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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1925)
PAGE FOUR THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEPPNER. OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1925. This Week's Cross Word Puzzle . WALTER - BARNES HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE TW flnrt Wtr i4 ttk wort t tnrfKr4 b number plud fa taw blank whit tpfw. r4 by referring t th li-t of worte rivm below. y will ft ad tb eVAattioa. Fr trxtknr. nnmhrr dm hinwritJ firm ib definition of a word wfatck will fill in all tb wfcii ptu--a to tW firwi htmrk ir at the nrbt. Number on vertical rives the tVfintttnn for a wr4 whirh will flit in mil the whit spans to the flrst black pK be krm. IV btark spare mrtirst the t4 of a word. an4 no tetter is placed in them. When aotnpietail, the purxl must read both horisoDtailj and wiicUj or across and down. TW Ut a dissratt ward (a this rross-word panle a arraared by Walter Baraea. rverr ward is rmmmm ia th rrahsUi7 the aeraca adalt. A tiat limit ia aatvinf the. aasilt bM he a rnd test far anTsnt whs wished ta kssw Ja haw fast a thiakar the srs GH a had pff snd t ts it. i U, 5 R 3 'tTfT . It T5 Ft To mmf kas II li a? J aasBsl "ZZCFIZZ: DHZ pnzzc ztzzz: - Z Z Zfc !LfL zfcl 11 Z. Z r zzq ztzDz p HORIZONTAL Vanity. Hfgrin. Ceremonial. V.arhine to sow with. Whether. Saluted. Personal pronoun. City in Oregon. Large wtoto. Genuine. Edg. A drove. To oVluire. Virions sea fish. Cirri Ftwls. Hirher. Waikinr stick. To lick nn. To rlip off. Outfit, Analyze (Gram.) An animal. Br. Oreal food. Liquid measure (abbr.). Instrument for sewing. Triple. Margin (plural), Strat urn. VERTICAL 1. Preeedinr. 1 Plundered. 1. Pentonal pronoun. 4. Ex cava ted. h. Part of bead (piural). a. Appear. 7. To scatter trass for drying. 8. Public notice (tbbr.). Comment. 10. Tendency. 12. To arquiif knowiHge. 15. Part of a plant. 16. Old testament prophet. 19. Loved one, 21, Flower. 24. River in France. 2-5. Musical instrument (plural). 27. Married. ?9. Jump or leap. 32. Lured, SS. Kind of stone. 34. Overturn. 53. Little wave. Se. Wading bird. .V. Part of body. 46. Man's name. 42. Companion. 46. A nobleman. 4fi. A poem. 47. A meadow. 50. For example (abbr.). 54. Near. 4wrwer tn lat week's pnnle. 'Ah T AlLlE NTnS QTJA L LlOlW 0 l 1 1 vIeOd a Ht EASE N ' k EOgjE L AWjjA ri I D 5 EjRsnP A ROF R EED 1 K UYjO R E Htl t E NllR E kaiT tIeIn d IrieIlIat eh FjL E pTT"". . ' fo'EAM DLIA NiC ES i DjOjCjK E Til BBv-fjA R T IE" A RaLli ) iTnsiT AJRM"AMH T RAPQ l Ttao PETS T I N E DRJE" A DhP N E Af B QNiVnT i eHlIe ase REN;DkpBDnclAsTlER Court met in regular lesaion at the CouTt House in Heppner on Wed nesday, the 4th day of March, A. D. 1925, with all officers present, when among others the following proceed ings were had, to-wit: Court read the viewers' report in the matter of the road petition of A. A. Agee, et al. Court accepted the resignation of Harvie Young as Justice of the Peace for the 6th Justice District, and bar ing considered the petitions for the appointment of a successor, and being fully informed, accepted the petition of A, L. Cornett and appointed A. L. Cornett to fill the vacancy, and the bond of said A. L. Cornett as Justice of the Peace was duly approved.- Court granted a dance hall permit to H. W. Grim at Irrigon. The following bills were approved and ordered paid: Howard Cooper Cor., Spl. 1 t 63.67 State Highway Com, Gen. 6.36 Standard Oil Co, Gen. 2.58 W. L. McCaleb, Gen 3.73 W. T. Scott, Gen. 2.00 Cohn Auto Co, Gen. 4.55 Vaughn k Goodman, Gen. .60 A. S. Tate, No. 2 3.00 Henry Gorger, No. 3 4.00 Coast Flume Co, No. 8 2.13 J. T. Kirk. No. 16 2.75 W. W. Smead. Cur. Ex. 40.52 Martin Ried, Roads 20.95 Ealph Moore, No. 16 16.44 Bute Indus. Com, Roads 25.31 0. V. Gibson, No. 4 13.85 Arlington Bank, Epl. 2 101.31 Claud Brown, No. 16 29.90 Chas. Ritchie, No. 16 34.38 C. B. Orai, Sealer 8 2 Lydia Ritchie, Wid. Pen. 17.50 Rebecca Knight, Wid. Pen. 32.50 Dorothy Patter.on, Wid. Pen. 10.00 Millie Haney, Wid. Pen .. 10.00 M. E. Zochert, Wid. Pen. 10.00 Earl W. Gordon, Poor 25.00 Ida Fletcher, Poor 15.00 Jen Kirk, Poor 80.00 County Agent 200.00 A. A. Agee, No. 3 253.00 Phil Doherty, No. 8 119.20 Patterson A Son, Jail .60 Harvie Young, Justice Court 4.50 Heppner Light Co, Court Hse. 72.76 Howard Cooper Cor, Gen. Rd. 250.00 J. W. Kirschtier, Roads 80.30 Lester Doolittle, No. 16 9.00 H. L. Raimussen, Bridge 188.60 C. A. Harrington, No. 2 11.00 Robert Wilson, No. 2 11.00 1. T. Ayers, No. 6 . 100.00 H. McDunVe, No. 15 10.60 W. O. Baylesa, Roads 42.85 Martin Ried, Gen. Road 40.50 W. L. LaDusire, Cen. Road ..... 27.69 C. V. Hopper, Gen. Road . 13.62 Pac. Tel. Co.. Cur. Ex. 39.41 M. L. Case, Poor 222.66 A. H. Johnston, Various 17.76 W. R. Walpole, Poor 10.61 Irwln-Hodnon Co., Clerk 2.11 Bushong A Co, Office 96.17 H. M. Walker, Supt. 82.60 A. Rood, Sr., Poor - 6.00 A. D. McMurdo, Poor 45.00 Glass Prudhomme, Tax. Col. 136.09 Geo. McDulTee, Various 91.80 Gasetta-Times, Various 114.70 Kilham SUty. Co, Various 30.78 W. P. ProphU, Court Houne 40 Peoples Hdwt. Co, Court Hse. 8.16 Phelps Grocery Co, Court Hse. .70 Turn A-Lum Lbr. Co, Ct Hse. 8.50 I. t. Wells, Assessor 80.00 Hudson Land Co, Assessor 2.50 Remington Type. Co, Assessor 1.67 1 Thomson Bros, Jail . 1.96 J. A. Gravbeal. T. B. cattle . ... 6.26 F. 8, Parker, T. B. cattle 1.50 ! A E. Perry, Watermasler 84.18 J. F. Gorham, Health 21.00 0. Moore, et al. No. 16 6111.62 ! Farmers Bank. Roads 70.63 First Nat. Bank, Roads 621.19 Bank of lone. Roads 118.67 LEXINGTON Frank Munkers came up from Sa lem Saturday night for a few days visit with friends and relatives in Lexington. Mr. Munkers and family moved to Salem last fall and he re ports them very well satisfied with their new home. Lexington boys went to Condon Saturday night to play basketball with Fossil. The teams played on the Condon floor, Lexington boys win ning, thereby winning the champion ship of the Upper Columbia League. Ola McCormack is here from the veterans' hospital at Walla Walla. 0ii still claims Lexineton as his horn town and has to come to see how hit old cronies are, about ever so often. B. H. Grady and family spent the week-end at Goldendale, Wsh visit ing B. H.'s parents who live on their farm four miles out from Goldendale. Percy Allison and Bert Thornburg left Wednesday for The Dalles where they will move later If they find working conditions better than here. Bill Budden and Howard Slate and their families are moving to Boise, Idaho, where they are going to make their homes. W. C. Lacy of Portland, formerly of this place, is here this week look ing after his business interests. Sedrick Rainey came up from Sa lem last Saturday for a few days' visit with relatives and friends. Butch Hendrix is here from Astoria for a week's visit with his sister. Mrs. Gayly Johnson. Vernon Wade from Stanfield was visiting old friends in Lexington on Friday. F. Kelley and family of Hermiston have moved to the Cecil Warner place. HARDMAN Hardman has had a touch of win ter lately, it having snowed about a half-inch in the last two nights. Several Hardman people attended the get-together meeting of the Re bekah lodge at lone last Wednesday and reported having a very good time. Those attending were Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Robinson, Mrs. J. N. Bat ty, Mrs. L. E. Knighten, Mrs. W. H. Ayers, Miss Beulah Batty, Lewis Bat ty and Neal Knighten, who stopped off at Lexington to visit with friends. Mrs. J. N. Batty, Mrs. W. H. Ayers, Mrs. J. H. McDaniel, Miss Beulah Batty and Miss Haxel Hays were at Mrs. McDaniels practicing songs for the convention next Saturday. On account of the convention of the Rebekah lodge in Heppner next Saturday the seniors have postponed their play. The date will be given later. Several Hardman members are plan ning to attend the annual convention of the Rebekah lodge to be held in Heppner next Saturday. Miss Beth Bleakman, the primary teacher, was in Heppner Saturday visiting at the home of Mrs. Mary McDaniel. Messrs. J. N. Batty, L. E. Knighten, J. H. McDaniel were in Heppner on business last Monday. Laura Williams was called home last Thursday evening because of ill ness of her moth ex. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Huston were in town Friday evening doing business. Beulah Batty is again in school af ter an illness of several days. Glen Farrens was in town doing business last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Robinson were in town Sunday. BOARDMAN (Continued from First Pagw) in charge of the postoffice during Mrs. Root s absence. The J. C. Ballenger baler was mov ed back to Boardman Sunday from Willow creek where the outfit has been for some weeks. They are now baling at the Alex Wilson ranch. We are very glad to report that Mr. Sylvester Attebury, who was so ser iously injured is gradually improving. If pneumonia does not set in he has a good chance for recovery. Mrs. John Jenkins is enjoying a visit with her niece, Mrs. Sundsten and little son, who came recently from their home at Cascade Lock. Mrs. Glen Hadley went to Pendle ton last Friday where aha had her , tonsils removed. Dr. MrKetisie oper ated. She has recovered nicely. Word came of the aaf arrival of Mrs. Ingvaard Skoubo and am all tons at her old home in Denmark. She found her father quite ill. j Rlmo Rtissell has been quite ill j with an attack of la grippe. He i much improved but has not returned to school as yet. Harry Warren left Saturday night for Portland to see his wife who is convalescing gradually from a goitre operation. Clifford Olson U reported to be re covering gradually from his severe bums. He is still in the hospital at Pendleton. Oscar Beck, Ray and Roy Dempsey left Monday for La Crosse, Wash., where they will herd sheep for the summer. Prof. P. J. Mulkey and two mem bers of his teaching staff made ft short visit with Boardman friends Sunday. Mrs. M. L. Morgan and children, Bobby and Billy, left Saturday for Astoria where Mr. Morgan is em ployed. W. A. Murchie and wife left Thurs day for their home in Wasco after a few days' visit with the Ballengers. Mrs. Roy Howell of Parkdaie visit ed last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Royal Rands. The pool hall stock and fixtures were moved into Harry Murchie's building this week. Mrs. Glen Brown and children were guests at the J. T. Healey home Sun day for dinner. Boardman turned out in full force Saturday night to attend the smoker at Irrigon. Alice Aldred accompanied Mrs. Joyce Willis to Portland over the week-end. Geo. Agee has gone to Pendleton where he is employed on the highway. Oscar Beck and family moved to the Hines place last week. FOR SALE Good used Columbia phonopnph; 50 late records. Har wood's Jewelry Store. IT MARKET AGENT The March of Progress. A new harvesting machine, com bine, tractor propelled, has appeared in the wheat sections of Kansas and Oklahoma, which cuts the grain, threshes and cleans it at the same time. A truck runs along the side of the combine and the cleaned grain is spouted into it. When the truck is full another takes its place, while the full truck drives, to the elevator. The combines cut a swarth of 14 feet and can harvest a carload a day. Within 24 hours standing wheat can be converted into money in the bank. To Thin Oat the Surplus. Briefly the proposed bill before congress to aid the grain and stock raising farmers, is a national export corporation, with power to purchase surpluses, sell them abroad, and spread the possible loss over the whole domestic trade in these com modities. Wheat, corn, beef, pork and cereals are embraced. The U. S. Na tional Council of Agriculture is help ing the agricultural conference frame the bill. The Rochdale Plan. . Two years ago a little group of hard-pressed farmers in Iowa start ed out to supply themselves with groceries, shoes, flour, feed and other necessities at lower prices, if possi wmmmmmmm That Fellow Feeling W0U are all wrapped up in the merchandise that fills your store. You enthuse over the qual ity of this article and that line. You probably display the goods at tractively, too. All you need now is to transmit your enthusiasm to the buying pub lic of your community and your goods will move out and profits roll in. ADVERTISE. For advertis ing makes the customer feel as you do about the goods you have to sell. Every time you talk to prospective buyers through an Advertisement in The Gazete-Times, you are in creasing the fellow feeling that brings business to your store. ble. Each member put in $10, traded it out and then put in f 10 more. They did so well that now there is a large. growing organisation, incorporated under the non-stock co-operative law of that state, and tho tiny store from which the movement started has grown Into a large business. tSc Jumps to $10.00. A southern newspaper aptly illus trates the crooked trail a commodity ha? to take between the producer and consumer in the following which is condensed. A colored man sold his bale of cot ton to a street buyer for 28 centa per pound, who in turn added his profit and sold it to a broker. The broker added his profit and sold it to a mill. The mill made the cotton into cloth, added its profit, and shoved it along to a garment manufacturer, who in turn had it made into a frock and shipped it to a wholesaler. The whole saler placed the garment on a rack, added his profit, and sold it to a country merchant. The merchant placed it in his display window and sold it for $9.98. The frock repre sented 98 cents' worth of cotton; $1.36 worth of labor; $2.08 cents' worth of transportation and $5.55 worth of salesmanship. Selling Cream on Its Worth. All over the country there Is In sistent demand that cream, butter and cheese be bought and sold on grade and the dairy organisations that recognize this coming change and accept it before being forced in, will be in a better position. The state market agent states that all through the east, middle west and Canada this movement is spreading and he states that it is his belief that in the near future that it will be almost impossi ble to sell cream, butter or cheese unless it is graded. THE EDITOR'S EASY CHAIR. We have a friend who breezes into our office at stated intervals, and if perchance he finds us at our desk he sings, "The editor sat in his easy chair." Now, this man is one of our very best friends but we resent his continual assumption that the editor does nothing but sit in his easy chair. Another man came in to collect a bill this morning and he found us setting a head at the case. "Why, I thought you never worked," said this humor ist. "Why, my dear sir," we replied, "I have worked nearly 62 years in a printing office, and as publisher of newspapers over 63 years." "A very commendable record you may well be proud of, he replied, and then pro ceeding further, aaid: "It seems to be a prevalent idea throughout the com munity that an editor just loafs about the office and draws his salary.1 Ye gods and little fishes! Do people be lieve that the newspaper prints it self? Do they imagine the types just march into line and fill the columns? If some of the men who think an edi tor sits in an easy chair could spend a whole day with said editor, they would very quickly change that point of view. Then there ia another wise guy who calls at the office at intervals and brings in a column or two of matter "just to fill up the paper." If the average reader of any newspaper could see the editorial waste basket he would be amazed at the amount of propaganda, free press stuff and vain efforts to get advertising published as news that goea into that waste basket every day. Just why, otherwise intel ligent men, will spend money in an effort to get something for nothing in the newspaper is one of the big prob lems of today. Ever since the World war, when newspaper editors gener-! ously printed columns of free matter for the war loans, the army and navy activities, and other appeals for for eign relief, a hundred corporations have been trying to get into print on the same basis. They have wasted enough money in this effort to pay for the space they seek at the regular ad vertising rates. Politicians, reform ers, charity workers, a hundred wel fare organizations that pay everybody else a salary, pile the editor's reak hjgh with free publicity. For a time the editor smiled and hung the copy on the compositor's hook, but as ev erybody got to doing it, the hook wouldn't hold the free copy and the waste basket got the overflow. Today the waste basket won't hold it and most of it goes direct from the edi torial desk to the baler. In self-defense the editor who seeks to meet his bills and pay his employees has adopted the very simple little slogan: "You charge, we charge." Which means that advertising for all events where an admission fee is charged must be paid for. No, the editor does not Bit in an easy chair. He has as many problem as other business men. He puts in as many hours and goes home just as tired as other business men and he never needs any copy "just to help fill up the paper." Shelby County Leader, Shelbyville. 111. RGasSr SERVICE STATION Union Gasoline I Oils, Differential, Transmission and Cup Grease TIRES and TUBES FREE AIR and WATER FERGUSON BROTHERS I Announcement AGENCY BRUNSWICK RADIOLAS at HARWOOD'S JEWELRY STORE Heppner, Oregon m I i 1 i 3 w I! Hfllllllllllll 1 ill a . m mmmMmrmmmimmn There's a RADIOLA for Every Purse PRICE CHANGES EFFECTIVE FEB. 1st Guaranteed to Aug. 1st RADIOLA III $45.23 (Not loud speaking) RADIOLA III-A $98.50 (108J6 130.00 down, 17.85 per month.) RADIOLA REGENOFLEX $134.00 ($147.00140.00 down, 110.70 per month) RADIOLA X $165.00 ($181.50 145.00 down, $13.65 per month) RADIOLA SUPERHETRODYNE, $272.00 ($300.00 $76.00 down, $22.50 per month) Prices include cost of delivery and installation with guar antee and three months' free aerrice privilege. A big organization extending over three counties enables us to give real service and satisfaction. MAURICE A. FRYE EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL - 8TUDEBAKER SIXES AN ADVERTISEMENT IS AN INVITATION Closing Out Sale, of our Oliver Implements Big reduction on Plows, Superior Drills and Repairs. 3-hottotn, 14- 16-in Oliver Gang Plows, $139 2-bottom, 14-, 16-in. Oliver Gang Plows, $99 Come in early as our stock will not last long at these prices. First quality Copper Carbonate now in stock Peoples Hardware Co. IE ARE now in our new quarters in the Garrigues Building on Main Street,' and within a very short time expect to be nicely fitted up. In the meantime, we are prepared to serve you with anything you may need in the line of BEEF - PORK - VEAL - MUTTON FISH : CURED MEATS AND LARD Phone in your orders for the regular de livery, but in case you are too late for this send them along anyway and we will see that you are served in time by making di rect delivery from the shop. YOURS FOR SERVICE CITY MARKET Phone Main G53 ARE YOUR VALUABLE PAPERS SAFE? or ARE THEY EXPOSED TO FIRE AND THEFT? Let us show you our steel in cased individual Safe Deposit Boxes where at a small cost your insurance pol icies, bonds and other valuable papers will be SAFE. Farmers & Stockgrowers National Heppner Bailli Oregon Star Theater FRIDAY and SATURDAY, MARCH 13-14 FRED THOMPSON and his Horse Silver King" in "NORTH OF NEVADA" A western atory full of pep and action. "Silver Wng" pleases everyone. You will be glad to see him again. MACK BENNETT COMEDY "WHEN SUMMER COMES" Fourth episode of "THE WAY OF A MAN" SUNDAY and MONDAY, MARCH 15-16 OWEN MOORE, SYDNEY CHAPLIN, SYLVIA . BREAMER, TULLY MARSHALL, and other stars in "HER" TEMPORARY HUSBAND" The atory of a girl who married a man on the brink of the grave and wh owas too darn mean to tumble in. What de lightful mix-up of comedy. It Is Just full of those little things that bring laugh after laugh until the final fade-out. You'll Laugh at This Mix-up You'll Roar at the Fix-up. Here la a picture you wan tto aee; It will make you forget your troubles and to realize that life Is meant to live, not Just a atate to tolerate because you must. Also FELIX TUES., WEDS., THURS., MARCH 17-18-19 COLLEEN MOORE in "THROUGH THE DARK" The beat of the popular "Iloatnn Illackie" stories, charged with a high voltage of love, thrills nd suspense. Good and bad things result from accidental happenings you'll be thrilled through a maze of thrilling, gripping, coin-t pelllng and dellghftul situations. Opens with a big punch, ACTION all the way through. Also Larry Semon Comedy NEXT WEEK. "THE SHOOTING OF DAN McGREW," "THE MAR RIAGE CIRCLE," "THE HUNTRESS" 1 I