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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1925)
PAGE TWO THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER. OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1925. THE KI tbi xirrvn gazetts. kmuim Man se. IUI THE HKTI-Kia TIHU. tCaublbkea NwwkM It. 1M1 CONOI.n)ATKD riBRPART lft, ltll VAWTr AMI SrKM fM CRAW P1IRD b4 ettt-rW M 'h '' oftx l HevpMT- ADVMTimvn RATFS CIVKN OK APPLK ATIUK iUBSCRlPTION RATES: One Tw . l.M Manila BllKt Copies . .1 MORROW COtJiTT OrriCIAL PAPER hmn A iftwrtinir r Rnrrntatie THK. AMKKICAN JKtSS ASSOCIATION Don't Fail to Vote. NEXT Monday the special elec tion to pass on the question of bonding Morrow county in the sum of $550,000 for roads in ac cordance with the proposed plans set out in the call, will take place This bond issue is a very import ant matter, and every qualified elector of the count)' should be at the polls and express his or her preference. This is a duty of cit izrnship. The vote of the women of the county should be large, for they are as much interested and are as greatly affected by the ques tion of good roads as is the male portion of the population. Don't fail to vote. The Gazette-Times has hereto fore attempted to set out in its argument in support of the bonds only such facts as have appealed to us as being sound. From the beeinnine we have favored the bond issue, and there has been nothing arise to change our opin ion. As a matter of fact, as we have studied the proposition and figured on the possible benefits to be derived from carrying out the program, we have only become more strongly convinced that the measure should be adopted. Lit tle time has been taken up with talking the benefits of good roads that part of the question was set tled long ago in the minds of practically all citizens. But good roads cost money, and the means of getting the money to prosecute such a program must be provided. So far, no better way to get the required funds has been provided than to sell bonds. When this means is adopted on a basis such as is proposed by the issue now up to us, there should be no hesi tancy on the part of any voter in the county giving their support in favor of the bonds. So. in reality, there is not much more to be said than has already been published. We have not said everything in favor of the bond issue that could have been said; we are sure of this, but there has been no chance on the part of anyone to misunderstand our po sition. While we should be pleased to have others take our slant of the matter, we are not quarreling with those who do not We sincerely hope that the issue will carry, and believe that it will, and that the results to follow by the putting across of the market road program of the county, which will of necessity require a number of years, will ultimately prove that the good judgment of our people has been exercised in the right direction. So, if you find it in your heart to support this measure ; if you think the bonds should carry, be sure to get out and vote. If, on the other hand, after careful study you are convinced that the good results to follow will not be of greater benefit than the cost, then be sure to get out and vote. The issue should carry by a strong ma jority, or it should be just as strongly defeated. AS A demonstration of the prog ress that is being made in the development of agriculture and horticulture in the irrigated projects of the Boardman and Ir rigon sections of north Morrow county, will be the splendid dis play at the North Morrow County Fair being held at Boardman Fri day and Saturday of this week. We are pleased to note that a large number of people from this end of the county contemplate taking in the fair. Famine and Bumper Crops. OREGON VOTER. IF 1926 and 1927 are to be "years without a summer", as is predicted by sunspot special ists, there will be a crop failure in parts of the world that are sus ceptible to cloudy weather. On the other hand, areas normally arid and semi-arid, would obtain the benefit of unaccustomed mois ture. That would mean bumper crops from the Missouri River to the Cascade Mountains, while grain prices would be high due to general crop shortage throughout the world. There would be grass on the cattle and sheep ranges of the Inland Empire, and hay would have littk; value, owing to the ex cess of moisture that would pre vent grain from maturing in the cloudy and stormy areas. Great disturbances . would characterize the summer seasons in the cyclon ic belt, and winters would be ex cessively severe everywhere, with unusual cold, mind and snow. If there is any sound basis for these predictions, anJ there may he, all who are financially interest ed in livestock and agriculture will do ell to post up. We recom mend Ellsworth Huntington's ser ies of books on geography and climate. These books contain many maps and diagrams which tend to locate areas affected by cyclonic disturbances of weather and climate, and also help