PAGE FOUR THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON TUESDAY, JUNE 7, Vr LEGAL NOTICES NOTICi: I Oil I'l'lll.H'ATIO.V l) partii).-nt of tlif; In'wior, V. S. Land Office at Lu'.Irandc, Or. gon, j.hiy 12, a:. 21 Kolicc i.-1n i-' by (iv n ilsat a r.miirr .f Oi :', who 011 April 3 filG ln:id: 1 1 -) i ; , I ' nii-y. No. for sv v.ni-:'.. hcu JlliSWMt S'-' t'n "., Town.-i.ip 2 iouUi, Kun-: ::: I.'.ust, VillainHir-M'-ridiau, lss Iil-1 not ire of intcn- ilr,n in makfi 1 1 1 1" : -year proof, to :-:lalli!h clnim to Hi'; land above (!'; I cribed, before 1,'nileil ,S:it'-s Coiu jiii.ssioncr, at JI ppiK-r, Oregon, on the 2 H-1 day of June, 3 ! 2 J . Claimant nam's as witness: John liio.-Tian, I'bil Hif-'Kina, Waldo Vincent, 1'eify Hughes, all of Lena, Oregon. c. s. nuxx, n.'?iHicr. JSO'JK 10 TOR lTISUCATIO.V Department or Uio Interior, U. S. J, and Office at LaGnindo, Oregon, Way 12, 3 921 Notice; inlii'ieby given lliat MAliKI, E. CUILS'A, )f Lena, Oregon, who, on May 1st, 3 III.", niado lioines-tead entry No. 014GCO, lor NK,SVV'i, NviSK'i, Section 21, NVV'i Sff',1, VV4 NW',4 Section 22, Township 2 south, Kunge, 20 oast, Willamette Meridian, lias filed notice of intention to make 1hree-year proof, lo establish claim 1o the land above described, before 1'niter Hlales Commissioner, at Jleppner, Oregon, on the; 21st day of Juno, J D2, Claimant names as witnesses: John lii'OKiian, Vein I'earson, W. V. I.uc'ltinan.Cha ilea II. Luckman, all of J.enu, Oregon. C. S. miSS, Register. KOT1CK OK I I.NAIi SKTTMO.MKXT Nolice is hereby given that the undersigned has Hied his I) mil ac count as administrator of I he Kslale of Win. 11. Hall, alias Hayes, de. ceased, and lhat. Hie County Court of the stall' of Oregon for Morrow Comity has appointed Tuesday, the hlh day of July, J 1)21, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon of said lay us Ihe time and tin; fount y Court Room in Ihe Court House at Jlepiiner, Oregon, as Ihe place of ln'aring and sel I h'liielil of said llnal iiccounl. Objections to said llnal ac. ruling must hi' filed on or before raid dale. I! 7 SAM lll'CII KS. Administrator. : i- i- ; : : 1 1: 1 1: ii xotk i:s .?. V V I-.J. .:. .:. i i i i : ' ; r i i Mi i; ii There will be ireaching in the 1'VdtTMKd clinch next Sabballi al l A. M and at X I'. M. I'rayei I -1 - I in;; ,) Wedne.alay evenin;; at S I4. M.. t'uC' a School ev.-i.v Sunday inei an t; ,ii li : I a. We ex Ii nil a hearly webaniu- lo the people of II' piMi'T lo annul all or any id' our (,.! i-si. Short sermons and good muuiiil,. Come Willi us and wo u ill I' l e lo ilo you gooil. K. I,. MOOKK, I'lislor. The f'irsl (lnlstliin (liiirch. The usual services of the Church vl!l he held on Sunday, conslstlnR of the Ilihle School at ten o'clock, fol lowed by Communion Service and 1'iiMrhing at eleven o'clock. Tin' evening Services will consist of ihe Christian Kndeuvor Service at Men o'clock ami Bong Service and 'ie;o him; at eight o'clock. Kv;rey one bi cordially Invited to attend Cue a' r- ot':. W. O Livingstone, Minister. ( hilstian Siiemfl n.ib-tinii Si'ieuce services are held cvcey Sunday moi ning Ht 11:00 o'clock ill I o. O. V. hall. Sunday Sshool at 11:45 a. in. Testimony ineeiliiiis are held every Wednesday evening a I 8:00 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Kugene Slocum. All Inter ested arc cordially Invited to attend the.e meetings. Saffron One Royil Color. In Ireland suffroii early became rinal color mid, fur tl Iouk period f ter hucIi vxcIhnIvmii was taken In Kiln, the yellow miftron dyi-d ahlrt remained a mark of social distinction In the Hebrides. In art saffron wm much employed In medieval lllunil nated nmnuscrlpt!!. In combination with tin foil nt a substitute for KiHI, Hiid, of course, Ht all periods the color U K cf tunny textiles whs done with lntle crocus milium. England Welcome Virginia Flower. To innny people the Viulnla creep er Beema like rather a lowly and mod est plant, and yet It has received a viiiii welcome In Duiihiud, where It la grown freely, rumbling over build tots, rocks and way. Just as much at homu lii lOiifllh noil as In American. CHESS COMES EASY TO HIM Youthful Prodigy Declares There la Nothing Wonderful About Hla Mastership of Game. Chess is the easiest game In the world to me. During tbe long dull days of the war my father used to play all the time with his friends'. At first I did not understand what the chessmen were for, and wondered why father would sit for hours and gaze at Ihe board with ils funny-looking pieces. One day when I did not want to go out and piny I watched him play his game. I became Inter ested. bothered my father so with (ptestions that he chased me out of the game as soon as he was through with his friend. I waited eagerly for him to get through. He played a practice game with me, and I under stood every move after that. The next game we played, I beat my father, who is a very good chess player. There Is nothing wonderful nbout my way of playing the game. My secre tary, Mr. Azenberg, says that it comes from reincarnation. A baby Is born with good brains, and they ex plain it that way. They say that ids ancestors or some spirits have given this power to him because so much ability In one person must have taken a long time to develop. When I play chess I enn plan my moves six or sev en moves ahead, and most players can only go three moves ahead of the game. I can't help It at all. I was born that way. I like to play with poor players. At West Point, where 1 beat 19 games and drew one, there were only nine good players; the oth ers had no business trying to play me at all. I have played lots of fine players In chess. During the war I beat the German governor at Warsaw, nnd lie was an old man and a fine player. Then I drew n game with Eubensteln, the Russian champion, and also drew with Orlllin In a blindfolded game In England. I have not played I.asker yet, hut one of the 21 I beat In Paris says he drew u game Willi I.asker, and another said lie beat Cnpablanca. In America, my hardest game so far has been with Colonel Fiebeger, sixty-two years old, at. West Point. Samuel Itzeszewski In Leslie's. SEE SUICIDE NATIONAL PERIL Influential Japanese Newspapers Exalt Christian Idea as to the Sacred ness of Life. Suicide, which lias nhvnys been prevalent In Japan, Is, according to the Japanese press, even more rife than ever since tbe financial crisis In the l,nii(l of the Illsing Sun, says the Literary I'igesl In a recent Issue. The Osaka Malnichl, which sees peril to Ihe lut lion In the prevalence of self slnughler, acknowledges the excel lences of the Christian view that sui cide, liisleml of being merely an apol ogy for failure, Is a crime. Many sui cides hi Japan are due lo the fact that the Japanese have "less attachment to life than foreigners," and also lo the t radii Ions of feudal times when they belittled life. The Osaka Malnichl says further: "IVnlh--much more suicide means ewishm of responsilillly . . . nnd Ihe notion lhat those who commit sui cide have the keenest sense of respon sibility Is wrong. Suicide Is the em bodiment of egoism and Irresponsibili ty. One of Ihe strong points of the Christian people Is Ihelr conviction that to kill one's self Is as criminal as to kill others." Remarkable Photographic Feat. Conspicuous among a number of re markable scenes In a three-reel mo tion picture film recently taken of an Ohio steel mill In oporntle.il, Is one that actually shows the boiling of nioltni metal In an open hearth fur nace healed to 3.(HI degrees Fahren heit. The photographic feat of suc cessfully registering this action In de tail on the tllm Is particularly Inter esting, because the subject Is one that a human eye can not gaze upon tin protected, Kays Popular Mechanics Magazine. Furthermore the extreme beat of the furnace cast some doubt on the safely of the camera, with Its charge of celluloid ribbon, and wh'le the exposure was made, two men stiwal ready to burl the operator to a cooler place If anything happened. Potato Flour Mixed With Wheat. A fifty til'ty mixture of wheat Hour from the I'nlted States ami potato Hour of domestic make has been or dered by the Netherlands government for Its people with the hope of keeping down the price of bread. I'nless some thing Is dene to keep down the price of Imported wheal It wlU soon be out of the reach of the populace, says the Chicago Journal. Potato starch was used ft great deal during tbe war for the purpose of piecing out the wheat flour jupply, and It w as not generally acceptable to the people, hut potato (lour will not be open to the same criticism, nml It Is anticipated will prove more palatable. No Respecter of Persona. Lnw enforcement Is no resin-cter of persons, as u young woman stenog rapher In the otllce of Charles J. Or blson. federal prohibition director, can testify. This young woman ordered some wine of pepsin from her druggist. The druggist considered the order and her record on previous orders. "Young woman," he said. "I cannot sell you any wine or pepsin. You are using too much. We are under strict orders from the prohibition director to watch carefully our sales on wine of pep. sin."- lndlcmu.'ol's News. if By JENNIE LITTLE. R .irhJKHC I ITT! C 3 ' &33SH2 . l'jzi, by JIcL'iure Newspaper Syn licate.) Another story, child dear? Sure 'tis overdrawn like the Ponzi fella's mv fund will he, with such a dftnnnd. Well, then, come with me, of an eve ning that I have !r. mind, to a grand concert hall in the city. A wonder ful prima donna, tbe idol of her audi ences' in two continents, has come un- on the stage for her last number. As she stands waiting for the applause to die away, something that she reads in the waves of upturned faces moves her to a sudden Impulse, and with a tender little smile, instead of the clas sical selection on the program, her voice second only in sweetness to the angels fills the vast room with: "There's a pretty spot In Ireland, I always claim for my land." In one of the boxes sat two of the earth's prosperous, and like a lightning nrtlst, the man's mind flashed picture alter picture on ids memory's screen. In faraway County Clare he saw a young gossoon full to the brim of the sheer joy of living. The Scotch would call him a lad o' parts, the English a topping chap, bud I'll declare to you that he was just a regular broth of a boy. Every old granny In the village, nnd clear down to every lass, thought the sun had its rising nnd setting in his merry charm, but only Eileen Mc Donngh had a mortgage on his affec tions. Ah, but she was the winsome colleen, and the likes of her was not to be found in a day's travel.' Then an uncle In America sent money for his passage, with tales of success that set the lad wild to go. Eileen must stay with her old folks, but when he had a good start, then he would send for her, und together they would conquer this fine new country. "My heart goes back there daily, To the girl I left behind me. When we kissed and said good-by." Ah, yes, at first 'twas so. Luck and pluck were with him, and his foothold grew firmer and stronger, nnd some how In the struggle, Eileen drifted further Into the background of his thoughts. The old bodies went one by one, and the black sorrow of lone liness was almost more than she could abide, but never did her sweetheart grow hitler or complaining in its wearying for him. Faithful and true she was to her trotli with Terence O'Neill. "Where dear old Shannon's flowing, Where the three-leaved Shamrock grows, Where my heart is I am going To my little Irish Itose. And the moment that I meet her, With a hug nnd kiss I'll greet her" Conscience woke tip entirely, and a Rhllhilah stroke was gentle compared lo the pain she gave hint For in these latest mouths of his prosperity he had decided that only n high-born, cultured American woman could rule his; home and help to find new fields for his never-satistied ambitions, and, cold-bloodedly, without a thought of love, he had set, about to win her. This very minute, by his side, sat the lady of his worldly choice, ami he hail fidt niueb elated that now she seemed not a great deal averse to his gallant nt tentlons. Sure, she never knew about that common past, anil almost had he forgotten its connection with the aris tocratic banker who looked at him from the mirror. Till tonight, that Is. "Sure no letter I'll be mailing, For soon will T be sailing, And I'll bless the ship that takes me To my dear old Erin's shore." The lady turned with a disdainful curl of the lip. "Really," says she, "one might expect the best music here and not vulgar street songs," and Ter ence's heart turned over with a thud of gratitude that wisdom had come not too late. Veij' quiet was he on the way home, and as he handed her from the limou sine, declined her gracious Invitation with n "Not tonight, thank you, as I have pressing business to attend to Im mediately. And I probably will not see you again for some time, as I leave on the Canople's next date of sailing." "Indeed." said the lady. In dis pleased surprise. "Surely tills Is very sudden." "I've not yet booked mv passage." says Terence, with an old time Irish grin, "but I think the fates won't fail; me ibis time." And neither did they. And now we come to n matchless evening In dear old Klllaloe night of enchanted moonlight, when all the fairies and little folk are casting their spells on everything. All alone nt her window sits Eileen, with the melting sweetness of her harp suiting her voice ns she sings so sadly: "It may be years, and It may be forever." And Into the room strides Terence of her thoughts. "Not on your life!" says he In the true American style, and then dropHd on his knees beside her. ami Into the tender oUI brogue. "Mavonnuvn. all this time I'm been madly, foollshlv following n w ill o' the-w Isp. but when I came to me senses and gave me heart the lead, it brought me to my own trie love, straight as the crow tiles. Will ye to hack with me. dnr I I it", to be the dear light of me life till the blessed saints call us from on! own paradise to theirs?" And some thing he saw In her face made him dare to greet her after the fashion ot the Shamrock song. Then because '!:. the way of a woman to forgive ion forget, acuslila, 1 can cod toy s'orv ir your favorite way: "And they a!l live.: happy eer after." IN THE SMART KNITTED SUIT v f Jf One of the season's smartest fash ions is a knitted suit of claret-colored wool; just the most appropriate cos tume for a young girl. FEATHER TRIMMING FOR HATS Heron Aigrette, Heron Breast Feath ers and Paradise Favorites for Millinery Decoration. Feather trimmings for midwinter hats are markedly in favor. Heron aigrette and heron breast feathers take the lead among feathers de luxe. Paradise, too, is used. Glycerined os trich and natural ostrich are having a big vogue. Coque feathers are also much in evidence, and hackle and oth er brilliant neck and breast feathers are frequently seen as borders on tur bans. Paris milliners generally are show ing very eccentric feather effects on both turbans and large shapes. Some of the new feather covered turbans look almost like wigs of bobbed hair, Irregular nnd unkempt.' Especially Is this true when the hat Is In dark brown. These feathers In no small degree resemble the monkey fur so popular last, season. Among the new ostrich trimmings are slender, drooping, quill-like orna ments of glycerined ostrich which are used in a disordered brushlike ar rangement, givUig the hats an appear ance of the head-dresses of savage tribes. These wild looking feathers have appeared on both velvet and panne hats. Another ostrich trimming still used Is the tlat glycerined plumes as a covering for small and medium hats, with the long dragging ends fall ing off over the brim. These, too, have a very savage and unkempt look, hut are considered very smart. Ostrich pompons again are popular. PARIS WEARS SHORT SLEEVES Arm Covering So Abbreviated That Bracelet la Worn Above the Elbow by Young Girls. , Over In Paris they are still wearing short-sleeved dresses and so short that the HboveMhe-elbow bracelet Is used with such dresses, especially by the very young girls whose arms ace as slender above the elbow as below. The French study the psychology to a much greater extent than we when considering n style. For instance, one authority says that no woman should wear long sleeves whose head Is not perfectly well dressed. With her hair properly marcelled and with perfect boots a woman may wear long sleeves hlth great advantage. And come to think of It. can you not picture the woman with beautifully dressed hair in a very dainty lady ftideed In a gown with long plain sleeves? If she has a good complexion, says the French critic, let the gown be black, hut with a had complexion avoid black. In these days of made-up complexion, however, nlmost anyone may have a good one. A .bracelet made at a band of pearls is worn outside the long sleeve, just above the wrist, or the watch on a black hand of ribbon Is used instead, outside and not Inside tin- sleeve. The Jersey Returns. Wool jersey Merblousea for women are among the new novelties. Several recently seen were cut to fit the fig ure very snugly about the shoulders and bust, so snugly. In fact, that the old-fashioned Jersey Jacket or basque whs brought to mind. CoMnr, cuffs and handing of angora In contrasting color and heavy wool embrotdery con stitute a popular trimming for these overhlouses, which are designed for sports wear, and worn with plabl wool skirts or plain color skirts matching either the blouse or Its trimming In color. Fasbionab'e Shades. Important In the millinery world are a new ruby shade and a startling tur uuolse. . Summer Clothing Dry Cleaned or Dyed Workmanship and Service the best You be the judge Lloyd Hutchinson TAILORING Cleaning,-Pressing, Dyeing, Repairing Oliver Chilled Plow Co. reduces prices to 1 91 8 level This is good news for you, Mr. Farmer! WeCARRY the OLIVER LINE Peoples Hardware Company Fresh Fruits and Vegetables WE ARE HEPPNER'S HEAD QUARTERS FOR ALL KINDS OF FRESH FRUITS AND VEG ETABLES. EVERYTHING IN SEASON WE KEEP Sam Hughes Co. "Here's Real Tobacco says the Good Judge That gives a man more genuine chewing satis faction than he ever got out of the ordinary kind. Smaller chew.lasts longer -so it costs less to chew this class of tobacco. And the good, rich to bacco taste gives a world of satisfaction. Any man who use9 the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that. Put ut in two styles W-B CUT is a long fine-cut RIGHT Let the Growing: Boy Have His Rabbits and Know Their Funny Habits. By E. C. HUFFMAN', Denver Realtor. Parent rise in holy wrath at the landlords who refuse to allow chil dren to live in their apartment houses. Vet. in my opinion, children should not be cooped up in apartments, where there i? no yard in which they can romp. Growing children need' the fresh air, green grass and contact with the soil. Life in an apartment house leaves the growing boy without the ne cessity of doing small chores that tend-to give him the habit of work he must do when he is grown. This generation is inclining more and more to the idea of letting the other fellow do the work. My advice to parents is, take the children out into the open. Let them know what it is to carry in the coal after school. Let them know the joy of digging into the fresh earth. Start the child at work in a gar den plot in the hack yard. It him s-x' nature at work. Let the growing bov have his rabbits and pigeons and know their funny habits. 11 tobacco CUT is a hort-cut tobacco 7i