Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, September 01, 1938, Page Page Three, Image 3

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    Thursday, September 1, 1938 Heppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon
HARDMAN NEWS
George Hayden
Running New Sawmill
By OPAL HASTINGS
George Hayden who has been
building a new mill on his place has
it completed and has been running
for some two weeks with Marion
Hayden and Ed McDaniel as assist
ants.
John Adams and wife are visiting
here this fall. Mr. and Mrs. Adams
make their home in Portland and
come up on business almost every
fall.
It has been reported that Reeds
mill on Rick creek will be closed
this week for an indefinite period.
Edith Stevens and Fairy Stanton
went to California on a vacation arid
while near Berkeley are visiting
with Mrs. Fred Bartmess who is an
aunt to both girls and will be re
membered as Lena Allen McDaniel.
Mildred Clary, Alene Inskeep and
Marie Clary visited the John Stev
ens home to see his little new grand
son, Bobby.
Vera McDaniel returned on Thurs
day from the mountains where she
has been visiting Reta Robinson for
two weeks.
Mrs. C. H. McDaniel went to Ar
lington on Saturday . to visit her
daughter, Mrs. Bud Fisk.
Ramona McDaniel visited this
week end in Lone Rock at the
Carl McDaniel home.
The Sabin Hastings family left
Sunday morning for Port Gambel,
Wash. Their stay will be indefinite.
Raymond McDonald who has been
working in harvest for Ida Cannon
had a narrow escape this week.
While pulling the combine from one
field to another, a steep hill had
to be gone down and the brake
broke. When Raymond jumped his
foot caught in some machinery and
he will never know how it came
loose just as he was nearly pulled
into the bull -wheel.
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Leathers who
have lived at Siletz for the last year
returned to Hardman this week.
Raymond Reid and Harry Owens
motored to Kinzua on Thursday.
Carl McDaniel of Lone Rock vis
ited in Hardman a short time on
Wednesday. He was on his way to
the mountains.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hiatt of E.
Chicago, Mr. Mott Cross, Hebean,
Ind., and Mr. and Mrs. Cass Cross
of Shelby, Ind., visited the Sam
McDaniels. They were all related
to Mrs. Sam McDaniel and she had
not seen them for 51 years.
Gladys Corrigall came over from
Echo bringing her mother and Jim
my Press to see his mother who is
visiting here from Chicago.
Mrs. Harlan Adams and children
visited this week at the Victor Lov
gren home on Eight Mile.
Miss Marjorie Adams, the daugh
ter if Belva Adams, is visiting at the
F. N. Adams home.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bleakman
and daughter and Mrs. J. J. McDon
ald of Tupper ranger station went
to Boardman to get their fruit.
Elmer Musgrave and wife came
over from their Fox Valley ranch
to take in the Heppner Rodeo. They
were accompanied by Lois, Eston
and Arlton Stevens.
Oren McDaniel who was recently
put on the biological survey was
in town this week. He moved his
family here this week from Lone
Rock as his district is near here.
Kathleen Ashbaugh is visiting
from Vancouver, Wash.
Carl McDaniel, U. S. hunter from
Lone Rock, was through town Mon
day evening. Mr. McDaniel reports
that he has caught 28 coyotes in the
Lone Rock district this month.
Mrs. Carey Hastings has been
quite busy painting and cleaning
tiie grade school She was retained
for janitor the coming year. School
starts September 6.
Mrs. Neal Knighten who has been
quite ill and in the Heppner hospital
returned home on Thursday and will
be bedfast for at least a month.
However, she is improving. Her
friends wish her a speedy recovery.
John McDonald was quite pain
fully injured when he was working
in the timber near the Roy Robin
son place. He was immediately
rushed to Heppner to a doctor. He
is getting along nicely now and
able to return home.
Maxine McDaniel visited Vera
McDaniel a few days this week.
Maxine lives at Reeds mill and will
attend Hardman school from there.
Lester Beason, formerly of Fossil
was an overnight visitor at Owen
Leathers' home. He is now a sales
man for the Commercial Importing
company from Seattle. His is in
Eugene. He was in eastern Oregon
for the Rodeo and business.
B. H. Bleakman, Ed McDaniel and
Pad Howell returned this week from
Grant county where they have been
for several days transacting busi
ness. Roy Robinson returned home from
Heppner on Monday with his truck
of stock that he had in the Rodeo
parade.
Elwood Hastings who has spent
the summer with Harlan McCurdy's
sheep over on Gilman flats came
through town this week on the way
to the home place.
Ed Warren is visiting his sister,
Mrs. J. B. Adams, this week.
Harlan and Forest Adams went
to Kinzua on Monday with Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Rodgers who had
been visiting friends and relatives
in town and over for the Rodeo.
Glen Merritt and Ed McDaniel
went to Heppner on Monday. .
Due to the thunder showers that
came over this part of the Heppner
district of the Umatilla National
forest the three emergency lookout
men, Owen Leathers, Jim Stevens
and Louis Gilliam, were returned
to their stations.
While Kenneth Bleakman and
wife were in Heppner with the fire
truck that is kept at Tupper ranger
station exhibiting it in the parade,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fries took care
of the switch at Tupper.
Way Cleared for
Wheat Loans to
Oregon Farmers
With the settlement of procedure
tangles between the Reconstruction
Finance corporation and the Pacific
Northwest wheat warehouses, the
way is now cleared for Oregon and
other northwest farmers to obtain
AAA loans on this year's wheat crop
whether they have farm storage fa
cilities or not.
This announcement is made by
Edgar L. Ludwick, recently appoint
ed state supervisor of wheat loans
in Oregon, who reports practically
all federally licensed warehouses in
Oregon as well as important state
licensed facilities on the approved
list.
Dificulty arose over the fact that
national regulations on storage of
wheat covered by loans were not in
line with established practices in
the northwest. Some adjustment in
the requirements as well as in the
practices has eliminated what for
a while threatened the progress of
the loan program in this region.
The procedure in obtaining loans
is for the grower to make application
through his county AAA committee.
In case of public storage of his
wheat, the chief step is obtaining
clearance on AAA compliance.
Where farm storage is being used
the wheat must be stored 30 days
and the storage facilities must be
passed upon by the county commit
tee before the loan can be approved.
Interest in farm storage is height
ened by the fact that the government
will pay 7 cents a bushel for storage
on the farm in case the grain is
turned over next spring as settle
ment of the loan. This would pay a
considerable share of the cost of new
farm storage, it is pointed out
State Supervisor Ludwick is main
taining headquarters at the AAA of
fice at Oregon State college. He has
had long experience both in grain
and wool handling in the northwest
After serving as county agent three
years in Idaho he did special grain
work for the U. S. D. A., then was
assistant manager for the Oregon
Grain Growers cooperative, and fol
lowing that was sales manager for
the Colorado Grain ' Growers. For
Page Three
the past 12 years he was assistant
manager of the North Pacific Co
operative Woolgrowers in Portland.
Independence is the most recent
Oregon city to institute a drive
against traffic offenders, according
to Secretary of State Earl SnelL The
Independence Enterprise reports that
the city council has instructed the
chief of police to put a halt to speed
ing along Monmouth and Main
streets, a practice declared to have
been responsible for several recent
accidents.
Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Barlow were
trading in town Monday from the
Eight Mile farm.
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