Image provided by: City of Dayton; Dayton, OR
About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1928)
Helpful Hints for Farm, Home and Housewife Wall paper may be cleaned by rul> fate is more safely used on alkali or bmg It with dry cotton tied to a broom neutral soils of heavy texture, while handle. Al»o »talc bread rubbud sodium nitrate is best for acid soils. over »oiled »pot» on the paper 1» ef Rap« and red clover can be seeded fretive. together in Oregon with good results, Picture» »oem better suited in a according to the exjreriment station. room If they are hung »u that the con Best results have been obtained by ter of Intercut come» at about the eye seeding I pounds of rape and 12 level. It 1» di»tre»»lng to enter a pounds of clover seed together. room and to »ee the furniture then Dwurf Sussex or Victoria rape have Seedings look up and »ee a line of picture» on been found good varieties. at I to 0 pounds an acre made until the wall. June 15 yield excellent summer and A good Gla»M» u»ed for milk are more easi fall sheep and hog pasture. ly wa»hed if not put into hot water । seed bed may be obtained for these until flr»t rin»ed in cold waler. The crops by working it up fine and firm heat drie» the milk In and gives a and free from weeds. cloudy appearance which cannot eaai* I There should be more calves on the ly be removed. farms. wished to attend the baccalaureate ■ermon delivered by Rev. Walter G. Smith in the Dayton Methodist church (Miss Flo Bingham) for the Dayton high school graduating Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Carter and son da»», lister Withee repraaenta this district in the cla»». A children’s I and Chester Carter and two sons, all day program mill be rendered during of Portland, visited at the Wdl Crite- the regular Sunday school time next ser home Wednesday of last week. Sunday. Mr und Mr». E. N. Woodward and A fresh coat of paint i» being ap Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Gustafson, of Ami- 1 'y, spent Saturday afternoon at the plied to the < . Co'intias home Mrs. D. Bingham home. Strawberries are yielding well and the weather continues ideal for the Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ego of Chehalem development of unsurpassed quality. Mountain spent Sunday at the Ed All crops arc thriving in this locali ; Keetz home. ty. Fail »own grain is now a good Ruth Kuhn is staying in town with height and heading, and the fail sown barley is turning golden, ev’nc- I her slater, Mrs. Ted Laurence, while : Ted is away working at a lumber ing that it will soon be ripe. camp near Astoria. Mr. und Mrs. Frank Knight of Mr. and Mrs. M V. Munson of Portland were guests of their cous ins, Mr. and Mrs. Sarn Dixon, Sun Stayton spent the week end at the day. They were accompanied by Elmer Stewart home. Mr. und Mrs. Clarence Addis. The Friday, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kuhn large farm that wax the former home motored to Portland to see their son of the Dixons has been sold. Don, who is up in a wheel chair, but Webfoot Siurch to kept from sticking by More cows should be kept on the adding to a »mull pan full u drop or Mr. The B. A. Maker family received not able to be on his feet yet. two of kerosene or a little lard and average farm. their new "Home Comfort” range, and Mrs. Kuhn spent Friday at the letting it come to u boil. One hundred ton» of »ilage will feed Monday, purchased of W. A. McFar i home of Mrs. C. S. Dudley, an aunt of Mrs. Kuhn. 26 cow» 40 pounds of silage a day for lane, of McMinnville. A new broom la»t» much longer 200 days. when soaked In strong hot salt water The L. C. Marley home was the Mrs. Jessie Vernon accompanied before using. This stiffen» the ! scene of a happy home coming Sun I Mr. and Mrs. John Shippy to Port- The cattle tick must go. It stunts day when all of their children, which 1 land, Saturday, where they visited straw. all your cattle. It kills many of them include Mr. and Mr». Leonard Mar Mrs. G. C. Christenson, an aunt of It reduces the price. It prevents The napkin or "serviette" is usual ley. of Portland. Mr». J. W. Pentney Mr». Vernon and Mr». Shippy, who is It pre ly placed at the left of the forks shipping to good markets. und sons Robert and Loui». of Baker, spending some time in Portland from kills the cattle business. You can't and parallel with them. If the nap Oregon, and Mr. and Mrs. Will Mar her home in Eugene. kin is folded in a square or other- , afford to feed the tick. ley and daughter Ellen of this locali Mr. and Mrs. Emmerson Kuhn and wise folded so that the corners are ty were present. Mr». Pentney and A little care early in the season daughter spent Sunday with the lat up, it 1» placed so that the open cor sons will remain for several weeks. will often prevent serious trouble and ter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. K. ners are toward the plate. no end of agony to the horses from Miss Ila Antrim, Mrs. Veers and Douthit of Newberg. It is no longer good form to put sore shoulders. daughter Fern and Ed Wolf of Cor- bread or a dinner roll in the napkin Mr. and Mrs. Will Criteser, accom valli», and Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Thorn too many embarrassing moment» re- • Grass furnishes the principal nour ton and son of Salem, were Sunday panied by Miss Marjorie Hadanar, suited from that custom, for it wax spent Wednesday afternoon at the ishment of all animals of life. It is guests at the George Antrim home. most natural, when one 1» engrossed home of Mrs. D. Bingham. yours without price. It is your sur in conversation, to take the napkin i Mr. and Mrs. Louis Houghtling, of est crop, but still the one that is unthinkingly and discover the roll per Mrs. Mary Gilkey spent Saturday most neglected and the least appreci Portland, were week end guests of versely flying for regions under the at Carlton, where she attended the friends in this locality. ated. table. pioneer meeting. Maximum development of color and leafiness in alfalfa, the two chief fac tors in high grade hay, is dependent upon cutting before the half bloom stag? Different fields of alfalfa will vary in time at which they begin to lose their green color, but between one-tenth to one- half bloom is usual ly the proper time to cut, report» the Oregon experiment station. At least 30 different kinds of vege tables can be successfully grown in various parts of Oregon, says A. G. Boupuet. head of vegetable garden ing at the college, in his new exten sion bulletin "The Farm Vegetable Garden " This bulletin present» in concise tabular form Information con cerning the farm and -.home garden. Many farmers underestimate the fi nancial value of a good home garden, says Professor Bouquet. The bul letin is for free distribution. As production of milk for a year is considerable strain on the system of a high producing cow, a rest period of six weeks to two months Is given by most successful dairymen, finds N. C. Jameson, extension specialist at the college. Cows difficult to dry up have their feed reduced and are milked but once a day for several days. Use of nitrogenous fertilisers, which effort vegetative growth es pecially, is advisable in connection with heavy use of grain straw, says Dr. W. L. Powers, chief in soils at the experiment station. Ammonium sul Unionvale (Mrs. C. L. Fowler) Pigs mean food, quick money, util ize waste and harvest their own food. The herd increases rapidly and it costs little to start. Grand Island to overfeeding and the remedy is self- evident. However, soft shelled eggs occur for want of lime. Sudden fright may also cause it, but in that case the matter will right itself in a day or two. Charles Ferguson has completed corn planting. A portion of it is on new ground. He cleared 12 acres during the past winter and has some of it seeded to barley and some to clover. (Mrs. C. L. Fowler) The Roy E. Will family entertained Don’t let the manure accumulate Mrs. Will of Jennings Lodge for sev in the open during the summer, where eral days at their home here. She re it will become a breeding place for turned home Sunday. flies and b<- a general nuisance. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Lee of Gales Creek, Ore., and Mrs. Myrtle Sinsley of Cornelius. Oregon, were guests at Some first class authorities on feed the Ed Lefley home Sunday. Mrs. ing recommend that no hay be given' Lee and Mrs. Sinlley are sisters of the teams during the noon hour, but that a liberal feed of grain only be Mrs. Lefley. fed. There is difference in opinion on i James Rockhill and Mae Umban- hocer represented the Grand Island this point, however. school district ax graduates from the Soft shelled eggs are generally due Amity high school Thursday evening. Every farmer should have a supply of standard remedies and appliances for treating the common ailments of the cows, horses, pigs, sheep or chick ens. luick of one of them might cost the life of a valuable animal or a con siderable veterinary bill. Worth Wiley enjoyed a visit from his mother, Mrs. Etta Wiley, of Sa This is the first time - lem, Sunday. she had visited him in three years, | during which time he was employed in a logging camp at Klickitat, Wash. His sister accompanied his’mother on the trip. A basket dinner was served near the river and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Finnicum, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tompkins and Miss Doris Braat and several others whose names were not received, at tended. THE “WHOPPER’’ WORK SHIRTS So called on account of its extra full cut. Made of htavy blue chambray, triple Stitched. 2-breast pockets. Coat style. Try to match this value at 79c Men’s Work Pants Moleskin Pants Very heavy weight, dark grey color. Full cut and tailored in every respect- Only $2.69 Lot 1033 MOKESKIN PANTS in a little lighter weight. 92.45 The Matt Warren family were Sun-[ day evening guests at the Mrs. Millie Stimson and Mrs. Rachel Stewart i home in Amity. Mesdames Stimson and Stewart are aunts of Mr. War ren. All farm work is being rushed j while weather continues ideal, setting tomato and melon plants in fields that were raised in green houses and cold frames, are almost finished. Flax on the Rockhill farm is doing splendid. Alfalfa cutting has begun and if weather conditions are favor able will soon be done. Guests at the Ernest Douglas home Wednesday were Mrs. Laura Ramsey and son George, Miss Anna Lang, of Dallas, Oregon, and Mrs. L. F. Mc Kee of Perrydale, Mrs. Susie Cook of Bend. Oregon, and Mrs. Lizzie Jones of San Francisco, California, and Mrs. Ball, of Corkran, Calif,. Mrs. Ram sey is the mother of Mrs. Douglas and Mrs. McKee is a sister. Mrs. Cook and Mrs. Jones are her aunts and Mrs. Ball is a cousin. An excellent grade of new peas raised on local farms are being mar keted now in Portland, Salem and nearby towns. Unity Mrs; May Goodrich and Ray Berry Eveyone around here is very busy were Salem visitors last Sunday aft doing their spring work. ernoon. Percy Johnson, who was hurt in Sunday afternoon, Mesdames Ted Miss Oma Emmons returned home Laurent* and Fred Kuhn and chil- I the Newberg paper mill is improving last week from Monroe, where she has dren motored to Salem, where they 1 and expects to go to work again in been teaching the past year, and since visited the latter’s mother, Mrs. < the near future. her return has been confined to her Shank. home with measles. There were quite a number from Mrs. Edah Ringle visited her par Mrs. Art Wilson and a group of this vicinity attended the Baccalau women went to Portland one day last reate services in Dayton Sunday ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Barter, last Tuesday. week and heard Aimee Semple Me-: night.. Pherson. Ross Cruickshank was an early Mrs. Grace Whitman’s father, C. W. Wing of Tygh Valley, Oregon, is morning visitor Sunday at the Wal Dinner guests Sunday at the Del lace Goodrich home. visiting the family for a short time. Morgariedge home were Mrs. Ollie Mrs. A. M. Yocum has been at the There is a pack of dogs that seems Maybe and sons and her mother, Mrs. Berry home the past week helping Darr, of McMinnville, Mr. and Mrs. to take great pleasure in attacking E. Maybe of Dayton and Mr. and Mrs. the sheep of Warren Dundass, several care for Mrs. Berry, who has been t having a bad case of bronchitis. Charles Gardner of Portland. The ( sheep having been hurt lately. Salt is one of the cheapest of the necessities on the farm when its val ue is taken into consideration. There should be no time when any of the stock are without a supply of it where they can go to it at will. For they know better than anyone else when Miss Verna Warren, who is at they need it and how much. tending the State Normal at Mon mouth, returned to her school work 1 w ------ Sunday after more than a week spent Many residents attended the exer at the home of her parents, Mr. and cises in Dayton and some went to Mrs. Matt Warren, where she was McMinnville. A large per cent spent confined with a severe attack of in-1 the day at the Hopewell cemetery and flammatory rheumatism. many former residents of this locali ty made visits with old neighbors Miss Leia Warren returned home ; here while so near them, before re Saturday. She has attended West turning home ofter the Decoration Lynn high school and school closed | day exercises. there Friday. Miss Irene Crawley, after picking strawberries at home all forenoon Wednesday, picked 130 pounds in the afternoon in the George Wynn H-acre patch. Two cents a pound is re ceived for the work and the berries Mrs. E. Larson, whose health is not are picked without crushing and are very good at best has suffered quite a hulled at the same time. They are severe siege of cold during the past being canned at the Newberg can two weeks. nery. Mrs. Sam Thornton, a former resi Dick Sitton and Mrs. Henry Taylor dent of this locality, but now living in represented this neighborhood in the Tacoma, Wash., is visiting several graduating class of the Amity high days at the Walter Kirkwood and school Thursday evening and many and Mary Hewitt homes. of their friends attended the exer The Henry Kerr family, who have cises. Dick was awarded a Linfield lived in Amity during the school college scholarship. term, moved their household effects August Auer is erecting a large to their home in this locality Satur hay barn on his farm. All the frame day. work is finished and the shingle roof Mr. and Mrs. Claude Ellis and four is on. Work of enclosing the sides will be done at leisure ax the building children motored from Lubbock, Tex., and arrived at the Fred Withee home is in shape to store hay In. Friday for several days' visit. They Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crawford and are looking for a suitable location for daughter Dorothy of Sheridan, were a home and are very favorably im Sunday guests at the Will Christen- pressed with this section of Oregon. Son home. Mrs. Crawford and Mrs. He is a son of Jim Ellis, a former Christenson are sisters. Mr. and Mrs. resident of this locality, who visited old acquaintances here two weeks ago. George Christenson of the Pleasant - dale neighborhood were afternoon Ed Taylor, of Centralia. Wn., ar callers. Will Christenson has been rived Saturday for a visit with his suffering with a severly strained brother, William Taylor, and family. back received while shearing sheep. No services were held at the local Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lattner and son Charles attended the Decoration day church Sunday evening owing to many residents of this locality who exercises at Dundee Wednesday. DAYTON PRAIRIE dinner wax in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Ray Berry and Mrs. John Bax Morgariedge’s daughter’s birthday, ter have been quite ill the past week. Mrs. Charles Gardner. Mrs. Owen Goodrich left Sunday for an extended visit with her sister at North Bend. Men’s Riding Pants Reinforced knee and seat. Button legs. All pockets heavy drill lined. To be had in either dark oxford grey or military tan. A typical Breier value at $2.95 Boys’ Bronco Overalls A real overall for rough and tumble wear. 220 wt. Denim. 5 big pockets, riveted buttons. Well stitched throughout. Heavy bar tacked on all points of strain. Big, wide suspenders. Full cut. 79c 89c Sizes 6 to 8 Sizes 9 to 16 ----------- ------------ -------- --------- --------- -------------------- ------- BOYS’ BALBRIGGAN UNIONS Lot 500 BV. i sleeves, knee length. Ecru color---- 49c MESH KNIT UNIONS i sleeves and knee length. Mercer ized trimmed neck. Ecru---- 49c C. J. Breier Co., McMinnville