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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (May 9, 1918)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, TRTRSD Y, MAY, 9. 1918. PAGE THKKR fHOi-KMHIONAL tU M. Dr. H T. ALLISON Phyairlan at 8wko Office In Odd Fellows Building. HEPPNER. OREGON Dr. N. E. WINNARD PhyNician ft Burgeon Office In Fair Building HEPPNER - OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. Physician Surgeon Office In Patterson Drug Store HEPPNER :-: :-: OREGON i Dr. R. J. VAUGHN DENTIST Permanently located In the Odd Fellows building. Rooms 4 and 5. HEPPNER, OREGON DR. GUNSTER VETERINARIAN Licensed Graduate HEPPNER - - ORE. Telephone 722 (Day or Night) WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Office In Palace Hotel, Heppner, Oregon Offce on west end ot May Street HEPPNER, OREGON SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORNEC-AT-LAW s. E. nots6n ATTORNEY-AT-IiAW Office, Roberta Building, Heppner Office Phone, Main 643 Residence Phone Main 666 FRANCIS A. McMENAMIN LAWYER Roberts Building, Heppner, Oreg. F. H. ROBINSON LAWYER IONB i-: :-: :-: :-: OREGON PATTERSON ft ELDER I Doon North Palace Hotel. TON90RAL ARTISTS FINE BATHS SHAVING ISe J. H. BODE MERCHANT TAILOR HEPPNER :-: :-: :-: OREGON "Tailoring That Batlsfle" LOUIS PEARSON MERCHANT TAILOR HEPPNER :-: :-: :-: OREGON ROY V. WHITEIS Fire Insurance writer for best Old Line Companies. HEPPNER OREGON M. J. BRADFORD "The Village Painter" Contractdlng Painting and Paper hanging, Phone 663. Office 1st Door Wtst of Crea-mery DR. J. G. TURNER EYE SPECIALIST Portland, Oregon. Regular monthly visits to Hepp ner and lone. Watch paper for dates. E. J. STARKEY Electrician House Wiring a Specialty Hoppner Oregon Phone 633 !;i!f!IHO;i!!!ilI!IIl!I!!!Il!!Ii!!:!;;il!!II!i!l!fli!Ii!!I!!! A Business Should be as Big as Its Job 1 If bigness is of benefit to the public it should be commended. The size of a business depends upon the needs which that business is called upon to serve. A business should be as big as its job. You do not drive tacks with a pile driver or piles with a tack-hammer. Swift & Company's growth has been the natural and inevitable result of na tional and international needs. Large-scale production and distribution are necessary to convert the live stock of the West into meat and by-products, and to distribute them over long distances to the consuming centers of the East and abroad. Only an organization like that of Swift & Company, with its many packing plants, hun dreds of distributing houses, and thousands of refrigerator cars, would have been able to handle the varying seasonal supplies of live stock and meet the present war emergency by supplying, without interruption: First The U. S. soldiers and the Allies in Europe by shipping as much as 800 car loads of meat products in a single week! Second The cantonments in the United States. Third The retailers upon whom the American public depends for its daily supply of meat. But many people ask Do producers and consumers pay too much for the complex service rendered? Everyone, we believe, concedes the effi ciency of the Swift & Company organization in performing a big job in a big way at a minimum of expense. Booking orders for pure bred S. C. White Leghorn baby chicks, of a heavy laying strain, for March, Ap ril, May and June hatches. Terms, $11.00 per 100. 60 per cent with or der, balanco at time of shipment. MRS. J. II. HARDESTY, l-31-t8 Morgan, Ore. I haul baggage and passengers to and from the depot to any part of the city, rhono 565 or 183. Lee Cant-well. Swift & Company's total profit in 1917 was less than 4 cents on each dollar of sales of meat and by-products. Elimination of this profit would have had practically no effect on live stock and meat prices. Do you believe that this service can be rendered for less by any other conceivable method of organization or operation? S3! That quutiont and othen are answered fully aad frankly in the Swift ft Company 19H Yui Book MM free on request Addraas Swift A Company, U. 8. Yards, Chicago Swift & Company,U.S.A. E. D. CUSICK 4 ijiMi- nt ''rti-i.Mniiit.vir.iihirB tiaii.Tii'i'ii 10 Stephen Irwin Called To Ground School Training Camp At Ber keley, California Aviation Camp. For State Treasurer The State Treasurer is a member of tlio Iioard of Control, managing the State Institutions. It requires a man of executive and administrative ablliy. VOTE FOR E. D. CUSICK OF ALBANY ' 'The .Man Who Measures up to the Job." BLACK LEG LOSSES SORELY PREVENTED by CUTTER'S BLACKLEG PILLS Stephen Irwin, oldest son of Mr. ami Mrs. W. H. Irwin of Heppner who enlisted in the aviation ser".ce in Oi'.ic'nnati last summer as a mem ber of the reserve officers' training corps, has been called to camp at Berkeley, California. Mr. Irwin left Heppner Tuesday. He will re port on the 1 1th. Along with young Irwin are six otlier Oregon boys who will go into training In the officers' camp. All together 67 men were called from the Northwest states of Oregon, Washington, California, Idaho, Mon tana and Wyoming. Mr. Irwin is strictly a local pro duct, having lived in Heppner from birth, graduating from the Heppner high school and later attending an engineering school in Cincinnati. I.ow.Drlced, Ircsh, lll.tlilej pre f erred bv western stink men, because Drotflct where Z Write lor liooltlrt nud testimonials. lu-oosa pKi.uiacKiag mis, )i uu SO-dosi oki. Blacklai Pills, $4.00 Use an v inleitur, but C niter's slini'lest nnrl strongest Tlie superiority ol Outer uri"liuts iBtliie to over 15 years ui spednllzinti in VAi'tlNltS AND SKKUMS ONLY. Insist ON CU'rrKK'3. II unobtainable, order direct. Th9 Cutter Laboratory, eertoisy. caiircrnia thev y4ii For Sale Barred Rock cockerels, $2.50 each. WIGHTMAN BKOS., Heppner. "mo. PRIMARY AND RURAL TEACH ERS ATTENTION I More than ever before you will plan to have a profitable summer. The times demand efficiency. Two weeks of INTENSIVE work at the school of PRIMARY Methods con ducted by Ruby Shearer Brennan, former Primary Supervisor of Port liuid Schools, will Rive you Just the inspiration and help that you wish. This Special Short Course is practi cal with all unosseiitiiils eliminated. Nearly ,'iOO teachers liavo taken, this course during the past three sum mers. The amount of their experi ence has varied from none at all to thirty years. Children from the Portland schools will be used for de monstration. Sessions will be held in tho Y. W. C. A. lildg. from June 24 till July fi. Tuition $10. Address all communi cations to P. O. Box 39, Portland, O'V. It. Political Paid Advertising. FOR SHERIFF. Notice is hereby given that I will be a candidate for the Republican nomination for sheriff of Morrow county at the primary to be held Id May. WILLARD H. HERREN. ANNOUNCEMENT. I will be a candidate for the nom ination for county commissioner on the republican ticket before the com ing Primary Election. Respectfully, G. A. BLEAKMAN, Hardman Ore. FOR COVNTY CLERK. To the Republican voters of Mor row County: I hereby announce that I will be a candidate for the nomination for the office of county clerk before the May primaries. J. A. WATERS. FOR SHERIFF. I hereby announce myself as a can didate for Sheriff of Morrow County, on the Republican ticket, subject, to the will of the voters at the primaries to be held on May 17, 1918. E. M. SHIsTT. FOR ASSESSOR. To the Democratic Voters: I hereby announce that I will be a candidate far the office of county assessor, subject to the decision of the Democratic Primary to be held in May, 1918. J. J. WELLS. FOR COUNTY TREASURER. To the Republican voters of Mor row County, Oregon: Notice is hereby given that I will be a candidate for the nomination for County Treasurer at the May Pri mary Election. Respectfully, T. J. HUMPHREY?. FOR COUNTY CORONER. To the Republican voters of Mor row County, Oregon: Notice is hereby give that I will be a candidate for the nomination to the office of County Coroner at the May Primary Election. Respectfully, M. L. CASE. FOR COUNTY JUDGE. To the Republican Voters: I hereby announce that I will be a candidate for the office of County Judge of Morrow County, subject to the decision of the Republican Pri mary Election, May 17, 1918. I have resided in the county 32 years. My long residence here and two years' service as county commissioner have enabled me to become familiar with the needs of the county. If nominal ed and elected, I shall pursue a pro gressive policy, bnt shall carefully guard against unnecessary expenses in county affairs. W. T. CAMPBELL. FOR SHERIFF. T the Democratic Voters ot Mor row County: I hereby announce that I will be a candidate for the nomination to the office of sheriff at the primary el ection, which will be held on Friday, May 17, 1918. Respectfully, H. C. GITHENS. C. E. WOODSON (REPUBLICAN) CANDIDATE FOR JOINT REPRE SENTATIVE MORROW AND UMATILLA COUNTIES PRIMARY ELECTION . MAY 17, 1018. !j mm. ! vaBoriztfur nniftftt. fn VmA rMM gasoline they form a continuous, un. form chain giving teady.depanddble power. I-nok for the Red Crown sign. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Caliioraia) iKmr fcZifo Gasoline SOLAS'" 7,..Ki, ffgfc. .tra-.-aitn.-rr--.- , ar irrrraaaiw-ipr G. W. MILHOLLAND SPECIAL AGENT HEPPNER, OREGON r: rrr 1 ENOCH MORGAN'S Qm SONS CO. BdE)s SAPOLIO ror For PATRIOTISM ECONOMY "Actions speak louder than words-Act - Don't Talk - Buy Now DELCOLIGHT Increases Farm Efficiency it Saves tuna anil labor Work formerly done under poor liht and by hand can be done better and in less time with the aid of electric light and power. 2. Labor ia attracted to the farm The "back to the farm" movement ii made practical when the convenience! afforded by electric light and power can be had in the country. 3. Keepi the boya and girla on the farm Electric service on the farm offteti city attraction!. Valuable labor and valuable young manhood and womanhood are laved to the country community. 4. Solve the retired farmer problem Electric light u4 power make the farm home io attractive and comfortable that the farmer and hia wife remain on the farm where their advice, experience, and immediate intereits are ol great practical value. I. Lifhteni burden el the henwif In created farm work in war time! meant increased labor for the house wife. Electricity off en the only practical meant of taking the drudgery of household tasks from her shoulder, Dlco-U(iit u a cmpct Uctric pin tW firm ar tmmtrr been. Setf-craatta. Atr netoa. Thick elate, hat-lived battanr. BaV bearing. Ne belt. RUNS ON KEROSENE THE DOMESTIC ENGINEERING CO, DAYTON, OHIO. U. 8. A. VAUGHN & SONS Dealers Over 50,000 Satisfied Uers throughout the World. ForJointSenator Morrow.Umatilla AND Union Counties rsd COLON R. EBERHARD OV UNION COUNX1' lm going to gef some Good Fishinq Tackle. DID YOU EVER LOSE A BIG FISH ? YES AND THEN YOU . YOU WOULDN'T IF YOU HAD HAD OUR STRONG FISHING TACKLE. WE HAVE ALL OF THOSE THINGS YOU NEED FOR FISHING. SUITING AND CAMPING OUT. AND WE GIVE YOU THE RIGHT STUFF AT THE RIGHT PRICE. FOR ALL YOUR NEED IN OUR LINE COME TO VS. USE OUR HARDWARE; IT STANDS HARD WEAR Peoples Hardware Co Successors to Tash & Akers I