Tuesday, September 27. 1021 THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER. OREGON m'mimmmmmmmmmmillmmmi,mmimiiiHmKmm THE BRICR McAtee CO. AiKen, Props. We Are Exclusive Agents in Heppner for Normans Ice Cream The Finest Product on The Market 3 I American (Copy for This Department Supplied by the American Legion News Service.) ALL KNOW JACK WILLIAMS Are your drills n good shape? iiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Now is the time you should begin to look after them. vmm Whether ;t is a new drill or repairs for the old ones, we have them. We handle the Superior and Van Brunt Drills. Which arethe best on the market. . . You need not take our word for this, but just ask any user. niiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiii copies ndw. Co. Stories of Great Scouts By Elmo Scott Watson , Western Newspaper Union. "JOHNNY APPLESEED." SCOUT WHO PLANTED ORCHARDS Not all of the great scouts were In dian fighters. In contrast to the ca reer of Lewis Wetzel, who was some thing of a professional Indian kUler, Is the life of John Chapman or "Johnny Appleseed." Chapman never killed an Indian In his life, but he probably saved as many white men from death at their hands as Wetzel did. Chapman first appeared on the Ohio frontier In 1806. He came floating down the Ohio river in a canoe, tow ing another, and both boats were load ed with apple seeds from the cider mills of Pennsylvania. His purpose was to plant the seeds In the wilder ness so that orchards would be started for the settlers when they arrived there to make their homes. For the next 30 years lie went every where up and down the Ohio country, planting seeds, going from one orchard to another, pruning and caring for the young trees. He was a welcome vis Itor in the log cabins of the settlers for he always carried a Bible and some books from which he would read and preach to them before the blazing nrepiaces in the evening. Johnny practiced his teachings of humility and kindness. He never killed anything for food. He carried a kit of cooking utensils. Including a mush pan, which he sometimes wore as a hat. Usually he wore a broad-brimmed black hat, but a coffee sack with arm holes cut In It was his only coat. White men called him "queer," for he often went barefoot Id winter as well as In summer, but the Indians said, "He has, been touched by the Oreat Spirit" He went everywhere among them unharmed, for the fact that Johnny never carried a gun con vinced them that he was under the special protection of, the Manlto. During the War of 1812 when the British were overrunning the Ohio country, Johnny Appleseed performed bis greatest service for his people. la tils wandering among the tribes he often learned of their plans for at tacks on the settlements. Where no other white man could have gone, Johnny passed In safety and more than once he carried warnings to the settlers, giving them time to prepare for defense before the red Invaders swept down upon them. , All this time Johnny Appleseed was carrying out his cherished dream of making Ohio blom with fruit trees and many- of the finest orchards In that state today owe their beginnings to this strange man. In his later years Johnny left the country which he had helped beautify and went o live with a relative In Fort Wayne, Ind. Be died In 1S47. THE rem toCABINCTl (, 1921, Western Newspaper Union.) m i n r t- U ' mm cm N There must be no stint of labor where labor will tell tor our neigh bora' happiness, but no wasteful ex travagance of it where it will not profit. SOMETHING TO EAT. When fresh milk is not available why not use condensed or evaporated milk? A most deHcnte soup mny be prepared with a can of unsweet ened milk and a can of pea soup. Heat them to gether and serve piping hot. Banana Ice Cream. I'eel and musli six bana nas, add the strained juice of half a lemon, one ami one half cupfus of sugar, brtit to n cream. Dilute two pint cans drf condensed milk with one quart of w'lter, and com bine with the fruit .mixture. Freeze, using one-third salt and two-thirds ice. Cereal Pudding With Prunes. Take one cupful of cooked cereal, two cup fuls of sweet milk, two tublespoonfulN of butter, one-half teuspoonful of suit, the yolks of two eggs, sugar to taste, and .flavor Willi a bit of lemon peel. Mix Ingredients and cook slowly in a buttered baking dish. Wheti firm remove frcTu the oven and cover with stewed prunes from which the stones have been removed ; spread over this the beaten whites of two eirc-a. tA "men a pmcn or salt, four tablespoon fuls of sugar and a grating of lemon peel hus been added. Return to the oven to brown. Serve with cream. nosy Macaroni. Break half a package of macaroni Into short lnirfh and cook urMl tender In boiling salted water, in the meantime open one pint of tomato soup and dllute'lt with one half can or boiling water. Add to this one tablespoonful of minced on ion, two tablesnoonfuls of choorw-d roU ery, a Dlnch of around clnvoa ninh of soda and two tablespoonfuls of meuea Dutter. Drain the macaroni and blanch wltn cold water; add one tablespoonfuL,of butter and two table spoonfuls of cornstarch with thi Add the tomato sono mixture and conk until free from lumps. Have ready a cuprul or grated cheese, butter a shallow baking difth and nut la inv. er of macaroni, cover with sauce and grated cheese and season with paprika and salt. Repeat until the dish l full Cover with buttered crumbs and bake In a moderate oven thirty-five minute Serve hot. Adjutant of North Dakota Legion De partment Acquired Popularity While Serving as Newsie. Everybody In North Dakota, and not a few in bordering states know Jack Williams, adju tant of the Amer ican Legion de partment, and his resonant voice. Williams acquired both his popular ity and his voice by crying "Extra, extra, nil about it" on the streets of Fargo, N. D., for six years. While newsie. WllWams conceived a monopoly on all the city's evening papers which brought all the other boys into his em ploy and made, nionejs' for him. Later lie branched out owl worked in a news paper press room. He worked up to pressman, a position he was holding when he enlisted in the Third En gineers for the war. Forced to quit school while in the fourth grade, Williams obtained a good education on the streets and by night study. At twenty-one years old he was president of the Fargo Trades and Labor assembly, a post he re signed to enlist. He went into the army as a private and came out with the same rank. He was the first state adjutant of the American Legion department. PAGE THREE .J..!..S..J..S..:. A PROFESSIONAL CARDS A A DR. R. J. VAUGHAN DENTIST Permanently located in Odd fellow's Building HEPPNER, OREGON POST SELECTS THIS BEAUTY Puget Sound Organization Chooses Miss Hazel Jordan as One of Their Prettiest. A dip In refreshing ocean water ev ery day during the summer and every ween, nt least, during the winter, makes for the sparkling eyes and exceptional beauty of Miss Hazel Jordan, re cently selected by the American Le gion of Seattle. Wash., as one of the three most beautiful girls In the great North west. Because of the cool, moist air which blows the year around, because they swim, skate, ski, float and fly and do everything else that a real Jive American girl Is sutmoseil to do ""the beauties of the Northwest far surpass those of any other section of the Lnfted States, the Leirlnn of Seattle holds. All these advantages obviate the use of rouge, powder, the lipstick and paint, too, they declare. Miss Jordan lives in Everett Wash.. on the eastern shore of Puget sound. .She was the only one of the three girls who would tell, willingly, her age. ne admits eighteen years. h N liCVA KILLED BY SHELL FROM WAR Ammunition Expert Is Almost Blown to Pieces in His Own Home at Indianapolis. Although he had gone throucrh the World war unscathed and had quail- lied as an expert In handling artil lery ammunition, Frank M. Kitine, Indianapolis, Ind., recently was near ly blown to plec In his home bv a three-Inch shell hi bud brought from France. After hav ing served In an exhibition squad which gave dem onstration ot how shells were unload ed and exploded, Klnne was unload ing his souvenir shell when the fatal accident o-currcd. Klnne's little home was wrecked, but his mother and sister, sleeping In an upstairs room, miraculously escaped Injury. The local post of the Ameri can Legion, to which the soldier had applied for membershin followinr his recent discharge from the regular army, gave him a military burial. iiiiiit Spsclal Rates to Convention. Sixteen railroad lines touching 27 states have granted one-cent-a-mlle fare to the third annual convention of the American Legion In Kansas City, Oct. 30, 81, and Nov. 17 Hate reduc tions have been made by the following railroads: Missouri Pacific; Kansas City Southern; Frisco; Rock Island; Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul; Wabash ; Illinois Central ; Chicago Great Western; Chicago jmd North western; Burlington, Chicago and Al ton; Santa Fe ; Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis; Missouri and St. Louis; Mis souri, Kansas and Texas and the Un ion Pacific. The one-cent-a-mile fare zone is bounded by Lwtiver, Minneap olis, Buffalo, N. T., Savannah, Ga Jacksonville, Fla., Birmingham, Ala., New Orleans and port Arthur, Tex. DR. A. D. MoMURDO PHYSICIAN and SURGEON Telephone 122 Office Patterson's Drug Store HEPPNER, OREGON F. A. McMENAMIN LAWYER Office Phone Main 643 Residence Phone Main 65 Roberts Building HEPPNER, OREGON S. E. NOTSON ATTORN EY-AT-LAW Office in Court House HEPPNER, OREGON SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORXEY-AT-LAW First National Bank Bldg. HEPPNER, OREGON A Member of the Federal Reserve fil lilil ii K M ? 5 2 Save and Invest WATERS & ANDERSON FIRE INSURANCE Successors o C. C. Patterson HEPPNER, OREGON DeLUXE ROOMS Summer Rates 75c & $1.00 Over Case Furniture Co. WOODSON & SWEEK ATTOK X 15 Y 8-AT-LAW Masonic Building HEPPNER, OREGON Heppner Korald Want Ada bring home tho bacon. Two thing's arc important if you want to reach the goal aheadSave and Invest, Even small savings, made regularly, will eventually grow into a moderate fortune and bring you a comfortable income. Make your start at the First National Bank, even though it is with One Dollar. Follow up your start with vigor ibis gets results. Savings invested here arc safe; they grow more rapidly when you add the interest earned. First National Bank of Heppner A Member of the Federal Reserve THE HEPPNER HERALD, ONLY $2.o0 A YEAR Messages Personal to You Not letters or telegrams but almost as personal as let ters or telegrams. The advertisements in this paper they were writ ten for you and printed for you. ' " You would not Tay aside a letter or telegram without opening it. Neither would you lay aside your newspaper with out reading the advertise ments. Merchants and manufac turers are talking to you. They are telling you of their goods and their wares and their services. They tell of opportunities They give you invitations. it is impossible for these merchants and manufactur ers to send letters to all the readers of this paper. So here in the paper today are the letters to the whole community and to you as a part of the community. Reading them will help you to economize and -post you on store news just as well as if each advertiser sent jou a personal letter. Read them as if they came as personal letters to you Up to-Date Economy. On little economy which nil Rf prior. raphers can practice Is to chew their gutu on both sides. Only Two 6pclmen. There are two kinds of men those who do what their wives tell them, snd those who never marry, Smart Set. Oldett Danish Blood ln Jutland The Inhabitants of Jutland are Vs. Ilevel to be the most genuine, speci mens of the old Danish stock. I