The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, July 17, 1924, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1924.
THE GME-TIIS
TBI WU-rNEM r.7FTTR. EataalUbad
M.r.k XI 1-S
THE llrrstH TKU KatnbliaWd
rinm brt : . i
OONCQLfDATr.D iLHhl'AHT 11. lt'.t
l,'Ma1 TUTlar BtWflhl fc
f KHt A NP fPKM't "RAr'RD
ea4 at. ard at lh I'iH ufica at Hrppnar.
ttiii a arruaa-tlaiw matter.
AOVKBTInlNC Tm CIVSS ON
AlTLII ATluM
t HScKIITlON RATES:
Om Tear
Kll Heath ... .
Thraa MonUa .
MORROW COl'NTT OITIC1AL PAPER
Parvlrv Adertline RrpraamtatlTa
TBa. AMtllKAN 1'hltSs ASSOCIATION
GOOD WORK, RrnniEs.
T LAST n old dream i realized.
I.eppTitr citiicns ionp apo feit the
i.eed of Tistatorium for the city.
nd 8tvt-rml times a wove was actual
ly made to accomplish its construe
tittc, but it remained for the loca
post of the American Legion to bring
it into being. The buddies started
planning it about a year aco, and
since that time have not rested until !
they reached their goal.
New the kiddie s and the older
people, too have a good, clean, pro
tected and tuptrvified concrete pool
in which they may take a plunge each
and every day of the year if they
wish. That is excepting such times
as the pool is being cleaned, ar.d this,
above all, is the most attractive fea
ture it is and always will be clean
to the limit of power of the Legion
boys to keep it so.
Civic improvements such as this
are what make life in the small town
liveable. Clean, healthful recreation
is a requisite in every well-balanced
life, and swimming is classed by au
thorities as the best recreation possi
ble to indulge in. The construction
of the swimming pool is a step in the
right driection and Heppner should
be very grateful for the good work
done by the Legion boys,
s-s-s
NO MORE SECRET CONVENTIONS.
POLITICAL reform has taken its
greatest forward step through the
operation of the radio. No longer
can delegates to a convention return
to their homes with strange and wierd
stories, to deceive the home folks re
garding their actions and their votes.
The check-up is too complete. Not
only is the state in touch with its
representatives in convention in block
formation, but the position assumed
by each individual is discovered in
every hamlet of the land by the poll
ing of the vote. The Democratic con
vention in New York has demonstrat
ed the value of the radio in this way
more than once.
The radio for the first time has en
abled the entire country to sit in the
convention. It has lifted the veil of
secrecy. It has enabled the home
folks to hear the arguments, the rul
ing's of the chair, to note the atti
tude of delegations, to digest their
trend of thought, when they have any,
and to discover the fact when they
have not. The betrayal of trust is
no longer possible without discovery.
There is a vast significance in the
much advertised cry so recently heard
through the air from coast to coast
"Aia-bama casts twenty-four votes
for Un-der-wood.
Summed up, the radio spells the
passing of the boss, because even his
operations, though kept secret in
committee rooms and in delegation
headquarters, become too evident on
the floor of the convention. The con
tact between the delegate and those
who sent him out as a representative
spells a greater honesty in voting.
The vote of the delegate is known in
stant rf and the telegram or tele
phone of protest can reach him al
most immediately.
The abolition of the secret conven
tion will do as much to free the peo
ple from political abuse as did the
institution of the secret ballot. The
radio seems destined to give us more
honesty in politics, a consummaton
devoutly to be wished.
S-S-S
THE NEXT BIG ISSUE.
"YNE of the great issues of the eom
ing campaign will be the railroads,
and the country might as well pre
pare itself for the digestion of first
grade propaganda. The forces behind
private ownership are intelligent and
quite capable of holding their own
in skilled argument, while those who
believe in government ownership or
control are equally alert in the art of
special pleading.
In considering the railroad prob
lem, however, it may be well to hold
in mind one or two indisputable facts.
Firt. on the one hand we hear the
cry of poverty from the railroads. At
the same time those who own and
operate the roads roar to high heaven
at the mere suggestion that they be
relieved of their unfortunate invest
ment. Again, railroad labor today received
approximately one hundred per cent
higher wages than it received before i
the war, while farm products on the !
average, as cum pu ted by the Bureau
of Labor, are 37 higher than in
11 3. These facts are used by the
railroads to prove that railroad in
vestors are in a disadvantageous po
sition, Thiii conclusion, of course, is
bast d on the assumption that the
wage question is the big question in
railroad operation. On the other hand
the people wut realise sooner or
later that wild expenditures and
heavy increases must one way or the
other come out of the pocket of the
public.
