6 Heppner Gazette Pendieton Ready . For Major League Baseball Exhibition Second appearance of a big league barnstorming group of American and National diamond stars in Pen dleton -will take place Sunday, Oct. S, at the Round-Up park, making their only Orgon appearance of the trip which includes games at Boise, Tacoma, and Wenatchee. A similar game was staged here last October with the Nationals edging out the Americans 3 o 2 in a sparkling ex hibition tilt witnesstd by approxi mately 6,000 fans from the Inland Empire. The game will be played at 3:15 p. m. and reservations already are being received at the Pendleton chamber of commerce for box and grandstand seats. Bleacher seats will not be reserved, and members of the armjfcd forces below com missioned rank will be admitted free to bleacher seats. The game, sponsored by the Pen dleton chamber of commerce, will be played by two teams selected from the following list of players: American league: Thurman Tuc ker, fielder, Chicago; Joe Orengq shortstop, Detroit; Eddie Lake, in fielder, Boston; Roy Partee, catch er, Boston; George Melkovich, first baseman, Boston; Al Unser, catcher and infielder, Detroit; Jo Jo White oul'ielder, Philadelphia; Hershell Martin, lieldfer, Yankees; Don Black, pitchier, Philadelphia; Rus Christopher, pitcher, Philadelphia and Milo Candidi, pitcher, Wash ington. National league: Jim Tobin, Bos ton, pitcher; Paul Ericksen, pitcher, Chicago; Steve Coscarart, second baseman, Pittsburg; Bob Elliott, third baseman, fieldtr, Pittsburg; Steve Messner, third baseman, Cin cinnati, Eddie Miller, shortstop. Cincinnati; Tommy . Holmes, field er, Boston; Butch Nieman, fielder, Boston; Phil Masi, catcher, Boston; Fritz Ostermeuller, pitcher, Pitts burg. E. C. Olsen, Pendleton cham ber of commerce baseball commit tee chbirman, said other names would be added to the two squads when the group started west at the close of the major' league season. Lexington News Mrs. Mary Edwards Mrs. S. C. McMillan and Mrs. Eula Barnhouse drove to Portland last Thursday. They were called " down on account of the sudden death of the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack McMillan. Mrs. Bethel Taylor entertained the high school tat her home last Friday night, honoring the fresh men and the eighth grade students. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Green have moved into the house recently va cated by the Merritt Grays who moved to Pendleton. Mrs. Nettie Davis and son James have gone to Stanfield to visit the Gene Grays and will go to Top penish later to visit another daugh ter, Mrs. Loren. Mikesell. A. M. Edwards was a business visitor in Portland Monday and Tuesday. Miss Patty O'Harra has gone to La Grande where she has enrolled as a cadet nurse. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. McMillan entertained at dinner Monday eve ning for Mr. and Mrs. Owen Helms and Alex Hunt and sons , Edward and Elwood. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lester of Wil son creek and Mr. and Mrs. Sou thard of Ephrata, Wash, were vis itors at the Edwards home last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Klinger are parents of a son born Oct. 1 at the Mollahan nursing home. The young man weighed eight pounds and has .been named Kenneth Charles. T. Sgt and Mrs. Clarence Hayes are the proud parents of a new daughter born at Hermiston, Oct. 3. ATTV ENGINEER HERE Claude Hollingsworth, army en gineer, civilian branch, has been visiting here this week with Mrs. Lucy Rodgers and Mrs. Sara Mc Namer. He recently from Attu Is land in the Aleutians and while awaiting transfer to another area decided to spend a few days with hia friends in Heppner. Times, October 5, 1944 LEGION AUXILIARY PLANS FOR NAVY DAY The executive committee of the American Legion auxiliary met in Legion hall Monday, Oct. 2. Plans for observance of Navy day were made, for the regular meeting, Oct. 9 at which time it is hoped to have talks by some of the navy personnel who are home on leave. A card party has been announced for the night of Oct. 30," in the hall. This will be a benefit party. Off facers and committee chair- GOING TO MEETINGS Mrs. Lucy Rodgers will attend a committee meeting of the Oregon State Tdachers' association Satur day in Portland. The problem of teacher recruitment will be under discussion. Mrs. Rodgers will go on to Salem for a school administra tors' conference the first of the week. MADE BUSINESS TRIP Harvey Bauman returned1 Mon day from Seattle where he went for a business meeting with his brother, C. J. D. Bauman. r a To lubricate Uncle Sam's sub marine Diesel engines so they run clean and smooth on long cruises, the Navy uses RPM DELO. The Navy is sharing this "secret weapon" with the home front . . . and RPM DELO is doing a great job in thousands of tractor, truck, marine and stationary Diesel engines. It's specially com pounded to prevent sludging and gummed-up pistons it actually cleans and frees rings stuck through use of other oils. Millions of test miles in laboratories and actual service proved that it just about DOUBLES THE TIME BE TWEEN OVERHAULS. The Navy can't afford to take chances with its fighting Diesels and neither can you. Get RPM DELO and you get the all-around lubricant for all Diesels. STANDARD DIESEL FUEL 100 Clean Cuts Diesel Injector Volve Wear L. E. Dick Phone 622 Heppner, Oregon ftp QiaMSIIDQiliOTili ft V K St men for the year are as follows: President Mrs. Chris Brown; 1st vice, Mrs. L. E. Dick; 2nd vice,, Mrs. Harvey Miller; secretary treasurer, Mrs. Dick Wells; execu tive committee,, Mrs. Loyal Parker, Mrs. , Harvey Bauman, ,Mrs. 0. E. Ferguson; historian, Mrs. Harold Cohn; chaplain, Mrs.. Anna Bayless; sergeant! fit- arms, Mrs. Millie Evans; Americanism, Mrs. Ferguson; child welfare, Mrs. Dick; commu- quicsc rnuEF from Symptoms of Distress Arising from STOMACH ULCERS due to EXCESS ACID FreeBookTellsotHomeTreatmentthat Must Help or it Will Cost You Nothing Over two million bottles of the WILLARD TREATMENT have boun sold for relief of symptoms of distress arising from Stomach and Duodenal Ulcer due to Excess Acid Poor Digestion, Sour or Upset Stomach, Gassiness, Heartburn, Sleeplessness, etc, due to Excess Acid. Sold on 15 days' trial) Ask for "Willard's Message" which fully explains this treatment free at GORDON'S DRUG STORE For Good Eats Go to the Victory Cafe lone, Oregon Roy and Betty Lieuallen Proprietors By ED C. POWERS Is an American birthright won by the blood and sweat of our fore fathers slipping from our grasp? James F. Lincoln, nationally known expert of work incentives and pres ident of The Lincoln Electric Com pany, Cleveland, says it is. Lashing out at Government poli cies which discourage the people's will to produce goods that go to make up the nation's high stand ard of living, the out-spoken in dustrialist told in an interview how he believes one of our birthrights is being strangled. A big, vigorous man of 61 with ruddy complexion and .. full shock of gray hair, Lincoln's eyes flashed as he spoke of a planned drift to wards socialism at Washington which is taking away the incen tive for the individual to develop his latent abilities to the utmost. Asked what the industrial in centive system he favors has to do with farmers, the industrialist replied that his remarks were not confined to industry or to systems, rather he was thinking about the incentive for any producer to pro duce. "What would happen on two neighboring farms," asked Lincoln, who was reared on a farm him self, "if one farmer applied him self to intelligent planning, plant ing and cultivation , of his crops and backed it up with plenty of hard work while the other farmer did not apply himself so diligent ly? You know which one of those farmers enjoys the better stand ard of living. "Now. what would happen if the Government came along and told the more productive one that he should have no more than the other: so from now on he must turn back all rewards received from his farming in excess of those of his neighbor?" "The Government did it to us. It could do the same to farmers," he said in level tone, looking directly irto the interviewer's eyes while h. controlled the indignation with in him. "Here is what happened." Lincoln first reviewed the his tory of his company. It took 110 Mau-heus to Btaka a 2410 ampac . . , , , Jt , Industrialist Crusades To Keep An American Birthright I nity service, Mrs. Bayless; Consti tution, by-laws, legislative, Mrs. Lucy E. Rodgers; girls' state, Mrs. Bauman; hospital and rehabilita tion, Mrs. Parker; junior activities, Mrs. Bauman; membership, Mrs. N. Schmaltz & Sons ' Peters Building, Heppner Roofing and Siding Contractors and Applicators For Information Write Box 726, Hepp ner, or phone 83, Condon, Ore. From where Roll d Hodges and the doctor were holding forth about how words only mean something when you think about them; and that a lot of words seem to lose their meaning just because they're, used too glibly. As the doctor put it, "They roll -off your tongue without go ing through your mind. Take tolerance for instance ... some of the people who use it most understand it least." From where I sit, it looks like the doctor is right But tolerance is mighty easy to understand. No. 97 of a Series JAMES F. LINCOLN welder before incentives were of fered 10 years ago and it takes 19 today, he said. A ton of welding electrode required 72 man-hours to produce then and 2 hours and a few minutes today. These remarkable gains were at tributed by Lincoln tp his com pany's incentive system which re wards workers in proportion to what each contributes to total out put either by production efforts or helpful ideas on production. While such production strides were being made, the average yearly income of Lincoln factory workers climbed from $1300.00 to $5400.00 and the prices for their output declined. For example, few men in farm areas would have found it practical to buy a weld ing outfit 10 years ago at a price of $550.00 to carry on a repair business for broken farm equip ment in their district, but many are doing a useful and successful business today with the same type of welders bought from Lincoln at $190.00. Simultaneously, the re duced prices so widened the sale of Lincoln equipment that the plant had to increase employment from 206 persons to over 1000. The widespread "know how" r&ined during the past ten years made welding oa: of the important tools, n speeding war production Mgrea aaqruiag D;0a Davidson; music Mrs. R. B. Ferguson; national defense and Pan America, Mrs. Kenneth Blake; na tional news and publicity, Mrs. Wells, poppy, Mrs. Evans (and war activities, Mrs. Cauman. I sit ... Joe Marsh Words That Off Your Tongue After all, it just comes down to having respect for other folks' . rights. I don't mean just in the big things like maybe what po litical party a fellow belongs to. But in the little things, too, like having a glass of beer or. sionally. Seems to me if every time we spoke about tolerance wo thought about what it means maybe then we'd all of us start living it and not just talking about it. Copyright, 1944, Brewing Industry Foundation dreamed in their wildest night mares. After explaining how his com pany had made this production-at-a-low-cost and high-wage record, Lincoln said: "The Treasury Department step ped in and slapped a $1,600,000.00 assessment on the company and the Price Adjustment Board added a renegotiation penalty of $3,250, 000.00 after this splendid team of production workers turned its ener gies to war production." Lincoln questioned the Govern ment's sincerity in desiring to save the people's money through renegotiation and stated that it had cost this country billions of dollars more than it had saved. He stated that this was because ef ficiencv hnd hppn npnoliVart t-nA 4v, efficiency encouraged. "For exam- pie, ne saia, "How long will the efficient farmer, whom I mentioned earlier, continue to way when he finds that the results oi nis emciency are taken fron him, and the inefficient farmer patted on the back? That ia i-n. negotiation. That is an example of nr v . . .... r v asnmgion economic thinking. "Renegotiation ." T.inr-nln ? t f' T VV'll k3LlVA AO makinsr it imnnssihle fnr ronnnnor. sion to peacetime business in many cuses. we are resisting in the court3 Governmental threats to our hard won efficiency just as the efficient farmer would resist having his earnings taken. To com ply quietly with such threats would cripple our incentive system ana cui oui tne very guts of an American method for giving the nation the most for its monev in war or peace." If industry is so m'rmloi on " I J'v co ,v be unable to provide post-war jobs unaer present Government - im posed handicaps, Lincoln believes the Government will have to step in to become the "fpnal lnA" furthermore, he believes "it is b&I mg planned that way" It doesn't make mnpVi Aitta, what happens to The Lincoln Elec tric Company or any other single company but it is tremendously ira- nortant what hunnona tj V Am- ican standard of living, as Lincoln cos iu no is devoting much tim and worlcino wit.1i TI which ar net inconsiderable, to a .tw 9-9u to m toT