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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1902)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1; 1902. 21 cured. It will be seen by a perusal of this article that there are hut very few staples that must be Imported to this county, and that many of these are sup plied by other sections of the state. One Mau Farms 240 Acres. A 240-acre "wheat farm run by one man Is something that Marlon County can point point to with pride. It shows the possibilities of farming in the "Willamette Valley, for Ite owner has made money on It, and la making money every year. It demonstrates that "management" is the secret of success In agriculture as In other pursuits, and proves conclusively that a life of comparative ease and plenty may be had on an Oregon farm. This farm, an Ideal home. Is seven miles south of Salem, and Is owned by W. W. Culver. Mr. Culver is now well along In years, past 60, In fact, and does not feel like doing a full day's work, yet he runs the farm alone and keeps his work up with the season. He puts in short days, but makes every turn count. The farm is divided into three fields of about SO acres each, and each field pro duces a crop of wheat once In three years. The other two fields are not idle In the meantime. One of them is in Summer fal low and both are supporting a well-fed flock of sheep. The accompanying illus tration will show the rotation of uses to which the fields are put. By thus dividing and using his land, Mr. Culver distributes his work so that he is at no time abso lutely idle, and at no time crowded with work. Each ear he has an SO-acre field to harvest and a field of the same size to plow and sow. One man can do the required amount of work easily. As soon as the crop was removed from the field which raised -wheat in 1897 Mr. Culver turned a Hock of sheep in tp feed on the scattering wheat and the clover which is a natural growth in this section of the state. The field will support one sheep to the acre and every sheep will get fat. The coming Summer the field will stand In the stubble and the wild oat3 will try to take possession, only to ae eaten by the wool-producers. At some seasons the vegetable growth is rapid, but at all times as many sheep are turned on as there may be feed for. The following year the field will be Summer-fallowed, but it will furnish pasturage nevertheless In fact, sheep are pastured on the land after the wheat has. been sown, and has come up, and until late In the Spring of the year it is to be harvested. There are 160 acres of pasturage the whole year and with the exception of a few months the whole farm Is In pasture. It will at once be apparent that a field recently Summer-fallowed and cleared of wild oats and other noxious wced will produce a good crop of wheat. It cots very little more to produce a good crop than a poor one, while the financial re sults of the former are much the greater. It has become almost a settled question that It is not best for land that it be Summer-fallowed every other year, and by pasturing his fields one year In three, Mr. Culver attains as nearly as possible the ideal In fertility and cleanliness. This farm Includes In all 295 acres, but only 240 acres are in cultivation. Tho land has been cleared largely through Mr. Culver's industry, and the farm has been furnished with the conveniences of a country home. While Mr. Culver Is a believer In diver sified farming, he does not carry the di versification to extremes. He keeps a number of hives of bees and some poul try, but only one cow. As he does his own cooking he does not have time to de vote to dairying. The economy of this manner of con ducting farming operations will seldom be of more necessity than during the coming season, when farm labor will be so scarce. The mines, lumber camps and railroad camps have attracted so many men that farm laborers are scarce. Un der such circumstances the farmer who has a crop of wheat of moderate size and the remainder of his farm produce on the backs of his sheep. Is fortunate. Such a method of farming is possible only under such conditions as prevail in Ore gon. 80 ACRES. Wheat 1897 Pasture 1S9S Summer fallow 1S99 SO ACRES. Pasture 1897 Summer fallow 1S9S Wheat 1S99 Plat allowing how a 240-acre farm by one Good Roads. Permanent Improvement of roads and highways has been the purpose of road work In this county in the last four years. As the county extends from the mountains to the Willamette River, it Is croated by many streams which furnish perfect drainage, and in the beds of the streams may be found wash gravel that makes a cheap and substantial surface for the roads. In the more thickly settled portions of the county the roads have already been grav eled and are, therefore, good the year round. As the cost of permanent Improve ment Is not great, this work will be ex tended each year, and farmers In the dis tant portions of the county will have good highways during the wet season. Values of Prinfcipal Crops. Owing to the diversity of Its resources, Marlon County could not have an entire crop failure and has never had even a failure of half a. crop. The wheat crop has failed once In the last 10 years, the hop crop Is short about one year In four, as also Is the prune crop. As harvesting is the chief expense In the latter two crops, a shortage entails but little finan cial loss. Except In rare instances, the crops pay expenses. The following table shows w'hat Marlon County expects to produce each year, and the values at average prices: Wheat, S00.000 bushels, at 50 cents.. ?400,000 Hops, 33,000 bales of ISO pounds, at 12 cents 752,400 Oats, 600,000 bushels at 30 cents 150,000 Hay, 40,000 tons, at 56 240,000 Prunes. 4.000.000 pounds, at 4 cents.. 160 000 Apples, pears, peaches, cherries, etc. 100,000 Sheep and wool 110,000 Butter, 600,000 pounds, at 22 cents. 135.000 Lumber, 30.000,000 feet, at 5S per M.. 240,000 Potatoes. 600,000 bushels, at 25 cents. 150,000 Market for Fuel. Furnishing fuel for Marlon County con sumers has suddenly become an enter prise of no small proportions. Salem alone consumes 30,000 cords of wood each year, and all this Is supplied by the farmers of the surrounding country. Residents and manufacturers in the other towns of the county consume some 35,000 cords more, a"nd, Including what is required by the railroad and steamboat companies, the annual consumption may be placed at 70.000 cords. There are two principal classes of wood large, or first growth, fir, and small, or second growth, fir. The former usually sells for 53 per cord, and the latter at 52 25. During the past sea son large fir has brought 53 50 and small fir 52 75 per cord. The total expenditure for. fuei Is in the neighborhood of 5200,000, and every stick of the wood Is supplied by residents of this county. Almost every farm of 160 acres has Its wooded tract, and the owner cuts cordwood during the Winter months, when there is little else to occupy his time. The farmer who has all his land under cultivation can buy "stumpage" from his neighbor, and make good wages for himself and team by fur nishing wood to the city consumer. As the haul Is short, the price Is remunera tive to the producer, and, as compared with the price of fuel In most Eastern cities, the burden to the consumer Is light. Many Instances are known of men pur chasing timbered land and paying for It with the profits from the fuel taken from It. Though the timbered area In the set tled portion of this county is growing gradually less, no person now living will see the time when firewood will need to be Imported from other sections of the state. Sheep and Goats. Sheep and goats are sources of consid erable profit In this county, because the cost of maintenance Is small. The animals are turned Into the fields of Fall-sown grain, and they nibble the green grain until late in "the Spring. This helps the crop rather than Injures it. "When the grain gets too large to permit sheep on It, the animals are turned Into a field to be Summer-fallowed, and they eat down the vegetable growth. Immediately after harvest they may again be turned upon the grain fields, where they eat native clover, which springs up in the stubble. Nearly every farm has Its wooded lot, and goats thrive there on vegetation which other animals will not eat. As our Summers and "Winters are subject to no extremes of weather, the loss from death of young animals Is very small. Schools. As Marion County Is one of the oldest settled sections of the state, Its educa tional institutions- are firmly established and abreast of the times. Not a child in the county Is beyond the reach of the common schools, except, perhaps. In the case of a family that has gone far back in the mountains to establish a home. In all the mountain valleys the comfortable schoolhouse will be found, and In the more thickly settled section of the coun ty children are very seldom compelled to walk over a mile and a half to school. Four-fifths of the people have a public school within one mile of their homes. In all the larger towns advanced grades are taught, and in the cities high schools are maintained. Salem Is the seat of "Willamette University, established In 1844. There are also several other private schools at Salem and other towns In the county. The schools are maintained chiefly from the proceeds of the Irreducible school fund and the county school fund, and only In rare instances Is a district tax necessary. Teachers are paid from 530 to $75 per month. There are 10,000 children of school age in the county. Free Rural Mall Delivery. Salem, Turner and Macleay, the centers of the most populous sections of the coun ty, have free rural mall delivery sys tems, maintained at the expense of the United States Government. Practically all the farmers within a radius of 8 to 10 miles of these towns have their mall de livered at their doors every day. The Government has recently called for bids for carrying malls on eight stage routes that center in Salem, and It Is provided that the mail-carriers must deliver mall to farmers along their routes. When this system Is Inaugurated a few months hence a large majority of the people of the en tire county will be within the reach of a free rural delivery system. This Is a matter of no small consequence, for It saves the farmer many a trip to town. Intending "Immigrants can secure more particular Information regarding Marlon County by addressing N. J. Judah, secre tary of the Salem Commercial Club, or by writing to the Mayors of the other prin cipal towns in the county Woodbum, Sll verton, Stayton and Jefferson. Salem. A. W. PRESCOTT. WASHINGTON COUNTY. Paradise for Dalrj-men Close to the Northtvest'a Greatest Murket Location Is the great secret of ttus pres ent and future of Washington County, situated westerly from and" adjoining Multnomah. Over one-half of the farmers and dairymen of this county can drive to Portland with a load and return the same day. This proximity to the greatest mar ket In the Northwest makes "Washington County an Ideal field for farm, dairy, fruit and livestock production. Add to this the great fertility and diversity of SO ACRES. Summer fallow 1897 Wheat .1893 Pasture .1899 is divided no as to be operated man. the soil, ranging from rich beaverdam so productive that Its leld seems almost fabulous to those unacquainted with Its character, and bench land where are raised grains and grasses, to the higher hill lands, where one finds a happy com bination that will produce the long range of agricultural and horticultural products Indigenous to Oregon soil. The Tualatin River Is the chief watershed of the val ley and mountains which go to make up the nearly 500,000 acres within the county's boundaries. Living streams run through almost every section, making its dalry posslbllltles second to none in the state. There are about 90,000 acres In farm and orchard, and those familiar with Its area say that there are yet 100,000 acres wWch will be cleared and become as productive as that now under cultivation. The mountainous sections are rapidly being used for stock ranges and creameries are being established in the hills, where a few years ago the idea would have been ridi culed. The meadows of the plains and river bottoms are famed for their richness of production, and it Is a fact that Wash ington has sent more timothy hay to the Philippines than any other county in the Pacific Northwest. As a matter of fact, grain-raising leads, although dairying and hopralslng are rap Idly coming to the front. For the year closed the production of grain at a con servative estimate was: Wheat, 650,000 bushels; oats, 700,000; barley and rye, 60. 000 bushels. Wheat ranges In yield from 20 to 25 bushels per acre, while oats yield from 35 to 70 bushels. Twenty-five Creameries in Operation It Is In dairying that the greatest stride Is being made. Where but a few years ago there were but two or three cream eries In operation the county now has 25, and all operating at a profit. The future of dairying Is unbounded, owing to the great area capable of providing range for stock, the splendid water supply and the excellent facilities for market. Where In 1600 the creameries produced for the mar ket 320,000 pounds of butter, last year the output for shipment nearly touched the 500.000 mark. Here, again, is made prominent the value of a close market. Nine-tenths of the creameries deliver their product by team, fresh from the butter vats, and this alone Is a valuable percent age over creameries located in the dis tance. Portland producers can give their customers the best ana freshest product, and this gives Washington County dairy men a better price, generally, than that enjoyed by their rivals from up the Wil lamette "Valley. Thousands of pounds of cheese are annually turned out by the Swiss settlements, and their product finds a ready market In the adjoining city. The dairy stork of the past is being replaced ,by Jerseys, and nowhere In the state are to be found better dairy herds. Dairy men are Intelligent and progressive, and prominent dairymen from the state at large who attended the State Dairy Asso ciation here last Winter stated that no where at their annual meetings had they found a more Intelligent and progressive class In the business. It Is significant that out of all the creameries and dairies established but three or four have failed. Five years from now the county will be first In the dairy Industry In Oregon. As a hop producer, the county I3 gain ing quite a reputation in the Northwest, the soil of the plains and bench land being especially adapted for a quality that cannot be excelled. Buyers for the 1901 crop state that, for quality, hops raleed In this section are the finest to be found In the Willamette Valley. From present indications, although the price last year was not all that was wanted, there will be a large Increase In acreage from year to year. As In all other production, the closeness to market Is a valuable factor In this Industry, and another benefit Is tho closeness to help In picking time. Last year's was a very light yield, but, notwithstanding this, over 1.000,000 pounds were harvested. It is safe to say that Washington County raises more onions than any other like area in the United States. Thousands of acres are given up to onion culture, and the market Is the entire 'Northwest. The rich beaverdam lands along the Tu alatin River and Its numerous branches produce wonderful crops, and growers make themselves Independently rich In a JSsSBE&MPSf v -4-4iMbE ssBWBg5aKSJra8SgSsw AS$tirt?&S-? . J,S8sSBSilBHH3MPvGHBBBBBff?Sk V$sfllr .i. "K79EB&flKusQHHra$SBBBBflr'3VisW M HeEL 'l&l!!Sr!SBHHKjllllsBsssi lw-''viw&TOfl Yt iSfrBfei-'' '- -s8jSNw3ag8BSMffiHwBKHssB 4MffMKJ5JI3BBBsrafSMSB3!J9ff5B Hi 9EKfW2K2&iaBHSBSHBflKBisssssB KUmSSSBKS'mSSBBHBK 3t.-;9ftv5lk dSHBBiBKssBBsBBIarslBBC&jBsESSkSwBsssnsF2 kSSk uaE99B9iM9lBKKlsHHBiSlW99SssssssBSKWVB. IsssBT tiEsviaBHpX3ENlsssBS ySjS8feifjMBHtMMsWPB?ff UBHriSvW.Tfty'"'!""'taaBKB is' - ,-i n8SfvjrrllisssisssssHssssssssst UssUHBsbP J03SSgMBSStBBBffQBsSBtBt 1 V itl!fymraissssssssH 'BEIw?BBBWBBBswBQ3HfFi "& 3BSsfSli&isSHfiE9sssislsssssss? smtHi i' . j MTsssMJnsCTLBMMSsEiLMMLi'rJ!li " . J.. JjrlBwlireiBlBJTJillLB. B9sHsssssBKXKLi &vTvXfssfc .wr SB8BBBBwKKy v4?vtwas ? l3aKJSIBEsslBMssssssssV - S?iisBBSBSBBBfifeSwi ". jy&5&3CSHBsssssBsKgfcfl$9K'a!w 3?!' ILlQOlJQLDJilDXClBMr .- iS v. tv. ;TssssMOBsssWMMnHIMFim- nro ? OREGON PEACHES COMPARED" WITH A SILVER DOLLAR AXD few years from the harvest of a five or ton-acre tract. This land also Is marvel ously rich In those 'characteristics that make great yields of all root crops, and Portland gets a greater per cent of her vegetables from this section. Fruit Is raised successfully here. Grow ers have been progressing In this regard, and orchards are doing much better now than In the past. The law- regulating spraying has borne good fruit. In a double sense. Thousands of pounds of prunes are dried and shipped each year, and pruneralslng is yet In Its Infancy. The hill lands, at the county edges, are very prolific as to prunes, and trees bear younger than on the plains. Grapes are raised in profusion, and much wine Is manufactured for home consumption. No where In the world are finer or better pears produced. English walnuts bear splendidly. As to cherries, here Is where "you get them. Owing to the high hills surrounding the county in its entire cir cumference, frosts are very rare at bloom time, and visitors from abroad tell us that ours are world-beaters. At the recent state fair It was the unanimous opinion of all who visited the Washington County display that the cherries were the best In the pavilion and that is saying a great deal, as Oregon's reputation Is estab lished. Although this is a county of agriculture and dairying, yet the manufacturing Is not unimportant. There are flouring mills at nearly every town and village of Im portance, and as a consequence very little wivat Is shipped for export purposes, ex- T"&,&mmrz . ,r a3c . ' .w "-. - v? rr?''srr"'"T -y&Tr si ffl?m&j tp r r& "'SS1 v - jj?j!& n i4cy&- EBrii . K5ffi5avj-ri"' ."-,.-.. . ii, -.' i r -V - t Z. V- t'.'iSil I WHEAT GROWS OX THE McFARLAXD RANCH, NEAR ALBANY, OR. THE cept In the manufactured article. Much flour Is ground for tho Oriental market, and this Is on the Increase. Small sawmills dot the streams here and there, and, besides manufacturing for the local demand, thousands of feet of lum ber are shipped abroad. At tho head of the streams there are yet millions upon millions of fine merchantable timber, which, In a few years will bring much wealth. Transportation Facilities. The Southern Pacific Company has two lines traversing the county from east to west. One line runs out of Fourth street, Portland, passes over the moun tain, through Beaverton. Reedvllle, Hills boro, Forest Grove, Dllley and Gaston, while the Other leaves the foot of Jeffer son street and passes through the rich bottom lands contiguous to Tualatin, Sherwood and Mlddleton. Each line fur nishes a dally passenger and mall serv ice, and an every other day freight serv ice. It Is only a question of time, how ever, until there will be an electric line established through the center of the coun ty, leading out of Portland, as the popu lation Is constantly Increasing. Along the Base line, and near which the Port-land-Corvallls branch has Its line, resides a population of nearly 10,000. Increase of population will demand a better railway service and more frequent passenger tran sit. County Out of Debt. Financially, the county Is In a splendid condition. The floating debt Is no more, and each year's taxation provides the revenue for current expenses. This within Itself Is a gratifying feature, as Interest is the barnacle of Industry. No like area In the Northwest can com- pare with this In production. There are yet thousands of acres of rich beaverdam whch will be made productive. With a constantly growing urban population to accelerate the market demand, and with Portland at the very doors of three fourths of the district, Washington Coun ty gives better promise for the farmer, the vegetable gardener, . the f rult-raiser, the dairyman, and the man .who wants a profitable country home, than any other county In the state and location is the key that Is unlocking her greatness. Estimate of Production. A conservative estimate of the county's production follows: Annual production wheat, bushels. 600,000 Oats 700.0CO Rc and barley 50.000 Potatoes DCO.O00 Onionb, for export 2-tO.OOO Apples, bushels 75,000 Prune., bushels J 20,000 Pears, bushels 10,000 Tomatoes, bushels 1.000 Cabbr.ge, pounds 500,000 Grapes, pounds 150.CO0 Strawberries 100,000 Eggs, dozens 300,000 Butter, dairy and creamery, cheese, pouads 425,000 Bacon, cured, pounds 500,000 Flour, manufactured, barrels 60,000 Lumber, manufactured, feet 12,000.000 Hops, pounds 1,000,000 Hay, timothy, tons 50.000 Hay, timothy and clover 75,000 Wool, pounds 60,000 Population Growlnc Over 1000 people have immigrated to Washington County since the last census was taken, and every train brings new families. People who are looking for .Oregon homes are beginning to appreciate the nearness to a large and constantly growing city like Portland, and are set tling -where they can have the advan tage of a dally market and a dally paper If they desire It. They find people here thoroughly metropolitan, as must be th case where so large a portion dally "vlslt the Northwest metropolis. For years past, when Washington County lands were high, buyers went on Into the Interior, disdaining to consider the law of averages. Those who bought now find that they have a market of 100,000 people just across the boundary, Instead of 40.000. And in this feature, largely. Is the future of this fertile section. Not alone commercially does this closeness to a large city affect our people, but It permeates the social life of the common wealth, enters Into our school methods, gives us better social tone, gives the farmer his dally record of the world's doings, and in various ways makes him a better citizen, and provide.") him a better chance to raise his family along modern lines. But no longer does It require a fortune to buy a home here. The old high values have disappeared. Forest Grove, the seat of Pacific Uni versity, the oldest Institution of learning in the Pacific Northwest, and Hillsboro, the County Capital, are the chief cities. Each has a population of about 1200, and their population Is at present Increasing rapidly. The school system Is organized thoroughly, and leading educators declare It equal to that at any county In Oregon. The last few years has witnessed a wonderful change In the raising of cat tle' and horses. The old scrub cow has been relegated to the butcher's 'block. WITH A HALF DOLLAR. GROWTf BY and the scrub horse has been sacrificed to the LInnton horse reducer. Fine herds of Jersey and Shorthorns now graze in the meadows, and the finest draft horses, Percheron and Clydesdale, are being bred. Hillsboro. L. A. LONG. Yamhill county. Undisputed Agricultural and Horti cultural Paradise of Oregon. It has been an undisputed claim for years that Yamhill County Is the agricul tural and horticultural paradise of Ore gon. The claim Is not only made within, but is conceded without her borders. It is based upon several Important and Justi fying facts. Though she has no town ex ceeding 2000 in population, she ranks sixth In the state In taxable wealth. She Is. and has been for years, almost strict ly an agricultural section. Her wheat crop for 1901 is estimated at about 3,000, 000 bushels. About 60 threshers are op crated each season, and a fair average run Is 50,000 bushels. Yamhill s bcen one of the leading hopgrowing counties for tho past five years. Tho product last year is estimated at 2000 bales, or about one-twenty-fifth of the spate's crop. Of a total area of 275,643 acres, 11S.14S acres are tillable. Her topography Is simply unexcelled. Lying to the west of the Wil lamette River, her territory comprises the -- e " sT"-.nsr ' j-"JV &! J' m..:xi - - S'l v ' -i f ', -t'i'S' LARGER MAN IS SEC FEET TALL, f broad valleys of the North and South Yamhill Rivers and their tributaries, merged Into and thus expanding the great general valley of the Willamette to an extent not equaled at any other point on either side of that river throushout Its length of 150 miles. Lying to the west of this natural farming section to an average distance of 12 miles Is Yamhill's allotment of the Coast Range Mountains. Easily accessible, j-et seemingly placed out of Industry's way, here Is territory that gives scope and ready vent to the poetic side of a man's nature In the en joyment of the beauties, comforts and privileges of mountain, forest and rivulet. There Is untold wealth of timber and water power. The county Is very favorably located In respect to commercial advantages. Fifty milfs from Portland, with both rail and water transportation, she Is brought near to populous centers, which crcato markets, yet not .near enough to lose her Identity as a separate community. The largest prune orchard In the world Is located at Dundee, in Ihls county. The principal part of this Immense fruit tract Is owned by Thomas Prince & Sons, whorfe largo driers have this year turned out over 100 carloads of dried prunes. Many driers are located at Newberg, Dayton, Carlton, North Yamhill and McMlnnvIlle, some of which prepare other products, such as evaporated apples, potatoes and vegetable soup compounds. Opening: of the Coal Measures. An epoch In the history of the county was marked last July, when an organized company began opening a promising coal mlno near North Yamhill. Assayers pro nounce the coal the best yet found on the Pacific Coast, and the work of mining has C. H. STEWART, ALBAJTY. progressed to a degree that insures cheap fuel of a new kind, profitable returns for the miner, and enhanced values for the landowner. A few miles from this coal mine another company is organized to bore for oil, and have early met with Indications In every way similar to those encountered In drilling for oil In the fa mous wells of Texas and California. They confidently look for the discovery of tho real article the coming year. In the southwest part of tho county, at Wlllamina, are large deposits of bluo clay, not found elsewhere, which, when baked Into brick, becomes white and af fords superb material for building pur poses. Some of the "finest blocks In Port land are constructed of this brick. McMlnnvIlle, the county seat, and New berg, the second largest town, each have a high-grade college, with yearly increase ing enrollment. Public school facilities are everywhere abundant. Tho county is practically out of debt. Indeed, her warrants are sufficiently in demand to occasionally command o. pre mium. The annual rainfall Is about 44 inches. On November 7, 1901, the time of penning this article, farmers were picking a Win ter crop of red raspberries, and roses were plentifully In bloom. This is suffi cient testimony as to the mildness of our climate. In tho development of the great State of Oregon, which is coming surely and quick ly, Yamhill County will not fall to main tain her place in the front rank, and with the development will come greater achievement In the line of manufactures, whlch,are now among our greatest needs, and for which our native resources stand unexcelled. JOHN G. ECKMAN. McMlnnvIlle. POLK COUNTY. Last Year There "Were 1,050,050 Acres Under Culti vation. Polk County lies between tho Coast Mountains and tho Willamette River, its northern boundary being 55 miles south of tho City of Portland, and the county's area is 7G0 square miles. The Luckla mute River in the south, the RIckreall in the middle and the Yamhill River on the north, with their net work of tributaries, all flowing toward the Willamette, afford a perfect system of drainage, and as the surface of the county Is rolling, and its few hills are cultivated to their summits, there remains little waste or unprofitable lands. Far Into tho westward hills and mountains along the streams extend areas of rich farm lands. The soil Is a rich, deep alluvial, almost incapable of being exhausted, and very productive. The to tal acreage under cultivation last year was 1,650,950. Polk County has long been celebratea for Its heavy yields of grains, fruits, hops and vegetables, the annual yield of wheat alone ranging from 2,000,000 to 2.S0O.O0O bushels. The past year a phenomenal crop of grain was produced, wheat yield ing from 15 to 40 bushels, oats 20 to W) bushels and barley 30 to 40 bushels per acre. Vast numbers of prune orchards planted some 10 years ago, have come Into full bearing, the crop being estimated last year at 2,500,000 pounds. Many old orchards are being renewed by skillful methods, and the enormous yield of apples and pears this year was of good quality. Organ izations for destroying pests and obtain ing markets have made the old pioneer orchard of value to the valley farmer. Hopgrowing in Oregon had Its begin ning in Polk County. The quality of hops raised here Is of the best, and Polk Coun ty hops have a special rating In New York markets. Hops grown in this coun ty received first premium at the Paris Exposition. The yield Is from 1000 to 2500 pounds per acre. The hop business has steadied down to a regular paying basis. Possibilities of Stockralslng-. If the future of this section Is to bo de termined by It3 adaptabilities there Is lit tle doubt that stockralsing along with Inci dental farming Is to be the employment or our people, and the source of revenue at no distant day. The climate Is mild and equable, especially fitted for growth of stock with a minimum of food and care, and the region will produce grass in quan tity and quality equal to the celebratea "bluo grass" regions of Kentucky. It has been demonstrated that there are no bet ter clover lands In the United States tnan In this immediate section; rape, vetches and other grasses are found to suit conditions here, and these can raise the capacity of land for feeding purposes to a faoulous extent, Stockralsing, though, not far advanced, has passed the experi mental stage. There are at this time in Polk County S9.310 head of cattle, 70.247 head of sheep, 11,427 head of swine and 2L',500 head of goats. Every farmer, large or small, strives to have a few- head of stock to supplement the farm, and he has learned by experience tTlat the products have greater value In the proportion In which he can utilize them in Increasing and maintaining the number and quality of his herds. This foreshadows the time when the Willamette Valley will be given almost entirely to stockralsing, with farm ing Incidental thereto. Dairying is receiving much attention now as a sequence of this tendency toward stockralsing. Several farmers have cream separators, and very many of them sell the milk directly to local creamerits. Tnis has led to careful selection of milch cows. Tho market for Oregon's dairy products is Illimitable. The extent to which dairy ing can be carried on in a community like Polk County is almost incalculable. To men skilled in dairying this is an inviting field. This county la tho center of goat cul ture in tho Willamette Valley. Oak grub lands stripped of their wood and long con sidered unprofitable are become valuable for goat pasture, and tho foothills abound In Hocks of goats. The number of goats has increased 7500 the past year, makiny a total of 22,500 at the present time. Thero are numbers of pure bred goats owned by U. S. Grant, of Dallas, and J. B. Stump, of Monmouth, valued at from 530 to 5150 tier head. Mr. Grant hrm In hia flnclr cnm does sired by "Pasha Columbia," sold at) Kansas City to C. P. Bailey & Sons for 51050. and at tho head of his herd a half brother of Pasha Columbia. Tho quality of mohair raised in Polk County excels because of larger numbers of pure-bred1 goats here. Oregon Mohair Superior. Experts claim that the climate la Ideal, for the production of high-grade fleece. A ' noted spinner In a New England factory says tho Oregon mohair is better than any brought from foreign countries. That It I is smoother, makes a better thread, is silkier, softer and runs the spindle faster than any other mohair known. Tho prico received for mohair in 1900 was 22 cents per pound. During the past 10 years the price has ranged from 21& cents to 6S cents per pound, the average for that pe riod being more than 30 cents per pound. Tho average yield per head is three pounds. Our Coast Mountains contain abun'dant feed to support vast numbers oC goats and tho land Is easily obtalnablo for that purpose. Fifty-five hundred dol lars will buy 1000 fifteen-sixteenths grado does and 20 bucks. These will yield 4000 pounds of mohair and 00 kids, easily worth 53200; 5600 will cover expense ot herder, shearing, taxes. Incidentals, etc., leaving net gain upon cost of herd of 52570 or 47 per cent tho first year. After paying the largest estimate of 57350 for tho land the gain is 20 per cent upon tho in vestment. These figures are conservative. The Coast Mountains with their foothills vast areas of lands now cheap as meas ured by the markets will one day support a heavy population, and the hills and mountains of Oregon, like Cantabrla. will resound with the bleating of flocks and the shouts of herdsmen. The number of sheep in this county has increased in geometrical ratio the past live years. More significant Is the earnest ness with which sheepraiscrs are advanc ing tho breed of their herds. The Mis sissippi Valley has been ransacked for tho finest specimens of the finest breed and there is scarcely a grazer that has noi caught this spirit of progress. Quallty as well as numbers forms the basis for estimating tho value of the 70,000 sheep above .referred to. In the western portion of Polk County is a belt of timber dense and majestic, composed of fir, cedar, white pine, hem lock, spruce, larch and ewe. Thdre 13 an area of 20 townships of this timber, of which eight townships are solid- timber. All this Is accessible and can be handled by railroads In conjunction with tho streams that thread their way In every direction from the mountain tops. Tho standing timber is estimated at from 6. 000,000 to 1S.000.000 feet per quarter section, averaging easily 6.000.000 feet per qnnrter. Estimating tho whole amount of 6,812,000. 000 feet at 50 cents per thousand, we havo a wealth of 56,500,000 yet untouched, awaiting tho advent of the lumberman, who Is even now beginning to arrlvo from the timber-devnstated regions of Maine and the old Northwest. Tho red and yellow fir, larch and hemlock trees tower 200 to 330 feet high, straight a plummet lines and as smooth as candles to a height of 160 or 200 feet. Tho pre vailing size of these trees is from 3& to 5 feet in diameter. Tests made by en gineers have shown that Oregon fir has under pressure nearly twice the strength, of Eastern oak, and almost three times that of pine. This timber will be used wherever great length, strength, lightness" and durability are In demand, and today Is being shipped to nearly all parts of tho globe. Eastern capitalists aro buying, holdings In this region as fast as men can) convey title to their lands. Totviis ot Pollc County. Polk County Is dotted over with towns! thriving with local trade. Falls City Is situated on the Lucklamute, at a point' well chosen for its manufacturing pros pects This town has a bright future. It 13 now a center of lumbering industries. Monmouth, the seat of the Normal School, has a good country trade. A largo two-story brick building has been completed tho past year and is now oc cupied. Independence, connected with tho out side world by river and by rail, is a great shipping center for hops, wool, wheat, fruits, cattle, etc. It Is supported by a rich section of farming country', and will always be a thriving business center. It has one of the finest public school build ings in the state and a very superior sys tem of schools. Dallas, at tho geographical center of tho county, the county seat. Is a prosperous town and has Increased heavily In popu lation during the past three years. It la backed by orchards, hopfields, farms and stock ranches, and an endless expanse of timber, even now coming into market. Educationally, the homeseeker finds all that Is desired in Polk County. The pub lic schools are of the best, and Dallas Col lego and the State Normal School af Mon mouth are both good Institutions of learn ing, each having largo attendance and promising future. The government of tho county Is and has been conservative. County warrants draw 6 per cent and sell readily at a pre mium. A new courthouse of stone adorns the county's grounds. It is a model of beauty and convenience. The people of Polk County are In a prosperous condition, healthy, contented, hopeful. The harvest just closed utilized every available man. woman and child In the fields, orchards and hopyards, and money has been scattered broadcast among the people. Our mild Winter finds all.comfortably dressed, -ell fed. the chil dren supplied with books and tuition, and the schools are crowded. Every man is at work at profitable employment. Flow ers are In bloom, fruit trees are deceived In putting forth their buds with tho thought that this is springtime. The homeseeker, as he looks about him on his advent here, exclaims, "This is para dise!" B. F. MULIvEY. Monmouth. At the Cass copper mine, near Waldo, Or., recently bonded by R. B. Whiteside, of Duluth. Minn., for 5100,000, a remark ably rich ledge- of copper has just been discovered. At a depth of 200 feet In tho upper tunnel being run into the mine an eight-foot ledge carrying copper values of 1" to 60 per cent has been struck. A large fcrce of men Is employed at the mine, ana the property Is being rapidly developed and opened up for a perma nent and extensive business