Stripped of all camouflage, the
farmer, who must be conxidered first,
fares cold, hard facts. The rail road i
gobble up whatever of profit he may
have in the sale of his product and
they compel him to pay extortionate
prices for the things he ha to buy
to live and to work. Theorists, econ
omist and politicians may be inter
listed to analyze the causes. The far
mer is inUrenttd in the effect. He
wants relief, ht needs relief, and he
will obtain relief if he regards the
railroad problem as an economic
problem first and realites ihat so far
as its political aspects are fonc"rnd,
platforms are of more importance
than candidates, providing always
there is a sincere effort to put the
platforms into operation.
S-S-S
In spit of unsettled business con
ditions of a presidential election year
and crop shortage, it looks as if the
farmer will glimpse a ray of sunlight
through ths fog in the shape of a
omewhat near fair prica for his
wheat. It will be good to ate the
train alleviated in a measure.
WHITE 1I1S Ifj LOST TRIBE OF PANAMA
AMERICAN EXPLORER BRINGS NEW PEOPLE
FROM SAN BLAS COUNTRY WHICH
STARTS SCIENTIFIC DISCUSSION
Written speriaUr for The Gazette-Times
By Robert Fuller
Thru Autorater Service
New York. July 16. Yes. We have
white Indiana.
The question now, however, is:
"What makes them white?"
Many of the leading scientists in
the United States are discussing the
subject, poking, prodding, twisting
the ears and looking down the throats
of three homesick little tots in New
York, brought here by Richard 0.
Marsh, American explorer, who last
summer discovered a tribe of 400 in
the San Bias country of Panama.
Brought from the jungle where they
wore no clothes, garbed in civiliza
tion's modern dress and thrown sud
denly into the world's largest city
the three children, Chepu, Olo, and
Margaret submit to a critical examin
ation without seemingly a flicker of
feeling passing across their stolid
countenances, beneath shocks of
bristling tow-colored hair.
The children are not alone. Order
members of the tribe and parents
were brought along safe return to
their Darien region of the Panama
being a;sured and guaranteed Most
of the older members are of brown
skins and of normal Indian charac
teristics. It was at first thought that Mr.
Marsh had brought a group of stray
albinos out of the forests of Panama
and was calling them white Indians.
After a critical examination by a
large group of our best scientists it
was agreed that they were white In
dians but abnormal and pathological
cases.
Explorer Tells How Tribe Was Found
Mr. Marsh described how he first
saw white Indians in Panama last
summer and determined- to return
with a properly equipped expedition.
He told how he approached the Smith
sonian Institution at Washington, the
Museum of Natural History here and
the University of Rochester in order
that they might send representatives
on the expedition, so that its results
would obtain the confidence of the
scientific world.
These representatives were pres
ent when he left New York last Jan
uary, and when he got to Panama he
received help by the detailing of ad
ditional observers from the United
States Army, the Panama Canal Zone
Government and the Republic of
Panama.
He told of the march to the inter
YOSEMITE
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ZEROLENE
increases
gasoline mileage
For years this Company has claimed
that Zerolene, because it lubricates
better, enables the average car to go
about five per cent farther on a gal
lon of gasoline than when other oils
are used.
A few weeks ago this claim received
the most remarkable confirmation in
the results of the annual Los Angeles
Camp Curry (Yosemite) Economy
Run. Six out of the seven trophies
offered, including the sweep
Stakes, were won by Zerolene
lubricated cars. The sweepstakes
winner, an Overland Model 92, driven
by Joe Eozzani, traveling the 400
miles of desert and mountain roads,
averaged 29.36 miles to the gallon of
Red Crown gasoline an achievement
which the 1924 contest rules made all
the more remarkable as they forbade
coasting or stopping the engine.
Right here, in the official records of
this economy run classic, is your
answer to the oil question. Why pay
tribute to the superstition that east
ern oil, merely because it costs more
and is made in the East, is in some
mysterious way "better?" Experi
enced drivers, out to make records,
don't share that superstition why
should you?
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(California) .
ooEsnn
ior in which great difficulties were
overcome. Before the trip ended al
most the entire paryt had been taken
seriously ill, and two members, the
representatives of the Smithsonian
Institution and the Republic of Pan
ama, died of fever.
It was not until the very end of the
trip, he said, that any white Indians
were seen, because the rumor had
preceded the party that its object
was to take such Indians into cap- 1
tivity and bring th?m away.
Finally, after making frier. -is with
an Indian chief of a coastal tribe, and
curing him and many others of var
ious ills, he got the opportunity to
win the friendship of all the tribes
of the region by stamping out two
epidemics of smallpox.
Then he was allowed to see the
white Indians whose presence had al
ways been denied. He persuaded the
native chiefs that their difficulties
would be solved if a kinship could be
established between the white In
dians and the white people of the
north. He saw about 400 of these In
dians of all ages and photographed
about a hundred of them.
Discovery Valuable Aid to Medicine
One scientist is of the opinion that
the condition under which white In
dians are produced is by leucodermia.
He is Dr. Cuthbert Christy, of the
Smithsonian Institution, and an ex
pert on tropical diseases. He has
made a thorough examination of the
white Indian children.
"I believe Mr. Marsh has made a
great discovery," he said. "But not
so much in the field of anthropology
as in the field of tropical medicine.
There is an interesting disease es
pecially prevalent in the West Indies
which is known as leucodermia. When
I examined these children I found
markings on them more symetrical
than those you observe in the West
Indian cases.
"If we could get a commission here
to investigate these cases I think it
would lead to important results.
There has never been any success at
getting at the cause of the disease
from the West Indian cases, and it
has been tried repeatedly. But with
these observations localized as they
are, it seems to me there may be hope
of finding the cause and devising the
cure."
This trip from their native jungles
to the very heart of civilization
means little to the three little white
Indians. They are, perhaps, the lon-
even if it does
co ft Jess
liet children in the world. And quit
the most bewildered.
"The little girl had worn clothes,
but neither of the boys had ever won
a strip until 1 got them. said Mr.
Marsh. "1 tied a red bandana hand
kerchief on each. When 1 got to Col
on I put them in shirta and pants but
I had a lot of trouble at first to keep
them from undressing right in the
hotel, they were so hot and uncom
fortable. In New York they do nothing but
stare. They blink their queer, squint
ing blue eyes at the crowds, the build
ings, the traffic. Sometimes Margaret
cries. Alo and Chepu nver shed a
tear; they are men, and their stoic
ism is as typically Mongolian as their
prominent cheek bonea and flattened
noses. But they do not smile, either;
and one feels that perhaps, when they
crawl into strange beds at the Wal
dorf, and the lights go out, they hug
each other quite tightly, in their ut
ter darkness.
Rabbit Poisoning Exper
iment Proving: Success
Experimental rabbit poisoning with
strvchnine alkaloid being carried on
in the lower Willow creek and Board
man sections this week by F. E. Gar
low is proving this poison to be very
effective. Mr. Garlow. is killing as
many as 250 to the ounce of poison
and in some instances as high as 500.
Roy Fugate, of the Biological Survey,
has also been employed in this work
this week, holding demonstration
meetings on lower Willow creek and
at Boardman and Irrigon.
The strychnine alkaloid is mixed
with young alfalfa cut in from one to
two inch lengths, and placed at least
100 yards from the field. Roger W.
Morse, county agent, believes it to be
the most virulent poison yet tried for
the destruction of the rabbit pest.
In a drive at Boardman last Sunday
1600 rabbits were killed by its use.
Ellis R. Minor, from his ranch near
lone, has been spending several days
in Heppner on business this week.
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE TO VACATE PORTION OF
WATER STREET.
Notice ia hereby given that on
Monday, the 4th day of August, 1924,
at the hour of 7:30 p. m. of said day
at a regular meeting of the council
of the city of Heppner, Oregon, at
the Council Chambers, there will be
presented to said council for hearing
a petition to vacate that portion of
Water street lying between Gale
street and the Oregon-Washington
highway in said city of Heppner, all
persons having objections to the va
filesuch objections with air! council
rAITPD TREATED AT
UVULI
HOME
Simple home treatment. Send for FREE
booklet and testimonials. WARNER'S
RENOWNED REMEDIES CO., 725 Se
curity Bldf., Minneapolis, Minn.
A TREAT
FOR THE
FAMILY
The wife and kiddies will
enjoy a change from the
monotony of home-cooked
meals, so why not suggest
coming here for dinner ev
ery one in awhile. No wor
ry, no delays, no dishes to
wash just sit down to a de
lightful, wholesome, satisfy
ing meal, served in a way
that all will like. Moderate
prices, too.
We Serve Chinese
Noodles
ELKHORN
RESTAURANT
HEPPNER'S POPULAR
EATING HOUSE
Delicious Coffee
JirvuqA tfietearioflht
occies
Round Trip
Excursion Fares
on toU daily to Sept IS
Kansas City . 72.00
St. Louis . . . l 60
Chicago . . . e 00
Detroit .... 10ft A3
Cleveland . . 108.68
Washington . 141.64
NewYorlr. . . 147.40
Boston. . . . 163.50
CorreeponrKng fares to other Important
eemari. Pinal return limit Ortuber 31,
I9J4. Liberal Hfop-over privilege, go
In, and returning.
A ille trip to VellowatorK at imall ad
ditional cut.
Call on
C. DARREE
Agent
Heppner, Ore.
WM. McMURRAY
Ooneral Patamger Agent
Portland, Oregon
It
on or be for the hearing thereon.
Dated this 16th day of July, WW.
W. A. RICHARDSON, Recorder.
cation thereof are hereby required to
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT.
Kotica It hereby riven that the un
dersigned Martha Wright and Frank
Gilliam, administratrix and adminis
trator, respectively of the estate of
Silas A. Wright, deceased, have filed
their final account of their adminis
tration of said estate with tha Coun
ty Court of the State of Oregon for
Morrow County, and that aaid court
has designated aa the time and place
for tha settlement of aaid account
July 26, 1924, at tha hour of 2 o'clock
p. m., in the court room of tha County
Court of tha State of Oregon for
Morrow County. All persons having
objections to aaid final account must
file tha same on or befora July 26,
MARTHA WRIGHT,
Administratrix.
FRANK GILLIAM,
Administrator.
CALL FOR BIDS.
Notice Is hereby given that the
Board of Director, of School District
No. 4-39 of Gilliam and Morrow coun
ties, Oregon, will receive seated bids
up to and including August 18, 1924,
for Bus Driver and Matron (man and
wife preferred).
Bus starts at the southern boun
dary of district, from the "Lundell
Ranch," following the Oregon-Washington
Highway to Heppner Junction,
thence to Arlington via. Columbia
River Highway, a distance of approx
imately 18 miles. Board of directors
reserve right to reject any or all bids.
MARY LUNDELL, Clerk, Dist. 4-39.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR THE
COUNTY OF MORROW.
Percy Hughes, Plaintiff,)
vs. )
John Woodward and Ada)
Woodward, his wife, Fan-)
nie Woodward, Clarence)
Woodward, Chancey)
Woodward, Nancy Crank.)
John Hale, Elias Hale,)
Loyd Hale, Angus Hale,)
Ralph Hale. Harrison)
Hale, Glenn Willingham.)
and Laura Willingham,)
his wife, Clarence Wil-)
lingham, Frank Hale, E1-)
la Vale. Gussie Ayers, E1-)
len Hale Duncan, and)
William Duncan, her hus-)
band. Henry Cannon,)
Mary Cannon, Darrel Can-)
non, George Baker, Mil-)
ton Baker, Edward Baker.)
Ella Baker Sperry, SylvialSUMMONS
Baker, Mary Hale, C. S.)
Hale, Michael Hale, and)
Mnude Hale, his wife, P.)
G. Hale, Clay Hale, and)
Myra Hale, his wife, Del-)
la Armitage, and Harry)
Armitage, her husband, J.)
H. Cochran, and Cynthia)
Cochran, his wife, Ida)
Grabil, and Thomas Gra-)
bil, her husband, Guy)
Hale, Caroline Cason. and)
C. L. Cason, her husband,)
Sarah Cason and Walter)
Cason, her husband, Dan)
Hale, and Lettie Hale, his)
wife, also all other per-)
sons or parties unknown)
claiming any right, title.)
estate, lien or interest in)
the real estate described)
in the complaint herein,)
Defendants:)
To Nancy Crank, Loyd Hale, Ralph
Hale, Fannie Woodward, Clarence
Woodward. Laura Willingham, Ella
Vale, Gussie Ayers, Ellen Hale Dun
can, Willian Duncan, Henry Cannon,
Mary Cannon, Darrel Cannon, George
Baker, Edward Baker, Slyvia Baker.
C. S. Hale, Michael Hale, Maude Hale,
P. G. Hale, Clay Hale, Myra Hale,
Delia Armitage, Harry Armitage, Guy
Hale, Dan Hale and Lettie Hale, also
all other persons or parties unknown
claiming any right, title, estate, lien
or interest in the real estate de
scribed in the complaint herein, De
fendants: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF
OREGON, you and each of you are
hereby required to appear and answer
plaintiff's complaint filed against you
in the above entitled court on or be
fore six weeks from the date of the
first publication of this summons, to
wit: on or before the 2Rth day of
August, 1924, and if you fail to so
appear or answer for want thereof
the plaintiff will apply to the above
entitled court for the relief prayed
for in his complaint, to-wit: That
the plaintiff be adjudged and decreed
to be the owner in fee simple of Lot
S in Block 1 in Morrow's Second Ad
dition to the City of Heppner, Mor
row County, Oregon, and that you
and each of you be forever barred
from all right, title and Interest
therein, and for such other and fur
ther relief ss may be just and equit
able. This summons is published upon
you in The Gazette-Times, once a
week for six consecutive weeks pur
suant to an order of Hon. Wm. T.
Campbell, Judge of the County Court
of the State of Oregon for Morrow
County, which order is dated July
16th, 1924, and the date of the first
publication of this summons is July
17th, 1924.
JOS. J. NYS,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Residence and postoffice address,
Heppner, Oregon,
SUMMONS.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR THE
COUNTY OF MORROW.
Mern Weatfall, Plaintiff,
vs.
Charles Westfall, Defendant.
To Charles Westfall, defendant:
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE
OF OREGON, you are hereby requir
ed to appear and answer plaintiff's
complaint filed against you in the
above entitled court on or before six
weeks from the date of the first pub
lication of this summons, to-wit: on
or before the 14th day of August,
1924, and if you fail to so appear or
answer, for want thereof, the plain
tiff will apply to the above entitled
court for the relief prayed for in
plaintiff's complaint, to-wit: That
the bonds of matrimony now and
heretofore existing between you and
the plaintiff be forever dissolved and
that the plaintiff have an absolute
divorce from you, and that plaintiff
have the care and custody of the
minor children, Wayne Westfall and
Homer Westfall, and for such other
relief as the court may deem just
and equitable.
This summons is published upon
you in the Gazette-Times, once a
week for six consecutive weeks pur
suant to an order of Hon. Gilbert
W, Phelps, Judge of the above en
titled court, which order is dated
June 28th, 1924, and the date of the
Arst publication of this summons Is
July 8rd, 1924.
JOS. J. NYS,
Attorney for plaintiff,
Residence and postoffice address,
Heppner, Oregon. I
NOTICE OF 8ALE OF REAL PROP
ERTY ON EXECUTION.
Notice is hereby given that under
and by virtue of an execution and
order of sale duly issued out of, and
under the seal of the Circuit Court
of the State of Oregon for Morrow
County on the 25th day of June, 1924,
upon a certain judgment and decree
entered and rendered in said court
on the 23rd day of June, 1924, in) a
certain suit in said court wherein
W. Y. Ball, plaintiff, recovered judg
ment against T. H. Williams, and
Corda Williams, his wife, defendants,
for the sum of 11625.76, with Interest
thereon from tha 24th day of August,
1922, at the rate of eight per cent
per annum, the further aum of
1160.00, attorney's fees, the further
sum of 1812.15, with interest there
on from the 26th day of March, 1924,
at the rate of six per cent per annum,
and the sum of $21.60, the cost and
disbursements, and to me directed
commanding ma to sell at public auc
tion the following described real
property situated in Morrow County,
Oregon, to-wit:
Being 1787.7 acres of land in Town
ship No. four (4) South of Range
twenty-four (24) East of Willamette
Meridian and described as follows:
The North half of the Southeast quar
ter, the East half of the Southwest
quarter, the Southwest quarter of the
Southwest quarter and that portion
of the Northwest quarter of the
Southwest quarter containing 15.43
acres more or less, lying South of
the County road running up and
down Rood Canyon of Section four
teen (14). That part of the South
half of the Southeast quarter and
the Southeast quarter of the South
west quarter of Section fifteen (15)
lying south of the County road in
Rood Canyon containing 74.98 acres.
The East half, the East half of the
Northwest quarter and the Northeast
quarter of the Southwest quarter of
Section twenty-two (22); the North
west quarter, the North half of the
Southwest quarter, the Southwest
quarter of the Southwest quarter and
the West half of the Southeast quar
ter of Section twenty-three (23). All
of Section twenty-six (26). That part
of the East half of the Northwest
quarter of Section twenty-seven (27)
described as follows: Beginning at
the quarter Section corner between
Sections 22 and 27 and running thence
South 40 chains to center of Section
27; thence West along the East and
West center line of said Section 11.40
chains; thence North 10 degrees West
28.04 chains down Canyon to Rock
Creek and across to the North bank
of said Rock Creek; thence North 71
degrees 45 minutes West along said
North bank 8.62 chains to the Mouth
of a canyon; thence North 38 degrees
30 min. East along up aaid canyon
H.0 chains to the North line of
said Section twenty-sevon (27);
thence East 10.55 chains to the place
of beginning containing 57.29 acres.
