Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, November 02, 1920, Page Five, Image 5

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    Tuesday. November 2, 1920
THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON
Five-
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V3
Indians Cling to Primitive Life
si
g 8
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II IV . m fl
IONE
Money By Wire
'To get money there quickly and to the
right person is often vital.,
WESTERN UNION
, Money Transfer
is the quickest, "surest, safest means to
send money anywhere for any purpose.
For the accommodation of our customers
and the public generally, wa are hand
ling Western Union Money Transfers.
First National Bank
Heppner, Oregon
Members of the famed Passamaquoddy tribe of Indians have made their
home for 155 years at the small reservation, five miles from Eastport, Me.,
and on the banks of the Frontier river, St. Croix, where there is excellent
lishlng at all times. This photograph slovs an ancient tepee used when the
French explorer, Sleure De Mont, made a landing on a small island about
twelve miles above the reservation. The modern Indians live in the wigwams
only during the summer, as they have wooden houses In their villages.
1
LOCAL HAPPENINGS
A From Neighboring Towns
.J. .t. .J. . .J. . .J. .J. ' ' I some prominence in the school exer
clfccs of October 27th.
BOARDMAN
j. .5. .j. .j. .j. .j. 4 4 ! 4 4
The Mack building and premises
on Main street aret being renovated
In preparation for the now stock of
general merchandise which will be
under (he management of W. B.
Tucker from The Dalles. John Jenk
ins and T. K. Droylcs are the local
men Interested.
The family of E. T. Messenger of
White Salmoa has arrived and taken
temporary quarters In tlio Paine
building on Main street, pending the
cllon of building on their recently
fijulred tract south of town.
The hay-growers of the Boardman
district have formed a 10-d:iy pool
nf 600 tons of alfalfa at 123 F. 0. n
ltoardmnn. The secretary of the
Farm Bureau. M. I). Hlgns, Is local
shipping manager.
Mrs. C. P. llarter, school vlerk. hns
returned from a wi- k's visit at Echo
While there she disposed of 40
acra west of town to A. Mays, of
Echo.
The teachers nf the Boardman
schools perpetrated an enJoable eve
ning celebration of the birthday of
Principal M. D. Slgna on Monday
October 2&th.
Ilotb tha achool trucks rer out of
commission on Tuesday and th chll
dren wera fathered up la touring
rs crested Into aervlca.
Two horliontal bars bar been
added to tha playground equipment
of tha achool and ara proving very
popular.
Arthur and Albert Mefford were
tinrno nn a short visit early in th
week. Arthur Is In th" navy and
stationed at Bremerton. Albett
wheat farming near Condon.
W. A. Goodwin will represent
Boardman and tb John ty irri
lion crolect at the Northern Pacific
land conference In Portland th
Week.
Ilsy bating la going fof ward as ft
at tha limited equipment for lb
Dfk wilt Bermil. Of the l" car
loads In sight only abut tn carload
art baled and rady for immdiaU
hlDmfit.
Roolfi tlrtbdar
The ladles of the Aid Society will
I serve a cafeteria dinner from 11:00
to 2:00 In the school lunch room on
election day, November 2. The voting
will tike place in the office of the
school,
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ball
anger, October 2Sth, an eight pound
girl, who will be called Mnxinc.
Mother and child arc doing well.
J. E. Calavan, boys' and girls' In
dustrial club field worker from the
office ofo the state superintendent
of public instruction, wal In Board-
man Wednesday and Thursday In or-
Kanlzutlon work among pupils of the
hools. With the cooperation of the
principal, M. H. Slcns, strong clubs
ere organized In pork production.
poultry, sheep, rooking, and sewing.
The gardening and calf clubs are not
yet complete. A special club of In
terest Is one of ten boys In eooklni:.
Ilarty ("uminitu'i. the sllver-
ongued orutor of Heppner, pre
sented a tnuMng roniiuetnt on the po-
itlral Issiiea of the (lay in the school
auditorium Thuinl.iy nluht.
