FAGE SIXTEEN Fall Garden Is Held Need Victory gardeners should begin thinking about the fall vegetables they are going to have in their gar den and begin securing the seed and preparing the soil, advises Robert E. Rieder, acting county agent. For instance, beets planted about June 10, with reasonable care, will be ready for use about August 1 to 10; lettuce, August 10 to Sep tember 15; carrots, August 25; cab bage, September 1 to 30; turnips, August 10 to 20; rutabagas, Sep tember 10; tomatoes, September 10 to 30; sweet corn, August 25 to September 15 and bush beans, August 10 to 30. Plantings of leafy green vegeta bles may be continued throughout June, July and August. For further information on planting schedules in your victory garden, inquire at the county agent's office. Oregon Vehicle Population Up Motor vehicle registration in Oregon -continued to show a slight increase for the first five months of 1942 as compared to the same period in 1941, Earl Snell, secre tary of state, announced Thurs day. There were 394,511 vehicles registered in this state at the end of May while at the same time last year, there were 394,284 ve hicles registered. Registration fees this year total $2,796,890.33 compared to $2, 707,272.29 last May. Willamette Valley Briefs Novel-Atlas-History Volume Of Dream Country Came Out Of Professor's Imagination By JOHN SELBY NEW YORK -(Wide World)- Many a person has created a dream world and mentally peopled it with strange characters. But Austin Tappan Wright went a long step further. His dream world developed with astonishing detail in his inventive mind,-and he brought it to life . . . on paper. Professor Wright died in 1931. For 20 yean before that he bad been locking himself into bis study at the University of Pennsylvania, quietly working eat his dream of an entire country all his own, a place called Islandia, and his ulti mate object was to make this country live in a great novel. He did it before he died, and "Islandia" was recently ""pub lished. But the painstaking details this professor of law dreamed up are the remarkable thing about it all. Carefully, without telling his wife or his daughter what he did, Wright first wrote a 75,000-word history of his dreamland. He be gan it with the dawn of the world, and carried it down in enormous details to the year 1909 not in general terms, but com plete with names, dates and what not. He placed his country on an imaginary continent. He provided it with a climate all its own, and the minutest detail. He created a language for Islandia. too you make the plural of Islandian words by add ing an R. He surrounded Islandia with neighbors, and worked out a set of foreign relations covering a thousand years. He gave his country a peer age, carefully created. He provided a literature, and developed characteristic art forms Islandians were given to writ ing fables, for example, and carv ing was their favorite among the plastic arts. Professor Wright also develop ed a calendar for Islandia, and a complete system of mathema tics this was based on a sys tem of 12 instead of a system of 10. He had a religion for his peo ple, and a national character as distinctive as that of the Chinese, for example. Sports, dress, a complicated syste mof family traits which ap peared in successive generations and interwove themselves as in the real world even a complete schedule of steamship and cable rates with the known world were provided. He then worked out a biblio graphy of works about Islandia - by outlanders, and this is one of the most fascinating of- Wright's fancies. The Germans were the ones who wrote the long, serious tomes about Islandia, for exam ple. And the missionaries, who failed uniformly to impress Islan dians, wound up by defending and condemning one another. And finally, he reduced the whole thins to maps. He drew 53 of them, and very beautiful ly. He went so far as to plot carefully such details as a uni versity; there is a plan show ing the location of all the uni versity buildings, including dormitories. Everything in Islandia built up to a great climax. Traditionally, Islandia through the centuries had refused to admit outlanders, and fought fiercely to keep itself to itself. But at last an experi ment was to be tried; certain re lations with the world would be tried, and a few consulates were established. The novel begins where the history leaves off, and it centers about the American consul, a Har vard man named John Lang. It is a whopping novel almost as long as Anthony Adverse." The strange thing is that it also is a moving piece of writing, not at all the meticulous, involved product one would expect from a mind that could devise such a complicated background. But even so, it almost missed publication. When Professor Wright died in a motor accident in 1931, it exist ed in a tall stack of folders, 5000 pages of longhand. It was all new to Mrs. Wright (who died re cently) and her daughter, Sylvia, but they decided to type it, and they did. By chance Leonard Bacon, the poet, was a friend of the family. He suggested that it be shown to Farrar & Rhinehart, and they agreed to publish, provided Miss ' "Wright would help in the editing. She, with Mark Saxton, worked two years at the job. Printed, Austin Wright's only aevel runs 1813 pages. Nobody really knows since the auth ' er has been dead 11 years but it looks as though he may have intended te write (in addi tion to the unpublished history and the novel) . all the books he mentions in that bibliogra- Phy. And while he lived, the author .never even showed this vast pro ject to his wife! t . Thin Peaches By Crop Yield Peach growers should thin their peaches according to stage of fruit development rather than by cal endar date, states Robert E. Rie der, acting county agent This has been proven to be the most effec tiveiethod for peach thinning as tested by recent experiments. Thinning should not be done on a certain uniform distance between fruits put on the basis of estimated Utal crop which the tree might properly mature. It should be re membered that excessive thinning reduces the yield so much that of ten growers actully incur consid erable losses by such practices. The distance at which to thin is controversial. Thinning from four The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon, Friday Morning. June 12, 1942 Marvin Thomas to six inches between fruits is about the general rule however. In recent years it has been shown that better results have been ob tained by thinning peaches to 30 ot 40 leaves per fruitn order to get the size and color. It should be remembered that the fruits get their size in direct proportion to the number of leaves and the amount of leaf surface per indi vidual fruit. This has been a good year for Marion county peach orchards and many have set a tremendously heavy crop. It is now time to thin these trees in order that they may mature the proper amount of peaches for each individual tree. This is particularly important in wet seasons where brown rot is likely to be a problem. The closer together the fruits are, the more apt brown rot is to become serious Named by USD A Marvin W. Thomas, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Thomas of Scotts Mills, has been named assistant agricultural statistician in the US department of agriculture. Since his graduation from Ore gon State college in 1937 he has been employed in the college ex tension service. One of his first duties in the new work was com piling an estimate of the Oregon strawberry acreage. at harvest time. Peaches should be thinned as early in their development as pos sible but it has been shown that actually it is of value to thin peaches tip to within three weeks before picking time. Test Changes Speed Seeds CORVALLIS, June 11. -(-Revised testing arrangements have been completed to speed up ship ment of 'Oregon's winter cover crop seed to southern states, the state AAA office announced Thursday. Seed will be shipped on a pur ity test alone, , eliminating the germination test The AAA esti mated this would cut the waiting time from two weeks to two or three days. Eighty per cent of the possible top price will be paid by the Commodity Credit corporation on basis of the purity test with addi tional payment to come after germination has been determined. At least half of Oregon's yield Brush Creek News BRUSH COLLEGE The an nual Brush College home coming picnic was held Saturday at the local schoolhouse, instead, of in the park as usual, because of the bad weather. Superintend ant Bennett of Salem spoke.others on the program were Glenda Mc Allister, Josephine Singer and Elva Lough. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Adams were appointed delegates to the state grange meeting at Milwaukee next week by local grange master A. E. Utley at the last meeting". A picnic will be held in the community grove July 3. of ;cover crop seed from 350,000 acres will be purchased by the AAA for shipment to cotton growifig states this year. Safe in Shanghai Hazel Green-Mrs: Hattie Van riaove has .juwv: the Red Cross that her sister, Miss Grace Wormoth, is safe in ShaniT hai, China. The last letter had been received in October. Miss Wormoth taught for 20 years in Shanghai, a term in a Babtist mis sion school and' 13 years in the International settlement. She vis ited her sister here during her sabbattical leave. Loggers Get Tires : SCIO Tires and tubes recently issued include Don A. Tarpley, Frank S. Parrish, Roaring RiVer Logging company, C. E. Kendle. Valley Events Central Townsend elnb Ne. 6 will meet in the courthouse Friday night, at 8 p. m. Child Recovering SILVERTON Small Lila Han sen of Mt. Angel Thursday was reported as getting along as well as could be expected following an accident Wednesday in which her dog had bitten through the child's upper lip. She was rushed to the siiverton nospitai wnere sne is being cared for. Small Girl Hurts Eye Scio Judy Martin, 6 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Martin, injured her eye in a fall at Bilyeu Den a few days ago. Aumsville News AUMSVILLE Mrs. Constance Pio and Mrs. Addie Barker of Portland, were here Wednesday to attend the funeral of Mrs. Nellie Newcomb. Reverend and Mrs. Snyder, from Calif, have rented the O. A. Lesley house and will take po session soon. They have three daughters. He is a minister in the Dunkard church and is a brother of Oakie Snyder of Salem, who formerly lived here. C. D. Boone has rented his pro perty adjoining the O. A. Lesley home, to Mr. and Mrs. Bass and six children of Mehama. This place was recently vacated by the Makinson family. Farmers Union News SCIO Oyster supper climaxed a recent meeting of the Jordan farm union, which initiated 12 members at the meeting. The un ion meets on the first and third Thursday each month. John Sil- bemagel is president and Ed Foltz, secretary-treasurer. Pastor Leaves for Convention 1 WOODBURN Rev. Oluf Asper of Woodburn and the Monitor churcbes hai gone to Minneapolis where he will attend the biennial -convention ofev the Norwegian Lutheran church. . , He also will visit relatives and friends in South Dakota and will be gone three weeks. u , EH3 on irm mm am -mt cij am, rr -M rtnu r zi iu 'iw-n nut. n twr, 'ins u. 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