Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, January 17, 1929, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAN. 17, 1929.
ALPINE.
By Gertrude E. Tichenor
Mr. and Mrs. Irl Clary and son,
Irl, Jr.. and daughter Mildred, ac
companied Mrs. Anna Heiny to But
ter creek on Sunday. They spent
the day with Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Ncill of Pine City.
The various members of the fam
ily of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Jarmon
have been suffering from the Influ
enia. Most of the victims have
recovered and have gone back to
their duties at school. The grand
children who were the last to con
tract the disease have not yet fully
recovered.
Miss Margaret Melville left Satur
day for Portland, where she has
been attending Behnke-Walker Bus
iness college. She spent the Christ
mas season vacation at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. Mel
ville. The church services at Pine City
were well attended on Sunday, all
report having enjoyed Milton W.
Bower's sermon and the general
discussions. Dr. Conder of Hepp
ner was teacher of the Bible class.
Services next Sunday will be held
at Alpine. Everybody is welcome.
Mike Sepanek and daughters,
Bernice and Bertha, were Heppner
visitors on Saturday.
C. Melville was a Heppner visitor
on Wednesday of last week.
Those of the G. L. Bennett fam
ily who have suffered from the in
fluenza are Mrs. Merle Bennett,
Ruth, and G. L. Bennett himself,
all are recovered, though Mr. Ben
nett is not entirely out of danger.
Mr. and Mrs. Irl Clary entertained
on Saturday, Willard Halley, for
merly of Grass Valley.
The semester examinations were
held at the Alpine high school last
week, all the students passing with
good grades. The new semester
opened Monday with a new stu
dent, Bernice Sepanek, who is tak
ing a post graduate course in for
eign language.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Melville were
Pendleton visitors on Saturday.
Mrs. Melville found it necessary to
have an optical examination.
Messrs. Harry Hammond and Leo
Ernhardt of Hermiston were Sun
day guests at the home of the Miss
es Bernice and Bertha Sepanek.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Sepanek en
tertained at a card party on Sunday
evening, the following being pre
sent: Mr. and Mrs. Irl Clary and
Mr. and Mrs. George Lambirth and
children Doris, Celatha and Lester,
also Harry Hammond and Lester
Ernhardt of Hermiston.
Mr. and Mrs. George Lambirth
entertained at a card party on Sat
urday evening. After a session at
pinochle, Mrs. Lambirth served
luncheon. Besides the Lambirth
family those present were Mrs. An
na Heiny, Merle Bennett, Willard
Halley, and Mr. and Mrs. Irl Clary
and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Finley and
son Claud were Pendleton visitors
on Saturday.
Mrs. Thorn of Pendleton who has
been acting nurse at the Bennett
home for the past three weeks re
turned to her home on Monday.
Willard Halley called on the var
ious neighbors throughout the com
munity on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Melville were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Ben
nett on Monday afternoon.
MORGAN
Wid Palmateer spent the week
end at The Dalles consulting a phy
sician. Elmer and Harry Peterson and
Mlidred Morgan of lone were visit
ing at the H. O. Ely home Sunday.
Quite a number from here attend
ed the dance at Cecil Saturday
night, given by the Willow grange.
Everyone reported a very enjoyable
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. John Nash and
family visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Clayton of Rhea Siding Friday
night
The Oddfellows had Initiation and
"feed" Thursday night Qufte a
number attended from lone.
Sunday school was reorganized
Sunday with thirty present Mrs.
Bert Palmateer was elected super
intendent; Chester Hutchcroft as
sistant superintendent; Edith Ely,
secretary, and Mrs. Hal Ely, trea
surer. There will be Sunday school
every Sunday at eleven. Everyone
is invited to attend.
Andrew and James Porter are
moving on the Alfred Adem ranch.
Mrs. Anderson has returned to
her home at McMinnville after vis
iting some time with her daughter,
Mrs. C. Hutchcroft.
The "flu" victims of this vicinity
are all on the road to recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Harbison at
tended church in lone Sunday.
Alfred Troedson was in Hermis
ton Wednesday and Thursday get
ting dental work done.
Donald Heliker of lone spent Sun
day with Walter and Ralph Gibson.
By Arthur Brisbane
To Live Long, Eat Little.
A Small Piece of Land.
No Peace Prize.
Two Coolidge Virtues.
Reasonable expectation of life is
now limited to fifty-five years for
the average. Formerly, when open
sewers ran through streets, with
graveyards on hillsides draining
into wells below, life averaged less
than twenty years. Science says
we already have sufficient medical
knowledge to make life s expecta
tion twelve years longer, but we
don't use what we know.
