12 Th Statesman, SoJem, Ore.. ' Thursdcrf ,' December 16. :1943' it i t t M Val ley if an iVeics and Fieirs of Farm and Garden -"vulmadse. A . - i fietared hew sre Mrs. R. E. Stoat and her five-year-old son. Eddie, who with Mr. Stoat are newcomers to Oregon's half-million dollar holly industry. The Stoats, who have their holly ranch on the Croi san road sooth of Salem, moved oat here last March and report they are enjoyta greatly taking their first crop. Cutting-holly alone this year will go better than $259,000 in the state. (Photo, by state de partment of agriculture.) Safe Theatment Of Yule Trees Avoids Tragedy (See story Page 1) Christmas trees which are to be treated with ammonium sul fate solution absorb more of the solution if treated soon after rutting. But despite treatment, the tree will not be absolutely fireproof, Charles R. Ross, Oregon State college extension' farm forestry specialist, warned Wednesday in discussing the dangers of home fires from Christmas trees. Ross suggests other points to check on the Christmas tree are: the tree electrical lighting sys tem; location of the tree; wrap pings and presents which may ignite from contact with flame or faulty electrical circuits. . Ross also states that county home demonstration agents have information orr simple fireproof lng formulas for making fabrics LIN DOW COW RATES AGAIN Signal Star Model 1500465, a registered Jersey cow owned by June Lindow, Independence has completed a production record of 10,915 pounds milk and 679 pounds butterfat which has quali fied her for the gold and silver medal awards of the American Jersey Cattle club. Star Model's record was made in 305 day ac tual Droduction at the age of two ! years and 11 months- She has type by the American Jersey Cat tie club with the high rating of Good Plus. TIME TO MAKE REPORTS Farmers are reminded by their county AAA offices that only a few days remain to make con servation reports of practices com pleted in 1948. All reports are due in the county office not later than 15 days following closing date which is December 31. safe. He says he had in mind ! cotton sometimes used to deco rate the base of a tree. FOB FRIENDLIER BUS SEBVICE I fifcs? Sesafe SisssSB 330 nuc rumrvr 520 N. High, Marion at High 0US DEPOT Phone 3-381 5 7- Dr. E. E. Boring All Our Specialty Is Promptness Optometrists KU Dr. Sam Bnghes lenses and Glasses Completed in Our Own Laboratory Assuring Prompt and Speedy Service. ', If you ha ye a prescription to be filled, a lens to replace bring It to US. Our modern equipment and instruments guarantee exactness and satisfaction at BORING OPTICAL Phono 3-C50 SS3 Court DIGNIFIED CREDIT STORAGE Household Goods . . . . . . Merchandise Red Raspberry Production Costs Vary By Lillie L. Madsen Farm Editor, The Statesman Cost of producing raspberries in western Oregon is 12.9 cents a pound. Oblique-banded leaf rol ler, which threatened to wreck the raspberry industry five years ago, can be controlled. These conclusions are two results of intensive and extensive experi ments in raspberry culture carried on at Oregon State college experi ment station in recent years. Costs of production for processing in the Willamette valley is covered in a new bulletin prepared by Gustav W. Kuklman and D. Curtis Mum ford. The war on the pet and dis eases is covered by Joe Schuh and Dr. Don C. Mote, in a separate bulletin. Raspberry culture is no small it em in the Willamette valley. Of the 2,100 acres in Oregon 90 per cent are grown here in the valley. Al most an equal amount of black raspberries, the "black caps" of Oregon, are grown in the state. Multnomah county leads all others in amount produced, with Clacka mas county, second. Marion county rates fifth in numbers of acres of red raspberries, with Linn county third. The other high producing county is Washington county. Yam hill tops all others in acreage of the black raspberries. Cost Figured Per Acre The cost of producing red rasp berries in 1947 on 294 acres, yield ing 4,705 pounds per acre, averag ed $608.93 per acre and 12.9 cents per pound reports Kuhlman and Mumford. The two agree that cost of production in 1948 was very much the same. The cost includes all items of expense in producing and delivering the fruit to the can nery door excepting the cost for crates and ha Hocks. This cost is omitted as canneries customarily furnish growers with them. The cost of man labor was $460 or 75 per cent of the total cost. Pruning was the largest pre-har-vest cost. All excepting four of the 38 red raspberry growers studied in the valley, practiced one or more methods of soil fertilization. Twen-ty-five'growers applied commercial fertilizers including limestone; 20 growers put in a cover crop, and 18 growers applied barnyard man ure. Total cost of all fertilizer materials averaged $19.72 per acre or about two-fifths cent per pound of berries produced. Raspberry Land High The value of the land producing the red raspberries averaged $434 per acre. This value, says Kuhl man, was estimated by the growers from a conservative, long - term standpoint. The average capital re presented by the plantings over the life of the stand was $186 per acre, exclusive of the land value. Cost of establishing per average acre on 20 fields containing 68 acres averaged $371.84. On the bas is of keeping a planting for a pe riod of 10 crop years, the cost in cluding interest, averaged $37.18 per crop year. The cost of red raspberry pro duction per pound was 55 per cent higher on the group of 13 plantings with the highest cost than it was on the group of 13 plantings with the lowest cost. The respective fig ures were 16.96 and 10.92 cents per pound. The average size of the plantings in the two groups was quite similar. The big difference lay in the average yield produced per acre which was 2,948 pounds for the high cost group, and 6,898 pounds for the low cost group. If the yield is small, each pound of berries must bear a larger share of the overhead costs than if the yield is large. Plant Cost Told The cost of plants figured $40.76 per acre. An average of 1537 plants were set per acre. The price aver aged $26 per thousand. The width of rows varied from six feet to 10. Nearly two-thirds of all plantings studied were spaced either eight or eight and a half feet between rows. The spacing of the plants in the row varied from two and a half to 6 feet. Nearly half of the plantings were set three feet apart. Cuthbert comprised two-thirds of the total red raspberry acre studied. Other varieties were Washington, New berg, Willamette, Latham and Tay lor. Pest Controlled The oblique-banded leaf roller, which threatened to wreck the en tire industry unless controlled, is common throughout the Willamette valley, Dr. Mote states. Its chief damage is caused by the habit of the larvae in getting into the cups of the raspberries from where they are so difficult to dislodge that they ruin the sale or use of the fruit. The adult moths, whose wings are marked by oblique dark bands as the name implies, fly mostly at twilight. They hide on the under side of leaves and when flushed, dart quickly to another hiding pice. Parasites play an important role in holding the insect in check un der normal conditions. The entom ologists found 29 different paras ites of more effective parasites, making a vicious cycle for the berry grower. Commercial raspberry growers now follow a standard spray or dusting schedule with DDT. ap plied between May l and 15. As most hibernating worms live over an old canes, good cultural control consists of removing and burning the old canes not earlier than Nov ember 1 nor later than March 1. Cleaning up the raspberrv patch during the winter months has be come a -must" with those who wish to grow good red raspberries. Reimer Gets Pear Development Medal In recognition of his outstay ing contributions to pear culture, F. C. Reimer, former supevinten- ' dent of the southern Oregon branch experiment sta';on. h : been awarded the coveted Wilder medal by the American Pomo logical society at its tcc nt 100th annual meeting in Yakima. Pcofessor Reimer, who utntd in 1947 after 36 years as he id of, the branch station. developed! blight resistant pear stock now j used for nursery stock. He Iso! developed methods of pear scab' control and a pressure teter to! determine best picking time for pears. The award is given to only one man each year. Fiarm Crop Virus Control Must Be Had Virus diseases must be control led if Oregon specialty crops are to continue, says Dr. Frank P. Mc Whorter, plant pathologist at the state experiment station. There is a vital need for more fundamental research in this line, he adds. Dr. McWhorter, in discussing Oregon's virus problem Wednes day, cites the example of clover which, except for ladino. is almost sure to have an abundance of vir us infected plants. Most clovers are weakened by the yellow bean mos aic virus which causes infected plantings to age prematurely and which frequently kills stands of crimson and subterranean clover. Fortunately plant viruses are not infectious to animals, but they re duce or at least change the plant food available and thus change the diet of animals that eat virus in fected plants, Dr. McWhorter points out. Practically no work has been done on this aspect of the in creasingly serious virus problem. This is but one aspect of funda mental research which Dr. Mc Whorter says needs to be done on virus control if its steady and some times rapid inroads on Oregon crops are to be halted. The Oregon bulb industry, which now includes the largest and most successful planting of garden lilies in the world, depends for its exist ance on the control of lily and oth er viruses. Rapid costs for presence of bulb viruses have aided in suc cessful control of these thus far, McWhorter said. Pea crop of the Umatilla county area suffered tremendous losses from virus this last season when at least 10,000 acres were damaged or ruined. The virus that did this was present only as a trace in 1947, which shows how rapidly these dis eases develop, McWhorter pointed out. ami Calendar Dec. 19 Marion County Jer sey Cattle :- club, Hugh Harris farm, Salem. Jan. 25-26 Western Oregon Livestock association. Astoria. Jan. 29 Oregon Jersey Cattle club annual meeting, Salem. jitancli Bfamblings Hop Production Still Below Pre-war Days The 1948 production hops in reporting counties which before the war accounted for more than 90 per cent of the world's total is now indicated at approximately 117.3 million pounds according to the United States Department of Agriculture's office of foreign ag ricultural relations. Some recovery from wartime lows is reported in several of the important producing areas in cen tral Europe, but the estimated har vest in that area is still about 40 per cent under the prewar average. Mohair Raisers Wage War Against Misuse A campaign to end misuse of the. term "mohair" in upholstery fabrics and other products con taining little or no mohair was put into motion at the annual con vention of the Texas Sheep and Gort Rrisers acsocialion. Te pi opened campaign includes applir ., jf, n to ihe Federal Trade commission for rules governing the. use of the word mohair ", no lifiei.iir;n to better business bu reaus of the 'gross deceptions' practiced upon the public, and drastic legal action against of fenders. C hemical analyses will be made of upholstery fabrics, draperies and other household products la belled as being mohair or con taining mohair, and where these analvses indicate deception through absence of the fiber or use of only a small percentage, legal ac tion for fraud will be undertaken. John Gale, owner and operator of Gay moor Farm, Canby, has en larged hjs barn to house his entire herd of Jerseys. John expects to be milking 30 head in his new milking parlor before long and that, together with his retail route, is guaranteed to keep him busy. Marion County Jersey Cattle club members will gather Sunday at the home of Hugh Harris which lies to the! east of Highway 99 about three miles south of Salem. The dinner will be no-host and served at 1 o'clock. Paul Vouingman over in Yam hill county not too far from Mc Minnville has quite a pasture pro gram. He runs dairy cattle, beef cattle, hogs, and chickens on alta fescue pastures almost the year around. Most of Paul's pastures have subterranian clover seeded in the alta fescue. He said that he had pastured 11 head of cat tle for six weeks on slightly more than an acre of alta and sub last spring. ''.. After last weekend's corn show at at Canby (up on the map, and down on the terrain) former mid westerners need not longer keep saying 'but you oueht to see the corn back in Iowa." John C. Burt ner, news director at Oregon State college, refers to the big yields as having reached "astronomicnl peaks." The 139.8 bushels, while not the mot ever yielded to an acre, is not bad even in Iowa. This was grown by George Mbeller of Ontario ,for the annual Oregon Yield contest. But it took Marion county's own Dan A. Steffen to head the adult corn shuckejrs of Oregon. Dan got out 16 pounds and 14'i ounces of i corn in three minutes. Corn shows in Oregon have usually been held earlier at least in recent years , and the late show, which most ' corn growers have been begging ' for, proved one of the finest Ore gon ever had. Clackamas Cloiinty Guernsey Men Elect L. L. Ramgay, Carver, was elected president of the Clacka mas County Guernsey herd for 1949 with directors to include John Headrick. Beaver Creek; Ed win Ridder, Shefwood. and Paul Houston, Oregon City. Gustov Selander, Sherwood, was elected as a director on the state association, representing the Clackamas county club. Mr, Se lander who has been active in the state Guernsey club, . is a newcomer to Clackamas county, having recently moved into the Sherwood area from Corvallis. The Selanders fine herd of Guern seys are on herd imtvement and Dairy Herd Improvement asso ciation test. Robert Douglas, Ttnorn In peone! Scotland, was a student of fruit chemistry and in 1912 was able to extract and prepare commer cially the fruit ingredient pectin, which makes fruit juices jell. fildifmijiiij f.fr Will Salem Healing and Sheel Ilelal Col "Heating Headquarters 1085 Broadway SL Ph. S-S55 Salem. Oregon Day or Night X Linn County Elects -1949 Ag Committee George L. Koos of Tangent was elected president of the Linn County AAA committee for 1949 at this week's annual meeting of the Linn County Agricultural Conservation association. The meeting was held in Albany. Others elected were Ed Rus sell, Sweet Home, vice chairman, and Victor Lyon. Scio. third mem ber of the committee. Gerald Det eiing of Harrisburg and Glen Lsom. Brownsville, were elected as alternates to fill possible vac-1 ancies that may occur in the county committee during 1949. your way-and At feraonal, you get the cash quickly because the YES manager and she alone : makes the deci sion. And she says "yet" to 4 out of 5. At Personal, you select the loaa plan most con venient. Every detail of the loan is made your way wherever possible. Em ployer and friends not no tified. ; Phone or visit Personal's YES manager. Mr. Gal linger today. LOANS $25 to $300 on Salary. : Furniture, up to $500 on auto. 1 I i i FINANCE CO. IS State SC Km. 125 Phone 2-2464 E. Gallinger, Mgr. Lie, S-122. M-165 O Moving O Crating O Packing O Shipping O Briquets i O Coal O Fuel Oil Capital Cily Transfer Co. t,,ftlllirif Moving and Storage; Since 1906 -2436 Russell Pratt, Owner VAN LINES CO. Owner i ...as a frecracker -that's PilES-TO-lOGS THE EFFICIENT, CLEAN, CONVENIENT FUEL SET 'IM fKOM. Capiiol Lumber Co. N. 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