Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1924)
1) PAGE THREE THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1924. Morrow County Farm Bureau and Extension Service News Item of Interest to liocal Farmers and Stockmen Published by the County Agent and the Farm Bureau i 1 What I Think About 1925 mmal Farm Bureau Meeting, Hcppner, Dec. 20th County Asront Makes An nual Report. Tv ar-nnal rrrt of tV.e CV.jr.ty I'M mhich rvt-r the t me frt.m IhrffUr 1. to N promt r "'X 124. bofii ci-:rpt.d and for- Nr4rJ to votTh!i-. Tbe- n port c-ott.-pnvrv sevt r.ly t n p J ar and in pi'iden twot.iy f irr pirtun iiutrst inc the work 1S yr and rumer cus tab' r-.i.irj fruin yic!s in the nursrrii s, -Tut count, ai d otver v!ub .Ii'j. Turing tS year 120 diiVK ?re spent in the orT.ee. I n the l d. A total of 40 tarm v. it? rre made and 71.5 o rf.ee calls reja tv tr entr-nsion work rt-ct. d: TtK pfrsnai If.if" wore wr:tirn and j circular ;ctur, totaling i.-ta copies ir.rtucd. Twenty-three dctrontrstion meet ir.jrs :tn an attendaree of 519 and ch-r meetit.f? to the number of 27 with an attei.dar.c of 147 were he.d. During tr-e year 133 pr?s artic'es -ere written and punished in the Farm Bureau News and county pa pers, A copy of the report has been filed with the County Court and a copy is on file m the County Ajrent's of fice where anyone interested can in spect the rame. The County Agent appreciates very much the coopera tion piven him by the farmers of Morrow county the past year and wishes to state that the work for the fuure will consist largely in an en deavor to make farming in Morrow county more profitable and pleasant. The work for the coming year will center largely on the question of re ducing production cost, and more economical production of farm crops, livestock and livestock products. Wild Horses. The wild horse situation in Eastern Oregon is becoming of supreme im portance to the stockmen of the state. A reeet survey by the Oregon Humane Society estimates that with a hard winter this year at least KH 000 horses running wild on the range in Eastern Oregon would die. The organization is considering legisla tion providing for the handling of this trouble. At the 124 meeting of the Oregon Woolgrowers Association a permanent committee was appoint ed to draft and submit to the Legis lature a law providing for the con trol of the horse situation on the ranges. Large numbers of these horses are running loose in the foothills and on the Forest Reserve in southern Mor row county. Complaints have recent ly been made that much damage is being done in the Boardman com munity by hordes from the range, breaking into farmers' haystacks and fields. The situation is getting wore rather than better and will require drastic action to control in the next few years. Some states provide for the periodic rounding up of all stray bors.es and disposal by sale or killing those unclaimed. Something of that kind is urgently needed in Oregon. Unless the people get together and demand action it will probably go by the board at this year's Jeg:slature. TME annus! meeting of the Morrow County Farm Bureau will he held in the Odd Fellows Hall at Heppner, Satur day. December 20, starting at 10:30 A. M. Some of the important matters that will be taken up regarding the county o-gan7ation are. revision of by-laws, and a reduction of the annual dues, which were suspended last year, to a very nom inal figure. A committee on farm labor is now working out a plan to handle farm tabor for the coming year. The question of the continuance of harvest wage conferences will be thresh ed out at th.'s meeting. Among some of the matters that will be considered by the resolutions committee will be the pro posed child labor amendment to the constitution and methods of handling the wild horse problem in Eastern Oregon. The speaker of the day w ill be Mr. Paul V. .Maris, Direct or of the Extension of the Oregon Agricultural College. Mr. Maris is a Morrow county boy, an exceptionally good speaker and well informed on the agricultural situation throughout the state of Oregon. The meeting will be held in the Odd Fel lows Hall and lunch will be served at noon in the hall dining room. Committees appointed at the Executive Committee meet ing December 1 were: Program Committee, R. Y. .Morse, C. B Cox, V. H. Cleveland. Garnet Barratt; Labor Committee, Fred Raymond, William Padberg, Ed Rietmann. Leonard Carl son, R. A. Campbell; Committee on By-laws, G. N. Peck, Earl Eskelson, R. A. Campbell; Committee on Nominations, R, V. Turner, Oscar Keithley, R. B. Wilcox. Foreign Wool Notes. The U'2"-24 wool season in Argen tina ended with the month of Septem ber. Experts for the season amount ed to only pounds com nsrod with 33S.730.604 last year, 440. 2 574 in 1921-22 and 291.5S0.390 in U'20-21. The countries purchasing most heavily last year were Germany, the United Kingdom and France whereas the United States, the prin cipal buyer in 122-23, took only a little more than 10 per cent of the total shipments. Opinions as to the com in clip in Argentina differ radically. While a report from the Yorkshire Observer published in Foreign Crops and Mar kets last week predicted a 10 to 20 per cent increase, another report just Farm Bureau Activities. During the past year the Morrow County Farm Bureau has taken an active interest in many items of county-wide importance. A few of theri activities are listed below. The Farm Bureau took an active lead in the calling of a Morrow Coun ty Harvest Wage Conference and a District Wage Conference at Moro in June. At this conference, a minimum transient harvest wage scale was set which, according to reports, was fol lowed closer than ever before. In cooperation with the County Agent, data on used paper mill can vas was secured and to date 1600 lbs. of this canvas, which is 4S-ounce ma terial, in good shape, has been ship ped into the county. Arrangement received from Ernesto Tornquist of i have been made for the handling of Buenos Aires states that the new this by dealers in the countv the com- Remedies. The trouble with Agriculture is that it is a gigantic business that is poorly managed as an industry. Deal irg with an industry that has four million stockholders and no officers is about as difficult as trying to climb a tree that is ft thousnad feet to the first limb. Agriculture needs a board of directors with ft full set of officers to direct and guide the business if they could get a sufficient number of proxies authorizing therr. to act. No Industry can succeed that keeps on producing without paying any at tention to the probable demand for iti produet. Neither can Agriculture ever expect to get on a sound basis. Any scheme to help Agriculture that does not take into consideration the adjusting of production to demand, will never be of much benefit. There is not much hope of ever get ting any legislation through Congress that will have for its purpose the fix ing or rabin? prices of farm products for the great industrial East and the cotton-growir.gr South is not in favor of any legislation that will further increase the already high cost of liv ing. Therefore, the farmers must work out some kind of a scheme that will enabie them to do it themselves. The farmers should have a national advisory council corr.po.-ed of produc ers, one member from each state, ap pointed to start with by the Governor of the state. They should gather sta tistics of probable producion and con sumption throughout the Nation and the world. They would then be able to advice the farmers so they could, if they wouid, adjust their producion to probable consumption of the va rious crop.. This advisory council should meet at least four times a year and go over all statistics and informal ion, that had been collected by its officers and experts and, after thoroughly consid ering them, iuc a report together with tfieir recommendation us to whether it' ere thou id be an ircrea or a di'CniLH' in the production uf the various products,. In time 1 bctieve this council would be luokcd upon as the real head of Agriruhure, and ell legislation ar.d everything pertaining to farming ar.d livestock wouid coiue through tnis avury council, in order to t;,rt thin, though, w" have got to find a rich philanthropist who will finance it, or borrow the money iVom the Government to put it on it k feet un til it cou'd be financed by the pro duce;. There can be no doubt, but what Agriculture needs a real head, I governing body. This may not be the way to get it. so if anyone hut a bet ter plan for creating a governing body, let's hear from them.- Cha. E. Collins, Kit Carson, Colorado. shearing will give a clip somewhat smaller than last year, a shrinkage of from 10 to 15 per cent being estimat ed. Stocks of wool at the Central Produce Market in Buenos Aires on September 30, 1924. totaled 2.358.922 pounds compared with 1.543.220 at the same date last year. Stocks in consignees hands and in exporters' warehouses were estimated at 13,227, 600 pounds. Wools are reported as arriving quite freely from the Northwestern Karroo Districts of South Africa and auction sales range from 200 to 300 .es per week. The condition of these wools is generally good, being exceptionally fine in quality owing to drought but rather sandy, a condition which depreciates the yield approxi mate two to three per cent below last year's average. The condition of wools from the mountain districts and high altitudes wilt be excellent this season as late rains have recent ly fallen. The outlook for the coming clip in New Zealand is good. A mild and open winter has been experienced and this combined with the prospects for an early spring seems to indicate that the new clip will be well grown, sound and of good color. Last sea son's clip was estimated at 208,987, 15 pounds. U. S. D. A. OKKGON WOOL GROWKHS CON- VKYTION J AM' Alt Y li AM) 15 Tb date of the annual meeting of the Oregon Wool Growers Associa tUiii hat been art for