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About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1932)
PAGE FOUR HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCT. 27, 1932. THE HEPPNER GAZETTE. Established March 30. 1SS3; THE HEPPNER TIMES. Established November 18. 1S97; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15. 1911 Published every Thursday morning by VAWTEB and SFEHCEB CBAWFOBD and entered at the Post Office at Hepp ner, Oregon, as second-class matter. ADVERTISING SATES GIVEN OS APPLICATION. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Tear f 00 Six Months 100 Three Months -Jo Single Copies .0 Official Paper for Morrow County. MR. COOLIDGE SPEAKS. "TF INITIATING proposals and sc 1 curing; their adoption constitute leadership President Hoover is a leader. If saving the country from one impending disaster after an other provides any basis for grati tude President Hoover is entitled to gratitude. I present my opinion of him to my fellow countrymen for such consideration as they may be lieve it merits. The more this cam paign has progressed, the more I am convinced that the public welfare requires that he should be re-elected." Calvin Coolidge, MR. HOVER, THE FIGHTER. GOVERNOR ROOSEVELT and his adherents may have reck oned wisely, but they did not reck on well in opening up a campaign of villification against Mr. Hoover and the present administration. They may have thought that Mr. Hoover would take it on the chin as he has done the last four years, without retaliating. Because Mr. Hoover did not take the time to "sell" his every action to the public, or to reply to every criticism at the time it was given, while he was busily engaged in .fording the na tional government across one of the most dangerous rapids of its his tory, they may have thought they had him "buffaloed" and that there was no fire in his makeup. But they will have been sadly disillusioned. In taking the brunt of the cam paign for his reelection, Mr. Hoover has met the enemy squarely on ev ery battle front and his ammuni tion has exploded every opposition reservoir of record, promise and slander in the minds of thinking people. Over the wreckage and ruin of an ill-conceived campaign of destruc tion on November 9 they will see standing a mighty man whom they did not know existed. He will be none other than Herbert Hoover the fighter. cerpt from the Congressional Rec ord, labelled "not printed at gov ernment expense which was car ried without postage in Uncle Sam's mail under the franking privilege of Marvin Jones. Carrying a Port land cancellation mark, the mater ial plainly came from the state democratic central committee. This is the label on the envelope: "House of Representatives U. S. part of Cong. Reord Free Brok en Promises D iscri mi nation Against the Farmer Only Hope for American Farmer is to Place Democrats In Power in Both Branches of Congress and the Pres idency Remarks of Hon. Marvin Jones of Texas In the House of Representatives, Friday, July 15, 1932." Consistency, thy name is mud. To Dr. A. B. Gray the Gazette Times extends thanks for a copy of his newly-issued "Gray's Lines In Verse." The work is a commend able effort to realize the desire in nate in the breast of all mankind to put into writing his thoughts rel ative to life. You are to be ad mired, Dr. Gray, for your frankness, sincerity of purpose and quality of your work. But in your endorse ment of Mr. Roosevelt we find naught but an honorable friendship and a woeful wail over existing conditions. The country is In need of something more constructive. PEOPLE PAY FOR DEMOCRAT IC CAMPAIGN DOPE. THOSE astute guardians of the national treasury, the democrat ic party, do riot hesitate to use the people's money for spreading cam paign literature. Tuesday morn ing the editor of the Gazette-Times ran through his mail to find an ex- Sunday School Lesson n a By ReT. Charles E. Dunn, S. D. The Christian and World Peace. Lesson for November 6th. Psalm 72 9-17; Ephesians 2:13-19. Golden Text: Matthew 5-9. The early Church was against wax. but with the conversion of Constar-tine, it became war minded, later glorying in the Woody Cru sades. The Church of Rome drew a distinction between just and un just wars which was carried for ward by the P-eformation. Most Christians supported the World v ar. But since the Armistice a great change has taken place. The Churches, now sensible of the hor ror, futility, and insanity of war, are rendering splendid service to the peace cause through local com mittees, and national commissions, including that of the interdenomin ational Federal Council. There is also an international organization, the World Alliance, now operating in thirty-six countries. The fight for peace bids fair to be one of the major struggles of his tory. It will demand extraordinary skill, wisdom and patience. The war makers will die hard, for be hind them are centuries of tradi tion. The peace movement is in its infancy. Yet remarkable progress has already been made. The fundamental problem Is not so much to prevent war, as to get the nations together. This has been impressively accomplished by the League of Nations, which may be considered mankind's greatest step forward ; by the World Court, which Chief Justice Hughes calls "the most important of all undertakings for peace"; and by the Briand-Kel-logg outlawry of war Pact, a dec laration of momentous significance. But many formidable problems remain unsolved. Very little prog ress has been registered in the di rection of disarmament Indeed, the world today is more heavily armed than ever before. Nevertheless the conscience of Christendom is so aroused over the crucial issue of peace, upon the set tlement of which the whole future of civilization depends, that we can say with Emerson, "War Is on its last legs." It Is certain to go the way of crucifixion, polygamy, and Blavery. Both the spirit of Jesus and the collective common sense of humanity will finally prevail, for they are indeed God's children. WHY THE PRESIDENT SHOULD BE ELECTED. THE prize of one hundred dollars, offered by Grenville Kleiser for the best essay on : "Why President Hoover Sould be Re-elected," has been won by Mr. A. C. Scott, 310 W. 16th Street, Oklahoma City, Okla homa. Following is the winning essay: "If ever a President of the United States deserved re-election on his record, President Hoover deserves re-election; and if ever our country needed the continued services of a President, the United States needs continued services of President Hoover. "Confronted with greater difficul ties than any other President has had to meet in times of peace, if not indeed in times of either war or peace, he has been the outstanding leader in preventing disaster and promoting recovery. From the first blast of the depression to the pres ent hour, in every succeeding crisis, he has been more resourceful in suggestion, more prompt in initia tive, and more effective in action than any other man or official, or all others put together. "He closed the door to foreign im migration. He was the leading fac tor in maintaining wages for eigh teen months, thus softening the first blow of the panic. He promot ed public and private construction running into hundreds of millions of dollars and employing hundreds of thousands of men. He secured prompt and effectual relief of the drought-stricken states of 1930. Al most entirely upon his recommen dation, Congress appropriated near ly one billion dollars for the relief of agriculture. He proposed and carried through the moratorium which probably saved Europe from complete collapse and our own country from untold disaster. In the face of general skepticism he instituted a surprisingly successful campaign against the hoarding panic of 1931. He organized the National Credit Corporation to al lay the epidemic of bank failures and to support the banking credit of the nation. "Thus, one by one, he dealt with each new crisis. But the measure of his statesmanship was not yet taken. In December, 1931, he laid before the Congress a program of reconstruction and relief so com plex, vast, and far-reaching, and in its implications so beneficial to all our people, that it must rank among the greatest achievements of any of our Presidents. Most of this pro gram the President, with unequall ed firmness and persistence, pushed through Congress, stamping out meanwhile dangerous proposals that beset the way. Notwithstand ing assertions to the contrary, this program was fundamentally for the relief of the common people the victims of misfortune in country, town and city. Out of it came the Reconstruction Finance Corpora tion, the Home Loan Bank System, emergency relief through help to states and cities, enlarged relief to agriculture, the balancing of the budget, the ending of the outward flow of gold, the maintenance of the gold standard, and the return of confidence in our financial situation to our own people and to the world. "President Hoover has grwn in stature with these years until, in the words of the independent Dem ocratic New York Times, he is 'every inch a President He is a stronger President than ever be fore. His experience is invaluable. He has not only achieved great good, but he has prevented great evil. He has stood like a rock against proposals that would have imperilled, if not wrecked, the fi nancial structure of the govern ment; and repeatedly, during the whole course of his administration, he has had to supply the courage which Congress lacked. "And now, largely through the wisdom, the courage, and the states manship of the President, the coun try seems to have touched the verge of recovery. To change to untried leadership would be to risk reversal or dangerous modification of poli cies and processes just now coming into action and to invest the imme diate future with an uncertainty peculiarly deplorable at this criti cal time." Oregon Judging Teams Win High Dairy Honors Agricultural students at Oregon State college apparently know their cows and their butter, as the judging teams at the Pacific Inter national Livestock exposition in Portland "cleaned up" all competi tion in these divisions. The .dairy cattle judging team was composed of Harold Finnigan, Forest Grove; Kenneth Carl, Ara go, and Donald Sherwood, Nyssa, and; coached by Dr, I. R. Jones. This team made the highest aver age score for all breeds as well as taking first in Holstein and Jersey classes. The dairy products judging team consisted of Marvin Davidson, Haynes; Bert O'Donnell, Portland, and Finnegan, who worked on both It won first in butter judging, and Davidson took second induvidual honors for all products. Landplaster Applied in Fall. LaGrande Union county farm ers have purchased a carload of landplaster in the fall, says County than in the spring. On land too wet for early application, better results are obtained here by appying the landplaste in the fall, says County Agen ; Avery. For Women Traveling Alone THIS BANK ADVISES: American Express Travelers Cheques 1o insure her against the loss or theft of her travel funds. To provide her with a ready means of identification. To assure her the personal service of the American Express travel organiza tion which will care for her safety and comfort wherever she may travel. You can secure these Travelers Cheques at this bark before starting on a trip. They are issued in convenient denomin ations, and cost only 75c for each $100. k mum JOHN JOSEPH 6AINF4M) ABOUT ASTHMA The fall season ragweed damp weather asthmatics know and dread its meaning for them. Hence this talk. Asthmatics can inhale; the trou ble is in expelling the air from the lungs A spasm of the small bron chioles prevents. That's your way of telling If it's real asthma. To stop the spasm is to relieve tem porarily. Anything that will stop the spasm. When a confirmed asthmatic con sults me, I first make sure of the diagnosis. Then I have the patient make a list of his regular foods; then I require him to abandon every item of it and eat something else, even if he don't like it. It is quite possible that he has been eating something that starts the spasmodic attack. Physicians call it "allergy," that is, the reaction of the individual to certain proteins. Others may eat it with no harm following. Some inhale "asthmo powder." It may relieve, but does not cure but relief is worth something, even by smoking the spasm away. Antispasmodic agents medicines must be selected by your doctor. He no doubt has something that has served him well, and his judg ment is infinitely better than yours. The use of opiates is taboo don't ask him for a shot of morphine with atropine. I have found a whiff of chloroform effectual in stopping the spasm, but be sure that it 13 genuine, spasmodic asthma. Don't guess. "Asthma" may come from heart, kidneys, or actual disease of the lung. That is not pure and simple asthma. Treat the cause always. Let your doctor determine. But try changing your diet; that is a safe plan always. And, watch for underlying causes of the trouble. Asthma is one of the most treach erous diseases. I wish I could cure every sufferer from this dreadful complaint ' New Grass "Stands the Gaff" Hereford The ability of crested wheat grass to withstand severe pasturing was demonstrated on the dry land grass plots maintained here in cooperation with County Agent Fortner. Cattle weer turned on the plots and allowed to pasture the grass to the ground during dry weather. Though many of the plots looked like dust patches afterward, CALVIN L SWEEK y2SJL LEA iiSiJ lilliiiiUUl Candidate for CIRCUIT JUDGE Of Sixth Judicial District, comprised of Umatilla and Morrow Counties, On non-partisan judi ciary ballot Nov. 8, 1932 PRESENT INCUMBENT "CIRCUIT JUDGE CALVIN L. SWEEK of the Umatilla and Morrow District will run for re-election. He was ap pointed by Governor Meier to the vacancy created by elevation of Judge Alger Fee to the U. 3. District Bench. The appointment was commended as excellent and the appointee has made good. He is a young man, 45, Oregon Native, Oregon State College, University of Oregon, University of Michigan, practiced at Heppner." "His professional standing is high; for years he has been regard ed as one of the leading attorneys of his part of the state." Oregon Voter March 5, 1932. RADIO is but one of many services and conveniences brought to your home over the wires of the Pacific Power & Light Company at a very reasonable cost. The average electric radio cost is less than 65c a month. AN ARMCHAIR SEAT ON THE 50- Farmers and Stockgrowers National Bank The first-hand thrills of the areat football classics a front row seat at the Broadway successes a box at the opera a top price ticket to the best concerts and lec turesradio brings you all this with the twist of a dial. Behind the dial miles of copper wire, tubes, condensers, transformers, made alive and entertaining with a simple connection to an electric wire. YARD LINE Copper wire, tubes, condensers yes! ' But how skillfully they've been assembled in the new set. The result Is clear, living, true-to-life tone knife-like selectivity, no over-lapping, greater distance, improved day-time reception. Hear the new radios today; learn of the convenient payment plan by which you may own and enjoy one NOW! Pacific Power 6 Light Co. Always at Your Service THIS ADVERTISEMENT IS SPONSORED BY THE PACIFIC POWER i, LIGHT COMPANY TO PROMOTE THE USE OP DEPENDABLE ELECTRICAL MERCHANDISE AND TO INFORM YOU WHERE IT CAN BE PURCHASED IN THIS COMMUNITY the crested wheat grass was merely eaten off close to the ground and the plants were neither pulled up nor tramped out Baker county stockmen are much interested in this additional demonstration that this new grass is capable of stand ing up under hard range conditions. Lost Food chopper, on Willow creek road. Mrs. Albert Rea, call 464, city. SI M NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE UNDEB EXECUTION. Notice is hereby given that by vir tue of an Execution issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Morrow County, to me directed and delivered upon a Judgment and Decree and Order of Sale rendered in said Court on the 12th day of July. 1932. in favor of William McCaleb, against D.. E. Gilman and Bertha D. Gilman. his wife, and Henry Heppner Estate In corporated, a Corporation, defendants, for the sum of $3650.110 with interest on said sum at ten per cent per annum from January 20, 1931. until paid; for the further sum of $309.37 with inter est on said sum at ten per cent per an num from November 19. 1931. until paid; for the further sum of $116.00 abstract charges; for the further sum of $400.00 as and for attorney's fees; and the fur ther sum of $12.00 costs and disburse ments, which said Decree and Judgment and Order of Sale has been duly dock eted and enrolled in the office of the County Clerk of Morrow County, Ore gon, THEBFmuK T will on the 26th day of November, 1932. at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day. at the front door of the County Court House of Morrow County, Oregon, in Heppner. Oregon, sell all the right, title and interest which the said defendants, D. E. Gilman and Bertha D. Gilman, his wife, or either of them, had on the 12th day of July, 1932, or since then have acquired or now have in and to the following described premises sltu- ate In Morrow County. Oregon, to-wit The East 72 feet of Lots 9 and 10 of Block 3 of the original Town of Hetwner. Morrow County. Oregon, together with the tenements, heredita ments and appurtenances thereunto be longing or in anywise appertaining, ana also all tne rigni. estate, tine ana in terest ot said deienaants, u. a. unman and Bertha D. Gilman, his wife, or either of them, in and to the same; said lands to be sold at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand, the proceeds of the sale to be applied in satisfaction of said execution and all costs. Dated this 25th day of October. 1932. 33-37 u. J.. L. Muun, Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon, NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE. Notice is hereby given, that the un dersigned, as administrator of the es tate of Joseph W. Rector, deceased, by virtue of an order of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, duly made and entered on the 28th day of September. 1932, authoriz ing and directing the sale of the prop erty herinafter described, 1 will, at th Court House door, in Morrow Coun ty, Oregon, from and after the 1st day of November, 1932, sell for cash at pri vate sale to the highest bidder the fol lowing real property belonging to said estate, to-wit: SWli, Sc. 12, Tp. 4 South, Range 2H E. W. M in Morrow County, State of Oregon, containing 160 acres. Dated this 29th day of September, 1932. 29-33 J. L. CARTER, Administrator of the estate of Jo seph W. Rector, deceased, City) of Heppner. Oregon, running thence South Thirty-three (33) feet thence West Ninety (90) feet thence North Thirty-three (33) feet thence East Ninety (90) feet to the place ot beginning. Also, an undivided one half In terest in and to the wall erected on the North line of the South half of Lot Five (6). Block Two (2) of the original town (now City) of Hepp ner. Oregon, together with an undi vided one half interest in and to the land on which said wall stands, said wall extending from the East end of said lot West Ninety (90) feet Also, an undivided one half In terest in and to the following: Be ginning at a point Thirty-two (32) feet South of the Northeast corner of Lot Four (4), Block Two (2) of the original town (now City) of Heppner. Oregon, running thence West parallel with the North line of said lot Ninety (90) feet thence South Twenty (20) Inches, thence East parallel with the North line of said lot Ninety (90) feet thence North Twenty (0) Inches to the place of beginning; all being In the City of Heppner, Morrow County. State of Oregon, subject to a certain mortgage In favor ?, oL Mo' Trustee, for the sum of $18,000.00; and declaring that you and - . .iv, micicBi in or claim to or lien upon any of said above de cribed real property, and for a further ucv, co luBiiumiiiK ana enjoining you and each of you from hereafter setting forth any claim of Interest in or lien upon any of said real property. This summons is published by order of Hon. We T. Campbell, Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, made and entered in the above entitled court and cause on the i 27th day of September, 1932 prescribing that this summons be serv ed by publication thereof and that the same be published once each week In the Heppner Gazette Times, a newspa per published in Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon, and that the first pub lication be made on the 6th day of Oc- tOD6It 1uq2. S. E. NOTSON, Attorney for Plaintiff. t . Address: Heppner, Oregon. 1932 publication, October . 1932atB ' IaSt pubIlcatlon' November 8, "trr-r-fl-q-(t-(r-r Professional Carols NOTICE FOB PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, Sept 26 1932 NOTICE is hereby given that Benton Short, of Albee. Oregon, who, on Feb. 28, 1928, made Homestead Entry under Act Dec. 29, 1916, No. 026375, for SVi NWH, NW4 SWA. Sec. 28, SVi Nfc. SVi. SW'4 SWVi, Sec 29. SE4 NE4, NE4 SE'4, Section 39, Township 4 South, Range 31 East Willamette Meridian, has tiled notice of Intention to make final three year Proof, to es tablish claim to the land above des cribed, before S. A. Newberry. United States Commissioner, at Pendleton, Or egon, on the 10th day of November, 1932. Claimant names as witnesss: Peter Smith, of Albee, Oregon. Walker Ellis, of Albee, Oregon. Claude Jarvis, of Uklah, Oregon. Prank Cable, of Pendleton, Oregon. R. J. CARSNER. Register. SUMMONS. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MORROW COUNTY. Willow Lodge No. 66 of the Indepen dent Order of Odd Fellows, a cor poration, Plaintiff, vs. George H. Stansbury and Elizabeth R. Stansbury, his wife, unknown heirs of George H. Stansbury and wife; Jane Doe Dickson, whose true chris tian name is to plaintiff unknown, wife of Stafford Dickson; Jane Doe Dixon, whose true christian name la to Dlaintiff unknown, wife of William Dixon; Eva Hampton and John Doe nampton, wnose true cnristian name is to plaintiff unknown, husband of Eva Hampton; Fred C. Hawker (also known as F. Hawker, Fred Hawker and F. C. Hawker) and M. E. Hawk er, his wife: unknown heirs of Fred C. Hawker and wife; William E. ineodore and nibble Theodore, his wife; Charles Stanley Waite and Jane Doe Waite, whose true christian name is to plaintiff unknown, his wife; Laura Waite, a widow of Edward B. Waite, deceased; Clarence L. Ebbels (also known as Clarence L. Ebbets); Mildred L. Ebbels (alfio known as Mildred Ebbets); Ernest Ebbels, and also all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right title, estate or Interest in or to the real property described in the com plaint herein, Defendants. To George H. Stansbury and Elizabeth R. Stansbury, his wife; unknown heirs of George H. Stansbury and wife; Jane Doe Dickson, whose true christian name is to plaintiff un known, wife of Stafford Dickson; Jane Doe Dixon, whose true chris tian name Is to plaintiff unknown, wife of William Dixon; Eva Hamp ton and John Doe Hampton, whose true christian name is to plaintiff un known, husband of Eva Hampton; Fred C. Hawker (also known as F. Hawker, Fred Hawker and F. C Hawker) and M. E. Hawker, his wife: unknown heirs of Fred C. Hawker and wife; William E Theodore and Llbbie Theodore, his wife; Charles Stanley Waite and Jane Doe Waite, whose true christian name is to plain tiff unknown, his wife; Laura Waite, widow of Edward B. Waite, deceas ed; Clarence L. Ebbels (also known as Clarence L. Ebbets); Mildred L. Ebbels (also known as Mildred Eb bets) ; Ernest Ebbels, and also all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate or in terest in or to the real property des cribed In the complaint herein, above named defendants: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You and each of you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 8rd (lay of November, 1932, being more than four weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons; and if you fall to so appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof, Bald plain tiff will apply to the court for the re lief prayed for in his complaint here in on file, to-wlt: That a decree be en tered herein that the plaintiff Is the owner in fee simple of the following described real property, to-wlt: The South half of Lot Four (4), Block Two (2) of the town (now City) of Heppner, Oregon, except a strip of land beginning at a point 32 foot 4 Inches North of the South east corner of said Lot Four (4), running thence West parallel with the South line of said lot Ninety (90) feet, thence North eight (8) Inches, thence East parallel with the South line of said lot Ninety (90) feet, thence South eight (8) Inches to the place of beginning. The South half of Lot Seven (7), Block Two (2) of the original town (now City) of Heppner, Oregon. Also, commencing at the North east corner of Lot Five (5), Block Two (2) of the original town (now J. 0. TURNER Attorney at Law Phons 178 Humphreys Building HEPPNER, ORB. A. B. GRAY, M. D. PHYSICIAN ft SUBOBON Phone 323 Heppner Hotel Building Byes Tested and QUiaes Fitted. WM. BROOKHOUSER PAINTraa PAPEKKANQINO interior dhcoratxho Leave orders at Peoples Hardware Company DR. C. W. BARR BEST 1ST Telephone 10M Office In Oilman Building 11 W. Willow Street DR. J. H. McCRADY DENTIST X-Ray Diagnosis L O. O. P. BUTLDUira Heppner, Oregon Frank A. McMenamin LA WYES 90S Guardian Building Residence. GArfleld 1949 Business Phone Atwater 1348 PORTLAND. OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SUBOEON Trained Nurse 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 la 1 O. O. P. Building Heppner, Oregon AUCTIONEER Farm and Personal Uroverty Bales A Specialty, 0. L. BNNWBTT "The Man Who Talks to Beat the Band" 6329 72nd Ave.. S. E Portland, Ore. Phone Sunset 84S1 J. 0. PETERSON Latest Jewelry and Olft Goods Watches - Clocks Diamonds Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon F. W. TURNER & CO. FIBB, AUTO AND LTPB INSUBANCB Old Line Cempanlu. Beal BiUU. Heppner, Oregon JOS. J. NYS ATTONEY-AT-LAW Roberta Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon