PAGE TWO HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPT. 6. 1934. THE HEPPNER GAZETTE. Established March 30.1SS3; THE HEPPNER TIMES. Established November 18. 1S97; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15. 1912. Published every Thursday morning by VAWTEB and SPENCER CRAWFORD and entered at the Post Office at Hepp ner, Oregon, as second-class matter. ADVERTISING BATES GIVES ON APPLICATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Tear ,. Six Months Three Months Single Copies , $2.00 1.00 .75 .06 Official Paper for Morrow County The Result of Work and Cooperation. HEPPNER'S 13th Rodeo was suc cessful, financially and in re spect to all other expectations of it. It drew what was probably the largest crowd ever assembled in the city, and the crowd, though pleas ure bent, was orderly withal and appreciative of the entertainment and hospitality of the city. The en tire occasion was marked by gen eral good will and a general good time, serving as a medium for re newing old acquaintanceships, mak ing new friendships, and giving the city such a house-warming as it has not had in many a day. Those esteemed visitors who as sisted with the judging and in oth er ways helped with the show have the warmest thanks of the people of Heppner. The high caliber of performers has received commen dation on many sides, and many ex pressions of appreciation were heard from the performers them' selves of the fair treatment given by the judges and officials in all in stances. Fair play was the watch- word throughout, and everyone got the money to which he was entitled. That such an accident as hap pened in Saturday's derby came about, is regrettable, and many ex pressions of sympathy were heard for the injured. But the sports of cowboys are not child's play. It takes red-blooded men and women of nerve to participate in Rodeo sports, such a nerve as is required to meet all the trials of life. A spirit that is admired by all. Now that the curtain has dropped on the last performance, the dec orations have been removed, and almost the last indication of the gala celebration has been erased; and now that the city has returned to normalcy, there is naught to say but "we're glad you all came, and please come back again. It took foresight and a lot of hard work on the part of those men in charge of this year's show to bring it through to a successful conclusion. To Henry Aiken, pres ident, Herb French, D. A. Wilson and Earl Eskelson, vice president and directors, go a lot of thanks for their good work, and to all those co-workers, to the business folk, to the granges and to everyone whose cooperation made the success pos sible, go a lot of thanks also. To Complete the Alphabet (Contributed) LOS ANGELES, Aug. 4 (To the Editor of the Times:) "We've got the NRA, the CCC, the PWA, the CWA, and a host of other al phabetical cryptograms, but when the C.O.D.'s and the I.O.U.'s begin to come in, then there will be an S.O.S. for the G.O.P. P. D. Q." H. E. SEESIT. CCC BOYS EARN' PAY. To the Editor: It seems rather peculiar, but the general opinion of the public seems to be that a CCC camp i3 a place where men go to bum around and get a vacation on pay. To be sure there are a few who work but very little; however, the majority work hard. A great deal has been accomplish ed by Company 1309 at Tollgate, This camp is composed entirely of Oregon boys. Between the hours of 8 a. m. and 4 p. m. the CCC boy is all business, He is locating and slashing right of ways and building roads, putting up new and maintaining old tele phone lines, putting up shelters, piping water and putting in other accommodations in recreation parks for campers, building houses, barns and garages for rangers and look-outs, erecting lookout tower3 of both steel and wood, building stock trails, corrals and drift fences and many other things for the comfort and safety of all who go into the mountains on business or pleasure, After 4 p. m. the CCC boy is at leisure to do pretty much as he pleases until "lights out" at 10 p. m, Recreations provided by the com pany are pool, ping pong, a library, volley ball, indoor baseball, also dancing, and swimming and boat- . lng at Langdon lake. ONE OF THE CCC BOYS, WICK-LOVGREN. Mlsg Roxie Wick of Lone Rock and Alfred Lovgren of Hardman were married here Saturday after noon at the home of Joel R. Benton, Christian minister who performed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Brown of Rhea creek were attend ants. The marriage was given more than usual notice when the an nouncer at the Rodeo called Mr. Benton, and later announced the purpose of the call. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hayes and family and "Happy" Hayes were over from Lonerock for the last day of the Rodeo. MEMBER BOARDMAN By RACHEL J. BARLOW School opened here at 9 o'clock Monday morning with a large en rollment of students. School was let out at noon after the registra tions were made, and on Tuesday was in session all day. The teach ers on this year's staff are: Edwin Ing'es, supt.; Murdina Nelson and Clara. Ruff, high school; Miss Har- ned, 1st and 2nd; Miss Burkholder, 3d and 4th; Miss Henderson, 5th and 6th; and Theron Anderson, 7th and 8th. Several graduates of Boardman high are taking post graduate courses this year. Bill Ayers returned to Boardman Sunday after visiting in Heppner and Portland for a while. A number of Boardman folks at tended the Rodeo at Heppner last week. Guy Barlow, deputy sheriff, helped C. J. D. Bauman all three days of the Rodeo. H. H. Weston was a visitor In Portland and Hillsboro last week. Mr. and Mrs. Strobel and family and A. B. Chaffee motored to Pen dleton Saturday. John Chaffee re turned home with them. Miss Katherine Brown left last week for Woodland, Wash., where she will teach in the grade school again this year. Dean and Freddie Griffith re turned to their home near Portland last Saturday after visiting here for several weeks with their grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Asmussen and family of Woodland were overnight guests last Thursday at the George Blayden home. Miss Mabel Brown went to Al- derdale Monday where she was re elected as a teacher. Rev. and Mrs. H. B. Thomas and family attended the Baker county fair last Monday and Tuesday. The Thimble met last Friday af ternoon at the home of Mrs. J. F. Gorham. Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Keys of California spent several days on the project last week, visiting at the Royal Rands home. They have gone to Wenatchee where they will pack apples. John, Pat and Geraldine Healy left last Thursday for Portland where the latter will visit with rel atives and the boys will enjoy a mo tor trip to the coast Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cramer and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Surface left Monday for Spokane where they will be gone a short time. Glen Berger spent several days in Boardman last week with old friends. Mrs. George Wicklander spent last week in The Dalles with her daughter and family. L. N. Compton was a business visitor in Portland several days last week. Clarence Berger of The Dalles has been relief operator at Messner during Mr. Compton's ab sence. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harwood re turned home recently from a motor trip through California. Miss Norma Gibbons went to lone Sunday where she will teach at the Liberty school, near there. IRRIGON MRS. W. C. ISOM. Mr. and Mrs. Clair Caldwell left Monday for Entiat, Wn., where Mr. Caldwell has employment in the ap ple orchards. Rev. and Mrs. Walter Warner left Friday for Spokane, being enroute to Yale University. They expect to visit relatives in Bozeman and Springdale, Montana, and will go from there to Yellowstone park and on to the world's fair at Chi cago before completing their jour ney. David and Bryant Williams, who have been visiting their grandpar Greatest Pendleton Round-Up September 13th is the : ':' : y-'l " v. i$ M.?S$5K lilllii j J, L i"1 . C2 ' I kk&r I:. Action lifcn thin will bring folks to their feet at the famous old I'cndlplon Hound-In Thursday, Kri daj and Saturday, September 13, 14 and 13. ents at Teco, Wn., for the past sev eral weeks, returned home Thurs day. They were accompanied by their uncle, Kenneth Mace. Alvert Veige from Umatilla was a dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ros coe Williams Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Don Kenny are the proud parents of a baby boy born Thursday. Sept. 30.. Mother and ba by are doing fine. Mrs. Edith Mark ham remained with Mrs. Kenny for a few days when she was re lieved by Mrs. Strader. Mr. and Mrs. Martin and daugh ter Eloise of Portland visited Mrs. W. C. Isom Thursday as they were enroute to Idaho Falls, Idaho. Francis Markham left Friday for Sclah, Wn., to visit hia father, Lawrence Markham. Mr. and Mrs Clarence Wood of Tollgate, Wn., spent the week end with the Clay Wood family. Glenn Ball of Yakima was a bus iness visitor here Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Kendler, Jr., of Umatilla and Miss Gwendolin Merrith of Spokane were guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Isom Sunday evening. Miss Bowling of Portland estab lished her residence in one of the F. Leicht cabins Saturday, prepar atory to taking up her duties as teacher in the grade school. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Houghton were Walla Walla visitors Saturday. Chase McCoy of Imbler visited relatives here over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Cork of Edg mont, S. D., arrived Sunday evening for a visit with Mr. Cork's sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Isom. Mr. Isom and Mrs. W. W. Cork mo tored to Arlington Sunday night to meet Mr. and Mrs. Cork. Mrs. Raymond Lamoreaux who has been staying at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Emery Shell during her illness returned home with her lit tle son, Ronald Raymond, Monday. George Hendrix returned from The Dalles Wednesday. Mrs. W. C. Isom, her small grand daughter, Yvonne Kendler, and Mrs, W. W. Cork visited Mrs. Homer Hendrick at Stanfield Sunday. Land Bank Loans Not Hampered by Drouth Spokane, Wash. "No general re ductions are being made in our ap praisal values because of this sea son's reduced rainfall or water shortage in the irrigation districts,1 declares E. M. Ehrhardt, president of the Federal Land Bank of Spo kane. "The land bank is continuing its services to farm borrowers in the usual way. Some rechecking of earlier commitments in dry-land drouth areas has been deemed pru dent where security upon which we based our original commitment has undergone a change before the loan was closed, but in principle we are carrying through unswervingly. President Ehrhardt's explanation is in answer to questions as to the effect of drouth on the land bank's lending program. He points out that the bank bases its appraisals on the "normal value" of farm land representing average conditions over a period of years, thus mak ing allowance for seasonal changes either upward or downward. CALL FOR WARRANTS. Warrants of School Dist. No. 12, Lexington, Morrow County, Ore gon, up to and including Warrant No. 340 will be paid on presentation to the district clerk. Interest on said warrants ceases with this no tice. DONA E. BARNETT, District Clerk. Fred Albert, resident of the Lena district, was transacting business in Heppner Tuesday. Tales of Old Times BY J. W. RBDINGTON pioneer editor of tht "Gautw writing from National Military Horn. California. HEPPNER HOSTILITIES. There has been considerable his torical hijacking about the Bannock Indian war of 1878 and how it came pretty near to hitting Heppner, without touching it, the nearest point being Butter creek, where a war party killed some sheepmen whose names I had in my head, but they flashed away again. That spring I was with some sheepshearers clipping the feath ers off of John Curran's sheep, which Park Garrigues was running up on the Kelthly ranch. The news came that Buffalo Horn had start ed out on the warpath in Idaho, just as he told me that he was go ing to, when he was In our scouting outfit on the Yellowstone the year before. When I announced my In tention of going out scouting again, Mrs. Garrigues offered to' sell me for $2.50 a horse that had been wished onto her by somebody. I borrowed that sum from Judge Dut ton, so that it was a spot sale. When I spotted the horse out on the range and rode him into town I found that he was too slow and heavy for a warhorse, so I swapped him for a light footed cayuse to Mr. Howell, of McKinney creek, who was camp ed near Heppner, having come in like many others to get out of the proposed path of the hostiles. The $5 to boot that I had to pay I bor rowed from Will Walbridge, and when I rode away to join the army, he and Judge Dutton rode with me over to Pine Creek where Winlock Steiwer swapped me a big straw berry roan for my cayuse. He was a good, tough