PAGE TWO HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, DEC. 7, 1933. JC I IjfPPllfr j mzttti Simrs THK HEPPNER GAZETTE. Established March MX 1883 ; THE HEPPNER TIMES, Established November 18, 1897; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15, 19a Published every Thursday morning by TAWTKR and SPENCER CRAWFORD and etitered at the Post Office at Hepp ner, Oregon, as second-class matter. ASTXXTisrjr rates given on APPLICATION. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Tear . Six Months Offlolal Paper for Morrow County AMERICA'S FINEST FARM PRODUCT. ONCE more the season rolls around when the finest products of the American farm are assem bled for inspection and awards of merit at Chicago. We refer to the International Live Stock Exhibition, but we are thinking not so much of the prize cattle, sheep and hogs which will be shown there, when we speak of te finest products of the American farm, as we are of the boys and girls of the 4-H clubs. Here the healthiest, the most skil ful, the most promising of the young folk from every part of the country are brought together once a year, and anyone who has the real interest of America's future at heart must feel that they are by far the most important of all our Amer ican products. We hear a great deal about the pitiable condition of the farmer. But we do not hear enough about the farms and their people who pro duce these boys and girls, who, through their 4-H clubs, are pre paring to be the master farmers of the next generation. Farming does not seem like a hopeless endeavor to them. On the contrary, it seems to them the best way of living, the most independent and satisfying oc cupation there is. So it Is, for the great majority of farmers and farm families. There are good farmers and bad farmers, good farms and poor farms. It is unfortunate that a great many far mers have found themselves sad' died with bad farms, and that so many bad farmers find themselves unable to get ahead on good farms. We are in sympathy with the move ment to eliminate the bad farms and turn them back into forest or grass; but even that will not guar antee the remaining farmers a Jiv ing unless they are good farmers. That is what these 4-H club boys and girls are growing up to be: good farmers and good farmers' wives. Give them a chance on good farms and it will not be long as another generation before we shall be hearing little about the "farm ers' troubles." HOOVER AND ROLPH. Baker Democrat-Herald. CORMER President Hoover ren- dered a distinct public service when he broke his retirement rule against public utterances to de nounce Governor Rolph of Califor nia for endorsing lynching. In this he was joined by many of the lead ing citizens of that state. This will go far to correct the immediate im pression that California courts had ceased to function and that only the mob was left to do justice. Rolph's attempt to answer evad ed the issue entirely by trying to divert attention to the eviction of the bonus army from Washington, a mistake, but the two fatalities in it occurred before the arrival of the troops and not afterward as Rolph sought to make it appear. In any event it didn't justify Rolph's amaz- ing statement after the San Jose lynching, and that Rolph should imagine anyone would think it did shows what a poor opinion he has of the intelligence of his state. But perhaps he was justified In that California elected him governor. An Indiana democratic congress man says the next session of con gress will enact legislation to muz zle the press and adds that "it needs muzzling," because some of it is criticizing the administration. He plans to trample on the first amendment to the federal constitu tion in doing so. What have those who insisted the press was in no danger when it protested against the "gag" part of the proposed newspaper NKA code to say now? Remember, that if the right of the newspapers to criticize the govern ment la destroyed, the right of oth er citizens to criticize the govern ment goes too and we become just as much a dictatorship as Italy, Germany or Russia. SHORTS. Some men are known by their deeds, others by their mortgages. Intelligence is very much the knack of knowing where to find out what one does not know. Most of us would be just as well off, and far happier, if we put the business of worrying high on our list of "don'ts." Modern intelligence and the spirit of enterprise constitute the main forces that create town progress. Everything should be all right in Washington if the brain trust does n't fall victim to the brain rust Looking for a substitute that will pay as well as work has been the ruination of many. It will never win any more than a slow horse wins the race. Work wins lasting victories, makes real men, builds homes, erects factories, and makes peaceful communities. No one can live in a community, enjoy its privileges and draw his 12.00 is 1-00 Three Months Single Copies . -05 sustenance therefrom wtihout be- coming lastingly indebted to the community, its people and institu tions, and that obligation Is a debt of loyalty the discharge of which is incumbent upon him as opportu nity offers. For the Government, as for an In dividual, there is but one way to re duce taxes spend less money. No man can tell what the future may bring forth, and small oppor tunities are often the beginning of great enterprises. BOARDMAN By RACHEL J. BARLOW Funeral services were held in lone Tuesday for William R. Wilbanks who passed away in the Hermiston hospital early Friday morning, and interment was made at the ceme tery at Morgan. He is survived by his widow, Sarah, and two daugh ters, Ada of Salem and Mrs. Viola Carrick of Boardman. The body of Elmer Westervelt was taken to Kelso Saturday after his brother and brother-in-law came to Boardman. Mr. Westervelt is survived by his mother, sister and brother of Kelso. L. M. Morgan was a business vis itor in Heppner Tuesday. Adrain Bechdolt of Hardman is visiting at the home of his parents this week. The Ladies Aid annual bazaar will be given in the basement of the school house Friday evening, Dec. 8. Chicken dinner will be served and the price is 25c a plate for adults and 15c for children. A fish pond, candy booth, fancy work booth, rummage sale and a number of con cessions will be open during the evening after dinner is served. Mr. and Mrs. Zearl Gillespie and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hadley and son enjoyed a goose dinner at the Guy Barlow home on Thanksgiving. Mr. and Mrs. Nate Macomber and daughter spent Thanksgiving day in Pilot Rock "with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Beardsley of Arling ton and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sauders were guests at dinner at the Stout home Thanksgiving. Mr. and Mrs. Y. P. Rutherford were hosts at a lovely dinner last Thursday. Guests included Mrs. Eva Warner, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Wicklander and son, Mr. and Mrs. Parry and daughter and Frank Rutherford. Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Root and Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Barlow spent last Thursday m Heppner at the Al Macomber home. The next Home Economics club meeting will be held Monday eve ning, December 11 In Root's hall. Mrs. Ray Brown left Friday for Woodland where she will visit for a short time with her daughter, Katherine. A very interesting Thanksgiving program was given at the last Parent-Teachers' meeting at which a large crowd was present The pro gram consisted mainly of numbers from the school children, and show ed the fine work being done in mu sic. There will be no meeting in December. Mr. and Mrs. Royal Rands and son are visiting friends in Board man. Mr. and Mrs. Ingaard Skoubo and family and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kunze and family were guests at Thanksgiving dinner at the Paul Smith home. Mrs. Mary Martin and children have moved from the old Kelly ranch to the Ben Atteberry ranch. Mr. Donabough has rented the At teberry ranch. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Ransier and sons spent Thursday In Echo with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Mead and fam ily of Arlington spent Thanksgiving day here with friends. Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Messenger owned a 36-lb. turkey which was served with all that goes with it for dinner last Sunday afternoon. The bird was too large for the home oven and was taken to town to the home of Mrs. Eva Warner who roasted It All members of the Messenger family were present but Marie, a graduate nurse of The Dalles hospital who is now nursing in California. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Sharpe (Nellie Messenger) and family of Vancouver came Thurs day. Mr. Sharpe is employed at the court house with state work. Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Messenger and fam ily of Condon arrived Friday night and Mr. and Mrs. U. H. Messenger and son or Portland came Saturday Since Mr. Messenger graduated from O. S. C. seven years ago he has been employed with Western Electric Telephone company. Mil dred Messenger accompanied by Frank Hamel of The Dalles came Sunday morning. Mildred will graduate from nurses' training on January 10. Mr. and Mrs. M. K, Flickinger, Mrs. Eva Warner and Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Messenger and Lois brought the number of the crowd to twenty to surround the lavishly spread table. All departed ror their homes Sunday night, Ten local men started to work near Boardman Tuesday on the county relief work. Oregon Laws Guided Nation, Writer Finds Eugene. Oregon laws and their subsequent interpretations by the courts made two distinct contrlbu tions to the national development of the present public utility concept and to public regulation of private industry for the common welfare it is declared by John W. Joyce formerly a graduate assistant in the department of economics at the Un iversity of Oregon, in an article en. titled "Early Oregon Public Utility Regulation, 1843-1899," published in tne recent Issue of the Common wealth Review, a journal Issued by tne university here. The first of these contributions wag the enactment and subsequent interpretation of the long and short haul clause In the first general law regulating railroads, Mr. Jove states. The second was the exten sion of the public utility concept to inciuae water supply companies. Try a Gazette Times Want Ad. -I ii i imir iiiiii 1. i -mum 1 Wallace right man I was struck by Henry Wallace's talks on his recent trip into his na tive Middle West. Our Secretary of Agriculture is about the only mem ber of the Administration who has voiced the elemental truth that any program of recovery must take the whole world into its scope. I do not say that nobody else in the Admin istration recognizes that our prob lems, especially as they deal with farm surpluses, are international and not national, but Henry Wal lace is the only one I know of who has said that in public. That merely confirms my previous opinion that he is the right man in the right place. Few men in public life have as broad a grasp of econ omic questions, and I know of no body who really understands the agricultural situation as well as he does. Money . . . finding a level What is happening in the matter of American money is just this, as I see it. There are only three or four nations, of which France is the most important, whose domestic money is still tied to gold. Three quarters of the world's people live in nations where the strength back of the money is the national credit. Gold is no longer used by them for money except in international trade. Cheapening their money in terms of gold, as England, Japan, the United States, have done, does not affect its internal value, but only its foreign trade value. The cheaper the money compared with gold, the greater the advantage a nation has over others in foreign trade. We have taken that advantage away from cheap currencies in world trade by cheapening ours. But so long as one important na- tion remains on the gold standard the others cannot get back to it ex cept on the basis of that nation's currency, which would still leave In equalities. What is going on seems to me to be a deliberate attempt to force France, and with it Belgium, Switzerland and a few minor na tions, off the gold standard. With all nations off gold, their re spective currencies will speedily find their natural relative values, one to the other, and it will be possible to set up a new, universal gold stand ard to which all can conform. In the meantime, a dollar is still a dollar in America, as a yen is still a yen in Japan and a pound still pound in England. Weather . . 23 year cycle Remember what the weather was like 23 years ago? Whatever it was in 1911 in your part of the world. It probably will be much the same in 1934, says Professor Charles G. Ab bott secretary of the Smithsonian Institution of Washington. Every 11 years the sun breaks out in larger spots. That these had some influence on our weather has long been believed, but nobody could figure out the cycle. Professor Ab' bott thought perhaps is was a dou- ble cycle, and by comparing the weather records over 23-year per iods discovered that condtions are repeated every 23 years. If it was a dry year in 1910, look for a dry season next year, and vice-versa. Sunspots, of course, won't tell whether it will rain on the Fourth of July, but Professor Abbott thinks they will tell whether it is going to be a good season in the cotton belt or a poor season in the wheat belt, Islands that floa' Edward Armstrong astonished the world of engineering a few years ago when he came out with a pro posal to anchor floating islands at intervals across the Atlantic, to pro vide landing platforms and refuel ing stations for airplanes crossing from continent to continent. I was pleased to read the other day that the Government is going to nelp finance the building of an ex perimental island on the Armstrong plan. If that stands up and stays in place through the Atlantic storms more will be built and it will soon be possible to carry passengers, mail and freight in safety across th Western Ocean. There is something to fire the Im agination in dreams like this: some thing to stir patriotic pride in their realization. Dreams ... do come true In one man's lifetime I have seen so many dreams come true that am no longer astonished at anything mucn. wnen i was a boy I was fascinated by the romances of Jules Verne, who wrote about such "im possible" things as submarine ships, balloon voyages, flying machines and the like. I read Edward Bel lamy's "Looking Backward" I which he Imagined the possibility of listening to music and voices from a distance, without wires; clear vision of the radio. I had toy called a "zootrope" in which picture of a horse seemed to gallop when a wheel was turned, and so the movies didn't surprise me, read about a man who thoueht h could build a machine that would talk, long before the phonograph was invented. And one of my boy- noou iriends was a young chap named Charlie Duryea, who had the crazy idea that he could build an engine to run by gasoline, which would propel a buggy! After seeing so many impossible tnings accomplished I am prepared to believe almost anything. I long ago refused to listen to people who said of any new idea "It can't be done. Start of Corn-Hog Plan Awaits Word on Detalis Just how much of a part Oregon will take in the forthcoming corn- hog reduction program now start ed by the agricultural adjustment! administration will depend largely on the details c.f the plan, such as the number of sows necessary to make one eligible, and other fea tures, believes H. A. Lindgren, live stock fleldman of the Oregon State college extension service. Such details had not been re ceived the first of December but just as soon as they are the infor mation will be disseminated to all counties of the state through county gents and the press so that all Or egon hog raisers can decide what the best course will be In relation to the control program. Decline In export demand has been one of the principal factors in bringing the hog market to its pres ent low position, figures gathered by the AAA reveal. While hog pro duction in this country has in creased at about the same rate as the population exports of hog pro ducts have steadily declined since the world war until this year they were less than a quarter of the amount taken by other countries In 1919, and barely half of the 1925 ex ports. Oregon stands to gain much by the corn-hog program, it is pointed out for though this is a deficit hog producing state, prices here reflect directly the middle western market levels. AAA officials are repeatedly asked why there should be concerted cur tailment of production as long as there is a single hungry mouth in this country. To this they reply that if there was being consumed now all the wheat, pork, corn and similar basic products that were being used at the peak of prosper ity, there would still be great un used surpluses as the result of the loss of the export markets. These huge surpluses here at home de press the markets, keep growers from getting enough money to buy the products of the citeis, and hence industrial workers are thrown out of employment. The very sur pluses thus add to the "hungry mouths." The Book the first line of which reads, "The Holy Bible,'" and which contains Four Great Treasures. By BRUCE BARTON A Great Declaration There are some wonderful things in the book of Leviticus for the stu dent of history. For example, many of the laws of health and sanitation on which we moderns pride our selves are distinctly set forth here. We think of the. disinfection of a house where there has been con tagious disease as a comparatively recent development in medical sci ence, but Moses prescribed that the blankets of the sick man should be burned and the house thoroughly purified. The book of Numbers, also. has some high lights, but speaking generally, these two books are less interesting than Genesis, Exodus and Deuteronomy, the other three. and may well be omitted if one is reading to get the best in the eas iest way. Start in then with the first chap ter of Genesis and you are gripped at once. Here is no preface, no ar gument, only a great declaration: "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. And God said, Let there be light: and there was light" Viewed only as a piece of good writing that paragraph Is superb. What a way to begin a story! How dignified, how Impressive! How swift and sure the movement! How nobly superior to the Greek myth ologies, and free from their gross- ness and puerility! There is an old anecdote, attrib uted usually to Charles A. Dana, about a reporter who protested that a certain news story could not be compressed into a column. Dana sent him to the Bible. "Read the first chapter of Genesis and you'll find the whole story of the creation in less than six hundred words. The whole story is there in one chap ter, majestic in its simplicity, every line fraught with meaning and in terest. If you argue that Evolution tells the story very differently, your ar gument is only partly true. What does Evolution say? That in the beginning there was nothing but nebulous matter; that it gathered itself into hot shapeless planets, which by revolving grew round; then Into land and water; that grad ually vegetation appeared, then life in low forms, then higher forms, and finally man. Look back at Gen esis and you are surprised perhaps to discover a certain method of progress In its account which is not at all at variance with the best sci entific knowledge. It, too, starts with matter fluid and formless, "without form, and void," But the matter is not wholly inert; the creative Spirit 'the sci entists say the "First Cause," which means nothing much except that they don't know) is brooding over the vast shapeless egg and incu bating something of purpose. The matter is In motion. It separates itself into masses. There is dis tinction between that which belongs to the earth and that which is of other bodies. Upon the earth the waters gather Into oceans, and land Is seen in continents. Next Week i Development of the Book. ATTENTION. The Willing Workers of the Christian church will have an apron and cooked food sale on Sat, Dec. 9, in Shelly Baldwin's windows. THE Hehisch Published by the Journalism Class Of HEPPNER HIGH SCHOOL STAFF Editor Francis Nickerson Class News Andy v'an Schoiack Sports B.'ly Cochell Grade News Jennie Swendig Reporters: Clifford Yarnell, James Beamer, Ray Reld, Francis Rugg, JJon Jones, Cleo Hiatt. Editorial There are two different types of courage: physical and moral. Phy sical courage is that which enables a man to face great physical danger without flinching. "Moral courage enables a person to stand for what he or she believes is right in spite of temptation, desertion of friends, attacks of enemies, or any other reason. In a large number of cases when a person has one he will also have the other, but this Is not al ways true. One type is no better than the other but in order to at tain success it is necessary to have both. Practically all persons attending school prove their physical courage or lack of it very early because of that fact that It is almost impossi ble to go through school with a lot of other students without crossing someone at some time. Fortunate ly this type of courage is possessed by a large majority of students. Now that the prohibition amend ment has been repealed many of us are going to have an opportunity to display moral courage. Drinking Is harmful. There is no way of get ting around this point. Drinking cuts down resistance, moral force, physical ability, and mental efficien cy. The size of the loss Is in di rect proportion to the amount one drinks, but no matter how little one drinks harm is done. No man who drinks can hope to reach the top in the present day type of civilization. All of these facts are true and cannot be contested. We know they are true. We are wondering how many of us are going to show moral courage and leave liquor alone. This will be a hard thing to do since from now on we are to be continually tempt ed to drink. But if drinking is known to be wrong is that not rea son enough for the person with moral courage to refuse? Anyone who does drink lacks moral cour age, and anyone who lacks moral courage is a coward of the" worst type a moral coward. Are you a moral coward, or as it is commonly put, are you yellow? , Sixteen Letters Awarded Every year after football season the members of the squad who have played one complete game or five separate quarters are awarded a golden "H" which is set upon a pur ple background. Those to receive letters for the 1933 football season are Harold Ayers, Howard Bryant, Marvin Morgan, Owen Bleakman, Claire Phelan, Donald Drake, Curtis Thomson, Floyd Jones, Cleo Hiatt, Reese Burkenbine, Raymond Reid, Matt Kenny, Howard Furlong and Edwin Dick. $2000 for Repair Work. The government has recently al lotted the Heppner school the sum of $2000 to be used in repairing the school buildings. It is expected this will give quite a bit of work to the unemployed men In Heppner. The roof of the building is to be cov ered with tin; the windows will be weather-stripped; the wooden steps in the basements will be replaced with concrete steps; and the pipe between the gymnasium and the main building will be Insulated to make heating of the gymnasium more efficient High School Notes Amendment No. V which per tained to student body officers and the number of positions each officer can hold was voted into the high school constitution by a unanimous vote taken at the student body meeting last Wednesday afternoon. The Booster club organization was explained and Its membership read oy Francis Kugg. A few spir ited yells were given by the student body for the basketball team and then the meeting was adjourned. The honor roll for students hav ing ones on their report cards this six weeks included the following Three l's each, Armin Wihlon and Irene Beamer; two ones each: Clif ford Yarnell and LaVerne Van Mar- ter; one one each: Francis Nicker son, Ralph Currln, Billy Thomson, Alice Bleakman, Florence Moyer, Miriam Moyer, Beth Wright, Owen Bleakman, Ervln Perlberg, Jessie French, Jennie Swendig, Betty uonerty, Katnerine Healy, Margar et Sprinkel, Paul Brown, Dean Goodman and Dora Bailey. Have you ever Seen Howard Furlong's picture on tne bulletin board? Seen Marion Oviatt study? Wondered why Mr. Foord al ways wears a blue tie on Mon day? Wondered why it took so many students till Monday afternoon to get to school? Seen Frank Anderson and An son Rugg pump up a flat tire? Wondered who the certain L. A. Is that Jimmy Farley seems so fond of? P. W. Mahoney, local attorney, explained to the sociology class on Tuesday afternoon the state and national statutes which have to do with freedom of speech. The noise In the typing I lab, has Increased to a frantic din as mem bers of the class enter the race to Increase' their speed rates to twen ty words a minute before Christ mas. This follows an announce ment by the Instructor, Miss Cop pock, to the effect that anyone who could not type twenty words a min ute by Christmas would fail for the half year. The foods class is serving break fast to its members. The sewing class is working on art problems for Christmas. The public speaking class is learn ing how to conduct meetings. Mr. Claude Pevey has taken over Mr. Lumley's classes for the re mainder of the year. Mr. Pevey is from Helix. Everybody raced for the fire es cape last Tuesday as the fire bell rang through the building. All high school students escaped by means of the fire chute at the north end of the buildiner. A group of selected students met last Tuesday for the purpose or or ganizing a booster club which shall have for its purpose the advancing of school pep. Sports HenDner high school's fast bas ketball Quintet defeated lone high 18 to 10 on the Heppner gym floor Saturday night Heppner took and held the lead the entire game. lone at no time seriously threatened to lead. Gentry and Akers, respective ly were high scorers ror weppner and lone. Line-ups were: HeDDner: forwards, Green and Jones; center, Schwarz; guards, Gentry and Phelan. lone: for wards, Akers and Heliker; center, Morgan; guards, Eubanks and Brls tow. Substitutes for Heppner were Driscoll, P. Phelan, Furlong and Cox. Next Friday at seven o'clock the local hoopsters will play Lexington high on the Heppner gym floor. The Lexington and Heppner town teams will play a preliminary game. Grade School News , Warren Blakely, a student of the fifth grade, broke his ankle in Ar lington last Thursday. Warren, known to almost everyone as Bud dy, was playing with his friends when he slipped into a ditch, break ing his ankle. Guy Moore has moved to fine City where he will go to school. He is in the sixth grade. Band to Have Grade Sheets Grade sheets have been issued by Mr. Buhman for the purpose of keeping track of the amount of hours each band member practices This means that at the end of the six weeks a member who practices the most will get the highest grade and those members who do not practice will be graded accordingly. A good member should practice about seven or eight hours a week. World Peace Topic of University Students Eugene. Students of the Univer sity of Oregon representing 10 dif ferent countries and five different races were on the program of the International banquet held at the Methodist church club rooms in Eugene December 1. Countries rep resented were the Philippines, Chi na, Japan, Germany, Finland, Great Britain, Greece, Ireland, Italy and Poland, and races included white, Philippino, Japanese, Chinese and negro. World peace and international re lations were topics featured at the event. Eric W. Allen, dean of the school of journalism, who spent last summer touring and observing con ditions in Japan and China, deliv ered the address of the evening. CARD OF THANKS. We wish to express our sincere thanks to the many friends and neighbors for their kindly help and sympathy at the time of our be reavement Eugene, Frank and George Noble, Mrs. Jennie McCarter. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned was duly appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, administrator of the estate of Annie Williams, deceased, and all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased, are hereby required to present the same to the un dersigned, with proper vouchers, at the law office of Jos. J. Nys, at Heppner, Oregon, within six months from the date hereof. Dated and first published this 22rd day of November, 1933.. HENRY CRUMP, Administrator. NOTICE OP SHERIFF'S SALE. Notice Is hereby given that by virtue of an execution issued out of the Cir cuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, dated November 21st 1933, in that certain suit wherein Mar garet H. Woodson, as plaintiff, recov ered a Judgment against the defend ants, Eflle J. Gilliam, Louis E. Bisbee, Emeline F. Bisbee, pesonally and against Lenn L. Gilliam and E. E, Gil liam as executors of the Estate of Frank Gilliam, and against each of them for the sum of Fifteen Thousand and no-100 Dollars together with in terest thereon at the rate of seven per cent per annum from the 1st day of June, 1931; the further sum of Seven hundred and no-100 Dollars, attorney's fee, and the plaintiff's costs and dis bursements incurred in this suit taxed and allowed in the sum of Twenty and 75-100 Dollars, and a decree of fore closure against the defendants, Erne J. Gilliam, a widow, Louis E. Bisbee and Emeline F.. Bisbee, husband and wife, Lenn L. Gilliam and E. E. Gilliam as executors of the Estate of Frank Gil liam, Lenn L. Gilliam, single, E. E. Gilliam and Mary Gilliam, husband and wife, C. C. Gilliam and Hazel Gilliam, husband and wife, Ona Gilliam, a spin ster, Hazel Vaughn and Charles Vaughn, wife and husband, Minnie W. Shutt, a widow, I will, on the Twenty-third day of December, 1933, at the hour of Ten o'clock A. M. of said day at the front door of the county court house in Heppner, Morrow County, State of Or egon, offer for sale and sell to the high est bidder for cash in hand all of the following described real property sit uated in Morrow County, State of Ore gon, to-wlt: Commencing at the Northwest cor ner of Block numbered Five (5) in the Town of Heppner, in the Coun ty of Morrow, State of Oregon, running thence East Fifty (50) feet; thence South Eighty (80) feet; thence East Twenty-seven (27) feet; thence South Sixty-three (63) feet; thence West Seventy-seven (77) feet; thence North One hundred and Forty-three (143) feet to the point of beginning, being parts of Lots Eight (8) Nine (9) and Ten (10) in Block Five (5) in the Town of Heppner, aforesaid, or so much of said real property as may be necessary to satisfy the plaintiff's Judgment, costs and attorney's fee and accruing costs of sale. . . c' J' D' BAUMAN, Sheriff of Morrow County, State of Oregon. Date of First Publication: November 23, 1933., NOTICE OP SHERIFF'S SALE OP SEAL PROPERTY ON EXECUTION. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an execution in foreclosure duly is sued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, on the 20th day of November, 1933. by the Clerk of said court pursuant to a judg ment and decree renuereu in saiu court on the 7th day of Novembtr, 1933. in favor of James Ben Green, Executor of the estate of Sanford Green, deceased, plaintiff and against Harriet M. Brown, and Roy Brown, her husband, defend ants, for the sum of JJ623.44, the sum of J200.00, attorney's fees, and $26.90, the COSLS ana aiMUurseiueiiui, nuu ut- recting me to sell the following describ ed real property, situate in Morrow County, Oregon, to-wit: The WV4 of SW54, SWK of SE'A and 8E14 of SW of Section 26, the EM of SWtt of SE4 of Sec tion 27, the EVfe of NE14 and NWK of NEI4 of Section 34 and W'i of NW!4, NVs of SWV and Eto of NW4 of Section 35 In Township three (3) South, Range 25 East of Willamette Meridian. Now, in obedience to said execution, I will on Saturday, the 23rd day of December, 1933, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the front door of the Court House at Heppner, Oregon, sell at public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash the said real property and apply the pro ceeds to the payment of said judgment or so much thereof as may be neces sary and the accruing cost of sale. Dated this 23rd day of November, 1933. C. J. D. BAUMAN. Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, Administratrix of the Estate of Uzz French, Deceased, and she has duly qualified. All persons having claims against said estate must present them to me, duly verilied as required by law, at the 6mce of P. W. Mahoney, in Heppner, Oregon, on or before Six months from the date of first publication of this no tice. LULU FRENCH, Administratrix of the Estate of Vzz French, Deceased. Date of first publication, November Sixteenth, 1933. Professional Cards :staasat3siie$aMs DR. E. C. WILLCUTT Osteopathic Physician & Surgeon (Over J. C. Penney Co.) PENDLETON, OREGON AUCTIONEER Farm and Personal Property Sales a Specialty G. L. BENNETT "The Man Who Talks to Beat the Band" LEXINGTON, OREGON PHELPS FUNERAL HOME Phone 1332 HEPPNER, OREGON J. O. TURNER Attorney at Law Phone 173 Humphreys Building HEPPNER, ORB. A. B. GRAY, M. D. PHYSICIAN k SURGEON Phona 323 Heppner Hotel Building Eyes Tested and (liaises Pitted. WM. BROOKHOUSER PAINTING PAPERHANOXNQ INTERIOR DEOORATHfQ Leave orders at Peoples Hard wars Company DR. J. H. McCRADY DENTIST X-Rs; Diagnosis Oilman Building Heppner, Oregon A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON Trained Nurss Assistant Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon P. W. MAHONEY ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building Hsppnsr, Oregon S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Offlos In L O. O. P. Building Heppner, Oregon J. O. PETERSON Latest Jewelry and Gift Goods Watches - Clocks - Diamonds Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon F. W. TURNER & CO. 'IRE, AUTO AND LIFH - INSURANCE Old Lin Companies. Real Estate, Heppner, Oregon JOS. J. NYS ATTONEY-AT-LAW Roberts Building, Willow Btrsst Heppner, Oregon