Tueday. November 23. 1020. THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON Five 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 f. o 0 0 0 0 r Q f. : a a o o o o O O o O o 0 o o o o o o o What the Sphinx Says By Newton Newkirk. smelly "V here there's nnich smoke there's of tim an Im perfecto Cabbngo ci gar or a okl pipe." ing Day OCAL HAPPENINGS From Neighboring Towns ALWAYS IT WORK Jury t uts Down Turner Claim A damage suit involving a quantity of wheat, in which E. H. Turner was plaintiff and Gustave Friedwald was defendant, was tried in Judge Phelps' court, last Thursday. The amount claimed by Mr. Turner was $840.00. After hearing the evidence the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $37 5.00. Woodson & Sweek represented the plaintiff in the case,, and Sam E. Van Vactor appeared for the defendant. CECIL Geo. D. Anderson, camp-tender for Hynd Bios., arrived at llutterby Flats on Sunday from Hynd Ilios. roneh at t'kiah with a fine bunch of young horses This good old New England custom of counting blessings and giving thanks therefore, is becoming world-wide in ob servance. There arc many things to be thankful for if you give the matter careful attention. If you have opened an account at our bank and regularly deposited your savings, you . can be thankful for the snug sum you now have on hand for emergency. If you have not done that, you can at least be thankful for the fact that the opportunity is still at hand for you to start an account, and that a good, reliable Dank is ready to care for v your deposits. If you can't be thankful for that well, you can at least be thankful that you are not a turkey ! First National Bank Heppner, Oregon The blue stone lime method of seed treatment is preferable to formalde hyde for late fall planting. This is one of the many helpful hints con tained in the circular published by the department of plant pathology, O. A. C. This circular (No. 176) is on the treatment of seed for smut prevention, and may be had by writ ing the college. Hoardman district next week for the purpose of studying irrigation first hand, and to give the Commercial Club some advice. The Ladies Aid will hold a bazaar and food sale at the church Friday ; evening, December 10. Kvory lady on the project is asked to contribute some article of food or fancy voi. !A good social time is promised and Henry Krcbs of the Last Camp was every one invited. one of the many guests who attended Neighbors All The next imnort- the dinner party on Sunday given by i ant event on the calendar is the Hid Saved His Horse Mr. R. L. Mclntyre, of Altoona Ala., says: "Dr. LeGear's Antiseptic Healing Powder quickly healed some bad wire cuts on my horse. I defy any stranger to find the slightest scar on him." Dr. LeGear's Advice and Remedy saved this valuable animal. He warns you not to leave a wound, sore, or cut exposed, but to dust on Dr. Le Gear's Antiseptic Healing Fowder, which instantly forms an antiseptic protection and promotes healthy healing. In his 28 years of Veterinary Prac tice and Expert Poultry Breeding, Dr. LeGear has compounded a remedy for every curable ailment of stock or poultry. Whenever they require a remedy, it will pay you, as it did Mr. Mclntyre, to purchase from your dealer the proper Dr. Le Gear remedy on n sat isfactlon or money b?.ek guar-. antee. Mr. and Mrs. Phil Brady at their home near lone. Miss Lois Easterly of Four Mile spcont a short time in Cecil on Sun day. Mrs. Ista Bauernfiend of lone spent Sunday with Peter Baurenl'iend ta Cecil. Mrs. Bauernfiend will win ter in Portland. Walter Pope has been visiting friends in Eight Mile during the past few days. Roy Stender and sister. Miss Tessie of Seldomseen, accompanied by Mr.. Crabtree and family of Dotheboy Hill were calling on their friends anound Cecil on Sunday. Everrett Logan of Fairview arrived on Sunday ' from Merrill, Oregon, where he had been called by the death of his wife's father. Mrs. Weltha Com best and sister, Man's Network cf Brains Really at Rest. iever COMMUNITY D1XXK11 on Thanks giving day at the school house. All who can will bring a picnic basket or some item of iood as they are able. Bachelors and unattached gentlemen will contribute 2 5c or 50c to meet the expense of the occasion. There will be a good program. It has been suggested that the nimrods of the community get out their trusty guns and capture a wagon load ofducks. The ladies volunteer to cook them. Owing to the bazaar mentioned above the next regular meeting of the Farm Bureau will be held on Friday night, December 17. Program, re freshments and election of officer. The Grange holds its election of of ficers Saturday, December 11. There will he a picnic dinner at the usual time Road election called for November 27 at Hie school house. This is the Mrs. E. J. Logan of Portland, visited Saturday following 0OOOOOOOOOeOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOi Stsir 1 fie aire h A V r WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4. De VINE Magician Also some good pictures " Comedy and Scenic. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25 iMaiH'e I .umpire Th' iinpi.ii r,i i y .lit r00000 0 0 0 0 0 0 C. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ri'tn.-'.i'iv "In Search cf a Sinner' r;:i:;,Y. NO1 l;'t with Mrs. L. H. Lowe on Monday. Joe Mason of lone was a busy man in Cecil on Friday delivering his car load of potatoes to his various cus tomers in the v'cinity. Mr. and Mrs. Ball and daughter of Morgan were doing business in Cecil on Froday, and also Mr. and Mrs. George Hardesty of Morgan were call ing on friends in Cecil the same day. Mrs. T. H. Lowe of Cecil wishes to thank all those who have responded to the Red Cross Roll Call for renew ing their memberships. Any one wishing to be a member may leave their dollar at Cicil store and receive their receipt and button at the Eante time. Mrs. Bradford and childrea from Prairie City arrived in Cecil on Sun day. They will visit with Mr. Brad ford who is working on come bridge work in connection with t;ie Cecil scenic highway. T. W. Lowe who has been spend ing some time at Kitter Spring.!, re turned to his home in Cecil on Sun day. J. M. Allyn, who has been visiting W. A. Tltoinas ol Benson's Canyon, left on the local for his home in Oak Uro e on Wciinei-day. A fine band of lambs belonging to Mrs. I'al I'arb of the Willows, pa ;-e 1 through Cril on Monday. Kin. it Molir t.rriveil ri llutterby Flats mi Wi oni . il.i.v Innu l!,,nd line. rand, at Fn v mt, while In' i ; ; linen winking lor muw time. Roy Scull, cninp-tenili r fur .I nk Mwl. ami J. Fnd"i v I, h'ldrr, also re- 'tunnd to liuli'iliy Flats the rame iay Willi n lire band of ihi.p which will v inter on Iliiitithy Flats. Tie- "Mayi.r ' ru.de aa tdiort visit in 11 pp-ii 1 0:1 .-.'.tiniltiy ihiiin,: ihe lii'utv ma'.ut's ale nr.- at the slocl; : I nn :il Pm" land. M OllM- l.i".. .ti el I'nrtl in. I. v.l.' , . i !. -. In ; w i ' 'i In r bt i.i I.. 1 I,. mi : F1..11 M :!e, 1 ,t I .. ;i !i Mr,. . It !..- k I 11 I'.ii!; v. Than k slaving. 5 mills special The purpose is to vote tax. Most of the parts in the community play have been assigned. A few more books have been sent for. Rehearsals will begin soon after Thanksgiving A school bank has been organized in the endeavor to develop habits of thrift among the pupils. Deposits from one cent up may be made. When .13c has been deposited a thrift siamp may Do had if desired. If pre ferred, when one dollar has been de posited an account may be opened with a real bank. Money mav be nut in or taken out at any time. This In good training for the pupils and we hope that the parents will give them every encouragement. WANT AltS FOR SALE 480-acre mountain sheep ranch, house, barn, Kliods, running water, pionty of outside range. $10 per cere. Mrs. J. O. French, Her:niston,. Or. 2!pd NOTICE 1 will pay no blll.i ton traded by Helena Louise Martin lifter this date, Nov. ti, 1D20. M. C. Martin. f- Every Action of the Eady Controlled by Thousands of Nerves of Which Few Persons Have Any Ade quate Conception. It is only within recent times that the brain has been recognized as a thinking organ, the ancients having lo cated the thinker In the liver. Put even in the good old days then) were physiologists who regarded the kidneys as the real sent of the mind. Even nowadays we speak of a person as being "of the same kidney" us ourselves. We speak of a coward ns a "white livered" individual. An ill-tempered person we call "splenetic," because In earlier days the emotion of anger was supposed to be engendered in the spleen, Indeed, the word spleen Is In our language a synonym for nngry ir ritability. It was formerly Imagined that the gentle emotions were engendered in the heart, an idea that even now holds its grip to a considerable extent. Thus we speak of a "kind-hearted" person or of a "loving heart." The lover calls his lady fair his "sweetheart." . To refer to the hearts that decorate every valentine seems superfluous. As a matter of fact, the heart is in a certain sense an emotional center. Joy makes it flutter; fright will cause it for a moment or two to stop beat ing. This is because there is In the heart n considerable assemblage of the "ganglia," which are In effect tiny brains, being mainly composed of the same sort of gray matter that goes to make up the cerebral cortex. Acting as a group, It Is their business to control the rhythmic pulsations of the heart. These little brains, strung like bends along the sympathetic nerve, are dis tributed through the body. One tinds the biggest bunch of them In a com plex Interphieement of nerves behind the stomach. This Is the "solar plex us" we have heard so much about. It Is, of course, a highly sensitive piece of apparatus, so much so that a hard blow In the stomach may kill a man. You have probably noticed that keen anxiety will give you an uiieomfort able and even slcklsh feeling in the region of the stomach. The solar plexus is responsible. It Is perfectly true that some of your thinking is done for you by your liver, your heart, your kidneys mm other parts of our body. Xhiety-iilne per cent of the things yon do are doni) automatically and without conscious effort of the iiilml. The tlioiisiiiidH of little brains distributed throughout your body lire at work helping. They know their business better than you know It. Try to tlx your mind on the tying of your fotir-ln hand scurf and you are likely to thid yourself doing It much more clumsily than if you "let the thing do Itself." K LEASE- I .'.in) acres of finei i mountain slu op pas lire I'll nty water. $xn per vear. Mi.i. . .) licit, llereiiMoa, Or. J'iid Fn Arlington ( VleliiiiteM LLOVI) IHTl'III.V-'n.N , dj,.,,, presses and n p.ris men'" cml p, die.i' ilothin;;. ';it inflict it.lt IMi.ir- aiifi'i d. 2 'i .!! I'OI! SALE Ford Touring car first-class- condilion. Kniiiin Snyder, Heppner Soda Works. ; FSII!ON.iI.K DliKS.'M AKINi; j Itemoil. I.ng and Ladi.V Tailor, ! Mis. Cuiren, Hnm-h st:ii . Ailini'lon is celehi lit ing todcy the fail that Ihe Slate Highway ('om-iiii::-lon has desli'tialcd Hint town as ihe point wh.'ic Ihe John Day High way yill rohti.cl Willi Hie Ciiliiiiiln i ; i v i r Highway. 'Hon will ! biu cooso dinner and a grand ball, an I lit. Donnelly, who has li. i n (lie rim f booster for ..id dci lopmi tit, will I"' pi esoeiitcil w,ii a gold lii-.ole I lam or some other alu.ible t.d.i n ol appreciation. Sub. the i ibi- for run my lo Hi tabl Only $ and git I a v at. M- Mid M ' . I . I I r: .1 V it KVaf;on Tracks' 3 i f; riiANKPUL YOUNG5TERS 1 ERS J s SATUnnAY.NOVKMUKK;; i:-.. '..: !' m : "Respectable by Proxy I. .a t ti t-.;t li til. !' i t' i . i .1 ! ti I ; SUN' DAY. NOVEMBER I k i ; '( i , ". . , : i f : i, "Out of Luck" lNI. O O I.I a . o Q O o 0 O O O o o a a o o o o 0 o o !..l 1 1 .1 A o, f , ' V: A f , . . 9 -' 1 EOARDMAN TI. :i ri .1 In i mi u I lin!.- l'.i; :i- i ,i! Hcppncr Bakery Bread ..! I I.. t.n.1 N ' ... , p. I., I I . I II . I . , !4'. f 1 1 . .', ,r1 I.. 4 I anil, I I :', t i I, t! .. 1 1 I ... I. cm i : .. . I t i;i ! till l' i . ;i it -I t: l-.l 'I " I' I III t !,,i. l.. I !! b lid I If Only 10 Cents n Loaf llUl'l'NICK I1AKI:KY, M. W. Ilainmrr, Piop. It.Kt nil oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo 0