Tuesday, August 23, 1Q21 THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON PAGE SEVEN I We Carry "foot Rest Hosiery' FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN CASH VARIETY STORE HELEN V. SMITH, Prop. PARKERS MILL Sept. 3, 4 and 5 Ball Games, Foot Races, Boxing and Wrestling Pavilion Dancing Joy Giese's Orchestra is coming back. Oh Boy! Old Fashioned Barbecue Dinner Monday, September 5 Wrestling Match R. W. VOLLE, of Heppner vs. CHARLIE BENNETT, of Monument Broncho Busting, Bulldogging FREE CAMPING GROUNDS HAT approximately $700,000,000 is required by the public utility companies of the country to pro vide service for an additional million inhabitants, is one of the interesting facts brought forth in the recentlv published report of Senator Willard M. r.aiiipr'. Committee on Reconstruction and Production. After a searching inquiry into the various conditions bear ing upon the housing situation and the country's industrial pro duction, the Committee finds that the business of puUic util ities has outgrown their plant facilities owing to the inability of the companies to finance improvements and additions nec essary to take care of the increased service demands. "Prior to the war," Btatrs the Comnrttee, "it is estimated that the normal annual requirements of electric railway, pas, and electric light and power companies for extensions, better ments, and improvements 'was about $500,000,000, proportion ed as folows: Electric railways, $250,000,000; gas com panies, $125,000,000; electric light and power companies ? 123,000,000. The Committee has been informed that for four years not over 40 per cent of such betterments has been made, leaving an accumulation of about $1,200,000,000. If this sum is ad ded to $700,000,000 required alne for new residential build ings held in abeyance, a total of approximately $2,000,000,000 seems necessary for the public utility program in the immedi ate future. "The question of placing these businesses on a sound financial basis in order that credit may flow to them is the same question which confronts steam railroads nnd housing, but in the case of public utilities the rase is more difficult be cause there is no central body as now provided in the case of steam railroads which miht adjust rates in proper relation to operating costs and capital investment. The utilities like wise suffer in their effort to secure new capital for necessary extensions of service by the almost insurmountable difficulty of having to compete for such capital with municipal, state pnd similar tax-exempt Isecurities. Until these problems are sol ved the public should recognize this underlying reason for much of the faulty service and for the failure to provide the additional facilities urgently demanded to meet community needs. Paid Advertisement. HOLDS WILDERNESS IN SCORN Japanese Adventurer Thrives on Such Perils as Might Well Daunt Even the Bravest. Jujiro Wada has always played a lone hand. Up and down the northern fringes of civilization he has pioneered for 30 years. He has been in the thick of every gold rush from the Klondike to Hanson Creek. He is an expert trapper, hunter, cook, prospector and dog-team driver. From Athabasca to the mouth of the Mackenzie, all old- timers know the little yellow wilder ness adventurer. Soon after the discovery of a gusher well at Kort Norman last full, winter closed the trails to the new oil bonanza on the Mackenzie. But it did not shut out Jujiro Wada. Ice and snow and howling blizzards have no terrors for him. Employed by Van couver capitalists to go to Fort Nor man and stake claims for them, he struck out for Peace river with a team of dogs in the dead of winter. For 1,200 miles he mushed alone through the frozen, wolf-haunted solitudes, staked his claims and came back across the snow to Peace river. Now he has been employed by a New York syndicate to go to the top of the world on a hunt for gold. A rumor has long been bruited about the arctic that Herschel Island conceaJs rich gold deposits. The little Jap will soon leave for the north prepared to spend nt least a year on this thunder riven, desolate rock in the arctic seas. If he uncovers treasure, there will be no delay in bringing out samples. No matter if it is 00 degrees below, Jujiro Wadn will hnrness up his malamutes and break trail back toward civiliza tion. That's his way. CANDIDATE GOT ONE VOTE Humiliating Practical Joke Played on Italian Who Had Made Himself Politically Unpopular. Solicitor Gandolfl of Cremona, Italy, besides being a poet, is also a bombastic meddler In political