PAGE SIX THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER. OREGON Tuesday, October 21, 19 19 INTERESTING HATS FOR MILADY TRAVELED BY DEVIOUS WAYS SUFFERED FOR THEIR FAITH Seeding Her You'll need a new Grain DriH. We have the BEST. Call and see them Superior Grain Drills "The Name Tells a True Story" Also see our 'line of PLOWS Oliver and John Deere Nothing Their Equal in the Plow line Peoples Hardware Company lllffBlliicIlp I 1 I It's Senseible Economy to Buy g i Bread These Hot Days A No woman can afford to ruin her health and n S personal appearance fussing around a hot oven in the summer, when she can get Li HOLSUM BREAD Frcsli Every Day I We've many other items on our shelves too, h M that will save vou the necessilv of cooking V these hot days. Come suggestion for a lunch Sam Hughes 0 1 : innvRrn . i t.m r 1 t 1 1" tL if Farmers Exchange of The fnJmd Empire 1'. A. McMeiiamin and h. U. l'.rown l 00111 5 and ( Koherts lildg. 1 leppner, (Iregon p' 1 'ii-u!i l's l'.r Auction Sales Realestate Income Tax Statements Insurance See Us Before You Sell Your Wheat I'hof.O o: 1 1 v I r. ii 11 Time Is e in and let us make a today. j Company A SRE rrl rn (l i z - . ."i,''.--'";'.:,'.!. n 'I J- ' t, f - i In ' IS ( j j I S r , ? - ' . ' 5 U r y' I! 1 ,, fyT I : Jt- rn NyWbniipcr Hilton HOVEL CREATION OF ANGORA AND SATIN, AND A BERET OF DUVE TYN EMBROIDERED. COMING STYLES II MILLINERY Forecasts Materials and Shapes That Will Mark Fall and Winter Hats. TRIMMED BRIM IS CERTAIN Will Be Used In Many Ways, Most of Them Charming High Draped Crowns Sure to Be Another Feature. While It seems somewhat early in (he season to speak with finality of the fall and winter hats, enough .new shapes have been displayed to give us some Inkling of what Is to come, writes Martha Goode Anderson tn the New York Sun. For several weeks now we have seen a sweeping rage of the felt hats with wide brims and exploited In the palest pastel shades and ornament ed with bright and gay wool stitchery. As this wool stitchery is to be so much In evidence throughout the winter not only on hats but on coats, dresses and blouses, It is just as well to consider It seriously and recognize the demand, for It Is one of the eslnlillshed facts in winter's coming fashions. The felt lints of which T am spenk liiK have been used primarily for sport hut with pale-colored sweaters lirlglit-hucd skirts and blouses. We cannot complain of the lack of "lor during this summer, for as a sort of reaction from the dull and somber hues of the war period our clothes have caught and rellected the most radiant tones of the rainbow uuJ every group has been resplendent lu its vivid colors. The First Showing. Always nt the beginning of every xi'ition It seems as if the Mrst shotting of millinery Included only the wide brimmed and large hats. This Is In evitably so for the spring ami summer, n wo Mud ourselves preparing for the hot days wheu the sun Is blinding mid we need some sort of protection for eyes and skin. Just why it should be lor fall iiikI winter, however, I do not know unless the idea Is to display first the dressy hat, us most women go nn the principle that having Invested In a smart mid very good hat almost any tiling will do for every day. 1 do not present this Idea as cotn luslve by uny in but It may lie one of the r'U sons why we sre shown so few of the "i.iiill mid simple cvery-day sort of li lt and tinit of the m-weM simp.- are or the !'lcnillil Velvet picture hats. Paradise feather are ri d ni'liatlng ns trimming. Tiny sweep down, but not up as lii'ii'tnfuie, and thick s,iny : te iinil inure than the sin.1,- f,-m:. rs we l.uw t-it mm h it In i rent li'(ie. Ill.n s anidl-e h n ;:l!i ! .vi I) .ml i-i-i iislv,- that II ,i Hit he ".-iMllt" l )' lCll l!li" l'n--.i 'Xa'l'll,; rid i .'i int.i' 'iii' i'i the I'l-iiiii i ip.'s V I,', h is :.''lhir I it ; ! . T -nil,!' If ... la ln' tin! turtinit i;h the 1 tilnl I'l'n VV tr, i. V, i, u. 'i tilt 1 1 - -l ap ! i ..r. iii !' l c I tn l".k ! !. ;n; et..e to !!,. i . II. . . . i It I t. "!!y v.'f) -j.;. n l ,. f..f It l .!. . !. i n the Miu ai'd r!i !.. .t ef I i. n l!y el i' r. I ii i -.) In k - (in. tVe ' d ri i Ii tnli'tii Iii a tnlMli-is i.f i uI.i: 1 ii aa 'n ti "I'll. n.e It : f f On -e i ;.( or Me .tin il- tl l ' . Ii 'V I" i no, . I. !. II,,. h.' i ,,,it- r i.:' tr , i " f t'.n I i' I I',. - ti ; 'i ll ll !l si f! i' .' I' ' '!lt , II. . ' .!,' i T lil ' of i - r..' . It ! , ' I lit,- .-! . -. I I I:,. :. e i- - II. H... ;i i'.iw n i i iil:n.l T:. 