The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, April 05, 1923, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEPPNER. OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1923.
THE GM-TIIS
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THK HEPPNER TIMES. Krtahl.h4
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hblliM iwt TharUay monlbc by
n4 atTd at tfc PaatoAe at Hrppoer,
Oraaoa.
ADVERTISING WATF GIVEN ON
APPLICATION
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
On Yr -
Sti MMtte
T--f MobUm
&i&arto ufMs
MORROW COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER
THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION
AS TO rROHIBITIOX ENFORCE
MENT. THE iutmtnt it o frequently
heard and commonly repeated here
about that the officers are doing lit
tle in the wir of enforcing the prohi
bition law, that some may hare ac
tually formed the opinion that our
officials are laying down on the job;
that the booxe crowd is "putting one
ever on them, and that the law is
proving to be a failure. In fact there
are so many and various kinds of
propaganda against the ISth amend
went that even some of the "very
elect" art being deceived in a meas
ure, and are sometimes found to be
joinirg in on the chorus and helping
to aing the song of the bootlegger
and moonshiner, and thus adding
their bit in making it just that much
harder for the officers to get hold of
the violators and land them where
they belong
Last week the efforts of the officers
were frustrated in landing a bunch
of moonshiners down in Juniper can
yon. For a time there was a lot of
lively discussion going on about town
as to why they failed, and much good
advice was spilled pertaining to the
question of how easy it would be for
the officers to land these fellows, if
they only wanted to catch them."
Many people can see that the law is
being openly and flagrantly violated;
they know it from what they have
been able to observe, yet they are not
ready to stand up and deliver the ac
tual evidence when called upon to do
so, and many is the time when such
are called up to state what they ac
tually know, and to produce what evi
dence they possess that will be suffi
cient to convict, they close up like an
oyster and have nothing to say, or
what they do say is worth nothing as
evidence at all.
We believe that on the part of a
great many, this talk is more or less
thoughtless, but there is no denying
the fact that there is well organized
propaganda that looks to making it
just as hard as possible for the offi
cials to enforce the prohibitory law.
On the other hand, those who believe
in its enforcement, and this number
is in the majority, are not having so
much to say that is encouraging, and
it should be up to them from now on
to do more talking of the kind that
will encourage the officers in their
efforts to make the penalties of the
law more effective.
That something may be known of
what has been done in the county
since the law went into effect January
1, 1917, we have the following figures,
furnished us by District Attorney
Notson. They show a lot of activity
on the part of the officials in behalf of
law enforcement, and they further
more show that the actual expense
in connection with this campaign ha3
been borne by the offenders them
selves and has not come out of the
pockets of the taxpayers, as all fines
and costs were placed in a special
fund for the enforcement of the law.
From January 1, 1917 to January 1,
1923, complaints were filed in con
nection with the enforcement of the
dry law to the number of 106, of
which 15 were for search warrants
a&d 91 charging violations of the law.
Six cases were tried by juries, of
which one resulted in a disagreement,
one in acquittal, and four in convic
tion Two cases were tried by the jus
tice of the peace, of which one re
sulted in acquittal and the other in
conviction. Five cases are pending
because the defendants have not been
apprehended. Five cases were dis
missed because of lack of evidence.
Seventy-three convictions on pleas
of guilty; the seventy-eight convic
tions resulting in fines and forfeit
ures amounting to $8657.50, and costs
aggregating over $300.00 were collect
ed from defendants.
More teeth have been put in the
state prohibitory law, and it is get
ting harder and harder each day for
the offender to get by and work his
illegal stuff off on those who are will
ing to pay exhorbitant prices for
their indulgence, but there is no gain
saying the fact that conditions are
improving, right in Ueppner and Mor
row county, and we are willing to
give the officers credit for bringing
this about, though all has not been
accomplished that Is desired
THINK IT IT.
By RICHARD LLOYD JON'FS.
IT IS not by chance that automatical
ly hr bruin oVr-top your eyes,
ear. ne and mouth, but by desipn.
that it n.ay supervise what you are
to fee. hesr. smell and tnste. Think
it out!
Not by char.ee was your brain put
bove Up sr.d arms, but by p!an. that
it mipM direct ard conserve their
enerpy. Think it out!
Your brain- your best counsellor
situ in trie "crow's nest of your
craft on purpoe to oversee your
course. It is equipped with the most
precious power nature gave you.
Make that brain yield you the full
est value. A e'ear brain is the tost
conserver of muscle and energy. I'se
it. Cultivate the power to think
clearly.
As a people we evade hard thinking.
Shallow surface cleverness is a too
common characteristic. Our educa
tional system develops the minds of
our children along the lines of mem
ory and absorption. Child and teach
er seem equally afraid of reason.
Thus as the child grows older he
shows less and less inclination to tax
his brain with thinking a thing out.
Stuffed and crammed with informa
tion in early youth he faces life with
few. if any, material powers devel
oped. How enthusiastically and how
blindly we embark on a new idea only
to cast it aside when our muscles are
tired and it doesn't "work." It may
have had its measure of value, else
why our first enthusiasm. Think it
out!
Keiax your muscle clinch up your
brain. A bit of adjustment that good
thinking will suggest to you, a bit
of cool patience oh, rarity among
Americans, and you may contribute
something of value to the world.
Success means ability to make the
best use of our powers. Success
means that the man in the "crow's
nest"' is awake and on guard. One of
the best valued faculties commercial
ly is the power to get efficient work
out of men. Everywhere we hear the
cry for efficiency. What scientific
study we give to the elimination of
waste! How we scheme to cut out
unnecessary motion in even so prim
itive a work as bricklaying! Com
petition is so fierce that competitors
bend every effort toward organization.
The struggle for individual existence
must mean better co-ordination in the
human being itself. And education
should mean organization for effi
ciency of a man's native powers.
The vacant look, the wandering at
tention, the meaningless erratic mo
tion characteristic of the imbecile or
the lunatic, all mean that the watch
has left the "crow's nest." Reason is
off duty.
Think it out!
B
RUCE DENNIS will
back on his statement
OL R POPULATION ON THE JUMP.
"THE National Bureau of Economic
I Research shows that on January,
1923, the population of the United
States stood at 110,100.000, a gain of
approximately four and a half million
since the last census was taken. At
the present rate of growth the popu
lation in the 1930 census will pass the
120.000,000 mark.
The probability is that our popula
tion is even greater than officially set
down. In a great many states births
and deaths are not reported. Even in
the area that is registered a great
many births and deaths escape being
recorded. It is safe to assume that
the unrecorded population lies in re
mote country districts.
How puny seem the great cities of
America when one considers that a
majority of the known population plus
one hundred per cent of the unre
corded population lives and finds its
being in the villages of 5,000 popula
tion and less, and on the farms. What
a sleeping giant is this wonderful
country America what a market for
the absorbtion of American manufac
tures, a market practically untapped.
The blase smile of the city cave
dweller serves only to prove his pro
vincialism in the light of facts.
Country America feeds him and his
few millions, country America forms
the backbone of his nation, it makes
and unmakes the government under
which he lives, it is the great hearted
simple strong big brother that looks
upon his idosyncracies with tolerant
understanding.
Possibly it inspired that American
term "Poor Fish."
ROADS FOR PLEASURE.
OREGON'S state highway system
was built from funds contributed
by auto owners whose paramount de
sire was to use the roads in their
pleasure cars. These owners of
pleasure cars did not provide the
funds with any intent to furnish -free
right of way, free roadbed and free
traveling surface to a new system of
freight and passenger transportation
entered into for private profit. They
voted for the good roads bonds is
sues, and paid in their money, to get
roads and paving for their pleasure
autos, not for 10-ton trucks and heavy
commercial stages.
What has happened?
The paving built plenty heavy
enough for the pleasure vehicles
the autos owned by over 100,000 of
the PO.oOO motor vehicle owners of
Ore ton has bon pounded by the bip
st.pe-i and heavy trucks. Some of
the iipht paving hn gone to pieces
undt-r the pourdinp. Using the mon
ey taken mainly from the owners of
the pleasure cars, the state has built
heavier paving intended to carry the
bip tuicks and big slopes.
California has pone through the
same experience only hundreds of
miles of light cement paving pound
ed to pieces under heavy traffic. Only
in Ca 1 1 o rn i a the m o n e y for pa v i n g
was furnished principally by owners
of property itif-tead of by owners of
pleasure autos. The public service
commission is doing what it can in
California to control the situation.
Our pub.ic service commission in Or
egon is doing what it can do under
existing law. In both states the own- !
ers of big trucks are very m.tuial!y
doing everything in their power to
hold all of the privileges they have
been enjoying at the expense of oth
ers who have paid for the pavements.
Auto owners who today are taking
note of the destruction wrought by
the heavy trucks are doing consid
erable thinking.- Oregon Voter.
-
have to go
that an
Eastern Oregon man can't get past
Troutdale in a race for an office. That
may apply to political offices but
there are other positions of honor of
statewide importance in which East
ern Oregon occasionally gains recog
nition. During the past week Geo.
P. Cheney, editor of the Enterprise
Record Chieftain was honored with
the selection as president of the Or
gon Newspaper Conference This
may not mean much to the layman
but with the newspaper fraternity
of the state it is quite a signal hon
or. Joseph Herald.
NOW WE ARE THINKING IN
TRILLIONS.
THE Geological Congress which met
in Canada states that the United
States is the world's chief source of
coal supply, being accredited a sup
ply of 3.8d 4, 000.000 .000 metric tons.
Canada comes next with 1,234,000,
000,00 tons; China and Germany fol
lowing in turn, with the United King
dom winding up in last place with
li 0.00 0.000 .000 metric tons When we
come to thinking in trillions the
mind grows wabbly, but when we
visualize the coal bins of the folks in
this country and realize the way the
ptople have been either frozen or ex
ploited despite this 3. SM. 000 .000 .000
tons we don't feel so delighted that
America stands first in possession of
the black diamonds.
The relative tigures show plain as
a pikestaff that something is rad
ically wrong not only with our econ
omic system, but with the economic
system of the entire world. While
Americans were suffering from bit
ing cold and could not obtain fuel all
j winter our railroads were busy carry
I ing coal to Canada which has 1.234.-
000.000.000 tons of coal under her own
soil. Coal administration failed to
check extortionate prices and it com
pletely collapsed in distribution that
was anywhere near adequate. The
result is a permanently higher level
of coal cost for the consumer.
With furnaces about closing and
spring buds appearing coal dealers
already are warning us that prices
next year will be about the same as
they are now. True we know or
rather we are advised there will be
no strike, but what does that matter
where profits are involved?
The dear old public must pay thru
the nose just the same.
Wmm
Poem by
fncle fohn
0
SHELTER.
I KNOW you remember the child
hood hour, when April called from
her biuegrass dell, I know you have
n't forgot the shower that gave no
warnin' as it fell . . , And I'm sure
you recall the childish glee that sud
denly changed to keen regret when
Daddy called out, to you an' me,
"Come in you children out of the
wet!"
And we obeyed, as we knowed we
must, but we whimpered a lot, as
children do, we held no dread of the
April gust, that pelted right down,
from skies so blue. . . . For chil
dren love the patterin rain, that lays
the dust, an cools the sweat, You
have to remind 'em time and again,
afore they'll come In out of the wet!
" Twas ever thus" of the human
kind, when venturesome sperits dar
ed the rain, our appetites has atlers
been blind, till they fetched us down,
on the bed of pain. ... So, I hark
back to Daddy's command, which im
pressed me, so's 1 cant ferget, and
I can't help callin' the heedless band,
"Come in you children out of
the wet!"
Slat's Diary
has got
.'hi
H
ERE you are reading this news
paper again You haven't seen it
for a week and it feels life an old
friend who's just dropped into the
house. Wonder why you read it!
Perhaps you like the simple way it
tells the news of the old home town.
Perhaps you like the editorials. May
be it's because you can do all your
shopping through the advertisements.
Or the paper may have been helpful
a little informative. Anyhow, what
ever it is that moves you to read, is
summed up in this: it brings you
either pleasure or profit perhaps
both. So when you have finished read
ing it why not pass it along to a
friend. Scatter your roses while ou
may, for what is good belong; to
humanity, and eveiy kindly act rebounds.
By ROSS FARQUHAR.
Friday Pa most genrelly all ways
answer for ma or enny
buddy else if they try
to put 1 over on him.
For true. Today ma
was a giveing pa Fits
on acct of leaveing his
t igar stubs lay all a
round the house and
she sed. You are Hard
Boiled and pa replyed
,3r a,n answer that no wan-
''S; . tier ne was nara ooiieu
J kn..., v u; ;
V-4 water prit nigh all
me time, aia naa notn
ing to say and aed it.
Saturday I was a
telling ma how Jane
laffs at nearly evry
:hing I say here of late
ly and she sed it must
be because she has got so many gold
Teeth in side her mouth. So let her
try to get Gay with me frum now on
and I will tell her a few Items of in-
trest.
Sunday Are preecher sed a very
truthful! saying today when he give
his sermon. He sed if you want to
mix Polatix and religion you got to
let Polatix do most all of the mixing.
Monday The teecher was xamin
ing us in Gender and ect. today and
she ast Blisters what was the Mascu
line gender for Bell meaning a hand
some good looken woman. For a
wile he Hesitated and evry thing was
so quiet you cud pick up a pin and
then a brite lite cum in his lips and
he sed a Dumbell
Tuesday Had a fite today and cum
out winner as fur as it was concern
ed but the teecher sed she was a going
to notefy my parents witch I hope
she forgets to do it as I no there will
be a lot of trubble in are House at
the same time I am in it. And I hate
friction in home Life.
Wdnesday Had a peace of good
luck today. Ma informed us that sum
I had been stealing her Dt-vils Food
ca'.e. Pa a:it her if she thot it mite
of ben nie. I was shivring but she
r.ed No I dont think it cud of ben him
because they are 2 peaces left. I will
not discuss it in my diry because you
cant tell who mite read it 1 of these
days.
Thursday I wanted to borro 2
bits to go to see a good dectecktive
pitcher tonite but ma sed she was
tired a putting up money for pitcher
shows and me never willing to get out
ard hussle for my own spending
money. I ast pa what he thot of her
.ir.d he smiled and whispered silently
to me That she was as they sed in war
tunes sort of Unconscious Objector.
& slips me a 2 bit peace.
I money to America and England. Fix
the amount definitely and finally.
Give Germany eighty years in which
to pay it, endorse her note for that
amount, underwrite her securities,
and let her begin to reconstruct her
commercial institutions and to enter
the marts of the world.
This is a plain, simple, common-
sense method of establishing com
mercial peace, progress and prosper
ity. Away with the selfish Pharisees
who refuse to adopt this policy. Put
it into effect. Let America take her
place as the leader of the world.
LOST Chauffeur's badge, No. 636.
Finder please return to W. H. Kirk,
city.
LEGAL NOTICES
Register, trustee, and)
Nellie Register, his wife;)
W. waterman and Car-)
rie Waterman, his wife;)
J. W. Osborn and Henry)
J. Streeter; also all other)
persons or parties un-)
known, claiming any)
right, title, estate, lien or)
interest in the real ea-)
tate described in the)
complaint herein, )
Defendants.)
To George N. Murray and Sarah F.
Murray, his wife, the unknown heirs
at law of Loeb Livingstone, some
times known as Loeb Livingston, de
ceased, the unknown heirs at law of
.Toepb May, deceased, and Edward
May and Margaret C. May, his wife;
A. P. Williams and Berthania Wil
liams, his wife; W. E. McPherson and
E. F. McPherson, his wife; W. G.
Register, trustee, and Nellie Regis
ter, his wife; J. W. Waterman and
Carrie Waterman, his wife; AIbo all
other persona or parties unknown,
claiming any right, title, estate. Hen
or interest in the real estate described
herein. Defendants.
IN THE NAME OK THE STATE OF
OREGON: You are hereby summoned
and required to appear and answer
the complaint of the plaintiff filed
against you in the above entitled auit
and cause, on or before six weeks
from the date of first publication of
this Summons, to-wit: On or before
the 6th day of May, 1923. And you
are hereby notified that If you fail
to so appear and answer for want
thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the
court for the relief prayed for -in his
complaint, to-wit: for a decree of the
court, that the plaintiff is the owner
in fee simple of the following des
cribed real property In Morrow Coun
ty, State of Oregon, to-wit:
The Southeast quarter and the
Southeast quarter of the Northwest
quarter, and Government lot No. S of
Section 18, in Township 1 South
Range 23 East of the Willamette
Meridian.
