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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (April 3, 1919)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNK.R. CREGOX, THCKS: AY, APHIL 3, 1919. PAGE TWO ft I The 'Victory Loan la ',y LFOKK we settle down t anil jms- l . ( ri.v 'Yorhstinir, wo must SETTLE IT'. Our ' iowrnnu'iit "s war !olt still carries an unpai'l lialam-o and it is both our privilege and our pleasure to hiul our oo-ojioratioii tlirordi the ,"tli l-iborty or Victory Loan. The Farmers & Stockgrowers National Bank wil be glad to help YOU help. FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK Heppner Oregon LIVE CECIL NEWS ITEMS Are You Getting the Best Out of Your Slock? ; carry a full line of DR. HESS STOCK TONIC DR: HESS DIP AND DISINFECTANT DR. HESS HOG WORM POWDER DR. HESS HEAVE POWDER These remedies are guaranteed and highly recom mended, and then, if you want the hens to lay, get DR. HESS POULTRY PAN-A-CE-A " Security Calf Feed Puts the Puny Calf on its Feet ALFALFA AND TIMOTHY SEED Heppner Farmers Elevator Company Leonard liarr left villi a band of 'sheep ior lone on Sunday. ! Cecil Ahait autoed to Heppner with Hob Thompson of that city. A. Henrikstn and son Clifford were Arlington visitors on Sunday. . Koy S. Duncan and wife were doiiiS business in Cecil on Monday. l-ilis K. Minor of Ioue, was down to Cecil on a business trip Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Van Sohoiack of Arlington spent Saturday with Mrs. I'.ennett of Cecil. Miss McMorris, teacher of the Khea Siding school, spent the weel: .nui with friends in Condon. Jess Deos of the Willows, also K. S. Wilson of Khea Siding were doing business in Cecil on Sunday. Mrs. IM'chey of Coca county, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. R. F. McFadden of Eight Mile. Misses McFadden of Eight Miie and Miss Ruth May of Four Mile were Cecil callers on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Nash and family of Fairview, spent Sunday at the Winter Bros, homo in Shady Dell. W. G. Hynd made a trip over from Sand Hollow, accompanied by Miss Annie C. Lowe on Monday, W. G. returning Tuesday. Wm. H. Stalcup, who has been working for A. E. Nash was suddenly caliel to his home in Ennis, Montana, through illness of his father. Mrs. J. H. Franklin and daughter, also Mrs. A. Hendnksen and Miss Matilda Bjork were the guests of iiis. Jack Hynd on Sunday. Mrs. C. Blane of Walia . Walla, who has been visiting around Cecil. h'ft on the local for Heppner on Sat urday. S. W. Spencer of Heppner and Wm. Stabler, a prominent sheep buyer from Montana, were in Cecil on Friday. Mis. W. Matlock and Miss Blanche .Minor came down from Heppner on Friday to spend the week-end at the Last Camp. Gq:. D. Anderson of liutterby Flats iei'l on Sunday for Pendleton on ;i business propusiiion, returning home ! on Tuesday. ! M. V. Logan and Charles Sennett I of Portland, came in on Monday, and are very busy cleaning and fixing up , the garden around tb?ir Cecil resi dence. t Ceo. Simmons who lias been work ! ins for Jack Hynd during the last j few months, left for Montana ou Sat urday to attend to some work on his j homestead there. i J. W. Osborn of Cecil and Clarence Winter of Shady Dell made a, trip to Heppner en Tuesday. Mf. Osborn who has been suffering from a very bad thumb for some time, wished to have Dr. Chick's advice about it. J. M. Mel'on and his son Kd who have been visiting with relatives in Mt. Moriah, Mo., for the past few months, returned to Cecil on Satur day, and fujly intend to make Cecil their home for the future, the oasis of the desert. The residence cf Mr. and Mrs. John Nash was the scene of a very large gathering in hunor of Mrs. Botbwell of Portland, who is visiting her daughter, Miss Irene Douglas. Dano ing was indulged in until au early hour on Saturday morning, when a dainty supper was provided for all present. James Kierman, who has been herding and attending camp for Jack Hynd of Butterby Flats, for the past few years, said good bye to his many friends of Cecil on Monday, when he boarded the train on his ' way to his former home in Cavan, Ireland. Jimmy has been called home on account of the deaths of his iwo brothers, both victims of the influenza, to take care of his mother and the farm. I will sell four of the best building lots in Heppner for J-L'SO.Ou each. The lots are each 50x100 feet and true paralelograms, each comer aeing a right anyle, and each lot is a half of a square. HARRY CUMMINGS. FOR HALE Dry land seed corn. Inquire Farmers Elevator Co. n;J3-lm-pd f MEATS and f POULTRY AT THE HEPPNER MEAT MARKET H. C. ASHBAUGH, Proprietor. FRESH AND CURED MEATS, POULTRY AND LARD. FISH IN SEASON. Finest quality meats at the lowest possible price. Phone Main 203 Home Portraiture For the month of March, Portraits in the home or at Room 16, Barnard Rooming House. Make an appointment. C. S. Reeves Several varieties of better seed potatoes at Minor & Co. m27-3t I will buy all second hand punc turned tires that can be repaired. Bring to W. W. SHAMHART. The Gazette-Times Gives More Advertising Value for Each Dollar Expended for Space In Its Columns Than Any Other Available Medium. Let Us Prove It to You. era 7AKEYGURPIACE JMW RANKS a x is-?- PLANT A iSF, v m -w www 9 !'Araffsr&a Garden Seeds C. C. Morse & Co. D. M. Ferry & Co. Lilly's FLOWER SEEDS Mandeville & King Morse & Co. Ferry & Co. v. ' Plan now for your vegetable garden. Beautify your prem ises with choice flowers. , Buy your seeds of Sam Hughes Company Good Will Given a Now Impetus A statement of Dodge Brothers war activities is due the owners of their cars. Dodge Brothers refrained, during the progress of the war, from any reference to the performance of the car in Government service. It seems proper now, however, to disclose the facts, because they are unusual facts intensifying that good will which owners of Dodge Brothers Cars have always manifested. Dodge Brothers car was the only one of its class approved and adopted by the War Department In a separate Ordnance Works, built especially for the purpose, costing millions of dollars and employing thousands .of their skilled motor workmen, Dodge Brothers undertook an important duty designated by the War Department. Without the aid of their great motor organization, Dodge Brothers could not have fulfilled the heavy obligation which they were asked to assume by the Ordnance Department. The other service required of Dodge Brothers motor works, by the Government, was to continue to furnish their cars as they were needed. They were furnished, not in hundreds, but in thousands both for the training camps here, and for service in Belgium, France and Italy. The record of those thousands of camp and army cars is one' in which any owner may feel the utmost pride and satisfaction. Their performance justified the compliment implied in their selection by the Government. The great works in which nearly three hundred thousand of their cars have been produced in the past four years furnished a vast store-house of human energy and equipment for the ordnance work. Naturally, it will take time to adjust the motor works to its full accustomed activity. Gradually Dodge Brothers will resume the grateful task of con tinuing to deserve the good will of America and indeed of the whole world. DodgeBrothers consider good will their most valuable possession. They will never knowingly do anything to lessen it. THE HEPPNER GARAGE