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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1918)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNTER, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUCIST 22, 191g. PAGE THRQ9 G.-T. WANT COLUMN FOR SALE Good i-roora house, built three yeara. Famished thru out with best of furniture and player piano. A bargain if taken soon. In quire Gazette-Times office. 15-lm FOR SAXE One Deering 2-man Combine, with engine. Has never been run. Terms reasonable, tf. "WALT ROOD, Heppner. FOR SALK Mack truck in good running order. Inquire at this office. FOR SALK Eighteen or twenty head of mixe cattle, yearlings, and cows with first and second calves. 17-tf. BARNEY McDEVITT, lone, Oregon. FOR SALK 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 WAXTEJ) To rent a farm of some 640 acres Tarty has horses, lmple- fU)l KHIO.SAL tJOLL'M.N Dr. N. E. WINNARD Physician & Surgeon "OfHce in Fair Building HEPPNER - - OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. Physician & Surgeon Office In Patterson Drug Store HEPPNER :-: :-: OREGON Dr. R. J. VAUGHN DENTIST Permanently located In the Odd Fellows building, Rooms 4 nd 5. HEPPNER, OREGON " DR. GUNSTER VETERINARIAN Licensed Graduate HEPPNER - - ORE. TeUndione 722 (Day or Night) DR. 4. L. CALLOWAY Osteopathic Physician 6 Roberts Building . Phone 643 At Lexington Tuesdays and Thursdays WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORN E YS-AT-LA W OfBoe .in Masonic Building, Heppner, Oregon Offce on west end of May Street HEPPNER, OREGON SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORNEY-AT-LAW S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office, Robests Building, Heppner Office Phone, Main 643 Resideuoe Phone Main 665 FRANCIS A. McMENAMIN LAWYER Roberts Building, Heppner, Oreg. F. H. ROBINSON LAWYER IONE -: OREGON PATTERSON & ELDER 2 Doors North Palace Hotel. T0N80RAL ARTISTS FINE BATHS SHAVING 26o ROY V. WHITEIS Fire Insurance writer for best Old Line Companies. HEPPNER -:- -:- OREGON M. J. BRADFORD "TheiVUlugo Pulnter" Contractdlng Painting and Paper hanging, Phone 663. Office let Door Wtst of Creamery DR. J. G. TURNER EYE SPECIALIST Portland, Oregon. Regular monthly visits to Hepp ner end lone. Watch paper for dates. E. J. SHARKEY Electrician House Wiring a Specialty Heppner Oregon Phone 63 S ments, feed and seed. iVould like be tween 400 and 600 acres of farm land. Inside fifteen miles of Hepp ner. Or will buy on crop payment contract. Inquire at this office. 120.00 REWARD. Will be paid by the undersigned tor the recovery of one black mule, about ten years old, branded TJD connected on left Btifle or shoulder. Left my place about March 15. Phone or write T. E. Peterson, Eight Mile FARM FOR SALE 1440 acres, known aa the Brown place, 3 miles north of Heppner. Inquire of owner, Geo. B. Woodward, postoffice Adams, Oregon. 2t LOST Two rings, one with em erald setting and the other with carnet. Greutly valued as keep sakes. Reward given and no ques tions asked when returned. MRS. B. L. LEWIS. 1X)HT Mare, saddle and bridle. Sorrel, bald face, bob-tuiled, weight about 950, branded J on stilie. Saddle branded EMC. $5.00 re ward. 16-3t. McENTIRE BROS., Cecil Or. A 10-20 and 12-25 Case Gas Trac tor, guaranteed to be in good con dition, for sale by Vaughn & Sons, Heppner. FOR HALE OR RENT 320 acres north of Lexington. Price, including buildings, horses, cows, pigs, machin ery and fence, $30 per acre. Good water. Will take part cash, some exchange or crop payments. Prop erty free and clear. Write S. C. Schwarz, 127 EaBt 16th St., Port land, Oregon. STRAY There came to my place, -mile north and -mile east of the Fair view schoolhouse, about 4 weeks ago, one brown 2-year-old mule, branded 24 on left shoulder. Owner may have same by calling at my place and paying pasturage and advertising bill. W. L. BARLOW. 10 HO 1! ir nnvinn on nu One German HihI Right Idea. A dispatch in the daily papers gives an account of the capture of a German soldier. After his capture he donned a Red Cross grassard and helped bring In American wounded. German snipers shot at him, and this so enraged him that he grabbed a captured machine gun and returned their fire, dropping two Huns from a tree. PortlLJd, Aug. 13. We have made oar war gardens veritable munition plants. We must now make every pantry and household store-room an aresenal for the stor age of these munitions of war," urges the United States Food Admin istration. "Home drying is by no means a new art. It was used by our grand mothers in saving apples, peaches, pears and kindred fruits for winter use. Until recently, however, the practice of this form of household conservation lias been given little application by tlie present genera tion. The ease with which the housekeeper could procure canned goods from the grocer served to discourage the .u of this fine old custom, and dried products found little favor. I'l-Wiups something less than a world war ;i.i;,'ht have caused its revival and expansion, but the tact remains that it was not given serious consideration until civiliza tion was plunged into the whirlpool of strife. With the outbreak of the war and the attendant food shorage, fruit (hying was revived throughout America, and with it came the stimulus for vegetable drying as well. Today vegetables are being dried in the homes of this country on a scale never before approached, and it is constantly ina&asing. As in the matter of home-canning, the people of the I'liiuvl States an; giving practical application to the urgent plea of the United States Food Administration. For home canners the watchword is 'Back up the cannon by the use of the cau ners.' For home driers it finds ex pression in the constant plea to 'Fight the foe with the Dreadnaught and Drier.' The national benefit of this progress in enhancing the stay ing powers of the home grown food supply is very great. As a means of providing for whi ter food needs t:ie importance of fruit drying is j h en special em phasis this year !-y the scarcity of sugar. Mr. Hoovet states that the sugar shortage is a real problem at this time. To save truits by drying prevents tying up sugar which is needed to meet immediate demands. This gives an added impetus to the need far drying fruits as well as vegetables. Eat less sweet food. Put less sugar in tea and coffee and dissolve completely what you use. Use less on cereals. Do not frost cakes. Eat less candy. Use other sweeteners, such as maple syrup, honey etc. instead of sugar for cooking and with cereals, hot cakes etc. War is scraping our sugar bins and our granaries. The less we eat the longer it will take to empty them. It's up to us. PROFITABLE DAIRYING At a recent meeting of the Oregon Dairymen's Association, C. L. Smith, agriculturist of the O-W. R. R. & X. Co., was one of the speakers. Pre ceding his address, there were a number of speakers, and they ex pressed the opinion that dairying was no longer profitable. Mr. Smith toqk an opposite view. He said that after fifty years associa tion with the dairy interests of the country, and a careful study of con ditions from the Atlantic to the Pacific, he had failed to find a place where the right kind of a cow, and the right kind of a man, combined with the right kind of land failed to give satisfactory results. Dairymen are roninion ializing the industry. They buy their feed, hire men to do the work and expect a profit. Now they are asking the government to regulate the price of feed and to raise the price of miik. Butter is retailing 8t 55 cents per pound. This is exorbitant. The wholesale price of butter, should be based on the wholesale price of its ingredients, which is 35 cents per pound. This would leave the whole saler a handsome profit at 40 cents per pound, or even les. The trouble Is that the dairymen are not giving their personal atten tion to the business. They are let ting the hired man do the work, and he is apathetic. No country in the world is better adapted to dairying than the Pacific Northwest. Pasturing cows and buy ing feed is wrong. When one acre of land properly utilized for soiling crops will feed four times the num ber of cows that the same area will feed if used as a pasture. If the dairyman will cull out the boarders In his herd and raise his feed, he will have no ground for complaint. Intelligent, practical, profitable dairying is the marketing of well-grown forage, grain and root crops in the form of milk and butterfr. Charles V. Overman, a young man ol Mounment, passed away at the Htppner Sanatorium Wedresday morning, as a result of exposure in the storm Monday night. He was on the road during the rain, arriving at Heppner late Monday evening, and was stricken the following morning with pneumonia, compli cated with tubercular trouble. 1 1 Sapolio doing its work. Scouring ioru.5.Manne Corps recruits. Join Now! INOCH MOdCAlT ON CO, APPLY AT ANY ?OST OFFICE for SERVICE UNDER THIS EMBLEM Men who wear this emblem art U.S. MARINES "When a man gets to wanting real tobacco comfort and lasting quality he can go straight to Real Gravely Chewing Plug every time. Peyton Brand Real Gravely Chewing Plug 10c a pouch and ivorth it Gravely lasts to much longer it costs no more to chew than ordinary plug P. B. Gravely Tobacco Company Danville, Virginia VMJL mi HELPisSO.i 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. Get yours early before they are all gone SeeC E Jones or H G Ashba w' Heppner, Ore. Meatless Days! SSS5 The People's Cash Market Is cooperating with the food administration by. encouraging the sale of fish and poultry as substitutes for the other meats which we want to save. FRESH OYSTERS, CLAMS, CRABS, FI$H Mr Hoover says: "Eat more fish." The best will be found here. Phone Main, 73 HENRY SCHWARZ, Proprietor The Gazette-Times $2.00 After July 1st The technicalities of tire con struction do not interest you. It isn't what goes into a tire, but what comes out of it, that counts. , t Kelly-Springfield Tires go their guaranteed distance on the road not over the adjustment counter, and 7000, 8000 or 10,000 miles on the highway is a com mon Kelly-Springfield performance. HENRY COHN, Local Dealer aiuii Right mi y 8P M Hardwan and Snorfina Goods. Co??e see j Us. WE WILL MAKE A HIT M'lTII YOC WHEX YOU COME TO is von sporting goods am hardware. OUt SPORTING GOODS ARK THK "AUTHORIZED" KIM), SELECTED FOR THEIR HIGH OUALITY AM) USED BV THE JUG (LIBS. VOl' Wil l, ALWAYS ITXD IT CHEAPEST IX THE END TO BUY OUR GOOD GOODS BECAUSE THKY LAST SO MUCH JiOXGER AM) GIVE SO MUCH BETTER SATISFACTIOX COME TO US FOR YOUR SPORTIXG GOODS AND HARIji WARE OUR PRICES WILL STRIKE YOU RIGHT. USE OUR HARDWARE; IT STANDS HARD WEAR. Peoples Hardware Co Successors to Tash & Akers mn