PAGE SIX THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON Tuesday, August 26,1919 TRAINED IN WORK THEY LIKE BEST Disabled Men Are Given Every Chance by Vocational Board. EARTHS IN SOLAR SYSTEM HOW ONE F00N0 HIS JOB Unskilled Man, Wounded at Eellrau Wood, Who Thought Engraving Fun Soon Proves Himself Expert Workman. Washington. A stoop- Nliouhlered man leaning on crutches cumc Into tbe offices of the federal board for voca tional education one morning and. look ing around tin- room, asked if this was the place where the soldiers who had been hurt In the war could find some thing to do. The anent of thH hoard asked him to sit flown, and told him the plan that the government had for helping the handicapped men of the nrmy, navy and marine who had been 'disabled in the service so that they might keej) with an active life. Maimed at Belleau Wood. - "I reckon I was In Ihe service, nil right," the stoop shouldered one said, laying his crutches by the chair. "At Itelleatl Wood! Lord, what, a day!" He let his hands drop listlessly be tween his knees and turning bis eyes to the ndvlser. he said: "Well, how you goin' to help me? I have, lost my left leg and I have about two dollars In my pocket and nowhere t get more. I never had a decent Job in my life. I don't know how to do anything Kpeclal and I don't care what It is you give me to do, just so It's something." The adviser talked to him for u hit and tried to discover Just what this man could do. He had held odd Jobs here and there , hut none led to any thing definite. He wasn't any more Interested In nulo mechanics than In street sweeping, or In gardening than In clerking. He sat there listlessly looking at his hands and left It to the adviser to decide. Kvery now and then he slowly turned n strange ring he had on Ids finger. The ndvlser felt rather discouraged. He couldn't get n lead from tlds man's silence, and to get his confidence he asked to see the ring. Hie man took It off and handed It to him. Ills face became suddenly animated. "I made that," lie said. "Hammered It out of sliver myself and engraved thoc fig ures on the outside. Nothing but some plnyln' of mine," he added depreeat Ingly. The adviser looked at the ring carefully. II was well done, with a certain look about the engraving that cave lil ii 1 an Idea. "That's Just Play." "How would you like to learn en graving and get a good position Ml It?" "I oln' this? Say, tills aln'l work It's Just play, and nobody pay-i ou fur hnvln' a good time, do Ihey?" "Let's have a try at II," suggested lb" adviser, "and e what happen-." The federal board seal the lie'll to b'lirn engraving, unci hi a few months be was lie best nl all the workers In t!w Jewelry store where he wan em ployed. Tin-1 r!:it was the key that opened the door of sueeiM to blm. He has aked up anil Is enthusiastic about Ills v oi k ; oiilv, he s:i s. "It's not work. This Is fun." Woik nhtnv. Is 'ii'i when ynii liuv found tie riilit vm alien and the f" I CPlI b i:ir, Is trvbi" to lb d v hat tic iH-.nl.i: ! ...,i, - III, . to do best. WILLS ESTATE TO FRIEND Ceoi-,1 Mrhpi(ien R. n"i"'t Clots and Inthiiate Relation With Jimfi K. P. Pin?. Moweap.il!-:. Minn The will nf Ceu i;,' Mi le il-i Ml of I l.'iil Itedford live l.l.'i. lute l,v pre-' b et of Ihe I'lliled :'lil. I mi l Collar 1111 -n n v of Troy. N V, v h i die Mil MliUltie I'llv provide f if l ilispiisiil.ni i f mi 1 -I He nf tin 1 i .. i il 1. -d t l tie. 'lie' 11-e of pn.o.rlv, wnhh rn'i-M iit.i'ltf of pei x.itinlilv. Villi km to bis ubii.v f.ir lit., and a I h'T il.-:i;h, u III be tl.lllllllleil milling lehithea 11 II'I flie.i U A'l.-i Ihe p iviti.-nl of li e -pei itle I in1'-, lite residue will go In n f i lend, .1,1 n " K. I'. I'lne . I;n.l lllllll Ills reil-ull fur hl I'f .!! .. ii,i.--I l.i Mr I'lne, M" ! hi.N.ui wrtle "In the foi e.titi j in- i Im.H' i.f thl id In foul of im ih ;r fi ieii.1. lii'inM k. I'lne nil. I hi- fntnlh, I trtf Mi ..;iii'ed the . l..-e nr. iiit.mni.. re Inti. .in Mlll'll Iiiim- rlte. l.elwe.'ll Thousands of Asteroids, Mostly Small, Known to Be Swinging Around the Sun. Swinging around the sun between the planets Mars and Jupiter thre are more than a thousand little earths, ranging In diameter from three to 4S."i miles. These are known as the aster olds, and although they pursue their individual ways in the solar system much like our own globe they are too small to support any sort of life, being unable to hold an atmosphere. I'rom time (o time new asteroids are discovered, not by astronomers pa tient ly peering at the heavens through a telescope, but by means of the photo graphic plate. 