Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, January 10, 1946, Page 11, Image 11

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    Want Ads
LOST On New Year's eve, a gold
earring in Elks hall or on the
street. Will finder please leave at
this office for Evelyn Bosworth.
1934 Chevrolet truck, dual wheels,
good rubber, platform bed.. Pric
ed under OPA ceiling $425.00.
1938 Ford One ton truck good rub
ber, motor reconditioned, stock
rack, priced under OPA ceiling
$650.00
Rosewall Motor Company
WE have soldurjnill and timber
but have retained lands. Have
range to lease for several bands
of sheep for 1946 season.
We are also offering some of this
good Wallowa county range land
for sale at low prices. Address
H. N. Ashby, Bowman-Hicks
Lumber company, Box 58, Wal
lowa Oregon. , 42-45c
Dr. J. P. Stewart, Eye-Sight Spec
ialist formerly of Pendleton will
be at the Heppner Hotel on Sun
day, Jan 20th. Hours 10 a. m. to
5:00 p. m. 42-43c
LOST Friday, gold brooch com
posed of clusters of flowers, each
one set with bright red stone.
Reward. Helena Estidilllo, at the
high school. 42p
FOR RENT Furnished house; or
will sell, including 7 cabins and 2
lots. Charley Fraters, Box 533,
Heppner. 42-45p
LOST Brown billfold bearing
name of Dick N. Edmondson.
Personal papers and money. Re
turn to Durward Tash at Mor
row County Creamery. Suitable
reward.
42p
FOR SALE House -and furnish
ing; electric stove, refrigerator,
water heater, washing machine
and miscellaneous items. Phone
. 664 or 732. 42c
LOOK HERE Wanted men, wo
men to start in business on our
capital. Sell some 200 farm-home
products. Thousands our dealers
now make quick sales, big pro
fits. For particulars write Raw
leigh's Dept ORA-101-192, Oak
land Calif.
LOST in Heppner or Lexington
a reading glass. Finder please call
Swaggert ranch 34F24. Reward.
42-43c
JANUARY SALE V off on coats
and Vz off on hats. Curran's La
dies Ready to Wear. 41-42c
FOR SALE 10 incubators, 280 to
600 e7gs, very cheap if taken
soon; 2 coal-oil brooders, 2 tons
coal, 2 loads dry wood, Al milk
cow, fresh Feb. 25; load hay.
Mrs. Addie Salter, lone. 41-2p
FOR SALE 1941 Dodge truck, ex
cellent condition. M. E. Moyer,
Phone 2F12. 41-42p
LOST Pair of glasses in case
while sanding highway. Name J.
L. Davis inside case. Finder
please return to James L. Davis,
Lexington. 40-43p
CHILDRREN
hour before
Phone 1064.
cared for :5c per
midnight; 35c after.
40tf
FOR LEASE 1009 acres of stub
ble excellent pasture for cattle,
no sheep; plus 600 acres grazing
land with water, southwest of
Cecil, Ore. Davidson Bros, Box
283 Arlington, Ore. 36tf
JANUARY SALE Vi off on coats
and Vz off on hats. Curran's La
dies Ready to Wear. 41-42c
Legal Notices
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned was duly appointed by
the County Court of the State of
Oregon for Morrow Cunty, admin
istrator of the estate of Lena M.
Pettyjohn, deceased, and all per
sons having claims against the es
tate of said deceased, and all per
sons having claims against the es
tate of said deceased are hereby re
quired to present the same to the
undersigned administrator, duly
verified at the law office of Jos. J.
Nys, at Heppner, Oregon, within
six months from the date hereof.
Dated and first published this
10th day of January, 1946.
ARMIN C. WIHLON
42-46 Administrator
JANUARY SALE off on coats
and off on hats. Curran's La
dies Ready to Wear. 41-42c
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned was duly appointed by
the County Court of the State of
ministratrix of the estate of Dave
Oregon for Morrow County, ad
McAtee, deceased, and all persons
having claims against the estate of
said deceased are hereby required
to present' the same duly verified
to the undersigned administratrix,
at tne law oliice ot Jos. J. Nys, at
Heppner, Oregon, within six months
from the date hereof.
Dated and first published this
10th day of January, 1946.
