: v. ... . .. ..v. m f - . Six rwmjarw THE HEPPNER HERALD. HEPPNER. OREGON Tuesday. January 4. 102 1 I 'I Refuse to Take the Million Legacy Because the Money Is Not Mine." 5 A D ' 1 1 n ABM Cc lwau. Wntftrn Newspaper Union.) SOMETHING TO DrtlNK. More insistent than the call for food Is the demand for drink. The sense By CIIAKLES GARLAND, Buzzards Bay, N. Y. . 1 V I have renounced my right to a millioii-dullar lefraey left rne by 1 my father. I refuse to take the money because it is not mine. A system . which starves thousands -while hundreds are stuffed condemns itself. A (system which leaves a sick woman helpless and offers its services to a healthy man condemns itsdf. It is such a system that offers me a mil lion dollars. It is blind to the simplest truth known to every child, the truth that the hungry should he fed and the naked clothed. I have had to choose between the loss of pruale properly and the law which is written in every human heart. I choose the one which I believe to be true. I believe I could do no good with the money. It is the man who gives food to the hungry who : t, not the dollars given in exchange for the food. I would be happy to be the man if I had the food to give, but I cannot lend myself to handling the money that is not mine even though tint good that might be done is possibly great. There are great opportunities to do good, but they are in men's hearts, not ii the check book. "Perhaps You Don't Know" says the Good Judge How long a little of the Real Tobacco Chew will last. Nor how much gen uine chewing satisfac tion the full, rich real .obac;o taste will give. Ask f,ny iiiiu'i who usc3 the Meal Tobacco Cher,'. He will tell you thc.t this class cf tobacco will give more satisfac tion and at less cost than the ordinary kind. Put up in two styles W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF FURNITURE, CARPETS, RUGS, LINOLEUMS, ETC., HAS BEEN PLACED ON SPEC ANNUAL INVENTORY AT REDUCTIONS OF FROM TEN TO FORTY PER CENT. -r xr r Sl W t. JiL. S A V E S M I 1j 1 tn. f- 1.1 nr 1 itii f. lrJ , vj. v: ivi. '.- ..-4--., , .,'1 - ! - J l'r.:'i '-"" ; . " -...;.v . ( , r 1 " ! of hunger may depart, hut thirst Is seldom di minished. The thought of food In Illness Is often distasteful, but the de sire for fluids Is intensi fied. While water is the natural beverage, an In finite variety of other drinks may be prepared for those who 'ire well 111 or 111. In illness, besides nuonehing the thirst, they reduce the temperature of the fever patient. They also may serve as a form In which nourishment may be given when solid food cannot bo taken. Other drinks relieve nausea, stimulate the heart, excite the gastric Juices, con trol the bowels and prove soothing to a congested state of the alimentary canal. All drinks should he subject to the advice of the attending physleUm, for even harmless grape juice may bo fatal in cases recovering from typhoid. Like everything else prepared for the Invalid's table all beverages should be made and served with nil possible daintiness. A smeary, thick glass of lukewarm lemonade or other drink which should be cold would nau seate a person who was not 111. A pretty shaped tumbler or sherbet cup standing on a pretty plate protected, by a dainty doily will appeal to the eye before its delicious coolness is tasted. When beverages are carried to the sick room they should always be cov ereJ and never left uncovered in the sick l'dom. Very hot beverages stimulate the digestive fluids, while very cold ones retard but lower the temperature In fever. Various other fruits and fruit juices may be used with orange or lemon or alone, such as pineapple, currant, ber ries 'and grapes. Most fruit juices are more acceptable when chilled, elthe. near the lee or having chipped Ice added. Orange juice alone, strained and served well chilled, is an agree able and mildly laxative drink very popular with most people. It Is given a tablespoonful between feedings to El IE I vnung naiuos wirn very cnod roonlfa I r wypr"WrT TH k If &4 E 8 S Tic t :5 1 - X'y.in in 1 if ls. M X.. jLjl JM- jrWy ij . .... (j. ... VwM '; ? Still" y ! mm mrM . . Plrfc tfl' ' ' L ItitwTZi I nnilERE is a natural likinsr for music in the mind of every child, therefore fill the all-receptive child I mind with harmony. Begin ics musi- With a Brunswick Phonograpn and Brunswick Records in your home the means of producing music at its best are always at hand. It will, therefore, be distinctly to your advantage to know Brunswick Phonographs and Brunswick Rec ords before you make your choice. Come in when convenient and we will be delighted to assist you to, coming to a decision. Oscar R. Otto IAL --- , Extra Special Prices on FELT MATTRESSES v r h is a natural iikif lor mm 1 1 v - dt A u 1f n ml ?u II r if i HP 1 b -i ' ft ity' r SALE PRIOR TO MAKING OUR PATHE WAS $150.00 NOW ONLY $100.00 I AP H o mi I 4 ;.5 f, i I