lew» Notes f r o m The Great Outdoors AJI O ver Oregon Gleaned by the W estern Newsapor Union for Busy People Need Home-Grown Seed for Success W here Bread, Meat, Clothing, H ealth and Vigorous H u m an ity a re P ro d u ced Italian and Chilean Varieties Prove Unsatisfactory in Most Parts. Valuable H ints if be decided by D. 0 . Woodworth, protein feeds as tankage, otlmeal. or T h is Is a Coyote pea meal, Me., aa of the same geo J. W. B urkhart and Ed Shoel. eral nature and composition. With Older Girls’ conference was or- (PrspsiM ky ta. UaUwl Mat«* A cted on in Tim e Of Affrlaullkurw.) ««at ___ to tho girl» of the Cornelius Mrs. Cade, Mrs. Henry Ste- this assumptloa. calculation »how» that and Cougar Year oomnnjnlty reeentiy. More general use of homegrown i wart, Mfs. J. M. Dickson, Mrs. 1 pound of meal to 3 pounds of milk clovar seed, ln the opinion of the T. J. Doyle, HO, resident of Linn P ru n e Blossom Blight... S. B. Holt, Mre. D. O. Wood- gives a nutritive ratio of about 1 to 414—• proportion of protein to carbo­ Bears H ave Met D isaster United States Department of Agricul­ county IB years, died at his farm P each L eaf C url...O r­ I worth, Mrs. W alter Hense, Mrs. hydrate ture. would do more than any other ideal for growing pigs Just af home near Sodaville. Alice Byers, Mrs. Ethel Cald­ in T h eir F o ra y s N ear egon Clubs W in one thing toward solving the problem ter weaning and for tn-plg sows during the Sooth-Kelly Logging camps well and E. R. Allen. H. H. the last month of pregnancy. As the of red clover failure ln this country Brownsville. “ hove Weodllng were closed down on Eastm an, E. G. Pugh, Roy Cox, growing plgx get heavier relatively I f msthods can be found by which (By 0. A C. Experts.) account of deep snow. A. W. Moreland, S. G. Simons less milk to meal will be required, small acreages of domestic red-clover A. C. Armstrong went to bis seed can be conveniently harvested, Where ____ ___ Several virulent oases of tnfluenia blossom and twig ___ and V. A. Carter have charge since the nearer to finishing the mar­ have broken out among the Indians blight of Oregon prunes, ch eo of th at im portant featui'e, the ket pig gets the less protein ln propor­ ranch Thursday and found that and hulled for home uee, more depend- tion to fattening feeds ore needed ln coyote» had killed »even lam b« for a“ ®* C0Uld ”* pot upon of the Klamath reservation. ries, and apricots has been se ri-! dinner. «“PPlF of his feed. him .„ ,4 „ i 7 home-grown seed and less would need Samuel B. Martin, Multnomah coun­ ous In the past, special atten- him aod m a n y for hi« neiahbors I to be imported. y^ior his neighbor» For practical use the amount of ty auditor for the last 14 years, died tion to spraying them should f>e meal mixture needed to each gallon He came home the next day, The College Gives us Clover Turned Under. given this year. Where the di­ at the family home In Portland. of skim milk (or buttermilk) to supply ranch is at Oakland, It Is known, says the department. sease has been severe, p arti­ The American Legion posts of the the proper balance ln the ration for ' a Smutty S tory market Judging from the report» th a t that throughout the country, east of pigs 1» given as follows: mld-WIllamette valley held a district cularly on apricots or other very the Allegheny mountains at least, susceptible varieties, a number convention in Corvallis Saturday. ▲ m uuat wf m eal par have reached the Enterprise of­ there are every year thousands of taJio n aklna m ilk Up tfl 10 WA« Kg . The 28th annual convention of the of sprays will be required if the A Sim ple Oat T rea tm en t fice, this is a banner year foi acres of good second-growth clover ............. « ltw. 10 to I I w e e k s .. ............... HU As soon Umatilla County Sunday School asso­ season is at all wet. 11 to 14 w eeks . coyotes, cougars and ’bears in that 1» turned under lnatead of being ............... I lba. Gives Good R esults harvested for seed, because ln tho»e buds open use ciation was held In Pendleton Satur­ as the winter Nut®— Thia table does not refer to Oregon. I n i n r v »n j , . I n®lghborhood» no butlers are to b t had day. Bordeaux 4-4-50 or even strong­ the amount of feed required dally by ^ erds by und the * " “*«• u " « Last week agricultural college the pig, but lim ply to the proportions c o u ^ r e I CkS The new Polk county directory es­ er, covering every bud and twie ougars has been complained of “nd ««v» »rod economically, i f The second application with t i e Kutei prise readtrg of milk and meal to use to make the timates Eugene’s population at 19, in various parts of the state« ,he®« farmers could save tbelr own a uew and economical 'ma­ best use of skim milk ss feed for mar­ same m ixture is best ju st a s i X “ •00, nearly 100 per cent increase since coyotes have been killing more seed’ the drala on the stocks ket pigs. the 1920 census. soon as the first blossoms are imut jor use in killing wheat sheep, lambs, calves and chick- r*pregeDt®<1 br thslr requirements Thia week there cornea to opening. The third is w'hen the ' The Oregon state board of bortl ens than usual, and bears about t ° uld ** m“terlaUy decreased, and hand the following regarding smut Excellent Supplements culture appointed Charles A. Cple its trees are in full bloom. Brownsville a t least have made n produc*d 10 th® wh* # o a ts: secretary, to succeed the late Coloael Increase Flow of Milk’ - a n y raids on orchards w i t h ^ | L 'e’ £ £ ^ X T s u ? ^ £ Peach leaf curl in Oregon When most farmers are making Henry E. Dosoh. I f row» have not been fed «ulfideut suits disastrous to themselves daman d. cannot be prevented or control!- ready to sow oats, they know whether protein to meet the requirements for Dr. H. 8. Oa KJeid of pondietoo w m I td a fter the leaves have begun For at least fifteen yeare the United or not smut Is present In their seed, thslr milk production, the addition of ¿ ¡n J l ° Zen uor two have t**1' •ppotptud Umatilla county concur to j to appear. Before this time but a considerable number of farmers killed there by faim era driven States has been a heavy Importer of cottonseed meal w ill probably Increase fill tho vacancy caused by the death Bordeaux m ixture spray Will do not know how stgniflcant oat smut tbs amount of milk which they will u> hunting to protect their red-clovar seed. M om of this seed hae of Dr. J. T. Brown. come from Italy and France. Evidence IA Losses from this disease nre com­ produce and consequently the amount fruit. give complete protection. Florists from a Lx states and Brit monly as high as 5 to 10 per cent. of butterfat the cows produce. Cows ¥ et the game commission re­ 1» accumulating to show that the More Oregon girls and boys, Italian seed la not »atlafactory fbr use They may run less, or may destroy 23 that are not giving any more than 1 to Ish Columbia met In Portland Monday their c,ub P ^ je c ts in to 50 per cent of the crop. The actuul 1*4 gallons of milk, or one-half pound ports bears decreasing in num ln America. Co-operative trials which and Tuesday for the annual eon ven ber so rapidly th a t it recom­ the department has been conducting »J ob of the Northwest Flurtota* aseo 1JZ4 than ever before. Other losses from smut are not often ac­ of butterfat per day, can get what nu­ ¡^cwds were in the number ot curately observed ln the field on ac­ trients they need by eating all the al­ mends a closed season on bears, with experiment stations ln the Mid­ edatlon. dle West have shown that the plants count of the early spread of the smut falfa hay and Klage that they want tô ih« end that Fire louses fa Oregon, exetMive of 100 per cent clubs, in amount or *u»y re m a iu °ll^n I froIn Italian seod are much more likely masses. The casual observer Is wont, Ctows prsdudng mors then this amount species taro-eta f iu « H .h ,«> wlntMkiU than those fro » A m V Portland. daring tho month of Feb­ money won in scholarships and therefore, to underestimate the dam­ of milk will need some grain to sup­ live ruary aggregated »8^259, »eeofiUng prizes and in larger attendance age und lay the poor yields to other port their mltk production. .The fol for sportsm an can »rod, that they are more guiceptt- to a report prepared by the state fire at th e club summer sessions at causes. lowing grain ration, fed In the propor­ , ,, en ttley ?O out to shoot and ble t0 certain diseases and that they the college. Oregon led the 11 marshal. With but a small amount of ttyuble, tion of 1 pound of the grain to each 4 KM something. I give a Knaller crop even when western states in d u b enroll­ and an expenditure not exceeding 2 pounds ef milk the cows produce will A noble sportsm an is a m a n th* ,tand u «Xherwlro apparently sat- with 6047. Washington cents per bushel, any farmer can treat do very well: Six hundred pounds of who goes hunting to g ratify hJs lBf,ctwry CKieens of Warrenton noted an ment Unaatlafnetory Send, sinsndtntet to the Warrenton oharter was second with 4558. Oregon his seed oats with formalin solution corn chop, 200 pounds of bran and 100 desire to kill. 1 and eliminate the smut In one season. pounds of cottonsesd meal I f the far aa the Investigation» of the whleh will teoreant- the number of ciub money earned in the pro A farm er who kills a deer or department have progrewed It waa treatment consists ln sprinkling cows test more than 4 per cent they olty eommlaeloBars from three to five. 8‘nt1afOr ™e , year was $49-' The the grain with a solution, made by should be fed this grain mixture In the » pheasant for the sake of the found that Italian seed la practically The vote woo 142 tor to 82 arottc.it 8'n / 9' l i CIub winnings in mixing 1 pint (1 pound) of 40 per proportion of 1 pound to each 8 pounds meat for his fam iiy i3 an ignoble everywhere unsatisfactory and that a n d p r iie s w e re cent formalin with 40 gallons of water. Swvbpty two per oept of those pay i T w w S . ” “ of milk thHt they produce. pot hunter. French and Chilean seed, whUe giv­ log taa upoii inoosaes for 1924 made H Is applied at the rate of one gallon The more useless a m an 's'o c ­ ing good yields In some parts, 1» un­ to the bushel of grain, the grain being Orchard Fertilization, •‘“ resent* In fun, ac<-ordlog to figures satisfactory ln Iowa, Minnesota and Wet mash, fed with the regu- shoveled cupation is, the more noble he is. elsewhere thoroughly during the appll- oo»pAed by Clyde Q. Huntley, ooi where the winter« are se­ in gram ration, causes rapid An Am erican farm er, asked vere. cation. The grain Is piled after treat­ Pruning and Spraying leetor of Internal rovenne for Oregon evelopment in growing out In almost all section» of the country by an im m igrant if we had no Means of harvesting and saving the 8W* fbr the Qoaatrttollon of wt> bioilem for an early m arket. ment and covered with wet cloth or . v-aa* iv lllf li ftt t. canvas. After 8 to 12 hours the grain w h .re there I . any fruit groyn. there aristocrats here, inquired w hat seed from the numerous small acre­ yrohUkWtely 66 miles of road will be 'I'L. 1 he wet mash should be fed two 1» spread out to dry.—H. K Vasey, are run down orchards that can be th a t meant. ages of red clover Instead of lmport- dppsl^ered at a meeting ad the glnje | ing seed would do much to bring the or three times a day. Ordinary Colorado Agricultural College. Fort made profitable by pruning, aitravlmr Gentlemen who do not work W»hwsy cptngiiggton in PortWad and fertilisation. A . an eiampie | clover crop back into a dependable «1 y mash mixed with milk n Collin», Colorado. for a living,” was the reply. Thuredny aath nd^ioA with returns of his oxpondl- the yield in fruit 09 barrel per tree mission exists, would go into our over a long period of years has ad­ mtUrmilk to make a batter. tWMe dnrtng the primary campaign Skim Milk, Buttermilk and The value of thia Increase waa »247' sheep-raising laM Jane. districts and hunt versely affected the yields of all other Oregon has been added by the and the coat of the fertiliser 21 centa' involved In tho rotation. Whey Are Most Highly coyotes, they would find gam» crops A traot of 8» acres near Otadstnae. “is ¿ f ^P®8' 1*0“ to the le,02,ni , an “verHie Increased net value The Importance of home-grown seed hroween Mbldrutn rehtion and Fern list of ¿8 states whose cow own- th a t would test their ability as Is especially great ln the southern and of $2.20 per tree. Prized for HogB. hap been sold fty Mrs j . p. ‘‘., 3 “r c recognized in thè na­ In the 14 demonstrations. 934 tree» hunters. south sartors part of the clover belt, fhdthpeop of Portland for 989.000 to tional 300-pound herd honor roll were fertilised, and the Increased value wbere tbs anthracnose disease Is com­ •k® Ritter Drive Auto Park oompaay *o qualify for the honor the mon and often very destructive. Here Anioof all of the fpods used for pi® of the fruit over the erot ef the tn of a small trout of putt an average yearly production of as growth stimulators than the dairy The 1 follotking bulanced grain ra of resistance to the disease. He land (or tohvehlp Purposes near not less than 300 pounds of hut. by-produets-aknn milk, buttermilk und Jolting Bee Hives Will tlona to feed dairy cows cost approxl A lg o ty »uijjprijidd lip. *n eaecu- tei fat as reported by a cow test * hey. Of these, skim milk Is In most Likely Bre-k the Combs mately the same. They ‘ are recom T H E MARKETS »ive «M er l M 0 M ’ i n ^helnipenda mTi0“* ii1 * tD °“t commonly used and Io moving bros move theta In a mended for supplementing cornluage ,4, n a t i o n for the current year Incidentally the most valuable as a 4 t l « « the s4ere«nry of tie Interior. ending pnor to July 1, Z Wagon with springs or an auto truck and alfalfa hay, and should be fed at Foreland feed. The plgrnan who has an abund­ .X? Most Valuable Feed for Swine Th® ergot cqntattn approximately niae « fe Klamath <«ouo«s of Portland has het been a member of the state fish commission since January io. accord •ng la a legal opinion rendered by the atturney general. Thia was the date on which Oovernor Pierce sent a letter to Dr Hoes notifying him that he had been removed from the com Mt»slon. tfce »action of The Dallee-Callfer every precaution being taken not te to be made of Its excellent qualities. Experiments without number bare been carried out to determine the value of aklm milk In terms of meal and It la now pretty generally conceded that alx pounds of thia product has an approxl mate feeding value equal to one pound of a suitable pig meal. .. But JJ11* *• only ■ P«rt of the quee- At the special meeting of the tlon. The optimum proportion, of meal h m ^ / e T y C,Ub at H ar'>s- to mak Is too often forgotten, though I'Uig Saturday preparations were from a nutritional point of view it Is made for participation in the aa Important aa Is Irs meal equivalent value. Title feed being high ln pro­ Jersey jubilee, May 23. Mr. Tucker explained h i s , tein has a very narrow nutritive ratio but one and a half pant tuberculosis testing bill, which of oontetnlng carbohydrate to each part of pro- the governor, at the request of teln, whereas an Ideal pig ration car­ oekgations o of f farmers, vetoed, j ries from 4 to 8 - parts of carbohydrate ------------- <--«- on account of the cost it involv- products to sa- t, other ed. nt Protoln. In other words the unllm- D . o W o o d w n r f b __ j n . " ** of •klm m,lk« «cellent feed Burkhart 1 ’ *,n<* t»*m»(h It does not provide a prop Khart were named a com -f *rtr balanced ration for any class of nuuee on program for the jub- i « * •* 11 do<* Bo’ io » » * that since a pound of lye to six or eight aal- dnr / Water> or the lye maV be added to the dormant lime sul­ fur spray. P re p a re for Ju b ilee Z Feeding Baby Chicks Chloago, BI.— In one of the most diaatlc breaks ever known, the wheat market Saturday suff.rod a not loss ol m. much as 181» oenta with May wheat down to 21.8814. as against |«2.0S% only a fa- weak» ago. Rye. corn and oata »bared In the losses, Rya, 16% coats; corn. coats, and oata more than 5 cent». I Baby chicks must not be fed under b00r» fron> the time they are hatched, declared A. Q. Philipp of Purdue university. The y„|k of the •gg which the chick take, m t. It , body before It I, hatched. I. provided by nature to furnish food daring ,hm ro v » a f ' ‘a” U • ddl,lon“ ' ’ <* • given diarrhea , nd otller troubles are likely to reault Seattle W be»^-%-b,te. western whlto. hard ; p? ; : VEAL POULTRY EGGS CAPONS HOGS Reference. Bank of California P A G F X o<1’ mor* -*• »•ceooartiy bet a 5*r,,lB •“><’«■* of rerbobv- dates foods, as aborts, barley, or corn mrolo, are nocoaoary for the beet re Salta In order te state definitely what a mounts of meat aad milk should be tiowl to obtain a given natrttlve ratio It would bo ne.«eoaary to know the kind of meal u,ed In spire of tho fact, however, that a wide variety of fee«!« are seed for hog feeding, the basts of the majority ot pig meals In oastorn Canada la shorts and barley meal Fur. therm si e moot of tho other meals used carry a very similar rotnposltloa to the sliortn-barloy mixture. For all practical purposes, then. It 1» poaalble . to meal . . conalder any ordinary ____ * * combination of meals naod for pig u bluoatum. U. nla highway in the northern part of Klamath «oawy which U untrnprov ilee and Mrs. B urkhart to have •d. has broom. a M l read TeMs. the charge of the musical feature The Linn county location will maximum of which M ,« for a four wheeled rehtcl" will be charged for all vgblrlro and stock passing any of the M i gatas along this road by George « M Fred Duka, stage com P*ny proprietor». Secretory of the laterlor Work will l * v . Waehlogtoa. fk C . about M.roh * M th Dr Kllwood Mead, comml. sloner of reclamation, for the south west, and reaching the Pacific * ~ i(. « '» w ant your produce and gUa r . w ill go a or north as the Klamath n n toe i ho big best m a rk e t p rice . Irvlgallo. project In Oregon for an O u t business o«tabli«bed 44 ye ar. Inspection/ Hu will reaoh Klamaih •to. about April 8. (Continued on page 5) the rate of seven pounds for each w h T ” “ 1 \ Rard "rKlt8' W T#: pound of butterfat produced. white, nerthera spring, hard winter The first ration 1s COO pounds corn- an wostorn w hit., wegtera meal and 400 pounds bran. The sec­ > 1 .0 0 . ond consists of 500 pounds corn and H sy-^ A |f,ifa, *18 60j?19 ton; valley eob meal, 400 pounds ground oata, and mothy. 8 i9 ® 20; , ajlurn bees any more than poaalble. It 1, 100 pounds cottonseed meal. The first * dangerous for the bee. to be disturbed ration, with corn at 21 per buahel— al­ timothy, 224^28. to great activity wbUe th . weather 1. lowing 12 centa per hundredweight for B utterfat-4T c delivered Portland cola. e (rinding and bran at 21.25 per hun­ Eggs— Ranch. 25028c. Cheese-Prices f. 0. b. Tillamook: thro thUyh r b7 * ' be *bgohlt*|r »tire dredweight-coats 8185 per hundred­ that the bees have no disease Each weight. The stAond ration—allowing Triplets. 28o; loaf, 20c per lb. shipment should bear . certificate the same price for corn and with Cattle—Steors, good, 28.2608.75. w U h rn 'fio " ith'’y bee0 (round oats at 91.83 per cwt. and cot- 14 oo° » ' - Med1«“ to choio», »12.000 within «0 day» «od found free of dis tonseed meal at 12.43 per cwt.— totals eu«e< 21.08 per cw t Sheep— Lambs, medium to choie». 211016. Chicago Wheat Market Break Severe. Accumulations of lichens and ance ed fresh aklm milk available Is Jolt them Jolting the hives Ig Hkelv "?°‘s s, ln o,d and neglected or­ piX" 7 th* °“8 Wh° hM th* be,t duln« to break the comb», which would ruin chards or in nut plantings which L'e ‘‘ p * tW* according to S k im M ilk P r o p e r ly U sed. E S. Prevoat, extension bee specialist «ire not sprayed frequently may But aklm milk. Uke any other feed Be very careful and not -Hsturh the lx* quickly cleaned up bv u sin i should be properly used If the most It Ç "*» brick, Washington Young America. 21022«, reduce your present high cost of feed- * Spokane. ® i2 g U ie Alfalfa Meal Molasses * J T his is A lfa lfa M eal and pure Cane M o - > Mz 4 lasses. A really good dairy feed « , fre sh shiprnenl just received k E rim e jtro rs . 27.2607.76. Try sweet dover and . gret f t * r and ,ou won’t re- •Wreared , t T h T ¿ a Í f o ? 7 ^ r , 7 . / ü Z* Mz • Ä n n X L * " “ í O. W . F R U I _______ 0/ "•v e he»» ecun,y One ow 01 th„ . w„ n* ' W ~k 6roc* ’ » d C r e * » U T ;» '? ‘ hfW yrtle c-rero »„«j ]g fron i 'l«4»»ted that throe wíu p» ,»-» 1» ao­ ût IS .Ote^oobc