PAGE FIFTEEN Two Million in em The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, November 28, 193? Over, Fruilt Mack am DropF roin'36 Figu res Slight Berry Crops Are Short in . Valley, Causing Gloom at Season's Start By C. GENEVIEVE MORGAN With Salem's 1937 trait ad vegetable packing s season at Its dead end, pencil sharpening Is in order to get a picture of what this industry means to the city and the A ahnnt : A lid that - x picture will reveal a bread and :. butter industry of; major proper-: tiens. ' .' -1 . It may be said I at : the outset, that figures on the 'canning Indus- try are almost as hard to dig out as gold in the Marion county courthouse lawn; the chief reason being .'that canners (here and elsewhere) ..hover over their re spective figures jat 1 reasonable length of time so 'every possible can of , prunes or berries or cher ries can go to market, in the most favorable light. , ; f.--: ; In short, the figures,' offered here are unofficial, but just-the same probably will hit the mark pretty accurately! when actual pack figures are officially given to the public. v " Salem canneries this season have packed 2,030,000 cases of fruits and vegetables! , Not Much Decline - That figure U 200,000 cases'br -less under the.l9JG pack, and is Something of a revelation in view Of gloom which dominated-the canning situation as most of the fruits neared the ripening stage. Some there are who hold this figure is way too high for the 1937 pack. One veteran icannefy operat or here holds that only 1,250,000 cases of fruit and vegetables were put up in the Salem plants this year, or only about half the nor mal pack. I These two million plus casej, handled 'by nine tanneries,' don't . tell the whole fruit story, either. For between 15,0,00 and 24,000 barrels (2 SO pounds to the barrel) of brined cherries were handled, not to mention increased opera tions In bottling; beverage fruit juices. I , Bullions Paid out If you don't think the Salem canneries are a bread and butter industry for Salem,, open your eyes at these figures ( based on the pack of 2.030.009 cases): Approximately j S 1 ,6 4 2,2 1 4 was paij. . here for fruit which went into cans alone during the. 1937 season: t About 22,400,000 (enough to buy a $200 refrigerator for every home in Salem and then some) was paid or labor on frultsLand vegetables that went lnto.tbe cans In Salem cannerie! : - - y Nearly J 1,035,500 was paid for tin cans in which to pack the fruit. While cans are not man ufactured in Salem, they, come from Portland and Washington state, and so this money went into northwest channels. And sugar cost around the halt million dollar figs re. Eleven Plants Here (And right here, while those figures take effect, is as good place as any to list the names of the Salem canneries and barrel ing, plants: California Packing company, : Hillm&n Packing com pany. Hunt Bros., Oregon Fruit Products company, Paulus Bros., Producers Cooperative, Reld Mur doch A company, 'Starr Fruit Pro ducts company, Jory Packing com pany, W. G. Allen Fruit company and Willamette Cherry Growers association, the latter dealing in cherries alone). - The figures outlined above are only for the pack which went Into tla cans, and do n6t include money for fruit, labor or other Items on barrelled cherries, pitting oi brin ed cherries, dried prunes or Juice operations. f . The cannery industry, as repre sented In these figures, was vir tually a B'i month industry here this year, operations getting un der steam generally in late May and closing late In October and .SI Gooke's Is a w wa j j wsri wi -mm it j hu wji w . w m wmja w as mw z 4i x ha ma hj az ht hs wjs v -iw Mexican Gift Items Zipper Binders Ash Trayg - Book Ends - Plaques Several Styles from 2.75 Best-Seller Books Fountain Pens, Sets All Popular Titles in KiddW' Books, too Sheaffer . Parker Esterbrook. 1.00 np Kodaks - Photo Albums Gift Stationery The Perfect Gift for Anyone Attractive Boxes 50c to 5.00 Gift Wrappings, Stickers New! Desk Lamps Seals, Taps, etc., 10c up With Indkect lighting 2.95 - Christmas Cards Billfolds - Key Tainers Special! 25 Cards, Imprinted. 1.83 Just the Thing to Please a Man, SOe np - Hundreds of Gifts at . and Less! 340 SUte St a It's All Over at the Canneries but ; 1 ; if : Hi lip - 1 ' : viricHli it .r: rra r i U ft . - . -f. 1! WMli SI " i - J Ton count 'em. and while vou're scene, hist a corner of th tinm wait to go to market. Below, just hereabouts the past season. early November. Some plants have worked on fall vegetables until early this past week, j And theraja still some work on pitting br&ed cherries, as some of the handlers here enter this mar ket with the pitted product in or der to afford additional payroll for Salem people, and at a-season of the year when canning opera tions generally have slackened and even through part of the per iod when the canning equipment is idle. Outlook not Rosy The brined cherry outlook, by the way, is not so rosy due to high labor costs and high cost of the fresh fruit this year forcing the price to the trade so high" that the Italian brined cherry can again compete, in spite of a: stiff tariff, with the product of this country la the major United States mar kets. For reasons already indicated, it is not possible to present a breakdown of the huge pack here Into quantities of varieties packed. As is already well known, an berries were a poor" crop, quan titatively speaking, and as a con sequence producers realized prices which sounded like . the halycon days ot the pre-depresslon era. Cherries Surprise Cherries, decried as a small crop due to severe weather condi tions which attended their matur ing and ripening days, finally turned out to be. the largest crop from a local orchard standpoint. Ready With a Tempting Array of STATIONERY COHIPANY Just East of 1? Am 544 -j J' JL 1 mum ' '-V. 1 jg- ' nmzr "' - t ' doine it. here's this: Above is a Hunt Bros, storaee SDace where berries. Drones, cherries and pears a handful of the 15,000 or more A virtual freeie-out In the other large producing cherry orchards of the -state saved., the situation somewhat from the packers and barrellers-' standpoint. : : But while the crop was making up its mind what proportions to take here, canners forced the mar ket up to the. point that it's still a pain in the neck when prices paid for that fruit are mentioned in cahner quarters. Pears, largely brought In from Medford and Yakima, were the largest item packed In local can neries, with cherries next. There is some dispute as to how large the canned prune deal went, with figures running it from 40 to about 65 per. cent on. the canned deal last year. . ' Due chiefly to a $10 increase in the price of fresh prunes over 193S, or a $27.60 price per ton for 1937, and to the short crop,, bulk of the prunes locally went into the cans with a resultant- small deal on the dried commodity. Peaches Advancing Canned peaches are coming to the fore in 'this section, with slightly larger packs handled than last year and this fruit being eyed for larger acreages. Oregon grown peaches, until recently ignored from the cannery picture due to favorable position of the Califor nia cling, are gaining reputation as ot finer flavor than the cling. As a result the peach stands alone as about the only fruit tree go ing into commercial orchards. 4? IB 7 1 IB IB 1B 1B IB IB IB IB IB & IB IB IB IB IB IB a IB IB SB IB Order Yonr . Personal Greeting Cards Now! IB IB IB IB Ladd & Bosh Clearing Shelves i I nil a - t - ' - iii ' - typical Salem cannery warehouse barrels of brined cherries handled Beans, asparagus, pumpkin tomatoes and carrots represent the bulk of the vegetable phase of the canning industry, but with acreage of sweet cern greatly increased in this valley in the last year, it is considered likely that corn will enter the canning line of more than one local plant. Apple Pack Fewer The apple pack this year, go ing into large tins for the rest aurant, hotel and bakery trade branched out some but the total pack was considerably short of last year when only one plant canned apples. Apple canning locally is hinder ed by two important factors: First the labor schedule here is so much higher than in east coast apple canning sections; and secondly, freight costs put the Oregon can ned product at a disadvantage. Canned stocks have enjoyed a good movement from here until recently when the usual seasonal lull came on. Canners, however seem optimistic about prospects for next year and expect to see shelves cleared of their stocks well before the 1938 season. Of the individual fruit prospects for next year,, canners have noth ing to aav and that, too, is the usual situation at this time of the year. Figures ot the U. 8. bureau of agricultural economics Indicate that the strawberry picking ac reage next year will be 17,000 acres, or 22 per cent larger than the 14.000 acres picked last spring. . Scioans Enjoying Southern Journey SCIO "Having a glorious trip, says a card from Mr. and Mrs Ed Bilyeu, Scio farmers, who have been . touring western California for three, weeks. They visited at Fresno, Sacramento, Los Angeles and other . points of Interest in California, and later at Baja Call fornia, Mexico. Alice Davis has returned to her work in Albany after spending a week at the Scio home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Davis. Sage of Salem Speculates By D. R. TALAIADGE (Continued from page 14) Istration comes in for an "impu dent, irreverent ribbing, some times kindly, sometimes brutal often very funny, and all delight fully goofy." There is a real "kick" in the Irene Dunn - Carr Grant film Th Awful Truth. which has been showing at the Grand thee tr since Wednesday. I liked "The- adora Goes Wild better, possibly because of its theme, perhaps be cause Miss Dunne's "Theodora was so delightfully unexpected But Miss Dunne, engaged in bring ins a Jealous husband, who childishly silly in his Imaginings and actions, and whose own rec ord is not above some slight re proach. IS as entertaining j as three-ring circus. And the dog in the east. Mr. Smith,'" helps a heap in the way of making the film one to be remembered pleas Amelia's Final Book Prophetic Volume's Title Changed to "Last night"; Is Issued Thursday By HAROLD K. MILLS NEW YORK, Nov. 27. Through the gay pages of Amelia Earhart's last book a narrative of her globe-girdling attempt runs a tragic thread of prophecy, born out by the dlsannearance which changed the volume's title from "World Flight" to "Last Flight." Last Flight" as published to day (Harcourt. Brace A Co.) pic tures a life of bright adventure against the darker backgrounds ot ubiquitous hazard. It was com piled by Amelia's husband, George Palmer Putnam, from the cables, the telephoned reports, the crib bled log-books, and the letters she dispatched as the unfinished trip progressed. The book ends, as abruptly as did the ill-starred flight, with this portion of a letter she left for her husband as she started an earlier aerial adventure: , Please, know that I am quite aware of the hazards. . I want to do it because I want to do It. Women must try to do things as men have tried. When they fail, their failure must be but a challenge to others." "Because 1 want to - - -." That was the explanation Miss Earhart gave for attempting to fly around the earth near the equator, when she first announced her plans in New York less than a year ago. Saw First Airplane At Age of 10 The book skips swiftly from the time she, as a girl ot 10, saw her first airplane at the Des Moines. Ia., state fair, through the ocean flights which made her the world's No. 1 airwoman, to the beginning ot her world flight. The first attempt, westward, ended In a takeoff crash at Hon olulu, and Miss Earhart wrote, "I think it was not more than two minutes after we emerged from the crack-up that I knew exactly what I wanted to do If ways and means could be devised for doing it. 'My own desire, I am sure, was set almost before the slithering slide along the concrete ended. " 'If we don't burn up, I want to try again.' Something like that flashed through' my mind. Mirac- uously, fire spared us . . ." Miss Earhart did try again, and. "Last Flight" tells of the rebuild ing of her twin-motored plane, of weeks spent in careful checking of plans, and equipment, before thesecond takeoff: this timeeast- ward from Miami. "I have a feeling there is just about one more good flight left in ray system," she fold a close friend, as she prepared to leave Miami. "And I hope this trip is it Anyway, when I have finished this job, I mean to give up long distance 'stunt' flying.- Off on her last flight. Miss Ear hart dispatched one note which said: "Push through. .1 find myself writing these words almost resent fully. We're always pushing through, hurrying on our long way, trying to get to some other place Instead ot enjoying the place we'd already got to." Chapter by chapter "Last Flight" takes the aviatrix and her navigator, Capt. Fred Noonan. from Brazil to Dakar, South Af rica: across Africa, and on to Singapore. The last completed flight of the tousle-haired woman and the ; plane of which she was so proud was to Lae, New Gaines, reached: June SO. "Denmark's a prise n." she . wrote on July 1, "and Lae attract-' ire and unsusual as it Is, appears to two flyers just as confining, as the Electra la poised tor its long est hop, the 2,6 56 miles to How land Island !b mid-Pacific . . . a wind blowing the wrong way con spired to keep her (the plane) on the ground today. "In addition, Fred Noonan has been unable, because of radio dif ficulties, to set his chronometers. Any lack of knowledge ot their fastness or slowness would defeat the accuracy of celestial naviga tion. Howland island is such a small spot In the Pacific that ev ery aid to locating it must be available." The next, day they took off on the jump that was never com pleted from Lae to Howland is land, which she had described be fore as 'a fantastically tiny tar get." , PLATES OF ALL MAKES FILLINGS, CROWNS, ' EXTRACTIONS, BRIDGES DR. HIGGINS DENTIST . Over J. C. Penney Store -.TeL CSSi . " i ' f , - v t I v C How iDoes Your Garden Grow? Complaint "Against Parasitic Diseases in Lawns '; Start With Fall; Remedies Given By LILLIE L. MADSEN Last week I was reminded that t had promised to list a few of the lower growing rhododendrons and had not done so. The R a e m o sum is consider ed one of ! the finest of "the roek garden group. It Is an ever green - and has pink flowers in early spring. Chrysanthemum, listed by some growers, is also a dwarf one in yellow. ' The Ferrngin eum grows from tflUl MldMB . 18 Inches to two feet high and has pink or carmine flowers. Hirsutum is one of the excep tional rhododendrons in that it does, not object to limestone. To most rhododendrons lime in any shape is ' anathema. The Keiskei Is variable, but us ually stays below three feet, tls flowers are yellow. Lawn Diseases Appear The fall has brought a strong revival at parasitic diseases to tha4 lawn it would seem, to Judge from inquiries reaching me. Fairy Ring has the largest number of com plaints against it. This is a fung due to mushroom, toadstool, and cuffballs. The grass immediately outside the ring of mushrooms is likely to be stimulated fhd be come darker, while inside or over the ring there will be a zone of dead grass. As the ring increases year by year, tweeds grow in the dead zone and grass dies. The roots of the fungi live in the soil perennially. It is a difficult -disease to erad icate if it gets a firm hold in the lawn. Treatment has to be per sistent. First carefully pull up all fungi and put them into a 6aek or paper box to be burned. Next, perforate the soil to a depth ot about eight inches and apply bor deaux mixture Immediately over and In advance of the ring. You must apply enough to penetrate the sell thoroughly. Organic Mercury applied at the rate of two ounces to five gal lons ot water is also recom mended. Advice of SUte College Another suggestion from Ore gon State college is to drench the perforated soil with a solution of Potassium sulfide, one ounce to two gallon ot water. Make sev eral applications- at two week in tervals. This same treatment wil care for Brown Patch. But do not. mow over these fun gi growths and scatter them about. In response to request for names of flowering trees for the' smaller lawns: Prunus Blireana; double pink flowering cherry. Spray Peach Trees Soon The double flowering peaches they must be sprayed for leaf curl and other diseases if they are to thrive. Remember in December spray your peach trees, both the flowering and the fruiting varie ties, with lime-sulphur. Pyrus floribunda and PyruSj eleyi are the bettter of the flow ering crabs. The first has pink buds to recommend It and the oth er has a rosy red flower, bronzy foliage and deep red little apples. , The laburnums grow to only about 20 feet in height and bloom when very! young. It must be re membered ! that all parts ot the plant, including the fruit, are poi sonous. Good flowering shrubs for the small lawn would include the Jap anese quince, spirea prunif olia. Of course, V. Carlisll and the laurus tinus, the welgellas, the deatzias. the lilacs., and the azalea and rhododendrons are all suitable. Ferns which seem to be dying should be examined tor mealy bugs, small scale-like affairs that adhere to the fronds and along the "ribs"! of the ferns. Those should be removed either by a tooth pick or they may be touch ed with a tooth pick dipped In al cohol. Birds Bobbins Shrubs I have I had complaints about birds robbing berried shrubs, . I rn n CHECK THE DOZENS OF nNE-CAX FEATURES IN THIS CHEAT DESOTO I THIS TEAR De Soto give , you BIG-CAR luxury at SMALL-CAR cost I See' this great car today. Discover De Soto's greater beauty ... greater ability ... greater aatety . greater comSortt . - Feet the faster pick-tip . Y . rw m II l I VUJIU1 ; W. L. ANDERSON, Inc. 860 MaHon St ' . Phone 7703 was really of the opinion that the berried shrubs were as much to keep the birds in the garden as for any other reason. However, if in your garden, you have a ber ried shrub you want to protect for some other use, yon might take the - tops and bottoms of shiny tin cans, punch holes ' in them and hang them on the shrubs just as we Used to decor ate Christmas trees when we were children.' Hang the discs on eight- inch strings about two feet apart. If you use . a green string, the sight won't be quite as unattract ive. - A newcomer from the midwest tells me she has a lily pond in her garden and wants to know how she can protect, the water lily roots during the winter. I suggest ust leaving them where they are. Unless they are the very tropical ones, and few people plant them here, they will winter in the pond. Complains About Ivy Mrs. J.- M. of Stayton com plains that her ivy dies in water. She wants to grow the small-leaf ed variety. It should grow very well. Do not have it in too hot a place, at least not for all the .24 hours of the day. Run fresh water over the roots occasionally and wash out the container' thoroughly once a week. Some, suggest placing a piece of charcoal in the water to keep it sweet. Creeping Charley is a perennial weed which is difficult to eradi cate. Sodium' chlorate will kill it but will also kill other vegeta tion. Dig up as much of it as you can. It pulls up comparatively eas ily right now. Do you remember the rock salt advocated for lawn by W. S.Jack of Silverton? Well. I notice that he" has neither , creeping Charley or any of the fungi growths in bis lawn. Rock salt may be added to the lawn now. Mr. Jack said, you may . remember, to throw It over the lawn in about the thick ness of a light hail storm. This rainy weather is ideal for the treatment.. Give, It another treat ment in about two weeks and re peat again in March. Keeping Up Window Boxes When the window boxes be come unsightly, and some of them have already become bo, pull out the plants and put in their steam small evergreens from 10 to 18 inches high. They will be nice all winter and will especially add to the holiday appearance of the "Medicine absorbs the physician's whole be ing because it is con cerned with the entire human organism." I GOETHE Our Prescription Service Is tlie Best Service We Render A WILLETT'S Capital Drug 405 STATE, CORNER LIBERTY PHONE 3118 . . . nnorap i nma-oinx the quicker response of De Soto's bigger hydraulic brakes ... the restfalness of complete sound-proofing ... the easier shifting and steering. Check up oa De Soto's dozens of fine car features. ' This BIG DcSoto is now priced just above the lowest ... actually costs lets to run than ordinary. SMALL cars. Ask about OfScial Ccxnmercial Credit Company Finance Plan. home. An assortment ot IS little evergreens,' it you don't Insist on the fancier sorts, won't cost yon any more than you put out for window ibox plants in the spring. Approximately five or SH months will pass before you again set out porch plants. Evergreens suitable include ' Norway spruce, Mugho pine, Douglas fir, Pyramital Ar barvitae. To estimate the number of trees required, figure about one tree per foot of window-box length.' If the box is quite wide, two rows of trees should be planted. Plant in fertile soil and keep well watered. .i To Keep Plants Healthy T Things you should do to keep your houseplants healthy: ; Air your-rooms thoroughly ev- rery day but do not allow a direct cold draft to strike the plants. Remember a temperature above 70 degrees is not conducive to good plant growth or your own health.! Provide proper humidity by placing the flower pots on the new water mats or put sand beneath the pot. - Keep the foliage ot your plants clean. ! Spray foliage with water frequently and keep dead or dam aged leaves picked off. Watch your plants particular ly ferns and coleus for mealy bugs. ; Water your plants Judicially. Remember some take more water than others. Thanksgiving Day Hosts Entertain LYONS Mrs. L. C. Trask had as Thanksgiving day guests, Mr. and Mrs. V. D. Scott and two sons Guy and Keith, . Mr. and Mrs. Scott, sr., all of Union Hill and Mrs. Jessie Pendleton of Mill City. Mrs. Pendleton and Mrs. V. D. Scott are Jlrs. Trask's daughters. Mr. I and Mrs. G. F. Johrfston entertained at dinner Thanks giving day Mr. and MrS. Donald Huckabee and three children of Stayton and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Johnston and two daughters, Carroll and Shirley of Lyons. Mr.! and Mrs. Clair Humphreys and their daughter, Betty, left early Friday morning for a trio to Longvlew, Wash. Their small Bon, Leland, remained with' his grandparents Johnston. To Entertain Club HAZEL GREEN Mrs. Charles Zielinski, jr., . and Mrs. Virgil Perrene will be hostesses to the Sunshine Sewing club Wednesday,' Dec. 1, at Mrs. 2ielinski's home. C St ore I . ' I . IS'CfiSi MUM I A 1 I mJ m W md m i antly.