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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1914)
STATE HS ITEMS International Harvester Oil Tractors OF GENERAL INTEREST COLLEGE BOOKLET 15 - US TtelHCLiw CtAm AND HAT ACHINU Htaicrt, Mowwt him, Stickare HvUiim . HarFrM COIN MACHINE! Plutan, Fickiri liim, CiNntaft Fllitw ClUm IMbn. SMfal TILLAGE CENUALUItl UN inom Cms twutlm IktarTncti Grain Mb TjVERY day situations come rap in 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 the power for thresher, husker and shredder, feed grinder, or serve you in other duties. Simple mechanism, protection of p'arts, ease and convenience of operation, economy of fuel, complete equipment make Inter national tractors last and satisfy youlongest. Study their records, ask their owner about them, and write us for catalogues. I H C tractor sizes range from 6-12 to 30-60 H. P. operating on kerosene and gasoline. A -line from you will bring yon catalogues, facts and figures, and we will also tell you where the tractors may be seen. Address the International Harvester Company of America ikmffmMl Portland Ore. Chimpua Decrbf McCtmlck Whrattt Otlone PUao 7, Imaclne her lov when she finds It Is chocolates Send to Modern Confection ery Comoanv. Portland. Orej con. 5 ' Modern Sweets" seals cliDDed from the enclo- i IV 71 1' ' lure found in all packages of i ' Modern products, or 1U cents fttamn nr Aiin) fnr ruvttaop mnA full nmnlji . i ii i . r Box Of vogani mocoiatei wnroe scm you tree. THfil GUARANTEE. Vofim UkxoUm ire nide by expert, from the bttt mite mil. It tor 9nj mwn uicy no bui five gunman ycncci EUfiacuon, we SLOCUM DRUG CO. 'WW Ufa PALM has a complete line of CONFECTIONS, CIGARS and SOFT DRINKS Try our Fop Corn always fresh. R. M. HART Goto the Jack Rabbit Garage AND BE WISE , Headquarters for Gasoline and Oil. All kinds of Re pair Work by Skilled Mechanics. - GENERAL LIVERY SERVICE SPECIAL ATTENTION TO TRAIN CALLS NORTON WINNARD, Prop. Agents for MAXWELIr"25" May Street, rear of the Palace Hotel June Bulletin of Oregon Agricultur al College Is Work of Art Say Critics. WVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVWVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVViryyv People's Cash Market Now open for business under the manage ment of an experienced butcher. All kinds of Fresh and , Cured Meats, Poultry, Lard Highest cash price paid for Stock, Hides and Pelts BRING US YOUR POULTRY HENRY SCHWARZ, Proprietor Evening Telegram. It simply delights the eye. That is the verdict which any person of taste and discrimination will render after he lias glanced through the last Oregon Agricultural College Bulle tin. It is a work of art. You are impressed with that fact as your eye falls on the front cover, and the im pression stays with you until the last leaf Is turned. v There are ninety-six pages In this June Bulletin and every page illus trated with the finest sort of photo gravure. It is a comprehensive and most attractive pictorial presentation of all the college activities. The ac companying text Is hardly needed to arouse enthusiasm concerning the quality of work done at the Oregon Agricultural Cplloge. The excellence of workmanship In this little book is In itself the best sort of assurance, if such assurance were needed, of the high character of achievement at this agricultural school. The tone of it is that of me chanical and artistic thoroughness. The person who examines It is con scious of having in hand a production created in an atmosphere of unusual intellectual vigor. High purpose is manifest on its every page, and there goes along with It the consciousness that that purpose is being attained. If any citizen of Oregon shall glance over this book and not be proud of the institution that printed it, we can only say there is something wrong about that man or women. We are not inclined to believe there is any such. We are proud of the Ore' gon Agricultural Colloge, as a matter of course, irrespective of this partic ular publication or any others it has put out, but we have In these the means of letting other people know why we are proud. This Bulletin is a piece of very high-class advertising tor the state. It is more than the us ual presentation of matter concerned with the fertility of the soil, the po tential wealth of our resources and the assured magnificence of our com mercial and Industrial future. It Is an undeniable testimonial of tim splendid things we are doing for the development of all that makes Ore gon a more desirable place In which to live. CLOI'DIXG THE ISSUE. The Oregonftin. The tactics of the campaign of Mr. Chamberlain and against Mr. Booth are being slowly revealed. They will be to shake the ghost of Cannonlsm Forakerlsm and Penroseism before the voter, With the expectation that he will be frightened away from sup port of the Republican candidate. The empty dinner pail is to be ig nored; the widespread industrial stagnation is to be termed a psy chological creation of a hectic imag ination; the Inveterate incompetence of the Democratic party for public administration is to be discreetly passed over. We are to hear about the wicked Cannon, back in Illinois, the corrupt Penrose, far off in Penn sylvania, and the unscrupulous For aker, 3000 miles away in Ohio. But the Oregon campaign for Sen ator does not hinge on Cannon, a castoft relic of the old regime, or on Foraker, repudiated by his party at home and discredited by the people everywhere, or on Penrose, fighting desperately for his political life against the pure Pinchot and an al most unknow n Democrat. If the peo ple of Pennsylvania, In their sover eign capacity as rulers of their own state, should want Penrose for Sen ator, Penrose is the man they want. If Mr. Booth is to be loaded down with Cannon, Foraker and Penrose, how will Mr. Chamberlain avoid re sponsibility for the odious Boss Mur phy, or Boss Taggart, or Boss Guffey, or Boss Sullivan, all of whom are much alive and in full control of the Democratic party in their respective states? How indeed? But of course neither Cannon, uor Foraker, nor Penrose, nor Taft, nor LaFollette, nor Roosevelt on the one hand, nor Murphy, nor Taggart, nor Sullivan, nor Guffey on the other, are real issues in Oregon. It is utterly futile to drag In such bugaboos. The electorate knows fetter. The issue between Mr. Booth and Mr. Chamberlain is not personal. It is wholly political. It will be deter mined on the merits of the respective principles for which the two men stand. The people of Oregon in No vember will be called upon to answer the following questions: Shall we support the Republican party and what it stands for through the election of Mr. Booth? Or shall wo support the Democratic party and what It stands for through the elec tion of Mr. Chamberlain? If the people of Oregon are satis fled with the policies of the present Democratic National Administration and their effects, they will re-elect Mr. Chamberlain. If they are not, they will elect Mr. Booth. Hood Hiver Votes In Favor of $75, 0(H) Koad Bonds For Colum bia Highway. Portland, July 21, 19H, (Special) By a vote of 1652 to 428 the peo ple of Hood River county last week authorized a bond issue of $75,000 for the completion of the Columbia River Highway through their section of the state. Every precinct In the county, except one, gave a big ma jority for the bonds. In addition to this section of Hood River, Columbia county has issued bonds to the extent of $360,000 for ood roads, 260,000 of which will be applied to the Columbia River High way; Clatsop county will spend $315,000 on her section of the same road; Multnomah county is spending $400,000 in cutting the road from Portland to the eastern line of the county, and it will spend about $200,- 000 more before the work Is finished; Wasco county has but two miles of the highway and is working on that little link now. The highway to the east of Portland will unite' the Co lumbia River district wltii Central Oregon, while on the west, it will be a beautiful road down the Columbia about as far down the coast as the Tillamook county line. I Tobacco and Cigar Salesman want ed to Advertise. Experience unnec essary. $100 monthly and traveling expenses. Advertise Smoking, Chew ing Tobacco, Cigarettes, Cigars. Send 2c. stamp for full particulars. HEMET TOBACCO CO., New York. Within the past few days work has been started on the building for the new fish cannery and cold storage plant to be located at Bay City. The building will be 64 x 98 geet and among other up-to-date facilities will Include an ice-making plant with a capacity of ten tons per day. The building will be used for handling Tillamook Bay salmon, both fresh and canned, and its estimated cost will be between $25,000 and $20,000. In addition to the main building, the company will erect a dock 32 x 80 feet for the accomodation of the fishermen, and will also build drying racks for nets. The recent decision of the Supreme Court confirming the validity of the $1,250,000 of bonds issued by Mult nomah county, clears the way for the dlsposol of the bonds and the com mencement of actual construction of the great Interstate Bridge across the Columbia. The bonds will be adver tised for sale at once and no difficulty In finding a market for them is anticipated. It is announced by Manager O. M Plummer, of the Northwest Interna tional Livestock Exposition that Mon tana is preparing to send a team of agricultural college students to the show, to be held In Portland Decem ber 7-12, to take part in the stock judging contest, and it is also ex pected that state will send a number of carloads of fancy livestock to the show. It is proposed by the Salem Conv mercial Club that the commercial bodies of the state charter a steamer next Summer to transport the various booster organizations to the Pana ma-Pacific Exposition, the vessel to be used as a hotel, or club room, dur ing the stay in San Francisco, and to be so decorated with banners and electric signs as to be a floating ad vertisement of Oregon. The newspaper is the representa tive of the home community abroad. It's pages reveal the whole life of the community. The advertisements tell of it's commercial prosperity and the news service reveals the doings of the people. Since the pages reflect the entire community life, it is pro per that the people should assist the publisher in making the home paper newsy and a financial success. The printing of a newspaper is an expen sive proposition, a fact which many men have learned to their own sor row. Hence it behooves every citi zen to have pride In the home paper by subscribing for It, by reading it, and by contributing a news item oc casionally. McMinnville News-Re porter. Echo News: W. J. Wattenburger is carrying his left hand in a sling caused by blood poison. While work ing around his home Mr. Wattenbur ger received a small scratch on one of his fingers and is was only a short time until he was compelled to go and receive medical attention. He is reported on the improve. OWN YOUR OWN HOME. Every man shouid own his own home. Rent Is a dead horse. You are beter contonted and will save more money If you own your own home. Paying for a home on terms Is the same as putting your money In a savings bank only better. We are offering some town homes at pri ces and terms that ought to appeal to you. Come and see us. SAIEAD & CRAWFORD. 320 ACRES FOR SALE One hundred and thirty acres In cultivation, plenty of running water, all fenced. Fair buildings. 190 acres of good pasture, 2 acres in alfalfa 3 acres more that can be put In alfalfa. 130 acres In wheat and oats goes with this place. $20 por acre buys this place four miles from Heppner. One-half cash, balance torms to suit. Smead and Crawford. , 1111 I ALCOHOL 3 PEH renin Afoelab!eftraMinnriiric. siraUatuiSfeFoorfamiRitf,, (ingtlKSiomactsandBowlsof Promotes DignttonOeetfuf ness and Restlontains neiitw Opiuru-Morphine norMiiteraL NOT NARCOTIC. JUtittA- AperfiectBetwdy rorOmsflfa-1 non . sour aiDmauiuiaiiiiu Worms jConvnlsKmsJeATrisfr nessandLoss OF Sleep. ruSimfc Si$nanm of NEW YORK. of For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the ,, Signature AU W In Use For Over Thirty Years Exaat Copy of Wrapper. thi eiTun eoaMMT. an vem am. EVERYBODY is using Fruit Jars At this Season of the Year We have a large stock of the staples, such as Economy, Ball Mason and Special Masons Also Jar Tops, Rubbers, Parafine, Clamps, etc. Phelps Grocery Co. THE LIFE CAREER "Schooling in youth should Invariably be directed to prepare a person in the best way for the best permanent occupation for which he la capable.1' President C. W. Hliot. This is the Mission of the OREGON AGR1CULTURALC0LLEGE Forty-sixth School Year Opens SEPTEMBER i8th, 1914 Write for illustrated ioo-page Book let, "THE LIFE CAREER," and for Cata log containing full Information. Degree Courses AGRICULTURE i Agronomy, Animal Husbandry, Dairy Hus bandry, Poultry Husbandry, Horticulture. Agriculture for Teachers. FORESTRY, Logging Engineering, home Eco nomics: Domestic Science, Domestic Art, ENGINEERING: Electrical, Irrigation, Highway, Mechanical, Chemical, Mining. Ceramics. COMMERCE. PHARMACY. INDUSTRIAL ARTS. Vocational Courses-Agriculture, Dairy ing, Home Makers' Course, Industrial Arts, Forestry, Business Short Course. School of Music Piano, String, Band, Voice Culture. Farmers Business Course by Mil Free. Address THB REGISTRAR, (tw-7-18 to Corvallis, Oregon Subscribe for The Gazette-Times Sow $1.50 Per Year. REDFRONT Livery &Feed Stables Willis Stewart Prop. First Class Livery Rigs kept constantly on hand and can be furnished on short not ice to parties desiring to drive into the interior. First class Hacks and Buggies 'all around and see us. Ye cater to the : : : Commercial Travel ers and Camping Parties and can furnish rigs and driver on short notice. HEPPNER, ORE.