Page Four Heppner Gazette Times THE HEPPNER GAZETTE. Established March 30, 1883; THE HEPPNER TIMES. Established November 18. 1897; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15. 19U Published every Thursday morning by ! CKAWFOED publishing COMPANY and entered at the Poat Office at Hepp ner. Oregon, as second-class matter. JASPER V. CRAWFORD, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $2.00 Three Years - 5.00 Six Months 1.00 Three Months 75 Single Copies 05 Official Paper for Morrow County We Can't Have Everything rAILY the clouds roll up and the rain descends. And each day prospects look darker for the 10,000 acres of uncut wheat in Morrow county, as worry furrows become deeper set in the owners' faces. Re ports come of kernels sprouting in heads, of mildew, and of rust. It is a tough break for those wheat growers. On the other hand sheepmen, whose lambs have been moving late- addUio cau for elaW FaU ! ranges" are getting an tarly start, and an abundance of hay awaits the worst Old Boreas may have to offer later. Economically, in the long run, the county's wettest, August followed by more weeping days so far in e i 1 ...:n i ui.. i tu ., - iif i j tit ! mountain-top. Days on end he saw blue side of the ledger. Morrow!,, j e ij county has suffered for more than ten years from a constantly declin ing water' table, reflected in low wheat yields and receding livestock population. There is need for re storation of the water table to main tain these industries on a higher level over a period of years. The gray days, too, have been a blessing in the forests. The heaviest cover seen in the hinterland for many years has been kept well moist, thus averting what promised to be a hazardous fire season should the cover have been permitted to dry up. Lightning was many times bad. And it started many fires which were in most instances immediately quenched by succeeding showers. Thus the forests were brought thru to the start of what promises to be another good forage year. The unusual season has had its "DEFENSE "BOND f Q. I would like to provide a regular L income for myself when I retire. " Can this be done by buying De fense Savings Bonds? A. Yes. If you purchase a Bond for $37.50 each month, each Bond will mature in exactly 10 years. Thus at the end of 10 years you will have $50.00 payable each month as each of your Bonds reaches maturity. Q. But I will need more than $50 a month. A. Then you should invest a larger amount each month, hvery $0 you put into Defense Bonds will pay you $ 1 00 ten yea rs from now. Meanwhile, your money, serves your Government during this period of national emergency. NOTE- To purchase Defense Bonds and Stamps, go to the nearest post office or bank, or write for information to the Treasurer of the United States, Washington, D. C. Heppner Wheat Insurance For 1942 Equals Last Year Total As the signup for 1942 winter wheat crop insurance closed in Ore gon last Saturday, August 30, pre liminary reports showed that the number of farms covered by insur- ance and the total insured produc- tjon wjH equal or exceed the 1941 figures in the state, according to Clyde Kiddle, crop insurance assist ant at the state AAA office. First reports from county offices indicated that winter wheat produc tion will be insured against all risks in 1942 on about 5000 Oregon farms, covered in an estimated 3250 appli cations. The 1941 total for both win ter and spring wheat was 5839 ap plications covering the same num ber of farms, of which about 85 per cent developed into policies. The 1941 applications covered production of 3,910,000 bushels on 244,000 acres. Provisions in the 1942 program whereby the grower may insure his interest in the wheat crop on all the farms in the county with one appli cation will reduce the number of applications, but not the number of farms covered. Favorable growing conditions this year resulted in unusually few loss payments. To date, the state office has approved payment of 401 loss applications, for a total amount of indemnities of 36,646 bushels. More compensatory factors otherwise. On the human side, it has been pictur esque. Not alone in the bursting greenery and flowers, but in the beauty of the clouds themselves, has there been a deep source of pleasure. There's a man who lives on a the van guard of white, fleecy clouds come into view, to be immediately followed by those of deeper hue until shortly a deep dark bank had gathered, maybe in the distance, or maybe overhead, to unleash its blitzkreig of lightning and thunder, its downpour of rain. Such a view, from a mountain-top, he averred, is inspiring. -The unharvested grain now gives concern, there is hay that may spoil before it is put in the stack, livestock to be protected from the wet, but there is the prospect of better growing days ahead. Life, withal, in Morrow county is not exceeded elsewhere. We just can't have everything. Have you bought your defense bond? One Morrow county man had the full quota of $5000 for an individual shortly after the bonds 1 were placed on sale. : ?4 . Ouiz Gazette Times, Heppner, loss applications are being received every day, however, and payment for losses will continue until Nov ember 15. Most of the losses are being paid in western Oregon, where foot rot, Hessian fly, rust and excessive mois ture took a heavy toll in some counties. Fire and hail were the principal causes of losses paid in the eastern Oregon wheat area. Landowners Urge Organization of Soil Districts Referendums on the formation o twe- soil conservation districts in western Oregon will be called soon as the result of favorable sentiment