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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 1920)
Tin" ; vrrrr-TiMFs nrrrxru, ora:.. tiuuspat, txs. 13, 1020. I c. M Gilliam & Bisbee iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiHiiiii Hardware and Implements illlllUllilllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllillllll We have it, will get it, or it is not made iIllllMllHlhl!Hiiu:!IHillMIIIi;illliillH!IIIIIUIllllllMlll!lillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinillUIIIIIHI!lll Hill I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 1 STATE NEWS - - - SPECIAL FEATURE SECTION j 1 Under this Heading Each Week Will be Found Up-to-the-Minute News of the World in Picture and Text, Showing the Doings of the Great, the Near- Great and Those Who Are Striving to Become Great. Items of General News Interest Gathered From Over the State at 1 Large. Women's Activities and Fashions. Humor From the Leading Humorous Papers. 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 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 miiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiu 11 111111 1 111 1 iitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 11111111111111 iiiiiiii 111111111111111111111111117 The Heppner Gazette-Times issued I Snow Heavy on Forest. Twenty-six inches of snow on Wil son creek, near Heppner on the Uma tilla forest was reported today by su pervisor V. W. Cryder. No other stations have reported recently but it is believed that this last stortu left some snow almost ail over the forest. Pendleton Tribune. Transfer and General Hauling AVe do a transfer and general hauling business of all kinds. Let us ficrure with vou on that next job. We will GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. BARNARD & EMRY 1 J Am'susl for Larceny. I Harry Manser and Charles Travis I were arrested here yesterday and taken to Pendleton today to answer to a charge of larceny of several sacks of barley from W. K. Wigles worth. IVputy sheriff Blakeney came down this morning to get the men. Echo News. NEW CAPITAL BUD stow x xTv 1 I The The Parting of Ways 1 m e issue 01 tnnit, numanity is divided, but the difference is oniv mat wnicn inevitaDiv aistin- EEs guishes foresight from folly, wisdom from 1 Get headed right by opening an account S5 rs with us. Then keep on the right path by jj building up your account steadily. Every , EEs dollar you add is a measure of safeguard b against trouble and future want. rg One Dollar starts a Savings Account FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK Heppner Oregon 3IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII ill ! Her daddy is Franklin K. Lane, Secretary of Interior. Her name Is Miss Nancy and she Is one of the most popular Washington buds, a debutante of the season. Kcho Resident! are Married. Miss Beulah Barker and Frank A j Helms were married at the M. E. par sonage in Pendleton January 3rd by Rev. R. E. Goruall. Mrs. Jos. Cunha Sr. of Echo was present at the cere. J mony. i Altho Miss Barker and Mr. Helms have resided in Echo several years, ' and are well known here, their mar ' nape came as a surprise to many of : their friends, as they let only a few 1 know their plans. Miss Barker, j whose parents were well known pion eers of this section, taught in the schools in Echo, Pine City and Stan field. Mr. Helms has for some time been employed by Joseph Cunha Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Helms are living on the j-Barker place on the west side of the river. Echo News. a holiday number this year that is a credit to everyone connected with that paper and to the town in which it is published. It is full of interest ing matter, and the merchants and business men gave it generous sup port. Typographically it would be a credit to any office. Condon Globe Tiines. Portland club women have start ed war on risque movies and have decided that they will not contlne their crusade to the movies but will carry the battle to vaudeville and road shows. A recent picture "The Thirteenth Commandment" shown in a Portland theatre, aroused a storm of criticism. Total receipts for the month of De cember from the national forests lu the district of Oregon, Washington and Alaska reached $35,220.29, al most four times the amount received in December, 19 1 S, which was $9, 224.03. Of the total, $27,518.15 came from timber sales. Water pow er revenues amounted to $2,515.85, and grazing trespass and fire trespass fines and grazing permits made up the remainder. Charles II. Collins, 40 years of age :ir.d a switchman in the O.-W. yards at Pendleton, committed suicide at his home last Saturday night by hang ing himself to the door of the kitchen with a bath-robe cord. He leaves a wife and two small children. Ill health is believed to have been the cause of his rash act. PUT YOUR PRINTING PROBLEMS UP TO US. WE HAVE HELPED OTHERS OUT OF THEIR DIFFICULTIES AND CAN DO THE SAME FOR YOU. "Nowls theTime to Do It" says the Good Judge Go to real tobacco the small chew with the rich tobacco taste that lasts a long time. It will cost you less to chew than ordinary tobacco. Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that Put Up In Two Styles RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco Why Worry About Fuel When the Izard Gas Heater will do the work. See us for recommendations front Heppnei people u ho are now using the hard heatei MERRITT & AKERS, Local Agents c. ii. mi:kjutt A. 8. AKERS Hardee Is X'ew War Loan Director. San Francisco, Cal. Governor John U. Calkins of the Federal Re serve Bank has just announced the appointment of Theodore Hardee of San Francisco as director of the War Loan Organization for the Twelfth l-'ederil Reserve Distnct, which con. prises the seven Pacific Slope States of Arizona, California. Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington, as well as Hawaii. Hardee succeeds Kobt. E. Smith ol Portland, and in this capacity, with Clovis A. Farnsworth as Associate Di rector, will direct the 1920 campaign for distribution of War Savings Stamps and Certificates, and any sim ilar securities the Government may otter, throughout this extensive ter ritory. The District headquarters will remain at 420 Sacremento Street, San Francisco. In the conduct of his former duties as Executive Secretary of the Twelfth District's General Executive Board for all five Liberty Loan campaigns, covering a period of nearly three years, Hardee has made a host of friends and acquaintances, all of whom will be glad to learn of his pro motion to the highly important office he now occupies. He plans an act ive campaign during the present year and counts upon the earnest cooper ation of all loyal and intelligent Am- W'ood Club "Will lie Formed at Pen- ericans in this District to make it live dleton. up to the Treasury Department's ex pectations. A Leonard Wood Club for presi. dent will be organized at Pendleton. Dow. V. Walker, overseas veterau who has charge of the Wood cam paign in Oregon is an enthusiastic supporter of the general and says the fight in Oregon will be between Wood and Johnson. Mr. Walker started the work of organization in Pendleton, after visiting in La Grande, where he found an active Wood organization. The Patron-Teachers Association will meet at the high school auditoi ium on Friday, January 23. A pro gram is being arranged. Democratic Women Organize National Party l - " i i lit; Democratic women not to be outdone by Republican tair ones have organized' ft National Demo crate Women's Party and are here shown In the first meeting at Washington. Among those who at tended and took part in the organization, shown In the front row are (left to right) Miss L. Caubler, Mis Margaret Vail, niece ot President Wilson, Mrs. George B. Chlids, Misa LilLan Sire and Miss Adeline Sterling. CARPENT1ER GETS CHAMPIONSHIP CUP? Make a Trap! i f v x i - w rMzw ! An PNnL ?Uc 1 f7 European sportdom has oim funny ideas of things. F'rlnstance here is Sport Promoter Co-, in ane of London, presenting the Cant gold cup to GeoiKes C:tri-n;iei th.- French heavyweight champion, after his defeat of . itei'lctt. Prni-.h champloti, in one round, at London recently. The .up i all right ami the idea of awarding, fine but thvy tnsorilied n it 'll--av ..-ii.-ht Champion of the World." American s;:ui I- i 'h. 'tiplon. Jack Dempsey, Will ura "Junk" thai cup t, Cai ,.eni:-r i'do a ring. Kiddles! Do you want to catch a mouse? Here's a simple diagram tor a trap which gets 'em every time. A cardboard box round hat box preferred. A piece ot common wrapping paper for a top ties with a string. Then qut a square X (No. 5) and hang a piece of cheese or cake directly over the center. A thin board or strip runway for Mr. Mouse to get up to the top. Ho walks out to get his supper, the paper bends under his weight and he slips down into the box trapped.- Some Ileal Estate Deals. W. S. Smith, lone's live realty j agent, has this week handled the two I HMII.K AWHILE. A HopelcsN Case. j A doctor came up to a patient in a; K. E. Jones, who sold his farm be low town the past week to C. W. Law son, lias purchased the interest of Phil Jones in the Heppner Delivery Co. real estate deals mentioned below . lunatic asylum, slapped him on the and has several more in prospect for , back and said: "Well, old man, you're the near future. j all right. You can run along and Fred Mankin purchased from Gus-' write your folks that you will be back tave Friewald 480 acres lying five i homo as good as new In two weeks." miles northeast of lone for a consid-; The patient went off gaily to write eration of $10,800. No Improve-! his letter. He had it finished and ments are on this tract with the ex-j sealed, but as lie was about to affix ception of a drilled well but Mr. j the stamp the latter slipped through Mankin will at once erect buildings his fingers to the floor, alighted on and make other permanent improve- j Ule b.ltk of a cockroacn that waa ments. , , , , , ,, . . Walter Keitmann has transferred I)assing ;,ml stl,,:k' T,le patlent had' titln tn 194 ncres nf Innrl Ivlmr north, n't seen tile cockroach. What he did east of lone and known as the Davis in the world are you doing?" "Vou see, father," answered the bright nnd shining light of the house, hold, "today at school the teacher said there was no such word as 'fail' so I'm cutting it out of the dictiona ry." St. Louis ylobe-Democrat. .Marriage Is A Lottery. Mrs. Dearborn Did you ever win a prize in a lottery? Mrs. Wabash Why, of course, I'm getting alimony. Yonkers Statesman. place to John McDevitt for a consid eration of $4000. This tract adjoins the 4S0 acres previously owned by Mr. McDevitt and gives him a com fortable little patch of laud to handle. lone Independent. ! HER JOB IS TO WAR ON BEARS, UONS AND BOBCATS J. w .;-., .v.'.vj.v. iaW. 'm ..ir );.. . - i i. -. 'M ' tit V i WA V,- ICS, y '2tA Afjs 'M Wo see was his escaped postage stamp zigzagging aimlessly across the floor and following a crooked trail up the Mull and across the ceiling. In depressed silence he tore up the letter he had Just written and drop ped the pieces on the floor. "Two weeks!" he said. "I won't be out of hero in three years." Lon don Tit-Bits. Johnny Was Literal. Little Johnny was discovered In tlie library, busily snipping away at mi open dictionary. "Johnny." asked his father. Telephone Co. Held Meeting In This City Last Sat urday. The stockholders of the lilacs Horse-Sand Hollow Telephone Com pany held their regular annual meet, ing at the court house In this city lust Saturday afternoon, with a fair rep resentation of the shareholders and patrons of t lie line present. Among other business attended to, Chas. Hemrick, was granted the right to change the location of a number of the company's poles which cross one end of his placo in Sand Hollow. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. McMillan and young son, of Lexington, were visit, 'whatjors In Heppner on Tuesday. Mrs. Ada Tinglev of the Riitoaii her work in Idaho that of trapping or killing predatory animals. In 17 months she silenced the ravaging destruction of 278 stock-preying animals. She Is shown here with pelts from coyotes, bob cats and badgers Bhe has killed. Three hundred such men agents have killed over 70,000 animals In he last three years, saving stockmen over five million dollars annually, it is estimated. HOME SWEET HOME by Jack Wilson pAW w pet RABBn is gome! we GOTTA way ,' wELl ,DOWoRI?Y- WE'LL FNP M'M AROUND HERE SOMEWHERE O.-T. WANT ADS ARE SURE RESULT GETTERS. Use their HELLO WtlOMBoR! CAW 1 1 CuE5s H07 II HELP VOO LOOK T I I ritn,,,.,, o. ., " " - i ZcT- J A bM "EADEO MAM To LOOK V , : - For Disabled Soldiers w vw::. V. I V liAi 1 , I in HON. BURTON E. SWEET. neprcsentatlve Sweet, Republican, of Iowa, Is author of tha bill recently enacted by Congress, awarding an additional 180,000,000 per year to disabled soldiors. Under the Sweet bill, which was endorsed by the American Legion, totally disabled service men who formerly re ceived only $30 a month will receive 80, with liberal additional allow- um iur uieir wives, cniiaren ana dependent parents. This Is notable piece of "soldier legislation" and has made the New Ye vubui in mouwuos or patriotic nomes. Year