Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1922)
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, IIEITNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JCXE 1, lf!. FAGE TIIKKC PROFESSIONAL CARDS j DR. F. F. FAEEIOE DENTIST Office upstairs over Postoffice Heppner, Oregon DR. R. Z. GROVE DENTIST Successor to Dr. R. J. Vaughan Permanently located in the Odd Fellows Building, Rooms 4 and 5. Heppner, Oregon A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN BURGEON Office in Patterson Drug Store Trala4 Nam AaalaUat Heppner, Oregon C .0 .CHICK, M. D. PHYSICIAN SURGEON Office upstairs over Postoffice Tralaet Nan Aaelataat Heppner, Oregon WOODSON & SWEEK ATTOIlNEYi-AT-LAW Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon VAN VACTOR & BUTLER ATTORNEYS AT LAW Suite 30& First National Bank Building THE DALLES, ORE. S. E. N0TS0N ATTORN K Y-AT-LAW Offce in Court House. Heppner, Oregon Office Phone, Main (41 Residence Phone, Main iU FRANCIS A McMENAMIN LAWYER Gilman Building, Heppner, Ore. F. H. ROBINSON lONE, OREGON roy V. WHITEIS . Fire Insurance writer for best Old Line Companies. Heppner, Oregon E. J. STARKEY ELECTRICIAN HOUSE WIRING A SPECIALTY Heppner, Oregon Phoae 8TJ HEPPNER SANITARIUM DR. J. PK.HHY CONDER Physiclan-ln-Charge Treatment of all dlBenses. Isolated wards for contagious disease. FIRE INSURANCE WATERS & ANDERSON fturr?.ora to C C. Patttraoa Heppner, Oregon THE MOORE HOSPITAL Kutlr New Equipment... Large Modern Surgery, lilt, C. C. CHICK. M. D. Physician and Surgeon Phone Mala 5.12 MATERNITY HOME Mlt. V.. C. AIKEN, HEPPNER I Bin prepared to take a limited number of maternity cases at my home. Pnilrnta privileged to choose fhrlr own th-Nlf-lna. HcHt of attention and care assured. Phone Aftft BEAMER & WILLIAMS DRAY AND TRANSFER Phone Main 872 Heppner Oregon LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE) OF SHERIFF'S SALE. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREdON FOR MORROW COUNTY. ADA M. ATERS, Plaintiff) v.. ) W. D. Nowlon and Ella) B. Newlon, his wife, and) John J. Worley, ) Defendants.) Notice la hereoy given that by virtue of a foreclosure execution, Judgment, Order, Decree and order of sale, Issued out of the above entitled Court In the above entitled cause to me directed, dated the 18th day of April, 1922, upon Judgment and decree rendered and en tered In said Court and Cause on the 14th day of April, 1922 In favor 0 Ada M. Ayers, plaintiff above named and against W. D. Newlon and Ella B. New lon, his wife, above named defendants for the sum of One Thousand Three Hundred Fifty and no-100 dollars with Interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from March 6, 1U and tho further sum of 1160.00 attorneys" fees and the further sum of $17.50 costs 1 ana uisoursementa or said ault an coata upon (hla writ, commanding me to make axle o( the following deacribed real property located In Morrow Coun ty, Bute til Oregon, to-wtl: The Eaat half of the Northweat quarter and the Northweat quarter of the Northwest quarter of Sec tion 20, In Townahlp One North, Kange , E. W. M. NOW THEREFORE by virtue of aaid foreclosure, execution, judgment, order, decree and order of sale and in coropll ance with the command of same, I will on Saturday the 20th day of May, HIS, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M. of said day, at the front door of the County Court Houas of Morrow County, at Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon, sell at publlo auction (subject to redemp tlon) to the highest bidder, for caah In hand paid, all the right, title and Inter eat of the above named defendants, or euner 01 them, had or now have. In and to tne above described real property, or any part thereof, to satisfy said fore closure execution, judgment, order and decree, interest, costs, attorneys' fees and accruing costs. GEORQE McDUFFEE. Sheriff for Morrow County. Oregon. Dated this 10th day of April, lm NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION U. S. LAND OFFICE at La Ornnrf. Oregon, April 28, 121. NOTICE is hereby a-lven that Jams W. Wheeler, of Hannnar. Oram whn on June 14. 