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About Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1923)
Tuesday, November 201923 PAGE TWO THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON THE HEPPNER HERALD AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER S. A. PATTISON, Editor and Publisher Entered at the Heppner, Oregon, Postofflce as second-class Matter Terms of Subscription One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Three Months $0.50 scntial to accomplish something. And this is what every ! ood manager knows on the farm as elsewhere that i wurk undertaken to get someiliing worth while actually done, is the kind of work that tends to become less burden some. Having a definite object, the work simplifies itself, discovers better methods, besides yielding to the spirit ol man the refreshment of seeing his work actually telling on the task. FORD TALKS ON FARM PROBLEMS 4 CECIL . 4. 4. . W. Lowe and George Wilson ar rived at Butterby P'lats on Saturday J. C. Kelsay of. Grass Valley, Ells worth Swaggart of Heppner and Miss Violet Ledford of Strawberry ranch were the dinner guests of Miss An nie hynd at Butterby Flats on Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. E. Hart and daugh ter, who have been residing at "Pop lar Grove," left on Tuesday for Irrl- Wiiile there is much difference of opinion regardin licnrv Ford's fitness for president there arc but few who from Frefzeout ranch with a large will d'env that as a student of economic problems he ranks ba,ld 8,';';p MonKing to Hynd , . , ', . 1 .1 ... . ,, , ; ., I Bros, which will be wintered at Ce- hiir 1 and at tins time when the attention ot so mail) .... . . . . 11 .11-1. cil. jjeople is being directed to tlie larmer s problems me 101 oving excerpt from Mr. Ford's )age in the Dearborn Jn dependen is of more than ordinary interest: For one thing, it should be seen that farming is pres ently to cease being a single industry, such as food raising, and is on the threshold of becoming an industry of diverse interests. The world's food supply is more than amply pro vided for. Over-production is evident on every hand a fact which condemns the lack of supply in many quarters eon where Mr. Hart has bn trans- 1 . ,i i.-- 1 1- , 1 ..,. ...,( ,1; d-;i,, , t, ....tti.in ferred to other work on the stale due to the sellishness ol the present distiilnuive system.' On he production side, the lood supply is overdone. harm- Jh. an(J Mrs N L MorHson of ers feel the result of that, lint sliail the farm be used only ; -nockiiffe" accompanied Mrs. c. h. to raise food? Has it no pari in raising the materials '. crundaii of Hermiton as far as needed in our industries? All the signs of the times in-' Portland on Sunday on her way to ,, , .1 1 , , ,. ;n 1 r, ,.,.,,,1 ;,, 1,., ,l,., rw.-i 1 California for the winter months. dica e thai this later pai t will be loiced 111 y ncv dtcop- , , .. , , ! Walter Pope and Hoy Wirth of mails trembling 011 the verge ol practical use S;U(ii sp(.nt Moml;iy tiiking ,n the It is not at all impossible that motor luel will one day be 1 sil,llts at Allington. a seasonal crop raised 011 the farm. Oils and fuel alcohol Mr. and Mrs. c. A. Minor who jikiv iiresently become field and garden products. An ' have been visiting at the Last curp acre of potatoes will vield enough fuel-alcohol to plow that "''" "- lM Vmd 011 , , , 1 , 1 1 , 1 . , 1 I Monday. acre lor a lumdi ed seasons. 1 1 is not impossible .1:1 1 the , that brothl. rubber supiilv so neeessaiy 10 mooeiii muusuy siian 'iiciIiave not I(.as(.(, any laM(l from j. j W. O. shorn but that John Gray, from Ritter Springs, and since mud baths have been installed there Pete de clares there's no place to compare with Ritter. All Pete's friends are pleased to hear of his good health. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Ballinger and daughter of Boardman were callers in the Cecil vicinity Saturday. E. H. has bought several hundred tons of hay from Minor & Krebs and will have a baling crew here in a few days to bale it ready for shipping out. To knew How good a cigarette really can be maae you must try a- ago from the Moro experiment sta tion, entitled Wheat Raising After Fallow, may also be had by apply ing to Mr. Morse. These bulletins are both of especial value to all dry land wheat farmers. NOTICE OF' TAKING IT AM) SALE OF HOUSE Because it walks in different ways. T . ' ,,. : Should we then unto men refuse T. H. Lowe, H. J. Streeter, Walter 1 1 I modern industry snan one day depend on the i arm . Weeds which are now spurned may turn out to be valuable for cultivation and harvested for their yield of the elements of rubber. We have by no means begun to understand what the soil shall yield. Co-operation, as now applied to the farm, means mostly co-operalive selling. 1 hat is putting the cart belore the horse. Co-operation should begin in production. There is hardly any ol this kind of teamwork in America'. A field of corn and a field of wheat, a bit of this and a bit of that, a team of horses and a half a dozen cows and this endlessly repeated all over the country spells needless waste and work. A few pigs here and a few slice) there, odds and ends of every department of farming scattered about the countryside this is not farming. It is not best ior the farmer and it is bad for the country. The pigs must be shipped hundreds of miles to be turned into bacon, the bacon is sent back to the very spot where it was raised; the farmer loses the bacon profit and is compelled to pay the bacon price; doubling the rairoad hauls and the freight rales; the same with wheat and dairy productsall these abuses could be abolished by co-operation. Wheat pools in Chicago can be defeated by flour pools in the country district. Pool the cows under competent management ; cure the bacon in the district where it is raised; complete the dairy processes on the ground; go into business co-operatively lor the common benefit. It can be done, and it is o-oiuj' to be done, if not bv the fanners then by those ' .- , '. ' ,-..it .1,..;.. t i.. ho are waitum ior me latins io i.m mm mui u.mvis. Pope and Henry Krebs were county seat visitors during the week. George Krebs of The Last Camp was doing business in Arlington on Thursday. Dr. Walker of lone was called to Willow Creek ranch on Friday to at tend to George Chandler who had the misfortune to have one of his shoulders hurt by an accident with one of his horses. Mrs. R. E. Stender accompanied by her mother, Mrs. J. E. Crabtree, were callers in Cecil on Tuesday. Master Jackie Hynd and his pal, E. Swaggart of Heppner, were "ex ploring" the four corners of the Ce cil vicinity during their vacation and singing (as they left on Monday for their studies in Heppner school), "Oh! Cecil, Yes We Have Xo Cecil Life in Heppner, etc., etc." choose V -Edgar A. Guest. Wheat ltulletins Available Here Bulletin No. 1173, U. 8. Depart ment of Agriculture, on experiments in dry land wheat farming, which was mentioned in a recent issue of the Herald may be had at the office of County Agent Morse, he having received a supply a few days ago. The Stephens bulletin issued a year Notice is hereby given that I. the undersigned, under the laws of the State of Oregon, having taken up the animal herein-after described while running at large on my prem ises in Morrow County, Oregon, near Boardman, Oregon, to-wit: One roan horse branded HP. con nected on left shoulder, about 3 years old and weighing about 900 pounds. That I will on Wednesday, December 3, 132:1, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, unless the same snan nave been redeemed, at my ranch, near Boardman, Oregon, sell to the high est bidder for cash in hand for the purpose of paying charges incident to taking up, holding and selling said animal together with reasonable damages for the injury caused by said animal running at large on said premises. Dated and first published 20th day of November, 1923 30-31 M. C. MARSHALL. this W I Nothing is more frequently asserted than that tlie farmer works hard. ( f course he works hard. There is no harder woik in the world than that done on worn-out principles. No work is harder than that which yields an insufficient profit. It would be very beneficial if the farmer would be gin to analyze his hard' work. Fvery fanner knows men who work i'roiu before dawn until after dark, and work l,;Ull without accomplishing much. It isn't sufficient to hard, to endure physical strain and laiigue, u is es- won the liroady place near Morgan, ha:; rt nted tin? Shady Dell ranch from Mr. Oshorn and will live there in the future. Fred Pettyjohn of Mor- gan will run the liroady ranch for the winter. R. 11. Ilaldock, slate engineer of La Grand, and W. E. Carter, resident engineer, were inspecting the work being done on the Cecil highway on Wednesday. Work is" expected to be finished from McNab to four miles below Cecil in a day or two, when the graders, tractors and trucks will move to lone and get ready for work on that part of the road. Mrs. C. II. Barnett of Fourmile, who has been visiting in Heppner for some time returned home on Wed nesday. J. A. Allyn of OaTcgrove arrived in Cecil on Thursday and is visiting around amongst his old friends for a few days. Miss Flossie Stender spent the week-end visiting her brothers at Seldonseen ranch near Cecil before returning to her studies at Heppner high school. Mrs. George llenriksen of Straw berry ranch spent Friday with Mrs. Jack Hynd at Butterby Flats. W. A. Thomas has returned to his ranch near Cecil and will try wheat farming again. VS. A. has been spending a year or two in lone but has decided to again try living "down on the farm." Peter BaiHTnt'ieiHl returned from Ititter Springs on Sunday and has once more taken his place as Cecil's right hand man. Pete feels greatly benefitted from his treatments at -fiiiimmiiiiiniiiiiiii iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiii iiiiiiiuuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiini'f Elkhoi Best Eating Place in Tozvn We are now ncrviiitf All Kinds of Shell Fish To Order Our lood ii bt utility, well couUd. neatly erved Sproial uttrntii n jicn to lodiie and ''llh lnM" a .. . a' . . ' . - lit ligion "It seems too bad," s.'iid he. to me, "That you and I should disagree. What difference should it ever make Which road ;o heaven you choose to take. If you are ill, I do not frown Because you call in Dr. Brown. Xor do you sneer when I feel mean Because I call in Dr. Green. Though I prefer an allopath, You do not vent on me your wrath. "In summer time you like the sea; The golf links have1 a charm for me. Where'er your days of rest you spend I still am proud to call you friend. Should I your glory then besmirch Because you choose a different church? Or should you fail me as a friend Because I somewhere else attend? Do not all Christian doctrines plan To worship God aiuj better man? "I do not ask that you shall eat My choice of fish or fowl or meat, Nor read the books which please me most, Nor li'ke the things of which I boast. I do not hold your friendship lessz Because you wear a different dress, Nor do you think the less of me For wanting' sugar in my tea. You call nil' friend, and still maintain Your right to drink your beverage plain. "The proof of all our varying creeds Lies not in printed words, but deeds And Catholic, Protestant and, Jew Shall all bjO judged by what they do. Men don't dictate or even care What garb their friends may choose to wear, Nor hold from merit words of prai Sigsbee Studio Is now open and prepared to take first-class Photographs B. G. SIGSBEE PHOTOGRAPHER Located on Main Street Opposite Star Theatre, Heppner VETERINARY mi. T. G. KENXEY, I). V. S. ' Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College Now Permanently Located in Neppner TREATS ALL ANIMAL DISEASES Office at Red Front Livery Barn Phone Main 332 qasBuaaKSBKasnaasonRKBSiafl&aBZSiiaaBflBBzsan M H m a n lilkhont .;)V.KI) C.H1NN, Prop. imiie 'r pt'"". ! mmmmmmmmmmmmmmimmmima Advertise it In the Herald. j SAVE $200 EVERY YEAR Prices Have Dropped We are now offering new stock at lower prices MILL RUN BRAN') MIDDLINGS CALF MEAL KERR'S MILK MAKER and MILK RATION ALL KINDS OF POULTRY SUPPLIES Seed Rye for Sale Brown &. Lowry HEPPNER, OREGON Phone 642 Ono Bind way to make money on your farm Is to protect your farm machinery. The average annual loss, from deterioration alone, on farm machinery left out In the weather Is 1200. A machine shed that will turn this annual loss Into a profit can be built for a sur prisingly small amount. The shed shown here Is only one of many catyfully designed B and economical plans that our g B B B B B B B B B B fl B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B M Architectural lVpartmelit has 1 . ready tor yoi'r Inspection. Our ; , . . . '---rrr-' ----ft Thomson Bros. OUR STORE is head quarters for seasonable merchandise. We can feed and clothe the whole family from soup to nuts and from hats tc shoes See our line of Suits and Overcoats for Men and Boys lilm l'rints ami so eiM'.iplele in. i tor ior Maierial that it is ou to do e'.f ilurimr Lists s. an the the !hi;M!:u; sUrU se.isen. iVmi' in anil let us show yon how little money it takes. TUM A LUM LUMEER CO. Yards at HI-TPM'! idi.l l.KlliTO I'hoiio Main II I 'J Heppner Tailoring Company SUITS MADE TO ORDER Old Work Remodeled CLEANING and PRESSING All Work C.uaranteed You Can See What You are Buying when you fill your tank from a Dayton Visible Gasoline Pump I have just installed one at my Repair Shop. Let me fill your tank next time. M. R. FELL Chase Street b b