Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, May 08, 1923, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON
Tuesday, May 8, 1923
To know
how good a cigarette
really can be mad
0
you must try a
THE HEPPNER HERALD
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
S. A. PATTISON, Editor and Published
Entered at the Heppner, Oregon, PoBtoffice as second-class Matter
KLAN KNIGHTS PUT OUT OF CHURCH
(Literary Digest)
CECIL
i43!!S! 4 4aia4
C. Henriksen of Portlaml arrived
at Ewing on Saurday and will visit
at the homes of Geo. and Oral Hen
riksen for some time.
Babe and Lot is Monague of Ar
lingon were Cecil callers on Thurs
day. Miss Gussiet Lindstrom of lone is
I visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Herb Fustone left on Wednesday
for Heppner where he will Bpend a
W. H. Chandler of Willow Creek
ranch Is visiting with friends at
4. 4.
BOARDMAN
On Saturday afternoon and even
ing of April 28, was organized the
In driving Ku Klux Klansmen out of church, when they
-Kome in mask and gown, the Hellevue Methodist Episcopal
Church in Pittsburg set an example, says the Brooklyn Lundell
Citizen, which "may well be followed." It was a lone and Mr. and Mrs. k. Farnsworth of
particularly irate trustee who started the retreat of the j Rhea siding were Arlington business
Klansmen, which ended in a rout. The hooded men came .callers on Tuesday,
unheralded, according to newspaper accounts of the affair, Lf "aw' ertb an,d . Atnn'e
, , . . ' , , 1 , , . 1 1 ,1 Hynd of Butterby Flats visited at the
breaking 111 on the Easier services being conducted Iry the ;home of Mr and Mrg w H Chan.
pastor, Dr. R. B. Urmy. The visitors divided into three dier on Thursday,
groups, one of which started up the main aisle, while the j Franklin Ely, accompanied by Miss
other two headed for the pulpit from the opposite sides of j oiadys Perriot of Morgan, were caii
Ihe church. Six of them were approaching Attorney El-: at the J- w- 0sborn home Mon
mer L. Kidney, trustee, who was taking up the collection, ar and Mrg Ge0 w Krebg of
at the time, when he planted his "six feet and 200 pounds Portland visited at the home of Mr.
in Jront of them and effectually barred further progress, and Mrs. Geo. c Krebs of the Last
"Get out," he ordered tersely, "and be quick about it." j Camp, returning home on Sundaf.
From the pulpit came the voice of the pastor: "Gcsjtlc-1 fA Henriksen of the Moore ranch
- 1 v i . 1 u -1 of Heppner was a Cecil caller Wed-
men, you are disturbing tne services neic, vviuui is u viuia- nesdav.
tion of the law. 1 ou will be pcrlectly welcome to remain
if vou remove your disguises. Otherwise you must go."
The Klansmen, thus rebuffed, turned to go, and as they fw days,
reached the exit Mr. Kidney we are told, got into action. strteteTocediVre buTy todays
When he had limshed, hp had the robes and masks of six putting j w 0sboin'8 caterpillar m
Klansmen as spoils of war, and the visitors had inconti- to working order again,
nently and ingloriously fled the scene. Mr. Kidney, the I Everett Logan of Heppner was a
son of a Methodist Episcopal minister, is said to be promi- Cecil business caller on Sunday.
nent in the, work of his church. In 1921 he presided over
an international conference of Methodist laymen in Lon- Lebanon this week
don. lie lias no feeling against the Man, the. 1 lttsburg r. Baicomb and Martin Bauern
l'ost quotes him as saying, and he understands that the or- fiend of Morgan were Cecil callers on
gani.ation has some very good principles. mit ne does
think that this thing of interrupting church services and
handing a few dollars to the preacher ought to be stopt."
Some newspaper editors agree with the redoubtable Pitts
burgher. "If other pastors were to adopt the rigorous
course of Dr. Urmy," says the Jersey Journal, "there
would be less of this sensational tomfoolery, and a lot of
Ku Klux advertising'might prove very unprofitable." No-
bodv can object to the Klansmen going to church, in the uardman Lodge No. 248, 1. 0. 0. F.
opinion of the Baltimore Sun. "They will be welcomed in with 17 memb,;rs; The afternoon
...... , ., . J- , , session was spent in election and in-
their individual capacity as saints or sinners in any church, stallation of orfiw,.s Visiting teamg
so long as they observe religious proprieties and conven- from Pendioton, stanfieid and Her-
tions." But, in this case, submits the Sun, Imistou with their regalia and or-
"The Klansmen apparently had not come to prav, but to "stra put on the degree work, con
create a sensation. They seemed to value their hoods more Pning a'7ur dperees on the 11
, . , J, ,, , , , .1 1. , - npw candidates. A typical Board-
nighly than their souls, for they declined the good pastoi s man lunch was geI.ved at midnight
invitation and departed hurriedly. and was much enjoyed by the visi-
"Jt is a new thing for honest, onc-hundred-per-cent tors. The officers elected were:
Americans to be ashamed of their faces. The Ku Kluxers Noble erand, c. g. Biaydbn; secre
profess to specialize in piety and ratriotism. , Pious ,and fitl
patriotic people generally do not lififc their countenances lllfs win be held every Wednesday
under masks or their light under bushels when they at- evening in Root's hail.
tend church. They have nothing to be afraid of or ashani-1 Mrs. ruiph Davis and junior re
ed of. The Ku l(ux church fashion is not onlv a piece of turned Thursday from her visit with
cheap ami ill-annered melodrama, but it is in direct con-, lTla T ?atew;y;,
. . . . . 1 fl Mrs- Royal Hands returned the
flict with the honest Americanism that is not ashamed ot ast of tho wePk from Ech0 where
its patriotism and of the honest humility that never wears she has been visiting relatives,
a mask over head ofr heart in the presence of God." Ml's- J- c. ciuistensen and son,
If the Klan wishes to give money to a church, remarks S'""'. of McMinnviiie visited a few
the Fort Wayne News Sentinel, "the mails arc still open, j ZnZacrZ
or representatives may call upon the pastor in his study j Saturday w. h. Gilbert received
and quietly make the donation. But the minds of men who word of the death of his sister-in-law
go about their activities hiding their faces from the world, in The Dalies. Mr. Giibreth ana
.t 1 ! 1 11 11 A 1.1 X T 1 XT WlltllJt l(t'r tlin Duma fM.ont....
:ro 1 11' innicK o sw.-is 1 inck its. jna 1 ne iewa v xews " " " -'-"'"b -
thinks it will do no harm to repeat what has often been
said: "In the life of America there is no room for a band
of men who are ashamed to show their faces while engaged
upon what thev insist is work of humanitv. All the high
professions of the Ku Klux Klan are of no avail as long as "",n",Ij tnt ,,xo,ci-ws wiU e hold m
., 1 1 . - .- .1- 1 ii tlH! auditorium Friday evening, .May
the mask ant gown are retained 111 their ritual. Ami the ., n , . h' '
, . , . . . , 1 , lu v. U. C. oung of Wasco will
height 01 uiqifopnely is readied wnen, so auireu, iney in
vade fhurclu's, hopiiiir to win condonation of their imperti
nence by a gift of money." To the Columbus Ohio State
journal "the effrontery of the Klan is amazing. It does
not seem as if an organization which countenances such
impudence could live very long among persons of good
sense and respect for sacred things." "Down in Louisiana,
where the evenings are dark and the country is wild," re
marks the Baltimore American, "knighthood prospers bet
ter; but Mr. Kidney of Pittsburg has demonstrated with
startling vividness what knights will do when they meet a
he-man in the daytime." And "when it is borne in mind
that the Klan has never officially condemned the outrages
which culminated in the Mer Rouce butchery, nor any
other outrages of which men wearing the Klan regalia rmon 11 a m. and 7:30 p. m.
. 1 u .1 x- v 1 ri 1 i l-- 1 .Christian Endeavor 6:30 p. m.
have been guilty, says Uig .New oik (..lobe, Mr. kid- Next Sunaav wllI be MJher.B Day
Hoy's action SCCinS warranted. J There will be a special program
"Before the Klan is received in church it may well be re- in honor of the mothers during the
iuired to irive evidence that its purposes are those of Sunday school hour. The pastor will
which tolerant and law-abiding citizens may approve. The bring,tt Mother18' Day
.... 1 . . 1 nwirnln trvlrn tVmrn will ha
I LUCKY Yl E
llSTRlKEJ :
NCiaARETTE,
LOADED MOOXSH1XE
IV SHERIFF'S AUTOMOBILE
tend tho funeral,
C. O. Beck has purchased the res
taurant from Mr. Webster and will
take possession this week.
Combination class day and corn-
deliver the address to the graduat
ing class and Mrs. Shuite, county
superintendent, will prseent the di
plomas. An impressive' baccalau
reate service was held at the church
on Sunday evening Rev. Gibson de
livering the sermon.
Ou Friday evening the Alumni
met for organization. Officers elect
ed were: President, Belle Packard;
vice president, Leroy Giibreth; sec
retary, Dorothy Boardman.
FEDERATED CHURCH
J. It. L. Haslara, Pastor
Sunday school 9:45 a. m.
Klan is certainly hiding something under a bushel, but it mwl.,i musC hotv
is darkness rather than light.
morning and evo-
nlng. We expect a lare number of
mothers at the morning service, also
twenty minutes after he fired hi" a large number of others to Uonor
press agent and quit advertising the them by being present,
world forgot him. He made a noise j she would wipe away my tear
like a real psychologist as long as ! drops,
his press agent kept the printers' ink Sh p would soothe my aching brow,
flowing In a steady stream, but when I slle would bind my bruised fin-
the flow stopped It was curtain for ' govs.
Frenehey in the V. S. A. and ho slu fs with her Savior now.
went buck to France where the best j Wlien I wandered far from
known people never heard of him. I mother,
a itivn.n ron advi htiseks
'Member that Frem-hman that got
fo much ndwrtlsing space in the
llvwspuptTH heie a few weeks ago
Binl ev erybody was talking about him
and reading his dope ami buying his
books and (noting bis rhymw about
'Every day and every night I'll get
the inon or have a fight," or tome,
thin' like that? Let's see! What
was his name? Smuethiir 1 J;e Go- A steady flow of printers' Ink Often broke my every vow,
way, or Cow ay. wasn't It? Well, ' makes many men and women think She forgave with tears of pity,
the polut Is that within fifteeu or j and then they w ill buy your Roods, i She Is with her Savior now.
A pretty good moonshine story has
trickled over the range from Grant
county in which Sheriff Cy Bingham,
a federal prohibition agent and a
native moonshiner figures.
The federal man traveled all the
way from Portland to investigate
stories of alleged unlawful opera
tions being carried on by Mr. Native
Moonshiner. Reaching Canyon City
the federal man enlisted the aid of
Sheriff Bingham to assist him in the
undertaking. Soon after darkness
had settled over the hills and can
yons the two started for the moon
shine plant, expecting to surprise the
operator in the midst of "running
off a batch." As they neared the
place and just as they approached a
bridge a man stepped out in the road
and signaled the officers to stop.
The sheriff brought his car to a stop
and the man in the road said: "All
right, Jack, this is the place," then
ran down under thp bridge and came
back with two well filled gunny
sacks. Anoher trip under the bridge
brought two more sacks and all were
safely deposited in in the car. "Junjp
in," said the sheriff, and the moon
shiner jumped in and it was not till
the sheriff turned and started to
wards Canyon that the moonshiner
discovered he had taken the wrong
car.
The man had finished his run and
was waiting for his wholesaler to
come alter the goods and when the
sheriff drove up just simply got the
officer and his bootlegger mixed.
The Place
to Live
The only "place" to live happily is inside
your income.
Not until you have lived for a time outside
your income do you fully realize this truth.
Make it a practice to save ten per cent of
your income.- You will then live within your
income and live happily.
Start today.
First National Bank
Heppner Ore.
em
IT PAYS TO READ THE HERALD ADS
0
II
M
n
1 1 "
Economy the Spirit
of the Times
DID YOU EVER STOP TO THINK WHAT
YOU PAY FOR FANCY CONTAINERS?
COffEE
IS A GOOD ILLUSTRATION OF THE FACT.
YOU PAY FROM 7c to 8c PER POUND
FOR THE LITHOGRAPHED CANS
WE CARRY A LINE OF BULK COFFEES AT
33k - 35c - 40c
PER POUND
Company
I
inn