Image provided by: Washington County Cooperative Library Service; Hillsboro, OR
About The Forest Grove express. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1916-1918 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1916)
X YOU CAN’T ALWAYS BE SURE NORTHWEST MARKET REPORTS; GENER AL CROP CONDITIONS! G------------------------- THE TURK by Charles Frederick I'ltKKY I iih I been n part, I lie prlnrlpul purl, of tin* Scott’« Tliiink«- giving Mil of fan* ever «III«*« Hot) could reniem l«*r, real Vcrmuiit itir- key thut they raised on thi'lr Vermont farm nml f«-»l with corn from tin* Vermont hill«. I tut tin* imrilcuhir hill on which the Scott iirnw Iny «eemed hdter «nit «•d to Urn turkey« than to the corn; atid, along In the very early spring of 1N«1, Itoh'M father decided to try a newer country to the South and Went. I.ute March found them breaking a clearing for a new fnrm In Ku«t Teitneanee. They cot their corn In, although n little lute; they hred n few hogs and a «mull (lock of sheep; but, when they wanted tur key, they didn't go to the hnruyard for It, hilt up Into the hill«; for father'« Irusly rllle and trusty eye were a com bination no wild turkey could hope to escape, There were plenty of rumor« of wur while the Yankee from Ycrmout wan curving out a home there In the South. When war came, that Yankee made hi« way overland urn! cull sled In the com pany from hi« old valley In Vermont, leaving I'.oh to take the re«i>ou«lhlllty Of the Tennessee farm on hi« young ahoulder«. Rob did very well; and. when November came In due course, he got the rllle down from It« pegs above the fireplace and went up the hill« In search of a bird. He had been up there before with hi« father, but this was hi« llrst turkey hunt alone. There was a trail that h*d from the I iok lot up to the rtdife, and along the ridge, atuouit the grnnddnddy poplar« mid cherries and throiik’h the «wed- gum brush. Bob followed it until three that afternoon without so much us a sign of turkey; and, ns he had no In tention of a|x-nding a ulk'ht In the hill«. It begun to look as though he must re turn empty-handed. Then «uddenly he heard n rnckot off there to the east of the trull— ; "Whlr-r-r-r-" * Some great liv ing thing swept across the rl lge like n cloud. Hob's Kim was up to his ahoulder In an In stant, although lie Shook with as had u case of buck fe ver as a boy ever had. “ltang!” he bla/.ed away at the Hying cloud. It did not stop. He mu«! have missed. Hut as Blazed Away at the the report died Flying Cloud. away he heurd tb s whir change to a flutter, and the flutter to a thud, and the thud to a struggle In the brush down the hillside. He followed the sound of that strug gle till he came upon the bird, and bird It was, u turkey not so big of laxly as Its spread of wings had indicated, hut a turkey none the less fit to grace the Scott Thanksgiving board. The shot had broken Its right wing. The hoy decided to tote It home as It was, and he soon had It slung from Ills rllle barrel over his shoulder and was picking his way down the mouutulu- slile to find the trail at a lower point. It was moonlight when he reached the hog yard, and then the house, with Ills trophy, which was now quite still. Hav ing exhibited the bird to Ills mother nml young sister, he lnhl It In the liny loft In the stable, and, after a full recital of his hunt, went to bed, as tired a boy ns ever bugged a turkey, and probably more tired than nny boy who never did. ' Now, n most surprising thing hap pened the next morning. When Hob opened the stable door the turkey was still there, but It wns standing on both feet and with one wing trnlllng on the ground. And, Instead of fluttering away as a regular wild turkey should. It looked up at him with a look half curiosity and half appeal. It hopped n few steps away when he approached, and then allowed Hob to touch It with his hand. i “Well, fellow," said Rob, "you don't seem to be very much a-scart.” NEWS ITEMS About Oregon Of General Interest Portland— Wheat— bluestem, $1.60; forty-fold, $1.63; club, $1.60; red flfe, $1.48; red Russian, $1.60. Oats— No. 1 white feed, $35.76. Barley— No. 1 feed, $38.00. 15,337,809 Acres Are Open Flour— Patents, $8.40; straights, $7 for Settlement in State @ 7.60; exports, $7.20; valley, $7.90; whole wheat, $8.60; graham, $8.40. Salem—Figures collected by O. P. Millfeed — Spot prices: Bran, Hoff, state labor commissioner, from $25.00 per ton; short«, $29.00; rolled Oregon land offices show that July 1, barley, $41.00@42.00. 1916, there were 15,337,809 acres of Corn— Whole, $49 per ton; cracked vacant public lands in Oregon open to $49. settlement and entry under the provis Hay—Producers' prices: Timothy, ions of the homestead laws. Of this Eastern Oregon, $17@20 per ton; tim amount 13,942,348 acres are surveyed- othy, valley, $16@17; alfalfa, $16@ This acreage is a decrease in the year 17.00; valley grain hay, $13@15; of 104,369 acres and 632,037 acres clover, $12.50. since July 1, 1914. Butter — Cubes, extras, 36@38c. Much of the acreace taken up in the Jobbing prices: Prints, extras, 40c. last two years was under the timber butterfat, No. 1, 40c; No. 2, 38c, j and stone acts, mineral, coal, desert Portland. land entries and withdrawn for power Eggs — Oregon ranch, current re sites and public water reserves. A ceipts, 49c per dozen; Oregon small portion was taken under the ranch, candled, 60c; selects, 52c. homestead act. “ From the records Pouitry—Hens, 13@15c; springs, 15 obtainable,” said Mr. HofT, “ it would @17c per pound; turkeys, Jive, 2Of« appear that desirable homestead lands 23c; dressed, 23@27c; ducks, 13@18c; are scarce in Oregon, especially in the geese, ll@ 1 2 c. part lying west of the Cascades.” Veal—Fancy— 116dpi 1 ¿c per pound. Of the 13,942,348 acres of surveyed Pork— Fancy, 12fal2£c per pound. lands only 257,713 acres, or about 18 Vegetables — Artichokes, 75c@ l. 10 ner cent, are situated in Western Ore per dozen; tomatoes, 75c@$1.25 per gon, and a very small percentage of crate; cabbage, 75c@$2.00 per hun this area is suitable for practical dred; peppers, 6@7c per pound; egg-, homesteading. Many Oregon counties show an in We vnould be thankful that everybody who pulls a wishbone and gets plant, 6@ 8c; lettuce, $2.60; cucumbers, ; $1041.50 per box; celery, 65@76c per crease in the public land area, and of the long piece doesn't get his or her wish. dozen; pumpkins, lc per pound; this total 24,822 acres lie west of the squash, l@ l£ c per pound. Cascade mountains and represent en lb* hxiked nt the wounded wing, then ner, captain," nnd Hob found he had Potatoes — Oregon, buying price, 1 tries that have been canceled for non s c r a t c h e d bis head a moment, mid then walked Into u hornets’ nest. They took $1.40 @ 1.50 per hundred, country j fulfillment of statutory requirements, was oft to the the two to a cabin a little hack from points; sweets, $2.75 per hundred. or relinquished for the reason that Onions— Oregon buying prices, $2.60 they were found untenable for home cuhln on a run, the pike mid a«ked the hoy a few ques «butting the sta tions, without gaining any Information. per sack, country points. stead purposes. Green Fruits— Apples, new, 60cfa$2 ble door behind Nor did he loose his hold on Yank, In the high plateau regions of East h I m. When he though the bird struggled to be free. A per box; pears, $ 1@ 1.50; grapes, $1@ ern and Central Oregon, where irriga 2; casabas, l j c ; cranberries, $10.50 tion and dry farming methods are used returned he went black-browed giant entered. " T h e r e 's n Yank @ 12.50 per barrel. and enlarged homestead act applies, to work with ban- Hops— 1916 crop, 9(0,12c per pound. there is abundant opportunity for set duges. He may up on the ridge Wool — Eastern Oregon, fine, 25@ tlement and entry, and it is in this re not huve been in a cabin thnr, 27c; coarse, 33@34c; valley, 33c. gion that the great bulk of the home much of a sur and a hundred of Mohair—35@45c per pound. stead settlement has taken place dur geon or n bone- 'em yonder on the Cascara bark—Old and new, 5£c per ing recent years. setter, but what tother side.” pound. "Y o u fellahs h e lucked III «kill Cattle— Steers, prime, $6.75@ 7.30; lie made up In make a ride for It good, $6.40@ 6.76; common to fair, $5@ Grants Pass is Host to good Intention«. nt sundown," said 6.00; cows, choice, $5.25@ 6; medium Meanwhile his en the captain, “und Sugar Beet Growers to good, $4.50@ 5; ordinary to fair, thusiasm regard grab thut Yank. $3.50@ 4; heifers, $4@ 6; bulls, $3@ Grants Pass— John Mills, of Talent, ing the Thanks They are the fel 4.25; calves, $4@ 7.50. won the title of the “ banner sugar giving feast rath lahs thut hung Hogs—Prime, $9.25@ 9.75; good to beet grower” at the beet growers’ cel er oozed away Jed Speed. We'll Cautious Knock on prime mixed, $8.25@ 9; rough heavy, ebration held in Grants Pass Saturday. have a little Imag from him. the Cabin Door. $8@ 8.25; pigs and skips, $8@ 8.25. He reported a crop of 28 tons per acre, our "If It’s all the in’ party Sheep— Lambs, $8@ 8.75; yearlings, yielding a gross return of $154 per selves.” same to yon, rna," lie said that night. wethers, $7@ 7.50; old wethers, $6.25 acre, the cash outlay being only $29.79 What could Bob “I’d n-Just us sixm have bacon fer din @ 6.50; ewes, $5@ 5.50. per acre. do to warn his fu- ner tomorrow." Beet growers and prospective beet "All right, sonny," the mother laugh ther? Itun for It Familiar Figures in' growers from all of Southern Oregon T h a t himself? ed and agreed. And that 1« how Yank the Neighborhood. Mayor Threatens to Sell Bread gathered in Grants Pass as the guests hopeloxii. became n member of the Scott fuinlly. w a s at Cost to Break Up Trust of the city, 600 farmers and their Hardly ' For Yank he was named. To Southern Then he thought of Yank. partisans It was a term of opprobrium, knowing why, he let go his hold. I Tacoma— “ A mayor of Cincinnati wives coming by special trains from as but to Ilob a term of affection—so ev There was a squawk and a Hut- j broke the potato trust there by ship far north as Oakland and from Ash ter, n man at the door wus nearly j ping in and selling potatoes at cost. land on the south. erybody wus satisfied. Including the local people 2000 men Hy gund financiering In the spring knocked from his feet, nnd a feathered i I am going to break the bread trust in and women got their first view of the Mrs. Scott wus able to udd u small thing that half ran and half flew made Tacoma by the same plan,” said May inside of the factory, through which flock of fowls to the Scott ixisseHstons, for the pike and the woods beyond. they were piloted by the officials of or Fawcett as he sat in his office and “He got away!’’ "Thnr goes your j including some turkeys. With these the Utah-Idaho Sugar company. The I Yank mingled, not without a tinge of dinner, captain,” and a half-dozen | explained what three loaves of bread factory was in full operation and was condescension. He never did recover shots ull came nt the same instant. As meant on his desk. He had previously slicing beets at the rate of 600 tons > the use of that wing, hut he could run for the boy, he poured outdoors with per day, while a sack of sugar was be like a dog, using the giwxl left wing ns the rest nnd plunged Into the woods issued a statement denouncing the high ing put into the warehouse every 40 cost of bread in Tacoma and announced a plane now anil then to lift him to hack of the cabin. seconds. I the top of a fence. If Olive Chunute, Two hours later n turkey, both of that he was planning to sell bread at Upon the factory grounds the visi | the Inventor of the aeroplane, hud seen whose wings droop»*d now, the left one cost in the city hall, if this was nec tors were escorted through the feeding \ Yank, we might have had that lnven- stained with blood, fluttered Into the essary to break local bread prices. pens where 6teers were being fattened i tlon a half century before wo did. Scott clearing. To go to the boy wns upon beet pulp while farmers were “ This big loaf here,” said the may i Yank showed no disposition to leave the father’s llrst thought, to go for help seen loading tons of the pulp to be j the Scott place, seeming to prefer the the second and better one. It was a or, indicating what is now a 15-cent hauled to their farms for feeding to | good corn to woodland pickings. bit risky, hut over the ridge he went loaf in size, “ weighs 20 ounces. I fattening stock and to milch cows. It was seldom that any word or ru and down the mountainside. will sell this bread, fresh, at two At noon, after inspection of the fac- mor trickled through from Hob’s-fa - Bob circled nnd crossed the pike a j loaves for 15 cents. That is.40 ounces. I tory, the visitors were guests of the j tlier, and then there was a silence of ndlc above. On a white stone by the I while the local bakers offer only 26 city at dinner, the hundreds being fed 1 months that left the Scott household road he saw n drop of red. "Well, they ounces for 15 cents, This smaller loaf at the Commercial club. 1 very solemn Indeed. The sympathies hit him but didn’t git him," he said. is a full pound and will sell for 5 of the neighbors were Southern; hut. Thnt evening. Just as the sun dipped cents. I»»* It recorded to their credit, they to the West, there was unother hor Cranberry Crop is Cut. “ Flour is a little more than 4 cents treated the Seotts with Just ns much nets’ nest on the ridge. But this time a pound and that is the principal in Marshfield—North inlet, the cran- kindness ns If the head of the family It was the enemy thut walked into it. gredient of bread. A pound of flour berry producing area of Coos county, had not gone Into the Union army. Hut There wns time for only a few shots. will make considerable more than a has only 25 per cent of its normal crop when the guerrillas began to operate Hut the guerrilla captain heard them in pound of bread because the latter is this season. Some fine berries are In the valleys below, there wns renson the valley below and decided thnt It mostly water. It will take less than being marketed here. Growers are re for some uneasiness, regardless of would be well to move on, leaving his a cent to make a loaf of bread and cut ceiving $3.50 a bushel, and it is doubt- one’s sympathies. missing men to Join him ns best they ting out the delivery cost and selling ful if any cranberries will be exported One morning. Just nt the break of could. at cost, I can sell it at these prices. this fall. Reports of shortages every dawn, there was a cautious knock on But they never did. Next night, 20 This bread is as good as any made in where is likely to increase the selling the cuhln door. Trembling with appre miles away, the enptuin turned to one Tacoma, and is made by one of the price to $4 or $4.50 before the winter hension. the family roused Itself. The of his men nnd asked: cleanest bakeries in the state. is over. latch lifted, hut the man who enter**d "I»o you reckon that fool bird hud “ I will first endeavor to have the There are about 20 acres in cran was clothed In blue. Bob could scarce anything to do with It?" housewives make their own bread to berries at North inlet, and instead of ly believe thnt this red-bearded man As for Yank, the bnttle-sonrred vet break the prices, and if this does not harvesting the usual amount of from was his father. • eran. what wns one wing more or less? affect it, 1 will begin selling bread at I 3500 to 4000 bushels the ranchers will His story wns short nml soon told. He lived to see pence return to the cost from the city hall.” not obtain much more than 1000 bush He had been wounded nnd separated mountains, nnd to all Tennessee, nnd els. The shortage is attributed to late from his regiment. When he recov to tin* nation. And you may be sure frosts and the presence of water on 29 Cows Are Condemned. ered. he wns assigned, quite willingly, he never played the principal pnrt In the vines for too long a period, that is, to n detail to round up the guerrillas; any Thanksgiving dinner. Marshfield, Or.— Dr. J . L. Masson, until after the blooms were out. and, us he was famlllnr with the vi ( C o p y r i g h t. 191fi, W r i t e r n N * w » p a p o r U n io n .) deputy state veterinarian, of Myrtle cinity he was now scouting on their Point, condemned 29 cows in the dairy Farmers Use Cars More. trull. He wns to lie quiet thnt day, herd belonging to Clarence and Henry gutherlng such Information ns he Schroeder, of Arago, following a tu Albany—Automobiles are being used could, and return to Ills comrades that berculin test, which developed four more and more by farmers in this vi- night. suspects in addition to those which , cinity in bringing farm produce to "I tell you. pop." cried Holt. " I’ll go gave reaction. The Schroeder Broth town. One farmer residing near Al down below and see whnt I onn see ers have applied tor slaughter under bany surprised people on the streets and let you know I” It nppenled to the inspection, and the cattle will probably one day this week by driving into the hoy’s desire for adventure and to the be killed within the next week. In city with a wagonload of potatoes, tied soldier’s desire for Information. So, the meantime they are quarantined. to the rear of the car. Others have after some reluctance nnd ninny cau The herd is in the heart of the best hauled sacks of potatoes to the city tions, the hoy wns allowed to go. To dairying district in the county. piled up in the car. Clover seed and divert suspicion, for the turkey would Under such circumstances the own other produce has been hauled the attract more attention than the hoy, ers of condemned cattle are paid $25, same way. One man recently brought Y'ank wns permitted to accompany him. half by the state and half by the coun a calf to town in his car. Garden Thanksgiving. The hoy nnd the bird were fntulllar fig ty, while the meat, if passed by the truck is frequently hauled to the city T h e cid er sp arkles brigh t and clear. ures In the neighborhood. Some of the garden T h e corn Is husked, T h an k sg iv in g 's near; inspector, and the hides, are the prop in this manner. Three miles from home a voice T h e doughnut hour o f life draw s nigh erty of the owners. ers, however, have regular auto trucks. laughed, "Here’s a turk fer your din And golden glow s the pum pkin pie.