IBKSH-j ft' Hi 1 U&msW " NEW FEEDERS CONSTRUCTED Dr. J. A. B McArthur. right, and Ted Sidor in spett new construction at the Eastern O ri'gon Experiment Station at Union. Work ers at the station under Dr. MuArthur's supervision have built new feeders for re placement heifers at the station. The picture above is an inside view of the feeders. (Observer Photo) . . , . , I. .i- . ! -V , ' . , t . turn i October's ricss Up On Farms 0t4(.n Ur;n prices showed mixtMl pattern of ups and downs n urtubvr and endtd up with an sverave twj per cent higher than a month age, reports S!rs, Etvera Hcrrell, extensiun asrkultursl ectnomivt st Oregon iJate Col-Uge. At the same time, reports from' the U. S. department of agricul ture show prices received by Tartness over the nation dropped iseasonaliy in October tj a point two per cent lower than last month and the lowest in nearly two yeari. National farm prices jnw stand sps per cent below Ust year and the lowest since ,-tuveiiiuer ayDf, In Oregon, October egg and turkey prices moved up, and milk and milk cows also carried high er price tags. Feed grains and wheat climbed, and hay and pota to prices also rose. These gains in state farm pric es were partially offset by lower prices on most meat animals and wool, broiler prices dropped for the second straight month, and corn prices turned lower. How 2ver, gains averaged more than losses for the state's farmers md total farm prices averaged two per cent higher than in Sep tember and four per cent above a year at;o. Meanwhile, prices received by IF.S. farmers fell to the lowest iverage in nearly two years. Cattle, hogs, corn, grapefruit, alves, and eggs all moved down. Higher prices on milk, fresh to- j natoes, and wheat only partially ffset the decline, i Prices the nation's farmers pay ( ,or goods and services also moved :ower in October, but at a much ! Sower rate, Mrs. Horrell found, farm wage latcs were down, as Ivere prices paid for farm pro ' 'uetion items. However, higher jrices paid for things used in arm family living offset these i jwer costs to some extent. With prices received by farm .rs dropping faster than prices 'aid by farmers, the purchasing xjwer of farm products slipped i little last month. The parity -Uic the government's yard- lick for measuring the relation- i ip between prices received an! rices paid by fanners fell to lie point below September this .'ear. six points below October B38, and the lowest since Aug .lit 1940. Observer, La Grand. 0r,, Fri Nw 13' WW St Valley Farm-Ranch-Home Bill Sabeut, ij ! I I T.RM i I v y&tti: i-vjiL. t- j.) ".-Ml . , PRIZE BEEF First animal to go on the auction block at 5rand Nmionai Livestock Exposition at the Cow Palace m San Francisco, Calif, was "Tim Topper, a 1000 pound Hereford, Grand Champion Fat Steer of the sbew. "Tim Tcf was bought at the phenomenal price of $5.50 per pound bv the Hyatt Itousf Hole!. etured with "Tim Topper" are its raisers,- Mrs. Joiene Hardy awi nusband (right reart of Bakersfield. Calif, and buver for Hyatt House, Jack P. Crouch. Among Valley Farmers By County Aontt Td Sidor and ChI Gavin . An alfalfa breeding method be ing tried is callel the doubleeross. It involvrs four parents and resent-! ties hybrid corn production meth ods. As srtth corn, the best combi nations of four parents (douhle-cros-s i have not been as good as the best combinations of two par ents 'singlecrosst. But with corn, doubleeros seed has been largely used because of the h'gher costs of singlecross seed. With alfalfa, however. ed yields from selected parents have bn goad. Thus, the singieerosa is also being used expcrime.itally. With averaged 76,$ pounds at weaning, and graded high utility and low good, the better lambs sold for cents a pound more. Weaning weight, conformatioc and condition of the rams were considered to selecting those for the research project. Of the 16 rams studied to date, Bogart point ed out that even'lhe poorest were rated average or better. Much greater difference would be evi dent in offspring if rams were se lected randomly, he emphasized Cattle oa farms fat Australia on s .eed .ouH be produced by March 1, 1959, were estimated at "READY FOR OPERATION a.New feeders have been bai'.t at the Experiment Sta tion at Union and are now biing ttsed for the-teeding-af. replacement heifers, .. ' ' ' - , . , , (Observer Photo) Plastic Tags For Oregon's Cattle In Use Smalt plastic tags which Oregon cattle w.ll carry from country brlmd inspection points or auction markets to the slaughterhouse w Sether it be in Oregon. Colorado, California or some other western jeXn wick congratulated 4-H Achievement Party Is Saturday At Island City enkamps on Saturday at 9:30 a.m. The money earned at this event will be used to sponsor club activi ties and to enlarge their club treasury. By JIM HUBER Union County Agtnt The Vnion Cou:itv 4-11 Achieve ment Party will be held at the Is land City Farm Bureau Hall Sat urday at 7:30 p m. Purocse of this Avpn! i to ff'vp rreop.litinn to elu'l state-are now being applied by the j members who have won ouisiand State's brand in?pectirs. inB awards durins the iwst voir The tags will be glued on thelg-.d to focus attention on club mem- j tional 4-11 Club Congress. left shoudler of all dry and cull , bers that have just completed Jean will join the Oregon dele- Cur compliments to Jean Wick for bcir.g named sectional winner ;n 4-H Forestry and a trip to Na- cows. They tell where the animals originated and are the key to the new simplified method of re-certifying counties and stale for bru cellosis. their first year of club work. igalim oi Thanksgiving day and A representative from the First i travel to Chicago, stay in the Con N'ational Bank of La Grande will I rad Hilton Hotel and participate in be on hand to present 4-H pins to youngsters in the La Grange, Ladd Fred Pope, animal division chief jCanyon, Fruitdale and Alicel areas. for the state department of agri culture. say this is how the new program works: Presence of the tag is a signal to blood test for brucellosis wher ever the animal is slaughtered. Blood samples will be seat to the State-Federal Brucellosis Labora tory at Salem and submitted the the agglutination test. If the test is clean, the herd of origin and the county will be given credit towards recertification. If it shows a reac tor, it will also be credited to the herd and the rest of the eligible cattle blood tested. Dopa.-tmcnt representatives will place tags only on dry and cull cows. In saleyards. tags will be placed as the cows first come into the yard and this wiil be done ouickly so it will not stow the fast moving operations. Pope points out that this is an important innovation for the cattle man as it greatly reduces the on-the-ranch testing which has been .going on for years. At the same time, the tagging system will bring to light any reactors and pinpsiit a i i t i Ul,w4 lAttte w , . r-'mr ified status Uhitn thp t.i0 are n rr.USl ior . . - blood tests in whatever state they appear. Oregon will continue to teat all eligible cattle sent to slaughter here. The tagging plan has been under study by federal and state officials; for more than two years. It has tone through field lists, both her" and in other states, ad is now starting full-sccle operjtion. Sev- enteen western states have receiv-i cd the "go ahead" sit"! for the tagging system and oihi-r sia'e.-; are cxoec'.ed to adort it. making thp nrft'jr.im nationwide. In addition to being a new tool fr.r re-cert ftcaticn. the tas.'?i"g system has been approved by the federal Agricultural Research Ser vice for use in brucellosis pro rfcims in slatps which haie not jet reached original moJifled cert Many Businessmen will be on hand to present 4-H awards that they have donated to 4-H'ers dur ing the past year. All clubs attending are request ed to bring cookies and the 4-H Leaders' Association will serve runch. Union County Junior-Leaders un der the direction of their new presi dent, Ruth Hoxie, will present a program and serve the refreshments. Achievement programs will be completed this week with events being scheduled at Union, Cove and Imbler. PTA's at Union and Inibler will sponsor these events and at Cove we have a joint spon sor, the PTA and Cove Farm Bur eau. The Mt. Glenn Homemakers 4-H dub pe planting a busy Thanks giving weekend as all of the girls ia the club along with the.leaders, are planning to bake sweet breads on Thursday and Friday and will stage a coDfcey food sale at Bohn- Ih? Xatiora! 