1 Do VOLUME 5 HEPPNER, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1918 NUMBER 12 Contributors to the Relief Fund) The following 1b the list cf sub scribers to the fund for the relief of the Heppner fire sufferers. The total amount raised was $2454.00, and we are Informed by the commit tee In charge that the entire amount has been disbursed. Eight parties received the sura of $200, five the sum of $100 and seven the sum of $50. The list of those receiving aid is in the hands of the committee, and anyone interested can see the same, but owning to the fact that a number of those accepting aid desire no pub licity, the committee have decided to withhold the names of all those re ceiving aid. In justice to the committee in charge it is only due them to say that they did the best they could to hand out the aid where it was need ed, and if there were any who should have been helped, the cases did not come to their attention. The list of donors isas followa: FlrBt National Bank, $200; J. W. Beymer, $50; Farmers & Stockgrow ers Bank, $100; S. W. Spencer, $25; W. B. Barratt, $100; Mrs. W. B.' Barratt, $10; Geo J. Currln, $25; Andy Rood, Sr., $60; M. D. Clark, $25; A. D. McMurdo, $50; PatUraon fc Son, $25; John Kilkenny, $50; Victor Wlglesworth, $10; A. L. Cor nett, $10; Paul Webb, $50, Vaughn & Sons, $25; Guy Boyer, $10; K. A. Brown, $5; Gurdane & Sou, $25; W. C. Cason, $3; Farmers Elevator Co., $25; W. G. McCarty, $5; Joe Hayes, $100; Emmet Cochran, $25; F. Gunster, $10; Wm. Wilson, $5, J. E. Maxwell, $5; Hoy V. Whiteig, $5; Morrow County Creamery, $5; W. C. Cox, $2; Wm. Haylor, $5; J. M. Hayes, $10; Hall & Ager, $10; Miles Martin, $20; Clarence Scrivner, $5; W. T. Mcltoborts, $5; Henry Schwartz, $5; S. P. Hunnawalt, $2; Vaughn & Butler, $10; W. R. Irwin, $25; Bruce Kelley, $25; J. C. Kirk, $20; Mr. Reed, $2.50; W. A. Hayes, $5; Henry Scherzlngor, $5; Thom son Bros., $50; Martin Held, $20; Jeff N'eal, $5; John Her, $2; H. Tash, $1; J. H. Frad, $5; Welh Bros, $5; Cash, $15; K. F. Wiglci worth, $50; Pat Healy. $10; V. A. RlchardBon, $5; N. E. Wlunard, $5'); Thos. Urennan, $5; Mrs. Mciu:e, $100; H. C. Glthens, $10; H. C. Ash baugh, $5; Matlock & Gentry, $50; Peoples Hardware Co., $25; Elmer Btaman, $10; F. M. Bayless, $10; H. Yokum, $1; J. D. Moyer, $1; E. L. Chlm, $5; Mrs. Luper, $5; E. G Noble, $25; Henry Blacknian, $10; Mrs. Blacknian, $10; W. S. Thomp on, $5; Leo Jinn, $5; D. E. Gil man, $50; U. F. Doherty, $5; J. A. Waters, $10; Morrow County, $200; E. M. Shutt, $11 ; Andrew Keaney. $25; A. Z. Barnard, $5; Austin Dovln, $5; Charley Jones, $5; Vtt French, $10; Phlll Colin, $50; Mrs. ('ohn, $50; O. E. FarnKWorth. $10: Robt. Allstntt. $5; J. P. Williams. $2.60; T. J. Humphrey!. $25; 8. E. Notion, $10; Dell Ward. $10; An drew Rood, Jr., $100; H. E. Storm. $5; W. O. Dayles. $10; Malcolm Church. $2; M. S. Corrluall, $100 Total, $2454.00. lU-turn From IItrn Trl. F. A. MrMonamln, Pat Ward and John MrNamoa, have returned from an extended buMnom trip through Michigan and Wisconsin where they went to look over the rourre of that country from the itwkman'n itandpolnt. While their plana are n ..l yet sufficiently devulopcij to make any public announcement they found lot of rood country and were en erally oll pleaned with tlii-lr trip Mr, McNamee alio vllt"d bin father ad other relative, at I l old home at Iiekalb, IllnoU. He ityi the rrp all thrnuih the MlnM-Mwd valley and tlie middle wet are marvolou tx-lrig prl.apt the riro,t ovor knon In t!.t prolific K-rtlon. Glenn Jone. one of t'nrle Sm'i bp lookine klo, arrUn v )i,ur vet (ik f 't;i Mum Inland on a Jo. day furlouih during mMrh ho will aUt In liiritlr,g the tig liat crop on the Jonet ra'h en Rhea creek. Notice to Herald Subscribers Persons in the lone, Morgan and Cecil country who wish to settle their subscription accounts with the Heppner Herald may do so by calling at the Independent office which is now the lone office of the Herald, where such payments will bo promptly cred ited and receipted for. ' Our sub scription accounts is allwe had left after the fire and we will ap preciate early settlement of same. S. A. PATTISON. Leaves Nature Beauties to Suing Scythe. J. H. Gemmell, an old resident of Morrow county, who has recently cast his lot with the Tumalo irrigation project near Bend, came in Tuesday evening to assist his son with his har vest. The Gemmell ranch smith of town was in the path of the heavy storm last week and a lot of fine wheat was knocked -down by the wind and heavy rain to such an ex tent that the combine cannot success fully harvest it. Mr. Gemmell, the elder, who, in his youth learned to swing the scythe among the banks and braes of bonny Scotland, pro poses to save that portion of the crop by the old fashioned, "armstrong" method, two dollar wheat being a commodity not to be sneezed at in these war times. Mr. Gemmell has a fine tract of land in the Tumalo project end he says It is one of the finest and rich est spost In Oregon. Properly handl ed under irrigation tho Boll is won derfully productive and the people are prosperous and happy. Mr. Gem mell gives a vivid description of the beautiful scenic view from his place and regrets that he is not able to re produce on canvass the grandeur of the snow-capped peaks, the majestic pines and the sparkling streams which delight his eye each day. Ben McMullan, who left Heppner with the contingent of uly 6th, left Portland Tuesday morning for Camp McDowell, California. In tho list of new subscribers and renewals published last week the iame of Tom Lowe, Cecil's good looking and efficient postmaster, was Inadvertently omitted. Mr. Lowe was one of the first to come through with a subscript ion remittance after the lire i.nd while the coming was good pegged hip credit up to September 1, 1921. A good sport and n0 slacker Is Tom Lowe, T. J. Merrill, former principal of the Heppner schools, now cattle and wheat ranching In the Hardman country, was In town Wednesday grunting his many friends and saying nice things to them. Mr. Merrill is a live wire right down thel Ine and con tinues to keep In touch with educa tlonal matters as a member of the school board In Ills district. Alonzo T. Merrlll.o f Monument, was In Heppner Wednesday evening and left for Portland Thursday morn Inr; where he has enlisted In the mer 'br...t marine branch of the American nn-v. He expected to be sent to So ittle where he may soon become a part of the Pacific fleet service which may bo nectary to take rare of the innounred campaign of American ind Japancx troops n Siberia and llUHHla. CECIL ITIMS John Ewirif t ime In from Tort land Sunday sml will spend hi vacation helpin Jack Hynd put up his second crnpof alfalfa hay. lilies A. ( Hynd and M. H. Lowe visittd with Mra, Henrik. Sunday. Onfar Lund!!, of the Willows, was Ocil caller Sunday. We Urvlemtand there wm a treat 3mI ol damage done to the alfalfa and wheat crops ,y the torm which red ovtr Cecil Monday. J. . Mi;r retorts his ai a total Km. J. ('rabtree, partial Ion. W. 0. r,!m.tfer! total Ion. Between tr.(i0 ar.d J 10.000 of crops was totally de stroyed and several buildings had their roofs removed on Walter Winslow's and Henry Vander vort's place near lone which is rented by H. A. Edmonds, some where near 600 acres was in whuat and all ready to harvest. Mr. Winnlow estimates that the crop would have yielded 30 bush els to the acre. Cecil Ahalt, who has been spending a few days in Portland, returned Tuesday and is now working on the Minor ranch with the second crop of alfalfa. Jean Fairhurst and S. M. Mor gan were business callers in Ce cil Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Bearis and son, of Wasco, were Cecil visitors Tuesday on their way to Boardman. Mr Johnson reports Rood wheat crops in snerman county this year. Mrs. Hannah Ahalt returned from Sherwood Wednesday to visit with her friends in and around Cecil. Peter Bauernfiend. left Cecil for the McDuffy Springs Thurs day. Dock Yak and his 348 from lone, accompanied bv Rov SLend- er, passed through Cecil Sunday. Ed Melton, who ia still work. ing in lone, spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Nash. Charles Russia, of Toluma county, Cal., came in on Monday to spend the summer with his uncle, Walter Pope. J. J. Mclntire waa a visitor in lone Monday and witnessed the storm there. Miss Ruth May left MooJay for Wasco. Olaf Johnson, of Morgan, was down Willow Creek as far as Ce cil looking for a water tank which had washed away during the storm. Fred and George Ely and J. E. Surensen were down Willow Fri day hunting Olaf Johnson, who had missed the train at the Junc tion and got loston his way home. Mrs. Ben Barnes visited wiOi Mrs. A. E. Nacb Thursday. Geo. MeDufi'y was visitinir in and around Cecil Friday, finding tverything O. K. Geo. Miller and son were do ing business in Arlington Friday. J. II. Franklin and Miss Violet Hynd returned to Butterby Flats Friday from Pendleton. Geo. W. Wilson of Butterby Flats was a Heppner visitor Fri day. S. M. Morgan, Mm. H. Aha't. Mr. and Mrs. l!od Loaan and family left for Toppenish by car Saturday. Jack Hynd, Mrs. T. II. I)we and Master Ja -kie Hynd autoed to Sand Hullo Saturday, re turning Sunday. Mrs. Bennett arH MiH rjeorg'a Summers vii:. 'l with Mrs ti n Barnes Satur :y. A ruaior wss rurent eitfrJry that Gern-.any hal ma le a'o'.b'.r petee proposition to the allier, this time tbreusa Spain. If the rjnor is crrct it is likely rimi lar to h r farmer peace propose! all In favor of Grrmsny. The feet is there will be no peare un til Ormnny leys down and takes what is Cuming toe.tr. ENDS ONE NOISE OF CITIES Invention of Philadelphia Man Does Away With Racket When Cars Cross Intersection. The problem of suppressing the noise and shock of the street car In passing over nn Intersection bus been uttneked lu a novel milliner by n Phil adelphia Inventor, Snmuel It. Meeker, who accomplishes the object without the use of any of the moving and In terlocking parts which characterize most of the Inventions for this pur pose, and without making nny great changes In the design of the crossing Itself. The latter Is constructed In one piece or unit, and nt u point slight ly In advance of the Intersection of the mil sections. Each rail section Is formed with the face of the rail cut nway In an Incline which allows the weight of the vehicle to pass from the base of tho wheel to the flange on which It continues for a few feet, until tho wheels have passed entirely over the Intersection, when the weight of the car again passes to the base of the wheel. This change Is so gradually accomplished that It Is not noticeable to the passengers and the car passes over the crossing without Jolt or noise. The latter Is a matter of great Importance to persons living In the vicinity of such Intersections, for the pounding of the cars over them tit night comprises a serious unnoy-ance. America's First Steel Ralls. In lSffii, us an experiment, the North Chicago Itolllng Mill company manu factured six Bessemer steel rails from steel produced at Wyandotte, Mich. They were the first mude In America, the modest beginning of a great In dustry. A New York mill, using ma terial turned out at Troy, made fur ther experiments, and In JSCJ the Cambria company begun to roll Bes semer steel rails ns u regular business, says an exchange. The first rails of this type were made and used In Eng land. They were Introduced Into America by the Pennsylvania railroad, which, In 1 S.-.ri. Imported and put Into service KkJ tons of steel rails. The price paid was J?lfiO gold per ton. equivalent In Civil war times to $'JO!i In American currency. These rails were made of crucible slecl and con tained n lilh percentage of carbon, rendering tle-m brittle. For this ren con many hrol.o during the n xt win ter; lint despite this fact th" rnll.vr) company placed orders for large ijmin tltles In Client Britain, paying from t?.o to I KZU) KM j,r tn. Conserve Surplus Food. laereasci! .!i.ntlijj of vegetnliles tl.ls Tear almost certainly will in, an an Im precedei,. d jl, , ,,f n kn,lM f f,.,,.,!, vegetables. This will mean plentiful supplies for rummer t.-bleH and n liir-e surplus. TU:( Htirpli; ;, to u-eCul to Anier leri, Inn t be ( on:.-: veiI, It imi't be i iiiin. il, dried, bllned or stored In lb" homen of America. 1'"' ceincrved food meant that the home will be more nearly elf sustain li.g iind that the burden on transporta tion Will be lightened. Woiin n who have never cniioeil should i:ov l.:.r:i how; women who know bow ihoii d prepar" to do inoie. fulled .''ires I ii pi rtit-nt of Agrl- Package Ccodt Expntive. That pad; age gomls lire inore expel. Mve than goods bought In bulk lc fhown III ii chart of ci.mpari.Hw' food Values recently pn),p.,. - . ,-.,-. idiouH that canoed pencil, s co t ihrei tliiK'i hi much as dried penihei, mi.! tlie food value In calorie Ik three time grenter In the dried than In th" c-ihiied variety. faun.. I p.,rl. and I. I h Cist iiliollt tube in In i I per unit of food mine n dr. d Iimih, "1 lie canned g..(,i nn ready f .r Inon. illnle tr- n ml tin. dried r. j .j If .re ,n,Mi,n, but to .i M,,, .re-!. . re.,. bo; the cost of Ihliig th, u,. fuel ttr.f worth Uiilntf Into oimldfrullou. Not Daegerou. "Y.'M; o were out ,,,) ,, y,, Wert With nny lp,- l ,. j "I (.lecrd y mi! I ,. i,t a ,, a cip full ,,f ,. , ,,.!.. ru.t,,,,,, r you i-v, r n v - r. i.l , who n i,t i;e-l . f tVr !.,.. Il-i.,s. p t, .) rnreerlog on t,, !r t,r..i,' !,.,. t brei,',. fie, u j . :.i t ., t t. ..in;,' f, r (, ,r pr,,)- "I V N t- ",. . y , ,.., (,, t en I l ., ( n ,,, . ,,!; i re. t..r l.i,;,;.. n f, it, . j,u,,1( Up Con dd. nihil, fourii CUPID NOT IN THIS DEAL One Case of Courtship That Was Con ducted Along the Strictest of Business Lines. Everything ,wus strictly business with August Rlnnick. A sign on his desk said : "This is my busy day," and a sign above his desk said: "There art) a quarter of a million words In tho English language. Be brief." He regarded his ollice force merely as muchines of varying degrees of ef ficiency, and it was therefore several months before he realized the luscious physiognomy and many virtues of Miss Perch, his stenographer. But, with August ltiunick, to think was to act, and, the very afternoon on which he tlnally realized, he summoned Miss Perch Into his ollice. "Miss Perch," he said, "take a let ter." And he dictated as follows: "My dear Miss Terch : It has lately come to my attention that you are a young woman of exceptional iuchtl em bellishments, mental endowment t,a;l moral elllclency. The limited time ui my command will not penult me many details, but I may mention that slnco you have been In my employ I have never yet seen you masticating chlda commonly known us gum or apply ing powder to your nose (an organ whose extreme delicacy of contour unit pleasing abbreviation much impressed me). In short, my dear Miss Perch, the Idea has come to me to endeavor to In duce you to have your surname legally changed to ltiunick in brief, to be come my wife. I will cheerfully give you n day to think this matter over, and shall be pleased to bear from you at your leisure. Very trnly, A. Kinnlck." In the next day's mall he received the following reply: "Mr. August Iiln lilck: Hear Sir: In reply to yours of the 30th Inst., would say that I am oth erwise engaged. Very truly, Therly Perch." Exchange. QUAINT OLD INDIAN COINS 8o Adulterated That They Were Not Even Accepted In England aa Value In Metal. In IflflS the Independent state of Hy derabad, lmiiu, obtained u modern mint and called In the coins that had been current up till that time. The old mint of Hyderabad was little more than a eoppersmllirs shop in which scrap cop per of all sorts was melted up, ham mered into plates, cut up Into very rough approximations of one tola In weight, and slumped between dies, one of which was In the anvil and the oth er In a toll held ii, tongs, a blow from a sledge hammer made the Impression. There was no regularity In shape, weight or stumping, nor was the metal unltorm in (juullty. The mint could not furnish supplier fust enough, and licenses were Issued to coppersmiths to assist In production. Naturally, the Kcleiitlllc American slates, iionlheiiseil persons began to liinnufnctiire, nml adulteration with leud whs so flagrant that when several ton of these coin were sent to Eng land a old nietnl they wen- returned on account of (.r Impurity n W1.r tlnally Worked up Into bran f,,r local consumption. A "dub," If held In the fliiini' of a spirit lamp, would before It reached fei heat m-iI to dlsehnrgll very line Jet resembling mercury; the lend. Inning reached It fusing point, burst from th pp. r with a force u. diluting a very high Internal pressure. Cuard Your Breath. "A man' breath," day popular Hrt. eiee Monthly, ", open ii betrayer of Secret. II,,. I, ,y 1V), I,,.,.,, ,)tjt ),,, sitting up v h a ch-li friend, but I Win II bo reach. hi. mi. ,ls loving wife I at once open up her buttery of re- pronche. "Now rorno the new that two In ventor In ),.. ,,i. Ark., liny.. Jolnt I ly Invent. I n l.r. i.th g-mr-l of n in-w patli rn. It Is M.ld to be i lli. lent, tint hot In th nniiiie r yon wer il, Inking , of. It i, tended to protect i, nttN, biirb.-r mid li.i-i Inn from tnlml li.it th" rtn Ind. ii br. utli of their pn ! tletit or pnlroi,. H ronl of n mull cimcd i.,i . of ui,,). plnn.d ao to cover tho iioMrll and In l. In poniiion tiy n spring clip grtpjitng th t'lirtltlori wnll of tin. ti'.x. on th In ld. Many d; ii urn rtireetiy com i,imlciit... throuyli the li.hnlntlon of tainted dir. mil n d.lo of tt,t kind ahoiihl l,o a bono r. f. f.lo who ro cnp. p ,. .y the iintur.i lit their dutle. to t.o in , prmlitT lty to Uiom whom tber aervn." i