THK i ZETTK-TIIKS, HKPPM'R. ORK.. THl RSIUY. APRIL 1, 11)15 in,r. i tw . w " See the New Land scape Pictures in the Big Assortment Something Different It will do you good to see them and the prices will surprise you Orders Taken For Portrait Enlargement 1915 CALENDARS for distribution. Call and get one if you have not done so CASE COMPANY Tiir rnvi'TTETP I nr. iiftLUi limn The Hepo-ier Gazette. Established MThe Heppner Times. Established No vember IS lM'T Consolidated 1- ebi u.u y lo, 1 a.. V A V T I j K f K V W K O K U Editor and Proprietor. Issuedevcrv" Thursday morning, and 1 entered at" the Postofflee at Heppner, Oregon, as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Tear Six Months -rt Three Months "V Single Copies JJJLLL ADVERTISING RATES SOMETHING TO TAKK HOMF. Displav, transient, running less than one month, first insertion, per Inch 25e- subsequent insertions. 12e. .lis; lav, regular, 12,c-: loc?ls' inseruons. i' lions, per line, 5c; cliurcn Bora .. all advertising or eiunu. conducted for pay, regular rates. mobkow rorxTY official papbk Thursday, April 1, 1915, Of course yoa are a booster for good roads; and you will get a ticket to the banquet to-morrow evening. There was some real life and ging er to that Monday evening meeting of the Commercial Club. Men this is as it should be; keep it up. When Heppner gets really awake, there will be something doing. The first big job before us is to improve the roads leading to the city. At tend the meeting at the Palace Hotel to-morrow evening and get in touch with what is doing. The Gazette-Times is thirty-two vears old to-day. The paper long since laid aside its swadling clothes, and has assumed the proportions of a grown-up. Thirty-two years ago the Gazette started as the first paper in Heppner and it has been on the job ever since. In February, 1912, it was consolidated with the Heppner Times by the present management, and we feel proud of the fact that the paper is now at the head of the pro cession in this neck o' the woods and has a standing with the people that canot be shaken. To our friends and patrons we give all the credit, feeling as we do that we lack in ability to properly express our sense of grati tude. We enter the new year with brighter prospects and greater hopes of success. A fire entailing a loss of $6500 vis ited the town of Fossil one night last week. The loss was partially cover ed by insurance in the sum of $2500. The property destroyed will be re built at once, and in a much more substantial and attractive manner. The New Star theater being com pleted by Mr. J. B. SparkB is a show house that would be a credit to a much larger town than Heppner. In this move Mr. Sparks has shown com mendable enterprise and his efforts will no doubt be amply appreciated by the citizens of our city. The people of Pendleton have ar ranged to attend the celebration of the opening of the Celilo canal in large numbers. Our neighbors over that way are sure that an open Col umbia is going to be a good thing and they are rejoicing over it. That Heppner is not suffering from a business depression is shown by the fact that there is not a vacant business building in town and the building bee is buzzing louder every day. Let us get ready for clean-up day and have this job out of the way be fore the arrival of "Good Roads Day." The question of trading at home, and of patronizing the home mer chant, the local producer, and all that is always a live one, and it is not in frequently that the writer is led to look upon but one side. The follow ing from the hand of Dro. Bede, of the Cottage Grove Sentinel, presents the question from a little different angle: "The calendars of a certain insur ance company are prominently dis played around the state. The com pany advertises that the stock is own ed by Oregon men and that its money is invested in Oregon property. The biggest display line says, 'Keep Your Money in Oregon.' A very reason able and proper appeal. If all in surance purchased by Oregonians was placed with Oregon companies, quite a big business would be bunt up in the state and the people buying in surance would receive other direct benefits besides insurance protection. What is true of insurance is true of all other tilings, so we were struck by a small line at the botom of the cal enndar which gave the information that the advertising and the calendar I were designed and produced by a St. 1 Louis, Mo., advertising agency. "This shows the inconsistency of a great many people. This insurance company used the 'trade-at-home' slogan to appeal for business for it ' self, but it overlooked the fact that if all the printing purchased in Oregon were given to Oregon printing offices that there would be a great many more people here to buy insurance, i "Not long ago at a meeting of the Lane County Horticultural Society i the president of the society made the ' assertion that Lane County products and manufactures were not being patronized by Lane County people. He stated that this was true of the products of the Eugene Fruit Grow ers' Association. Here again is in- consistency. We make a big whoop j and hurrah about building up a market for the products of our farms. Then we ourselves buy the products of farms of other states and depend upon other states to take our pro ducts. 'Complaint made concerning the products of the Eugene Fruit Grow ers' Association is probably equally true about the products of the Cot tage Grove Cannery. The manager of the cannery made the statement that not a sale of the products of the cannery had been made direct to Cottage Grove merchants, although some of the goods shipped to Port land had probably come back here. "The farmer hollers because the merchants of -his home town some times buy outside products that could be bought from him. Then some of these very farmers send away for things that could have been bought just as cheaply at home. If all the goods purchased in the Cottage Grove country were bought of Cottage Grove merchants there would be a larger city here with better markets and better stocks of goods and the price of farm land would advance ac cordingly. "The merchant does not think it fair for others to send away for things that could be bought just as cheap, or nearly as cheap, from mer chants who are paying taxes and building schools and roads for the benefit of patrons of mail-order houses and then some of these very merchants, just to save a few pennies, will send away for things which some other merchant stocks and pays taxes on. "The newspaper hollers for home trade louder than any of them, yet half the newspapers of Oregon are printed on paper that is made in the East. "Consistency, thy name is mud! "What we need is a thoroughly or ganized ptate-witle trade - at r home movement with a trade-at-home so ciety in every community and hamlet and th'3 first and greatest tenet of the order should be that the 'Kerp-Your-Money-in-Oregon' slogan is just as good for one as the other." Fl'Tl'KE MEAT SIPPLY. From the very earliest Bible times down to the present day, the human race have been meat eaters, when they could get it. Vegetarians have propounded their theories, and point ed to long life as a reward for ab staining from flesh, but the red-cor-puscled, hungry man will not forsake his meat to any perceptive extent On the contrary, modern methods of canning and cold storage have brought the shipments of meats to such a high degree of certainty and perfection, its consumption ha? greatly increased. City dwellers arc large consumers, and our cities have doubled in population the pask gener ation, while our export trade lias grown from almost nothing to im mense proportions during the period named. While this demand has been in creasing, the system under which our beef was produced has largely van ished. Twenty years aso millions of acres of western range were as free to use as the air, and ranchers and cattle companies by the hundreds grazed their stock by the tens of thousands. These vast herds, ad vancing leisurely, slowly grazed their way from one good feeding place to another; and, after a herd was once started, the comparatively triftying cost of herding was all it cost, while the production and shipping went on year after year. Now conditions are :adically changed. The vast ranges have been surveyed, sold, fenced, and passed from government ownership to individuals. It is no longer pos sible to drive the herds from .one feeding place to another, both, on ac count of obstructions and inability to graze while on the way. The evident readjustment must come through a reversal of the for mer system. Instead of one man marketing 5000 head a year, there will be 5000 owners producing each one beef per year. Somo farmers, of course, will market mora but the iireat, reliable, steady flow of beef production will ultimately go to the packing houses in a vast stream made up of innumerable small branches. Under these conditions one or two beeves will live on what is now prac tically going to waste, and with the extra care which is given small unitB the weight and quality will profit. There will still be some cattle kings in each of the western states, but the great abundance can be maintained indefinitely through a million small producers. H. H. Windsor in April Popular Mechanics. Clem-up Suggestions, We have been handed the follow ing suggestions for (Mean-up Week, May 4 to 11, and they might be fol lowed out with good results by all of us who would like to make onr town i cleaner and therefore, a more healthy town In which to live. 1. Take away all the ashes and trash from your back yard immed iately. Send your rubbish to the dumping ground. 2. Suggest to several men with teams that they drive through the alleys with a sign, "Clean-up Wag on" on their wagons; also a bell call ing attention. People are only too glad to pay such a man for hauling away their trash. 3. Burn all rubbish that will burn. Clean your vacant lots and alley-ways. 4. Make your street and parking look as trim and well kept as possi ble. i. Refrain from throwing old pa per, banana and orange skins into tho streets. He f Now open for business with new equipment for Automobile Repair Work. GOOD SERVICE GUARANTEED c 191 We are Agents for the B 1 1 ifiUf and carry a complete line of Ford repairs as well as accessories for other cats. Your Patronage is Invited all & vance, props, ftf A3N STREET HEPPNER pU.- gJ.- IG AUCTION SALE Will be held Saturday, April 3rd, at Healy's Livery Stable, Heppner, Oregon LOOK OUT FOR POSTERS 6. Plant some grass and flower seeds to make your home beautiful. 7. If your store front is dingy, paint it. 8. If you have unsightly old bug gies or old traps in your back yards, remove them. x 9. If there are unnecessary, un sightly tumbled down sheds in your back yard, tear them down. They de tract from the beauty of your home and the town. Open spaces and fresh air are better. 10. If your walk la an eyesore to those traveling over it, repair it or build a new one. 11. Clean out the alloys back of the business houses at once. By all means do your part to help make your town cleaner and more at tractive. Signed, MRS. CHARLES H. CASTNER, State Chairman Civic Committee Oregon Federation of Woman's Clubs. It will take money to build good roads, hot air won't do It. FOR. SALE. One red brood sownd 8 pigs; also one fresh cow. Inquire of E. C. Mil ler, 7 miles northeast of Lexington. WANT K I) . Wheat farms for owners only, for cash or in exchange for Portland property or Willamette Valley farms. Address Sam Hewey, care of HA HTM. N-THOM PSON' BANK 219 Stark St. Portland, Oregon. FOR SPRING SOWING We are ready to supply you with selected new crop seed. For over two generations we have built up a reputation for dependability. Our stock this year Is fully up to the high stnndnrd we set, and we arc better equipped than ever to herve you-and serve you well. Marquis Wheat For Spring I'lnntlnff Tills splendid new wheat won the $10(m prize at tite New York Agricul tural Show as the best wlieat grown on the Con tineiitu of North and South America. Won the ?3H)0 priae of the Inter national Dry Farming Congress at Letlihridge, 11U2, anil the Sweepstak es at Tulsa, Oklahoma, Dry Farming Congress In 11)13. You should plant this earliest nnd heaviest yielding hard sprint? wheat of highest mill ing and baking qualities. Price 4 per I (Ml llm., f, o. Ii. I'ortlfintl. Oderbrucker IIAItl.KY A pedigreed strain of six row barley, considered tho earliest maturing and must prolific of all bar leys. We offer genuine stock of our own grow ing. 1'rlee fli.'tl per 100 IIn., f. i. h. rortlfiml. Shadeland Hrvi Ontii for Spring Plant ing. MAil HKH iy MVF.TV DAYS. Won first prize at the Oregon State Fair ev ery year since 1H02. First at N. P 1. n n ,1 Show, HU3-14, over $700 in prize ey irom one exhil season, at the big in iiib unueo. Bla Canada. Yon Can llnlse the ( ron on the l,nnl. SIIni;l,AM) ( hnllenge, :i.2B prr 100 IIih. Kcllpw $4 per 100 IIik. Ilium, $4 per 1(10 llin. V. O. II. POIITLAND. For description and plii nllir Information ee general catalogue it one n unrn shows If J.ffhp AftflfTr '" aml ' JVrsrk ill 1915 CATALOGUE li11," a" t,,e lem"S varieties of grains, grass jio vninuuuuu es forage crops, etc., as well as all Held a id fan PORTLAND SEED CO. PORTLAND, OREGON