VOL. XVI. fyvrrtfyvnAtntq. Letter from Ilia, W. T. Illa, W. T., July 22, 1884. Editor Willamette Farmer: As I haven't written to your valuable paper Bince I left "Wasco county, Oregon, ' I will try and tell you something of this part of the country. It has been seven years since I came here, on Snake river, and I have been going into the fruit busineso as fast as my means would per mit. I commenced with 200 peach trees, and 100 each of plum and prune, 200 apple and 4 pear trees, a few cherries, apricots, grapes, and the smaller fruits, all of which grow well, and in fact do better than at any place I have lived be fore. I now have over 2,000 fruit trees growing and shall keep on setting out until I get 5,000 trees. When I com menced in the fruit growing I read the Farmer and everything else I saw re lating to the subject, and worked and watched and tried to find out what kind of fruit would be tho most profitable to go into extensively, and have about de cided to set out two or three thousand prune trees. I have tho Italian and German that I have been growing six years. Tho peach, Washington, Colum bia, Jefferson and egg plums, all of which are full and fine looking. The prunes are very full and large. Apples are full enough except a part of them have what we call the apple louse. The apples have fallen off and tho trees are injured. They are everywhere that I have heard of this year. They have the same trouble in California, often kill i ing the buds before the leaves come out. In some places press pumps have been used throwing a spray of Paris green into the tops of the trees. I tried a so lution of strong vitriol which killed the lice, also the leaves, but not the bark. My pear trees are very rank in growth, but not very full. Some of them show a little blight on tho leaves as though they had been scorched. The peach trees will bear a full half crop which is considered good for this season after the injury they received during tho past winter. Cherries and small fruits do well every year. Al though there aro some disadvantages to contend with I think the fruit business is going to bo a success in this locality. Yours respectfully, Geo. W. Bi'rfoiu). The Best Strawberries. Editor Willamette Farmer: According to promise, after noting carefully which plants and berries wero tho best this season, I proceed to state tho result or conclusion. Tho Sharpless, Jucunda and Wilson, in the order mentioned, are the best on my place. Tho Wilson did poorer this season than it has ever done; the Jucun da did uncommonly well, being large, prolific, and late. Out of twenty-three kinds it was one week later than any of them. The behavior of the Sharplefs was singular this 6enson, being not only among tho earliest but lasting down to within one week of tho latest, tho Ju cunda. The earliest was tho Warren ; and, it is not only the earlier but it is alio among tho richest berries I havo ever eaten. It is not so firm, nor so good a market berry as the Wilson, but for home uso I prefer it to tlmt great market berry tho Wilson. If the Sharpless would always behave as it did this season wo should ncod no other. It was early, medium, and away down to quite late, covering nearly tho whole season. It is A No. 1. The Jucunda is only medium to very late, nay, with me, the latest of all. Tho only real objection I havo to the Wilson is, tho last pickings are bo small. Deep and constant culture im proves the size, and quality, too, of the Wilson. The Jersey Queen U late and productive ; but, is not as largj as the rikK SS SALEM, OREGON, FRIDAY, books would- have it; and, although a pistillate, boro handsomely. The Big Bob is a failure) a miserable failure. The Glendale is late, firm, productive, too sour for eating, but good for canning. I do not think it worthy. Tho Jersey Queen is equally late, even later, and far better. The Finch's Prolific has be haved admirably, and is the easiest berry to pick I know of. My pickers would almost quarrel about who should pick them. They are large, firm making no juico handling and grow in such clus ters that you can get a handful at a time, soon filling a box. Honce we love to pick them. It takes the breadth of a continent and a decade of years to prove a straw berry. The Sharplcss, Jucunda and Wilson hae stood the test. They have been found "not wanting" are worthy. These three are early, Wilson ; medium, Sharpless; and late, Jucunda. They fill the bill. Still we may need, in time, new ones, as these may run out, degen erate, or become diseased to such a de gree as to be worthless. There is much complaint now, in various States, of the Wilson, it having the blight, scalo, and seoms sickly. Henco many are discard ing it. So, too, in some sense, of the Jucunda; rarely of the Sharpless, it be ing a young aspirant, having been sent out by J. K. Sharpless in 1872, and con sequently now twelve years old. The Jucunda (Knox's No. 700) is over thiriy years old. Indeed, many contend thut Knox's No. 700 is really the old Jucunda brought here from Europe nearly half a century ago. The Wilson originated with Mr. Wilson, of Albany, N. Y., near a quarter of a century ago, and is, to-day, more universally known, cultivated, and successful than any other strawberry in our country. Any new and superior fruit I welcome ; but cling to the old till the now is proven superior. There aro somo others wo havo on trial ; but will not speak of them now, because they may, in future, behavo badly, and far bo it from mo to recom mend what might, to others, be a blight and curse. Oregon, or rather the Wil lamette valley, is tho natural home of ttho strawberry. Our hills and prairies wero, before settled, teeming with wild strawberries, and many of them of good size and quality. An experienco of thirty-throo years has convinced mo that wo can, with common sense and labor, grow "tho greatest berry God ever mado" to perfection in the Willamette. I grew Sharpless, this season, weighing two ounces; rich, firm and delicious, too. But to grow them thus requires more trouble than tho berries are worth. Tho Sharpless, more than any plant I know of being "a thing of conditions," "Its onironment makes it," as Darwin has it. These aro tho conditions that make large, rich straw-perries : First, a deep, warm, rich, well underdrained soil-either naturally or artificially. Secondly, deep and constant cultivation. Thirdly, all runners cut. Fourthly, moisture in tho form of rain or water applied. "Tho cat is out of the wallet." Catch her if you can. A. F. Davidson. Tho following is slid to be truo : A preacher out West, Mr. II., was a good man, but very rough in his ways, and very much given to chewing tobacco. Ono timo ho was riding on horseback through tho country, whon thoro camo up a shower. Hiding up to a cabin ho hastily hitched his horse and knocked at tho door. A sharp looking old lady answered tho summons. The preacher asked for fheltor. "I don't tako in strangers, I don't know you 1" replied tho old lady, sufpiciously. "Hut you know what th Biblo says," said the preacher. "Be not forgetful to entertain strangers, for thereby somo hae entertained an gels unawares." "You needn't quote Bible," said tho old lady, quickly; "no angol would como down from heaven with a quid of tobacco in his mouth as you have!" Tho door was shut, and tho preacher unhitched hi horse and rode away in the raid. Midsummer Culture Saving Hay, etc F. D. Curtis in the Country Gentlo man writes as follows : There is an opportunity for some ono to do a good thing, and to improvo this original millet, so that it may bo made available for a lato forago plant to eke out poor meadows, and to take tho place of better grasses. It will grow on any kind of land, but like other things, will do host where tho soil is rich. I am not able, from Flint on Grasses and Forago Plants, to give the botanical namo of this grass. When the oat crop is light it is always found in it, and tho seeds, coarser and lighter-colored than millet, used to fill tho screen-box, and the old timo farmer was bothered to know what to do with them. I have found out that tho hons aro fond of them, and that when ground and mixed with grain they aro good for cattle. Like millet, the hay will be better if tho seeds are not allowed to ripen, and tho hay itself does not havo the sub stanco and value of timothy and some other varieties. When hay is short and light, as a great deal of it is this year, It must not be forgotten that it is moie nutritious than when weak and bulky, and a less quantity should bo given at a feeding. The shortness in hay may bo made up to a large extent by cutting the grain early while the straw is still bright and full of the juices, which give it value as food. Farmers will find, if they will do this, and feed a little grain with it, that a goodly portion of tho hay mow may bo sold, notwithstanding tho short age. It will not do to let the grain stand until it can bo cut in tho forenoon and taken in in the aftornoon, or even when cut tho day before. Straw harvested under theso rules has very little value as fodder ; but straw cut as soon as tho most of tho grain on it is ripo, is good fodder. My rule is to cut as soon as tho straw is quite generally white. Even if there aro green heads and somo green spots, there is a saving in the shelling of the grain, which is moroof an item than most farmers imagine. Thoro is ono crop which can be mado to help in tho sawng of tho hay by affording a late and nutritious pasture. I mean turnips. All kinds of stock can feed on thorn till winter fairly sots in, and this will savo a month's foddering of stored proven der, and a great loss of llcsh, beforo this time, as stock nro quito often managed. There is no flesh in frost-killed grass, and not any moro in frost-killed and bleached corn-stalks. Tho dead grass is tho Pastern farmer's lesort, and the killed corn-stalks the Western. A field of turnips for tho stcck to feast in would change their condition from depletion to growth. If superphosphates have any special mission, it is for turnips. Horo they toll. Tho growing season is too short, and the wants of the plant so little that they can supply it, and henco it is a very easy matter to grow a crop of turnips. There is a phaso to turnip culturo yet unstated, and which ought to bo moro appreciated tho mid-summor culture of the land. Land is getting so foul that wo shall havo to resort to tho old fashioned system of summer-fallowing, or extend tho aica of buckwheat and turnips. Buckwheat is a most excellent crop to subdue rough land and bring it into a moro mollow condition, but it is a somewhat risky crop, and is apt to re new itself tho next year, especially if the land is sown with any kind of small grain. Some farmers havo an idea that buckwheat is poisonous to land, and on this account thoy will nover raio it. The straw is irritating to the skin of an imals, and the flour causes a rash on tho skin of Eomo pcopl, and this is all the Ioison, in my judgment, there is about it. I have fed tho grain to all sorts of animals with no injurious results. Turnips will tako root whero buck wheat can, but a crop cannot be expect ed with as little culturo. The soil W r v( arm&&7& M ..TW AUGUST 1, 1884. should bo mado mellow and clean. Buckwheat starts promptly, and makes such a rapid growth that it will get ahead of most woeds; whereas turnips are of moro dolicato growth, on tho start, and tho land must bo thoroughly subdued beforo the seed is put in. There is value in turnips in this fact. In what better way can a farmer improve a field, and at the same timo improve his stock. It would be a profitable advancement in the routino of Amorican farming, if ev ery farmer mnile it a rule to fit ono field every year for turnips. Ho would get his pay in tho crop, and havo a fiold in a condition the next year for producing a largo yield. I do not know of any cheaper or moro effectual way to enrich a fiold and free it from foul stuff than with turnip cul ture, and f coding them otl'on tho ground. Turnips do not exhaust tho land like grain crops. Tho tap root penetrates to tho lower strata, and opens it up for tho introduction of the atmosphere and tho rains. It also acts as a pulverizer, and so deepens tho actual soil and enriches it. I am satisfied that turnips dorivo a considerable portion of their food for growth from tho atmosphere, and whon the crop is fed out on tho land whero grown, thcro is a manifest addition to its capacity to grow other crops, and besido it is purged of weeds, and left in a fri able condition, which makes future till- ago easier. Lousy Chicks. Young chicks aro liable to a groat many diseases, so much so that tho farm er's wife often thinks thoir lives hang on a very slender thread. When the chick is hatched out its first work is, and con tinues to bo for a couple of months, to put out feathers. If they aro of healthy stock, on suitablo ground, and fed regu larly with suitablo feed, it would seem they ought to get along all right. But there is still another important condi tion ; they must be freo from vermin. If on examining a ten day chick tho lico aro found so thick about tho nock and throat that they stand on end liko quills upon a porcupine, it may bo set down that tho lico havo tho best of tbo bar gain and tho chick's days aro numbered unless relief como at onco. Ofton the first thing is to put sulphur and lard on, and, upon tho theory that if a littlo is good much is better, and it is put on so injudiciously that tho chick dies at last. Sulphur is suro doath to insect life, but the chick can seldom stand it. It is a fact that tho worst result is in tho lico sapping tho lifo blood from tho littlo fol lows, thus reducing tho constitution o that it is an easy preyto cvory form of disease This exhaustive process of sup porting hundreds of mites though not a disease, would bo bad enough nt any time, but whon in connection with that of making feathers it requires moro than a chick's digestive organs to moot the drain. Now prc ontion is always better than euro. Sulphur, or lime, will keep the nests clean and if put in a week be foro hatching timo thcro will bo no dan ger to tho chicks whon they como out. To mako a, suro thing of it, however, tako a rag and saturate it with coal oil. Then wring it out as dry as it can bo wrung and rub each chick thoroughly with tho rag whon they aro first taken off tho nest. Or, after allowing tho old hen to dust hen-elf thoroughly, rub tho rag all over her, under tho wings and breast so that tbo littlo ones will got tho lxinclit of it whilo hovering undor her. Probably tho greatest bourco of diteaso among tho clucks is bvercotno when per fectly guarded ngiinst lice. "Father," asked a littlo three- car old tho othor day, at dinner, of his pa pa, "what is it that inukes tho light ning?" "You can't underhtand it now," was tho answer; "I'll tell ou when you get a littlo older," and tho father went to his avocation. In tho evening ha returned, ami iho young hopeful, climbing upon his knees, en'ul to him, "I'apa, I know now what makes the lightning. It is Dod scratching match es against tho sky." Frank Mnrkham, repairing tho fluino of Isaac' mill this aftornoon, tuys tho Walla Walla Journal, discovered, at 1 0 o'clock, a human body on top of tho turbine rase. It gavo forth' a horrible smell and had evidently boon dead weeks or months. NO. 25. Natives of Texas are noted by all new comers as being vory inhospitable. As oninstanco: A man was traveling on " tbo boundless prairie," and when night was about to fall, ho spied a log cabin near a small pieco of cultivated ground. As ho was twenty miles from any other inhabitant, ho felt that ho had boon lucky in coming on this settlement. As is customary when within hailing dis tance, ho shouted, " Hello!" In reply to this a, bushy female head was thrust thiough tho door, and, in a loud voice, demanded "What's wanted?" "I want to stay over night and get a bite to cat," wns tho answer. "We haint got nothin' to oat," said tho planter's wife. "What!" said tho travelor in nstonish ment, "Haon't you got corn bread and bacon?" "Wo haint got no cawn bread, wo haint got no bacon, wo haint got no nuthin', and you can't stay." And as tho weary travelor turned from tho door ho heard a voice which seemed to como from behind a pilo of straw in the corner, "Mariar, I reckon you had better tio tho dog loose." Perhaps tho most rcmarkablo thing about Texas is her northers. It is a sudden wind from tho north which often causes tho mercury to drop twenty do grecB in as many minulcB. The morn ing of a day last winter was as pleasant as ono could wish. Tho thermometer stood at 75 degrees. Beforo ovening it showed six degrees above zero. Thus it is that luckloss travelers aro caught nnd fiozcn to death on tho prairies. I havo known tho wind to chango from south to north in less than ono minuto. No man can make a good living in Texas by farming. Tho soasons aro too uncertain. In 1879 thoro was no rnin from tho fifth of Mny to tho following December. Tho farmers of Texas aro principally Southern pooplo, who eko out a miser able ONistonco by raising cotton and corn. Their solo diet is bacon and corn bread ; and lucky is ho who can got money enough o buy these, togotlier with quinine, which tho Toan takes al most as regular as his meals. Thoro is monoy to bo mado at cattle raising, but this lcquircs largo capital. Shoep aro also raised bore, though in Hamilton county tho mobs of outlaws havo almost totally discouraged sheep raising. Cattle mon aro vory hostilo to sheep men. Ex-Socrctary Evaits tells a good story at his own oponse about a small don koy which ho sent up to his country seat somo years ago for tho uso of his children, of whom somo wero then quito young. Ono of bis littlo daughters, go ing out to admiro tho animal in its pad dock, was sorely distressed when tliu donkov lifted up its voice and brayed dolofully. "Poor thing I Poor thing!" exclaimed tho sympathetic child; but, suddenly brightening up, sho turned to hor uurso and said: "Oil I I am ho glad ! Papa will bo hero on Saturday, and then it wont foci so lonosomo!" "What shall wo namo baby sister?" asked a mother of her littlo four-year-old daughter. "Call her Early, mammn, that's a protty name." " Early, that's not a girls namo." "Oh, yes it is. Don't you romeinbor you lead to mo alwut tho little girl who was to bo Quren of tho May, and who wanted her mother to call her Early?" Mr, J. M. liiirhani, of Mohuiua in the foot hill region of tho Sunti.uu showed iih a pio-pliiut stem, the palm of which was three feot nnd two inchos acios nnd tho stem was in pioportion. Mr, Il's place is wj en miles alxjvo .Mi' liatna on iho little north foil: of tho Kaiitiam. Tho quality of tho soil in that region is of gieat fertility. TUB "BOSS" TIIRE3HEE. The "Kow MaisilUoa" Heard From. Sir vnnt-ov, Ore., Aug. 1 1, 18811. We, tho underhignod, lmo this day wen tho "New Mnsilllnu" .'M-lnch Separator and Ituiwill Ten-JIori'o Self fleering Traction I'uuino (purchased by W, O. Daws of T. 11. Wait) run, and pro nniinco it tho best threshing outfit wo liavo over non. It threshed fast, nnd can't liii Ix-at "cpnrating and cleaning. A. Cooliwik & Co., C. McAm-ix JOHV IlAIXrt, Q. A.Mauhiiiiankh, I SlcCfJiix, W. II. Tumi.v, O. SrAix, John Dawh, II. T. VON VoLKK.SJllXJK. I concur in tho abovo statement, W. G. Da we.