matters. Because of this It was arranged by a party of jokers to bring him forward as a candidate for the polls. The elec toral committee was duly constituted and Gandolfi's name was entered on the government lists. The unlucky solicitor was forced during the fortnight to do his own can vassing and to drive about from vil lage to village delivering speeches. When election day cume, no voting pa pers having been distributed by the committee for him, It was found that the only vote he received was his own. His discomfiture may be imag ined, but it Is said that a radical cure for his political tendencies has been found. A still more unfortunate candidute was a communist in the same town named Lodolini. After the commun ists had officially announced their In tentions to carry him, the manllisap peared. It was found that the Fas clstl had selzej him at night time and driven him to Casalmaggiore, where he was forced under the severest threats to remain during election time. Once Lodolini returned to Cremona to see his wife, but the same night the Fascist! again entered the house and forced him to dress and drove him again to seclusion and meditation over the rules for the Third Internationale. New York Tribune. Making It Clear. Clarence was trying to explain to hit plsymate the distinction between the troall dog and the larger one, and thla It the way he expressed himself: "The little do Is the baby dog. and the big on It the mama dog, Juat Ilka your mama." Sour Milk. Among the many uses for sour milk It tnst of silver polish. Put the ill erware In the liquid and let It remain for 20 to 30 minutes. Then wash at usual. It will look aa If It dad been polished. Signs of Age. "Uncle Dunk Is getting along In years," regretfully said a resident of the Oznrks. "Eh-yah," replied an acquaintance. "He's aom'erg about eighty-one, ain't he?" "Yes, and I skurcely ever seed a man ao old for his years as he 'pears to be of late. He rid Into the county seat with me tuther day. We got thene about nine o'clrtck In the morning and before 5:30 he came around wlnir I was talking swap with some fellers, and 'lowed that as he didn't know no body In town skurcely and hadn't any business there, no-wny, and uuthin' had happened of any Interest so fur and didn't 'pear likely to, he was Just about ready to go home. Uncle I Mink is feeling bis age powerful." Kansas City Star. Milk From Peanuts. The common peanut is the source of a new substitute for miik which so closely resembles its profot1. po that it turns sour and curdles, pro duces buttermilk when churned and may be made Into cheese, say.s the Scientific American. The flavor, in which the nut characteristically per sists, is declared to be praotlcailv its only point of variance with cows milk. The new lacteal product orig inated In the laboratory of tin Amer ican university where the peanut ker nels are converted Into four times their volume of milk, varying from 4 to 8 per cent In fat content and from 2.4 to 3.3 per cent In protein. The cost of production Is said to be con slderahly less than the market price of dairy milk. Boy Scouts Aid Birds. The birds In the neighborhood of St. Louis have had their housing prob lems reduced to lowest terms by the act of the hoy scouts of St. Louis, who, as a result of a contest, provided 2,.'S"8 well-built bird houses, which have been placed In the public parks and other reserves. The winning troop turned out C51 bird houses. The scout executive writes that much In terest nag roused locally, not only In the house building which It Is pro posed to make an annual good turn uwlit;'. hut also. In, the acoutt thera-nelve. HERMITS LIFE HIS CHOICE Man Who Has "Flocked by Himself" for Twenty.Five Years Will Have No Other. A hermit leads a fascinating life. So W, D. Clark says, and he ought to know, for he has been a hermit in the tirctic wilderness nearly a quarter of a century. ' "Once a hermit, always a hermit," says Mr. Clark. "A hentiit wants no body's pity. He enjoys his solitude and wouldn't trade It for the pleas ures and excitement of cities. I have been In civilization a year now and I am going back home to the wilder ness as quickly as I can. There are no fakirs, swindlers and thieves there." Mr. Clark's home cabin is on the headwaters of Peel river, ISO miles from Herschel island and lit) miles from Kort McPherson. His nearest neighbor is Till miles away. They see each other once a year. With the ex ception of this man, Abe Schafer, Mr. Clark Is the only human being in a thousand square miles of country. The Indians do not go that far north