20 Pages V;": SECOND SECTION ,Pages9tol6 ' 20. Pages' SECOND SECTION Pages 9 to 16 East Oregonian Bound-Up Souvenir Edition Pendleton, Oregon, Saturday, September 24, 1921. Apple Crop Alone This Year Will Amount, to 800 Carloads, Valued at $1 Per Box to the Grower; Prune Crop is Also of Extreme Value. , - t .' - i ii i i f '' " ' ' ' ' ' i " " " I BUMPERRUIT CROP AIDED BY ORGANIZED SELLING METHODS HAS PLACED EAST E.ND Of UMATlUACOUNTY BEYOND NEED OF WORRYING OVER BUSINESS DEPRESSION , ;, H BY BUlt'E' SHANGUS. 'A prominent Umatilla- county clti Hale of their product" Also the grow ers themselves did not take the tlmo ten who mukes his home down towurd and effort to grow top notch quality Peudloton but who was fort a num-- 'run inui mey uo now. j ncy om ih f vnura nrnmiiient soc al and "ot realize thab It paid so well. To- political' loader of the Fast End, us- I sorted u few days ago that not ten pt-r cent of the land owners of this county could pay their debts and have dollar left. iiMo such ratio exists In the Milton- J Frecwatcr country for according to day, however, llhc grower who does not properly care for IiIh orchard, prune, spray and thin when and where necessary. Is th,e only man who does not get results and hundsomo results at that. . j Compared in number of boxes with .oahlnr of nnn nt our largest le uppie crop 01 oiner nonnwesiern , bunks, there are not ten per cent of "PP'e districts the Mllton-Frecwale: ) the men here who would ba seriously country does not stand out consplcu- , . ... . , . ........... nuslv for the Hood I'tiver and ftoi?u. pincnca u lorccu 10 mjuiuaio. , - - --- --- , . " ..... ,,, u ,.,Mtf kn niver districts In Oregon and the We-. V. . r . . . .,...1 nalfchee and Yaltlma vullcys of Mash- of by person, of al shades of PoUtlciJ , moro faith as being- as -bad if not worse J " n than the Cleveland times of the early '0s, and unbiased economic and fi nancial experts hold out little hope for me- months to oome. . According to the secretary of labor who spoke to there are six million unemployed In the United States today and little prospetet for lessening this number In the near future. Hut If hard times are in evidence elsewhere this locality feels the depression but little. . ' '" There la a reason for the oiHlmlum which prevails here and it Is not hard to find. A Visit to the bulging ware houses where the recent bumper wheat crop has been stored or a trip through the ;orohards of the valley heavily laden-and hanging to the (round with their bounteous yield, or a tour of In spection through any of the several packing houses of the Twin Cities will convlce the most skeptical that this Is a thriving and prosperous community. Time was when the sheriff's coming with an overdue mortgage to foreclose was a nightmare which troubled the slumbers of the small fruit grower through this valley, but generally speaking that day !s past;-' and tho fruit grower Is the only producer who can realise fat returns on his Invcst- " went calculated at war time cost. A few years ago the fruit grower was - the' hardest customer the banks had to deal, with, not because of any native dishonesty- or pour business judgment but. because there was no other class of individuals who produced and sold on such an uncertain market .-! OrranlMsl ttoll'ng Counts. ;i This was due largely to lock of or ganised effort In the distribution and pies than are. crown here. - But the acreage is much 'lurgcr, Acre for acra the Walla. Walla valley produces as much as anv of them. In the end, however, it Is not quantity that counts so much as quality, and the quul ty can be denied by no one who has had the. opportunity ,to test It.' Fifteen years pr' more ago when all the other apple j districts mentioned above were famid for their fruit, it was a doubtful proposition If the ap ple could be grown successfully In a 'commercial way'ln this valley, due to orchard posts, 'when' Hood River, Yakima and Weuatchop wero famed for the hundreds of carloads of ap ples shipped to the east and to Eu rope at' prices that made good d'vi dends on valuations of $1000 and more per acre, the apple industry in this valley was practically nothing. 'Even after state and nationally known horticulturists had dinned Into the ears of the people of th's district at countless mass meetings and horti ciltural conventions. In an effortto cultural conventions. In an effort apple country, there were long haired and loud mouthed pessimists v' could figure the grower out of nny profit even if they could - kill Ihe worms. There were those who could f'g"re well, who estimated that even the acreage then In orchard, when It came Into bearing, would produce so many million boxes and so many car and train loads of freight that tb rnil- roads could' not. secure sufflcn j eaulpment to haul the stuff to snvl K . t , The Standing Race. come from who would -nt it. But the calamity howler h id Irs day, and while those he was not able to convince then, aro now ouulent growers, he and his kind are still working for wages and predicting evil times ahead. The apple crop of the Walla Walla valley this side of the state line will amount to son cars fyr the present year. Valued at J1.00 per box net to tho grower the apple crop of this dis trict will total $500,000 .n dollars and cents. Aside from what the grower receives employment Is furnlxhed .to hundreds of men. women and children In caring for this vast output at wages that do not lnd'cate pinched times, t The history of the apple in this dfs trlct Is hut a counterpart of the growth of the Italian prune 'ndnstry. Not po mnny years bo there wfre acres and acres of full grown Italian prune orchards dug up around (he Twin Cities and It was not Infrequent for h rrnwor o "ft'r tin" to the rail road company for ecess fre'ght on a car of prunes shipped Enxt. About I90R or 1908 the prune crro". not ting of where the people were to ers got as high as $15.00 per ton for I their product and they began to think 'maybe they h.-id been too hasty In dig ging out, the trees. .In 1910 the Ital ian prune was in such demand tli.it Al together this valley produced cose to a half mlll'on dollars gross for its iprunes, apples, peaches and other frisjt products. In 1919 the prune grower received $100 and better per ton. That war u wur time return but in the har.l times of 1921 the average Is going , t- b-; about fifty dollars per ton. ' i A few years ago a man by the name of Hurst had been offered a' le :icre Italian prune orchard for a few h'Jn dred dollars and bought It in. The Hur,it orchard has for the pal c'vbt or ten years been a -wizard, mukinK money for its owner. , . Hie present season will y'eld. when f'nal returns are in. close to BOO cir loids of, prunes from this sl'stricf 0'. prices rang'ng from $35 to $."5 per ton to tho proiver or between $400,001) and $500,000. In addition to thes? figures may be ailfteri the vast volume of n'onev spent in packing, 'cratlnr and loading these prunes for shipment. -In the' packing houses alone durttig the past six weeks there h.ivc been employed for a good deal of the time E"0 to Too men, women and tlu.ilren, caring for the prunes as they arc 'brought in from the orchards. In a single day ulone C5 carloads of urune were sent out from here con signed for eastern markets. A close estimute of the total y'eld of apples, prunes, cherries and ali oth er fruits shipped from the Milto.i Freewater districts during the year 1921 amounts to more than one and a half million dollars. It is not a primrose path, however. ith's business of getting b'g returns! from the fruit business. Hard work, 'oils' and persisfert attention to the details of the bim'ness and 16 hours a day during. the. growine and ' marketing season is the only way it I can be done. Put hour for hour the fruit business will pay b'gger returns for the owner of the land than nny other line of productive occupation known in tho Northwest. . On' of the most enthus'astic evpo nents of the fruit industry In the M 1-ton-Freewater d 'strict -is that pioneer fruit and nurseryman, S. A. Miller. Along about 1889 Mr. MH!cr,with his father, now hale and hearty abetter than 90 years, started a little nursery business near Milton." Today with more than 200 acres devoted to Ui industry Mr. Miller has demonstrated to h's own satisfaction thai the fruit business taken year for yeair and fol lowed up persistently is a profitable and pleasant line of industry. Twenty years or more ago when lands were not so much in demand as now Mr. Miller paid $900 for four and one-half acres - of land adjoining his home in Milton. His friends told him it was too much money. , A few dais ago he received a cheek f,or his prune crop which nette'd him close to $700 per acre for the. one year's cTop. Here are the figures: On the fosr and one half, acres are !7! trees, Jnihe and 1 1 years old. From these trees were gathered this year 66 1-2 tons of prunes for which their owner received $52 per ton net to him, or $3458. Ex penses in caring for the orchard, pick ing and hauling to market ramounted to approximately $504, leaving a net income from this land ot about $3. 000 ' Not so bad for four and pne hulf acres. . ,' ; . . t ' The reader may say," tWls was one cape in a thousand. ' It s not. It Is unusual but there, are others l'Re It and there are hundred bf, acres do- In? half that well. ' A $350 an acre net return is a pretty handsome divi dend on an acre of ground In a single 'ear. The septical will sav this, is not done every-year, for a hedvy fruit crop one season is almost Invariably followed by a light crop. Not so with prunes. There are of course some years when the yield Is not so large as this season nor the price so good, but the prune Is as sure and safe1 a crop as .'s wheat on the best land in Umatilla "county. C. Collins, a. well known fruit grower, who resides near the hard surface road a mile north of Freewa ter, has two prune trees 37 years old from which he gathered 1460 pounds of ItaTnn prunes this year, sell'nsr the same fqr $52 per ton. ' To the Individ ual who likes to compute f'gures It may be interesting to know that an average acre of prune.' orchard con tains 125 trees. At T30 pounds to the p .rvhnlrt Ora fhn WO trPCS above mentioned would yield 91,250 pounds or a trifle better than 45 tousi which If sold at the price Mr. Collin received this year would bring tho owner $2340 or ten per cent on a Val uation of $23,400 per acre. J.' The above . Is of course a mot unusual case arid there are no or chards In this district producing arijj such aggregate returns. Hut this Is i land of intensified cultivnt'on and ths more Intense it is cultivated the b g ger the returns. Foor farming never pays in any district and this Is no ex ception. ! While the big red applo and th Italian prune occupy the two most im; portant places in the fruit industry of this valley, the cherry Is by no mean a small producer itself. Because ot the longer time it takes for a cherry, to grow to maturity It Is not so popu lar with the grower as the more thrifty and quick growing prune or apple. ' W. W. Bridgewater. who has a snialr acreage just outsldo the city limits of Milton, has b. cherry orchard whiqh fields h.'m good returns. From this orchard of about 60 trees of BiiiK cherries Mr. Bridgewater last year sold $1900 worth of fruit, about $30 to tho tree, whtch Is by no means an except tional yield for tho Bing cherry tre 12 to 20 years old. s Growers of the Royal Ann cherrw have of late years been reaping handr some returns for their product due tq a big demand from California buyers. A good bearing cherry orchard . It safe for from $500 to $1000 per aero each year in this district. ,; While growing a new orchard, its. owner does not content himself with no profit-from the ground as is thtt case in some localities. The first foni1 or five years of'a young orchard's Ufa its owner grows watermelons, toma- toes, potatoes and other "truck" be-, tween the rows, and the returns from' th' venture often proves highly grnti ify'ns. The tomato bus'ness this year par-." ticularly has been of a profitable na ture and many acres have been plant-0 ed and harvested, the total carload Veld amounting to 30 cars for the dis-; trtct. Fred McElrath, who started out a. few -years ao In the orchard game.' ow own 50 nxrrpq rf bear'ne anrtV young orchard and grows tons of- (Continued on paste 10.) Qliiillillll pftihiiiiiiiiiiM WTWWEMmKMM' CARS " " " " " " 11 ." 1' 4 Studebakef- Special Six No other factor than public appreciation of this car spread mouth-to-mouth fashion by prideful owners could account for the un questioned popularity that it enjoys today. ' 4. During tlic first six months of 1921 the sales of Studebaker ears exceeded those of every other autoino bile - manufacturer in the country with the exception of one man ufacturer of a. well known and very low priced car. 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