i PAGE TWO THE GAZETTE-TIMES. IIEFFNER, OREGON. THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1923. THE EHM-TIISt:: TUB HICPFNKR CAZFTTK. Eftblua4 IrUr-k b, THE htirSKR TIMES R-taMW I1 shits twtl vrr TfcurxUy morning fcr Orirn, aMVkmt-c)KM matter. ADVT.RTimG HkTrH GIVES OK A IT Lit ATI ON subscription rates-. On Yr fi MOw Thr Month 6mr Cor MORROW COl' NTT OFFICIAL PAPER THE AMERICAS PRESS ASSOCIATION Arir TR1BTTE. bells of Heppner A FITTIV1 THE church irp n t undfty morn in p tney nhould have in especial appeal to everyone, fr nrxt Sunday is Mother's Dhv. Each year the second Sunday in May if- set aside for remembrance of Mft kt, the one person whom all, hel l er of p!ebian or ptrician des cent, honor, love ard respect. Mother the very our.d of the word breathe WicredncsR. And truly noth ing is more sacred, or nearer to the Creator than is the institution of motherhood. It is the working of God's plan for the continuation of the human rwce. And as God has wrapped up all that is sacred in the name of Mother, no has he designed that it be kept holy. Then as the bells chime forth on Sunday morning's breeze, who is there in the city of Heppner whose thoughts will not turn to mother? And if free to do so. who is there who will not answer the appeal of those chimes by going to the house of God, the place designed by God for perpet uating the sanctity of motherhood? Let's all go to church next Sunday. COMMENCEMENT S INVESTMENT TIME CE more our schools and college 0N School is an outfit shop. It is where! we get the tools with which to do our part of the world's work. j Graduation day is not a time to re call achievements, but to p'an them. It is not a day for reflection, but of prediction, a time for looking for ward, not backward. Education is the search for truth. Truth is progress. The bud is a manifestation of the truth of nature. Because it is true to the laws of nature it c!ws not re main a bud but unfolds into the flow er. The seed laid in the clods finds its way to the light. Light is truth. Be a light seeker. Truth is ever ahead, never behind. Keep pursuing it. You cannot serve truth and repose, W e seek ed uca t i o n th at we may know how to progress, to serve; that in this world we may be live seed and not dead seed. It is not what you know that gives : you recognition in the world, but what you know how to do. Commencement is not accounting time it is investment time. The intellectual miser is of no more use in the world than the money mi ser. The world never honors an idle intellect. There is but one nobiiity that lasts and that is the nobility of usefulness. He who cannot USE that which he has acquired from his text books has labored in vain for his grades. We are measured by what we can GIVE not by what we can GET. Education is wasted time and ef fort unless it inspires us to test our strength rather than our weakness, to dare the impossible rather than complacently follow the line of least resistance. The world has but little need of the man who can "do almost anything." But it has great use for the man who can DO SOMETHING. Education, once looked upon as a luxury, is now regarded as a neces sity, Once its influence was contem plative, now it is ccntributive. In the dark ages people belonged to kings. When the light of educa tion spread, kings belonged to the people. Education emancipates. It is the advance guard of democracy. It de mands that the rights of the many prevail above the rights of the few. It is altruistic, not individualistic. If you are truly educated you are a friend of the masses. That is edu cated patriotism. Education is a movement outward, not inward. No day on the school calendar is so weii named as Commencement. It is the beginning of work, not the end; it is the binding to duty, not the re lease from it. A W AY OIT. HE are farms in thi county that , 1 never gvt out of debt. It is r.ox m the cards with o nil nary farm- r.g. Vr.ier prrsent eorduions each rear will see the debt growing bigger and bigger. Here is a way out, but tVf work. Other districts have dr.e i when thev turned their backs on the old style of farmir.g ar.d went into the dairying business. This d not mean that every man who gies into the dairy business make a success of it, for there are men who r.ot make a success of anything. I'ut the dkiry business dte offer a r.re opportunity for thus who exert their brain and settle down to steady