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About The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1928)
THE HILLSBORO ARGUS JANUARY 2fl, 192H. PAGE THREE — Chur« hey at 4helr new home in Orchard ¡st Gives Advice on Care oí Kei'dvllle Tue-day evening. The evening win devoted to dancing, and Fruit Frees as Learned After Many I refreshments were served about mid- I night. Years of Study and Investigation A pleasant event of the week was i the Leap Year party on Saturday evening, given by Mr. and Mrs. th«- head of u pin. On young trees George Jack of Jacktown. The eve- By II. LEIS, Proprietor Aetna Orchards, Beaverton or small branches of older trees n 1 ning whs spent in dancing, after No doubt there are some of your red spot can usually be found un . which delicious refreshments were readers and newcomer» who intend der lhe lurk. In badly infested (served. There were over 100 friends to plant a few tree» on their place. treea the bark will be entirely en- j present. • Undoubtedly the cherry (th«' teart crusted und if rubbed <»fY with u About 25 ladies honored Miss vuriety In their opinion) will be knife and the scale separate«! from Hertha Iteusser with a bridal shower the bark, th«* surface will be left nt the home of Mrs. Matt Bloom - ummig the trees planted. The Royal Ann, the Hing and the with a yellowish, greasy appearance, quiet, Cooper Mountain, lust Thurs- Lambert and perhaps all of them [and the bark looks grayish an«l very i day afternoon. The afternoon was will probably be planted. If there rough. Th«* effect on the tree is delightfully spent, and a lovely are no others in their proximity you death, if no spraying is done. lunch was served. Miss Reu-ser re It is not uncommon to see young ceived ninny beautiful and useful will lie disappointed, as they will bloom, but will bear no fruit, or trees kill«-«! th«* flr> t year after gifts. Her marriage to Charles Mas don’t terson of Cloverdale will be an event After pruning, very little fruit. A tree of another planting. If you of next month. variety, say the Waterhouse, Black butcher, use your brains, Tartain, Republican or Kentish, is don't prune right the first year, by Mrs. C. R. Anderson and Miss needed to pollenir.e them. The year forming a scaffold for the limbs, i Jean Smith spent Saturday in I’ort- old trees are better to plant than you are spoiling the looks of thut i lurid. Mrs. Anderson spent a day two year olds. Dig your holes not tree for the r«*malnder of its exist lol two in Seattle last week, und ence. Figure out your tree before l««s than three feet in circumfer Mr. ami Mrs. L. O. W oods and Mr ence and two and a half feet deep; you remove a limb, burn nil the i.nd Mrs. George Woods, who nre fill up the hide again to about where brush so the birds will not carry I on ii motor trip to California and the roots of the trees are to rest, them to other treea. Then spruy , Arizona, brought her home Wednes then tamp reasonably solid, set the your trees, which must be in a dor day ami spent the night. trees, spread the roots, cutting off mant state, preferably when buds and’ Mrs. Ed Wolf are re- Mr. and* all bruised und broken fibers. Fill are swelling. Select a calm day and < riving congratulations on the birth in with top dirt around and under be sur«' your trees ure dry when i of a daughter, Jean Bernice, la t roots, Lmving no air splices, then spraying, otherwise the spray will Sunday. tamp solid around the roots, fill in, not udhere to the tree. Don't use Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Sherwood of and your tree is ready to grow. But the so called dry stuff as you will Seattle, Wash., are the guests of don't think it will grow without have very unsatisfactory results us Mr. and Mrs, C. L. Durban, Mr. your help. Keep cultivating to con« far ns expenses are concerned, for and Mrs. Sherwood are on their way 1 have tried it out. Use pure lime to San Diego, California. serve moisture. Don't do as n niun told me one nnd sulphur solution without uny Mias Gertrude Walthers of Port day. He bought some trees an<l other ingredients added. They are land spent the week end with Mr. when I linked him where he planted useless if not detrimental. und Mrs. J. A. McMillan. P. L. From my experience I will add a Koontz of The Dalles wan a guest them, said, "Over in the fence cor* warning to others. When some 40 ner and let them grow und be d------- at the McMillan home on Sunday. years ago 1 moved on this plow to them.” Ed Miller is confined to his bed Now if» to the San Jose scale, and, being a born fruit crank, 1 with a severe attack of tonsilitis. which in destructive to our trees. plant«*«! a lol of trees and took the Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Brooks were After a in Portland on Thursday, where they It is very easily controlled with one best of care of them, npruying of lime and sulphur solu couple of years the trees begun to •met their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Al tion, providing of course thut you look as if they needed, not only an bert Tisdale, and family, and Mr. Weil, 1 use the pure stuff, und do a hun M. 1>., but a specialist. and Mrs. David Tisdale, and fam- dred per cent job. If that is not started to spray and spray and ily, of Saskatchewan, Canada. The done your time and money uro both spruy, but they did not seem to re Tisdale brothers, who own larice spond to th«* medicine I waa giving wheat ranches in Canada, are ■top- wasted. First, prune your trees, and be them. Finully 1 became so disgusted ping over for a few days in Port- sure to burn all th«« cuttings before thut I would have pulled them out, land on their way to California. spraying. When pruning don’t leave when I got the idea that I could Mrs. B. W. Gothard, who is mak- any slubs standing as that will cause make my own spray, and the result ing’her home in southern Oregon heart rot. Cut close to the trunk n« xt season wax strong, healthy for the year, spent last week at her or limb. The scale feeds by sucking trees, und they have been healthy , home on Cooper Mountain. the Juices from the buA tissues. It ever since. Mrs. B. L. Griflitts entertained Use one gullon of lime and sul Mr. and Mrx. Doughty at dinner on is but u »mail plant louse with the phur solution to nine or ten parts habit of covering itself with a waxy Sunday, in honor of Mrs. Griffitts' substance after becoming ufflxcd to of water for dormant spray. If de birthday anniversary. the surfuce of the tree with u pro sired u couple handsful of air slack Mrs. Pizer and family of Molalla ed lime may b«* added. It will not , spent th«' week-end with Mrs. Wes tected liurd scale covering. The insects puss the winter in un affect the spruy, but will give th«* Baney. Mrs. Pizer and Mrs. Baney immature stage, attached to the trees a whitish tint. Above every -pent -Saturday shopping in Port- bark, hidden underneath the scale, thing, if you have the pure spray ’ land. which is of black, sooty color. The material, let me impress on your female scale is usually more or less mind the necessity of doing u thor Best sheepmen allow the ewes to convex, the centrr being slightly ough job. Spray every limb, branch elevated, point fitting close to the and twig, and don’t miss any part graze as long ax possible during the bark when grown. The female gives of the trunk. If any part U left I w inter months in western Oregon, birth to living young, which crawl unsprayed you may have a few mil- i according to the experiment station. [ Every winter there is ordinarily a from the covering and, after a few lion of the scale. period of from five to ten days, how hours, insert their beak into the ever, when the grass is not avail bark tissue and begin to feed, and able. For a short period the sheep they are immovable the rest of their are then fed hay to supplement the existence. pasture, making the ewes much A number of generations are de stronger at lambing time and also veloped during the summer, running preventing a break in the wool. high in the millions. (No birth con Hazi-ida!«*, Jan. 26. — A large trol in that family.) A single scale Gooseberry jelly makes a good when highly developed is but a crowd of friends from Rosedale, ¡ small speck on the surfuce of the Jacktown. Hazeldale, and Reedville substitute for cranberry jelly tree or fruit, scarcely larger than churivaried Mr. and Mrs. Clarence • relish for poultry or game. At the Churches Trinity Lutheran Church Third and Walnut Street George Keule, Pastor English services next Sunday at 10:30. Sunday school at 9:45. God has not changed. Mun has not changed, The gospel, therefore, is still the only effectual medium of reconciliation, We preach it. You ure welcomed to hear it. ♦ ♦♦ Church of Christ Corner Third anil Baseline Streets Len B. Fishback, Minister You will enjoy the religious in struction in the Bible school at 10 a. m. Mr. Claude Nosier, Supt. The morning hour of worship is at 11 o’clock, with sermon by the pas ter. The C. E. society meets at 6:30, followed by the evening church service at 7:30. The sermon sub ject will be “Why there are so many churches in the world.” This is a sermon lecture on church history. Music will be led by the whi-tling- singing young people's chorus. ♦ ♦ ♦ Methodist Episcopal Church E. B. Lockhart, Minister “The Temperance Question” will be the pastor's theme in the morn ing, und in the evening at 7:30 the service will be a young people's pro gram with Miss Fannie Konnigan in charge of the junior choir and Miss Edna Mae Drake giving that classic in religious literature, "The Christ of the Indian Road.’’ Mi Fem Gar wood will lead the Epworth Ix-ague at 6:30. The League is now en gaged in a contest for attendance, with prospects of a record of fifty or more in the near future. Miss Mildred McPherson is one leader. and Miss Josephine Stuart the other. ♦ ♦ ♦ First Baptist Church S. McMinis, Pastor Bible school at 9:45 a. m. Morn ing worship at 11 a. m. Sermon subject, “What the Church Owes to the Community.” Evening service j nt 7:30. Sermon topic, "A Young Mun's Vow.” B. Y. P. U. meets at 6:45 p. m. ♦ ♦ ♦ ‘Í p. m. Prayer meeting Thursday evening, All are welcome to these services. ♦ ♦ ♦ Morning worship at II a. m. Ser mon theme, “Kept from th»’ Evil One." This is the third of a aeries of sermons taken from the seven, teenth chapter of John's gospel. Christian Science Society ♦ ♦♦ Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. with clas-es for the younger children at Orenco Presbyterian Church II a. m. Wednesday evening testi Sunday school at 10. C. E. meet* monial meeting at 8 o’clock. Sun Evening worship at day service at 11 a. m. Subject, ing at 0:30. 7 30. This will be the third sermon "Love.” on Jesus’ Prayer for Hia Disciples. ♦ ♦♦ Hillsboro Congregational Church Clover rolls are made by placing George T. Pratt, Minister ■ three small hails of dough in one Sunday school o’clock. muffin ring or pan. 3E Profits Insufficient? A FEED RATION not properly balanced will keep a herd of good milk cows or a flock of otherwise good pullets from profit able production. FEEDS carrying the necessary PROTEINS and FATS may cost more, but if they “Bring Home the Bacon” they are the cheap est in the long run. Only FEEDS OF KNOWN FOOD VALUE are really worth buying. BEAVER DAIRY FEED or COW RATION for your Milk Cows, and BEAVER SCRATCH and EGG MASH for those laying hens, will insure profitable feeding. MAY WE FILL YOUR NEXT ORDER? L Silverware tickets are given with every cash purchase, or when accounts are paid within thirty days. In thia way you may obtain absolutely FREE, William Rogers Guaranteed Silverware. It's worth getting! Imperial Feed Full Gospel Tabernacle 1246 Lincoln Street T. J. Creighton, Pastor Services Tuesday, Thursday. Sat urday and Sunday at 7:45 p. & Grain Company City Market and Grocery QUALITY FEEDS All kinds of Frosh Groceries and Vegetables 745 Second Street Telephone 511 MRS STRACHAN, Propristor Téléphoné M 1102 Third St. Give Charivari to Reedvillc Couple ----- I -1 Sunday school at 1 :45 p. m. Ser- vic«*» at 3 an«l 7:45 p. m. Thurs day is young people's meeting at 7:45 p. m. Evangelist Mrs. J. Green is charge. Wonderful testimonies and messages in song by the young people. Everybody welcome. ♦ ♦ ♦ Fra* Methodist Church Corner Fifth and Oak Streets J. N. Wood, I'astor Sabbath school at 10 a. m. B. Y. Yates, superintendent. Preaching at 1 1 a. ni. 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