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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1920)
Tin: . zi m -timi s mi itm i:, oi:i .. tim kiv. ju. rvi.K Tiir.i i: I'KOIK.SSIO.VVI, ('(II.I MX DR. F. E. FARRIOR KKXTIST Oltlce upstairs over Postofllce Henpuer, Oregon DR. R. J. VAUGHAN DKNT1ST 1'erniaueutly located la the Odd Fellows building, Kooins 4 and 5. Hcppuer, Oregon DR. HAROLD C. BEAN I'll YKK IAN & SIKUEON Permanently located In Odd Fel lows Building, Rooms 1 and 2 riioiitu, Olllce 702, Uesidence 523 Heppner, Oregon A. D. McMURDO, M. D. l'liyaii'lun & Burgeon Olllce lu Patterson Drug Store Heppner, Oregon DR. C. C. CHICK PHYSICIAN & HIKUKON Olllce upstairs over Poslolllce Hcppuer, Oregon WOODSON & SWEEK ATTOH.N KVB-A T-LA W Olllcw lu Musoulu Building Hoppuer, Oregon SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTOltNKY.AT-LAW First Niition.il liaiik Uuilding Hcppuer, Oregon J. E. NOTSON AlTOHNKY-AT-liAW Olllce in Court House Hcppuer, Oregon Olllce l'lioue, Malu 643 Keaideuce PUouo, Main 660 FRANCIS A. McMENAMIN LAWYKH Huberts liuildlug, Hcppuer; Ore. F. H. ROBINSON LAWYKH 10NE, OHKGON DR. M. M. JOHNSON Veterinarian Calls answered promptly at ail times. Interstate Inspector of Livestock and Sheep. Ofllco Patterson Drug Store Phone 123 Hcppuer, )re.gou ROY V. WHITEIS Fire Insurance writer for best Old Line Conipaules. Heppner, Oregon DR. J. G. TURNER KYK HPIX'IALIST i'oi timid, Oregon Itegulnr monthly visits tu Hepp ner and lone. Watch paper for dates. E. J. STARKEY K.I.Kt TUICI AN House Wiring a Specialty Heppner, Oregon Pin. ne 872 DR. A. HENNIG Chiropractic Physician Olllce at E. 0. Slociun Residence Heppner, Oregon DR. D. N. HAYDEN Physician & sturgeon Hardman, Ore. Day or night calls promptly attended. LEGAL NOTICES notht: OF HTOCKIIOMWKH AN M AI, MKKTI.MJ. Notice la hereby given that the annual mooting of stockholders of the Heppner Mining Company will be held at the office of S. K. Van vactor. Heppner, Oregon, on the second Tuesday in February, 1920, being 1 ho 10th day of February, 1020, at 2 o'clock In the afternoon of Haiil day. Thin meting is for the purpose of electing officers and the trans action of such other business thai may appear. 1). B. STALTKU, President, J. O. llAOKIt, Secretary. Notice of Farmers' I'nloti Meeting,. Notice Is hereby given that thors will he a mass meeting of farmers and all others interested, in the Odd 1'elloWB Hall In Heppner on tho after noon of Saturday January 31, al which time, reorganization will be ef. fected. W. W. Hurrah of Pendleton will adilresH tho mooting. Every far mer In Morrow county is especially urged to attend tho mooting. Morrow County Farmers' Union, 15. II. HUSTON President. It. W. TltUNIOlt, Secretary. bull, a fi-tt uh:ti. spots In fon-iicnl and bramli'il am Imr S on left side ami s.vailuw lurk in riht ear, cam' to lay place t)tn- mile or-t of Liberty houl liiiu-''. mi Nivcjut.r 1, 11)19. Weight of said animal is about llUO pounds. Owner may have animal by paying pasture hill and cost of this advertisement. T 1 1 K 0 1 )( 1 1 1 E ANDERSON, P. O. address, Heppner, Ore. NOTICE There came to my place about June 1, four miles southwest of Hardman, the following described animals: one brown horse, white stripe in face, branded with spear on right hip; one black yearling horso, no brand. Owner may have same by paying all costs. J.-J22 LOTUS KOUISON Hardman, Ore. APPLICATIONS .IOH .GKAZI.NG PERMITS. Notice is hereby given that all ap plications for permits to graze cattle, horses or sheep within the UMATIL LA NATIONAL FOREST during the season of 1920, must be filed In my office at Pendleton, Oregon, on or be fore January 31, 1920. W. W. CKYDER. Supervisor. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Multnomah County, Probate Department. In the mutter of the Estate of John B. Peterson, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the un derslgned, us administrator of the es. tate of John E. Peterson, deceased lias filed his Final Account in the Cir cuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Multnomah County, Probate Depart ment, and that Friday, the 27th day of February 1920, at the hour of 9:3(1 I'clock A. M of said d;ry, and the Court room of said Court lias been appointed by said Court as the time and place for the hearing of objec tions thereto, if any, and the settle ment thereof. OSCAR E. PETERSON, Administrator. John Olsen, Attorney. Dated and lirst published January 29. 1920. (iiivcisity Will Heceive lkttllcliip Oregon Gun. University of Oregon, Eugene, Jan. 1 'J. The University of Oregon is :;oon to receive from the Puget Sound navy yard at Bremerton, Washington, one of tho small guns mounted on the battleship Oregon w hen she made her historic dash from San Francisco clear around South America to parti cipate lu the battle of Santiago in 1 S y S . A letter received at the office of President Campbell from Hear Admiral II. A. Field, commandant at ilremertun, gave the news that the piece would be lent to the University if desired. It is expected to arrive iu a lew days. The gun which helped win the war , ilii Spain will be suitably inscribed and placed in ail aprOpriale position here us a memento of Oregon's name sake vessel. The University already has the old Hag which was carried by the Oregon during the war. For a long time the tlag bung on the second lloer of the administration building. Is Oregon NOTICE OF ESTHAY. Notice Is hereby given that a red Peace First, Then League Students' Vote. t iiivcsity of Oregon, Eugene, Jan. 19. "Make peace with Germany first, and leave the League of Nations to he settled afterward," is the atti- inde of a one-vole plurality of those Undents of the University of Oregon ,vi:o took enough Interest to vote it: t lie intercollegiate treaty refereii' (1 ii in . The vote for this proposition was !)S, as against 97 for ratification of thctrealy and the league covenant without amendment or reservation. (if the faculty, a plurality of those voting cast their votes for unreserved ratification, with 24 for this proposi tion to 16 for a proposition favoring any reasonable compromise which would bring immediate ratification and an eitial number for the "mild" reservations favored by the McNary group of senators. The vote of students and faculty did not reach 600 out of u total of more than 1600. V.i'A'i HOUSES QUICKLY BUILT .if.'-nce That Sat sfies Eskimo Can Ce Put Together In Something Like Six Hours. It takes about six hours to build a r.-il cluss winter residence In Eskimo land. The material, snow cut from a bank that must have been made lu a single storm, must be solid and homo geneous, fine, yet soft enough to be easily cut with saw or snow knife. The blocks ire three or four feet long, two feet high and six to eight Inches thick. They are piled on one another, some thing like In building a brick bouse, save Unit they are placed to form a spiral, Inclined inward, to form a dome-shaped structure. When finished the lose Is 10 or 12 feet high and 12 to 15 feet III diameter, and 'ias the ap pearance of a hemisphere of snow set on Its flat side. An entrance, big enough to crawl through, Is made on one side and on either side of It are cubby holes for the storage of liumess, spare food, etc. A window Is cut in the wall and covered with seals' Ii. ti-stlnes, sewed together. These ure translucent and admit daylight. In lieu of that a slab of clear fresh water Ice may be used. The house Is lined with skins to prevent the warn) air from the Inside from melting the snow roof. Between the skins and the wall there is always a layer of cold air. There In also a small hole cut in the roof for ventilation, und to pro vide a draught for the fiiiuil;. lamp. On the side of the house opposite the entrance a broad snow bench Is built, with a long pole for an edge. This is the family bed. For a mattress a thick layer of shrubs Is spread upor It mid over these many deerskins. Clothes, when taken off, are rolled op and put under the skins for pillows. One blanket of skins serves to cover the whole faintly. WISDOM IN JUDGE'S CWIXE Irish Jurst Warned "Good Men aoj True" Against Being "Obfusti cated" by the Lawyers. Hound the library lire In the F"iu Courts, Dublin, Irish barristers long have gaihered to spin yarns of their profession while waiting for briefs, line of these stories was of u nov. 1 charge to a Jury given by a Gaelic Judge, which Is reculled by n write. In the Irish World, as follows: "Gentlemen of the Jury." a judge be gan when counsel for the defense had concluded an eloquent nnd elaborate address. "Gentlemen of the jury, there are two courses, do you observe, to he adopted by counsel. The first Is sim ple enough. If he has a middling case he endeavors to convince the jury. But If he has no case at oil, If the evidence Is all one way nnd the guHt of the prisoner Is as plain, do you see, us the nose on his face, and no one but n fool or a Juror could be asked to have a doubt about it, then counsel endeavors to obfustlcate the Jury! For counsel seems to think that when In telligent men come Into a jury box thev hang up their common sen' won their hats and coats on the pegs be hind them." Head of A Family. Unmarried men and women who are bread-winners for others are granted special exemptions on their earnings before figuring the Income Tax now being collected. Although a return must be filed by every un married person, and by every married person living apart from wife or hus band, who had a net income of $1, imio or more during 1919, recognition is made In the law of the homo bur dens carried, and relief from excess ive taxation is especially provided. In addition to the ordinary person al cxcmptmin of $1000, an additional exemption of $1000 is granted to "bonds of families"; and there is al so provided an exemption of $200 for each dependent under 18 years of age or who is mentally or physically de fective. The $200 for each depend ent may be claimed by any taxpayer wlio Is the chief support of tho family or relatives. It does not Include ot ti ers who are earning their living, nnd it does not apply to the wifo or hus band of the ninried taxpayer, even though such person may have become a total burden. Tho person who claims exemption "head of a family" must qualify for it. Two single persons wlio div ide between litem, more or less equal ly, the financial and other responst- llles of a household cannot claim that either one is tho head of the family. Hut If a singlo person nct uallv assumes the total responsibil ities of the household and is aided by having one of Ills brothers or sisters support himself and contributing an amount that could not practically be considered more than his hoard, such trivial assistance must not be allowed lo Interfere with ills clear claim for exomption. The Days of '49. California was as popular 70 years ngo as It Is now. Judging by an extract from a copy of a Missouri paper In the possession of n Wythe (Cal.) man. dated WA The extra Is an adver tisement for an auction sale. 'Public sale, state of Missouri, coun ty of Pike. To whom it may concern: The undersigned will, on tuesimy, September 2H, A. D. 1849. sell at pub lic outcry for ensh, on the premises, where Coon creek crosses the Old Mis sion road, the following ctiatieis. ro- It : Six yoke oxen with yokes and chains; two wagons with beds, three nigger wenches, four buck niggers, three nigger boys, two prairie plows, tweoty-tive steel tracks, one barrel pickled cabbage, one hogshead tobac co, a lot of nigger hoes, one spinning wheel, one loom, thirteen fox hounds, a lot of coon, fox nnd skunk skins and a lot of other articles. 1 am gwino to California. "X. 11. Gingerbread and hard elder free on the grounds." Gets 'Em on the Fly. The Wilson warbler Is the champion fly-catcher of the United Stales. Ills method of getting most of his food Is to dash out from the limb of a tree and snatch passing Insects on the wing. They catch other Insects which ore Hitting about or sitting on the foliage or blossoms of the trees. You will often find these little birds in ap ple trees when In bloom. Their olive green and yellow plumage harmonizes with the green leaves of the trees. The male bird has a black crown patch on the top of Its head, while on the female this cap Is greenish like the hack. This bird Is found throughout the eastern United States but winters In Central America. ' Assyria's Great Queen. Senilraniis Is enlled the "legendary" queen of Assyria, but Babylon was an old city before Nebuchadnezzar trod Its dust. Senilriinils had been the wile of Omnes, general In the king's army. In the siege of Bnetrin she berself led a forlorn hope against the walls and captured It. Enchanted by her power. King Nlnus resolved to make her Ids queen. Omnes committed suicide. At the king's death, Semlramls ruled the kingdom, founded Babylon, conquered Persia nnd Egypt, and made incur sions into India, where in personal combat with King Stuabohates she was wounded. She died at sixty-two. builder, terror, charmer a great woman. Optimist. Growler Tcs, In the end, we all get six feet of earth. ' Cheerup What would you do If they discovered oil on your plot before you died? I-. Aulhor . Frai k A. IM-i. j s1 l;ool teat iser of I ii..;'illa ( our.';, nooklet of vcr' -vUiile a soldier in i orporal In Co. M I li r... '! r..'.,r( f'.nn.-riy " ,-f.uth. rn p.i't publi.-h.-d a 'n'.teri by him Europe, lie as -'iird Infantry. The rhymes us, !,e .-vies them, cover experiences in Krai,..., Belgium. Lux-eiuij.-rg and Geria.iny. Ti.ey will be read Willi inter... i ,v maIly friends of Mr. D.dde. and by his com rades in arms. II.- makes no claim that they are for general circulation, or of wide public interest. Pendle ton Tribune. Mrs. Rachel Ward, mother of Frank and Willis Ward of this coun ty, died at her home in Corvallis on Saturday, January 24th. The re mains arrived in Heppner on Monday; evening, being taken to Hardman, where the funeral was held yesterday. Mrs. Ward was a pioneer resident of Morrow county, having made her . lioine on the Ward farm near Goose berry for many years prior to moving to Covallis a numbe of years ago : with her husband. Don't Worry About ' Fuel Get an Izard Gas Heater MERRITT & AKERS Heppner Oregon VSYSTEM Old Age Postponed The appearance of old age can be postponed by Having your teeth nronerlv looked after. Registered Den tists using the E. R. Parker System arc especially capable of doing this by making fine crowns, bridges and artificial teeth. Some men and women look ten years younger after these dentists have done the necessary work. So much depends upon making arti ficial teeth look natural that you should be glad to know where to go for the right kind of work. Another thing about E. R. Parker Svstcm Dentists: They make a specially of saving time for out-of-town" patients, so these patients won't have to come in so often. You will be surprised to learn how reasonable the prices are, too, and also to find out that you need have no fear of pain. There are 24 E. R. Parker System offices, the uearest being at 7."5 Main Street, Pendleton. !'2i Washington Street, Portland. USED EXCLUSIVELY 4 4 THERE ARE MANY BUSINESS FIRMS IN Heppner which use G.-T. "Quality" Printing exclusively. For this the rea son, to anyone who has compared G.-T. printing with other printing produced lo cally, is perfectly plain. In every particular that produced by The Gazette-Times excells. New and modern equipment combined with intelligent and efficient treatment of every job accounts for the difference which is making Gazette-Times "Quality" Print ing the standard printing of Heppner. Phone Mam 882 If you are needing anything which is printed. The Gazette-Times Power fLII- ri vii.svja v ir ' i i- -..' n rv wm urn Hammered In. "The school of experience Is r hnrd one." "Thorough, though, very thorough. What you lenrn there, you know." Louisville Courler-Journul. Let a FORDSON Do Your Farm Work Here is a Tractor that has revolutionized farming:. It has made power-farming a reality on more than 100,000 farms. AN EFFICIENT MOTIVE POWER THAT COMBINES EFFICIENCY WITH RELIABIL ITY AT A LOW FIRST COST. Being small, light and economical, the "FORDSON" Tractor is adapted to use on the small farms as well as on the largest. It will pull all farm implements and do the work generally done by horses on the farm. In addition, by its belt p alley, the tractor will drive farm machinery such as the thresher, ensilage cutter, saw mill, etc., making the "FORDSON" a truly universal tractor. Place Your Order for a "FORDSON ' Today Chas. H.. Latuorell Authorized Dealer HEPPNER OREGON