The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem. Oregon, Saturday Morning, August 10, 1935 Unusually Eine Oram in PAGE EIGHT This County VIEW RELATED Walnuts and Prunes Will be Big Crops, Hops Too, Prospects lilow Crops in general In Marion county hare been far better this season than last year, says Harry L. Riches, county agent, who daily comes In contact with farmers from all parts of the area and who has Bammed up the harvest sit uation hereabouts to set off the numerous reports from smaller districts appearing today. While harvests may vary some even in adjoining areas or on ad Joining farms, the composite pic tures of harvested and unharvest ed products is reported by Riches as follows: Wheat Yields Heavy -'Fall-Sown wheat and oats are " better than they have been for a long time In some sections, though spring grain is not so good and yields are and will be unusually light due to lack of moisture. Vir tually no moisture has been ex perienced since seeding time on the late crop. Large spring wheat yields are found at Pratum and in the North and Central Howell area, with some small fields there averaging 60 bushels, with un usually large wheat averages, in several fields 100 bushels to the acre. No trouble from Hessian fly and only little from rust was experienced in wheat fields. The prune crop looks better to date than' it has any year since 1926. The heavy drop at the present time is not alarming, and in some orchards is a virtual god send as the trees were too laden for the' prunes to make any site able growth. Hay Crops Short Hay production is quite a bit under last year's cut, with a prob able decrease of 20 per cent. Al falfa is below normal: Some sec , ond cuttings are being made now, but only on river bottom fields will the third cutting materialize. The clover seed yield is less than normal and hairy vetch is only about half the average crop, due to dry weather. Berries Disappoint The smalj fruits were generally way short of the normal bearing, with strawberries about 50 per cent off, and other berries below normal. Cherries were about up to average production, with es pecially good yields of sour cher ries. Some damage to the blacks due to a rain at ripening time was not as severe on the grower as an ticipated because many of these were sold for Juice purposes. A normal peach crop is nearing harvest and pears look good, both as to quality and output. Walnuts look especially good all over the county, with blight at a minimum and little trouble from burn. Filberts in general are better than normal, though the young filbert plantings are pretty badly affected with filbert blight more so this season than for 10 years. Pests -at Minimum Various pests from individual farms have been reported from time to time during the season, but save for the spittle bug on the strawberries early in the sea son, these have had little effect on the crops. Peach and prune root borer has shown up, but no more so than normal, and the county agent's office has already conducted a series of demonstra tions to inform orchardists how to combat this at the proper stage. The potato plantings in the eonJBty are unusually small this year, with not many patches in the entire area larger than 10 acres. However, spuds look like a fine crop thus far. Corn is good In the main, though rain would benefit both corn and late pota ' toes. The hop production looks to be ' of the finest Quality for many years, and quantity will also be large though this is no source of satisfaction in view of the ex tremely low prices prevailing as the new season comes on. The red spider is giving some concern to fuggles growers, but so far hep . pests, even the downy mildew, .. have been strikingly absent from the cluster yards, which constitute bulk of the production. Quality of Grains And Hays at Suver Reported Excellent SUVER, Aug. 9 Nuts and fruit axe not grown commercially in tbe immediate vicinity of Suver, the farmers having only small or chards for home use. Dairying and hop growing are the chief industries here. The grain and Bay crops this year are of excel lent quality. Several kinds of bay, retch, alfalfa, clover, rye Crass and oats and vetch mixed, are grown. Threshing is well under way and the farmers say their wheat is averaging 20 bushels per acre and other grains at good yield : Some fields of fall planted wheat are making as much as 24 bushels per acre. Good Stand of Clover Being Hulled, Airlie AIR LIE, . Aug. 9 The first threshings have been completed and the grain turned out above expectations. Clover hullers are busy with what seems to be a good stand of clorer. Neighboring prune growers report the heaviest crop for several seasons but very low marketing price. Hops too are food but low in price. Har vesting of hops will begin the lat ter part of the month at the M. E. Branch yard. Gardens this year are practically worthless because of the bugs that are eating them. Wheat Five Feet High is Seen on Vern Fox' Ranch; Vetch Stand Also Good RICKREALL, Aug. 9 Thresh ing of fall grains in this commun ity Is pretty well completed, with much of the wheat averaging 25 bushels to the acre. Vetch also ran well. J. P. Hamilton thresh ed 400 sacks from 55 acres and Jess Ragsdale averaged 11 sacks to the acre. Vern Fox on his farm north of town has ten acres of spring wheat that averages over five feet in height. Most spring grains seem to be a riddle but if no hot winds come, these may mature, although oats and barley will not be an average yield due to lack of moisture. Hops in the local yards are good. Middleton has some that F,f ,1 10 FEET HIGH ELDRIEDGE. Aug. 9 Thresh ing of fall grain is in full swing here with the yield around 40 bushels per acre. Arthur Coffin. Ivan Brundidge and A. L. Collins have Just finished harvesting their wheat. Prospects are that a good crop of filberts will be harvested on the McGilchrist berry farm. Drop ping of prunes during the hot weather will decrease the prune crop. The first cutting of hay has been good. Flax pulling was begun Mon day at the Springer farm where Albert -Girod is in charge. Some of the corn grown on this place measures 10 ieet nign. rne late potatoes give promise of excel- ent yield in spite of dry weather. Loganberries harvested here were of good quality, hot weather shortened the picking period for some. Around 40 tons from 22 acres were barrelled at the McGil christ farm and hauled to New- berg for Juice. Hop yards here give promise of excellent yield but what to do with the crop is the question. Grains at 'Point Turn Out Better Than Expectation VICTCfR POINT, Aug. 9. Threshing began in general here Monday. Grain is turning out bet ter than was expected in most places. Oats are running from 40 to 50 bushels to the acre. Wheat on the Elmer Lorence farm averaged better than 30 bushels per acre. The King machine has comple ted its hills run and will continue to thresh on Howell prairie. The Waldo Hills company ma chine, which still runs the Cook rig, is working near McAlpin, then comes here. The Lorence machine has finished in this dis trict and has moved to Valley View, the Independent thresher is operating at Silver Cliff and will have several days' run here later. The Victor Point outfit started a 10 days' run here at the Arthur Mulkey farm Monday and will go from here to the Union Hill dis trict. Damage to Prunes At Mehama Result Of Last Downpour MEHAMA. Aug. 9 Most all crops are short in this vicinity this season. The hay crop was threatened to an entire failure un til the last rains came. The rain. at this time damaged the prunes considerably. Berry crops were less than half while the grain yield is very ordinary. The pear crop promises to be extra good while the early apples are very light. The late apple crop will be normal. Cherries were plentiful. Orchards at Rosedale Show Full Prune Crop ROSEDALE. Aug. 9 Logan berry picking in this section was mostly completed last week. The yield was not so heavy as expect ed. There is not so much acreage here as some years ago. Spring grain and hay were also short. Not much of either is raised in this section. The main cron is prunes and these trees are mom than full though the prunes are not very good size as yet. A good drop is starting. Harvesting will probably begin around September !. Walnuts promise a good crop, and no scalding Is noticed as re ported In some other localities. Spotted Condition is Seen on Zena's Farms ZENA. Aug. 9 Fall grains now being threshed here are "spotted", some fields turning out good while others are below av erage. Spring grain is light. Not so much hay was sown as usual this season. Cherries, while below par in most orchards, are excellent in those of W. D. Henry and W. Frank Crawford, the Royal Ann's particularly running far above average. Both Walnut, Filbert Prospects Are Great ROBERTS. Aug. 9 The fruit crops yielded around 50 per cent in this district, berry crops wert shortened by the hot weather. There was an arerage crop of hay, but little' hay is grown here. Wheat ran around 30 and oats 40 bushels to the acre. John J. Roberts reports a larsre crop of walnnts and filberts. 1 SPRUE! are extra fine. A new pest has put in its appearance, a small red spider that covers the under side of the leaves and quickly devours it. Continuous spraying seems to have them checked. Picking will begin about September 3. J. P. Hamilton has a record' yield of corn, stalks are seven feet. Jess Ragsdale grows seed flax with good results. It is pur chased by a Portland firm for lin seed oil. He has 40 acres this year. Clover is another crop that grows well in this vicinity, and is threshed about the same time as spring grains. The "year seems to be a good one for wal nuts for the trees are loaded while 'filberts are not so plentiful. Dry Season Dents Hills Oats Output WALDO HILLS, Aug. 9 At the end of the second day of threshing, J. W. Goodknecht, manager of the Haberly company machine, operating in the Cen terview district, said wheat was 100 per cent above last year, but oats not more than 35 per cent above. The. lesser oats yield is due to the dry ear and many oat fields are spring sown. Just the opposite situation is found in the Evergreen district, where wheat was about 25 per cent better and oats 100 per cent. Edward Kuen zi, in the latter district, had a field of oats that made 93 bushels. Nuts are a promising crop. Wal nuts are a heavy crop and good quality, while filberts are a fair crop but exceptionally fine qual ity. The heat seems to have done no damage to either crop. Hops are looking fine, though not as large a crop is expected this year as was harvested last year. Barley Short But Well Filled; Pear Trees Are Loaded PRATUM. Aug. 9 Threshing is well under way in this commun ity for fall grain and spring grain will soon be ready to harvest. Some barley is ripe enough to cut now. Much of the fall wheat is yielding above 50 bushels per acre. The average for this com munity will probably, be near that mart. Oats are very rood in some fields but will probably not aver age any higher than wheat. Most of the barley is quite short but well niled. Very little spring wheat was sown. Only a small amount of hay was baled, far be low the average. Late potatoes make a good showing. Walnuts never looked any better at this time of the year. Pear trees are loaded to capacity, apples are fair. All in all the 1935 crop gives great rea son to be thankful and will play a large part in bringing prosper ity back to this community. Average Yield of Fruitland Wheat Runs 50 Bushels FRUITLAND. Aug. 9-The grain in the Fruitland locality has most ly been threshed and the yield has been generally beyond expecta tions. The average yield of oats is above 60 bushels per acre; of wheat about 50 bushels. The hay crop has been rather light with poor prospects of a second crop. There will be little or no clover for seed. The walnut trees are loaded generally and the trees look thrif ty. The filbert crop is not so heavy, due, probably, to the late frost. The loganberry crop was harvested with satisfactory re sults. Strawberries were a fair crop. The hops will average with other upland yards. " They did not require spraying for lice this summer on account of the un usually hot days. West Stayton Pole Beans Show Large Tonnages to Acre WEST STAYTON, Aug. 9 Pole beans, bush beans, tomatoes, hay, fruits and grains are raised in this community. Beans and tomatoes are raised to a greater extent than fruit or gram and are laraelv irri gated. Hay Is a pretty good crop. Busb beans are yielding fair, about three tons to the acre. Pole beans are good, the yield will h about five tons per acre. The hay wasn't good. Tomatoes are fair and will yield about four tons per acre. Filbert Prospects in Hollywood Area Light HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 9 Indica tions are that filberts will be a light crop while the walnuts will be heavy. Fall sown hay and grain surpasses the 'spring sown crop by an unusual. margin. One crop of grey oats went 65 bushels per acre. Wheat runs 35 to 50 bushels.' Gardens generally are not as good as usual. CROPS LOOK FIXE MACLEAY, Aug. 9 Wheat Is fair, oats, especially spring, light. Corn looks good, prunes look good but it is too early la the season to tell what per cent will mature as a good many are falling. Wal nut crop looks good but . like prunes, too early; to state definitely. UT BURN NOT SERIOUS Wheat Heavy, Oats Fair, and Cherries Way Ahead At Silverton SILVERTON. Aug. 9 Harvest ing of grain is now well underway in the valley surrounding Silver ton. Early reports show that wheat yields are proving heavier than at first anticipated. Reports have been running from 50 to 60 bushels of wheat to the acre on the average. C. E. Jorgenson, a well-known farmer, reports the heavy yield of 70 bushels an acre. A. B. Wlesner reported a yield of 65 bushels per acre. The oat yields have also been fairly good. Reports show them to range from 50 to 100 bushels an acre. Ed Kuenzi had a yield of between 70 to SO bushels an acre on his grey oats. Other yields run in proportion. Threshing has just been begun in the hills surrounding Silver ton, and while no definite returns are reported here, it is understood that the grain crops are much lighter in the hills than in the sur rounding valleys. Slight Sut Burn The walnut crop, which prom ised to be very heavy, was slight ly damaged by burn during the extreme heat in July. However, it is said, the damage is not as seri ous as the" blight of a year ago when from 40 to 5(1 per cent losses Were recorded. In orchards where the trees are growing on south slopes, the heat , damage is more serious than iru locations where at least a part cl the orch ard has a north facing.. The cherry harvest which is being completed this month, is re ported as good. The Silverton Food Products company has a pack of over 150 tons. Walin Brothers are proprietors. In the Keenwood orchards, which are the largest cherry orchards around Silverton, the yield was reported at least 37 per cent more than last year. The black pie cherries at Keenwood ranch are being har vested this month. Eye Packing of Corn The Walin Bros, report they are greatly interested in the corn growing and packing in thi coun try. Th.ey believe, they say, that corn offers a fine opportunity for Oregon farmers, and cannerymen could find a ready sale for this pack. They point out that the Oregon corn flavor is superior to all others, and very little of it is packed in the west. Therefore a good market would necessarily re sult. Harvesting of vegetable seeds is about completed and it is reported the yield is average with yields of other years. Hop crops-will be heavy enough, but hopmen are too worried about prices to be interested in yields. Clover Seed Has Promise of Good Yield at - Turner TURNER. Aug. 9. Threshing is in progress with good reports from the hills southwest of town, and wheat is averaging 25 bush els to the acre, the highest yield being 31 bushels. Oats are quoted from 30 to 67 bushels. Other sec tions report smaller yields owing to location. Some grain .on the bottoms is not cut and threshing is delayed. Early and well cultivated corn promises a good yield. The hay crop was heavier in many fields than first estimated, owing to the dry season. There are a few small fields of clover seed with prom ise of good yield. Nut trees are loaded. Cherries were a light crop and berries average. Bean har vest has just begun. Rye is running 34 - Bushels Per Acre; Parkejrsville Area PARKERSVILLE, Aug. 9 The grain threshing began here last week and the crops are turn ing out much better than first ex pected. There is approximately 350 acres in grain in this neigh borhood. The average of yields is as follows: wheat, highest yield 45 bushels per acre, low, 25 bushels; oats, 75 bushels per acre. low, 45 bushels; rye yield was 34 bushels per acre. Due to the dry weather there is hardly any clover seed this year. What was hulled averaged two bushels per acre. Leading Falls Crop Hit by Bad Weather SILVER FALLS, Aug. 9. The leading crop In this vicinity is the strawberries, though a light crop was harvested this year. Late frosts, hot weather and spit tle bugs were very destructive. Berries sold from four to six cents a pound. The caneberry yield was good and sold at an av erage price. .Though only a few acres of hay were grown here, the harvest was good. Very little threshing is done. Pasture is 100 per cent this season. Two saw mills and a logging camp are oper ating steadily. Fruit Crops Low But Grains Fine, Hubbard HUBBARD, Aug. Fruit crops In and around Hubbard have been only about half as large as usual. In some cases, as with Marshall strawberries, only a third of a crop was produced. Grains In general : are excellent. Threshing; is about halt complet ed and In most cases the yield has been better than average. A full hay crop Is expected. Over Ton Austrian Peas Per Acre are Taken at Molalla MOLALLA, Aug. Fifty-one bushels to the acre Is the highest wheat yield re ported here. Hay and oats are running short. Spring oats are averaging about 25 bushels to the acre. Aus trian field peas are yielding weU from 1000 to 2200 pounds an acre. . Estimates on the unbar rested barley crop point to a good yield of about 40 bush els to an acre. Spring wheat is not doing well. Hairy vetch is yielding between 100 and 500 pounds to the acre. Less walnut blight than usual is expected to help that crop. This is not a fruit country, except on a small scale. CK L LATE ATJMG PRICE Crooked Finger Potatoes Are Showing Well so Far; Prunes Tardy SCOTTS MILLS, Aug. 9 The crops in this vicinity vary. Mar shall strawberries were fairly good, especially above Crooked Finger, where they were harvest ed u'jtil August 1, getting as high as 41.80 a crate. Loganberries were only about one-half a crop, aud Etterberg strawberries one- third a crop. Hay crop was not quite as good as usual, and grain is better, especially in Crooked Finger, than it has been for a few years. Wheat will probably go 40 bushels and oats as high as 65 bushels to the acre on some places, others as low as 20 bush els. More rye sown around here than has been sown for years, and looks better than the average. Corn looks fair. Spuds Look Fair Crooked Finger Mountain Bur bank potatoes so far look better than the average, these potatoes are sown from certified seed. Fil berts look good, walnuts in the higher regions are good, but not a big crop, though they don't seem to be hurt by the hot weather. Indications are that prunes are fairly good, but awfully late. Last yeat prune picking was started now, while they haven't started to turn yet. Pasture is still good. Dropping of Prunes Relieves Trees of Excessive Burden LIBERTY, Aug. 9 Logan berry yield in this section varied this season all the way from very poor yield to a very good one with two tons per acre the highest. There was winter frost damage In some patches, and all suffered some loss due to heat scald in picking time. Red raspberry and blackcap yields were poor here In all patches. Early hay did well, that 60wn later lacking sufficient moisture to make a good stand. Threshing has not started. There will be a good crop of prunes throughout the district. Dropping has been quite heavy the past two weeks, which was a good thing for some orchards where the trees were breaking under the load of fruit. Wheat Harvest is High as 60 and Oats 100 Bushels CENTRAL HOWELL, Aug. 9. -The fall grain in this locality is an exceptionally heavy yield. Many fields of wheat are going 50 bushels to the acre and oats from 0 to 85 bushels to the acre. The highest average for a field of wheat reported is 60 bushels and for oats 100 bushels. Less hay was baled here than usual. Some vetch fields failed to mature and had to be re-seeded to other crops this spring. Strawberries were short this year, while the cherry crop was plentiful. The filbert and walnut yield promises to be heavy. Grey Oats Thresh Full 100 Bushels In Jefferson Area JEFFERSON, Aug. 9 The crops in this district are consid ered generally good. Threshing Is well under way. One field of grey oats north of town yielded 100 bushels to tbe acre; wheat from 18 to 64 bush els; hay, good; corn, good; hops look fine; prunes will yield a bumper crop, peaches only fair; berries fair on account of drouth and heat; apples, poor; walnuts and filberts a good yield; pros pects for corn good; bean crop, good. Spring Grains Light But Fall Crop Great MARION, Aug. 9 Fall grain yielding better than estimated be fore threshing started. Wheat and oats running from 40 to 65 Bushels per at re. Spring grain of all kinds is short an light. Straw berries are a light crop; logans and raspberries good. Bean pick ins; is just starting and a heavy crop predicted. , There will be a good crop of prunes and pears. No damage to walnut crop from the hot days ot July. The heaviest crop In years Is predicted. 1 ISIS 7 1SUHS MIS MARK FOR 'GREEH Only One Poor Crop Fore seen in Prunes; Grapes Are Excellent HAZEL GREEN, Aug. 9 C. A. Kobow has a week's threshing in the western part of the district yet. The average yield is good. The largest reported 97 bushels of oats, Max Wood; 50 wheat, Charles Zielinski, Jr. The spring grain is not so good, except bar ley, which will be combined later. The Dunhigan brothers threshing in the Howell Prairie part of the district report good yields. There was an abundant crop of clover hay, as the hay was made early. There is a fine prospect of seed. The second crop of alfalfa has been cut. Ralph Worden has the best yield. With one excep tion the many small prune orch ards have a good crop. The acre age is four to 10 of the Italian variety. Joseph Zielinski has the Coats prune. -There are a num ber of small English walnut and filbert plantings. They promise a good crop. Grows Radish Seed Perry Saunders has 10 acres planted to radishes for seed. Hen ry Dunnigan and Mr. Kinkaid are growing radish seed. A. T. Van Cleave and son begin this week to pick their six acres of cultivated evergreen blackberries. The on ions and market gardens are promising. The grapes, family plantings, have more and larger bunches than usual. In fact G. G. Looney shows a second crop trying to grow on the suckers of his 57 year old vine of the Isabella, a large purple variety. It often bears a ton, being more than 13 inches in diameter. FLAX ID GLOVED AURORA. Aug. 9 There will be one half crop of hay in this section this season. Winter oats and wheat are good in grade and quality for milling. Wheat is running 50 bushels to the acre, gray winter oats 75 bushels. Spring grain promises an average fair crop. Flax and all clover were affect ed by the dry weather in May and June. Oats is the only available crop which can be seeded for the coming year. The vetch crop is very short. The Australian field peas hare made a good yield and are a good land builder. Feed the soil and It will feed you is the famous expression of a successful seed man. The wonderful hop prospect with favorable weather conditions will produce hops of good quality. Farmers at Scio Say Shortage of Feed Threatened SCIO, Aug. 9 A bumper crop of cherries began the season in the Scio vicinity. Fall wheat and oats yielded normally, as did early spring grain. Winter and late spring grain wefe below par in some sections. Strawberries were short owing to intense heat during the ripening season. Raspberries yielded well. Hay will average sufficient for home use, although many farmers report shortages. Rye grass seed will yield normally. Present pros pects for prunes are below an an ticipated bumper crop because of low humidity. English walnuts at this time indicate one of the largest yields in the history of their cultivation. Nuts and Prunes Promise Highest Yields, St. Louis ST. LOUIS, Aug. 9 An ex ceedingly small crop of strawber ries, hay and fruit was raised in this locality this year. The logan berries yielded about half a crop. Fall oats yielded about 40 bushels an acre. Fall wheat is also very good here. A very good crop of prunes and English walnuts is expected. The filbert crop will be light. The evergreen crop looks good so far but owing to the light rain, the crop will be lighter than last year. Picking started here Monday. Largest Grower of Walnuts Looks For Greatest Crop Yet KEIZER, Aug. 9. The outlook for fruit and nuts in this district is encouraging. Almost every prune orchard will yield above last year's crop. The pears and apples will be a bumper crop, and of good quality. Walnuts and filberts will be in abundance. One of the largest walnat growers says the yield will be the greatest he has ever had. Small Acreage of Fall Wheat Brings Excellent Stands OAX POINT, Aug. 9 Hay crop was good, cherries also good, no retch seed; fan wheat excellent, but acreage small; rery little fall grain, gray oats, fall planting poor. Spring planting gray oats, fair. Spring sowings of wheat, oats and barley about halt a crop. Hops are good; gardens good, and prunes poor. Nuts good. DBS REDUCES Marginal Land Average From Hairy Vetch MONMOUTH, Aug. 9 Wheat and oats are coming into the Co operative warehouse here, slowly, reports F. E. Murdock, manager, and no approximation of the re turns can be given at this time. He does not anticipate a heavy tonnage, and farmers are taking plenty of time to let the grain ma ture fully, before harvesting. Quality is a little better than last year. Quality of common vetch this year is less than in 1934, with prices about the same, at 91.75 to $2 per hundred. The local crop last year made about 300 tons; this year it is about 75 tons. Use Marginal Land Hairy vetch has been a satis factory crop on the average. Re turns have shown a yield of 100 Wrong Rains Injure Crops At Mill City MILL CITY, Aug. 9 Crops in this vicinity did not compare so favorably with those of a year ago. While there was a greater rain fall this season, the rain did not come at the right time to help either berry or fruit crop. A late frost in some places hurt the strawberry crop. Gardens were slow but late ones are doing fine. At the old Gardner farm, per haps the largest one in the val ley, the hay crop fell approximate ly 35 tons under that of last year. A year ago about 120 tons were raised on this place and this year the crop runs about 80 tons. At the Roy Taylor farm on King's Prairie only one third of a crop was harvested this year, while Frank Fencle, on the edge of South Mill City, will only have about four tons less than a year ago. Marshall, Big Joe. and Oregon strawberries were all under the crop of 1935, but one farmer har vesting the first time a patch of Corvallis No. 12 berries reports a good yield. Both red and black cap raspberries made good yields this year. Late threshing is Just beginning but an average yield is expected. Walnut trees are all loaded, these being the only nuts raised to any extent. All of Crops Fine On 'Heights Except Varieties of Berry SALEM HEIGHTS, Aug. 9 Crop production in the Heights district is considered, despite the lack of moisture, a fairly average one. ine strawberries, running only 40 per cent and the logan berries and raspberries falling short of a normal crop, were the only exceptions. Prunes are showing a decidedly good crop, with the hopes that the dry season will not cause too much dropping of fruit before harvesting. The nut trees are all heavily laden, with no dropping of nuts and a decided absence of blight in this section. The gardens are showing the effects of the dry season more than other crops, although one notes many gardens In this vicinity being irrigated and bearing heavily. Excellent Hops at This Stage Dimmed By Price Prospect GERVAIS, Aug. 9 "If hops were up where they should be growers in this vicinity would be sitting on top of the world," said one party interviewed on the crop situation in this section. There is a good crop of hay and it is all cut and most all in the bale. All fall grain is cut and almost all threshed. Spring grain will be threshed soon. One field of oats is reported to have produced 90 bushels to the acre and wheat is running from 15 to 27 bushels. Small grain is yielding much heavier than recent years. Onions are reported first class with rad ishes and nuts not so good. Brightest Outlook For Years Seen on Hayesville Farms HAYESVILLE. Aug. 9 The outlook for the farmer is the brightest it has been for some years. Hay was not so good and prunes also are going to be scarce. But 'strawberries, in spite of worms, were good. Loganberries and blackcaps were damaged some by the extreme heat. Cher ries were fine and a bumper crop of pears is expected. All grains have been good. Prospects are good for onion seed, but the radish seed in some fields is not so good, especially the late plantings. Fair Hay Production Reported, Cloverdale CLOVERDALE, Aug. 9 The crops in this community were fairly good, considering the short age of rain and hot June days. The logan and strawberry produc tion, compared with last year, was a little short but with the .greater demand and better prices this shortage was offset. Cherry pro duction was good. Hay crop is fair. Oats and wheat on some farms were up to the average, while on others the crop was fair. Some prune growers report a heavy crop. All other orchards have atair crop. The walnut out look is good. Gives Fair to 700 pounds per acre which will bring six cents per pound on con tract, and eight cents per pound where not sold on contract. Most of this crop was grown on margin al land of poor quality, and is bringing an average return of around $28 per acre which ex ceeds anticipations. The price of feed grains bar ley and oats isnow $21 per ton. Last year it was $31 per ton at this time. This difference is a result of midwest conditions where weather played an especial ly important part last year with heavy drouth, and in other region al differentiating factors. The hay crop in this section was a little short, particularly on the second crop of alfalfa; and oats and vetch hay ran below tbe usual yield. PUNTING 2D HP BROOKS, Aug. 9 Threshing began here last week with the Charles LaFlemme machine. Oats are exceptionally good with some fields yielding as high as 100 bushels to the acre. Wheat in some fields is very good land in others very low yield is reported. Corn is continuing to make a ra pid growth. The loganberry growers report a good crop and they were able to dispose of their entire crop this year. The prune crop will likely be small as many of the prunes have dropped since the extreme hot days. Plant More Celery The walnut crop will be good but the pear crop will be light and also a light crop of apples. The gardners on the lake are planting another crop of celery and lettuce. They report an ex cellent yield. The hop crop will be light on account of the riry weather. The peach crop is also very light. Better Prices For Berry Compensate For Poorer Yield WOOD BURN. Aug. 9 The berry crops in the vicinity of Woodburn have not been as good as usual this year, the strawberry tonnage being about 30 or 40 per cent of the normal crop, logans not over a 60 per cent normal crop and cherries in this vicinity were 65 to 80 per cent normal. Blackberries will run an estimated 60 to 80 per cent crop i.i compari son with the past few years. Prices received for the crops have been better than in the past three years. The hay' crops have been good, and grain has averaged more per acre than last year in spite of the dry season. A very fine crop of hops is expected by the growers this year, but the market for them is not so good. Spray For Squash Cures 'Troubles of Farmers at Grove OAK GROVE. Aug. 9 The cherry crop in this locality was about one third less than usual. A few fields of grain have been combined already with a yield of about 15 bushels per acre of wheat. Wheat in one field ran 25 bushels per acre. The threshers are starting operations now. Several farmers have found success this year spraying their cucumbers and squashes with cal cium arsenate for the striped bee tle that is such a pest in this lo cality. The recent rain has been a great benefit to the dairymen, re viving the pastures and helping the corn planted for ensilage. Fiber Flax Very Poor, But Walnut Yield Looks Big MT. ANGEL, Aug. 9 Winter grain was very heavy in this sec tion; spring grain was short but turned out better than it looked. Winter wheat yielded up to 55. bushels per acre and some winter oats as high as 100 bushels. Fiber flax was very poor. Hay was average, hops about average, not quite as heavy as last year. The walnut crop is much above average. The onion crop in Lake Labish is very good. Prunes are average. Berries were light. Color Already Found On Prunes at Pioneer PIONEER, Aug. 9 Prunes and pulp wood are the biggest crops that Pioneer can boast. The prune, crop seems to be fine this year and some prunes are turning col or. Cutting pulp wood is almost over and the trncks from the three companies cutting are busy haul ing. This industry has given many a man work the past year. Tbe hay crop is short here in this neighborhood! There were many fooi gardens for home consump tion. Ideal Curing Weather - Boosts Hay Harvests t. RICKEY. Aug. 9 Berry crop was fair, with season materially shortened by the few hot days. may zair out or. good quality be cause of Ideal curing weather. Fall grain good with spring grain spotted. Some spring oats rery poor, some good, with wheat the same. Prune trees full hut drop ping badly. Walnuts are avei age; grapes good. - CM