HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEB. 18, 1937. PAGE SEVEN Seed Standard Set; Flax Checks Given Use of seed adapted to the con ditions for which it is sown will be an essential in participating in this year's agricultural conservation pro gram, it is announced by the state committee in charge in Oregon. In line with a national policy adopted, the state technical committee has recommended specific requirements in alfalfa and clover seeding, pasture grass seeding and related crops, where soil building payments are sought. No payments will be made this year in Oregon for seeding alfalfa seed obtained from southwestern states, or that imported from Ar gentine or South Africa, it is an nounced. No imported red clover seed is to be used except that from Canada. Pasture grass restrictions will in elude the elimination from consid eration of seed that contains nox- . ious weeds, and mixtures must be such as give reasonable assurance of success in the district where seed ed. Those in charge of the program point put that the rules are such as to give every consideration to the cooperator who does everything pos sible from his standpoint and then suffers a crop failure. Payments are still permissible in such cases. The use of poor seed at the start, how ever, invites failure and is not evi dence of good faith, it is held. The federal subsidy to. fiber flax growers in 1936, administered thru the AAA, netted 306 Oregon and Clark county, Wash., growers $25, 036.31, according to a report just made by the state committee at 0. S. C. Checks have been distributed from San Francisco after the claims were checked here in Oregon. Clackamas county led all others in production, with 134 growers get ting $10,731.15 in addition to the mar ket price for 2210 tons. The final rate of payment was $4.90 a ton. Marion county was close behind Clackamas with 106 growers, 1909 tons, and $9,224.52 in payments. Oth er counties with lesser amounts were Linn, Lane, Clark (Wn.), Yamhill and Douglas in that order. Total acreage for the region was 2579 and total tonnage 5163. Cattle Make Gains Despite Bad Weather Union. Ability of beef cattle to put on good gains despite severe winter weather was demonstrated here during January by the results obtained at the Livestock Branch Experiment station. Four out of the seven lots of steers fed made an av erage gain of more than two pounds per day during the month, a figure considered good under normal con ditions. These feeding trials were carried on under practical commercial con ditions, reports D. E. Richards, su perintendent, as the steers were fed in open lots with only a windbreak for shelter. Cattle fed alfalfa hay and coarsely ground barley made the best gains for the month, averaging 2.23 pounds per day. A comparable lot of steers fed grain hay and barley made only an average gain of 1.91 pounds. Gains made by heifers were considerably less than those by the steers. Good Hereford cattle were used in all the trials. Considerable interest in finishing cattle has developed in Oregon in the past few years as the demand for better quality beef has grown. A series of feed resources meetings were held through the livestock sec tions of the state this winter to make available recent experimental results with stock feeding. Because of the unusually severe winter weather the January record is considered par ticularly encouraging. INSURANCE SETTLED. Seeley & Co., with Walter Eu banks as agent, settled $1400 insur ance on the A. E. Stefani farm home near lone, within four days after it burned. Jim Burnside was in town last Thursday from the farm near Hard man, making it in for the first time in several weeks. The winter was about as hard as he had ever ex perienced in his many years in the county, he said. LEGISLATIVE HIGHLIGHTS By A. L. LINDBECK. Salem. Oregon is not yet ready to abandon its time-tried legislative set-up for the unicameral system, in the opinion of the state senate. Two measures calling for this legislative reform were killed by the senate this week. One of these, by Senator Carey, would have vested the law making functions in a single organi zation of not fewer than 30 nor more than 36 members. No time- limit would have been placed upon ses sions of this lawmaking body and their aggregate pay would have been fixed at $60,000 for the biennium, this sum to be divided equally among the members, whether 30 or 36, and the members to hire their own stenographers. The other uni cameral legislature proposal by Sen ators Burke and Staples, would have abolished the House of Representa tives and left the law making func tions entirely in the hands of the senate. Senator Strayer, chairman of the resolutions committee which recommended that the measures "do not pass," declared that Oregon could not afford to experiment with the proposed reform. He urged that this state await the outcome of the ex periment now being tried out in Nebraska. The senate also blocked the move to refer to the voters a proposed constitutional amendment creating the office of lieutenant governor and still another measure propdsing an increase in the pay of legislators from $3 to $8 a day. Although these proposed reforms are dead so far as the present ses sion is concerned, proponents of the unicameral legislature and lieuten ant governorship expect to place the issues before the people through the referendum. Young Americans who live in Or egon are not to be denied the pleas ure that comes from burning one's fingers or shooting out an occasional eye in the good old fashioned way on the Fourth of July. The House this week killed the Higgs bill .which would have banned the use of fire works and firecrackers in this state. Counties in which the state milk control board has established milk pools will have their own local con trol boards if a bill introduced this week is enacted into law. The local boards, to be named by the governor, would serve without pay and act only in an advisory capacity to the state board. In his second appearance before the legislature since the present ses sion convened Governor Martin this week cracked down on the legisla tors who are sponsoring bills aimed at the state highway fund and the regulation of highway traffic. Bills now before the session, the governor pointed out, provide for the diver sion of $1,700,000 of the highway funds. To enact these, he warned, would create a deficit of $1,000,000 in the highway account. Senators and Representatives whose toes were stepped on by the governor in his special message and they were many did not take kindly to the official castigation which amounted, in effect, to a notice that any of the objectionable measures that might get as far as the governor's office could expect to meet with the ex ecutive veto. The parole board bill which came before the legislature with the bless ing of Governor Martin, does not meet with the approval of State Treasurer Holman. The bill would centralize the parole activities of the penitentiary, boys' and girls' schools under a single board. Holman ob jects to the proposed disruption of the parole staffs at the boys' andl girls' schools which have been built up over a period of years with a view to giving expert supervision to these juvenile delinquents. The perennial chain store bill, long delayed, finally made its ap pearance in Saturday's batch of new senate bills. The bill would levy an annual tax on all retail stores, rang ing from $1 for an independent store up to $250 for each store in a chain of 75 or more. Now that the House has clamped down on new bills they are all com ing in by way of the Senate. The hopper of the upper house is clog ged every day, a single day's grist during the past week totalling 35. Mrs. Wm. Smethurst came in yes terday morning from the farm in the Alpine district. The hard wind almost blew the car off the road, she said. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has filed her final account as executrix of the estate of Samuel Hughes, deceased, and that the County Court of the State of Oregon for Mor row County has appointed Monday, the 5th day of April, 1937, at the hour of 10 o clock in the rorenoon oi said aay, as the time, and the county court room in the court house at Heppner, Oregon, as the nlace. of hearine and settlement of said final account. Objections to said final account must be Hied on or be fore said date. MARY HUGHES, Executrix. NOTICE OF EXECUTORS' SALE OF SEAL PROPERTY. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF MULTNOMAH, DE PARTMENT OF PROBATE. In the Matter of the Estate of FANNIE O. ROOD, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that pursuant to power given the undersigned by the Last Will and Testament of said Fannie O. Rood, deceased, and also pursuant to an order of the above entitled Court duly made and entered in said Estate on the 8th day of May, 1929. authorizing, empowering and directing the under signed as Executors under said Last Will and Testament to sell at private sale for cash or upon credit and at such price or prices and upon such terms as to the undersigned may seem wise or proper, the following described real property situated in the County of Mor row, State of Oregon, to-wit: The Northeast quarter and the North half of the Southeast quarter of Section Thirty-five (35) in Town ship Three (3) South, Range Twenty-three (23) East of the Willamette Meridian, containing 240 acres; and we will on and after the 18th day of March, 1937, proceed to sell at pri vate sale for cash or upon credit at such price or prices and upon such terms as to the undersigned may seem wise or proper and subject. to the confirma tion of the above entitled Court, the said described real property, the same to be so offered for such sale at the ffice of the Deshon Mortgage Company, No. 1216 Spalding Building in the City of Portland, .County of Multnomah, State of Oregon. . FRED H. DESHON, FRED ROOD, Executors under the Last Will and Testament of Fannie O. Rood, deceased. Date of First Publication, February 18 1937. Date of Last Publication, March 18, 1937. NOTICE OF SALE OF CITY LOTS. By virtue of an order of the Coun ty Court, dated the 4th day of Feb ruary, 1937, I am authorized and di rected to sell at public auction, at not less than the minimum price herein set forth and on the follow ing terms: 20 down and the re mainder in ten equal semi-annual DoThis For a Cold m Taks 2 Bayer Aspirin tabled with a full das of water at lint lien of a cold. 2 If throat U or also, gar gle twice with S Bayer tablet! Absolved in H of water. Quick Relief with 2 Bayer Aspirin Tablets The modern way to ease a cold is this: Two Bayer Aspirin tablets the moment you feel a cold coming on. Repeat, if necessary, in two hours. If you also have a sore throat due to the cold, dissolve 3 Bayer tablets in Xi class of water and gargle with this twice. The Bayer Aspirin you take internally will act to combat fever, i i i- it aches, pains which usually accompany instant relief from soreness and raw ness of your throat. Your doctor, we fenl mire, will aDDrove this modern way. Ask your druggist for genuine Baver AsDirin by its full name not by the name "aspirin" alone. FOR A DOZEN 2 FULL DOZEN FOR 2Sc Virtually lc a Tablet 15 payments with interest at the rate of six percent on the deferred pay ments and all future taxes to be paid by the purchaser: lone Sperry's 2nd Addition, lots 9 and 10, Block 8, to the City of lone. Minimum price $101.00. Therefore, I will, on the 27th day of February, 1937, at the hour of 2:00 P. M., at the front door of the Court House in Heppner, Oregon, sell said property to the highest and best bidder for cash as stated above. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff of Morrow County, Ore gon. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF GILLIAM. KATHERINE L. WASHBURN, Plaintiff, vs. MARK V. WEATHERFORD and EM MA WEATHERFORD, his wife; O. LOWELL, MRS. W. W. WEATH ERFORD and JUNCTION CITY STATE BANK, Defendants. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an execution, judgment order, decree and order of sale issued out of the above entitled Court in the above entitled cause, to me directed and dated the 16th dav of January. 1937. upon a judgment rendered and entered in saia court on tne zna aay oi Janu ary, 1937, in favor of Katherine L, Washburn. Dlainttff. and against O, LOWELL, defendant, for the sum of $841.82 with interest thereon at 6 per cent Der annum irom tne Hist aay oi October, 1932, until paid; the further sum of $457.31 with interest thereon at 6 per cent per annum from the 24th day of June. 1935: and the further sum of $100.00 attorney's fees, and the costs of and upon this writ commanding me to make sale of the following described real property, situated in the County of Morrow, state oi uregon, to-wit: Also that portion of Section 6, Township I North Range 23 East W. M. lying North and West of the County Road running through said section, containing . acres more or less; Also the Southwest quarter of the Northwest quarter, the west half of the southwest quarter and the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of Section 30 and the West half of Section 31, Township 2 North Range 23 E. W. M., all sit uated in Morrow County, Oregon, and containing 941 acres, more or less; Also the South half of the Southeast quarter and the Northwest quar ter of the Southeast quarter, and the Southwest quarter of the Northeast quarter of Section 31, Township 2 N. R. 23 E. W. M., in Morrow County, Oregon, contain ing 160 acres more or less. Now. therefore, by virtue of sad ex ecution. judgment order, decree and or der of sale and in compliance with the commands of said writ, I will, on Sat urday, the 13th day of March, 19B7, at 10:00 o'clock A. M., at the front door of the County Court House in Heppner, Morrow County, State of Oregon, sell at public auction (subject to redemp tion), to the highest bidder for cash in hand, all the right, title and interest! which the above named defendant, O. LOWELL had on the 31st day of Oc tober, 1932, the date of the Trust Deed andor mortgage herein foreclosed, or since that date had in and to the above described property or any part thereof, to satisfy said execution, judgment or der and decree, interest and accruing costs. Dated February 11, 1937. First Publication February 11, 1937. Last Publication March 11, 1937. C. J. D. BAUMAN. Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, Feb. 4. 1937. NOTICE is hereby given that Colum bus J. Gordon, of Heppner, Oregon, who, on Sept. 30, 1929, made Homestead Entry under Act Dec. 2, 1916, No. 027301. for NSE14. SE14 SE. Sec. 12, EVjNE. SE4, Sec. 13, NN, Sec. 24, T. 7 S R. 28 E., and Lot 19, Sec. 7, Township 7 South, Range 29 East, Wil lamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final Proof to estab lish claim to the land above described before Jos. J. Nys, Notary Public, at Heppner, Oregon, on the 24th day of Marcn, i;. Claimant names as witnesses: S. M. Morgan, Rosco Cox, Chester Masey, R. A. Thompson, all of Hepp ner, uregon. W. F. JACKSON, Register. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that the under signed was duly appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, executrix of the last Will and Testament of Thomas J, O Brlen, deceased, and all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased, are hereby required to pre sent the same to the undersigned with proper vouchers as required by law, at tne law omce oi Jos. j. jnvs, at Hepp ner, Oregon, within six months from the date of this notice. Dated and first published this 4th day of February, 1937. LUCY G. O'BRIEN, Executrix, NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that on the Cth day of March, 1937, at 3 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the front door of the County Court House In Heppner, Morrow Coun ty, Oregon, I will sell at public auction to the hlghtst bidder for cash the fol lowing described land, to-wit: The East Half of Section 21, all of Section 22, the South Half and the Northwest Quarter of Section 23, and the North Half of Section 26, all in Township 1 North of Range 24 East of the Willamette Meridian, in Morrow County, Oregon. Said sale Is made under execution Is sued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oreeon for Morrow County to me directed in the case of The Califor nia Joint Stock Land Bank of San Fran cisco, a corporation, plaintiff, v. Earl Murray and others, defendants, which said execution commands me to sell said land to satisfy the sum due said plaintiff, tc-wit: the sum of J17.179.39. and interest thereon. Dated February 1st, 1937. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE REAL PROPERTY. NOTICE is hereby given that by vir tue of an execution and order of sale issued out of the Circuit Court of the . State of Oregon for Morrow County this 27th day of January, 1937, upon and pur suant to a decree duly given ana maae by said court this 25th day oi January, 1937, in a suit pending therein in which The Federal Land Bank of Spokane, a corporation, was plaintiff and Harvie E. Young ana Gladys uox xoung, nusDana and wife; R. R. McHaley, Trustee; Es tate of James H. McHaley, deceased ; k. R. MaHaley, Administrator de bonis non of the estate of James H. McHaley, deceased; V. C Belknap and Annie Belknap, husband and wife; Roderick R. Belknap and Jane Doe Belknap (whose true name is Vera Davis Bel knap) husband and wife; Virgil V. Belknap ana Mary noe iseiknap, nus band and wife; Janis A. Belknap John son and E. F. Johnson, wife and hus band; Nettie Blinn and Earl Blinn, wife and husband; Dempsey Boyer and Nora Boyer, husband and wife; Lizzie Coates and J. E. Coates, wife and husband; J. H. iFell and Jane Doe Fell, husband and wife; George E. Fell and Mary J. Fell, husband and wife; George W. Gib son and Hettie Gibson, husband and wife; Adolph Gibson and Jane Doe Gibson, husband and wife; Rex Gib son and Mary Roe Gibson, husband and wife; Calvin G. Gibson and Musa E. Gibson, husband and wife; Mattie Hus ton, a widow, formerly Mattie Edmund- son; Stella Miller, also known as iJstella Miller and Thomas M. Miller, wife and husband; Glen Miller and Jane Doe Miller, husband and wife; Zelda Mc Haley, a single woman; Rice R. Mc Haley and Elizabeth A. McHaley, hus band and wife; Rodney McHaley and Nelle McHaley, husband and wife; G. V. McHaley, same person as Volney McHaley and Nevada McHaley, husband and wife; Ruth o Neil and Wm. O Neil, wife and husband; Pearl Peery, same person as Pearl Peary and Ed ward Peery. wife and husband: Edris Potl, formerly Edrls Peery, and William Poti. wile and husband; Adeline Pierce, same person as Delila Adeline Pierce, and Benjamin Pierce, wife and hus band; Francis Putnam, same person aa Frankie Putnam and Irvin E. Putnam, wife and husband; Annie Wood, same person as Anna Wood, and Wells W. ' Wood, wife and husband; The unknown heirs of Mary D. McHaley, deceased; The unknown heirs of Clara Belknap, deceased; The unknown heirs of Amie McHaley, deceased; The unknown heirs of Inez Fell, deceased; The unknown heirs of D. E. Gilman, deceased ; . The unknown heirs of Bertha O. Gilman, deceased; The United States of Ameri ca; J. L. Gault, as Receiver of The First National Bank of Heppner, an Insol vent National Banking corporation; F. M. Miller; Fred H. Deshon and Fred Rood, as Executors of the last will and testament of Fannie O. Rood, deceased; lone National Farm Loan Association, a corporation; Also all other persona or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the complaint here in; were defendants, which execution and order of sale was to me directed and commanded me to sell the real property hereinafter described to sat- sry certain liens ana charges in saia. decree specified, I will on the 27th day of February, 1937, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M. at the front door of the County Court House in Heppner, Mor row county, uregon, oner ror sale ana sell at public auction for cash, subject to redemption as provided Dy law, au of the right, title and interest of the defendants in said suit and of all par ties claiming by, through or under them or any of them since the 16th day of December, 1918, In or to the follow ing described real property, to-wit: The West Half of the Southeast Quarter and the Southwest Quarter of Section Twenty; the North Half of the Northwest Quarter of Sec tion Twenty-nine and all of Section Thirty, all in Township Three South, Range Twenty-five, East of the Willamette Meridian and contain ing 940 acres, and being situated in the County of Morrow, State of Oregon, Together with the tenements, here ditaments and appurtenances there unto belonging or in anywise apper taining. Dated this 27th day of January, 1937. C. J; D. Bauman, Sheriff. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE REAL PROPERTY. NOTICE Is hereby given that by vir tue of an execution and order of sale issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County thia ism aay oi January, ia3Y, upon ana pursuant to a decree duly given and made by said Court this 15th day of January, 1937, in a suit pending there in in which The Federal Land Bank of Spokane, a corporation, was plaintiff and Lillle T. Nizer; C. Wilson; Anna G. Miller, a widow; Otto Lubbes and Nel lie Lubbes, husband and wife; West Extension National Farm Loan Asso ciation, a corporation, were defendants, which execution and order of sale was to me directed and commanded me to sell the real property hereinafter des cribed to satisfy certain liens and charges in said decree specified, I will on Saturday, the 20th day of February, 1937, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A. il., at the front door of the County Court House in Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon, offer for sale and sell at pub lic auction for cash, subject to redemp tion as provided by law, all of the right, title and interest of the defendants in said suit and of all parties claiming by, through or under them or any of them since the 21st day of March, 1923, in or to the following described real property, to-wit: The Farm Unit "B" according to the Farm Unit Plat, or the West Half of the Southeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter and the West Half of the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section Twenty-lour in Township Four, North of Range Twenty-four, East of the Willamette Meridian, con taining 40 acres .... Situated in Morrow County, State of Oregon, Together with the tenements, here ditaments and appurtenances there unto belonging or In anywise ap pertaining, and Together with all water and water rights used upon or appurtenant to said lands and however evidenced. Dated this 18th day of January, 1937, C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff.