Page Four 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 CKAWFOED PUBLISHING COMPANY and entered at the Post Office at Hepp ner, Oregon, as second-class matter. JASPER V. CRAWFORD, Editor SPENCER CRAWFORD, Manager SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year J2.00 Three Years 6.00 Six Months 1.00 Three Months 75 Single Copies 05 Official Paper for Morrow Coanty Member OregpnNewspaper Publishers NssociatiorP The Growers' Move I TNCLE SAM is digging into his pocket to subsidize movement of a large volume of domestic surplus wheat into foreign markets. The subsidy is announced this week in the form of a two- to five-cent pre mium over loan-value on white wheats now held under government loan. Morrow county farmers voted fa vorably on the- plan at a meeting at Lexington yesterday, as Will Steen, state chairman of the Oregon agri ultural committee, explained the plan. Still some farmers seem re luctant to let go, apparently believ ing that they will be able to sell for a higher price. It is not the intention of this news paper to try to tell the farmer how or when he should sell. But it does look like cooperation with the gov ernment plan is called for if a severe congestion in domestic wheat ter minals is to be avoided when the new crop comes on, and if a more severe drop in price is to be avoided. Under the loan contract signed by farmers who took the loan, farmers may turn their wheat over to the government in settlement of the loan at the end of seven months if they do not wish to sell in that time. So far since the loans went into effect there has been little improvement in the market so that, so far, as good a sale has not been possible as that now offered by the government, and it is highly problematical if a better market will be found before time of expiration of contracts. Of course, the farmer is assured receiving the amount already taken on the loan, and if he holds he is only gambling on the loss of the two to five cents now being offered as a premium. From the individual viewpoint, it possibly appears to be a good gam ble. On the other hand there is the re ftlUK'' It ,1m m WW n FIELD'S TANDEM HITCH for MOLINE PLOWS, any size FIELD'S GARAGE Dealers in Moline Implements T. L. Fields ' Wasco, Ore. Heppner cent history of the surplus commor ity credit corporation which ended disastrously with Uncle Sam hold ing large stocks of wheat. If the good uncle is forced again to be the hold er of such large stocks there is lit tle to indicate an improvement in the market situation. As announced to be the inten tion of the export subsidy at this time, clearing of warehouses to make way for the 1939 crop seems to be a wise move for the welfare of the wheat industry. A point to be considered also is that the open market at this time does not justify the premium price. The premium is being paid out of Uncle Sam's jeans to clear the way for better times. Happy Living to Be Theme of Big Home Conference "Happier Family Living" is the theme around which the program of the ninth annual Oregon Conference for the Study of Home Interests is being built, according to Mrs. Azalea Sager, state leader of home econom ics extension, who has announecd the dates as February 7 to 11, in clusive. The program, as tentatively out lined, again offers a wide variety of topics dealing with the various phases of family life. Many outstand ing speakers, recognized as author ities in their fields, are scheduled. In addition to the general assemblies, numerous group meetings are plan ned, to allow those attending to choose the subjects in which they are most interested. Each group will have a member of the college staff or a visiting speaker as discussion leader. Registration will begin at 9 o'clock Tuesday morning, February 7. The program proper will begin with the noon luncheon in the Memorial Un ion building, when President G. W. Peavy will welcome the delegates and Wm. A. Schoenfeld, dean of ag riculture, and Mrs. Jessamine Wil liams, acting dean of home econ omics, will extend greetings. The conference will, as usual, be preceded on Monday, February 6, by the annual meeting of the Oregon Home Economics Extension council, many of the delegates to which re main for the week. The time which motorists require to react to emergencies was meas ured at the Medford auto show De cember 9-10, with the reactometer from the office of Secretary of State Earl Snell making the tests. Past tests have shown that most persons have a reaction time of three-fourths to seven-eighths of a second. One of Oregon's newest commu nity traffic safety councils is now operating in Tillamook, where I. E, Keldson is chairman. The council has decided to hold monthly meetings and to call upon committee heads to submit written reports to the gen eral chairman before each meeting, .,T kSaf T 2-TfftisJ 5 vi ' ... Gazette Times, Heppner, LOS ANGELES COLUMNIST TELLS OF COPENHAVER FAME Lonnie Copenhaver's rise to fame by being retained as trainer of the Louis B. Mayer racing stables at Hollywood was cited in these col umns last week through an excerpt from the Grants Pass Courier. Lon nie, former Morrow county boy, had early racing experience at the Heppner Rodeo, later ran a stable of his own near Grants Pass, and since has trekked to race tracks far and wide. This week another clipping anent Lonnie's fame came to the editor's desk. It was taken from a recent is sue of Gene Coughlin's "On the Level," sports column in the Los Angeles Examiner. Coughlin calls Copenhaver "one of the most romantic figures in mod ern horse racing" in telling of exper iences leading up to his berth with Mayer. Copenhaver, says Coughlin, first got folks taking notice with a nag known as Malicious. Only under the newly-acclaimed wizard's train ing did Malicious seem able to win. In Coughlin's words, Copenhaver explained it: "Shucks, I never did anything to him. I just knew the old rascal and I found out the way he liked to train; that was to trot around in circles at the end of a rope. "And I found out he liked to run every quarter of every race at the same speed. He never sprinted in the stretch. He just kept running his usual gait and the other horses came back to him. That old rascal knew and still knows more about run FDirtififfiiifi) At the DICK GARAGE, Heppner ATL J AN. MAIN BENNY WHITE 160 Lbs., Heppner SEMI-FINAL RICHARD HAYES ... vs. ... IRVIN .GREENER 175 Lbs., Heppner 3 PRELIMINARY Admission 35c and : Dance at Elks' Hall Oregon ning a two-mile race than any trainer on the tracks." In addition to Malicious, says Coughlin, Copenhaver will have with him at Santa Anita this win ter some $250,000 worth of horse flesh owned by Mayer. Coughlin relates: "This is a strange and wonderful thine that has happened to Lonnie Copenhaver, who decided, all at once, to give up his career as a black smith and shoved off for Tijuana with a motor truck and a trailer. And in the trailer was a piece of horseflesh named Handsome C, by Beauty Boy, so help me." "Handsome C couldn't even walk fast," is the way Coughlin put it. But from one horse to another, and one flock of bangtails to another, Copenhaver withstood the jests of track followers, Coughlin relates, to make total earnings in 1936 to the neat sum of $30,000. In 1937, he "saddled 70 winners and collected $37,150 to place him seventh on the list of American trainers. And this with a bunch of cheap platers." Last year, Coughlin said, Copen haver topped all trainers in the Chicago district. "That settled it for Mr. Louis B. Mayer. He had to have Lonnie Copenhaver to train his quarter of a million dollars' worth of prize beauties." Sheriff C. J. D. Bauman arrived home from Portland Tuesday morn ing driving a new car, purchased through a local agency. EVENT 6 vs. STANLEY PARTLOW 160 Lbs., Boardman 75c Thursday, Jan. 19, 1939 Employment Figures Show Improvement Salem, Jan. 17 Oregon enjoyed an employment complexion improved 5 per cent over November, figures covering the December experience of the Oregon state employment service released by the over-all state agency here today disclosed. Placements totaled 2715 and 49 per cent were in private jobs. Pendleton, covering Morrow and Umatilla counties, accounted for 65, or 2.4 per cent, of the state total. Twenty-five per cent of the total were handled through the Portland office. Klamath Falls was next with 11 per cent. Marshfield had 8.2 per cent and Albany and Eugene, 6 per cent each. Industrially, public construction absorbed the greatest share of the unemployment load, 46 per cent. Personal service groups accounted for 12 per cent; lumber manufactur ing, 11 per cent; agriculture, 6 per cent; and private construction, 4 per cent. Women got 15 per cent of the jobs and veterans accounted for 13 per cent of all male placements. From the Klamath Falls Herald comes the suggestion, through its column on safe driving, that motor ists remember to slow down to city speeds when entering a town' after a long highway trip. The writer comments that after travelling long distances at 50 miles per hour or more, one is prone to underestimate the speed of his car as he comes into a city. 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