12 The Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Thursday January 28, 1950 WILLAMETTE VALLEY FARMER News and Views of Farm and Good Drainage Brings Higher Farm Profits Increased farm production and possible greater profits are the results of good drainage, accord ing to Art "King, conservation specialist at Oregon State college, mho spoke before the Polk county farm drainage meeting. Charlei Evans, chairman of the meeting, reported 60 persons In terested In better land drainage attending the all-day meeting. Three Dams Completed Colonel Donald G. EUget .ex ecutive officer of the Portland dis trict. US army engineers, spoke on the flood control phase of the SJllamette Basin project. Colonel iget reported three dams Cot tage Grove, Fern Ridge, and Dor- na are in operation, wniie oiners are under construction. Fred G. Ingram of the engineers, discussed the drainage work for which congressional authorization Is being requested at present in Sill HR 5472, which Includes Ash Ewale, Salt Creek, Mud and Basket Slough, Ash Creek and Soap Creek in Polk county. Ingram stated that the Lewis vllle dam Is not Included In the bilL He further pointed out that authorization does not Include an appropriation for work. These ap propriations are obtained by re quest of the people and the con gressional delegation after author ization Is granted. -Drainage Increased Claude Hoisington. Polk county PA secretary, reported large In crease In open ditch and tile drain age In Polk county In 1949. Ap proximately 8,900 rods of open ditch and 39,000 rods of tile were placed in operation In the county. - The group passed resolutions opposing the location of the Lewis ville dam and recommending Con gress to make a restudy of the Luckiamute project; the. formation of legal subdivisions for the pur pose of expediting drainage either in cooperation with PMA, or as Individuals; and requesting Ore gon Congressional delegations to work for passage of HR bill 8472, which authorizes the drainage pro jects. ,. , : . r arm Lalendar January 28 Marion County Farm drainage meeting, Mayflow er hall, 10 a.m. January 27 Linn County drain age meeting. Veterans Memorial hall, corner 6th and Lyon streets, Albany, 10 ajn. January 27 Yamhill Pomona grange, Newberg chamber of com merce, 10 ajn. January 27 Annual meeting Polk-Marion Cherry Growers as sociation, Mayflower hall, Salem, January 28 Annual meeting Oregon Jersey Cattle club, Keizer hall, North River road, Salem. January 30-February 1 Western Oregon Livestock association an nual meeting, Corvallis. January SO Mt. Angel Cooper ative Creamery annual business meeting. January 31 Yamhill County South 40 field tour of Northwes tern Malting company and Van couver Grain company, Vancouver, Wash. February 3 Eighth annual nut rition conference, Oregon Feed and Seed Dealers associations, OSC. February 4 Fifth annual Ore gon Swine Growers bred gilt sale, Oregon state fairgrounds, 11 ajn. February fl Oregon Polled Her eford association dinner meeting, 7 pjn.. Senator hotel, Salem. February 8 Annual meeting MIA, RickreaU grange halL 10 a.m. February 9-11 Fourth annual Bop Growers convention, Salem, Marion hotel, 9 ajn. xcoruary vrmuai granga lecturers school, Memorial Union building, OSC. February 10 Second annual - Mint Growers meeting, museum building, Oregon State college. February-1 1 Marlon county sil age forum, Mayflower halL 10 ajn. February 18 Oregon Swine Growers bred gilt sale, La Grande. February 18-25 National FFA "week.' , February 21-23 State conven tion, Oregon Farmers Union. Vet erans of Foreign Wars building, Salem. February 24 Hop Growers con ference, 208 Memorial Union build Ing, Corvallis. U VIOLENT DnATHfU.G.A" L(foj(u eta 104000 population; soueauotFics & vital surispcs;, Triplet , mBk-m m CLOVERDALE Karleen Drager, shewn doing her best to corral her three new triplet lambs for The Statesman photographer shortly after their arrival this week. Even their busy mother en the left decided to get In en the pictureafter doe persuasion. The triple arrival, a rarity even in sheep circles, earns in the midst of an early lamb ing season which prevails this year. All are registered faffelks. (Fhote by Lester F. Conr, Statesman Valley editor.) 'Rocking the Baby' May Return with Medical Approval LINCOLN, .Neb.-(INS) - "Rock ing the baby Is coming back Into scientific acceptance. Dr. Morris Fishbein, former ed itor of the Journal of the Ameri can Medical association, told this to University of Nebraska stu dents In a recent address. The doctor, who held the edi torial post 25 years, added: "I wouldn't be surprised to see science get over Its habit of sep arating mothers and new-born in fant at hospitals." In discussing Infant feeding, Dr. Fishbein recounted how an east ern woman physician decided to test the food selection desires of babies and placed all manner of food within reach of a group of babies. He said: "One baby ate five hardboiled eggs, one after the other, with no obvious ill effect. Another child showed a great liking for cod liver oil." He said this and other experi ments and studies indicated that a. "lot of scientific feeding practi ces -nay be on heir way out" s Smut Spread Blame Laid to Dwarf Smut Ninety percent of the wheat smut Increase in the Pacific North west last year was due to dwarf smut a variety which cannot be controlled by seed treatment it nas been estimated by Dr. C. S. Holton, USDA cereal chemist stationed at Washington State college. From figures given him by the Pacific Northwest Grain Dealer's association. Dr. Holton reports that 14 out of 33 wheat varieties grown in the area last year were smut free. Golden and Elgin contribu ted 88.4 percent of all smutty wheat reported. , NEW OFFICERS NAMED Newly elected officers of the Clackamas County Livestock as sociation are Walter Fisher, Cams, president; Marcus Vetter, Monitor, vice president; and Maurice Bus ton, Liberal, director. Holdover directors are Ben Elmer, Clarices and otto Lucht. . Molalla. Don Coin Walrod, Oregon City is the secretary-treasurer. V i By Lambs Arrive Garden daaghter of Mr. and Mrs. Earn Drager of the Cloverdale district. Is '. ' '' '- . - , ' - , , ; - j ' " v , '-"- ' ' v": RJlea W. Dee, ef Oakland, Calif, Is the featured speaker at the Western Oregon Livestock asso ciation meeting at Corvallis Jan vary SO, II and February L Solving the problem ef keeping livestock products en the move at high volume will require producers, processors and dis tributors alike te give more care ful attention to the demands ef the consumer, and this, ears Mr. Doe, will be his topic at the con vention. Doe Is vice president ef Safeway stores. McMinnville Creamery To Give 4-H Banquet The 4-H club banauet for an livestock club members sponsored annually by the McMinnville Co operative Creamery will be held Wednesday, February 8, at 7:30 pjn. in the RickreaU Grange halL Following the banquet, there will be movies and a talk by Cal Monroe, state 4-H club leader. All boys and girls enrolled in 4-H club dairy and livestock clubs are invited to attend this banquet MALES MAKE MORE GROWTH Males make more economical gains than females In raising broilers or turkeys. The males grow faster than the females, and the faster the growth the higher the efficiency of feed utilization. In broiler trials at the Massachus etts experiment station at 3 Sounds of body weight. New ampshlre males required 40 per cent less feed than New Hamp shire females. i - - - ifr If CAPITOL LUIIBER CO. No. Cherry Ave. LILLIE L. MADSEN Early a ' -.. . VUd; 'Possible Taxes' Scare Residents Of Monte Carlo PARIS (INS) The tlnv nrin cipality of Monaco Is known for its famous gambling casino In Mon te carlo, Its beautiful scenery and an eight-century old policy against direct taxes. Manegasaues are so accustomed to this happy state of financial af fairs that they are now demanding free gas, electricity and water from their government, but they are evi dently out 6f step with the times. An unprecedented 1950 budget of close to $3,000,000 is working against the happy, tax-free popu lation or the little .607 square mile nation on the French Riviera. The crisis came to a head when all 18 members of the Monagasque parliament resigned rather than vote for a direct tax. The recently Installed Prince Ranier III called for new elections this month when 900 malt electors will go to the polls to choose a new legislature. In the meantime the very word "taxes" makes a Monegasaue jump. "We now pay 1.73 on all busi ness transactions to support our national soccer team. That's too much as it Is!" exclaimed one. Polk Plans DHIA For RickreaU, Feb. 8" Dairymen are urged to attend the annual meeting of the Polk county Dairy Herd Improvement association, which will be held Wednesday, February 8, In the RickreaU Grange hall. In addit ion to the regular business meet ing, Ben Simondson, manager of the Oregon Dairy Breeders as sociation, will discuss the organ! ration of an artificial breeding unit in Polk county. A committee headed by M. B Findley, RickreaU, is already go ing ahead with plans to start such a unit A minimum of 1200 cows Is needed to start a unit in this county. In the afternoon, Tom Ohleson, administrator of the milk marketing administration, will discuss the milk pricing situation. He has been on the milk control board from the beginning and knows the marketing problems The meeting starts at 10:00 ajn. with a covered dish dinner at noon, and will adjourn ia mid- afternoon. Mi Phona 3-88S2 or 2-4431 Infant Death High in Pigs Says Iindgren This, little pig went to market; this little pig stayed home and quite possibly died. Paraphrasing the popular nurs ery Jingle, Harry Iindgren, Ore gon State college extension ani mal husbandry specialist, points out that farrowing season is on hand, and that four out of 10 pigs born in this country never reach the nation's dinner tables. Not only Is the loss represented bf cash at market time, but at least 14 per cent of all hog feed Is wasted as a result of feeding hogs that die on the farm. Program Outlined To insure added hog profits, the specialist has outlined a five-point plan which he says will cut pig losses and benefit every hog grow er: One, have brood sows In con dition; two, give pigs a chance thiough good facilities and good care; three, know your feeding; four, control parasites; and five, control Infectious diseases. Various scientists express the view, Lindgren explains, that ev ery pig farrowed dead costs the grower 140 pounds In wasted feed. Any pig dying between farrowing and weaning represents an aver age loss of about 1 and three-quarter pounds of feed for every day It lived. Guard Ran a "Must Approximately one-half of the losstt in young pigs come as a re sult of the sow lying on them. Thus, a guard rail around the walls in a farrowing pen is a "must, Lind gren says. It is also a good idea to put a sow in her farrowing pen a few days before pigs arrive In order that she will become ac customed to the new surroundings. Best farrowing house tempera ture Is about 87 degrees. At 60 de grees sows become warm and rest less; at 80 degrees or below, little pigs begin to chilL Electric brood ers, easily made from a light bulb, a reflector and a piece of plywood or tin, will save many pigs from chilling during cold weather. Improper diet also results In many pig losses, the specialist con cludes. Klemans of Keiser Build Their Own Handy Small Silo A silo for farms with four to six cows has Just been put into use by Max Kleman and his sons in the Keizer district north of Salem. The Kleman family Is handy with tools and build most of their equip ment and buildings themselves. The proof of the family's skill is weU demonstrated in the newly built sUo. , . The structure Is seven feet In diameter and 23 feet talL Staves are one by four flooring. The hoops which hold the structure were pre fabricated by use of a pattern and a band saw. Scrap pieces of pine lumber made the 12 bands. Kleman took no chancer on the strength of the wooden bands and added a V. hr 2 lnh ttran rnn hant under the first six bands from the, ground up. These steel bands give adequate strength for grass and legume silage. The bill of materials for Kle man's seven by 23 sUo read some thing like this: 700 feet of floor ing for staves, 700 feet of scrap pine for prefabricated bands, gal vanized eight penny sox nails, three ply plywood for door, steel for reinforcing bands and a yard and a half ton of concrete for the base. Total cost for materials was $123. The silo wUl store over 30 tons of corn or grass silage. Ben A. Newell, county extension agent tuvesiocKj in Marion county, says that's chean storage end is en couragement to operators with on ly a small acreage and a few cows. Life of such a silo should be 20 years or more. JERSEY WINS MEDALS Baroness Seena, a registered Jersey cow owned by Newton Davis of Endee Farm, Wood burn, has completed a production record of 10,483 pounds of milk and 618 pounds of butterfat which has qualified her for the Gold and Silver Medal awards of the Ameri can Jersey Cattle club. ANCIENT HISTORY SPRINGFIELD. HL-(INS)-The untold history of Illinois for countless centuries before the com ing of the first white man is em bedded in five feet of soil atop Starved Rock in Starved Rock State Park, near Ottawa. Archae ologists last summer found there traces of progressive Indian oc cupations stretching back for thousands of years, possibly as early as 3,000 B. C, or earlier. Wj Rom "where I wrote that ever aa article la the Cleriej. last veek, bat I didn't like doing H. After aU the mu it was alaed at Slim Henderson la a good friend of adae. Slim came into quite a windfall last month, and bought the old Clarke place. The deed gave him title to eS the land right down to the street Then Slim started to take up the sidewalk to make his lawn look better. I felt It wasnt fair to the town and said so in my article. Next morning Slim comes around and wants to know what X meanget . - I : I y -) m I pL ... New officers for the Marion County Jersey Cattle elub were elected Sunday at the annual meeting at Mayflower halL Standing from left to rirht are Fred Davis, Woodburn, director; Floyd Bates, Salem, president, and Leonard Lee, Salem, rice president. Seated are Ted Hobart, SUTerton, secretary