THURSDAT MORNING, DECEMBER 29, 1921 2 THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM," OREGON More Bargains Every Day :: l At The New Store Worth & Gray DEPARTMENT STORE q) cMi v Dedicated to Stimulating Our Present Industries And to the Establishment of New Ones Successors to W. W. Moore i The Way to Build Up Your Home Town Is to Patronize Your Home People The Surest Way to Get More and Larger Indus tries Is to Support Those You Have VICK BROS. Trade and High 177 N. liberty St. Balem. Or.' i f P(B (5 J TIRES I SOUND ALL Eat a plate a day YEATHERLY ICE CREAM Sold everywhere BUTTERCUP ICE CREAM CO. ? P. M. Gregory, Mgr. 240 South Commercial Street Salem This campaign of publicity for community upbuilding has been made possible by the advertisements placed on these pages by our public spirited business men men whose untiring efforts have builded our present recognized prosperity and who are ever striving for greater and yet greater progress as the years go by. Wly Bultt WtU Stoaact Troobl wba ChlrtiprictW Win Knt Oa Ohn Your Health Begins Yfhtn You 1 Phone 87 for an appointment DR. O. L.SCOTT P. S. a Chiropractor Hy laboratory 14 to 41 V. .sV Hrt'l Bk. SM. Hours 10 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 6 p. m. DRY GOODS NOTIONS " WOMEN'S READY-TO-WEAR FURS : CORSETS. Alt State Bt. Phone '877 DEUYDRATlOfl IN THE PUT OF THE KING S FOOD PRODUCTS UAH AS OBSERVED BT A COMPETENT DESCRIBES THE THINGS HE OBSERVED ITER 10 ' Dehydration According to the Processes Used Here in Salem Is a New Thing in Conservation and Destined to Confer vast rjenems upon bow ine proaucing and Consuming Millions in This Country and the Rest of the World To Hold Is to Have, and the Need for the Universal Application of This Principle Is Growing and Bound to Continue to Grow With the Population of the World. By SIMON DE BILLINGSLEY 'All my life, at least ince my of the delights of the little heroes of that beautiful story was "want arly school days, manuraeturing j to see the wheels go round," in my very youthful day?, where one and watching the conversion of plants have held a fascination for me. Perhaps my mother's read ing to me of He.en-a 3abies" '.a stilled in me a similar desire which I in a measure satisfied by visiting factories of various kinds. Eyes Tested Glasses Fitted tutl i9tss mwWT P"Pw Hartman Bros. Jewelers and Opticians Salem; Oregon ..j-. . . - Sa ve Btv Wort Worry by awtef or ', dry wort ono J Salem Laundry Company 136 Liberty St. Phone Z5 OWPCO. Handles. Moo Han , PnnT Plues. Tent Toggles, all Hinds of Hard wood ii&aaies juanuiaw- o - lured. DV-ine j. f.ptegtihMhod: Products Co. v West Salck Capital City 'Laundry s Quality and Service Phone 165 KING'S FOOD PRODUCTS COMPANY Dehydrates and Canners Oregon Fruits and Vegetables Salem Portland : The Dalles " ' . Oregon . Wiring Fixtures Mazdas t. Electrical Appliances Salem Electric Company I! It' electric, come to u.M faionlc Temple. Pbone 1200 Member Mirton Ooaaty, InUr St U and National Realty Association L A. HAYFORD REALTOR 305 State St. , SALEM, OREGON Our efforts will be to assist in every possible way tbe development of the fruit and berry industries of this 9 valley OREGON PACKING COMPANY A Licensed Lady Embalmer to care for women and children la a necessity In all funeral homes. We are the only ones furnishing such service. Terwilliger Funeral Home 770 Chemeketa St Phone, 724 tf SALEM. OREGON Monuments and Tombstones Made In Salem Tats Is th only SMasatat works Big Stock on Display Capital Monumental Works - 2210 8. Com'l Oppottta OomtUry : Made In Salem , by experienced 8wlss Cheese . : maker I v Swiss! Cheese ; Cream Brick Cheese V- Limberger Cheese Order front .the factory or from yonr crocer ; . Salem Cheese Factory .Phone 81F11 ' On paTed reforni ic'hool ro1, aontbeast of Salentv We carry" the following lines of PAINTS, Sherwln Williams Co. and Bass Hueter Co. Also Everything In llulldlng Blaterial Falls City-SalemLumber Company i A. B. Kelsay, Mgr. 349 S. 12th St Phone 813 DIXIE BREAD Ask Your Grocer SALEM BAKING CO. G. SATTERLEE AUCTIONEER Phones: Residence, 1211 Office, 1177 SALEM :: OREGON raw products Into finished com modities. ' 1 continued visiting factories of one kind or another as I grew in to manhood, and gradually ac quired a knowledge of some of the principles of manufacturing, bo that I generally am able to de termine whether a factory is well managed, and, so far as the ac tual making of the goods is con cerned, whether or not the plant is being run at a profit. These things do not come to one in a moment, nor am I infallible, but nevertheless I am able to deter mine, at least to my own satis faction, whether or not a factory is being run on au economical basis. Several years experiences as sec retary of a manufacturers' asso ciation served to