Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 22, 1922)
VACK TWO TIIK GAZETTE-TIMES, HEITNEK. OREGON, THURSDAY, JTXE 22, 192 IMIWS T1. Hlr"r .attfc K.tAbl!hd Murch III. Illl Th F.pin.r Tim Rntabllshd .Wvrnhr Ifc. 1S". Cmn!,.'.!fHl Frbruar? 16. 111. PuM1ihi1 vy Thursday morning by and nt.rd al tha 1'o.tofhc at Hepp n.r. Urtjcon ai .ecorul-WaM inattar. AIM KHTIMVC RaTK G IV B N OH AlTl.U ATIO PUHSCRUTION RATES: Ora Tr F I Mixilht Thr Month. ini Copiea i 0 1.00 M M miKKOW lOl TY OFFICIAL P-KTK.BL Foi, nil Acivwtwnc RrprrMntatr. THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSXIATION The Seven Natural Cravings Dr. Daniel Russell Hodgdon, au-j thority on the science of dietetics,! believes even' housewife should ex-j amine the menu she prepared for; friend husband, and see if it contains, the seven natural cravings of a heal thy appetite. These are summed up j as a bulk food, a fat food, an acid; food, a salt food, a sweet food, and finally a live food. The seven crav ings, says the doctor, should be sat isfied every day. For guidance of our queens of the kitchen, bulk comes in bread, pota toes, cabbage, and other vegetables. Fish, eggs and cheese are muscle builders, olive and other oils are fats while vinegar covers the acid re quirement. Salts are salts and sweets are sweets; so that no explan ation is needed, and thus we reach the seventh requirement, the live food, which means raw food such as oysters or clams or rare meats. All , of which is interesting and doubtless enlightening. The doctor of medicine ; has provided his bit to the sum total of useful knowledge. May we now look for some doctor of economics to come forward with the seven re quirements to enable the people to satisfy the natural appetite and yet remain out of the bankruptcy court. Perhaps it will require the seventh son of the seventh son to provide the answer. It will be interesting to the poor devils who are sweating in the coal mines at top speed when coal is needed and then thrown out of w ork when the supply is thought suf ficient, to read during their idle mo ments, and so improve their minds, just what their overworked wives ought to put on the table to keep the family in proper trim. Surely Dumas had a glimpse of life, when, in Les Miserables, he caused that rich and noble lady, stirred by the sight of abject poverty and suffering, to give in her generosity to the great French derelict, a golden manicure set. Join the Legion The American Legion will conduct a nationwide membership drive fron: July 5 to 27. The purpose is to en all evserevice men who have not vet identified themselves with the le gion and its work. Harry N. Nelson, adjutant of the American Legion in Oregon, has an nounced that a supreme effort will be made to double the membership in Oregon. At present the Oregon department of this great national or ganization has enrolled less than one- third of the eligibles. The American Legion is composed of the men and women who were in the service of the United States dur ing the World War. It admits to its ranks all who served regardless of the place or conditions of service. While it is designed to keep alive the associations growing out of the war, and to express upon the life of the country the point of view of the 4,500,000 who served, its greatest value to the country lies in stimulat ing patriotism and sound sacrificing Americanism. The American Legion will be to the country during the next three-quarters of a century what the Grand Army of the Republic has been in the past. Therefore its in fluence for sound and liberal Amer icanism is certain to be permanently- recorded in the national conscious ness of the nation. It is the duty of every ex-service man to join. He should add his point of view to the legion's activities and thus express in civil life the spir it of service to country displayed in the national crisis. Oregonian. One sees only the worst side of life on the first pages and in the big headlines. On the inside pages the world is getting better. Motor cars are surely wonderful things, and are accomplishing much but we have yet to hear of one that bucked the locomotive off the track at the crossing, although hundreds try it. Get Tariff Out of Politics Elbert H. Gary, head of the U. S. Steel corporation, and president of the American Iron and Steel Insti tute, puts much thought into few words when he states that revision of the tariff is an intermittent dis ease that it appears if not with ev ery session of congress, certainly with every change in the adminis tration. The tariff seems to be an import ant political question, but it ought not to be a political question at all. of fairness to every part of the coun try, to every department of human It should as the steel man points out, be decided strictly upon scientific principles and from the standpoint industry, to every line of employ ment and to the public welfare. There is . nothing novel in this thought. The National Tariff Com mission, at great expense to the country, studied the problem, gather ed data enough to sink a ship, pre pared reports, made recommenda tions, and went through the usual multitude of inquisitorial gymnastics that mark practically every official "probe," and when it was all over. everyone said it was splendid and then promptly went to sleep. The tariff being no longer needed as a pressing political issue, was set aside and forgotten. Now we have it bob bing up again, with the forces all set and prime, to upset the business conditions of the country. Surely, it is time the public took the matter in hand and put an end, once and for all, to this perpetual economic men ace. Regardless of whether men be lieve in high tariff, low tariff, tariff for revenue only, or no tariff at all, certainly they must unite in the con viction that mingling tariff with pol itics is as vicious as it is disastrous. When all is said and done, tariff schedule advocates always are sel fish. They fight for their own inter est. There may not be much amiss with this because in the last analysis, obedience to intelligent selfishness means service to the majority. The danger comes when selfishness is armed with a political black jack. By all means get the tariff question out of politics. The meek may inherit the earth, and they ought to, for they very sel dom get a raise of salary, or any thing like that. Women Not Office Seekers Since woman has been given the ballot in this country, and the same right to hold office that man has, it has been pretty well demonstrated by this time that our women, taken as a whole are not much inclined to want to be office holders. This is everlastingly to her credit, for it proves that she sets more store upon her old time duties of raising a fam ily and attending to the home than going in for political careers. Wo-' j man's sphere is c.v-entially the home ,and the child and while we have giv-, I en her the right to hold office, that is jno sign we want to see her do it to, any great extent, and neither is it; any sign that she wants to. Lord bless her, she can always be depend ed upon to do pretty nearly right, which is something we men lack a whole lot of coming up to. Twenty women in eleven states have announced themselves candi dates for the national house of rep resentatives. Four women in as many different states have become candidates for the senate. A wo man candidate for governor has ap peared in Kansas, and another in South Dakota. This is quite a show ing in a country which in 1917 greet ed Congresswoman Rankin of Mon tana as a national curiosity. The fact that there are only 26 women candidates for these many different offices shows the American women are still leaving the work of office- I 4' Carefully sealed cylindrical carton insures absolute saaitau'on. Grocers Recommend Albers Quality Albert Flapjacks the hotcakes of the West Slats' Diary By Ross Farquhar Friday This is the last day of skool for witch I am Dooly greatfull. j We have got wun-: T 7 der full plans for ' ;i are hall tpam this 4 1- 1! season unless to; much Garden wirk I interfears with the I a fishency of are men and etc. Enny how 1 maniged to pass and by it 'Saved myself a lot I of Unplessantness in my Home ilfe. Sat. Jake & me found a ded cat witch had ben hit by a ottomobeel it a- and and we went in told his ma about it and ihe sed she gess it was mrs Donavans ole cat. She told Jake to make sure it was ded and then take and berry him. So Jake hit her on the hed with the shuvvel to make sure it was ded and we berried her in the shade of a weeping whippoor willow tree. Sunday Jane has been Very frendly towards me here of lately. Only today she sed she had a ideel and I sed what is it. She sed she liked a man witch was brave and strong and good looking and has got lots of Caracter and ambishun like Wallis Reed or gen. Pershing. I think she was hinting at me. but I remaned quiet. Monday Pa was reading in the noosepaper that John D. Rockefelow has got $7 for evry Person in the U. States. So I sugested to Pa that he rite to him for are share witch wood amt. to 21$ with interest at 6 per cts. Tuesday Ma says they are 2 tipes of girls now days. 1 is the kind you can look up to and 1 is the kind you look around at. Wednesday we all went a swim ming this evning. Pa says he dus sent beleave in that old saying Like father like Son. since he seen me ack the fool in the water tonite. Thursday A nother new baby has came to town and ma tuk me down to see it. She sed we shud ought to take her sum thing. So she tuk sum Beauty pins and I tuk him a hunk of Lickerish. It is fortunate for the country that very few of the terrible troubles and calamities Senators La Follette and Borah are continually seeing ahead Thomson Bros. Now is the time to see our complete line of Wash Goods in voils, crepes, ginghams and all the most up-to-date wash goods on the market. We Have Shoes For Everybody Ladies' Low Shoes $4.00 to $7.00 Infants' Shoes 50c to $2.00. Children's and Girls' Shoes $2.50 to $5.00 Boys' Shoes $2.50 to $5.00.. Men's $4.00 to $8.50. Boys Suits $7 to $12.50; Men's Suits $20 to $35 Those Leather Vests Reduced $8.50 to $12.50 Odd Wool Pants at a Great Saving Khaki Pants $2.00, $2.50, $3.00. Button and Lace Bottom Pants $3.00 to $5.00. YOUR MEASURE TAKEN FOR A SUIT OF CLOTHES THAT WILL FIT. NO TROUBLE TO SHOW YOU GOODS CHEAPNESS is not the tesT: of Value VALUE is the test of Cheapness. Quality Counts LLOYD HUTCHINSON Where They LEAN LOTIIES tLEAN hoUing to the men Our women' f have full right to vote and to hold oftice, and they now have that right ! and can become Miss Mayor and Madam Governor if they so elect, ' but the ambition does not allure the i average American wpman. To enter politics as a permanent business, as men do, she would necessarily have to more or less neglect her home, her children and her husband, and that she never has done and never will do. After walking through a cemetery and reading the epitaphs on the tombstones, one is liable to wonder where all the bad people are buried. Walter Moore, assistant cashier of First National Bank, accompanied by Mrs. Moore and son Larry, departed on Sunday morning for Tacoma to spend their vacation season visiting with their relatives. BIG CIRCUS COMING SOON Baby Lion With Howe's Great London Shows Attracts Many MASON CORDS Not only lower than other standard tires, but super ior in quality, uniformity and dependability. Buying MASONS now is buying tires right. With this goes a standard of service we're proud of. ALSO OLDFIELD "999" 30x31, $9.00 30x3, $8.00 C. V. HOPPER TIRE SHOP WHERE YOU GET REAL TIRE SERVICE I Central Market I I FRESH AND CURED MEATS Fish In Season H f Take home a bucket of our lard. It f g is a Heppner product and is as good as the best. V 1 Jfoeprayf Jfosen Elegant In Appearance Famous For Long Wear Sam Hughes Company Phone Main 962 EKClUIRSQdDN FARES EAST Lower than Ever This Summer ROUND-TRIP TICKETS ROUTED OVER THE Union Pacific System returning same or any direct line Yellowstone Park $36.25 Salt Lake City 48.82 Denver 64.00. Kansas City 72.00 Omaha 72.00 Chicago 86.00 St. Louis $ 81.50 Cincinnati 106.30 Philadelphia 144.95 New York 147.40 Boston 158.35 To other cities in proportion. Ticket Salea DAILY until August 31& Return limit October 3 lilt The Union Pacific operates the only THROUGH SOLID TRAIN be tween Portland and Chicago. "OREGON-WASHINGTON LIMITED" Leaves Portland 9:00 A. M. ' Arrives Chicago 1 1 :00 A. M. (third day) Through service also on "Continental Limited" Every foot of the track is protected by AUTOMATIC SAFETY SIGNALS. Equipment is the best in the transportation world. Dining car Kervice the very maximum of human skill and art. The service as a whole represents the supreme effort of the management to please and satisfy patrons. Call on our Agent when you are ready to go and he will do the rest, Wm. McMurray, General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon S A F E T Y 6C msm S E R V I c E Service turns T The service pol icies of TheFirtt tional Wank are the result of long ex perience and a genu ine desire to insure each patron all possi ble service returns from his investment in a close, personal acquaintance here. FirSt National Bank HEPPNER, OREGON ever materialize.