Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, November 29, 1921, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    rr
Tuesday, November 2q, IQ21
- t - . xxnctli.
T5he
Hot Drinks
I A Member of the Federal Reserve !
1 I 1 P'
;
Sandwiches
Hit the right spot these frosty morn
ings and blustery, afternoons.
You Get The Best
at
McAtee & Aihen s
You Can Be Both
Tired and Happy
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniii
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.
miinHiHimonniiaiiuB
Peoples Hdw. Co.
WE AIM TO PLEASE AXD OtUi AIM IS TRUE!
AMERICAN
QLEGIONQ
(Copy for Thia Department Supplied fcr
the American Legion Nswe Svrvlea.)
0mh
w. r:.
"BACK-TO-HOME MOVEMENT'
New York Post' Woman Commander
Would Have Women Give
Up Their Jobs.
Someone should start a "back-to-the
home movement" for married women
who toll unneces
sarily In the busi
ness world, ac
cording to Mrs.
Julia E. Wheelock
commander of the
Barbara Frietchle
post of the Amer
ican Legion in
New York city,
and widely known
as a writer.
Mrs. Wheelock
believes that
"working wives
make lazy husbands." She believes
married women should give up their
jobs in favor of unemployed ex-service
men.
It was Mrs. Wheelock who success
fully opposed the making of the Amer
ican Legion strictly a man's organiza
tion. As a result there are tndnv sev
eral women enrolled as Legionnaires
ana several posts composed altogether
of ex-service women.
Mrs. Wheelock began helping the
United States win the war as early as
1916 when she started a campaign to
obtain stevedores and coal heavers for
the navy. She caused to be presented
to congress petitions for adequate pre
paredness and ig accredited with hav
ing through her own efforts recruited
8,000 men for the navy. Jn recogni
tion bf ner Services she wk made a
chief yeoman In the regular service.
Mrs. Wheelock is active in social
and civic affairs In New York and Is
widely known for her writings in both
the English and French languages.
Will Hays Gets Birthday Flowers
Tostmaster General Will Hays at his desk in the Postomee department on
ihls forty-second birthday. He received several dozen floral pieces and bun-
AMONG "BIRDS OF PASSAGE"
Editorial Asserts West Point Will
Continue to Turn Out Crop of
Second Lieutenants.
That the "second loole," of whom
there were so many during the war,
is more or less an institution of ac
tive warfare Is shown In an editorlnl
from the American Legion Weekly
miner tne caption "Birds of Passage."
it miiovv8 :
"Burled in the recent official list
or the number of armv officers of nil
grades who have contrived to survive
the congressional guillotine appeared
mis inconpieuous entry:
"Second lieutenants (all arms).. 233
"Only 233 second lieutenants left!
And once there must have been that
many thousand. Who shall now "deny
mac me war is over? Certainly while
It lasted they bloomed like so many
hardy perennials, emerging full blown
from the training camDS and flnnilv
from the ranks, for was not the top
m-igHnni oniy a little lower than the
ungeis I
"After the Armistice, when divisional
and regimental shows began to appear
all over the A. E. F., the second lieu
tenant won fresh immortality in the
quips wnicn Mr. Bones passed to Mr.
Tamho, and vice versa. It was a
token of his popularity for humnnliv
does not poke gentle fun at what It
nates.
"The second lieutenant
tingiiishpd. Most of him hn P,.rt.
uated into a first lieutenancy. West
Point will, of course, continue to turn
out its annual crop, but even these
win wmiin a few months enter the
lurger life of the silver bar."
Electricity for Infantile Paralysis
Dr. Samuel Hose of the Broad Street hospital. I'nlladelphia, Is here ahown
applying a new electrical machine for stimulating the blood and muaclea to the
tota of little Lillian Paris, an Infantile oamlrsis victim.
THE HEPPNER HERALD
ONLY $2.00 A YEAR
POST NAMED FOR LIEUTENANT
First American Artillery Officer to Die
in Action Is Honored by
Surviving Comrades.
The first American artillery officer
to die In action In France has been
nonored by his
surviving com
rades, who have
named their post
of the American
Legion In New
York In' his hon
or. The post,
which comprises
members of the
old First division,
Is known as the
Jeff Felgl post.
Jefferson Felgl
was a first lieu
tenant of Battery F, Seventh field ar
tillery of the First division. He was
twenty-two years old, and had entered
tne service of his country Immediately
upon his graduation from Harvard uni
versity.
A year after the death of the young
omcer on the field of battle, his per
sonal property was sent to his parents.
Colonel and Mrs. Felgl, who reside at
the Blltmore hotel. New York. In a
hand-bag was a letter addressed to his
parents, which Lieutenant Felgl had
written a short time before he was
killed. In the letter he forecast hla
death, and said. "Dam rartnn
couldn't aare picked a more aeotto-
manly man&er for sa t ntaka my ex-
dr. r. j. vaughan
DKXTIST
Permanently located In Odd
fellow's Building
HEPPNER, OREGON
DR. A. D. McMURDO
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
Telephone 122
Office Patterson's Drug Store
HEPPNER. OREGON
F. A. McMENAMIN
LAWYER
Office Phone Main 643
Residence Phone Main 665
Roberts Building
HEPPNER, OREGON
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORXEY-AT-LAW
Office in Court House
HEPPNER, OREGON
SAM E. VAN VACTOR
ATTORXEY-AT-LAW
First National Bank Bldg.
HEPPNER, OREGON
WATERS & ANDERSON
FIRE INSURANCE
Successors to
C. C. Patterson
HEPPNER, OREGON
DeLUXE ROOMS
Summer Rates
75c&$i.oo
Over Case Furniture Co.
WOODSON & SWEEK
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
Masonic Building
HEPPNE-R, OREGON
.
I
;
,
I
'
A Good Bank is Well
Managed
Through years of experience, a bank's
management becomes efficient and the bank
an institution of strength and good service,
At the First National Bank, depositors
have a surplus of safety and a full measure of
good service, made possible by the combined
experience of all officers. ; , , , '
First National Bank of
Heppner
A Member of the Federal Reserve
!
I
j
i
I
i
:
i
:
;
I
i
fit'
!
;
!
;
'
:
'
&
raj
&
000 Q
Buy With Your Eyes Open
When you buy a piano you
don't make a selection on
guesswork.
You want to see 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
an everyday occurrence..
But, there is no reason
why you should not get the
same full value for your
money. You can.
Good clothes, good tools,
good shoes, good soap arc
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.
Read the advertisements. They keep you abreast of
the times. They show you how to better your surround
ings and yourself. They teach you how to save money
and get the most out of what you spend.
141
r
A
It"