Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, May 04, 1933, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1933.
(&VLZttti ultmrg
THE HEPPNER GAZETTE.
Established March SO. 1883;
THE HEPPNER TIMES,
Established November 18, 1S97;
CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15, 1812.
Published every Thursday morning by
TAWTEB and EPENCEB CRAWFORD
and entered at the Post Office at Hepp
ner, Oregon, aa secona-ciass maimer.
ADVEBTXSIH KATES GIVES OH
APPLICATION.
SUBSCRIPTION KATES:
One Year 12-00
Six Months 1-gO
ThnM Unnthl .10
Klnele CoDies - .05
Official Paper for Morrow County
WHERE DO WE GO FROM
HEBE?
WE CONFESS to a good deal of
trouble in figuring out just
what direction the Ship of State is
heading these days. We have a
great deal of confidence in the pilot,
who has demonstrated that he un
derstands the art of navigation, but
we would like a little more infor
mation about the port toward which
he is steering.
Like almost everybody else, we
are thoroughly in accord with the
effort to remedy the outstanding
evils of our economic situation, so
far as that can be done by Govern
mental action. We applaud Mr.
Roosevelt's vigorous attack upon
the problems which confronted him
when he took office. We agree that
the banking situation was thor
oughly bad and that it need3 com
plete overhauling and much tighter
control, in the interest of deposit
ors. We admit that Governmental
expenses needed paring and are
cheered by the news that the new
Administration has cut a thousand
million dollars off the budget. We
would be the last to quarrel with
any intelligent effort to relieve far
mers of their distress, to lighten the
load upon mortgage debtors, to put
men back to work in industry, to
keep the railroads running and the
insurance companies out of bank
ruptcy. We are somewhat concerned,
however, as to the means proposed
to bring these things about We
do not see how it is going to be pos
sible for the Federal Government,
for example, to go into vast schemes
of reclamation, to make huge
grants of funds for doles to the out
of work, to spend money on great
programs of public works, without
increasing, instead of lightening,
the burden upon the taxpayers. We
do not think the- Administration
contemplates anything so foolish as
to use the revived credit of the Gov
ernment, brought about by the bal
ancing of the budget, as a means of
plunging the nation still deeper in
to debt. But we hardly see how
the big enterprises which we read
about in the dispatches from Wash
ington can be undertaken without
doing just that.
We have always regarded it as
the sound American principle that
Sunday School
L sson n,
By Rev. Charles E. Dunn, S, D.
Jesus Faces the Cross.
Lesson for May 7th.
Scripture. Mark 10:32-52.
Golden Text: Luke 9:51.
The lesson begins with a very
striking picture. Jesus and His
disciples were on their way to Je
rusalem. For some reason not stat
ed the Master was walking along,
ahead of the others. Perhaps, lost
in thought, He had unconsciously
quickened His pace. At any rate,
there must have been some strange
expression upon His face, and
something unusual about His man
ner. For Mark tells us that the dis
ciples were both astonished and
frightened. Apparently they had
never seen Him look and act in
such a way before.
Our Golden Text helps us to ap
preciate the significance of this
scene. "He proceeded with fixed
purpose towards Jerusalem." The
crucifixion, at once shameful and
triumphant, drew him forward by
an irresistible Impulse.
But note that He accepted the
dire fate awaiting Him voluntarily.
He was not forced into the shame
of a bitter execution against His
will, but deliberately chose the
Way of Calvary. As Paul says, He
"gave Himself for our sins."
Liszt, the composer, once spoke
of the "madness and the exultation
of the Cross." As we think of the
fickle crowd that hailed Jesus on
Palm Sunday, only to crucify Him
on Good Friday, we are reminded
of the collective insanity of man.
At the same time, as we think of
Jesus soon to die, we feel an un
mistakable note of triumph. Here
is a matchless Master so brave, so
resolute, that He does not shrink
the Cross.
The disciples naturally did not
understand the necessity of th'.
Cross. They were thinking in terms
of wordly fame and success. James
end John, in our lesson, pleaded for
favored positions in the glorious
new Age Christ was to introduce.
And the Master had to make it clear
to them that they must bo ready
to drink His bitter cup, and be bap
tized with His baptism of fire. And
He proclaimed that sovereign truth
that the golden Way of Life is not
the path of lordship and authority
but of humble ministry in the spirit
of the Son of man, a suffering servant.
Government should content itself
with the protection of the weak and
incompetent against exploitation by
the strong and unscrupulous, and
not undertake to guarantee to any
man or interest anything more than
a square deal. We do not think the
United States has reached the stage
where only a paternalistic Federal
power can save us from the conse
quences of our own folly, but we
cannot escape reading that implica
tion into some or the projects now
under consideration in Washington
SHIRTS STIFFED AND
OTHERWISE.
WE ARE hearing a lot these days
about the "Brown Shirts"
of Germany. Hitler's followers, the
"Nazis," adopted the brown shirt
as an emblem, just as a dozen yeais
ago Mussolini's Fascists made the
black shirt compulsory for all mem
bers of the party.
We read a whie back of the Ital
ian revolutionist. Garibaldi, whose
armies were distinguished by wear
ing red shirts. And not long back
somebody tried to start a political
movement in America, of which the
outward symbol was to wear a
green shirt.
Shirts, somehow, seem to have
considerable influence in human af
fairs. The principal difference be
tween the culture of Europe and
that of the Far East Is in the way
of wearing the shirt; that is the
main outward difference, which may
have deep inner significance. For
the Chinese and their neighbors
wear their shirts outside of their
trousers while the European tucks
his inside. An old saying of years
ago was to the effect that the Rus
sians could never become Euro
peans until they tucked their shirts
in; so long as they wore the shiit
outside they were Asiatics.
One thing about shirts we have
never quite understood, and that is
why shirt-tails have to be as long
as they are, when worn by people
who tuck the most of the garment
inside their pants. Someone once
said that if three inches could be
added to every Chinaman's shirt-
tail it would send the price of cot
ton up several cents a pound. May
be some consideration of economics
govern the standard length of the
American shirt-tail. We don't
know.
Another variety of shirts with
which we have had a considerable
experience in this country is the
stuffed shirt. One of the truths
which we have come :o realize,
painfully, in these latter years, is
that a lot of the wise men, proph
ets and self-appointed leaders to
whom we looked for advice and
counsel didn't have anything inside
their shirts but hay, and not always
even that. Some of those stuffed
shirts turned out to be mere wind
bags, which collapsed at the first
puncture.
We don t think America Is ready
for a Brown Shirt or a Black Shirt
or a Green Shirt or a Pink Shirt
movement, but we think it would
be well to keep a close eye on a lot
of white shirts who are trying to
get their grip on our affairs, to
make sure that they, like their dis
credited predecessors, are not mere
ly Stuffed Shirts.
k GPOCTTOT
JOHN JOSEPH QAINS,M.D
For the Middle Aged
You get to thinking about what
you OUHT to weigh I know you
do, for I do it myself.
Well, figure your height in inches
you men of five feet ten. Yoa
are seventy inches high. Add 100
to the number of inches for the
weight, 170, if you are middle-aged
or past This rule does not apply
to young adults and children.
Remember, each individual has
his peculiarities, which he can by
no means escape. It is just as "nat
ural" for some men and women to
be spare, as it is for others to he
a little stout. I had a most re
fined, intelligent lady of forty-five,
who had worked herself almost in
to a frenzy because she held a
weight of 145 steadily. Her figure
was perfect; yet she was contin
ually in anticipation of "obesity1"
The big boy of fifty, with the pon
derous "bay-window," must lay the
blame on himself alone. He ac
quired the deformity by overeating
and lack of exercise. It will take
him a long time to correct the ef
fects of his truancy, if he ever does
It. But he still has room to repent
of his sins to get out of that swiv-el-chair
get out of doors at every
opportunity and STOP EATING
TOO MUCH.
There's the rub, however. He
still lingers with the lucious viands
with the heavy sweetening. Well,
if you'd rather have that belly, keep
on as you've been doing, I'm no
traffic cop, to stop you for travel
ing on the wrong side of the road!
Don't forget though, that the pre
vention of an evil is many times
safer than a belated attempt at
cure; be sure your (dietetic) sins
will track you down.
Corn to be Grown In Polk County
Dallas Corn will probably prove
to be one of the best crops in Polk
county this year, due to the short
age of hay and pasture. It will be
used for green feed for stock, for
filling silos and for ear or shelled
corn feed, J. R. Beck, county ag
ent, recommends Minnesota 13 or
Golden Glow as the two best va
rieties, with McKay Yellow Dent
ranking third best. The seed sup
ply of the latter variety is said to
be limited, however.
Groundhogs Unusually Numerous
Ontario Farmers of the Iron
side district in Malheur county
have organized a poisoning cam
paign to control the groundhogs,
which have appeared in unsual
numbers this spring. Ordinary
poisoned oats used for squirrels has
proved to be most efficient weapon
for this purpose.
. FRAN KPARK C R, 1
II STOCKBRIPgg II
Taxes . . . easiest to pay
There is only one easy way to
pay taxes. That is to pay them as
a part of the purchase price of
something the taxpayer wants.
Uncle Sam's latest tax, that on
beer, is an example. Nobody pays
It who doesn't want beer, and no
body who wants beer objects to
paying a price which includes the
tax, amounting to about one cent
for an ordinary glass. The cigar
ette tax is another that is not pain
ful. It comes to six cents on each
package of twenty cigarettes. Last
year the Government's income from
cigarette taxes was over three hun
dred million dollars.
In Italy last Fall I learned that
every sign, poster or public noti e
of any kind has to pay a tax. Even
the card over the bell-button in my
hotel bedroom telling me to ring
once for the porter, twice for the
chambermaid and three times for
a waiter, had a revenue stamp stuck
on it.
Stamp taxes have never been used
in America as freely as elsewhere.
They are the easiest taxes to collect
as well as to pay.
Change mighty slow
Miss Frances Perkins, Secretary
of Labor, said the other day that
more than two thousand persons
had written with elaborate schemes
to change the whole social system.
Probably never before have so many
folk all over the world be busy
making plans to remodel the world.
Nothing is easier than to make an
ideal plan; nothing is harder than
to induce human beings to follow
a plan.
It takes from three to a thousand
generations to change the habits of
a people. What is needed now is
something that will work next
month, not next century. It would
be a good plan, for example, if the
relations of industry and agricul
ture could be readjusted so that
every factory worker would have
a piece of land to fall back on, but
the present generation of factory
workers doesn't know how to live
on the land.
The last thing Americans want,
it seems to me, is to be compelled
by law to do anything to which they
are not naturally inclined. I don't
think highly of any scheme of so
cial reform which is not the product
of the evolutionary interplay of nat
ural forces.
Curtiss
late honor
Glenn Curtiss died three years
ago, but the War Department he
just awarded hiimthe Distinguished
Service Cross, which was given to
his mother as a memento always to
be cherished of her brilliant and
beloved son.
I knew Glenn Curtiss intimately,
from the days when he was a bicy
cle-racing kid .trying to ride faster
than anybody else. When he was
beaten at the New York State Fair
he resolved to make a bicycle which
would go faster than anybody has
ever gone. The first motorcycle
grew out of that determination, and
Glenn Curtiss was the first man
ever to travel at a speed of more
than 150 miles an hour.
His most famous achievement,
however, was making the air
plane practical. The Wright broth
ers were the first to fly, but Curtiss
was the first to build a plane that
anybody could fly. He did more for
the development of aviation and
taught more men to fly than any
body else ever did
I'm glad his mother has his Dis
tinguished Service Cross,
Horses . . man's medicine
When the wild Mongols from the
high plateaus of Asia swept around
the Black Sea, a thousand or more
years before Christ, they Intro
duced the horse to Europe. The
Greeks had never seen men on
horses, and believed, many of them.
mat man ana norse were one,
Hence the myth of the Centaur, half
norse, half man.
In another thousand years the
horse had become the indispensable
reliance of travelers and explorers
all over the world. A couple of
uiousand years later the automo'
bile was invented and folk who
thought they were wise said the day
or tne norse was over.
Mora people are riding horses to
day than ever before. Good horses
bring higher prices than for many
years. City folk are learning anew
the old truth that "the best medi
cine for the Inside of a man is the
outside of a horse," and the parks
are filled with riders daily, rain or
shine. The best riders In the world
today are still the Mongols, but the
best horses are bred In America and
Western Europe. The wild mus
tangs and bronchos of our Western
plains are descendants of the
horses brought by the Spanish Con
qulstadores; America never had
horses until after 1492.
Fingerprints . . . practical
"Practical" people laughed at Joe
Faurot when, thirty years ago, h?
insisted that the fingerprints of ev
ery captured crook should be re
corded. Today identification by
fingerprints is relied upon in every
police department in the world,
and the Department of Justice in
Washington maintains an interna
tional clearing-house of fingerprints
with more than two million records.
No two persons have ever been
found whose fingerprints were
alike.
Joe Faurot retired from the po-
lice department seven years ago
and is trying to extend the use A
fingerprint identification In other
fields. He has lately invented a
method of fingerprinting which does
not soil'the fingers, as the old print
ers' ink system did. He thinks the
time will come when everybody's
fingerprints will be recorded from
birth, so nobody can ever pose as
somebody else and there will be no
doubt of anybody's identity.
W. C. T. U. NOTES
MARY A. NOTSON. Reporter.
Walter M. Coleman in his book,
"Human Biology," says; "The long
and sad experience of the race with
alcohol proves that the attempt to
adapt the body to its use should be
given up.
Michael F. Guyer, in his book,
"Being Well-toom;' says: "Most
investigators feel that there are
too many criminal, imbecile, insane,
and unhealthy persons among the
offspring of drunkards to dismiss
the matter as a coincidence.
"I stand for the law that has
proved a blessing for one station in
life and would be an equal bless
ing to those enjoying greater priv
ileges in this world if they would
give the law a fair chance. Mrs,
Thomas A. Edison.
The author of the beer bill which
failed to pass at the recent session
of the legislature says that wo
should have the Quebec system of
liquor control. He thinks that we
would not need a sales tax in Ore
gon if we had the Quebec system.
He points out that the population
of Quebec, 1,194,745, is only slight
ly larger than that of Oregon. In
1929, the people of Quebec paid in
to the treasury or the province in
the purchase of liquors more than
$9,000,000. Think of asking the
poor fellows with an appetite for
liquor to pay such a sum in Ore
gon in order to reduce the taxes of
the rest of us. If the State of Ore
gon collected any such sum from
the drinking portion of its popula
tion, it would mean that many a
family would be without the com
mon necessities of life; that many
women would again bend over the
wash-tub as in the days of the sa
loon; that money which should go
through the hands of merchants,
dairymen, auto dealers, confection
ers, picture show proprietors, and
others in legitimate business would
go through the hands of the liquor
dealers to enable them to collect
for the state this revenue. If Ore
gon must debauch its citizens and
lay a heavy burden upon women
and little children in order to low
er its tax rate, let us admit that
we have failed in all that makes a
people great.
Government by the people will
fail and vanish off the face of the
earth unless the people adopt and
religiously observe the principle
that "so long as a law is a law it
should be observed and enforced."
To repeal a law because "It can not
be enforced," is to admit that gov
ernment by the people is a failure.
Prohibition is not on trial, as many
believe and assert, but the citizen
ship of this country is on trial.
How do you measure up as a citi
zen, as a patriot, as a believer in
the principle of government by the
people? Do you believe that laws
should be repealed at the behest of
outlaws? Our heritage cost moun
tains of treasure and rivers of
blood. Shall we sell our birthright
for a mess of pottage?
Japanese Distinguish
Sex in Day-Old Chicks
The time is not for distant when
a poultryman desiring to raise 1000
pullets will order just enough more
baby chicks to care for the ordin
ary mortality, rather than ordering
twice as many knowing half of
them will be cockerels. In fact that
Is the condition in Japan now, and
two Japanese experts on sex deter
mination in baby chicks recently
visited Oregon State college and
explained the method to poultry
specialists and Oregon hatchery
men assembled there.
Before any ambitious hatchery-
man hurries to Corvallis to find out
all about this process, let it be said
that being shown how it is done,
and doing it with a reasonable de
gree of accuracy, are two different
things something like being shown
how to play a piano. Skill and
practice are the prime essentials,
judging from the demonstration.
The method was shown to inter
ested Oregonians by Hikosaburn
Yogo, a trained expert In this work,
whose tour of America at present
Is sponsored by the Japanese Poul
try association and is under the
leadership of Tokuzo Yamaguch,
editor of the Japanese Poultry
Journal.
In the demonstration at Corvallic,
arranged by A. G. Lunn, head of
the poultry department, Yogo took
100 day-old chicks from a local
hatchery and quickly separated
them Into two groups of 54 cock
erels and 46 pullets, placing them
at the rate of about 17 a minute.
Not content to let time reveal tho
percentage of accuracy, the group
of cockerels were all killed and ex
amined, post mortems reveal'ng
that Yogo was 100 per cent correct
as far as that group was concerned.
Naturally the pullets were left to
grow.
The method is based on a hasty
but accurate manipulation and ex
amination of the vent of the chick.
A slight difference always exists
between the male and female, and
this is detected by these trained ex
perts. Japanese hatcherymen now
commonly guarantee 90 per cent
pullets in their sales, the visitors
said. Unseparated chicks there soil
for only half price.
Bend Ladak alfalfa in Daschutos
county during the past winter
proved its claims to winter hardi
ness, and thus still further increas
ed Its popularity in this section, ac
cording to Gug Hagglund, county
agent He cites an Instance of one
farm where common and ladak al
falfa were planted in adjoining
fields last summer. The common
variety this spring was practically
a total loss, while close examina
tion failed to show even one winter
killed plant in the ladak field.
Bruce Barton
writes of
"The Master Executive"
Supplying- a week-to-week Inspiration
for the heary-burdened who will find
very human trial paralleled In the ex
perience of "The Man Nobody Xnowi"
HOLDING PAGE ONE
Matthew's luncheon for Jesus
furnished the third "news" sensa
tion. It was not at all the kind of
affair which a religious teacher
would be expected to approve. De
cidedly it was good-natured and
noisy.
No theological test was applied
in limiting the invitation No one
stood at the entrance to demand
"What is your belief regarding the
birth of Jesus," Or, "Have you or
have you not been baptized" The
doors were flung wide, and, along
with the disciples and the respect
able folks, a swarm of publicans
and sinners trooped in.
"Outrageous," grumbled the wor
thy folk. "Surely if this teacher
had any moral standards he never
would eat with such rabble."
They were shocked; but he was
not. That he had condemned him
self according to their formula
worried him not a whit His liking
for folks overran all social boun
daries; he just could not seem to
remember that some people are
nice people, proper people, and
some are not
"Come, come," he exclaimed to
the Pharisees, "won't you ever get
over nagging at me because I eat
with these outsiders? Who needs
the doctor most they that are well
or they that are sick?
"And here's another thing to
think about," he added: "You lay
so much stress on forms and creeds
and occasions do you suppose God
cares for all that? What do you
think he meant when he said: 'I
will 'have mercy and not sacrifice?'
Take that home and puzzle over it"
'"Defends publicans and sinners
. . . Jesus of Nazareth Welcomes
Them at Lunch . . , Rebukes Prom
inent Pharisees . . . "Creeds Unim
portant," He Says. "God Wants
Mercy Not Sacrifice"
A fourth story for page one. You
may be sure it was carried into hun
dreds of homes during the next few
weeks, and formed the basis for
many a long evening's discussion.
As the meal drew to its close
there came a dramatic interruption
a ruler of the city made his way
slowly to the head of the table and
stood silent, bowed by the terrible
weight of his grief. That mornirg
he had sat at his daughter's bed
side, clasping her frail white hand
in his, watching the flutter of. the
pulse, trying by the force of his
longing to hold that little life bai-k
from the precipice. And at last the
doctors had told him that it was
useless any more to hope. So he
had come, this ruler, to the strange
young man whose deeds of healing
were the sensation of the day.
Was it too late? The ruler had
thought so when he entered the
door; but as he stood in that splen
did presence a new thrilling convic
tion gripped him:
Master, my daughter is even
now dead," he exclaimed, "but come
THOMSON BROS.
DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE
THERE IS A REASON
The person who shops regularly at an Affiliated Bayers store WILL save.
Ton may wonder why these Independent merchants can sell good mer.
chandlse at such low prices. He oan do It because he is a member of the
largest buying organization in the Northwest, Oronp baying plus low
overhead . . . that's the answer.
SATURDAY, May 6th MONDAY, May 8th
White Laundry Soap SNOWDRIFT
" B"8 : 28c Can " 45c
CHICKEN FEED BAKER BRAND
10-Lb. Sack 20c Premium Chocolate
Tailored to Fit the Recipe
Mi-lb. Cakes
SEED POTATOES Cake 22c
NETTED GEM
1 00 T ha 1 W MEC-K HONEY
1UU LbS GRAHAM CRACKERS
. A Sunshine Baker's Product
EXFOBT BRAND 2-lb. Caddie
Alaska Pink Salmon Caddie 29c
l's Tall
a11 AMBASSADOR BRAND
TOILET TISSUE
H-D BRAND 750-sheet
PEANUT BUTTER 5 Rons for 24c
16-oz. Jar '
Jar 11c
GOLDEN WEST
COFFEE
SHYER BAR BRAND 1-lb. Vacuum Can
Yellow Cling or Sliced Can 32c
PEACHES
In Syrup. 2V4'S Tin WHITE KINO
2 Cans for 27c Granulated Soap
Large Size
EMIGRANT BRAND
APRICOTS
In Syrup. 216's Tin
2 Cans for 29c
JELLO
Lemon, Orange, Raspberry, Straw
berry, Cherry or Lime
3 Packages for 22c
FRESH FRUIT and VEGETABLE SPECIALS
APPLES, Winesaps Box 50c
LETTUCE, California, large head Each 6c
and lay your hand on her and ahe
will live.'
Jesus rose and went with him.
Next Week: Service Not Sermons.
For Sale or will trade for wheat,
forty ewes. A. C. Swarner, ier
miston, Oregon. '7P
NOTICE OF SALE OF ANIMAL
By virtue of the laws of the State
of Oregon, notice is hereby given
that I have taken up at my place
In Morrow county, Oregon, 4 miles
southwest of Hardman in Rood
canyon, the hereinafter described
animal And that I will on Satur
day, May 13, 1933, at the hour of
Z O ClOCK p. in., ai "
th said animal to the highest bU-
der for cash in hand, unless the
earn a shall have been redeemed by
the owner thereof. Said animal is
ripK-.Mhed as follows:
1 roan steer, muley, coming 2 or
3 years old; no visible brand, under
bit and under slope on rigni ear.
HERMAN NEILSON,
9-llp Hardman, Oregon.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE.
Notice Is hereby given that by virtue
of an Execution issued uuj i -"
-.. f th Mtate of Oregon for
Morrow County, oaiea P"'
sixth 1933. in that certain suit wherein
The Federal Land BanK oi apouuie,
corporation, as plaintiff, recovered t
Judgment against the defendants. Wil
liam Huebner, a widower, L. W. Tall
madge, and T. M. Keller on the twenty
fifth day of April, 1933, which judg
ment was for the following sums, to-
$168.00, with interest at the rate of 8
per cent per annum from April 5, 19dl:
$168 00. with interest at the rate of 8
per cent per annum from October 5,
1931; $168.00, with interest at the rate
nf a ntxr i-dni rmr Annum from April 6.
1932; $168 00, with interest at the rate
of 8 per cent per annum from October
5, 1932; $387178 with Interest at the
rate of 6 per cent per annum from
October 5. 1932; $194.91. with interest
at the rate of 8 per cent per annum
frnm Nnveinhor K J932: $34 50. abstract
charge, paid on July 22, 1932; and the
further sum of $365.00, attorney's fee
in this suit, and the further sum of
38 K rosin and disbursements, and
decree of foreclosure against the do
fendants, William Huebner, a widower
L. W. Tallmadge, B. P. Doherty, same
nerann as B. p. Dauenertv. ana cam
erlne Dohertv. husband and wife; F.
O l.vnch: T. M Keller. F. B. Nick
son, aoing Dusmess unner rne acsumeu
name or Morrow county ADstract com
pany, Lillian Gluth and Emery R.
Gluth, wife and husband. C. R. Wal
strom. Fred Lehnherr and Marie Lehn
herr, husband and wife; and Hardman
national f arm L,oan Association, a cor
poration, I will, on the 26th day of May,
1933. at the hour of ten o'clock A. M.
of said day. at the front door of the
countv court house in HeDDner. Mor
row County. State of Oregon, offer for
sale and sell to the hignest bidder tor
cash in hand all the following described
real property In Morrow County, State
of Oregon, to-wit:
The South half of the South Half
of Section Fifteen, the South Half
of the Northeast Quarter and the
North Half of the Southeast Quar
ter of Section Twenty-two, in town
ship One North of Range Twenty
six, East of the Willamette Merid
ian. Morrow County, State of Ore
gon.
Tog
ether with all and singular the
tenements, hereditaments and ap
purtenances thereunto belonging or
in anywise appertaining.
or so much of said real
Dronertv ai
may be necessary to satisfy the plain
tiffs' judgments, costs, attorney's fee
and accruing costs of sale.
c. J. u. BAUMAN,
Sheriff of Morrow County, State of
Oregon.
Date of first publication, April 27th
1933.
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
Package 34c
CLOROX
Quarts
Bottle '19c
WESSON OIL
-allon Size
Can 53c
this gg -
ing Apn
EVA L
WARNER, Executrix.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Nntir lii harebv given that the un-
eraigned have been duly appointed by
the County Court of the State of Ore
gon for Morrow County, joint Execu
tors of the last Will and Testament of
Frank uiinam, aeceasea, ana an per
wru having claims iigalnst the estat-i of
said deceased are hereby required o
pesent the same propel ly verified as re
quired by law, to the undersigned ex
ecutors, at th3 lew cilice of Jos. J. Nys.
epnper, uregon, wiinn .iix moi ilia
fom the date of this notice.
Dated and first published this 13th
day of April 1933. -..
JAilX 11 Li. VJTlIUXAJILt
E. E. GILLIAM,
Executors.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice la hereby given that the un
dersigned has been appointed by the
Countv Court of the
tela
State of Oregon
for Morrow County administratrix of
the estate of William J. Davis, deceas
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 Blx montns irom tne date oi nrst
ubllcation of this notice, said date of
irst publication being the 13th dav of
April, 1933.
Administratrix.
NOTICE OF SALE OF COUNTY
LAND.
BY VIRTUE OF AN ORDER of the
County Court, dated April 26th, 1933, I
am authorzied and directed to sell at
ubltc auction, as provided by law, the
ollowing described real property, at
not less than the minimum price herein
set forth and upon the following terms
as set out after each tract, to-wit:
The Ntt SE4 of Section 25. Town
ship 6 North, Range 26 E. W. M., for
tne minimum price oi tzu.uu.
The SE& 8W of Section 17. Town
ship 4 North, Range 25 E. W. M., tor
the minimum price of $40.00.
The NW!i of Section 30, Township 2
North, Range 25, E. W. M., and the
SE'i of Section 24, Township 2 North.
fiange i a. w. m., tne minimum
price to be at least $1.00 per acre, of
which $.25 per acre shall be cash and
the balance In 10 equal yearly pay
ments at 6 per cent interest per annum
on the deferred payments, the purchas
er to pay all taxes levied upon said
uruperiy curing tne term oi the con
tract of sale.
THEREFORE, I will, on the 27th day
f May. 1933. at the hour of 2 -no P m
at the front door of the Court House
In Heppner, Oregon, sell said property
to the highest and best bidder.
t . C. J. D. BAUMAN,
Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon.
Professional Cards
J. 0. TURNER
Attorney at Law
Phone 173
Humphreys Building
HEPPNHR, ORB.
A. B. GRAY, M. D.
PHYSICIAN k SUSOBON
Phone 323
Heppner Hotel Building
Eyu Tested and OUasea Fitted.
WM. BROOKHOUSER
PAXNTXHO FAPERHANOINa
INTERIOR DECORATING.
Leave orders at Peoples Hardware
Company
DR. J. H. McCRADY
DENTIST
X-Ry Diagnosis
Oilman Building
Heppner, Oregon
Frank A. McMenamin
LAWYER
806 Guardian Building
Residence. GArfleld 1949
Business Phone Atwater 1348
PORTLAND OREGON
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Trained None Assistant
Office in Masonlo Building
Heppner, Oregon
P. W. MAHONEY
ATTORNEY AT LAW
First National Bank Building
Heppner, Oregon
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Office In L O. 0. F. Building
Heppner, Oregoa
AUCTIONEER
Farm and Personal Uroperty Sales
A Specialty.
O. L. BENNETT
"The Man Who Talks to Beat
. . tne Band"
5229 72nd Ave., S. E., Portland, Ore.
Phone Sunset S4fil
J. 0. PETERSON
Latest Jewelry and Gift Goods
Watches - Clocks - Diamonds
Expert Watch and Jewelry
Repairing
Heppner, Oregon
F. W. TURNER & CO.
FIRE, ATTO AND LITE
INSURANCE
Old Line Companies. Real Batata.
Heppner, Oregon
JOS. J. NYS
ATTONEY.AT-XiAW
Robert Building, Willow Street
Heppner, Oregon