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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1914)
I THK GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPXER. OKE.. THURSDAY. OCT. 1. 1!I4 PAGE FOm Q: ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRA ORDINARY! We have just received the Ex clusive Agency for the Chase & Sanborn COFFEES This ranks without a peer the United States over GIVE IT A TRIAL PHELPS GROCERY COMPANY. REDFRONT Livery & Feed Stables WILLIS STEWART, Proprietor. First Class livery Rigs kept constantly on hand and can be furnished on short no tice to parties desiring to drive into the interior. First class Hacks and Buggies Call arouRd and see us. "Ye cater to the Commercial Travel ers and Camping Parties and can furnish rigs and driv er on short notice. HEPPNER - OREGON Under Auspices Episcopal Diocese of Oregon FALL TERM OPENS Sept. 23rd, 1914. Grammar School and Colloge Pre paratory courses. School estate com prises 100 acres of fertile land. Complete gymnasium, indoor and outdoor athletics. Library, study halls, competent instruction in all brandies. Send for rates and book let: "Where Boys are trained to think." Address! BISHOP SCOTT SCHOOL, Yamhill, Oregon FREE FREE Memoirs of Napoleon In Three Volumes This man caused the last general European war. His personal memoirs, written by his secretary, JBaron Dc Mcneval, are full of the most absorbing incidents especially in view of the present great Euro pean struggle. Just a hundred years ago, his ambi tions bathed the Continent in a sea of blood. France alone, under his leader ship, fought Germany, Russia, Austria, Italy, and Great Britain and -v:o:i. Get these Memoirs Free Byspecial arrangement with the pub lishers of COLLI tR'S, The National cekly, we arc enablid to clfer a lim ited number of tiicso three-volume sets of the Memoirs of Napoleon free with a year's subscription to Collier's and this paper. The offer is strictly limited to got advantage of it you must act promptly. Sherlock Holmes Stories Exclusively in Collar's A!I the S'lerlock HiAmw stories published in 1915 tvilj a p.:;iu--i ei!uiivel, i;i C4 ier's. 1 he "Last-trimi'i."" pic'tirr, ,,f t!ie Fiiwpenn War will aperir every week in the photoarjphic jecu-m uf C'.-l;;er s. The finest fiction ril!en wilt appear each week in short story and serial t,rm. Mark Sullivan's timely KMitmials and widely quoted Comments on Congress will continue to be an exclusive feature. Special Offer to our Readers Your own h' me piper ar t COI-l.tER S. The National Weekly, toce'her w:n t;,c iliree volumes of Napoleon's Memoirs - all c.t 'hce y u iTet for tnc p;ice of Collier's alone, plus to cover the cost of packing ant shaping ihe Memoirs. Send your order to this cftice non . If you are already a rubscrber, your .nib-criprion will be ex tended tor one year from its piesent date of expiration. COLLIER'S $2.50 f 'petial combination J price, including trr , 1 three-vo I it T' 11 Fft 1 mree-voluine i "U uaztue-1 lines i.au umoin.nMpti' On Saturday of last week the Coos Hay band, of forty pieces, was enter tained by the Portland Commercial Club. During their stay they enter tained Portland at a public concert, thus bringing Coos Hay prominent ly to the front and offering some of the finest music heard in the city for many months. 0 Per tent Money 0 Per Cent. Loans may be obtained for any purpose on acceptable realestate se curity; liberal privileges; corres pondence solicited. A. C. AGENCY COMPANY, 758 Gas, Electrical Bid, Denver, Col. 440 Phelan Bid., San Franctsca, Cal. STATE INDUSTRIAL HEWS hiit lSuIUIiiigs mill Industries .are Doing to Make (irenter Pay roll for Oregon. rrinoville needs more modern houses. Gresham will soon have a new cannery. Pilot Rock has great need of more dwellings. A new Catholic church is being built at Adams. Albany is calling for bids for a new $50,000 high school. The Heppner Milling Co. distrib utes $10,000 annually in wages. The new Pendleton hotel costing $130,000 lias been opened to the public. Work on the Sutherlin, Coos Bay & Eastern Railroad is being pushed rapidly. The Sutherlin Railroad has been granted a franchise on Sutherlin streets. McCully & Rumble of Joseph have just completed a concrete office building. Joe Knowles got what he went af ter publicity, the greatest Oregon product. Portland will soon erect another 24 classroom school at a cost of $160,000. The Willamette Pacific expects to have rails to Tidewater before the rainy season sets in. The Marion county court house is to have a new heating plant 'install ed by T. M. Barr of Salem. Quarterly payments of taxes is a popular movement that would re lieve industries in a practical way. European War has demoralized the fruit industry and freak labor laws are crippling the canneries at home. The Lebanon Lumber Co. will be gin soon to ship logs to their mill at that town ami the mill will be run to capacity. Proposed plans for, the improve ments of the old St. Johns road out of Portland calls for the expenditure of $175,000. Cyanide jumping from 19 to 75 cents a pound on account of the war is hampering the mining industry in Baker county. During the harvest season to save crops farmers must work 12 to 14 hours. What will an 8-hour law do to the farming Industry? The Standard Oil Co. is preparing to erect tanks at Lebanon making this point the distributing center for that part of the country. Portland Catholics are planning a home for Archbishop Christie and other buildings for 1915, totaljnr provements to cost $250,000. Win, Kyle & Sons Co. salmon can nery at Florence has started opera tion and will distribute $20,000 to the workers uiHng the season. The enactment of nearly tiiirty new laws on the ballot this year would be an industry at the expense of all the industries, says the Ore gon Manufacturer. The La Grande $60,000 Elks lodge will be erected by the Palmer Ellisen Co. of Portland. It will have Otis elevators and finished in Seattle terra cotta. The new Portland post office will have two floors devoted to mail work and seven floors of offices for the army of federal officials and com missioners at Portland. Pacific Coast Manufacturer: Gov ernment ownership of public util ities should not be used to break down investments of capital in public utilities if Oregon is to prosper. The state railroad commission lias protested against a three per cent tax on freight shipments as a meat!? of raising governmental revenue to offset the effects of the European war. Bids being received for the re construction of the headwords at the intake on the East Fork of Mood River and construction of Main can al for an approximate distance of six miles. Portland bankers recently re turned from the banking conference at Washington, D. C. state eastern factories are running night and day to fill orders brought about by the European war. The $75,000 rock crushing of the Cascade Construction Co. at Marion has begun operation with a payroll of 100 men at $6000 per month. It is expected to distribute 600,000 yards of crushed rock on the S. P. Co. tracks in Oregon. The Pacific Coast Condensed Milk Co. will Immediately proceed to en large its Hillsbora plant to meet the demands of the constantly increasing ing offerings of milk. The new building will be of concrete 140 x 140 and when completed will give the local plant a capacity of 200,000 pounds a day. Tubereulocis, for the most part, is a bad air disease. Plenty of fresh air at night will go a long way tow ard preventing this disease. The sleeping porch would almost stamp out "The White Plague." During the past two weeks the Portland office of the Oregon State Immigration Commission has bad a half-dozen men in the field listing farm lands for the benefit of pros pective settlers, securing accurate le gal descriptions, noting the physical character of the land and making a note of the price at which owners are willing to sell. These listings 'dem onstrate that there is available at the present time plenty of good, produc tive farm land at reasonable prices in nearly all seetlons of the state. GEORGE L. CLEAVER FOR CONGRESS THIS DIST. Campaign of Dry Congressional Cun- (lidnte Growing Strong. La Grande Observer. Indications from all over the dis trict are exceedingly favorable tow ard the election of Geo. L. Cleaver to Congress. George Huntington Currey, Secretary of the Non-partisan Dry campaign to elect "Cleaver for Congress" says That under pres ent conditions Cleaver would carry a majority of the counties and would win by a safe margin. Geo. L. Cleaver is the "Dry Candi date" for representative in Congress from the Second District of Oregon. He has been a resident of Eastern Oregon for ten years and now has ex tensive banking and farming inter ests in Union county. Mr. Cleaver is a Trustee of Wil lamette University, is himself a col lege man and has ever taken a prom inent parti n church and state affairs. He is progressive in his ideas, public spirited, versed in the needs of con structive legislation and favors all movements for the moral and mate rial advancement of the people. Mr. Cleaver in his platform favors state and national prohibition, na tional woman s suffrage, improved labor conditions, direct power of peo ple in government, greater federal assistance for river and harbor de velopment in Oregon, expansion ot rural credits, conservation aiming at legitimate development, direct nom national initiative, referendum and ination and election of the president, recall, a non-partisan tariff board, loyalty to our public school system, International peace though arbitra tion, Oregon getting its snare of the National Irrigation and Reclamation Fund, and efficiency and economy in governmental administration and legislation. Mr. Cleaver believes in his plat form as outlined. If elected he will devote his entire ability to secure such legislation. Unquestionably he is the best qualified candidate to represent the Second District in Con gress. HOW YOU MAY AVOID THAT FALL COLD A Col.l is Xot a Trivial Disorder; Also it May !e Easily Avoided. By Dr. R. R. Daniels. The fall is a favorite time for colds, largely because at this time we both increase our food, especially our heavy foods, out of proportion to what can be readily used up in the body, and we close up our houses and by robbing (he body of fresh air we decrease our power to burn up the heavy foods. The unused food in the body and the lessened activity of the body tissues, lower the body's disease-resisting power and a cold is the common result. A cold is not as trivial a matter as most people suppose; not only is it a warning that the body's disease-resisting power is low, but many ser ious diseases follow in the wake of an ordinary cold. A cold is a dis order to be avoided; incidentally colds can be prevented. The first essential in avoiding colds is not to overeat, and to keep the digestion in good condition by eating only easily digested foods, avoiding fried foods and pastries. Chronic gas in the bowels, a coated tongue and a bad taste in the mouth all indicate that food is failing to be digested, is fermenting and decomposing and poisoning the body. Such a distur bance in the body frequently gets tlie system ripe for a cold. The next essential in avoiding colds is plenty ot fresh air. Colds are prevalent only during the time of the year when we are "housed up." Ventilate your house or office l.y opening wide the windows for a few minutes several times dally. Get plenty of fresh air at, night. Out door sleeping is almost a certain pie ventative for colds. The worst colds of the season are ften contracted just as the change is made from light to heavy under wear. It is a mistake to wrap the body in heavy, woolen underwear, to overheat the skin and render it ensitive to weather changes. Our winter underwear should be cotton and of .fairly light weight. The skin hould be kept active by a daily sponge bath or a thorough rubbing with a dry towel. Such care or the skin will keep it active, An active Hkin adjusts the body to various weather changes, and along with fresh air and proper food conditions will positively prevent colds. The Bend Commercial Club has taken up with Senator Lane the mat ter of expending $450,000 on the Deschutes Reclamation Project. The tib asserts that the amount allott ed to the Deschutes Valley by Sec- etary Lane, of the Department of he Interior, will be lost to Oregon nless it is definitely, assigned to some project before January 1. I Will Give $1000 If I Fail to Cure Any Cancer or Tumor. Noknlfe.no pain, no pay until cured. Any lump in woman' breast Is cancer if hard; it always poisons deep glands under the arm and Kills qutcKiy. Any tumor, lump, or sore on the lip, face or body long is cancer. An Island plant plaster and blood specific makes the cure. Writ ten absolute guaranteo. 120 pniro book tent tree. Tostimok nialaof lO.OflO cured iworn to. ace some; oo XRay swindle, "strictly reliable." Andrew old Dr. & Mrs. Dr. Cham-ley t Co. 436 Valencia St.. San Francisco, Cal. Kindly mill this to someone with etneer. U, S. cancer cure, eppner Flouring Mill SAVES MONEY FOR EVERY USER OF FLOUR IN MORROW COUNTY. ' Our WHITE STAR and DIAMOND brands are made from selected Bluestem. Every sack guaranteed by us, and your money cheerfully refunded if goods not found satisfactory. -:- -:- -:- .;. .;. NONE BETTER-Ask Your Grocer For It GRAHAM, WHOLE WHEAT, CREAM MIDDLINGS, SPECIALY CLEANED ROLLED BARLEY AND ALL OTHER MILL PRODUCTS ALWAYS ON HAND. Heppner Milling Go. BUYERS TO SHARE IN PROFITS LOWER PRICES ON FORD CARS Effective from August 1, 1914, to August 1, 1915, and guaranteed against any reduction during that time. TOURINO CARS $505 RUNABOUT - - $515 TOWN CARS $75 F. O. B. Heppner, all cars fully equipped. ' (In the United States ot America only.) Further we will be able to obtain the maximum ef ficiency In our factory production, and the mini mum cost in our purchasing and "sales departments if we reach an output of 300,000 cars between the above dates. And should we reach this production we agree to pay as the buyer's share from $40 to $60 per car (on o about August 1, 1915) to every retail buy er who purchases a new Ford car between August "l, 1914, and August 1, 1915. For further particulars regarding these low prices and profit-sharing plan, call on or write ALBERT BOWKER, AGENT At Heppner Garage. Heppner Farmers Union Warehouse Co. ?Wool, Choice Flour Grain $5.00 per bbl. Wood, Coal, Cedar Posts and Rolled Barley Best prices paid for Hides and Pelts CITY MEAT MARKET KINSMAN & HAM,. , ... . Best in the line of meats handled and at the lowest possible prices. Butchering in the hands of a butcher of long experience. FINEST HOME-MADE LAUD AND FRESH AND CURED MEATS HIDES AND PELTS BOUGHT FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF HEPPNER ESTABLISHED IN 1887 We make banking our business. A sound and efficient home institution, is our purpose. Capital and undivided profits .'. .'. $140,000