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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1918)
pr THE GAZETTE-TTME8, HEPPXER, OREGON, THCK8DAT, KOVEMEKK 7, IBI8. PAGE THKfc PKOtEttfilONAl, OULtMA Dr. N. E. WINNARD Physician A Burgeon Office In Fair Building HEPPNER - OREGON A.D. McMURDO, M. D. Physician A Surgeon Office In Patterson Drug Store HEPPNER :-: :-: OREGON Dr. E. J. VAUGHN DENTIST Permanently located In the Odd Fellows building, Rooma 4 and 6. HEPPNER, OREGON DR. GUNSTER VETERINARIAN Licensed Graduate HEPPNER - - ORE. Telephone 722 (Day or Night) DR. J. L. CALLOWAY 1 nutennathic Phvsiclan 6 Roberts Building Phone 643 At Lexington Tuesdays and Thursdays ' WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORNEY S-AT-LAW Office in Masonic Building, Heppner. Oregon Off ce on west end of May Street HEPPNER, OREGON SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORNEY-AT-LAW S. E. NOTSON ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW Office, RoberU Building, Heppner Office Phone, Main 643 Residence Phone Main 665 FRANCIS A. McMENAMIN LAWYER Roberts Building, Heppner, Oreg. J. H. ROBINSON LAWYER IONB :-: :-: :-: :-: : OREGON PATTERSON & ELDER I Doors North Palace Hotel. TONHOKAL ARTISTS FINE BATHS 8HAVINQ 25c ROY V. WHITEIS Fire Insurance writer (or best Old Line Companies. HEPPNER OREGON M. J. BRADFORD "The Village Painter" Contractdlng Painting and Paper banging, Phone 663. Office 1st Door Wtst ot Creamery DR. J. 0. TURNER . EYE SPECIALIST Portland, Oregon. Regular monthly visits to Hepp ner and lone. Watch paper (or dates. E. J. STARKEY Electrician House Wiring a Specialty Heppner Oregon Phone 633 FOR SALE Automobile in good running order, $360. Five good tires. Call at this office or address Box 464. Reason for selling, "I need the money." tf FOR SALE Good 6-room house, built three years. Furnished thru out with best of furniture and player piano. A bargain if taken soon. In quire Gazette-Times office. 15-lm BUY a Teterson Tire Welder of W. SIIAMIIART. 4t-pd I lU VIELL M Willie AoccThi Akl TiJi PilkJ Akl III m. ' .TTT. v n 11 r . . TTTi W -iVrmiTIi HOME N?EW5TACJnNWBfR f rTfJISMY IiSK llME-TO 8 W SWEET e? y :. Ti iff on Me wxMmsmdn .a K LEGAL NOTICES. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. I Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has filed ib the County Court of the State of Oregon fori Morrow County his final account as I administrator of the estate of Elian E. Lacy, deceased, aud said Court has appointed Monday, the 2nd day ot December, 1918, as the time for bearing and settlement of said final account; objections to said final ac count must be filed on or before said date. WILLIAM C. LACY. Administrator. NOTICE OF EXECITORS SALE OF REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that under and in pursuance of an order of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, made and en tered on the 1st day of October, 1918, authorizing us as executors and ex ecutrix of the Last Will and Testa ment of C. T. Walker, deceased, to sell the hereinafter described real property. We will from and after Friday, the first day of November, 1918, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M. of said day at the office of J. A. Waters in the City of Heppner, Mor row County, Oregon offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand subject to the con firmation of said Court, the follow ing described real property, situated in Morrow County, State of Oregon, to wit: Lots Five (5) to Twelve (12) in clusive, Block Seven (7) in Sperry's 2d add. in lone, Oregon; Lots One (1) Two (2) and Three (3) ot Block Three (3) in' lone, Oregon; Lots Thirteen (13), Fourteen (14) Fifteen (IE) and Sixteen (16) in Block Three (3) in lone, Oregon; Lots One (1) Two (2) Three (3) and Four (4) in Block Nine (8) Sperry's 2d add. in lone, Oregon; the North half of Lots Five (5), Six (6), Seven (7) and Eight (8) in Sperry's Third Addition to lone, Oregon; Also the West halt of Section Six teen (16) ; East half of section Eight (8) and the West half ot Section Nine (9) in Tp. 1 S., R. 23 E., W. M. Right reserved to reject all bids. J. A. WATERS, CYNTHIA WALKER, 'AUGUSTUS WALKER, Executor and Executrix ot Last Will and Testament of C. T. Walker, deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County administrator ot the estate of John H. Thomas, de ceased, and that all persons having claims against the said estate must present the Bame duly' verified ac cording to law, to me at the office ot my attorney, S.E. Notson, in Hepp ner, Oregon, within six months from the date 'of the first publication of this notice, said date of first publica tion being October 25, 1918. JAMES THOMAS, Administrator. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has filed her final ac count as administratrix of the Estate of Patrick McDaid, deceased, and that the County Court has appointed Monday, the 2nd day of December, 1918, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of Bald day, as the time ot hearing and settling said final ac count. Objections to said final ac count must be filed on or before said 4at. MARY McDAID, Administratrix. LOST-4-A sorrel Alley, two years old, weight about 700 pounds, branded B on left shoulder. Reward will be paid for information leading to recovery. Inform this office. 24-6t Dry slabwood to BURN. 4 foot lengths per cord, $1.00. 16 inch per cord, $1.25. PARKERS MILL. FOR SALE A registered sow and boar, also some pigs ready to wean. 26-4t A. E. PIERCER lone, Ore. Send your tires to us for repairs. We guarantee all work and. pay return postage." ARLINGTON VUL CANIZING WORKS, Arlington, Ore gon. 27-lm W. T. McNabb, of lone, came to Heppner Friday, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Earl Puyear and Mrs. Steele. Mr. Puyear is now one of Uncle Sam's soldier boys and is here on a short furlough. Mr. and Mrs. L. 1). Neill wens in Heppner on Friday from their farn, on Big Butter creek. Mr. Neill was getting his questionaire made up, as , well as attending to other business matters. ll FoCM Sflis HE'LL waup wdf iif nl I ERr s-Y CWr?M... K UXJCifcd II. DESTROYS HOPPER EGGS Routing out Embryonic Forms Ex poses Them to Attacks of Weather and Enemies. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor vallis, Nov. 6. Disking the relatively limited areas in which grasshopper egg deposits are massed is one of the two effective con'.rol measures for hoppers practiced by Oregon farmers. '"Right now is the time when most effective work is being done In routing out the vast quantities of eggs and exposing them to attacks of bad' weather, birds, and other enemies," says B. G. Thompson, federal and Agricultural College in sect field specialist. "The grass hoppers that will damage the crops next season are now in the egg stage and great masses of them may be destroyed by disking. "The eggs are relatively large and straw colored, and are deposited in bean-shaped capsules with 25 to 30 eggs each. The capsules are half an inch long and covered with earth. They are found around grass roots In untitled soils, along fence rows, HI IN OUR CUSTOM TAILORING DEP'T and in waste nlaee wherit ihn s j n "j' ' y v. " " " . uim i c .in &u vc protected from the weather. equipped with a stage and movie "The egg areas seldom exceed two apparatus. The game room, reading or three acres in extent and frcqneal- and social rooms will be so arranged ly are no larger than a table top. that they can be thrown Into the Within this space the egg masses are auditorium when necessary, increas crowded thick. They are mostly ing its seating capacity to 750. A within the two inches of surface canteen will probably be established soil, which should be thoroughly in the hut. stirred to that depth. The areas may . W. O. Hetkart, a Eugane contrac again be harrowed or 'disked next, tor, has charge of the construction March or April to expose the eggs of the building and William F. that escaped the fall disking. j Vance, Y. M. C. A. secretary, will "Grasshoppers do an immense: have charge as soon as the hut is amount of damage each year in, completed. Dr. Vance has just re- i'.asiern ana boutnern Oregon and indications are that they wiU appear in great numbers next spring." SUPPORTS LAID FOR UNIVERSITY Y. M. HUT Two Story Building wBJi Total Seating Capacity of 750, to Cost $8,70O. University of Oregon, Eugene, Nov. 4.: Supports have been laid for the new university i . M. C. A. but oe- tween the library and the Oregon building on Thirteenth street. It la to be a regular two-story hot, fifty by ninety feet, containing an auditorium, game room, reading room, Bocial room, showers and hath rooara. and is expected to be ready for occupancy in a month's time. The auditorium will have a seat- Ifilll Of course you believe in economy It behooves all of us to recognize the fundamentals of Conservation and to co-operate intelligently so that the ideals of our Country may be quickly attained. To secure maximum service from everything we use should be our aim, and from no other source can you secure such dependable and trustworthy tailoring as we offer in See our new fashions your oison selection. Minor & In ihii r son on i. . k. ccntly arrived from Caldwell, Idaho. The national Y. 11. C. A. has ap propriated $8,700 to be used for the beuefit of the soldiers in the Univer sity camps. This means that the organization of the red triangle is putting on the campus $2,100 more than the United War Drive is asking from the campus. The University of Oregon is expected to give $6,600. for war work during the week of the drive, November 11 to 18. c. A. Morey and wife were in town: fOT a short time on Tuesday after-1 noon. Mr. Morey states that the in- j fluenza was quite prevalent through- out the Strawberry district the past : (ew weeks but that it is now about all over. The school was going at the time the epidemic broke out and j moBt every family had its Bhare. The , cases were mostly light. and woolens and make Prices reasonable. Company "rtCRE'PisAl? ALtrYui' I 1 HAPPENED iJVi Vm$fkYm.i JA Tn5.M PiPFP IRM'SSJM. B VW OUR STEADY SUBSCRIBER. "How dear to our hearts is the steady subscriber Who pays in advance at the birth of each year; Who lays down the money and does it right gladly, And casts around the office a halo of cheer. Who never says, 'Stop it; I cannot afford it I'm getting more papers now , than I can read.' But always says, 'Send it; our people all like it Id fact we all think it a help and a need.' How welcome his check when it reaches our sanctum, How it makes our pulse hrob; how it makes our hearts dance. We outwardly thank him; we in wardly bless him The steady subscriber who pays in advance." --Adopted from C. C. Chapman's Oregon Voter. People of Heppner now travel the "saw dust trail" when they go to the butcher shop. Henry Schwarz has adopted this Billy Sunday method of inducing people to come his way, which is, of course rather a different destination from that in which Billy exhorts his followers to travel. jTrJMKti, - Bur Tk'M WiKT k'.M.T- . . IN OUR CUSTOM TAILORING DEP'T 5 V i. ih. T II TMlS WAS MfXi vi HRTHBAV 1 t0r? 5,nm W Vf 75? WW ' ll Wag J