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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 2, 1919)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPJTER. OREGON, THURSO AY, DECEMBER 2fl, 1918. PAGE THR PROI'KKHIONAI, l(iU H,S Dr. N. E. WINNASD Phylcl Rargeoa Office In Pair Bulldlnf HEPPNER OREGON A. D. McMUEDO, M. D. Physician Jt 8wrgoB Office in Patterson Drag Store UEPPNKR OREGON Dr. B. J. VAUGHN DENTIST Permanently located la the Odd Fellows building. Room 4 and I. HEPPNER. OREGON DR. GUNSTER VETERINARIAN LiceuNed Graduate HEPPNER - - ORE. Telephone 722 (Day or Night) DR. J. L. CALLOWAY Osteopathic Physician 6 Roberts Building Phone 643 At Lexington Tuesdays and Thursdays WOODSON & SWEEK A TTOliN EY8-AT-LA W Office in Masonic Building, Heppner, Oregon OSes ou west end of May Street HEPPNER, OREGON SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW 8. E. NOTSON ATTORNBY-AT-LAW Office, Roberts Building, Heppner Office Phone, Main 643 Residence Phone Main 665 FRANCIS A. McMENAMIN LAWYER Roberts Building, Heppner, Oreg. F. H. ROBINSON LAWYER IONE :-: -: :-: -: OREGON GLENN Y. WELLS Attorney at Law 926 Chamber of Commerce Bids. Portland, Oregon Phone Main 5220 PATTERSON & ELDER 2 Doors North Palace Hotel. TONHORAL ARTISTS FINE BATHS SHAVING 25c ROY V. WHITEIS Fire Insurance writer for beat Old Line Companies. HEPPNER OREGON DR. J. G. TURNER EYE SPECIALIST Portland, Oregon. Regular monthly visits to Hepp ner and lone. Watch paper for dates. E. J. STARKEY Electrician House Wiring a Specialty Heppner Oregon Phone 633 LEGAL NOTICES. NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS MEETING Notice is hereby given that there will be a meeting of the stockholders of the First National Bank of Hepp ner, Oregon on the second Tuesday In January, 1919 (January 14th, 1919) between the hours of ten a. m. and four p. m. of said date for the purpose of electing directors and for the transaction of such other bus iness as may legally come before said II SAY Y0O Told carl Harris I AW. I G'wM RUN IN TfE ioOSE Aw, I I WUZ A OLD , ' , IDra tA T3KJ BABY, -I'LL GET TlDN'T 5AY home "J meeting. W. P. MAHONEY, Cashier. Dated this 3rd day of December, 1918. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned have been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon tor Morrow County, Exe utora of the Last Will and Testament of Thomas Morgan, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate must present them properly verified, to the undersigned at the office of Woodson & Sweek, attor neys at law, Heppner, Oregon, with in six months from the date of first publication of this notice. First published this 28th day of November, 1918. S. M. MORGAN, LEE SLOCUM. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, Exe'cu trlx of the Last Will and Testament of John S. Buseick, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate must present them, properly verified, to the undersigned at he office of Woodson & Sweek, attorneys at law, Heppner, Oregon, within six months from the date of first publi cation of this notice. First published this 28th day of November, 1918. HELEN BUSEICK Executrix. NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the regular Annual Stockholders' Meeting of the Lexington State Bank will be held at its banking rooms in the Town of Lexington, Oregon, at two o'clock, Thursday, January 9, 1919. The purpose for which this meet ing is called Is to elect a Board of Directors for the ensuing year and for the transaction of any other busi ness which may properly come before it. W. G. SCOTT, President. Attest, W. O. HILL, Cashier. Dated at Lexington, Oregon, De cember 2, 1918. NOTICE OK ANNUAL MEETING. Notice is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of the Galloway Telephone Company will be held In the office of the Humphreys' Drug Company in the City of Heppner, Oregon, on Saturday, the 28th day of December, 1918, at two o'clock in the afternoon for the purpose of electing officers and the transaction of such other business as may prop erly come before the meeting. D. O. JUSTUS, President. IN THE COUNTY COURT OP THE STATE OK OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. In the Matter of the Estate of Frank J. Hubelt, deceased. CITATION TO HEIRS AND DE VISEE8. TO AMALIA RICHTER, GREETING: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, You are hereby cited and required to appear in the Coun ty Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, at the Court Room thereof, on the 4th day of January, 1919, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M., of said day, then and there tc show cause If any there bo why this j Court should not grant a license to i the Executor of the Last Will and i Tostament of Frank J. Habalt, De ; ceased, to sell at Fubllc Sale the fol lowing described lands, to-wit: NICV4. of SWU and the NVi of SEVi of Sac. 7, in Tp. One (1) South of Range Twenty-five (25), E. W. M. First published December 5, 191S. (SEAL) J. A. WTAERS, County Clerk of Morrow County Oregon. d5-5tms j GUARDIAN SALE. j Notice is hereby given that, by virtue of an order made the 12th ! December, 1918 by the County Court of the Slate of Oregon for Mult nomah County. In the matter of the Estate of Belinda A. Parker, Insane, and for the purpose of paying I he debts and claims 'against the estate of said Ward, the expenses of said Ward and the costs and expenses of sale and the Guardianship of Baid Ward. I will on Saturday, the lSlli January, 1919 at 10 o'clock a. 111. and thereafter, at the law oftice of I Frank Robinson In lone, Morrow 1 County, Oregon, offer for sale and sell, at private sale to the highest bidder for cash, all of the right title and Interest of said Belinda A. Parker, Insane, in and to the real property situated in the County of Morrow and State of Oregon do scribed as follows to wit: The'south- west quarter (SWVi) or Section fifteen (15) Township two (2) I north. Range twenty-three (23) east of Willamette Meridian, con taining 160 acres more or less. Terms of sale: Cash, one third of purchase price to be paid at the time of the sale and the balance upon delivery of deed. Bids will also be received a the residence of G. C. Garfield. 985 E. 18th Street N. Port land, Oregon. MARY E. GARFIELD, Guardian of Belinda A. Parker, insane. C. A. Appelgren, Attorney for Guardian, 701 Chamber of Com merce BIdg., Portland, Oregon. Date of first publication of this notice 19 December, 1918. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by , the County Court of the State of! Oregon for Morrow County adminis trator of the estate of Alfred Schaefor, deceased, and that all persons having claims against the 1 said estate must present them to me, at Echo, Oregon, Star Route, duly! verified according to law, within six: months from the date of the first publication of this notice, said date being December 26, 1918. C. D. MOREY, Administrator. SPECIAL SCHOOL MEETING. Notice is hereby given to the legal voters of School District No. 1 of Morrow County, State of Oregon, that a SPECIAL SCHOOL MEETING of said District will be held at the office of C. E. Woodson, in said Dis trict, on the 17th of January, 1919 at 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon, for the following objects: To vote upon the question of the sale of the old school house belong ing to said District. Dated this 2nd day of January, 1919. w. g. Mccarty, Chairman Board of Directors. ATTEST: VAWTER CRAWFORD, District Clerk. Applications for Grazing Permits. Notice is hereby given that all applications for permits to graze cattle, horses, and sheep within the WHITMAN NATIONAL FOREST during the season of 1919, must be filed in my office at Baker, Oregon, on or before January 31, 1919. R. M. EVANS. Forest Supervisor. I WANT YOUR POULTRY. Am in the market for all kinds of poultry, alive or dressed; also veal and pork. Pay highest cash market price and take all you have at any time. HENRY SCHWARZ, Heppner, Oregon. Phone 636. 8(100 REWARD. LOST BOO head of sheep, be tween Echo and L. P. Davidson ranch in Morrow county. Sheep branded K on wool. Old ewes, mixed year lings and mixed lambs. Will pay $1.00 per head for return of any or all of these sheep, or for information leading to their recovery. lm L. P. DAVIDSON, lone, Oregon. FOR HALfc 100 ton of good al falfa hay. Convenient feed grounds on place and parties tau come with either cattle or sheep. Communicate with me at Lexington, Oregon. 3t . ANDREW REANEY. FOR SALE Good six-room house, barn, chicken house, pnv.ge and 8 acres of laud, with Ro.id well and small orchard. Property well situated just outside of city limits of Hepp ner. Must he sold within next thirty days. SilEAD & CRAWFORD. Auto tires welded for $1. Inner allies 75c. for blowouts 2 inches square, Double the price for large' velds, or can sell the welder for $7.50. V. W. S11AMH ART. lm SMALL ACREAGE We offer 80 acres on creek bottom under ditch, 35 acres in alfalfa, 25 acres ready to put in . U. R. station within half tnilo. No buildings. Wry reason able terms. See SMEAD & CRAW FORD. LOST A sorrel mare colt, coming year old; long, white stripe in face, branded Jl! connected with bar under It on left shoulder. Notify 10. UERGSTROM, Iono, Oregon. lm I have at my place a dark Jerr-ey cow, 5 or G years of age. Has been about my promises for some two weeks. Is dry now, and a nuisance. No visible marks or brands. 2t MAL CHURCH. Minor Musings j You often hear it said that a girl is "throwing herself away" on some man, but never that a man is throw ing himself away on a girl by marry ing her; yet the chances are about fifty-fifty. There's nothing much funnier than a very fat man running to catch a car. Unless it's a fat woman doing the same thing. 1 When a man says "business is bus iness," he is about to do or already has done something of which he is ashamed. Three-fourths of the lies you ;e:l are known to be just that by the persons to whom you tell them. You only think you're fooling 'em. A good many failures are made by persons who would go deer huntine in the heart of a city. Why the father of a newly born baby is proud of himself, is another mystery. Help is most plentiful when you don't need it. Agree with everybody and you may run for office, but you're not likely m run very fast. One beautiful thing about winter is the absence of activities on the part of the neighbor's lawn mower in the early morning hours. Snow plows do not make much noise. The man who can have his photo graph taken without being em barrassed is either a professional photographer or a nut. If you place no vaJue on money, proay soon you will be placing a high value on it and will discover that everybody around you is put ting an even higher valuation on it wnen you suggest that they loosen their hold on a little of it for your benefit. Some men seem never to "strike their stride" until somebody else has lost his. When a man's grouchy his trouble begins. Advice to women: Never put off till tomorrow what is unusually be coming today. The ancients spent much of their time worrying about the future and now look at 'em. They're all dead. It is easier for a rich man to pas3 V 0. OF Trf0S BOSCHAse XOO IN T(E HOUiFOU'D ?er A Wl1'rr T" - -- r'S wuuwKwinwjK through the eye of a needle than for a man to Ret anywhere In business with a btard on his face that ought to be off. A little learning may be a danger ous thing, but none is more so. "Now let's be sensible about this thing," a man in an argument will say, and then proceed to get mad all over because the other doesn't agree with him. A barber should never be caught shaving himself. It makes every customer wonder why he shouldn't save money by doing the same thing. The modern boy is not content merely to be father to the man, but wishes to be father to the woman and the whole household besides. Harold Stiles, of the coast artillery arrived on Saturday for a visit with his wife who is spending the winter here with her mother, Mrs. Josie Jones. Arthur McAtee returned home Saturday from Camp Lee, Virginia, where he has been located since going into service last summer. He has received his discharge. Fred Teague was over from Camp Lewis to spend the Christmas fur lough with the folks in Morrow c -.junty. He has returned to the barracks where he will remain in definitely. FIRST CZEClfO-SLAV DIPLOMAT IIEKE. Charles rergler,' formerly of Chicago and later an Iowa lawyer. Is credited with being the first Czecho-Slovak diplomatic repre sentative to America. Pergler was secretary to the Czecho-Slovak preiident, Dr. Thomas G. Masaryk, before the latter's departure for Europe and his own country; Pergler spent most of his youth in Prague. 1 UVR f illUM ! An tlir l-'inn 'Jrar rolls mmwh m it bring tit ntrnjmir milimttrft Iwutssmt 2Jros. 7Ak'e A WHIPPY FEES FOR GRAZINo. SEASO.X. As has before been i,(,;d the Sec retary of Agriculture i.ai raised th grazing fees to be charged on tb National Forests. The following ar the fees which will ottain on the Umatilla National Forest for th grazing season of 1919: Cattle Yearlong, btAnslng Aprfl 16, 81.20; April 16 to October 3. "8c; May 1 to October 21, 72e. Horses Yearlong, batoning April 18. 11.50; April 1 to October 31. 97c; May 1 to qctubw.31, 90c, Sheep June 15 to :tober 15, 12c. The Secretary has ufcto approved the issuance of five yea grazing per mits, without reductioH, but final decision as to the RdviHtiMIity of per mltting general use of tt.ese permit on the various Forests, or portion thereof, has not yet be;n reached. W. W. CRYDER, Supervisor. A TWICE-TOLD TALE. ne of Interest to Oiu- Readers. Good news bears repeating, and when it is confirmed, after a long lapse of time, even if we hesitated to believe it at first hearing, we fesl secure in -accepting itw truth now. The following experience of a Hepp ner man is confirmed after six years. J. H. Cox, carpenter, Baltinor St., says: "When 1 catch the least cold, I suffer from pain in my back. At times it has been so bad I simply couldn't move and have had to stay in bed for a week or ten dys. I have UBed t great many mwiieines, but Doau's Kidney Pills have done me more good than anything else. I haves't had an attack of thia trouble for some time." OVER SIX YEARS LATER Mr. Cox said: "It has been a long tima since I have had any occasion to take kidney medicine. I consider Doan't Kidney Pills a good, reliable medi cine for backache and kidney dis orders." 60o, at all dealers. Foster-Mtt-burn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Corporal Wm. O'Rourke left Sat urday for Camp Lewis after spend ing a two weeks furlough in Hepp ner, visiting friends and relatives. He thinks it may be some time yet before his division is mustered out of service. Miss Martha B. Struck, teacher of domestic science and art in Heppner High school, has been offered a position with the O. A. C. in the Home Economics department aa a field supervisor. The position carries with it a nice salary and offers Mis Struck a fine opportunity for ad vancement. She has been released from her contract with District No. 1, and will leave for Corvallia to assume her new duties by the 20th of Jannary. S3 1 js- TNci- ASOTHe EYES ANV T I T r'T LIKE IT -BUT TCAN ( 9 ) fefiSTAMD IT WtteRc.V l