.11 nn n TVTirhFiri rir tttvtbx inn titbit y K;-L ' W N 5 ,KKYi IN J IKY -II - . ..... , ,ju iifiuvyu -inn r n m 11 n r i 1 "':--a;-- fT True ion car of "the limited, Tammany's overwhelirt- 9 woman suffrage move Knickerbocker state but ich receding through the followed by another, all siette valley, until just at in a delightful panoramic St 'valley, will, be in the not c I'zes that the growing of this I ry. will pay more net profits ) y other crop for- commercial .alley painting may be found. , iii uu wuir join me SWlif i upper New York state to the 'right shining steel rail's divide fame of whose grape Juice has . - -.-- -: - i. ' " ;on? Agricul&Eal Colleges says: pare juicc,Just aTTtNnaip from ;nt to three times its conU. .ruit-MfriXlie market. j Oregon, the Center i ays r,A! rising young juice that has it ranks of the glittering soda fountains I extract j of loganberry. It has; made a erican j palate in a short two years of I where meironcc looked for golt there ianza in juice. L 'J -:J- J i i I California,; discovered the berry about e a-chance hybrid between, a wild-blacky IX is long anu lai, uawug wwre nuiance '-rry It is grown on a commercial scale vington and Oregon, and' does not seem '.ate; It was first used for pie and jamj ies.; mostly fresh and m iced cars, fast f fresh berries are now shipped annually i of California. , '-r'iVvV .. - U nters at Salem. Ore eon. ."VVhen the state large brewery became idle and was cora gospel of , kickless beverage among the he reformed brewery was received with ?s of Boston $nd Ne$ York. -The farmers ,-e acreage, and the production. ia- betwecy to the acre, .which compares, closely with I grape. i.The jyield;of juice for the same grape I t jj jis of LIanufacta . lor raanufaetonriff loganberry ice one d for consumrtion. and "Thez! bottled the berry, 05 pe theory mat f ?s mucn Consumer to d his own reducilg 'than to bulk m shipping. -it. f mies control 75 Dcr Cent of thl bGrries of t the other two companies, oat uiey. arc jffor the reason that' the berriel are falling f companies;' as it is no small man s game - ;eity of it, to operate such a? business, j ,(t)Q invested in vineyards 'j of loganberries in t fad the industry are calling or the planting Th berries. At present onif abVnt-2000 -acres I .'I , ; --. - 1 'vine, notti bush, as is setimiii.eiTncisly v f rom- twenty to thirty feet in length. The i size and proportions of man's thuiab. Tlie ;rown ii the two states of Oregon and "VVash ;atipart of these: srles west of the Cascade ; j r v .. m only j b grovfi : ipccfully wesf of the I brid fas dt&yeyA " Judge John II. i expeimtnfnK "wifli theross between a pTscrrf'fr't'" veT- nisheil in the . . t. . r..txAik. tn" .SvizardXl tt i?itU lndu8t-y. surtlns. as Ji fht lhfnit. Ute went dry, the bottle maaufactnrers and keffeted that becluse of Ef,". t?.ttIe business would drop ? rJSi 1 wJul4 b negligible. But these prophecies did not prove true, for, today these two companies alone are using hundreds of carloads of empty glass, and the product are shipped to every quarter of the globe -r-in fuU carload lots, for the most part to the large distribuUng cen ten - .;.;.' la ; stacdardlxlng the business. "Phes," for Uistance. wilt be found bottle for bottle, In New York Just the , same as In "Salem, both- as to quality aaj price. . i ;. ; i ' r , , IXDILIUY JUST I COW. -"(The foliowhur editorial aDneared In the tatesmaa in the latter part i.Thecgaiberry industry has been stablliz 1. It - Is -now j on Its feet.' It brlt .s to Salem, which Is its. cen ter, aad the city of its birth, a vast sum Of nosey each year. But : it most grow. ..The Willamette valley has In bear ing ,2000 to'- 2500 acres. Marlon county has about lOOtf acres. There can be little Increase in the volume of the crop harvested ' next year,; over that of the season of 1917, excepting in Hie possibility of a better season and . better " cultira tlon. This increase may tte consid erable?' for last season was a jery poor one for logai berries; and the growers have learned a lot of valu able lessons from,' experience in this new industry ajid, since it is. new, experience is the only, guide worth noting. . . - f . ' .: . ; But there is now1 an effort being made to double vthe acreage ' of loganberries try planting next spring in Marlon county, and. If possible, throughout: fhe valley. 'r - The;:WotejgT-4i8trlct has already guaranteetrce doubling of the acre age; there.; v." -'r--. ' 5'""-- f;. if- t So that, in 1919, 'therq) may be 4000 acres of (bearing loganberries in the Willamette ; valley ;i - possibly 5000, if the efforts: now, being made I shall produce results up to the full measure f the expectations of the most optimistic. But there should be 10,000 acres, and more; and there will- be a market for the juice made from the berries of J0jfe0 acres before that mark is . reacbeM. I - ' s i The grape Juice Industry' of the United' States is already sing the product of 20,000 acres; tnd- grape juice is only a drink, wsilt logan berry Juice is both a drink and a food. I ' i.:-. : f In due course of time. th lareest demand for loganberry lIo will be from the ' kitchens of this Md other countries; for ice cream add. icings and flavorings ind icoloilng,: - it uses in this respect are many.v -- And as & drink It la a hetterrink than grape - Juice; "the lastei ang ers ;M and It is good for the health of the users. ; I Another I thingc ! The - Willamette valley has an exclusive franchise on loganberry t juice. - jThia is Ue only districts In -I this country- where-the loganberry; can be grown to perfec tion, f ": 4 - Now, - for; a greater tosnage per acre, and la larger acreage, np to 10,000, and then some. Thl will mean one ! of the largest industries tn tha whole country, anf it is surely coming- and the sooner' the better for all -concerned. j. h : r y Juicj Profits in Sight An rticTer which should be interesting to many of the Statesman's readers, appears in a late issue of the Oregon Voter, published by C. ji-'Chapraan, -It deals with the " loganberry industry, more especially in the Willamette vaUey, Oregon, and is as follows r Another Oregon dream has ctfrae' true.; It's only a few years ao that a few enthusiasts prophesied that the loganberry industry had Vast possibilities for the WUlairatte valley. And in this year o our Lord 1917 we wake up to the realization that Judge Logan's berry is bringing $2,000,000 into. our slate. ; f . f Nearly as productive' as the whole apple crop of Oregon,, in dollars and cents, is the loganberry crop of 1917. v ; I , . . And it's nearly as Valuable as the prune cropthat boom crop of the late '80s, which vindicateJtself as the years rolled by amjf has brought riehes to all the persistcst growers who persevered .n loyalty to it. Half as valuiable as a normal hop crop is the loganberry ?rop. t And nearly half as 'valuable', as the salmon crop of the mighty Col mi bia Almost half the-valne of I normal wool. crop, "befo the'wii!:..". Surely, here, is an industry t!.at merits attention.' It has grown t . tlie point, that it commands t. And those who have followed' it closely are beginning to see, that its beginning is modest indeed cor.i pared with its1 immediate and ultimate possibilities. S Quick attention this lusty infant industry should have for it ; main need today is more 'acreage. ; Here is something our .Willamette valley commercial bodies can take up with a feeling of certaii:t; , that their, efforts will bring ! liars intOtheir communities bril.t, new round dollars, that eorce from afar' and. enrich farmer tr: I merchant when they come. ; , . ; " V , f '; Only 2000 acres are now flanted to loganberries. This land i worth $150 an acre, or aj total of only $300fiOO. And- from th'; $300,000 worth of land is produced the berries that bring $2,000,OC J into the state. Looks like a ssnall investment. Immediate planting of 1G,OCO acres to loganbcrries'is what is advo cated, by leading manufacturers of the tasty juice. Demand already established for Ihis deliioEs beverage base is:, what impels 0.1 recommendation. y- Jfj v;" , i , ' . Backing up its judgment one of the' leading juice manufacturer offers to erect a local pressing plant in each community that will pul in from .200 to 300 acres of loganberries. And on top of that, 'will guarantee $70 a ton for the picked berries, on a long-term contract. lit is only a few years ago that a cent a pound, or $20 a ton, wu the amount paid for picking The grower felt he was doing well t get 2 cents a pduhd for his." aJacft.. - And tnanypickeT? and grower made money at those price , s a much so that the planting of logan berry acreage was extended :pace. f .' i s 4 . . With the oncoming of pr ' ibition,everal faV-sighted. manufactifr era saw possibilities in the, f arp taste of loganberry juice to cstabli a new favorite' as a temper, :ce drink. They shipped some juice east, and it made a hit wherever served; As a bar drink, it promptly won a-place f or-itself amohg-d, lit. refreshments-. At the. soda fount air it established a quick defend. In households, at banquets' and at retfeptiona and dances, it I ame a favorite for punch, ior unlike any thing else that was.non-in xicating "it' had the punch' And pro hibition is spreading. t; 1 : :v ( r , So. two years ago one co jeous manufacturer undertook nation.-! advertising' on ; a small scj :. -The inquiry and interest created wj. sufficient that last winter a big advertising campaign' was under taken. Si pages of the Saturday Evening Post were contracted, oj; of them in colors- The cost was $31,000 a big sum for a tiny infar l industry of far-off Oregon to eipend-r-but the actual demand create 1 as the advertising. was run duringLate spring and early summer mor than justified the expense. ; - -'f'f Another manufacturer operatinsf a converted brewerj',' 'iiuTv ' ' his brand of, loganberrj' juice in daily newspapers of several 'lur; eastern cities, concentrating his campaign. . - i Results they were impressive. Distribution ofthe preceding k: son's supply of juice was effected into every part of the countr; Carload, after carload was shipped east. : , ' , As soon as the 1917 crop began to come in, it was pressed, packc and shipped. Dealers and vendors clamored for more. By autui.; the demand was so heavy it made; the manufacturers gasp. Tl widespread character of the demand indicated the special rcsultsth came from the national magazine advertising. Then, the military authorities caught on. ' .They, too.- discover what charms there were in loganberry juice as a beverage. At an posts, training; camps and cantonments, the soldiers bought log berrv juice from their canteens. Prohibition was enforced, the r medical authorities thought little of 'ppp" as a health drink, r here was loganberry juice, a favorite, that was the healthiest ik: that nature and man had ever produced. J ' ' So the government tried out a carload. .This was followed nv.l by orders for many more carloads. One eastern grocery jobber t ten carloads of loganberry juice to the government on one nr And a carload costs $9000. And nearly all the $9000 conn. Oregoivjr--.. ;-:-' :V v : v .- Today 'the army demand for Iojranberry juice is Ruffle, command all of next year's production; ( But'the manufacturer wise. They are going to continue their national advertising: , not to lose the advantage of the general'market that has been'c'; all through the I7nit4d States. Instead of beinir satisfy easy sales made to tKe government, they-are bending their ciu; to increase acreage lroduction here in regon. Thus thcy-i to ailcment throp RuffWicntlv to at least take care of nrt armv demand and. the growing public demand for juice. ; , Will ot California and thagtertt and southern states ' ii vr acreage, so as to compete with the Paeifw Nnrthwt They have already, tried it. The loganherry was a Californi ventionJuage uf5an,iu f xperjinemer iMj,0 perfected it. It leen thirty years since me luscious oerry wa heralded, and in r every state it has been tried. Only on. the Pacific Coast ! survived commercially , i " - - v s 4- And only 2Cp acre have survived in California and t!j' there ?s a joke compared with the greats luscious Oregon lo; It is small and dry, and yields very small juice tonnage with the, Oregon product." Neither has it the surpafwing flav it takes that rare combination of abundant moisture and mildness ; to' produce .the, great,' perfect, juicy roganberry, ; nation found, no wherv else in happy combination save nrur Korthwest coasts.;.,:. -I --, '5" .' . 1 :;1 ' : . ; ;'. Judge Logan invented a fine lerry ii California. , But he ! better than he, knew. rFor, from that California start' r Oregon loganberry of today, so far beyond what Judge Is able to produce in California that there is hardly a cc From Judge Logan's plants the Oregon loganberry was The old jurist wizard of berrv nlsnta has nroven to 1 Oregon's preatest benefactors. 1 ; ; . . cOur Willamette valley is one of th'Wanlennots of e -r its fertUity Hs being sacrificed to wheat and other n bulky rouffbasre.t-Dairvinir is helninw' taw if l.nt f dairy .farms'.: is 'smalL cornered--with ilmt. -nW f- drain the soil. Tha ideal products for the Wiltn-v ! ' Acreage Must Be Increased Not ae e'erson in a, thousand In the .Unie1 gtates ever heard the iWord lognneVy before one ot the Salem companies undertook an am bitious y aojtertling c ampalgn through ;tlTa medium of The Satur- - The princiale before - the manu facturers ot l6gzXjrr Jnice at this time is first and foremost to produce enough of the product, and second to secure glass bottles fast -enough, and third to make known to the .world that there is such a product; If Salem doesnt look out and do tt bow, the loganberrr center of the world may shift from Salem, as sud denly as it "feund a place- In the sun." ' . . i The farmers of Marion county are not asleep all' the time, but some of them seem to be asleep most all of the time whenJtjcom.es to "hook ing op" with a good contract deal for produce on term contracts. Or, In other words, tn the - language of Lincoln, "You can fool some of thH people all of the time; you can fool all the people some of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all the time." ; v - -' . Now there are right here In Salem two or three x large manufacturing plants which - make a specialty of handling loganberries; one, pr may be two, dry or eTaporate the berry. Two others press out the Juice for ries. i With these ? two companies openly offering to tie up the grow- ers output for fromflve to ten years at a price that makes the market, even before the canes or vines are put into the ground, it would seem to be a matter of Mr. Farmer getting out his fanto' and making a "bee line" for the off tees of these com panies, i - ' . I A - i - Large Car i til Invented ; Today there is ver $800,000 in vested la loganbeiyy vineyards and factories in Oregoi with Salem as the center of the Jworld; m this dis tribution of the product. In Marion county only 1000 acres are planted to loganberries, with 1000 other acrea in other parts of the state. Last year loganberries brought Into . the state gross sales estimated at a trifle over 2,000,000 or almost as mucn in dollars and cents as the apple crop of the entire state,- ven -inel udfttg - the : celebrated Hood River country. . v Those behind these manufacturing concerns are doing everything In the pow,er?of human beings to do in a supreme effort to induce the plant ing of ; 10,000 more acres to logan berries, and by offering to provide a market at a good price per pound before .the: vines can be set In j the ground, It would seem that there is little more that they can do. ; If, toy any reason of their own, the farmers of this county do not pledge . sufficient loganberries to Wliere "Phes'T Is Vwed i Shipments of "Phes" are shipped throuah distributing arrangements already perfected pa Canada,;South America, in BuropeV and the far east. and initial shipments have been made to all countries' on the globe, as far as war conditions nake possible. The foreign shipments have.com pelled the company to provide wood instead of paper cases, which are used In making shipments through out the United States. I have before me the announce ment sheet of food products carried In stock; orsupplles on demand, of Austin.) Nichols & Co., New York Among other statements oh this ord er leaflet appear: r "World's I record broken, ship stores, navy yards, ma rine harracks; army "posts, training camDf. etc, All"SUpplled quicker and better than any other house -in the world." !"Pbes Loganberry Juice The-Krohlbitk)n beverage with, a kick In it."' i -I-.;' V; : The records of this large exporting house show that all the battleships of the United States 'navy, and all the cantonments in this country. where United States troops ; are in training, have been supplied by them with "Phes" shipped on their,-orders direct to docks or camps.; !l ! ! . With two large manufacturing companies located 'right In Salem each offering to contract for ail the loganberries that can be produced In this county, on contracts from five . e tiad of M berrynoV known cmercially . :t ir Ktill Loeanberrv.i ! ; I r-e vine?? ! n coast to ,, other Ycrk, alS the l of.the,?ld Kn,e iIway 'pte--ever en'mS border on bothies doWAlbany.-f : . X nnll who know, especially those in tlie befy iuic 18 penor to grape juice fo ' (X. jnice m Ue U,ited States is. 10,000,000 U OOQ acfW. of 1 ganbemes to equal this Aiiis berry. Or: rrpat. vinevarrf renehinir i?Zm end of the ,ilamette valley to Port i.liu- , . font a I , Vear t lpn to 1 ? out and prepare ground J . -rV V 111 no fi I. .' y are piantea in rows 'and eight feetilaparf in ' :.,hcrry vines. nrth and sou. . fourth plant, i r. Two. Strand, . the canes are ( ut after each i winter while ' Jltivated, t e j- tie Eprc. o . wWe r: t rs. to-1: - :..,;;.?. 't,-S;- ! ;kl vine, or thirtytwo feet wire are strung to the r season, and the new nes are dormant. If ill average from . four rc paid 3. 'cents per 11 ceni a pound,' with, ire picked in pound i single' tier crates of emptied into large : ,?cs into hyclratilie 1:" 1:U rwn secret the most T ... 4 V 'tint ' -r- r 4 a leverage, and have already, with in a.Khort time, established a market for tVe product' beyond their ability to supply why? '1 :.-,;"i; I wilt take, for exampleithe two leading manufacturers of loganberry products, one is the Salem-Kings Products Company, oi Korth Front street, whick plant waa opened for business only a few. weeks ago under the management ot "Jack" Walker. The firm. employs nearly 200 people, part of them in fh factory, the oth ers in the field trying their.best to tie up farmers or - growers, of all kinds of produce, which can be 'pre served for future use.- In the logan berry line they have, and In only a few casea; comparatively ; speaking, taken time term contracts accepted by the .farmers -or growers to whom these offers have been made. Their method , of preserving the fruit Is that of evaporation iv r ; -i - ,Tbe other, company Is the Pheas ant Fruit Jnice Company, which be gan the manufacture or loganberry juice tn a. small, way. In 1913: last year by Judicious-advertising the de mand for- its: product exceeded the ability of the company to supply. , - -.lpreaKto the . Farmer ! To v t'1"- t hundreds of acres ' ' - ' " r Salem that are " da. not pay as ",t,- as wouH meet the reqalremenU of these man ufacturing plants, and other local! ties came forward with the acreage pledges to make the future of the business assured, cenld any one in Marion county blame these" factories for seeking otner faarters? It might be, but Is not a likely ining 10 nappen. t . . r . Do you get It? t j Fignree Drltt Point ITome As Ulustratinrfwhat one of th,a companies is doUg for Salt m In the way oi a guuuizea payroll, I will give you a lewriignrea taken direct from ibe bool pf The Pheasant rruft Jttice tympany, whose main plant Is located at ?Hshand Trade streets.- .:. !.. Ifere are employed from forty to flf ty people, and In the rush seasons many times that number are 1 re quired to use care or the business. Sob-stations are located at Wood- burn, ami - urii urore, and there will oon be another plant at Oreneo. where hundreds of acres have, been puced un4er contract for i planting ext season, i j The general office force, now lo ated In the .United States National pask eullding, numbers fifteen clerks; stenographers,- bookkeepers an salesmen. .. . . Offlcfs. afe arso mafn.tained In .vew York Chicago, and Ati,f, . . . - - I I I' t u years, at a price that gnar ante a regular! market fori the pro ductoganberries even before the grouai j, cleared and planted, with an e&trmous market already estab lished fcr thIs most delicious bever age, ant with the bottle factories ready te do their nartJ the logan berry Jn4stry s noW 0 '.absolutely solid greand. - - ; I J : ' Each! oi of these companies has invested any thousand or ooiw In buildine. Mrhlnerv f and sfaip- DiniF ntaterf..! tr ttllll OUt Of Salem, yfor 1A of sunplt of the raw material, wen Id enforce ?a great sac rifice of pital already invested, but, better lose a part bf that, and go to a,erritory wnere ers can rsee "througn a .iu. with . i sUi. in it and re-establUh a business; there. ' j t H.i.:. r nature in ner simp m f-m,' MflDOl -oniys " but the gteatest oev - v : V" nlalne and growinSoi wh-"""" for. commercial, puivww.-,' " . . , ... v. h itrcam come true.' to taWUIamjette valJwithar county as ""'l m to berry vlneyaras n-aca -7er . . . . i. ' nm here Eagene on tie wain, "ntir to Portland n the "f?; " ve the "Rose. of, SharpnTfo er plain.- I . .-1 - - (Continued on page S)