PAGE FOUR THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER. OREGON Tuesday, November 22, 1921 . -1 i i Jt I if 1 1 j LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE VOK I'lBIJCATIOX Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, September 30, 1921. Notice is hereby given that Willie Ruddy, of Lena, Oregon, who, on September 23, 1916, made Homestead entry. No. 016341, for ENW, KV&SWU, Section 34, Township 1 South, Range 29 Last, Willamette Meridian, .and Lots 3, 4,SNW, Section 3, Township 2 South, Range 2 9 East, W. M., Iihh 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 day of November, 1921. Claimant names as witnesses: Francis McCain;, I'hilip McCabe Kdd Doiieity, Tom Gill all of Lena Oregon. 2030 C. S. DUNN, Register. NOTICH OK 1 I.NAL SICTl'LIOM L,T Notice is hereby given that the un ci '.signed has filed his final account :is administrator of the estate of AHa Loward, deceased, and that the County Court or the Stale of Oregon has appointed Monday, the fil'lb day of December, 1921, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock A. M. as the time, and the County Court room in the Court House at lleppner, Oregon as the place, of hearing and settlement of said final account. Objctions to s-aid final account 7nust be lited on or before said date. S. 11. IJOAKDMAN, 27-31 Administrator. tvotici; to i:i:i)i ions Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the Stale of Oregon, for Morrow County administratrix of tlie Mutate of Clemens V. Ditnton, deceased, and that all persons having claims against Hie said estate must present the same, duly verified accor ding to law, to ii io at the office of iny attorney, S. K. Notson, in llepp ner, Oregon, within six months from the dale of the first, publica tion of this notice, said dale of first publication being this 1st day ol' November, 192 1. ALLIK WINNARn, 27-31 Administratrix. NOTICK I OII ITIll.K WTION Vuhlic I.iiml Office, Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, October 21, 1921. ,. . fi-f Notice Is hereby given that, a's (li veried by the Commissioner of the General Land office, under' provi sions of Sec. 2ir.fi, I!. S., pursuant to I he application of Claud Huston, Serial No. 204 r7, we will oiler at public sale, to the highest bidder, tint at net less than S2.0t per acre, iit 10: K. o'clock A. M., on the 14tb ctiiy of December, next, at this ol't'lce, the following tract of land: NKVi N K Vi . Sec. 23, T. 5, S., U. 25, L, W. M. (Containing 40 acres.) This tract Is ordered Into market on a showing Hut the greater portion theretf Is mountainous or loo nm;',li lor cultivation. The sale will not be kept open but will be declared closed when those present at (lie hour named have ceased h!dding. The person imi!: Ing the highest bid will be required to immeilataely pay to the receiver the amount thereof. Any persons claiming adversely the above described land are advised to hie their (i.ilms, or objections, on or before the time designated for mile. J. V. DONNKI.I.Y, Kegister. T. C. 0.1' KKN, Receiver. NOTICK I' I Vl. ACCOl NT Notice Is hereby given that the un dersigned, Kseciitor of the Last Will and Testament of I'lunui Kiloup, ilo leaned lum tiled his final account with the County Court of Morrow Count. Oreisoti and that said court bus tlxed VNedn.'Hduy, the 7th day of December, 1S21, at 10 o'cloek A. M. us thrt tiinn uml the County Court Loom t th Court house In Hepp Utr, Oregon, an the place for hear ing HiUil tlnul account and any oh Jectlons thereto, and the settlement of the estate of said deceased. WAi.Ti'.u Kii.crr, 2S 32 Ceeu:or. xonci: or u : r.tt fs s.i i: l'.y vet ie of an vii!ieii and or- (1, r of t ll ' dlllV t.-ved llV the I'b'l i of the Circuit Court of the State o' Oiecon, fivr ttie county of Moriow Ih. 19th .lav ol Sepieieher, 1921, l n certain suit in slid County ar.t State, wherein, Mss:Uil .let. 1. Ml. plaintiff ieeo. r.'.l jiidc-u,,-!. I ;,-aiut 15. N V a !e ;.i.I M .v M Wade, lin w He. (h !'. hi! , for I' . I lllli of i ..0" OH h int. I ' t C.e c en ul the late of S per o nt p. i a.i nura from the 8th day of November 1919, and the further sum of $14.93 with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from the 28th day of February, 1921, and the fur ther sum of $75.00 attorney's fees and the further sum of $52.70 costs, together with all costs and accruing costs, which judgement was render ed on the 14th day of June, 19? Notice is hereby given that I will on Saturday, the 10th day of Decem ber, 1921 at the hour ol 2 o'clock in the afternoon of said day sell at pub lic auction, at the front door of the County Court house, in Heppner Ore gon, for cash in hand, the fallowing described real property to wit: Lots three (3) and four (4) in Block three (3)'ciuff's eighth addition to the town of lone, Oregon, thence South 100 feet, thence Last 100 feet, thence North 90 feet, thence West 100 feet, to the place of beginning, taken, levied upon as the property of the said defen dants R. N. Wade and May M. Wade, his wife, being the proper ty mortgaged by said defendants to secure the sums aforesaid, and ord ered sold by the Court to satisfy the same, or so much thereof a 3 may be necessary to satisfy said judgement in favor of said Missouri Jordon, plaintiff against said defendants, R. N. Wade and May M. ..Wade, his wife, together with all costs that have accrued or may accrue in said matter. GEO. McDUFFEE, Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon Dated this 24th day of October, 1921. First publication November 8th, 1921. Last publication, December 6th, 1921. Stories of Great Scouts w (c;, Western Newspaper Union. JEDEDIAH STRONG SMITH, THE AMERICAN ULYSSES This is u story of a modern Ulysses, a frontier hero of many wanderings, who died without receiving the fame which was Ills due, a man whose serv ice to America has been but lately appreciated by his countrymen. Jede illali Strong Smith was his name, and his conl i-i tin t ion to history was the first aecurale mapping of the great West. Smith was horn in New York In ITH'.I. As a buy he played with the young Seneca Indians of Chief Corn planter's tribe, and learned their lore. He became an expert Willi the bow uml arrow, which lie afterward car ried on all of his expeditions. Once lie brought down a hawk Hying ahum "." yards above him, ami he could (b'lve a shaft to the heart of a buf falo as skillfully as any Indian hunter. In years of wandering Smith crossed the western country on the south from the Colorado liver to the I'licillc; ho crossed It midway from (he Uocklcs to the l'aellie, and he traversed ll on the mirth from Call I'oiuia to the Heckles, lie visited all the Important streams from Arizona to the Yellowstone country, and he inaile accurate notes of all lie saw. This Information was used in correct ing the unreliable maps of the day anil proved of Inestimable value to Inter explorers. Smith's death was heroic. In 1831 he was guiding u wagon train over the Sun I it le trail. The train had tak en a short cut around the head of the 'Ilium on river and soon was lost In a desert country. Water must lie found at once. Smith set out In search of a stream, and Dually reached one. While drinking, he was surrounded bj a hand of Conianches, who determined to have (lie while man's gun. The Indians signaled peinv, and af ter talking in the sign language for a while, they siiceeiled in frightening Sinllli's horse. As It turned, they shot at the scout with arrows, wounding hlin In the arm. Smith wheeled about, shot the chief dead with his rllle and killed two more savages with his pis tols. Then grasping his nx, the scout dashed Into their midst. They cut lilin down with their lances, but when tliry approached to scalp him, Smith rose up again mid stabbed Ihree of them with tils knife. Then he dropped ileiid. The Indians afterward admit ted thai he hud killed l.'l of their party before he died ! Cyprett Lumbering. Not many years ago owners of cypres swamps regarded their prop erty as practically worthless. Cypress Imiibeilng was attended with peculiar ilithcultVs because of Its swampy u vow th. The green logs could not be i.ioed with oxen or mules because of their great weigh! and the softness of the soil. And often the logs were so saturated wilh tiu'sture that they would not tle.it. Sometimes only about la per com of a cut could be uo:teo t. market. I imilly Iuiii'm ruteii b. g:'ii io B!rdi. the tics six i.ciihs or it jeiir be.'.ae .tilling, which leMilicl ill a en at vmin:. Now the, Imiil'i rr.u'ii .hail the vino i , Kioro eultiiia. S.vamp .Irititi- . Is all ilitport.ttlt flirt "f llieiieni ovpiess l.;iii''.i leg. Mas-no iimchtivry ,-is.. is Used. Ill l!t ov hi . itl.!.. ',., ii;,"'ns th... ! ,-s c.re l-i ..e..'h! ill I i a , ,,i or tr.iv .! over a !. - mi u u..!' :.:.!! s. I'.vt ri. POLISH EFFECTS Styles Have Great Dignity and Elegance; CaH for Use of Rich Materials. USE BROADCLOTH AS NOVELTY Perforated Fabric Is Being Featured by the Important Dressmakers in France Tea Gowns Are. in At tractive Models. Suffering Poland has furnished the Paris dressmaker with her inspiration for the fashions of this fall and the coming winter, according to a Paris fashion correspondent. From this war racked, poverty-stricken country has come the lead for the luxury of the world. It Is not the Poland of today that Is dominating, but the Poland of ancient glory which kept step with France In her progress toward civiliza tion. Many missions have gone from France Into Poland, and each group has returned Impressed by her pathos and her beauty. These missions have had a hearing on present-day fashions, all of which are of the Renaissance period, touched with the Polish In fluence. The Polish-r.enaissance Influence Is a transforming one because prac tically every part of the dress has been touched. Sleeves have been made larger "and In fancy .sfyle, both open and with under sleeves. Collars have heightened and have grown very Im portant looking. The waistline has dropied several inches. The skirt has lengthened and taken on a flare, so this movement is almost revolutionary. These styles have great dignity and elegance. They call for the use of rich materials of heavy weight. Trimmings are heavy In the form of big cabuclions, nail heads and heavy embroideries that stand out from the background. The goldsmith's trade was at Its zenith during this period and the costumes of the nobility were adorned with real and seml-preclnus jc-wels and ornamented with hammered gold and silver. Today all of these effects are being Imitated with great success. Quilted Velvet Model. Such fringes as are used are heavy, being made of laeet, chenille and strings of large bends Instead of the line silk strands of modern times, There is a new line of quilted ma terials brought out by Kodler, which works np wonderfully In these Polish Itenalssance models. One of the most striking examples of the Polish styles Is the model named N'ijiu-ki, made liv .lean I'aton. The Tan Broadcloth Su.t Which Features Perforated Trimming; Brown Monkey Fur Is Used. It Is of Rodler's Olookl, a quilted velvet, the quilting beln done In fold thread. It Is trimmed with black Persian lamb fur and has hammered steel nail head embroidery on the un dersleeve and a heavily Jeweled girdle worn at a low waistline. The inoc.ii holds the keynote of mmii that Is n.-v and Interesting In forthcoming fashion for nutintm and winter. In common with many other of Hits season's tailored dresses It shows n li'rh inul'ling collar. Persian lamb "a chosen f-.r It. and the same fc.r f inis the sves and forms hr.i .1- down either sale. Tins oH fa hi also Is l :iv''i. a ivna'.s-mi v d fc.r id w H he ore of the mast '.'ash: :,hV fl'-s hush Is t'ls w's: lAten-U . Copies wl'h the l''ll'"s l'el-1: used as a tri nm. f t'.rs dr. :ig!i rati:' In ha th e-n'.r. :l e I era 111:1 V 'lihif of c;o!h 'eel or t'fi-.' It a'sn h: :!i fr.tu. .1 n i'h Cm the I'eiiiUi ...I,. n locrei eea w e; ' lonkey f' AsM. i 1 ill ill ch a ni A TOOTHSOME TALE ANNETTE C. SYMMES. . 1821, by McClur Newspaper Syndicate. When Cousin Phrony Butterfield made her annual visit to the Blakes, little Phrony, as she still continued to call her namesake, In spite of that winsome damsel's 20 years, was unanimously elected to the pleasing task of "giving Cousin Phrony a good time." A rather bleak and cheerless girlhood which merged into a woman hood tilled with hard and unappre ciated toil as the bond-slave of a brother whose body was crippled by rheumatism and whose soul was warped worse than his body long be fore the latter knew a rheumatic paug, had brought Cousin Phrony to her mid-fifties with a girl's keen relish for good times and she wanted the kind of good times girls have, too! Only little Phrony could stand her namesake's pace, when she j attempted to cram Into a fortnight! enough jaunting to last the other fiO: weeks of the year and little Phrony frankly admitted that Cousin Phrony was more fun than any girl she knew. "It's wicked, I know," little Phrony said to herself," but I'm glad Cousin I lira in is dead! Aifll I wish he'd died before! And do wish, too that Cousin Phrony would sell that wicked farm and move somewhere where she wouldn't have to take her amusement in chunks!" But Cousin Phrony clung to the farm, and came regularly after haying each year for her visit. This year the first few days passed rather drably, owing to the guest's attendance at a dental ofliee, where an under set of "store-teeth" were being fashioned for her. But the night after she bore them home In triumph, she announced cheerfully that tomorrow she "wuz in hopes 't she'n Phrony could have a real good time." Little Phrony knew where to take her cousin, and from the moment when they descended from the trolley Into the gay crowd at the beach re sort, Cousin Phrony was in her ele ment. The clanging music of a merry-go-round drew her into the big pa vilion, her eyes dinging to the gaily painted beasts and their riders. Little Phrony, knowing what the woman really wanted, proposed a ride and after a very slight resistance Cousin Phrony gave In, and settled her generous weight upon a gaudy ele phant, "hcause It'd take an el'phant to hold her up'" The spectacle of the dear soul, In her Muck-striped muslin, i her hat, a descreet combination of hat and bonnet, and her "comfort'' shoes, careering in a circle with delight, written broadly till over her rosy, wholesome face, was striking enough to compel the attention of a good looking young man near-by. When the ride was over, and the two de scended, he followed them. And when they dined, he sat at the table next them. Now Coiisin Phrony had not yet suh dned her new "store-teeth." The upier set she was used to ; but the new lower set bothered her to that extent that the delicious fried clams and "French fried" potatoes lost half their flavor for lier, as slip painfully con centrated upon mastication. "Take out these horrid under teeth, cousin !" begged little Phrony. ft last. "They're spoiling your dinner?" "I declare, I Mieve I will!" sighed the harrassed diner, and lifted a dis creet napkin to her Hps. When she removed It, the teeth were In Its folds. It wns when they rose to go that the catastrophe occurred ! In her engross- j inent In the dinner. Cousin Phrony had totally forgotten the teetii lying in her j lap. With a horrifying chatter they i struck the floor, and. not content with . that, "skittered," to use her own j phrase, right out In front of the young man at the next table, who was rls- lug, too! I I.lttle Phrony made n dart for them, but the man was th quicker. licking them up. he hand:'!! them to the Mush ing girl, with a bow ninl a smile that bad in if nothing but kindness and un derstanding. "Mr. Crawford!" gasped little Phrony. and I lushed the harder, .lust to think of meeting the distinguished. in neb-sought lifter Klllot Craw ford In this war! And to think Unit, hardly knowing her m all. he should plainly be so pie-sod to see her! Itnt i here was Cousin Phrony to In troduce, and her rebellious teeth to lie restored to her, and the story of the morning's doings to be told, as simply as If It wa- the commonest thing In the world for a girl and an elderly woman to participate In the giddiest sports of the bench together. "And we'd admire to have you come with us awhile, Mr. Crawford," Invited Cousin I'his.ny. with country-neighborhood feeling for the young man all alone In a place ll at deiuaniled com panionship. "The's nvile a number of things we ain't had t me to try out: Mil" we e'n get our fori lines old by the seventh chingh'er a sevei:'.li d nuh- ter. 1 want to if '!' go it's to nn.rry a r.eli. c!.ir!;- vi s I'm ! ini'levteil j num." So Mr. Crawford . anio. And (he canny cipv predicted ll ' colons, after Inking at his and llif'e I -broiiy's lace. But she ,1 .In t tell the irili t'i;:t it was her sweet cheer. illness and cot-si. Vr-i'eness sis-i'M-d M.ii'.m that :n'. lo. e e itii her. so si e didn't !,.. or .M her Ihiiim .' .- i:i..:iw! il upon til. i.-r. f. :i p.i-siMire-tl Cr.nvt.T'l K:i.'v It li'l I;er ' :. :is !. !:.-..,. I , the eiu:ui'.i:ent j 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 3Ghank 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 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIII Call or Write ALEX CORNETT, Main 615 Or See E. R. MERRIT, . .Heppner, Oregon. 25 Cents out of every 1.00 You are now paying for insurance can remain in your pocket when you renew that Fire Insurance policy in the Oregon Fire Relief Assn. F. R Brown Phone Office 642, Res. The Eats That are TREATS 1 We make It our business to Rell meats for eats that are real treats. And we don't comply with the! food laws because it is compulsory we do it because we want, and expect to get good service and fair treatment from merchants and professional men with whom we deal, and because we know it Is our busi ness to sell only the best. For Thursday's big dinner we can supply your wants, no matter how elaborate or how conservative. We have arrang ed to fill all orders and would like to see your meat order. Centra! For British and American Lawyers to Contribute to the World's Peace By SIR JOHN A. SIMON, The fact that vu- irare our reverence of law from a common fount, is one of the oh if rail!.- of Ati-tin-American friendship. In our practice of the law we nre rinded by the same principles and arrive at the same con clusions as - li is. Here 111 actual existence is a case of "hands aerosa the sea." The ; ': utiim ef thc?e same principles may be a strong force in the lih'vemciit l' 1 t'.e parc of the world. It is in our hands, the lawyers of th. -c tun tin iit ii'i,'i.;i':i.'s to do quite as much as the statesmen or the .:v.-s 111 iiiiuir,,' a ooutribution to the peace of the world. The world is j.., k ef war. We must do what we can to save the world from future If t! e lawyers of our country who pre.-erve the ideal view of the prng. to., and tradition of the two natin would devote t hem-elves to that l;,-is .:! the s.am fervor villi winch our soldiers !a:d nuun their lives hi ,';..:, c, siuh .-i-caons as tios iiitvr:.at;n.'il pulieri:),' would, in the futare, i;..t K- i:;,':.'-t.K I ;:t i::d: at;-u of v:r work ther in saving Uc u rid from future ui..-crv a:.J tnut.'.al dv.-;n.i.;.v a. . Buy TURKEYS - GEESE 20F1J.. County Agent Heppner, Or. Market K. C, Britiah Leader of the Bar 0' -TV,