r M.y rot n THK GAZKTTK TIMKS, HEFPXER, ORE.. TUVRSDAV, JULY 20, 1920. THE GAZETTE-TIMES 1 !: Ht;i",r rrtt. FiUblihd Tl Itf;Tiir TIiiimi Ktbllfcd N.ivnt -r IS, 1S" r-r,p.ila!l February 11. Ull . l iii.i:h.l every Thurdy mornlnt bj I nfrtrr mmi 9peef Crwp4 . r,'l inlt'fj at the roMofflo t Hepp- i i ii i iim; ratf lilVHJi ON AITl.lt ATION Sl l'.SCRirTION RATES: One Year ti.W 8.x M.inih 1.00 Th'f Month ." Mnyie Copies .01 MOKHOW 1(11 VTV OFFICIAL PAPER The Motor Vehicle Law T.vu important features of the mo tor wliioif law which have been call ed to our attt-ntiun by Secretary of Su.!e. Sam Kozer, and which seem to have not been thoroughly under s;ood by many persons over the state, relate to the issuanec of licenses to persons under sixteen years of age and to persons who are "physically imapaeilated." The Operator's Law (Section 4, Chapter 3, Laws Special Session, 19i'0) specifically prohibits the is suanee of a license or a permit to any person under the age of sixteen years, whether or not such person be the owner of a motor vehicle, and the same section further enacts that "No person, who is the owner or custodian of any motor vehicle, shall permit any person who is less ,than sixteen years of age to operate or drive any such motor vehicle or em ploy any person to operate or drive any such motor vehicle who is less than eighteen years of age and a li censed operator or chauffeur." The term "physically incapacita ted" is defined to include "any per son who has lost the us of one hand or one foot, or who has lost the use of both feet, or whose eyesight or hearing are greatly impaired." Attorney General Brown has ruled that the motor vehicle law does not include nonresident car owners and likewise nonresident operators are exempt so far as the working of the motor vehicle law is concerned. The newspapers are beginning to feel the effect once more of private ownership of railroads. Not that we are contending especially for private ownership, but while Uncle Sam was runnicg the roads he did very little advertising. Of course be had his hands full taking care of the stress of war business and didn't cater to tourist trade to any considerable ex tent. Once more we have the call to field and stream and beach resort. Vaca tionists are given the advantage of special round trip fares. The roads are bidding for the business again and it seems like one sign that con ditions really are getting at least a little bit back to normal. Cement roads built by the State Highway Commission of California are going to pieces rapidly. They were not heavy enough to stand the strain of modern traffic. Coating them with thin coats of asphalt was tried, but the coats wore through quickly and disintegrated under the strain of traffic and weather. Coat ing with a 2-inch thickness of as- phaltic pavement was tried, but the traffic squeezed the paving coat into ruts and bumps. The subject is re ceiving attention from the newspa pers, and the taxpayers as well as the motor and truck owners are stirred up. California built lighter roads than did Oregon. The foresight of our Oregon highway commission in building a better quality of pavement is being vindicated. Oregon Voter. Briefly Told A number of infuriated eagles, dis turbed by motion picture men in the Californlan mountains, pursued the auto in which the men were driving and destroyed the car's top before being beaten off. Enamel steel guide signs will be erected on the Lincoln Highway be tween New York and Omaha. Since goat's milk is said to be more nourishing and better for children than cow's milk the Chicago Health Commissioner Is encouraging its use. Efforts will be made this summer to raise the Laurentic which contain ed more than $16,000,000 In gold when It was torpedoed. Verdun will celebrate annually the battle which occured on June 23, 1916, when the German advance was stemmed. A bill bus been Introduced into tii English House of Commons which would impose fines for fallurt to vote. Georges Carpentier paid an Income tax of eight per cent on all money he made in the United States before sailing permit could be granted. Mrs. Pankhurst Is still holding meetings in London and frequently her speeches end in a riot. Recently she boxed the cars of a man who differed with her and a scrimmage ensued. Mrs. Pankhurst sought safety in a railroad station. Motion picture censorship In Mex ico has been abandoned by order of President Huerta who declares that !t "hindered the development of the Industry." In the passing of J. Frank Hunley, ex-senator from Indiana, and former candidate for president on the prohi bition ticket, America loses an able Utusiuun and a staunch cititen. Tving the Blame to the Wrong End If it strikes us at times that cost of living is clear out of sight, and it's quite apt to strike us that way daily,; we are apt to iet our thoughts take' us to the counter over which we do, our buying and straightway start' blaming the local merchant for a cun- Jitioa that I.e does not help to create,: to say nothing of giving it existence, j Hoarders of food supplies have been found. They have even been fined heavily by the United States government, but those boarders were not found among the country mer- hants. Taken the country over, prices out of retail stores will be found to run along the same level. The retailer is entitled to a profit. He cannot