Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, January 03, 1935, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAN. 3, 1935.
llfrppttrr
THE HEPPNER GAZETTE.
Established March 30.1883;
THE HEPPNER TIMES.
Established November 18. 1897;
CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY IS. 1913.
Published every Thursday morning by
VAWTEB and SPENCEB CBAWTOBD
and entered at the Post Office at Hepp
ner, Oregon, as second-class matter.
ADVXBTISrXQ KATES GIVEN ON
APPIJCATIOBT
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Tear
Six Months
Three Months
Single Copies ..
$2.00
LOO
.78
M
OfBclal Paper for Morrow County
MEMBER
Who Will Have the Last
Laugh?
WCTH Congress all set to start its
74th session today, all eyes will
be turned to Washington and the
Democratic organization which has
full sway in determining the pol
icies of the nation for the next two
years at least One faithful reader
of the Gazette Times who may have
become imbued with the philosophy
of this newspaper or it with his
dropped an epistle on the editor's
desk this morning. In viewing the
present political situation, he quotes
"Old Uncle Daniel Webster" who
spoke to his senate colleagues in
1838 in these words:
" There are persons who con
stantly clamor. They complain of
oppression, speculation, and the per
nicious Influence of accumulated
wealth. They cry out loudly against
all banks and corporations, and all
means by which small capitalists
become united in order to produce
Important and beneficial results.
They carry on mad hostility against
all established institutions. They
would choke the fountain of in
dustry and dry all streams.
" 'In a country of unbounded lib
erty, they clamor against oppres
sion. In a country of perfect equal
ity they would move heaven and
earth against privilege and monop
oly. In a country where property
is more evenly divided than any
where else, they rend the air shout
ing agrarian doctrines. In a coun
try where wages of labor are high
beyond parallel they would teach
the laborer he is but an oppressed
slave.
" 'Sir, what can such men want?
What do they mean? They can
want nothing, sir, but to enjoy the
fruits of other men's labor. They
can mean nothing but disturbance
and disorder, the confusion of cor
rupt principles and the destruction
of the moral sentiments and moral
habits of society'."
Webster's words of 1838 were
quoted to show little is new in the
present situation. Himself a pol
itician of a generation ago, our cor
respondent says: "I wonder if we
will not sit back and smile at our
silly selves in the not too far dis
tant days to come. Surely we will
if we have not lost our sense of
humor. Probably we will blush
every time we see our four-footed,
long-eared brothers, doff our hats
and greet them with a fond em
brace. "After all, we are just running
around in a spiral. We think we
are getting somewhere when in
reality we are not We are doing
the same old thing over and over
and our children are just like you
and me and the millions of others,
though they are doing these things
just a bit more recklessly than they
were done by us.
"But aren't we much the foolish
ones generation after generation.
I don't know if you were as smart
as I was when I was getting my
first fire of politics. Probably not
I really felt sorry for Washington,
Jefferson, Adams, et al., and I re
gretted that their generation had
not been blessed with the benefit of
my brains. I fear there are a lot
of youngsters now who feel their
importance, their superior know
ledge and ability to manage and di
rect, even as I once did. ..."
FCA Loans for Year
Total $134,000,000
Agencies of the 12th district farm
credit administration made loans
totaling slightly more than $134,
000,000 to farmers of the Pacific
northwest during 1934, it is an
nounced by General Agent A. C.
Adams. The breakdown of this
volume is as follows:
Long-term Federal Land bank
commissioner real estate mortgage
loans, $53,883,520.
Short-term loans and discounts
through the Federal Intermediate
Credit bank to agricultural credit
corporations, live stock loan com
panies, cooperative marketing as
sociations and production credit as
sociations, $69,365,325.
Loans by the Bank for Cooper
atives to cooperative marketing and
purchasing groups, for facility and
working capital purposes, $2,500,000.
New money advanced by the Re
gional Agricultural Credit corpora
tion (out of its own resources),
$8350,000.
The Federal Land bank's volume
set a new all-time record since this
cooperative mortgage institution
was established in 1917. The bank's
closing of 21,398 loans during 1934
for $53383,520 to farmers in the
four northwest states is more than
four times the 1933 volume when
only 4034 loans were' closed for $10,
202,967. The comparison is even
more striking when the 1934 volume
is measured against the bank's total
business between 1917 and 1934 of
43.642 loans for $141,023,335.
This significant increase during
1934 is accounted for by the Land
bank's completion of the big back
log of applications that poured in
when the emergency mortgage act
of 1933 provided for the refinancing
of accumulated farm indebtedness
to arrest foreclosure. The peak of
this emergency refinancing task
was passed last June and opera
tions are now returning to normal
after being 40 times normal during
the last year.
This refinancing program, han
dled on a sound business basis, did
not add a new burden of indebted
ness upon farmers of the northwest,
but rather enabled borrowers to re
duce their indebtedness through vol
untary adjustments with their for
mer creditors. At the same time
these refinanced farmers are able
to carry their new mortgages more
easily, their payments spread over
as long as 34 years, at a low rate of
interest. By this means, thousands
of farmers now face the future with
new nope.
Land bank loans do not fall due
all at once but are paid off gradu
ally on the amortization plan
whereby normally a portion of each
semi-annual or annual installment
applies to reduce the principal. For
a period of five years, beginning in
1935, borrowers whose mortgages
are not otherwise in default, have
been permitted to postpone the
principal portion of their install
ments. Furthermore, a temporary
reduction in interest is saving bor
rowers nearly $1,000,000 as another
important aid to agricultural recov
ery. In appreciation of this liberal,
but soundly conducted, mortgage
service, borrowers have shown their
good faith by meeting their pay
ments promptly. Although current
installments falling due were al
most the same in 1933 and 1934, col
lections during the past year were
$5,222,278 as compared with $3,
320,738 for 1933. The Land bank
made an all-time record in the sale
of acquired farms also, the volume
being $2,588,000 on 802 properties.
The Federal Intermediate Credit
bank likewise established a new
high record of service to northwest
farmers in 1934. Its loans and dis
counts of $69,365,325 compares with
$46,702,422 in 1933. It does not loan
direct to individual farmers, but
acts as a "federal reserve" system
for agriculture, making credit avail
able to qualified agencies which
finance farmers and stockmen
A big" part of the bank's growth
in volume last year came from its
discounts of $26,022,111 for the 30
production credit associations or
ganized last spring under supervis
ion of the Production Credit cor
poration of Spokane. These local
cooperative farm credit organiza
tions make live stock and crop loans
to their stockholding members on a
sound business basis at actual cost
Their membership now numbers ap
proximately 7300.
Of the credit bank's total loan
volume, approximately $57,000,000
went into live stock financing and
$8,000,000 into fruit. Cash repay
ments and renewals during the year
amounted to $63,392,618, and the
bank has approximately $36,000,000
in loans and discounts outstanding.
In addition to serving the 30 newly
organized production credit asso
ciations, the FICB also made loans
to 28 other agricultural financing
organizations and 10 cooperative as
sociations.
The Production Credit corpora
tion of Spokane, another FCA unit,
does not itself make loans but
serves as a holding and supervisory
agency over the local production
credit associations. It supplied a
major portion of the association's
original capital, but it is intended
that ultimately farm borrowers will
gain full ownership of their local
association through their required
investment in its stock at the rate
of $5 for each $100 borrowed.
The Spokane Bank for Coopera
tives, fourth FCA unit, makes fa
cility and working capital loans to
cooperative marketing and purchas
ing groups on a sound business ba-
The Regional Agricultural Credit
Corporation, organized In 1932 with
RFC funds to meet the emergency
need for farm and livestock finan
cing when other sources of credit
had collapsed, is now winding up its
emerency operations in an orderly
way under supervision of the FCA.
The local cooperatively operated
PCAs are the permanent agencies
for making short-term crop and
live stock loans.
try are entered in these three con
tests.
Plant Disease-Free Berries
Hillsboro Rowell Brothers of
this county have a planting of disease-free
Marshall strawberries ob
tained from the state college green
houses at Corvallis, reports County
Agent W. F. Cyrus. They are using
all of the plants on the home farm
this year for Increased planting
stock production, he says. They
plan to join the strawberry plant
certification program.
Farmer "Threshes" Field Corn
Albany Shelling corn with a
grain threshing machine proved
economical for F. D. Kropf of Har-
risburg. Mr. Kropf "threshed" his
12-acre field of grain corn In less
than 1 1-2 days, he reports. An av
erage threshing crew was employed
to harvest the corn after it had
been bound in bundles and placed
in shocks.
ON OREGON FARMS
Fertilizer Trials Conducted
Redmond Results of fertilizer
demonstration trials with alfalfa
carried on by County Agent Gus
Hagglund and cooperating DeschU'
tes county farmers indicate that
superphosphate, a fertilizer of re
cent prominence in the county, has
not yet established its ability to
outyield sulfur, Mr. Hagglund says
In one test on the James Foss farm
at Terrebonne, sulfur at the rate of
50 pounds and a cost of $1.05 per
acre out-yielded by about 10 per
cent superphosphate applied 200
pounds per acre at a cost of $2.50.
Oregon Hens Lead In Contest
Corvallis Oregon White Leghorn
hens are again leading in three of
the biggest national egg-laying con
tests in the east, reports J. A. Han
son, local poultryman, who shipped
pens 3000 miles to enter them. His
birds are leading the western and
central New York contests and the
Pennsylvania state contests after
more than two months of the year's
competition. From 61 to 76 pens
from the best breeders in the coun-
NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS'
MEETING.
Notice is hereby given that the
annual meeting of the stockholders
of Heppner Mining Company will
be held in the courthouse at Hepp
ner, Oregon, on Tuesday, Feb. 12,
1935, at 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon
of said day. The meeting is for the
purpose of election of officers and
for the transaction of such other
business as may appear.
D. B. STALTER, President.
J. O. HAGER, Secretary.
hereby required to present the sme with
proper vouchers duly verified a required
by law to said executors at the la office
of P. W. Mahoney. at Heppner. Oregon,
within nix months from the date hereol.
Dated and first published the ara nay
of January, 1935.
HAKUI.U A. wnii,
HENRY P. COHN,
43.47 Executors.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE
UNITED STATES FOR THE DISTRICT
OF OREGON.
In the Matter of George Lewis Bennett,
Bankrupt.
In Bankruptcy. No. B-19658
To the creditors of George Lewis Bennett
of Lexington, Morrow County, Oregon,
Bankrupt:
Notice is hereby given that on the 26th
day of December, 1984. the Baid George
Lewis Bennett was duly adjudicated bank
rnnt and that the first meeting of his cred
itors will be held in the offic of the referee
in Bankruptcy of this court in Pendleton,
Oregon, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon of
the 11th day of January, 1936 ; at which
time and place the said creditors may (and
the said bankrupt MUST) attend, prove
their claims, appoint a trustee, examine
the bankruDt and transact such other bus
iness as may properly be brought before
said meeting.
Done and dated at Pendleton, Oregon,
this 29th day of December, 1934.
C. K. CRANSTON1,
Referee in Bankruptcy.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUN
TY OF MORROW.
Probate Department.
In the Matter of the Estate of Elizabeth
Young, Deceased :
Notice is hereby given that the under
signed have been appointed Executors of
the Estate of Elizabeth Young, deceased,
by the County Court of the State of Ore
gon for Morrow County, and have qualified.
All persons having claims against said es
tate are hereby notified to present the
same, duly verified as by law required, to
the undersigned in care of W. O. Dix,
Heppner, Oregon, within six months from
the date hereof.
Date of first publication January 3, 1936.
Date of last publication January 31, 1936.
FRANK C. YOUNG,
LOWELL A. YOUNG,
Executors of the Estate of Elizabeth
Young, Deceased,
Leonard D. Alley, Attorney.
NOTICE OF SALE OF ANIMAL.
Notice is hereby given by virtue
of the laws of the State of Oregon
that I have taken up at my place 4
miles south of Lexington, Morrow
County, Oregon, the following des
cribed animal, and that I will, on
Saturday, January 5, 1935, at the
hour of 10:30 o'clock a. m., sell said
animal to the highest bidder for
cash in hand, subject to the right
of redemption of the owner thereof.
Said animal is described as follows
One black mare, weight 1150 to
1200 pounds, smooth mouth, no vis
ible brand, stripe in forehead.
HUGH SHAW,
42-44-hp Heppner, Oregon
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice is hereby given that the under
signed were duly appointed by the County
Court if the State of Oregon for Morrow
County, Joint Executors of the Last Will
and Testament of Henrietta Cohn, De
ceased, and all persons having claims
against the Estnte of said deceased are
We Are Grateful.
ONCE in a while among the many
brickbats which come to the ed
itor's desk, there are words of kind
ness and appreciation which warm
the cockles of the heart The Ga
zette Times has received many
words of appreciation from local
readers of the recent Christmas edi
tion, which are cherished deeply,
and in addition, we are grateful to
our good friends the Enterprise
Record-Chieftain and the Western
Newspaper Union for the follow
ing: Under heading, "Heppner paper
unusual," the Chief tais said: "One
of the unusual Christmas issues of
Oregon newspapers was that of the
Heppner Gazette Times, published
by Vawter and Spencer Crawford.
It was tabloid in size, with color
print of the Sistine Madonna cov
ering the front page. The news
paper was assembled and printed
with the perfect taste which marks
all work done by the Crawfords,
father and son."
Western Newspaper Union, who
supplied the beautiful rotogravure
work In the paper, said: "Just a
line to express congratulations on
the splendid paper you turned out
in connection with the Rotogravure
section. No newspaper coming to
our desk using this section has a
better appearance all around than
the Gazette Times. It is well made
up, well printed, and the ads are
all excellent"
Mrs. Lucy E. Rodgers, county
school superintendent, has been
confined to her home by Illness the
past two weeks.
t ' '
The New Ford V-8 for 1935 is
the biggest and roomiest Ford
car ever built. It is a strik
ingly handsome car, with mod
ern lines and new, luxurious
appointments.
But most important of all it
is especially designed to give
you smooth, easy riding over
all lands of roads "a front
seat ride for back-seat riders."
This ease of riding is
achieved by the use of three basic prin
ciples never before combined in a low
price car.
1. Correct distribution of car weight
by moving engine and body forward
eight and a half inches.
2. New location of seats by which the
rear seat is moved forward, toward the
center of the car away from the rear
axle and away from the bumps.
3. New spring suspension which per
mits the use of longer, more flexible
springs and increases the springbase to
123 inches.
The result is Center-Poise which not
only gives you a new riding comfort but
adds to the stability of the car and its
NOW ON DISPLAY
A New Ford V'8 That Brings New Beauty,
New Safety, and a New Kind of Riding
Comfort Within Reach of Millions of People
basic design. You buy pre
mium performance when you
buy this Ford V-8-full 85
horsepower and capable of 80
miles an hour. All Ford V-8
cars for 1935 come equipped
with Safety Glass throughout
at no additional cost.
ease of handling. You can take curves
with greater safety.
There are many new features in the
Ford V-8 for 1935 which make the car
still easier to drive. New brakes give
more power for stopping quickly with
far less foot pressure on the pedal.
A new type of easy-pressure clutch
employs centrifugal force to increase ef
ficiency at higher speeds. New steering
mechanism makes the car still easier
to handle. New, wider, roomier seats.
The New Ford V-8 for 1935 retains the
V-8 engine which has demonstrated its
dependability and economy in the ser
vice of more than a million owners.
There are refinements, but no change in
We invite you to see this
New Ford V-8 for 1935 at the
showrooms of Ford dealers!
You will want to ride in it
to drive it yourself. You will find it a
new experience in motoring.
FORD V-8 PRICES ARE LOW
12 BODY TYPES - Coupe (5 windows),
$495; Tudor Sedan, $510; Fordor Sedan,
$575. DE LUXE-Roadster (with rumble
seal), $550; Coupe (3 windows), $570;
Coupe (5 windows), $560; Phaeton, $580;
Tudor Sedan, $575; Cabriolet (with rum
ble seat), $625; Fordor Sedan, $635.
TOURING SEDANS, with built-in trunk- .
Tudot Touring Sedan, $595; Fordor'
Touring Sedan, $655.
(F. O. B. Detroit. Standard accsssory group
including bumpers and spare fire extra. All
body types hare Safety Glass throughout, at
no additional cost. Small down payment. Con
Yonlont, economical terms through the Univer
sal Credit Company.)
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice is hereby given thst tho under
u duly appointed by the County
Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow
County, administratrix of the estste of
Arthur A. MeAtee, deceased, end all per
sons having claims against the estate of
said deceased are hereby required to pre
sent the same with proper vouchers duly
verified as required by law to said admin
istratrix at the law oilice of Jos. J. Ny, at
Heppner, Oregon, within six months from
the date hereof.
Dated and lirst punilsnea tnis -am asy
of November, 1934.
ljUll.rJ UCAICU,
Administratrix.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice is hereby given that the under
.nwl hiu been auDointed by the County
Court of the State of Oregon for the
County of Morrow, administator of the es
tate of F. H. Robinson, deceased. All per
sons having claims against said estate are
hereby notified to present the same, duly
verified, as by law required, witn proper
vouchers attached, to the undersigned at
the law office of Bert Johnson, at lone,
Oreiron. within six months from the date
of the first publication of this notice.
Date of first publication of this notice,
November 29, 1B34.
HAROLD W. ROBINSON,
Administrator of the estate of F. H.
Robinson, deceased.
Professional Cards
Dr. Richard C. Lawrence
DENTIST
Modern equipment Including
X-ray for dental diagnosis.
First National Bank Building
Phone 662
Heppner, Ore.
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SAXE.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
THE UNITED STATES FOR
THE DISTRICT OF OREGON.
In the Matter of Peoples Hardware
Company, Bankrupt.
In Bankruptcy. No. B-18606.
Notcle is hereby given that, pur
suant to an order of sale duly en
tered in the above entitled matter
on the 17th day of December, 1934,
the undersigned will, on Saturday,
the 5th day of January, 1935, at the
hour of 2 o'clock in the afternoon
of said day, at the front door of the
Court House in Heppner, Oregon,
offer for sale and sell the following
assets of the above named bank
rupt, to-wit:
102 accounts receivable.
2 promissory notes.
A list of said accounts and notes
may be seen by Inquiring of the un
dersigned at the O'Donnell Pastime
or at the law office of S. E. Notson
in the Court House at Heppner,
Oregon.
E. A. BENNETT, Trustee.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL PROPERTY.
Notice is hereby given that under and
by virtue of an execution duly issued out
of the Circuit Court of the State of Ore
gon for Morrow, County, on the 11th day
of December, 1934, pursuant to a decree
rendered in said Court on the 10th day of
December, 1934, foreclosing a mortgage
lien in the sum of $62,500.00, with interest
from September 10th, 1920, at the rate of
6 per cent per annum, the sum of $1200.00,
attorney s fees and $19.60 cost, in favor of
LANA A. PAD BERG, Administratrix of
the estate of E. L. Padberg, deceased, plain.
tiff, and against FREDERICK RAYMOND
some times known as FREDRICK RAY
MOND, and ISABELLA R. RAYMOND,
his wife, and CHARLES A. RAYMOND,
and PEARL RAYMOND, his wife, defend
ants, and commanding me to sell the fol
lowing described real property, situate in
Morrow County, Oregon, to-wit:
The EVfe of E',4, of Section 22, SW4
and W14 of NW'A of Section 23, W
and SEVi of Section 26, EVi and SWVi
of Section 27, S'k of Section 28, NV4
of NE4 of Section 84, NE',4 and N
of NW54 of Section 36, ALSO, com
mencing at a point 24 chains North
of the Southwest corner of the NWf4
of Section 36, being a point on the
Southeast side of the County road,
thence N. 84 deg. 65 min. East 11
chains, along the South side of the
County road, thence N. 86 deg. 62 min.
East 17 chains along the Southeast
side of said County road, thence N.
19 dog. 46 min. East 14 chains along
the Southeast side of said County road,
thence N. 31 deg. 46 min. East 21
chains along the Southeast side of said
County road, thence North 18 deg. 28
min. East 10 chains along the South
east side of said County road, thence
N. 33 deg. 68 min East 16.30 chains
along the Southeast side of said County
road, to a point 20 chains South and
88 chains West of the Northeast cor
ner of Section 26, thence West 47
chains, thence South 76 chains to the
point of beginning. ALSO, commenc
ing at the quarter corner between Sec
tions 27 and 84, thence South 14.62
chains to the center of County road,
thence N. 82 deg. 13 min. W. 39.16
chains to the center of the County
road, thence N. 67 deg. 34 min. W.
18.46 chains up the County road to a
point on the line between Sections 28
and 33, thence East 64.16 chains along
the Section line to the place of be
ginning, containing 64.47 acres, more
or less, excepting therefrom a tract
60 by 60 feet square for a reservoir
site, more particularly described as
follows, the boundary lines running
North, East, South and West respect
ively, the SW corner of which is South
8.33 chains and East 8.36 chains from
the corner of Sections 27, 28, 83 and
34.
All of the above described real prop
erty being in Township one (1) South,
Range 24 East of Willamette Meridian.
NOW, in obedience to said execution I
win on tne jatn day of January, 1936, at
the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon
01 said day at the front door nf the r.mirf
House at Heppner. Oregon, sell at mihllp
auction to the highest bidder for cash the
said real property above described, and
apply tne proceeds of such sale in satis,
faction of said mortgage lien.
Dated this 12th day of December, 1934.
C. J. D. BAUMAN,
Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon.
NEW 1935 FORD V8 TRUCKS AND COMMERCIAL CARS ARE NOW ON DISPLAY
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OJ' OKEUON FOR MORROW
UUUNT X.
Philip W. Mahoney, Plaintiff,
vs.
Leda Mahoney, Defendant.
SUMMONS
TO: Leda Mahoney, the above named de-
lendant :
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 of the date
01 tne nrsi publication of this summons
and if you so fail to appear and answer,
for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply
(to the said Court for relief as prayed for
in the said complaint, to-wit: For a docree
of this court dissolving the bonds of mat
rimony now existing between the nlnlntlfr
and defendant and granting to the plaln-
un an aosoiute decree 01 divorce from the
defendant.
This summons is served upon you by
publication thereof for a period of four
consecutive weeks In the Heppner Gazette
Times by order of the Honorable Wm. T.
Campbell, Judge of the County Court of
Morrow County, State of Oregon, which
said order was made and entered the 12th
day of December, 1984, and the first date
of the publication of this summons la the
13th day of December, 1984.
JOS. J. NYS,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Postoffice Address: Heppner, Oregon.
DR. L. D. TIBBLES
OSTEOPATHIC
Physitlan & Surgeon
FIRST NATIONAL BANK BLDG.
Res. Phone 1162 Office Phone 491
HEPPNER, OREGON
Heppner Abstract Co.
J. LOGIE RICHARDSON, Mgr.
RATES REASONABLE
HOTEL HEPPNER BUILDING
DR. E. C. WILLCUTT
OSTEOPATHIC
PHYSICIAN k SUBO-ON
(Over J. C. Penney Co.)
PENDLETON, OREGON
AUCTIONEER
Farm and Personal Property
Sales a Specialty
0. L, BENNETT
"The Man Who Talks to
Beat the Band"
LEXINGTON, OREGON
J. 0. TURNER
ATTOBNEY II LAW
f Phone 173
Hotel Heppner Building
HEPPNER, ORE.
DR. RAYMOND RICE
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office
First National Bank Building
Office Phone 623 House Phone 828
WM. BROOKHOUSER
FAINTING FAPEBHANOrNQ
INTERIOR DEOOBAT-NO
Heppner, Oregon
DR. J. H. McCRADY
DENTIST
X.Bay Diagnosis
GILMAN BUILDING
Heppner, Oregon
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SUB QEON
Trained Nurse Assistant
Office In Masonic Building
Heppner, Oregon
P. W. MAHONEY
ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW
Heppner Hotel Building
Willow St. Entrance
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Offiee In Court Hons
Heppner, Oregon
J. 0. PETERSON
Latest Jewelry and Olft Goods
Watohes . Clocks . Diamonds
Expert Watch and Jewelry
Repairing
Heppner, Oregon
P. W. TURNER & CO.
FEM, AUTO AND LITE
INSURANCE:
Old Lln Companies. Beat Bstste.
Heppner, Oregon
JOS. J. NYS
ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW
Roberta Building, Willow Street
Heppner, Oregon