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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1922)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEPPNER, OREGON. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1022. PAHE THR Professional Cards DR. F. E. FARRIOR DENTIST Office Upstairs Over Poatoffice lltipncr. Oregon A. D. McMURDO, M.D. PHYSICIAN SURGEON Office in Masonic Buildint Trained Nunc Asalatant Heppner, Oregoa C. C. CHICK, M. D. PHYSICIAN SURGEON Office Upstain Over Poatoffice Trained Nurse AuiaUnt Heppner. Oregon WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Officei in Firat National Bank Buildinc Heppner, Oregon Van Vactor & Butler ATTORN EY9-AT-LAW Suite 305 First National Bank Building THE DALLES. ORE. S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office in Court House Heppner. Oregon Office Phone, Main 643 Keaidenee Phone, Main 66i Francis A. McMcnamin LAWYER Gilman Building, Heppner, Ore. F. II. ROBINSON LAWYER IONE, OREGON E. J. STARKEY ELECTRICIAN HOUSE WIRING A SPECIALTY Heppner, Oregon Phene 871 Heppner Sanitarium DR. J. PERRY CONDER Pbysiclan-in-Charge Treatment of all diseases. Isolated wards for contagious diseases. FIRE INSURANCE Waters & Anderson Successors to C. C Patterson Heppner, Oregon MATERNITY HOME MK8. U. C. AIKEN, HEPPNER I am prepared to take a limited num ber of maternity can at my horn. Paticnta privilecd U ehooaa their awn physician. Hent of car and attention auured. PHONE m E. J. KELLER TREE PRUNING AUCTIONEERING HORSE SHOEING Heppner, Oregon L. VAN MARTER FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE INSURANCE Old Line Companies REAL ESTATE Heppner, Ore. with proper vouchers and duly veri fied as by law required, at the office of Woodson & Sweek, my attorneys, at Heppner, Oregon, within six months from the date of firat publi cation of this notice. Dated and published the first time this 16th day of November, 1922. GUSTAV VICTOR PETERSON, Administrator. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, November 10, 1922. Notice la here by given that Percy Claude Cox, of Heppner, Oregon, who on December 9, 1920, made Homestead Entry No. 020886, for SEKNEK "id NEttSEVi Section 31, Township S South, Hangc 29 East, Willamette Meridian has til ed notice of intention to make Final three-year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before United States Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 5th day of January, 1923. Claimant names aa witnesses: William Cunningham of Lena, Ore gon; Charles Edwards, of Heppner, Oregon; L. L. Hiatt, of Lena, Oregon; Ben Cox, of Heppner, Oregon. CARL G. HELM, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, November IB, 1922. Notice is hereby given that William Cunningham, of Lena, Oregon, who, on August U, 1920, made Additional Homestead En try, No. 017377, for WV4SWH, SE14 SW14, Section 20, NttNW!, SEH NW14NWK, Section 29, NE14NEK, Section SO, -Township 3 South, Range 29 East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make Fi nal three-year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, be for United States Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 12th day of January, 1923. Claimant namea as witnesses: Paul Hisler, of Heppner, Oregon; Percy Cox, of Heppner, Oregon; Frank T. Peery, of Lena, Oregon; L. L. Hiatt, of Lena, Oregon. CARL G. HELM, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, November 25, 1922. Notice is here by given that Francis McCabe, of Lena, Oregon, who, on September 14, 1921, made Additional Homestead Entry, No. 020116, for NEK, NWtt NW14, Section 28, Township 1 South, Range 29 East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make Final three-year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, be fore United States Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 19th day of January, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: John Keegsn, Mike McGuire, Marsh Courtney, Pat McLaughlin, all of Lena, Oregon. CARL G. HELM, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, November 25, 1922. Notice is here by given that Michael Curran, of Lena, Oregon, who, on November 15, 1919, made Homestead Entry, No. 019263, for SV4SEW, SttNEK, SE4 SWK, SE14NWK, NWWSEVi, Sec tion 1, NEViNWi, Section 12, Town liin 2 South. Ranee 28 East. Willam ette Meridian, has filed notice of in tention to make Final thne-year Proof, to establish claim to t ie land above described, before United States Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 19th day of January, 1923. Claimant names as witneases: W. L. Vincent. Francis McCabe, Percy Hughes, James Higgins, all of Lena, Oregon. CARL G. HELM, Register. NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING. KrvTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the regular annual stockholders' meeting of the Lexington state Ban will be held at Its banning rooms in the Town of Lexington, Oregon, at two o'clock P. M., Thursday, Janu ary 11, 1923. The nurnose for which this meet ing is called is to elect a Board of Directors for the ensuing year and for the transaction 01 any otner nus iness which may properly come be fore it. W. G. SCOTT, President. Attest: W. 0. HILL, Cashier and Secretary. Doted at Lexington, Oregon, De cember 7, 1922. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of Morrow County, Or egon, administrator of the Partner ship Estate of Minor and Thompson, the partneship consisting of W. O. Minor and R. A. Thompson, W. O. Minor, deceased. All persons having claims against the said Partnership Estate, are hereby notified and re quired to present the same to me, with proper vuochers, and duly veri fied as by law required, at the office of my attorneys, Woodson A Sweek, in Heppner, Oregon, within 6 months from first publication of this notice. Dated and published the first time this 16th day of Novembr, 1922. R. A. THOMPSON, Administrator. NOTICE TO CREDITOR9. Notice is herby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morro r County Executor of the Estate of Elmer E. Beaman, deceased, that all persona having claims against the said estate must present tne same, duly verified according to law, to me at my office In Heppner, Ure eon. within six months from the date of the f rjt publication of this notice, said dnto of first publication being November 80, 1922. JOS. J. NYS, Executor. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by tne f!niintv Court nf Morrow CountV. Or egon, administrator of the estate xf Aaron Peterson, deceased, and has qualified as such. All persons hav ing claima against said deceased or his estate are hereby notified and required to present the same to me, NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT. Notice is hereby given that Cor delia Boten, administratrix of the es tate of John Garside, deceased, has filed with the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, her final account as administratrix of the said estate, and that the Court has fixed Monday, the lBth day of January, 1923, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M. of said day as the time, and the County Court room in the Court House at Heppner, Oregon, as the place for hearing objections thereto and the settlement thereof, and all persons having objections to said final account or to the settle ment of said estate are hereby re quired to file such objections on or before the time set for the hearing thereof. Dated this 14th day of December, 1922. CORDELIA BOTEN, Administratrix. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF MORROW. Carl G. Washburne, Chester W. Waahburne,) Bertha K. Lee, and Eva) J. Hill, Plaintiffs,) vs. ) Charles L. Flint; Also) all other persons, or par-)SUMMON tics unknown claiming) any right, title, estate,) lien, or Interest In the) real estate described in) the complaint herein, ) Defendants.) To Charles L. Flint; Also all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or Inter est in the real estate described in the complaint herein, Defendants: IN THE NAME OF THE STTE OF OREGON, you and each of you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed agninrt you in the above entitled court and ause on or before six weeks from the date of the first publication of this Summons upon you, and if you fall to so appear or answer, for want thereof, the plaintiffs will apply to the above entitled court for the re lief prayed for In their complaint, to-wit. For a decree that the title to all of Section sixteen (16) in Township one (1) South of Range twenty six (26) East of the Wlllam ette Meridian, In Morrow County, Oregon, bo quieted; that the plain tiffs be adjudged to be the owners In fee simple thereof; that you and each of you be forever barred from claim' WASTE W 111 M BE VALUABLE Head of University Chemistry De partment Has Perfected Process to Obtain Products Used in Nu merous Basic Industries. University of Oregon, Eugene Dee. 16 One Of the most outstanding con tributions to science yet made by a University of Oregon man that admits of practical use in the Pacific North west and elsewhere, became public today in the announcement that Prof. O. F. Stafford, head of the University chemistry department, has perfected a process for utilizing waste wood to obtain a superior grade of charcoal and wood distillation products used in a number of basic industries. Because of the great amount of cheap waste wood material available in the Northwest, it is believed that the lumber industry and other en terprises will be keenly interested in Prof. Stafford's success. Heretofore it has not been commercially prac ticable to utilize mill waste in the carbonization and wood distillation industries. Prof. Stafford first demonstrated his process scientifically. The Uni versity campus was the scene of the early experiments. He and the firm of engineers behind him have now succeeded, after several years' labor, in demonstrating- it as a practical commercial process. Two wood dis tillation planta on the Atlantic Coast, one of them controlled by a big cor poration, placed every resource at Prof. Stafford's disposal, and the suc cess of the progress was completely demonstrated. By the Stafford process a fine grade of charcoal can be obtained as well the usual by-products of carboni zation, acetic acid, acetone and wood alcohol, basic in the manufacture of such articles as dye, paints, var nishes, celluloid, smokeless powder and artificial leather. A considerable amount of charcoal is used in the chemical industry; for example, in case hardening steel. Bagged char coal is consumed extensively in many large cities. Charcoal briquets are n demand as fuel. The Pennsylvania Railroad is making use of briquets made by the Stafford process. Cord and slab wood have been the accepted material used in making charcoal and its by-products. As small waste wood is materially cheap er than either slab or cord wood, the desirability of utilizing it in car bonization operations has long been recognized. Eight hundred applica tions have been made at various times at the Patent Office by those who thought they had hit upon a process of carbonizing Bmall waste wood on a commercial scale. The failure of these efforts, up until the Stafford process was proved successful, have been due, in general, to heavy costs of installing and maintaining the complicated mechanical appliances required. Following his preliminary experi mental work. Prof. Stafford set up a semi-commercial scale apparatus near the campus in the summer of 1917 and sot results from his opera tions. The following Fall he took up with the National Research Council the matter of getting aid for further work, but before action was finally Becured, E. R. Badger & Sons Co, Boston, chemical engineers and man ufacturers of chemical equipment, sde a proposal to back up further preliminary experiments. In the summer of 1918, Proi. atai- ford went East on a leave of absence from the University. He directed the work of practical demonstration in a plant having a daily capacity of 100 cords erected especially for the tests in Cambridge, Mass., by the 1 rm of engineers. The entire per sonnel of the Badger organization was always available and, in addition, Prof. Stafford had his own organiza tion of workmen. The outcome at Cambridge was so successful that a lnrge manufoctur ing corporation utilizing by-products of the carbonizing industry was in forested. In 1920 the work was con tinued in a plant of 200 cords daily capacity at Kingsport, Tenn. The plant had originally been erected by the National Research Council during the war for chemical experimenta tion. The special equipment neces sary to continue demonstrations of the Stafford process was installed in this plant. The commonly accepted practice of carbonization is to place cord or slab wood in large oven retorts made of steel plate. Fires in the furnaces beneath ore started. Vapor outlets from the ovens are provided, these outlets leading to condensers for the recovery of the liquid products of the distillation. The charcoal is withdrawn after the wood has been carbonized. The retort used in the Stafford process is a cylinder, thirty-two feet hiirh and nine feet in diameter. The cylinder is set vertically and the ap pliances arc such that the wood to be carbonized is fed continuously in to the top, while charcoal is with drawn from the bottom. A remark able feature of the process is that no heat is applied to the cylinder after the process once is started, the car bonization of the wood being spon taneous under the conditions which the Stafford invention maintains. Until the Stafford process was de veloped the principal difficulty en countered in the use of small waste wood has been that of transmitting heat to the Interior of a mass of finely divided woody matrial in the retort. Such a mass is a poor con ductor of hent, Only the portions of it in contact wtih the hot walls of the retort can in any reasonable time reach a carbonizing temperature. The numerous attempts to handle such material have had to do principally with overcoming this difficulty. The Stafford method depends upon an entirely new principle. Before l'rof. Stafford began his experiments, the wood used In carbonization work hns always contained moisture Prof. Stafford experimented with perfect ly dry wood. He found that when the