The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, August 31, 1916, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THE OAZEfffi-ffMES. HEPP.Nr,R, ORE., THCR8DAT. Alia. 31, 191J.
FACE THREE
miim inMfmmwmm4
TED MILLION DOLLARS
ITORS ARE EXPECTED
i
ttticiei
-tastier foists
a cleaner, cooler
kitchen, and less
fuel expense
A
NEW-PEBEECIJOH
OIL C0MSTOV&
I
It's the uniform unva
rying heat of a good oil
stove, and the perfect
Control that Itperra thn
juices in that pre
serves the savory,
goodness of the meat
and gives that even
brownness all over.
All the convenience of
gas. Cooks everything
any wood or coal range
will cook, but keepa
t)out kitchen oooi
The long bluo chim
neys do away with all
smoke and smell. In 1,
2, 3 and 4-burner sizes,
ovens separate. Also
cabinet models with
Fireless Cooking Ov
ens. Ask your dealer
today.
STANDARD OIL
COMPANY
(Cililoiait)
Heppner
mm.
For
Best
Results
Use
Pearl
Oil
FOR SALE BY
CASE FURNITURE CO.
GILLIAM & BISBEE.
GO TO
Gilliam & Bisb
ee
FOR YOUR
Harvest Supplies
Of
Oils, Greases, Belting, Lace Leather,
etc.
TV 7E will give you the qual
" ity and price that will
command your patronage; oth
erwise we do not ask for it.
We Have It. Will Get It, Or It Is Not Made.
Gilliam & Bisbee
MAKE
Thomson Brothers
YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR
Harvest Supplies
We have everything you want in the line of
overalls, work shirts, harvest hats, kahki
pants and shirts, underwear, shoes, etc.
Our Grocery Department Is
Complete
Thomson Brothers
(Plans Announced for Work Under
Federal Road Act.)
Secretary Houston lias just announ
ced the plan to be pursued in spend
ing the ten million dollars appropri
ated by the Federal Aid Road Act for
the construction and maintainance of
oads and trails within or partly with
in National Forests, and has tentati
vely allotted among the various Na
tional Forests States the million dol
lars which is expendable this fiscal
year.
The tentative allotments to the
principal National Forest States are
as follows: Alaska, $-16,280; Ari
zona, $59,795; Arkansas, $11,294;
California, $140,763; Colorado, $62,
335; Idaho, $108,010; Montana $89,
901; Nevada, $19,195; New Mexico
$42,622; Oregon, $127,794; South
Dakota, $8,115; Washington,$91,
739; Wymong, 540,5 6. In
addition, a total of $9,552 has been
tentatively assigned to Florida, Mi
chigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North
Dakota, and Oklahoma, while the
Eastern States, Maine, New Hamp
shire, Virginia, West Virginia, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee,
and Geargia in which the Govern
ment is purchasing lands for National
forests, have been allotted $21,057.
"In general," said Secretary Hous
ton, "the States and the counties will
be required to furnish cooperation in
an amount at least equal to 50 per
cent of the estimated cost of the sur
veys and construction. However,
upon a satisfactory showing by . the
applicant State or County that such
a proporation of cooperation is
Inequitable, it may be altered and the
ratio of cooperation filed upon a basis
equtable to both the State or County
and the United States."
The method followed in apportion
ing the money was explained by Sec
retary Houston as follows: Ten per
cent of the amount available each
year will be withheld as a contigent
fund. Ono-half of the remainder
will be allotted to the States in a-
mounts which will be based on the
area of National Forest lands in each
State. , The other half will be appor
tioned on a basis of estimated value
of timber and forage resources which
the Forests contain. Amounts ap
portioned but unexpended within
three years, and any balance of the
contigent fund which remains unap
portioned at the end of each year,
will be reapportioned on the same
basis as the original allotments.
The two groups of states to which
lump sums are allotted are, it was ex
plained, to be considered as single
units of apportionment. Apportion
ments now to be made are for the
current fiscal year only. Thereafter
new apportionments will be made,
giving consideration to the number
and character of anplicants made by
the State and County officials for ex
penditures on specific projects. These
applications must be filed with the
District Foresters in the seven Na
tional Forest District on or before
January 1 of each year, for the fiscal
year beginning the following July 1.
The determination of the projects
upon which funds will be expended
during the current fiscal year will be
made on the basis of applications
which must be filed with the District
Foresters on or before October 1,
1916. Each application must con
tain a statement of the public needs
to be served by the proposed road and
the manner and extent to which it
would aid in the development of the
resources upon which the communi
ties within or adjacent to the Nation
al Forests are dependent, and must
also show the general location of the
proposed road and its estimated cost.
As already stated, in General States
and counties must be prepared to fur
nish cooperation equal to at least 50
per cent of the estimated cost Qf sur
veys and construction. This coopera
tion may be in the form of nionef, la
bor and materials or the construrtion
of roads Where other factors are
equal, the approval of a project may
be determined upon the relative a
niount of cooperation offered. Many
applications have, it is Btated, al
ready been received for expenditures
upon specific projects.
Pendleton, Ore.. August 29. Pen
dleton is preparing to entertain more
than 60,000 visitors at the 1916
Round-Up, September 21. 22, and 23.
Never before have so many orders for
tickets and sleeping accommodations
flooded the Round-Up headquarters.
From the eastern cities of Boston and
N'ewTork, from the southern cities of
Los Angeles and San Francisco and
the northern cities of Seattle and
Vancouver, B, C. are daily arriving
requests for grandstand seats. San
Francisco who has heretofore been
represented at the Round -Up with a
special car and so will this year send
a special Pullman train to the show.
To accommodate the Bay City visi
tors 300 reserved seats have been set
aside.
Spokane will send a special train
for the first time in several years.
The Portland Journal will send at
least two and probably more specials
from Portland and there will be spe
cials from Boise, La Grande, Walla
Walla and the west and east ends of
Umatilla County.
The show itself will be far supe
rior to anything ever seen In the past.
Performers are already arriving on
the scene of action. Allan Drum
heller, winner of the cowboys' relay
last year, has two strings at work on
Round-Up park and Bertha Blanchett
is working out daily with her horses.
Ed McCarty will arrive soon with his
outfit of horses and cowboys'. Ruth
Parton, winner of last year's cowgirls'
relay will arrive September 1. At
least eleven relay strings will be on
hand for the opening day of the
show.
All in all Pendleton expects 191 to"
W the banner Round-Up year.
L. M0NTERESTELL1
MARBLE AND GRANITE
WORKS
PENDLETON, OREGON
Fine Monument and Cemetery Work.
All parties interested in getting work in my
line should get my pricss and estimates
before placing their orders.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
j
MONEY TO LOAN ON
FIRST FARM MORTGAGES
E. J. Roberson,
702 TiUe & Trust Building,
Portland, Oregon.
$ in a i f mir a t
t if nuuKj if jt
LAM PARK
"Breath of the Pines"
4,500 feet above tea-level, in the
Powder River Mountains
near Joseph, Oregon. Eat, deep,
play, live out-of-doori. A delight
ful mountain-lake retort. Good
Sitting. ,
F.r Ml tofermaHm, Imnt, Udult, tfc, a
1 ; J. B. HUDDLESTON, Agent
iO W. R. It & It
.Manual Training Men Demand Out Of
flight.
With its last available manual
training teacher already employed
the Industrial Arts department at O.
A. C. faces a shortage of men fitted
foi this work for the coming school
year.
The demand for manual training
teachers is out of sight. A total of
22 have been placed within the last
few weeks, and there are on file re
quests for four men in Oregon, three
in Washington and one in Idaho. In
addition this department has received
seven wires within the past week
from teachers' agencies, asking for
trained men. The average salary for
the first year men is more than $100
a month.
One cause of the lack of supply is
the increase in the number of schools
of Oregon, urban and rural, which are
carrying this work. Another is the
high standard of work set by State
School Superintendent J. A. Churchill
and other school authorites. The
slip-shod work of earlier teachers
having little or no special qualifica
tions for this work has been elimina
ted by the present policy of certifica
tion, and only trained and competent
instructors are entrusted with ' the
manual training work.
School will soon comm.ice. Were
your chi'dren backward in their stud
ies last year? If so it may be due to
eye trouble of some kind. An edu
cation obtained at the expense of eye
sight, is of small value. It is better
to obtain both by seeing that the
children's eyes are right. Children
cannot tell you whether their eyes
are right or wrong. Bring them to
Dr. Turner and let him give their
eyes a most thorough searching and
scientific examination with the latest
improved electrical instruments, and
he will tell you whether they are
right or wrong. Is not such informa
tion almost beyond price? Yet there
is no charge, for consultation or exa
mination. If they do not need glas
ses, Dr. Turner will most positively
not recommend them. You owe this
to your children. Dr. Turner will
have a private office at Palace hotel
during Fair. Consult him. He has
been making regular visits to Hepp
ner every thirty days for nearly three
years, and absolutely guarantees sat
isfaction. Don't forget the date.
C. M. Redgeld and family passed
through Heppner Monday on their
may to Pendleton. They reside at
Bend and had been visiting at the
home of Mrs. Redfleld's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. M. Pitzmaurice at Condon.
ICE FOR SALE Stores supplied
at $12.60 per ton and ic delivered
at your residence for one cent per
pound. Phone City Meat Market,
Main 563.
FOR SALK Four hundred acrea
prairie and timber land, known at
the South Jones Prairie. Mrs. Henry
Jones, 321 14th St, Portland, Ore.
In.
6 lots 40x90; 1 lot (0x110; 1 8
room dwelling, woodshed and other
outbuildings; 1 fi-room dwelling,
woodshed and other outbuildings; 1
barn, used for livery stable, (4x(4.
This property is in a small eastern
Oregon town and is for sale at J 1500
cash or will trade for Heppner prop
erty, Morrow county wheat land, or
would trade for an anto. Owner's
basinet calla him away and he ia
desirous of closing a deal on this
property before leaving. Farther
CITY MEAT MARKET
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
AH kinds of Fresh and Cured Meats and Lard
Tills is the place to buy
Oysters, Crabs, Clams, Salmon, Halibut, Smelts
Johnson & Johnson
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.
Don't Raise Weeds on Your Summerfallow
USE A
JONES WEEDER
PATENTED DECEMBER 16, 1913
"Made In Morrow
County"
We have had lota of moisture and weeds will grow and ruin your
Summerfallow unless they are destroyed while small.
THE JONES WKKDER is the best implement for this purpose. We
advise all who are needing a weeder to buy now while the prico is low.
Steel has gone up 1 40 and the needers will be considerably high
er next season.
FOR PRICES, ETC., SEE
C. L JONES, Eigb Mile, or H. C. ASHBAUGH, Heppner
Mr. 6
usmessman
ARE you contemplating the execution o
a special advertising campaign? Do
you need some new stationery? In either of
these instances you need the services of an
up-to-date printery.
The Gazette-Times Printery
will be glad to help you plan your printed
matter regardless of its nature, and they may
be able to make some suggestions which
would be of value.
Bring Your "Printing Troubles" to Us
particulars will be give by catling
on us.
SMBAD ft CRAWFORD: