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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1919)
TVV nTrTTF-TTMK. IH'rPNF-.. Hn;(i, THVRSHAY. MY I, fAGE EIGHT V!!!!l!nilIllM:i:ill!! rsJliilUliilill'll'.iHllill !!!!! I One of the Best Wheat i EI8 PORCH; SuIjFOWEB irlri H Farms in the County We are offering 800 acres of wheat land situated in the heait of the wheat belt of Morrow county, 730 acres in cultivation; good buildings and plenty of water. Every acre of this can be handled with a tractor. PRICE IS VERY REASONABLE. $10,000 Required on First Payment. Balance to Suit. If you are looking for a good wheat farm, don't over look this one. I Smead & Crawford IlliiEiiiiliHIiliillllllilillllllilM ('ami Iiiiin-dveiiio i-s im.l Rural Con EE Mruetion W - k Will Aid in zrz Ke.ii!juiiiii'lit. zzz: Farm products have a greater pur- iniers a.ui Mayors in Washington, it was apparent that these executives we:e disposed to go in for extensive improvements cam- respective districts. e a success only a! en they are supported by the ritUons. For this reason, the farmer, as veil as the city dweller, who un ilcrst.uids how importantly building and construction work now is affect ing general business conditions, will hack up his local officials in every reasonable campaign for road build- ehasit.g power today than ever before ana Puuilc worKS 01 a necessary in the country's history. This may sort' explain why rural districts of the, m0 acres Fam LanJ For gale country rapidly a.e getting under ijoo acres tillable. 800 acres in fall way with building and construction wheat all up and looking good. One work. It. is obvii.ua. since building 8-room llouse- a11 modern improve- and nnn-urnction work have such im- meIlts hot and cold water- Barn nrtrtnnt he;,ri.r n.t this time nn 4Sx4S. Oll6 5-rOOffl U0US6, gOOd stimulating general business, the farmer may serve both his own and flip miiinnal interest hv at once making needed imrrovements on his head of good uwork hrses- two cows property. He can further the general barn, well and windmill, which pumps to house and barn. A small house and barn with windmill, 16 OL ON VESTORS "INVESTIGATE BEFORE YOU BUY" Free Information on oil companies and promotions to subscribers for the TEXAS OIL CRITIC One Year ESTABLISHED 1915 One Year $1.00 Sample Copy Free $1.00 THK TEXAS OIL CRITIC is an independent publi cation issued every Saturday at Fort Worth in the inter est of the investors in oil securities. It is not a house organ and is not affiliated with promotions of any kind. THE TEXAS OIL CRITIC F. & M. Bank Building, Fort Worth, Texas. weifare while assuring himself oi immediate and permanent benefits, in urging road construction and im provements in his .locality. It is generally understood no ma terial reduction may be expected in building and construction costs in the near future. To be sure, prices on some materials may be slightly re duced is the readjustment, but the best authorities on the subject assert no pronounced reductions are prob able. This is explained by money (xiiuliHnnQ tlio fnppipn ilivlTlnnd anrl the marked curtailment of production ')argain of building materials during the war.'! Harness for horses, 1 pumping en gine, 2 three bottom 14-inch plows, two three bottom 12-inch plows, two double discs, one iron harrow, 24ft., one wooden harrow, 24ft., thresh ing machine and engine, one header and boxes, 2 wagons. Quarter of mile to school, 4 miles from R. btation. $40 per acre with all the crop and the above stock and mach inery. 20 acres. 15 acres in alfalfa. Four room house and barn, other outbuildings. All in cultivation. Plenty of water for all purposes. A SMEAD & CRAWFORD. ALL TIRED OUT. night and Prof. Fisher of Yale University has issued a statement in which he says the country is on a new price level Hundreds More in Heppner in the from which there will be no general! Same Plight. recession. Many farmers have been unable to get materials and labor for barns,1 silos, houses and other improvements during the war. The farmer who at; once avails of the labor supply and ! gets his improvement work under j way, in the long run, may prove toiwork oe tne prucieni uusmess man, lor there is reason to believe that farm ers who delay in the hope of mater ially reduced construction costs will have been deprived of the use of these improvements and in the end be Tired all the time; Weary and worn out day; Backaches; headaches, Your kidneys are probably weak ened. .' ' You should help them at their the 12 Let one who knows tell you how, Mrs. B. G. Sigsbee, K St., Heppner, says: "Speaking from personal ex perience, I can recommend Doan's Kidney Pills, for I have always found them just what they are represenetd to be. When I get that tired, dull ache across the small of my back and notice my kidneys are not acting right, 1 got a box of Doan's Kidney Pills. After taking them a few days, 1 feel as well as ever." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get) Dean's Kidney Pills the same that: M ClCTL-Hiio had Pnut or-M il hum Other campaigns for j : m N y j V PEL F 1 Crown gasoline is high tiuality, full -powered every drop. Look for the Red Crown sign before you fill. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) T.EO. W. Mil. HOLLAND, Gasoline of uvanw forced to pay approximately building prices now prevailing. j In several states, among them' Missouri, Oregon and Colorado, silo buiiding campaigns are being car ried on by the Agriculture colleges. In Wisconsin there is a milk house campaign being vigorously prosecuted ' in the dairy districts, while in Illinois farmers are being urged to build feeding floors. farm iniDrovements are on in Neb raska, Kansas, Minnesota, South Da kota, Kentucky, Ohio and in localities in Texas and Iowa. Whiie many of these are being conducted by build ing interests, the Division of Public Works and Construction Development of the U. S. Department of Labor is interested in seslr.g them succtshfuily carried out because the Division realizes sucli activities on the tanns are bound to hae a bom-Odal effect on f;p.nerai business c mdSthms. The farmers of the country should have an unusual Interest in road building at this Uaw. li torroiusj u lo continue jits present profitable level, there must be no busiu .'.-s in uie ccuntry una uie f E23 I 81 I A Flavor for ( every taste III LL sealed air-tight and f 3 impurity-proof, in the wax jl wrapped, satv packages. i Be sure to get J foecause It Is supreme ! fitH flavor Lasts m G.-T. WANT ADS ARE SURE RESULT GETTERS. Use them and watch them; they will help you both ways. ;,U,,li;ul(;il vast road bniidiuz wo. various states avo detuiiu a p! ;,tound influence in ko ' s us usual" or "hi Special Agent, Standard Oil Company, Heppn ,ai. ad buildii. Are You Getting the Best Out oi Your Stock ? Jine of We carry a full 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 Food Puts the Puny Calf on its Feet ALFALFA AND TIMOTHY SEED Heppner Farmers Elevator Company rh, in the il to e.iu'i. ;ping "bu. Ucr ti.sui creak.-,-, a Uc- i .j ami abvjriw. ....'i ir prclila.u'. is a j us, oe wit and will c-t.- ii American indus- ,. . .sled ihcmselv! ,tace pioC.ci r. on a scale to moot .he attKineuteu demand of America i.'d Europe. The Trans-Mississippi Readjust ment Congress, held in Omaha, Neb., ate in February, summarized the .i.-eseut Eituatiou in the following anguage: "We do not favor a pause in the industrial process to awaii some uture readjustment of wages and prices of staples. So far as public improvements are concerned, they should be resumed at once. It is better that the public should absorb the increased cost, if any should here after appear, than that general un employment and consequent disaster and social disorder should follow. "We believe also that the pro moters of private construction and business enlargement should take I heart of courage and should believe in the immediate resumption of bus iness prosperity in the United States. There is no place in the American scheme of things for the pessimist or the doubter. Our country today leads the world in prosperity. It can lose its leadership only by its own faint-heartedtiess. We especially deprecate any concerted holding back of construction and business resump tion, for the purpose of forcing a re duction in wages or cost of material. "Both aa a means of stimulating the resumption of industry and re moving the shadow of unemployment from the working people and also serve the broader and more perman ent purpose of supplementing the railroad lines and to develop the in land and farm commerce of the coun try, the work of constructing good reads should be promptly carried on by cooperation of the Federal and State Governors and local commun ities." ' Here's the way we look at it S5lHEHEwS BBfacr, r.gE!!isga Just for a minute, look at the tire proposition from our standpoint. We are in the tire business here, to stay. We can remain in business only so long as we please our customers. Coasequently, it pays us to handle good tires United States Tires. They're the tires we sell. ' They're the tires you should use. We have them to meet every need of price or use. United States Tires are Good Tires We know United States Tires are good tiresv That's why we sell them Albert Bowker E. R. Lundell, lone In the recent conference o Gov-