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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (April 8, 1920)
tiik (. a.i ni:-TiMKS, iiMTXKii, oiii:., Tiirnsinv, Afiiir. s. ny. TAtiK THKf'K I'KOI i;SilON Al, C'OLl M X DR. F. E. FARRIOR HKNT1ST Office) upstairs over Purftofflce Heppner, Orogun DR. R. J. VAUGHAN DENTIST Perniuueiitly located lu the Odd Kelluws building, Kooins 4 lad 5. Heppner, Oregon DR. HAROLD C. BEAN I'lIVSKlAN' & Hl'KUEON Permanently located in Odd Fel lows Building, Rooms 1 and 2 rtioiu-H, Ofllcc 7(12, KcHidcnca 823 lleppner, Oregon A. D. McMURDO, M. D. 1'lijsicluu & Surgeon Utiles In Patterson Drug Store lluppner, Oregon DR. C. C. CHICK PHYSICIAN Hl'KUKON Ollire upstairs over PostolUce lleppuer, Oregon WOODSON & SWEEK ATTOHNhYS-AT-LAW Ollicn ill Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTOKXEV-AT-LAW l-ust National liank lluildiiu; lluppner, Oregon a. . NOTSON ATTOKXEV-AT-LAW Ullice lu Court House lleppner, Oregon Ulhco I'lioue, Main 643 Residence Phone, alalu 665 FRANCIS A. McMENAMIN EAWVEIt Iti.tiLiis lluildiug, Hcppuer, Ore. F. H. ROBINSON I.AWYKK 10NK, OKEUON DR. M. M. JOHNSON Veterinarian Calls answered promptly at all limes, interstate Inspector of Livestock and Sheop. Olllro Patterson Iii-uk Store I'liouo 12IJ lleppner, Oregon ROY V. WHITEIS Fire Insurance writer for best Old Line Companies. lleppner, Oregon E. J. STARKEY ELEITIUCIAN House Wiring a Specialty lleppner, Oregon Phono 872 DR. A. HENNIG Chiropractic Physician Office at H. 0. Slocuin Residence llcipner, Oregon DR. D. N. HAYDEN Physician ft Surgeon rturdmun. Ore. Day or night culls promptly attended. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OE 1TXAE ACCOI NT. Notice is hereby Riven that the un dersigned administrator of the Estate of J. W. Marlatt, deceased has filed with the County Court of Morrow County, Oregon his final account as such administrator and that said Court lias fixed Monday the 3rd day of May, 1920 at 10 o'clock A. M. as t ho 1 1 in o nnd the County Court Koom In the Court House in lleppner, Ore Ron as tlio placo for hearing said Fln !i I Account and uny objections thereto and for the settlement of said Estate, W. 0. MINOIl, Administrator. NOTICE TO CKEDITOH8 Notice Is hereby given that the un dersigned has been duly appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon tor Morrow County, adminis trator of the estate of Frank E. Boll, deceased, and that all persons having claims against said estate will present same, duly verified as by law requir ed, to me nt my office In lleppner, Oregon within six months of the first day of the publication ot this notice, said date being March 11, 1920, F. A. McMENAMIN, . . Administrator. NOTICE VOtt, SEALED FIlOrOHALfl Seuled bids will be received by the undersigned at Hardman, Oregon, up to 2 o'clock p. m., April 3, 1920, tor furnishing materials and erecting a concrete, tile and frame school house, All bids must be accompanied by a certified check payable to the under signed in the amount of 5 per cent of the sum bid, ns a guarantee that the successful bidder will enter a con- trad and furnish a bond of not less than Co per cent of the bid and said cheek to be forfeited for f.illure to comply as above set forth. Plans and specification may be had by application to the undersigned 'or to T. C. Staley, architect, at 701 , Wycant St., Portland, Oregon, j The board reserves the right to re ject any or all bids. E. JAY MERltlLL. Clerk. j I'ulon High School No. 1. Application for Judg ment Foreclosing Tax Liens. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREOON FOR MORROW COUNTY. .Morrow County, Oregon, A Public Corporation, Plaintiff, vs. R. V. Brown, H. C. Furnell, Arvid Haryu, M. Linebaugh, C. Llne- baugh, A. 'I, Rhodes, 11. C. Robert- sou, Otis Sliepardson, Olilt Shep unison, uud Asa L. Young, and uny oilier person or persons owning or claiming to own, or having or . claiming to have, any Interest or estate ni or to the real property hereinafter described, Defendants. SIMMONS AND NOTICE. To R. V. brown, II. C. Furuoll, Ar vid Haryu, M. Linebaugh, C. Line baugh, A. Z. Rhodes, 11. C. Robert son, Otis Sliepardson, Oliff Sliepard son, and Asa L. Young, and any otu er person or persons owning or claim ing to own, or having or claiming to have, any interest or estate in or to the real property hereinafter descri bed. Defendants: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREOON: You and each of you are hereby notified that the above na med Plaintiff, a Public Corporation, ;s the purchaser, owner and holder of certificates of delinquency Numbered 719, 724, 740, 767, 768, 772, 773, and 7S8. issued on the 10th day of December, 1915, by the Sheriff and Collector of delinquent TaxeB for .Morrow County, Oregon, uud filed by said Sheriff and Collector of delin luent Taxes iu the office of the Coun iy Clerk of Morrow County, Oregon, in the loth day of December, 1916, for taxes duo and delinquent, togeth er with penally, interest and costs thereon, upon real property situate in Morrow County, Oregon. ou are further notified that the amount for which suid certificate is issued is set opposite and following ;. lie description of the tract or parcel of land hereinafter set out, the same neing the amount th,n due uud dona iuont, for t lie taxes for the year 1913, together with penalty, Interest .mil costs thereon, upon real property iituate in Morrow County, Oegon, and particularly bounded and descri bed as hereinafter set forth; said tract or parcel of land being assessed for the year 1913 to the fist person whose name immediately precedes the description thereof, and is fol lowed by the name of the person ap pearing to be the owner thereof, as appears on til tax roll of Morrow County, Oregon, now in the hands of tli j Sheriff of said County for collec tion, at the date of the first publica tion of tills summons and notice, which date is the 19th day of Febru ary, 1920. Certificate No. 719, II. C. Furnell and R. V. Brown, West Half of Lots Three (3) and Six (6), and Lots Four (4) and Five (5), in Block Eight (8) of duff's Seventh Addi tion to the town of lone, Morrow County, Oregon, $4.05 Certificate No. 724, Arvid Haryu and Arvid llaryu, Southeast quarter (SEVi) of Section Thirty-three (33), Township Six (6) South, Ruuge Twenty-seven (27) East ot Willamette Meridian $14.86 Certificate No. 740, M. Linebaugh and C. Linebaugh; and M. Linebaugh and C. Linebaugh, Northeast quar ter (NEVi ) and East half of Eeast half of Northwest quarter (EHE HNW1,) of Section Sixteen (16), Township Four (4) North, Range Twenty-seven (27) East of Will amette Meridian, $8.66 Certificate No. 767, A. Z. Rhodes and A. Z. Rhodes, Lots Ten, (10), El even (11) and Twelve (12) In Block Thirty-one (31) of the town ot Irrigon, Morrow County, Ore gon, $1.15 Certificate No. 768, H. C. Robertson nnd II. C. Robertson, West half of Southwest quarter (WM-SW'A) and Southwest quarter of North west quartor (SWUNWtt ) of Sec tion Nineleeu (19), Township One (1) North, Range Twenty-seven (27) East of Willamette Meridian, $28.45 Certificate No. 72, Otis Sliepardson nnd Otis Sliepardson North halt of Northeast quarter (NHNE4), Southeast quarter ot Northeast quarter (SE4NEV4), and North east quarter of Southeast quarter (NE USE 14) of Section Nine (9), Township Six (6) South, Range Twenty-eight (28) Enst of Will amette Meridian, $14.45 Certificate No. 773, Olift Sliepardson and Oliff Sliepardson, North half of Northwest quarter (N'JNW Vi), Southwest quarter of North west quarter (SWUNW14), and Northwest quarter of Southwest quarter (NW!4SW',i) of Section Ten ( 10), Township Six (6) South, Range Twenty-eight (28) East of Willamette Meridian, $14.45 Certificate No. 788, Asa L. Young nnd Asa L. Young. All ot Section Six toon (16), Township Six (6) South, Range Twenty-seven (27) East of Willametto Meridian; nil of Section Sixteen (16), Township Six (6) South, RiniRO Twenty-eight (28) East of Willametto Meridian; and all of Section Sixteen (16), Township Six (6) South, Range Twenty-nine (29 East of Willam etto Moridlan, $165.60 The said amounts bear Interest ns follows: The Taxes aforesaid bear Interest from the dato of the filing of said certificates of delinquency, re spectively, nt tho rate of 15 per cent per annum, until paid, tho date ot filing of said certificates of delinquen cy being the 10th day of December, 1915. And you and each of you are here by summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first pub lication of this