TIIK CAZKTTK-TIMKS. IlKPPNKIi. dKK., TUCk'SHAY. AIC. 5. 1015
1'KOKEHSIOXAL I'OLVMX
Dr. H. T. ALLISON
Physician & Surgeon
Ollke lc Guuu Building.
HEPPNER, OREGON
Dr. N. E. WINNARD
Physician & Surgeon
Office In Fair Building
HEPPNER - - OREGON
Dr. F. N. CHRISTENSEN
DENTIST
Offices over the
New Postoflice.
HEPPNER, OREGON
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
Physician & Surgeon
Office In Patterson Drug Store
HEPPNER :-: :-: OREGON
Dr. JOHN B. DYE
DENTIST
Room 16, lone Hotel, lone, Ore.
C. E. WOODSON
ATTORXEY-AT-LAW
Office in Palace Hotel,
Heppner, Oregon
SAM E. VAN VACTOR
ATTORXEY-AT-LAW
OfTce on west end of May Street
HEPPNER, OREGON
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORXEY-AT-LAW
Office in Court House, Heppner.
F. H. ROBINSON
LAWYER
IONE
OREGON
Knappenberg & Johnson
ATTORNEYS
A XI) COl XCELOKS AT LAW
IONE -: :-
OREGON
CLYDE and DICK WELLS
KHAVIXU PARLORS
Three doors south of Postoffice.
Shaving 25c Halrcutting 35c
Bathroom in connection.
PATTERSON & ELDER
2 Doors North Palace Hotel. .
TONSORAL ARTISTS
FINE BATHS SHAVING 25c
J. H. BODE
MERCHANT TAILOR
HEPPNER :-: :: OREGON
FOR FINE UP-TO-DATE HOMES
See
T. G. DENNISEE
ARCHITECT and CONTRACTOR
W. L. SMITH
ABSTRACTER
Only complete set of abstract
books in Morrow County.
HEPPNER :-: :-: :-: OREGON
CLOTHES CLEANING AND
PRESSING
MRS. G. A. FISCHER
Upper Main Street, Heppner, Ore.
"Tailoring That Satisfies"
LOUIS PEARSON
MERCHANT TAILOR
HEPPNER :-: :-: :-: OREGON
E. E. VICKERS
PAINTER
Tlione 662
HEPPNER
OREGON
F. M. DYE, M. D.
DENTIST
Permanently located in Odd Fel
lows Building, Rooms 4 and 5.
HEPPNER, ORGEON
RED FRONT
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 arouBd 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
What Are
YOU Worth
From the
(UP?
IHs estimated that
the averano man it
worth $2 a tluy ftcm
the neck rfrww-whnt
is he worth from the
neck up
I nat depenOn en
tirely upon training.
It you are trained so
that vnn nlnn and
direct wont you arc
worth ten times as
much as the man
who tan work only
under orders.
The Intirnalltrtil
Coruipondsnc School
jototht? man who U
fitrutfKlinjr alonff on
small pay and say to
him, "We will trnin
you for promotion
riifht where you are.
or we will qualiiy
you to take up a
more cnniffnial line
of work at a much
higher salary. "
livery month sev
eral hundred stu
dents voluntarily
report advancement
as the dfreel result
of I. C. I'i. training.
You need not leave
your present work,
or vnur own home.
Mark this coupon at
once and mail it.
1, STVT
interadllonj! corresMwknct Schools
fifiar i-tmi. -.uifut lortner ooni;trion un m
pirl, now l can iuaniy fur the positwn, trade, or
prolcttloa before which I have marked X.
Auiomobil Running
Poultry Fanning
Bookkeeper
Stenographer
Advertising Man
Shu w -Curd Writing
Window Trimming
Commercial Illustral.
Industrial Designing
Architectural Draft.
Chemtal f Spaniah
Languages J French
Banking I German
CMI Sarvtcti ""
Elei'trical Wf reman
Electrica I Engieer
Mechanical Draftsman
Mechanical Engineer
Telephone r.xpert
Stationary F'ngineer
Textile Manulacturing
Civil Knglneef
Building Contractor
Aril tiled
Concrete Conatruct'n
Plumbing, Steam FiK'g
Hint Foreman
Mine Superintendent
Nam
St.&No..
City
. State
INJcKinneDteMgr.
202 McKay BIdg., Portland
The
CALIFORNIA
EXPOSITIONS
are two vast wonderlands
Tlio Greatest Shows of The Ae.
You rannot afford to miss them.
The opportunity will soon puss.
(Jo Now.
Choice of several mutes nt low
fares for the round trip, via
OEEGON-WASMNGTON
RAILROAD & NAVIGATION CO.
Ask J. It. HnWiK8TOX, Agt.
Heppner, Oregon
(UP? i
I .1.
fiil vfaJ t
THE PENALTY Of
By 8. W. Inglith,
Fire Prevention Expert.
Every time you hear the cry of
Tire!" you can be almost absolutely
safe in thinking that someone has
been careless. Fires don't happen.
They ara tho Inevitable result ot
combinations of preventable things.
When analyzed to the last equation
it v ill be found that carelessness is
the root whence spring nearly all
fires.
What a penalty Industry pays to
carelessness! Fire Is the great de
stroyer. The wealth of a generation
can be wiped out in but a brief hour.
Why not fight fires before they
start? Why not so conduct your
habits and so keep your premises
that when the fire demon wants to
offer your savings as a sacrifice be
will pass you by, just as those of
Egypt of old were passed over when
the sign they bad been told to place
over their doors, were seen?
Too often when those who are
responsible from lire cry out they
are the victims of bad luck, they are
but paying the natural penalty for
their own carelessness.
If you want to keep down your fire
insurance rates, wage eternal war
fare against those things that ever
breed fires.
LI
BE
By P. P. Claxton,
U. S. Commissioner of Education.
In most States school days for
country children are fewer than for
city children. The average length of
Bchool term In cities ot the United
States is one hundred and eighty
five days; in rural communities one
hundred and thirty-eight days, a dif
ference of forty-seven days. In some
States the difference is much greater
than this average. In many counties
the average length of the rural
school term is less than one hun
dred days, and in some districts it is
less. On the other hand, in the
States of California, New York and
Connpctlcut, the country schools are
in session one hundred and eighty
days in a year, and in several other
States almost as long. The country
schools of Rhode Island are in ses
sion one hundred and ninety days in
a year.
If all children are to have an equal
opportunity for education we must
even up the school terms of the
country and give to all country chil
dren at least as many days as are
now given to city children. One
hundred and eighty-five days of
schooling a year for all children will
not be too much. There are coun
tries in which the schools, both for
city and country, are in session from
two hundred and twenty to two hun
dred and fifty days or more in the
year. American children need as
much education as those of any oth
er country, and this applies to the
rural as well as urban districts.
AN AGRICULTURAL COUNCIL
By T. N. Carver,
Profeaior of Economics, Harvard University.
Every city has its chamber of com
merce or its Board of Trade. The
purpose of such an organization is
to study economic and business op
portunities ot the city and promote
enterprises which will help to build
the city. Does any one know of a
good and sufficient reason why ev
ery rural neighborhood ought not
have a similar organization?
In Germany they already have such
organizations. They are generally
called the "landwirthschaftsrath" or
agricultural council. Some students
of the problem of rural organization
are strongly of the opinion that such
an agricultural council is necessary
before much can be done for the bet
tering of rural credit or the market
ing of farm produce. There is no
object, for example, in having more
capital in a farming neighborhood
unless the farmers know without any
gueBS-work Just how to use that capi
tal so as to increase the production
and the profit of their farms. If all
the leading farmers of a neighbor
hood would lay their heads together
and talk over the situation and study
the opportunities for new Investment,,
they would be less likely to make
mistakes than if they work secretly,
as separate individuals.
CIVILIZATION'S
GREATEST TRAGEDY.
Extract from article by V. D. Lewis,
president Texas Farmers' Union, op
posing woman's suffrage:
"We are willing to join in every ef
fort to elevate woman but will assist
in none to drag her down. The de
scent of womanhood is tho most awful
tragedy In civilization As she sinks
she may, like the sotting sun, tint the
horizon wtlh the rays of her depart
ing glory. She may tenderly kiss the
mountain tops of her achievement
farewell; she may, liko the sinking
sun, allure the populace with her
beauty as she disappears for the night
but when she steps downward, tho
earth is as certain to triAnble and
plunRc ivito darkness tis death is to
follo-y life '
J-
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS
AGO IN HEPPNER !
.!.
Heppner Gazette, August 7, 1890.
Rev. H. F. Dennis is over from Is
land City. He will assist in the pro
tracted meetings which will com
mence In the M. E. church South to
night. Jay Shipley and Ed. Drlscoll went
to the McDuffee springs Tuesday
where they will remain for a month,
reaping the benefits of that health re
storing resort.
Mrs. Wm. Rush came up from
Portland last Monday. Her daugh
ter, Mrs. Arthur Minor, who accom
panied her below, remained for med
ical treatment.
Geo. Conser this week purchased
W. P. Dutton's residence property on
Chase street. Consideration 300u.
Geo. has been doing some lively work
on the place and expects to make it
one of the most attractive homes in
the city.
The water supply has run out, and
the street sprinkler is stopped as a
consequence. The business men and
residents on Main street will have to
suffer with the dust, which is begin-!
ning to get very deep, the remainder
ot the season.
Grant County News: Mr. T. E.
Fell, manager of the Morrow County
Land & Trust Co., of Heppner, has
been in Grant county for a few days
looking after business. Heppner is
getting an immense trade this year
from Grant and Harney counties and
she appreciates the patronage.
Mr. Otis Patterson, editor-in-chief
of this first-class family weekly, re
turned from his visit to the old plan
tation in Indiana last Monday eve
ning. He is able to be on deck at
present, although he was pretty bad
ly used up in a railroad wreck on his
way home, necessitating his being
laid up In Portland for a week. He
reports having an enjoyable time,
and a very pleasant visit with the
folks at home.
Walt Richardson writes the Ga
zette that the snow banks of Green
horn are preferable at this season of
the year to the less attractive bunch
grass region, and invites us up to
spend a "week or two. Some pros
pecting and mining is being carried
on in the Greenhorn range this year
with indifferent success. Martin An
derson succeeded in dispatching a
large bear with a 33 caliber Smith &
Wesson revolver, a few days ago, and
is declared the champion nimrod of
the region of cool shades, mosquitoes
and ."hoss" flies.
TAKING CHANGES 10
That motion pictures in the making
often require the players to face real
and serious danger, and even the pos
sibility of sudden death, is a feature
of the movies that few persons real
ize. The popular notion is that any
act involving danger is "faked"
that in a fall, for instance, the actual
fall is made by a dummy and not by
a living player. This was true of motion-picture
making in the past, and
to a limited extent is true even at the
present time. Some of the feats shown
on the screen could never be perform
ed by a living person without the cer
tainty of death. But competition be
tween the leading producers has be
come so keen and the taste of the
public so exacting, that a thrilling
act must as a rule be the perfection
of realism, and this usually means
that it must be the real thing. How
the players go to the limit of safety
and beyond in meeting this require
ment is shown in a number of pctures
appearing in the August Popular Me
chancs Magazine.
One of the most daring of these
feats is a fall now being shown in one
of the big plays. The actor is seen
standing on a balcony 20 ft. above ;
the ground. Suddenly he clutches at j
his breast as if shot and pitches hack-1
ward off the balcony, turning over
during the descent. This entire act 1
is performed by a living actor who j
makes falling his business and who is j
said to have fallen a total of more j
than five miles in the past three
years. In an act like this, the actual I
tumble would formerly have been
made by a dummy, and the effect of j
continuity in the pictures would have j
been given by stopping and starting j
the camera at just the rls'lit instants j
as the dummy was substituted for the j
actor and as the actor took his po
sition on the ground In place of the
fallen dummy. Another act of a
startling nature is that of a fugitive
dropping from a signal bridge to the
top of a moving locomotive without I
injury to the actor while the lucomo-1
tive was running at a speed of 17 I
miles per hour. A fight on the pilot
of a locomotive was staged with the 1
locomotive running at a speed of 20 i
miles an hour and the pictures were
made from the rear of a train ahead. J
A single careless movement of either
of the actors might easily have re
sulted in the death of one or both.
Anatomic.
When Anna gave her hand to Tom,
Friends thought the match was j
comic; j
They snld the pair misht ho demon-1
Inated Anna-Tom-io.
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
HEPPNER WOOD YARD
E. E. BEEMAN, Prop.
Dealer In
Wood and Coal
Leave orders with Slocum Drug Co. or phone Main 60.
j. ft
BONDS and
INSURE IN
Royal Insurance Co. and Fireman's
Fund
AND YOUR BONDS IN
United States Fidelity Guaranty Co.
Rates furnished
T. J. MAHONEY
Reduced Prices
on Flour
p.-
At
Heppner for
No higher quality made. Discount of
30c. per bbl. on 5-bbl. lots. This price
good at all points on Heppner branch,
with freight added.
R. R. agents hold goods 10 days without charge.
Heppner Milling Co.
INSURANCE
upon request
Heppner, Oregon
pes
our White Star
i A