Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, August 30, 1921, SECTION ONE, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    J
i 1
Tuesday, August 30, 192 1:
PAGE TWO
THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON
MOLLIE'S TRIAL
By AGNES G. BROGAN.
l(cj, Western Newspaper Union J
"Now did you set- tlint?" asked
lloliie, dismayed, "1 lure go the tups
jf my hullj hocks."
Her lieu holg.'i
could lie Mi'ii f'n. :
t-'lrelully 1 1 i 1 r 1 ; 1 1 1 1 1 ! .
of tlieir llowi-rs "
4-r i 1 1 1 i 1 1 trio ;n i :j i : it
"lit re vipii," erii
a tune
to use,
garden.
Alum
her i!i
Iimv. !l;
liiiiiiii
Itlsll I!, I,
"U'ililllr'.V
teiv-t 1
"WIm
tali til..
as it
"keep
Ynii
il Mi
"-
::ht t
lie.
I!
M'-!rr
it's eldest boy
.Mollle's window
her tall plants
lie in the rear a
i his boldness.
lie, In as sharp
ible fur .Mollie
"U'n side "f the
he ashamed';"
"liie turned to
.Manly. lint
t found li"t the
ieil. .Mrs. Manly
the latticed
of suddi'i) iu-
tgcrly, "is that
Tell trie, Mol-
I aggrieved,
i plied, "is the
e live Irrepres-
adainied Mrs.
'i;p of the boys
What u pity,
"Why Hi.-!." -!
doting father i.f i!
Kihle, buys.''
"The 1".-: 1 1 1 1-1 "
Manly. "And yi'ti
lis being liiullM-rii'
lhat t here are fh e '
"I fail tu Sim' w In,
ditioti has to do v.
lie crisply.
She had caught
erne.
"The sour faced
house fur the t,l;:n
told Chlole thai !!'
been better, if they
motherless."
Mrs. Manly drew
lippolnted.
"And lie has sivli
new neighbor Mull
"If only he had ba
be took unto bine
least If he did tint now possess those
live terrible hoys- "
Half Impatient, half laughing, Mol
lie turned to her sU'et1.
"You poor nie'ch -making hopeful,"
be said, "will you inner give up your
fancies for lite'; Nmv. that I have that
rnreless father here in his garden, 1
tdtull go down In mv severest innniipr
and eall liiui to task. spinster has
miinp rights of her own, even holly-liock-llowers,
and pet eats."
Indulgently smi'itnr, Mary Manly
watched her snial' ci'ueeful sister, as-i-end
n small ladder upon her own
fide of (he garden wall, and beckon
Iter neighbor to conference. The
neighbor came Willi alacrity. He np
IHuired almost as joyous lis young
-Danny had. In Ins guilty pursuit f
hollyhock hbissonis. The conference
i his wifeless con
1 h me,"' said Mid
ler sister's Infer-
v iinan who keeps
.iiid Ids cherubs,
1 hoys might have
had not been left
ia her bead, dls-
a fine face your
e." she regretted,
lened along before
if a wife. Or tit
-lasted sonietin
ending peaceably
with a floral olToritig from the'oppnsite
Midi- of the feme,
evidently given in
He's denuded plant
lug one of his o n.
callously ilesei
It was timwvn
hasten arneiul
mid assist her.
"Ills Mil II 'I
"Is John .iii-'
Ihe place for the
it seems t!i:t
crusty boll el. ei
no control nw
A Inswort by w i
Mollie turned I
"He remiiiiied
The neighbor iiail
exchange for Mol
. a rare and bloom
ind as Mollie pre-
micd with her burden
ry :ur the neighbor to
in hi r side of the wall,
i" calmly confided
iv, lie has taken
miner. The Lemon
e hoys dub their
'The Lemon' bag
heir actions: Mr.
reprimand tlieni.'
face nway.
of the fact," sb
enld, "that they have no mother."
"It was upon the following morning
that Mrs, Maulv attain saw her sister
ascend the ladder to the garden wall.
This time she hup' a basket of Chlole
fresh baked
lug lliein
urchins, hastily
to
Hi
The boys
triumphant
acceptance
Hired,
"Hit us
Danny. Mollie n
"If that Is tin
to talk to ."
uii'hl
hollts.
and enjoyed toss
freckled faced
erregateil beneath,
the cookies with
Their manner of
much to be do-
NO LONGER OLD AT THIRTY
Women Have Proved Conclusively
That Age Is Not at All a
Matter of Years.
Perhaps women who are not at all
sensitise iibuui their age are still in
u minority. But their number Is trow
ing. In almost uuy gathering where
women chatter pleasantly and with
some intimacy ahum things which in
terest them you tind at least one
woman who cheerfully admits that
she. Is nut thirty-live, but forty-live.
or lhat it is a very long time since
she was thirty.
Une of the tragic conventions which
have helped to wreck women's lives
is this stupid tradition that at any
iveii age a woman gets old. Years
ago most w. mien ciebrateil Uie:r
tiiirtielli birthdays will, a sense of de
pression. Willi greater common
sense, women at least began to See
that even after thirty they might en
joy lite, and that the games anil
ainusemeii.s ami -joys which are pos
sible at twenty are no less possible
at forty.
Today there lingers this ancient su
perstition that if you have reached a
certain age you must uot'tidmit the
fact. Hm it will not endure long.
Now that we bear o a woman of
ninety playing really capable golf, of
women past tifty banding themselves
together In cheery fashion as golling
veterans, of women of every and any
age enjoying life, it will become uu-
fasliiouahle to conceal one's age.
from the Continental Edition of the
Loudon Mail.
mint l ei'
"Ah !
K tld
l'eiii hv.
We're ill
!
anell.fr. IVnchy." crleil
e reddened III Indignation
v you are going
admonished, "not
, no! e "
s.'i.v !" eel. ilmed l'ete, the
l'i v . "I i;"i means all right,
T1 id's w! at we cull you V hen
V v :;t neilly pleased.
:ii !i '" I ' ev named her, these
e lyi'i ! 1 el young creatures,
vi ! ( ii i ! : i ame. more often
ii. t V. i"de In the new
' r - . i the new neighbor's
. .-, ;- i ted boys eniwVeil
'. : ' ' V n! became se't
:' "i ! "iii her sister's tirst
..... f John A us-
Mil ' - 'y Mollie had re
! , .'. . I'. iii'd sileii.'c upon
r,'. . t M.inly's cleverest
. i ' 'ri'in her no w ord.
.-.-! .'elU'cru'e'v put
t " ' e l;iii-:he. happd v.
.'.. '. ' ' ' II AlllsWUI'lhV." t!
' - :, I I ::i going to marry
-'"' milled, "live some
n lit to John's noli, e
i - '.lance. They are
entlv ciinv nlesecot.
" -.- Idea i'f bringing
'a the eoimtrv air.
' r you see. and bere-
, to think of sive
i ew on," B'bte'l Mollie
vt'l have ire." She
miss thiw boys," sli
"1 will
Ktht
Dfr' nfd tH Honor.
"So you have inrnrd a new hmnd
f c gnis .itiei me. lime youT" mll th
orlebrPi.
"I have taken lhat liberty, sir," r
piled the mm i;fm trer.
"Well, I wish )ou would call It
unit-tltiug else. I huve tried oim"
i
50 good cigarettes
for 10c from
one sack of
GENUINE
DURHAM
TOBACCO
BOYS PROVED THEIR HONESTY
Do Not Fear Trees. !
I don't think that anybody (boy or j
otherwise) who has the knowledge of
trees required by the test for the
merit budge in forestry will ever be
afraid to be alone in the woods at
night, or at any other time. Once
vou know what the leaves do, and
what makes them green and how the
sap runs and why (or as much of that
"why" as is known), and how the
wood tissue is formed, and how the
mots work, and what tbj, tree does
In winter when you know such things
about trees, you should never again
be lonesome in the woods. For though
all these are merely scientific facts,
they will make the trees real living
tilings to you, and then you will beg n
to understand what Is meant when
one speaks of the trees "whispering"
and of the leaves "clapping their
hands." tieurge (iladden in Hoys'-Life,
Airplane With Peculiar Fuselage
Who Owns a Glacier?
When the retreat of a glacier leaves
a piece of ground uncovered, w hose Is
It V The state's, says the law of France
and of Italy. The canton's, suys the
eneral law of Switzerland. Hut ill
the (bisons the commune Is held to
own both the glucier and the ground
It covers, so that u body like a parish
council often possesses some millions
of tons of good blue ice. Manchester
Guardian.
How Shall They Park?
Akron, U recently, by ordinance,
Unlimited all angular automobile
parking, with the result that accidents
have been cut -o per cent In downtown
sections and street car service has
been Improved. In Buffalo practically
all parking lias been changed from the
parallel method to the perpendicular,
which allows three cars to park where
one formerly did.
Sounds Like Double Meaning.
Some female defendants are homely.
And some are acquitted. Nashville
Tennessean.
Small New York News Vendors "Made
Good" Wi'thojt Having Given
Promissory Notes.
One of the great New York news
papers pays an astonishing tribute to
the young merchants who sell its wares
upon the streets. This newspaper,
like practically every other, printed
an 'extra" after the big Jersey City
prize fight. When the papers arrived
at Times square the young man whose
business it was to sell them to the
newsboys, taking their cash in return,
found himself overwhelmed by an
eager flock of youngsters who grabbed
the papers as fast as he could open
the bundles and raced away to dis
pose of them without going through
the usual formality of paying for their
stock. .
Many a boy could have kept all the
money he received as profit and neg
lected to pay for his papers, but, so
the paper declares, as soon as the
storm of selling whs over the boys re
turned to the neighborhood and set
tled, until the cash turned In was ex
actly what It should have been for
the number of papers sent out from
the office of publication.
That was only ordinary honesty, It
Is true, but a kind of honesty met
with seldom enough to be uncommon.
Yet It would be expected by those
who are familiar With newsboys. The
newsboy doesn't expect to be cheated,
and hi? certainly doesn't Intend to
cheat anybody. More power to him.
Hartford Times.
Recognition.
"lie easy on me. your honor, this is
the first counterfeiting I have ever
done."
"You made a remarkably good job of
these bills, and I believe in recognizing
genius."
"Thanks, your honor."
"Ten years." Birmingham Age-Uernld.
5) "
f v , 4 e- I "-i f $rV
L t--r ;- o A!
Yi i:... .i-K J:Mli4MWM
1
Closeup view of the peculiarly broa.i fuselage of the 32-passeuger Reming-ton-rairnelli
biplane piloted by Hert Acosta at Curtiss field. The huge plane,
designed for cross-country passenger service, has a wing spread of 70 feet, and
Is capable of staying in the air for eight hours. Its two Liberty motors of 3S5 .
horse power each, drive it at 110 miles an hour.
Secretary Wallace Meets Group of Young Farmers
i
Secretary Wallace receiving 170 farm club boys and girls who were gpenalng a week at the University of Maryland
In recognition of their agricultural achievements. Hr. Wallace shook hands with them and showed them through the-
grounds.
mi
o
''5
...
v'
O
O
00
a0 mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
--
To make their headquarters during Fair Week
AT THE
"Winchester Store"
THE LARGEST AND FINEST
Hardware and Implement Establishment; In
Eastern Oregon
WETHER YOU WISH TO BUY OR JUST LOOK AROUND AND GET ACQUAINTED, WE ARE AT
YOUR SERVICE
& Bisbee
uur
Pioneer Hardware Merchants ' ' '
"W EHAVE IT, WILL GET H OR IT IS NOT MADE." " ' '
With the Approach of Cooler Weather
On K Hi
5ioves ana itanges
May Interest You
f
'.,t
0
b - i