1 i I Page 2 EDITORIAL Z. NIWSPAPSt i PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION In The Same Boat Finally Secretary Snyder recently observed that any further increases in income taxes must fall with the greatest weight on people with small and moderate incomes. He pointed out that 58 per cent of all taxable income now goes to those who earn less than $5,000 a year. This should destroy, once and for all the old illusion that we can pay for the government by the simple expedient of soaking the rich. As the New York Times recently said in an editorial, "It may be an unpleasant fact, but it is a fact never theless, that, thanks to our reluctance to tax courageously in the past, we have now reached the point where the individual income tax is al ready far too steeply progressive . . . Political tax ation, in short, has at last been stretched to its full limit; the time has come when, whether we like it or not, we must approach the problem on the economic level." In the higher brackets, the income tax is now only one step short of confiscatory. Moreover, if the government taxed the incomes of the wealthy a flat 100 percent, the additional revenue gained would hardly make a dent in today's governmen tal budgets. The' families with modest incomes must carry the load. This should have one extremely salutary ef fect. Everybody from the man who works with his hands to the executive who runs a big com panynow has a direct and personal interest in taxation, and in governmental extravagance and waste. Everybody's pocketbook is involved. The whole public, out of a universal self-interest, now has a reason to demand, and get, economy in government The Freight Cars Are Rolling U. S. Senator Carlson of Kansas recently paid high tribute to the railroad industry, the Associa tion of American Railroads and the Interstate Colorful John Day Country Has Horses Fossilized or This MMorlor condensation, which p petred oririnaJlr tn the Jane 3 Imic of The Bandar OreronJaa Majruine section. It the third of an annaal kHm ipon wrfd by The Oreronlau and the Oregon State Motor association. This and subse quent mntorlon were based on winning , entries for The Oregonlan'i recent "Mj Sentimental Journey" contest. BY LEVERETT G. RICHARDS CRAZY over horses? 1 Try Grant county, a horse heaven where past, present and future meet. If you don't like your horses alive and lively you can dig them, old and ossi fied, out of Oregon's famous fossil beds. There's a changing panorama of scenery ranging down from the spectacular to the soothing. The fossil beds themselves com pare with Zion and the Grand canyon for color, in addition to their archeological interest. The area is rich in relics of Oregon's own gold rush. It is still the wild and wooly West where a dude can ride the range with sure-enough cow pokes on a newly opened dude ranch, or hunt, fish and loaf if he likes. This fascinating fastness has been accessible only by a nine or ten-hour drive through the Columbia gorge via Arlington, until recently. It is only 5Vi to 6 Vfchours from Portland over the motorlog's new direct route. Paving of the last 20 miles over Ochoco mountain in June will speed it up still more. You hit th John Day river deep in a rocky canyon at the junction of highway 28 with highway 19. If you're heading on eastward to John Day, drive slowly end watch for Picture gorge, which starts at the junc tion. It isn't marked by any siRn. But on the south side of the highway immediately adjacent to mile-post 125 you'll find the Indian pictographs that give the gorge its name if you get out and look for them. The strange, prehistoric figures are painted fn red ochre on an oil base at the foot of the rock cliff. You'll want to see more of the John Day valley, but we first turned north on highway 19 to follow the John Day gorge to the fossil beds. Following this busy little river you find yourself sud denly fn another world, where T I Heppntr JW) G Condon fossil V NATIONAL EDITORIAL vV on order totaled alize thousands the freight is economically, Looks Like Rounding up dogies In shadows sabre-toothed tigers stalked the ornery oreodon only a few score million years ago. where rhinos roamed and turtles did what ever turtles do. Most of their bones have turned to stones while waiting for man to find them. But the beds in which they have snoozed away their Rip Van Winkle past are bedight in all the latest shades of shocking pink, blue, green, mauve and lemon. The whole earth-long story is told in one bold, dramatic tale in Sheep rock, towering 3566 feet above the sea level, 1337 feet above the river at milpost 123. There is a turnout and his troical marker, but there are no name posts for this or other points of interest. To find them better clip out this article. They aren't marked on the maps, either. Driving down the gorge along side the racing John Day you will catch continual glimpses of other fossil beds in technicolor, along canyon walls capped by flows of lava. At milepost 119 a sign "Fossil Beds" directs you (not by name) to Turtle cove, called by scientists "the best and most extensive fossil col lecting ground" in the region, which is considered one of the most Important in the United States. It's ' more than that. It's a tpmnle of natural beauty that rivals the Taj Mahal or the cathedral at Rheims for beauty of color and architecture. Even more striking is the Cathedral formation that smites the eye as you round a sharp curve just before you hit mile post 116. This is one of eight state parks in the Grant county area, but is inaccessible at pres ent and unmarked by signs. Here the canyon narrows to the point of claustrophobia, only to widen suddenly at about mile post 111 into a peaceful pano rama straight from a storybook It looks like a natural golf course with the rampaging John Day foaming and dashing in a (MJtw i(,'iv.v .. v im miMt n muni. tmm 'nxss jyy a Heppner Gazette Times, Thursday, assochWo)n 37 y Commerce Commission for the manner in which they have cleared up the boxcar shortage situa tion in the West. During the first 15 weeks of this year, he pointed out, loading of grain commodit ies exceeded the figure for any comparable per iod in history except in 1947. The boxcar problem was the result of a num ber of factors, of which one of the most impor tant was the outbreak of the Korean war and the sudden step-up in the rearmament program. It is not the kind of problem which can be solved over night. The railroads have met it in two ways. First, they have placed orders for great numbers of new cars, and these are going into service as fast as they can be delivered by the car builders. Second, working with shippers, they are trying to get maximum utilizataion out of every car they have. Very marked success has been attained in this effort, and conditions are improving all the time. In April alone, deliveries of new domestic frieght cars totaled 8,274, an increase of 18 per cent above the March figure and 41 per cent above February. As of May 1, undelivered cars nearly 156,000. No one can visu of freight cars. But if you'll take a careful look at the next freight train that passes you, you'll see a few of the tangible products of this great expansion program New cars and old cars are rolling along the tracks together, and being moved safely, efficiently, swiftly. A Good Move It is encouraging to see the city take steps to establish a fund for the construction of a sewer system and sewage disposal plant. The council is submitting a proposal to levy a ten-mill tax to supplement the proposed one dollar a month per water meter as a definite plan for financing the project, or at least setting up the machinery for Frisky of John Day fossil beds. wide curve through the middle of it. That's just what it is a sporting nine-hole golf course. It's also the 70-acre front! yard of Art Waldorf and his Rodeo Canyon dude ranch, cap able of accommodating au guests the first answer so far sup plied to the question of what to do when you get to central Oregon, besides digging fossils. Waldorf, his wife Rena; his son, Jimmy; his pretty blond daugh ter, Betty, and her husband, Bill Amis, started out running cattle on their 36,000-acre spread in the heart of the fossil beds. They had no intention of duding. But the location, the spacious ranch houses, the easy Waldorf hospitality and the ranch-house cooking that always tastes like more proved an ir resistible lure. Plenty of fossi fied oreodons a hog that ate like a cow and whole herds of three and five-toed Eohippus horses have been found on the farm. But they are a little old for riding, about 50,000,000 years too old. So we settled for a couple of 5-year-olds and joined the buckaroos who were bent on moving the main herd of 400 or so Black Angus cattle up the canyon wall to the open range on top. After a good night's sleep on our stomachs the motorlog headed back to highway 28 to ward John Day. John Day and Canyon City, hub of the John Day country, are booming now, what with lumber and livestock both in urgent demand. But today's boom is just bubble-gum size compared to the excitement of the gold rush of 1862 that brought a reported 10.000 dig gers to pitch their tents in Can yon City. History of John Day and Can yon City is relived annually in county fair at John Day in Sep tember is one of the finest, with! a parade rivaling the Pendleton Round-Up. J retiring of bonds that may have to be issued to get actual construction underway. The tax levy would not run in excess of ten years. So far as the water meter assessment is concerned, that is in the province of the council and could be discontinued or extended as neces sity demands. The levy must have the approval of the taxpayers. Words of encouragement have come from many citizens who feel that the question of in stalling a sewer system in Heppner has long since passed the question of necessity. The prob lem confronting the council and the townspeople is the matter of financing it. When the question of finances is posed, the citizens should take into consideration that the local town government is about the last political unit to receive considera tion in the matter of taxes. The federal govern ment grabs all the cream; the state comes in for the milk next to the layer of cream; the coun ty has its levies for this, that and the other thing; the school districts get a of the citizen's dollar, and finally to be contented with what in this be termed just the bluejohn. So, when it comes to making civic improvements the town has to re sort to special taxes to pull funds out of a popu lace that is already harassed with fixed levies that go for everything but civic improvement. There seems no justifiable reason for seeking delay in the construction of a sewer system. It will have to come sooner or later and having in mind the trend towards higher labor costs, to say nothing of materials and engineering, it would seem the sensible thing to do would be to The oAmerican Way THE "MAN" FOR THE JOB By GEORGE PECK History is a-making in Missis sippi this year. For the first time a woman tossed her hat into the ring for the governorship of that state. Mrs. Mary D. Cain, pub lisher and editor of the Summit Sun, a weekly newspaper,, is the little lady who is flaunting Mis sissippi tradition. Mrs. Cain's platform is predi cated on one idea and I quote her: "To restore to the people of Mississippi their sovereign rights as citizens, of their state and the United States." Space does not permit enumerating all the planks in the Cain platform, but here follow some that should be of absorbing interest to all sound-thinking Americans: 1. Refuse any further Federal Grants-In-Aid. 2. Reduce taxes. Specifically, abolish state income tax, black market tax, admission tax, estate tax, chain store tax, slot machine tax and malt tax. 3. Reduce cost of state govern ment by consolidation, transfers and eliminations of existing (106) state bureaus and agencies to a total of 26. 4. Tax the cooperatives. (Mrs. Cain believes they would prefer to be taxed as a matter of fair ness. They've never had an op portunity to pay). 6. Sound public health pro gram but within the bounds of state and county aid only. No federal funds. 7. Opposition to all New Deal socialism which includes subsi dies for farmers, unemployment compensation, federal aid to edu cation, socialized medicine and compulsory health insurance, ar bitrary wage and hour regula tions, public housing, the Bran nan Plan, the Valley Authorities, federal aid for the aged and needy and social security. Espe cially opposed to the extension of social security to state, county, district, school and municipal employees .... 9. Purge present Welfare De partment rolls, repudiate further federal aid and make sure that 30 Years Ago Born on Wednesday, June 15, to Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Rhea, a 10 pound girl. On June 9 City Water Commis sioner Pruyn took samples from the water in the city mains and forwarded them to the state board of health. The report shows the water is pure and contains no injurious properties. The 10 year old son of Law rence Redding suffered the break ing of an arm Tuesday when he took a fall at the family home in Eight Mile. Mrs. J. L. Wilkins came up from Arlington Tuesday evening where she enjoyed a visit with her father, E. C. Maddock at the Grande hotel. She will visit friends here for a few days be fore returning to her home in Astoria. Mayor Noble and his wife moved into their nice new home this week. The new residence is one of the finest in the city. J. E. Higley, recently with the Northwestern National Bank of June 14, 1951 liberal portion the towns have instance might only absolutely destitute people are aided by that department. . . . 11. Suitable laws to protect the right of Labor to belong to a la bor union or not, as it sees fit. That, my friends, is quite a platform. But, ii elected, will the lady live up to it? Is it just an other candidate making a lot of promises for the sole purpose of getting elected? Well, let's look at the record Mary Cain's record. In 1943, during World War II, U. S. Senator Bankhead introduc ed a bill, part of which proposed to subsidize small-town weekly newspapers. Reaching for her typewriter, Mary Cain dashed off an editorial that was copied in thousands of newspapers across the nation. Part of that editorial follows: "And now the press of the na tion is being approached with an insidious scheme to PAY for our patriotism. My paper is small so small that I wonder at my te merity in speaking thus. It is poor so poor that it depends al most entirely upon the job work I do to sustain it. . . I am a young woman who could use a goodly sum such as this would net me. But, I tell you frankly, even if this bill passes, I shall not accept the money. . . . This is an inde pendent newspaper. It accepts no pay for government advertising and publishes only what it deems best for the needs of this town." In large measure due to this editorial the Bankhead Bill was not enacted and the free voice of the rural press was saved. Again space does not permit recounting the many things Mary Cain has said and done to prove she is bit terly opposed to paternalistic government, even when it prom ises to feather her own nest. Not being a citizen of Missis sippi, I have no vote there. I wish I were, as it would give me great pleasure to vote for Mary Cain as often as the Mississippi law would permit. She strikes me as being just the "MAN" for Missis sippians to install as governor of "Ole Miss." Portland, has been elected to the position of assistant cashier of the Farmers & Stockgrowers Na tional bank of this city. He has taken the place of C, M. Sims who recently resigned. D. A. Wilson, who has been bookkeeper for the bank for several months, has al so resigned. Postmaster Richardson in forms us that beginning July 1 the delivery window at the post office will be closed on Sundays and holidays. The Umpqua River route to Reedsport was originally survey ed for a railroad and was later abandoned, even though over a million dollars had been spent on a tunnel. The Smithsonian Institute will investigate three former Indian camps back of McNary Dam on the Columbia river in Oregon now under construction. The In stitute hopes to uncover Indian relics before the waters backed by the dam cover them. support the council's proposal. The editorial tile is doffed to Miss Ingrid Her mann of lone, choice of the committee for queen of the 1951 Morrow County Fair and Rodeo. This attractive young lady, fresh from high school graduation and the winning of unusual laurels in her 4-H club work is eminently fitted for the honor that has been accorded her. Ingrid's motto has al ways been "That which is worth doing at all is worth doing well." Faithful adherence to that motto has paid rich dividends in strengthening of character, not to mention the financial success that has attended her 4-H club projects, all of which have left her unspoiled and filled with a desire to go on to greater achievement. The tile is also doffed to the committee for its selection. "Some Americans, stricken with fear, are will ing to barter freedom for some small measure of safety and survival." David Lawrence, Mayor of Pittsburgh. "There are billions of dollars that can be cut from the non-military budget. And they should be. Why should the American taxpayer tighten his belt when the Government continues its merry spending spree?" Oakland, Calif. Voice. "Many Americans do not doubt this country's financial ability to maintain the nation in a gar rison state for a number of years, or even to fight a full-guaged war, if necessary. What they are wondering about with reason is whether they can maintain the nation's tremendous army of bureaucrats." Eldorado, Kan., Times. Thirty years ago Oregon Caves, now a national monument in Southern Oregon, were called the Josephine Caves, named after the county in which they are situated Lookout Point dam located on state highway 58 in Lane county; will be completed in 1954, and is expected to become a major tour ist attraction The Astor column overlooking Astoria is 25 years old this year. for all occasions MARY VAN'S FLOWER SHOP PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY N. D. BAILEY Cabinet Shop Lawn Mowers Sharpened Sewing Machines Repaired Phone 1485 for appointment or call at shop. DR. H. S. HUBER DENTIST First National Bank Bldg. Room 116 Phone 2342 JOS. J. NYS ATTORNEY AT LAW Peters Bldg., Willow Street Heppner, Oregon J. O.TURNER ATTORNEY AT LAW Phone 173 Hotel Heppner Building Heppner, Oregon P. W. MAHONEY ATTORNEY AT LAW General Insurance Heppner Hotel Building Willow Street Entrance Dr. L. D. Tibbies OSTEOPATHIC Physician & Surgeon First National Bank Building Res. Ph. 1162 Office Ph. 492 A.D. McMurdo,M.D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Trained Nurse Assistant Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon Dr. C. C. Dunham CHIROPRACTIC PHYSICIAN Office No. 4 Center St. House Calls Made Home Phone 2583 Office 2572 C. A. RUGGLES Representing Blaine E. Isom Insurance Agency Phone 723 Heppner, Ore. HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES The Heppner Gazette, established March 30, 1883. The Heppner Times, established" November 18, 1897. Consolidated Feb. 15, 1912. Published every Thursday and entered at the Post Office at Heppner, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription price, $3.00 a year; single copies, 10c. O. G. CRAWFORD Publisher and Editor PENDLETON HEPPNER FREIGHT LINE Arrives at Heppner, Lexington and Ions EVERY DAY For Pickup or Delivery For pickup, call Red & White, Heppner Padberg Tractor, Lex. Omar Rietmann, lone Connecting Carrier for Consolidated Freightways Transferring & Heavy Hauling Padded Moving Vans Storage Warehouse U.PandN.P. Penland Bros. Transfer Co. 39 SW Dorion Avenue Phone 338 Pendleton, Ore. Call Settles Electric for all kinds of Electrical WorK New and Repair Shop phone 225? at Willow i Chase Streets. Kes. Phone 2542 r Carpentry and Cement Work By Day or Contract Bruce Bothwcll Phone 845 J. 0. PETERSON Latest Jewelry & Gift Goods Watches, Clocks, Diamonds Expert Watch & Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon Turner, Van Marter and Company GENERAL INSURANCE Phelps Funeral Home Licensed Funeral Directors Phone 1332 Heppner, Oregon Heppner City Cmrnril Meets First Monday Citizens having matters for discussion, please bring them before the Council. Phone 2572 Morrow County Abstract & Title Co. INC. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE TITLE INSURANCE Office In Peters Building r RICHARD J. O'SHEA, M. D. Physician and Surgeon 2 Church Street Telephone 1152 Alfred Baska Gen'l. Contractor Contact me for estimates on Grain Storage Bins Phone 404 - Condon, Oregon