and the Eskimos do not come that far south. "I have seen 10,000 caribou In a herd," Mr. Clark said. "They go to the arctic coast In the spring to have their young and in September they re turn south to the edge of the timber, where they can find shelter and moss on which they live." The mercury goes 75 degrees below In winter, Mr. Clark says, but It Is the most healthful climate In the world. Old-timers up there, he de clares, do not know what sickness means. DUNTON'S CASH MARKET O C. Dl'XTOX, Prop. Will open about August 15th, j . ; . Next Door to First National Bank SWEET CIDER Made Daily a Specialty Canned Fruits and Fresh Fruits Direct From the Willamette Valley POTATOES, OMOXS, KJ(JS AXD HOXEY Look over my goods and get my prices Open 9 to 12 A. M.; 2 to 6 P. M. Saturday evenings to 9:00 House riione, Main 93 WORD HAS MANY MEANINGS When One Mentions "Fish," the Sylla ble Is Susceptible of More Than One Construction. "All Is not fish that swims" reflected the sapient philosopher as he beheld a summer girl taking to the ocean. The sapient philosopher was formulat ing a great truth when he came to that conclusion. The whale, for Instance, although It unquestionably swims, Is. more closely related to the cow than to the minnow. The seal Is closer kin to the dog than to the fluke. To a great many fishermen the word "fish" see Latin "piscls" and Dutch "vlsch" (the snme word) possesses only the verb form, "to fish." Catch ing fish Is not a necessary part of the piocess of fishing. The thing is "to fish," and Is not primarily to catch fish. (See fishermen on the banks of the Seine In Paris, "fishing" all day without even getting a bite from a minnow.) A famous Englishman by the name of Izaak Walton was one of the most persistent patrons of the verb "to fish." The word "fish" was also ex tensively used during the war In an ef fort to save meat for the fighters. Exchange. Bigamy for a Lodging. A Le Mans signalman has just been condemned to two yeurs' Imprison ment for bigamy which, he avers, he committed in order to find In the pres ent "crise de Logemeut" somewhere to lay his head. He Is a man of fifty-five and he re cently married a widow of seventy five who offered him a room liv her cottage on the firm condition that he should marry her. This he did, de claring that his wife was dead. One of his wives was dead, but the police tracked down another, who deserted him some time ago. The unfortunate man has now had "crlse de Logement" solved for some time, at least. Paris Figaro. Osmiriduim in Tasmania. Itecent exploration and develop ment have revealed enormous de posits of osnilrhlium and gold-bearing gravels In the valleys of the lame rivers of the western iIII-hii of Tas mania, which Is the sole producer on a large scale of point inelal oMnlrid lum. For the first half of l!r'fl the pro duction was 1,0! Ci ounces, valued Bt 41,042, i March, not, the local price reached 42 10s. per ounce, states the London Times Trade Supplement. Florence Oil Stove Asbestos Wick Bakes Boils Roasts Toasts Cook in a cool kitchen Peoples Hardware Co. Blackbird Fed Thrush. A lady of Penzance who Is a great lover of birds, says Mr. W. II. Hudson In his recently published book, "Ad ventures Among Itlrds," noticed that a blackbird and a thrush always came together to her lawn where she was In the habit of placing food for the birds. Then she noticed that the blackbird feil the thrush, picking up the crumbs of liread and putting them Into Its mouth. Looking more closely, she dis covered that the thrush's beak had been cut off clo-e t tit. bead, prob ably by a steel trap or a sudden-death spring trap, such as the children In j Cornwall coinmouly use to cal'h or kill small birds. The thrush was in- j capable of feeling Itself. j Hay and Harvest MACHINERY mHTstaJaVI -VH X WE Carry the Famous fl.il. C.LIN Mowers, Rakes. Headers, Binders, and Threshers. Better look up your repair needs Now and avoid costly delays after you start cutting. GILLIAM & BSSBEE "We Have it Will Get it Or it is Not Mode" A Super-Hero. "Anything unusual In the court of domestic relations this morning?" "A young woman who married a bo gus war hero wants a divorce." "That has happened before." "Put Oils fellow has large Ideas. He claims to have won the buttle of the Martie." Hlrmlngham Age ilfrald. Reward of Merit. "What's the most attractive feature of farm lifer asked the city dweller. "Knocking ofT work on Kuturday and going to town In the flivver," suld the truthful agriculturist. Ulrinlughsia Age-Herald. 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. I