Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, November 07, 1922, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON
Tuesday, November 7, 1922
rnoi'KssioxAL cards
. . ?
DR. A. D. McMURDO
I'llYSK.'IA.V ami SCKGKOX
Telephone 122
Office Patterson's Drug Store
HEPPNEK, OREGON
F. A. McMENAMIN
IiAWVEIt
Office Plione Main 643
i
ReHldunce Tlione Main 666"
Ilobtrts Building
i
HEPPNER, OREGON
S. E. NOTSON
Al'TOU.V E Y-AT-LA W
j Office in Court House
HEPPNER, OREGON
DeLUXE ROOMS
Summer Rates
75c & $1.00
Over Case Furniture Co.
Biune E. Vati Vac'-or K. K. Butler
Van VACTOR & BUTLER
A TTOR1V E YS-AT-L A W
Suite 304 First National Bank Bldg.
3'IIK DAIJiEK, OKIOGON.
WATERS & ANDERSON
I' IKE INSUKANCIi
; Successors to
1 p. C. Patterson
HEPPNER, OREGON
WOODSON & SWEEK
ATTOttNIOYS-AT-IiAW
Masonic Building
JIEITNK-R, OREGON
I "
OPTIMISM 1M IXTIOl S
11. J. Aii'xanctcr, rosilnt. of the
Fii'Hl National bank of Denver upon
rotuniiiiK from 1 lie rouvrnt ion of the
Amiricaii l!a ukcrH' nhnoriiit ion in
New York wln'rc nearly 12,000 of
llio country's hunkers iinKemlil''.l says
"that, optiisism .and conl'icli'iico in ro
lurtiitik' prospciily were rcl Irciod in
nil the puinlilic and informal sessions.
Thai optimism was inectious,"
miiil Mr. Alexander, "ami I lirminlit
qiillo a lo ol' II lmm" wilh mi. Na
lion wide prosperity is HWiinip'i'K tin'
railroads ol' 1'ie country with I'reiKlit
ol Terincs, and 1 find much lo inspire
confidence in ;;ood limes ilurinK (lie
luwl I hroo year.
""riiose of us who live in the cities
must seriously consider a mure eiuil
ahli' ' adjust nienl of farm earnings.
Thai is an unsolved problem
needs sillily by hanker and business
man.
"We do not need any boom, no.'
do we tired o expect any ft ravaira nl
vHunis, luil Kuod times semu, assur
ed." GILLIAM & BiSSEE'S
COLUMN
THE KICiHT KI.VD OF XEWS
.J. .J. .;.
Conio and I'.et. tin' county nnoiilV
niachine for the dry treatment of
jour seed wheat with copper carbon
lite, The work Is ilmii rl'ectly anil
(Toiioesti'uUy. (let yi eider i
early as it lakei sumo le to le.akt
lm.
w.. 1 :,.- : eh! all Kinds o' .am
tl rills- but hie il.vMcJ t th
Kentucky lVulilo r,un lieu is f'-v I
U- fulti'.l for this territory. Come
In and look them over for yourself.
The lievolvint; lied V coders ro
thi' ones that get the weeds.
I? you ari going to use the dry
treatment for your seed wheat you
cannot ntford to pass up tho Calkin
nuu'hlus.
News Important to Your ('(iinmiinity
Should iie J'ublisheil
If you want to benefit your own
community through pubicitly of its
farminr;, social or business interests,
send the Herald news of the activi
ties of the people of your neighbor
hood. Let the rest of the county
know what you are doing as a com
munity, personally or socially.
Any of the following topics are
matters of interest in which the
whole county is interested. Some of
them are important matters of news
which may i:ot be published unless
some one in your comniuuity inter
ests themiselves in sending the news
to the Herald, your county paper. Be
that person and send it yourself, the
next time something of interest hap
pens in your neighborhood, your fam
ily or your circle of friends. TRY
IT. It will benefit your community
and you, as well as the Herald. Tell
us something about any of these
subjects as news items:
Accidents
Anniversaries Wedding, Lodge
Annual Meetings
Appointments to Office
Balls
Baptisms
Base Ball 'Games
Births ' :'
Bridges New, Repairs '-"''
Burglaries
Business Changes " '!
Business Undertakings j
Caucuses ' "! ""
Church Activities
Club Doings ; 1
Commencements School "
Concerts
Confirmations
Contests
Co-operative News
Crime
Crop Prospects
Crop Conditions
Curiosities Discovery of '
Damage Wind, Water
Damage-Hail, Other Causes
Dances
Deaths
Dedications
Directors Meetings
Dilches - County
Elections Political ' '
Election, .School, Lodge
Eloolioii Society, Etc.
Entertain men ts After
Exercises School
Exhibits
Farmer's Union Meetings
Kami Bureau Meeting
Farm Improvements
Earm Organizations
Eiros
Floods
Former Residents Visits
Fool ball Games
(.! rad ual es Names
(iraihiat ion Exercises
Orange Meetings, Doings
Historical Hems Local
Home Coinings
Hotels-- Prominent Visitors
House Warmings
Humorous Happenings
Illness - Serious
Improvements- Public
Improvemi nts Private
Industries New
Initial oiis- -With Festivities
Inventions Hy Local People
Lawsuits
Loci lli'cs
Light l'lanls- Changes, Etc.
Lodge Doings
Lo: Si s - Money, Etc.
Mai riages
Meetings of Interest
M ines New .
Ministers New, Etc.
Mobs
New comers
Operations Serlol.s
Old Happenings
l Mil Tiise Stories Local
Ow no-ship Changes
I'a n ies
1 iMili;i 1 Items
Li ,vate TNo.-.tncals
I'liM'c I'lojects
I'uhlic !'ler
IV .1 Kstaic Sales
:
GILLIAM & BISBEE
ih'.ic Officials
.igu.it tons
-i,0 nee..
Changes of
Keun ions
K. n h al Mooifngs
Load Improvements
Kobhei ies
Runaways
Sickness- Serious
School Doings
School Houses
School Houses -
Secret Societies
Socials
Society IVungs
Sports-- Local
Slot 111 a Damage
Suicides
Swindles
Teachers
Thefts
Tra elini
Vntold Stories
Vacations
New
Changes
Employment of
- Coming and Ooinsr
Local
Violence
Visits and Visitors
W ea t h e r U n u s u a 1
Wedding Anniversaries
Women's Club Doings
Wrecks Auto, etc.
HARD OX THE FARMER
An Iowa farm mortgage banker
says that a new England client re
fused to renew a $2,000 5 loan,
stating the case like this:
"The annual interest was $110.
The client's income and local tax on
that amount was $79, leaving only a
net revenue of $31 for the $2,000
loan. The client called the loan and
invested the money in tax-exempt
securiies."
The effect of tax-free investments
is the same on industry as on farm
ing. Roughly, a rich man today is
better off, draws a larger income, ff
he buys a 4 V2 per cent tax-free bond
than if he takes a 9 or 10 per cent
industrial stock.
The bond is under the rigid and
unproductive hand of the public of
ficial, while the stock is under the ac
tive and productive hand of the Am
erican business man.
For the wealth and welfare of thn
people at large the difference is as
that between the quick and the dead.
Yet tens of thousands of investnra
are being encouraged or driven vearlv
to choose the dead, to turn their
backs on live American enterprise,
and to lock up their capital in a
financial graveyard.
What is the cure? An amendment
to Hit Federal Constitution allowine
states to tax nationail securities and
the naioual governmen to tax state
securities.
No country can survive half tared
and half untaxed. Manufacturer.
PIULANTHOPY IS COXTAGIOVS
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON: Eu
gene, Oreg., Nov. 5. Oregon's sister
slates are watching the results of the
Oregon endowment campaign "with
eager interest", according to Herbert
T. Condon, Comptroller of the Uni
versity of Washington, who was a
week-end visitor in Eugene. Mr.
Condon is an alumnus of the Univer
sity of Oregon, having graduated in
1892.
"The benefaction of the late Dr.
Bernard Daly of Lake county set a
noble pace, and fortunately, philan
thropy is contagious," said Mr. Son-
don.
"Oregon has wealth and culture
and this wealth and culture are fre
quently to be found combined in the
same household. I am sure Univer
sity of Oregon alumni believe in their
cause. The result is oerhiin "
PRESIDENT CAMPBELL COM-
MK.VDS KorVD-lP
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON', Eu
gene, Oreg., Nov. 4. The Christian
Science Monitor in a recent issue
printed under an Eugene date Hue
a half column interview with Presi
dent P. L. Camlipbell of the Univer
sity of Oregon in which he discussed
the Pendleton Round-Up. In tile
opinion of President Campbell, as ex
pressed In the intrevivv, th Round-Up
is not a wild and crude Western im
provisation, but a work of supreme
excellence, a pageant unequalled for
sincerity, proportion and genuine
beauty."
LEGAL NOTICES
.NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned has been duly appoint
ed bv the County Court of the State
of Oregon for Morrow county, as Ex
ecutrix of the Last Will and Testa
ment of W. O. Minor, deceased and
that she has qualified as such.
All persons having claims against
the raid estate must present them to
the undersigned, properly verified, at
the office of Woodson & Sweek, at
torneys, in Heppner, Oregon, on or
before six months from the date of
the first publication of this notice.
Date of first publication October
31, 1022.
MAHALA MINOR, Executrix.
CALL FOR CITY WARRANTS
All general fund warrants, City of
Heppner, registered on or before Oc
tober 8th, 1921, will be paid on
presentation at office of City Treas
urer on and after November 10th
1922, at which date interest on said
warrants will cease.
Dated at Heppner, Oregon, October
30th, 1922.
LEON W. BRIGGS,
Treasurer City of Heppner.
COUXTY TREASURER'S NOTICE
All Morrow county warrants drawn
on the general fund and registered
from January 1 to. January 31, 1922,
both inclusive, will be paid upon pre
sentation at my office on or after
November 13, 1922. Interest ceases
after that date.
T. J. HUMPHREYS,
27-28 County Treasurer.
SUMMOXS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR
ROW COUNTY.
Arthur Smith and Elizabeth Smith,
Plaintiffs, vs.
Antone Abrahamsick, Jr., amd Jo
hanna Abrahamsick, Defendants.
TO Antone Abrahamsick, Jr., and
to Johanna Abrahamsick, the above
named defedants:
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE
OF OREGON: You, and each of you,
are hereby required to appear and
answer the Complaint filed against
you in the above entitled suit on or
before six (6) weeks from the 10th
day of October, 1922, towit: On or
before the 22nd day of November,
1922, and if you fail to so answer,
the plaintiffs will apply to the Court
for the relief prayed in the Com
plaint herein, towit: For a decree of
the Court decreeing that you, nor
either of you, have any estate or in
terest in or to the following describ
ed real property, or any part there
of, towit:
"Commencing at the Northeast
corner of Lot numbered Ten (10) in
Block numbered Five (5) in the town
of Heppner, County of Morrow, and
State of Oregon, running thence
South Eighty (SO) feet, thence West
Thirty (30) feet, thence North
Eighty (80) feet, thence East Thirty
(30) feet, to the place of beginning."
And further decreeing that the
plaintiffs are the owners in fee of the
whole thereof, 'and that you, and
each of you, be forever enjoined from
asserting any claim in or to said
premises adverse to the plaintiffs
herein.
For such other and further relief
as may in equity be just.
This Summons is served upon you
by publication hereof once a week for
six (li) consecutive weeks in the Hep
pner Herald, a weekly newspaper of
general circulation, in Morrow
County, Oregon, published at Hep
pner, by virtue of an order duly
made and entered herein on the 3rd
day October, 1S22 by the Honorable
W. T. Campbell, County Judge of
Morrow County, Oregon, and the date
of the first publication of this Sum
mons is October 10th, 1922, and the
date of the last publication hereof
will be November 21st, 1922.
VAN VACTOR & BUTLER,
Attorneys for Plaintiff, Postoffice
Address: The Dalles, Oregon. 24-30
SPUDS
CELEBRATED WESTON MOUNTAIN
POTATOES 75c PER SACK
One Sack or a Car Load Same Price
Come and get them at our store
Jones &, Jones
Weston, Oregon ,
at Thomson Bros. fr
Boys and Girl's School Wear
OUR Assortment of Boy's
and GirPs footwear for
the school season were never
more complete.
Boy's and Girl's Shoes $3.00 to $5.00
Boy's and Girl's Sweaters $2.50 up
Boy's Knicker Suits $8.50 to $15.00
Boy's and Girl's Windsor Ties .35c - .50c
Boy's and Girl's Blouses $1.00 and $1.25
School Hose 25c - 35c - 50c
Thomson Bros.
Heppner - - Oregon
ft
n'
The Road
to Happiness
9
IS made more smooth by a substantial
savings account. Moy sn'i everything
but it certain'-. ' 0-er the rough spots in
life.
The inborn feeling of satifaction and
contentment that accompanies a growing
Savings Account can only be appreciated
by the man or woman who has one.
Open Your Account and
Build for Happiness
Farmers and Stockgrowers
National Bank
Heppner, Oregon
i
nil
ill
A
8 X' Tf Th "H 1
"We wish to announce to the people of Heppner and Morrow county that we
are open for business with a complete line of dry g'oods, notions, mens clothing and
furnishings, shoes, and groceries.
Our stocK is new and we respectfully solicit a share of your patronage. Our
prices will be as low as is consister t with the quality of merchandise will merit.
GIVE US A TRIAL
W. P. PROPHET & CO.
HEPPNER, OREGON
tffiOBS
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