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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1927)
T H 3 J H E B M lJ B T O J r H B f lÀ J L P , H K g M I B T O » . ¿ « B O O M . Œtfr irrm iato» Arraló ^RECLUSE o /îlE flî 7 AVENUE Published every Thursday at Her- aaistoa, Umatilla County, Oregon by Jeeeyh 8. Harvey, editor and man ager. B n tered as second clase m a tte r December, 1906, a t th e poatofflea a t H e rm is to n , U m a tilla C ounty, Oregon. ^WYNDHAM MARTYN Subscription Kates One T e a r ..... ...............— ................ >9-06 8 tz M onths — .................. ................ >1.00 IT HAPPENED IN 1927 C O P Y R IG H T //» M e UNITED S T A T O and s hands and .« could Ancient history has records of all brlug readily his aid the salesman's sorts of cruelties practiced at the ex-| forced enthusiasm, which seemed gen pense of Incarcerated prisoners, b u t' uine to those who did not know him. a development within the past few He knew he would do well In politics days in Umatilla county shows th a t, I f no old ghosts arose to eoufound him. For years now lie had been liv such practices have not ceased. The death of a Hermiston man In 1 ing among men Immeasurably beneath the county Jail at Pendleton In th e 1 hlui in intelligence; a lucky turn had made hint independent of them early morning of July 1 bring» to To go to the senate from New York light the astonishing fact that the W0U|,| expensive matter, but he prisoner, were unattended, often, ac- waa p|.ej,are(, (O pay. To that end it cording to the reported testimony of would be necessary to conserve his a prisoner given at the coroner's In-' fortune. His wife, after years of llv- queet. In effect he, this prisoner, lug in second-rate hotels, was lncjlned Baid that the Jail was usually locked to a reckless extravagance. Domestic at 5 o'clock In the afternoon and the Hf<? "t Great Itock was strained. Yet prioners heard no one around until Itaxon saw that the era of great eu teitaliiments was at hand. He knew 7; 30 the next morning. He-contin that as he was now u man In the pub ued that prisoners might have torn lic eye, lie had better do the thing the Jail down without getting any well. The life of relatively small response from a jailer for the suffic things was over. Not again would he ient reason that no Jailer wnB in at deal with the baser sort of men. Much uf his amusement came from watching tendance. How strange— such a situation as the men he controlled trying to assert this— In this yaar of our Lord, 1927. themselves. There was Loddon, for By what lin e, of reasoning can such Instance. At heart, of the shyster action be Justified. Have fires, lawyer type and tilled with the Ideals of petty graft, a wealthy benefactor ceased to burn? Have Jailbrtaks1 had bought him a partnership with a become history? Are men temporar respectable tlriu and lie liad to guide ily behind the bars les, likely than tils professional conduct accordingly. their fellows to bicorne 111 in the Loddon for the moment wus .filled night? Are prisoners of so little Im with glee at bis own fortune. He portance that they may be locked up wished Itaxon to regard him as an and forgotten and their lives left to equal Instead of snapping orders at the mercy of chance during half or him. He ventured to disagree with Ills patron. more than half the hourg In 24? “Sly success," Raxon said, stopping Is the lack of a deputy sheriff for III in with a gesture, "Is due to two night duty near 1 the ' Jail due to an things. One Is . a e u total absence of effort to economize? The force em-, Anot|ler tbat , 0I|ly 118« tuen ployed In conducting the business of j (.Hh crusb ,f thpy gp| ((Ut ((f the office now Is several times as |lH|1(, Cuffray was one. You're large as It was a few years ago, andj llnon,er." He looked at the gross, night attendance was always prac- formless creature and sneered. "When tlced then. The work In the office' I pipe, you shall dance; and If you undoubtedly haa Increased, but why i don't dHnce to my liking, what Imp- neglect a factor in duty that u n -' pens? The Bar association will dis necessarily place« lives In Jeopardy bar you. You . may . . try to incriminate The Herald would like Its readers j «*. >«’» "«>•'“ ‘ « slired of evl- me u deuce of anything ci crooked, not a to understand that It has no sym check, letter, telegram, or a dicta pathy whatever with those persons phone conversation. Keep me In good with that degree of Intelligence who humor, Loddon. and work for me and send mush notes, flower, and candles you'll go fur. Try to be Independent, to prisoners unknown to them charg or Indiscreet, and I shall break you.’’ ed with hideous crimes against soc "Why, Paul ” Loddon cried, "what's iety, but it does assert most emphat got Into you? I’m the loyalest follower ically that men temporarily deprived you ever bad, and you know It." Ituxon smiled. "I want Intelligent of their freedom on charges preferr ed In a regular way In the courts do loyalty, and you’re not overburdened with Intelligence any more than (“af not forfeit all their rights. fray was. I'm not underestimating The practice of locking a group you. You've been useful ta me in a of prisoners behind bAr» and In ef number of ways.” fect throwing the key away for the "Thank you," said I-oddon, almost night is abhorrent, repulsive,, Inex bitterly. He thought of certain un cusable. If It ha, not already been professional tilings he had done at his discontinued the peopl, of Umatilla patron's bidding which had. In effect, county have reached tho time to delivered him bound hand and foot to Itaxon. hang their heads In shame. That Raxon aspired to a United Dairy men in this district States senatorshlp seemed a laudnble more considerate of their cows. ' enough ambition. Rut that he had a chance seemed, on reflection, almost IN TERMS OF HAPPINESS ubsurd. And yet Raxon was not the A re a l service to the cause of co kind of man to delude himself. Lod operation am ong farm ers In this dis don voiced his doubts. tric t was perform ed by N ew Madden, "McKlinber Is the party's nominee,” H erm isto n fa rm e r, in hts ta lk before lie observed. "Of course, he'll carry the F o u rth o f J u ly assembly at Stan- New York city, and they say he’ll get flaid M onday when he urged his fel- low t llle is of the soil to forget the dotlrp as tide m easu ring m a rk of more votes up-stats than any possible candidate." "The Pa r,y ’ rtl1 ‘ h* votes, not succes, in e ff o r t , to co-operate for m u tu al b en efit and to substitute th erefo r happiness. But McKIm ber's the party's choice," Loddon persisted. W .N.U. S E R V IC E phla, where fie liatT thrown np hfr position. Already unollittr laboratory assistant had taken Bradney'a place. The two had yielded to Peter Mil- man's Importunities and ugreed to re main as Ills guests. Neelund Barnes had not yet come baek from Peekskill. He had gone with the avowed inten tion of paying Lippsky something off Ills account and hurrying buck with some clothes. So that he might escape the ridi cule attending a man who reaches hts suburban home In full evening dress at midday, Barnes arranged to come ts his distasteful abode when It was dusk. He wanted to remove hl» entire wardrobe from the Lippsky shuck and pay as little of the deferred rent as possible. In Lippsky's front yard, which com msnded a view of his tenant’s en trances and exits, the aggrieved land lord was trying to bring to maturity depressed looking vegetables. Hie eyes glistened when he saw who ap proached. He dropped tils spade and hurried to meet Neeland Barnes. “Was you expecting a lady?' he de manded. “Good God. no 1” r,arnes stoppeo Instantly. Hud old ghosts arisen to confound him? "Hus any woman the right to go In and monkey about with your things?" "Absolutely nobody," Barnes cried. “Mr. Barnes.” said Lippsky shrilly, “you are a loafer. You sent her in to get your clothes so you should go away and leave me without nothing to hold. I got your number, and b} golly I g o t hers. I locked her In. and I tell her if she makes a fuss I send for the police. You thought you should And me out. You know this Is my lodge night." "I didn't know there was a lodge low enough to admit you," Barries said angrily, "and I sent nobody here. Send for the police. I've had enough of your d—d Insolence." "Pretending she was a fine lady," said Lippsky, who was growing angry! "Looking at me mid my house as though we wus dirt. She wouldn't believe you lived here. I tell her right quick you wouldn’t even be liv ing here If you didn't come over with rent." Neeland Barnes removed his silk hat and mopped hts brow'. "My good ass,” he began, "what the devil are you ranting about?” “I tell her," Lippsky went on, unap- penseil, "you could go out w-ltli your line gentleniun's clothes on, and a silk hut even, and treat me like dirt. I'm a citizen here qgine as you, and this Is an end of you walking over me with your silk hat and your fifteen dollar shoes. I know the price of them shoes. I tell her to screnm nil she likes, nobody hears away up here.’' “You mean to say you’ve locked a strange woman op In my house?" "It's my house. If you pay the rent, you can go In and get your clothe«. If you don't, you stuy out." Feverishly Lippsky destroyed what ever chance of life u row of kohlrabi might have had. Then, when he saw hts tenant march toward the shuck, he followed. “One of them yellow hairs," he scolded ns he trotted by the tall man’s qldc. "A swell lady who ur'd she didn’t know how you could live In "It lo o lf that way, doesn’t Jt?" He went even further than merely Itaxon smiled. “McKImber's very urging thBt happiness replace money popular.’’ as the goal and expressed the belief "You're keeping something back,” that co-operation among farmers said Loddon. "I always do. That's why I get on. can not be a solid success until com mercial standards are made second That's why I'm going to the senate." His hands clasped behind him, Paul ary. The d'Stlny of mankind Is to itaxon stood at a window and looked be happy, here and now, he said. over the sound. I-oddon talked, hut he Enough money to buy the funda did nut listen. Raxon saw himself In mentals that can be purchased Is a few years as the greatest money necessary for the cup of happiness power In America. All hln future was to contain a satisfying draught, he carefully planned. He was now en admitted, but he went farther and gaged In mapping out a present. He asked his fellows to make the dollar appreciated the (tower of women secondary and the happlnees It will |H>litl<-iilly and knew he must appear as a hoine-lovlug man, a man wtio was buy the primary consideration. When the men and women who till notoriously good to his wife and chit the soil forget the old belief, once Iren. Fortunately, all of them wen attractive physically. true but now relegated to tho back He was Interrupted by Mrs. It'xon ground as a fallacy that economic de- She was a handsome, dark w anan vclopmeut has exploded, ttiat farmers wb(1 bllj ,,nly Just discovered that are Indepi ndent, their minds will he | wbu« ahe h, d living her prepared for the mass action dictated husband had lieeoine enormously hv present day conditions as neces wealthy. She had the sense of a per sary to the enjoyment of a greater -mini grievance against him highly de "She Called My House a Pigsty." measure of happiness than bus been \ doped. He conld see she «'as pre pare,! for battle. such a pigsty. She called my hou :e r thelrH during the Immediate past, "1 want a suitable allowance for pigsty. Well, she'., b. cu locked up In myself and the children," she began. Let’s see. wasn't there a popular "I want a hanking account and my a pigsty - Lice It teas my dinner time.' Snddet.ly Barnes' powerful hand song quite a few years ago entitled. own limousine and chnuffeur." She selxed Uppsky. 'Come Take a Spin In My Airship?’’ had thrown down the gage anil waited, "If you dou't give me the key." he a little frightened, for what was com aid. "I'll tw ist your arm out of Its Ing. l’aul had always aeemed Incom Oregonians who arc beginning to socket.” Ilnnies turned the other's feel surfeited with the luscious prelienslhle. She did not understand wrist a little. strawberries offered this year may him now. When he smiled It might “Yon shell sleep lu the |all for this,' direct their attention to the famous he, she supposed, the prelude to tome l.lppsky cried when the key •»••»< hiring sarcasm. watermelons and cantaloupe« grown -reed irom him. "Certainly." he said. "A very good "It will tie less verminous than this In th« Irrigon district. They'll soon I Idea Fortunately, Loddon Is here plaea. It«, lies answe.cl. He put U. be ripe. I Talk It over with him. I am very key in the door and threw It o;>en will ng that you should take you, He was wholly at a loss to know The belief, often expressed In olsce In society I only sak that yo, whom the Invader could ho. these newer days, that old fashioned will l>e careful with what (teople yo« The noise of the iqieiilnx awokt Fourth of July celebrations have lilt my house. I'm after hlg game, and her. She was a tall, slim girl wlti. gone the way of many other good If I ris e f o n ' l l go np with me. Talk golden hair, In a White knitted s(s>rt> treats In life was pretty thoroughly It over with Herman." lie smiled and suit. When alia saw hliu site held ou. disproved last Monday by the day's walked slowly from the room. her arms. Aud while Marie Raxon was passing program offered by the Stanfield "Darllut daddy f" she cried, inrow Grange and the Umatilla Project an enthralling hour discovering hei Ing her arms arouud his neck. many needs, and her husband was Farm Bureau. Someone should Jab "Nite," he said, stroking her lialr wondering how best to start to beau their memories shout 1U or 11 tify Rellington's enormous building, "how I have longed for you! But. roy months from now and remind them some men In I-ow er F ifth avenue ware dear, how la It you are here?” "1 ran aw ay." She confe*»c.L "They th a t there will be • Fourth pf July discussing hts rule. I* 19». Male? had returned firow P h ila 'I* ^HowwaTT«« you r couldn’t stand I t look, daddy, ) shall call you my big brother. Nobody w ill believe you're my father. W hat makes you stay la such a funny place ae this?” Sudden ly she caught sight of Lippsky. "Who la tbat dreadful little creature?” Llppeky spoke up distinctly. "I own this house, and I’ve come for the rent. It he don't pay, he goes to sleep In the village Jail. I guess he don't mind. I guess It ain’t for the first time. He ain’t got no money. You say he's your father." Lippsky grinned. “Well, you got the chance to save your daddy from Jail." "Dad," »lie whispered, “I hadn’t any Idea It was as bad as this. I've only three dollars left The boat trip took all my savings." I "My dear girl,” he said easily, “the man is known widely as the village idiot. Notx>dy believes him. It does liup(>en that niy rent la due. By the way, how much Is It?” “Ninety dollars eighty cents.’’ "I rather thought it was more," said Barnes. He took out a roll of bills and paid. He was left with seven dollars. His reward came In the relief the girl »bowed. “It’s a fad of mine staying up here,” he admitted. “The air Is good and I’ve been In training. 1 shall leave now. I think we'll go to New York as soon us (losslble. How lovely you look. You have those unforgettable violet eyes of your mother, but you are taller.” The thought that he had nowhere to take her made him miser able, but lie would not let her see IL It was incomprehensible to him that the countess ot Horsham, -his late wife’s eldest sister, had allowed her niece to come. The countess had al ways been his enemy. “It came to a point,” the girl suld when tlfPy were In a New York-bound train, "when I was asked to drop my own name and take my mother’s. Not that I minded being Nlta Fessendon. except that it seemed as though I were publicly ashamed of you. I simply refused. There were awful rows. So I ran away. I was twenty-one and my own mistress. I sent all the Jewels and presents back and started to earn my living.” “Nlta," he cried, with admiration In hls look, “how could you possibly do what I’ve always failed in?” “It wnsn't easy at first," she ad mitted, "hut I stuck It out and made enough money In secretarial work to come out to my own country second cabin. I tried to find you six months igo, h u t the silly clubs returned all your letters." Neelund Barnes colored. “Must have mislaid the address," he said: -d—d cureless of them. I shall report it.” He wondered how she had run him to earth. “When I got to New York I 'phoned he Knickerbocker. I knew It used to he your favorite club. I told the secre tnry. or whoever it was, that I was your daughter and simply had to find you, and they told me to call up later. When I did they said you lived In Peekskill. I spent three hours looking and then that village Idlo locked me In.” She did not tell him that naturall? she had started her search expectin; to find him In one of the better sec lions of the charming Hndson-sld- ■ ity. The Lippsky cottage on the oul ¡klrts had been a dreadful shock. Bit' the search was over and she wat happy. She was very proud of him Her aunt had drawn the picture of ; decrepit, vlee-rldden physical wreck Instead lie wus vigorous, clear-skinned ami agile. "Where are we going, daddy?" shi demanded, after she hnd passed Sing Sing's embuttled walls. "I'm staying with Peter Mllmun," hr answered. “Lady Horsham may havi mentioned him.” "I remember. His wife ran away and he shut himself np In his house and went mad.” "That 1« Just what your aunt would say," he returned. “He did not go mad. He happens to be the best friend I have, and I shall ask him to let you stay the night there. Much better than a stuffy, noisy hotel.” “And tomorrow we'll get a coxy little flat. I've often wanted to look over the treetops Into Central park." “I’m afraid cozy little flats on Fifth avenue where you were born aren't exactly within my means. The view Is just as pretty from Central Park west." He groaned to think they were just as dillicult to attain. "Anything you like," she said hap pity. Peter Mllman and his two guests had finished dinner nnd were In the large drawing room when Achille cairn In with the news that Neeland Barne* hail returned with a lady! Bradney looked at Malet and shook Ids head. ’ It was In Brndney's ndnd that llarnes had spent his money on liquid refreshment and had so far for gotten himself as to seek to Introduct a lady friend to a bachelor establish ment. lie could see that Peter Mil man was much disturbed. A moment later Neeland Bnrne- w hs Introducing a very pretty, gra clous girl with charming spcnkln- voice as Anita Barnes newly cone from England. Peter Mllman’s an noyanee was banished momentarily a« lie tii ught of the ramifications of his I.nullv tree. The girl must tie, re moi> Iy. a distant cousin. He greeted her with distinguished courtesy aud it,tri on ed the other men to her. "M ..st extraordinary," Neeland Bar.e.-i liegan. "Entirely unlocked for. I feel as It I had come In for a Court Houl* at **“*leton' U m a tilla County, Oregon as th e place w hen and w here h ea rin g is to be had thereon. A ll person, interest ed are hereby notified to then and there appear and show cause, if any they have, why said report should oot be approved, the administrator discharged and the estate cloeed. Dated this 7th day of July, 1927. RAY C. GOODE. 44-5tcv Administrator. >3 Oregon Auto License Propos-d. Salem.—The first step In a move ti initiate a measure providing for re Juced license fees on motor vehicle! was made Tuesday, when H. H. Stal aro and George Bylander, Portland ,'lled with Secretary of State Koser ar tppllcation for a ballot title for such a measure. The proposal of Stallard and Bylander, as set out in their letter to Kozer. is Lo establish a flat license fee of >3 a year for all motor vehicles, Including automobiles, trucks, motor cycles, etc. 1 Judge Lindsey Put off Famous Bench. Denver, Colq. — Ben B. Lindsey’s long career as judge of the Denver juvenile court, which he founded a quarter of a century ago and made famous throughout the world, was In terrupted when a court order official ly ousted him, in line with the Colo rado supreme court’s decision last win ter that he was illegally elected In 1924. Pacific Coast A ir T ra ffic Increases. San Francisco.—Pacific coast pas senger air line traffic has increased more than 6000 "per cent since January 1, A. K. Humphries, an official of thr Pacific Air Transport, declared here. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, June 17, 1927. Notice is hereby given ahat John E. Mason, of Hermiston, Oregon, who, on Jan. 29, 1924, made Homestead Entry under Act June 6, 1912, No. 024549, for NW% Section 20, Town ship 4 North, Range 29 East, Willam ette Meridian, has filed notice of In tention to make final Proof, to es tablish claim to the land above des cribed, before W. J. Warner, United States Commissioner, at Hermiston, Oregon, on the 5th day of August, 1927. Claimant names as witnesses: 'araes G. Pc arson, of Hermiston, Ore- ,-on, Jacob L. Stork, of Hermiston, Iregon, Charles E. Lewis, of Stan- 'ield, Oregon, Howard Avery, of Her- niston, Oregon. J. W. DONNELLY, Register. TAKEN UP NOTICE ▼a. IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE V ir g in ia Boone and STATE OF OREGON FOR Peyton Boone, UMAVILLA COUNTY Defendants. In the Matter of the Estate of Thomas William Peter», Deceased. Citation. v To. John Thomas Peters, John James Peters and Mary Jane Cush ing, as heirs of and persons inter ested in the estate of Thomas W il liam Peters, deceased and to all other persons unknown: In the Name of the State of Ore gon: You and each of you are here by cited and commanded to. appear before the Honorable I. M. Schanntp. Judge of the above entitled Court at his office In the courthouse in Pen dleton, Umatilla County, Oregon, on the 11th day of July, 1927, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M. of said day. then and there to show cause, if any exists, why an order of the above en titled Court should not be made in the above entitled matter, permitting and directing Michael Keating as administrator of the estate of ThomaB William Peters, deceased to sell at private sale In one parcel for cash In band, for the purpose of paying the charges, expenses of administration and the claims against said estate, all, or such part of the hereinafter described real estate belonging to the said estate as It may be necess ary to sell for such purpose, the said real property being described as follows, to-wlt: An undivided one-third interest in and to: East Half and the East Half of the Southwest Quarter of Section 8, Tp. 4 North Range 28, E. W. M. containing 400 acres more or less. You are further notified that this citation is served upon you by pub lication, pursuant to an order of the Honorable I. M. Schannep, Judge of the above entitled court, duly made and entered on the 18th day of May, 1927, directing that publication hereof be made once a week for a period of four consecutive weeks and that the first publication hereof is made in the Hermiston Herald, a newspaper published in Hermiston, Umatilla County, Oregon, pursuant t0 said order on the 26th day of May, 1927. By order of the Honorable 1 M. Schannep, Judge of the above en titled, court made and entered on the 18th day of May, 1927. In testimony whereof, I, R. T. Brown, Clerk of the County Court aforesaid, do hereby set my hand and affix the seal of said court this 18th day of May, 1927. R. T. Brown, Clerk of the County Court. Raley, Raley A Warner, A. S. Cooley and John F. Kilkenny, Attorneys for Ad ministrator. Postoffice address, Pendleton, Oregon Summons. Equity No. 4375. To Virginia Boone and Payton Boone, the above named defendants: In the Name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint in the above entitled suit within six weeks /rom the first publication of this summon« and you will take notice that if you fall to appear and answer or plead within that time, that the plaintiff, Daniel H. Boone, for want thereof, will apply to the above entitled court for the relief prayed for In his com plaint herein, to-wlt: F o r judgment and decree agalnBt the defendants Virginia Boonv am Peyton Boone for the sunt of >3.61; together with Interest there rate of 6 per cent per annum, p y able annually, from the 24 th day of September, 1917 until paid and fo" the further sum of >400 attorneys fees and for plaintiff's costs ar disbursements in this suit and f n further decree that the mortgage described In plaintiff s comnlst t which was recorded In the office of the County Recorder of Urn; tl’l: County. Oregon, on the 14 th day o January, 1919, r.t page 351, in Bo !. 66 of the Records of Mortgage i. th^ office of the Recorder of Con veyances of said eounty and state, ue foreclosed and that the premia aB therein described, to-wit: West Half of the Northwest Quar ter of the Northeast Quarter ol Section 20, Tp. 4 North Range 28, E. W. M., containing 20 acres, together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments, appurte nances. easements, water and all other rights belonging or any wise appertaining thereto, be sold and that the proceeds thereof be applied tow ard the payment of plaintiff's Judg ment in the amounts aforesaid and for a further decree forever foreclos ing and barring all of the defendants In the above entitled milt o? any and all right, title, claim, interest and e tate in law or in equity and all equity of redemption in and to said prem ises and every part thereof, excepting only such right of redemption as shall be allowed by the statutes of the State of Oregon and for such other relief as to a court of equity may seem meet aud proper In the premises. This summons Is published pur suant to the order of the Honorable I. M. Schannep, Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Umatilla County, duly made and en tered on the 17th day of May, 1927, directing that publication herein be made once a week for a priod of six weeks consecutively in the weekly Hermiston Herald and the first pub lication herein is made pursuant to said order on the 19 th day of May, 1927. Notice Is hereby given that I have aken up and have kept for about 21 lays at the J- M. Prlndle ranch 3H (3 8 -5 tc ) nlles west of Hermiston the follow Raley, Raley A Warner, ing dtscrlbed animals: One bay mare, A. S. Cooley, ibout 3 years old, weight 950 pounds IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE John F. Kilkenny, STATE OF OREGON FOR UMA .vlre cut on front leg, and one black Attorneys for Plaintiff. ;elding, age unknown, weight 1050. TILLA COUNTY. Said animals will be sold, unless Daniel H. Boone, Postoffice address, Pendleton, Oregon' edeemed, at public auction to the (37-7tc) Plaintiff, dgheet bidder for cash in hand on he 7th day of July, 1927, at the tbove described ranch at 10 o’clock \ . M. D ated a t H e rm la to n on th ia 23rd day o f June, 1927. Signed: RAY M. DOLVEN MILLION ACRES OF RICH MONTANA LAND OPENED BY NEW RAILROAD 12-2tp 'N T H E COUNTY COURT OF THE 8TATE OF OREGON FOR UMATILLA COUNTY 'n the Matter of the Estate of “r a n d s M . M c C lIn tic , Deceased. Notice of Administrator’s Sale of Real Property. Notice is hereby given that the un- lersigned, H. J. Warner, as adminia- rator of the estate of Francis M. Mc ClIntic, deceased, under and by v|y- ue of an order of the Hon. I . M. ichanncp. Judge of the above en titled Court, made on the 25th day of May, 1927, will, from and after the 1st day of July, 1927, offer for iale and sell at private sale, upon the terms hereinafter described, at the office of Raley, Raley A War ner, In the First National Bank Building, in the city of. Pendleton, Umatilla County, Oregon, and sub ject to confirmation by the above entitled court, to the person making the best and highest offer hereon, all of the estate,, right, title and interest of the estate of Francis M. McClIntic, deceased. In and to the following described real property, situated In Umatilla County, State of Oregon, to-wlt: Parcel One. The Southwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of the North east Quarter of Section 4, Tp. 4 North Range 28, E. W. M. Parcel T w o. West Half of the Southwest Quar ter ot the Northwest Quarter o f Section 3. Tp. 4 North Range 28, E. W. M., also known as Farm NOTICE or HEARING UFO» FINAL Unit G, consisting of 20 seres. RETORT T^e terms on which said property la the Coaaty Coart of tho State pf will be sold by the said administra Oregoa for Umatilla County. tor are as follows, to-wit: said pro In the M la a t tte r o f the Estate perty w ill be sold for cash upon the of JoeephAV. C r a lk , Deceased. confirmation of the gale of said real (To be c o n tin u e d .) Prices of Best Land only $10 to $20 an Acre N E million acres of rich, low priced land in the great Red water Valley country of Southeast ern M ontana w ill be opened to farmers this year by a new branch line o f the Northern Pacific Rail way, running 63 miles from Glendive. Here the Northern Pacific will sell direct to farmers a half million acres a t prices ranging from only >10 to $20 an acre, w ith 20 years to pay. Taxes are extremely low. Special advantages are available to neigh bors and colonies desiring to settle together. M ix e d fa r m in g is successful throughout this area. C o m has in creased by hundreds o f thousands of acres in the last few years in South eastern M ontana. Hog production haa grown rapidly. A ll classes of livestock are raised. The dairy in dustry is getting a good start. Communities already are estab lished. Churches have been built. Schools are open. Rapid develop O ment will come with the new rail road. M arkets w ill be closer. M ore fanners will come in . Land values will increase. The Northern Pacific Railway will help farmers in getting started right. Settlers are wanted who seek a real chance for themselves and their families. The Northern Pa cific will send a representative to talk the m atter over, i f desired. In vestigate this opportunity. L et us send you booklets, prices and easy payment plan. A ll sent free. MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY! J. M . Hughes, Land Com. Northern Pacific Railway Co., S t. Paul, M in n . Draw er is» Without ob lio tion an ray part pleaae vend all information about Redwater Valley Country. N otice ts hereby g iven th a t the p ro perty by th« above e n title d c o a rt, undersigned a d m in is tra to r ot the and upon the execution and d eliv e ry eatate of Joseph W . C ra lk . deceaaed, of » good and s u ffic ie n t deed, has file d h is t la a l re p o rt W ith th e D ated th is 2 5 th day of M ay. 1927. C le rk of the above e n title d C o urt and H . J. W A R N E R , th a t the Judge o f eaid C ourt h a s 1 a s a d m in is tra to r of the estate of designated S a tu rd a y , t h r 6th day o f F ra n c is M. M c C lIn tic , deceased. August, 191? a t 1 o’clock in th e a t- Raley, R a le y A W a rn e r. A tto rn e y s ternoon »» ‘ he tlm s , and the rooms fo r A d m in is tra to r, Pendleton. O re. salii f.teh m t e r ij h eg itiy th lP T , |i»oui j of , h „ aN jTt. f n t|ile<| Q m i M 1 b tbe goa (>»-»te) Subscribe for The Herald-$2.00