work. Some of the richest farming districts in the United States are the dairy districts. At Prairie City is a creamery. This creamery will buy all the butter fat orTered. Here is your opportunity. If you want it, take it. and if you don't, leave it alone ar.d watch the mortgage on the ranch grow. At one tin-.e this creamery distributed as high as $14. (XXl a month among the farmers. Canyon City Eagle. Morrow county farmers, may this not apply to you as well? Heppner has a thriving creamery, and condi tions for dairying are every bit as good in Morrow county as they are in Grant. The above does not mean that you mut quit farming all together and go into the dairy business. But there are few farms in this county that will not support more cows than are now being cared for. And the monthly cream check from the addi tional cows is an item worth consider ation. Have you thought about it? The Eagle also says, '"Farmers should eat what they produce, if they expect others to do the same, and to promote an industry that operates for their benefit they should call for home made butter when they go to the store," - THIS WOMAN STARTED SOME THING. THE Virginia woman who pinned a note to a potato she had raised. reading: "I got 24 cents a bushel. j What did you give?" started some thing, because the man who noticed I the potato paid $1.20 a bushel, and the facts leaked out. Trust a woman j to find an ingenious way to bring op- , pression to public notice. Also hap pily, trust the American man to change conditions when they assail the welfare of our womanhood. One of these days we will bring in to being a real commission of inquiry, one with vision, one with practical business sense, one with sound econ omic knowledge and finally one with out self-interest and free from pull. An impossible combination? No, some day it will be found, and then a happier condition will arise as rapidly as the blood-suckers who live on the labor of their fellows fall by the wayside. Middlemen are neces sary, of course, due to the great com plexities of our modern civilization, but in the last twenty years the con sumer has been removed so far from the producer that they have nothing in common. Every day the strain is getting birder and harder to bear, and it will get worse before it gets better. Na ture brings about man's advance by h lash. There seems to be no other way. One day, however, we will im plant in the minds of our highschool boys and girls a lo7e for economics perhaps under a more attractive name the Science of Human Free dom, for example Then will arrive a generation that will not be fooled by the exploiters of mankind. II ' ' Slat's Diary I By ROSS FARQCHAR. FRIDAY dum Vi r 3 Jane still continues to be ' et on all matters pretaining I to Sports and horse races and etc. 1 ! was a telling her about I'ncle Hens horse witch he had ran in a steeple chase and she ast me did he ever ketch it yet. Saturday Ma has ben p-w 2 taw king pa into tae i 3 wiing out sum insurance ""s wrtgen and today he went , 1 ; i jown to me ir to oe Xnmined to get a policy l gess tie cum out aa rite. Only he didder,', no just Exactly what the Dr. ment when he ed to him. You are as Sound as a Nut. Sunday Mr. Gillem was at are chirch this morning and ma was h tawktng about it at dinner time & pa sed the only time Gillem ever went to chirch was when we wanted to ketch up a little on his sleep. So this must of ben the reasan as he has ben up pritty late here of lately for sev ral nites. Monday This evning they was a man here and ast pa did he have any old close to give away to send to the Epyleptick home for Invalids or sum thing. And pa reply ed and sed. No he was saveing all his old close for tramps and ministers. Tuesday Ma's Club gave ft big dinner by the name of Luncheon to day and ma wassent very keen on t tending as she always gets the neck to eat when they have chicked or elst the back Bone. She sed the only time she ever got a tender peaca of meat at a Club luncheon was 1 time when she bit her toung. Wensday well I had a narry ex caps from trouble. I cum home late and betore ma got started to jawing me I ast her if she wood ever punish me for sum thing I had not done and she sed Wy no dear I woodent. Then I told her I haddent pulled the weeds in the onyan patch witch she had in formed me to pull up. And she was as good a sport as her wird and sed You shud ought to get into' the Dip lama tick