PAGE two HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAN. Ifll933. THE HEPPNER GAZETTE. Established March SO. 1S83; THE HEPPNER TIMES. Established November 18, 1897; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 16. 1912. Published every Thursday morning by UWTEB and SPENCER CEAWTOED and entered at the Post Office at Hepp ner, Oregon, as second-class matter. ADVKBTISINO SATES GIVEN ON APPLICATION. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Tear Six Months Three Months Single Copies 2.00 1.00 .76 .06 Official Paper for Morrow County. SHUTDOWN COSTLY TO MO ROW COUNTY. TO CARE for much of the emer gency work during the winter months, there was put into the contract allotted to Mr. Nyberg for completing the mountain gap on Heppner-Spray road, provisions re quiring that certain portions of the labor be given to Morrow and Wheeer county men; those who had registered with the relief com mittees as available for such labor to be given preference. However, there was delay by the contractor in getting his setup going, and the December cold spell put a quietus on the work and it was tied up. Up to that time there had been very few emergency men on the job, and it was apparent to those most interested that few were to get work, though plans had been made to use dump wagons and teams in stead of trucks in spreading the surfacing, and there was to be a lot of hand labor, also. All of this was contemplated in the contract, and the bids were raised to figures high enough to care for the additional costs of this class of labor, and let with that understanding between the contractor and the Bureau of Public Roads. Then came the shut down of the work, and there is ap parently no prospect that a wheel will be turned before the middle of March or the first of April, if we have been given the low-down on the situation. A protest from Wheeler and Mor row county courts and emergency relief committees to Senator Stei wer brought quick action on his part with the head officials of the bureau at Washington, resulting in their taking up the matter with the Portland office and getting their re port, which supports the action tak en in shutting down the work and the reasons therefor, and the head office is inclined to stand pat and not override the local officials. We understand that the Wheeler county people are not inclined to lay down, and they are contemplat- ing further protests and presenta tion of facts that they hope will change the attitude of the officials of the Bureau. However, time is slipping by, and we doubt not that many who might have been aided by the emergency work on this road will be otherwise engaged, and the contractor will then proceed with his own crew and machinery. Just how many might have been put to work on this road had the contractor remained on the job to take advantage of the good open weather of the past three weeks, and what promises to be good weather from now on, is a prob lem. The closing down of the camps has forced our county court to pro vide other work for the unemployed and put the court up against an outlay of some $2500 that would In all probability have been unneces sary. Emergency work is now proceeding on a number of market roads for which appropriations were made at the recent term of court. Fuller canyon road received $1000 and this is providing work for the unemployed in the Heppner area; $500 goes to Blackhorse, this to be divided on work east of Lexington and on the road leading to Rhea creek west of Social Ridge, and will be cared for by labor from these two sections; the money is being spent on the basis of $500 for Blackhorse and $250 for the grade leading to Rhea creek. Labor is provided in the lone area by an ap propriation of $500 on Jordan east road and a like sum on the McMur ray canyon road, should that sum be required to finish the necessary work. Heppner-Hardman market road is to receive some attention, but no money has been set aside for the purpose yet. The expenditure of the most of this money would have been avoid ed, no doubt, by pushing the work on Heppner-Spray road and giving the unemployed of the county an opportunity to earn even the small portion they could under the con ditions of the contract Bruce Barton writes of "The Master Executive" Supplying a week-to-week inspiration for tha hoaTy-bn.rdt.ned who will find very hitman trial paralleled in tha ex perience! of "The Man Nobody Knows" A NEW DEAL. CARING for the indigent of Mor row county when in need of med ical and hospitalization services, has heretofore been the source of a lot of worry to the county court, and in spite of their efforts to keep the costs of such services within reasonable bounds, they were not able to do so. Patients of this na ture were taken to first one hos pital and doctor, jthen to another, many were cared for in outside in stitutions and by physicians who have at times been just little short of exhorbitant in their charges, and it took the time and labor of inves tigation of the members of the court to get these charges adjusted and brought down to a reasonable basis. The court was always facing an outlay of many hundreds of dol lars a jfear because of the lack of a proper system of handling these cases. At the November term of the county court, following the meeting of the county budget committee, and the presentation to that body of a new proposition of handling such cases, a contract was entered into with Heppner hospital of this city, ths institution agreeing to give hospitalization servces for care of county poor at $50.00 per month. The requirements hereafter will be that all patients of this nature will be brought to this hospital, and the court will not authorize the taking of any to other points, or allow any claims for such services rendered elsewhere. Under this arrange ment a large item of expense here tofore borne by the county i3 ex pected to be eliminated. Sunday School n u Lesson By Bev. Charles E. Bonn, D. D. YOU JUST CAN'T WHIP THIS KIND. Oregon Farmer. NE of our readers, in a recent Jesus Forgiving Sin Lesson for January 22. Mark 2; 1-12. Golden Te:;t: Mark 2:10. Jesus is in Capernaum, His head quarters during His ministry in Galilee. Such a crowd comes to hear Him that the door of His abode Is completely blocked. Now there is something fundamental in this magnificent response to a living Message proceeding from the heart of a great soul. Some there are who disparage what is spoken. "Deeds not words" is their motto. But they forgat that words ARE deeds. "By words alone," said the Greeks, "are lives of mortals swayed." And it was Jesus who declared that each of us is justified or condemned by his words. In the case of Jesus their influ ence was wholly good. His sen tences were laden with pure and quickening impulses. "The words I have spoken to you," he once said, "are spirit and are Life." We detect the eager glow in the faces of that Capernaum throng as they listen. But our attention is diverted by a paralyzed man carried by friends. Unable to push him through the mob, they break open the roof, low ering him before Jestis, who does not, at first, attend to his physical disabilities. He sees a deeper need. "iS!y son," re quietly announces, "your sins are pardoned." The suf ferer's real trouble is inner, not out er. It Is his soul, more than his body, that needs first aid treatment Look now" at the stern faces of the Scribes. Jesus' declaration puz zles them. In their eyes sin can only be forgiven by the offering of a sacrifice of the formal statement of a priest. In answer to their hos tility, the Master at once restores the invalid to sound health. Ey this physical test Jesus silences criticism. The astonished Scribes cannot Ignore this proof of divinity. As the restored paralytic walks out, ail, with hearts thankful to God, cry, "We never saw anything like this." What an appealing picture! Our Master can heal the body. Better still, He brings comfort and peace. letter, hit the nail right on the head when she said she and her family were solving the depression problem by taking the "de" and the "i" out of the word. This reader is no quitter. The more difficult the problem the hard er she tries to solve it, judging from her letter. The farmers of this country are not quitters. If they were this old land of ours would have slipped In to oblivion long ago. The American people cities and towns and rural communities are not quitters. Though they may not know that they have taken the su perfluous letters out of "depression" that is exactly what they have done. Depression! Without those three letters what have we? Just a mighty sentence of determination, Press on!' Whipped? Say, people with that point of view can't be whipped! A TEST OF GENIUS The shortest verse in the New Testament is "Jesus wept" That tragic note in his story the Gospel record has carefully preserved. How we wish it might also have told us what occurred on the night after the chronic old grumbler was healed at the river. Did Jesus stop suddenly in the middle of the sup per, and set down his cup, while a broad smile spread across his won derful face? If he did the disciples were probably puzzled they were so often puzzled but surely we have the reverent right to guess what was in his mind, as he pic tured the home-coming of that cured old man. On that evening surely Jesus must have laughed Some one has said that genius is the ability to become a boy again at will. Lincoln had that type of genius. Around his table in Wash ington sat the members of his Cab inet silenced by their overwhelming sense of responsibility. It was one of the most momentous meetings in our history. To their amaze ment instead of addressing himself directly to the business in hand, Lincoln picked up a volume and be gan to read aloud a delightful chap ter of nonsense from Artemus Ward. Frequent chuckles interrupted the reading, but they came only from the President. The Secretar ies were too shocked for expression. Humor at such an hour it was well nigh sacrilegious! Heedless of their protesting looks, Lincoln fin ished the chapter, closed the book and scanned their gloomy faces with a sigh. Gentlemen, why don t you laugh?" he exclaimed. "With the fearful strain that is upon me day and night, if I did not laugh should die; and you need this medi cine as much as I." With that remark he turned to his tall hat which was on the table and drew forth what Secretary Stanton described as a "little white paper." The "little white paper" was the Emancipation Proclamation. Stanton could hardly restrain his impulse to walk out of the room. No one of his Cabinet really un derstood Lincoln. He was constant ly scandalizing them by his calm disregard of convention, and his seemingly prodigal waste of time, The friends and advisers of Jesus were similarly shocked. How could any one with such important busi ness allow himself to be so casually interrupted to heal a self-pitying old man at the river! One of the surest marks of greatness, of course, is accessibility and the ap pearance of having an unstinted al lowance of time. "Extreme busyness is a sympton of deficient vitality," says Steven son. The disciples were extreme ly busy, Judas most of all. He was the treasurer of the group, har assed because expenses ran high and there was no certainty of to morrow's income. Jesus brushed away such petty worries with smile. "Consider the lilies of the field, he exclaimed, "they toil not neither do they spin, yet Solomon In all his glory was not arrayed like one of these." out for the big mirror and the brass rail wherever the state laws do not forbid. Dr. Irving Fisher, noted econo mist of Yale university, says: "The idea that the liquor b.i eie ates something economically is on par with the idea of the under taker who complained that the pure milk committee in his town had ruined his trade In babies' funer als." Alcohol is a habit forming drug, and the alcohol in beer will establish the habit It will tend to destroy efficiency in work, which means economic loss. After visit ing this country after the war, Lloyd George said that England with its drinking workmen could not compete with America with its workmen sober. IN OREGON HOMES Durkee Time and labor savers for the kithcen are suggested by a Durkee homemaker who says: "I find a rubber plate scraper very useful for removing all batter from mixing pans, cream from contain ers, and hot fat from frying pans. I keep a knife sharpener fastened in place with screws on the end of my work table. Also I have ham mered Into shape over the end of my table a small metal plate about five inches long and three inches wide. It is fastened with screws and makes a good firm place on which to clamp the food chopper." Medford Ten Jackson county communities have enrolled in a one- act play contest sponsored by the recreation leaders of the home ec onomics extension service. More than 100 plays have been obtained from the state college and distrib uted to the various communities Oregon City various short steps in doing housework were exchanged by- members of the Echo Dell P. T. A. Radio club at its meeting recent ly. One member suggested that if all garments to be mended are as- sem bleed and sorted so that those requiring the same kind of patches and thread are mended at one time much effort and many minutes will be saved for more enjoyable activ ities in the home. Elsie At a cost of $2.00 a Clat sop county homemaker has built an extra cupboard and so Increased her work space 20 x 40 inches. The top of the new cupboard, which is even with other surfaces, is covered with linoleum. Another expenditure of 75c put a fresh coat of paint on the pantry. Local ads lp the Gazette Timet bring results. iX5Kf,"js?'r I 7 FAMILY JOHN JOSEPH GAINS,M.D AS GOVERNORS EAT The election year, 1332, brought me some interesting news items. Our state changed governors this year, as did many others. But it is not the political, but the dietary habits that attracted my attention picked up by the "nosey" report er for the daily Press. Both incoming and outgoing gov ernors are lawyers; the outgoer is a large-city resident the incomer is from a small county-seat town a life resident The city man has city habits the small-town man has habits peculiar to the country. Both men are said to be very healthy. The country jurist is strikingly robust; he rises at day break "goes to bed with the chick ens." We know the city man does just the opposite of that. The re porter gives us a glimpse at the breakfasts of the two men in striking contrast: The present chief executive takes a breakfast which consists only of orange juice and black cof fee." 'The newly-elected executive ac tually wants fried chicken for breakfast according to his wife, who does his meals; if he cannot have the fried chicken, he wants a breakfast steak, or country ham, or sausage." Readers of my letters will recall my insistence on good breakfasts for the hard workers. No man is fit for a heavy day's work, on a breakfast of orange juice and cof fee. Chances are this type of man will consume the big steak, ham or sausage for SUPPER, the hour when the body, brain, nerves and stomach are tired out. The country jurist our next gov ernor is right; he builds a good fire under the boiler in the morn ing. He is fortified for the days' struggle. He will be less tired at closing-time. Ifc will eat a light meal to sleep on." His arteries will last He will outlive the city jurist. ON OREGON FARMS' PINE CITY Next Week: Time for Everything. W. C. T. U. NOTES MARY A. NOTSON. Reporter. Senator Bingham of Connecticut says that 3.2 per cent beer has kick ; that seems that it has alcohol in it sufficient to produce drunk enness. The House enacted the beer bill on the theory that no mat ter what the alcoholic content, if congress calls it "non-intoxicating' it Is legally a soft drink and does not violate the 18th amendment This program of the wet bloc is the most foolish and illogical program ever undertaken by a majority of the House. If this sort of thing can be done, then no provision of the constitution will stand against the act of a majority of congress. It is a dangerous precedent. It is a matter of some note, however, that under the tax provisions of the bill the Iniquitous "one half of one per cent" Is still retained. The booze crowd first put the "one half of one per cent" provision into ef fect, but they have recently roared about it and attributed it to the long haired fanatics who stood for prohibition. What has become of the loudly proclaimed slogan, "The old saloon must not come back," which was so much in evidence two or three years ago? Every time someone tries to get an amendment to the beer bill added so as to outlaw the saloon, it is voted down with a shout. Speaker Garner threatens to prevent the senate amendment, modifying the 18th amendment, from being presented to the House, if it contains the provisions for the protection of the dry states and the authority for congress to shut out the saloon by law. This shows that the brewers and the old saloon gang are working hand In hand. For the sake of the record, keep in mind what the wets promised in the late campaign: That, If beer should be legalized, there will be no more drunkenness, no more gangs, no more crime, and partic ularly no more drinking among young people. Of course, not all of the wets proclaimed such an out come, and not all claimed just exactly those things in those words, but their indictment of the 18th amendment and the Volstead act Indicated that these results would follow the repeal of the amendment and the Volstead act So, be pre pared for the alibi in case no such results are obtained. Also, look ALMA NEILL. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Boylen and children of Pendleton and Mrs Boylen's mother, Mrs. Hungerford, of New York, spent the week end at the Dee Neill ranch. Ray Applegate is cutting wood on the Frank Helms place. Burl Wattenburger was in Hepp ner on business Wednesday. W. J. Wattenburger of Echo called at the homes of Fred Lee and H. E. Young Wednesday. John Healy and daughter Cecelia and son Jack were business visit ors in Heppner Friday. The Pine City band furnished music for the P. T. A. play given in Echo Friday evening. A large number of Pine City people at tended the play. Those from Pino City attending the surprise party given at Alpine Friday evening in honor of Dor othy Doherty were Mr.1 and Mrs. Frank Helms and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Morehead and children, Misses Alma Neill, Reitha Howard, and Jasper Myers, Hugh Neill, J. S. Moore, Misses Naomi and Audrey Moore and John Moore, Miss Doherty finished her high school work at Alpine and as she was the only senior, did not want any commencement exercises. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Gourley were in Heppner Monday on business. Tom Healy is among those con fined to their homes by sickness. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Wattenburger and children, Miss Neva Neill and Lloyd Baldridge were shoppers in Pendleton Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Coxen of Her- miston visited at the Mrs. OIHe Neill home Monday. Mrs. T. J. O'Brien and daugh ters Isabella and Katherine, visited Mrs. Isabella Corrigall at her home on Little Butter creek Monday. Mrs. Ollie Neill, Miss Neva Neill and Mrs. H. E, Young and daughter were in Echo and Hermiston Wed nesday on business. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Ayers vis ited in Hermiston Friday. A large number of Pine City etu dents have been absent from school the past week due to sickness. Roy Neill and daughter Alma and Lloyd Baldridge were dinner guests at the A. E. Wattenburger home Sunday. Mrs. Jessie Cox of Heppner call ed at the Mrs. Ollie Neill home on Tuesnay. Surpluses . . . Now Actual I think most of our present trou bles can be traced to the fact that the rest of the world is unable or unwilling to buy the urplus prod ucts of our farms. I do not be lieve this export market for our wheat, cotton, tobacco, live stock and other farm products is ever going to come back. I have myself seen how Italy is making itself in dependent of our tobacco, cotton and wheat and the other nations are doing the same thing. There has been no Increase In the average yield of wheat per acre; it still stands for the whole nation at 14.4 bushels. But in the five years from 1925 to 1930 the acreage sown to wheat in America increased by 21,000,000 acres. It is very clear to me that the only solution of the farm problem lies in reducing the quantity and improving the quality of farm pro duction. Murphy . . Farmer-Editor My friend, Frederick E. Murphy, publisher of the Minneapolis Trib une, is a real farmer as well as a real newspaper man. He has done more than any other man to bring the state of Minnesota up to the front rank in agricultural prosper ity. Mr. Murphy has put forth a tangible, workable plan of farm relief. First, he would have the govern ment induce the farmer to cut down crop acreage by providing money rewards for those who will do that Second, steps should be taken to protect dairy and live stock farm ers against imported oils and fats. Third, he wants quick tariff action against products of nations whose currency is depreciated. Fourth on Mir. Murphy's program is readjust ment of farm mortgages at reduced interest fifth, the reduction of farm taxes, sixth, an early revision and settlement of war debts, and sev enth, intensive research looking to wider industrial uses of farm products. I think Mr. Murphy's program will work. My only doubt about it is whether the politicians who run our public affairs will see enough in it for themselves to adopt it. Illiteracy . Declines Here There are still more than 4,000,000 Americans over ten years old who cannot read and write, the National Advisory Committee in Illiteracy reports. That is 600,000 fewer than ten years ago. Georgia has more illiterates than any other state, while Wyoming has the fewest, on ly about 3,000. Considering that at the beginning of our national life hardly more than one person in ten knew how to read and write, that only within my own memory practically no Ne gro or Indian could read or write and that school attendance was not compulsory anywhere In America when I was a boy, It seems to me we have gone a long way in rais ing the standard of education to the point where ninety-seven people out of every hundred are able to read. The important question, however, is: "What do they read?" Having taught them to read, it seems to me we might devote the next hundred years to improving their tastes in reading. Gopher Control Districts Grow Ontario Another petition for a gopher control district has been presented to the Malheur county court, this time by the people of the Owyhee district As still other districts are being considered it be gins -to look as though practically all the irrigated lands of the coun ty would soon be included in such areas. This fall some 50,000 acres were covered for the first time and about 20,000 acres the second time. Supervision of the work is taking much of the time of the county ag ent in the fall and spring. Yamhill Farm Reorganized Carlton Assistance has been given a farmer in this district by the county agent in reorganizing his place into a stock farm rather than continuing crop enterprises wholly. Expense will be cut down by having much of the land, which is not exceptionally rich, classified as grazing land for tax purposes. Irrigation is being installed on 30 acres to provide pasture through out the dry summer months. Cow Beef Distributed at Cost Bend Lowter grade beef cattle are replacing old fat ewes in this county now as the chief source of low priced meat for those able to pay something for such supplies. Recently the management of the Shevlin Hixon Lumber company asked the county agent to get 56 cows for slaughter and delivery to the mill to be distributed at cost. The agent was able to obtain offers to get such animals at two cents a pound. Canyon City The practice of feeding grain to breeding ewes is becoming a standard practice with range men of eastern Oregon de spite the depression, reports the Grant county agent. Better meth ods of feeding the grain have con vinced the growers that the prac tice is profitable. Experience has shown that the ewes must be built up at least three months before lambing, if at all, and by starting them on very small amounts of grain. Small amounts of from 1-8 to 1-6 pound per head a day over a 90-day period is much better than feeding more over a shorter per iod. The SE NEK. SWVi NW!4, SE SW(4. of Section 16, Twp. 6 South, Range 27 E. W. M for the minimum price of $37.50. The Ett SW14 of Section 16, Twp. 6 South, Range 28 E. W. M for the min imum price ol f2o.uu. The North hail of the following de scribed tract to-wit: Commencing at the northwest corner of block 9 of Jones Addition to Heppner, Oregon, running thence North 0 degrees 10 minutes East 241.2 feet along the East line of Jail Street, thence East 38 feet more or less, to the westerly line of the water ditch or the Heppner f louring Mill Company, thence in a southeast erly direction along said line of said water ditch to a point due East ol said starting point thence West 68 feet, more' or less, to the place of beginning, for the minimum price of $20.00. thehecukk, I will, on Saturday, the 21st day of January, 1933, at the hour of 10:00 A. M at the front door of the Court House in Heppner, Ore gon, sell said property to the highest and best bidders. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon. SUMMONS. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF MORROW. MARGARET DENNIS, Plaintiff vs. HENRY DENNIS, Defendant To Henry Dennis, defendant above named: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, you are hereby required to appear and answer plaintiff's complaint tiled against you in the above entitled court and cause within four weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons upon you, and it you fall to so appear and answer, for want thereof, un oui her complaint, to-wit: That the bonds plaintiff will apply to the above entltl- ine renei prayea lor in ed court for of matrimony now existing between you and plaintiff be forever dissolved, and that plaintiff have an absolute di vorce form you; that her maiden name be restored, and for such other and further relief as may be just and equitable. This summons Is published upon vou in the Heppner Gazette Times, once a 101 der of Wm. T. Campbell, Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, which order is CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank our friends and neighbors for their sympathy and aid in our bereavement, and for their beautiful floral offerings. Mr, and Mrs. Owen N. Helms and Family. If you want to wear the latest and smartest styles, wear a Kath erine Harford frock. Low in price, high in quality. See Mrs. A. R. Reld, representative for Harford Frocks, Inc., of New York. 43 tf. Try a Gazette Times Want Ad. Scrip . . . The Stamp Idea The latest thing in the form of money is called "stamped scrip." The idea originated In Germany and has been adopted In a number of American cities, to make money circulate faster. In Evanston, Illinois, they work the scheme this way: The local re tail merchants association put $5, 000 in a bank. Then It Issued 5,000 scrip dollars, each one of them good for a dollar at the bank if pre sented within a week. But after one week it was only good if it had a special two-cent trading stamp pasted on it. Nobody but the mer chants had these stamps. You have to spend the dollar at a store to make it good. The next week another stamp has to be put on it, and so on for a year. This makes each of these scrip dollars turn over fifty-two time1? a year, because anyone who holds one of them has to pay two cmts a week for the privilege of holding It, or lose his original dollar. Our principal money trouble Is not a shortage of money but the fact that it is not moving fast enough. This scrip plan Is said to be working well in the towns that have tried it- Prosperity . at Rowley, la. I pass my compliments to the town of Rowley, Iowa, Rowley has 205 population, living in sixty houses; there are fifteen business institutions including a bank, and three churches. And It Is the most prosperous town In America, If not In the world. There is not a single deliquent tax payer In the town. Not one resident of the town is on the coun ty poor list. There has never been a bank failure. If 205 people In one community can manage their affairs as well as that, there seems to . be no reason why 205,000 people, or two million people, or any number of people cannot do equally well. The answer, of course, Is politics. Rowley has no large list of salar ied taxeaters, Its people run their own affairs, dated December 21, 1932, and the date of the first publication of this summons is uecemDer a, isa. JOB. J. NY3, Attorney for Plaintiff. Postofllce address, Heppner, Oregon. waMWtces! Professional Cards NOTICE OF SALE OF ANIMAL. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of the laws of the State of Oregon, I have taken up and hold at my place, six miles southwest of Heppner, known as the William Hendrix farm, the following des cribed animal, and that I will on Saturday, January 28, 1933, at the hour, of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at my said premises, offer for sale and sell the said ani mal to the highest and best bidder for cash in hand, unless the same shall have been redeemed by the owner thereof. Said animal is des cribed as follows: One gray horse, about 8 years old, weight about 1100 lbs., brand ed quarter circle above figure 1 on left stifle. F. E. PARKER, Heppner. Or. NOTICE OF ANNUAL STOCK HOLDERS' MEETING. Notice Is hereby given that the annual meeting of the stockholders of Heppner Mining Company will be held at the office of the First National Bank of Heppner, Ore gon, on the second Tuesday in Feb ruary, being the 14th day of Feb ruary, 1933, at the hour of 2 o'clock in the afternoon of said day. The meeting is for the purpose of elect ing officers and for the transaction of such other business as may ap pear. D. B. ST ALTER, President J. O. HAGER, Secretary. NOTICE OF SALE. BY VIRTUE OF AN ORDER of the County Court, dated December 7th 1932, I am authorized and directed to sell at public auction, as provided by law, tne following described real prop erty, at not less than the minimum price herein set forth and upon the roiiowing terms as set out alter each tract, to-wit: The SW14 of Section 20, Twp. North, Range 28. E. W. M., for the minimum price of 1100.00, of which at least $25.00 shall be cash, the balance payable in two eaual yearly payments. with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum on the deferred payments, the purchaser to pay all taxes levied upon said land during the term of the contract or sale.. NOW IN SEASON Oysters SHELL FISH Served Here Fresh Daily. If your appetite (te rn a n d s something different some thing tasty some thing healthful EAT SHELL FISH For a good meal any time go to ELKHORN RESTAURANT ED CHINN, Prop. J. 0. TURNER Attorney at Law Phone 173 Humphreys Building HEPPNER, ORE. A. B. GRAY, M. D. PHYSICIAN ft SUBQEON Phone 323 Heppner Hotel Building Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted. WM. BROOKIIOUSER PAINTING PAPRH.A2V QUO INTEBIOB DECORATING Leave orders at Peoples Hardware Company II. McCRADY DENTIST X-Ray Diagnosis Oilman Building Heppner, Oregon I DR." J. Frank A. McMenamin LAWYER 803 Guardian Building Resldenre. GArfleld 1949 Business Phone Atwater 1248 PORTLAND, OREGON aTd. McMURDO, m. d. J PHYSICIAN AND SUB-EON I Trained Nurse Assistant I Office In Masonic Building I Heppner, Oregon P. VV. MAIIONEY ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building Heppner, Oregon S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Offloe In L O. 0. F. Building Heppner, Oregon AUCTIONEER Farm and Personal Uroperty Sales A Specialty. O. L. BENNETT "The Man Who Talks to Beat lne Band" R229 72nd Ave., S. E.. Portland, Ore. Phone Sunset 3451 J. 0. PETERSON Latest Jewelry and Olft Good Watches Clocks . Diamond Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon F. W. TURNER & CO. FIRE, AUTO AND LIFE INSURANCE Old Line Companies. Real Estate. Heppner, Oregon 10S. J. NYS ATTONEY-AT-LAW Roberts Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon