Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 5, 1924)
PA OK FOTT. THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEPPNER. OREGON, THURSDAY. JUNE 5, 1924. s-.W.i-.tv., HALLOWTIDE CECIL NEWS HEMS' ALL R0ADS LEAD T0 CLEVEND AND CO. P. CONVENTION By JESS ( A. FARSONS tg. .bii. aiov til. Njki nd.oil I Ud (nic. r,.: J. .::,. l.ti.-i on ler Sim-u ti,; i i.l t: it ic ui!f the "J, sr ' tlirtu-l ll.r .-;ri-. t to tW cmu Mi'Dci of Mi vi'O M.i, 'n the nv.i day i( N..(-i:).er, 1 r.-;,!i?-d t!iat all ki.hoh :..- lii'. rt n u...re than re paid I nn !' I: .!u.n l'U-s. pllrd I.ljli itl. 1W.II i U( UiKIlJ cuiicvj fiuucri and prax.; fr mi the s'.rwt TtanVrs, eSeniiiJ t! fir f.iKr tomb suax'i anj ca; ilv M.c:ons; frc-n tl.e wo'm1u cr.i-s o! i.asiit'iitt'd w.th tin sel and ray l.':rT. and tl.e tnudles throHli.g a fect.i lifht on every muuiid. It v. us e; v;.t Uist la Mexico the "dia ".e los m.;ert" was no iue;in festival. A:u'i( t!i knw-Ung flprirps wt a woman .f prent I n:v. lit r hair, un knotted in her ar.d fs'.Vn below her alL a of a d.vn, Nu Mack. Slia held me foill.oiud while Lucia droughts and inds which have vis- J, l?vrd of But'frby Fata left Kririny for Hyrd Pro. ranch at lAiah here he mill trend a few days nr., r.ct the sheep and men pettinf a.i tMr.c in order for the summer n.ort-.. Jtick va accoirparietl by Y. O. llyr.d. president of Hynd Bros, c t'ttpar.y. Master Marcel'us Van Scholars, of Ar:irpton is vtMtirc his aunt, Mrs. ueo. Krehs at The 1-ast Camp and is Vavinjr the time of his life rescuing his twin cou-irs cut of all kinds of troubles since tht'V have hepun to ex plore the wonders of Cecil. A terrific sand and wind storm hit Cecil all day on Saturday, May 24. and also apain on Tuesday, May 27, and on Wednesday. May 2S. to tantal ize everyone about a d.'ien drops of rain fell when we were prepared for ; buckets-full of real rain. i Mrs. Ceo. A. Miller of Hlphview ranch near Cecil brought Mrs. T. H. l.owe of Cecil a box of beautifu arpe strawberiies which were grown in her pardon on the hills in spit o' tried In vain to shew me a wonderful wreath on a nfar-ty pedes-nil. "Lucia," 1 l.isp. red, "bow pitiful to a jouiig f.rl in suoh deep sor row P "Ah, yes. that la Dolores," replied Lucia, 'the beauty of Merida. Last year ahe was not auii'i.g the mourners. "She frieves for her lover. A nierry lad, who took l.fe 6,1 easily that all hi tronMes dropid vS with a shrug of his shoulders. v believer my broth er was r. Merida be always went Into Henri's little slui to be shaved. This pay youi;g rrenchinjiu. however, bad two th.nps whi.h frrieved him. One was his love for 1'oloresi, almost hope- , leas because of her ambitious father. About this Henri said nothing, but of ; bis other grief he talked freely. ! "He was positive there was a mine ' of precious oais near by. and all he 1 lacked to go In search of them was the 1 few thousand d Hits to buy his outfit. ! In vain he had plot: ied with the many j travelers who Tistted bis shop. But 1 they only leered at wat they called ; his 'crazy notion." Tou know tow interested Dick Is 1 for the summer months. to mining. Eelnp interested also In Henri, he lent him the desired money. After a year Dick had news from ted this ioc.i.ity lately. Haro'd Au.alt, pc-vernment trapper "or tis district, was calling in Ce cil du:u c the week. Business has been brisk. Harold informed us that re trnpr-od ninety-eipht coyotes last rronth ar d has almost the same num ber t;.i.- month. W. A. Thomas of Dotheboys Hill rer.t Surday amongst his friends in Ctcil. W. A. declares there will be iti.e wheat to harvest in his part of e county. Everything is drying up for want of rain. A. C. Morgan and daughter Miss Lottie, of Spokane, arrived in Morgan on Thursday and will visit their friends in this district. A. C. Morgan wcas formerly storekeeper, etc., at Morgan. Geo. W. Wilson, Geo. Brandes and Bob Lowe left Butterby Flats on Sun day with sheep belonging to Hynd Bros., which will be trailed to their summer range near Sumpter. Miss Violet Hynd arrived at Cecil on Saturday a full-fledged graduate of Heppner high school and will en deavor to "stav down on the farm Convention 1 4, JL :Kx 4-?, it rf. si 11 s Where the first GOH Convent iori was Keld dt la j w j I Bloominston, 111, m 1856 A qAI ' d m i cl hi""ia,"t-'i-1""-i"'iTiii i-A"-iiiriiifiiiMiiMiiniii i r ;' rf 4 The men w ho ore running' the show The Reoublioin National Committee1 v-v. i. Oscar Nash arrived in Cecil during the week from Vernonia and will vis it his friends in Four Mile and assist he harvest work provided there is Henri that be bad found the mine Soon after Dick arrived at Mer.da and : wheat to harvest. beheld the most beautiful collection of the perns be had ever seen. And Henri, of course, became a rich man, "The hard-hearted father of Dolores had sent her to live with an impossi ble aunt unf'l s'ne wonM nrnmise to marry some wretched pood-for-nothlng ! Haying has begun on all the ranch Miss Mildred Duncan who bas been attending high school at Boardman arrived at Busy Bee ranch during the week and will spend her vacation with her parents. Cleveland, 0. Politics role Cleveland today with the 0. 0. P. Elephant in the star role. With the Republican National Committee on the scene; delegates and convention onlookers arriving hourly, it is a certainty the town will be Jammed vvheu the Convention convenes next Tuesday, June 10. Cause of Fruit Poison ing Discovered at U. 0. Portland, Ore., June 4. Research workers at the University of Oregon Medical School have succeeded in Covering the cause of so-called fruit poisoning, a disease which at tacks hundreds of workers in the anneries and packing houses of the Northwest during the fruit packing season. . After six months of investigation, Pr. Lyle Kingery, Professor of der matology, and Dr. C. H. Thienes, pro fessor of pharmacology, have isolat ed the organism that produces the disease and they are now on the way to finding the most effective means of checking and preventing the mal ady. Dr. Kingery will present the results of their investigation before the annual meeting of the American Society of Dermatologists in Minne- polis in July. Fruit poisoning is a painful skin infecton whch attacks workers who pare and cut fruit in canneries. Those who hull strawberries are also liable to be infected. The disease causes the persons infected to be complete ly incapacitated for a month or two and often results in loss of the fin ger nails. Before the investigations of the University of Oregon men were made, the cause of the disease was unknown. The infection causes large economic loss to the fruit industry and its workers. When sufferers from fruit poison- ng were brought to Portland hospit als last year, Dr. Thienes and Dr. Kingery became interested in discov ering a cure for the disease, which was then unclassified by medical science. They made trips to Oregon orchards and canneries, and studied cases of the poisoning, finally isolat- ng the organsim which caused the rouble. They are now experimenting at the Medical School to find the best means of exterminating the or gansm from the human body so that cures may be effected. i es around Cecil and is cutting off j very light, and prospects are poor for who had a fortune left him by his first wile, wnom ne raa a: psea ana neaieu ; any waler for irrigating the second because she was n.-t plump and beau- crop. tlfuL ! . -iTnri hnw r,. of (TPm to uuaiin, state tramc omcer, the faiher of Ingres. Lvn Runno re- j also Mies Thelma Miller of Heppner, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rynd of Butter by Flats were visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Farnsworth at Rhea Siding on Sunday. Peter Bauernfiend, Cecil's right hand man, visited friends in Heppner on Tuesday and found Cecil still on the map when he returned. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lundell and famiiy were visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Otto Land strom at their ranch Brutally Murdered 1 Jk 't ii ii i 'n I ! u-prp the impttti ttf Mis Violet Hvnd celved him cold.y at first, but on per- j ftt BuUerby Fiata during the week. Ceivlng that nis lortune was greatw than that of the, Mexican Invited him to stay at bis home, Dolores was brought back and Joy reigned in the household. In the evening a brilliant moon looked down upon the lovers. "She was occupied with her needle In the morning, and after the noon tide rest, would pick gay love songs on her mandolin, which the blithe Henri would sn.g In a reverberant tenor. Even the father seemed to have oftened Into the ambiance of a hu man being under this powerful influ ence of love. "Two weeks before the wedding a messenger came to the door of the garden where the lovers were discuss ing their plans, thrusting into Henri's hands a poorly applied letter. Turning a white and frightened face to her, Henri told Dvlores that there was trouble at his mine and be must hasten to the spoL Along the road outside the garden passed the first of the carriages of the rich returning from Mexico City. Then the lovers remembered, which In their happiness they had forgutteii, that nearly all the Mexk-an world was keeping the 'dia de los muertos. "After a long and tender parting from Uolores, Henri dug his heels Into his puny mountains, eago youths, sons of wealthy Chicago "Dolores look a stitch or two, now meD ind BtudenU at University of on this embroidery, now on that Her Chicago, have confessed committing aewir-g women could not work fast the crime and are now in custody, enough for her. S:.e tried on garment i They claimed the deed was done in after garment, throwing aside each In disgust because the stitches were not fine enough. Toward evening she went into the garden to look at the sunset and found it veiled m a cloud of dust Straining her eyes to see what was In the distance, she beheld a long proces sion of hla'-k-clad peasants trudging through the middle of the road re turning from the city on the heights, where Dolores had forgotten to go, from hearing the wlmn masses In the cathedral and from decorating the graves In the stony place of burlaL "After a few straggling couches, came a long cart, drawn by two don keys. Slowly It came along the road and slowly It turned toward the gar den gate, Aj It entered the garden, Dolores streamed on seeing her life less lover. The servants ran out of the house and brought her In- They could not tell her until after her days of de lirium that Henri's rtval, full of re venge and of Mx1ran 'pulque' had lured him to the mine, and at the en trance struck him down from behind. Ttiis Is Dolores' first puMIc mourn ing at his grave on the 'dia de los muert's. I saw her last year, and she Is even more beautiful In her sorrow." "Obf" I breathed. "She will never forget again the solemnity of the 'dia da los njuertos.' near lone on Thursday. E H. Harbison, prominent grain buyer and fire insurance agent of Morgan, -was a busy ma;i around Ce cil on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Madden of Port land are the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Melville Logan of The Wil lows. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crosby from their ranch above Heppner were call ing on Cecil friends on Wednesday. Joe Marcus accompanied by Miss Aldrich of Arlington were doing the sights of Cecil on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Oral Henrik?en and daughter were doing business at the cennty seat on Thursday. Mrs. Johnson of lone was visiting with her aunt, Mrs. Karl Farnsworth, at Rhea Siding on Sunday. Hermann Havercost and Billie Lo gan were calling on friends in Four Mile on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Streeter and farmily were visiting friends in Mor gan on Friday. Walter Pope of Cecil was doing business in Morgan on Monday. a total capital of fifty cents, worked his way through the university and later worked his way through Co lumbia University law school in New York City, gave $3500 to the fund. He said he estimated his education cost the university $1200, and he wanted to pay it back with heavy interest. Men Who Climb Poles Are Safer Up There Sometimes a lineman, working on top a pole is glad that he is not ex posed to the hazards of the traffic in the street beneath him. His sense of security may be traced to the ramark able precautions taken to remove what to the layman would seem to be inherent dangers of his job. To say that a lineman must be trained is not to intimate that he must develop himself into arLaerobat, a steeple-jack, or a "human-fly." In fact, precisely the opposite qualifica tions are those of the ideal lineman, who works aloft. The daredevil is not wi.nted. The characteristics wuich are essential are a cool bead, steady nerves, the ability to recognize dang er and the common sense to avoid it when recognized. To the layman, the most obvious danger the lineman faces is that of falling. Utility men declare, however, that only a relatively small propor tion of accidents are of this kind. Standardized belts, safety straps and spurs and regular inspection of this equipment by company inspectors have materially reduced the number of injuries due from falls from poles, Safe Home Canning n l t a ruie is Announce d FIRST BONUS Robert Frank, 14-yar-old son of. wealthy Chicago jeweler, who waa 1 . 1 J J A Ln.t.v nnriauj Via and galloped tow.rd the S t VhT. i the inlereati of Kienee. Prexy Campbell's Gift P to University is $30,000 Alumni Subscriptions to Gift Cam paign Now Total $312,232; Many Cities Are Represented. Eugene, Ore., June 4. A gift of $30,000 from P. L. Campbell, presi dent of the Universtiy of Oregon, and family, brings the total subscriptions to the alumni fund of the University Gift Campaign to $312,232. The pres ident's gift was made in the names of Mr. and Mrs. Campbell, Mrs. E. A, Hassan and Walter Church of Berke ley, California. Graduates and former students are giving liber:!ly to the fund which is to be used for sorely needed build ings, particularly a new library building, on the campus at Eugene. Contributions are being received from all parts of the country. Alumni in New York City have sent $4400, Bos ton $4480, and Washington, D. C, $1140, Los Angeles $3000, Spokane $2960, Berkeley $1950, Vancouver $1140, Seattle $2565, Medford $3550. These figures represent only a part of what can be expected before the campaign is over. One graduate in Portland, a man who came to Eugene as a student with ' '4 . A , at New Time-Tahles of Federal and State Departments Supersede All For mer Recommendations. "Safe home canning requires care ful attention to every step in the process." This is the rule announced by the O. A. C. extension service in putting out a bulletin with succinct direct ions for each step, on information supplied by the federal bureau of home economics and approved by the horticultural products department of the college. The new time tables for processing supersede all former recommenda tions and tables published by the state and the federal departments on home canning. They give the safe time for Oregon fruits and smal fruits, and for most vegetables. Only the clean, sound and fresh produce is to be used for canning, It should be taken preferably within two hours after harvesting and thor oughly washed as for cooking. Every bit of soil is to go, as it may contain dangerous bacteria hard to kill. The fruits and vegetables are then given a short pre-cooking. Full di rections for processing follow the general instruction. Bulletin may be obtained by applying to the college at lorvallls. f "Arro c a v t csT") Here it is boys! the firnt bonus certificate signed by General Hlnes, of the Veteran Bureau, following pas sage of the bill over the President's veto. CAR I) OK THANKS. Wt ih to express our sincere thank to our frit-ndi and neighbors for their kind SM.iM.Mnce and sympa thy during the IMness, death and burin 1 of our h loved mother, Mrs. Firms 7,,'tis tMnilh. K. F. tSmiih. Mm. D. Harlow and Family Mrs A G. ItrVort and Family. Mrs, A. L. Anderson and Family. Mitts Ktiotui ftinith. Mr, and Mrs. D. Cot were doing buitr In the cny Tuesday from their H in ion creek farm. Il wwl, X vpc X r HOW O' DO MlSTeR &UNN X EAI rC orftJ&u?noe A WHEN A VVERE JUST DlSCUSSlN' rULlVk) i?vBS&Ris i WOMAN WOMEN IN POLITICS- 1 Vlil OUR EX i RplONS COMES Do VOO THINK IT WILL IN HTTP V &L?I if PRESIDENT BE MANY YEARS BEFORE ' ; TOWN M $p Edward .:.ko;o;krii3L V-'.f&S A T4 I autocar 1 1 or2g ii jggg - lUGONH DO YOU 5AV y V , X I A WOMAN Jf CANDlDOTe s V CANNOT BE WAL O MUST BG PRESIDENT? I CAUSE- t I THIRTf-FIVE I :vv:-mvL m y If It Foams, It's Butter Oleomarjcerine or butter? If you are in doubt about what the grocer has given you, it is an easy matter to apply the gas test over the kitchen ranee. Hold a spoonful over .the tea kettle spout or at some distance above a gas flame. If its contents become a sort of foam, you have butter. FORMER RESIDENT PASSES, Word received here this week an nounced the death of Frank Bayless long-time resident of this city, at Dayton, Wash., on May 6. Mr. Bay leas, who left Heppner about two years ago, had been failing in health for considerable time before leaving here,- and his death was not unex pected. Three step-daughters sur vive Mr. Bayless. They are Mrs. Lee bprmkle and . Mrs. Adam Blahm Heppner and Mrs. Ida Hinton. Mr, Bayless was buried at Dayton. w hy -o$ IV) Uncle JaJui COMES NOW, Hie glad "Vacation-time" so happifled an' real. . . , Seduction la her favor ite rrlme, though ahe delights to slenl She Ijalta ui with an art nutillme resistless In appeal. , . . She halla u froniher arbored lea from haunts of rose an' fern. . . . She calls from Bad hurst by-the-sea, or, Bshs Creek at Its turn and when she casts her luxe at me, she reckons I am her'n I So out from Mammon's fierce demands, my weary soul would fare. . , . You'll see