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About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1930)
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPT. 18, 1930. PAGE FOUR (Basrttr Stmrsi THE HEPPNER GAZETTE, Established March 30. 1SS3; THE HEPPNER TIMES. Established November 18, 1897; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15. 191Z Published every Thursday morning by TiWIEB and SPENCEB CBAWFOBD and entered at the Post Office at Hepp- ner. Oregon, as second-class mauer. ADVEKTISIKO SATES 0IVXN ON APPLICATION. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year Six Months Three Months , Single Copies $2.00 , 1.00 . .75 . .06 Official Paper for Morrow County. IS MONEY KING? TP JULIUS L. MEIER is elected 1 governor of the state of Oregon, he may well enter the account in his ledger. "Bought and paid lor. That he considers the expense in volved in obtaining election to the governorship of little importance is evidenced by the expensive nature of his campaign. Further to indi cate that money is a mere trifle with him, he has implied that he will turn back the salary into the state i coffers, if elected, and might even go so far as to erect a mansion to house the governor. Philanthropy in its proper place is a commendable thing, and re ports from Salem indicate that the state might be in such circum stances as to make donations ac ceptable, though more needy places for charity might be 'found than the comfort of the governor. There are people who believe Mr. Meier might start at home in his giving of charity, and in doing so come nearer establishing as tact his tout ed championship of the common people. The history of great wealth has largely been the employer talc ing more than his just share from the labors or his employees. might be interesting to know how many dividends have been received bv sales girls m Mr. Meier s arm because of larger profits than had been anticipated. SCHOOLDAYS. ALL over the nation, "the public schools are again in full swing. Shortly the colleges will begin their annual sessions. The greatest of all American industries, education, is running on full time again. More than 25.000,000 pupils are enrolled this year in the public schools of America, under nearly 800,000 teachers, to whom we pay an average salary of $100 a month, a total bill for teaching alone of more than one billion dollars a year, to which almost another billion must be added for other educational ex penses. And that is for public grade schools alone, below the grade of high school. In the high schools we have another two and a half million pupils, with 140,000 teach ers. Then tnere are state normal schools and teachers' colleges, in addition to state universities, sup ported out of public funds, and on top of those are the privately en dowed preparatory schools, colleges, universities ana proiesmuuai schools, accounting for nearly an other million of students with some 75,000 instructors. There is nothing else except war for which we spend so much money as for education in this country. And still we have not got as far as some other nations have gone, in proportion to population. Little Denmark has a higher percentage of high school and college gradu ates. Only about 30 percent of farm boys of high school age In America ever go to high school; almost luo percent in Denmark. HHIrFAMnDV JOHN JOSEPH GAINESTM.D. Land-Marks" of the Body Of course it is stupid of anybody to speak of having "stomach trou ble," unless one knows reasonably well the situation of that organ within the body. If you can, with a finger, locate the lower end of the breast-bone, you are not far from mid-way of the stomach in its long diameter from left to right. Its larger area is to the left; it nar rows and drops slightly lower to Its termination at the right, where it empties into the first portion of the small bowel. Near this point, beneath the "Short ribs," the gall bladder is hidden. If you invert a coffee cup two inches to the right of the point of the breast-bone, you will cover the site of the gall-stone colic, and the burning distress of hyperacid stomach, and many cases of gastric ulcer or duodenal ulcer. Pain in this locality should have im mediate attention. Gaseous distension of the stom ach is likely to bulge the area to the left, and just below the point of the breast-bone; I am not going into diagnosis here; I am trying to APPLES. A PPLE-PICKING time is upon us, From Georgia to Maine', from Pennsylvania to California, the ap ple grows almost everywhere in the United States. Although the apple is not a native of this continent, we have developed so many varieties which are distinc tively American, that we look upon the apple as our own. Europe now buys thousands of carloads of Am erican apples every year.- The apple is one of the few edi bles that is as good raw as whem cooked, as good cooked as raw. Cooking does not spoil an apple, but converts it into something new and strange. Who ever heard of a baked orange? But a baked Rhode Island Greening, swimming in a rich syrup composed of its own juices and all the sugar it can car ry, browned to a turn and enriched with a liberal baptism of thick fresh cream, is there anything that comes to the table quite as good as that? Arpte pie! Europe may claim the apple, but we have first claim on apple pie. The English call them "apple tarts" and leave out the cin namon and most of the sugar and make the crusts out of something more like an inner tube in texture than, the flaky substance which melts in your mouth and which ev ery good American cook knows how to mix and roll. King George the Second, who was a sort of royal dumbbell, is said to have marvelled, on first eating an apple dumpling, how the apple got inside the dumpling. He would have marvelled more if he could have had a genuine American baked apple dumpling, for the English idea of a dumpling Is to wrap it up in a rag and boil it. Baked apple dump ling, with a hard sauce compiled of lots of granulated sugar and lots more butter, all beaten together with a liberal flavoring of nutmeg, may not be the food of the gods, but it comes pretty close to the nec tar and ambrosia which Ganymede used to serve on Olympus. And cider! But hush. Cider has an unfortunate habit of obeying one of the laws of Nature which was not repealed by the Volstead act Nevertheless and notwithstanding, the apples which are not quite good enough for pies are not going to waste on the ground, as they used to do, however we may deplore that fact. RULERS OF AMERICA. R. JAMES W. GERARD, once United States Ambassador to Germany, made public the other day a list of 64 men who, he said, were the real rulers of America. There was not a single politician or office holder in the list It was composed of the men who. operate the great industries, banks and newspaper or ganizations of the nation. Some of the nation's richest men were on Mr. Gerard's list, of course but many men of great wealth were not included. The rich men whom he named are men who actively manage the investment and opera tion of their own wealth, like Henry Ford and John D. Rockefeller, Jr But the great majority pf these "Rulers of America are hired men They work for other people, man age other people's money and prop erty for them. They rule, or help to rule Amer ica, not because they are men of wealth but because they are men of brains and ability. Walter P. Gifford, president of the American Telegraph and Telephone Company, does not own as much as one per cent of the company which he man ages. Owen D. Young, chairman of the General Electric Company, Is a hired man working for the com pany's stockholders. Such power as those men and others similarly sit uated exert is theirs because they have proved their ability to build and operate great organizations of capital and men. That is the American principle, to which we all subscribe; that a man is. entitled to go as far as his individual abilities will permit, pro vided he does not gain power at the expense of others. And it is safe to say that for sheer ability the men whom Mr. Gerard calls "Rulers of America" have it all over the gener al run of public officials. acquaint you with Important local ities. This gaseous distension of the stomach is most likely to inter fere with the heart-movements, for, approximately two inches to the left of the point of the breast-bone, is the site of the apex-beat of the heart easily encroached upon by the distended stomach. You ought to know at once if it is gas making your heart "palpitate." Roughly speaking, your colon oc cupies a space beginning at the right "flank;" it ascends to just above the edge of the liver, bends leftward, crosses just below the stomach to a point opposite its first bend; then descends to the left "flank;" like a horse-shoe hanging toe upward. The coils of the small intestine lie within the area describ ed by the colon, communicating with it low in the right flank. Here is the site of the appendix; colics in this region are worth watching closely. If I may digress: a "colic' anywhere within the abdominal space may, within twenty-four hours descend to the appendiceal region, and mark the site of an ab scess. Remember that out, and still more degrading to get into yourself. GIVES NEW USES FOR OLD BOXES U. S. D. A. Bulletin, Giving Instruc tions to Campers, May be Obtained for 10 Cents. "Y OU CAN GET ALL YOU WANT" Los Angeles Times. YOU can get all you want pro viding you enter a telephone booth and receive instructions to en ter the second door to the left on the third floor back knock three times and give the password. Then you obtain an order to go across town and meet a man with a mus tache and a limp. He will person ally conduct you to a place where an order may be left and the goods delivered. You may get all you want; but you have to want it pretty hard. It is not on tar under your nose. It comes around in secret and solicits under an assumed name. And it travels in a trunk or plastered va lise to decoy the police. You have to work hard to get it. Even when you get it, you are treated as a spy by the booze fra ternity. They hesitate to accept you as an acomplice. They put you to tests to prove your sympathy with the racket. Possibly anyone who is willing to qualify can get what he wants. But the number of clandestine drinkers is decreasing daily in law-abiding communities. You can get all you want: Mebbe, In event you can the bootlegger is being driven into his hole, and you must hunt him there. And another year of Mr. Hoover and Attorney General Mitchell and the new dry staff will make the hole the boot legger is In still harder to ferret Mother's wishes may cause fath er lots of hard work on his next camDing trip if she takes along a kit of carpenter tools, some nails and a copy of the Department of Commerce publication "You Can Make It." Inspired by the title of this book let and by the drawings of the fin ished product, summer homesiters and vacationists in the national tor- ests of Oregon and Washington may soon be taking up the carpen ter trade and hammering their thumbs or sawing holes in their knickers instead of stalking the elusive trout or hiking over the mountain trails, say officers of the U. S. forest service. Father may not get all the sun tan that is com ing to him but mother may get a lot of things made that she has been wanting for a long tinte if she takes this publication seriously. ADDarentlv vou can construct most anything your heart desires from most any .box, packing case, sugar barrel, orange crate, or what not, if you follow the directions giv en in the bulletin. To make con struction easy, there Is a drawing for every article, with specifications collected from experts the world over by the national committee on wood utilization. Beach sandals to blue bird houses, bookcases to bathtub boats, rabbit traps to reading tables any jack- of-all-trades camper, or his wife or children, can fashion them trom wooden containers usually broken up for kindling or thrown away. The material is light and cheap. The work is easy, rough-and-ready, or artistically painstaking, accord ing' to the temperament (or sex) of the summer woods dweller. When the patriarch of the camp or summer home group gets tired of making windvanes for the grand children, and woodbaskets for the fireside, he can turn ambitiously to building cabinets, refrigerators and vanities. The universal beauty seeker who is not satisfied with the homespun plainness of this furni ture need do nothing more than get a brush and apply a coat of pain varnish, or lacquer to his heart content. An appendix to the bulletin writ ten bv Major R. Y. Stuart chief of the U. S. forest service, tells of the tremendous destruction wrought by forest fires and gives a number o simple fire prevention rules for camners and vacationists. The tools needed, the designs ana directions to guide the eye and the mind of the worker, and the metn ods of reclaiming boxes, which will conserve a portion of the nation s waste of four billion feet of box lumber annually, are set forth in the booklet, which may be obtained from the Superintendent of Docu ments, Washington, D. C, at a cost of 10 cents. mtimy Btlpoi CwBmt international Sunday School Lesson fo September 2L JONAH THE NABBOW NATIONAL. 1ST BEBUKED. Jonah 3:1-5.10; 4:1-11. Rev. Samuel D. Price, D. D. "You are a Jonah" Is a phrase that is often used when one makes a mistake, and it 1b usually a clum sy one. Many are so disturbed over the "whale" that they fail to get the great lessons on foreign missions, grace abounding and the triumph of a cowardly man. "Great fish" is the meaning of the Hebrew. Jehovah gave commission to Jo nah at his home Gath-heper, near Nazareth, to go to Nlnevah some 600 miles away and proclaim their sins and that the city would be destroyed If they did not repent within forty days. Jonah went 50 miles in the opposite direction to the nort of Joppa and there took shipping for Tarshlsh In Spain that he might get as far away as possl- ble from the place where he should have obeyed God. The storm, the casting of lots pointed him out as the cowardly messenger. He was cast overboard but God was ready to give him another chance. When Jonah was ready to begin over he had to face the same com mission which was the message of denunciation in Nlnevah. This was a mighty city of sixty miles In cir cumference and given over to all kinds of wickedness. The people were startled into attention as their consciences made them aware of their appalling sins. Even after Jesus Christ gave the great commission to preach the Gospel In all the earth It was over 1700 years before the matter of missions to other nations was taken at all seriously. It was Peter who gives us further understanding of the ' heart of God in our Golden Text: "Of a truth I perceive that God Is no respecter of persons: but in every nation he that feareth Him and worketh righteousness, Is ac ceptable to Him," Acts 10:34-35. OTERS TO DECIDE 13 E! (Continued from First Pace) to persons otherwise qualified who were not residents of Oregon when they entered the service, but who shall have been actual residents thereof for ten years continuously immediately before filing applica tion for loan; and increasing the amount of state bonds authorized for such purposes from three to four per cent of the total assessed valuation of all property in the state. Motor vehicle license tax consti tutional amendment" Purpose: To amend section 32 of article I of the state constitution so as to author ize the legislative assembly to class- fy and subclassify property, includ- ng motor vehicles, for purposes of taxation, and, in providing for an excise or privilege tax, to take into consideration use, value and depre ciation of the property affected, without specific assessment Motor vehicle license tax consti tutional amendment" Purpose: To amend section 1 of article IX of the state constitution so as to auth orize the legislative assembly to classify and subclassify property, including motor vehicles, for pur poses of taxation, and, in providing for an excise or privilege tax, to take into consideration use, value and depreciation of the property af fected, without specific assessment Constitutional amendment for filling vacancies in the legislature" Purpose: To amend section 3 of article IV of the constitution of Oregon to authorize the Ailing of vacancies in the legislature in such manner as may be provided by law. 'Legislators' compensation consti tutional amendment" Purpose: To amend the state constitution to fix the compensation of members of the legislature at $500 for the term of two years, together with travel pay for going to and returning from the place of meeting, as now provided by the constitution; the presiding officers to receive one-half of their allowance as members as additional compensation. Referendum Ordered by Petition of the People. "Two additional circuit judges bill" Purpose: To provide for two additional fudges of the circuit court of the state of Oregon for the fourth judicial district, comprising Multnomah county. "Income tax bill" Purpose: To levy and collpct annually a progres sive state tax upon net incomes of resident and non-resident natural persons and fiduciaries, from every source within the state and from property taxable therein; making exemptions to single person of $1, 500; married person, head of fam ily, or husband and wife together, $2,500; and for each child or depend ent under certain conditions, $400; and providing that the estimated amount of income taxes for each year be deducted from the total amount of revenue required for state purposes, and only the bal ance of such required amount be levied as direct taxes on property. Proposed by Initiative Petition. "Anti-cigarette constitutional am endment" Purpose: To amend the constitution by adding a provision prohibiting the importation, manu facture, sale, purchase, possession, or giving away within the state of cigarettes, cigarette papers, or ma terials for the manufacture of cig arettes, or the advertisement of the same in any manner whatsoever, and making a violation of such pro vision a misdemeanor punishable upon conviction thereof by fine of not less than $25, nor more than $250, "r imprisonment in the county jail not less than thirty, nor more than ninty days, or by both such fine and imprisonment. Rogue river fishing constitution al amendment" Purpose: Constitu tional amendment making it unlaw ful to take or fish for any kind of fish in Rogue river, and its tribu taries, and within a radius of three miles from its mouth, except with rod or line held in hand and hook or hooks baited with natural or artificial bait or lure; excepting the state and United States taking fish for propagation purposes; making each violation thereof a misdemean or punishable by fine not less than $100 nor more than ?1,000, or im prisonment in the county jail not less than fifteen days, nor more than six months, or both such fine and imprisonment "Lieutenant governor constitu tional amendment" Purpose: Con stitutional amendment to provide for election of lieutenant governor at same time, in same manner, with same qualifications as governor; to receive $500 annual salary ana no other compensation except when serving as governor; to be president of senate and appoint senate com mittees, but have no vote except upon a tie. If governor's office be comes vacant to became governor for remainder of term; acting gov ernor during governor's temporary absence or disability. Secretary of state becomes governor until next election, if both office of governor and lieutenant governor become va cant, and serves as acting governor during temporary absence or dis ability of both. "Peoples water and power utility districts constitutional amendment Purpose: To amend article XI the constitution so as to authorize the creation by the people of util ity districts consisting of territory which is contiguous or otherwise within one or more counties, which may include one or more incorpor ated municipalities, with or without territory outside of such municipal ities, for the purpose of supplying water for domestic and municipal purposes, and for development, dis tribution, disposal and sale of wa ter, water power, and electric en ergy; under the management of boards of directors consisting oi Ave resident members each; and specifying the powers of such dis tricts. estate must present them to me, duly verified u required by law, at the office C. L. Sweek In Heppner. Oregon, on bafnra sir months from the date of first publication of this notice. w. 1. Dauu. Administrator of the Estate of Murimrrt P. Ball. Deceased. Date of First publication. August Four teenth. 1930. 23-27- Professional Cards NOTICE OP SHESTPP'S SALE. TJntlrn la harehv elven that bv virtue of an Execution issued out of the Cir cuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, dalea sepiemoer Twelfth, 1930. In that certain suit wherein Isabel F. Corrigall, Executrix of the Last Will and Testament of M. CorriKall deceased, as plaintin, re covered a judgment against the de fendants, Edward O. Neill and Ollle M. Noill nn th Eleventh dav of Septem ber. 1930. which judgment was for the sum of Twenty-nve tnousana uoimro. witn interest at tne rate oi r-igiu pn cent per annum from November Fif teenth, 1920; the further sum of Fif teen hotwired Dollars attorney s lee. and Sixtv-six and 70-100 Dollars for costs and disbursements, and a decree of foreclosure airaiust the defendants, Edward o. Nei 1 ana Anne jMeni, ma wife; OUie M. Neill; Claude A. Baker M R. Knnli?alow: Oreeon-Acme Exten sion. Inc., a corporation; First National ttanK oi Heppner, uregon, a corpora tion; W. M. Howard; Chas. H. Latour ell: Alexanders, a corporation; L. F. Dnvttll: S B. Notson. Trustee:Ada wig lesworth and Morrow county, a public nrnni-atinn T will nn thff Eighteenth dav or October, iiu, at me nour oi Ten o'clock A. M. of said day. at the front door of the county court house In Heppner. Morrow county, uregon, oner for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand all of the following described real property in Morrow county, state of Oregon, to-wlt: SW NEVi. SE'4. SE4 NW4. WMi NW. SW14 of Sec. 25; S'A of Sec. 26; Also commencing at the SE corner of the NE',4 of Sec. 26. run ning thence W. to the center of said Sec. 26; thence N to the NW corner of the SW4 NEVi of said Sec. aforesaid, thence in a South easterly direction to the point of beginning; the E E4 of Sec. 35; all of Sec. 36, Twp. 1 N. of Range 27. E. W. M.; all of Sec. 31; SW'i NW'j of Sec. 32. Twp. 1 N. R. 28. E.W.M.; Government Lots 1 and 2; S NE'i and NM of SE'i of Sec. 1. Twp. 1 S. R. 27 E. W. M.; Gov ernment Lot 3, SE'i NW'4 EM, SWV4 of Sec. 4; All of Sec. 5; Gov ernment Lots 1 and 2. SMi NE'4. NMi SE4, SE SE'i of Sec. 6; N'4 NE4 of Sec. 8; NW14 and WMi NE'4 of Sec. 9, Twp. 1 S. R. 28, E. W. M.; Also NE14 NW14 of Sec. 26. Twp. 6 S. R. 29, E. W. M. Gov ernment Lots 1 and 2, SMi NE'4. SEVi NW'4. SEH, NEVi SWVs, and the SVi SWV4. Sec. 2, Government Lots 3 and 4, SV4 NWVi and SVVt of Sec. 1 ; All of Sec. 11, all in Twp. 1 S. R. 27, E. W. M. : Government Lots 3 and 4 and S'4 NWVi of Sec. 4; EVi of Sec. 34; WV4 EV2 and WV4 of Sec. 35. all in Twp. 1 N. R. 27, E. W. M., or so much of said real property as may be necessary to satisry tne piauuin s judgment, costs and attorney's fees and accruing costs 01 saie. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff of Morrow County, State Date of first publication: September 18. ISttU. H-OL AUCTIONEERS E. D. HTTBSON, the Livestock Auc tioneer of Granger, Wo., and D wight Misner of lone, Ore. SALES CON DUCTED IN ANY STATE OB ANY COUNTY. For dates and terms wire or write DWIOHT MISNEB, lone. A. B. GRAY, M. D. PHYSICIAN fe SUBaEON Phone 333 Heppner Hotel Building Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted. GENERAL HOSPITAL CONVALESCENT HOME Dr A. B. Gray, Physlcian-ln-Charge Miss Helen Cnrran, Surgical Nurse Hiss Ona Gilliam, Anesthetist Mrs. L. G. Herren, Superintendent Open to All Physicians Local ads in the Gazette Times bring results. NOTICE TO CBEDITOBS. Kotlce is herabv given that the un- Hpraitrn ert has been aDnolnted by the County Court of the State of Oregon ror Morrow uouniy, AuimmouttiiiA m thn Ratate of Ernest Cannon, deceased, and has duly qualified as such admin istratrix. All persons having claims against said estate must present them to me, duly verified as required by law, at ti.o nfflpo nf n. L. Sweek in HeDPner, Oregon, on or before Six months from tne date 01 nrst puoiicauou ui mm uv Date of first publication: September Eighteenth 1930. ADA L. CANNON. Administratrix of 'the Estate of Er nest Cannon, deceased. SUMMONS. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MORROW COUNTY. , , Juanlta Bellemin, Plaintiff, vs. Frank J. Bellemin. Defendant. TO FRANK J. BELLEMIN Defendant. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby required to nnnenr nnrt answer the complaint filed against you In the above entitled suit within Four weeks from the date of first publication of this summons, ana If you fail so to answer, for want there of the plaintiff will apply to the Court lor tne renei prayea tor in iter com plaint, to-wit: For a decree granting to her an abso lute divorce from you and further awarding to the plaintiff the care and custody of Alvin James Bellemin. the son of plaintiff and defendant, and For such other and further relief as to the Court may seem equitable. Tnis summons is puonsnea Dy oruer of the Honorable R. L. Benge. County Judge of Morrow County, State of Ore gon, dated September Tenth 1930. which order proviaea mat mis sum mons be Dublished once each week for the period of Four weeks in the Hepp ner Gazette Times, a newspaper 01 general circulation printed and publish ed at Heppner, Oregon. Date or nrst puDiication csepiemoer Eleventh, 1930. C. L. SWEEK, 26-30 Attorney for the Plaintiff. Address: Heppner, -Oregon. NOTICE TO CBEDITOBS. Notice is hereby given that the under signed has been appointed by the Coun ty Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County Administrator of the Estate of Margaret P. Ball, decesed. All persons having claims against said INJURED IN ACCIDENT. Gene Florence, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Florence of upper Willow creek was painfully Injured in an auto accident about 1.A0 o'clock Saturday evening. Gene was crossing E. May street at tne inter section of Main on foot, when Joe Swindig drove along In one of the Swlndig cars with the other In tow driven by Raymond Clark. Evi dently unaware of the tow rope In between Gene started to cross be tween the two cars, was caught by the car In tow and drug across the intersection before Joe became aware that something was wrong and stopped his car. Gene was im mediately taken to a doctor's oince where hie Injuries were dressed. Though badly bruised and suffering some loss of skin, reports are that his Injuries will probably not prove serious, and his rapid recovery Is anticipated. NOTICE TO CBEDITOBS. Notice Is herebv given that the un derslgned has been appointed by the fnontv cvmrt of the State of Oregon for Morrow County executor of the es tate of Ella R. Walpole, deceased, and that all persons having claims against the said estate must present the same duly verified according to law, to me at my office In Irrlgon. Oregon, or at the office of my Attorney, S. E. Notson, in Heppner. Oregon, within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice, said date of first publi cation being September 18, 1930. WILLIAM R. WALPOLE, Executor. Get Your GUARANTEED Mail There's Magic in Compound Interest 6, compound Interest, State supervision, Safety. Make them yours today. Write for our free booklet "Doubling Your Principal by Compound InteraU" It tells you exactly when and how soon you will be independent ... either on lump sums of $100 or small amounts put lde regularly. There's magic in Compound Interest and TWO SURE PAY CHECKS A YEAR from "Western Savings." Fill out the coupon NOW for detailed Information I " State MAIL this money growing COUPON Gentlement Safe, good old-fashioned 6 interests me. Send me your free booklet explaining it. Name. St City- Supervision WESTERN SAVINGS and Loan Association . , 1 1 ir L:11 TJ .Iam J rt.n v t r a i ntn anu 1 annum 1 uiuwui vhkuh m Resource ever $1,600,000 f GLENN Y. WELLS ATTORNEY AT LAW 1526 Chamber of Commerce Building PORTLAND, OREGON Phone ATwater 4884 WHAT'S IN A NAME? The late Andrew Carnegie said, "If you can gell a man a hat for one dollar, you can sell It for two dollars If you stamp it with your name and make the public feel that your name stands for some thing." The man or woman who has a reputation that "stands for something" has little to wor ry about whether he Is selling his services or hats, Many a family tree is a slip pery ..elm make ..your ..own name. Ours Is a helpful bank. 10HAL DR. J. L. CALLAWAY Osteopathic Physician Gilman Building Phone 93 Heppner, Oregon WM. BROOKHOUSER PAINTING FAPEBHANOINO INTEBIOB DECOBATINO Leave orders at Peoples Hardware Company DR. C. W. BARR DENTIST Telephone 1012 Office in Gilman Building 11 W. Willow Street N. D. BAILEY Contractor and Builder Cabinet Work Built-in Cabinets Window Screens, Etc. Call Heppner Planing Mill DR. J. H. McCRADY DENTIST Z-Bay Diagnosis L O. O. F. BUtLDINO Heppner, Oregon Frank A. McMenamin LAWYEE Phone BEscon 4461 1014 Northwestern Bank Building, PORTLAND. OREGON Residence. GArfleld 1949 A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND StTBOEON Trained Nurse Assistant Office In Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon C L. SWEEK ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW Offices In First National Bank Building Heppner, Oregon There Is No Substitute for Safety S. E. NOTSON ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW Office In Court House Heppner, Oregon AUCTIONEER Farm and Personal Property Sales a Specialty "The Man Who Talks to Beat the Band" O. L. BENNETT, Lexlngten, Oregon J. 0. PETERSON IjiteHt Jewelry and Gift Goods Watches - Clocks - Diamonds Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon F. W. TURNER & CO. FIBE, AUTO AND LIFE INSUBANOE v Old Line Companies. Beal Estate. Heppner, Oregon JOS. J. NYS ATTONEY-AT-LAW Boberts Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon J. Perry Condcr, N. D. 20th year In praotlee In Heppner and Morrow County. HEPPNER HOTEL BUILDINU Office Phone 02, Residence Phone 03. Heppner Sanitarium ITnenit il Dr- Conder nOspildl physician In charge Oldest Institution of Healing and Oldest Practicing Physician in Mor row County: with the least percent age of fatality and greatest percent age of benefit.