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About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1926)
PAGE FOUR HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1926. (&nz?tt? imps THE HEPPNER GAZETTE, Established March 0, U8S. THE HEPPNER TIMES, Established November It. 1897; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY It, 1JL Publlshed rer7 Thursday morning by VAWTER AND SPENCER CRAWFORD and entered at the Poet Office at Heppner, Oregon, aa seeond-eUss matter. ADVERTISING RATES GIVEN ON APPLICATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Vear Six Month Three Montha Sinftia Copies , 1304 ).0 .7 . .04 MORROW COUNTY'S OFFICIAL PAPER Foreign Advertising Representative THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION Farm Income Better SECRETARY JARDINE of the Department of Agriculture has done a real service for the nation in the study of farm incomes for 1925 and 1926. One of the ser ious handicaps in procuring ade quate remedies for farm condi tions has been the disposition on the part of the industrialists to say that the farmers were 'well off, and on the part of the farmers to deny completely any advantage and to picture their condition as even more depressing. In this particu lar report just issued, however, the Secretary sets forth that while farm incomes have improved, so that the average farm family has earned $24.00 more than the pre vious year, that the earnings are still 30 per cent lower than in 1919 and 1920, while factory wage earners for the last three years have only been earning what they earned in 1919 and 1920, they have been able to buy more. In other words, fanners had an in vestment return of only 3.5 per cent, while the industrial work men have had a return of 4 per cent. The one thing to do now is to see that farmers and indus trialists get together in a common acceptance and agreement on these figures. The trend of the people from the farms to the cities contains now a serious element of danger. The fact again that virgin land in the United States is virtually elim inated is also worthy of note. There is no lack at Washington of a disposition to recognize the seriousness of the farm condition and to plan to improve it, but the primary handicap is the inability of farmers themselves to agree on a program. Even in the matter of the McNary-Haugen bill, which certain people have attempted to make a fundamental grievance with the farmers, it must be ad mitted that in states from which the spokesmen talked the loudest, the actual farmers had the least sympathy with this measure and had the feeling that if enacted, it would do more harm than good. This is the real time for education al activities and because of not only the friendly, but the interest ed attitude at Washington, condi tions are particuarly ripe to make hay while the sun is shining. The Home Owners FIGURES of the activities of the building and loan associa tions of the United States are al ways interesting because they form an index of the prosperity and progress of the people of the country in moderate circum stances. These associations, as everybody knows, finance the building of homes by persons who are unable to pay cash. Of course there are now many other meth ods of financing the building and purchasing of homes, but the building and loan associations oc cupy a very important place in home financing and their activities are always significant from the standpoint of the modest home owner. According to H. F. Cellarius, of Cincinnati, secretary of the na tional association of these organi zations, 500,000 American homes were bought or built last year on mortgage loans secured from building nad loan associations. There was a thirty per cent in crease in residential building in the country during the same year There are more than 12,000 of these associations in America and their assets amount to more than five and a half billion dollars. Ten million Americans hold stock in these organizations and the in crease in assets during 1925 amounted to $743,238,957 or 15.6 per cent, while the growth of mem. bership in the associations was I,. 332,645. The growth of institutions of this kind is indicative of the pros perity of the workers of the Uni ted States. So long as the num ber of home owners increases so rapidly there is little danger of bolshevism in America. The American worker is rapidly be coming a capitalist, and he is go DrJrank Crane SayslmJ Many Alms for Success Are Astray MR. JOHN E. ANDRUS, Yonkers millionaire, recently said that ninety percent of the graduates of Columbia, which was graduating an enormous class, would not be successful in the various professions. He said that these people ought to be educated rather for some hard work. Most of the people who engage in the various professions are failures and they had better be sign painters or farmers. This is an old criticism which has often been leveled at the colleges. There is some truth in it. Unfortunately almost all institutions of learning are engaged in the business of turning out professional men, that is, men for white collar jobs. Too many mothers regard the school as useful for their chil dren in enabling them to escape from the necessity of manual labor. There is nothing inconsistent in earning one's own living by one's own labor and at the same time being an educated man. To have an education or a broad outlook upon life does not nec essarily mean that we are to make a living by it. St. Paul mended sails and Jesus was a carpenter. It was the custom among the ancient Jews to teach all their children some handi craft so that all would be equipped to support themselves in an emergency. Among a vast number of people only a certain proportion are equipped to make their living by their brainwork. Just how this proportion is to be determined no one knows. It is ulti mately done by nature, just as nature determines the relative number of the two sexes. Doubtless many people are following a professional life and gaining a meager livlihood who would be better off working with their hands. And perhaps some manual laborers could make a success as professionals. As a rule, however, these things take care of themselves. Every man finds his own level. Some are equipped by nature for manual work and some are properly endowed for intellectual work. The college should be able to train both classes. It should not aim to make every man a teacher or professor, or even a doctor or lawyer. It should aim to give him that education which would be the most satisfactory groundwork for any kind of life, whether that of a farmer, storekeeper or a doctor. ing to be slow to risk his assets and his opportunity for better ment for the promise of a Utopia which he knows has never yet been made possible in a world of human shortcomings. Iowa Is Not "Broke" ORMER State Senator Henry L. Adams of Iowa still thinks he lives in a pretty good state, all the advertising of Iowa's bankrupt cy to the contrary notwithst in.ling. He says: "Iowa has 34,000,000 acres of the best land on earth. It is seven times the area of the Val ley of the Nile. We lead in the value of earn, oats, horses, hjgs poultry, livestock and farm prop erty. In 1925 we produced one- tenth of the food produced in the United States. Our crops were worth $513,000,000, livestock $539,000,000, or a total of $1,052, 000,000 $31 produced on each acre of Iowa land. Capitalize this $31 at five per cent and it makes the value of each acre of Iowa land worth more than $600. Iowa produces ,$1,000 for each man woman and child living on an Iowa farm, or $5000 a family. National Republic. Why Pay the State? Warrenton Argus-News. rpHE question of the disburse- ment of taxes collected is of interest to every person in the state of Oregon, particularly when it is realized that each county in the state pays in full in two semi annual remittances the amount levied by the state of Oregon against the county. During the year 1926 Clatsop county court will pay to the state ot Oregon the sum of $135,761.80. Indications are that the actual amount collect ed by the sheriff's offce to apply directiy on the state levy will not exceed 80 per cent of the amount asked for by the state. This pro duces a condition whereby Clat sop county will fay to the state of Oregon approximately $26,000, which will have to be taken from other funds to which the county has access. During the past ten years there has been little activity shown tow ards the actual foreclosure of tax liens against property delinquent during that period. There is today possibly more than one million dollars past due for taxes on prop erty in this county. It is possible that the county court has remitted to the state of Oregon a sum of $100,000 covering the state levies of the past ten years, which has not been collected from the prop erties referred to. We would urge at this time that a recommendation be made to the members of the Oregon 1927 leg. islature that the law be amended to the end that each county only remit to the state treasury the ac tual amount of money collected each year for state taxes. This would, in our judgment, cause state officials to take a positive in terest in the collection of delin quent taxes in the several coun ties of the state, because when the remittance from these counties failed to produce the annual amount needed to conduct the state business there would arise immediately a movement to force each county to foreclose on delin quent tax property immediately same was subject to such proceed ings. This would cause a new in terest in our laws governing the collection of taxes and give to counties and cities the cooperative influence of the state of Oregon that they now lack. The bondholders of the city "of Warrenton would not today be awaiting past due interest had the state of Oregon not received the portion of taxes levied against property in this city for the past ten years, which has not been paid. Warenton has