PAGE FOUR
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCT. 21, 1926.
TBI HEPPNER GAZETTK. EiUhlUM
Marsh 10. U81.
TBI HEPPNER TIMES, EatahlUhed
November 18, 187;
CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY li. Hit.
PebUftbca' mrrf Thvrsday mornlnf by
TAWTER AND IPKNCER CRAWFORD
and ntrW at the Post Offlc at Heppner.
Oregon, as aeoond-olaaa matter.
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MORROW COUNTY8 OFFICIAL PAPER
Foraica Adrartblns Repraentative
THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION
The Political Pot.
THERE has been very little in
terest, apparently, in the local
campaign. But few county offi
cials are to be elected; county
commissioner, assessor, treasurer
and surveyor will about complete
the list, and of these there are no
opposing candidates except in the
office of county commissioner.
George Bleakman of Hardman,
present incumbent, is the republi
can nominee and Chas. B. Cox of
Heppner is the democratic aspir
ant. Both are excellent gentlemen
for whom this paper has high per
sonal regard, yet we are con
strained to give our political pref
erence to Mr. Bleakman, not be
cause he is the republican nomi
nee, but for the better reason that
he has made good in the office.
There is no one disputes this; the
years of experience Mr. Bleakman
has had in the affairs of the coun
ty as commissioner has proven
that he understands how to carry
on for the county, and he has done
this in excellent shape. This ser
vice should bring its reward in re
eleciton. The people of Heppner,
we feel, are under special obliga
tions to Mr. Bleakman. He has
during the past six years worked
for the improvement and construc
tion of highways directly benefi
cial to this place, and while all of
these projects are not yet com
pleted, they will soon be, and we
must acknowledge that Mr. Bleak
man has been a consistent and per
sistent worker and to him we can
give a large measure of the cred
it for this work. We are sure of
another fact, also, and that is that
Mr. Bleakman has had at all times
the welfare of the entire county
at heart, and no section appealed
to him in vain if its cause was
found worthy. Bleakman has
been a good commissioner; let's
keep him on the job.
A young man, but not lacking
in wide business experience and
splendid ability is Fred E. Kiddle
of Island City, republican nominee
for joint senator from the dis
trict of Morrow, Umatilla and
Union counties. Mr. Kiddle may
not be very well known in this part
of the district, but we are sure
that the republicans will make no
mistake by standing by their
nominee for the important state
position. He was state command
er of the American Legion, and
DtFrank Crane Says
THE DUNES ARE INDOMITABLE
SOME time ago the writer visited the wild sand dune country
of northern Indiana.
This sandy waste stretched along the southern shore of Lake
Michigan between Gary and Michigan City.
The high sandhills are ages old. Some are "wandering
dunes." Moving slowly through the years they have worked
eastward. In their track new dunes are born. Others are
vexed and on their sides sand cherries and stunted pines strug
gle for existence.
Indians have come and gone; pioneer scouts have given
place to adventuresome settlers and they in turn have made
way for the teeming city bred; but the dunes have remained.
Over them the great invention of the age had a cradle and a
culmination.
Here Octave Chanute made experiments with gliders, giving
his information to the Wright Brothers later on. And here day
and night great roaring planes fly overhead carrying the mails
from Cleveland and Chicago.
The dunes have outlived the wilderness; they continue un
tamed in the heart of civilization.
In their enduring ruggedness there is a message of inspira
tion that helps one who feels it to "hold on" in the trials of life.
The face of the dunes is like the face of the common people.
It is grim, determined, enduring.
" It possesses neither the kingly grandeur of the towering
mountains nor the abject serfdom of impotent deserts.
Through the passing chiliads it has remained, remained in
spite of wind and wave, remained one of the enigmas of geo
logical endurance.
Buffeted, driven about, torn asunder, the particles yet re
main, and remaining, combine in lines that alter day by day,
that move, that retreat, that advance; but lines that lie in the
shadows of evening, gray, gaunt, beaten and deformed but
sublimely everlasting. x
In the face of the dunes there is seen this example of end
less endurance.
In its barren beauty there speaks a message of grim courage
and indomitable, lasting power.
"NEWS and PROGRESS" No.
ECONOMIC SIGNIFICANCE AND SERVICE OF THE AMERICAN
NEWSPAPER AND NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING From latest volume
in Manhattan Library of Popular Economics, republished in serial form through
courtesy of Bank of the Manhattan Company, New York.
A UNIFYING FORCE
HE history of the last three hundred years is not
just a tale of more population or more territory.
Rather it is a story of hundreds and thousands
of newwants.new hopes, new experiences among
the people of the earth, especially of the Amer
ican reoDle. The averace man does live a few
M
years longer than his ancestor or the sixteen hundreds;
if his life be measured by the manifold variety of his new
experiences, by the multiplication of his new relation
ships, he lives literally hundreds of years more than
people did then.
In this evolution of mankind America especially offers a fascinating
study; complex, intertwined, many-sided, even confused; its more than
one hundred million human units possessed with big and little inter
ests that dart in every direction athwart those of their neighbors, now
waxing now waning, each proud of his personal independence, freedom
to choose, to make his own way, to get ahead. To a visitor from Mars
a vision like this, if he saw us all only as individuals, could mean only
conflict, contradiction, disorganization, eventual destruction.
Kaleidoscopic as it appears to be, our civilization is a stable civiliza
tion, nevertheless. How can stability exist amid so much diversity?
Certainly it is secured by no natural law; it is not even compelled by a
superior force, since ours is a government which promotes stability
largely because everybody may share in it. It could be destroyed if any
large part of the American people were to become deliberatelyperverse.
For example, if all the farmers refused to cultivate, the carriers to
transport, the workers to produce, the salesmen to sell, or the investors
to lend, progress would stop. No one worries about such a possibility
any more than he questions whether the
sun will rise on the morrow. Why? Be
cause we Americans have faith in our so
cial organization, in our government, most
of all, in ourselves. We know we shall co
operate to keep things going, and if here
and there disturbance occurs, we draw
the more closely together. It Is the Amer
ican way.
This faith is not an accident; it comes of
a long line of causes. Ordinarily, a popula
tion like ours, extending over a irreat con
tinent, would have difficulty in holding to-
getner as it does, out in the beginning, we
Bad certain traditions of government. We
havo had common language. As terri
tory expanded we have developed rail
roads and telegraphs, telephones, radios
and even airplanes for closer communica
tion; we have utilized waterways; we have
established great system of common
schools. Yet not all of these would have
sufficed. One thing more was needed to
ensure social and economic unity, and that
too, we have developed the American
newspaper.
during his regime that organiza
tion in this state made its great
est growth. He is active and en
ergetic and possesses the qualities
of a good legislator. We could
say nothing against his opponent,
Uncle Henry Taylor of Pendleton.
He is a mighty fine old gentleman,
a pioneer of Umatilla county and
owner of a large wheat farm there
though retired for a number of
years from active work after ac
quiring a competency. We are
sure that no citizen of this county,
having formed the acquaintance
of Mr. Taylor, would have any but
the highest personal regards for
him as a man of fine qualities and
likeable withal. He is a democrat
and we are sure no member of his
party should turn him down. We
say, however, that Fred Kiddle is
a republican, a young man of
parts, and we are aware of no rea
son why any member of his party
should not support him.
As a man of experience in the
legislative halls at Salem, Roy Rit
ner of Pendleton stands up with
the best of them. He has served
Bank of the
A single newspaper in one small mm-
munity is not so much an activity of that
community as it is the community itself
imorming its memDers ot its economic and
social needs, discovering to itself its own
conceptions and ambitions, voicing its
punuuiia wiuic it is listening to tne na
tion and to the world. In the lanw pn
there is no single newspaper. Each shares
in the great total of nearly 14,000 dailies,
tri-weeklies, semUweeklies and weeklies.
In this larger sense the American news
paper constitutes the nerves of our entire
social system. The news that shoots
through these nerves in every direction
contributes to national consciousness
that emancipates each one of us from the
limitations of a narrow provincialism.
This common sharing in the thoughts.
nopes, rears and ambitions ot our fellows
makes us kin. It is not that we all think
the same way, but that we have the sany
things to think about. It may be the news
of some recent discovery in medicine, a
recent experiment in education, an im
proved kind of automobile paint, a change
in wireless communication, or even a new
Umatilla county some fourteen
years as representative and sena
tor, and this year he is making the
race as joint representative of
Umatilla and Morrow counties.
Mr. Ritner was pretty well pre
sented to the people of this coun
ty in the May primaries, and hav
ing received the nomination over
one of the strongest men of his
own county, the late Judge Gilli
land of Pilot Rock, stands forth
as a strong contender at the polls
on November 2nd against his
democratic opponent, Joseph N.
Scott of Pendleton. The exper
ience of Mr. Ritner would seem
to highly recommend him for the
place and makes a strong appeal
for his election as joint represen
tative. His opponent, Mr. Scott,
is not so well known in Morrow
county as he is at home, but we
can say for him that he is an ex
cellent citizen and stands high
among the people of his home
county where he is engaged quite
extensively in wheat raising. Mr.
Scott is also a land owner in Mor
row county.
Governor on Rack.
THE announcement of Govern
or Pierce comes forth in which
he flat footedly denounces the
hydro-electric bill, promoted by
the Housewives' Council, Irfb.
This bill would load on the state
an additional bonded indebtedness
of $50,000,000 for state develop
ment of hyrdo-electric power, and
the governor seems to have dis
covered that the measure is ex
tremely unpopular, and tho strong
ly backed by the State Grange, it
is not proving to be a vote getter
for his honor, hence he goes into
reverse on the proposition and
decided that it will not be a good
policy to stand pat. This was sup
posed to be a pet measure of the
governor's, and it is claimed that
it was originally his measure. In
his statement he says now that the
bill would be a business killer in
the state, a tax-raiser and would
drive new capital away as it would
discourage the development of pri
vate nidustry; also he senses a
scheme to rehabilitate defunct ir
rigation district bonds at the ex
pense of the taxpayers.
Because of his stand on this
measure, the governor now comes
in for a little panning by the lead
ing promoters of the measure and
it will doubtless turn many a vote
from the governor, who is accused
of double-crossing his friends and
disowning his political offspring.
This should be of little concern,
however, to the average republi
can voter of this county and of the
state at large. The republicans
have a candidate in the person of
I. L. Patterson who is sound and
reliable, and will give the state a
business administration. He is
not seeking election on a lot of in
sincere promises, and he will be a
genuine tax reducer because of the
10
Manhattan Co., N. T.
The American newspaper is a vital constructive
force in the economic progress of the nation
kind of radio, but whether it comes
through special dispatches, the SDort Dane
or the advertising column, this common
ucruage 01 news is tne tnmg tnat manes
for unity of understanding.
Ve are not, as some seem to tear, a ma
terial people. We are a practical folk who
recognize frankly the profound desirabil.
f i Ji 1
uy ui u generous aistnuution or material
well-being among all the people. To that
well-being the American newspaper con
tributes, as a market place, as a source of
information, as a stimulus to production
and commerce. ,
So much we know, yet we do not fail to
recognize that the contribution of the
American newspaper is civic, educational,
moral and inspirational as well as eco
nomic. Moreover, it is the great force that
binds America together. In its columns
news, editorial, advertising may be dis
covered its essential function to inte
grate the one hundred and seventeen mil
ion Americans into one American people.
Voluntary co-operation is the American
plan and the American newspaper is its
chief instrument.
strict business administration of
affairs. He is not spectacular; he
is not an orator or anything of this
sort, but his knowledge of affairs
ot state has been obtained thru
years of experience and he can be
relied upon. As we see it there is
nothing to recommend the re-elec
tion of Governor Pierce to repub
licans of this county and we should
rally to the support of our own
candidate, who was so strongly ea
dorsed for the position at the May
primaries.
Silver Spoons vs. Tin.
THE morning papers the other
day carried dispatches telling
how busy Queen Mane, of Roa
mania, was over in Paris getting
her fifty trunks packed and buying
a few extra gewgaws to bring
along on her visit to America.
Now we haven't anything
against the Queen. In fact, we
don't know her at all. And it is
news, we grant, when a Queen is
busy.
But that same morning, per
haps, if the immigration quota is
n't full, some other Roumanian
women were busy getting ready
to come to America to stay.
They probably didn't have any
trunks to pack. They couldn't buy
any trinkets, even the cheapest
ones, because all their money was
to be spent on their tickets. And
they aren't queens, except possi
bly of their men's homes. So no
newspaper space is wasted on
them.
Here in America, some millions
of women were busy seeing that
Dad's eggs were fried just right,
that Mary's tears didn't drop on
the dishes she was wiping, and
that Johnny washed behind his
ears before he started to school.
Maybe some of these women
stopped working long enough to
read the papers, and to lament be
cause they were wearing calico
aprons instead of ermine robes.
But unless we know less about
our community than we do about
Roumania, 99 out of every 100
women here wouldn't trade their
trials, including Johnny's troubles,
Mary's tears, and Dad's com
plaints, for all Roumania if it
meant being separated from John
ny, Mary and Dad.
They may have been born with
tin spoons instead of spoons of
silver in their mouths, but by a
process far subtler than any al
chemist of ola knew, their tin
spoons turn to gold when the day's
trials are done.
Emotionalism.
APPEAL to voters has been
made by the housewives'
council on a basis of emotional
ism. "Keep natural resources tor
the people" was a Roosevelt ideal.
But with that ideal the great Am
erican combined practical sugges
tions for conservation of forests,
water-powers, playgrounds and all
the vast resources over and under
the ground.
Broad minds in national affairs
provided the federal power com
mission, the forest service of the
Department of Agriculture and
many other mediums of controll
ing, supervising, protecting and
conserving state and national re
sources on a basis fair to those
who would develop them and just
to all who benefit by them.
The power of mental imagery
and the appeal to prejudice, how
ever, would picture the destruction
of all national resources and cre
ate the impression that the "rights
of the people " are being invaded,
their water powers being monopo
lized, their foresst cut down, their
lands neglected and their freedom
endangered.
All this is emotionalism under
influence of which the voter is
asked to bestow supreme powers
upon a tate board, who shall ad
minister a vast fund to be raised
by further bonding the State of
Oregon forjjurposes already cov
ered by wise national legislation.
It is a political appeal to voters
who earnestly wish for preserva
tion of our natural resources, as
most of us do. This very desire is
back of the laws by which federal
control of forest and stream was
instituted. These laws have been
extended, broadened and made
more widely comprehensive to in
clude large part of the undeeded
lands in many states (in Oregon
85 per cent of such resources are
under federal control), and pub
lic interests are. safeguarded to
that extent.
Those who have inspired the
constitutional amendment to be
voted upon November 2, using the
"housewives' council" as part of
their emotional appeal, doubtless
are fully informed of the rigid
requirements as to permit, license,
prompt construction, check on op
eration, rates, profits and sums in
vested in all hydro-electric pro
jects under the Federal Power
Commission. But some who have
not investigated fall under the
mental control of these skillful
political propagandists. Albeit the
informed and thinking housewife
is not deceived and knows the
measure for what it is the aspir
ing ambition of a few to gain ex
traordinary political power and in:
fluence. One woman, a home
maker, puts it thus: "What we
have, we know; what we may have
we aon t Know I am opposed to
the housewives' council amend
ment. This woman is not af
fected by emotionalism.
Opposed to this constitutional
change are listed the most progres
sive ousmess men, manufacturers,
tradesmen, professional and com
mercial leaders of Oregon. The
measure will be defeated by votine
oo a inu! at the election next
month.
Guilty in the Public Mind.
XX7HY the jury in the Daugher-
' ty-Miller case disagreed may
never be revealed to the public.
But the public will never be sat
isfied with the outcome.
The jury sensed that a crime
had been committed. This seem
ed pretty clear. However, the
lengthy wranglings in the "jury
room and the repeated appeals to
the court for explanations. showed
that a minority of the jurors could
not tie up in the minds the wrong-
doings with the intricacies of the
indictment.
Harry M. Daugherty and Thorn
as W. Miller may consider them
selves lucky that the jurors didn't
comprehend all the ramifications
of the law.
The story uncovered in the trial
was distressing. The evidence
for the most part was deadly, un
contradicted. District Attorney
tsuckner presented his case with
damning facts. However, the de
fendants escaped a verdict of guil
ty chiefly through the fact that
they could not be tried directly
tor bribery but had to be tried un
der a conspiracy sltatute which
raises much greater legal difficul
ties.
Technically, Daugherty and Mil
ler are not guilty. But they stand
convicted before the bar of public
opinion, no matter what a few
jurymen may have decided. Nor
will the public ever forget this hu
miliating chapter in the history of
Federal administration, nor should
it lose any time in demanding a
new and decisive trial.
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 Charles
L. Ashbaugh and Rose A. Ashbaugh,
husband and wife, and the Hardman
National Farm Loan Association, a
corporation, defendants, for the sum
of $81.25 with interest at 8 from
December 3, 1925; the further sum
of $2,325.10 with interest at 5tt
from December 3, 1925; the further
sum of $177.26 with interest at 8
from May 26, 1926; the further sum
of $7.60 with interest at 8 from
May 11, 1926; less $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 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:
' North Half of the Norhtwest Quar
ter, the Southeast Quarter of the
Northwest Quarter and the Northeast
Quarter of Section 14 and the South
vest 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 satisfy the 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
ber 23, 1926.
GEORGE McDUFFEE,
Sheriff of Morrow County, State
of Oregon.
NOTICE OF SALE OF ANIMALS.
Notice is hereby given that by vir
tue of the laws of the State of Ore
gon the undersigned has taken up the
hereinafter described animals found
running at large on his premises in
Morrow County, Oregon, and that he
will on Saturday, October 30, 1926,
M the hour of 10 o'clock in the fore
noon of said day at his place on Eight
Mile, known as the Jenkins place, 14
iriles southwest of Heppner, Oregon,
offer for sale and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand the said ani
mals. Said animals are described as
follows:
One black mare, age 8 years, no
visible brand, weight 1200 pounds.
One black mare, age about 8 years,
no marks or brands, weight 1200
pounds. '
One black mare, age about 6 years,
no marks or brands, weight 1500.
One bay horse, age 2 years, circle
J brand on left front leg, weight
about 800 pounds.
One black mare mule, age 5 years,
no brand, slit in left ear, weight
about 1000 pounds.
One bay mare, age about 10 years,
branded H on right hip, weight 1100
pounds.
Unless the same shall have Leen
redeemed by the owner or owners
thereof.
FRANCIS GRIFFIN,
Eight Mile, Oregon,
NOTICE OF DISTRICT ROAD
MEETING.
Notice is hereby given, pursuant
to a petition of the requisite
number of legal voters of Road Dis
trict No. 14 of Morrow County, State
of Oregon, and an order of the Coun
ty Court of the State of Oregon for
Morrow County, made and entered on
the 1st day of September, 1926,
meeting of the legal voters of said
Road District Number 14 of Morrow
County, State of Oregon, will be held
at the Henry Peterson house, Morrow
County, Oregon, in the said Road Dis
trict Number 14, November 1st. 1926,
at the hour of 2 to 4 o'clock in the
afternoon of said day, for the nur-
pose of voting an additional tax for
Road purposes upon all the taxable
property in said Road District to the
amount of 10 Mills on the dollar,
said tax to be expended as follows:.
For grading and rocking the road
known as the Victor L. Carlson road
R. L. BENGE, County Judge.
Attest: GAY M. ANDERSON,
County Clerk.
NOTICE OF DISTRICT ROAD
MEETING.
Notice is hereby given, pursuant
to a petition of the requisite
number of legal voters of Road Dis
trict No. 2 of Morrow County, State
of Oregon, and an order of the Coun
ty Court of the State of Oregon for
Morrow County, made and entered on
the 6th day of September, 1926, a
meeting of the legal voters of said
Road District Number 2 of Morrow
County, State of Oregon, will be held
at the Boardman public school build
ing, at Boardman, Morrow County,
Oregon, in the said Road District
Number 2, November 6th. 1926. at the
hour of i to 6 o clock in the afternoon
of said day, for the purpose of voting
an additional tax for Koad purposes
upon all the taxable property in said
Koad District to the amount of 5
Mills on the dollar, said tax to be
expended as follows:
For general building and maintain
ing in said Dist. 2.
R. L. BENGE, County Judire.
Attest: GAY M. ANDERSON,
County Clerk.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE.
Notice is hereby given that by vir
tue of an execution and order of Bale
issued out of the Circuit Court of
the State of Oregon for Morrow
County, dated the 7th day of October,
1926, to me directed, in that certain
suit wherein R. W. Beardon, plain
tiff, secured judgment against Mary
Johnson and Allan Johnson, defend
ants, for the sum of $400.00, with In-
ttrest thereon at the rate of 8 per
cent, per annum from the 18th day
or August, the further sum of
70.00 attorney's fees, and the sum
of $301.44 on account of taxes, penal-
y and interest, and $15.40 costs and
disbursements, which Judgment was
dated September 28, 1926.
I will on Saturday, the 13th dav of
November, 1920, at the hour of 10
o'clock 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 situated in
Morrow County, Stato of Oregon, or
so much thereof as may be necessary
to satisfy plaintiff's judgment, costs,
attorney's fees, and accruing costs of
sale, to-wit: Lot I, Block 1, Ayers'
Third Addition to the town (now
city) of Heppner, Oregon.
Dated this 7th day of October, 1926.
Date of first publication, October
14, 1926.
GEORGE McDUFFEE,
Sheriff of Morrow County,
State of Oregon.
E. H. BUHN
Expert Watchmaker and
Jewelry Repairer
Heppnar, Ore.
DR. A. H. JOHNSTON
Physician and Surgeon
Graduate Nurse Assistant
L 0. O. F. Building
Phones: Office, Main 933; Res. 492
i 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. 0. 0. F. Bnilding
Heppner, Oregon
Frank A. McMenamin
f LAWYER
Phone ATwater 6515
1014 Northwestern Bank Bldg.
PORTLAND, OREGON
Res. GArfield 1949
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN A SURGEON
Trained Nurse Assistant
Office in Masonic Building
Heppner, Oregon
C. L. SWEEK
AT TORNEY-AT-LAW
Offices in
First National Bank Bnilding
Heppner, Oregon
MORROW GENERAL HOSPITAL
Surgical, Medical, Maternity Cases
Wards, and private rooms.
Rates Reasonable.
Mrs. Zena Westfall, Graduate
Nurse, Superintendent.
A. H. Johnston, M. D. Physl-eian-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 Car.
Same Price 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.
)
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, Ore.
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