r PAGE SIX THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON Tuesday, May 35, 1920 Appreciation. Thou hast made me known to friends whom I knew not. Thou hast mven me seats in homes not my own. '1 lion Imst brought the distant near :ip;l made a brother of the stranger. When one knows thee, then alien there is none, then no door Is shut. Oh irvunt me my prayer that I may never lose the bliss of the touch of the one, ;i. the nlav of the many. Tacore. Subscribe for the Herald and get Ml the county news. Only $2 a year, A Problem If a new pair of shoes cost $9.00 and wear 90 days, and can be repaired for $3.00 so as to wear 90 days more, how much does the wearer save by having the shoes repaired? I The Answer $9.00 divided by 90 equals cost of New Shoes, per day .10 cts. $3.00 divided by SO equals cost of Repaired Shoes, per day 3 1-3 cts. Cost per day, New Shoes TO Cost, per day, Repaired shoes .03 1-3 Saved per day on Repaired Shoes 06 2-3 90 times .00 2-3 equals amount saved on Repaired Shoes $G.OO plus the comfort. TAKK THK JOH OVKK .VOW! Bowers Shoe Shop s I FRANK PRACTICAL HORSESHOER at SCRIVNER'S BLACKSMITH SHOP I.AM K AND INTKKFKRINO IIORSKS CAR K FULLY ATTKNDKD v, HEPPNER 4 Cutting Machinery Will soon be needed We have bath the Deering and fVfaCormack Lines and a reasonably complete stock WT, WOULD ADVISK SKCUK1NG KXTRAS AT . AS HARLY A DATi: AS POSSIHLK. WHILi: VV : HAVK A COOP STOCK 01' EXTRAS NOW TIU'.Y AKi: GOING TO HP. HARD TO C'-'T I.ATKR IN THK Sl'ASON. " I I! I!1 Gilliam & Bisbee Tit's Occupational. An English newspaper suggests the use of generic names for household help, as, for Instance: "Palmer" for parlor maid, "Jenny" for penernl. j ".Scully" for scullery maid, and so on. All very well, but suppose In the first ease -there were three parlor maids, would it distinguish them ns "Palm," "Palmer" and "Palmist?" Boston Transcript. Subscribe for the Herald only for a full year. I ! a I I 1 SHIVELY :o: OREGON VICTIM OF FATE'S HARSHNESS Sad Story of Luther K. Llnkenhooper Would Move Almost Any One to Tears. "As I was coming to town Just now," said the motorist, "I saw a peculiar sight ; a thin, wild-eyed man, clad iu a red-and-blue bedquilt. perched in a treetop and tvery now and then cryini nonk ! Honk !' to the unbridled slee of a gang of men and boys assembled below." "That was Luther K. I.inkenhooper. hy the symptoms." replied the landlord of the tavern at Grudge. "He accumu lated three second-hand Hootin' Nanny curs; one he traded for, one his brother-in-law wished onto hlra and one was left him by will. None of them were of any account, and so he set to work to take 'em all apart and make one good one out of the three. The task was too much for his mind, and after he had made about five from the ruins of the three and still had a lot of stuff left, and none of 'em would move a muscle, "lie began to chatter, then to yell, and finally took to his bed a-Jlb-hering. Once in n while he escapes from his relatives and gets out am cuts some such caper as you saw. He thinks he Is a Hootin' Nanny himself." "lint, great guns! Even a ear of the name you mention does not wear a bedquilt and climb trees!" "Mobby not. But It would if it was as crazy at Luther Is." Kansas City Star. Art Criticism. One day a German subaltern who had been ordered to find billets pre sented himself at my house, writes a Belgian woman in the World's Work. I showed him among others the room occupied for more than two years hy the American delegates of the relief commission. In which a reproduction- of an ancient work of art a bust without arms stood on the mantel piece. The subaltern thought the room appeared to be comfortable, but. seeking to make himself disagreeable, he raised his eyebrows, after looking at the reproduction, and said in .a rude voice: . "Why, madam, did you cut the arms off this bust in a room destined to be occupied by n German officer?" Words failed me. What could I say? He left the house with an of fended air. But the Incident had rn sequel, which was most extraordinu" Scientific Research. Philip, who had received as a birth day present a beautiful new tuisero seope, presently astounded the conk with the exclamation: "Iley, cook, lend me n flee, will you? I'll give It back to you in tnree minutes!" Hi flomeTown friMpsji BENEFIT OF LOCAL COUNCILS Deal W:th Matt' rr- Which Vitally Af. fect Welfare of tvsry Member of the Community. Are you a lonesome citizen or are you a neighborly citizen? Are you and yours getting a square (leal In your district? Are the pavements, the street cars, the gutters clean and giving good service? Are the prices you pay for meat, potatoes, milk and bread, in your opin ion. fair and right? Is ,th" school furnishing your child a good education in return for your taxes? Is the landlord pronteering on your rent? These, according to the councils, are a: few of the Important matters of everyday city llvlna which should have a satisfactory answer if a man Is to remain a satisned citizen in his ' niunit.v. To get. a satisfactory answer he must be a memher of his local council. "In tnese times." says a circular explaining tne organization, "the community council ' Is a ray of hope. It is a nonpontlcnl. nonsectarl n neighborhood organization of the people the voice of the neighbor hood."' Parenthetically, it may be added that a large part of the voice Is fem inine, thousands of nousewlves being enrolled In the various locals. Ex change. TO PREVENT LOSS BY FIRE Simple Rules, If Properly Observed, Will Lead to an Enormous Annual Saving. Use only safety matches and make It Impossible for children to get them. Always place burned matches in metal leceptacles; never throw them on the lloor or Into waste baskets. u niiitme 111 gj 'ML'es. In tied nr around stables containing hay Is de- liberately to Invite disaster. One or more approved chemical lire! extinguishers should be placed In ev- r ery home. They must be protected against freezing. It Is well to see that the garden hose may be attached to the kitchen faucet. Have the telephone number of the nearest fire station on u speclul card at your telephone. Familiarize the family with the op eration of the nearest fire alarm box. After operutlng a fire alarm stny near It to direct the firemen to the tire. Ev ery minute Is Important. Don't fall to notify the chief of the Bre departmeut of anything you may see In the neighborhood that Is dan gerous or liable to cause fire. Ex change. Plea for Home Ownership. From Portland, Ore., a western view of what the own-your-owii-hotue cam paign means to the tuition lias bcVn re ceived by the United States depart ment of labor. William A. Mrltue of the Bank of California writes: "Whether the home Is a cottage or a palace It equally shelters anil en shrines the sacred love and devoted af fection of all that Is best and wor thiest In our common humanity. Why should every married man own his home? "First, to give Ills wife n chance to make n home, which Is the natural de sire of the normal woman, who in the cramped quarters of the boa nil n house - or apartment lacks sufficient breathing space. Secondly, to supply htji family with an environment where pnterlial love and devotion niiijr have ample room and the privacy so esen tlnl to enable parents to train tbelr children by setting before tUeui In their plastic stage an example worth while." I Old, but Ever True. It 1 1 In part to help the plrlttinl i growth imil in tench the "yoimi! Iiln" ! nf omnium!) ip!rlt "how In mhmi i tloil the cli.imlier of iiiininerco pule t iMird In l' monthly bulletin line j Ilka tlicw: I If H'e 1" I" ,h a tows .lk !' kind "f t'n run Ilk. Vim Mfilnl !'! '" '".- In a (rip Ar il start cn a long t.lko. Veu It n'i'V n' ,n' '' htiln4. K,tr tlu't tiitiimiit ltui'a fraily i tf knek t , ..ul.-f Kl.rll V tf kn"k onr ti'wti It tan'l llir ln. If .u IUI rtn mrm mat ty mn afralil lttl p.ii?-!h.1 rta gt ah4i1 Win-' r"na a-uka ant nnt1y aMrks Vim can r-tta a l-iwtt from II. itnil Anil if wl'iia " oka ) eur piaitial llltl V our tilal'li-'i-a ran mak ona Vour lonn .l h ahat f.m mm ra. It in I I' r i"i. it a . i Many tmsll Hemt Built. Tit liulliltnt pT)i-ta tif I'.Mii :r ,Hi to .iMi' fr lliv tu.l ciiiiitry. n"iHin l N V a et th.irt.y. The nt Intnrraiint fining nf i ms'trr la the f1 tbnl an tin (iriHfUil"1 perci itat f Ihe build l.n; l l"UlH;i 'f imll llMM'i-a. Cammvaily'i Bg Teuf. fhr rtinreh. ih a. faml, h oountT aecM the ! n r -ma, are ORDER In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Morrow County. State of Oregon, plaintiff. vs. Nancy M. Meek, defendant. This cause coming on regularly to be heard on the application of the plaintiff by It3 attorneys, S. E. Not son, District Attorney, and Sam E. Van Vactor, for an order of publica tion herein, and it appearing to the Court: That Information has been filed herein, and wherein it Is alleged that heretofore and on and before the 3rd day of August, 1906, one Martin An derson was the owner of the follow ing described real property, to-wit: Commencing at a point in the middle or center of the flume ' or ditch formerly used by the Heppner Milling Company, (as described and set forth in the plat and specifications filed by Nelson Jones, In the office of the County Clerk of Morrow County, Oregon, and recorded in ' Book H, Records of Deeds, for said County, at page 457 there of, on the 6th day of February, 1892.) where said ditch or flume intersects the South line of Block Two (2) of Nelson Jones' Addition to the Town of Heppner, Morrow County, Ore gon, and running thence East on said South line of Block Two (2), ten feet to the Southwest corner of Lot Four (4), of said Block, running thence in a Northwesterly direction ten feet from and parallel with the cen ter of said ditch or flume, to a point where the same intersects the North line of Lots Four (4) and Five (5), of said Block, be ing the Northwest corner of said Lot Four (4), thence running West on the North line of said Lots, twenty feet to a point ten feet West of the center ol said flume or ditch, and being the Northeast corner of Lot Five (5) of said Block, thence running in a Southeasterly direction ten feet from and parallel with the cen j ter or middle of said ditch or flume to a point where the same Intersects the South line of said Block Two (2), being the South east corner of said Lot Five (6) of Bald Block, thence East on the South side of said Block Two (2), ten feet to the middle or center of said ditch or flume, the place of beginning, and being a tract of land twenty feet wide and lying between said Lots Four (4) and Five (5) of said Block Two (2). , Thathereafter and on the 3rd day of August, 1906, the said Martin An derson died Interstate la said County, and that thereafter his estate was duly administered upon In the Coun ty Court of Morrow County, Oregon, and final settlement of the same duly made therein, on the 6th day of April, 1908. That the said Martin Anderson was the person last seized of the said des cribed real estate, and that the above named defendant, Nancy M. Meek Is the present occupant and In posses sion of the same and claims to be the owner thereof. That the said Martin Anderson died without heirs and left said real property hereinbefore described es cheated and vested In the State of Oregon, the plaintiff In this action. WHEREFORE, Based upon said application and Informatlon filed hereln, It Is hereby ORDERED, That nil persons Interested In said real property appear In this Court and cause on or before Wednesday the 16th day of June, 1920, and show cause, If any they have, why Judg ment should not be granted the plaintiff as prayed for In said Infor- of hearing said petition, and the place mation, to-wit: Adjudging that tho of mid hearing at the Circuit Court said real properly hereinbefore de-l corns. In the Court Ilounc, l'ondle crlbed be escheated and the title itcn. State of Oregon, at si 'd time, thereto vested In the stRle of Oregon. I And you will lake notice that arty that said real properly be sold In (he person Interested In the organization manner provided by law; that out of the proceeds arlalng from such ssle the ciiKta and disbursements of this proceeding, be paid, together with the cokk pf such sale, and that the re mainder of the proceed deiieil from fuch mile be paid over to the Sutc Treanurrr of the State of Oregon. It is further ORDERED, That lhl order be published for a period of six weeks In the Heppner Herald, a weekly nraprr of general rltcula linn In Morrow County, Oregon, pub llnhed at llnppner. Oregon. Ivme nnJ dated at Chambta, at vndl'tm. l'n.atill.i County. Oregon, this mh day ft April. 1920. c.ii.iiKUT w. rni:i.i-. Circuit Judii of thf Mt nf Oion for Mifti County. , State of O'rgon County if Mor row. e I. J. A W'atria. (Vint? t'l-'k o! i M mow t'eun'). alii "rV pf tV fir Irult Ceitrl of Die t!al- of linen fur M..tto County, do tn!y certify j that the !" and fnr-geiBg Is tru and tortavt tepy of lha original Ordt I mad and entaied la the above eotit- led cause on the 29 th day of April, 1920, as the same appears of record In my office. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said Court this 1st day of May, 1920. J. A. WATERS, Clerk of Morrow County, Oregon. 1-6 NOTICE In the Circuit Cmrt of the State of Oregon for Umatilla County. In the matter of the petition of Emmett Callahan, J. G. Camp, A. E. McFarland, directors of the West Extension Irrigation Dis trict for a judicial examination and judgment of the Court as to the regularity and legality of the proceedings in connection with the organization of said district, and the' proceedings of the Board of Directors of said District, together with the pro ceedings of the said Board of Directors and the District in the election for the authoriza- tion of a conotract with the United States of America, and as to the validity of said con tract, and whether the same may be legally signed by the said To the West Extension Irrigation District, and to all Freeholders, legal Voters, and Assessment Payers with in said District. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED, That the petition of the Board of Di- 'ffk rectors of tho West Extension Irri- ' gation District, praying as follows, to-wit: WHEREFORE, Your petitioners respectfully pray for a judicial ex- ammauon ana judgment of said above Court as to the regularity and validity of the proceedings in collec tion with the organization of the said West Extension Irrigation District, and as to the regularity and legality of the proceedings of the Board of Di rectors of said District subsequent to the date of the organization of said Irrigation District, and as to the reg ularity and legality of the proceed ings of the said Board of Directors and of the said District in the pro ceedings providing for the election authorizing the said proposed con tract with the United States and as to the validity of said proposed contract and that all such acts and proceed ings may be judicially examined and determined by the said Court in one special proceeding. And your petitioners further pray that the Court shall fix the time for the hearing of this petition and shall order the Cleric of the said Court to give and publish a notice of the fil ing of this petition directed to said Irrigation District and to "all free holders, legal voters, and assessment payers within said district", which said notice shall be published for three successive weeks In a newspa per published In Umatilla County, Oregon, and in a newspaper published In Morrow County, Oregon, stating the time and place fixed by the Court for the hearing of this petition, and that any person interested In the or ganization of said district or In the subsequent proceedings of the Board of Directors of said District or In the proceedings of said Board of Direct ors and of said District In the author ization of a contract with the United States of America, msy within ten (10) days after the full publication of said notice and on or before the day fixed for the hearing of this p- j tltlon demur to or answer said petl- tloo. has been filed In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Umatilla County. 1 And you will take notice that the Court has fixed Monday, the 14th day of June, 1920, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M , of said day n the time jof aaid dlatriii or In Ihp'aubrenuV-nt proceedings of the Hoard of Directors of a.Ud luntiict or In the proceedings of nald Iioatd of Directon and of the sild District In the aethoi if.itlon of a contract nh the United States of America, may within ten (11) days alter the full publication of this not ice nd on or before th day fix.d for the hearing of the aald petition demur to or anwi-r ml. I petition. This notice is published purausnt to an order of ihe Hon. O. W, I'helps. Jinlne of the above entitled Court, made and entered on the :7lh day of Artil. I'JO. in ihe Jlermi-ion H-rsld. n-paper of g. ni -at circulation In I'n.flt.Jia County. Own, and In the II' l-tncr H.-rald, a tiewtpaper of gen- "ral citrilatinn in Mrto Cmniy. '"Coh. tot three ucrr egs. 1- he an l djied at Ivndlrion. Ore n. urd.r the ..! of the Circuit i'oum of the Utate of Oregon, for rn'!:i' mly. tr.ls 2T:h day of Ap'ii. I;,;.!, n t. nnowN. Clrrk of Ihe .bota entitled Court I'utlid.eJ May. th. Uth. l!h. (iff