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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1915)
PAGE TWO THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPN'EU. ORE., THt'IISDAY, NOV. 11, 1915 4 y THE v WEEKLY Including Comic Supplement UNTIL JANUARY 1, 1917 MORE THAN AN ENTIRE YEAR AND The Gazette-Times ONE FULL YEAR For $1.50 During the Bargain Period Ending Nov. 30, 1 j15 Mail or bring your subscriptions today to the office of The Gazette-Times IS ;; in the new Family Package cv'xr rsd delicious Snowflake Sodas now co packed in a sanitary tin cake and cracker box. Keeps your Snowflakes useful kitchen help. At your dealer's. Per box 50c also in 10c and 25c packages and in bulk l.f'- r- (, 1 Look for thU name on every package t r PACIFIC. COAST biscuit en. 77T PORTLAND, OREGON - ( I MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS PENDLETON, OREGON Fine Monument and Cemetery Work. All parties interested in getting work in my line should get my pricas and estimates before placing their orders. ALL WORK GUARANTEED . J from CAPS MAOUNAWS COAT SWEATERS - - $1.25 to $6.00 GERMAN SOX and RUBBER FOOTWEAR Anticipate the cold weather by buying your winter clothes now. SAM HUGHES COMPANY . OREGONIAN fresh and crisp. Acts as a a a .a $8.50 to $10.00 50c to $1.50 Ck- THE GAZETTE-TIES. The Heppncr Gazette, Established, March 30, 1S83. The Heppner Times, Established No vember 18, 1897. Consolidated February 15, 1912. VAWTER CRAWFORD Editor and Proprietor Issued every Thursday morniiiR, and entered at the Postotfice at Heppner, Oregon, as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Tear J1.50 Six Months 76 Three Months 50 Single Copies 05 ADVERTISING RATES: Display, transient, running less than one month, first insertion, per Inch, 25c; subsequent insertions, 12c; display, regular, 12'4c; locals, first Insertion, per line, 10c; subsequent Insertions, per line, 5c; lodge resolu tions, per line, 5c; church socials and all advertising of entertainments conducted for pay, regular rates. MOKHOW COUNTV OFFICIAL PAPER Thursday, November 11, 1915; THE HYMX OF HATE, , French and Russian they matter not, A. blow for a blow and a shot for a shot; We love them not, we hate them not, We hold the Weischel and Vosges gate, " We have but one and only hate, We love as one, we hate as one, We have one foe and one alone. He Is known to you all, he is known to you all, He crouches behind the dark gray flood, Full of envy, of rage, of craft, of gall, Cut off by waves that are thicker than blood. Come let us stand at the Judgment place. An oath to swear to, face to face, An oath of bronze no wind can shake, An oath for our sons and their sons to take, Come hear the word, repeat the word, Throughout the Fatherland make it heard. We will never forego our hate." We have all but a single hate, We love as one, we hate as one, We have one foe, and one alone England! In the Captain's Mess, in the banquet hall, Sat feasting the officers, one and all, Like a Baber-blow, like the swing of a sail, One seized his glass held high to hail; Sharp-snapped like the stroke of a rudder's play Spoke three words only: "To the Day!" Whose glass this fate? They had all but a single hate. Who was thus known? They had one foe, and one alone England! ' Take you the folk of the Earth in yap, With bars of gold your ramparts lay, Bedeck the ocean with bow on bow, Ye reckon well, but not well enough now. French and Russian, they matter not, A blow for a blow, a shot for a shot, And the time that is coming Peace will seal. You we. will hate with a lasting hate, We will never forego our hate. Hate by water and hate by land, Hate of the head and hate of the hand, Hate of the hammer and hate of the crown, Hate of seventy millions, choking down. We love as one, we hate as one, We have one foe, and one alone England! These verses which have echoed around the world were written by Ernst Lissouer, a resident of Berlin, and this translation is the work of Gilbert Hirch, and appeared in the New York Evening Post. For months the verses and the sentiment they ex pressed were held almost sacred throughout Germany. Hatred of Eng. land appeared to be the dominant thought of the whole nation. The author 1 a.5 decoratrd by tlie kaiser. More re .'uSlf the 'j r :iM,,le . i Germany have r?c uzpd the evil done tJ he nation by this excess of s; ba.e a passion, and '!:'- has boea a pr. mise f a mor. -a' a; tie ling FORJ'K'X Bl'YFRS PX!PlT. INM WHTSAT PT51CFS. This x'ract f-om he Ne v Y;rk Journal f Comm !! -wts a question i f ethics and na'ri 'ism: "While there is not the same amount of excitement in the grain market as was current last season, the export movement is very lar.se. But it is being car ried on in a much more system- i atic way. It is understood in the i grain trade that the purchases for the British and French gov ernments are being mads thru J. P. Morgan & Co., who in turn, have enlisted the services of the Armour Grain company. There is no definite authority for thia statement, notwithstanding that it is accepted very generally. In advance of the very recent re ports that the allied govern ments had become convinced that the opening of the Darda nelles was a task too expensive in life and was to be abandoned, the bankers in question and the Armour Grain company were re ported to have made in a quiet way large purchases of wheat, presumably anticipating a rise in price to result from the an nouncement. This announce ment, however, of the abandon ment of the Dardanelles cam paign has not yet oeen made officially." In other words, if it is true that these Arms hold the commission at tributed to them, their job is to man ipulate grain prices to the benefit of England and France and the disad vantage of the American wheat grow er. If they are thus commissioned they are leagued with foreign inter ests to impair the national resources of their own country. Since the United States is at peace with Great Britain and France, that action rould not be termed treason able. Nor could it, by and stretch of the imagination, be termed patriotic. Whether it would be in violation of the anti-conspiracy laws of the Uni ted States is a question for jurists to weigh and answer. The quoted extract may throw light on the recent action of the French government in laying an import tax of 37 cents a bushel on wheat. Gov ernment purchases would be exempt from the tax. Wheat bought here by private French traders would be taxed. Perhaps the government took this step to shut off competitive grain buying by some of its own people and give Morgan & Co., Armour & Co., or whoever their real agents are, a non competitive field in the American markets. A scheme of that kind, to be well rounded out and perfect, would call for an agreement to restrict French orders to the United States and Brit ish orders to Canada. It is impossi ble that the deal is on that basis. Spokesman-Review. FREAK ROAD LAW KNOCKED OUT. The Oregon Supreme Court de serves credit for declaring the lmbe cilic new Oregon road law unconsti tutional. It provided that thirty percent of the road funds were for "new work and seventy percent for maintenance. Of the thirty percent only five per cent could be used for actual road making, the rest was for bridges, cul verts, etc. All bridge work, surveying, general supervision and pay of supervisors had to come out of the thirty percent. Under this law good roads in Ore gon would have been an impossibility and the court deserves a medal for killing the law. Oregon is gradually getting out from under the stigma of being the incubator of crazy-house legislation cf all kinds. The Federated Church. The regular service at the Feder ated church are as follows: Preaching every Sunday, 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Federated Sunday School every Sunday 9:45 a. m. Federated Young People's Meeting every Sunday 6:30 p. m. Federated Missionary Society the last Tuesday in each month. Prayer meeting every Thursday at 7:30 p. m. Federated Ladies Aid meets the 2nd Tuesday in every month, 2:30 Lp. m. A hearty welcome is extended to all. ' W. B. SMITH, Pastor. Parsonage next door to the church. FOR SALE A good residence lot; a good barn, chicken house and a number of fruit trees on lot. Inquire at this office. tf. FOR SALE! Seven head of good work mules, will be sold on reason able terms. Inquire of J. S. Young, Heppner. St. Dr. Wlnnard has taken special course in treatment of eye. ear. nose ana inroai. it. TYPHOID S no more necessary than Smallpox. Army experience hu demonstrated the almost miraculous effi cacy and Harmlessness, of Antityphoid Vaccination. Be vaccinated NOW by ymir physician, you and your family. It is more vital than house insurnnce. Ask your physician, druggist, or send for "Have you had Typhoid?" telling of Typhoid Vaccine, results from use, and danger from Typhoid Cariiers, THE CUTTCS LABORATORY, BERKELEY, CAL f tow cms vaccinii swum undir u. s, ov, mcinc: JUST RECEIVED by 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 NEW EXPLOITS OF ELAINE AT SJ'r-. V ICll COMMENCING Monday Night, Nov. 15 Also a MUTUAL WEEKLY of CURRENT EVENTS and a ROARING KEYSTONE COMEDY Any seat : COMING THE OXFORD CO. ! ' IN SONG AND DRAMA HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM Tuesday Evening, Nov. 16th f The Oxford Company is formed with the distinct pur- I pose of ' ' permanency. ' ' The artists composing it are pro- iessional singers and entertainers, tried and true. HEAR AND SEE THIS REMARKABLE TROUPE IN SONG AND DRAMA. The Oxford Company: STELLA SEBASTIAN OQDEN Soprano and Reader. VERAE ROSS COBURN-Contralto and Cartoonist. HARRY ALLEN LEITER Basso Contante. CLAUDE HART OQDEN Tenor.- ADMISSION: " Adults T. $1.00 Children 50 Theatre 10 cents a