Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, May 25, 1933, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1933.
3?rjipnrr
THE HEPPNER GAZETTE,
Established March 30, 1883;
THE KiSPPNER TIMES.
Established November 18, 1897;
CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15, 1912.
Published every Thursday morning by
VAWTEB and SPUN CUB CRAWFORD
and entered at the Post Office at Hepp-
ner, Oregon, as second-class matter.
ADVERTISES KATES GIVEN OH
APPLICATION.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Tear $2.00
Six Months LOO
Three Months .75
Single Copies - .05
Official Paper for Morrow County
GIVE YOUTH A CHANCE.
JUST now when a new crop of
J high school and college graduates
Is being harvested throughout the
country serious thought should be
given to the assimiliation into the
work-a-day world of such of those
who may not be continuing their
educational career. The crop offers
a source of virile stimulus, much
needed in these times of depression
which should be welcomed and en
couraged into the channels of bus
iness, the trades and professions. If
ever America was in need of new
ideas, new life, new blood and new
ambition, it is now.
"Youth will out" is true. But
the direction the will shall take
will be determined largely by those
now holding the reins of business
and government. Either youth will
be given its chance for natural ex
pression, or ere long America will
experience one of the most shocking
revolts in its history.
This is not idle talk. The begin
nings are seen in many places in
young leaders of socialistic move
ments, in frequenters of the speak
easy, and In the drifting mass of
the unemployed, whose number will
be Increased by many from the new
crop if America does not take heed.
Among them will rise competent
leaders to force a new order, if the
old order is not changed. It would
be shocking to staunch patriots to
hear the talk of these young men
and young women, whose socialistic
inclinations are becoming ever
stronger and stronger.
It is pointed out by a writer In
the current Atlantic Monthly writ
ing on "The Crime Against Youth,"
that the doors of trades, professions
and business have been closed
against youth in order to make
more secure the position of the
comfortably situated middle aged
folks. The tactics employed in
battling the throes of depression of
fer only too gloomy prospects for
the high school and college grad
uate. UNLESS all signs fail, Morrow
county is headed for a bumper
wheat crop this season, the splendid
rains of May coming just at the
right time to insure this result. We
are convinced of this after a drive
over a large portion of the wheat
belt Sunday afternoon. At this
time, wheat in the north end of the
county is especially promising and
0
Sunday Schoo
n n Lesson n
By Bev. Charles E. Dunn, D. D.
Jesus and His Friends.
Lesson for May 28th.
Mark 13:1-14:9.
Golden Text: John 15:14.
I have long felt that the Chris
tian body with the most satisfac
tory name is that small group of
devoted, practical, mystics who call
themselves the Society of Friends.
Most denominations have long and
awkward names. The Quakers,
however, have a perfect title. For
the comrades of Christ's way are
primarily the friends of Jesus, men
and women who aim to live In the
spirit of our Golden Text, "You are
my friends, if you do what I com
mand you."
Now the lesson gives us glimpses
of Jesus in the midst of His friends.
We see Him seated on the Mount of
Olives. It is daytime, and He is
conferring privately and earnestly
with Peter, James, John and An
drew, In thirty-three verses Mark
summarizes the remarks of Jesus.
What he gives is a composite, con
densed discourse, a vivid apocalypse
or detailed description of the fu
ture. To interpret this colorful
chapter is difficult Scholars do not
agree in their findings. But the
differences of viewpoint on critical
questions need not dim our appre
ciation of the passage.
It sounds, first of all, the note of
tragic catastrophe. Jesus warns of
the coming of war, treachery, mur
der, hatred, of the triumph of false
hood, and the dissolution of the un
iverse. His words, of course, must
not be taken literally, as a mechan
ical prophecy of definite events in
history. But when understood poet
ically, with the eyes of the imagin
ation, they are abundantly true.
Secondly, this discourse reveals a
profound urgency. Note the seri
ousness of the Master! "Take care,
be on the alert, and pray," He cries.
"Moreover, what I say to you I say
to all Be wakeful!"
But our lesson presents a further
picture of Jesus in the House of
Friendship. Under a friendly room
at Bethany, in the home of Simon
the leper, we see Him resting, and,
witness the striking devotion of
Mary, who had come to pour prec
ious ointment upon His head. Here,
sheltered from a hostile world, He
receives his friends, love.
1 1 j-W
Every Way We Turn
its developmenet during the past
two weeks has been splendid. Many
things might happen, of course, be
tween now and harvest to cut down
the yield, but why worry; nature is
doing well by the farmer at pres
ent, and abundant yields are prom
ised; all that will be needed later on
is the right price. This, of course,
is up to Roosevelt, and should he
fail us it will be just too bad all
around.
MEMORIAL DAY.
ON MAY 30th it is the custom
throughout most of the United
States to observe the day a3 a me
morial to the heroes of our nntinn
who gave their lives for its defense.
In many states this or some nearby
date is observed as a memorial tn
the soldiers of the Armv nt thn
Confederacy who, no less than those
otners, made tne supreme sacrifice
for the cause in which thpv ho.
lieved.
It is meet and nroner that these
gallant dead, whether they wore the
khaki or blue or erav. should hp
held forever in fond remembrance.
For they were brave men who did
not hesitate to risk their lives that
their beloved homeland might live.
But it is also meet and proper, it
seems to us, to consider whether
tne youth of today are as ready as
these sacred dead were, to fieht and
to die, if necessary, for their prin
ciples, we seem to sense a slack
ening among the youth of our land
of the fervent natriotism whifh
was America's chiefest glory in the
days when our nation was younger
We hear young men say that they
would not risk their lives fnr their
country as their fathers did. We
nave notea tne polls of students in
our great universities in which an
appalling number have declared
mat tney would not take up arms
In defense of America.
If such a feeline is eeneral nmnno-
the youth of our land, then it is a
iar more serious matter than mere
unemployment or financial riiatraaa
If through some failure on the part
oi our institutions, our schools, our
churches, our home traintnc wo
are raising a generation which f eel3
no sucn devotion to the principles
of liberty and independence as once
made every young American eager
to go to war in their defense, then
our nation is in a sorry case.
We do not believe that such a
spirit prevails generally. We rin
not believe that the young men of
America have become so infected
with the germ of Internationalism
that they no loneer look unon thoir
own country as the greatest, the
most glorious, tne best place in the
whole world.
Many will be the nravera nrtWoH
on Memorial Day at the graves of
tnose who died honorably on the
field of battle. Let it be the for.
vent prayer of every true American
on that day that the honor which
nnas expression In unselfish self
sacrifice for country and for nrin.
ciple may not perish from those
who are to take our places.
SAVINGS BANKS.
WE ARE informed on good au
thority that not a single savings
bank of the "mutual" or "trustee"
type has been compelled to close Its
doors, while other types of banks
have been falling by thousands. It
is reported, moreover, that there
has been a steady growth in the vol
ume of deposits in these mutual
banks, which are the type found
principally in New England, New
York and Pennsylvania.
In those and some other states
the word "savings" cannot be used
by any other type of institution.
Savings banks are non-profit-making
organizations, with the ablest
business men of their communities
serving as trustees without pay, in
vesting the deposits with the great
est care for safety first, and paying
to depositors as dividends what
their money actually earns.
There is a movement on foot in
many states to adopt the mutual or
trustee system of savings banks
and bar all other forms of savings
institutions. We think that is a
step in the right direction. There
is also a movement in Washington
to bring the mutual savings banks
into the Federal Reserve system,
thus further strengthening them.
We think that ought to be done.
How far the Government ought
to go in enlarging the postal sav
ings system is another matter.
There is talk in Washington of
changing the postal savings act to
cut off payment of interest on de
posits. That will have a tendency
toward driving poor depositors out
of the postal banks Into privately
operated banks, or dangerously
hoarding their savings at home. We
think no such step should be taken
until all the savings banks of the
country have been placed on the
trustee system under the strictest
control.
WHEAT has been hitting the to
boggan again, and the price
quotations are fast nearing the low
mark of last month. The slump
may be only temporary, but it is
somewhat disappointing, when our
hopes were being raised by the
steady advances of the past several
weeks. Wool is still holding good,
and prices locally have reached 21
cents and better, with a strong de
mand. This seems to be due to the
needs of mills right now, and the
recent rise in wheat might be at
tributed to the pressing demands
ot millers. These two commodities
will pull our people out of their
present financial difficulties; very
promptly if prices get to a point
where there is some profit above
production costs, and we hope that
such conditions will prevail through
the season. With the present out
look for wheat, this one crop will
go a long way in pulling our farm
ers out, provided the price is what
it should be; say anywhere from
75 cents to a dollar a bushel.
Ik FAMLW
fc QIXCDOTIK'
JOHN JOSCPH (5AINE5fM.D
Things Worth Reading
So many good and bad things
are in print nowadays, that we
must be careful, lest we go astray
and believe some stuff that is not
good for us. Sometimes in the little
folio circular that comes to my
desk, I find some of the brightest,
most practical ideas and so well
worth reading.
A prominent woman, Marie
Dressier, is quoted in "Food Facts,"
in substance, as follows:
The modern cult among women
Is to reduce. No matter what hap
pens just so you ladies remain slim.
You resort to any means that prom
ises a slim figure some of it dan
gerous to you.
When you want to make a thing
better, you fatten it, don't you? A
cow, chicken, pig, fruit or vege
tableyou grow them as big as
possiDie . . . Dressier sagely re
marks, "I never could see any beau
ty In the human skeleton." She Is
right, too.
Let me quote this Interesting wo
man again:
"I fail to see where the fun Is In
a life that hold3 nothing more than
a sip if orange juice for breakfast,
two biscuits and a raisin for lunch,
and a small portion of grated car
rot for dinner. . . . This is a cruel
diet for which there is no neces
sity. Women are advised against
eating carbohydrates and since
they do not know what carbohy
drates are, they 'play safe' and eat
next to nothing at all."
I know a lady neighbor, who must
weigh almost 300. She is as happy
a woman as I know. Seemingly per
fectly care-free. I saw her dining
at a restaurant the other day she
sat at one of those little perches
provided for speed. . . . She was the
picture of happy content. Isn't
that about all that matters?
FOR SALE Late type Monarch
wood-coal range; reasonable. In
quire at this office.
-By Albert T. Reid
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'
PICKING HIS MARKET
Jesus' preaching was almost in
cidental. On only one occasion
did he deliver a long discourse, and
that was probably interrupted oftci
by questions and debates. He did
not come to establish a theology
but to lead a life. Living more
healthfully than anv of his content
poraries He spread health where
ever He went Thinking more
daringly, more divinely, He ev
pressed himself in thoughts of sur
passing beauty, as naturally as a
plant bursts into bloom. His ser
mons, if they may be called ser
mons, were chiefly explanatory of
His service. He healed a lame
man, fed the hungry, cheered the
poor; and by these works He was
advertised much more than by His
words.
The church, which covets adver
tising and receives little, is much
more faithful in such good work
than the man on the street suspects,
Most of our colleges were founded
under its inspiration; most of our
hospitals grew out of, and are sup
ported by its membership; the ideals
that animate all civic enterprises
are its ideals; and its members fur
nish to such movements the most
dependable support. More than
this, the day by day life of any gen
uine pastor is a constant succession
of healings and helpings, as any
one who has been privileged to
grow up in a minister's family very
well knows. The door-bell rings at
DreaKiast time; it r nes at dinner-
time; it rings late at night and
every ring means that someone ha3
come to cast his burden upon the
parsonage. A man comes bl nded
by his greed or hatred or fear he
opens his heart to the pastor, and
goes away having received his sighL.
A parent whose child is dead in
selfishness, comes leading the child
by the hand. And sometimes the
preacher is able to touch the with
ered veins of conscience, and life
becomes normal and wholesome
again. A man out of work, whnoo
family is hungry, knocks timidly at
me parsonage door. And somehow,
from the parson's few loaves and
fishes, the. other family is fed.
These are Jesus' work, done in
Jesus' name. If He were to live
again, In these modern days, He
would find a way to make them
known to be advertised by His ser
vice, not merely by his sermons.
One thing is certain: He would not
neglect the market-place. Few of
His sermons were delivered in syn
agogues. For the most part He was
In the crowded places, the Temple
Court, the city squares, the centers
where goods were bought and sold.
I emphasized this fact once to a
group of preachers.
Next Week: The Modern Market
Place.
Attend District Meeting
Neighbors of Woodcraft
The district convention of Neigh
bors of Woodcraft was held at Pen
dleton Monday and Tuesday of this
week, and the attendance of the
members of the order from Hepp
ner, which included delegates and
visitors from Maple Circle, was
made up of the following: Claude
Hill, Doris Hiatt, Rose Howell, of
ficers of the circle. Kate Swendig,
Tom J. Wells, Guy Shaw, Margaret
Chapln, Kathleen Gentry, Elma Hi
att, Maggie Hunt, Ada Coblantz.
Mrs. Ruth Hayden of Baker, grand
representative, and Mrs. Anna S.
Mardall of Portland, grand banker,
were high officials of the order at
tending. Heppner delegates report
a very profitable convention,
BM
Governor . . Fed. Reserve
In picking Eugene Black of At
lanta for Governor of the Federal
Reserve Board President Roosevelt
has followed the example of his last
Democratic predecessor in selecting
a man from the South to head up
the nation's financial system. I am
one of those who believe that the
late W. P. G. Harding of Alabama
was the best man who ever held
the post to which Mr. Black has
been appointed.
Mr. Black was picked, I am told,
mainly because he is entirely free
from Wall Street influences. He
has a bigger and more important
task than any of his predecessors
had, since it is on the cards, I be
lieve, that the entire banking sys
tem of the nation will be taken in
to the Federal Reserve System, and
the head of that system will exer
cise financial control even greater
than that of the Governor of the
Bank of England.
Unlike many bankers, Mr. Black
has a sense of humor. But his rep
utation for sound, homely common
sense is the highest
Rockefellers . they move
Times change and landmarks
pass. The Rockefellers, father and
son. are movine from the historic-
address "26 Broadway" to the new
iiockeieiler Center, five miles up
town. For more than fifty years
"26" has been the headauarters of
the Standard Oil interests. No
body knows how many millions
have been made there, but proba
bly enoueh to nav off our national
debt, if the men who made it had
Kept it.
The Rockefellers don't keep their
money. They spend it largely in
vast enterprises for the public wel
fare, education, health and the res
toration of historic antiquities.
John D. Rockefeller, Jr., is in the
limelieht lust now because ho nh.
jected to Communist propaganda
being put into a mural Daintine- hv
Diego de Rivera, the Mexican artist
wno naa Deen engaged to do some
work in the Rockefeller Center.
Some "Liberals" are makine- a o-ront
fuss, saying that Mr. Rockefeller is
no judge of art. That may be true
but wouldn't he look foolish pro
moting Communism?
Gold since 1493
According to the United States
Bureau of Mines all the gold that
nas been mined in the world since
any kind of records have been kept;
that is. from 1493 tho
Columbus discovered America, down
to date, amounts to a little over a
thousand million ounces. At $?n on
ounce that is worth twenty billion
aonars, ana more than half of it is
still in the form of monev nr o-nM
bars held in banks as security for
money.
In the United States, since 1792,
we have mined about 226 million
ounces, worth above S4.fion nnnnnn-
and that, curiously enough, it just
aDoui tne amount or monetary gold
still In this country.
In the same 450 years of gold pro
duction the amount nf silver mind
in the world was a fraction more
than fifteen thousand million
ounces; and the ration of silver to
gold in the world's monetary sys
tem before silver was dropped by
one country after another, was just
1 J. -O i . ' "
ttuoui uneen to one.
Silver is comine- hnrU mnnmr
but it is more likely to arrive at a
ratio of about twenty to twenty
five to one than the traditional "six
teen to one" of the old Populist
uays.
Population growth
The United States could support
probably ten times the nonillnKnn
we now have. It used to be all that
nmetenths of the population could
do to produce food enough for the
ten-tenths; now it takes the time
and work of only a fifth, perhaps
less, to feed everybody.
Population in tho United stotoo
is almost standing still. Unless
mere is an unexpected upturn in
the birth rate or we open our doors
again to immigration from Europe,
we shall find ourselves still less de
pendent on the producers of food.
It looks to me as if food farm
ing, on any important scale, will be
a thing of the past in fifty or a hun
dred years from now. More people
will live in the country, but fewer
will be engaged in trying to make
money out of growing food. They
will get their cash from other forms
of labor and of products of the
land.
Land . . . what it will earn
What is good farm land worth?
An English friend told me not long
ago that the best land in England,
where the average production per
acre of all crops Is much higher
than in America, the markets are
at the door, the growing season Is
longer and the climate generally
more favorable, can be bought for
$100 or less per acre, when it can
be bought at all. With an exper
ience of two thousand years behind
them, English farmers are pretty
likely to know what values are.
I doubt whether any land in Am
erica can earn interest on a very
much higher valuation than that,
except in a very few highly favored
spots and then only by intensive
cultivation of high-priced perishable
fruits and garden truck.
One of the principal causes of
much of the present trouble of far
mers is that they paid, or promised
to pay, more for their land than It
was worth, and their mortgages
than the actual
value.
Land, like anything else, is worth
only what it will earn.
Mortgage Relief Plans
Explained in Release
Farm mortgage benefits as well
as higher prices for farm products
in relation to things farmers buy
are provided for in the new r arm
Act, according to information re
leased by the Oregon Agricultural
Extension service cooperating with
the U,. S. Department of Agricul
ture.
Borrowers from Federal Land
banks are to receive a moratorium
on payments on principal for five
years, plus reduction in the inter
est rate to 4 per cent They also
will be helped with interest due
which they are unable to pay.
There are 400,000 Federal Land
bank mortgages in the country
with over $1,000,000,000 borrowed.
Farmers who have mortgages
with Joist Stock Land banks may
also be benefitted under the provis
ions of the Farm Act which offer
assistance In the liquidation of
these banks, provided they reduce
their Interest rates to 5 per cent
and cease foreclosure proceedings
for two years.
The Act provides help to other
farm mortgagors through a special
bond Issue of $2,000,000,000 to raise
funds for loaning to farmers who
wish to borrow from the Federal
Land banks. New loans are to be
made on the same liberal terms as
granted old borrowers.
Further provision is made to pro
vide funds to enable farmers to re
deem farm property lost by fore
closure since July 1, 1931. In fact,
this section of the Farm Act con
tains provisions through which ex
cessive debts may be cut down, in
terest rates reduced, payments on
principal postponed, foreclosed
farms redeemed and other provls
ions to assist farmers to meet ur
gent obligations, according to a
circular issued by the Extension
service.
The first part of the measure Is
the Farm Act proper, or the part
that applies to controlling produc
tlon and increasing farm prices. In
this section, Congress declared that
the present acute economic emer
gency is in part the consequence of
increasing disparity between the
prices of agricultural and other
commodities. For instance, index
numbers prepared by the United
States Department of Agriculture
show that for several months farm
products have had an exchange val
ue of only half as much as before
the war.
Congress declared the policy of
the Nation to "reestablish prices to
farmers at a level that will give
agricultural commodities a pur
chasing power with respect to ar
ticles farmers buy, equivalent to
tne purchasing power of agricul
tural commodities in the base per
iod" August 1909-July 1914. "Par
ity" in exchange value is clearly
tne goal of the Farm Act Three
production control plans are pro
videdland leasing, domestic allot
ment, and marketing agreements.
Farmer participation must be on a
voluntary basis, with benefits in
cash payment provided for those
who cooperate. Application is to
be gradual at as rapid a rate as is
deemed feasible, with consumers'
interests protected by provisions in
the act, according to the Extension
service circular.
SALES TAX MEETING.
There will be a meeting at the
courthouse on Thursday, June 1, at
2 o'clock in the afternoon, to dis
cuss the sales tax and effect an or
ganization to carry on the cam
paien to furnish the mihlln with In
formation pertaining to the sales
uu
Harriet K. Mahoney,
Committeewoman
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Rlealtmnn anA
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bleakman
were down from Hardman Monday
getting ready to go into the forest
ior tneir summer s work.
NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS
MEETING.
Notice is hereby given that the
annual stockholders' meeting of
Lexington Farmers Warehouse
Company will be held at the offices
of the company in Lexington, Ore
gon, on Saturday, June 3, 1933, at
2 p. m., for the purpose of electing
officers and the transaction of such
other business as may regular'y
come before the meeting.
S. J. DEVINE, President.
GEO. N. PECK, Secretary.
10-12.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice la herebv given that the un
dersigned were duly appointed to the
County Court of the State of Oregon
for Marrow County, administrators of
the partnersnp estate oi oiinam ana
Blsbee, Frank Gilliam, deceased, and
all persons having claims against said
partnership estate, are hereby required
to present the same duly verified as re
quired by law. to the undersigned ad
ministrators, at the law office of Jos. J.
Nys, at Heppner, Oregon, within six
months from the date hereof.
Dated and first published this 18th
day of May, 1933.
LOUIS E. BISBEE,
LENN L. GILLIAM,
E. E. GILLIAM,
Administrators.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE.
Notice in herohv e-tven that bv virtue
of an Execution issued out of the Cir
cuit Court of the State of Oregon for
Morrow County, dated April twenty
yixtti, 1933, 1n that certain suit wherein
The Federal Land Bank of Spokane, a
corporation, as plaintiff, recovered a
Judgment against the defendants, Wil
liam Huebner, a widower, L. W. Tall
nwlge, and T, M. Keller on the twenty
fifth day of April, 1933, which Judg
ment was for the following sums, to
wit: $168.00, with interest at the rate of 8
per cent per annum from April 6, 1931;
$168.00, with interest at the rate of 8
per cent per annum from October B,
1931; $168.01), with interest at the rate
of 8 per cent per annum from April 6,
1932: $168 00. with interest at the rate
of 8 per cent per annum from October
5, 1932; $3871.78 with Interest at the
rate of 8 per cent per annum from
October 5, 1932; $194.91, with interna
at the rate of 8 per cent per annum
from November 6, 1932; $34.60, 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
$28.65, costs and disbursements, and a
decree of foreclosure against the de
fendants, William Huebner, a widower;
L. W. Tallmadite. B. P. Dohertv. same
represent more
person as B. P, Daugherty, and Cath
erine Doherty. husband and wife; F.
C. Lynch; T. M. Keller. V. B. Nicker
son, doing business under the atsumed
name of Morrow County Abstract Coin-
Sany. Lillian Gluth and Emery R.
luth, wife and husband, C. R. Wal
strom, Fred Lehnherr and Marie Lehn
herr, husband and wife; and Hardman
National Farm Loan 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
county court houBe in Heppner, Mor
row county, state oi uregon. oner lor
sale and Bell to the highest bidder for
cash in hand all the following described
real property in Morrow county, atato
of Oregon, to-wlt:
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. Together with all and singular the
tenements, hereditaments and ap-
fpurtenances thereunto belonging or
n anywise appertaining,
or so much of said real property as
may be necessary to satisfy the plain
tiffs' Judgments, costs, attorney's fee
and accruing costs of sale.
C. J. D. BAUMAN,
Sheriff of Morrow County, State of
Oregon.
Date of first publication, April 27th
1933.
NOTICE OF SALE OF COUNTY
LAUD.
BY VIRTUE OF AN ORDER of the
County Court, dated April 25th, 1933, I
am authorzied and directed to Bell at
public auction, as provided by law, the
following described real property, at
not less than the minimum price herein
set forth nd upon the following terms
as set out after each tract, to-wit:
The N SEVi of Section 25, Town
ship 6 North, Range 26 E. W. M, for
the minimum price of $20.00.
The SE SW!4 of Section 17, Town
ship 4 North, Range 25 E. W. M., tor
the minimum price of $40.00.
The NW!4 of Section 30, Township 2
North, Range 25. E. W. M and the
SEhi of Section 24; Township 2 North.
Range 24, E. W. M the 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
property during the term of the con
tract of Bale
THEREFORE, I will, on the 27th day
of Way, 1933, at the hour of 2:00 P. M
at the front door of the Court House
in Heppner, Oregon, sell said property
to the highest and best bidder!
, . C. J. D. BAUMAN.
n bherlfT of Morrow County, Oregon,
Professional Cards
J. 0. TURNER
Attorney at Law
Phone 173
Humphreys Building
HEPPNER, ORE.
A. B. GRAY, M. D.
PHYSICIAN ft BURGEON
Phone 333
Heppner Hotel Building
Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted.
WM. BROOKHOUSER
FAINTING P APE KHAN CI IU Q
INTERIOR DECORATING
Leave orders at Peoples Hardware
Company
DR. J. H. McCRADY
DENTIST
X-Ray Diagnosis
Oilman Building
Heppner, Oregon
Frank A. McMenamin"
LAWYER
905 Guardian Building
Residence, GArfield 1949
Business Phone Atwater 1348
PORTLAND. OREGON
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Trained Norse Assistant
Office In Masonic Building
Heppner, Oregon
P. W. MAHONEY
ATTORNEY AT LAW
First National Bank Building
Heppner, Oregon
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Offloe in I O. O. F. Building
Heppner, Oregon
AUCTIONEER
Farm and Personal Uroperty Sales
A Specialty.
G. L. BENNETT
"The Man Who Talks to Beat
the Band"
5229 72nd Ave., S. E., Portland, Ore.
Phone Sunset 8451
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 LIFE
INSURANCE
Old Line Companies. Rail Eitate.
Heppner, Oregon
JOS. J. NYS
ATTONEY-AT-LAW
Roberts Building, Willow Street
Heppner, Oregon