Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 07, 1926, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    PAGE FOUR
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCT. 7, 1926.
THE HEPPNER GAZETTE, Established
March to, 1881.
THE HEPPNER TIMES. Establishes
November 18. 1897:
CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY U, mi.
Published ever? Tfawsday moraine- by
VAWTER AND SPENCER CRAWFORD
and entered at the Post Office at Heppner.
Oregon, a aeeond-eisM matter.
ADVERTISING RATES GIVEN ON
APPLICATION
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.:
On Year
Six Month.
Three Months
Stncla Copier ,
II 00
1.00
.71
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MORROW COUNTY'S OFFICIAL PAPER
Forelfa Adrertisins Representative
THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION
We Don't Agree, Mr.
Chapman.
"GRANTED, as you say, Mr,
J Chapman, the republican vot
ers of the state made a serious
mistake in not favoring Mr. Stan
field with their vote in the primar
ies, we are prone to disagree with
your stand taken in that worthy's
behalf in the issue of your es
teemed Oregon Voter of the 2nd
inst. You ask that republicans
blast the party nominating system
and support Mr. Stanfield for the
state's welfare, because of Mr.
Stanfield s strong committee post
tions and the belief that his re
tention as United States senator
may result in great financial re
turns.
It seems, Mr. Chapman, you
may have overlooked a major
point in your premise. Even
though Oregon republicans do as
you ask, is there any assurance
that the G. O. P. men in Washing
ton will break over the traces and
receive Mr. Stanfield back into the
fold with all of his former pres
tige? We have known of in
stances where party jumpers re
ceived rather rough usage at the
hands of peers in the halls of
Congress. As you say, hard think
ing is required.
Personally, we are willing to
stick to our choice in the primar
ies. In every respect as things
now stand, it looks to us like
Frederick Steiwer is a good man
to tie to. He is as much in favor
of Oregon getting her just return
from federal trust lands as is his
challenger, and should he be cho
sen to fill the boots now occupied
by Mr. Stanfield he would be in a
better position to gain full recog
nition of Oregon's rights in this
regard than would Mr. Stanfield,
should the latter be returned ac
companied by the odium that most
certainly would surround him. We
can see nothing but fallacy in Ore
gon republican voters deserting
their choice of the primaries.
Mr. Stanfield's present predica
ment is but another result of his
not being on the job. He should
have made more clear before the
primaries the points he now cites
in his own behalf. Acknowledged,
he has reached a place where he
could have done the state untold
good. But Mr. Stanfield has made
a grave error an error that
should blast his career, politically.
Such unwisdom sounds an unde-
Dr.Frank Crane
SELECTIVE AFFECTION IS BEST
THE old dispute between true love and any other kind of love
dates back as far as Wagner's operas, and further.
Lord Lytton said something somewhere to the effect that if
a man truly loves a woman all other women are slightly dis
tasteful to him.
There are two kinds of love in the world selective affection,
and the other kind.
They can be distinguished, as much as anything else, by
their associates.
Selective affection is the companion of all the virtues. It
goes with honesty, honor, loyalty, and every commendable char
acteristic. That affection that is felt for just anybody is a law breaker.
It makes nothing but trouble.
Of course the greater includes the less, and selective affec
tion may include all manner of desire.
But there is something characteristic of true love that is es
sentially different from any old sort of love.
It is true love, that inspires and actuates the greatest achieve
ments, not miscellaneous attractions.
The human race has experimented a good many hundred
years with various kinds of affinities, and it is selective affinity
that has stood the test. -
It is that which every young man or woman feels with the
advent of the right mate. There is something about it that
excludes all other affections.
It is not enough to ask yourself whether you are affectionate
or not. It is also necessary to inquire of yourself whether this
affection is confined to one person. It is not any sort of love
that is the basis of the right marriage, but it is loyal love, and
the more loyal one is, the greater his love becomes.
There is the same difference btween true love and other
kinds of love that there is between a flower and weeds. One is
a cultivated plant, and it is that for which the garden was made.
The other is an interloper and does nothing but drain our re
sources. One is an inspiration constantly, but the other does nothing
but leave us bankrupt of desire.
"NEWS and PROGRESS" n.
ECONOMIC SIGNIFICANCE AND SERVICE OF THE AMERICAN r
NEWSPAPER AND NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING From latest volume
in Manhattan Library of Popular Economics, republished in serial form through J
courtesy of Bank 0 the Manhattan Company, New York.
HOW ADVERTISING CREATES NEWS
T-siVERY successful newspaper editor possesses the
Sm-Tsi faculty of being able to sense the existence of an
interest on the part of his readersin any subject,
and the degree of his success is measured largely
by the manner and extent of his response to that
interest through the news and editorial columns
of his publication.
But why mention fact that is 90 obvious and commonplace? What
has it tc do with the purely economic functions and influences of the
newspaper? What relation has it to such things as production and dis
tribution, merchandising and newspaper advertising?
The answers may be found by glancing through the columns of any
modern newspaper and comparing them with the newspapers of a
generation ago when advertising as an arm of merchandising and an
educational force was still a sprawling infant in swaddling clothes. The
answers mav also be found in those numerous departmental sections of
the newspaper which are now devoted to such subjects as real estate,
finance, automobiles, books, theatres and moving pictures, radio and
many others. They demonstrate in a striking way the fact that news
paper advertising not only is news but that it makes news; that through
arousing a widespread interest in any given subject a public desire is
created for more news which the editor is quick to sense and to satisfy
through the news and editorial columns of his paper. Likewise news
produces advertising, for the modern merchandiser of goods or services
is, like the editor, eager to respond to the desire or demand which
follows close upon the heels of an awakened public interest.
For example, only a few years ago, the newspapers began to print
references to interesting experiments by
phenomena. These notices were brief, for
the most part, and seemed as remote from
practical affairs as archaeological research
in Egypt or Yucatan. Less than a decade
later in almost any issue of any news
rjaner. could be found a regular radio sec
tion giving the programs of a number of
stations, and often a good deal ot addi
tional news and general information.
Various papers, indeed, issue weekly radio
supplements. Since it is the newspaper's
business to study and meet the news re
quirements of its readers, this demon
strates the existence ot a large interest in
the nbject of radio on the part of the
The swift rise of this interest is an inter -
sons illustration of how the advertising
and new columns of the newspaper have
each reacted upon the other. The atten
tion of manufacturers hrst was attracted
by the published accounts of these radio
experiments. They succeeded in producing
sets that could be used by the layman, and
then undertook to create a market for
their sale. This led them into the news
paper advertising columns, where they
sirable trait in any man, more
so in a United States senator.
Quit Yammering.
HIBBING, MINN., NEWS.
OUR country never was in a
more prosperous condition
than it is today on a better or
more solid financial foundation,
with glowing prospects not only
for next year but for many years
to come. There are, naturally, in
dividual and community cases 'of
disappointment where business
and wages and employment are
below the average but such cases
in no way hamper the general
prosperity of the nation.
The people as a whole are bet
ter off today than they ever were,
and are better off than the people
of any other nation in the world,
more labor-saving devices in the
home, more and better clothing,
set better tables, have more op
portunity and more means of play
and enjoy the play better than
they ever did.
If the country were on the way
to the demnition bow wows such
cercain scientists in radio
stated the amazing powers of the new de
vice and captured the imagination of the
public The response was overwhelming.
Radio sets were sold in incredible numbers
and installed in every community. The
buyers became eager for knowledge of pro-;
grams and for information about the new
nstrument. Radio information, therefore.
became genuine news and the result was
seen in the radio columns of the news
papers. Another department which has spruntr
into the news from the advertising col
umns is that of the automobile. This is
almost entirely a development of the pres
ent century, and thus has occurred under
the eyes ot almost every adult.
During the same period, finance has
risen to be a large news subject. A few
years ago it commanded little space be
yond the bare details of market reports
The tremendous success of the Liberty
Loans was a lesson to investment bankers.
Only since the war have they realized the
possibilities ot selling stocks and bonds to
the millions instead of to the thousands.
Nearly $6,500,000,000 of new capital
a condition could not exist.
Let's quit yammering and yowl
ing about hard times and about
everything else and turn our
thoughts toward the blessings that
are given us in such abundance,
and if we make the most of our
blessings we will have provided
ourselves with an armor that can
not even be dented by the pro
fessional calamity howler.
And we'll enjoy life the better.
Mr. Kipling Again.
RUDYARD KIPLING, regard
ed by some critics as a bright
literary light, and by others as one
not so bright, has broken out into
verse again. Whatever one may
think of Rudyard s ability as a
rhymster and literary man there
can be no question, judging from
some of his latest work, that he is
a little weak on logic. Among
other things in his latest volume,
Mr. Kipling evolved a little poem
entitled "The Vineyard." In his
poem, according to the critics, he
has taken Uncle Sam to task for
his conduct in the aftermath of
the World War. The poem is very
properly enclosed in a volume en
titled "Debits and Credits." The
rhyme about the vineyard starts
off as follows:
At the eleventh hour he came
But his wages were the same
As ours who all day long had trod
The winepress of the wrath of
God.
Since his back had felt no load,
Virtue in him still abode;
So he swiftly made his own,
Those lost spoils we had not won.
This is supposed to refer to the
part of Uncle Sam in the war. It
seems to suggest that he came in
late then grabbed off all the plunder-
without making any sacrifice
of his own. This may be all right
in poetry, if you have enough poet
ic license to put it over, but we
fail to get the logic of it.
Will somebody please have Mr.
Kipling or some of his friends in
this country tell us about the
wages Uncle Sam received? Up
to this time it would seem that
he has been paid mostly in in
gratitude. And the load he has
borne and will bear includes not
only the killed and wounded, but
about fifty or so billions of dollars
that it will cost him before the
war expense has been entirely li
quidated. It is to be admitted that there
probably wouldn't have been any
spoils won had not Uncle Sam
gone into the game; but just when
did he make those spoils his own?
A careful inventory of his pock
ets fails to discover any repara
tions, any Alsace-Lorraines, any
Asia Minors flowing with oil and
honey, any territory in Africa or
among the isles of the Pacific.
If Uncle Sam took over the
spoils, he is holding out on his
boys and girls, and we are enti
tled to know about it.
Pfr Sir ill!
YrsAi-gVr
Q Bunk of the Manhattan Co., N. 3f.
Public interest in any topic finds quick response
from both editor and advertiser
was secured from the public during the
sinale year 192;. The United States has
some tw nty million individual holders of
stocks and bonds, and their foreign invest
ments alone, exclusive ot government
debts, amounted, in the same year, to ap
proximately ? 1 2,000,000,000. Such figures
indicate a remarkable extension of popu
lar interest in nnance, to which the finan
cial news and advertising columns minister.
All told, it is a new and wonderful chap
ter in American life, one which may be
visualized by comparing newspapers of
yesterday and today. The radio, the auto
mobile, the investment bond, are but
examples among hundreds. News and ad
vertising columns alike are filled by those
who seek to learn, to buy, to sell, and each
group in turn reinforces the other, as the
volume of production and distribution
broadens. In the whole process one essen
tial agency has been consistently and con
stantly at work to inform and to bring to
gether scientist, inventor, reader, maker,
seller, distributor and buyer. That agency
is the newspaper.
Next article, "Following the News.")
Solving Farm Problem.
I
N FOUR years there has been
a jump in Idaho farm produc
tion that is phenominal.
In 1921, carload shipments over
the Union Pacific from the farms
of Southern Idaho totaled 151. In
1925, they totaled 1213. They in
cluded 434 carloads of butter, 455
carloads of cheese, 208 carloads
of eggs and 116 carloads of poul
try. It will be noticed that the
shipments were butter or eggs or
poultry, rather than hay or other
bulky commodities.
The Idaho farmers have found
that to reduce feed to the higher
values of dairy and poultry prod
ucts, results in products for which
there is readier demand on the
markets.
LEGAL NOTICES
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR
ROW COUNTY.
Mabel Cox Luper, )
Plaintiff,)
vs. JSUMMONS
Claud R. Luper, )
Defendant.)
To Claud R. Luper, Defendant:
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF
OREGON: You are hereby required
t- appear and answer the complaint
hied against you in the above entitled
suit within six weeks from the date
of first publication of this summons,
if published; or within six weeks
from the date of srevice upon you, if
personally served without the State
of Oregon; and if you fail to appear
and answer, for want thereof, the
plaintiff will apply to the court for
the relief prayed for in her complaint,
to wit: For decree of his court,
granting to her an absolute divorce
and restoring to her, her maiden
' name of Mabel Cox, and for such oth
er relief as to the court may seem
equitable.
I This summons is published by vir
tue of an order of the Honorable R,
L. Benge, County Judge of Morrow
County, State of Oregon, made and
entered on the 29th day of Septem
ber, 1926.
Date of first publication Septem
ber 30th, 1926.
C. L. SWEEK,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Address: Heppner, Oregon.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR
ROW COUNTY.
Belle Courter. Plaintiff, )
vs. )SUMMONS
Frank Courter, Defendant.)
To Frank Courter, 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
suit within six weeks from the date
of first mihlieation of this summons
if served hv nublication; or within
six weeks from the' date of service
unon vou. If rjernonally served with
out the State of Oregon; and if you
fail to appear and answer, for want
thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the
court for the relief prayed for in her
complaint, to wit: For an absolute
divorce from you.
This illmmnfll is oublished by vir
tue of an order of the Honorable R.
L. Benge, County Judge of Morrow
County, State of Oregon, made and
entered on the 29th day of Septem
ber, 1926.
Date of first publication Septem
ber 30th, 1926.
C. L. SWEEK,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Address: Heppner, Oregon.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned has been appointed by the
County Court of the State of Oregon
for Morrow County administrator of
the estate of Louis Paldanius, de
ceased, and that all persons having
claims against the said estate must
present the same, duly verified ac
cording to law, to me at my office
in Heppner, Oregon, within six
months from the date of the first
publication of this notice, which date
of first publication is September 23,
1926.
S. E. NOTSON.
Administrator.
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, dated the 21st day of Sep
tember, 1926, to me directed, in that
certain suit wherein The Federal
Land Bank of Spokane, a corporation,
secured a judgment against West Ex
tension National Farm Loan Associa
tion,' a corporation, defendant, for the
sum of $48.76 with interest at 8
from December 24, 1925; the further
sum of 11,468.75 with interest at
5V4 from December 24, 1926; the
further sum of $604.48 with Interest
at 8 from April 16, 1926; the fur
ther sum of $12.60 with interest at
8 from March 19, 1926; less $75.00
stock subscription; $150.00 attorney's
fee and the further sum of $56.60
ccsts and disbursements, which judg
ment was dated September 16th, 1926.
I will on the 23d day of October,
1926, at the hour of 10:30 o'elcok A.
M. in the forenoon of said day, at
the front door of the County Court
House in Heppner, Morrow County,
Oregon, offer for sale at public auc
tion and sell to the highest bidder
for cash in hand all of the following
described real property in Morrow
County, State of Oregon, to wit:
Southeast Quarter of the Southeast
Quarter of Section 14, in Township 4,
North of Range 24 E. W. M., or so
rruch of said real property as may
be necessary to satisfy plaintiff's
judgment, costs, attorney's fee and
accruing cost of sale.
Dated this 22nd day of September,
1'26.
Date of first publication, Septem
hei 23, 1926.
GEORGE 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, dated the 21st day of Sep
tember, 1926, to me directed, in that
certain suit wherein State of Oregon,
a public corporation, Becured a judg
ment against George N. Perry and
Eiva A. Perry, defendants, for the
sum of $2040.00 with interest there
ri. from the 15th day of September,
1923, at the rate of 4 per annum
and the further sum of $35.00 with
interest at 8 from July 26, 1925; the
further sum of $134.59 with interest
et 8 from January 19, 1926; and the
further sum of $250.00 attorney's fee
and $47.60 costs and disbursements
which judgment was dated the 16th
day of September, 1926.
I will on the 23d day of October,
1926, at the hour of 10:15 o'clock A.
M. in the forenoon of said day, at
the front door of the County Court
House in Heppner, Morrow County,
Oregon, offer for sale at public auc
tion and sell to the highest bidder
for cash in hand all of the following
described real property in Morrow
County, State of Oregon, to wit:
Lot numbered 6 in Section 6, Town
ship 2 North, Range 23 E. W. M,, in
the County of Morrow and State of
Oregon, or so much of said real prop
erty as may be necessary to satisfy
plaintiff's judgment, costs, attorney's
fee and accruing cost of sale.
Dated this 22nd day of September,
H26.
Date of first publication, Septem
ber 23, 1926.
GEORGE 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, dated the 21st day of Sep
tember, 1926, to me directed, In that
certain suit wherein Albert Kerber,
plaintiff, secured a judgment against
Elizabeth Salisbury, defendant, for
the sum of $11,050.00 with interest
thereon from December 4, 1924, at the
rate of 7 per annum and $685.00
attorney's fee, and the further sum
of $38.20 costs and disbursements,
which judgment was dated the 16th
day of September, 1926.
I will on the 23d day of October,
1926, at the hour of 10:45 o'clock A.
M. in the forenoon of said day, at
the front door of the County Court
House in Heppner, Morrow County,
Oregon, offer for sale at public auc
tion and sell to the highest bidder
for cash in hand all of the following
described real property In Morrow
County, State of Oregon, to wit:
Southwest Quarter of Section 12 and
the Northwest Quarter of Section 13,
in Township 1 South, Range 25, E.
W. M., In Morrow County, State of
Oregon, or so much of said real prop
erty as may be necessary to Batisfy
plaintiff's judgment, costs, attorney's
fee and accuring cost of sale.
Dated this 22nd day of September,
11126.
Date of first publication, Septem
her 23, 1926.
GEORGE 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 Coui't of
the State of Oregon, for Morrow
County, dated the 21st day of Sep
tember, 1926, to me directed, in that
certain suit wherein The Federal
Land Bank of Spoknne, a corporation.
j secured a judgment against Charles
L. Ashbaugh and Rose A. Ashbaugh,
husband and wife, and the Hardman
National Farm Loan Association, a
corporation, defendants, for the sum
of $81.26 with interest at 8 from
December 3, 1926; the further sum
of $2,325.10 with interest at 6V4
from December 8, 1925; the further
sum of $177.26 with interest at 8
from May 26, 1926; the further sura
of $7.50 with Interest at 8 from
May 11, 1926; leBs $125.00 stock sub
scription; $200 attorney's fee and the
further sum of $20.80 costs and dis
bursements, which judgment was dat
ed the 16th day of September, 1926.
I will on the 23d day of October,
1926, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock A.
M. in the forenoon of aaid day, at
the front door of the County Court
House in Heppner, Morrow County,
Oregon, offer for sale at public auc
tion and sell to the highest bidder
for cash in hand all of the following
described real property In Morrow
County, State of Oregon, to wit:
North Half of the Norhtwest Quar
ter, the Southeast Quarter of the
Northwest Quarter and the Northeast
Quarter of Section 14 and the South
west Quarter of the Northwest Quar
ter of Section 13, in Township 4
South, Range 24, E. W. M., contain
ing 320 acres, more or less, in Mor
row County, State of Oregon; or so
much of said real property as may be
necessary to Batisfy the plaintiff s
judgment, costs, attorney's fee and
accruing cost of sale.
Dated this 22nd day of September,
li'26.
Date of first publication, Septem
ber 23, 1926.
GEORGE McDUFFEE,
Sheriff of Morrow County, State
pf Oregon.
, NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE.
Notice is hereby given that by vir
tue of an execution, decree and order
of sale issued out of the Circuit
Court of the State of Oregon for Mor
row County, in that certain action
in said Court wherein J. B. Colt
Company, a corporation, as plaintiff,
secured a judgment against M. C.
Marshall, as defendant, on the 14th
day of December, 1925, for the sum
of $400.00 with interest at the rate
of six per cent per annum from
April 17, 1924; the further sum of
$50.00 attorney's fee and costs and
disbursements in the sum of $11.00,
I will on Saturday the 16th day of
October, 1926, at the front door of the
Court House in Heppner, Oregon, at
the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., offer for
sale and sell to the highest bidder
for cash in hand, all of the follow
ing described real property belong
ing to M. C. Marshall, or so much
thereof as may be necessary to sat
isfy said judgment, costs and attor
neys fees, to-wit:
All of Section 16 In Township
3 North, Range 24 E. W. M.
SE of NEV4 and Ett of SE14
of Section 23 and SWtt of SW14
of Section 24, in Township 4 N.
R. 23 E. W. M.; also the NEK of
Section 19, Township 4 N. R. 25
E. W. M., all in Morrow County,
State of Oregon.
GEORGE McDUFFEE,
Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned has been duly appointed by
the County Court of the State of
Oregon for Morrow County, executor
of the estate of Mary D. McHaley,
deceased, and all persons having
claims against the said estate of said
deceased, are hereby required to pre
sent the same with proper vouchers
to said executor at the office of Jos.