horse named Bones, because he was rawboned, and was afraid of nothing, going right up to dead horses, dead Indians or whites, with none of the temperamental snorting that other horses indulged in, and when I turned him loose at night I could always find him nib bling grass near by next morning. I must have rode him 1000 miles before abandoning him on the Meacham road, and even then he was not given out, but the scouts had a chance to get fresh horses, and our chief, Rube Robbins, said I had better change while there was a chance. When I left Heppner that morn ing, Mrs. J. L. Morrow, that good lady who was a mother to all of us, cooked me up a sack of donuts to nibble on until I reached the hard tack zone with the regular army, which I did after several days and nights of hard riding. Meantime rumors reached Hepp ner that the hostiles were coming down Willow creek, heading for the Chief Moses country across the Co lumbia, where his 5000 warriors would join them and make a clean sweep of all whites clear to the Canadian border, where they would join Sitting Bull and his successful Sioux, who had killed Custer's troopers two years before. Uncle Jack Morrow, who had seen service as a lieutenant in the Washington Territory Volunteers during the Yakima war of '55-6, took things in hand, handed out 50 needleguns that Governor Chadwick had sent up from Fort Vancouver, and set a force of volunteers to throwing up a dirt fort alongside his store. Big-hearted Henry Heppner lock ed up his store and was full of ac tivity in arranging the defences of the town. He had filled my saddle- pockets with sugar, bacon and cof fee when I started for the front, and he freely drew on his store Ready Opening Day stock to keep the day-and-night guards well fed up on crackers, cheese and sardines. Among the guards were Joe Rector, Oscar Mi nor and Sam Carmack. Heppner scouted around among the campers who had been stampeded from out side districts, found out what the women and children needed, and brought it to them pronto pay when can, or forget it He was one nature's noblemen! The Heppner fort was an illustra tion of how preparedness kept us out of war and made the world safe for astronomy, trickonometry and assafetity. Had hostiles dropped down and tried to take it with their storm troops, most of them would be ready for Memaloose Island, for those '50-calibre needle guns were strong shooting-irons that would kill elefants at long range. Columbia Joe s outfit of renegade Indians were known to be camped on Penland prairie, handy to join the hostiles after they had been joined by Umapine's outfit of Uma tilla warriors, and Willard Herren, Doc Andrews and Tex Croft volun teered to go out and capture them. which they did, after convincing Joe tnat his safety zone was down at the Columbia. It was a stirring sight to see that little squad of white men driving that outfit of 100 wild Indians, with their herd of 300 horses ahead of them, and turning them over to Commander Morrow as prisoners of war. While a pow wow was going on near the fort, one big squaw shouted defiance and made a break for freeom on her fast horse. Judge Dutton rode after her for half a mile, but she ignored his commands to halt, and as it was not the open season for shooting squaws she escaped. Meanwhile the Heppner fort was made safe for women and children, and as the whites needed not so many Indians around, Lieut. Mor row gave Joe a fatherly talk and sent the tribe on their way to the Columbia, where they stayed put. When the hostiles showed no sign of coming down Willow creek and hitting Heppner, a troop of volun teers started out to help settlers, and I think that Frank Maddock was their captain and Denis de Porte lieutenant, with Tom Hall and Young Forward among the high privates. I collided with some of them while I was scouting around Butter Creek, but soon after they rooe nome, as the war zone had shifted over to the Umatilla reser vation, where the First Cavalry de- ieatea the hostiles at the battle on Bear Fork of Birch Creek, and the 21st Infantry under Colonel Evan Miles, Troop K, 1st Cavalry under capt iiendire and the Pendleton volunteers under Captain Frank Frazier, Jim Turner and Matlock gave them a lasting defeat at the battle of Cayuse Station, which was the turning point of the war. The men who were in the field winning the west in those frontier days have mostly mosied over the Great Di vide, leaving me to feel like the last of the Mohicans. Their bones are dust, their guns are rust, their souls are with the Lord, we trust. PINE CITY By OLETA NEILL Those from Pine City attending me neppner Kodeo were Mr. and Mrs. John Healy and family, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Finch and fam ily, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Moore and family, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Watten burger and family, Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Neill and family, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Wattenburger, Mr. and Mrs. u. i. Ayers and family, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Bartholomew, Mrs. T. J, O'Brien and children, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ayers, Mrs. Stanley Struth ers and son Allen, Misses Neva, Ole ta and Lenna Neill, Ellis Coxen, ranK and Dick Carlson, Alvin Strain and Fred and August Rauch, C. H. Bartholomew was a busi ness visitor in Hermiston Tuesday. Mrs. T. J. O'Brien and daughter Isabella left Tuesday morning for tne Danes, where Isabella will at tend school this year. Mrs. O' Brien returned the following day. Mrs. Roy Neill and son Guy Moore returned Friday evening from a week's vacation at Tacoma. Wash, Ray Hardman, principal of the Pine City high school, who is from Eugene, and Miss Eleanor Barth, the primary teacher, from Salem, are staying at the home of Mrs. Ol lie Neill this year. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Criteser and daughter Flo and son Delbert, and Roy Jarmon of Portland spent the week end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Jarmon. Miss Cecelia Brennon, the Inter mediate and assistant high school teacher, returned to the C. H. Bar tholomew home Sunday. Miss Frankie Neal is staying at tne nome of Mr. and Mrs. E. B Wattenburger this winter and will attend the Pine City high school. Mrs. Stanley Struthers motored to Pendleton Tuesday evening. Her son Allen returned with her. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Neill and family attended church at the Un ion church In Hermiston Sunday. Mrs. O. F. Thomson visited Sun day Bit the home of her daughter, Mrs. E. P. Jarmon. Mrs. T. J. O'Brien and daughter Katnerine and son Pat and Mrs. Isabella Corrigall called on Mra. Anna Schmidt Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Criteser and daughter and Miss Lida Jarmon and Roy Jarmon called on Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Bartholomew Monday. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Wattenburger ana a. wattenburger were in Echo on business Fjiday. Mrs. Isabella Corrigall is staying at the T. J. O'Brien home while Mrs. O'Brien Is in The Dalles. CALL FOR WARRANTS. School District No. 29, Morrow County, Oregon, will pay warrants numbered 82 to 128 inclusive on presentation to the district clerk. Interest on said warrants ceases with this notice. HENRY E, PETERSON, lone. District Clerk. Sheep range for rent 3000 acres In Sections 19, 18, 24, 25. 14. 30. Twn. 2 N.( Ranges 24, 25, and 640 acres at McEntlre Well, Range 23. Nell uonerty, Lexington, Ore. Governor Meier Urges More Care on Highways As governor of the state of Ore gon and as an individual, I wish to bring the following facts to the at tention of Oregon citizens, whether they be drivers, passengers or pe destrians: During 1933 and up to July 1. 1934. there have been 412 deaths, 6983 in juries, and $15,000,000 loss in money in the state of Oregon. This rep resents an average of one death for each 2,427 families, one injury for each 143 families and an average cost in money to each family of $75. All of this loss has been caused by automobile accidents, and in almost every accident one or more persons were either careless or thoughtless of their own safety or the-rights of others. When the above loss is considered, in addition to the suffering of the injured and the grief of those who lost relatives and other loved ones, I feel confident that every citizen will cooperate with me in a special effort during the month of Septem ber to reduce this enormous toll by using utmost caution while driving, riding or walking on our streets and highways and by influencing others in using precaution. Automobile accidents are not re specters of persons or families, and you and yours may be the next where death or injury may strike. I hope, therefore, that the citi zens of Oregon will not only give their full support to the nation-wide safety program which will be ob served during September, but also that they will work systematically throughout the year for greater safety on our streets and highways, JULIUS L. MEIER, Governor. CALL FOR WARRANTS. Waiants of Union High School Dist. No. 1, Nos. 589 to 657 inclusive will be paid Sept. 8, 1934, on presen tation to clerk. Interest on said warrants ceases on this date. ETHEL M. KNIGHTEN, Clerk, Hardman, Oregon. CALL FOR WARRANTS. Warrants of School. Dist. No. 35, Morrow County, Oregon, numbers 596 to 619 called for payment at the clerk's office, lone, Oregon, Sept 6th, 1934. Interest will stop with this notice. RALPH HARRIS, District Clerk. 40 head hogs for sale or trade. Sows and pigs. Trade for cattle or sheep. W. H. French, Hardman. 25tf General trucking, anywhere, any time. Phone Walter Corley, lone. 26 NOTICE OP ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY. In the County Court of the State of Ore gon for Morrow County. In the MHtter of the Estate of Josiah W. Osborn, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the under- sgned, Administrator c. t. a. of the estate of Josiah W. O.-born, deceased, pursuant to an order of the above entitled Court, mane ana entered, on the bth day of Aug ust. 1934, will, on and after the 8th dav of Septemlier, 1934, offer for sale and sell the following described real property situated in Morrow county, uregon, to-wit: Beginning 12.17 chains West and 10.15 chains North of the Southeast corner of Section 29, Tp. 2 N., R. 23 E. W. M. and running thence West 3.18 chains, thence South 45 minutes East 7.15 chains, thence West 2.32 chains, North 15 minutes West 11.15 chains, North 48 degrees 42 minutes East 7.25 chains, East 75 2-3 links, South 45 minutes Kast 7.81 chains, West 75 2-3 links. South 45 minutes, East 97 links to place of beginning, containing 5.74 acres, more or less, excepting a strip of land 8 feet wide to be used as an irrigation ditch, beginning 4 chains North 45 minutes West of the starting point above described, thence running South 73 degrees West through said descrila-d tract of lnnd. Excepting also a strip of land 8 feet wide running Northeasterly and Northerly through said descrilM-d tract of land and now used as an irrigation ditch. Together with all the easements and water rights belonging to snid land and particu larly all grantor's right in and to the irrigation ditch now running from Willow Creek on the Curtis Place through the Mcllee Place to the above described land and right of way of said ditch. Also, beginning 12.14 chains West , and 4(i0'i feet North of the Southeast corner of Section 29, Tp. 2 N., R. 23 E. W. M., thence North 45 minutes West 210 fret, thence West 210 feet, thence South 46 minutes East 210 feet, thence East 210 fcK to the place of beginning, containing one acre, more or less, situated in Morrow County, State of Oregon. Also, beginning 12.09 chains West and 3 chains Norlh of the Southeast corner of Section 29, Tp. 2 N., R. 23 E. W. M., and running thence North 4i minutes West 211214 feet, thence West 210 feet, thence South 45 min ut East 2li2'i feet, thence East 210 feet to the place of beginning, con. taining 1.25 acres, more or less, at privnte sale for cash. Dated August 9, 1934. JACK HYND, Aminlstralor c. t. a. of the Estate of Josiah W. Osborn, deceased. First Publication August 9, 1934. Last Puhlicalion September fi, 1934, NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE. Notice is hereby given that on the 1st day of September, 1934, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the front door of the Court House in Hepp ner, morrow County. Oregon. I will sell t auction to the highest bidder for cash the mowing ucscrioeu real property situate in Morrow County, Oregon, to-wit: The West half of the Northeast quar ter, the East half of the Northwest quarter, the East half of Southwest quarter of Northwest quarter, the Southwest quarter, the West half of Southeast quarter of Section Eight (8), and all that portion of the East half of Southeast quarter of Section Eight (8) lying west of the Gooseberry Road as the same is now established and used over and across said lands, all In Township one (1) South, Hange Twenty-four (24) East of the Willam ette Meridian, in the County of Mor row and State of Oregon. Said sale is made under execution is sued out of the Circuit Court of the Stntei of Oregon for Morrow County, to me di rected in the case of Isaac L. Howard and Edith A. Howard, his wife, l'lnintiffs, vs. Rose F. Roberts, Administratrix of the Estate of Albert S. Roberts, deceased ; Rose F. Roberts; Frank II. Watts and Daisy Watts, his wifoj F. E. Watts, Oscar Kellhley, Alberta Rose Rolierts, George Allyn Roberts, William Shelton Roberts, and Wilton A. Roberts ; Elliott P. Roberts and Helen It. Roberts, his wife; Roscoe D Roberts anil Honita M. Roberts, his wife; and Ivan F. Roberts and Murlnn V. R-.k. erts, his wife, Defendants. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff of Morrow County, State of Oregon. First publication August 2, 1934. Last publication August 30, 1934. EXECUTOR'S SALE. Notice Is hereby given that pursuant to the last will and testament nf flmr.. w Dykstra, ilecensed, admitted to probate In the County Court of Linn County, Oregon nrul n rerlilicd copy of which appears at page 233 of Vol. 42 of the Deed Records of Morrow County, Oregon, the undersigned as such executor, at the George W. Dyks tra home place one block north of the schoolhmise In Heppner, Oregon, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder on Saturday, the 15th day of September, 1931 beginning at 2 P. M. sharp, ths following property of said estate, to-wit: One Win ona wagon with wagon box. one wood rack, one hay rack, one disk, one aide-hill plow, one mower, one hayrake. Majestic range. 3 cupouarus, wriung ue. - iron Deu steads and springs, one kitchen table, one 10-gul. stone jar, harness and miscellan eous articles. ARHTl'R W. UYKSTKA. Executor NOTICE OP SHERIFF'S SALE. On the 22nd day of September, 1934, at the hour of two o'clock P. M., at the front door of the Court House in Heppner, Mor row County, Oregon. I will sell at auc tion as provided by law, the following de scribed real property at not less than the minimum price set forth: All that portion of the Townsite of Hourdman north of Riverside Drive, min imum price $16. 00. Lots 16. lb. li and iti, mock zs ; Lots 16 and 17, Ulock 88 to the Town of lrri- gon. Oregon. Minimum price $5.00 per lot. Lots a and , Ulock 2ti. fenland s Addi tion to the Town of Lexington, Oregon. Minimum price $20.00. Sale is made by virtue of an order of the County Court, dated August 29th. 1931, directing and authorizing me to sell said proierty as provided by law. Dated at ileppner, Oregon, August 29, 1931. c. j. d. hauman, Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon. Professional Cards Dr. Richard C. Lawrence DENTIST Modern equipment including X-ray for dental diagnosis. First National Bank Building Phone 562 Heppner, Ore. DR. L. D. TIIiliLES OSTEOPATHIC Physician & Surgeon FIRST NATIONAL BANK BLDG. Office Phone 496 HEPPNER, OREGON ' L Heppner Abstract Co. J. LOGIE RICHARDSON, Mgr. RATES REASONABLE HOTEL HEPPNER BUILDING DR. E. C. WILLCUTT OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN ft SXTBOEON (Over J. C. Penney Co.) PENDLETON. OREGON AUCTIONEER Farm and Peraonal Property Sales a Specialty O. I. BENNETT "The Man Who Talks to Beat the Band" LEXINGTON. OREGON J. 0. TURNER ATTORNEY AT IAW Phone 173 Hotel Heppner Building HEPPNER, ORE. A. B. GRAY, M. D. PHYSICIAN k StTBOEON Phone 333 227 North Main Street Eyes Tested and Olaues Pitted WM. BROOKHOUSER PAINTINO PAPEKHANOXNO INTERIOR DECORATING Heppner, Oregon DR. J. II. McCRADY DENTIST X-Rty Diagnosis GILMAN BUILDING Heppner, Oregon A. D. McMURDO, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON Trained Nun Aailitant Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon P. W. MAIIONEY ATTOENEY-AT-LAW Heppner Hotel Building Willow St. Entrance S. E. NOTSON ATTORNEY AT LAW OfflM In Court Hons Heppner, Oregon J. 0. PETERSON Latest Jewelry and Gift Good. Watohei - Olooki . Diamond! Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon F. W. TURNER & CO. PIBE, AUTO AND LIFE ' INSURANCE Old Line Companies, Real Estate. Heppner, Oregon t JOS. J. NYS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Robert! Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon