0 0 0 0 0 ;0 0 0 '0 '0 '0 0 0 a 0 4 Tuesday.rSeptember 6, 1921 THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON PAGE THREE Our stocks arc now very complete and you will find your needs well supplied. We can please you. Soft, Lustrous Silks, from the World's Markets, are here in Profusion Taffetas, Satins, Charmeuse, Crepes, Gros des Londres, Pean du Soi Etc. Classic Coats .a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0- 0 '0 0 0 0 The latest staple styles and the greatest variety of A Hearty Welcome models and materials. Wonderrful deep pile Salts ( Plushes. Heavy soft woolens in many weaves and color- QVtU NEW FAL LAND WINTER SAMPLES AND STYLES CoUrteOUS Attention "Gordon awaits you THE BIG WORD IN HATS A WD CAPS In our Fall showing you will find an . exceptional line of new novelty and staple hats and caps. . . Hats in unusual new shades in felts, wools, velours etc. Made in various fall shapes. . . Caps in new mixtures, serges and popular herring-bone weaves in pleasing colorings. "Good Goods" EASTERN ISLES UNDERWEAR Dainty hand made garments, made from the finest of materials and beautifully embroidered. Every stitch put in by hand. The price compares very favorrably with ordinr.vy garments "WHO'S YOUR TAILOR?" A vital question to every man, what clothes to buy? You want the best in workmanship, you want materials that will give service, you want the choice of suitable styles you want the opportunity of selecting your own suitings from a wide range of materials and patterns. If you want a combination of everything that is best in clothes, let your answer be 0 0 0 . Company 1 Stories of By Elmo Great Scouts , Western Newspaper Union. CAPTAIN SAM BRADY AND HIS FAMOUS LEAP Capt. Sam Brady was a member of a lighting family wliieli made history on the I'eimsylvania border during the Indian wars after the- Revolution Captain Brady's greatest exploit took place in Ohio. He had hern captured hy the Indians aftil carried to tlie San dusky Towns, headquarters for all the Ohio tribes, where the savages pre lared to burn hlra at the stake. He was stripped, hound to a post und slow fires kindled around lilm, for the Indians hated him so much that they wished to torture him as long as possible. Brady was a powerful man and he strained at his letters until they were loosened slightly. Then with a final effort he snapped the last bond, leaped across the barrier oi flame and, seizing a squaw, pitched Iter Into the fire. Before the Indians could recover from their surprise, the scout escaped from the village and plunged Into the woods, hotly pursued by hundreds of savages. Finally he came to the Cuyahoga river, near the present site of Kent In Portage county. At this place the river flowed be tween steep, rocky banks. 21! feet ficross from side to side. The scout was trapped. There was no other place for miles up and down the river where he could ford It. The Indians were closing In on him and his only chance of escape was to try to leap across the chasm. Brady could hear the savages yell Ing In the woods only a short distance away as he ran back toward thetn to get a good start. Then turning, he sped for the brink and putting all his failing strength Into a final spurt, he snrane for the opposite cliff. Ills jump wag a little short and he struck the bank a few feet below the edge. The Indians stopped In amazement then as the scout scrambled up over the edge, they opened lire. They wounded hlui In the leg, delay Ing hla flight, and In a short time were on his heels again. He came to a lake and plunged In. Stooping beneath the broad pads of a water Illy, he breathed through a hollow reed while the sav ages hunted In vain on the shores of the lake. They found his bloody trail to the water's edge and. believing that he hart drowned rather-than be cap tured again, gave up the chase. Soon afterward Brady reached Fort Pitt In safety. He had many more thrilling adventure before his death on Christmas day, 17P', but his 2J foot leap arns the Cuyahoga wis tb ireatest feat of all. TfoeKI 0 iyc), 19a 1, Western Newspaper Union.) &- B Do little tlilnKS now; so shall big thinss come to thee by and by asking to be done Persian Proverb. FOOD AND LABOR ECONOMIES. We, of necessity, do much planning to get a dollar's worth of food from the dollar ex pended. X o w, dinners of func tion do not ex ceed five courses, while in the home a four-course din ner is sulliciontbv elaborate to suit the most fastidious. Many clever ideas sprung up during the press of war which are too line to be ever given up. Among these Is the plate dinner served in so many restaurants. Meat and vegetables side by side in one receptacle, which reduces the work of serving and dish washing. In the home such dishes as can he cooked and served with the main course in one. disli have become very popular. The serving table or wheeled tray now appears with three stories, so the mindless home may have served the entire dinner Willi very few steps. The soaring of linen lias brought us to bare tables with doileys and run ners, which saves us Jaumlry bills and much work. The oilcloth table sets have been a wonderful blessing in many families and the use of the pa per napkin Is not to be despised. Living quarters have been reduced until the living room and dining room In many apartments must of necessity be one. The gate leg table which may be pushed back against the wall when not in use or can serve as the library table when not dining; with screens to use in the room to give some privacy; a couch by day will be the sleeping quarters at night; all add to the com fort. While we are all working to simplify our mode of living to give us more time to do the things worth while, let lis at this season do away with half or more of the bric-a-brac, pictures and other things which are only a weariness to the flesh. In this way by changing about in spring ami fall we will enjoy and appreciate each piece and picture more fully. A home to be comfortable and home like need pot be crowded with things; the things we ile and enjoy are the only necessary furnishings, and the more space around them the more comfort ami enjovment we will htv "Hell's Kitchen" on the Salton Sea This qunint house Is aptly named and decorated, fur It stands upon the top of an old volcano and Is 200 feet below sea level. It Is the dwelling of Capt. Charles K. Davis, who heads the mollct fishing industry of Salton sea. The Salton sea Is the bed of an ancient "marine lake" In Riverside and San IHego counties, California, ami Is 'Jim feet bejow sea level. The breaking through of canal bunks of the Colorado river turned it Into n fresh-water hike, !00 miles in area, In BMlfi isi. "llell'-i Kitchen" Is located on top of an Islan l (once the top of a volcanic mountain) 00 feet high. 200000OO Dress and Work J For Pair Visitors J Repairing is Our Specialty J C. W. Bovvers I The Spring Straw Hat. All winter long man wears a hat that Is easy and comfortable a friendly, slouchy, well-worn sort of thing that he can pull down over his ears when the wind blows or throw In to the air at a football game. It's just the sort of clothing a man ought to wear, not tyrannical but compan ionable. And then along-comes spring. In the spring, say the poets, the spirit of man breaks Its bonds. A fellow feels restless and Indomitable, fit for anything and free as the wind. He brooks no restrain', not he. He looks upon his good old cap or hat and de cides he ought to buy another. And he does. He goes and gets himself a straw hat a stiff, uncomfortable, unreliable sort of thing that is faith less to every passing breeze. A man can't roll It up and put It In his pocket, he can't throw It Into the air, he can't pull It down over his ears, he can't do anything with It except wear It daintily and carefully, until the time comes to smash It In the autumn and go back to the old cloth bat. And that's the best proof of the madness of spring not love, not blooming flowers, but the new straw that leaves a red mark on n fel forehead. San Francisco Ca!U SURVIVED STORM AT SAMOA Major General Lejeune One of the American Sailors Who Cam Safely Through Hurricane. Secretary Kdwln Iienby of the navy Is a fan ttn the history of that branch of the service and never misses an opportunity to expatiate on Its glories. He was speaking at a Navy league dinner not long ago and vividly de scribed the events as they occurred when. In 18-SIi, a hurricane caught three of our ships, three German ships and one flying the British flag In the harbor at Apia, Samoa, and sank them all except the Britisher, which man aged to get to sea. He told how the American ships were battered to pieces on the rocks, how the Vandalia sank and her crew rode out the storm In the rig glng which still protruded from the water. Three seats down the fable from Mr. !enby sat Major General John A. Lejeune, commandant of marines. The secretary of the navy did not know at the time that Gen. Lejeune, then a navul cadet, was one of the lads who hung on to the rigging of the Vandalia through the duration of the storm. TWO BARGAINS A small stock and rreefc ranch about miles from Hepp. tier. .'100 acre with a number of fine sj'ilngs; fenced and cross fenced with woven wire I'nlr Impnn cniotats. A Imr- guin if taken at once. 'JO acres of alfalfa land one mile from (own, 7 acres in good stand, balance easy to put in, nil wnt r l ights and taxes paid up. Trice $1,100.00 for quick sale lliue for rent n good lut'lo ranch, uel! impioied ami well watered of I IHO acres, ROY V. WHITEIS THE HEPPNER HERALD, ONLY $2.00 A YEAR