r.f-.- U-.vr-; Kll-., J l -. X '; ::' ; --"V" - ' i -! -:- x ' ; ;l l ' ' -V -s ': vT v-.'a - - i i -.1 Stortesacm. Soltxxu. OrtW.ThursvFeb.. II. 1854-Sec 2 3 liV, I M m u fr 11 I m r r r I fi II f U 1VI III M I 1 Ml-I I V 1 1 J n I L J I I IT Forest Martin Ranch in I Polk County - " " 1 " ,: IN;, .. ' Tumi Jj.. ' J!m f 1 ""T ST" f '-- J Ranch Itnniblings ,t By RURAL REPORTER . -i A sW-ycar-old ewe on the Wake field Walker ranch out on Route Salem, looked with consterna tion at her offspring a couple of days a?o. The lamb weighed 15 , pounds at birth and was fully two inches taller than some of Its cousins which were two day old at the time. Parentage was divided between the Columbia tnd the Lincoln breeds. . . Everyone is a-dither today at the Farmers Union meeting. Charles F. Brannan, former sec retary of agriculture, will peak this morning at the opening ses sion of the 44th meeting of the Oregon State Farmers Union. His address is slated for 11 a.m. He will talk again this eve ning at the banquet Governor p.ni Patterson, too. will be on the afternoon program today, 1atl to anoear around 2:30. With Dick Neuberger to gather them around at 2:30 Friday afternoon. -. . . ' An odd sidelight on the year's agriculture index is being point ed out Farm cash receipts from crops were 106 per cent of 1952 through August, then dropped 1 after the wheat harvest (feed grains and hay off 32 per cent potatoes off 50 per cent). Live stock income dropped from $180, 636,000 in 1952 to $166,861,000 in 1953. Many livestock men wel comed the change and elimina tion of marginal operators, others prepared to "get" Agriculture s Secretary Benson. But then buying power of the farmer inched up. Prices received- by farmers continued the climb started last November and again increased during January. 1 This time the index rose 2 per cent over the revised December 1953 leveL Costs edged mgner, too, but again at a slower pace. - The net result was another slight recovery in purchasing power of farm products. The parity ration the relationship between prices received and prices paid by farm ers stood at 92 in mid-January. That is back to the level of late summer and early fall of last year, but still 8 points below fuir parity. Substantially higher prices for hogs, beef cattle, and commercial vegetables, together with small increases for lambs, chickens, wheat and hay were mainly re sponsible for the Higher farm price index. In chatting a bit with Johnny In&keep over the line in Clack amas counth he told us that pas tures containing clover, particu larly subterranean clover, should have a good top dressing of phos phate ' in one form or another now. This is, he insisted, abso lutely essential procedure on at least 80 per cent of the vauey : farms. . Of course, he added, grasses need nitrogen also. He suggested to apply 400 pounds of 16-20 ammopbos and 100 pounds of landplaster per acre to sub clover fields during the winter months. Then he added: "If you don't be lieve me, just leave a little strip unfertilized for comparison." - ' Austin Warner, well known dairy fanner over at Carlton, says - that he 1s using superphosphate in his dairy barn now. Austin adds he likes it very much. He used to use lime, he says, but tried phosphate and has now changed over entirely. In re turns on soil tests that are made ' it was found that 50 per cent of the soil is either low or medium in phosphate content If phos phate, is used in the dairy barns, or poultry houses, it will save the . nitrogen in the natural fertiliz ers and make It avauanie to tne - plants.' when put out upon the land. Lime has a tendency to de- v stroy the nitrogen that it comes in contact with. - , You know we along with a lot of others have been talking trench silos for sometime. Arnold Braat in Unionvale in Yamhill county has such a one above ground and he had very little spoilage with his sweet corn and 20-Year v - - -." i - - J j! Shows Value Creep- How important can creep-feeding be to the cattleman's profit ac count? I I M Careful feeding records kept on nearly 3.000 head of cattle, some creep fed and others not, tell the story convincingly. I f The records and tests were con ducted by cattlemen themselves on their own ranches and farms with the feed furnished by one of the larger feed companies; which as sisted in the tests. In each of these many experiment, creep-fed calves were compared directly with equal non-creep fed calves handled un der the same conditions. j Creep-fed ! calves averaged 412 pounds, as compared to 373 pounds for their non-creep fed mates. This added weight and the resulting upgrading meant an ; extra $8.91 per calf over feed costs.; : Ten of the creep-fed calves to taled 4,120-pounds .while their ten non-creep fed mates weighed only 3,730 pounds. In this lot of ten, creep-feeding gained the I equiva lent of one extra calf Weighing 390 pounds, without the; expense of breeding, feeding and caring for another cow. f The ability to upgrade by creep feeding was an important factor in the test. Twenty-two per cent of the creep-fed calves graded choice, as compared to . only six per cent of the non-ct,eep fed. Forty-three per cent of those creep fed graded good, compared to 25 per cent in the nonrcreep lots. Extra condition put on by the cows suckling creep-fed: calves av eraged 44Va pounds per cow. Sets March 1 Milk Hearing DALLAS The line forms to the left when molasses is on the menu, the sheep aren't too polite about waiting for the first to get done before the second starts. One gallon feed 20 ewes at a - little over a cent a head a day. (Statesman Farm Photo.) Cereal Meetings Slated for Dr. Wilson Foote. professor of farm crops, and Dr. Tom Jack son, soil conservation specialist, both Oregon State College, will discuss cereal grain improve ment and review results of cereal fertility work carried on in 1953 as experiments, at the forthcoming cereal meetings to be held in various counties. (See Farm Cal endar for dates.) ' Of interest too at these meetings will be talks by Aren Kellet, who will discuss quality malting bar ley, and Rex. Warren who will make suggestions' on : weed con trol in grain crops. At the Marion County meeting, reports will be .made on the two Marion County trials: Barley on the Albert Schmidt li Sons farm near Parkersville, arid spring oats on the Ray Hagg farm near Vic tor Point. M silage. There was i some side- spoilage, he said,' on the grass sil age. i; These trench siloSj the larmers who have tried them: tell us, must have a slope of at least one foot in each 10. This allows for the sil age to shrink into a smaller area as it settles and causes it to be come tighter, keeping air out of the silage. Louie H. Gross, McMinnviiie, tells us that he has seen trench silage where paper was laid on top with very slight amount of weicht. and that there was prac tically no spoilage ;in tne suagc. Then again he has seen silage that has had as; much as a toot ot spoilage on top, and he believes this is all due to the packing. He recommends packing again a few days after filling: the silo. This, he says, seems to- firm the silage down, and keeps air from getting into it Air (contributes to the spoilage. He is very strong for buying some paper and putting on top of the trench silage rather than letting I nature take its course. This is particularly nec essary, he adds, j in grass silage, Corn silage will keep a bit better than grass. f By LILLIE L. MADSEN Farm Editor, The Statesman DALLAS Running the ranch you grew up on and loved as a youngster, is a pleasure all in it self. Improving a standard pro duction is another pleasure. And topping the whole thing is doing all of this with a grown son as a partner. Unless you have these privil eges you just don't know how very fine they are, Forrest Mar tin told me as we stood atop his ranch west of Dallas at the end of. the Ellendale Road. Way out in the sunshine to the east' we could glimpse Salem and some of the farm country which lay be tween. At night, Martin said, one can see the Pioneer on theCapi tol from this spot To the left of us lay the sheep barn and a little below and to the right, lay the house, which was home to Mr. and Mrs. Martin and their son, Kenneth, for a number of years, and which is now home to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Martin. There were still banks of snow in the shady spots on the ranch, al though the snow had been gone from Salem for several days. But this day (Tuesday) the sun was bright and warm on the hill and the first few lambs were begin ning 40 play. The Forrest Martins now live on a smaller place about a mile below the ranch half-way be tween the ranch and Dallas. Here, I picked up Martin to go to the sheep ranch. He was work ing among s his shrubs, making good use of the sun. Botanist at Heart "I always liked botany and plants, he explained. We go hunting a lot in the mountains and I fear that while the others look for game on foot or wing. spend more time looking for my kind pf game different plants, shrubs, trees. About five years ago Mr. ana Mrs. Martin started making bus iness of iheir hobby and, said Mr. Martin, ?we are doing right well on it! It works in fine with sheep ranching." I have a date with the Martins for blooming season and I'll tell you about the 10,000 azaleas, camellias and rhododen drons then. On the way to the ranch, some questioning brought out that Martin's grandfather, Luther Martin.icame to the area in 1870 as a lumber man. In fact, he fur nished lumber for many of the early homes in Dallas. Forrest himself was born in the Pioneer district a little to the north of their present home. Around 1896, before I Forrest could walk, the family I bought the ranch at the end of Ellendale Road. With the exception of a stretch in the first World? War, a little time out for schooling, and a few years living in town, the Martins have spent their years along Elendale Creek. DALLAS Forrest Martin is shown here with his registered Shrop shire ram of English blood. The ranFwas brought to the Dallas ' band of sheep to help the improvement program toward open- faced sheep. (Statesman Farm Photo.) 40-Year Trees Bear Prunes and apples were plant ed on the ranch in 1912. Some of the old prune trees are slipping, but the orchard as a whole still is bearing welL Having gone through all the phases of market ing prunes drying, fresh and canning the Martins have set tled for canning as the most profitable. However, the object of my Tuesday visit was sheep ... and we found the 100 registered Shropshire ewes grazing over the hillsides. The Martins, I had been told, now own one of the largest bands of registered Shrops in the valley. f "We've nearly always had some sheep," Martin said. "We've tried different breeds and crossbreeds, but in 1946 we settled on the Shrops because they! rustle for themselves on the hillsides bet ter than some of the other breeds. They are large and pro duce a good wool crop along with early-marketable lambs. The lambs grow and fatten at the same time, a very nice feature." Kenneth and his; father are breeding toward open faces (the Shrops have been frowned upon a little in recent years because of their wool-blindness). Martin explained that "the English have for many years bred toward open-faced Shrops but sometimes we think, they have forgotten some of the other fine qualities of this breed. We are trying to help bring back the best in the Shrop as we see it." Bought Loar's Sheep The Shrop project started when the Martins bought the register ed band of 66 head from Dr. P. A. Lbar at Silverton.! To this was added one of the fine open-faced rams from the Angus Lefler ranch. Wool has been averaging eight pounds per head but even this is to be improved, and is gra dually gaining, I was told, as we stood admiring the well-formed stocky sheep, including the ram which came from the Shultz farm in Ohio. Another one will arrive before the 1954 breeding season from McKerrow's! in Illinois. We entered the sheep barn, where bay was stored in the cen ter, permitting the sheep to feed all around it ! In the east end of the barn were a number of lambing pens, four by four feet, Here the lambs are placed when born and here they remain for three or four days, depending upon weather and strength of lamb. Than they are turned into a larger pen where six to eight ewes and their offspring are together. This, Mr. Martin explained, gives them a little practice in finding their own mothers before time to turn them out on the range with the whole band, about 10 days later. When ! the ewes lamb feeding of rolled or ground oats is be gun. Sometimes this starts in De cember,! but this year the ewes were "plenty fat" without this auxiliary feed, I was told. Each ewe gets about a pound of the grain a day. Molasses is before them at all times in the barn. Around; a gallon per 20 ewes is consumed a day. No cheaper food, Martin said. Costs, he add ed, about 12 cents a day for the 20 ewes. Creep-feeders are pro vided for the lambs, too. Likes Chopped Hay While baled hay was being fed this year, Martin said, he much preferred the chopped hay. The latter was more economical and more palatable to the sheep. "For our sheep we have found no better hay than chopped fes cue arid subnclover, with a little rye grass thrown in," he remark ed as; he said this mixture was also used for pasture seeding. "The extra cost of choDDine the hay pays for itself two and three times, a season in saving from waste. Oat and vetch hay is ex cellent too, and in a pinch we feed alfalfa. Other than the alfal fa, we grow our own hay," he ex plained. Just as I was leaving. Martin said that "if I were young man just starting, I'd go into dairying. I know a little about it, so I'm not just day-dreaming. We ran a string of 40 Guernseys up to 1942 when we sold them because it be came impossible to get hired help. It's confining; it's work, and ! profits aren't too high, but there's a living in it: it's eood for the land, and there's some thing very satisfying about it, too he said. The Oregon Stale Board of Ag riculture has set March 1 as the date for another hearing on the touchy problem of,, milk prices. The hearing will cover Zone 2, of which Salem is member. The board also has ordered price hearings to cover all milk markets in the state in the final two weeks of March, with the dates to be set by Administrator William S Weidel. The plants to be studied which have been prepared by the milk administration staff, include: (1) a -cent boost in retail prices and no change in producer prices; (2) leaving retail and producer prices unchanged by reducing the but terfat content of 3.8 per cent stand ard milk down to 3.5 per cent; (3) reducing the producer price 31 cents a hundredweight In November, after a series of hearings, the board ordered a 1- cent increase in milk prices, half of which, was to go to the dis tributor, the rest to the store keeper and producer. This stirred up a controversy, and the board first postponed and later rescind ed its action. At this week's meeting, board members were given tables show ing Oregon producer prices were considerably higher than in major California and Washington mar kets. A letter from Governor Paul L. Patterson, referring to protests from a number of producers ob jecting to being put in the Port land milk marketing pool, was read at the meeting. "Again let me emphasize," the Governor wrote Weidel, "that I am not attempting to administer the milk marketing act I am pass ing on to you that which comes to me for such assistance as it may be to the board and yourself, and in order that I might be kept some- aat abreast of what Is go ing on through your replies." The board, acting on advice of the state attorney general, and its own attorney, decided it would Cherry Growers '.K To Meet Friday : In Dairy Co-op '-;: ... - Robert Shinn. manager of the Willamette! Cherry Growers Co-op erative. and one of the state's most widely known cherry men, will dis-: cuss the future of the sweet cherry industry at the Marion-Polk Cher ry Growers meeting Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Dairy Co-op building, Salem. j Also included on the program for, the day are two Polk County cher ry growers Fred Gibson and Jim Smart,' together! with a group of Oregon State College men. Gibson and Smart will relate some of their experiences in I establishing-jiew sweet cherry plantings during re cent years: i not object to a proposed adver tising scheme Fred Meyer, Inc., has for the promotion of milk, in cluding a children's coloring con test iec: jse it did not appear to be any price reduction program, the chief concern of the board. & Milk price hearings will be held twice a year for all Oregon mar kets, whether producers want them or not, the board decided. . A producer request for a milk price increase; in central Oregon was denied, j - Weidel told the board that State Finance Director Harry Dorman's office will support the milk id ministratkm's request for a $12, 000 budget increase before the state emergency board Thursday. The emergency board at its last meeting referred the request to Dor man for investigation. : i The board voted to give quota in the zone 2 market zone to Stan ley Malott, McMinnviiie, who was in the process of qualifying as a grade A shipper for his local mar ket when the new zone-wide pool' ing order went into effect Nov. 1. Aluminum Roofing Lasts a Lifetime Costs Much -Less See Your; ' Local Dealer WILLAMETTE ? ALUMINUM CO. 3035 Portland Rd. Ph. 2-805 Limi Growers Told to Plant More Berries Farm Calendar 1 ':t j i """'r , w've;fio genuine new Mcculloch model 33 saw Coyly cut through . e 1-foot log "h 15 seconds. CuH j Within 1 kick of ' the ground. Weighs only 20 b r to saw. set if now! Some increases will be profit able in planting of strawberries, red raspbe-ries, boysenberries, and sweet cherries, the- Linn Count i Agricultural Planning Council reported this week.! The committee emphasized that all new plantings should be made on deep, mellow sous that are high in na'ural fertility. Only the very best planting stock should be used if the plantings are to be profitable, according to recommendations. One of the biggest mistakes made by grow ers, said Clifton Plagmann, vice chairman of the group, was to plant poor - stock horticultural crops on wornout land. If a mature filbert orchard doesn't consistently produce near ly 1,000 pounds of nuts per acre, the committee believed that it should come out of production. The use of cover crops and rather heavy applications of nitrogen fertilizers are ways of increasing production. I Members of the committee in addition to Plagmann, are Roy Fitzwater, Lebanon; Ray Cun ningham, Brownsville: Glenn Mc Kibben,Harrisburg; William Com- mings, Lacomb, Robert Groshong, Albany; and L. T. Carnck, Cor vallis, who was recently elected chairman. Big Beef Cattle Salej Set Feb, 12 outomqtic clothes dryers for only Iff50 if ! Feb. 11 Oregon State Farmers Union Convention opens at 9 a.m. at VFW Hall. Feb. 11 Yamhill Dairy Dayi Fair building, McMinnviiie, 10 am. i f eb. 11 Farmers meeting Sil verton Armory. Dr. G. Burton Wood, Corvallis, speaker, 8 p.m. Feb. 12-13 Range bull sale, On tario, sponsored by Oregon Cattle man's Association. Feb. 12 Polk-Marion Cherry Growers meeting, Dairy Co-op building. Salem, 1:30 p.m. Feb. 13 Pedee Farmers Union, Pedeev school. fFeb 15 Linn County Seed tirowers meeting, Fairgrounds, Al bany, 10 a.m. I Feb. 15 Polk County Farm Bureau, Rickreall Grange hall, 8 p.m. S Feb. 16 Linn County agricul tural outlook conference, city hall, Lebanon, 10 a.m. . ' j Feb. 16-18 Oregon Dairy in dustries 43rd annual convention, OSC. I Feb. 16 Yamhill Cereal Grow ers mtormation meeting, rair building, McMinnviiie, 10 a.m. : Feb. 17 Polk County Cereal Producers meeting, Dallas City hall, 10 a.m. Feb. 18 Willamette "Valley Some of the ,Northwest's most outstanding purebred Hereford and Shorthorn- cattle breeders will make their first 1954 sale offerings at Ontario on Feb. 12 and 13. The Double M. Hereford Ranch, Chandler Herefords and many other equally famous names from Oregon,:' Washington and Idaho have consigned to the Ore gon Cattlemen's Association fifth annual spring range bull sale. The show and sale will be held at the fairgrounds in the eastern Oregon city and will feature 92 Herefords, five Polled Herefords and 13 Shorthorns. A social hour and entertain ment have been- scheduled for visitors on the evening of Feb. 12, A number of Willairette Valley folk plan to attend the sale and show. Turkey Growers round-up. Fair Building, McMinnviiie, 10 a.m. Feb. 18 Marion County Cer eal meeting, Keizer Grange hall, 10 a.m. Feb. 18 Blue Lake Packers business meeting, 10 a.m. Feb. 18 i Polk County Live stock Association meeting, city hall, Dallas, 8 p.m. Feb. 19 Re-opening Deetz milk hearing,! Portland, 9 a.m. Feb. 20-27 National FFA Week. ! FREE ESTIMATES ON CUSTOM MADE I Window Shades i CAPITOL SHADE & ! DRAPERY SHOP 560 S. 21st St. Ph. 4-1856 IF EVERYONE If every one who drives a car i rnitlH Iia a mrmt h in Ha4 Feb. 20 ( Willamette National j With broken bones and stitched- Farm Hotel. Loan Association, Marion SEE THE ALL NEW SILVER JUBILEE DUO-THERM Oil ConsoU Heater at CAPITOL FUEL CO. 198 S. Commercial Ph. 3-7721 WATER RESOURCES STUDIED The Linn County Land Use Committee is making prepara-J Hons to present facts concerning the county's water resources at a public hearing to be held in Al bany, March 17. On the commit-f tee are George Koss, Ben Chris tensen, Raymond Meyer, Terry Elder and O. E. MikeselL i ; TOWNE Equipment Co. 908 Edgewoter i Ph. 4-1541 Come In or oU in. but b sure to cash in on the lowest prices in Hamilton dothes dryer history! We've sot 'we've got one for yowl .- I ll. i 1 ' ft! . - " ' " Propone Gas and Appliance 3367 Portland Rd. Ph. 3-5098 VfSG&VSii:i 1-v PLANTING TIME IS HERE l Hedge laurels Hedge Privet lOO so , . dor. $25 doz. Blueberry Plants Climbing Roses Varieties $1.25 Flowering Crab Apples Apricots Peaches Cherries Hawthorne ; Redbnd Sophora j Dogwoods -i T Green Stamps With All: Cash Sales A complete line of shrubs vines trait and shade trees - and berry plants j KNIGHT PEARCY NURSERY 2SalesyardsOpfB7DaysiWeek - T.wn Yard. 375 S. Liberty. 3 Blks. South of Stale, 3-3212 Country Yard Portland Highway 1 Mile South of Brooks v : Phone 4-4157 ! 3 kinds 4pple pear or cherry hi $1 ff single tree t.W I Flowering Shrubs $1.25 Tamarix-mock-orange forysthia - butterfly bash and many others Mazsard Cherry Trees up wounds. ? Or fractures of the head. And there endure the agonies I That many people do. They'd never need preach safety i I Anymore to me or you. i If every one could stand beside 1 The bed of some close friend And hear the Doctor say No Hope" Before that fatal end, . And see him there unconscious Never knowing what took place, The laws and rules of traffic I am sure we'd soon embrace. If every one could meet The wife and children left behind And step into the darkened home Where once the sunlight shined: And look upon "the Vacant Chair," Where Daddy used to sit, I am sure each reckless driver i -i i .w:Mt. Kit t noma or lurieu tu uuu vu. If every one who takes the wheel Would say a little prayer, And keep in mind those in the ear Denendine on bis care. And make a vow and pledge him-f self - : - To never take a chance, The Great Crusade for Safety Would suddenly advance. . . j ' ' ; . Oregon Service Insurance Co. and Oregon Motor Club L A. Scheelar, RV. ggg N. Com!. 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