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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1921)
THE OAZFn'K-TlMKS. HKITXKK. OREGON. TIU KSDAY, OCT., -JO. 1921. Tin; (;:tti:-Timi:s .' IK 3 i i T.- Ktkbllhd x - iv. i: , 1 1 .1 i:s-v 15. 19. 1 . -1 a: ty. i At Hpp- . . -, . r n.Httor. i i n i I'lM. Kri it i K OS ,rii ii ki u s- HIl'Tl.'N KATES: - r ti 00 K i V- - ; '.! , 1.P0 v, ; '!. .01 iiuiiiiinv (iumv orririAL paper Tltt. W'.niK N I'KKv. ASXIATiON J '- ' co-rcs to advertising there shouM be no question about inhere vour fnisiness should be placed. Spend vour inonev vkhere you uill get the hest results, always. We can give vou full value here. Community News Service We Joire to c.ill special attention of our readers, and the public in Rer.er.il to the announcement on an other pace of a new feature to be sdortcd rv this paper in our Com munity News Service. By a careful re.iJin:; of this announcement, it will he seer, that we have something worth while for the coming year, which will be given in addition to the other good features maintained by The Gu:ctlc-Times It will he noted that each and ev ery article that will appear in our columns from this service, beginning with the first week in November. will be from the pen of a man of prominence, and it will all be along the line of "Solving the Nation's Problems." It has been the policy of this paper for the past several years to give our readers full value for their mon ey, and from this time on each issue will be made practically worth the price of a full vear's subscription. The campaign is on and w ill continue until the second week in November, when you will be asked to push the claims of your home tow n paper, and the large army of readers of The Ga-rcilc-Times need have no hesitancy in asking their friends and neighbors to join with them in subscribing. We are making no reductions in sub scription price, are offering to club with no other papers or in any man ner placing inducements other thati the paper itself. It is worth all we ask for it and we shall be fair to ev erybody. We do not expect at this,. time to increase our circulation 50 or The next thing that looms is the big strike of the railway orders. The labor troubles between the employes and the companies will have to be settled sooner or later, and perhaps now s just as good a time as any to ifiiht the issues out. In the mean- tme. Uncle Sam may have some thing to say, as he is about as much interested as the other parties at is sue. In fact he represents the great st American public, and the time is fa appoaching when this great body who are the support of both the rail roads and their employes, will have their sav, and it will be final f.it to this swing iiu'bbv. Then she beia to vawn on me so just for meeness 1 got up & left. ll'.'n,.iv -The teecher ast us what we was fondest of to eat & Jake sed he Hived frute a speshuly peanut butter & mush meltons. Thursday-l beleve it is bad luck to slap a bug when it lites on yure neck. 1 was crawlng on my neck, & I struck him whiten was a hunny be. They sav it hirts them wirse than it does you. If it does I am sorrv for the be. Where could you go to beat this weather? There may be some draw backs to living in this Eastern Ore gon country, and in Morrow county but the weather is not one of them Fine rains to place the wheat fields in excellent shape for the fall seed ing: the new grass coming forth on a thousand hills, and all nature put ting forth her most beautiful smile Can you beat it? Slats' Diary. By Ross Farquhar. Friday when pa come home the sevening he was all out of breth. ma ast him wat the matter was & he replyed & sed he was a comeing up the street & they was a yung lady on a hed of him whichs hat blue off & he chased it. ma sed You chased what the hat or the lady. Pa sed Yure simpully redick- lus. I suppose he ment the hat. Saturday pa has ben a cused of killing a caff with his ford, so mister Gillem advized him to go & see a lawyer, pa sed nuthing doing. If I got to pay a lawyer I mit as well go a hed and pay for the caff whitch is just as heep. C 1 urn. u.t (.ai auu c ULoll c vciy , y jj mucn ro nave inem on our lists, inis is our season for doing a little ad-verti-;rg ou our own account and we 100 per cent in this home field::.. , , :i , . ,,, , . . . man ennv i eise. lhs iiuc ua a sis- this would be somewhat of an impos-; . h . bro(her offere(f tQ s.Miry. However, there are many hepe ; whitch we consentedJ new people n the county who do not He , nx room & he s, tiK? the- rnrpr nn.i u-p nrcirp up . r . . . . . . . r very loud. I ast him this morning did he always snoar like that. He ! sed No sunny. Only when I happen fn hp a clppn ma At no lflffpH lilfp are taking advantage of it. ijtwasajoak Many people over the county will! Monday Missus Skinner whitch receive sample copies of the paper ijs are nabor started cleaning up her during the next few weeks; we want,house today & she told ma that she you to read them, and shall fully ap-; found hat under the bed that she precMte having you become a per-,naddent saw for 2 years. Personly manent reader of the paper. j think that js bad sine. As a medium through which the! Tuesday Are soshul seeson has people of the county can be reached, began, yent to a yung party tonite there i? none better. The Gazette- & tuk Jane home & we sat in the Times has more than the combined porch swing. Finely Jane spoak up circulation of all the other papers of & sed. You are growing fast aint the county, and this leadership it J you. I sed I dont no & ast her why fullv exrects to maintain. So when she sed 1 thought you was growing For . One Week I I We will give j Free j one big 5-cent stick of candy with every pound of Royal Club Coffee Phelps Grocery Co. Phone 53 A Well-Balanced Farmer. He is the man not afraid of the banker, the merchant or the railroad