Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, January 02, 1923, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    r PAGn FOUR n
THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON , Tuesday, January 2, 1923 T
15. $.1. .j. .j.
, professional cards
, . A A A
DR. F. E. FARRIOR
DENTIST
Office rpata'rs Over Posloffico
Heppner, Oregon
E. E. NOTSON
Al JOItNEV-AT-LAW
Office in Court House
HEPI'NEIt, OREGON
Cooily. -,-ir iiii'l K"lly-Spi'ingficl(l Tires
"None Belter"
Arlington Tire Service Co.
J!i.y Wilson.Prop.
Vukaui-iinj;- Tires and Tubes, Auto
"Tops 'em All". "Service
Worth While"
I'hono 3 Arlington, Oregon
WOODSON & SWEEK
ATTORN ES-AT-LAW
Masonic Building
HEFPNE-It, OREGON
l'Olt KENT Six room house part
ly furnUieu, in Heppner. Call at
office. 29tf
Vliy p.iy more for groi:ne when
yon can get It at the Dyers Chop Mill
for SO cents a gallon? Stf
The Dalles Hospital
A pom-nil lir..if;.l ol' evenly six
1u fur tli'- I ); t f 1 1 1 1 1 1. of ni'-iliciil
: 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r;-(; 1 iIM;i$M. Special 1' I;u t-
),K n fur olj. ! i t l ie c;e'cs.
Dis. Renter, Thompson
and Coberth
m i '1 1 1 iii;i; Tons
DR. A. D. McMURDO
physician mid si i:;i:on " "
Telephone 122
; Office Patterson's Drug Store
HKlTNKli, 01! LOGON
F. A. McMENAMIN
LAW YIOIl
Orfii'o Phoni' Main 643
Gilinaii ltuililiug
IIKI'PNKU, OHEOON
KARGL & HURLEY
I'm' bunion iii or m ar
The Dalles, Oregon
see us
Our I'lic s Are 1! bl
" 20 1'.. Seeiiml St . Main 1 or, 1
DeLUXE ROOMS
Summer Rates
75c & $1.00
Over Case Furniture Co.
Columbia Realty & Loan Co.
K. (!. Merriliehl, Mr,r.
;;US 'a:iliinnlin Street
The Dalles, - - Oregon
- "-'niin'miCT,MW
Same 1'. Van Vnc'or 1!. 11. Butler
Van VACTOR & BUTLER
Ai TOUNI.VS AT I AW
Suite "04 First National Hank lililg.
'I 111' II M l I S. OKI (iO.
WATERS & ANPHRSON
IT UK INSl'ltAM E
Successors to
C. C. Patterson
11KPPNKR, OltECSON
l'hone '.!$;! 1. Wo have money to loan
FRED J. BAUER
AKont for Pacific PUlg. & Loan Ass'n
..Coneral Heal EnUte. and Insurance..
100 12 East Second Street
TI1K DALLE. OKEliON
Job Printing
SEE US
When in need of any
thing in the line of neat
and attractive Printing:
imimimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiu;
I The Mistake of
I Nurse Phyllis
I By CLARA DELAFIELD
rjlllllllllllllllllllllimillllllllllllllllllllli?.
(i), VJ2'4, WeHtern Newsijapwr Union.)
Nurse Phyllis was sure that Doctor
Parkes, the house surgeon, loved her.
That was according to .the tradition,
and Nurse Phyllis was the latest ac
quisition of the North Manhattan hos
pital. .She had become a probationer
after a long and not very successful
career ns a stenographer.
Nurse Phyllis was twenty-eight. Is
that too old for romance? Nurse
Phyllis was romantic.
fche loved Doctor Parkes, and hated
Nurse Marian, who was trying to
take him away from her.
If Doctor Parkes seldom spoke to
her, Nurse Phyllis knew that the rea
son was his uncertainty, his fear of'
his love being unreciprocated. The
hospital was harder work than Myers
& Co., but oh, how much pleasanter
than the office, especially with Doctor
Parkes In mind.
"Come back when you want a job,"
old Myers had told her.
"What a Job I" Nurse Phyllis was
devoted to her work. Even when off
duty she would steal Into the wards
to lay her calm hand on the fevered
brow of some restless sufferer,
There was little Billy, a boy like
an angel, who had been run over.
Nurse Phyllis sat beside him for near
ly half an hour while he tossed rest
lessly In his delirium.
"Nurse, I wish you'd keep out of
Hie ward when you're off duty," said
Nurse Marian crossly. "That kid
Hilly didn't have a chance to sleep
hist night, with you fussing about
him."
"Cat !" thought Nurse Phyllis. She
knew that Nurse Marian was mail
with jealousy about Doctor Parkes.
The climax came In the case of
young Mr, Alonzo Kent. Young Mr.
Kent was the victim of an auto .ac
cident. He was also the victim of
dipsomania self-Induced. Young Mr.
Kent's father was one of the Wall
street crowd.
(ih, to redeem that still Innncent
bioklng boy from dissipation! Nurse
Phyllis sal by his side, smoothing his
fevered brow why do fevered brows
require smoothing? and laying her
'I'd palm upon Ids forehead which
really anmunls to the same thing.
Young Mr. Kent tossed on his bed
of pain, lie opened his eyes.
"oh, Lord. I've got such a head!"
tin I'l'mini'il I
Nurse Phyllis sped lightly across
the room to the cupboard where the
medicines were kept. A little aleoTml
upon young Mr. Kent's forehead
would soothe him with Its cool appli
cation. She snatched up a bottle and
let the contents How upon her hand
kerchief, which sinelled delicately of
lilac. She hurried hack to young Mr.
Kent's bed, which was In a screened
off corner of the nurd. Young Mr.
Kent had been brought In on emer
gency, and there was no vacant room
to he allotted htm.
Young Mr. Kent lay groaning, his
eyes wide open, staring Into the un
seen. ;
Nurse Phyllis laid a cool hand upon
his brow. "Poor hoy!" she said, ap
plying the handkerchief. The liquid
trickled down young Mr. Kent's
forehead, down Hie corners of his
nose. ...
Young Mr. Kent sat up with fiendish
bellows that star) led every occupant
of the ward. The words thai Mowed
from Young Mr. Kent's lips were hor
rible. In the midst of her piteous
sympathy, Nurse Pliyllis shuddered.
"My poor boy " she heunn. j
Nurse Marian came hurrying up. 1
"Nurse Phyllis!" she cried. "I must
ask oil wind, uhnt have you been;
doing to that peer boy on the bed?"
"She'd killed me, d n her!" young
Mr. Kent bellowed, screwing up his
eyes. i
"Nurse Phyllis, I must ask you to '
get out of this ward immediately ."' :
s.ild Marian. J
Nurse Phyllis, casting her n look of
complete Indifference, obeyed. After
nil, Nurse Marian could not help her ,
limitations. She was always Jealous 1
of e erybody. j
Nurse Phyllis heard a bell ring. Tlui '
house surgeon came hurrying into the!
ward. Involuntarily Nurse Phyllis,
tlaltened against the wall outsl le, !
listened. !
Young Mr. Kent was groaning. '
Nurse Marian w as talking excite lly. j
"That's the limit, doctor!" she cried t
holly. "lien.'.lne- and in his eyes
poor boy !" 1
Nurse Pliillis gulped. II. id she
made a mistake?
"That woman's the limit !" said
Doctor Parkes angrily. "She's a
niis:iuce, the way she's alNas nos
ing about. 1 can't stand her here any
more." j
Hut that was too much With n
strangled sob Nurse I'lnllis tied, tear
ing off the trappings of her Job ns she
ran. And In her tubal one sentence
rang that of old Mers.
"Come back when you wunt a Job,"
old Myers hud said.
She was done with the treachery
nnd hypocrisy of life. She was done
with Doctor Purkes. Something n
her mind said. "Click, click, click I
guess this ribbon's good for one more
turn."
Town'. Narrow Eicap..
Lightning: struck the . steamship
Georgian with SoO toin of T.N.T. high
explosive aboard while she luy at the
municipal docks In Jacksonville, Ha.,
stunning several member of the crew
and throwing . a scare luto the city.
The eltlien believe tlioj- narrowly es
caped a second Uallfm dlsaiter. Th
bolt splintered the tnait of the ship.
JUDGE LANDIS ARGUES GOLF CASE
1 vfj A MK 1
U Mm jxwx I w4 1
If II vil'" Itj li
W
Former Federal Juage K. M. Lanuis lost one of ine tew aeoates of his
career when he clashed with Frank Bacon over a point on the golf links. The
two veterans, with Ralph Morgan and Chick Evans, were playing an interesting
foursome on the Edgewater Golf club course, Chicago, a few days ago, when
the argument took place. The photograph shows Evans, Morgan, Landls and
Bacon.
ANIMAL TOUCH KS ARE
SECHET OF PICTURE
David Smith Noted for His Work
With. Dumb Beasts
One of the secrets of the success of
David Smith, who directed "Flower
of the North," which will be shown
at the Star theatre on Sunday and
Monday, January 7 and 8, is his little
human interest touches.
The addition of little bits of atmos
phere not written in the script, but
which, when flashel upon the screen,
give a realism to the production that
the average spectator is unable to
explain. These little touches consist
of beautiful scenic backgrounds, close
ups of wild animals, a rabbit with a
litter of little ones, a dog in some un
Back to Earth
The Holiday rush is over, hut that only
means that we are all getting- back to
earth again and dealing in the substan
tial things of life.
We specialize in seasonable things
to eat and wear
Sam Hughes Co.
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 Agent For Morrow County
Phone Office 642, Res. 29F14. Heppner, Or.
Better Look Over
Your Old Plows
and see what repairs you
will need. Plowing time
will soon be here.
Peoples Hdw. Co.
Heppner, Oregon
" S T V
' At
."JV.V ' 7 'WBl. ,v ,','.'.V,' !', ' Wf-Vr?.
usual yet characteristic pose; or a
player caught unaware performing
some act that is entirely characteris
tic of the individual. These little
things when multiplied and put into
a big production make the picture a
classic.
"Flower of the North" is a story
of unusual interest, being one of the
best James Oliver Curwood novels,
and in picturizing it, Vitagraph ad
hered closely to the picturesque story
of t ho North country full of romance,
adventure and stirring scenes.
Small potatoes may be utilized to
good advantage by cooking and add
ing to the wet poultry mash to make
it more palatable. 0. A. C. Exeperi
in en t station. j
I
The Helm Dry Wall System
of Pressed Cement and
Brick Blocks
rcT "- v Sf n JflL? V
WITH CONTINUOUS CIRCULATING AJR SPACE
COOL IX SUMMER WARM IX WINTER. CHEAPER THAN
LUMBER. LET US BOLD YOU A HO.YD3
THAT WILL LAST
No painting No repairing Write us for literature
Umatilla Pressed Concrete
Brick and Block Co.
Auto Owners!
Do you hnow that I will do your
repair worK for a MINIMUM PRICE
and at the same time the
WORK is GUARANTEED
MP FF1 1 willow st.
i. 1 JLSLk at Chase
at Thomson Bros, for
Boys' and Girls' School Wear
UR Assortment of Boys'
"and Girls' footwear for
the school season were never
more complete.
Boy's and Girl's Shoes $3.00 to $5. 00
Boy's and Girl's Sweaters $2.50 up
Boy's Knicker Suits $8.50 to $ 1 5.00
Boy's and Girl's Windsor Ties .35c - .50c
Boy's and Girl's Blouses $1 .00 and $1 .25
School Hose
Thomson Bros.
Heppner
"I Wouldn't Lose
it for the World"
Some of your most highly prized pos
sessions are things that belong in a Safetv
Deposit Box. They may be in the form of
Keepsakes, Jewelry, Notes Contracts, Pen
sion Papers, Insurance Policies, Wills, Se
curitiesValuable papers of all kinds.
Place your valuables in one of our
strong Safety Deposit Boxes, then you will
have no need to worry.
We rent them for as low as $1.50 a year.
Better be safe than sorrv.
Farmers and Stockgrowers
National Bank ' '
Heppner, Oregon
M 1 1 ' "IH
25c - 35c - 50c
Oregon
of V
ell, f
PL .
4