The big problem Is extending life
for men and women past fifty. Bar
ring cancer and other troubles, not
understood, prolonging life is not
complicated. Eat sleep, exercise
and breathe properly and living to
ninety will not be difficult Eating
is especially Important We are
what we eat
Luigl Cornaro proved It when, at
fort years of age, doctors told him
his case was hopeless.
He cut his diet to twelve ounces
of solid food, with fifteen ounces of
light wine per day, wrote an in
teresting book when past ninety,
lived past one hundred and wrote
to the Archbishop of Venice: "I
mount my horse without difficulty
and had to live past ninety to real
ize that the world Is beautiful." He
made his wife live as he lived, and
she passed one hundred. Francis
Bacon supplies Interesting details
of Cornaro's life, as do other an
cient writers.
Real estate dealers, old and
young, paste In your hats.
One hundred years ago a small
piece of land, part of the old Botan
ical Gardens in New York, was
bought for $4,807.36. The land,
three blocks, is on Fifth avenue.
John D. Rockefeller, Jr., has just
secured that piece of property for
$100,000,000, an increase to make a
good single taxer shudder.
Mr. Rockefeller will use part of
the property for a new Opera
House, to be built in a fashion to
allow students and others to have
musical talent but no diamond
necklaces, to see or hear.
The money goes to Columbia Col
lege, which now owns the land.
That probably reconciles Mr.
Rockefeller to so large an invest
ment He inherits from his father, who
gave tens of millions to the Uni-
.... - . nr.
8f Helena f?ubinsleirt
Old not beanty prove most precious
when its opposite obtained?
Browning.
Beautiful hair is a subject much
too important to beauty to suffer
much neglect Women are natur
ally endowed with good healthy, at
tractive hair. You have only to
look at any child and convince your
self of this fact If in later years,
we neglect our hair If through in
frequent or too frequent washings
we destroy the gloss and finish of
it we have only ourselves to blame.
However, taking for granted the
fact which is all true that very
few women reach thirty with the
hair beauty they were meant to
have, it doesn't do for us to blame.
The thing to do is to set to work
and repair the damage.
Whether your hair is long or
short thick or fine black or white,
there is one daily practice which its
good appearance demands, and
that is brushing.
If you really want beautiful hair,
B ' t B 1!
mm
versity of Chicago, an interest In
educational enterprises.
An association organized in hon
or of Woodrow Wilson held Its an
nual dinner, but didn't give a peace
prize to anybody. Secretary Kel
logg certainly worked hard enough
to deserve a prize.
President Coolidge deserves two
prizes, for continuing to mind his
own business, and for minding the
business of the United States, leav
ing Europeans to mind theirs.
Perhaps the Woodrow Wilson
committee don't like to honor any
Republican, like the colored lady
whose apartment was invaded by
a burglar, while a Bryan parade
was passing. Asked why she didn't
scream, she put her head out of
the window and replied, "I didn't
want folks to think I was hollering
for Bryan."
A collection of miserable human
beings, losing sleep, undergoing
useless torture, engage in a 'talk
ing marathon."
The one remaining awake and
talking, for the greatest number of
hours, receives $1,000.
A civilization that does not al-
you cannot neglect this all-important
rite.
Brushing sounds simple enough,
doesn't It? yet I really doubt if
there Is one woman in a hundred
who knows the technique of hair
grooming. Get yourself a bottle of
Hair Tonic and either a pair of
military brushes or a good, firm
handled, firm bristled brush. Part
the hair rub a little tonic in at
the partings and then brush with
long even strokes. Be sure that
your strokes start at the scalp and
end at the very end of your hair
one hundred strokes a night is
only a good healthy average, and is
you are really sincere about improv
ing the health and beauty of your
hair you will not begrudge the ef
fort of an extra fifty strokes or
more. Next week I shall take up
the subject of Shampoos.
UHMiiiMiiiiiiiitiiimiiiimiMiiiiimimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiMiiiii
MiiimiiiMiiiHimiMiiimiiiiMimiiiimiiiitiiiiii!:
ST. PATRICK'S CHURCH.
Rev. Thomas J. Brady, pastor.
Next Sunday, January 20, will be
the Becond Sunday after Epiphamy,
and there will be a first mass in
Boardman at 7:45 sharp, so as to
enable the pastor to return to Hepp
ner, where there will be a second
mass at 11 o'clock. The mass in
Boardman will be said in Root's hall
and while in Boardman the pastor
will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Peter Slevin. The pastor will preach
at both services. He will leave
Heppner on next Saturday forenoon
for Boardman, making a brief call
upon Mrs. Patrick Farley and fam
ily. The mass usually said on the
fourth Sunday in The Sands will be
said in lone, at the home of Mr. J.
P. O'Meara, at 10:30, with a first
mass on the same Sunday in Hepp
ner at 8:30.
The pastor left on Monday morn
ing's motor bus for Portland on
business. He expects to be back in
Heppner on Friday afternoon.
Anson Wright and son Walter
were Saturday visitors In the city.
Up Hardman way there is little fog,
and the sun comes out quite warm
nearly every day. In fact this
seems to be the prevailing condition
In the mountains and foothills.
SOME EVENTS OF 1928 THAT WILL
BE LONG REMEMBERED
JANUARY
11 Thomas Hardy, famous British author, dies.
21 Col. Geo. W. Goethals, builder of Panama Canal, dies.
FEBRUARY
8 Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh completes his 7,860 mile good
will flight over Mexico and Central America,
MARCH
6 First non-stop flight from New York to Havana accomplished
by Charles Levine.
13 Captain Hinchcliffe and Elsie Mackay begin ill-fated attempt
to span the Atlantic from England.
30 New endurance flight record of 53 hours 36 minutes set by
George Haldeman and Eddie Stinson at Jacksonville, Fla.
APRIL
5 Chauncey Depew dies.
13 Koehl, Von Huenfleld and Fitzmaurice complete the first suc
cessful east-west flight across the Atlantic. Secretary of State
Kellogg begins negotiations for a treaty to outlaw war.
l&George H. Wilkins and Lieutenant Eielsn complete 2,200
mile flight over the North Pole region from Alaska.
25 Floyd Bennett, Byrd's companion on the North Pole flight,
dies of pneumonia while attempting to carry aid to the stranded
Bremen flyers at Greenly Island.
MAY
24 Dirigible Italia, with General Umberto Noblle as commander,
flies over the North Pole.
JUNE
18 Miss Earhart completes trip in plane Friendship, being the
first woman to fly across the Atlantic.
24 General Nobile rescued from ice pack by Lieutenant Einar
Lundborg.
JULY
1 General Obregon elected President of Mexico.
4 Captain Alfred Lowenstein falls or leaps to death from pri
vate airplane over English Channel.
17 General Obregon assassinated.
21 The famous English actress Ellen Terry dies at the age of 80.
27 Chinese Nationalist Government recognized by the United
States.
31 Gene Tunney retires as heavyweight champion.
AUGUST
25 Commander Byrd's flagship, the City of New Yrok, In prep
aration for his South Pole (light, sails for New Zealand.
SEPTEMBER
13 250 die, 700,000 made homeless In Porto Rico hurricane.
OCTOBER
8 U. S. Polo Team wins international match from the Argen
tines. 9 New York Yankees win world series from St. Louis Cardinals.
15 Graf Zeppelin reaches Lakehurst, N. J., after perilous flight
from Germany.
23 George Barr McCutcheon, novelist, dies.
28 Figures show 43,000,000 citizens registered to vote In Presi
dential election.
NOVEMBER
1 Graf Zeppelin concludes successful return flight
6 Herbert Hoover elected president of the United States with
record vote breaking up the "solid South."
13 Disaster to Steamer Vestrls off Virginia Capes results In loss
of 110 lives.
19 Herbert Hoover starts on good will tour from San Pedro, Cal.
23 Thomas Fortune Ryan, financier, dies.
DECEMBER
3 King George V critically ill with pleurisy, oxygen is administered.
low one man to torture another
should not allow human beings to
torture themselves for profit
CARD OF THANKS.
We desire in this manner to ex
press our sihcere thanks to the
neighbors and friends for their
sympathy expressed by their many
acts of kindness and assistance In
our recent bereavement in the death
and burial of our father, William
Gorger. Especially do we thank
Mrs. W. E. Moore for her assistance
with the music and singing at the
services.
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Ramsey,
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Cooney,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gorger,
George, Leo, Joseph and
Gene Gorger.
Cummings & Witcraft
U. S. L. BATTERY SALES
Complete Battery Service
Recharge Rental Repair
Satisfaction Guaranteed
A I SSI E
3lMMMHHIHIHHIHIIIIHHIIHIIItMIIMIIMIMIlllllllllllMIIHIM(IIIMHlllMIIIHItllMIWItlHIIIMIIIMHMIMItlMltlltlllllllllllr
When you build, we nr
ready to serve you
YjTTHEN yu kufld k 8 y8 a comforting
W thing to know that the building materials
you buy are going to be up to specifications.
Cheap, flimsy construction usually goes
hand in hand with poor quality materials.
Safeguard your building by letting us know
what you require and we will work with you
to see that your interests are well protected.
We are headquarters for all dependable
building materials and can also help you select
a good, reliable contractor.
Tell us what you plan to do we can and
will give you helpful advice.
TUM-A-LUM LUMBER
COMPANY
Yards at Heppner, Lexington and lone
The FirsT:
Thousand
Nearly every successful man can
say: "My hardest job was the care
ful saving that accumulated my first
thousand dollars."
And is wasn't this first thousand
that brought him success. Don't get
that idea. It wasn't that at all. It
was due to the SAVING habit form
ed while accumulating his first nest
egg. Learn to take care of your dol
lars. Place them in our Bank where
they will be safe. You are then fair
ly on the road to financial success.
Fir National Bank
HEPPNER, OREGON .
D
EICES CUT AGAIN
At Prophet's Closing -Out Sale
NOW! Everything cut to cost and below cost for immediate disposal. BARGAINS! BAR
GAINS! BARGAINS! Don't Miss This Great MONEY-SAVING OPPORTUNITY!
YOU'LL HAVE TO HURRY! Our Stock Won't Last Long at These Prices.
Dry Goods
60c Men's Cashmere Hose. 43c
75c Men's Wool Sox .. 60c
1 5c Men's Cotton Sox
3 pairs for OOv
$1.25 Men's Union Suits, light Q-i p
weight - wlv
$2.25 Men's Part Wool JA
Union Suits
$4.00 Men's All Wool ffQ
Union Suits
$5.00 Men's Ail Wool fi?A
Union Suits POOV
$2.00 Men's Gloves . $1.42
$1.60 Men's Gloves . $1.18
$2.50 Men's Flannel fl-j JQ
Shirts J J.1i7
80c Chambray Shirts ... 60c
$4.25 Wool Shirts ... $2.93
$4.00 Corduroy Pants ....
82.98
$2.25 Khaki Pants .. $1.59
$5.75 Dress Shoes . $3.98
$4.75 Men's Work Shoes $3.65
$1.90 Overalls ..
$1.48
w.
$1.49
$1.75 Boy's Waist Overalls
MANY OTHER NUMBERS ALL
GOING BELOW COST.
25c Children's Hose, size C A A
5 to 7, 6 pairs for tjjj. UU
30c Children's Hose, size Q- A A
8 to 10, 5 pairs for t J.UU
$1.00 Ladies' Silk Hose C At(k
2 pairs for )JLTt
$1.50 Ladies' Silk Hose Q-I ft A
1 pair for jX5U
COME IN AND GET THEM
THEY MUST GO.
Groceries
35c Quart Jar Dill Pickles,
now going for
45c Quart Jar Olives, now be
ing sold for
30c Jar Ripe Olives, 9 oz.,
now going for
15c Jar Ripe Olives, 4 oz.,
now 2 Jars for
45c Jar Stuffed Olives, 8 oz.,
now being sold for
30c Canned Peaches, 2 1-2's
now going at
25c Quart Minced Clams,
now 2 cans for
1 1-oz. Cans Pork and Beans
3 Cans for
2 1-2 size Can Pineapple, now
being sold for
27c
30c
23c
25c
38c
20c
43c
23c
20c
10 lbs. Olympic
going for
24 lbs. Olympic
now going for
49 lbs. Olympic Flour,
now going for
No. 2 Can Loganberries, now
being sold for
No. 2 Can Strawberries, now
being sold for
c Koyai uud Corn, now
being sold for
20c Standard Corn, now be
ing sold 3 cans for
15c Deviled Meat, now being
sold 3 cans for
15c Vienna Sausages, now be- ()("
ing sold 3 cans for
$1.50 10 lbs. Honey, now
going for
75c, 5 lbs. Honey, now going
for
25c Lamb's Tongue, now go
ing for
25c Chipped Beef, now going
for
35c Salmon, now being sold
at 2 cans for
20c Salmon, now being sold
at 2 cans for
15c Corn Starch, now being
sold at 2 for .
$1.80 Gallon Jar Sweet
Pickles, now
$1.65 Liberty Bell Syrup,
gallon, now
85c Liberty Lell Syrup half
gallon, now
45c Very Best Bulk Coffee, Cn
now per pound Ttl
Flour now F4n
eJAC
Flour, Q -f A
$1.90
15c
22c
18c
35c
25c
25e
$1.15
65c
19c
19c
25c
15c
25c
$1.45
$1.35
P. PROPHET
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