The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, August 25, 1921, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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TRH U A ZKTTK-T1 MF.S. HErPN'ER, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST ', 1921.
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We All Labor and Are Free;
"Old Glory" Is the Flag for All
After 500 Miles
Drain and Refill
There you have the first of the two most impor
tant rules for motor -safety. The second is fill
with the very best oil you can buy call here
and get the correct weight of
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MISS DE SWELL'S
PET 006 DIED
SO SHE GOT
MARRIED.
....WHISHT f"."--l"t 1
'iBii Wm
l&i together! I
Puritan Oils carried in all weights, making
an oil for every car, truck and tractor.
All accessories for Ford cars always in stock.
A CARLOAD OF FORD CARS ARRIVED
THIS WEEK. YOURS IS HERE.
Try Us for Service
Latourell Auto Co.
Heppner, Oregon
The evolution of our Bait is here shown in its four most Important Btintes. The first, the "Gran.l I'nion Flag," was simply a British Union
Jack, onto which six white stripes were sewed. The second, the "Betsy Ross," had thirteen stars on a blue field in a circle. Two new
States added two more stripes and two stars May 1. 1795. But after July 4, ISIS, the stripes were limited to thirteen, and new States
were indicated only by stars.
THE GAZETTE-TIMES Is Your
Home Paper. It Is A Very Fine
Investment At $2.00 Per Year.
"You Save Money"
says the Good Judge
And get more genuine chew
ing satisfaction, when you use
this class of tobacco.
This is because the full, rich,
real tobacco taste lasts so
long, you don't need a fresh
chew nearly as often.
And a small chew gives more
real satisfaction than a big chew
of the ordinary kind ever did.
Any man who uses the Real
Tobacco Chew will tell you
that.
Put up in two styles
W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco
RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco
Be Independent
Make a part of your earn
ings work for you. Pro
tect yourself against the
steady drain of needless
and impulsive spending.
Insure your surplus
against loss through theft
and carelessness.
Open a Savings
Account Here
FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS
NATIONAL BANK
Heppner Oregon
l i
In the horizontal position wif usually
drape the flag properly (aa shown
ibove) with
the starry field
at the upper
left. Not so of
ten, however,
do we hang It
aa it should be
in the vertical.
The proper way
Is shown In the
accompany 1 n g
diagram, with
the starry field
now at the up
per right The
flag has an In
side and an
outside. This is
Its outside.
How to Treat the Flag
The Rules in Brief
The man who la In uniform salute In
military style when the flag goes by.
but when in civvies the best form if to
take off the hat and hold it against the
left shoulder. In draping the colors
the simplest rule to remember la that
the Stars and Stripes always claim the
place of honor, the forefront, the right
or the highest elevation. Another rule
is that the colors should never be al
lowed to touch the ground or the deck.
On Memorial Day run the flag to the
top of the mast; then half-mast It until
noon. From noon until sunset let It
fly from the top of the staff.
Don'ts
Don't sew the flag onto a sofa pillow.
Don't use tt as a silk handkerchief.
Don't twist It Into fantastic designs.
Don't use it in any form of advertising.
Don't let It drag in the dust In han
dling It
When you drape our flag with that
of one of the Allies or with the ban
ner of an organisation, always place
the national colors at the onlooker's
right
I
No other flag should be
hoisted above the na
tional colors except the
white triangle and blue
cross of the church pen
nant which is allowed to
be at the masthead
above the Stars and
Stripes when religious
services are in progress
in a military chapel or
aboard a ship of the
navy.
Don't let the
flag drag in the
dust even at
unveiling.
Before you half-mast the
flag, and afterward be
fore you haul it down,
run It to the masthead.
Don't use the flag aa a
tablecloth. A Bible may
rest on It Nothing else.
SS
When carried with other
flags in a parade, the colors
claim the place of honor
at the right
To honor the flag's passing
when In civvies hold the
hat against the left shoulder.
Don't drnpe the flag (as
in picture at the left)
below the seats of a
platform, or twist It In
to fantastic design. Use
bunting for the trick
stuff.
BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS WITH THE AMERICAN LEGION
Outside Students to
Pay Tuition Fee
University of Oregon, Eugene,
August 22. A tuition fee of $60 will
hereafter be charged students from
states outside of Oregon, in addi
tion to the fees now charged all stu
dents, following a Joint action of
committees of the board of regents
of the two state institutions.
The tuition charge of the Oregon
institutions becomes effective for all
new registrants from states other
than Oregon, beginning September
next. The $60 will be payable in
$20 installments at the beginning of
each term. Men in the service of the
United States during the late war
coming to the university or the ag
ricultural college from other states
will be exempted from half the reg
ular non-resident fee.
The advisability of charging no
resident students tuition has been
considered at various times but as
SHOULD WOMEN SMOKE?
TV
4
1
'Mary," a member c a movie zoo
at Los Angeles, votes yes and to
show the courage of her convictions
lb lights up one.
long as the state institutions of
Washington and California and other
western states admitted resident and
non-resident students on precisely
the same basis it was not thought
feasible for Oregon to adopt a non
resident tuition charge. ' Now that
these and other states have decided
to make a non-resident charge it will
also be made at the Oregon institu
tions. The fees will not only tend to pre
vent any undue influx of students
from other states but will also help
provide funds for building and other
necessary purposes. Because of the
large increase in student enrollment
at the college and university there
is already a shortage of room.
In fixing the amount of the. fee it
was the aim of the regents to avoid
a merely nominal or a prohibitive
charge. Some of the leading state
colleges and universities of the coun
try were asked their charge and the
average of 20 was found to be $54.
SMILE AWHILE
Silas Harris, Wm. Lowen and Walter
Drumm were south-end residents In
Heppner on Monday. They reside In
the vicinity of Parkers Mill.
I 51 OOOM ! I'M 'GONNA l" 3 1 MOM-. Knv V , 2
THAT5 THREE TIMES U. ( WELL WATS MV IlEw gm ' U
Conversation.
"Jim," she said, as he settled down
for a comfortable smoke, "I've got a
lot of things I want to talk to you
about." ,
"Good," said her husband, "I'm
glad to hear it. Usually you want
to talk to me about a lot of things
you haven't got." Cincinnati En
quirer. Her Sense of Fitness.
Little Ethel had lost her grand
father. A few days after the funeral
she asked her mother if she could
play the piano a little while.
"No, dear, don't you know that we
are in mourning?" her mother repli
ed. "Well," insisted the disappointed
child, "I don't think it would be
wickel if I only played on the black
keys." Judge.
But He Was Logical,
"I don't like a friend to domineer
over me," said the young man with
the patient disposition.
"Who has been doing that?"
"My room mate. He borrowed my
dress suit."
"That's a good deal of liberty."
"I don't mind it, but when he ask
ed for my umbrella I told him I
might want to use it myself. But
he got it just the same."
"How?"
"He simply said : 'Have your own
way; they're your clothes that I'm
trying to keep from getting spoiled,
not mine.' "-Los Angeles Times.
Art Criticism.
Arthur, aged nine, returned from
his first visit to the John Herron Art
Institute with such a depressed air
that his mother was puzzled.
"Didn't you like it, dear?"
"Not much. Mostly there were
people with their heads cut off."
"But there must have been some
pictures of animals and trees and
lovely country."
"Oh, a few, but," in disgust, "there
were more people doing things they
shouldn't."
"Things they shouldn't?"
"Yes, some of them had taken off
all of their clothes, even their union
suits." Indianapolis News.
There Are Others.
In a man's life there are three
tradgedies. The first is when he de
cides he's too old for Lord Faunt
leroy curls and mamma decides oth
erwise because they're so cute. The
second is when the high school Be
atrice he can't live without marries
and he doesn't die. The third is his
shape in a bathing suit. Boston
I Transcript.
j Room for More.
! Bishop Bratton, at a dinner in
'Jackson, was genially patronized by
a millionaire.
' "I never go to church," the mil
lionaire said. "I guess you've no
ticed that, Bishop?"
"Yes, I have noticed it," said Bish
op Bratton, gravely.
"I guess you wonder why I never
go to church, don't you?" the mil
lionaire pursued. "Well, I'll tell
I you why, bishop. There are so
many hypocrites there.
"Oh, don't let that keep you away,"
said Bishop Bratton, smiling. "There
is always room for one more." De
troit Free Press.
Great Improvement Noted.
"Did you know," asked the proud
resident of Terrell, Tex., "that this
is a wonderful health resort?"
"Why, no," replied the traveler. "I
hadn't heard about it."
"Fact. When I came to this city I
couldn't walk and had to be carried
from my bed."
"Remarkable! Remarkable! May
I ask how long you have been here?"
"Oh," said the citizen preparing
to go home, "I was born here." Am
erican Legion Weekly.
Souvenir.
A returned soldier found a pretty
looking card in France and brought
it home to have his wife hang in the
parlor. It read: "Ici on parle Fran
cais." "What's the idea?" she demanded.
"That means 'French spoken here'
and you know you don't."
"Well, I'll be darned!" ejaculated
the ex-soldier disgustedly. "The guy
that sold it to me said it meant 'God
bless our home.' "American Le
gion Weekly.
Samuel Hill Is pushing a project to
reclaim 27,000 acres of desert land lying
between Ilond, Ttedmond and Prlne-vllle.
. . ,
0, regulate the safety-valve, an' i self? . . .
see that it performs. You know you ( So don't forget the safety-valve
need the safety-valve, when life s that keeps the engine cool. . , .
machinery warms. , . . An' health's There's a powerful sight of differ
too blame uncertain, even at its best,' ence in a wise man an' a fool, the
to clpan neglect the sarety-vaive, machine that s over-heated is the
that lends a bit of rest. 1 certaintist to stall, and the fool that
Our elbows nudge a feller-man keeps her hottest, is the biggest fool
that seems to never stop. , , . We of all.
: whisper "steady, brother or some-
thin s goin to pop. ; then we watch j
his hair turn grayer, as he serves the ,
God of pelf, now what's the good
of fortune when it costs a man his-1