''.Mr - e- V 'ft SECOND SECTION PAGES I TO 4 III Slogan, General News and Classified SEVENTV-FIKST VEAIi SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY MORNING. APRIL 28, 11121 PRICE: FIVE CENTS aump f I HI'S BEAUTIFUL LITTLE in is a roil OLDER lit ( II I . V He Grew Grapes in Competition With Jack London When He Was a Youngster, and He Has Not Lost Any of His fntcrest in the Production Of Fine Grapes, and He ' fcnows the Salem District Produces and Can Produce Them. j. (Jim) I.Inn of Salem is Interested" In ou,d many things, BcJdiiK hops. prunes, loganber ile, general farming and stock falning hotels, the Htate fair, politics, etc. But he takes an much personal Interest In hi young vinyanl. four mile south 1 Halem. in tho liberty district. as he does in snjtnlng els. When Mr. Linn was a number of rs younger than he is now. It was on the payrolls of the itate of California!, working at the! home for the feeble-minded children at Glen Ellen, In the? Sonoma valley. He then had the nM of the vineyard of that in gt 1 1 tion. and the vineyard that : may P CB.CRAHAM CRACKERS Aaotkrr f. C. M. product r VUkUttr WW. cri t4 tmaty. . . mt ami- 1 ! - i jj Pacific Coast Biscuit Co. MVT 1 i ' ' i Telephone Pacific Long It places the It brings the It provides a prompt and satisfactory means of communi cation between friends in distant cities. It enables the business man to communicate immediately with his salesmen and with his trade. It eliminates time, it saves expense, it gets results. I. Pacific Long Distance service is available not only to neigh boring cities and towns, but to the East, the South, and to all Pacific Coast points, j Make use of this money and time-saving service; time saved is money earned. Consult your directory for rates or ask for Pacific Lonj Distance. The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company he attended wu across the road from the one on the farm of Jack London, the great novelist, and near one owned by Dr. Donnelly, mayor of San Francisco and whilom candidate fur governor of California. There was a good deal of riv alry between Mr. Linn and Jack London, for the great story writ er though! he knew all about grape growing, and he took great delight in the arts of viticulture. Hut Mr. Linn made a study of the science, too, and he worked hard, and he thinks he put It all over Jack London in the quality and quantity tf grapes grown. Mr. Linn says the grape land of the Sonoma valley district is At the Club and in the Best Cafes You'll find Snow Flakes served with broths, soups. Oysters, salads and cheese. Everyone likes to nibble these crisp, tasty soda wa fers. Sold by grocers in red packages and family tins. Dotit atk lot crackers -say SNOW FLAKES Long distance Service Distance telephone service is producer in close touch with home of the traveler to his hotel. like the I'olk county hills, only rougher. lie says the rough rocky land of the Willamette valley, with south slopes, to get the best ad vantage of the sunshine, is the best for grapes in the country around Salem. Ill Own Vine nnl Fig Tree. Mr. Linn's own vineyard Is a four-acre patch of land that was formerly grown up to oak grubs and wild things of the woods. lie set out his grape vines in the spring of 1 1 5 ; Concords and Wordens. which he got from New York. The Wordens are of th" Concord family; only larger and finer. 'Me set his vines eight Teet apart; set them like hop Tines. There are three ways to culti vate graces; the stump system, the trelllsing system, and the layering system. The grower can produce more grapes to the acre with the layering system than with either of the other two; some Hungarians and Hermans in Marion county are producing lu tons to the acre with the layering system. Hut that system takes the most labor of all. Then there Is the trelllslng system escribed in this l?s je by Professor Brown, of Oregon Agricultural college. Mr. Linn useg the etuni)in system. He says this Ig the f-yetem used in California for large acreage It makes for easy cultivation and harvesting. The stumping system Is like this: The second ye ar tie up the first year's growth to a stake IS Inches high which makes the Ftuinp of the vine. Each year after that cut back the season's growth to about two eye. Thus the new growth will branch out and make a bush high enough to carry the fruit off the ground. When the vines produce frut, to get perfect fruit pinch back the vines about the first of July to two joints In order to throw the growth Into the fruit. Another advantage, this will make the winter pruning much less. Mr. Linn says that, while he set his grapes about like hops, deeper holes are better. He says that a grower here may safely count on an average of three tonii to the acre, under the stumping system; a well tended . trellised vineyard will produce five tons to the. acre, and a layered vineyard may bear 10 tOHs to tha acre.... ,; . ... The price should' be at least f 100 a ton, in normal years, He says the Jelly and jam plants will need all that is grown or may be grown for a long time, hereabouts; for grape jelly is a standard product, in demand everywhere. The Layering System. The layering system is rather hard to describe without a pic ture. But the principle is the growing the year before of two or three vines about six feet long, from the parent stump; then the covering of these vines with soil for about two feet, supporting the rest of the vines with stakes. The part of the vine under th Foil grows rootless and gets sus tenance from the soil to put growth into the grapes on the part of the vine exposed to the sunlight on the stake and, the universal, tjj. his market. GRAPE GROWING AROUND SflLEIVl Br TIE CD1TY Spare the Pruning Shears Mr. Van Trump We Should Tack our Faith to the Standard American Varieties if We Expect to Develop A Grape Growing Industry on a Commercial Scale Proper Locations. I Kdiior Statesman : Very good grapes can Imj grown and are grown every season in'the Salem section of the Willamette ' vaalley. Not all varieties succeed I equally well,' however. Only the earlier ripening varieties of the itfj labrusca or native American I species, reach the highest degree of perfection on tlt. average soil , in this section. In a I eW very fav-i orable locations and on suitable "soils certain varieties of the. vitis vtnifera succeed fairly well here, i but generaly speaking, California , or Kuropeuu grapes require a lonoer season and a hotter cli ! mate than we have in the Willam ette valley. ! The first and most essential ! point demanding consideration in .planting a vineyard Is the selec ; tion of a suitable soil. The best soif for the grape is a sandy or ! gravelly loam that will not' bake j nor suffer seriously from drouth. I Such a soil underlaid by a porous I suboil which will furnish good natural drainage, even ii poor in fertility and liable to suffer from occasional severe drouth, is much to be preferred for the grape, to the heavier and darker loams, which, though much more fertile, are apt to be too wet and cold in spring and early summer. The I!et location. ' ' ' ! The best location for a vineyard is a southern slope, the steeper the I better, up to that point where til i lage and harvesting optrations are not seriously inconvenienced. It is important that your vineyard be located on an elevation the highest you can command above the adjacent lowlands. By this single important precaution you iraay enjoy an abundant harvest of I fruit many a season when Jack ; FTost shall have despoiled the ! prospects of your less fortunate neighbors in the .bottoms. Preparation of the Soil. Whether you plant in the fall or In the spring you should first give your aoil a libertl application of well decayed barnyard manure. After harrowing the manure into the soil it should be plowed to the full depth of the surface soil. When the breaking of the soil is finished it may be allowed to lie exppsed to the elements until con ditions are favorable, when it should be thoroughly pulverized with a harrow to the full depth i plowed. Having decided upon the proper distance apart to plant, which is 10 feet each way for the stronger growing varieties like Concords, and two feet closer each way for weaker growers like Moore's Early, the next operation is laying the ground out for planting. This is best done by fur rowing out the rows up and down the slope with a 16-inch breaking plow and then with a ten or 12 inch plow, breaking up the subsoil along this furrow as deep as pos. sible. In planting I use a wire, stretch ing it perfectly straight and tight at right angles to these furrows and planting at the intersections of wire and furrows. In planting set vines six to eight inches deep and spread the roots out evenly In all directions, firming the soil thoroughly and filling the furrow up level. Immediately after plant ing the young vine should be cut back to within a Tew inches of the crown, leaving only two or three strong buds. Cultivation the first season should consist in frequent hoe ingH around the young vine, with Biich other shallow tillage between the rows as will keep all weeds in subjection and retain soil mois ture. All cultivation should be lesult is a great crop. A Year Older Now. The above was written last year; but it will do most begin ners good to read It again, if they did read it in The Statesman's Salem slogan pages in 1920; and j there are many new people and many new subscribers of The Statesman to whom it will be new and of service For there t a greater Interest in grape growing in tbs Salem district than ever before. Mr. Linn secured about two tons of grapes from his vineyard lat-t year. He gave some away, mrwle some into grape juice, and old the balance to The Phez com pany for ." centR a pound; and they went Into jelly for the mar kets. The excessive early rains of last year rendered the grapfs lss sweet than they would have been in a normal seapon. Hut they are growing better and larg er each season. It is largely a matter of pruning. Mr. Linn says, for size and quality. Mr. Linn says California grapes sold as high as $200 a ton last year; but there is money in grapes in the Salem district at $100 a ton. One may expect at least three tons to the acre, and the harvesting Is not expensive. Mr. Linn himself, when he first went to California, picked grapes at $1 a ton. and he picked two tons a day. The scales of wages are higher than that now. but, even so. the expense of harvest ing grapes is low as compared with any other fruit crop. FRUIT HEC1 and You Spoil the Vine, Says discontinued on or before the first of September. During the liist Reason it will be found convenient and prolitable to grow some catch crop between the rows of vines. I have found the navy bean one of the most desirable crops for this purpose as it is low growing and adds much fertility to the soil. Training and I 'inning Training and pruning the vine is oiit of the most particular and difficult processes in connection with growing a vineyard. Indeed, one of the most difficult problems in horticultural practice is that or pruning the grape vine to get the tst yields under- varying condi tions of soil and climate. How ever, one point seems to be thor oughly proven, viz., that a grapo vine though ever so well fertilized and cultivated, will, if left to grow according to its own natur". soon come to naught. The great trouble with most vineyardists is they spare the pruning shears and soiI the vine. No one not pos sessed of a large bump or d destrucilveness need look for n success in a vineyard. Important as winter pruning is to the life oi a vine, it is not more important than summer pruning Is to tlx success of each succeeding crop. It would require a separate artlcl" to treat the subject of summer pruning adequately, but w hen w note that the size of the bunch, the quality of the fruit, and in seasons of drouth the ripening ot the crop all depend upon proper summer pruning we indicate the importance of the subject. The KuiH-rior Varieties Co-equal in importance with the o.uestions of suitable soil, proper methods of culture and training, is the question of super ior varieties suitable to your soil and climate. Some varieties, like Delaware, are admirably adapted to certain restricted sections, but when taken out of their favorite conditions of soil and climate prove utterly worthless. Other varieties, like Concord and War den, are possessed of the uniqr.? Three Ranges in One Coal, Gas, Wood Compact, Practical, Simple, Economical Absolutely Automatic No parts to change. Nothing to remember. 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If this section ever becomen successful as a commercial grap growing area it will be necessarv that our growers muke a thorough study of varieties and select only those especially suited to our soil and climate. I am not acquainted with the possibilities of Kuropean varieties when grown in t li ' section, except certain inferior varieties used for wine making'. which seem to succeed very weli. I am inclined to think that for market, purposes we can't do bet ter than tack our faith to the siaimard American varieties such as Hartford Prolific, Moore's Kur Iv, Campbell's Karl Concord, anil Worden. Moore's Carly, besides i. very early is of fine quality but lacks vigor and productive ness. These defects might b' remedied by grafting it on vigor ons varieties like Concord of Ozark. S. II. VAN THl'MIV Salem, Ore., April 20. 1!2 1. Read The Classified Ads. REFINEMENT, COMFORT AND BEAUTY It is attentnion to the nicer details of service wich distinguish glasses made by us. 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