PAGE SIX THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON Tuesday, February 10. 1020. Tt'.l .:ei'-73 Life, i'r. A. V.i;. ! nip, liic fanems lir.an. ier. '- ';;!! wsntfi for a h!i:h ; e- :'et! an;.- ,n.it ; Iso failed to make his '.!;: ''e'r vti.'ii at co!ii ;;e. "A nmu v.-lio rece-ait;,m front lils ::t.-stm!tf! :r MMe':e is likely to wia ie ei:iii;ie!i in after life," he once re marked. I'esfon I'ost. V. - V.i re ' . d -rf. . , . I - . 'i t the War!:. Departing from custom, Hi" I'i'il :r lA Council of Churches ha endorsed tlie work helnj; done by ."ai- Ivist l.olief, 1 Madison Avon Hi-, .New Virl: City, (lifi former committee for Ar menian unrl Syrian Itellef which bus essayed the task of cull!!; for 1,250, 000 slurvfnir people In Western Asia. Resolutions adopted liy the executive committee, as announced liy Charles S. Miicl'arland, n'-ui'ial secretary, Drc as follows : "Your commit Ira recommends that prayers lie offered In all our churches for tlx; suffering eh 1 1 i-?n throUL'hout (ho world, especially those who lire In distress and peril us tli result of the wa r. "They further recommend that wo leuflirni and emphasize our Interest and co-operation In tlie plans of 'Near ICast Relief.' We know of no need In the world thut Is more com pelllriK lhan thut of the Armenian, Kyrl.ni and oilier peoples In the Le vant who have already received and iiiiihI wtlll receive Hie (.'onerous sym Jmlliy of the American people." Prehiotoric Culture in Ohio. IlluKiiiU inlo tin' tomlj of a mound liulldcr chief near Newark, (I., scien tists rcccnlly discovered ancient trlnlielH which they declare establish Hie fuel that Hie slnne-iiKo inhiihitauts of tli loi'ality belonged lo I lie same tribe whose earth monuments are louiid In oilier parts of I In slate, iiuliiliiy Ross county, wliere similar re reared work has disclosed Mirprislui; evidence of pre hlslorlc culture. The nepillelier Is located near Hie Hint quar rlen from which aborlines ohlaineil Mm ( m I for urrowheails and oilier Im-pleni-ntK. It Is inaile of Kinall stnnei mill i' hurled In a circular iiiiiinnl In tnilli ulioiit tlilrleen feet liixli, I'lm i hit' i skeleton Indicated Hint lie was i 10:111 nearly six feet lall and 1 ve, 1 v.-iiik' weight. Underneath I he Imiii'i ah found what Is considered Hi i Impiiriiint article taken from Hi excavation, a copper gnrgci, be hcvel in have lieen a token of auihorl ly 01 i-.ink. Oilier ohjeels of iuicresl wcr 1 iiii,T earrings, an nrnilei of the t'li 1 ' maiei'lnl and bends made from m-i ..ell-,, which evIdeiiHy !nil lieen vie 1 is 11 iiei Lplece. and are do-ailh-ill 'i 1 " . i ' : . I ;t I- .Mechanics. i ,1 - A L IN Overcoats $1 r-$20 A TRULY KKWAKKAHI.l-: VALUK Sk1 1 1 vvillll UIHI f re ..-w;;i r s.in rm i cm co.v; .-. ri'M.v 0;; 1 1 a k i si'kvici: am; covi-ou r $8.50 COMi: IN AND I.l'.T am s I;.a-ii'o a lir.ai-1 line of l'J0-,n fnm ished i:eopl.; v ;i : I : ii for ' wen! y-f. uir hours :i ' ; 1 y for Hie i!.lc of fond thai is the seie barrier between llieni and death from starvntioy. That is the situation in Alcxawlropol, a city In Russian Armenia, according to Miss Hermlne Dakesiun, a pretty Armenian girl, one ef the survivors of four years KxJ t UlCfi UCDMIUC nAiccmiu of the horrors of Turkish massacres and deportations. Saved by an Ameri can woman, she has come to this coun try and entered Oberlln College. With her came fourteen other Arme nian K'fls In charge of Miss Adelaide S. Dwlght, a Near Kast Relief worker, who has been Instrumental In hclpinx to save hundreds of thousand of their people from death by starvation. Miss Dwluhl, who Is not civen to exagger ation and has seen conditions at llrsl hand, says more than h million people ure facln death liy starvation In Ar menia and will perish unless America aids. Herself an eyewitness to the slaueh- ler of hundreds of helpless women anil children by the Turks and a vic tim of the dcioiiallons. Miss lliiki Minn, ail unu.iailly pretty nirl, say j K; 0 ! 1 IC.IL1 i IUUI US SHOW YOU DTIAM A 1 1 1 aunni CD ii -1 J k '4 4 PP.iC0T5 L2 ii r 1 1 r w wfL'wa MEAL. Hi I ill i i j .. i'i; i'ii 1 1 I.' 1. All Co, : ' . ,. i i' ' i . ! ' I '; ivo tN WHAT TO COOK FOR DINNER WHEN UNEXPECTED COMPANY ARRIVES, AT MEAL TIME Or fn a Hurry TO PREPARE A QUICK LUNCH FOR HUBBY AND THE CHILD REN WHEN THEY RUSH IN AT NOON It Is a Comf o t TO HAVE AN ASSORTMENT OF OUR LINE OF CANNED GOODS ON YOUR PANTRY SHELVES. IT WILL SAVE YOU TIME, TEM PER AND NERVOUS ENERGY AND FURNISH THE BASIS FOR A SUBSTANTIAL AND APPETIZING ASK US ABOUT PRICES AND SUITABLE ASSORTMENT. .Phelps GROCERY CO. mere is untold sutleriuc, in Armenia and Syria. She praises the efforts of the Near East Relief, formerly the American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief, to save as many of these people as possible. At lCrivan. the capital of the Armenian republic, one hot meal Is given out daily, und by this relief alone the city's death rate has been cut from a thousand dally to an averaue of twenty. At Alexandro pnl, where the refugees from Turkish Armenia were driven by thousands, the situation Is appalling, Miss Pukeslnu s.iys. It Is to avert these wholesals deaths that Near Ksnt Relief Is ninklhu a nation-wide appeal fur fund. 60Y SCOUTS IN YOUNG ARMENIA Strangest Troop of All in Con stantinople Being Made Into Good Citizens. American Hoy Seoul training 1 aid Id; prominently In Hie rehabilitation of hundreds of tit 1 1 0 Armenian boy refine from the Turkih muxaerea, wbn bilte been ornaiii-cil into a scout tr p In t'oii-cintliiople aa the xd.itl.m of en of the mint tronbb .mi rob. Ii-tin tb.it '-etifioulc I t! e Near i:at tie llcf worker. In (!,:! cMy. ll.i.iloled and ilii 11 for four year, teiMi n tl e'r j, 1 1 vi,: , nt ! r i .1 ! i !.i".;lit. r.'d or v. . : - Ti tl. a a I I. 11! a Hie ll or I- ! coin;e.- . 1 I V 1 1 I I. -t 'I . l!i. V: l a. It- ,v. if ! f ! I l-i... i ,it t' ,..f , N .r 1 ir ef ' . . fir le . Ibe I'. r nl"l , ! -ry I I . ii..- la T! 11 r.ej c-.o., TI-, .. !e.l c! f rii , II.. y b. Had lolee Men ! t 11 I a. I. r f mil- ,f I" t !. .1 ! i.f e.i l-..fi'f tbiy ! iel m.tl .eit rniepiiic 11 il.cy fi-st ei t-r-d tl, or he 11 uMiiiird Irt t al. One pi 111 poy nt..!. a pur from his Anr!.-n teacb. r I ..r t' or thrr w after be bi im a f' ioit he ot.il.un ly tituvioy One dv l ram ta lor Mh tbe iiir In Ms hand. don't asut fa gt It back." k K.t.1 rrhi, Matty "Hut I la te I'M lu.y t- ."! row " To form were eceet trte te fmos f, .no He little nforona,i Into g. . rltlots. la e ef the r.tn hy the Meer Katt Bltf. 1 M. 1 ...a aitte. ? Tark tfity, le s4a lu a I fir Nela, !! ' il III 1 . il; ------ '! bF.ANS I aa 3 ... m A LAoGE RETURNS FROM MINT j i United States Supplies Bulk of Pep-1 pjrmint Oil for the World. ! 'Ihe lull 1 or the peppermint oil of the world is pr..d'ieed on the muck I lands of southwestern Mlchliuin and a few counties of northern Indiana. The j loitil yearly product U estimated at j r.iHi.imo pounds. There are two vurl-1 eties of iiepperinlni. the American and' the 1,111,'llsli or Mitcheiu. The latter has almost superseded the American. hciiiK better adapted to our soil and clttna'e, and favored by the trade. It Is also hardier and yields larger crops. Tin bleat mint farm I one bavlng both hixh land and niu:lt soil, which is a distinct advantage ou account of the roitulon and humus In the toll, de cayed venetaiion being essential to the pepniiliit crop. Ity the use of prop er aiuoiit, H and kinds of commercial f err Mixer, It . crops of mint can he (row n for many years In succession on the sum. (round. The mint plant, .iftcr l'ie o'l s removed makes a ver. III! c i; ; ':.. : ,o;. :ymr.': Gentlemen READ THIS AD CAREFULLY 1 I ." I iti : V 'a.. i- I 'ti 1 ' , . , ill 1 1 , , i t ' ' i 1 s U t'':.- I Heppner Tn'lor and Cleaning Shop Taia-r arc j t-( i.t!i.. n i!n ;r . Inn-, wit!1, .,i c.ii' t s; 1 ri. i,c l.i liin.l tlu-tn. I iv t!it point ? Now i the t-.mo lu chct your ih w Sj rin Sri! u. k -ar.tplo will p'.t.i'C ..'.i -i,h in i,.ia!ity anl prii i G. Franzen I Proprietor V i:.r C iicslr.:" the Latest. !';'')' I I.' " !;:'; lieen obtained Ihe "wau'f '. i-.-t !it:' ." the tubers of which,, cai,':i raw 1 r -: slews, are a source of much jrntiiK-.itii.n to llie jialates of p'-tailcd epicures. They are also sliced and shredded for soups. DR. HAROLD C. BEAN 1'HYSICIAX and Sl'KUEON Heppuer, Oregon, Periaarenlly Located Odd Fellows Building Office riione 7i'J Residence 523 VAUGHAN & BUTLER DENTIST Permanently located in Oddfellow's Bunlding Heppner, . Oregon S. E. NOTSON ATTOr.N EY-AT-LAW Office iu Court Ho8e Heppner Oregon DR. A. D. McMURDO PHYSICIAN & SLKCiKOX Telephone 122 Office Patterson's Drug Store Heppner Oregon WOODSON & SWEEK ATTOUXE YS-AT-LAW Heppner Oregon SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW . Heppner Oregon F. A. McMENAMIN LAWYER Roberts Bldg. Heppner, Ore. Office Phone Main 643 Residence Phone Main 665 ROY V. WHITEIS INSURANCE BE AIj ESTATE, LOANS, Heppner Oregon DR. CLYDE R. WALKER rHYSICIAX AND SURGEON Phone Connections lone, Oregon desirable feed for live sloel;, returning about Him anie amount of food value as an acre of ordinary meadow land, bc.ldes the oil. Thus two profits, are harvested from one acre of peppermint. An acre of peppermint will yield from 2d to r, I pounds of oil, while a second cutUiii! will yield from six to JO pounds extra. The farmer needs no extra. 1 quipment to grow this crop than found on the ordinary farm ex cept u small still to refine the nil. In Michigan unit Indiana from JO to 100 farmers ru-operate In the opera Nun of stills, handling from 50 to 100 ncres of peppermint In the one mill. It la now large Industry. Irish Mothers' Superstition. Among the people nf the south Isle of Aran, off the .-oasf of Ireland, there Is uir odd belief that Ml luck I sure to follow If 11 mother sew s the first (tor ments for In.- offsptiin:. The mtrments for ihe Utile one must come from a distance, and are Ihe coarsest make shift posiblo. The oldest rags are con sidered tn in- ih. .litest as n prevent ive iiiilnt i.ny son of evil. . a 'i 4. t H I 3 1 - v cm, U'i'1 a 1 i a V.I hi' .1 m . 1 m 1; Mn 'i -' .1, - -