PAGE SIX HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1927. LOCAL NEWS ITEMS Mrs. Ellis Henriksen arrived on Tuesday from her home at San Loan dio, Calif., and will be a guest for the summer at the home of her onr ents, Mr. ar.d Mrs. Jeff Jones, in this city. Henry, Jr., the young son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peterson of Goose berry, has been ill the past few days with a light form of pneumonia fol lowing the croup, but is much belter. Billy Buschke, young son of Mr. end Mrs. Ed Buschke of Lexington, who was recently operated on for acute appendicitis at the Morrow Gen eral hospital, has returned home. Mrs. Hugh Curran and children were visitors at the home of her mother, Mrs. Jerry Brosnan, in this city on Saturday, returning to their home at Pilot Rock on Sunday. Mrs. Fred Nicholson of lone, who underwent a major operation at the Morrow General hospital last week, is improving nicely and will soon be able to return to her home. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Jones enjoyed a trip by auto to Spokane the last of the week, where Mr. Jones was called on matters of business. They return ed home on Monday. Miss Hurley, graduate nurse, who has been assisting for the past week at Morrow General hospital in this city, returned to her home in Port lend on Monday. E. R. Huston, city recorder, is quite ill this w-eek at his home, being threatened with pneumonia and com plications. He had to take to his bed on Monday. Mrs. Carrie Vaughn was taken sud denly quite ill on Sunday with an at tack of acute indigestion. She is re ported to be much improved at this time. Mrs. R. H. McCormick of east of Morgan is confined to her home with a bad attack of measles, a result of a trip recently to Portland and Eu gene.' Wesley McNabb has been suffering from blood poisoning in his arm for the last week. His physician, Dr. McMurdo, reports him as improving. Mrs. Geo. Evans, who has been ill for the past six weeks from influenza rnd complications, is much better and able to be up in her chair again. Mrs. John Gaunt is reported to be improving from a severe attack of in fluenza, having become sick on Sun day at her home in this city. M. R. Morgan, leading citizen of lone, was attending to matters of business at the court house in this city on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lindstrom of Morgan were visitors here on Tues day, spending several hours in the city. Mrs. F. B. Nickerson is confined to her bed this week, suffering an at tack of German measles and tonsilitis. Jacks, the best in the west, for sale or lease for season. Swaggart Jack Farm, Lexington, Oregon. 6-10 Mrs. Ellen Buseick and son Reid are visiting with relatives in Port land this week. Mr. and Mrs. Dillard French of Gur dane were visitors in Heppner on Saturday. Ed Musgrave, Rhea creek rancher, was doing business in Heppner Monday. LODGES TO ASSIST. The Heppner and Wai'a Walla lodges of Elks will be here Thursday to assist with initiation at the local lodge of Elks. The Heppner lodge will do the ritualistic work and the members of the Walla WaLa lodge will make the occasion one long to be remembered by the 30 candidates who will be initiated. East Oregon ian, Pendleton. FARM POINTERS. Late plantings of small grains as wheat, oats and barley usually results in poor yields in Oregon, the experi ment station reports. Under irrigat ed conditions other crops do better aiter the first of May. Late planted crops that give good results are corn, rape, alfalfa, buckwheat and root crops. Oregon rose bushes infested with aphids or their eggs are saved by use of nicotine sulphate applied with a fine sprayer, says the experiment sta tion. Slugs are controlled by dusting the foliage of the plants attracted and the surrounding soil by dry bor deaux which is shaken through a loosely woven sack or if the plot is a large one applied with a dust gun. HARDMAN. Bert Walker, who has been working for Pat Connell the past 2 months, returned home Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bleakman and daughter Alice were week-end visit ois in Heppner. Miss Beulah Batty was a visitor here Monday. Missse Anne McDevitt and Edith Mickey were the week-end guests of Miss Mildred Farrens. Mr. and Mrs. John Mf Donald and f;mily moved Monday to their new Rhea creek ranch. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wright were Hardman visitors Monday. Mrs. Walter Farrens and son Ron ald and Ms. Robert Burnside and ba by were visitors here last Tuesday. The Dry Fork baseball team will play a return game on the Hardman field Sunday, May 8. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer McDaniel and family were the visitors of Mrs. John Allen Sunday. Mrs. Floyd Adams was a visitor in Hardman Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Steers and fam ily visited here Sunday. Walt Ritzert was a visitor here Sunday. Owen Leathers and Charlie McDan iel returned Saturday, April 30. The latter expects to take work at Mon ument soon. HOME POINTERS. (.From School of Home Economics 0. A. C.) A device to save flour and lighten work for the cook is to keep a large salt cellar full of flour on a shelf with which to flour meats, cake tins and bread boards. Too much fat on the top of meat extracts is skimmed off by using brown paper to absorb the fat from the top of the fluid. An ordinary board eraser is an aid in cleaning a wood stove. It is con venient to keep it in the warming oven or any place near the stove. A boiled icing too soft to frost a cake is made suitable for use by setting it in a pan of boiling water and cooking until it is grainy around 'he edge. Crumbs are kept from working into the frosting when icing a cake by pil ing a good deal of frosting on a spat ula for spreading and keeping enough on it so the spatula never touches the cake. In frosting the cut side of a cake the cut side is spread first with a thick paste of powdered 'sugar and water. When this is dry it is frost ed over to make the icing smooth. When a cake frosting is too thin powdered sugar is added to thicken it. When it is too thick boiling wa ter is added until the frosting is of the proper consistency. An orange is placed in the oven for one minute before peeling to make it easier to remove all of the white membrane. Oranges for slicing are peeled slow ly, removing all of the white mem brane at the first peeling. The or ange is cut in half through the sec tions and the core removed. The half cut side down, is placed on a small cutting board and sliced thinly, hold :ng the orange together. A knife is olid under the cut half, which is lift ed to the plate. The knife is with drawn and the orange gently pressed on the top slice. The slices are then in an even row. IN THE KITCHEN HEPPNER housewives know the certified faith they can depend on with Alfalfa Lawn Dairy Milk and Cream. Alfalfa Lawn Dairy WIGHTMAN BROS., Propi. Phone 30F3 To HOLT COMBINE and HOLT and BEST TRACTOR Owners- I now have a large stock of extras and sup plies for all models of Holt Combined Har vesters at Arlington, Oregon. I am also stocking parts for all Holt and Best Tractors for Gilliam and Morrow County tractors. See Holt Combines now on display at Arlington before buying. B. A. AMY, Dealer The Dalles, Ore. FOR PARTS PHONE ARLINGTON 752 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been duly appointed by the County Court of Morrow County, Oregon, administrator of the estate of Patrick Brady, deceased, and all persons having claims against the es tate of said deceased are hereby re quired to present the same with proper vouchers to me at the law office of Jos. J. Nys, at Heppner, Ore gon, within six months from the date of this notice. Dated this 5th day of May, 1927. LAURENCE BRADY, Administrator. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. J. E. Berry, Plaintiff,) vs. ) Clarence Reid and Viola) M. Reid, his wife; M.) G. Stoncbrink and Ma-)SUMMONS thilda A. Stonebrink, his) wife; A. J. Wilkinson;) O. E. Ryder; and E.) Snyder, Defendants.) To M. G. Stonebrink and Mathilda A. Stonebrink, his wife, defendants: 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 publication of this summons if published, or from the date of ser vice 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 his complaint, which is as follows, to-wit: That the plaintiff have judg ment against Clarence Reid and Viola M. Reid, his wife, for the sum of $1234.77 with interest at the rate of 8 per annum from March 23, 1925; the further sum of $200 attorney's fees and the plaintiff's costs and dis bursements in this suit; that the plaintiff's mortgage securing the above mentioned sums be foreclosed and the lands described in plaintiff's mortgage and herein described as fol lows, to-wit: The Southwest quarter of the Southeast quarter of Section 5; The Southwest quarter of the Southwest quarter of Section 4; the Northeast quarter and the Northeast quarter of the South east quarter of Section 8; the West half of the Weit half and the Southeast quarter of the Southwest quarter of Section 9. All in Towni hip 5 South, Range 27, E. W. M., in Morrow County, State of Oregon, be sold to satisfy the plaintiff's judg ment, including cost and attorney's fee and accruing costs of sale, and that each of the defendants in this suit be foreclosed of all right, title or interest In and to the real prop erty herein described, save the stat utory right of redemption, and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem meet and equit able. 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 4th day of May, 1927, in which order it was provided that this summons be published in the Heppner Gazette Times for the period of six weeks. The date of first publication of this summons is May 5th, 1927. C. L. SWEEK, Attorney for the Plaintiff. Address: Heppner, Oregon. Wha t Do You Need? A Case Combine A John Deere High Lift Mower A John Deere Hay Rake A DeLaval Cream Sep arator A Eclipse Windmill A Universal Range A Florence Oil Stove These are all high grade products, the very best that can be pro cured,and the operation of them is productive of pleasing results and long life and service. GET THE HABIT of discussing your needs with this store. We will cooperate with you. Peoples Hardware Company Star Theater, Heppner, Ore. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, MAY 5 AND 6: Fred Thompson and "Silver King" in . . "THE TOUGH GUY" A typhoon of thrills! A cyclone of speed! Gales of laughter. Fred's here again, folks, and better htan ever. Also the McDougall Alley kids in LUKE WARM DAZE, two reel comedy, and 9th episode of THE ACE OF SPADES. NOTICE Friday is going t obe an awful busy day, folks, and If you are going to be caught in the whirl of excitement, better see this picture Thursday. 4lll1iillni.iltll1iiiiHilillltiiiiitilirilillliiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiif iiiiiiiiriiiiifi.iiiiiiiii.iiiiflll.liitfllir.Mlitiiiiiiililtlllllllllillll.littll.llllllllfMillltlliitllltliill.llifilll SATURDAY, MAY 7: Bert Lytell and Billie Dove in "THE LONE WOLF RETURNS" From the novel by Louis Joseph Vance, an amazing sequel to "The Lone Wolf." The gripping mys tery of a beloved adventurer and a girl who dared. Mystery melodrama at its best. Also THE PINNACLE RIDER, two reel western comedy. limMIIHIIimilHMIIIIIIIIIHIMIIMIIIHMIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIM SUNDAY AND MONDAY, MAY 8 AND 9: HAROLD LLOYD in "THE KID BROTHER" And JANE'S TROUBLE, two reel comedy. Children 25c Adults BOc. What's the use of saying any more? liliitMiiiiiiimiiiMiiMiiiiHmiiiiiiHiiiiiimnmm,, n iiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiniiiMiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiitiniiiiiii tun iiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiHMiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiuinili TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, MAY 10 AND 11: LESLIE FENTON, CLARA BOW and EARL WILLIAMS in a Dramatic Fantasy based on THE ANCIENT MARINER By Samuel Taylor Coleridge. A vital, pulsating modern story plus the most picturesque fantasy ever screened. The slaying of the albatross and the many other dramatic incidents of "The Ancient Mar iner" vviidly depicted. Also comedy, BABES IN SAWDUST. NEXT WEEK: Bebe Daniels in THE PALM BEACH GIRL. Belle Bennett in THE FOURTH COMMANDMENT Kenneth Harlan and Patsy Ruth Miller in THE Now running in Portland. FIGHTING EDGE. Shirley Mason in ROSE OF THE TENEMENES. Save with Safety at Your REXALL Store. Remember Mother on May 8th with an Artstyle Jewel Box. This is a beauti ful metal box, the design of which is taken from a French treasure chest, and contains a supreme assortment of the nationally famous Artstyle Chocolates. She will treasure the box long after the candy is gone. If Mother does not care for candy, surprise her with a box of our beautiful Mother's Day Stationery. As useful as it is beautiful. PATTERSON & SON The REXALL Store Your Money Goes Farther This Way: People maintain checking accounts in this bank because they want to get the greatest value from their money. Their money goes farther that way. They get more ben efit from it when they maintain a reasonably large aver age balance. Such a balance provides them with suffi cient funds for emergencies, entitles them to greater service from this bank and builds up credit so that, if necessary, they can secure loans in proportion to their needs. Maintain a checking account here with a reasonably large balance. It will help you get the most from your money. And you'll be entitled to the maximum of mighty valuable service from this bank. Farmers & Stockgrowers National Heppner Bank Oregon Heppner Gazette Times, Only $2.00 Per Year S A F E T Y & s E R V I c E We are all working for MORE FRIENDSHIP AND BETTER UNDERSTANDING As we get together more we will be kept apart less. It is the spirit here to know you and have you know us. This Bank maintains a high stan dard of efficiency and since real ser vice is one way of making friends, you will find here the kind that will please you. MtMIII) Firt National Bank HEPPNER, OREGON