the reader to do some clear thinking as to his own business future in so far as it is affected by weather. Not much is known for certain yet on this big subject, but what little is known is of some import ance if it can be applied by the man whose fortune may be wiped out as a result of failure to antici pate what kind of seasons are to be expected during the next few years. If you have a son or daughter in a high school or college that uses Huntington's Commercial Geography, a standard textbook, borrow the book and real what it says about weather, climate and sunspot cycles. That may inter est you enough to pursue the sub ject further. Huntington's books are in all the larger public librar ies. Are you a believer in perman ent roads? "Then help your neigh bor beyond to get in touch with a good road. Vote for. the exten sion of the market road program. Roads A Magnet For Capital. TTR. A. M. MARKHAM was for 1V1 many years a resident of this county. He was a pioneer settler here and grew up utider those con ditions. Mr. Markham still owns hundreds of acres of land here and pays heavy taxes into the county treasury each year, hence, as he states, he is greatly inter ested in the development of the county. Mr. Markham now lives in another part of the state where they are pushing good roads and he takes note of the development being made. As a heavy taxpay- of this county, though not a voter here, he is strongly in favor of the adoption of the proposed road program, and supports the bond issue. According to his view this is a progressive step and makes for the development of the coun ty. "What is needed as much as any one thing in Morrow county," states Mr. Markham, "is a pro gram that will induce more peo ple to come here. There is out side capital that can be interested m investment here, and when the road program is adopted there will be a very sharp increase in the demand for Morrow county farms. For this reason, alone, if I were now a resident of Morrow coun ty, I would support the road pro gram by voting for the bond is sue. I sincerely hope it carries. A Much Needed Textbook THE standard of living in our home county is possible as high as in any county in the state; certainly it is higher than the stan dard obtaining anywhere abroad. There is not an American alive who does not feel proud of the su perior living conditions of Ameri cans. If the standard is to be maintained, however, the time has arrived for the nation generally to give serious thought to the curb ing of waste in living, and to the inauguration of a period of sensi ble saving. Even more important is the necessity to press for some reform in our school system which will bring to the youth of the country a deeper understanding of economics and a more sensible idea of the personal budget. There are forty-four millions of the American people now gainful ly employed who earn more than $60,000,000,000 yearly. The bus iness of managing such an income is a staggering problem, bewilder ing, when one considers that ev ery worker is a member of the board of directors. Fully $10,- 000,000,000 is wasted every year because the directors know noth ing of economics. New York, for example, spends $65,000,000 every year in charity, but for practical instruction in economics, which, if properly ap plied, would largely do away with the necessity for charity, it spends not one penny piece. This same condition prevails, in proportion ate degree, right here at home. Our school children are not taught how to manage their personal af fairs with prudence; they are not taught the value and use of mon ey or the basis of economic liv ing; they gather a smattering of botany, a little geology, possibly interspersed with a modicum of plain sewing and kindergarten chemical experiments, but noth ing at all of the science that lies at the very root of personal pros perity and national development. The teachers are not to blame, but unless there be a change the day of reckoning will be a very black Friday. The Menace of the Spirit of Lawlessness. THE writer of the article be low is Mr. Ernest H. Van Fos- san, well-known Washington at torney and chairman of the Com mittee on Law and Legislation of the Washington Federation of Churches. This was first pub lished as a letter to the Washing ton Timfs : "It seems to me that we some times place too much emphasis on law enforcement and too little on law observance. Law enforce ment is a duty of the State dele gated to certain officials. Law observance is a duty of the indi vidual and cannot be delegated. If we had real law observance we would have no problem of law en forcement. "In the face of the growing prevalence of lawlessness and in difference, no clear-minded citi zen can have any doubt as to where his duty lies. Either the Constitution, the Federal and State laws and municipal ordi nances must be observed and en forced, or America must face the prospect of being a nation of law breakers and criminals. There is no twilight zone. "Many