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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 1, 1921)
TilH GAZHTTIvTIMHS, IIKPI'NKR, OHKGOX, TI i i ' . V. IK. 1, i:M. Pcrsonaf on W VVI'KIJ-Hoy to milk cow Iuiii. Intiuiru this otlicB. Advertise '"' 121 -it. llooiu itinl hoard In modern home. reuomilU-. I'hone Main 4(13. Adver tisement Horn, on Mnmlny, November 2th, 1 '' 2 1 . t Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Ir win, at their homo In this city, a on l.ovr-One lilack 2-year-old filly. lininil horseiihoe J on left hip. Notify Heppner, Oreon. K. J. HnUIoKK, Ailvertlnt'irient. 121 A M. Kink wan a visitor In this city on Tueulny. He reportH that there la Htlll much snow covering the Krounil out north of lone where he lives. H. A. Kmry hat returned to Heppner wllh hU family and will reside here for the winter at least. He has been llv Inn at Nampa, Idaho, fur the past year or more. KTKAV ANIMAL Brown 2-year-old mare mule, brand 7HC connected on left shoulder. Owner can have this aia mat by paying- pasture hill and cost of n.lvertlHlnif. F. J. HOUIOKE, Hepp ner. Advertisement. 121 -2t Tit A To II lti;i'Alltl; I am pre pared to come rlKht to your place and do repair work on your tractor, auto mobile or gas engine. My charges will be reasonable and my work Is guaran teed. F. 11. MAKSHAM Uox 281. Heppner. Advertisement. Mr. John Kilkenny nnd two children. llean and Hubert Kussell, who has been visiting Mrs. Kilkenny's mother, Mrs. Kate Russell, for a couple of months. have returned to their home In Hepp ner. Mrs. Kilkenny alio visited her sisters, Mrs. John Monahan and Mrs Frank Maddock. Condon Globe-Times. Wanted, to exchange for Morrow county farm, one of the most homelike farmB on Umatilla irrigation project near Hermlston. Ore. (iood buildings. fine shade trees, orchard, berries, about 40 acres of alfalfa. Four miles north east of Hermlston, one-half mile to Columbia school. J. H. De.MOSS, Her mljton. Oregon. Advertisement l-3t. Mrs. T. M. Hlchardson, sister of Kalph K. Crego, and who visited with hit family In this city for ten days, de parted on Frld.iy for Watsonville, Cal., where she will Join her parents who reside In that city. It was necessary for Mrs. itkhardson to bo routed out of Heppner via Walla Walla and the N'. V. to Tacoma In order to reach Portland, ns the O-W. H. & N. line was not open for direct travel the day she left Heppner. J. A. Auiburn has closed up his af fairs at Lexington, rented his farm for a period of years ami departed this week for Iks old home In Tennessee, where he will Join his family who pre ceded him several weeks ago. Mr. Auh bmn goes to his old home to take charge of the property left to his mother's cjlnte, nnd he may conclude to make his permanent residence In the South. However, he thought It worth while to hold on to his Morrow county property and have a place to land in case he can't stay away from Oregon. t'.eorge T. Tenrce, editor of the Mad ras Pioneer and Mrs. Pearl Osborn who has been employed as an operator In the .Madras exchange of the Taclflc Telephone & Telegraph Company for the past five years, nnd who i a daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Read of Madras, were married last Sunday af ternoon. The ceremony was performed by Justice of the Peace Howard T Turner at his home, the bride being a slater of Mrs. Turner. Following a brief trip to Hend and Prlnevllle Mr. nnd Mrs. Penrce returned Wednesday to Madras. Madras Ploneor. Eight cars of beef cattle left the Heppner yards on Monday, destination '"' ""I The. ra'll, lui.l I I, I'ic. in-Ill I.. Heppner f,.r hipn,. -r t u,. week l,er..ie, :n,, were l.i.ul.-d on the .mis and taken ax fur as lone, when it Was found liny .-Ml, I not get through anil they were l. tuilie.l ln. .la. e.l on feed at the Vaughan & Talker ranch The shippers were. J,.e l:e.k, 3 cars, Dlll.ird I-'ren.-h 2. Tilden Williams 1. J. II. Ilelleslirock 1, and U. WIligtieM 1 ' It was expected that the cattle woul.l have to he tranwferre.l over onto the North llank road at Cclllo, but thil wan not found necessary as the road to Portland on the south side of the river was opened to trallic on Monday. i 1 ..ij..ti.i JJ.LiLi i.ii ii.i,.i..iJ . 1 Jti.i . l.i ...i ui l.i J I J Li i 1.1 i.i J 1..U.II li.. i.li.i i.Li.il 1 .- - .. Toytown and Dolly ville Bid You Welcome at I Nov. 2Ath Snowed in. No trains, no cullers, no KosMp. Kven Thanks,'. vim? turkey refused to survive the storm ami utiveral tahhn were minua turkey for ThankfKiviriK day. Wheat men are uVlighU'fi with the cover of snow. Nov. 21st A coverltiK of twenty inches of snow In Cecil. Nov. 22rnl. Kiebs Br oh. took a trip to Klla with hay for a large band of ewes beloiiRiiiK to Sinythe liros. of Arlington which arrived at Cecil after neighbors had broken a road to Krebs liroi.' ranch. The sheep are en route for Arlington. Nov. nnd. News received in Cecil that it. K, Duncan, who had left for Condon on Friday, Nov. 18th, with a truck load of honey, was snowed in near Clem and it would he several days before he could reach his home. The Mayor and his deputy and sev eral other men took hay and supplien to McDaid's canyon where nlieep be loiiKiiiK to Kenny & H caly were storm bound on Nov. 23rd. We heard the iheep arrived two days later at Killar ney, the ranch of J. J. Mt Kntire near Cecil. Miss Violet lynd of Hutterhy Flats and Miss Doris Dojjan of Kairview ar rived on the local on Nov. 24th to eat Thanksgiving dinner with their folks. Nov. 24th. The barn at Itockcllfft. belonging to Krebs liros. fell in and to keep it company the barn at Shady Dell, belonging to Hulferty Bros, col lapsed and also the barn at Fatrvlew, belonging to Everett Logan. Mrs. T. H. Lowe wishes to thank ev ery one who enrolled during the Red Cross Koll Call. Thirty members were enrolled in spite of the storm. Nov. 25th und Zfith. Snow is melting fast, traveling bad, geese and ducks leein the only things that are in sight. Several bands have passed over Cecil at time of writing. The Christmas Store 1 i CHILDHOOD'S HAPPIEST DREAMS OF CHRISTMAS MORNING COULD NOT PICTURE SUCH A WEALTH OF TOYS, DOLLS, BOOKS, GAMES, ETC. THERE ARE HEAPS AND HEAPS OF THEM. Seeded Wheat Land For Sale. At 127.50 per acre. In center of finest wheat land belt In Morrow county, only few miles from railrond; 450 acres sowed to wheat and 80 acres to rye; ranch consists of a little over 1000 acres of rich, deep-soil plow land, a tractor proposition with only ten acres waste lund; worlds of water and good Im provements. Just as It stands and Im mediate possession given at only $27.50 per acre, 17,500 cash down, balance one third crop payments. This offer holds for only 20 days. Sickness compels owner to move. No better bargain ever offered. See me quick. B. M. SHUTT. Advertisement. tf..027 Mechanical Toys TRICK AUTO When wound up runs in circles, hacks up and changes direction in the most amusing way. 50 Cents. CLIMBING MONKEYS A most popular mechanical toy. Buy one for the child's Christmas. 25 Cents. JAZZBO JIM JIGGER A toy with lots of action. Jim dances on the roof of his cabin. Lot's of fun. 50 Cents. L Games Dominoes, 10 Cents Checker and Chess Boards, 25 Cents Card Games, 10, 25 to 75 Cents. Holiday Boxes Convenienet sized boxes for hand kerchiefs, hosiery, neckties, gloves, etc. in very pretty holiday designs. Choice 10 Cents Seed rvn for Hale at the Scott & Mc Millan Warehouse. LeilnKton. Adv. Furnished housekeeping rooms for rent. Inquire this ollice. Advertise ment, tf. Thoroughbred bronze turkeys for sale. Inquire of Mrs. F. burroughs, lone, Ore. Advertisement, n3U. SKF.II KVE KOll SAI.K Cleveland ranch, phone 4SK11, or leave orders for delivery at Minor & Co. Advertlsem'nt Seed rye for Bale at the Scott & Mc Millan WnrehollBC. Lexlnuton. Adv. QHfrialmaa Muatja Srtuga (Flfiutgljta itf Smifea 1110 two go together for how can we hope to better stay in the thoughts oi our mends than through a good book as a remembrance Rift. In our book offering for Xmns giving this year is found every imaginable kind of reading from kiddie rhymes to Oxford Billies! Books for father, mother, sister, brother, sweetheart and the kiddies. Our list includes the year's most popular novels' as well as those of former years whose popularity never dims. Other suggestions for gift giving are: Fountain Pens, Everslnirp Pencils, Crane's Fine Linen Sta tionery, Pictures, Py-ra-lin Ivory, Perfume Sets, (James, etc. Holiday Assortment of Boxed Stationery Quality Stationery not only carries a message but also shows character. A wonderful assortment. 