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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1915)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPXER, ORE., THURSDAY, OCT. 14, 1915 PAGE TTTREE PROFESSIONAL COLl'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 Poatoftice. 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 May 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, Shavlne 25c Haircutting ibC Bathroom in connection. PATTERSON & ELDER 2 Doors North Palace Hotel. TONSORAL ARTISTS FINE BATHS SHAVING 26c H. BODE MERCHANT TAILOR HEPPNER OREGON W. L. SMITH ABSTRACTER Only complete set of abstract books in Morrow County. HEPPNER :-: :-: :-: OREGON 'Tailoring That Satisfies" LOUIS PEARSON MERCHANT TAILOR HEPPNER :-: :-: :-: OREGON F. M. DYE, M. D. DENTIST Permanently located in Odd Fel lows Building, Rooms 4 and 6. " HEPPNER. ORGEON R. A. REDIFER Music Instructor VIOLIN, PIANO AND WIND INSTRUMENTS HEPPNER, OREGON Telephone your orders to Hum preys Drug Co. for the sawing of your wood. When you need two-vision lenses be sure to get KRYPTOK v LENSES (Worn by over 250,000 people) Forin all othertwo-vlsion lenses there is a line or seam between the near and far vision portions that makes the wearer look less than his best, and unmistakably brands mm or ncr with a sign ot age. Kryptoki are double-vision lenses that look exactly like regular one- B m vision lenses Decauae there are SOME U' THE BEST At Dr. Winnard can supply these lenses Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. VJhat Are YOU Worth From the up? It Isestimnted (hat the average nmn is worth 92 a day from the neck down what Is he worth from the Deck up? 'mat aenenfls en tirely upon trninlnff. If you are trained so that you plan and direct work you arc worth ten times as much as the mnn who can work only under onlers. The Inttrnitlinal Corrtipondtnci Ichsoti jo to the man who is struggling along on small pay and say to him. ' We will train you for promotion right where ou are, or we will quality you to take up a more congenial lino ot work at a much higher Salary'," hvery month sev eral hundred stu dents voluntarily report advancemrnt as the direct result of 1. C. S. training. on nwl not leave your present work, or vmir own io:n. Mark this coupon at once and mail it. to? lfltcrna:inaal corroooaikDee spools 9 part, now t cut nu piuicBsifin iirinre w ;i immi tanner otiikhtiou uu i 1 1 v lot the p;.i,"n, trade, or , ich I have market! X. Automobile Ru ining Poultry Firming Bookkeeper SterUigrtpher Advertising Man Show-Cird Writing Window Trimminff Commerdil Illuitrst, Industrial Designing Architectural lraft. CfarmlH Spanish I.tiMKunKc P11" Hanking i'"an Civil JfrvlceUlult4n Ui'tlrirul Wlreman ( li'ftrii'al Kiiu'ifcf Mcclianiml Driilttmin Mechanical Engineer Telephone F.xpcrt Stationary Engineer Textile Manufacturing Civil Engineer Building Contractor Architect roncreee Constnict'n Plumbing, Steam Fttt'g Mine I-or em a ti Mine Superintendent St. & No Citv J.N.McKinne!lReMgr. 202 McKay BWg., Portland RED FRONT Livery & Feed Stables WILLIS STEWART, Proprietor. irst Class Livery Rigs Xot For Himself. Donald, a boy of ten years, had been sent to an apothecary store and told to Ret a package of cigarettes for his father and a rubber nipple for his baby sister's nursing bottle. The druggist declined to give the boy the cigarettes fearing that he wanted them for himself. Indignant because of this impugning of his veracity af ter he had said that the cigarettes were for his father, the boy said, "Huh! I s'pose you think that the nipple is for me, too, don't you?" I I I I His Thought The recruiting had been good, and the orator of the occasion felt reas onably well satisfied with himself, It would be graceful, he thought, to speak a few concluding words to the score of men who had dedicated themselves to "King and Country." "And what will you think when you see the flag of the Empire stand ing out from its staff, above the field of battle?" the speaker demanded, his face alight with patriotic fervor. "Standin' straight out, Gov'nor?" a stolid recruit questioned earnestly. "Why, er, yes!" the orator re sponded in some confusion. "I should think, then," the future Tommy announced gravely, "that the wind was blowln' 'ard!" i i 1 i His Worst Fears Confirmed. Carraway was craning his neck for a better view of the turkey. "Rubber!" said the landlady. "I feared as much," said Carra way with a sigh. I I I I Sale Hot "He is a good salesman, Isn't he, Henry?" asked Mrs. Peck. "Good saleman?" replied Henry Peck. "Is he a good salesmann? That man, Belinda, could sell water heat ers to Brigham Young; yes, and he could have sold 'em to Solomon, and the Lord only knows how many wives Soloman had to keep him in hot wa ter!" till Unseemly Hate. Joy Rider (stopped by rural con stable) Haven't we got any rights left in this country, Doesn't the' con stitution guarantee us life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness? Constable It don't guarantee no man the pursuit of happiness at 90 miles an hour. i S I I (retting Hark ut the Priest. An Irishman was reproved by his priest for eating sausages on Friday, "Sure, Father Tim, ye don't call sausages meat?" he protested. Certainly they are meat," said his reverence. The next day the Irishman appear ed at the priest's house with a load of sawdust. "But, Michael, I did not order any sawdust; it was wood I ordered." "And isn't it wood I've brought ye?" "No, it isn't; it's saw dust." "But, Father Tim, if sausage it meat, sure isn't sawdust wood?" Boston Transcript. i I i Faming His Tip. "Now, guard," said Mr. Pilklngton to the English railway official, "re member if I have this carriage all to myself for the entire journey, you will receive a half crown from me "Very good, sir," said the guard and he locked the door and went to his brake to think how he could in vest that half crown when he got It. All went well till they got to a sta tion about the middle of the journey and then an irascible gentleman pulled at the door of Pilkington's carnage. Guard, guard he called, "open this door! I know your tricks. I've got the right to travel In this carriage and I mean to do it! The guard hurried up; but, wonder of wonders, he whispered a few words to the irascible gentleman, after which that gentleman went quietly away to seek room elsewhere. How did you manage it?" Pllk ington asked the guard at the end of the journey, as he pressed the prom ised half crown into his hand. "How did you manage to get that bad-tempered old chap to go away so quietly?" "Oh, that was easy," replied the guard. "I only just told 'im you were a bit wrong in the 'ead." Phil adelphia Ledger. MM Just Like a Woman. Lady What will you charge me INDUSTRIAL ITEMS OF L kept constantly on hand and for the use of a horse aud bussy for can be furnished on short no- Liveryman it win cost you $2 tice to parties desiring to drive for the first hour and for eadl ad r 0 riltlnnnlhnur into the interior. First class Lady Well. I'll use it for two ad ditional hours. I've got some shop ping to do and will not require It for the first hour. New York Sun. MM Easily Satisfied. He A maid must not expect such lovers as she finds in books. Few men are paragons. She Oh! I should not expect a paragon. I should be satisfied with a lover, young, handsome, brave, no ble and unselfish. Dayton Herald. Hacks and Buggies Call around and see us. We cater to the Commercial Travel ers and Camping Parties WlKTmi Pit mon or. tvlfo and Can furnish rigg and driv- position on stock farm, sheep pre fir on short notif!. ferred. Thorough knowledge of HEPPNER - - - OREGON ;0'Z: NochUdren- at th,s The Dalles has a new soap factory, The Ashland ice plant will move to Medford. Salmon canneries on the Umpqua have opened. The new creamery at Unity is near ly completed. The Hill lines will feature Oregon cranberries on their diners. Drainage district is being organiz ed on Ten Mile, Coos Bay. Crown Point on Columbia High way will have $20,000 hotel. Gold ore running M0 a ton report ed one mile west of Buncom. Prospect for railroad orders brigh tens the lumber market outlook. The Oregon cranberry crop is good, price around $10 a barrel. J. B. Miller Logging Camps on Depot slough are again in operation Prlneville is planning a big Irriga tion scheme with a canal and dam The St. Helens Ship Building Co. is busy on a 5-mast auxiliary schoon er. The largest grain crop the North west hag ever grown is now harvest ed. Report state that the C. A. Smith pulp mill will Boon start at Marsh field. The Geo. W. Moore sawmill at To ledo is preparing to. resume operations. Tacoma capitalists have bought the White Mine near La Grande for ?30 000. Present conditions indicate that North Bend mill will operate all winter. 744 head of cattle shipped from Ashland recently brought the owners $45,000. The Bandon cheese factory turned out 50,000 pounds of cheese In 6 months. An effort is being made for a bridge across the Willamette at Har risburg. Stockholders of the Canby Canning Co. are figuring on starting a cheese factory. The Warren Construction Co. is rushing its bitulithic paving contracts at North Bend. Eugene has shipped clover seed east for the first time, $10,000 worth going in two cars. 119,000 acres of land has been thrown open for settlement in South Central Oregon. Spaulding Logging Co. will at tempt to colonize its logged-off land at Black Rock. A soft-olling trolly wheel manu factured at Hausser, Oregon, ran 38 days without oiling. About 1000 men are now working on the Oregon Eastern Railway from Riverside to Harriman. Reports state that Oregon-Utah sugar company has been organized to build a factory in Rogue River Val ley. The fight to reduce taxes and to do away with Industry killing legis lation and regulation was never be fore carried on in such a determined manner by the citizens of the northwest. Manager Thompson of the Sixes River mines near Bandon, has a crew of men working on the construction of a flume. A sawmill is being con structed, and the cost of the flume aud mill combined will be about $150,000. z I z x z T z z T z z z z z z z z f z z z z T z T t 1080 ACRES OF DEEDED LAND FOR SALE ONE OF THE BEST COMBINATION RANCHES IN THE COUNTY. 370 acres of this is wheat land now in culti vation. The balance is pasture land, well watered, with government land adjoining. 130 acres fenced hog-tight. $14,500 Good Terms CONSULT SMEAD & CRAWFORD Heppner, Oregon Manufacturers' & Land Products Kx )Ksition Covers Many Sections of State. Portland, Oct. 3 (Speiial) More than one-half of the total area of Ore gon and more than two-thirds of the state's population will be represented by twenty-one counties at the Man ufacturers' & Land Products Show, opening October 25. The twenty-one counties have a total of 34,168,960 acres with a pop ulation of 646,494. Malheur county, with its 6,325,120 acres is the great est county in area to take part in tiie exposition. Multnomah, in which is located Portland, the state's larg est city, has the greatest population, but is the smallest in land area. Up to October 11, fourteen days be fore the date set for the opening of the exposition, the following coun ties had space reserved for the great est show of the kind ever staged in the Northwest: County Population Area GET THE UP-TO-DATE STYLES, AND The Best In Workmanship And Fabric PEARSON, The Tailor Is now located in his new quarters on Main Street, and is displaying the finest line of sam ples of Fall and Winter suitings ever brought to town. Step in and look them over and make your selection early. -:- -:- -:- .;. CLEANING, PRESSING, REPAIR WORK Polk 16,159 453,760 .Morrow 4,292 1,296,000 Hood River 7,815 347,520 .Malheur 13,913 6,325,120 Marion 46,919 764,160 I'matilla 23,270 2,030,720 Klamath 11,367 3,839,360 Wasco 18,694 1,499,520 Crook 12,799 3,825,920 Clackamas 36,819 1,192,960 Haker 20,375 1,958,400 Columbia 12,206 423,680 Multnomah ....300,000 288,640 Union 17,882 1,335,680 Linn 25,675 1,435,520 Wallowa 9,536 2,012,800 Jackson 27,144 1,815,040 Washington.... 23,270 476,840 Lincoln 6,702 645,120 Wheeler 2,872 1,090,560 Josephine 8,785 1,120,640 HEPPNER WOOD YARD E. E. BEEMAN, Prop. Dealer In Wood and Coal sssssMsaaBaaBBHHMBHHssssaaBssn Leave orders with Slocum Drug Co. or phone Main 60. 646,494 34,168,960 Choice Flour, Feeds, Wood, Coal and Posts, for Sale by HEPPNER FARMERS' UNION WAREHOUSE CO. Handle Wheat and Wool. Highest Price Paid for Hides and Pelts. For a Game of Ten Pins VISIT THE . NEW BRUNSWICK SANDERSON & CRAWFORD, PROPS. Pocket Billiards and a Good Time UPPER END OF MAIN STREET. V f ? ? f ? ? ? ? ? ? ? t ? ? ? ? ? f ? ? T f ? f ? ? T t ? f f t t f z z z z I I z