLY SHOT. While hunting squirrels in the vi cinity of Ukiah, Sunday, Don Tur ner, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Tur ner, accidentally shot himself in the left leg with a .22 pistol. He was in a car with Francis Nickerson, and was holding the gun pointed down ward in his lap, legs crossed, when a bump in the road caused him to pull the trigger. The bullet entered the fleshy part of the lower leg and lodged in the ankle. He was taken to Pendleton by a travelling man who came along right after the ac cident, and underwent an operation Monday for removal of the bullet. Barring complications, it was not be lieved the injury would prove ser ious. He was expected home today. ATTEND SUMMER SCHOOL. Episcopal summer school at Cove attracted a group of Morrow county young people who departed .Monday for that place. Among those in at tendance are Jackson Gilliam, Shir ley Wilson, Jeanette Blakely, Bethel Blake, Kemp Dick, Scott McMurdo, Harold Armstrong and Billy Barratt from Heppner, and Betty Jean Man kin and Mary Kathryn Blake from lone. OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1937. Farm Bureau Gets Under Way, Weeds Discussed White Top at Ceme tery Problem; Bar ratt Heads Group. By JOE BELANGER Thirty-five Morrow county farm operators held a dinner meeting at the Heppner hotel yesterday evening to discuss the serious weed situation confronting farmers along Willow creek, to hear Mac Hoke, Pendleton, president of the Oregon Farm Bu reau Federation discuss the back ground and aims of the so-called omnibus farm bill now before con gress, and to effect the permanent organization of the Morrow County Farm Bureau. With a nucleus of twenty -five paid members, J. G. Barratt was elected president, and E. H. Miller vice-president. The seven members of the board of di rectors also elected were J. J. Wight man, Heppner; Henry Baker, Eight Mile; Frank Wilkinson, Heppner; Oscar Peterson, lone; . Harlan Mc Curdy, Heppner; J. O. Kincaid, lone, and F. S. Parker, Heppner. The constitution and by-laws, prepared by the temporary directors, were read and approved. Mr. Hoke outlined the part played by the American Farm Bureau Fed eration in working toward a long time farm program beginning with the McNary-Haugen plan and con tinuing with the old AAA and the agricultural conservation program, which replaced the 1933 plan. The new farm program has as its central idea the establishment of parity prices for major farm commodities. This does not attempt, in any way, to fix prices but merely to set up machinery which assures consumers that a constant and sufficient supply of the major farm commodities will be available, and which guarantees to farmers that the purchasing pow er of these commodities, in terms of goods which the farmer must buy, will remain relatively constant. Mr. Hoke pointed out that under condi tions as they have existed since the beginning of history, farmers must necessarily be classed as the greatest of gamblers. Not only must they gamble with the weather on the amount of crops harvested, but they have been forced to gamble with economics on the exchange value of the commodities which they raise. As emphasized by Mr. Hoke, the price that any unit of a farm product may brjng is not of very much im portance. The thing that spells suc cess or failure to agriculture is the exchange value of farm commodities or, to put it in another way, the par ity price. The new farm bill also embodies Secretary Wallace's plan of the ever normal granary. Following Mr. Hoke's 'talk, there was considerable discussion of the serious weed situation caused by the heavy infestation of White Top in the Heppner cemetery., Seed proba bly from this origin has already es tablished itself in several places within the city limits along Willow creek. White Top in the infested areas outside of the cemetery has been pulled to prevent spread ing and the county has already au thorized the purchase of sodium chlorate to poison these areas. Such control work, however, is obviously of small importance so long as the main infestation is still growing lux uriantly in the cemetery. The only effective way known, at present, to kill this weed in such a location is through chemical poisoning. Un fortunately, none of these chemicals is selective and in killing the White Top, all other vegetation is destroy ed. White Top is generally recog nized as the worst of the noxious weeds. It seeds heavily, spreads rapidly, is exceedingly drought-re-sistent, and is hard to kill. Loan agencies have established the policy Continued on Page Eight Darkened Skies Remind Pioneers Of Heppner Flood Monday two pioneers stood on the street chatting, and as they looked at the darkened heavens to the south they recalled a simi lar appearance of the skies 34 years ago that day, fust before the deluge that claimed more than 200 lives and did untold property damage to the city. The pioneers were Charles Val entine and Milton R. Morgan. Mr. Valentine lived in his present home, seven miles below Heppner, and Mr. Morgan was at the old Baker home near lone when the flood struck. Both came to Hepp ner the next day and witnessed the heart-breaking scene while assist ing in recovering the bodies of the lost. Monday's darkened skies, while contributing to the 1.76 inches of rainfall received at Heppner since June 1, did not produce a cloud burst, But recalled in the minds of many, as in those of the two pioneers, were their experiences at the time of the terrible catastrophe. COULEE CRICKETS ATTACK FOREST Two Sections Reported Cleaned of