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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1923)
PAGE TWO THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON. THURSDAY, SEPT. 27, 1923. THE GAZETTE-TIMES TBI FrrTM CAtKTT. bUiltaM THE BWPMUI TIMUk. Brta blUrf NoMttwr 1. IBM MUit Pvtorwr U, lilt fsMlMrf Taria Mnilnc W ? J m miif Orawf mJ mtrrW . PotoAw at bWMT, APYEKTWKG ATF GIVEN ON APPLJt ATION EbbvCrUTTION RATES: Om Tfcf ti VmhW - Tfcrw MoatlM - ,. Stnft CopM ,. ttM IN .71 MORBOW COINTY OFFICIAL PAPKB Porrlrw ATrtfctnf RpwwiUtit THE AWLKK AN PkfcSA ASSOCIATION charJ Lloyd Jones Says: WATCH TI1E WEIGHT YOl CARRY BL'XK nd junk are the two great impediment to propress. It is a important to know how to get rid of thinp an to pet thine. We ccumu t&t thine liat think Are essen tial to our convenience and comfort only to find in the course of time that they encumber. Pylviculturifits tell us that it helps rather than harms a tree to occasion ally root op and replant it in its early years. The roots become train ed to concentrate. Concentration is the first essential step to success. He who dissipates his powers is on the sure road to disappointment. The captain wno pemlts the hull of his ship to become barnacle-coated may order just as much power in his engine-room as the ship whose hull is free and clean, but he doea not make as much speed. Despair is the reward of every at tempt to carry too heavy a load. The beauty of life in found not in abund ance of thinps we possess, but in the worth of thing's we ho'd to the worth they represent to us in our living. We are prone to go throug-h life with an unconscious accumulation of barnacles, d rapping a worthless weight through the waters we should be eager to traverse with speed that we may know the world and be of use id it. The will determines our progress; freedom and slavery are both acts of the will. He is free who lives strip ped of the barnacles of inertia; he it a slave who falls into that which he would avoid. Wise men get rid of all impedi ments. The thoughtless And the fool ish spend much good energy in ac quiring things they soon wish they were rid of. Thst which is true of things is also true of thoughts. You abase rather than use your years when you carry around a load of ancient principles which, through the wear of Aftor X Every Meal Rave a packet hi your pocket for ever-ready refreshment. Aids digestion. Allays thirst. Soothes the throat For Quality, Flavor and me Sealed PicUje, COMING TO The Dalles and Pendleton Dr. Mellenthin SPECIALIST la Internal Medicine for the put twelve years Does Not Operate Will be at Dalles Hotel, The Dalles,1 Monday, Oct 1. Dorion Hotel, Pendleton, Tuesday, Oct. 2. Office Hours: 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. Two Days Only No Charge for Consultation Dr. Mellenthin is a regular gradu ate in medicine and surgery and is licensed ty the state of Oregon. Us visits professionally the more Important towns And cities And offers to ail who call on this trip free con sultation, except the expense of treat ment when desired. According to his method of treat ment be does not operate for chronic appendicitis, gall stones, ulcers of stomach, tonsils or adenoids. He has to his credit wonderful re sults in diseases of the stomach, liv er, bowels, blood, skin, nerves, heart, kidneys, bladder, bed w tit ting, catarrh, weak lungs, rheumatism, sciatica, leg Uicers and rectal ailments. If yon have been ailing for any length of time and do not get any belter, do not fail to call, as Improper measures rather than disease are very often the cause of your long standing trouble. Lemember above date, that consult ation on this trip will be fret and that his treatment is different. Married women must be accompan ied by their husbands. Address: 211 Bradbury Bldg., Los Arce.es, Calif. time, have been worn to mere peju ,ic. It is only the free mind like tie free hull that cab hope to keep pa?e with progresa. s-s-s MORROW COl'XTY SHALL XOT BE FOI XD WANTING. MORROW COUNTY has been slow in answering the Red Cross call for funds to relieve the suffering of ihe stricken Japanese. At present not quite half of the quota of $925 set for her has been raised. We believe the only reason our county has not yet gone over the top. nearly three weeks after the drive was started, is be cause our people have not yet come to recognize the magnitude of the need. And need only to be appealed to for a heArty response. A Urge section of Japan, including Tokio, its capital, and Yokohama, its chief harbor, is in chaos. The ter rific earthquake, followed by typhoon and fire, aside from claiming a death toll of close to a million people, has left want and destruction in its wake. Food stores And fields Are destroyed, shelter razed to the ground, and amid the debris babies cry out for nour ishment that can not be provided, while thousands of people are left absolutely destitute. That which is true of things is country that has caused the ever ready band of the American Red Cross to be extended across the Pa cific But much more money and pro visions are needed to saIvo the wounds of affliction. Therefore the Red Cross is broadcasting its appeal that every one may help supply the deficiency. In every humanitarian call before,1 Morrow county has been one of the first to open her heart. When this appeal reaches the pulsating depths we are sure she will not be found wanting. MS PRESSURE ON Mc ARTHUR. HEAVY pressure is being brought on C. N. McArthur to run this time for the U. S. Senate. The pressure represents a desire to have him run rather than any hope of his nomina tion. McArthur would be performing a fine public service to run even though he had not the slightest notion of being nominated. He stands for principles that are .rather unpopular but which have such intrinsic merit that the country sooner of later will return to them, and a campaign for those principles would do good in Oregon even though it were a doomed campaign so far as its outcome is concerned. We wish we could en courage McArthur to believe he had a fighting chance to win but we cannot do so conscientiously. It looks like McNary would profit by all of the bit- ter controversies raging around other candidates, and the more of the other candidates there are, the better chance McNary has of being nomin ated. Election might be a different Gilliam & Bisbees j& Column j& If a McCormack Header is your choice, buy it now. No McCor mack Headers manufactured since 1922 and these will be made no more. The Deering will take the place of the McCormack. We have a few McCormacks in stock for this season. The most economical way to take care of your grain hay is with a Binder. We have both the Mc Cormack and Deering in stock. With such a large crop all over : the Northwest there is likely to be I a shortage of Binder Twine. Buy it now while we have it in stock. Superior Manilla, 650 feet to the pound. We have a large stock of Mc Cormack and Deering extras, also Mailable Chain Belting. We try to have everything nec essary to rig up for harvest Oils, Greases, Doubletrees, Sin gletrees, and a lot of other things and what we have not got we will get for you. Come in and see us when in need of anything and we will try to give you one hundred cents worth for a dollar. Gilliam & Bisbee ELKHORN RESTAURANT Come in and look over our new location in the Odd Fellows Building, where you will find one of the best equipped dining rooms in Eastern Ore gon. And when you have inspected the front, come back and take a look at our sanitary kitchen. You will be able to get quick service at our lunch counter. GOOD MEALS AND SERVICE AT POPULAR RATES ED. CHINN, Prop. matter with a candidate like Mans field c Ate ring to the grievances of the farmer. McArthur caq perform an educational service for Oregon by sacrificing himself, and if he repeats often enough, ultimately he will be elected, as the sane principles he ad vocates are certain to triumph again some day. Oregon Voter. s-s- UMATILLA PROJECT BOOSTED. In Saturday's edition of the East Oregonian of Pendleton, which, by the way, was a big Round-Up edition that will go all over these United States, there was a very complete and comprehensive review of the Umatilla Rapids project, together with a map setting out to the eye just what this project will mean to the states of Oregon And WAshington. Along with this Article is an interview given the East Oregonisn by Senator Charles L. McNary, which we herewith produce in full. It will be noted from this interview that Senator McNary places the Umatilla project ahead of the Muscle Shoals plan, on which the government of the United States has been spending so much money. Sen ator McNary states: "Within the drainage Area of the Columbia river is located one-third of all the undeveloped water power in the United States. At Umatilla rapids 125,000 continuous horse pow er can be developed eleven months in the year, and a total of 500,000 horse power can be developed during the season when irrigation is needed. This power belongs to the' public and like all great powers on navigable streams should be developed in the public interest and under proper reg ulation and control. It is free from many of the difficulties that beset the Just R The Palmer Best Materials Best Styles at the Lowest Possible Prices. Th omson i.'llillimilllr Six Wonderful Advantages Unequaled economy. Bigger, more powerful engine. Easiest riding Triplex springs. Strongest rear axle on any low-priced car. All-steel touring body. Durable, brilliant, baked-enamel finish New Prices All Models Roadster .'