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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1918)
THB GAZETTE-TIKES, OEPTNER, OREGON, THCRSDAY, Jl'NE 20, 1918. page pom Try the Uncle Sam Sundae at the cRpcall Fountain and grt a ticket on the S5.00 W. S. S. FOR. 30 DAYS, commencing June 20th and closinq July 20th, we will give each patron or dering an Uncle Sam Sundae at our fountain a ticket on a 5.00 W. S. S. 77k.' person holding the most U. S. S. tickets nt the end of the month a ill get the IV. S. S. Khaki Do Your Bit Be Patriotic and For the boys going to war. Razor Sets Toilet Sets Trench Mirrors Smoking Sets Sewing Sets Comfort Kits First Aid Kits and a choice lot of assorted gifts in Khaki. Patterson & Son mm I HEPPNER OREGON J Si.' ZZZZS " ' Kj,- - qgy .... Just the Thing the Boys Like. discouraging, and in some of the most premising fruit sections killing frosts have recently done great dam Age. Things appeared to be so dis-i couraging, withal, that Mr. Booher' cut his visit short and is glad to get back to Morrow county, where the faces of the people are not so long, ! notwithstanding our crops have been injured some. Mr. Booher is a man who observes closely as he goes along and it Is his opinion that the crop of the Northwest will fall far short this season. THE GAZETTE-TIMES The Heppner Gazette, Established March 30. 1SS3. The Heppner Times, Established November 1. 1S9T. Consolidated February la. 1312. VAWTER CRAWFORD. Proprietor. ARTHUR It. CRAWFORD. Editor. Issued every Thursday niorninp. and entered at the Postoffice at Heppner, Oregon, as second-class matter. ADVERTISING! HATES GIVES ON API'LH ATlOJi SUBSCK1 PtT6nRAT ES : One Tear Six Months - - ' Three Months - Single Copies 0:1 MOilltOW COtMV OFFICIAL PAPKH A GREAT LEVELEB. Captain Williams paid a high tribute to the new National Army while addressing members of the Heppner Home Guard in this city last Thursday evening. Captain Williams although appearing to be a man yet in his twenties, is in reality nearer forty. He served in the Spanish American war and has been in the service more than twenty years. It was his duty, while stationed at Camp Lewis, to put some 600 men through his company in the various stages of military development from the time they first joined the awkward squad until they were pronounced soldiers in the true sense. "The new National Army is the greatest army on earth," said Captain Williams. "Here every man has an equal chance and Is put forward on his merits. Millionaire son and poor boy bunk side by side and the great est spirit of fellowship imaginable exists." He cited an instance, where in his company was a son of a Seattle millionaire who had for his bunk mate ap Italian, a poor fellow who probably did not have 15 cents to hi3 name. Nevertheless the two men be came the greatest of chums and on Saturday evening when the big tour ing car came down from the city after the son of wealth, he piled in his room mate and they were off for a week-end visit at the big mansion in Seattle, the Dago the guest of his ar my friends during those two days. "The spirit which dominates the men in this National Army can lick any army in the world, for outside of the Canadians, no other army haa that spirit," continued Captain Wil liams. "The war is going to be a great class leveler and it Is going to iiceomplish a number of other great things. It will result in bringing la bor and capital clcser together. The laborer will be raised iir and the cap italist will be brought down." Captain Williams assured the Heppner Home Guard that the war would not be over this summer, that the government is making every prep aration for the winning of a war that may last yet even five years and that in all probability there will be 10, 000,000 American soldiers under arms before Prussianism is finally stamped out. He also predicted that the age limit would be Increased In the near future from 18 to 45 years. THKV NEE THE HANDWRITING OX THE WALL. Fourteen months ago the United States entered the war. Twelve months ago its first little expedition ary force landed in France. That force hag grown until it numbers now approximately 700,000 men, and Sec retary Baker says we shall soon have a million soldiers across. It has taken us more than a year to prepare for the first blow, and that blow is yet to come, for such fighting s our soldiers have faced up to the present-hour has been mere skirmish ing, though they have borne them selves gallantly under fire and wher ever given a point to take or a posi tion to hold, have gone at the job with fine spirit and dash. The enemy has had a "mill run sample" of the vein and may as. well make np his mind that the whole great ore body is of the same sterling stuff. Our work and that of our allies is now clearly cut out. They are to hold the line till we come in strong, and we are then to help them deliver the finishing blow. They confidently de clare their ability to do their part, and the American nation must attend to the rest. It is not an easy task we face. For mer President Taft Is probably near the mark in saying it will take three years, "one or two years for the Uni ted States to get started right, and then probably a year or so to win and end it." We must hold our resolution to no less a task, and go forward with set jaws for a still harder job if the un dertaking cannot be finished hi three years. If the nut cracks under lighter pressure, so much the better, and that is a possibility not to be entirely ig nored. While General von Stein, the Prussian minister of war, is boasting that the allied armies are beaten, we have not forgotten that such boasting came out of the German general staff! and from the throne nearly four years ago, when the kaiser's armies were nearer Paris than they have ever been ; again. Russia Is down, but Britain, France and Italy are fighting fiercely and strong, and the United States is com ing on and soon .will be striking sledgehammer blows. We may be sure that the eonfidenc-: that is on the tongue of General ran Stein is not within his heart. The kaiser and his general staff know that a mighty punch Is coming soon, and that, as Professor Hein says in an ar ticle published In Cologne June 9, "probably is the reason why the em pire is continuing to send, without reckoning, her soldiers to butchery." In God's good time we'll beat down the Prussian tyrant, and when the great cause Is won, and our heroic armies come sailing home, the worid will hear such songs of gladness as never before were upon the tongues of men. Spokesman-Review. The Clackamas county jury which refused to compensate the Oak Grove school miss for the $10,000 kiss that she alleged her school teacher had stolen from her, reasoned that the demands of proportionate and distrib utive justice would be for the teacher to return that which lie was charged with having stolen. Oregon Journal. The local train stopped 17 times between Heppner Junction and this city Monday night to put out grass fires which had started from sparka from the locomotive. As the season progresses and things become evn more dry, the menace will grow. Ev ery precaution will be taken by the railroad company to prevent damage in this respect and in their efforts they should have the cooperation o. all citizens. There was but little chance of a fire starting in that man ner when oil was burned In the en gines, but we must not forget that the oil is being used to transport men and material to France tliene flays and that, as a war necessity, coal will continue to be used on the railroad!) until victory is won, if needs be. A TRIBUTE TO LOOS GROSHKNK. Alex Lindsay. It Is with regret that I read the sad news of the untimely death of my old friend Louis Groshens. A utauncher and better friend 1 never had in Morrow county. I had known Louie for over 20 years. A truer friend in adversity I never had. To know Louie best was to know him in his home as I did, having lived neighbor to him for several years when both our families were small. A more hospitable man in Morrow county was hard to find. That hearty hello of his to attract a friend's at tention and the smile on his face as he firmly grasped your hand in a hearty handshake always seemed to be the same. My sincerest sympathy goes out to his family in this sad hour of their bereavement. 5 5 1 The Morrow county farmers are learning from each other. By study ing each other's methods and com paring the degree of success met with by these methods, bigger crops and better crops are bound to result. County Agent Brown Is doing a fine work in getting the farmer interest ed in what the other fellow'is doing. AVERAGE YIELD FOB LEXINGTON (Continued from Page Or.e) in the minds of a great many of the Lexington farmers as to the advan tage to be gained, at the present at least, in preparing for bulk handling, even though the price of sacks is high. The bulk shipments are reliev ing the situation very considerably and the warehouses are all prepared to handle grain in this manner. The Burgoyne warehouse will get in a shipment of bags within a very few days. Threshers Will Soon Be Beady. Several big steam threshing out fits are getting ready for the oncom ing harvest about Lexington. W. F. Barnett, J. B. Carmichael and Berry & Warner are busy getting their ma chlnery in shape. Berry & Warner have an entirely new Case outfit, Messrs. Barnett and Carmichael each have new Case engines, and John T. McDevitt took out a big new Case separator Wednesday. E. A. Zochert will take charge of the Berry & War ner engine and M. F. Parker, of the Leach store is contemplating goin, out with the Barnett engine. These new engines are big fellows, being 50 horsepower each. OF Portland, Ore., June 19 Federal authorities are getting' ready to in stitute a merciless campaign to run down and punish a new form of dratt slacker. - This new slacker is the draft regi strant who was granted deferred classification at the time of his regis tration, but whose status since has so changed that he no longer Is entitled to exemption, yet who remains silent bout, tills change in the hope it will be overlooked. There are estimated to be hundreds of such cases in Oregon, and thous ands of them in the United States. Suspicion particularly has been di rected against a great many of the deferred classifications granted for industrial reasons. It now appears that the status of many of these men is not the same as when they were granted deferred cl-.udfieation. Yet they have failed to notify their Local Boards end con tinue to enjoy exemption from mili tary service. In some cases, also, the original classification was not justi fied. Many cases where deferred classi fication was granted .for dependency also have changed In status, but the registrant has not notified his local board. With the time at hand when the need for manpower is so urgent that every available man must either work or fight," and when lower classifications are to be revised in or der to make more men available for Class I, this form of evading military service will not be tolerated. The draft regulations are very plain and blunt in prescribing the penalty for failure on the part of a man granted deferred classification to notify his local board at once if his status is changed: "Every registrant shall, within Ave days after the happening thereof, re port to his local board any fact which might change or affect his classifica tion," says Section 116 of the Regula tions. "Failure to report change of status as herein required, or making a false report, is a misdemeanor punishable, by one year's Imprisonment. The campaign to run down these draft slacken will be started very sooa. and it will be a rigorous cam paign. Men guilty of evading mili tary service by failure to report when they should be re-classified, need look for no mercy. "Every patriotic registrant who has been granted deferred classificuc tion, but whose status has changed so that he is no longer entitled to that classification, will report the change immediately to his local board," said Captain John E. Cullison, in charge of the execution of the draft law in the office of the Adjutant General. "Those who have not the patriot ism to report voluntarily will gain j nothing by it. They will be found out ' and not only re-classified, but will be ' subject to severe punishment, j "It a man is in doubt as to change 'of status, he should see his local board about it without delay." if Starts And develops great power and mileage because of its full, uniform chain of boiling points. Look for the Red Crown sign before you fill. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) yfe Gasoline yQualitp 5 1 ITH the welfare of our com munity at heart; a desire to render all possible assistance in fin ancial upbuilding .of this particular section of our great Republic in this time of stress, we offer our facilities. We are always glad to consult with you regarding the purchase or sale of products of the farm or ranch; with the buriness man, or working man, woman or child. Our Savings Department and Time Certificates of Deposit, paying four per cent, interest, are the beginning point on the high road to Success. A check ing account 'with a strong bank lends prestige to your efforts. FirSl 'National Wank of Heppner, Oregon ASSETS OF MORE THAN ONE AND ONE QUARTER MILLION LX)LLARS E. Nordyke and T. H. Nichols have j each purchased Deering combines to care for their wheat, harvest- and the machines are set up and ready for business. I Prof. N. E. Fertig is getting ready to move with his family to their new location at Granger, Wash., where lie will have charge of the schools as superintendent for the year begin ning with July 1st. Granger is sit uated in the midst of a fine settle ment in the Yakima valley arid has splendid schools. C. R. Pointer, who wos operated on to the Heppner hospital Sunday and had Mb appendix removed, Is report ed to be doing well and should reach a stage of convalescence In a few davs. Mr. Pointer took suddenly ill, suffering from a chronic complaint, and his operation seems to have not been performed a moment too soon. Andrew Reaney returned the last of the week from Eagle, Idaho, where he visited for a short time at the home of his son, Lawrence. He re ports that Mrs. Reaney, his son's wife, U in very poor health and Is not ex pected to live long. She Is suffering with lung trouble and no hopes are held out for her recovery, Mrs. Reaney is a daughter of Mrs. Fell, of Heppner. L'dcIb Lank Booher and wife re turned Tuesday from a visit with rel atives at different points is Washing ton, Idaho and at Weston, Oregon. Throughout the entire trip Mr. Booher found crop conditions very Wear Made-to-Measure Clothes And Stand out from the Crowd YOU command attention when wearing Taylor-Made Clothes; every suit is finely made from dependable fabrics rich in beauty and quality and the most up-to-date models of the season. Every Suit, no matter what the cost, repre sents a value absolutely unparalelled. Prices run from $20 to $50 With a wonderful range at the popular price of $30.00 Taylor-Made Clothes are guaranteed to fit and please you to the utmost Thomson Brothers