Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, August 03, 1933, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE FOUR
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUG. 3, 1933
BIANO'S ERROR
GIVES LEX GAME
S-8 Tie Broken in Tenth Inning
After Bull Prairie Boys Make
Huge Storing: Effort.
(Bull Prairie Correspondent)
The Bull Prairie boys were de
feated on Sunday afternoon at the
Heppner baseball field by the Lex
ington team, 6-5. When the score
was tied at 5-all in the tenth Inn
ing, Angelo Biano, the Bull Prairie
third baseman, mishandled a
grounder, which caused Harry
Dunne, his team's twirler. to lose
a tough argument
The pitching of the Lexington
team was taken care of by Beach,
that smiling red-head. He let plen
ty of our boys get on bases, but
that's where the majority of them
remained.
Davidson, the second man at bat
in the first inning, was hit by a
pitched ball. Biil Whitson tripled,
but Davidson was out at the plate
by a hair. However, the Bull Prai
rie boys were presented with a run
when Burchell fumbled Hank Rob
ertson's grounder.
In the third inning. Dunne looped
a high fly to A. Munkers in right,
who dropped it for a two-base er
ror. Rintavalle walked. Then our
boys proceeded to work & double
steal as Davidson sacrificed and
Dunne came galloping home.
Bull Prairie threw the game away
in the last half of the third. Beach
opened the inning with a single,
and had reached second when San
ders let the ball go past him for an
error. Carmichael reached first and
Eeach scored when Dunne made a
wild heave to the catcher.
The next two men, V. Munkers
and Gentry, struck out Scott sin
gled for his second hit of the game,
stole second and reached third
when Hank Robertson, our catcher,
made a wild heave into center field.
He scored when Devito mishandled
Burchell's grounder. Four runs,
three hits and four errors.
With one out in the fourth, Biano
walked, Sanders tripled and Devito
singled to produce a pair of runs.
Devito started the sixtn wiui a
walk and then stole second. Dunne
struck out but Rintavalle singed to
tic the score.
The most dangerous Bull Prairie
threat came with ono down in the
tenth when Dunne lined a ball to
left field for a triple. However, he
was put out at the plate by a beau
tiful throw by Scott Rintavalle
followed with another triple that
just missed being a homer when
it bounded against the left field
wall. Davidson was out, Carmich
ael to Burchell, to end the inning.
Burchell led off the last half of
the tenth with a double. A. Mun
kers' single, his third of the game,
and Biano's mishandling of Graves'
grounder, scored the winning run
Diamond dust The most artis
tic performance of the afternoon
was made by Umpire Massey when
he refused to call a balk. He de
clared that he was there to call
only balls and strikes. . . V. Mun
kers struck out five times in suc
cession. . . Lieut Zaccor, who is
directly in charge of the team, is
an ardent baseball fan. . . Babe
Grent the centerfielder, got on
bases twice, he was hit by the
pitcher each time. . . Harry Dunne,
Bull Prairie twirler, is our newest
pitching sensation. . . Manager Be-
zio is trying to get either Camp
Bates or the Heppner baseball team
for this Sunday's game. Everybody
is invited.
Box score and summary:
BULL PRAIRIE AB R H C E
Rintavalle, r
Davidson, 1 ..
Whitson, 2 .
Fatti. 2
He thought that they were brass.
Imagine his surprise when a bank
er In town showed him several gold
nuggets. . . Western hospitality:
Meyer SamuelowiU spent the week
end at the Glen Kelsay ranch. The
latter took him to his home and
them to the pioneer picnic. . . .
Ernest Bezio, our butcher, Is the
proud possessor of a home-made
washing machine. . . Your corres
pondent was a witness to the cap
ture of an owl by Boyd Hinton and
Al Sahastik while surveying the
Notch country. . . The Good Samar
itan club of Camp Bull Prairie is
glad to admit Oscar Ferguson and
Everett Hadley as members for
their good deed the other night
When coming home from Spray
they righted the overturned auto
mobile of the receiver of the
First National bank of Heppner
and drove it back on the road.
When he offered to compensate
them for their trouble, they refused
to accept anything at all but his
"thanks." You bet! . . . Chet
Wright was inoculated with a shot
in his right arm. He won't be able
to drive his truck for a few days.
. . Irving Osias, the camp dish
washer, has a perfect score. He
hasn't broken a single plate. . .
Lulu Molino, one of our better
known K. P.'s is a good dancer.
Here's a tip, girls. . . A tip to the
boys: Irving Ashenbaum, who just
came back from the Heppner hos
pital, says they treated him swell
there.
LEXINGTON
(Continued from First Page)
IONE
(Continued from First Page)
Z 1
4
" .37
Robertson, c
Orent, m
Biano, 3
Sanders, 1
Rofsky, 1
Devito, 8
Dunne, p
Totals ..
LEXINGTON
Palmer. 1
Carmichael, 2
V. Munkers, m
Gentry, 3
Scott, s
Eurchell, 1
A Munkers, r
Valentine, r
Graves, c
Eeach, p
Totals
4
4
. 5
4
5
4
4
.... 1
4
4
.39
8 14
6 11 16
Earned runs, Lexington 4, Bull
Prairie 3; 3 base hits, Whitson, San
ders, Rintavalle; 2 base hits, Bur
chell; left on bases, Lexington 11,
Bull Prairie 13: base on balls, off
Eeach 5; struck out by Beach 13,
by Dunne 13; hit by pitcher, Orent
2; sacrifice hit Davidson; umpires,
Massey and Aiken; scorer, J. Wit-
lin; time, 2 nr. 15 min.
News of ... .
CAMP BULL PRAIRIE
By Our Camp Correspondent.
A serious effort is now being
made to organize a C. C. C. orches
tra. If some of the citizens pi
Heppner would lend the boys th
instruments that are lacking, they
would be glad to play for them dur
ing the Rodeo. We have two guitar
players, Tom Gatto and Charles
Baumgartner; a piano player, Geo.
Jellig; a drummer, Rob Buro
trumpet player, Frank Amorelll
and a harmonica player, Jerry Fal
co.
Ialo Civil is the best wrestler for
his weight in Camp Bull Prairie,
. . . Peter Knichl, Jr., is the Baron
Munchausen of the camp. . . Free
ad William Bubltck, our dancing
instructor, is willing to teach the
girls In Heppner the Lindy Hop,
single or double, and the Savoy,
free of charge. , . Charles Dugan
was born with a lucky cap and
veil. Went to Baker recently and
while walking around in the wood
kicked some gold nuggets around.
Mr. Lasher of the International
Harvester company was a business
visitor in Lexington Wednesday.
Miss Rose Thornburg and Mis9
Fern Luttrell were overnight guests
of Miss Betty Doherty on Thurs
day. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Cutsforth
made a business trip to Pendleton
Saturday. They were accompanied
by Miss Edith Tucker and A. H.
Nelson.
The Misses Gwen Evans, Ruth
Dinges and Eula McMillan visited
friends in Antone last week.
Mrs. Charles Burchell and her
daughter. Miss Huldah Burchell, of
Corvallis were visitors at the E. D.
Burchell and J. G. Johnson homes
this week.
Miss Jessie Klages of Boardman
is at the Harry Schriever home.
Joseph Eskelson and Ernest
Frederickson are looking after bus
iness affairs at the Eskelson ranch
near Hard man this week.
Miss Gladys Graves of Boardman
is spending a few days at the home
of her brother, Shelby Graves.
Among Lexington people attend
ing the show, "The White Sister,"
at Heppner Mondey evening were
Mrs. Ola Ward, Mrs. Trina Parker,
Miss Dona Barnett, Miss Opal
Leach and Miss Wilma Leach.
COUNTY SCHOOL BILL
INCREASED BY $27,000
together
(Continued from First Page)
stated that the doctors had decid
ed that nothing but an operation
would give her relief. According
to the telegram advising friends of
her death she did not survive the
shock but died while the operation
was being performed. Mrs. Puyear
will be remembered by many as
she spent the greater part of her
life in and near lone. She was Ma
ble Walker, youngest daughter of
C. T. Walker, pioneer farmer and
merchant of lone. She was married
to Walter Puyear and to them were
born three children, Mrs. Anna As
ker, James and June Puyear who
with her husband survive her. The
Puyears left lone about ten or fif
teen years ago and since that time
have lived at Clarkston, Wn, and
Lewiston, Idaho. Mrs. Puyear was
member of Bunchgrass Rebekah
lodge of lone and was a charter
member of Locust chapter, O. E. S
of lone. Many friends mourn her
passing.
Mrs. Charles Christopherson re
turned on Sunday from Portland
where she has been with her hus
band who is at the Portland Sani
tarium for medical treatment She
drove home in a new Plymouth and
will return to Portland in a few
days to remain for some time. The
doctors who are caring for Mr.
Christopherson have advised that
an operation will be necessary be
fore he can get permanent relief
from his trouble. This will be per
formed as soon as he can be made
ready for it.
Quite a group of people spent
Sunday in the shade of the pines in
the mountains. Going up to spend
the day were Mr. and Mrs. H, O.
Ely, Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Ely and
children, Berl and Bertha Akers,
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Mathews,
Margaret Ely, George and Francis
Ely and Jim Warfield.
Mrs. Ernest Lundell and daugh
ter Mildred motored to Union last
Sunday to spend a few days.
O. E. S. Social club met at the
home of Mrs. Ella Davidson Tues
day afternoon. The time was spent
in regular business and sewing.
Ladies present besides the hostess
were Mrs. Willard Blake, Mrs. C,
F. Feldman, Mrs. Peter Timm, Mrs.
H. D. McCurdy, Miss Katheryn
Feldman, Mrs. Dwight Misner, Mrs.
Fred Mankin and Mrs. Earl Blake,
Mrs. Davidson's grahdadughters,
Miss Delvina Reis and Miss Maxine
McCurdy, assisted in serving the
lovely lunch of fruit salad, cake
and lemonade.
Robert Dressen of Pueblo, Col
who has been visiting with his
cousin, Dwight Misner, departed for
his home Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Werner Rietmann
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bergevin, David
Rietmann and Carlton Swanson
were among those enjoying a swim
in the Columbia last Sunday.
Pomona Grange has signed a
contract with the Shell Oil com
pany which will be of interest to
grange members in the market for
lubricating oils. Those interested
can get full details from Dwight
Misner, lone.
Fred Mankin, Dwight Misner and
Lee Beckner have leased the Shell
Oil plant at lone for the next three
months. They will use the plat
form to load wheat directly onto
the cars.
The Women's Topic club will
meet with Mrs. Thelma Corley on
Saturday, August 5. The subject
of the afternoon will be "Alaska."
1933, showed a total levy of $207,
900.59 of which $88,026.21, or 43.34
percent, remained uncollected at
the time of the report.
The notes and warrants outstand
ing in the various districts were
given as follows:
Dist Amt Dist. Amt.
1 .. X Kd.R18.43 2B-51 13.547.49
2 t 351.02 27 2.474.03
3 2.805.52
4 624.95
5 ... 1.146.21
6 748.50
8 533.01
9 1,867.87
10 570.06
29 830.9-4
31 1.175.37
32 400.60
34 1.235.26
35 11.849.71
11
469.80 38
40
41
42
48
49
50
51
53
531.57
677.00
390.86
4.150.24
1.141.95
2.688.89
673.90
515.45
456.82
514.31
510.05
59 1.948.68
U. H. 1 .. 5.499.66
12 14.450.60
14 i 357.25
15 777.00
16 938.95
17 1.537.79
18 769.96
19 1,088.87
21-40 423.77
23 216.30
24 920.90
25 4,013.31
Ham's consolidated statement
for high schools of the county
showed a total cost for the year of
$37,085.71. with the annual per pu
pil cost in each of the various high
schools as follows: Hardman, $17b.-
62; Heppner, $115.59; Irrigon, $174.
77; Lexington, $142.05; Boardman,
$126.24; Pine City, $108.17; Alpine,
$583.82; lone, $117.99.
The average daily attendance in
the various high schools was
Hardman. 11.2: Heppner. 108.2; Ir
rigon, 23.4; Lexington, 33.3; Board
man, 42; Pine City, 13.7; Alpine,
2.51; lone, 45.6.
OLD 'GAZET' EDITOR
WRITES INSPIRINGLY
(Continued from First Page)
by lashing beer bottles
with barbed wire. j
If any of you people are too fat
do not inflict on yourselves the
Hollywood reducing diet of 14 days
on spinach, buttercups and Decem
ber dandelions. Simply contact
diabetes. It pulled me down 13
pounds in ten days. Very simple!
No xtra xertion!
Although Mr. Morgan did good
service in the Washington, Terri
tory Volunteers, the pension buro
refused him the Indian war veter
an's pension. Same treatment to
me for service in the Oregon Vol
unteers in Bannack war, altho
Governor Thayer, of Oregon, hon
ored me with a commission as big
as a saddleblanket as Colonel and
Assistant Adjutant General of Ore
gon for such service. The Wash
ington Volunteers were recruited
around Waitsburg, Dayton, and
Walla Walla, and did good service
at the battle of Clearwater, pre
venting the retreat planned by the
hostiles. The men in Captain Hunt
er's company would not take any
back talk from anybody. One of
them, Eugene Wilson, editor of the
Columbia Chronicle, intimated that
the captain had robbed birds' nests
without a license, or swiped a piano
from an Indian wickiup or some
thing, and when the captain offset
that by calling Wilson a dam liar,
Eugene promptly took a pot shot at
the captain, but only winged him,
and thus kept up the dignity of the
profession.
Unless we annex hardening of
the artechokes, locomotive ataxi
cab, or some other ailment of ad
vancing age, we hope that after
awhile, bye and bye, b4 very long,
be discharged cured, and that
skillful surgery and heroic treat'
ment will again allow us to be of
some use in this active world,
which is the best we have ever en
tered. We hope that all you people
who go as delegates to Sunday
School conventions will always vote
against war. You all would, if you
could see its results around here in
so many veterans wearing canes,
crutches, empty sleeves, wheel
chairs and sightless eyes. But our
gtnerous government takes good
care of them all, reducing to a min
imum all the misery and attendant
agony.
Also pi. fl. encl. a lock of my
hair, which you will be glad to note
was awarded the blue ribbon at our
county fair, in the face of fierce
competition, and there isn't
bald hair among it.
With all our troubles, we are try
ing hard to retain that sweet
schoolmarm complexion, by using
all the nationally-advertised soaps
so graciously endorsed by our poor
ly paid actnnes, who have to plug
along on slender salaries of $500 a
week up.
Hoping that U R doing ditto, and
that you have a Merry Krismas
coming, with everything to add
cheerfulness to the surrounding
scenery, etc.,
Very T. Y.,
J. W. REDINGTON,
This beautiful Soldier's Home is
located about 14 miles from Los
Angeles, and three miles from
Santa Monica. It comprises about
800 acres, which have been im
proved ever since its establishment
over forty years ago, and has an
abundance of shade trees, lawns
and shrubbery.
Rhea Creek Grange.
By VELMA HUSTON
Due to the fact that some of the
most prominent of our members
found it impossible to be present at
the grange picnic on August 6 the
date has been changed to August
20. The picnic will be held at the
Tyndal Robison mountain ranch
on the Spray highway.
Monday saw most of the harvest
ers started on their crops. No
definite report on the average yield
has reached this source.
Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Clark spent
last week end visiting at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Buschke at
Elgin.
Miss Beth Wright Is spending
two weeks In Portland visiting rel
atives. Mr. and Mrs, Harold Dobyns
spent two days last week visiting
Mr. Dobyns1 mother, Mrs. H. M.
Olden.
Mrs. H. M. Olden is reported
much better and able to be around
again, following a heart attack.
Barton Clark reported .for work
Monday at the Swanson warehouse
in lone.
of the hostiles, shot all the loons,
geese and wild dux in sight, stuffed
theii feathers into bedsax, which
were all ready for the soldiers when
they arrived at dark, and all we
had to do was to kick away the rox
and level off a spot big enough to
spread a saddleblanket. Comrade
Morgan has also a rather dim rec
ollection of when we crossed th
Alps with Napoleon and had noth
ing to eat but huckleberry pies,
while the other favored Frenchmen
feasted on frogs. The finest of food
at this hospital, but of course the
diabetes diet that I have been on
for six months has become mighty
monotonous, and I long to surround
a' lot of corned beef and cabbage,
onion soup, and stax of hot cakes
as hi as your hoad, with large slabs
of apple pie like mother used to
make.
Two months ago kicking the
bucket seemed a sure thing. But
since then our Home Band has
been disbanded, so that there
no attraction .to being one of the
principals at any of our funeral;
as without a band they are tame,
and it was a real pleasure to be in
it while our 20-piece band played
so beautifully, heading the proces
sion by rendering the Dead March
in Saul-eratus. Our beautiful
Home Cemetery holds the remains
of over 11,000 veterans, all of
whom were awarded such fine mil
itary funerals that not one of them
has come back to register kix or
to talk to Sir Oliver Slodge about
it He claims to be able to talk to
the dead and get answers, but
many of us still remember being
from Missouri, and having to be
shown.
There may be some men In the
Heppner Hills who are tired of the
sheep business, and if so there
now a golden opportunity to buy
new home near here in Beverly
Hills, where there isn't a single
sheep In sight, and never a blah-a-i
Is heard. Pickleford, the beautiful
home of Mary Pickleford, Amerl
ca's sweetheart, and Douglas Sand
banx, which cost $400,000, may now
be bought at 50 per cent off, on
tho uneasy payment plan of ten
cents down and ten cents a minute
or, if preferred, note 30 days after
dinner, as everybody's credit
again good, owing to the summary
suppression of the recent depres
sion, impression and xprcssion. Of
course everybody knows that th
climate here is ideal no Ice,
snow, no slush, no flies, no fleas,
no bunk, no booze, no saxofoncs!
Still, if the weather buro would send
a little less fog, it might be better,
for at night it prevents us from
seeing the merry milkmaids filling
their pails along the Milky Way,
and some days It is utterly impos
sible to look across the Pacific
and count the fly-spex on the window-panes
In Honolulu, even when
we use powerful field glasses made
Scant and company clerk in Co. C
and Co. K, 5th Regiment Infantry,
Massachusetts Volunteer Militia.
Served as private in Captain
George H. Burton's Co. C, 21st U.
S. Infantry. Honorably discharged
at Fort Vancouver, Washington
Territory, 1874, Colonel Alfred Sul
ly, commanding regiment
Served In Major W. A. Clark's
Battalion, Montana Volunteers, dur
ing part of Nez Perce Indian war,
1877.
Served as Volunteer U. S. Scout
and Courier under General O. O.
Howard, in Nez Perce Indian war,
1877.
Served in Captain Timothy Bald
win's Company of Oregon Volun
teers, Bannack Indian war, in
Eastern Oregon, 1978.
Served as Volunteer U. S. Scout
and Courier under General O. O.
Howard, in Bannack Indian war, In
1878, In Eastern Oregon, Eastern
Washington and Idaho Territories
and Northern Nevada. Honorably
discharged at Fort Boise, Idaho, at
the close of the war.
Served in Farrow's Scouts In the
campaign against the hostile Sheep
eater Indians in the Salmon River
and Seven Devils Mountains of Ida
ho, under command of Lieutenant
Edward S. Farrow, of the 21st U.
S. Infantry.
Served as Assistant Adjutant
General of Oregon, 1879-83. Com
missioned by Governor W. W. Tha
yer, in recognition of services ren
dered during three Indian wars.
Oregon Crop Conditions
Exceed Country Average
The season of 1933 has been the
least favorable for crop production
nationally in 50 years, though Ore
gon shines In comparison with con-
itions about normal despite short
ages in some crops. This Is shown
in the current report on the agri
cultural situation Issued by the ag
ricultural extension service at Ore
gon State college. Low yields are
in prospect for most crops In the
country, with acreage in some
cases reduced.
The general condition of pastures
n the United States Is the poorest
on record. Hay production is ex
pected to be more than 10 percent
below average. The feed grain sup
ply of the country may be as mucn
as 20 percent smaller than a year
ago, with the oats crop especially
short. Flax seed production Is ex
pected to be less than one-half of
average. Potato production was
forecast on July 1 as about 14 per
cent less than last year.
CHECKING UP ON SrOBTS.
By JACK ADAMS.
Followers of tennis confldentally
expected to see the American Dav
is Cup team return to the United
States from overseas with the Dav
is Cup. Instead the United States
was defeated by England and did
n't even get to play France.
m m m
That certainly is a beautiful race
in the American league. The New
York Yankees are in the lead one
day and the Washington Senators
the next.
Volmapl Iso-Hollo, the young
Finnish runner and Olympic stee
lechase champion, broke the world
record for four miles the other day
at Viborg. Finland, in an athletic
meet, covering the distance in is
minutes and one second.
The other day at Phoenixville,
Fa., a woodpecker landed on a base
ball umpire s head during a ball
game. Would give tnree cents to
know what the bird was thinking
about.
"Grandstand" managers are pre
dicting that Babe Ruth of the New
York Yankees will manage the
Brooklyn Dodgers next year. It is
also said that Ruth will manage
the Chicago White Sox.
Military Service Rendered by
John W. Redington.
Served as private, corporal, ser
LIFE INSURANCE
i a promise for a better future
A Sure Investment.
MRS. ANNA Q. THOMSON
Insurance Counselor
NEW YORK LIFE
For SUNBURN, INSECT BITES
all irritations of the skin caused
by dust or weeds
WATKINS
MENTHOL CAMPHOR
Large Jar only 50c
J. C. HARDING, Watklns Dealer
IONE CASH
MARKET
Fresh and Cured
MEATS
Butterfat, Turkeys, Chickens
bought for SWIFT & CO.
Phone us for market prices
at all times.
Phone 82 IONE, ORE.
tut
The Pipe
DREAM
A Musical Comedy
50 PEOPLE 50
AH Local Talent
AUSPICES
LEGION AUXILIARY
HI SCHOOL GYM
FRIDAY
Aue. 4
Prices 10c and 25c
Trade and Employmen
EXCHANGE :
A record small crop of wheat is
in prospect, the estimate being ap
proximately 500 million bushels
compared with 726 million last year
and the 1928-1932 average of 8f5
million. With a carryover of 3t!j
million bushels and expected dom
estic use and export of around 600
million, a carryover next July 1 of
200 million bushels seems likely.
Outside the United States, the
world supply of wheat, considering
both the new crop and the record
carryover, appears to be about the
same as a year ago.
The general trend of prices for
farm products has been upward
during recent weeks, according to
the circular. The cost of commod
ities purchased by farmers has also
Increased somewhat In June, the '
government index of prices paid by
farmers was 103 percent of the
pre-war level with farm prices at
64, giving an index of purchasing
power of 62. The purchasing pow
er of farm products still averages
probably less than two-thirds of
pre-war parity, despite the advance
in prices for some commodities, the
report says.
ANNOUNCING
THE NEW AMAZING
PLYMOUTH
AND
DODGE SIXES
NOW ON DISPLAY AT
FRANK SHIVELY'S
Local Agent .
You are cordially invited to stop in and in
spect these cars.
OLSEN-KING, Inc.
PENDLETON
Dodge and Plymouth Cars and Trucks
NOTHING DOES SO MUCH FOR SO LITTLE AS YOUR TELEPHONE
(Printed without charge,
continued on notice.)
Dis-
Will trade for boy's saddle pony.
A. F. Majeske, Lexington.
For trade Dairy cattle for sheep,
wheat or barley. Roy Neill, Echo.
Two fresh heifers with calves to
trade for hogs or sheep. John G.
Parker, fone 17F3.
To trade Fresh milk cow.
Schulz, Heppner.
Max
To trade Pint and quart bottles;
also three 100-gal, barrels. Max
Schultz, Heppner.
Will trade cows for riding culti
vator. G. F. Hartford, Boardman.
To trade A 22-lnch Case thresh
er with blower; a Fordson tractor;
everything complete for what
have you. C. W. Valentine, Lex
ington, Ore.
To trade Holt 16-ft. hillside
combine; has only cut 500 acres
for cows or horses. G. F. Hartford
Boardman.
For trade, yearling Jersey bull,
for what have you. Ralph Butler,
Willows, Oregon. '
For Trade Full blood white belt
ed male hog; will trade for male
pig of same breed at weaning time.
Harry French, Hardman. Ore.
Weanling pigs for trade.
Higglns, Lena, Ore.
James
To Trade Hotpolnt electric
range, slightly used, for what have
you. Mrs. Eph Eskelson, city.
2-man Deering combine with mo
tor to trade for cattle, sheep or
hogs. Troy Bogard, Heppner.
To trade Electric range, nearly
new, for what have you. O. T. Fer
guson, Heppner.
To trade Gasoline engine and
water pump, also .32 Remington
automatic rifle. Max Schultz,
Heppner, Ore.
To trade Cream separator and
automobiles for sheep. O. T. Fer
guson, Heppner.
To trade Wagon for wood. War
ner Rietmann, lone.
Will trade fresh Holstein cow for
grain drill. Nick Faler, Boardman,
Ore.
To trade Jersey bull for another
Jersey bull. Must be from high pro
ducing stock. O. E. Aldrlch, Irri
gon, Ore.
Will trade gasoline washing ma
chine motor for a portable type
writer. Also will trade thorough
bred Jersey cow for anything I can
use. Beulah B. Nichols, Lexington.
To trade Jacks for mules; take
and pay In mules when raised; or
any other stock I can use. B. F,
Swaggart, Lexington.
To Trade Purebred Jersey heif
er, fresh. Ray Beezeley, lone.
Trade Purebred aged Jersey bull
for young Jersey bull. E. T, Mes
senger, Boardman, Ore.
Hay chopper to trade for wheat
D. A. Wilson, city.
Majestic range to trade for what
have you. See D. E. Oilman, city.
Business is
sending its voice afield
for ACTION
By telephone you can call on many additional
prospects each day
In town, and out of town;
At no waste of time;
At low selling cost.
Send your voice afield. It's one of the best
salesmen on your staff.
The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company
Business OfTice: 4 West "Willow Street cHeppner, Oregon
Headquarters for
MONARCH
Canned Foods
HUSTON'S
GROCERY
K
I
Heppner
Oregon