Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, April 08, 1948, Page 4, Image 4

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    4rr-Heppner Gazette Times, Heppne, Oregon, April 8, 1948
Kinzua Ball Club
Getting Ready For
'48 League Season
By Klsa M. Leathers
Ed VVahm and Roy Woods at
tended the Wheal league base
ball meeting at fnndun Sunday.
There are eight teams in the lea
gue and plans'are developing for
Lexington to be the ninth. Ball
praetlee was called off here Sat
urday due to the snow and rain.
Mr. Woods and Mr. Wahm brot
the trophy here and it is now on
display at the Kinzua pastime.
Mrs. Warren Jobe was painful
yl injured Thursday morning
when a piece ot lumber was
caught and thrown from a saw,
strking her on the jaw and ear.
She was knocked down and un
conscious for a few minutes.
Clamps were used on the wound
rather than stitches.
Ray O'Neil, who suffered a
heart attack while working Fri
day was moved by ambulance to
The Dalles hospital. Satuday Mrs.
O'Nel went also. It was learned
on Sunday by phone message
that his condition was very little
improved.
Mr. and Mrs, F. M. Harrison
met the Mr. and Mrs. Zepple Har
risons from Top and Mr. and Mrs.
Basil Harrison from Redmond in
Fossil Saturday to attend to some
business. Many Kinzua people
were surprised to see Mr. and
Mrs. Basil Harrison and enjoyed
visiting with them. They are for
mer Kinzua residents.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jackson and
family laft Saturday for their
home in Macks Creek, Mo. They
have only worked here a short
time.
Miss Lillian Schott has spent
several days here from The Dal
les where she is In high school.
This week was teachers' Institute.
Frankie Phillips was rejected
for the navy in Portland last
week, l'erry Adams was accepted
and reported to the station at
San Diego.
F. M. Harrison and Ray Taylor
motored to Richmond on business
Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Becker
new home in l'otlach, Idaho, on
Saturday.
Joe bcliolt wont to Portland on
Friday evening, returning on Sat
urday evening. He has In-en re
ceiving treatment for pine poi
soning. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fifth and
daughter Opal spent several days
In The Dalles on business. They
purchased a new ear while there.
Mr. and Mrs. Stan Hadley of
Fossil were visiting fnenos and
relatives In Kinzua Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Graham
and family and Owen Leathers
Jr. spent the week end at The
Dalles visiting Mr. Graham's
mother and sister.
Weakened by Long Years of Malnutrition
World's Children Now Fight Disease
Crusade for Children
Is Effort to Relieve
Millions in Distress
It Is not enough that a child Is
hungry.
He must also be sick, 11 he Is to
receive relief feeding in Europe.
That Is what it comes down to,
when you do not have enough
food to go around
The emblem is not to feed the
hungry but to feed the hungriest
of the hungry. Selection or wnicn
hunm-v child shall be fed is made
on the basis of need. Many times
need is determined by a doctor's
certificate
This is the grim factual situa
tion confronting relief agencies
serving the starving children
abroad. It is highlighted in a re
rvirt frnm Donald R. Sabin on
observations tn Europe where he
served as assistant director or neia
operations for the United Nations
International unnaren s cmer
eencv Fund
Dwindling resources of the
rtmiprf Nations international Chil
dren's Emergency Fund, and of 25
American voluntary relief agen
cies aidina vouth in Europe and
Asia will be replenished by the
Crusade for Children of American
Aid-United Nations Ap
peal for Children which asks
ifiu.OOO.OOO of Americans this
spring Meanwhile, starvation is
an Increasing reality to half the
children of the world. It is in
errasina because:
Czechoslovakia had no ram for
seven months last year, and as a
consequence, farm animals were
slaughtered for lack of feed, and
the milk and food shortage is
rritical
France, too, suffered drought,
with the same resultant slaughter
of animals, shortage of milk and
cut In bread rations
Greek political conflict has
caused difficulties in supply, while
long-term malnutrition shows in
rickets, tuberculosis and stunted
growth of the childrea
In Italy, poverty is everywhere,
the children ragged and barefoot
and without milk. Last stocks of
milk are being used up for the
leeoing or iuu.uuu orpnan cnii'
dren.
Poland still shows the terrible
destruction of war, streets still
piled high with fragments of
homes, farms devastated, food in
adequate, and tuberculosis a severe
threat to the children.
Two-thirds of the children of
war countries suffer from tuber
culosis.
Millions of these suffer other
diseases of malnutrition.
Many are literally starving.
In 12 nations of Europe, the
International Children's Emer
gency Fund Is feeding between
'' ' - h. ' . $ ' 'X If ' ,
1 til k'y ..w tin nr
' ... ' l Z
VICTIM UK MALM TKllluy ibis wan orphan it one of millions in
Europe and Asia flshting against the ravages of tubcrculoBii, scurvy,
HcLets drfad partners of starvation. Americans are helping them in
their desperate fight bv supporting the Crusade fnr Children of American
Overseas Airl-Cnilerf Nations Appeal for Children.
