TIIK GAZKTTE-T1MES. IUTPXER, OREGON. THURSDAY. MAY 2(1. 10J1. !lli!!llii!!I!!lill!i!IS!lilii!!!ffl H BEFORE YOU STEP THINK! Don't Drive Your Car Without Full EE INSURANCE PROTECTION g A vitKiut'luIt' Hail ih Fire Insuraiuv on Grain Gen- j tral Fire Risks in Standard Companies" I SEVERAL HOUSES IN CITY FOR RENT j! ROY V. WHITEIS I Real Estate and Insurance, Heppner. EE ; ONLY "QUALITY PRINTING" !!IIII!II1!I!!IIIIII!1II!IIIIIIIII!III!IIH On the Ground Floor I 1WTY friends and patrons are in-' 1 f LL vited to meet me in my new g 1 office formerly occupied by the g g Tri-State Terminal Co., Farmers g g Union Building, on the east side g g of Main Street. g F. R. BROWN j Real Estate, Insurance and Grain A. Z. BARNARD LICENSED DRAYMAN Transfer and General Hauling HEAVY OR LIGHT WORK HANDLED Get us on the street or by phone, No. 662 "NOW-A-DAYS" says the Good Judge W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco A Dollar Bill WILL WILL start a savings account at this bank. WILL put you on the real road to real saving. WILL earn interest while you save more. WILL help build a wall between you- and hardship. WILL make you think more of yourself. WILL make others think more of you. WILL turn your ambition into real success. FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK- Heppner ON THE STARTER EE PRODUCED AT THE G.-T. A man can get a heap more satisfaction from a small chew of this class of tobacco, tvan he ever could get from a big chew of the old kind. He finds it costs less, too. The good tobacco taste lasts so much longer he doesn't need to have a fresh chew nearly as often. Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that. Put up in two styles "71 Oregon A FLOWER AND A TEAR FOR THE HERO WHO SLEEPS fin wr &1U Patriotism Is Aroused forHome Dye Industry Kelly, of Pennsylvania, Speaks For Protection Provision in New American Tariff Washington, May 23 Unstinted praise of the provision in the emer gency tariff law which protects the dyestuffs industry of the United States is voiced by Representative Kelly, of Pennsylvania. He says: "This provision in the emergency tariff bill concerning dyestuffs and chemicals is recognition of the fact that we are on the verge of a new age. We have had the stone age and the iron age and are now in the elec trical age. Just ahead is the chemi cal age, and with an enlightened pol icy America will be the leader of the world in its accomplishments. "Coal tar is the most important basic material in the chemical world. In my own district for many years countless tons of coal tar from tlK old-stvle beehive coke ovens were GREATEST WOMAN . OF THE AGE IN U. S. FOR GIFT Marie Currie, even though tlic mother ol two little girls and with liome duties to take up her tinic. did not permit these obstacles to keep her from writing her name liitjh in the world's hall of fame. She discovered radium, the most precious of metals. Now she is tn the United States to receive from the hands of President Hard ing a Rrani of radium, valued at J1C0.OW). the gift of American' wo men who admire her great scien tific work. There are only .141 trams of radium in the world to day. Her two girls, now 23 and 16 years old, accompanied her litre from the home in France jf''AI II I HEY CURE! HOW AQoUT EATS? IS lllllllll I ill NOT VET, PEAK! -1 HAVEN'T I gAP'1' , jj jlll lj (JOSH, I'LL HAVE TO EAT DOWNTOWN THEN OR TIL BE LATE rAEETNG ' BYE.'r . wasted. Then it was discovered to be one of the most valuable products in the world. "Now in the new ovens it is being conserved and used for a thousand uses. Coal tar is the essence of the forests of by-gone years. It is one of the strategic products for war and peace. It wounds and heals. It sup plies both munitions ana medicines. "Every ton of coal produces 120 pounds of tar. Out of the tar comes 10 crude oils, which are converted into 300 secondary products or "In termediates." Through combination ot tnese cnemical elements manv thousand products are possible There are todav at least a thousand separate dyes produced from coal tar. The entire business has been dominated by Germany. The man who first made a dve from coal tar was an English chemist. In less than two years Germany had a complete monopoly of its production. "When the war broke out we were importing nine-tenths of our dyes from Germany. Only seven firms and 528 persons were employed "in the dve industry in the United States. Cut off from our supply by the war, we suffered greatly." SMILE AWHILE Horrible. "Are the snakes around here very venomous?" asked the timid tourist. "Venomous!" exclaimed Gila Bill, "Why, say, pardner, only the other day a side-winder bit Mesquite Thompson in his wooden leg and it swelled so hard and so fast that if we hadn't got him to a saw mill right away, he'd have turned into a petri fied forest." American Legion Weekly. So Natural. "I don't see how you allow your cook to abuse your husband that way," commented a caller as an ang ry female voice resounded through the house. "Oh, he doesn't mind it," answer ed the hostess. "You see, he's a baseball umpire and he isn't working to-day and I was afraid he wouldn't appreciate his afternoon off." lm- ericjn Legion Weekly. Slightly Mixed. An ex-doughboy was relating his experiences somewhere over there. "I'll say t was some battle. I was up in the air for the time being with my back against the wall, but I re solved to die in the ditch rather than to yield an inch, so I continued to ad vance regardless of the Jerries who were pressing me from the rear. American Lesion Weekly. A MINUTE 7' FOR T n get SuppeB. in CAN WELL CArJT vnu WAIT A MINUTE? 1 II 1 I III I ifcV-ST-)T-T" I 1 11 I Ml ft? 'G I I HI U.tf No H'JKKY. 'Shall I drop you off in Chicago?" asked the transcontinental aviator as they passed over Buffalo. "No, I won"t trouble you," relpied the nervous passenger. "1 believe I'll stay aboard till you come to your first regular stop." American Le- gion It eekly. .. Oh, Come, Come. There had been a quarrel over the back yard fence. 'You're no lady!" screamed one participant. "Say, ' shrieked back the other, "if it wasn't that I was a lady maybe I'd be able to tell you the kind of a lady you ain't." Ameriacn Legion Weekly- Under the Circumstances. "Say, will you mind this suitcase for me for a few minutes?" asked a young fellow in a railroad station of a fellow voyager. Sir! replied the other, drawing himself up. "Do you know who I am? I am a United States Sena tor!" "Well, in that case." said the otiler doubtfully, "in that case and seeing I've got everything I own in there, maybe I better take it along with my self." American Legion Weekly. Where Is Thy Sting? Aunt Sallie was paying a visit to the family for the first time in years and had told them how cute she thought little Willie was. In similar complimentary vein, the family told her just how much little Willie re sembled her. But the edge was tak en out of the compliment when all of them heard little Willie say, as he went out into the dark hall on his wav to bed: "Go on, grab me, ol' bogey man. I don't care. They say I look just like Aunt Sallie." American Legion Weekly. TOR LIVE STOCK BILL Washington, May 23. It is likely that at the present session of Con gress will be passed a blil creatrng a Federal livestock commissioner in the Department of Agriculture, which has been reported favorably by Chairman Norris of the Senate Committee on Agriculture. Of the meat packers Senator Nor ris says: "Furthermore, the peculiar cir cumstances under which it is oper ated, with a multitude of producers on the one hand and a very limited number of packers and distributors on the other, lend themselves read ily to monopoly. It was felt, there fore, that the meat-packing industry is charged with a public interest that can not be adequately safeguarded than through special legislation. "The principal duties imposed up on these agencies by the proposed SPRING'S HERE WITH HAIR PLANTING DAYS Ye men with shiny domes cease to grieve. All may be little Lord I'oimtkroys if they so desire now that Dr. S. J. l'arscgan. of New York, has invented a "hair planting" machine, illc says it is practical, the injection of hairs into the epidermis on bald heads wilh a small electric needle where they "catch on" and grow Springtime nf vonth has r tnrm l, ou Mimo'1 YCjO CANT CAN GET A Minute, YOU ? i TM yfyrr,x f if 1 I NO- BUT I Win A. CYNIC'S A MAN WHO'S GLAD WHEN THE COMPANY GOES. legislation are: "They are prohibited from engag ing in unfair, unjustly discrimina tory, or deceptive practices in inter state commerce; "They are prohibited from buying or selling live stock in such manner as to apportion the supply, unreas onably affect the price, or create a monopoly; "They are prohibited from deal ing in foodstuffs other than live stock products where the result is to lessen competition; "They are prohibited from appor tioning territory or purchases or ar ranging or agreeing to control prices; "They are prohibited from agree ing or arranging among themselves to prevent any other person from carrying on any business which com petes with them; "They are required within two years after the act becomes effect ive to dispose of their ownership or interest in stockyards unless this time is extended for good cause." PREFERENCE FOR SOLDIERS Washington, May 23. Senator Gooding of Idaho, the new Republi can colleague of Senator Borah, would help the American soldiers who participated in the war against Germany by putting through Con gress a bill to give preference right of employment on construction work on United States reclamation work on United states reclamation pro- jectst to honorably discharged sol diers, sailors and marines. The Gooding measure provides "That not only men, but also wo men who served in the Army or j East Side, made ther way through Navy of the United States in the war; secret passages and did all sorts of with Germany and have been honor- things familiar to readers of detec ably discharged therefrom or placed tive stories. in the Regular Army or Naval Re-! The sleuth wanted to teach Morcy serve shall have preference in em-' a few of the tricks of disguise, but ployment upon such projects con- right here the star balked. He was structed by the United States Re- an expert at make-up and proved to clamation Service: Provided, that the crime suppressor that a picture they are found to possess the capa- star could give a few tips to t!i5 da city necessary for the proper dis- tective profession. For an hour Mor charge of such duties: Provided fur- cv became the teacher and a certain ther, That the riphts and benefits detective the pupil. The latter lcarn- conferred by the bill shall not extend and wigs that he never knew before, to any person who having been draft-1 A picture actor has to be more par ed for service under the provisions ticular about the use of paint and of the Selective Service Act shall false hair than a detective, for dis have refused to render such service ; guises that deceive the human eye or to wear the uniform of such scr-l cannot he concealed from the cam vice of the United States." ; era. Every defect in make-up is . . - i readily detected when the film is Spring Insect3 Attack 1 Hashed upon the screen. The screen Many Vegetable Crops player must rival nature and, if pos Spring insects are beginning to siblc, do a better job or the disguise make their appearance on several , is of no avail, crops at this time, among them the! Many of the tips given to the de-12-spotted bean beetle, the tomato, tective were priceless, and he felt flee beetle, the beet leaf beetle, aphis ' amply repaid for the days spent with on various plants, and cut worms, j 'trry T. Morcy. which attack a wide variety of young! "The Flaming Clue" is a thrilling vegetables. Vegetable growers may j detective story, filled with love and provide themselves with the neccs suspense. It shows how real dctec sary means of information and ma-tives work and solve baffling mystcr terial by which they can prevent ies. The plot deals with the capture these insects from damaging a great of a band of counterfeiters. SPEEDING UP MAIL WITH COMPARTMENT CARS Mil iim CoiiK'Htfl wrrklnff conditions which miula mnlj car robberies eaRy, delayed deliveries rind In fcsnerfil, depleted mall service are nil to he eliminated, says Uncle Ham. This Is one of the new steps, a compartment car for carrying heavy mall, doing away with much use less lifting and transferring between central points. Tho now compartmont cars look like the regular flat car ex cept that they are equipped with six Ideal of the garden. Every veget able gardner should have a copy of 0. A. C. bulletin No. 325. The college is in a position to furnish at cost some "all-in-cne" dusting pow der which has proved to be very ef ficient in preventing serious injury by insects of different kinds. This is obtainable through the depart ment of vegetable gardening. "So Long Letty," at Star m Saturday, Is Full of "Pep" One of the best comedy-dramas oi the screen is "So Long Letty," the Robertson-Cole super-special which will be shown at the Star theater Saturday. Adapted to the silver sheet from Oliver Morosco's famous and successful stage play of the same name, "So Long Letty" appears to better advantage on the screen bo cause of the wider scope of the cam era. Al Christie, producer and director of "Letty," is pleased to believe that the screening of the comedy-drama is the best work of his career. Aside from a number of bewitching bathing girls who did not waste any material when making their bathing suits, Mr. Christie has selected four excellent artists to play the principal roles. They are T. Roy Barnes, Grace Dar mond, Colleen Moore, and Walter Hiers. The story of "So Long Letty" has to do with swapping wives, dis gruntled husbands,- home cooked meals, Paris gowns, cabarets, ging ham dresses and sardines. Likewise it teaches a lesson to perpetually dis satisfied individuals. em Methods of Sleuths Hahky T. Morly Learns How Sleuths Work and Gives a Few Pointers Before commencing work on "The Flaming Clue," which will be shown at the Star theater Wednesday and Thursday, June I and 2, Harry T. Morcy consulted a famous New York detective. After a brief interview Mr. Morcy became apprenticed to this crime detector for the period of 24 hours. He learned all the ins and outs of the profession, including the use of false skin, finger print detect ors, sound magnifying disc, suction climbers, pocket periscope and suu- terranograph. The detective gave Harry Morey a merry chase that day, and the star found it hard to keep up with his teacher. They shadowed persons on - ' Broadway, climbed buildings on the 'are; compartments, all of which are remov able to motor trucks at the destination through the uso of electric crnnes. The mall must now lie iiortort and routed from tho starting point, and does away with a groat deal of tho detail work on the mall cars as fonnorly. The plo turo shows tho first car arriving at Chicago from New York and a compart ment being removed to a waiting motor truck.