TIIE GAZETTE-TIMES, IIEPPXEK, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEB. 23. 1922.
PAGE THREE
DR. T. E. FAERIOR
DENTIST
Office upstairs over Poatufflc
Heppner, Oregon
DRS. VAUGHAN & GROVE
DENTIST!
Permanently located In the Odd
Fellows building, Roomi 4 and 6
Heppner, Oregon
A. D. McMURDO, M. D.
PHYSICIAN 4 SURGEON
Office In Patterson Drue Store
Trained Nurse Assistant
Heppner, Oregon
C. C. CHICK, M. D.
PHYSICIAN SURGEON
Trained Nurse Aaalatant
Office upstairs over Post office
Heppner, Oregon
WOODSON & SWEEK
ATTORNEYB-AT-LAW
Office In MasonleBulldlng
Heppner, Oregon
SAM E. VAN VACTOR
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
First National Bank Building
Heppner, Oregon
S. E. NOTSON
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office in Court House
Heppner, Oregon
Office Phone, Main 643
Residence Phone, Main 666
FRANCIS A. McMENAMLN
LAWYER
Roberta Building, Heppner Oro
F. H. ROBINSON
LAWYER
ION IS, OREGON
ROY V. WHITEIS
Fire Insurance writer for best 014
Line Companies.
Heppner, Oregon
E. J. STAREEY
ELECTRICIAN
House Wiring a Specialty
Heppner, Oregon
Phone 872
E. E. MILLER
"The Old-Tlme Auctioneer"
He Sticks tnt Stays
Reasonable nates for Sale
lone, Oregon
HEPPNER SANITARIUM
DR. J. perry con nun
Physlclan-ln-Charge
- DR. PARIS T. RICHARDS
Associate Physician
Treatment of all diseases. Isolated
wards for contacious diseases.
FIRE INSUBANCI
WATERS & ANDERSON
Successors to
0. C. Patterson
Heppner
Oregoa
THE MOORE HOSPITAL
HOW OPEN TO THUS Puni.io
For Uurgkal and Msdlcal l'atlsnts.
Katlre New Hqulpmrnt. Large
Medrra Surgery.
IH. C. CCHK'K, M. II.
Fhynlctaa and Sursroa
rkue Main as J
MATERNITY HOME
MRS. (I. C. AIKKN, HEPPNER.
I am prepared to take a limited
number of maternity cases at my
home. I'allrad privileged la ekoaa
heir on phyalctaa.
Bsst of attention and cars assured.
Pkoae SM '
BEAMER & WILLIAMS
DRAY AND TRANSFER
Phone Main 872
Heppner Oregon
LEGAL NTICES
NOTICE FOR PlIIIUCATION.
ISOLATED TRACT.
Pnbllo Land Sale.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR,
U. S. Land Office at LaOrande, Oregon,
December 81, 1921. NOTICE is hereby
Blvon that, as directed by the Commis
sioner of the General Land Office, un
der provisions of See 2455, R. 8., pur
suant to the application of Jerm O'
Connor, of Heppner, Oregon, Serial No.
021148, we will offer at publlo sale, to
the highest bidder, but at not less than
13.26 per acre, at 10 o'clock A. M., on
the 28rd day of February, 1022, next,
at this office, the following traot of
land: NWKNE14, Section s, Tp, 4 8., R.
28 SJ. W. M.
The sale will not be kept open, but
will be declared closed when those
present at the hour named have ceased
bidding-. The person making the high
est bid will be required to Immediately
pay to the Receiver the smount thereof.
Any persons claiming adversely the
above-deacrlbed land are advised to file
their claims, or objections, on or before
the time designated for sale.
CARL N. HELM. Register.
J. H. PEARE. Receiver.
NOTICES FOR PUBLICATION,
ISOLATED TRACT.
Pablle Laad Sale.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR,
U. S. Land Office at LaOrande, Oregon,
December 11. 1921. NOTICE Is hereby
given that, aa directed by the Commis
sioner of the General Land Office, un
der provisions of Sec. 2455, R. 8., pur
suant to the application of Jerm O
Connor, of Heppner, Oregon, Serial No.
021142, we will offer at public sale, to
the highest bidder, but at not less than
M OO per acre, at 10 o'clock A. M.,
the 23rd day of February, 122, next.
at this office, the following tract of
land: SEiSWlt, Section 10, Tp. 1 8.
28 E W. M.
The sale will not bs kept open, but
will be declared closed when those
present at the hour named have ceased
bidding. The person making the high
est bid will be required to Immediately
pay to the Receiver the amount thereof.
Any persons claiming adversely the
above-described land are advised to file
their claim or objections, on or before
the time designated for sale.
CARL N. HELM. Register.
J. H. PEARE, Receiver.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice is hereby given that the un
derslgned haa been appointed by the
county Court of the State of Oregon
for Morrow County. Administrator u.
the Estate of Bernard F. Doherty, de
ceased; and that all persons havln
claims against the said estate mua
present the same, duly verified accord
lng to law, to me at the office of Attor
ney F. A. McMenamln, In Heppner. Ore
icon, within six months from the date
of the first publication of this notice
cember 29, 1921. Date of last publl
cation being January 21, 1922.
JAMES O. DOHERTY,
Admnlstrator of the Estate of
Bernard F. Doherty, deceased.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice Is hereby aivan that th tin
derslgned has been appointed by tbe
County Court of the ftni nt
for Morrow County, as Executrix of the
wsi win and Testament of Ora E. Ad-
ina, deceased.
All DCrsona h&vlno- rlnlma aalnat th.
estate or said Ora E. Adklns, deceased,
must nresent them ta ma nmnnpiv ver
ified as required by law, at the office
or wooason Bweek, my attorneys, at
Hepnner. Oregon, before the eynlrotinn
of six months from the date of drat
publication of this notice.
Date of first publication. January 11
LAURA F. ADKINS.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
In the Countv Court In anil
row Countv. State of Orenon
In the matter of the aatata of Peter
Carl Nelson, deceased.
Notice is herebv riven that tha nn.
derslgned Allen Thomson, haa haar. an.
pointed by said Court, and has duly
qualified as administrator of the es
tate of Peter Carl Nelson, deceased, and
that all Dersona havlnor anv iaim
against said Peter Carl Nelson, da.
ceased, or against his estate, are here
by notified and renuired tn nrAMnr ha
same duly verified, to the undersigned.
Allan Thomson, as such administrator
of said estate, at his residence on Route
numoerea one, Echo, Oregon, within six
months from the date of the first pub
Icatlon of this notice, tn.wlt- within
six months from the 16th dsv of Jan.
sary, izz, or be forever barred.
ALLEN THOMSON,
Administrator of the estate of Peter
Carl Nelson, deceased
P. J. Klrwln, Attorney for said Es
tate, Vancouver, Wash.
in TUK CIRCUIT CntlRT nj TUIT
STATE OP OREGON FOR THE
COUNTY OF MORROW.
L. Darnett, Plaintiff.)
vs. )
Zella Anderson and)
George Anderson, her)
usbanct May Smith)
nd Earl Smith, her)
usband, Jennie Day,)
rank I. Shurte, the un-)
nown heirs of the sald)STTlUrivTnaTQ
f?rar.lr T Dh .,WWHUUUHW
. .. uiiuiia auui
Iso all other persons)
parties unknown,)
lalming any right, tl-)
1c, estate, lien or In-)
erest In the real es-)
tate described In the)
complaint herein, )
Defendants.)
To the said May Smith and Earl
Smith, her husband, Jennie Day, Frank
I. Shurte, the unknown heirs of the
said Frank L Shurte, and aiau all other
persons or parties unknown, claiming
any right, title, estate, lien or Interest
in the real estate described In the com
plaint herein, defendants.
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF
OREGON: You are hereby required to
appear and answer the complaint filed
against you in the above entitled suit
and Court on or before six weeks from
the date of the first publication of this
summons, and if you fall so to appear
and answer, for want thereof the plain
tiff will apply to the Court for the re
lief prayed for in his complaint, to-wlt:
1st. That the defendants, and each
f them, he required to set forth the
nature of their claims in and to the
Southwest quarter of Section 20 In
Tonshlp 2 North Range 23 East of the
Willamette Meridian In the County of
Morrow and State of Oregon.
2nd. That the defendants, and each
them, have no right, title, estate.
Hen or Interest In or to said premises.
3rd. That the defendants, and each
of them, be forever enjoined and barred
from asserting any claim whatever u.
to said premises adverse to the
plaintiff and for such other and further
ellef as to this Honorable Court may
scorn meet and Just.
This summons Is served upon you by
publication thereof In The Qasette-
Tlmes, a newspaper of general circula
tion published within the County Of
Morrow and State of Oregon, once a
week for six conseoutlve weeks pur
suant to an order of the Honorable Wm.
Campbell, Judge of the County Court
of Morrow County, Oregon, made and
dated on the 16th day of January, 1922.
Date of first publication, January 19,
922.
Date of last publication, March 1,
1922.
F. A. McMENAMIN and A. J. FRITZ.
Attorneys for the Plaintiff.
Postofftce Address, Arlington, Oregon.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice Is hereby given that the un
dersigned has been appolntetd by the
County Court of the State of Oregon for
Morrow County, Executrix of the Last
Will and Testament of George A. Stev
onson, deceased. All persons having
claims against said estate must pre
sent them to me duly verified as re
quired by law, at the office of Wood
son at Sweek in Heppner, Oregon, my j
attorneys, before the expiration of si
months from the date of first publica
tion of this notice.
Date of first publication January 28,
1922.
ELSIE ANN STEVENSON,
Executrix.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Department of the Interior, U. 8. Land
Office at The Dalles, Oregon, Jan. 21,
1922.
NOTICE is hereby given that William
L. Lowen of Hardman, Oregon, who, on
August 14, 1918, made Homestead Entry
016361 and on September 12, 1919. Ad.
H. E. No. 017186. for Wtf 8W14. Sec IT,
EK 8E14. NWU SE14. Wfc NE(4, NE1
NWlt, Sec. 18. NE NE. See. 1, Nii
NWK and SE14 NWK, Sec, 20, Town
ship 5 South, Range 28 East, Wlllam
otte Meridian, has filed notice of Inten
tion to make three-year Proof, to es
tablish claim to the land above de
scribed, before J. A. Waters, United
States Commissioner, at Heppner, Ore
gon, on the 17th day of March. 1122.
Claimant names as witnesses:
Wright Baling, Holley Leathers,
Z, Blddle. W. P. Prophet, all of Hard
man. Oregon.
J. W. DONNELLT. Register.
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT.
Notice Is hereby given that the un
derslgned has filed his account as ad
mlnlstrator de bonis non of the estate
of Charles Wallace deceased, and that
the County Court of the State of Ore
gon for Morrow County has appointed
Monday, the 6th day of March, 1922, at
the hour of 10 o'clock In the forenoon
of said day, as the time, and the Coun
ty Court room in the Court House at
Heppner, Oregoa aa the place, of hear
ing and settlement of said final account
Objections to aald final account must
be filed on or before said date.
L. W. BRIGGS,
Administrator de bonis non.
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT,
Notice is hereby given that the un
derslgned administratrix of the estate
of Martha M. Simons deceased, has 111
ed in the County Court of the State of
Oregon for Morrow County, her final
account as said administratrix, and that
Monday, March 20, 1922, at the hour of
10 o'clock a. m. at the Court House In
Heppner, Oregon, baa been fixed aa the
time and place for the settlement of
said final account All persons Interested
ed In the said estate are hereby notified
to appear at said time and place and
make their objections, if any they have.
to the said final account
FLORENCE BENNETT,
Administratrix.
Date of first publication, Feb. 16, 1922.
Date of last publication. Mar. 18, 1922.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE.
Notice Is hereby given that under and
by virtue of a writ of execution and
order of sale Issued out of the Circuit
Court of the State of Oregon for Mor
row County, upon a Judgment and de
cree rendered in said Court on the 4th
dny of February, 1922, in favor of E.
Jay Merrill and against Ouy Chapin and
Annie B. Chapin, for the sum of Thir
teen Hundred Eighty Four and no one
hundredths Dollars with interest there-
n at the rate of eight per cent per an
num from the 4th day of February,
922 and One Hundred and oFrty Dot
lars attorneys' fee and the further sum
Thirty-one and 50-100 Dollars costs
and disbursements, and for accruing
costs, to me directed and delivered.
George McDuffee, Sheriff of Morrow
County, State of Oregon, will sell at
public auction to the highest bidder
for cash In hand on tbe 18th day of
March, 1922, at the Court House door
Heppner, Morrow County, Oregon,
at the hour of 11 o'clock, a. m. of aald
day, all the right title and interest of
said Ouy Chapin and Annie B. Chapin
n and to the following described real
property, to-wlt:
Southeast quarter of Southeast quar
ter and the Northwest quarter of the
Southeast quarter of Section 26; the
Southeast quarter of the Southeast
quarter of Section 26; the East half of
the Northeast quarter of Section 25, all
in Township t South, Range 25 East of
the Willamette Meridian. Also the
Northwest quarter of the Southwest
uarter of Section 30; the Southeast
quarter of the Northwest quarter and
the East half of the Northeast quarter
r section 81, all in Township 5 South.
Range 26, East of the Willamette Mer
idlan, together with the tenements, her
editaments and appurtenances thereun
to belonging, and situated In Morrow
County, State of Oregon.
Dated at Heppner, Oregon, February
0, 1922.
GEORGE McDUFFEE,
Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon.
Dnte of first publication, Feb. 16 1922.
Date of last publication. Mar. 18, 1922.
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT.
Notice Is hereby given that the un
derslgned administrator of the estate
of Sarah Gentry deceased has filed in
he County Court of the State of Ore
gon for Morrow County, his final ac
count of his administration of said es
tate, and that Saturday the 18th day
of March, 1922, at the hour of 10 o'
clock a. m. at the Court House In Hepp
ner, Oregon, has been fixed aa the time
and place for the settlement of said
nal account
Al persons Interested in said estate
are hereby notified to appear at said
time and place and make their objec
tions It any they have, to said final
account
A. L. CORNETT, Administrator.
Date of first publication, Feb. 16, 1922.
Date of last publication, Mar. 18, 1922.
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT.
Notice Is hereby given that Marion
Evans, administrator of the estate of
Frank C. Evans, deceased, has filed his
final account of his administration of
said estate with the County Court of
the State of Oregon for Morrow County,
nd that said Court has fixed Monday,
the Srd day of April, 1922, at the hour
f 10 o'clock In the forenoon of said day
as the time, and the County Court room,
at the Court House at Heppner, In Mor
row County, Oregon, as the place for
hearing objections to said final account
and final settlement of said estate, and
all persons having objections to sam
final aocount or to the settlement of
estate are hereby required to file
the same with said court on or before
the date fixed tor the hearing thereof.
MARION EVANS, Administrator.
Political Announcements
For Commissioner.
I hereby announce myself as a
candidate for the nomination to the
office of County Commissioner, sub
ject to the will of the Republicans of
Morrow County, to be expressed at
the Primaries in May, 1922.
G. A. Bleakman, Hardman, Ore.
Paid Advertisement.
HEET A FBIEMD OF Y0UB&
III IflWyiEWSPAPEB
Some of the Things You Expect
From It And Some Things
You Often Forget
The Real Cure for Retail Sales
That Are Becoming Less Is
More Ink Much More
By Rex Grover White,
Editor Community News Service.
The local newspaper, like the local
Ere department, police department
and board of health, is accepted as
an institution by the American pub
lic, which must do its work, serve all
interests, ignore danger, know no
sleep, accept abuse, be always polite.
It is looked upen as an institution
that must give its wares, i. e., its col
umns, upon the slightest pretext to
the aid of any sort of movement hav
ing the slightest tinge of chanty,
civic advancement, or social welfare.
In the same breath it is called upon
to protect and destroy, to blow hot
and cold, to uphold the courts and to
watch them, to support church and
For Representative.
I hereby announce myself as a
candidate for the nomination to the
office of joint representative for
Morrow and Umatila counties in the
Oregon Legislature, subject to the
will of the Republicans of the two
counties, to be expressed at the Pri
maries in May, 1922.
J. Perry Conder, Heppner, Ore.
Paid Advertisement.
For Representative.
I hereby announce myself as a
candidate for the office of Joint Rep
resentative of Umatilla and Morrow
counties, on the Republican ticket.
If elected I promise to faithfully and
honestly perform the duties of the
office, working at all time for the best
interests of the people of this district
and the state of Oregon.
E. M. Hulden.
Paid Advertisement.
For Joint Representative.
I hereby announce my candidacy
on the Republican ticket for Joint
Representative of the District of Mor
row and Umatilla Counties in the
May primaries. I have lived in Uma
tilla county 24 years and own prop
erty in both counties. I was a mem
ber of the 1919, or War Sesson. and
the specal session of 1920 -of the Ore
gen Legislature and otherwise have
devoted much time to public matters.
I have no platform, except to offer
the best judgment I have and to pur
sue a conservative and economic
course. I believe in apnlvine strict
business methods to public matters.
When we can pay for public develop
ment we should have betterments,
but when taxes grow burdensome we
must be content with the old ways un
til we can do better. Just now taxes
must be trimmed wherever possible
and no new appropriations made;
and the pressing need of the farmer
and stockman must be the main issue
in law making and in the sphere of
public influence.
E. P. Dodd, Hermiston, Ore.
Paid Advertisement.
For County Commissioner.
After being urged by citizens and
taxpayers in all parts of the county
to anounce myself as a candidate for
the nomination for County Cmmis-
sioner, 1 have decided to do so and
will be a candidate for such nomina
tion on the Democratic ticket at the
coming primaries. I have been a
taxpayer here since before Morrow
county was organized. I have no
platform to announce nor promises
tc make only that, if elected, 1 will
endeavor to serve the people of the
county to the best of my ability.
R. L. Benge.
Paid Advertisement.
WANTED Man or woman to es
tablish permanent business distrib
uting our products. Pays up to $10
per day to the right party. Write
Kleen Zo Eze Co., 207 McKay Bide.,
Portland, Ore.
WHEAT RANCH WANTED -I
want a big wheat ranch in this coun
try and will trade two fine ranch
properties in the Umpqua Valley
near Roseburg in as full or part pay
ment. I have 841 acres, well im
proved. What have you to offer?
Address full information to A. T.
Lavrence, Roseburg, Oregon. 4t.
A Portrait Free
In order to be doing something
during these dull times, we will make
you a 14x20 oval convex $5.00 por
trait FREE. We want you to show
to your friends and advertise our
work. All we ask. of you send us
95c to pay for postage and boxing
and we will send the portrait prepaid,
free. Mail your photos, with 95c.
Give us a trial. No frame catch
buy your frame where you please.
We copy anything and everything.
Money back if not pleased.
PALM ART CO.,
Hastings, Neb.
A N
1 1 .p ,1
The
liberalism, to befriend the helpless
and uphold property rights, to be al
ways right and to be super-human in
its swift gathering and presentation
ot news. Like the municipal depart-
ments mentioned it receives fewi
thanks for doing its duty but bitter
attacks for the errors that, being but
of human energy, are sure to arise.
A Matter of Toil.
No one that has not been active in
the making of a newspaper has even
a faint idea of the toil and the ener-
gy, the sacrifice and the heart inter
est that goes into every issue of ev
ery daily paper in every city of Am
erica. Few have any idea of the en
ormous expense that must be met, of
the problems that arise from a clear
sky and must be settled without an
instant's hesitation, problems, often,
whose wrong settlement might mean
a fortune if not ruin. The daily pa
per is as near a living thing, pulsing,
warm, keenly alive, as any man
made product can ever come, as deli
cate as a web and as strong as steel
cable.
Expecting all things of his news
paper the local business man gives,
aL a rule, only what he must and the
newspaper is yet to be published
whose advertising department will
fail to hear a grumble over its rates.
The fact that there is not an imme
diate and tangible result from every
insertion is the base for ceaseless
mutterings and even advertisers of
years whose whole business has ris
en to success through printer's ink
are prone to belittle the part played
Dy the local paper.
When Need Arises.
But should a matter arise wherein
the business man feels the need of
his paper, should his lodge or his
club or his church desire to give an
entertainment, should his telephone
bill be too high, his street car too
lacking in seats, his treatment by the
corner policeman unkind, his milk
too thin, his children too little tausrht
jn school, his political party too dor
mantah. Then he runs to his local
paper for support, for aid and com
fort. Then he demands and re
ceives its most valued asset, its
space.
"The public supports the paper.
the paper owes the public space," he
cries. But might he not remember
it is the public that supports him and
he would be aghast should the pub
lic come in and ask his goods from
his shelf without pay, no matter how
great the need or how fine the rea-
John Wanamaker
The Merchant-Prince of
Philadelphia and New York
Says:
"It seems to me that retail advertising is a very
simple matter in these times, when the newspaper
goes into every home in the land. I believe that
the retail merchant who fails to advertise, fails in
his duty to his customers. The public haa a right
to know what a merchant is doing; it has a right
to know what sort of goods he has in his establish
ment, and what kind of service he renders, and
what the conditions of his service are. It has a
right to know when he receives new goods and has
a right to know what the new goods are like.
"No merchant nowadays ought to expect the
pubic to give him its patronage unless he comes
out frankly and tells the public what reasons he
has to expect its patronage. And he ought to do
this in the daily newspapers or the weekly news
papers if there is no daily in his town. That's the
way for him to stand fair and square with the peo
ple whom he expects to come in and buy his goods.
"Let his advertisement be the truthful news of
what he is doing, and let him print it in the news
paper, where news belongs, and then he will be
playing fair with the public and deserving of its
confidence." , ;
We have a large and complete assortment of ad
vertising illustrations at your command.
Advertise in
Gazette -Times
son. The church does not ask him
tc give it pews or carpets, the poli
tician pays for his fanners, the lodge
for its hall, the gas company for its
J ipes.
A business denressinn tti rWn
inc. t ret to feel it is the newspaper,
for the average business man, unless
he is a skilled advertiser of long
standing, cuts first at his advertising
appropnat.on. In other words, he
cuts away the greatest source of sup-
Ply of !ife blood for his ailing usi
ness. If times are hard, if money
is scarce surely it is obvious that it
will take more coaxing to draw it
from its hiding places. In every
other form of activity and industry
the greater the problem the greater
the energy expended to solve it.
Why, then does the average business
man in times of depression when his
sales are his greatest problem lower
the energy of attack, withdraw his
silent salesmen from the newspaper
columns and sit back grumbling at
the present, sobbing for the past and
crying but a faint optimism for the
future.
Buy More Space
A sick man takes medicine to make
him well, a well man takes exercise
to keep him well and to make him
even stronger and a very sick man
seeks the doctor, regardless of cost.
A well business advertises to make
itself greater, a sick business con
tinues to advertise untli it gets very
sick and then instead of calling in
Dr. idespread Publicity it demises
even its assistants and wonders why
it don't get well on general princi
ples. Sometimes it does. Sometimes
people recover from serious illness
without medical aid or advice. But
the chances are all on the side of the
man who calls for understanding as
sistance. The right sort of a newspaper is
the best friend the American public
ever had or ever will have; it is the
greatest support and aid to America's
business men they will ever know.
The sympathy between the business
man and the local paper should be
as near pertect as it can re maae ana ;
as long as each side asks for and!
expects only those things that a com-1
mon justice allows the union will be J
a mutual support whose value is
limitless. I
JTnmflV PhilnsnnVnr or
, . I
Doesn t it make you smile when
you hear some irreligious smart
Aleck laughing in his sleeves when
he is told to have faith. He thinks
he's wiser than the crowd, and can't
see a thing in faith. Then he goes
his way to make a fortune in some
business that he never would start if
he didn't have faith. Faith is the
foundation of all human effort, just
as much as Truth is the one thing
the human race is bound to search
for, and just as sure as Love is the
world's compelling dynamo. Faith,
Truth, Love three aces. Add Ideals
to inspire, and Courage to persist,
an we have a full hand, it seems.
Farm Notes For
Eastern Oregon
Yellow beried Marquis is iust as
good for seed as that which is dark
and red. Often it is Dlumoer than
the hard wheat. A wet growing sea
son, late plowing of summer fallow.
or lack of nitrogen usually causes the
yellow berry. O. A. C. Experiment
station.
Sweet clover seeding on rather al
kali soils where summer frosts are
not severe should be made early so
as to get the clover up before much
crusting occurs. Fifteen pounds to
the acre is a good rate of seeding.
O. A. C. Experiment station.
Late Plowing Cuts Yield.
An average increase of nine bush
els an acre for summer fallow plow
ed April 1 as compared with June I
has been obtained at the Moro ex
periment station covering a period
of nine years In other words, 81
bushels an acre of wheat have been
lost during the nine years where the
fallow was plowed late. In addition
harder wheat is produced on early
plowed summer fallow than on that
plowed late. O. A. C Experiment
station.
Keep Wheat Types Separate.'
The winter killing of much fall
sown grain will necessitate pnniH.
erable replanting. On the light and
drier lands Hannchen, Maricut, and
White Smyrna are good varieties of
barley to sow. Where there has
been Hybrid 128, Hybrid 143 is good
for reseeding. Marquis is the best
to reseed in Turkev Red fl A r
Experiment station.
More hogs will require more bar-
ley. Oregon's barley acreaee droo-
ped off seriously during the war
years. O. A. C Experiment station.