but realizes that he needs them all in his business. He realizes that he cannot live by himself alone but must have non producers to make a market for the products of his soil. He is not expecting the state or the nation to make him rich or raise his children or take care of his fam ily in his old age. He lends his influence, his muscle and his money toward securing bet ter roads to the farms, the school house and the church of his com munity. He helps to build better schools and churches for his own children and his neighbors', even if he has to make a personal sacrifice to do it. He does not waste his time, his money or his energy, but uses them to the best advantage. He realizes that he is better off than his brother in the city because he can raise two-thirds of his living on the farm. numitics. and this uiea of instilling in their minds some of the responsi bilties they are to face is an excel lent work. It is under the care and tutelage eof the V. M. C. A. and they are certainly iloing a magnifi cent work. Besides, it is worth a lot to the youth of this city to have such a gathering here. To Prof. James, who was instrumental in bringing the conference here this year, the community should extend a vote of thanks; he has done us a good turn. of a bulky mail order catalogue, and makes such little use of it that he is glad to exchange it for a 10-cent theatre pass, we can't see where any body is verv seriously hurt. Itambouillets, Lincoln Corrledalea. hve a row head only. Adv. St. It was an inspiration to attend the meetings of the Older Boys' Confer ence held in this city during the past week. These young fellows are the coming men of our different com- A Mail Order Shriek. Your average mail order house has a lot of tricks up its sleeve when it comes to breaking down the busi-j nesses of struggling merchants in j ten thousand American towns, and it doesn't hesitate to play every one of j them. But it shrieks blue murder when; some of those struggling merchants get together and turn a trick of their j own. As, for instance, the whine that has just been made by one of the biggest mail order houses to the Federal Trade Commission against the Chamber of Commerce of Mis soula, Montana. Catalogues are the main stock in! trade of the mail order concerns. It seems the Missoula chamber offered one free admission to a movie pic ture theatre for every catalogue turned in at the window. Great num bers of people thought so little of these catalogues that they were glad to hand them over in lieu of the 10 cent price of admission. After the collection was made, it is alleged that the Chamber of Commerce, having no use for them, burned the whole lot. Whereupon, the mail order house rips the atmosphere into tatters with its screams, and enters complaint with the government at Washington. Well, if a citizen gets so little out llsTRuriyj toasted I TO seal in the delicious Burley flavor Once you've enjoyed the toasted flavor you Hill al ways want it ES ' EXPERT -!tars: c . It takes more than a theory to develop Correct Lubrication No advantage of science, of vast resources, of lonj experience, of up-to-the-minute equipment and meth ods, is overlooked by this company in making Zeo lene a lubricating oil of the highest quality. If It were possible to make a better oil than Zerolen. this company would make it It is made in five consistencies, one of which is exactly tuned to the needs of your car. Use Zerolene for Correct Lubrication. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Califormi) - - Jim iil. MODERN CRANKCASE CLEANING SERVICE I - YVeutt fiTtt rtticxjivv? nn ZEROLENE If tint The Sign of a Service r At First-class Garages and other Dealers FAIE TREATMENT COMBINED WITH BEST PRINTING faserc Wherever Well Dressed Women Gather There you are sure to find Holeproof Hosiery. Women of fastidious taste know that a beautiful gown or a chic suit is incomplete without the charm of right-fitting, lustrous hosiery. Holeproof Hosiery in all the Autumn Styles is here, and you will find the new shades and colorings that will fit in with that new Buit or frock. In Silk, $1.50, $1.75, $2.00, $2.50. Silk Faced, $1.00. We Carry a Complete Line of Holeproof Hosiery for Men Also Sam Hughes Company Prince Albtrt it wold in tappy rtd bag; tidy rrf tint, hand torn pound and half pound tin humid or t and in tho pound eryttal glata humidor with Mpong molttontr top. You'll get somewhere with a pipe and P. A.! Start fresh all over again at the beginning! Get a pipe! and forget every smoke experience you ever had that spilled the beans! For a jimmy pipe, packed brimful with Prince Albert, wm trim any oegree m smokejoy you ever registered! It's a revelation! Put a pin in here! Prince Albert can't bite your tongue or parch your throat. Both are cut out by our exclusive patented process. So, just pass up any old idea you may have stored away that you can't smoke a pipe ! We tell you that you can and just have the timei of your life on every fire-up if you play Prince Albert for packing! What P. A. hands you in a pipe it will duplicate in a home-made cigarette! Gee but you'll have a lot of fun rolling 'em with Prince Albert; and, it s a cinch because P. A. is crimp cut and stays put! rinse Albert the national joy imoke Coprrifht 1HI br K. ) R.rnold Tobacco Co. Wbutoa-SalMO, N.C s A F E T Y 8i II s E R V I c E Save for a Purpose Perhaps some ono thing you want ot do most requires some money to accomplish. It's more fun saving money when you have a definite goal ahead. You can do what you want to do even if it takes a lot of nion- Here's a suggestion: Get clearly in mind what you want to do; decide how much money it will require; then start at once a Savings Account here and deposit regularly a fixed amount. The start is import ant, so is the follow-up. But you can do it. Fir& National Bank IIEPPNER, OREGON