The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, October 09, 1919, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8

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THE OAZETTr.-TlMF. HCTPYER, OUE, THITWOAt, OCT. 0. 1919.
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KEEP A HOUSEHOLD BUDGET
H;,rviv MrA!;stcr of Liinca,n
j-rit JKon !y 'n Hrj.pr.fr.
J.- hn J Kt !!y. lwal (hwpman,
Bia.iv s Nunpjt visit to Pendleton
the bst of the eek.
Mrs. B R. Patterson has boon
i'or.iiiiig t!, past two weeks in Fort
land. J. W. Christopherson and family
of lone were visitors in Heppner nr.
Monday,
Jack Hynd of Cecil and W. 0. Hynd
of Sar.d Hollow were Monday eveu.K,
Tisitcrs in Heppner.
W. 11 Cronk, local manager for
the Tum-A Lura Lumber Co., made a
business trip to lone the first of the
week.
Chas. Valentine has purchased one
of the late model Maxwell touring
cars from the Heppner Auto Co., local
agents.
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. McBride were
In the city the first of the week from
their mountain home near the head
of Rhea creek.
J. T. Knappenberg, prominent lone
farmer and business man was attend
ing to matters of a lefal nature la
Heppner on Monday.
George Stevenson, who has been
In Idaho an summer with the John
Kilkenny sheep, returned to his home
in Heppner this week.
Mrs. 0. F. Thomson. Mr. Chas.
Bartholomew and Lila Bartholomew
left Pendleton yesterday for a visit
with friends aid relatives in Iowa,
Echo News,
W. P. Mahoney, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Mahoney and Philip Ma
honey spent Sunlay on lower Butter
creek, where they enjoyed some good
pheasant shooting.
Dr. R, J. Vaughn, Harold Cohn,
Guy Boyer and LaVerse Van Marter
were a number of local sportsmen
who enjoyed shooting on Lower But
ter creek last Sunday.
W. R. Irwin and son Stephen re
turned Tuesday from Rockaway.
Mrs. Irwin and daughter Betty will
return Sunday, after having spent the
summer at Rockaway.
S. A. Harris, Civil War veteran, !
was down from his mountain home :
the first of the week. Tiling are
rosy in the mountains since the rains, ;
according to Mr. Harris. i
Among the many Eight Mile peo-:
pie who were in Heppner last Satur-j
day were Walter Becket, Mr. and !
Mrs. Harvie Young, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Young and R. D. AUstott. j
L. A. Doak spent a few days last 1
week visiting in lone with his bro- j
ther, S. H. Doak. L. A. was former-,
ly principal of the lone schools and
now lives at Opportunity, Wash.
Mrs. Waldon Rhea has moved to !
Corvallis to keep house for her
daughter Irene, who will attend high j
school, and her son Hugh who is a :
student at 0. A. C. Echo News. j
Property owners on the east end ;
of Baltimore street are preparing to
put in new concrete walks and steps, :
making access to their homes, which
face the school building, easier and
more convenient
Ralph Moores of Morris Brothers,
a Portland bond house, was a Mon
day visitor in Heppner. While here
he enjoyed a visit with Dr. Harold
Bean and C. L. Sweek, former co.
lege mates of Mr. Moores.
Practicing Imrossibit to Run Horn
Witt-sut Emplovmtnt of Good
Buiines Methods.
It muM t admitted ttmt tm!nos
system is lolraMe Id the home for
the very jjood and simple resH'U tUnt.
manifestly jou cannot ciirry on sue
cwsfui;y any kind of business without
, more or loss bookkeeping, writes Carl
Marshall In Thrift. But often you will
hour tome easy swing housekeeper kij:
'That's too much trouble; I have
enough other things te do without
bothering with accounts. Besides,
what's the use? It costs you Just so
much to live anyway, and keeping ac
counts won't make the amount any
less."
Laiy or Inefficient folk are seldom at
! a loss for self-Justincatlon of this sort,
i Some of us en a remember the old-
fashioned country storekeeper who
: ue1 to spend most of his time sitting
i on i box whittling or gossiping with
: the loafers when he should have been
! studying his business. This cheerful
soul held the same views as the slack
j housekeeper. ,
But we do not see much more of
' this old-fashioned, happy-go-luekj
i country merchant He has long ago
I been put out of business by his enter
j prising competitor who learned the
; value of good bookkeeping.
I The answer to those who would
; shirk home account-keeping Is simply
this: You cannot plan your affairs with
any certainty unless you know about
them, and you cannot know about them
unless you keep records of them.
Palmerston.
In the first place, it was always as
serted, with emphasis and even with
icV.meny that he (Pa!merst.n was
not a wh!g. Gladstone, who did not
ttoch like whlssery. though he often
used whig, laid It down that "to be a
whig a man must be a born whig."
! and I believe that the doctrine 's abso
' lutely sound. But Pnlmerston was
, born and bred a tort, and from 1807
j to 1SS0 held office In tory adtninlstra
, tlons. The remaining 83 years of hi
life he spent, for the most part, in
whig administrations, but a whig he
was not. The one thing Id the world
which he loved supremely was power,
and. as long as this was se
cured, he did not trouble himself much
ibout the political complexion of his
associates. G. W. E. Russell.
Girls Ladies Women
FIND
HOI.USTERS ROCKY MOtATAIX TEA a great Laxative mild, pleas
ant, certain so thoroly cleansing and purifying that CONSTIPATION dis
appears, and when your IDXSTIPATIOX goes your COMPLEXION Im
proves you work better at better feel better.
Give it a thoro trial and you will recommend it to all your women friends.
35c a package.
HUMPHREYS DRUG COMPANY
FOR SALE, RAMS AXD EWES.
I am offering extra good big Lin
coln rams at (25.00 to (30.00 each.
Romney rams at (50.00 each. Pure
Bred Lincoln ewes at (20.00 to (25.
00. Above In car or part car lots.
We are in the market for yearling
ewes and ewe lambs.
H. STANLEY COFFIN,
Yakima, Wash.
OXE furnished sleeping room for
lady for (10. Can be arranged for
housekeeping. Inquire at The Ga-ette-Times
office. ' 2tp.
He Knew Abcut It,
The other evening while (loin? home
work the small son of a minister wan
arguing and trying to convince him
self that "congregate" ninl "collect"
m. ant the same thing, for that was
what his te.n'her hnd told him.
Into the argument, which the mln-
i Ister father could not help but ovei
j hear, the said father broke:
' "What's that you are saying? That
j congregate and collect are the same
' word?"
; "That's what teacher said."
j "Quite wrong." replied the' father.
"You tell ti e teacher she Is quite
j wrong. There Is till the difference In
I the world between a 'congregation'
i nnd a 'ollection.' " Columbus Dis
! natch.
FIVE MORE MIXES to be sold nt
L. E. Akers sale on Saturday, Oct. 11
at O. M. Akers ranch.
Do Your Washing
with
SEE IT TODAY
E. J. Starkey
Agent
Gilman Bldg. Heppner.
ONE FULL YEAR BY MAIL FOR
$3.95
OLD OR NEW SUBSCRIBERS
Subscribe Now
CHARLES NOTSON
Local Agent. Phone 772.
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GEO. W. BROADLEY FRANK VANDERPOOL
j BROADLEY & VANDERPOOL
General Blacksmithing and Auto Repairing
We are agents for the "Safety" steering gear for
I Ford cars.
The Sam Hughes Co
HAS ANTICIPATED YOUR NEEDS IN WINTER
WEARING APPAREL, MEN.
We have a complete line of Shirts, both for dress and
work, ranging in price from $2.50 up, in a variety of
shades and weights.
LEATHER COATS
Heavy Work Trousers
These leather lined coats are the best thing yet for
out-of-doors wear. Priced at $12.50.
Winter Caps
In all sizes and styles
King Winter is in the offing. Cold -October nights
portend the icy chill of winter. Start early lay in your
supply of heavy clothing now the price will be no cheap
er later.
And remember. Everything in heavy woolen under
wear is on sale here at $4.00 up.
v
Sam Hughes Company
V
c a package
before the war
c a package
during the war
c a package
NOW
THE FLAU0R LASTS
SO DOES THE PRICE!
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ESTLING
5 vz&BxwmMa
3
Y L!TTL:" !
Invariably Only Two E'emsi.ts s: the
Bit of Jsp.--tce Ta'.es of the
S-'psmaturai.
The elements at bae of the ,
ghost utory of Jupunese thousM nrf
simple. They are fear and nn,'er, two j
mo;Inns cot separable, the one imply-
leg the other and forming a single mo
tive a fact perhaps true throughout
the rule of the eierclse of these two
pn!OM. . . . Tiiey deal with men
at. 1 oinen. acd are complete novels
of everyday lite. Of the past, theie is
the carefully preserved tra'Hti'iniil (
tnu'tnent, t a curate as the delight- ;
ful reprofjuciiuii of old-time costumes
oud old-time life found In the long ,
line of artist of the brush, whether In I
painting or literature. j
But this !s a tt alt of the race, so ,
eminmtly yiveti to minu:e detail In 1
featuring Its environment. Its preju
dices are instanced in the freat lmpor- !
tauce and strict Injunction as to ob
servance and practice of long-time cus
tom. In the ready reference of divers
Ills to old auperMl'lona always upper
most Id the popular mind, some wide
ly apread. others severely local. . . .
With all the varied detail and confu
sion of plot, the stories are all cast in
the Mine rigid lines. In general terms
one rend, all have heen read. This
can he attributed to the essential same
Dees found 'hroughout Japanese social
life. The ghoat Itseif la to bt men
tioned. It It an tinworshiped spirit, or, owing
to some atrocious 'njury In life. It
taya to wander the earth nnd to ae
cure vengeance on the living perpetra
tor. The mind concentrated in its hate
and aialice at the last moment of life
ecu res to the iplrlt a continued and
unhappy sojourn among the living un
til the renireance be secured, the
trudge satlnfied and the spirit pacified.
There are othr unhappy conditions of
this revisiting of life's scenes; el when
the dead mother returns to nurse her
Infant, or the dead rnistresa to console
love. Vengeance katisfles the grudge,
time aaeuages grief; but the ghost can
err by eiceai and find no essy pacifica
tion. The most strenuoua efforts of any
but the salntllest of men sre without
auccesa In the redemption. In the
ease of Suinen, the reprobate cleric
yet stalks the earth In spite of the
lifuyers of generations of aitincra and
alnlrss. offered at the Ruwa shrine; an
Instance of malignant persistence rare
even In the ghostly iiinala of Nippon.
Asia Magazine.
LEXINGTON, OREGON
Eeliable Service
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I " Mm-
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ml.
9t ' V J
5
HEAR
Lewis R.
H or ton s
Most Interesting Lecture
at the
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Friday, Oct. 17
"The Torch of Civilization"
Delivered under the auspices of the Anti- Saloon
Leajjue.
Mr. Horton deals with a "dry world" in his lec
ture. He is an eloquent and fascinating speaker.
SPLENDID ARGUMENT, WIT AND HUMOR
Don't Fail to Hear Mr. Horton
Eddie O'Connell
OF PORTLAND
vs.
Jack Kennedy
OF CONDON
I Star' Theater!
Saturday. Evening Oct. 18
1 AT 9:45 O'CLOCK
f RING SIDE SEATS, $1.50 I
i General Admission, $1.00 I
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3
SAN-TOX PINE BALSAM
with Menthol and Eucalyptus
For coughs and cold j take this remarkable
remedy. It cannot be recommended too
highly. Quickly loosens congestions, soothes
and heals irritated tissues. Safe and effec
tive fur both children and grownups.
We Recommend
I
! J PINE BALSAM
jjj
PUT YOUR PRINTING PROBLEMS UP TO US. WE HAVE
HELPED OTHERS OUT OF THEIR DIFFICULTIES
AND CAN DO THE SAME FOR YOU.
ill ii 1 1 ii 1 1 1 11 it 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
f Save Now, or Suffer
f Later
n
EEs ""THAT'S the ultimatum which is facing the
5 lli thoughtless, reckless spender these days.
EEs No one can tell when a re-action may set
3 And the fellow who has an ever growing
EEs Savings Account here at the FARMERS &
ffj STOCKGKOWERS NATIONAL BANK will
j he away ahead of the game.
EEs We pay a liberal rate of
Ej Interest on Savings.
H FARMERS ec STOCKGROWERS
11 NATIONAL BANK
Heppner
Oregon ss
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j Humphreys Drug Co.
m
IK
White Star Flour
Its a Home Made Product
and leads all other
brands
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WHITE STAR is the standrd flour in this section.
Your Grocer Has It.
Complete Elevator and Warehouse Facilities. Both
bulk and sack grain handled.
WE BUY WHEAT
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HEPPNER FARMERS
ELEVATOR CO.
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