PAGE FOUR THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER. OREGON Tuesday, October LEGAL NOTICES XOTICK roil rilJIilCATIOX Department of the Interior, tT. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, September 30, 1021. Notice is hereby given that Willie Ruddy, of Lena, Oregon, who, on September 23, 1916, made Homestead entry, No. 016541, for ENW, ESV, Section 34, Township 1 South, Range 29 Kast, Willamette Meridian, and Lots 3, 4,SNW, Section 3, Township 2 South, Range 29 Kast, W. M., has filed notice of intention to make final three-year I'roof, to establish claim to the land above described, before United States Commissioner, at Heppner Oregon, on the 29th (lay of November, 1921. Claimant, names t as witnesses: Francis McOabe, Philip McCabe Kdd Dolierly, Tom Gill all of Lena Oregon. 2530 C. S. DUNN, Register. Stories of Great Scouts By Elmo Scott Watson XOTICK TO CKKDITOliS No! ice is hereby given tlint the undersigned lias been appointed exe cutrix of the estate of Nancy M. ;leej, defeased, and all persons hav ing claims nKa iu::l said ( stale are Ji'Tcby l crj u i red I) present tlie Same, Willi proper vouchors to said execut rix at tlx; office of her sillorney, W. 0 Trill, in J'iiIiiciii Ruilding, Fossil, Wheeler County, Oregon, within six months from tin; dale of this notice. Dated this 4 111, day of October, 3 921. ANNA L. PUTNAM, Execu trix of the estate of Nancy M. Meek, deceased. Post office address, Fossil, Oregon. 23-27 (Si, Western Newspaper Union. OLD JIM BRIDGER, TELLER OF "TALL YARNS" Pleasant Walks and Talks. These nice Sunday wulks, when two friends get lo know one another so In tiinutely; these Nimday-evenlni; tulks, when you giilhor by twos mid threes In Die firelight, und talk so freely; oh, what a power they ure Cor good, if used iirlghl ; what u power for harm, if wasted or misused! No one wants .von to force the conversation Into an edifying channel ; hut one knows 1ow (o (ulk liifurcalt'H, us It were, and how often there Is a choice between high unit low, wise and foolish, kindly and unkindly.- 101 ly.a belli Wordsworth. Proud of Her "Fevvers." l.llllo Mamie very much admired her Vapa's chickens. llisorvhig for H first time llH. liillo hairs mi her a runt, Mie ran very excitedly to her mamma, saying: "See! Mamma, see! 1 dot soma fevvcrs, I dot some fevvers." "Yes sir, up thar In the Yellowstone I seed peetrlfled trees a-ifrowln' with peetrifled birds on 'em a-slngln' peet rified songs," once declared old Jim Brldger, scout, trapper and fur trad er. He was one of the first white men to visit the natural wonders of what Is now Yellowstone National park. After his return he gave an account of what he had seen to an eastern magazine writer. Two of the writer's article's were published. Then the edi tor refused to print any more, saying that his readers would not believe such Huron .Munchausen tales. Ev erything the "old trapper had told the magazine writer was true, and when liridgor found that his stories were no longer believed, he began telling oth er yarns which did not always stick so closely to the. truth, One day in the Yellowstone lie said he came upon an elk grazing within ea.-y gun range, lie fired, but the elk neither (Implied nor seemed alarmed by the shot. The scout reloaded and fired again wilh the same result. Then he became angry. Picking up a rock, he threw it at the animal. The rock si ruck some invisible barrier and dropped to the ground. When Iiridg er reached I hi; place where It lay he found that lie had been shooting at the elk through a mountain of pefectly transparent crystal ! liridgor was the first white man to see the (treat Salt Lake In Utah. This was In 1821, and he told some won derful stories about the lake. One of them was about the great snowfall in the winter of ISJtO, which covered the whole Salt Lake valley to n depth of 70 feet. All of the buffalo perished. "When spring came, all I had to do was to tumble 'em into the lake an' I had enough pickled buffalo for my self nn' the whole Ute nation for years," Itridger declared. Hrldger was known as "Old Gabe," or "The Old Man of the Mountains" by bis fellow trappers, and the- Crow Indians called him "Casapy the lilnnket Chief." "C.ineral, whar you (Jon't see no In juns, thar they're sartin to be thick est," he once told Gen. Henry Carring- ton, and the general found It good ad vice. When the engineers for the Union Paclllc railroad were uncertain about the easiest route through the Kooky lnmmlnins, they sent for Old liei. lie took a niece of old brown paper am! with n piece of charcoal marked the rnule which they wen; to follow. I.aler they found that he had not made a single mistake in mapping the ronie. I'.rldger died 111 1SS1, and Is buried In Kansas City. RED GROSS GIVES ANNUAL BUDGET t $19,361,657 Allotted for Cur rent Program of Relief and Service.' MILLIONS FOR VETERAN AID Medical Aid for European Chil dren Will Cost $6,000, 000 This Year. Novel Automobile Interests London '..1 L cj , .Vv;? r . cinicn in,. vi1a. h.is heen cau-Ui i two scaled auimneliilc llh uirph el. cine. This machine mid 1'nris. It Is ; right hoi si pow ei ITEMS OF INTEREST 'nn:iN of ii lii'.nl mileage of more Hi, in ,'lihin mib's are In use in I'.ng li.nd. ,MeiCMii rope soled shoes nre new fold In l'ligliind. iiinl for dry weather wear they an- said lo he ccJ and com forliible. g much interest in London me propeller, driven by nn No substance that refuses to dls sohe in water has an odor, 'Milord's Inn, ihe oldest of the nine inns of Chancery, of London, has a hisnr dating back to KUil, al least. It Is said a pel canary was recently Interred in New York in a tiny colliu, lo the music (f n brass bund and he fore oi'ii mourners. Americans Set Free by Russia mi milium .in nwmniiMHi . - ITS "J- In I ills group of release ! '1I In lti',il ft ii-ii Kiiss-an s, V. It. Ksv, Henri J, l.a Mar American prisoiieis, photographed on ihelr ar vi. t prices, iv Unwell i'attenger, John I'llck. ami X, K ilnimiUano. Washington. Expenditures totalllna $19,361,057 for carrying through Its program of relief and services In the United States and overseas are out lined in the budget of the American Red Cross for the current fiscal year. This total is more than $5,000,000 low er than the expenditure during the last fiscal year, when the disburse ments reached $21,4t)2,741, It Is an nounced at National Headquarters In a statement calling attention to the necessity of continued support of the organization by response to the An nual ltoU Call, November 11 to 24, if the vital work of the society is to be effectively carried on. Outstanding among the items of the domestic budget is the appropriation of $3,000,250 for work in behalf of the disabled ex-service man and his family. This appropriation represents the amount alloted to this work from National Headquarters only and does not take into consideration the mil lions being spent in chapters for re lief of the World War veteran. It Is In the chapter that the greater amount is spent In meeting this obli gation of the Ked Cross, the announce ment continues, as manifested by fig ures of the fiscal year 1920-1921 when the total was approximately $9,000.- 000, of which $2,692,094 represented the disbursement of National Head quarters while the remainder was the chapters' contribution to this field ot lied Cross service. Vast Work for Disabled Chief among the sub-divisions ot the appropriation for work with vet erans is that which concerns Itself with assistance to disabled men and women In government hospitals. This item of $1,700,000, an increase of more than $500,000 over the appropriation for the same work in last year's bud get, VilI provide those personal Rervr ices for the disabled and their families which are indispensable to supplement those provided by the governnnt. The director of the Veterans' l'.ureau has recently expressed ids desire that the Ked Cross should continue and extend these "humanizing services." Other items of the ii,-!iroprlution for veterans' relief are proportionately in creased. An additional appropriation of $4(!!),0IK1 has been made for Red Cross work in connection with regif lar Army and Navy hospitals and with the regular Army and Navy. For disaster relief, the lied Cross lias set aside for Jhe current twelve1 months an appropriation of $54,'!,i)7G, virtually doubling the appropriation for the same purpose for the fiscal year 1020-11)21. More than $2,000,000 Is provided for service and assistance to the 3,tmo Red Cross chapters by the national organization. Helpina Destitute Children Other Items of the domestic budget Include $IP,S,5ll! for miscellaneous ac tivities, Including contributions re stricted for special purposes and f'll'V tiOH for niiinngenieiit. Knoll of these Hems represents large reductions over similar appropriations of the previous year. from a fund of $1O,00O,iiO, $5,0011, POO of which was contributed through the lluropean Relief Council canipuk'n and $5,0iKl.00O allotted by the Red Cross for child welfare work in I'urope, there remains $S,7(!5,10S still available, of which it is estimated that $(i.iHKi,0(Kl will be required for this work during the current year. I'or Red Cross particlpatjon in the Joint effort to relieve famine condi tions in Russia, for final work in the China famine, for Junior Red Cross and other overseas activities including the closing of the old general relief program in Kurope $l,07S,0t is made available. In announcing the national budget, the Red Cross makes it clear that the figures do not Include chapter ex penditures or place any cash estiniHte on the Invaluable service of volun teers In chapters. . SHORT SKIRTS- STRAIGHT LINES Buyers Are Cleaving to Trail of Present Fashions for Winter Wear. TTay i ft- i ii i CARRYING ON SERVICE FOR ( DISABLED VETERAN'S OF THE WORLD WAR THAT IS COSTING $10,000,000 A YEAR, THE AMERICAN RED CROSS IS HELPING FULFILL THIS NATION'S OBLIGATION TO ITS DEFENDERS. HELP THE RED CROSS CONTINUE THIS WORK BY ANSWERING THE ANNUAL ROLL CALL NOVEMBER 11-24, 1021. 5 Cv ll t I mii.rnin. . . r. Straight Line Are Conspicuous uh the Fill Suit Model That Have Made Their Appearance. metals to be used for girdles. Any one of them Is a thing of beauty all by Itself, and lis association with the gown brings both Into relief with a fascination one cannot fall to appreci ate. Wool Shaw for Winter. The desire for Spanish shawls H not, it seems, jusf an Ko'iited flight, for 'wo are to have shnuls for the wiii'cr. fi. They are to be of wool iiiul embroidered, and. generally speaking, they are to retain much of lie ;nice and chnrtii possessed by the highly colored ones of this season. Women have found, thorn too becom ing to pnrt with them lightly, and they are priu'tlcal adjuncts to the ward- WOOL SHAWLS TO BE WORN Spanish Wrap to Hold Favor Coming Season Are Embroidered, Grace ful and Charming Radium Silk for Lingerie. The styles of today are on their way to make room for the styles of tomorrow. At this season of the year we are In the painful process of transi tion, but the wise ones will watch the signs of the times to see how some fashions will survive and others be cast into the discard. Just now, says a Xew York fashion writer, we iiear some hardened skeptics saying that women will never depart from adopt ing extreme fashions to make them selves conspicuous, or some such an tique theory as that. Hut there are others who assert that the short haired girl has come to stay, because that way of dressing her locks is more practical .and that the corsetless fig ure, with its stralghtline clothes, is with us for life, for the same reason. Who knows? If we are women, we must needs conform to the changes in fashion, whatever our inclination. And most of us incline to conform. We get that peculiar feminine thrill out of a new frock which no other proceeding on earth can bring with it. Buying for Winter. Western buyers are putting in their first stocks for winter. They are cleaving to short skirts and to straight lines. But this is always the way of this period of the season. They follow closely In the trail of present fashions, as any wild flights of fancy might lead them Into untold paths of loss and unappreciation. The duty, and, yes, the desire, of the New York public Is to go on beyond, creating new types of fashion which, in their turn, will be followed just as assiduously by others next season. The success of the spring coat and the adaptability of the one-piece dress have joined hands, the two making their autumn bow as a coat dress. Of 'course, we have had coat dresses be fore this, but the predictions are that Ihey will be more brilliant achieve ments tills coming season. News from Paris indicates that we are following the lead right here, for many of the wholesalers have reported that sales In this particular direction are going strong. A new slogan might be: "It is the belt that makes the gown," for in many instances all else Is plain, and tlie winding around the waist becomes the center of the design of the whole frock. All sorts of fancy ribbons and brocades are brought into play for this form of decoration. Then there are cords galore, and strings of beads and Rolled Barley I am prepared to furnish the finest quaity Rolled Barley at fair and honest prices. I also handle a complete line of gasoline Kerosine and Lubericating Oils. Satisfac tion to customers is my motto. Andrew Bycrs Case Bus & Transfer Co. We Thank you for past patronage and solicit a' . continuance of the same. Our best service is for you. Leave orders at Case Furniture Co. or Phone Main 844 BAGGAGE. EXPRESS. FREIGHT COUNTRY TRIPS & GENERAL HAULING III We Buy CHICKENS DUCKS - - TURKEYS - " - - - GEESE In fact, all kinds of poultry are wanted Highest Prices Paid 11111111111111111111111111111111 Call or Write ALEX CORNETT, Main 615 Or See E. R. MERRIT, . . Heppner, Oregon. YOU SAVE if you learn the rates of Oregon Fire Relief Assn. Before you renew that Fire Insurance F. R. Brown Agent for Morrow County Phone Office 642, Res. 29F14. Heppner, Or. Don't Throw Your Meat Grinder Away! Just because we can sell you a steak, a cutlet, a roast, or anything else in the meat line that can ' be eaten without running it through a meat grinder does 11IIU. )uu saouia tnrow the meat away. 1 grinder KEEP IT! Though we are going to try to be with you always accidents have happened before now, and may happen again. Xo matter how particular you are, you are no more particular than we pre and when you have, come once, we'll see you often. Central Market Children Found to Respond Eagerly to uoctrme ot Kindness to Animals By MRS. H. C. PRESTON, N. V. State Humane Eduction' Com. - - , : - - ... , 1 . ' " , "u'- Humane treatment of animals by children ha. been launched in 35 public school, of the lower East! d. of New Wk city. Instruction on humane treatment of animal, and birds became eotn-ml.ry the curriculum of the public school, of Neir lork state by an act passed in April, 1917. The special program in ,he 35 schools was arranged bv the board of education with the co-operation 0f the A. S. P. C. A. In the fall a first5 pr. and two second prizes will be given in each school for the best conW pnsmmu on ha, the writer has been able to do to help animals during the summer. ! The ) older people are alolutelv irresponsible. But the children ah ' that different matter f It has been traditional that children at a certain' c- will rob birds nests, torture cats, tie cans to dogs tails etc We have' f,und that that age in childhood responds just as' eagerly, inquisi My tir, , active v In t w mm,,. i f tl 11... v.- . ? ' "uitiv, , . . -n - .c oiu uaatuon, l. e., humaneness to , :i:.ns lusicaa ui iiHiumaucness, ani- Vr M