. Now $635 -Red Bird Now $850 Touring Now $635 Coupe Now $925 Sedan $975 THE MOST AUTOMOBILE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY i WE SELL ON TERMS Cohn Auto Co. HEPPNER, OREGON Muscle Shoals undertaking and in my judgment horse power can be devel oped at Umatilla much cheaper than on the Tennessee river where the gov ernment is now working upon its ni trogen fixation plants. "As a member of the senate agri cultural commission I made a thor ough study of the Muscle Shoals prop osition, and day no doubt that the fertilizers can be manufactured and power units produced at an amazing less outlay at the Umatilla rapids on the Columbia river than at Muscle Shoals on the Tennessee. "The problem for congress to solve is to rind a profitable market for the power when developed. In that con nection there are many benefits which will be derived by the public through the developments of the resource: Cheap power would be made available for municipalities as far as 200 or more miles distant. Power can be acquired at reasonable rates and would promote industrial activities Agencies bAdly needed in the devel opment of the Northwest country. "In the vicinity of this project is 270,000 acres of arid lands which can be irrigated by pumping, through the employment of the surplus power. A happy coincident is that when the lands need irrigation the flow of wa ter is most abundant, therefore per mitting secondary power to be used for lifting water to the thirsty lands above. "Beyond and above these important features is the use of this cheap pow er in the production of nitrates for munitions of war, and the creation of atmospheric nitrogen for use in farm fertilization." Mr. and Mrs. Earl Warner of Lex ington, were visitors here on Monday. d eceive Garments Best Workmanship Bros. CUTS PRICE TO $635 F. 0. B. HEPPNER NOTICE FOE PUBLICATION. Departaseat ef the Interior U. S. Land Office at La Grande. Oreron. September 16. 1923. NOTICE is hereby given that Iva Hiatt, of Lena, Oregon, who, en March B, 1920, made Additional Home stead Entry (Act 12-29-16), No. 01808, for Lot 2. SENWW. SEW SWH, Section 30, ESNWK, Section 31, Township 3 South, Rang 29 East. Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three-year Proof, to establish claim to the lend Above described, before United States Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 8th day of November, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: Vera F. Pearson, David W. Pear son, William Cunningham and Frank reery, all of Lena, Oregon. CARL G. HELM, Register. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE UN DER FORECLOSURE. By virtue of an execution and order of aale issued by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, dated September 22, 1923, in a certain suit in the Cir cuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, wherein W. J. Rush, plaintiff, recovered judgment against A. J. Spencer and Minnie Spencer, defendants, for $300.00 with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent per annum from the 20th day of May, 1920, for $35.00 attorney's fees, and for the costs and disburse ments of said suit, taxed and allowed at $36.40 and for the further sum of $94.62 on account of taxes paid on the mortgaged premises, 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 wi Hiili'l'jP'iIlpg'fl!! on Saturday. th 27lh day of October, 192S. at th. hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of aaid day. at the front door of th Court Houae In Heppner, Oregon, aell at public auction to the highest bidder for eaah in hand, the following described real property, sit uated in Morrow County, Oregon, to wit: East half of Northeast quarter. Southwest quarter of Northeast quar ter, and Northwest quarter of South east quarter of Section IK, Township 6 South, Kange 28 East Wlllairttte Mer idian, the same being the real prop erty mortgaged by defendants to se- care payn,ent of raid judgment and ordered sold by the court for that purpose. Dated this 27th day of September. 1923. GEORGE McDUFFEE. Sheriff. NOTICE OF SALE OF CAPITAL STOCK. Notice is hereby given that by or der of tha board of directors of the Farmers and Stockgrowers National Bank, we the undersigned, will on Monday, the first day of October, 1923, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the office of The Farmers and Stockgrowers Na tional Bank, in the city of Heppner, Oregon, sell either at private sale or public auction for the highest and best bid offered therefor, certificate Numbered Seven (7) for Twenty-five (25) shares at 1100.00 per share of the Capital Stock of The Farmers and Stockgrowers National Bank, issued to S. W. Spencer, on the 11th day of June, A. D. 1917. Dated this SOth day of August, 1923. By 1. W. BEYMER, President. By EMMETT COCHRAN, By 3. G. THOMSON. Directors. IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON, FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. In the Matter of the Estate of S. W. Spencer, Deceased, CREDITORS' NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: That the undersigned, Anna Spencer, has been duly appointed by the County Court of Morrow County, Oergon, the Administratrix of the estate of S. W. Spencer, deceased, and has duly qual ified for such trust. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to pre sent them to said Administratrix, duly verified, at her residence in Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon, on or before six months from the date of first publication hereof. Dated and first published this 30th day of August, 1923. ANNA SPENCER, Administratrix. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior U. S. LAND OFFICE at LaUrande, Oregon, September 16, 1923. NOTICE is hereby given that Ma tilda E. Pearson, of I.ena, Oregon, who, on November 26, 1921, made Ad ditional Homestead Entry (Act 12-29-16), No. 020725. for NEKSWii. Section 33, Township 2 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 Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 8th day of November, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: Willard French, of Gurdane, Ore gon; Iva Hiatt, A. Cunha and H. E. Instone, all of Lena, Oregon. CARL G. HELM, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, August 27, 1923. Notice is hereby given that George R. Pearson, of Lena, Oregon, who, on March 12, 1920, made Additional Homestead Entry, Act 12-29-16, No. 018128, for SEK SE Sec. 25, T. 1 S. R. 28 E.; Lot 1 Sec. 31, Tp. 1 S. R. 29 E.; SEi NW14, NE SW14, SH SE54 Sec. 83, SWK SWK, Section 34, Township 8 S., Range 29 E., Willam ette Meridian, has filed notice of in tention to make three year final Proof to establish claim to the land above described, before the United States Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 6th day of October, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: F. J. Hiatt, John Keegan. Jas. Hig gins, F. M. Duncan, all of Lena, Ore gon. CARL HELM, Register. Professional Cards DR. F. E. FARRIOR DENTIST Office Upstairs Over Postofflea 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 Postoffics Trained Nurse Assistant H.ppner, Oregon WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Offices in First National Bank Building H.ppner, Oregon Van Vactor & Butler ATTORNEY8-AT-LAW Suite 80S First National Bank Building THE DALLES, ORE. S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office in Court House Heppner, Oregon F. II. ROBINSON LAWYER IONE, OREGON Heppner Sanitarium DR. J. FERRY CONDER Phrviei.n-la-Cfc.re. Treatment of all diseases. Isolated wards for contagious diseases. FIRE INSURANCE Waters & Anderson Hepptw. Oron MATERNITY HOME MK8. O. C. AIKBN, HBPPNKtt I Km prepare, to take a limited u- ber of .Mteralty a at my borne. PitUntt privlUfW to clieeee tlr ewa phytic. ui. Heat of car and attention aaearei. phone m RODEO NEEDS We are ready and anxious to supply you with all your clothing needs for Rodeo time. Come in and look over our stock. We carry the famous Holeproof Hosiery in all styles and shades. You can pay more for less quality, but yon can't get more quality for less money. Sam Hughes Co. Phone Main 962 Quality Printing at a Fair She's Wild LET'S GO o HEPPNER RODEO Sept. 27-28-29 Of Course You Will Attend WHEN IN TOWN MAKE OUR STORE YOUR HEADQUARTERS Rest Room (or the Ladies. Phelps Grocery Company E. J. STARKEY ELECTRICIAN HOUSE WIRING A SPECIALTY Heppaer, Oroa i in L. VAN MARTER FIRE, AUTO AND LIFI INSURANCE OM Line Cseapaales REAL ESTATE Heppner, Ore. JOS.J.NYS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Upstairs In Humphreys Building Heppner, Onsjoa Price The Gazette-Times o PHONE 53