Heppner Gazette Times, TKursday, April 7, 1955 Poge 3 Lexington News ' By Delpha Jones Mr. and Mrs. William C. Van Winkle and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Van Winkle of Heppner and Lyle Allyn attended the funeral ser vices of Ray Martin at Prosser, Washington. He leaves to mourn his passing his wife Cora Mae, and 2 children. Cora Mae is the niece of Mr. and Mrs. Van Winkle and has lived most of her time in Arlington. She is the daugh ter of the late Charles Van Winkle of that city. Mrs. Bud Buchanan and son Teddy have returned to her home in Seattle after visiting her father Jack Griffen of this city and at the Aldrich home in lone- and the Charles Buchanan family of Lexington. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Anderson and children returned to their home in Burns after ah extended visit at the Franklin Messenger home. Mrs. Earl Warner returned to her homa.one day last week after a visit 'in Corvallis at the Clar ence Hays home, and at the Ver non Warner home in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Pomeroy and Mrs. Lou Broadley returned to their homes in Kelso, Wash ington after a visit at the W. E. McMillan, Frances McMillan and Owens Helms homes in Pendle ton. Mr. Pomeroy returned to his home early to attend the funeral services of an uncle at Beaver ton, Ore. Miss Pat Majeske spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Majeske from her work in Portland at Good Samari tan hospital. Mr. and Mrs. William R. Waite of Pendleton visited at the W. E. McMillan home on Sunday. Mrs. Helen Gridener, mother of Eugene Sawyer and Sophie Kub leek, grandmother visited at the Sawyer home on Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Jones and two children spent the weekend in Union and La Grande. Satur day night they visited at the W. I. Miller home and on Sunday at the Dewie Lovelace home in Cove, and the Sidney McMurphy home in Union. Mrs. Emma Breshears and granddaughter Georgia Gibson and Marie Steagall and daugh ters Pat and Barbara were The Dalles visitors over the weekend. They were met there by Mrs. Carl Whillock, another daughter of Mrs. Breshears and all visited at the ' Malcolm Richelderfer home. Mrs. E. E. McFadden and Mrs. Dean Hunt motored to The Dalles Thursday after Cherry Grey who had been a patient in Mid -Columbia hospital in that city follow ing an appendectomy. Mrs. Carl Marquardt and Mrs. Bill Marquardt and 'Mrs. O. W. Cutsforth were hostesses to a cradle shower honoring Mrs. Eu gene Sawyer, at the I. O. O. F. dining room on Friday night April 1. Games were played with prizes being won by Maureen Groves. Those attending were: Mes- dames Alex Hunt, Howard Cro well, Newt O'Harra, E. E. Mc Fadden, Archie Munkers, Wayne Papineau, Buster Padberg,' O. G. Breeding, Floyd Smith, Oral Wright, Bertha Hunt, Morris Mc-' Carl, M. V. Nolan, Earl Warner, A. F. Majecke, Don Campbell, June Cooper, L. G. Wetzel, Mel Bates, Oris Padberg, W. E. McMil lan, Carl Marquardt, Bill B. Mar quardt, Emma Breshears, Wilbur Steagall, and the Misses Inez McFadden, Dona Barnett, Mau reen Groves, Lynn Wright, Pat Majeske of Portland, and Mrs. Douglas Price of Heppner, and Phyllis Nolan and Bea Miles. Gifts were sent by the follow ing, unable to attend, Iris Miller, and Norma Marquardt, Mrs. Homer Hughes, Gladys Van Win kle, Mildred Davidson, Eileen COMPLETE DISPERSION SALE 165 REGISTERED HEREFORDS plus 1955 calves at side "We are selling our Sumpter Valley Ranch and therefore must sell all our Sumpter Valley Registered Herefords." HENRY & DARLENE JEAGER. CONDON. OREGON GEORGE POULOS. MANAGER, SUMPTER. OREGON. 58 Cows 20 Bred 2 yr. Heifers 39 Yrlg. Heifers 14 Yrlg. Bulls 10 Herd Bull Prospects , 12 Range Bulls 10 '54 Calves 2 Herd Bulls, sons of Donald DHU 47 SALE AT, Northwestern Livestock Comm. Co. Right on U. S. Hiway No. 30 25 Miles West Pendleton, Oregon APRIL 22, 1955 Cattlo will be in yards from April 10 for your Inspection. Auctioneers: Si Williams Don Wink JAEGER HEREFORD, LTD. Catalogs Reservations Western Sales Management jox 87 Hermiston, Ore.. Ph. 6532 ,.JH33 03 8093ooo RICE HULLS NO MORE SEEDING PROBLEMS. Grass or pasture mixture seed will feed smoothly through drills without bunching, skipping, or separating. Simple, easy, and inexpensive. Available now, unmixed, for only $3.50 per cwt. Mixed with grass for only $4.50 per cwt. ISOTOX HIGHLY EFFECTIVE CONTROL AGAINST WIRE WORMS.' Simply treat seeds before planting. A tested California Spray Chemicals - product. Inexpensive, easy to use in both dry and slurry form. Does not harm germination or seeds. Seed treated with Isotox lc per lb. extra. Use 2 oz, per 100 lb. Legume seeds. 5 oz. per 100 lb. Grass seeds. ARASAN GREATLY INCREASED ' STANDS, LARGER HEALTHIER PLANTS from Grass and Legume Seeds treated with Arasan. A tested DuPont product that provides protection to seed when it is planted. Recommend 8 oz. per 100 lbs. of seed. . A COMPLETE 1955 PRICE LIST FREE! Jacklin's complete new, easy to read 1955 Price List - Ask for yours TODAY u Mill Seed Company U Dishman, Washington CAPITAL PARADE Continued from Page 2 balancing the budget. The prob lera confronting the Oregon law makers is no simple sixty-four dollar question. It is more like a $64 million question $63 mil lion to be more nearly exact. This huge deficit in the general fund budget is accounted for by a $-15 million gap between the $200 million budget presented to the legislature by the governor and the $155 million in available revenues under existing statutes, phjs an $18 million building program. The House tax committee, in which all revenue measures must originate, has trimmed the bud get deficit down to $55 million by the simple expedient of arbi trarily lopping $8 million off the building requests presented by the board of control and the board of higher education. This gap can only, be bridged by cut ting budget requests or by in creasing state revenues. In any state but Oregon this problem would be a compara tively simple one. The legisla ture would work out a program of new levies that would produce the required amount and pass it. In Oregon this problem is com plicated by a constitutional pro vision which precludes the use of the emergency clause on a reve nue measure. This leaves all revenue measures wide open to a referendum for 90 days after the Padberg, Merle Cornilson, Nellie Johnson, Audrey Ansted, Gena Leonard, Cherry and Nita Grey, Tess Hatfield, Helen and Jean Nelson, Lois Hunt, Lorene Led- better, Mrs. Blaine Chapel and daughter, Mary Edwards, Em Peck, Lee Wagenblast, Mrs. Ina Nichols, Carol Ann Wiglesworth and Barbara Cutsforth. Later re freshments of ice cream and cookies with coffee were served. Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Cutsforth returned from Salem where they were called last week by the ill ness of an aunt of Mrs. Cuts forth. Mrs. W. I. Miller of La Grande reports that her son Pvt. Earl L. Miller has been among those re cently sent from Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., to Europe. ,Earl was a resident 'of Lexington for some time, graduating from this school and making his home with an aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Jones. Don't forget Good Friday and special Easter services at the Lexington Christian church. legislature adjourns. Oregon is the only state whose legislature operates under such a restriction. And past experience has shown that opponents of tax measures are quick to avail themselves of the referendum privilege. Oregon has not levied a tax against property for state pur poses since 1941 and it is the policy of the legislature to leave that field to the local taxing units so far as possible. In fact a statute approved by the voters in 1952 limits a state property levy, if one should ever become necessary, to six mills plus an additional amount to cover bond retirement and interest. The House committee's tax pro gram sets out to recapture a mil lion dollars appropriated two years ago to finance construction of a new reformatory and picks up $6.5 million in additional revenue from the personal in come and corporate excise tax over the estimate on which the budget deficit is based. Both of these items have been branded as "wishful thinking" by veteran legislators most familiar with the state's financial picture. It also relies on a $2 million cut in budget requests which so far has not materialized. In fact indications now are that the bud get will be above, rather than below, $200 million by the time the legislature completes its work. The committee expects to pick up $4 million through an in crease in the price of liquor, $2 million more by bringing public utilities under the corporate ex cise tax, $3.7 million by increas ing the withholding tax from one to two percent and $10 million by a tax of three cents a pack on cigarettes. This latter levy faces almost certain referral to the voters. The backbone of the new tax program, however, provides for an increase in the personal in come tax. This is to be accomp lished, first by reducing exemp tions and dependency credits from SHOO to $500, secondly by In creasing the tax rates, and third ly by application of a surtax of from 5 to 10 percent, dependent upon the amount necessary to complete the budget balance. This latter part of the tax pro gram is already under heavy fire from labor and farm groups be cause, percentage wise at least, it bears more heavily on incomes in the lower brackets than on those in the higher brackets. In any event it is generally predict ed that it will be subjected to close scrutiny and probable dras tic revision by the senate tax committee which received the tax program only last week. END IN SIGHT Legislators made bad news for the taxpayers last week but there was one bright spot. They are going to quit two weeks earlier than they planned. The surprise passage by the House of 32 per cent boost in income taxes started a reaction against a generally accepted view that the Legislature would continue through May. The sine die date now Is ex pected to be April 23, which would be a normal 104-day ses sion. Two days less than the record session of 1949. The income tax increase is ex pected to produce $24,500,000 and a cigarette tax of 3 cents a pack is estimated will bring $10,100, 000. Both measures are certain to be subjected to referendum. Rep. Loren Stewart, (R) Cottage Grove, chairman of the House tax committee, has started a move to have a special election this summer, if referendum petitions are filed against the bills. Legis lation is being drafted for a spe cial election, if needed, to de termine as early as possible what the voters want. CAPITAL PARAGRAPHS If you expect to make a trip to the capital soon this tip may help. The Salem Traffic Safety Council, in a get tough move, ad vises that jaywalkers in the main part of the city and the capital zone be arrested. The Oregon Journal has an nounced that Larry Smyth, its political editor, will resign as as sistant to Interior Secy. McKay, May 1 and return to his Portland position. Douglas McKean, pre sent political editor now cover ing the legislature for the Jour nal, is to return to his Portland City Hall assignment. State bulletin: "In the opinion of the Attorney General and'eon curred in by the state department of finance and administration, no driver of a state automobile may ask for or accept trading stamps in connection with the purchase of gasoline, oil or any other pur chase by state credit cards. This will be considered as receiving gifts." When Secy, of Interior McKay visits Europe next month he hopes to visit the Neuse-Argonne region in Frnce where he was wounded. USE GAZETTE TIMES CLASSIFIED ADS NOTICE! New Location of D. H. JONES AND SON At Residence on Heppner-Condon Hiway Across Hiway From Motel Phone 6-5338 HOURS: AFTER 4 P. M. AND ON WEEKENDS WHY TAKE LESS THAN THE BEST RCA Victor Television ilisimi liiii n mnn ill! iiili! !i!Hi!nnM;!i:; I IT RCA Victor 31 -In. Carroll. Swivelil 3 ipeak rtl Grained finishes, ma hogany; limed oak, extra. 21S526. A COMPLETE RANGE OF SIZES, STYLES AND PRICES Lexington Implement Co. PHONE 3-8111 $ 3 w w going on jxkefmW JfmWWf-f vnm M Mi A- v that elng of Spring I v that lift your spirit t that baby your budget I ' ' S1 si V wlllHilllllllHllllKlif lKu i 4 fcl P I, r-t W..M. -..?j4S .tJ fe"'lwiiMliiiiigiu lLmtMi -' -S-" " WfeSS. n -" nrr-riiiimiii- mm ( s'""' -WKasw .. -. Big news about ISmofo-s -lDQQir IRMoirsi THIS brand-new kind of automobile -the sensation of all the Auto Shows this, year-is now rolling off the Huick assemblylines in volume numbers. That's tjie first news. And the second is just as wonderful this dramatic new model is very definitely everything that eager buyers hoped it would be. For the 4-Door Riviera is the first "hardtop" ever available with separate doors for rear seat passengers-plus rear-compartment room big as a Buick-size family sedan. It comes breezing in with all the low lined sweep and wide open visibility of Buick's original 2-Door Riviera and with luxurious new spaciousness in its sizeable and full-length 4-door body. With windows down, no post9 appear for the rear doors, and you get a completely unobstructed view at both side9. You find rear doors are hinged at their front edges to swing wide and free, and assure easy entrance and exit. And you'll find legroom, headroom and hiproom extra-generous both front and rear with interiors tailored in fabrics and patterns specially reserved for the 4-Door Riviera. Best of all, this new Buick beauty comes off the line in both the low-price Special Series and the high-powered CENTURY Series. So you can pick jour 4-Door Riviera with the potent performance of a 188-hp or 236-hp Buick V8 engine -the swift get away and gas saving of Variable Pitch Dynaflow the velvet stride of the Million Dollar Ride the long list of Buick bonus features at no extra cost and all at ' great buy " Prices that have helped move Buick into America's "Big Three" of best sellers. But-better come see us about the 4-Door Riviera now. With all-out production -and a prompt order -this newest excitement in cars will be yours that much sooner. 'Dynaflow Driv is standard on Roadaustm, optional at txtra coil on olbtrSarkt. Yhrill of the jfo&r Is Buick -MILTON (IDLE STARS FOR BUICK S.t tht Bulck'Btrlt Show A!trnot Tiwidoy Evtnlngi "WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT WICK Will BUILD THEM" "Driy From Factory Save Up To See Tour Buick Dealer" Farley Motor Company