dry wood is heated under his process to the tmperature at which the charring begins the carboniza tion went along to completion with out further application of heat from outside sources. This is referred to by chvmivts as an exothermic process The cost of installing a plant under the Stafford plan is considerably less than that of building an oven retort plont of equivalent capacity. It has other advantages among which are low depreciation and low labor and fuel costs as compared with other systems. It has not yet been demonstrated whether the charcoal made under the Stafford process can be used in the iron industry. The charcoal produced from small wood waste would have to be briquetted for direct use in a blast furnace. A practical test of whether the briquets can be used in blast furnace work has not been made. In the working out of the Stafford process In the Pacific Northwest able species of wood. It occupies an Douglas fir would be the most avail intermediate position between the hardwoods and the aoft or resinous wood, such as the Southern long leaf pine. Hardwoods give a high yield of wood alcohol and acetic acid, while the Southern pine gives low yields of alcohol and acid but a high yield of turpentine oils and resins. While Douglas fir will not prove as favorable a material for wood dis tillates as the hard woods or resin ous woods, it is the judgment of those familiar with the Stafford process that the growth of the Pacific North west industries and the development of foreign markets will justify a wood carbonization industry here of considerable magnitude. Prof. Stafford ia a graduate of the University of Kansas. He joined the faculty of the University of Oregon chemistry department in 1900 and two yeara later was made head of the department. II LITTLE ST (Editorial in Good Housekeeping for December, 1922.) WILLIAM FREDERICK BIGELOW. Fifteen years ago. Miss Emily P. Bissell, of Wilmington, Delaware, con ceived the idea of raising funds to help the anti-tuberculosis work of her state. She had read in the Out look an article by Jacob Riis, in which he told of a Christmas stamp which was being sold in Denmark for the support of a children's hospital. At the time Miss Bissell was secre tary of the Delaware Red Cross Chapter. With but forty dollars, se cured from two friends, as her cap ital, she obtained the official consent of her chapter and the post-office au thorities to put a few thousand seals into circulation. Stores, newspapers, and women's clubs, attracted by the novelty of the idea and heartily in sympathy with Miss Bissell's pur pose, all supported her with great enthusiasm from the first. Through such generous and united effort, three hundred thousand seals, to her a number beyond all her dreams, were sold that first year, and one thousand dollars was paid on the site of the first tuberculosis sanatorium in Dela ware, known as Hope Farm. As a result of Miss Bissell'a dem onstration and earnest pleading, the American Red Cross decided to take up the enterprise on a nation-wide scale the next year, 1908. But the parent organization was handicapped by lack of funds, and again it was Miss Bissell who found the necessary backers who shared her faith. She also undertook the tasK of writing to four thousand newspaper editors throughout the country, asking them to tell their readers that orders for seals should be sent to the national headquarters at Washington. The result was a veritable flood of orders. The 1919 seal was the first to carry the double-barred cross, which spe cifically symbolized the fight against tuberculosis, and is the emblem of the National Tuberculosis Associa tion and its twelve hundred state and local agencies. This year's seal, with mother and child, is symbolic of the helpful guardianship of this cross over the children of our country. What the Penniea Have Done. So much for the seal Itself. To at tempt to account for the great ac complishments that have been real ized through its sale year after year would be impossible. Sixteen years ago the tuberculosis death-rate in the registration area, which includes only about seventy percent of the country, was 200 per 100,000; today it is but 100 per 100,000. Here a penny and there a penny, and a wall has been built against this dread dis ease that now results in the saving of 100,000 lives annually. From the economic standpoint this means the saving of $10,000,000 a year to the nation. The money secured by the sale of Christmas seals has been and is be ing applied in eight different direc tions in the fight against the Great White Plague. These are: (1) for Increasing the number of hospitals and sanatoria for the treatment of tuberculosis, which have grown from 100 sixteen years ago to nearly 700 with approximately 60,000 