i mm SECOND NEWS SECTION, Pages I to i SLOGAN PAGES, GENERAL! NEWS AND CLASSIFIED SEVENTY-THIRD' YEAR I SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 30, 1923 PRICE FIVE CENTS i , i THE mBRKEiri Dr. L. D. Scarborough Has:147 Acres jn Bearing, and He Gives Close Attention to the Industry and Keeps Up : With , Improvements anrj Maintains the Fertility I of the Soil 1 . -j (Following is a very interesting article copied from the August Issue of 0o Oregon Grower, the official magazine of the Oregon Growers Cooperative ' associa tion:) - v. : One of the pioneer prone grow ers of the state is Dr. I D Sear- brough of Creswell. v He has add ed to nisi holdings until his orch ard Is now the largest - in' Lane county.. When. a, prunes grower boasts of 1 0 8 tunnels in his four I driers used entirely f to' handle his own crop, the writer maintains DK. Ij. D. SCARCllorGH that he Is "some" 'prune grow er, f v; , Dr. Scarbrough Is perhaps, the ' only grower in Oregon -who oper ates his own packing plant in ad dition to his . driers. In fact, as . president of the : Creswell .Fruit Bank his bank -he probably, fin ancea his own growing, drying and packing operations. We venture v the opinion that--there -are seV ' tral hundred, other growers In the state just now who wish that they owned a bank. ; . . ; - The - Scarbrough -, orchard lies In the bottom a mile south of Cres- : welL s This town ts ; in the ex treme .south end of, the Wlllam- ette valley. The sou Is some" , what gravelly,, .but.onf the whole is adapted to prune culture. There are now 1 4 7 acres in bearing. The original planting .of 25 acres was . made .35 years ago. One hundred - twenty-two acres ; more 'were set ; out in 1900 and 1901. ' "I can say that I have netted fully le a pound more on an aver age by selling through coopera tive organizations, the veteran prune man " said to' the writer, "than by selling through private j, channels." Dr. Scarbrough's ex perience in selling his own crop through the packers long ago con ;- vinced him' of the need of a pack , ing plant of his own. This was . before the advent of a state wide marketing organizations. He packed his first -crop ; In '", 1916 --'t with-some improvised machinery in the old cannery building. He obtained the packing " profit - of 'He a pound : on 590,000 pounds of prunes that year. The next : year he built a - modern f. prune i 1 GREAT POWERS DEPOSIT RATIFICATIONS FOR PEACE ON HIGH SEAS. ! hhiww."l ! 1 it "V. h . . Kcene at the Diplomatic Room of the State Department in Washington whert five men, rep- "'-resenting the great Powers of the world, recorded the final approval of the .PoweTs for the " treaties drafted by the arms conference te end naval competition terminated the Anglo-Japa nese alliance and. swept away the war clouds that have"; boveTed for decades over the Pacific., , . - ,-- Scrapping of the ships, which is to nrfect the United States, England and Japan, is to begin at once and be completed before six months. Italy and France are not affected In the scrapping ' J program. Photo shows,' left to right, Signor' Augnsto' Rosso for Italy,' Mr; RV G. Chilton .for ', Great BriUin, Mr. Charles Evan Hughes for the United SUtes, M. Andre de la Boulaya f or JfTnc and lr. Zlasanao t packing plant costing some $9000 or $10,000. It was about 19.16 that he traveled up to Salem tot see Robert Paulus, then manager of the Salem Fruit Union, and formed - a ' friendship . which has lasted through the ups and downs of the business ever, since. The Salem Fruit Union . hand led his crop of half a mill-ion lbs. or more up to the formation of the Oregon Growers Cooperative association - in 1920'. , Dr. L. D. Scarbrough was one of the , first to join and has re mained one of the : staunchest members He claims , to - have made ' at! least $4000 a year; by selling collectively. There are few of the tricks or schemes used by private buyers . which Scar- brongh is not familiar with. , "I was burned as often as any,': he said, j "until I had sense enough to join an , organization working i or tthe good of.xhe grow ers themselves and not a few "pri vate owners." , . , : He has 108 tunnels in his four large driers. Last year he add ed a battery of four No. 9 Multi vane fans.: lie spent $3500 in in stalling a recirculation system ad vocated by the Oregon Experiment Station, j One 30 h. p. motor oper ates the four fans. He claims the innovation , was a - complete sue cess. ; Fifty per cent less would was consumed to the ton of dried fruit. He - has- $15,000 Invested in prune driers. J Dr. Scarbrough is an advocate of- good horticulture,' maintaining a system of cover cropping, early plowing. Intensive cultivation and i Orchard and -Peking House of . Pr. L. I). Scarbrough '- ) nitrate fertilization. He plows every other row each ; year, thlis disturbing only half of the feeder roots annually. Whether this Is actually of value Is probably not yet proven scientifically, but cou pled with an annual, cover crop of vetch and oats in the plowed strip with an annual application of ni trate It certainly has been giving results. -:. - . Plowing close to bloom time is apt to cause one-third of ; the prunes to fall off," He says. 'Earlyj plowing regardless of the in ' i ' r-iri: r-t" "'"",t"" 1 j J i 1 .5 ' I i I 1 J ft tW 5 -Z mi.njM. 5 . f 4 '2 if , ; X Ilamhara for Jar tern ) f r condition of "the cover crop "is of prime value." I lie started his fertilizer experi ments in 1916 by using 6000 lbs, of nitrate In four- blocks. The re sult was startling and one half of the orchard was fertilized the next yean , In 1920 and each I year since a full car' of nitrate-has been used on the orchard, worth a thousand dollars ,a car. In 11919 he added six tons of acid phos phate to the nitrate and feels that the operation Jald.; '-" In 1920 the Oregon. Growers' Cooperative association leased' his packing plant and engaged him to operate it. Last year1 over a mil lion pounds of prunes were pack ed in his plant. :- ! , Some Timely Suggestions From a California Author : ity, Applying Here The following is by Henry W. Kruckeberg, the poultry writer, in the Los Angeles Times of last Sunday:' r ! ', 1 . . In culling the flock for prodnc tive and ? profitable specimens, mere physical measurements are not the only thing to use as a safo guide. To our way of thinking activity andtgood ' chicken yard habits are of equal importance. If physical measurements were the only points, ' one might just as well say that tall men are good workers, and .short men are" lazy. As bearing - on 1 this Y particular phase of culling , Roy -White of Tulare declared in a recent Inter view, that hens as well as humans must be judged : Dy the character that underlies outward indica tions, s Any poultry man with the interests of : his i business at heart can tell more about - pro ductiveness by "watching 1 - his hens In the lyard .'tlian'i he can by . fhe ' , measurement i , of pelvic bones. The head and the eye of. the hen tells more about her annual productiveness than the remainder of her body and we would not think of; cull ing i without knowing something of individuality indicated, by her Industry and character as denoted by head and neck. . The head re veals vital factors that body mea surements do not. " Among them are vigor, vitality; and that nerv ous, high-bred temperatment pe culiar to aU animals and fowls of - superior; quality, j Body mea "1 -l, Sft aKM-i' -"Till. ' Vjt-j i. T. :-.;:. 1 - ; 7 1;; THE ! CULLING OF I FLOCK COMES FW J1 1T0M0T1 IDUSIES AGCOUriT FOR SOME 200 STATE EMPLOYEES Large and Permanent Payrolls ancj Growing Numbers ? of People Here in Salem Due to Commonwealth Super vision and Activities Connected With the Running and Repairrig of Cars and Trucks and Tractors, Etc. There were in the month of July 75 people employed In the shops of the state of Oregon, con nected with the state - highway department, at the end of State street, near the penitentiary. The state shops are complete in equip ment and personnel j for the re building auto repairing -of auto mobiles and trucks and machin ery of all kinds used by the state highway department. They are permanent. They will be here as long as Oregon builds or repairs state highways and this means forever.1;-' -- . .. ; In the state highway .depart ment offices in the capitol -42 people were employed in July. In the testing laboratory, 6 po- ple. That makes a total of 123. In the automobile offices of the secretary of state, having su- perviison over the collection of licenses and taxes paid by auto owners and machinery run with surements indicate the next im portant things digestive '" powers general health and capacity. Both are vital, but without the Industry and maternity indicated in the head and eye, the body is.- like so much obsolete machinery good only for wrecking purposes. Anyone may learn .to cull poul try properly by carefully studying them during the entire day. Those first to leave the roost in the mornings are generally the greatest producers, i , Assuming that the f lock is not overfed, those that are stil hungry, after the morning feed and remain keenly searching for grubs, bits of shell -or green feeds after the other fowls have sought the shade are all producers and the best producers In the ' flock. Having picked tne best type of layer. Use her for a sample to grade and call the others by. Sometimes It is difficult to feir'whTcbTIB tEe better of two or even ten fowls, hence where one hag a large flock, it may be advisable to market ', 30 or 50 per cent, and there will be little difficulty in picking out the best. Always eliminate i culls first, and if In doubt, cull two or three times in as many weeks, watching the individual members in. the meantime. Linn County Interested in Plan Adapted to Areas Having Small Herds ; . A new type of cow testing as sociation especially well adapted to ; dairy districts having numer ous small herds has been project ed in Linn county under the lead ership of C. A. Heyman, county agent, according to a current bul letin of the department, of indust- trial Journalism of the Oregon Ag ricultural college. From 1600 to 180X) cows can be handled by one tester regard less of the number of herds. It has not been possible heretofore to handle more than 26 to . 35 herd, regardless of the number of cows. With smal herds the cost per cow for testing has ben pro hibitive, so there are no cow test ing associations in the Willamette valley and somo other-dairy dis tricts. ' "This new type has been used satisfactorily in Whatcom county. Wash., for seven months," says N. C. Jamison, dairy specialist for the college extension service. "Members are grouped in routes of about 200 cows each, The test er goes out one day on a route and leaves sample bottles with members, who take their owjn samples for one day and at the same: time make a record of weights of feed used that - day. These are gathered up by ' the tester the following day and tak en to a central - laboratory for testing, each member being se.:t at 6ace a statement of the test of his - cows. On the next visit each member is given an - up-to- date record for each of his cows showing what they produced, the feed consumed, the amount and value of production and the quan tity and cost of feed." In 10 years of operation the Tillamook cow ;. testing ' associa tion-has brought up the average of its cows to 331 pounds per year. The state average is ap proximately 170 pounds. Tilla mook has three" associations -in operation ' this year with . about IMTESTK - nciATionoD 3000 cows on test. "f . " V : gas, an average of 50 people is em ployed. ' " The secretary of state appoints 7 traffic officers;"- the highway department 6, thea public service commission 2,: and these 15 men work out of the traffic department of the office of the secretary of state. There are 3 people! doing the office work of the traffic de partment. Around Two Hundred The footing of the above fig ures is 191.. The number is often above that. Counting the men re porting from various parts of the state, 200 is not high enough for the average. ' . ..; Up to June 30th, 8748' passen ger cars hadbeen- registered - and paid licenses for Marion county; and 881 trucks, and 194 motor cycles. The figures for the same in Polk county were at that date 2406, and 184, and 27. For both counties, the numbers are growing dayby day. BACK LOT BREEDER A Pasadena Man Who Is a Success in Poultry Tells of His Methods ' Christine Emery, writing In the Los Angeles Times of last Sun day, tells of an interview that will interest Salem district back lot breeders, of poultry: , . "There!s money in the poultry business,. if there wasn't;-! would n't stay with it!" So declared William- Corcoran, of 220 Stanton avenue, . Pasadena, as he surveyed his flock of, 600 White Leghorns and Rhode Island Reds. 'Mr. Cor coran spoke from an experience of a great many years, r In Okla homa, where space was cheap, he kept 5000; hens. Here in Pasa dena on a lot 50x169 feet, he has kept-as many as 2500. At pres ent the lot is occupied by a house and lawn, a few fine walnut trees and the 600 chickens, without be ing overcrowded. Mr. Corcoran inclines to the opinion that most poultry - keepers give their hens too .much liberty. " A profitable medium between too- much space and too little is that which he himself follows, y, , - Most people, he went on to' say, spend too much time on fancy fix ings and too little time in studying the needs of their birds. His housing ' arrangement I consists simply of rows of shelters and laying, boxes built; In the, pens. The sunny side is ; screened with strips of gunny -.sacks, affording forj that- location all the protec tion needed. : His most conspicu ous Improvement Is a lighting system; by which light can be switched on at night in case of disturbance by visiting varmints. He believes more in vigorous birds kept -out in the open than in mediocre iowis sateguarqea from roup and kindred troubles by too much protection. He cre ates vigor by feeding his ehickens well, keeping them clean and giv ing. them plenty of grit and fresh water. That, with the raising of his own chicks, so that he is sure of the stock he is getting, is Mr Corcoran's idea of poultry rais ing, i- ' -j- r ' Havings local customers to whom be can retail both eggs and fowl, he finds it profitable to keep the two breeds, White- Leg horns and Rhode Island Reds. He classes the Reds 'as fine general purpose chickens for small fam ily flocks. According to him, three strong points j in their favor are precocious laying at the age of seven months, ; good winter-laying habit owing to their being warm feathered, and splendid dressing as fowl. v - ' He expressed a preference for Anconas for strictly laying pur poses, saying that the would keep them instead of. White Leghorns it. they were not so expensive. ; A few years ago tp determine which strain was superior he says that he filled his incubator with White Leghorn and Ancona eggs, secur ing an equally good hatch of each. After, letting them run together fof awhiloj he selected 25 pullets of -each breed and penned them up separately.' The same care and treatment were given to both. Then. these results developed: the Anconas began laying two ' weeks before the Leghorns; . at the end o three months they had 16 more eggs to their credit, and had con sumed less feed b; $1.40; their EXPEAEf Ct A eggs were larger, and as time went on they 'continued to hold up their record, while'' the Leg horns began to slow down in the second year. The Anconas held up their output in size and quan tity well into the third year. : -Mr. Corcoran is therefore en thusiastic about Anconas.. While the margin of superiority may be small,; he says It will count up in a large flock and increase profits considerably. Doubtless he will again go .In for this breed. But in the- meantime the Leghorns are proving; profitable- producers of eggs, and the Keds supply tne demand for fowl, making a most satisfactory combination. THE BUSINESS HEN A Nebraska Competition That Gave Biddy Edge on the Milking Machine Figures are sometimes quite in teresting, especially - when these of two lines of activity are pitted against each other. " For instance, in r Thayer county, Nebraska, the dairy and poultry interests had a contest not long since as to which had the largest earning capacity on a basis of value in perform ers and performances. The dairy men were represented by 107 cows and the poultry fraternity by 34 flocks comprising 4167 birds. The returns, represented in dollars, covering April produc tion was $1 3 0.34 for the cows and $2373.94 for the hens. The feed expense for the cows was $706.09 and for the hens. $177.84 The returns abqve feed from the cows was $423.25 and from, the hens $1996.10. It would have taken 504 cows to have brought as much net returns as was pro duced by the hens. .The .cows brought a return of $1.48 and the hens $5.78 for each dollar's worth of feed. The ten best cows brought a return of $2.25 and each 100 hens in the ten best flocks brought $4.83 for each dollar invested in feed. One "A" class cow , was equal in net returnstB- 25 hens, one "B" class cow to 13 hens and one, "C" class cow to four bens, while the average cow was equal to nine hens., April Is the month when the , hens have their innings and show greatest egg production, while the cow is at a great dis advantage as this Is just the end of the dry-feeding season. We are of the opinion that contests of this kind reveal little or noth ing, of real value or service to either the dairy or poultry indus try; but it is conceivable that a year's record would add something to the interest, but hardly any thing that might change a dairy men into a chicken man, or a poultry fancier into a cow man. And -yet, which is tho most pro fitable? Los Angeles Times. (In the Salem district, each is the most profitable . when boti arei kept and have proper atten tion and care; and when'hdgs also are kept and accorded the same treatment: along with sheep and goats and other live stock, and bees, and fruits and nuts that come in sifeqession; throughout the season, and a number of other crops that give seed time and har vest every month in the year and pay checks in a regular stream from January to December. -Ed.) COCKERELS MUST BE DISPOSED OF A well known poultry authority, speaking for conditions applying to the Salem district, says that it will soon be. time to dispose of the surplus , 'cockerels and force the pullets along so that they will become productive early. If it has not already been done, it is high time to separate the sexes, for either will do better alone. It Is still a trifle early in the sea son to commence preparing t the surplus birds for market, never theless they should be fed liberal ly to develop size and frame When within two or three weeks of the time of marketing, which usually is in November and De cember, the birds should bo con fined to limited quarters and "fed up" on a fattening ration, which should have corn meal, flour mid dlings and ground oats, as a base and be moistened with skimmed milk, it available, into a crumbly (not sloppy) ; consistency. This should be fed for about two weeks before the fowls are marketed. Pot the local market, many breed ers "feed up" on the regular, ra tions and. market their product on the hoof." The final fatten ing Is done by the city dealers in poultry products. - . ' ; ' Rocky Mountain National Park. Colorado, has 200 mountain lakes. THE DMBT COW AND MA 1 COUNTY HAS SHOPS HERE They Are Maintained Per manently in. Connection . With Storage Barns Marion county is in the automo tive Industry permanently. The storage barns and repair shops of the county are on the east end of Center street, near the state hos pital. ; . 5 There are1 5 men "regularly em ployed In the ' repair department and 7 truck drivers, are now work ing out from that point. T- ,. i'i Altogether, there are just now about 200 men working for Mar ion county, building paved market roads. .; : r Fire Years iii Four ' " : The Marion county paved ' road j forces, under W. J. Culver, road musier, siarcea oui iai spring rxo finish about 30 miles of paved market highways this year. ' By Saturday .., night, they will have finished that much road, and they will still r be .working on five or n ve to six miles ; more. They started on a five year program for 100 miles of paved market highways in Marion county four years ago. They will - have com pleted that ; program, in total mileage, at the end of the pres ent' season; and, more, besides doing much' road work for cities and towns like Salem, Wbodburn, Jefferson, Sublimity, etc. -r They will go ahead next year extend ing the program, with 10; to 12 more miles of paved highways to be added, mostly connecting link in various directions. Then the work will go right on, year after year, both repairing and new paving and . Marion county will be permanently in the automotive industry, with hr shops always busy. s Timely, Information for Dairy Men, Prune Growers and Producers of Oats (The following Items come In a current bulletin from the de partment of Industrial journalism of the Oregon Agricultural Co lege:) ' ' " : ' The law, providing that only pureblood registered dairy bulls may be sold, bought, o offered for public use until licensed by the dairy bull registration board was amended by the last legisla ture to place the penalty for vio lations on the receiver as well as the purveyor. The purpose of the law is to raise the standard of dairy cattleIn Oregon. The dairy staff of the Oregon. Agricultural college constitutes the registra tion board. V Cover crops for prunes are best drilled in at good depth in the latter part of August or the first MM M Hi S GIVE BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTER OF VENEZUELA. if i r " 1 - f . - i I v U - I 1 S ;. ' I i , . ': i ' r'' , - i! M - V 2 22: y 2; :..: l , i t t , lit . . t ( ' ' i - . r - I - h i ...... '' I 'I ' :: '. I i , ; ; .: X .- .-' I ! ' , Lncilla Mendex, stage name of charming actress who is a dan - ter of the once famous President Castro of "the To-'i republic, Sho plays te a Eroadway mnslcJncVj. part of September on ground tha has been put Into - good , f riabl 3 condition following the last cul tivation of summer. - The see may not germinate till the first! fall rains, but If it is well rooted it will; not dry. out after it ha started. O. A. C. experiment st2 tion. , . . Rolled oals from Oregon gra; winter oats are of the finest, bu small black kernels with an off ish flavor occasionally . spoil th 3 pleasure of eating them either? fresh or cooked. These kerneU are not black oats as yon ma: have thought, but buck cheats says O. R. Hyslop, chief of farci crops at the Oregon 'Agrlcultral college. Too many of these spoil the lot for milling the choice pro duct, and. millers fear they ms not get enough good oats to kee l up the supply of rolled oats Growers who have the cheat I i their seed are invited to send fa I.' samples to the college seed labor atory at Corvallis .to be analyze for extent of mixture. This will enable growers to sow the best lots and get the highest price fc: the crop next year. . . .11 Kill 1 IIKEMiffii: t ! Construction to Go Forward i on New Addition; Another; F: One to Soon Follow : There is something doing alj the time at the Salem paper nil!. Life there for the managers of tha Oregon Pulp-& Paper company i) Just one improvement after an other. It was a new building f t a giant new paper making ma chine a short time ago. It iai the building of new digesters to take care of the pulp wood a llttli later. Now it is an addition fronting on South Commercial street, to bo constructed according to the orig inal plans, and only deferred f:, the Important work of gettics t' plant ready for quantity produc tion of fine papers, the finest pro duced on the western side of tL3 Uaited States.. . 1 Workmen are starting to tea? down the old office building to make room, for the extension of the main concrete and steel m'.l structure. - The addition will be exteadcl east 50 feet, and will be 90 feet north and south, the size and con struction to be the same as tLo present building.1 It will brin-; the main mill building flush wilL South Commercial ' and Trad 3 streets. ; The-paper mill people are mov ing their, offices into the The 2 property next door to the Marian creamery, for temporary quarters. They will have more office roon here than they had before. 1 The old one-story britk office' building is more than 50 years c'i. It was built by the old Salem, flouring mills, and then was use I for years by the Salem ("Water company. T j I The paper mill people plan a new addition, extending south on Commercial street, 130 by 170 feet, next spring; the same con crete and steel construction as the present main building. : . s.