Page Two Heppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon Thursday, November 27, 1941 Sheep Feeding Project Proves Wheat Unexcelled By WALTER HOLT, Umatilla County Agent That wheat is without a superior, corn included, as a grain for fatten ing animals has been conclusively proved by experiment stations quite generally scattered over this nation. Feeders, too, have demonstrated a superior quality of cattle, sheep and hogs fed with wheat as the prin cipal concentrate in the ration. Those who have been watching the pro gress of this grain are fully aware of the truths mentioned above. However, wheat has not become generally used in the fattening ra tions of the West in particular and it is apparent that the problem now is one of convincing livestock feed ers of its fattening value. Oregon State college recently published a bulletin showing how it would be possible to remove the wheat sur plus from the northwest by feeding it to fattening animals for consump tion along the Pacific slope. It seems only reasonable then to con elude that there should be a vigor ous campaign to vastly increase the utilization of northwestern wheat as feed for domestic animals. Most naturally, then, the Eastern Oregon Wheat league has taken the lead in an effort to show the farm ing public how practical is the wheat feeding recommendation. Visitors at the wheat league convention in Heppner next month will be given an opportunity to see a great many pens of ten lambs each which will have been finished by that time with wheat as the only concentrate in their rations. These pens of lambs will be exhibited by 4-H club mem bers from practically all of the wheat league counties in eastern Oregon and it's our guess that these 4-H clubbers will put on a great lamb show. In taking the initiative in this demonstrational program, the wheat league arranged for a uniform group of top-notch feeder lambs originat ing from one summer range to be distributed equitably among the young feeders, who since the 23rd of August have been following the most approved practices in lamb feeding operations with wheat as the staff of life. The wheat league has arranged for livestock experts to grade all the pens of lambs upon the basis of modern packing house requirements as to quality. Follow ing the show at Heppner, the lambs will be loaded and shipped by rail to the Portland Union stockyards where they will be offered on the open market. It is planned to take the 4-H club feeders of the lambs to the Portland market to observe the marketing processes, this phase to be followed by a trip through the packing plant, providing all of the boys and girls an opportunity to see the tremendously interesting opera tion. Lamb feeders in the various counties are as follows: Gilliam county, Joan Morgan of Lonerock! and Billie Jaeger of Condon; Uma tilla county, Harold Smith of Pilot Rock, Phillip Hoon of Milton, and Glen Wilcox of Hermiston; Wallowa county, Donald Vance of Enterprise and Jim Nobles of Wallowa; Morrow county, Freddy Rugg and Bobby Van Schoiack of Heppner, and Don ald Peck of Lexington; Wasco coun ty, Wilbur Hendricks and Clifford Bergen of Dufur, Norman Morrow, Wesley Magill, and D. A. Harvey, Jr., of Wamic, Bill Thomas and John Miller of The Dalles; Baker county, Ralph Leonnig, Jr., Royal Vander wall, Bert Vanderwall, Bob Young, Jim Young and Glen Daugherty, all of Haines. Gilliam County Cuts Loss From Smut By W. F. MARSHALL County Agent, Gilliam County Within the past six years almost unbelievable progress has been made in reducing losses from smut in Gilliam county. A survey of the records indicates that prior to 1936 approximately 40 of the crop graded smutty representing a loss to farmers of approximately $35,000 annually. In 193G a project was adopted by the Extension Service to reduce this loss. The campaign was based on the use of clean, smut free seed, thor ough and careful use of approved seed treatments, demonstrations of the use of New Improved Ceresan, and the introduction and use of smut resistant varieties. Farmers were quick to realise the possibili ties of such a project and the first year, 1936, wheat grading smutty was reduced to 20 of the crop in the county. Since 1936 the project has been continued without interruption and smut losses have continued to de cline. In 1937 approximately 18 of the crop graded smutty; in 1938, 8; in 1939, 12; in 1940, 6; and! from all indications not more than 4 of the 1941 crop will grade smutty. In the past six years farmers in the county have saved themselves at least $125,000. The highest percentage of smut is found in the varieties, such as Forty Fold, that are not smut resis tant. The use of clean, smut free seed and careful use of approved seed treatments will, as a rule, re duce the loss to a minimum in such varieties. Smut resistant varieties, such as Rex, Oro, and Rio, very seldom grade smutty if proper treat ment is used. New Improved Ceresan has proven to be the most effective smut treatment now available and is used more extensively than any other method. Experience in Gilliam county has proven conclusively that if fanners follow the relatively simple pre cautions of using clean, smut free seed, thorough and careful use of approved smut treatments, and smut resistant varieties the loss from smut can be held to a minimum. Morrow Second In Raising Wheat Grass By C. D. CONRAD, Morrow County Agent. Morrow countty, with approxi mately 37,000 acres of former wheat land now producing crested wheat grass, has become the second county in the state in area devoted to this crop. This popular dry land grass has now "arrived" as a major crop in this region, where its use consti tutes one of the most striking exam ples of the advantage of being ready in advance of an agricultural em ergency. Here in Morrow county the first crested wheat grass was seeded in nursery trials in 1925. Its use has grown steadily since that time, first as a seed crop and more recently for hay and pasture purposes. The AAA program with its wheat acre age limitation and emphasis on soil conservation has provided the oppor timity and financial assistance for expandng the acreage, but without the pioneer work of the state col- lege extension service and experi ment station, there would have been nothing to expand. Crested wheat grass was first grown in Oregon at the Moro Ex periment station, where the first 'planting was made more than 20 years ago and where a field is still in existence, under continuous pas turage for 23 years. The way this grass stood up through good years and bad at the station turned the! attention of eastern Oregon county agents toward it. With continued experimentation and small field trials with this grass, the acreage expanded gradually un til, by 1932 there were 250 acres seeded. By 1936 the total had reach ed 7000, since which time it has increased at the rate of nearly 10,000 acres a year. Several large blow areas and many smaller ones have been "tied down" in Morrow county by plant ing crested wheat grass. Seeding it in alternate strips with wheat and fallow on the contour, in contour strip farming programs has also proved successful as an erosion con trol measure on the steeper lands in this county. In eastern Oregon as a whole the crested wheat grass acreage has in creased steadily from 583 acres in 1926 to 202,854 acres at present. From 1930 on the acreage of crest ed wheat grass gradually moved into '. commercial production so that when the opportunity for wholesale ex pansion came under the agricultur al conservation program, Oregon was the only western state where every county had completed its own testing and where adequate seed! was available. As a matter of fact, the Oregon work paved the way for the rapid use of the crop in all oth er western states. The state highway commission is beginning to use the grass on newly constructed highways in order to reduce fire hazard, control weeds, prevent erosion, and in order to improve the appearance of the high ways. Mile after mile of green, wav ing grass is certainly more attractive to the tourist than jumbled masses of unsightly, partly dead weeds. Land use committees of this and other eastern Oregon counties have uniformly recommended the plant ing of crested wheat grass as a means of insuring continuance of farming here orv a stable, long-time basis. Wheat and livestock have always been, and must continue to be the mainstays of eastern Oregon agri culture. With the loss of foreign wheat markets and necessary limit ation on wheat acreage, the use ofi crested wheat grass on these poorer! wheat lands and on steep slopes where erosion has become serious is going far to maintain the long time stability of eastern Oregon agriculture. Morning Glory Land Grows More Wheat Than Weedless Soil By WALTER HOLT, Umatilla County Agent More wheat from an acre of morning-glory-infested land than from an adjacent weed-free acre while killing the weeds will constitute one of the most startling facts to be presented to Eastern Oregon Wheat leaguers at their convention in Heppner in December. There was no application of stable manure, no alfalfa plowed down, no commercial fertilizer used to produce accurately measured yields of 60 to 68 bushels of wheat to the acre in 1941 upon land that three years ago was rent ing for 50 cents an acre, covered with a tightly-woven blanket of morning glories. Nearby weed-free land under the usual summer fallow system produced 12 to 15 bushels less. Lynn Harris of the Oregon experi ment station will tell, by words and colored pictures, how farmers may rid their lands of the grasping mor ning glory while growing better-than-average crops. Harris will base his information upon facts develop ed at the Oregon morning glory con trol experniment in Umatilla county, bolstered by findings of other exper iment stations. He'll tell the folks how to plow in the spring, when to cultivate in the summer, and it's pretty certain the advice will include fall plowing, maybe once maybe twice. Since this is a tillage and cropping method of weed control, Mr. Harris will bear down on such points as what to seed and when to do it. How much seed to plant will be important if quick destruction of the weed is sought, as well as the management of the land during the year it is being cropped. All these points, and more too, will be covered in this most important dis cussion. So, if you are using high-cost soil destroying methods and still have this clinging vine, or if your neigh bors are threatening to give you the work as ,a community spreader of How come? Just tillage and crop-1 this pest becaue you are waiting ping. JNo weed killing chemicals. 1 tor a cheaper, more eitective metn- No fancy gadgets or patented ideas, And a slick angle of the whole deal is the fact that in most cases the present allowance under AAA will take care of the extra cost. At the wheat league convention od of control to be developed, may it be suggested that you let the hired man run the outfit for a few days while you go to Heppner for the wheat league meeting? It seems like a smart thing to do. Welcome Wheat Growers Thursday, December 4 BLOSSOMS IN THE DUST (In Technicolor) Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon, Marsha Hunt, Felix Bressart, Fay Holden, Samuel S. Hinds An mspiring, heart-iwarming story that should be seen by very man, woman and child. o Friday-Saturday, December 5-6 WHISTLING IN THE DARK Introducing RED SKELTON, the stage's most brilliant come dian. He's a mile-a-minute whirlwind of laughs, giggles and guffaws! With Ann Rutherford, Conrad Veidt, Virginia Grey. PLUS FLYING BLIND Richard Arlen, Jean Parker, Nils Asther, Marie Wilson, Roger Pryor, Eddie Quillan An eventful flight that has everything to please patrons seeking entertainment. o STAR THEATER WHITE FOR SAFETY AT NIGHT Nearly 85 of the pedestrians killed in traffic accidents during thei first six months of 1941 were dressed in dark clothing, indicating the need for persons on foot to wear or dis play something white while walking at night, according to the state traf fic safety division. In winter time, wear white rain coats, carry white umbrellas, or dis play a lighted flashlight. We Sell All HOMEGROWN and Much WHEAT FED MEATS Welcome Wheat Growers CENTRAL MARKET & GROCERY HEPPNER BOWLING ALLEY Bids You o WELCOME E. 0. W. L and Invites You to Relax and Play