V I i 3j Tuesday. Tanuarv 4, 10-2I HI-SCHOOL XOTKS School opening next week will her ald in the basket-ball season for the High School. Heard has been chos en coach and prospects are good for a winning team. We have lots of material this year nnrt iha .,-... - c . ... mo icim 11 ih Ainens, center on the championship 1918-19 team gives us five letter men,, the other four are Peterson, Ferguson, Irwin and Young. Irwin, last year's forward, looks sweet and is working hard, his last year's running mate, Pattison, gradu ated and there are several candidates out to fill the vacancy left ty him. Howell, Chidsey, and the McDuffee brothers are the loading candidates for this position. The guard posi tions are in doubt, but Peterson and Ferguson seem to have the edge, while Orr, center on the football team and who made a substitute last year, is making the boys open their eyes by his guarding ability. Center seems to be the hardest po sition for the coach to fill. Young last year's center is a fair man, and bids strong. Boyd, a lanky 6-foot 4 lad seems to be inexperienced, but has the fight, he may land the posi tion. The opening game will be with Lexington, January 14, on our own floor. THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER. OREGON COUXTY JUDGES EXDOKSE ouego.n PKonrcTs At the recent meeting of county judges and commissioners at Port land the present problems of finan cial distress and unemployment in the state were freely discussed and the sense of the meeting expressed in the following resolutions: WHEREAS, the entire country is facing a serious unemployed problem that vitally affects 'every line of pri vate and public business, and WHEREAS, it would seem that much of the problem could be solved in its relations to conditions in Ore gon if every public official and citi zen of the state undertook to do their part, therefore be it RESOLVED by the Oregon Asso ciation of County Judges and Com missioners in convention assembled on December 13, 1920, that we rec ommend the purchase and use of Oregon materials and products and thus- aid in the continuous employ ment of people in Oregon factories. pleasantly surprised by the arrival of some fifteen of his friends of the younger set and the balance of the evening was given over to an old fashioned good time. HIS TIME ALL T00 SHORT Dying Profiteer Could Not Make Com plete Confession of Iniquity in One Brief Day. Armin W. Riley, head of the "flying squadron" that hunts down profiteers tor the department of justice, told a profiteer story at a Washington re ception. "A sick profiteer," he said, "was told by his physician that be had only a short time to live. Accordingly he expressed a desire to confess his sins, and a divine was sent for. "The divine entered the dying prof iteer's chamber and the door was closed. An hour, two hours, three nc. ins passed. -Nothing was to tie heard by the attendant nurses and physi clans- outside in the corridor save the steady, monotonous How of the prof iteer's confession, punctured at brief Intervals by exclamations . of horror and indignation ou the part of the divine. "Lunch was sent into the sickroom, and the confession went on. The af ternoon waned. The sun set. Night fell. The divine's dinner was carried to him. And still the profiteer con tinued to confess. "Haggard and unstrung, the divine at last tottered forth at daybreak. " 'Our unfortunate friend,' he said, 'is no more. He worked very, very hard; but at the time he passed away he had only carried his confes sion through the first year of the wur." I T Student Gets Surprise Elmer Bucknum, a student in Mt. Angel college, returned to Heppner last week to spend the Xmas holi days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bucknum. Soon after his arrival at the home hearth Elmer was most Hunt in Autos in Alaska. Times have changed in Alaska fro.n the days when trappers mushed over the snow fields to hunt for game. Citizens of Fairbanks are hunting cari bou by automobile, so say recent ar rivals at Seattle. Automobiles are coining into their own in the territory and the bureau is advised that "the days of real sport" around the north ern Alaska town are featured by mo toring out to the herd where thou sands of caribou are leisurely graz ing, bagging a few aniraals, dumping the carcasses Into the tonneau of the car and driving back with the winter's meat supply. A Changu of Culling. "You are going to have some sad dislllusionments," said the mysterious Egyptian. "I've already had one," said the cli ent. "How l3 that?" "When this carnival company cume through here last year you were sell ing 'hot dogs' and pink Itaonude." Birmingham Age-Uerald. mfrWUS is 1101 an advertisement. Onlv an expression of appreciation for the nalr tended to us by the people of Heppner and Morrow county and to extend best wishes for the happiness and prosperity of everybody, everywhere during the present year of 192 1. We thank you for past favors. We sal ute you with present good will, we congrat ulate you for future good things for all which is sure to follow the present time of re-adjustment. Cordially yours, THOMPSON BROS. 1 ii WITH A BIG STOCK OF WILL OPEN ITS STORE IN HEPPNER ON , JANUARY 5, 1 921 WEDNESDAY, W2 THE OPENING OF THIS STORE MEANS AN OPPORTUNITY TO THE PEOPEE OK MORROW COUNTY TO SUFI, Y T,,E!R NFEDS VT PRACTICALLY THEIR OWN FIGURES. WE QUOTE THE FOLLOWING: (, 1). SHIRTS, New and Reclaimed 0. D. BLANKETS, New and Reclaimed O. D. RAINCOATS and MACKINAW'S, New and Reclaimed. 0.. D. SWEATERS, New 200 PAIRS Reclaimed ARMY SHOES Reclaimed and New BREECHES PFI TS c()Cr S, PUTTEES, COVERALLS, OVERALLS, LEGGINGS AND HUNDREDS OF OTHER AR-TICLES INCLUDED IN REGUIAR ARMY SUP PLY LINES. ' J o B. TESSLER, Mgr. Gilman Building, Willow Street HEPPNER, OREGON Three A 4 I 4 1 s 'k