4-H Club Congress November 29 to December 3. This is the first time in Union Couity 4-H history htat a club member has won state honors in forestry, not to mention sectional ho iors that Jean has won. We can't think of a more deserv ing girl, nor one who has worked harder in scoring successes in for estry, clothing and cookery. We are pleased to have Mrs Edwin Lampkins jonn our 4-H leader ranks and we think that she wiil be a real community lead er and help us establish several clubs in the Imbler-Summerville community. Wayne Bartron. principal at Im bler, is leading a 4-H health club and Mrs. Virgil Yarington has in dicated an interest in teaching a 4-H health ciub in the Elgin area. specialized growers, much as corn u. u i j seea is produced. But un like corn, where the parents are oropagated hy seed the parents of an alfalfa singlecross are propa-; gated vegetat'vely. Rooted stem cuttings, made by cutting of alfalfa stems much as we slip geraniums, are transplant eJ ti,, macunery in isolated fields resembling vineyards. Because al falfa is a long-lived perennial, fields should persist for a long time. After the first year, seed production could be as high as from row seedings, because plants increase in size with age. As with corn, the farmer would buy seed for each planting to get the bene fit of the first-generation cross. He could not harvest seed from his fields and retain the initial hy brid vigor. Top quality purebred bred ewes iambs will be offered at the sec ond annual Bred Ewe Sale at the Polk county fairgrounds located at Rickerall, Oregon, tomorrow. The sale will get underway promptly at 10:00 a.m. An outstanding ram will pay for itself within a year by producing aucve average lambs, reports Dr. Kalph Bogart, animal husbandman at the Oregon State College agri cultural experiment station. OSC researchers compared grade, weight and selling price of Bulls Net Top, Prices At Sale In Enterprise Calf voted grand champion at the Wallowa Counly Bull Calf Sale was a polled bull consigned by Wolfe Hereford Ranch and sold to Emmctt Weatherman for $325.00. The ballots gave reserve cham pion to a calf consigned by Walt Stein, but buyers liked him well enough to run the bidding up to $340.00 paid by BartoJ Wade. Average for all cahes sold was $267.00 per head. High quality bulls were consign ed, according to Elgin Cornell, county agent. The show and sale were attended by Darret Brown of the American Hereford Associa tion and Sherm Outtridge of the Western Livestock Journal, Auctioneer was Clayton Tschirgi of Fruitland, Idaho. Wallowa county rancners who Mfsprmg from outstandma rams sold bulls were: Daggett Hereford j ith offspring of average rams Th 16,277,000 head, about 4 per cent below the same date tin 1938. This marked the second consecutive year that Australian cattle num bers have declined. The reduction is the result of unusually heavy "daughter. There is some concern that this heavy slaughter will imperil the a- wiity of Australia s cattle indus try to maintain Us breeding herd However,- the. general- opMon is that most of the slaughter repre sents earlier marketing of cattle normally destined for slaughter. ana heavy cutting of inferior breed ing stock. In any esse, the heavy slaughter and large exports of re cent months can- hardly be main tained beyond the end of 1959 with out depleting the breeding herd. Sheep numbers rase to i52,sas. 900 bead, about 2 per cent above 1958. improved pasture conditions and strengthening wool prices point to a further increase. Australia: mutton asd wool exports during liOS-GO an expected to be high Exports to the United States wii probably remain an important pars of Australia's total exports. FARM CALENDAR 13-14 Pacific Coast Turkey Exhibit, Me.Minnville. J3-14 Sheep and Wcol School at Oregon State College, ending at noon, Saturday, Nov. 14. 14 Oregon Purebred Sheep Oregon reached that ' Breeders Bred Ewe Sale, 10 a m., status last July and all work done Pclk county fairgrounds, Rickreall. now fs to maintain that status. I 16 l ca workshop for soil Banch, Amos F. Evans, Hays Here ford Ranch, Kenneth and Roger Kooch, Tapoan and Gardner Locke, James MeCrae. MR. McCrae, Norman McCrae, 51 ,C. Oveson, Herbert and Rita Reavis, Walt and Herman Stein, Van Blokland Here ford Ranch, F.H. Weinhard and Wolfe Hereford Ranch. Purchasers were: Emmett Weatherman, Joe McClaran, Mrs. Estella Morton, Darrel Gelsinger, Sfencer Bacon, Kenneth Craig, Barton Wade, Truman Poulson, Bob Willis, Vernon Hays, J F. Ranch. Paul Green, Verne Colvin, Jack Read, Vernon Britton, Amos Evans, Donald Smith, R.L. Gorbett Mack Birkmaier, and John Baxter. Straw for bedding was donated by the Enterprise KFA Chapter. touna the difference is enough that one lamb crop will cover cost oi tne Better ram, Lambs sired by the best rams averaged 90 pounds at weaning, an graded good and choice. Lambs irom the two least desirable rams Horticulture Society Sets Annual Session Two faatioaaByJmcma twikm will keynote the Oregjn State Hor ticulturat Seoetys TOh ammrf meeting, Nov, srj m at Or State College. A former OregKiian. Krvin I. Peterson, assistant secretary o the U.S. department of agricul ture, wiU speak at the VrUm tnerning general VWnMt. Hi talk, titled .Yesterdav, Today oi Timorroai feBm the them of the meeting whscfc is to revtev the past 10 years aod explore the luture of thestaie Iratt and vege table industry. J. Roger Deas, o'. Us? American Can Compaiy in Sew Vork City will talk on "America's Secre Weapon" at the Thursday evenini banquet. Dea? alss is a forme West Coast resident, having live: in California much of his life. Thursday afternoon's general a ssembiy will feature a discassior an marketing by OSC agricultural economists, ti. t . Hsuanos, U. Korzai asd G. B. Wood. Most of the meeting Is divided Is to four sect fens of growers of vege table cross, apples and pears. stone fruits, and smaK fruits to dis cuss their special Interests. About 1000 growers, fieldmea. scientists and other agricultssral eaders are expected to attend the two-day nhwting ta study new de velopments production and mar- Production Of Meat To Climb High fmrm Mews Roenriup WASHINGTON UPI - The; Agriculture Department predicts hat meat production will go up in I960 to an all time high of mora thn 23 biliwn pounds. Ircduction tor tlas jear is - -oclej to tola! about SJJOO.OBS, JS0 pounds. There W be no mm record :xt year in per capita suptriy, however. The popyhithm if fcif-Ser- The 198 supply is expected to give the avarage American abesst 81 pousda of meat liurnjg Use year, six pounds less than the ecord year of i'.i The dvparime.it said the house wife also can expert tower meat pikes, first on nigber-cost cuts ai Che winter and aping, ana hen on lser-eoit cuts like ham jurger next summer and fall. Meanwhile, the department re ported that t imports of meat viii see a r.ew record this year, oing over one billim pounds far Jse first time in history. . - WASHINGTON' fPI Seiea ists working for the Agriculture Apartment aad the California Experiment JsSaiion have devei sed a sew variety sf oats. - The new plant is a red cat with .hurt straw and is resistant to edging and shattering. It as called curt" and is adaptable for past are and hay production. WASHINGTON UPI Egg traduction has dropped faster nan government experts expect 4. The Agriculture Department hd een predicting that product; art hrough the end of 1959 would ortinue above 1938 levels. A re; ort shows, however, that reduction during October cam j 4,T8t,B,M eggs, down 1 per I I from the same month te The drop apparently was the esult of low egg prices through ust of this year, the department aid. WASHINGTON UM The lumber o." work'rs on the a ki's farms is getting smaller. A t tisS of 8,600,000 persons were ; work o i farms in late October, :iis as i per cent less than a ar ago asd S per cent below the erase (ar the same month ia ie past five year. ket";ng. Sectional meetings will b- 3 Ihuisday at .30 m,m. , mum ; Fir, Mahogany and Birth ALL IN STOCK ' w- y - MILLER CABINET SHOP Greenwood and jsHensB If October Precipitation At Wallowa 1,88 Inches WALLOWA (Special October weather observations show a pre cipitation during the month of 1 88 inches. Thursday evening the Mary aiica circle met at the home of Mrs, . Verda Baird. Twelve were present. Mrs. Kenneth Running was assistant hostess. There was a business meeting snd refresh ments. ' Nov, g, a Simplicity style review was to be held at the Wallowa gymnasium. conservation district supervisors, Klamath Falls. 19-20 Oregon State Horticul tural Society annual meeting, OSC. "Service With A Smile" STOKE'5 UHI0N ON HIWAY 30 EAST i ACROSS FROM BLUE MTN. BOWLING LANES Pickup & Delivery Within City Limits At No Extra Charge! WE INVITE YOU TO GIVE US A TRY. COME IN AND FILL 'ER UP! LUBRICATION JOBS, OIL CHANGES, TIRES ANO ACCESSORIES STONE'S UNICN 76 Operated by Bob and 31m Stone WO J-49 Gel HEW ADMIRAL APPLIANCES ft FURNITURE for Price$ A LOW AS USED t La Grande FURNITURE Warehouse East Adm Ava. FARII PRODUCERS Better Industrial Eqsipmeni for A.M. SPRINKLER IRRIGATION SYSTEMS RAINBtRD SPRINKLERS Atlas Workshop POWER TOOLS Phillip Rad Haad Concrete Fattanort Bolts Chains Steal Staal CabI SATES BELTS A PULLEYS All Sir. 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Quality proteciiws for youf family, home and ear, Find art kw much money you may av witk Allatata'i fktaoua bw rates. ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANIES p.o. b ai Obsarvar Boildinj . , -;-f La Grand, Orsa Phone: WO 3-22M "i Your In good hand wrth i-iLSTATre lAaitiiiiioii au WSM18W , tt w c '" "aj