til l;i:)V HEPPNER HERALD s. A. pattison. p3lisher. . tl Neivs- An Independent, L p(i!t r. KkU red at the r, Oregon, ' Post. Ot)u:e as scan' !-:l-iss matter, " 1 1 rms J ,Vr ..: '; '0,1. )ii Year - - $1.50 Six Month - J- 7 I'h ) Moulin - - :,D FRIDAY, MARCH !,?19l HERALD C71.V- aiRSUH'. t e undersign- e. hership and With this isM, v( assumes tin control of the lh i ,tiM' leril,l. A few words tnui-f. iiir"n his at tiiude reitrdinjf certain matters j and things as vicam! through liie spectacle of a c-t.;!t,try nevvspap-! or man may not be amiss. To begin with the present i "jag" in that town since the proprietor is no journalistic prod-1 "bone, dry" law went into effect, igy; he is no wh'r'wind. able toj"lt, is well to remember" contin tear and twist public oiinion tojues our friend Fit.tuanrice, his liking reganli"---, of man, ( led "that, the (irst man caught d runk or the devil. Neither is he in any J gets a free trip to Jtlie Oregon sense a super inan, contident of j penitentiary''. Gee wouldnt it his abiliy to di reel t he affairs o have given Condon a bump if lleppner, Morrow County and j I hat law had been retroactive? I be I ,'ni verse wit houljregard tol the presentdcMi-es, past customs j Many an un regenerate sinner or ful.uri; aspirations of the cili in the Slate ot Washington will yiii thereof. He is just a com- j regret that hejdid not enter JJthe inon, ordinary sort of an individ j minist ry in his earlier years nai who tries to d j the best In c-a and so, ii -Mini 'S fails at that. lie lias never acipiired j't he habit of looking down on ordina- i 'r.V I.M.ple like bankers and boot-j iii- ip- blacks, farmers and larriers, merchants and milliners. lawyers i :m.J ..,. sl..,..m!,U..r ..,! ! . , i slice i ilierders, doctors a lid d ross makers, preachers and poultry, men, just because he is a coun try editor. This defect, however, in ty be due to neglect of proper t raining in hi.i youth. In fact ho confesses Id a sort of sneaking regard for all such people "and, after several year's experience, lie has concluded that, as Lincoln remarked of the poor, (! id must r, , . I Un common u.ioii le beitause he , r mine mi uriiiy 01 us. The writer is not exactly u si ranger to this section of Ore gon Ho was for several years u resident of Gilliam's capital city whose surrounding hills of Gold en Grain have made her farmers famous ami residents of I rving Ion. After spend;i)g the past de cade west nf the Cascad-.! range, however, he confesses to a ijuicU ened pulse, u more elastic step, a renewed lightness and buoy ftney, when again the ozone of Munchgrass Land fills his nos trils, which no denizen of tho Webloot country can ever know. As to tho future imlicy of the Herald but little need be said at this time. The writer is averse to high sounding promises made at the outset of any undertaking. H is easier to promise than to fulfil; it is sometimes easier to preach than to practice; what a Illlllt (I kith! IlliOIIIk; lluirit i t I L.i i1 tiinate timti whit he says he will! ttoin i in iiegiiiniiig; practical re subs ut the wire mean more lh.in Volumes of gushing theories at 1 be 1 1 1 1 ag posl. 'J le- II 'raid iii lie cimdui led lis ,iii independent local uewp i- per ll dees not expect l.i imiim' ,i , i . , . . tin' I' uiihgiass or wheat I ml s I In !'hi I With their routs in ll. air. ,y other way , ever., lMi nuit (iiin.sses Ol IlllUle, , . ' leu iii cup men With nil good citi'.eiis of lhi town and rotintt lis p : le i .bef will do wh.it he in n to nl v nice t hose things which make lor a better com in u titty lllet.-: .ii lilies le. .Nl.l.'i i-ulels II, is lulii1' "oiu.ei ceii-oralluns .Not.'il of indeivof ft . in ii nt! I v with a '"'",l'l"t "'el artists, who have i- ' tm'ng While'--from al. parts f ,he fnit- ; cngag. d in that act i uy i,e hopes , '' '.Hes to use Sundown fi r a ' to t ,i i,e to 0,i hs oil t an, I t.i Wo his ..ice in the community as a neighbor and a friend withj malice inwards none and charity , t..r . l' I i 1-sllN, i t The Newport IiidependeLt-En-terprise, which like many other .country newspapers perhaps needs some, advises its readers that the word "boosting" is spelled sup p-o-r t. Why doesn't Lloyd Riches of the Stmilield Standard, drop the List two letters from his iraaie and iiiM-i.me at once what he is r untune a newspaper to be. Con .template the price of "news 'print" and tuke'U.is hint, Lloyd. Nowwe know that the term, "movie magnate" is right'siuce reading in the daily press that spuds pass current as coin of the realm in exchange for movie tickets in Chicago and other ''astern cities. Maybe that's how jltie much taikedof "corner" on spuds started, Tlie: federaPtrade ; commission snoulu investiraie. The Condon Times remarks that una seems to be. .the most, popular way of acouiriii"- a when thi' "bone dry" law, signed by Governor Lister the other !hiy. gees into effect. The law provides that no one in the tHi. mav have an v intoxicatingHin nor ! in his possession except regular-! lu m-iLi'mml nilnidniv uni.j uA ! r..U,w .,,,,,, 1 1 I I t j '. " -""' j gi eg n ions ana tins must be ex- clusively for sacramental, pur poses l'ork A congressional appro-pria'-io'i that goes to another district than yours. More A man who won't listen mo your sl.orv out tuaU'es vou lis J 3 Ju" ten to his i. . ., . , lleppner- Synonymous with "best town in eastern Oregon." j Hone Dry--An aridity that en. , - ' bailees the high cost of "stews . i gaiety Pirst Koping a mule I securely before you shi l.i m . Confirmed. Governor Wiihycomhe has continued the appointment if tho new state highway com mis. j sum. I lie new commissiot:ersnre K. . I. Adams, of Kugene. retire. I .... 1 I senting thc lirst congessiomil district; W. L. Thompson, of Pen dleton, representing the second congressional district, and S. Itenson.of Portland, represei . ting the third congressional (district. General satisfaction is exuresi-- eel in this section of the state o. Vi,'r ni'poiutinetit of Mr. Thompson, who is recognized a a representative ritizen ol this section of ( regon. Broncho Busier to Quit ' I1.,.. I.e -on Sundown, the v, , ' ' (I v ' 'eree Indian ho holds Wot i.'s I'hani niolishiM n n l.r,,i, .-f... '. -ys he has about de- ' "' a i i n 1 1 mi ic III any i .. i , . inete bl'oiii-ho busting contests that he is stnf mi Ihe knee joints .i ., . and is h. 'coining rheumatic. , Although Suiidown will h,. ", years or ag in April, he wmi nt the Pcu,llet.,ti Uound l'p aial oth- - inottei, i ae prenoun,-1H him I''1)' sica'lv perfect, so it is saul. Athena Press I MiTgat:. 1 W. r. Palmatccr. of j was here dining the wvck A Strip of Seaweed It Was Given as a Token at the Time of a Betrothal. By F. A. MITCHEL lu the oUUn time Newport, It. I., was an luipoi-tdut skirling port. Indeed, until the eiiod of the Revolution a inimlier of points on the Atlantic coast wore about equally prominent in this ri'Hpect. A3 the years rolled on all ex (ept New York, Huston and Philadel phia dropiied out, the latter finally leaving the first the supremacy. la that early day on the beach where now In the summer season hundreds, at limes thousands, of fashionable per sons drive and lounge and bathe, one moonlight night a young man and a jih'l sat looUiny; out upon the gilded wa ter. They were Edmond ltoscoe and Hvalina Blair, the young man a son of a prominent shipowner, the girl the daughter of a merchant. There were no sounds of revelry in the little town hark of them, as there are now at that season, and, as for the beach, not a sound was to be heard except the plash of the sluggish waves as they broke and rolled in on the sand. There could be no more fitting place for a young man to tell his story to a maiden, and Edmund ltoscoe was toll in:; Eviillua P.lair his love for her. Then and there their troth was plight I'd under the yellow light of the moon, the lovers' voices accompanied by the effervescing sound of the waves as they slid up in foam on the smooth sands. There were bolh happiness and sad ness for these two young creatures w hose lives seemed so much to them. In a few days they were to part for several years. Kvuliua was to go to England that lier education might be liuihlii'd under the supervision of an T!-!. ! llK" f - uiuiw.v ui country gentlemen and ladles of blue blood, ami must needs be given accomnlishinents suit- "hie to her runk. Edmond was to enter lirowu university, which was then In its babyhood and soon to give up Its as jet only dormitory to quarter nol dlers of the Revolution. The transports of betrothal wero scurcely over when Edmond said: "Vou are going to a land where you will meet many persons of rank and fashion. know that you will lie a belle among them. Some man, possibly a noble, will fall in love with you. You will dread to return to this'tin cultivated laud. You will remain In England, ami I shall never see you again." Looking at hlni thiough her earnest eyes, she replied: "ee me some token bv whli-h I l,a remember these words of yours, 1 11,11 tempted by fortune to remain ",' 1 P'"""'' yen 1 will look ai b and am sure It will bring up be fore me the happiness of this evenin- "" 1 slm" choose you and the life of simple llhode Island woman In prcf i' c to that or a lady of rank." "Alas, I have nothing suitable. 1 hnuld Kve you a ring r"- "I wish no bauble." replied Evalltm. '!Ive me something to remind hip of l hes,. sands, the oeenii, the plash of 'he waves." hooking about him. Edmond saw a "eanee.l lying within his reach. Tuk iu K UP. he handed if til Kvnltmi Kttu j took It and, spreading It nut on her ,' HnidV "I. Evolltm. promise vou. Kdnmn.i tl"lt '" in"e 1 nm 'inpted to place nink and fin limn l,..f,,r.. vou 1 will think of you with this plant if tin- Ke before me. Ami I ommiiv ton that when I liuve finished my .itu.iitloii I win ,r ,, tliivli () you us evldeiuv that 1 liuve leeti true to you and my heart him lieeu iiIwhts your." After thin nnsiirnni c there wu n long euibra.. Then thev arose and '"king a path wlileh is now a broad avenue, returned to the town. Kvery day, or, rather, every evening, till Kviillnn g departure the lover-went to the U-iich. They were not troubled oca In the daytime with poron t ll-tiirb their ims-tlngs. There were no bathers hi fantastic suit", no ear Hate, no loungers. Th,, evening 1 eloie i:nllni,', depiirtur.. ihey passed there. The luoou ree, us It wcio. out of the o eiin. the tlrst spark apisuiln - iin IUI "" ' ui-tain liil,re. then gliding 'oie i.i. r the erets of t,(, w.oe and llnrlly the gieiit round dl-k i-...t.,.i "ti (lie Iini-l7t.il ,,r wai,.,- Ju': Heaven gtiiiit." said IMmnnd, "that ui n i aat Hlni U I lii'n I,, ,,m, I r ,.. . .... lr ' Hjeu will lime your wl-h.' '- r,i . ,, I he next day the ship Hint wns In carr.i tier t.i Kntland .iilled fr.mi the Itile town n Niiriit..-iii.it bay. tin. Iioeis waving tmill thev could iTistln gnUli e.i. Ii other x fornis no longer. I on ILL- il,,, n, .t ..... . ... i - ,-i lii.-ir mnm 1 C-ialliiM wrote r.'siil.,, l.i p. ,er i",,r Th" "- 'I 'r i.t.. wan StZV't': '" ! wrote 1 dimnd of the tin.. 1 1 " ""' of the amii.ciiiruu reoeiion among person. ,.f ipi.ility. Hut her letters .honed tin dltnlmn lo'n of loir for Mm n.l hidk-atisl I list .tie ln. k.,1 forward to th,.r rciiiilmi with mil. h hots and pl.n-oue a wheu 1 ' '"'ft htiii J el there wan a great deal that ah did not write hlni. She did not write of the offers of marriage that followed one another lu rapid succession. When these offers of marriage were showered upon Evalina she declined thorn without giving as a reason a pre vious attachment. Later, possibly as one might hide behind gauze, she fre quently wore as a decoration the sea weed that her American lover had giv en her. Sometimes It was tacked to her skirt, sometimes she wore it in her corsage, and again it would be Inter twined with her hair. In time she came to be called the Seaweed Lady. Meanwhile Koscoe was studying as a collegian, though his mind was with his heart. a(id that was across the ocean. He read witli avidity Evalina's letters and shuddered as he thought of the differences between himself, au undergraduate of a college but a few years old, without fortune, compared with some coroneted man with vast estates. Evalina's letters were reas suring, but she was growing from maidenhood to womanhooj, and would she not give way at last? I However, the period allotted for her I sojourn abroad was drawing to a close. She did nut write her lover that she was coming home for the reason that i she did not know if she would be per- milted to return. Her parents were much chagrined at hearing that she hud refused an earl ond the second son of a duke and were debating whether to scud the funds for her pas sage back to America or Insist that she remain longer. It was two years from the time of lie annus uepaiune luai. a siuiui sueu as .eNpuiL uiiu nui. eApeiieiiLcu lu many years broke upon the coast. For three days the giant waves struck wildly-upon the cliffs and rolled far up into Narragansett bay. Then, on the evening of the third day, the clouds broke away in the west, and the sun set in golden splendor. That night the moon was at the full. As the sun went down the queen of night rose. Edmond, desiring to view the effect of the storm on the waves, I when night had fallen and the moon I was lighting the bind and the water, I started for the bench. The path was i lonely, and there was terror la the j tumbling of the great waves on tho i sands. The only likeness to the night of Edmond and Evalina's betrothal was the full moon. lie had passed midway from the town to the water when he saw before him a figure that, he knew to be a woman by her garments fluttering lu the wind, which was still strong. She seemed to be coming toward him, but as he advanced drew no nearer to him. He went on until he came to the edge of the beach and saw her still distant from him, sometimes Hitting nearer, sometimes farther, and ulways seeming to rock like a bird resting ou the crest of a wave. Whether It was the night, still dis turbed by the storm that hud passed, or something bewildering In this un steady figure, ltoscoe could never tell, but an appalling premonition stretch ed a pall over hlni like the wings of some huge black bird. Something within him seemed to say: "A great misfortune has fallen upon you. The wind and the waves ore n dirge. He strong or you will be crushed." And now, having reached a point overlooking the water, the sands beiug Soaked, progress was slower. Scat tered ragged clouds were flying above, now and again dashing, across tho face I of the moon and shutting off its light. I At these dark periods the timing figure was lost, but reappeared when the , cloud had passed and the full light ot the moon was released. Edmond had spent many au hour when home from college on the spot where he and Evalina had spoken their betrothal, and he saw that the figure wuh slowly moving toward It Yet It was the movement of a Moating object, driven by alternate advancing and receding waters, yet borne by an Invisible tide toward a given point Hut notwithstanding this apparently slow movement ho gained but little on tho figure. At last It reached the ery nst where he and Evalina had plight ed their troth. There tt pauwd. Hastening Ida steps so far hi he could the moon nt the moment was over rant he advanced to Join the figure. When he wan a few yanU from It a bright light burst from the moon and reveultsl-Evallna. looking at liliu with pale and melancholy visage. Ho sprang toward her with out stretched nrma. but at the moment an other black cloud swept acros the face of the only available light and Mil hi from her. When tt had passed she had vanished. At Ills feet was a utilp of seaweed. W hen tuoruliig eiime a boatman stalk ing along over the soft' sands saw a mnn lying so villi that he thought It mkht U one cast lu from a wnvk by the storm. He found Edmund ttoacop. There was life lu him. and the Isat man after rousing him helped him home. A ship came !u mid with It new licit llvaliiin had deported for Amr lea. Hut the cm' en which, alio sail ed licier leached port. I'lecea of wrvolt lame ashore ou the coast, dcnollnjr tint a ship had foundered, but no frajf ineiit bote lis Inline I'diixiud Ipiicne licier went luck to e. l'e.o. lie had lost all ambition, all desire for life. It w is claimed that Be tin reci-hed ,nie pli.vsl, a atroke whl. h Impaired hl mental facultlea. Whether this wen o or whether the los of his betrothed and Ms ailment were A coin. I.lemv was licier WK t'.ed. He wan often seen mi the Ixnch tt Newjsirt wandering about nlmlcsn ly or Ml t'li g on one vpot bsklug out ou tho water. Thli continued till b wna an old mail, and lu the town lu which li lived few resident of oth r m,-e Nvmi l.i build col la fx fg uuiiuer rrshJencra. YOU SPEND 14 A DAY IN fTTHE Work Shoe of, To-Day M FI F!RI F rOMFORTABLE ANO SERVICEABLE. - f ft S E. N. Gonty Masonic Watch the shows at the Star Theatre this week. Heppner Herald $1.50 a year. See the Ford Ton Truck on the street daily demstration. E. H, Kellogg, Morrow County Agent Palace Hotel, Heppner. LOST Large Brown Mink muff. Black stripe. Left on bench West side Fair Pavillion at Elks Ball. Finder please leave at Her ald. Reward. E. H. Kellogg, Morrow County Agent for Ford One Ton Truck Attachments. Palace Hotel, Heppner. The OXO-GAS is not mcrehj a summer store. It does a- way with wood and coal, furnishing heat in a few minutes both for Iteatiiig a room or cooking. It does the business quicker, cheap- er and cleaner. S. L. STEPHENS ; Variety Store TUf service ' Qua,ity Dtdl Price Case Furniture Co. Wood and Coal Raising daily. Also a ser ious car shortage. NO HELP IN SIGHT N. A. Clark l WANT LAND To soil to .H buyers who will commence to arrive bore on tho 2ith. of this month. If you want to sell, send mo the full particulars, and description of your land, als your lowest price and the terms, also a full lift of what Koos with your ranch if improved and full description of all improvements. Land NORTH of the biusol.no prefonvd. but can sell land anywhere in Morrow County. THE LARGCR THE RANCH THE QUICKER I CAN SELL IT My chat-ire for sellinp land is FIVE PERCENT. nnIhe;!tkfr; h om you, the quicker your ranch will bo sold. W. D. NEWLON Uxington' Oregon HOURS YOUR SHOES Buy a pair of our WORK WELT SHOES i&&ijC-&r&y2 nnd vnn wtll get 16 hours f solid com fort every day. Shoe Store Building :troy. Washes everything but the baby. Our excellent equipment insures perfect work on collars, shirts, and womens' fancy clotnes. Send them tousjtiy Parcels Post Our Work is Guaranteed TROY LAUNDRY; : PENDLETON, - ORE. GLU3 BILLIARD PARLOR : Palace Hotel I 0. B. 'Hottman First Class Straight Rail and Pocket Billiard Tables Soft Drinks, Fancy Candies, A Complete Lnie of Cigars, Cigarettes and Tobaccos Furniture Undertaking Heppner; Ore. Phone 396 : 0 1 "11