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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1918)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 11, It IS. PAGE THKER V KOFESSION All IX) LIMA Dr. H. T. ALLISON Physician A Bwpo Office. In Odd Fellows Building. HEPPNER. OREGON Dr. N. E. WINNARD Physician St Surgeoa Office in Fair Building HEPPNER - OREGON A.D. McMURDO, M. D. Physician Burgeon Office In Patterson Drug Store HEPPNER :-: ;-: OREGON Dr. E. J. VAUGHN DENTIST Permanently located In the Odd Fellows building, Rooms 4 and B. HEPPNER, OREGON DR. GUNSTER VETERINARIAN Licensed Graduate HEPPNER - - ORE. Telephone 722 (Day or Night) DR. J. Ii. CALLOWAY Osteopathic Physician 6 Roberts Building Phone 643 At Lexington Tuesdays and Thursdays WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORNEV'8-AT-LAW Office in Masonic Building, Heppner, Oregon Offce on west end ol May Street HEPPNER, OREGON SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORXEY-AT-LAW 8. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office, RoberU Building, Heppner Office Phone, Main 643 Residence Phone Main 66S FRANCIS A. McMENAMIN LAWYER RoberU Building, Heppner, Oreg. F. H. ROBINSON LAWYER IONE :-: :-: :-: :-: -: OREGON PATTERSON & ELDER S Doors North Palace Hotel. TONBORAL ARTISTS FINE BATHS SHAVING 25c J. H. BODE MERCHANT TAILOR HEPPNER :-: :-: :: OREGON "Tailoring That Satisfies" 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 ot Creamery 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 Heppner Oregon Phone 633 Turning Used Cars Into Profitable Trucks TRUXTUN Truck Attachment Makes Lowest Cost Dependable Truck Fits Any Make of Car Internal Gear Shaft Drive The driving mechanism pf the Truxtun is ot a type that has proved most efficient. Most of the heavy hauling of the armies ot the world is done with this type Internal gear drive. The Truxtun is durable, economical, and reasonable in price. VAUGHN & SONS LOCAL DEALERS, HEPPNER. I haul baggage and passengers to nd from the depot to any part of the city. Phone 665 or 183. Lee Cant velL FOR SALE Black Minorca Eggs. 11.50 per setting. Write Mrs. W. P. Qcxdon, Echo, Ore., R. R. No. 1, YOU I Do Your Christmas I n fi 1 loaling fcarly HEED FUEL ADMINISTRATOR GARFIELD'S WARNING. PULL TOGETHER-GET SERIOUS-WE'RE AT WAR There is plenty of coal to supply all m , BUT m It can't be mined and transported in eight months. It takes twelve full months to mine a year's supply. There are only 200 days left until the snow flies.. Deliv eries are blocked! DON'T ARGUE PROVIDE STORAGE ROOM If you haven't the cash on hand, borrow it. Store Coal Now IN MAY, JUNE AND JULY Make what sacrifice is needed to keep your home warm, your factory running, and the food, clothing, arms and ammunition necessary for our Soldiers "Over There" flowing in a steady stream to the front. Help win the war and protect yourself and your business at the same time. "Turn -A-Lump" (FOR ALL THATS GOOD IN COAL OR WOOD) SEE LEW AT LEXINGTON OR BILL AT IONE a HELPisSCARCE and the weeds will ruin the summer fallow if not killed. THE JONES WEEDER will save 60 In labor and do a bet ter job than the usual methods. Get yours early before they are all gone SeeC E Jones or H C Ashbaugh Heppner, Ore. 11 l jyyyk SPECIAL WAR PaOBLEfJS WILL BE MET By (LLC. Men Will Bo Trained for Effective Miliitary Service War Work For Womcm. Meatless Days! "SI wSrS The People's Cash Market Is cooperating with the food administration by encouraging the sale of fish and poultry as substitutes for the other meats which we want to save. FRESH OYSTERS, CLAMS, CRABS, FISH Mr Hoover says: "Eat more fish." The best will be found here. HENRY SCHWARZ, Proprietor Phone Main, 73 J O. A. C, Corvallls, July 10 Spe cial war conditions will be met by the Oregon Agricultural College next school year. All students over 18 years of age will be urged to Join a military train ing unit and thereby become mem bers of the United States army. The government is in need ot men trained along technical lines and consequent ly students who enroll in the college next fall will have an opportunity ot obtaining the training desired by Un cle Sam. Those under 18 will be urg ed to join the unit, but it will be the policy of the government not to call the men into active service ntU they reach the age of 21. The government is sending enlist ed men by the hundreds to O. A. c because the demand In. the nay for men with technical training la far greater than even Ue normal out put of technical colleges like O. A, C and none of these colleges are able to supply anything lik its normal out put. It will be possible for young men to return to or start la college with the feeling that they are doing the bidding of their government and are by no means slackers. Practically all types of training for military service most in demand will be offered by the Oregon Agricultural College. For any but advanced offi cers and aviators, the college will of fer not only all the types of training glvcm in the ciutonments and train ing camps, but In addition engineer ing, commerce, mining, forestry, pharmacy, chemical engineering, san itation, veterinary medicine, physi cal education and the trades and in dustries, as well as all phases of borne economics. The courses will all in volve essential war training. Effective military work requires preparation. The higher and more effective the service, the longer and more exacting is the training. The government Isn't sending men to the front trenches to be slaughtered. It Is sending men there whose resources and training have proved that they can take terrible toll of the enemy and at the right moment go over the top. ARMY ENGINEERS ACM Troops ot the Engineers Corps, tho seldom mentioned in the dispatches from the front, perform duties ot the very highest importance in any cam paign. The main duties of the en gineers "is to apply engineering and science to the emergencies of mod ern warfare to protect and assist the troops. When circumstances demand they 'are thrown into the combat as purely fighting units. They are charged specifically with surveying and reconoltering for military pur poses; they make maps which deter mine the plan of the campaign; they prepare camps, open roads, lay brid ges across unfordable streams, han dle the railways and operate armored trains, organize bases from which to launch the attack, fortify points of support, force an opening through the enemy's obstacles, blow np bis forts, operate search lights; they con struct wire entanglements, destroy bridges, blow up depots, wreck roads, and In general are ready to do any thing which the non-technical troops cannot do. In the present war the duties of the Engineer Troops are so varied that a man who has been trained In civil life to "do things" can be so placed in the engineers that his training will be of value to him self and his country. Engineer Troops were among the very first sol diers to go to France last year. Sev eral new regiments of the United States Engineers are now being re cruited and organized in different parts of the United States. The 604th at Vancouver Barracks, and the 470th. at Camp Fremont, Cal., though Am ericas one great Engineering Train ing Camp is at Camp Humphreys Virginia, near Washington, D. C, this is to be the great school of instruc tion for engineers in all the branches of their activities, including gas of fonse and defense, highway building, bridge building, mining, pumping, sapping, and a variety of related sub jects. Men outside the draft age who have not passed their 41st birthday are urged to join the engineers. Pro motion will be rapid for those who show special adaptibility and force All enlistments are for the duration of the war only, unless sooner dis charged. Application for enlistment should be made to the nearest Army Recruiting Station, or to nearest Postmaster. Meat Must Be Sold Fresh meat is perishable. It must be sold within about two weeks for whatever it will bring. A certain amount of beef is frozen for foreign shipment, but domestic markets demand fresh, chilled, unfrozen beet Swift & Company can not increase prices by withholding meat, be cause it will not keep fresh and salable for more than a few days after it reaches the market. Swift & Company cannot tell at the time of purchasing cattle, what price fresh meat will bring when put on sale. If between purchase and sale, market con ditions change, the price of meat must also change. , The Food Administration limits our profit to 9 per cent on capital invested in the meat departments. This is about 2 cents per dollar of sales. No 4 profit is guaranteed, and the risk of loss is not eliminated As a matter of fact, meat is often sold at a loss because of the need of selling it before it spoils. Li Swift & Company, U.S. A. j The Gazette-Times $2.00 After July Is! Mrs. Hessie McAtee Kinney and I. C. Bennett, both of this city, were united in marriage at lone on July 4th, Rev. J. L. Jones, pastor of the Congregational church at that place performing the ceremony. These are well known people of Heppner and this paper extends to them its heartv congratulations. At the present Mr. Bennett is in charge of the Minor & Thompson sheep, but the newly-weds will continue to make their home in this city. , Buy a new fee Cream Freezer ICE CREAM IS A GOOD NOURISHING FOOD FOR YOUNG OH OLD KAT L(TS OF IT. BUY OXE OF Ol'K FREEZERS AND MAKE VOI R OWX ICE CltEAM. THEN YOlT CAN ALL HAVE IT WHENEVER YOU LIKE. YOU CAX SERVE ICE CREAM WHEN VOI R FRIENDS CALL TOO. A FREEZER COSTS ONLY A SMALL SUM RUT GIVES GREAT PLEASURE. VSR OUR HARDWARE; IT STANDS HARD WEAR. Peoples Hardware Co Successors to Tash & Akers