March 12, 1942 Weekly Page of Farm News PAGE ELEVIW Squirrels Out on Schedule, Poison Program to Start Br C. A. HEHDEHBON County Agricultural Agent Th mild, sunshiny weather of the past two week! hii served to bring out ground squirrel bout on schedule. Each year these squirrels ap pear about the early part of March, after (pending about six monthi In complete hibernation In their burrows In the ground. They enter the deeping, or hi bornttlon period along In late auinmer or early (all, and neither est or drink until their spring awakening. Throughout the crops season, they are particu larly active, and If allowed to Q unchecked would destroy hun eds of thousands of dollars o( (arm products In the Klamath basin, and would cause consider able loss by burrowing Into the dike, ditch banks, under road ways, etc., In establishing their next winter's home. Poison oats are still the best method of controlling this post, and are mixed and distributed from the county agricultural agent's office at cost, as required by law. Stores throughout farm ing districts handle polsonad . oats in season for the benefit of land owners (n those districts. In addition, supply Is always kept at the county agent's office on the second floor of the fed eral building. State laws require that land owners examine their property and poison all noxious rodents, Oilng accepted methods for this ork. Complete control or ex termination is required. Poison ing gives best results when un dertaken early In the morning, on warm, still, sunshiny days. A small quantity of oats placed Just In front of the mouth of the burrow from 8 to 19 kernels to a burrow gives best results. This poison should not be put down the holes or burrows, as most of It Is wasted. Poison should not be put out in bunches, or containers with poison should not be left in the fields, as It is extremely dangerous to live stork under either condition. This poison contains strych nine as a poisoning agent, and Is dangerous to all kinds of live stock. It should be kept out of the way of children when stored In buildings or about the farm, bags Anyone using this or any other poison material Is respon sible, and should see that it is properly handled and properly titftd without endangering live stock or people. With the great national need for food products tills year. It Is essential that all land owners tnke every precaution to prevent loss of crops by squirrels or other rodents. Four-H News If V Hj i tiw -M,VAjr. vi"?..z-jtr ti. m o the regularly labeled poison Dairy Harlan Prough of East Dairy was taken to a Klamath Falls hospital early Monday, where he is suffering from a severe case of blood poison in his arm. Friends wish him a speedy re covery. Mr. and Mrs. Jo Horsley had the misfortune of losing their flock of 300 baby chicks and brooder house which caught fire Sunday night. They awakened In time to extinguish the fire before other buildings nearby caught fire. They believe the fire was started by the explod ing of the brooder. Buck Williams and Ernest Paddock moved their herd of beef cattle to the Albert Burg jlorf ranch Saturday, where Qhn Logue will feed out the Tuy recently purchased ther. They have had them at the Ray Hicks ranch all winter. Italian Alien From Medford Being Held PORTLAND. Ore., March 13 (UP An Italian alien, arrested by FBI agonte In a raid at Med ford. Or., (or possession of con , t re band, was held last night In the Multnomah county jail at Portland. J. D. Swenson, special agent in charge of the Portland FBI office, said the contraband In cmaea ririe, a shotgun and camera. Swenson added that federal agents mad 81 raids today In the vicinity of Medford. UNCLE SAM'S KNITTEH9 Uncle finm's Knitters of Ma lln held a meeting March 3, 1642. Officers of the Knitting I club ere Donna Clugston, president; Ruby Stem, vice president; Mel ba Stephenson, secretary; Mary Ruth Bay, song and yall leader, and Marie Hanel, news reporter. The club has 10 members. The name of our club originally start ed when we were knitting f ghans for the Red Cross. After we finished on the afghans, we started on our 4-H knitting pro jects Every girl has a choice of Itoms which she may knit Three of the following have to be made In order to finish the project: a scarf, purse, beret, beet, bag, or baby shoulderette. Many hava nearly completed their work. The majority of the members have had two or three years of 4-H club work, some five and a few seven. Betty Lou Dalton recently Joined the club. She and Marie Suty are the only ones who knew anything about knitting when they Joined the club. Winona Logsdon did the cro dieting and Violet English the embroidery on the (Irst afghan. The remaining members knitted the squares. MARIE HANEL, News Reporter CKEMULT "CO EDS" At the last meeting of the Chemult "Co-Eds" three mem bers finished their requirements in the leathercraft project. The three who have completed their work are Margaret Hash, Jo sephine Brader and David Bra der. We expect to have a few mora finish the next meeting. Those present were Jacky Mc- Greer, Gall James, Caple Jessup, Margaret Hash, Glenn Hash, George Hash, David Brader and Josephine Brader. Several of the members brought cancelled postage stamps, and we had a good business and work meeting. After the meeting we had ice cream made by one of the mem bers mother, Mrs. Cap Jessup, with the help of Caple Jessup, Jacky McGreer and Gail James. Cake was served with the Ice cream. The meeting was ad journed with a vote of thanks for Mrs. essup, DAVTD BRADER. News Reporter. MERRILL 4-H NEWS At the last meeting w elected a nam .(or our club. We de cided on "Uncle Sam'a Seam stresses." We elected officers: President, Mary Lou Day; vice president, Evelyn Polndextcr: secretary treasurer, Wlnnifred Fsyne; news reporter, Colleen Moore; leader, Mrs. Day. COLLEEN MOORE. News Reporter. V V "CHAMPION COOKS" Our last meeting was held on February 26, 1942. The meeting was cauea to order by our presl dent. Then we had some songs and yells. Elizabeth Dennehy and Betty Turner gave demonstration on how to prepare and serve vege table salad. Our leader, Mrs Lyon, gave us several sugges tions on making salad. The meeting was adjourned until Thursday, March 8. COLENE HERRICK, News Reporter. 155.- -? -vwv -x , - j w - ,,a. : AUSTRALIAN SHIPPING C I N T I R-AerUI view of Sydney. Australia, and Darling harbor whirrs rivet Mr of city's Industrlsl and commercial character. Circular Quay i In center. RECENT PRICE ADJUSTMENTS FAVOR BUTTE ceedlng $2,000,000 The secretary of agriculture would also be authorized to plant or contract for the plant ing of not to exceed 75,000 acres o( guayule In areas of the west. ern hemisphere where the best growth and yields may b ex pected In order uf maintain a nucleus planting of guayule to serve as domestic source of crude rubber; to establish nurseries and buy equipment; survey for growing areas; to build pro cessing facilities; test and har vest it; improve processing and obtain patents and hire employes to carry out the act. Keno Guayule Rubber Industry in California Given Big Push SACRAMENTO. March 12 ment would pay a tots! not ex- (UPV California's guayule rub ber Industry was given Impetus with the signature of President Roosevelt on a congressional act permitting federal development of the rubber substitute. The bill was signed March 0, the day Governor Culbert Olson had proclaimed as guayule rub ber day In California. State Director of Agriculture W. J. Cecil said the passage of the legislation would permit ac quiring extensive acreage of guayule plantings in Monterey county and elsewhere in the west from the International Rubber company, and would eventually lead to a formidable western1 hemisphere source of crude rub ber. Cecil said he was told that an improved strain of guayule, now being grown in the Salinas val ley, produces a larger plant than the native Mexican shrub, aver aging 18 to 22 per cent rubber. He ssld comparatively few plants of the improved guayule are available for 1942 spring plant ing. He said about 700 acres will be seeded in Monterey county this spring with which to make the 79,000 acre plantings to be grown later under U. S. depart ment of agriculture supervision. "We have no knowledge at this time where this acreage will be located or under what the plants will be grown." he said. The major rubber companies have used guayule In different quantities and they say it makes good rubber. This work has long since psssed the experimental stage. ' Cecil said the bill limited the development program to the united States when originally passed and vetoed. The presi dent requested the bill to be broadened, to the program below to be carried on anywhere In the western hemisphere, and the senate and house agreed to that change. The act would authorize the secretary of agriculture to ac quire by purchase or other agree ment the right to operate under processes or patents relating to the growing and harvesting of guayule or extraction of rubber j from It, and the acquiring of real property, seeds, patents and processes for that the govern- i iiw iii psb g b naesM Itching Skin Eczema Torture Vow tfiki 1mb. povrfal, patrttof Mooot'i Kmwtld Oil U arallibU &t flrttw clan drug itor til ovr til country, fhoiusndk bfcv found helpful rtlltf front tb dtitmM&f itching tod tortur of mho. txtwmi. polioo Itv nd outer toroMIy eauied ikln trouble!. Kot onlv dot the (nteaie t Mitel, bun hii or itlmlnjj qulokly tututde, but thro He iwiutlve d d emollient propertlw heeltng U more qulokly promoted. Aik your druiiut for en orijjtne! bottt nf Kmereld oil Orette tUtalui. Moaey refunded. If not utUfled. Dairy The community was saddened Friday, March 0. by the passing of Mrs. Margaret Virginia Hood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Smith. - Virginia was a member of the 1938 graduating class of the Keoo high school. An outstand ing student and sweet person ality Virginia was loved by all who had the pleasure of her friendship. The community ex tend their deepest sympathy to her relatives. I red , Herrlck had the mis fortune Monday morning of cut ting off several toes while split ting wood. This is the second such accident in the Herrick fam ily this winter. His brother. Roy, cut off two fingers in the same manner. A class in home nursing, con' ducted by Mrs. Ralph Johnston, is being held each Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Dick Morgan. IMPRISONMENT COBTS The cost of maintaining a con. vict in prison is estimated to be $438.19 a year, while the cost of supervising a convict on parole is 546.81 annually. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Horsley and sons moved from their place east of Dairy on Tuesday, March 10. They are spending aeveral days with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Monroe of Langell valley, and then will visit with Hors- ley's sister, Mrs. Howard Boor- man and family of Merlin, Ore., before they leave for Oakland, where Horsley will work in shipyard. The Kimble family from Klamath Falls took pos session of their new horn the same day. Olive Mounts of Dairy. Mrs, Horton Cadwell and daughter, Cleo Nan, of Klamath Falls, spent Sunday with Mrs. V. W, and E. B. Schmoe. Mr. and Mrs. Erchel Smith and daughter Charlene. Mr. and Mrs. Albert McCumber and daughter Sharon Lee, of Klam ath Falls, spent Saturday ever ntng In Dairy visiting relatives and friends. John Tofell of East Dairy had the misfortune of receiving a serious injury to his eye Sat urday evening when he started to crawl through a barbed wire fence and one of the barbs struck his eye. It was necessary to have a Klamath physician take a number of stitches in his eyelid to close the wound. Mrs. E. B. Schmoe Is spend ing severtl days with her granddaughter, Mrs. Ray Rob erts and family of Homcdal. while Mrs. Schmoe Is receiving medical care. Martin Stoehsler and Frank lin Arant, -operators of the for mer Brewer service station and store in Dairy, have just com pleted remodeling of the store department. Miss Harriett Bruner of Olene was a visitor in the home of Mickey Mounts Saturday after noon. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sparks of Bonanza were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Horsley and family on Wednesday. "Among the staple food fats, butter is the outstanding source of vitamin A In the dietary," ac cording to Dr. H. C. Sherman, nationally known nutrition au thority of Columbia university. Recent price adjustments make butter even more Important to the thrifty housewife. 'It Is remarkable," says MH ton Hult, president of the na-: tlonal dairy council, "that of all ' the fata available for planning 1 family meals, substantial in-1 creases, In price hava taken place ! (or every one except butter, In i which case the Increase is fsr 1 lower than any other and only a little over one per cent." ! The bureau of labor statistics j of the United States department of labor, reporting retail food i prices in SI cities, lists seven food fats and shows an average Increase in price for the group of little over 30 per cent from December, 1940 to December, 194). Lard leads the price rise for that period with an increase of over 63 per cent and shorten ing In cartons is a close second with an increase of over 88 per cent in price. Signs of Spring Observed Here Signs of spring were noted In Klamath Falls by a number of amateur gardnera and pussy wil low were out In full beauty, Forsythia, on of the earliest of the flowering shrubs, were re ported by a number of property owners. First daffodils to open were noticed at the Oregon state high way department shops were row bloomed7 on a protected side of the office building. Tulips and hyacinths wre pushing through the group with vigor and several said crocus plants were attempting to bloom this week. WHERE IT CAME FROM Th word "sleuth" com from early trailing dogs, Irhieh were known as slough hound, or sleuth hounds, and wr used to hunt out criminal In sloughs, or bogs. Many Never Suspect Calico Of Backaches, vui 4Uw el (uiA wmlM nobooou iMtta ia ntuf to rw JIM. nniuM SMlbu bwkusb., tkralMttwM i ptlu. Ic M ""T- ay"1 EtUutiM MlilMrrw tn? guuiN wlUl mwtlBS BOTMS gt EmMlil tfcr If iOHMtMM W 40 Tun. Taty ) k tot WW m44W C. I. Club Holds Routine Session FORT KLAMATH The regu lar meeting of the Civic Im provement club wat held in the clubhouse on Friday afternoon,! with the president, Mrs. Frank Derton, in the chair and a good i attendance of members present. Routine business occupied the attention of the group during th meeting. Mrs. John Drake became a club member at tills the next regular business meeting, which falls on the nf ternoon of April 3. a speciiilj Easter program will be present-! d under the direction of Mi'ti Carl Wilson, who is in charge i:if arrangements. Potluck refresh ments will be served at the clote of the afternoon, and all mem bers and friends are urged to at tend. The business meetings are held on the first and third Fridays of each month, alternate Fridays being devoted solely to sewing for the Red Cross when no re freshment are served. '. ' These Motors Must be Perfeetl YOU, too, can have a perfect motor $044 for Looking for Bargains? Turn to the Classified page. Defense Production Depends Upon You? STffTT TT Your ISlilUlU old P SCRAP IRON RUBBER ALUMINUM, BRASS and COPPER Help Assure Victory M & BAG COMPANY 1 LONG HOURS MEAN NOTHING Tjini'S a firm helper th will work twenty-four hours' XX s diy, if you wsnt It to . . .without a complaint . . .. tni without slowing down. It's ths iniwer to your need for extr help t s time Vht getting your work done mesns grejter yield . . and gtesier profits! It's the snswer to yout probfcra of keeping your costs down when the genersl trend I up. Only on the Ford Tractor with Ferguson Syttem esa 'you iai such time end Uborsrving features ss finger dp Implement control . T. sutomttic depth control of unit type Implements... safety electric starter... built-in power tske-off. . . sad one-minute Implement chtage. Only oa your own firm, sad oo your own work, esa you really find out what this mesns to you In dollars snd eents. Well be glad to arrange s demonittidon whenever you ssy. Call us today. BALSIGER MOTOR COMPANY Main and Esplanade Item lobar fart Install Rings 8.70 $ ,30 f Vqrv Grind ....,.... 4.01 Adj. Rod Bearing N.C. Adj. Main Roaring 4.S0 Oil ....... Gokt . iAP $27.25 $13.35 2745 Total Part and Labor ..- $40.0 $8.44 Down .. $8!4 ear Month for 4 Month Ths costs were figured for a Chevrolet others in proportion Uncle Sqm Soys: "Watch your car and keep it rolling" Dick B. Miller Co. The BIG OLDS TOWER et 7th and Klamath .a THAT NEEDS NO ijfflPS Hire it ikt- sugar beet making sugar From the soil the beet draws water into its leaves. Within the leaves, hydrogen and oxygen (of which water is made) meet carbon dioxide from the air. When this happens in the presence of sunlight a union of these elements takes place -and sugar is created. That is why sugar is sometimes called "crystallized water and sunshine" PJTJRE BEET SUGAR is ts sweet tn'd wholesome s sparkling white and fine in grain as any other topjuality sugar. It tastes the same. It behaves Exactly the same in cookery. The only difference is that beet sugar needs no ships. At the time of World War I Amer ican farmers, produced 764,811 tons of beet sugar annually. ' Today our sugar beet industry turns out nearly a million and threejuarters tons of sugar every year. Prtsint pro duction of American beet sugar is near ly as large as the total tons of sugar formerly brought from Hawaii and the Philippines . . . almost as large as our normal yearly importation from Cuba. Because sugar in wartime is vital, our supply of sugar must do more than take care of our own needs. We must send sugar to our allies. And In addition, we. may have to 'distill thousands of tons of sugar into raw material for explosives. This three-way division of our sugar is why sugar has to be rationed. Our 1942 ration, however, will be a liberal ration. It will probably allow every man, woman and child in Amer ica more sugar than did the 1918 ra tton.Under this ration and with present price control, nobody in our land will be deprived of adequate sugar. Let's remember that. Let's waste no sugar and use no sugar unnecessarily. '. We say again, America is never likily to go without sugar. And one reason is the sugar beets that this spring will grow green and lush over thousands of acres of western farms. The sugar beets that will create, from air and water and sunshine, the sugar that needs no ships. The largest-selling sugar grown in the West 834 Market Phon 4881