ovo O O QtO NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION ISOLATED TRACT. Public Land Sale. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, July 14th, 1914. NOTICE is hereby given that, as directed by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, under provisions of Act of Congress approved March 28, 1912 (37 Stat., 77), pursuant to the application of Patrick Curran, Serial No. 012397, we will offer at public sale, to the highest bidder, but at not less than $2.00 per acre, at 9:30 o'clock A. M., on the 11th day of September, 1914, at this office, the fol lowing tract of land: NEV4 NW4, MW'AIN'i, sec. iu 1 . 1 IN., K. 25 E. Willamette Meridian. Any persons claiming adversely the above-described land are advised to file their claims, or objections, on or before the time designated for sale. H. FRANK WOODCOCK, Register. HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPN'ER, OREGON. PACE THREE INDUSTRIES and INDIVIDUALS Men and Businesses With Whom Pros perity and Success are Associa ted in This County. An interesting incident in the auto- . brother and it was not long until it mobile world came about when a j was safe to drive the machine down patent was issued to George Selden in j the street without Inviting a damage 1895. It covered what is now known suit. I almost forgot to mention tha, Hebert W. Copeland EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Morrow County Dates For August Aug. 20, 21, 22 at Palace Hotel Hepp ner... Aug. 23, 24 at Beymer's, Lex ington.. .Aug. 25, 26 at Carle's, lone. "The window of the soul" THE EYE, Most precious gift to man! As the busy years of life go by, Preserve it while you can. By E. G. H. There are three processes in civili zation, one is to dig, the next is to manuiacture, and the third is to carry. Concerning the third, horses first furnished the power to carry. Today we have discarded the horse and the locomotive, the steamboat, and the automobile do our lugging. Things are brought from the farthest corners of the world and laid at our feet. Railroads carry a man a mile for three cents and in most states for two, they carry a ton of freight one mile for one cent and a half. This is all that they have to sell transportation. In the year Eighteen Hundred lift' as the clutch which throws the engine in and out of gear. He invented this jears before but bfing a patent at torney, he delayed the final issuance of the patent for sixteen or seventeen years until automobiles were better developed. Henry Ford led the fight against him and spent a quarter of a million dollars before the patent was knocked out. Most companies paid the small tribute to escape the courts. "Licensed under the Selden patent" used to be seen on every car. The word automobile come from the Greek, Auto, meaning self, and the Latin, Mobilis, meaning move able, hence a self-propelling machine. Garage comes from the French mean ing a repository for automobiles. Three years ago there was a man selling candy in a small shop in Hard man, Oregon. He had a barber chair in the corner and at odd tiirws did a School children needing glasses should be fitted at this time. Do not start the boy or girl into school work this year with defective eyesight un corrected. It means misery and bad lessons for the child. HARDMAN BLACKSMITH & GARAGE MM.. An Up-to-date General Repair Shop. tonsorial work. Occassionallv Sixty-five, a Frenchman by the name l.j sold a few stamps. He prospered, of Gottlied Daimler perfected t!.a as such stores do and as the time rol gasoline engine, which made the led around he accumulated enough modern automobile possible .and to buv a Cadillac car. In this nur- Any and All Kinds of Work Promptly Done. Garage Work A Specialty. OIL and GASOLINE ken Hardman, Oregon 'ft 30 It, A . nbnoi THE HEPPNER GARAGE Levassor developed the car itself, as ' chase he revealed good judgement, we know it. Levassor and a man by for I understand thev are a good ma- the name of Panhard were in the wood-working machinery business and Levassor named the first car after Panhard. Levassor was the man who devised the transmission now used in every car, who placed the engine in front, who ran the axle and crank shaft parallel to the side members of the frame. He was never known, however, as the real developer of the automobile. Daimled did not get the credit either, for a French agent wish ing a lighter car than Daimler cared to make, under his own name, put forth, under the name of "Mercedes1 chine. He knew something about ma chinery, having worked in the railroad shops in Sacramento and during the slack times in the store he helped his customers by running the engine in harvest times . Automobiles were scarce in those days, there being but three or four in the county. It did not take much of a'prophet to see that in a short time many people would want cars, also these cars would nee.; careful atten tion. In the course of events the store was sold and he came to Hepp ner. He stored his car among the (after his daughter), the car made by horses at the livery. The animals a German firm. soon got acquainted with their iron THE SECOND ANNUAL MORROW COUNTY FAIR HEPPNER, September 17, 18, 19 Free Attractions Daily Best Talent on the Coast has been Engaged to Entertain the Visitors Send or Bring in Your Ex- I hibits Early Don't Delay Buildings Now Being Erected in Which to Display Your Products No Lack of Space Your Help is Needed to Make This the Greatest County Fair in Eastern Oregon Eor Premium Lists, Information, etc, address the SECRETARY, Morrow County Fair . HEPPNER, OREGON this man's name is Mr. A. B. Bowker. Mr. Bowker started in business where the Jack Rabbit Garage is at the present time. He was well pre pared to start the business, all except the monetary part. He had been in Portland and worked in an automobile shop, starting in by doing anything that they cared to trust him with. He didn't watch the clock and gradu ally mastered the intricacies 'of the profession. The first thing that he had to do was to educate the people to the advantages of the automobile. 1 The next thing was to sell the car. 1 Of course there were people wht stood on the corners and said that the machine wouldn't go. Every new thing to fight for dear life, every departure from the established cus tom is greeted with an Anvil chorus of condemnation and disaDDroval. Now we know that automobiles are practical and the remarks now are to the effect that we thought so all of the time. I happened in the office of Mr. Bowker's a short time ago. He has the only fireproof garage in the coun ty, which is to say, one of the few in Eastern Oregon. In the office I saw every convenience for accuracy and speed. Office work is always on the side of expense and the problem ir. business today is to cut down expense. I saw one of the latest National Registers which accomodates fou. :lerks; a Burroughs Adding machine they stand in the adding machine business for what the word Sterling does in the Bilver world. There was an automatic check machine thai makes check raising a thing of his toryj of course I found a typewriter a telephone and other modern fixtures that make office work a pleasure.. The main building is 44x100 feet built of brick with an imposing front. It has a cement floor and the rear is partitioned off for the repair part. It will accomodate thirty cars and the space is always occupied. Gas, water and air are at the curb and also in side. You might get an idea of the amount of business done when you consider that fifteen hundred to two thousand gallons of gasoline are sold weekly. Cylinder oils are in tanks with handy force pumps. Every thing is out in the light and there are no dark cellars to stumble through or overhead garrets to climb through Cars are stored for reasonable rates and the garage being lighted by elec tricity, it is handy .to come or go at any time of night. A complete vulcanizing plant cares for tire trouble. Incidentally a com plete stock of tires and tubes is al ways kept on hand. While in the shop I saw a tire vulcanized in twenty minutes and the man was on the road again. Quick repairing is one of Mr. Bowker's hobbies. Everything that i goes to make up a complete repair jshop can be found here. A motor is used to compress air, another to run , a drill press, and emery stand and a 'new Monarch lathe, which I was told I cost $450. I also saw a Ford motor taken from the car, hung on a move able crane, the cylinders re-ground and replaced In the car, all in a few minu tes. In the rear of the main build ing is a complete blacksmith shop. There is a special furnace for springs. To weld and temper springs requires the work of an expert. Mr. Bowker, employs an expert workman, Micheal Szepanek, who learned the trade in ! the East and knows all that is worth I knowing about springs. The main difference between a wheelbarrow and an automobile is in the springs. In another building he stores his oils and greases. As I looked at the stock it reminded me of John Dee's stock at Whiting, Indiana. He also told me that he had another ware house near the O.-W. R. & N. tracks which stored the main supply of his nils and greases. Four men attend to the repair busi ness. Calls are answered for help in the country and in the nearby towns. A regular bus business is carried on and at your service at all times. The new over-night telephone service will always be answered at the Heppncr Garage a one man sleeps there, that is, when the rest of us will let him. Ford, Overland and Mitchell cart are handled by Mr. Bowker. I noted a complete supply of accessories for' cart, including the new shock absor bera for Fords. I have been inform ed that Mr. Bowker has sold neerl fifty cars in his stay here. Mont of , these have been purchased by farm ers. ! When the lists are made again com piling the great inventions of the world, who would 1 surprised to see j automobiles included? Not long ago I i had a letter from an old college-1 mate who had been preaching in a tmall town in wentf r Nchraxka. His hurrh was a,landoned last month and mA4 to nearby farmer for a ware house. It teems at if hit paritihoneri had all purchased auto and went to the city to church. And that is not iwo.amy standard model. m Two. Sily Standard Model. The treatettt motorcycle vtlut ever thieved. 7 H. P. Twin equipped with Electric Head liilht, F.leetric Tail I. iM. Flectrie Signal, Two Seta Storage Batteries and Cnrhin-Brown Rear Drive Speedomet er. Price 3W60.00. Sec Catalog (or detailed description. 60,000 brand-new red machines will go out"over the Indian trails during the coming year the greatest motorcycle produc tion in the history of the industry. They will flash forth fully armed with " Thirty-Eight Better ments for 1914 !" Armed with powerful and beautiful Electrical Equipment! Armed with a New Standard of Value which must completely overturn all existing ideas of motorcycle worth. All standard Indian models for 1914 come equipped with electric head light, electric tail light, two sets high amperage storage bat teries, electric signal, Corbin - Brown rear-drive speedometer. You cannot fully realize the 114 Indian without a thorough study of the 1914 Indian Catalog. It makes plain a host of compelling Indian facts that all motorcycle-interested men can consider to their real profit. Send for the 1914 Indian Catalog the most interesting volume of motorcycle literature you've ever read. The 1914 line of Indian Motocycles consists of: 4 H.P. Single Service Model $200.00 7 H.P. Twin Two-Twenty-Five, Regular Model 225.00 7 H.P. Twin Two-Sixty, Standard Model 260.00 7 H.P. Twin Light Roadster Model 260.00 7 H.P. Twin Two Speed, Regular Model 275.00 7 H.P. Twin Two Speed, Tourist Standard Model 300.00 7 H.P. Twin Ilendee Special Model (with Hlcctrio Starter) 325.00 Prices F.O.B. Factory JOS. BURGOYNE Agent for Morrow County. LEXINGTON Heppner Garage All Kinds of Repair Work Done Quickly We are agents for Ford. Overland and Mitchell Automobiles. COME TO Gilliam & Bisbee For anything in the HARDWARE LINE We have it, will get it, or it is not made We try to keep a complete, up-to-date stock of everything car ried in a first-class store, and we ask everybody for a liberal share of their patronage. We do our best to merit the same. Come and see us CLEARANCE SALE IN ORDEK TO MARK A (U'K'K (LEAN-IT ON SEVERAL DIS CONTINUED AM) BROKEN LINKS, WE WILL FOR A FEW DAYS. MAKE RI'ICKS ON THESE GOODS THAT WILL PAY YOU TO IN VESTIGATE. .......... Phelps Grocery Co. i ; f 5 Silk Faced Hose The Famous Holeproof brand, sold withe the usual guarantee. Priced at 50c the pair Sam Hughes Co. r ; OB . (Continued on rage four)