beds; (2) for establishing clinics and dispen saries, of which there are now more than 550; (3) in paying the salaries of 3500 special tuberculosis nurses who carry the fight against the dis ease right into the home, instructing mothers and their families; (4) in research work; (6) for statistical study: (6) for printed matter, of which, during the past sixteen years, approximately 1,000,000 pieces have been distributed; (7) for the Modern Health Crusade, which has enrolled nearly 3,000.000 school children who are learning daily health habits; and (8) toward securing over 300 open- air schools and preventoria. Be tween now and Christmas you will have many an opportunity to pur chase more of the little stamps that in past years have made possible this truly wonderful work. Purchase tnem Ing any right, title, estate, lien or interest therein, and for such other and further relief as may be just and equitnble. This Summons la published upon you n The Gnzette-Timea once a week for six successive weeks pur suant to an order of Hon. Gilbert W. Phelps, Judge of the above enti tled court, which order is dated De cember 11th, 1922, and the date of the first publication of this Summons is December 14th, 1922. JOS. J. NYS, Attorney for Plaintiffs. Postofflce address, Heppner, Oregon, r 1 IT1? A flOOO TWNj,THAT ON I HALP OF THE WOCLP DOESM'T ; KNOW WtfT THE OTHEE HALF SANS ABOUT I 1 I iretHTO'irly arid put them on your let ters in tr e way approved by the Postoffice Df-partment. They won't carry your 1,-tters, but they will car ry a chance to live to tens of thous ands upon whom death has put its first sign. That sign can be crossed out, is being crossed out yearly in one hundrtd thousand cases by the ministration made possible by the sales of the little stamps. It is es timated that there are over a million active eases of tuberculosis in the United States; that every five min utes, day in, day out, a man, a wo man, or a child dies of it. In addi tion, it ia estimated that there are at least one million inactive cases. And yet tuberculosis is both preventable and curable. It is not true that it is inherited; it is "caught" by germs transmitted from sufferers with the disease. That makes the remedy easier to apply, but means that it must be applied constantly, for there is no safety for anyone while the disease ia among us. More than fifty per cent of all children are infected before they are ten years of age; from sixty to ninety percent before they are eighteen. The strong sur vive; the weak succumb. You can help protect them all and provide care for those who need it by pur chasing Christmas seals at one cent each. Buy them and use them. We hope that the day ia not far off when every letter, every package, mailed in December will carry the sign of one of the bravest fights against dis ease ever made by man. Slat's Diary 41 By ROSS FARQUHAR. Friday sum fokes down on 3rd st. had I baby left at there house las nite and ma was tell ing pa about it this evning at the supper table. She sed it only waved 2 pounds and a hi dressed. Pa sed to her Do you spose they C-j j a are gonna try to go a i . f 4 leil and raise it enny '- 1 ways. Sat I set down at pa's tiperiter and rote a note to Jane today on it. And a long in the afternoon she sent the note back to me by Elsie. Elsie sed she was very xtremely angry and sore at me. I went and looked it over and all I cud see that was rong was I made 1 Mistake when I went to call her my Pet and rote it my P-E-S-T. I gess she was just hunting for a xcuse to get mad. Sunday Tuk a bewtiful ride out threw the country and seen the be wtiful leaves and fodder shox and got a bunch of walnutB and 3 pun chered tires and burnt out a bear ing. Pa says a ottomobeel and a wife iB xpensive luxerys but it is the excessories witch costs the most in the long Run. Monday Teecher kep me in on Suspishon of haveing put sum shell ac k in Elsie's hair. I diddent do it because I diddent have no shellack but I new who did all the time so after it was all over I tuk a good laff at the teechers face and confest that the joke was on her. She had punish ed the rong boy. Tuesday the teecher ast Jake what was one of the principlest causes of Indigestion and he replyed and sed Eating vittles. Wednesdoy Blisters cays he is g. ing to he a filosofir when he is groan up to be a man. just now he is spending a lot of time when be cud be practising futball trying to figger out where yure fist goes to when you open up yure hand. Thursday Jane and me has made up agen. I ast her this noon if she had saw the last pitcher I had drew and she sed she hoped she had done so. Saw a aroplane and was inspired to rite a pome on it. The flier jump ed into his plane. And waved to his lady fare. He flew up threw the atmosfere. And cum