PAGE TWO THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEPPNER. OREGON. THURSDAY. MAY 31, 1923. THE GiZETIHIIS THE HfcfPWWl GAZETTE, EfltabltoWd THE HFF'ISKh TIMRS. Kt&bllah4 nwwtwr 1ft. Iff? (W)dt4 Prrr 1. Hit Onvon, M ootid matter. ADVERTISING RATFft GIVEN ON APPLICATION SUBSCRIPTION Om Vmr . Ait Mortka Tfarw Mnih hing-i (Vipic RATES: . I.N . . MORROW COITNTT OFFICIAL PAPER THE AMERICAN PKESS ASSOCIATION CULTIVATION CULTIVATES YOV. By Richard Lloyd Jones. MAX benefits more by the process of labor than by the products of labor. Where Nature pives most lav ih.y man doc ?eat for himself And there we fifid Humanity at its lowest cbh. The less man cultivates the less he cultivated. Nature often kills by kindness. It in from the stern, riporoua and naturally unfriendly stretches that we pet our hardiest and best Humanity. The arid waste forces the farmer to alertness and energy. One must be more than fanner to farm a desert. He must be engineer; he roust bring water from distant mountain basins and release it on the parched ground. He must master pates and sluices to make the reluc tant land yield its inherent richness. Success comes to him who is bipper than his job. The idle are penalized by weakness. The workers are re warded with power. For each atom of strength expanded more energy is given. Resistance produces friction and friction give the dynamo its driving power. Too much smoothness or lu brication may result in a loss of force. Your automobile engine is never so likely to "go dead" as when you give it no work to do let it idle. Necessity is the mother of inven tion, because need forces action, want compels man to do. Food too easily found always nur tures the sluggish mind and flabby muscle. It takes true greatness of soal to weather too easy a life. we often hear of a man who can master adversity, but who becomes as putty under the consoling influ ence of affluence. To be forced to fight for food quick ens the wit. The smartest dog is. not the pro tected lap pet, but the dog whose wit is whettfd by duty to perform. Slothfulness and waste are always found where Nature is kindest, the soil richest, and competition lacking. Cultivation is a kindly habit. It is the expression of a mother in stinct; the passion for power to cre ate, develop and buiid. It is the wish to nurture the seeds of good, to bring them the moisture of gentle rain, the warmth of the sun. the protection from being crowded out by the stronger things which are not of ser vice to the better end. We cultivate that the best possi ble may be brought forth. And in the beautiful economy of life the ben efit is reciprocal. It is our struggle against the ele ments that lifts our civilization. Cultivate anything and you culti vate yourself. Make anything grow and you make yourself grow. Build anything and you build yourself. The man who does the biggest work is al ways recorded in history as the big gest man. , Cultivation is the process of civil isation. Perfection is the product of work. "Jl'ST ONE MORE TAX." THIS is just one more tax" is the barn-yard a PnT it each year when they allow IVfMHt p,-r(r, and urns f 5iM.tH.V in property to be wird out by tire. hen about per cent of such death and loss i preventable. The Cnderwriter 1-aboratoriea in Chir&go has been te-ting every kind of buiiding and household equipment ai to its f re proof or rire resistinc; qualities and its advice on thes mat ter is free to the public. Carelessness with fire is equally dangerous in a little town like Cam den or in a great city like New York. It this aful disaster be a warn ing to every household in the land to be careful ith tire and let parents demand that public official see that school house and public buildings are properly safeguarded so that an other Camden catastrophe cannot oc cur. 14MW Al'TO FATALITIES. FIGURES compiled by the national bureau of Casualty and Surety Un derwriters reveal that 14.000 people were killed in America last year as a result of automobile accidents. This represents an increase of 1, 600. or 12 per cent, over 121. Auto mobile accidents in 1922, were respon sible for 67 per cent of all the vehic ular fatalities within the last sixty years, more than four times the num ber caused by railroad trains, and seven times those due to street rail ways. The only ray of sunshine in the report is revealed in the fact that while the number of automobiles have increased five fold since 1915, the to tal of automobile fatalities baa lit tle more than doubled. Education apparently is the only remedy since traffic regulation has proved a failure. Carelessness at railroad crossings is one of the great est causes of automobile fatalities and this in spite of the fact that transportation companies do every thing in their power to keep people off the track. REMEMBER that birthday when there were twelve candles on the cake and the big piece rested on the plate of that wonderf ul girl whose golden curl were the most beautiful in all the world nd then that birth day, when that girl with nut brown hair glanced shyly as Pad told you you were now a man. And then the birthdays came quickly, until there were no candles on the cake, but just a touch of thoughtfulness and love reflected in the making. Now in the mellow of years we can think of birthdays and their joys just as the mirror of the only birthday the day we pass from life into Eternity. Smile as the hour nears. Give the little chicks a good start; we have tha necessary chick feed. Also for the laying hens bone meal, egg maker, grit and oyster shell. Peo ples Hardware Company. 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. Slat's Diary homo t tfw he re- A when 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. Give the little chicks a good start; we have the necessary chick feed. Also for the laying hens bone meal, egg maker, grit and oyster shell. Peo ples Hardware Company. Poem by fncle lot hit a FOR A RAINY DAY. UNLESS I'm poor at guessin' there ain't a grander blessin that's sent to cheer this anxious world of ours. . . When the farmer starts to frettin and the medder needs a wet tin' the thing that helps the bettin' is the showers. . . I've saw a heap of weather takin years, an years together, an' I reckon I have et my sheer of dust, and I've allers been befriended, when the fervid drouth was ended by a copious an' splendid thunder-gust! And I've never had it fail me, when the prickly heat would ail me, I'd do my level best to not complain, for I know my blessed Mas ter watches His earthly pastur' and will jugulate disaster with a rain. . . In spite of their devotion, there's some that get a notion, that fortune or misfortune's only luck, but it's been my observation, there's migh ty close relation between a man's sal vation, and his ptuckl And so, in rainy weather, I never wonder wheth er we face annihilation by the flood, but I keep my sperit happy with a rhyme that's nice an' snappy, though my cloze is wet an' flappy with the mud! on the 12th day of July, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: Sher man Shaw, Joe Robbins, Mrs, Ida Dexter, H. M. Yocum, all of Heppner, Oregon. CARL G. HELM, Register. LEGAL NOTICES and curbstone opinion of thousands of country taxpayers and city taxpayers on the pending income tax law. While the hasty opinion hardly doet justice to the law, it isn't far from the facts. It would be more accurate to say that this law opens up the way for higher taxes, which it most assuredly does. While the income tax law promises to reduce property taxes to the ex tent that it collects money from in come tax. that very promise excite" hopes that new taxes can be voted on property to absorb the amount of the expected saving. Thousands are supporting the in come tax measure in the hope that it will enable them to get property and mill&ge taxes voted for their own pet purposes. If we ratify this income tax law we simply are Inviting all the mill age propagandists to get ttteir pet millage measures on state, cr unty and local ballots. Do you know a millage enthusiast with a pet hobby, who also it not in favor of this state income tax? All of the enthusiasts favor it; .her just love to vote taxes on other people, end thU state income tax measure looks good to them because it opens the way to vote other new taxes on the pretext that reduction of prop erty taxes provides the money they seek for their pet schemes. Oiegon Voter. RAILROAD EFFICIENCY CUTS OPERATING COSTS. WITHIN the last two years the rail roads have reduced their operat ing ex-penses $70M0,000 a month and in Janu&ry and February of thie year they were $4,000,000 less than in the same months of 1920, under government operation, although th ntilronds this year are paying higher average wages, higher prices for coal and hauling more business than un der government control. These fig ures have just ben made pubiic in an editorial of the current i&HUe of the "Railway Age" replying to criti citron of t'flicieiK'y of private oper ation of railways voiced by Senator James Cousens of Michigan. GRIEF BOWED TOWN Bl'KIES FIRE VICTIMS. AM DEN, South Carolina, is grief V- strfrken over the death of seven ty-sfx children, parents and friend? in a school house rire. H is useless to elaborate on the details of the fire which resulted from a rickety fan tuning cttunihg an oil lamp to full to the floor during n entertainment being given by the children. The sunVring ohukkJ by such firen a this is beyond undemanding and y-flt almost wei-kiy we read of such school hvu tragedies where one or more children meet dt'atli. The National Hoard of Fire Un derwriUr has been doing everything in it power to show the American pt-ople the erimntai waste which they By ROSS FARQUHAR. T7RIDAY We was out for dinner