Page Four Heppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon Thursday, Nov. 23, 1939 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 CHAWFOBD 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 $2.00 Three Years 6.00 Six Months 1.00 Three Months ...... . . . .75 Single Copies 05 Offiolal Paper for Morrow County When It's Blackest FJEPRESSION days evpked from economists the theory that people should save in times of prosperity; spend in times of adversity. That policy generally followed, would keep business or a more even keel at all times. The theory is really not new. Poor Richard taught the lesson of thrift, recognizing many years before the brain trust came on the scene that it is wise "to save against a rainy day." In the field of economics it is here recognized the law of compensa tory forces at work everywhere in nature. In the exact sciences, those in which all elements can be meas ured to mathematical precision, man has learned after the physicist that "for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction." Man has not learned to gauge the pendulum's swing of compensation so accurately in all of nature's workings. Bound by the theories of the chemist that "matter is never destroyed, merely transformed in appearance" in the chemical pro cesses, and of the physicist that "en ergy is ever transmitted, never lost" in processes of motivation, man can everywhere see symptoms of the processes at work, yet in nature at large he has not been able to harness them and control them to anything like the degree of efficiency he has attained in the laboratory. The foregoing is not meant as a scholarly treatise on the law of com pensation. It is intended, rather, as the basis for a truism in which hope may be found when prospects ap pear specially adverse. Morrow county has been going through its driest fall season of rec ord, from all accounts. The imme diate prospect for the growing wheat crop is bleak, indeed. It has led some to conjecture as to whether the great eastern Oregon empire is not being stricken by one of those cli matic changes as recorded in eras of geological transformation, that may eventually leave it another Sa hara desert. That is a matter which should not greatly concern inhabi tants of the region at this time, for transformation of a country such as this into a complete desert is a matter of a million or so years. A more encouraging and more proba ble theory now, as measured from past experience, is that the drouth pendulum's swing is about to re verse its course. Good crop years have at times followed dry falls in Morrow county. So far, general re ports say, seed that has been put in the ground is not greatly injured; will come through with favorable winter and spring growing condi tions. When the night is darkest, the earth turns toward the dawn of a new day. Railroads operating in Oregon suf fered a loss in revenue during 1938, as compared with the previous year while at the same time experiencing a substantial increase in their tax levies, according to a report filed with Governor Sprague this week by O. R. Bean, state public utilities commissioner. Freight tonnage drop ped 2,680,199 while the 1,161,400 pas sengers carried during the year was 236,005 under the 1937 record. Net revenue of the railroads was $5,565, 049, a decrease of $107,765, while taxes paid totalling $3,190,380 rep resents an increase of $240,049 over the 1937 figure. River Development To be Stressed at Hood River Meet The chamber of commerce and civic groups of this community will be invited by W. S. Nelson, manager of The Dalles chamber of commerce and secretary of the Mid-Columbia chamber, to attend the annual meet ing and banquet of the regional group at the Columbia Gorge hotel, Hood River, December 14. Mr. Nelson, well known in this area as an authority on Columbia river development, says that the 1939 session will be turned into an intercommunity forum, in order that frank discussion may be secured toward directing the trend of future action along the lines of best policy for cashing in on the Columbia riv er's navigation and Bonneville low cost power. Thomas W. Nordby, Bingen lumberman and president of the organization, says the time has been reached again when all Mid Columbia and contiguous Inland Em pire organizations should engage in a coordinated program, such as char acterized their activities in the pro motional campaigns, which have been successful in attaining physical facilities. A similar coordination will be asked of public agencies, state, regional and federal. Speakers at the banquet this year will include Dr. Paul J. Rover, ad ministrator of the Bonneville proj ect; Colonel John O. M. Lee, Port land division engineer of the Uni ted States engineers; Capt. Robert H. Elliott, Bonneville district en gineer; Charles Baker, president of the Inland Empire Waterways asso ciation, and Ray Conway, manager of the Oregon State Motor associa tion. Mr. Nelson will contact Harry D. Proudfoot, president of the Eastern Oregon Wheat league, and endeavor to secure a full representation of this influential organization at the coming chamber session. He says the wheat league will discuss at its an nual meeting at Condon the week before the regional session, in an in tensive way the development of the Columbia and Snake rivers as ad vantageous factors for eastern Ore gon agriculture. Mr. Nelson says the conclusions reached by the wheat ranchers, and their views on policy will be invaluable for the Hood River discussions. RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT "God knows the way, He holds the key, He guideth with unerring hand; Educational Forum Contributed articles from county school leaders telling the pur poses of education. Why Public Speaking Should Be Required in High School Whatever one plans to do after he finishes school, he will do it bet ter if he possesses the ability to speak well. By learning to speak well, one can expect to be a better clerk, a more efficient stenographer, a more useful farmer, a better nurse, a more capable teacher, a more val uable physician, a more worth while citizen. One certainly does not need to wait two or three years to discover how useful public speaking training is. The football captain will make use of his new knowledge when talk ing to the pep rally before the big game, the class president will ac quire new confidence and poise in presiding over his class, the indi vidual club or class member will find himself participating in the business of the group, the wallflow er will blossom, yes, even the his tory, the algebra, the chemistry, the agriculture student will become in creasingly aware of the fact that the public speaking class has given him new and valuable tools to use in the class recitation period. Proficiency in speech surely need not be con fined wholly to the public speaking class the majority of our daily re lationships involve the use of speech. As Americans we should be very thankful that we have the oppor tunity to express ourselves. What use would there be in a public speaking class in the schools of dic tator controlled countries? Some time with tearless eye we'll see, And there, up there, we'll under stand." In memory of Brother John O. Kincaid, lone, Oregon, who died November 3, 1939. They are not lost in the distant worlds above. They are our dearest link in God's own love. The Angel of Death has entered our midst and we are called to mourn the loss of a faithful friend and co-worker. Our tears are mingled with yours, your sorrows are ours. .May the gloom of the sorrowing ones be dis pelled by the promise, "I am the Resurrection and the Life, sayeth the Lord; he that be lieveth in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live, and he that liveth and believeth in Me shall never die." Resolved that Bunch Grass Re bekah Lodge No. 91, I. O. O. F., of lone, in testimony of our loss, be draped in mourning for the allotted time and that we tender the family our deepest sympathy in the afflic tion, and that a copy of these reso lutions be sent to the family. ELAINE RIETMANN, AR VILLA SWANSON, MARY L. SWANSON,' Committee. CARD OF THANKS Our sincere thanks and apprecia tion are extended to the many kind neighbors and friends for their help and expressions of sympathy at the time of bereavement of our mother, Alice Cochran. The Family. APPRECIATION My sincere thanks and apprecia- NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Notice is hereby given that the undersigned administrators of the estate of Dan C. Doherty, deceased, have filed their final account with the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County of their administration of the estate of said deceased, and that said Court has set, Saturday, December 23rd, 1939, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon of said day in the County Court room at the Court House at Heppner, Oregon, as the time and place for hearing objections to said final account and the settlement of said estate, and all persons having objections thereto are hereby re quired to file the same with said court on or before the time set for said hearing. Dated and first published this 23rd day of November, 1939. W. T. DOHERTY, BERNARD F. DOHERTY, Administrators. tion are extended to the friends for the radio recently placed in my room. W. K. CORSON. WINCHARGER Home Electric Light System 50c Per Year Operating Cost 3-Year Payment Plan. Free Estimates without obligation Ladies Try Newart soft wring ing Rubber Mop, also Dexter Twin Washer. Write or Phone JOHN DE MOSS, Dealer Moro, Ore. Res. DeMoss Spr. BOXES 3 Sizes to Suit Everybody LOCALLY BUTCHERED MEATS FRESH AND CURED Central Market Ture Peterson, Mgr. 7 BIG PUBLICATIONS Each for One Year-A Total of 164 Issues WEEKLY JH All Seven for One Year Here's What You Get! 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Enclosed is $3.50 in FULL PAYMENT for ONE YEAR'S subscription, new or renewal, to the following SEVEN publications: THE GAZETTE TIMES 1 year HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE l year COLLIERS (Weekly) 1 year THE COUNTRY HOME l year WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION 1 year FARM JOURNAL and WOMAN'S WORLD 1 year FARMER'S WIFE i year ( ) Check here if you want LI BERY one year instead of Collier's. ( ) Check here if you want LOOK one year instead of Collier's. My Name Is Address.. Town State