10 Th News-Review, Rotrburg, Ore.
MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1954
Farm Forest Facts
iBrownell'Says McCarthy Plan Bypasses Rule
nists more than to create division of Communist infiltration in our
Brownell said last night Sen. Mc-
High Yielders In Grasses,
Legumes Revealed In Trials
High yielders among 4? grasses
and legume under experiment
last year in an irrigated pasture
project at Oregon S'ate College
were alta fescue, sevsraf species
of orchard, and Tualatin of the
pern
lental data obtained from an
Farm Experiment
Station Field
Study Scheduled
By ED OILDEN
County Extension Forester
What is the most important crop
that we can grow for the future
of Douglas County? Timber
what else could you expect in a
forester's column! '
But it a little more complicate
BALTIMORE - Atty. Gen. ; n.sts more i roan w cre.ia ....... - " I believe U equahv
ti .:J lnU Con 1 P- amoM IIIB UWIHC Ull iiioncia w - , . .
"FEws
awing in Uougla, County, I 5! Pf j
. if. iv.n un4iin' nu- at Res-1 ,r.e l2ari!YL .S.r.r". sirAntftv afainst those a hieh ' ticate coDimuniMl. There ii no
ton last week making a survey - on. 0, separation of places who arc Olina to tne ganger neeu mr it.
imal grazing trials ean be applied
immediately by the fawner or
livestock feeder to his own opera-lions.
lirasses used in the project were
grasses and alfalfa, several ape-1 seeded in May 1952. Yields are for
cies oi Dirasiooi ireiou, lauinoiuie jwij bcbw. mi -
clover and big trefoil of the leg- j clipped seven times with an av
m. erase 2S-dav recrowth period. A
i Southern Oregon Branch Expert
' ment Station's annual farm crops
, field day is scheduled for Thurs
! rlay at the test 'arm one-haU mil
west or Talent, it Has neen an
I nounced by Station Supt. 11
! White.
for the TRH. Wilson with his i Dower, amot.g Congress, the exec-
iiicuivu ... - uuve ana ins cuu.ia. ,
good seed source and consequent- wouid substitute rule by an
ly has fine reproduction on the ! individual for government by law."
land. He is doing his own kissing I n,.,ni urn weekly m-wsDair cdi-
ed than Vst growing timber. To on bis property and. has been do- to and publishers atten-fing the
Miuf, is. Oie only .d three J, four urn., , and m.s ud when tne attorney genera,
one that can proauce me ea; -- - - - -v;- , , nu.
When selling or logging yourihimsetf above t w a,
timber, the first thought 107
be to provide for a good seed our national security, is tragically
source. Whether it be blocks of. mistaken if he believes ne is neip-
Verv low yielders were Merlon
bluegrass and Hie European and
California burnet with the other
grasses and legumes ranging in
between.
H. A. Schoth, OSC agronomist,
who reported these research re
sults at the recent OSC grassland
field day, says that although the
one year's results are not enough
(or definite pasture recommenda
tions, they can bear directly on
production and management of
irrigated pastures after further
tests are made.
Th project, part of research to
find out bow to obtain maixmuin
profit from irrigate pastures, in
cludes small-Dlot studies and ani
mal grazing experiments. Kirst concluded
year results were ooiameo irom
mall-plot experiments, the pur
pose of which was to screen out
large numbers of treatments oe
(ore the more expensive animal
grazing trials. Schoth said the ex-
total Of 185 pounds of nitrogen
fertilizer was applied in four ap
plications in VJj'i.
Legumes were seeded in Mav
19.12 also. White and ladino clovers
were clipped six times; birdsfoot
trefoils, alfalfas and burnets four
limes; and big trefoil three times
during the season. AH plots re
ceived three tons of lime and 60
pounds of phosiphate at seeding
time. An application of iOD pounds
gvpsum was made in the spring
of 1953. , . A
The project, Schoth explained,
has demonstrated the value of
knowing the various forage plants.
Different grass and legume spe
cies vary widely in yilding ability
in pure sianus unucr innouwu,
but. we as landowners and log
gers ean leave the necessary seed
trees.
Getting quick and enough trees
proum? on Uumed off Douglas fir
1 land has always been a major for
est management problem. Clear-
Visitors can browse "free r cutting by staggered aettings has
Wheat- Allotment Rules
Probable During 1955
There is a definite probability
thit wheat allotment and market
ing quota regulations will be ef
fective in 1955, according to J. K.
Honebrake, chairman of the Doug
lac County Agricultural Stabiliza
tion and Conservation Committee.
Farmera on land on which no
wheat was seeded for any of the
crop years of 1952. 1953 or MM
may appiy for a 1955 wheat acre
ape allotment, he said.
To be considered for an allot
ment on a farm which had no
wheat seeded for any of Uio.ih
years, the farmer must apply 'n
writing to his county ASC com
mittee by June 30, 1954.
Blank application forms are
available ti the county ASC office.
321 Pacific Bldg.. Rosebtirg, for
use in filing requests for allotments.
LLOYD YOUNT
2-1812
TOP SOIL
SHALE ROCK
Air Compressor
Dump Trucks
Scoop and D rag lino
By Hour or Contract
Dealers Issue
Grain Storage
Problem Warning
SPOKANE m The Pacific
Northwest drain Dealers Assn.
was warned Friday the nation
faces the biggest grain storage
nrohleni this vear of all time.
Assistant Secretary of Agricul
ture Ross Rizlev told delegates t.
the association's two-day conven
tion that "what we will do about
this state of overproduction de
pends on what you, the grain men.
.siting willi the farmers and ranch
ers, do."
Another speaker. Dr. G. B.
Wolds, of Oregon State Colleee,
said soft wheat production in the
Rig Bend country had gone up
from 24 lo 35 per cent of the to'i'
harvest In the pail four years.
He ascribed the increase In
rigid price supnorts. which pay
the same for all types of wheat.
Varieties of soft wheat, he sail.
yield more heavily than hard.
Mason Llewellvn. Wilbur, was
elected president to succeed James
Hill Jr.. Pendleton. Ore. Maurice
Roe.' Dayton, was named vice
president.
Directors include Leonard Her
oes. Pomernv; William F. Martin.
Portland: Wendell Balsinaer.
Mora, Ore., nid J. D. Urquhart,
Lind.
The convention ended Friday.
choice" through some 30 experi
mental plots of forage, grain, and
seed crops best suited to the area.
Printed programs giving detailed
results with various crops and
showing locations of test plots W'll
be available at the farm entrance.
This year's new approach
"come and see for yourself" pro
gram was arranged in cooperation
with county extension agents W
B. Tucker, chairman, Jackson
County; Harry Clark. Josephine
County; and J. Roland Parker,
Douglas County
Forage croos fur pasture, hay
meadows, and range improvement
include new altalfa varieties fur
comparison with varieties already
oroven for the region, and va
rieties of lotus for forage survival
trials and adaptabi'ity to unirrigat
ed areas of southern Oregon.
Row spacing, rate of seeding,
and fertilizer tests can be studied
in the seed crop plots. .The cereal
nursery contains more than 100
entries of wheal, oats, and barley
under test for yields. Cereal fer
tilizer trials include effect of nitro
gen on spring so,vn wheat, oats'
and barley with rates of ammon
ium sulfate varying from 0 to 400
pounds per acre.
Field
not always resulted in good, young
tree slocking. Even where no part
of the logged-off land is more than
seed trees, scattered seed trees,
or small group cutting, it is up to
the landowner to plan for in ad
vance. If you are selling your
timber, it is a good plan to specl-
eld corn tria's compare re- f'o.,i 'V,,.. :;LV
sponse of Iriahybrid 544 and Illin- '",(" i" . b"T. "I "',
one - fourth mile irum a seeu ly in your wrmeii i-uiiun-i m.i
source, this has been true. Leav- will be left for a seed source and
ing scattered seed trees has many j actually lay the area out on the
times been followed by excessive ground. After all, the landown
windthrow, injury, decay, a n d ! er is the one' that should be
shock to the trees. I concerned about getting trees
THESE TWO METHODS Of pro- back on nis timoer growing areas
ducing more seed may not be per
fect; but in general they are
much belter than most of the for
est management that is being done
on our private woodlands.
Maybe the answer on our ma
ture forests on small woodlands
is small group cuttings. The small
group cuttings would probably be
under five acres in size. Surround
ing trees would furnish the neces
sary seed.
These small group cuttings
would start in overmature or de
fective concentrations. As new
trees stall growing on the area
that was logged, the adjoining seed
source could be removed. This not
only scatters the removal of your
old growth over a period of years
but insures a much better chance
of getting reproduction started.
When we stop to consider the
costs of planting young trees.
around $25 to $30 per acre, it pays
ing to Drotect our nation's safety
"Nothing pleases the Commj-
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The Timber Resource Review,
nation-wide
grain lo different rates of nilro- whicn 15 a "ation-wide survey
en feriHier cheeking the tree reproduction on
r , , .'areas logged since 1M7, is in full
Let Us Age Your
Beef Before Cutting
W After com pint focilittu to
ja, cuttorn cut and wrap your,
moot! th way you liko.
DOUGLAS ICE
AND STORAGE
Opan 8 e.m. to 6 p.m. Daily
I a.m. t Noon Sunday
Syhat & Short Stf. Dial 1-4 J IS
LOWER PRICE URGED
PORTLAND I The Commod
ity Stabilization Service was urged
bv the Oregon Feed and Seei
Dealers Assn. to make wheit
available lo livestock feeders at
prices lower than the market
ievel.
A price comparable lo corn
shipped Irom the Middle West w.is
suggested by the association.
KILLEf IN CRASH
PORTLAND (i John Opal
Adims. 47. IAS Angeles, was
ki'led Friday night when a car in
which he was riding plunged of
Highway 3n east of here.
The car went out of control arid
hurled down 200 feet of sleep rocky
slope
Clifford Woodward. 32. Portland,
who was riding w'th Adams, wjs
injured serlouslv
lilelude safflower. and oil ormhir-
in? crop: soybean varieties; phor- i QfpuonC Won't
mium tenax, a fibrous plant used j TT via a
in production of twine and rope: Su J ioLs II
.weet clover varieties lo study soil AllcnU wUCKTall
b'lildmg values ami possible adapt-1 n t . .
ability as a seed crop for the j Pa rtV Of MUlldt
area; and lawn and turf gfasses 7
for seed production. QUANTICO, Va. Wt Secretary of
the long and bitter days of his dis
pute with Sen. .McCarthy (R-Wis),
voiced confidence today that "the
integrity of the Army no longer is
at stake."
lie also made it plain he intends
to decline an invitation to 'in alter-Ihe-heariikgs
cocktail parly to he
given Monday by Sen. Mundt I R-
BALTIMORE Wl - The Balti- SD) !or Prt.iciPnt on hoth s;l,'
more Sun disclosed Friday receipt 1 -.Ij4nd "'"V-'18 no Arm Pers,nnel
:n lull n: a nnu; .Imi-u ....nn,...tn,i -
"nlons strict Communist lines" by i
its Guatemala correspondent to
orove that only a Communist parly j
line dispatch wuuld pass censors
Baltimore Sun
Says Communists
Censoring News
MuikU presided over the 36-dav
hearings, which ended in Washing
ton yesterday.
Stevens, here for a four-day
.n..tin., ,.r ..... nrnn..a nnna..i.
fn a front page story, the Sun : mni onrf ,r,l f.,r.-. ffi-,l
raid on June 5, the government of i also told newsmen:
ij.iatema.a susnended its constitu-1 1. "i am absolutely confident
imposed I thai there w.ll be no abuse of Army
personnel, in or out of uniform."
and
innal g.'.aranlees
rigid censorship on all outgoing
press messages, at the same time
protesting innocence of charges
inai me government is Communist
dominated.
who appear fmm now on before
McCarthy's Communist - hunting
subcommittee. One of the back
ground issues in the row with the
"Since that time a few stories , senator was Stevens' contention
flam Guatemala, must of them ! that a general whi appeared be
badly mutilated, have been al-Ue-re McCarthy had been a'uised.
uwed through the censorship, but' 2. He has no intention "wha'.sn
'he greater number of unbiased ever" of resigning, but proposes
news dispatches on current (level-1 to serve as long as he is of "sciv
onmcnts there has come from the 1 ice to the country."
neighboring stales of Honduras i 3. "I feel that the integrity 0r
and Panama, or from Mexico City, i the Army was at slake. We've been
"In order lo demonstrate the na; nu,w- ne
Fastest
aiier
ver!
Th JOHN DEERE AUTOMATIC BAITR it the fastest
baler you've ever seen , . . and makes better bales, tao'
It bales on the go, bales are wire-tied, sliced and square
cornered for easy handling and easy feeding See me
for a demonstration of the FASTEST BALER EVER!
precise n iiure oi liuaietnal.m cen
sorship," the Sun added. "Patrick
Skene Calling, the Sun's corre-1
spondent in Guatemala City, aflerj
C'-nsullalion with reporters from,
other American newspapers anj ,
news services, concocted a dis-1
natch along strict Communist
lines, written in a style amount
ing to a caricature of Communist
pronunciamentus ami confessions."
The p.'per said Catling submit
ted the Jispateh for transmission
through Guatemala communica
tions system and the message ar
rived in Baltimore intact.
A subsequent check revealed not
one word had been altered, the
Sun said
While descriptions of political
sclivity in Guatemala City, of
rgid controls imposed by the
Guatemalan authorities, and'of the
unrest inside the country arrived
unly by devious paths, the Sun
said. Calling was permitted to I
lend: I
"Reactionaries have their apuio-'
ists here, and their haying and
Kh'mng was heard long before the j
invernment look decisive action to '
stabilise the nation at this time;
when decency and courage are be-j
ng tnrcatencu hv cynical and mer.
abundanUy clear to everyone that
the Army is just as interested aVI
active in ridding itself of sunver
sives as anyone else in the United
Mates
r j(J "I Wetor Hotter
ROSEBURG
114 N. ROSE . DIAL 3-5574
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