Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (March 18, 1920)
i hi i. :: i ri timi s. iu itnku, our., riiuismv, Mn. it. nso. rV. I If.MT - m h m t i n 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 m 1 1 1 1 1 i i n 1 1 1 1 1 ; 1 1 i i : ; n t i t : : 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i h i 1 1 1 it 1 1 1 u ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 iniiiniiitiiiniii iiiiuiiiiiiiiniiiiiuiiniiiiiiitMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiniiiiiiiiiiiHiiiniiiiinnwiMniiniiiiiniiiiHiiniin STATE NEWS - - - SPECIAL FEATURE SECTION 1 Under this Hendins Each Weei: Will be Found Up-to-the-Minute News of the World in Picture and Text, Showing the Doings of the Great, the Near- G:v .t .md Those Wlio Are Striving: to Become Great. Items of General News Interest Gathered From Over the State at Lanje Women's Activities and Fashions Humor From the Leading: Humorous Papers. 5 FniiiititMiiiiiiiMMiHiiiniini'iiMi: iiiiiitiMiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiMiiiiiiHMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiMiiiiiuuiiiniHiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiuniMiiiiiiiiMnnMiiiiiiiiiiiiiunMiiiiiiHiiuiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiT j7w utmost power-value Pure throughout, dependable always, Red Crown gasoline gives the utmost power-value. It is made to meet the requirements of your engine. "Red Crown" is all-refinery gasoline with the full and continuous chain of boiling points necessary for ready starting, quick and smooth acceleration, steady, dependable power and long mileage. Look for the "Red Crown" sign before you fill. STANDARD OIL COMPANY ICilitermla) 'jfte GasoIinQ of Qualify GEO. W. MILHOLLAND, Spwial Asiont, Standard Oil Co., ItoiiiH'i Oivsron STATE NEWS I '.land Tit)- Merchant hilled. Lee Tabor was killed in liis store at ll.ind i'i!. I'nien county as a re-' suit of a lield-up oii'tiring tliore last Friday nis'it. Talior was alone in his store playing solitaire when two masked men dressed in blue overalls and jumpers drove up in a car, enter ed the store and ordered him to throw up his hands. When he re fused, thinking it was some friends playing a joke on hiiu, one of the highwaymen shot him, the bullet passing over his heart. Mr. Tabor died the following afternoon. The robbers made atway w ith several thou sand dollars, his watcn and other val uables. A reiward of $1000 has been offered for the capture of the highway-murderers. Willard Service Station BATTERIES RECHARGED The Lexington Garage FEEDER ICKSOX BROS, Props. We Sell Goodyear and Racine Tires Repair Work Oils Greases C. W. McNAMER B. F. S0RENS0N CENTRAL MARKET McXamer & Sorenson, Props. BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, VEAL, POULTRY and FISH IN SEASON Give Us An Opportunity to Serve You Gilman Buildim;: Willow Street List Your Ranch Now Spring will be here in a few weeks and I will have buyers ready to take your ranches. I want about 15 more choice wheat ranches for sale, and if my past and present success is a criterion you won't hare to wait long to close up a deal. Quick Sales and No Deception E. M. SHUTT The Real Estate Man Upstairs in Court House SomethingYou Need You should have a checking account. You will thus have a perfect record of all income and an indisputable receipt for all payim-nts. Your money will always he safe, and ct at your instant command. You w ill rain the increased respect of all with whom you deal. We Pay 4'.; on Time Deposits. Member Federal Reserve Bank A FARMERS &c STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK Inland Cmpire to s-e ;WO Miles of Highway. Spokane. March 1:!. - miring 19Jl eisl't counties in the Inlaml Kniuire Ul huild approximately 3S0 miles of permanent highway at an expendi ture of $2,375,000. Kive of the coun ties are in Washington anil three in I1 tli ii. Those in Washington f re: i Whitman. 40 miles. $:',00.000: Ad-, 'is. 70 miles, $1,100,000; Douglas, ' miles, $750,000; Spokane, 60 miles. Fl 50,000; Lincoln, 60 miles, $250,000. ' '"unties in Idaho are: I Horner. 40 miles. $175,000; Tioun-il-r-. 50 in-h's, $200,000; Kootenai,1 40 miles, $150,000. 