and Mrs. Arthur Bnyserle, Woodburn, assistant secretary. (Statesman Farm photo.) nGsumcIa IIufiunmlbllDimgs A top-notch production race be tween "Frannie," a registered Hol stein owned by Dr. J. B. Harrison of Eagle Creekr- and "Babe," a registered Jersey owned by Rex Ross of Mt Angel, has Just come to a close end, Richard Gale, DHIA suDervisor for the two herds, reports. Babe, whose registered name is "Come Son Junior's Babe," won by a very close margin. Her pro duction for 308 days was 821.6 pounds of butterfat and 13,814 pounds of milk. Frannle, whose registered name is "Bessie Peertain Bracelet.' pro duced 8115 pounds of butterfat and 20,371 pounds of milk in her 305 day test period. While Frannle produced consid erably more milk than Babe, but terfat has been the customary point where most stress has been placed. Neither cow had any special care other than that given the rest of their stablemates. Lebanon's 12th annual Turkey Day has been announced for Feb ruary 15. The event will be held in Lebanon's city hall which was such a pleasant sunwise to those who attended the Turkev Day a year ago. Few of the smaller towns of the state have as attractive a city haU as does Lebanon. The Rambler wonders II turkeys or strawberries or both are respon sible for it It couldn't be that lumber was, could it? Well, even so. the Oregon soil which pro duced the lumber, too likely paid for the haU. e Hazel Prague, and we suppose, no matter how we try, shell re main Hazel Prague to most of us, and A. E. McCornach were receiv ing good wishes and congratula tions on their marriage at the Willamette Commodity Credit as sociation meet at Salem Monday. Hazel is widely known for her sheep ranch at Sdo and her work In maintaining the rugn tone oi the Linn County Sheep show at fidA nnh mrln. Something new is being planned for the event this year, she whisperea. Mac, Hazel's new husband. Isn't a ctranffpr ta these carts either. He has been a director of the credit association for some time an4 la nnw It vicm nrpsidpnt. He ( mscAHated with the Eurene Fruit Growers and admits that he and Hazel are sort of commuting between Eugene and Scio. Also, h- ariria h rertalnlr is learning a lot about sheep that he didn't know neiore. Clackamas county has got some thing for these snowy days. Good, old fashioned community "talk rests," with food at noon, have been on the schedule. One such event was held at Oak Lawn on January 20 with George Howard in charge and it proved most suc cessful. On February 3 another one has been planned for Mar quam's community haU out east of Silverton, with Albert Barth In charge. Walter Hardy, Russell ville, reserved the date of Febru ary 10 for a meeting there. Just about everything of interest to the farmer is talked. First we start out talking rather formally about soil conservation and weed control, but first thing you know we are off on a tangent which may end anywhere between crop and livestock production, to how the water in the weU held out last summer and what about water right laws in the state. It's good. and we really learn a let. Louis Hennies, Turner. Is one busy man getting ready for the big annual meeting of the Western Oregon Livestock association to be I sit Jjy Joe Marsh . Givo Us Back Our Sidewalks, Slim! ting folks riled against him. I felt ornery myself, and we had quite a set-to OTer the whole business. From where I sit, that was fool ish. Once we'd cooled off (orer lunch and a bottle of beer at Andy's TiTenO.SUm decided the sidewalks should stay for the common good and I promised next time I'd take a good look at the other fellow's point of view before writing any articles abont him! ! Copyright, 1950, United States Brewers TmutieOtm 1 1 s 'I t ft n held in Corvallis January 30. 31 ana reDruary l. . Hennies Is Mar ion County Livestock association president The banoueL which ca man who do not attend aU the sessions, motor up for, is set for the night of January 20. Pharl! TVana Independence, is president of the association. Charlie is even busier than Louis. As a fun note at the banquet a barbershop quartet contest is be ing inaugurated. Marion County Livestock association is offering ior its contribution the Four Norsemen from Silverton. Ghosts Travel Rome Busses PARIS (INS) People who be lieve in ghosts shouldn't ride on bus tops. Anyone who doubts this should take note of a Rome dispatch to the Paris newspaper Figaro. In the little town of ForU a bus bulging with passengers was pre paring to leave on its regular run to Pievre di Diveschlo. At the last minute a man came running up to the door and tried to wedge his way inside. But this time there Just wasn't room for one more. Undaunted, our hero climbed on to the roof and squatted on an empty coffin that was being de livered to a family in Pievre di Kivescnio. Things were going fine until It began to ram. A brilliant idea came to the bus-top voyager. He opened the coffin, stretched out in side and shut the lid to keep him' sen ory. ; At another stop two more pas sengers climbed on the root" (It's apparently standard operating pro cedure on Italy's little interurban busses.) The newcomers were rev erently regarding the coffin with their hats over their hearts when passenger No. 1, inside, decided to raise the lid for a little air and a peek at the outside world. Before he could explain to his fellow passengers, they had Jump ed off the roof, either not noticing or not caring that the bus was traveling at high speed. They were taken to a nearby hospital where their condition was described as "very serious." nOLSTEIN MAKES RECORD . Among registered Holsteln- Friesian cows in Oregon, whose recently completed production re cords were recorded by the Herd Improvement Registry department was one owned by Walter M. Brog, Salem. This cow, Bess Hou wtje Veeman, made 603 pounds of butterfat and 18,810 pounds of milk in 331 days of two makings dally at the age of 4 years and 8 months. ON THE STREAMLINED I U I TO 8 $21 .60 roundtrip, plus tax. Fast morning; to night run; connect with OtcZ, arriving Los Angeles i0:55 next morning. Luxurious chair cars, tavern, coffee shop and dining cars. See the high Cascades and Mt Shasta in their srjetecular winter dress of ice and snow. All chair car seats reserved but no charge for reservation. Children under 5 free 5 through U, half fare. IP C A. LARSON. Arent Phene 3-9244 Breeders Sign 32 Gilts for Swine Auction. Twenty-two breeders have con signed 32 registered bred gilts to the 5th annual Oregon Swine Growers sale at the state fair grounds hit Salem Saturday, Feb-' ruary 4, 11 ajn., reports F. L. Zielinskl, St. Paul, sale chairman. Nine breeds are represented with breeders to include, Chester. Whites, six head. Glen Hawkins. - Shedd; Alton Marshall, Mulino; Elton Watts, Silverton. Leonard ; Forster, Tangent Spotted Poland cmnas, two head. Wilmcr Lyon.. Junction City, and Elmer Stangel, wiison vuie. Berkshire, five head, ' Richard Schaefer, Salem; Oregon State college, E. L. SawtelL Mol alla. Poland Chinas, three heart, Wendell Willard, Dayton; F. U Zielinskl, St Paul, Leonard For ster. Tangent Durocs. eiaht head. Jim Lorenzen, Silverton; ESKvIn Kidder, Sherwood; Homer Zielin skl, Gervais; Guy Hansen. Junct-' ion City; C. E. Stretcher, Beaver ton, and Marvin Robertson, Sher wood. Yorkshire, three head. F. L. Zielinskl, Elmer Stangel. Min-t nesota, one head, Hugh Severin, Prospect Herefords, two head. Earl Drury, Fall Creek, and Har old Schmidt Newberg. Hamp shire, three head, Lyle McKinley, Shedd, and F. C Putman, Hills- Doro. Richard Barnes. Silverton. will be clerk at the sale which will be cried by H. J. McMurray, Council Bluffs, Iowa. New Lincolns Set to Go on Exhibit Friday DETROIT, Mich., Jan. 25 -Heralded with the slogan "Noth ing could be finer," the 1950 Lincoln and Lincoln Cosmopolitan cars will. bow to the public to morrow in more than 1,400 show rooms across the nation, including the Warner Motor Co, at Salem, Ore. Unusual luxury and livelinen combined with the highest stand ards of comfort and performance are claimed for the new cars which feature 150 changes In styl ing and mechanical improvements. All models are available with automatic shifting Hydra-matis transmission and the high com pression, 152 HP V-type Lincoln t cylinder engine, officials said. Benson Ford, vice-president and general manager of the Lincoln Mercury Division of Ford Motor company, said that while mechan ical excellence and manufactur ing precision are outstanding fea tures of the 1950 Lincolns, to tho public . the striking first impres sion would be a sense of luxury Ing. Yamhill's 87-Year Old Tile Still Works The highlight story told at tho Yamhill drainage meeting was that told by George Zimmerman of YamhilL The story was about tile that Zimmerman s father had put in the Cove Orchard area, 85, 86 and 87 years ago. The clay tile put in at that time are still working and doing a good draining job on tho Zimmerman farm. Reports at the meeting showed that in 1947, there were 111 farms completing 18,000 rods of tiling. Also, 69,000 feet of ditching were dug that year. Estimates mad in 1949 show that approximately 160,000 cubic yards of earth had been moved and 27,000 rods of tilo naa neen put in curing we pass year." Fiery, Smarting Itch ef Common Skin Rashes Don't staad such torment another bout I J nit smooth Reaiaol Omtacnt oa your Irritated skia at ooe. See how quickly iu medically proves ingredients ia laa lia bring bliaaf tu, loag-laatiag relief plus nt Tht friendly Southern Pacific