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About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (March 9, 1933)
PAGE TWO HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNERtOREGON, THURSDAY, MAItCH 9, 1933. (Bnuttt intra THE HEPPNER GAZETTE, Established March 80, 1883; THE HEPPNER TIMES. Established November 18, 1897; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 16, 1911 Published every Thursday morning by VAWTEB III SFENCEB CBAWTOBD sod entered at the Post Office at Hepp ner, Oregon, a second-class matter. ADVEBTISTKO BATES GIVEN OS APPLICATION. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Tear , , Six Months Three Months , Single Copies , $2.00 , LOO . .76 , .06 Official Paper lor Morrow Comity. FARM AND FACTORY. Autocaster Service. THERE is a rapidly growing be lief among farmers that the ul timate solution of our agricultural problems is going to come from a much more direct relationship be tween agriculture and industry than exists at present For many years industrialists and scientists have been pointing out the neces sity for a closer tie-up between farm and factory. Henry Ford has for years been preaching and put ting into practice his idea that, in stead of concentrating production in great industrial centers, big in dustries should have numerous small factories, each producing some part of the finished product, so located that industrial workers could also be agriculturists, having their own land to fall back upon for subsistence whenever industry was slack. This has always seemed to us like a sound solution of the problem of the Industrial worker, but it does not go far toward solv ing the major problems of the far mer. The utilization of farm wastes and surpluses for industrial pro cesses has also been the subject of a great dteal of intelligent study by economists and manufacturers. One of the most important of all chem ical substances is alcohol. Alcohpl is easily and cheaply produced from a wide variety of agricultural pro ducts. In Iowa and Nebraska a beginning has been made in the production of industrial alcohol from corn, and experiments with a mixture of alcohol and gasoline for motor fuel have been fairly success ful. In California the grape grow ers are beginning a similar experi ment, producing alcohol from grapes which are unfit for ship ment We think these are steps in the right direction. We are told that scientists and technologists are ready to show the agricultural and industrial world how to utilize ev erything that can be grown on the farm for industrial purposes. It is not difficult to imagine a coming era in which hundreds of thousands of small industrial establishments will be scattered throughout the ag ricultural regions, providing as Sunday School nu Lesson n By Bev. Charles E. Buna, D. B. Jesus Ministering to the Multi tude. Lesson for March 12th. Mark 6:30-44. Golden Text: Matthew 20:28. The lesson opens with a picture of the Master and His disciples so busily at work ministering to the needs of the many who hurried to see them, that they had no time fr meals. It is then that Jesus sound ed His call for a retreat, that they might restore their depleted ener gies. "Come away, all of you," sad He, "to a quiet place, and rest awhile." Our sorely harassed modern world greatly needs this advice. Re laxation is a lost art. We desper ately lack serenity and poise. Our voices are harsh and high-pitched. Our muscles are taut Our minds are over-tense and excited. William James, the psychologist, uses the expressive phrase, "bottled light ning,' as an apt description of the explosive American temperament. Systematic exercise of the body stimulates steadiness of spirit Well planned vacations restore ones' bal ance. Best of all, religious faith brings an inner, untroubled peace. When we share Jesus' boundless trust in God, we are calm and un shakable. But, alas, the Masters' quest for rest, like so many of our own at tempts to flee from the world's tu mult, met with frustration. When He and His disciples stepped from the boat upon the lonely shore they had chosen for their escape, a great multitude was there! It was as difficult for Jesus to avoid people as it Is for "Babe" Ruth! With characteristic compassion He extended His sympathy to them, for, as Mark in our lesson says, "they were like sheep which have no shepherd." And now we see Jesus rising to the emergency of hunger. The day was advancing. The place was remote. But Jesus contrived, with the help of the apostles, to feed those five thousand famished folk with an abundance to spcxe. How this miracle was actually performed will never be known, it ia futile to try to rationalize and explain this famous deed of mercy. The Important fact to bear in mind la that it was not a merely physical act, but a spiritual communion with Him Who la, as Johns' gospel telle us, the true and living Bread. many new outlets for the farmers' by-products and surplusses, and so stabilizing agriculture on a sounder basis than It has ever been. GIVE THE RAILROADS A CHAXCE. Autocaster Service. THE commission appointed by a group of a couple of hundred insurance companies and other large holders of railroad securities to make recommendations for the rehabilitation of the railroad sys tems of the United States has ex pressed itself very clearly and di rectly in favor of reorganization and consolidations tending toward an ultimate single railroad system for the entire nation. That is the considered judgment of a commis sion which was headed by the late Calvin Cool id ge and which has in its membership statesmen and economists such as Alfred E. Smith, Alexander Legge, of the Interna tional Harvester company, and oth er men in whom the public gener ally has confidence. The opinion of these men that the day has passed when unlimited competition among railroads is de sirable, if it ever was beneficial, must meet the approval of every' one who has given the subject ser ious thought. The commission in vestigated and reported upon many collateral phases of the railroad situation, such as motor bus and truck competition, water competi tion, etc. It came to the conclu sion that if wasteful expenditures by the railroads in the interest of so-called competition could be elim inated and the railroads given au thority to operate all important transportation systems of every kind, they could eventually pay off their legitimate indebtedness, pay fair wages to their employees, and do this without increasing rates, and in many instances could reduce rates. This seems sensible and business like to us. Nothing could be more injurious to the economic life of the nation than the failure of the important railroad systems. They are the arteries which carry the lif -blood of commerce to the utter most corners of the country. Some of the railroads are well managed, some of them are badly managed. The day has passed when any rail road can be permitted to operate merely for the benefit of a single individual or group of Individuals. There are many who believe that the Federal Government should take over the entire railroad sys tems of the nation, as was done dur ing the war time emergency. Whether this would be desirable or not is a question on which opin ions vary widely. But if that is to be the ultimate fate of the rail roads, It will certainly be a simpler process if, in the first place, the railroad systems are unified under a single management and control. W. C. T. U. NOTES MARY A. NOTSON. Reporter. Good people have been misled by the continual howl of the wets about the evils of prohibition. Get the record straight. The things they complain of are not, in any sense, the result of prohibition, but are the results of liquor and the lawless element which has tried all the time to discredit prohibition. The bene fits of prohibition have been great. They would have been much greater if the opponents of prohibition had been at all patriotic; if they had said, as good citizens should say, "As long as it is the law, It should be observed and enforced." Then, if it proved not to be the best way to deal with the traffic, it could have been readily repealed. But many of the wets admit that if pro hibition had been observed and well enforced, it would have been a great benefit to the people. Do not forget that it is the desire of certain in terests to make money by exploiting the weakness of their fellow men which is the driving motive behind the fight for the return of liquor. They are not in the least concernod about morals and temperance. An eminent English preacher in 1760 said: "All who sell liquor in the common way to any that will buy are poisoners-general. They murdered His Majesty s subjects by wholesale. Neither does their eye pity nor spare. They drive them to hell like sheep. And what is their gain? Is it not the blood of these men? Who, then, would envy their large estates and sumptuous palaces? A curse is in the midst of them. The curse of God is in their gardens, their groves a fire that burns to the nethermost hell. Blood, blood, is there! The foundation, the floors, walls, the roofs, are stained with blood." Professor Ross, of the University of Wisconsin, has called attention to a new phase of the battle that is, an intrenched and legalized b is Iness, with all the rights, powers, and strength of modern equipment for extending the curse. He says: "It became a "big business intent on profits always more profits. It no longer pleaded humbly for leave to assuage existing thirsts. In or der to promote business it deliber ately and methodically set itself to create new thirsts. As production and distribution were centralized, the business grew more capitalistic, and the saloon keepers came to be the brewers' men. Systematic ef forts were made to 'shove' liquor, especially beer. Continually they plotted to tempt the public Into a large consumption. Their ambition seemed to be to convert the rising generation into paripatetlc tanks." Thoughtful men are saying, "When liquor comes back, it will not be safe to drive an automobile on the highways. A large percentage of the accidents now are due to liquor drinking. It will be worse when beer comes back." Wanted to buy, one yearling, or one two-year-old stallion, Palamina or Cremollne. Box 316, La Grande. Mr. and Mrs. Myles Martin were visitors here Monday from the farm home north of Lexington. Local ada to the Gazette Times bring result. rain Assassination . of Rulers Three Presidents of the United States have died at the hands of assassins. One ex-President, Theo dore Roosevelt, was shot but not seriously injured, when he was a candidate for a third term. It was only accidental that the assassin who fired at President-elect Frank lin Roosevelt missed him and hit Mayor Cermak of Chicago and four others Instead. Assassination is a risk which ev ery head of a nation constantly faces. The President of France was killed less than a year ago. Presi dent Obregon of Mexico was as sassinated in 1928. King George of Greece, Prince Ito of Japan, Presi dent Madero of Mexico, King Hum bert of Italy, are only a few of the national rulers who have died at the hands of assassins in recent years. There is no effective way to pro tect rulers from the irresponsible attacks of lunatics. A president or a king must show himself to his people. In this country a guard of secret service men always travels with the President and with the President-elect, but even their pre cautions sometimes fail. The Pres ident of the United States literally takes his life in his hands when he accepts that high office. Eyewitness .... of Two I happened to be present at the shooting of two Presidents, Garfield and McKinley. I doubt if there is another person living of whom this is true. As a small boy in Wash ington I was passing the old Balti more and Potomac Railroad sta tion on July 2, 1881, and went into the station to get a drink of water. As I entered the waiting-room men and women were screaming and rushing in every direction. 1 wormed my way through the crowd, boylike, and saw one of the station guards struggling with a bearded man, who was still holding a smok ing revolver. On the floor lay a figure which I recognized as that of President Garfield, and bending over him was the familiar figure of James G. Blaine, Secretary of Stale General Garfield died two months later. Medical and surgical science was still crude fifty years ago. There is little doubt that if doctors had known then what they know now he would have recovered. Lunatics .... with Guns There was no doubt that Guietau, who shot Garfield, like Wilkes Booth, who killed Lincoln, and Le on Czolgoscz, the assassin of Mc Kinley, was insane. As a newspaper reporter "cover ing" the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo I was in the Temple of Music when McKinley was shot on September 6, 1901. The murderer had wrapped a handkerchief around his right hand to make it look as If it had been injured, but the bandage concealed a revolver. Only those closest to the President heard the shots or realized for a few min utes what had happened. I was present when the Buffalo police questioned him. If ever there was a lunatic Czolgoscz was one. And apparently, Zangara, who shot at Franklin Roosevelt, is likewise not quite sane. As a result of the shooting of President McKinley stringent laws were passed providing the death penalty for even threatening the life of the President Florida Canal Plan Among all the projects for pub He improvements to be financed by the Reconstruction Finance Cor poration I cannot think of any that would do so much good as the plan to excavate a sea-level canal across the neck of the Florida Peninsula, connecting the Gulf of Mexico di rectly with the Atlantic Ocean. It would give immediate employment to tens of thousands. It would ben efit everybody In the United States from Texas east, by shortening the time and reducing the cost of trans portation of commodities between the Gulf states and the wealthy North Atlantic seaboard. It would pay for itself through tolls charged for use of the canal by ships. I hear from Florida friends that the railroads of Florida are oppos ing this project. That seems to me like pretty small business, but It is quite characteristic. The wide spread and growing demand for a complete reorganization of the rail road systems of the United States arises largely from Just such an ar rogant and selfish attitude on the part of railroad managements in almost every part of the country. Radio World-wide Report We have got so accustomed to ra dio broadcasting that to most of us it hardly seems like a miracle. But I cannot escape the feeling that the world entered a new era on Febru ary 17th when the League of Na tions broadcasted to the world its report refusing to recognize Japan's rights in Manchuria. Two powerful short wave stations at Geneva sent this fifteen thousand word message in Morse Code around the world for anybody and every body to pick up. It took ten hours to transmit the entire report, but every word of It was picked up by the New York Times and published in full on the following morning. Within less than twenty-four hours every newspaper In the world was able to Inform its readers that the combined nations of the world would oppose Japanese aggression in China. It was the most Impressive ges ture the League of Nations has ever made. And my guess Is that it will accomplish its purpose. Berry Fields Survive Winter Falls City Strawberry growers in this district are pleased to find that their plantings have come through the winter with much less loss than Is reported . elsewhere. Most of the large plantings of W. V. Sample, leading local grower, ap pear to be In good condition. Young; berries and the new Corvallis straw berries came through the freeze in good shape, so that some plants of these will be available. The plant ings of these new varieties were started from small lots obtained through the Polk county agent's office. For Sale or Trade 200 acres of summerfallow near lone for horses or mules; or would lease on shares. Cecil Sargent, Rt 3, Box 232, Salem, Oregon. 46-48 -Jhe FAMILY JOHN JOSEPH GAINES10 PLEURISY Here is a disease of the winter months, Pleurisy, usually resulting from exposure to violent cold. It should not be mistaken for pneu monia, so, you better have the doc tor and be sure you are right Pleurisy . announces itself by PAIN. Not necessarily much fever, unless it begins with a pronounced chill. Remember, pleurisy is out side of the lung; pneumonia Inside. The pleura is a tough, smooth mem brane that lines the ohest-wall and also covers the body of the lung. If the membrane is normal, it will glide over its neighboring surfaces without sensation; in flamed, It at once becomes very painful. A cough, If any, is excru ciating it hurts to' take a full breath hurts at the point inflamed. If the spot remain sore long enough, adhesions may form, which starts a very chronic condition, hard to cure. I have many times taken out from three to twelve pints of drop sical fluid from an old case of ne glected pleurisy "pleurisy wth ef fusion." It should never be per mitted to get that far. Your duty when attacked is, to go to bed, or at least stay in the house where the air Is dry and warm. Get up a sweat as quickly as possible. See that the bowel is "open." Get the blood to the sur face and keep it there it is possi ble only in warm atmosphere. Pneu monia may be mistaken for pleu risy a dangerous mistake. See your doctor and take no chances. Simple pleurisy is not dangerous if promptly attended to; pneumonia may be deadly if neglected. The real name of pleurisy is "pleurftis." But I am inclined to use plain, understandable language for my readers. I hope this short sketch concerning a common com plaint, may do good somewhere. THOMSON BROS. DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE YOU CAN'T FOOL A CLEVER SHOPPER A clever shopper deals at Affiliated Buyers Stores because she knows she is getting the lowest price on nationally advertised, quality goods. She is saving consistently light down the line and by patronizing this Independently Owned and operated, home owned store, her money goes further, but never leaves home. Saturday, March 11th Monday, March 13th REAL VALUES ON OUR LIST TODAY White Wonder LAUNDRY SOAP 10 Bars 28C WESSON OIL Half Gallon . . . 75c Marshmallow SYRUP Gallon ...... 90C COFFEE Golden West. 1-Lb. Can Decidedly best, and made at home 29c .an FREE KITES With each package, large size, White King Granulated Soap A White King Kite FREE . Package ...... 35C CORNED BEEF Derby l's Finest of first grade pack, extra quality Gin 16c PORK & BEANS Van Camp, Medium 16-oz. size. Delicious, nourishing and so easy to serve 4 for 24c OYSTERS Otter 1 New pack extra fine Cove oysters 3 for 27c Bruce Barton writes of "The Master Executive" Supplying: a week-to-week inspiration for the heavy-burdened who will find every human trial paralleled in the ex periences of The Man Nobody Knows" Street Cars and Men Surely no one will consider us lacking in reverence if we say that every one of the "principles of modern salesmanship" on which business men so much pride -themselves, are brilliantly exemplified In Jesus' work and talk. The first of these and perhaps the most im portant is the necessity for "put ting yourself in step with your prospect." A great sales manager used to illustrate it in this way: "When you want to get aboard a street car which is already in mo tion, you don't run at it from right angles and try to make the plat form in one wild leap," he would say. "If you do, you are likely to find yourself on the floor. No. You run alone beside the car, increas ing your pace until you are mov ing just as rapidly as it is moving and in the same direction. Then you stop aboard easily, without danger or jolt "The minds of busy men are in motion," he would continue. "They are engaged with something very different from the thought you have to present. You can't jump directly at them and expect to make an effective landing. You must put yourself In the other mans place; try to Imagine what he is thinking let your first remark be in line with his thoughts; follow it by another with which you know he will easily agree. "Thus, gradually, your two minds reach a point where they can join without conflict. You encourage him to say 'yes' and 'yes' and 'that's right and I ve noticed that my self,' until he says the final yes' which is your favorable decision.' Jesus taught all this without ever teaching it Every one of his con versations, every contact between his mind and others, is worthy of the attentive study of any sales manager. Passing along the shores of a lake one day, he saw two of the men whom he wanted as dis ciples. Their minds were in mo tion; their hands were busy with their nets; their conversation was about conditions in the fishing trade, and the prospects of a good market for the day's catch. To .have broken in on such thinking wilth the offer of employment as preachers of a new religion would have been to confuse them and in vite a certain rebuff. What was Jesus' approach? "Come with me," he said, "and I will make you fishers of men." Fishers . . . that was a word they could understand . . . fishers of men . . . that was a new idea . . . what was he driving at . . . fishers of men ... it sounded interesting. . . . well, what is it, anyway? They listened. They were convinced, They said yes and they went with Him. Next Week: Getting Attention. MOLASSES Gallon ....... 60C SALT Diamond . Crystal, 26-oz Shaker. Plain or Iodized Package 8c COCOA Baker's Breakfast, -b. Can Rich and nutritious Can lie COTTON GLOVES Boss Brand Those heavy drill 14-oz. red wrist 2 Pairs for.... 23C JELLO Americas' most famous dessert Your choice all flavors 3f 19c or TOILET TISSUE VELVET Extra fine 1000-sheet rolls 5f. 24c or PEP HOT SAUCE Buffet. Quality and price. 5f 23c or PEARS Mellowmlst.. Large iM' Can A real good quality pack in syrup. Exceptional value, 2 for 29c Busy Bees Found to Work Best in Alfalfa Regions Consider the bee traditionally known for his or rather, her in dustry and freedom from unem ployment ' That is just what some farm management and entomology spec ialists at the Oregon State college experiment station have been do ing this past year considering the bee and the methods under which it has been kept in Oregon. The re sult is the current publication of the first progress report on cost of honey production in Oregon, a mim eographed circular of 13 pages con taining figures and conclusions drawn from 1931 operations in this state. Oregon is not a leading honey producing state, but does have a substantial honey Industry, points out A. S. Burrier, associate econo mist, who was in charge of the sur vey. He was assisted by Frank E Todd, federal apiculturist, and H. A. Scullen, associate professor of entomology. For the four years 1928-31 the total colonies In the state averaged 64,375, producing a yearly volume of honey valued at $200,000. As little information on honey- production costs has heretofore been available, the Oregon State Beekeepers' association strongly urged this two-year cost survey which is being financed under the federal Purnell fund. Just as in dairy cost studies, the eastern Oregon alfalfa regions lead in low cost of production of honey, the first report shows. The alfalfa clover region leads In number of commercial producers, lncidently. accounting for 53 per cent of the state total and extending over east ern and parts of southern Oregon. In those regions the net produc tion cost averaged 6.2 cents a pound for extracted honey. In the fire- weed section of the northwest coast counties the net cost was 6.9 cents a pound, While in the mixed-blossom section of the Willamette valley costs were 7.8 cents. The state av erage for 85 apiarists modern for beekeepers operating 16,348 col onies and producing just short of a millian pounds of honey, was 6.4 cents a pound. Individual costs varied from an extreme low of 2.7 cents a pound to 41 cents. Yield, as with most farm enterprises, was found a vital fac tor In cost, though high yield ob tained by expensive means was of no avail in keeping costs down. Fig ures are now being gathered on the lysz crop. Home Recipes Given For Attractive Lamp Shades Stvle. simDllcltv. and llcht wlfh out glare may be obtained in . a lamp shade with little expense, says Miss Mildred Chamberlain, acting neaa or clothing, textiles and relat ed arts at Oreeon State vllr Miss Chamberlain cive twn rivl, pes for attraotive shades that are inexpensive. Cream-colored Hoi land linen, ordlnarv window ahnrii cloth, is used for the first. To make this pleated shade, hub nnn nH o half times the lower diameter of the wire frame. The depth is made an men more than the depth of V.e name irom top to bottom. On each edge of the shade sew a atH-n nf i-ih. bon, three-fourths Inch wide, then pleat the material in three-eighths men pieats ana sew the ends to- getner. In the toD of ennh nlonf nimi.li hole for the cord which draws the lampshade Into shape. Just below this row of hoies, punch half holes in the edee of each stent. Th n wire of the frame will rest in the naif holes when the shade is s on the frame. The second method is to paste gom or silver paper on a atrip of butcher paper. Then pleat, punch and mount as In the flrat ahn-rio Yellows are the best colors for translucent shades, points out Miss Chamberlain. They absorb less light than the greens and blues and so are less likely to rob the lamp of the element of cheer it should possess. It is difficult to set down actual laws about the height of base, and depth of spread for a shade, says ..iiso viiiuiioenain, out one rule Is this: The denth of the hoH equal one-third of the total height of the shade and base combined. The lower diameter of the shade snouia equal the height of the base. However, this is onlv a ppnAral mile subject to modifications due to the contour or the base and shano the shade. A cmnA foKio up throws a circle of light six feet New Chicken Mite Found To be 24-Hour Parasite Most mites are satisfied to prey on chickens at might and then re treat to hiding places around the roosts during the day, but a new type of particularly persistent mite una just Deen laentinea by the en tomologists at Oregon State college who were appealed to ror help by distracted Oreeon ooultrvman This new breed is a close relative to the common chicken mite, says Ir. Don C. Mote, head of the ento mology department. When present on fowls these mites multiply rapid ly and congregate at certain spots on the body, where feathers become rough and dirty from the effects of the parasites. English sparrows and blackbirds have been known to carry these mites. Preliminary tests Indicate they are fairly easy to control onoe dis covered, as dipping In liquid louse killer or dusting with very fine sul fur are effective, while use of nlco tine sulfate on the roosts has killed many of them. Further observa tions are still being made of best control measures. NOTICE. To Whom It May Concern: Notice Is hereby given that pursunnt to Chapter 118, General Laws of 1931, all persons are warned to refrain from throwing, dumping, placing or deposit ing upon any public road, highway, street, alley, or easement used by the public for public travel, any cans, glass. nulla ta!, kml,.. JinkAV ' .Uw.r, uiuncn UIOMTHI Ul VI UUHerV, carcass of any dead animal, old cloth- Ins, old automobile tires, old automo bile Darts, boards, metal, or any sort of rubbish, trash, debris, or refuse, or any substance which would mar the ap pearance or aeiraci irom me cleanli ness or safety of such public road, highway, street ally, or easment or would likely Injure any animal, vehicle or ntrson traveling upon such public road, highway, street alley or easement. The penalty ior violating saia cnapier 113 Is a fine not to exceed $100.00 or confinement In the county jail 30 days. By Order ol tne county court 51-62 NOTICE TO CBEDITOBS. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been duly appointed by the County Court of the State of Ore gon for Morrow county, executrix or the last Will and Testament of James G. Doherty, deceased, and all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased, are hereby required to present tne same to tne undersigned, verified as requird by law, at the law office of Jos. J. Nys, at Heppner, Ore gon, within six months from the date Dated and first published this 2nd day of March, 1933. Executrix. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice Is hereby eiven that the un dersigned has filed her final account as executrix of the estate of Joseph F. Eisenfelder, deceased, and that the County Court of the State of Oregon tor Morrow county nas appointed Mon day, the 3rd day of April, 1933. at the hour of 10 o'clock In the forenoon of said day, as the time, and the County Court room in the Court House at Heppner, Oregon, as the place, of hearing and settlement of said final ac count. Objections to said final account must be filed on or before said date. CORA Li. L. JAMIESON, Executrix. NOTICE OF FIN AX ACCOUNT. Notice la herebv sriven that the un dersigned, Executor of the estate of Lizzie Humphreys, deceased, has filed his final acocunt of his administration of said estate with the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow vounty, ana tnat saia court nas set Monday, the 3rd day of April, 1933, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock In the fore noon of said day at the County Court room at the Court House at HenDner. Oregon, as the time and place for hear ing oDiecuons to saia nnai account, and all persons having objections to said final account or the settlement of said estate, are hereby required to file the same in said court on or before the time set for said hearing. Dated this 16th day of February, 1933. FRED ROOD, Executor. Professional Cards J. 0. TURNER Attorney at Law Phone 178 Humphreys Building HEPPNER. ORE. A. B. GRAY, M. D. PHYSICIAN ft BTTIiOEON , Phone 333 Heppner Hotel Building Byes Tested and Qlasses Fitted. WM. BROOKIIOUSER FAINTING PAFEBHANOINQ INTEBIOB DBGOBATOfO Leave orders at Peoples Hardware Company DR. J. H. McCRADY DENTIST X-Bsy Diagnosis Oilman Building Heppner, Oregon Frank A. McMenamin LAWTIB 906 Guardian Building Residence, GArfleld 1949 Business Phone Atwater 1348 PORTLAND, OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND BrBOEON Trained Nurse Assistant Office in Masontc Building Heppner, Oregon 1 P. W. MAHONEY ATTOBNET AT LAW I First National Bank Building I Heppner, Oregon j S. E. NOTSON ATTOBNET AT LAW Offloe In I. O. O. F. BnUdlng Heppner, Oregon AUCTIONEER Farm and Personal Uroperty Bales A Bpeotalty. 0. L. BENNETT "The Man Who Talks to Beat the Band" 8239 72nd Ave., S. E., Portland, Ore. Phone Sunset 8461 J. 0. PETERSON Latest Jewelry and Gift Goods Watches Clocks Diamond Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon F. W. TURNER & CO. FIBE, A0TO AND LIFE INSUBANOE Oldflilns Companies. Baal Estate. Heppner, Oregon JOS. J. NYS ATTONET-AT-LAW Boberts Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon