I'yV'lK SIX TIIK GAZETTE-TIMES, HETTXER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 15, 1022. 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 'The Human Bug" Hard To Upset The Byers Chop Mill (KorBM-rij SCHEMPP-S MILL) STEAM ROLLED BARLEY AND WHEAT Af tor the 20tli of September will handle Gasoline, Coal Oil and Lubricating Oil You Will Tind Prompt and Satisfactory Service Here xs X 4 4 -v; 9; "LgL This is Kinjo Ikeda, champion Japanese Catch-as-Catch-Can wrestler, who has never been defeated. He is going into action against Walter. Miller, the Pacific coast middleweight champion, in the Los Angeles, Calif., Athletic Club. Community Service Pioneer Employment Co. With Two Big Offices PENDLETON AND PORTLAND Is prepared to handle the business of Eastern Oregon better than ever before Our Specialties Farms, Mills, Camps, Hotels, Garages, Etc. WIRE RISH ORDERS AT OCR EXPENSE Portland Office U Jf. Sco4 St PemdletoB 0ce 11S B. Wcbfc St. The Only Employment Office in Eastern Oregon with Connections in Portland villllllllliiiillllllillllllllllliiillllllllllliiniiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillliilllllillliilliiiiiiih' ! A. M. EDWARDS I I WELL DRILLER f I Lexington, Ore. I Box 14 I Uses up-to-date traction drilling outfit, equipped for all sizes of hole and depths. 1 " WRITE FOR CONTRACT AND TERMS aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir? PLAYING SQUAR The Corner Stone In every structure is a headstone from which is determined its strength. In the structure of savings it is tried and proved i'c which stands for all that is safest and soundest. A young artist unversed in financial matters returned home from a business trip to find his mother had invested her savings in a promotion enterprise which offered a very tempting 'Jco. "It's no good," he said. "But you don't know about it yet," said the mother. "I know that any 'outside' investment wherein anyone with small capital can buy stock and which offers more than 6 has an el ement of risk in it which you can ill afford," he replied. Two years later events forced the mother to selland after all the "special clauses" had been observed, the interest she received on her money was less than 21. WE PAY 4 PER CENT ON SAVINGS. FARMERS & ST0CKGR0WERS NATIONAL BANK Heppner Oregon EW1 THE WIFE Al KIDS Making a Home of a House. By Rex Groves White, Editor Community News Service. It is to be presumed in the Uni ted States that you, friend, mar ried your wife because you loved her, she gave herself to you without question, with a firm and fixed belief that you told her the truth when you entered the life long partnership. She believed then, and she believes now, that your love will find expres sion not only in words but in deeds. That you will do all that is human ly possible to make her happy, to keep her in health, to make her motherhood, if such should come, a glory. Have you done that? Have you kept your part of the agreement that is ust and binding whether it was ex pressed in words or only in infer ence? You have sheltered her, fed her, clothedh er. is that all your duty? You have taken outi nsur- ance, perhaps bought her not only the neded things of life but some of the luxuries, you have not for- rotten the celebration of the wed ding anniversary or her birthday You have told her the truth about all things, remember the caresses that made of your honeymoon a won derful memory, stood by her, pro tested her, loved her and all that is fine and splendid and worthy of you as a man and as a citizen. WINS BRONZE MEDAL IN ONE YEAR 1 1 mmmL Gladstone learned Greek at sev enty. Soloman Ba Dabinski, not so widely famed, reached America from Poland a year ago, unable to read or write English, but he has just won a bronze medal for the best patriotic essay on Washington given by the National Society -ri Colonial Daughters of Washing- r Home Is Not a House. But there is, perhaps, one thing you haven't done and that one thing is the goal of all your courtship, all your love, all the happy days of the honeymoon, all the preparation of your youth and hers, the harbor to ward which your ship should be driv en and that one thine is the build ing fo a home. A home is not house, it is true, but given the house the wife will make the home and to make it lasting, a true shelter, place ofrefuge and content that home must be yours not another man's. Every life in nature from the smallest brown bird to the giant bears that growl from darkened caves has set an example. They one and all have ahome that is theirs, a home for which they will battle to hte leath or return to through greatest difficulty. What will that home mean to your wife? Is it hard to see? Put the answer in words. It will give her a sence of security that means a heart at ease. It will mean to her that no matter what storms arise she need not fear the chill and echoing streets. It will mean that she can enter down into the valley of shadow to bring forth a new life with a smile on her lips for she will know that when that tiny life grows up it will have a shel ter that cannot be taken away by ev ery whim of fortune or the careless word of a stranger. , The Answer "Own a Home.' Is she not entitled, that little wife of yours that has stood by in sun shine and storm, to a home where she can give expression to her hap piness and find the joy that all wo men find in making of it a thing of beauty and comfort, a place where her children can grow in strength and mind and passing on into man hood look back with such golden memory of the days that were the very name home will be sacred Is she not worth the extra effort that will bring her the realization of her woman s dreams, the garden where she can putter, and grow the bowers she resembled in her youth, the garden that will give her health and bright eyes and the surging life that out door labor gives. How about the children? Will they be entitled to that same garden, to the yard, all their own, where they can build their caves and play houses, where they can romp and tear and rip and rend with all the gay madness of child hood without a frowning stranger to forbid or be hearing the everlast ing: "Children, be careful. The house isn't ours, you know." Is the wife going to sleep at night with content in her soul because she knows if the grim reaper swings his sickle before the sun sinks on the morrow that her little ones will still have a home, a shelter, a place where no man may forbid them. Is the wife going to know that when she toils all day to clean and make bright that the thing she has made beautiful is her own or is she to con sider that labor lost at anv moment when the slightest chance may take away the rented quarters? Is she going to know that you love her so much and love your children so greatly that you will be tireless in your efforts for them or is she going to be left to wistfullv follow vou from house to house, changing her life and her plans and her hopes at every move. Home Ownership Guarantees Security. Are the children going to grow up with a sense of security, of import ance, of being a part of your city and a part of the community about them or are they to grow up with the wander lust already alive in the heart that has never known a true home, a dangerous lust that may take them far and take them ill. Do you know what constant change does to the mind of your child as it is jerked from one course of study to another, from one school room to another, from one influence to an other? What can you do as a renter to help the city's schools? Is your voice listened to with the respect that isg iven the home owning cit izen who by its very ownership has proclaimed mmseir a man that is a part of the city's growth and who is determined" to stay and be identified with his city s progress? As your children grow up what sort of friends are they going to make? What are you going to be able to do to make their home such a place of cheer and comfort that their friends will love to come and visit them if that home is here to day and there tomorrow. How can your children plan for the future when they cannot know what that future will be? Can you guarantee your wife that your job will always last? Can you promise her you will always have good health? Are you sure the babies will not meet with an acci dent? And what if any of these things do happen? What if you are a renter ? Is your market man and your grocery man going to long extend credit to a man who has no assets, whose mode of life shows he cannot save? In fact are you doing the right thing by your wife? Are you keep ing your promises? Are you prov ing yourself to be the greatest thing that the unknown power has created a man? Think it over. A MEDITATION. As 1 set on the oorch. after sun down, an' placidly puff at my cob, my thought sorter drifts to the feller that works hisself out of a job. . . . The one that rebels at his pittance, an' envies the man that has more, there ain't a sauare inch on his per son that don't hold a chronical sore. . . Sometimes he busts loose like a panic, an strives till nes mignry nigh dead an' then he lays down like a dummy, and never gets noth in' ahead! He's either a-tearin' the bone out, or, throwin" spectacular fits, until, like a blame Damy enner, he humps a few times, an' jes' quits! Messrs J. H. Cox, W. C. Cason, and J. Leach of Heppner are busy moving a house belonging to Oral Henriksen nearer to Ewing. We un derstand that Oral is going into the dairy business when he gets all things straightened out, but haven't heard the name of the dairy or breed of cows as yet, but expect it will be the Jersey as R. E. Duncan of Busy Bee ranch has Holsteins and Miss Crystal Roberts of Ewing has Guern seys and the Mayor a mixed breed. Six cars of yearlings belonging to Minor and Krebs were shipped on Tuesday at Cecil bound for Mon- HE STARTS TO 600 MILES HIKE Eighty-three years old George W. Sheram of Atlanta, Ga., has just started on a 600-mile hike to Rich mond, Va., to attend a reunion of Confederate veterans. His recipe' keep in the open, work hard, and be happy." ,1 .1 ' " 1 "j " Poem hy IllyJUncle John You can take it all over creation, an' you'll find what 1 tell ye is so, the most on-dependable yahoo, is the one that's too quick to let go. . . . For, life is a trip over mountains, or, maybe through bottomless chasms, and that feller that aims to complete it, had better not monkey with spasms. ... I take off my hat to the brother, whose daily perform ance must teach, that it pays us to love one another, an' stick to our job like a leech! PETITIONED PARDON FOR MORSE lames A. Finch, pardon attorney (or the Department of Justice, is reported to have attached his name to the document begging President Taft for executive clemency " for Chavles W. Morse, according to a statement made by Attorney Gen eral Daugherty. City with a visit on Saturday. Messrs. Earl D. Wright and E. Ericson from the highway office at lone were the guests of Mrs. T. H. Lowe at Cecil on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Phil Brady and son of Athlone Cottage near lone were calling on their Cecil friends on Wednesday. Elmer Mohr, who has been speni- ing his vacation in Heppner, return ed to his work at Butterby Flats on Monday. J. W. Morris who has been look ing after his interests at Morsil, left for his home in Portland on Sun day. Misses Mildred and Thelma Mor gan of Morgan were visiting with Miss Helen Streeter on Tuesday. J. J. Kelly was a busy man in Cecil on Thursday shipping several cars of ewes and lambs to Montana. J. W. Vickers of Salem spent a short time with his friends around Cecil during the past week. Geo. Haines of Heppner was a visitor in Cecil on Saturday. 14 f Li C l l R (,A II ( HERe.MEBe.VOONGMAN STOP THIS NUmL 11 Jl ,lC tf VACTIN6 LIKE A WILD INDIAN -BE , ' '''(CIS K S CW" ri t . mOB6 REFINED! ACT LIKE SWEET & f Vix00 srrz HOME W" L ) tana. Henry Krebs and T. W. Lowe were in charge. Word was received at Cecil on Friday that the sheep had arrived at their destination in fine condition. Lots of rain and lots of feed on their ranges. Hay making is in full swing around Cecil. Minor and Krebs are busy stacking, A. Henriksen, a close second, with the Mayor a mile be hind, "slow but sure." Rain seems to miss Cecil every time. Not en ough drops fell during the week to dampen the sand. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Misner of Dayrbeak ranch and friend J. E Swanson of Morgan who spent their vacation at Shipperd s Springs, Wn., returned home on Monday all de lighted with their outing and ready to begin hard work once more on their ranches. Mr. Geo. Henriksen of Strawber ry ranch is the busiest man on Wil low creek, picking and delivering his fine berries. His first crate of straw berries was delivered to Mrs. T. H. Lowe at Cecil last week. Master Billie Logan of lone is having the time of his life in his old home town and says Sunny Cecil can't be beat even if it doesn't rain, the wind and sand can blow to beat the band. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wear and W. W. Randall of Wallowa have taken up their residence at The Dovecote while working for Minor and Krebs during the haying season. Miss Margaret W. Barratt, young est daughter of Highway Commis sioner W. B. Barratt of Heppner, is visiting at the home of Mrs. T. H. Lowe at Cecil. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Krebs of The Last Camp and also Misses A. C. Lowe and Margaret Barratt were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hynd on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Minor of Heppner were the geusts of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Krebs at The Last Camp on Wednesday, leaving on Thursday for Portland. Mr. Wear, who has been visiting with his daughter, Mrs. Geo. Hen riksen at Strawberry ranch, left on Friday for his home at Canby. Jack Hynd accompanied by his daughter, Miss Violet, and niece, Miss A. C. Lowe, honored the Egg Homey Philosophy for 1922 What do you care about the scan dal monger? Nothin'. Just smile at him. Ain't he puttin' you on the map? All you need worry about is that what he says isn't so. Every body'll find that out by an' by then you'll be better off than ever if you keep on smilin'. The man who tele Jcte tfcsfo A FOOL, LOOKED DOWN THE BARREL OF HIS GUN TO SEE IF IT WAS LOADED, if WVS. fOCrRPGItr IfliV PUB AoTm-ATTK "ifH- CO , OH, LOOK CAP'.' I-r "if La THERE b A BALL 6AME OVER THEKE Kite mJ SAM VOv r 1 knocks you'll help you more than the man who boosts you, because the booster's likely to paint things up just as much as the knocker and when the folks find out you're not a white winged angel, they may won der if you're an angel at all. Opin ions don't cut much figure anyhow, an' there's no use tryin' to stop folks from havin' 'em because they're like measles, bound to be. We don't have to improve on what God made us. If we just be what he made us, we'll be about all right, an' he made us to smile, particularly on the poor fish of a silly corner gossip. HEMSTITCHING. I have installed a hemstitching machine at my apartment in the Gil man building and will give all orders for work in that line my best atten tion. Your patronago is solicited. a6-tf. Mrs. C. C. Patterson. Keeps Farmers Posted by Radio utx (til This is a photograph of Hertche! JoneH, director of the New York office, New York State Department of Farmi and Markets, whose duty it 11 to assist farmers in marketing their crops. He reports prices and conditions every day, sending from the Westinghouse station in New ark, N. J,