The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, October 13, 1921, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    Tin-: GAZirrxr; timf.s, iikpiwhu. oiikoon, tiih.'sjiay. ict. i:;, 11.
r
DR. F. E. FARRIOR
HKXT1ST
Otlue upstairs over i'oslullice
lloppner, Oregon
1 l .!. ,.f
I'M.- .
1'- I
I ;.! of l.i.'.t liulili
K. A. M. Mi:NA1!
I'osto'.lo :
atom, Nov. 22. 1521.
N ami A. J. HUT,,
s tor lialnllrf.
Ht-i'imcr. Oregon.
Humanity's Real News
In Home Town Papers jj
jut s w cut: rir ! p't!.;!
muI'! r, lp us fn.t ;i b.
k ninl ftTartf-'l fi.r the ki'f'.rni a
h-re b'-hind the t-:i' L-r ! fanH v.
says. "UretiiT n, I -a;I1 r-;.l in y
DR. R. J. VAUGHAN
11KXT1ST
lVi'mani'iilly loiMlcd iu the Odd
Kwlluws building, Hnunis 4 and 6.
lli'ljiii r, Oregon
K TlllC
Co UN-
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
l llYSIt I AN & SI IWiFON
Office in I'attiTs.m Mrug Store
Trained Nurse Assistant
lleppiipr, (Jicgiii.
!. C. CHICK, M. D.
I'HVBK lN HI'IUilCON
Trained Nurse AssiNtunt
Office upstairs over l'ostofflce
lli-ppniT, Oregon
WOODSON & SWEEK
Anoi:r:vs.ATi.AW
Office in Masoiili-iHuilillng
lloppner, Oregon
SAM E. VAN VACTOR
ATTOKXKY-AT-LAW
First National Hank Building
lli'ppner, Oregon
S. E. NODBON
ATTOKNKV-AT-LAW
Ullice in Court House
lleppner, Oregon
Office Phone, Main 643
Kesiileiico Phone, Main 6C5
FRANCIS A. McMENAMIN
LAWVKK
KoIiIh BuildiUK, Hcupucr Oro
I Till-: CIKiTlT COl.'ItT
TATK UK oiiKUON' F"ll Till
TV ' r M' iLil'(V.
i:;i: iit-.it W. Muyers, )
Plaintiff, )
V )
J. l.n F.:. i hurt. Daniel Far-)
hart. Heine Kurhart, Mary)
I'oe Karliurt, whose true)
j name is unknown, a sister)
of Theo'loie O. Karliart, do-)
ceased, ami all the uiikiiown)Hl'MMOS
heirs of Theodore (j. Far-)
Ii.ul, deceased. Also all)
oilier persons or parties un-)
known, okiimlng any right.)
title, estate, lien or Interest)
in the leal estate described)
in the complaint herein. )
Defendants. )
To John Earhart, Daniel Earhart,
(ieorKO Kaihart, Mary Doe Earhart,
whose true name Is unknown, a sister
of Theodore G. Karhart, deceased,' and
all the unknown heirs of Theodore G.
Farhart, deceased. Also all other per
sons or parties unknown claiming any
right, title, estate, lien or Interest In
the ical estate described in the com
plaint herein. Defendants:
IN' TIIF NAMK OF THE STATE OF
OUKGON, you and each of you are here
by required to appear and answer th
complaint filed anHinst you in the above
entitled court and cause on or before
six weeks from the date of the flrat
publication of this Summons upon you,
and If you fail to so appear or answer,
for want thereof, the plaintiff will ap
ply to said court for the relief prayed
for In his complaint, to-wlt: For a
decree thnt plaintiff be adjudged to be
the owner In fee simple of the SE14,
F'i of NW"4, NWS of NW14. SWA of
NW4 of Sec. tine. In Twp. One, South
of lianno 24, K. W. M, and that you and
each of you he forever barred from
claiming any right, title, estate or In
terest therein, and for such other and
further relief as may be Just and equit
able. This Summons is published upon you
In Tho Oazettc-Times once a week for
six consecutive weeks pursuant to
order of Hon. Gilbert W. Phelps, Judge
of the above entitled court, which order
Is dated the mth day of September,
ll'iil, mid the dale of the first publica
tion of ihis summons Is September 22nd,
1521.
JOS. J. NTS,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Posloll.cc address, lleppner, Oregon.
S. 2!-N. 3.
THAT'S WHY WE WANT TO TELL,
OUR READERS WHY THERE'S '
GOING TO BE SUCH A THING :
AS A "SUBSCRIBE FOR YOUR
HOME TOWN PAPER" WEEK.
F. H. ROBINSON
IjAWVKK
lONK. OltEliON
ROY V. VHITEIS
fire Insurance writer for best Old
Line Companies.
lleppner, Oregon
I will sell my house partly furnish
ed, or I will rent same to right party
Phone or write Millie Mcltoberts, Hepp
ner. tf.
Knit tm.K 18 head of purebred i-
vear-nld black face Hampshire rami.
W. V.. WIGI.F.SWORTH, Echo, Ore.
Adv. tf
T 0
' i
H. T. POH'I E
I'reHhlrut of tfae Porte PublUhlnc
t o, of Salt Lake Clt, aad one
of the country nnpaper
Krea teat frlfDilM.
(tin a ii nnnt e! nt onee.-
pit.-tl. riiono Main 632.
-Moore Hos-tf.
t.ilOlt V 1 N t III SINKHS yOU MA1.K
- !,ot Mas 'i.s for MIIiri. Tor partic-
Jai ', aO.in'ss u,x i'S, city. tf.
IHI SAI.l; ht'At ot mu lea, good
i7.e, broke to work; one fcood tractor
C'in!i,r. TfTins to rSKht tmrtiea.
E, J. STARKEY
i:i.KCTKI( I
House Wiring a Spwlaity
lioppner. Orison
I'lione K7'J
E. MILLER
"Tli Oltl-Tinie Auctioneer"
He Sticks and Slays
Kon-sonanle Hates for 8iu
lone, Oregon
HEPPNER SANITARIUM
llll. J. PFIIHY ( tlNDFtt
Physlciun-ln-t-hariro
lin. PAHl.t T. HK'HAIID!)
Assoclat, Physician
Treatment of ull diseases. Isolated
wards for contagious diseases.
roll l.i; - Hi'iiU'ticfl property on
lain street, lleppner 7 rooms, well
nlshed. For particulars and terms
Henry Johnson. lmo.
By R. T. Porte
Written kor this Newspaper
It is a notable fact that with alt the
wonderful things that have been writ
ten about the so-cauea country
newspaper," very few of them real
izs all their possibilities, or what an
influence they are in the worlii
It is alro a notable fact that very
few of th; readers of those papers
realize wl Jt a loss it would be to
them and w the world if the "country
paper" should cease to exist.
The large papers, with immense
circulations, tell of "world happen
ings" as they understand them, and
display heads telling of the latest
scandals, prize fights, and the mis
fortunes of humanity.
But, it remains for the "local pa
per," the "country veekly," the
"home town paper" to really give the
news of the world, of that of Mr.
Common People and his wife.
It is time thtat the country newspa
per should do somethinng to place it
self on a higher plane, and also make
some noise. Just one paper to start
something would not amount to much
but if the 15,000 country papers
would join in the chorus, a noise that
would go round the world would be
the result.
Some time ago I was going through
some trade paper, or bulletin of a
state press association, or something
of that kind, and noted that somebody
wrote that it might be a good idea to
have a "Subscribe for Your Home
Town Paper Week." I smiled a the
idea at first, but some way the idea
stuck, and then I started to find out
who originated the idea, but the pa
per was lost.
The publisher who thoueht of the
idea just let it go at that, but I de- ready to "boost" for the other fel-
cided that it was so good, that it t low, to print item atter item about
should not die, so at once asked all i this and that kind or a day or week
the trade papers, printers' magazines1 the time has come for it to boost and
and the ereat printers' supdIv houses mow its ougie tor itseii, to prim sev-
what thev fhouf-hf of the idea. ;cral columns about itself and all
The officers of he National Edi- home town papers, to put on a cam.
torial Association were written tcvPaign of publicity, and take advan
and in fact some two hundred letters tage of what other papers will do.
were sent out. In other words, throw its hat into
The result was that everyone ! the ring, and put up a fight that will
wrote that the idea was just the get it somewhere insead of sitting on
thing, and by common consent it was; the side lines and hollerin' for the
decided that the week of Novemher othter fellow.
ur
.er:,e toroKht an ex'raet from the
i.ti' tb l.dpter ,,f Kxodus as found
J tr 'he WHEAT GnoWFP.S' P.IPI.K Be
j fore I read these verses, let me say t'nat
I 1 we have been in bondage In Ek pt un-
J der siuaw farming for many, many
years and the I. S Department of Ag-rii-ulture
has sent Its Moyes. the Ex
periment Stations and Extension ser
vice, to find a way out across the Jor-
lan of habit to the Promised Land of
greater production. Today we are stlli
in the wilderness of low production be-
ause ye have hardened your hearts.
saying that new fangled stuff about
plowing early and treating properly Is
ill bosh."
Then opening up the Wheat Growers'
Mible to the twentieth chapter of Exo-
lus, said to have been written by the
Superintendents of the Dry Land Ex
periment Stations, he read the ten com
mandments In the presence of a full
house of farmers. I became Interested
muchly because I had been thinking we.
oughta have something to go by, so I
took them down as best I could and
they read about as follows:
Extract From the Wheat Grower'
Bible.
The Tea Command meats.
7 to 12 be adopted as the week to be
known as "Subscribe Fr Your Home
Town Paper Week."
It is no up to the newspapers of
the country, the home town papers,
to see the wonderful possibilities of
such a week, where in every locality
readers will be asked to subscribe for
the local weekly, and in addition to
the home town paper where they
were born if they were not born
where they now live.
In this way, every home town pa
per will help every other home town
paper, and by concentrating the ef
forts to one week, or three or four
weeks, the home town paper will re
ceive the publicity it is entitled to.
Ihe home town paper is ever
Mrs.
Fort n In acie stock and grain
He h. niii. half under cultivation. 100
nes can ho irrigated. This Is a very
ood buy. une-thiid cash; balance,
i :ns to :oiit purchaser. Address lock
x r,',:.. lleppner. Ore Adv. 2mp.
run stl.l". Winter barley seed,
1 1 per Hi. Can be had at Trl-Stnte
e..ti eh'iui-'e or nt ranch. JAS. HIjltN
SIOK. -Adv.
P. A. Ai.dets
iescnt.,1 1he (
pound-Pp on f
eoml.allieil by
1 lulUiin and 1 i
,n and ,1. A. Waters rep
.uit house bunch at the
n in d.i y. They were ac
1,. I. Matlock, Harry
mi ry Colin. K'dtig over to
Pendleton ill the And
on cai.
Sheep i a nge, with running water, and
thirty tons of stacked straw for sale
for tho winter. Tall on or address Ash
ur Montague, Arlington, Ore. Phone
1FH.
mu; INSURANCE
WATERS & ANDERSON
Successors to
C. ('. I'uttcrson
lleppner
Oregon
THE MOORil HOSPITAL
l(riiicr, Ore.
MUS. UAV Moult!!, r.p.
ratienU iirivilPK'! Hums) their
own (ihyHit'lniiH ami miikoohh.
I'Ikmip HI
1 have pi :ipi'n fr
rnts nml "f 1
1 ANltKlI.
,iU Toknya, Mus
ru; por pound,
md $1.25 per box
V. U. 1. Tho 1 miles. Or.
DO YOU WANT
A New Suit or a Coat?
Do your old clothes need
CLEANING DYEING
RELINING
REPAIRING
We are experts in our line
LLOYD HUTCHINSON
Where they Clean Clothes Clean
THE GAZETTE-TIMES Is Your
Home Paper. It Is A Very Fine
Investment At $2.00 Per Year.
Iaem Bureau News
(From the Morrow County Farm Bureau News.)
Wheat Production Costs Are Heavy
rnit sw.v. " if
Sw.-l.'n. Mi-. Will
Ih-ppiMT pr.iprrt'-.
H.-pplPT. Adv.
HITS f;
inn hind nortr
v Undo Tor
f. . Rippet
013-tm.
MATERNITY HOME
II US. (,. (. A1M;. IIKl'I'MCIt.
1 um prepared to lake a limited
number of tuatonilty cnnea ftt my
htuno. PMIeatu rlllrcil to rhooit
llM'lr own iiliynlclnn.
Cent of nttontlon and euro &nurd,
rhonr aim
Here's Your Land Snap.
f t;il. on within the not SO d:iys:
of pni c h--.it l;i!id, rich noil,
nlrr nf Mel row eniintys bopt
n ii'vos undor cul
u'i rlrvjttor, down
of w;ilor, piptd to
u.il improvoments.
tlcop-plnwed mini
to sroil. l'riee, In-
?:tn per acie
wn w -nld handle
Ahvnlntoly no hft tor land snnp In
Tiiiti'd States. Ovrr $17,000 worth
wlwn't prodtired from three qtmr-
1 4 :
in Hi
wheat hidt. all lu t t
1 1 v:i ;'n. !"!' in i ii"; 1 1
hilt pull. i;niit ell
honso iiijii bain, i
I'.n iutci of -dfan,
mrrfallow. all ready
I'ludiiiji Miininiorfalh'W
J,-,nOi( ur JtJ''O rash d
it.
tlr
of
(IMS of thi
nt once.
land in one season. See mo
V. SHI '
Many ; utreet corner fanner has said :
durum the last two months that If he
could hnvc received one dollar per bu
?hel for his wheat when he was farm
ing that he would have been able to get
rich Why cant they do It now. The
simple reason is because It cost too
much. If we want to analyxe these
.osts we will find Jn the first place the
overhead is too Krtat, the price of land
has increased, the price of machinery
has doubled and trebled, much more is
bo I n k paid for hired labor, the repair
bill on machinery is eshorbitant.
It minht be interesting to notice some
Mtturos gathered in Sherman county last
ve:ir. Those were taken from forty
representative farms and these farmers
actually kept a set of books accounting
for all the money taken in and all the
money spent durinp the year of their
operation. These figures are for the
1H20 crop, the 1:1 crop would be
slightly lower due to the fact that the
labor was cut down somewhat and gas
and oil was a little less. The other
items will remain almost constant, as
the man who buys new machinery and
pays for repairs or pays interest will
readily know.
The followinp
facts in which
ostel:
table will give the
ou will be most Inter
C OMI'AHISON OF WHEAT COSTS PEU FAHM, VF.lt At HE, PER 1U SHEL,
40 FA 11 MS, SKKIOIAN COI'TY. W20.
Percentage Average Average Average
ITEM of Expenses Costs Costs
Total Cost Per Farm Per Acre Per Bushel
1. Hired labor and Board.... 21.7 $ 2,369 $ 8.00 ( .40
L Machinery Expense 14.4 1,571 520 .26
1 Crop Expense 10.7 1,172 4 00 .20
4 Livestock Expense S.7 40S 140 .07
fi. (ieneral Expense 6.6 715 2.40 .12
6. lVpreciation 13.3 1,4 S3 4,80 .24
7, Interest on Investment .... 17.3 1.8S7 C.20 .31
s. Family Labor 12.3 1,336 4.40 .22
9. Total Expenses 100.0 10,912 36.40 1.S2
10. Miscellaneous Receipts .... 1.052 3.40 .17
11. Net Expenses .854 33 00 165
LEGAL N0TICE3
SIMMONS.
In the Circuit Court of the Stato of
Oregon for tho County of Morrow
Anna K. Kandhoe, Plaintiff,
vs.
Fred J. Sandboe, Defendant.
To Fred J. Sandboe, tho above nnmed
dt-fondant:
In tho namo of tho Stato of Orogon,
you are hereby t cM)uir-il to appear and
answer tho complaint Hied against you
In tho abovo entitled suit within six
weeks from tho dato of the first pub
lication of this Summons. If you fall
to appear and answer, for want thereof,
the plaintiff will apply to tho Court
for the relief prayed for In tho com
plaint, to-wit;
That the bonds of matrimony now
existing between tho plaintiff and tho
defendant be forever dissolvod and hold
for nauitht and that tho plaintiff bo
granted an absolute divorce from said
defendant, and that Itobert Carl Sand
boo, tho .minor child of plaintiff and
defendant, bo given to tho care, custo
dy and control of tho plaintiff.
This Summons Is published pursuant
to an Order of tho lion. Gilbert W.
pholps, Judge of tho Morrow County
Circuit Court, made and cntorod on tho
Pairons of Hotel Patrick can now be
served with meals right ih tho hotel.
Tho dining room is again open and
meals are being served reuularly both
family style and a la carte, and the
servh-o is pronounced first class. Mrs.
pylo, who has been running the hotM
at Parkers Mill, has charge of the din
ing room service and ebo will be In po
sition to give tho traveling public as
. holee service as they can find, any
where, and tho cliames will be reason
able Wo bespeak for her a very liberal
patronage.
Voiiiil:' people fpmi Morrow county
who aiv iakinr advantage of the rdu
oallnniil fariliti.w ;1t O. A. ( include
Helen P.arratt. Violet Corrlgall. Helta
Ned, Edward N'otson, Max Uogers nod
.laspcr Crawford, from Hrppner; Kelt
sie Twin, Wayne S.-hciver and Walter
Linn from lone. Kenneth Hinns .and
Virginia Currln. also well known in
Hoppner, havinir lived there in bygone
days, have nln taken up Iheir abode at
tho college. Miss Currln's present home
is in CreHliam while that of Mr. P.inns
is in Corvallis.
Emmotl Hughes, son of Malt Hughes
of this cilv. who WiiH graduated from
the O. A. school of pharmacy last
year. Mian accepted a position with a
drug store in Eugene, Mr. Hughes Is
well known hero where he graduated
from high school with tho class of '17.
H will be Interesting to note that the
farmers on these forty farms received j
an average yield of twenty bushels per j
acre, Obtaining these figures It will bo
noted that In addition to the carrying)
of expenses such as hired labor and ,
hoard, their machinery expense which
Included repairs. Interest on Invest-1
ment and so on: tho crop expense In-j
eluding sacks; their livestock expense,!
including veterinary bills and f eed j
bought; miscellaneous and general ex-'
pensea: there was also added a reason- j
able rate of depreciation which would'
icpbiee the farm machinery when It i
was worn out, seven percent Interest'
was charged nn the money which the,
man actually had tied up in his farming !
equipment, twelve hundred dollars n
year was allowed the farmer for his
work which added together gave the
total expenses. The last column gives
some figures in which you will be In
terested. Notice that It costs forty
cents per bushel for hired labor during
1!20. If this was cut In two It stilt
would amount to twenty cents per bu
shel. That is tho only Item which has
ehanged greatly during the past year
and nlthoutfh It has not been cut In
two the twenty cents dotTTINod from tho
average cost of a dollar and sixty-five
would still" make It necessary that the
average farmer receive $1.45 a bushel
for his wheat In order to eomo out
clear.
The farmer who was doing tho best
and operating the cheapest found that
ft cost him $1.05 a bushel to produce his
110 crop while fifty per cent of tho
farmers found that it cost them $1.50
more.
Py summarizing your year's business
and analyzing it at the close of the
season you can not only determine Just
what it has cost ou per bushel to pro
duce your crop but you can analyze the
figures thus determining" the cost per
bushel for each operation. The County
Agent has already promised to assist
a few farmers who have been keeping
somthing of a record to analyze these
figures this fall and will gladly do the
same for others who are interested.
The Farmers9 Revival
oAs Johnnie Saw It
Chapter XX i
1. Thou shalt have no other purpose
than this: that thy land be plowed
early In the springtime.
2. Thou ,halt not make unto thee
any poor plowing or any likeness
of any.
3. Thou shalt not look about thee and
And weeds on the fallow or an in
iquitous result will follow thee un
to the third generation.
4. Thou shalt not hearken after false
gods and make a dust mulch, ra
ther, thou shalt keep thy fallow
cloddy on the surface thereof.
5. Thou shalt nut harrow thy land in '
vain.
6. Remember thy fallow land to keep
it clean.
7. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbors
yields but buy certified seed and
achieve them thyself.
8. Thou shalt not commit late seeding.
9. Thou shalt treat thy seed properly.
10. Thou shalt never stubble thy grain
into the soil, for no mercy will be
shown thee, and if a Blight gain re
sult therefrom it Is only the work
of the devil, for surely thou shalt
Buffer and thy children and thy
children's children.
Then with those ten commandments
as a text he went on expounding for
twenty minutes in a way that evhii
made my old dad sit up and take notice.
He showed how beyond a shadder of a
doubt a mp.n lost a bushel of wh?al for
every week ho left his land unplowed
kfter April first, and I saw Ande Jones
color up wl'.en he was hittin' tn's the
l ardest and I remember tat ha usually
got about 8 bushels per acre when dad
averaged 23 and that he usually finished
plowing Just In time to hay.
As he bore down on the weedy sura
merfallnw Sid Ilrown, standing in the
corner, kept flgitln' around like he was
saying it just fer him. He didn't need
to tho for we were all In his class I
Iho't.
He went on to show how formalda-
hyde killed from 5 to 20 percent of the
seed wheat as it is frequently used and
that the blueslone treatment still killed
more; I knew as that was why dad :
failed to get a stand on the last field
he sowed last year. I ain't a tellln' but
he treated all his seed at once and let
all stand until he got ready for it. He
used formaldahyde and then Smith over
the fence used bluestone and only got a ;
fair stnnd. Abe Neil on tho other side
of us seeded about the same time and
used formaldahyde but he treated one
day what he needed the next and'I sure '
know the reason for the difference and ;
think it pays to. treat right I was in-
terested In knowing that they could ;
keep bluestone from injurln' the seed
wheat by dipping the sack in a lime
bath, made up of one pound of quick
lime to ten gallons of water, after tak- i
ing It out of the bluestone solution.
Jay Brown said after the meetin that
he sure was going to use It hereafter
and tho't It was mighty good Insurance
When he got down to '.he tenth com
mandment the time was short but say
he didn't let up a bit. When he got
through I knew why it was that dad
said that he would rather summerfal
low twice in succession than to stubble :
a piece in to even up the place. I know
that it did take us six years to get the
Adams quarter that dad bought from
Flddlln' Jim. as they called him, to get
to producin' within five bushels of our
land adjoinln' Old Jim only had a quar-1
ter and lie fingered that he would have
to put it In every year to make a livln' !
and do you know the last year he had It
In it didn't pay to cut it so Jim was
closed out and went to work. I
Well, we had an experience .meetin'
after it wns all over and everybody con-;
fessed willingly that they had trans
gressed from four to ten of those there ;
commandments every year and that j
they saw how they could Increase their
yields from 5 to 15 bushels by livln' up
to them.
Well, that religion took like a smnll
pox vaccination and I can sure see a
change. That meetin' came off before
scedln' time last year and I noticed
that very few took much chance on
klllin' their seed. This spring there
wasn't a farmer in our School District
but what was ready to go to plowing
on the first day that it was fit and they
were racing to see who would get done
first and are anxious to see who gets
the biirgcset yield. The County Agent
was out one day last Spring and want
ed Pan Ilrown to leave a strip to plow
late to see how much difference there
was In the yield, hut Pan said. "Not ON
TER LIF1C. that's what my whole farm
has been heretofore and I'm going to
compare my crops with the past." When
I saw tho real of old Dan Ilrown In
this new religion I knew that It ws a
revival indeed that was worth while,
and I ain't looking for any back sliders
cither. I'm not a prophet but I bet in
loss than five years we will have tho
best producin' community In Morrow
County.
r.KT'S 00.
HlllllilllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIMIIIimillllllll'i
I A. M. EDWARDS !
E WELL DRILLER
Lexington, Ore. I
Box 14
I Uses up-to-date traction drilling outfit, equipped for
I all sizes of hole and depths.
1 WRITE FOR CONTRACT AND TERMS
aiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiS
I Central Market
I FRESH AND CURED MEATS
1 Fish In Season g
1 Take home a bucket of our lard. It g
1 is a Heppner product and is as g
1 good as the best. H
I LIFE and FIRE INSURANCE I
LEON W. BRIGGS, Agent
t. i i n . i t t
Kepresintrng laano oiaie .me insurance uo. .a.
strong, progressive, Western company with attrac
tive policies equal to the best.
California and Continental Fire Insurance Com
panies: All American companies keeping Surplus,
Eeserve and profits at home instead of in foreign
countries.
As my health prevents me coming to see you I will
appreciate you coming to see me.
zm EE
The Byers Chop Mill
(Formerly SCHEMPP'S MILL)
STEAM ROLLED BARLEY AND WHEAT
After the '20th of September will handle Gasoline, Coal
Oil and Lubricating Oil
You Will Find Prompt and Satisfactory Service Here
SSESJEt'
ssary to hold revival meet
chuivhos because the people
s Ihoy know they ought to
It is 11CIM
Ints In tho
fui! lo do ;
do.
As farmers I sometimes think that
wo need a real good old fashioned re
vival when wo would all really get en
thused nbntit doing tilings up right and
thereby reaping a real reward. Just
as I was thinking this most seriously
Micro happened lo bo a meeting called
down nt the School House nnd as usual
the County Agent was thero. Our
chairman said that ho would give us a
lalk, that wo hadn't been doing things
Early Seeding Gives Greatest
Yields.
Tests ooiiilueteil (luring: the past two
years show that the earliest dates of
seeding have piven the greatest yields
praetieally without exception. Kvery
year Is n little different and it i? often
a question whether it Is advisable to
seed iu the dust or not. This is true
however, thnt every man should at
tempt to have his work so arranged
that he pan pet his seed in tho ground
as quickly as possible after the firsts
heavy rain eonies. U la usually con
sidered advisable to pet It in the
pround by the middle of October. Where
seedlnp in the dust the wheat should
bo thtwrumhly dried after treating; be
fore seeding.
If you want GOOD repair
work done on your car or
on your truck or tractor at
reasonable prices, see
Jack Turner
at
Hardman Garage
llardman, Oregon