THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 192o. PAGE FIVE George Thomon and family left Heppner on Monday, their destine tion being- Seaside, Or.jon, where the family expect to spend the winter. Howerer, they had ear trouble aboo the time they reached lone and were compelled to return to Hennner for repaira. They expect to have things in anape to make their journev til th end of the week. The Thomion residence will be occupied during the rail and winter by the Miitea Denn Coon and Simpion, teachera in the Heppner achool. John C. Gentry of Valley Junction. Iowa, li visiting- with hia aunt, Mrs. Karati Rrnarn unA I .. t : ... - Heppner. Mr. Gentry, accompanied oj jus. r.. newman, a -young friend, mail tha trln tn t .... i... t" I and after attending the Pendleton nouna-up ana tne Heppner Rodeo, will tart nn in..n I ins; by way of California. Mr Gentry Tieiieu nere za years ago, and dur ing that time there have been many cnanges laae place nere. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Naylor and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Morris of Walla Wal la were visitors here during the past week, coming down on Thuradav last. Mr. Naylor is a cousin of Mrs. Rose Richardson, and he and Mrs. Naylor were guests of Mrs. Richardson. Mr. and Mra. Morris also visited with relatives here. The gentlemen spent few days in deer hunting in the mountains. Mr. and Mrs. Morris are the parents of Mrs. Naylor. Tom Gurdana has been appointed to the position of chief of police at Pendleton, succeeding the late Jinks Taylor, who died from the effects of an accident on last Thursday evening at the Round-Up grounds. Gurdane was formerly head of Pendleton's po lice department and served in this capacity for ten years, being consid ered a very efficient officer. He is a brother of D. C. Gurdane, formerly of Heppner. It la reported that Fred Raymond, who has for a number of years past been farming the Padbcrg place on Rhea creek, has given up the farm and Is going to return to the state of Washington, expecting to continue In the farming game north of the Snake river. Mr. Raymond came to Mor row eodnty from the Prescott country and purchased the Henry Padberg place from the late Lee Padberg. Dr. Purkey, who was located in this city for a year or more, arrived at Heppner on Monday, being accompan ied byhia wife and mother. They visited during the week, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Pieper. Dr. Purkey and family are on their return to Portland from a trip to Vancouver, B. C. and other points up north, Mrs. Jennie Booher, who for the past four seasons has helped with the housework on the Davidson A McCurdy ranch in Gooseberry, re turned to Heppner on Tuesday, hav ing finished for this season after put ting in 68 days during the wheat har vest and threshing. She will make her home in this city for the winter. Tom Boylen Jr., was in Heppner for a short time on Tuesday. He has finished gathering In his wheat crop out on the borders of Butter creek and reports that the yield in the Pine City section was not heavy, but fair considering that It was all spring sowing. Al Troedson brought up the re turns from Cecil precinct on Tuesday morning. He was a member of the board and states that the light vote in his precinct was a disappointment. People failed to take the interest in the bond election that he thought they should. W. P. Mahoney returned on Fri day evening from an absence of about two weeks, visiting Spokane and other pointa north. He waa accom panied on the trip by Mrs. Mahoney and daughter, Patricia, and K. K. Mahoney, who will return home la ter. J. W. Sibley, who for the past twenty years has farmed some 800 acres of land out north of Lexington, Informs this psper that he is com pelled to give up the place. Mr. Sib ley would like to get another farm hereabouts that ha could rent . Judge Phelps has returned home to Pendleton, and he writes County Clerk Anderson that he Is attending to some business pertaining to his office. The numerous friends of the Judge in this county will be pleased to hear of his recovery. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Robinson, for merly of Hardman, are now located at The Dalles, where they direct their Gazette-Times to be sent. Mr. Rob inson has a good job with The Dalles Garage, while Mrs. Robinson works in the hospital there, Bert Mason, merchant, and Dwight Mianer, wheatralser, of lone, passed through Heppner on Monday, return ing from the mountains where they spent a day or so huntnlg. These gentlemen each got a buck. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Huston of Eight Mile were visitors in this city on Monday. Ijiij ' U lb'' I b l lsp I 'Athtri ttanift fm atllfr brMVolu" Carnation Mush brings to your breakfast bowl all the flavor, all the nutriment, of golden wheat fields. And does it (n 5 mlnutts thanks to the Albers process. Ask your grCerl g Mrs. Lucy T. Wadding departed the past week for Topeka, Kansas, where she haa accepted a poaitioa as teach er In Bethany college, an Episcopal school of that city. Mrs. Wedding had charge of the Alpine high school last year. Mrs. Fannie Rood arrived at Hepp ner on Saturday for a visit of a week. Mra. Rood waa on her return home to Portland from Denver, where she haa been spending a short time visiting a sister residing in that city. Fred Tash waa called to Walla Walla on Sunday In answer to word announcing the very grave illness of his mother, Mrs. Hiram Tash. Mrs. Tash who has been ill for a long time, passed to her reward Sunday evening. The American Legion Auxiliary will hold ita regular meeting on Monday evening, Sept. 21, at Bethel chapel. The hostesses for the evening will be Mrs. Bauman and Mra. Johnston. Mrs. Walter Moore, Secretary. J. B. Huddleston was in the city for a day or ao the first of the week. He had been at Pendleton the oant week, attending the raeeting there of users of the national forest with of ficials of the government. C. A. Rhea, who haa been living on a place near Hillsboro for the pant year, has disposed of his holdings there. He arrived at Heppner the first of the week and will make his home here this winter. Strayed away from Pendleton Sheep Co.'s Pine City ranch, 2' bay marc mules, branded B on left shoulder. Liberal reward. Notify H. L. Pear son or Tom Boylen, Jr. LOST Lady's gold watch with chain; Elgin closed case. Reward. Lost either on streets of Heppner or road leading to Eight Mile. Finder leave at this office. Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Clark of Eight Mile departed Tuesday for Redmond, Oregon, for a visit of a week or so at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Nel lie Allen. Raymond McCormick of Lexington has taken up his home in Heppner, being employed at the filling station of Ferguson Broa. Miss Florence Cason has accepted a place in the store of Patterson aV Son, beginnnig work there the past week. Paul Aiken who has been spending a few months at Oakland, Calif., re turned home the first of the week. Vnr fiol not. w.-l. .. - 1 . leather upholstered couch; both good as new. Call Main 523. New Champion ell This nineteen year old school boy, Fedel La Barba of Los An geles, startled the fistic world b winning the flyweight champion ship from Frankie Genaro of New York, in a decision bout Now is the time to order your COAL for your winter needs TUM-A-LUM LUMBER CO. Heppner, Lexington, tone mm The UNIVERSITY of OREGON contains: The Collcfle of Literature. Science and the Arta with 22 deportments. The professional schools of Archi tecture and Allied Arta Business Administration Education Grad uate Study Journolism Law Medicine Music Physical Edu cation Soclolojy Extension. for a catotojut or onj) Information Wrttt Th Rejutrar, UntiHriitg of Oregon, Eujtn; Orejon. TheSOlh Yen Opens September 24, 1925 Took Man Centuries to See Value of Fork ' In the "good old timet," whvn hu man beinga were always within 24 boura of narration, man ate only wltb bla fingera. lie hunted for bis food u the woods or by the eea abore, and be picked the bone clean. Two tehle art Idea are found among uncivilized peoples the anue ana the spoon. The knife waa originally a weap on of attack or defense; it was uawa ror cutting and curving flesh, but its convenience in eating soon became apparent. The origin of the spoon la uncer tain. It must have been Invented at a very ancient date, for it la round among people that have never come into contact with civilization. The necessity toi having some implement ror dipping water seems to have led flrat to the Invention of the calabash, or the use of the co conut shell, and later on to the spoon. It waa many thousand years later before there were forks. As a French writer on table etiquette has said, "from the creation of the world until the beginning of the Seventeenth century man ate only with bis Angers." This Is, how ever, a mistake of 400 years, for wa And forka as early as the Thir teenth century, when they are men tioned as being kept for special pur poses. British Guiana Jungle Still Aw Jits Explorer British Oulana bush Is a danger ous maze. Savages find their way by means of secret marks, but a tenderfoot enters at great risk. The country la five times the size of Knglund, and there are not more than ten white men who bave gone Into the wilds of the Interior, ac cording to D. Bannerman Clarke, M. A., gvnerul tnanHger of the Aranka Gold, Limited, of George town, British Oulana, says the Lon don Mall. The natives, he says, bave the most marvelous sense of direction, and find their way through the Jun gle with unerring precision. They bave a sort of sign language. They make marks on trwa which only they understand, and If some one has followed the natives he can al ways tell how large the party was, whither they went, and Just when they passed the given spot by these curious marks on the trees made with cutlasaes. They also leave marks for their own guidance when they turn about and start homeward. Youth and Middle Age Touth la the time for action middle age for thought. In youth, red-handed, red-ankled, with songs and shoutings, we gather In the grapes; In middle nge, under our own flg tree or in quiet gossip with a friend, we drink the wine free of all turbid lees. Youth Is a lyrical poet middle age Is a fiilet essayist, fond of recounting experiences, and of appending a moral to every in cident. In youth the world la strange and unfiimlllur, novel and exciting; everything wears the face and garb of a stranger; In middle age the world Is covered over with reminiscences as with a garment, It Is made homely wltb usage. It Is made sacred with graves. City May Have Been Myth The ancient city of Troy Is sup posed to have occupied a slight ele vation near the foot of Mount Ida, In Uysla, and nearly surrounded" By the Klver Sramander, but its loca tion la In dlapu'e and some even doubt that I; over existed. Ttw foundlLg of the kingdom Is ascribed to Teucer, wboae grandson waa Troaa, who waa the father of II ua, wbo called the eity Dlum after him self and also Troja after Troaa, bis rathe The classic poeU say that the walls of the city were built by the magic sound of Apollo's lyre. The date of the taking of the dty after ten-year siege la usually placed at 1184 & a Youthful Mountains As old as the bills means little In Haiti, for the mountains there) are very young and the earth's crust very mobile. Dr. Wendell P. Woodrlng of the United States geological survey says that the rising of tbese hills probably -causes the earthquakes wblch at intervals shake the north ern part of the country. Some of the coral reef caps cover marine terraces that rise like gigantic stairs from sea level to a height of about 1,500 feet. These terrace, begun in Miocene times, are pre served because of the aridity of the climate and underground drainage. Fight Decided Name In 1803 the community now known as Barre, Vt., was undecided at to tiie new name for the town, the original name of which was Wllbet burgb. A change was decided on in 1783. Eventually the prospective names narrowed down to two. Hol der, sponsored by Capt. Joseph Thompson, and Barre, offered by Jonathan- Sherman, both names be ing after Massachusetts towns. The controversy developed Into a fist fight, Sherman winning. The city fathers and the legislature hon ored the victor by naming the town Barre. DUpoial of "Dead Letters" Letters and other mall matter which cannot for any reason be de livered are sent to the dead letter office. Where possible the dead letter office returns this mall to the senders. Otherwise the letters are destroyed. Valuable articles are kept for a certain length of time In the office. Some time ago the Post-Office department sold at pub lic auction a large number of such objectc Inquiries respecting lost mail should give tne date when it was mailed and should be ad dressed to Division of Dead Let ters, Post-Office department. Wash ington. Pathfinder Magazine. Easy to Discover the , Moral in This Story It was indeed a lucky day when Barry Raymond of Los Angeles em barked for San Francisco. The steamer was crowded with passen gers and there were not enough staterooms to go round. Harry no ticed an old gentleman who had no place to sleep, and taking pity on his age, offered to share his stateroom with him. The old man gladly accepted and tne two occupied the room to gether. Samuel Harrison, Ray mond's guest proved to be a broth er of Raymond's mother. Then Ray mond learned that another uncle, Henry Harrison, had died, leaving a fortune of about SVXXOOO to Ray mond's mother. But Raymond's mother was dead and Raymond was entitled to the inheritance. So Is kindness rewarded not only in romances but also very often In everyday life. Pathfinder Magazine. 1 f f w v v sw i.- if uyj C AWlfit0 Attn Try GOLDEN WMT TBA Orange Pekoe mi Green Jtpm the heart of the Golden West and the visitor sees towering snow-capped mountains- forests primeval' - glimmering stretches of water -and can soothe his mind and body with a satisfying cup of West wgT Ancient Plate Prized by Historical Society The Verendrye plate, a square bit f leaden plate, la said to be the most celebrated bit of matter In South Dakota's hiatory. It repotet in the capital building at Pierre, in poHealon of the South Dakota His torical society. It was found burled In the earth near Pierre In 1917. This remarkable plate was pre pared either In prance or in Mon treal at the request of the older Verendrye, and in anticipation of the expedition of 1741, which bad been planned by his eldest son Pierre, Into the Mandan country In the far wilderness of America. It la thought that the explorers plant ed the plate on the banks of the Missouri, opposite what Is now Pierre, on the hill where It waa found. It bears, translated from French, this Inscription: "In the twent.v-tilxth year of the reign of Louis XV, the most Illus trious Lord, the Lord Marquis of Beauharnols being Viceroy, 1751, Pierre Gaultler de Luverendrye placed this." Detroit News. "For the Merry Heart Is a Gladsome Thing" Fortunately for the world Its sup ply of Bottled Sunablne far exceeds that of its Wet Blankets. If this were not so what an unbearable place the world would he I Some lands, people and centuries are rlfher In It than others. Children and puppies and kittens and lambs and all young things (unless they be III) are Bottled Sunshine. Pre cious atones and coal, flower buds and aeeds and the kernels of fruit are Bottled Sunshine. Flashes of kindly wit and peals of laughter from out of a merry heart are its very essence. Beautiful, bewitching, attractive In an unatahle, uncertain sort of way, are the dispositions of some people, of whom it may be said. "They have a mercurial tempera ment." Better to be merry, to be known as Bottled Sunshine, with a heart as full of the Joy and gladness of living as are the woods of singing birds In the springtime. Montreal t-'iimlly Tlornld. a C ' THE NEW FALL vaaa Mark Rat, HAVE ARRIVED Many of them with two pairs of pants. The colors are beautiful. You should aee the new "Saharr Tan" and "Antwerp Blue" shades. The atylea are the very latest THE PRINCE OF WALES in both single- and donble-breataed. Wide bottom trousers. I also carry a very complete line for the conservative man. DAVID A. WILSON A MAN'S STORE FOR MEN HEPPNER, OREGON V H IIIIIIIIMMIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllillllulllliliiiiiiiiHiuilliiiiiiitK 1 Order Your 1 I SEED WHEAT) I Now I We have some Forty Fold, average I I 97 1-4 per cent pure, and Certi- I fied Hybrid 128. I Heppner Farmers Elevator j nllllllllllllNIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIUIUIINHHIIIIIIUNIIIIiniHIIIIIINIUHIIItllimtl The HEPPNER BAKERY can bake all the bread that is consumed in Heppner and then some. Does' Portland bread bring any prosperity or payrolls to Heppner? Hepp ner bread costs no more and for cash you save 2570 9 cents a pound loaf, 3 for 25c. Do Portland bakers have any money invest edo rpay taxes here? Do they donate any thing to the welfare of the city, or do they just take your money. THINK IT OVER. HEPPNER BAKERY AND CONFECTIONERY Farmers Have your seed wheat recleaned and dry treated on your farm. Phone or call at Peoples Hardware Co., Brown Warehouse Co., or see W. T. Wheeler Central Market C. W. McNAMER, Proprietor FRESH AND CURED MEATS, FISH AND POULTRY Call us when you have anything in our line to sell Phone Main 652 The brush leaves tlO trace Rasmussen's Pure Paint dries without brush marks -- The double grinding in pure unseed oil gives Rasmussen this out standing advantage. Asfc your dealer for color cards. Ask your painter for an estimate. Jr VARNISHES For Exttriort RASMUSSEN PURE PAINT A Iso Creoaote Shingle StaimPorch Floor Paint; Barn and Root Paint; Truck, Tractor and Implement Paint; Automobile Enamels; Spar Varnish; Roof Coating; Concrete and Cement Coating. For Inter ion Wall-Dura Washable Wall Paint; Racolite Enamels; Inside Root Paint; Oil Stains; Floor and Var nish Stain; BathTub EnameU3ui able Fioor Varnish. KotmujMn 6r Company Portiand art Smuit Sold by GILLIAM & BISBEE HARWOOD'S A COMPLETE LINE OF Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry We repair any make of clocks and watches, old or new. If you have a Swiss watch that will not run bring it here. . We guarantee all our repair work. Also Pianos and Phonographs and the latest in sheet music and phonograph records. Agent for the Brunswick Radiola Think of a radio and phonograph all in the same cabinet. CALL MAIN 1062 FOR CORRECT TIME Main Street, Heppner, Ore. OUR Closing Out SALE Continues With all prices prevailing as per previous announcement. SUGAR $725 PER SACK Entire Stock Must Go SAM HUGHES CO. Cflf Hhl CImiii Sj Drrm