Heppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon, April 7, 1.949 Page 3 Pre-Flight Briefing for Embryo Pilots If' i Li- X 'n v v 41 A mm i)' f' 1 Standard instrument pattern is carefully explained to Naval Aviation Cadet! by their instructor in a pre-ilight briefing at Pensacola, Florida. Pensacola Naval Air Station, the "Annapolis of the Air," is the focus of the recently reactivated Naval Aviation Cadet training program, which is open to healthy, single young men between 18 and 25, with at least two years of college. Upon graduation they are commissioned ensigns in the Naval Reserve, or second lieutenants in the Marine Corps Reserve, are awarded their wings and assigned to two years' active duty. (ORcitl Navy Photoguph) French Reviews the Legislature By Giles L. French The senate's verson of how to change the tax system was re vealed lute last week and passed by the members of that body with small debate and smaller understanding. Lest there lie undue criticism of the senators let us hasten to say that understanding the re vised House hills 5 and 24 is a job requiring some long days or a well prepared and lightning mind. Actually the bills divert the income and excise tax funds to the general fund for legislative appropriation, but do so in lan guage so involved that sponsors are able to say with some show of truth that the bills preserve the tax-offset provision. Unless HJR 9 is also passed the property tax payer will have suf fered irreparable damage from the hands of the senate taxation ! committee. What members of that group expect to do about ; HJR 9 is not being told and dis cussions about it are couched in terms as indeterminate as are the bills on the other parts of the tax program. Briefly the senate has divided 'income and excise funds both past and present, has spent in come tax funds first, even though there is much less legality and III!! Cmfn In Oi-I ftm. tin b miied In )uil jifty. Ahtohifrry no miwwl No rwd to ocrapo off ohobby old walk One Coat Covers Clean, Quick, Easy Way Tc Paint Washable Dries In I Hour Think of itl You can now redecorate o room in 3 hours. Two hours to apply Pittsburgh Techide and only one hour for il to dryl You can actually hang up pictures 60 minutes after painting with Pittsburgh Techide! let us tell you the whole story of this amazing wall paint. GALLON TKhld. Willi n In wilckly wiMii-d with mild Ml VKl watw. 3.75 PITTSBURGH PAINTS " Get Your FREE Copy ol COLOR DyNAMICS for th Home HEPPNER HARDWARE Cr ELECTRIC CO. normality about spending thern at all, lies diverted money un necessarily, has approved two measures more difficult to un derstand than any other part of Oregon tax law, which has been often attacked as too hard to un derstand. Tin- semle has inissed an op portunity to take a step, toward simrilifieelion and has, in fact, backed up several steps. Perhaps, and probably, it will be passed by the house as it was by the senate. Not because It Is good or because it is understood, but be cause the members are tired and anxious to get home, because they will not read, it, because few would understand it if they did. Thus it Is proven that it Is often as valuable to think last in.a leg islative session as to think best. The bill to change the method of dividing highway moneys to the counties had another hard week but did some out of the highway committee which is more than fyiy similar bill has ever done. As of now it would Mlvp Multnomah county 34 of its regular share and divide the dif ference which would give some $400,000 to other counties. The terms of division for cities gives Portland 2 3 of its share. A half dozen methods of dividing the funds were figured out but none could get enough votes to get out of committee. This isn't much, and it is a long way from final enactment yet, but it is a start. The senate approved the bill giving clubs the right to keep and sell hard liquor (the master lock er plan) with some other provi sions which lighten the Knox law somewhat, but not so extensively as at first expected. The senate has passed out IIB 193, the bill for an additional $30 per month for census chil dren for schools. The money would be paid on a strict TDM (total days membership) basis which provides another handicap to eastern Oregon. It may pass the senate if teachers are able to obtain pledges as they did in the house and then it will have to go to the people. ... Adjournment now seems ten days away, perhaps the night be fore Easter or thereabouts. The senate still has unemployment compensation, workmen's com pensation, game, highways, final on education and taxation and some other smaller stuff. The house has the bonus, now not nearly so popular as when first debated. When means of financ ing is added to it it isn't so pop ular which if like the old con servative policy of reading the right side of the menu first. What is handicapping the sen ate is the eternal and intermin able talking of Senators Carson of Marlon and Neuberger of Mult nomah who have spent half of the entire senate's debate time and show no sign of slackening their gab. Neither is a good talk er, seldom does either have any thing of moment to contribute, but each is enamored with the sound of his own voice and im pressed with the jewel-like qual ity of their ideas. ROMANS BELIEVED THAT A CABBAGE A DAY KEEPS THE DOCTOR A WA Y." CA TO (23 4 -149 B.C.J ATTRIBUTED ROMAN HEALTH TO THIS" VEGETABLE. MEDIEVAL EUROPEANS GOUGED WITH THEIR FINGERS; BUT ANCIENT. EGVPTIA NS A TE DELI CATELY WITH IVORY FORKS AND SPOONS. PI MM WW&M St-' i ff :, THE PITTANCE GIVEN THE POOR AT EARLY CONVENTS WAS REALLY DRIED PEA SOUP A WELCOME CHANGE FROM THEIR ETERh SALT MEAT DIET. Copyright 1949 J.V.Carke AFTER EXHAUSTIVE EX PERIMENTS, DR. WINFIELD S: HUBBARD, FORMERLY OF THE U. S. FOOD A ND DRUG ADMIN ISTRA TION, PRONOUNCED BEER AHONS MOST EASILY ASSIMI LATED OF FOODS. 2? (From last week) -The boys are getting tired and weary of it all. Citizens can tell that when the senate, and house members begin calling names and comparing records. Last Sat urday, for instance, a senator with a reputation for words sur passing his reputation for work iterated the house as noisy and the speaker as inefficient. Vell, some people get that way when the majority refuse to pass their hills and an ability to take it helps any legislator. If he pro poses any legislative program of any consequence he will find op position. Tax bills are expected to be decided upon by the senate com mittee early in the week. Many hearings and no little effort to become fully informed have de layed final decisions. Also the fact that no one knows how much money the ways and means will need has slowed tax matters. No one knows what will come out of the committee to date but there is certain to be division. HJR 9 may get a divided report. This resolution would let the peo ple vote on the proposition of doing away with the property tax for state purposes. That is t!e most important bit of tax legis lation so far mentioned except for the matter of raiding the in come and excise tax lunds for the general fund. Whether en lOugh legislators are tired enough to relax their sense ot public morals and permit the raid is not known. Regular procedure would be to let the people make the decision. It is expected that the high way program will go through much as started in the hous. which meant additional taxes and additional road building. The interim committee found a desire for more and better mads more general than a desire fee smaller fees. What will happen as to building highways outside cities or grand passageways in side cities cannot be foretold but probably the cities would lose in a straight vote on the mea sure. Not even all of Portland fa vors the Sullivan's Gulch road. The bill to divide the highway funds sent to the counties on a different basis has had a bad week. Not enough votes could be found in the committee to bring it out as written. Neither would another proposal which would have given each county $25,000 before the distribution formula was applied, nor twenty, nor ev en ten. Now sponsors are trying to get the city formula applied which would cut Multnomah county down to two-thirds of its 4 fin