FOUR ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON. MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1942. 1 j Garden, Menus : Could Handily be Planned Together Where conditions of soil and air favor the growing of veget ables, the smallest Victory Gar den that should be planted may be considered one sufficient to supply the family with fresh vegetables during the period of harvest. In a home garden, from which " many vegetables can be taken ' when they are half mature, the harvest season ought to continue for four months. How many vegetables will a family of four eat during that period? Excluding potatoes, which are not a crop for small gardens, a ,' cooked vegetable for luncheon, plus one cooked vegetable nnd ! one raw salad for dinner, will provide an abundance of these protective foods for the average diet. The most important problem , for a Victory gardener to solve is ' what vegetables to grow, and ? how much of each, to provide this ration. And the difficulty Is to determine in advance what his family will eat. Suggestion For List As a basis for planning, bore . is a l.'ft of the most nutritious vegetables which can be grown in Vicotry Gardens; Following each vcpclable is given the number of feet in a'garden row which must be i.lantcd to produce one dish sufficient to serve four persons: Slringlcss Beans, 1 ft.; Lima beans, 2 ft.; Beets, 1 ft.; Broccoli, 1 it.; Brussels sprouts, 1 ft.; Cm .. rots, 1 ft.; Collards, 1 ft.; Sweet ' corn, 4 ft.; Cucumbers. 2 ft.; Egg : plant, 1 ft.; Endive, 1 ft.; Kale, 1 " ft.; Lettuce, 1 ft.; Spring onions, 1 ft.; Parsley, 1 ft.; Parsnips, 2 ft.; Peas, 2 ft.; Peppers, 1 ft.; New Zealand spinach, 1 ft.; Spin ach, 3 ft.; Squash, 3 ft.; Swiss Chard, 1 ft.; Tomatoes, 1 ft.; Tur nips, 11 ft. Perhaps some vegetables which you like arc not on this list. If so, they have been omitted for one of two reasons: Either they are difficult to grow, or lack nu tritive value. In place of cabbage, cauliflower and celery, their rich ly nutritious counterparts, col lards and broccoli arc listed. . By deciding how many times you will serve each vegetable in J four months, and multiplying this i number by the length of row re ' quired for each dish, you will know just how much to plant. Newsof4-H CLUBS 411 club members who have been raising Chlneso pheasants for the game commission during the piiwt several years have been advised that the game commission expects to have eggs for them about May 20. The quota of oggs, according to County Club Agent E. A. Britton, has been reduced by about two-thirds. The Dougl is county members will receive only 1500 eggs instead of more than 4000 as received before. A ques tionnaire is being sent out to each club member asking whether or not they "want the eggs at that late date and how many they will want. It is unlikely that any new members will be allowed to carry this project for this year. A group of boys and girls of Yoncalla have taken up 4-H club projects which they will carry as individuals. They have been un able this far to secure a leader, so each one will work by him self. Those who have requested material are: Rodney Joslyn, sheep; Marshall Merk, ducks and calf; Vernon Rapcr, chickens; An na Huntington, rabbits; Jack Hamilton, pigeon: Louise Merk, rabbit; John Mcfiinitip, sheep and garden; and Louise Merk, chick ens. The local leaders of Wilbur are holding a meeting next Wednes day afternoon at 3:30. County Club Agent Britton will be pres ent to discuss the exhibit of all completed projects. In all proba bility there vill be meetings soon of leaders in other communities. County Club Agent Britton is taking some sound motion pic tures to the Canyonville school for showing at 1:30 Wednesday afternoon of I his week. The 4-H basketry club of the Wilbur school had the baskets which they made during the win ter on display for the Wilbur com munity club meet In? Friday ev ening. Every member of the school took .art In a program which was directed by Mrs. Har riet Ctr.der. The motion picture, "The Worlds Largest Electrical Work tJliop," v as shown by Coun- OUR BOARDING HOUSE GREAT CAESAR , NEVER SNEAK A MAN AND PLUCK AT WIS COATTMLSVOU STARTLED ME OUT OP MV WITS-' PRESUME THE MAIL PLANE THAT WAS-AU-ER SHOT DOWN OEFEMSE 60MOS COPH.J4 BY nr StHVICC. INC. T. M Mass Slayer Caught Charged with more than 300 murders, Seattle's most notorious criminal is behind bars. He's "killer" Racoon and residents of the Kort Lawton district say he has been raiding their henhouses for over 10 years. Mrs. Ethel Redding, who lost 250 chickens to the beaslle, got sweet revenge when she captured him. ty Club Agent Britton. DAYS CREEK 4-H NEWS (By Maxine Wright) A group of girls, with Mrs. John Ferguson as local leader, or ganized at Days Creek a Rose and Klower Gardening club Monday. They call it the "Rainbow Klow er club." They elected Norma Duncan president, Donna Joyce Sumner vice-president, and Hazel Welch secretary. There was dis cussion required for the following year and also on soil preparation. rhcy plan to meet at the school every Monday afternoon. Mem bers enrolled besides the officers named arc: Alice Welch, Jane Brown, Jean Duncan, Rosemary Wright and Dorothy Brown. Maxine Wright met with her "Reliable Cookers" at the school Thursday. The exhibits for ihi. year were discussed. As there will not be any spring fairs this year, the exhibits will be brought to school and judged sometime luring the week of May 1. At .he next meeting, planned for Wed nesday, April 13, Alice Welch and Jean Duncan will give a demon stration on some phase of cooking and Lavina Perdue will give a re port on some of the work done this year. The club pledge was 'repeated at ti" close of the meet ing. LOOKINGGLASS 4-H NEWS (By Torrance Hodges) A meeting of the Lookingglass livestock club was held on Friday. Dean Eckos gave a report on "Preparing a lamb for show." Casey Morgan was assigned to give a report on "Preparing beef for a show." Zeasy Names The 11 sons and daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Uiggs Cox, of Jack sonville, N. C, all have names hc "Innlng with ?.: Zadic, .ylphla. Zulu, Zadoc, Zeber, Kebonia, Zeronia, Zcslic, lieola. Zero and Zclbvlt. sw on: ' . & i -- :m&'T jtttim"' ' M gp-, :..r . i ' . 6 ym - " "k"Jf f LE A.NDER UP BEHIND AU-,UNCL COP TOLD OV SPIES BLOW UP PLANT SOW SAW CAME rtOiM1 RtG. V. S PAT. OFF. Eat Yellow Corn, Use Popcorn In Place of Sweets Like the other yellow vege tables, yellow sweet cbfh Is a val uable source of pro-Vitamin A, which is changed into-yiftamin A In the body. White corn Is not as good a source of viWtfhlh A as yellow corn, just a$,(bleachcd leaves are a poorer subrce of A than green leaves. V Without vitamin . A,,',the epi thelial cells which form the lin ings of the nasal passagi-s, mouth, intestinal tract, and various other body cavities, lose thejr.' smooth, normal structure, and. nb' longer function as a protective, covering. Nutritional night bllndscW can bo prevented by eating" adequate amounts of vitamin A foods such as the yellow and grtl-en vege tables, butter, eggs and cheese. Probably no food Is so univer sally enjoyed for pure satisfac tion in eating as yejlfw, sweet corn on the cob. .Americans are ridiculed abroad .for chewing their corn off the cob, but we all pity anyone who hasn't stacked a pile of cobs on the I' side of his plate too many, to count, per haps. It's hard to stop when this delicious food is; around; isn't it? Corn cans well' and also freezes well. Corn can be frozen cut or on the cob, but locker space is best conserved when frozen cut. Let's plan for lots of canned and frozen corn next winter. And don't forget the whole some and delicious popcorn for pleasant winter gatherings. We ought to have fewer malnourish ed children next year, with less sweels and candy to take away their appetites for plain whole some food. Let's serve more pop corn. It is so good and can well replace some of the excess sugar on which Americans have been hazarding their teeth. Satin-Fruit Moth Barriers Changed Three Oregon quarantine or ders, dealing with satin moth and Oriental friiit moth, have been revised by the stale department of agriculture with the approval of Governor Sprague and the changes will be effective April 15. The quarantine on satin moth In 13 infested counties in Oregon -Benton, Clackamas. Clatsop, Columbia, Douglas, Hood River, Lane, Linn. Marion, Multnomah, Polk, Washington and Yamhill will not permit shipment from tnose areas upon certification of ine proper treatment, as well as upon certification of inspection ; nowmg no Infestation as already piuvinra. treatment must be ap proved by thp department. i similar change was made in Ihe satin moth Quarantine I igainst the slates of Connecticut. I Maine. Mas s a c h u s e 1 1 s . New Hampshire. Rhode Island, Ver mont and Washington. The changes are. of course, in ditve tion of relaxing the restrictions though they still provide adequate protection. The revised Oriental fruit moth quarantine adds New Hampshire to Ihe states from which certain horticultural products will not be accepted except under certain conditions. Budwood or scions ill be admitted, on permit from .r-r--V 1 i .-rV. SUITCASE with MAJOR HOOPLE IT WASN'T A MAIL PLANE AT BUL&V-THE TWIGGS IT WA FULL WHO VJERE COIN1 To THE PROPELLER. -SOME GUARD PUT A BULLET IN THE SVS TANK AND DOVMN SM& WHERE SOD vJrm TUFt a b PP -SPUTT; SAW THAT AGAIN.' the Oregon department of agri culture, from November 1 to April 1. The new order also broadens the fumigation clause on bare-rooted stock. U. S. Meat Production To Meet All Demands PORTLAND, April 11. (API David r Hunt, Chicago, predicts that America's meat production would meet all demands. Hunt, president of the United stockyards, said "there are ample livestock supplies to furnish meat products to the armed forces of this nation, to the civil population and to meet demands for export to our allies." He said cattle and sheep pro duction are at record levels and hog production is expected to in crease. Herd Slash for War Not To Affect Grazing Permit PORTLAND, April 13. (AP) Grazing rights on national for est lands will not be lost by stock men who rccluee herds to provide moat during the war, Regional Forester Watts said. He said the secretary of agri culture had given assurance that grazing rights would be protect ed under such circumstances, even though restocking was delayed. Tenmile TENM1LE, April 13. Jack Ca bot returned to Portland after spending a week in Tenmile with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Cabot, and other relatives. Jack is attending Hill military school in Portland. Mrs. Alice Tyler was shopping and transacting business in Roseburg Saturday. Mrs. Courtney Muetzcl and baby daughter, Nancy Ellen, arc at the home of Mrs. Muetzcl s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Al- bro, in Tenmile. Keith Coats was absent from school last week due to illness. Mrs. Edna Burlelson from Washington will finish the term of school as principal as Mr. Clark was called into army scrv- Mr. and Mrs. J. JcMiller were Roseburg visitors Monday. J. C. Flora spent Saturday in Roseburg receiving dental work. J. M. Calxt made a business trip to Portland last week-end. .Mr. and Mrs. Joe ilso;i re ceived fifteen hundred day-old chicks last Saturday from Rose burg. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bil of Rose burg were visiting and attending to business in the Tenmile valley Thursday. Those In kill lar-'o 111. irk h.,vkn in the n.it ten Hav .-n-n ri,hi Rathkcy, Mr. Patterson and Mr. Taylor. Darla Sue Howard is improv ing in health after having the whooping cough for the past month. Byrd Smith spent Tuesday afl ornoon in Roseburg receiving medical treatment for an injured ftKit received while working in the wttods. Big Tails The fat tailed sheep of Lebanon have tails so large that little wagons are provided to carry them. The fat In the huge tails, provides a reserve supply of en ergy when lh food supnlv runs shell. Wait for Warm Soil Before You Set Out Beans Beans, one of the Victory Gar den's most important crops, should not be planted until tiic ground is warm. They are very tender to frost or to cold cutting winds in their younger stages. Gardens with light, warm sandy soil can get an ealier bean start than those with heavy colder soil. The first crop, in which we take a gamble with the weather, should be given the warmest, mel lowest, and best drained patch in the garden. Later on when the frost danger is past it will make little difference, as the bean is the most obliging of vegetables and will even produce a fair crop in positions much more shaded than some other vegetables will tolerate. The choice of varieties is first of all whether you want to grow green beans or wax beans. Both have their advocates as to su periority of flavor. Then you n ay choose whether you want a round podded or a flat podded bean. Some claim the round pods are more tender than the flat, al though there seems no sound bas is for the argument. there are numerous excellent varieties from which to choose nad almost any sort offered by a reliable seed house will give ex cellent results. How To Avoid Rust The one warning concerning their cultivation is not to work the patch while the leaves of the beans are wet, either with dew or from rain. Rust seems to fol low. A rust spotted pod ruins it j for culinary use and this is about to a pod bean. Pole beans arc the heaviest yielders of the family, and in the small garden will give more food for the space occupied than any other crop. They are later in season and more tender than bush beans. They should not be planted until the weather is settled and the ground warm. Plant six to eight seeds in a hill and thin out to the four strongest. The hills should be two feet apart. The secret of quality and abun dant yield in pole beans is to pick them when half mature and keep the vines picked clean. Kentucky Wonder is a favorite pole variety. It will produce pods ten inches long, if you wish, but these pods will have strings. If they are picked half grown the strings will not bother and the quality will be much better. Parasites Found Serious in Moist Sheep Pastures Recent experiments with at tempts to fatten lambs in western Oregon on irrigated pastures have not proved very promising, according to a report made by Doctors J. N. Shaw and O. H. Muth of the department of vet erinary medicine at Oregon State college, in a new bulletin entitled "Studies of Parasites in Oregon Sheep on Irrigated Pastures." Because of the success that California sheepmen have had in fattening range lambs on irri gated ladino clover pastures, sheepmen in Oregon have sought information on similar practices here. Veterinarians realized from the start that the limiting factor would be parasites, which thrive best under irrigated conditions. In the test carried on, these parasites did prove to be the chief handicap to success. Only eight out of r lambs under t"st became fat in 126 days on irri galed ladino clover pastures. A death loss of 17 of the lambs re sulted from parasitism. The small stomach worm and small intestinal worm were the worst parasites, although five other kinds were found. The Investigational work re ported on in ihe bulletin is still incomplete, but the results were so significant that the report was issued in the hope that it might aid farmers in avoiding losses, says William A. Schoen- j fcld. dean and director of agricul-1 ture. Ranchers Cooperate to Keep Road Work Going ENTERPRISE, Ore.. April 13. (API Wallowa county ranch ers are bringing back the old co operative roadworking plan to help the county offset a wartime equipment shortage. New grading machinery' is un available and repairs arc not easily obtainable for old equip ment so the county has built drags of heavy timbers which carry a steel blade from old grad ers. One man in a community is de- signated as custodian of the drag and neighbors borrow it to grade dirt roads in their districts, using their own tractors and sometimes horses. Spray That Kills Weeds Aids Crops, Expert Explains , Increased yields as well as higher quality have been obtained in Vfirimic b-inric nf nmnc in Oi-rt. , .....u . . - . gon through the use of selective weuu sprays wnicn Kin oroaaieav ed annual weeds, while fertilizing the crop. While experiments with such selective sprays have been going On in thlR Gintn ftf ahraii fii.a years, the first comprehensive uuiieun giving aeiauea results, as well as directions for use of such snrava on a pnitimurrinl calo hoe Just been issued by the agricul tural pxnerimnnf taHor, at tim. gon State college. It is station ouiieun iuo, aeiective sprays lor Weed Control in Crops," by L. E. Harris, ascnrialo affMnnmid n,t G. R. Hyslop, head of the division ui plane industries. The material that mafia tha irt of selective spray a practical pro cess is a cnemical dyestuff with the imnossihle namn nf cnrUnm dinitro-ortho-cresyiate, a commer cial torm of which is sold under the trade name of Sinox. The ef fectiveness of this material was enormously increased, however, by the addition at the experiment station of the common fertilizer, ammonium sulphate. Grass Growth Aided The combination is not only a more effective weed killer than the Sinox alone, but it also stimu lates the growth of the crop to which it is applied. Common rye grass has been increased as much as 300 pounds of seed per acre, fiber flax one ton or more per acre, and grain yields increased as much as three to 45 bushels. While developing the best com binations of spray to use, the ex periment station men have also worked out practical equipment for applying the spray. Pictures and description of such equip ment are included in the bulletin. The cost of the recommended spray solution depends on a num ber of factors, although the ma terfal cost averages from $1.25 to $2.75. pet. acre, depending on the crop toe treated, size of plants, and , Weather conditions at the time of; application. Cost of actu ally applying the solution will ap proximate 50 cents per acre. Short-Measure Milk Bottles Bring Warning SALEM. Anril 13 fAPi Ti,n state department of agriculture inreaiens to prosecute jobbers and distributors who haw hA.m selling short-measurement milk ooiiics. The department said it had found many instances where quart and nint bottles havo hom-i short measure. The short meas ures range as high as a half-ounce per bottle. These bottles have been dump ed in Oregon by eastern manufac turers, the department said, and comparatively few have actually reached dairies. Most of those tested were still in the hands of the bottle dealers. Oregon Farms Yield 10,000 Tons of Scrap Ten thousand tons of scrap iron over 200 carloads have been collected from Oregon farms since the start of campaigns bv county USDA war boards, R. B. Taylor, chairman of the state board, reported this week. Jack son, with 1200 tons collected;" is high county in the campaign so far. "These 200 carloads of scrap can bo used to make 3100 anti aircraft guns to protect our figh; ing men from Jap planes," Taylor said. Enjoy Trip to Coast Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Delaney. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Wimberly, Mrs. Maude Poole, Frank Poole, Mr. and Mrs. George Gaskey and son, Donald, and Miss Lucille Lenox, all of thi3 city, enjoyed a trip to the coast Sunday. POLICE RESERVES Next meeting Wed., April 15th, Field trip Sunday, April 19th. H. C. STEARNS Funeral Director Phone 472 OAKLAND, ORE. Licensed Lady Assistant Any Distance, Any Time Our service Is for ALL, and meets EVERY NEED Maintain Soils For Long War, AM Chief Says More conservation farming on more farms than ever before Is needed if agriculture meets pro duction goals this year and for the duration of the war, 1200 Ore gon AAA county and community committeemen were advised this week in a letter from Fred S. Wallace, national chief of AAA. Conservation practices are needed that will get greater and wiser production not only this year, but more production per acre and per farm next year and for the duration, Wallace advised the committeemen. He called on the committeemen to do two things to carry out agriculture's war production task: 1. Use every method of adjust ment to get the right amount of each product, without waste. 2. Use every method of conser vation to increase yields this year and build up the soil for bigger output next year. "We were in the last war only 19 months, and yet agriculture was barely able to get by disre garding the future by reckless ly plowing up additional acres, by shooting up too much of our ammunition in the first wild vol ley," Wallace's letter continued. "This time we cannot possibly get the needed production simply through a plough-up spree." Oregon farmers and ranchers, cashing in on soil fertility built up through conservation work in recent years, have a running start on this year's production goals, Robert B. Taylor, chairman of the Oregon AAA committee, points out. Citing the increased interest in pasture and rango im provement practices, and the big demand for lime and phosphate through the AAA program, Tay lor believes that Oregon farmers are laying a foundation for heav ier production for as long as the war lasts. $200 in Prizes Posted For State 4-H Contests OREGON STATE COLLEGE Three new state-wide 4-H club contests, in baking and canning with prizes totaling1 $200 have been added to this year's state fair 4-H club awards through a con- The Simple Truth about Colorfully illustrated A IWIJKfm handbook on how to m IflV Urn select, use, serve Simple, understandable "de-bunking" complex etiquette you will 6nd every thing yon want to know in WINES. .and WINE SERVING This book mailed direct to you Without x peaae. Fill io and mail the coupon below. MAIL COUPON TO WINE COUNCIL OF MAME- ADDRESS. CITY w 27 "THE TOP OF THE MARKET TO YOU" PAYING TOP PRICES FOR YOUR POULTRY, EGGS, MOHAIR, WOOL VALLEY POULTRY CO. KEN REYNOLDS, New Owner Is a great guy-tin the papers. But we haven't seen him yet in real life. We are just doing the best we can, and don't claim to know all the answers. But one thing we do know "You Own the Profits" DOUGLAS COUNTY Farm Bureau Co-Operative Exchange ROSEBURG, ORE. tribution of the Spreckles Sugar company of California, according to Miss Helen Cowgill, assistant state club leader. Cash prizes will be offered In a cup cake baking contest for cook ery one girls, a sponge cake con test for cookery two girls and a canning contest for all divisions of canning club members, accord ing to Miss Cowgill. One contes tant in each contest from each county will be eligible. County club agents have been given complete information on these contests. Free Pickup and Delivery Expert Work Quality Materials Fix Your Shoes Don't Throw Them Away CHAPPELLF. S SHOE REPAIR 226 N. Jackson Phone 85-R Lymon L. Spencer Representing New York Life Insurance Co. 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