b 3 1 H? , r: . :n n i i i 12 The Statesman. Salem, Oregon. Thursday. June 1850 News and Views of Farm and Garden -By LILLIE L. MADSEN r : ".:;n .- ' - .---.jS , -r- -e:t,;r,J ,1 Ireioil heed . Standards! Set Types Walter Holt (rlfht). manaccr of the Pacific International Livestock exposition, Is shown presentinc Bob Bannlck, Brooks, with the cap won by showing the champion market lamb at the Marion county fat lamb show. The show was held at Turner June S and Bannlck, winning first in the 4-11 club division, ' later beat out his elders in the Open classes. (Statesman Farm Photo.) ; 4-H Qubbers Assemble lit Coliseum Youngsters between the ages of 12 and 21 will predominate on the Oregon State college campus. for 10-day period beginning Tues day, June ' 13, as the 35th annual 4-H club summer school gets un derway, for 1,800 enrollees. L. J. Allen, state 4-H club lead er, states that arrangements are now complete, and housing assign ments have been made tor all club members, -j THey wilt be delivered by roster 'to -the" "front steps"' of their respective living organiza tions where counselors will take them in tow for their stay on the state college, campus. - v ' Polinc Will Welcome The following day, Wednesday, June 14, has been designated "Get Acquainted Day," and Dan Poling, ctean of men, will ofiiciallv wel come the 4-H club members to the campus at the evening assembly. AH assembly programs this year will be held in the new coliseum rather than in the venerable men's gym as they have in years past, j Dr. John Anderson, head de partment of religion at Lewis and Clark college, Portland, will be. 'featured speaker at the afternoon j assembly; June 15. The Lake county 4-H drum and bugle corps, 40 pieces strohg, is scheduled to make a two-day ap pearance: during the 10-day ses sion. , Warrington to Speak ' A Sunday church service, June 18, will be broadcast over KOAC starting at 11:15 and continuing for 45 minutes. Dr. E. W.! War rington, head of the college de partment of religion, will speak during the. service. June 20' has been designated "Bankers Day" and again this year the Oregon Bankers , association president will be on hand to meet the youngsters. The Oregon Bank ers will sponsor its traditional vaudeville show featuring profes sional talent. The show this year is scheduled for the evening of - June 20. Club member participation will oe stressed in otner assemDiy pro grams, Allen states. ' , Farm Calendar State Jersey Leader To Entertain Club : Fox Jersey Farm, home of state president and Mrs. Marlin M. Fox, wulje the scene of the next meet' ing of the Clackamas county Jer sey Cattle club Sunday, June 11, when members will convene at ll:30a.m. daylight time for their second picnic meeting of the year, As usual, members will bring food and their own table service as their contribution to the picnic. The Fox Jersey Farm, identified by the standard . "Registered Jer seys" roadside sign, is located on highway 215 between the Molalla river bridge and the Liberal cross roads. " t Meetings at the Fox Jersey Farm always draw heavy attendance, as" the scenic beauty of its locale adds Interest to their fine herdhand new modern dairy barns and equip ment, and it is expected that Sun day's meeting will top all prev ious occasions in number of at tendants. All people interested in the Jersey breed of cattle are in irited. New Brooder Plans Given in Bulletin , f!anttmrtinn ' nTana - fnr- tVira types of home-built electric brood ers designed to handle 50, 200 and 300 chicks are presented in a new bulletin of the Oregon State col lege agricultural experiment sta tion. - - - ' - .- ' ." '; All of the brooders use flat-top ' "wood hovers. The small brooder for 50 chicks or fewer and the brooder for 200 chicks use electric lamps for heat. A thermostat is needed with the 200-chick unit but Is optional with the small type. Toe 300-chick brooder calls for a ready-made ivit consisting of a forced ventilation and' electric heating unit with thermostat to be Installed In a home-built hover. 1 June 8-9 Rose show, Port land. i June 8-10 Eastern Oregon Livestock show. Union. i June 8 Marion county beef tour. r.June 8 Fruit and vegetable meeting, Oregon Farm Bureau building, 1:30 pjn. 1 June 9-10 Linn County Rab bit and' Cavy Breeders show, Al bert feed store, Lebanon. : June 9-10 Lebanon Straw berry festival. r June 9 Farm crops field day, OSC. 9:30 a.m. ) i June 10 Fourth annual Clack amas county spring lamb show, fairgrounds, - Canby. June 12-16 Oregon ttate Grange convention, Ontario, i i June 13-23 4-H club summer school, OSC campus. , i June 13 Market lamb show, Pacific International, 9:30 a.m. Auction, 1:30 p.m. ; June 13-15 Oregon Federa tion of Garden clubs annual con vention, Klamath Falls. 1 June 15-16 Oregon Nursery men's association annual meet, Memorial Union building, 9 a.m. evening banquet. June 21 Marion county urange famona, Keizer halL i June 18 Marion county Jer sey Cattle club meeting. June 23 Guernsey Field day in Marion and Polk counties. June 24 Guernsey field dav. Clackamas county June 28 Oregon Chick as sociation, Memorial Union bldg. June 23- uregon Poultry Im provement association, Memorial Union bldg. July 11-14 Fourth annual leadership institute of town and country churches. July 23 Oreeon State Farmers Union picnic, Champoeg. July 23-29 National Farm Safety week. July 80 Marlon County Live stock association pionic. Flowering Shrub Pruning Hints Listed Spring flowering shrubs reauire pruning while they are blooming or-right after they are through. vuuing nowers tor indoor use is a good method of accomplishing both purposes. Often, growth of these shrubs and next years' flowers are regulated by this pruning. Forsythia does much "tetter If the- long branches are! trimmed uiu.il iu me iirsi acuve duq or growth. Removal of part of the old wood each year will keep this shrub looking better, also. Now may be a little late to prune hy drangea, but those who have not trimmed this shrub can trim back the terminal growth to a set of duqs so wis same snoot will have two flower heads instead of one. DONT NEGLECT DAHLIAS The dahlias should be growing well and ready to bloom soon. June is the time to put the first fertil izer on these. Well-rotted ban yard manure is about the best fer tilizer for them. -They will be bothered with several pests, worst of these being aphis, thrips and mildew. Later on, the diabrotica may get after the flowers. Use all-purpose combination sprays or dust for wide ranee control. (See Garden page In Sunday States man.)". GORDON DIES IDANHA James B. Gordon received word Monday that ' his father, James, sr., Portland, pas- Hyslop Farm! To Be Honored At Ceremony A foundation seeding of the new Nangeela strain subterranean clover will be shown visitors dur ing the annual farm crops field day on the Oregon State college experiment station, Friday, June 9, starting at 9:30 a.m. (DST), Harry L. Riches, Marion county extension agent, reports. Dr. D. D. Hill, OSC farm crops department head, has announced the tour meeting point will be on the street directly south of the college green houses. . During the noon hour at the experiment station farm located near Granger on the Corvallisr Albany highway, formal dedica tion ceremonies will take place naming the farm in honor of the late George R. Hyslop, OSC farm crops department head from 1916 until his death in July 1943. After the ceremony, the farm, where many of Oregon's seed crops or iginated, will be known as .the Hyslop farm. History of Farm Given William A. Schoenfeld, dean and director of agriculture, will make the formal dedication address after Dr. Hill reviews the history of the farm and relates the role Hyslopj played ui the seed industry s de- velopment. 1 From the tour assembly point, visitors will be shown the grass and legume plot area on the west side of the campus. Riches said. There visitors will have an oppor tunity to see results of fertilizer experiments on grass seed - crops. On alialia plots on the Linn county east farm, a stop will be made to see trials where 16 var ieties are being tested. Work thus far shows Talent, Atlantic and On tario variegated to be the longest lived, surpassing Grimm the stand ard alfalfa variety for this area. Flax Trials Noted At Granger, tour members will see Ladino olover seed trials as well as flax and cereal work be ing conducted. Quackgrass control using a new weedicide, DCU,;will also be seen. . j- Riches adds that tour visitor; are asked to bring their own lunches. The farm crops department will, however, provide coffee. . In charge of various sections of the program are: forage crops, H. A. Schoth, H. H. Rampton, and J. R. Cowan; weed control, Virgil Freed; corn, Dr. R. E. Fore; and cereals, Wilson Foote. : Cabbage Plant Care Weevil Control Given Ringing cabbage plants with a teaspoonful of 5 percent chlordane dust at time of transplanting will give good control of cabbage mag go,t according to research work conducted at Oregon State college. Cabbage maggot can do consider able damage when not controlled. Another consistent visitor to the home garden is the pea weevil, which is controlled by weekly ap plications of a 3 or 5 percent DDT dust, or a .75 percent roCenone dust. The first application should be made during full bloom. There after, use of rotenone dusts is pre ferable because of reduced hazards. Seed certification standards have been developed for the two vari eties of big trefoil now to be known as Columbia big trefoil and Beaver big trefoil. Selection of names for , these were announced several weeks ago. i.-r Until recently, the two varieties were ' known by the one name, lotus major. One, the common or fuzzy type, is now- be ke known as Beaver big trefoil. , The smooth type will be Columbia big, trefoil. Sied Available . I 'H H. B. : Howell, . superintendent. John Jacob Astor branch experi ment station, Astoria, will produce breeder's seed under his supervis ion from experiment station plant ings in Clatsop county, i There is possibility that, some breeder s seed will be available this fall. There, will be no foundation or registered seed in 1950. Many seed fields, meanwhile, of the two -trefoil varieties are now in production in several counties. Fields that can be traced ot seed released by the experiment station will be eligible for the certified grade this year providing the fields qualify on varietal and isolation requirements. Requirements Given Certification of both big trefoil varieties will include the seed classes breeders, foundation and registered. Certified sequence will be followed with . only breeders, foundation and registered seed eligible as planting stock for fur ther certification. Registered seed, however, will produce certified seed which will be tagged but cannot be used for further certification. To meet requirements for pro duction of foundation seed, land must not have been planted to trefoil (lotus) for at least seven years. The requirement is five years to produce registered or cer tified seed unless the previous crop was the same variety and certified. .County extension agents have copies of the certification stand' ards. USE CAMOUFLAGE A compost pile left to "age" can be camouflaged with trailing nas turtiums, squash or cucumbers, The food crops turn out especially well. Heavenly Blue Morning glory will ao well, too. ; ' - - . r '-.'' . . , v - -v i I ' J jf :' . V':-'s" x '' ? : f tfffiiiinni.ii Mii.iii.ti... r ri nail ir tim n nir mm Pictured here is the new method of movinr a portable sprinkler Irrlration pipe from one part of a field to another. The new system has actually turned the conventional aluminum Irrigation into one long axle for a series of specially designed wheels. With the aid of a ratchet drive, an entire one-eighth mile line or amminnm irrigation pipe can be rouea across a larm Held by one man. Meet uss Nursery Will Dis I- : Winter njury Storage problems relating to nursery stock will be among topics discussed during the forthcoming two-day meeting iof the Oregon Association of Nurserymen to be held on the Oregon State college campus June 15 and 10, It has been announced by Mike Dering, Scappoose rose grower and assoc iation president. The convention-Is scheduled to get underway at 10 Thursday morning, June IS with a welcom ing, address by R. S. Besse, assoc iate director, college agricultural experiment station. All general sessions will be held in the campus memorial union building, Roberta In Charge - In charge of program arrange ments is A. N. Roberts, college hor ticulture department staff member, He states that Dr. U. G. Dubach, political science professor, Lewis and Clark college, Portland, and former dean of men, will be feat ured banquet speaker. The din ner meeting will be held in the downtown Benton hotel starting at 6:30 Thursday evening, June 15. Dr. S. M. Dietz, head, depart ment of botany and plant pathol ogy, will be banquet toastmaster. The discussion on nursery stock storage problems will include the five college speakers, Henry Hart man, head, horticulture depart ment; Roy Young, plant pathol ogist; W. H. Martin, mechanical engineering professor; and R. G. Rosenstiel, entomologist Several to Speak Dr. E. J. Kraus, horticultural consultant at the college, will dis cuss winter hardiness in plants, Following his discussion, the as sociation members will discuss winter hardiness observation made during the past winter. Speakers and topics assigned each are Fayette Weedin, Fairview, decid- sous fruits; John Wieman, state department of agriculture, bulbs and from Portland, Jim Doty, broadleaf evergreens; Max Hor and, conifers; Fred Borsch, peren nials; and Henry Hausch, roses. Program for the second day, will consist of a field trip to examine research work underway en the experiment station. Hen Culling Urged as June Poultry r Chore , June is the peak month for death - losses among laying hens in their , first year of lay, Noel Bennion, poultry v specialist, Oregon Stat . college, told those attending th culling school held at the state fairgrounds this week, i . Average mortality in laying , hens, reaches a peak during May. - June and July, Bennion said. The death loss in first year laying . hens, reaching a peak in June, ii the result of gradual building up of disorders that reach a climax ! during this period. Low producing hens, Bennion added, also start to molt during the months of May, June and July. . These hens are best culled as soon , as they are recognized, since pro ducers cannot afford to feed molt ing birds. Early molten are easily ident ilied. As they go out of produce tion, their combs and wattles ; shrivel. Abdomens contract and '' pigment gradually returns to beak ' ana shames, reamers also begin; to drop out. Bennion stated that cull hens will bring considerable more mon-' ey if they are marketed as soon as they show signs of going out of production. - They lose consider able weight and become covereoT with pin feathers as the molt pro ceeds. s BEETLE CAUSE OF DAMAGE Flee beetles cause considerable damage to newly, transplanted cab bage, cauliflower, broccoli and tomatoes, often killing these newly set plants overnight. DDT dusts are very effective in controlling these beetles. Larvae of the bettle tunnel around potato tubers in the soiL damaging the outer one fourth inch of the tubers. (For further beetle control sec Sunday Garden page). Jayceet at Silverton Will Complete Project Statesman Nwi Strviee SILVERTON Members of the Silverton Jaycees plan a work night for Wednesday, June T, to complete the tennis courts on the municipal park grounds near the swimming pool. The project was started by the Junior Chamber o: Commerce in 1948. When completed the courts will be presented by the city and op erated in conjunction with the re mainder of the park and swim ming pooL Conscientious, Dignified S45 North Capitol . Tel 8-3672 sed away that afternoon. Funeral services will be Friday morning at the Catholic church in Portland. Your Savings Are Safe S A i I M FEDEKAl SAVINGS " 1(9 State Street Salem, Oregon tOAHj Telephone 2-4131 o7. 7 A Axminster and Velvet in a Beautiful Selection of Pattorns And colors for all types of rooms Per sq. yd. We will gladly measure and furnish estimates. Wide selection In all . price ranges by leading carpet mills. 3 cr1 A J TWO-PIECE SECTIONAL SOFA A truly beautiful modem sectional so adaptable to all types of rooms, lech section has I inches of seating space, making a full e ft. between arms when sections art placed along side of each other. Seven beautiful colors of rich mohair frieze Turquoise, . Red, KeHy Green, Grey, Rose, Beige end Sage Green. 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