4 (Sec. 2" Statesman, SaTem, Or., Thursday, Sept. 22, 1955 toliiLLAlirif!i MiUTf M&WM CD Monitor M Town Holds to Goal of Farm Trading Center r .i w Jr Br LILLIE L. MADSEX , tntwM - irv- Ar:i.- f who now owns uic juvuiiui uiu. mi iuu tuu wvmuim MONTTORpe Monitor MiUs N OM aock , Undj the oJd doMtion Und "It't fine place to do bus!-' claims of William Eastham and ness and to call home," Vetter, Joseph Eagon. It is connected most any business man owns his Monitor, situated on Butte (Mills, the two largest businesses own farm ... like Marcus Vetter . Creek, the dividing line between! are pronaniy me iwo implement nouses larm implements, ine ground its first grist on the day of the historical battle between Monitor and the Merrimae. It is rZ.r.-w": .1 'president of the National Asso- to highway 99E by two paved uu ir nu.ui, dation of Columbia Sheep, will roads. One connection is at tell you. Vetter bought the old Woodburn and one at Barlow. nun less than a year ago. For There is a modern grade more than 80 years the old mill, 'school and an auditorium, there are two school buses and a PTA with a membership of more than 100. There are three churches in the community: The Nidaros Lutheran. - Seventh Day Advent- ist and a Community Full Gos- ru1 A 19M1 fir hill. fur. The mill, lying in the center I four years. Unlike the old clock, 1 nished with modern equipment, .. ..... l i : . -i . , ... . . flour only feed for livestock and poultry come out of the hoppers today. The water wheel has been changed for electric switches. ana norse ana wagon nave given way to trucks, but the old tim bers still hold up the structure which still serves " farmers as it like Grandfather's Clock of the old-time ballad, ran without stop ping. Then its owner Invold Ed lund became ill and died. Ray mond David took a brief swing at its management, but gave up. times in its schools and in the products it sells, remains the same," Tweed said, as we sat in one u now ownea oy jmer i ine pauo oi nu attractive Dome, Thompson, farmer in the Moni-linst east of the "center". 1 has done since it was first built, The wheels laid idle for about of the little community, is a symbol of the town's being. It modernizes but it does not out- serve the farmers. "We aren't an incorporated town. In fact, we aren't really a town at alL We are a farm trading center and that's what we want to stay," any business man encountered on the street of Monitor will tell you. In fact al- however. its destiny was not "never to run again". The mill and Monitor appealed to Vetter, a widely known sheep breeder, and he took over. The mill is now again a smoothly running plant, again buying, grinding, mixing feeds and seedscleaning and treating the products for the rich farm community which bor ders the , trading center on all sides. was built in 1948, when the Mon- itw Rural Fire Protection dis trict was formed. The fire dis trict has a valuation of more than $2,000,000 and includes the communities of Harmony, Monte Cristo, Oak Lawn, Marquam, Needy, Ninety-One, Whiskey Hill, Elliot Prairie and Union. Has Two Machine Houses In addition to the Monitor WW tor district. He bought it a few months ago. , The other is one of the histori cal items of the community. It's senior partner is L. D. Lenon, one of the timbers bf the town. He was born in the area 75 years ago and has spent most ,of his life here. More than 40 years ago be bought a half interest in the old grocery store of Jensen and Cook. It be came - a general country store. known for miles around, where al most anything could be bought or sold. In 1919, Lenon became sole owner, and in 1925, be added the John Deere Implement and tractor agency. In 1938, Lenon 's son-in-law, Edgar Tweed, a native of Salem, became manager, and the general merchandise was closed out in 1945. "Even in the 20 years since I came to Monitor, we've seen a lot of changes but somehow. Moni tor, while it keeps up with the "1 'j f ManT lovely homes are found la the Monitor area. This one, with owned by Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Tweed. It was built la 1941. (States- jnst is spacious a iwa w uc is bvku h He went on: "Hundreds of thou sands of dollars all farm dollars change bands here each year. During the spring, the summer and the fall, we are a very busy little place. ' In winter we are quieter." We stopped our car near Thomp son's implement bouse. A farmer. whom we recognized as coming from 10-12 miles southwest of Moni tor, was getting into his car. Doable Appreciation Noted "Sure I've traded here for years. Buy most of my farm machinery and things like that here. I like it They really understand the farmer, We don't have to hear a lot of hard luck stories. We even get to tell our own once in a while. But mostly everybody is sort of happy. We talk about crops and the wea ther. May be politics and the schools. They appreciate our busi ness here and we appreciate their appreciation. I guess," he said as he started his engine and hurried homeward for evening chores. At the top of the hill we stopped to look back, instead of turning to salt, like Lot's wife of Biblical times, we almost turned to sugar. Monitor is not as we had sup nosed, lust another wider spot in the road, another place we naa xo slow uo on the way from our home some nine miles to the south, in'o Portland. It is an individual com munity. A rich community. Grain trucks were backing up to the mill. Feed trucks were pulling out loaded. Farmers and businessmen together were stopping at the little restaurant for a cup oi couee While we couldn't hear the old time clink on the anvil, the whir-r-r and the whiz-z and hammering a-plenty in the two farm machine shops almost directly across the highway from each other reached US. i! Monitor Mills, like the eld clock, raa 90 years without stepping, aad thea laid eff for fear years! New It is running aad busy again. This miu was bum la ism, and wnue much oi ue structure remains the same, it changed from water to electricity more than a quarter of a century ago. New owner if Marcus Vetter. (Statesman Farm Photo). V Jr. s. LA" t v J' 7 A This is "Mala Street" ia one of the Willamette Valley's richest farm community trading centers. la among the trees are hidden a half dozen business houses which cater almost exclusively to farm business. It is a happy little center, aad ia the proper seasons a busy little center. It is Monitor. siaicsman farm rnoiv. OSC Lists Sprays for weeay irass Weedy annual grasses can be successfully sprayed out of peren nial grass seed crops if the right materials are applied at the cor rect time, -i Research conducted by William Furtick at Oregon State Col lege shows : that the following practices have been successful in treating stands that -have been established a year or more: Kate . Material , .pounds Chloro IPC": 3 to 4 or Peach Fungus Should Be Treated Now Farm Calendar Alfa fescue r . - Time of Application Sept 22 to Oct il Chewings fescue Bed creeping fescue Highland bentgrass Merion bluegrass Perennial ryegrass Karmex DW IPC . IPC or Karmex DW Chloro IPC or Karmex DW Karmex DW IPC 2 Sept 22 to Oct 31 3 Sept 22 to Oct 20 3 N Sept 22 to Oct 20 2 v Sept 22 to Oct 20 3 v Sept 22 to Oct 20 2 Sept 22 to Oct 20 2 ' Sept 22 to Oct 20 2 Sept 22 to Oct 20 Where velvet erass is exceedingly heavy in alta fescue and Highland bentgrass, the Karmex DW can be increased to 4 pounds I Ber acre. Strong stands of alta fescue ana Menon bluegrass esiao shed in the spring of 19S5 can be safely treated with Karmex DW at the 2 pounds per acre rate. ' New Product Used . Karmex DW is a new product that comes as a wettable powder. The chemical has some advantage over IPC as it does have some effect on broad leaf weeds as well as the annual grasses; however, it has the disadvantage that it must be used in a sprayer with a mechanical agitator. The cost of Karmex DW and IPC is practi cally the same. Moisture isn't too important for fall application as good results can be expected after Sept 15. Spraying with IPC can be done with a ground rig, or an airplane. With JPC, the recommendation is to use from 10 to 40 gallons of water per acre with a ground rig, and . 1 gallon of oil per acre with an airplane. With Karmex DW, the recommendation is to use 30 Gallons of water per acre. Weedv annual erassps that can be exoected to be controlled with these chemicals are rattail fescue, soft chess, common rye- crass, silver hairzrass. and fall gemmating velvet grass. CaumoI w f MrarTF'ir n-urtfer vaaaivajI evwvt AntAl f9 weedy annual grasses and sheep sorrel in 1955 by treating their filrt with a mixture nf IPC. and 2. 4-D. The IPC was used at the rate of 2 pounds per acre and the 2,4-D at the rate of 1 pound per acre. : i . - Contemporary Records Compiled for Future LOS ANGELES (UP) A rroup of workers at the Univer sity of California at Los Angeles is busily compiling a historical commentary on ecu temporary American life for the use of fu ture generations. The UCLA library staff, under the supervision of the school's special . collections department one is bringing together under roof not cnly books and periodi cals, but also such articles ai playbills, restaurant menus, pho nograph records and business ledzers. These are for the con venience of historians of coming years who wish to study our mode of living. MOMMY y THE MOSSLERS ") c I ways get mixed up on Duncan Phyfe and thj. .bit'tht kzi & sort of likt thisl An after harvest spray of Bor deaux 8-8-100 for control of Cory- i neum peach blight is needed in I Willamette Valley peach or chards, say Willamette Valley extension agents. A Bordeaux spray, properly mixed ana tnor oughly applied, will protect the new wood from the contagious fungus disease, also called "Fall blight" or "California blight- Regardless of the name. Cory- neum blight is a serious prpb- em. It blights the buds and produces small sunken spots on the one-year-old or fruiting wood during the fall and winter months. This may be followed by spotting of the twigs, leaves, and fruit in the spring and early, summer. Growers who are harvesting! the later varieties of peaches should look for small, circalar, i purplish-red spots in the skin of the peach. In larger : spots, the centers turn white and have a brown area surrounding the white area. Unlike the watery breakdown of peach tissue caused by brown rot (another fungus disease) the diseased tis sue from Coryneum blight infec tions on the fruit is typically dry. Whether the spots are large or small, they lower the grade of the peach both for fresh mar ket and processor use.; Bordeaux Best Spray ' Bordeaux 8-8-100 remains the best spray mixture for control of Coryneum blight under condi tions in the Willamette Valley. Bordeaux 8-8-100 means 8 pounds of copper sulfate plus 8 pounds of lime in 100 ,galions of spray. In any Bordeaux formula, tne ingredients are always given in the same order with the ptounds of copper sulfate first then the pounds of lime, and followed by the gallons of water.: Proper preparation of Bor deaux mixture is just as impor tant as proper timing and thor oughness of application. The best way to mix Bordeaux is to follow "work with dilute solu tions." Second, soak hydrated lime in water for at least two hours before adding in the spray tank. Stock solutions can be pre pared by adding one or two pounds hydrated lime per gallen of water. The required gallonage of stock solution can be added to the spray tank to give the recommended pounds of lime per 100 gallons of spray. - Many growers nave bad good results by preparing stock solu tions of copper sulfate. Wooden barrels make convenient mixing and storage containers. Glass Dned barrels are satisfactory but the eorrosion of the copper sul fate solution eliminates the use of metal barrels. The rate is one or two pounds of copper sulfate per fallon of water. 1 Method Recommended The recommended procedure in adding Bordeaux materials to the spray tank are as follows: After filling the tank from one half to two-thirds full of water. wash the copper sulfate stock so lution in a stream of water pass ing through the screen over the tank as the agitator is going. This method will also work if the copper sulfate powder is washed slowly into a stream of water failing into the spray tank. After all the copper sulfa ta is Sept 22-24 North Marion County Fair, opens 4 p.m. Wood burn. Sept 22 Milk hearing 10 a.m. State Highway Bldg. Sept 24 Oregon Shorthorn Breeders heifer and bull sale, Salem. I Sept 24 Jefferson Country Fair, Ankeny grange. Ham din ner 6:30 p.m. Show 2 to 9 p.m. Sept 24 Santiam Valley Grange Harvest Festival, Lyons. Oct 1 Jim Short Shorthorn dispersal sale. Lane Bros. Farm, WaUace Road. Oct l Silverton Hills Fair! . Oct 11 Oregon Jersey Cattle Club meeting, Senator Hotel, 11 a.m. Oct 15-22 Pacific Internation al Livestock Exposition and Wool Show, North Portland. Oct 24-27 Oregon Town and Country Church Conference, OSC. Oct 25 1:30 p.m. Oregon Aberdeen Angus Association third annual sale, Brah's Auction Yard, Corvallis. Oct 27-Nov. 5 National Live stock Show, San Francisco. Nev. 3 Annual meeting Wil lamette Basin Project 9:30 a.m. Withycombe Hall, OSC. Nev. 7 Grassman of the year luncheon, Portland Chamber of Commerce, Hotel Multnomah. Nev. lt-12 Oregon Wool Growers annual meeting Im perial Hotel, Portland. Nov. 13-16 Oregon Farm Bur eau Federation annual meeting, Salem. Nev. 17-19 Western Oregon Livestock Association, Gear hart Hotel. Nev. 27-Dec 1 National 4-H Club. Congress, Chicago. Dec. 1-2 70th annual Oregon State Horticultural Society meet ing, Corvallis. Dec 1-3 Oregon Seed League meeting. La Grande. Dec 5-9 Smithfield Show, London, England, agricultural exhibit Dec. fi-9 Pacific Coast Tur key exhibit, McMinnville. Dec. 7-8 Nut Growers Society of Oregon and Washington, Mc Minnville. Dee. 810 Oregon Wheat Growers League 28th annual meeting, Pendleton. Coyer Crops Should Be Planted Early Sow cover crop early In the fall and turn them under early in the spring, has been a standard recom mendation for caneberry and fruit growers in the Willamette Valley for many years. D. L. Rasmussen. Marion Coun ty agent, is reminding farmer' of this area that it is still a good prac tice. He adds that early seeding, even in a dry year, is desirable. Germinations wMl follow any good rain. Farmers with irrigation sys tems can sprinkle irrigate after seeding to hasten a germination if soil should become too dry again. which is not thought likely as long er nights prevent evaporation. Crimson clover, common or hairy vetch, oats, rye, turnips and chew ings fescue are among the satisfac tory cover crops for Willamette Valley caneberry and tree fruit plantings. Grower experience, cost of the seed and soil requirements will help the farmer decide what cover crop to use. Cover crops add organic matter to the sou. Their decomposition supplies good material to other crops in the soil. The value of cover crops for erosion control is well established. Cover crops im prove aeration and tilth of the soil. Rasmussen points out, adding that these are very much needed in the valley. Fertilizing the- cover crop is a good practice. Nitrogen is the most important element for fair cover crops. From 20 to 25 poufds actual nitrogen per acre will speed early tail growth without delaying dorm ancy of the caneberry tree fruit plantings. Sheep Growers Give Approvals To Promotions Oregon sheep producers joined the rest of the nation recently in approving a promotion program for wool and lambs. The program was approved by 72.2 percent of the sheep growers representing S million head. This approval put into effect an agreement between Secretary of Agriculture Benson and the newly organized American Sheep Pro ducers Council providing adverbs-, ing; promotion, and related mar keting activities. Deductions from sheep produc ers incentive wool payments-wi'J amount to one cent per pound of shorn wool and 5 cents per 100 pounds of live weight from lambs and yearling payments. , Fall Time tb Fescue Screenings Death Claims Mother Of Rear Admiral PORTLAND ( Mrs. Mary Updegraff. 80, mother of Rear Ad miral William N. Updegraff (ret), San Francisco, died in a hospital here Tuesday. Another son, George G. Upde graff, was district judge of Gilliam, Wheeler and Sherman counties, before his death two years ago. Requiem mass will be said here Saturday. Gar Hits Deer; Driver Injured EUGENE m A deer bounded onto the McKenzie Highway in front of a car Monday night, and in the ensuing crash the deer was killed, the car wrecked, and the driver injured. Jack Summerlin, 26, Long Beach. Calif., said be tried to avoid the crash, skidded on gravel, hit the animal 'and then plunged over a roadside embankment. His wife escaped injury, but Summerlin suffered an elbow cut. lkt Speaks For Modern Road Program WASHINGTON President Eisenhower spoke out again Tues day for a modernized highway sys tem and declared the country's economic growth "must not be stunted by a creeping paralysis of traffic." T-V T" ! J 1 It J m i iy ine x-resioeni cauea ior support from a directly interested audi encethe 53rd annual convention of the American Automobile Assn. From his vacation headquarters in Denver. Eisenhower sent a mes sage asking the organization to speak up again and again for prompt action on a highway sys tem adequate for modern living." Congress this year rejected the President's road-building recom mendations, and administration leaders say highway legislation should be among the first items tackled next year. I Eisenhower proposed a special bond issue outside the national debt to finance a huge interstate highway network. Both that plan and another put forth by Demo crats providing for tax increases to exoand the present system of footing road bills were turned dawn. "Motoring convenience, safe driving and national security must not be checked by a lack ot roads," Eisenhower said Tuesday. "A mod ern road system is one of our great national needs." About 700 delegates represent- Dust Sheep September is a good month in which to control sheep ticks, coun ty ftgents are now reminding farm ers! Ticks can be controlled by spray ing; dipping or dusting. The latter method is only recommended where the owner has a few sheep. Several insecticides are effective against ticks, including DDT. meth oxychlor, TDE. taxaphen, chlor daiie, lindane and rotenone. Sug gestions are for 8 pounds " of 50 perj cent wettable DDT to be used in 100 gallons of water when a high pressure spray rig is used. For preparing a dip, use from 4 to t pounds of 50 per cent wettable DDT powder to 100 gallons of wa ter; or 8 ounces of S per cent rot enone powder to 100 gallons of wa ter! A 10 per cent DDT dust will serve as an effective dust for the smaller flock. . If other materials are used, the county agents suggest that the mamif acturer's recommendations are followed closely. Russia Frees 1st Germans Can Be" Poisonous The feeding of nematode infested screenings to livestock can be ex tremely dangerous because of t poisonous effect, says O. E. Mike sell, Linn County extension agent Chewings fescue and red creep, ing fescue are the most commonly infested, but bentgrass seed may also contain nematodes. Screenings that . are free of nematodes are those of common ryegrass, peren nial ryegrass and alta fescue. Mikesell advises that screenings from susceptible crops be destroy ed by burning .as a number of los ses have occurred in Linn County in past years from feedine nema tode infected screenings. M Negotiations Of U. S., Reds To 'Drag Out' GENEVA, Switzerland W The seven-week-old negotiations be tween the United States and Com munist China Tuesday appeared headed for a long period of com. jplete secrecy as they began deal 'ing with political matters for the .first time. At their 16th meeting Tuesday, U. S; Ambassador U. Alexis John, son and Red Chinese envoy Wang Ping-Nan for the first time ex. changed views on questions pther than the release of civilians on both sides. Their next secret meet ing was set for Friday. ' It was learned that the two am bassadors agreed Tuesday .to clamp down a complete security blanket on their discussions until further notice. The negotiatums i Under Pact FRIEDLAND. Germany tf Four Germans arrived at this re patriation center Tuesday after their release from more than 10 years of Russian captivity. Tbey were the first to be freed since Chancellor Konrad Adenauer returned from Moscow with a Rus sian promise that all Germans still held in the Soviet Union would now about to begin concern eco be sent home The four returnees included a former German soldier and three1 civilians, among them a young wo-1 man witn a 2-year-old child born in a Russia camp. The three ci vilians were deported to Russia from their native East Prussia after the war. They reported a wave of excite ment is sweeping the camps in Russia with every German hoping to be in the first mass transport home. J nomic, strategic and political ques uviia. Johnson later said. "It is only by restoring the private nature of tnese talks that we can hope to make any further progress." in AAA's : nearly five million members reported for the start of the three-day convention. DING DONG MAIL OSWEGO, N.Y. (UP) A three-year-old girl took her "Dinf Dong School" lessons all too seri. ously. Police and postal workers received a hurry-up call from the child's mother who said-the girl had mailed a mud pie to the tele, vision program's teacher by wrap, ping it in a paper towel and dropping it into a street letter in the tank, add the lime solu tion by washing slowly through the screen into the agitating cop per sulfate solution in the spray tank. The lime solution must be as dilute as ' possible before meeting the copper sulfate solu-i tion in the spray tank. Agitation j must - be continued until the spray is applied. Mixing Bordeaux & 8-100 prop erly, applying it after the peach es are harvested (preferably aft ter September 15 for all varie ties, regardless of harvest date), and applying thoroughly will help control Coryneum peach blight . ' A; 7m ma i If Expert Workmanship Bfflnr-BFirii n .IV isrtr, .wyk-J' - 1 : I m Ton can buy many drapes at many prices but when it comes right dowa te it wouldn't you rather pay . a little more and get something that's worth the money? Don't be misled by fancy "sale prices" aad "free" gimmicks ... we all know we eet exactly what we vay for. you're looking for draperies that yoa can truly be to have in your heme see us! We have Salem's largest selection ef drapery samples ia price ranges that will fit every pecketbeek . . . and eastern made with ex pert care, i ; - Se proud Capitol Shade & Drapery Shop ' Manufacturers of Salem Yenetion Blinds 1695 Fairgrounds Read j Ph.4-1856 RENT-A-TOOL r Howser Bros. $ o Plumbing Tools o Sprayers o Sanders Cemenl Mixers o Saws : o Vaxers o Trailers o Refer Trucks Tractors Drills Salem's Oldest Home Owned i .Rental Headquarters HOHSffi'B 1115 S. 12th Wa GiveT Grstn Stamps fh. 33646