over $200,000 due the city treasury for delinquent taxes. The Warrenton school dis trict and the Warrenton road dis trict also have substantial amounts due them. Clatsop county total delinquen cy exceeds $1,000,000. The road district, school district, city and county have had to function with out the various sums of money due them and interest bearing war rants have been issued in lieu of cash payments, yet the state of Oregon has been paid her claim in full and the state obligations are paid in cash. We submit that this condition is not equitable and should be changed. Many lawyers inform us that they are not conversant with tax laws and hesitate about making any recmomendations on their own initiative. Perhaps the Portland daily press or our friend, C. C. Chapman of the Oregon Voter, will make a comprehensive study of this subject and in due time recommend to the members of the Oregon legislature an amendment to the law which will only make it mandatory for the various coun ties in the state to remit to the state of Oregon the money actu ally collected each year for state taxes. We assume that the condition in Clatsop county is beyond the nor mal delinquency throughout the state of Oregon, but it is not un likely that the several counties will remit a total of $300,000 in 1926 that they have not collected. Therefore if cities must default on bond interest, or counties must is sue warrants not paid for want of funds and made to bear 6 per cent interest, why should the state of Oregon be maintained by law as a preferred creditor? We recently asked for a remedy for our tax collection laws, none has been offered, so we recom mended placing the state of Ore gon only on an equal basis with other tax levying bodies and feel that this plan, if adopted, would quickly bring about the necessary changes. We fail to understand why the state of Oregon should re ceive its full tax levy against a city lot that is delinquent and then by process of law the city may even tually lose its improvement dis trict liens against the property. EVERY resident or eastern Ore gon ought io make it his busi ness from now until the Novem bed election to boost for the East ern Oregon normal school. If es tablished this school will serve all the vast territory east of the Cas cade mountains. It is needed and needed badly. At the present time our young people desiring normal training are compelled to make the long journey to the west side or go to another state. The matter of a location for the school is in the hands of the state board of re gents, so that for the present the people need not concern them selves with that phase of the ques tion. The first thing to do is to put the school over in the election and the whole east end of the state should be a unit working to that end. Milton Eagle. The old-fashioned woman who used to relax into a sunbonnet and mother-hubbard wrapper at sixty, now gets her face lifted, cuts off three inches of her skirt and hops to it. The trouble with a lot of folks is that they are only getting eight miles on a gallon of gas when they have a twenty-miles-to-the-gallon income. FOR SALE. Italian prunes in suit cases, 40c. Add 35c for delivery, or can send C. O. D. Petite prunes 60c. Some ap ples and pears. W. R. Woodworth, Heights Berry Farm, Estacada, Ore. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has filed his final account as administrator of the estate of Charles W. Caldwell, deceased, and that the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County has ap pointed Tuesday, the 7th day of Sep tember, 1926, at the hour of 10 o'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, of hearing and settle ment of said final account. Objec tions to said final account must be filed on or before said date. M. F. CALDWELL, Administrator. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. In the Matter of the Estate of G. D. Coats, Deceased. The undersigned having been ap pointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Morrow County, administratrix of the estate of G. D. Coats, deceased, notice is hereby giv en to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against Baid deceased, to present them verified as required by law, within six months after the first publication of this notice to said administratrix at the office of C. L. Sweek, her attorney, at Heppner, Ore gon. MARY E. COATS, Administratrix of the estate of G. D. Coats, deceased. Date of first publication July IB, 1926. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. IN" THE COUNTY COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. In the Matter of the Estate of Robert J. Buschke, Deceased. The undersigned having been ap pointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, administratrix of the estate of Rob ert J. Buschke, deceased, notice hereby given to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against said deceased, to present them verified as required by law, within six months after the first publication of this no. tice to said administratrix at the of fice of C. L. Sweek, her attorney, at Heppner, Oregon. LORENA BUSCHKE, Administratrix of the estate of Robert J. Buschke, deceased. Dated and first published July 22, 1926. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE, Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of an execution and or- der of sale issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Mor row County, to me directed nad dated the 13th day of July, 1926, upon a judgment, decree and order of sale rendered and entered in said Court on the 12th day of July, 1926, In fa vor of State of Oregon and against Warren H. Stender, defendant, for the sum of $2940.00 with interest at the rate of 4 per annum from Aug ust 1, 1923; the further sum of $243.61 with interest at the rate of A thorough cultural and professional scholar ship it th outstanding characteristic of the State University. Training im offtni in: , 22 departments of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Architecture and Allied Arts-Business- Administration Educa tion Journalism Graduate Study Law Medicine Music Physi cal Education Sociology. Social Word Extension Division. 51st Year Opens September 27, 1926 for innrmarlon.or catalaiiM mrit The Retturor. Unlvtriltf of Oregon, uene, Ore. 8 per annum from June 1, 1926; the further sum of $300.00 attorney's fees and costs and disbursements taxed and allowed at $19.00, which said de cree further ordered and directed the sale of real property mortgaged to the plaintiff to secure the payment of such judgment. I will on Saturday, the 14th day cf August, 1926, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M. of said day, at the front door of the County Court House In Hepp ner, Morrow County, State of Oregon, offer for sale and sell at public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash in hand all of the following described real property situated in Morrow County, State of Oregon, to wit: The West Half of Section 32, Township 2 North, Range 24 E. W. M., or so much of said real property as may be necessary to satisfy plaintiff's judgment and accruing cost of sale. Dated at Heppner, Oregon, this 14th day of July, 1928. Date of first publication July 15th, 1926. GEO. McDUFFEE, Sheriff of Morrow County, State of Oregon. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE. Notice is hereby given that by vir tue of an execution and order of sale issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, to me directed and dated the 14th day of July, 1926, in that certain suit in said Court wherein The First National Bank in Sprague is plaintiff, and Eli' sabeth Salisbury and Child & Browne Company, a corporation, are defend ants, and wherein said plaintiff se cured judgment against defendant, Elizabeth Salisbury, for the sum of $1550.00, with interest thereon from the 6th day of January, 1924, at the late of 12 per cent, per annum, the sum of $180.00 attorney's fees, th sum of $80.96 on account of taxes paid by plaintiff, the sum of $168.00 on ac count of interest paid by plaintiff to the Pacific Coast Jofiit StocK Land Bank of Portland, Oregon, the sum of $18.75 paid by plaintiff for extension of abstract of title to the mortgaged premises, and the further sum of $51.40 costs and disbursements taxed and allowed herein, and wherein plain tiff secured a decree of foreclosure against Elizabeth Sa'sbury and Child & Browne Company, a corproation, de fendants aforesaid, I will, on Satur day, the 14th day of August, 1926, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the front door of the County Court House in Heppner, Mor- ow County, Oregon, offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand all of the fol lowing described real property situat ed in Morrow County, State of Ore gon, to-wit: South half of Northeast quarter and South half of Section Twelve (12) and the Northwest quar ter of Section Thirteen (13), Town ship One (1) South, Range Twenty- five (25) East of Willamette Merid ian, or so much of said real property as may be necessary to satisfy plain tiff's judgment, costs, attorney's fees, end accruing costs of sale. Dated this 15th day of July, 1926. GEORGE McDUFFEE, Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon. By PAUL McDUFFEE, Deputy. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY Laura H. Akers, Plaintiff,) vs. ) Lee Cantweli and Frances) Cantwell, his wife; Da-) vid Cantwell and Mrs.) David Cantwell, his) wife; Cassie Fuller and) John Doe Fuller, her) husband; Ethel Stewart) and John Doe Stewart,) her husband; Ida) Knight and John Doe) Knight, her husband;) Abner Cantwell; Lottie) George and Milo George)SUMMONS her husband; Martha) Wright, a widow; John) Dennis; William Den-) nis; Cassie Epperson,) a widow; also all of the) unknown heirs at law) of Moses Cantwell, de-) ceased; also all of the) unknown heirs at law) of G. M. Akers, da-) ceased; and all other) persons claiming any) right, title or interest) in or to the real prop-) erty hereinafter des-) cribed, Defendants.) To Lottie George and Milo George, her husband; the unknown heris at law of Moses Cantwell, deceased; the unknown heirs at law of G. M. AkerB, deceased; and all other persons claiming any right, title or interest in or to the real property hereinafter described. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, You are hereby required to appear and answer the plaintiff s com plaint filed in this Court, on or before six weeks from the date of first pub lication of this summons, if published or from tke date of Bervice upon you if personally served within the State of Oregon; and if you fail to appear as aforesaid, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief prayed for in her complaint which is as follows, to wit: For a Decree of this Court that the plaintiff is the owner in fee simple of the following described real property in Morrow County, State of Oregon, to wit: Wtt of the SEtt and the Ett of SW4 of Section 28, in Township 3 South, Range 24, E. W. M.; and that plaintiff's title to Baid real property be quieted against each of above named defendants, and that said de fendants be decreed to have no right, title or interest in or to said real property; and for such other and fur ther relief as to the Court may seem meet and equitble. This Summons is published by vir tue of an order of the Honorable R. L. Benge, Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, made and entered on the 7th day of July, 1926. Date of first publication is July 8th, 1'26. C. L. SWEEK, Attorney for Plaintiff. Address: Heppner, Oregon. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned, administrator of the estate of Eva M. Darbee, deceased, has filed in the County Court of the 8tate of Oregon for Morrow County, his final account of the administration of said estate and the said court haB fixed the 20th day of August, 1926, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M., as the time, and the County Court Room at the Court House at Heppner, Oregon,' as the place for hearing objections to said final account and the settlement of said estate and all persons having ob jections to said final account or the settlement of said estate are hereby required to file the same in said Court on or before the date Bet for the hear ing hereof. Dated this 22nd day of July, 1926. C. DARBEE, Administrator. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF MORROW. THE UNITED STATES INVEST MENT CORPORATION, LIMITED, Plaintiff, vs. E. G. ALFREDSON, NORAH R, AL- FPvEDSON, his wife, and IRENE M. BALCH, Defendants. By virtue of an execution, judg ment order, decree and order of sale issued ut of the above entitled Court in the above entitled cause, to me di rected and dated the 10th day of July, 1926, upon a judgment and decree duly made and rendered on tho 26th day of June, 1926, and entered in the Journal of Baid Court on the 28th day of June, 1926, in favor of The United States investment Corporation, Lim ited, a corporation, plaintiff, and against the defendants E. G. Alfredson and Norah R. Alfredson for tho sum of $2500.00 with interest on the sum of $3000.00 from the 1st day of Decem ber, 1923, to the 16th day of June, 1926, at the rate of eight (8) per cent, per annum, and with interest on the sum of $2500.00 from the 15th day of -June, 1926, at the rate of 8 per annum, and the further sum of $240.00, with interest thereon from the 1st day of December, 1923, at the rate of 10 per annum, and. the fur ther sum of $6.00 with interest there on from the 18th day of December, 1924, at the rate of 10 per annum, and tho further sum of $10.00, with interest from the 16th day of May, 1925, at the rate of 10 per annum, and the further sum of $278.67, with interest thereon from the 11th day of September, 1925, at the rate of 10 per annum, and the further sum of $523.90, with interest thereon from the 29th day of March, 1926, at the rate of 10 per annum, and the fur ther sum of $200.00, with interest thejon from the 26th day of June, 1926, at the rate of 6 per annum, and the further Bum of $17.50, costs and disbursements in said suit, and the costs of and upon this writ com manding me to make sale of the fol lowing described real property, sit uated in the County of Morrow, State f Oregon, to-wit: The Northeast Quarter of Sec tion Twenty-seven (27), the West Half of the Northwest Quarter of Section Twenty-six (26), the West Half of the Southwest Quar ter of Section Twenty-three (23), and the South Half of the South west Quarter of Section Twenty two (22) in Township Two (2) South, Range Twenty-three (23) East of the Willamette Meridian, containing Four Hundred (400) acres more or less, I will in compliance therewith on Saturday, the 14th day of August, 1926, at the hour of 10 o'clock, A. M., at the front door of the County Court House in the City of Heppner, in the County of Morrow, State of Oregon, sell at public auction, subject to re demption, to the highest bidder for cash in hand, all the right, title and interest which the above named de fendants and each of them had in the above described real property on the 20th day of June, 1918, the date of the mortgage foreclosed in said suit, or since that date have had in and to the above described real property, or any part thereof, to satisfy said exe cution, judgment order, decree, inter est, costs and accruing costB. GEORGE McDUrr'EE, Sheriff of the County of Morrow, State of Oregon. Dated this 15th day of July, 1926. First Publication July 15, 1926. Last Publication, August 12, 1926. NOTICE OF SALE OF ANIMALS. Notice is hereby given that by vir tue of the lawB of the State of Ore gon the undersigned has taken up the following described animals found running at large upon his premises in Morrow County, Oregon, (the Par kers Mill range), and that he will on Saturday, the 21st day of August, 1926, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of Baid day, at his ranch 3 miles above Heppner on Willow creek, sell said animals at public sale to the highest bidder for cash in hand. Said animals are described as follows: lroan horse, ME brand on right shoulder, weight 1000 pounds. 1 sorrel horse, ME brand on left shoulder, weight 1300 pounds. 1 black mare, ME brand on left shoulder, weight 800 pounds. 1 brown mare, T brand on right jaw, weight 900 pounds. 1 brown mare, IN over bar on left hip .weight 800 pounds. 1 horse mule, brown, no visible marks or brands, weight 700 pounds. 1 bay mare, 21 bar over it brand on right hip and brown colt at side, weight 850 pounds. 1 bay mare, O over cheok mark brand on right hip, sorrel colt at side, v-eight 900 pounds. 1 bald face brown mare, S brand on left jaw, weight 800 pounds. 1 bay mare ,bar 3 brand on left shoulder, weight 750 pounds; gentle. Unless the same shall have been re deemed by the owner or owners there of. FRANK WILKINSON, Heppner, Oregon. IN THE JUSTICE'S COURT FOR THE SIXTH DISTRICT OF MOR ROW COUNTY, STATE OF ORE GON. Nora Hughes, Plaintiff,) vs. ) SUMMONS R. J. Vaughan, Defendant,) To R. J. vaughan, Defendant. 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 ac tion on or before six weeks from the date of the first publication of this Summons, if served by publication, and if personally served outside the Slate of Oregon, within six weeks from the date of such service, and for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the Court for a judgment against you for the sum of $75.00 with Interest at the rate of 6 per annum from April 1, 1021, her costs and dis bursements incurred in the action, and for a further order of the Court directing that the attached property be disposed of and the proceeds ap plied to the payment of plaintiff's judgment. The plaintiff has caused to be at tached in said aetion a check for $103.00 belonging to the defendant. This Summons is published by vir tue of an order of Alex Cornett, Jus tice of the Peace for the Sixth Dis trict of Morrow County, State of Ore gon, made and entered on the 29th day of July, 1926. The date of first publication is July 29, 1926. , C. L. SWEEK, Heppner, Oregon. Attorney for Plaintiff. - E. H. BUHN Expert Watchmaker and Jewelry Repairer Heppner, Ore. DR. A. H. JOHNSTON Physician and Surgeon Graduate Nurse Assistant I. O. O. F. Building Phones: Office, Main 933; Res. 492 Heppner, Oregon A. M. EDWARDS I DRILL WELLS I also handle Casing, Windmills and Supplies, do fishing and clean out old wells. Box 14, Lexington, .Ore. DR. F. E. FARRIOR DENTIST X-Ray Diagnosis I. O. O. F. Building Heppner, Oregon Frank A. McMenamin LAWYER Phone ATwater 5515 1014 Northwestern Bank Bldg. PORTLAND, OREGON Res. GArfield 1949 J A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN ft SURGEON Trained Nurse Assistant Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon C. L. SWEEK AT TORNEY-AT-LAW Offices in First National Bank Building Heppner, Oregon MORROW GENERAL HOSPITAL Surgical, Medical, Maternity Case Wards, and private rooms. Rates Reasonable. Mrs. Zena Westfall, Graduate Nurse, Superintendent. A. H. Johnston, M. D. Physi-cian-in-Charge, Phone Main 322 Heppner, Or. S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office in Court ouse Heppner, Oregon MATERNITY HOME MRS. G. C. AIKEN Private Rooms. Special Car. Same Prices to All. Phone 975 Heppner, Or. AUCTIONEER Farm and Personal Property Sole a Specialty. "The Man Who Talks to Beat the Band" G. L. BENNETT, Lexington, Ore. DR. C. C. CHICK PHYSICIAN and SURGEON Office In Brosius Block Hood Rivi . Oregon C. J. WALKER LAWYER and Notary Public Odd Fellows Building Heppner Oregon Maternity Hospital Wards and Private Rooms. Rates Reasonable. Mrs. Zena Westfall, Graduate Nurse Phone Main 822 Heppner, Or. C. A. MINOR FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE INSURANCE Old Line Companies. Real Estate. Heppner, Oregon JOS. J. NYS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Roberta Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon