I Gnlesrrirrn; Sdanu Oregon S&undo&f April- IX tlSSQ i 2 WILLAMETTE VALLEY FARMED - i ; " I ' News and Views of Farm and Garden By LILLIE L MADSEN Mini, Geese Mink, Sheep Mix at Talbot By UUIe L. Modsen Farm Editor. The Statesman Diversified, says N. Webster, means "distributed, variegated." He uses "diversified farming" as a illustration. Now 1 know exactly to what he refers. It's the E. B. Henningsen ranch In the Jefferson area at : Talbot. There are, for instance. horses, sheep, geese,. Hereford cattle and a Bantam chicken. There are also mint and mink. There were goats and timber. ! It all started about 25 years ago when Mr. Henningsen (known to . the rest of the county as Ernie) bought an Island in the Santiam river in the Talbot area. He isn't a native of Talbot He was born In Astoria of Danish parents, and was reared In the Roberts district. near Salem. First. He Loss I Mr. Henningsen played Crusoe and batched on his island while he logged it oft For 10 years he logged and' was one of the last to drive a log raft out of the Santiam. We Mr. Henningsen, the farm photographer and the farm editor went for a tour In a pick-up truck out over the island. We crossed the Santiam on -a narrow fill-in of soiL and a bit of water; traveled over the middle of mint fields. Just coming through the river silt; and ran alongside of the edge of the Santiam where it had cut great swaths in the soil, and where In one location the government . had spent a bit of money on revetments. Uver Is Changeable The Santiam, Mr. Henningsen Mid. never can make up its mind Just where it wants to go. Part of what was river when he first came to the Talbot area, is now Ceod mint fields. Part of what was then cood tillable land is now swift, deep river. " "But you got to be philosophical If you will farm land along the river," he pointed out. "You got to figure If the river cuts off some f your land one year and deposits it on that of a neighbor's, it may deposit th neighbor's soil on your land net year." The goats followed logging, and ays Mr. Henningsen, "people den't realize the value of goats. ATI they new know about are bull dozers. If .you are not in too big a hurry -the goats do a marvelous . lob ot clearing land at little cost." He ran 430 -of them on his island of 275 acres. He is farming some f00 acres in all. - This acreage was acquired , by the purchase of a number of. smaller v farms and stretching them into one bigger property, r Mrs. Henningsen was born in Astoria, was graduated from Mon mouth in the days of Oregon Nor mal school, and taught in the area close enough to the Henningsen J' roperty to meet and marry Ernie, tint Fields Started Fifteen years ago, they started mint fields on the farms and now have 230 acres of the flavor-plant. -It looks good this year," Hen ningsen says. "I dont know what the price will be but the crop is -going to be okay. I imagine it'll turn out all right I haven't noticed folk quitting chewing gum or heard of them refusing to eat mint Ice cream." The sheep and the geese really belong to the mint crop. "They era part of my hired help, says Mr. Henningsen. This is the second year for the geese as "hired hands." They are "weeders. going through the mint fields eating oil the grasses and weeds, which would otherwise have to be removed by hand and '-hoe. Weeds grow rapidly in the river-silt soil, especially when the sprinklers ,are working and the . weather warms up a bit. They go rapidly when a flock of 70 geese follow the path of sprinklers. relishing the weeds while they are young and tender. " Geese are Nesting i At present the geese are nesting and one finds them sitting on nests la the most unlikely places all over the Henningsen ranches. Wan dering about in a bit of meadow land, beneath the scattered trees f A h ' ' ' 'J 7 v A Silver Flex (the horse) will be seen at the sixth annual Willamette ! Valley Horseman's association Western Horse show and Gymkhana at the Oregon state fairgrounds on Saturday and Sunday. E. B. Hennlncsen (the man) will bo seen there also likely, bat Hennlncsea wont ba riding- this trip. He's lost solus to watch what Silver Flex, one of the nation's top catting horses, will do. Flex, who wed to belong to Henningsen, now belongs to Grant Farris of Salem. was a wild goose, perfectly at ease with a tame goose and gander. Last season, the Henningsens rented sheep as a try-out for weeding. This spring they bought 290 yearlings to assist the geese in the weeding project. Lambs and mint certainly are "naturals" in field as well as on the dining table, Henningsen reports. Older ewes eat off the mint. Light yearlings are best. The big ger ones get too big and you dont get so good a price in the fall. Mink, which used to be farmed on the home ranch, are now most ly leased out on shares to growers Hh Tillamook and Astoria. All Hen ningsen mink are now mutations. Dark mink, they tell you, are pas sing out ot the picture. "It s a funny business, this mink business,'" Mr. Henningsen ex plains. "If you breed towards platinums, then the women change their minds and must, have dark . If you bread toward dark. they want mutations. You can hardly keep up with Cattl Important 1 Hereford cattle, along with mint, is one of the big projects on the Henningsen ranch. Herefords there are now 30 of them on the ranch were started here 13 years ago when the Henningsens bought 13 head from Bill McKinney, son of John W. McKinney, the pioneer Hereford cattle breeder in Oregon. These were of the Domino blood line and the herd has been kept pure. Market for the stock has been excellent. It all goes for breeding stock and there have been no carry-overs. But it was over a cup of coffee the national Scandinavian drink (for the farm editor and farm photographer, like Henningsen, have a Danish derivation, and Mrs. Henningsen's ancestry is Swedish) that the Henningsens told of their real loves the horses. They had the first cutting horse Silver Flex brought into Ore gon. Mr. Henningsen is a director in the national cutting horse as sociation, and he is a great believer in the present and the future of the Quarter horse, to which the cut tings belong. While Silver Flex was sold not long ago to Grant Farris ot Salem, there will soon be colts, the offspring of Silver Flex, on the Henningsen ranch. The Bantam? That, Mrs. Hen ningsen explained, was an Easter present which now has been given the freedom of the lawn. "We don't," she added, "intend to go in for extensive Bantam breeding." Approximately 143.000 mem bers of 3,152 farm youth clubs in new Japan are now actively en gaged in pursuits similar to those of American 4-H Club members. ' V-VV( W II 1- it' ' k ' ft 1PM M 1 i SAILS PACIFIC ALONE Alfred reterseav If. T Ifew Terk. aUa at tiller of kia tt-fael cetter "Stwrnawar" la r, AnstraUa, after voyage across radfic alone trees MlamL i 1 ' Vi.i Vl When year farming is diversified yea get a lot of Interesting! ,mail every day, says Mrs. E. B. Henningsen, who Is the manarers man ager en the large Henningsen ranch In the Talbot area. The: States man farm photographer eanght Mrs. Henningsen removing the mall from her rural box jast aa she returned from a shopping trip to tews. I 1- Farm Calendar April 15-18 6th annual West ern Horse show and Gymknana, Oregon state fair grounds, Satur day afternoon and evening, Sun day afternoon. April 18 Marion County Jer sey Cattle club, NRA haU, Quin aby, 12:36 noon. April 16 Clackamas County Jersey Cattle club. Andy Malar farm, Sandy, 11 a.m. April 17 Oregon Polled Here ford association, 7 pjn. dinner meeting, Cherrian room. Senator hotel. April 18 Polk County 4-H leaders meeting, RickreaU grade school, 8 pja April 20 Yamhill County Farmers union, fair building, Mc Minnville, 8 pjn. ! April 21-29 Northwest Shrine Rodeo show. Pacific International building, Pete Logan, roaster of ceremonies. April 23 Yamhill County Livestock association pasture tour, fair building, McMinnville, 10 ajn. ! April 27 Yamhill Pamona McMinnville anrioi-y, 10 Poults Have. Poor Eyesight First Weeks Starvation usually accounts for a high percentage of turkey poult death losses during the first two weeks of the brooding period. This management reminder ! is from Noel L. Bennion. state col lege extension poultry specialist who points out that turkey poults are hatched with extremely poor eyesight. As a consequence, many of them will never find food and water unless assisted. Good lighting: with clanrv lof feed and water accessible in the brooder house are essential in starting poults. At least 50 per cent of the .mortality normally ex perienced in raisin market tur- peys,. Bennion relates, usually oc curs during the first two weeks of the brooding .season. Marbles Used Anyining wnicn can be done to attract poults to feed and water will usually lessen the amount Of handling required. Many success ful operators place tender young chopped greens, rolled oats, dab bered milk, or highly colored mar bles in mash hoppers or In drink ing water at least twice daily to encourage eating. Chopped greens on clabbered milk, for example. provides a striking contrast that seems to attract poults. fcgg case flats covered with feed and placed under or close to brooder hovers during the first few days of the brooding period will also stimulate feed consump tion. Testing Crops TJrred Feeling a poult's crop is an easy method to determine if it is eat ing, Bennion adds. In some cases. it may be necessary to dip beaks in feed and water several times to induce ; eating. Some growers practice this method as they re move poults from their shipping crates. , borne feed manufacturers are now assisting producers by man ufacturing colored crushed pellets which aid in attracting poults to ieea noppers. Unless temperatures In the brooder house are reasonably warm, poults will have a tendency to remain under the hover, and refuse to eat and drink. Brooder houses must be thoroughly cleaned and disinfected before poults ar rive, the specialist concludes. Church Institute Sets Summer Theme Conservation of Souls and Soils" has been selected as the theme for the 1950 Leadership In stitute for Town and County Churches at Oregon State college July H to 14, reports W. L. Tuetsch, assistant director of the extension service and institute chairman. The institute is sponsored by Oregon State college in coopera tian with the Oregon Council of Churches, the Archdioceses of Portland in Oregon and the Home Missions Council of North America, and the other denomin ation!. , .It it intardenomipannal, Teutsch stresses. Both pastors and laymen from town and country churches will spend the week on . the campus re viewing rural problems, especially as they concern conservation and becoming acquainted with meth ods that have been effective in town and country work. Members of the regular and summer ses sion faculties and religious and lay leaders will be on the institute staff. Hop Harvest Cost Raised by Control Restricted harvesting of hops in Oregon last year under the hop control program caused a 20 per cent increase in the estimated cost ox production, according to re sults of a survey by the Oregon State college agricultural expert ment station. The estimate of the average cost of hop production in western Ore gon in 1949 was made by Dr. G. W. Kuhlman, agricultural econo mist. The compiled figures re vealed that production costs in creased more than 10 cents pper pound as a result of restricted harvesting. Average 1849 yield was estima ted at 920 pounds per acre while. under the hop marketing agree ment, growers were permitted to harvest an average of only 690 pounds per acre. Estimated cost of production on a' full crop basis was 52.7 cents per pound. On a restricted crop basis costs Jumped to T3 JZ cents per : pound. Fixed costs, preharvest costs and har vesting costs were all included in the estimate. : Utah Man Comes ........ , . . , . . . . , To Oregon State Appointment of Dr. Glen T. Nelson as assistant aericulrunl economist of the Oregon State college experiment station, to suc ceed Gordon Howe, resigned tr complete graduate study, has been announced by William A. Schoenfeld, dean and director of agriculture. Dr. Nelson will do full time research in dairy marketing, be ginning wore immediately on a cost and efficiency analysis of diversified dairy plants in Ore gon and Washington. The analy sis is one pnase or a western re gional program designed to main tain and expand markets for dairy products. The new staff member is graduate of Utah State Agricul tural college in 1942 with a ma Jor In dairy husbandry. After four years of army service he returned to Utah State where he received a master's degree In agricultural economics in 1948, followed by a doctorate in dairy marketing at University of IUi nois. Clackamas Jersey Club Plans Meeting The Clackamas County Jersey Cattle club will meet Sunday, April 18, at Firwoodeen Jersey Farm near Sandy, home of Mr. and Mrs. Anton Malar and son M. C (Cap) Malar, beginning at 11:30 a.m. A no-host dinner, for which members are reminded to be feature of the day. which will Also. include a. Jersey. Judg ing contest in which only women. wui participate. Some of the out standing Jerseys owned by the Malars win be the subjects upon which the women will test their Judging skill. Special .guests at this meeting will be members of the Multno mah County Jersey Cattle club, who have indicated their accept ance of the invitation. Firwoodeen Jersey Farm is located 2H miles southwest of Sandy on the Foot- mils highway (211) between Eagle Creek and Sandv. It la identified by the standard "Reg istered Jerseys" shin beside the highway. Plans for the club's spring show, to be held on the county fair grounds, Canby, Tuesday, May 23, will be discussed. Oregon Names 4-H Club June Delegates Four delegates to represent Oregon at National 4-H club camp in WashingtonrD. C. the state's highest 4-H club awards have been named by L. J. Allen, state 4-H club leader. They are Roma Deane Otto, 17, Eugene; Margaret Colegrove, 18, Junction City; John A. Kiesow, 18, Bend: and Bill Monroe, 18, Mullno. The four youngsters will attend the twentieth National 4-H club camp which is to bo held in the national's capital, Juno 14 to 21. Trees Require Care When First Planted If you are one of several hund red farmers who have received tree seedlings this year from the state forestry nursery, or else where, don't make the mistake of "planting and forgetting" them as soon as they are in the ground, says Charles R. Ross, extension service farm forestry specialist. He adds that trees planted for windbreak purposes require care. He suggests that the area, prepared before planting, be fenced against livestock and that the seedlings be watered the first year or so even if a bucket or tank wagon must be used. i j In cases where trees have been ordered and soil preparation and fencing have not been completed. Ross offers this alternative: hill them in a garden row for. year or two. They will grow nicely there, ha points out, and will lose little growth while waiting to be planted permanently a year hence. SMUT PREVENTATIVES PAT Seed treatment to prevent smut on spring-sown grains is good in surance, says O. E. Mikesell,Linn county extension agent. One of the best materials is Ceresan used at the rate of one-half ounce per bushel. Many, seed dealers have treated grain available, and also have facilities for treating on custom basis, i The vampire bat legend of the old world is remarkable because real-life bats that suck blood are bring their own table service, will confined to tropical America. Everybody's Watching . . . "DGAUtOUA'S" 170I6I1T Yes. "Beaulena." our store calf, la really growing. Coma In and check her weight see how she's boating the stemdard weights for har bread. And she's really a honey for looks. Dairy quality sticks out oH over her. Wo think shs proves that & Purina Calf Startona way really does the Job! Sit'i fttav Growno ly on PtmiUA CALF STAQTGHA i ani& Airi; m tf;Kirt3jani in; VALLEY FAIUl STORE 1 Salem 4345 Sflverton Road at Lancaster Drive Plant 2-2024 tonal Oregon County grange. a jn. ; April 30-May 8 Na home demonstration week May 1 Polk county j Home makers festival, school gymnas ium, RickreaU. 10:30 a.m May 7-9 California Ram sale, Sacramento. May 8-10 Annual State Cattleman's association con vention, Klamath Falls. May 13 Marion Homemakers festival, Salerrt arm ory, 9:30 ajn. May 14 National 4 Sunday. May 19 Clackamas Guernsey field day at Bockman and Edwin farms, Willsonville. May 25 --- Yamhill Spring Jer sey show, fairgrounds, McMinn ville. ; May 28 Annual Oregon Hol stein picnic, Dupint Farms; Har risburg. : j J May 29 Marion county $pring Jersey show, state fairgrounds. May 30 Clackamas jersey show, canby fairgrounds. June 1 Pacific Northwest Guernsey sale, Pacific Interriation aV: Portland. H club . i county Vernon Ridder Rom where I sit y Joe Marsh Gabby Enjoys Going to Tho Dontist One ef aty smUts was firing ste a bed the Taaeoay af Uraeoe, ae I slipped ever te Doc Jeers, hoping to catek Ida free. Whaa I armed. Cabby Jakaee was aittiag there reedlag a stagaziae. I said fecDe te Cabby aad he nodded. Doe cornea oat and says Fin Bert, "Wait a minete," I says. (My tooth seemed to have stopped aching.) "How about Gabby doesnl he have an appointment?' Doe smile and says, "Gabby? Why, he's got the finest teeth la the eonaty. He Jest eomea vp here aad reads the magasfaes whenever he's in town t" As Doe went to work he told me that ht's glad te hare Gabby: come ap and read magazines . 1 they wight not all be fresh off the news stand, but If Gabby or anyone wants te while away some time who is a to stand in their way? Froat where I sit. thla live aad let Ut" spirit helps stake America what h Is. If I prefer a frieadly glasa ef beer with aty sapper aad yea prefer atOk who's te say eac's right and the other wTeagTj , Ctpytif H I95". TaiW State Brmtm fWri Salem's Retail Paclting Plant 351 Slate St. 611 Ho. Capiiol EVERY DAY PRICES-HOT "SPECIALS' MIDGET MEATS ARE MEATS YOU CAN TRUST. Wo do not lower qucdity to cut price. FRESH PICNIC LEAN SIDE THICK CUT PORK ROAST BACOU Piece SWISS STEAK 33c ib. ; 35c ib. 55c a. - YOUNG SUGAR CURED BEEF PORK STEAK SLICED DACOII POT ROAST 43c 38c a, 43c n, CENTER CUTS OPEN KETTLE LEAN LOIII CHOPS PURE LARD BEEF CUBES 48c 2 lbs. 25c 48c r TRY THIS PORK CHOP RECIPE It Sounds Good, Tastes Better. 6 loin chop toasp. salt 3 tart apples 3 tablsp. molasses tabisp. flour 2 cups hot water 1 tabisp. vinegar 13 cup raisins. Have chops cut 1 Inch thick (Well gladly cut thorn tor you) sprinkls with salt Brown well on fat edge on both sides. Arrange In layer in baking dish. Core aplos; place VV slices on chops: add snolasses. Add flour to fat in skillet cook until browned: add water, stir until sauce thickens. Add vinegar and raWnsi pour saucs over chops, add salt Coven bake 350 degress 1 hour or until applss are tender. Serves 6. Chooss Midget Small Loin Chops and It's Sure to be Good. BONELESS mm ASr FOR TLAVORIZED" QO Rolled Roast n, 03C tickets Bologna n, ouC Hslp your club to obtain ' SUNLESS ' AH A Deluxe CoHee-maker. ASSORTED Weiners n, 39c ;gSJipteT' Lnnch Heat QC Smoked Pork Links They're Dolidously Different When Yon See It In Our Ad, It's So HARRY M. LEVY, OWNER. SALEM'S MEAT MERCHANT FOR OVER 35 YEARS.