Now, therefore, in compliance with
said execution, I will on Saturdny,
the 26th day of July, 1924. at the
hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon
of said day at the front door of the
Court House at Heppner, Morrow
County, Oregon, sell at public auc
tion to the highest bidder for cash
all the above described real property.
Dated this 25th day of June, 1924.
GEO. McDUFFEE,
Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon.
EXECUTOR'S NOTICE OF SALE OF
REAL PROPERTY.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned, as executor of the estate
of Thomas L. Dorman, deceased, by
virtue of an order of ths County
Court of the State of Oregon for
Morrow County, duly made and en
tered on the 2nd day of June, 1924,
authorizing and directing the sale of
the real property hereinafter describ
ed, will, at my office in lone, Morrow
County, Oregon, from and after the
25th day of July, 1924, proceed to sell
for cash, at private sale, to the high
est bidder the following described
real property belonging to said es
tate, to-wit:
That portion of Lot 6, Block 13,
lying south and west of the channel
of Willow Creek, Town of Lexington,
Oregon.
Lot 10, Block 13, Town of Lexing
ton, Oregon, except the Oregon-Washington
Railroad and Navigation Com
pany right-of-way.
Lots 4 and 5, Block 20, Town of
Lexington, Oregon.
Said sale will be made subject to
confirmation by the County Court of
the State of Oregon for Morrow
County.
Dated this 17th day of June, 1924.
H. J. BIDDLE,
Executor of the Estate of
Thomas L. Dorman, deceased.
Professional Cards
DR. A. II. JOHNSTON
Physician and Surgeon
Calls answered Night or Day
CRADUATK NURSB ASSISTANT
L O. O. F. Building
Phonaa: Orlee. Main 8S ; Has., 4
HEPPNER, OREGON
A. M. EDWARDS
I DRILL WELLS
I also handle Casing, Windmills
and Supplies, do fishing and clssn
out old wells.
BOX 14, LEXINGTON, ORE.
DR. F. E. FARRIOR
DENTIST
I. O. O. F. Building
Uappnar, Oragoa
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN 8UR6EON
Office in Masonle Building
Trained Nuraa Assistant
Heppner, Oregon
Drs. Drown and Chick
PHYSICIANS It SURGEONS
800 Alberta St. (Cor, E 24th.),
PORTLAND, ORE,
WOODSON & SWEEK
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
Offtees In
First National Bank Building
Heppnar, Oregon
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORN KY-AT-LAW
Office la Court Hoqm
F. II. ROBINSON
LAWYER
IONB. OREGON
Heppner Sanitarium
DR. J. PERRY CONDEB
Phralctaa-ln-Caarge
Treatment of all disease,. Isolated
warda for contagious diseases.
FIRE INSURANCE
Waters & Anderson
Htppn.tr, Oregon
Ladies' Silk Hose
Range in Price from
$1.00 to $4.00
ALL POPULAR SHADES AND COLORS.
The Large Assortment Includes: .
Silver, Airdale, Rose Beige, Lark, Otter,
Jack Rabbit, New Bobolink, Samoan, Fawn,
Cloud, Sponge, Caravan, Noisette, Beige,
Gun Metal, Cordovan, Black and White.
Sam Hughes Co.
Just Received j
a fresh car of
I OLYMPIC I
I Flour and Cereals I
If you want the best
ask for
I OLYMPIC I
I Phelps Grocery Company
PHONE 53
liillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllH
E. J. STARKEY
ELECTRICIAN
BOUSE WIRING A 8PECIALTY
C. A. MINOR
FWE. AUTO AND LIFE
INSURANCE
Ola) lis Coeapuiaa
REAL ESTATE
Heppner, Ore.
MATERNITY HOME
MRS. e. C. AIKEN, BEFPNEB
I an prepared to take a limited sua
bar of maternity eaeea at air bean.
Patleata privileged I cheese Iketr awa
phrelrias.
bat of ear and attention aaaurad.
PHONE III
JOS. J. NYS
ATTORNET-AT-LAW
Upstairs In
Humphrey! Building
Heppner, Oregon