Tfce OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, Jnn 30, 1929 PAGE THREE ... J,. ...... M . P TOSp3Cts Gcod IVTL Valley ml F1T0UTL is hit spimh Prune Crop is Heavy and Price Good o Corn I looking a better color but needs more sunshine, k The cherry and prune crop is light the strawberries are good but have a tendency to ripen at once, shortening the season for this fruit. Potatoes are not being planted i as extenslrely as last year. i Celery and onions are thrifty ts, . .and head lettuce In the lake land .uierries very Lignt .put is up to us higk standard. me large amount ot cipverseea I prod deed here . last year will not be obtained 'here this year. U ? Hay is a fairly good crop and with suitable weather conditions should be a crop of excellence in iuality and quantity. (Continued from page one) A summary of the crops as re Ported from the various section' of the valley is given herewith! O na more will be printed later in we week! the hills, and It looks very One, tor the same reason that the strawberries this season hare been remarkably fine. That reason Is the cool damp weather. The cherry crop is generally light, bat come growers report better prospects than last year. - There is a wonderful crop of lo ganberries coming on, and good prospects for a prune crop. The prune orchards are somewhat "spotted." Too thick in spots and too thin In others. Taken all to gether, the crop prospects in this neighborhood are good. Apple Crop Not Up to Expectations Sun Shines Upon Mill Citv frnns MILL. CITY, June 29. The sun at last has decided to shine and' with it comes tUe usual ajuouri : of crops that the people-in Mill City and vicinity look forward to. This part of the Willamette Valley is not noted far , any one crop nor any great amount of var ieties of crops. Of course gardens are always plentiful and it thn oil is given- the right care a bountiful yield of fresh vegetables euch as cabbage, lettuce, turnips, onions and radishes prevail. Kings' Prairie which extends for approximately two miles above Mill City is given over to the rais. lng of hay although most of the farms have orchards containing Cherries, apples, prunes and pears lor their own use. At some of the places strawberries are raised but aot to a great extent. In an interview with S. M. Bas sett who has made his home in Kings' Prairie for a lohg time, it was revealed that the hay crop would be just average this year, which means a little more' than what is called the "light" crop. The fruit tieea p5 c an appear ance of fairly good crops but the rainy weather has done quite i bit of damage to the strawberries. Although farms cover a some what large acreage most of the land is uncleared or eleo grown tip in wild ferns and other weeds. Since Mik City is a lumber town i . iiu one yeems 10 oe aeepiy-cnuugn Interested in raisin e- prnm for the marketa even though the lane can be made tillable. -O Grain Crop Good at Lake Labish Center o- o LAKE LABlSfc, June" The grain crop, consisting of oats, wheat and barley is a good crop here this year. Fall sown grain is heading out well and the stand Is strong. Spring sows' grain is coming along In good shape owing to fre quent rains. " - KEIZER, Jnne 29 Owing to a very wet. cold spring, the fruit situation in this community is not upto par. Those who' hare had strawberries have realized a neat sum from their crop?. Only a few are growing logans but the outlook is good for a crop. Some growers have the black berries, and the black and red raspberries which are doing well. The prospect for pears and prunes is good in some orchards and in others they are very scarce. The Coats, Schindler, and Imperial prunes seem to have stood the cold rains better than the Italians. The apple crop is nearer a failure than mest any other fruit. . Some trees which bore heavily last year are not bearing any this year. The cherries are conspicuous for their absence. The walnut and filbert growers are looking forward to a bumper crop. Hops are looking well. Not many peach orchards in Keirer so that crop will be light. O O Orchard Heights ! Sees Many Changes o o ORCHARD HEIGHTS, June 29. When the Statesman asked its country correspondents for a crop report, it set me to "reminiscing." In the days of Auld Lang Syne, the word crop meant grain, while in these days of intensive and diver sified farming, the name has a far wider meaning. For instance, the ancestral home of the writer, in the Orchard Heights hills, then known as the Eola Hills, (the change of name is significant) consisted of 252 acres on which grain was raised. This 252 acres is. now divided into five farms, on which prunes, cherries, nuts, small fruits, etc., are cultivated. So the old order changeth. In the Orchard Heights comun ity today, the farmer only raises grain enough, if any, to feed his wife's chickens, and the tractor requires no hay. However, a lot of good farmers still use horses, so there Is a" good deal of hay in Prune Crop in I jjScotts Mills Area SCOTTS MILLS, June 27 The prune crop in this vicinity seems to be quite good, especially on the hillsides the prunes are very heavy in s'ome orchards the crop being so heavy that some of the trees are breaking. There will be a great amount of hay this year, due to so much moisture in the ground. Strawberry picking is going on in full swing, and taken to the Sa lem canneries. The late potatoes are practically all planted now. The potatoes grown In this district are consid ered the best in the country, sev eral carloads being hauled from the Crooked Finger district each year. Grain is looking fine and ex pect a good crop. Pheasants Destroy Auburn Corn Crop AUBURN, June 29. The spring sown oats and wheat look better than theyi have for ntj years. The fall sown barley. wheat, oats and clover is also ex cellent, although clover fields were quite spotted, partly on ac count of early frosts, but will yield a goodly tonnage of hay Most of the clover in this section was not cut until after the rain and is well cured. Some farmers have already stored their hay in their barns. believe there is no flax here. The white vetch has been sown this year in place of the blue variety The farmers wind it does not freeze out nor fall as flat from heavy rains. This is mostly sown for silo filling, and will be ready after July 4th. Corn is growing well and has good color, although more cultiva tion and hoeing than usual has been necessary on account of weather conditions. China pheasants have been very troublesome, completely destroy ing some portions of most fields. The fruit crop will be light this year, due to early frosts. Some cherries which were well filled have dropped almost all of tbe cherries. The cause. Is not known. Several trees axe dying from some unknown cause, resembling curly leaf. All varieties of berries are do ing fairly well. Hops are excellent. Vegetables are growing well, peas are ready for canning. One farmer Is growing a crop we surmise must be ginseng. Sun flowers are flourishing gloriously this year. These form part of the ensilage crop. Lloyd Lee's hatchery is still shipping eggs to California, from tbe heavy breeds. As these do not do well there, these shipments are used by the California hatcheries for broilers. Ross Clark is having good suc cess with his new furbeariog rab- bitry. A. L. Lindbeck has been selling his late supply, of hatching eggs. He has erected a modern dairy barn, and has purchased a regis tered Jersey cow. Several other farmers here have also recently gone in for tbe registered Jerseys. Maggot Hits Onion Fields at Aurora AURORA, June 29. The onion crop around the Aurora and Butteville district is not as good as It was last year. All together there Is about 25 acres of onions. Som eare onion setsr and, others raise onions for the seed. There is an onion maggot which seems to be destroying a great deal of the -crop. Some farmers expect only half a crop, while others anticipate a medium crop. Those who are raising onion sets will have the largest yield, because the onion maggot does not bother them as bad as they do the onions which are raised for the seed. v ...... An acre and a half of cucumbers are also being grown by the Wit cels. The early flax is bloming and looking fine. P. E. Thomason Is the heaviest grower, with 75 A.4, C. A. Bear and son Earl have 30 A. A few other small acreages are In the neighborhood. . Turner being a dairy aeetlon, nearly every dairyman grows corn for silage. C. A. Bear has the largest acreage, about 25 A., part of which Is for hog feed., The corn needs more hot weather. , The strawberry season . has about closed. Bob Given had the largest patch near Turner. LPQsiiniE Cimallilfty Dfl a flgjUn CPipdleiP Salem Heights Has Fruit Crop Fair Flax and Hay Godd In Turner Country TURNER, June 29. Hay har vest Is on in Turner vicinity. The rain of a week ago meant much to all growing crops. Clover hay is much heavier than at first expect ed, also vetch is yielding well. Quite a large acreage of Ken tucky Wonder beans, are being grown, most of them for the Ore gon Packing Co. The earliest ones are at the present time being trained on strings, while the later planting is receiving second culti vation. Among the largest growers are W. J. Denham with 12 A.; H. Tur- noy 15 A.; R. O. Wetzel and son 5 A.; P. E. Thomason 5 A.; A. My ers 5 A.; S. Mudinger 6 A. O 0i SALEM HEIGHTS, June 29. ; Salem Heights comunity is divided ! into small tracts of land, and the j crop's are mostly raised for the ' home use. The crops of Salem i Heights includes strawberries, lo- 1 ganberries. cherries, and prunes. ' R. D. Hulsey reports that th : strawberry crop is on the whole better than it was last year; how ever, about one-fourth of the berry crop has been destroyed by the crown bore. Mr. Hulsey also stated that the loganberry yield i was going to be very light. There will be about a twenty , per cent crop of cherries this year. I There are a very few prunes raised In Salem Heights proper, but the outlook on prunes is towards s bumper crop. o o Jefferson Yields ' Better Than UsuaP , : , ? JEFFERSON, June 29. The farmers in this vicinity are busy with their hay harvest; and the hay crop Is good, owing to plenty of moisture and good growing weather. The fall grain Is exceptionally good. Some fields have been cut, and the grain is shocked. Strawberry picking is well un der way. Some patches are fine, producing large yields, while in some localities the berries are scattering, owing to the frosts. The cherries are beginning to rjpen, but the crop will not be large; however the outlook for a prune crop is good. The potato fields look fine, and the growers are anticipating an Immense crop. Corn is some backward, owing to the lateness of the season; yet with tbe continued warm weather, it will make a good crop. The hop yards look fine and the prospects are for a bumper crop. TTpv ISCARD that old piano! The day 1 ; U of modernization is here. In the piano business, as in many others, you get finer quality, new design, more util ity than dollars have ever bought before. The outstanding example in our store is the Gulbransen "Home Study" model Upright, nationally priced at $275. Petite, dainty, charming in appearance. Delightful tone quality. Genuine du Pont Duco Finish. 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