diagnoses of our na tional illness have been made. By some it is attributed to the reac tion from the rigid sacrifice and discipline of war times, by others to prohibition, by others to the jazz spirit of the day. None of these may be correct. No one has yet adequately appraised and explained the differentiating fea tures of this age in which we live. One thing, however, is clear. There can be no temporizing with lawlessness. "Is not the time ripe for a great concerted movement of opinion to suppress and discourage the further growth of this national menaced All rightminded citi zens will indorse it if they allow their minds to speak honestly and frankly. Cannot the newspapers, our greatest medium for molding public opinion, inaugurate a cru sade to crystalize this latent spirit of right into militant policy? "Our nation was born of sac rifice. Whenever her safety has been threatened she has been saved through sacrifice. Are we to believe in this crisis, the spirit of sacrifice is dead? "Rather let us believe that with the realization of the gravity o the situation will come in millions of hearts a willingness to make whatever sacrifice it entails, whether of personal prejudice, physical desire or innate indiffer ence to the great common good the observation and enforcement of the law and the protection of life and property. Trained Ears Detect Faults in Machinery Brass workers hear "tempers," dull tools and noises Imperceptible to ordinary ears. "Trained bearing bas saved us thousands of dollars," says a writer In the official publica tion of a tinn of brass manufac turers of Waterbury, Conn. Some time ago it was discovered that there were many employees of the company, both men and women, whose sense of hearing was so acute that In spite of the deafening roar of machinery, they could hear noises, or the absence of noises, that the ordinary person would never no tice. In every case it was discov ered that this unusual gift was not inherited, but acquired. It didn't come to them suddenly or easily, but only after years of ex perience and familiarity with their work, surrounded by the same ma chines, that their hearing would de velop this delicate keenness that gave them the power to notice the smallest sound amid other noises. A curious thing was found, that the ability is more co nmon where fac tory noises are deafening. It Is the overpowering noise Itself that makes these trained ears so delicate that they can hear what would be In audible to others, observes the Liter ary Digest. Magical Power Seen in Shorthand Writing The ancients appear to have re garded their shorthand writers as possessed of a faculty closely akin to magic. Ansonlus, a poet of the Fourth century, addressing a short hand writer, says: "Your hand, of which the movement is hardly per ceptible, flies over the waxy sur face; and though my tongue rune over long phrases, you fix my Ideas on your tablets long before they are worded. I wish I could think as rapidly as you write ! . . .Who has revealed to you what I was meditating? How mariy thefts does your hand make In my souir There Is no evidence to show that the speed of ancient shorthand writ ers was at all comparable with that of our own day. They wrote upon waxed tablets and no specimens of their art appears to have been pre served. For centuries there was no shorthand in the world. It was not revived until 1588, when Dr. Timothy Bright, a Yorkshire parson, published a book, "Characterle ; an Arte of Hhorte, Swlfte and Secrete Writing by Character." This system was simply a collection of arbitrary signs for a large number of com mon words. There was no attempt to provide a shorthand alphabet, says the Manchester Guardian. Rhymei on Ringt While some old customs are dying out, others are being revived. Among the latter la thHt of engraving mot toes and proverbs on lovers' rings. Itlntrs thus engraved were formerly called "posy rings," and some of the Inscriptions were very iualnt. For Instance, how would the fol lowing appeal to the "modern miss" : My love Is flxt, X will not range, I like my choice too well to change Among the many other mottoes which adorned the rings of oldtlrne lovers were: "In thee, my choice, I do rejoice.'' "Dili and the giver are thine for ever." "Of all the rest I love thee best." "fjod for me appointed thee." I Joy In thee, Joy thou In me, and Providence divine hath made thee mine." National Champion U JTK 1 Stephen M. Crother of Philadel phia, shooting 200 rounds a day broke 400 pigeons without a mis. establishing a world record an winning the national championshn at Vanilalia, Pa. The forme record was 256 without miss. Could Fiction Writers Find Anything Funnier? The story of the British civil sen-ant who, after ten years' ab sence from his office, returned to It to find that he had risen in snlury and seniority while away, and was now a principal clerk, has its pur allel In real life. A certain young man became a member of the French civil serv ice in 1022, and from that time a hat, a coat, and a pair of gloves at his desk bore mute testimony to his existence. This evidence was con firmed by his regularity In collect ing his salary. But, otherwise, he was never seen or heard of at his office. He was transferred to another of fice, and his hat, coat and gloves changed their quarters, but other wise there was no change. Event ually It was discovered that he was a professoinal dancer, and was too busy to attend the office. The authorities were shocked, and resolved that the young man must be punished. But the only two pos sible punishments were dismissal and reduction In grade. The first seemed too severe; as for the sec ond, the young man was already In the lowest grade. Finally, the Gor dian knot was cut the young man was promoted, and then immediate ly reduced to his former status. Famous Roman Baths Have Been Overrated We go to the movies and see scenes arranged to impress us with the luxury of the old Roman baths in use 2,000 years ago; aiid very few of us realize how superior the up-to-dute bathroom Is to those costly ancient edifices. So says a well-known maker of up-to-date bathrooms. The Boman baths, he continues, were built, as a rule, by the em perors, their cost being too great for a private Individual. Crude and clumsy was the method by which the water was heated and carried from one pool to another. Al though It was changed coutlnually, everyone bathed In the same water, and soap was unknown. The baths were open only at certain hours of the day, an admission price was charged and their use was limited to nobles and freemen of the city. In Greece marble slabs were hol lowed out and filled with water, which was splashed or poured from urns over the head or body of the bather. Down through the Middle ages plumbing fixtures, as we un derstand the term, were unknown. Doubt Anecdote of Drake One of the features of the great historical pageant of Devon, pro duced at Torquay, was the use. In one scene, of the Identical set of howls with which Drake was play ing when the Armanda came In sight. These bowln are among the treasures of Torquay museum, says London Answers. There nre people, however, who doubt their authenticity or rather the truth of the famous anecdote of Drake and his celebrated game on Plymouth Hoe. There is no con temporary account of the Incident, which was described for the first time In Britain In an Eighteenth century book. It Is mentioned, how ever, in a Spanish political pam phlet published In 1024. His Excuse Mother's fare wore an exasper ated look as she rapped her little son smartly on the knuckles. Johnny would persist In putting the food Into hln mouth with hl knife instead of his fork, and time and again his mother had told him about it. "Sonny," she said angrily, "how many times have I told you thai you must not eat with your knife. Use your fork." "Yes: but mamma." oblected rhs little boy, "I muRt use my knife, 'cos my fork leaks." Japanese "Hello" Girls Telephone operators In Japan are lied "moahl mnahl" rlrl. t, belnit the Japanese equivalent for hello. These operators are required to wear a uniform costume consist ing of a sort of skirt called a "haka ma," which Is worn over a working kimono of coarse white cloth. The sleeves of the kimono are not as full as those of an ordinary kimono and nre tied with a cord Just below the elbow to prevent them from In terfering with the movements of the openito-'s hands. The hnkninn has a sash tied In front. This attire Is completed by a pair of white cloth foot covers and straw sandals. They wear no storking, which Is a cus tom peculiar to all Japanese wom en, except those who adopt foreign styles. Precaution "Before we start the poker game I must mall a letter." "Aw, let It wait until we go out, Tom." This can't wait. I'm mailing my ' a V hill," Judge. self Look Like Rain The New Hoarder Our landlady seems to be a very thrlfly woman. The Thin Hoarder To the limit. She saves the water she bolls the eggs In and serves It as chicken broth. LEGAL NOTICES SI MMONS. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. The First National Bank in Sprague, Plaintiff. va. Elizabeth Salisbury and Child ft Browne Campany, a corporation, Defendants. To Elizabeth Salisbury and Child ft Browne Company, a corporation, de- fendenta above named: You and each of you are hereby re quired to appear and answer the com plaint filed against you in the above entitled court and cause on or before six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, and if you fail to so appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof the plain tiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in said complaint, to-wit: For judgment against de fendant, Elizabeth Salisbury, for the sum of $1550.00, with interest there on at the rate of 12 per cent per an num from the 6th day of January, 1924, until paid; for the further sum of J1S0.00 attorney's fees; for the sum of $80.96 on account of taxes pa d by plaintiff upon lands covered by the hereinafter mentioned mortgage; for the sum of $168.00 on account of in terest paid to the Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank of Portland, Oregon, on a first mortgage upon part of the, land hereinafter described; for the further sum of $18.75 paid by plain tiff on account of extension of ab stract of title to the mortgaged prem ises hereinafter described, and for its costs and disbursements herein; for a decree foreclosing that certain real estate mortgage recorded in Book 32 of the Record of Mortgages of Mor row County, Oregon, at page 67 there-1 of, described in plaintiff's complaint, covering the following described real property, to-wit: South half of Northeast quar ter and South half of Section 1 Twelve; and Northwest quarter of Section Thirteen, all in Town- J ship One South, Range Twenty five East of Willamette Meridian, in Morrow County, Oregon; that said real property be sold as i upon execution, subject only to the ! prior mortgages in favor of Albert Kerber and Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank of Portland, Oregon, and that you and each of you, be barred and foreclosed of all your right, title, claim, or interest in or lien upon said mortgaged premises and every part thereof, save only the statutory right of redemption; that the proceeds of such sale be applied toward the pay ment of the judgment which plaintiff may obtain in this suit, and that plaintiff have judgment against de fendant, Elizabeth Salisbury, for any deficiency remaining unsatisfied upon such sale; and for such further re lief as the Court may deem just and equitable. This summons is served upon you by publication thereof in pursuance of an order of the Honorable R. L. Benge, Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow Coun ty, made and entered on the 21st day of August, 1925, and the date of first publication of this summons is Aug ust 27, 1925. S. E. NOTSON and JNO. I. MELVILLE, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Address of S. E. Notson, Heppner, Oregon. SUMMONS. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. The First National Bank in Sprague, Plaintiff, vs. Elizabeth Salisbury, Defendant. To Elizabeth Salisbury, defendant above named: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled action on or before six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, and if you fail so to appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof the plaintiff will take judgment against you upon its first cause of action for the' sum of $850.00, with interest thereon at the rate of 9 per cent per annum from the 18th day of March, 1924, and the further sum of $120.00 attorney's fees; and upon its second cause of action, plain tiff will take judgment against you for the sum of $150.00, with interest thereon at the rate of 9 per cent per annum from the 6th day of May, 1924, less the sum of $5.04, and the further sum of $25.00 attorney's fees; and for its costs and disbursements in this action, And you are hereby further notified that the plaintiff has caused a writ of attachment to issue in the above entitled action and has attached the following described personal prop erty, to-wit: 144 sacks of wheat and 108 sacks of barley, the personal property of the above named defend ant, in said Morrow County, State of Oregon. And by virtue of said attachment and the judgment hereafter to be ob tained, the plaintiff will cause said personal property to be sold for the purpose of satisfying its judgment. This summons is published by vir tue of an order of Honorable R, L. Benge, Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow Coun ty, made and entered on the 21st day nt AiiiriiKt. 192ft. nnrl th Hnto nf firut (publication of this sum room is Aug- ust 1, IVZQ. "nv ' NUISUN, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Address of S. E. Notson, Heppner, Oregon. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OP OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. State Bank of Echo, ) Plaintiff,) vs. )SUMM()N8 Henry C. Robertson, W.) E. Hiatt and John F.) Vaughn, Defendents,) To W. E. Matt, the above named defendant. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, you are hereby requir ed to appear and answer the com plaint in the above entitled suit within six weeks from the first pub lication of this summons or if per sonally served upon you out of the State of Oregon, then within six weeks from the date of such personal service. And you will take notice that if you fail to appear and answer or plead within that time the plaintiff will apply to the above entitled Court for the relief demanded In 1U com plaint, to-wit: for a judgment snd decree against the defendant Henry C. Robertson and in favor of the plalnltff for the sum of $500, togeth er with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per annum from the 23d day I of February, 1924, until paid, and for the further turn of $125 as reasonable attorney's fees and plaintiff's costs and disbursements and also for a de cree foreclosing the mortgage held by plaintiff against the following described real property, to-wit: Lots 2, 3, and 4 of section 19, in township 1, North, range 27, E. W. M., contain ing 152.72 acres, which said land is also described as the southwest quar ter of the northwest quarter and the west one-half of the southwest quar ter of section 19, township 1, north of range 27, E. W. M., which said mortgage was recorded in the office of the Recorder, duly and regularly recorded in the records of Mortgages of Morrow county and state of Ore gon, in Book V, at page 219 thereof,1 and for a decree forever barring the j defendants and alt of them and all ' persons claiming or to claim by or through them or either of them of all right, title, interest or estate in and to the said mortgaged premises. This summons is published pursu ant to the order of the Honorable J. U. Campbell, Circuit judge, duly made and entered on the 29th day of: July, 1925, directing that publication herein be made once a week for a per iod of six weeks consecutively in the Heppner Gazette-Times and the first publication herein is made pursuant to said order on the 6th day of Aug- ust, 1925. RALEY, RALEY ft STEIWER, AND H. J. WARNER, Attorneys for plaintiff, post- j office address, Pendleton, Ore. gon. a6-sl7 NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS. Notice is Hereby Given, that on the second Monday in September (Monday, September 14th, 1925) the Board of Equalization of Morrow County, Oregon, will attend at the Courthouse in Morrow County, Ore gon, and publicly examine the asses ment rolls for Morrow County, Ore gon, for the year 1925, and will cor rect errors in valuation, description or quantity of land, lots or other prop erty assessed by the Assessor of Morrow County, Oregon, for the year 1925. All persons interested or having any complaint against their assessment for the year 1925, should appear at that time. Petitions for reduction in assessments must be presented in writing, verified by oath of applicant or his attorney and must be filed with the board the first week it is in ses sion and any petition or application not so made, verified and filed shall not be considered by the board. Dated at Heppner, Oregon, August 19th, 1925. JESSE J. WELLS, Assessor for Morrow County, Oregon. EAT OLYMPIA OYSTERS SERVED DAILY ANY STYLE Shell fish seasonable now. Delicious and healthful. ELKHORN RESTAURANT Telephone Main 252 Heppner's Popular Eating Place EDWARD CHINN, Prop. Professional Cards GLENN Y. WELLS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 1028 Chamber of Commerce Bldg. Portland, Oregon Phone Broadwsy 6583 DR. A. II. JOHNSTON Physician and Surgeon I. 0. O. P. Building Phoneil Office, Main S1 ; Rea., til HEPPNER, OREGON A. M. EDWARDS I DRILL WELLS I also handle Cailng, Windmilla and Supplies, do fishing and elean out old wells. BOX 14, LEXINGTON, ORE. DR. F. E. FARRIOR DENTIST X-Itay Diagnosis L 0. O. F. Building Hnppner, Orefon A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN A BURGEON Office in Masonle Building Trained Norse Assistant Heppner, Oregon WOODSON & SWEEK ATT0RNEY8-AT-LAW Offices In First National Bank Building Heppner, Oregon S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office In Court Boom Heppner, Oregon F. II. ROBINSON LAWYER IONS. OREGON AUCTIONEER Fim and Personal Property Sales A Specialty. T Years in Umatilla County. G. L. BENNETT, Lexington, Ore. Drs. Brown and Chick PHYSICIANS BURGEONS 800 Albert St. (Cor. E 24th.), PORTLAND, ORE. Red Crown Gasoline SERVICE Oils, Differential, Transmission and Cup Grease TIRES and TUBES-FREE Affi and WATER FERGUSON BROTHERS Bank Credit and Bank Balances The average balance you carry in this bank has a great deal to do with the amount of credit extended to you. When one man wonders why he can't borrow as readily as his neighbor, granting all other factors equal, the reason is proba bly found in a steady, substantial average balance as against a small, fluctuating ac count It's good business from every standpoint to build up your bank blaance, as a builder of credit, a bulwark against emergency, a ready capital for business opportunities. Farmers & Stockgrowers National Heppner Bank OreSn Don't Forget Us WHEN LOOKING FOR SCHOOL SUPPLIES We have a new and full stock of TABLETS LOOSE LEAF FILLERS NOTE BOOKS SPELLING BLANKS, Etc. PENCILS PENS PASTE ERASERS, Etc. -8 - 1- TTTTT I Phelps Grocery Company s PHONE 53 E. J. STARKEY ' ELECTRICIAN HOUSE WIRING A SPECIALTY HppMf, Oregon I IT! C. A. MINOR FWB, AUTO AND LIFE INSURANCE Old Une Companies REAL ESTATE Heppner, Ore. MATERNITY HOME MRS. Q. C. AIKEN, BKPPNBB 1 siii prepared to Uk limited num ber of maternity emmm at my bom. Pattonta privilac. U efaeaaa thalr phrsician. Boot of ear and attention aeaured. PHONB lift JOS.J.NYS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Upstairs In Humphreys Building Heppner, Oregon STATION Union Gasoline SiH I Irs