1111. made Homaatsaul En try No. 018804. for t?U. Section 14. and on November 2. lJl..made Additional Homestead Entry, No. 0177. for Ntt Section 14. all In Tnwmhln i B..tK Uiange 27 East, Willamette Meridian, has riled notice of Intention to make Final three-year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before United States Commissioner, at Heppner, Ore gon, on the 20th day of June, 121. Claimant names as witnesses: W. B WlgJeaworth. F. K. Pavna and E. o Nelll, of Echo, Oregon; J. a. Barrett of Heppner, Oregon. CARL O. HELM. Reelater nH-St NOTICE OF BOND SALE. Notice Is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the undersign ed until the hour of 7:80 oclock p. m. on the 5th day of June, 1922, and Immedl ately thereafter publioly opened by the City Council at the Council Chambers In the City of Heppner, Oregon, for the purchase of City of Heppner Gen eral Obligation Funding Bonds In the sum of Fifteen Thouaand Dollars (115,000), said bonds to be in denomina tlons of One Thouaand Dollars (11,000) each, dated May 1st, 1922, and to be come due May 1st, 1942, to bear interest at the rate of six per cent () per an num payable semi-annually on the first days of May and November In each year, principal and interest payable at the Fiscal Agency of the Btate of Oro gon in New York City, which said bonds are to be iaaued and disposed of under the provisions of the City Charter. All bids must be unconditional and accom panied by a certified cheque of $600.00. The approving legal opinion of Messrs Teal, Minor & Winfree will be furnish ed the successful bidder. The Council reserves the right to re ject any and all bids. L. L. GILLIAM, Recorder. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. U. 8. LAND OFFICE at La Grande, Oregon, May (, 1922. NOTICE la hereby given that Francis A. Gentry, of Lena, Oregon, who, on July 18, 1917, made Homestead Entry, No. 018394, for NWUPEU, EViSEU. Section 24, NttSWK. NWKSE14. BWK NE14, SEUNWK. Section 16, Township 1 South, Range 28' East, Willamette Meridian, ha. filed notice of Intention to make Final three-year Proof, to es tablish claim to the land above describ ed, before United States Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 27th day of June, 1922. Claimant names as witnesses: W. L. Vincent Howard Cullck, F. M. Duncan and Fay Pettyjohn, all of Lena, Oregon. CARL G. HELM, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBICATION. Department f tae laterior. U. S. LAND OFFICE at La Grande, Oregon, May II, 1922. NOTICE Is hereby given that Harry Brown, of Lena, Oregon, who, on Sep tember 11, 1916, made Homestead En try, No. 016788, for NW14NWH. EH NWH, NEUSWK. SEU, Section 22, Township 1 South, Range 28 East, Will amette Meridian, haa filed nntlm nf In. tentlon to make Final three-year Proof. to establish claim to the land above described, before United States Commis sioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 80th day of June, 1922. Claimant names as witnesaea: Howard Cullck, Robert A. Cullck, W. L. Vincent, A. P. Hughes, all of Lena, Oregon. CARL G. HELM. Register. NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF PART NERSHIP. Notice Is hereby given to all whom It may cvoncern, that the partnership heretofore existing between Frank 8. Parker and R. J. Vaughan and conduct ed under the name of Vaughan and Parker has been this day dissolved by mutual consent of said partners Frank Parker will pay all outstanding claims against said partnership and collect all clalma due said Arm. Dated this 12th day of May, 1922 FRANK S. PARKER. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice Is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of Morrow County, Ore gon, administrator of the estate of Frances Luper, deceased, and has qual ified as such. All persons having claims against the estate of said deceased are hereby notified and required to present the same to me duly verified as by law required at the office of Woodson and Sweek, my attorneys, In Heppner, Ore gon, within six months from date of first publication hereof. Dated and published the first time this 11th day of May, 1922. JAMES N. LUPER, Administrator IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MORROW COUNTT. Terry Wendt, Plaintiff ) VS. ) SUMMONS Otto W. Wendt, Defendant ) To OTTO W. WENDT, DEFENDANT. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: Tou are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you In the above entitled suit within six weeks of the date of the first publication of this summons; and It you fall to so appear and answer for want thereof, the plaintiff will proceed to ask the Court that the bonds of mat rimony now existing between the plain tiff and defendant be forever dissolved and held for naught and that plaintiff be granted an absolute divorce from said defendant; and for such other and further relief as to the Court may seem equitable. This summons Is published pursuant to an Order of the Honorable Wm. T. Campbell, Judge of the County RRIGATIOli OF THE WEST BUGS CAS Idaho's Governor Asserts That Water, In the Right Place, Spells Untold Millions for U. S. Points Out Immediate and Di rect Benefit to Eastern States Through the Prosperity of West By D. W. Davis, Governor of Idaho and President Western States Reclamation Association. Editor's Note For snappy dic tion, for clear reasoning and general interest the following article by Gov ernor D. W. Davis of Idaho is worthy the consideration of the most busy of men. Those whoare seeking a better economic condition for the na tion have suffered many suggestions, wise and otherwise, but Governor Davis, writing from a unique per spective gives one of the most in triguing of suggestions. What has primarily lured men to the West? What has been the guid ing desire in the hearts and minds of those who set their faces toward the Pacific? Gold the shining and precious metal, to be dug from the monutains or panned in the streams. Millions of it have been-found. Bnt its value has not compared with the value of the homes which have been established by these pioneers and those who have followed them These are permanent investments. In addition, many more millions have been produced from the soil than from mines in the west. And mill ions of acres still await the magic hand of enterprise, when water is impounding dams which will course through irrigation ditches makes the desert bloom. This is a proven fact. Where do these millions of dol lars go? Into the channels of trade, into the world of commerce. Here is a concrete example. A man has been a renter in a humid section. He has created the average wealth pos sible on an acre of humid land. The profit is small he divides even that. The government by impounding wat er makes it possible Tor him to take a farm under government project. This farm produces, according to statis tics, twice the wealth his rented farm produced. Producing twice the wealth, he is twice as good a custom er of the eastern or central state manufacturer and jobber he was in his old environment. Our Modern Farmer. Step in the home of a man who has fully developed his government farm. There you will find all of the common varieties of nationally ad vertised goods. He has a piano, a phonograph, a kitchen cabinet. He buys an automobile made in Detroit, or Cleveland, or Indianpolis. He buys tires made in Akron, farm im plements made in Moline, a separa tor made in Waterloo. His family wears eastern-made clothes. His purchasing power has been enlarged with his opportunities. It is a most interestine study to come ln contact WIU1 tne irrigation farmer. Go back into his life and note what he has been able to do since the government gave him his opportunity to create wealth. He as sumes a greater share of tax because of his accumulation of wealth. A great majority of these men have paid but small tax shares on person ality before they wended their way westward into the land of opportun ity. They now own land. The manufacturer of the eastern and central states as well as the job ber who cannot see the active inter est which the development of the west has upon his business is blind to his opportunity. His additional receipts through reclamation of land by the government are truly enorm ous. These receipts should be multi plied by ten in 25 years. There is not a sales manager nor executive head of any business in all that east ern territory but who would startle Court of Morrow County, Oregon, made and entered on the 10th day of May, 1922. F. A. McMENAMIN, Attorney for Plaintiff. Residence and postoffice address, Heppner, Oregon Date of flrat publication May 11, 1922. Date of last publication June 22, 1922. NOTICE. Notice Is hereby given that I, the un dersigned, under the laws of the State of Oregon, have taken up the animal hereinafter described while running at large upon my premises ln Morrow County, Oregon, to-wlt: One two year old Shorthorn red Durham heifer, with white belt back of shoulders and white on belly, branded with figure 8 on right hip. That I will, on Monday, the 19th day of June, at the hour of 10 o'clock In the forenoon of said day, at the Robert Dexter ranch, nine miles southeast of Heppner, In said Morrow County, Ore gon, unless the said animal shall have been redeemed, sell for caah In hand to the highest bidder, said animal, for the purpose of paying costs of taking up, holding and selling of said animal, together with reasonable damages for Injury caused by running at large up on said premises. W. T. WHEELER. Dated and published the first time this 1st day of June, 1922. REGISTERS OF EAST himself by thinking of the possibil ities lying before him for an increase of his buying public and its ability to pay. Waiting for Water. A trifle less than two million acres have been reclaimed by the govern ment. There the twenty millions which could be placed under water. To accomplish this a system of fi nance has been worked out in the McNary-Smith bill now before con gress wnicn an appropriation of $350,000,000, the payment of which would cover a number of years, could be made to revolve into an expendi ture ot a century, without adding to me investment. The plan we have worked out for financing is not in its proper sense an appropriation by the government, for every cent that is used is raid back to the government. While the money is in use the government draws more interest from it than it must pay out. It is good statesman ship to provide for the future of aeri- culture in this country. It is good statesmanship for different sections of the country to join in building oth er sections. It greases the wheels of commerce, it increases per capita wealth, it encourages opportunity. As these lands are developed they will furnish thousands of homes to enterprising citizens who have not oefore had an opportunity to become producers of wealth except in a nom inal way. I owns will grow, railroads be built, enterprises tlourish, mines be opened, countless markets come. The selfish argument is made sometimes that the development of these new lands will reduce the value of land in the humid districts; that the production from the soil thus re claimed would reduce the price of the products. Nothing could be far ther from tcuth. Over-production is not a possibility. No less an authority than Ur. ball said, before the Agri cultural Conference: "The peak of agricultural produc tion per capita was passed in 1898, nearly a quarter of a century ago. Agricultural production almost kept pace with population for some little time after that date, but in the last decade it has been steadily and ever more rapidly falling. No won der that when the Secretary of Ag riculture stated that the United States produced 25 per cent of the wheat, 60 per cent of the cotton, and 75 per cent of the corn of the world, with only one-sixth the population, the nation should feel it was on a firm foundation and its future pros perity assured." A Balance Lacking. In the mean time, standing still as an agricultural producing nation for a decade, our population has increas ed fourteen millions. Dr. Ball fur ther says: What does this mean to the na tion? It means a reorganization of our entire national life. It means that the farmer's interest in foreign markets will have disappeared. It means that the price of wheat in Chi cago will be the price of wheat in Liverpool, plus the cost of moving it from Liverpool to Chicago, where now the price in Chicago is the price in Liverpool less the cost of moving it there." What little opposition one hears seems to be centralized in what is known as the corn belt. This corn belt section is standing in its own light. Much of the country's stock is finished with corn. If the west did not produce feeder stock, Iowa, Illi nois, Missouri, and the other corn belt states would find a greatly re duced market for this crop. The crop in the irrigated section most respon sible for the development of live stock and the production of a finished market in the central states is alfalfa. We feed, but do not ship, alfalfa in quantities. The United States is a big importer of wool. Alfalfa is raised in irrigated sections to feed to sheep in winter. In summer they are fed on the forest reserves. Millions of acres of forest reserve would be useless as a wealth producer if we did not have alfalfa to feed in win ter. We raise sugar. The country is a big sugar importer. There is not a single crop but wheat which could even remotely, be considered competition. Let the statistician in form you that the production is so in finitesimal in the world's supply as to make no impression. We are fast, indeed, coming to special crops, be cause our remoteness from market eats up the profits in staples and will not bear the cost of production. In one irrigated section of the West, they are raising long staple cotton produced nowhere else in the United States. The fruits raised in the West are bringing comfort and pleasure to the less fortunate sections of the country. What Might Be. Today we have but ten per cent of the possible territory irrigable by the government in cultivation. Yet if we had all of it we would not add as much as the farm area of the state of Indiana to the total agricultural area of the United States. At the same time, practically every dollar of production in this highly productive country would go back to the east for cash purchases, making one of the most stable markets in the world. While we would add no more than the agricultural area of Indiana to the farm stretches of the Union, yet there would be three times as great a population supported as within the state of Indiana. We claim this development will ring the cash registers of the East. Better say we know it. Fifteen ; years ago where Twin Falls, Idaho the possible exception of Great Brit is, was a barren sage brush desert.! ain, begins to form the market the This site of the town was sixty-four irrigated West does. If I ran a big miles from a railroad. Last year the business, I would consider the recla- Twin Fals section sent thirty-six mil-'mation of the West as important a lion dollars out of Idaho to purchase ' division of my sales development as goods. I know personally hundreds foreign trade. of farmers in Idaho who had a hand! If we da not develop our lands to jin spending that thirty-six millions,' produce food, and continually drop and I do not know one who had mum iv 111 1115 U1U CUVIIUU- j ment. Periodicals are flooded with sug - gestions which would open up foreign trade. We hear much nf Smith America. Our political officers are deeply interested in this foreign trade, and most big businesses have I Harold Ahalt, of Morrow county, was departments with many employees! high man for the month in the num working on trade extension. Yet thejber of predatory animals killed, ac irrigated states of the West last year 'cording to the report recently sent bought more than all South America j out by Stanley G. Jewett, of the de purchased from our manufacturers 'partment of biological survey. He and jobbers. No other country, with 'killed 10 adult coyotes and 41 pups. Be Wise! Sporting Goods THIS is the time of year when every red blooded man and woman should begin thinking about making the best of the great out-of-doors. We have a complete line of fishing and hunting supplies. If you are contemplating establishing a camp in the mountains this year it is not too early now to start planning your equipment. We can furnish you everything you will need except the eats. Our Prices Are Very Reasonable Peoples Hardware Company P. S.Have asjto a lower scale as a food-producing j naiiim, ctlj UI1G Ul uul II11C5 111 U1C j East will lose in population in com- j Panson Wlu wna' wey mignt oe it ; we wou!d produce more farm pro- uucis. Morrow Man High Lettered. M en know the power of knowledge. Knowledge is the truth about Persons, Places, Things. F'r instances: If you had time to count all of the letters used by the printers of this page, you would find more "e's" used than any other letter. The letter "t" comes next, then "of" "a," "n" and so on with "z" least used. That is all very interesting, but not very val uable knowledge. However, the words these letters spell can prove valuable to you. In the news and advertising columns of The Gazette Times the regiments of "e's," "t's," "o's," "a's," and "n's," tell both interesting and val uable messages every week if you will but read and profit. Read and Advertise in The Gazette-Times Get Results! you seen our "Paint" Three hundred and e-ht unSom prefatory animals ere killed alto gether. Poisoning, shooting and trapping were the methods used by the hunters. Pendleton Tribune. HEMSTITCHING. I have installed a hemstitching machine at my apartment in the Gil man building and will give all orders for work in that line my best atten tion. Your patronage is solicited. a6-tf. Mrs. C. C. Patterson. WANTED A good, steady, gentle manly salesman to handle a Ward's wagon in Morrow county. No exper ience needed. For full particulars write promptly to Dr. Ward's Medi cal Company, Winona, Minnesota. Established 1856. 3t. FOR SALE One 1918 model used Dodge car; also Oakland used car. See Cohn Auto Co., Heppner. tf. window?