Sore when you grow up. And we latter hartily. A specshally me. She dussent belong to such a bad Sex after all. Thirsday The preecher was ast ing ma what had become of her yun ger bro. and she sed she gess he was in the publishing bisness as the last thing she herd of him he was make ing books over in Maryland sum place. Uncle Hen and me passed a sly smile to each another on the q.t. Poem by (nclejolvt THE the A NEW AUTOMOBILE. country's got no patience with old, back-number skate, but he allers holds a welcome fer the one that's up-to-date. . . . An' my lot whs cast betwixt the tall grass an' the bresh I've set my inner work- in's to the task of keepin' fresh. Of course we love the ladies, from our store of southern pride and you'll see us steppin' higher when there's one on either side, and while we ve got convictions that I hardly keer to state, in regards to shorter dresses we admire 'em up to date! There's enough of disenchantment to abide by when we must so we os tracize the flivver that's a pile of rags an' rust, and ef taxes ever draps below the confiscation rate, you'll be apt to ketch me figgerin' on a boat that's up to date! costs and disbursements in this ac- tion incurred. You are further notified that the following described real property I belonging to you and taken as your j property has, at the instance of the I plaintiffs, been attached in this ac- j tion. to-wit: E N E Vt SWfcNE. and NWV4SEU of Section 18, Tp. 6 South, Range 28, E. V. 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 Gazette-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 2Uh day of April, 1923, and the date of the first publication hereof is May 3, 1923. S. E. NOTSON, Attorney for IMaiutitTs. Address: Heppner, Oregon. Heppner Sanitarium DR. J. PERRY CONDER Payiclan-ln-Chara Treatment of ,11 diiaaaea. UoUud wards for contagious diacaaaa. E. J. KELLER TREE PRUNING AUCTIONEERING HORSE SHOEING Heppner, Oregon Rey-MJlMauW AUTOCA3TEH. H CECIL NEWS ITEMS UNDERMINING MAN'S RESPON SIBILITY. GOVERNOR CHARLES W. BRYAN, of Nebraska, attracted national attention when in his inaugural ad dress he said: "During the past few years and especially during the late war period there has been a univer sal tendency towards an excess of government. This is resulting in the enactment of public laws for the cure of private and personal ills that are burdening the state government with functions and obligations which will destroy the effectiveness of govern mental activities and also of individ ual responsibility." If this condition be true of the states, and there can be no doubt it is true, what shall be said of such an evil when its operations are extend ed to the national congress. Perhaps the evil is most forcibly brought to public attention in considering the question of appropriations so fla grantly made in defiance of the fun damental and just principle that one Ciass or group shall become the pri vate beneficiary of appropriations made at the expense of the taxpayers. But more than this, the radical ten dencies daily becoming more evi dent in government circles, disclosed as a fact by the members of both great parties, are persistently press ing the opportunist to foist on the nation laws and governmental re strictions that are utterly destructive of business expansion, but which provide an opportunity for a little flag waving, that finds its reward in the applause of the unthinking. If we don't look out we will soon be "governmented to death." Mr. and Mrs. Geo. U. Krebs of Port land visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. C. Krebs of the Last Camp returning home on Sunday. C. Henriksen of Portland arrived at Ewir.g on Saturday and will visit at the homes of George and Oral Henriksen for some time. Arthur Turner of lone and Henry Streeter of Cecil are busy these days putting J. W. Osborn's caterpillar in to working order again. Alfred Shaw, Herb and Annie Hynd of Butterby Flats visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Chandler on Thursday. Franklin Ely, accompanied by Miss Gladys Perriot of Morgan, were call ers at the J. W. Osborn home on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Farns worth of Rhea Siding were Arlington business callers on Tuesday. W. H. Chandler of Willow Creek ranch is visiting with friends at Leb anon this week. A. Henriksen of the Moore ranch of Heppner was a Cecil caller on Wednesday. Hert Instone