to- I nite at supper time and when we was a comeing home ma jumps onto ast him why did ject the Gravy he likes it so much and Mrs. Gillem had went and made it a specally for his Benefits as she had always new he lik ed it . Pa sed the reas on he diddent care for none of it was because he seen a cupple hairs in it and he prefers his Gravy ball headed. Saturday P a was asting the new Dr. how was bissness now and if he had got many Customers yet and the new Dr. replyed and sed they was lots of fellows comeing j in and trying to get perscTiptions. : And once in a grate while they was sumbuddy cums in witch is sick. Sunday Joe Hix is a going to quit smoking he says. He red in a paper where evry Cigaret you smoke it nocks a week off of the tale of yure life and he got to figgering. He has : been useing 10 a day for the past 5 yrs. since the war and it shows that he has beat hisself out of 347 years. Monday Uncle Hen was here this evning and he and ma was a tawking and he sed he thot a woman shud ought to no how to ern money and ma up and says she eras evry cent she gets a holt of and he says How do you figger that. She sed if you j new how hard it is for me to get money out of my husband you wood say I ernt it. Uncle Hen is a old Batchelor and owns a race Horse. Tuesday I was a telling Jane that Uncle Hen's horse had win the Der by last winter down to New Orleans and she sed Well what in the wirld does a horse want with a Derby, they cant wear them can they. I answer ed her in Latin & sed Packs of Bas kets witch means peace be with you. Wednesday The trffick Cop told pa he cuddent stop in the middle of the square today and pa just laffed and sed I gess you are not acquainted with this car of mine. Thirsday Ma woodent let me wear my new pants today and I had a no tion to spill ink on my old ones. But I diddent. I dissided it wassent enny use to biteing up yure face to spike yure nose as the proverb goes. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. U. S. LAND OFFICE at La Grande, Oregon, May 26, 1923. NOTICE is hereby given that George R. Pearson, of Lena, Oregon, who, on March 12, 1920, made Addi tional Homestead Entry, No. 018128. for Lot 1, Section 31, Township 1 South, Range 29 East, W, M., SEl4 SEi Section 25, Township 1 South. Range 28 East, W. M-, SEHNWS, SHi SEH, Section 33, SWSW, Section 34. Township 3 South, Range 29 East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three year proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before United States Com missioner, at Heppner. Oregon, on the 17th day of July, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: F. J. Hiatt, John Keegan, Jas. Higgins, F. M. Duncan, all of Lena, Oregon. . CARL G. HELM, Register. 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, adminis trator of the estate of R. E. Jones, deceased, and all persons having claims against the estate of said de ceased are hereby required to pre sent the same with proper vouchers, to the said administrator at the law office of Jos. J. Nys, at Heppner, Ore gon, within six months from the date hereof. Dated this 10th day of May, 1923. C. N. JONES, Administrator. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned executrix of the estate of James L. Swift, deceased, has filed her final account as such executrix and that the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County has appointed Monday, the 2nd day of July, 1923, at the hour of 10 clock in the forenoon of said day as the time, and the County Court room in the Court House at Heppner, Oregon, as the place, for hearing and settlement of said final account. Ob jections to said final account must be filed on or before said date. SARAH ELIZABETH SWIFT, Executrix. Watch Out. (From Morrow County F. B. News) The principle slogan now-a-days seems to be "Watch out that you don't get pinched." There are so many new laws being enacted now days that the farmer is almost afraid to move for fear he will "get caught." Your car has to have a license before it can run, you have to have a license before you can drive it, the dog must be licensed before she can go along, and I suppose in a year or two more the wife and kids will have to be licenced before they dare step on the running board. You must not drive only so fast, nor Btop except in cer tain places nor turn except in denig nated places and then in a certain direction with the proper signal, the tires must be of -a certain size and the light just right. It sometimes makes us yearn to drive the old one- eyed horse down the cow trails with the whole family and never think about a license. Maybe the legisla ture ought to be given a rest for I few years and give those who make this government a chance to catch AH Aboard For Moro. (From Morrow County f. B. News) The sixteenth of June is the day set upon for the farmers of this county to visit the Moro experiment Htation. Word was received from Mr. Stephens, director of the station, that thU date would be best because the various crops would be in best condition at about that time. Mr. Stephens stated that the Was co county farmers would be there on the same date and it would afford us an opportunity to get acquainted and visit with our neighbor farmers, and there would be be no inconvenience felt because of the added numbers because Mr. Stephens said that he could direct 75 or 100 farmers about the farm just as easily as he could a few. Lawt year there were about forty farmers made this trip and all came back believing their time welt spent. This year there ought to be more be caua of the added interest and be cause there is a good gravel road practically all the way to Moro. It would be much appreciated if those who intend going would tell either the county agent or J. O. Tur ner about it as early as possible so that complete arrangements can be made. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE UN DER FORECLOSURE. By virtue of an execution and or der of sale issued by the Clerk of the Cricuit Court of the State of Ore gon, dated May 24, 1923, in a cer tain suit in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, wherein Agnes Hynd, plaintiff, re covered judgment against E. K. Wy land, Ora M. Wyland, his wife, and E. K. Wyland, administrator of the estate of J. H. Wyland, deceased, for $1,000.00 with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum from the 1st day of July, 1921, for $125.00 attorneys fees and for the costs and disbursements of said suit taxed and allowed at $23.50 and a fur ther order that the real property mortgaged to secure payment of said judgment be sold as by law provided Notice is hereby given that I will on Saturday, the 23rd day of June 1923, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the front door of the Court House in Hepp' ner, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash hand, the following described real property situated in Morrow County, Oregon, towit: The Northeast quarter of Section 7 in Township 5 south, Range 25 E. W. M., same being the real property mortgaged by defendants to secure payment of said judgment and order ed sold by the court for that purpose. Dated this 24th day of May, 1923. GEORGE McDUFFEE, Sheriff. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Or egon. May 12, 1923. NOTICE is hereby given that James Higgins, of Lena, Oregon, who on March 8, 1920, made Additional Homestead Entry No. 017234, for WMi NWH, W-SWW, Section 8, and on May 21, 1921, made Additional Homestead Entry, No. 016974, for SE'iNWU, NESWVi, Section 32, Township 1 South, Range 29 East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three-year Proof to establish claim to the land above described, before United States Com missoner, at Heppner. Oregon, on the 6th day of July, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: John Keegan, Phil Hirl, George Pearson, John Healey, all of Lena, Oregon. CARL G. HELM, Register. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. William Hill, Plaintiff) vs. )SUMMONS: Anna Hill, Defendant.) IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint of the plaintiff herein, filed against you in the above entitled court and cause, within six weeks from the date of first publication of this Summons; and if you fail to so appear and an swer said complaint for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in his com plaint, which is as follows, to-wit: That the bonds of matrimony now and heretofore existing between the plain tiff and the defendant be dissolved and forever held for naught, and the plaintiff have an absolute divorce from the defendant. 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 at Heppner, Oregon, by order of Hon. William T. Campbell, County Judge of Morrow County, State of Oregon, made and entered on the 18th day of May, 1923, The date of first publication of this Summons is May 24, 1923. WOODSON & SWEEK, Attorneys for the Plaintiff. Address, Heppner, Oregon. Mary A. Hein, ) Plaintiff.) vs. ) SUMMONS C. E. Hein and Henry) Dayton, Defendants.) To C. E. Hein and Henry Dayton, the above named defendants: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby required to apppear and answer the complaint of the plaintiff herein filed, against you in the above entitled court and cause, within six weeks from the date of first publication of this Sum mons, and if you fail so to appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in her complaint, which is as follows: That the bonds of matrimony now and heretofore existing between plaintiff and the defendant C. E. Hein, be forever dissolved and held for naught, and the plaintiff have an ab solute divorce from said defendant. That the plaintiff be given the cus tody and control of the minor child. Melvin Hein, aged seven years. That the deed given by the defen dant, C. E. Hein to the defendant, Henry Dayton, be held void and of no effect, save as a trust deed, and that the defendant, Henry Dayton holds the legal title to said land in trust for defendant, C. E. Hein and not otherwise. That plaintiff have an undivided one-third part in her individual right m fee of said land. i nat piaintitt have and recover from defendant, C. E. Hein, as ali mony, and for care, support and edu cation of the minor child of herself and C. E. Hein, the Bum of $3500.00 in one gross sum, and that said am ount be imposed as a lien upon the interest of C. E. Hein in said land. That plaintiff recover from defen dant her costs and disbursements In this suit, and have such other re lief as is meet and proper. mis summons is served upon you by publication thereof once a week for bix consecutive weeks in the Gazette-Times, a weekly newspaper, printed and published at Heppner, Oregon, by order of Hon. Gilbert W. Phelps, Judge of said court, made and entered on the 3rd day of May, 1923. The date of first publication thereof is the 10th day of May, 1923 and the period of publication expires on the ZUt day of June, 1923. WOODSON & SWEEK, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Address, Heppner, Oregon. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. U. 8. LAND OFFICE, at La Grande, Oregon, May 19, 1923. NOTICE is hereby given that Will iam Pleiss, of Heppner, Oregon, who on January 13t 1920, made Additional Homestead Entry, No 017647, for S'NW'i, SWJA, WfcHEK, Section 32, Township 8 south, Range 28 east, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of Intention to make three-year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before United States Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE UN DER FORECLOSURE. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under and by virtue of an executi and order of sale insued by the Clerk or Morrow County, Oregon, dated the 3rd day of May, 1922, in a certuin sui. in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, wherein J. O. Hager and Ruth Hager McMur- do, plaintiffs, recovered judgment against the defendants, Walter Rood and Hfflen Rood, hi wife, for the sum 5 GOOD CIGARETTES JLHJ' GENUINE "BULL DURHAM TOBACCO 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 $46.50. Notice is here by given that I will on Saturday, the nd 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. of Oregon for Morrow County. ' W. J. Rush and A. L. Devon, Partners doing business un der the stylo and firm name of Rush A Devos, Plaintiffs,: a. I A. J. Spencer, . Defendant To A. J. Spencer, tha 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 6th of May, 1920, to the 6th day of De cember, 1920, and at the rate of ten per cen tper annum, from the 6th 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: EViNEfc, SWWNE4, and NWfcSEK of Section 18, Tp. 6 South, Range 28, E, W. M., and that 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 26th day of April, 1923, and the date of the first publication hereof is May 3, 1923. S. E. 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. Heppner Sanitarium DR. J. PERRY CONDER Phytic lan-in-Chart 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 catea at my borne. Paticnta privilege to chooa thvtr own phyHician. Bent of care and attention aaaured. PHONE m E. J. KELLER TREE PRUNING AUCTIONEERING HORSE SHOEING Heppner, Oregon L, VAN MARTER FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE INSURANCE Old Lin, Companies REAL ESTATE Heppner, Ore. JOS. J. NYS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Upstairs In Humphreys Building Heppner, Oregon ! Professional Cards L i DR. F. E. FARRIOR DENTIST Office Upstairs Over Postofflce Heppner, Oregon SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the Stnte Gilliam & Bisbee's j& Column j& 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 Postofflce Trained Nurse Assistant 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 & Bisbee. Water turns the wheel. Money turns the business. We have the business it don't turn. Creditors please take notice. Gilliam & Bisbee 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 Strawberries We are getting them now every day. Oregon berries will soon be on the market. ARE YOU THINKING ABOUT CANNING AND PRESERVING Fresh Vegetables OF ALL KINDS Our Grocery Department is stocked to meet all needs Sam Hughes Co. 1 Phone Main 962 The Gazette-Times Is Morrow County's Newspaper F. II. ROBINSON LAWYER IONE, OREGON E. J. STARKEY ELECTRICIAN HOUSE WIKING A SPECIALTY Heppner, Oregon Phone 7! FOR BETTER "WALLS D CEILINGS Si. 11 The old house looks young again. Our new Plasterboard made it. Good for old walls and ceilings. "Materially yours " TUM-A-LUM HEPPNER LEXINGTON IONE 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 PHONE 53