THK C.AZKTTK-TIMES. HEPPXER. ORrXOX. THIT.STWV, JTXY 25, 1018. r.GK SIX IU'v. IVi-m IihH 1 Pine ril. Rev. lYrscliall. Vnitetl Hretlirea preacher at Pine City, has been transferred to Albion. Wash. Mrs. PerM'hall ant! children were in Echo Thursday preparatory to leaving for Albion, ami Mr. PerschaH will join Ii is family at their new home as soon as he can close up his business af fairs here. Kev. S. M. Mathis. of K.lwall, Wash., will take Mr. TersehaU'f place at Tin? City. Mr. Mathis is ti e father of Joss MathK of Echo. Ei ho News. I mat 111 llarlejr Crop Slmrt. As reports come in from the har vest fields it becomes more evident the big shortage in the county will be in the barley crop. From all parts of the comity the yield of this grain is being reported light with the quality generally below the usual grade says the Pendleton Tribune. The be.-t yield and quality seems to be on the foot hill lands east of Pendleton. A peculiar condition re ported is that in many localities bar ley on sprins; plowing seems to be turning out better than the fall 1 wed ground. Eli Experts Say "ZEROLENE IS EETTER" because it holds better compression, gives better protection to the moving parts and deposits less car bon. Zerolene is the correct oil for a typea of automobile engines the correct oil for your automo bile. Get our Lubrication Chart show ing the correct consistency for your car. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) mm: SIM A'. The T'-Head type engine, itlut trated here, like all internal com buatton eniinet, requires an oil that holds its lubricating qualities at cylinder heat, burns clean in the cylinders and goes out with ex haust. Zerolene fills these require ments perfectly, bocauao rf cor nctty refined from selected CeJUbr mm aapAar6ase crude, BESMC IMS ROL The Standard Oil for Motor Cars ES32 SPECIAL A HEPPNER, OREGON W 1TH the Deering Combined Harvester you can harvest your crop for one-half the ex pense you can any other way. Two men is all that is necessary to put your wheat in the sack. The machine cleans the grain in perfect manner, takes out and saves all weed seed and leaves straw in bunches to be easily taken care of. Can furnish them with or without an engine. Will have to have your order early in order to insure getting' the machine. The factory is lim ited to a definite numbsr of machines and when that n ember is reached there wi'il he no more for anyone. Give Us Your Order Now GILLIAM & BISBEE L MONTERESTELLI MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS PENDLETON, OREGON FINE MONUMENT AND CEMETERY WORK All parties interested in getting work in my line should get my prices and estimates before placing their orders ALL WORK GUARANTEED I to the boys and girls Of morrow county Greeting: You have had rather an uphill bus iuess this year, to raise a garden. Nu merous draw-backs have oeeurrei' but remember "No discourageme will ever prove greater than yov power to overcome or resist the: if you will only dig in like you moa. it." The Western Farmer sa Clioer up- Take courage. Ever s:ati w ho ever shinned up a tree hr. . slip down the trunk time an !-:iin until he got hold of a strou ..inch and pulled himself up." 'f you mt the weeds when it 1 i 1-undred in the shade, it wont tak ;.g for them to wilt. Be a true e:n i r. Have some prize winning exhl : s for the fair. If you enjoy you .vork for work's sake you will wfi ut. We have the best Industria Club in the State according to a re -ert from Mr. O'Reilly, and I am surr we shall continue to hold that repv ation. Girls, do not fail to can pie-1 iy. We are anxious to have seven '.earns to demonstrate each day at tl fair and a good one, bacause the fai. are going to help lick the Kaise )ne paper states thatt hey are tyi i .p in every possible way with the wa -rogram. Since all work and no p!o r.-.akes "Jack a dull boy" we will hav uir play week in Se .tember. Girl and boys who have taken up othe hases of the club work, are doiir their best. The pig clubs are makin; splendid showing and from the dit play of sewing which we saw before the close of school in the various dis tricts, feel sure we shall have sonif splendid exhibits from members of those clubs. So lets all be ready. MRS. LENA SMELL SHURTE, School Superintendent. HARVEST HELP With harvest In full swing we car low view the lalnr situation witl more definiteness. There Is no doub a shortage of men but as yet tht- shortage is net serious enough to jus tify the continued talk of higher wa ges. The majority of Morrow count; farmers are paying $4.00 for box dri vers and loaders. This advance 1 about what was expected at the bes'x ning of the season, even when set ting a standard wage. Such condi .lens as distance from town, distant from source of supplies and harvest ing methods were admitted to be a factor which could not be considered except from the local standpoint. The danger now, however is not a lack nf men but rather the fact that some operator may get uneasy and offer higher wages. This could easily prove disastrous for as soon as one outfit makes a better offer, trouble will start, and will result in a great 1:jt ' t'me. The present wages are con Hered fair not only to the farmer but better than the average man ran obtain in any other industry, and any talk of $5.00 a day for box drivers should be condemned severely. We want to save the wheat regardless of irst and we can do that if the agita tor is quickly spotted and given to un derstand that his part is to work and to create unrtst. The Couny gent will appreciate any informa tion which will assist in 1 ocatliij .hose men who are creating trouble A letter received recently by the unty School Superintendent is of i ercst to every cittzen in Morrow t unty. It indicates the valu of each . dividual's work. The shawl men tioned In the letter below was made by Mrs. Brown who taught at Kisht Vliie Center the past year, and is a plendid example of thrift that rails rth the following appreciation from he director of the Junior Red CroBs work : Mrs. Luna Snell Shurte, Chairman, Morrow County Chapter, A. 11. C, Heppner, Oregon. My Dear Mrs. Shurte: I would like to toll you how very niioh the shoulder shawl v. a appre ciated at Pittsburg. It was the occa sion of more comment than any one ather article in the exhibit and A.'iss ustine Cook, who is in cnarge of the girl's work at National Headquarters asked to take it to Washington to put it in the permanent exhibit there as a sample of thtrtittf work. I is one of he best things I have Keen. Yoi will be interested to know that J?i;:s Cook is the niece of Professor Wirtli who is the founder of the Gary, Indi ana school system. Sineerely yours, ROBERT MAX GARRETT, Director, Junior Membership. UNLAWFUL WEEDS Weeds have commenced their drive and unless the farmer checks their growth, it is doubtful if many of them can be apprehended before fall. Once the weeds secure a foothold, every farmer knows the persistency with which they hold on. Their dam age is enormous each year and the ways in which they injure are too many to mention. Oregon has many very troublesome weeds. We also have several which the state legislation has listed as nox ious weeds. The laws, "Paragraph 6458-6469 Inclusive," on our State Books compels the cutting of these weeds before the seed has commenc ed to form. At the last session of the Legislature, the following Canada Thistle, St. John's Wort, Goat or Tip- tin weed, Chinese Thistle or Prickly Lettuce, Marsh Elder, Poverty or death weed, Iva Burr, Silver or Fail Weed. Cockle Burr, Silver Salt Brush, Tumbling or Jim Hill Mustard, and Russian Thistle. While most farmers realize the danger from infestation, many con sider weed control as less imperative than treating the seed, sowing the seen, cultivating and harvesting the crop. Weed control is undertaken only when the other farm work is not pressing, hence is not continuous and persistent. There are those individ uals who do all in their power to eli minate the weed pests on their land while others make not the semblence of an effort to fight them. This at best is a very deplorable condition. Community iooperation is absolutely necessary for bast results. The law provides for these who will not co operate and who make no effort to eradicate these weeds on their pre mises. It is the duty of the road su pervisor In each road district to hunt out these individuals who persist In allowing the weeds mentioned above to go on producing their seed year af ter year and allowing it to become scattered over their neighbor's fields. The Kaiser Is Biting on Granite." What are the kaiser's troubled thoughts in the night hours, when sleep dies from his pillow, when all the trappings of imperial power are invisible, and he is alone with his guilty conscience and his angry God? Moments must come when accusing reflections and black despair are his portion. Moments must come when 'ear deepens into conviction in his baffled mind that he is treading a dreadful course that must tnd in "no throughfare," no fur:tier pass age. L?ng ago he must have become errified by the unbreakable will of ho opposing nations to fight on to ultimate victory. When he reflects upon the fact that France, with all its sufferings and sacrifices, after '.ho dark days of 1014 and the dark weeks of 1915 and 1916 and 1917. with a ninth of its territory stolen, and more than half of its manhood ';illed or crippled and all of its wo mankind bereaved and saddened, and its children orphaned or impoverish ed that France still fights on with heroic joy of battle what expecta tion can he find that France can be made to listen to peace terms by another weakened German offensive? After the Marne, and after the dark hours of last March, what force and feat of Prussian arms can give the kaiser hope of victory? Russia's collapse only deepened the allied will to further fighting. Italy's narrow escape from irretriev able disaster only heightened the heroic purpose of its people. Bri tain's dreadful losses at the Dardan eles, in France, in Flanders, in dis tant Asia, have but intensified the heroic purpose of its sons and daughters. France, Belgium, Britain and Italy have passed through a long night of darkness and horror, and ti'oir souls are unconrpiered and un conquerable. They noM behold with !oy unbounded the rise of a t csteru iiar of th'i first magnitude and 'cfulgenre, bidding them fight on with stout hearts r.nd uns'iaken reso lution, even as that great star is rC" lug jn the west the biessed signs f dawn are painted in God's l.eavens. We are matching Prussian militar 1 r.i in guns, in airshlrs and in num bers of fighting forces. We are inre than matching the enemy in the genius of generalship. But be yond these we have the higher exal latii.n that soes with a just cause and the unbreakable spirit that has faced four years of defeat and seem ing disaster. Hasten, then, embittered prince of Hohenzollern, to make such terms as yet may be possible with an avenging Nemesis, for your phllos phy is false, your cause is lost, your crimes are gigantic, and God !n his heaven has set his great day of retribution. Spokesman Review. LI; TRASH MI ST BE CLEANED I I' ! Notice is hereby given that, Tues day, Wednesday and Thursday, July 23, 24 and 25 are to be general clean up days for Heppner. All trash of every description must be removed from the City. The City Council will have teams to haul off the trash, ow ner to pay reasonable price there for. Arrangements have also been made to use the burned off part of town where all trash that will burn will be burned by tho Marshal," sav ing a lot of expense in hauling. Peo ple will therefore see that all trash that will burn is kept seperate from that that will not burn. W. W. SMEAD, Meyor. Heppner, Oregon, July 17, 1918. Elza Vinson, rancher of the John Day country, was In Heppner for a few days this week. He has a place on the John Day a few miles below Monument and states that weather conditions out hiB way have been none too good fof the crops and range. George D. Fell came over from Pendleton on Monday to look after business interests in Heppner. He is the owner of the Star theater prop erty and other buildings adjoining. 1 Lend Your Pennies I to the Government! That is the spirit which will help America win the war. That is the THRIFT spirit. There is a place for the pennies put them in Thrift and War Savings Stamps. This store is cooperating with the Government in food convervation. SAVE WHEAT We have the substitutes. Sam Hughes Co. 'House of Reliable Merchandise" Banking by Mail mt F you are too far wy from Heppner to call at the mi Farmers & Stockgrowers National Bank and por; J sonallr transact your banking affairs write us for information about how this can be safely and convenient ly done BY MAIL. We Sell Travelers Cheques. MEMBER OF FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM WE PAY 4 ON TIME DEPOSITS. SAFETY DEPOSIT HO."ES TO RENT. FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK H ppner Oregon FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN 85 Head of Mixed Yearling Cattle; 20 Cows and Calves Inquire at the ottce oj The Gazette-Times jj CREAM To ret HIGHEST CASH PRICES for L Cream Cream Cream p Union Meat Co. P&' PORTLAND, ORE. m& WE PAY CASH Kfjf tmranteeinc correct weigliH and tetti. t$'- sp"d Ui yuf mx ihipmcnt, or wrile i for prices and other particular! TYPHOID w no more necetrary thansmalipox. Armr experience hu demonstrated the almost miraculous effi cacy, and harmlessness, of Antityphoid Vaccination. Be vaccinated NOW by your physician, you and vpur family. It Is more vital than house Insurance. Ask your physician, druggist, or send for Have yoi: had Tynhold?" telling of Typhoid Vaccine, resula fronfW, and danger from Typhoid Carriers. THE CUTTER LABORATORY, BERKELEY, CAU moducim vaccinas a asanas um u. s. . ucinsi FOR SALE Eighteen or twenty head of mixed cattle, yearlings, and cows with first and second calves. 17-tf. BARNEY McDEVITT, lone, Oregon. Don't let him get like this Dr. Daniels' Antiseptic Dusting and Healing . Powder FIXES GALLS, SORES AND CUTS Costs only 50c large can, at our Agenti Aak for Dr. Daniels' Horse Book-ita Fre. HUMPHREYS DRUG CO Agents for Dr. Dan iel's Horse, Cow & dog remedies. WITH FREE BOOKS NOTICE. I will not be responsible for tnj debts or bills contracted by my wife. 3. P. HUGHES. Dated at Heppner, Oregon, this 6tb, day of July, 1918.