VALLEJO McATEE KREMERS,
42-46 Administratrix
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned has been duly appoint
ed by the County Court of Morrow
county, State of Oregon, Adminis
trator de bonis non of the Estate
of Carrie B. Pillsburg, deceased,
and all persons having claims
against the said Estate of the said
deceased are hereby required to
present the same with proper
vouchers duly verified as required
by law to the said Administrator
de bonis non at the Law Office of
P. W. Mahoney at Heppner Oregon,
within six months from the date
hereof.
Dated and first published this
20th day of December, 1945.
CHARLES A. CARLSON,
Administrator de bonis non.
P. W. Mahoney
Attorney for Administrator
Heppner .Oregon
With Ed Reardon
THE NEW MR. LINCOLN
NOW THAT President Tru
man's labor-management confer
ence has exploded with a beautiful
bang and the boys have gone back
to their favorite
pastime of bash
ing: each others
brains out, this
might be the
opportune time
to put Mr. Lin
coln under the
microscope.
This is in no
way a reference
to the Great
Emancipator
although he had
some pertinent
ideas about la
bor, too. The
Mr. Lincoln now
Ed Reardon
under discussion is James F. Lin
coln, a gentleman who operates an
electrical welding concern in Cleve
land, and has been making a pretty
good go of it for a considerable
number of years.
Mr. Lincoln has a plan on how
to run business in a way which is
mutually satisfactory to both labor
and management. His plan isn't
just a theory he has scribbled
down on paper and is waiting for
someone to try.
It is one which he has tried,
himself, and has found practical
over a period of years. It is a plan
which i3 so simple, however, that
at has the efficiency experts, the
economics analysts and the brawny
brained Government statisticians
tearing at their hair roots and
gnashing their bridgework in angry
amazement.
Mr. Lincoln merely pays his em
ployes what they are worth.
THAT ISN'T intended as a wit
ticism. It really is the Lincoln plan
in a nutshell. But the idea is so
elemental that it ha3 confounded
the experts who regard the Cleve
land tycoon as a sort of monstros
ity, an industrial bogeyman, a guy
with a gimmick who will pull the
world's economic structure down
around their big, red ears if some
body doesn't throw a net over him
in a hurry.
They even hustled him off to
Washington during the war to let
a Senate investigating committee
pick and poke at him and threaten
him with fines for overpaying his
help and warn him that he and his
silly idea3 would be the ruination
of all the wartime industrial regu
lations if he didn't watch out.
You see, Mr. Lincoln made the
mistake of thinking that what this
Country really wanted wa3 more
production for less money, more
employment and less strikes and
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned, administrator of the
estate of Mary L. Wicklander, de
ceased, has filed his final account
of his administration with the
County Court of Morrow County,
Oregon, and said court has set
Monday, January 14, 1946, at the
hour of 11:00 o'clock, in the Coun
ty Court Room of the Morrow
County Court House, as the time
and place for hearing on and final
settlement of said final account.
All persons having objections to
said final account are requested to
file the same with said court on
or before said date.
Dated and first published this
13th day of December, 1945.
CHARLES WICKLANDER
38-42 Administrator
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned, administrator of the
estate of Charles R. Johnson, de
ceased, has filed his final account
of his administration with the coun
ty Court of Morrow County, Ore
gon, and said Court has set Mon
day, January 14, 1946, at the hour
of 11:00 o'clock, in the County
Court Room of the Morrow Coun
ty Court House, as the time and
place for hearing on and final set
tlement of said final account. All
persons having objections to said
final account are requested to file
the same with said court on or be
fore said date.
Dated and first published this
13t day of December, 1945.
J. O. TURNER,
38-42 Administrator
NOTICE OF SALE OF
COUNTY PROPERTY
BY VIRTUE OF AN ORDER OF
THE COUNTY COURT, dated De
cember 11, 1945, I am authorized
and directed to advertise and sell
at public auction at not less than
absenteeism, and the most that
could be produced in the shortest
possible time. He didn't know that
keeping within the Government
regulations was more important.
MR. LINCOLN, it appears, is
an odd individual. He works on
the principle that if you . pay a
man what he is worth, based on
what he can produce, you won't
have any of this fus3 about union
rights, or quotas, or days off, and
the like. You will also increase
your productive output so that you
can drop the unit price on your
product, which in turn gives the
buying public a break and pre
vents inflation.
Mr. Linaoln believes these things
because out at his Cleveland plant
where they are in effect not a sin
gle hour ever has been lost through
a misunderstanding between the
workers and management.
In 20 years no person has been
laid off because of lack of work.
In the same period no reduction
in wage rates has been made and
every employe has received a
steady income.
More jobs have been created so
that the employe force of the com
pany has been more than quad
rupled. The earnings per man of Lin
coln employes have been increased
by more than four times, which is
double that of industry in general.
Last year's average compensation
per man was in excess of $5,800.
The system has made possible a
reduction in the selling price of
Lincoln's products by mere than
60 per cent. During the same period
other manufacturers' products
were increasing an average of 25
per cent.
Yet dividends to the company's
owners and shareholders prac
tically all of whom are workers
have been continuous and increas
ing. MR. LINCOLN thinks now that
the labor-management conference
has blown up higher than one of
those lovable Picard Brothers' bal
loons, maybe both sides would be
interested in studying his plan as
a solution to the present problem.
He seems of the opinion that
representatives of the unions and
of the big industries might wel
come an opportunity to drop all
these long-winded discussions about
contracts and agreements, hidden
profits and "take-home" pay and
say, instead:
"Okay, fellows. From now on
we'll both apree that the worker
will be paid what he's worth."
Isn't Mr. Lincoln foolish?
R"y, :::rd from
'i ".. : iUralil-NcKS, Passaic, N. J.
Heppner Gazette Times,
the minimum price herein set
forth:
North 44 feet of Lot 2. Block 10
in the Town of Lexington, Mor
row County, Oregon, for the
minimum price of $50.00, cash.
THEREFORE, I will on the 12th
day of January, 1946 at the hour
of 10:00 a. m., at the front door
of the Court House in Heppner,
Oregon, sell said puoperty to the
highest and best bidder.
P. A. MOLLAHAN
Sheriff, Morrow County, Oregon
By Frances Mitchell
38-42 Deputy
NOTICE OF SALE OF
COUNTY PROPERTY
BY VIRTUE OF AN ORDER OF
THE COUNTY COURT, dated Jan
uary 2nd, 1946, I am authorized
and directed to advertise and sell
at public auction at not less than
the minimum price herein set
forth:
Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 13, 14 15
16, 17, 18 and 19 in Block 27,
Irrigon, Oregon, for the mini
mum price of $65.00, cash.
Lots 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 17 in
Block 37, Irrigon, Oregon, for
the minimum price of $60.00,
cash.
All of section 17, Township 4,
North, Range 26 EWM, except
ing about 24.72 acres belonging
to the O. W. R. R. & N. Co.
and the State of Oregon, for the
minimum price of $1.50 per acre,
cash.
Lots 2, 4, 5, and 6 in Block 19
West in Section 25, Township
5 North, Range 26, EWM for the
Elkhorn
Motor
T
one-up
an
Front End
Alignment
We have the latest thing in equip
ment with specialized men in charge
HODGE
Chevrolet Co.
January 10, 1946 1 1
minimum
price
of $2.00
per
acre, casn.
THEREFORE, I will on the 2nd
day of February, 1946, at the hour
of 10:00 a. m. at the front door of
the Court House in Heppner, Ore
gon, sell said property to the high
est and best bidder.
P. A. MOLLAHAN,
Sheriff, Morrow County, Oregon
By FRANCES MITCHELL
41-45 Deputy
WASHINGTON COUPLE
WED HERE SATURDAY
Delbert M. Winter and Agnes M.
Windom, both of Klickitat, Wash.,
were united in marriage at 6 p. m.
Saturday at the courthouse in Hep
pner, Justice of the Peace J. O.
Hager performing the ceremony.
Witnesses were Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Harshman, friends of the
bridal couple.
PRUNE BREAD
1 cup cooked prunes, drained and
cut fine; VA cups sifted white
flour; Vt tsp salt; 1 tsp soda; 2
tsp baling powder; 1 cup sugar;
1 cup whole wheat flour; cup
prune juice; 1 egg beaten; 1 cup
sour milk of cream; 2 tbsp melt
ed butter
Sift together the dry ingredients,
except the whole wheat flour,
which should be added unsifted.
Stir into this mixture the prune
juice, beaten egg, sour milk or
cream, cooked prunes, and then
the melted butter. Pour into two
oiled bread pans and bake in mod
erate oven (350 degrees) for about
Balanced!
Balanced meals at moderate
prices is a standard policy at the
Elkhorn. We strive to please our
customers by serving the best the
market affords. . . . Seafoods are
our specialty . . . Fruits and veg
etables in season.
When dining out always think of
the
Restaurant
d