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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1914)
HOME AXD FARM MAGAZINE SECTION 15 Late Gossip and News From 0. A. C. Corvallis Students "Make Good" at New York Views and Reviews From All Departments of College. Mole Skins Are Valuable, Say Experts Experiments by Department of Agriculture Demonstrate Domes tic Variety as Good as European for Skins. A GROUP of boys from the electrical Engineering courses of 0. A. C. are finding instruction, practice and employment in tho great electrical works of New York, the largest of the kind in the world. Several other form er students from the Oregon eellege are in the employ of the company, sta tioned at various parts of the United States and other countries. These boys an meetiug the competition of the best product of most all leading colleges and universities of the country, and what is most important, they are meeting it suc cessfully. The students now at the central plant of the general electrical work in Schenectady, on the Mohawk River, are members of the graduating classes of 1910, '11, '12 and '13. They have formed an Oregonian club and live to gether at beautiful Lake Ballston, eight miles out fro mthc works on a car line. They have named their cottage the "Oregonian," and were first of all the students who make their homes at the lake to organizo and maintain an alumni club for its members. The company for which these college men are working has maintained stu dent training courses for many years. Every year a limited number of stu dents especially qualified in their col lege work and adequately recommend rd by the college officers, are accepted for training, practice and service, if competent. All that are accepted for training are admitted on positively equal terms ami assigned to the course technically known as the Students' En gineering course. In order to receive advancement students must do a mini mum of one yeiir's work in this course, and can do much niorc, depending upon the nature of the specialization they undertake. The chief value of this pre liminary Course is disciplinary, although a good living wage is paid from the time tho student enters upon his work. At the end of each six-month period students who remain arc given.a stated increase in salary. When this preparatory work is fin ished by any student he is assigned either to the industrial or to the com mercial end of the practical engineering business with the company. Both phases of the practical business as car ried on by the company are highly spe cialized. The student who has won his position in either of these fields selects his specialty and goes into further training, lie never quits It until he is complete master of all its complicated details, after which he is regularly em ployed by the company and may con sider that his position is permanent. Qualifications for salesmanship are equally exacting with those for opera tion. Should tho -employe elect to han dle switch-boards as his specialty he must master all the technique of the operator in order to act profitably as a demonstrator. He must know the sources and nature of material going into their construction, the cost of manufacture and handling, and avail able market territory. He must like wise inform himself of supply condi tions, the goods of competitors, and all other practical branches of this comnli catcd business of selling switch boards. It takes a great deal of time and effort to accomplish all the company requires. but the remuneration is both liberal and certain. Aside from the dozen students now at the leading works of the company many older men from 0. A. C. have gone out into one of these specialized fields of electrical business. The fol lowing men have reported their pres ent places of labor, according to II. I. Smith, of the class of 1912, who has recently returned to Schnectady from a visit to nis parents at Marshfield and to the '14 commencement exercises at tho college: II. R. Zimmerman, '08, of The Dalles, at Kansas City; II. X. Probst, '10, of Albany, in Montana; J. C. Planking tou, '10, of The Dalles, at San Fran cisco, and J. D. Carnegie, '11, at Minne apolis. The students now in the shops of the general company are the following: J. Gordon, 'in, of Portland; F. E. Kwrrt, '10, of Portland; .1. D.V'arnegie (assigned); II. Pfandoefer, '11, of Salem; II. P. Cady, ,'11 of Corvallis; F 0. McMillan, '12, of Salem; H. E. Me Lean, '12, of Wallowa; H. I. Smith, ''12, of Marshfield; W. DuMolin, '12, of Corvallis; G. W. Morris, '13, of Cor vallis; R. R. MeKenzie, '13," Lostine. and S. R. Cohen '13, of Portland. "Students train at these great elec trical works from most .of the leading. colkges ot the country, -, said Mr. Smith. "Several other schools of the West, among them -the, University of Oregon, University of Washington, ttashiugtou State College and the Uni versity of California are represented 'Iho latter in particular has a large delegation, although the 0. A. C. is most largely rtpreneuted of the Coast schools "We find, too, that our students are as well trained for the work as those of any other school. When students are first received it is on recommendations alone that the officers of the company must rely for- information, about the iuness oi ttte mutfejits, and during the first year there is no distinction made. After that, however, students are ad vanced on their own merits, and here as elsewhere in life, the personal equation is the important factor. "The Oregon group was recommend ed for the work bv Professor Hilla brand, who supplied lis with applica tion forms, and by other officers of the college. . Our company is very liberal and broad in its policy toward us, and students who show 'the qualifications may consider their employment pernia nent with good prospects for advance ment. It seems to me that this is the best practical work open to gradu utes. " VIEWS AND REVIEWS. ELF-FEEDERS for either fowls or swino arc easily and cheaply made and give excellent satisfaction when properly constructed. Aside from decreasing tho cost of labor, they are a great saving of time and of worry over tho fact that hand-tended animals must bo fed regularly two or more times a day. The use of self-feeders also saves feed by giving the animals a chance to balance their own rations, by pro viding it regularly, and by saving all the scraps that usually result . from hand feeding. Methods of constructing home-made self-feeders, accompanied by drawings and photographs, will be pub- lished from time to time in this jour nal. Apple scab is reported to be greatly on the iueTease in some of the fruit districts of Oregon. While this seems to indicate that orcliardists are losing ground in their fight against this pest, the conclusion is not at all inevitable. The season seems to have been unusual ly favorable to it in. some parts of the state, and control measures were applied too late, if at all. Growers are more thoroughly aroused ovor this enemy than formerly and doubtless make fuller i p thg dajuaga, At ilia same time it is gratifying to hear that the most systematic attempt ever made in the Northwest to ascertain the most successful control measure, for apple scab are now being carried on in a field test conducted jointly by the Lane County Horticultural Society and Pro fessor II. S. Jackson, plant pathologist of the Agricultural College. The experi ment is designed to test the effective ness of the standard sprays and the most effective means of applying them. When the information acquired in these experiments is brought to bear upon the pest under favorable conditions, it may be seen which way the battle is going. Hie establishing of vocational courses at the Agricultural College will open the doors of the institution to the peo ple of Oregon. These courses are de signed primarily to give opportunities for college training to those persons of tho state who feel the need of this training and are not in a position to get it by the usual degree courses. If they are desirous of entering degree courses, they can ordinarily find means of pro paring to do so in the local high schools and other institutions of learning. If they merely wish to secure the benefit of the training and study at college without reterence to college degrees, the , vocational courses are open doors through whieli they may enter. Tie J WINGto the gradually decreasing number of wild fur bearing ani . . mals, mole skins have found a ready market and are valuable com mercially according to Farmers' Bul letin 583, Department of Agriculture. It is significant to the lack of atten tion to small business matters, however, that American moleskins are not quoted or offered on the markets. All the skins used by American furriers are import ed from Europe. Auction lists of fur dealers in Lon don show that more than 3,000,000 mole skins were sold in 1911, 1912 and 1913. A small lot of American moleskins se cured by the Biological Survey, V. 8. Department of Agriculture, was pre pared and made up by an expert fur rier who pronounced them in every re spect eqnal or superior to European skins. It seems likely, therefore, that a new industry amounting to many thousands of dollars annually might be developed in this country. Five Recognized Groups. ' . In this country there are five recog nized groups of true moles, two of which are confined to the Pacific Coast and the other three arc distributed over the section east of the one hundredth meridian, extending frfim Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. In the latter dis tricts and in the greater part of Penn sylvania, Xew York and New England the common mole occurs with the Btar nosod mole and Brewer 's mole. The mole is so seldom seen, even by those who are faniiliar with its work, that it is often confused with other small creatures, particularly the shrew, the mole or meadom mouse, and te pocket gopher. However; it can be readily distinrnislied by its stent, short, front limbs ending in broad, rounded hands with palms turned ontward. It has a rather elongated body, close plush-like fur, a pointed snout, and a short tail. Neither eyes nor ears are in evidence. It is a creature of etrietly subterranean habits, " ' Mole. Are Disliked. . . ' It is believed commonly that the mole works only at regular periods each day, but direct observation taken in later summer and fall fall to substan tiate the. theory. The moles are dis tasteful and seldom eaten by domestic cats and dogs which have learned to catch them. Hawks and owls take small toll from tho mole tribe, as an examina tion of the stomach contents of oyer 2,000 of these birds disclosed the re mains of but 13 moles, 5 of which had been eaten by the red-tailed hawk, 4 by the red-shouldered hawk and one each by the broad-winged hawk, the barred owl, the great gra yowl and the screech owl. Stomachs Are Examined. From an examination of the stomach contents of 200 moles taken in all months of the year it was found that earthworms and white rubs constitute the bulk of the food. Beetles and their larvae, spiders, eentipedes, cocoons and puparia also form a part of the diet. Seed eoats of corn, wheat, oats and peanuts have been seldom found in stomachs of the moles. f Complaints of damage or depreda tions by moles are frequent and insis tent. However, in very many eases a thorough investigation would show that the smaller rodents which follow the mole's runways are responsible for the damage to corn and other cultivated seed products that grow under ground. Trap Efficient Destroyer. When it is desirable to destroy the mole the trap will be found to be tho most efficient means. So far all ex periments undertaken with the object of finding an acceptable poison bait have given negative results, as the very nature of the animal's food makes it difficult to secure a satisfactory sub stitute of live worms, grubs, and in sects. Moreover, the little animal seems to be shrewd and quick to sense tho danger in poisonous substances. There are a number of excellent mold traps on the market, most of which will give good results if properly set. There are the harpoon, the scissor-jaw and the choker types. Harpooning traps are designed to impale the mole in the ground by spring-driven spikes. The seissor-jaw 'traps are intended to be set astride the runway to gTasp the mole firmly -when he attempts to pass in either direction, and the choker trap has a set of wire loops that en circle the burrow when the trap is set. All three types are designed to be sprung by the same sort of mechanism, a trigger pan resting on a depressed portion of the mole ridge in such a way as to be lifted when the animal passes beneath. E XPRFCSSING the view that it is easy to dispose of first class pro ducts, but that the profit of the fruit and vegetable business depends very largely upon a utilization of the second and third class products. Pro feasors C, I. ".Lewis and W. S. Brown have isroed a new college bulletin call- led "Fruit and Vegetable By-Products, " m which they explain the conditions and processes of organizing and run ning by products factories. ,The highly important questions of the amount of money necessary, tho quan tity of products raised within tho pro posed by-products territory, and what kinds of plants to establish, are treat ed intimately from the point of view of the grower. "The question of what kind of plant should be put in cannery, Vinegar works, evaporator, or jelly factory cannot be answered off hand," says Professor Lewis. "There is undoubted ly a splendid field for all these manu facturing plants, tl wouldi be unwise, however, to try working all our low grades into any one of these forms. ' If we were to attempt to work all valu able produce into vinegar we should easily overstock the market. We must remember that there are only certain types of products that are adapted to each of the special uses. The ideal t6 which every association should work is first to handle as large a percentage of the product as is feasible in tho fresh state, to establish a canning factory that can handle large quantities of both vegetables and fruits, and to install an evaporator for the handling of all classes. Finally the vinegar -works should be, added. In other words wo should aim to have a plant so organ ized that nothing would go to waste, each plant supplementing the others." As as example of this method it is shown how peelings and cores from the eannery could be used in the vinegat works, or if more profitable, how the peelings eould be dried to excellent ad vantage Rnd later worked into jams and jellies. By a combination of plants . losses in all lines would be reduced to a minimum. - Because the success of the association for handling these products would de pend very largely upon the character of the contract entered into by .the growers this question is treated quite fully m the new bulletin and sample contracts are presented in the appea dix. Methods of organization are also treated quite fully so that the bulletin is of the greatest practical value to al producers who must face the profit and loss situation in their industry. Those, desiring copies may secure them by) writing to ti. v. jletzel, director, cor- vallis, Oregon, for Extension Series 2, No. 21. courses provide for one year of college work in agriculture, one in dairying, one in home-making, three years in in dustrial arts, five months in forestry and two years in business short course. What a wonderful opportunity this ofJ fers to people of Oregon who desire to fit themselves for doing their chosen work in the most efficient manner.' 0. A. C. may justly be called a college of the people, by the people and for 'the people, and its open' doors invite all who find the time and the means tot enter1. The foregoing course begins September 22, 1914. j Students of the Oregon Agricultural College are working at the forest nurs, eiry on the Sinslaw forest. The arrange ment is said to be mutually satisfactory since the students gain experience in, forest nursery practice and their ass sistance lowers the eost of nursery, work. j