develop in me a keener sense of appreciation of a well-ordered' factory, so it was with pleasurable anticipation that I accepted Persident Earl O. Clark's invitation to visit the Sa lem plant of the King's Products company. I had become familiar with the excellent products of the Kink's company; I knew in a gen eral way the merits of dehydra tion; I had learned something of the superiorities of the King's method over other alleged dehy dration processes, and had come confidently to believer that a few years added to the activities of the King's Food Products com pany would see that brand of de hydrated fruits and vegetables broadly sold throughout the world. - When I presented a letter of in troduction from President Clark to Superintendent J. F. Walker, 1 was immediately made welcome We talked for fifteen or twenty minutes about "the business" and then went to one of the receiving doors where two carloads of bau- tiful red apples, fresh from the orchard, were being unloaded There was nothing particularly new about this feature of the ac tivity. The big boxes of sweet smelling apples were piled up in great columns, and tier ater tier of these columns indicated the tremendous tonnage of deuydrat- ed apples which the company was to turn out this season. I was told later that the plant probably would handle between eight and ten thousand tons of apples. Contented Workers From tne receiving room wf went into the department where the apples are prepared for dehy dration. I believe I was first struck with the cheerfulness ol the place. Scores of men and wo men were toiling away with mighi and main, but ws there a dissat isfied face in the crowd? 1 there was I did not see it, and I have learned to look for those things because happy faces mean con tented workers, and contented workers in nine cases out of ten means efficient workers. So it was with pleasure that I looked up and down the long rows of wo men doing the lighter tasks, snd watched their happy faces as their deft fingers performed the func tions assigned them. 1 spoke to Superintendent Wal ker of the contented and healthy appearance of his employes. He agreed with me that he had a splendid crew and stated that it W An Out Aftor Tw Millions - W mr. bow payinf .rtt thre . qnftrten of millioa dollars year to th dairymea of this ctio for " " "Marion Butter" . Is tat Btt Batttr . cows anA twr cows s.tka V crying aead . MARION CREAMERY ; & PRODUCE CG . Salem, Ore.- Phone 2485 BETTER YET BREAD ' !' It Satisfies ! Made By MISTLAND BAKERY i 12 th and Chemeket a Order from your grocer Seamless Hot Water Bottles and Combination Syringes Guaranteed Not To Leak Prices from up Brewer Drug Co. 405 Court St, Phone 184 was a practice of the company to Bee that its workers wero well and happy. "We endeavor," said Mr. Walker, "to keep our staff together from year to year as much as possible. This year over halt our employes were with us last season. They know our ways and we know them. They know that they receive the berit treat ment from us, and when we need additional help it is no trouble to get our pick. The result is that our women and men arc of su perior type. You will not see any of the "chicken" class among our girls. We see to that. It is one of my aims to maintain a good tone among our women especially "As to the health of our peo ple, I will state that we guard it most carefully. Every person is watched. We have experienced men and women who watch for any signs of illness or disease. We are particularly careful in the matter of skin diseases. Persons afflicted with any sort of skin or blood trouble are not taken on. and should cases develop after the individual is on the pay-roll we care for the matter properly, so that our products cannot become contaminated. This supervision is most essential in food product factories." Peeling the Apples But I have departed from my theme. I started to tell of the preparation of the apples for de hydration, when I got into the matter of the health and happi ness of the King's employes. First the big boxes of red apples are carefully gone over by several trained inspectors who watch for defects and cast aside such apples as are not suited to the high standards maintained by the com pany. The selected apples are car ried on endless belts to the peelers." This operation is a fas cinating one. The girls work with great rapidity, threading the ap ples onto the peelers and long stringers of peels flow from the apples almost in a constant stream. I was reminded of the days of my very young boyhood when we boys used to tease the giris because of the apple peel cuns tney ailected. Those were the days. Of course the apples, some of them, were not perfectly peeled. The varying shapes o even the selected fruit causes the mechanical "peeler" occasionally to miss a small spot, but this is taken care of later, as you will sec. The peeled apples then con tinued on their journey, via end less belt, to the "corers" whose fingers, equally deft with the "peelers," whipped the apple on.Vo the mechanical corer and in a twinkling the core was removed, the peeled and cored apple pro ceeding on its journey, and the discarded cores joining the peel ings traveling to a bin from which they are removed to be made in to vinegar. Atples Are Bathed And now comes an operation which rather startled me. The peeled and cored app:es are Riv en a bath, a real washing. Of course no soap is used, but the apples are mechanically agitated and come from the "tub" nicely wasneu ana once more resume their journsy, this time to the trimmers. You will recall that I stated that sometimes a bit of peel is not removed by the me chanical pee!er. That is what the trimmers are for. These women are equipped with peculiarly shaped knives and as the endless belt carried the washed apples along, the trimmers picked out the imperfectly peeled or cored apples and cut off such bits of oeel or core as the mechanical devices failed to remove In this manner the apple goes to final in spection. The slightest imperfec tion, the presence of the smallest bruise, the least possible indica tion of anything that would miti gate against the policy of the company to maintain "King'a quality." results in the blemished appla being d'scarded. This rare- 'y happens at this stage of man ufacture, however, lmper.'ectionp usually are "caught" long before this stage is readied, but the final Inspection sometimes produces an Imperfect apple, and that is why it is maintained. And Another Bath Now the apple gets another bath. Think of it. two baths in one day! But that is what hap pens. Cleanl'ness, we have been taught, is next to Godliness, and cleanliness is one of the strong points of the King's processes. So the second bath is administered and the annle. still on its end 'em I belt, goes to the slicing machine. Here, with tremendous rapidity the apple is cat into thin slices and is placed on large trays and goes to the first actual process of dehydration. Process of Dehydration Into great tunnels heated by a continuously moving body of fresb. air heated, sometimes to as high as 145 degrees Fehrenheit, great Btacks of the trays mounted on especially equipped cars move on tracks within the tunnels. The cars of trays remain in the tun nels for varying periods, accord ing to the product being dehydrat ed Some fruit and vegetable products contain more water than others so that the process or de hydration in some cases is far longer than in others, but in any event always at the end the pro duct emerges perfectly dehydrat ed and ready to go into packages and boxes for distribution at home and abroad. While apples were being han dled on the particular day of which I write, the basic process in every case is practically th1? same, allowance being made, of course, to meet the varying con ditions of the fruits 01 vegetables Tha extreme care taken in every phase of the conversion of the lipened product, whether it be apple, prune, loganberry, carrot, potato'or whatnot in the fruit or vegetable families indiginous to this region, the results are always the same, a fine, clean sanitary product containing all the food elements of the rifflnal pro- duct. Rest in the World I was curious regarding the source of the waves of heated air which swept through the great. tunnels, eo Mr. Walker conducted7 ms to the great steam plant, and there I saw some wonderful ma chinery, wonderfully bright and shiny, running with that splendid rhythm which denotes the well ordered plant. Looking about me I was made to realize that here I was in the center of activities;, here was the mainspring of the great watch builded by the King's Food Products company; here was the machinery which created those energies which are produc ing the finest group of dehydrated fruits and vegetables ever made in the world It was a splendid combination of steam and elec trical contrivances which I had the pleasure of viewing, construc ted at a tremendous cost for the sole purpose of creating heated air in great volume, dispersing that heated air in the most scien tific manner ever devised for a dehydration plant, and for per forming the usual power duties of such a manufactures enterprise. llehydration a Manrlouii Thlnjr. 1 have told you something about tti splendid enterprise of the King's Food Products company, but 1 have not touched upon the basic idea which is furnishing mankind with a new form of pre served fruits and vegetables and at the same time retaining all th? virtues of the mother product as t was taken from the tree cr vine, from the bush or from the ground. Truly . dehydration is a marvelous thing. The process of dehydrailon U far removed from that of old fashioned drying, though it takes up the intent of the latter and carries it through to complete suc cess. Literally, the term means the extraction of water or the elements of water, and in its modern application it achieves this important and desirable re sult without loss in any part of the food value or palatability of th, original material; retaining intact the mineral salts, vita mines, acids, proteins, etc., in the same cellular structures wherein nature compounded them of soil, sunshine and rain. An interest ing process, too. well worthy of comparison with the methods It so completely displaces. Dehydration Is Different By the old methods of dryinsr. the heated air waves swept ott or tnrough the material, at 140 to 190 degrees, carmclizing the sugar content of fruit and often sealing the surface of the mate r'al, thus preventing the escape of moisture and facilitating decay and fermentation. But always was the cell structure demolished by the intense heat, so that tha addition of water when the ma terial was ready for use failed utterly to restore it to anything approaching its pristine freshness and flavor. Flat, stale and sav- urit-Bs was me 'nierior rood bo produced. Dehjclrat'on Ts Clean Then there was the older meth od of sun-drying. In the drying season hundreds of trays bearing the various fruits were left in the fields exposed to the blazing sun. And not infrequently the fruit in the trays became dust-laden from passing vehicles and from the dust of the workers in the orch ard passing up and down in the alleys between the great rows of trays. The sun-dried fruit was exposed to the contact with flies, moths and other Insects and very frequently became the depository for the eggs of the Insects ana for germs from disease infected areas. These old fashioned, unscien tific and unsanitary methods have given way to the absolute and per fect system of preservation known as dehydration The process of scientific dehy dration is widely at variance with the obsolete heated-air or sun drying methods, for its basic prin ciple is the gradual extraction of the moisture by raenas of low, warm temperature going direct to nature for the study of devices Nature not only is a good provid er, but an excellent instructor and so it is that dehydration avails itself of the principle of the wind, and wafts over its ma terials a torrent of air compar able to a gale, and at a low tem perature. Only once does the air pass that way, in continuous vol ume, at the rate of from 25,000 to 65,000 feet a minute, for the moisture and odor-laden current is not permitted to penetrate from one product to another". It is as though the material itself, on some bright day of summer, were exposed to a eturdy wind from heat-laden fields. Quite gradually the moisture leaves the material at the lure of thi3 unvarying gale, deserting the undamaged cell structures and Dequeatmng a product that re tains the flavor and food value of its original condition. The ab sence of moisture made possible the ideal preservation of materi als subjected to dehydration tha return of the moisture will complete the miracle. Dr. Wiley's Prediction Into the retained cell struc tures, when dehydrated fruits and vegetables are coaked for use, seeps the water content of other days, restoring them to color and freshness with the same natural odors, flavors and food proper ties that were theirs long months J before, when they left the orchard or garden, i rom pounds to ounces, without the sacrifice of quality or food value, is the na tural ach'evement of the King's process which gave rise to Dr. Wiley's prediction of ita wide spread adoption. What is the amount of moisture so deleted, to come again in the kitchen as white magic most wel come to the housewife? The ratio varies according to the product, but a few instances will present the more common reductions in weight. Ten pounds of fresh ap ples are required to make one pound of dehydrated product; five pounds of apiicots; eight pounds or pears; ten pounds of peaches; twelve pounds of cabbage: ten pounds of carrots, fifteen pounds oi spinacn; nine pounds of squash; ten pounds of onions; i v-s pounas or celery; fifteen pounus oi tomatoes; six pounds of potatoes and on through th long list of produce treated by de nyu ration. It follows that this sharp de crease In weight is attended by a marked decrease in bulk frm one-half to three-quarters of the original, ana both storage and iiauepurtauon are consequently .-.wLieu. une Degtns to appre ciate the worth of Dr. Wiley's prophecy, for the- ad dehydration over those of canning leave room for no othed conclu sion that that It is tremendouslr superior and an economic meas ure that can not be set aside. It is obvious that water is not desir. able for purchase in food staffs nor worth paying freight and stor age upon when components of the crops are moved to distant mar kets. In Prime Condition The King's process aemands fully matured vegetables, deliv ered from the field" within 24 hoars, and sun-ripened fruit picked at perfection and hastened to the factory. This hard-and-fast dehydration Dolicv Diavs an Important role in the dietetic values of the product, for both chemical proof and actual prac- ui experiment prove that properly, dehydrated fruits and vegetables, coming fresh to the factory retain their full l.fe-sus-talnJns and anti-scorbutic prop erties, while there is a marked loss of these values In withered produce, such as is often laarket ed and sought, as fresh from the Held. Helps Producer and Consumer Dehydration comes to the res cue of the producer, as well as to the relief of the consumer, lor it makes possible . the disposal of, crops that wilt not 'keep, as wit ness an incident or mo past sea son In the Willamette valley The onion crop of these prolific acres was large and of fine ; quality, possessing the requisite tang to tmmortailc soup and add test to the sirloin. But the water con tent was abnormally high, and while the oninons were Ideal for Immediate use they were destltted to spoil if held long In storage. Without dehydration such a. crop would have been practically val ueless with dehydration it be came available as excellent food. For the entire crop passed through the process, and will lit erally bring "tears of Joy,f to the eyes of the winter-bound chef or housewife. And the Incident It self Is but typical of many such. To Hold Is to Have , With its constantly augmented populace to feed, America - and the world as well - must learn conservation, elimination . of: waste, through thrifty thought. The war era measures of conser-. vation were a trifle .different In application, but they made plainly evident the truth that to hold Is to have and that conservation U the armed champion that routl want.and shortage of supply. Th modern process of dehydrating food stuffs is conservation ralseJ to the last degree. All aurplut crops, all perishable produce, are rendered available for food not tomorrow, nor next week, for there is no need for haste, but next year or whenever the appe tite impels. Like Some Vt Kitchen ' A trip through the Oregon de. hydration plants, where luscious, scarlet tomatoes, blushing fruits' and ' a sccore of choice products are in seasonable transformation is' not the ordinary factory ex-, cursion through haste and whir and gloom. The factories are bright and airy, snow-white of wall and table like some vast kitchen where a regiment of cooks prepares for the festal mor row. Dally the plants are flushed and scoured and in conditions of absolute cleanliness the vegeta-. bles are washed, scraped and diced, the fruit pared, cored or pitted. Steel cars flash the prod ucts through the factories, un touched by human bands, and out to the lesser kitchens of the con tinent go materials that will be always fresh when needed.- Nothing Is more certain of proof than that a new industry. . wisely established, lends immedl ate and continued impetus to the general prosperity. The dehydration plants of Ore gon, for example, have made it possible for the farmer to special ize in crops that have an assured market, and to add to the nation al food supply those items of pro. duce that are commonly grown only to meet the requirements of the season and to add them with all the attarctive qualities of the strictly fresh product. Skilled field agents of the King's plants educate the grower in the produc tion of desirable varieties, and the natural result Is that both, yield and quality are increased and that a general tonlng-up of agricultural standards is fostered. Chemists of the King's Food Products company are constantly searching for opportunities to ex tend the scope of the process, and it is not Improbable that their unremittent experiments will eventually result In the dehydra tion of such foods as meats, fish, and milk. Already they have con- querea tne seasons and forced them to yield their sovereignity over a score of products. And be fore them are vistas of even greater possibilities. .Jl- V 1 i r I- r : I ! 'X j t : i As soon as a man Is elected to v an office he looks around for an assistant to do tbe work:. - ' t Champion Heavyweight of American Forces Injured TERRA ALTA. W. Va., Dec. 28. Bob Martin, heavyweight champion boxer of the expedition ary forces, was injured near his home heer today when his auto mobile overturned on a cuive. His fact was cut and attending physicians said his chat was In jured by the steering shaft. While it was not believed he was in a serious condition, members or hli family have ; been summoned to his bedside. ' '1 j