Washington, where she will visit her
friends for a few weeks before re
turning home.
Wid Palmeteer and daughter, Mies
Cleta, of Windynook were calling on
their Cecil friends on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Fansliier and
party of Four Mile spent a short time
in Cecil on Sunday.
Mrs. John Nash and family of Ew
ing left on Monday for The Dalles,
where they will reside for the winter
months.
Miss Zeila Kelly, teacher of Cecil
school, spent the week-end at her
hornet in Hood River.
Mr. and Mrs. Springer and family of
the Poplars left on the local on Mon
day for Portland.
Miss LqIs Easterly and Esther Lo
gan of Four Mile were Cecil visitors
on Saturday.
Henry Slender of Seldomseen, J.
E. Crabtree of Dotheboy's Hill,, and
W. A. Thomas of Benson were all Ce
cil callers on Sunday.
W. L. McCaleb, county Roadmas
ter, was a Cecil caller on Tuesday.
Harold Ahalt came in from Echo
on Wednesday and spent a shoft time
in Cecil before joining a number of
friends who were all bound for the
mountains on a hunting trip.
Geo. A. Miller of Highview and
Walter Pope of .Cecil were in lone on
Thursday and were present at the
1 funeral of Wesley McNabb.
Mr. and Mrs. Assur Montague and
friends from Eight Mile were calling
on their Cecil friends on Thursday.
"Mayor" of Cecil and his "deputy"
made a hurried run to Heppner on
Wednesday to attend the Farm Bu
reau committee meeting on behalf of
the Cecil community.
Roy Scott, who has been camp
tending for Hynds Bros, near Granite,
arrived in Cecil on Thursday and will
spend his vacation at Butter Flats.
It is rumored he will leave in the
near future for Mexico, but not alone,
Mrs. Weltha Conibest of Cecil vis
ited with Mrs. Everett Logan on
Thursday.
Ralph Winter and family of Four
Mile left on Saturday for Yakima
where they will visit their friends for
a few days.
Old Cottonwood at Norris City, IIL,
Has Interesting History Was
'Planted by Boy in 1815.
eight. The price of the supper is I hct WAS UiMCi A HANUbflKt
nominal. i 1
The Tum-a-Lum Lumber Com
pany's building has been moved east
ward about 40 foet, giving a fuller
view of the railroad crossing so near
by. This is regarded as a move in
I the interest of safety to the traveling
public, as the distance from the state
highway to the railway crossing is
but a short one.
! I '
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v 1
IRRIGON
ORDAINED A MINISTER
4 4 ! 4 ! ! 4 4 4 4 4
CECIL
4
4 4, I,4,
Boyd Logan of Four Mlla left for
Portlsnd on Friday for a visit among
hit friends for tha nut few weeks.
M. and Mrs. T. W. May of Una
fltar ranch wr doing business In Ar
lington on Friday. J. W. Osborn,
Walter Pope, rirnr and Uatph
Winter wer also Arlington visitor
on Friday.
A. lentikon of Willow ranch
pent a fw ni during lb "
with t,t nt his t'bers at Walia
Wslla.
Sir. and Mrs William Winter tit
F'-ur Mil' were railing on their Cecil
friends in Saturday
Mr, and Mrs Uk MyM and fami
ly spent Bjndsy amoni their friends
ta l"B.
M m A. C Iw arrtd In "wil
on Saturday after spending hr vaca
tion in Portland and vicinity.
Mft. Co. A Mill'f of Mihvl
tft eo Raturday for Battleground,
I
.yeex
1
s f-- V V.2
aT
Mrs. Clemma Kills Whft of New
Tork, for tha past 19 ycara anpr1ntnd.
ent of the West Hid mission, waa or
dalncd Into tha ministry by lha unan
imous vols of 14 clergynwn sitting In
IntenlMinmlnatlotial creumll, Tba i
amlnstton pretlons to tha mevtlnc
WSS basd on Iwrlenr, tluxtlogtrnl
faltb and call to tba ministry, and tba
testa ara aald ta hava tin very rigid.
Imprevtd Trtatmaet of Rubbar.
By curing on a roui)d msndrvl, a
new plintilc rubber mat la ft ten an
j lmperceptlr.l curl that causes It to
' cling clcwty to bathroom floor and
similar aurfscea. rina enrrugsttons
ilmi.srt feeling of aftneis. A tha
aurfara can acrublisJ and thoronf t
ly cleaol. tba itial la rwroiimetidel
for Ita sanitary quality, aa well aa for
tiracma dark eviora that adapt It for
rarest prwteniew la frot of dvorw
flnssira and Ibt Itkav
4 4- 4 4- 4 4- 4 v 4-
Mr. M. W. Skinner and his family,
consisting of wife and three boys, re.
cently arrived in Irrigon, and hope to
remain for several montths at least,
to make a study of the country be
fore settling permanently somewhere
In the northwest. The boys enter the
5th, 7th and 8th grades of the local
school.
A force of ten or twelve men are
at work erecting the walls of the new
school building. They are now above
the first floor line, nnd the casings
for the second story are In place.
Halloween was celebrated Satur
day evening by the young people of
Irrigon In a Halloween social. There
was a short and appropriate progrum
full of the Halloween spirit, and a
box luncheon refreshment feature. In
which the ladies had prepared ttwo
fantastic hatB one to be worn by the
purchaser at auction, and the other
to be donned after the rale by the
lady who made It. By matching hats
ihe buyer and the provider of the box
were brought together to enjoy the
contents thereof. Much labor was
expended In the decorations.
Mr. Wudrworth, Irrlgon's lone mer
chant, has treated himsvlf to a new
display counter, and on th's account
has received many compliments for
his enterprise. While he was making
hie change he had part of the floor
Mlald wit hnew haleilal. Altogether
the Improvement adds tto theconven
tence of the patrons as well as to his
on n.
On the evening f TTiursday, 11. e
4 1 h of November, Mr. Ilendtlek will
appear before the Irrigon public nt
(be cb'irch In his own program of
iouhIc. He will be u.iteil by mem
ber ofo his family. Tins uppeamiire
Is at the invitation of the l.iuliei Club
and under their auspices. A latge at
tendance s solicited. Tbketa ate
now on sale at COc and 25c.
The local branch of tha Fsrm Bu
reau will hava Ha next regular meet
Ing Saturday evening, November t.
and after the business of the evening
shall have been concluded, and hour
or tnwo will be devoted to thet prac
tice of tha art lerpslrhorean. The
local branch la a live organisation.
On account of the state of her
health Mlsa Dale, the leather of the
primary gradea nf the rrit!n shol.
baa darned It Dece.ssry to sk the
school board to rclee tn r ss soon
as they csn secure some one to I ike
her pUre. t'ftder this r! Iiari'li-
rsp, Mi" Ile has made a rel
ord as a t'arber, and It il'I be In
ferreting to See what she n.ikht b'
able to arromplih und' r nofriml
halth conditions. Many rerrt to
lose l.er from Our srl.ool, but tl.e
th)icin asms against bri runt nu
snce un'il She recovers her beiltbl
and f ngtb.
The ladlis Club has snnouncerj an
oyster supper aa a fitting close f"f
election day. Tbla will be served at
tba church from flva o'cIckIi unnl
4 4 4- 4 'V 4 4 4 -V 4 4 4 4 4
M.r. and Mrs. T. B. Buffinpton, for
mer residents of lone but now of Pen
dleton, came Tuesday to attend the
funeral of Mr. W. T. McNabb, who
passed away last Monday at his home
in our city.
The .Chautauqua of the Ellison-
White company will open at the lone
rink Wednesday, November 10 and
continue to the 15th, inclusive.
Mrs. Chas. Howe has been suffer
ing the past week with a severe at
tack of asthma, and her friends are
glad to learn, she is much improved
the last few days.
Mrs. B. E. Emrick of Philomath
will arrive Tuesday and will keep
house for her husband while he har
vests his grain,, which will take about
two weeks. MMr. Emrick has been
very unfortunate in getting his grain
harvested before so late.
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Haines are vis
iting in Portland this week.
F. S. Bender, a former lone mer
chant, came from Colfax, Wash., to
spend a few days in our city on busi
ness. Mr. Bender has been in the
general merchandise business at Col
fax but has recently sold. He has
not decided where he will locate, but
at present will make that his home.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hale and
daughter Juanita, and the former's
niece, Miss Mildred Hale, motored
from Yakima Wednesday nnd spent
the week end with Mr. Hale's mother
and other relatives, returning home
Sunday.
C. W. McNamer, manager of the
lone meat market,, is a business visit
oro in Portland this week, having ac
companied a load of pigs to the Port-
in d market.
Wayne Sperry left Thursday for
Portland, where he will visit for a
ew days with his sister, Miss Bea
trice, who has a position in, the First
Naloional Bank.
Mrs. J. T. Knappenherg of Tort-
land spent a few days last week'as a
guest of her daughter, Mrs. A. E.
Johnson of Well Spring. Mrs. Knapp-
nberg and daughter, Miss Jole Wool-
cry, will remain for some time as she
expects to study music at the Boston
Conservatory.
At Norris City, 111., there is a tres
nowri as the "vaulllng-po'e cotton
wood" that lia an interesting history
which is to'.d by the American For
esrry Magazine (Washington) as fol
lows :
Ilosea Pierce nnd a boy comrade re
turned from the war of 1S12 to their
homes, near Nnrris City, in the spring
of lSir. and on January 8 of that
yeir they had helped General Jack
soi' whip the British In the Battle of
New Orleans.
These boys both attended a log
rolling on the old Pierce farm that
spring, nnd as they were reuirning to
the house after their day's work made
a wager who could vault the furthest,
using their cottoriwood handspikes as
vaulting poles. They both left their
handspikes sticking in the soft earth
where they had vaulted, and duriryj
the spring rains of 1S15 they both
took root and lived.
One of these trees died about ten
years ago, but the other is still living
and Is 105 years old. This tree is
about thirty teet In circumference, 375
feet high, with a very large hollow 1n
the base of the tree which has been
used as a housing for setting hens, a
kennel for dogs nnd Is always a fine
playhouse for children.
CLOUDS ARE EARTH'S VEIL
If Ceen From the Moon They Would
Appear as Mere Film Separating
the Earth.
The layer of cloud covering the
earth Is relatively very thin. If, for
example, we could examine the earth
from the moon we would doubtless
see a veil of cloud covering little
more than half the surface. At that
distance the clouds would have no
texture, the earth would appear
swathed in an Irregular sheet of
formless vapor, through which, from
time to time, the land and water areas
could be seen.
The cloud cover of the earth Is most
attenuated; It may be compared to a
film, for It Is supposed to be less than
one-elght-hundrcdtli of the earth's di
ameter In vertical thickness.
The thinness of the earth's atmos
phere may be more clearly compre
hended If we realize that the relative
thickness of the cloud layer on an
eight-inch terrestrial globe would be
nhout one-hundredth of an Inch. Yet
It Is In this thin belt thnt clouds form,
so that it is seen our weather Is pro
duced within limited counties. The
Ace.
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I-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-
HARDMAN
t t T t ?
(Received too lato for last week.)
The high school Is planning a pro
gram for Armistice Pay. If arrange
ments arc completed It will take
place on the afternoon of Nov. 10th.
Two young men of llardman, Ver
non Leathers unci I.oulH hath, left
Sunday morning for Portland.
The physics laboratory npparlus
arrived Monday evening.
School opened after the return of
the teachers, Miss Klhel I'opcnhaver,
Miss Ethel Clark, Mrs. Harriet Brown
and tho Misses Minnie arid Florence
Spicor from the Institute'
Several of the local men have been
absent on a hunting trip, ('hiuh
Mclmniel and licit Ulciikin.m
brought in two deer.
Heveral of the young people of
ll.mlii nn attended the "Hound up'
In Id at Wright Pros, on pbeacruk
They reported an rtijo:.be lime.
I The Hollow, en p.uty whl. h Mr
.arid Mrs. Itmlow planned for the hl,h
iMiiool pupils V.HH (iirinlcd Imtjiuni
Itlielr son Hay acciileiitly broke tils
i leg while playing at school.
Ilardinsn Is going tu have a Sun
Jay school, Three auto loads of peo
ple came over Sunday afternoon from
Heppner to help start and plan for
tha Hunday school.
Mr. Harry Curumlnga of Heppner
gave a political talk here Raturday
night. A danra followed tha meeting.
There will be another dance In
Hardrnan on Tuesday evening at the
Ashbaugh Hull. The Leathers orchis
tra will furnish the music.
Mr. Ayers found a collection of
ui ful. and otherwise. Implements In
front of bis store uu Monday mom-
mi? Front all reports the giiljlr ones
I- bis ri.i.f a ids In clearing the
l'l 4lM.
nu i.
Mr ru turners snd the pubiir c n
rullv are hereby rsp-cifyly noli
fieri that i.n snd after November J,
I ':'!, all boise shoring done In toy
hop I." strictly rash
Frank Kblvrly
Tha Old Red Barn Passea.
Boyhood days without n hnyloft ara
like a play without a stage. The auto
mobile has vanquished the big red
barn, as the cement bottomed pool baa
tho old swimming pool. Tho center
of boyhood life has dlseappeared. 1m
uglne the gnng sneaking off from trust
ing parents on a hot afternoon mifl
congregating In the shiny new garage.
Where can they conceal tho forbidden
weapons, or the tlmmb-miirked yellow
back that mother thinks haa long since
fallen Into the ash heap? Where do
they hide to escape tho starched shirt
and stiff shoes and the party? Wliero
are the circuses given T The train rob
beries planned? And the hulr-nilslog
stories repealed? The carefree scones
of boyhood Ufa has disappeared, lm
no Held to grow and expand In. Half
the joys of youth have vanished with
tho passing of the old red burn. Sum
mer Session KatiHiui.
Imposing en Hospitality.
In Ahiliiiinn a negro team driver
came home one night and found Ida
wife highly agitated.
"Jeff," she said, "you know dnt Asa
Rogers' wife, Sullle, Is dcml. Ain't
you gnlii' to bu a pallbearer at do
fun'rl ?"
"No, I ain't," answered Jeff with
Uliuiiiiil po!tlvelicH.
"You ain't I Well, wasn't you a pall
bearer at d fun'r'l of bis second wife,
Mell-li?"
"So I wax. But dnt ain't"
"Ln wn'i't you a pallbearer at dtt
fun'r'l of bis lint wife, M.iodie? What
you iie-i.n, you ain't goiu' to a t dia
timer'
'Lira." be snld. "atitlttity, I us
pallbearer nt item fun'r'K en I dona do
best I could, but I'm tellln yuu now
I ain't acreptln no mo favora from
nobody wbut I can't returu." L"rv
don lit Bits.
Catting DssparaU.
fellt Frankfurter of tba I'opnUr
Government leagua, aald at a banquet
la Cambridge:
"Tba authorities, to aoothe oa for
Ibey sea ne'ra fttlnf preitv lerr
ate the authorities now declare that
tha high cost of ll.lr.g la gotiif to
fail."
Mr. Frankfurter nisda a fstura of
acorn and Incredulity.
"Well. It bsa fallen," La aald ".n
tba coiisutner."
aa ce,r.
Rubscrlba for tba "Harald" tad
get all tba county
Idsaa Confused.
"Hnw are the wn.ei bera
vertiH ,i!!sUi"
"I t.a light one frr tt ere Is rs'! r
beaty, but tha dr g'rl leMe Mr
la very light."
tatramee Msetmg.
Tba atettririiin !' as aa tba
apt ass rertsMiir a Ha aire."
"How do job kouwT"
"I could tell by tba way ba bav
d.ed tba dead wee."