Tuesday, October n, 192 1 THE HEPPNEK HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON PAGE THREE s. PROFESSIONAL CARDS 4 REDEMPTION A Member of the Federal Reserve THE BRICK McAtee CD. Aihen, Props. We Are Exclusive Agents in Heppner for Normans Ice Cream The Finest Product on The Market A S3 jSU 1 'eyouron good shape? Now is the time you should begin to look after them. 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. miiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Peoples lidw. Co. Stories of Great Scouts C0U!T DE SRIECK (c), WoMern Ncwsjmper Union. OLD BILL HAMILTON'S STRANGE DUEL WITH AN ENGLISHMAN Oiii of the greatest of the ulil time mountain men In western history wns Willliini '1'. lliiniilton, or "(Hil lilll" lliiniilton us he wns known In t lit -uiiy diiys In Monlnnn. Ills strange duel Willi 1111 Englishman Is historic. (Mil Kill hail nlVi'inli'il the Englishman In siHtii' wii.v, unit I he liiit islier liial 1 ' 1 1 k i ' I HI 111 In 11 iliicl. "All right ; I'll tight yon '." snlil old Hill. "Itui I get lo name tin' weap ons nnil rules for tin- tight." The Englishman agreed, niul llils Is what lliiiiiillon decided: Km li man wns lo snip to the skin, no mil In ihe Vollow stoni' rier, tiiul wiili an ax Imp n liolc In llio hi'. Tlim ll.r two inrn wrrr In gel ilnwn In llic-.,' Iiulrs alnl sit In llir walrr up in Ihrlr .-hull! lei's. Thr lirsl lu leaw this try hath was thr lo-ri'. Thr 1 nut i's In stall. Tin' Englishman slued It for a lew iiiinnies. Tin n Willi a wllil 'I'll he leaped out anil, with Ins Irrth cliaitrium. ran fur n house niul 11 slmo us faM as hr I'mihl. iihl Hill I'ollouril rh'M' mi his Ins'ls, rilling llir shivering l;rii:sher every ' ;i 1 1 n lu his wn alailary. Old 1(111 was declared wlmirr of llir duel. It hail li'rii no hardship for Hamilton. hail llvril uiiioni; ihr liulinns niul was as lianly us thry. Ili Is said to have heen the only w lit ti mail of his time lio could Htrlp niiki'd, take a hmv niul arrows Hint shiKit InilTnlo from horse liiick as well as the savage-., with whom he lived. lluiullton tlniilly settledi down Ht Fort Ilenton, Stout., where he opened a log i-ii hi 11 hotel uud a hutrher shop. Thj governor of Montana Appointed him sheriff of Chnteau county, ami he , also a deputy United Htate mar shal. In IStSo the governor risked him to visit the (Vow and (Iron Ventre In dian and persuade them to come In to Fort Kenton to mitke peace. "Hut how can I go?" said Old Kill. "I have to look after my eatln' house jinil hutrher shop and 'tend to my duties hr sheriff and marshal. I've got two prisoner on hand now and no Jail to Visep 'em In." Finally he ootisented and. acenni IMiiiled only hy an Indian hoy. he made the dangerous trip. After a series of eieltliuj adventures lie rvturned In ufetjr, bringing the tvru trlles with hint to the t'ouiu'll. Hid Kill died In 1SW at the ao of eighty six. He was always proud of the foot that he had been a scout for fha I'ntted Htatea army, and to the day of hi death ha kept th Stars and t tripes noaclug over Um ItttMt leg nbiB wtwr h UfeU. i Ufa flA The young Ccmtc Van de Strgcn de Sneck of Daigium, is shown lowering I the fUij on the nfterdrck of the Bet- gl.in ste.mier Persier, aboard which he , is serving as apprentice seaman. SYNGMAN RHEE 'f His By MARGARET A. NORTON. Syngman Rhsa, president of th pro visional govarnmont of Korsa, who hops to pload for oslf dotonnlnatlon for his country bofora tha dologatoa to tho oonforonoo an limitation of armaments. (. by McClur Nwpjer 8yndlct. It was a crucial moment. Rachel recoKnlzed It. Without a second's hesi tation she grasped the steaming coffee pot and, with an alarming agility, sent It, contents and all, right through the hlg pane of glass In the dining room window. Then, with a slightly heightened color, but apparently otherwise calm and placid, she begun filling some glasses with water to substitute In place of the usual beverage. Iinlph, astonished, aghast, his mouth open, stood as If turned to stone and watched his wife's movements. To his astonished gaze she appeared ns cool and chilly ns n winter morning. "They" hail told her why, even Ttnlph's own mother bad warned her that Itnlph's ugly temper had spoiled bis first wife's life; tlint he was given to fits of "meanness," which' while they lusted made life near him, or with him, n misery arid a terror. "They" hud said that she would nie tho day she married him, for he was "overboil ting and tyrannical" and "had no thought for anyone but himself." To all well-meaning clitics, except Iliilpli's mother, liniiiol had turned a smiling lint unmoved face. Willi Mrs. Koihnun she hud talked earnestly. For some months her tactfulness and the love Kulpli undoubtedly bore his handsome and cheerful wife held his tyrannical temper within hounds. I!ut this lovely April morning he had risen with all Ids; disagreeable propen sities on the surface. Itnecbel had not uttered a word of remonstrance, not even when her lius band kicked the unoffending cat, threw a chair In his path to the other side of the room and nearly broke the covers of her new range when he replenished the fire. She pretended not to notice that her merry remarks were unanswered or glared at. It was not until, through his own careless ness, he had spilled a few drops of hot coffee on his wrist and had, with n muttered oath, thrown the offending cup across the room, landing. It In scraps on n pretty and prized rug, that Itachel acted. It was then that she followed his example, but to his horror and the sudden cooling of bis pettish resent ment, not only followed his example, but went his several better, for the window pane wns a valuable one and the coffee pot one of their best wed ding gifts. Neither spoke dining the hasty meal that followed. At dinner she ui'tiAl ,1ust ns usual. Italpli was very silent. He noted that the debris of the morning explosion lay where It had fallen. His mother and uncle were coming to tea. After dinner he gathered up the broken glass and Cleared away the coffee grounds. That night she prepared n letter. It was not long. In It Itachel told her husband that she had been warned about bis Inllammable temper; that she loved blin despite that very bad blemish, and she believed he was man ly enough to conquer his ruling pas sion. She told him that she meant for a while, "only for a while, and .lust as an object lesson, to show you how terrible such behavior Is. When I see that my acts are not bearing fruit and that you are not hearing fruit and that you are not worth my descending to siuii tactics then I shall say 'good by.' and forever 'good-by' ! I cannot live with a husband unworthy my respect. 1 should still love you, Ralph, but I should leave yon .Inst the s'une ns if my love bud departed, for I am an Individual with a right to happiness, and It woti'd be unobtain able with you. Think It over, hus band !" K-ilph ii"ver mentioned the letter, but it was many months before he al lowed his br-rtling vice to get the hotter of him aaln. and when he did It proved to be the las' time. This lime he stoned and killed a hen that had done some damage III the garden. When llaiiui, who loved all hclplcs creatures, saw the mutilated body she acted. That night when Ualph went out to feed bis poultry, which he fancied, despite bis occasional cruel ties, bis poultry house was empty. Itachel had given every bird away, "When you can use creatures hu manely," she said, "I'll agree to have more here. Kut that hen's broken ribs and body made me understand that you had to learn humane principles before we could trust animals of any kind In your hands." If was the Inst lesson necessary, Ralph saw the point. He began to re spect, as he had never done hefora with any woman who had come Into his life, the will which refused to sub mit tamely to Injustice and tyranny, "I must not lose her." he thought, "for If she gtes It will be forever." A year later as the pair were look ing at some fowl that Itachel herself had Installed In the poultry houses, Ralph remarked, retnlnlsrently : "I'm mighty glad. Itachel, that yon had the gumption to hit hard from the shoulder when I merited It." And Itachel, her prophecies fulfilled, answered : "I never hit you, honey, hut I did hit the black moods that were killing you." DR. R. J. VAUGHAN DKXTIST Permanently located In Odd fellow's Building HEPPNER, OREGON Now Droslng for Burnt. A newly devised Instantaneoo drowning for burns consists of three rolls of gaon linuiersed Id a solution of bfcarbooato of soda and mineral, pat' op In a contslnor with aa ut alaorVy romoralilo 111 DR. A. D. MoMURDO PHYSICIAN and SCRGEON Telephone 122 Office Patterson's Drug Store HEPPNER, OREGON F. A. McMENAMIN LAAYYER Office Phone Main 643 Residence Phone Main 665 Roberts Building HEPPNER, OREGON LOOK AHEAD S. E. NOTSON ATTOIl.N E Y-AT-LA W Office in Court House HEPPNER, OREGON SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORN E Y-AT-LA W First National Bank BIdg. HEPPNER, OREGON WATERS & ANDERSON FIRE INSURANCE Successors to C. C. Patterson HEPPNER, OREGON DeLUXE ROOMS Summer Rates 75c & $i.oo Over Case Furniture Co. WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORN E YS-AT-LAW Masonic Building HEPPNER, OREGON Heppner Herald Want Ads bring home tho bacon. 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