Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1923)
PAGE TWO THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEPPNER. OREGON. THURSDAY, JUNE 21. 1923. 1 GAZETTE-TIIS tri Birrvrm gamtte. buuiiM thi HrrrskR times. iuwum Nowmlw 1ft, 191 Vivw m4 Ipmw Crwfr4 M4 tf p4 t Om PartoffW M Heppner. ADVKBTIII1KG ATM C.I VI N ON ATPLK ATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Om Tr SI flti MooUm Trm MmUm ." fcfi Copiaa . .U MORROW COr NTT OFFICIAL PAPER PartoiO ATrtitnf RcprapeittatJv THE AUUtlCAN 1KL&S ASStX-lATlON 'Richard Lloyd Jones Says: DOING Ol'R PXTY LEADS TO POM EH. DUTY. Thi is positive word. Vp on every living creature is impos ed an obligation. Duty demands that thii obligation be met. He who fails to meet it is a drone. The world dis cards its drones. Do not let yourself be cast into the discard. Duty is a stern taskmaster. It commands us to be useful, not ac cording to our desires, but according to our powers. Duty will tolerate neither slight nor neglect. The more you shirk it the higher it piles up before you. If yoa break the thread in the loom by being false to your duty today you may confront the flaw tomorrow, when you will have forgotten its cause and are helpless to mend it. Duties seldom come through choice. They are the lot of destiny. The reward for doing one duty is the pow er to fulfill another. The arm that swings the hammer grows strong. The conscience that soldier-like, pursues duty daily dev elops character. Duty is the acid test of manhood. It marks herota and shows the shame of pretenders. Duty is not spasmodic, it does not confront us occasionally; it is con stant. Some duty meets each of us face to face every day. We cannot meet it by long jumps. We must fol low it step by step. Duty measures time cautiously. With every duty we are given the time in which to do it. But we are not given time to spare. Neglect will forfeit fulfillment. Do your duty now. Take no chance. Duty delayed spells failure. Pleasure often appears to be in conflict with duty because in attempt ing to discharge our duty we do only what we are strictly obliged to do. and we feel we are seldom praised for it. Yet the pleasure a man of honor enjoys in the consciousness of having performed his duty is a reward he pays himself for all his pains. The first, the last, and the greatest pleasure in life is the sense of hav ing discharged our duty. A CONVENTION OF PATRIOTISM. THE city of Washington has just finished entertaining the annual convention of Shriners- In a peculiar sense the nation was the host, for Washington not only is go-emed and financed by Congress, but during the convention many agencies of the fed eral government actively participated to make it a success. Furthermore. President Harding, himself a member of the Shrine at Columbus, Ohio, took an active part in all of the Shrine ceremonies, and, with Mrs. Harding, reviewed all par ades. The White House was thrown open and was daily visited literally by thousands of Shriners in attend ance at the convention. Scores of del egations paid formal calls upon the President and the ladies of the con vention paid especial tribute to the First Lady of the Land. Postmaster General New, another noble, a member of the Murat Temple at Indianapolis, established a Shrine poKtflffice and rendered 100 per cent efficient postal accommodation to the hundreds of thousands of visitors during the week. Secretary of Labor Davis was a speaker at one of the Shrine meetings. One of the chief features of enter tainment were the exhibition drills and maneuvers of units furnished by the army and navy. The navy made additional contribution by giving ex hibitions on the Potomac River while both army and navy fliers gave aerial circuses each day. The show places of the federal government, such as the Congressional Library. Bureau of Printing and Engraving, etc., made an especial effort to entertain the visitors. But the outstanding feature of the convention was the patriotic favor of the delegations of Shriners which was matched only by the enthusiasm with which the tens of thousand of spectators greeted such exhibition. Over 100 bands furnished music al most 24 hours a day. At a dozen oinereni places in tr.e ciy there was HOME SWEET HOME Okmt Alibi. For Hi Friend Terry Cilkikon AUTOCAITCR TUT, TWT, (MOT SO LOUP. WJ WAtVtT DANClNS AMS NtW I STNLI HKi PARTNER. AINTtD AWO Ml VJA4 :abrnin UVltD A CHAIR-.' I -rue iPEA. otcAa. bzihGiMi I -TVta jeJe op vovj inviting y THAT NOTORIOUS USTfa. OUKDO HIM TO OWH. HOUSE - ON LT "" 7' to owe Mouse - SWCM J 1 LAST WEEK. HB WAS PUT OFF- T UTTr-V A man" -?H A "rwtt CLUB DANCE FLOOR. FOR. OH, a dainty job U the S.iilor lid, as she perches o'er ruins o'd . . , . hen the large pink eAr that can't be hid, are tanned ;o a ruset gold. . . . And a forso red, adds vehemency rre to the scenery feninst the bean. . . . It's the old boy, fresh from the barber-chair, that's flirting with sweet sixteen! I dote on the guy in the damp sweat-shop, who turns ojt te sailor lid . . . for the old galoot with the egg-shell tops, is vain r the average km. ... He parades B-nsdway in a manner gay, and taks on the goo goo eve. He's a masher bold -though a a band concert staged from morning till night, not to mention the im promptu concerts furnished in hotel lobbies and on street corners. Yet pa- triotic airs were always received with roars of applause and cheers from j the crowd?. Whenever the strains of the Star Spangled Banner were lifted above the blare of the street, it in variably brought fcats off and hands to salute. It was during the parade, however, that the hundreds of thousands who were in Washington furnished the most significant exhibition of their intense nationalism. Of course every delegation was headed by a color beartr with the American flag and in many cases each unit of a delegation. Not a flag passed the reviewing stand that was not saluted by President Harding, Mrs. Harding and others in the stand. In this respect crowds were in one accord, for they, too, saluted the passing national colors. But when the delegation from Chi cago passed with several standards of the national colors and with their immense drum bearing the inscrip tion "One heart, one hand, One flag, one land, One country" those in seats arose and joined with those standing in cheer after cheer. The spirit of America pervaded and dominated the entire convention. There was no politics. There were no partisans. All were Americans. As Thomas Jefferson exclaimed in his first inaugural address, "Every dif ference in opinion is not a difference of principle. We have called by dif ferent names brethren of the same principles. We are all Republicans; we are all Federalists." And so in this convention the outstanding fact that although delegations were com posed of Republicans and Demccrat9, radicals and conservatives, none of these distinctions were thoueht of be cause all were Americans with whxm the institutions of our nation and the honor of Old Glory stood frst. Had the visiting thousands been asked to give utterance to the thought uppermost in their minds, they would no doubt have all subscribed to the sentiments expressed by Daniel Web ster in his speech of dedication of the Bunker Hill Monument: "Our principal business is im provement. Let our age be the age of improvement. In a day of peace let us advance the arts of peace and the works of peace. Let us develop the resources of our land, call forth its powers, build up its institutions, and promote its great interests. " Let our object be, our country, our whole country, and nothing hut our country. LET OUR TOW N BE HEARD FROM. IF the great American hen could talk, the principles of democracy would soon be spread over the globe, for there is scarce a land under the sun where the cackle of our barn Dempsey and Train ert In Oveat Falls Camp lie f iii Champion Jick Dempw; U here hown with hi trainer 1b his camp on tb ontiklrtt of Great rails, Mont, when on July 4th. he will defend hit title ag&lmt Tom Dlbboni, of fit PauL Dempiey la now Into heavy training. W6LL ANSVWf, , m CHAUFF'i POOH, POO Ml HE WAS ) OUST RAW AwAN V GOMG TO DlSCHARGt ( AN0 MAKR.6P TWAT CH.AU PFEuR. AW WAN'. HI KOTHEi- jl ' VWN-LAVJ' . ( ftJ -'f& Poem by J(ncleJohn JO ooster old, can't somebody tell m ahy? I darsnt go near to Liver's Lane, topped out in a sailor new . . , for fear I might addle some Dearie's brain which my wife wouldn't want me to. . . . So, I stick around my vine-clad porch, to keep my attrac tions hid . . Tor, nothin' will kin dle flirtation's torch, like a bran'-new sailor lid! yard fowl is not heard. The fiscal year of 1923 will show that approximately thirty-nine mil lion docen American eggs were ship ped abroad in that period, and if we include those sent to our own col onies and not included in the govern ment figures as exports, then the number will exceed forty million doi en. To this must be added the eggs and yolks, frozen, dried, or canned, which brings the sum total up to quite a half billion, having a value of $12,000,000. In the year preceeding the war the value of eggs, dried and frozen, en tering the Lnited States, chiefly from the Orient, advanced $37,000. In 1919 it had risen to $8,000,000. Then Un cle Sam's scientific department work ers perfected the methods of preserv ing the product and in two years our importation dropped to $3,000,000. These silent and poorly paid work ers in bare looking experimental rooms in the national capital every now and then add a million or two of dollars to the income of the na tion. They should take a lesson from the hen and let themselves be heard from. SAVINGS. A PROBLEM that comes home to practically every individual is the problem of saving. How much to save? What proportion of one's income to put by? A financial writer recently gave some startling facts about saving. Only ten persons out of every hun dred in the United States are self supporting after reaching the age of sixty-five. The total absence of any systematic saving is the reason. He cited the fact that an invest ment of $250 every half year, at 6 per cent interest, reaches a total of $13,500 at the end of 20 years. The important thing for the saver to remember is to invest his money, not to speculate with it. Investment is defined as placing one's money in productive channels. Mr. and and Mrs. Harry Clappshaw of South Bend, Wash., visited during the past week with Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Ward at the Ward farm on Rhea creek. Mrs. Clappshaw is a sister of Mrs. Ward. They departed Sunday for a trip to Minneapolis, where they expect to spend a few weeks and will return again to Heppner for a fur ther visit with relatives in this vi cinity. Give the little chicks a good start we have the necessary chick feed. Also for the laying hens bone meal. egg maker, grit and oyster shell. Peo ples Hardware Company. fdrrtiLS President Off on Alaskan Trip n,, 14 j , -n. C- Raff' J JL V ?r VI m .. ' lui mAMCHCO Opening with an address at SL Louis, Thursday June 21t, President Harding will make 19 speeches on his Alaskan trip. One address will l.e delivered at Vancouver, British Columbia, July 26th. The Itinerary is a? follows: St. Louis, June 21sti Kansas City, June 22nd; Hutchi son. Kan.. June 23rd ; Denver, June 25th i Cheyenne Wyn., June 25th ; '-lit Lake City, June 26th ; Pocatello, Idaho, June 2Sth ; Idaho Falls, ! luho. June 2Mb: Butte, Mont, June 20th; Helena. Mont., June 2ittb; Spokane. Wash., July 2nd; Meacbam, Ore July 3rd; Portland, Ore., July 4th, and Tacoma, July 0th. The President will spend two weeks In Alaska; returning, he will spenk at Vancouver, British Columbia, July 26th; Seattle, July 27th; San Francisco, July 81st) Los Angelas, August Jst, and 8au Dlutfo, Ausuat 4th, Slat's Diary By ROSS FARQUHAR. FRIDAY Well this is the happyist day of all the hole entire yr. for us kids and etc. The last day of skool has got here at last finely. Pa says this is the time of yr. when the sweet girls and boy g radiates i rum skool goes out looking for poshuns and finds a job insted of a posishun. Sat. High xcitement rained down at Blis terses house today when the ambulants backs up to the house and hauled his sister away to the Hospittle to oprate on her for appnediaitis. Or sum ligh brow dizease at lease. Sunday Pa and Mr Gillera was haveing a argumint today about witch was the wirst kind of a wife to have hanging round the house. Mr. Gillem sed he thot it was a grate draw back to have a wif witcb was oposed to a fellow playing Golf, He sed it dampened a mans ambishun and inishative. And pa pipes in and says that he dont no weather it is enny wirse to have a wife witch frouns on the game or to have 1 witch insists on playnig with you in yure company. Monday Went to the St. fair to nite. When we wa a comeing out of the fortune tellers tent we seen a woman lalfing fit to kill herself and pa sed to her What makes you so Mary all at once and she replyod and sed. The fortune teller Red I wood be a Widow in 10 yrx. And pa sed Why I thot you was a single old Made and was not marryed and she just laffed agen and sed. Yea I am. Teusday Ma was saying she wisht pa had of studyed for a Dr. or law yer or sum of the profeahuns rather than ben a nooaepaper man. and he sed Whats the matter dont you think I make good money and ma sed Yes you make good money all rite, but Gilliam & Bisbee's j? Column jZ? A full car load of Poul try supplies just arrived. Anything and every thing for the chicken in stock. A flash light on a dark night is a necessity. None better than the Winches ter. We have all styles and sizes. Who said the roosters were crowing and the hens cackling over the Poultry Supplies to be had at Gilliam & Hisbce. Water turns the wheel. Money turns the business. We have the business it don't turn. Creditors please take notice. Sri not enuhT of a quantity. Wensday Played fum more erokay made in the West- JJARDEMAN hats are made in the west They're stylish and are guaranteed to hold their shape. Come in and try on one of the new blocks. $5 DAVID A. WILSON EVERYTHING I.N MEN'S FURNISHINGS Heppner Oregon FOR BETTER WALLS &' CEILINGS The old house looks young again. Our new Plasterboard made it. Good for old walls and ceilings. "Materially yours " TUM-A-LUM with the girl frum the city today. I drather play b.s. ball than erokay only this girl dus.ent care for bate bail. And besides we are getting to be almost good enufT frends to quart with each another. Thirsday We got a invitashun to Cummencemint today and pa sed he like to go all rite but he diddent like the idea of printing it on the invitashun that Yure presents Is re quested. He led that was to strong of a hint to satisfy him. undjettes AutuCaster I.ET THE BIBLE ALONE. HERETICAL, rutionalistic forces do not seem to be satisfied with the f from the J T OBACCO J We take this means of expressing to you, through the columns of what we still call our paper, our apprecia tion of the splendid cooperation ac corded the office while we were priv ileged to serve you in the capacity of County Agent, Copper Carbonate has proven to be more than we had dared to hope, controlling the smut without any in jury to the germination making it possible to seed in the dust at the same time reducing the rate of seed ing 25 per cent. The seed can be treated in advance of seeding too, which is another great advantage. It means that practically every far mer in the Northwest will be using that method of treating this fall. Every farmer who knows of the method and the greatly increased yields is already purchasing ma chines with which to do the work. So great will the demand for ma chines be that it will be practicallly impossible to secure them promptly without ordering in advance and for your protection we have arranged to have Mr. Ralph Fmley who will be our representative in that section call on you and show you the CALKINS IMPROVKD WHEAT TREATING MACHINE so that you can place your order in the near future. Mr. Finloy will have 800 farmers to r.ec in Morrow and Gilliam counties ard it will he impossible to see ynu all at once, THEREFORE, if you will write us we will wend you a circular giving a clear cut of the improved machine and ull details on price and purchase. You can then order direct at ynur convenience. You will appreciate the fact that you ordered early before heeding time is over. Address com munications to CALKIN'S MACHINE. COMPANY 30 1 West Boone Ave., SPOKANE, WASHINGTON 1 ROLL YOUR OWN WITH I Ria La Croix Papers Attache Ml wrack they have produced. They are responsible for the late war. They are also responsible for the crime wave sweeping this country and Eu rope. The orgy of sin and crime can be traced directly to false teachings. Like the vultures they make a feast of the decaying carcass. Not satisfied with the murder, expense, wreck, and ruin produced, they have written a shorter Bible which will perpetuate the orgy. The astonishing thing is that there are leaders connected with the cer tain religious organizations who have lent their names and their influence to the infamous, hell-born production called the Shorter Bible. If these or ganizations permit their names and the names of their leaders to be at tached to this abortion, then the righteous, orthodox Christian forces of Amercia should crush them. Our boys and girls cannot be entrusted to the leadership or to the education al and club features of Institutions drawing their sustenance from the churches of the living Christ, to have the faith of those children under I? Ginghams New ginghams in a wide variety of colors, designs and qualities. Ginghams rule su preme for summer wear. Linen tissue ging hams at very attractive prices. Sam Hughes Co. Phone The Gazette-Times Is Morrow County's Newspaper Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Phelps Grocery Company mined by such Infamous attacks upon God's Infallible Word. The Shorter Bible, so called, is one of the most blasphemous attacks up on God's Holy Bible. Orthodox, self-respecting, conse crated men and women will not be in sulted by such attacks of the ration alistic forces. ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT TO VISIT. Mrs. Edith Kelley, state anhembly president, will bt in Heppner on Sat urday, June 23, and i anxious to have a full meeting of San Souci Rebekah lode. Luncheon at 6:.'U and business sesiiiun immediately after. STRAY Eli! From my ranch on Eight Mile about May 10, one bay saddle hortte, brand ed 3E on left stifle. One bay mare with blaze face, branded circle heart on left stifle. Phone 16x5, or write me at Heppner, Ore, Reward. 4t. ORA U BARLOW. Chickens need Meat Meal, Ground Bone, and Charcoal. BROWN and LOWRY. Main 962 m MAT A rvHt ON VOUH, A w rut wf PHONE 53 Gilliam & Bisbee HKITNEK LEXINGTON IONE