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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1919)
THE UAZETTE-T1MES. HKPPNER. OREGON. THURSO Y, 4PRIL 10, 191t pa;k TWO i7r. Encouragement NE finds the FARMERS & STOCK- GROWERS NATIONAL BANK a source of encouragement at all times. And, moral encouragement is not ALL we offer, for when conditions are practical, one finds us ready to extend the financial kind. The surest way to appreciate our facilities and services is to open an account here. SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES TO RENT. A: ON TIME CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK Heppner Oregon l IMF. ATS mm m m j k mm. and 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 LIVE CECIL HEWS ITEMS R. E. Duncan was a business mau Id lone on Monday. Mr. snd Mrs. Jack Hynd autoed to Arlington on Monday. M. V. Logan was a passenger on the local for Heppner on Tuesday. Roy Scott came down from Hepp ner on Saturday to work on the Butterby Flats ranch. Pcie Bauernfcind left for Portland on Thursday where he will spend ft few days. Mrs. Owens and son lert on me local for Wasco where she will Join her husband. Ralph Winter of the Shady Dell ranch, was a business man In Arling ton on Saturday. John Nash and family spent Satur day helping Grandma Nash to put In her garden at Cecil. Mrs. Ed Farnsworth and Mrs. Albert Falconer were doing business in Cecil on Monday. Galen Falconer who has been work ing around Cecil for the last few days left for lone on Thursday. W. Byrket of Pendleton, who is interested in the sheep business was the guest of Jack Hynd on Sunday. Mrs. Cleve Van Schoiack and family of Skinner creek, have been in and around Cecil during the past week. A. Henrfksen and son Oral ct the Willow Creek ' Ranch, autoed to Heppner on Saturday returning on Monday. Frank Keiggan left with a fine bunch of ewes and lambs for Minor & Thompson's ranch on- Saturday morning. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Falconer left for Roosevelt on Wednesday where they have bought a place and intend to settle. E. J. Fairhurst of Rhea Siding spent Sunday among some of his old Cecil friends, M. V. Logan and Chas. D. Sennett. Herb and Annie Hynd were down from Heppner, where they are at tending school, to spend the week end at their home on Butter Flats. Frank Owens who has been work ing on Buterby Flats ranch for the past few weeks, and late of Uncle Sam's forces, left for The Dalles on Sunday. . , A. Henriksen of Willow Creek Ranch and Jack Hynd of Butterby Flats, autoed to Heppner Jn the Mitchell car, andj took in the hotel meeting. M. V. Logan and Chas. Sennett left on Wednesday for the Wljlows where they Intend spending a few days befo leaving for their homes in Portland. John Cochran of lone has been doing some good work among the coyotes near Cecil the last few days, having got one den near the Cecil school with fourteen cubs. C. A. Minor and Geo. Krebs came down from Heppner on Tuesday. We understand that Mr. Kreb's two sons, George and Henry Walter have bought a half Interest in the Cecil ranch. W. E. Ahalt and son, who after having spent the last week in Port land, returned home by way of Cecil to look up some old friends. Ed thinks that Cuftil looks better every time he sees it. Wm. Matlock sent out his last bunch of ewes and lambs on Friday to feed near lone. This makes some thing like 3200 ewes- Mr. Matlock has lambed down at Cecil this spring. Bill says that no man could have wished for a better lambing than he had. How Brooder Chicks Are Fed. Take chicks out of brooder 24 to 36 hours alter hatching. Give all the sour milk or buttermilk they will drink. The morning of the second day start feeding a grain mixture of 7 pounds fine cracked corn, 2 pounds steel cut oats, and 1 pound cracked wheat. If this mixture cannot be obtained a good grade of commercial chick feed mt do. Feed a little of the grain five times a day, keeping the chicks a little hungry till night, when j they are given all they will eat. From (the fourth day keep wheat bran be fore them in small hoppers or shallow troughs. Give them all the sour jmilk or buttermilk they will drink, i also all the kale or other green feed, cut fine, they will eat. Keep fine grit and granulated bone before them all the time. C. S. Brewster, O. A. C. More Home For Less Money HOME BUILDING SHOULD BE ONE OF THE . GREATEST EVENTS OF A MAN'S LIFE. Frequently it turns out to be a nightmare, but always because of lack of forthought or failure to make note of what you have in mind. To give you what you want for what you want to spend, to avoid extras, liens and disappointments is one of the ideas back of the service we have to offer home builders. It will cost you nothing to investigate, one single item we have in mind will save you many dollars each year, but like any one of many other ideas pertaining to homo building, will have to bo cared for when the home is in the planning, for after you have built it will be too late. ' Go about it in a business-like way. Eliminate Ilump-ty-Dumpty methods. Build by plans. Know the com pleted cost before, you start to work. TRY US Tum-A-Lum Lumber Co. HEPPNER LEXINGTON IONE SUMMER GRAZING FOR SHEEP & CATTLE SEE THE FARMERS EXCHANGE Roberts Building CALL IN PERSON Heppner, Oregon TAKE YOUR FIACE iN MTmKS VICTORY Garden Seeds C. C. Morse & Co. D. M. Ferry & Co. Lilly's FLOWER SEEDS Mandeville & King Morse & Co. Ferry & Co. Plan now for your vegetable garden. Beautify your prem ises with choice flowers. Buy your seeds of Sam Hughes Cmpany PUT YOUR PRINTING PROBLEMS UP TO US. WE HAVE HELPED OTHERS OUT OF THEIR DIFFICULTIES AND CAN DO THE SAME FOR YOU. Good Will Given a Ngw 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 senice 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 arid 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. Dodge Brothers consider good will tneir most valuable possession. They will never knowingly do anything to lessen it. THE HEPPNER GARAGE