for such organization expressed at two hearings recently by the state Soil Conservation committee, accord ing to Chairman Robert H. Warren of Forest Grove. More than 100 landowners signed a petition for organization of the district for the Nehalem river wat ershed, which would include parts of Clatsop, Columbia, Washington, and Tillamook counties. Farmers at the hearing held in Vernonia stated that the major problems in the Nehalem area are soil erosion on hill lands, river and stream bank erosion, soil fertility maintenance, drainage, weed control, timber growing and fire protection, and the development of grazing on burned-over lands. More than 60 farmers and business people in western Lane county at tended a hearing at Florence and urged the creation of a district in the lower Siuslaw river valley. Ma jor problems mentioned were the stabilization of shifting sand dunes that are encroaching upon agricul tural and forest lands and impair ing navigation on the Siuslaw river, soil erosion on hill lands, river and stream bank erosion, weed control, drainage, and maintenance of soil fertility. Soil conservation districts are governed by five farmer supervisors who develop their own district pro gram and plan of work. Any 25 or more landowners or owners of 70 per cent of the land in any proposed area may petition the state commit tee for the organization of a district. Other members of the state com mittee are C. E. Stncklin, state en gineer; William A. Schoenfeld, dean and director of agriculture, and Wil liam L. Teutsch, assistant director of extension, at Oregon State col lege, and Walker Franklin of En terprise. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT In the Matter of the Estate of John R. Wagner, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned as Administratrix of the Estate of John R. Wagner, de ceased, has filed her final account in the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, and that Monday, the sixth day of October, A. D. 1941, at the hour of 10:00 o' clock in the forenoon of said day in the Court room of said Court has been set as the time and the place for the hearing of objections there to and the settlement thereof. Dated and first published this 4th day of September, A. D. 1941. DELIA M. WAGNER, Administratrix of the Estate of John R. Wagner, deceased. NOTICE OF SALE OF COUNTY PROPERTY By virtue of an ORDER OF THE COUNTY COURT, dated Septem ber 3, 1941, I am authorized and di rected to advertise and sell at public auction at not less than the mini mum price herein set forth: Lot 10 in Block 13 of the Town of Lexington, except that part owned by the O. W. R. & N. Company, for the minimum price of $10.00, cash. THEREFORE, I will on the 4th day of October, 1941, at the hour of 10:00 A. M., at the front door of the Court House in Heppner, Oregon, sell said property to the highest and best bidder. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff, Morrow County, Oregon. WAKE UP BUSINESS By Advertising In tl:- m f) I 1 ins iicn Oregon Third 4-H Stock Sale Set at Fair Friday Foui-H club members who are showing fat stock at the state fair are expected to pocket close to $5000 in receipts from sales following the third annual 4-H club auction to be held at the state fair Friday, Sep tember 5, starting at 10 a. m. Ar rangements have been completed to handle nearly twice the livestock sold at the auction last year, says L. J. Allen, assistant state club lead er. Ben Sudtell of Albany is again donating his services as auctioneer. The sale will be broadcast over KOAC. This vear from 15 to 20 head of baby beeves, 75 lambs, and 125 hogs : will be available for sale. A sifting committee will go over the animals so that only those well finished andj ready for market will be sold. Now-more than 12 million telephone calls a day! livered in a matter of seconds. . That's a Dig jod but it's only part of the job we're doing today as the West hits its stride on National Defense work. Add to this a program of plant additions, this year, in excess of $70,000,000 of which expenditures for new construction alone will be over $57,000,000. We are making an all-out drive of man power, materials and money to supply the kind of telephone service that will help the Pacific Coast speed its part of America's biggest job. THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY' Business Office: 4 W. Willow Street, Heppner Phone 5 Good Printing s a mark That's why so many business houses prefer panting that comes from the Gazette Times Printery Thursday, September, 4, 1941 NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY On the 4th day of October, 1941, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M. at the "front door of the courthouse in Morrow County, Oregon, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the following de scribed real property located in Mor row County, Oregon, to-wit: The Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section Thirty-six in Township Five North, Range Twenty-six, East of the Wilamette Meridian, in said Morrow County, Oregon. Said sale is made under execution issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Morrow, to me directed in the case of Carlton L. Pepper, plaintiff, vs. Albert E. Benefiel, defendant. Dated and first published this 4th day of September, 1941. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff of Morrow County; Oregon. he number of telephone calls we handle on the Pacific Coast has mounted to over twelve million a day ! Each telephone call must be made to order on a moment's notice . . . manufactured and de- of distinction