to 1 WJ B CMS ROLL GALL ON DECEMBER 1B-23 The object of the Red Cross Christmas Roll Call is to enroll every person in the United States as a member of the American Red Cross. The primary purpose of tha cam paign is not money, but membership, the registration in terms of active participation of the spirit of our na tion in the greatest humantarian or ganization the world has ever known We want to bind together every man and woman in America by a common bond of brotherhood and sisterhood in an organization whose sympathies and efforts are are as; universal as human suffering and need. We want to marshal the spiritual force of this great nation and give that force ex pression through the American Red Cross. The time selected for this worthy work is the week of Dec. 16-23. It is peculiarly appropriate that the Roll Call be had during the Christ mas season. With a splendid vic tory attained and the dawn of peace at hand, the ingathering of all our people in this great altrustic order serves at once as a fitting climax to our achievments and a fitting thank offering for the guidance that has led us to them. During the above period every man and woman in Morrow county will be asked to join the Red Cross. If you are already a member you will be asked to renew your membership for 1919, if not a member you will be asked to take a 1919 membership as your first. No children, but only adults will be solicited. The mem bership fee will be $1, the same as in former years. Of this amount 50 cents will go to your local chapter and 50 cents to the National organi zation. Every district of the county will be organized and canvassed by com petent workers. Every member will be given a 1919 button, every home will receive a service flag with small crosses to express the number of members or absent ones enrolled in the army or navy. universal membership is the key note of the campaign. This thought is expressed in the language of our president, "I summon you to comrad ship." To our absent boys, to the valor ous allies by whose side they have fought, we want to send a message on Christmas eve; the message that the American nation stands solidly behind the Red Cross, the great mother, who never faltered or failed them even In their greatest extremi ty. Join the Red Cross. Make unanimous. C. E. WOODSON, County Chairman Red Cross Roll ' Call. FIRS FOR CHRISTMAS TREES Thousands of Balsam Supplied by New England to Cities of East and Midwest. Most of the tinsel-covered trees that ; are set up each Christmas season in the homos of Boston, New York and Philadelphia, it has been found, are balsam firs, and many of the selected , specimens are even shipped compara tively long distances from their places ' of growth to Chicago and the cities of the middle West. While the balsam fir is popular as a Christmas tree on aeconnt of Its symmetrical and practically perfect conical shape, it is in growing demand for a variety of uses. Its white, straight-grained wood has come to be used more and more in the manufoc facture of toys that hang from the branches of its younger fellows and from the branches of the other ever greens that are widely used In many parts of the country. The wood of the balsam fir is used to a large extent, also, in the manu facture of excelsior, of which thou sands of tons are used each holiday season for the packing of gifts that are sent by express and mail. The balsam fir is the source, too, of the wood from which are made many of the food containers, such as fruit baskets and butter boxes, in which materials for the Christmas dinner are brought to the market, the taste- lessness of the wood making it unsur passed for such uses. Finally, the balsam fir is being Increasingly used for the manufacture of paper, and this, wrapped around thousands of holiday packages, adds still another chapter to the list of the tree's almost indispensable usefulness as a factor In Christinas observances. 1 IfmSbjidfiAsd tl icre ia your opportunity to insure eRa:ir!: embarrassing rrrora in spelling, jjronimci.?tion end poor choice of wor a. Know the meaning of puzzling vrs t".TT?.:i., Incre-se ycir efficiency, which results in power and success. BSTEctS mnmimomi Wanted I'lrat-clnss woman ceo! for country home. Kitchen :.nd liv ing room for cook detachnd froi liouse. Permanent situation to right party. Address or call Join Kilkenny, Ileppncr, Oregon. Phon 27-F4. :r.i DICTIONARY h nn ell-knowing teacher, a Kiuvorsal question answerer, made to meet your needs. It ia in daily uso by hundreds of thousands of suc cessful men and woni-a tlio world over. .fm Vord. 2739 Pa-1.c 9. 6(rt II luntrar!rrt. 12,600 Biographical En tries. 26, MS Geographical Sulijscts. G2VSB nm. (niThe-t Award) l'anama-Pacilio Exposition. KTGW.M ml nzU-FATfl tdltlora. WRITE for Srwclntn Tnfti-i. FREE l'ocltet Mar U you name Una paper. g. & c. vszx&imi cc, Springfield, iMass., U. S. A. Jo CHRISTMAS EPIGRAMS IT It is a wise Santa who keeps his whiskers away from the candles. ' Better broken toys than broken hearts. 1f Never look a gift in the price tag. Many a man puts on long white whiskers and thinks he looks like Santa Claus when he looks more like a goat and perhaps he is. f One thing they missed dur ing the Spanish Inquisition Christmas cigars! If Shopping done in time is the noblest work of woman! A Christmas gift by any other name doesn't cost half as much. U A gift in the hand is worth two in the postoffice. Many a man gets a girl under the mistletoe only to find himself, a little later, under her thumb. A pound of steak to a poor man is worth a ton of holi day greetings. Holiday gges oons T rf?;v JI4 ..'.J.. till ,; . w Holiday Greetings n i jfi H i v "' X I TAKE this mothod of extending my heartiest Holiday Greetings to all my friends and patrons and to wish for each and erery one of you a most Mer ry Christmas and a very Happy and Prosperous New Year. Trusting that the New Year will bring much good to Heppner and to all of her people. Respectfully, CW-BOWSRSTiieSkeMan - From War to Peace Time The changes neceisary to pats . through this period may tax the patience and peraeverence of all of ui. But let's not alter our pre-peace habits in living and working too sudJenly, but permit the change lo take place automatically. Otherwise, the Farmers & Stockgrowers National aJ viet"Full Steam Ahead." Farmers & Stockgrowers National Bank In the Christmas Handicap Mere Man Describes How Friend Wife Wins by an Eyelash HERE Is no use tn my going home tonight," observed the tnll, sad man as he pushed the dice box from him and accepted the consolation ci gar which the tobacconist vouchsafed him. "There will be nothing do ing the way of eats. My wife hasn't time to cook. She's enter ed in the Christmas handicap. Yon talk about the six-day races where fellows ride around and around until they drop dead or go nuts! Why, the Chrlstmns handicap has that kind of an endurance race skun a mllel "My wife gives one hundred and eleven presents on December 24 and 25. The nice Is between her and Christmas, and, believe me, Christmas Is coming along pretty fast when It conies to the Inst lap of the race dur ing December. Hut my wife Is coining along pretty rapidly, too. Take It from me, those needles of hers click Fo fast that they sound like fifty rev olutions to the minute, and she hits on nil six, too, and Rhe leaves a string of pink and blue double bowknots, ku telets, plcos and fourets In the wake fy or those needles that would astonish youi l "Tick, tick,' says the clock, and itlckerty, tlckrrty, tick, tick,' says the ji . needle and there's rmlr of emhrold- red socks, nn embroidered hanriker- chief or a foot towel, a sweater, a cap, I a dolly, a lnmp shade, a photo holder or most any old thing. "Klngo! It's December 221 Bingo, ' needles and crochet hooks and the tat ting shuttles, leaving a string of gnr- i merits In their wake. np on the cal- bang! r.lpp! go the needles, the paint brushes, the brand- , lug Irons and the stencils. And swish, f swlsb! on comes the scenery, (he me-miL-rlo, or whatever she lias to evolve. "December Ct swlnei Into the stretch. Now ("lrNtniiiM Is here. Tin y approach the wire. "Xiiw, I i!.n't I; now wln-llier lnv wife tins viirl; il nil nllit or tint, but she lins br-nii'lit Iht Mrlng pretty well up nbrenif n( tii" tlneM. ',ut sunn of linn,. Ti"intH bnve to be ibllvi-riil. My wife grabs ti m rn!f ui nf tb !:i mid starts nut to d'-ler tlntn. Nnm of tln tn Is f tihbi il yet, h'lt hbe rnl"b n tU' m nil the ny. "fbitii.', clung! gos the street car. Bm r.-z! gnrs tin- current imd nwny we got I'.ut bib, bib, bub go the file Nblng toiiehes on Ibe presi'iits. My wife nrrlvea at a place where a pre cut In to "be ih-llvered and ring" the li. II. I'.lp, blp, l.li. blp go the ti.cll. -s. l ive yards tn make and the nmld Is on ibe way lo the dMir. "Creak-k! The servant opens the d'Kir. ?Wi h! the pri-M-nt Is roinpb t el. Thud! My lfe drops It Into tin tioT. 8Mi, In g'' iny wlf.'s can), and rsttle, on g'x-s soirie liull r.-l wrapping pnpi-r and my wife wins by nn yi lsh : The advantage of early Christmas shopping are daily emphasized by the made from my com er you propose giv piece of Jewelry, a mond, mounted La Ring, you will find reasonable prices. Everyone realizes the popularity and practicalness of the Wrist Watch. We are agents for the celebrated many selections plete stock. Wheth ing an inexpensive Watch or a Dia-i vallier, Bar Pin or them here at most "GRUtH" WHICH Complete Stocks of Silverware, Cut Glass, Fountain Pens, Nut Bowls, Cassorels, Umbrellas. SHOP EARLY. OSCAR BORG, JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST Day of All Days. Merry Christmas! may It find f0 Gay with all the best ot cheer; Joy come your way to remind you Of the Una ot aU the year. No Apology Needed. Never apologize for a Christmas gift. Never say it Is cheaper than what you would have liked to give, or not as pretty as you thought It, or anything of the sort. A Christmas gift Is supposed to be an expression of good will. If there Is kindness enough back of the giving, no apology Is necessary. If We Give Ourselves. Christmas is not a day or a sea' son, but a condition of heart and mind. If we love otir neighbors a ourselves; If in our riches we are poor in spirit and In onr poverty w? are rich In grace; if our charltj vnunteth not Itself, but 6uffereth and Is kind; If when onr brother asks fl loaf we give ourselves Instead; It each day dawns In opportunity nnrl sets In achievement however small then every day Is Christ's day und Christinas Is always near. Chrlstmaa Bells. : .There are' some feetWalft Ilk birthdays, for example, which affect a single family ; others, like national! holidays embrace the nation; and! some there are which girdle the en-l tire globe. But Christmas Day lifts! at one leap a line of connection be- tween earth and heaven. If there be) ono duy on earth on which above an other the gates of heaven aA more widely opened, it is the day when JoyJ bells ring tn memory of the 'blrthJ of the Babe of Bethlehem. This Is th day of the Christmas bells I Bishop Vincent 7 1 I PUBLIC SALE i i "December 23 Jumps '' endiir, and whizz.! bang Fair Grounds Heppner, Dec. 14, 1918 Beginning at 1 P. M. sharp the Farmers' Exchange will sell at public auciion the following: , 2i0 or mure bred Kwih In miii;,1 bunds. 2 twii-yiiir -obi MiiN-h, unbroki'ii. jenr old Miilin, brolu ii to wink, w- U-bl 1 1 00. I li-;nii I jvar nld.Miilen, luoki'ii fi ttf.M;. I'l brad wink lniM"K. 3 to 8 y-;rs. 1.', wtoiicil I'Ikk. I llriiod Sows. ISO puiiii'l Hon. 1 .", In n yi mi lliii; J im k Cattle. 1 intia ( null Milk Cows that bavo 1 in iin'ii,i ut Mm row County t 'l i i l iei y t lo. i,it t. tit a.nli. MH Kalilillig Mill. ij In root Van lit tin t dlfc Iirlll, One In-lit ii.u k . stf ooooooooooooc 0 J At Chrittr.a, be merry ari'I ? thankful withal o And feast thy poor neigh- o 5 bori, the great with q o the rpa!l. O Thomas Luster. 1 0 1 OO000C0O000OO I Here is a chance to get that small band of Bred Ewes for the ranch. Do you want pure bred cattle? Investigate our plan. Everything sold without reserve on usual terms; $10 and under, cash; balance six months at 8 per cent on approved notes. FARMERS' EXCHANGE of the INLAND EMPIRE Roberts Building, Heppner F. A. McMENAMIN. Auctioneer, Heppner, Ore. F. R. BROWN, Mgr. and Clerk