Heppner Gazette Times, March 19, 1942 5 SOIL SAVING FOR VICTORY pcruai tmm &m.i$ TfiKtn f p.om f I tfiCH SH ft TVPIC8L PfiLOUSS HILL pllllM 11111 Ijllll si4 ! 36J j;i mt no pks&!f stall 4&s jtl 49 J I 5? II k? 1 - tr M lj jp 5; jff m trw ; ss'Bn TYPICAL PflLOLSE HIU 'SSSS!,? - !: . pictures cf acrasi sojl columns to & depth of 4 feet WASTE: Wheat on eroded acres wastes soil and loses the farmer money. (Note the low yields where the topsoit has worn thin.; BOD-HOW SAMPLES TAKEN FROm A TVPICAL PALOOSEHIIL CROPPED IN A SOIL CONSERVING SVSTEm ! . Per i1! u.pr v v ; : - Ace ;; Acre - ' t f 1 i v if I : Jf'r X. i ; - i VV cross V - jj , ' I SECTION Xll V HZ tyP.AL PAIOUSE HIJ 3 l PICTURES PALOUSE FARtHS SHOWtWO ACTUAt, RESULTS Feed Crops Best On Eroded Hills Of Inland Empire Many wheat farmers in Oregon and Washington learned from pre war experience that they can grow "Food for Victory" feed crops prof itably on their eroding hilltops and steep slopes and still make as much ' money from cash crops on the re maining 80 percent of good land as they formerly made by straight crop ping it all. Farmers' testimonials to the wis dom of confining their wheat and pea cropping to the productive mid dle and lower slopes and putting the low-producing eroded acres into grass and alfalfa, either permanently or in long-time rotations, were con firmed by actual measurements made on a hundred hills east of the Cas cades. The observations by Soil Conservation service agronomists and soils men, included complete yield sampling on 33 of the hundred cropped hills. They showed that on approximate ly a fifth of the farm, when it all was cropped under the straight wheat-fallow system, the cost of producing the grain was more than the farmer received for it. The loss was being absorbed by the other four-fifths of good land. More soil was being lost every year, and the farmer's machinery, labor and other overhead mounted. The farmer who cut this dead wood from his operating expenses by seeding grass and alfalfa on the hill tops and severely eroding slopes and CONSERVATION: As much money from wheat on the 80 percent i of good land profitable hay crops on the rest for meeting dairy andj meat quotas while protecting the land. Soil Con.erv.tion Servle. photo., THEY CAN HANDLE THE TOUGH JOBS SAM VACTOR WEDS Told in The Dalles Chronicle of February 23 is the wedding of Sam Van Vactor, former Heppner boy, on the Saturday previous and Mina Johnson of Wasco, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Grosscup of Portland. The ceremony was performed by Rev. F. L. Cannell at the home of the bride's twin sister, Mrs. Lester Johnson. The bride wore an attrac tive light green costume suit, with brown accessories and an orchid corsage. Her matron of honor, Mrs. Johnson, was attired in an orchid colored afternoon dress with an orchid corsage. Mr. Johnson was best man. A small reception was held for about 20 intimate friends, mostly Dalles residents. The newly weds left immediately for a short honeymoon in California, after which they will be at home here in The Dalles. Later report from friends in The Dalles stated Mr. Van Vactor has entered the service to serve with the army intelligence service. using conservation practices on the rest of his land netted as much or more from his cash crops. When he added livestock to cat the feed crops, or sold the hay, his profits went up accordingly. One representative farm, for ex ample, showed a net year's increase in income of $419 after shifting from so-called soil -depleting program to a soil-conserving livestock set-up. As worked out for the average 420 acre farm, the net gain in income from using the erosion-control crops for livestock totaled $944. Local Items ... Clarence Scrivner was in the city Friday from The Dalles, visiting old time friends while looking up rec ords to establish certificate of birth. He has conducted a welding bus iness in The Dalles for several years but expected to start work in the shipyards at Longiview just as soon as the birth certificate could be ob tained. Marvn Klemme, republican candi date for congress in this district, was in the county Friday from Burns, making contacts in behalf of his candidacy. GARDEN HINTS SLATED On Monday, March 23, at 2 o'clock, Bruce E. Stewart and Hazel L. Dun can of the Farm Security adminis tration will speak from the Pendle ton studio of KUJ on "Planting Your Family Garden." Many help ful gardening hints will be given. Dr. W. H. Rockwell Naturopathic Physician & Surgeon Gilman Bldg. Office hours: 1 p. m. to 7:30 p. m. Exam free Ph. 522 Heppner, Or. We Sharpen and Harden Steel Shears McCLINTOCK'S WELDING & Repair Shop Heppner o Dln) The men and women in the Bell System are used to meeting emergencies and they are trained and equipped to carry on in times of special need. For years they have known the test of fire, flood and storm. That experience stands in good stead in this neatest emergency of our time. The Nation is counting on telephone workers to prove faithful to the task and they will not fail. Always before them is the tradition that the message must go through. Your dollars will help win the war -buy Defense Bonds THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY Business Office: 4 W. Willow St., Heppner Phone 5 ENTIRE STOCK of New and Used Furniture of HEPPNER TRADING POST HEPPNER, OREGON Including 2 Small Walking Plows, Harrow, Tables, Stoves, Chairs, Tools, Bedsteads and Springs, Dressers, Chest of Drawers, Rocking Chair, Dishes, Thor Mangle, 2 Washing Machines, Baby Buggies, Lots of Fruit Jars, Stove Repairs, Stove Pipes, Desk, Folding Cot, Wagon, Few Used Tires and Tubes, Rifles, Shotguns, and other articles too numerous to mention. THURSDAY MARCH 26th Beginning at 1 o'clock p. m. ITERMS - CASH CLOY DYKSTRA, Owner V. R. RUNNION, Auctioneer E. H.MILLER, Clerk