'A thousand have al ready been found, but it Is likely thai thousands of smaller asteroids remain to he discovered. The four largest asteroids, Ceres. Pallns, Vesta and Juno, are respec tively 483, 304. 24.1 and 118 m!IM In diameter. A few more asteroids may exceed KM) miles In diameter, hut the great majority are simply huge rocks five miles or less In diameter. Unlike the major planets, the asteroids are not spheres, but simply Jagged rocks, huge mountains hurtling through space, whirling round and round on their axis as they journey about the sun. Possibly, as some have suggested, they may be the larger fragments of periodic comets of unusual size that have In the course of ages been shorn of their appendages. SAHARA MAY DE RECLAIMED LIKE GEM IN RARE SETTING Lake Kluahne, Close to Arctic Circle, Is Beautiful Spot Seldom Vis ited by Man. Lying nmld the heights of encir cling mountains as a mere dewdrnp In a titanic crinkle of the continental surface, Is the 50-mlle lengtli of Lake Klunhne, once reputed source of the Tukon, flowing from it 1,200 miles or more north, northwest and south west to Iierlng sea. Harelv .'!."() miles south of the arctic circle, south ern boundary of perpetual snow and lee, It Is compassed about with moun tain ranges and peaks rising abruptly from Us waters, says Christian Science Monitor. The shores of the lake are bare of vegetation, save for the dwarf birch and the hardy northern willow, tundra grasses and lesser brush. Lapped In the perpetual silence of the unpeopled North, sternly Isolaled, untouched by human presence, save for at long Intervals a casual Indian or passing prospector, Lake Kluahne has In lis very silence and sternness of aspect a beauty of that hardly ex pressed, Indellnahle, hut none the less deeply felt nature which, conscious of It or not, Is a main factor In holding the prospector or other man of th open places In his wandering ways, In Ihe sand deserls of the South, or Ihe mountain wilderness of the ex I rem Northwest alil.e. Good Possibility of Its Being Ma'ie Into a Reasonably Productive Agricultural Country. That the Sahara will some day "blossom like the rose," or at any rate like a reasonably productive agricul tural country, is the gist of an article by J. Nicholas Brusse In Ln Nation of Paris. For more than a quarter of a century, Sir. Brusse declares, although people In general have thought of the Sahara as an enormous, permanently hopeless expanse of sand, those ac quainted wilh the results of a geo graphical survey conducted about ISM have known also that the Sahara Is not absolutely unfit for either plant or animal life. Itain falls sometimes In the great desert anil there are under ground streams that could be made available for water. The present oases could he developed and others created, provided a beginning were made by establishing strategic roads and intro ducing a sense of law and order among the desert tribes for the security of those who were trying to develop the country. In Its entirety the region In cluded In the Sahara contains already a good deal of spontaneous vegeta tion ; it grows a number of forage plants and shrubs that serve as pas turage for caravans, and could doubt less be improved and made valuable by cultivation. Fig trees, apricots, peaches, grapes and various cereals have been grown In the oases. A Smalley Cutter ' Will Save 25 Per Cent of Your Feed Costs PRINCE'S MEMORY WAS GOOD Heir to British Throne Had One Qual ity That Is Indispensable to Politician. On one occasion Mr. Louis Sterne, an engineer and Inventor, and a friend of C'hnrles Dickens, showed the late K.dward VII, then prince of Wales, his exhibits at South Kensing ton and the Crystal palace. "The next time I met the prince." said Mr. Sterne, "I was crossing Plcadilly, at the (op of St. James street. In trying to escape being run down I ran directly Into the arms of his royal highness. He at once recognized me and said: 'Mr. Sterne, you should give this traffic time and never cross the hows." I expressed surprise that he should recognize me, to which lie replied I hat he never for got either face or name If associated with any matter of Interest." Mr. Sterne met the prince again ni a picture exhibition where n por trait of the late W. II. Smith was hung. Turning to the princess, his royal highness said: "Hallo, there's Smith '." At once a man standing near turned around and acknowledged the recog nition, offering his hand, which the prince unhesitatingly accepted. When this man, whose name happened to be Smith, recognised the prince, he became embarrassed and, Willi Ihe lady who necoinpanied lilin. made his exit as soon as possible. One-fourth of the dry feed that is fed uncut is wasted.- The S'malley cuts dry feed so there is no waste, and the stock get full value oi the feed. Nothing keeps up the flow of milk in cold or bad weather like good succu lent silage. Get the highest production from your cows by purchasing a Smal ley Cutter and putting your silage away when feed conditions are best. The 3-in-1 Smalley Cutter Combines a complete Silo Filler, Feed Cutter and.Meal-Making Cutter, all in the one machine. Perfected thru 62 years of experience in building machinery to cut the cost of feeding on the farm. . Drop in and'let us demonstrate the Smalley for you. Heppner, Oregon Distributors for Smalley Feed Cutters Qu te So. "Now till slreping beauty slept fo! t.venly years." "If there's anything In Ihe beauly nnp theory,' Ilia! him; a sleep ought te make nnybody beautiful." I.ohlsvltb Coiirler-Jounial. . Their Supply. "I suppose the men who were fight Injt In Champagne never ran the risk of pinning out of ammunition." "Vliv nhoiihl theyl" "Wasn't there plenty of grapeshot theror What You Make it. "After nil," a man writes, ' Ufa U merly Ihe act of going lo one' grave, Not much lu (hat; It Is hardly worth pnn'ing. Life Is long and full of In teri'Ht, opportunity Ind pleasure. Life Is unused unjustly and untruthfully. K. V. Howe's Mmi'lilv. Only Real Monument. Those only deserve n monument," wrote Ila.litt. "who do not need one; thai Is, who have raised themselves a monument In the itilnds anil memories of men." . Dilemma. A woman novelist Is bemoaning that If a woman holds onto her opin ions she lose her husband's love and .If she holds onto his love aha loses her Identity, Herald classified renny a word. mis gel result Early Progress of Industry, Prior to ISPm the progress made In the development of the automobile can he summed up as follows: In gen eral style the body was a park phaeton, a ponderous complicated contrivance, which would crush the pavements as It passed over them. The gasoline was stored In n large tank In front. The motor and controlling nppuralus were placed beneath the bed of the vehicle. Kxcesslve weight and complicated machinery helped In a great measure to make It an utter failure. One weak spot after another developed. The axles became heated, then the gears got out of order. The noise of the explosion of the gasoline was suggestive of a railroad locoiuo tlrt. Chevrolet Bulletin. Titanium ,111111 1 a rMSKTrtr.iJljiciirt RIMI Wait !!!! ' !l 1 ' v.y- 1 lei 'II C'vti Lit ta 8vt D. j ief, I'n - 11 1 1 1 f In- d"H fioni 1 'ill down l n train on the Che e lil illl. b of the l'i no- !' it 1 1 it i.,,li.iil I Im 1 y I niiMiii;h, Im u ii in d Kif. struck b the liiiln lb' ill. d k ii,. Cheater i-i 1 ii I. I'm. 11 11.I1 n t ilkillg li( Ihe tllllliinl III.', v li.-n lie lieui l n ir.iin ii-irn ti i lie I . .!. I tor Ills il '. Mho h f.i'tcl M l. I I'm' nniiil" Mbl-th1 of ill.' ttv J i'iH:"iiiu i Inn litter pi t, inli'i'l ll'lll bv li e I' ik of the, II- U t Ii I 11 1,'gc-l It 1 lit lo vifi it but i b ! I J (Ii .iUHie. l-y l-'!sfciAi?ai J JTifl ,.r.VX I YOU CANT BEAT I EM i i,- -v 1 I'.'iiiu; 1 bj..j'.ij I -T-.- j-,i:II- 1 gym a 1 1 i . is1 -M'.i-ii. ..ii y i Ti - m i -ii i.i t m is , fc-vf i w SA 7 m r mux mwm-im D e Nctk In 19'0; Is Al.vt. Vii f;: I Veil CI, I' ,t. buhl mi ' I',,. ! I- r . I fi... Mi i I . M . r. r .t.T CI' ::i 1'itii i.i liHIIltolll I III I l. i v'am I Soft ii.i.1. Pi inU'? .,ii i r..! ii I McAfee & Aiken 1 1 It's Scnsciblc Economy to Buy Bread These Hot Days No woman can an,r, rui u.r health ami 1'iTM'iial ai'n-araiu-i- fiiN-inj; arouml a Imt oi-n in tho Mimtt'.'v, when lu' can n" HOLSUM BREAD frrs'i tvery D i'f i iativ t.il.v- iioiiis i.t cur .lulcs tin. lll.tl Will ,IW ..:t tin tuHf-il) of conking llit M- li. t l.iv v'oiiu' iii anl Kl u- make a i "Ever Occur to You?" says the Good Judge That it's foolish to put up with an ordinary chew, when it doesn't cost, any more to get real toBacco satisfaction. Every day more men dis cover that a little chew of real good tobacco lasts longer and gives them real contentment. There's nothing like it. THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW put Nj) in two styles RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco Sam Hughes Company it r-t i . . i - . M . . I 7 C4-f . . & jilt:'- rTT' ?mr' Your Bath Room- I a ni'i-t imi'iTiant rot'in in our Ikhi-i- atul its ,!' .'iT fijiiiiiu'nt will a.lil jnatly to the iU-as- t trotu it. hi aiM -at i-iMi t ;"ii iu If tin io i- a ( n nieiit i room in our liou-c that -hou!l In- tin- lialh room. '.". on w ill iin,l many thin; tl.v "'inn'' r.co o tin- li.ilh ' ' J: !.'-' .If tllUf f1MH)f-t rn.l, 'hotlld lie :- that will room ami People's Hardware Company