TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1921 THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON PAGE THREE APRIL SALE OF TAILORING MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHES AT LESS THAN READY-MADES Right down in your heart you've always wanted to wear clothes tailored to your exact measure TODAY THE PRICES ARE WITHIN YOUR REACH We're showing bright, new spring fabrics that we tailor to your measure at , $35-$40-$45 ORDER YOUR SPRING SUIT TODAY Lloyd Hutchinson Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing, Repairing When Lovely Woman Gave Up Fainting and Took Up Smoking Instead. By G. BERNARD SHAW, English Man of Letters. J 6 U'n N.w..nim Unlui Masculine auVotalione were always a mistake. During the movement for the liberal education of women and their mimiKsicm to the professions, the followers of John Stuart Mill and Henry Fawcett cut their hair short, put on men's stilf collars and cravats, wore waistcoats and shirtfronts and wutehohains, and made themselves mannish 'above the waist while re maining qnakerish below it. The counter-movement has not balanced itself yet. It culminated in the campaign of the sutTragets, which was conducted with extraordinary violence and resisted with frantic sav agery. Hut before it broke into volcanic eruption it had obliterated the would-be manly women. The sulfragets insisted on their womanliness much more consciously and strenuously than the ,rictorian women. The manly pluwc, however, had established toleration for practices which, though formerly conl'med to men, were really as proper or im proper to women as lo men. For instance, women gave up crying and fainting, and took to swearing and smoking. When toy mother formed her habits, smoking by women, or even in th;ir pre-nee. was rnhcard of. There was not even a smoking room in the house. Men wen! down to the kitchen late at night and smoked up the chimne). When women discoered that, the toleration and even the practice of smoking was the price of male company, they first tolerated and then practiced. The habit is one of the most extraordinary aberration.' of our civilization, imposed on us as it was by the redskin at the climax of the Renascence Men were always a little ashamed of it, and were ac tually heading for its rentmr iation wh.'n women gave it an enormous im pulse and made it quite shameless. In the nineteenth century we could hope smoking might tlisapear in the twentieth. Now people who do Dot smoke have to choose between stale tobacco and social ostracism, A refinement wn supposed to be proper to women and roughness nMir to men fifty years ago, the great increase in companionship be tweou men and women during that period was bound either to refine the men or roughen the women. It has done both. Tho feminine refinement, which was only silliness disguised by affection, haa gone, and women are hardier and healthier, ami the stock si.es of their clothes ara larger it inse(uence. The masculine vigor that was only boorishness, slovenliness and neg lect of person and clothes ha-s tied before feminine criticism. Hut the generalization that women are refined and men rough by nature is a super ficial one, holding good only when, iw often happens, the iuau's occupation ik rougher than the woman's. 'The Great Puritan Emirrration Was Not the Foundation of America." fly GU.UKKT K. CilESTEHTON. flritis'i Fannyist. Whatever the great l'uritan emigration whs it w.ts emphatically not the foundation of America. The Puritan emigration was not even tin foundation of Knglish America, as distinct from Spanish America. At least a whole generation before the Calvinist ipianels, one of the adven turous antagonists of Spanish America had c-daMislit 1 the first defiant frontiers of F.nglish America. KaJ.ugh and the Klpahcthans gave to their c-olony a magnificent Flrabethan name, houcver little it niav have been merited by Kliziibeth. Hut whether or no its origin was worthy of it, its hi-torv was wholly worf't of it. Nolhinsr in the American story has h-oti more truly heroic or humane, more truly ftted to last among men as a b'ifi ud, than the story of what we may still lie tempted to call the great ii.itioii of VirirmiH. It is a commonplace to siv that Virginia was th very throne of the authority of the devolution. From Virgin's came Washington, its hero, and .l.vTersoii, its prophet. The stale ttat. known as the Mother of I'resi dei l -. It a fc't a a s.rt of em. in il chamber of the Father (if the Ke public. Not t.i follow its pno'a! i :!.i T t!i;o'. 't Is i Hoc: t :IV Yn a to the (i'de, W ;i- i'lt'1 . Ill i'' ' r .1. ic M 'u u i-, t el i: ' a h coc o! Ii ' the fi !:!'! !l ' w i . i;;c!t,i!,s V.e-'i i ! a f w :ia with Ch..r!c ; i i . ih, ; '-' . :in m . ' v II. s'lot:!. but ll.U U tual hivt.iry tlirougli a thousand n the I'ml viar, the ai!he;vnc of il p.-l-i v ht.-h leipj-eiie.) to Iv the loing t !-s. 'i a!'' t tnrr.i I it into the winning side. it, iir.-i' tV itevt ef Ann rein generals, t of Ar.i '"!:. 1 ri M I' v cm ivt una r.ne whv Uncle Walte an.' en !-. lih I 1 :I1H iiiciiti'!:!a!iv w'!'t a-i.ie aiii! forgotten in favor : 1 1 . . . !:o luijip ncd to j.urtv!, GOOD OLD TIMES iTROr. WINDYRPIEL delivered XT fine lecture last evening," said Mrs. Jamesworthy. . "He held up to scorn the pessimist who nays the world Isn't getting better, and de scribed conditions as they were hun- area years ago. Then people trr eled on foot or on horseback, and a ,y)8hort Journey wu sertons matter; there were no tel- - , 41 f " 'ephonea, no elec VJcLJ I snon of the con- venlenees we are OtJaed to." , . " ' "It 18 true there I nconveniences In those day." re- "" ,,r""'" t .piled James worthy, "and for that reason I think the old times were better than the present I only wish the old condi tions could be restored. A hundred years ago the married man had no reason to dread the poorhouse. It was practically Impossible for women to be extravagant then. If they want ed to 'blow themselves they had to go to town, and In order to get to town they had to ride in old coaches which weren't as comfortable as a modern hayrack. "The woman of a hundred years ago couldn't lean back in an easy chair and order a hundred dollars' worth of junk by phone. If she ordered by letter, it took the letter three weeks to get anywhere.and by the time the goods arrived they were out of date, and she had to send them back. It would be a great blessing If things were that way now. "But the modern married woman has the softest snap ever Invented, Mrs. Jamesworthy. If she happens to be too lazy to put on her brass-mounted harness and go downtown to do her shopping, she has that great modern convenience at her elbow. It isn't necessary to make herself presentable to do her shopping. She sits down with an old wrapper on, and her top knot askew, and her mouth full of hairpins, and calls up the butcher and baker and candlestick maker, and or ders everything they have In their Joints, and has It charged to her hus band. "Aa your sway-backed professor said, a short Journey was a serious business In the old days, and as a re sult people stayed home and attended to their knitting. If a woman Jour neyed nine miles In one of the old time coaches she had a backache for three weeks, and so the Idea of going away from home didn't fill her with enthusiasm. But nowadays traveling la a luxury. All a woman has to do Is to hold up her husband for the fare, and then the urbane railway people do the rest, and make everything so comfortable for her that she bates the Idea of ever returning home. And be cause of this luxury, women are for ever hunting up excuses for a trip somewhere. Kerstnith told me the other day that his wife traveled three hundred miles and back to match a ribbon, the local stores not having the exact shade she wanted. Kersmtth Is Just about three cubits ahead of the sheriff, and his wife knows It, but she wouldn't let a small matter like that Interfere with her trip. "In the halcyon days people used to tallow candles and were all the better for it. There was no satisfaction In rending by a candle, so men didn't iilow In their substance for fool books and tmiUMziues. The candles kicked up such a smell that they were extin guished as early as possible, and so no money was wasted. Now we have Ihe electric Unlit, which Is a great con venience. It is such a thundering eon 'enienee, Mrs. Jamesworthy. that It Is :reasing (lie read to the poorhouse for innumerable heartsick husbands. The .iverage citizen finds It Impossible to convince bis wife and daughters and other female relatives that the electric Juice costs money, and so his home Is Illuminated from basement to garret every night. Few women remember to turu oft the light after having It turn ed on. If I drop deud of heart failure one of these days. It will be when look ing over the electric light bill. Iu the old days " "Oh, bother the old days, and the young dnys, aud the middle-aged days I" cried Mrs. Jamesworthy. That Dependi. "You know, my dear fellow, we really gain by our trials In life." "That depends on the kind of law yer you employ." He Starred E.irty. Mor:irt began composing at tin ear lier iv;e than anybody eNe on reeonl. At four he was exhibited as an in'iiiit prodisy. and ut the he ccnpiwil mi; cevtos. When he was eleven he wrote mi opera iHUille. Co-fd at the Stirt. Of the tlitv oldest lliiivevsitles In western 1 -i 1 1 n- Salerno, H '("irui and l'nris two were open ttvm the first to women. Those were Salerno an HolilUI. Home Town TBelpsT DRIVEWAY AND WALK IN ONE Effectfvs Combination Shown Hare la the Idea ef Widtiwake Los Angeles Man. Once a Los Angeles man bought a new colonial house with a small ga rage at the rear. There was neither a driveway leading to the garage nor steps leading to the house entrance. The house was so new that only the lawa In front had been finished. - It was up to the owner to finish the Joo. But labor and building ma terials were costly, the owner was not a rich nsU) and he had already spent several thousand dollars on the ven ture. . , .. Sb he developed an entirely new scheme. He built his driveway and Effective Combination. sidewalk together, putting a flight of short steps, two and one half feet wide, between the driveway strips, making the whole a solid piece of ce ment work. At each side he built a retaining wall to hold the lawn earth in place. At the top of the steps a narrow walk branches off, leading to the front porch of the house. The general scheme Is decidedly effective, and the owner says he saved considerable money in labor and ma terial by building in combination rath er than by putting In a separate drive way and wulk. picture of this drive way with steps In place of the usual grass strip Is shown above. Popular Science Monthly. BENEFIT IN TOWN PLANNING Unreasonable to Think That, Without Guidance, Events Will Shape Them, selves to Best Advantage. Town planning, city planning and country planning, as well as the plan ning of national highways, waterways, and so on. have made It more and more evident during the last few years that, though the earth can be depended up on to turn rightly upon Its axis, things upon the earth cannot profitably be left Just to grow, like Topsy. There Is a vast difference between a river running wild and one laden with ship ping and furnishing valuable water power; between c road determined as to course by a cowpath, following the direction of least resistance, and one that serves to the utmost the inter ests of those who use It; between na tional park areas where certain selfish Interests have encroached and those In which playground and beauty have been faithfully maintained; between a community where every private In terest has fought for power and place and one where residents, merchants, manufacturers and public have re ceived Just consideration in view of the Interests of all. It Is even as the difference between the seeds planted by the farmer according to the funda mentals of good gardening and those which grow as they may In the thicket by the fence. Christian Science Monitor. Flower Boxes Instead of Trees. The shores of New Kngland, all the way from southern Connecticut, which is almost suburban to New York city, to the farthest reaches of the rocky Maine coast, abound In villages whose natural beauty, especially very near the water, Is marred by their paucity of foliage, for tr"es do not thrive close to the ocean. Of late years there has grown up, particularly In the com muultles which have a summer influx of visitors, a determination to beauti fy the barren treeless spots by the typically Kngllsh device of the flower box. Hundreds of summer cottage properties which would, by reason ot their lack of shade trees, look barren and commonplace, achieve something of real distinction ty having theii porch rails and window sashes pre sent to the eye of the beholder, a lux tirlant growth of traillrg ivy In a green hex, -studded p.-rh.ips with bri.lit red geranium, purple heliotrope, or nmltl colon d nasturtium. Christian Sci ence Monitor. Mut Women Snow the WayT Women all over the country are -mowing s dis.init!on to insist that if It Is possible to keep a house clem and well ordered It Is p-sslile to io the same tilings for a town. Ex v'hange. Oliver Chilled Plow Co. reduces prices to 1918 level This is good news for you, Mr. Farmer! We CARRY the OLIVER LINE Peoples Hardware Company WANT AUS " FOl'ND Oregon automobile li cense plate for 1921, between Lex ington and Heppner. Owner call at this office, pay for this notice and recover. 46tf. For Rent House in roar of Her ald office. Inquire this office or of Dr. D. A. McMurdo. 46tf. Found Two auto robes. Enquire F. R. Brown, second floor Roberts building. 48-50 Shutt has several ra Bargains in alfalfa ranches; easy terms. 47tf. W'n n t Cfl r';i-.li ruiM fnt- el" 'i ....I - ton raffs at the Herald office. Bring them in. Heppner Herald Want Ads bring home the bacen. MATERNITY HOME I am prepared to take a limited number of maternity cases at mj home in east Heppner and assure best attention to all patients. Write or phone, MRS. G. C. AIKEN, Hepp ner, Or.. Box 142. Phone 396. 23tf FASHIONABLE DRESSMAKING Remodeling and Ladies' Tailoring. Mrs. Curren, Church street. 27tf 'b i- CHURCH NOTICES 4. 'b -b 'b "b ! 'b -b 4 b 'b !- The First Christian Church. The usual services of the Church will be held on Sunday, consisting of the Bible School at ten o'clock, fol lowed by Communion Service and Preaching at eleven o'clock. The evening Services will consist of the Christian Endeavor Service at seven o'clock and song Service and Preaching at eight o'clock. Everey one is cordially invited to attend these services. W. O. Livingstone, Minister. Christian Science Christian Science services are heli every Sunday morning at 11:60 o'clock in I. O. 0. F. hall. Sunday Sshool at 9:45 a. m. Testimony meetings are held every Wednesday evening at 8:90 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Eugene Slocum. All inter ested are cordially invited to attend these meetings. A man refers to his automobile aa "she" probably because it is some thing he can't reason with. Syra cuse Herald. "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 tobacco taste will give. Ask any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew. He will tell you that this class of tobacco will give more satisfac tionand at less cost than the ordinary kind. Put up in two styles V-3 CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco s Fresh Pure Lard We render fresh, pure lard three times a week and have reduced the price to 25C A POUND Order a Strictly First-Class, Heppner-made Product Central Market McNAMER & SORENSON, Props.