Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, December 02, 1919, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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    Tuesday, December 2, iqiq
THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON
PAGE SEVEN
Nature's Method.
Nature Imitates herself. A prain
thrown into good ground brlnps forth
fruit; a principle thrown into a good
mind brings forth fruit. Everything
is created and conducted by the same
master; the root, the branch, the
fruits the principles, the consequen
ces Pascal.
Rear! the Herald classified ads.
Borrowed Dignity.
She "Doesn't Charles look dis
tinguished in that full-dress suit?" He
"now could he help It? That ontfit
In its day has been oil the backs of
three football captains, two editors,
and the leading man in our last col
lege production." Stanford Chaparral.
Don't overlook the classified ads.
GOOD LOADING IN CARS AND PRECAUTIONS
AGAINST DEVELOPMENT OF DISEASE URGED
1tl
Seeding Time
Is
ere
You'll need a new Grain Drill. We have the
BEST. Call and see them
Superior Grain Drills
"The Name Tells a True Story"
Also see our line of PLOWS
Oliver and John Deere
Nothing Their Equal in the Plow line
ve e
1 I
t i i
.ft
A
PcopS
cs Hardware
Company
Hucksters Salvaging Damaged Potatoes in Freight Yard.
Under New
anagement
Having just purchased the Cleaning and Pressing establishment
formerly owned and operated by A. J. Wilkes, I am now prepared to
,do Cleaning and ' Pressing of all kinds in the quickest and most
satisfactory way.
Especial attention will be given LADIES DRESSES,
FURS AND COATS. .
G. H. McFerrin
(Prepared by the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture.)
Cars of fruit and vegetables are
often dumped at large market termi
nals but persons who witness this pro
ceeding should not conclude that this
practice is uneconomic or done to
keep up prices, according to men in
the bureau of markets, United States
department of agriculture. The whole
sale dealer Is not in a position to re
sort and repack damaged produce and
often enough decay is present to ren
der the produce unsalable in its orig
inal container or bulk shipment.
Sometimes hucksters do go over the
damaged cars and salvage a limited
amount of food. More often, however,
the labor cost of such salvage work is
greater than the value of the products
saved.
Losses May Start on Farm.
There are many causes for loss of
perishable foods between the term
field and the market. Some of these
causes go back to the time crops are
harvested. Take potatoes, for instance',
which are injured in digging. Unless
these injured potatoes are sorted out
and not packed with the good pota
toes, rot may develop in the shipment
and spread rapidly to other potatoes,
especially if the temperature in the
car is favorable for rot to develop.
Another source of great loss in per
ishables is found in lack of care in
loading. The packages must be spaced
to permit air circulation and also
braced to prevent shifting. Tempera
ture can not be controlled in loads
packed solid without any air spaces
between the containers, while bracing
must be carefully done or packages
arrive containing only a part of their
original contents.
Although care in packing, loading,
In Rear of The Herald Office
8 Jjj
and bracing cars of potatoes, cabbage,
and the less perishable fruits and
vegetables is necessary to prevent
damage in ordinary freight cars, It i8 i
far more necessary for highly perish
able products that move to market in i
refrigerator cars, such as strawher- j
ries, peaches, pears, grapes, lettuce, I
and celery. Such products, even with
the best of care, may arrive at city
terminals in damaged condition caused
by delay in transportation, overripe
ness, or disease developed in transit
hurniicn toiimorfihiroB woro nAt unflpr !
control while the cars were en route. !
Disease In Shipped Products. I
In the case of plant diseases de-1
veloped in transit, there may not have ,
been any indication that the disease
was present when the car was loaded, ;
and perhaps the shipper thought that
his crop was free from disease. Prop
er refrigeration plenty of Ice and
air circulation holds diseases in l
check aril unless long delays in tran
sit occur such perishable produce
might arrive in good condition. Such
shipments, however, often deteriorate
rapidly after being unloaded and must
be handled quickly and consumed be
fore rot develops.
