f f V PAGE FOCR THB GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER, "ri; . THURSDAY. SEPT. 28. 1916 People's Cash ftlarket Phone Main 73 Wholesale and retail dealers in FRESH AND CURED MEATS Prompt attention given all orders. HENRY SCHWARZ, Proprietor Every Home can have a Musical Instrument Wonderful Values in Pianos. PlaSer Pianos m . I altnn Machines, tie. Ve are known to carry only what is cootl. what will endure and what is fully worth the price nsk;i Our easy pavment terms pla.-e the best musical :nstn:rrents vi:h'n every one's reach. lul ci:t the coupon or vrite for catalogues. Sherman, layS, Go. Portland, si OR!-cox THE CLUB h.t- IS HEPPNER YOUNG MEN'S POPULAR RESORT BILLIARDS AND POOL WE SERVE ALL THE LEADING BRANDS OF SOFT DRINKS AND THE BEST LINES OF CIGARS AND TOBACCO. -:- -:- O. .B fiCltmsan, in the Palace Hotel. ! Will 1917 Find "IF"? If we had builded as we planned last year A home of cheerful rooms and porches wide, If we had worked, instead of dreamed to rear A structure where contentment would abide, Where little children's voices could be heard In merry shout and laughter ringing free Without the fear of any chiding word From irate landlord, or from you, or me. We would have missed the poor homehunt er's doom, If we had builded as we planned last year! The soul expands if you but give it room, But shrivels in a crowded atmosphere. We would have had a dwelling of our own, And this mad war that raised the build ing cost Would not affect us, had we only known. But now our opportunity is lost! (Anne Stark) I Come Right In and Talk "SEE WEIGEL OR CRONK ABOUT IT" AT THE HOME OF TUM-A-LUMBER 4-HtHf44(.4, : : : it t f i Why Advertising ! Brings Results to t f c t Being the first of a series of advertistig talks by the "Devil." INTRODUCTION For the advertiser to gain the best possible results from his newspaper advertising, his medium must possess 1. The confidence of its readers commonly ex pressed "Having a standing with the people." 2. A field that is virgin soil for the advertisers' statements where they will sprout and bring forth many sales. Circulation which thoroughly covers the field, and which includes in the list the "buying class." Xext week we will take up why The Gazette-Times has Headers." J.V .4if4i4i44M44HMti4i.I TT wtwJN1" i r Catalog Hote"- i You With lis i y"4"T'T'T'ft"tMfr t it Over With Us. i in THE GAZETTE-TIMES f f the Advertiser it 7 f i t f f t f t t t t i t t t i t 1 f f t f T t t f t the first imint and show the "Confidence of its X I Nam 1 Oil cisfe By Glfford Plnchot. The Conservation of natural re- sources h become one ot the largest issues oi our time, in me campaign interior actively supported this sur of 1912, it formed one of the chief render of National safety to private planks in the Democratic platform, Breed. The Secretary of the Navy and and was often endorsed in Mr. Wil- the Attorney General opposed it. Wil- ... son remained neutral and did noth- son s speecnes. his inaugural aaaress )ng committed him fully to support it. Because Wilson refused to take For these reasons it is important sides, or took the wrong side, the to know what the Wilson Administra- Question whether the people or the .. . , . . , , interests shall win or lose in the tion has done. As one man deeply in- ., ,, . . Shields and Myers waterpower bills terested in Conservation and familiar and the Pheian oil bill is yet unset- with the record, I am writing to lay it tied. These bills are still before Con briefly before you. gress, and will pass or fail at the When he took office, Mr. Wilson coming session. The public water ceased to say much on Conservation, powers and the efficiency of the Navy preferring to let the members of his are at stake. There can be no corn Cabinet speak for him. After his in- promise between the men who would auguration, the friends of Conserva- grab the public resources for private tion, regardless of partisanship, offer- profit, and those who would conserve ed him their help in putting the Con- them for the use of all the people, servation policies through. The op- j Either the interests will get them or portunity invited action. The fight ; the people will keep them. There is to save Alaska from the Guggenheims no middle ground, had created a living body of public To sum up, as in many other mat opinion which lacked only official ters the promise made was not per- leadership to save what resources still remained in public hands. It seemed at first that President Wilson would lead. At the outset the work of the Wil son Administration in Conservation was good. Congress passed, and Mr. Wilson signed, the Alaska Railroad 'Bill and the bill which assured Gov ernment control of coal lands in Al aska. These measures were excellent, and President Wilson deserves praise for their enactment. So he does for his veto of a bill to give away Nation al Forest lands. Unfortunately these creditable in stances form but a little of the ercord. Politics came into control. Thus a bill seeking to turn the natural re sources of Alaska over to a political commission was repeatedly recom mend by the Administration through the mouth of the Secretary of the In terior. If passed it would have thrown Alaska Into the hands of the special interests and established a policy al most certain to destroy the National control of natural resources every where else as well. This measure we were fortunately able to stop. When Wilson became President, the Reclamation Service, In its great work of irrigating the arid lands of the West, was wholly free from pol itics. By the mouth of his Secretary of the Interior Wilson advocated, and later signed, a bill which leaves the choice of lands to be reclaimed to a Committee of Congress, and so makes politics dominate the Service, fi. Director Newell was the man who created the Reclamation Service. He made and kept it one of the most effi cient Bureaus under the Government. The Secretary of the Interior forced him out, and replaced him by a Com mission In which politicians control. The Newlands bill is a Conserva tion measure which proposes to devel op all the resources of our inland wa terways waterpower, navigation, ir rigation, and domestic supply, for the public benefit. Although Wilson strongly endorsed it during his cam paign, as President he let it drop, and instead has signed two waterway bills of the old pork-barrel type, which are everything the Newlands bill is not. Waterpower is the most valuable resource still in public hands. There is undeveloped waterpower in our navigable streams equal to twice the power of every kind now used In the United States. It is a huge prize. For years the waterpower Interests have been fighting to seize it, and the Con servationists to save it for the people. A waterpower measure, the Adam son Bill, came before the House In 1914. It favored monopoly, and gave the special interests, for nothing, the public water power on navigable streams. Nevertheless Wilson en dorsed it. On Its way through the House, the bad parts of the Adamson bill were stricken out, and the public rights were secured. Thereupon Wilson re versed his previous stand, and en dorsed the amended bill. This good bill then went to the Senate, where It was shelved, and the Indefensible Shields bill was reported in its place. The Shields bill gives away the public waterpowers forever and for nothing. Both Roosevelt and Taft vetoed bills drawn on the same principle. Yet, by another reversal, the Wilson Ad ministration got behind it, and when a widely circulated public appeal was made to the President for his help to defeat It, lie refused. As to waterpower on the public lands, there Is but one reversal in stead of two. Wilson first, by the mouth of a member of his Cabinet, endorsed the Ferris bill, which was mainly good. It was replaced In the Senate by the Myers bill, which Is thoroughly bad. Among other tilings this bill actually throws the Grand Canyon, the greatest natural wonder of America, wide open to individual appropriation. Nevertheless, Wilson reversed himself In order to give It In the same way Ills endorsement. Both as to waterpower on naviga blo streams and on public lands, the last reversals leave the Administra tion standing with the special inter ests against the people. j The Phelan oil land measure would hand over to private Individ uals who have no legal rights the val uable oil lands set aside as reserves 1 for the Navy. The Navy Department has made public announcement that the mere threat of the Phelan bill's passage has caused it "to seriously consider the advisability of abandon ing" the policy of constructing oil burning ships. Only oil burning ships can develop and maintain the high speeds required in modern war, and without them no Navy can be even secon(, clag9 The Secretary of tne formed. Instead of progress in con serving our resources, the last two years have seen a bitter and often a losing fight to hold what we had. Wil son talked well, began to act well, and then, yielding to the political pressure of the special interests, went back on Conservation. Farm Crops Exhibit at the State Fair. During the course of the year at the Branch Experiment Station a'' Moro R. Ball of the United States De partment of Agriculture and Mr L. M. Jegers of the United States Grain Standardization Laboratary, collected a large number of wheat varieties and planted them in a wheat classification nursery. Hundreds of varieties were represented there from various parts of the dry farm country of Eastern Oregon and Washington, and Eastern states. In addition to this a consid erable number of varieties from In dia and Australia were grown. Both head and grain samples of these wheats are on exhibition at the fair, so that It will be possible for people having varieties of wheat to identify them and get their true names. An other feature of the exhibit consists of heads and grain display of the leading winter and spring varieties of each of the important wheat growing sections of Oregon. The leading va rieties of barley and oats are dis played. A small exhibit of some of the freak wheats that are rather fre quently exploited before the farming public of the northwest, has been pre pared. Persons having varieties of wheat of which they do not know the names are invited to bring head sam ples of the wheat for comparison and identification at the State Fair booth, and in case they cannot be identified there they will be forwarded to the Farm Crops Department at Corvallls and worked over at that place. Merle Neil, Earl Gordon and Henry Peterson took in the Round-Up last week at Pendleton, going over on the special. Allder & Davis make over old and make new mattresses in sectional form. Se us at Bode's tailor shop. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Matlock were in the city today from their home on Hititon creek. M. D. Clark and Guy Boyer were among the Round-Up visitors from this city. Ralph Justus and Hen Cox of Hin ton creek, went to Pendleton last week. Ernest Lundell of lone was in the city a little while Wednesday after noon. Frank Hopkins visited a while in this city Wednesday afternoon from lone. Tyndal Robinson was in the city today from his Eight Mile home. Burl Gurdane took In the big show at Pendleton last week. LEGAL NOTICES. NOTICE FOR PUttilCATION Isolated Tract. Public Land Sale. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, August 29th, 1916. NOTICE is hereby given that, as directed by the Commissioner of the General Land office, under provisions of Sec. 2455, R. S., pursuant to the application of Walter W. Luckman, of Heppner, Oregon, Serial No. 014923, we will offer at public sale, to the highest bidder, but at not less than $2.00 per acre, at 10 o'clock A. M., (n the 19th day of October, 1916 ,f mvv. m, TJ'V, .vt tl,t., 1 . L 3 S., R. 28 E W. M. The sale will not be kept open, but will be declared closed when those present at the hour named have ceas ed bidding. The person making the highest bid will be required to im I mediately pay to the Receiver the l imount thereof. J Any persons claiming adversely I the above-described land are advised to file their claims, or objections, on )T before the. time designated for sale. F. C. BRA.MWELL, Register. NOLAN SKIFF, Receiver. NOTICK FOR PUBLICATION'. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, August 16th, 1916. Notice is hereby given that Charles Gray, of Lexing ton, Oregon, who, on July 19th, 1913, made Homestead Entry, No. 011917, for S NE4. Sec. 21, W14 NWVi, Section 22, Township 1 North, Range 25 East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make Final three-year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before C. C. Patterson, U. S. Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 9th day of October, 1916. Claimant Names as witnesses: Nell White, Pete Beymer, Louis Marquard and Hugh Berry, all of Lexington, Oregon. H. FRANK WOODCOCK, Register. Aug. 31-0ct. 5. NOTICK. Notice Is hereby given that I will not be responsible for any o?ebts here after contracted by my wife, Arminda Sayles Bodo, who has left my homo. Dated this 17th day of August, 1915. HENRY BODE. NOTICE FOR priMjicwni x Isolated Tract. Public Land Sale. Pepariiucit of the Interior, IT. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, August 2iUh, 11)16. .NOTICE is hereby given that, as directed by the Commissioner of the General Land office, under piovisi lis of S'C. 2455, It. S., pursuant to the application of George C. Krebs, ot Heppner, Oregon, Serial No. iiru7f 015U76, we will offer at public sale, to the highest bidder, but at no'. 1lss than $2.00 per acre, at 10 o'clock a. m. on the 19th day of October, 1916, next, at this offlce, the follow ing tract of land: NEU SW'i.Sec. 23, and NW4 NW!4, Sec. 35, Tp. 3 S., R. 27 E., W. M. The sale will not be kept open, but will be declared closed when those ! present at the hour named have ceas ed bidding. The person making the highest bid will be required to im mediately pay to the Receiver the amount thereof . Any persons claiming adversely the above-described land are advised to file their claims, or objections, on or before the time designated for sale. F. C. BRAMWKLL, Register. NOLAN SKIFF, Receiver. NOTICE FOIl PUBLICATION n Public Land Snlo. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, Aug. 29th, 1916. Notice is hereby given that, as directed by the Com missioner of the General Land office, under provisions of Sec. 2455, R. S., pursuant to the application of Whit ley W. Ewing, of Cecil, Oregon, Ser ial No. 014556-014557, we will offer at public sale, to the highest bidder, but at not less than $2.00 per acre, at 10 o'clock a. m on the 19th day of October, 1916, next, at this offlce, the following tract of land: SE'4 SW14, Sec. 24, and NEVi NW14, Sec. 27, Tp. 4 S., R. 27, E. W. M. The sale will not be kept open, but will be declared closed when those present at the hour named have ceas ed bidding. The person making the highest bid will be required to im mediately pay to the Receiver the a mount thereof. Any person claiming adversely the above-described land are advised to file their claims, or objections, on or before the time designated for sale. F. C. BRAMWKLL, Register. NOLAN SKIFF, Receiver. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned, by virtue of an order of sale, made and entered by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Mor row County, in the matter of the es tate of Jennie Kirk Sprouls, deceased, on the 5th day of September, 1916, authorizing and directing the sale of real property hereinafter described, 1 will, on and after the fith day of Octo ber, 1916, offer for sale and sell at private sale, to the highest bidder for cash in hand, ?J, the office of S. E. Notson, in Heppner, Oregon, all the following described real property, subject to a mortgage lien of the State Land Board of the State of Ore gon for $700. on, to-wit: S NE 14 , NV ' SE V4 , NE V4 SW , Sec. 32, T. 3 S, R. 26 E. W. M., sit uated in Morrow County, Oregon. Said sale will be made subject to confirmation by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow Coun ty. Dated this 7th day of September, 1916. J. C. KIRK, Administrator of the Estate of Jennie Kirk Sprouls, deceased. Notice of Extray. There strayed from the Mike Mar shall ranch in the sand country some time ago, one bay mare branded L C on left stifle and also hat brand; and one buckskin horse branded circle M. Information leading to the recovery of these horses will be paid for by Hugh Laine, Heppner, Ore. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. Daisy Shoemaker, Plaintiff, vs. ) ) ) SUMMONS. ) Roy Shoemaker, Defendant, ) To Roy Shoemaker the above nam ed defendant: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby re quired to appear and answer the Com plaint, filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before six weeks from the 21st day of September, 1916 to-wit. On or before the 3rd day of November 1916, and if you fail so to answer, the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief prayed for In her complaint, to-wit: For a decree of the Court forever dissolving the bonds of matrimony now existing be- PUOFbMSlONAL COLUMN Dr. H. T. ALLISON Physician & Surgeon Offlce in Gunn Building. HEPPNER, OREGON Dr. N. E. WINNARD Physician & Surgeon Offlce in Fair Building HEPPNER - OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. Physician & Surgeon Office In Patterson Drug Store HEPPNER :-: :-: OREGON 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 ATTOKNEYS-AT-LAW ' Office in Palace Hotel, Heppner, Oregon SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORN EY-AT-LAW Offce on west end ot May Street HEPPNER, OREGON S. E. NOTSON ATTORNBY.AT-LAW Offlce In Court House, Heppner. F. H. ROBINSON LAWYER IONE :-: OREGON CLYDE and DICK WELLS SHAVING PARLORS Three doors south of Postofflce. Shaving 25c Haircutting 35c Bathroom In connection. PATTERSON & ELDER 2 Doors North Palace Hotel. TONSOKAL ARTISTS FINE BATHS SHAVING 25c 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 MONEY TO LOAN AT 8 The tax registration bureau In connection with this omce will tie found most useful to taxpayers of Morrow county. It gives prompt and full attontlon to all tax matters of Us patrons an4 thus relieves them of all worry and trouble. Write for contract. BRADFORD & SON "The Village Painters" Contractding Painting and Paper hanging, Phone 553. Offlce 1st Door Wtst of Creamery tween yourself and the plaintiff, and Sot such other and further relief as may in equity be meet and just. This summons is served upon you by publication herof once a week for six consecutive weeks in the Gaaette- j limes a weeKly newspaper of general circulation in Morrow County, Ore gon, published at Heppner, by virtue of an order made and entered herein on the 19th day of September, 1916, by the Honorable C. C. Patterson, County Judge of Morrow County. Oregon, and the date of the first pub lication of this Summons Is Septem ber 21st, 1916, and the date of the last publication of this Summons will be November 2, 1916. I SAM E. VAN VACTOR, I Attorney for Plaintiff.