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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 23, 1920)
55 n i .!: six TlY, 0AZKTTK-T1MKS. riKITXER, OREGON, THURSDAY. W.C. 23.1!W. A-R-D At a Big Reduction One year ago lard was selling at 40c. We are now selling pure lard at 27k lb. In 2, 3, 4, 5 and 10 pound lots. Everv Bucket Guaranteed Central Market McNAMER & SORENSON aiiiiiiniiiiiiitniiiiniiiiiiiHiiiiiiiHiiiiiinHiiiiiiiniiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiniiMiiiiniiiniiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiuiiiiiii j STATE NEWS - - - SPECIAL FEATURE SECTION 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 Neax- Great and Those Who Are Striving to Become Great Items of General News Interest Gathered From Over the State at 3 Large. Women's Activities and Fashions. Humor From the Leading Humorous Papers. MMmHmiMIIMIIMMHMIIIIIMIMMItlllllUIIIMIIIimiUllimiMIIMIHMIIUlUililMlllin FRIENDS Blacksmithing In all its branches, including Wagon Work, Horseshoeing and Repair Work ALL WORK GUARANTEED We Give a 5 Percent Discount for Cash J. B. Calmus Formerly the Ashbaugh Shop ! F 8 WHEAT RANCH BARGAIN 400 Acres 350 Acres Under Cultivation. 'Five Miles From Town. Small House and Barn and Good Well. ALL UNDER FENCE. PRICE $9000 S3000.00 down and easy terms on the balance. Roy V. Whiteis Real Estate and Insurance Heppner Oregon I used to watch for Santa Claus With childish faith sublime, And listen in the snowy night To hear his sleigh-bells chime. Beside the door on Christmas Eve I put a truss of hay, To feed the prancing, dancing steeds That sped him on his way. If children of a larger growth Could have a Christmas tree From Father Time, one gift alone Would be enough for me Let others take the gems and gold, And trifles light and vain, But give me back my old belief In Santa Claus again! Mill UTTLK riHl.nilKN EVKIIYWIIKIIK K BKINU OIK l-KKCUHS UIKTS TO Til KM A JOYOIS SKA SON STII.L VK MARK; I KVKN Mill TUB PEAR CHILD JKSIK' BARK. WILL GUARD HEALTH OF NEXT PRESIDENT This little maa. Dr. Charles E. Sawyer. Marion. O., Is slated to nil the place now occupied by Dr Carey . Grayson. He is to be personal physician to President elect Harding. Dr. Sawyer has been a close personal friend and neighbor to the Hardlnga for many years. Dr. Sawyer made the recent trip with the president elect to Texas, Panama Canal and back to Washington. The pressure cooker Is one of the first of the labor ami fuel saving equip-j menta purchased by many progressive! housewives. It can le used to prepare; fruits, meats, and vegetables for imme diate use as well as for canning, audi soon pays for it self.--Home Demon-, stration, O. A. C. Not al the arsenate eaten by cater pillars feeding on cprayed foliage is assimilated, but part passes through the digestive tracts. Less is lost this way when the acid lead arsenate is used. Kntomology. O. A. C. Potato, storage calls for well ventil ated, cool, dry conditions. The best temperature is from 35 to 38 degrees. A more even temperature is maintain ed In bins having false floors and walls. Farm Crops, O. A. C. ning, of ple;iHunt days. Practically all of them used It In stormy weather. The shed itself is simple and Inexpensive but offered considciahle protection es pecially from hard winds. Methods of feeding and results of shelter are fully explained in the stution bulletin, "Fat tening i.umbs." Copies free. SucefMMirr llt-arlnw l'uwtllilr Although yellow NY w tons and Spitx eiihergers Beem to hear on alternate years, proper fertilization with Ullage, Irrigation ami pruning, produced three successive crops in orchards used in farmer- . A. C. cooperative trials. Con tinuation of tlu-sc favorable conditions may bring these varieties into the an nual bearing class, the college horticul turists hope. l.aml.H Mknl Shelter About 60 per cent of the lambs fed in the shelter vs. open lot tests at the Tnlon branch experiment station stay ed hi the shed in the morning, 3" per , vacates, which will be immediately af cent at noon and 2 per cent In the eve- I tcr the first of K. J. Starkoy Is contemplating mov ing his electrical goods and fixtures to the room now occupied by Hoy V. Whiteis, JiiMt as soon as Mr. Whiteis the vear. SELECTING SITh FOrt ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL lillllilII!l!!l!l!!!lll!l!ll!ll!IIS!l!!!l!!ll!ll!!l!lllllllll!lliillllin! The Gift of Gifts I THERE is no better gift for the ambitious boy or girl than the gift of sav ing. And saving is largely a matter of getting started right and that is where you can help. A dollar or more deposited in this bank will start a savings account for your boy or girl, or some young friend. And the pass-book, with its first entry, will make a great hit on Christ mas morning. In after years your gift wil lhave repaid itself a thousandfold. Step in next time you are passing. We have something of real interest to say to you on the gift of saving the gift of gifts. KnntanaKmmnstummaannmmma FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK- Heppner Oregon Farm nml Home Pointer Fatening lambs were fed all the "al falfa they could be indeced to eat in the experimental tests at the Union fourth pound of whole barley a day, which was gradualy increased to one pound per day at the end of the eight eenth day. This waa the amount fed branch station, with a grain ration as for the remainder of the test, 90 days. follows: Started on a feed of one' The 130 lambs under shelter gained 2J.3 WOMEN HEARD AT FARM BUREAU CONVENTION pounds, average, and those In open lots 27.30. A. C. Experiment Station. The Portland press announces receipt at that port of large shipments of ni trates, which will be used In Oregon orchards. Growers can learn much that the state experiment station has found out about orchard fertility by sending for the station bulletin, "Fer tilizers for Oregon Orchards." Horti culture, O. A. C FniihiK', pasture and silage are used j to supplement one another on many j well-inanagxd Oregon stock farms j Together they make possible the feed- Ing nf succulent feeds all seasons of the year. Farm Crops, O. A. C. STADIUM GIRL FOR OLYMPIC IN OHIO Woman already has her place Id the ranks of American Farm Bureau Federation. These two, Mrs. John C. Ketcham or Hastings, Mich and Mrs. C. W. Sewell of Otterbein, Ind., appeared before the Farm' Bureau National Convention at Indianapolis last week, both scortag.decidcd blU In the message they carried. Mrs. Ketcham Is one of the two women In the V. S. who are members of the executive committee She Is a director of the Michigan State Farm Bureau. Mrs. Sewell dropped her house work on her farm to talk on Homebuilding. V ' v f ,$t . '" , - r&a The erection of the Roosevelt Memorial, to the memory of the former president, has reached the point of selection of a suitable loca tion. These three men. Wm. B. Thompson, president; Charles Moore, chairman, and Herman Hagedorn, secretary, are members of the Roosevelt Memorial Association. They have Just been In Washington trying to decide upon a site for the memorial M1.vp l,loir? Fi'omme It's rather hard to associate a beautiful young lad M like Miss Elolse Fromme of Urbana, O., with the 1924 Olympic athletic games. Nevertheless Columbus (0.) citizens working band In hand with faculty and athletic leaders of Ohio State University bad this young lady lead them In a drive for $1,000,000 to erect a new athletic stadium on the school campus A strong bid U to be made tor the next Olympic games. Miss Fromme. a senior, was voted the most popular as4 "nwnea t ne suuuum nn. 5 ,.'T A Jf now OoTellI Z W-ETC- A.N0 THEN J),, M fif ME'ALl9O0T jgf WE STAVED AT MTj HOME i S BUT THE ALTITUDE 1 IT WAS AWFUL HIGH WHESE .ftk )wAS SO HIGH WE WE PUT UP TOO -BUT MY 1J JUST couldn't I 4i Tfrk HUSBAN0 MEVEB COMPLAINS 5 f?vw i!kH stand it. . r"Srl -XvV about the cost of any- Jfa - THING-. HE'S SO NICE THAT aillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII FORD When your Ford is in need of repairs take it to the 1 FORD SHOP I ON MAIN STREET j Phone 193 LLOYD FELL, Prop. Tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii FOR PRINTING THAT HAS REAL CLASS SEE THE Q.-T. "Perhaps You Don't Know" says the Good Judge How long a little of the Real Tobacco Chew will last. Nor how much gen uine chewing satisfac tion the full, rich real tobacco taste will give. Ask any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew. He will tell you that this class of tobacco will give more satisfac tionand at less cost than the ordinary kind. Put up in two styles W-B GUT is a long fine-cut tobacco RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobaccq 53 LLiLlill!!!!!