The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, May 03, 1923, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER. OREGON. THURSDAY. MAY 3. 1923.
TIE fifiETIH
THE HEI'PNUI CAUI IE. ZatafcltoM
Mrrh M. IMil
THE B EFT N Eft TIMES. ErtabtbM
NotMtb it. mi
ADVEETT8INC ATF9 GIVEN OM
APPLICATION
UftSCRirTION RATES:
On Yr
Kn Mtta
Tfcr Month
fcingt Copwa .
. IN
MORROW COl'NTY OFFICIAL PAPER
Torxgn Advcrtuint Rpr enUtift
THE AMERICAN FRLSS ASSOCIATION
KOAII MAKING A DAY BY DAY JOB.
BY RICHARD LLOYD JONES.
EVERY man is road-maker. He
builds the road over which he him
self i to travel. If he is careless and
ir sincere hie road will he poorly made
ar.d he will find himself stalled in the
soft mud of indifference. If he be
sincere and dilipt-nt he will make a
hiphway over which he can travel far.
The Ancient Romans built, with
much labor, the famous Appian Way.
To do t:is they laid end to end great,
heavy, flat stones. Time shifted the
great block of the Appian Way; they
were not laid upon a strong bed of
littie gtonea.
Many centuries later a Scotchman
by the name of McAdam found a bet
ter way to build an enduring road.
McAdam accepted for his road only
very little stones stones that would
slip between his thumb and first fin-
per. The little stones could shift.
they could settle and as they shifted
and settled the "macadam" road be
came firmer and better.
The life road-maker who makes
surest of his future lays his road bed
in daily deeds of good rather than by
seeking only to lay down the large
mocks 01 ambiuous performance.
The man who gets more out of life
and he who gives most to life is the
man who sees the good in little
things, who learns how to use little
thinps, who neglects or despises no
detail and who builds his life road
constantly and insistently with little
deeds well done.
Measure the deeds of any great man
and yoo will find his achievements
have grown out of an experience of
doing the small things with patience
and painstaking fidelity.
The man of moral courage does not
reach his moral power by one full
leap; it is a matter of road making;
he acquires his mora strength step
by step.
The architect who conceives the
great cathedral or the monumental
tower has first learned to use the T
square and the sweep; he has learned
the mathematical laws that govern
the stress and distribution of weight;
he has built his road step by step
and over it he has reached the thing
of strength and beauty.
The road tnat is without a firm
foundation is not the road of an en
during civilization. Soft ciay carries
r.o commerce. The road of least re
balance is the road that retards pro
gress, that holds back the traveler
who would use it. Each day we lay
the foundation for the road we are
to travel tomorrow.
Life's prizes are not gifts; they are
goals; they must be won; we must
build the road over which we are to
put s to reach them.
THE PARADOXICAL MR. LASKER.
IITITH the retirement from the Uni
' ted States Shipping Board of Al
bert D. Lasker June 1st, the nation
will enter upon another experiment
in its effort to solve the bewildering
problem of a merchant marine,
Mr. Lacker succeeded Rear Admiral
Benson, swept his policies to the four
winds and et nail for the port of
popularity with as fair a breeze as
ever carried a mariner into harbor.
That he fizzled out, is largely due to
the fact that he failed to follow his
own expressed convictions. Lasker
knew nothing of ships when he took
hold of the shipping board, he knew
nothing of the shipping problem. The
chances are he knows little more to
day. Nevertheless, Benson, who had
made a life study of our water com
merce, was compelled to sit by and
see the great dream of an American
merchant marine crumble and wither
before the new "business administra
tion." The plan tow is to get rid of our
ships and to junk those that can't
be sold, thus clearing the seas for
privately owned vessels. Perhaps
hurrying the retirement of Lacker
wiil bring new life into the thought
of putiiug the American flag back on
the seas.
It is admitted an American mer
chant marine never can be brought
into beirg without the intelligent
support of tne farmer and the folk
in trie innd towns and villages who
do not fct-r&e what water traffic means
U tr,e prosperity and indeed to the
HOME
SWEET
HOME
ForOaearitwai
be "Fail and
W.
PABUN6 VtXl ALOnB RBI6N WELL " v Be APROPOSAU
VlN HE ACTT WITH HOU BY ( OF MA(8?I A be , BUT IT J fOME
fwo i sit6 i can weATHis aim y V souNts to , nice A HABITS'
jj I ViSwt 0 1 3v REPORT IV 'fS MAWTeX
' ' 1 '
' nafety of America. Admiral Benson
i fcd this plan of enlif htenme-nt well
undr way. lasker publicly approved
of it. but having done so be then pro-,
reeded forthwith to destroy it. Great
ir.tnd like providence non in a mys-
terioui way their wonders to perform.
SI'ECl I.ATIOXS. NOT TARIFF,
BOOSTED SVG AR j
THE United States Tariff Commis
sion has made its report to Pres-!
tdent Harding on the suar situation.:
It states without equivocation that
the increase in sugar prices since
J an un. ry was d ue to "causes n ot
connected with the American tariff.
Simultaneously with this report.
the Department of Justice, at the di
rection of Attorney General Daught
erly, filed suit in the federal courts
against sugar speculators. This ac
tion was taken after the facts col
lected by the Department of Justice
had been presented to President
Harding and his cabinet and discuss
ed in detail by them.
In filing the suit, the Department
of Justice sets forth that there was
and is a combination and conspiracy
in the restraint of trade in raw and
refined sugar. The petition alleges
that "an orgy of speculation in raw
sugar has been indulged in through
the instrumentality of the exchange
and clearing association" (the New
York Coffee and Sugar Exchange, Inc.
and the New York Coffee and Clearing
Association, Inc.) since February 7th.
In support of this it sets forth that
during the month of February "enor
mous quantities of raw sugar great
ly in excess of quantities customarily
dealt in and more than the total Btock
of raw sugar then in existence have
been subject to fictitious 'paper sales.'
It shows that the transactions on the
exchange during February aggregated
1,515,0W tons, while in point of fact,
during that month, only 300 tons
were actually delivered as a result of
transactions. In other words, only
two ten-thousandths of one per cent
of all the February transactions on
the sugar exchange were bona fide
and represented the sugar that was
actually delivered.
All this bears out exactly what the !
Republican National Committee stat-1
ed on March 17, in reply to the Demo
cratic charge made at that time that
the high price of sugar was due to
the Fordney-Mc Cumber tariff. It also
bears out the statement at that time
to the effect that the Republican Con
gress had stopped gambling in grain
to the detriment of consumers, and
there was no reason why there should
not be a stop put to gambling in sugar
or any other food product to the ex
ploitation of the consumer.
Since that statement was issued,
the United States Supreme Court has
declared the grain futures act con
stitutional and it is largely upon the
principles of law embodied in that act
that the Department of Justice in
tends to base its prosecution of those
it charges with gambling in sugar and
fixing fictitious prices to the Ameri
can consumers.
It was charged by the Democratic
National Committee's publicity bu
reau, by leading Democrats and by a
number of demagogues who do not
classify themselves as Democrats
that the Department of Justice would
never do anything in regard to the
sugar situation. The investigation
was started less than six weeks ago.
In the interim, agents of the Depart
ment of Justice have been in Cuba,
have visited the sugar markets, made
exhaustive examinations of books and
records, have compiled the data
gathered, prepared their case and have
commenced, all of which is almost a
record for expedition in a case with
so many ramifications and involving
a problem of so great magnitude.
The action of the Department of
Justice in seeking to stop the specu
lation on sugar by an injunction is a
hard nut to crack for those dema
gogues who have been attacking the
courts and what they term "govern
ment by injunction." it is the fav
orite argument of this class of ene
mies of judicial process that the in
junction is never used except against
the poor man or the laboring man,
that it is a weapon only in the hands
of the wealthy. The invocation of
the injunction as a legal weapon to
protect the breakfast table of the
working man and bring the wealthy
speculator to book conclusively shows
the falsity of such propaganda.
4
LOST Chauffeur's badge, No. 636.
Finder please return to W. M. Kirk,
city.
E. i. Merrill, prominent Hardman
citizen, was doing business in Hepp
ner Saturday.
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE OF SALE OF ANIMALS.
Notice is hereby given that, pur
suant to the statutes of the State of
Oregon, the undersigned will sell at
public auctoin for pasture and feed
bill, on Saturday, the 12th day of
May, 1923, at 10 o'clock a. m., the fol
lowing described animals, to-wit:
Two five-year-old steers, branded X
0M,O4CA -THAT (0UN6 v' l!W'T IT 80M ANTIC 7 J
s I HCH0RY &CN 1 yi.aW SV4lT TH0 WOC04 HI
V P8oPOil6 TO OUS 1 V 1$ UNej iUf
on right aide; unless said animals are
redeemed by owner before aaid date.
Sale will be held at the ranch of the
undersigned, 18 miles southwest of
Hard man, Oregon.
ROY ROBINSON.
SIMMONS.
In the Circuit Court of the State
of Oregon for Morrow County.
W. J. Rush and A. L. Devos,
Partners doing business un
der the style and firm name of
Rush k Devos, Plaintiffs,
vs.
A J. Spencer, Defendant
To A J. Spencer, the above named
defendant:
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF
OREGON: You are hereby required to
appear and answer the complaint of
the plaintiffs herein filed against you
in the above entitled court and cause
within six weeks from the date of the
first publication of this summons.
and if you fail so to appear and an
swer said complaint, for want there
of, plaintiffs will take judgment
against you for the sum of Three
Hundred Dollars, together with in
terest thereon at the rate of seven
per cent per annum from the Mh
of May, 1920, to the 6th day of De
cember, 1920, and at the rate of ten
per een tper annum from the 5th
day of December, 1920, and for their
costs and disbursements in this ac
tion incurred.
You are further notified that the
following described real property
belonging to you and taken as your
property has, at the instance of the
plaintiffs, been attached in this ac
tion, to-wit: E4NE. SWVNE,
and NWSE of Section 18, Tp. 6
South, Range 28, E. W. M., and that
in the event judgment be taken
against you in the above entitled ac
tion said real property will be sold
under execution to satisfy said judg
ment. This summons is served upon you
by publication thereof, in The Ga-rette-Times,
a weekly newspaper pub
lished at Heppner, Oregon, for six
consecutive weeks, by order of Hon.
Gilbert W. Phelps, Judge of the Cir
cuit Court of the State of Oregon for
the County of Morrow, made and en
tered on the 26th day of April, 1923,
and the date of the first publication
hereof is May 3, 1923.
S. a NOTSON,
Attorney for Plaintiffs.
Address: Heppner, Oregon.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned has been duly appointed
by the County Court of the State of
Oregon for Morrow County, executor
of the last Will and Testament of
Grace L. Chick, deceased, and all per
sons having claims against the es
tate of said deceased are hereby re
quired to present the same with the
proper vouchers, to the said executor
at his office at Heppner, Oregon, on
or before six months from the date
hereof.
Dated this 3rd day of May, 1923.
CLAUDE C. CHICK, Executor.
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNTING.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned has filed with the county
court of Morrow County, Oregon, his
final account as administrator of the
estate of Frances Luper, deceased,
and that the court has fixed Satur
day, the 26th day of May, 1923, at
the hour of 10 o'clock in the fore
noon as the time and the County
Court room in the Court House at
Heppner, Oregon, as the place for
hearing said account and any objec
tions thereto.
JAMES N. LUPER, Administrator,
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: Yon and each of yon 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 thifl 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
fendants 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
snd the accruing costs; that ay 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
EQUALITY OR MORE.
IT SEEMS to me, this world of our'n
is more supremely human, and ful
ler of am axes, sence we've got the
Business Woman. . . . I've hammered
en my prejudice, till I've subdued the
critter, and I can welcome Mary Ann
as cordial as I fit her! There ain't
a job in man's domain, from war to
hullin' clover, that don't appeal to
Maude or Jane, and so, we fork 'em
over.
O' welcome to our stalwart ranks,
ye Mesdames and ye flappers invade
our shops, our stores, our banks, and
show us clumsy yappers. I like per
fumery around, I'm fond of curlin'
papers an don't ye think that whis
as the court may deem equitable.
The lands covered by said mortgage
and which will be sold under such
foreclosure are as follows: E4NE,
SW14NEK. and NWKSE4 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 Ga-tette-Times,
a weekly newspaper
printed and published in Heppner,
Oregon, by order of Hon. G. W. Phelps
made and entered on the 5th day of
April .1923, and the date of first pub
lication Is April 12, 1923.
S. E. NOTSON,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Address: Heppner, Oregon. r
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
before the time set for the hearing
hereof.
C. R. GUNZEL, Administrator.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR
ROW COUNTY.
J. C. Devin, PlalntltlJ
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-)
iams, 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-)
resh
from the
factory
I ROLL YOUR OWN WITH
Rial. Croix Papera AtachJ
.THE
1 j4jXCUi 1
SJ TOBACCO WJ
IT now 1 vSS
Special Prices This Week
on ouf 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. Sertoli'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
Poem by
Jfncle Joht
kers might augment yer mannish ca
pers? .... And smokin, too, might
brace yer game, an' make the deal
f raternat, an' sometimes we could
call ye "Jedge" or "Cap" or even
"Colonel"! There's nothin' like equal
ity in plain or fancy preachin' nor
nothin' in humanity that could be
furder reaehin' .... The little step
from skyirts to pants is daily growin'
smarter, Awake, Arouse, Salute, Ad
vance, My darter, O, my darter!
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.)
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
Joseph 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; Also all
other persons or parties unknown,
claiming any right, title, estate, lien
or interest in the real estate described
herein, Defendants.
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF
OFLtiON: 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
Gilliam & Bisbee's
j& Column jgr
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
&4 Peters Shoes
GOOD FEELER?
20TH CENTURA
WORKSH0E.1
J UU 00U9LI T0t
complaint, to-wit: for a decree of the 1
court, that the plaintiff Is the owner
in fee simple of the folio wine 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. 1 of
Section 18, in Township 1 South
Range 23 East of the Willamette
Meridian.
That the defendanU be decreed
to have no right, title or interest In
or to any of said real property and
tnat the plaintiff's title be forever
quieted against said defendants and
each of them and that the defendants
and nil 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 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 5th day of March,
1923, and the date of first publication
of this Summons is March 22, 1923.
WOODSON ft SWEEK,
Attorneys for the Plaintiff.
Address, Heppner, Oregon.
Professional Cards
DR. F. E. FARRIOR
DENTIST
Office Upstairs Over Postofflc
Heppner, Oregon
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office in Masonic Building
Trained Nurse Assistant
Heppner, Oregon
C. C. CHICK, M. D.
PHYSICIAN A SURGEON
Office Upstairs Over Poatofflce
Trained None 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
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office in Court House
Heppner, Oregon
Office Phone, Main S
Residence Phone, Main eel
Francis A. McMenamin
LAWYER
Gilman Building, Heppner, Ore.
F. H. ROBINSON
LAWYER
IONE. OREGON
E. J. STARKEY
ELECTRICIAN
HOUSE WIRING A SPECIALTY
Heppner, Oregon
Phone 87J
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
Physician - la-Charge
Treatment of all diseases. Isolated
wards for contagious diseases.
FIRE INSURANCE
Waters & Anderson
Heppner, Oregon
MATERNITY HOME
MRS. G. C AIKEN, HEPPNER
I am prepared to take a limited num
ber of maternity osmi at my home.
Patients privilttW te choese their own
physician.
Uwt of ear and attention assured.
PHONK m
Ginghams
This popular line is more attractive than
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. I
Phone
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 Un Compaalea
REAL ESTATE
Heppner, Ore.
JOS.J.NYS
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Upstairs in
Humphreys Building
Heppner, Oregon
Main 962
PHONE 53