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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1963)
STATE LEADERS Russ Bowman, La Grande, state vice-president for Oregon Future Farmers of America, left, and Pat Neal, Crater chapter, state president, posed recently under the Crater chapter sign in front of the vocational agriculture building in Central Point. The two boys had returned from the national FFA convention in Kansas City. They are scheduled to tour all of the FFA chapters in Oregon this year to help in leadership training. When this picture was taken they had attended the combined district leadership training session at Drain and visited all the chapters within the district. Alan Bray, Crater FFA, placed third in the 12 state western regional speech contest. Stockmen For Annual Meeting The Jackson County Stock men's Association will hold its annual winter meeting at 10 a.m., Thursday, Dec. 12 in the Central Point Grange hall. The Grange ladies will pro vide the lunch for the all day meeting. During last Thursday's di rectors' meeting it was agreed to have a speaker talk on a subject important to the beef industry. Besides committee re ports, there will be committee appointments for the new year to be announced by President Gorden Stanley. A committee meeting on incorporating the association into a non-profit or ganization will be held before the annual meeting, so there should be a report on this de velopment, also. Written Policy During the Thursday meeting, it was agreed to draw up a written policy on feeder sales. This will be presented for as sociation approval at the De cember meeting. Feeder Com mittee Chairman Leroy Offen bacher explained some policy has to be set controlling bring ing in of cattle from outside the county. One truckload of unsifted cattle was sold at the Rogue Livestock yard after the sale. This could get out of hand, he noted. Setting a policy for dehorning cattle will have to be worked out gradually, the directors noted. The emphasis will continue on good beef-type cattle. The feeder sale committee will set dates for next year's feeder sales this year to allow more time for advertising and promotion, it was agreed. Theft Resolutions Stanley noted that the Ore gon Cattlemen's Association ap proved two resolutions on cattle theft during its recent meeting in Baker. The local directors approved a resolution to ask law enforcement officials to tighten up parole procedures so a convicted cattle thief serves at least one-third of his sen tence. Closer inspection of cat tle shipments, particularly those going interstate, will be asked, also, although the directors felt that local livestock brand in spection has been good. The forestry committee plans to meet with lumber company representatives in the near fu ture to work out grazing lease problems, Chairman Martin Grier said. The Forest Service will work out some means of more closely identifying cattle in the near future, according to OCA reports, it was noted. The OCA .has suggested a combined state and local mem bership fee, an optional $15 or Dry or Green - Red Fir log Ems FOR THE FIREPLACE - FURNACE HEATER OAK and LAUREL WELL SEASONED STANDARD HEATING OILS PRES-TO-IOGS GOLD BOND STAMPS VALLEY FUEL CO. 11 W. McAndrews Set Dec. 12 assessment on a per head of cattle basis. The state is striv ing for more representation and emphasizing membership num bers over dues, it was explain ed. Membership will be discuss ed at the Dec. 2 OCA board meeting in Portland. Food Technologist Honored at OSU CORVALLIS - Prof. Ernest H. Wiegand, Corvallis, founder and former head of the Oregon State University department of food science and technology, was honored for his outstanding contributions to Oregon's horti cultural industry Thursday night by the Oregon Horticultural So ciety. Prof. Wiegand, OSU professor the 1963 recipient of the society's Hartman Cup, awarded annual ly for outstanding service to the industry. Presented by James Smart, Salem, the award high lighted the banquet of the so ciety's 78th annual meeting here which concluded Friday, Nov. 22. Prof. Wieand, OSU professor emeritus of food technology since his retirement in 1952, came to Oregon State in 1919 and organized the first four year curriculum in schools of higher education to train stu dents in food technology. He served as head of the depart ment 1919 to 1952. During the years, he set up research projects which have meant thousands of dollars to the Pacific Northwest fruit and vegetable industry. His meth od of brining has been adopted by the maraschino industry in both the U.S. and Europe and brings several million dollars to Oregon each year. Prune growers saved thou sands of dollars by the mechan ical recirculating dryer devel oped by him. Under his leader ship, the department developed a consumer size package of fro zen fruit, better methods of canning fruit, dehydration studies on fruits and vegetables, standardization of canned and frozen foods, and pioneered work on frozen fruits and vegetables. CANDLELIGHT PARADE LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A group of about 100 teen-agers from Hollywood High School marched down Wilshire Boule vard to the city hall Monday night in a candlelight proces sion as a tribute to President Kennedy. 'STANDARD HEATING OILS i Rd. Tel. 773-1576 Westigard Talks On Tree Diseases To Hort Society CORVALLIS Increasing the number of spray applications can reduce mildew infection and increase yields, reported Dr. Norman Dobie, Oregon State University plant pathologist, who talked before the Oregon Horticultural Society last week. Tests conducted by Dobie over the past three years at Corval lis show that more frequent spray applications are effective. In his tests, apple trees were sprayed every seven days from the pre-pink stage through the third cover with Karathane. In all, IS applications were made in comparison with the five or six generally made, he said. The tests show that only about half as many spray appli cations are being made as should be, he added. Karathane, although not per fect, is still the best chemical for control of mildew, Dobie said, although many others have been tested. One new chemical does show promise, but it will require at least one more year of testing. Ways in which growers can fight the mildew problem out lined by Dobie were: Prune out infected terminal twigs at the time of regular pruning. This may not be prac tical in a large orchard, al though he urged that it be adopted as a practice in small orchards. Apply a dormant or delayed dormant spray. Use a protectant fungicide spray to keep a cover on the trees and prevent the spread of mildew infection to twigs, etc. The standard protectant spray schedule developed fol lows the growth development of the tree. Pear Psylla Pear psylla, the most damag ing insect pest of pears in the West, was discussed by Dr. Everett C. Burts, assistant en tomologist, Washington State Tree Fruit Experiment Station, Wenatchee. Growers must rely on a sea sonal program of insecticide sprays for control of pear psylla, he said, stressing important points in a chemical control program which may make the job easier. Infestations should be kept at a low level throughout the year as pear psylla is very destruc tive and can reproduce rapidly . Effective early season treatment makes seasonal control easier. Simultaneous treatment of whole areas increases the ef fectiveness of pre-bloom sprays by minimizing re - infestation from one orchard to another. Effective sprays during the pre-bloom period and again in the early post-bloom period will usually control the insect until after harvest. An occasional fall clean-up spray is necessary if an infestation appears. Poor application and improper timing of sprays often have been reasons for control failure, Burts stated, but the real problem comes from the psylla's ability to become resistant to chemical sprays, failure to detect this soon enough and lack of effec tive materials to substitute into the program. He cautioned growers they must be quick to detect control failures. This requires thorough and frequent orchard examina tions. Problems in controlling spider mites are similar to those in the control of pear psylla, Burts continued. Control measures must be applied thoroughly and at the proper time. The key to successful mite control is an effective early sea son program. Growers should try to avoid having to treat heavy populations late in the season by applying the most ef fective early season program available, he stressed. Westigard Speaks Two trends in spider mite con trol were cited by P. H. Westi gard, entomologist at the South ern Oregon Experiment Station. These were trends in acaricidal recommendations and trend in the researcher's approach to mite control. Not many years ago, he point ed out, researchers could pre pare recommendations for con trol of mites that would be suc cessful over large areas. These areas have become more con stricted until "today individual orchards have become a control complex within themselves, quite different, perhaps from the adjoining orchard." To compensate for this situa tion, local extension agencies have begun to issue their own recommendations and pesticide representatives are playing a role in planning the acaricidal schedule for the individual grow er. Supervised Control The next logical step in the evolution of pesticide recom mendations may be the super vised control approach to mite vuniroi, using a highly trained specialist who can accurately evaluate potential Insect threats and advise the grower when to treat and with what material and when not to treat, Westigard said. Most all the grower's cultural practices influence either direct ly or indirectly populations of pest species, he noted, Including irrigation, pruning, fertilization MEDFORO FROM THE GROUND UP y IART lARTUn The recent rains, frosts and winds have now removed most if not all of the leaves from the deciduous trees of the area. This fact, of course, makes it desirable and even necessary to accomplish certain tasks that have to do with the foliar residue. Storm drains and drainage systems should be cleared of accumulations of leaves. The roofs, gutters and down-spouts of buildings should be freed of any deposits of leaves that may tend to retard the flow of rain water off of and away from buildings. In dry periods, deposits of leaves on the roofs of homes may become fire hazars. In oth er instances, such leaves along with other debris may cause rapid deteriation of the roof it self. Remove Leaves Fallen leaves should be re moved from lawns as soon as possible as they will result in discolored areas of lawn plants in a very few days. Where the lawn cover is kept covered by piles of leaves for very long periods of time they may be killed. Leaves and other plant debris can be added to a compost pile or used to form one. The leaf mold or organic matter that can be obtained from such a compost heap will be useful dur ing the coming season. Along with leaf fall the job of pruning the hundreds of acres of fruit trees can begin on a large scale. There are jobs available now for a large num ber of persons in the orchards of this area. Meetings Disappointing The meetings of the Oregon State Horticultural Society that were held last week in Corval lis were a disappointment. Ses sions that were devoted to in formation of interest to grow ers were practically devoid of interest. The subjects covered were old and had been covered many times, or they were of little interest at this time. We hone a more substantial pro gram can be provided for the meetings of this coming year. The holiday season is at hand and as usual many home-makers are busy doing the baking, and making the decorations so necessary for the proper cele bration of we festive - season by their families.. The past few days have been tragic, solemn and sad for our nation and all mankind. In has proven beyond all doubt that some men behave in such a way that many families of ani mals would be disgraced by having sOch members among their kind. As a nation and a people we must all suffer loss of stature in the eyes of the remainder of the world's nations. We are not as sophisticated and ma ture as we should hope to be at a time when our nation tries to be a leader in the human affairs of this earth. MILK OFFICERS SALEM Milk sanitation ra ting officers of the Oregon De partment of Agriculture will serve as hosts for a U. S. Pub lic Health Service Area 9 meet ing of milk sanitation rating of ficers at Klamath Falls Nov. 19-21. Purpose of the meeting is to consider a program that will facilitate free movement of in terstate milk. Subjects consid ered will be administration, co ordination and standardization of the milk sanitation program and its enforcement and survey procedures cs they relate to in terstate milk shipments. Included in the area besides Oregon are California, Arizona, Nevada, Washington, Alaska and Hawaii. and cultivation. Any of these may reduce or increase the im portance of spider mites, he said. Because of this interaction in the orchard, we can no longer consider the control of each pest or the development of new cul tural practices as a separate or distinct entity; they have all become inter-related in the or chard ecology, Westigard stress ed. This type of approach now existing in research either plan ned or under way at the Med ford station includes work on the effect of rootstock type on populations of the two-spot spi der mite, the effect of chelates on the fecundity of the two-spot spider mite, the control of the two-spot spider mite by a preda tor mite, and the effect of post harvest defoliation on the winter carryover of the two-spot spider mite. LOG ENDS Quick Dlrery MEDFORD FUEL CO. PHONl 77i-211t StH Green Srtmpi MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON Overseas Developing as Competition CORVALLIS Dr. John Ca rew, chairman of the depart ment of horticulture, Michigan State University, stressed that advances in the production and marketing of fruits - and vegetables in countries outside our own are occurring with blinding speed. We shall-not be able to ig nore them. We owe it to our selves to anticipate them," he told the Oregon Horticultural Society recently. Horticulture in the United States is "unique," he pointed out, as no other nation has de veloped mass production, mass marketing and mass merchan dising to such a degree. Now, however, other nations are be ginning to affect similar changes. This is occurring in both the "underdeveloped" countries as well as in Europe. The changing world of horti culture was underlined by Ca rew when he described several developments which he has ob served in Nigeria, England, The Netherlands and France. Nigeria Promising Nigeria must rate as one of the most promising tropical countries in the world, he said "If you catalogue this country for ambition, intelligence, sheer desire to move ahead or agricul tural potential." Large scale agricultural training and re search programs have already started. In England, the small land owner will be rapidly replaced by large farmers using many of the same techniques as their American counterparts, Carew believes. He cited the work of the Dutch in growing more than 4,000 acres of tomatoes under glass to deliver a product "that is the envy of the world," as part of the world wide drive. Production costs have been reduced, yields increased and the Holland grown tomato is in an even better competitive situation." South from Paris, in the low er end of the Rhone valley, an enormous irrigation project is bringing water to land formerly planted to grapes and which is now being planted primarily to fruit and vegetables. A large processing facility, combining American, French and Kalian interests, is underway. EATTLl if J PORTLAND ff BOTTCri . . T" 7 :.(.' - ,1' t KANSAS CITY OAKLANO .' J ' ' ' J . ' 1 . Ti t " " 'I "" 11 rt SAN FRANCISCO LASVESASX I j if LOSAN8ELES I J"'- Kr ml wxm J Horticulture Seen France knows the increas ing role that fruits and vege tables play in the diets of pros- 431 Cattle Sold At Midway Yard; Feeder Sale Set Midway Auction Yard report ed 431 cattle were sold during its regular Friday, Nov. 22 sale. The market was active and about steady on good quality calves and yearlings, according to Owner-Manager Bill Bray. It was slow on slaughter cows and low quality feeder. Good steer calves brought $24 to $25.40. Several penlots of good 400 to 430 pound calves brought $24.60 to $25.20. Medium steer calves earned $20 to $23.50. Good heifer calves banged the gate at $20 to $22.60. Medium heifers brought $18 to $20.75. Good yearling steers earned $21 to $22.75. Medium quality yearlings brought $18 to $20. Low quality yearling steers earned $16 to $18. Yearling Heifers Good yearling heifers sold for $17 to $19.50. Medium yearling heifers sold for $16 to $17.50. No penlots of good yearling heifers were offered. Springer cows brought $140 to $166 per head. A few cows with calves earned $150 to $200 per pair. Holstein steer calves earned $17 to $18.40. Yearling Holstein steers sold for $15 to $16.50. Fat cows sold for $14 to $16. Aged utility cows brought $12 to $13.50. Cutters earned $10 to $12.50 and canners brought $7 to $10.50. "It is very difficult to com pare any weekly sale with a previous week's feeder sale as you just can't get the buying power for the smaller sales. Bray noted. "There will not be a sale at Midway this week, Nov. 29, since it would come after Thanksgiving. But, another feeder sale will be held Friday, Dec. 6. We Invite your consign' ments," he said. POCATV ',..' CHNNe !. ; ; ' ' , , OMAHA W ''"' I Denver" SuC: - Some of the finest foods and delicacies grown and proc essed in th great Northwest are packed In glan or metal or frozen for your convenience. And, many ol them are (hipped via Union Pacific Railroad. No matter where you art, chances are the next canned product you buy, somewhere along the line wai shipped the automated rtll way. Throughout th West, on the Union Pacific, automatic traffic controls and electronic communications, super vised by (killed personnel, help tpeed your shipments efficiently, swiftly and dependably. So whenever you hip, or travel, be specific ... say "Union Pacific." perous educated nations. She knows the competitive strength of a mechanized modern horti culture. She is confident of her role in Europe and looks hope fully to markets outside of Eu rope," Carew stated. Developments in all these na tions is bringing increasing si milarity with the United tSates, he continued. Already, many European growers use the same varieties, insecticides, fruit thinners and fertilizers as the U.S. Important Competitors "Sooner than you think they will be as important competi tors as your neighbors in New York or Wisconsin," he cau tioned, as barriers between na tions continued to break down. "We must recognize that these developments abroad, especial ly in agriculture, will most cer tainly affect us." The competitive aDiuty oi pro ducing areas will increasingly be decided by climate and water and decreasingly influenced by nearness to market or lauor cost and availability, he stressed. "Thus, I see little hope for home of our U.S. production areas where climate is a con stant source of trouble. Here in Oregon, however, where Blue Lakes reach their finest flavor and where your fruit is a joy to behold, you have the opportunity not only to survive, but to thrive," he said. Carew suggested that Ameri can horticulture must continue tn seek out new ideas for im proving efficiency in producing and marketing its products and not "foolishly discontinue" in vestment in research, educa tion and extension. American horticulture must become more unified with skilled executives to represent its interest in legislatures and international conferences. American horticulture must continually be on guard "against well-meaning indivi duals who would lead us into the blind alley of government regulated agriculture." . Expressing an optimistic atti tude about the future of Ameri can horticulture, carew said "I am confident that our cli matic advantages coupled with American ingenuity, coopera tive spirit and freedom will keep us in front." Many Northwest food products go to market on Union Pacific . . . the Phonei 773-5388 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1963 Sterilized Milk -Hearing Held The Oregon Department of Agriculture will consider revis ing its proposed standard of identity for sterilized milk in light of testimony presented at hearing Oct. 31 in Salem. The proposed standard defines it as milk containing no viable microorganisms and with a but terfat content of not less than 3.5 per cent and a minimum content of solids not fat of 8.5 per cent. Foremost Dairies Inc., San Francisco, Calif., proposed sub stitution of "processed by heat to prevent spoilage" for "con taining no viable micro-organ isms, pointing out the "no viable micro-organisms" pro vision was almost impossible to meet. This was confirmed by Prof. Roy Stein, superintendent of dairy products laboratory. Oregon State University. Wil liam Bentley, Pacific Milk Corp., San Francisco, said his firm could live with either stand ard. Hearings officer Kenneth Carl frT " dSQQM m SSI ' , Proof OMAHA Travel relaxed In the Domtliner "City of Portland." Superb meale frethly prepared. Liberal baggage allowance. Money-saving Family Fare. Convenient (ehedulet. A 7 said the department would taks the proposal under advisement. MtsxilJs.t Special Christmas gift plan foe latest hearing aids, including eyeglass models. SONOTONE OF MEDFORD 105 V. Main Ph. 772-5904 ANP we mean! i UrlAlilO NEW LOW PRICE Kentucky 's Finest Bourbon for over 150 Years! ,A$O00 $4.75 flfWf Sj PINT TS QT. (CODe flll.C) (CODE 111 B) Also Available BOTTLED IN BOND DISTILLED AND BOTTLED 11 WATEREIll AND FRAZIER DISTILLERY CO. IARDST0WN, NELSON COUNTY, KENTUCKY CHICAGO t& ' T. LOUT