NEW! We had our 2nd sewing club meeting at the home of Patsy and Janet Wright. We named our club the "Busv Stitchers" club. present apportionment and give the difference to counties on the same basis as now, which is the number of cars registered. That would divide about S700.000 more than now. Inasmuch as all big truck companies register their vehicles in Portland some change is needed. As Oregon's cities get bigger and bigger and rural areas de cline in population it is harder and harder to adjust such things and more necessary that it be done. The senate bill for adjustment I of county officials' salaries has been showing some life but is not expected to get to moving before the final gavel. The racing commission with its two elements, horses and d igr, held the spotlight last week with wrangling and bickering over who should get the most d;:ys racing. As finally adjusted the take wll be left at 12 1 2 per cent and the days racing will be cut to 100. Some small adjustment will give the state a little more money, but not enough. Had not the speaker ruled that a bill re pealing the whole business could not be considered legislators would probably have repealed the bill permtting racing entire ly. It attracts too many of the wrong kind of people. The distribution of funds will now be in another bill. There have been efforts to take out everyone including the Pacific exposition and the county fairs but 1he committee hasn't gotten around to talking about that fea ture vet. Sally Palmer is a new member of our club. Our next eiub meet ing will be at her home Satur- I any, April 23. at 2 o clock Re porter, Janet Wright. The '.'Future Knitters" met i Monday at the home of Mrs. W. ; O. Dix where Selma Orwick dem I onstrated "basting on" of stitches ! and Eleanor Rice demonstrated i "binding off." Joan Both well led ithe singing while the girls knit ted. Mike Stalcup, young 4-H club member of Boardman, is proud of a newly purchased Spotted Po land China herd boar. The regis tered boar was purchased from the Greenfield Hereford ranch, Bakersfield, Cal., and carries some of the best bloodlines of the Spotted breed. Also, newly arrived at the Stalcup farm are 17 little purebred Spotted Poland China pigs from his two register ed sows. Mike is kept quita busy these days checking on the health of his new pigs besides feeding and caring for his fat and breed ing beef, rabbit, and fat pig pro jects. Ronald and Duane Baker, mem bers of the lone Livestock club, have recently added some more purebred breeding stock to their many 4-H projects already car ried. The new additions are three purebred Shorthorn cows and calves purchased from a promin ent southern breeder at Odessa, Wash With this beef breeding stock now added to the original stock, the boys now have a qual ity small herd started. - Four-H projects now carried by the boys consist of the beef breed ing herd mentioned above, fat beef, fat and purebred breeding sheep With this good start in the quality livestock business, the boys will be well along with size able herds of both sheep and beef when they are old enough to begin farming on their own. These are examples of what 4-H club work is doing for our farm boys and girls, beside the youth training they are getting that is so valuable. Everything does not always go so well for 4-H members. Dean Graves, member of the Sandhol- Xf .AC J' Ready-printed for quick delivery ... in any quantity from single books to thousands. Forms for every business: . RETAILERS TRANSPORTATION WHOLESALERS SERVICE BUSINESSES MANUFACTURERS HOTELS, RESTAURANTS PROFESSIONAL OFFICES 9 A Quiet Evening at Home g. IIWIPI win 1 1?