PAGE TWO HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY. NOV. 10, 1932. THE HEPPNER GAZETTE, Established March 30. 1883; THE HEPPNER TIMES. Established November 18. 1897; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15. 1911 Published every Thursday morning by V1WTE1 ul SPENCER CRAWFORD and entered at the Post Office at Hepp- ner. Oregon, aa aecond-ciaaa mailer. AOTEBTrsma sates gives on APPLICATION. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year . Six Months Official Paper for Morrow County. THE "XEW DEAL." THE air IE GAZETTE TIMES is not amone those who Deneve tne country has gone entirely to the bow wows because its candidate for the presidency was not elected. This newspaper supported Mr. Hoover because it conscientiously believed the reins of government would be better treated in his hands. That opinion has not been changed, but has been added to by the belief that Mr. Hoover's great fight for a principle, single-handed, has gained for him a deeper re spect in the hearts of the American people. That he has placed his undoubtedly great talents at the command of the new government since receiving the news of Mr. Roosevelt's election is an added tribute to the true patriotism of the president. The "new deal" is at hand. It has a great opportunity for success backed as it is by a great prepon derance of public sentiment In so far as it complies with those prin ciples of government compatible with the ideas held by this newspa per, it shall have its hearty support. If at any time we find it necessary to criticize, it shall be our aim to do it in a constructive manner. We bespeak for Mr. Roosevelt the cooperation of American country newspapers, whose first concern is the stability of the home life and happiness of its constituency. The men who take over the reins of the city government show cour age in facing the problems offered. They are entitled to the whole hearted support of our citizenry. We welcome Mr. Anderson as the city's new mayor and offer our co operation in all measures which may be undertaken for the public good. May we add a heartfelt adios to Mr. McCarty, whose conscien tious endeavors to serve have re sulted in harmony and progress within the city. A good man was defeated, while a good man was be ing elected, for the mayoralty. Both will continue to serve our city. Mr. Roosevelt has a great oppor tunity to impress into the service of the government many leaders in the various industries of the coun try. May we place in nomination as head of the farm board the edi tor of our esteemed contemporary, the Pendleton East Oregonian, whose exhaustive study of the wheat situation makes him an apt candidate. BOARDMAN RACHEL JOHNSON Census figures just taken for this school district show that there are 174 children over the age of four and under the age of 20 in the dis trict. Of these 87 were boys and 87 were girls. The census was tak en by Mrs. M. L. Morgan, clerk. Rev. Wible, Sunday school mis sionary of the Pendleton Presby tery, was visiting people on the project last week, and on Sunday he delivered an address at the com munity church. Next Sunday Rev. J. J. Carnick of Clarkston, Wash., will have charge of the church ser vices. He is conducting revival meetings in Umatilla. Pendleton visitors the first of the week were Mrs. L. C. Cooney and family, M. Cassidy, Mr. and Mrs. I. Skoubo, Dorothy Cramer and a chel Johnson. The Grange meeting held Satur day evening was devoted to the dis cussion of the proposed bills and amendments of the election. George Wicklander and George Mitchell were the main speakers. There was no business meeting held and after the speaking the remainder of the evening was Bpent playing cards. A number of the farmers are getting their turkeys ready for the Thanksgiving market this week. W. O. King and Charles Dillon have the largest flocks. Mr. King has about 500 this year. L. C. Cooney was taken to the Pendleton hospital Saturday where he is ill with infection on his hands. He hopes to be able to be home the last of the week. They think that the infection was caused from husking corn. Armistice Day will be celebrated in Hermiston Friday, with a foot ball game in the afternoon, follow ed by a free barbecue. A dance will be given in the Hermiston gym in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. John Nearness of Pendleton were guests Saturday at the Ves Atteberry home. Mr. Near ness conducted the Seventh Day Ad ventist services Saturday after noon and evening at the A. Agee home. Boardman folks visiting in The Dalles Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Barlow, Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Warner, Mr. and Mrs. I E. Mar schat and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Brown and Mabel and Katherine. Wm. Strobel and son Donald of Toppenlsh were business visitors in Boardman this week. Mr. and Mrs. M. Cassidy are the proud parents of a son, Michael 1200 s 1.00 Three Months .76 Single Copies .06 Joseph, born Monday In Pendleton. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Spagle and family of Mollala are guests this week at the Leslie Packard home. Dorothy Cramer and Deibert Johnson of Wasco came Wednes day for a visit at the J. R. Johnson home. Deibert plans to spend the winter at home here. The Ladies Ail silver tea met Wednesday at the Macomber home and hostesses were Mrs. Nate Ma comber, Mrs. George Blayden, Mrs. Charles Goodwin, Mrs. Howard Channing and Mrs. Paul Smith. Lunch of salad, warm rolls and coffee was served. The next mis sionary meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Claud Coats. Mr. and Mrs. J. Hoover and fam ily of Walla Walla have moved to Boardman where they will make their home on the Ben Atteberry ranch. Mr. and Mrs. Gregg and family have lived there during the past year. Mrs. Gregg and sons have been in Seattle since the open ing of school. Mr. Gregg plans to join them soon. The members of the relief com mittees met Monday evening at the W. A. Baker home. The drive for the relief supplies will start No vember 14. Those on the relief com. mittees are Mrs. T. E. Hendricks, chairman, Mrs. Graves, Mrs. Ves Atteberry, Mrs. E. Kunze, Mrs, Bryce Dillabough, Mrs. Earl Cra mer, Mrs. W. A. Baker, Mrs. Guy Barlow and Ray Brown. HARDMAN MRS. ELLA FARRENS. Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Johnson were attending to matters of business in Heppner one day last week. Mrs. ay Wright was a visitor of Mrs. Frank McDaniel last Friday. Muriel Farrens spent the week end at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Farrens. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Leathers are having some carpentry work done on their house this week. Emu Johnson has charge of the work. Billy Leathers was attending to business in Heppner Wednesday af ternoon. The dance given by Roy and Clair Ashbaugh was well attended and a general good time is reported. Miss Catherine Peterson, social service worker for the Episcopal church, has resumed her weekly visits out here again,. having been called to the southern part of the state where she has been for the last month. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Johnson were visiting here Sunday from their home in Heppner. Blaine Chapel and Lorena Isom were business visitors here Friday. Mrs. Ray Robison of Lone Rock was visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Mac Donald for a few days last week. Mrs. Harlan Jones is making an indefinite visit with friends and rel atives here from her home at La Grande. Mrs. Ethel McDaniel and children have moved into their home here from their Burton valley ranch where the children have been at tending summer school. Mr. and Mrs. John Byland have moved into their residence property here. They have also spent the summer months at their mountain ranch. Bylands report the weath er to be getting cold out that way, there having already been several frosts and some snow. Mr. and Mrs. Lotus Robison, Blaine Chapel and Mrs. Bob All stott were looking after business interests in Heppner Monday. PINE CITY ALMA NEILL. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Foley, Murray Potts and Mrs. Mary Hodgens were business visitors in Hermiston Sat urday. Church was held in the Pine City auditorium Sunday evening. Rev. Sias of Lexington preached the sermon. There were about thirty six present. Church will be held again next Sunday at the auditor ium at 7:30 o'clock. Mrs. Ollie Neill and daughter Lenna were business visitors in Echo and Hermiston Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bartholomew visited Mr. Bartholomew's mother, Mrs. Mary Bartholomew, in Hepp ner Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Mary Hodgens of Walla Walla is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joe Foley. She returned home with Mrs. Foley and will return to her home in Walla Walla some time the latter part of the week. Mrs. Omohundro and sons Edwin and Lewis were business visitors in Hermiston Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. D. Neill and daugh ter Bernice attended church in Her miston Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Helms and daughters visited at the home of Frank Correa in Echo Sunday. Earl and Burl Wattenburger found and killed four rattlesnakes in the cliffs near the Pine City school house while trapping for skunks Sunday. Mrs. Moore and son John were in lone on business Saturday. A number of Pine City people attended the Farm Bureau meeting at Alpine Saturday evening. Ralph Neill sang a song, being the only one from fine City to furnish a part of the program. Pine City intends, however, to furnish more of the program for the next Farm Bureau meeting December 3. At this meeting there will be a basket social to raise money for candy for the Christmas tree. Mava Applegate who has been ill for several days with flu return er to school Friday. Charlie Bartholomew and daugh ter, Mrs. Marion Finch, were in Pendleton on business Friday. Roy Neill and daughter Alma were in Echo and Hermiston on business Monday. Charlie Bartholomew and Marlon Finch went to the Arbuckle moun tains Monday after a load of wood but due to tire trouble returned home with only a small load. Mar ion Finch went to the mountains Thursday after a load of wood which was already cut, but some one else had been there ahead of him. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Helms and daughter Henrietta were in Echo and Hermiston on business Friday. J. S. Moore, Mrs. Ollie Neill and C. H. Ayers dressed turkeys Mon day. They took them to lone Tues day to sell them. More Grain Being Used To Feed Western Cattle Use of grain along with hay in fattening beef cattle is now becom ing a much more general practice in the west than ever before, says E. L. Potter, head of the animal husbandry department at Oregon State college. Grain has never been fed in the west in any such liberal amounts as is customary in the cornbelt, but where a few years back it was unusual for a feeder to use grain at all, now the practice is becoming quite general, he says. "Where the cornbelt feeder would feed from 15 to 18 pounds of grain and seven and eight pounds of hay a day, the western feeder will give only a third to a half as much grain and three times the quantity of hay," Potter explains. "The bulk of our steers on hay and grain will get from five to eights pounds of grain a day. "Experimental results at the Livestock Branch Experiment sta tion at Union indicate that five pounds of grain is about the small est amount that can be fed satis factorily, while eight pounds has produced in most cases reasonably satisfactory results at lower cost than if larger amounts are used. "This experimental work has shown that one pound of barley, for example, is equivalent in feeding value to three pounds of good al falfa hay. Ordinarily the barley will sell for more than three times the price of hay, but last winter was a marked exception to this rule. "Even with the cheap hay of this coming winter, it is likely that the grain will be less than three times the price of hay, and under such conditions there is likely to be more liberal feeding of grain," Professor Potter added. Ground or steam rolled barley is an excellent feed, little less valuable than corn, except that a straight combination of barley and alfalfa has a tendency to cause cattle to bloat Any other mixture of grain with the barley seems to reduce if not actually eliminate this danger, according to Professor Potter. Under present low hay and beef prices, feeders need to figure on a margin of about one dollar per hun dred between feeder and beef prices in order to carry a four to five months feeding period, experi ments show. Much data on this and other phases of feeding of beef cat tie have been collected at the Union branch station which may be had by any stockman for the asking. ON OREGON FARMS Money Saved on Sulfur. Lakeview Farmers of Lake county recently pooled orders for a carload of soil sulfur which was obtained through the county agent's omce. Total cost delivered here was $38.70 a ton, which on the car load amounted to a net saving of $150 to the seven farmers who or dered. Amounts obtained ranged from 1000 pounds to five tons. The sulfur is used mostly as a fertiliz er for alfalfa. Small Clover Patch Pays Well Grande Ronde How even a small patch of irrigated Ladino clover can make a great difference on the ordinary farm was demonstrated this summer by Eben ay of Valley Junction near here. A patch of clover not quite two acres In extent pastured eight cows from .April 1 to October 1 except for periods ev ery 10 days when they would be taken off while water was applied and the clover allowed to grow. Ray has 2 more small clover fields coming on which he irrigated by a gravity system laid out with the aid of the Polk county agent. Testing Costs Cut Down Ontario The spray residue test ing service carried on here in the chemistry laboratory of the high school had made 76 arsenical tests by the first of the month, affecting a saving of $74 over the price paid by fruitgrowers last year when samples had to be sent into Idaho for testing. The equipment set up for the purpose by the county agent was inspected recently by a federal representative and pronounced en tirely accurate and satisfactory. Tile Drainage Being Installed Albany Two farm drainage sys tems are being installed this winter on the farms of L, Cade and John Buckner in this county. State col lege representatives made the sur veys and the ditches are being dug by a mechanical trencher engaged at Monmouth. Drainage can be in stalled cheaper now than any time In many years, according to these farmers. IN OREGON HOMES Gresham Using odds and ends of wool, cotton and silk pieces, wo men in two communities of Mult nomah county made 106.7 square feet of hooked rugs and cleared $195.58 on them, according to Fran cis Clinton, county home demon stration agent. Miss Clinton su pervised this project, giving in structions on good design, color and construction. Lena A woodbox on the back porch with a slide door opening from it into the kitchen is a time and energy saver reported by a homemaker of Lena, Morrow coun ty, who enrolled last year for the series of letters on "Short cuts In kitchen work" sent out from the home economics extension service of Oregon State college, '"The door of the woodbox Is In the wall near the kitchen stove," says this house wife. "Now the men don't track In the kitchen while filling the woodbox." Eugene A spirit of cooperation and a philosophy of self-help char acterizes Lane county citizens, ac cording to Gertrude Skow, home demonstration agent. She reports that on one day's notice, the master of 4-Oaks grange and the chairman of the home economics committee, assembled a group of workers and sufficient surplus pears to keep the "portable cannery" busy all day. Approximately 650 cans of fruit was preserved and the entire amount turned over the county court for distribution to the needy this winter. In another instance Ray Bower, a prune grower of Lane county, offered the fruit of his orchard for drying. A group of eight men picked and delivered it to the Eugene Fruit Growers plant where 18,000 pounds of prunes from Bower's and other orchards were dried free of charge. Mrs. Alfred Wedlock was in the city the first of the week, having just returned from a visit to Mr. Medlock at the veterans hospital in Walla Walla. She 'ound Mr. Med lock to be getting i ong fine. NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that there will be a meeting of the Levying Board oi Morrow uounty, Oregon, at the Court House in Heooner. Oreeon. on the 7th day of December, 1932, when and where the estimates arrived at by tne uuagei uommmee oi Morrow coun ty, Oregon, nereinarter set forth, may be discussed with the Levying Board. and when and where any person who shall be subject to such tax levy, shall oe neara in xavor oi or against said tax levy or any part tnereof. Dated at Heppner. Oregon, this 3rd day of November. 1932. WM. T. CAMFBKCL, Judge. G. A. BLEAKMAN, Commissioner. GEORGE N. PECK, Commissioner. ESTIMATE This estimate sheet is made in com pliance with Chapter 118. General Laws of Oregon for 1921, and amendments thereto, and shows the several services. materials and supplies for the budget estimates ior me year liwa. Department or Estimatetd 1933 Officer Expendtiures COUNTY JUDGE Salary $ 1,600.00 COUNTY SHEKlr IV Salary 2.000.00 Deputies 2,280.00 Hooks. Blanks, incidentals, and Travel Expense 850.00 Tax Collection 400.00 COUNTY (JLEKK. Salary 2,000.00 Deputies 1.380.00 Books, Blanks, Incidentals 300.00 COUNTY TREASURER Salary , 1,000.00 Books. Blanks, Incidentals 200.00 COUNTY ASSESSOR Salary 1.600.00 Deputies, field work . 1,950.00 Books. Blanks, Incidentals 400.00 Extension 150.00 SCHOOL SUPERINTENDENT Salary ...4. 1,600.00 Travel Expense 400.00 Books. Blanks, Incidentals 200.00 Club Work 125.00 COUNTY CORONER Mileage. Fees COUNTY COURT 150.00 Expense. Mileage 1,000.00 ACCOUNTANTS Book Audits , CURRENT EXPENSE Postage, Telegrams, Tele phone, Stationery, etc. .... JAIL Prisoners' Board .. ELECTION Expense INDIGENT SOLDIERS Appropriation COURT HOUSE Janitor Fuel Light. Water Incidentals Rentals 300.00 900.00 300.00 750.00 100.00 960.00 400.00 600.00 250.00 228.00 POOR Care of Poor 3 500 00 WIDOWS' PENSIONS Expense 2,000.00 PHYSICIAN Salary 300.00 INSANE Expense 3,000.00 CIRCUIT COURT Jurors. Witnesses, Bailiffs, Incidentals, Special Coun sel 1,800.00 JUSTICE COURT Expense 200.00 NOTICE OF MEETING OF TAX LEVYING BOARD OF THE CITY OF HEPPNER NOTICE TS HEREBY GIVEN tbnt 1932, at 7:30 o'clock in the evening of said day, at the Council Chambers In the City Of Hennner. Oregon, the tax levvlne hoard of said C.itv of Hennner mill meet for the purpose of discussing and considering the tax budget hereinafter set forth of said City of Heppner for the fiscal year beginning January 1, 1933, and any tax payer of said City of Heppner may at that time appear and be neaiu eiuier in opposition to or in iavor "CHI LllCinOl. BUDGET ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES PERSONAL SERVICE Chief of Police : City Recorder City Treasurer City Attorney Night Marshall Insurance (State) MATERIAL AND SUPPLIES Lights Printing MAINTENANCE AND BRIDGES Streets and Bridges FIRE DEPARTMENT. Hose, Fire Chief, Extras, Truck, Incidentals - BOND REDEMPTION Redemption of Water Bonds BOND INTEREST Interest on Water Bonds LIBRARY Donation MISCELLANEOUS Rent Incidentals .... WATER DEPARTMENT Salary Superintendent Bookkeeper Labor, repairs, Incidentals TOTAL ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES ESTIMATED Water Collections Pastime Licenses , Theater License Fines ... County (Road Tax) Balance In General Fund - TOTAL ESTIMATED RECEIPTS RECAPITULATION Total estimated expenditures for the Total estimated receipts for the year TOTAL AMOUNT TO BE RAISED BY Dated at Heppner, Oregon, this 7th AttOHt: E. R, HUSTON, City Recorder. DISTRICT ATTORNEY expense 200.00 2.200.00 COUNTY AGENT Appropriation TAX KKBATE Rebate . 100.00 120.00 SEALER Appropriation WATERM ASTER Appropriation . 500.00 200.00 100.00 1,080.00 440.00 470.00 LIBRARY Appropriation INSTITUTE Appropriation MISCELLANEOUS Overseer (Machinery) Insurance Bonds EMERGENCY Appropriation . 6.000.00 14,230.00 COUNTY SCHOOL Per Capita TUITION High School 15.432.00 13.000.00 MARKET ROAD Appropriation ROAD BONDS Sinking Fund , Interest Fund ... 6.000.00 25,720.00 ROADM ASTER-ENGINEER Salary 2,000.00 ROADS-BRIDGES Repairs, Labor, Materials, Equipment. Roads, Bridges, and Incidentals.. 25.000.00 TOTAL $146,965.00 The following amounts are not in cluded within the 6 per cent limitation and are authorized by law: Bond Sinking Fund , ? 6.000.00 Bond Interest Fund 25,720.00 High School Tuition 15,432.00 TOTAL $47,152.00 Estimated receipts other than taxa tion, for the year 1933: Interest on bank deposits ....$ 500.00 Sheriff's fees 350.00 Clerk's fees 2.300.00 25 per cent Forest Rentals .... 375.00 Motor License from State .... 5.000.00 Miscellaneous 200.00 TOTAL $8,725.00 Recapitulation Total estimated expenditures for 1933 subject to 6 per cent limitation $99,813.00 Total estimated receipts not Including proposed tax 8,725.00 Balance, amount to be raised by taxation subject to 6 per cent limitation ,...$91,088.00 Dated at Heppner. Oregon, this 4th day of November, 1932. MORROW COUNTY BUDGET COMMITTEE, By WM. T. CAMPBELL, Chairman. Attest: GEO. N. PECK, Secretary. I hereby certify that the amount of outstanding indebtedness of Morrow County, Oregon, is the sum of $524. 000.00 represented by road bonds. GAY M. ANDERSON, Clerk. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF BEAIi PROPERTY ON EXECUTION. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of an attachment execu tion duly issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Mult nomah county on tne 2nd day or. No vember, 1932, by the Clerk of said Court pursuant to a judgment duly rendered and entered In said court on the 7th day of April, 1932, in an action in said court wherein The Farmers and Stockgrowers National Bank, a corpor ation, was plaintiff, and Henrietta Conn, was defendant, and in which ac tion said plaintiff had and recovered judgment against said defendant for the sum of $5000.00, with interest there on from the 17th day of Ocotber, 1930, at the rate of eight per cent per an num. the further sum of $470.00. at torney's fee, with interest thereon from the 6th day of April, 1932, at the rate ot six per cent per annum, and tne rur ther Bum of $21.00, the cost and dis bursements of said action, and com manding me to sell in the manner pro vided by law, the following described real property of said defendant, sit uated in Morrow County, Oregon, to wit: The SW& and Tract, in Section 8, the WM. of tiVVt, NW4 of SW,4 of Section 16. the EVfe of EV4. NW(4 of NE. NE'4 of NWV4, W of NWS of Section 17, all in Town ship 2 South, Range 27 East of Wil lamette Meridian: also, Lot 3 in Block 2 and lot 8 in Block 2 in the ' town of Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon. NOW. THEREFORE, in obedience to said execution I will on Saturday, the 10th day of December, 1932, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon of said day at the front door of the Court House at Heppner, Oregon, sell at pub lie auction to the highest bidder for on Mnnrtnv tho nth Aav nf ncl, oi tne tax levy set forth herein, or any i.. ...$ 1,320.00 270.00 270.00 ... 270.00 ... 900.00 70.00 $3 100.00 .$ 1,600.00 130.00 $ 1,730.00 .$ 750.00 $ 750.00 1 .$ 550.00 550.00 .$ 6.000.00 $ 6,000.00 .$ 4,310.00 $ 4,310.00 .$ 160.00 $ 160.00 .$ 144.00 . 1.000.00 $ 1,144.00 .$ 1.440.00 360.00 . 1,500.00 Storage, Fuel, Gas and $ 8,300.00 $21,044.00 RECEIPTS $12,000.00 120-00 60.00 100.00 .00 1,600.00 $14,520.00 year 1933 . 1933 ,..$21,044.00 ... 14.B20.O0 TAXATION $ 6.524.00 day of November, 1932. LEVYING BOARD, W. E. MOORE, CHAS. W.. SMITH, EARL W. GORDON. cash said real property and apply the proceeds thereof on the payment of said judgment and accruing coat of sale. Dated this 10th day of November. 1932. C. J. D. BAUMAN. Sheriff of Morrow County. Oregon. NOTICE OP DISTRICT BOAS MEETING. NOTICE is hereby given, pursuant to a petition of the requisite number of legal voters of Road District Number One (1) of Morrow County. State of Oregon, and an order of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Mor row County, made ana enierea on me 5th day of November, 1932, a meeting of the legal voters oi saiu nuau uia trirt No. One (1) of Morrow County. State of Oregon, will be held at the School House in irrigon, morrow County. Oregon, in said Road District Number One (1). on Saturday, Novem ber 26. 1932, at the hour of 2:00 o'clock in the afternoon of said day, for the purpose of voting an additional lax ior Road Purposes upon all the Taxable Prnnortv in aniri Road District to the amount of Fifty-live hundred dollars, said tax to be expenaea as iouowh; For road purposes in said district, and to designate the road or roads to re ceive such expenditure and the propor tion of said money to De expenaeu on such road or roads. WM. T. CAMr Brjljlj, County Judge. Attest: GAY M. ANDERSON, County Clerk. (SEAL) Dated this 5th day of November, 1932. 35-6. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THa DIS TRICT OF OREGON. In the matter of Thomas C. Clark, Bankrupt. IN BANKRUPTCY, No, B-17704. To the creditors of Thomas C. Clark, of Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon. bankruDt: Notice is hereby given that on the 4th day of November. 1932, the said Thomas C. Clark was duly adjudged a bankrupt and that the first meeting oi his creditors will be held in the office of the referee in bankruptcy of this court in Pendleton. Oregon, at 6 clock in the afternoon of the 21st day of November, 1932: at which time and place the said creditors may (and the said bankrupt MUST) attend, prove their claims, appoint a trustee, examine the bankrupt and transact such other business as may properly De prougnt before said meeting. Done and dated at Pendleton, this 5th day of November, 1932. C. K. CRANSTON. Referee In Bankmptcy. NOW IN SEASON Oysters SHELL FISH Served Here Fresh Daily. If your appetite de mands something different some thing tasty some thing healthful EAT SHELL FISH For a good meal any time go to ELKHORN RESTAURANT ED CHINN, Prop. For Women Traveling Alone THIS BANK ADVISES: American Express Travelers Cheques To 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 banh before starting on a trip. They are issued in convenient denomin ations, and cost only 75c for each $100. Farmers and Stockgrowers National Bank NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE UNDER EXECUTION. Notice Is hereby elven that hv 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 12tli day of July, 1932 in iuvur ui wiiiiHiu jMccaieD, against D E. Gllman and Bertha D. Gilman. his wife, and Henry Heppner Estate In corporated, a Corporation, defendants for the sum of $3650.00 with interest said sum at ten per cent per annum iioin January v. isdi, until laid; for the further sum of $309.37 with Inter est on said sum at ten per cent ner n. num from November 19. 1931. until paid; "ci uiu ui fiiD.ou aDatract charges; for the further sum of $400 00 as and for attorney's fees; and the fur ther sum of $12.00 costs and rfihnr ments. which said Decree and Judgment aim uruer oi &aie nas Deen duly dock eted and enrolled in the office of the County Clerk of Morrow County, Ore gon. THEREFORE, I 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 situ ate in Morrow County, Oregon, to-wit-The East 72 feet of Lots 9 and 10 of Block 3 of the original Town of Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon together with the tenements, heredita ments and appurtenances thereunto be longing or in anywise appertaining, and also all the right, estate, title and in terest of said defendants, D. E. Gilman 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 C. J D. BAUMAN, Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon, Professional Cards J. 0. TURNER Attorney at Law Phone 173 Humphreys Building HEPPNER, ORE. A. B. GRAY, M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Phone 323 Heppner Hotel Building Eyes Tested aud Glasses Fitted. WM. BROOKIIOUSER PAINTING PAPERHANQINQ INTERIOR DECORATING Leave orders at Peoples Hardware Company DR. C. W. BARR DENTIST Telephone 1012 Olllce In Gilman Building 11 W. Willow Street DR. J. II. McCRADY DENTIST X-Rar Diagnosis L 0. 0. P. BUrLDINQ Heppner, Oregon Frank A. McMenamin LAWYER 906 Guardian Building Residence, GArneld 1949 Business Phone Atwater 1348 PORTLAND, OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SUBOEON Trained Nnrss Assistant Omce in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon " P. W. MAHONEY ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building Heppner, Oregon S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Offlos in L O. O. P. Building Heppner, Oregon AUCTIONEER Farm and Personal Uroperty Sales A Specialty. 0. L. BENNETT "The Man Who Talks to Beat the Band" 6229 72nd Ave., 8. E., Portland, Ore. Phone Sunset 8461 J. 0. PETERSON Latest Jewelry and Gift Good Watches - Clucks - Diamonds Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon F. W. TURNER & CO. FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE INSURANCE Old Line Companies. . Real Estate. Heppner, Oregon JOS. J. NYS ATTONEY-AT-LAW Roberts Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon