PAGE TWO HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1933. THE HErPNER GAZETTE Established March 30. 1S83; THE HEPPNER TIMES. Established November IS. 1S97; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15. 1912. Published every Thursday morning by TAWTES and SPENCEB CBAWFOBD and entered at the Post Office at Hepp ner, Oregon, as second-class matter. ADVERTED! SATES GIVEN OH APPLICATION. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Tear . Six Months Three Months Single Copies $2.00 1.00 .75 .05 Official Paper for Morrow County THE AKRON DISASTER nPHE LOSS of the huge Navy dir- IglQle AKron W1U1 aev"J' three lives is the most serious dis aster since men first began to nav igate the air. Caught in the middle of a terrific thunderstorm off Bar negat Bay the great airship plung ed into the sea and only four of its crew and passengers were rescued one of them dying shortly after wards. Tragedies like this are a part of the price humanity pays for pro gress. Doubtless there will be t great outcry against further exper- iments in aerial navigation as a .e sult of the "Akron's" crash. But (there were outcries against rail roads, against the automobile. against airplanes, when they were young. Millions have perished at eea, yet nobody proposes to abolish ships. If safety were the only rule of life mankind would still be living in the primitive jungle. CONSOLIDATING FARM CREDIT. CO FAR as the first step in the O new administration program of assistance to agriculture goes, we do not see how anybody can quar rel with it It consolidates the Fed eral Land banks, the Federal Inter mediate Credit banks, the Farm board, the Farm Loan board, the Crop Production Loan office, the Seed Loan office, and the Regional Agricultural Credit corporations into one agency under a single head. Most people did not even know that there were so many govern mental sources from which farmers could borrow money. We must agree with Mr. Henry Morgenthau Jr., who is the new chairman of the Federal Farm board and will manage this whole business of farm loans, that the old system was too complicated and expensive and that the average farmer In need of nn ancial assistance has not known where to apply, and often had to deal with many agencies at widely scattered points, instead of having all of his troubles attended to in one office. We understand that no new form Of farm credit is provided for. merely the centralization of admin istration of all existing kinds of credit These include long-term mortgage loans, short-term crop loans, loans for the purchase of seed and emergency relief loans, be sides loans to cooperatives. From all we can learn about Mr. Morgenthau, who has become the big boss of farm finance, he is a good man for the job. His early training in finance was under his father, who made a large fortune in business and was President Wil son's ambassador to Turkey. The younger Morgenthau was in the real estate business in New York for a time, but went into farming on a large scale. He has a 1,400- acres dairy and stock farm in New York state, and for several years has been the publisher of one of i the large farm journals, the Amer ican Agriculturist With the new set-up and the ad ministration of farm credit in com petent hands, it looks as if every real farmer who nas a real need for a loan can demonstrate that he is capable of paying it off in time ought to get the relief he desires. A FASHION NOTE FROM THE BIBLE WE READ a report in a New York paper of a convention of beauty shop people a few weeks ago. According to this report tne most interesting things in the ex hibits were removable lips, de mountable eyelashes, devices to change the shape of the nose, ap paratus to hold the ears back, arti ficial eye-sparkle and little pictures for fingernail decoration. We began to wonder how women could be so foolish as to think that such artificialities make them at- tractive to men. But before we had got to the point of raising an outcry against this degenerate mod ern age we happened to think that we had read something of the sort before. We looked it up and found it, written more than two thousand years ago by a prophet named Isaiah. The daughters of Zion are haughty, and walk with stretched forth necks and wanton eyes, walk ing and mincing as they go and making a tinkling with their feet In that day the Lord will take away the bravery of their tinkling ornaments about their feet, and their cauls, and their round tires like the moon, the chains and the bracelets and the mufflers, the bon nets and the ornaments of the legs, and the headbands, and the tablets, and the earrings, the ring and nose jewels, the changeable Suits of ap- "parel, and the mantles, and the wimples, and the crisping pins, the glasses and the fine linen, and the hoods and the veils. Isa. 3. Perhaps it wouldn't be any use for us to try to talk the girls out of their finery. Apparently Isaiah's threats didn't change feminine na ture, which seems to be about the same now as it was in Old Testa ment days. But we have an idea that the girls of Isaiah's time, like those of today, didn't put on their dew-dads so much to make them selves interesting to men as to make Other women envious. That, how ever, is a mere man's point of view. Bruce Barton writes of "The Master Executive" Supplying a week -to-week inspiration for the heavy-burdened who will And very human trial paralleled In the ex perience! of "The Man Nobody Xnowi" Sunday School Lesson n By Bev. Charlea E. Sunn, D. D. Jesus Rebukes Self-Seeking. Lesson for April 23rd. Mark 9:30-50. Golen Text: Romans 13:10. All of us crave popularity. It is human to seek recognition. But it is foolish to scramble for it The disciples, in their quarrel as to who was the greatest, and therefore en titled to the honors of rank and pi ecedence, form a sorry picture. Jesus, with characteristic direct ness, at once plunged to the root of the whole issue. Greatness, He in sisted, is not the fruit of the ag gressive seizure of power, but of tts renunciation. "If any one wishes to be first, he must be last of all and servant of all." This means that the humble, obscure workman behind the scenes, an unheralded hero never in the limelight, never responding to a curtain call with its ringing applause, may be, by God's standard, first in value and esteem. He it is who, when the kingdom of heaven is established, will be called from his inconspicu ous position to a post of leadership Then the Master gave a concrete demonstration of this principle. Taking a little child, He placed him in their midst, embraced him, and then uttered those memorable words. "Whoever for my sake re ceives one such young child as this, receives me." That child, with its trustful eyes so full of wonder, its innocence, its beauty, Its simple faith, unspoiled by the sordid, self ish brutalities of our blighted world, both rebuked the grasping discipli'S, and gave them a needed lesson. Was Jesus mistaken in His glor ification of the child? No, indee:! Havelock Ellis maintains that the average man of genius, both in physique and temperament, is child like. "The progress of our race," he says, "has been a progress in youthfulness." One other saying of the Master in this lesson deserves careful studv. It Is the declaration, "He who Is not against us Is for us." How large-hearted' How gener ous! How we find the secret of the Master', superb tolerance and mag- namtatty. k JXOKLUM JOHN JOSEPH MNEffiD YOUR PHYSICIAN "Doctor, whats' the matter with me?" "Can you cure it?' These two questions make the "horns" of the dilemma in every case treated or applying for treat ment Both questions are of the highest importance for the doctor and patient A doctor may know exactly what the trouble ishe may be the best of diagnosticians yet he may sadly deficient in his knowledge of the best remedies for the disease so broad and deep is the science of medicine! I believe there are hundreds thousands of patients treated an cured when the diagnosis was ab solutely a mistaken one. How Well, the skillful doctor treated the important SYMPTOMS. The best doctor strives to be equal to the answer to both of the questions at the head of this letter happy the physician that can, truth fully answer both. Suppose the doctor cannot accu rately diagnose the case yet be lieves he has done so; I'd trust that doctor anywhere. Why? Just be cause ha knows what remedy to apply for the symptoms. I would be perfectly willing for doctor to treat me who knows well the action of the medicine he uses he knows the cause that will bring about the effect A good physiolo gist is a good doctor; the man who knows healthy life is quick to rec ognize any departure from it. Phy siology is the science of life. I am not so devilish particular about a technical diagnosis; I do not care how many red cells a man has, just so I know he Is anaemic, Now laugh, if you want to! State Building Congress Meets at O.S.C. Apr. 28 The first annual convention the Oregon State Building congress has been called to meet on tne ure gon State college campus Friday, April 28, when tne ltj cnapters this organization In Oregon i combine business of the association with a conference on rural con struction. This organization embraces ev ery branch of the building industry from architects to lumbermen and contractors, and this is to be th first time that all have been assem bled In a statewide meeting for ecu slderation of mutual interests, ac cording to O. G. Hughson of Port land, fleldman for the association Cooperating in entertaining th 100 or more delegates expected wll. be the Corvallis chapter of the congress, the school of agriculture and the deparment of agricultural engineering. A "Many-Sided" Man Jesus was, as we say, "many sid ed," and every man sees the side of his nature which appeals most to himself. The doctor thinks of the great physician whose touch never failed, who by some mystery preceded modern science in its still imper fect knowledge of the relation of the spirit to health. The preacher studies the Seremon on the Mount and marvels that truths so pro found should be expressed in words so clear and simple. The agitator remembers only that he denounced the rich; and the communist that his disciples carried a comm n purse. Lawyers have written in praise of his pleading at his trial and the literary critics of every age have cheerfully acknowledged his mastery. I am not a doctor, or lawyer, or critic but an advertising man. As profession advertising is young; as a force it is as old as the world The first four words ever uttered, Let there be light," constitute its charter. All Nature is vibrant with its impuse. The brilliant plumage of the bird is color advertising ad dressed to the emotions of its mate. Plants deck themselves with blos soms, not for beauty only, but to attract the patronage of the bee and so by spreading pollen on its wings, to insure the perpetuation of their kind. The spacious firmament on high, And all the blue ethereal sky, And spangled Heavens a shining frame, Their great Original proclaim. It has been remarked that no astronomer can be an atheist," which is only another way of say ing that no man can look up at the first and greatest electric sign the evening stare and refuse to believe its message: "There is a Cause: A God." I propose in the next few articles to speak of the advertise ments of Jesus which have surviv ed for twenty centuries and are still the most potent influence in the world. Let us begin by asking why he was so successful in mastering pub lie attention and why, in contrast, his churches are less so? The an swer is twofold. In the first place, he recognized the basic principles that all good advertising is news. He was never trite or common place; he had no routine. If there had been newspapers in those days, no city editor could have said, No need to visit him today; he will be doing just what he did last Sun day." Reporters would have fol lowed him every single hour, for it was impossible to predict wnat he would say or do; every action and word were news. I repeat. Jesus had no routine. He was never trite or commonplace. Next Week: A News Maker. W. C. T. U. NOTES MART A. NOTSON. Reporter. It is amusing to note the numer is alibis the wets are putting forth. Although we have been told over and over that the restoration of beer would put the moonshiner and bootlegger out of business, now we are told that If a drunken driver is arrested, the drys will claim he was drunk on 3.2 beer, when in fact he will be found to be drunk on moonshine. In all probability theri will be drunken drivers who can justly claim that they became drunk from drinking moonshine, but It is also very probable that there will be drunken drivers who became drunk by drinking beer. No one with a memory long enough to recall the old saloon days takes any stock in the claim that 3.2 beer, which is the same as the old four percent by volume beer, is not in toxicating. Congress can no more by law change the intoxicating character of alcohol than it can re peal the law of gravity. Moreover, it is not the noticeably drunken driver who is the greatest menace to the traveling public. It is the driver whose muscular reac tion is slowed down slightly. As has been noted in this column siv eral times, it has been determined by eminent scientists that one glass of beer will slow down the muscular reaction from the normal one-fifth of a second to two-fifths of a sec ond, and a little more beer will still further alow down the muscular re action, yet a person whose muscu lar reaction is slowed down to two- fifths or three-fifths of a second would hot be noticeably intoxicat ed. With beer on sale everywhere, we may expect great Increase In the number of such drivers on the highways. New and severe penal ties for drunken driving will not reach this class of drivera Another amusing thing put out by the wets is that the brewers, ven dors and users of beer must be very careful to see that beer is used in moderation during the next f3w weeks because any excess may re sult in people refusing to vote for the repeal of the 18th amendment on July 21. They thus admit the con tention of the drys. It is also amusing to hear one of the leading exponents of the repeal of prohibition warning his vet brethren that the drys have the ad vantage in that their speakers are more able than the wet speakers. Also, that the drys always have plenty of money with which to fi nance their campaigns. The crowd that makes money out of the sale of liquor always has ample money for campaign purposes. They fight from a purely selfish standpoint, The drys, in many Instances, may take the view that it is good bus! ness for other lines of business to fight the liquor interests, but such business men do not put up the large sums of money which the wets put up for campaign purposes. Reforestation Work Starts in Oregon Soon A total of 1,100,000 forest tree seedlings will be planted this spring in Washington and Oregon by the U. S. forest service, forest officials of the Portland headquarters an nounce. This work will start about April 17, the seedlings now being shipped from the federal forest nursery in Wind River, Washington. About 150 local men will be used in this work for a period of about four weeks. All of the labor needed in this work has already been secured from the local unemployed. One million of these young Doug, las fir trees will be set out on Look out mountain, in the Yacolt burn, Clark county, Washington, within the Columbia national forest. T ic- area has been badly burned over and these seedlings will serve as new tree crop which is to be start ed on otherwise barren and unpro ductive land. The young trees will be trucked to Sunset Falls and thence packed from 2 to 5 miles to the areas to b planted. Three camps are to be set up, of about 45 men each, under the immediate direction of assistant forester George A. Bright of the Columbia forest In Oregon a total of 100,000 pon derosa pine seedlings will be plant ed on the Fish creek burn in east ern Douglas county, Umpqua na tional forest. The Fish creek work will start about April 18, and will be directed by assistant forest supervisor T. H. Burgess, Umpqua national forest. The seedlings will be trucked Steamboat springs, thence packed on horses to the planting sites ' Fish creek burn. About 20 local unemployed men will be used for about two weeks on this work. In addition to the above, the 1933 reforestation program includes some purely experimental planting or Digtree (Sequoia, Washington iana) and Japanese Cryptomerla on the Olympic forest in Washing ton and the Siuslaw forest, Oregon. The Olympic planting, one to one and a half acre plots each, will be done near Crescent lake, while the Siuslaw planting will bo In the Mt. Hebo country. These are purely test plantings, rorest otllcials state, to learn wheth er these species will do well In the relatively mild climates of the Olympic peninsula and the Oregon coast. Mr. and Mrs. John Kilkenny of r-enaieton are the parents of a son, John Michael, born at St. Anthonv'i hosplt il In that city Sunday. Young Mr. Kilkenny Is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Kilkenny of i-ieppner and Mr. and Mrs. James H. Sturgls of Pendleton, announces me Pendleton E. O. Nationalism . a kick-back A lot of the world's present trou bles are due to an excess of Nation alistic pride. Every nation Is try ing to be self-contained, and then grouching because other nations won't trade with It! Every dollar we spend for for eign goods helps some other nation to buy our goods. I believe In America first, but I do not believe in the stupid doctrine which would prohibit me from buying something I wanted because it was made abroad. Nearly a hundred years ago there was an agitation in this country similar to the "Buy American" movement of today. The party which advocated non-intercoui-se with foreign countries got the nick name of "Know-Nothings." Pres ently we will wake up again to the truth that every obstacle to inter national trae hurts everybody con cerned. Jews in Germany Jewish people all over the world are greatly disturbed over the pol icy or the new Nazi" government of Germany, under the practical dictatorship of Chancellor Hitler, in boycotting Jewish merchants, doc tors, teachers and others. I talked the other day with an In telligent young German Jew who had been getting letters from home about the situation in Germany. He was not at all worried. His people' had written him that they were not being annoyed and that the whole anti-Jewish agitation was directed at a Communist element, mainly composed of Jews. Another German, a non-Jew, said to me: "Here in America the Jews work like other people. In Ger many a lot of them don't do any thing but try to make trouble for the Government." But, of course, the German gov ernment has handled the situation stupidly, as it always handles any situation. More than a hundred years ago the great French his torian, Guizot, wrote: "There Is something in the German tempera ment which makes them utterly unable to understand the point of view of other peoples." those old-timars still working, He was sitting in a rocking-chair watching an automatic machine do almost exactly the same sort of work he used to do by hand, only many times as rapktly and accu rately. Every once In a while he would take a finished piece off the machine and put a new block of metal In its place. "They say the machines will throw everybody out of work," he said, "but I notice It still takes a human brain to tell the machines when to stop and start" That s something people overlook. Nobody has yet made a machine that can think, an nobody ever will. Telephone . . another step Everybody who has a telephone must have wished for some sort of an attachment which would answer automatically when the subscriber is away. Word comes from Vienna that just such a device has been invent ed and is In use there. When one is going to be out of telephone reach he sets the implement to the hour when he expects to be back, Then, if a call comes through in his absence the caller hears a gong ring to Indicate the hour when the person called will return. When he returns he finds a record of all calls. It Will be easy to develop that Idea into a phonograph record which would say "Mr. Smith has gone to Florida but will be back on the fifteenth," or whatever other message it is desired to convey. Something of that sort will come some day. I this notice, said date of first publica- !.. 4..HI 13 1933. EVA u. WAltflcn. c-Ma;uui, NOTICE TO CREDITORS. KTi,.a ia harnitv piven that the un- ersigned have been duly appointed by the County Court of the State of Ore gon lor Morrow uuiuy, j"11" fore of the last Will and Testament of Frank Gilliam, deceased, and all per sona having claims uga'nst the estat-i of said deceased are hereby required to pesent the same propeily '.erifted an re quired by law. to the undeMigned ex ecutors, at th3 Ip.w office of Jos. J. Ny:, it Hepnper, Oregon, win ui ai. uiuruw fom the date of this notice. Dated and first published this 13tn day of April. MS t TTTT1 E. E. GILLIAM, Executors. Typewriter . has birthday I have a vivid memory of the day when my mother received a letter from her younger brother in Buffa lo, with the words printed Instead of written with a pen. He said TTiis letter is written on a new kind of machine we have got In the office, called a typewriter." That was almost sixty years ago shout 1876, I should say. The type writer was only three or four years old then, for the sixtieth anniver sary of Its Invention by Christoph er Sholes has just been celebrated There was quite a celebration organized by the Young Women Christian Association. The type writer, they held, had emancipated women by making It possible for them to do work In offices, I don t think that is soundreasoningJIard ly anybody but men used type writers for at least twenty years after the machine was invented. The rush of women Into business began in the early 1890's, after the telephone people had broken down the barriers that kept women out of officea NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Nnttra la hereby eiven that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County administratrix of the estate ot William J. uavis, uetow ed. and that all persons having claims against the said estate must present said claims, duly verified according to law, to me at the office of my attorney. S. E. Notson, In Heppner, Oregon, with in six months from the date of first publication of this notice, said date of first publication being the 13th day of April, 1933. Administratrix. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice is hereby Klven that the un dersigned have been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon tor Morrow county executrixes oi me estate of Olive J. Campbell, deceased, and that persons having claims agalnut the said estate must present the same to us at the office of our attorney, S. E. Notson, in Heppner, Oregon, duly veri fied aocording to law, within six months irom tne date oi tne nrst pumication or this notice, which date of first publi cation in March 30. 1933. leala anderson, lula Mccarty. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. 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 of the last Will and Testament of Jamos G. Doherty, deceased, and all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased, are hereby required to present the same to the undersigned, verified as requlrd by law, at the law office of Jos. J. Nys, at Heppner, Ore gon, within six months from the date hereof. Dated and first published this 2nd day of March, 1933. CATHERINE DOHERTY. Exeeutrlx. Professional Cards ON OREGON FARMS Marketing Costs Reduced Roseburg A plan to reduce mar keting costs in the Northwestern Cooperative Turkey Growers asso ciation by 25 per cent for the com ing year was presented to the. re gional meeting of the association by J. C. Leedy, Douglas county agent and a member of the market ing committee. The plan was unan imously adopted. The association also is negotiating with the rail roads for a rate reduction of one third in transcontinental shipments and a reduction in rates for district shipments as well. Machines can't think When these hard times are over and that won't be long now we shall not go backward but forward And one thing we may look for Is more and more perfection of ma chines to do our work for us. When I was a boy I used to ad mire the muscular development of the men who worked in my uncle's machine shop. Not long ago I vis ited the same plant, now tremend ously changed, and found one of For Rent 6-room furnished resi dence; barn, pasture, chicken house, garden. Call 6F32, or write Mrs. George Moore, Echo, Ore. 4-5 The Gazette Times' Printing Ser vice Is complete. Try it NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County executrix of the estate of O, H. Warner, deceased, and that all persons having claims against the said estate must present the same, duly verified according to law, to me at the office of my attorney, S. E. Notson, in Heppner, Oregon, within six months from the date of first publication of Emergency Hay Crops Planted Redmond Spring-sown vetch anil oats as an emergency hay crop in central Oregon has come Into fa vor this year as a result of the most severe freezeout of alfalfa and oth er forage crops this section has ex perienced in many years. County Agent Hagglund has also recom mended interplanting oats In some badly thinned alfalfa stands, and the production of more root crops for feed, Including carrots and Bortfleld turnips. The winter also damaged some new seedings of rsd and alsike clover. Narclssa Berries to be Tried Cushman The new Narcissa strawberry will be given a trial in western Lane county this year by C. C. Cushman and W. C. Walte of this section who have recently re ceived a shipment of 100 plants from County Agent Fletcher. The plants were grown on Ben David sons' place near Eugene where a start had been obtained direct from the Oregon Experiment station. Of the various sorts grown on the Da vidson place, the Narclssa appears to have suffered the least injury from, winter killing. Baker Egg Co-op. Forming Bakfr An organization commit tee of the Baker County Egg Pro ducers association is now working out a plan for forming a local co operative egg marketing assoclt tion The plan is to obtain at least a 50 per cent signup of the leading egg producers in the county and then market the eggs of the mem bers under a trade name. O.S.C. STUDENT WINS HONOK. One of three national awards In an annual landscape design con tost has just been won by Howard Buford, a senior in landscape archi tecture at Oregon State college. This is the fourth successive year that O. S. C. students have placed In this national competition In which solutions of design problems are submitted by the leading col leges and universities In the entire country. No other Institution in the west has equaled this record, Vernor Sackett, son-'ln-law of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Notson of this city received news of the death of his mother at McMinnvllle Sunday. Mr. Sackett, who makes his home at Salem, lis well known In Heppner, and has the sympathy of many friends here In his bereavement THOMSON BROS. DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE TEMPTING FOODS - What yon save by paying lowest prices without quality and what yon save by baying at an Affiliated Buyers' store at these prices Is the difference between "Fenny Wise and Found Foolish." SATURDAY, April 22 MONDAY, April 24 M. J.B. Tillamook Loaf Cheese The Only Safety Sealed Coffee PflTT'Niri on 1-LB. CAN 31c ruuiNiJ 20c 3-LB. CAN 87c SALT Diamond Crystal Shaker. Seasons TREE TEA f0d better De00" ' naked Blended to America's Taste. Vi-lb. PACKAGE 8c Orange Pekoe 32c PEANUT BUTTER ireen tsc Hooays s-ib. jar. - "" Everybody Prefers It I SWANSDOWN JAR 25c Insures your cakes against failure. CORNED BEEF PACKAGE 25c CAN Derby Bran4 r' 1(J GRAPE FRUIT SARDINES 3's Gold Bar Brand OAKXIllirjO CAN 14c 3p0jf Brand' """"""Sc W'TVjrWtoBUr Brand SANKA COFFEE CAN 16c Drlnk aAtAln& - CAN 48c a's Gold Bar Brand CORN STARCH CAN 16c PACKAGE B"aa. 6c r.A5oi?oUB?and Th SNOWDRIFT 2 FOR 25c CAN ... 83c W waVB?a?a MAYONNAISE CAN 10c Durke Beo"jJ". Jf Better. OYSTFRS JAR 31c V. Otter Brand SANI-FLUSH CAN 10c A lona"-landled bowl brush free with each purchase. COOKIES CAN 25c Fnitrer-ette. A Sunshine Prodnot I TTV TTkTf PT ciAiii in Nutritive Vs. ne. Jb. Tin. LiUA. J. UlLlti 1 BUAr POUND 15c 3 BARS 23c BAKER'S COCOA WESSON OIL "High Above Government Btanards An Hgg plus Wesson equals Mayoa- CAN 10c r-a xt " Mm "" !-o H-0 OATS N Tpp, 53C 20-os... Kiddles Save the tops and At 1 Llift get a cowboy suit Borne Beanty 2 Packages for 26c 4 LBS 15c DOG FOOD ORANGES Victory Brand. The best for all dogs Southern Navels, Wrapped, 853 slie 3 FOR 23c 2 DOZEN 27c J. 0. TURNER Attorney at Law - Phone ITS Humphreys Building HEPPNER, ORE. A. B. GRAY, M. D. PHYSICIAN SUBOEOsT Phone 323 Heppner Hote Building Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted. WM. BROOKIIOUSER PAINTING P APE II KAN (JUS O INTEBIOB DXCOHATIlfO Leave orders at Peoples Hardware Company DR. J. H. McCRADY DENTIST X-Bay Diagnosis Oilman BuUdlng Heppner, Oregon Frank A. McMenamin LAWTE 806 Guardian Building Residence, GArfleld 1948 Business Phone Atwater 1848 PORTLAND, OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SUBOEON Trained Nurse Assistant Office In Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon P. W. MAHONEY ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building Heppner, Oregon S. E. NOTSON ATTOBNET AT LAW Offloe In L O. O. F. BuUdlng Heppner, Oregon AUCTIONEER Farm and Personal Uroperty Bale A Specialty. O. la. BENNETT "Th Man Who Talks to Beat the Band" 8329 72nd Ave., S. E Portland, Ore. Phone Sunset 8461 J. 0. PETERSON Latest Jewelry and Gift Goods Watches - Clocks - Diamonds Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon F. W. TURNER & CO. FIBS, AUTO AND LIFE INSURANCE Old Lin Companies, Beal Estate. Heppner, Oregon JOS. J. NYS ATTONEY-AT-LAW Roberts Building, Willow Street Heppner, Sregon