Estacada's Clackamas County news. (Estacada, Or.) 1957-1976, August 01, 1958, Page Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE CLA( K A i.\S COUNTY NEWS
Page
Estacada, Oregon, Friday, Aug. 1, 1958
6
sale
'News' Want Ads Bring Good Results
Good Catch?
m a r ia n
g u il d
S a t u
baked
rd ay
,
aug
. 2
M i t * BY
m
ways -?»
The monthly bake sale, spon­
sored by the Marian Guild will
be held Saturday, August 2 in
(By John J. Inskeep, County
the office of Clackamas Coun­
Get out the dust gun.Clacka­
ty News.
mas county farms and gardens
are currently suffering from a
severe infestation of the W es­
tern cuchmbei- beetle This vor-
aciuos insect is especially fond
of snap bean pants but is not
too oarticular and wil devour
leaves of most garden crops and
even pigweeds. The long straw
colored larvae
often
attack
sweet rorn seedings and roots.
They may cause the stalks
to
lodge.
Adults are described as yel­
lowish green.
black spotted
beetles common to
Western
Oregon. They are often confus­
ed with the beneficial ladybug
bacause of the similarity in size
and shape.
But ladybugs are
red with black spots. In early
spring the cucumber beetle de­
stroys red clover seedlings cau­
sing loss o f satisfactory stands.
What to do Dust with 5 per­
JUTLAND GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
i rs incude lower shipping costs, from the field und burn them
less storage space and cheaper If you leave
them
on the
handling costs. These
advan- ground they wil
make seea,
tages have not been weighed once they have bloomed.
Or
against processing costs
and spray them with a severe spray
other features which may
or which will knock them
over
may not make watering fcasi- right now. For this purpose 1
ble.
lb. of ummae to each gallon of
....................................
water. The boron chlorate m lx-
"It beats me. Here the coun- tures found in the market und-
ty court has long since declar- er various trade names are also
ed the whole county a
tansy effective.
These materias are
ragwort free urea County Weed non fire hazardos and non poi-
Control Officer Dock Hnnt has sonous.
W et each plant thor-
werked very hard to eradicate uughly. There are other spray9
this poisonous weed from our which are effective but some-
An experiment recently con­ fields anh cutover lands. Yet, in what poisonous and which pre-
cluded at Oregon State College the fact o f it, there are so m a- sent a fire hazard,
for
And then spray new plants
shows no significant difference ny folks who do not care
in fci-d consumption between these small infestations which j next spring, in April or M ay,
j with 2, 4-D . They are easily
baled alfalfa hay, alfalfa
hay keep all of us in hot water.”
It w is Louie Our fishing and and cheaply destroped with 2,
wafers and alfalfa hay pellets.
Molalla 4 - D at that time­
These différent forms of alfalfa hunting partner over
In large areas, where practi-
hay were fed to dairy cows. Re­ way speaking. W e had driven
paints
with
searchers noted little difference liy the house slowly and seeing j eal, graze the
I is waspish wife around
the sheep. Sheep eat tansy plants
on milk production.
on. j readily and seem immune
to
They conclude that
alfalfa premises, we drove right
hay can be condensbed
into Louie we found emerging from I any poisonous effects,
he
is
Extension Bulletin 717 tansy
wafers and fed satisfactorily to his cutover 40 which
com-
milk cows.
The economic as planting to Christmas trees.He \ ragwort provides more
control and
pect of hay wafering were ex­ was dressed in a paraffin treat- ! pletc details of
cd red hat and ragged blue de- provides excellent pictures of
cluded from this experiment.
Advantages of feeding w af- nim pants which reached half ¡tansy plants in color. This doc-
vay to his ksecs to his ankles ument is available in the Ex-
and in logging boots.ln is jaw tension Office, P. O. Box 511,
was a cud o f eating tobacco,in Oregon City,
his arms was a beautiful yellow
Many times in this column
bouquet of
blooming tansy
pi nts and a few cf his seigh- we have encouraged the use of
commercial fertilizers
where
bors.
Every year,” Louie explain- we surmised they could be us­
economically.
I ed “ I spray with 2,4-D in early ed wisely and
spring when
these
bloody Unwise use and this includes
place­
plants are young
and easily improper timing, poor
of
killed. Then in blooming season ment and use of too much
when they are easily
seen 1 cne or more elements, m ay re­
pull those I missed, take them sult in damage
During the state holly grow­
trom the field and burn them.
in Washington
Otherwise they woud| take ov­ ers tour held
County this year we saw a good
er the whole place
what m ay
‘ ‘And you can’t tell me they demonstration o f
won’t poison cattle and horses. have been caused by over use
Sure. I know some folks past­ of fertilizers. Variegated trees
ure heavily infested fields reg­ in the orchard in question loo­
ularly but you just let
young ked as if they may have been
plants grow up with good pas- struck by a serious blightLeaf
ture.One of my neighbors lost drop was quite serious.
Extension Agent Plamer Tor-
three good milk cows from tan­
vend, Washington county, read
sy poisoning last summer.
“ Folks get real scared when a report of the soil analysis of
they find
themselves
faced the soil in this location. Phos-
with a big tansy
infestation phoi-us content reached the 200
But U s- PCr acre mark and the soil
Then they want action,
the !>°tash content was found
to
they can’t seem to sense
danger of a
few
scattering reach to 900 lbs.per acre mark,
plants wheih help to seed the Professor A ! Roberts,
OSC,
whole country.
Nor can the pointed out that holly trees like
county afford to hire inspect- many others,
cannot
stand
ors to stop at
every
place such h>Kh concentration of fer-
where one or more tansy plants Hlizer salts.
j are blooming heartily and u
n
- -----------------------
touched on many, many f a r m s __Try a Classified Adv. in the
will
throughout the county.
" get * results and the
* cost ** is
low. Just phone us or .bring
“ I talked to Dock Hunt
cently and he told
me these 0r mail y ° nr ad- ,n
small infestations are causing
more concern than the heavily
Try a News
Classified Ad
infested areas.”
Costs little and
get results.
T a k e a tip from Louie, folks. Phoneor bring your ad. to the
Pull up those plants, take them News office.
cent DDT or preferably Meth-
oxchlor dust
of
the same
strength. Melon vines, cucum­
ber and squash plants are sen­
sitive to D D T so this materialt
should never be used on them.
Human beings are also much
less effected by methoxychlor,
meaning it is a safer material
to use
And this word from Extens­
ion Entomologist Robert Every
“ Do not dust when the plants
are wet with dew or when
a
rain seems imminent.”
THE C O M PLET E PICTURE
A t
f ir s t g l a n c e
—
Silvawool_scientifically processed wood fibers— is an efficient insulation. Professionally applied, the “blown-in"
method fills every corner and crevice, forming the insulation into a fluffy mat that locks out heat or cold. In the
manufacturing process the wood fibers are impregnated with fire and moisture retardants. For homes, refrigerated
warehouses or food locker plants, Silvawool helps maintain steady temperatures, with minimum fuel and power cost.
SILVAW OOL" INSULATION FOR HOMES AND COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS
... another product of Weyerhaeuser development
Progress in forest product development helps to improve the
economy o f the Pacific Northwest. As new products are created
and proved, new plants are built. Result: more jobs.
Silvawool is an example. Developed by Weyerhaeuser to use
Pacific Northwest woods, Silvawool was first produced in a
pilot plant. Later, to meet the demand from home owners,
refrigeration specialists and building designers, a full scale pro­
duction plant was built in Snoqualmie Falls, Washington. This
is just one example o f practical, scientific use o f wood. It
increases the use and economic return o f the forest crop.
THESE W OM EN!
By d’Alessio
Weyerhaeuser scientists and technicians are continually
searching for new products. As new and better forest products
are created, other new plants will be built.
Quantity production of Silvawool comes from this
Weyerhaeuser-engineered plant. This machine per­
forms one of several complex operations in the
Company's Snoqualmie Falls, Washington, fiber plant.
New products create new payrolls. Together they help to
stabilize local communities and expand the tax base to support
government and schools.
WEYERHAEUSER TIMBER COMPANY
working
to m a i n t a i n a p e r m a n e n t f o r e s t i n d u s t r y
w r — — m
W IY H N M U S «^
l\ \ \
il
4-SOUiR!
• • then, last week, after five years, the dictaphone broke
down and he called me into his office for dictation . . .”