1 FASHION CANT RULE OUT SWEATER, ADOPT IT WETS BOOM EDWARD rUK rKLdiur.ru irrigation Company Proposes to Store Supply of Water. Salem, Or., The Tumalo irriga tion district has tiled application with Percy (.'upper, state engineer, for the storage of 150,000 acre-feet of water in Waldo lake, on the middle fork of ihe Willamette river. It is proposed by the district to store water in this reservoir and divert the same through a tunnel under the divide to the head waters of the Deschutes river for the irritation of the lands within the Tu malo project. The Enterprise Electric company asks for the appropriation of 30 acre feet of water from the Wallowa river for development of power. It is ex pected that this power will be used in the vicinity of Joseph and Enter prise. Hoad Grant Tax Drafts Arrive. (Portland Telegram) Oswald West, who represented the counties of Coos and Douglas in ef forts before Congress to obtain the taxes due on the reverted Coos Bay wagon road grant lands, announces that drafts covering the congression al appropriation for the delinquent taxes have been received in Portland by Harry E. Laughlin, chief of the field division of the general land of fice, and forwarded to the sheriffs as tax collectors of the two counties. Coos county's share of the govern ment draft is $41)2. 141. OS and Doug las county's share $55, 071). 27. Tongue Point Will Have Naval Base.! Washington. The submarine basej at Tongue Point, near Astoria, is the j only new project on either coast toj remain in the naval appropriation j bill, as agreed upon by the house j committee on naval affairs. The pro- ie:-t is retained only because of the ; long undefended coast line between San Francisco and Puget Sound, it , has been explained. I I .l-lll II four new spring impels for itr iH g hM adop,ed tt- Note color range Is wide Prom u fca.nd "port wear 8howD a"ove. The able In thto Voit T LJtiTVnV? C,e8t blue """ Either bell sleeve or th . tlfhUwSS Mitad "h"."" ,'n V0U9' Quite the thin,, silk m'Z and el,h Governor Edward I. Kdwardi was elected in New Jersey on a "wet" platform. Last week he signed a bill for 5.5 per cent beer and in defiance of the Volstead ntional prohibition enforcement act. ' Now the wets are starting to boom "Edwards for President.' lieml Publisher Is Count)' .Indite-. I Salem, Ore. Robert W. Sawyer.' one of the publishers of the Bend . Bulletin, has been appointed by Gov-i ernor Olcott as county judge of Des-j chutes county to sueeees W. D. Par-: nes, who has resigned. FIRST WOMAN HEAD IN INTERNAL REVENUES OLDEST MAN SHOULDERS RIFLE FOR HIS BABY Great Electric Plant To Be Put Above Lake. A great hydro-electric plant will be constructed this summer by the En terprise Electric company somewhere above Wallowa lake. For more than a year the company has been figuring on various sites and plans for getting more power and current, and has been gathering information regarding the advantages of each of the sug gested plants. This crystallized in a decision to go above the lake. Fur ther details have not been decided on, although a tentative order for the necessary machinery and equipment has been placed. It is certain, how ever, that the new plant will produce many times the power now generated and used, and will provide for the growth of the county for years to come. L. M. Simpson and Dert L. Sivyer of the company have been in town th is week attending to various phases of its business. Enterprise Itecord-Chieftain. il ten y ill' if. J v.s DEDICATE LINCOLN MEMORIAL THIS YEAR Mrs. Estclle V. Collier of gall Lake City, the first woman to be appointed collector of customs In the Internal Revenue Department. Is also the mother of (our chil dren. She won the appointment over five male candidates. She U also chairman of the Utah Dem ocratic Women's State Committee. Her husband is a mining it,, i ineer. Uncle Johnny Shell, 13 2 years old, G r a s 8 y Creek, Lesllo-co, Ky., still has a bit of fight in his ' make-up, accord ing to reports. When his 35 , year-old wife, his r fourth, recently died, It is said relatives Attemnted 2 to take Uncle . S Johnny's 6-year- ' i old son away. , QOrabblng; his 100-year-old ! .1 flint ln1f PlHA I i Uncle Johnny niounieu a imuiu and rode across K" inu iiiuunitiiun in k recover his boy. 5 At the point of a it run It Is said Shell got hia boy Si nonie. onen win be 13.1 yours old J Sept. 3. C .1 i i A Jil'. -: i ' mm K Ik-'V&, 'till A I ! , ! . 1 1 1 SMILE AWHILE In liealms of Art. ".My fortune's made!" exclaimed the dancing teacher. "Have you thought of a new dance?" "No. Hut I've thought of a highly improper name for one." Washing ton Star. Query from Sir James, Here is a story with a moral for telephone users. Hon. James Duff of Canada wus in the habit of shouting into the receiver, and one day Sir James Whitney, who was in his oflice nearby, asked what all the racket was about. "It is Mr. Duff, sir," replied the clerk. "He is talking with his wife up in Simcne county." "He is, eh?" said Sir James. "Well why on earth doesn't he telephone her, instead of yelling across the Pro vince like that?" -Boston Trans cript. Due Process of Ijuv. "Yes, I iwas on the stand In that case." "I thought you lold mo you knew nothing about it." "I didn't. Hut under the regular procedure it took three days to bring that out." Judge. The great Lincoln Memorial at Washington, D. C, is to be dedi cated this year. Sept. 22 is the date now virtually agreed upon. This was the decision of the Lincoln Memorial Commission, which held a meeting at the capital this week. The commission is made up of prominent Americans. They are, left to right, former Speaker Champ Clark, former President William Howard Taft, former Speaker Joseph O. Cannon, from Lincoln's state, Illinois, and former Governor Samuel W. McCall of Massachusetts. The picture of the memorial building shows the great structure in its present stage of construction. ' Enterprise Rika are contemplating the establishment of a camping , ground at the head of Wallowa lake, j says the Kecord-Chleftaln, and defl 'nite steps have been taken to carry lout the plans. It is their intention to 'lease a tract of land and ilx it up at tractive for tourists carrying their own camping outlits. HOME SWEET HOME by Jack Wilson THERE S OOP CALL AT LAST! -IT S M0$ GOSS. 1 jsKNOW.' - SHE SAID SHE , VOULD fe'iCALl. ME THIS I -1 MOPNiN&Vf L r - I HELLO, HELLO MRS GOSSl ES-THiS IS Me.KASie, WrtHTV-x - HELLO -HELLO SAV, CENTRAL. stat out! HEL-tO', iO VOU WERE GvEt? To WARRENS, EH?- SAW THEiR NEW -xPuRHiTuE'.Gec)Wi 50L0ii IT TO 'EM MUSI HAVE- tS HELLO- ITtV 'i.V School Children (let Milk. Pendleton school children are ask ed to report at the morning recess but not to unswer for mischief. Not much. They step right up to the tea cher and get a glass of fresh milk. Fifty-three children in the Lincoln school are given a half pint each mor ning, and 4 4 In Washington. Parent and teacher cooperate with the home demonstration agent, Miss Harmon, who suggested this means of supply ing more of the great protective food. Teachers in the first and third grades weigh the children and record In crease in weight. Many more chil dren would be suppplled but the milk is not to be had. Sunflowers Make (iimh) Silage. Sunflower silage, so extensively used for silage In some eastern Ore gun counties, Is good feed in all parts of Oregon. Many samples analyzed by J, S. Jones, chemist of the O. A. C. experiment station, gave the follow ing results In comparison (with corn silage, given second In each pair of figures: Water 73.21, 7S.20; dry mutter -26.79, 21.80; acids 2.52. 1.47; ash 1.39, l.f8; crude protein 2.45, 1.95; ether extract 17.40, 8.01. (First figures sunflower sil age, second, corn.) County Agent Hunt, S. A. Pattlson and Br. J. Perry ('under attended a road meeting at Alpine hiHt Thursday. "Perhaps You Don't Know" says the Good Judge That nearly every wise to bacco chewcr got over the big chew idea long ago. A little of the Real Tobacco Chew gives you more to bacco satisfaction and saves you money. Its rich taste lasts a long time. 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 MELLO-M0ST HAvE hateo To PART WITH IT - BECAUSE HC COMtV-xTo SEE WARREN ABOUT IT EV6BV l.lLll T -lFILft. AREY00- fc.ro -WReueARieM suppose You ve HEARD ABOUT TH6 uv BeiNG Built for jX. TELtPrtCHf. ' OPERATORS? rleuo- -HEL- VSt TjlETRG NAMING TH6 Moreu- " LUTE H INN" HELLO - Clothes That your friends admire that's the kind you want Heppner Tailoring & Cleaning Shop Hand Tailoring (Mists no morn lliiin ordin nry cldllics; in fact Iohs, fur your .'inncnlH Inst and look eouii longer, Havo yinir next suit, niiiilc to iiii'iiHiin'. Our Tape Line Is Ready Are You? G, FlfANZEN, Proprietor 1 1 Heppner Oregon 1 M