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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 12, 1918)
TTTR GAZETTE-TIMES. HETPNKR, OREGON, THURSD VV, DECEMBER 12, 101S. I S3 m. m yen S3 m m m ?9 m m m m m m m m 5? -" rt! Si Off, Hi m m The famiiy nf F. II. Rrown, county Saturday and will arent. arrived from Spokane on tor the winter. rr. rtTHiiri i iw 1 i t ctuih is? ' V .n p1. ' SPECIAL REGISTERED POLAND CHINA Ability as a Breeder, TO BE SOLD AT FARMERS EXCHANGE SALE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14 DOES YOUR FORD START HARD? DO YOU WANT BRIGHTER LIGHTS? GIVE THE LECTRO METHOD A TRIAL Within a few minutes' time and at little ex pense the LECTRO will automatically lo cate your electrical troubles. No more tak ing out motors or magnetos. The old way was more wasteful and expensive most times guesswork. This hi test invention will recharge your magnets equally, make your car start easy, make the lights bright er and give you real gas economy in fact, put new life and PEP into your car. LET HILL & JOHNS, OP THE UNIVERSAL GARAGE, EXPLAIN IT TO YOU. SOLD EXCLUSIVELY BY LECTRO SALES COMPANY 506-507 HENRY BUILDING 4TH AND OAK STS., PORTLAND, OR. Does the Farmer Make the Country Make the Farmer? At one time, I was almost convinced that the .'country makes the farmer but now, I feel differ-s-itly. I have been thinking of the farmers that live in .'.is community; the farmers that come, to this yard to buy their building materials, aad I have decided '.hat the farmer makes the country. You have made two Wades grow where one for merly grew. That is why I say the farmers of this community have made it what it la. Some of you were pioneers the clays were long er then for there were fewer cemforta there were fewer people on the roads. First, you built a small home, barn or stock shed. Perhaps, you would not call it home today, but it wrs a protection to your loved ones. And, that is what we call home. Mother Nature has done her share, for we have had rain, sun and wind. But, without, your labor, the weeds would overrun the best of farm land. You have taken a lot from the soil this year a good crop and at top prices. Let this community of farmers prove beyond a d; ubt that it is the farmer that makes the country.. Von can do this by building your wife a new home. She has earned it a home with conveniences In the s- 1'cii'Mi a home that will save steps a home that it warm in Winter and caul in Summer a homo 'hut will oe economical to build and economical in i h arrangement of space. You have- been successful because you worked. We want to prove to you that we can be successful for the same reason. Yvre all like to be successful. We like to show our neighborhood farmers and business men that v e are d-iing more than our part to live up to wj.'at the successful farmer aud business man should do. We will do our part. Let Our Engineer Tell You How to Build It. Tum-A-Lum Lumber Company reside iu Heppner DEMOCRATIC PARTY NEEDS REORGANIZING BOAR Dissatisfaction With Wilson's Reti cence on Peace Plana Cabi net Superannuated. if By David Lawrence. (Copyright. 1918, by N. Y. Evening Post, inc.) Washington, November 25. Pres ident Wilson is himself so strong au advocate of frankness in public bus iness and politics that he will not mistake the sincerity of purpose and 31 the Country, or Does Will you do yours? Will your stock sheds take care of the cattle? Are iliey "warm? And, have you plenty of light in them? 'Remember, light kills germs', foul odors and makes better, beefier, and healthier stock. How is your fence? We have posts that are as gjod as a pair of old-fashioned knit socks. Suc cessful farming and a good fence go hand in hand. Do you need a walk leading from the house to the barn and sheds? Don't track mud into the house. Help keep It clean. Whe-i you ccir.e to town with grain and farm ;,:oducts, don't drive home with an empty wagon. Load her up with lumber and coal. Do this now for i car shortage may deprive you of the supplies later n. Do you need some battens for the barn? Make U aa warm as possible. Line the Inside with tar paper. Re-hang the old doors that do not fit. And, by all moans, protect your machinery from the weather. You would not allow your automobile to stand cut all winter. Then, why leave your im plements out? And, how about the hen house? Make it dry and warm. The chickens will reward you by announc ing in their own way "big, big, big, big, big egg. Big egg." My company is at your service. Come in nnd talk these tilings over. We will gladly help you in every way, and remember one price to all. There Is at least one grade for the work that will give you the best job for the least amount of money. We want to play our part in building up good farm buildings, by helping you. By rendering you SERVICE. All stock is up to grade, bright, fresh and easy to work. You like this country we like it but. no town or country will ever bo so good we can't improve it. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm disinterestedness of his many friends who believe that he is face to face with a crisis In his own career both as the leader of the Democratic party and the representative of America at the Peace Conference. Briefly, there is a dissatisfaction and discontent inside the Democratic party of which the public has hitherto had no hint, but which, if left uncorrected by the President himself, will mean that as he goes to Europe he will leave behind a dejected and depressed following whose enthusiasm for him will have been seriously diminished. Men who are not officeholders but unselfish friends of the President are grieved and disappointed. They are not Republicans, they aro not his political foes, but they are the men who helped elect hiin in 1!)12 and in 1016, aud they arj talking earnestly among themselves about what can be done to make the Presi dent see thai he must clem, housa, lihut he must teorganij; nis entire Cabinet and that lie must, indeed, reorganize the Democratic party in Congress so that he will have ad- I visers in the Executive branch of the Government and leaders in the Legislative branch who are in sym pathy with the true wishes and! spirit of the American people. j After talking with dozens of these men, the names of any one of whom, : if published, would carry the con-! viction that they are seeking only : things which will heip and not hurt the President, one gets a consensus of opinion which is unmistakable. Here and there are suggestions of method which differ, here and there are different degrees of dissatisfac tion, but, put categorically, thesa are some of the mistakes which the President himself is declared to have made or to be making today: First, the President in his absorp tion in foreign questions, has gotten out of touch with the true spirit of America on domestic questions. He has listened to a small group of ad visers who have had his ear to the exclusion of the greater group of friends who come from the Middle West and West and sections of the East where people, are finding it dif ficult to reconcile the brand of de mocracy which Mr. Wilson preached at the outset of his Administration, with the retention of distinctly auto cratic and bureaucratic advisers and with his own seclusiveness. Second, the friends of the Presi dent are unable to understand why Gei-rge Creel should be taken to Europe as the head of any commit tee on public information when Mr. Creel, notwithstanding his fine per sonality and close personal friend ship for the President and sympathy with the Wilson ideas, has lost the confidence of the American press, and thereby the people. Third, the friends of Mr. Wilson believe a grave mistake was made in announcing, the dispatch of Mr. Creel to Europe at the same time that Postmaster-General Burleson was permitted to take over control of the Atlantic cables. These things have been denounced aa "colossal blunders," not merely by Republi cans, but by Mr. Wilson's most loyal friends, who mean nothing personal by it either. Fourth they believe that Mr. Wil son's Cabinet Is superannuated, and in a rut, and that the resignation of William Gibbs Mcauoo deprives the Administration of one of its most ef ficient public servants, and that the President should have never , per mitted him to resign until after re construction was well under way, or at least Mr. Wilson had returned from Europe. Fifth, they consider that Southern domination in Congress and else where will prove fatal to the Demo cratic party's chances to regain the confidence of Western electorates. Sixth, they are deeply disap pointed that Mr. Wilson himself should have kept himself aloof from m l from various States, who have sought to aid him in the past, and that he should have depended so much on his own judgment or the advice of a small group of pro vincially minded advisers. Seventh, and most important of all there is a deep-rooted feeling that -Mr. Wilson lias not taken ac- 1 M w to:- to : v- m m m (Continued on Page Seven) ALFALFA HAY for sale. 150 tons on Butter Creek. Good feed lots and water for stock. Will sell this hay at the market price. 2t TRAVIS J. HOSKINS, Echo,, Or. Sail m :,.s: m HHPl'XKK WITXKSSMS The .Values of lit-ppurr Portions Kanillim- To All. Who are the witnesses? They are Heppner people Residents of Heppner who have ha'd kidney backache, kidney Ills, bladder ills; who have used Doan's Kidney Pills. These witnesses en dorse Doan's. One Heppner resident who speaks is F. M. Bayless. He says: "I have found Doari's Kidney Pills all that is claimed for them as a remedy for lame back and kidney disorders. Of late years, I have had very little kidney trouble. When I notice my kidneys are out of order In any way, I take Doan's Kidney Pill's and they goon remove the trouble." . Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Bayless had. Foster-Milburn CO., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N.'Y. m US. S3 L M0NTERESTELL1 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 Mike laughed at the Judge for chewing Gravely. The Judge came right back at Mike with a friend ly chew just a couple of little squares off his plug of Real Gravely. .' Mike found that the chew stayed with him for a long while, and the more he chewed the better it tasted. "There's the real tobac co satisfaction,"' says the Judge: "and it costs noth ing extra to chew this class of plug." It tots furtktr that's toky yo can get thi food taste of this clas tf tobacn without rxtra cost. PEYTON BRAND Real Gravely Chewing Plug each piece packed in z pouch 800-Acre Creek Ranch miles of creek. 110 acres under ditch. One half mile from town. Good house and good out buildings. A bargain if taken at once.- $20,000, ON EASY TERMS. ROY V. WHITEIS REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE Heppner, Oregon VrSjM Utnstmas GIVE CHIHSTMAH PRESENTS THAT WILL LAST. 1 BUY THEM FROM US. YOU HAVE NO IDEA WHAT A lilO LOT OF USEFUL PRES ENTS YOU CAN GET IN OUR STORE THAT YOUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS WILL BE MIGHTY GLAD TO RECEIVE. YOU WILL FIND IT ECONOMY TO BUY YOUR GIFTS FROM COME IN AND SEE FOR YOURSELF. USE OUR HARDWARE J IT STANDS HARD WEAR, Peoples Hardware Co. Successors to Tash & Akers -