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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1918)
PAGK TWO LI CECIL REUS HEMS M. V. Logan of the Willows did 1 nsiness in Cecil on Tuesday. V. G. Palniateer was doing some business in lone on Thursday. I Mrs. John Nash is now visiting' ith some friends in Cottage Grove.' Mrs. Jack Hynd and party visited vith Mrs. George Miller on Wednesday. Mrs. Jefferson and Miss Barnes vis-; i;ed with Mrs. T. H. Lowe on Tues-i day. Walter Pope and Winter Bros. ere all business men in Arlington on Tuesday. Miss C. E. Etrats left for Hepp- ruT on Friday where .she intends to i Mi for a few days. j Mrs. Bert Bow ker was a Cecil call er on her way home from Echo and ' Ileppner Junction on Friday. Mr.'and Mrs. C. A. Minor and Miss Blanche Minor. Mrs. Bennett and Miss Georgia Summers, accompanied by W. Shippy of Portland, arrived in Cecil on Wednesday evening, the Mi nors proceeding to Heppner on Thurs day. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Everett and son left for Pendleton, where he Intends to work in the harvest for a few weeks. Miss Juanita Crabtree returned home on Monday after spending the past week among friends in and near Portland. W. G. Palmateer, wife and daugh ter had quite a time on Sunday visit ing among their friends, taking in Morgan, Cecil and the Willows. Miss Malinda May of the Lone Star Ranch left for lone on Sunday, where she is going to take charge of the cooking during harvest for Mr. Char les Weatherford of that town. Mrs. Jack Hynd and Mrs. A. Hen riksen went up to Heppner on the lo cal on Friday and were met by Mr. Henriksen on Saturday evening, who brought the two ladies home in his car. Peter Eauernfiend of Cecil was a Heppner visitor on Monday and Tues day returning on Wednesday, declar- flkViVV If you have ns;d othex J.i'tT'" 1 mmmj ' ""ename-18 $mh m&Sms of E-H Gold Seal White VM felSv ' It's whit, an! stays so. ffef? J0&tek jfcfcSllL Makes a hard, glass-like, VIWK fimsh that will re- jS fck ;W Mil fcral t3in nsiresh appearance m ing that there is no place like Cecil aud Kitter. Pete got a bad scare in Heppner when he saw the water come down the street on Tuesday. Hoof Paint for Tree Wounds Found to be an Economical Way for Settling Abrasions. Many orchardists aud tree surgeons have found that the best and most economical way of treating tree wounds of all kinds is to cover them with roof paint. It is easy to apply and farmers throughout the country have used it with benefit in the treat ment of abrasions, cuts and grafting. I is theavy enough in body to form a thick coating over the wound, thus preventing insects and the elements from harming the tree. It is also very easy to apply. A professional tree surgeon and primer who is taking care of some 20,0(io trees, writes enthusiastically about it for use on citrus trees. "It is," he says," the best thing I have ever used or heard of, and being so well satisfied I heartily recommend Oronite roof paint to any and all or chardists who may be Interested in such a paint." The use -of this paint is undoubted ly the best, most convenient and econ omical way of healing abrasions of trees, and it greatiy prolongs their life and productiveness. FOR SALE Best combine harves ter, 16 or 20 foot cut. Iri good run ning order except draper. -Terms reasonable. Inquire SUerman Wake field ranch on Heppner Flat. 5 jy XiJ JW?XiAJLt 4t Made by BASS HOSTF.R PAINT CO, San Franci.co DISTRIBUTORS! TASH & AKERS Heppner, Oregon. THEY ALL DKMAM) IT. Heppner, Like Every City and Town in the I'nion, Receives It. People w ith kidney ills want to be cured. When one suffers the tor tures of an aching back, relief is eagerly sought for. There are many remedies today that relieve, but do not cure. Doan's Kidney Pills have brought lasting results t5 thousands. Here, is Heppner evidence of their merit. Mrs. H. Hughes, Court St., says: "My back ached and throbbed so bad ly at times I could hardly stand the pain. The way my kidneys were act ing was causing me a lot of distress. I had taken only a few doses of Doan's Kidney Pills when I noticed a big change; my back felt stronger and my kidneys acted more regular ly. One box permanently cured the trouble and since then I have enjoyed the best of health." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Hughes had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. (HANDLE e S ( Famous For Its Marvelous Motor ! i! Sedan Now Is the Best Time to Get Your Sedan THOSE who bought Chandler sedans last Fall, with the Winter in mind, find now that they have a most delightful Summer car. And those who buy now, with the Summer in mind, will find in a few months that ihey have a most comfortable Winter car. For the handsome Fisher-built convertible sedan body which is mounted on the Chandler chassis is quite as much a Summer car as it is p. Winter car. It i3 an open car when you want it open, and a closed car when you want it closed. All the windows are instantly adjustable and may be either entirely lowered away into the body panels or removed. The car is roomy, splendidly upholstered and seats seven in perfect comfort. The auxiliary seats face forward. There can never be a better time of year than right now to get your sedan. SIX ATTRACTIVE CHANDLER MODELS Seven-Passenger Touring Car, $1795 Four-Passenger Roadster, SI 795 Four-Passenger Dispatch Car, $1875 Convertible Sedan, $2495 Convertible Coupe. S239S Limousine, $3095 All prices t. o. b. Cleveland MARTIN REID Heppner, Ore. CHANDLER MOTOR CAR COMPANY. CLEVELAND. OHIO BEA Y.M.C.A. SECRETARY If you can measure up to thee re quirements you can go to France as a Y. M. C. A. War Work secretary: Good mixer Over draft age Not a pacifist or slacker Willing to go under shell fire Broad-guaged aud willing to go where sent The call has gone out from the Na tional War Work Council of the Y. M. C. A. for 400 men for overseas ser vice before Septemberl. These mea must go to France as big brothers for the boys who have gone from their homes to fight in the great cause. The Y. M. C. A. secretary must take cheer into his life, serve htm at all times and keep him fit to fight. Frank A. Jackson, head of the bu reau of personnel for the National War Work Council of the Y. M. C. A. with headquarters at 619 Fivst Na tional Bank Building, San Francisco, says that the need for men at this time is most urgent. "We want men big enough to have a smile and a cheery word when they themselves are fagged out after hours of service for our boys. We want men with big hearts and hard mus cles, men who will go to France on a blind assignment, ready to handle whatever job appears at the moment to be most important. We need nat ural leaders, men wfto are real men, good mixers and capable of exerting the proper influence. "We don't want pacifists, slackers. Our men go under shell fire. They have been gassed and wounded by bursting shrapnel. We need men who understand something about ath letics, who can drive motor truck3. We need red-blooded American men who don't know what fear is but who want to serve overseas and do some thing to help w in this war." FOOD SAVING MIST BE KEIT UP. No matter how large may be Amer ica s next yeuu ot wtieat, n wouia be folly to suppose that there will be any return to a policy of unre stricted consumption of wheat pro ducts The fact is that tendencies will probably be all the other way. For American wheat, is no longer the property ot America alone. Out of the wheat that we grow we must build up a great reserve that will be a bulwark against privation not only for us, but for all the countries by whose side we are fighting. We have got to make provision for a possible short crop next year and for possi ble short crops in France and Eng land as well. That means we must save without letup, and save on a scale even lar ger than heretofore. Our reward will come In knowing that while we are saving wheat we are saving the situation, too. Part of that reward is already at hand in the shape of figures show ing how American self-denial has tided England over the most difficult period of the war. Only American wheat, according to a British author ity, saved England from adopting the restriction which her statesmen most dreaded the rationing of bread. Bread cards, it is said, would have had a most depressing effect on Brit ish morale and the fighting spirit, yet bread cards would have been inevit able but for American wheat. The, meat situation fc-is hardly less serious, and would have been posi tively disastrous except for American bacon, whicli all through the winter wa3 a saving help in time of trouble of the English food administration These are big result"! to show for the comparative little that we have given up. iSven greater things may be ac complished if we do not relax. Spo-Uesman-Review. Why Not Others? E. M. Shutt, who is a successful salesman for the Oregon Life Insur ance Co., went out to Jason Bid- die's rancli on Rhea creek last Sun day, and will spend the next thirty days helping Mr. Biddle harvest his grain. Mr. Shutt aims to practice what he preaches that it Is a wrong policy for the soldier boys to be re nuired to come home from their training camps to help save the grain crops while the towns and cities are full of able-bodied men, who are en gaged in occupations that they could leave till after harvest. Insurance men and numerous others engaged in non-productive and non-construct ive pursuits by helping the farmers with their crops could enable the sol dier boys to go ahead with their much-needed training and thus be in shape to help lick the Kaiser and bring the war to an end as soon as possible, Mr. Shutt's example Is wor thy of emulation. CARD OF THANKS. We desire to express our thanks to the relief committee for the substan tial aid rendered us following the de structlon of all our property In the Heppner fire, and also the kind ladies who did sewing and brought ia seed ful articles of wearing apparel. This kindly assistance is appreciated more than mere words can express. MR. AND MRS. BERT KRAMER. Good music and a Ann time for all those who attend the dance at Park ers Mill on Saturday evening, July 20. " To Our Subscribers Living Outside of Morrow County O 0 I O 0 THE NEW ZONE POS TAL LAW has gone into effect and as a result the cost of mailing The Gazette-Times to you has been materially increased. This in creased cost, added to the al ready greatly advanced cost iri all departments of the pub lishing business, makes it im perative that we collect in all due subscription accounts at once. Especially is this true of out -of -county subscrip tions. Those living outside of Morrow county who are in arrears are urgently requested to send in their money at once. You Do Not Want To Do Without The Old Home Paper IT IS NOW BETTER than ever and getting better 11 the time. But "it takes money to make the mare go," and the quality of the paper must necessarily be de termined by the re sponse we receive on subscription accounts. The Gazette-Times morrow County's newspaper Is Now $2 Per Year Statements are being mailed to all out-of-county subscrib ers and an early response will be appreciated. The Gazette-Times