Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1942)
Heppner Gazette Times, June 25, 1942 7 Want Ads Found pair of small glasses. Ow ner call at this office and identify. Want ride to Portland, June 30 or July 1. Share expenses. Laverne R. Emmons, call at Zinters. Wanted Job of tending header on combine with some one who has long run. Lotus Robisoiu, Heppner. 13-14p. Fryers for sale. Call 3F3. 13-14. WANTED Used bench model cream separator. Inquire at G-T. 2 purebred Aberdeen Angus bulls, good size, 15 mo. old; 8-yr. old team horses; lO-yr.-old team horses, all black, wt. 1600 lbs., for sale. Ralph Butler, Willows, Ore. Strayed from vicinity of Rodeo grounds, black and white pig. Please notify Gazette Times. Combine for sale, in good condi tion, nearly ready to go. See Sid Zinter. 10tf. For Sale 2 coal oil stoves. 2 and 3-burner. Alex Wilson, city. 12-13p. For Sale Steel range, 6-hole Home Comfort for $25. Can see it now at Ekleberry ranch, Morgan R. L Ekleberry, Hermiston, Ore. 11-13. For Sale New Hampshire baby chicks and started chicks. Chicks hatched each week. Suddarth Hat chery, Irrigon, Ore. 8-18. For sale Old Catholic church. Ap ply Father McCormick. My home place for sale. Rosa Es kelson. 3tf. LIVESTOCK MARKET now open at Echo. Ore. Can handle all kinds of cattle. I. A. Witten, Box D, Echo, Oregon, phone 111. 27-34p. tf. New or Used Office Machines sold, serviced or rented. Leave word at Gazette Times office. 12tf. For Sale Model W Case combine in good condition. Good drapers and belts. Write Ivar E. Nelson, Kinzua, Oregon. 16p. Puppies for sale. Thorobred greyhound-stag. Phone 4F14 or inquire at G. T. 13-11 One used McCormick-Deering 6 foot cut 'binder for sale or trade. V. R. Runnion. 13-14p. SUFFERS GAS BURNS Stumbling and falling while car rying a can of gasoline in one hand and a lantern in the other at the Scritsmeir mill Monday morning, Mr. Dyreson was severely burned when gasoline that spilled on his clothing caught fire. He extinguished the burning clothing in the mill pond and returned to put out the blaze at the scene of the accident before arousing anyone, when he was brought to Heppner for treatment. THE NEWEST GAME NOW HERE FACTORY MACHINE for lawnmower sharpening. We'll make your lawnmower like new. We also do saw filing, bi cycle repairing, floor sanding, knife and scissor sharpening and band saw work. N. D. Bailey SlOpM BID ROOM wl j tBE MAIS KITCHEN LIVING ROOM V BASIMENT Stretching across the country, the new game called "Keep Looking" or "Go Find the Rubber" is being played by everyone these days. The best place to play is right at home, where every member of the family can take part. At a given signal, usually the snap of a rubber band, the players begin the first phase of the game called "Combing the Home." It's everybody's move, and each participant takes a section of the house for "combing." Players need not be exceptionally skillful, although a pair of sharp eyes Is a great help. The object of the game Is to collect every piece of unused rubber In each room in the house. Latest ruling on the new sport Is that Items col lected should not be confined to SCRAP rubber, but should Include every rubber item that is not actually needed. This ruling may call for an occasional conference between the rubber owner and the rubber finder, to determine the usefulness of the object. When "Combing the Home" has been completed, one member of the group is delegated to place the collected items behind the goal line the nearest service station. Aleutian Battle No Mystery, Navy Says The so-called "mystery" of the Aleutian battle is merely a mystery of weather of fog and slow gray rain coupled with a desire to keep the enemy in the dark, according to a Navy spokesman of the Thirteenth Naval district. "If the public is confused about the situation in Western Alaska, then so is the enemy and that is all to the good," he said. "You can't make a statement about a battle until the battle is decided. As Ad miral King has told the American people, the battle for the Aleutians is continuing. "It's a weird, wild country up there. There are great patches of fog and rain in which the enemy can hide, as a band of guerillas may hide in the bush. There are liter ally thousands of small bays and inlets. The Japs know the country, but so does the Navy. "Why haven't the Army and Na vy already driven the Japs out of the Aleutians? The weather ex plains that, in part. It's one thing to get at them in clear skies and an other to get at them when the wea ther is foul and thick and snow is in the air and quick-forming ice burdens the wings of planes. You can depend on it, they are getting smacked whenever there is a rift in the fog banks. Some of the greatest stories of the war, some of the finest contributions to Naval tradition, will come out of this strange struggle of give and take in the Aleutians. "I wouldn't want to be one of those Japs up there. Suppose you had spent years as a Jap fisherman in Alaska, or as a bus-boy in Seat tle and had gone back home a few weeks before Pearl Harbor. Then suppose, because of your experience, you were sent on this Aleutian ex pedition to occupy the outer is lands, to try to take the Alaska out posts and, if sucessful in that, to establish bases in Alaska from which to attack British Columbia and the Northwest. "Such a Jap knows where he is, but he also knows with whom he is dealing. He knows the type of men who are above the fog, and out be hind the snow and rain squalls, searching for him. This Jap knows that if he isn't gone today he will be tomorrow, because these men are determined that even though the American flag was lowered in the Philippines it will not be lowered on the North American continent. And Canada will have a welcome hand in the struggle also. "Those are real men up there, standing between us and the enemy, and they are facing realistically the problem presented by the opening of a new front where we meet the enemy for the first time under con ditions where the difficulties are equal on either side. of $5.00, cash. Lots 1 and 2 in Block 18, Ir rigon, Oregon for the minimum price of $20.00, cash. THEREFORE, I will on the 11th day of July, 1942, at the hour of 10:00 A. M., at the front door of the Court House in Heppner, Mor row County, Oregon, sell said prop erty to the highest and best bid der. C. J. D. BAUMAN, Sheriff, Morrow County, Oregon. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Notice is hereby given that Alma E. Morgan, administratrix of the es tate of Melissa Marlatt, deceased, has filed her final account with the County Court of the State of Ore gon, and said Court has set as the time and place for hearing on and final settlement of said final account, Monday, the 3rd day of August, 1942 at the hour of 10:00 A. M., of said day, in the County Court Room of the Morrow County Court House in Heppner, Oregon. All persons having objections to said final ac count must file the same on or be fore said date. Dated and first published this 25th day of June, 1942. ALMA E. MORGAN, . Administratrix. SUMMONS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR ROW COUNTY. Rosalie Ployhar, Plaintiff vs. John A. Ployhar, Defendant To John A. Ployhar, defendant above named. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are required to appear and answer the complaint of the plaintiff filed against you in this court and cause within four weeks of the date of the first pub lication of this summons, namely, on or before Thursday, the 25th day of Dr. J. P. Stewart, Eye-Sight Spe cialist of Pendleton will be at the HEPPNER HOTEL on WEDNES DAY, JULY 1st. NOTICE OF SALE OF COUNTY PROPERTY BY VIRTUE OF AN ORDER OF THE COUNTY COURT, dated June 8, 1942, 1 am authorized and directed to advertise and sell at public auc tion at not less than the minimum price herein set forth: Lots 1 and 2 in Block 26 of Irrigon, Oregon for the minimum price of $20.00, cash. Lots 3 and 4 in Block 1, Cluff s 1st Addition to City of lone, Ore gon for the minimum price of $20.00, cash. Lot 41 in Block 28, Irrigon, Oregon for the minimum price June, 1942; and you will take notice that if you fail to answer or other wise plead to said complaint within said time, the plaintff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for therein, to-wit: a decree dissolving the marriage contract now and here tofore existing between plaintiff and defendant and for an absolute di vorce from defendant. This summons is published in the Heppner Gazette Times, a weekly newspaper published hi Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon, pursuant to an order made herein by the Judge of this court on the 25th day of May, 1942. It will be published for four consecutive weeks, the first publication to be made on Thursday the 28th day of May, 1942, and the last publication on Thursday, the 25th day of June, 1942. PETERSON & PETERSON, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Postoffice address: Pendleton, Oregon. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY BY GUARDIAN Notice is hereby given that, in pursuance of an order made and entered by Bert Johnson, Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Morrow, on the 23rd day of June, 1942, for the sale of real property hereinaf ter described, I will sell at public or private sale, to the highest bid der for cash, at the Standard Ser vice Station, in Boardman, Morrow County, Oregon, on or after the 25th day of July, 1942, at the hour of 10:00 A. M., the following described red property, to-wit: Lots 11 & 12 of Block 8 and Lot 7 of Block 5, all in Board man, Morrow County, Oregon. Said sale will be open one hour. Dated this 24th day of June, 1942. CRYSTAL BARLOW, Guardian of the Estate of Chloe Barlow, minor. uumnuuumiiimmm illllllllllllllllllUlllllllUllllUUllUIIIUll1 WE NEVER PULL OUR PUNCHES QOOD PRINTING is not only our business but also a hobby of oUrs. We never pull our punches but give all" we have on every job. We are equipped to assist you in laying out the job with correct type faces, proper paper stock and with illustrations, if desired. We print business stationery of all kinds, letterheads, invoices, bill heads, blotters, order blanks, envelopes, folders and ruled forms. Also catalogues, broadsides, booklets, posters, show cards, etc., etc. Our prices are most reasonable and our service is always prompt HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES Morrow County's Newspaper PinmimfiiiinimntMitiiuTiiniiifi tittwtMttititttt..itmmiiiiiitiitttriiiittfMi....iittinftTiiiittttHlrmrft,1nWffT BIFF AND BANG By F. II. Cumberwortn