25 Cents 50 Cents $1.00 Have that damaged tread fixed before it causes a lot of blow outs and punctures and costs you five or six times the price of having it repaired. Bring It Here! We will vulcanize it making it as good as new. Have any tire trouble? Bring it here C. V. HOPPER TIRE SHOP Tri-State Terminal Building. ana Big Bargain in Small Creek Ranch 16 acres, all under ditch, partly in cultivation, alfalfa, strawberries, raspberries; good five room house, good barn and out buildings; stock and machinery; good spring and well. Price 2250.00 if taken at once. 7 miles from town. ROY V. WHITEIS Real Estate and Insurance, Heppner. L Come and see our Christmas Merchandise Minor & Company J Central Market j I FRESH AND CURED MEATS ! Fish In Season Take home a bucket of our lard. It g g is a Heppner product and is as g g good as the best. H THE GAZETTE-TIMES, Your Home Paper. $2.00 Per Year. Uiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiiiii' A Few of the Special Bargains at The Cash Variety Store I 1 Where You Get Big Values For Little Money Men's Overalls, 79 cts. Boys' Shirts and Blouses 39cts. f Copper Bottom Wash Boilers $2.75. ?nmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin A Newspaper's TWO Sources of Revenue 'N.iii'iiii'iiiriii'MiiTiTiiiiii'iiii'iiiii liiiijjlii i!lS'i,';lijl!i'Hi:i ilUBiSCttlPTlOXS and advertising are the ouly sources of revenue a newspaper has, and often the subscriptions do not pay for the cost of white paper. Advertising today, especially in newspapers, is the greatest business getter there is. This is acknowledged bv men who know. People read advertisements in news papers. They have been educated to do so. Every merchant in our town ought to advertise. You remember the story about John Wana niaker. The first day he was in business his receipts were $21.G4. He kept G4 cents and spent the $'J4 the next day in advertising. We all can't duplicate this feat, but according to the best statistics available three per cent of the gross sales should be put aside for advertising. Possible you will say: "I don't need to advertise. I've been in this towu thirty years and everybody knows me." Probably they do, but did you ever stop to think of the sales you lose because your fellow competitor advertises? He may advertise the same goods you have in stock, but the people don't know you have them. The other fellow gets the sale because he advertises. And then how much more business would you do if you did advertise f AVe know of one merchant who advertised a lot of goods at 19 cents a yard. They cost him 27 cents. Ho took a clean loss, but while the sale was going on he could buy new goods at 12 cents. He put them in with the other goods and the result was that he cleaned his shelves of the old goods and he broke even on the deal. Advertsing and good buying liquidated his stock without a loss. AVe can't all be John "Wanamakers, but we all can advertise in proportion to our business. Hesults will be sure if you advertise hon estly and give service. A newspaper can bring people to your store, but it can't make people buy your goods. Your clerks must do that and it depends upon the service vou give as to how successful your business will be. What is done in the big cities can be done right here in this town, if you will show the pop, give the service and advertise. Make business good. You can do it through this newspaper. Seeding Time Is Here Gilliam & Bisbee will sell you Drills and Harrows at prices that are right. Gilliam & Bisbee 8 H H :: S K 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 H X 8 8 8 H S8JU8888888888888J L. MONTERESTELLI Marble and Granite Works PENDLETON, OREGON Fine Monument and Cemetery Work All parties interested in getting work in my line should get my prices and estimates before placing their orders All Work Guaranteed