PAGE TWO (Bviztttt Stntrs THE HEPPNER GAZETTE, Established March 30, 1883; THE HEPPNER TIMES. Established November 18, 1897; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15, 19a Published every Thursday morning by VAWTEB and SPENCEB CRAWFORD and entered at the Post Office at Hepp- ner. Oregon, as second-class matter, ADVEETISIH SATES GIVEN OH APPLICATION. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Tear J2 00 Six Months i LOO Three Months .76 Single Copies .05 Official Paper for Morrow County REFORMING BUSINESS. BY ADOPTING a new set of rules which will make it very much more difficult for the little fellow with a few dollars to speculate in stocks, the New York Stock Ex change has gone a long way toward curing the worst evils of specula tion. In rigidly limiting the possi ble fluctuation of the price of grain to not more than five cents a bush el in any one trading day, and peg ging the price of wheat at 87 cents, below which it Is not to be permit ted to fall, the Chicago Board of Trade has at least set up some pro tection for the producer against a speculative collapse in values and makes gambling in the staff of life less alluring to the professionals. Both these great exchanges have acted as they did only under pres sure from Washington. It has dawned upon the federal author ities that no organization or group can be trusted to purge itself of the evils which it has countenanced and which its operations involve. The purging must be done from without That is true of every hu man institution. We cannot recall one that ever reformed itself. Re form has to be forced upon human ity. The greatest effort ever attempt ed by our Government to reform business practices and bring about better distribution of products and profits as between employer and employee is now being made. It was quite natural that many, perhaps most of those accustomed to doing business under the old scheme of unrestrained competition should not like the idea of being re formed. A great many still do not like it; but are accepting the Pres ident's code and organizing into trade associations under NRA codes because there is nothing else to do. We are like the majority of Americans, we believe, in hoping that the New Deal works as it is planned. If it does accomplish its ends of putting people back to work at better wages and so re storing prosperity, we think that most of those who are grumbling now will forget that they didn't like the idea. And if it doesn't work well, we'll not be worse off than we were. IT'S LP TO THE FARMER. "THE regulation of the cotton and A cigar tobacco crops by the Fed eral Government is now in effect. The regulation of wheat production is practically in operation. Next to be regulated will be corn and hogs, so Washington announces. Milk producers are under license in several important districts. We have started out, as a nation, on the largest experiment in history in this business of what Assistant Secretary Rexford G. Tugwell calls "a sensible working policy for our land." Whether this policy will work or not depends, naturally, upon indi vidual farmers. Government has no power under the law, as we un derstand it to force any farmer to keep land out of cultivation or to reduce crops; it cannot dictate to him whether he shall sow wheat or corn, raise hogs or sheep. But it can and does offer to make it more profitable to him to comply with a general program of adjusting agri cultural production to demand. This is not the first time in Amer ican history that there has been an attempt to control production. In the early 1700's Maryland and Vir ginia were producing more tobacco than the market would take, so their Colonial governments ordered that no planter should plant more than 6,000 plants for each Negro slave between the age of 16 and 60! As Professor Tugwell pointed out the other day, France attempted about the same time to control the overproduction of wine graps; and today France actually controls its wheat acreage and imports so that the French farmer now gets the equivalent of $2 a bushel for his wheat If this allotment plan works it will be because our farmers are in telligent and far-sighted enough to make it work. If the majority of them do not cooperate In the effort to bring American agriculture up to Its proper place as not only the major industry but the most uni formly profitable one, the failure of the Administration's plan will be their fault and nobody's else. Sulfur Helps Grant County Land Canyon City Belief that a good deal of ground In the Prairie City section of Grant county can be brought back to far heavier pro duction by the application of sul fur is expressed by R. G. Johnson, county agent He cites an example of the results of this fertilizer on the Edgar Deardorf ranch where a very poor alfalfa stand which had been sulfured showed a greatly thickened stand due to Increased tooling, and other improvements. Try a GazetU Times Want Ad. Disarmament new concept My friend Norman Davis, United States Ambassador at Large, Is hopeful that, after seven years of discussion, international disarma ment will soon get somewhere. When I talked with him a few days ago he was more optimistic about it than I have ever seen him. Nobody is asking any nation to abandon its defenses. The program which is coming to be accepted most everywhere is that nations should not be permitted to provide themselves with the sort of weap ons which are useful only for the invasion of another nation's terri tory. If Germany had not had the great Krupp and Skoda guns it could never have invaded Belgium in 1914. Big mobile guns and big tanks would be abolished by such an agreement as the nations at Ge neva are talking about Military men are coming to realize that air craft alone can never win an ag gressive war, and that it is not hard for any nation to protect its coast against a foreign navy. A few months ago there was a real fear of a new war in Europe Now there is a genuine belief that permanent peace is close at hand Progress it is actual A hundred years ago Europe had a population of 180 millions of peo ple most of them frequently on the verge of starvation. That was as far as the world had got in the 12 centuries since European civiliza tion really began. Today Europe has nearly 500 million population, all of them sure of their food. That is a lot of progress to make in a hundred years. People who talk of the "good old times" are talking about the lives of the small minority who lived in what was re garded as luxury while the com mon people were practically slaves. Few of us would care to live as un comfortably as the nobility and royalty did in the old days, without gas or electric light or even kero sene stoves, without plumbing or furnaces or even stoves. Forks were introduced by Queen Eliza beth, only a little over 300 years ago, and soap was a novel luxury for the rich in her time. When people tell you the world is going backward and that the age of invention, beginning with the steam engine, has not improved human conditions, tell them to run along and read their history books. Land for all There is land enough in the Uni ted States nearly 20 thousand mil lion acres to give every family more than 60 acres, if it were divid ed equally. If only ten percent of the land is suitable for the growth of foods, there is an average of 6 acres per family of four. It seems nonsensical to talk of anyone starving to death in Ameri ca, when at least a living can be got from the soil. What we are trying to do, of course, is to get more than a living; to get a surplus for the desirable but strictly unnecessary things of civilization. Czecho-Slovakia is combining in dustry and agriculture, by making it possible for every industrial worker to have a piece of land to fall back on when industry is slack. I think we shall also come to that in America. It seems to me to be the only permanent way of insuring a gooa living to everybody. Goodwill . . . from Seattle When Edward Stevens nn ama teur radio operator in Seattle, "talk ing" by wireless with another oper ator on Kadiak Island, off the Al aska coast, was told that an Eski mo boy there was pretty sick and nobody knew what to do about it, it would have bepn mijiv frw him in have remarked that that was just too bad, and think no more of it But vounsr Stevens Isn't thnt nnrf He has that quality of good will toward otners which is the essen tial basis of Christianity. He had his radio friend on Ka diak describe the boy's symptoms. He telephoned them to a Seattle doctor, who diagnosed the case as probably peritonitis and suggested that if there were any way to get the sick boy to the hospital at An chorage. Alaska, he tnicht hova n chance. Stevens told the Army wireless station in Seattle what the doctor said. The Army operators sent a wireless to Anchorage ask ing to have a 'plane sent to the is land to get the boy. I haven't heard Whether the boy got well or not but I salute Ed ward Stevens of Seattle. His spirit of helpfulness is what the whole world needs more than it needs anything else. Dope ... a world treaty The other day I had a visit with Captain Richmond Pearson Hob son, Spanish War hero and former member of Congress from Alabama, who has for years been devoting his life to the effort to stamp out the international traffic in narcot ics, such as morphine, cocaine and hashish. As a result of the work of the commission which Captain Hobson heads, organized under the League of Nations, 39 nations have Just signed a treaty agreeing to limit the production of narcotics to ac tual medical requirements. In an other twenty or thirty years, Cap tain Hobson believes, "dope" will be so hard to get that there will be no HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, new crop of drug addicts and the pld ones will have died off. I think he is unduly optimistic, but I hope he's not I have seen enough myself of the effects of the narcotic habit on men and women to realize what It does to them and to society, but also to realize how hard it is to break an addict of the habit Forest Report Shows Trees Are Seeding Well The annual seed crop reports from the rangers on the national forests in Washington and Oregon, complied by the Pacific Northwest Forest Experiment station show that some seed is being produced by all tree species in parts of the region this season, but only in a few places are heavy cone crops reported. Douglas fir, the most important timber species west of the Cas cades, was reported to have a heavy crop in the Packwood Lake region on the Coulmbla forest, along the Sauk river on the Mt Baker for est near Peshatin on the Wenat- chee forest, and Kamela on the Umatila forest, the heavy crops be' ing mostly on young trees. Ponderosa Pine is bearing a heavy crop in the vicinity of Sen' eca and Kamela, Oregon, and Pea- hastin, Washington. Western red cedar has a heavy crop aolng the west slope of the Cascades but not along the Coast or east of the mountains. From the Mt Hood forest comes the report of a heavy cone crop of western hemlock, noble fir and white fir, and from the Rogue Riv er forest the report of a heavy crop of western white and sugar pine. These seed crop reports of all forest trees sent in to the Pacific Northwest Forest Experiment sta tion from 40 localities on 20 nation al forests serve as a guide for seed collection activities of state and federal agencies and private col lectors. Private companies have built up a sizeable Industry selling tree seeds both to domestic and foreign trade. The seed crop reports are also a fairly reliable indicator of the amount of natural reproduction that will occur on logged-off land provided it is protected from fire. As a. result of the moderately heavy Douglas fir cone crop in 1932, seed lings were more abundant this year than any season since 1924 follow ing the heavy cone crop of 1923. illllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllH Atemidl the I RodeO Season Opening SEPTEMBER 2nd uensr The city in the evening will be the Final o Heooner HEPPNER, OREGON, Bruce Barton writes of "The Master Executive" Supplying a week-to-week Inspiration for tht heavy-burdened who will find every human trial paralleled In the ex periences of "The Man Nobody Knows" NUMBING GRIP OF ANCIENT CREEDS Ask any ten people what Jesus meant by his "Father's business," and nine of them will answer "preaching." To interpret the words In this narrow sense is to lose the real significance of his life. It was not to preach that he came into the world; not to teach; nor to heal. These are all departments of his Father's business, but the business itself is far larger, more inclusive. If human life has any signifi cance it is this that God has set going here an experiment to which all His resources are committed. He seeks to develop human beings, superior to circumstance, victor ious over Fate. No single kind of human talent or effort can be spared if the experiment is to suc ceed. The race must be fed and clothed and housed and transport ed, as well as preached to, and taught and healed. Thus all business is his Father's business. All work is worship; all useful service prayer. And who ever works wholeheartedly at any worthy calling is a co-worker with the Almighty in the great enter prise which He has initiated but which He can never finish without the help of men. It is one thing to talk about suc cess, and quite another thing to win it. Jesus spoke of crowns and died on a cross. He talked of his kingdom, and ended his days amid the jeers and taunts of his ene mies. "He was in all points tempt ed like as we are," says the Epistle of the Hebrews. We have read it often, heard it read oftener, but we have never believed it, of course. . . . The conception of his character which Theology has given us makes any such idea impossible. He was born differently from the rest of us, Theology insists. He did not belong among us at all, but came down from Heaven on a brief In Heppner will be in full Rodeo regalia. Official cowboy hats and Windsor ties will be donned by the citizenry the Heppner school band will play during the day and ueeim yaimce at which Queen Jean of the Pendleton Round-Up will be a guest of honor -Then ANNOUNCEMENT OF j THE QUEEN TO RULE OVER THE I SEPTEMBER THURSDAY, AUG. 27, 1933. visit spent a few years in reprov ing men for their mistakes, died and went back to Heaven again. A hollow bit of stage-play. What chance for temptation in such a career? How can an actor go wrong when his whole part is writ ten and learned in advance? It is frightfully hard to free the mind from the numbing grip of an cient creeds. But let us make the effort Let us touch once more the high spots in this finest, most ex alted success story, considering now the perils and crises of success. He was not at all sure where he was going when he laid down his tools and turned his hack on tne carpenter shop unless we can be lieve this, his struggle ceases to be "in all points" like our own; for each of us has to venture on uie as on to an uncharted sea. Some thing inside him carried him for ward the something which has whispered to so many small town boys that there is a place for them in the world which lies beyond the hills. Next Week: Responsibilities of Success. NEWS SERVICE RESTORED. Efforts of Oregon farm organi zations, cooperatives, produce deal ers, civic bodies and individuals in protesting the abandonment of the government leased wire market news service in the northwest have been successful, and orders are now issued to resume nearly all former activities starting August 28. This will include the wire connections to Oregon State college from where the reports are issued via radio, circulars and Dress notices. Ore gon's congressional delegation, headed by Senator Charles Jj. mc Nary, was instrumental in getting the service restored in tne nortn west. PoUinization Value Shown Roseburg The value of pollini- zation in cherry orchards is appar ent on the G. T. Royer place at Dillard, where pollinizers have been placed in a Lambert cherry orchard during the past two years. A 300 percent increase in yield on the limbs near the pollinizers is esti mated by the county agent. NOTICE OF SALE OF ANIMAL. Notice is hereby given by vir tue of the laws of the State of Or egon that I have taken up and now hold at my ranch in Camas Prairie, 8 9 10 miles SE of Lonerock, Oregon, in Morrow County, the following described animal; and that I will, at said place, at 2 p. m., Monday, September 11, 1933, sell said animal to the highest bidder for cash in hand, subject to the right of re demption of the owner thereof. Said animal is described as follows: One bay mare, branded TP con nected on left shoulder, white strip in face and white spot on each side of neck, 12 to 16 years old; right shoulder has either been broken or is badly sweeneyed; weight about 1050 pounds. ALCY J. MADDEN, 24-26 Lonerock, Oregon. NOTICE OF SALE OF ANIMAL. Notice is hereby given by virtue of the laws of the State of Oregon that I have taken up and now hold at my place 14 miles NE of Hepp ner in Newman canyon. Morrow county, the hereinafter described animal: and that I will on Satur day, September 2, 1933, at 2 o ciock p. m., at said place, sell said ani mal to the highest bidder for cash in hand, subject to the right of re demption of the owner tnereoi. Said animal is described as follows: 1 black mare, 5 years old, weight 800 lbs., branded PL (connected) Y on right stifle. 23-25 JAMES DALY, Star Route, Echo, Ore. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: NiiticR ia herfihv eiven that pursuant tn tho nnthnrltv in them vested by the will of William Hendrix, deceased, and by an order of the County t;ourt oi me State of Oregon, for the County of Morrow, made ana emerea oi raniru in the nhnve entitled estate on the Slat day of July, 11)33, the undersigned as administrators of the will annexed of the estate of William Hendrix, deceas ed, will on and after the 26th day of September, 1933, sell at private sale for cash or credit, or for cash and credit, the real property of tins estate Known as the" "Bellenbrock Ranch," and more particularly described as follows, to- The Southeast quarter of the South east quarter of Section twenty; the Southwest quarter of the South east quarter, and the South half of the Southwest quarter of Section twenty-one, the South half of the Northwest quarter of the South west quarter of the Northeast quar ter of Section twenty-seven; the Northwest quarter and the West half of the East half and the South east quarter of the Northeast quar ter of Section twenty-eight; the East half of the Northeast quarter of Section twenty-nine, all in Town ship three South, Range twenty five. E. W. M., in Morrow County, Orepnn. All persons desiring to submit bids for the above described lands may sub mit them in writing to the undersigned, or either of them at any time from and after the date of the lirst publication of this notice and up to the time that an actual sale of said premises is made. The date of the first publication of this notice is August 24, rJJd. JOHN WIGHTMAN, D. O. JUSTUS, Administrators, with will annexed, of the Estate of William Hendrix, deceased. 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, administrator of the estate of Charles W. Christopher son, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same, duly veri fied by law as required with proper vouchers attached, at the law office of F H. Robinson, at lone. Oregon, with in six months from the date of the first publication of this notice. Date of first publication of this no tice Thursday, the 21th day ot August, 1933. OPAL CHRISTOPHERSON, Administrator of the estate of Charles W. Christopherson, de ceased, Postofflce Address, lone. Oregon. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned have been duly appointed by the County Court of Morrow County, Oregon, joint executor and executrix of the estate ot Margaret Keaney, de ceased, and have accented such trust. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified and required to present the same, with vouchers and vrifled as by law required to us at the office of our attorney, J. O. Turner, in Heppner, Oregon, within six months irom tne date nereoi. Dated and first published August 3, 1933. EDITH MILLER, Executrix. E. L. REANEY, Executor. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice Is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Morrow. Aministra tor of the estate of Charles H. Adams, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same, duly verified ns by W required, with proper vouchers attached, to the undersigned at his law office at lone, Oregon, within six months from the date of the first pub lication of this notice. Date of first publication of this no tice. July ZYttl, 1933. F. H. F.OBINSON, Administrator of the estate of Charles Adams, deceased. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. The Federal Land Bank oi Spokane, a corporation, Pallntift, vs. Arthur A. Finley and Daisy E. Fin ley, husband and wife; Effle J. Gil Ham, a widow; Lenn L. Gilliam, single; E. E. Gilliam and Mary Gilliam, husband and wife; C. C. Gilliam and Hazel Gilliam, hus band and wife- Ona Gilliam, a spinster; Hazel Vaughn and Charles Vaughn, wife and husband; Lenn L. Gilliam and E. E. Gilliam as Executors of the Estute of Frank Gilliam, deceased; L. E. Blsbee and Jane Doe Blsbee, husband and wife; J. L. Gault as Receiver of First National Bank of Heppner, . First National Bank of Heppner, a corporation, Albert Bowker and Katherine Bowker, husband and wife; Also all other persons or par ties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest In the real estate described in the com plaint herein: and lone National Farm Loan Association, a corpora tion. Defendants. SUMMONS. To all other persons or parties un known claiming any right, title, estate, Hen or Interest In the real estate des cribed herein. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON : YOU ARE HEREBY REQUIRED to appear and answer the complaint filed against you In the above entitled court and cause within four weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons and if you fall to bo appear and answer for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to the Bald court for the re lief prayed for and demanded in Its complaint on file herein in the above entitled matter, to-wit: For a Judg ment against the defendants. Arthur A. Flnloy and Daisy E. Finley, husband ano wite ana against eacn oi tnem lor the Bum ot $133.25, with Interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from tho fith day of December. 1931: the sum of 91133.25, with Interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 6th day of June, 1932; the sum of $133.25, with Interest at the rate of 8 per cent por annum from the 6th day of December, 1932; the sum of $133.25, with interest at tlio rate of 8 per cent por annum from the 6th day of June, 1933; the sum of $3208.28, with Interest at the rate of b per cent per annum from the 6th day of June, 1933; the sum of $154.49, with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 17th day of October, 1932; the sum of $37.60, ab stract charges; tne sum oi iio.uu, at torney fees: and for plaintiff's costs and disbursements in this suit; that the mortgage described in the plain tiffs complaint be foreclosed and the mortgaged premises therein and here inafter described be sold in one par cel as provided for under the statutes of the State of Oregon, to-wit: Ail of Section XI in Townsnip 2 North, Range 26 E. W. M., contain ing 64. acres, all situated in Mor row fnnntv. State of Oregon.. and which said mortgage is dated the 6tli day of December, 1918, and was thereafter to wit: On the 26th day of December, 1918, duly recorded In the office of the County Clerk of Morrow County, Oregon, in Book 28 of Mort gages at Page 95 thereof, and that the proceeds OI me sale oe uppueu iu me satisfaction of said summons, attor ney's fees, interest, costs and disburse ments and for a decree further provid ing that any party 10 una suit may hid unun and mirchase the said land at the sale thereof, and that all of the defendants hereinabove r.amed be for ever foreclosed and barred of any and all right, title, claim, lien or Interest In or to said premises hereinabove and in said mortgage described, except the right of redemption wnicn saia de fendants have under the laws of the State of Oregon, and for such other and further relief as to the Court may appear that equity and the nature of sum suit may require. That this summons is served upon you by publication thereof once a week for four successive weeks in the Hepp ner Cozette Times, published in Hepp ner, Oregon, by order of the Hon. Cal vin L.. Sweek, Judge of the above en titled Court, which said order was made and entered the 22nd day of July, 1933, and the date of the first publica tion of this summons is the 27th day of July, 1933. r. W. MAHUINl!iI, Postofflce Address: Heppner. Oregon. HENRY R. NEWTON, Postofflce Address: Spokane, Washington. Attorneys for Plaintiff. Professional Cards PHELPS FUNERAL HOME Phone 1332 HEPPNER, OREGON J. 0. TURNER Attorney at Law Phone 173 Humphreys Building HEPPNER, ORE. A. B. GRAY, M. D. PHYSICIAN ft SURGEON Phone 333 Heppner Hotel Building Eyes Tested and abuses Fitted. VM. BROOKHOUSER PAINTINO PAPEBHANOINO INTERIOR DECOBATINO Leave orders at Peoples Hardware Company DR. J. H. McCRADY DENTIST X-Bay Diagnosis Gilman Building Heppner, Oregon Frank A. McMenamin LAWYDB 905 Guardian Building Residence, GArfleld 1949 Business Phone Atwater 1348 PORTLAND, OREGON A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SUBOEO Trained Nurse Assistant Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon P. W. MAIIONEY ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building Heppner, Oregon S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY AT LAW OfBoe In L O. O. F. Building Heppner, Oregon AUCTIONEER Farm and Personal Uroperty Sales A Specialty. 0. 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, AUTO AND LIFE INSURANCE Old Line Cempanles. Real Estate. Heppner, Oregon JOS. J. NYS ATTONBY-AT-LAW Roberta Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon