THE CAZETTE-TIMES, HCPPXK R, QUE,, THURSDAY, AUG. 19, 1915.
PAOE TKRFR
I'HOKKSHIOXAL C'OLl'MX
Dr. H. T. ALLISON
Physician & Surgeon
Office in Gunn Building.
HEPPNER, OREGON
Dr.N. E.WINNARD
Physician & Surgeon
Office in Fair Building
HEPPNER - - OREGON
Dr. F. N. CHRISTENSEN
DENTIST
Offices over the
New Postoffice.
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
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office in Palace Hotel,
Heppner, Oregon
SAM E. VAN VACTOR
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Offce on west end of Mar Street
HEPPNER, OREGON
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office In Court House, Heppner.
F. H. ROBINSON
LAWYER
IONE :-: :-:
:-: -: OREGON
Knappenberg & Johnson
Attorneys
and councelors at law
IONE
OREGON
CLYDE and DICK WELLS
SHAVING PARLORS
Three doors south of Postoffice.
Shaving 25c Haircutting 35c
Bathroom In connection.
PATTERSON & ELDER
2 Doors North Palace Hotel.
TONSORAL ARTISTS
FINE BATHS SHAVING 25c
J. H. BODE
MERCHANT TAILOR
itEPPNER :-: :-: :-: 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 :-: :-: :-: ORBOON
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
Phone 562
HEPPNER
OREGON
F. M. DYE, M. D.
DENTIST
Permanently located in Odd Fel
lows Building, Rooms 4 and 5.
HEPPNER, ORGEON
REDFROKT
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 around 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
MM
UP?
It la estimated that
the average man is
worth i a day from
the neck drwu-what
Is be worth from the
neck upf
That depends en
tirely upon training1.
It you are trained so
that you plan and
direct work you aro
worth ten times as
much as the man
uhn an wnrV nnlir
nnriir nrrlora. "
The InUtnitlinal
CifrtiiMiutt tchsols
zo to the man who is
struggling along on
small pay ami say to
him, We will train
you for promotion
right where you are,
or we will quality
you to take up a
more congenial line
of work at a much
higher salary."
hvery month sev
eral hundred stu
dents voluntarily
report advancement
as the direct result
of I. C. !i. training.
You need not leave
your present work,
or your own horn".
Mark this coupon at
once and mail it.
internatlOBa. Carpcs&oadence Sibeeis
Meat it etiiimn. - .mt tun net Dint nun uu ir
0 pari, sow l ca i)uuty lot tlie poiltioa, trade, 01
muicbiub ucioro wDicn nave muntcu
Automobile Running
Poultry Fanning
Bookkeeper
Stenographer
Advertising Man
Show-Card Writing
Window Trimming
Commercial llluttret.
Industrial Deilunlng
Architectural Draft.
Cbemlat f Spanish
Language J French
Banking German
ClYllServlceUtahan
Electrical Wireman
Klectrtcal Engineer
Mechanical Draftsman
Mechanical Engineer
Telephone Expert
Stationary Engineer
Textile Manufacturing
C ivil Engineer
Building Contractor
Architect
Concrete Conetmct'n
Plumbing, Steam Fitt'g
Mine foreman
Mine Superintendent
St.&No..
J.N.McKinneURouieMgr.
202 McKay Bldg, Portland
o o 0 O O 0 0 0 0 0
I THE OAZKTTE-TJMRS IB READY
TM1INU YOU MAY HAVE NKtSD OF
IN THE LINE OP PRINTINO. WE o
SPECIALIZE IN PRINTING TO I
SATISFY TOT! PtTRPHARRR ANn n
OUR MANY SATISFIED CUSTOM-
EKS TKHT1KY TU OUK SUCCESS 0
IN THIS ENDEAVOR. LET US I
HANDLE YOUR NEXT ORDER o
FOR PRINTINO. AND YOU WILL I
BECOME ONE OF THE ARMY OF 0
SATISFIED USERS OF GAZETTE-
TIMES PRINTING. CALL PHONE o
I NO. 432.
O O 0 0 O 0 O O 0
I WILL GIVE SI 000
If I FAIL to CURE m CANCER a TUMOR i tmt
btton It POISONS dies lands or attackes to BONE
Without Knife or Pain
Ns PAY Until CURED
WRITTEN GUARANTEE
No X Kay or other
swindle. An Island
plant makes thecure
Any TUMOR, LUMP or
SORE on the Hp, lace
or Doay long is
CANCER! It never
pains until l&ststane
120-PA6E BOOK sent
FRKE, 10,OtK) tostl
mouials. HtltttuMi
Any LUMPip WOMAN'S BREAST
ie Oft. IIP CD andalwsyspoisoiisdeepnrm
15 UAM U CI1 pit glands and KILLS QUICKLY
unewnintin meveryau'soi cancer u. at report
We refuse many who wait too long & must die
Poor cured at half price If enncer is yet small
Dr. & Mrs. Dr. CHAMLEY & CO. booksInt'freI
"Strlctlv Rallabls. Oreitert Cancw Snclallst llvlni "
4340 i. 436E Valencia St, San Francisco, Cal.
I KINDLY MAIL THIS tOMMMIWItt CANCER
Sales Letters Valuable
In Securing Orders
Oregon Agricultural College, Cor
vallis. Ore., Aug., 9. The sales let
ter that Is so effective In the hands of
the mail order expert fails to appeal
as strongly as it should to the local
merchant, according to Clyde I. Blan
chard, O. A. C. teacher of stenog
raphy and one of the four winners of
the world championship efficiency
contest. "Although the local man
feels that he cannot use this weapon
effectively it has been proved beyond
a doubt that he can make it more ef
fective than can the mail order man
We all know that by means of these
letters New York and Chicago houses
are continually taking business right
from under our noses here In Oregon
It Is needless to remind you what the
mail order houses have been able to
do with a two-cent stamp and a letter
sent to people in all parts of the
world, people they have never seen
and in all probability never will see,
"Surely the retail merchants should
be able to do as well with friends and
acquaintances as the mall order men
do with entire strangers. If any
have tried and failed to get business
by personal letters In connection with
consistent newspaper advertising
their methods rather than the sys
tem was probably at fault. An im
portant step in securing results is use
of artistic and dignified dress for your
correspondence. A neat return tas
tily printed on your envelope will of
ten be the means of saving your let
ter from the wastebasket.
"Dignity, good taste and orders are
secured by having very little printing
in the letter head to distract atten
Hon from the typed message, which is
the all-Important thing. In ordering
your stationery have printed only the
data necessary to enable the corres
pondents to transact their business
efficiently. Never have the city and
state off to one side at the right, con
nected by -lotted lines to '19 .' The
style never was artistic, and besides
it is a bad time-waster. Far better
have the state and city printed at
the top with the heading, leaving
room for the date at the usual place.
"The personal letter may also be a
means of keeping track of cash cus
tomers whose names are not entered
on the Arm's books. And certainly
the cash customers are worth looking
after. Sometimes they quit the firm
because of some misunderstanding
easily adjusted, and the personal let
ter will enable the proprietors to
learn the fact and make the adjust
ment, thus retaining a most profit
able patronage."
National Forests Take in $2,500,000.
The National Forests turned into
the U. S. Treasury during the fiscal
year ended une 30, 1915, nearly $2,-
500,000, an increase of more than
$40,000 over the r.ecelpts of the pre
vious year, according to a statement
Just issued by the Forest Service.
The timber sales, which amounted
to $1,164,000 yielded on account of
the depressed condition of the lumber
Industry about $79,000 less than
those of the previous fiscal year, but
the gain was made possible by larger
revenues from other sources. The
grazing receipts, which totalled $1
125,000, increased $127,000 over last
year, and the water power receipts,
which amounted to not quite $90,000
howed an Increase of nearly $42,000
The demoralization of the turpen
tine industry on account of the war's
curtailment of the naval stores mar
ket caused the receipts from the sale
of turpentining privileges on the Na
tional Forest to drop to about $9,000
as against nearly $16,000 last year.
The sale of special use permits, un
der which all sorts of enterprises
from apiaries to whaling stations, are
operated on the Forests, yielded
nearly $78,000, an increase of $9,000
over last year. There was a decrease
of nearly 5:17,000 in the revenue de
rived by the settlement of trespass
cases in which Government timber
had been cut without intent to de
fraud, the revenue from this source
being only a little more than $3,000
More than $7,000, however, was col
lected from other timber trespass
cases. Grazing trespass cast s yielded
nearly $6,000, an increase of about
$1,000; occupancy trespass cases,
which occurred In only one of the
seven forest districts, turned in some
thing less than $250; about $60 was
derived from turpentine tresspass
cases, and $660 from fire trespass
cases, the latter being more than $7,-
000 less than the amount collected
in the previous fiscal year for dam
age to Government property through
fires carlessly or wilfully started in or
near National Forests.
Grazing Figures For Fiscal Year 1915
Announced.
An announcement just made by
the Forest Service, covering the graz
ing business on the National Forests
for the fiscal year ending June 30,
1915, shows a decrease of over 100,-
000 In the number of sheep grazed on
the Forests of Oregon, and an in
crease of approximately 44,000 in the
number grazed in the Forests of
Washington.
For several years past the grazing
business in the forests of Oregon
has been in excess of that in Wash
ington, but the influx of settlers in
those parts of Oregon where good
forage was to be found has made it
difficult for the big stock owners to
find sufficient winter range for their
sheep. This fact, combined with the
recent high prices of wool and mut-
Few Forest Fires In
Oregon In Past Year
Portland. Oregon, AugUBt 15.
Reports recently received by the Wes
tern Forestry & Conservation Asso
ciation, from all protective agencies
in the Northwest, ahow practically
no loss of timber through forest fires
up to the present time.
Favorable weather conditions and
careful preparations for the season
are the chief factors which have so
far made for a clean record on the
part of patrol organizations.
Following the plan of previous sea
sons each protective agency began,
well in advance of dry weather, to
get Its territory in the best possible
shape for successfully combatting any
fires that might become started.
Additional lookout points were
equipped, telephone lines extended
and repaired, new trails constructed,
and every effort made to secure the
best possible co-operation between
the various patrol organizations.
These efforts are now bearing fruit
in the prompt detection and suppres
sion of all fires which become started.
Although the beginning of August
saw conditions much more favorable
than those of a year ago, there is still
time for the woods to become dry and
only the greatest care and vlgllence
will prevent fires from starting dur
ing the next few weeks.
Oregon experienced no fires wor
thy of mention for July. A few
fires escaped as a result of slash burn
ing but were speedily extinguished
without loss of green timber. About
300 wardens are on duty outside of
the National Forests and this number
will probably be slightly increased if
rains ore not forthcoming in the next
few days. The need for strict en
forcement of the forest laws has been
especially emphasized this season,
and a campaign to eliminate the
smoke nuisance has been vigorously
carried on.
Washington reports some 35 fires
during July, all promptly extinguished
and with small loss of timber. The
Washington Forest Fire Association
has 87 men on duty, and the state,
through its own and the -Federal
Weeks Law appropriation, nearly as
many more.
Idaho has experienced a few small
fires, none of which have caused loss
of timber. Only the normal force of
patrolmen is on duty, but every pre
caution is being taken to see that
fires are promptly discovered. The
Forest Service has this season con
structed several emergency ware
houses where fire fighting tools,
available for immediate shipment to
points needed, are stored. This is in
addition to the tool supply which
each National Forest maintains.
Montana reports a most favorable
season as compared with last year.
The Northern Montana Forestry As
sociation has had no fires in its territory.
In spite of present favorable con
ditions the utmost care is urged to
prevent damage the next month. Aug
ust and early September can be
counted upon to be dry and a few hot
days are all that Is required to pro
duce a serious fire hazard.
ton has led many sheep men to sell
out. In Washington there has not
only been an Increase in settlement,
but also an increase in available Na
tional Forest range, which has in
duced many to go into the sheep busi
ness. Hence, the Oregon sheep men
found the Washington ranchers ready
to buy their sheep.
There has been an increase in the
cattle business in both States, over
10,000 increase in Oregon and near
ly 3,000 head in Washington. Many
of these new cattle men were for
merly sheep owners grazing stock
on the National Forests.
HERBERT W. COPELAND
EYESIGHT SPECIALIST
LEXINGTON, Ore. Eleven o'clock
till three, Monday, Aug. 23, 1915.
HEPPNER, Ore. Four o'clock p. m.
Aug. 23 to 6:30 a. m. Aug. 24.
HARDMAN, Ore. Arrival of stage
Tuesday, Aug. 24 to departure of
stage for Heppner, Wednesday,
Aug. 25.
HEPPNER, Ore. Arrival of stage
from Hardman, Wednesday, Aug.
25 to departure of train, Thursday,
Aug. 26.
IONE, Ore-Thursday, Aug. 26, from!
10 a. m. till Friday, Aug. 27, 2:30 i
p. m. I
LEXINGTON, Ore. From arrival of 1
afternoon train Friday, Aug. 27,
till Saturday morning, Aug. 28.
SEE HIM IF YOl'K EYES NEED i
ATTENTION. I
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.
BONDS and INSURANCE
INSURE IN
Royal Insurance Co. and Fireman's
Fund
AND YOUR BONDS IN
United States Fidelity Guaranty Co. !
Rates furnished upon request
T. J. MAHONEY : : Heppner, Oregon
(
Reduced Prices
on Flour
Only $P
BbL
At Heppner for our White Star
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.