DEFENSE GREGO" HISTORICAL Z Z ZA P U B L I C A 'JjITOq mx BUY 'Fl UNITED ,UJ STATES aijy SAVINGS ;7fe7BONDS cH i ' l " STAMPS Volume 58, Number 40 City All Ready To Entertain Largest Influx In History Extra Housing, Eat ing Facilities Listed; Big Banquet Planned Expectations were being fulfilled this morning as a fast filling Main street presaged one of the largest crowds in history for an Eastern Oregon Wheat league meeting, or any event ever staged here. More than a hundred visitors ar rived at 6:30 this morning in the special seven-Pullman train, cars of which will augment local sleeping facilities. Auto loads of visitors con tinued to arrive all morning. Local committees had all arrange ments well in hand this morning, with courtesy cars meeting the train passengers and escorting them to various eating places. Courtesy cars will continue to be available at the headquarters in Hotel Heppner, next to lobby entrance, where guides will also be found to take visitors to rooms in homes, more than a hun dred of which have been registered. Registration for the convention sessions may be done here or at the school gym-auditorium , where all meetings are being held. In addi tion to league memberships, visitors' badges, programs and banquet tick ets are available at these places, the league membership for a dollar, and banquet tickets a dollar. There is no registration fee. Banquet tickets are being reserved for visitors first. They will only be made available to townspeople if any of the 600 tickets are left tomorrow afternoon. The banquet will be staged at 6 o'clock tomorrow evening at the county pavilion on north Main street. "Dusty" Rhodes of Pendleton will prepare the food and it will be served by high school girls. Judge C L. Sweek of Pendleton, veteran E. O. W. L. banquet toastmaster, will fill this role again, and the principal speaker of the evening will be Dr U. G. Dubach, dean of men at Ore gon State college. Favors have been contributed by Portland firms. H A. Cohn is banquet chairman, with J. G. Barratt as head of the enter tainment. E. Harvey Miller is head of the local convention committee, with other sub-committee chairmen as follows: J. O. Turner, housing; B. C Pinckney, meeting place; Kenneth Blake, courtesy cars; L. E. Bergevin, registration; Vawter Parker, window decorations. Store windows are showing at tractive displays in a contest for $10 and $5 prizes offered by the cham ber of commerce. AIKEN IN AIR CORPS Joe E. Aiken, former Central Washington college athlete, is now a member of the first class of cadets in the new Air Corps Replacement center (Aircrew) at Kelly Field, Texas, says a recent Ellensburg, Wn., press clipping. He was m school here from 1939 to 1941. He played football, basketball and baseball and was a boxer. He is from Heppner. Aiken entered the school November 12. He will go through five weeks of treliminarv training before being sent to a primary flying school where he will start flight training. Flight training will take another five weeks. Then he will go to an advan ced school from where Aiken will be graduated 30 weeks later as an of ficer in the army. MAKES FIRST TEAM Dubby Aiken, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Aiken of this city, is num bered among those present on the first basketball team at Central Washington College of Education at Ellensbura. Wash. The team is coached by Leo Nicholson, former Heppner high school athlete and four year basketball letterman at Uni versity of Washington. BANK HEAD SLATED - au&wi Jgx: wwiwiwiim R. E. Brown, general agent of the Farm Credit administration of Spokane, and president of the Federal Land bank of Spokane, who will speak at the Eastern Oregon Wheat league meeting here tomorrow. His topic will be, "Farm Financing, Present and Fu ture." Growers Endorse Triple A Program More than 300 wheat growers from the three Pacific northwest states, plus a group of department of ag riculture officials from Washington, D. C, assembled in Heppner this morning for the opening sessions of the fourteenth annual meeting of the Eastern Oregon Wheat league. With Governor Charles A. Spra gue and N. E. Dodd, of Baker, direc tor of AAA's western division and other officials of AA and the Fed eral Crop Insurance corporation in attendance, the morning session was devoted to a meeting of the com mittee on federal agricultural and conservation programs. Will Steen of Milton presided as chairman. Unanimous endorsement of federal AAA and crop insurance programs, with minor changes, was embodied in resolutions urging their continu ance. The group recommended three year marketing quotas with no change in present penalty regula tions and 85 percent commodity loans and expressed belief that the wheat surplus problem could best be solv ed through strict enforcement of marketing quotas without reducing the national wheat allotment below the present 55 million acre mini mum. Bauman Named Head Of State Sheriffs Another laurel came to Morrow county last week end when the an nual convention of state sheriffs el ected C. J. D. Bauman, local sheriff, as president of the organization for the coming year. Bauman served as vice-president last year. A former Heppner boy, Bruce Spaulding of Dallas, was elected head of the state association of district attorneys at the same time. Bauman reports the sessions last week among the livest he has had the privilege to attend. STANLEY MINOR INJURED , Stanley Minor suffered lacerations and bruises which required first aid when he was struck by a motorcy cle Saturday evening on Main street. Stanley was just passing by as Spencer Fox of Stanfield stopped the gas cycle at the curb and dis mounted, and the cycle continued on to the sidewalk, striking Minor. Fox rushed the injured man to a doctor immediately where his in juries were attended to, and, for tunately, none proved serious. Apartment, oil heat, automatic hot water. A. Q. Thomson. ltp. Heppner, Oregon, Thursday, December AAA Community Elections In Week Start New Year 'Food for Defense' to Play Important Part In New Program Approximately 500 farmers, mem bers of the Morrow County Agri cultural conservation association, are eligible to vote next week at the annual AAA community elections, Kenry Baker, county AAA chair man, announced yesterday. Community committees and dele gates to the county conventions will be chosen at the community elec tion meetings, which have been scheduled as follows: Alpine, Eightmile, Lexington, Mor gan, lone, North Heppner, South Heppner-Hardman 1:30 p. m., Tu esday, December 9, at the I. O. O. F, hall, Heppner. Irrigon 9:30 a. m., Wednesday, December 10 at the Water Office. Boardman 1:30 p. m., Wednesday, December 10, at the FFA Room in the Boardman High school. Following the community elec tions, delegates to the county con vention will meet to review the bus iness of the association during the past program year, and to elect county committeemen for 1942. "Triple A's role in the all-import ant food for defense program will place added responsibilities on all AAA committeemen during the coming year," Mr. Baker said. "I believe that this is all the more rea son why everyone who has a vote hould attend his community meeting and help name the men who will handle this increased responsibility," the chairman added. Fox Hunting, New Sport, in Which Horse Proves Superior (Contributed) Last week one of Sheriff Bau man's silver foxes escaped from its pen and led a free life for a few hours. Deputy Earle Bryant was noti fied and he quickly organized a posse of a score or more and gave chase. The fox retired to the side of the hill east of town and pro ceded to lead the posse on until he finally gave them the slip. Frank Tousley, the horse trainer at the Rodeo grounds, seeing the chase, decided the proper method to catch the fox was to rope it from horseback. Members of the posse told him where the fox had last been seen and he soon found him and gave chase. The horse, a palomino stal lion named Sundancer and owned by Chuck Oswald of dude ranch fame, fell into the spirit of the game and quickly put Mr. Tousley within roping distance at a down hill run, and Tousley made his catch on the first loop. The then defeated fox was wrap ped in a blanket and taken back to his pen much the wiser about cow horses and ropes. Mr. Tousley said all credit was due the horse, and Sundancer, who is also trained to do tricks, bowed and nodded his head. TRAFFIC LANES PAINTED As Heppner's main thoroughfare and other parts of the Oregon Wash ington highway in town were treat ed to renovation of the center yellow line this week, city officials cooper ated to mark off pedestrian lanes at intersections, augmenting traffic reg ulation as the big Eastern Oregon Wheat league meeting approached. PARTY GIVEN Mr. and Mrs. Ben Patterson were hosts Monday evening at a party given in honor of Peggy Aiken who is leaving shortly for Vancouver, Wash. A number of lady friends were invited guests, and Mrs. Aiken was presented with two traveling cases. 4, 1941 HIS MESSAGE HOT People cf Ikppmr and Morrow county have an exceptional op portunity to hear a first hand message from Europe, and one that will make national news, when R. M. Evans, chief of AAA nationally speaks before the Eastern Oregon Wheat league meeting Saturday morning. Mr. Evans has just re turned from England where he learned first-hand the food n?cds of that country. He will tell what he learned there and what Am erica nfarniers can do to help. School children especially will find his address the source of up-to-the-minute information, as well as to sec a man who has a major part in controlling the agricultural destinies of the country and of the world. Governor Lauds Defense Efforts The patriotism of the people of Oregon cannot be beat, Governor Charles A. Sprague told a group of county defense councilmen, county and city officials who met at the courthouse following noon luncheon at the Lucas Place today, Oregon has led the nation in fill ing its quota for the enlarged militia (and here he paid tribute to the late George A. White, commander of the 41st division), it has been first in buying defense bonds, it led in an inventory of workers to pre vent disruption of labor in industrial centers, its agriculture is cooperat ing in the food for defense program, and now an inventory of industrial plants in the state is being taken that Oregon can the most effectively prosecute her part in the defense efforts. While Governor Sprague admitted to different party affiliation, he em phasized that the people of America must present a united front behind the national aministration's policies, especially those related to foreign relations. The governor commended Ore gon's labor leaders for this state's good record of strikes and lock-outs in defnese industries. There have been no major strikes in Oregon in the last two years, he averred. While declaring his candidacy to succeed to the state's highest office at the next general election, the governor said "I am not now on a political mission. I came only to attend the wheat league." He said it is too early to do any campaigning. Declaring the state's budget now balanced with money in the treas ury, due largely to receipts from income tax, he announced himself in favor of "little change" in the present income tax laws. Especial ly did he protest expending income tax money in ways other than now provided. He hoped that excess in come tax funds would always be used to relieve the property lax, as it did this year by paying the ele mentary school tax which counties were not required to levy. The governor said he expected to go further into the tax situation in his address before the wheat league this afternoon. Subscription $2.00 a Year Governor Sprague Among Visitors At Meeting Today National Triple A Chief, Regional Di rector Also Noted Governor Charles A. Sprague, for whom a special luncheon is being given at Lucas Place this noon, is among distinguished visitors who arrived this morning to greet the Eastern Oregon Wheat league. He expected to go on to Pendleton this afternoon. The governor is a wheat grower himself, owning a farm in eastern Washington. Bringing national as well as state attention to the sessions today, to morrow and Saturday will be R. M. Evans, chief of AAA from Washing ton, D. C, and N. E. Dodd, director of the western region, AAA. R. E. Brown, chief of the Farm Credit administration of Spokane, is anoth er high official who will appear on the speaking program. A meeting of the Federal Agricul tural and Conservation Programs committee this morning started the convention grind. The first general session was set for 3:30 this afternoon with the ad dress of welcome by Mayor J. O. Turner, response by J. L. Stagg; ad dress of the president, S. J. Culley, and annual report of the secretary, C. W. Smith. Committee meetings iwere to follow at 4:30 and 7:30. A second general session will start tomorrow's program at 9:30 a. m. Musical selection will be followed by the feature address of N. E. Dodd on "Report on International Wheat Conference and World Wheat Sup plies." L. E. Harris, associate pro fessor of farm crops, O. S. C, will speak on "Experimental Results in Weed Control" with Walter Holt, Umatilla county agent leading the discussion on this subject. At 1:30 tomorrow afternoon the session will open with a musical se lection, followed by report of Land Use, Weed Control, Production, Handling, and Marketing Commit tee; address by Mr. Brown of FCA, Spokane, "Farm Financing, Present and Future"; address by E. B. Mc Naughton, president First National Bank of Portland, "After Defense, What?" Saturday at 9 a. m. will come the report of the auditing committee, report of nominating and place of meeting committee, election of offi cers, and the address of Mr. Evans on "Food Needed by Great Britain and What American Farmers Can. Do to Help." The address will be followed by report of Taxation, Leg islation, and Transportation commit tee. At 1:30 Saturday afternoon, sum marization of the 4-H club wheat lamb feeding contest will be given by H. A. Lindgren, extension animal husbandman, O. S. C; D. E. Rich ards will tell of "Fattening Livestock on Oregon Grown Feeds" and re ports of the Federal Agricultural and Conservation Programs committee, and general resolutions committee will be given. A meeting of the league executive committee is called for 3:30 Saturday afternoon as the program finale. INJURED BY HORSE Miss Colleen Kilkenny, attendant to the queen at Heppner's last Ro deo and Heppner high school stu dent, received painful injuries Sat urday when a horse she was riding fell upon her. She had just reached the surfaced highway at the end of the lane leading from the farm house on Hinton creek, in chase of horses, when her horse slipped an fell on top of her". Her brother Bobby saw the accident from the house and rushed to her. Mrs. Kilkenny took her to Pendleton immediately for first aid and returned there with her Sun day for further treatment. Miss Kil kenny has since been confined at home, but no complications such as were feared have developed.