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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1918)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HWPXEtt, OREGON, THURSDAT, AUGl'ST 15, 191S PAGE HKVK NO SUGAR FOB. BEES 1 Sugar tor feeding beeB will be extremely hard to get this year, due to the Federal food control measures. "Oregon beekeepers generally rob their bees rather closely In the fall," says A. L. Lovett, entomologist of O. A. C, "trusting to the bees to collect from scattered sources suffi cient honey ao wlnteh them. When this supply falls the bee men depend upon feeding sugar for winter stor age or to bring the bees through in the spring. Every effort was made last spring to supply the extra eugar, but food administrators are averse to making further allowance for this purpose. Beekeepers are urged to allow sufficient honey for winter care of the bees. This not only saves sugar but Insures that the bees will winter well and be in a condition to reap the greatest benefit from next year's honey flow." URPES STICKING TO BUSINESS SIJilJi llllllillml1 cook A New Perfection Oil Cook Stove means kitchen comfort and convenience. Ask your friend who has one. Used in 1,000.000 homes. Inexpensive, easy to operate. See them at you dealer's today. Ready to Cook in a Jiffy Just the touch of a match and your New Perfection Oil Cook Stove is ready for cooking. No waiting for the fire to burn up. Easier to operate than a coal or wood stove: No smoke or odor; no dust or dirt. Bakes, broils, roasts, toasts, all the year round. All the convenience of gas. And a cool kitchen in summer. In 1, 2, 3 and 4 burner sizes, with or without ovens or rahinets. Ask your dealer today. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Cslifornia) NEW PERTECIION OIL COOK STOVE G. W. MILHOLLAND, Special, Agent, Heppner. DEALERS: Gilliam & Blsbee, Heppner Leach Bros., Lexington Johnson & Bristow, Iona T. H. Lowe, Cecil y Slab and Cord Wood, Utah Lump and Rock Springs Coal Leave Orders with A. Z. Barnard ALBERT WILLIAMS MT. HOOD ICE CREA Pure -:- Delicious Refreshing Something Special Every Sunday ALL SOFT DRINKS SERVED HERE THE VERY BEST THE PALM LOWNEY'S CHOCOLATES BEST CANDIES J HEPPNER FARMERS ELEVATOR CO. Manufacturers and Distributers of While Star Flour and Dealers in Flour, Feed, Grain, Stock and Poultry Supplies Physician Ascerts That Toe Early Re tirement of Successful Business Men It a Mistaken Policy. To old men who are thinking of re tiring from active fcusiness Dr. Wil liam J. Robinson, editor of the Medi cal Critic nnd Guide, gives the cele brated advice once tendered by Punch "to young people nbout to marry," namely, "Don't!" The coun sel often given to those of advancing years, even by physicians, to take things "easier," to give up this and give up that in short, to lead a dull, empty, vegetable existence, is unqual ifiedly bad, Doctor Rohluson thinks, although, of course, there are excep tions and special cases. He writes: "An old man with a very high bleod pressure i. e., high for his age should not engage tn business which is likely . to Ciiuse him great excite ment nnd throw him in fits of anger; and a man. who is showing symptoms of senile dementia should not be In trusted with important affairs; but, generally speaking, there is no rea son why a man should give up his work or narrow the circle of his in terests, merely because he has cele brated the seventieth or eightieth an niversary of his birthday. The gen eral condition of the man, his fitness, should be the criterion, and not his age in years. We all know that some people at sixty are actually older than some are at seventy or eighty. "The advice to old men to retire has sometimes, if followed, very dis astrous consequences. A man of sev enty or eighty Is attending to his pro fession or business in a satisfactory manner, and he feels well. Suddenly he decides or is adtlsed to retire and take things 'easy' for the rest of his days. He does and in a few weeks or months that man is a physical or mental wreck and ruin. As long as he kept up his mental Interests he was all right. A sudden change, a sudden vacuum, I might say, perhaps the pernicious subconscious feeling that now It Is all over for him all that contributed to the disaster And it is not the physical change so much as the mental that Is the Important factor. I, for one, am sure that men tal activity, mehtul interest, has a life-prolonging tnlluence, because mental activity stimulates many, if not all, of our vital processes. It Is not mental work that ever kills; It is worry that does It, and even its baneful Influence has been greatly ex aggerated. We know of octogena rians whose lives have been one round of trouble." Great Home Army. More than 2,400,000 boys and girls were reached through club work last year, according to a compilation re cently mode by the United States de partment of agriculture, which super vises this work in co-operation with state agricultural colleges. Of tills number approximately 350,000 made complete reports, which show that they produced and conserved products amounting to $10,000,000. In the 33 Northern and Western states 840,606 boys and girls were enrolled. Of this number 160,6125 made complete reports and produced and conserved products valued at $3,700,000. In the South there were 115,745 boys enrolled In the regular work, who produced prod ucts valued at $4,500,000, and 73,300 girls, who produced and conserved products valued at $1,500,000. In the emergency club work in the South the club leaders reached nTer 400,000 boys and approximately 1,000,000 girls, who produced nnd conserved products val ued at more than $4,000,000. , "Stocking Room" for Banks. Has your bank u stocking room? The Security bank of Oakland, Cal., couldn't sell Liberty bonds without theirs. Here Is how It works: Mrs. Onklanrter enters. "I want to buy a Liberty bond, please." "All right; sign here," says the pleasant bank clerk. After this the good woman hesitates, blushes. She makes wavering passes and then looks around with a hunting and hunted look. The pleasant bank clerk knows the symptoms and politely Inquires: "Would you like to use the stocking room?" Mrs. Onklander retires to the little side room and makes a run on "the first national bank." Veteran Proud of Standing. Edward P. Weaver, formerly of Bangor, Me., claimed the distinction the other day of being the oldest oill cer yet graduated from the free gov ernment navigation school conducted by the United States shipping board recruiting service. He la sixty-nine years of nge. Mr. Weaver, who had ninny years' experience as a seaman, decided while at New Orleans some weeks ago to enter one of the schools and train for a deck officer for the morchnnt marine. Ho passedthe rigid physical test without difficulty and completed the course. Canadian Emphasis. By the bye, don't be shocked byour damning and swearing. It doesn't mean Hie wune in Canada as it docs over here. It's natural to us. In Canada everyone swears. My little boy he was six years of age at the time was shearing one day In the kitchen and the cook told him if he was not care ful his teeth would drop out. He looks up at her only six years of age, mind you and says, "Daddy's teeth haven't' dropped outl" What do you think of that? Gen. Alec McDougall, Canadian Forestry Corps, In London Chronicle MR. FARMER : Ground, no matter how good or how -Tien, cannot be called a farm until the careful nlannin. i . yielding! man' ' made eld ""nalure' made ot n,ouG0ld tIn,ber8'J P'nks, shingles, doors nnd windows are like good ground Thev do not make a home or a bant without the same careful planning. sruuna. i ney ao not houSeSUPPOBe I0" thiDklng of buiWins a new barn' a be"er HOME, a modern chicken or hog Because you lack the years of experience in building that you have had In farming you hesitate vateTorlhe money wiT bUilU'nS Wi" SUU and Jt !teD' U y" "t" Bet Uom a lumber yard is the material with which to build. We are ore for your foltor?' Wa 'n ghing you the last P'ny of value ,Nt 5"" I1 y are tninh"lnS of building, we want to help you plan it. Tell us what vou TttiiE5iS? ln black 8nd wllite: we win draw a plan t0 scaIe 80 s We will show you designs (approved by expe ts) of almost any kind of building: designs from builuUs!1 B PraCUCal 'deaS- T'ieSe kleaS Can be mb0died tlirplans for your r,,QJ.!1'and we.ul",i0 or- We will make up your material lists and give vou a figure on enough Thfc, that there will be no "extras." no afterclap of greater costs than you had planned on. wantSTn h?l Z?7 l fctlh uUS than doing H the old of teIlinS one what you on that UsU " "P a f what he THOUGHT it would take and getting a figure tn wJif raaYch cases where the material was hauled to the job, the carpenters went '.rk' and lt WM fnnd changes had to be made. It meant trips to town when they could and both ' HLte"1 t0 E0 back more t3 come out' and an endless lot of trouble, worry 4 h. TS nOW ,the r1Pt ?f the slory' U was found that the completed building had cost muchmore tnan had been planned. It meant debt, borrowed nnney, notes to sign., But worse than all the rest the completed building was not quite what they thought it would be. . Disappointment, discontent. Inconvenience, all the sure result of INCOMPLETE PLANS. We not only do not want that to happen to YOU; we will see that it does not happen if you will bring your building problems to us. Building In haste means waste. Let us first make a rough sketch for you. You can take it home take time to think it over; talk it over with your wife or your neighbor. Then bring it back and we will change it until it is just what you want and need. After that, we will make completed drawings, . to scale, so you can see exactly what it Will be like, when built. We will then figure the cost, and remember, we guarantee that if you build according to plans, the cost of material will not be more than our figure. None of your battling problems are too small to Interest us. A model hog' house that saves little piga and keeps them healthy, a warm, light chicken house that will increase egg production, get the same care as the plan for a big barn, or a fine, new home. Are you wondering what Um service will cost you? Not a single red copper cent. We make no charge for it, and it does not add a cent to the cost of your material. Instead, 'it actually saves money for you. We are ready to prove this statement to YOU. Tum-A-Lum Lumber Co. SEE LEW AT LEXINGTON, BILL AT IONE. HAVE YOU BOUGHT YOUR W.S.S. FOR JULY? People once went to New York for the Opera Season Now they stay at home with The NEW EDISON rb ill'-'- FOR this marvelous instrument brings Grand Opera right into their homes. sbu. BJBdo esjnoD jo ,Xnrj,i9!i sx double appeal: to the eye and to the ear. The New Edison can't supply the former but it certainly does the latter. So far as hearing the great artists of to-day is con cerned they themselves can give you no more than The NEW EDISON ''The Vhonograph ith a Soul." You can't improve upon perfection and this invention Re-Creates the singer's vorce with such perfection that no human ear can dis tinguish artist from instrument. The Ed ison tone tests in which the singers have sung in direct comparison with the New Edison have proved this to more than 2,000,000 listeners. More than 1500 oi these tests have been held. More than 30 great artists have appeared in them. Drop Into our store to-morrow and hear a demonstration. Oscar R . Otto Heppner, Oregon Kdkion Re-Creations should not be play ed and cannot be played properly on any other instrument. If they could !)?, the manufacturers who seek to profit by Mr. Bdison s research work would be able to make tone test comparisons, such as have been made with the New Edison before two Bullion muic lovers. Interview,