THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, FJ-BKLAKl' if, ADEQUATE EXTENSION WORK MEANS MUCH FOR OREGON More Productive Farms, More and Better Livestock, More Permanent Farm Improvements, Better Roads, More Social Advantages and Happier Homes Outcome of Hoped-for Plans of O. A. C. ' - ' ' -V T-WW urn in mmmmm5&&2m . . Nfl If r - " r " II . i ' ' "'iil 1 ' ' '"srgKtfT" : lift t . - -s. : .nHr1: ... -si-j: i.-v. . . k.. v tuivjr-1 n . i . . x w ...i'.' v t.'.-'.v.'c . -- n i - Ir 'if1 1 .- Id -?.-'?Vi II jJaLm fi-- Fos2 O BT RALPH D. BETZEL. .RERON AGRICULTURAL COL.- I LEGE. Corvallis. Fell. S. (Spe cial Un. 1 . .-av . i . .1 . n Vnll that, according to the broad conception of the functions of tne state-support-. ed tnatitutions of higher learning, you - and every other cltisten of Oregon are nonresident students of these Institu tions? Are you aware of the fact that your requests for practical assistance, when addressed to these institutions, re ceive Just as careful and thorough at tention as do questions asked in the classroom by the resident students? Do you realise that the activities of the college faculty members, during vara . tion periods, at week ends, and, when able to leave the campus while college is In session thus carrying to the people of the state- the same practical instruction which the college men and women receive every day In the class room are due to the desire of the general public to receive the advan tages of scientific aid In all lines of human endeavor? And why should this not be the case, or rather whv should conditions ever have been otherwise? These Institu tions of learning were established and are maintained bv the people to aid in the general advancement of education. And so. when a potato grower writes to the Agricultural College stating that after his "potatoes are planted and the sprout gets nearly to the top of the ground, sometimes clear up through the ground and sometimes not. then the sprout seems to blight or die. Then it win start up again from the potato If you can send m anything treating on this you will oblige " a special op portunity is presented fov the applica tion of scientific knowledge to the so lution of a practical problem. Plaat PatholKtt Geta Bur- The plant disease expert, known to the college students as the professor of plant pathology, must now diagnose this ase from the information given end condense his general lectures and laboratory courses on the life history of the fungus "Khizoctonla" into a few words of instruction to fit this indi vidual cae. The gardener is advised that "potato blight" is the cause of his trouble. He Is told to treat his seed potatoes, before cutting, by soaking them tor two hours in a solution of formaldehyde, using one pint of the commercial drug to 30 gallons of water, and. if possible, to plant them In new soil or where Dotatoes have not been growa for four or five years. This done, the college has performed its fuil duty by the non-resident student as thoroughly as It can do by the resi dent student In acquainting htm with the various species of "Rhisoctonla," by explaining and demonstrating that all members of the genus are parasitic fungi which attack potatoes, beans and other crops, but which may never cause him much trouble after examination day. The subject matter of both les ions is Identical Yet the non-resident "student' is a busy man of family and his Instruc tion must be so adapted aa to meet the requirements of his particular case; 5 ria -a.j..;s in iTSHu f- I 1 iiisa-aaaaBBMHrorapaB-MBBBB--iiBriijii ru , . Inm-A-aainfl' numl it must be so formulated as to aid In ing for their just share of instruction ... 1 la.ai. It. ft The present endeavor of Oregon Ag ricultural College to heed this call and carry the benefits of Its instruction to the people of the entire state is the outgrowth of a very modest beginning made a number of years ago. To be exact, this form of instruction now known to the educational world as ex tension work was begun by Oregon Agricultural College in 1888 when farmers- Institute Instruction was first undertaken at the request of the Grange. ' ; ' Although no records, giving data concerning the beginning of the work, are available, the first meeting la re ported to have been held-at Hillsboro, the programme consisting of lectures and discussions on agricultural meth ods and farm management. The Hills boro meeting was signally successful. The Idea of the Agricultural College taking the lead In rural development met with unqualified approval and Its ultimate position as the practical ex ponent of industrial education was ap parent. Other communities throughout the Willamette Valley quickly caught the spirit of having the college instruction brought to them and at the request of progressive individuals' granges and other organisations, institutes similar to the Hillsboro meeting, but adapt ed to meet varying local conditions. IIIO OVIU.IU1I VI ' ,., ...... Perhaps you have thought of this be fore, and. if you have, you already know, or will not be surprised to learn, that the work of Instructing non-resident students has. in many states, come to occupy a place in the system of higher education equal In importance to that of experimental work. In such states liberal provisions have been made for their colleges to carry useful instruction out to the people ju their homes Instruction in the same sub jects which are treated fully in the classroom, yet so modified as to meet the special needs of the people by fur--.hi.,o. nractical aid in the solution of the problems of everyday life. All rn Too Old to Lear. This broad oonceptlon of the mission of the state-supported institutions of higher learning has recently come Into general acceptance and the fact that responsibility for the proper dissem ination of practical knowledge does not cease with the Instruction of those who actually attend college Is well estab lished. Men and women are never too old to learn, yet they are often too old or are otherwise hindered from attending- college. The age has now come, however, when the people who have not been able to avail themselves of the privilege of special instruction be fore takina- up their life work are call- i in Um-Mfllnff number each succeeding Whiter. With the Increase In number a correspondingly larger territory was served until finally re quests for such meetings began to reach the college from every quarter of the state. Special Attention Required. Extension service then came to bo considered one of the minor duties of the college faculty and experiment sta tion staff, every possible effort being made to meet efficiently and econom ically the requests of the public for ed ucational assistance. Not until 1911, however, did. the constantly increastnu demand on the college for extension work become so overwhelming as to require special attention by the board of regents. With a view to co-ordinating and unifying under the supervision of a distinct department of the col lege the farmers" institute work and that being done by various other ex tension agencies such as demonstra tions, educational exhibits, the publi cation of bulletins, etc., accordingly, the extension division of Oregon Agri cultural College was created by action of the board of regents and authorised to arrange for and keep records of in structional and demonstration work done throughout the state by members of the college faculty and experiment station staff. The records of the extension services rendered by the college experts during first year after the establishment 4 U JI.-ialAn falU thA RtnrV Of a phase of educational work which has grown from the farmers' institute to such proportions that its importance and future magnitude canrtot be safely estimated by conservative calculations. In 1888 the only activity used In ex tension service was the farmers' insti tute. In 1913 the agencies used in teaching the multitudinous extension lessons pertaining to scientific agricul- ana nome-maKing. w-nc. Lectures delivered before farmers and teachers' Institutes, development leagues, growers' unions, commercial -i .. v. ...nnni .Tn monfPTnpnts. Grange meetings and picnics, church organi sations, Chautauqua uaiiqurjio, ...--clubs, conventions and Young Men s Christian Associations: (2) demonstra tion work; (8) correspondence courses; (4 officiating at lairs ana hlbltlons: o) extension work in tnc . i t& n,nmntinn nf organ- PUDIIO BCUUUirti 1 " t' ' " ' . Isations for agricultural and industrial Improvement; vi puuuU.i... tins, and (8) educational exhibits. inus aerencies the representatives of O. A. C. came in per sonal contact wttn i.s,oo-i:u." the state, while the Influence of the college waa carried to thousands of others by means of bulletins, by edu cational exhibits such as those placed on display at the State Fair and at the Portland Land and Products Show, and by answers to letters of inquiry. Work's Stage Preliminary. nrt.iu lint nf the agencies through which extension work is being done in Oregon may seem aii'uiuu.i. to the casual observer, in reality they .. nniD thA nrAltmlnarv stage of the work as compared with Its de velopment in Wisconsin, neorwii Georgia, Indiana, Pennsylvania and jther progressive states where Bums ranging from 115,000 to amounts prac tically equalling the maintenance ap propriation of Oregon Agricultural Col lege are annually Invested in extension work. ' Going into detail, some surprising facts regarding the extension service furnished, or, more properly, not fur nished, by O. A. C. are brought to light. For example, the college la now of fering correspondence courses in three subjects farm accounting, rural law and rural economics and the instruc tors In the school of commerce are di viding the work in such a way as to give the correspondence students the required attention without Interfering with other regular instructional duties. But when we see in the extension office the list of Oregonians who have sent specific requests for instruction by cor respondence in dozens of different sub jects which are not offered, and which the college cannot even consider offer ing without additional faculty people 4. J . tlm tn thl Work. WO lu uovuw u" . realize that the extension work now being done Is not by any jneans iu comprehensive. T .. - J t n .n"nl- oil nASRlhln &R slstance to these people, who, of their own voiinon, wnie ivr tuucojjyiv.. Instruction wnicn it is uniiuooiu . , i M .anc.lvA TVnm thAlr (lU'Tl state Institutions, the college, frequently suc ceeds in referring them to the colleges of sister states, wnere iney m '"" for the desired courses. Another phase of the work done by correspondence is that of direct aid given by the college experts in the form of personal letters written in reply to requests similar to the one mentioned in the beginning of this article. The .... inG.iinilnn thus Imnartpd cov ers the widest imaginable field of sub. jects. and requires nours oi time c.cij month. Farm Knowledge Asked. Thousands of the tetters come an nually from Oregonians, who have heard the call of the land, and wish to acquaint themselves with rural condi tions before making the move from city to farm; they come from the pro gressive farmers who are Interested in encouraging rural development or have some special problem to solve; from prospective settlers at present living in distant states which they are re luctant to leave without specific in formation relative to Oregon conditions and the possibilities of their succeeding in such an environment. Yet. disregarding this constant stream of letters which pours Into the exten sion office requesting assistance In spe cial problems, and considering the re quests for correspondence Instruction In . courses not listed in the catalogue. It Is amazing to sec how far these courses fall short of meeting the present de mand for such work. And this statement is not only true or correspondence courses, but equally true of all other branches of extension work. . ' But. returning to what has actually been accomplished during the past year. Instead of explaining the present un limited demand for the work, additional facts full of significance to the peo ple of Oregon are found to "be num erous. Demonstration work In Its various forms probably rank second in importance to regular Institute work as an efficient means-of extension teaching. This phase of the work is based on the old saw to the effect that "seeing is believing." The efforts ot the college experts, to phow the people of Oregon what results are posstble by the adoption of scientific methods, were directed along three main lines, namely, demonstrations given by means of a poultry car, those given before public gatherings and those on private farms. The poultry demonstration car was equipped by the college and operated over the Southern Pacific lines in the Willamette Valley from April 6 to May 4, 1912. Attaches of the poultry hus bandry department of the college ac companied the car In Its tour, giving lectures and demonstrations In BO towns and villages. .The car was visited by 21.932 people, who saw all the latest appliances which are In use at the col lege poultry plant, and heard the lec- fConcludert on Page II.) a-, x ET the greatest athlete have dyspepsia and Ma X'W O Ol2.Il 1.3 I , strength will soon fail. One's stamina force--1 ' ' fullness and strength of mind or muscla depend upon the blood, and the blood in turn, requires a healthy stomach, for the stomach is the laboratory where the food is digested and such ele ments are taken up or assimilated which makm blood. In consequence all the organs of the body, such as heart, lungs, liver and kidneys, as well as the nervous system, feel the bad effect if the stom ach is deranged. Stronger Than his Stomach The Medical Adviser by R. V. Pierce, M. D., Buf falo, N. Y. answers host of delicate questions about which every man or woman, single or mar ried ought to know. Sent free on receipt of SI ons eent stamps to pay for wrapping and mailing. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery helps the stnsaa to direct food properly, starts the liver into new aaci vity, removing the poisons from the blood, and the various organs get rich, red blood, in stead of being illy nourished. The refreshing influence of this extract of native medicinal plants has been favorably known for over 40 years. Everywhere - .1- 1 ..11 M -u Haa (MM. neigOiK)r vu -u jruu a ui, Said all medicine -eaters la llqaJd or tablet forim or send SO one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce, Invalids" Hotel. Bmt rlo. aad a trial box will walled jroa A ! A 4