3,500,000 and 4,000,000 children a
minimum daily 600-calorie meal
which means the difference be
tween life and death. In those
countries alone, there are 60,
000,000 children who are equally
in need of this life-saving daily
meal half the size of an Ameri
can school lunch but cannot get
it because neither their own gov
ernments nor the United Nations
International Children's Emer
gency Fund have the resources to
provide it
This means that for every child
who receives the survival-ration
supplied by arrangement between
his government and the Children's
Fund, 15 children stand in a spec
tral line of starvation behind him.
The brightest outlook is that the
situation will get far worse before
it gets better.
Its only chance for getting bet
ter lies in immediate, generous,
voluntary assistance.
America's channel for that assis
tance is the Crusade for Children
of Ar-erican Overseas Aid-United
Natijni Appeal for Children.
This cornbined campaign rep
resents the United States' share in
the . "rid-wide United Nations
Appeal asking voluntary contri
butions for the International Chil
dren's Emergency Fund, together
with the appeals of America's
major voluntary foreign relief
agencies.
Forty-five nations of the world
are cooperating in the United Na
tions Appeal. Nations which are
too impoverished to collect money
through the UN Appeal for the
Children's Fund are sending prod
ucts such as desperately needed
fish, cod liver oil, clothing.
Of the $60,000,000 goal of the
American campaign, more than 70
per cent has been allocated to
foreign relief projects directly
aiding children, and the balance
to activities helping children in
directly. Contributions of money from
Americans, which will be con
verted into food for the hungry,
medicine for the sick, clothing for
the naked and shelter for the
homeless, may be given to local
campaign committees in commu
nities where they have been
formed, or sent directly to na
tional headquarters of American
Overseas Aid-United Nations Ap
peal for Children, 39 Broadway,
New York 6, N. Y.
Most Home Fires
Said Caused By
Heating Systems
Baby diapers and other clothing
hang up to dry beside an over
heated stove have a top priority
on the list of wavs of how to burn
down your house, Charles R. Ross,
O.S.C. extension forester, has
learned from the state fire mar
shal's office.
Rural or farm homes face the
greatest danger from fire, Ross
adds, since immediate help from
fire departments or neighbors is
usually not close at hand when
the emergency arises. One way or
another, heating systems are re
sponsible for the majority of
home fire losses.
The state fire marshal states
You Can
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and SAVE MONEY, too!
Yes, you can feel just as proud
of your appearance as if you'd
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you have to do is
PHONE 2592
for.quick, courteous, satisfactory service! So,
invest a little to get a lot! Call
Heppner Cleaners
Quality Cleaning
Free Pick Up and Delivery
ihe number of fatalities in home
fires this year is disturbing. His
statement is emphasized most
tragically by a recent fire in Linn
coimiy. There, five persons were
killed in a home which burned at
night. Specific reasons for that
fire cannot be given; however,
evidence pointed to several pos
sibilities which are all too often
duplicated in other homes. A
wood stove loaded just before the
family went to bed or an unat
tended trash burner may have
been the cause of the disaster.
Ross believes that rural people
do not pay enough attention to
fire prevention. Ranking second
to the home heating system as a
"house burner," he lists careless
habits of smokers, the use of gas
oline to wash clothing in enclos
ed rooms, inflammable liquids
used near open flames, improper
electrical fust's, ashes stored in
cardboard boxes and dried leaves
and moss on roofs as important
causes of home fires.
If these fire hazards are either
Crop Production
Outlook Reported
Favorable By OSC
The odds are favorable for the
nation's principal crops this year,
according to current crop and
weather reports summarized by
L. R. Breithaupt, Oregon State
college extension economist,
stantially greater as the output of
stantially greate, as the output of
corn, oats and . other feed grains
might be 15 to 20 percent higher.
Wheat production is expected to
be perhaps one-fifth less, yet
more than a billion bushels.
The Pacific Northwest wheat
crop is expected to be exception-
ally large, but this is offset some
j what by poor grain crop prospects
in California, the principal dom
estic market for Oregon wheat.
There will be need again for
much United States wheat over
seas in 1948-49. The supply for
export will be smaller, however
than the record-breaking ship
ments this season, yet, probably
much in excess of the United
States quota under the proposed
international wheat agreement,
the extension economist con
cludes. The wheat agreement will be
come effective August 1, provided
enough of the 36 governments
concerned ratify it in the mean
time. The exports from three
countries must total not less than
500 million bushels a year for
five years; and 33 countries
would agree to import not less
than this quantity from the three
exporting nations. Additional ex
ports and imports could be made
under the agreement, however.
Under the terms of the agree
ment the importing countries
must pay a minimum price in
1948-49, equivalent to not less
than $1.45 12 a bushel, basis
No. 1 soft white at Pacific coast
ports. The United States would be
bound to sell at Pacific coast
ports at not to exceed $2.00 a bu
shel for a five-year period; but
the minimum price importing na
tions must pay would be 10 cents
a bushel less, each year.
