The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, April 19, 1923, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1923.
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Or", m wmnd-dM matter.
ADVERTISING ratf GIVEN OS
APPLICATION
SUBSCRIPTION
Of Ymr
Rn MontAi ......
Thrm Honthi
8truri CopM
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MORROW COVNTT OFFICIAL PAPER
Porrif Adwrtifing Reprweotati
THK AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION
VOl R SrCCESS IS WITHIN
VOl'KSELK.
By Richard Lloyd Jones
AYTHERS can bring you up careful
V- y; can five you equipment arid
education, but at the end there is but
one power that decree? for or atrainst
our Furce&s, and that is yourself.
Stevenson Mid. "One man I had to
make pood. Myself. All others I have
to make happy if 1 can."
Yourself is your direct point of
contact with the world and those
about you. Yourself is the point that
needs study and adjustment because
the world by all the laws of physics
and metaphysics is bound to react up
on you as you affect it.
Were it not for the real serious
business of training and bringing the
bost out of yourself, the business of
bringing happiness out of this world
would be automatic.
As the world has grown complex,
more and more study of the relation
of each individual to his surroundings
has been tiecessarv.
There are certain qualities that be
long to you yourself. Your most de
voted friend cannot force them or
yon. Your most relentless enemy can
not take them away. They are a free
gift of your inheritance.
If your birth his been niggardly
witn tnese qualities, then all your
life you work to disadvantage, but if
yourself be mostly of the right spirit,
you will triumph anyway.
There art unfortunate, ill-born
souls who come into the world with
their heritage of self-mastery stolen
from them. They are foredoomed to
be a drain on humanity and a burden
to their feHowmen. They may have
many gifts of brilliancy and power,
but they are like a fine and delicate
machine that cannot be co-ordinated
into productive power.
This is an sge of attempt to study
oneself with the idea of making one
self of use to others. More and more
religions center on the necessity and
duty of being right-minded.
You say, superficially. My duty in
this world is to others not to my
self." The truth is, your pre-eminent
duty in this world is just to your
self. Oa!y by doing the very highest
best for yourself can you do the very
highest best for others.
No man can teach mathematics who
has not himself mastered mathemat
ics. You can only teach astronomy so
far as you have studied the story of
the stars.
You cannot hope to make others
cheerful until you have made cheer
fulness your habit. You cannot give
sym pat h y un ti 1 won have acquired
sympathy.
Emerson said that the best thing a
boy got out of college was a room
to himself.
Every wise man, like the wise mer
chant, knows where he stands because
he knows the worth of pause for in
voice. Take stock of yourself. If on
reviewing your shelves you find your
stock of consideration for others be
low, or your jars of generosity be
empty, get more of these commodities
in your siorehouse. You need them
to make yourself good to yourself and
therefore good to othera
It is only the poorly man who shies
of self-study.
THE TEST OF GOOD MANAGE
MENT. DL'RIED in dry statistics of the De
partment of Commerce lie facts in
connection with the packing industry
that may bring pause to those dis
posed to hasty criticism. While the
whole sory of this industry is not
told sufficient facts are disclosed to
show that the packers have not had
such a rosy tiire during the year
lft.il. It appet-rs that the value of
the products of wholesale slaughter
ers amounted to t2.2"0,942.000 in 1&21
as compared with $441,000 for
the year a decrease of 46 per
cent. True the btuine? increased 33
per cent over the sven year period,
but a sudden slump in one year of
approximately $2,000, 000 .000 presents
a financial and economic problem of
sufficient proportion to throw the
best managed business in the world
out of gear.
It is a remarkable tribute to the
manafment of the packing industry
HOWE
SWEET
foa Shouldn't
Hare Made
That Laat
Remark,
Oscar
Gilkison
anTocafTCB
IDEA. "0U 6SOWLIN6 BOUT
( y cousin vr in3 HEB5, vwesy
gigantic drop fn the volume
em did not bring about tm-
conditions in the retail mar-
tut. Our may have complained
of rising prices, perhaps at timat
they may have been justif.ed, but that
they received the protection of some
very able business brains remains un
disputed. The packers have been under heavy
f. re. but fair play is a jewel, and
while this newspaper fighting always
the public interest is ever ready
to throw the light of publicity on con-1
d it ions when they appear to be
vicious, it is equally fearless and
equally pleased to offer a word of
praise when it is so obviously de
served, as it is in this ease.
THE COST OF Ol'R LOCAL IM
PROVEMENTS. From all parts of the country come
reports of great activity in towns and
villages in the matter of public im
provement, Nothing could be more
encouraging providing the problem is
sensibly attacked, but if your villages
begin to run wild and act without
proper perspective of finance then
many of them are brewing serious
trouble. Taxation is on the jump al
most everywhere. The amount of
taxes now paid by the American peo
ple is larger than the whole foreign
trade of the United States. The sum
total of taxation is four times as
great as the American profit on all
foreign trade.
In Germany is heard the cry that '
taxation has brought utter ruin to the
people. We hear the echo from France,
and also from England. Let us not
forget that the law of economics is
not national. It is universal. Ameri
ca cannot escape the effect of ex
change taxation any more than can
Great Britain or the benighted Chock
tongs of Passamaquaddy.
The business of the world today
needs more capital than ever. The
trouble is the man on the street does
not grasp the first rules of national
business building.
With restricted capital business
cannot expand. It requires more
money to harvest and market a hun
dred acre crop than it does a ten acre
crop and if American industry is to
expand and prices be kept within the
normal, liquid capital and legitimate
credit must be increased. We cannot
have our cake and eat it. If the mon
ey of the nation is spent because of
a sudden craze for improvements
something else will have to go by the
board.
STEERING Bt" SIN EN S3 SHIPS TO
SUCCESS.
FRED P. MANN is a dry goods mer
chant in Devil's Lake. North Da
kota. He sells a half million dollars'
worth of goods every year in a town
of five thousand population. He has
built his business from nothing. His
capital has been intelligence. He
stands today an inspiration for any
small town merchant who seeks to
build a paying business on a sound
foundation.
There are thousands of merchants
who flop along without &nT definite
aim except an instinctive desire to
accomplish. These are the merchan
dising derelicts. The ship that reaches
port in time to win the cargo is one
that is steered with a definite pur
pose and along a course thoroughly
charted.
Mr. Mann frankly says his success
is one of two things sensible buying
and vigorous newspaper advertising.
He spends more money in newspaper
advertising than any small merchant
in the United States. The answer is
he dpes more business than any small
merchant in the United States.
Half the local merchants in small
towns see in advertising nothing but
typographical announcements. The
money they waste in direct by mail
advertising is astounding. There is
not a skilled advertising man in the
whole of the United States who uses
direct-by-mail advertising except as
a supplement to the newspaper. With
out the newspaper the rest is useless.
If we fail to learn by the experience
of others who have succeeded then
we fall behind in the march of prog
ress. John Wanamaker, Marshall Field
and Fred P. Mann are not fools. Hitch
your wagon to a star, not to a doubt
ing Thomas.
HOMEY PHILOSOPHY.
ONCE we knew a man in far away
India who for more than thirty
years had not spoken to a human
soul. His last words were that it
was better to think and do things
than to waste time talking; more
over he believed nobody ever had
said anything of lasting value. It
would be a strange world if all of
us just shut up and talked through
our actions. Gee, how lonely it
would be. Lots of thing might be
accomplished that are now left un
done, but we'd miss that human
contact that seems to make the
whole world kin. And it isn't true
that nothing has been said of last
ing value. There are three ever
lasting words that stand as the
foundation of human happinss and
development: Love one another.
We don't need to talk a great deal
if we say something.
I , . ,i
Slat's Diary 1 j
By ROSS FA RQ CHAR.
PRIDAY Pa informed mo tonite
1 that he was a going to have sum
Co. who was a man who wanted him
to lern him the noose
paper bisness. He told
us he was a going to
tell the man evry thing
he new. And then ma
up and ast him what
they was a going to do
for the rest of the eve
ning. Well they was a
coolness sprung u p
among them from then
on afterwards.
Saturday They was
a well fair meeting
here in town tonite and
aa pa was on the com-
mitty we all went. Well
the committy set up on
the front bench and
when the speaker got
up witch was a preach
er from sum other town he just look
ed the committy over and offered up
a long prayer for the town.
Sunday Went out in the country
today to visit 1 of pa's old time skool
mates witch has come here to re
tire his self and famly. They got 1
boy and he has got a pony & a Radio
and a bisickle and a little ottcmobeel
with a gas engine in it & well in fact
whatever he wants and hassent got
isn't.
Monday Went up to Jake's house
to here there new Radio tonite but
it wassent much acct. tonite as they
was to much Statistics in the air.
Tuesday Ma was jawing pa be
cause he tawked so much when Co.
was here at are house and Pa finally
got mad and told her what was what.
He sed Well when you set around and
say nothing fokes will think you are
a fool. Ma up and replyed. She sed
Yes and when you go ahed and tawk
they Know it.
Wednesday Tonite 1 shone pas
shoes before Lodge meeting and I
stuck him for a dime for same and
then ma cums along and hits him for
two $ and a H for a swell new hat. I
gess he is sorry he went and marryed
into are famly.
Thursday A ole lady down the st.
is wi rrying her self sick because she
dont think she will get to hewin on
acct. she is so poor she diddent have
nothing to give up dureing lent this
year.
FOR SALE Cheap, one 22-in. Case
separator with blower, in good con
dition; also straw carrier for 22-in.
separator in good condition. C.
MOEHNKE, Lexington, Oregon.
LOST Chauffeur's badge, No. 636.
Finder please return to W. M. Kirk,
city
LEGAL NOTICES
SUMMONS.
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for Morrow County.
W. J. Rush, Plaintiff,
vs.
A. J. Spencer and Minnie
Spencer, his wife,
Defendants.
To A. J. Spencer and Minnie Spen
cer, the above named defendants:
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF
OREGON: You and each of you are
hereby required to appear and an
swer the complaint of the plaintiff
herein filed against you in the above
entitled court and cause within six
weeks from the date of the first pub
lication of this summons, and if you
fail to so appear and answer said
complaint, for want thereof, plaintiff
will apply to the court for the relief
prayed for in his complaint, which is
as follows:
That plaintiff have judgment
against you for the sum of $300.00
with interest thereon at the rate of
ten per cent, per annum from May
20, 1920; $35.00 attorney's fees and
the costs and disbursements of this
suit; that the mortgage given by de
fendant to secure the payment of
the above amounts be foreclosed in
the manner provided by law, and that
the lands therby mortgaged be sold
under foreclosure execution as by law
provided and the proceeds applied to
the payment of said several amounts
and the accruing costs; that all right,
title or interest of you and each of
you in said lands be foreclosed and
that you and each of you be barred of
all right, title and interest in or to
said premises and every part there
of, save the statutory right of re
demption and for such other relief
as the court may deem equitable.
The lands covered by said mortgage
and which will be sold under such
foreclosure are as follows: ENE,
SWNE, and NWKSE14 of Sec.
18, Tp. 6 S., R. 28 East of Willamette
Meridian.
This summons is served upon you
by publication thereof once a week
for six consecutive weeks in The Gazette-Times,
a weekly newspaper
printed and published in Heppner,
JW TB THINK ONf Of MM FAMILY
I TO TUtyy ABROAD. I CAM HMJiM
AlT. I'M SO AMBITIOW FOR HER-1
, WISH SHE HkS THERE
i
Jill Poem by
SPRING W ARNING.
F I was makin' sejestions, which I
seldom attempt to do, 1 might re
mark that old friends is giner'ly saf
er'n new. ... If you feel that Spring
is upon us, remember this sage ad
vice: Be slow to part with yer funics,
till you're feelin' the need of ice.
If I should admonish my neighbors.
which I hardly expect to try, I'd start
with the freaks of weather, from now
till about July, an I'd sorter dwell
on the danger of takin' a blasted cold,
if you peel off the winter fuziies, be
Oregon, by order of Hon. G. W. Phelps i
made and entered on the oth day of
April WiSt and the date of first pub
lication is April 12, 1923.
S. E. NOTSON,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Address: Heppner, Oregon.
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned, administrator of the estate
of Charles B. Sperry, 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
oei ore me ume set ior me hearing
nereoi.
C. R. GUNZEL, Administrator.
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-)
Hams and Berthania Wil-)
jams, his wife; W. E. Mc-)
Pherson and E. F. Mc-) SUMMONS
Pherson, his wife; Bertha)
D. Gilman and D. E. Gil-)
man, her husband; W. G.)
Register, trustee, and)
Nellie Register, his wife;)
J. 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 es-)
tate described in the)
complaint herein, )
Defendants.) 1
To George N. Murray and Sarahs P.
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
nil!
,THE
f fresn
f from the 1
factory
fT FRESH I
4VTOBACCO JB
now Vjf Js$.
I Rii Ta Croix P.pere MtAmi I
Special Prices This Week
on our men's lace boots, made by Buckingham & Hecht, A. A. Cutter.
Do Your Feet Bother You?
There is a Dr. Scholl foot comfort appliance or remedy for every foot
trouble. We are qualified to fit and adjust Dr. Scholl's foot appliances.
We do shoe repairing no matter where the shoes were bought.
Special attention paid to parcel post orders
Gonty Cash Shoe Store
cause they're a trifle old. . . .
If I was disposed to orate on mat
ters of health in spring, I might refer
to the changes that April is bound to
bring; an the crime of clippin' yer
whiskers a month and a half too soon,
is as fatal as sheddin' yer fuzzies be
fore it's the tenth of June.
Joseph May, deceased, and Edward
M:.v 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; Also all
other persons or parties unknown,
claiming any right, title, estate. Hen
or interest in the real estate described
herein. Defendants.
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF
ORLGON: You are hereby summoned
and required to appear and answer
the complaint of the plaintiff filed
against you in the above entitled suit
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 tot No. 2 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
Gilliam & Bisbees
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
lGOOD FEELEfiP
- (
20 CENTURA
WORKSH0E.1
fun oouei.1 Tofi
or under them or any of them, be
forever barred and enjoined from
assarting any right, title or interest
in or to said real property or any part
tnereoi.
This summons Is 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, 1923.
WOODSON A 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 the State of Oregon
for Morrow County, administator of
the estate of Eliza J. McAlister, 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, 1923.
HARVEY L. McALISTER,
Administrator.
Professional Cards
DR. F. E. FARRIOR
DENTIST
Office Upataira Over Poatoffice
Heppner, Oregon
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office in
Trained
Masonic Building
Nurae Aaeistant
Heppner. Oregon
C. C. CHICK, M. D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office Upstairs Over Postofflce
Trained Nurae Assistant
Heppner, Oregon
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
ATTORN EY-AT-LAW
Office in Court Hours
Heppner, Oregon
Office Phone, Main (41
Residence Phone, Main etift
Francis A. McMenamin
LAWYER
Gilman Building, Heppner, Ore,
F. II. ROBINSON
LAWYER
IONE, OREGON
E. J. STARKEY
ELECTRICIAN
HOUSE WIRING A SPECIALTY
Heppner. Oregon
, Phene 17
Peters Shoes
Built to Stand the
Hardest Wear
Every pair made of the Best
grade leather
Prices, $3.25 to $5.00
Heppner Sanitarium
DR. J. PERRY CONDER
Pajrticiaa-Ui-Caarva
'treatment of all diseases. Isolated
wards for contagious diseases.
FIRE INSURANCE
Waters & Anderson
Heppner, Oregon
MATERNITY HOME
MRS. G. C. AIKEN, BRPPNER
I am prepared to take a limited num
ber of maternity osms at my home.
Patient privileged la cheoas their ewa
physician.
beet of care and attention aaaured.
PHONR Its
Ginghams I
This popular line is
ever this season in beautiful patterns.
We are showing
FANCY DRESS GINGHAMS
CREPE, DEVONSHIRE AND
GAZE MARVEL, 31 and 32 in.
and
APRON GINGHAMS
PRICES
25c, 35c, 60c, 75c and 90c the yard
CREPE, SOLID COLORS, PERCALES
CREPE, FLOWERED
Sam Hughes Co.
Ph&ne Main 962
The Gazette-Times Is Morrow County's Newspaper
Eat
Graham
Crackers
After the Long, Hard Winter You Need
Extra Energy to Withstand the
Rigors of Early Spring.
Eat Graham Crackers
Every Day for
a Week
You will be surprised how much better
you will feel, becauses they contain
the VIGOR building vitamines.
We have the two best brands made
PACIFIC COAST and TRU BLU
GRAHAMS
Phelps Grocery Company
E. J. KELLER
TREE PRUNING
AUCTIONEERING
HORSE SHOEING
Heppner, Oregon
L. VAN MARTER
FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE
INSURANCE
Old Line Companies
REAL ESTATE
Heppner, Ore.
J0S.J.NYS
ATTORN EY-AT-LAW
Upataira in
Humphrey! Building
Heppner, Orecon
more attractive than M
fl JIG;
PHONE 53