January 14 and K1 at I'ciidietnn. Important matters of utt treat to lncp and Wool grow ers of the Mi(. will be up fur con . . deration. The program will include talks by a number of specialists on ahenrp and wuul. The JVndlelon Com mercial AftMtriation will nave charge or the banquet again this year and ruttit the best time yet. Seed Testing. Farmers of Morrow County can get an accurate te.?t on the germination and purity of their seed by forward ing a sample to the County AJent who will have it tested free of charge at Corvallis. Two most important items to be found out are the purity. '-Specially regarding the presence of noxious weed seeds, and the percent age of germination. The kinds of im purity are many times more import ant than the amount. Seed with pur i'.y test of 99'c may be undesirable if lie is noxious weed seeds. Accord ing to Mr. E. N. Bressman, who has charge of the seed testing laboratory at Corvallis. if Vo impurity is seed of Huekhorn. it may mean as many as 22"0 seeds in a pound. Seeded at the rate of 100 pounds to the acre, this would mean distributing 22,500 weed -eeds to each acre. In taking sam ples, seed should be taken from sev eral parts of a sack and from all sack. If seed in different sacks is not uniform separate samples should be ier.t in for tho.se sacks, otherwise the sampies from different sacks can be mixed together. For small seeds as alfalfa and grass 2 ounces, or one nandful, or for large seeds like wheat 1 ounces or two handfuls, should be ent. ing year. Ihis win let farmers buy canvas when needed instead of hav ing to wait from three to four weeks for it. This used canvas sells at about half the cost of new- IS-oz. ma terial. The Farm Bureau took an active interest in support of the McNary- Haugen Bill, adopted resolutions, writing letters to many Congressmen urging them to support the bill. Called a Wheat Growers Confer ence at Lexington in February to work out a wheat growers program for hte county. Assumed responsibility for getting the rodent tax on the ballot in No vember. Furnished money to allow the County Agent to bring in certified Federation seed wheat to try out this variety. Sent two delegates to the Agricul tural Economic Conference at Cor vallis in January. Nursery Yields of Spring Wheat, 1921. Twenty-two varieties of spring wheat were planted in the Eight Mile nursery Mareh 25 and 25. These were planted in two series of four rows each and the two center rows of each series harvested and threshed at Moro. In the lone nursery the ground was rather dry at the time of seeding and had practically no rain until har vested. The yields were low, but showed the wheats that had the drouth resistant qualities necessary for spring wheats. In each nursery Sunset was one of the leading wheats. This wheat was at least a week ear lier than any other wheat in the nur sery which let it get out of the way of some of the hot dry weather. Oth er wheats showing up well were Onas, Canberra, White Federation and Baart in the lone nursery. In hte Eight Mile nursery White Federation was the highest yielder with a yield of 25.6 bushels. .This wheat is a selection from the federation wheats brought from Australia about nine years ago. Hard Federation, Federa tion, Onas and Baart with Sunset were the highest yielding wheats in this nursery. The following is the acre yield in bushels of spring wheat grown in two adjacent rows at lone: Sunset 12.3 Baart (check) 10.46 Hard Federation . 9.6 White Federation - 10.6 Bunyip 8.4 Quality 9.1 Bobs 10.1 Red Bobs 10.2 Boadicea 10.2 Federation 8.4 Redsaack 7.7 Currawa 11.7 Onas 12.2 Major 10.5 Firbank 9.4 Canberra 12.9 Marquis 8.7 Red Chaff 8.2 Bluestem 8.3 Little Club 5.6 Marquis III 7.1 White Chaff Federation 9.3 Yields of spring wheat varieties grown in nursery rows near Eight Mile, Oregon, 1924: Sunset 23.0 Hard Federation 20.3 White Federation 25.6 Bunyip 17.7 Quality 18.7 Baart 21.1 Bobs 19.2 Red Bobs 15.3 Boadicea 17.8 Federation ...i!0.1 Currawa 1.1.7 Onas 21.0 Major 19.6 Firbank 13.2 Canberra 19.1 Marquis - 13.S Red Chaff 14.2 Bluestem 14." Littie Club 12.8 Marquis III 12.7 Federation, Wh. Gl. Sel 17.6 Irrigated Pastures. With America having possession of more than one-half of the entire World's gold supply, with the World War problems substantially all readjusted; with Labor all em ployed at useful work at profitable wages; with the products of the farm at last eoiittuanding reason ably good prices; with interest on our foreign debts at least being partially paid; with our taxes di minishing, with the cost of Gov eminent gradually decreasing from the World War period, with tre mendous orders heretofore held in abeyance now being released by re tailers and distributors; with pes simism dead; with optimism alive and vibrant, 1925 is going to be the greatest year for business in the history of America. i t ll,l j John U.Ftrri One of America's Great Publishers By Arthur Brisbane Farmers Oppose Child La bor Amendment. FOREIGN SMALL GRAINS. damage to Australian grain crops reported iat week is not serious, ac cording to information cabled to the Department quoting the Australian I" partment of Agriculture. Fore casts of production remain unchanged and private reports indicate an early and favorable harvest. The f.rt forecast of the Argentine busr.eia harvested in 1023-24. Light bushel compared with 217,000,000 bushels barveste din 1923-24, Light rainfall with temperatures below normal are reported for the week end ing November 17. Although more moisture is needed the cool weather is favorable for filling of the grain. Harvesting of wheat now in progress in Ecuador marks the beginning of the Southern Hemisphere harvest. The crop of Ecuador is reported to be practically a failure because of the unusually early rainy season in the Sierra. BOX SOCIAL AT ALPINE DEC. 20. A box social will be held at the Al pine Kchool house, Saturday, Lec. 20 to raitw? money for the conntruction of rabbit pi-ni for drive thii winter. An interesting program will be put on by the members of the Farm Bu reau, starting at 8:0(1 p, rn. Ladle are requested to bring boxen which will be auctioned off after the program. The production of livestock on ir rigated land depends largely on mak ing the farm keep the stock as econ omically as possible. Experience throughout the west on reclamation projects has shown that irrigated pas tures furnisned an economical me'.h od of providing summer feed for all kinds of livestock. The County Ag ent is planning on starting of pasture demonstrations on the irrigated farms of the county the com ing year. Experience on reclamation projects throughout the west show that a good irrigated pature should support two mature cows or their equivalent for at least five moths of the year. This varies with the soil and climatic con dition but is believed to be lower than can reasonably be expected on irrigated farms in this county. Some of the essentials for success ful irigatcd pastures are as follows: One of the commonest causes of fail ure of irrigated pastures to produce is that the.se pastures are put out on so-called waste land which will not grow other crops to advantage and usually will not produce pasture with high carrying capacity. To get more efficiency and carrying capacity, good land should be utilized for pas ture. W here it is desirable to use wane land the carrying capacity will not be high. The seed bed should be weil pre pared and firm. Good seed must be used or the stand will be poor. Only seed that has been tested and shows a high germination should be used. The supply of water must be ade quate to provide frequent irrigation. Irrigations must be more frequent and lighter than ia commonly used for alfalfa as the pasture grasses are hallow rooted and require moisture close to the top of the ground. Management of the pasture is very important. It should be divided so that half of it can be pastured while the other half is irrigated and given an opportunity to start. Stock must not be put on the pasture wheh it is wet or kept there too long and the pasture eaten too close to the ground. Pastures must be given an opportun ity to get a good start before being used so that the grass can develop a good root system. To keep weeds down, it is advisable to clip the pas ture frequently the first year. To summarize the essentials of a successful irrigated pasture requires good land, thorough preparation of the seed bed, good seed, and intelli gent management, which includes proper irrigation and use. In another article we will give information re garding the best mixtures to be used in this section of the state. Farmers organizations in many states are taking an active stand against the child labor amendment. This amendment is also being opposed by a large majority of the farm pa pers throughout the country. A num ber of farmers organizations have adopted resolutions opposing it un less the children on farms were ex empted from its provisions. The series ' amendment, which is known as the L'Mth Amendment and will be acted up on by State Legislatures this year, gives Congress the right to limit, reg ulate and prohibit the labor of per sons under eighteen years of age. That there is much abuse in using child labor in factories is admitted by these organizations but they ques tion seriously the advisability of turning over to Congress the right to regulate all child labor. It may mean, according to many of them, that people under eighteen years of age will be forced to lead lives of indolence. The outstanding objection to the amendment is that it puts the age limit too high and gives Congress a dangerous and unresricted power over all the children of the country. A resolution by the Ohio Farm Bu reau declares that "idleness by law is as repulsive as involuntary servi tude." This question is worthy of serious thought from people in Mor row county, as the amendment will be before the Oregon Legislature this winter for action. Barley. HONEY IS BEST SWEET. Honey, in addition to having more sweetening power than granulated ugur, contains the much needed min erals, which are removed entirelj when sugar is refined. Cirn yrup or molasrfes are inferior to honey, the former lacking in both sweetening power and minerals, and the latter containing too mucri lime which is added during the refining process, to be wholesome. Honey is the only commercial sweet iicv known to con- With Oregon lambs at 10 cents and wool worth 40 cents, the ewe will pay about $5 for the feed and pasture she consumes annually, reports the state tain vitamines, says the sUte college a day can be expected, says the college animal husbandry department, experiment station. perimeni station. One of the possibilities for cutting down the wheat acreage in Morrow county is to grow more barley. Ac cording to experiment station results a good spring barley generally will out-yield any other spring-sown crop in Eastern Oregon. There is a home market for this crop at all times. The possibilities of winter barley are being investigated by the Experiment Station and the County Agent and it is hoped to have a good variety of winter barley for distribution with in the next two years. A large num ber of spring barleys will be tried out in small plats the coming year. Much of the land not planted to wheat this Fall should be planted to hariey in the hpnng. ALPINE APPOINTS RODENT COMMITTEE. At the meeting of the Alpine Farm Hueau December 6, a rodent commit tee was appointed to cooperate with the County Agent in control of rab bits and squirrels in the community during the year. The committee appointed was Ralph Finley, Joseph Pringle, Mike Szcpan- eic, uenry lafel and Claude Waid. The Grain Marketing Company, or ganized last summer as a cooperative grain company through the Middle West, announces that they ara hand ling 50 of the terminal grain busi ness of the country. Without any campaign for members, 70,000 have signed up as members of the com pany. In fattening Oregon range lambs. a ration of one pound of grain a day together with all the alfalfa hay they will cat a gain of one quarter pound on neighboring planets? It Isn't im possible. Nothing is impossible that men can imagine. Successful poultrymen often ask the station what is the best ration to feed for winter laying. The same ra tion used at any other time of the year for egg production will give good results in the winter. Plenty of grit and green food are necessary at this season. Skill in feeding is important at any time of the year. It is most important in winter feed ing, advises the O. A. C. experiment station. Is broadcasting to all the World this season "Come! W. ar Ixttu- prapand than Tr to tatartala )ru and auk your Tltlt a wondnrf ul xparlana. If you have never been to California It ahould ba the effort of your life to go. When you are ready to plan the trip let the Union Pacific help. Send word to the undenlgncd by phone, or null or call. I will giv you the benefit of my personal knowlrdg and experience, or I will ntf you tfa nil helpful Mteteel SMttif M had. I know every route, every train, every kind of cquipnwtit end the exact coat. I wiu ecure yourtleeping cex accommodations, provide you with an outline of your, trip, end deliver your tickets. You need not leave your home or your office to attend to botltereome details, f have the brat there u, and it etiall be youn tha moment I know you deiire it. L. PURDIN, Agent Heppner, Ore. Railroads and Someday. Semi-Flying Machine. Hearing the Atom. Her African Blood. President Coolidge will ask lower railroad freight rates and suggest that the roads can make up the dif ference by practicing economy. That is not the railroad idea, how ever. President Coolidge will find that railroad management and rail road wishes are a department of our Government, although not listed as such in the Constitution. The voters, when less prosperous times make thinking necessary, will decide to have a government running the railroads, instead of railroads running a government. This is not said unkindly, or by an agent of bolshevism. The writer has a few thousand shares of railroad stocks, a few hundred thousands in railroad bonds. But it is desirable for railroad men to realize that it is not going to be mid-Summer forever. There is cold weather coming. Admirers of the late Theodore Roosevelt will be interested in the statement, made by the authority of the family, that a newcomer from the mysterious realms of the infinite is expected in the Longworth family. Mrs. Longworth was Miss Alice Roosevelt. Those who have read Galton's Her edity know that the greatness of the father is handed down through the daughter, not through the son. The new little Roosevelt-Longworth may prove to be the reincarnation of Theodore. It will be interesting to see how his little teeth develop. Monsieur Laur, eighty-four years old, has invented the aero car, and the French government will build a sample "aero line." The car, 7 feet high, 7 feet wide and 40 feet long, is suspended be low a cable forty-two feet in the air, slung from poles far apart. Each car carries 100 passengers and the speed is fifty miles an hour. Most interest nig of all, the car, hanging below the steel cable, is driven along as a flying machine is driven. A powerful propeller, nine feet in diameter, worked by electric current taken from the cable over head, pushes the car. With power enough, and a big pro peller, the car might as easily go 100 miles an hour as 50 miles. Then "New York to Chicago above the railroad, in 9 hours, for 9. Dr. Mary Walker cared little about fashion, but the latest news from Paris would interest her. The new "dress" is to be more like trousers than dress, a Bort of slit skirt. Politics, athletics and common sense will finally do away with hte cumbersome skirt. That impediment was all right in the harem, where It was bom. It's all wrong on the pub lic street, collecting germs, prevent ing free movement. A lawsuit raising interesting ques tions is coming. A young man named Rhinclander, whose people for sev eral generations have not worked for a living and are, therefore, called "aristocrats," married a young wo man with negro blood. Her people have always worked hard; therefore she is no aristocrat. The young man, annoyed by publicity and by the Ku Klux Klan throwing stones through his window, now sues for annulment of his marriage, saying be was de ceived as to his bride's race. She told him nothing about the negro blood. Tf the young womnn in the ease fights, the question of her constitu tional rights might be taken to the United States Supreme Court. New York State legalizes marriages be tween Africans and Whites. The young woman in this case is nearly white. A man in New York could not got a divorce on the ground that his wife had deceived him about a British or Celtic strain of blood. What will the Supreme Court say about a few drops of colored blood? Atoms of Iron, so small that you wouldn't notice ten thousand of them in the comer of your eye. make a roaring noise as they rush to a mag net held near them. Scientists of the General Electric Company have perfected a device that makes the roaring sound audible. If that's possible, may we not some day hear noises of our distant relations Dressmaking Bring your work to Mrs. Geo. Moore. All work guaranteed. "Service Plua Farm Practice Oregon Agricultural College WINTER SHORT COURSES Eleven course with names and date ka follow. ; Dairy Manufacturing January 5-31. Dairy Herd Management January G to March 20. Fourth Annuel Canners' School February 2-20. Poultry Husbandry February 2 to March 14. Land riaMiflcatien and Appraisal February 2-7. Farm Mechanics I. Farm Power and Power Kquipment, January 8 to March 10. II. Ga Engines, Tractors, and Equipment, January 19-23. III. General Farm Repair, Janu ary 26-30. IV. Farm Water Supply and San itation, February 2-6. V. Ga and Electric Light and Power, February 8-13. VI. Farm Concrete Construction, February 16-20. For full information address DEAN OF AGRICULTURE, CORVALLIS, ORE. Maxwell - Chrysler Automobiles Fisk Tires and Satisfactory and Well Known Atwater-Kent Radio Sets. GASOLINE, OILS and GREASE Guaranteed Automobile Electricians and General Repair Shop. CUT GARAGE WALTER L. LA DUSIRE, Prop. CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS FOR HIM Are you wondering what you will get for Him? Why not some of the articles suggested below) Men always need any of the sev eral things we are advertising, and there is no place in town where your 1 00 cents will go further than in my shop. ' SOX 50c to $1.25 SILK - SILK & WOOL WOOL A complete assortment in the popular colors. Something the man will be proud to wear. NECKWEAR 50c to $2.50 You will be surprised when you see these new and beautiful creations in ties. For Young Men Young men ara not easy to auit nowadayi, but we have many ar ticle! that will auit any young man that we know. The brgiht colored article! of wearing ap parel, the anappy accesiorlea that every young man feela that he needa to be dreaied like "the other fellow"; they can be found in our Man'a Shop. For Older Men Older men look to the amaller artcilei of dreei to make their attire complete, even more than young men. They know through experience that to be well dressed it is extremely important to look to the little details. They know that it la Impossible to ever have too many pain of sox, for in stance. Therefore that sort o f gifts are always acceptable. Come In and select yours now. We will place them aside until Christmas. There may be other things such as Sweaters, Suits Overcoat's, Garters Suspenders SHIRTS I have never had a more complete assort ment of shirts in plain and fancy colors. Priced frtrtl $2.00 to $9.00 GLOVES LINED AND UNLINF.D Something the man who drives a car will appreciate I Make a Special Effort to Carry the New and Up-to-date Wear DAVID A. WILSON EVERYTHING IN MEN'S WEAR