PAGE THIRTEEN Our High Destinies Here Wait on Use of Available Water The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, May 19, 1929 hi 4? Hitched to Eternity, the Wheels of Our Industries Harnessed to Water's Flow Vast Undeveloped Hydroelectric Power Is Available in the White Coal Running Now Largely to Wast Down Our Mountains and Valleys The white coal tributary to Sa lem to bound to render this city an increasingly important indus trial community; a manufactur ing center working up the raw materials of the land and the for ests that make up the supporting t Tltor? -"jLth potential resources beyond tfie dreams of even our present day people, who have al ready witnessed what would hare been considered phenomenal prj gress by the pioneers who saw this section in the garb of prlmitire nature. This white coal of our water powers largely yet running to waste Is comparatively easy and Inexpensive of development. Dis tance of transmission is not as much a barrier to progress in this field as it was even a few years ayj. But short lines from hydro electric projects will always be a factor making for low cost of op eration and low overhead. Vast Source Near Within a distance of 50 miles of Salem, it was estimated a yer ago that there were 250.000 horse power potentialities already mark ed out i nour streams and lakes; and the filings have been going eadlyion -egonts on steadily since then. At that time there were within 100 miles of Salem about 60 wat er power projects with above 100 horse power each, and the devel oped power of these was 68, 799.24, and th etotal claimed horse power 529,892. It is reas onable to estimate a final total of a million horse power in the water projects within a radius of 100 miles ot Salem. On The Santiam The filings on the power of Marion lake -and near by North Santiam water flows have come inio public notice recently, on ac--,Cirubt of diverse claims based on surveys of the cities of Salem and Albany, for domestic water sup plies. The filings of the people proposing power development there mark out about 70,000 po tential horse power for hydroelec tric development. Tl is is per haps only about half the potential power of the North Santiam dis trict's flow. (This is the estimate of a competent engineer.) All his power is witthin 100 mile3 of Salem, and over half of It within 50 miles, and a good deal of it witl.in a less distance. This will be cheaply developed, compared with the average cost of suh projects throughout the country. teaching Further Out It is estimated that, within 150 Salem, three million horse power ittay be developed, and within 200 miles, four million. That is not a long distance. In terms of transmision of power, for "modern engineering experts. They cover twice the distance in send ing power over their high voltage lines in other sections, without ap preciable loss of energy. So the great Columbia river project Is within easy reach of Salem power users, or rather wil be when It Is developed. Also the vast powers of the Deschutes, Jusi: over the Cascades, laid the McKenzie and other great powers. The Oak Grove plant of the Portland Elec tric Power company, on the upper reaches of the Clackamas river, Is about the same distance from Sa lem as from oPrtiand; the v.ator for the 105,000 horse power pla::t coming largely from the o'.ernal snowa of Mt. Jeferson, in the northeast corner of Maricn county. Hitched To Eternity The economic adrastazres of water powers that ere exhaustles? If you could, see. how the dust and dirt your rarmenta can absorb m say three months you would have them cleaned more often. We call and deliver anywhere. JAPANESE HAND LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS We Call and Deliver , . Telephone 753 Gideon Stols Company Manufacturers of ' Vinegar, Soda Water, Fountain Supplies luS As Well At "wvvf Appearand I J Demands Jl gSSr If Frequent II U aeamog in point of time are many, and will be appreciated more and more. 'Salem had her birth In a water power project; became a town through the advantages of its wat er powers on oN'rth Mill creek, and then on South Mill creek, aid ed later in their flow from the Santiam ditch. The opening of the latter has a major undertak ing for the pioneers. The bene fits still flow from this source; but they are smart indeed as com pared with the present power sources utilized here, and smaller still in the prospect of the vastly greater sources that will in good ime be tapped and their energies harnessed to innumerable new plants and made to bestow bles sings upon future teeming millions in thia great Willamette valley. SPREADING LIME Fertilizers for late spring crops are best broadcast and harrowed in at time of planting so they will be horoughly incorporated in the soil and be in solution when the seedlings germinate, says Dr. W. L. Powers, chief in soils at the Oregon State Agricultural college. Best results are reported from Iowa vperiment staion rials whn lae treatments are applied with a fertilizer attachment on the plant er, the material being gown a hte side of the rows. Ground lime stone can be applied with a lime- Ftone spreader or with a manure spreader the floor of which has been covered with heavy barn yard manure. A tail gate seeder is also on the market. This at tachment distribrtes the material in strips 20 feet wide. Lime Is bes opplied o soils that are known to be acid or of medi um fertiliyt. where legumes such as alfalfa or clover are to be grown. Application of one to one and a half tons per acre are sufficient. A new. lime bulletin is available upon request at the soils department. SPRING PLANTING TIME! It Is April, gentle reader, and the spring planting season con sists of April and May. the most desirable period being from about April 15 to May 15. If you have been dreaming of the wonderful things you would do in the spring, with trees and shrubs and vines and flowers, it is hish time to get busy. If you haven't prepared a definite plan of proce dure, don't wait another minute. The folks that can help you in making a plan or selecting plants to use are going to be pulling through a swamp of rush activity pretty soon, for it's a short sea son and there is a lot to be done. The earlier you get started, the earlier your plant orders are booker, and you get delivery Just so much earlier in the season, be fore growth is started enough to involve a setback for the season's development. Oakland Sales and M FERTILIZER VICK BROS. High Street at Trade RaVEHD We have moved our office from its down town location at 143 S. Liberty street to 009 N. liberty St. Our office and warehouse are now in the Same Building We have the same phone numbers GMJLgF or Residence No Job Too Big orSmafl for Us to Handle Local and Long Distance Hauling, Storage Wood, Coal, Fuel Oil THE TOMtTQ IS THE 0 MI S OH The usefulness of the tomato In the borne garden is plainly dem onstrated by Its unusual popu larity, says A. G. B. Bouquet, vegetable gardening specialist at the Oregon experiment staion. The plants are prolific bearers of fruit, and as a canning crop the tomato takes first place among the vegeables. This popularity Is partly due to the yalue of Its Tlt amin content. It is sometimes called "the poor man's orange." A good stocky plant with a good root system is of primary import ance in the successful growing of tomatoes. At the ime plants are set out they are from 8 to 10 inches high. The time for set ting out the plants Is from May 10 to 20 or afer the frost season is over. I is best that the plants be se down several hours before transplanting so hat soil will ad here to the root system. Com mercial growers place plans from 4 to 5 feet apart ind the vines are allowed to ran on the ground. Home gardeners sometimes use some method of supporting the plants, limiting the grown o three or four main stalks. Chemical fertilizers are fre quently applied for the, commer cial production of early tomatoes. This fertilizer contains a consid erable amount of phosphorus, and not much nitrogen or potash, be ing in the ratio of 4-1 6-4. On light soils more potash la used. When more than 500 pounds are used, broadcasting is the best method of distribution, but for Ml applicalons 500 pounds an acre is adequate. The best time for distribution is before the plants have been se out. The broadcast application is done earlier than the hill distribution. For cannery t omatoes when early maturity is not expected, rotted barnyard manure will of ten tend to increase the yield. Eight or 10 tons are applied to an acre wih a supplementary distri bution of 400 pounds of super phosphate. CLEM YOUR PRUNE Before the season's operations become extensive, it Is essential that farm dehydrars be clean and in good condiion. A strong solu tion of lye, or sawdust dipped in lye and spread on the floor will remove the old prune drips which, cause much mold and odor. After 2 4 hours the lye and juice can be removed by washing and rinsing thoroughly. Trays may be cleaned by dipping with the same solu tion, and sunning to areate them. This kills the mold, making he dehydrater clean and sweet, says the Oregon experiment station. Powdery mildew of grapes, which is seriously cutting down the production of grapes in small er plantings in Oregon, is easily controlled, says the experiment station. As the fungus is confin ed to the outside of the grapes and the leaves, sulfur dust applied at frequent intervals during the growing season will prevent the development "of the mildew. .Best results are obtained by beginning the treatment early in the season, destroying the fungus before it be comes visible or does any damage. The treatment is repeated at 10 dav intervals to keep the growing parts covered with the dust. Pontiac Service at night 1898 DRYERS IN 1 l College Expert Tells How To Control Powdery Mildew On European Type Grapes The American Varieties in Commercial Plant ings in This Section are Little if at All Affected by the Pest, However John C. Bnrtner of the depart ment of industrial Journalism, Oregon State Agricultural college, sends the following for this an nual grape Slogan number of The Statesman: The powery mildew disease Is seriously cutting down the yield and quality of grapes in Oregon, according to H. P. Barss, plant pathologist of the experiment sta tion. While commercial growers are not seriously affected, a large number of persons in Oregon, growing grapes for their own use, do not understand the nature of this disease, nor how to control it. While the cultivated American types of grapes are but little af fected by the powdery mildew, the European types and some of the hybrids of the two types are susceptible to serious injury by this disease. The vineyards in some sections of Europe were once threatened with extinction by the mildew, but a means of control has now been found that is effec tive the world over. How it Develops The powdery mildew, it is be lieved, lives over winter chiefly in the buds of grapes, says Pro fessor Barss. Then when the buds shoot out in the spring, the mildew grows out on the new shoots, onto the young foliage, and into the clusters ot blossoms. . The fungus is inconspicuous early in the season, but later shows up in the form ot grayish or powdery white patches on the sur face of the leaves and sometimes on the stem. It creeps out over the surface of the grape berries, giving them an ashy appearance, followed by a somewhat rough or scabby condition. The fruit often ceases to grow in size as a re sult of this attack, and in many instances the skin may split and a deep crack appear on the fruit. In a severe attack the leaves may become crinkled and devitalized, and even drop from the vine, while the fruit is rendered entire ly worthless. The white powdery appearance is due to the presence of the fun gus on the surfaces attacked and to the spores which it produces for its own reproduction. These spores are readily spread about by insects and by air currents and In duce new infections; so that the disease frequently spreads with considerable rapidity through the season from a small beginning. Is Simple To Control Serious as this disease is, it is comparatively simple to control. As the fungus is confined to the outside of the grapes and the leaves, sulfur dust applied at fre quent intervals during the-, grow ing season will prevent the de velopment of the mildew, says Professor Barss, but to get the Oregon Pulp and Paper Company Manufacturers of BOND LEDGER GLASSINE GREASEPROOF TISSUE Support Oregon Products Specify "Salem Made" Paper for Your Office Stationery Let Kennell-Ellis Make Your Cuts, Engravings or Half Tones SEE US ABOUT REDUCED PRICES .We Can Save You Money KENNELL-ELL1S Artist Photographers .429 Oregon Building Telephone 951 best results he advises that the grower begin the treatment early in the season, destroying the fun gus before it becomes visible or produces any damage at all. "It is best to begin dusting with sulfur when the shoots are not more than a few inches long and before the first leaves are full , size," advises Professor Barss. j "The treatment is repeated at in. tervals of ten days or two weeks to keep the growing parts covered with the dust. In fact, in the early part of the season when growth is very rapid, it might be advisable to apply dust at inter vals of a week, especially 'If the disease has been severe in pre vious years. After the trouble is under control, dusting every two weeks will ordinarily keep it in check." Fine Sulfur Does Work The finer the sulfur used the less it takes to do the work and the better it will adhere to the vines, says Professor Barss, who recommends that the material us ed be the best obtainable either in the form of ground sulfur or of sublime sulfur, known as flowens of sulfur. It is best applied with some kind 6f blower or dust gun. Small outfits are obtainable at the larger seed stores. For best results dusting la done only when the air is still; just before or after sunrise is usually a good time. A heavy covering ot dust is not necessary, if it is uni formly and thoroughly distributed over all exposed parts, says Pro fessor Barss. It does not hurt to apply sulfur dust while the grape clusters are in tul bloom, It has been found, some growers even reporting an apparent Increase in fruit as a re sult of Buch a practice. "The main things to be ob served in connection with the pre vention of powdery mildew are an early start and repeated applica tions until the middle ot the sum mer when the danger of mildew damage Is practically over," Says Professor Barss. Keep Your Money in Oregon Buy Monuments Made at Salem, Oregon ranital Monumental Works J. C. Jones & Co., Proprietors - All Kinds ot Monumental Work Factory and Office: 2210 S. Commercial St. Opposite L O. O. F Cemetery, Box 21 Phone 689 Salem, Oregon UK PEA ID REM HPS Thorough inoculation of beans and peas with root nodule bacter ia is one of the essential factors in getting a good stand, says Dr. W. V. Halversen, asociate bacter iologist of the Oregon State Agrl cultaral college. Many planters rely on the possibility of suffici ent bacteria being present in the soil, but eiperimens in various pars of the country have shown that artificial cultures, when ap plied to the seed a time of plant ing, increase the yield consider ably. Several thousand acres of land In Umatilla county are being pre pared for beans under contract of a large canning firm, which has asked Dr. Halversen to supervise the inoculation of the seed with root nodule bacteria as soon as weaher conditions permit. A Washington-Idaho seed company also has a contract for 1000 acres of field peas in Umatilla county which require inoculation. Experimental tests to prove the value of inoculation and deter mine he most effective ani effici ent methods of application on beans and peas are planned by the bacteriology department of O. A. C. in cooperation with Walter A. Holt. couny agent, Umatilla county. CUT DEAD FLOWERS During your walk around your garden, carry a smal basket and a pair ot shears to cut off all dead flowers. Just as Boon as the bloom of a bulb has passed Its stage of beauty, it should be cut off In order to keep the beauty and neatness of the garden. Like wise all perennial plants whose blooms have ended should be cut off. Cutting" a few dead flowers each day will keep your flower bed clean and fresh all the time. Everything In BUILDING MATERIALS Cobbs & Mitchell A. B. Keisay, Manager 349 S. 12th St. Tbone 813 Your health depends on what you eat. FISHER'S FAST COOK ING TOASTED WHEAT every morning will keep you well. WHY? Because it retains 100 of the wheat, precooked wonder ful flavor easy to prepare. Cooks in three to five min utes. Costs less than lc per dish. FISCHER FLOUR ING MILLS 8flTprton, Ore. An Grocers 247 Union Ave. Portland, Ore. Phone E.6033 REFRIGERATOR Season Is Now Here! Come in and see our complete stock of new refrig erators, in all sizes and styles. We have a size for every home at the price you want to pay. For those who live in the apartment we have the refrig erator to suit your individual needs. Open Your Account Today Water Power, Gift of God THE average old timer of Oregon, yclept the webfoot state, would have been jarred by the assertion that the ultimate great future of Salem and the Willamette valley is tied up with water The use of water for power and irrigation. But that fact is evident to every upstanding observer now. Two-thirds of the water powers of the United States are in the Pacific coast states. Oregon has an eighth of the water powers of the country. Four million or more horse power is running to waste within a radius of 200 miles of Salem; a half million not far outside of a radius of 50 miles ; certainly no toutside of a 100 mile circle. The Willamette valley is the certain stage of a future population of ten millions of people, or more. WTith the use of our undeveloped water powers and the available water for irrigation, this will be possible; with such a population maintained in comfort and in a high stage of average pros perity. The available water used for rrigation will mean suger factories all over the valley ; the full development of our flax and linen industries; the greatest dairying section of like extent m the world ; vast truck garden and orchard develop ments, and a long train of indirect benefits in the way of stabilized industries on the land backing up the industries of ! the cities and towns, supplied with their raw products from the annual crops and the constantly ripening harvest. Our water powers are as "permanent as the revolution of the earth ; as certain as the sun." The resource of water, this gift of God, through the laws of nature, s a value that never diminishes, never dies, neve ris consumed, never wears out, never is used to exhaustion, destruction or extraction. This clean white coal,, possible benison and blessing, is as free as the grace of God for the taking ; for bestowal n answer to the call of industry and science. What a picture of the future! But a true picture, only waiting the magic brush of the practical painter of progress. Rich soil, in good producing condiion, la necessary to secure a large yield of root crops in Ore gon, finds the experiment station Applications of 20 to 40 ons of barnyard manure an acre- are not uncommon, and the crops are in such cases often grown on the same lad several years In succes BRING IN YOUR NEW WHEAT And exchange it for hard wheat patent flour, or any of our long list of milling specialties. We do custom grinding. We supply what you need for what you have. CHERRY CITY MILLING CO. Salem, Oregon 481 Trade St. Phone 318 We have obtained the distribution of CERTAIN-TEED Paints and Varnishes And are making an introductory offer Anyone desiring paint for any purpose for inside or outside work, of the highest quality made will find it to their advantage to see us. P. CPE1L AN LUMBER YARD West Salem Telephone S76 "Dependably Serving the Lumber Consumer' pa it ree With Every Refrigerator Sold New or Used CONVENIENT TERMS ARRANGED lice lTRnnT?TmiiTTrTnT?.iDnnm ire aiiftTOiaaaagmnamiiMnaaTWflmmiaaiBiMmniHiCHuat sion. Cost of handling makes it desirable "to produce this heavy yielding, water crop fairly close to the place where it is to be stored. Commercial fertilizers, particularly superphosphate in the coast region, he': s to secure a larger yield of roots. The side icer is large and roomy for the home. Economists In Fnraitim i Salem Pboi Ore. -- i