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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1919)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER , ORE.. TRTRSDAY, JTLY 3, 1910. PACE TWO GREAT! M r.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 ?ormileage r m I LOCAL I HAPPENING Herbert Olden was in the city Sat urday. Arthur Dykstra waa down from his Balm Fork ranch on Monday. County Agent L. A. Hunt made a business trip to Lexington Saturday. 0. J. Cox, Rhea creek dairyman. spent Friday in Heppner on business. Ed Kellogg has gone out to help Dell Ward harvest the 1919 wheat crop. Mr. and Mrs. Ike Howard and son if lone were visitors in Heppner Mon- i day. Guy Huston, Eight Mile farmer, was a Heppner business visitor Monday. R. F. Wiglesworth, Butter creek sheepman, transacted business . in Heppner Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ayers and son of Little Butter creek were in Hepp ner a few hours on Monday. Anson Wright, extensive south end sheepman, was in town Saturday :rom his ranch near Hardman. John R. Olden, prominent Rhea :reek farmer, was a Saturday after noon business caller in Heppner. Ralp I. Thompson, upper Willow ;reck farmer and stockman, was a Heppner business visitor Tuesday. C. B. Vickers, recently of the Uni versal Garage, has gone to Spokane to take a position with a garage .here. Eddie Rietmann, extensive lone wheat farmer, was driving about Heppner in his big, handsome Jordan ;ar last Sunday. Dillard French was here the past weeks buying cattle and he also Dur- I chased the Saunders place from C. W Conger. Long Creek Ranger. Miss Jean Black is recovering nice- I ly from the injuries which she re, :elved to her right hand a few weeks ago, when she lost her index finger Wm. Beymer and Emmett Cochran, jf Monument, Heppner and Canyon City, were in town a few days this week. Canyon City Blue Mountain 'Red Crown" gives greater mile age because it is correctly made, straight-distilled, all-refinery gasoline. Look for the Red Crown sign before you filL STANDARD OIL COMPANY (C4Uiu) e Gasoline of quality ODD- DN VETOK "INVESTIGATE BEFORE YOU BUY" Free Information on oil companies and promotions to subscribers for the TEXAS OIL CRITIC One Year $1.00 ESTABLISHED 1915 One Year Sample Uopy Free $1.00 THE TEXAS OIL CRITIC is an independent publi cation issued ever)- 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. IlllllllliM I Cool - Sanitary - Convenient s Thats our new location 1 in the Gilman Building Fresh and Cured Meats Poultry and Fish Peoples Cash Market H OVIATT & HAPPOLD, Props. Park Carmichael and wile re- .urned to their farm home north of Lexington last Friday after making i visit to Portland and other Valley points. Mrs. Luther Huston returned home Friday from Portland, where she had I been called earlier in the week by the death of her mother, Mrs. Jackson .vicHaley. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Frederlckson ,f Lexington spent a few hours In leppner last Friday. Mr. Frederick ion is a prominent farmer of the Lex '.ngton section. Miss Nettle Mason, the foremost voman farmer in Morrow county, vas in Heppner Saturday from her :hea creek ranch to look after some uslness matters. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Vaughn re- urned last Saturday from an auto1 .ip to Portland, where they spent a eek while Mr. Vaughn was attend- ig to some Dusmess mauers. D. W. Boitnott returned the last f the week from an extended busl- ess trip which took him to Irrlgon, lermiston, Stanfield and other town3 : the Umatilla irrigation section. A new ad in this issue U that of itephen M. Irwin, local agent tor the :ates Half Sole tire. Mr. Irwin is eetlng with marked success In this ine and autolsts will do well to look ,p his ad. W. F. Barnett, pioneer merchant nd farmer of Lexington, says har- esting operations will begin on his anch six miles north of Lexington, :ext Monday. Mr. Barnett says h iias a good crop this year and Is look ing forward to an average yield. W. H. Padberg is getting into the hog business in earnest. He is buying up all the hogs in the country, It would seem, several hundred of them anyway, which he will fatten and condition for the market on his farm west of Heppner. Billy never dies things by halves. Marshall McAllster, a Lexington boy who spent many months in over seas service and who recently received uls discharge and arrived home, Is now an express messenger on a train running from Portland to Tillamook, according to his brother, Harvey Mc Allster of Lexington. Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Dykstra were pleasant callers at this office on Monday. Mr. Dykstra has homestead- ed a piece of land about 14 miles south of Heppner and he and his wife are making their home there. To keep informed on events, Mr. Dykstra has added his name to our honor roll. Myron Carver and family are new arrivals In Heppner, where they will make their home. Mr. Carver litis taken an office position with the Standard Oil Company. Miss Boslee, a sister of Mrs. Carver, returned to her home in Portland Friday after visiting at the Carver home here tor ten days. Mr. Carver was formerly Dan Eneleman is engaged thU week in painting the Alex Cornett residence on Water street. Frank Barfow and Wes Stevens, farmers of the McKlnney cheek sec tion, were in the city Saturday. Theodore Anderson was among the farmers who came to Heppner to at tend to business matters Saturday. J. C. Devln, who farms in that sec tion west of lone, was transacting business in Heppner last Saturday. J. F. Vaughn local auto dealer, and .Tnfl M. Haves. Butter creek sheep man, motored down to Portland last Friday. ' - S. W. Spencer, cashier of the Far mers & Stockgrowers National Bank, left HeDDner Saturday evening Dy auto to Arlington, where he caught a nleht train Into Foruana. flir. Spencer went down to attend a meet ing of the Shriners. H. R. Smith and H. V. Smouse, partners In the farming business lu the Fairview district, were business visitors here Saturday. Mr. Smouse, says grain has held up remarkably! well during the dry weather and they expect to harvest a fair crop. K. L. Beach and family passed through Heppner one day last week In their, car and from the way tneir machine was decorated with ever greens we just surmised they were returning from an outing in tne mountains. Mr. Beach Is in the hard ware and automobile business In Lex ington. Ben Moore Is back in Heppner again after spending several months in France with the Wildcat division. He arrived Friday evening. Ben re turns home feeling fine as a result of army life, although for the past few months he has been bothered witn throat trouble, the result of taking on an overdose of German gas, Reports from lone state that the Dwlght Mlsner crop of Turkey Red wheat which Is now being combined, is making an average yield of iv bushels per acre. The grain is of ex ceptionally good quality, weighing 61 pounds. Mr. Mlsner has a section of this wheat and is demonstrating what good results good farming wui give. Carl Yount, lone wheat buyer and thn reDresentative in this territory for the Pacific Grain Co. of Portland, was in Heppner Monday looking after the shipment of some last year's wheat. Mr. Yount Is a busy man now as the wheat harvest Is coming on. He has an ad In another column which will be of especial interest to farmers. GRAIN INSURANCE CUT IN HALF Place Your Grain Insurance NOW It will be much cheaper this year, and worth more to you, Mr. Farmer, if placed in a good company. ' See Me Today ROY V. WHITEIS The Insurance Man "Some Saving I" says the Good Judge You men are saving every cent you can. You ought to know that this quality tobacco costs less to chew not more! You take a smaller chew. It gives you the good tobacco taste. It lasts and lasts. You don't need a fresh chew so often. THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW put up in two styles RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco ii i ii i r EVEPOTBODT KfWWS AXVX-INHEAD MEANS BUICX TVT EARLY a half million Buick Valve-in-Head Mo tor cars are in service and the most remarkable phase of that fact is the un usual length of each Buick car's service. There is no magic about the long life of Buick cars. Their owners simply get from them the life, the stamina that is built into each one of them. Today motorists accept Buick longevity for its character of construction and individual endurance. HEPPNER GARAGE, Agent 1 in the employ of the Standard Oil In Imiiiiiiii Portland.