-'?' "WW u i 3 fc - Ji aW Tim m Ml I Hi j Tom-Tj-ow tiiese Aviation Cadets In training at the Pensacola Naval Air Station will put their homework into actual practice i i t".:e skies over the Florida base. Two cadets are assitrned to 1: "?e rooms in brick dormitories. Pensacola Naval Air Station, h: "Annapolis of the Air," is the focus of the recently reactivated Navil AviViiun Cadet training program, which is open to healthy, sinj'e younf men between 18 and 25, with at least two years of co! !";. I'pcn graduation they are commissioned ensigns in the Nr.val it"s;rve, cr second lieutenants in the Marine Corps Re sc:ve, n:e t.waided their wings and assigned to two years' active Cll'y. (OtBcitl NtYj Pbotogiapb) County Committee Approves Flans Final detailed plans were ap proved Monday afternoon for their homemakers' festival to be low-Butter Creek Livestock club, knows this after the hard luck he had this past week. Dean pur chased a high priced purebred Shorthorn heifer at the Walla Walla Shorthorn sale held last November. This past week the heifer fell into a gully caused by the flood waters early this spring, when a portion of the bank gave way. The heifer fell on some rocks in the gully, breaking her back. While this is quite a loss to Dean, he is thankful that he is ! protected by the Morrow County 4-H Livestock Mutual Aid asso ciation, like so many other 4-H livestock members. held April 20 at the Rhea Creek Grange hall. Features of the day nclude the style review at 11:15, of the 61 dresses made in cotton dress workshop conducted by community project leaders; noon luncheon served by Rhea Creek Grange home economics group; and the talk, 'The One Family School" at 2:00, by Mrs. Buena Mockmoor of Corvallis. All home makers are invited to attend any or all of the program. Children high school girls and four lone will be cared for by four Heppner high school girls Tickets for the luncheon may be secured from extension unit members or from I the county agent's office. Chil dren will be served at nan price. Genevieve Cox who is attend-. ! ing school at St. Joseph's acad- emy in Pendleton this year, spent the week end here with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Cox. .SEND EASTER GREETINGS Add to the Easter happiness of your friends and relatives by sending them HALLMARK Easter Cards. ... Our complete showing includes many beautiful Religious designs; cards for the children and for special friends; an dindividual sentiments for every member of the family. Bibles - Testaments - Prayer Becks Religious Books for th Children Humphreys Drug Co. The Rexall Store Heppner Gaette Times RECAPITULATION OF TOTALS FOR RURAL DISTRICT ON BREAKDOWN OF UTILIZATION OF FUNDS SCHOOL DISTRICT Heppner Irrigon Lexington Hoardtn.-in lone TOTALS SCHOOLS OPERATING HIGH SCHOOLS Teaching Gen. Cont. Operation Operation Mainten. New Bus Personal Per. Serv. 5uper.-Oth. of Plant of Plant and Equip. Service, er Teach. Personnel Other Repair Supplies $ 75,700 $ ),150 $ 6.500" S 4.725 $ ' 8.S00 $ 9.350 $ ' 8.500" 35,331 3,505 3.000 2.S50 5,150 2.400 2.700 25.W0 2.255 2,100 2,450 (i.350 1,700 TiO 32.100 2.705 3.400 2,025 5,(i(10 7,000 2 875 3(1,200 3.050 3.S00 1.S50 4.200 2,400 1800O 205,5!ll 21.(i25 10,1011 11,800 30.100 - 22.850 33,025 Hot Other Fixed Capital Debt Emer. Lunch Aux. Charges Outlay Service gency Labor Agenc. $ 1,500 $ 200 $ 5.310"' S'!W(Y $ 700' $ 3.000 1.350 SS5 2 000 S.150 100 2.0IX) 720 1,175 1.415 l.SO'l 250 2,000 2.025 400 2,725 4.750 300 2.000 1.500 500 2 000 0,700 SO 1.000 7.005 3,100 1 1.950 2S.300 1,430 10.000 SUSPENDED DISTRICTS, HARDMAN, NON HIGH TO 2.500 1,800 " 125 1,000 110 2,500 1,750 100 500 45 1,500 1,800 30 40 2,250 10 500 125 2,000 3.100 120 500 00 1,000 SO 2,100 2.250 ISO 150 100 1,200 200 3.200 310 1,100 790 ,0 '-00 75 500 125 000 1,200 13S 21X1 500 280 3.000 500 3.200 1,405 1.100 790 000 10,000 19.410 ns 77" 75 V0 4 350 208,791 22,070 20,200 . 15,590 30,700 33,450 52,435 7,095 3,335 15,725 2S.375 1.020 14,350 2... J15.9 5:0 4A 3.1 2&7 7.3 11.4 1.0 0.7 3.5 ti.2 " 0.4 3.4 Lena Wl Noway Morgan Hood Canyon 1 Irvine Willow Sand Hollow Halm Fork lliirilmiin Union High Non High TOTALS ('HAND TOTAL Per Cent Tola I Budget Total fur Rural Dlslrlct Operating Schools. High Schools Total for Suspended Districts, Hardman, Non-High $111,000 42,070 Grand Total $454,336 Special Close-Out of STEWART-WARNER AIM; 1 BLOND Combination -- $129.95 1 MAHOGANY Combination -- $1 1 9.95 1 Console Radio $99.95 BELOW COST Tum-A-Lum Lumber Company Investigate our FHA Building Plan We Like to Help Folks Build