left on Wednesday for Heppner where he will spend a few days. Miss Gussie Lindatrom of lone is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lundell. Mayor Hynd of Butterby Flats spent the week-end in Baker and La Grande. R. Balcomb and Martin Bauernfiend of Morgan were Cecil callers on Fri day. Babe and Louis Montague of Ar lington were Cecil callers on Thurs day. Everett Logan of Heppner was a Cecil business caller on Sunday. DRIFTING HOMES. OW about your home, Mr. Husband and Mrs, Wife? The a ve rage husband is a coward and the average wife a bully. Are you? Many have either yielded to the spirit of the day and have permitted their wives to dominate the domestic circles to its disgrace, or they have practically abandoned their homes. Consequently, they occupy one sec tion of the city, namely, the business and club sections, the saloon or the pool hall, while the wives take a sim ilar direction in another part of the city: the home stands between these two factors in a neglected condition. Women have been thrown out into the world and seem to care more for the activities, excitements, gaities and outside glares, than they do for the domestic drudgery, seclusion, re sponsibilities and glories of home. Women ought to be forced to go home. But their husbands are too cowardly to force them, or they are too indifferent to their responsibil ity, or they would rather glide or travel the road of least resistance, and let the home drift. The home is drifting; children are roaming; wives are gadding. Their husbands are practicing fraud and dishonesty on their families. They are cowardly. The time has come to re-establish the home with the sovereignty of the federal head, the sacredness of do mestic seclusion, and the proper ad justment of domestic duties. The dark spot in the present civil ization is the neglected home. Cow ardly husbands are responsible for every phase of domestic decline. Let the men awake, reassert them selves, re-establish their homes and build again the domestic the na tional fortification namely, a well organized domestic circle. do. plaintiffs, recovered judgment against the defendants, Walter Rood and Helen Rood, his wife, for the sum of $22,500.00, with interest thereon from the 21st day of January, 1922, at the rate of 8 per cent per annum until paid, and the further sum of $1600.00, attorneys fee, and the costs and disbursements of said suit, taxed and allowed at $16.50. Notice is here by given that I will on Saturday, the 2nd day of June, 1923, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the front door of the County Court house of the City of Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, the following described real property situated in Morrow County, Oregon, to-wit: All of Sec tion 23, and the South Half of Sec tion 14, in Township 3 South, Range 25, E. W. M.( or so much thereof as is necessary to satisfy said judgment, costs and accruing costs, same being the real property mortgaged to se cure payment of said judgment and ordered sold by the court for satis faction of same, with costs and accru ing costs. Heppner, Oregon, May 3, 1923. GEORGE McDUFFEE, Sheriff. 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 tate 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. FIKE INSURANCE Waters & Anderson Heppner, Oregon MATERNITY HOME MKS. ti. C. AIKEN, BEPPNKR 1 am prepared to tak a limited num ber at maternity catea at my bom. PalicnU privilea tm eh tbalr phynician. lleat of care and attention assured. phonic m Ii. VAN MARTER FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE INSURANCE Old Una Companies REAL ESTATE Heppner, Ore. JOS.J.NYS ATTORN EY-AT-LAW Upstairs in Humphreys Building Heppner, Oregon Ginghams 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. IP II 111 EVERY morning when we wake up now the sun is shining, the birds are chirping a welcome to the new born day. S hy not fall in hne arise and shine smile and perk up at the call of this delightful Spring. If we want to grunt and moan of course we can do it, but the sun will bine just the same for those who have enough sense to enjoy it. Old Dame Nature has fixed things up so that there's no chance for the fellow who keeps out of step putting the whole procession on the blink. You might just as well bow to that old dame and march along. When a wom an will she will, and you may depend on't. and when she won't she won't, and there's an end on't. 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. HOME SWEET HOME Oecar, You're Luck; It Wu A Pillow 'Vj COulO AT LEATT 00 SOMCTMIwel TMeRE'S FANNV V-ttS LESSON rOZ EXAMINATION - JO IN AND "fVMV THEY CALL THIS language the MOTHER. III -II rs 'will MJ$. f-ruTTUTlv.HAT ELSEfW) I ( II p Kfl ) I J -iMEx CALL IT? FATHER. J V " U 1 . nJTXO SI. NevER 6ETV A chance AlABlTS mave cw A LITTLS SEND IT TO us aup we'll PBJNT IT E.B.S. SENT BROTHER ALWANrCATP Mif pevieeT IRRIGON BOY NOMINATED. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor- vallis. May 3. Wait Rising of Irri gon, senior in pharmacy at Oregon Agricultural college, was nominated for membership on the Greater 0. A. C. committee, yesterday at Btudent body meeting. Three members will be elected at this time. Others nom inated are Raymond Hixson of La Verne, Cal., Mrs. Ruth Wislon of Boring, Cecil Redden and Harry Kel sey, both of Corvallis; Elmer Goudy and Malcolm Ronnusaen, both of Portland; William North of Clats kanie, and Gertrude Dowse tt of Greaham. The elections will take place next week. SUMMONS. 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 St Devos, PlaintifTs, 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 plaintilTs 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 nth of May, 1920, to the 5th day of De cember, 1920, and at the rate of ten per cen tper annum from the 6th day of December, 19 20. and for tholr 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 1 OREGON: You and each of you are I 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; 535.00 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 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 Innds covered by said mortgage and which wilt be sold under such foreclosure are as follows: EVNE, SW4NEVi, and NWKSEtt of Sec. IS, 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 G zette-Times, a weekly newspaper printed and published in Heppner, Oregon, by order of Hon. G. W. Phelps, Judge of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, made and entered on the 5th day of Aprli, 1923, and the date of first publication is April 12. 1923. S. E. NOTSON, Attorney for Plaintiff. Address: Heppner, Oregon. 5 GOOD CIGARETTES HEMSTITCHING I have installed a hemstitching machine at iriy apart ment in the Gilman building and will give all orders for work in that line my best attentoin. Your patronage is solicited. Mrs. C, C. Patterson, if. Bone meal, scratch feed, egg maker chick feed, grit and oyster shell, all necessary to get the best results from your poultry pens. Come to us for these. Peoples Hardware Company. 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 on right side; unless said animals are redeemed by owner before said date. Sale will be held at the ranch of the undersigned, 16 miles southwest of Hardman, Oregon. ROY ROBINSON. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE UN DER FORECLOSURE. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that umli'r and by virtue of an execution and order of sale lusued by the Clerk of Morrow County, Oregon, dated the 3rd day of May, 1922, in a certain suit in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, wherein J, O, Hager and Ruth linger McMur- HVU 3 8 Professional Cards 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 land 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 1 The Gazette-Times Is Morrow County's Newspaper DR. F. E. FARRIOR DENTIST Office Upstairs Over Pofttoffice Heppner. Oregon rm GENUINE UULT DURHAM TOBACCO Gilliam & Bisbee's j& Column j& A. D. McMURDO, M. D. i'HYSICI.VN & SURGEON Office in Manonic Building Trained Nurne Anafatant Heppner, OreRnn C. C. CHICK, M. D. PHYSICIAN & HURGEON Office Up ft lairs Over PostofRce Trained Nurae AHsintant Heppner, Oregon 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 & Bisbce. Water turns the wheel. Money turns the business. We have the business it don't turn. Creditors please take notice. Gilliam & Bisbee WOODSON & SWEEK ATTOKNEVS-AT-I.AW Offices In Firnt National Hank Building Heppner, Oregon Van Vactor & Ilutler ATTORNF.Y8-AT-I.AW Suite 305 First National Bank Building THE DALLES, ORE. S. E. NOTSON ATTORN KY-AT-LAVV Office in Court Houne Heppner, Oregon F. II. ROMNSON LAWYER 10 NE, ORKCON E. J. STARKEY ELECTRICIAN HOUSE WIRING A SPECIALTY Heppner, Oregon I'hc.n. 172 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 PHONE 53