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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1919)
OKE.. TJTlTiSnW, OCT. 30, 1010. OHF.. TIU'RSDAY, NOV. IS, 101B. THE GAZETTE-TIMES IS' i trr and m mrr 4rnwlitrl ll I 111 IMM. HH I. ON trl'i.ii i lit fallen before the oo Jinan's anJ the Urrber trust. l r.crete ho.:se m.iv save lumber for fumttii'e and other ues. The !e.it ;in epiiertc cf concrete house building can J-1 vill be to conserve ;hc nation' forests for posterity, n-ore than they would get if we kept on bu:!i:ng wooden houses, burning them up and building them over 3;:a:n. Fire rates ought to be lower in a community of concrete houses, so should repair bills. But the main point is the rapidity 'J!'.. . 1" -l with which the poured house can be tioKiiou (iitMv ornnvL ru'r.u completed. Takes a day or two to ..... - " erect the form, which mav be used BROUGHT TO A HEAD. i for scores 0f otner houses, and is the Ked blooded Americans are indeed ! most ct.pensive preliminary to the shocked bv the atrocities wrought i era of poured houses, aiimst leva! sons, ex-service men.l When you build a house out of Iv member of the 1. W. W. at Cca-rood you have to bother with joists. tralia, Washington, on Armistic cia! scale, now that malt in quantity can be had; the closing of the brew eries and available machinery for its manufacture is a reality; and the willingness of the nation to try out the new sweet. Malt sugar syrup is sweet, the fla vor of honey. Bakeries, candy makers, soft drink flavor manufacturers and housewives S, I.SCKU'TI' N UATICS. i. 00 1 iv Day. While the patriotic people of that city were celebrating the first anni versary of a glorious victory on for eign soil, it was brought graphically home to them that there is, here in America, a menace more grave by far. It is the menace of the Reds, the 1. W. W. and the Bolsheviki. which many have read about but have been inclined to treat with no great ser iousness. The Centralia tragedy vnll only serve to bring the 1. W. V. boil to a head more quickly. Mob violence against the perpetrator of such a deed is but natural. But America must keep cool, give all the Reds due justice, and when that has been two-by-fours, lathes, shingles, veath er-boardinj. casincs, nails, and bunch of other incidentals. There is ever so much pounding and saw ing, a regular boiler factory of noise. But when you pour a house a calm silence prevails, broken only by the murmuring hiss of the stream enter ing the mold. Concrete runs hither and thither through the form, into spots where walls ought to stand, where floors should be, stairways, and even roofs. I Then add a few windows, a bit of rlaster, and hang the doors on hinges. I Move in. I Easy, isn't it ? Once you know they said concrete, bridges wouldn't work. J Once thev said that of concrete: !illlll!!ll!l!lll!!ll!lllliiiiiilllll!llllil!llllllllllllll 4& at the request of the government , have found it a perfect sugar substi-, t.ite. . j Its wholesale price is seven to nine cents a pound, in barrel lots. j Malt grains used in beer; barley, corn, potitoes or ar. starchy plant can be made into malt sugar sirup. So at last. John Malt has a "regu lar" job. KttMta 1 r ' "M dinneri i t V "Sc done, the country will soon rid itself paving. of this blight of humanity. X i Down in New Jersey they are ex perimenting with poured houses. There they take a form, or mold, But the world moves. And as it moves it learns. OLD JOHN MALT GOES TO WOR Old John Malt, just like a lot of When making your plans j for that I Thanksgiving Dinner think of us and our complete stock 1 of good eats. pour concrete in it, let it stand for a folks, has learned there are many day or so, and presto ! the house is useful things he can do once fore built, ed to it. Concrete poured houses are more' John Malt, you know, has spent a cheaply built than wooden, brick, or very busy life until recently, putting concrete block houses, and the time the "kick" into beer, etc. consumed now is of vital importance National prohibition however has in ending the nation's home shortage, changed the course of his footsteps, troublesome alike in large and small Malt sugar; malt sugar sirup. Old cities, in villages, too. John Malt rushing to rescue of a Another phase also enters into the sugarless nation, matter. This is the growing scarcity That is what John Malt can and of timber. Once there was a time will do, say specialists in the" bureau when lumber was cheap and plenti- of chemistry, U. S. Department of ful. That time will never come Agriculture, again in this country. The forests It has been placed on a commer- We can furnish the entire lisT; of supplies except- ing the turkey. j I Phelps Grocery Company Sj rrr It OX 1 'heater The story of a tenderfoot who made gun-toters hop. See TOM MIX Friday, Nov. 14th. The peer of all westerners in a western play. SATURDAY H. B. Warner in "THE PAGAN GOD" SUNDAY, A Big Lasky-Paramount Production Feature John Barrymore in "ON THE QUIET" "Bob Ridgeway" thoroughly agreed with the Kentucky colonel who said, "There are two tastes that have to be acquired, suh; one is for olives, and the other is for water." That is, he agreed until he saw the girl and the $20,000,000 that went with her. DON'T MISS IT. You read it in the Cosmopolitan. See it at the Star next MONDAY. "Virtuous Wives" Does a virtuous wife love her husband and seek the and seek the society of other men when he is away. Come and see this wonder picture. Also first number of Lyceum Course Harold C. Kessinger, "Boy Senator" from Illinois Anita Stewart in ' , J m. .c-, from Vir UOUf ViVCJ-" Tuesday, November 18. DUSTIN FARNTM in "The Man in the Open" Should a wife sacrifice a glorious career for the sake of her husband? Livestock Show Dairy Products Show Horse Show STAGED AS ONE BIG EXPOSITION In the New $300,000 Pavilion at North Portland, Oregon Week of November 17 to 22 Open All Day and Evenings Cups, Trophies and $75,000 in Premiums to be awarded The Pacific International Livestock Exposition was inaugu rated and is supported by leading bankers, business men and breeders of the Pacific Coast men of vision who see in the Pacific Coast the livestock center of the World. The staging of this exposition on so huge a scale is a long step toward the accomplishment of this aim and the benefits of its success will be widespread. Thousands of entries of pure bred stock, many coming from the Middle Western States, necessitated additions to the im mense $300,000 Pavilion. Hundreds of educational exhibits claim your attention, includ ing the large Western Dairy Products Show with 2130 entries and daily lectures by Mr. 0. E. Reed of Purdue University and Mr. M. Mortenson of the Iowa State College. Plan to Attend the Entire Week. Pacific International Livestock Exposition NORTH PORTLAND, OREGON Are You Interested in a Truck Bargain? An attractive proposition on a new truck of standard make. Inquire at The Gazette-Times. Quality In Printin A GREAT MANY Busi ness men are becoming just as particular about the kind and quality of printing they use as they are of the goods they sell or the clothes they wear. In fact they are demanding "Printing of Quality" and nothing pleases us more than to be called upon by particular customers for "Quality Printing." Does your printing have the "Quality" trade mark? There is no job too large nor too small for our efficient com mercial printing department. Call Main 882 Producers of "Quality Printing" .1 UM