THE IONE INDEPENDENT Published Every Friday by, J. V. HEAD, Editor Publisher SUBSCRIPTION One year $1.50 Six months ."iS Three months .50 Kutervd n wcoml cliisa mtun-rat tin-pin UiIfKf nt lout Oivuon, under in t. of Miirvli 8. 1S7!. Friday.Fcbruary 19, 1926 It is hard for an tmty bug to stand upright. Ben Franklin THINGS THAT NEVER DIE ByChariea Dickens The pure, the bright, the beauti ful, That stirred our hearts in youth The impulses to wordless prayer, The dreams of love and truth; The longinn after something lost, The spirit's yearning cry, The strivings after better hopes These things can never die. The timi.l hand stretched forth to aid A brother in his need. A kindly word in griefs dark hour , That proves a friend indeed; The pka for rmrcv softly .breathi-d When justice threatens high; The sorrow of a contrite heart- These things shall never die. The memory of a clasping hand. The pressure of a ki?, And all the trifles, sweet and frail. That make up love's first bliss; If with a firm.unchanging faith, And holy trust and high. Those hands have clasped, these lips have met These things shad never die. FOREIGN INTERFERENCE IN AMERICAN AFFAIRS . The supporters of a modifies tion of the Volstead Act and a nullification of the eighteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States have com bined their resources for the maintenance of a permanent lob by and office at Washington. It is charged that these wel organizations are being in part financed by the wine and distill ingjnterests of the principal win) and distilled liquor producing countries of Europe. Whether the specific charge U or is not susceptible of proof , there can be no question but tha these organizations are doing tlx work of the distillers -of th British Isles and the wine pro ducersof France, Spain and Ita ly. , . - . . .Tbe return to pre Volstead con ditions would mean hundreds ol millions of dollars annually to these people directly and would check if not destroy the move ment now on in every part of the world to destroy the liquor traf fic root and branch. Couldn't Redly Call Inn Ancient Lullting V hud piiddM through Ulit-nt'i eoinplez watersny wrid wen i. ndcr lug where we could leave our :im In safety, when fount racing uliplls Mhot (mat, f boulhoiute fmiunt fluttered, and f chi-ery voice Invited un to util ize the Itnyiil Club Nnutlque for ai long ff we wished. So we stored otir cuuoe In the clubs 'girgH,B then drove tlirotiKh the town to a quaint Inn whose leaded pniie looked oat upon f row of shops hul'.t Into the outer walla of i grcitt Gothic church, Melville Clmter wrltc In tlie Nullonal Cleographlc Mugur.lne. The alght of people flocking to nerv. Ice, while other ilppcd drinks, got fhf ved or bought curios, ill under the eavef of a sacred edifice, hinted thut we were In an ancient quarter of the town. , . i "If tlili an old Inn?" we 'inquired of mir r'li-iiilsli lumt. fie n a liii;u larly IIIpthI man. He replied gravply: "Not fo very. probably when .built In the Thirteenth century It wa aome wealthy mun's home. In the Klxteenth century, about the time Albrecht Pur er stopped here. It waa the limine of the Grocers' guild. I-ater It waa pri vately owned for couple ir more centurlef. No, a an Inn 1 wouldn't fall It particularly old." After that we reverentially uaed the doormat, and refrained from ftrtklng natrhea on tbe woodwork FORMER PUBLISHER OF IONE INDEPENDENT RETURNS TO FIELD OF JOURNALISM p. p. hassler wearies ok chasing Demon Rum P. P. Hassle r, formerly publish erof the Turner Tribune and lone Independent, has taken over the Gervais Weely Star from G. L Swartz. The new publisher an nominees that the fctar will be con ducted as a "strictly Republican paper," Mr. Hassler spent a year as a general prohibition enforce ment officer under E. A. Hazel tine, formerly divisional chief at Seattle. He decided td get back into newspaber work "befoie some bootlegger piped him off." Oregon Exchanges. Frenchman Firet to r' U$e Gasoline Engine The flrat attempt to employ gaso line at a motive power waa made by a Frenchman, l'lerre Ravel, who pat ented "a at cam generator heaWd by mineral oils, to be applied to at earn locomotion on ordinary roads." Ita vel'a engine waa lifted to a email car riage, and developed three hone power. Tbe Franco-German war put an end to IEavel't exerltuenta for time, but year later1 be built motor car In which petroleum waa naed for the di rect generation of motive power. In 1ST8 Lent Invented a burner by which a mixture of gasoline and other naph tha, called maaaout, waa used a fuel on steamships. About the fame time gasoline waa used aa an lllunilnant In street lampa, and later a new use waa found for It In the manufacture of varnish and oilcloth. Gasoline, amounting to per cent of the distilled product of the crude petroleum, continued to be a drug on the market until the Inven tion of the gasoline motor, imd Its application to automobiles, boa's, air plane, and hundreda of Industrial uses. Several Inventor helped to Ind urate the "Are of Gasoline," but the chief of them waa George L. Selden of Rochester (X. Y.), the father of the automobile. Chicago Journal. Equinox Affected by Heating Power of Sun The autumnal equinol Ja wanner, not colder, than the vernal In prac tically all of the continental Vnited State and other .places of middle to high latltudea. The reason for this la that the temperature conditions at any locality always lag behind the changing amounts of heat revived by the locality from the sun In the course of Ita annual Journey from winter solstice and return. In New Jersey, for example, the heating effect of the sun shine la at minimum on Decem ber 22 of each year, but tbe lowest temperature of the winter occur full)' a month later, on January 25. The greatest solar heating occurs at the summer solstice, June 'A but the high est average tetiiieratures fall about the eud of July. Tbe autumnal equi nox, September 21, orrnrs, therefore, only about Bve daya after the highest temperatures of the year, whereas the vernal equinox, March 21, is separated from the time of highest by fully i:U da), and I separated only ahont 90 day front the coldest period of the year. Flattered "De longcf word la," fald Unci Kbeo. "de more 1 feela kind o' flut tered for beln' given credit wlf uiebb knotvlu' what It means." Washington Ut. Motl Animal Can Fly Almost two-third of all known kinds of animal can 0y or gild through tbe air. ENGELMAN HARDWARE ; IONE, OREGON Everything in the line of hardware. If wc havn't got it we can get it - quick. ENGELMAN HARDWARE IONE; OREGON .wit . r Whlipered Speech and Received Big Ovation A prominent suburbanite, who I well known a a speaker In fraternal or ganisation, recently had occasion to go. to a northern city to snake an ad dress at dedication, When he arrived lu the city b was so hoarse that he could scarcely be heard. The committee of reception whs dismayed. "Why not take aoin Turkish baths today r waa suggested. "All right," he responded in a whis per. "I'll try It" Bo he went throu.h a steaming process, and sure enough, in the evening his voles had com back to hltn to an extant When he arose at the meeting h apologised by saying that h had prac tlcally lost hi voice, but, that after years, he would put Into practice a precept of un old elocution professor, to whisper so that everyone who would be attentive could understand each word. So hs whispered his speech. He was given an ovation the great est be had ever had. Later, In speak lug of It, he aald: "That waa one of the principle Uid down by Professor Neff years ago, "He asserted that articulation was necessary In public speaking and that the voice could be pitched in any key or could be loud or soft I remember u though It were yesterday when I stood ou a platform In a large hall and whlNiered to him aa he sat at the other 'end of the hall, lis heard me perfectly. It waa all due to articula tion." Philadelphia Record. Not Qualified Willie, who was nearly live, anil his mother were sitting at home one night. At the tuhle his sister, aged aevea, was doing her home work. - Saddenly moth er looked up and saw Willie watching his sister. "Well, Willie," she said, "It will not be long before yon wlU hav to go I school." "Oh," said Willie, "It's so us tend ing me to school !" "How Is thatr asked hi mother. "What' the use of sending m 'to school r exclaimed Willie. "I dofl know anything and I cau't read or Difference in Heraldry Tn heraldry "difference" or mark of "cadency" Indicate the varlou branches of a family. I'u.lng the life time of his father the eldest eon bean a label, the second a crescent, th third a mullet, the fourth a marlet, the fifth an annulet, the sixth fleur ile Us, the seventh a rose, the eighth a cms mollne, Ibe ninth a double qnutre full. , . In "Hamlet" Ophelia fays that both she anil the queeu are to wear rue, herself aa the afitaneed bride of the eldest ton of the late- king, but the queen with a "difference," Indicative of the fact that, although she w Hamlet' mother, her status waa that of her present husband, Claudius. Detroit New. Lodge Directory IONE LODOE So. 123. A V.Sc A M Meets every first and third Wednea of each month. W. M. W. E. Hul'.rd Hec. Elmer (Jrllflth ' IK'UST CHAPTER No. 119, O. K. Meet the second and fourth Tuc. dny of each month. W.M.Mr. (Irn Ilowk; Sec. Mrs. Ruth Mason. IONE LOIOE Xo. 1-13. I. O. O.K. Mewta -every Kuturdny evening. S. 0. 'Edaon Morgan; ' V. U. Ernest Hellker.Hec. Enrle A. Urowu; Trca E.J.Drlatow. BtTNCHOUASS KEBEKAH No. ill. 1. O. O. V. Meets the flrat anil third Thursday of each month. X. (J. Ettu Howell; V. .. Vdla Hellker Sec. Venlii Ritchie: Treoa. Etta Brhv tow. ' BIBLE READING FOR THE WEEK enrth is the Lord's, and the fullnesB thereof; the world, and they thut dwell therein. rsa.21:l The Lord is my light and my Halvation: whom bIiuII 1 fear? Psa. 27:1 "The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament show- eth his handiwork. Psa. 19:1 Blessed is the man that walk eth not in the council of the un godly, nor stundeth in the way of sinners, nnrsitteth in the sect of the scornful. Pa. 1:1 As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, 0 Cod. Psa. 42:1 From the end of the earth will 1 cry unto thee, when my heart is overwhelmed: lead me to the reck that is higher than I. Fna. 61:2 God he merciful unto us and bless us; and cause his face to shine upon us. They Will Talk The trouble with mot duniti-hella 1 tlist they aren't dumb Ethel (iaxetlt. Bone in Human Hand There are no more bones In a rhlld't hand than that of an adult In th young, however, the etuis of tbe hones have not been firmly attached to the shaft, whlcii in an X-rny picture would clve the effVct of more hones lh;in reul ly exist Roue orlgttmte and develop from several centers known a center of ossltlcutlou. ciTuRaTDiuEf ory CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Kev. W. W. HEAD, Pastor Services 11:00 A. M. and 8:00 P. M FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Sunday School 10:00 A. , M. - Prayer Meeting Thurs. Evening Services" 10:00 A. M. and 8:00 P. , M.' . s k ' FIRST BAPTIST CHUitCH Sunday School atlC.OOA.M Junior Endeavor at5.30 P.M. Prayer meeting Thurs. 7.30 PM TAILORS Suits Made To Measure PRICE $29.50 And Up .Satisfaction Guaranteed -Heppner, Ore. I D. MCMURDO, E D. PjhysicUn and Surgeon Office in Masonic Building Trained Nurse Assistant Heppner Oregon WOODSON & SWEEK Xttorneys At Law' First National Bank Building Heppner Oregon' When You Visit Heppner Eat at the !' Elkhorn Restaurant - , X I Good Meals r Best of Service ' LUnch Counter : : Dr.' A. H."1 Johnston PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Phone-Office . , Main 033 , Residence Main 402 HEPPNER . OREGON Bristow & Johnson BOOTS and SHOES Fall and Winter Clothing PRIME GROCERIES PRICES LOW As Consistent With Good Quality 4 IONE HARNESS SHOP C. A. BELCH, Proprietor f Drop 1 n and looK over my Lino of WorK Shos. i 1 have a ood stocK of Cloves and Harness Supplies.. Repairing at Reasonable Prices. ' v.. 1 lone Market T. E. Peterson, Prop. aSssasWMsasssjpssassjtsaaasssssB Wholesale and Retail Dealer in FRESH and CURED MEATS Your Patronage Solicited. ' Under New Management IONE HOTEL ' lone, Ore. - . . , f . Refurnished and Strictly Up to Date. Commer- cial Table First Class. ; A home away from home, with best meais in Central Oregon. SAM GANGER; Proprietor. Nice Rooms. Good Service. Farm Implements VULCAN and OLIVER PLOWS, SUPERIOR DRILLS," FAIRBANKS MORSE ENGINES, MYERS PUMPS, STAR and AERMOTOR . WIND MILLS. WINONA WAGONS. ? PAULG. BALSIGER ... lone," Oregon' j "Wsll1s5BslalBalIIBBsllsl SEE ME BEFORE THE FIRE H. C. WOOD i REAL ESTATE & INSURNCE IONE, - OREGON F. H. Robinson Attorney and Counselor at Law Will prtictica ' in all the ' Court! ; -KNE,t OREGON W.W. KETTLE M.D. Physician and Surgeon Eyes examined & Glasses fitted. Office in Drug Store. IONE, - ' OREGON Dr. F. E. Farrior DENTIST , Office: Odd Fellows BuIIdinfi f Heppner : Oregon .