PAGE SIX HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1937. o Motor Cruising for Fun o A Motor log to the Wallowa Mountains of Northeastern Oregon . . and a Visit with "Silver Tip" Charley Seeber Thli newspaper 1i co-operating with the Oregon State Motor association and The Oregonlan In presenting a series of motor cruises under the title, "Motor Cruising for Fun." It 1 hoped thereby to stimulate travel In the Pacific northwest. The follow ing article haa been condensed from a full-page article appearing In The Oregonlan on July 25. BY VINTON H. HALL Silver Tip shoveled a spoonful of beans into his mouth, leaned back in his chair and 'lowed as how we should make ourselves at home, being, as it was, cold and sopping as an overworked dishcloth outside the cabin. A fire blazed its welcome in Sil ver Tip's neat little cook stove, and steam arose from our water-logged Levis as we huddled together in the small room. A mountain rain, the tail-ender of winter storms, beat on the roof. We were glad to be inside. A mile and a half high, we were, in the Wallowa mountains of north eastern Oregon. We had found Sil ver Tip's cabin a veritable haven of refuge after the arduous and sometimes perilous horseback trip from Wallowa lake, 6 miles in back of us. Silver Tip's trim cabin, hewn from the mountain forests, rests near the shore of beautiful Aneroid lake. "So you thoueht it was nretfv tough going, did you?" cackled the Motor log party transfers from one form of transportation to another, before the lodge Miici-iioucu man, wiiuac x etu name is Charles Seeber, amused at his guests' apparent exhaustion. 1 - YC ? JJ - '4W'W' r - 1 1 Part of Mountains Silver Tip is the "o" 1 man of the mountains" the Wallowa moun tains. He loves them. He has lived in them so long that Silver Tip and the Wallowas have become almost synonymous. He will always be a part of them. None can really know those towering, jagged peaks with out knowing him. Forty-eight years ago the doctor looked at 15-year-old Charley See ber in Walla Walla, shook his head and said there was virtually no hope. Charley, a smiling, ambitious lad, had tuberculosis. They called it consumption. One chance remained to save his life, the doctor said. Get him away to a higher, drier air. Charley's father, desirous of doing everything possible to save his son, chose the Wallowa mountains. Out fitting themselves, the Seebers began the long trek to Aneroid lake, which back in the '80s was wild and untouched as the moun tain sheep that still roam there. Charley Silver Tip didn't die. Instead, his lithe body became rugged and strong as Aneroid point. Now he can out-pack the average horse. "Some difference between this and the city life you fellers are used to," he chirped, scraping up his dishes, carefully wiping the oil cloth-topped table and finally settling back in his favorite chair. Names Motorloggers "Let's see, now. You're Mr. Pang born," pointing to Arden X. Pang born, executive news editor of The Oregonian, who by this time had moved somewhat further from the scorching little stove and launched a vicious attack upon a ham sand wich. "You're Mr. Gobble," Silver Tip barked, indicating Richard Goebel, Ford man for the advertising firm of McCann-Erickson, who at that particular moment was drying his rearage and nursing a saddle blis ter on his shin. "And I guess you're Mr. Hall, the AA.A. man." , A great talker and fascinating as a dime novel that really belongs in the slicks Silver Tip stretched out his long legs and moved on to the subject of the weather and his mountains. "Ain't seen such a spring in all the 48 years I been here. Been rain ing constantly, and that ain't right, you know. It's usually swell weather even this early brisk and brilliant, with the moon, the stars and the mountains. Makes you wish you could be in love but damital, I'm too old and funny lookin' for that, anyway, "In a few days it'll all be over, and summer will really be here." That was a month ago, and the Wallowas now bask under bright blue sky, fishing is good in An eroid lake and Silver Tip is happy. Haven't Seen It AU "Of course you fellows know that you haven't seen all of the Wal lowas just because you've been up here to Aneroid," he began. "Take a look at this little map. It'll show you just how little you've seen." Silver Tip related many of the things John Conwell, genial asso ciate manager of the Wallowa Lake lodge, had related the night before as we slumped comfortably in large, rustic chairs before a mas sive fireplace in the lobby. The lake basin trip, made by a trail hewn through an area of 33 glacial lakes ranging in elevation from 7000 to 8500 feet, would have been the ideal trip had weather been favorable and had we al lowed two days instead of one, he said. Here we would have found live glaciers extending to the very edge of troMt-filled lakes. We would have ridden around or over Eagle Cap, from the 9675-foot summit of which we could have seen the en tire basin with all its lakes. We could have camped out, over night, we could have scaled The Matter horn, 10,004 feet up, the highest peak in the primitive area. Other Routes Desirable Better yet, had we been better horsemen and allowed three extra days, we could have traveled the Lostine-Minam loop and camped the first night in the lake basin, from where we could have gone to Minam lake, at one end of which is Minam river; at the other end Lostine river. We could have fol lowed either of these for some of the most spectacular scenery in the Wallowa mountains. "Oh, you've got to come back," said Silver Tip. "You ain't seen nothin' yet." Pangborn spied a carpenter's saw, a fiddle bow and a peculiar contraption like a hock-shop ver sion of a collar-bone splint, hang ing on the wall beside the spice rack. HIGHWAY ImSWSWtSSJSSSSmSStSM MIHtfl ll ' 1 1 ' ' i"l ilTIMMssMsssTsMMMWBM - JOSEPH I pm mm Am- 5 ICE LAKE II I "JiL Jfi ' n" under the pines and a billion wink ing stars. Or, rambled Silver Tip, we could have chiseled our way along the ad venturous trail to Ice lake, no fur ther away from Wallowa lodge than Aneroid lake. Our route would have taken us over the most spectacular horseback trail in the west, the last mile and three-quarters of which rises fully 3000 feet Ice lake, too and his eyes twinkled under the silver mop of hair teems with eastern brook trout that are glut tons for flies, spinners or bait the entire season. Had we possessed Silver Tip's vigor and endurance PNDLbT Map shows Wallowa moun tain district trails and points of interest, while smaller map shows location of Wat lowas in state of Oregon. "Do you play the saw?" he asked of Silver Tip. Blushing as well as the weather- beaten old face could blush he ventured he could a little bit. Prac ticed for years, but the saw. was a mighty hard instrument to master. Hard, sometimes, to remember what you started in to play. "Here, I'll show you." He brought down She bow and the saw,, which was of-spSecial steel but used about the place for sundry construction and repair jobs. Carefully, he lifted down the strange contraption, which, lo, was a harmonica fixed to a brace designed to fit firmly around the neck and shoulders to keep the instrument in place be fore the lips. Looked Like Character Rigged out, Silver Tip looked like a character from "Banjo On My Knee." He played, earnestly and well. The music sounded like the mountains, which had listened to the mellow, ng tones of the saw and the i . .king notes of the mouth harp for many years. We could visualize a winter night, snow as high as the roof, with the wind and sleet howling a weird accom panimentand Silver Tip all alone. It was three o'clock. Time had passed like magic in Silver Tip's cabin. It had been like an amazing dream, or a chapter in an absorb ing novel. The rain had not ceased. W would have to make the hard down hill trip to the lodge in the same rain that had softened the trail and soaked us to the skin as we ascended to Aneroid lake. It was with some apprehension that we mounted our hnrwo. nrnvpil good-bye to Silver Tip and started aown me precipitous 6 -mile trail. Constant hammeriner nf rain vm bound to soften the trail, we knaw. Carefully and expertly built, as it was, mere were places so abrupt ana so narrow tnat it seemed in evitable the pounding rain would weaken it to the point where one iaise step Dy our horses would send' us Dluntrtner and rollinsr tn destmo. tion. . Finally Safe Again Finally back on level ground at) the fOOt Of the trail, the hnnum I too, breathed a sigh of relief. TheyJ were anxious to reach their ntAhl! and we let them run, despite saddle- soreness 01 wnicn we ail complained, Harley Hamilton, head guide and owner of a string of 50 fine saddle horses, which he rents to recrea tlonists, met us at the stables. He was scheduled to make the trip with us, but business that day pre vented it Harley, like Silver Tip; knows mountains, and someday, he said, he'd show us the lake basin Ice lake or the Lostine-Minam country. Next day we loaded the motorlog car and started on the 367-mile re turn trip to Portland. Rounding calm Wallowa lake, we gazed back into the towering peaks and bade a silent good-bye to Silver Tip and his "Switzerland of America." HUMAN CONSERVATION By LUCY E. RODGERS, County School Superintendent. (Reprinted by permission from the "Sagebrush Chronicle," publi cation of Camp Heppner, CCC.) Not long ago, Robert