Vegetation; Officials Make Investigation at Opal Station. An outbreak of Coulee crickets which has already cleaned all vege tation from about two sections of national forest land in the neighbor hood of Opal guard station threatens to become a serious menace to graz ing on the national forest and, if the spread of these crickets goes on un checked, to the wheat growers of the county. On Wednesday of this week Prof. B. G. Thompson, entomologist from the state college at Corvallis, inves tigated the range around Opal sta tion with Fred Wehmeyer, forest ranger; Joe Belanger, county agent, and C. J. Johnson, staff officer of the Umatilla forest. According to Ed E. Birkmeier, range examiner, the pre sence of Coulee crickets has been reported in small numbers during the past few years but in nothing like the present numbers. These crickets lay their eggs from around July 15th on, each female laying about 70 eggs at a time and repeating this process several times, provided the weather remains favor able. The adult crickets die at the end of the season. The eggs winter over and hatch during the first few warm days of the spring. It is at this time that control measures are most effective. It is planned to keep fairly close check on the migrations of the crickets so that location of the egg grounds may be determined. Next spring, after the eggs have hatched, the immature crickets will be dusted with sodium arsenate dust. While it is highly important that control measures be conscientiously followed, there is probably little danger that Coulee crickets from this source will become a source of dan ger to the crop land of the county. BAILEY-HUGHES. Miss Viola Maude Bailey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. D. Bailey, was united in marriage to Elwyn I. Hughes, son of Mrs. Grace Hughes, both of this city, Tuesday morning at the Methodist parsonage, Rev. R. C, Young performing the ceremony in the presence of immediate rela tives. Tuesday evening the young couple were accorded a charavari at the Hughes home in south Heppner. They expect to make their home on the Hughes farm on Rhea creek. PIONEER STRICKEN. John T. Kirk, pioneer Morrow county resident who has made his home at Vernonia for several years, suffered a slight paralytic stroke re cently, according to word from the family. Although still in bed he is reported to be resting comfortably. His daughter, Mrs. Ethel Ritchie of Portland, is with him. Subscription $2.00 a Year Jury Gives Nelson $300 Damages in Auto Accident Suit E. R. and E. N. Lun dell Lose Case, in Court Three Days. E. R. Nelson of Portland was al lowed $300 damages and costs by the jury in circuit court here yesterday at the close of a three-day trial in which he sued Ernest R. Lundell and son Ernest N. Lundell of lone for $7100 from damages arising out of an automobile accident last Novem ber 20. Both Mr. and Mrs. Nelson received minor injuries in the acci dent, while Ernest N. Lundell, riding alone in the other car received in juries causing unconsciousness for twelve days. The accident happened at the intersection of the Oregon Washington highway and Ione Boardman road at lone. The jury, with E. H. Miller as fore man, reported after two hours de liberation on the evidence, and im mediately a second suit with Ada Nelson, Nelsons' wife, as plaintiff and the same defendants was dis missed through motion in open court for non-suit by the plaintiffs coun sel, Wendall Phillips and Willis Por ter of Portland, who also represent ed Nelson. Judge C. L. Sweek, who presided, dismissed the court ses sion. Jurors sitting on the case were E. H. Miller, foreman; A. F. Palmateer, Elvin Ely, Alex Hunt, W. H. Cleve land, H. O. Bauman, Frank Munkers, Orain Wright, Frank D. Brace, E. O. Ferguson, Robert S. Wilson and M. C. Smith. P. W. Mahoney of Heppner and Arthur S. Vosburg of Portland were attorneys foe the defendants. J. S. Beckwith, veteran court reporter from Pendleton, transcribed the evi dence. Camp Education Told by Director Marvin E. Dixon, educational di rector of Camp Heppner CCC, told the Lions club Monday of the work being accomplished. More than 90 percent of the camp enrollees are taking class work, either in locally organized classes or by correspond ence, he said. Two have earned cred its to meet college entrance require ments since the work started. It is the attempt to assist in preparing every boy to find a place for himself in the world. And while the work is not compulsory, the interest evi denced is creditable, he believed. Assisting with the entertainment were Miss Lucile Moyer who played a piano solo; Miss Winifred Case, who sang, accompanied by Miss Moyer, and Miss Jeanette Turner, who accompanied the group singing. J. G. Barratt was introduced as a new member, and made a few per tinent remarks relative to the im portance he placed upon service club work. SON UNDERGOES OPERATION. H. C. Woods arrived in Heppner Sunday from his home at Eugene, expecting to spend a couple of weeks. Sunday evening he received long distance telephone word from Mrs. Woods that their son had been stricken with an acute attack of ap pendicitis and was forced to under go an emergency operation. Mr. Woods left for home Monday morn ing after calling to find that the boy had undergone the operation success fully with good chance for recovery. FATHER DIES. Randall Grimes, local Smith Hughes instructor, was called to Harrisburg Tuesday by the death of his father, H. L. Grimes. William Driscoll spent Dart of last week in Portland, visiting his daugh ters while taking in the Rose Festi val.