The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, February 15, 1923, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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PAGE TWO
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER. OREGON. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15. 1923.
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f ortnm Aderriinf Ryrawptatirt
THE AMUUCAN I'khlsS ASSOCIATION
DARE THE IMPOSSIBLE.
Itr RICHARD I.LOVD JONES
IV ONE of Maeterlinck's stories he
telis of a powerful man of the
Middle Ages who conceived great
p.ans and executed them, but always
with difficulty. Frequently he al
most f&iied. and succeeded only by
superhuman effort. Finally he found
that a secret enemy was always work
ing against his most careful plans,
neutralizing his most strenuous ex
ertions. Aa the years passed he determined
to And and destroy this enemy. Life
was not worth living with this hid
den f oa forever encircling him with
difficulties. One evening he went
out for a walk He saw another man
approaching him. By that strange
instinct which warns us of danger
he knew that this man was his life
long enemy. He resolved to kill hira.
As he approached, he observed that
this man wore a mask. But, conscious
that this was the antagonist of his
life, he said as they met: You are
the man who from my youth till now
has been pursuing me, thwarting me,
almost defeating me. I mean to kill
you, but I will give you a chance for
your life. Draw and defend your
aeif." The stranger said as ha drew his
word, "I am at your service, but first
see who it is that yot wouid fight,"
He removed his mask and the man
stood before himself.
This fable is true of every one of
us. Where you think an enemy has
injured you, look closely and nine
times out of ten you will find your
self in the form of your habits.
It is a common practice to blame
the world and not ourselves for our
failings. Look deep enough and you
will usually find that it is not the
world that stands in your way, but
yoo yourself.
If there is any evil in us, bad hab
its will rlnvlnn it knA than is sviril
in all of us. Put your strength to !
the test, but never your weakness.
Dare to try the apparently impossible
tasks if they are tasks for good; nev
er fear failure all the world loves
a good loser; and when you fail in
the right, your defeat is only the be
ginning of final victory.
Day by day civilization is demand
ing more of each one of us more
that is pure and strong. Twentieth
century society tolerates no weak
ness, no taint in individual workers. ;
Today every man must be above sus
picion. Each one of us must be proof
against calumny. Everybody is lied
about sometimes by envy, sometimes
by ignorance. Never resent a false
hood about yourself after all it is a
test of your reputation. Let your
life, not your words, be your rebuke
to slander. You defeat yourself
when you stoop to the slanderer's
low level.
Noble living is all the armor you
need to wear. Silence is the most
elttuent answer that can be made to
the slanderer and it is the sure
searchlight that will reveal the slan
derer's shame and put hira in com
plete df? repute.
Be so true to yourself that yon
never need to fear yourself and you
will never need to fear the world.
THE FARMER IS SEEING THE
LIGHT.
SENATOR ARTHUR CAPPER OF
Kansas, Chairman of the farm
bloc, says: "The legislation which
must be enacted in the near future
to help cure the agricultural situa
tion is in no sense class legislation.
Agriculture is the only foundation
upon which the state and nation can
securely rest."
Capper also insists that Congress
must put through the complete rural
credit plan and it must pass a consti
tutional amendment prohibiting tax
exempt securities.
The programme is ambitious, but
in the main sound and constructive.
Evidently the farmer, however, has
come to see the evil effect of inequit
able and unscientific taxation.
In our hunger for money we creat
ed the tax-exempt security and urged
the rich to absorb it. When we dis
covered that the wealth from which
bu.uiif and farmers muct draw their
UnmC TViEE COMK 0q He AKJ6 FUN OP J
0 U III t WAH LADYS HUSBAND lpOfiT pt ANf 60 ANtWtZ (t
ninrrx up 5 Wier aimePUall AfBT -rw POOR.. jT a
SWFFT KiowT our. AmiU AXE rr v
mi
-TMATij TOO (SfAW.MV WIF6 CAM'T f I SUPPOSE SE V OH, 6i - Wl'S jj-
SAP ALEXANPESy COvE TO WASH FECUS VERY A SO HOAR.9& HUnfc
HtUB COfli the HE' 60T 6AP ,VeAPLVtf' HE CAN'T HABIT
rAlu. TELL 1 v TMfcOAT , r;, iliv. TALK.!
1 V J A W - 4 I II Rjn iJI a - Ktmu I I I
(mnt withdrawn from its pro
ductive function and thrown entnas
into t-exrmpt serum tea w realised
the fauX
The tn owmpt purity it an s-
peiiient mfckenhift appeal that thit
, country do not and never has need
j ed. Had SN-rrtiry McAdoo adrer
jtiwd the n-veral Liberty Bond insues
j in a business-like way instead of de
j pem.it? on a spurious patriotic press
agrrt free advertising exploitation of
1 I r.tted States securities, our finances
wouid be in a different condition to
day. Abolifhinp tax-exempt securities is
a wise thought, but fitting down to
equitable taxation is a just thought
justice must prevail.
MASSES OF AMERICA NdT
ENSLAVED
THE reports on life insurance and
bank pavirfr are at once astonish
ing and pleasing. They indicate
more than prosperity and wealth in
the ration. They show that, with ail
the extravagance that exists among'
the foolish, there is growing thrift1
among the wise. 1
The savings figures, which com j
from the American Bankers' Asso-1
ciation. show an increase of a billion 1
and a ha!f dollars in the savings ac
counts of the banls of this country. 1
The American people have salted
away eighteen billions, not includ
ing what they have deposited in the
postal savings system and the build
ing and loan associations. What is
equally encouraging, the individual
accounts have grown more than two
millions in number and now total
about twenty-nine millions.
The statistics on life Insurance,
which in recent years has come to
be regarded more and more as a me
dium for savings as well as for the
protection of dependents, are even
more impressive than the bank fig
ures. Forty large companies which
are members of the Association of
Life Insurance Presidents and which
write three-quarters of the Hfe in
surance business of this country, re
port that they wrote last year pol
icies totaling more than six and a
third billions.
The sensible American evidently is
getting down to hard pan. Such sav
ings and insurance figures as these
can mean nothing else. The period
of inflation which had its peak in
1920 is followed by sober thought
about the future. Wages are still
high. The saloon is happily eliminat
ed. There is money in the worker's
pocket. He finds rents swollen and
starts saving in order to buy a home.
Meanwhile he wishes to protect his
family. Hence the savings bank ac
count and the insurance policy. He
may wish that he had saved more in
the years of the largest inflation, but
he can be comforted by the thought
that so to do is not human nature.
The banks and the insurance com
panies have learned from experience
hat th 'ings period follows in-
flation, instead of paralleling it.
When we remember that in 1890, a I
generation ago. the deposits in all :
the savings banks of this country j
were only a billion and a half of dol- !
lars, it is astounding to find now
that each year the people are putting
away that amount and paying an
equal amount on their life insurance.
The total of alt bank deposits, sav
ings and otherwise, was only four
billions in 1890; now it is nearly
forty billions! In 1890 there were
scarcely more than a million life in
surance policy holders; now there are
twenty-three million policy holders.
A country in which eleven million
of its twenty-two million families
own their homes, in which there are
twenty-nine million savings accounts,
in which there is an average of one
life insurance policy for every home,
is surely a country to be envied. And
it is- refreshing to see, from statistics
which spell thrift, that the extrava
gance so prevalent in some places and
among some classes has not pene
trated the flesh and bone of the na
tion. It is a particularly good sign of the
national drift toward provident fore
sight and an encouraging promise of
prosperity and the conservation of
the people's wealth when it is seen
that now, in spite of high costs, in
spite of the example of the wasteful,
in spite of the many luxuries that
tempt human nature, the majority of
Americans, and particularly the wage
earners, are saving a good portion of
their incomes.
The American people are not only
the most fortunate on earth; they
have discovered that good fortune
can be kept. New York Herald.
THE STATE INCOME TAX.
THE state income tax measure is
framed, and in the last days of the
legislaltive assembly it will probably
pass, as it is one of the pet measures
of Governor Pierce, a companion
piece to the proposed consolidation
measure. The bill proposed seems to
be a puzzle to both legislators and
lawyers, and just how some of its
provisions will work out is something
left for the future to determine It
is quite freely predicted, however,
that the particular class expected to
be reached those of wealth and
large incomes ill escape, and the
farmer and wage earner or salaried
class will have to bear the burden
of additional taxes, and it will be
come a case of "more taxes vs. econ
omy. as stated in the following from
The Manufacturer:
"That Oregon will be made the goat
of a state income tax is a foregone
conclusion. It will take a new de
partment with state and county offi
cials.
"The federal income tax on top of
high state and local taxes, and a state
income tax. will make Oregon a state
where capital will vanish.
4As the only state in the west with
state income tax, investments of
money will decline both by residents
and by intending home-seekers.
All real property and all personal
property will still be exposed to high
levies for roads and schools and
money will go into hiding.
"Where California and Washington
and other western states are putting
on the screws to cut their overhead
O'-egor is raising a new tax.
he tive million dollars to be
raised by a state income tax, if it re
duced other taxes that much, will
benefit the farmers but litil.
Three-fourths of the real estate is
owned in cities and by big corpora
tions and timber land corporations
that will get the benefit.1
If these predictions should prove
true in regard to the proposed state
income tax, the more equitable dis
tribution of the burden of taxation
that its advocates are looking for
will not materialize, but instead we
shall have an additional burden of
taxation placed upon those whom it
is desired to relieve. A referendum
on this measure, should it pass, will
no doubt be called, but there appears
to be strong opposition in the legisla
ture and the bill may fail there.
ONE MAN'S TRIBUTE TO
LINCOLN.
IXT to the destruction of the
IV Confederacy, the death of Abra
ham Lincoln was the darkest day the
South has known."
That quotation perpetuates one
opinion of the greatest American an
opinion which loses none of its force
from the fact that the man who ut
tered it was Jefferson Davis. Amer
ican Legion Weekly.
THE FIRST LABOR CORPOR
ATION. Labor banks have ceased to be a
novelty, but there is only a single
labor corporation the Beech Grove
Union Corporation. This shows that
Amercian labor is thinking along cap
italistic lines. Some are proposing
the compulsory incorporation of un
ions and their statutory regulation
But the path of permission is the
path of least resistance'. The induce
ment of profit for labor by incorpora
tion remains to be demonstrated, but
at least a beginning is made by the
first labor corporation, says the New
lork Times.
The corporation undertakes by its
charter, constitution and by-laws:
To promote a greater efficiency of
tne individual workman.
To increase the daily output of the
individual.
To increase the total production of
the shop.
To increase the profits of the em
ployer.
To establish a flexible plan for de-1
tcrmining wages, on a basis which
adjusts the earnings of both the em- I
ptojes and employer to the number
of units of output rather than length
of time worked.
To increase the individual earnings
of employes by first raising the effi
ciency of the whole organization and
reducing the production cost per
unit of output
Capital could not propose that pro
gram to labor, but may welcome it
from labor. This is the first admis
sion by labor that wages do not come
from profits. If wages come from
capital there is a limit to their in
crease, and they cease altogether
when capital is expropriated.
Labor can increase its share in the
universal dividends of goods through
quantity production by working with
capital better than by fighting cap
ital. The benefit lies not merely in
incorporation but in the principles
avowed. There are particular bene
fits to labor through incorporation.
Trade unions now accumulate funds
by millions, which are used without
the responsibility and safety afford
ed by corporation methods. This
pioneer corporation has realized for
its members better wages than the
Railroad Labor Board could allow to
unions, and has done so by increasing
shop efficiency 25 per cent, and thus
reducing unit costs.
A PRACTICAL MEASURE.
THE reader of Senator Lenroot's ar-
t guments in favor of his farm cred
it bill can not fail to be impressed
with the difference between that sen
sible, constructive measure and the
windy ideas advanced for agricultur
al relief by those whose chief inter
est in the industry centers in the size
of the farmer vote that may be at
tracted by a general appeal to dis
content. The Lenroot measure, as its author
ursti out
fro REr
DCWAVAN,
0(teH-A
PH UHCLt
voiim his
COU-M
BATHTUB'
OIR Hl'MBl.F. FRIEND.
