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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1916)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEPrXER, 01! E., THl'HSnAV. AUG. 10. 191G FUNERAL SVJPrUES MUDKKX IHl'MKNT 1NSTAK IN(i SKKVin-: CASE FURNITURE COMPANY ! I I Hans Gun Calf, Blind Eye let, English Last, Good year Welt $4.00 IF THIS PARTICULAR NUMBER DOES NOT AP PEAL TO YOU WE HAVE MANY OTHER STYLES AND CAN SURELY PLEASE YOU. Exclusive agents for widely known brands of shoes: HAMILTON-BROWN, For Ladies. DIAMOND BRAND, For Men and Ladies. FLOPvSHEIM, For Men. A. A. CUTTER, Only Shoe For Men. CHURCHILL'S GLOVES For Workingmen. E.N . G MASONIC ! You Can Afford to Build Now-- WE SAVE YOU 25'; TO 30"r OF THE COST. f" . u ; m n w '4 XI Xo. 501, Five Itooms. $790.00 is a small price for ALL the lumber, Shingles, Windows and doors, weights and cord for win dows, and building paper, for this HOME. BUILD BETTER BUILDINGS FOR LESS MONEY. Our Building Experts Show You How. Our building experts have prepared a book of plans of buildings erected here in the Northwest. These designs embody many exclu sive features that go to make the best possible buildings for least cost. No matter what kind of a building you contemplate building, you want to see this book. Our local sales manager will show it to you and will gladly quote you the complete price NO EXTRAS-Y0UR MONEY REFUNDED FOR UN USED MATERIAL. There are no extras to pay for when you build by the Tum-A-Lurn Method We furnish ALL the building material necessary to com plete the building. We tell you exactly how much your biulding will cost before you spend one cent. We furnish blue prints and ma terial list showing where every piece of material belongs. THERE IS NO WASTE every piece is figured so that it cuts exactly no guess work about the compMe cost. Should any material be left when the building is up, you can bring It back and we will refund your money. THE ONE RIGHT PRICE TO EVERYBODY. Everybody pays the SAME price at our yards. You do not hae to pay for the man who doesn't pay his bills or make up the dif ference for the man who jrets a special, price you pay the actual cost of the lumber delivered and ONE fair profit you pay the RIGHT PRICE nobody can buy for any less. See R. F. Weigel, Lexington, W. H. Cronk, lone, About It TUM-A-LUM LUMBER COMPANY THE HOME OF TUM-A-LUMBER. ,, GAZETTE-TIMES PRINTING oiitv BUILDING f .5. . .;. .j. .5. .;. .j. $ j J '!''!,'5'' j. AND WON'T REGRET IT IftBiS OF INTEREST : FROM THE IONS SECTION Frank Hall and family have mov- lied down from Heppner. They will occupy the Wilmot residence. V. L. Barlow and family will move to lone from their Eight Mile home to take advantage of the school. Dr. Chick reports the arrival of a son at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Buschke on the 7th. Mother and child doing well. Joseph T. Knappenberg has thrown his hat in the ring and is buying wheat for Phill Cohu of Heppner. The wheat buying season promises to be a lively one. John Olden, of Rhea creek, is quite busy these days putting up a new j residence on his farm to take the plate of the one destroye'd by fire last season. lie will nave a hue country home when the new structure is com pleted. Mrs. R. F. Wilmot and daughter, Miss Katura, will leave lone the com ing week for Portland where they ex pect to make their home in the fu ture. These excellent people will be j , . . . ., . . . 'waste places, rocky areas, etc. ad nnssed form lone by their large cir- i . , ' ' cle of friends. D. E. Gilman, manager of the Mc Halev estate, was a visitor in lone on Tuesday looking over the grain j situation here. He found a lot of the best grain he ever saw raised in 1 cieusly scattered at this time will a Morrow county, and was highly I mount to hardly anything as far as , , ... ,, ,, either money or time is concerned pleased with the outlook. , ,,, , , and will surely put a stop to the Carl Yount has arrived from Port-j threatened outbreak. Where grass land and will soon have charge of the hoppers are already beginning to en- office of M. H. Houser at this place. jHe expects to take up his residence in lone and his family will arrive as soon as he has secured a place for I them to live. i Charley Shaver completed a good well on the W. G. Palmateer ranch I the past week, and has moved bis I outfit to the farm of Sam Dennis i ' where he began boring this week. The Palmateer well was sunk over 70 feet and an abundant flovf of wa ter was secured. i W. D. Fox, of Glacier, Wash., who has been visiting with his son, Frank j ,Fox, of Gooseberry, since the middle, of June, returned to his home on; Tuesday. Mr. Fox greatly enjoyed : his stay here and is very favorably ! impressed with this country- Ha : left much improved in health. j J. M. Baker, formerly one of the i successful farmers of this section, is i ; up from Portland on a visit at the home ofM. R. Morgan, of lone. Mr. Baker farmed for many years in this county but disposed of Ii Is interests i here some years ago and took uu his i residence in Portland. Iconnug ol l uai'ies E. ili:;;!'.c.i. h(.,iuIi- i W. S. Smith returned the first of j!k.au (allaidale for president, to Spo ' the week from a visit to Salem where ; smulav and Alomlav. Aucust l.i ' he owns a good piece of property. He j -vas accompanied home by Mr. Rob erts, or saiem. wno is interested m 'central committee expects that 2, ; making a trade for some Morr.nv 1 000 people win )u,iir Mr Hughes in ctrunty property. Mr. Roberts is on a ; gD0iane deal for the farm of A. B. Grov We have not learned whether tin transaction went through.. Mrs. C. W. Reynolds, wife of Pas itor Reynolds of the Christian church !has been moved to the home of her parents at Dallas,, Oregon, after un dergoing an operation for appendicitis I at the Salem hospital. From latest r:.prt Mrs. Reynolds was yet quite ;ck and she will not be able to re ':.! to her lone home before the first ?f September. Mr. Reynolds expects 'i return and resume his labors here -a Sunday, Aug. 20. John E. Peterson is visiting at the home of his brother, Aaron Peterson, on Eight Mile. Mr. Peterson is now a resident of Portland where he has been living for a number of years, but still owns his farm in this county which is being run at the present time by Ture Peterson. Aaron Peter son is also enjoying a visit from an other brother, C. T. t Carlbort, of Linnsburg, Kansas, an' educator of some note in that state. The lone schools will open on Mon day, Sept. 11, according to the pre sent arrangements, and from the way all vacant houses are being engaged we can look forward to a large atten dance. Many families from the coun try are preparing to move in to take advantage of the educational facill- ties and all vacant houses will be oc- cupied and a demand is going up for more. All of which speakes well for the educational institution of our town. ?! A ride through the extreme north end of Morrow county's wheat belt early this week reveals large num- bers of fine stacks of headed wheat. . Heading out that way is about all finished and the farmers are now an 4 rious to get at the threshing. Just when this will be done is not known at tliis time owing to the scarcity of 1 machines. The crop returns from that part of the county will be a big surprise mis season, junging irom me nunioer aim size oi uie Kiain There has been quite a bit of ac- tivity in the lone wheat market the . .. li.iy.;. and s..ivu considerable m:h i.ii! v I sra:: I'.ar, been contracted. creviulmg pine has been a- S l.Od. but some has sy'.d as i:h;'. Sl.O.". This latter figure realised by I'liil S. Gridin for Turkey ;;t,,, aiul he Sllla his ,.,ub for $1 0() Mr. Griltin disposes of 3000 sacks at this time. Frank Wilson has sold his entire crop, which will make a- round 14,000 sacks, to M. H. Houser fP $1.00, all around. Mr. Wilson is well satisled with this deal, and feels he has made money, though wheat should go to a higher price. Numerous other smaller sales have been made and times are somewhat inproved as a consequence. jSwnt the Grasshopper and Save the Crops. Grasshopper outbreaks may be ex pected in various portions of the State says A. L. Lovett, acting etomologist at 0. A. 0. from the present indi- cation. Grasshoppers injure crops more or less everyyear and did a great deal of injury in portions of the State last year. There is every reasan to believe that,, this condition will be as bad this year. In most cases the grasshoppers occur at this time as only partly grown forms more tor loss confined in the area of their distribution. In many cases they have ,not yet entered the cultivated field;;, but will be found in great numbers minute hoppers collected in vast strongly advised that farmers visit such portions of land adjacent to their cultivated fields at this time and inn l.-Q n cAnrph fitv nnv nf tluiun prilfi- , ', bg A amount 0f the poison bran mash judi- i ter the field or where later they do ontfir Hip lipid the snme nnisinn hr:in mu0l shouU be use(, slmp,y broa (.ast it over the areas where the grass- , hoppers occur. Grasshoppers tend to collect in open 'spaces on the soil for passing the nil;Ilti therefore such areas should be watched for and the poison bran mash scattered there either late at night or verv early In the morning, ine mixture sufficient to treat an acre is prepared as follows. Coarse bran 16 pounds Paris green or white arsenic '.i lb. I.emon extract 2 teaspnoufuis Warm water to make coarse crum bly mash. not get the mat"rial sloppy. It should fall apart readily in the hand after being pressed together. A. L. Lovett, O. A. C, Corvallis, Oregon. spue ill m tf s wrr '''pure omce of our a li ft i ll 'Vrr 1U 'HfS.Vactor, in He Spokane, Wash., Auyust in Ex traordinary interest is being ta!.! throughout the Inland Empire i.'i the and 14. Chairman ('iiarb-s ilubbard of the Spokane County Republican ! The original plan of holding the meeting in a theater had to be given up, as it was seen that no hall in Spo kane could accomodate one-fourth of the people w ho will want to hear Gov ernor Hughes. The nominee and his party of 27 including the representatives of the National Press association and the large eastern dailies, will arrive in Spokane over the Northern Pacific, Sunday morning, he will be met by a reception committee and taken to the Davenport Hotel. Sunday will be a day of rest. It is expected that Mr. and Mrs. Hughes will attend services at a Baptist church, as they are mem bers of that denomination. Monday morning at 9 o'clock, Mr. Hughes will be taken for an auto drive through the business district. Immediately after the drive the Idaho committee will take the candi date and his party to Coeur d'Alene city, where a forenoon meeting will be held. After luncheon, Mr. Hughes will re turn to Spokane and address a wo men's meeting at the auditorium the ater at 3:30. The party will then rest until the evening meeting at the sta dium at 7:30. The stadium has a seating capacity of 6,500 and stand ing room for 10,000 more than with in hearing distance of the speaker. The Spokane committee has asked the county committees and the state com committeemen of eastern Washington counties each to nominate five mem bers of the general reception commit tee. These are asked to call at Re publican headquarters in Spokane at 612 Sprague avenue and receive bad ges, i It is predicted that at least 50,000 pople will see Mr. Hughes in Spokane, either during the occasion of the auto drive or at the great public meetings : ''He of the plaintiff's mortgage herein at the Auditorium and the stadium, foreclosed, or since that date had in .. c , ,,. TTi,a ,i,and to the above descr bed real pro- At Spokane Governor Ilnghes and of flny his party will be met by S.A.Perkins' fllH innw Pfior nmi of Tacoma, national committeemen: chaIrman Millard T. Hartson and Sec - retary Jame8 Wood ot the Hepublican state central committee, and escorted across th state. The next stop will be in Tacoma. SLE OF KSTKAYKD .iMil'.l,. NVtice is he.-tby ghvn that the un- ; lier- 'sned has taken up and now holds ou his farm at Irrigon, Oregon, horse branded V on right shoulder. No other distinguishing marks appear on said animal with the , exception of white right hind foot, i Owner may have the above-described animal by calling at farm and paying all costs that have accrued. Notice is further given that unless. called for on or before Saturday, August 26, the said animal will be sold at sheriff's sale at 2 o'clock in the afternoon of said day to the high est bidder for casn in hand and in ; such manner as described by law per-1 raining to the taking up and sale of , animals running at large in Morrow county, Oregon. Dated and published the first time this 10th day of August, 1916. L. I.!. DAVIS, Irrigon, Ore. XOTK'J: OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has filed his final ac count a:, administrator of the estate of Walter P.. Birdwell, deceased, and that the County Court nf the State of Oregon for Morrow County has ap pointed Tuesday, the 5th day of Sept ember, 1916 at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, as the time, and the County Court room in the Court House at Heppner. Oregon, as the place of hearing and settling said final account. Objections to said filial account should be filed on or be- fore said date. W. G. Scott, Administrator. NOTICE OF l iNAL .('COl XTl(i. I Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned Executor ot the Last j Will and Testament of John Miller j deceased has filed with the county : court of Morrow County, Oregon his I final rport as such executor, and that j taid Court has fixed. Monday the 28th j day of August, 1916 at the hour of! 10 o'clock a. m. as the time and the j County court room in the court j house in Heppner, Oregon as the place for hearing said account an 1 . any objections thereto and for the j settlement of said Estate. Francis M. Miller, Executor. ! NOTICE Notice is here by given that the j j undersigned, Alfred L. Ayers, and ( i Anna Spencer, have been appointed i Executor and executrix of the Last i I Will, and Testament of Matilda, C. i Ayers, deceased, by the County Court of Morrow County, Oregon, and have j duly qualified for such trust. All persons having claims against ' said estate are hereby notified to i present same, duly verified, at the attorney, Sam E. Van puer, Oregon, within m the date of the first publication of this notice. Dated and published this 29th day of June, 1916. ALFRED L. AYERS, ANNA SPENCER, I Executor and Executrix of the Last Will and Testament of Matilda C. Ayers, deceased. IN THE CIRCl'IT COFKT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. Thomas Quaid, ) Plaintiff) vs. ) Emil Grotkopp, Frank Gil-) liam, Trustee in Hankruptey) of the Estate of Emil C. f.) Grotkopp, a bankrupt, and) O. E. Famsworth, ) Defendants,) NOTICE OF Siiriiill'i 'S HALE. By virtue of an execution, judge ment order, decree and order of sale issued out of the above entitled court in the above entitled cause to me directed and dated the 17th day of July, 1916, upon a decree rendered and entered in said Court on the 31st day of May, 1916, in favor of Thomas Quaid, plaintiff, and against Emil Grotkopp, Frank Gilliam, Trus tee in bankrupcy of the Estate of Emil C. T. Grotkopp, a bankrupt, and O. E. Famsworth, for the sum of $300 in United States Gold Coin, with interest thereon at the rate of 10 per cent per annum from the 22nd day of November, 1914, In like coin, and the futher sum of $40.00 attor ney's fees, and the further sum of $13.40 taxed as costs and disburse ments heroin, and the costs of and upon this writ, commanding me to make sale of the following described real property, to-wit:- The south Half of the S. W. of Sec. 10 in Township 5 S. of Range 27 East of the W. M. In Morrow County, Ore gon; NOW THEREFORE, By virtue of said execution, judgment order, and decree and order of sale and in com pliance with the commands of said writ, I will on Saturday the 19th day of August 1916, at 10 o'clock, a. m., at the front door of the County Courthouse In Heppner, in the Coun ty of Morrow, State of Oregon, sell at public auction, Bubject to redemption, to the biggest bidder, for cash In hand, all the right, title and interest which the within named defendants and each and all of them had on the 22nd day of November, 1910, the decree, interest, costs and accrued : costs Dated this 17th day of July, A. D.( 1916. GEO. McDUFFER, Sheriff for Morrow County, Oregon. Nt-TilK OK i'KOI'ESSlO.N U, ( Ol.t .N Dr. H. T. ALLISON Physician & Surgeon Office in Gunn Building. HEPPNER, OREGON Dr. N. E. WINNARD PhysicUn & Surgeon Office in Fair Building HEPPNER - - OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. Physician & Surgeon Office In Patterson Drug Store HEPPNER :-: OUEGON Dr. R. J. VAUGHN DENTIST Permanently located in the Odd Fellows building, Rooms 4 and 6. HEPPNER, OREGON DR. D. R. HAYLOR EYE SPECIALIST Heppner - Phone 52 - Ore. WOODSON & SWEEK ATTOKXKYS-AT-LAW Office in Palace Hotel, Heppuer, Oregon SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATl'OUXEV-AT-LAW Oftce on west end of May Street HEPPNER, OREGON S. E. N0TSON ATTOK X E Y-AT-I. A W Office In Court House, Heppner. F. H. ROBINSON LAWYER 10NE :-: :-; -: OREGON CLYDE and DICK WELLS SHAVING PARLOUS Three doors south of Postoflice. Shaving 25c Haircutting 35c Bathroom in connection. PATTERSON & ELDER 2 Doora North Palace Hotel. TONSORAL ARTISTS FINE BATHS SHAVING 26c J. H. BODE MERCHANT TAILOR HEPPNER :-: :-; :-; OREGON "Tailoring That Satisfies" LOUIS PEARSON MERCHANT TAILOR HEPPNER :-: :-; :.: OREGON ROY V. WHITEIS Fire Insurance writer for best Old Line Companies. HEPPNER OREGON W. L. SMITH ESTATE ABSTRACT OFFICE M. A. LOEHR, Abstractor FARM LOANS The tax reg-lstratlon bureau In connection with this olHce will be found moBt useful to taxpayers of Morrow county. It gives prompt and full attention to all tax matters of its patrons and thus relieves them of all worry and trouble. Write for contract. BRADFORD & SON "The Village Painters" Contractding Painting and Paper hanging, Phone 553. Office 1st Door Wtst of Creamery Abstracts examined. Corporation Law Financial Agents. Trusts, Escrows and Accounts. Estates probated. Collec tions, Deeds, Mortgages. General practicelnall courts. Correspondence solicited. Prompt attention. Bank references. Fourfeenli year. LOANS PLACED ON PORTLAND PROPERTY Mosessohn & Mosessohn 714.71S-7U Chamber of Commarc Bids. PORTLAND, OREGON LAWYERS