Through the food products inspec
tion service of the department of agri
culture, the facts concerning losses
through plant diseases 'developed in
transit are being studied and labora
tories have been established at New
York and Chicago to work on thest
diseases, plant pathologists now re
port on shipments that develop dis
ease and this Information is mudt
available to producers and shipper;
where the fruit and vegetables wen
grown, in order that prevention maj
begin In the field and packing house
PPLEE
by the box
Hood River Belli lower, Baldwins,
Ortleys, Spitz
Irrigon-Yellow INewtons
Rhea Creek Black Twigs
priced at
$2.00 $2.50
$2.75
Phelps Grocery
Company
When you think of Good
Cats, think of us
I
SECURING LABOR IS
DIFFICULT PROBLEM
4-
Maintenance of Steady Supply
Worries Stock Farmer.
Sieppner Tailoring
and Pressing Shop
T
t
11
i
(I Olt.HKltt.Y OKI. SWAN SON)
MERCHANT TAILORS
Wc carry an extensive line of strictly first-class
Suitings for your inspection, from which you arc in
vited to make an early selection. c employ oni
in guarantee eoin-
ind workmanship.
v i ut von make vour selection aim m.
ynur order at once'as our wholesalers inform us that
prices on all the hotter grades of woolens will make
material advances after January 1, 19JO.
vited to mawe an eauj smvu.."..
strictly first-class workmen and cat
itlete satisfaction in quality, style a
i
TP
t
: t
I
t
bogs, or a calf now and then,
etc.
Where there Is a year-round require
ment for labor it Is a!so possible to
utilize to better advantage the services
of married men, and their wives and
children can often be useful. Where
laborers are not needed on the farm
the year around there Is not the advan
tage of this preference for married
men.
SmoKing in Church.
Sir Walter Scott records how farm
"rn in the country districts of Scot
land were ;;"CUtomed to light up as
oon as tin- minister announced the
loxr. iKsiac Harrow called tobacco pan
pnariimeon, or cureall. ltlshop Tur
in'! t was so loath to part with bis
pipe that he out a hole In his ha!
to support It, Doctor l'arr used regu
larly to smoke In the vestry before
a lamb, j his sermon while the congregation va
-liiglng. "My people like long hymns,"
said, "hut I prefer long clays."
He It Compelled to Use Temporary
Help at Harvest Time Which, In
Many Cases, la Unreliable and
Quite Expensive,
(Prepared hy the I'nitM Ktates Depart
ment of Atcru ultura.)
One of thu most serious phasenfof
the farm labor problem is the main
ti iniin e of a steady supply of hdior
and the Interest of the laborer in farm
opeiatlons. In both of these matters
the farmer who has little or no live
siock has a much more illflii-ult prob
lem to solve tliiiu the one who main
tains the maximum amount of live
stock consistent with his farm opera
tions. I-'or example, the fanner who
devotes Ills entire effort to grain pro
duction or cotton production In con
fronted with a keen demand for labor
at the most critical period in the crop
year. lie bus the rush during the
planting sinson, which shortly Is fol
lowed by the tremendous demands of
harvest. I'.etween times, especially
: ; I during the winter, this demand Is not
V i so urgent und he Is, thi-rcfore, com
T ' polled to use temporary help (cspe
' j dally at harvest time), which, In many
' cases, Is unreliable and expensive.
! The former whose operation make
possible the distribution of the mini
mum amount of labor throughout tbe
year la In mwh stronger position
from every standpoint than the one
w u.,. ;ncta11v1 a modern Dry Cleaning plant Wl h 1 compelled to rail in large num.
t nov - f,..r .,f tiHHtMirnrv helixra at critical
time.
stork production la year
proportion and therefore make
each distribution of labor.
furthermore, live atock are Inlemt
Inn to nearly all human belnga. There
Is much more to Interest the average
man In watching the growth of the
young animals or the fnttrnlng of feed
ra, and much le drudgery, evi-n In
feeding operation, than there la In tbe
tilling of the toll and the cultivation
the crop, fleautlful a grow it, g
rrope Uh'iupitliittnhly are. and nerea-
I ary aa they are to the ntHlnti-nanre of
llr atock. the farm which only hn
growing rrop la'ka for niMl people
the Tltal thing whbh la nectary to
1 make rountry life attractive
Many farmer recognise the appeal
1 which atilmala bav" for the average
man and rater to thla In handling their
I employ we. Vr example. 1h-re art)
lrae) where the farm owner glvea the
! laborer share In the animal produce
I of the farm. such, for example, at
I erjr tenth ptg. which twenwea the prp
I erty of the man wit fake rare of tfce
THRASHING TO SAVE WHEAT
No Place for Him to Die.
Daniel Webster, taken 111 one day In
II town, of decided Democratic lean
ings, begged his friends to take htm
home at once. "I was born a Federal
ist," he pleaded. "I have lived a Fed
eralist, and I can't die Id a Democratic
town."
Looking for a Bargain.
r.ll.Mlioth was thrifty. She had her
picture taken, and l,"r mother sent her
for tiie proofs. "How much are they,
please?" asked lCllzaheth, and the pho
tographer announced: "One dollar
and a half for the original and .10
cents each for duplicates. Kllzabeth
pondered a moment, then said: "I
think we'll take six duplicates, please."
The Zuyder Zee.
The Zuyder zee, or Southern sea, was
formerly n lake surrounded by mnrsbes,
Its present extent being the result of
floods In the thirteenth century. Its
area Is about 2.otiO square miles, ami
the average depth from 10 to 10 feet.
The Hollanders have reclaimed a mil
lion acres from ca, lake ami river
since the sixteenth century.
Read the Herald classified ads.
Fairr.ers ef Minnesota County Pre
vented Loss of $77,000 by Using
Clean Methods.
(Prepared ty tli$ ynlf el 8ttes Drrinrt
r.Vnt i f Acrl.-niluro )
Members of the farm bureau of Kitt
son county. .lnncsota, saved !f"7.0io,
or about $'iui to each thrashing ma
cliiiie, by uMng tight-bottom racks, enn
uis under the feeder, cleaning up when
required after each setting of the ma
chine during the thrashing season. A
oiiMcrvatlve estimate of the saving
by clean thrashing by this county waa
:7,MK bushels of wheat, 'J0,4KI hush
Is of oats, and 10,000 bushels of bar
ley.
-
GENERAL
I una, .mii ii iiiii. ii e-
Cleaning and Pressing
I
u . a tit tctnpiifin in :i 1 1 iirrs:
I and can guarantee .uuii'i. time-.
n inrr and cleaning orders entrusted iu us. . u Liv.
. f U ' 9 t.ecialtv of cleaning and pressing la- t round
- H nTrrvnur work to 1'endleton or Portland k
i l
ft
when you can have equal sen ice u i
cost in Ileppner. ,
c solicit the 1'atronage 01 an .mui.u
Main Street, One Door orin 01 oson iimu
a
' Peon
u ; f
S of
Cochran's Orchestra
tt.vlni secured first-class musicians who are looat-d per
manenfly " Heppnrr I am prepared to aupply high-cl... mo.le
suitable for all occasions.
Why send your money away whn you tan aecura equal tal
ent and satisfaction at bomt?
For full information write or call
ROY T. COCHRAX
The wise ue of cover crops will
conserve the fertility if the soil and
better Its iibycical condition In many
i-aws.
e e e
In purchasing commercial fertilizers
oiiiolder the cost of the crop to be
grown aa well aa tna prlco ef tba fer
tiliser.
A fe4 4g la like a teA eon ha
stays at borne at night. Kept In good
habits, ha la a guardian rather than a
murderer of sheep.
t
i
The
deman
C
h rn
s
0)
I. 6
A
P
S
Few animals like rye aa a steady
diet aa the do oata or corn. When
rye la crushed and mixed with ground I
oata or corn II makes g'MKt hre feed. I
1
Drain tile et over cmh celery
plant Manrhee It nicely. Paper or
boards way be ueed In chi! wisther.
bat are apt to Of ay the plants In
warm weather.
e e e
Clover will eot.tain the prip'r
amount of dry matter to make g'"l
silage If allowed to a'and until enio.
wtmt more than one-half of the bloe
aoma are brown.
see
II le aeld that etpoeiire to weather
rauaea greater oVtrnrtl,n to farm Im
plements tba aetog Xbtm. Aeotd Ma
i' by atnfng ail tuarhlnery and tools
properly under abetter befora wlotter
! In.
a a a
Wc announce tlie arrival u a complete line of llif
famous HARDEMAN HATS which we cany in all
shapes, colors and sizes.
$4.00 to $6.00
U'e als., t arry tli- HARDEMAN CAPS
mcs and patterns.
in in any
$1.00 to $2.50
If joii need a new lid and want a striitly good ar
ticle at an honest price call and look this line over.
SAM HUGHES CO-
I
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