t ? : J' THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM. OREGON - GREATER SALEM DISTRICT NUMBER, MARCH 1923 suitable for filbert growing, ex cepting part of western Wash- J ington tna northern California; and that there j la big money1 In filberts; that vthls is a crop ihat has a cumber of very impo.'taut advantages and that there is rast rt oin here for mere f inert gro were, who will take nopn ot tne risks of pioneers in the in dustry?" : : v 1 So substantially runs th. Sa lem Slogan in The Statesman of four annual editions. .. The Salem district Is the- only section of the United State3 tui has so far developed the filbert industry on a 'commercial "c "i., - Mr. Reed, of the bureau o: nut culture. United States l?;-art-roent of Agriculture, Washington D. C, virlted the Salem duiriet recently and: he stated tha we have here In. the Willamette val ley the linest filbert soils; also the most promising filbert groves anywhere in the United Stairs. - United States Senator Cbas. L. McNary of Oregon,? whose home la In Salem, Is a pioneer grower of filberts here," and his enthu siasm !' undimished, and he predicts a great future for the Industry. . The filbert Industry has ?n outstanding : number of ad tart ages in this dstrict, r for Instance'- ' : :. - S f ; - The filbert is frost proof; the trees mature young; the harvest ing Is easy crop falls off and all. but harvests itself; is a , "lazy man's crop." needing little ' at tention fter v trees mature. In rears of high "prices, it, wW be a bonanza crop, yielding f-otn 3000 to 5000 pounds to the acre here for mature trees, and sales nave in the past lew years ben as h'gh ; as 35 cents a p-rusd. Firur it out for yourself. Filbert trees are being t Out here : as fast as the ' proper rursery stock can be had. , capable, of earning interest on a large sum, it grafted over to a pure Vrooman j FranquetfJ ' or Mayette strain. Large walnut trees In California' have sold for 13000. From the above, the readers may get an idea of the intrinsic value of a large walnut orchard; or. even of a ; few trees, in the coming years, fit will commence bearing the sixth year here, and increase Vapidly thereafter. It has been ! stated that if all the shade trees In Salem were bearing English walnut trees ot the right varieties the sale ol the nuts would pay all the taxes of the i owners of city property- . '. The reader I is referred to a special article in this edition on walnut growing, i The Walnut Industry -Did yon know that Salem hf - the center of a great walnut In dustry; that the Franquette ftil Mayette walnuts . produced here are the world's best -walms with a nutty flavor found in no ether; that carloads and then tralnloada ot walnuts will go out from Salem, the market . center tor walnuts; and that there is last room tor more Intelligent walnut growers?" ; The; above wordV are fanv:Vtr to readers who follow .'the Slogan tampalcns. .. j ': X, 1 ' The walnnt tree comes into bearing early In this district, but It attains great age, and becomes more valuable each year. undT the proper conditions found her.v ind lth the right va?'jres. . Black and other ,; walnut tr.s slanted here by our pioneerj are Kwerlng giants and every , one The Strawberry Industry This is a great strawberry dis trict. For some growers, straw berries have been a bonanza cop. There have been yields here reaching as high as 24,000 pounds to the acre, but the aver age under the old method has perhaps been a ton and a half to the acre. It Is expected, with new methods and varieties, to bring: this up ; to two and four ions to the acre. The Salem canneries packed 60,000 eases of strawberries last year; ', 83 per cent of . the straw- terries canned In the Pacific Northwest last year. Besides, great, quantities were sold fresh, cold packed, and disposed ct In other ways. ' The Salem district is going fast towards a 10.000,000 pounds annual crop of strawberries, arid our manufacturing and market ing interests must prepare to take care of such a crop. Ore gon produced 5 per cent of the strawberries grown in the Unit ed States in 1919; Marlon county ' the leading strawberry county in Oregon, and Polk, adjoining, is a close second. Salem surely has the true i strawberry mark ; and her premiership , as the strawberry center of the wor'ld will depend only upon the facil ities for properly handling them keeping up; with the- - growing of them in this district. THe Salem M'strict also produces an nually great quantities of straw berry plants for sale at home r.nj for shipment to outside mark ets. . i center stem SO .feet high; 0 t limb spread; bears SO bushels ot apples a year. Nearly; all : var ieties of apples do well In family orchards here. But, for com mercial purposes,' nothing should be grown in which we do not ex cel. We can excel in the Ort ley, the Rome Beauty, the Winter Banana, the Grimes, the Delici ous and others, and we raise as fine Gravenstelns as the world can show.' Speaking from the commercial standpoint, it would be well for the Salem district If nearly every apple tree in all this section were a one of the bove varie ties. We can' top the market with these and that Is where the big money is in any industry. Indiana, and New York; and an is going; the 1000 to 1200-pound oil that ranks at the top in fia- purbered cow is coming; andutbe vor. Besides, our 'growers gel 1 Salem district is leading and will more pounds of eil to the acre, head the way. acre, and 50 pounds to the acre The Apple Industry Apple ' growing has been suc cessfully carried on . in tha Sa lem district since the .settlement of the country. There have been many apple booms.. There Is an apple tree ' on the Egan farm below Salem, of the Deli !ous variety, that is 74 years old; The Raspberry Industry The Salem district Is a good raspberry country. ; It produces as good red raspberries as any grown. But it has a franchise on the black raspberry; , or what amounts to a franchise; for the Munger black raspberry can - be successfully and persistently grown here. This is not true ot any other district in this part of the world. It is not true of western Washington,' the great red raspberry country. The Jam and Jelly trade demands a lot of black raspberries; and there i no bush fruit line that is more certain of continued success here in the Salem district than is the raising of Munger black rasp berries; the blackcaps of com merce. I Is common. ( Mint is as good as clover for the, soil some say better; and the mint hay makes good feed, and it is a safe crop. The White Michem variety does well here; and no 'where else excepting in England, Sax ony and Syria. Only one thing is needed, and that Is to protect the Oregon standard; to see that no inferior product is raised here, from the wild varieties, or full ofweedsr But the association is calculated to see to 'this, and the growing demand for menthol in the can dy and gum trades, and in drugs, etc.. will do the . rest. The Sa lem district is headed towards a mlll.'on dollar a year peppermint oil crop; and It will not be long in arriving; and It will go just as much farther as there is a de mand for the oil at remunera tive prices because we have the peppermint o!l soil and climate The fcvergreen Blackberry Jn- Salem is the center of the great and evergrowing Evergreen blackberry Industry. Marion coun ty has over ' half the acreage of the state, with Polk, Yamhill and Linn, second,? third and fourth so the Salem district has nearly all the Evergreen blackberries in Oregon, and nearly all the mar ket for these great pie berries of commerce. The importance of the industry l es in the great American appe tite for pie and the Evergreen blackberry is the commercial pie berry par excellence; also in the creat production to the acre There have; been yields of 22, 000 pounds to the acre and how much greater are the posslblli ties no one can guess. The Evergreen blackberry is an important link In our chain of diversified agriculture, and who can: saywbat its future in the Salem district may be? The and know how. and orranlza-! Salem canner'es packed 85,000 tion. The acreage will be cases of Evergreen blackberries largely increased in this district this year. Tho Rooming Mint Industry The mint industry is on a boom and Salem, Is going tp be headquarters for ' growing ; and marketing the crop of pepper mint oil. Dan J. Fry, the Salem druggist, the largest buyer: of crude drugs In the state, says he is in touch with one firm that will want 50,000 pounds annual ly and the Salem district, from present indications, wil soon be ready to furnish that much;, and a great deal more. The Oregon ; Mint i Growers Co -operative association 1s active, and it proposes to build a refin ery, to secure a larger benefit and a better standardization ot the Oregon product, which now stands very high, and which sells to what amounts to a premium of $1 or more a pound over the eastern product, owing to Us su perior quality... -'.'l ' So Salem is bound2to be the center of the leading' peppermint oil district of the world because the finest and richest mint pit In the World is produced here; an oil with 51 per cent o? men thol content.1 against the 36 per cent o'l produced In Michigan. The Country of Great Cow The noses of Dionysus and Bacchus are oiA of joint; enter the bovine goddess, "wet nurse of the human race, and in this new era the Salem district ' will have' the premier place of all the earth. Near Salem, at Marion, Mar Ion county, Oregon, is Vive La France, the . greatest dairy cow of any age, any breed, living or dead. The Salem district has all the world record Jersey i cows in the world except one; and is going to have all of them. There are 21 Gold Medal Jersey bulls In all the world; we have nine of them There are 29 Silver Medal Jersey bulls In the world, we have 11 of them. We have half of all the 1000 pound butter fat Jersey cows In the world. Western Oregon Is the hest cow country on earth; because we have the feed and the climate and the natural conditions that conserve the highest qualities end make for the highest produc tion in 1 the domain ot dairying and we have the dairy brains and the dairy will to excel. " -The 1200 (annual butterfat production) Jersey cow is on the way; and she will be produced n the -Salem district, and fu ture .competition for World's rec ords will be between Salem dis t't Jersey cows. The 150 to f-00- nound common brindle cow roo D-. PRODUCTS 'CO Dehydrators, Canners and Evaporators of Fruits and Vegetables Originator! of Conmercial Dehydration, the King Company is the leader in the Dehydration Industry. . . . King's Salem Plant is the largest Dehydrating Plant in the world. . . Oregon Fruits and Vegetables packed under the King label are distributed to all parts of the globe. . . . King's Advertising to the Trade Designates Salem as the Capital of Dehydration. ... To the American House wife King's magazine and newspaper advertising features the high quality of Oregon's Fruits and Vegetables. last -year. The Cherry City of the World Salem was namedV'The Cherry City of the 1 World" years ago-j-the writer believes it was by A. F. Ho'er, at that time the- secre tary . of the Salem Commercial club.' Anyway she was entitled to that distinction and has . worn well" the title and deservedMhe honor and earned the emolu ments. The cherry Industry liere had early - beginnings. County Commissioner J. T. Hunt has on his Waldo Hills farm a black Tartarian cherry tree that is per haps 65 years old, and it has never missed a crop .since it be gan to bear. s ' . . The three greatest sweet cher ries in the world were Originated In the Salem district the . Bings and Black Republicans and Lam berts; and the other great sweet cherry, the Royal Anne, has been brought to. perfection here and the most useful of them all, the Long Stemmed Waterhouse, Is of Salem origin; most useful be cause it Is the pollenizer of all sweet cherries,- . while Itself, cherry about equal in quality to the Royal ; Anne. (And add the honey bee; for the cherry pollen Is not carried by winds; it must bo- carried on the wings and legs of Insects.) Given the bong Stemmed. Waterhouse and the honey bee, and the sweet cherry industry is a reliable industry in the Salem district g'ven also ample manufacturing and shlp- e4ng-rand cold storage facilities. Then there is the sour cherry x 1 -mr a . V. f iae iuomiiiurency cuerry wuitr 'dds to the value ot the indus try here. Nature has by election made alem the "Cheery City of the World;" and man is doing more md more to confirm the title. Maraschino plants are here now. and other manufacturing plants re coming, and the whole wide world will come to acknowledge calem's premiership In the cherry industry. i The Salem canneries last year racked 80,000 cases of Royal Anne cherries; and there were Immense shipments of barrelled cherries and of the fruit shipped fresh to distant markets as far away as and farther than New York;' - i . cVoVce of a million American housewives Grower?, Please Note! We ar now" contracting for Spinach and Stringless Bean Crops. Growers who are interested should call, write or telephone our Salem office. Seed furnished at cost. I . KING'S FOOD PRODUCTS CO. 1 ;l Front and Market Sts., . SALEM, OREGON Telephone Salem 830. nil'.; ,.-.-.-..'. ':!. . . . . The Pear Industry The Salem district is the world's pear paradise. ,Bartletts are self-fertile here aedv nowhere else. Pears are free rrom hiignt nere and nownere else ,We have more pear friends and less pear enemies than any other district in the world. We have the cheapest pear land In the world. Our Bosc pears topped the New York market in 1919 and 920: at $6.85 In 1919 and $7.38 in 1920. Our Anjou pears top ped the Chicago market at 14.71 a box and $4.54 in car lots In 1920. Our Winter Nells topped the London market at $7.10 a box in 1920. There' should be ten times the present acreage ot pears, j and they should ' be principally the Fartlett, Bosc and Clairgeau var ieties, and all nondescript -varie ties should be grafted to these. In fact, the whole Willamette val ley, ia a very good corn country, that it depends upon the selec tion and acclimatization or seed, and upon the preparation of the seed bed and cultivation to hold moisture during dry seasons- And under the leadership of these men, and through other agencies, there has been a won derful increase in corn growing here In the past few years Until Marlon haa become the second Oregon county in the pro duction of shelled corn and per haps , the first corn county when her 1000 acres of silage corn of last year Is taken into ac count; and Polk county is a close second to Marion. Also, Marion has become the fifth corn county in shelled com m the Pacific Northwest. Under the same kind of lead ership, Marlon will in a few years exceed all Pacific North west counties in corn production, to the vast benefit of this section in very many ways. There are reports of produc-. tion as h'gh as 75 and more bus hels to the acre, and good farm ers say 50 to 60 bushels ought to be common. Jesse Huber has raised corn in Ohio and Oregon, and he says that, with proper seed selection, a yield as high as the average crop of eastern corn can be ma tured here. He has raised 80 bushels to the acre near Salem. The average yield for the whole of the United States is 24 bush els to the acre.. ' Perhaps of sfll more impor tance to the Salem district is the production of more corn for sil age, for in this respect corn is the great stand-by; nor is there latent to detract from the im portance of silos in preventing loss of various forage crops in cases of unseasonable rain; of, indeed, from the importance ot any other crop that is commonly used or may be used for filling the silo. In whole or In part. There is no agricultural Inter est in the Salem district that will not ' benefit from the produetlon of more corn, "which will mean more cows, more hogs and more livestock in general, and there fore a better, chance to keep up and improve the fertility at -the land devoted to tree and hush fruits and all other products of the soil. World's Beet Celery The Salem district grows the best celery in the world. Eugene celery in 1921 took second prize at the national celery contest; and Prof. Bouquet of the Oregon Agricultural College says the Oregon exhibitors gained a great er victory than the taking of the first, prize in that, contest. Trout dale celery took the first prize last year at the national con test at Indianapolis and It wti taken with ceiery that was growa by a man who was a celery grow, er before coming to Oregon In the famous Kalamazoo, Michigan, district. The n Labish Meadows district, just north of Salem, produces as good celery as that grown at Eu gene oc Troutdale j - Produces the best in th world ( I Produces $100,000- worth a year on 100 acres of land And the Labish Meadows grow, ers are ambitious and expect to become the largest growers of ceiery quality celery In ths V-orld, f Do you realize what this will n-ean what the full development of the celery Industry here will mean? There are 5000 acres of tb same kind pt land as the 100 acres in celery in the Labish Meadows district; beaverd&m land. There are many mors reaver dam tracts. In the Salem district. There are scores of thousands of other acres of good celery land In this district - So there is a possibility of a $5,000,000 annual crop; or a $10,000,000 or more. The world is the market; al most it is the market, or will be, for the celery fresh from the fields, with the improvement or shipping facilities. For the de- I Oregon Packing Compimy Canners of Fruits arid : . 4 Vegetables : j In the development of diversified 1 fruits andberry,cultute of this valley 9 I this organization gives its hearty II cooperation. jj 1 'K ; ; ' Salem, Oregon The Gooseberry Industry " From the standpoint alike . of the profits they may hare on these bush beriies on their own account, and because they mesh Into the scheme af succession which is very Important for the Salem fruit district; and because there Is no other locality in the world so favorable to the produc tion of the highest quality of gooseberries, with large average yields, the fruit growers in the Salem district ought to raise more gooseberries.' Growers here have produced 9000 to 16.000 pounds to the acre; and even t the rate of 25,000 pounds to the acre on small plats of ground; selling as hirch as 15 cents per pound, or at the rate of $3750 to the acre. An experienced grow er says 8000 pounds to the acre is a reasonable average expecta tion. The Salem canneries pack ed; 7000 cases of gooseberries last year. ' GRAVES CAMMING CO., Inc. Main Office: Woodburn, Oregon " , Canneries at: Woodburn, Sherwood and Sheridan, Ore, - Packers of the famous GRAVES brand fancy fruits ' . . . : . . - Our Motto: "QUALITY FIRST9 i W- slgnilZ term contracts for all varieties of fruits, including plantings of this year. If you are .thinking of making some new plantings, see us before you decide as we can give you some very valuable information as to the best varieties to put in, and will help you to secure good plants. . '. We are also prepared to make you an attractive cash offer on your fruit, for the coming season. V . It Will Mean Money Saved to See Us First"; A :- A Good Corn Country 1 Cur best if arm ers have conclud fit ed that the Salem district, and x 4 -