down threw the air. ADDISON EDWIN DALZELL Funeral services were held at the Congregational church Sunday for Addison Edwin Dalzell, who died Thursday, December 7, at his home in the Gooseberry country. Inter ment took place at the I. O. O. F. Condon cemetery. Elder N. E. Austin conducted the services. Mr. Dalzell is survived by his wife and two sons, Kermit Lavern Dazell and Arthur Edwin Dalzell; his mother Mrs. Nancy R. Dalzell, and a sister, Chloe Dalzell, who live in Missouri; as well us two sisters in Condon, Mrs. G. P. Warren and Mrs. Albert Heigh; and two brothers in Wyoming, Al Dalzell and W. R. Dalzell. The deceased was the son of Jos eph S. and Nancy R. Dalzell. He was born May 17, 1879, at Milan, Missouri. He was united in marri age June 15, 1902, to Floicnce Warren nt Elreno, Oklahoma. To them were born four children, 2 of whom died in infancy, Two sons survive him Kermit Lavern who was with his father at the time of his death, and Arthur Edwin who is a student at the Condon High school, and being unable to reach his father's bedside. Mr. Dalzell had suffered from dia betes for three years. Only a few duys ago he was in Condon, and the final attack of the malady came sud denly. He came to Oregon in March, 1903. He made many friends in Mor row county, where his home is located, and in Condon where he is widely known and respected. Condon Globe-Times. it pays to buy good lubricating oils. Valvoiine and llavoline oils at Peo ples Hardware t'orppany. tf. HONEY FOR SALE In 6 and 10 pound pails at 12H cents per pound post paid, in lots of 60 pounds 12 cents post paid. CURTIS WHARTON, Juntura Ore. FOR SALE Standard bred Mam moth Bronze turkey toms. Well ma tured birds $10.00 each if taken by Thanksgiving. B. H. PECK. Heppner. FOR SALE A few well developed Duroe Jersey weanling pigs. $5.00 each if taken soon. B. H. PECK, Heppner. FOR RENT Good room in private residence gentleman preferred. In quire this office. NOTICE Change of Term Commencing on November 1st, our terms for all merchandise will be cash on delivery, or Strictly Thirty Days. So don't put us in an embar rassing position by asking us for further time, which it would be im possible for as to allow. We appreciate the trade accorded us in the past and respectfully aolicit the same for the future as indicated above. Yours very truly, GILLIAM BISBEE. W. R. C The regular annual election of officers of the Womens Relief Corps will be held on Wednesday, Dec. 13, and a full attendance of members on this occasion is desired. A Christmas party is to be given, and each member is to bring a gift, not exceeding ten cents in value, to add to the interest of the tree. The meeting of the Corps will well repay the effort, and members who do not attend will be missing some thing worth while. Legal Guarantee Given N nd mf Knil no pain coatinne work. Ask to see Oie-o-nia File Treatment. PATTERSON k 80N Main Street -:- Heppner, Oregon FELL BROS. Auto Repair Shop Fords A Specially Oils and Grease No-Nock Bolt Fell Bros. End of Willow Street, East of Patrick Hotel -"J . Chg & w Liooitt ft Mmi Tobacco Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Cypert were passengers for Portland on Sunday, where they expect to remain for about three months, or until spring opens. They will visit at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Grace Mitchell. Mrs. Cypert also has a brother residing in Portland now, C. P. Barnett, who re cently moved to the city from Pendleton. HEMSTITCHING I have installed a hemstitching machine at my apart ment in the Gilman building and will give all ordera for work in that line my best attentoin. Your patronage is solicited. Mrs. C. C. Patterson, tf. It pays to buy good lubricating oils. Valvoiine and llavoline oils at Peo ples Hardware Comoaav. tf. Good board and room in private family; reasonable price. Phone 663, city. It pays to buy good lubricating oils. Valvoiine and Havoline oils at Peo ples Hardware Company, tf. - 4 1 kAh morewmtr6speed kssmctioosDdwTarv tim&ntctJMcciIion for Winter motoriq Your motor will start readily and operate flexibly, in winter, if you use an oil that stays fluid at low temperatures. The battery troubles, worn bear ings and scored cylinders, experi enced in winter, are simply evidence that the motor is bound with con gealed oil and deprived of lubrica tion. Zerolene Stays Fluid in Winter Zerolene No. 1, No. 3 and No. 3, which are good cold test oils, move freely in winter with the action of the motor. They give a continuous flow of lubricant of the proper "oil iness" to the pistons, connecting rods and crank-case shaft bearings, and save batteries. For safe cold weather lubrication, consult the Zerolene Chart at ga rages and service stations. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) mmi