PAGE FOUR THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON Tuesday, Ntvember 2g, tqzt LEGAL NOTICES AOTICE FOIl FUBL1CATIOX 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 f-ntry, No. 016541, for ENW, ESW, Section 34, Township 1 South, Range 29 East, Willamette Meridian, and Lots 3, 4,SNW1(i, Section 3, Township 2 South, Range 29 East, W. M., has filed notice of intention to make final three-year Proof, 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 McCaho, I'hilip McCabe Edd Doherty, Tom Gill all of Lena Oregon. 530 C. S. DUNN, Register. KOTICM OK 1 I N A I, HKTTI.K.MEXT Notice is hereby given Hint the un (lei.sipjied lias iileil his final account ns administrator of the estate of Alia liowiird, deceased, and that the Comity Court: of the State of Oregon lias appointed Monday, the. fifth ilay of December, 1921, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock A. M. as the time, iind the County Court room in the Court House at Heppner, Oregon as l.ho place, of hearing and settlement of said final account. Objctlons to said final account must bo filed on or before said date. S. H. IiOARDMAN, 27-31 Administrator. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Morrow County administratrix of the Estate of Clemens I. Dunton, deceased, and that all persons having claims against the said estate must present the same, duly verified accor ding to law, to mo at the office of my attorney, S. E. Notson, in Ilepp jier, Oregon, within six months from the date of the first, publica tion of this notice, said date of first publication being this 1st day of November, 1921. ALLiK WINNARD, 27-3 1 Administratrix. NOTICE l'll VI ItJ.ICATION TuMio I. ami Office, Department of the Interior, I!. S. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, October 21, 1921. ' Notice Is hereby given that, as di rected by the Commissioner of the Ccncral Land office, under provi sions of Her. 24 rul, 1!. S., pursuant to the application of ("laud Huston, Serial No. ('Ji)l!"7, we will offer at public sale, o the highest bidder, but at ml less than $2.00 per acre, at 10:15 o'clock A. M., on the 14th day of December, next, at. this office, the following tract or land: NKU Ni: Vi . Sec. 2:1. T. 5, S., It. 25, K.. W. M. (Conl'ilning 40 acres.) This tract is ordered in!o market on n sliov.liv; tli.it the greater portion Cierec f Is iiiuuntainou.'i or too iou;;li for cultivation. The -ale will not be kept open but will be (Icc'i.iivd closed when those present at the hour ni'inid have ,-. a: ed bi.Mnii;. 'I he p-is nia.. iii: i d ivi'. i r in:; the lii:;'.ir. 1.) iinn.i lal m I Cie amount 1' Any per n ;:l.oe .1' v :ih. bid will be r. pay to the oof. liiuin :u'.v I' elv the laud a re i or ol'jeciion.-. ed to ihi or s: le. li!o their o;a brfolo the l:t i Co: V.ltod for j. v. Donnelly, uegi.-.ter. T. ('. Ql'L'EN, Receiver. NOTICE 1 I I N IL Al't t'lM' Not Ice is In1 dorslcned, K oln- given that the un i iitor of tin" Last Will nl Emma Kilcup, de- and Testament ceased bus tile ,l his II mi I account with the County Court of Morrow County, Oregon and that said court has fixed Wednesday, the 7th day of December, 1:121. at 10 o'clock A. M. us the time mil III County Court Room at th Court house In Hepp ner. Oregon. " l'll-o for hear ing Bald limit account au,d any oh Jcctlona therein, and the settlement (if the estate of ..aid deeeused. WALTER KILCUP, 28 3 J Executor. NOTICE Ol hi:km 1"S SALE Hy virtue of .uv execution nnd or der of Mile duly issued, by the clerk of the Circuit Court of the State ot Oregon, for tin' oounty of Morrow w the 19th day of September. 1921, It' a certain suit in said County and State. herein. Missouri Jordon, plaintiff recovered JudKemen t nialnst R. N. WuJ and May M Wade, hl wifed-fendsnta, for th urn of $500 00 with Intermit ther- al the rate of 8 per cent per an nura from the 8th day of November 1919, and the further sum of 114-93 with Interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from the 28 th 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 ou the 14th day of June, 192 Notice Is hereby given that I will on Saturday, the 10th day of Decem ber, 1921 at the hour ot 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) Cluff's eighth addition to the town of lone, Oregon, thence South 100 feet, thence East 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 aloresaiu, and ord ered sold by the Court to satisfy the same, or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy said judgement in favor of said Missouri Jordnn, 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 matte i'. GEO. McDUFFEE, Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon Dated this 24th day of October, 1921. First publication November 8th, 1921. Last publication, December 6th, 1921. NOTICE FOR I'UBLKATIO.V Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon. November 12, 1921. Notice is hereby given that Ruby A. Coxen, formerly Ruby A. Ayers, of Echo, Oregon, who, on August 14, 1920, made Additional Homestead Entry, No. 017709, for SW14NE, NB!4SW?4, SWUNWU Section 29, SENEV4. ESE4, Section 30, Township 3 South,, Range 29 East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make Final three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before United Slates Commissioner, at Heppner, Oregon, on. the 28th day of December 1921. Claimant names as wilnesses: Her man Young, of Echo, Oregon; Frank Terry, of Lena, Oregon; Ad Moore, of Lena, Oregon; Anita Coxen, of Echo, Oregon. CARL G. HELM, Register. NOTICE Foil ITISLie VI'lOY Department of the Inlerior, U. fi. Land Office at La Grande, Oregon, November 12, 1921. Notice is hereby given that James Daly, of Heppner, Oregon, who, on October 23, 1918, made Homestead Entry, No. 017921, for NNEVi, N N V H , N W V4 S W VJ S W i,i N W xy Section 9, Township 2 South, Range 28 East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make Fi nal three-year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, be fore United States Commissioner, at llepiuier, Oregon, on tlio 2Sth day of December, 1921. Claimant names as witnesses: J. C. Stuirpo, of Lena, Oregon; Johu Kil kenny, John O'Rourke nnd James Kenny, of Heppner, Oregon. CAUL G. 11 KL.M, Register OliDKK TO SHOW C.I USE In the County Court of the Slate o'' Oregon fur Morrow County. in the Matter of the Guardianship of the Person and Estate of Hessie 1 i:;lo:, worth, Gladys Wiglesvvorth ! and Walter Wiglesvvorth, minor heirs o l'ith;i Wiglesvvorth, deceased. Petition having been presented by W. E. Wiglesvvorth, Guardian of the person and Estate or Hessie Wigles vvorth, Gladys Wiglesvvorth and Wal ter Wlglesworth. minor heirs of Uitha Wiglesvvorth, deceased, from which it appears to the court that it Is neces sary for the support and maintenance of suld minors that the real estate hereinafter described be sold, and that the same would be beneficial to said minors. It is therefore hereby ORDERED that, the next of kin of said minors and nil persons interested in the es tate, appear before this court at the County Court room In the County Court House in llepiuier. Morrow I ounty, Oregon, at the hour of two o'clock P. M. on Tuesday the 2 7th day of December, 1 y 2 1 , and show cause If any there be. why a license should not be granted said guardian for the sale of all of the right, title and Interest of said minors in and to the Southwest quarter of Northwest quarter ot Section 13; Southeast quarter of Souihwest quarter and Northwest quarter of Southwest quarter of Section 13, in Township 3, South Range 28, K. W. M., said sale being subject to tho courtesy Inter est therein of said guardian. Done and dated In open court this 18th day of November, 1921. WM. T. CAMPBELL, County Judge of Morrow County Ore gon. . STATE OF OREGON, S3 County of Morrow. I, J. A. Waters, County Clerk of Morrow County, Oregon, and ex-of-ficio Clerk of the County Court of said County and State, do hereby cer tify that the above and foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of the original Order made and entered In said matter.as appears by the records of my office and of said court. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and the seal of said court, this 18 th day of Novem ber, 1921. J. A. WATERS, County Clerk of Morrow County Oregon. WHEN DICKENS ATE 'POSSUM English Author and Washington Irving Dined With Webster in the National Capital. "I have, sir, just purchased In the market a famous opossum" so wrote Webster to Irving and the lutter's guest, Dickens, In March, 1842 "and I have sent- it home to Monica, my cook, who will stuff it with chestnuts und bnke it with sweet potatoes in true Virginia style. It will be, sir,' a dish lit for the gods. Come, with your friend, and partake." Dickens and Irving did pnrtake In Webster's house, on Connecticut ave nue, Washington, and Dickens did not relish the 'possum as much as he relished Webster's company. In a paper on literary aspects of the capi tal in the Catholic World Margaret B. Downing recalls another British vis itor's introduction to a new dainty in Washington. Thackeray, in 1851, ate his first ice cream with Irving at the home of Hamilton Fish, on II street. Not ninny people realize that Irving lived for nearly five yeurs in Wash ington. Of course, every one knows that George Bancroft long lived there, and that Whitman and Burroughs were In the civil service during tho same Civil war years. Probably most people know also that " Mrs. Stowe resided in Washington while "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was appearing in the National Era. Charles Warren Stod dard, the author of the "South Sea Idylls," also lived In Washington for a time. But no city really has title to nn author until he not only lives In it, but writes about it. The author of tills paper omits all mention of Henry Ailiuns and the most notable novel of Washington life, "Democ racy." New York Evening Post. 1 Stories of ty Elmo Great Scouts w , Western Newspaper Union. BEN CLARK, WHOM THE INDI- ' ANS CALLED "MI-E NO-TO-WAH." j When General Custer's Fighting j Seventh charged down upon Chief j Black Kettle's Cheyennes on the 1 Washita to the tune of "Garryovveu" j that cold November morning in 1SGS, 1 at his side rode a man whom the In- j (linns recognized, and they shouted to ! each other "Look out for Red Neck I He's a dead shot!" . j Clark played an Important part in ; Custer's campaigns that year, but his j most valuable services were performed ; ns a scout for Gen. Nelson Miles in j the war with the Cheyennes, Arapa hoes, Comniiclics and Kiowa In 1874. ! Ills greatest feat was his part In the I rescue of the Gertiialne sisters, two j little white girls who hud been cap tured when their parents were niur- : dereil hy raiding Cheyennes in their Kansas home. j Two of the girls. Adelaide nnd Julia i Geriiiaine, were recaptured from the ' Cheyennes when Lieut. Frank Bald win struck the camp of Chief Gray Heard so suddenly that the Indians Iind no chance to kill their prisoners, us they usually ihd. The girls, in foriiu d General Miles that two of their sisters, Catherine and Sophia Genua ino, still were held by liuoilie' bund of the Cheyennes. j Deri Clark Immediately set out to discover where they were. After a long search lie found that they were In the ciimp of Chief Stone Calf. Gen eral Miles secured a photograph of j Julia and Adelaide ami on the back i of It he wrote a niessnue to the other ! sisters telling them that every effort was being made to rescue them, lie gave this message to a friendly In dian who visited Stone Calf's camp and, unobserved by the Indians, slipped It Into the bund of one ot tho girls. The general next sent a message to Stone Calf, demanding his surren der and telling him that nn mercy ' would be shown his warriors unless j the Ciermiilne girls were brought to I the nearest army post nllve nnd un harmed. In a short time Stone Cuif ctune In to the Cheyenne agency, sur rendered his white captives and all four sisters were reunited. Ben Clark's scouting had not been In va n. When the Cheyennes were finally subdued, Clark settled down at Fort Reno, Okla., with them. He became their Interpreter In all their dealings with the white men, and the Chey enne came to honor "Red Neck" much as they bad feared hliu when he was fighting against them. Later he was custodian of old Fort Keno. srnl when he died few years sgvj, after more tbso V) rears In th gov eminent service, hi passing wi mouiwd by white sod red meg iltk. ARE THEY7 By MARGARET M'CONKEY. , 121, tr McCluro I4wipapr Syndicate. The office was alive with noises. A messenger whistled, typewriters clicked, an adding machine buzzed, a multlgraph thumped. It would seem to a mere outsider that amid all this speed and activity there would be no room for anyone so distracting as Dame Gossip or no time to listen to her stories In case she could force her way In. ' let If this outsider had supernat ural ears, he might have heard one stenographer buzzing to another. "And just before he has to leave for South America! What a shame!" Gr, if Ids powers of observation had been acute, he might have noticed that the messenger had stopped whistling long enough to listen to a new devel opment In the story, such as "He has been working for six months for his appointment so that they could go to South America for their honeymoon." If a mind reader, he might perhaps have noted a pang of envy flushing through the mind of a plaln-luoking stenographer in an obscure corner of the room. Perhaps she was thinking. "Any girl with a bunch of curls and baby-vampire eyes can treat a man as she pleases." His curiosity as to the victims of these little snatches of gossip might have induced the outsider to go to the root of the trouble. If so, his In vestigations would eventually have led him to a dilapidated old boarding house, the home of one Genevieve West. A small, blue-eyed girl sat in front of a mirror deftly pinning some curls back in shining waves over a large protruding ear. Having accomplished this to her private satisfaction she turned her head, carefully avoiding a prominent flaw in the mirror, and proceeded to cover up the other ear, equally large and equally protruding. Three floors below in the boarding house parlor sat Lyman MeCullough, a clean-cut young Scotchman, charac terized mainly by a rather square jaw, but with a pleasing face for all that. His Scotch Jaw for once was serving him well for, In a position where most men would have given up In despair, he was able to hold on with a stub born persistence which would excite envy from the most tenacious bull dogs. Curiosity well aroused now, the out sider would probably have followed j the couple as they strolled through the Boston common, nnd he might I even have eavesdropped a little to ' their conversation as they sat on a bench beneath the sheltering shade of a large tree. Lyman was arguing. "Genevieve, if you love me ns you say you do, you i will marry me tomorrow and go to South America." While Genevieve was persisting j with much determination. "You know I love you, Lyman, but I can't marry you tomorrow. I can't." Fnlterlngly she added, "I'll wait fur you." Lyman exploded. "Wait for me! Why do you suppose I took this posi tion? For the privilegu of traveling alone?" Calming down a little, he asked her patiently for the hundredth or per haps the thousandth time, "Why, why can't you marry me tomorrow V We were planning to be married next month, anyhow." And for the hundredth or perhaps the thousandth time, Genevieve an swered, "I can't, Lymnn, I just can't." Lyman changed his tactics and re sorted ,to coaxing. "Come, Genevieve, please tell me what is troubling my pretty curly-bonded girl." Genevieve winced. "I'm not." "Not what?" asked Lymnn. "Not what you think I am," an swered Genevieve. Lvmnn looked puzzled nnd then laughed. "What are you then, sweetheart'-" Genevieve shook her head with a decided negative, but did not answer his question. "How soon will you marry me If I give up the trip?" Genevieve counted on her fingers. "A week from Thursday. Oh, Lyman, will you? Cun you?" But Lymnn, too, was counting on his fingers. "Aha!" he detected, "I have a clue. Thursday! Pay dayl Money !" But Genevieve refused. "I couldn't take your money. We aren't married." "Very easy," remedied Lymau. "Weil get married now and I'll give you the money." When Genevieve refused, Lyman lost his patience and left her. The outsider would probably have been losing his patience, too, by this time nnd be relieved to see Genevieve shedding tears, which is a sure sign Unit a woman is about to tell -what is troubling her. She called to Lymnn and he turned to her roughly. "Look here, Gene vieve, you're go'ng to tell me .this minute why you want that money." Genevieve crumpled Into a pathetic little heap beside him and gulped her explanation. "It's for a p-pennsnent wave. I know you would divorce me If yon saw my hir on c-c-curler." Lyman's tvlleved laugh rang through the common, but If th (wmlder had been there he would probably hare trolled wy. ylnf dto(edl: "Aren't girl feo!r 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 IIIIIMIllttlliHU Call or Write ALEX CORNETT, Main 615 Or See E. R, MERRIT, . .Heppner, Oregon. 25 Cents out 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 We make it our business to sell 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 breakfast, lunch, or 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. rS r " Central Submarine a Weapon Deserving Serious Consideration and Development . By EDWIN TJENBY. U. Our navy today is 'seriously lucking in recently developed type of submarines. We have im mine laying submarines, no fleet submarines, except the three V boats now under construction; no submarines with large caliber guns, sm h as the British M class, and, what is more impor tant, no long radius cruier submarines. It in considered highly important to the national defense of this coun try to eon.-tnnt at least three each of these types for experimental and development purposes, so that in event of a national emergency we will be in a position to continue the construction of the types most necessary. The present submarine force of the navy consists of 143 submarine of a'.l types and ages, including those authorized but still under construc tion. Of these there ar. at present 101 submarine in commission and 41 under construction. After careful consideration I hare reached th conclusion that th. submarine it a weapon deferring of serious tonaideration and development Buy TURKEYS - GEESE of every 1.00 29F14. County Agent Heppner, Or. , -r - Market S. Secretary of th Navy ill