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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1908)
THE ; OREGON SUNDAY , JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING,' NOVEMBER 22,; 190 ff. v, """" ' I'-lRiwS ! ' ' . v '.tt. n nn, w rys- - KSt I X ( I f;L J ... Wr? Th?,'v Viiiiri '(.wNk i Bl " n i. mi inn iniim.ii. n -nil i ii ,i in, mi, .. m 1 For These Fruits of the Tree We May Add to Our Thanksgiving MERICA, landof the wonderful, I ' can rejoice in having accomplish rd miracles of which all-powerful Rome, at the height of its grandeur and in. the depths of its decadence de spaired. For the sated Romans groaned amid their surfeits, "JF here is he who can give us a new pleasure?" Within the last few years the United States has created, merely in the ordinary course of its miraculous agriculture, many new delights for the appetite. Could one of these have been given Lucullus as an addi tion to his diet of nightingales' tongues, the heart of the great epicure, no doubt, would have warmed with joy. Heirs of the ages, the sybaritic Ro mans rejoiced to call themselves. Poor, in deed, was their richest fare in comparison with the dainties that fall to the lot of moderns palate joys that help give Uncle Sam a real Thanksgiving. V i V- I iff r'- T MIE Department of Agriculture, at Wash ington, has shown a Bhrewd comprehen sion of the varying requirements of the nation's domestic . and foreign markets. So the government itself, the agency which alone is qualified to obtain a comprehensive view of the discoveries in fruits that are being con stantly made throughout he land, has brought to the attention of practical orchardists the more prominent fruits of victory continually attained by the American farmer in changing the harvests of the earth. There are romances 'pi'; nature among those "victories; for the 'Burbaiks "are 'few, even ' among the" millions; of agriculturists who know their trees r as college prof essors know their tjoks, and nature, every little while, takes a hand in the.etenal transformation, flingingup ; rare and delicious exceptions to her rules and leaving it to man to make the best of them. She did just that in an apple orchard of a farmer at PeruMadison county, Iowa. From the stock of a: yellow Bellflower appletree, the top of which had been destroyed, a sprout about six yearc. old was noticed. The farmer was astonished at the beauty and tho fine 'quality of-the fruit it bore. The flesh was yellowish, juicy, mildly sub-acid in flavor, and the 'general quality was extremely good. In size, the fruit ran from medium to large, with a smooth, glossy surface, which when, only slightly rubbed took on a high, polish. Most of the 6kin seemed washed over with mixed red, striped and splashed with dark crim son in brief, an apple to make a picture in a dessert, beautiful to the eye, delicious to the palate. u KNEW A GOOD THING "j One of those who knew a good thing was the farmer, even when it came to him for noth ing. He guarded that sprout, and watched it;" for It was, in' very truth, the apple of 'his eye. It proved to be hardy, vigorous, upright grpwer, with very heavy dark -green foliage, and a regular, annual bearer. At fifteen years cf age! the" original- sprout measured thirteen inches in diameter at the ground. When eight "years of drought ; and cold had' ruined three fifths pf his orchard the farmer found that this miracle of nature had not been harmed in the" least.-- . " ' ; ' ... Its, only 'handicap, la that, grown in cool and humid climates, it needs sprayinr for annle ...... young trees in most of the apple districts west of the Mississippi river, and it is now especial ly promising in the Rocky mountain and Pacific coast states. Chance had played its part, a short time be fore, in producing another wonderful apple from a stray seedling near a spot where, in earlier years, cider had been made on a farm in "V'indsor township, Lawrence county, Ohio. But man's discernment here was not so keen as it was in Iowa. Year after year the Idst orphan of some mighty stock went on, bearing its splendid bur den, fit for the table of royalty, yellow in color, but washed with red and crimson, great, sub acid, richly flavored fruit that came in season in the late autumn and early winter, and keeping perfectly in cold storage. OF GREAT PROMISE - After a time the owners of the tree divined that there should be something more than mere eating in the crop of that splendid, lonely tree. Yet today it still awaits its true exploitation in the districts to which it is peculiarly adapted, the middle states and the irrigated valleys of the West. Wherever sweet cherries thrive a welcome should await that exquisite fruit that had its origin in Oregon and who, when the cherry of which he makes one rejoicing bite proves worthy, regrets the earjy taste he formed as the agile boy, juice stained and reveling, high in the fork of the trees nearest home? In the Williamette and Columbia river val lcys. in Oregon, the great size and beautiful color of the sweet cherries have been a source of mar veling delight to all who saw and tasted them. Chance, there, "leaned heavily on man's intelli gence, for the earliest introduction of cherries in 1848, at Milwaukee, Ore. included some of the choicest varieties known to the United States of , that generation. As the years passed, some of the seedlings, Jinder the influence of the land and the climate, displayed Vemarkable merits. One of them de veloped under a Napoleon, or royal Ann tree, in an orchard at Milwaukee, Ore., an orchard plant- . ed sixty years ago. The seedling tree, supposed to be a cross of Black Heart on Napoleon, was grafted to a May Duke tree before it reached bearing age, and was transplanted to a location at one end of .the old orchard. Some years ago the May Duke top broke off,' or died; but a sprout from the seed ling stock was permitted toi form a new top. When tnat new top bora its fruit the owner r 9 vvmMm 7f V;--fi, 'ff ,--: rn iff N w .:-:K-i 7 i ii'- Yi y&Jife'STg-o sCrcs? 'jW&fa fj&iTf. " " . -"":!.v .-,v7 ' ' -". ' - -s - .v . . , ' J s . ' t r 11 7, nprcftivpd limmediatelv that he hurl f rpainrn eabj to whieh it shows some susceptibility; Dur- trove. X JI sent small shipments of theherrieswosinriniana. ck mo iasi ww jtr u ween iruitea on to Boston and otner eastern markets. Ineprjces received were a revelation. . It is not yet extensively planted east of the Rockies, but is regarded bySAgricultural Depart ment experts as worthy of the 'test at any place where sweet cherries grow. " Heart-shaped, large of ten very large it is light red in color, beautifully marbled with a " ","r. ' ., ! '- V rv . darker , red. The flesh is purplish red, with J- Packed: in eight-pound grape baskets, sells m lighter marbling, sweet, rich andjuicy. The - Kansas 'City and other good markets at prices' fruit isborne in large clusters, one twig three ' ' ranging' fro.m 50 to 75 cents a- basket.' A 'iii. and one-half inches long ; having twentv-three '":"':' This 'is 'one of the foremost s neniimmoM well-developed cherries. -: , known in -the United States today. We cannot ,L 47 . fl.A, .W-.lf. vpr. nnllfll tlw M AnanASA rtoraimmnTi in otm oni 1 . i e i t. ' i iy . ana rerresntng. v- it. is a genuine wonaer in mangoes, believed to .be, unique among its kind, . The Missouri persimmon is. extremely large for its class, with a translucent reddish color and , a flavor sweet ana rich. Un the thin, dry land of Jackson county, llo., it ripens, in September, but the government experts deem it worthy of testing in ; all pcrsfrnmon-growing sections, where, if the land bo rich and under cultivation, it should ripen and be marketable for a period of several weeks during autumn and early winter without ' the need of cord storage.1 The Department of Agriculture, in the lus-. cious domain of the orange, has at last decided that a stock, imported from China, previously classed with mandarins and tangerines is too splendid a variety to endure longer without a distinct horticultural dignity all its own. It majr even reach the importance of being rated a sub species of orange. . ' The parent stock was secured by a woman of Riverside, Cal., through non. John S. Bing ham, then United States minister to Japan, who obtained it' from the Chinese Imperial Gardens at Pekin. The juice is abundant and peculiarly sweet and rich,, with, a distinctive and agreeable aroma. It is considered a distinct addition to the orange family, and, is alretdy grown in Florida. A variety of mangoi' imported by' the Gov ernment Section .of Seed and Plant Introduction in 1901 -into Florida from -Bangalore, India, has . turned out to be a truly giant mango which at tains weight of twenty - ounces as ,'a ; regular thing, and of ten reaches two pounds. .; . This ihormous" fruit has rich reddish yel low, flesh,, very juicy and tender, and almost en- ln an abandoned field ; in. Jackson county, yet equal, tire Japanese persimmons in size and1 Mo.va fruit grower of, Harlem, Mo., discovered a-, .brilliant ;color,;but:ours are farmbre hardy f ar; remarKanie, persimmon iree oi ine. variety jjios .richer, in flavor and far better ju general que lle Becurcd .aeions, and has .ltTlhn, anything tho Japanese-have succeeded'1 'now an orchard of K) trees, the fmit.qf which, i;in,producing.i.. ; . i ' . ' ? . ' . .'. J '.'.'.'x'- i .' x ' " And any. one who; hay ever eaten a 'fresh, aro matic mango willcomprehend what a gift of tha -gods this .must be.- . ,. - , ' . ; .' y., "O o'