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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1915)
THK GAZETTE-TIMES. HEFPNER. ORE., THVRSDAY. Jl'NE 24, 1915 Pin? THREE PROFESSIONAL COLUMN Dr. H. T. ALLISON Physician & Surgeon Office In Gunn Bulldlns. HKPPNER. OREGON Dr. N. E. WINNARD Physician & Surgeon Office in Fair Building HEPPNER - - OREGON Dr. F. N. CHRIS TENSEN DENTIST Offices! over the New Postoffice. HEFPNER, OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. Physician & Huigeon Office in Patterson Drug Store HEPPNER :-: :-: OREGON Dr. JOHN B. DYE DENTIST Room 16, lone Hotel, lone, Ore. C. E. WOODSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office In Plae Hotel, Heppner, Oregon SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTOTtNKY.AT-LAW Offce on wetJt end ot May Street HEPPNER, OREGON S. E. NOTSON ATTRNEY.AT-LAW Office u Court House, Heppwc:. F. H. XOBINSON LAWYER IONS -: :-: -: OREEON Kn&ijpenberg & Johnson ATTORNEYS AUaiCOUNCELORS AT LW IONK :-: :-: :-: :-: 0RH30N CLYEE and DICK WELLS SHAVING PARLORS Three fioors south of Postoffice. Shaving 25c Haircuttin 36c RsiJuroom In connection. PATTERSON & ELDER 2 Doers North Palace Hotel. TUMORAL ARTISTS FINE BATHS SHAVING U J. H. BODJE MERC1UNT TAILOR HEPPNER :: :-: :-: OREGON FOR FINE UP-TO-DATE HOMES See T. G. DENNISEE ARCHITECT and CONTRACTOR W.L. SMITH ABSTRACTER Only complete set ot abstract books In Morrow County. HEPPNER :-: :-: :: OREGON CLOTHES CLEANING AND PRESSING MRS. G. A. FISCHER Upper Main Street, Heppner, Ore. "Tailoring That BatiiSes" LOUIS PEARSON MERCHANT TAILOR HEPPNER :-: :-: :-: OREGON E. E. VICKERS PAINTER Phone 562 HEPPNER OREGON PRINTING TO PLEASE YOU. This is the specialty of THE U.-T. PRINTERY. Anything from a card to a catalogue. no more necessary than Smallpox. Arm? experience bu drmonstratol the almost miraculous effi cacy, ind humlesroett.af Antityphoid Vaccination. Be Taccinated NOW by yom physician, you and your family. It Is more vital than house insurance. Ask your physician, druggist, or send for "Have you bad Typhoid?" telling of Typhoid Vaccine, results from use, and danger from Typhoid Carriers. THE CUTTEIt LA5ORAT0RY, BERKELEY, CAL VaoStlCIH VACC1MM BltU US UHKI . S. MV. 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 arouad and see us. We cater to the Commercial Travel ers and Camping Parties and can furnish rigs and driv er on short notice. HEPPNER OREGON For Sale. 75 cords wood, $2.50. 3000 fsssts 4c each. Near Slflcum Mill. Raul them yourself. PHELPS "GROCERY CO. THE CONFECTIONERY HARDMAX OREGON . WILL SERVE JOE CREAM HERE AFTER ON SATURDAYS AND SUNDAYS. COMPLETE IONK OF rONFEC TIOXERt FRUITS IN SEASON. W. H. AYERS, Proprietor -HONEY" The mint makes It and under the terms of the CONTINENTAL MORT GAGE COMPASIY you ran secure it at 6 per cent for any legal purpose on approved real estate. Uternis easy, tell us your wants and we will co operate with yotu. PETTY COMP1NY 513 Pen I) am Bias iDtnver, Colo. REDUCED PRITKS FOB ROUGH DRY WORK. We have reduced the price of Rough Dry work to 8 cents a pound. We iron all shnets, table cloths towells and other flat rork and starch and dry the other pieces ready to dampen and iron. No rough dry bundle taken for less than flftv cents. tf. HEPPNER LAUNDRY. TO AUTO SPEEDERS. It is very evident that many auto owners fail to observe the ordinance governing the speeding of machines. All such will take warning that the city ordinance will be strictly enforc ed, and all violators of the speed law will he brought to account. Please be governed accordingly nnd save trouble. W. W. SMEAD, Mayor. Kill The Flies. Now is the time to swat the flies. Kill one fly now and you will do bet ter than killing a thousand later. Clean up all filth, thereby destroy ing their breeding places. Every body get a swatter and kill the flies as they appear. DR. A. D. McMURDO, City Health Officer. ATTENTION MEMBERS FARMERS' UNION. The Semi-Annual meeting of the Morrow County Farmers' Union will be held on Saturday, June 26, at the hour of 1 o'clock P. M-, at the County Court House in Heppner, Oregon. It is earnestly desired that every local of the County be represented at this meeting. E. R. HUSTON, President R. W. TURNER, Secretary. Cheap House and Lot. For sale at a bargain. Rigflt for a small family. Good place for chick ens. See Smead & Crawford, NOTICE. The city council has ordered all past due accounts On the 1914 oiling bill, collected. Property owners who have failed to settle their accounts in this respect are asked to pay when the collector calls. tf. We have a fine new Bungalow, a good barn and two lots in Lents, Ore gon, valued at $6000 to trade for Morrow county land. If interested come and see us. This property is not over-priced. SMEAD & CRAWFORD. FOR TRADE. A good rooming house in La Grande for Morrow county property. 1 Inquire SMEAD & CRAWFORD. TYPHOIDs RED FRONT TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO IN HEPPNER The Heppner Gazette, June 26, 1890. W. R. Stokes, of Portland, who built the First National Bank build ing, at this place, has the contract for building the hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Blaekman and children leave Monday for San Fran cisco, where Mrs. Blaekman and the children will remain for the summer. The senator will return in a few weeks. Col. J. W. Reddington got back to old scenes in the Heppner country last Saturday evening. This week lie leaves for Desolation lake whore Fred Wilmarth and Martin Anderson are each seeking health, and at the same time industriously presiding over the destinies of a band of sheep at the rate of $35 per month and grub. The contest between Joe Gibson and L. W. Barnett last week, for the office of justice of the peace, Lexing ton precinct, was decided in favor of Gibson. According to the count, Bar nett was the winner, but it appears that a ticket which should have been thrown out was counted for him. Judge Mitchell so decided, and there fore the election stood a tie. They then drew straws and Joe pulled the long one. The little son of Thomas Kimsey was thrown from a horse up Willow creek last February, sustaining a fracture of the skull in the back part of the head, and although receiving no medical attention, has entirely re covered. The extent ot the Injury was not known until recently. A piece of the skull the size of a half dollar is entirely gone. The child's recovery, under the tircumstances is quite remarkable. On last Saturday Evening while the Heppner train "was nearing lone, it ran into a band of horses. Om three vear old Colt vas knocked from the track, breaking one fore leg and oth erwlse badly using him up. The train was storpied and the engineer called for a 'gun to kill the animal butt here wars not a gun on the train so the fireman finally succeeded in killing the -poor brute w5th a sledge hammer. A mule tied to a nearby fence became frightened, pulling up the post he was tied to and went tearing around through the brush kicking at the post tied to him, much to the amusement of the passengers. This morning as the family of Wm Rush were sitting down to break' fast, Mrs. Itush discovered that the house was on fire. The alarm was given and a crowd of excited people soon gathered, but the fire had gath ered such headway before being dis covered that It was almost impossible to extinguish U, ana had It not been for the heavy rain yesterday and last night, which soaked everything so completely, the house could not have been saved, at all, for when discover ed the whole npstalrs was ablaze. Mr. Rush heing in Portland, there was no' one at home but Mrs. Rush and Mr. and Mrs. Crabtree, and the wonder is that the whole house was not burned before assistance arrived. The fire started up stairs over the kit chen from a defective flue. Oregon Dairymen Should Raise Their Orni Calves. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor vallis, June 21, "There Is only one practical way for the dairymen to in crease the herd and that is to raise his own calves," said Professor C. H. Eckles, professor of dairy husbandry, University of Missouri, when speak ing before the dairymen's conven tions during the Farmers' Week at the Oregon Agricultural College. "You can't buy good stock. Heifers should be raised with a good deal of care and atteniion. You say it costs too much. But I believe that under any ordinary conditions you can not afford not to do it. "They say about one cow out of every three is not going to be a prof itable animal. But success of the dairy farmer depends to no slight ex tent upon the careful rearing of the calves. The careful dairyman sees in every heifer calf the possibility of a cow that will not only replace a dis carded member of hie herd, but help to raise the average production. By proper care in the choice of the sire, and by careful attention to the rear ing of the calves, the dairyman who is compelled to start with a herd of ordinary quality may, within a few years, raise the average of produc tion of his herd to a marked extent. On the other hand, carelessness in breeding and in calf raising is bound to result disastrously to a herd, or at least to keep it at a standstill as far as improvement is concerned." Heroine "The Jungle" Coming. Marion Ballou Fiske, heroine in many human Interest tragedies staged In that part of the tenderloin of Chicago, the smoky city, made fa mous by Upton Sinclair as the "Jun gle" is coming. A student of human hearts, she plays upon the strings of emotion and sympathy and implants a message in the mind of her hearers as her fingers cartoon the greatest pictures of life and her ready wit, her versatile humor and crisp word painting keep her hearers engrossed. She unconsciously shapes their thots about the higher things In life. J. L. Wilkins is a philanthropist That stunt he performed on Tuesday of covering the crossings on Main and May streets with sand was Just the thing to abate the oil nuisance. The last oiling of the streets has failed to properly assimilate the dust and the stuff adheres to your soles and Is carried onto walks and inside business houses to such an extent as to he nnnnvine. This condition will undoubtedly be past in a few more days. STORIES WITH SMILES Old John, orangeman, that histori cal personage who presides over the affections of Harvard men, was show ing strangers through the yard at Harvard. On every hand they saw the college seal, bearing this motto: "f'hristo et Ecclesiae." Not being on speaking terms with Cicero, Caesar, and the other Romans, this did noth ing but to arouse their curiosity. Fi nally they asked John. "I say," said one of the visitors, "I see these w ords everywhere. Can you tell me what they mean?" John looked carefully at the Latin inscription, bit his pipe a little harrted, and then replied, gravely: "Oi don't jist know, but Oi fink it means 'To hell with Yale.' " San Francisco Argonaut. I i i "Don't you care for any postcards today?" asked the postal clerk, as lie handed the mau the stamp he ha:l re quested. "No, not today," said the man. "Or some sta'mped envelopes. We have some new ones." "No, thank you." "Would you like a mon ey order?" "No." "Or perhaps you would like to open a postal savings account." "I do not." "Then let me advise you to rent one of our let ter boxes." But the man had fled. "Who was that fellow, and why did you ask him all those questions?" S asked a fellow clerk. "That," the other clerk, "Is my briber. For years when he has shuved me he has bothered me with, recommendations of massages, shampoos, hair cuts and hair tonics. I am even with him! Philadelphia Ledger. i I ! i According to the story they are telling in New York the erman Kaiser was complimenting a soldier named Einstein, who had distinguished him self on the field of battle. "I am told," so the Kaiser is quoted as say ing, "that you are a very poor man and the only support of your aged parents. Because of your poverty you shall have your choice between taking the Iron Cross or a hundred marks." "Your majesty," inquired the canny hero, "vat Is the cross vorth in money?" "Notm uch," said the emperor; "it is the honor that makes it valuable. It Is worth per haps two marks." "Veil, den," said Private Einstein, drawing himself up to his full height and saluting, "1 vill take the Iron Cross and ninety-eight marks In cash!" San Francisco Ar gonaut. I I I I Struggling Author (who has just read his latest story to his wife) There! That's the best thing I eveT did. His Wife Yes, dear. What magazine shall you send it to first? Life. i f i : "I thought you liked your new friends so much. So I do, but I just had to give them up they own such a cheap car." Puck. Ill "De vorld owes you a livln'," said Uncle Eben, "but it's up to you whether you gets it out'n yoh own kitchen or in de bread line." Wash ington Star. I I I I Mrs. Gray The window in my hall has stained glass in it. Mrs Green Too bad! Can't you find anything that'll take the stains out? Topeka Journal. ill! "There were plenty of other men who wanted to marry me." "Yes, and not one of the ungrateful hounds has been around to even so much as thank me." Toledo Blade. I I I I "I like this quaint little mountain village of yours, waiter. I suppose I can get plenty of oxygen here?" "No, sir, we've got local option." Sacred Heart Review. III! Crawford. I understand that his matrimonial difficulties have been settled. Grabsaw Yes; wife's rela tives have agreed to maintain strict neutrality. Life. 8 S I Some time ago an office boy an swering the telephone for the first time in his life, and not knowing how to use it, was told that when the bell rang he was to answer It. When, therefore, he heard It ring, he picked up the receiver and shout ed: "Halloa! Who's there?" The answer came back: "I'm one hundred and five." "Qro on," said the boy. "It's time you were dead." Philadelphia Rec ord. 5 5 5 5 A San Francisco cjergyman recent ly at the close of his sermon announ ced that in the course of the week he expected to go on a mission to the j heathen. One of his parishoners ex claimed, "why, my dear doctor, you have never told us one word of this before. It leaves us unprepared, what shall we do?" "Brother," said the minister solemnly, "I shall not leave town," I I I I Fair Autoist (who has broken down on the road) i-Pardon me, sir, but have you an extra plug. Country Yokel No, ma'am, but you're wel come to a chaw offen mine, ma'am. Detroit Free Press. III! "So you worked your way through college? Your father must be proud of you." "Not much. He's the man I worked." Boston Transcript. III! Spice. A farmer wrote to the editor of an agricultural paper as follows: "1 have a horse that has been afflicted for the past year with periodical fits of dizziness; Please let me know what I should do to him, as he seems to get worse Instead of better. I am afraid he will be unlit for work if something is not done soon." In the next issue this answer anneared: When the nag is looking all right, s,u" "im to some one." San Francis l co Argonaut. SPECIAL SUBSCRIPTION OFFER The best family daily paper in the state and your own. weekly paper for TSie Daily Portland Telegram and The Gazette-Times both one year for This offer will be in force from now until Juiy 15, 1915 and may be taken advantage of by new as well as old sub scribers. Subscriptions are for one year in advance. Old subscribers to The Gazette-Times in order to participate in these rates must pay up all arrears due and the $3.50, in addition will pay for both papers one year in advance. GOOD ONLY UNTIL JULY 15, 1915 A Business Change. AN JUNE 1st, Arthur Yickers took an interest with his " father, E. E. Yickers, in the Wall Paper Store. This boy served an apprenticeship with his father and has worked in the leading shops of the United States and British Colombia. We do not hesitate to promise the people of Heppner and vicinity first class work at rea sonable prices. We do painting in all its branches. Paperhanging a Specialty. Thanking the people for their liberal patronage, we solicit your trade "with an Exclusive line of Wall Paper and Paints. E. E. VICKERS Drink "Grape Smash" The pure flavor of the Concord Grape 5c a glass Fresh Ice Cream Every Day-WE MAKE IT THE PALM The Home of Good "Sweet Meats" JUST RECEIVED by Gilliam & Bisbee A carload of FAIRBANKS & MORSE Gasoline Engines direct from the factory At Greatly Reduced Prices At least 25 per cent un- der last year's prices We are fully equipped for installing Deep Well Pumps and Irrigation Systems of all kinds, and guarantee all work to give satisfaction When you want water get our prices before closing a deal