Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, February 21, 1929, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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    HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEB. 21, 1929.
PAGE FIVE
W. L. Copenhaver managed to
get to town Wednesday from his
farm in the Swaggart's butte neigh
borhood. That section of the coun
ty received a covering of better
than eighteen inches of snow dur
ing our recent big storm, and it
was hard getting out. At this time
the snow is melting away slowly,
Mr. Copenhaver states, and he feels
that the ground will surely get the
full benefit. There was about seven
inches of frost in the ground, but
this has melted out for two inches
on top, the frost is gradually dis
appearing, thus allowing the ground
to take in the moisture. It will be
a great help to crops out that way.
Joe Howk had the misfortune last
Friday morning to have the water
back in his kitchen range blow up
in consequence of an ice plug some
where in the circulatory system.
The range and an oilstove in the
room were put out of commission
and some damage was done to the
kitchen walls and ceiling but no
one was hurt. Mr. Howk had just
gone to the cellar and Mrs. Howk
and the baby were in another part
of the house. lone Independent.
Frank Conner, truckman with the
Union Oil company, suffered a pain
ful accident on Saturday when he
inadvertently dropped a drum of oil
on his toe while working in the
storehouse. An x-ray revealed a
compound fracture of a bone in the
big toe, With the application of a
cast, Frank has been hobbling
around on crutches and unable to
work. He Is being relieved by John
Turner.
The Union Missionary society
met Friday afternoon at the Episco
pay church, honoring the day set
aside the world over as the "World's
Day of Prayer." Following an ap
propriate program In the church a
social hour was held in the Parish
house. Hostesses were Mrs. A. D.
McMurdo, Mrs. S. G. Lininger and
Ms. It. A. Thompson. Thirty-seven
ladies were present.
Hoy Missildine thinks this one of
the longest continuous feeding
spells he has ever experienced in
this country. His stock have been
constnntly on feed for as much as
90 days and the end is not In sight.
He suffered a loss of several new
born calves during the zero weather
from freezing.
Thomas A. Hughes writes this pa
per that he is now located at "St.
Luke's In the Desert," Tucson, Ar
izona. He finds the climate there
Ideal, and has been feeling fine. He
expressed his good fortune in leav
ing Heppner Just In time to escape
the severe winter weather here.
Edgar Ball and family of lone
were visitors here Wednesday. Mr.
Ball reports a very slight melting
of the snow in his section, the Chi
nook, if it can be called such, only
striking in spots here and there.
He reports feed running short also.
Mrs. A. Reaney of Lexington dis
posed of her wheat on Tuesday,
and it is understood she received
a price of $1.05. The market has
been quite dormant both at Hepp
ner and Lexington for some time,
but seems to be looking up some.
Joe Hayes of Big Butter creek,
who has a bunch of sheep on his
place near Lone Rock, is now hav
ing to haul feed over to them from
Heppner. This prolonged spell of
snow and cold is beginning to get
on the nerves of many sheepmen.
Ed Kelly, farmer of the north of
Lexington section in town Monday,
reports snow going off very slowly.
He wns accompanied by a brother
from Pendleton who purchased a
new Chevrolet six coach from the
Ferguson Chevrolet company.
Latourell Auto company received
three more of the new Ford models
the first of the week. Chas. H. Lat
ourell was in Portland over Sunday
to receive them, and drove one
home.
E. E. Clark Is being relieved at
the Clark barber shop by Roy Yard
ley, while he is engaged tagging
sheep at the Frank Wilkinson
ranch.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Adkins have
named their new baby boy James
Ross, contrary to report of last
week that he had been named Abra-ham.
C. J. D. Bauman, sheriff, and
Howard McDuffee, deputy, were
Boardman visitors Monday where
they conducted a sheriff s sale,
Hugh Smith, lone farmer, was
transacting business In the city on
Tuesday, reporting departure of the
snow to be slow In his vicinity.
Joe Hayes was In town Tuesday
from his ranch up Butter creek,
feeling well saitsfied because winter
Is showing signs of breaking.
Bernle Allstott has returned to
Heppner from a visit of several
weeks to the old family home in
Oklahoma.
The ladles of the Christian church
will hold a candy sale at Humph
rey's Drug store, Friday afternoon,
Feb. 22.
Due to Illness, Rev. Father Brady
announces that services set forth
In this Issue will be subject to some
changes.
Mrs. Albert Bowkcr has returned
home from a visit of several weeks
with her children at Los Angelcq.
Snow Is melting slowly, and just
right to go Into the ground, writes
Karl L. Beach from Lexington.
W. H. I. (Buck) Padberg was a
Heppner visitor Sunday, driving his
new 1929 Oakland coupe.
Antone Holub, wheatraiscr of the
lone section was transacting busi
ness here Saturday.
Mr, and Mrs. Garnet Barratt were
passengers taking the train at Ar
lington on Sunday for Portland.
They are spending the week in the
city at the home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. B. Barrait, in order
to be present at the marriage of
his Bister, Miss Willetta Barratt to
Mr. Fredercik Hoedecker of Camas,
Wash., the ceremony taking place
today. Mr. Hoedecker is the Chev
rolet dealer at Camas, and the
young people will make their home
in that city.
E. R. Lundell, lone garageman,
was doing business in the city Tuesday.
y Arthur Brisbane
A pretty accessory for the bed
room is the gown bag which looks
like some lucious flower in full
bloom and may be hung on the wall
or on the foot of the bed.
Two circles of colored straw are
used for centerpieces and a puff of
harmonizing taffeta gathered
around them to form a circular bag.
A wreath of ribbon flowers is ap-
pliqued on the front circle of straw,
and a silken cord used for hanging.
BiWeelt
B
For the Children's Supppr
Chicken consomme
Creamed halibut Buttered rice
Chocolate custard
Shortbread wafers
Cocoa or milk
Ham and KggM de Luxe
Line a buttered baking dish with
slices of cooked ham spread lightly
with prepared mustard. Mix 2 ta
blespoons of chili sauce with a ta
blespoon catsup and pour over the
ham. Carefully drop six eggs on
top, sprinkle with pepper and salt,
dot with butter. Bake In moderate
oven until eggs are set.
Stuffed Potatoes
Remove meat from hot baked po
tatoes, mash, season with salt, pep
per, butter, small chopped onion
and celery seed. Add cream or milk
to moisten, whip thoroughly, fill
skins, dot with butter and grated
cheese and place in oven to brown.
Tomato and Cream Cheese Salad
Whip together 1 square of cream
cheese and 4 cup of French dress
ing. Add the solid meat of canned
tomatoes drained, chilled thorough
ly and seasoned, pour over crisped
and shredded lettuce.
Rhubarb and Kaisin Pie
One cup canned rhubard, drained,
M cup raisins, cut fine, 1 cup sugar,
1 egg, 1 teaspoon melted butter.
Mix and pour into pastry shell.
Bake as you would raisin pie.
sectional championship cups, one
going to the winner in Eastern Or
egon, and one to the winner in
Westetrn Oregon.
As in past years, inter-school de
bates within the eleven districts will
continue until late in March or ear
ly in April, when the district de
bates will be held. When these are
over, the winners in the sections will
come to the University of Oregon,
some time in May, to argue it out
for the state trophy.
Heppner high school is In district
number nine, which includes high
schools in Hermiston, Milton and
Pendleton. Harold G. Brownson,
Milton, is director of the district,
and the question for debate is "Re
solved that Oregon should adopt an
integrated system of executive and
administrative reorganization along
the lines of the MacPherson plan."
ARTIE VICTORIA GARNER.
Artie Victoria Garner was born
in Wright county, Missouri, October
2, 1890, and died February 13, 1929,
at Pine City, Oregon, aged 38 years.
She was united in marriage to H. E.
Young, September 16, 1906. To this
union six children were born, five
of whom survive, namely: Bert,
The Dalles, Ore.; Mrs. Olive Cox,
Hermiston, Ore.; Marie, Lowell and
Geneva, of Pine City. The deceased
child is Doris Berdena. The family
came to Oregon 11 years ago. She
was a member of the Church of
Christ, she and her husband having
confessed their faith in Christ and
were baptized the same day, Decem
ber 19, 1926, at Lexington. There
remain to mourn her loss, her hus
band and five children, her father
and mother, six sisters and two
brothers, all in the East. E. O.
Neil!, an uncle, the only immediate
relative in Oregon, resides near Pine
City.
Funeral services were held in this
city at the Christian church Friday
afternoon, February 15, conducted
by E. L. Wood, pastor of the Lex
ington church, assisted by M. W.
Bower, pastor of the Heppner
church, and burial was in Heppner
cemetery.
"Where thou art gone,
Adieus and farewells are a sound
unknown,
May I but meet thee on that
peaceful shore,
The parting sound shall pass my
lips no more."
scribed in the complaint herein. De
fendants. IN TUB NAME OF THE STATE OF
OREGON: You are hereby required to
appear and answer me complaint tiled
axuin-it you in the above entitled suit
within twenty weeks from the date of
first publication of this HummoiiH. and
if you fail to so appear and answer,
for want thereof, the plaintiff will ap
ply to the above entitled Court for the
relief prayed for in her complaint, to
wit: fur a decree of the above entitled
Court that the pliantiff is the owner
in fee-simple of the following described
lands in Morrow County. Mate of Ore
gon, to-wit: The West half of the
Northeast quarter of Kection thirty
four (34) in Township Two (2) South,
Range Twenty-six (26), E. W. M., free
of all claims or interests of defendants,
or any of them and that plaintiff's title
to said land be forever quieted against
the defendants, and all persons or par
ties claiming by, through or under
said defendants, or any of them, and
for such other and further relief as to
the Court may seem equitable.
This summons U published by virtue
of an order of the Judge of the County
Court of the State of Oregon for Mor
row County, made and entered on Feb
ruary 20, 1929, which order specified
that this summons should be published
in the Heppner Gazette Times, a news
paper of general circulation publsihed
in Heppner, Oregon, for the period of
once each week for four weeks.
Date of first publication, February
21. 1929.
C. L. SWEEK,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Address: Heppner. Oregon.
mule branded F with bar under on
left stifle, small white collar mark
under neck. Kindly call and pay
for this ad and take your mule.
Jess Hall. 45-tf.
I have for sale a new Pontiac
Six car. For particulars inquire of
Mis. Geo. Aiken, city. 41 tf.
WANTS
Pigs for Sale. W. H. I. Padberg.
Lost-Oakland hub cap. W. H. I.
Padberg.
Wanted Chicken feed horses. W.
H. I. Padberg.
Dr. Clarke of the Clarke Optical
Co., 202 and 203 Merhants Trust
Bldg., 6th and Wash. Sts Portland,
Ore., EYE SIGHT SPECIALISTS,
will be in Heppner all day and eve
ning, Sunday, February 24th, at the
Hotel Heppner. SEE HIM ABOUT
YOUR EYES. 84-9.
Wanted Work by man and wife
on farm; woman experienced cook,
man has tractor experience. R. O.
Stone, care Ed Lindeken, lone. tf.
SUMMONS.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR
ROW COUNTY.
IDA id. DUTTON, Plaintiff
vs.
Charles Richard Tayleur and Catherine
Emma Tayleur, his wife, also all
other persons or parties unknown,
who have or claim some title, estate,
lien or interest in the property de
scribed in the complaint herein.
Defendants.
TO Charles Richard Tayleur and Kath
erine Emma Tayleur. his wife; also
-all other persons or parties unknown,
who have or claim some title, estate,
lien or interest in the property de-
Wan ted Work by nan and wife
on sheep ranch during lambing sea
son. Call this office. 48-49p.
Wanted Job sheepherding or
light chores. Inquire P.O. Box 402,
Heppner. 48-51p.
ATTENTION!
Farmers and ranchmen, we want
your stock hogs, fat hogs, chickens,
turkeys or other poultry, veal or
beef. Come and see us when you
have anything in this line to dis
pose of; we pay all the market af
fords and can use your produce.
46-tf. CENTRAL MARKET, Hepp
46-tf. Central Market, Heppner.
Come to Harry Rood ranch, 6
miles west of Heppner. one brown
Creamless Coffee
If the cream should sour or you
are just out of cream, beat an egg
lightly, divide It among the cups,
pour the hot offee over it and the
family will compliment your delic
ious coffee.
To Open Fruit Jars Easily
If the lid of a fruit jar sticks, dip
it in hot water and let stand a min
ute, then loosen the wire or insert
the point of a sharp knife under the
rubber.
High School Debating
Gaining In Interest
University of Oregon, Feb 19.
Greater interest is predicted in the
high school debating contests this
year, in which Heppner high school
is taknig part, because there will be
three cups awarded instead of one,
it Is anounced by Dr. Dan E. Clark,
assistant director of the university
extension division, who is secretary
of the league.
E. E. DeCou, head of the mathe
matics department here, has donat
ed another Btate championship cup,
the last DeCou cup having gone
permanently last year to Ashland
high school. In addition, Eurt
Brown Barker, vice-president of the
University, and one of the found
ers of Delta Sigma Rho, national
debating fraternity, hns offered two
111
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DRINK MORE MILK
Wise old Mother Nature made milk
for children. Into It she put every
thing needed for sustenance, and In
the most easily assimilated form.
So, Drink More Milk. Let the
children have plenty. It is the
cheapest food you can buy,
Alfalfa Lawn Dairy
WIOHTMAN BROS., Prop.
Phon 80F8
For Your
Springtime
Work
Following are a few of the things
you'll need:
LEVI STRAUSS OVERALLS $1.95
WEYENBERG SHOES
$4.85, 5.00, $6.00, $7.00
WORK SHIRTS-$1, $1.50, $2
' HEAVY DUTY S0X-15C, 20c, 35c
LEATHER GLOVES
75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.50
n
WA MANS STORE FOR MEN
For Sale Horses, chain harness,
collars, hitches and hitch timber.
Also John Deere tractor and three
Oliver plows, three bottom, No. 40.
Will trade for anything I can use.
John Michelbook, lone, Ore. 44tf.
Fur Sale Three 3-bottom Oliver
plows; used hardwood hitch and
doubletrees. Good bargains. Gor
ger Eros., lone, Oregon. 44-47.
For Sale Creek ranch of 800
acres; creek bottom under ditch;
nearly all place fenced sheep-tight;
comfortable buildings with running
water in house; small orchard. D.
E. Oilman, Heppner, Ore. 38tf.
F. W. Turner & Co.
GENERAL INSURANCE AND
REAL ESTATE
WHET AND GRAIN
Washington Saved
His Country
The Father of Our Country was a man of
many high qualities; among those for which
we have most to be thankful was his ability
to see ahead, taking count in his decisions
and declarations of the future as well as the
past and the present.
The principles he formulated for the Na
tion still obtain today and are as true as they
were when he uttered them in a past cen
tury. Saving a portion of your income regularly
is one of the most important elements in
looking ahead.
When you take stock of the future you are
justifying Washington's faith in the destiny
of his beloved America.
First National Bank
Heppner, Oregon
23 !
ill
National
Demonstration
Week!
Drive the Chevrolet Six
No matter how closely you inspect The Outstanding
Chevrolet of Chevrolet History-you will never appreci
ate what a wonderful achievement it is until you sit at the
wheel and drive. So this week has been set aside as
National Demonstration Week, and you are cordially
invited to come in and drive this sensational automobile.
Not only is the new six-cylinder valve-in-head motor 12
more powerful, with correspondingly higher speed and
faster acceleration ... not only does it provide a fuel
economy of better than twenty miles to the gallon-but
it operates with such marvelous six-cylinder smoothness
that you almost forget there is a motor under the hood!
Regardless of the car you may now be driving-come
drive this new Chevrolet Six. Come in today!
-a Six in the price range of the four!
m
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The
COACH
Ttu C2?
Rat....
The iK7i
Coap J-
StdlKI J
Tk Sport $ftqe
1 '.IWUlIM . . . . v
s595
Tte Convert-7 7 C
iMcUadsu.. I -
Soba SCO 5
Light (Ml- ATVO
UlMM - 1
250
Ferguson Chevrolet Co.
Heppner, Oregon
QUALITY AT LOW COST
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