THE OAZETTE-TDtES, HEPPXER, OREGOX, THURSDAY, JULY it, 191ft.
PAGE THREE
Dr. H. T. ALLlioN
Physician Burgeon
Office ia Odd Fellows Building.
HEPPNER, OREGON
Dr.N. E.WINNABD
Physician & Burgeon
Office In Fair Building
HEPPNER - - OREGON
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
Physician & Surgeon
Office In Patterson Drug Store
HEPPNER :-: :-: OREGON
Dr. E. J. VAUGHN
DENTIST
Permanently located In the Odd
Fellows building, Room 4 and 6.
HEPPNER, OREGON
DR. GUNSTER
VETERINARIAN
Licensed Graduate
HEPPNER - - ORE.
Telephone 722 (Day or Night)
DR. J. I CALLOWAY
Osteopathic Physician
6 Roberts Building
Phone 643
At Lexington
Tuesdays and Thursdays
WOODSON & SWEEK
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
Office in Masonic Building,
Heppner, Oregon
Oftce on west end ot May Street
HEPPNER, OREGON
SAM E. VAN VACTOR
ATXORNEY-AT-LAW
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office, Roberts Building, Heppner
Office Phone, Main 643
Residence Phone Main 665
FRANCIS A. McMENAMIN
LAWYER
Roberts Building, Heppner, Oreg.
F. H. ROBINSON
LAWYER
IONB :-: :-: :-: :-: -: OREGON
PATTERSON & ELDER
2 Doors North Palace Hotel.
TONSORAL ARTISTS
FINE BATHS . SHAVING 25c
J. H. BODE
MERCHANT TAILOR
HEPPNER :-: :-: :-: OREGON
"Tailoring That Satisfies"
LOUIS PEARSON
MERCHANT TAILOR
HEPPNE-R :-: :-: :-: OREGON
ROY V. WHITEIS
Flto Insurance writer for best Old
Line Companies.
HEPPNER -:- -:- OREGON
M. J. BRADFORD
"The Village Painter"
Coutractding Painting and Paper
hanging, Phone 653. Office
1st Door Wtst of 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
I haul baggage and passengers to
and from the depot to any part of the
city. Phone 566 or 183. Lee Cant
veil. FOR SALE Black Minorca Eggs.
$1.50 per setting. Write Mrs. W.
Ps Gcrdon, Echo, Ore., R. R,, No4 1,
G.-T. WANT COLUMN
FOR SALE A Singer sewing ma
chine, almost new. Inquire at this
office.
FOR SALE Light team of horses
weight about 1150 pounds. Inquire
this office. 4t.
FOR SALE Sixteen-foot Holt
Combine in good condition. Price
! reasonable. Inquire Gazette-Times
FOR SALE One 14-foot Deering
header, has cut less than 1000 acres.
In good condition. Terms reason
able. GLENN HAYES, Phone 29-F-23.
15-tf.
FOR BALF Studebaker car. sev
en passenger. Model "35", perfect
mechanical condition. Terms $450.
$200 cash and note for balance. In
quire at this office. tf.
FOR SALE One Deering 2-mau
Combine, with engine. Has never
been run. Terms reasonable,
tf. WALT ROOD, Heppner.
FOR SALE Mack truck in good
running order. Inquire at this of
fice. FOR SALE OR TRADE. '
Two houses in best residence sec
tion of Salem, Ore., on paved street
and car line, street and sewer asses
ments paid in full. For further par
ticulars inquire of FRANK S. PAR
KER, Box 222, Heppner, Oregon.
FOR SALE Good home tract on
outskirts of Heppner; about 4 acres.
Plenty of fruit, berries etc., and fine
garden tract that can be well irriga
ted from system already installed; an
Ideal home place. Inquire at this of
fice. 13-lm.
FOR SALE Two, good, heavy,
gentle work mules. Five head of
good work horses and mares, threo of
which are good leaders. Inquire
Frank Anderson, Heppner. 4-tf
Good 7-Rooiu Hou.se For Sale
And half-acre lot. An ideal home
Terms reasonable. Fruit trees and
shrubbery and good garden. Mrs. W
E. Walbridge.
WANTED To rent a farm of Borne
640 acres. Party has horses, imple
ments, feed and seed. Would like be
tween 400 and 500 acres of farm
land. ' Inside fifteen miles of Hepp
ner. Or will buy on crop payment
contract. Inquire at this office.
Wanted Position as cook through
harvest. Have had experience and
can furnish references if desired.
Mrs. W. Scott, 520 E.J3 St., The Dal
les, Ore.
Hummer Pasture Wanted for 30 tc
35 head of horses. Address Matt
Halvorsen, lone, Ore.
HOME WANTED.
Owing to the new ordinance gov
erning the running at large of dogs,
we wish to find a home in the coun
try for. a good-natured, playful Cock
er Spaniel. A good watch dog and
very fond of children. If you like
dogs and know how to treat them,
here is your chance.
Address P. O. Box 4, Heppner, or
phone Main 662.
LOST Mare, saddle and bridle.
Sorrel, bald face, bpb-tailed, weight
about 950, branded J on stifle.
Saddle branded E M C. $5.00 re
ward. 16-:it. McENTIRE BROS., Cecil Or.
LOST Berkshire sow, 2 or 3 yrs.
old. Reward. Eastern Oregon
Jack Farm, Lexington, Oregon,
LOST Pearl ear ring, with topaz
pendant, somewhere between Palace
hotel and depot. Finder please leave
at this office. Reward.
14-2t-pd.
LOST Open face 16 size, nickel,
Hamilton watch. Finder return
same to Borg, Jeweler, and receive
reward. 2t pd.
LOST Somewhere about Lexing
ton, a pair of tortoise shell rimmed
nose pincher glasses. Finder return
to this office and receive reward.
TO MY FRIENDS AND PATRONS:
I will hereafter conduct my dress
making parlors at my home on Lin
den street, one block north of depot.
I wish to thank my patrons for the
work given me, and ask a continu
ance of your patronage.
15-2t. MRS. GEO. MOORE.
I would kindly request that all
those who were owing me on account
of hoard and room rent at the time
of the fire, will now mettle up. I have
many adjustments to make and need
all that is coming, and need it
promptly. Will you assist me.
PALACE HOTEL CO.
J. L. Wilkins, Manager.
NOTICE I
Notice Is hereby given that any
person who builds any fire within the
corporate limits of the city of Hepp
ner within 50 feet of any building
without first obtaining the consent of
the Marshal will be prosecuted to the
full extent of the law.
This notice to be in effect until
further notice.
W. W. SMEAD. Mayor.
Phone Main 204 for your baggage
transfer or the bus to the depot. M.
L. CANTWELL.
George J. Currin departed Tues
day morning for Gresham and will
spend a few weeks with his family
there.
y. ! C. JL
A FRENCH FAMILY
How a division of American sol
diers in France played raven to the
Elijah of a family ot starving French
refugees, found cowering in the at
tic of an old meat market, and how
Elijah, in turn, made the ravens com
fortable, is told in this story, written
by a Y. M. C. A. war work secretary
in France;
"A division of our troops were on
the move. For thirty-eight hours
the men had been on the cars. Then
had detrained, and started to hike
for the front. Two days of marching
had left them stiff and tired.
"The Y. M. C. A, men had gone
ahead of them. They knew that the
troops would be in a certain village
by a certain time. So they loaded
three big trucks with canteen sup
plies, hustled to the village, and look
ed around for a canteen.
"They found an old meat market
with the shutters up, located the ow
ner, and got the key. The supplies
were unloaded, and the trucks start
ed back to town. The two men left
behind to 'open up' lighted a candle,
and began an Investigation.
"Up the steep stone stops they
found a room, with a family of refu
gees crouched inside. The old fire
place had been opened. A few twigs,
the size of a lead pencil, made a fire
as big as a coffee cup.
"A mother nursing a baby sat on
the floor in front of the fire, two
small girls whose eyes seemed un
naturally big in their thin, little faces
cowering near her, scared by the
steps they had heard. A daughter
about fifteen years old was cooking
some nondescript bits of food in an
old frying pan. The father, a little
man, badly cripled In the early bat
tles of the war, started forward, as
the strangers approached.
"They spoke no English, and our
men spoke no French, but suddenly
they understood. These were 'les
Amerlcaines!' They would not be
hurt. They were going to be fed.
"When the American soldiers
came, they found the mother making
chocolate for them, while the oldest
daughter scrubed up the old mafket,
humming the 'Marseillaise' as she
worked. The two little girls, burst
ing with importance, ran on small
errands. The baby sat on the can
teeli counter, chuckling at them.
"As they entered, the crippled lit
tle Frenchman, busy opening pack
ing cases, straightened himself as
well as he could, and saluted them.
There was pride in the way he did it.
He had worn a uniform, too.
"The American boys adopted the
family, at once. The Y. M. C. A. men
had fed the refugees, of course, hut
the soNTiers insisted upon buying
them more food in the canteen. They
tossed the baby in the air, and began
teaching the little girls American
slang.
"That night there was a real fire
in the fireplace upstairs, and real
food on the table. Windows, board
ed up so long, were open. The fam
ily chattered away at the top of their
voices, instead of whispering, as they
had done. There was nothing to be
afraid of now.
" 'Les Amerlcaines' has come!"
Sam Turner arrived home from the
Mare Island Navy yard Friday on a
30-day furlough. Sam looks fine and
states that he is enjoying the training
he is receiving. He expects to get
right into the harness in the harvest
fields at the Turner ranch in Sand
Hollow and work off some of his sur
plus flesh.
' And develops great
power and mileage
because of its full,
uniform chain of
boiling points. Look
for the Red Crown
' Bign before you fill.
Standard oil
company
(Cilifornit)
WeGdsolhte
fQwllt?
G. W. MILHOLLAND, Special Agent
ptllrl
Heppner, Oregon
NationNowCalls
on All Patriots
By HAPSBURG LIEBE .
of the Vigilantes.
Y m "-HIS is the stow of Cede
I Fourth, the Day that Is the
J American year's badge of In
dependence and Liberty, the
Day that should mean to as much the
same as a real Christmas and the
Day that too many of ns hae hereto
fore dragged through the cheap mire
of loud noises and spread-eagefem!
And now we stand in no small danger
of losing forever the glorious old
Fourth to the Prussian legions. It is
a fact, and not a calamity bowL. I
tell you, it is a fact.
We have three distinct classes of
Fourth Observers in this big and good
natured, easy-going, stin half-asleep
nation of ours. There is the class that
drowses the day away; the class that
spends the Day either in Joyriding or
in making great noises; and the class
that looks upon the Fourth as the sa
cred day it is. It was this Utter
named class that made the Fourth;
is keeping the Fourth ; and will contin
ue to keep the fourth, God willing.
If these patriots can only get the help
of all the people we shall keep the Day
of Independence as long as time lasts.
We do stand in danger of losing this
Day and alt it means, I tell you most
solemnly. The distance between us
and Prussia has given as a false feel
ing of security. Man, there ia no dis
tance now I Germany Is at our elbows.
Germany is right here with canning
spies and Incendiaries, and cot-throat
propagandists. Let me state this to
you, brother American; there are men
of no small importance in things, here
In the United States, who are secretly
working for Germany in the stout be
lief that Germany will win in the end.
Foolish, you say? Unspeakable, insuf
ferable, perhaps; but hardly foolish.
Germany is not yet whipped ia Eu
rope. If Germany finally wins In En
rope ; If Germany breaks and rolls up
the allied lines that which will fol
low will surely take your breath away.
Never, never was there dreamed of
such a colossal reign of horror as that
which would follow a final Ptmaian
victory In Europe.
Man, man, we mustn't lose our
Fourth. It is our most sacred her
itage ; we must keep it and all It stands
for, though the last drop of our blood
goes to pay the price. We can keep
It, if only we wake to the great ne
cessity that confronts us now. If we
lose it, it will be the fault of the slack
ers among ns. Our biggest difficulty
Is that wooden-headed, nnfmmifoa tvn-
fldence we've got in George in leaving
it to the other fellow. Dout for min
ute think we've got only a "bit" to do;
uo ; we must do all we can!
Generally speaking, we've been mlld-
ly patriotic so far. The average per-y
son of ns has really civen little hunt
suffered little save the inconvenience
caused by food and fuel situations. '
We must back up the army and navy,
through our government, better than j
we have been doing. Remember, poor )
George can't possibly do all there is
to do! If we don't help Gerrge, the!
other fellow, George is going into the"
hands of the Black Beast of Kultur.',
And if we don't help George, It would
serve us right If the Spiked Helmet
did get us but wouldn't it be hell for '
George? Poor old George. God bless
that patriotic, overburdened man.'
Let's help him, you and I; Ieri keep:
the Fourth as our own Day of Inde
pendence. I can imagine no greater
remorse of conscience than to look ;
backward, after these bitter years that J
be upon us now, and have to say to,
myself this: f
"This Liberty is not mine. I did
nothing to help. Jfothlng. Nothing."
God save the Fourth of July,ftmil
make it Immortal! God must save it
for us If only all the people will help
Him and George. We pay for what
we get. It is the oldest law. If Lib
erty is ours, we must pay for it
Cradle of Liberty.
" ft
Famous Old Faneuil Hall, From an
Old Revolutionary Print
Maryland Claims Patriot
Samuel Chase, a signer of the Dec
laration and a justice of the United
States Supreme court, was born on
April 17, 1741, in Somerset eounty.
juaryinna.
ff
Fill
Sapolio doing its work. Scouring
iuru.o.nanne
Join
APPLY AT ANY
?OST OFFICE
for
SMOCM WOICANV
SON CO.
SERVICE
CP
Real Gravely Plug has been
chewed for its real tobacco
satisfaction ever since 1831.
It's made the good old
Gravely way.
1111
lUc
-0
fcfc
mt
Get yours early before they are all gone
SeeC E Janes pr H C Ashbaugh,
Mepphet, Ofe
r
I
Meatless Days!
The People's Cash Market
Is fr, operating with the food administration by encouraging the sale
of fish and poultry as substitutes for the otlier meats which we want
to save.
JFRESH OYSTERS, CLAMS, CRABS, FISH
Mr Hoover nays: "Eut more fish." The best will be found here.
Main, 73 HENRY SCHWARZ, Proprietor
The Gazette-Times
When you va;j . aid
Hardware
our WMm
Store
2r
We treat you right
THK lU'I.K OK OX K ltl'SlNKSS IS TO "SHAVK" (H it I'KICI S
JitVWN 1X)V WHKX W E HKST MARK OI K (iOOI) HAIiOWAIti;.
WK rKHV ONLY KXOWV, HKLIAW.K HHAXDS OK TOOLS
.YX1 II A KDWAIJK; VK CAKItV A ITU, 1.1 XK OK KVKKYTHIXU
TM V, I'KOn.K OK THIS COMMI XI'I'V WANT; VK WAIT OX YOU
rMOMTTIA'i AX1) WE STAND HACK OK EYKISYTHIXG WE SELL.
UJYK VS YOllt THADE. OIK Pit ICES ARE LOW.
ISE OUl HARDWARE; IT STANDS HARD WEAR.
Peoples Hardware Co
Successors to Tash & Akers
orps recruits.
Now!
Men
who wear
this
emblem
are
U.S.
MARINES
UNDER THIS EMBLEM
Peyton Brand
h Keal bravely
VH Chewing Plug
a pouch and worth it
Cravelylattssomach longer it cottt
no mora tochew than ordinary plug
P. B. Gravely Tobacco Company
Danville, Virginia
HELPisSCARCE
and the weeds will ruin the summer
fallow if not killed.
THE JONES WEEDER
will save 50 in labor and do a bet
ter job than the usual methods.
Observe them by Eating
FISH fresh or salted
$2.00 After July 1st
''XiaJ
I
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