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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1919)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEFPXEIt, OREGON', TSTESDAV, JUNE 19, 1919. PAGS 8ETE3 Morrow County Wheat j Farm Contains 800 acres. 700 acres in cultivation; 100 E S acres pasture. One of the best producers of the Ei J county and well situated for market. Good 7-room EE E5 dwelling, also 4-roora bunk bouse. Good barn, 2 E E3 granaries and other outbuildings. 200 acres of sura- EJ merfallow. . Ei ' $35.00 PER ACRE. H H $15,000 will swing this deal and balance payments EE on easy terms. A proposition well worth investigat- ing. E g SEE H Smead & Crawford Heppner iiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii OOLDNVESTTOKS "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 $1.00 THE TEXAS OIL CRITIC is an independent publi cation issued every Saturday at Fort Worth in the inter est of the investors in oil securities. It is not a house organ and is not affiliated with promotions of any kind. THE TEXAS OIL CRITIC F. & M. Bank Building, Fprt Worth, Texas. ( '3ffr'Ts. The Red" Crown tig n marks V (T3w3V "Th G"oU Quality.' It J$ n Mur dependable results. 4 Ful Lok for the Red Crown siga XJ? cK',L ITANDAXD OIL COMPAN1 J Quality GEO. V. MILHOLLAND, Special Ag cnt, Standard OU Company, Heppner GREAT ! V r ''1 V White Star Flour A home product that stands in the lead of all other brands Is now becoming: the standard for this section. Get it of your grocer. Whole Wheat, Graham, Mill Feeds, Cream Middlings Our Elevator and Warehouse furnish facilities for hand . ling grain, both bulk and in sacks. Wool Forwarding. SEE US ABOUT YOUR GRAIN BAGS. ' Heppner Farmers Elevator Company l!i THE DAY'S HEWS The wheat crop of the atate of Washington this year will be over twice the size of last year's crop, ac cording to the report of the Spokane office of the bureau of crop statistics. Eugene is considering strongly the proposition of putting in a muncipal paring plant. Besides the 25 miles of new paving, there will be much work for repair and upkeep on the o!d paving. The city council is get ting estimates from the municipal paving plant at Portland. The former German emperor and his son the crown prince will return to Germany as soon as the peace treaty Is signed, according to a well- known German source in Amsterdam quoted in a wireless dispatch. Orders placed in American ship yards for 500,000 tons of merchant snips to go under the French flag, have been approved by Edward N. Hurley, chairman of the United States shipping board. D. M. LInnard, who owns a string of hotels on the Pacific coast, will soon commence the construction of the new LInnard hotel in New York to cost $7,500,000. One of the features of the Elks' convention which la to be held at Klamath Falls is the big. Elk barbe cue at Harrlman lodge, the mountain home of the late E. H. Harrlman. Three elk are to be served along with a large assortment of a lot of other meat. A change in the allied peace terms will allow Germany an army of 200, 000 men for three years instead of 100,000 men as previously arranged. Reports from Paris also state that Germany will be admitted to the lea gue of nations "in the near future." Governor Ernest Lister of Wash ington passed away at Seattle last Saturday morning after a long fight against death. Louis F. Hart, lieu tenant governor and acting governor during the Illness of the chief execu tive, assumes the governorship. Gov ernor Lister was a democrat and was serving his second term when the death summons came. The annual gopher and ground squirrel shoot held by the Boseman. Montana, lodge of Elks, has resulted In the slaughter of 20,000 of these little pests. The estimate is based upon the number of tails turned in at headquarters, nearly 7000, and the fact that delcaratlon of hunters that twice that number which were killed fell into holes and the trophies could not be obtained. The final goal of all ambitions which flying men have dreamed about since the Wright brothers first rose from the earth in a heavier-than-alr machine was realized Sunday morn ing, June 15, when the young British officers, Captain John Alcock and Lieutenant Arthur Brown, landed on the Irish coast after the first non stop flight across the Atlantic. The trip covered a distance of more than 1900 miles and the Journey was made In 16 hours and 12 minutes from St Johns, N. F., to Cllfden, Ireland. The Journey was made without mishap ex cept that the machine was damaged when the landing was made in Ireland. Shearers Go To Shaniko. S. A. Moore, Al Searcy. Joe Hurt Glen Hadley, Holly ' Leathers, John Howell. Carl Leathers ' and Pearl Howell, who have been shearing at the Barker ranch, passed through town Tuesday on their way to Shan iko, where they will shear at the J. E. HInton ranch. The run over there will be on at least 18,000 head and possibly considerably more. They took all of their eaulDment with them with the exception of the engine, using an auto truck. They stopped in Condon long enough to enable all of them who could vote here to cast a ballot for eood roads Condon Globe-Times. Gasoline Boiling Points Tell the Story Contrary to the opinion held by a great many people, the real value of gasoline is not shown by the old fashioned gravity test. . This test tells nothing about the vaporizing and combustive qualities of the fuel, as has been pointed out by the Na- tional Bureau of Standards at Wash ington. Only the boiling point test Is really efficient. Boiling points, of course, mean ex actly what the words say. That is, they are points on the thermometer at which a liquid will begin to boll. For a cold engine to start quickly the gasoline must vaporize at a low tem perature. To get quick and smooth acceleration somewhat higher boiling points are necessary and for full power and long mileage the fuel must have still higher boiling points. High quality gasoline must have a complete and continuous chain of boiling points, ranging from the low to the high. Combustion starts with the lowest and flashes on through the uniform chain from lew to high with the result that there is full powered, Instantaneous combustion. Eliminate one link and the full power chain is broken. Te famous Red Crown gasoline has the complete power chain. The Oregon Voter says: All five of Oregon's congressmen have import ant committee appointments Sena tor Chamberlain, Publlo Lands; Sen ator McNary, Chairman of Irriga tion; Representative Sinnott, Chair man of Public Lands; Representative Hawley, Ways and Means; Repre sentative McArthur, Naval Affairs. Keep sending them back and they will send something back to Oregon. 10 Cents m Week. Let me deliver the Portland Tel egram to you, six days a week, for 10 cents. All the news from the most reliable source for 10 cents a week. Phone 772. CHARLES NOTSON. REWARD. LOST Tool box off Republic truck. Finder Clease leave at Mc- Roberts-Cohn Auto Garage, Heppner, or Cleve Walton, Long Creek and re ceive $5.00 reward. BLACKSMITHS ATTENTION. We have Just received a carload of blacksmith coal for immediate deliv ery. TUM-A-LUM LUMBER CO. U PlttM "tin" by Mrviif W 1 witk Vogut Uuthmtllow WUp. 1 Cm M u jou would whipped craa. I 1 It k richer ud mm tutf. It will I Ik (otaour. You cu keep It oer until f U tasutdtr if ttwrtliu; Uft! f iA Order Jtr todr ffejijf ijk and trr thie dtll- gSsjjjsssM A Moot deeeeit 1 j - Vojot Candj bstI u--iflpfV Company AjflvjU Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Olden were in Heppner Monday from their farm home west of Heppner. BERRIE Strawberry season is now on. It will soon pass and you should place your order for fruit for canning and . preserving now. There is no indication that prices will be much lower, if any. If You Want Strawberries, See Us Now We carry Quality Gro ceries; our service is. prompt and you get genuine satisfaction by dealing with us. Sam Hughes Company A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Jesse O. Turner at the Heppner sana torium on Friday morning, June 13. The young fellow, who has been named Donald Edwin, is getting along fine and his mother is doing nicely. Earl Gordon, who has been attend ing the North Pacific School of Phar macy during the past two years, has accepted a position with Patterson & Son, druggists. Emll Carlson of Gooseberry was a business visitor on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Sims motored down to Portland last week to enjoy the festival of roses. Wm. C. Gosney arrived home the first of the week from Camp Lewis, where he received his discharge at-' ter 16 months of service with the engineers. His mother, Mrs. Emma Ranck resides here. ITS UP TO YOU There is just as much reason for efficiency on the farm as there is in an automobile factory turning out nine hundred thousand automo biles in a single year. Efficiency is always the basis of a large production With the governmena guaranteeing the price of wheat, and the increasing demand for beef, pork and milch cows, the thinking, efficient farmer is going to make big profits this year. You will need better and larger storage facilities for your crops. You will need larger housing room for your implements and machinery. If you raise cattle, you will need a larger barn, perhaps a new one. And now is the time to get these improvements under way, for delay may very easily prevent them. As an intelligent reader of the daily news reports from European countries, you know there is a demand for building materials beyond any previous record. Thousands of homes are to be replaced, new com mercial buildings of ever description will have to be constructed. And the capacity of the mills of this country will be taxed to the utmost. We are able to make deliveries now, but cannot guarantee to do so, if you wait too long. Let us go over your needs now, help you plan such improvements, as are necessary, and get out the materials. They will-insure greater production on your farm, and more profit. Yours For a Prosperous Year Tum-a-Lum Lumber Co.