PAGE FOUR wm, ncrni&R, ukuuim . Tuesday, August 30, 1921 THE HEPPNER HERALD AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER S. A. PATTISOX, Editor and Publisher Entered at the Heppner, Oregon, Postoffice as second-class Matter Terms of Subscription One Year S2.00 Six Months S1.00 Three Months $050 ir . A .!. , CECIL I Miss Annie Hynd at J I Wednesday. Butteby Flats K. V. Krop, of Morgan Sr.t in Ceril Sunday. r Goodrich, ling hi old pi.U ; lor. :nd C Vl.-l- .-'u:i- j Miss Annie Hynd who has been spending a few days at Hynd Bros. I ranch in Sand Hollow, returned t her home at ulJ'terby Flats Tuesday. 1 Mr. ami Mrs. R. E. Duncan and daughter. M ;.. MUdr'-d, of Busy Boo ranch, were try;c? out the highway to Mor-Mn Fndav. Karl Farnsworth and family hare returned to their home at Rhea Sid ing afte camping out at at ..Iitch creek for some time. Karlsavs, rive him Cecil for sunshine and fine weather. Mrs. J. H. Franklin and daughter, Miss Bernice were week-end guests of Mrs. Jack Hynd at Butteby Fiats before leaving for Milton where J. H. has bought a home. Men NEW COUXTY AGE XT ARIUVES k. v,-.::.. doing 1,1; Thur-ida;. and M; of J. W. Lo- O.-born and nt t Fiirvi'-w ran. hw, Everett h, both iroi:i i Cecil were r dur; tne -v.' W' Hynd. of liing i.ti J D. a t and -: : j: T. H. J on uBtt'-rby Flat?, of the Hichwa.y li'-s in H-ppner m-: Mr. n vi' lid on and son. E 5. Z'-nnith Logan rw ratif h,v.'-rohe and als. n fron guest. H. J. lie. K an.-inad' i;:ndu' a or' (.n Mi A V m Cecil on Sa'urday. id. T. .i'-'o;,. oi the Lookout, left lie local Friil, ty j.,r Boanlman v.-re he will visit for a. f.-w days. Mrs.T. H. Lowe,p,.n, Thursday in rgan as ih" tu.-st of Mr. and Mrs. K. Wait. Walter 1'op,. and Robert Lowe drift-d back to Cecil after two weeks can -ping in the mountains. Herbert Hynd and sisters, Annie and Violet aceompanlodby Miss Mil dred Henriksen, of Strawberry ranch, were visiting in lone Thursday. Mrs. Roy .St-nder of rfeldonisecn, and sisters, MissesDotand Dimple Crabtree, were callers in Cecil Sun day. Jack FenUick, painter and paper- 1 a shor tstay in Cecil on turning to his home hanger, mud Sunday before in lone. Mi.-s M lie. I ; -nriksen. of Strau- 1.. ty ranch was the dinner guest Of Mr and Mrs. Georg Kreb? accom panied by Miss Georgia Summers and and Herbert Suiimierfeldr, of the Last Camp were visiting friends in Arling ton .Sunday. Heib'-rt Hynd and John Krebs and party of charming young ladies were seen Sunday joyriding on the Colum bia river highway between Heppner Junction and TheDalles. Miss Emraalyne Belshee who has been visiting for some time at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. W. May re turned to Wasco Sunday. . Master Gene Logan and friend, Sudiiey Wilmotle spent a short time around Cecil during the week before, 1 returning to their home at the Wil I lows. I Miss Ruth May, of Lone Star ranch left on the local Saturday morning for Wasco where she will visit for ' some time before leavingfor Portland to resume her studies at Jefferson High school. C. Cj Calkins, who succeeds L. A. Hunt as county agent, took up his work here last week. itr'. Calkins has been for four years county agent in Sherman county and for two years has enjoyed the distinction of work- i mg with a county farm bureau which had the highest percentage of members of any county in the Paci fic northwest. Seventy per cent of the farmers in Sherman county for two years have been merabes of the Fam Bureau carrying on a valuable county prosam though the untiring a -somite" of Mr. Calkin, who is ra ted by the O. A. C. extension service as one of the most abb? county agents ' in the srate. Mr. Calkins is rated as j j one of the bet posted men in Eastern i I Oregon on wheat production, having : had practical experience and in addi ! tioa. several years of professional ex ' perience first, as an Extension special- ! 1st with the c. S. D'-paunent of Agri- culture, later as an employee of the! i experiment, station at Moro and more recently as county agent in Sherma ! county. ' At a recent meeting of t execu- 1 itive Committee of the Morrow coun ; ty Farm Bureau, Mr. Calkins was the 1 unanimous choice of that body al ! though not an applicant for the posi 1 tion and when asked to come to Mor j row county, was glad to accept be cause he realized it offered a broader field for effort than was afforded in Sherman county. MORE IMPROVEMENTS OX TEH ROAD RIT- Ii- m A Ml m 3 and Young Men You can get the Best Value in Clothing From Lloyd Hutchinson IUIIIIIIlllllUl!lllllllll:lllil!IIHUIIilUlliilllllllllllll!l lie new iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui nappy patterns and styles will please you: the new bell bottom trousers and round opening low cut vests will give you class they are both the very latest things for the smart dressers. MliWMraOIMIIIM Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllll Don't forget our Cleaning, Dyeing, Pressing and Repairing Department where we make your old clothing Look Like New East Side Lower Main St. Heppner, Oregon MRS. I G. HERREN Latest Styles in Fall Millinery NMMMRlWMffli Gossard, Henderson and La Princesse Corsets Corset Accessories Maurine Toiletries Popular Priced Jewelry tuuumtMMiiHaitu MAKE USE OF OUR REST ROOM AND CITY LIBRARY W. L.McCaleb, county road master, County Judge Campbell, R. L. Eenge, and Arthur Ke-ene and their families spent last week camping at Ditch creek. The men of the party impro ving their time by clearing right-of-way for somenew grades on the Hit ter road. The grading is now un der way and Mr. McCaleb, who has long worked and schemed for the opening of that road thinks the pro blem is about solved. Judge Campbell, who went to I'nion county Saturday, expected to stop at Pendleton Ions enough to pry a few hundred dollars away from the forestry service to help in com pleting the work which has, so far. done largely by donated labor money. Mr. McCaleb is also trying to list some donated labor to clear right-of-way for a new grade at the Ha we Hill camp this side of the coal mines, which is said to be the only bad grade left on the road. He received as surance from F. A. McMenamin of co-operation from the commercial club on that work. i i ... ti: ... & r i i x i 'St SO.MK SNARK STOKY (Mwlford Mall Tribune) You can tafk about your bull fights being ferocious, vicious and thrilling, but the most fascinating and thrill inest thriller ever witnessed was a battle between two large rattlesnakes on the Crater lake road near McLeod, witnessed by Court Hall and Frank Isaacs and described in the Medford Mail Tribune. and I i& c Between the Local Fuel Dealer and the Consumer Is the only way to avoid a serious oa S nonage and attendant high prices Next Winter HEPPNER GARAGE tMUUtMNWIMUtUHtlHH United States Tires Buick Automobiles Goodyear Tires Everything in Accessories Vaughn & Goodman J Heppner, Ore. Phone 213 Hall and Issacs were visitiug some campers, when of a sudden they heard ! the brush cracking and saw rolling stones coming from a point TO yards , up the hillside. To their astonish ment they then saw two rattlesnakes intertwined around each other stand ing on the end of their tails bat; ling ieiously. "As tli'.v neared the biif'.ini: ratt lers they disdained to notice our ap proach, seemingly fighting more vic ious than before." says Court H.t',1 in describing the novel conflict, "Wrap ped mound each other to within eight or ten inches of their heads, some times standing on their tails and sometimes rolling down the hill for five or ten feet, only to arise again on their tails' ends, drawing back their heads, striking again and again at each other with their forked tongues and their eyes glaring balls of fire. "With the larger rattler at time seeming to hae an advantage only to have this advantage overcome at-ain by the agility of the smaller one, the battle was becoming more fascinating and thrilling alt the time, and after watching the almost even struggle for eight minutes Mr. Issacs ended the affair with a shot gun, emptying four loaded shells into the combatants. "The rattlers were found to be unusually large, one measuring 4 4 inches in length with 13 rattlers, the other 41 inches with 12 rattlers. It is seldom that two rattlers are evwr seen fighting, but the dry season and 0 We can handle coal direct from the car to your bin at this season while the weather is fine and the streets are solid cheaper than we can from our storage platforms next win ter when mud and snow and cold will interfere with traffic and make delivery cost twice as much. Save Money, Worry and Discomfort ly tilling your winter fuel order NOW We want to co-operate with YOU Will you co-operate with US for your own benefit? Tum-A-Lum Lumber Co SHOW GOOD BUSINESS JUDGEMENT BY ACTING NOW t hot weather seems to have mad them more vicious this year as well aa more plentiful." Engraving 6.000 Yar Old. An engraving approximately &.0UI years old waa discovered recently In Wale. I'iMin the plaque are a number of triangular aymbolt dutir.j from Neolithic times, probably by workmen ot the Iberian race, many evidence of which survive. ni ii.'i -e Few lit'cta Harmful to Man. IteiaiiveU H.nkliig. very few species ,,- mriuiui in any way to .. and his uorks. The Injurious '! amount to less than 1 Lvt cent "i the hole. on the other hand, a re ii many species are beneficial ' to mmiUnd. Pollination of crops like closer would be Impossible without In ie, t visitations, and tbe same U true f many garden flowers and Important 'ruita. Energy Ned, , c.lon.a. According to the Lulled States De parttnent of Agriculture, a fain ,y S k ?g f " fatl"'r- """her and thr. .r. Jit T1' d'"' ' best bal- calories each. (m thls ba9i nd vegetables should ,upp, - 'a,' .rLttrCf i-ri