Page Four Heppner Gazette Times. Heppner, Oregon Thursday, March 31, 1938 Heppner Gazette Times THE HEPPNER GAZETTE, Established March 30, 1883; THE HEPPNER TIMES, Established November 18, 1897; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15. 1912 Published every Thursday morning by CBAWFOBD PUBLISHING CO MP ANT and entered at the Post Office at Hepp ner,. Oregon, as second-class matter. JASPER V. CRAWFORD, Editor SPENCER CRAWFORD, Manager SUBSCRIPTION RATES: y One Year $2.00 Three Years 5.00 Six Months 1.00 Three Months .. .75 Single Copies .05 Official Paper for Morrow County OfegTewspapeWiblirs s0ssociatio To Arms, Mr. Wire WHEN you declared war on Ore gon's stockmen before a meet ing of your Portland friends last week, Mr. Frank B. Wire, generalis simo of Oregon's game commission, did you prepare yourself for counter attack? If you didnt, you had better call in the board of strategy and shine up your Big Berthas, for Ore gon's stockmen, at least those in Morrow county, have their guns trained your way. Looking through the sights are keen gray eyes ac customed to drawing a bead on the eye of a deer on the run, and the guns are gripped in strong hands steejed by nerves tempered under fa miliarity with the haunts of the wild life. These men have slit the bellies of deer on occasion to learn what they eat. They have seen them browsing on moss and needles while the sheep grazed on the grass nearby. They have seen the the deer in season and out but, by and large, they have been the games strongest protector. They are not law violators, these men. Familiarity with the denizens of the wooded lands has given them a deeper love for all forms of wild life than, we dare say, exists in the breasts of your city sporting breth ren. Maybe you were warmed unduly by the sentiments of National Wild Life week, Mr. Wire, or maybe the good fellowship of the occasion with your city sporting partners caused an! added degree of exuberance; and maybe, you didn't fully mean what a Portland paper quoted you as saying, that it was time for lov era of wild life to declare war on the range users and forest service. At least, we hope you were not serious about it. You should know, Mr. Wire, that the income of Morrow county as a result of it's wild life and it is a favorite hunting ground for Port- land sportsmen is insignificant as compared to the income from it's sheep industry. And you undoubted ly know, Mr. Wire, that the summer range in the mountains is essential to this industry. One thing you apparently do not know, Mr. Wire, is that sheep grazed according to forest service regula tions and the way any good operator who expects to stay in business grazes his sheep, does not drive out the wild life. If you will investigate, Mr. Wire, you will find out from many of your Portland sportsmen that the most lucrative source of information as to the best hunting grounds is the stockmen and herd ers who have observed the game while following their work-a-day pursuits. No, Mr. Wire, it is not necessary to turn all of the states mountain region into a wild life reserve in or der to have abundant supplies of game. There is room in our timbered regions for the sheep, cattle, wild life and such other resources as are properly managed. You might save defenders of your type of wild life administration, some severe casual ties if you would come up to Morrow county with a flag of truce and learn your ground a little better before proceeding with the war. We'll gamble you'll find our stock men just as good sportsmen as your Portland friends. How about it, Mr. Wire? Good Bye, Congress GENERAL public ignorance seems to prevail over the content of the president's reorganization bill passed by congress this week. That any measure as far reaching in ef fect as this should be passed into law without making the people aware of its provisions and giving opportunity for a definition of opin ion, is an indictment against the ca pability for self-government of the American people, and a vital blow to democracy. Whether President Roosevelt be motivated by the best intentions in the world, he has acted outside the realm of public confi dence, and thereby invites question ing of motives. There undoubtedly needs to be considerable renovating and remod eling of the nation's administrative department structure. That fact has been recognized for a long time. But to place unrestricted power for this in the hands of the executive is to upset the system of governmental check and balance provided in the constitution. If congress has dele gated such powers to the president without reserving for itself the right to accept or reject any reorganiza tion meaures the president may wish to institute, it has abdicated its rights under the constitution. And, if this be the case, the su preme court of the land should re ject the law as unconstitutional. Since, however, presidential ' pres sure has brought the executive a large measure of control over the na tion's tribunal of final appeal, it is Look at the young people around you - per haps there is one or two in your family I Listen to their experiences in trying to find work! Multiply these young men and women you know by hundreds and you have our FORGOTTEN CROP I Have we nursed this orop through its educational years only to NOW PREVENT its bearing fine fruits? All these young people ask is the OPPORTUNITY to WORK in the Columbia Empire. Think this overl Are you buying products that provide OPPORTUNITY for someone else's "crop"; or will your purchases provide . Jobs here in the industries of the Columbia Empire? It's time we planned WORK for our FORGOTTEN CR0PI Ask: IS IT PRODUCED IN THE COLUMBIA EMPIRE? hardly to be hoped that body will find in favor of democracy's great est constitutional safeguard the safeguard against any one of the three governmental branches usurp ing the power of the other two. Extraordinary powers have been placed in the hands of President Roosevelt under the New Deal, the like of which never were enjoyed by any former president. Though it be granted stress of the times may have justified the delegation of such powers, there is little evidence that the country's condition has been bettered thereby. And if, again, congress has given the president a free rein there is naught but trust in the ability of one man to assure that the ship of state will be righted and headed for smoother seas. The prayers of many people, ignorant of the machinations of this new legislation, will implore divine guidance of our president. ! TIPS ON COOKING GREENS To save all possible food values and color in greens, it is best to cook them uncovered and just long enough to wilt them and make them tender, says Miss Lillian Eaylor, assistant professor of foods and nu trition at OSC. Except for strong flavored greens, such as mustard and kale, it is best also to use just as little water as possible, she says. When done, greens may be fla vored in a variety of ways, accord ing to the family peference, with butter or other fat. salt and pepper, with bacon, salt pork or ham, or with oil and vinegar or lemon. CCC FIVE YEARS OLD APRIL 3RD CCC-Soil Conservation Service Camps in Oregon to Celebrate Fifth Anniversary Next Sunday Along with other CCC camps throughout the nation, four camps assigned to the Soil Conservation service in Oregon will observe the fifth anniversary of the organiza tion of the Civilian Conservation corps on Sunday, April 3, reports A. W. Middleton, CCC administra tor for these camps. "Open House" will be held so that people in the surrounding country and commu nities may become better acquaint ed with camp personnel and soil ero sion control measures they have put into effect. Erosion control treatment on Ore gon farms totalling approximately 250,000 acres has been completed by enrollees from these four camps, working under the direction of trained engineers, foresters, agron omists, and other soil conservation technicians attached to the camps. Plans have been made for similar work on aproximately 550,000 acres, it was reported. .Enrollees are engaged in putting into effect on farms of cooperators within the camp areas practical methods to keep the soil from be ing washed off sloping fields, by run off waters. CCC-Soil Conservation service camps are located in strate gic farming areas where soil erosion problems typical of wide surround ing areas are encountered. From the sand dunes on Clatsop beaches to the wheat lands of eastern Oregon these camps are demonstrating to Oregon farmers the latest methods of curbing sheet and gully erosion, conserving moisture, and maintain ing soil fertility and erosion resist ance. Locations of soil conservation camps are: Warrenton, Simnasho, Moro, and Heppner. Control of gullies that were cut ting back into fertile farms required the building of nearly five hundred permanent and 1500 temporary check dams and the sloping in and seed ing of one million square yards of gully banks to soil-holding vegeta tion. Contour tilling is being prac ticed on several thousand acres de voted to wheat production, on which camps have worked. This method su percedes the customary up-and-down hill practice which has caused loss of soil and water . on sloping fields. Straw farming, essentially the mixing of crop residues with topsoil to create a porous, wash-proof and blow-proof surface, has been adopt ed on more than five thousand acres of wheat land within erosion control areas in central Oregon. Several hundred thousand trees and shrubs have been planted on Oregon farms under cooperative agreement with the Soil Conserva tion service. Plantings have been in the form of shelterbelts, woodlots, for wildlife food and shelter, and to hold soil on gully banks and steep slopes. 'iriiiiiiiiiiiitiit itiiiitiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iitiiim iimiiiiiitiiii tiiiitiiimiKW Hear Dem Minstre Help the Band atu relay N fee 8:00 O'CLOCK t GYM-AUDITORIUM E 1 1 A A i tiKS vvmstreis RESERVED SEATS AT GORDON'S Reserved Seats 75c; General: Adults 50c, Children 25c Dance After Show AT ELKS HALL $1.00 the couple Proceeds from show and dance go to help send Heppner School Band to State Contest fllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIII