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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1918)
THE GAZETTK-TIMKS. HEPPXEU. OREXiOX. TRTKSDAV. AVCIST 15, 1918 LIVE CECIL NEWS ITEMS'- lierb Kerett ami wife spent Suu- visited with the Uoyd Logan family on Sunday. Mrs. Forbes and daughter, Miss Thelma, spent Wednesday with Mrs. George A. Miller. . Mr. Malcome, one of the State Police, was visiting in and around Cecil on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Miller and, son were doing business at Heppner Junction on Saturday. The Misses Hynd, Barrett and Mahoney, ' were the guests .of Mrs. Henriksen on Friday. I Will Shippy of Portland, who has been working at "The Last Camp" with Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Nash. for the last few days, left with a bunch of horses for the Hager place on Wedneday. j Herb Hynd, Hiram Beard and the Misses Annie and Violet Hynd and Miss Georgie Summers attended the picnic at Farnsworths, Rhea Siding, on Sunday, all having a good time.. i C. H. Winters and family of the i hmly Pell ranch spent Sunday at Ed M"'tin from lone was a tYci i 'one. isitor on Sundav. , , , , Mrs. Sarah Harrison of Idaho is (.'. it s-'prrr of lone was a Cf- i i.itinp with her sister Mrs. John visitor on Thursday. ( ssh. ! Mr. and Mrs. Henriksen were lore J. W. Osborn left on f ie local for viitors on Thursday. j i-n r on Wednesday returning . . " ... 'Tluifsday. SHOWN TO CROWDS noya Logan was an Arlington visitor on Wednesday. S. M. Morgan a-nd Jean Pairhurst tew Germans Turn Their Cap tives to Account. PAGE TWO tf VARNESH2S if f I C IF V l-J offeliabrnfa Wherever you see this srn you are sura of getting paint satisf-c'.lori. The 61 years cf exrerkece of the Bass-Hu-ter P-Jjkt C.: 'an Frcrxlsco, in making zzl.-.y r LUnd behind every kcr.1 in tht L-H line. Permanent pi; mer.is a base combin ing pnre c.-.rtonate cf lead, zinc oxide and refined Ibsee-l c:l B-H manu fccturisg :;.:ihcdr, i.-.ake a product that cannot be excelled in quality. Then with i ie addition of the advice ana s?r'v ' is stew is always glad to r .Ti :A.i r. r.a e at command a painting coii.li..: . . i th:.t insures a perfect job. TASH&AKERS Heppner, Oregon. E. Wallace of Condon spent Fri day and Saturday in and around Cecil visiting among his friends.. j'. U. l!i jw:.. the cjunty agent, has I eeii very busy in and around Cecil : nMirj; u: exhibits for the County 'at.-. W G Pauintet r, J. H. Miller and J. F. C-ab:-'.'e left on Tuesday to I spend some few days tu the moun- I talus'. Gcoigc Alillholland, the energetic Standard Cil CVs. agent, and Mr. ' Ho wo, of Heppner were Cecil callers : on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Min ir and Miss Blanche Miner came in on Tuesday frcm Portland leaving on Wednesday for ilcppner. Jack Hynd and Wi'.He George Wilson returned home from Heppner on Sunday where tiny had been speeding the wock-end. The iiistei H?'en Barrett and Doris Mahoney caaie to Butterby Flats to visit with Mr.. and Mrs. Jack Hynd for the nex: few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Nash and Kobbio, Lowe hit for the mountains' where they intern! t-.i spend a week or &j amons th: huckleberries. A. Henrikfeu cf the Willow Creek rancli leLunied li '.v.s from his ranch above Heppner what he has a bunch of ca'.tle, re.jorti:i;T a.l doing fine. The best all-around training a bey can get is al ;i college. Write to Mt. Angel Coile;e St." Benedict, Ore., for catalig. Rev. A. M. Meier. A. M. Perkins, who has been work ing for the past two years on, the Butterby Flats, leii for Seattle on Monday where he expects to spend tne next few months. Miss A. C. Lowe, who has been spending the last few days at her home in Cecli, returned to The Dalles on. Wednesday to resume her duties there. - -. V? f" r, i H Cq Em & 4 Famous For Its Marvelous Motor ; ' ! M&J&U-Jl.. f; -V : , I t I 1 mm . mm0 my Thousands Dlig'hted With New Chandler Dispatch THOUSANDS of men and women thoughout America have declared the Chandler Dispatch Car is the most beatifu! ne-,v model that the motor car industry has produced thia year. As many as could get their orders filled have purchased 'the Chandler Dispatch. You may see this car now from coatt to coast. And you cannot mis take it, fcr there it. no other car cf the hca four-passeacr type with such graceful lines suggestive of speed and service, no other with such beatity of fir: ish. ' No iIJt?stra:5on can do more than give a hint of the beauty of the Chandler KW-itcb. HiAJ- hood and radiator, low body iiaes and a strik iv.fi frii'sll la" electric, blue, 32-inch wheels and top cf special design combine to' distinguish, in appearance, this car among ail others. And the famous ChanJier motor, now in its sixth year of production without radical changes but with constant refinement throughout that period, distinguishes this and all other Chandkr models in a vital mechanical way. Come Choose Your Chandler Now SIX SPLENDID BODY TYPES Seven-Passenger Touring Car, 5795 Four-Passenger Roadster, 5795 Four-Passenger Dispatch Car, $187S;Five White Wire Wheels. $110 Extra Convertible Sedan, $2495 Convertible Coupe, S239S Limousine, $3095 Alt prices f. o. b. Cleveland MARTIN RE1D, Heppner, Ore CHANDLER MOTOR CAR COMPANY, CLEVELAND, OHIO Idea Is to Delude t.ie People Into Thinking That Military Victories Are Constantly Being Won by the Kaiser's Soldiers. Ivan S. Uossitor, a Canadian solrtlrr lias just been in to see me. For your he was a (jennan prisoner. Wliei tni tiernmns caught him lie wu.s Imill. wounded in the right hnud. The, took him to a hospital, where, winsoii tne use of un anesthetic, they Cut o! one of his lingers and removed flvt pieces of bone from his maugled wrist They said that they had no ani-sthet ics to spure for use on a "schwelc liunii," nud added that they were sav iai; their anesthetics for their owi wounded soldiers. Rossiter shoWei me what is left of his hand. It U-u much, and what is left is of no use except as a reminder of that Geriuai. surgeon who operated without giving un anesthetic. While ltossiter was in Germany hi was moved, about from one prisoi camp to another until he and othei prisoners were exchanged for Genual prisoners held by the allies. TUi. moving-about process was the mov.i interesting thing he described. He was never allowed to stay in one place more than a few weeks. In the year that he was there he was in nine dif ferent prison camps, loomed in vari ous parts of Germany. On each trip the train that was transferring these wandering prisoners stopped at every station. German officers got out ev ery time the train stopped anil told people that the prisoners were all new ones just tnken! ltossiter says that one excursion of this kind bvgan at four o'clock in the morning and lasted until late at night. And always at ev ery station were a crowd of people to jeer at, these "new" prisoners, many of whom were French and Belgians who liv.d been in captivity for two years. It got to be like a theatrical troupe playing one-night stands only far . more boresome, for the prisoners were never allowed to leave the trains or to communicate with the crowds that came to see them. Rossiter says that one company of British artillery "t.i.kes the palm" for touring Germany in the guise of "new" prisoners. They were captured in the fall of 1914 und they are still playing to packed houses. In other words to fool the people Is (ienuany's policy. Bismarck be lieved In that idea. He once said that It is impossible to overestimate the stupidity of the human race. No dotil.t the kaiser feels just as con temptuous about us. In his mind, men are nothing but so many tons of flesh and bone to be used to push back boundary lines. This war Is for the purpose of pre venting human beings from becoming as boneheaded as the German emper-1 or would lika theiu to be. It Is a war j against the thick skull. On one side j are those great nations whose policy i Is to teach the people to think for themselves. On the other Is the Or- j man autocracy, which says: "Believe I what I tell you." Imagine trying In this country to palm off a trainload of j veteran prisoners as new ones. John M. Siddall, editor of the American Magazine. It Isn't Foolproof. Crowds who hud gathered to wit ness an intercollegiate boat race on t!;e Housatonic river In Connecticut recently also saw a young man and woman drowned by the overturning of a canoe which had ventured into the wash of a fast motorboat. The canoe is an invention of our first families the American Indians. It is absolutely unrivaled for trav ersing inland waterways, where shal- i low water may be met or portages required. For lack of such a native contrivance many large rivers In South America remain unexplored to this day. Portaging a waterlogged "dugout" weighing 1,000 pounds or more is apt to discourage any party not having a Roosevelt at its head. Yes, the canoe Is the first great American invention. But It can never be made foolproof. Rochester Times-Union. Atmospheric Pressure. "When a high altitude, say 17,000 feet, has been reached," says L. J. Wilson, airplane expert, writing in a Southern newspaper, "there Is an atmospheric pressure equal to about one-half that at sea level. The effect of this lessening of pressure Is no ticeable to one who for the first time experiences It. At about li.OOO feet there were physical sensations at once experienced by the writer, that of Increased blood pressure and the exertion following exercise being the most apparent. The altitude, whether attained In mountain climbing or by airplane, to a certain extent produces the same effect upon the organism, the amount differing with various In dividuals." ' . cribers ivinff Outside of Morrow County o o I o o npHE NEW ZONE POS TAL LAW has gone into effect and as a result the cost of mailing The Ga zette-Times to you has been materially increased. This in creased cost, added to the al ready greatly advanced cost in 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 tosend 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 all 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