Tho OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon. Thursday Morning, April 4, 1948 PAGE SEVEN Septic Tanks Discussed by Health Officer There are many ready-made eeptic tanks which are entirely Inadequate .now being sold by high pressure sales talk, said I. G. Lermon. sanitary engineer for tb Marion county department of health Jn am interview .this week. f "Tears of, ! experience."" Lermon said, "have shown public health authorities that the average fam ily dwelling needs a septic tank ef -about SOO gallons capacity. The inside measurements of such tank; would, correspond to a rectangle three feet wide, six feet l long and halve a liquid depth of four feet D till ml Car laaportant "For proper operation of the tank neither the inlet nor the out let should be placed too near the floor ' of the tank.. For the single family unit the inlet and outlet may consist of a single elbow or . T-ahaped pipe , extending not more than midway from the wa ter line to the bottom of the tank. "Extreme care should be taken la the final disposal of the ef ' finest coming from the tank. It is ' rife with bacteria, some of which may be harmful. For ordinary . ; soil conditions, the usual practice Is ta provide sufficient drain tile ao that the effluent may be ab sorbed in . the surrounding area. In. any event, this liquid should not be permitted to come to the surface of .the, ground nor should It be drained into road ditches or streams.' Health Considered The county health departments . can supply anyone with technical fJaSatmaiiaa about the coostrwe ' tiea of prfrete-vewage disposal system.! They are glad to give out this information, says Dr. W. J. ' Stone, county health officer. "Home owners who are. build ing new houses are being con-. ' Iron ted wjth sewsge disposal problems. Dr. Stone said, "these people would save time and wor ry as well as money If they con 1 suited our department of health. We. want to de all' within our , powir to make Marion county a healthy place both tncity and country in which to live." rinrr -Is-Here!- SP So Are Weevils And Spittle Bugs - The time of year is rolling around when insect pesti and diseases show up ia stra w berry Held, says Ben A. Newell, assist ant county agent. Root ' weevils are the most damaging, he adds. Two groups of root weevils work on strawberries. One winters ov er ae an adult and conies out m March and early April and the second ts. a grub now in the soil and come out as an adult around .picking time. Weevils come out ewer such a long period that spe cial care is needed to get con trol. NewelTs recommendation for control is thai each grower exam ine his own planting now and if weevils ' are found around the base of the plant or the injury to the leaves known as "ragging" is present, a bait application should be made at once. i rreaared. Balis , Use a commercial prepared bait this year. Newell advises, a ma terials for. home-made baits are hard te get. A tablespoon 'u 1 of bait placed In the crown or at the side of each crown U mott effec- t News arid yietcsofFarhiKand i;uWl;'madse.;',: i r J I V ... if k Ranch Ramblings By Rural Reporter on, si Ahe T Shown here is part of the hero itage of the farm child the na tive wild flowers from one's own bit of woodland. r From Oregon pioneer days it 'has been the privilege of farm child to gsther and bring home to Mother the first blooms from the woods. City children frequently lack this privilege; first, because neither they nor their neighbors have . "woods;" second, because they do not know from past years under which large fir trees the first lady slip per (lower left) blooms; on which bank of the stream the trillium (lower right) comes out the earliest, or on the edge of which oak grove the Iambs' tongues (uppei) Jmost sneak up on one, they grow so fast once they get started. In the gsrden of many a farm child, grows a little nest of lady slippers which would have failed, in another garden . because not. enough leaf mold was 'brought back, or perhaps, slug bait was ot put out early enough and slugs are so fond of lady slippers. The farm child has learned from experience that if trillium.i are picked they do not bloom again the next year and likely not even the year following. So, oftly one or two are picked from each clump and net infrequently is the bulb from the picked ' flower brought home to be nursed back in some shaded corner of the home garden. Not for three years; will, this bloom as . a rule, but eventually quite a little; clump will Show up. The lambs' tongues fi which mid-westerners usually call dog's tooth violet when transplanted grow remarkably large in the home garden if given very good drainage and a little mulching. tive. One hundred pounds of bait will treat from one to three acres. Spittle bugs will be hatching out very soon too, and when spittle masses are noticeable ap ply a dust at once. The early in jury to developing leaves and fruit spurs Is often very serious. Ro ten one of various strengths is available this year. Either i per cent or 1 per cent is best, 'and 50 to 60 pounds per acre applied with a hooded duster will do the job,. Dust on a good day. If the m Him . cr spreading land plaster because cf gramd cosdilisas. ; SATISFACTION GUARANTEED i , e Valley Duster 15S0 CenUr Street Telephone 6981 weather continues bad, : second application two weeks after the first may be necessary. A bulletin "Insect Pests and Diseases of Strawberries in Ore gon" is available at all the county agents offices here in the : valley. E. F. Hubbard, Corvallis, has again been appointed as manager of the Willamette valley purebred ram sale. Other members of the sale committee are Eldon Riddle of Independence. Claude Steusloff of Salem and O. E. Mikesell of Albany. The date for the sale has been tentatively set for August 10, with Bryant park, Albany, again the location. .The Linn county fat lamb and wool show at Scio is being re newed this year after a four-year lapse. The date has been set for Saturday, May Z5. E. Kellerhals, sr., has sold his 30-acre ranch near Silverton and has bought a home in Silverton. He says he is going to watch the other fellow farm for a while. O. E. Mikesell, county agent in Linn, sent the rural reporter no tice that ground squirrel control barley is now available at many points in the county. The mater ial, Mikesell says, is prepared by the state college extension serv ice in cooperation with .the U. S. fish and wildlife service. Places where it can be had at Albany include the Albany Feed and Seed, Murphy's Seed store, Kel ly's Feed-and Seed, and M. Sen ders or Co. At Lebanon it is ob tainable at Lebanon Feed and Seed and the Valley Feed and Seed. Santiam Feed store" has it at. Sweet Home, and Brownsville Feed and Seed store at Browns ville. Harrisburg lists Smith's Produce; Halsey, O. W. Frum Seed and Grain; Shedd, Thomp son's Flouring mill; Tangent, Grange Oil company. Remember, these places are just for Linn county, Marion, Yamhill, Clackamas' and Polk have their own stations. Deer aren't "little dears" up around Scotts Mills these days. More than one grower reports that he (and she) has set out scores of back wreaking . rows of strawberry plants one day, only to return the next to find that deer had undone all the work. Never, say strawberry planters in this area, have deer been so pestiferous as this year, and nev er before hare growers wanted so badly to set out additional strawberry plants. They were told -to put in electric fences but, the growers report, the deer have undoubtedly changed the well known "Don't Fence Me In'! to "You Can't Fence Me Out," as they sail gracefully over the tops of any ordinary electric fence designed to keep cattle in or out. Growing Gertifietl Not a Simple Job j The increased interest in certi fied strawberry plant production is very evident this spring. Plants that have been dug from certified fields recently are being sought widely by many buyers. Growers who wish to certify plants this year in Marion county are being . reminded to file I an application by May . Late ap plications will not be accepted. Forms- and rules are also avail able at the county agent's office. Ben Newell, assistant Marion county agent, reminds growers that entering plants for certifi cation is one thing and complet ing . the job i another. At last three inspections are made of fields by representatives of Ore gon State college and plants must have less than S ; per cent virus disease at an inspection and less than I per cent on the final in spection to make them blue tag plants. "1 Marcus Vetter, well known commercial sheep shearer and farmer of Elliot Prairie, over the line in Clackamas county, has just returned from a trip to Mon tana and the Dakotas with seven head of Columbia sheep from the famous Ernest White band of Kalispel, Mont. Marcus reports that Ernest White sold one Co lumbia ram last fall for $1500 and that he weighed 305 pounds a lot of mutton in one package, Marcus said. The weather man, apparently, doesn't agree with our column on the time for gardening. But even tually spring will get here. In some sections it has arrived in spite of the weather man. Green onions from home gardens were being gaten in both' Salem and Silverton this past week. What I started out to tell, however, was that cutworms and slugs rather like the rainy weather. They get lots of early licks in, because gardeners fail to realize the pests are here even if rpring isn't. Bait put out now will kill the slugs and cutworms before any dam age is done," and also, before a lot of new slues and cutworms have been hatched. In this day of scarcity, don't try to mix your own baits. Buy the ready made materials at the seed stores. Hamsters and Sprayers AND ft SEED ft WHEAT ft OATS ft BARLEY GENERAL FEED AND GRAM CO. A. C. ANDERSON. MGR. tM S. Liberty , Phone 6532 THE HOME OF QUALITY FEEDS ..." A TfinilBIKIETf &m (ID WIS MS 1 The Orfgon Turkey Growers Association at Canity, Oregon ii offering three attractive methods of marketing hreeder turkevs. UI11CT A-present net cash price of 31.2c per lb. for prime hen tur- . keys. 25.7c per lb. for prime" toms. These prices are subject to change as the market dictates.' K Birds can be pooled with a 22.2c net cash advance on hens and 20.2c net cash advance on toms tf grower de sires to selt cooperatively. TPUyPf 1 We have-a storage plan which might be very attractive to ;; growers interested in marketing their own birds. i FOR FURTHER DETAILS CONTACT - (IDnoeg(iDDn i - TTaqirlkcey (LaipaDweir i ' , Canby, Oregon Phone 290 1 A committee of 1 the Union Hill grange, with Floyi Fox as chair man, has' been working on the advisability of a weedr control district for St. Johnswort. I Seed produced! in the Union Hill-Sublimity are was original ly noted for its freedom from St: Johnswort but in recent' years records from the state t college seed laboratory and the exper ience of private seed companies show an increasing number of bent grass seed lots having St. Johnswort seed. . I A number of control ; methods are being considered, with W. G. Nibler, Marion county agent, giv ing information i on the best nethods. j foot boom for-spraying of weeds was. bought separately,- together with additional hose and extra gun. The jcost of the complete out fit was approximately $550. Cost of the sprayer will be met by mon ey takeni in from custom work in spraying trees. both weeds and fruit A fTA BUYS SPRAYER Future Farmers f ,,McMiin ville, have" bought a SOO-gallon power sprayer, which operates under 400 pounds pressure. An jl8- For Better, Results Why Not Try Y7 ATKINS j IIIIIEIIALS ! FOR YOUR STOCK ; i . ... . - . i Ilillon Dierks, Watkins Distributor Route 7. Box 93-r Phone.22602 St. Joiiriswort Finds No Welcome in Hills : St johnswort, 'alias goa tweed. as a weed In highland bent grass for seed and pasture was dis cussed at a 'meeting in the Union Hill grange hall during the week. 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