Fechner, director of emergency conservation work, said, "With no disparagement to the huge work accomplishments of the CCC nor to its collateral ec onomic and relief aspects, I feel that the creation and preservation of hu man values has been and continues to be the signal service of the CCC to the nation." The truth of this statement is proved by the accomplishments of the CCC. Nearly 2,000,000 men have been members of the CCC since its organization four years ago. These men came from all walks of life, from cities, from small towns, from the rural areas. Some came from homes where living conditions were unwholesome and unsanitary, from families that had never known any thing but poverty. Some came from families that had been accustomed to a good standard of living but were victims of the depression. Many of these men had but lim ited educational opportunities. Some had become discouraged and dissat sified with what the schools had to offer and dropped out. Most of them were undernourished. Long periods of idleness had killed their ambi tions, sapped their energies and left them indifferent or hostile to every wholesome influence. Many of them were on the move "thumbing" lifts and existing as they could regardless of the means employed. Crime was definitely on the increase and these thousands of unemployed young men were fast becoming a menace to the welfare of our country. Not long ago after the opening of the camps, it became evident that the project was a contribution to hu man conservation. The camps sup plied a new and wholesome envir onment. The hard work in the open air, the abundance of nourishing food, the association with the mem bers of the camps, both men and of ficers, the recreational and educa tional opportunities and the pride in being able to take care of himself and do an honest day's work, have all contributed to the physical, mental and moral development of the young man who has enrolled in the Civilian Conservation corps. Not only have they showed a decided development of the physique, but their attitudes toward life, toward their fellowmen and toward the nation have become immeasurably improved. Many of them have shown a desire to plan intelligently for the future, and have chosen vocations and are preparing for them. The educational programs in the camps have done much to help the CCC in its problem of human con servation. More than 50,000 illiter ates have been taught to read and write, more than 300,000 have re ceived instruction in the elemen tary school subjects, over 200,000 have pursued high school courses and some 50,000 have taken college courses. Instruction on CCC work projects have developed the voca tional skills of over 1,000,000 men. These men have also learned the value of regular habits of living and of work, and the necessity of good management. A review of the CCC educational program shows the unpreparedness of our boys and demonstrates the worthwhileness of the work project. The fact that 2.7 of the CCC en rollees have been found to be illiter ate and 38 of them on the elemen tary school level indicates that our American youth is unprepared to take his place in our great common wealth as a useful citizen. The CCC is no longer an experi ment. It has proven its worth and usefulness to the unemployed youth of our land. Surely it should become a part of this country's educational program. The possibilities of build ing youth into a useful and desirable citizenry should be a major problem not only to the federal government but also to our educational leaders and to everyone. There should be a closer integration of the CCC edu cational program and our American schools. The greatest service the CCC can render is to take large numbers of out-of-school unemployed boys and prepare them for employment and citizenship. The regular living habits, the dis cipline, the training that comes from the labor and the educational op portunities of the CCC cannot but help give the men enrolled a new outlook upon life and a better idea of how to get a job and the necessity for keeping it. WHEAT QUALITY GOOD Five hundred sacks of the new wheat crop had been delivered at Lexington Tuesday morning, said G. J. Ryan, manager Morrow County Grain Growers at that place. The wheat, white federation, tested 61 plus, and 10 plus protein content, with a little extra high moisture content indicating that it had been cut a trifle too soon. He expected that the new crop would be rolling into Lexington full tilt by the first of next week. John Carter, extensive livestock operator from Long Creek who has assisted at Heppner"s annual Rodeo as race timer for several years, was in the city Saturday on business and visiting local friends.