THE BANNER-COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1922. Page Five AGRICULTURE AND LIVESTOCK NEWS Up-to-date Information to Help Develop Progressive Farming OREGON'S HOG SITUATION We are all familiar with the fact that there is a serious shortage of hogs in Oregon as well as other States of thePacific Northwest. We have been aware of the fact that large shipments" of live hogs have been brought into the Oregon market cen ters from as far East as the Dakotas and Kansas. It has been apparent for some time, especially since the price of wheat has come down that the farmers of Oregon can profitably go into the raising of hogs for market. It may be interesting to review at this time what has been accomplished in the way of increasing hog production in Oregon in the past 2 or 3 months. Around the first of the year it was comparatively easy to assemble a car load of breeding sows for sale; in fact several such sales were held, and wherever good breeding sows were offered in a sale, they brought prices satisfactory to . the selleras well as the buyer. It is apparent now that brods sows have been scattering out over the farms of Oregon, not only through carload sales but in sales of one, two or three head, with the re- auiL inaL at me present, uuie n seeiiis onext thing to impossible to find a brood sow that is for sale. Apparent ly so far as the supply of brood sows in Oregon is concerned, they are all being put to maximum use. In the past two or three months quite a large number of good quality brood sows have gone through the Portland Union Livestock market to the killers. Steps have been taken now by the Live stock Exchange and the Portland Un ion Stock Yards Company whereby no good piggy brood sows are allowed to be killed, but whenever offered they are" picked up and put in a special di vision in the Stock Yards where they are immunized and held for sale to the farmers of the Pacific Iorthwest at practically pork prices. Quite a business is being done in these brood . sows at the Stock Yards at the pres ent time. On account of so many hogs arriving at the market, it will probably be possible to assemble as many as a carload of these brood sows on fairly short notice. This in dicates that every effort is being made to conserve the hog breeding stock of Oregon at this time. It is possible that the point may be reach ed where it will be necessary to bring in brood sows from outside points be cause the demand is so strong. Here is an opportunity for farmers living within a radius of fifty miles or so of the Stock Yards at North Portland, and who want one or two piggy sows, to get what they want at reasonable price. They will be crated and ship ped. Address communication to Portland Union Stock Yards Co. C. M. McAllister. maggot injury is easily possible and practical by use of cheap screen frames over the beds. Roof shaped frames 10 feet long, 2& feet wide and 1 foot high made of light material and covered with coarse cheese cloth or wire screen give excellent protec tion from the little flies that deposit the eggs. These are light enough to move with reasonable ease and with any care will last several seasons. The slighf shade afforded by the screen assists in the growth of rad ishes and keeps them tender for a longer period. With three such frames placed over successive plantings 100 per cent maggot free radishes may be had all season. O. A. C. Experiment station. TfVA TTTMT THE lyf Watch Brooder Temperatures Much of the trouble with young chicks that is bringing inquiries to the veterinary department is caused by improper brooder temperatures. Brooders kept too cold causebowel troubles, while if allowed to get too warm weak legged chicks is usually the result. . Mangels Need Rich Soil Mangels should be seeded on rich land and in rows 24 to 36 inches apart, depending on whether hand or horse cultivators are used. Mid April to early May planting is best, and about one inch is the proper depth. Screening the seed into large, med- ! ium, and small sizes makes it easy ! to get an even stand with a seeder. Feeding Brood Mares Pure-tored mares in foal need a lib eral grain ration throughout the per iod of pregnancy. If these mares are toeing used at light work, we suggest feeding them about 15 pounds daily per head of a grain mixture 'of three parts oats and one part each of shell ed corn and bran. If the work is fairly heavy, a 1,500-pound mare will need a little more than this., amount, while if she is idle, the daily feed may be cut down to 10 to 12 pounds. We would feed a daily allowance of about 15 pounds of mixed hay, provid ing it is bright and clean. If avail able, alfalfa may be safely used as a part of the roughage ration. Eight to ten pounds per day might be al lowed each mare, together with some coarser roughage such as -timothy or oat straw. The feed must of course be cut down at foaling time and for a few days thereafter, using bran and oats as the grain feed at this time. Reg ular watering and access to salt are always important in the care of brood mares. It is obviously unwise to work these mares very hard because sudden strains may casue abortion. Jt is also inadvisable to allow these mares to gether in a small enclosure. Mares in foal are apt to be ill-tempered and will frequently injure one another as well as their unborn foals. The safest policy is to discontinue working pregnant mares about two weeks before they are due to foal. Light work should not be given them until at least two weeks after foaling, and they should be gradually accus tomed to heavier work. Tying the Fleeces Explained The best wool on the sheep is found over the shoulders and along the back andevery fleece should be graded on the basis of this wool because it con stitutes the major portion of the fleece, says H. A. Lindgren, extension specialist in animal husbandry at the Oregon Agricultural college. Tying the fleece so that the good wool is on the outside is, therefore, not only an honest practice but is the way the buyers want it for inspection and grading. To tie a fleece properly it should be intact when removed from the Sheep. Then spread it out on a clean floor with the shorn side down. Gath N er up the loose locks, belly, and britch wool, and place it in the cen ter of the fleece. Then turn over a third of the fleece from each side to the center and make one fold at the neck. Next start to roll the fleece from the rear, making a tight bundle, and tie it with paper twine. This method of tying make3 an attractive bundle and puts the back and should er wool on the outside. Maggot Free Radishes Sow Alfalfa Now Mid April is one of the best times to sow Grimm alfalfa on the sandy bottoms of the Willamette valley. Fif teen pounds to the acres on a fine, firm, seedbed planted not more than an inch deep is best. Landplaster, 50 pounds to the acre, will usually give it a better start. Alfalfa is the best for age crop for the well drained river bottoms. At the experiment station it has yielded four to five tons of hay an acre through eight years. Harvest the Cutworm Crop Our most injurious garden cut worms pass the winter partially grown caterpiliers in garden soil. De stroy the cutworm crop before the garden plants are available for them. This can be done by broadcasting poi son bran mash over the garden plot as soon as the soil is "thoroughly pre pared for planting. The standard cut worm formula is bran 15 pounds, cal cium arsenate or lead arsenate four ounces, salt four ounces, molasses or syrup two quarts, and water to make a coarse crumbly mash. The Value of a Ton of Manure . We roughly estimate that on the ordinary corn belt soil a ton of ma nure properly spread has the ability to increase the yield of conr by about two and a half bushels, the yield of oats by two bushels, and the yield of clover by two hundred pounds. In other words, with corn at 40 cents a bushel, oats at 30 cents and clover at ?10 a ton, manure would have the value of about- $2.60 a ton spread on the land. On our richer soils manure will not have this great avalue, but on poorer soils, it will have an even greater value. Creosoting Hog House Floors " If wooden flors in hog houses are treated with creosote, their usefulness will be practically doubled, according to J. C. Wooley, of the agricultural en gineering department of the Missouri college of agriculture. Creosoted floors do not swell or shrink to such an extent as uncreosoted floors. This prevents large cracks from forming and makes the floors more easily kept clean. SPRAY PROGRAM FOR CHERRIES Early raaisnes e"""" An elaborate spray program for cherries is usually unnecessary. Of the insect pests for which sprays are generally applied we have the San Jose Scale and Aphids. For the con-' trol of these a combination spray of lime-sulfur 12-100 plus nicotine sul phate, 1 pound to 100 gallons should be applied just asthe buds are swell ing and before they open. Because ants carry aphids up the trunks to reinfest the trees it is advis able after spraying to band the trunks of the cherry trees with a strip of treetanglefoot two and a half inches wide. Where blossom blight caused by the brown rot fungus is troublesome a spray of Boredaux 4-4-50 should be thoroughly applied just as the first blossoms are starting to open, but in many orchards this trouble is not suf fiicently serious to require attention. Where cherry leaf spot is bad sev eral spraying with Bordeaux 4-4-50 will effectively- reduce the injury if applied ' beginning about the last of April or, first of May and repeated at three week intervals. This will also check brown rot to a' consider able extent. It is probably best not to spray during the month immediate ly before picking biit if leaf spot has been bad a final spray should be giv en just after harvest. In many or chards leaf spot is practically un known and special sprays - for this may be omitted. . , The cherry slug is frequently seri ous, causing skeletonizing ,of the fol iage. Lead arsenate 2-100 applied from May 20 to 28 will control. The cherry fruit maggot can be con trolled by sweetened poison bait for the adults. See notes on important orchard diseases and pests. GAIN OF BULL ASSOCIATIONS Increase Attributed to Fact That Farmers Are Beginning to Realize Value of Quality. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) A gain of 35 co-operative bull asso ciations during the past fiscal year in dicates that dairy farmers are beginning- to appreciate the value of such organizations. According to the dairy division of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture there were 158 of such associations, as compared with 123 a year ago. This is an increase of 28 per cent, a very satisfactory gain In view of the comparative newness of the plan. This increase is attributed by the department to the fact that farmers are beginning to become acquainted with the benefits which other farmers have derived from this form of co operative breeding. Both federal and state workers have found that mem- HON. LOUIS E. BEAN, CANDIDATE, SPEAKS AT LUNCHEON Louis E. Bean, candidate for gover nor spoke briefly on political issues before the Live Wires at the noon The speaker dwelt briefly on sever meeting last Tuesday, al issues of this campaign. He pointed out that only 22 per cent of the population pay the , taxes ; that the etate taxes ..almost equalled in amount the value of the products of the Willamette Valley farms while over one billion dollars is tied up in non-taxable bonds and securities held by individuals and corporations in the state. As a chief remedy Mr. Bean sug gested an income tax. He was . ac companied by Lloyd Riches a former newspaper representative of this city and now of Vale, Oregon. OREGON INDUSTRIES Weekly Record of Industrial Conditions Gleaned From Re liable Sources Over The State Use of Purebred Sires as Improvers of Productive Capacity of Cows Is Rapidly Gaining Favor. bers are being benefited by such co operative associations even more than the organizers had anticipated. Some form of co-operative breeding is essential to the proper growth of the dairy industry in many sections of the country, for the reason that the average herd at present is. so small that the owner cannot afford to buy a good purebred bull, and it is certain that the herds of the future will not be large .enough to change this condi tion materially. The movement to get more people living on farms and in vil lages to keep family cows tends to diminish the average size of the herd, for the one or two cows kept by each family are really a herd In themselves, but owners of small herds cannot af ford to keep a bull. They, therefore, depend upon neighboring bulls, and the - co-operative association Is one means of providing for such cows the service of high-class bulls. The dairy extension men in South Carolina, for example, - realizing the importance of the co-operative bull association, have made it a part of their campaign for "two cows to each rural family," and they have set as a goal the organization in their state of 114 co-operative bull associations. Eugene gets factory to make stock and poultry feed. ' PacificTelephone Co. planning new trunk line from Eugene to Roseburg. Prineville R. H. Jones takes over Central Oregonian. Forest service to build 500 miles road in 1922, costing J281.000, 434 miles trail and three bridges. Total $413,000 will be spent, Reduction in cost of Corvallis schools this year fl0,000. North Bend 150 men employed here loading ships. , Cottage Grove reduces school tax 12600 a-year. Pilot Rock has cut teachers' salar ies $10 a month flat Reedsport to build 100 new houses this year. Union Pacific cuts fares to North Beach points about one-half. Oregon Electric may be extended from Eugene to Springfield. Astoria effects a saving of $11,000 in teachers' salaries. - American Legion builds swimming tank at Redmond, dance hall at North Bend. Bend Broks-Scanlon mill shipped 7,000,000 feet in March and with Shev-lin-Hixon Co. cut 20000000 feet that month. North Bend South Inlet gravel found rich in gold. La Grande experiencing building boom this spring. Roseburg-Coos Bay highway to be finished this year. Tillamook Wheeler sawmill at Cochran closed since November, to reopen May 1. a, Astoria $42,804 expended here dur ing. 1921 for building purposes. Klamath Falls $150000 appropria tion made to fight pine beetle pest 300 men to be employed. ' Eugene Construction to start on new $60,000 plant of Eugene Farmers' Creamery. Sherwood votes $12,000 bond issue for purchase .aj improvement of wa ter plant '' KlamathFalls Development of 20J 000 , acres land in Fort Klamath sec tion of Klamath county planned. Philomath With coming of spring, smaller lumber concerns here resume operations. Gilde votes $25,000 school bond is sue. The Dalles Transfer of O. W. R. N. Co.'s tie-treating plant at Weyth to this city means another annual payroll of from $135,000 to $150,000. S. F. Scripture GENERAL BLACKSMITHLNG All kinds of repairing, plow grinding Automobile and Truck Springs Repaired HORSESHOEING Phone 276-W 108 Fifth St. Between Main and Water Sts. Dependable Poultry Feeds Are a large factor in successful poultry farming. We carry a large and complete stock of poultrxsup plies and grain at prices which compare very favor ably with pre-war-times. Larsen & Company 10th and Mahv Oregon City Wallowa $47500 school bonds sold; construction of new building to start at once. Eugene New 2-story business block will be constructed here at cost of $15000. Oregon City Odd Fellows to erect $30,000 lodge building. Eugene Fruit Growers' Assn. closes prune pool netting $100,000 to growers To erect new friut packing house at Creswell. Stayton $50,00) in improvements being made in woolen mills here; will triple capacity of concern. mend Doan's Kidney Pills. Ask your neighbor? I E. Schuld, carpenter, 119 - 18th St Oregon City, says: "Doan's Kidney Pills have helped me and I gladly recommend them to others. My work is hard on the kidneys and often I had spells of lumbago. I had a dull aching across my back and could hardly stoop to do any lifting and my BACKACHE IS DISCOURAGING But Not So Bad If You Know How to Reach the Causa Nothing more discouraging than a constant backache. Lame when you awaken, pains pierce you when you bend or lift It's" hard to work or to rest Backache often indicates bad kidneys. Oregon City people recoin- kidneys acted irregularly. Doan's Kid ney Pills from the Huntiuy-Draper Drug Company soon fixed me in good shape by strengthening my back and kidneys." " Price 50c, at all dealers Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Schuld had. Foster-Milbura Co., Buffalo, N. T. Adv. Y NELDON'S WATCH SHOP J has the agency tor the Mandel Phonographs which is as good as the very best instrument sold by any one, at a remarkable low price of $75.00. Also Gen nett records for 75 cents. All of the very latest ones out are carried in stock. i?1 r f 1 insures Grocers I Recommend! FPjacks Albers 1 Quality I the 1 hotcakes I of the 1 West The Time to Buy Is when others are not buying when money Is rather close and prices are low. When spring opens there Is always a buyers' rush, and prices always follow demand. If you want a city home, a farm or any property, look them over now and save mone.y. Come in and see what I have. Insurance that Insures Seven strong companies, fire, accident, burglary, forgery, causality, auto. E.E.TEEPLE 7l9j4 Main, Oregon Or. t WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER 425 Main at 5th St. Oregon City illers Shoe Store Men's and Roys' Shoes, Gloves, Laces, Shoe Polish, Oils and Greases EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING Main Street Opposite Post Office SAVE AND INVEST Buy Our 7 Per Cent Prior Preferred Stock Pays Dividends Every Three Months Pay Your Light Bill with a Dividend Check. Portland Railway, Light and Power Co. 619 Main Street Oregon City, Ore. Store Now Opens at 9 A. M. Saturdays Phone: Pacific Marshall 5080 The Most in Value The Best in Quality -THE MOST IN VALUE THE BEST IN QUALITY Store Closes Dally at 5:30 P. M. Saturdays at 6 P. M. Home Phone: A 2112 "THE STORE THAT UNDERSELLS BECAUSE IT SELLS FOR CASH" A Timely and Important Showing A Special Showing of New Spring Lines of the Famous Phoenix Silk Uderwear cmd Hosiery FOR PARTICULAR WOMEN The superior merits of the famous P hoenix Silk Underwear and Hosiery are so universally known to women who insist on having the best in style, quality, fit and finish as well as th e most in value for their money that it is needless for us to go into further detail suffice it to say our new Spring and Summer stocks are now complete, and "selections can best be done at this showing: Phoenix Fiber Silk Vests at $1.95 An extensive variety in the popular bodice top styles, in flesh color sizes" 36 to 44. ' Phoenix Full-Fashioned Silk Hose At $2.10 At $2.55 At $2.85 Pair Strictly high-grade, full fashioned Phoenix Silk Hose in black, brown and white all sizes. Unsurpassed in quality at these prices. PHOENIX SILK VESTS AND BLOOMERS Vests at $2.50 and $2.75 Bloomers at $3.95 and $4.25 Fine Silk Knit Undergarments in plain and in Richelieu weave Vests in bodice top styles in flesh, white and orchid; Bloomers made with rein forced crotch elastic waist and knee colors grey, green, flesh, white cincl folcick EVERYTHING DESIRABLE IN O UR STOCK OF New Spring Coats Just such Ribbons as are in greatest ing of Hats, Waists, Dresses, Underg Plain colors and novelties in all widt Narrpw Silk Moire Ribons in plain colors and amber effects 20c and 25c yard. Double-Face Two-Tojje Ribbons, all collors, plain or with Picot edge 20c and 25c yard. Grosgrain Ribbons is black and colors or with Picot edge; Nos. 3 to 16. demand for the trimming and mak arments, Bows, Bags, Sashes, etc. hs, and all at new low prices. New Garter Ribbons and Garter Tubular Rib bons in alt colors and combinations. New Wash Ribbon's in all widths from No. 1 to No. 7. Plain odors and light combinations. New wide Metal Ribbons in styles and colors especially adapted for vestees, hats, bags,' sashes, etc .