THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPfNER. ORE., THURSDAY. AUG. 24. 1918 FAQS SIX When you need two-vision ltnses be sure to get KRYPTOK LENSES AV ( Torn h okt 250.000 ropl For in all other two-vision lenses si-.cro is a line or seam between the near and far vision portions .hat makes the wearer look less ' M-Ji his best, and unmistakably V . ids him or her with a sign Sk c! aire. ryptoks nre double-vision lenses a nat lookexactiy uJteregaurone- vision Icqm'-s because there ire nolinctorscamstn them. i ( I OF L Ore.. Aug 23. "He teach must first be Dr. Winnard can supply these lenses Sati faction guaranteed or .none'y refunded. WALLOWA f LAM PARK! Peindletoo who would taught." With this slogan, supplied by the educators oC Oregon, Pend'otcu l'.a undertake an aggressive campaign for the pjH.sKa ot ilte initiative tufr ure prov'.rlinsj for the estuu'ii.liraent of a stati) normal s-rool r'tr fanT'i Oregon. The real initiafi-rs ot the amendment and ile strongest sup porters of it are M e educational uie'i and womer. of the stit. The hew' of the tliref .TTg edu cational institutions, the University of Oregon, The Oregon Agricultural College and the Monmouth Normal School, have endorsed the measure as has St.'to Supeintendent J. H. Churchill. At tin "eetnt anuuii1 luiweatwn uf i' e coun: "upermtepiients of the state, the following resolution was unanimously passed. "Resolved, that it is the sense of ;he Court" Hhool SureP'itemlents of the State of Oregon in Convention as sembled, that the best interests of the schools of the state demand increas ed facilities for the training of teachers, and that we, therefore eu dorse the . initiative measure to es tablish a normal school at Pendleton. "J. C. Sturgill, President County Superintendents Association; Lincoln Savage, Secretary. Committee S. E. Notson, Morrow County: 0. C Brown, Douglas County; H. J. Sim mons, Wheeler County; B. W. Barnes, Washington County; J. Percy Wells, ackson County." COUNTY SCHOOL NOTES "Breath of the Pines" X 4,500 feet above sea-level, in the Powder River Mountains near Joseph, Oregon. Eat, sleep, tul mountain-lake resort. Good fishing. For hill information, far, Uckttt, etc., at J. B. HUDDLESTON, Agent O W. R. R & N. I rTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT E Weather Bureau Aids Sheepmen in Protecting Flocks From Storms. LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED 111 lim v cutter's buckiea PltLS mm ama Lowpriced, mm mmm mm fresh. reliable; Wrf preleiredby Li IcLbJI jMIM3 rein wr fir WHtelorbookletaiidtesHmoaials. l o-oou tug. giacnig puis,, j i uu SNltl DkL MacklM PIUS. $4.00 Vw any iaitclor, but Cutter's simplest and itrMgcat. The superiority oi Cutter products is due to over 11 years oi specialMii ill VACCINAS AND MRUMS only. Insist on Cutter's. II tuoMataaUt, order direct. V IIW WWII MWIHIJ. wmmwwmw, wmnmrntm Uniting Learning and Labor THE OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE In its Si Schools and Forty-eight De partment!) is engaged in the great work at uniting Learning anil Labor. forty-eighth School Year Op Mi SEPTEMBER 18, 1916. Degree Courses requiring a four-year high school preparation, are offared in the following: AGRICULTURE, It Departments; COMMERCE, 4 Departments; ENGIN EERING, (i Departments; MINES, 3 Department-; 1 FORESTRY, 2 Depart merits; HOME ECONOMICS. 4 Depart tnents; and PHARMACY. Vocational Courses requiring an Eighth Grade preparation for entrance are offered in Agriculture. Dairying, Commerce, Forestry, Home Makers, and Mechanic Arts. Pharmacy with a two year high school entrance requirement. SCHOOL OF MUSIC Piano, String, Band and Voice Culture. fitaloeue and beautiful illustrated booklet free. Address Thk Rkgistrak, 1 sr-7-lS-lu to 9-7-16) COKVAI.US. OR BOON St. Mary s Academy THEDALLES, OREGON OLDEST AND BEST PRIVATE SCHOOL FOR GIRLS IN EASTERN OREGON. Education thorough and practical, Terms moderate Academic, Commercial and Music Courses. SEND FOR CATALOGUE YOU can afford to protect your family, your creditors or your business when you can get Pure Life Insurance At Coat. All speculative features left out. It will save you money to Inves tigate our proposition before In suring. GUARANTEE FUND LIFE ASSOCIATION of Omaha, Nebranko. See BRIGQS k NOTSON, Af ts. Heppner, Oregon. In order to enable the owners of some 2,000,000 sheep and their lambs in the Northwest to protect the lambs and sheared sheep from the effects of disastrous storms, the Weather Bureau, during .the spring of 1916, installed a special storm warning ser vice for Oregon, Washington and Ida ho sheep ranges. This service prov ed to be of such value to sheepmen during the recent lambing and shear ing season that it will be continued and possibly somewhat extended. Storms, especially those accompani ed by Ftnw and cold rains, kills large numbuis of lambs and recently shear ed sheep unless they can ne protected in time. This is especially true, be cause early lambing to meet high market prices is extensively practiced in this section and because winter feeding is expensive, and sheep are usually shorn and put on the ranges as early as possible. Even before shearing, under especially stormy, snowy, and muddy conditions, a ewe will readily succumb to fatigue and starvation, and her lamb may perish with her. There have been Instances where the loss reached as much as 50 per cent of flocks, in which the animals were valued at about $6 each. As a result of these losses the owners make a practice where possible of sheltering their shorn sneep in cay nons and keeping them near shelters during unsettled weather in early spring. Later the sheep are allowed to graze more widely, and the herders must have warning of storms suffi ciently in advance to enable them to drive the sheep to the nearest shelter. During the springs of 1914 and 1915 thousands of sheep beyond the reach of shelter perished in severe storms that swept over the states. The service during the spring was operated through 25 distributing cen ters through which weather reports and special warnings covering tem perature, rain, snow, winds, clouds, and clear sky, all of which have a bearing on the safety of the sheep, were distributed to nearly 100 other communities. The word was passed along by telephone to several hund red additional stockmen. In this way the warnings reached the owners of most of the sheep In these States by noon, or earlier, of the day of is sue. In sections In and around the national forests the forest supervisors cooperated with the Weather Bureau in distributing these forecasts and warnings. By S. E. Notson, Co. Supt. The report from the extension di vision of tht University shows that quite a number of teachers have not completed their reading circle work. The persons In charge ot the work have been exceedingly lenient in re gard to the work this year, and in fairness to them all, teachers should if possible, send in their manuscripts before Sept. 1. Those who do not se cure the reading circle certificate will be required to take an examination on one of the books. The writer visited the schools in Districts No. 7. No. 51, and No. 56 this week. Miss May Severance it aches in District No. 7. This school has an enrollment of nine. The pu pils are all interested in their work. In District No. 61, Miss Sylva Mc- Carty and twelve pupils were working away diligently. A new organ has been purchased recently from the proceeds of a box social. This also has a new stove. Miss Gladys Mus grave teaches the school in District No. 56. The enrollment is eleven This school has a new globe. The windows are provided with adjustable canvas shades. Mr. Robert H. Young Deputy Game Warden, accompanied the writer on his trip, and addressed two of the schools on the subject of game pre servatlon. The pupils were greatly interested in the subject. After a two weeks' vacation, the school In District No. 59 opened, on Monday witn miss opal uriggs as teacher. Miss Muender, who has been teaching this school, will teach near Oregon City this fall. The new course of study will be off the press soon. The principal change in it will be the revision of the langu age and grammar work. The work In formal grammar will be made much stronger. KTIL ITEMS OF GENERAL INTEREST Odell school contract let for $6208. Marshfleld making plans tor $50.- HEPPNER 25 YEARS AGO From the Gazette of Aug. 27, 1891. Senator Henry Blackmail returned from 'Frisco last Friday. He came back looking well, and we must judge that the balmy breezes of California are just the thing. However, "Mr. Blackman has been steadily improv ing in health since his return .'rom Arkansas. His family will remain below for some weeks yet. Last Sunday four of our popular Heppner boys, Dave McAtee, Lee Mat lock, Frank and Al Roberts, hied themselves away towards the Blues In quest of game Coming hack late that evening, they reported quite a little accident, which fortunately did not prove serious. T"v were all Nine shipbuilding plants are either busy shooting birds, etc., while rid-jn operation or building on the Co- County, will build 000 armory. Kamela, Union school house. Astoria has large new hotel near ly completed. Coos county to mill has added bridge building forwarded on Brewster valley, have a creamery. Glenada shingle large boiler plant. Wallowa Steel across Bear creek. Vale Work going nitrate plant here. Coquille river open-shop stevedore company organized. Ontario Episcopalians purchase site and will erect church. Portland Willamette shipyard adds 50 by 500boiler shop. Astoria Six modern dwellings be ing rushed to completion. Eugene Contract for 200,000 ties for Hill lines placed here. North Bend Beuhner Lumber Co. erecting fine office building. Florence Monroe, Wash. Shing lemill Co. build plant here. Pendleton gets new garage and motorists rest room 100 by 135. Waters creek station shipping ore and lumber out of Curry County. Pendleton $75,000 health resort hotel to go up at Lehman springs. ' North Bend S. P. Co. will build comfortable home for section men. Baker Big developments under way in Greenhorn mining district. Junction Lane county will spend $500 on 1V4 miles Pacific Highway. Gardiner Heirs of late W. F. Je- weat present city with $15,000 Enterprise High power trans mission line to be built to Joseph Lake. Klamath Falls Strahorn railroad saves five miles of survey through dairy. Springfield S. P. Co. pufting 50 carloads gravel ballast daily on Coos Bay line. A. R. REID for your Rough and Dressed Lumber, Wood and Posts At the Mill or delivered Uo oj Florence $6000 electric fog and signal station to be built at mouth of Coquille. Pendleton wants to get state nor mal school and in turn will help re vive the Ashland Normal. lumbia and Willamette rivers. Pendleton Tribune: Legislative candidates must walk circumspecely this year. There are brickbats fly- Harvey Miller has Just returned from Butte, Montana where he was employed by one of the large mining companies of that district for the past several months. He will spend several weeks on his father'B farm northeast of Lexington before returning to O. A. C, where he will complete his course in Mining Engineering this coming year. ing along in the wagon, and perhaps the driver was so engrossed In the sport that he failed to notice just where he was directing the team. At linv rata tho vpMplo armplr a nlana Inn sidling for anything but a goat, and over they went. Several of the guns I Supreme Court upholds Chambers were at full cock, and Its a wonder Power Co. of Eugene in Its fight for that one or more were not u.Hed. the right to widen its ditch to 60 "Mike" Roberts says tne tiling went feet. over too quick for the guns to go off.' SaIemTne Iand grat counties Dave McAtee was the only one of wUn to unite t0 coect teg from he party who was hurt at all, being tne 0 & c ,and t ,andg 0vw knocked senseless for a moment. ,, miin hii., , h... ,m v tw uiiuivuo uuiinio niv awb uciu up by the act ot Congress. East St. Johns Contract for con structing another sea-going vessel has been closed by the Standlfier Clarkson company. The boat will be built at the Monarch mill. The new road to the North Fork and the Rltter settlement as viewed by MeEsrs. Isaac Large, W. O. Minor, and Wm. Walbrldge, will prove when finished, a boom for Heppner, as well as the northeastern part of Grant. It will place Rltter over 40 miles nearer than by the present route, and ad jacent sections proportionally near, depending of course on the location. The new Leadville mines are near Ritter and Heppner will reap a bene fit from them over the new road. The road connects with the Rhea creek and Heppner road at Copple's place, passing John Zollinger's ranch thence on the west side of Ditch crtek on the divide down to the crossing of the Susanville trail on this stream, thence down the east side of Ditch creek to 'he county line. This is 33 miles from Heppner. Mr. Minor has a greed to raise a subscription to com plete the road to the North Fork which is only three miles from the Grant county line. It will be com pleted from there by Grant County or private subscription of Ritterites. The road, as projected, passes through a fine body of timber, and just across the divide from Heppner there is a world of black pine, which will be pleasing news to the rancners. bis- Shocked Trie Guests. Tommy Ma, gimme another cult. Mother (sternly) If Tommy If the company don't want to hog them all. Boston Transcript. Coquille Sentinel, N. A. Young, editor, very progressive for the Social Uplift, says the People's Land and Loan measure is bad and would "des troy the value of all investments." It does not occur to newspapers urging on strikes that capital can go on a strike the same as labor and when it does it just simply quits and suffering and hardship await results. Drewsey Sun exhausts Itself fight ing "Big Biz." Yet the Oregon 3hort Line, Union Pacific and R. E. Strahorn, all of Big Biz, are the only -nes doing anything for the develop ment of Malhuer, Harney and Cen tral Oregon counties. Coquille Valley Sentinel: Speak ng of the "flea bite" of $18,687 Ore. ;on Is to get out of the national roads fund the first year, the Wood rurn Independent says that "when Portland and Salem, the two biggest hogs In the state get through there will be nothing left." Albany Democrat The celebration of the opening of the railroad to Marshfleld is one deserving the at tention it is receiving. It is a state affair, a part of a great progress to give the state a network of railroads reaching all sections. Whatever helps one section, helps all sections. N. P. Cannon of the Longshore men's Union Is quoted as saying at a meeting of the Portland Central Cou ncil, as reported in the Portland Journal for Aug. 11th, page 7 column 2:-"Nowhere In the world did the longshoremen receive as high wages as they did in Portland when they recently went on a sympathetic strike." .. TO BUY A BETTER DRINK THAN gpfflAIL IT can't be did. son, IT CANT BE DID T. W. JENKINS ft COMPANY . Portland OrciM. 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