'v im " .11 in ii t'ie 'r to the !. r the ' I ..I, i.f 3 j fronds high In the air so much used formerly. Trimmed Brlmo. The trimmed brim Is used In many ways, as we shall see as the season advances. Single flowers of velvet are being used In fiat masses around the wide brims which turn up and aw"y fl'"m uie faco snu,-'er fusion. dressy as the picture hats of velvet' and paradise, but they are suitable for morning wear and make a trim finish for the shopping dress worn with smart veils and furs. One of the simplest Is exploited In n mtdnlght-blue velvet In the saucer shape with upturned brim. Around the crown is placed a circle of loops made of heaviest blue silk floss in a lighter shade. These loops are used to Imitate ostrich fronds, which are also much In evidence as a winter trimming. At one side of this model Is placed a large rosette of the loops of the silk floss and on edge of the same finishes the brim around the face. Another treatment of this upturned brim Is seen In the wide sailor shape which has a flaring briin. across the front of the hot, giving something of a three-cornered effect seen from the front. This Is particularly suited to young faces and youthful types. I The flaring brim Is often thickly studded with tiny steel b'eads or (lotted with knots of silk In tlie kind we cull Kreneh knots, meaning n tiny dot of . the silken thread made by wrapping It twice around the needle and pull- I ing through to the under side. The : effect Is that of silken beads. As this j Is often done. In contrasting colors It makes a most effective trimming, I ltecause of the p-'a' 0 miand for I hats of soft materials, 'i as iluvetyn mid velours and velv. t, and because of the Increasing cost of these soft I and beautiful fabrics, the price Is con- I tlnually mounting, especially as so much of the trimming used this year ' Is done by hand and Is really hand embroidery. One of the favorite ef- ' feets Is seen In the use of simple bios- 1 soms, such as nasturtiums, single pe- taled roses and kindred blooms done In outline around crown and brim. These are extremely simple to make, so that we shall have a fad of home made hats, doubtless, as almost miy- ne can embroider In the simple and quickly iiiude outline stitch. High Draped Crowns. The high dinpcd crowns are again seen. Mnmctlmc they point up almost foot nhove the brim and are draped In a series of folds which keep them from being awkward and very ugly, as they so easily could be. Of course the brim which accompany these high draped crowns must be wide enough to set them off successfully and pre vent a tophenvy hsik. Among the new trimmings are seen much glyeerlnwl ostrich feather banding. This sort of treatment of the fenthi rs makes them shiny and glo-sy. The friudn lire plmed slmrly nl.imr n narrow band tn hold t'leui and ere u-od thus Mgalnst thf in mi In a wlnili Mitlli-ii nt to i iit'ri l n f,T the brim Hie! i M' lid slightly lieyi.ml. They are tt- "1 cfr. .-thi'ly mi a ralh.T vide hat if ro-ei'iil.,1 id wl V"t of which the iTii.Mi l of the hli.li ifrni'i il di sii.il thickly 1r"i :idnl In sil ver. The feather bllt'.'l Mi's ll; t OWT the brim and n t :irru strip of s!!er r l l'i'ii iielri'let the rrnwii win re tin' fcath'T and the briunde mti.e to gether. A ' i w slmde l call il iii.sturtltlt'i yellow s!,.) u a vivid a It urn - :l Iv I e nn. eiy smart when Intnl. Up III ell tintrliiiiinst ti'vet bat niiiin us in brim slid rrnwn t.m. These Im trlmiiii'd huts sre qul'e new, as they have nn sir entirely nil Hair nu and -rein to be il)ot i-'al'uri.le i!.en nt, siiln'ily imtrimiiw I. 'tl; i Tn! I m hie.e.l by a cleier dr pit , f the let as in oln" In nine t. .' x.lvf. la so sri"iii gc.l fs n t It ""! i to n n fell eirr the er-wn n'el ! i in in er tin" I Mm In u il '.I ' e iiii.ih Is i! flcri'Tit fri'ta iv. r ,!.!; sfrni -.-Iii. n's. d ..-! t) Correspondent Experienced Acute Dis comfort While on a Journey Through the Holy Land. It Is eiht or nine miles, as I esti mate. Trum the Euphrates to t'mislan thtoplc, if one folio. vs the courso of the Bngdnd n.l'road, vin-se track is laid a part of the way where the feet of the "ten thousand" hail marched, where St. I'imiI had' trumped in ids first and second missionary Journeys, and where Godfrey ef Ihujillon. Tan cm!, Baldwin, Unymond and r.nhe innnd had passed, and Frederick the First laid perishiMJ. In my anabasis (if I may give inv lonely expedition a name' so ambitious and yet so contemned by many a youth) from the 'I-aipiiraver; toward Constantinople I had to make il tir- euitous Journey, as did St. i'aul from i 'iiiunscus, wnres jonn n. t lniey in July Scriiiner's. 1 went first from Aleppo to Damascus, then to Jeru salem, tln to Haifa (near old Caesarea where St. I'aul took ship), and then by sea to Beirut and llerina, on the coast of Asia Minor, a few miles from St. Paul's "home town" Tarsus, which was also the same town as that toward which Jonah sailed from Jaffa, when evading the call to Nineveh. But the reader would, I fear, find this nn uncomfortable and perhaps a tiresome trip, even to read of, for I traveleii lnost of the way in freight cars (of the type known to our soldiers In France, accommodating "forty-five homines or eigllt ehevaux") on a trawler (which was absolutely the most uncomfortable means of transportation that 1 Imd ever en dured) and on a British "destroyer" which might very fitly have borne St. Paul's name before lie changed it, In the dnys when lie was "breathing cut threatenlngs and slaughter." There Is a shorter aftd less Indirect way, for, speaking generally, there Is no direct way from one place to an other In that part of the world. This Is probably the reason why the street In Damascus called "Straight" got Its distinguishing name. Roller-Skating In Business. Roller-skating, once Indulged in only for pleasure, has now become an Im portant accomplishment lu mnny busi ness houses. Several large mail-order houses In both Chicago and New York require office boys to know how to get about on skates, giving them a care fully worked-out route between the different departments. The Only National Magazine edited and published for Western People VV- ai N A. h i-' h k PL Vf!Ei " ' -, . .'- - f .... T , " . Y Via! ? .An rrt- vi OUR SPECIAL PRICE $3.00 A RARE MONEY SAVING OPPORTUNITY About Sunset Magazine Sunset the Pacific Monthly, is the West's own national magazine. It is the only "gen eral" magazine of national circulation and influence published in the West. It is there fore di.siitu tly representative of the West in its viewpoint and in its treatment m' world and national affairs. l'.eautilV.Ily printed and artistically illustrated, crai.itmd frll of interest for every member of the l.imil. it is distinctly a 1WMM.Y maga.ine. I v uld he on the rending tal.'e of every Western household. tW I 1 enclose .? l'hae sr, u. ,,,, llcl, 1, tier II. ..-.!. I 1.. . I si........ M .. 1 ., , "II"1' iin.ii'i ,111a ,'iunrt .O .Ig.l till. Ii. il II i .p e.tr. in accord.uice with your special offer, N" iir.e French Huguenots Driven Into Exile by the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. The Huguenots were the Puritans nf France In the sixteenth and seven teenth centuries. The lianie was first used about 1-"; Its ork'in is un known. The Huguenots suffered se verely in the reigns of Francis I and his immediate successors, and after l,-e-2 wi re fn iiu r.ily involved in war. miller the leadership of such men as Admiral Cnliuny and King Henry rf Xavarre. e.fterwards Henry IV of France. Collgny and from 20,000 to iW.fCO others fell in the mas-acre ef St. Bartholomew, August 24, 1.7T2. It is dispu:-d in history whether Oils was Ma'.! nly caused by the discov ery if liugtienot plots or had been prer.e'ffiiiited. In spite of all this, they continued numerous and power ful and the edict ef Nantes, issued tn 1":!3 by Henry IV gave them full po litical and civil rights. Their power was broken after . the surrender of I.altnchelle and the revocation of the edict of Nantes by Louis XIV in 1685, and hundreds nf thousands of Hugue nots went into exile, going to Prus sia, Holland, Switzerland, England, Scotland and America. Chinese Curb Tobacco Users. China's ministry of the interior has telegraphed the following circular in structions to the Shenchangs and Tu tungs all over the country, according to the Peking. Dally News: "It has been noticed that almost everybody in the country has indulged In the use of cigars or cigarettes, which will become n worse curse to the nation than opium In former days unless some restrictions are imposed. It is hereby decided that before taking up any measure for the total prohibi tion of Its use, the following restric tions shall be Imposed: First, no boy or girl under eighteen years of age shall- be allowed to smoke cigars or cigarettes ; second, any military or na val man using It shall be punished ; third, the use of cigars and cigarettes in all government schools and colleges shall be strictly prohibited." Far Eastern Bureau Bulletin. Hearts Asunden "We can never marry." "YVhy not?" "I am the heroine of a summer nov il, while you are merely the hero of a dally storyette." Louisville Courter Journal. Save Money ON YOUR Magazine Reading Your own Home Paper and SUNSET MAGAZINE (together) for S.tx) for one year This is Si.cx) less than the cost of the two sepa rately. The Herald, regular price per year is $2.00 Sunset Magazine regu lar price per year $J.oo Total $4.00 Ills Coupon tic ( 1 for I 1 'leae r!e 1, .! ...Mr p...l!H ) t 1 1 I 1 I.