4-Hcppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon, July 10, 1947 --jrr j 1 I)' Kit' M A. t. u 1 T i Id. I ftso eM lt'H-t" A ePACIOrS HOME ON A SINGLE FLOOR A family of four or fie on live fomfortablr in this one-story home. Features include ipaciom kitchen, lante living room and three ood-aiied bedrooms. The exterior i finished with asbestos cement tidings. Besides adding a pleasing appearance, the asbestos sidings reduce maintenance costs and provide protection against fire. Living Costs on Farms Cut Value Of High Prices Rural living costs nationally are 25 percent higher than a year ago and are more than dou ble those of 1935-1939. according to an analysis of the L'SDA data by O.S.C. extension agricultural economists. Thus, the real net income of farmers is not to be judged alone by prices of farm products, or even by the dollar income. It takes five farm family dol lars to buy the goods and ser vices that could be bought for four dollars a year ago. Mean while, farm production expenses increased overall at approxim ately the same rate as the gen eral level of prices for farm pro ducts. The real income of farm fam ilies has declined rather sharp- BOIL FIRST, TASTE LATER. . BEST ANTI-BOTULISM RULE 'Don't try to tell by odor or appearance whether home can ned string beans, corn or peas are spoiled or not. Boil them first and taste them afterwards." This is the advice of G. V. Copson. head of the bacteriology department at O.S.C, who has tested scores of food samples for the deadly botulism. Such food that may smell and appear all right may carry enough poison to be deadly, while food that is completely spoiled can be ren dered harmless by boiling. Botulinus poisoning is caused by a germ fairly common in Or egon soils. Professor Copson ex plains. While it rarely appears when reasonable care is used in canning, it is so deadly that it is not safe to take chances at any time. He also warns against throwing suspicious canned food to chickens until it is boiled, as it is just as deadly to them, causing "limberneck" preceding death. The poison in canned food is destroyed by boiling 10 minutes, Professor Copson adds. The germ forms a spore which resists boil ing temperatures, but which is harmless in the human body. It is advisable, however, to reboil foods that have been opened more than a day or so. A positive antitoxin for botu lism has been developed, but the poison works so rapidly that it is usually impossible to admin ister the remedy in time to do any good. Thor M. Thorson of Medford was a business visitor in Hepp ner Monday. He was interested in a land sale of north Morrow county property. He expects to become a resident of that sec tion soon. From where I sit ... 6y Joe Marsh Fish Bites Woman! Willie Wells was coming home from Seward's Creek the other eve ning with a string of trout, when a itern looking lady (visitor at the Boxwood Inn) stops him. and tells him a man his size could be better occupied than catching fish. Willie tells her off real good naturedly by saying: "Perhaps you're right, but if these fish had kept their months shut, they wouldn't be here." (At that, says Willie, laughing out loud, she looked just as if a fish had bit her ! ) Blabbing mouths never cause anything but trouble. Nobody who knew the facts would ever criticize Willie's right to go fishing on his one day off any more than they'd deny his right to come home to a mellow glass of beer. From where I sit, the slower we are to criticize and the quicker we are to recognize another's tastes, the better well get along together whether those tastes apply to beer or fishing. ly thus far in 1947, the econom ists report. At mid-June the U.S. index of all commodities used for farm family maintenance stood at 253 nercent of 1910-1914. (ll points higher than at mid- January. Meanwhile, the cost index representing all commod ities bought by farmers for pro duction rose faster than the gen eral average of prices received for farm products. The result was a double-action decrease in overall real farm income. Compared with January, the general level of farm prices re ceived, at 2il in June, was up 11 points, while the index of prices paid for commodities for production rose 22 points to stand at 229 at mid-June. The parity index of farm costs, in cluding interest and taxes, but not labor, stood at 230. Farm wages rates nationally were at 397 per cent of 1910-1914, on Ap ril 1, the latest figures available. In terms of parity the overall buying power of farm products has declined from 132 at the peak last October to 118 at mid June. There was a decline of 1 point from mid-May to mid June. The decline was due to a slight increase in prices paid by farmers and a slight decrease in the average of prices received for farm products. If you toss a burning match into the woods, you're a fire bug, just as surely as though you had set fire to a house. Most of the houses in America today . , . and most of the houses of tomorrow . . . started as growing trees. Trees destroyed by forest fire don't build houses, or make paper, or the thousands of other products we make from wood. They don't create jobs or pay taxes. It's up to every one of us to prevent needless forest fires ... for most of them were caused by us in careless moments. One blazing match can destroy thousands of acres of growing trees. Heppner Lumber Company Motorloggers Visit Oregon Ranch Where Dudes Become Part of Place i mm. "x&J Mr. and Mrs. Chlf Ralston, wno operate tne Circle M. They Mrs. Ralston leit the city to operate the ranch sinqle-handed. 20 years in the Jefferson area, has packed frr the forest serv Kvllui. iiiK is ft cuiiiir 11 iiuii ut a motoric ttrtuie aifurHiK la Thr .sua d Orrtu..iitji iuiiii i. Tlif arlli'l U wbr 01 m ries pi , i:irftl by I tie Ore to ni:to i ro-otHTrt.hin ultb the UreKua State Minor aifc.. Ititlon. BY WiLMA MORRISON titan ,v nttr. Tu. ureon.au The business of making the visitor feet pari ol the place is the fine art ot dude ranching, this writer discovered tlie other week end on a motorlog trip in tne Oregon ts'.ate Alotor as-1 sociation s while travel car to! the Circle M guest ranch on ' the Metolius l iver near Suttle , lake There were ten people m the big ranch nouse living room when we arrived, after driving over the scenic Santiam high way from Alban.. They were all as preoccupied" s doctors in an operating theater over the business of :- Hating a ten-foot rubber Ivji. Within ten min- s u. arrival we were ui.. ' u'ir turns at the air pun.. Owner Fled City Whatever the secret of mak ing people feel at home. Cliff and Margery Ralston have it and it must come naturally, be cause neither of them is long in the business. Mrs. Halston came to the Circle M trom the pavements of Portland and she professes to see nothing strange in tnt fact that in 1943. all of a sud den, she decided to take to the wooua and lun a guest rancn. She isn't sure how siie would have made it if Cliff hadn't come past the ranch one snowv day during that first winter. Said Clitf, wno had been firmly rooted in bachelorhood for 48 years when he stopped at the Circle M that winter day: "When 1 came along there was Margery and another wom an hauling wood in a wheel barrow down over the hill through a foot of snow. I looked in the yard and there sat the car with two flat tires. 1 stopped fixed the tires, helped with the wood, ate half of the Portland 1 sjieti I (M) I I I RANCH I I i 1 One of most beautiful drives in Oregon is trip from Albany over Santiam pass to Circle M ranch. Round trip from Port land, returning by way of the Wapinitia cut-off. is 414 miles. were married in 1944 after Mr. Ralston, a veteran of ice, trapped and run horses. oest appie pie X ever tasted and here 1 am." Oregon is less prolific of dude ranches than California. Over in the beautiful Wallowa moun tain country near Joseph is the Lazy T. operated by Cnuck Oswald, which offers, besides breatn-taking scenery, excel lent fishing in rushing streams and calm lakes, the varied ex citements of a real operating ranch. Close at home is the H-Bar-H at Wren, just a few miles west of Corvallis. This is owned and operated by Mussel Poi leous and has the advantage of being close enough for the week-end vacations. Other guest ranches as listed with the Chamber of Commerce travel service are: Other Ranches Listed Oxbow lodge at Medical Springs, operated by Ned Foye; Red's Wallowa Horse ranch, near Joseph, whose owner. "Red" Higgen, has a Portland office in the Morgan building; Bingham Warm Springs resort and Bar M ranch at Gibbon in Eastern Oregon, operated by Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Baker, and a new vacation spot called the Lazy K near Hood River. Operator of the Lazy K is C. C Clark. In Washington the motor as sociation lists Methow Valley ranch atWinthrop and the War nick Brothers guest ranch, route 1. Selah. tory, making possible a greatly expanded program requiring the fulltime sen ice of a technical director. The advisory committee which approves policies of the labora tory has recently endorsed the expansion program and the new appointments which include sev eral other technicians to join the staff soon. Dr. Proctor joined, the staff here in 1915 after heading a technical branch of the army alrforce laboratory. He is a grad uate of Yale with later exper ience at the University of Idaho and at the federal forest pro ducts laboratory In Wisconsin. Professor Grantham has been on the staff since 1944, coming here from the research depart ment of the Texas Forest ser vice. He took graduate work at the New York State college of fnrestrv and taucht in Virginia Two bulletins by him will soo ,be published here on relogginj and utilization or iorest wasiy Robert D. Grantham and Jolt! masters degrees here last month joined the laboratory staff Ju 1, while M. E. McDonald, a wol technologist now employed h New Hampshire, will come A4 gust 1. o EXAMINER COMING A rfrivprs license examiner cohprinlod to be on duty b tween the hours of 10 a.m. am 4 p.m., Tuesday, July 15, in tli court house at Heppner. Person wishing licenses or permits U drive are asked to get In tou4 with the examiner well aho; ,of the scheduled closing nour U ' order to assure completion 0 ftlmtr nnrtlipnlinn with a mini mum of delay. Avoid" Annoyance And Discomfort due to a clogged septic tank or cesspool. I have purchased a tank pump and am in position to give prompt, efficient servine. Phone 702 HOWARD KEITHLEY YOU CALL, WE'LL HAUL Livestock, Lumber, General Commodities lone Freight Line Phone 21 22 H.G. RING lone Oregon 16-19p Forest Products Research Staff To be Expanded Oregon State College En largement and reorganization of the staff of the Oregon Forest Products laboratory here has lust been announced by Dean Paul M. Dunn, director of the laboratory and head of the for estry school. The chnncps. mnrte o meet the needs of an expand ed Tene-reh pnjran with more state support, ?lso in''nl'-e a "hnge in a forestry school de iTtrrent herj. Dr. Phimster B. Proctor, heid if the wood products depart ment of the school of forestry, 'tps hneti rp-iointed technical di rector of rll re-crch n"o'ccs in t-o ior rv IV vill be suc ceeded bv John B r,-"'"!th"t sopite rrof-s-or of forest pro ducts, w"- --! t-K-t named heid ,f 'he department. Under the new state law levy ipf " c-n- r-ynn of RC pT thousand foot of t-trW h-rvp?t. fd ,-n "ti-intp.-' ""yi nor) rPr year will be provided for re fTfti of tv,i!rh 6 Ar co-it hs been allocated to the work of ,'he fore-'t products lnhorntory, Dean Dunn explained. With an nd''pd stite appronri-'tinn about $170,000 per year will he avail able for the work of the labora- SEE US BEFORE HAULING YOUR Sand and Gravel Have two dump trucks on the job at all times ready to give you satisfactory ser vice. Eliminate hand shoveling. Will deliver where you want it. Rates are very reasonable Vernon Christopherson LEXINGTON Phone 3311 Statement of Condition FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Portland June 30, 1947 Resources Cash on Hand and Due from Banks . ....$110,473,709.16 U. S. Bonds, including U. S. Government Agencies. 225,570,488.66 Municipal Bonds Other Bonds Loans and Discounts , '. Stock in Federal Reserve Bank ., ' Bank Premises, Furniture and Fixtures Other Real Estate Interest Earned Other Resources TOTAL RESOURCES $336,044,197.82 50,653,216.01 None 108,146,996.98 450,000.00 4,037,576.05 None 1,989,174.71 305,547,69 $501,626,709.26 GAS fr AIR . . . Howdy Folks: A man over on the other side of town had just taken the trouble to advise his young son on the complexities of life. When the various prob lems were covered, he asked his son if there were any questions I he would like to ask. "Yes," said the son, "can ynu toll me how they get the Saturday Evening Post out on Wednesday?" Which seems to prove that parents are one of the hard ships of a minor's life. Kids are natural mimics. They act like their parents In spite of all efforts to teach them manners. Kids are first taught to talk and then spanked to make them keep quiet. Someone said that kids are like canoes. They behave bet ter when paddled from the rear. Oh well, kids will be kids, for which we are glad. Just as you'll bo clad If you'll buy our General Tires and Tubes. Unrein Motor Service LIABILITIES Capital $ 4,500,000.00 Surplus 10,500,000.00 Undivided Profits and Reserves 11,436,249.83 Reserves Allocated for Taxes, Interest, etc Interest Collected in Advance .-. ,.: Other Liabilities Deposits (exclusive of reciprocal bank deposits) . , TOTAL LIABILITIES $ 26,436,249.83 1,291,398.03 545,220.7,6 228,168.03 473,125,672.61 $501,626,709.26 In addition to its 40 branches throughout Oregon, aso affiliated with the First National Bank of Portland are 10 other Oregon banks DEPOSITS First National Bank of Portland and 40 branches , $473,125,672.61 10 other Oregon Banks affiliated with First National Bank of Portland 84,838,574.41 total deposits , $557,964,247.04 LOANS AND DISCOUNTS First National Bank of Portland and 40 branches , $108,146,996.98 10 other Oregon Banks affiliated with First National Bank of Portland.: 13,554,474.05 TOTAL LOANS AND DISCOUNTS .$121,701,471.03 MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION