Tuesday, November 22, iQ2t THE HEPPNEft HElRALD, HEPPNER. OREGON PAGE THREE J PROFESSIONAL CARDS A Carrying On, With the Hot Drinks A Member of the Federal Reserve American Legion and Sandwiches Hit the right spot these frosty morn ings and blustery afternoons. You Get The Best at Mc Atee h. AiKen's You Can Be Both Tired and Happy 1IIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIJIIII1I Tired after a day's hard work in the house and happy because you have the most improved washing machine, kit chen range and complete set of kitchen utensils in your house. If you are not completely equipped with the HARDWARE NECESSITIES of life, it will only take us about a minute to prove to you that you are the loser not only in dollars and cents, but in the fact that you are losing a whole lot of satisfaction. anHtfluuiHwifMiaiHHi Peoples Hdw. Co. VE AIM TO PLEASE AXD OUR AIM IS TKUE! POOTBALI THANKSGIVING DAY Heppner Athletic Grounds one Legion vs. eppner Post Good Fast Game. If you crave to see acition don't fail to be there at 2:30 Sharp Big Legion Dance in Fair Pavilion Same Evening THE HEPPNER HERALD ONLY $2.00 A YEAR Daniel Chester French, sculptor, who created "The Minute Man at Concord," has been selected to design the me morial for Massachusetts dead in the World war which is to be erected somewhere along the American sector in France. Henry Bacon, designer of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D. C, will be associated with him. The Community House at Camp Cus ter, Mich., purchased by a Chicago company for $30,(XK, has been repur chased by the state of Michigan and will be presented to the American Lesion for use as a hospital for sick and disabled veterans. The building will be improved at the expense of the state. General Lafayette post of the Ameri can Legion, composed of New York City policemen, has mortgaged its Long Island clubhouse for $1,000, the money to be used in helping unem ployed veterans. The policemen-Legionnaires have pledged themselves to canvass their heats for jobs for their unfortunate "buddies." t "The Book of Misery" containing thousands of news-clippings and let ters describing the plight of America's World war veterans in the recent period of unemployment will be pre sented to Congress by the Legion as documentary evidence in favor of relief for ex-service men. Unemployed ex-service men sleep ing in Bryant Park, New York, wer awakened one recent midnight by the sound of a bugle mess call. Seven hundred of the unfortunate men lined up for "chow". A committee repre senting the George Dahlbender Post of the American Legion, led the men to a restaurant where each was fed at the expense of the Legion post. The American Legion has asked the shipping board to permit the use of the giant liner Llvlathan as a' tem porary shelter for Jobless ex-service men. The liner has been Idle at the Hoboken army docks for several months. During the war It transpor ted 140,000 American troops to France. Charles W. Seymour, of Hartford, Conn., tendered his resignation as state senator following his election to the commandership of the American Legion In Connecticut. Officers of the Legion cannot hold public office which is elective. A twenty-acre park, known as "American Legion Park" has been ded icated by the city of Melrose, Minn., to the men of the city who were in service during the World war. The Melrose Legionnaires have established a children's playgrounds, a tourists' camping grounds and a baseball dia mond. Ex-soldiers and marines, members of the American Legion, were the heroes in the rescue work which fol lowed the explosion of a tank con taining 600,000 cubic feet of ammonia fumes In New York City. One of the former service men is accredited with having rescued ten persons from a tenement which had become filled with the fumes. A "party" which Is said to have cost $10,000 was glyen by L. Gordon Hamersley, who served as a lieutenant In the Sixth Field artillery of the First division, at his estate near Tarry-town-on-the-Hudson. The guests were disabled soldiers of the First division and members of the Jeff Feigl post of the American Legion. ... Emergency officers of the army dis abled during the war "don't belong" on the retired list of the regular army, Secretary Weeks told officials of the American Legion, who are fostering a plnn for the retirement on retirement pay of the emergency officers of the World wnr. . The first woman to hold the position of adjutant of a state department of the American Legion Is Miss Ilo norah H. Glttings, of California. Miss Gtttlng served during the war as a yeomanette In the navy. She Is act ing adjutant of the California de partment. Failure to doff his hat when the funeral cortege of an American soldier passed, caused Adam Kosloskl to lose hla Job as constable at Sauk Rapids. Minn. A complaint against Koaloskl was filed by raemban of tht American Legion. Five hundred deaf and dumb chll dren of New York attended a showing of the fllm-play, "The Man Without a Country," as gueati of the Ameri can Legion. Each child wrote an efsay on Americanism based on Impressions of the play. Five hundred unemployed vernns of the World war In New York were given employment as movie supers In the studios at Mamaronerk, Long Island. ... The Mark-Hamilton post of the American Legion at Minneapolis Is organizing Its own b;ind, nnliestrn, gb-e club, vaudeville teams and dia miitle company. ... i Nahvfluk. Minn.. I,:ih turned ovei sn almndonH s'li'ml huiliili.g to t!e Ani'Ti. im 1 e,i"n r r :i I iN Iwei The buildir;,; will be rem. le.e.j. DR. R. J. VAUGHAN DENTIST Permanently located In Odd fellow's Building HEPPNER, OREGON DR. A. D, McMURDO PHYSICIAN and SURGEON Telephone 122 Office Patterson's Drug Store HEPPNER, OREGON F. A. McMENAMIN LAWYER Office Phone Main 643 Residence Phone Main 66 5 Roberta Building HEPPNER, OREGON S. E. NOTSON ATTOHNEY-AT-LAW Office in Court House HEPPNER, OREGON SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORN EY-AT-LAW First National Bank Bldg. HEPPNER, OREGON WATERS & ANDERSON FIRE INSURANCE Successors to C. C. Patterson HEPPNER, OREGON DeLUXE ROOMS Summer Rates 75c & $1.00 Over Case Furniture Co. WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORN EYS-AT-L AW Masonic Building HEPPNER, OREGON Buy With Your Eyes Open When you buy a piano you don't make a selection on guesswork. You want to sec it. You want to hear it played. Above all, you want a piano that you know by name. You want to buy it from a store you know. Buying a piano is, for most folks, an event. Buying food, wearing ap parel and household needs is Read the advertisements. They keep you abreast oi the times. They show you how to belter your surround ings and yourself. They teach you how to save money and get the most out of what you spend. Safety and Service For Savings Depositors f" x ioczr: Savings depositors here enjoy more than a safe place for their funds and a safe rate of interest on their savings. They consult with our officers in a frien dly way on their plans for a larger success. From our many years experience in serving people, they get much in the way of helpful suggestion. As a savings depositor at the First Nat ional Bank, our offiicers arc on call and their experience is always availahle. t re. i i First National Bank of Heppner A Member of the Federal Reserve ' an everyday occurrence.. But, there is no reason why you should not get the same full value for your money. You can. Ciood clothes, good tools, good shoes, good soap are advertised by the manufac turer because he MAKES them good. Your merchant here has these goods. He believes in them. He backs up his faith by advertising them.