Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, July 07, 1932, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1932.
IONE
(Continued from First Pape)
holidays with Mrs, Gabbert's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs, Dwight Misner.
Arthur Turner, north side farmer,
drove to Portland to spend the 4th.
He was accompanied by Mrs. James
Lindsay and daughters, Helen and
Betty Lou, who will visit relatives
in the city.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wright and
sons are guests at the home of Mrs.
Wright's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T.
E. Grabill. Their home is in Baker.
Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Troge and
daughter, Miss Marguerite, spent
the week end visiting relatives and
friends in and around lone. Mr.
Troge was formerly in the dray bus
iness in lone, but now farms near
Gresham.
Mrs. Peter Allen and daughter of
Redmond, who have been the guests
of Mrs. Allen's sister, Mrs. Hugh
Smith, departed for their home on
Friday.
Mrs. Walter Corley was hostess
to a small party Friday afternoon.
Bridge was the diversion of the of-
ternoon, with two tables in play.
High score was won by Mrs. Feld
man. Those present were Mrs.
Omar Rietmann, Mrs. Hugh Smith
Mrs. Peter Allen, Mrs. H. S. Hatch
and the hostess. Delicious refresh
ments were served.
The regular meeting of the Wom
en's Topic club was held Saturday
at the home of Mrs. M. E. Cotter.
The subject for the afternoon was
the Hawaiian Islands. Roll call
was responded to with "What I
know about the countries of the Pa
ciflc" Map study, Margaret Blake
Making the voyage, steamship lines,
routes and cost, Edith Bergevm;
history of the Hawaain Islands, El
la Smith; Legends of Hawaii in
the path of the Trade winds, Eppa
Ward; Hawaii, the rainbow land,
Katheryn Feldman; song, Aloho'oe
all. Those present were Mrs. H. S.
Hatch, Mrs. Fred Mankin, Mrs, Bert
Mason, Mrs. Omar Rietmann, Mrs.
Edward Rietmann. Mrs. Werner
Rietmann, Mrs. Victor Rietmann
Mrs. Carl Feldman, Miss Katheryn
Feldman, Mrs. D. M. Ward, Mrs.
Roy Lieuallen, Mrs. Louis Bergevin,
Mrs. Hugh Smith, Mrs. Walter Cor
ley, Mrs. Inez Freeland, Mrs. Vic
tor Peterson and the hostess. Re
freshments of salad, wafers and
coffee were served at the close of
the program. The next meeting
will be a social meeting at the home
of Mrs. Bert Mason on the after
noon of July 15th.
Miss Elizabeth Head of Cathlam-
et is the house guest of Mrs. Bert
Mason.
Mrs. John Glasscock who is stay
ing here with her sister-in-law
Mrs. Ella Davidson, spent the week
end in Hermiston.
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. McCurdy of
the Davidson ranch in Gooseberry,
spent the Fourth at Ukiah.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Howell and fam
ily of lone spent the Fourth in the
mountains. They were joined there
by Mr. and Mrs. Grant Olden of
Rhea creek and Mr. and Mrs. Ora
Barlow and family of Hermiston.
Several parties of young folks
from lone spent Sunday in the
mountains. Among those who went
were Dorr Mason, Richard Lundell,
Elizabeth Head, Vida Eubanks, Mil
ton Morgan, Kenneth Smouse, Hel
en Smouse, Margaret Crawford,
Jessie Klages, Orlow Martin, Ran
dall Martin, Norman Nelson, Nor
man Swanson and Ralph Gibson.
Mrs. Charles Ritchie of Heppner
has been visitin gher brother, Lon
nie Ritchie, in lone and attending
the meetings at the Pentecostal
Mission.
The last regular meeting of the
O. E. S. until September was held
last Tuesday. After chapter, at
Mrs. Bert Mason's invitation, the
members adjourned to Mrs. Ma
son's home, and the lunch was pre
pared at her outdoor fireplace, and
served on the picnic tables.
The regular meeting of the Con
gregational Missionary society will
be held next Thursday. Mrs. Ed
ward Keller, the president, will pre
side. The meetings of the Union Sun
day school are held this month in
the Congregational church.
Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Page of Iowa
City, Iowa, arrived Tuesday for an
extended visit with Mr. Page's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Laxton McMur
ray. They were met at Arlington
by Mr. and rMs. McMurray. Mr.
Page is a former lone boy and is
well known here. Since his gradua
tion from Oregon State college he
has been engaged in hydraulic re
search work at the University of
Iowa. Mrs. Page is a former Ore
gon girl.
Mrs. Alan Learned of Darring
ton, Wash., is the guest of her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. P. G. Balsiger.
Freddie Ritchie was painfully in
jured Thursday when he stepped on
the thread end of a bolt with his
bare foot. His mother cared for
the injury which is getting along
nicely.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Roberts,
Frank Engelman and Joel Engel
man returned Wednesday from
Portland. Mrs. Engelman, who ac
companied them to Portland, re
mained for a visit with relatives
there. They were accompanied
home by Mr. Robert's niece, Miss
Dorothy Birks of Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. John Grimes have
returned from Trent, where they
went to put up the hay crop.
Louis Bergevin and daughter
Betty were business visitors in Pen
dleton Thursday.
Mrs. Bert Mason has word that
her mother, Mrs. Adelia Godfrey of
Portland, who has been quite ill,
has been moved to the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Charles Dalzell in
Spokane. Mrs. Godfrey is slightly
better.
Lee Beckner has been suffering
from an infection in his ear, and
has been receiving treatment from
an ear specialist in Pendleton.
W. E. Ahalt, who has passed his
eightieth milestone, narrowly es
caped serious injury one day last
week. The well at his home in lone
has a platform built in it, a short
distance from the top. This need
ed cleaning, bo Mr. Ahalt lowered
a ladder onto the platform, and
started to descend. The platform
had rotted, and gave way under
Mx. Ahalt'i weight, so that he and
the ladder descended into the well
proper. Fortunately the ladder re
mained upright, and by clinging to
it, Mr. Ahalt avoided falling into the
water, which is six or eight feet
deep. Mr. Ahalt was alone but was
able to climb the ladder and get out
of the well, little the worse for his
adventure.
Kenneth Akers drove to Camp
Rotary Sunday to fetch home the
Boy Scouts who had been sojourn
ing there.
W.C.T.U. NOTES
MARY A NOTSON. Reporter.
The outcry of the wets against
poison liquors sold by the bootleg
gers is amusing to those who have
lived long enough to remember the
good old days. Moreover, their as
sertion that the drinking of poison
liquors is due to prohibition is silly.
Nobody is required to drink any
kind of liquor. Such piffle is an in
sult to the intelligence of anyone
whose brain is not dulled by intoxi
cants.
Every informed person knows
that the old saloon sold liquor that
was not pure. A great many, possi
bly a large majority of the saloons,
sold synthetic concoctions, often of
very deleterious drugs. They there
by avoided the high internal rev
enue of distilled liquors and multi
piled their profits.
J. Fanning O Reilly, who was edi
tor of the Liquor Trades Review,
was quoted in the Pittsburgh Lead
er of Jan. 31, 1898, as follows:
"The evils of adulteration, imita
tion, and counterfeiting of labels
are among the worst curses of the
liquor business. It will surprise
many of our readers to know that
90 per cent of the so-called import
ed goods sold in this country are
spurious. It is' also a fact that 75
per cent of the so-called Pennsyl
vania and Kentucky whiskey, al
though branded as such, never saw
those states, and is nothing but
colored cologne spirits touched up
with prune juice, burnt sugar, bead
ing oil and other stuffs of that kind
with a very small percentage of the
genuine article."
The Leader of Jan. 5, 1900, said:
"Judge J. W. F. White, sitting in
the criminal court, entertains a
very poor opinion of the beer brew
ed in America and takes every op
portunity he sees of expressing it.
Yesterday he told those who drink
beer they had better drink the im
ported beer and today he said that
the beer bought in this country does
not intoxicate but makes brutes of
the men who drink it. 'That is due,
the aged jurist said, 'to the drugs
in the beer. Judge White conclud
ed by asserting that more crime re
sults from beer drinking than from
the drinking of other liquors." Is
it likely that conditions would be
any better if beer were legalized
now by modifying the Volstead act
and nullifying the constitution?
The Oregonian thinks that Clar
ence True Wilson is wrong when
he asserted that there were twice
as many bootleggers in Portland as
there were licensed saloons in the
saloon days. He meant illegal sales
men. If he was mistaken as to
Portland, he did not miss it as to
some cities. When Los Angeles
had only 200 licensed saloons, the
late Wiley J. Phillips printed a list
of more than 1,100 speakeasies in
the county of Los Angeles. In Kan
sas City, about 25 years ago, the
mayor made a careful survey of the
places which sold liquor. He stat
ed that there were 300 saloons pay
ing licenses and 2,100 joints operat
ing without paying license. Mr.
Wilson probably underestimated
the number of illicit dealers.
Many Cherry Uses Given
By Extension Division
Cherries are ripe! And they are
plentiful! This year, as always,
they hold a prominent place among
Oregon home canned or preserved
foods, as they are easily canned and
kept, says the home economics di
vision of the State college exten
sion service.
For canning, select fully ripe
cherries, such as are ideal for im
mediate table use. A 30 per cent
sirup is preferred for Oregon cher
ries, that is, a sirup made in the
proportion of 3 cups of sugar to 7
cups of water, mixed together and
brought to a boil. Cherries keep
perfectly when canned without su
gar, but hold their color, flavor and
shape better and require less sugar
for the same degree of sweetness if
sugar is added at canning time.
Dried cherries are delicious and
can be substituted for raisins in
puddings, pies, cakes and salads.
Dry cherries unpitted by washing
and placing them on a wire screen
in the oven or over artificial heat
A few of the cheny recipes avail
able in mimeographed form upon
request are given below:
Cherry Olives.
Fill a quart jar with large sweet
cherries, leaving the stems on and
packing the fruit as closely as pos
sible. Mix 1 tablespoon of salt and
1 cup of cold vinegar, and pour the
mixture into the jar of cherries.
Fill the jar with cold water. Ad
just the rubber and the cover, and
seal the jar as usual. Turn it up
side down several times. Allow the
cherries to stand for at least two
weeks before using them. These
cherries are not heated. They make
a firm salt pickle to be used with
meats.
Cherry Cocktail.
1 pound cherries
1-2 cup chopped walnuts
3 teaspoons lemon Juice
6 tablespoons strawberry juice
6 tablespoons powdered sugar
Pit the cherries, sprinkle with
chopped almonds and pour over
them a sirup made by mixing straw
berry juice with powdered sugar
and lemon juice. Chill and serve
in cocktail glasses.
Cherry Relish
Remove pits from cherries. Drain
cherries and cover with vinegar so
lution made in proportion of 3-4
cup vinegar to 1 quart water. Let
stand for 6 hours, drain cherries,
measure them and add an equal
measure of sugar. Let cherries
stand over night, Seal.
Local ads Id the Gazette Times
bring results.
CERTIFIED PLAN
TO BE EXTENDED
Strawberry Plants Now Eligible
for Inspection and Marking
Vnder State Service.
Just as the development of certi
fication of seed has given Oregon
producers a profitable outlet in this
and other states for seed potatoes,
so are the strawberry plant grow
ers expected to profit from a new
plan proposed for certification of
strawberry planting stock.
The new plan for strawberry
plant certification has just been is
sued by the extension service of
Oregon State college as drawn up
by O. T. McWhorter, extension hor
ticulturist, and S. M. Zeller, plant
pathologist of the experiment sta
tion. It is designed as a practical
plan whereby any grower desiring
certification service may get it at
nominal cost, while no others need
use it any more than a potato grow
er has to use certification.
Strawberry-plant certification is
to provide the prospective purchas
er a source of improved planting
stock," says the announcement just
published. "Such stock is that
which has been improved through
selection or other practices to the
extent that it is vigorous, is true to
the variety name and has a mini
mum of destructive strawberry dis
eases or pests."
It is pointed out that there is a
demand for high grade, vigorous
planting stock for use by Oregon
growers and for sale to out-of-state
markets. Such planting stock is
now recognized as a requirement if
high yields of quality fruit of the
strawberry are to be expected.
Much work has recently been
done in studying strawberry dis
eases with the result that it is now
known how serious many of these
are, and it is realized how import
ant good planting stock is in their
control.
Any Oregon grower, firm or cor
poration agreeing to abide by the
rules for strawberry-plant certifl
cation is eligible for the certiflca
tion service, says the advance an
nouncement
CLEANLINESS ESSENTIAL,
From State Board of Health.
Nearly twenty thousand cases of
communicable disease are reported
in Oregon annually and of course
many more are not reported. About
half of these occur in children
These diseases furnish abut 15 per
cent of total deaths. In addition
to the deaths and the economic and
social losses from cases, one must
add the permanent disabilities re
suiting from these diseases. From
50 per cent to 75 per cent of our
crippled children owe their condl
tion to infantile paralysis and tu
berculosis. Damaged hearts and
kidneys, increased susceptibility to
other infections, are all found In
the wake of communicable diseases
among children. Economic and hu
manitarian motives alike demand
that every known effective means
of control be fully utilized and that
further studies to increase our
knowledge be expedited.
Physicians can reduce tremen
dously the possibility of infection
by hospitalization and the proper
care of cases of communicable dis
eases. There are certain funda
mental principles which are essen
tial to effective communicable dis
ease control. Prompt reporting,
particularly of the first case3 in an
outbreak, is of the greatest import
ance. Isolation of the first cases
frequently prevents an epidemic
prompt investigation makes possl
ble the early discovery of the source
of infection. A recognition of the
cause of the disease and the mode
of transmission makes it possible
to establish-suitable control meas
ures. A sound basis of control de
pend upon knowledge of each indi
vidual case, its source of infection
its contacts and potential contacts,
as well as the social and environ
mental factors.
The value of personal cleanliness
must be impressed upon all mem
bers of the community, especially
when a communicable disease is
present. The body should be kept
clean by sufficiently frequent soap
The Season's
Choicest
Offerings of
Vegetables
Prepared the way
you like them
are available
any time
at the
ELKHORN
RESTAURANT
ED CHINN, Prop.
and water baths. The hands should
always be washed before eating. Un
clean hands and articles should be
kept away from mouth, eyes and
ears. Do not use common or un
clean eating, drinking or toilet ar
ticles of any kind, such aa towels,
tooth brushes, handkerchiefs, hair
brushes, drinking cups, pipes and
so forth. Avoid close exposure of
person to spray from the nose and
mouth as in coughing, sneezing,
laughing or talking. All contacts
should be inspected daily. All sus
pects should be Isolated until a def
inite diagnosis is possible. All rec
ognized cases should be quaran
tined, preferably by hospitalization,
ntil they are certified by compe
tent authorities that they are safe
to return to the community.
N OREGON HOMES
Waterville A homemaker of Wa-
terville donated a supply of Caro
line Sieva beans which were plant
ed this year by Lane county gar
den cooperators who are taking ad
vantage of garden helps given by
the extension service of Oregon
State college. This variety was
recommended as well suited to
Lane county year-round gardens.
Names of 190 families are included
in this project of year-round gar
dens which is supervised by Ger
trude Skow, home demonstration
agent, and O. S. Fletcher, agricul
tural agent.
New Pine Creek By such a sim
ple thing as moving the dish cup
board, a Lake county homemaker
living at New Pine creek saved
herself eight feet of travel many
times a day. "My improvements
did not cost me much," explained
this housewife who had enrolled for
the "kitchen short cut" letters sent
out by the home management spec
ialists of the State college exten
sion service. "It was only a matter
of rearrangement but it has saved
me many steps. I used to walk half
way across the house to put away
the dishes, now the distance is cut
from 12 feet to 4 feet. The long
kitchen windows were already
placed crosswise and this I found
very helpful when I started rear
ranging. Now all my working ma
terials are near together and it
helps wonderfully."
Willamette First prize winner
in the Oregon label contest conduct
ed in the foods and nutrition meet
ings under the auspices of Thelma
Gaylord, Clackamas county home
demonstration agent, presented 154
different labels. Second place went
to the holder of 145 labels and third
place to a homemaker who had col
lected 75 labels.
Wanted Combining by the acre.
You pull the machine or I will. De
pression prices. Write Cecil Sar
gent, lone, Ore. 13-17p
OVER THE HILL, with Mae
Marsh, Star Theater, Sunday and
Monday.
The Gazette Times' Printing Ser
vice is complete. Try It
CHASTER NO. 11007
EEFOST OF CONDITION OF THE
Farmers & Stockgrowers National Bank
OF HEPPNEB, IN THE STATE OF OREGON, AT THE CLOSE OF
BUSINESS ON JUNE 30, 1932.
RESOURCES
Loans and discounts , $133,532.92
Overdrafts 214.32
United States Government securities owned , 20,350.00
Other bonds, stocks, and securities owned 1.650.00
Furniture and fixtures - 2,919.27
Real estate owned other than banking house 17.23260
Reserve with Federal Reserve Bank - 6.157.44
Cash and due from banks ..... 7.788.11
Outside checks and other cash items 964.56
Other assets, Expense 300.58
TOTAL $191,109.80
LIABILITIES
Capital stock paid in - ...$ 50,000.00
Due to banks, including certified and cashiers' checks outstand
ing ... 1,258.04
Demand deposits , - 70,644.47
Time deposits - . 40.755.39
Bills payable and rediscounts j. 28.451.90
TOTAL - $191,109.80
State of Oregon, County of Morrow, Ml
I, L. A. Alllnger. Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear
that the above statement Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
L. A. ALLINGER, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before II CORRECT
me this 6th day of July, 1932. I
JOS.. J. NYS, Notary Public.
My commission expires May 24, 1936 II
FLORSHEIM SHOES
1 1
More value per dollar
than ever before . . .
WILSON'S
Th Store of Personal Service
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
At Heppner
CHURCHES
CHUCH OF CHRIST.
JOEL R. BENTON, Minister.
Mrs. J. O. Turner, Director of Music
Bible School
9:45 A. M.
11 o'clock
7 o'clock
Morning Worship
Senior and Junior C. K.
Evenine WorshiD .,
8 o'clock
Choir rehearsal. Wed. eve.. 8 o'clock
Church Night, Thurs. eve. 8 o'clock
Crime Prevention.
"The fear of the Lord Is the be
ginning of wisdom." Prov. 9-10.
Not so long ago, in the state of
New York, a district judge said, at
a meeting of the State Sunday
School Association: "Not a single
Sunday School attendant was ever
brought before me charged with
the emmission of a crime. I regard
religious instruction, especially
Sunday School instruction, as the
most desirable and necessary thing
for the poeple of America at this
time.
At the same meeting another
judge said, a Supreme Court judge:
"My experience, during eighteen
years on the bench, in which time
more than 4000 boys under twenty
one years of age were convicted of
crime before me, of whom but three
had ever attended Sunday School,
has satisfied me of the value of
Sunday Schools to the community
in helping to safeguard it from the
growth of criminality: in fact, I re
gard our Sunday Schools as the on
ly effective means of stemming the
rising tide of vice and crime
among our youth."
In one case this judge said to a
sixteen -year -old boy: "I am going
to sentence you to five years' at
tendance at Sunday School; will
you carry out the sentence?" "Sure,
I will," replied the boy. The judge
found the proper teacher and se
cured for the boy a job in a store.
Later the boy became manager of
the store and married the owner's
daughter.
Judge Webster, of the Juvenile
Court of Spokane, has had the same
experiences as the two judges al
ready referred to. And what of all
this? Nothing, if we just talk
about it and do nothing. There
needs to be a great campaign of
going to Sunday School started by
the parents of this community, and
they should TAKE their children
WITH them, instead of staying at
home and trying to casually and
once in a while SEND them.
Listen, men and women; how
many folks, how many boys and
girls could you get into our Sunday
Schools if you tried hard enough?
Well, you may not be a member
of the Church (tho you know you
ought to be, and working at it, too)
but you have a certain responsibil
ity, which some day you will have
to face, for setting the feet of your
children in right paths; and if you
have no children of your own, then
you ought to be glad of the privil
BESEBVE DISTEICT NO. 12
-Attest:
J. W. BEYMER.
W. G. MnCARTY,
R. L. BENGE,
Directors.
No time like now to
make a real saving.
ege of helping, as a good citizen,
some under-privileged boy or gin.
Beein now going to Bible scnooi
and to Church. GO TO CHURCH
TWICE ON EVERY SUNDAY
you will survive It all right, and
you will be a better parent ana cit
izen because of it If more boys
and girls were sent to Sunday
School, fewer of them would be sent
to jails and detention homes.
If you 'have not a Church home,
come and worship with us; we in
vite you. For the coming Lord's
Day the sermon topics are: For
the morning worship, "I Have Call
ed." For the evening service, "A
World Rescue Expedition."
W. W. Smead and Earl Eskelson
motored to East and Paulino lakes,
Deschutes county, for an over-the-Fourth
fishing jaunt
JULY SPECIALS on all spring
and summer merchandise. Curran
Ready-to-Wear.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OP THE
UNITED STATES FOR THE DIS
TRICT OF OREGON. UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA vs. WAYNE
D. NEAL. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV
EN that the automobile hereinafter de
scribed, seized by the United States
Marshal for the District of Oregon, un
der Section 26. Title II. of the National
Prohibition Act. because the said au
tomobile was being used for the trans
portation of intoxicating liquor on the
public highways of Morrow County,
State and District of Oregon, in viola
tion of law, has been condemned and
forfeited by the United States District
Court for the District of Oregon, and
is to be sold by the United States Mar
shal at public auction, at the Heppner
Garage at Heppner, Oregon, to the
highest bidder, on July 29, 1932, at 10
o'clock A, M.. towit: One Essex Sedan
Automobile Motor No. 1054323, Serial
No. 983949. JOHN L. DAY. United
States Marshal, District of Oregon.
Lexington Farmers
Warehouse Company
Dealers in Flour, Poultry and Dairy Feeds
Sperry's "SHURE LIVE" and Scratch Food for Baby Chlx.
ALSO ALL STOCK FEEDS.
General Warehouse Storage and Custom Grinding.
LEXINGTON, OREGON
Don't Take a Chance
insure Grain NOW!
See FRANK TURNER
STAR THEATER
HEPPNEB, OREGON
Show Starts 8:00 p. m. Doors open 7:45
MATINEE SUNDAY 2:00 P. M. ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY.
Admission, Children 10c, Adults 25c, ma tine and evening
for those coming In before nine o'clock. After 9:00 p. m.
admission will be 20c and 40c.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JULY 8 AND 9:
RAMON NOVARRO in
"HUDDLE"
SUNDAY AND MONDAY, JULY 10 AND 11:'
MAE MARSH in
"Over the Hill"
Circulate Your cMoney in Ofour Own Community
For
Satisfaction
Mrs. Housewife Says:
"I am always sure of good selections when
I have my orders filled at Hiatt & Dix's."
SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY ONLY -
MAZOLA OIL, Quart 22c
1 Pkg. SUPER SUDS 31c
3 Cans Blue & White OYSTERS 35c
1 Lb. Red & White COFFEE 33c
4 Cans Good Grade Yellow CORN 47c
2 Cans Broken Slice PINEAPPLE 33c
7 GELATINE DESERT 29c
1-Lb. Can Red & White BAKING POWD. 23c
1 Pkg. each EGG NOODLES, SPAGHETTI
AND MACARONI 20c
HIATT &D IX
Quality Always Higher Than Price
JULY SPECIALS on all snrine
and summer merchandise. Curran
Ready-to-Wear.
CALL FOB BIDS.
The Clerk of District No. 8 calls
for bids for transportation of school
children from said District to lone.
Bus to take the children from the
W. T. Doherty, Wells Springs, Nell
Doherty and Edward Rietmann
ranches.
Kindly specify vehicle to be
used. All bids must be in by July
15 1932
LEO GORGER, Clerk,
16-17 Lexington, Ore.
Dr.
A. B. Gray
In New Location
227 N. Main
Comer Main and Baltimore