That the defendants be decreed
to have no right, title or interest in
or to any of said real property and
that the plaintiff's title be forever
quieted against said defendants and
each of them and that the defendants
and all persons claiming by through
or under them or any of them, be
forever barred and enjoined from
asserting any right, title or interest
in or to said real property or any part
thereof.
This summons it served upon you
by publication thereof, in The Gazette-Times,
a weekly newspaper pub
lished at Heppner, Oregon, once a
week for seven weeks by order of the
Honorable Gilbert W. Phelps, Judge
of the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for Morrow County, made and
entered on the 6th day of March,
1923, and the date of first publication
of this Summons is March 22, IWi.
WOODSON SWEEK,
Attorneys for the Plaintiff.
Address, Heppner, Oregon.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice Is hereby given that the un
dersigned has been appointed by the
County Court of tho State of Oregon
for Morrow County, adminUtator of
the estate of Eliza J. McAUster, 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 the office of
my attorney, S. E. Notson, in Hepp
ner, Oregon, within six months from
the date of the first publication of
this notice, said date of first publica
tion being March 22, ltt'.IJ.
HARVEY L. McALISTER,
Administrator.
Ginghams
Professional Cards
NOTICE OF TAKING VP AND SALE
OF ESTRAY.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned, on the second day of April,
1923, took up in the City of Heppner,
Morrow County, Oregon, the follow
ing described estray animal, which
was unlawfully running at large in
said city, to-wit:
One dehorned dark Jersey cow, no
brands or ear marks visible, about
four years old and weight about 800
pounds.
Notice is hereby further given that
unless the owner or owners of said
estray reclaim the same before the
sale thereof and pay all charges and
costs against the same, the under
signed will, on Monday, the 16th day
of April, 1923, at the hour of 10
o'clock in the forenoon of said day,
at McRoberts Livery Barn on Main
Street in said city of Heppner, sell
said estray at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash, and apply the
proceeds of said sale first to the
charges and costs of taking up, keep-
ng and sale of said estray and the re
mainder if any pay into the City
Treasury.
Dated at Heppner, Oregon, this 4th
day of April, 1923.
S. P. DEVIN,
Chief of Police of the City of
Heppner, Oregon.
itmcljettos
Wright Saling was dwn from
Hard man Monday, taking orders for
some of those diamonds he has been
uncovering in the lngs out at the
wood camp. We have been wonder
ing all the time what made cord wood
so expensive at Heppner, but now the
problem is solved when you buy a
cord of the fuel, diamonds are thrown
in with it. We had thought this ap
p.ied only to coal.
Work Mules For Sale. Inquire this
office.
- II bsCre!yoO lG Co,' J ouQ NEIGHBORS the AiewtvWBDs
D U JH L 10 7feew a plate at m - it
SWEET , -fc p$
hojie b$ mm
GilkiBon A 535 L. rU - -
ttTTOCtTIl I NS""
f( now oo ov know -xe 're. ) vecif they'd Bee HOME i v B tv&
ArfEWHwePS? -rWBY JUST V AGRIEP AA4Y LENGTH . . , I : Vf
Vovep in veTBiPY ) of we-ewuup HA&Ily ! ftZfl
V-s. A-Tfc00"' n . NEEH HAVE AAI65EP f B n "
-r V . J - X V Hl W,TW AT A rE f from the 1
' M&JL " H'Til factory
ryVT 6t I 1 5f ND it TO 1 ZZ'7m FRESH I
"WM ft IML Ve''2 '' 88eeAK"5T ; u!j5
Rev.M.A.MoUAew5'
' ' II.L.T..C
mm
THERE h
the wor
AUTOCASrtK,
IIKPARATIONS.
but one way to stabilize
d's currency and bring
commercial progress. That is to fix
definitely and finally the indemnity
that Germany is to pay. That indent
nity when fixed should be underwrit
ten. And when underwritten it would
become valuable commercial paper
throughout the world.
Ah nn illustration: Suppose they
say that Germany shall pay twenty
billion gold dollars, which would be
a very reasonable amount. Germany
couid pay that amount, but she should
be given sixty or eighty years
which to pay it Suppose we say
eighty years. Then, she would have
to pay $2.rO,OOO,000 a year.
If you fix the note at twenty billion
dollars, turn the note over and let
England and America endorse it, then
it becomes worth face value through
out the world and would be a good in
ve.it.ment for any individual or for
any country. America could afford
with England to guarantee the pay
ment of $.50,000,000 per year to
France and Belgium.
Looked at from a selfish stand
point, it would he worth commercially
a thousand times that amount of
DR. F. E. FARRIOR
DENTIST
Office Upstair, Over Postoffic
Heppner, Oregon
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office in Masonic Building
Trained Nurse Assistant
Heppner, Oregon
C. C. CHICK, M. D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office Upstairs Over Postoffice
Trained Nurse Assistant
Heppner, Oregon
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned, administrator of the estate
of Charles B. S perry, deceased, has
filed his final account with the Coun
ty Court of Morrow County, Oregon,
and that said Court has fixed Monday,
the 7th day of May, 1923,, at the hour
of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said
day as the time and the County Court
room at the Court House at Heppner,
Oregon, as the place for hearing ob
jections to said final account if any
there be and all persons having ob
jections thereto are hereby required
to file the same with said court on or
before the time set for the hearing
hereof.
C. R. GUNZEL, Administrator.
WOODSON & SWEEK
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
Offices in
First National Bank Building
Heppner, Oregon
Van Vactor & Butler
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
Suite 305
First National Bank Building
THE DALLES, ORE.
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office In Court House
Heppner, Oregon
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR
ROW COUNTY.
J. C. Devin, Plaintiff,)
vs. )
George N. Murray and)
Sarah F. Murray, his)
wife; the unknown heirs)
at law of Loeb Living-)
stone, sometimes known)
as Loeb Livingston, de-)
ceased; the unknown)
heirs at law of Joseph)
May, deceased; Edward)
May and Margaret C.)
May, his wife; A. P. Wil-)
liams and Berthania Wil-)
liams, his wife; W. E. Mc-)
Pherson and E. F. Mc-) SUMMONS
Pherson, his wife; Bertha)
D. Gilman and 0. E. GI1-)
man, her huwband; W. G.)
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. N one
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 & liisbee.
Water turns the wheel.
Money turns the business.
We have the business it
don't turn. Creditors
please take notice.
Office Thone, Main 643
Residence Phone, Main 06
Francis A. McMcnamin
LAWYER
Gilman Building, Heppner, Ore.
This popular line is more attractive than
ever this season in beautiful patterns.
We are showing
FANCY DRESS GINGHAMS
CREPE, DEVONSHIRE AND
GAZE MARVEL, 3 1 and 32 In.
and
APRON GINGHAMS
PRICES
25c, 35c, 60c, 75c and 90c the yard
CREPE, SOLID COLORS, PERCALES
CREPE, FLOWERED
Sam Hughes Co.
Phone Main 962
The Gazette-Times Is Morrow County's Newspaper
F. II. ROMNSON
LAWYER
IONE. OREGON
E. J. STARKEY
ELECTRICIAN
HOUSE WIRING A SPECIALTY
Heppner, Oregon
Phone 871
Heppner Sanitarium
DR. J. TERRY CONDER
Phyifcian-in-Charge
Treatment of all diseased. Isolated
wards for contagious diseases.
FIRE INSURANCE
Waters & Anderson
Heppner. Oregon
MATERNITY HOME
MRS. O. C. AIKEN, HEPPNER
I am prepared to tak ft limited num
ber of maternity cane at my home,
Patlenta privileged to chooM thtlr own
phyniclan.
lient of care and attention uaured.
PHONE 195
Gilliam & Bisbee
E. J. KELLER
TREE PRUNING
AUCTIONEERING
HORSE SHOEING
Heppner, Oregon
L. VAN MARTER
FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE
INSURANCE
Old Line Companlel
REAL ESTATE
Heppner, Ore.
JOS. J. NYS
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Upstairs in
Humphreys Building
Heppner, Oregon
Economize
and Save
is the need of the times.
It is not economy to
gain in quantity at the
expense of quality.
We have stocked a
line of high grade
Coffee
in bulk, .which we guar
antee equal in cupping
capacity to any brands
in tins. The saving in the
containers alone is from
7c to 10c per pound.
Phelps Grocery Company
PHONE 53