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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1921)
y.r,. TV. i Tin: oazi:tti: timf.s, iikitxku, our.oox. TiirusruY. skpt. i, 19:1 m mm inn IP F81CT EAST fcr.rln n 1 mmtrrw Srmhnmri to Make i.r IirHrr Irl't lrlc to Vf li u?iem ci lie r..: List hs : - t nun i. '-i-e-al-ve lUy tiro ers a; ' h A retinue of x I'ma-h,- rie r'so is. the association plana, oils' costuTiies and other en will also appear In and ombrros of the fill! M ,1,... 2 7 to lake Cdrt ot i.ja.gn Iir the pre t.tve.. i nu: t t a fat-avy shortage of r .... Li.ii .t,c e..t.-:n 6i-.1t,ar,i n-.kes u it-.t.. (or in '.hvvosuia has to be ;..,( i to that market ai a verv t: ..it iui anai,,e over present iocai I ! s t .v Tr.ere it ie'.l to be a e.irplus ci JtM in the no:lhet, although Uk.s iu i t y ro n.t.ir.s i-otrsraer r,Me, lite ajts.-ciai.on ri.,-: to ship hy to the .:u;ein Matio..id in the i:nu.iui;ite fulLi. In uiakihK this movement it is iie.tj-iiiy to hve a Urge- supply ot t'lit-I ca: a hay avaii.-b;e. It nrust be held iu a particular inarner and deliver ies iLost be maoe in large quantities. heye factors are &.1 con:bined under the u aiheting plan of the northwestern hiv flowers, associated. The trustees deci.led to employ as n.at.akre for th.s selling campa.gn J. N. i'rke, who for the last year ha bad oisaite of the Washington hay growers. Itui.ng last season they marketed $300. iH'ii iu worth of hay with a loss of only l.'Outu). It is doubted if any merchant can show a better sales sheet. Present guoiatioiis on alfalfa are, choice hay In. and standard, SID. I a. b. shipping po.nL Three thousand tons have already tieen sold on this basis. A large amount of this will go to British Columbia. The Qua-antine on hay in MaLheur .ounty and In Idaho due to the alfalfa weavil and the heavy crop in Klamath cour.ty has made prices in these sec tions very attractive to feeders, and will undoubtedly reduce the amount of feed ing done in the Butter creek, Stanfield districts. This with the present Wil lamette valley hay crop, creates a sur plus that can only be relieved by ship ment outside the northwest The local market seems to be con siderably stabilized by the quotations by many local dealers of association price. Hermiston Herald. cia'.'oe:: is the only fruit grown i .:. L i.i'.cd states w hose course of !::..M'l east to west. Realising I f.at ir..s ..ate is a fruit-producing ; :.,ie. tnvn of broad vision in the uis i:i. i at ;..e uiou.i of the Columbia river Ur. ;;-.: He or. ..berry game and has j ..iu'I ; e.. it to such an extent that at . . p:ce-.t t.tr.e it is supplying a great '" c:anberries used on the la. .:.c Coast t ut there are still ber ets si.i; ; ed ii. irom the East. Land that was considered waste has icen mace productive. The total in vestment in land and improvements in the distrut amounting to a million dol .ars. Those members of the Oregon State Uditonal association who were fortun ate enough to visit the cranberry bogs ;n Clatsop county, Oregon, last fall were astounded at the magnitude of the industry. The cranberry industry on the Pacl tic coast, while new, already occupies a arm place among the horticultural industries of the Northwest Berries of very fine quality are grown in Ore gon and Washington, In the district at the mouth of the Columbia river. Here .s a great frost-fre son with abun dant rainfall, having a climate admir ably adapted to the growing of crau berries. Picking will commence the second week in September and will extend over a period of four to six weeks Many people are attracted to this dis trict by the fact that they can earn good wages picking cranberries, and at the same time, enjoy the mild weather of the Oregon coast climate In Septem- i ' the r;:V tl-...t tl. e Onoa fruit Is ,!,c ai- where, the cran- i r is :.o . ti t i. :i it is a very lus-weli-t!aoieJ fruit which has m.iiio a jrie.it impression wherever 111 t;.'v....ed. ilieie is a pieju.iice in some uuailers in f.ior of the eastern cran terr. This is due more to habit than reason. The cranberiy grown on the east shoies of the Limed States is ln deed a wonderful fruit but the cran berry grown on the Pacific coast is of equally good quality and requires leas sugar when put up. The industry Is well organised and the fruit is market ed cooperatively, lierries will nnr on me markets shortly after the pick mg season is completed. The cranberry associations of the coast are urging the purchase of cran- oerries by the housewife mirlv nn count of the fact that there is a shrink age in berries as the season progresses, and the thrifty housewife, by making an early purchase, saves just that much, cranberries canned earlv in iv tober taste Just as good on Christmas day us cranberries cooked on Christ mas eve. Clerk J. A. Waters return...! tmm hi. vacation on Tuesday evennig. He his oeen absent for the month of August ana with Mrs. W aters and Delm.ir snnt the time in and around Tacoraa. where tney enjoyed the cool of the sea and mountains, and where the time passe.' ill too soon. Mrs. Waters and Delmaj remained at Portland, where the boy will attend school at the Hill Military Academy again this winter. School be gins there on the 13th. J. D. Movers and family are here from their home at Norton, Lincoln county. Mr. Moyer is still Interested in Morrow county, owning a good farm In the Blackhorse country that he has been renting for a number of years past. Over where he resides now, the people are largely engaged In dairy ing, and Mr. Moyer has a small farm there which keeps him busy. He likes the coast country quite well and has been living there long enough to get used to the excessive winter rainfall. When good roads arrive In Lincoln county It will be a fine place to live, so thinks Mr. Moyer. tPron Peadletoa Roaad-rp Aasvsvcia tioa, Peadletoa, Oregoa.) Pendleton, Ore., Sept J9. From the -riding of the bucking bulls, the Brat j event to the wild horse race which closes each day's list of thrillers, the program for the 1931 Pendleton Round- ! Up. September 22, 23 and 24, is ready. 1 Of the twenty-five events, IS of i which are competitive, there Is not one 1 which will not hold the Interest of the j spectator when the big show begins on j that Thursday in September. Follow- j Ing the riding of the bucking bulls 1 comes the cowboys' pony race, then ; squaw race, cowgirls' standing race, stage coach race, cowgirls' relay race, Indian race, steer bulldogglrig, steer roping, cowboys' and cowgirls' grand mounted march, Indian parade, trick riding and roping, Indian war dances, Indian pony race, pony express race, tC'Vgirls bucking contest Indian war : bonnet race, juiok chance race, cow- ' girls' pony race, lniian pony relay race, cowboys' standing race, cowboys' buck ing contest cowboys' relay race and wild horse race following each other In quick succession. One of the secrets of the popularity of the show Is the dispatch with which events are given. There Is never a moment's delay in the Round-Up. Prizes for this year's how are the greatest ever offered. The largest prizes are for the steer-roping, the cowboys' bucking contest and the cow boys' and cowgirls' relay races, all for the championship of the world. In The steer-ropine. the champion will be awarded a S600 cash priie and a J350 prize saddle presented by the Pendleton Commercial association. In the relay races, the purse totals llfi''0 to be divided first f500, second JSO" and third, f;i". The cowboys bucking contest for the world's cham pionship has a purse of $750. while the winre- pets a 1 4 r. r cah prize and the hesutiful t r. ro Hamley saddle. The JK'O Police Osrerte belt will go to the all-around cowboy champion, while to the winner of the wild horse race Thursday anl Friday will go a f78 sad dle with a f 101) saddle Saturday, as well as a silver mounted bridle and a silver bit presented to each davs win ner by Pauline Frederick, noted Aim star. Who will reign as queen of the Round-L'p? This is the question which confronts the Round-Up association and which is to be decided within the next few days From among the attractive girls of Pendleton is to be chosen one who will ride In the Round-Up parade. Watermelons Are now in their prime We get them fresh from IRRIGON every other day You know what Irrigon Quality means! Phelps Grocery Co. Phone 53 i1.,W-Wl,t.JJi,111 JaiiiiuaiMa jSr"'l,'?P ml Jtt Do You Reca the time you had getting COAL two years ago? Begins to look like that again Shall we send up a man to fix and fill your bins? Better be safe than sorry and cold! Tum-A-Lum Lumber Co. Heppner Lexington lone MOSTLY OF r;JIAN ORIGIN Twenty. Five of the Forty Eight States f the Country H.ne Practically Native Names. (f etir 4S state find that ""i hour niiim-s of Indian .fit. vtnl 1'.' nre Kndiih. sis SiniiK'i mill three French. Two states may he -.nil! to have Amer ican names. The t;rt Is 'aliliii:nm. natne.l after the l iilur of our Coun try, unci the s con I Indiana, no culled on account of the sequent settlement tribes of larse trac the Ohio river urn! boundaries of the s purchase anil suli ! various Inuian of land nonh of within the present rite. When we review Indian state names, wc must remember hat there was no one Indian tonpre. Instead, there were several genu. rate ami distinct Inn Kiiaires, and each of these was divided Into many (delects. Hence the wide variance In Irdian names In different sections. Wisconsin, written by early Frc.rvh explorers of the region as Oulseotisln and named for it chief stream. Is thought to have come from a Sac In dian word translated as Wild Rush ing Channel, and also us having ref erence to holes in the hanks of streams where birds nest. However, neither of these Interpretations can he eonfirmeil National Geogrtiphic Magazine. Artificial Wool. The artificial wool which has been under test at Leeds (Knc.) university Is produced from eottoti waste, Its basis being cellulose acetate. It Is claimed that tlie product Is an even better Insfllntor against heat and cold than wool, that -It takes dyes success fully, and that It will wear well. Id the experiments made. It has been sat isfactorily converted Into fahrles. Cigarette To seal In the delicious Burley tobacco flavor. It's Toasted L'linal parts of artinYhil woo! umI natural wool gave n cloth resembling tweed, and the head of the universiiy's textile department li. suggested that tills should he useful for men or wo men fancying honied-pun effects In clothing. Cheapness und piyslble wearing qualities constitute the special appeal of the material. Its defects are said to Include Inelasticity and lia bility to break, ami these unlit It for yarns of the worsted type, requiring a combing length of two Inches or more, though it may serve well for yarn and cloth where short flhers are suitable. I'OK SA1.K 18 head of purebred t- KOH stft: i Inn. I of purebred year-old black face Hampshire ranis, bhok faced bucks, yeariimts. .VMrom W. E. WIGLKSWORTH. Echo, Ore. O. K CI.KVKl.ANP. Stantlebl. Oregon. AdY. tf. I Adv. St. Wartime Lumber Consumption. The consumption of lumber during the war has been approximated at 6. NXUX.i,0(0 feet, hoard measure, hy the I'nlted States forestry service. Of this amount of lumber purchased di rectly by the various government de partments, the army consumption was nearly 5.rHXUH.0X feet, the navy con suming more than 11W.000.OtiO. Purlng 1P1S the Emergency Fleet corporation consumed for ship construction ap proximately 800,000 000 feet. Lumber needed for boxes and crates alone re quired approximately 2,0O0.(KX).0O0 feet. Structures for cantonments, hospitals, warehouses, etc., used ap proximately 3.000.000.000 feet. I LIFE and FIRE INSURANCE I LEON W. BRIGGS, Agent KcpiYsciitiuir Idaho State Life Insurance Co. A strong, progressive, Western company with attrac tive policies equal to the best. California ami Continental Fire Insurance Com panies: All American companies keeping Surplus, Heserve and profits at home instead of in foreign countries. As my health prevents me coming to see you I will appreciate you coming to see me. Your DOLLAR has the PUNCH in buying HARDWARE at GILLIAM & BISBEE'S JOIN THE GOOD PEOPLE WHO TRADE HERE Who have perfect confidence in our methods and cer tainty that our prices on Quality Hardware are right Dependable HARDWARE for 35 years "We have it, will get it, or it is not made" GILLIAM & BISBEE When vou come ri At di to reason, what is there to discount tires THE next time a friend comes to you all excited about some wonderful tire bargain ask him how much value he ought to get for each dollar of tire money. It's astonishing that any car owner today should not know all the tire service he is entitled to. Nor how to check up between the economy of par quality on one hand and big discounts, surplus stocks, discontinued lines and retreads on the other. For two years U. S. Tire makers have been telling the American people all about tires. They have laid open the tire business from every angle. They have always led the fight for better tires. They have consist- ently maintained quality first standards with certain economy for the tire buyer. They have established 92 Factory Branches all over the country. Perfecting U. S. distri bution so that you get a fresh, live tire every time you buy a U. S. Tire. So when a man once decides on U. S. Tires he knows what he is getting in quality service economy. In support of his own judg ment he gets the pledged word and reputation of the largest and most successful tire concern in the world. A sound reason for the fact that you see more LT. S. Tires on more r, . 0!k- cars lan ever year. The U. S. CHAIN TREAD Om of tin few tires of which it may b said that they deliver economy year In and year out and tire after tire. You it frwih, live tin nry Horn you buy U. S. Tin." Uonotedl United States Vaughn & Goodman Heppner, Ore. Rubber Company E. R. Lundell lone, Ore.