summons, exclusive of the day of Lrbt publication thereof, io-it: February 19, 1920, and de :ei.d the suit in the Court afortsaia, or pay the amount duo as shown a uove against said tracts or parcels of land, respectively, above described, of which you are the owner, or In a Inch you have, or claim to have, any .Merest or estate, together with in terest and costs accrued tn this suit tiiereon. Service of a copy of your answer or other process may be made upon the undersigned attorney tor plaintiff, at tho place specified below as his address, and in case of your failure so to do, Judgment and decree will be entered against you and each ot you, foreclosing said tax liens for the amount set opposite and following the description ot said tract or parcel of laud above set forth, together with interest and costs thereon, against said tracts or parcels ot land and said tracts or parcels of land will be sold to satisfy buid judgment and decree obtained in this suit. You are hereby further notified that the plaintiff will apply to the Cir cuit Court aforesaid for Judgment and decree foreclosing said tax liens against said property, hereinbefore described. This summons Is published once each week for sixty consecutive days in the Uazette-Tlnies, a newspaper of general circulation in Morrow County, Oregon, published weekly at lleppner in said County, the date of first publication thereof being Febru ary 19, 1920, said publication being made in pursuance of an order there for made by the Honorable Gilbert W. Phelps, Judge of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, said order having been made and entered on the 6th day of Febru ary, 1920. COUNTY OF MORROW, STATE OF OREOON. By Samuel E. Notson, District Attor ney for Morrow County, Oregon, and Atorney for Plaintiff; whose address is Heppner, Oregon, SUMMONS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MORROW COUNTY. i'ercy M. Garrigues, Plaintiff, -vs.- Warreu Kathan, Eliza Alger, Mrs. E. C. Allison, Lydia A. Gray, Welling ton Wark, Chleo Scott, Caroline Myatt, Isaac Bates, and William Bates, and all the unknown heirs of H. A. Kathan, deceased. Also all other persons or parties claim ing any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property here inafter described. Defendants. To the ubove defendants: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, you and each of you are hereby required to appear and answer plaintiff's complaint filed gainst you in the above entitled court and cause on or before six weeks from the date of the first pub- icalion of this summons, and if you fail to so appear or answer, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief prayed for in his complaint, to-wit: That you and each of you be forever barred from all right title or Interest in or to the North half of Lot nine (9) in Block one (1) of the original town of llepp ner, Morrow County, Oregon, and for such other and further relief as the Court may deem just and equitable. This summons is published In the Gazette-Times once a week for six onsecutive weeks pursuant to an or der of the Hon. Wm. T. Campbell, Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, made on the 8th day of March, 1920, and the date of the first publication of this summons is the 11th day ot March, 1920. JOS. J. NYS, Attorney for plaintiff, Postoflice address, Heppner, Oregon. NOTICE OF PARTNERS' RETIRING Public Notice is hereby given that the copartnership heretofore existing between Earl D. Cramer, George W. Kelly and Margaret Cramer under the linu nume of "Cramer, Kelly & Cra mer" was dissolved by mutual con sent ou the 12th day of December, 1919, so far as relates to the said George W. Kelly who was released H orn all claims and demands thereof. All debts due to the said partnership and those due by them, will be set tled w ith and by the remaining part ners who will continue the business under the firm name of Cramer & Cramer. Dated at Boardman, Morrow Coun ty, State of Oregon this 12th day of December, 1919. 6t. EARL D. CRAMER, MARGARET CRAMER. SUMMONS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MORROW COUNTY. Lillian P. Orr, Plaintiff, vs. Edwin F. Orr, Defendant. TO EDWIN F. ORR, the above named defendant. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby re quired to appear and answor the: complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before tho Slh day of May, 1920, and if you fail to so appear and answer or otherwise plead, for want thereof the plaintiff twill apply to the Court for the rolief prayed for in her com plaint, to-wit: For a Decree of the Court granting to the plaintiff an absolute divorce from the defend ant. This summons is published pur suant to nn order of the County Judge of Morrow County, State of Oregon, made and entered on the 20th day of March, 1920. Date of first publication March 25, 1920. Date ot last publication May 6, 1920. WOODSON & SWEEK, Attornoys for Plaintiff, Heppner, Oregon, NOTICE OK BOX I) S ALE Sealed bids will be received until the hour of 7:30 o'clock p. m. on the 2:!rd day of April, 1920 by the under signed, and immediately thereafter publicly opened by the City Council at the Council Chambers in the City of lleppner, Oregon, for the purchase of City of Heppner Funding Bonds In the sum of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) said bonds to be in denom inations of one thousand dollars ($1, 000) each, dated January 1, 1940, to bear Interest at the rate of five and one-half per cent (5) per annum payable semi-annually on the first days of January and July in each year, principal and Interest payable at the Fiscal Agency of the State of Oregon in New York City, "which said bonds are to be Issued and disposed of under the provisions of the City Charter. The Council reserves the right to reject any and all bids. 3t. THOMAS HUGHES, Recorder. NOTICE OF FINAL HEARING. Notice Is hereby given that the un dersigned has filed his final report as administrator of the estate of Py ron Powell, deceased, with the Clerk of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrdw County and the County Judge thereof has fixed Mon day, June 7, 1920 at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon as the time and the County Court Room in the County Court House In Heppner. Morrow County, State of Oregon, as the place for the hearing of objec tions to such final account, if any tuere be. Dated April 2, 1920. CHAS. W. POWELL, Administrator. GEO. W. COUTTS, Attorney for administrator, Pendleton, Oregon. NOTICE OF ANNUAL STOCK HOLDERS MEETING. NOTICE is hereby given that the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Morrdw Couuty Creamery company will be held at the First National Bank In Heppner, Oregon on Thursday, the 22nd day of April. 1920, at the hour of 8 o'clock p. m. of said day. Officers for the ensuing year will be elected and such other business transacted as may regularly come before said meeting. Dated at Heppner, Oregon this 8th day of April, 1920. FRANK GILLIAM, Pres. W. CLAUDE COX, Secretary. NOTICE OK CALL FOR WAR RANTS Notice T3 Hereby given that the un dersigned clerk of school District No. Jj. of Morrow County, Oregon will pay all outstanding warrants against :aid district in the order of their is sue from No. 181 on July 30, 1918 to No. 180 on April 5, 1920, in elusive, upon presentation at my office in Boardman, Oregon. All interest will cease after this date. Dated at Boardman, Oregon this 8th day of April, 1920. MARGARET CRAMER, Clerk School Dist. No. 25. EXPERT WORKERS IN DEMAND Great Need for Those Who Art Capable and Willing to Do Special Tasks. "What we need in this country Is expert workers." snys a woman who makes smart huts for smnrt people nnd who says business would be very good If she could get people to work for her. "I hear It all along the line," she continued. "They say there is n great need of employment, but It can't be so. for people don't want to work. I want expert finishers and I can't get them. An advertisement won't bring them. It won't lirln; anyone. They won't even come to see what you tire willing to pay for them. Where are they? I don't know. Perhaps the girls prefer to ride up and down In eleva tors. "There were some I knew who went during the war to work on gas masks, but they can't be doing that now, nnd I don't know where they nre. They made good money, nnd perhaps they nre still sjiendlnj: it. I want some models that I am having made In New York, but I have been waiting weeks nnd I can't get them. I suppose ttie others are having the same trouble that I nm. I talked with n Jeweler the other day nnd he told me he could use twenty expert workmen If he could get them. He enn't do It. He has found one old ninn. and thnt Is the host he can do. Whnt nre we going to do? People don't wnnt to do nny careful, expel work. They want to do something thnt Is quick nnd easy nnd make money doing it." Brooklyn Engle. FIND COST OF FEED IN OHIO Hundred Pounds of Milk Produced at Rate of 68 Cents When Silage Is Furnished. At the Ohio college It was found thnt 10O pounds of whole milk can" be pro duced nt the rate of 08 cents when silage Is fed, nnd butter nt n cost of 13.1 cents n pound. However, when an average feed Is fed without silage, It costs $1.IV to produce W pounds of whole milk, and '.'2 cents to produce a pound of butter. The same cnti he said for beef production. Slluge nnd n little cottonseed meal, or clover hay. any beans or cowpvus will make a bal anced ration. Middy silnge should not be fed to stock at any time. I DAIRY NOTES g When ten days to two weeks of age, the calf should have a little grain. The silo Is one of the foundation stones of successful dairy funning. Some people like butter that Is quite ally and some prefer butter without suit. It Is nil a mutter of taste. Every furnior who observes: closely must be Iiiii "ov.cil with the need of more dairy rows to economize In food production. hFvA-HWi ft -A PREVENT MOTTLES IN BUTTER Primarily Caused by an Uneven Dis tribution of Salt or by In sufficient Working. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Mottled butter is frequently found on the murket, and, even though It may be of very good flavor, it Is strongly discriminated against by the purchaser. As this defect is one of workmanship, It can be overcome by the application of proper methods on the part of the buttermaker. Mottles are caused primarily by an unewn distribution of salt in the but ter. Ti ls may be produced by Insuf ficient working of the butter or by churning, washing, and. working It at a very low temperature, or by wash ing or working It at a temperature several degrees higher or lower than the churning temperature. When the quantity of butter made In one churning is much less than usual It Is necessary to work It a greater number of revolutions of the churn than usual In order to produce the same results on the butter. Extremely low temperatures of churning, washing, and working should be uvolded, because they pro- Working the Butter. duce so firm a butter that It is only 1 18111V. rSWSMll f ; J vN . iZ -.wr '.v!th treat '!;".!: t!st h" saiT ei:i be worked uniformly Into It. JI:;h temperatures of ri.urninir, washing, and working niu-t a No be avoided to prevent an abnormal b-in of fat In the buttermilk and also the making of a greasy, leaky butter. Great variations in temperature dur ing the manufacturing process should always be avoided. Under normal con ditions the temperature of the wash water should be the same as or within two degrees of that of the buttermilk. FLY REPELLENT IS USEFUL Spraying Should Not Be Don Just Be fore Milking, as Milk Absorbs Odors Very Rapidly. The following homemade fly repel lents to ease old Brlndle at milking time are recommended by Horace Jones, Instructor In dairy husbandry at South Daktoa State college: (1) 100 parts fish oil, 50 parts oil of tar, and 1 part crude carbolic add. Apply with a sprayer. (2) One pound com mon laundry soap, 4 gallons water, 1 gallon crude petroleum, and 4 ounces powdered naphthalln. Dissolve the soap In the water and the naphthalln in the crude petroleum. Care should be taken that the spray ing Is not done Immediately before milking as milk absorbs odors very readily. If the cows are milked In the stable the milk should be removed Immediately after milking to a cool place where no odor of the fly repel lent exists. GOATS' MILK FINDING FAVOR Prejudice Against This Cheap and Nutrit ous Food Seems In Fair Way to Disappear. Goats, It must be admitted, have never been taken seriously by public opinion In the United States, and the news that the owner of the largest herd In the American Northwest Is preparing to establish an extensive dairy for the sale of goats' milk will probably seem to many rather humor ous. As a matter of fact, however, It appears that a promising beginning Is already made, and that the city of Seattle, conveniently near the great herd of goats on Cypress island, In the Puget Sound archipelago, already consumes about a thousand quarts of goats' milk a day. Publicity will per haps be necessary to overcome the American habit of regarding the gont humorously, and it may tnke time and patience to prove widely the state ment of the owner of the herd thnt goats' milk Is quite as good. If not actually better, than cows' milk. Five cents a day, snys he. will pay the cost of keeping a gont whose average milk production Is two or three quarts; and two quarts of milk for 5 cents would make a considerable difference In the food expense of a family. The gont ilnlry may be more Important than It seems; nnd ten years from now such dairies mny be commonplace. USi9ter Is Your Hook Baited Right? For every species of fish and condition of water there is the proper bait which, when used, will give the greatest num ber of finny beauties in the basket at the end of the day's sport. The wise angler acquaints himself with this lore and his efforts tire productive of greater results than the one who uses any hind of bait for any kind of fish in any kind of water. Just so, there are in every locality certain ways for the mer rhant to increase his sales and among these advertising stands out preeminently. But the wise advertiser soon learns that ad vertising in itself will produce but few results if the medium used is not the best. In lleppner, close attention to the me diums the advertiser has at his command shows conclusively that The Gazette-Times is the choice of local advertisers, and what is just as significant, the choice of large national adver tisers, with whom advertising is a science and who judge a me dium solely by the standard of the results obtained. That these large contracts are renewed every year is one of the strongest recommendations of the effectiveness of G.-T. adver- Place your advertising in The Gazette-Times and your judgment will be vindicated by the results obtained. Phone Main 882 and let us help you plan a Spring campaign. The Gazette-Times III. Datpy Notps The rig and cow pasture should l e eepara!e. Give the young calf an early chance to nibble nt grnM. Spray religiously all stall and whitewash all parts of the stable. Dairy cows, or all milk cows for that matter, require large quantities of water. Take good care of the calves, for more of them are needed on many farms. There Isn't ranch play about dairy ing hut no other Job pays better for hard work. The heifer bred too early always re mains stunted In growth and her milk Mow Is shortened for all time. Keep dirt out of the milk. Strain through cotton or filter cloth. Use nUy clean, sterile strainer cloths. Romans' Fondness for Amber. Amber was the first precious stone made use of for the purposes of per sonal adornments. Homer mentions "the gold necklace hung with bits of nmber" which was offered by the Phoenician trader to the queen of Syria, and Nero, in one of his badly composed verses to Poppnea's hair, de scribed it hs of an "amber" shade. The Romans valued amber highly, not alone for Its beauty, but also for the medicinal qualities which they believed It to contain. In their opinion, an nmn let of amber, worn round the neck, was an Infallible cure for ague or chills; ground up with honey and roe oil, amber was a specific for deafness, and ground with honey a remedy for de fective sight. ADVISABLE TO SKIM CREAM Saving Can Be Accomplished by Turn of Screw and Is Well Worth Effort Required. In skimming a hundred pounds of 85 per cent cream 15 more pounds of skim milk is kept on the farm than when the same amount of 20 per cent cream Is taken. This saving can be accomplished by a turn of the cream , screw, and at present feed prices Is well worth the effort required. More skim milk on the farms also means more calves raised to furnish meat and milk for all. Milk producers are paid for the butterfat in cream, not for the water and other constituents. This makes it advisable to skim a rich , cream, so that as much valuable skim ' milk as possible maybe saved forfeed . ing purposes. mini i: ntrmttmtmn I IWIllpi nil