Careful Handling of Judge Gives Man Time' to Think " Ottaway Says Old Varieties Yield Better Tlian New While many new varieties are being. tried out familiar older grain varieties seem ta continue in outyielding' the newcomers, Hollis Ottaway, Marion ' County Agent, said Wednesday. . ' ' Continuous variety trials have been planted and harvested un der the direction of Dr. Wilson Foote, professor . of farm crops, at Corvallis.. These trials include old and news varieties as well as crosses. V ' i' ;X'U.:;t"-; '. " Variety trials have now been harvested on the fiyslop farm at Ole Fryliberg Dies at Dallas Market Cows Advised WILLAMETTE VALLEY FARMER Better care in handling -old IteUtmu Ktws Serrle . DALLAS Ole Frykberg, who worked at the Willamette Valley Lumber mill here for 27 years before retiring, died Friday at his home at 107 Maple St He was..9L'.."-, Frykberg, who lived at Dallas for 40 years, was born Sept 4, 1862 I in Sweden. He married CHARLOTTE, V. C (ff John Reid,"27, stepped on the gas and let er rip through Charlotte's business district :. - People ran for their lives. Three -cars, one pedestrian and a , . telephone pole didn't quite make- it and were ' hit by the plunging automobile. t- Finally captured, Reid said: "I don't know why I done it" , . A judge gave him three years in prison to. figure it out . Caroline Anderson on April 14, 1894 in Polk County, Muul, and thep came to Dallas in 1913. The deceased retired in 1941 and his wife died in 1943. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. William Hoff, Dallas; two Mrs. Goldie Dube at Bend, and sons, Rudy Frykberg, Independ ence, and Alfred Frykberg, Salem; also a brother and six sisters in the Midwest nine grandchildren and eight great-' grandchildren. Services will be held at 2:30 p.m. Saturday at Bollman Fu neral Home with the Rev. Rich ard Schwartz officiating. Inter cows: going ta market tnis fall wil pay off in dollars and cents cattle producers are- being told. News and Views of Farm and Garden A . recent study has shown -By ULUE L7AADSEM greater, care is taken while han dling younger, higher-Quality : . . t . animals than it is while handling old cows. A large percentage of I II: cow carcasses are unsalable after trimming out . bruised areas due to improper handling. f j perimental , area near Oregon City,' and trial plats in both Yam bill and Washington Counties. White Holland and White Win ter Wheat, Grey Winter and Sup port Oats and Cascade barley show the best vields of vHti s A record total . of old cows has been held, back from the fall markets, the livestock specialists t report, adding that it is expected will likely result and every effort should be made to maintain the value of old cows by proper care tnat ween nerd culling is com pleted -old cows will be marketed in large numbers. Lowered prices in Handling before slaughter. vorvains ana tne ilea Soils ex for fall planting, Ottaway stated. ment win oe at Dallas Cemetery. 10 (Sec. 3) Statesman. Salem.' Or. Friday, Oct 2. 12 S3 - ... - - vuana; tatcu. :i.'.-A.y.-:fr.4wi A. new "canned" self -service garden Doerfler and Sons opea their new make their own selection and cart Self -Service At Nursery Starts Today. By LTLLIE L. MADSEK ; Garden Editor, The Statesman Something new for Pacific ; Northwest Gardeners, is opening at Salem Friday when F. N. Doer fler It Sons starts its new self service division at the firm's place . of business at 250 Lan caster Drive. Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Doerfler I have just returned from several 'weeks visit in five : different J states looking over what is new fin garden selling lines. The self- service ideaf; which has become popular in eastern states in the I past two years, has just begun in California, the Doerflers said. ! There are now two such places in jthe southern state. Installing the division at the Doerfler Nurseries on Lancaster, involve'd the erection of 7-foot ; cyclone fence around a lot 60 by ? 100 feet adjacent to the street. ! Half of this has been covered by an attractive red lath house : made from one-by-three inch ' boards. The lath place to the south of the area is for shade- 1 loving plants while the uncovered division is for the sun-thriving plants. The entire area is filled with canned" plants which are ar : ranged so that the customer can make his- own selection, place ; them on a cart and wheel them to a central location for purchase. . All material is labeled as to name and price. This division will be ,open the entire year, Doerfler frantf? poerfleifi startediis nutsery- business Tn ids Waldo Kils farm "25 yeats ago, jusfcbe- caosew-nei "liked to growrithings."1 Fifteen years ago he . opened : a small business on Lancaster r Drive 1 and since then his sons have grown and entered business : with him. The father still con tinues in charge of the growing ' and wholesale division. Four car -loads or Oregon-grown . : nursery material, in addition to a number of truckloads, are leaving Salem this fall for Utah, Idaho and i California. Wallace Doerfler is in charge of the office and sales' division and Donald, the landscape service. t "Our new service is a .matter - of economy," the elder nfember of the firm said Thursday in speaking of the opening set for Friday morning. All nurserymen in the area will tell you that our kind of labor has advanced 400 per cent while shrubbery has ad vanced only 50 to 100 per cent In the past 15 years." The new service will make it possible to cut down in salesmen employed. Dairy Group Pushes Butter CHICAGO (INS) Americans 'are eating less butter and more ' margarine, and the dairy indus try has launched a two-million dollar campaign to change the situation. : j The sum is the biggest promo tion budget ever alloted by the American Dairy Association. ' ' . The consumption of butter has dwindled steadily. The ADA said people in 1935 ate an average of 17 pounds of butter per person. In 1951 the average slipped to nine and one half pounds, eight and one half pounds in 1952, and the outlook for 1953 is eight pounds and six ounces per per son. - ' The ADA wants to know why . people are eating less butter and is seeking sharper selling tools to stem the trend. t . Butter brings in about one ! fourth of the dairy industry's rev enue with milk, cheese, ice I cream, evaporated milk and dry I Whole milk making up the rest i i the promotion is divided into f radio, TV, magazine and news paper advertising, a public rela- !tions program supplying dairy in formation to newspaper and radio ' editors, a nationwide survey of consumer preferences, and Uni- ,versity comparison studies of the nutritive value of butter fat On a scientific level, professors : are conducting studies at four un iversities on the food value of - butter fat as compared with fats I derived from sources other than -milk. center will be operating" oa Lancaster Drive Friday when F. N. division which permits customers it to a central point for checking Not How' Tall' But How 'Short' New Corn Boast "Out where the tall corn grows" may someday read "out where the short corn grows." j The creation of short corn half-size plants which, would pro duce as much, if not more, grain per stalk than the present tall corn may result from atomic ra diation experiments now under way. .-. .: ,; : W. Ralph Singleton, a scientist at the Atomic Energy Commis sion's Brookhaven Laboratory on Long Island, N. Y., hopes to pro duce corn mutations by means of atomic radiation that will lead to the creation of short corn. Corn plants on a 10-acre experimental farm are exposed to atomic radia tion from cobalt metal made ra dioactive . by keeping it in the Brookhaven atomic pile. I Singleton hopes the short corn breeding project will produce sturdy, stocky, half-sized plants that will be wind-resistant and easier to harvest, such as the com bine types of sorgum now popu lar in a number of states. ! By FARMER'S WIFE j We don't usually mention other publications, especially when they have something good in them. However, here's a time when we lay all prejudices aside. This is too good not to mention! Night;. fall came fast tonight and we. couldn't do our resting out in the backyard at sundown. toe air .so we moved in, merely AnntATit)! iTY Vvnw Ki -M ij weld" W W tho KMm rfnclr foil H out over the fields' as dusk f elL In our lap was lying the Octo ber number of Country Gentle man. We weren't really paying much attention to contents as we sat glancing out the window and idly flipping the pages. All at once a familiar face stared out at us. Here was Mrs. Ronald Jones of Brooks standing besides her familiar pool in her own back yard. There was yet another pic ture of herein her garden.; But that wasn't all: Along with Mrs. Jones are Mary Bell, a teen-ager from a dairy farm near RickrealL and Josephine Singer from the widely known rose-tree farm over in Polk County, and Mrs. J. E. Johnson, whose .. husband . is strawberry grower. ) These women tell the Country Gentleman's Fall Fashion. Story. Believe it or not, here are our Marion and Polk County rural women telling the rest of the world what to wear when. i ,t v ' ;. . j -, Did you ever take' a trip with Malno -Reichert around Polk County? If you haven't you have missed something. Malno knows just where to get the best out of everything. Take for in stance the home of Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Gibson in Eola Hils. It was Malno who knew first that the Gibson living room has four pic ture windows. From the south you can see the city of Salem with its capitol building. From the two east windows you can see' Mt Jefferson and the . Willa mette Valley. From the north window you . can see (when it isn't lost in a cloud) Jit Hood.! . ; ,- j:,; Then, if you dont have a pic ture window .with, a view, .you. might try making your own views, Malno points out as she shows you the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Focht of Brush Col lege. The Focht's hve a, back yard -.wh'ch Ioo lice a small yv-rk alT during the ye?r. Barbara (Mrs. Focht) as. a :12th house overflow wjth fuchiu and'be onias. The' seems to be flowers blooming thivear ; around in Barbara's an. M;,ce's gardens. , If you can talk your husbands or bov friends into going, the 'tTT'ntv'ein,"? show at CorvaUiS fus -wee!c-nd i go5i to be I very wrly aaid "Out 'of? this World",; but I vowed never. i9 use that expression again very well worth seeinjr. While-. the shmw - goes on at , the Roosevelt School . there are also several i ,tnts to ee ln Mootn oi't on tiie Lewisrrwn eTter t?rm two miles east "of C-v?"is on te Peorn roa'1.! Maybe H well run into you there?- ; Twilight 3 i h: Time j to "browse" among the plants, out. (statesman Farm Photo.) Benson Asks' Farmer Help Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson this week called on farmers themselves lor sugges tions for an improved govern ment farm program. The ; agriculture department head urged the nation's farmers to write a "letter giving us your views. "We have received thousands of letters making suggestions and we want yours, the secretary said in an article made . public Tuesday. "After we have had the opportunity to study all the sug gestions we can obtain, we will make recommendations to Con gress.' ':' . I fie continued: "It seems pretty plain that we need to improve our farm programs. If present programs were doing the job they should, we would not face such serious problems today. "Your overriding problem at the moment is, of course, the cost-price squeeze. Farmers find that the prices of the things they have to sell have come down, while the prices of the things they must buy come down only a little, have stayed the same, or have even gone up. The cost-price squeeze is serious warning signal that our agriculture is out of balance with its markets that we must strengthen our farm programs to restore good balance. Secretary Benson emphasized, however, that "We must seek program that will serve all our people, consumers as well as producers," and he added: "We seek, a program, that will put 5 food ? Supplies : into stomachs rather than., buildup excess re serves intorage. We seek a pro- tt&SSSS nd W Applies Of tooa and fiber for consumers while helping farmers to achieve tneir iuu lair snare of the na tional income." Central Ho well Livestock Club Wins Ribbons . ' ? . T ' SUtesmaa Nwt Service CENTRAL HOWELL The 4-: Livestock Club, under leadership of Bill . Williams, earned many ribbons at the North Mario County Fair. : -Connie Gregg places first With her Holstem junior heifer calf. Ronnie Gregg took firsts with an Ayreshire senior heifer calf and a Brown Swiss junior heifer .calf. Mike Denham earned a blue ribbon with his Ayreshire junior heifer calf and second on a senior Guernsey heifer. Duane Hofstet- ter took second on a senior Guernsey heifer. ' In showmanship, Mike Denham placed first in junior division and Connie Gregg, third. Bonnie Gregg took third in senior show manship. RECORD BT MT. ANGEL COW Nuggestt Korndyke Gelsche, a Holstein-Friesian cow, owned by Mr. and Mrs. C J. Berning of Mt Angel, made the September Honor Roll for Holsteins by pro ducing 687 pounds of butterf at and 19,455 pounds of milk in two times milking in 365 days at the age of 7 years and 7 months. EASTERNER VISITS JEFFERSON Mrs. Rose M. Jones' of Cleveland, Ohio, is visit ing for three weeks at the home of her mother, Mrs. GeorgeC Ma son, and her sister, Miss Virginia Mason. . . -. ... -i SchaelerY Healing Solve Wifh Vitamins A. D. F. Oulckly; beals diaper rash, cuts, bruises, burns, stings, bites and frost bites. " ' 59c & $2X3 . SCnAEFEB'S t ipnuG stoue ' Open Daily. 7:31 AJI.-t PJL Sundays, 9 AJIL-4 PJLL . - 135 N. Commercial Make Program 3-day Get the Straight tVEBTOHE FACTS COHCEHIIIHG TRADERS BEFORE you giva-tn your old screen television set. BEFORE yov convert your present UHF television to all channel UHF VHF reception. BEFORE you buy your new all channel UHF-VHF set. SEE our net saving - - m -y T.'T i .. . T . . WBf!Wra!!w ; 21 -in. TV, Radio- i PHsno Ccmbinatlsh Uaiogany ..... 549.95 - Specials on Available Now at the Price of Straight VHF Sets All channel Silvertone with amazing S.B.0. CHASSIS - i ; 1 I V-X - LJ small on Sears SAVE NOW! Not metal, not plastic but TONE-TRUE wood S.R.O. chassis gives precision knob tuning Big-as-life 17-inch rectangular picture tub Smartly styled for living room or den "t i Continuous Tuner v... 17-Inch Deluxe TV Maaocany Veneer Cabinet 279.95 Our best fringe area perform- speciai trosted picture tube and tilted safety glass eliminate glare and reflec tions. . , - Regalori: 359.95 SAVE 40.00! on Soars Easy Payment Plan O Amazing S.R.O. electronic chassis tunes best picture and sound. O Installed, serviced and guaranteed by Sears own tech- .'nlclant. ; j ; '..... . .,; .v, ; .Triple'' tested Silvertone means, unsurpassed viewing pleasure. j .. . O Compare the quality, the value and Sears special low prices. . -.V.'--,: -: . . . . . ' c ;' ". " :' All-Channel Television 10.00 down Easy Payment Plan 21 -Inch Consoles All Channel UHF-VHF Tuner Silyertone .... 399.95 Truly the finest la, TV re eeptioa and furniture deal en. Frosted face picture tube far eajj-en-tae-eyes TiewintJ w' stnns hvi Clock Radios Awakens yoa and can even start year breakfast . . . all , automatically. Brown Plastic .... 30.95 Phone 3-9191 550 R Capitol, Salem 10 dovn Sets NATIONWIDE GUARANTEED SERVICE The only national retail firm with its own trained TV service technicians whoso work is uncondi tionally guaranteed by Sears. ,-v"