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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1924)
1 ! 5' $ ; E r if f : 3 - iU - i: ii' i-rv; ! f ' 9 'I ': j. 1 IT' i i. m Boy tho Oregon Mad furnaces W. W. ROSEBRAUGH co. Foundry and Machine Shop 17th Oak .Sts., Salm, or. Phone 881 Wi Art Oat Attar Twt aCOllaaa Wa at oit paying vae tar Martara of a atllltoa dollar a jur U (ha dalrjraca of tala Mctiea lot milk. "Marion Butter" Zj U Bast Battat., Mora Cava aad Battel Cava la tha crying aaad MARION CREAMERY & PRODUCE CO. Salem, Ore. . Phone 2488 DEHYDRATED and CANNED FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Oregon Products King's Food Products Company . ! Salem Portland The Dallea ; . vv; ' Oregon i it Gideon Stolz Co. .. sr. Uanut actuyers of (, , . Dependable Brand Lime-6ulphur Solution 5 ' The brand you can depend - on for parity and test Prices upon application . '."!-'!-,:.! j Factory near corner of Bummer and Mill St. Salem, Oregon WfflaneBe Valley Prune : . Association ... The oldest Association In -' the Northwest ; ; W.L JENKS Secretary and Manager U Trade A nigh Sta. f SALEM. OREGON NELS ON BROS. ana Air rttraacaa. Blumblaff haaOaf mmi aaan bmuI vara. tl aid graral NAflag. gaaaral JoV, Ui is iia aad ralvaaiaad Iroa , wars. i . ; u - , iSf CfcasMkaU M. naaa HOC DIXIE BREAD Dixie Health Breai ; A&c ,nr Grocer j RIDE THE t TROLLEY ' . - -. FOR . ' - , j , SAFETY ' ' ,i OOSIFORT OONVEMEXCE AND ECONOMY 1 Tickets aare your time. . ' Buy them In atrip 5 for ; 80 cents. SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES FOR YEARS AND YEARS , Tha SUtaamM aaa saaa npply tag tta wa&ta at taa aittteal Jab Drtatlag t4a- Fraof podtlTa va ar ptlatata af wank aa awrlt. ' ' i Hadani 4nlpmnt and Idaaa af taa aaaa that gat ay. 1 Statesman Company Thone 23 or ,683 215 S. Com'I St. Pubushing El; Devoted to Showing Salem District People the Advantages and Opportunities of Their Own Country and Its Cities and Towns. The Way to Build Up Your Home Town The Surest Way to Get U to Patronize Your Home People Industries Is to Support Selling Salem District is a continuation of the Salem Slogan and Pep and Progress Campaign 0U SHOULD EAT HONEY i r ailNYHR. SftYS The Family Should Come Naturally to Use it as a Partial and Very Desirable Substitute for Sugar, and All Will Be the Healthier and Happier for It (The following lg a special ar ticle by H. A. Scullen, assistant professor of entomology and spe- cialiist in bee culture of the Ore gon Agricultural college. It con tains matter that la of value to every one who has a regard for his or her health, as well as being interested in the development of Oregon, and especially of the Sa lem district:) Strange as it. may seem, many people do not fully understand the source of houey or just what honey Is. Yet the time is not far in the past when man knew no other sweet. At the present time the average Individual consumes about 60 pounds of sugar in a year with a relative decrease in the. amount of honey eaten. Honey is first collected from various flora by the bee in the form of a thin nectar. This nec tar consists of about 60 per cent of water and 40 per cent of sugar. The sugar is chemically similar to cane sugar. Two chan ges, however, take place in nectar to form honey. In, the first place the bees evaporate the bulk of the water, thus concentrating the so lution and incidentally improving the flavor. Secondly, a chemical change takes place similar to the process which goes on in the hum an stomach after eating cane sugar. As a result the sugar is in a form which can be readily absorbed by the most particular digestive sys tem. Why Honey Is a Superior Fpod Honey is a food of superior val ue not only because it is so readily absorbed by' the digestive system tut for several other reasons.. Not the least of these is the natural flavor brought from the flower it self which no other artificial sweet catf ever have. Furthermore "we find in honey DAIRY Perfectly Pasteurized MILK AND CREAM Phone 725 Biitter-Nut Bread The Richer, Finer Loaf CHERRY CITY BAKERY HOTEL BLIGH - i -.. ' " . j ' 100 room of Solid Comfort I A Home Away From Home LING 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. EVERY DAY 0. A. c. some of those little known but ex tremely important elements known as vitamines, which are entirely lacking in sugar and the common syrups, due to the high tempera tures to which they are subjected. Also we find honey contains most of the valuable minerals which modern processes 4ave so fre quently eliminated from many forms of food, and fsparially is this true in regard to sugar and the syrups made from sugar. Why lioney Differs in Color and Flavor The color and flavor of honey depends on the plant from which the bees collect the nectar. For tunately the bees prefer to work on flowers which produce the better grades of honey when such flowers are available and are secreting nectar. The leading honey pro ducing plants of Oregon all furnish honey of superior color and flavor. They are: clover, alfalfa, sweet clover and willowherb. As a rule the darker honeys have a slightly stronger flavor. Honey Xot Adulterated Honey is so rarely adulterated that one might almost say it nev er is. This is due to the fact that beekeepers recognize the practice would only curtail their market and furthermore that the pure food law forbids it. The consum er often fears there is adultera tion because the honey granulates or is almost white. Yet if one could secure honey from any one of the above named hooey plants with no nectar from aaiy other plant the result would be practi cally water white honey in each case. Granulation Evidenoo of Purity Honey contains two sugars (dex tross) and (levulose.) These su gars are present in about equal amounts, but in most honeys the dextrose predominates and when it does honey granulates readily. This the case with most Oregon honeys. On the other hand when the levulose predominates the honey is slow to granulate and in rare cases does not granulate at all. Many people are learning to prefer granulated honey rather than liquid honey. Yet if one pre fers to have it in the liquid form one needs only to place the honey container in a vessel of hot water (not boiling) or simply set the container in the warming oven of Onr Ideal: "Tha Bet Only" Onr Method: Cooperation Capital City Co-operative Creamery A aon profit orfinintlon owned anttrelr br tha dairymen. OWa D a trial. i Uaanfartnrara of Bnttarcnp Bnttar At your Grocer'' Plana 299 1ST O. Com'I 8t. Salem Carpet Cleaning and Fluff Rag Works Rag and fluff rugs woven any sizes without seamai New mattrosses made to order. Old matb esaes remade. Feathers renofated. I bay all kinds of old 5arpeta for fluff rug. Otto F.Zwicker, Prop. - Phono USa 1 1SH and Wilbur Street SPECIALIST ALE the kitchen range for a day or so. Honey for Cooking When tested recipes are used many superior dishes may be pre pared with honey as the sweeten ing element. Cakes and cookies when thus prepared keep moist for a long time. A list of tested recipes will be supplied by the writer upon request. One of the most delightful com binations which has recently be come quite popular is a mixture of ordinary peanut butter and honey. When thinned with honey in place of water the peanut butter will keep indefinitely. Koep Honey Warm and Dry Honey, especially comb honey, should always be stored where it is dry and warm. Comb honey ab sorbs moisture from damp air and SALEM'S BEST POSTED SALEM DISTRICT IS A BEE PARADISE He Compares the Conditions Those of the Bee Keeping Problem Is Our Summer Late Bee Pasture Editor Statesman: Is the Willamette valley poten tially a good bee country? From j the observation of the writer after twelve years experience, the an swer must be in the affirmative. In the east the beekeeper would have not only most of the prob lems of this country, but far more serious ones as well. Wintering, for instance, is the great problem of beedom in the colder sections of the east, as it is necessary i.ol only to construct elaborate bee cellars with due regard to ventila tion and the conservation of heat, but cellar wintering is attended with other far more serious ele ments of danger. It is a compar atively easy matter to construct b?e cellars that are correct in ev ery essential as far as the conser vation of the heat of the hive is1 concerned, but in the best of cel lars there are other factors to con tend with, such as too early brood-rearing and several, diseases of bees consequent on the long confinement. The disease known as dysentery for instance, while not a serious one as far as its cure Is concerned. Is nevertheless fatal to many colonies and is caused principally by poor stores and too long confinement on that kind of food. By poor stores Is m,eant such natural food as the bees are apt to gather in certain localities badly infested with( those insects known as aphis' which sercte a saccarine substance akin to honey and known commonly as honey dew. This honey dew contains, in addition to saccarine, certain sub stances of a gummy or glutinous nature which the bees are unable Office Phone 12G0. Residence Thone 1345J BLEASING GRANITE CO. ROY ROHAN SOS. Mgr. IL . I V. it J; i v. fa... . .ma Manufacturers of Monuments, Mausoleums and Statuary. Works at City View Cemetery - , - Salem, Ore, in t(ime is apt to sour. Cold air causes honey to granulate much sooner that it would otherwise. Buy in Ijurge Containers Since extracted honey can be purchased so much cheaper in the larger containers and when proper ly cared for keeps indefinitely, enough for the entire family for a year or more should be purchased at one time. It,, should then be kept on the table along with the salt, pepper, sugar and tooth picks. There will then be less, danger of anyone making himself sick of it by over eating because of not hav ing had any for some time. The family w(ill then come naturally to use it a3 a partial and very desira ble substitute for the sugar and al will be the healthier and happier forit. BEE MAN SAYS and Advantages Here With uisincis ot me tasi me Drought and Providing for to properly digest, resulting in the faecal excretion accumulating past the capacity of the bees to accom modate, and as the bee is natur ally one of the cleanest of insects ami loath to void its excretions within the hive, the result is a swollen and diseased condition known as dysentry. The cure for this condition is simple. Give the bees a flight now and then dur ing the winter on, fine warm days when they occur and all is well. 'Easier Wintering Conditions This, of course, entails consid erable work for the bee keeper. as it is no small job to carry any large number of hives in and out of a beee cellar,' not to say any thing about the incidental danger of having a sudden change of tem perature set in while the bees are out, resulting in the loss of enor mous numbers of bees. Bees will fly when the temperature ia little above the freezing point if the sun is shining brightly, and it is often enough to chill them to have the sun obscured by a cloud. These conditions are all foreign to the Willamette valley, and while I do not decry the value of proper packing and winter insulation. even to the extent of double walled hives or the packing box or tenement hive system, at the same time it is possible to winter bees on their summer stands without so much as an extra board on top of the hive to serve as a ra.n break. I have had hives without any protection whatever, come through in as good condition as others which I took the pains and trouble to pack and protect in a thorough manner. r! ; T DISTRICT Bees Alwady Working. ! In addition to the above-mentioned advantages of this climate as a wintering one, is to be con sidered the early spring. Today, the 18th of February, I Inspected my bees and found them not only wintering in fine shape and with plenty of stores left, but all queens laying and brood emerg ing, the air alive with bees going and returning laden with pollen. Contrast this with the eastern bee keeper, who dare not remove his bees from their winter quarters until settled warm weather, and considers himself doing well to build them up by May 1st in time for the white clover honey har vest. Still Moree Advantage. In addition to all the advan tages of easy wintering and early springing, must be added the bountiful sources of nectar in the abundance t of spring flowering plants and shrubs, many of them producers of the finest honey. Our numerous small -streams are lined with willows of different varieties producing an abundance of early pollen available many times in mid-winter, so that the feeding of artificial pollen in this section is an unheard of thing. Next in or der of its importance in the spring is the blossoming of the maples, and in the estimation of the writ er there is no finer honey than that produced by the scrub trees known as vine maple. Closely fol lowing the maples we have an abundance of shrubs and plants; one of the most valuable from a bee keepers' standpoint being the shrub known as Scotch broom. While it is a worthless pest, it is generally found growing in un used land and along road sides and waste places. This plant is a legume, and, like all members oi that valuable family of plants which include the common pea and bean of our gardens and the clovers so familiar to all as pro ducers of our, best honey, is a source of much pollen and honey at a time when it is most needed to build up the colony. It will produce both nectar and pollen for several weeks and is a never failing supply year after year. Xectar Where Xot Expected Many persons unacquainted with the flora necessary to suc cessful bee culture would natur ally think that a large quantity of flowers would of necessity hi s good bee pasture and, vice versa the lack of same would entail failure. It is not the conspicuous exotic flowers of the home on whiich bees depend, but, on the contrary, the more inconspicuous the flower, the more certain it is to contain nectar, for nature is a wohderful provider of ways and rieans to further her ends. Per petuation of species is the end all plants as well as the animates are striving for, and nature has pro vided that the stationary plants without the power of self propo gation must depend on insects to carry the fertilizing pollen from one flower tos another. It is fit ting, therefore, that these litt'e agents should be properly reward ed for their services. Bees are the principal insects acting in this ca pacity, and it is a fortunate and wise provision of nature that au ample supply of the necessary nec tar secreting plants usually exists in all locations. There Are Also Problems However, all that glitters is not golden, and the bee keeper has his problems in this valley as well as he has in other sections. Bees are subject to certain diseases, chief of which are the two foul brood diseases knwn as European and American foul brood. These two diseases are similar in that they affect the young brood in the lar val stage of their existence, al though they are not alike in their cause and, effect. It is not my purpose to treat on the brood di seases at this time further than to say that they are not an on .surmountable obstacle to the suc More and Larger Those You Have Why rafter with Stomach Trouble whea ; ChtropractM fQ cessful keeping of bees. We have always had them and probably al ways will have them' It is pos sible to harvest a rop of honey even with the diseases rampant in your apiary, but of course no selT-respecting beftlheSper. would tolerate disease without ' taking steps to eradicate it. To those keepers of bees having any disease of the brood or any apparent de rangement of the colony not due to some known cause such as loss of queen, I would recommend that a sample of the diseased comb containing larvae In various stages ot growth be wrapped in waxed paper such as bakers use for wrapping bread and enclosed in a tight wooden box and sent to the, Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology, at Wash ington, D. C. for examination. Aim! the Summer Drought. Another great problem that con fronts the keeper of bees in this section is the summer drought, and until such time as additional nectar producing plants such as the whiite and yellow5 sweet clover get a start, it will be necessary to adopt a system of looking after your bees that will carry them over this period. It, therefore, re solves itself into a question of leaving them stores to carry them over the winter or providing them with a substitute in the form of a syrup made from white granulat ed sugar in the proportion of two sugar to one of water by measure. This is b?st fed to the bees in Oc tober arM should be given within the hive preferably at night One of the best feeders to use is a common gallon friction top pail such as is used as a container for the commercial syrup known ' as Karo. The friction lid of tha pail should have numerous small holes punctured in it with a small nail, the lid tightly pressed down and the pail .inverted over the brood nest; an extra empty hive body being placed thereon and covered with the regular hive top or cover. Two gallons of such syrup made with about sfxtten pounds of best granulated sugar will winter any colony in this section, and the cost is far less than the' same amount of good honey would be to leave in the hive. The Trick of It Winter feeding, contrary to the belief of some of the uninitiated, does not consist of supplying the demands of the bses at frequent intervals as you would an animal, but should be done once and ear ly enough in the season to enable the bees to ripen and seal the syrup as they would do with nat ural honey, but not too early lest it stimulate brood rearing. No Problem There. In certain favored localities, there is no summer problem for the reason of the accessibility of the mountains and the burned over waste land, which is covered with an abundant of fire weed (also called Elk weed and Indian Pink, etc..) which is a producer of what is considered one of the finest honeys in the world. It is a pure almost white honey of the most delicious flavor and brings the highest price in the markets of the cities where it is offered for sale. This plant grows, wild wherever timber land has been burned over, hence its name of Mreweed. and all efforts to culti vate It or propogate it have so far failed. paint;: S I We Will Give Our Best Efforts At an times to aaclat Is aay poaible way the AyU opment of the. fruit sal barry Industries Is, this ya lay. Oregon Packing Co. uemoTO torn ca ; . Tour Health Begins Whea Tea Phone 87. for u appofotmenl Drs. SCOTT & SCOFIELD M.O, CalrosractoTs . . - Ray Laboratory 414 to 419 U. 8. XaCT Ek. mag. Houri 10 to 12 ajq. ud 2 to 0 pjs. May Move the Bees. Fortunately, It , is an J1I lnd that blows nobody. good, and while we, deplore tiejjida-i oC;the fine timber by flrMt Is possible tor the bee keeper.to, jeapsome ben efit from the-4aJamity, and there' are but few locations in . lheWIl lamette vaUey!f where a bee keeper cannot . successfully winter his bees, harvest, the .early crop ot honey and incidentally build up his bees, then move them by into truck a comparatively short dis4 tance to where he can pasture the' mountain sides from July 1st till frost puts an end to the flow. ) It is the practice of many Cali fornia bee keepers to " move their bees many miles to the orange' groves and when that flow' stops,' move them a long distance to the sages on the mountains and.des- erts.. If they can successfully do it, so can we, now that we have so many hard, surfaced market roads leading in all 'directions in many cases to. .'the mountains them selves. A Ree Paradise. The question naturally comes, up it such a bee paradise exists,' why has- it not been taken up be-; fore? This is a Question I am not prepared to answer. ; Oregon has, been backward in advertising her self to the world,' and in consent quence has not attracted, to hef doors such a pilgrimage as has1 bet northern and southern neighbor, and this no doubt applies to tht bee keepers, as well as other set tiers. There are many thousand acres of available bee pasture ia our mountains that have never been occupied, whereas it is next, to impossible to find's good loca tion in other well-known field such as the irrigated alfalfa dis tricts, without overlapping the ter ritory of some other bee keeper,, with the result that neither caa" make any-money owing to the re duced Bupply or rather to thi overstocking of the district.' f FRANK M. ALLEY. I Salem. Ore., Feb. 18,1 1924. ' " , This is the fifth annual bee Slo gan number to which Mr. AUe$ has contributed; by letter or inter view. He is probably the best? posted bee : man in Salem. H could write a book about bees. Hi has always accentuated the imporj tance of late "bee pasture here. He knows well that the early honj ey flow here is the best in anj country or section. But tbe rrow era here, and especially the frutt growers, are realizing mora and more the necessity of providing bees with late bee pasture, wlla white, alsike and sweet clover, and the other well-known nectar bearing growths. When there 1? plenty of late bee pasture, this will be the best bee country, in the world it will be a veritable bee paradiise. Ed.) ' , I Not AFTER Rnt before you build, investigate' r M ILESTONE HOLLOW TILE 1403 X. FRONT FALLS CITY SALEM LUMBER CO. ! Lumber, Builders , Hard ware; Sherwin Williams Paint 16c get you M pint can Floorlac and one Varnish Brush. Call at ohce and get it at 319 S. 12th Near S. P - ; Depot. A.! IL KELSAY, Jlgr, i ' I r Phono 613 - t