Thursday, Sentember 18, 1941 Hcppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon 1QNE NEWS lone Takes Grid Opener From Lex By MRS. Ei,MER GRIFFITH Ernest McCabe is absent from school due to an injury sustained in the football game last Thursday. He has his leg in a cast, recovering from a broken ligament High school students and faculty enjoyed a party at the school house last Friday evening in honor of the freshmen, who completed their in itiation that evening. lone won the first football game of the season when they defeated the Lexington high school Friday afternoon by a score of 13-6. The H. E. club of Willows grange will hold an all -day meeting at the hall on September 19 with a pot luck dinner at noon. The Women's Topic club will meet at the home of Mrs. Clyde Denney on Saturday, the 7th, at one o' clock for a dessert bridge, which will be followed by the study meeting- . Out-of-town relatives who attend ed the funeral of Charles O'Conner last Wednesday were Clarence Linn and Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Griffith and sons, Robert and Dale of Port land, Mr. and Mrs. Carl P. Linn of Sunnyside, Wash., and Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Howk of Condon. Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Feldman are enjoying a visit from their daugh ter, Mrs. Neil Shuirman and chil dren, Tilia Sue and Jay, of Flint, Michigan . Miss Bertha Akers of Portland is here to visit her father, Ralph M. Akers. Miss Akers has just com pleted a course in nurses' training at Emanuel hospital in Portland, and will serve there for the pre sent Before coming to lone Miss Akers visited her sister, Mrs. Rus sel Miller, in Boardman. Farmers in this vicinity are bus ily engaged in the seeding of winter wheat and the ground is in fine condition. L. L. Putnam of Newberg is em ployed at the Bert Mason store. Mr. Putnam lived in lone in 1916. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Mhtthews at Morgan this week end were Mr. Matthews' brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Matthews, and his nephew and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Ki Line Matthews of Roseburg. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Ring drove to The Dalles on Friday and took their daughter Lois down for med ical attention. Lois is back to bed for an indefinite time. Miss Eileen Sperry departed ! ? Portland on Sunday where she will enroll in Marylhurst college. The Girls League of lone high school held their annual election ol officers on Monday. The new pres ident is Betty Lou Lindsay; vice president, Elsie Jepson; secretary, Barbara Ledbetter; treasurer, Mel baline Crawford, and sergeant-at-arms, Doris Palmateer. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Morgan re turned from their honeymoon on Sunday. They attended the state tair and then met Mr. and Mrs. Milton Morgan. Jr., in Portland and to gether they went to the coast. Mr. and Mrs. Morgan returned on Fri day. Mrs. Eddie Costillo and son, Irvin, were visiting in lone on Thursday and Friday at the home of her un cle, Harvey Ring and family, and at her cousin's, Mrs. Clarence Harris. Mrs. Costillo had just come west from Virginia to visit her parents in Portland and after visiting relatives New Features in 1942 AAA Program Receive Approval Streamlined to meet the demands of national defense and simplified for easy administration, the 1942 AAA program for Oregon is rapidly taking shape and will be available at county AAA offices in handbook form before October 1, the state AAA office has announced. Most important change in the pro gram is the abandonment of soil depleting commercial vegetable and total allotments and the substitution of a minimum soil conserving acre age requirement, thus lending great er flexibility to meet defense pro duction requirements and still em phasizing soil conservaton. Under this provision, payments on Page Three in the middle west will depart with Mr. Costillo, who is an engineer in the navy, for South America. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Balsiger of White Salmon, Wash., were visiting friends here this week. wheat and potato crop allotments will be conditioned on 20 per cent of the farm's crop land being devot ed to soil conserving uses. These in clude perennial grasses and peren nial legumes, biennial legumes, Su dan or annual ryegrass for pasture, seeded cover crops, Austrian win ter peas and vetch for seed, and certain weed control practices on irrigated land. In the summer fallow counties of eastern Oregon, the state commit tee has recommended that protected summer fallow qualify as a soil con serving use, providing 10 per cent of the crop land on the farm is de voted to permanent grasses or le gumes. The possibility of marketing quo tas for potatoes has made it neces sary to set potato allotments for all farms in the state growing three acres or more. In the past potato allotments were established only in certain counties designated as com mercial potato areas. Procedure for setting allotments has been chang ed somewhat. The wheat program remains much the same as last year, except that it will not be necessary to grow up to 80 per cent of a farm's allot ment to qualify for special crop payments. A new practice provides for application of oron or borax in connection with the seeding of le. guminous cover crops and perennial legumes. Changes in the range program, combined this year with the farm conservation program, provides for the practices of rotational and lim ited grazing under approved plans, to encourage conservation on small er ranches and on western Oregon livestock farms. EXAMINER HERE 25TH A traveling examiner of operators and chauffeurs from the office of Earl Snell, secretary of state, will be in Heppner, Thursday, Sept. 25, between the hours of 10 a. m. and 4 p. m. at the city hall. 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