Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1918)
' ' 1f"""" ""rn" '"' Tl" "'" tw i.im . mmh ruin i inriiiiiini, ,- rm .n-,- ,i,.,.im. ,. T. m , M , n , mmimKm mlt. - ,.. ... EIGHT THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM, OREGON. Tt i - Corn Valuable Adjunct to Stock Raising and Dairying ,Yield This Year Above a Million Bushels Effect Shown In Rapid Increase In Livestock. The pioneers who dared the dancers of the plains in the years long gone, most of them came from "corn count ries," and having tried to grow that erop here with poor success came to the conclusion that "corn would not grow In Oretron." The idea dence is was like giving s dog a bad name, for it stuck. The trouble was not that the corn would not grow, but that owing to the early wet season, oiiu tuHir continuance, railed to Hard en and to cure, for sixty years the idea that Oregon was not a corn state has prevailed, still prevails. However, stir red by the success Jim Hill had made with it in other places, some of the more progressive farmers began to take an interest in corn growing. They con ceived the idea that in time it would be possible to evolve a corn that would mature even in the damp climate of Oregon. The result lias been both, en-i eouraging and gratifying. While per fect success cannot yet be claimed it is evident crrnAfc afritr.tt li.va Ua. (J - ...... WUU J i Twl J, of , ... iL. - 11.1 Mt VMM. tilO CUfU luiLl Wlil ripen in Oregon will be created. This to a certain extent has already been ac complished as the various corn shows lave demonstrated. The area planted to eorn has steadily increased and the yield has increased with it. Along with this it can be stated that the experi ment of acclimatizing a corn has gone a long wayj, and that we now have a variety or varieties that will in moat. years mature properly. The eorn show here a short time ago had some as per fect specimens as could be found in II- linois or Iowa. The ears were larcre. tt.n rows even, tho grains long and the cob covered clear over the mid. This u shown in several varieties. It is eneouraging that this is so for without corn the fattening of livestock, especially hogs, cannot be carried on ucceBgx Uliy. Great Money Makers. The present price of hog products, bacon lard and hams, is muh flint air. eryimnz mat tends tn ini-mu the vioi.i of the state in this line is indeed a mon ey producer. As an evidence of the effect of the increasing of the eorn cror and with it the jrreater nrndnot'mn of hogs, it might be mentioned that two years ago mere was not a stock buyer in the country. Through the efforts of me oaiera commercial ciuo Mr. Ueorge .yre, wno naa had considerable exper ience as a stock buyer in the middle west, was induced to undertake the buy ing of livestock, and the encouraging 01 us growing dj ine larmers. The first season he handled less than $40,000 worth of livestock, but he talk ed hnea while hnvinc them nrcrpd hno i " - e - & - e growing,, patted the farmers on the oacK ana pointed out to them mat tne profit of farming was largely increased by sending their crops to market in a mftnilf AeturAf) ainta infitpnrl rif aa ra material, and proving that a fat hog or steer Vll illnt Aa much f ft tnantifaftiip. ed product as though factory made. In 1916, Mr. Eyre continued his buy ing and proselyting. More corn was planted, more hogs fattened, more steers turned into fat bppf. find hv the end nf the season he found that his purchases for the year were more than double those of the year before. " He liked the business, and this spring took the field TART on a punctureless ride thru the New Year by using Operating Under Government License '..V : 4 n 1 ..I k i :n -A ,, ... r w a ft f 9 r i ' f Running Day and Night ESTABLISHED 1912 if DOING A GENERAL MILLING B USINESS NUFACTURERS OF FLOURS CEREALS Cherry City Patent Hard Wheat Wheatola Oak Blend Fine and Coarse. Graham Economy Tip Top Pancake Flour Pastry Whole Wheat Flour Cesser's Best Bakers . GATES HALF-SOLE When Your Tires Get Worn There's no need to mourn. Just drive up with your bus And show them to us. We'll put a Gates Half-Sole on for you, And make your Tires look like new. - You can put the guarantet in your purse, For there'll be no more need to curse. Gates Half-Sole Tires are guaranteed. 3500 punctureless miles is their creed. Why not enjoy complete tire satisfaction? Of new tires, Gates Half-Soles cost only a fraction. 'Spectfully submitted, MOORE MYLEAGE. ITiftJES International Rubber aies Efficiency and Economy Department Co nipany MR. MOORE MYLEAGE, General Manager MESSRS. E. Z. RIDING, KID KOMFORT, -SAMMY SATISFY, MR. LOW COST, Treasurer. 177 SOUTH COMMERCIAL . PHONE 428 S , . : MZ lAWCMZ iir-Tr K3 It E2? OHiE.il sni llWta ? Cost Vs As Much All Kinds of Feed Y CITY FLOUR f P. W. GEISER, Prop. ILLS again. In the meanwhile the bovs and girls jiig clubs had ben organized thru Ins efforts and those of the United Sta tes National bank of Salem and in do ing this all of them builded better tha they knew. But of this subject more eisewnere. During the .year 1917 Mr. Eyre pur chased livestock in the territory adia cent to Halem, vulued at more than .fl7j,000. This was double the purchas es of the year before and moru than four times the total dealings for the year Livestock Improved. Another marked feature of the busi noss is the greatly improved eharacte of the stock. Marion county now boasts some or the very finest blooded hogs that can be round anywhere, and one Marion county linn is raising sires that bring prices practically unheard of else where. This is what corn has done and is doing for the country and it has ouly begun. Another thing it helps ia the dairy industry. It is a splendid mater ial for the sflo, and these are beiug multiplied all over the county. As a mutter of fact they are, for a time at least, a necessary adjunct to the grow ing of corn for they will provide for the saving of such of the crop as fails to mature, and which without them might be lost. Unfortunately there are few if any reliable faun statistics for Oregon outsido of a few crops and so just how much corn was crown in the state last year is hard to say, but that it was well above a million bushels is asserted by those best informed. Will Increase Acreage. Those farmers who have grown corn and raised hogs are more than pleased with results and each and every one of them will extend the area of his corn field and increase the number of his hogs. Bacon and butter are in the same class so far as price goes and indeed for the finest bacon bossy and her fa- i mous product has to take seeoud place for the bacon sells for the higher price. Another feature of the planting corn and selliug hogs is the speedy returns. A jug purchased when the eorn is plant- led w ill run on clover pasture and wait for the corn to grow. The pasture is :iaooui un ne necus, or wuuis uum c -! rives at hoehood and by that time he TT;has the frame and size and tne corn 4 j puts the meat on it and the solidity toj Phone 2331 Salem, Oregon 'the moat and in a short time the pro I duct goes to the market worth from fif- ;ty to sixty dollars. Besides tne money ' side of the business there is also a pat riotic side to it, for it is the hog pro-ilni-tn the country wauts for the boys "the gentleman who pays the rent," Let him pay yours. MARION COUNTY SCHOOLS (Continued om page three.) Salem Public Library Makes Splendid Showing for Year Resides Purely Literary Volumes, Has Added Many ijuujis un jrracucai everyday Matters. The library extends with the New many minds and hearts, books are doing Year greeting, a renewed invitation to for their readers everyday. They reveal everyone to come and enjoy what it has the great thoughts of the greatest minds, to' offer. Besides the books of more They make the life of other times and literary nature there are practical books other nations ours. They kiudlo the For the business man, fires of sympathy and humanity. In a lover in the trenches, and bacon is as cessary as bullets in the winning of line war. Every farmer who raises a neces the if TT!few acres of corn and grows the hog? J to eat it and make bacon is swatting Hi tffffff tffffffttttftff 4 I the kaiser just as certainly as though I stated the livestock purchased ry Air. ' .1. .;.-. 1017 "ilii.l m 17:i ;000, and this was double the value of ;the 1916 crop. It should be the aim of i'the farmers, of the district to again 'double the output in 1918 and if pos iilsible make the figures travel np toward the half million mark. improvement of the teaching of these subjects. During the visits to the schools following these meetings, the superintendent or supervisor gives the teacher any help she may need in apply ing the suggestions to the work in her school. Definiteness of purpose in ftll supervision work ii the ideal which radi ates from the superintendent's office. ' Beading Circle Plan. In order to make the work of these local mettiiiiis more definite, tn r.vii I fr all tastes as many as possible of the teachers books on new methods and efficiency every day problems and to unify the!aie being added slowly but constantly. professional feeling of the county 's! Cody " How to Deal With Human Na- teaelung force, a course in professional : Iure ln -Business," and Brisco's "Eco- reading will be conducted through these jnomica of Business," are among the meetings. Two or more of the readinu-' many. The engineer will find hand- circle books from the state list will be ! books on whatever department interests read throughout the county. ' i nim beside tie volumes of the Interna- One of tho most seriously considered i tional school of technology, which treat problems of educaotors today is how j ot almost e very work in the world. The to measure the results of teachim student may select at will, those that Many moral schools and colleges now I supplement his text. have one or more experts who devote! r or the teacher who will be proficient their attention to scientific investij;a-l,'le 1'brary includes many and choice tion along these lines. The result from I contributions from the best educators, these investigations has been a number! He who is interested in the war, and of tests and measurements w:;ii h have this " everyone of us, will find a selee been standardized according to the ry-ition from which to choose: Empey's erage abilities of various grades of -pu-i"Over the Top," Hav's "First Hund- pils. A great many eitv svstems of fed Thousand," MeClure's " Obstacles the pages of one of the 13o magazines schools have used one or more of these i to feace," and Aldrich s "On the Edge seven thousand people are enrolled as standard tests. Portland is perhaps the j0' the War Zone," are'suggestive titles.) patrons who have "opened the door" to most notpble example in the northwest.! Practical Books. enjoy the pleasures which the library The convention of City Superintendents j It is, however, the housewife whose i offers freely to everyone of the 17,0UU which met in Kansas City devcted prae-i needs have been brought to the front j citizens of Salem. It is not the oldest tically the whole time to the discussion ' under the Hoover regime. For her island wisest alone who come. The little of tests and measurements. jfirst of all "Feeding of the Family," j ones seik these treasures most eagerly. Marion in Pront Bank. by Rose, which is generally conceded to even before they can give the necessary Here again Marion county is in the i be the most helpful, for it discusses in! passport, their signatures. They visit front rank of educational progress. On I an intelligent way the food needs of I when they can read only the pictures all the available tables of results from; tho different members of the family in that childish imaginations beautify. One standard tests there does not appear any health and in sickness. Of this one book hundred of them flock in on a Saturday record of a county of schflcls, yet there, the library expects to be supplied in . morning to hear the stories which sbme are scores of city systems recorded. Mar-; sufficient numbers that every home may of them are not able to read. on county, however, has had a seienti-ihave the benetit. The new restrictions! The library puts an annual lectura ic and systematic measurement of abil- on food supply have called for new re-1 course which begins this vear with the ty in reading and arithmetic. The in- dpes. The best of the new cook books l"Libiary at Home," to be held in the vidua! scores in these two subiects , have been chosen carefully to satisfy main room from 2-5 on the afternoon four thousand pupils in the sixth.! this need. Hoover calls the library the of New Year's Dav. seventh and eighth grades of the lounty!" school out of school." Your library! Music will be furnished by the Vic are on file in the superintendent's of-(wishes to be the school for your house-;trola loaned by the Imperial Furniture rice. .More detailed results of these , wives, lor your businessmen, for all of . store. The remaining numbers occur tests will be announced later. 'you who are trying to do more efficient-1 in the auditorium at S p. m. on the dates Superintendent Smith plans to t ar- i ly a share of the world 's work. j announced, range later in the year a Teacher 's'Vis-j We are proud of Salem. We can I Library at Home, iting Day. This will give every rural speak with just pride of her beauty, of i January' 1. A trip through Rome, il teacher in the county an opportunity to; the worth-while work that is being ac-! lustrated" lecture by Trof. Frederick observe the work of at leasne of her 1 complished within her confines, of ail; Dunn. word they open the door of larger life to us. It is this broader vision that the li brary offers to all who will enter. Who ever will may come to spend an evening with Robert Louis Stevenson, to follow with Napoleon his unrivalled conquests, to see with the mind's eye the develop ment of the character of Abraham Lin coln, or to learn the wisdom of Socra tes. We may well commune with past heroes, but we would know too the vital thoughts and deeds of those who have risen to help us n.eet today's emergen cies and grasp today's opportunities. Whomever one seeks for entertainment or profit he will surely find within tho covers of one of the 13,000 books or on of fellow teachers who has similar prob lems to meet. This one dny of visiting is expected ro result ia renewed lrterst and enthusiasm to repay many times the time spent in the visit. Tne teachers of the co'.inty bcth by word anrl action have shown an admir able spirit of cooperation in the plans of the superintendent. The work of ed ucation, building for citizenship, lies, after all. in the hands of the teacher who directs the activities and habits of thinking of the bovs and girls in the able men and women who are bear- January D. Concert of Russian Mu- ing their" share of the world's work.jsie, conducted by Dr. Frank Wilbur World's Work," has for us a greater, Chase, significance than ever before. The; January 23. "Russia As It I," il year's developments have opened ;;fir I lustrated lecture by Rev. F. T. Porter, vision to the life octside our daily in-j February IX 'Russia; Its Revolu terests. jtion and Evolutioa,' lecture by Dr. What the stress of war has done for: John Hall. February 27. "Russian Experien- - I As the Irishman remarked, the hog is charge. The success of any school de- doing their work . pends almost entirely upon the teacher j cos," an informal talk by Mrs. "W. D. in that school. Marion county will get ! Carlisle. the best teachers that can be had, then March 13. "The Literature of Rus her give them every possible assistance in sia," a lecture by Miss Cornelia Mar 4H