PAGE FOUR THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON Tuesday Noyember t, 193 r LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE I OK I'l liLICATIOX Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office ne I,a Grande, Oregon, .September 30, 1921. Notice is hereby given that Willie Ttuddy, of Lena, Oregon, who, on September 23, 1916, made Homestead entry, No. 01C541, for E'NW'A, KViSWVii Section 34, Township 1 South, Range 29 East, Willamette Meridian, and Lots 3, 4,SNWV4, Section 3, Township 2 South, Range 29 East, W. M., has filed notice of Intention to make final three-year I'roof, to establish claim to the land iibove described, before United States Commissioner, sit lfeppner Oregon, on the 29th day of November, 1921. Claimant, names as witnesses: Francis Mr-Cube, . Philip Mcflabe Kdd Doherty, Tom Gill all of Lena Oregon. 2530 C. S. DUNN, Register. notice to i:i;i)H'oi;s Not ice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed exe cutrix of the esl;itc of Nancy M. Meek, deceased, and all persons hav ing claims aga inst said estate arc hereby required to present the same, villi proper vouchers to said execut rix at (lie office ol her attorney, W. ti Trill, in Putnam Jiuilding, Fossil, Wheeler County, Oregon, wilhin six )nonllis from I he dale of this notice. Dated this lth, day of October, J 921. ANNA L. PUTNAM, Execu trix of the estate of Nancy M. Meek, deceased. Post office address, Fossil, Oregon. 23-27 , Source of Diamonds. While siinne diamonds are obtained from river .sands, most of them are obtained by mining. Tim diamonds occur largely In a soft volcanic rock known as "blue ground." This rock Is taken from tin- mines spread out In the open nir and allowed (o decom pose; It in afterward washed and separated. Over-Estimate Themselves. Most of those who claim that the world ewes litem a living are Inclined to Insist on living hiifh. Testing Atmospheric Pollution. Automatic records of atmospheric Jiulluiion are kept In Kimhiinl by Humus of tin air liller which at til" 'lid of every lifleeii minutes draws II hiinun volume iif ah" 1 liroii'.',h a piece nf line blotting paper. The ilarl of II In-lo of deposit left on the paper Indicates the amount of sus pended niiitler In lie air. Stories of BElmo Scoll Great Scouts 'atwn t), uHtiitti NuWHpuper I'ulun. OLD JIM BAKER S DUEL WITH A FRENCHMAN Next to Uncle lllll Hamilton's duel with the Englishman, the strangest one In frontier history was that which till .llui linker, friend of Kit Carson, .t ill) lr!di;cr mid Fncle Pick Woollen, fought Willi n Fiem 1 1 1 1 1 : 1 1 1 III the early das of Wvoueiii;. linker had estab lished u tradlin; store whore the Ore gon Had crossed the Green rher. He was doing a good business with the einiijiaiils passu, g oer the trad until a I i -t it 1 1 ii in u opened iiii a r:nl store l.t :irh v. A iitai rel hct ecu I he I w o i:u n soon rc-iilicil. I he iu.iit.'I ciidcil in a challeimc. 1 Ill men ran to ihoir cabins, seicd pi' Ids . ahills and from Ihe d s oi tlieir which wcle olih about loo put ! , 1 1 ic he. an lirinu at e;e h N, I'll, 'I' was 1,111! .It Ihe 10 -I , i ,e h the ll elichlu.in all I I 'id hot. f, I. Mi.; ily. l.lil tuns ale illicit A d Ihell ,1 to their i. to I,, ed lite wild The belli ell ll.' H I or i'ial duel couiiiiuod, each man , becoming more unsteady nil the tune. At lust, Minling Iheiusehes unable In lilt each other, llie.v gave ll up In illsgust, und the oddest duel III his tory ended. linker w ns burn III Illinois In los, and went west Willi a fur-trading party about 1S'J3. Old Jim wni mighty hunter. At one time be was attacked by two full blown gri.v.l.v bears. The old scout was iirined only with his long limiting knife, but uflcr a ten-tin- struggle, In which he wan almost torn to pieces, lie killed both bears. In 1S57 Hakia- was ft guide and scout for Gen. Albert Sidney Johns ton on his eipcdllloii against tin- Mor mons In Utah, llettinilng from that trip, he wandered buck to Colorado and becaliie one of the first settlers of lVUM-r. I. tiler In life Old Jim drift ed to northern Colorado. On the hanks of the l.lltle Snake rher he I illt a block house, which became a ivn.Wvoiis for all of bis old trapping euipniilons '"d lhie of refuge when the Indium went on tlm war 1'nth. linker died In ISi'S after a life that had Iwu tlllod with more adventure than that of any other man of his lime. McetMIng possibly Old Jim Drldjer, wtot :liw frleud be was. Xjie AMERICAN &LEGI0N (Copy for ThU Department Supplied by m American L.eyion r ?twa Service.) HOLDS UNIQUE WAR RECORD Editor of Legion Publication Left Poet and Marched to the Front A. W. 0. L. Walter T. Neuberf, editor of the Service Star, ollicliil publication of the American Legion of Montana, has what Is believed to be the most unique war ec ord of any man who served In the . E. F. lie was ser geunt Instructor in France, but his desire to gd Into the front-line lighting caused Tt the army. He marched to the1 lie went through him to virtually ues left his post and front A. W, O. L. the St. Mlhlel drive and was In the Ihick of the Argoime lighting when an order was Issued for his arrest. Neubert didn't mind the arrest but lie haled to quit fighting. A court martial followed and he was reduced to u private. Later, following the armistice, he was sent to Coblenz as llnlotype operator on the Amaroe News. ' Neubert Is president of the Great Fulls (Mont.) Typographical union, and Is adjutant of the Great Falls post of the American Legion. LEGION HERO WITH ONE LEG Detroit Member of Organization Dis plays Makeup of True Soldier During Fire. Once r hero, always n hero, In what Detroit Is saying of Leo Fuhrmau, World war veteran, who lost a leg In France, but who nevertheless saved the life of a stranger In a burning building recently, while nble-bodled spectators stood about wringing their hands. l'ulirnian, a member of the Charles A. Learned post of the American Le gion, lost his left leg at the thigh while serving as u machine gunner wilb the Thirty-second division of the A. E. F. Early one morning he was awakened by shouts and soon learmjd that a near by house was n tire, Garbed In a dressing gown be made bis way to the burning house and found a crowd of spectators awaiting the tire department. Fears were ex pressed for Ihe safely of occupants In the house, and as no one volunteered to enter, the Legionnaire broke open n window and went In. He returned dragging Aaron l'rtillt, whom he found overcome on a bed. "Any soldier would have done the stiiue Ihlng," declared the hero. IN MIDST OF SHELL SHOWER Husky Seattle Legion Member Was Wounded Twelve Times Within Half Minute. Tin" w eiithorlng of three years rough and tumble ns n American tackle mi the Vale foot hall team eondl .ioueil Charles II. Paul, S e it I I I c. Wash., for one of the Woihl war's nosi iiitii mil ex. oerietlces. I mil, then u ill's) lieutenant In he 'I hive lillll lied and S;ty. lo'irth I iit'.m 1 r . Walter Ciittip All Vm 'i Hist diM .ion, was , dlllelvllt spots In hull' ! ditrinu t he Argonm- Mm . linn II III i minute V. I me j 1 1 i 1 1 eiiosie shel luirlliii! hilll a!" ill I biiist tnar him, led distant. 11c had I I landed when a second shell ''!o.e,l almost under him. It sing liini hack to where he Marled from. He Ihoticht il over for several months in unity hospitals. Also a indmite of Harvard law school, 1'iiid is junior partner In one of Seattle's legal corporations. He In coniliiiiliihT nf Kaililer -Noble post of the American Legion, Seattle. Legion Man Sets the Pace. Ageratuiu, iirclib vve, chamfer, clelstogHiiious, elolilin, gambit, gulinpe, Intaglio, metacarpal, mitosis, nadii, pomology, rococo, Simony. How many of the above words can you define? MU luiel Nolan, 43 . ear old ilicutal n Izard, who has been classed with the world's "best minds" defined I all of tbeiu In less than one minute Nolan Is a charier member of Hauler Noble pest of Ihe American Legion ill Scnltie. Nehin. who lias been ll lumberjack and a sailor. Is a sludciil j lu the engineering department of the federal board of vocational training lit the I'uU crslty of Washington,, lie was idiellshocked In France, lie broke Into fume when he established a new revord In tlm army "alpha" test with a perfect aeore of 2i points In thir teen uiluutee. The beet previous ex-ore lu the psychology tent wae SOT poluta In seventeen minutes, made by Tale profeeeor. fa 'SJ 2 -lr -., ,f 1 itiWrtii' 1 A .'-; s. f RED CROSS WORKING FOR HEALTHIER U. S, Thousands Aided by Instruction In Care of the Sick, Food Se lection and First Aid. How the American Red Cross guides thousands of persons to health Is shown In a summary of the society's activities In the health field based upon the annual report for the last fis cal year. Through Its Nursing Service, Its Home Hygiene and Care of the Sick courses, nutrition classes, First Air classes, Life-Saving classes and Health Centers and In numerous other ways designed to acquaint masses of citizens with proper methods of living, the Red Cross carried Its message of health Into all parts of the country. The work of the Hed Cross during the war In Its traditional field of nurs ing, furnishing tho military and naval establishments of the nation with 10, 877 nurses, is well known. Anil there are today 157,787 nurses registered with the American lied Cross and subject to call In emergency. During the fis cal year, 1,551 lied Cross nurses were accepted for assignment to Govern ment service, 'SSS by the Army and Navy and 1,53 by the United States Public Health Service. In addition to the nurses enrolled by the lted Cross for Government serv ice, the lted Cross itself employed a total of 1,'MH public health nurses In the United States and Europe. By far the greatest number was employed la, the United States, 1,257, while 81 were In foreign service. Home Hygiene and Cnre of the Sick classes, giving thorough Instruction In the proper care of the sick In Instances where the Illness is not so serious as to require professional nursing care, dur ing the fiscal year numbered 5,179. A statistical picture of the lied Cross operations In this field follows: New clusses formed during year 5,179 Classes completed during year. 6,299 New students enrolled 101.0C8 Students completing course.... 73,432 What the Ked Cross accomplished In giving proper Instruction through Its Nutrition Service Is Indicated by the following table : New classes formed during year 142 Musses completed during year.. ISO New students enrolled 2,341 Students completing course.... 2,013 In addition to the above, a total of 22,1 HMi children were given instruction In the proper selection und prepara tion of foods. . Through its 2110 Health Centers, the ; Red Cross reached 1111,252 persons. In these Health Centers, 1,015 health lee- j lures were given and 780 health ex hibits held. j rti the United States Inst year, 7.", 432 persons were killed and 3,500,000 injured In Industrial accidents. To I lrevent tills iiiormous waste the Hed ' Cross held 5,100 first aid classes with a total of 1(4,(XH) students enrolled. RED CROSS RESCUED 600,000 FROM DEATH Spent $1,200,000 for Relief of Famine Sufferers in China Last Year. To help overcome conditions of acuta distress In live famine stricken prov inces of Northern China, where mil lions of persons were affected by an unprecedented shortage of food, the American lied Cross during the last fiscal year spent more than tsl.2oo.inii, l.iHiii.oOO of which was contributed dl reety by National I ienihimirte' s and Ihe remainder by var.ous groups 'n terested In the welfare of China. Through the wide relict' operations thus made possible it is estimated that nuiiv than l!.K,iK famine s.ili'e'.ers weii' saved fioni starvation. 'to tho end that similar prompt re lief measures h ihe orani -atioii may alwa.s he possible tho Ked Cress Is ashing continued support by the A'aer lian people by universal renewal of membership at the Annual Ked Cross Koll Call. November 11 to 21. The method of relief employed by the American Ked Cross lu Its opera lions In Chirm was particularly riVee tive, for In addition to saving hundreds of thousands of lives it provided China with more than IHH miles of permanent roads that arv sorely needed to pre vent a recurrence of famine. At one time the Ked Cross employed 71.IKH) Chinese workmen, paying them In food for themselves and dependents, this food being brought In from Manchuria and elsewhere. ONE DOLLAR ANNUAL DUES IN THE AMERICAN RED CROSS MAKES YOU A PARTICIPANT IN RELIEF WORK FOR THE HELPLESS THAT GIRDLES THE GLOBE. ANSWER THE ANNUAL RED CROSS ROLL CALL NOVEMBER 11-24, 1921. 850 DISASTER DEATH TOLL FOR ONE YEAR Red Cross Gives $1,871,000 Re lief When 65,000 Families Are Made Homeless. Forty-three disasters, resulting In the death In the United States of 850 persons and the injury of 2,500 called for emergency relief measures and the expenditure of $1,871,000 by the American Hed Cross during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1021, says an announcement based upon the forth coming annual report of the Red Cross. These disasters caused property dam age estimated at $30,000,000, affected sixty-seven Communities and rendered 65,000 families homeless. The year's disasters were of vary ing types, including several which pre viously had never been thought of as fulling within that classifica tion. The Red Cross furnished relief In seventeen fires of magnitude, five floods, seven tornadoes or cy clones, one devastating storm, three explosions, including the one in Wull street; one building accident, tvvj typhoid epidemics, the most serious be ing that at Salem, Ohio, which af fected !) per cent of the population; one smallpox epidemic, In the republic of Haiti ; one train wreck, the race riot at Tulsa, Okla. ; the famine In China, emergency relief in famine among the Indians of Alaska, the grasshopper plague in North Dakota and ay earth quake In Italy. Pueblo Most Serious Ily far t lie most severe of the dis asters In the United States during the period covered by the Red Cross re port was the Pueblo flood early In June, 1921. The rehabilitation prob lem confronting the Red Cross In Pueblo was one of the most difficult In recent years. When the first news of the horror was flashed throughout the country, the American Red Cross Natlonnl Headquarters responded with a grant of $105,000 for relief" work. Governor Shoup of Colorado, appre ciating the long and successful experi ence of the Red Cross In organizing disaster relief work, placed the en tire responsibility for the administra tion of relief In Its hands. In response to appeals from Presi dent Harding, Governor Shoup anil other governors of western states and through local chapters of the Red Cross and other community organiza tions, public-spirited citizens brought the total contributed for Pueblo's re habilitation to more than $325,000. The terrible havoc wrought by the flood waters is a matter of record. More than 2, .100 homes were affected and 7. 351 persons were left homeless. Estimates of $."it tt 1,1 u as an absolute minimum for rehabilitation were made by Red Cross ollicials in charge of th" relief work. ) Fast Work In Wall Street The Wall street explosion wns nota ble In that relief workers of the Red Cross were on the scene twenty min utes after the disaster occurred. The race riot at Tulsa also was unique In disaster relief annals In that outside of a small emergency relief fund con tributed' by the Red Cross, the only relief measures outside the city con sisted of the service of social work ers, nurses and a trained executive whose object was to assist local forces In directing their own efforts. In decided contrast with the pre vious year, only one tornado assumed , the proportions of u major disaster. This occurred on ApriV lf, in the bor- I der sections of Texas and Arkansas with the city of Texarkann as the center. The significant feature of this disaster relief work wuk the fact that It covered so intieli rural territory ns to niiike necessary a large number of relief workers. I The famine In China, m-cessitatlng relief expenditures totallim: more than JI.HUVOOtl by the American Ked Cross was by far the most serious of the fon-lgn disasters m which t'.ie Red Cross gave aid. Builds Up Its Machinery In ennecien with the m.tnin'strn tbm of disaster relief measures, an In creasing etl'ei" IV eness oil t ie part of the Ked Cross to deal ivi',1 emergen cies was nian;!'estcd during the past jear. In "2s Chapters ( the Ameri can Ked Cross there huv,j been forme f special committees to survey the re sources of fheir , resn-wive communi ties and t be prepared in case of disaster. In others of the 3.402 active. ChnpteK, a network of oohitnunleit.ion has been formed thru nun which Install tnnevum relief way be dispatched to liny iwrt of the United States. That Its wixrs. la this field may be i civitltiued witIV ever greater elTectlve iwns, th American Red Cross is ap 1 in-altng f -r widespread renewal of I invrubershifv during Its Annual RoH Cull. t. b conducted this, jtvar frvu Noveiuher H to 24. LIFE SAVING CORPS ENROLLMENT 10,000 fSmwth of lied Oos Life Savins Corps throughout the country con tinned uiiHlutted during the Inst fWi l year, a suinnmry of the yetir's achievements by that Ked Cross Serv ice (how. There are now li!0 Corps with total membership of more than 10,000 members, of which 1.270 are iiifflelently skilled In the work to act si txamlners. Among the outstnndlin nchlevemeuts of the Red Cross In this field during the last year as the or gnnlxatloo at the United States Nival Academy, AnnapoU. ' wn,t Pep hipa the largeat Ufa laving corpa la tb world . -s 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 Byers 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 We CHICKENS DUCKS - In fact, all kinds of poultry are wanted Highest Prices Paid IIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllll 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 rhone Office 642, Res. 29F14. Ileppne Or. OUR IDEAS are sometimes good But we have something that is better. We aren't In the "idea" lusiness, but when it comes to tho cutting and selling of choice meals we don't take our hat off to any one. Our cooler is always kept at tho right temperature to keep the fresh meats FRESH and our f.mbition has al ways been and always will be to keep our customers supplied with ihe choicest of meats, whether they be fresh or salt meals. And when there's a better way discovered to cure meat, then we'll have better cured meat. Central - ) I iido nc A I CDs Recent photograph of Mrs. Eamonn dt Valtra, wlfa of tho "proaldent of tho Irian ropubllo." Buy TURKEYS - GEESE Market MISS MARGUERITE WALTZ x mSn Mia Marguerite Waits la aupar-i visor of the atraet danooo In PhlladeM hla, whara mualo la furnUhed. by t boIIm department band j n i i