LtiaiHtD in III SUCCESSFUL UPON ST, MOTS PROJECT Ranchers Raise Fruit,' Vege tables, 6 rain, ' Chickens and Turkeys With Success. By Fred Lockley. Stantteld, Or., Oct. 11 A day or two ago, accompanied by James Kyle, mayor of Stanfleld. J rode over the Stan- fleld project. Wo drov out rt past a. L. -Kurd's "Good jmcv peaen ana appl orchard. Vrom tnr wo drov to Mii.a r mnnr'i tract. Sir. Barager famini jhnnt inn acre. Ha hu 40 t acrM In orchard and, runa dairy. B cam In tbo spring of 10 and la one of tls first settlor on tbo project . Wa next drove, to the farm of Thora aa Richards. Mr. : Riohards la building up a splendid Holateln herd. Recently he went aaat and purchased several carloads of Holstelns for himself and soma of hla neighbor. There have been nine carload . of Holsteln , cattle ': brought Into Stanfleld In the past two year, ' 1 . ' ' ',., , From !Ji"r, Richard's place wo drov to the farm of Mr. Wallace who has lnterplantod hla fruit treea with water melons and other crops. Mr. Wallace la doing1 something1 that would aoive tn ( question of keeping the boy on the farm if mora universally adopted.? Bo i ba bought a lo acre tract for hi 17 year old bar. He and hi son farm it to gether. A.U money mad xrom goes toward tho payment of th place. With in a. few yean it will ba paid for and tho boy will hay a valuable property just at the urn n want . to sao Ush a home for himself. : From Wallace's wo drove abora the ditch and looked over tho Paradise pro JecL "There la ao reason," said MR Kyle, "why the government should not take up this Paradise project The 47. 000 acres In this project will make homes for hundreds of settlers and the water used on this project will drain through Stage . Gulch and Despaln's Gulch Into tho Cold springs reservoir, thus furnishing plenty of water at all times for th Umatilla project. Much of the land on tho Padarlso project la now In rye or In summer fallow. It can be ; hnnirht. fnr tiS an acre or lass.' We next dror to the Fred Pat ranch. This ranch, In which I have an interest" said Mr. Kyle, "1 largely owned by Fred Page of Page it Bon, at Portland. . Z was the first manager of tho ranch. It consists of 160 acres, 77 acres being In pears, peaches and apple. - The pears are four years old and the apples are two years old. We put In Wlnesaps, Jonathans and Arkansas Blacks, and tho rest of the place In . alfalfa. We get froth seven to sight ' tuns of alfalfa to the acre each season cutting It three or four times a, year. it takes about tare acre zee, ox water " to the acre to Irrigate It", From tho Pag orchard we want to . tho Sunrise farm owned by th Has el Investment company, Dr. O. EL Watts of Portland being the principal owner. The farm consists of 100 acres, 1(0 of which are in alfalfa, Twenty acres are planted to Wlnesap and Jonathan aD pies which are three and a half years Una. The manager took u all over th place. W went first to th chicken ' yard where ther ax over 1000 White ' Leghorns. " 'v ' Chickens XalseA With auooess, "W sent for 1200 young chickens paying 13 WJ cents apiece for them," , said the manager. "We recently shipped 10 docen young cockerels to Pendleton where we got f 4 a dosen for them. W will raise our own chickens next year : as we have two Incubators of 400 egg capacity. We also raise our own ducks." From th poultry . house w went to th ' swine- yard -where ther ar '110 Duroo hogs. "This is on of the m6st prof itable . parts of our ranoh." said th manager. "The hog and alfalfa na turally go together and both fit In like a hand in one's glove with the dairy business. W have 61 Holstelns. We sep- MftlV VHI -JbI4t UJ), iuvw l to - Kermiston. W feed ' th skimmed mine to th pigs and tb ealves. Our Holsteln heifers oame from Illinois and cost us about $7S eaeh, laid down." , W went next to O. Ik Dun-ting's frm. una, at tha haat inmnlM ff what lrt addition to his other crops, has a number of stands of beea "My bees i a varan shout II t atnjii, " aafi V, Dunning. "In an alfalfa or clovercoun ; try bees do wonderfully well as there 1 so much material from Which to max honey. T. J. Bartnger has 150 stands of bees and last year be made, between 1800 and 1900 from tarns." .. At Fred- Heath's plac. w found a 79 acre farm, a considerable part of It set ' to alfalfa,, with , some acreage In strawberries and asparagus, . both of which com on th market vary early la .this district. From Mr. Beath's plac w went to Peach Bill farm, owned by Mr. R,, M. Tnttl of Portland. Sidney Archer,, the resident manager, took us over the place, Th owner of Peach Hill farm believe in diversified farming and on - tho -100 acre which h owns be has . a hard of Holstelns, soma Duroo Jersey red hogs, an orchard, and ha also ..raise considerable corn and alfalfa. ' Th ditch is two miles long and drains land which had previously been over- i tlnwrmA anil ah wfifM, at 3aYA jmw. . a cat-toll wag la evidence. The district was bonded for t34,O0O and a ditch two miles long was put in. On this overflowed land they ar raisins; - th finest kind of crops, particularly corn, From Peach Hill farm w went to George C Coe's ranch. Mr. Coe 1 a aon f Dr. H. W. Coe, on of th originators of th Btanfleld project W went over , his ranch very thoroughly. Mr. Co Is a college man. Ha got on thing at col lego hot In th curriculum; which has been one or th chief factors In his success and that Is, a capable wlf who is helping him make hi farm . a suc cess. We stopped in a splendid field of corn and broke off ears of corn from it to it jncnoa ions wmon nan . rrom JO to 12 rows of corn to th ear, tb . coo oeing very, smaiL , , " At Tho Coe ataaoh, The' Improvements" on this farm are only three years old," said Mr. Coe. 'This statement may seem hard to be- iht nuw you iui t tine sue or in ; lint thin trnloanlM1 aali maII .l.k -.-,i,. . .:. ,...w ,. -n.-'" WIU1 water and with' the long growing sea son, produces phenomenal .results. I . have 10 acres of pears, mostly Bart lette and D'AnJoua, 10 acres of Early Crawford and Elberta peaches and a half acre of grapes though I am going to put in six ana a naiz acres or grapes nrirt spring and I am also adding six and a half acres of strawberries. X have put in this year six acres of com. I ' find that Northern Minnesota, Dent No, 6 does exceedingly well 'here. Z have also Intercropped my fruit trees with potatoes. Last year X raised 800 sacks tf.nuKD X will have mora than that this j-ear." ' " ' . ' ' , ;..rm -rararjttcom field- to th -r;.SCENK-0F'VAWED;TARUlNQ ACTIVITIES OH STANFIELD; PROJECT , .'.'..A::.ii ;.?'.' ii-'iclie , -...,-! iih it v' --'' ' ,). 1 .: ." c . , ni r -guj m, f.-n ' .. n.r.. rmii -l.h r -fi -' i"u-ii. ir nu . j .ml.. . u.'i.i ,n .ii.uihwi i-m n i " .;...j..r I li 1 I '. , ' , i "aaaaTT--"-w Tor Lining :Stanneld Irrigation canal with-cement -; Bottom; left to I right Potatoep ralBednby George, Coe between ,) corn rows." - . ,'-..r !. - , - . '. I " the bam yard., Ha began , calling : th . tur key, and from every direction they earn a th run. "W hav 1 turkeys this year: : 01d Tom' thr - weighs li pounda Wa sold 72 turksys ' last sea son, receiving sugnuy over ssuo xor r. rais Which includes the' cost af the' aottlngt of eggs was about 140 Come oh In. My wife can tell -you all. about . th. turkey business,; said Mr. Co. -Stepping Into the house one Is transported from Qton field 'to -Huntlnrton avenue in Boston. Mrs.- Coe' Is' a Boston girl -and oU and wateroolor paintings and a wsll-aelected library showed ' that as much attention was paid' to, the bom as to the farm- Mrs.. -Coe can -talk of the theory of Im mortality and she can 1 also talk of the raising of turkeys and talk, to th point onv both subjects. ' We raised our tur key." said Mrs. Coe. "by setting them under hens. The second sotting of eggs we set under: turkey hens. The bens leave the turkeys a -little early ao the brood of iyoung turkeys raised by the hen 1 usually adopted by a turkey with a younger brood. . X . feed . th little tur keys when they first com out on hard' boUed egg, then chick feed and cottage EXCEPW iL Lion : VflLL BE DiSCUSSED liecturft Will-Be Given by Prof. 'Groszmann; Admission 1 ;-.'Free,(,'; TJndar the . auspices - of ' the Portland council, Oregon Congress of Mothers, thr will ba given Tuesday evening, at i o'clock. In the auditorium of the pub lic library, a free lecture on the "Ten tative Classification of Exceptional Children,", by Maxmllian P. Grossmann, Ph. D' educational director of the .Na tional Association for' the Study and Education of Exceptional Children. - - This lecture ' Is divided Into three heads, first ."normal ohlldrehj second. subnormal children, and third, abnormal children. ? Under.; th first hoaV Pro fessor, oroasmann wiu Oeal with the typical child, th pseudo-typical children, children of unusually ' rapid develop ment, with genuin pathological preco city, children who ar diffloult of man agement and neglected children, and typical children- proper, neurotlo and neurasthenlo ohildren and children Of pathologically retarded development ; Under th second head, he will speak Of defective children, children of ar rested development pathological classes, submerged classes, children , of rudi mentary or atavistlo development and under th third head the speaker will tell of heredity and congenital, causes to which - abnormal ohildren can ' be traced. " All parents,, teachers and. others in terested In th most advanced Ideas on these topics will be especially welcome. roul j,. , e . i nart j fctt Bccident II' -Aifa uni jarents bav been caring for him, Thursday b started for town and. becoming confused, lost hla way. ' . IT twmed up later in Kenton and bii Tc actions, th result of Injuries rt. ;v.a 1 1 the wreric caused the police to arrest 1 n a,a hold him ftr an laniinatloi ror his sanity. No warrant or oharge ai made out when be was turned over to ti.e county Jail and his parents and wife secured his , release yesterday. , When the Kenton women earn to Identify htm they at one said be was net the man who had been causing th terror to women and chil dren.. '',' . ,,.'.. . ' No, examination will b mad for In sanity, 1 ? 1 f . t '.', IDAHO OVEhCilY , - , v increased attl.d;.:::: .Unlvers)- 't Idaho, Monro w, Ort. 11. I-Reglstr fifcures for the collcso year to ta w that tnere la an in crease I y mce over last yenr. 1 registr? j ow that there ar t m 171 new I J I njs registered as com pared to 1.1. I , j students the earns timo ' last year. I y 'classps, tlifre are'threu graduate student t, IS seniors,' 11.' Jun iors, 10 '.phon- 164 freshmen and, 29 utioU;.. i'd. 'Xi.u' ti t gain pi .13., seniors over last year, 13 , Juniors, IK freshmen and 10 unclassed. . The sopho. more class shows a losa The greatest : pumber coming from any on town Is 14, from,Bolse.tf - -i , - ' ; Flat Hunting InAnEasyGhdirl Oheesa, a littl later adding ground onions and alfalfa, ; When the turkeys ar large enough we let them roam all over th place picking up their own liv ing. Our . place, looks particularly fin and thrifty because tb. turkeys have eaten all th grasshoppers, borers - and lnseots . which - bother the trees. X . keep careful record of what the turkeys cost as well as the other expense on th farm, To date,, this season, , the. turkeys bar cost IS and we will .probably sell Uiera'for 400 or 1800 befor Christ- WRIGHT IS NOT : MAN WHO TERRORIZED WOMEN . . , . , -i, .. . t -- P. I Wright arrested on suspicion as the man who ' has terrorised women and children; In Kenton recently, was positively , declared' by - three Kenton woman i Friday , afternoon not to be thjnan. , Wright was formerly . a rall- tt,Takfi a mfortable chair-move where the, 1 'light, Is; good then vplclc up your copy, of, r-: The Journal and. turn . to " the ; "Want ' AdV : k pages ' In . section , three and - read tthe "For r RenfVcolumiis.: '5 ,V"'V.; r 1. -; '3 Thafs the way to find a flat; an apartment of a touse nowadays : Likely as not the ad-1 yertisement that attracts you;wfll mention a "telephone number and you, can secure any. furtiierlnformatldn you want by calling up. -j '"t.i Journal WantAds Are a Modern Convenience J J' r7 lilflM:aild ; ! , t " ! ' t --- v 77 - , 4 i y i . ie Five Volume Set IVl) ( I- , ', aw f , f i t' tOp(B(uLlL ' 3 l . " ut IT SI I Quickly iRj thi offer muit be withilrawn toori I''KMilluiiHuinniV 1 ; &,m ''Mltlni I) "'"'HCiiiVr:. 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