mesplttln' on my hands my golf-ball In tho alr--sweet maid yer uncle un derstands Gwendolyn, I'll be there 1 Florida Candidate 1 w l last year was tstimatrd at 45.000 pounds by E. R. Jarkman, extension crop apecialist who ia in cloa. touch with tht Held situation. Success in (.tting a stand with th dust-treated grain, so pronounced laat year, may lead even more farmers than at first might be expected to aubatitute the liquid method for the dry this year. EP PURDV'S OA WHO IS BACK HfMB FROM COLLEGE l HOLPIN' GLE6 CLUB ON6 RBHEAR4AL4 IN Hi CELLAR " wwg' Mrs. W. 8. Jennings, of Jackson ville. Fla- a atronf candidate for the Presidency of the General Federation of Women's Clubs. Takes Hundred Wires To Equal One Human Hair Tungsten and copper-nickel wires so fine that it takes one hundred of them to equal tn thickness a single human hair are now being made In the United States. The eobweb metal strands, used in electric vacuum thermo-couples to measure the most delicate atlernating currents, are on- Iv one five-thousandths of an inch In i diameter. They are practically invis- I ible, except as they reflect a streak of light, and can be handled and soldered only under a microscope. No metal can be drawn to this diameter. The tungsten or copper nickel alloy is first wire-drawn thru dies made of pierced diamonds, and after this it is submerged in an elec trolytic bath and gradually eaten down to the necessary size. Before the World War, the finest thermo-couples were made in Ger many, and those used here were largely imported. American manu facture began with our entry into the war, and since that time our electric al experts have reached s degree of perfection in making of these tiny instruments equaled in no other country. DRY WHEAT TREATMENT WINS. The new dry method of treating seed wheat for protection against stinking smut has made so rapid pro gress in Oregon that growers are expected to purchase some 60,000 pounds of copper carbonate dust for the 1924 planting. The amount ued LOST One 8-yr-old steer, branded BHP on left hip; lower crop, or under slope in left ear; one 2 yr.-old steer, same brand and ear mark, high arched horns. Reasonable settlement to finder. R. II . FECK, Heppner. For sale at a bargain 7-room res idence with-full basement; on comer next to power house. Would con sider land or light auto truck in trade. W. H. CLARK. Box 24, Hepp ner, Oregon. tf. We have just received a shipment of Spokane Draper Company's har vesting machinery drapers. The be.it draper made. Come in and see them. PEOPLES HARDWARE COMPANY. FOR SALE-Seed corn; N. W. white dent. Acclimated to local conditions. Postpaid, 10c per pound. ALWYN JONES, Box 231, Arlington, Oregon. Experienced girl wants work, ranch preferred. Inquire at office,- or ad dress Box 187, Heppner. Remember we are selling hardwood at 10c a board foot. PEOPLES HARD WARE COMPANY. GOITER home Simple homt treatment. Send fur FRKE booklet and tesitmaniaU. WARNER'S RENOWN KD KKMEDIKS CO., 72S Se curity Bids.. Minneapolis, Minn. FOR SALE! 20V, Acres In Hood River. Ideal Berry and Chicken Hunch. 4 acres under cultivation. All un der irrigation. 1 mile from grad ed school. 2 miles from Odell. CASH PRICE, 30.00 PER ACRE L. G. DRAKE The easy may to cook -wick control no fire to lay concentrated heat Just turn up the wick, touch a match and the meal is started! That's the beauty of Pearl Oil and a good oil cook' stove! No overheat' ing, nothing to lug. But cookstove kerosene must be highest quality kep osene to vaporize properly ana not corrode metal parts. So be sure you order by name "Pearl Oil." It's refined and re-rcfined by a special Standard Oil Com' pany process to pre duce quality fuel especially suited for the purpose. Pearl Oil is ecoiv omical, odorless and good to the last drop. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) PEARL i OIL (MER08ENE) EVERWEAR HOSIERY We have just received an assort ment of the latest new colors: Airdale, Jack Rabbit Gray, Tan Bark, Pearl, Banana OUR PRICE RANGE FROM $1.00 to $3.00 Ladies' Silk Hosiery Only E. N. Gonty Shoe Store I HOSIERY HEADQUARTERS sr- rn h J V the i jrruaui 'J fcw 'u tar Mp btauitful ft Not In Style The m5n in the barrel is not dressed according to the latest mode, and is not in position to make the best impression. This, however, is not the case with your printing if it is done by The Gazette-Times A We dress it in the latest fash- i 11 r ion and it makes the right im- pression wherever it is seen. fjj