The United States exports quo
ta is set at 185 million bushels
Canada 230 million, and Aus
tralia 85 million. Russia and Ar
gentina are imporatnt wheat ex
porting nations not parties to the
agreement, although provision is
made for additional members.
The United Kingdom is the
principal importing nation under
the agreement Others with the
larger quotas are Italy, France,
The Netherlands, Belgium, Aus
tria, Greece, Brazil, India and
China.
o
HIGH FRENCH HONOR GIVEN
TO OSC FACULTY MEMBER
Oregon State College High rec
ognition from the French govern
ment ha recently been awarded
Gordon W. Gilkey, head of the
Oregon State college art depart
ment, college officials have been
informed by the French consul in
Portland.
The title "Officer d'Academie"
and the decoration of the Palmes
Academiques have been confer
red on Gilkey for "outstanding
contributions to the scientific and
artistic expansion of the intellec
tual world and France."
The honor came as a result of
Gilkey's work as chief of the U.
S. war department special staff
are projects in Europe in aiding
in the location and restitution to
France of Nazi looted French mu
seum properties. Before Gilkey
left France a year ago, President
Vincent Auriel personally thank
ed him for his work.
Professor Gilkey became head
of the O.S.C. art department last
fall, replacing the late J. Leo
Fairbanks. He was in the army
for five years, serving earlier in
the combat intelligence and ra
dar schools and as a special offi
cer to make an operational an
alysis of the effect of atomic
bombs in Japan.
While in Europe he was also
head of the German psychologi
cal warfare study for the British
American combined chief of staff.
up the work as a small boy, be
ing a leader In the beef club
which has brought numerous
honors to the county in recent
years. He will graduate from
lone high school next month.
LEWIS CARLSON WINS
AWARDED SCHOLARSHIP
Louis Carlson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Carlson of Goose
berry, has been awarded the
scholarship given by the Union
Pacific System for outstanding
4-H club work. He was adjudged
the top 4-H'er in the county dur
ing the past year.
Louis plans to enter Oregon
State college this fall. He has
been one of the most enthusiastic
4-H club membes since taking
BEAUTIFY
YOUR WINDOWS
By having me-measure
and install
beautiful Venetiar
blinds-
Any Color Tape
and Slats
O. M. YEAGER'S
SERVICE STORE
Phone 2752 or 1483
Heppner, Oregon
Morrow County Cleaners
We Call for and Deliver
Ladies and Gents Fine Tailoring
Just Call 2632
removed or guarded against, Ross
claims about 90 percent of the
fire hazards in the home will be
eliminated. He also recommends
keeping a ladder and fire extin
guishers handy where they may
be readily available in the case
of fire.
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 service.
Phone 702
HOWARD KEITHLEY
APRIL SPECIAL
Regular $5-50 engine tune-up
For only $2.95, labor only
Get set for summer driving
Rosewall Motor Co.
Dutch Boy
Paint
We are please dtb announce that
we are the distributor for this fa
mous line of paints. . . We have
the best equipment in the county
for Spray Painting.
For the Best in Building
Supplies
Lumber, Plywood Roofing, Pum
ice Building Blocks, Rough Lum
ber and John Manville Products,
come to
Builders Supply
North Gale St. Heppner, Oregon
A
Ml
fat fnOfi-urfl$
in Lawns and Gardens
fry theM SccfifiCcetJ
W rcaxxawnd WPP to pfe ond OikrvoM Qo4 hmm mm4
GARDEN RAKES -$1.90 .
GARDEN HOES -$1.75
' GARDEN HOSE-$5.75
(25 feet)
Fresh Guaranteed
FLOWER & VEGETABLE SEEDS
GRASS CATCHER - fits any mower
$2.15
DOQ-KLI P GRASS SH EARS - $1 .50
Heppner Hardware
Be Electric Co.
Filter Packs For All Types Tractors Trucks
and Cars
Padberg Tractor Cr Truck
Repair
Lexington, Oregon
Phone 421 1
Oil and Grease
Parts for Various Machines
"Talk about VALUE" say s America
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champion Varve-In-Mead engine. It has
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Volve-ln-Head engines are exclusive to
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You'll find that n-ew
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more luxurious Inte
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the Big-Car beauty of
Chevrolet's Bodies by
Fisher. They're the
world's finest bodies,
found only on Chev
rolet and higher-pricod
Yes, from one end of the country to the other,
public enthusiasm for the new 1948 Chevrolet
points to a great public conviction that CHEV
ROLET AND ONLY CHEVROLET IS FIRST in all
round vafue as in popularity. More people drive
Chevrolets, according to official nationwide
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Chevrolet gives more value . . . because it alone
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You and your family wiB
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For Chevrolet brings you the
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i
As you know, public dmc"d for new 1941
Chevrolets b at the highest level in all
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, you to keep your present car In good
running condition, pending del-very of your
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Hodge Chevrolet o.
Main & Chase Sts.
Phone 403