Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, July 18, 1922, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON
Tuesday, July 18, 1922 '
Fruits and Vegetables
Fresh, Clean and Palatable. Fresh
Shipments Received Daily.
We Specialize in Things You like to Eat
Fresh Strawberries
Sam Hughes Co.
A A
PHONE 872
At. EX GII5H, I'lumber
At Slarkey's Electrical Store
I Fix Any Old Thing
Auto radiators, Ranges, Heat
ers ami Tinware. Dirty Chim
ney Cleaned. Key Fitting
Glazing Etc.
Job Printing
SEE US
... !
t
?. .
Heppner Herald Want Ads bring j
home the bacon.
When in need of any
thing in the line of neat
and attractive Printing.
Stories of
Great Scouts
By Elmo
Scott
Watson
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 rood laws because it is
compulsory we do it because wo 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 lflie to see your meat order.
At At At At
T T
Central Market
Rolled Barley
I
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
PHONE MAIN 733
10 per cent Discount
On all Spring and Summer
Suits
Lloyd Hutchinson
Tailoring
Where they
Clean
lothes
lean
(S. Western Newspaper Union.
SOUTH SEA ISLANDER WHO
WAS CROOK'S FAVORITE SCOUT
"1 would rather lose a third of my
army than to have Frank liruard
killed," once declared lien. Frank
Crook, and when this great Indian
tighter s-et such a high value on the
services of a scout it meant, that
Frank Gruard was without a peer,
'liruard was born in Tahiti in 1S50,
the son of an American trader and a
native woman. His father returned
to this country when Frank was but
two years old and at the age of fif
teen Frank ran away from home and
went to Montana.
Gruard became a mail carrier, a
dangerous job in a country full of hos
tile Sioux. They captured him finally
and were preparing to kill him when
a young brave pleaded for his life.
Calling their attention to Frank's
swarthy complexion lie declared that
the mail carrier must be an Indian
who had been captured by the whites.
This Indian was the renowned Sit
ting Bull. For 19 months Gruard was
guarded closely and, realizing the use
lessness of attempting to escape, he
learned the Sioux tongue and entered
into the Indian life as one of them.
He lived with the Indians six years
before he finally escaped.
One day Gruard was scouting for
an otlicer who attempted to guide his
command by use of the compass. They
became lost in a blinding snow storm.
Frank borrowed the officer's compass,
smashed it against a rock, and then,
taking the lead, he guided the soldiers
straight to the place they wished to
go.
Gruard's greatest exploit was his
part in the "Sibley Scout" in 1876.
Lieut. S. W. Sibley was sent out on a
scout to find the Indians. He found
them, and In a short time his little
command was surrounded by hun
dreds of Sioux and Ciieyennes. After
a desperate tight in which the Chey
enne chief, White Antelope, was
killed, the soldiers were forced to
abandon their horses and attempt es
cape on foot.
Gruard's knowledge of the country
was all that saved them. He led
them over unknown mountain trails,
winding through the deep canyons and
around high peaks, until the Indians
were outdistanced. The next day he
guided them to a high point on a
mountain side and pointed down. Be
low them lay Crook's camp.
Frank Gruard was given a life-time
position as a government scout and
he performed valuable services in the
!ast uprising of the Sioux, the Ghost
Dance war of lS!io-!il. In IS',14 Frank
sav Iiis father for the first time since
!:e had run away from Lome. Gruard
d:",l in St. .Toser-o Mo., in VJ13.
INTUITION LORE THAN HUNCH
Consequently, as Lady Writer Says,
It Must Never Miscarry, but
There Have Been Instances.
"I have discussed the matter with
a celebrated doctor of medicine (who
believes that genius is caused by mi
crobes), and he ascribes intuition to
an atavistic endowment. He some
what inconsistently mentions Eve and
Ann Whitfield in the same sentence
by way of epigram. After going to
all this trouble he was quite Insulted
when I hinted he was trying to ex
plain the existence of something that
did not exist. Yet I will bet all I
have in my pockets that the dear
doctor has never once in his life al
lowed a female nurse's intuition to
tell him where to dig for an appendix.
"Hell hath no fury like a woman
whose intuition hath slipped a cog.
A popular journal recently had the
temerity to challenge the idol in a
joke column: Two women are talk
ing. One says : 'I hear that Mrs.
Titherington-Iilohbs has eloped with
Major Snow.' The other replies: 'How
disgusting, r thought it would be Col
onel Swish.' What, pray, disgusted
the lady but the miscarriage of her
intuition?
"Intuition, if it existed, would nev-"'
er miscarry ; otherwise it would be a
mere hunch, such as a man may re
ceive.. If woman's hunches were in
fallible the gift would have been cap
italized long ago. Tbrogmorton street
mocks the wrecks of men who have
tried to capitalize their wives' in
tuitions." Boston Herald.
1 in Mats on r-eace reining.
There are no swords to be turned In
to plowshares in modern warfare, but
on many a field the famous tin hat of
the American soldier is now doing sen
try duty to scare away feathered
marauders, the New York Sun states.
The tin bat is playing its part as
gallantly in the arena of agriculture as
in that of war. Perched upon a wood
en pole around which an old coat has
been draped, It helps to create a rather
formidable figure of a warrior and In
some instances, when the coat is ar.
old army tunic, the motionless figure
when seen from a train window or fast
motorcar seems like a ghost from the
fields of France.
FREE SCHOLARSHIPS
Union Pacific System Announces Fif
teen in 19:22 and 1923
Corvnllis, Ore. A free agricultural
eliohirshii, It has Just been announc
ed, will be awarded by the I'niun
Piicllic System l the highest ranking
club boy In lil'lcen Oregon Counties
during the years Ili'-J ami I'.i'JM. The
ncholnrship will he in the College of
Agriculture, or the short winter course
of the Oregon Agrh -nil tiral College,
Coivullis, Oregon, and will lie worth
tiTi.INI, plus 1 1 anspoi tat ion.
The colonies in which the Nohohir
Kliips will he g i i i'ii are: linker, Crook,
lies Chutes, ililliiini, Harney, Hood
Kier, .lel'ierson. .Morrow, Malheur,
Multnomah, Sin n.aiu, I nion, lum
tilla, Wallowa and Wasco.
For the :u:', rc-giroi.ciits it . pro
posed that ten n, , i's of wheal. uv,
Hcl'es lit' colli, one .ore of putntoes, or
any of I he li e s,o, ;. pivjo. is nV be
ing conducted Miller the Hoys' mid
Girls' ( lull Wuil,, shall he grown or
complete,! by e.oli person 'entering
the ahoc compel it am. '! lu' rei,;ire
molds fur l!L"J aie s,niih,r to thee of
III.:.'!, eccil thai the competition shall
be upon projects now in effect, such
hs i. ill' eluli.. pig clubs, p.iiaio and
torn clubs, etc., ami prizes ure otl'ered
only in sin. h counties as i an he ar
ranged het'oie ll.e lose id' tin' present
llrlhiill.
'the winner la each county will be
chosen ti 'in ninoiig the ten lios riink
I'ii: lucl'c-t in liie coui.ty olu'i pro-
Jec;s, oil the loiloullig has;s; Vo plT
cent on i.imI. in r!,;li ion !, ; ''." per
I'ciil on ; 1,111 of the boy in coin-
inmitti a:l.iii.s.
The i ah!, of II
ty mlaii s. mill II
lie dole:
Case Bus & Transfer Co.
HOV CASK Manager
We Thank you for past patronage and solicit a
continuance of the same. Our best service is for
,you. J , cave orders at Case Furniture Co. or
Phone Main 845
BAGGAGE. EXPRESS. FRETGHT.
COUNTRY TRIPS & GENERAL HAULING
d hv
time, c,
llllei. !, l
till' 1 1 1.
gnu A : I
pel n
IllC! MM
io s in oomniimi-
oioil IIIIICI', w ill
it column 1 - c of
the ( 'ouiii Supcr
"'ii ai i'o. mod by
ii-.h'ii in the I Ire
ne.:,., and a third
u I'.i l!..- . two
't';.e ! .ii .11 -hip mi'.-; he ii-. d w it ti
ll! a ..e.u of Ihe i',.i:e ol u.i.nd. cv
V'i'l when, the is a rev u'.ir at-
teV'H'! HI Nilcol. !n hi. ease, It
lll.lX '' u-'d ihe o. ir follow in.-, or lit
the t 1 '-"'it following ill e nrne I lie
boy IliA"". school.
The action of the I nion INieitie Sys
tem is due to the fa. 1 thai i:s pio-l-ilcut,
Mr. C. It. irii, foniiorh .1 mem
er of the governing board -if the
Maryland Agricultural College. wa at
tracted by the work of boys' ami girls'
clubs as H Lu tor lu Intero-i n; the
coming generation In fanning; and lie
ieliec8 tliul Ihe System be head
honld further this work by of"i ring
ti'liobirsbips, (hereby helping- worthy
iy to obtain (ruining in seiemirtc
agriculture
Honors Are Even.
A woman doesn't make much l end
way driving H nail, but did yon eve!
net- n nuiii try to wrap up u bumlli
THE LURE OF THE
BEACHES
was never more laminating than now, because so much has
been done to insure comfort and delightful recreation at all
of the many resorts near Ihe mouth of the Columbia Kiver.
You can plunge into the stil l', ,dig clams, tisli, hunt, play, rest
and gel the real joy that only a beach vacation can give. And
Nun have this brilliant galaxy of beaches to choose from:
NORTH BEACH
CLATSOP BEACH
TILLAMOOK BEACHES
or NEWPORT
Ask ( ur Asi'enl for
"Outings in the Pacific Northwest"
and "Oregon Outdoors"
They tell the whole story. Then pack your
. trunk and purchase a Round Trip Summer Ex
cursion Ticket ia the
UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM
Insuring that piost wonderful dip
down through the Columbia Kiver
Corgi". Let our agent tell you all
about it, arrange your itineiaiy and
make your reservation.
C. DAKISI H, Asrnt
Will. McMurriky, (cnciul I'litener Agent 1'oiUainl, Oregon
J l new Qoodyear B
p I
A New Tread a Lower Price
Reliable Goodyear Quality
Here is a new Goodyear Cord Tire a big, sturdy, long
wearing tire that sells at a price lower than you are asked
to pay for many "long discount" tires of unknown value.
It has a different tread from the famous Goodyear All
Weather Tread Cord a new tread with a deep, clean-cut,
cog-like pattern and it sells for from 20 to 25 less.
It has in it the same high-grade long-staple cotton, the same
Goodyear patented group-ply construction, the same liber
ally oversize dimensions.
When you buy the 4!2-inch size, for example, you get a tire
whose actual measurement is nearly 5 inches.
Don't confuse this Goodyear Cross-Rib Tread Cord with
other popular-price cords which sell at the same price or for
slightly more.
In many cases, these other cords are made of inferior mate
rials, with short-staple cotton as a foundation.
Get the tire that is good enough to carry the Goodyear name,
that is built to safeguard the world-wide Goodyeir reputation.
AH of the Goodyear Service Station Dealer? ii-u'j cere
have the Goodyear Cross-PJb Tread Cord, : s ved as the
famous All-Weather Tread Cord, ready for yc-u v.
Compare these prices with NET prices you arc asked to p. fur "lou lu.cou-.t" tires
.'0 xVi Clincher $13.50 32x4 Straight Side . .$25. -'-5 3.1 x ' ' .' c .",. ;ht Side . . $32.1 5
!0 x 3'1 Straight Side . . 15-85 33x4 Straight Si.'.e . . 2'.l'0 .H x 4 .'.-.r.Oht Si.!e . . 32.95
32 x .V Straight Side . . 19.75 34x4 Straight Si.ie . . 27.35 3J x 5 Sir .ight Side . . 39.10
31x4 Straight Si.li . . 23.50 32 x 4!j Str ikkt Si.lc . . ji.45 3' a 5 Straight SiJe . . 41.05
These fuel i-.:iuJt man. fuehrer's ex.-ije i-x
CooJyair Cross-Rib Tread Cord Tires are a'-o ma-ie in 6, 7 ctj 3 inch sizes for trucks
.-4
HEPPNER GARAGE
Vaughn and Goodman