J. Nys, his attorney, at Heppner, Ore
gon, on or before six months from
the date hereof.
Dated this 2nd day of September,
1926.
D. E. GILMAN, Executor.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE ON
EXECUTION.
Notice is hereby given that under
and by virtue of a foreclosure execu
tion duly issued out of, and under
the seal of the Circuit Court of the
State of Oregon for Morrow County,
on the 8th day of September, 1926,
pursuant to a judgment and decree
entered and rendered in said Court on
the 2nd day of September, 1926, in a
certain suit in said Court wherein
Elizabeth M. Keeney, was plaintiff,
and Ida L. Matlock, a widow, Horace
J. Matlock, and Jennie Matlock, his
wife, Benjamin Matlock, unmarried,
N'orah Matlock Metschan and Otto
Metschan, her husband, Juanita Mat
Irck, unmarried, Ida L. Matlock, as
Executrix of the Last Will and Testa
ment of T. J. Matlock, deceased, J. I.
Hanna and Lulu Henna, his wife,
Nancy E. Stuart, unmarried, and D.
M. Stuart and Kate Stuart, his wife,
were defendants, and which judgment
was in favor of the plaintiff, and
against Ida L. Matlock, individually
and as Executrix of the Last Will and
Testament of T. J. Matlock, deceased,
for the sum of $5,000.00, with interest
thereon at the rate of six per cent
per annum from the 4th day of No
vember, 1922, for the further sum of
$115.82, with interest thereon at the
rate of six per cent per annum from
the 2nd day of December, 1924, for
the further sum of $194.79, with in
terest thereon from the 3rd day of
December, 1925,, at the rate of six
per cent per annum, for the further
sum of $300,00, with interest thereon
at the rate of six per cent per annum
from the 24th day of November, 1924,
for the further sum of $150.00, with
interest thereon at the rate of six
per cent per annum from the 24th day
of March, 1925, and for the further
sum of $500.00, attorney's fees, and
i 19.40, cost and disbursements of said
suit, and it was further ordered and
decreed that a certain mortgage be
foreclosed and the real property
therein and hereinafter described be
sold under foreclosure execution, and
all of said defendants be forever
barred and foreclosed from all right,
title or interest therein, and which
execution commanded me to sell the
following described real property,
situated in Morrow County, Oregon,
to-wit:
The southwest quarter of Sec
tion 24. All of Section 25; the
northeast quarter of the south
east quarter; the south half of
the southeast quarter of Section
26; the northeast quarter of Sec
tion 35; the northwest quarter of
the northeast quarter and the
northwest quarter of Section 86,
all in Township 2 South, Range
27 East of the Willamete Merid
ian. Now, therefore, in obedience to
said execution, I will on Saturday, the
9th day of October, 1926, at the hour
of 10:00 o clock in the forenoon of
aid day at the front door of the
Court House at Heppner, Morrow
County, Oregon, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash, all of
the above described real property.
The above described being the real
property mortgaged to secure the
payment of the above suras,- and the
proceeds of such sale will be applied
to the payment of the above sums and
accruing cost of sale.
Dated at Heppner, Oregon, this
8th day of September, 1926.
GEO. McDUr-ttE,
Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon.
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 Ashing and clean
out old wells.
Box 14, Lexington, Ore.
DR. F. E. FARRIOR
DENTIST
X-Ray Diagnosis
L O. O. F. Building
Heppner, Oregon
Frank A. McMenamin
LAWYER
Phone ATwater 5515
1014 Northwestern Bank Bldg.
PORTLAND, OREGON
Res. GArfield 1949
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN & 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 822 Heppner, Ore.
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office In Court ouse
Heppner, Oregon
MATERNITY HOME
MRS. G. C. AIKEN
Private Rooms. Special Care.
Same Prices to All.
Phone 976
Heppner, Ore.
AUCTIONEER
Farm and Personal Property Sales
a Specialty.
"The Man Who Talks to Beat
the Band"
G. L. BENNETT,
Lexington, Ore. j
DR. C. C. CHICK
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
Officf n Brosius Block
Hood Rlvi . 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, Ore.
C. A. MINOR
FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE
INSURANCE
Old Line Companies. Real Estate.
Heppner, Oregon
JOS. J. NYS
ATTCRNEY-AT-LAW
Roberts Building, Willow Street
Heppner, Oregon