HEPPNER, GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1937. PAGE ELEVEN Elmo Nolan Sends Article on Ch inese Burials; Returning Home Elmo Nolan, son of M. V. Nolan and grandson of W. E. Nolan of this city, who has ben stationed at Tien tsin, China, with the U. S. marines, wrote home folks this week that he expected to land in San Francisco the 29th or 30th of this month after serving his required foreign stretch. Elmo attended Lexington high school before going into the service and has many friends in this county. As indicative of some of the inter esting customs with which he came in contact while in Tientsin is a clip ping from "The Sentinel," service men's publication, sent his grand father by Elmo. Titled, "The End of the Road," the clipped article tells of Chinese burial customs. Under the heading is quoted a Chinese pro verb, "Man's life is like a candle in the wind, or hoar frost on the tiles." The article follows: On the railroad that comes from the sea to Tientsin the traveler is whisked through an almost continu-. ous series of Chinese graveyards. This is most apparent in the winter, for th green foliage that everywhere abounds in summer is missing, and the queer, mound shaped graves starkly clutter the landscape as far as the eye can see. They only dif fer one from the other in size, their general conformation and construc tion is the same. Made of dirt and plastered with mud they raise their odd shapes high above the flat coun tryside, signifying that in China they may not bury the departed deep but they certainly bury them well. Such a cluttering of memorials for the departed could only be preserv ed in a country with a very ancient past and where generation after gen eration of ancestors are remembered even to the point of worship. One time each year, in the spring time, the Chinese repair and im prove their ancestral tombs. Even the poorest may be seen laboring at this task; replacing dirt carried away by the past year's rain, removing weeds and grass and placing a fresh coat of mud plaster on the cup shaped mounds. Now in China there does not seem to be any perpetual care taken of cemeteries similar to those in west ern countries. The upkeep of the resting places of the departed is a family function. When the family ceases to exist the burial plot is left untended, the earth mounds are washed away and the wooden coffins are left exposed to the sky. On the outskirts of Tientsin where the farmers' fields begin there is a road called "Coffin Road" where Want Ads Lost Beta Theta Pi fraternity pin. Reward for return to this office. Lost Small brown Jersey cow, muley, branded W on rt. hip; bell on. Al Lovgren, Hardman. 3-4p STEADY WORK GOOD PAY RB LIABLE MAN WANTED to call on far mers in Morrow County. No experience or capital needed. Write today. FURST & THOMAS, 426 Third St.. Oakland. Cal. WANTED: Man for Rawleigh Route. Route will be permanent if you are a hustler. For particulars write Raw leigh's, Dept. ORC-84-103, Oakland, Cal. To trade 1932 Chev. pickup and milk cows for later model Chev. pickup. C. H. Bowlin, Quackenbush place, 9 mi. S. of Heppner on Hhea creek. 3-4p For Sale Baby chicks. Hanson W. L., 8c, custom hen eggs 2Y4C, turkey eggs 3y2c. Salter Hatchery, lone. l-4p Posts for sale Tamarack, Vz ft., 5c. Rood Ekleberry, Heppner. l-3p For Sale Dairy goats, to freshen soon. Orders taken now for Rock Alpine kids. Zoe Bauernfeind, Mor gan. 1-3 Dressed chickens, 20c lb. Mrs. George McDuffee, city. 49tf. For sale or trade Used brick in good condition, cleaned. See Paul Jones or Farmers Elevator Co. 44tf Registered Hereford bulls for sale. D. L. McCaw, Linden, Wash. 38-10p Maternity and convalescent cases eared for in my home. Mrs. J. B. Cason. & burial boxes clutter the ground in a maze of untended graves. The mounds are long since gone and the gaping coffins bear mute testimony to the lack of care that has been their lot. In old China the rituals attending death were rigid in their require ments. To a certain extent these practices are in vogue today with perhaps a few innovations brought about by the march of time. In the Treaty Ports and other large centers where the influence of western civ ilization has been mdst evident, changes have taken place, but in the hinterland, where the millions dwell, time has been kind to the heritage of centuries. In most instances when a person other than the very poorest dies, he is clothed in a dress without metal buttons or hooks, but fastened with ribbons. The cap and socks are also changed for new ones. The mouth, nostrils and ears are filled with imi tations of white precious stones from a belief that the spirits of these stones will keep the body from rot ting. Certain personal effects which the person prized in life are placed beside him. Food offerings are placed before the body, while can dles are kept constantly burning. Now the members of the family put on mourning garments and make lamentations before the body. They see a fortune teller and decide upon the time for placing the body in a coffin and for the interment This takes place anywhere from the fifth to the forty-ninth day from the death. While the body remains with the family, Taoist, Lamaist or Buddhist priests are called in turn to read Su tras. No chance is taken that the deceased may have during his nat ural life chosen the wrong road to the hereafter! When the day decided upon for the interment arrives, a considerable portion of the worldly wealth of the bereaved family is expended in see ing that the dead one is properly started on his road to the under-! world. He may have wanted in life, but now his spirit, often at great sac rifice, is given a royal send-off. The orthodox funeral procession is an extremely interesting sight, very picturesuqe and singularly oriental. Just the other day we had the good fortune to witness one wending its way, slowly and haltingly, toward the family burial plot on the out-) skirts if Tientsin. Not quickly and with precision, for the lengthy col umn was unwieldly and Chinese traffic rules do not seem to prevent all manner of traffic on cross streets from cutting through whenever an opportunity presents itself. Even at best, when there are no interferences these processions are extremely leis urely as if in keeping with the mournful wails arising from the mourners, the majority of whom TO EASE RHEUMATIC PAINS 15c FOR 12 2 FULL DOZEN FOR 25c Demand and Get Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN To Get Rid of Acid ftnd Poisonous Waste Your kidneys htlp to keep yon .well by constantly filterinf waste matter from the blood. If your kidneys get functionally disordered and fail to remove excess impurities, there may be poisoning of (he whole system and body-wide distress. Burning, scanty or too frequent uri nation may be a warning of some kidney or bladder disturbance. You may suffer nsgging backache, persistent headache, attacks of dizziness, getting up nights, swelling, puffiness under the eyes feel weak, nervous all played out. In such cases It Is better to rely on medicine that has won country-wlds acclaim than on something less favor ably known. Use Voan't PilU. A multi. tude of grateful people recommend Doan'i. Ask your neighbor! have been employed for the occa sion. First there were the musicians dressed in a wierd riot of ill-fitting unforms, who played music which to our western ears had little semblance to a funeral dirge. Next came life size effigies of objects that the de ceased might have need of on his long journey to the hereafter. What a queer assortment of equipment to speed the journey! There was a bi cycle carried by a coolie; then an effigy of an automobile, extremely realistic, with two dummies seated in the front seat; then an imitation of a ricksha, with a single passen ger, and lastly an effigy of a horse. We felt that surely this person did not hope to stay long in one place but hoped to speed his journey thru Hades and arrive at the portals of paradise in as short a time as pos sible. The procession continued to pass. There were many coolies carrying umbrella shaped memorials setting forth the name of the deceased and then came along streamers of white cloth bearing in Chinese characters the story of his good deeds in life. There were artificial flowers galore, other banners and a multitude of lanterns. Then came the bier, sup ported on long poles and resting on the shoulders of thirty-two straining coolies. At the end of the procession there were modern automobiles bearing the mourning relatives. This was the only touch that gave an ink ling that we were gazing at a thing of today rather than at some picture of the past. When the funeral cortege reaches the burial plot the coffin is placed in a grave a foot or so in depth, the bottom of ' which has been covered with white cash (white paper in the shape of small money), supposed to be of use to the departed, along with his other treasured objects, in the hereafter. After the coffin is lowered, into the grave, the head of the family and other relatives throw on hand fuls of earth, repeating the process three times. Then the grave is filled up. Now the objects, such as those enumerated as being at the head of the procession, are heaped in a pile before the grave and a lighted match is applied, reducing the whole to ashes. This ceremony marks their transmigration to the spirit world. Then there is an offering of wine and the spirit is gone. On the third day after the funeral the relatives of the deceased visit the grave, where offerings are made and paper cash is burnt. Some ex plain this ceremony as being an ef fective method of driving away de mons and by others as providing ad- Heat sea foods Oysters, Shell Fish the pick of marine delica cies served FRESH o You'll find our stock of WINES complete Elkhorn Restaurant ED CHLNN, Prop. ditional means of travel in the un derworld. The funeral festival is held on the thirty-fifth and again on the sixtieth days following the interment. Among wealthy people the 1st and 3rd anniversaries of the death are commemorated by the calling of priests for the Sutra reading and the gathering of all of the relatives. The first period of mourning for parents is for one hundred days, but the complete period lasts for 27 months among the Manchus and for three years among the Chinese. During this first period, both men and women are dressed in clothing made of white material and wear caps and shoes also of white. Man chu women wear their heads covered with cotton cloth and Chinese wo men witn an additional layer of hemp cloth. During the rest of the 27 months the Manchu people wear garments made of plain cotton cloth. The Chinese, on the other hand, wear white shoes throughout the first year, dress in ash colored garments in the second and wear plain cotton cloth in the third year. ' Widows wear plain clothes thru out their lives and use neither face powder nor rouge. Lamentations form a necessary part of the Chinese mourning. Both men and women not only shed co pious tears, but moan and wail, making loud noises. Between the death and funeral, the relatives and friends gather around the body daily at stated hours in order to make lamentations. Moreover, in the fu neral procession they set up regular wailing and howling for a time after leaving the house and before reach ing the burying place. Thus are most wayfarers sped on their way to eternity in China. Get results with G. T. want ads. NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby given that the County Court of Morrow County, on the 25th day of March, 1937, did authorize and designate as a Wind Erosion Dis trict the following described premises located in Morrow County, State of Or egon, to-wit: That section of Morrow County having for its West boundary the State Highway from Heppner Junc tion; for the North boundary the township line six miles North of the Base Line running East from the State Highway to the North east corner of Township 1, Range 26, EWM; the boundary from this . point running South along the Township line to the Southeast corner of Section 12, Township 1 South, Range 26, EWM; thence West to the road running North and South through Section 17, Twp. 1, South Range 26 EWM; thence South along this road turning West along the same road in Section 20, Township 1 South, Range 26 EWM, and continuing West to the Lex-ington-Jarmon Road, thence South to the Southeast corner of Section 22, Township 1 South, Range 25 EWM, and thence West to the State Highway. That said designation is based on a petition for the formation of such Wind Erosion District duly submitted to the County Court and bearing the signature of two-thirds of the land owners or duly qualified representatives thereof, in the above described' district as pro vided by House Bill 148 as enacted into a law of the State of Oregon by the thirty-ninth Legislature of Oregon and signed by the Governor on the 26th day of February, 1937. BERT JOHNSON, County Judge. GEO. N. PECK, Commissioner. 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 24th day of March, 1937, upon and pursuant to a decree duly given and made by said Court this 24th day of March, 1937, in a suit pending therein in which Daniel D. Summer was plain tiff and Thomas C. Beymer and Sylvia Beymer, his wife, were defendants, which execution and order of sale was to me directed and commanded me to sell the real property hereinafter de scribed to satisfy certain liens and charges in said decree specified, I will on the 24th day of April, 1937, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M. at the front door' of the County Court House in Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon, offer for sale and sell at public auction for cash, subject to redemption as provided by law, all of the right, title and in terest of the defendants in said suit and of all parties claiming by, through or under them or any of them since the 3rd day of March, 1934, in or to the fol lowing described real property, to-wit: The West half of Section Fifteen (15); the East half, the East half of the West half, the Southwest quarter of the Southwest quarter of Section Sixteen (16) ; the North half of the Northeast quarter, the South west quarter of the Northeast quar ter; the West half of the North west quarter and the Southwest quarter of Section twenty-one (21) ; the North half of section Twenty two (22) ; the North half of Section Twenty-eight (28); the Northeast quarter of Section Twenty-nine (29), all in Township Two (2) South, Range Twenty-seven E. W. M. Together with the tenements, here ditaments and appurtenances there unto belonging, or in anywise ap pertaining. Dated this 24th day of March, 1937. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has filed her final account as executrix of the estate of Karl L. Beach, deceased, and that the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County has appointed Monday, the 5th day of April, 1937, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, as the time, and the county court room in the court house at Heppner, Oregon, as the place, of hearing and settlement of said final account. Objections to said final ac count must be filed on or before said date. ELSIE M. BEACH. Executrix. IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON IN AND FOR MORROW COUNTY. In the Matter of the Estate of Robert C. Mitchell, deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Notice is hereby given that Letters of Administration upon the estate of Robert C. Mitchell, deceased, late of Morrow County, Oregon, have been is sued to me out of and under the seal of the County Court of said county and state. All persons having claims against said estate are required to present them, with the proper vouchers, to me at the office of my attorney, W. Vawter Parker, in the city of Heppner, in said county and state within six months from the date of this notice. JESSIE GROSS MITCHELL, Administratrix of the esttae of Rob ert C. Mitchell, deceased. First published March 11. 1937. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT. Notice is hereby given that F. W. Turner, administrator of the estate of Emanuel Nordyke, deceased, has filed his final account of his administration of said estate with the Clerk of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, and the said Court ,has set as the time and place for hear ing on and final settlement of said ac count, April 5, 1937, at the hour of 10:00 A. M. of said day, in the Court Room of the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Morrow County, Heppner Oregon. Anyone having objections to said final account must file same on or be fore said date. F. W. TURNER, Administrator. IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE STATE! OF OREGON FOR MORROW COUNTY. In the Matter of the Guardianship of Martha McKennon and Dallas Mc Kennon, Minors. ; ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE. It appearing by petition of J. O. Tur ner, guardian of the estates of Martha McKennon and Dallas McKennon, mi nors, praying for an order to sell real estate; and that it appears, to the court, that it is to the best interest of said estates to sell said property to pay cost of administration, it is therefore, ORDERED that Raymond D. Mc Kennon and Jean Hassell, as next of kin and all other persons interested appear before this Court on the 5th day of April, 1937, at the hour of 10:00 A. M. thereof, and show cause, if any they have, why a license should not be granted for the sale of the right, title and interest of said minors in the fol lowing described real property, situat ed in Morrow County, Oregon, to-wit: Southwest quarter of Northeast quar ter, Southeast quarter of Northwest quarter, West half of Southeast quarter and Southwest quarter of Section Seventeen; East half of Section Nineteen; all of Section Twenty; West half of Section Twenty-nine; North half and Southeast quarter of Section Thirty, all In Township Two South, Range Twenty-Seven East of Willamette Me . ridian ; also, the Southwest quarter of Section Twelve, Township Four South, Range Twenty-eight East of Willamette Meridian. It is further ORDERED that a copy of this order be served personally on all next of kin and all persons interest ed, directing them to appear at the time and place above set forth, to show cause, if any they have, why said li cense should not be granted, and that a copy of this order be published for three successive weeks in the Heppner Gazette Times, a newspaper of general circulation, printed and published in Morrow County, Oregon. Done and dated at Heppner, Oregon, this 1st day of March, 1937. BERT JOHNSON, County Judge. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has filed her final account aa executrix of the estate of Olaf Berg strom, deceased, and the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County has appointed Monday, the 6th day of April, 1937, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, as the time, and the county court room in the Court House at Heppner, Oregon, as the place, of hearing and settlement of said final account Objections to said final account must be filed on or before said date. CAROLYN BERGSTROM, Executrix. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF COUNTY LANDS. By virtue of an order of the County Court, dated the 24th day of February, 1937, I am authorized and directed to sell at public auction, as provided by law, the following described real prop erty, at not less than the minimum price herein set forth and upon the following terms, to-wit: The North Half of the Northwest Quarter of Section Twenty-seven, Township 1 North, Range 23 East of Willamette Meridian. Minimum price $60.00. Heppner Tract Number 68 D. R. 30-581. Minimum price $50.00. Therefore, I will, on Saturday, the 20th day of March, 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 in hand. Dated this 25th day of February, 1937. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff. 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 forenoon of said day, as the time, and the county court room in the court house at Heppner, Oregon, as the place, of hearing and settlement of said final account. Objections to said final account must be filed on or be fore said date. MARY HUGHES, Executrix,