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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1914)
WHAT MONEY International Harvester Children Cry for Fletcher's Oil Tractors HDUSTRIAL REVIEW OF THE STATE OF OREGON The I HC Line T7 VERY day GRAIN AND HAT MACHINES Bindera, Renperl Headeri, Mowcrl Rakaa, Stackers Ha? Loadera Hay Preitea CORN MACHINES Plantara, Pickeri Bindara, Cottivatora Eniilage Cutten SlnUera. Sbredderi TILLAGE Pel, Spring-Tootk, end Dick Harrawe Caltbatora GENERAL LINE Oil aod Gaa Eagiaci Oil Tractera Mantra Spreadere Craaa Saparatorl Earn Watooa Motor Tracks Thraabera Grate frill. Faed Griodara Knifa Griaden fitadar Twiae which you need an International Harvester oil tractor Mogul or Titan. An International tractor on your farm will pull your field machines, haul your products and supplies, furnish husker and shredder, feed grinder, or serve vou in other duties. Simple mechanism, protection of parts, ease and convenience of operation, economy of fuel, complete equipment make Inter national tractors last and satisfy you longest. Studv tlieir records, and write us for catalogues. I H C tractor sizes range from 612 to 30-60 gasoline. A line from vou and figures, and we tractors may be seen. International Harvester 1 1.1$) Portland nay 3 Champion Ueeriiig McCormick DON'T RAISE WEEDS! USE A JONES WEEDER Built in Morrow County H (Patented Dec. 1C, 1913) Tlii'iv lias Ix'on a great need fur a nmrliine tn cultivate sinn niri -fallow that wmilil ilo it thoroughly with the least possible loss of moisture and "ilo it 1 1 1 i i -k . ! ' We i laiin the Jones WVeder will do nil of this and more. Tt can he used in as many sections as wanted, like a harrow. Four sections cut IS feet S inches and pull no heavier than four sections of steel harrow. The I )la it's having a slope of (10 it will not choke under nor mal conditions. I am now putting up 100 sections. Parties wanting this machine, should semi in their orders at once. For further information, prices, etc., write or see C. E. JONES City Meat MarKet KINSMAN & HALL, Proprietors Beef, Pork, Mutton and Veal FINE HOME CURED HAMS AND BACON. ,lVWVWVWVWWSrVVSArVVrWVrW he PALM has a complete line of CONFECTIONS, CIGARS and SOFT DRINKS Try our Pop Corn always fresh. R. M. HART M. L CASE CALLS ANSWERED situations come up in the power tor thresher, ask tbeir owners about them, it. 1 . operating on kerosene ana will brine vou catalogues, facts will also tell you where the Address Uie Company of America Ore. Milwaukee Otborae flano fL ft- Heppner, Ore. Funeral Director and Embalmer DAY OR NIGHT. s rWWrWW Eugene engineers are promoting a 100,0110 drainage project. Legislature appropriated $4,759, 336 in 1911, and $0,416,607 In 1913. A new industry in Oregon is the eastern demand for husbands. Bandon will erect a municipal dock. Douglas county will finish plank ing the road over Camas mountain. New schoolhouses are going to be built in Lane county, cost $60,000. Brick manufacture is being estab lished at Bisters. Warrenton, Clatsop and West Side towns are to have telephones. LaFayette will install a $15,000 water plant. The Gleason yards at Cottage Grove will burn a half million brick. Seaside will have a 20H.000 per day shingle mill. Hood River Royal Anne cherries all sold at The Dalles for five cents Klamath Falls is now after the Bandon woolen mills with a free site. In asking for paving bids, Albany bars bids on concrete paving. Work will start soon on the Car negie library at Marsh field. Big strike reported at High Grade mine, near New Pine creek. The Oregon grain crops are esti mated at 69,024,000 bushels by the department of agriculture. The new power plant for Canby and Clackamas county is being rushed. St. Johns is providing a street for an outlet for the Western Cooperage Co., that employs 200 men. Andrew Kennedy is putting in machinery and a plant to manufac ture coal brickets on Coos Bay. Ashland has voted $175,000 bonds to develop mineral springs and baths on a large scale. The skyscraper limit in Portland has been raised from 160 feet to 2 00 feet. Tne McKenzie river hatchery is to je increased in capacity to 2,000,000 fish annually. Sheepmen of Umatilla county are selling off their Hocks unable to com pete with free wool. Willamette Pacific tracks are to reach tidewater by October 1st. In att 1500 men are employed. The adoption of British and Ku i'opean standards for public utilities in this state will make further in vestments very difficult to secure. Portland has passed a meat in spection act that will hamper that industry and raise the price to the consumer, to improve sanitary con ditions. "Dundee" Reid, a pioneer railroad builder is dead. In his day the peo ple were glad to get railroads on any kind of terms. Engineers are working on a $350, ooo foothills ditch to irrigate S000 acres at Med ford, to be completed bv 1915. The campaign for a two-mill limit on state taxes will he made by the taxpayers direct in the Willamette valley. Lumber shipments out of Colum bia river ports aggregated 6,1 IS, 000 feet, and Coos Bay 9,316,000 for the last two weeks of May. Governor West announces that 2000 acres of the Tunialo project are ready for settlers at forty dol lars per acre. The state campaign to defeat all freak laws initiated and to limit state taxes to two mills will he taken up by taxpayers' leagues all. over the state. The publication of the proposed eight hour law for this state Is being hastened that the people may know just how drastic the measure is and how it will effect farmers. During the past week the Oregon Public Utilities commission has fixed standards of quality in water, gas, light, heat, and telephone service. Effect of order not yet known. July 1st, the new Workingmen's Compensation Act goes into effect and this is the last date on which manufacturers and employers can give notice of not coming under the provisions of the act. A Portland woman is suing for the right to work for wages she can agree upon with her employer and at which she saves money each week. The minimum wage law forbids her to work on those terms. 11. C. Sampson of the North Pa cific Fruit Distributors Association says the Panama canal will bring large shipments of German beer and the vessels will take fruit tonnage back with them. A. M. Slocum and son Kmery ar rived from Portland, Saturday. They shipped their Cadillac by boat to The Dalles and drove overland from that city. Mr. Slocum is winding up his business in connection with the plan ing mill, which he recently sold to Reid Brothers. An eastern newspaper tells of a great many yachts, some of them marvelously fine for sale. Their ow ners are rich enough to keep them and not feel the expense, but they are just tired of them. That would be an item worth running down to find the cause. We suspect that in every case the owner was a poor boy and had to work every day; that when lie be came wealthy, the first thing was to turn to fast horses and after a year or two he tired of them. That next he tried automobiles and they soon staled on him. Then he read or had some friend tell him of the enchant ment of .yachting, so he had one a little finer than the finest built, se cured a picked captain and crew, in vited a few friends to accompany him and put to sea. That there he dis covered that old ocean is no respect er of persons and so while he felt an all-ganeness somewhere in the re gion of his stomach the great nerve center is near there, he could not hold what he already had, and so was weary of the yacht from the first, and now is looking out for some new excitement. The secret of it al Is that we are mere creatures of habit. The nerv ous man, brought up to work, can not stop work and find peace after he has become rich. He may change his work and enjoy the change but he cannot stoD. A fondness for books is the safest refuge, and so every young man should cultivate that fondness in every leisure hour. Then if fortune smiles on him he need not worry. And if he lives on until the swift moving world begins to pass him by, he may laugh at its hurry and reflect that at his command the wisest and bravest of the ages, will come to him with their best thoughts and be his comfort as the beating of the swift world's pulses fall fainter and fainter on his ears. Nothing Personal. A worker in one of the mission settlements was speaking to some waterfront boys with refenence to Roman history. He touched upon the doings of Nero, giving a vivid picture of the cruelty of the emper or. It seemed to the speaker that he had fixed the idea of injustice and wickedness in the minds of his hear ers. Then he began to ask a few questions. "Boys, what do you think of Nero?" Silence, broken only by the uneasy shifting of the lads in their seats. "Well, Clancy," said the lecturer, making an individual appeal, "what do you think of Nero? Would you say he was a good man? Would you like to know him? Clancy hesitated. Finally after be ing again urged to reply, he did so in these words: "Well, he never done nothing to me." llarpars Magazine. A Hot Day In The Past. But they had warm times in other days and lands. You recall what Sydney Smith ( 1769-1S45) said of the hottest day of the season: " 'Heat, ma'am!' I said, 'it was so dreadful here that I found there was nothing left for it but to take off my flesh and sit in my bones.' " Boston Globe. Sociological Problem. If one 18-year-old girl finds it im possible to scrape along on less than $15,00 a year, how much money will it take to buy a pint of milk for a tenement baby at 4 cents a pint? Philadelphia North American. Pendleton staged a minature round-up last Wednesday, a week ago for the benefit of Milwaukee bus iness men. These men have been making an excursion tour of the Northwest. Masons at Astoria will build a four story home. The building is to be constructed of reinforced concrete and will be fire proof. Kermit Roosevelt, son of ex-president Roosevelt and Miss Belle Wil lard were married in Madrid, Spain, on June 10. Work on the Stanfield-Covote cut off is progressing rapidly and it is ex pected that the grade between Stan fleld and Coyote will soon be com pleted according to the Stanfield Standard. Twohy Bros, have a force of about 100 men working on the west end, where there is a large steam shovel cutting through the sand hills and making the necessary fills. They are working dav and nigth forces and expect to be through with their part of the work by the latter part of the month. Two boys were drowned in the Umatilla river near Echo last Thurs day. Glenn, Arthur and Clifford Hoggs, sons of Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Boggs, had gone in wading, the first two named inadverdently stepped off into a deep hole and being unable to swim, were drowired. The youngest boy managed to save himself. A man came along, but being unable to swim, could do nothing to save the two boys. See our ad on another page giving reduced prices on flour. HEPPNER MILLING CO. The Kind You Have Always in use for over 80 yoars, ana has been made under his per-iJJrf-f-- sonal supervision since its infancy. Y -CiccuM Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless snbstitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It ! contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Xarcotie substance. Its afre is its guarantee. It destroys Worms ! and allays Fcverishness. For more than thirty years it lias been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS 1 ) Bears the J J r The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For THt CCNTAUR COMPANY, T7 THE CANNING SEASON IS NOW ON IN EARNEST Every family will need more You will find them here in any size or quantity and at the most reasonable prices. ECONOMY-the great favorite MASON-the old stand-by MASON SPECIAL-a new one Phelps Grocery Co. Flowers for Funerals and Parties Choice Rose Plants and Pansy Plants. Bedding Plants of all Descriptions. The Jewell Greenhouses THE DALLES Highest cash price paid at all times for hides, pelts and furs. See Peo ples Cash Market. tf. Andy Cook and his road crew of eight men returned from Irrlgon last Thursday evening. Tuey have been putting the finishing touches on the Irrlgon road and it is now pronoun ced excellent. Mr. Cook says that crop conditions all over the lower sand country aro excellent. He thinks the "banana belt" will pro duce a wheat crop this your that will average IS bushels. Bought, and which has been has borne the signature of Signature of Over 30 Years MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. Phone B 2721 OREGON Mr. and Mrs. II. Hogelaud wero passengers to Portland on Friday where Mrs. Hogelaud goes to enter a hospital for surgical treatment. They were accompanied by Dr. II. T. Allison, Mrs. Ilogeland's physician, and after consultation with special ists there it will be determined whether Mrs. Ilogeland's physical condition will permit of her under taking the serious operation her casa calls for. Ernest Mover, wheat farmer of up ner Mack Horse, was in the city on Saturday,