sell his goods at a less figure than cost plus a reasonable profit. Many of our country mer chants, due to business conditions, could not hoard foodstuffs if they wanted to ever so badly, for the pre sent system is against that. Hoarding is done at the other end of the line, as may be witnessed by the daily press reports of one large concern or another in the cities, be ing jerked up by federal authorities for holding foodstuffs In warehouses. Holding in order that the demand may grow still greater than the sup ply and then slowly feed these goods out upon the market at a still higher price. The local merchants may be short on some lines, but they cannot and should not be accused of hoarding, for common sense should tell us that the hoarding is being done at the other end of the line where the big fellows have first whack and are in a position to get a firm hold on the necessities of life. During the last five years too high a proportion of Grunt county ranches have become encumbered with finan cial obligations, says the Blue Moun tain Eagle of Canyon City. These debts have been incurred during good times' or during the time when live stock prices were at their best. Stockmen have had to mortgage their ranches in spite of the high prices they have received for beef, sheep and wool the past few years. The In creased cost of labor, and the high cost of feed has not kept up with the price received for livestock. It is all well enough for the Department of Agriculture, Financial Agents, and the big packing plants to send out alluring reports about the stockmen and the big profits. This is all bun combe. The stockmen of Eastern Ore gon know better, and so do some of the financla institutions that have ad vanced the money to carry the stock men over the good times. Slats' Diary Fridav uncle Ike give me a nice fox Terryer dog today wich I have named hli Pershing after gen. of that name. He has a black spot on his rite eye & fetches rats ft mice & flees. Saturday Not laveing nuthing else 2 do I rote pomes this a m & sent 1 of them 2 Jane wich I have (always referd 2 as !j. E. heretofour in my diry. The pome went thisaway way down south in the land of Cotton I love you so much ithat I feel Rotten. I borryed 2 cts. frum ma wile Bhe was down 2 the meet Store bying mpet 2 eat or dinner & mailed it. Sunday the s. s. teecher told us the Creator cud do ennything & Taf fy Bilkua ast her cud he make a stone wich was so big he cud not lift it his ownself. Teecher was thotful for a wile ft then she sed 2 Taffy That is a very silly Queschun and dis mist the Class. But just such thlnes are hard 2 understand. Monday wile out takeing a littel walk I past Jane's house just Ack- sidentlv and seen her out in iront & she smiled at me with blue eyes and all & sed Slats that was a nice pome you sent me. Did you mean It I sed I'll say I ment it. And she put her hand on my sholder ft sed Bhe liked me better than enny fpllsB In town & wen she touched me a thrill trickled in my spine just like I bad drank Absence -or sum thine. Tnoortav nothine of intrest I worked In the Garden. Wednesday the editor of the pa per was dis Cussing things with pa today & he ast pa did he beleeve in sumthing & pa anserred ft sed I dont know wot I beleeve Exackly but whatever I did beleeve in wen I got married I changed my mind. The editor smiled laffinely & sed A par ently yure wife has a Mind of her own. Pa sed She has z mmas ners and mine. Then he saw me & sent me to null weeds. Thursday I had 2 change the name of my dog. I ent out 2 the horn anil found him with 4 littel nnnnvfl ft ma sed I should ought 2 call him Josie or sumthing feminine like. So I did. But I dont know how to name the puppys I might hafto change their names z. Its taking America longer to get over the effects of the war than our European allies, according to the re port brought back from that, country by a Heppner man who spent the winter In Northern Belgium and Hol land. He says Industry is going for ward, everybody Is working, wages are good and the cost of living Is not as high as in this country. A revela tion of his trip was the prosperous condition he found existing in Bel gium a year after the great war. Had the Pendleton Jail breakers been content to gain their liberty without the shedding of human blood, there would have been a si lent hunt by Taylor and his deputies with the public looking on with but little interest, as the original crime committed by these men was insigni ficant when compared with the cold premeditated murder of Sheriff Tay-j lor. When murder was done, there j were thousands of persons in the ': state ready to lay aside the tasks of the day and devote all their energies to hunting down the desperadoes. Hart and his bunch had about one chance in ten thousand of ever get ting completely away. In the mean time work at Salem on the new scaf fold is being rushed and the hang man's noose is rapidly taking shape. m m SI MMONS 1XR PUBLICATION IX FORECUKSl RE OK TAX LIEX. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Morrow County. W. R. Walpole, Plaintiff vs. Danbury Land Company, a cor poration, Defendant. To Danbury Land Company, a cor poration, the above named defendant IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby notified that V. R. Walpole, the holder of Certificate of Delinquency numbered 356 Issued on the First day of March, 1916, by the Tax Collector of the County of Morrow. State of Oregon, for the am ount of Three and80-100 Dollars, the same being the amount then due and delinquent for taxes for the year 1914 together with penalty, interest and costs thereon upon the real property assessed to you, of which you are the owner as appears of record, sit uated in said County and State, and particularly bounded and described as follows, to-wit: Lots 5, 6, 7 and 8, Block 7 East, Section 19, Township 5 North, Range 27 East of the Willamette Meridian. (Complete description in deed being as follows: Beginning at the South quarter corner of Section Numbered 19 in Township Numbered 5 North, of Range) Numbered 27 East of the Willamette Meridian; running thence North No degrees Six minutes West (N 0 degrees 6 min. W) Eleven Hun dred Fifty-eight and Five-tenths; (1158.5) feet, thence South Seventy- six degrees Five minutes West (S 76 degrees 5 min. W) following a line Thirty (30) feet out from the Ore gon Railroad and Navigation Com pany's right of way, three hundred forty and three-tenths (340.3) feet; thence South No degrees Six minutes East (S 0 degrees 6 min. E), One Thousand Seventy-five (1075) feet; thence following section line South Eighty-nine degrees Forty-three min utes East (S 49 degrees 43 min. E), Three Hundred Thirty (330) feet to the place of beginning. Reserving therefrom one-half ( Vt ) of a road sixty (60) feet In width along the North, East and South sides, said tract being shown on the amended plats of the Company as Lots Num bered Five (6), Six (6), Seven (7) and Eight (8) in Block Numbered Seven (7) East, containing 8.46 acres, more or less.) You are further notified that said W. R. Walpole has paid taxes on said premises for prior or subsequent years, with the rate of Interest on said amounts as follows: der of the Honorable Gilbert W. Phelps, Judge of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the Coun ty of Morrow, and said order was made and dated this 2Sth day of July. 1920, and the date of the first publication of this summons is the 5th day of August, 1920. All process and papers in this pro ceeding may be served upon the un dersigned residing within the State of Oregon at the address hereafter mentioned. a E. NOTSON, Attorney for Plaintiff. Address, Heppner Oregon. Year's I Tax ' Date Paid I Tax i i Rate Rec't 1 Amt. ! of 1 No. ! I Intr'rt 1915 Mar. 24 1916 555 1916 Mar. 10 1917 538 1917 j Apr. 5, 1919 j 559 1918 Apr. 5, 1919 j 585 2.98 3.10 4.34 2.60 15 15 15 15 Said Danbury Land Company, as the cwner of the legal title of the above described property as the same appears of record and each of the other persons above named are here by further notified that W. R. Wal pole, Plaintiff, will rpply to the Cir cuit Court of the County and State aforesa d for a decree foreclosing the Hen afc. ''nst the property, above de scribed, and mentioned in said certifi cate. And you are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the first publication of this summons, ex clusive of the day of said first pub lication, and defend this action or pay the amount due as above shown, together with costs and accrued in terest, and In case of your failure to do so, a decree will be rendered foreclosing the lien of said taxes and costs against the land and premises above named. This summons is published by or- 0B& LWillard: He Never Had Time The other day a man lost two hours because his battery suddenly went back on him. He could have saved delay by keeping that battery shipshape. Sidestep trouble by stopping in. Ask about Threaded Rubber In sulation the kind se lected by 136 manufac turers of cart, end trucks. BATTERY ELECTRIC SERVICE HTATION J. W. Fritsch Phone Main 82 Hcppnei, PEARL OIL (KEROSENE) An ideal home fuel for oil cookstoves, oil heaters and oil lamps. Get it at your dealer's. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (CALIFOENIAl AVtlERE 10 .EAT The Question Is Settled DINE WITH US Our New Big Dining Room Is not exclusive to transient trade. It's for the folks of Heppner First, Last and All the Time. Give the wife a rest and a treat a Sunday dinner here. SHORT ORDERS, TOO Eikhorn Restaurant Willow Street ttee pjor Sick Motors 1 WImw few fciotar kj lr4 fSp kktd toaUft tWa Mitafcr fend. Uwa u cstiA feotrt . ' m Ol Fada to pick up m i-aolNj J uiaalaWy a wfcaa asr' Don't Experiment ISo. 5 Mhrvel Cylinder Re-Boring Machine 4sf rMV JMn 0stWm IHsmsu Vr pui pfp in tick mobm Realm 100 canspwgii is jrntr sMspcw. A Mtmloui nadLa far jt4db ni o mpvuI wwtt Xnp year pemet. car a fOffiirtrm -a--. At the Shop Vif flS BottM- Servic V T " l Heppner Garage Machine Shop Look for Tha Sign tn Our Window This wonderful re-boring machine has just been in stalled in our shop. Time is money to you. Save two weeks by having your re-boring done at home. We guarantee satisfaction, and quick and efficient service. ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN ON ALL JOBS Heppner Garage Machine Shop Largest and best equipped auto repair and machine shop in Morrow County We Are Prepared to Sell You a Ford Car 1-3 Down Balance in monthly payments a period of ten months. over Buy Your Ford Car Now and Pay Later We have a number of new Fords on the floor. Come in and get yours. Touring Cars - Coupes Latourell Auto Coo Authorized Ford Sales and Service Main Street Heppner, Oregon