Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, February 10, 1920, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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    Tuesday, February 10, iq 2 0.
THE HEPPNER HERALD. HEPPNER. OREGON
PAGE FIVE
of ALL M
TtTil
NEWS
ioxk m:vs
i-
K '.ill reports art' true Judge Rob
inson of this city was not the sole,
mourner at the requiem of his faith
iul dog, Ni.'ktl. as the'e were invisi
ble mourners, vY o witnessed the sad
riles.
Jmes Howard, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ike Howard, is quite sick with the
mumps and a severe cold.
Mrs. Mary Kegley, who has been
spending the past two weeks in Port
land, returned Sunday and will re
sume her duties as housekeeper for
her brother, J. L. Calkins.
Earl Wilson, who is a student at
llehnke-Walker business college at
Portland, raine borne Friday. Karl
expects to return to school a- soon as
the small pox and flu subside a little
in the city.
Mrs. C. V.'. McNamer, who has been
teaching the past week at Arlington,
came home Sunday. We understand
Mrs. McNamer is in style now as she
lias the mumps.
Mr. Elewitt of the Blewitt Tractor
company, is spending the week in
lone.
S. P. Wilson, , who has been speed
ing the winter at Huntington Heach,
Cal., returned home Friday. Mr. Wil
son reports the winter as being very
mi'd there. Some difference from
Eastern Oregon winter. '.V'hile there
Mr. Wilson purchased 1 Sacres of
valuable land for the consideration oi
$700 per acre. He has rented the
land and the party will plant it in
lima beans Property there the last
few nionths has greatly increased in
value due to the oil wells.
Mrs. J. B. Sparks and her sister,
Mrs. Mary Million, left Monday morn
ing for The Dalles where they will
spend a few days on business.
Mrs. Herb Olden spent Thursday
and Friday in lone with friends.
Mr. Jess Dobyns, one of Rhea
creek's leading farmers, has gone to
Milton on a business and pWsnie
trio for a few days. Joss is much
taken up with that place and I think
he Is planning on moving there in the
near future.
Mrs A. E. James and son, Donald,
came over Thursday from Pendleton
anl are guests at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Douglas.
Uev. Clarence Reynolds, a former
lone Christian minister, but row or
Corvallis, came Thursday evening.
Uev. Reynolds was disappoint od as he
had planned to preach that evemni:
and also the tollovi..g evening hiu on
account of the ban being on all
public gathering.-, the meetingb were
postponed. Quite a number of his
friends met with him at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Morgan and spent
a very pleasant evening. He returned
home Friday.
Mrs. Ida Fletcher was called to
Heppner Friday evening on account
of the illness of her sister, Mrs. Jack
Hughes and her children.
Mrs. Robert Mathison has just re
turned home alter a four weeks v'sii
with her daughter at San Metro, Cal.
She reports a delightful trip.
F,. K: Lundell has his hands full
these days as his wife and five child
ren are confined to their beds with
the flu. They are all better with the
exception of his wife who is quite ill
yet.
Famous Hymn.
The words of the hymn "I Hear
Thy Welcome Voice" were written by
Lewis Hiirtsough, and for that mutter
the music, too, was written by that
composer. Poth words and music were
first published in a monthly, a Guide
to Holiness, a copy of w hich was seut
to Ira D. Sankey while he was in Kng
limd in 1873. lie immediately adopted
if nml had It published in "Sacred
Songs and Solos."
moiu.w m;ws
Mr. ten Morgan is hauling feed
from lone.
Hany Kdmonds is tecoveriug last,
with his broken leg.
Mr. Fred .1. Fly went to Ht-ppncr!
in his new car Thursday. i
Edith Ely is going to take musio
lesson.-, from Mrs. Bert Palmateer this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Noah Pettyjohn went
over to the Gooseberry country this
week.
Mr. Palmateer butchered a beef
this week which he sold to the peo
ple around Morgan.
Mr. Ralph Wade returned to OH-x
after visiting his sister, Mrs. Fiank
Hal'ferty, three miles from Morgan.
Miss Bessie Wetzel, Grace Willis,
Gladys Medlock, Kate Morgan has
been taking music lessons from Miss
Medcalf since the first of the year.
Mr. Witzel got his- neck strained
last week when him and his hired
man was breaking a colt, and some
of the harness broke, throwing him
out of a wagon on his head.
i:c if. m:vs
is now
PlXM I.i: Tl Ti TO HOOVl.lt
Chilean Traffic Rules.
There lire no road rules nor speed
limits In Chile outside of the cities,
hut the speed limit in the cities Is 2"
kilometers (lTiVi miles) im hour. In
the trafllc rules" of the various Chilean
cities there Is n luck of uniformity,
the Valparaiso regulations requiring
an automobile to puss to the right of
a coming car. while In Santiago It
must pass to the left.
Heart Disease.
I hear of a man who fussed 30 vears
about having heart disease. Lately he
said: "After all, I'll be cursed If I
don't believe I will finally die of some
thing else." K. W. Howe's Monthly
To End Wire "Singing."
To prevent the "singing" of tide
phone or telegraph wire.; passing over
houses, these are muted by putting on
them small olive-shaped pieces of lend
or fitting corks on to them.
NO "KAZ
l'Oin'F.lt" AliOVT THIS
l'Oi:T!!Y
Sending a remittance to peg his
suoscription up a year in advance W.
Windsor, who is holding down a
homestead some 27 miles south of
lone in the Rock creek country, adds
the following post scrip to his letter;
"I am bucked and gagged here un
til spring with a bunch of towhead
cattle but I will call and see you
when I get to town and we will go
out and get on a Raa Porter tear and
paint the town In celebration of my
emancipation from this monotonous
life for I am away out here
Where the dewdrops fall, and the
wild birds nest,
Where the wild rose blooms on the
prairie crest:
Where the coyote hows and the wind
sports free,
Midst the Rock creek hills on the
Iodi prairie."
No
stutf.
Ttaz Porter kick about that
Read the Herald, only $2. 'hi a year.
f!!l
in Our N
ewi
jOCdXlOIl
I wish to announce to the Morrow County public in general and to all Ford
owners in particular that I have leased the Oregon Garage on Main Street and
am now better prepared than ever to give you
FORD SERVICE
HI
Let a Fordson Tractor
Do Your Farming Work
Buy a FORD CAR Now
lVi-.'r MoMartta of Jono
'.vorkina for Phil Pra.ly.
Mrs. Ben Karnes of I pl:. :- C.rove.
was callini; in Cecil on Tuesday.
A. V.. Ross and family of the Look
out, spent Thursday and Friday in
lone.
V. D. Lt anion of Heppner, spent
Sunday in Cecil among his old
friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Krebs of the
Lust Camp, left on Saturday for Arl
ington. Bob Carsner whs a busy man in
Cecil Sunday shipping out cati'e for
The Dalles.
John Saddleback of Newton, was
looking up his old friends around
Cecil Monday.
Mr. and Mis. Pal Pea-sou autoed
to Hi ppner Friday when- they will
.-penii a Iff days.
Fiank Laughrige of Arlington, was
looknm up his Cecil friends on Tues
day and Wednesday.
Jim Whitney of the Dove Cot, left
on the local Tuesday for Heppner
w here he will spend a few days.
Grover Curtiss of Lower Willow
cr"ck was a business caller at the
county seat Monday and Tuesday.
J. D. Walker, ot.e of the highway
surveyors, who are working in Cecil,
spent the week end with his family
in lone.
iMisses. V. M. Hynd and Lizzie
Ualhin of Butterby Flats spent Sat
urday afternoon at the home of Mrs.
Phil Brady.
J. H. Miller, who has traded his
Boardless Barn ranch for some prop
erty in Mi'lon, made a business call
in Cecil Tuesday.
Wid Palmateer of Windy Nook, and
J. E. Crabtree of Dotheboys Kill,
wete busy arounl Cecil on the county
roads during the week.
E. L. Vinton, district engineer of
the state highway and also several of
his lone cr-'w are now ia Cecil busy
working on the highway.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Franklin and
daughter, Miss Bernice, of Rhea,
'f-pent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Hyud at Butteiby Flats.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Minor of Tort
land, arrived in Cecil on Sunday and
spent a few days at the Last Camp
before leaving for Heppner.
Kivbs Pros, have Just finished
building an addition to Ihe Shep
herd's I'.est. "Hob" T!.oii.ps"ii of
Hei i :u r is nuv at tin' Shepherd'.-,
i'.e-t.
H. 1). W'i'lis Ii.ik be a bie-y dining
the last we-k enuiiierai ing the Ceil
district. II. F.. says l: loond evoiy
one veiy obliging and accommodat
ing wherever he called.
Osker Huber shipped a nolher huge
caterpillar Into Cecil on .Monday and
Ihe hills are beginning to look II
around Cecil since two caterpillars
are going night and day.
MUa Letltla Shewey who has bein
obliged through ill health to give up
her school at Cecil, left for her home
in Dallas on Tuesday. M-s. Mima
j Miller of PorlhnJ, now huh chuige of
the pupils.
Mrs. John Mask of KwinR. who haw
I been visiting her slhler, Mrs. Albeit
Korkner, at The Dulles hospital, re
turned home on Saturday and we'
' hear is now Hcriousty 111 and under i
I Ihe rare of Dr. Walker of lone. j
M'e. M. I'. Logni of l'oiihiid, ai
j rived In' Cecil Saturday. Mrs. I.g.in i
was railed to tr fick bid ..I her
daughter, Mils Vivian, who was tuil-
Ii is funny about Hoover, how peo
ple turn to him like tired children.
He is not a politician, tier, so Tai as
known, a Presbyterian. Heaven
knows whether he stands in with
Brother Bryan's purpose to make pro
hibition permanent or not. Heaven
knows what treaty reservations or In
terpretations he would accept or re
ject. What is known about him Is
that he is the greatest living helper of
mankind in practical matters. We
think of him as a man who can put
more dinners into more people, and
more milk into more babes, and more
money into empty pockets, and more
roofs over unsheltered families, and
more clother on bodies and shoes on
bare feet than any one else in sight.
These are all homely exploits, but the
world just now needs to have them
done. It needs Hoover, and Hoover's
knowledge, and his great gift of or
ganization and his great heart. It is
not certain that 'he is fit to be presi
dent. He is- a curious man, almost
as curious as Mr. Wilson, almost as
much of an autocrat, almost as prone
to work things out in his own head
and then shun them through with
such instruments as he can find. But
he is big, and when he sees a great
need he runs to it with blankets and
food. And lie is the farthest possible
from the flabby, sentimental type. He
will spend money or lend it, but he
will not waste it. People's hearts
(urn to him because he Is not the
senate and not the constitution, and
because his checks and balances can
be cashed and will weigh. When Mr
Gerard at the Jackson dinner quoted
the South Dakota man who said:
am for Judge Gerard, but he is not
the best candidate. The best candi
date is Herbert Hoover," he showed
himself a truly artful man for he
made the hearts that warm to Hoover
warm also to Gerary.
If we could have elections at will
as they can in England, Hoover could
be choBen president in sixty days
Our mocbauih-nis of government have
stalled dreadfully this last year and
ought lo go to the shop. The ques
tion presses what to do with them
and if they don't work better very
soon Ihe pressure w ill become perem
ptory. They are unexceMi d just now
lor eliicien'y ill keeping little men in
power (by no means meaning Mr.
Wilson) anil keeping big men out.
lMVVKDM.W NF.WS
J. H. Weaver, Weldon Weaver and
Oral Weaver were land lookers in. tha
community last week and expect tit
return for a more thorough investiga
tion next month.
A committee of citizens is investi
gating the Emberger water system
with the idea of taking control under
lease for a time to see if an improve
ment in the service cannot be had.
The Farm Bureau meets Friday
evening, February 13th, at the usual
place. A program and refreshments
have been arranged. All having bills
against 'he rabbit fund should tilo
it li i lie secretary.
The directors of the Irrigation dis
trict, Mr. Schilling, Mr. Camp and
Mr McFarland met with the Board
man people last Saturday afternoon,
to explain the points In the contract
between the district and the govern
ment in preparation for the -!cct
to lie held February 24th.
Rev. Boyd of New York, and Rev.
Sody of Hood River, met the people
of the community church on the even-
ng of February bt'h and outlined the
New Era movement calling attention
to th'i challenge that is placed upon.
the pic.ent day church niid outlining
a plan for organization to meet tho
cnallenge.
Mr. Emery of the Ellison and
White Chautauqua was In town last
week looking over the field. He found
the community not quite ready to
neet the expenses necessary to carry
ing on a Chautauqua. As soon as the
new rehool is finished and the audi
torium available tor nso there will bo
many educational and entertainment
featured Introduced to supply tha
community need along this line.
Bui ir that treaty is ratified thinflH
may start up, and our feet again ba
planted In the paths of duty, and oar
ears he iclieved from the affliction of
listening so much to persons who
have noises in tho head that they
niista'ke for political thoughts.
Such persons, by the way, must
have in en in control In Albany when,
(lie astern lily excluded the live social
ists for belonging lo a political party
"ibat is inimical lo the best Interest
of Ihe slate." Life.
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II' III
To Our Friends
and Customers
We expect lo move into our new building on or
about February I, 1920. where we will be pleased
to give one and all a most cordial welcome.
Our new store will be the most modern and com
modious in eastern Oregon and we will take much
pride and pleasure in showing you through it when
you rail.
YOURS FOR 1920 HEING TIIK BEST YEAR
HEPPNER HAS EVER KNOWN
Gi?S?am & Bisbee
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car i- luwc -l in r. mo! i-.-'-i
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WE HAVE ONE FORD SEDAN FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Chas. H. Latourell
AUTHORIZED DEALER
HEPPNER Main Street OREGON
( Formerly Ori g in Ciaragc)
OUR FORD PARTS AND ACCESSORIES STOCK IS COMPLETE
Insist on Genuine Ford Parts
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bune, li';.l I i-.k .i rtil.it ar..i--. ' it
tli" Itnl'l tt i,noti if !'.. I..ml
1 I lllli lid Ik .lit,l Ii a pi- J.l.lr I
blrh I will rUdl) "tel rl'ii'ii.ljf
" uti) hiu 1. m oho ll to! ti dt
MUin t). ..fr
Mf Catlnwii !,' ii1tr- m t, 1 ( W
IMih mtn.-t, Sr Y-'k i'f
Til llrirjld mix f',n"rr f ' fi In'
fill to Irill (. fti jhnuM rd t'.nn
n4 fcnow hnt ir jr, fruit r. pj.ir.it
m'lhn bit !(( lo oi
Buy Wheal Land
and Prosper
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ain! h I !; I ' .if l.e I" '(t lii .in, luit
I In y at r j" : 11;; l.i I. N.v i- lh- Hiii- !
buy aii'l y fc.nly (T t:inii: r fiillowini:
Casy Terms and Pair Treatment
E. M. SHUTT
The Kfdl tslate Man
Up-stairs in Court House