JF.S' a clumsy sort of feller, more or
less inclined to fat; alter, been a
ready seller never matters where
he's at. . . . Eats his grub without a
question sleeps accordin' as he feU.
Never has no indigestion, allers hear
ty at his meals Plumb contented
as they make 'em, all regyardless of
his fate, has his habits can't for
sake 'em yet, he's allers up to date.
Never saw a porker jealous of his
neighbor's face or fame, though he
might, with safety, tell us, two-leed
hogs has swiped his gamel Call him
raior-back or Chester. Call him
pointed out, aims to provide for the !
farmer a credit system equivalent
to that enjoyed by other bu.-ine
men, that is, a credit sufficiently ex
tensive to carry him through the per
iod between the starting of a ciop
ar.cl its marketing. The farmer's
turn-over differs from that of the
business man in other lines in hat
it is not completed in a period of a
few months, but may require a year,
or even two or three years for com
pletion. The Lenroot bill provides for a
business like credit arrangement that
will enable the farmer to n nance
himself by loans which he can be
assured will run until crop maturity,
instead of, as now, being required to
take his chances on obtaining num
erous extensions of short time loans.
The measure aims to put the far
mer on a plane of equality with other
business men as regards his finances
and to enable him to carry on his
business in a businesslike way.
There is no socialistic Utopia
planned by it through which the
farmer may in some miraculous way
be assisted without doing his part.
There is no plan to make the farmer
aa object of charity or a government
pap sucker.
Under the Lenroot plan the farmer
merely is given his proper place as
a business man, provided with cred
it facilities adequate for his needs,
and afforded the opportunity of go
ing ahead with his business on busi
ness lines.
It is a safe guess that the average
American farmer wants just that and
not government coddling or public
charity. It is what he has a right to
expect. Milwaukee Sentinel.
AUTOCA3TCK.
SLOT MACHINE CHARITY.
FAITH, Hope and Charity are the
only permanent virtues. All the
other virtues and all the othr graces
are temporary.
Charity dominated and controlled
by love ia personal.
The greatest dynamic that has ever
moved any one is the dynamic of love.
Whenever you reduce love to a
mechanical basis or you reduce char
ity to a slot machine method of ad
ministering, you have blown out the
light of love and you have chilled the
personal touch, and have robbed vir
tue of its heart.
Whenever you administer charity
by proxy or by an organization, which
is more interested in investigation,
registration, tabulation and confisca
tion of the domestic skeleton than it
is of administering charity, you have
turned the sweetest sentiment
earth into a mockery, a curse, and an
object of contempt.
Let each family in each church be
responsible personally responsibli
for some unfortunate family. Let
them administer to that family, per
sonally, visit it, clean its house,
clothe its children, feed its hungry,
nurse its sick, educate its ignorant,
and sing the songs of cheer and hap
piness and thus dispel its dullness
and gloom.
Then, and only then will you eradi
cate suffering and put real charity
back on its throne.
Cursed thrice cursed be the slot
machine charity.
Gilliam & Bisbee s
j& Column j&
A full car load of Poul
try supplies just arrived.
Anything and every
thing for the chicken in
stock.
A flash light on a dark
night is a necessity. None
better than the Winches
ter. We have all styles and
sizes.
Who said the roosters
were crowing and the
hens cackling over the
Poultry Supplies to be had
at Gilliam & Bisbee.
Water turns the wheel.
Money turns the business.
We have the business it
don't turn. Creditors
please take notice.
Gilliam & Bisbee
Poem by
fncle lohn
Duroc-red or swine. . . , Ain't no
name that seems to pester thia old
friend of your'n and mine.
Truly, we had ort to pander to the
hog. in classic verse, 1 would fain
resent the slander which the road
hog renders worse! Bacon, spare
ribs, ham an sausage, shoulder, back
bone, chops galore. Let the medal
grace his corsage angels couldn't do
no morel
firl925
THREE hundred and fifteen married
men killed themselves in New York
City in 1922, and 141 married women
committed suicide in the same period
of time. Only 151 single men and 60
single women killed themselves. The
conclusion seems to be that the mar
ried folks are unhappier than the
single folks, but that isn't so. It's all
a question of percentage.
The married couples are in the ma
jority, so more of them sought the
great adventure. It's a great thing
in a metropolis of 5,000,000 people
to find only 350 fools that want to get
out of it Such a preponderance of
men and women from the very rich
to the very poor, who are content to
remain with us, is pretty good proof
that the old world is rather satisfac
tory sort of place after all. The best
way to decide if the world is worth
living in is to give it a trial for seventy-five
or eighty years and then
sum up.
FOR RENT Good room in private
residence gentleman preferred. In
quire this office.
Legal Guarantee Given
No nmd of Knifo-no pain continue Work.
Ask to see Gle-o-ois Pile Treatment.
PATTERSON A SON
Main Street -:- Heppner, Oregon
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned has been appointed by the
County Court of the State of Oregon
for Morrow County Administrator of
the estate of Ruth E. French, de
ceased, and that all persons having
claims against the said estate must
present the same, duly verified ac
cording to law, to me at my office in
Heppner, Oregol, within six months
from the date of first publication of
this notice, said date being February
8, 1923.
L. W. BRIGGS, Administrator.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of an execution and or
der of sale duly issued by the Clerk
of the Circuit Court of the County
of Morrow, State of Oregon, dated
the 22nd day of January, 1023, in a
certain action in the Circuit Court
for said County and State wherein
Tilman Hogue, Plaintiff, recovered
judgment against R. i. Vaughan and
Edith W. Vaughan, Defendants, for
the sum of Twenty-nine Hundred
Dollars, with interest thereon at the
rate of seven per cent per annum
from the ninth day of June, 1921,
and the further sum of Three Hun
dred Dollars attorney's fees, and
costs and disbursements taxed at
Twenty Dollars, on the 18th day of
January, 1923.
Notice ia hereby given that I will
on Saturday, the 24th day of Febru
ary, 1923, at 10 o'clock A. M., of said
day, at the front door of the Court
House in Heppner, Mnrrow County,
Oregon, sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash in hand, the
following described property, to-wit:
The south half of the south half of
Section 23 and the north half of Sec
tion 26, all in Township 8 South,
Range 23 E. W. W., being the real
property mortgaged by R. J. Vaughan
and Edith W. Vaughan, his wife, to
plaintiff to secure payment of the
foregoing amount and ordered Bold
by the court for that purpose, or so
much thereof as may be necessary
to satisfy the said judgment in favor
of plaintiff and against said defend
ants, together with all costs and dis
bursements that have or may accrue.
This sale is subject to a first mort
gage of Ada M. Ayers for $3,600.00.
GEORGE McDUFFEE, Sheriff.
Dated at Heppner, Oregon, Janu
ary 24, 1923.
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT.
Notice is hereby given that Mar
garet Wright, the duly appointed,
qualified and acting administratrix of
the estate of Harley Wright, deceas
ed, has filed her final account with
the County Court of the State of Ore
gon for Morrow County, and that
said Court has set' as the time and
place for the final settlement of said
account, Saturday, February 10, 1923,
at the hour of two o'clock P. M., in
(he Court room of the County Court
for Morrow County, Oregon, All per
sons having objections to said ac
count must appear and file them on
or before said date of settlement.
MARGARET WRIGHT,
Administratrix.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Department of the Interior, U. S.
Land Office at La Grande, Oregon,
Jan. 6, 1923. Notice is hereby given
that Clarence Held, of Heppner, Ore
gon, who, on July 21, 1920, made Ad
ditional Homestead Entry No. 017648,
for NW SWV4, Section 4, NEK
RE'A, Section 6, Township 6 South,
Range 27 East, Willamette Meridian,
has filed notice of intention to make
three-year Proof, to establish claim
to the land above described, before
United States Commissioner, at
Heppner, Oregon, on the 27th day of
February, 1923.
Claimant names at witnesses:
It. W. Owens, J, L. Carter, Chas.
Oslen, A. T. Harris, all of Heppner,
Oregon.
CARL G. HELM, Register.
tiOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT.
Notice is hereby (Wen that the un
dersigned administratrix of the es
tate of Frank C. Adkins, deceased,
has filed her final account aa admin
istratrix of said estate and that tht
County Court of the Stat of Oregon
for Morrow County haa fixed Uonday,
the 6th day of March, 1823, at the
hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of
said day, as the time, and the County
Court room in the court house at
Heppner, Oregon, aa tha place, of
hearing and settlement of said final
account. Objection! to said final ac
count must be filed on or before said
date.
MATTIE W. ADKINS,
Administratrix.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Department of tha Interior, U. S.
Land Office at La Grande, Oregon,
January 27, 1923. Notice is hereby
given that Willilam Cunningham, of
Lena, Oregon, who, on August 14,
1920, made Additional Homestead En
try No. 017377, for WfcSWK, SE54
SW, Section 20, NH NWS4, SEi4
NWii, Section 29, NEttNEK, Section
30, Township 3 South, Range 29 East,
Willamette Meridian, has tiled notice
of intention to make three-year Proof
to establish claim to the land above
described, before United States Com
missioner at Heppner, Oregon, on the
20th day of March. 1923.
Claimant names as witnesses:
Paul Hisler, of Heppner, Oregon;
Percy Cox, of Heppner, Oregon, Frank
T. Peery, of Lena, Oregon; L. L. Hiatt
of Lena, Oregon.
CARL G. HELM, Register.
Professional Cards
DR. F. E. FARRIOR
DENTIST
Office Upstairs Over Poatoflke
Heppner, Oregon
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office in Masonic Building
Trained Nurse Assistant
Heppner, Oregon
C. C. CHICK, M. D.
THYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office Upstairs Over Postofflce
Trained Nurse Assistant .
Heppner, Oregon
WOODSON & SWEEK
ATTORN EYS-AT-LAW
Offices in
First National Bank Building
Heppner, Oreaon
Van Vactor & Butler
ATTOR.VEYS-AT-LAW
Suite 30S
First National Bank Building
THE DALLES, ORE.
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office in Court House
H.ppner, Oregon
OAtce Phone. Main 43
Residence Phone, Main 666
Francis A. McMenamin
LAWYER
Gilman Building, Heppner, Ore.
F. II. ROBINSON
LAWYER
IONE. OREGON
E. J. STARKEY
ELECTRICIAN
HOUSE WIRING A SPECIALTY
Heppner, Oregon
Phone 872
Heppner Sanitarium
DR. J. PERRY CONDER
Physlcian-in-Charge
Treatment of all diseases. Isolated
wards for contagious diseases.
FIRE INSURANCE
Waters & Anderson
Successors to C. C. Patterson
Heppner, Oregon
MATERNITY HOME
MRS. G. C. AIKEN, HEPPNER
I am prepared to take a limited num
ber of maternity case at my home.
Patients prlrllagad to chooaa thtlr awn
phyaieian.
Beat of care and attention assured.
PHONE m
E. J. KELLER
TREE J'RUNING
AUCTIONEERING
HORSE SHOEING
Heppner, Oregon
L. VAN MARTER
FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE
INSURANCE
Old Line Companies
REAL ESTATE
Heppner, Ore.
JOS. J. NYS
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Upstairs in
Humphreys Building
Heppner, Oregon
L. SWERDLIK
American Hide & Junk Co.
t Main St., South of Reid's Garage
Phone Heppner Garage, Main 213
BOX 311
HEPPNER, OREGON
We Buy
HIDES, PELTS, WOOL, FURS, Etc.
JUNK, SCRAP METALS, Etc.
They say that
No meal is too elaborate or too simple
for them
That eaten regularly, they are nature's
best safeguard for health
That the best apples can be bought at
Sam Hughes Co.
Phone
Good Printinjf Is Our Hobby The Gazette-Times
A fa Drae
We have stocked a
brand of
Coffee
It is meeting with
. splendid success, re
peating daily.
Next time you buy
coffee call for
WASON
Coffee
Phelps Grocery Company
PHONE 53
N. WEINSTEIN
Main 962
0
I