The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, November 04, 1920, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    THK GAZKTTK-TIMKS. IIEITXER, OKKGOX, THURSDAY. NOV. 4. 1020.
I IS DISOWNED
n All NATION
S
t'rrdrrlck 4 halm'. Jut tlrlraMd
Iron I'rtaon. In "Man liltniit
Ksr,i Fvft!: K. tie's Vai Wit-ul
jt Vui.tn ' -,s U 1 n rv.tUel in fact
it. the hie cf KrtMvr . k i o il.ume, lor-..;f-r
? a .:. jo;; it r, ; ..:.. r ar.d lobe
t:o!:-. wh- rt-.t'!-i: v v ir.j.U'K-ii a sen-
tT.v c fit t fje ! ier :u ;!; itfit in ry at
1a e:. worth, Kan. a.--d was liiouclit to
St. Lou, to :i;i.t his. exportation to
Vex ion.
Ie Ch.tsr.e w as st t tenot il to i-erw
th-ce e:rs in the er,iientiary in 1 91 S
fallow ins hi? our.vu tion in Kl liso.
Tx.s. oi. a .hiire K-t having falsiiieii
as to his naturalization w her. enlisting
in U.e I r.itii Stales ar:: y.
llor ! Sedan, F m n er .
I'm? t,"h;iTie. w ho is known also as Oeo
R. i;bs,her. toUl naturalization offi
cials that he was a "mr.n without a
country." lie sai.i that he had applied
for naturalisation in Kranoe. (.ionr.any,
and Mexico, sas the St Louis Globe
Derr.nerat but had never been admitted
to citizenship.
"I was born in Sedan. France, forty
years ago," he said. "My parents died
when 1 was a child A Sedan farmer
took me into his home and I remained
w ith him until I was about 1 year? old.
Then I ran away and became a cabin
boy on a sailing vessel. I followed the
sea for several years, and when 1" years
old I left it
"In Bremen. Oerm.my. w hen I was ar
rested on a charg-e of having attempt
ed to evade military service. I protest
ed that I was a citizen of France. I
had no birth certificate, and even today
there is no record of my birth there. 1
have tried many times to obtain it.
"I was forced into the military ser
vice of Germany. I served four months
and seeing- my opportunity, deserted. I
fled through Holland. At Rotterdam 1
obtained employment as a sailor and re
mained at sea for several years
"In 1914, while in Enpland, I ag-ain
had trouble because I was a citizen of
the world but of no country in particu
lar. In vain I tried to establish my cit
izenship in the republic of France, and
finally I w as shipped to Hio de Janeiro.
I found my way back to the sea, which
has become my home, inasmuch as na
tions refused to recognize me. One year
I spent upon the water and then the
war forced me from the only home I
ever had. I was unable to prove my cit
izenship In any country. 1 was not a
subject of any nation and consesuently
the ocean, transformed into a giant na
val battle ground was no place for me.
Worked In the City of Mexico.
"Fate sent me to Mexico and I went
to its capital city. I obtained employ
ment with a mining; company and
worked there for a year. I married and
then became the plaything of the Mex
ican revolution. One day the Villistas
descended upon the mine and wiped it
out I went to Chihuahua with my wife
and obtained employment there as an
electrician, a trade I had learned on the
sea. I came into possession of some
property there, which I still own. unless
the Mexican government has sold it be
cause of my failure to pay taxes.
Arretted as Allen.
"In February, 191S, I was placed un
der arrest as an enemy alien and tried
upon the technical charge of having
falsified about my naturalization. I
was found guilty and sentenced to the
penitentiary.
"No country will recognize me as a
citizen. I have been in the armies of
Germany and the United States. I re
member nothing of my early life except
having lived in Sedan. My life has
been spent going from one corner of the
earth to the other, a citizen of the
world, but a man without a country."
The deportation of De Chaine has
been recommended and he will be held
here until a "party" of aliens is made
up to leave SL Louie for Mexico.
S- j -i. ked carload Seeralothet
i-if apples and late rears are
: - w rr.route to Kngland, Scotland and
. vT...:a The association is confident
M ..t the Oregon fruits are now so well
s;abha on the foreign markets that
1 a... rsh.p ir. these lines is practlcallv
covce.ied
! Fortland Thirty-four hundred bush
tels of wheat were handled by the mu
1 nieipal pram elevator at terminal No, i
I in its first week of operation, just com
pleted Mxty-flve carloads of sacked
wheat and 17 cars of wheat in bulk
reached the terminal in the same per
iod The first steamer to load is one in
augurating service on the Holland
American line.
Fort Orford Freight may now be
shipped from here and also brought in
much easier, owing to completion of the
new 140,000 wharf on the waterfront.
It will be usd by vessels loading lum
ber, shingles, piling, telephone and tele
graph poles, ties and the like and was
t time
"Do
Unto
Others"
That's as svsry
Wt treat your
battery just n if H
wat our own and
were bound to make
use of every laat cent
worth oT value ia it.
Of oouree we re
charge batteries aod
always have oa hand
the Still Better WU
lard with Threaded
Rubber Insulation
the kind selected by
136 manufacturers of
passenger cars aad
aaotor tracks.
bmlt In- th IVrt of Tort Orfonl. or
t::iniii two ears a;o
North rtt.J To f;i.tlit;ito luml'Oi
shipments, the Oregon Kxeorts iv.
which has a saw-mil at Milllnton. is
oonstruotinit a spur trak from the
Southern 1'Aoinc. This will do aw:i
with many of the loading prot'k'nis.
Fortlaiui. Spain will receive a full
carpo of Oregon rlour w hen the Admiral
line steamer, Wawalona, docks at Ca
Ml. The cereal has Veen sent by the
Portland Flouring Mills company and Is
the first shipment of tts kind ever sent
from here to the historic Spanish port.
It is likewise the first cargo from the
Willamette river to go to that section
of Europe.
Salem. Enough prune orders have
been secured by the Oregon Growers
Oo-operattve Association to keep all of
us plants running to full capacity un
til the latter part of November.
Salem. Local manufacturers are
gloating over the recognition given
l'hei loganberry Juice in the pure food
column of the New York Tribune. The
publication selects what it regards as
worth while goods and has a chemist
Investigate each product selected as the
subject for an article. It also makes
suggestions as to uses of this. In a re
cent issue the paper devoted a good
portion of a column to Hies In which
it suggests that if the fruit Juice is
used in plum pudding It "makes one
forget the absence of sherry."
Fortland. The fastest one pound vac
cuum coffee packing unit In the world
has been Installed in the new plant of
the Clossett A Devers company In North
Fortland. This has a 50 percent In
crease in capacity over the old head
quarters and houses much new equip
ment, including a large spice grinder
Roseburg Lnd products of every
description from this section were ex
opening early in the week. Farms In
every portion of Douglas county were
represented.
latlas After being Idle for some
time the sawmill of S. C Cleveland at
expected w ill continue to run all w lntor
Burns Flans are being made to de
velop the log Mountain oil well near
here on a commercial basts. San Fran
cisco capital. It Is understood, will get
hlbtted at the show in the armory here,' Fedee has resumed operations and it Is; behind the project.
WHEN you buy eggs
' ' you judge their value by
freshness and the "dozen,"
When you buy silk you figure
its worth by feel beauty
and the "yard."
But how do you arrive at
the value of baking powder?
You can't tell by appear
ances by weight bulk
doesn't mean quality.
There's only one way and
that is an oven test
Bythattest-Calumet always
proves itself the best
tkbW BAKING powder cfiSii
"BEST BY TEST" ' """""" "a
BATTERY ELECTRIC SERVICE
STATION
J. W. Fritsch
Phone Main 83 Heppner
It is the most economical of
all leaveners. Its price is
moderate you save when
you buy it
It has more than the ordin
ary leavening strength you use
less and save when you use it
It never fails. There is no
loss of baking ingredients.
So, don't guess at Baking Powder
value any longer. Measure it by re
sults. Pound can of Calumet contains full
16 oz. Some bakingpowderscome in
12 oz. instead of 16 oz. cans. Be lure
you get a pound when you want it.
Calumet
Griddle Caka
Racipa
4 cups flour, 4
level teaspoons
Calumet Baking
Powder, 1 tea
spoon salt, 3
cups milk. Then
mix in regular
way.
1 1
3 ,...,. 1,....,. ..,. i k!
News About Oregon's
Industries
Portland. Eathine suits from the
Jantzen Knitting1 mills are displacing
the hula hula garments on the beaches
near Honolulu and are now being in
troduced into another new field. The
company has just arranged to open of
fices in New York within three weeks.
Owls are already going to Chicago,
Cleveland, Kentucky, Florida and other
parts of the pouth and middle west in
large quantities. One salesman sent in
orders for $40,00 worth of the manu
factured article for distribution in Los
iilartd Manufactured goods and
products of Southern Oregon will be
shown at a community fair to be held
here the first weeK in December. It is
to be under the auspices of the cham
ber nf commerce and will replace the
UH'.-al rgur.ty fair.
Sale-n. F.ven Sweden is to taste the
famous Oregon apples this year, for the
'refcron Groovers Co-operative associa
tion has just completed shipping a
GOOD TASTE
.WHERETO
tel.-aEAT
1
fiaC
The Question
Is Settled
DINE WITH US
Our Ntw Big Dining Room
Is not exclusive to transient
trade. It's for the folks of
Heppner First, Last and All
the Time.
Give the wife a rent
and a treat a Sunday
dinner here.
SHORT ORDERS, TOO
Elkhorn Restaurant
Willow Street
Good taste in dress must find its first expression
in the proper corset in the harmony of beauti
ful lines and right proportions.
Gossard Corsets
Front Lacing
are designed to accent the natural charm of ev
ery type of figure. Whatever your corset needs,
there are many models created in accordance
with the unchanging principles of beauty and
good taste that will assure you graceful lines
and faultless proportions with that unconscious
ness of retsraint that can only result from the
healthful support of a perfectly fitting corset.
Our thorough understanding of modern corsetry
makes certain your complete satisfaction.
Mrs. L. G. Herren
eSWdi'n Street, Heppner, Ore.
m.
The most beautiful line B
of a woman's figure is g
the graceful curve from i
the armpit to the ankle.
The beauty of this line fa
determines the effective- H
ness of all your clothes. g
, aa il
Smart Hosiery For Women
HOLE-PROOF HOSIERY
has not only the dash and
style, but also a lasting wear
ing quality which has made the
name HOLEPROOF a bv-word
among discerning people who
want quality.
We carry a complete line of hos
iery in prices ranging from $1 up
ocUV
o rn )f
nr
HLEPI?
HoIERy
Sam Hughes Company
e mean o
umanity
Must Be Kept Beating
Fourth Annual Red Cross Roll Call
ttrcrtttttttttti tin i ti mm 1 1 1 1 1 1 m i : 1 1 nm nn 1 1 1 : i : i : i i:t tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMJTtiiiiitiii iiirririiitm itntitttrrrrrrrrrrrT
ARMISTICE DAY, November 11
to
THANKSGIVING DAY, Nov. 25th
itwiiiiiittttnastntta
There are five classes of memberships:
Annual, or $1 memberships.
Contributing, or $5 memberships
Sustaining, or $10 memberships.
Life, or $50 memberships.
Patron, or $100 memberships.
50 per cent of the Annual and 80 per cent of the Con
tributing and Sustaining memberships will be retained
by the Morrow County Red Cross Chapter for carrying
on the local work.
Everybody Has an Opportunity to Become A
Member of This Humanitarian Organization
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiinimm;::
H. A. DUNCAN, Chairman
I Fourth Red Cross Roll Call I
IP
The Inside of the Pail
The "finish" of any painted or varnished
job depends largely on the quality of the
materials used. When Basi-Hueter prod
ucts are employed, the results are never dis
appointing. The Bast-Huttcr line.containing
a product for every painting or varnishing
need, is built on the plan that high-grade
materials plus high-grade manufacture pays
both manufacturer and consumer.
If you have a painting problem.let us solve it.
BASS-HUETER PAINT COMPANY
ka l I I M warn wu a airrrri v a sn-na r-i
Peoples Hardware Company