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About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1931)
PAGE FOUR (Basrttr emnrs THE HEPPNER GAZETTE. Established March So. 1883; THE HEPPNER TIMES. Established November IS. 1S97; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15. 1912. Published every Thursday morning by VAWTEB and SPENCER CRAWFORD and entered at the Post Office at Hepp ner, Oregon, as second-class matter. ADVERTISING BATES GIVEN ON APPLICATION. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Tear . Six Months Three Months Single Copies 12.00 1.00 .75 .05 Official Paper for Morrow County. 1 KDlToR ft 4-H CLCBBERS COMING. THERE is no greater agency at work in the United States today in the interests of true American ism than boys' and girls' club work. It inculcates in the minds of youth, during the formative period of life, a desire for those things which rep resent the very foundation of our national stability, and the only things which will prevent disinte gration and retrogression of the ideals of security for individual in itiative and love of freedom that brought about its establishment and the growth of the United States to its present commanding position among the nations of the world. Dr. Wilson, University of Mon tana economist who spoke before the Eastern Oregon Wheat league convened in Heppner last year, gave as the greatest stumbling block to Russia's five-year plan the failure of the Soviet government to place a premium on the home and family life. In attempting to cast all the people from a single mould, it is robbing the individual of his initiative. Contrast this to the United States where every married man is or should be an executive, the head of a little government of his own, the problems of which it is up to him to solve, and the destiny of which depends upon his counsel and ad ministrative principles. In this primary governmental unit, as was said, the man should be the executive, for such is the American plan "I promise to love, honor and obey." Granted that this is the case, the man may be likened to the governmental executive, and his helpmate', to the cabinet, direct ing the various lines of household activity. Great care Is used in the selection of our national executive, and the selection of his helpmate, the cab inet, is watched with keen interest to see that men of the proper ca pabilities and possessing the right ideals have charge of the nation's destiny. Highly educated men of good qualities are wanted at the helm of government But the gov ernment itself is a composite of all the primary units the families of the land. Should-less care be used to pro vide for the future security of the primary unit, than for the present orderly administration of the na tional government?. Surely the fu ture stability of the American gov ernment depends upon the security or the home. And with a rising generation trained to think straight, to act for itself, and pledged to the principles of willing hands, true hearts, good health and love of Sunday School nB Lesson nt International Sunday School Lesson or September 27 THE SPREAD OF CHRISTIANITY rer asia Golden Text Acts 14;27 Rev. Samuel D. Price, D. D. This Review lesson Is of special importance because of the large amount comprehended in the quar ter's lessons and since the regular study has been Interrupted In many cases by reason of the summer va cations. Begin by reading in Acts from chapter 1 through 15:85. You will need your map constantly. The map that will help you the most is the one that you draw as each new place is named. Gloom incident to the crucifixion and then the Ascension of Jesus Christ was fully dispelled by the stupendous events that took place in Jerusalem on the Jewish feast of Pentecost After the disciples had the ten day prayer meeting the dis pensation of the Holy Spirit began with the awe-inspiring manifesta tion, followed by the spiritually ef fective preaching of Peter when thousands believed that the Cruci fied was the Messiah and Saviour of mankind. Preaching and personal work fol lowed, and miracles were confirm ing signs that attracted the atten tion of the people. Peter was no longer the coward to cringe before the sneer of a serving maid. The lame man was healed in the tem ple. When the authorities com manded that such preaching cease, Peter replied "We must obey God rather than man." Church organization was devel oped as occasion required and the order of deacons was established to give adequate attention to the wor thy poor. Giving money is part of true religion. Persecution arose because of the very successes of the early church. Deacon Stephen became the first martyr and Deacon Philip did fine work In Samaria and as a missionary to the eunuch. Be lievers were scattered and Saul of Tarsus was changed from chief per secutor to an ardent believer and evangelist home, such securitiy Is assured. When Heppner entertains the Morrow county 4-H Club fair Octo ber 10, it is helping to spread the message of boys' and girls' club work; it is encouraging the boys and girls already enlisted to great er effort in their work and putting its okeh on the principles to which they have subscribed. The amount of warmth given the entertainment will denote the degree to which the help, encouragement and dissemin ation will have been effected. Every progressive business works constantly tor new business, for thus only is it possible to compen sate for the loss of old business a certain amount of which is bound to slip away and to expand. New business is created only through ad vertising telling the world what one has be it by word of mouth, window display, sign board, or newspaper message. Thus the progressive business considers ad vertising an investment The more people reached, the more powerful and resultful the message, if the message be truthful and convincing. HARD TIMES AND MATRIMONY (Autocaster Service) FROM all over the country we get reports that there are more peo ple getting married than there have been for a long time. Naturally, there are exactly as many women as there are men going in at this time for this justly famous experi ment. Some of the people who have no ticed the increase in marriage li censes wonder how these young people have the courage to take the jump when jobs are scarce and none too secure. But we think the answer is to be found in the old, saying that two can live as cheaply as one. That isn't literally true, but it certainly is true that if both will do their share two people can live together more economically than the two of them can live sep arately. We have been told of several cases where the young man lost his job and the girl kept hers. They had been engaged for some time but were waiting to get more of a stake together before hitching up. Perhaps they might have kept on waiting for years had not fate, in the shape of hard times, intervened. And in a great many cases, we are sure, marriage has been hastened because the young woman is out of work and no longer feels the sense of independence which she had when her pay envelope came along every Saturday. On the whole, we think this get ting married when times are hard is a good thing. We were begin ning to fear that matrimony was going out of fashion. It is a long time since we had heard a man un der forty boast that he had noth ing but a fifteen dollar a week job and enough cash for the parson's fee and the first installment on the furniture when he and the girl teamed up for life. But we know many men of the older generation who give all the credit for their success in life to the fact that they married young and poor, and had to hold their noses right down tight on the grindstone while they were still young enough to acquire the habit of hard work. For a while it seemed as if work, too, were going out of fashion. There are not so many youngsters complaining because they have to do something for their pay as there were a couple of years ago. Work is not something to be ashamed of any more. And we don't know of anything so well calculated to make a useful working citizen out of a young man or a young woman, eitner tnan to get married at a time when work is scarce and those who want to hold their jobs have to do a lot of it WAR CLOUDS DISAPPEARING Autocaster Service. IT REALLY looks as if the war- 1 cloud which has hung over the world ever since the Armistice were clearing away. For the first time since the early days of the last cen tury, France and Germany are making friendly gestures toward Maybe He'll Be Able lift! f ijlftW HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, THE FAMDILY- UDOOTCTDP JOHN JOSEPH GAINESM.CX ODDS AND ENDS. Since I last touched this subject, I have noticed in the big daily newspapers that no fewer than twenty-five deaths have occurred from "heart disease" in one great metropolis of the middle-west Men all of them. One none of them over sixty years old. All of them big, two-fisted, bull-necked fellows. . . . Some of them were per sonal acquaintances of mine. They were go-getters, if you please; the city and state sustained a distinct loss when each died. There's a les son here for all but the heedless. The skinny, lanky, dyspeptic, plunderbund artist of the ig town may go crazy, but he doesn't die of "heart disease." Had you ever no ticed that? The fellow that "spits up" once in awhile, and is afraid to eat much. It's the fellow that weighs from 190 up, whose "heart" gets him like a shot; the fellow each other. The French people are beginning to realize that the old days of Imperial ambition are a thing of the past in Germany, that the German people actually do con trol their own government, for the first time in history, and that they are just as human and peace-loving as the French themselves. And the Germans seem to be beginning to understand that France has been keeping up her big army, and build ing her line of frontier forts, be cause she has had solid grounds for fear of an invasion from beyond the Rhine at any moment It has happened to her four times in a hundred years, and that's enough to make any nation nervous. Whether anything will come of the latest proposal before the League of Nations, to put all the armaments and military and naval forces of all nations in the League under the control of the League it self, we are not sufficiently inform ed to guess. But on the face of it, it sounds as if even the serious en tertainment of such a proposal is an indication that the war-like spirit no longer rules Europe and threatens the rest of the world. W. C. T. U. NOTES. MARY A. NOTSON, Reporter. The W. C. T. U. is fifty-eight years old. It has organizations in more than 10,000 communities. It has gone forward, although it was pre dicted that when Miss Frances Wil lard passed away it would decline. It has twice as many members as it had at any time during Miss Wil lard's leadership. Its educational program i3 reaching ten times as many students as before. At least a million high school and college students have entered its 1931 es say contests. It is not solely a pro hibition organization. It has twen ty-three departments doing chari table, educational, Americanization and religious work. One of the leading women in the fight for nullification of the eigh teenth amendment, speaking in Washington, said, "We have won the fight aganist prohibition; now we must win the fight against total abstinence." Yet, her organization parades itself as an organization in the interest of temperance. The Anti-Prohibition Association says that conditions are exceedingly bad, and that the proper way to handle the alcohol problem is thru education and moral suasion. How ever, they do not seem to be using any of their time or money to put such a program Into effect With the money and talent at their com mand they might be making a good showing along that line if they really meant what they say. In Pennsylvania it is charged that frauds amounting to fifteen million dollars have been perpetrated by a gigantic gasoline bootleg ring, to Keep Going Now HEPPNER, OREGON. that carves the canvas-back, and tops It off -with a hot chaser; that doesn't have tima to dine till the day is done the big, forceful he man of business. Lessons lessons) to the observ ing. Over-fueling at wrong hours. The big feed just before the night of rest Breakfast and noon lunch negligible in qauntity and bolted swallowed whole! The rush back to business no time for eating or digesting properly, until that office closes at six. Theroad to "tubbi ness," blood-pressure, rotten arter ies, "heart disease" at 50 or there about Better be a skinny" with a bun die of nerves and a cow-horn stom ach, in the mad chase for the dol lar. Then, you can at least avert the heart disease benediction, the over-stuffed wares of the mortician. the tall marble shaft, all these, till you really want to die and have it over with. which has been avoiding payment of the gasoline taxes. This gaso line bootleg ring has demoralized the entire gasoline market in Phil adelphia. Obviously the law is a failure, but have you heard of the Anti-Prohibition Association ask ing that it be repealed? The State Federation of Labor in their recent convention went on record for repeal of prohibition. They also did what none of the oth er organizations favoring repeal has done; they favor a definite sub stitute. They want the government to make beer and light wines and sell them at actual cost. We have been asking the wets to give us a definite substitute for prohibition, but they cannot agree among them selves and they have offered no definite plan. But here is a plan offered by organized labor. How do you like it? " Uncle Sam, Brew er, Wine-grower, Saloon Keeper." It has more merit than the veiled program of the DuPont-Raskob combination, for the program is one to relieve the multi-mililonaires of paying taxes and to saddle the taxes upon the poor fellow who can not control his appetite for beer and other alcoholic drinks. THE EBB AND FLOW OF BUSINESS. Editor's Note: This is the first of a series of articles on present business conditions, written for this paper by Dr. victor f . Morns, protessor of econ omics at the University of Oregon. Dr. Morris, an authority in his field, has made a special study of the present world situation and herewith offers his analysis and some suggestions for the future. The next article will appear soon. Steel rails, bolts, bars, wheels, concrete, brick, mortar, stone, glass, copper wire; these and their com panion materials make up that strong and rigid slave, our "iron man." By such rigid means are the processes of twentieth century pro duction controlled. We are aware, however, of the in finite delicacy and flexibility of this modern industrial process. Though resting upon the rigid foundations of iron, steel and concrete, business activity ebbs and flows like a fluid thing. Or shall we say, it seems to have the throbbing character of a living thing. Such indeed it is, for with the steel and concrete go hu man wants, habits and fashions, hu man ideas, ideals and motives. The world of machines' waits on a world of human energies. While business cycles thus have a throbbing, pulsating character, and ebb and flow, their movement lacks precise regularity. Human nature, as just noted, la intimately inter woven, and where ideas, ideals, fashions and motives play a heavy role allowance must b"e made for infinite variations and peculiar ities. While these peculiarities of par ticular business cycles add to the labors of business men, since fore- liy Albert T.'Reid THURSDAY, SEPT. 24, 1931. casting cannot be done with the accuracy of tide tables, they add, also, variety and spice to life. Tne business waters cannot become stagnant There are always prob lems to be solved. In this ebb and flow of business is a challenge to the brains of business: "Yes," said the facetious barber, we-re up-to-date here. We shave you while you wait" "Indeed!" replied Fuller Feppe. "I've usually found that you shave several other persons while I wait." 1st Stude (writing home) How do you spell "financially"? 2nd Stude F-i-n-a-n-c-l-a-l-l-y, and there are two r's in "embar rassed." "So Mrs. Riggs started going to church again. Change of heart?" "No; hat" EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. Notice Is herebv given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Morrow, Executor of the estate of David Henry Grabill, de ceased, all persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same duly verified with vouchers at the office of F. H. Robin son, at lone, Oregon, within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice. The date of the first publication of this notico is Thursday, September 17, 1931. OREN G. GRABILL, Executor of the estate of David Henry Grabill. deceased. 27-31 NOTICE OF SALE OF STOCK. Notice is hereby given that the board of directors of the Farmers and Stock growers National Bank, will on Mon day, the 6th day of October, 1931, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the fore noon of said dav sell at dudhc auction, at the office of said bank at Heppner, Oregon, the following shares of stock of said bank, to-wit: 10 shares of $100.00, each, issued to H. Xj. Duvall, on December 22nd, iaiu, And hplne certiorates Nos. 54 and 55: 25 shares of J100 each, Issued to Jos. M. Hayes, on June 11th, 1917, and being certificate No. 6: 90 shares of 1100.00 each, issued to J. W. Beymer. on November 8th, 1927, and being certificate Nos. 30, 81, 32, 33 and 34. and 10 shares of S10U.UO eacll. and being certificate No. 35, issued to said J. w. tieymer uecemDer autn, uui. Dated this 2nd day of August, 1931. J. W. BEYMER, Director. J. D. FRENCH. Director. R. L. BENGE, Director. W. G. McCARTY, Director. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice Is herebv 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 Caroline Omohundro, de ceased, and that all persons having claims against the said estate must pre sent the same duly verified according to law to me at the office of my attor ney, S. E. Notson, at his office in Hepp ner, Oregon, witnin six montns irom the date of the first publication of this notice, which date of first publication is September a, laai.. 25-29 Administrator. EQUALIZATION NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that on Tues day, October 6, 1931, at 2 P. M., the Directors of the West Extension Infl ation District, acting as a Board of !aualization. will meet at the office of the Dijtrict in Irrigon, Oregon, to re view and correct thennual assessment of said District to be levied on the first Tuesday in September, 1931. A. (J. liUUUHTUIN. Secretary. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. The Federal Land Bank of Spokane, a corporation, Plaintiff, vs. Rudolph Klinger and Nora D. Klinger, husband and wife; Charles Klinger; Albert F. Kerber and lone National Farm Loan Association, a .corpora tion, Defendants. SUMMONS. To Albert F. Kerber, the above named 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 Court and cause within four weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, and if you fall to so appear and answer, for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to said Court for the relief prayed for and demanded in its com olalnt on file herein in the above enti tled matter, to-wit: For judgment against the defendants, Rudolph Klin ger and Nora D. Klinger, husband and wife, and against each of them, for the sum of $113.75 with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 30th day of October, 1930; and the sum of $113.75 with Interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 30th day of Anril. 1931: and the sum of $2948.73 with Interest at the rate of 6V4 per cent per annum irom me autn aay oi April, 1931: and the sum of $267.18 with inter- est at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 8th day of June, 1931; and the sum of $30.40 insurance; and the sum of $25.50 abstract charges; and the sum of W00.00 attorney s fees, and for plain tiff's costs and disbursements In this suit: that the mortgage described in plaintiff's complaint be foreclosed and the mortgaged premises therein and hereinafter described,, be sold in one parcel as provided for under the stat utes oi tne state oi uregon, to-wit: The Northeast Quarter, the East Half of the Northwest Quarter, the Southwest Quarter of the North west Quarter, the Southwest Quar ter of Section Six, Township One North, Range Twenty-six, East of the Willamette Meridian, contain ing 472.88 acres, all situated In Mor row County, Oregon. And which said mortgage Is dated the 30th day of October, 1919, and was thereatter, to-wit: on the 3rd day of November, 1919, duly recorded In the office of the County Auditor of Morrow County, Oregon, In Book 28 of Mort gages, at page 589 thereof, and that the proceeds of said sale be applied to the satisfaction of said summons, attor neys fees. Interest, costs and disburse ments, and for a decree further provid ing that any party to this suit may bid upon and purchase said land at the sale thereof, and that all of the defendants hereinabove named be forever fore closed and barred of any and all right title, claim, Hen or interest in or to said premises hereinabove and in said mort- age described, except the right of re emptlon which said defendants have and for such other and further relief as to the Court may appear that equity and the nature of said suit may require. That this summons is served upon you by publication thereof once a week for four successive weeks In the Hepp ner Gazette Times published in Hepp ner, Oregon, by order of the Hon. Cal vin L. Sweek, Judge of the above en titled Court, which said order was made and entered the 25th day of August 1931, and tne dute of tne nrst publica tion of this summons is the 27th day of August, 1931. RALEY, RALEY & WARNER, JOHN F. KILKENNY, ALFRED F. CUNHA, Postolllce address: Pendleton, Oregon. HENRY R. NEWTON, Postoffice address: Spokane, Wn. 24-28 Attorneys for plaintiff. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY ON EXECUTION. No. S867. Notice Is hereby given that by virtue of an execution In foreclosure duly Is sued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County on the 27th day of August, 1931. by the Clerk of said Court, pursuant to a Judg ment and decree renuereu . in said Court on the 27th day of Aug ust 1931, in favor of Samuel McCu - lough, planum, ana : rich, and Mary uinm. ucit.--. the sum of 2467.70, with interest there on from the 12th day of August. 1931, at the rate of six per cent per annum the sum of 220.0U. attorney further sum of J4000.00, with Interest thereon from the 21st day of May, 1930, at the rate of six per cent per annum, the further sum of 335.00. attorney s fees, and the cost and disbursements in the sum of $15.00, and directing me to sell the following described real prop erty, situate in Morrow County, Ore gon, to-wit: , - me soutn zs.o acico ",t NW of Section 19 the Ntt of SW'i, the SWK of SW and WMi of SE4 of SWW of Section 19, save . and except therefrom the follow ing tract of land owned by Arthur Dykstra, described as follows: commencing at the Southeast cor ner of the NiS'i of SWA of said Section 19 in Township 3 South, Range 27 E. W. M., running thence West 40 rods, to a stone marked X, thence North 22 rods to a stone marked X, thence East 12 rods to the side of the County road and a stone marked X, thence in a South easterly direction along said road to where said road intersects the East line of said NE4 of SW54 of said Section 19, thence South to the place of beginning. ALSO, the NWii, and NE'A of SW of Sec tion 30, all In Township 3 South, Range 27 E. W. M. ALSO, the SV4 of SE'A, and SE'A of SW of Sec tion 24, NE of NEK and NW of NEU of Section 25 in Township 3 Q.,th Rnniro M E. W. M. now' In obedience to said execution I will on Saturday, the 3rd day of Oc tober, 1931, at the hour of 10:00 0 clock in the forenoon of sam day at me irom rinr nt the Court House at HeDDnec. Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the above de scribed real property and apply the proceeds thereof to the payment of said judgment and accruing cost of sale. uatea mis znu uay oi oepLemuci, 1931. 25-29 C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon. INT THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. The Federal Land Bank of Spokane, a corporation, Plaintiff, vs. Haitv H. Crawford, also known as H. H. Crawford, a bachelor; T. M. Kel ler and Jane Doe Keller, husband and wife, and West Extension National i arm Loan Association, a corpora tion, Defendants. SUMMONS To Harry H. Crawford, also known as H. H. Crawford, a bachelor: T. M. Keller and Jane Doe Keller, husband and wife, the above named 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 Court and cause within four weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, and if you fail to so appear and answer, for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to said Court for the relief prayed for and demanded in Its com plaint on file herein in the above enti tled matter, to-wit: For judgment and decree of said Court against the de fendants, Harry H. Crawford, also known as H. H. Crawford, a bachelor, and West Extension National Farm Loan Association, a corporation, and each of them, for the sum of $65.00 with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per an num from the 2stn day of June, ism; and the sum of $65.00 with Interest at the rate of 8 Dor cent per annum from the 28th day of December, 1929; and the sum of $65.00 with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 2bih day of June, 1930; and the sum of Sbo.OO with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 28th day of December, 1930; and the sum of 17,S6.93 with interest at the rate of 6ft per cent per annum from the 28th day of December, 1930; and the Bum of 43.75 with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 20th day of May, Iks ;, ana me sum oi no. id wun interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 20th day of November, 199; and the sum of 4.vo witn inter est at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 2Uth day of May, 1930; and the sum of $48.75 with Interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 20th day of November. 1930; and the sum of $1374.01 with interest at the rate of 5ft per cent per annum from the 20th day of November, 1930; and the sum of $124.68 with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the Hth day of October, 1929; and the sum of $177.76 with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 21st day of May, 1929; and the sum of w.za in surance: and the sum of $24.50 ab stract charges; and the sum of $250.00 attorney s fees and lor piaintin s costs and disbursements in this suit; that the mortgage described In plaintiff's complaint be foreclosed and the mort gaged premises therein and hereinafter described, be sold in one parcel as pro vided for under the statutes of the State of Oregon, to-wit: The Northwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section Thir teen, Township Four North, Range Twenty-four, East of the Willam ette Meridian. The Northeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section Thirteen, Township Four. North, Range Twenty-four, East of the Willamette Meridian, all situat ed in Morrow County, State of Ore gon. And which said mortgage is dated the 20th day of November, 1923, and was thereafter, to-wit: on the 23rd day of January, 1924, duly recorded In the of- nce oi tne county Recorder of Morrow County, Oregon, In Book 32 of the Mortguge Records of said County at page 531 thereof, and that the proceeds of said sale be applied to the satisfac tion of Bald summons, attorney's fees, Interest, costs and disbursements, and for a decree further providing that any party to this suit may bid upon and purchase sold land at the sale thereof, and that all of the defendants herein above named be forever foreclosed and barred of any and all right, title, claim, lien or Interest in or to said premises hereinabove and in said mortgage de scribed, except the right of redemption which said defendants have under the laws of the State of Oregon, and for such other and further relief as to the Court may appear that equity and the nature of the said suit may require. That this summons Is served upon you by publication thereof once a week for four successive weeks In the Hepp ner Gazette Times published In Hepp ner, Oregon, by order of the Hon. Cal vin L, Sweek, Judge of the above enti tled Court, which said order was made and entered the 25th day of August, 1931, and the date of the first publica tion of this summons Is the 27th day of August, 1931. RALEY, RALEY & WARNER, JOHN F. KILKENNY, ALFRED F. CUNHA, Postoffice address: Pendleton, Oregon. HENRY R. NEWTON, Postofllce address: Spokane, Wn. 24-28 Attorneys for Plaintiff. IN THE JUSTICE COURT FOR THE THIRD DISTRICT OF MORROW COUNTY, STATE OF OREON. BERT MASON, Plaintiff, vs. LEONARD LARSEN, Defendant. SUMMONS. To Leonard Larsen, Defendant: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed ugalnHt you in the above entitled ac tion on or before four weeks from the date of the (list publication of this Summons, if served by publication, and If personally served outside of the State of Oregon, within four weeks from the date of such service, and for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the Court for a Judgment against you for the sum of Eighty and 19-100 dol lars, and for costs and disbursements Incurred In this action. And for a further order of the Court directing that the attached property be disposed of and the proceeds applied to the payment of plaintiff's said judg ment. , The nifltntlfr Tins caused to be at tached In said action the sura of $4446 belonging to said defendant. This Summons is published by vir tue of an order of F. H. Robinson, Jus tice of the Peace In and for the Third District cf Morrow County, State of Oregon, made and entered on the 25th day of August 1931. The date of the nrst publication oi this notice Is August 27th. 1931. and the date of the last publication of this notice is September 24th, 1931. Justice of the Peace In and for the Third District of Morrow County, Oregon. 24-28 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice Is herebv Klven that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, Administrator of the Estate of Carl E. Mattson. deceased. All persons- having claims against said estate must present them to the undersigned in Heppner, Oregon, duly iquirea uy law. witnin six months from the date of first publica tion of this notice. P. W. MAHONEY, Administrator of the Estate of Carl E. MattBon, deceased. Date of first publication, August Twenty-seventh, 1931. 24-28 NOTICE FOB PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. U. 8. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, Aug. 19, 1931. notice is hereby given mat Sam uel McDanieL of Hardman. Oregon who, on Feb. 12, 1926, made Homestead Entry under Act Feb. 19, 1909, No. 025019, for SE'4 NWH, NEi SW1 SWi swiA. Sect on 34 TownshlD 5 South, Range 25 East, Willamette Mer idian, has tiled notice of intention to make final three year Proof, to estab lish claim to the land above described, before Gay M. Anderson, United States Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 6th day of October, 1931. Claimant names as witnesses: Geo. H. Hayden, R. H. Steers, G. A. Farrens and Foster Collins, all of Hardman, Oregon. R. J. CARSNER. Register. Professional Cards frswwrascsftsw J. 0. TURNER Attorney at Law Phone 173 Humphreys Building HEPPNER, ORE. A. B. GRAY, M. D. PHYSICIAN as SUROEON Phone 333 Heppner Hotel Building Eyes Tested and Olasies Fitted. VVM. BROOKHOUSER PAINTING PAPE&KANOXNO INTERIOR DECORATING Leave orders at Peoples Hardware Company DR. C. W. BARR DENTIST Telephone 1013 Office in Gllman Building 11 W. Willow Street DR. J. H. McCRADY . DENTIST Z-Ray Diagnosis . X. O. O. F. BUILD IN (I Heppner, Oregon Frank A. McMenamin LAWYER 905 Guardian Building Residence, GArfleld 1949 Business Phone Atwater 1348 PORTLAND, OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SUROEON Trained Nnrit Assistant Office In Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon P. W. MAHONEY ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building Heppner, Oregon S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Offloe In L 0. O. F. Building Heppner, Oregon AUCTIONEER Farm and Personal Property Sales a Specialty "The Man Who Talks to Beat the Band" O. L. BENNETT, Lulngtsn, Oregon J. 0. PETERSON latest Jewelry and Gift Goods Watches - Clocks - Diamonds Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon F. W. TURNER & CO. FIRE, AUTO AND LIFB i INSURANCE Old Lin Ctmpani. Real Bitat. Heppner, Oregon JOS. J. NYS ATTONEY-AT-LAW Roberts Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon