PAGE THIRTEEN Tb OREGON STATESMAN, Salem. Oncan. Saudi? Mrnb. Aagast 2S. 129 3 ulliig of the Farm Sheep Flock Important Item in Business of Good Breeding High Authority of the Oregon State Agricul tural College r orces Caives the Outstanding Rules For Flock Owners of the Willamette Valley Making Vacation Tours Successful John C. Burtner, associate d- j are la prima condition, and are ftor of the college news service retained. Instead of being sent to f the Oregon State Agricultural I the butcher. Barren ewes are ollge, sends the following, on those that miss a year or two. "Culling the Farm Sheep Flock," probably producing lambs two or by H. A. Lindgren, extension ani- three seasons ont of the usual uial husbandman ot that insti-.Hve. Such animals lower the tuiion: breeding efficiency of any fleck. Most of the flieep owners of the Kbould rroduct Two Crops "Willamette valley are beginning! Speaking of lambing percent to think about culling their ewe ', ages, in a flock of 30 ewes it flock for next year. This is a J would be Quite possible to haTe paving proposition, and a great j. 10 ewes each producing twins, 10 aid in building up the quality of ; ewes prouucing one laug apiece the flock. It is comparatively easy to de termine the best t'Pe of ewes in tli- flock along about the latter put of August or early Septem ber. One has an added advantage and the remaining lu ewes pro ducing no lambs. The lambing percentage would be 100 per cent, 30 ewes and 30 lamb?, but nev ertheless one-third of the ewes would be dry. If these non-pro- ai this time too, knowing alsoiaucers coum De eliminated me whi.-h ewes have produced lambs j lambing percentage would go up an! which have cot. to about 150 per cent, making One of the first things that a quite a profitable flock, ordinar l k master is concerned with is Hy. J. age of the ewes. Such ewes j There is just one time to de- n nave lost iiieir leem ur tect ary ewes, ana mat is at me close of the lambing season, when otherwise run down because oi ag. are best discarded, a they sometimes do not even live through the winter. The condi tion of the mouth, however, is R-uerally more important than tin actual age. If an ewe ha? enough good teeth to chew her food, she can reasonably be held over the winter, if necessary, to hold up numbers. N.'Xt to age, the flockmaster insiders the ui'.der of the ewe. It .sometimes happens that one portion of the udder is spoiled, or b ;iie- other defect makes it diffi cult for her to raise the lamb jiroperly. Such ewes are discard ed without any further examina tion. The geut-ral conformation ctl th- auimal is next considered. All e.---s that are thallow bodied, -,:!i;(ll at the heart girth, or that Invrt a narrow muzzle, are re pined with deep-bodied, thrifty, wi-ie-inuzzled animals the kind a record of tnera. is made, une suggestion is to put the record right on the ewe herself, so that she carries it for the rest of her life. Many breeders do this by cropping the ear of the ewe that has no lamb. The first time an ewe fails to breed one ear is cropped, the next time the other ear. Such a mark is a perman ent record and canuot be lost. It is generally not advisable to dis pose of an ewe merely because she fails to breed one year, especially if she is young. However, an ewe faitiiiK to breed a second time is host disposed ot as soon as possi ble. To, be most profitable, an ewe must produce offspring and a crop of wool each year. The ewe flock, after culling In late summer, is given good pas ture on which to run prior to breeding. This usually puts the animal in the good, thrifty con Pi 4 V? r rr'A ?Wf! 13 15 3? S ..Mr A Livestock Valley rpHE Salem district will achieve its greatest growth and most splendid and beat balanced prosperity by develop ing and using the diversity that is hers by the laws of na ture and this is truly the land of diversity. Ivan Stewart, when he was enraged as agricultural ex pert for this district, proclaimed and proved that this is among other things naturally a live stock valley. He showed by facts of experience that we should breed more good horses, cattle, sheep, goats and swine. These all tend to keep the flow of money coming our way the year through, and they help to maintain the fertility of our soils. Live stock fit in with rotation crops, and this is one of the main essentials of successful farming. Poultry takes its place with this kind of agriculture, and with fruit and nut growing, which are bound to grow indefi nitely in magnitude of acreage in orchards, and in quality and abundance of crops. So the highest good of both country and city will be fos tered by making this more and more a live stock valley. CASCARA Xow that camping can be done with comfort and convenience, it Is rapidly becoming Ana eric'! major outdoor sport, arcordiac to the Western Auto Supply Company who farsUhed the boT entic ing display. There are many beautiful vacation laida in the United State hot none are more alluring than th wonderlands of the National ForesU of the West. Twenty niUHoa acres of forests offer the vacationist t-OMRtles ramp sites like the one shown here. m ii . ii Mi, i m ' ii - " - Ample Supply of Beeves of Highest Quality Seems Now In Sight For This District . ,. I, i Recalling an Important Interview That Was Printed in These Columns Three Years Ago This Month That Became a Last Message FUSE Oil FORCED T MOLT IS HO 6 AH FLIGHT TO CALIFORNIA FIJI OFF WILL 8E DEVELOPED all ! dition necessarv for beat results. tii u usually prove the best produ- i i breediiiK tim it is well to have cm-. They give a large quantity i the flock in small pastures -where 1. 1 milk and i-or.stqueuily raise ,,e ram be accessible at sM ttiiK. vigorous hiiubs. i times. AfftM l Wool rrulu tion it ia well to winter only These points affect not only th9 many animals as can be properly n itton produrtioti. but also have fe(j a3 experienced sheep men j s mie signifit i.io e in wool produc- j know. A shortage of feed at j i '.n. U ha . b'-i'ii louna mat. ase. ; lambing time takes tne pront oui f'-.d and heaUu influence the weight of the fleete as well aa the strength of th stnple. In culling t'l- flock, wool growers generally sJlect as nearly as possibla for h-avy fleece, showing plenty of l--ieth and covering over the bly. The best authorities say! t ! t length and density mean less "slirinkagft after clipping. Fine n'ss of fiber is also a desirable q tality ot the fleece. After the flock has been cuiied a to age. condition of the udder. r -iieral conforniation atd quality i of wool, the nei.t question is uni- ' f )i mity in the flock. There may Ii : jonie sheep that stand out as -itig off-type as compared with i others, and it is best that t be replaced. With the use of ths weighing s ales at shearing tints and the br-ader's judgment of body con. f trmation and age at breedin; tine, the ewe flock may be brought up to a hlgS standard. Oui item, however, is often over l)ked because of lack of records - that is. the breeding efficiency 'ot the ewes. Too often no record of dry or barren ewes id made, or el?e ths record is lost before the bieding flock is made up. As a result these dry ewes ia the fall of the enterprise. F m EtfllS WILL MEET ABROAD AH 0. A. C. PASTURE DEMONSTRATION -A two-year ORKCOX STATE C'orvallis, Auj:. 24.- c-.st and economic study of the ( i iry industry in Oregon that will ! one of the mot comprehensive c st studies ivtr made is being j undertaken by the college export- j nu'nt station. The work will be carried on entirily with fedpral I funds made available under the l'tiinell act for tue in this state. Costs of dairy farm production i-i the different regions and on various types of dairy farms will ! studied to find means of re ducing costs eo that increasing competition caji be met successful ly. The economic place of the dairy industry in Oregon, what types of dairy farming are most profitable and what factors in the internal organization of a dairy fjrnj are most important to "the success of the enterprise will also l gone into carefully. The study will cover the years 1129 and 1930. It is planned to obtain records from about 500 dairymen each year, approximate lr 300 of whom will be in the Wil lamette valley. 100 in the coast region, and 10 0 in eastern Ore gan. The total number will be di vided between the various coun ties according to the importance of the dairy industry In each coun ty. This is to determine in what regions of the state, on the basis of comparative costs, prices and markets, dairying can advisedly lie encouraged and increased. The survey will be under the general supervision of P. " M. Brandt, professor of dairy hus bandry, and 11. D. Scudder, pro fessor of farm management. Prof. H. E. Selby of the department of farm management will be In charge of the field work. County agricultural agents will also co operate by compiling lists of the dairymen in their counties for use In carrying on the study. DARMNGTOX HALL, Devon, Kngland. (AP Marketing trend, relation between city in dustry and agriculture, and the problem of maintaining a perma nent agriculture in a nindustrial nation are among the subjects for consideration of the first interna tional conference on agricultural f conomics. The conference will be held here August 2 to September . and according to Dr. C. E. Ladd of the New York State college of agriculture, who suggested it, will fill a need for a more rapid flow of information on agriculture I across the ocean. Dr. Ladd spent six months in England and aided Leonard K. Elmhurst, bead of the agricultural school here, in some research work. I Mr. Elmhurst has offered the facilities of his school for the con ference and he and hia wife have made possible a number of travel ing scholarships for those wishing to attend the conference. The research institute of agri cultural economics of Oxford uni versity is behind the movement. The conference will be primar ily a two-weeks' summer school. Subjects to be studied will include methods of. studying and analyzing the statistics of farming and mar keting; recent trends in the mar keting problem in each of the countries represented; problems of land tenure; farm production I costa and methods of reducing them; the marketing of American I fruits, vegetables and other farm between city industries and agri culture in a highly industrialized nation, and the problem of main taining a permanent agriculture ri an industrial nation. In addition to about 30 agricul tural economicts from England, Canada, Irish Tree State, Ger many, Finland, Denmark and Nor way, a number of Americans will attend. They will include Dr. Ladd, Dr, I In the little more tha nine and , a half years since the Valley j Packing company opened for bus- iness in Salem, on January 1, 1920 ! there has been a vast improve j ment in our live stock industries. largely due to the operations of this local plant. Pn Thursday, August 19, 1926. slightly more than three years ago, the Slogan columns of The Statesman contained the follow ing interview : F. W. Steusloff. who with his brother. W. H. Steusloff. and Curtis B. Cross, is in direct charge of the business of the Valley Packing company, Salem's pack ing house, told a Statesman re porter yesterday that the Salem district must do one of two things, in order to produce an ample sup ply of beeves of the highest qua lity. "Raise more alfalfa for feeding them, or establish beet sugar fac tories, in order to have the beet pulp in helping to finish off the beeves; these two things, and the producing of pure bred beef cat tle of the approved breeds and strains. "Mr. Steusloff said the markets of this section are now largely supplied with local lambs and mutton, veal, and second class beef, and & few beeves of the higher class "But most, of the high class beeves come from southern Ore gon, where alfalfa Is raised on a considerable scale, especially in Josephipe and Jackson counties, and from eastern Oregon alfalfa districts, and from Idaho, where both beet pulp and alfalfa have been available, and from the al falfa district of Montaua. 'He said no doubt that the .spreading of the Grimm alfalfa will help, but the development of a beet sugar industry here will help more in giving us a large supply of beeves that are neces sary to supply the best cuts that are demanded by the high class trade that calls for tha choicest meats. "I'ntil that time conit-s. most of ih first class beef stock, which a packing house with a reputation to maintain must supply, will have to be brought in from the points named, obtained largely from the stock yards in Portland and ship ped to Salem in car lots." That interview was in the na ture of a last message, for the day after it was given, in the fore noon of the rfay it was published, Fred W. Steusloff was suddenly and unexpectedly stricken by the hand of death ending a signally useful career for his city and sec tion and state. So the interview became a last message on a subject on which Mr. Steusloff was singularly com petent to speak. The Grimm alfalfa boom In the Willamette valley, and especially in Marion and Polk counties. where it was tnen just getting a fair start, has grown and expand ed beyond all expectations. This boom promises well in the solution of the matter that was the thema of the interview. B;t even so. beet sugar factor ies in the saiem district woma add vastly to the supply of ths best beeves, not only for supplying the local packing plant, but also for extending Us operations far, and for giving an export supply of that kind of live stock. Besides this, sugar factories would make the Salem district the best dairy ing country in the world, and benefit vastly very phase of our Industries on the land, besides conferring indirect benefits that would help in adding solidity to all the industries in Salem and the othsr cities and towns of this section. It would even help in Grimm alfalfa growing, by giving . a 1 . : 1 1 a most aesiraoie ciean cuiuuimu rotation crop. Cascara orchards will have to be developed In western Oregon. This is the cascara country, and the wild forest growths are fast dis appearing. They will not last. The coast sections of Oregon and northern California (mostly Oregon) have been supplying 7. 000,000 pounds a year of this bark. There is no substitute. The trade will have to continue. The forestry department of the Oregon State Agricultural col lege is carrying on projects of cascara (or chittim) tree grow ing. They are making a good showing. In a little while, we will see cascara orchards all over this section. It will have to come, and it will return an annually In creasing revenue, and a certain one. Culling the poultry flock in August and disposing of those birds that have stopped laying, and feeding a moist mash at noon to the balance of the flock, Is con sidered a much better manage ment plan than putting the birds through a false or forced molt, believes the Oregon experiment station. "When the days begin to shorten, the lights may be turned on and the birds given about a 13 hour daylight day. This practice keeps the hens laying well until late In the winter, and often un til early spring, when they usually molt and can be marketed. Birds forced to molt late in the summer have a strong tendency to go in to a natural molt In October or November. One way to preserve the nutri tive value of a vegetable Is to bake It in Its skin, and eat the skin, says the O. A. C. Irish pota toes, sweet potatoes and squash are often baked, and cabbage, on ions, carrots and other vegetables may be prepared in this way. Steaming vegetables also con serves their food vahrf. NEW YORK. Aug. -J. (AP) Captain Roscoe Turner who flew from Los Angeles with pas sengers day before yesterday and who had hoped to fly them back today has indefinitelv postponed the flight. Continued poor weather late to day made it possible that the flight would be abandoned alto gether. It was Turner's plan to fly his passengers 'back to Los Angeles and then hop alone to Cleveland for the air races. He indicated to day that If .weather held him up another day he might go direct to the races from here. 0.I.C.WIILBU0T da my cost study OREGON STATE COLLEGE, Corvallis, Aug. 24 Forty-fiYO milk cows, feeding on 12 acres of irrigated Iadino clover pasture, with complete 90-day data on the cost of maintaining this pasture and it effect on the butterfat production of the cowa will be ready for the inspection of Ore gon dairymen who will convene here August 27 for the Irrigated pasture field day. Irrigated ladino clover pastures are advocated by the experiment station as one means of overcom ing the problem of dried up pas tures in Oregon during the usual dry season. July, August and Sep tember, according to P. M. Brandt of the dairy husbandry depart ment, who is in charge of the 90 day experiment. Reports from county agent demonstrations in central and southern Oregon, as well as on the moist, unlrrigated sections of the coast- show that ladino clover pastures in these areas have far outstripped all oth er pasture crops In carrying ca pacity. Juice for Jelly making can be extracted from all berries, and from grapes, without adding wat er, by crushing some of the fruit to start the flow ot Juice before cooking. Blackberries, however, have -been found to yield better and more delicately flavored Jel ly if one-fourth to one-half cup of water Is added to each pound of berries, saya th O. A. C. Oakland Pontiac Cover crops, particularly those of a leguminous nature, are bene ficial to Oregon soils In a number of ways, says the Oregon experi ment station. They tend to check leaching or erosion, increase the nitrogen content ot the soil, and provide organic matter, thus Im proving the physical nature of heavy soils. Everything In BUILDING MATERIALS Cobb & Mitchell A. B. Kelsay, Manager S4 S. 12th Sc. Phoae SIS Keep Your Money in Oregon Buy Monuments Made at Salem, Oregon Capital Monumental Works J. C. Jones A Co., Proprietors AH Kinds of Monumental Work Factory and Office: 2210 S. Commercial St. Opposite 1. O. O. F. Cemetery. Box 21 Phone 6S9 Salem, Oregon Sales and Service VICK BROS. High Street at Trade Gideon Stolz Company Manufacturers of Vinegar, Sods Water, Fountain Supplies Salem Phone 20 Ore. Oregon Pulp and Paper Company Manufacturers of BOND LEDGER GLASSINE GREASEPROOF. TISSUE Support Oregon Products Specify "Salem Made'' Paper for Your Office Stationery BEETS WOULD HELP III CROP SCHEMES in The harvesting of sugar beets the districts where they are grown will begin generally around the middle of September. This crop would come in well in the Salem district, to give em- u. r. warren, ur. . A. rearson pi0yment to many of the hop plck- and Dr. Leland Spencer, all of ers who come jn from other points Cornell university; l'rof. F. W. to help ln that harvest. V caver. State college. Pa.; C. L. Tha mnra arlT m. season Christensen, United States bureau of agricultural economics; Prof. G. A. Pond ot the College of Agri culture. St. Paul, Minn., and Dr. H. C. Taylor of Burlington, Vt. Most Oregon vegetable growers could profitably apply more fer tilizers, either barnyard manure or green manure, supplemented with standard commercial fertil izers, to their crops, believes the Oregon experiment station. An ir rigation system also helps to make these fertilizers ot greater benefit to the crops. Using only sound fruits and vegetables Is a big step toward success in home canning. The fresher the material to be can ned, the stronger are the chances for keeping, if properly handled. "An hour from garden to can" is a good rule to follow, says the 0. A. C. through for harvesting we can have, beginning in the spring with berry picking, the easier it will be to get ample help and ample help we mu3t have in order to maintain our growth in the In dustries on the land here. There are many good things that will follow and attend the growing and manufacturing of su gar beets here. Their timely har vesting will be one of them. . They will help ln our live stock industries as no other one thin can. BULBARS MY PUT ISSUE UP TO LEH SOFIA (A P) Bulgaria Is rrn ai dorini the advisability of asking the League of Nations to adjudicate the bothersome fron tier questions which are constant ly arising with Jugo-Slavia. The border passes within a few miles of this capital and cuts through several villages, separating houses from garden3 in some in stances and ln others dividing a house. The two governments, after a three weeks conference at Plrot, Jugo-Slavia. reached an agree ment last March regulating iron tier traffic and providing for the guarding of the border. It also provided for a mixed commission to adjudicate any differences that might arise. This agreement nas not been ratified by Jugo-Slavia and Bul garia has accepted it only with res ervations. The unacceptable pro posals would have created a neu tral zone six miles wide on both sides of the line from which the bulk of the population would have been evacuated and moved Into the interior. Bulgaria has decided it can not furnish enough arable land to support the number of peo ple affected. New incidents of clashing au thority and individual rights have been so frequent that public opin ion here I demanding an inter national inquiry. It Is argued that ihe status quo threatens the peace of the Balkans. Night or Day US Ettfs ITnire Service Invite Us To The Blow Out E0 Hit's ITurre RMeage Buy KELLYS They Cost Less ITT IV. ffiES! no ntt'c 5i The Price is Low- 1 Wastonuag -The Car is CLEAN FAST HOP PLAXXKD ROOSEVELT FIELD. X. T., Aug. 23. (AP) Captain Roscoe Turner announced tonight he would take off tomorrow at S a. m., in an attempt to beat Captain Frank M. Hawks record ot 19 hours and 33 seconds for east-west transcontinental flight. Exclusive Local Agents fr Paiinttcpiu Harris Auto Service Service Anywhere 2390 Fairgrounds Road TeU 1798 This Week's Slogan: The Willamette Is By Natural Law a Live Stock Valley Powgx? lLrati5i?ScatfcS!in We Use GENUINE ALEMITE HO Itt's GaGoBiiime Use Shell 400 Its HIGH TEST THE STATION WITH A CLOCK OPEN 8,760 HOURS EACH YEAR "Jim" "Bill" iKniTO VAITESIM The Station With a Clock