. Better fruit. Fruit-culture. rke utmost power value Pure throughout, dependable always, Red Crown gasoline gives the utmost power-value. It is made to meet the requirements of your engine. Look for the "Red Crown" sign before you fill. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) jhe GasolineofQuality How to Save Your Fruits at Ripening Time There is no process known equal to canning and no better sellers than canned fruits and vegetables. We build canning outfits and plants to meet the requirements of the small and large growers—Hand and Belt Power Double Seamers for sealing sanitary cans. W


. Better fruit. Fruit-culture. rke utmost power value Pure throughout, dependable always, Red Crown gasoline gives the utmost power-value. It is made to meet the requirements of your engine. Look for the "Red Crown" sign before you fill. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) jhe GasolineofQuality How to Save Your Fruits at Ripening Time There is no process known equal to canning and no better sellers than canned fruits and vegetables. We build canning outfits and plants to meet the requirements of the small and large growers—Hand and Belt Power Double Seamers for sealing sanitary cans. Write for Catalog C, Dept. T. Henninger & Ayes Manufacturing Co. If it's used in canning, we set! it. Portland, Oregon, U. S. A. I'HEN WRITING ADVERTISERS MENTION BETTER FRUIT and to the contents, 850,000, fully covered by insurance. The Yakima Valley Fruit Grower's Associ- ation has announced the closing of its 1919 Winesap pool. According to the records, 200,223 boxes were shipped bringing a net return of per box to members. Frost proof apple warehouses at Grant Or- chards, the Soap Lake station of the Great Northern Railway, 120 miles west of Spokane, and at Dalton, 40 miles east of this city, are announced by Charles J. Webb of the Spokane Fruit Growers' Company. Each will be 100x50 feet, with the second story for packing pur- poses and a receiving shed, fifty by fifty feet at one end. The storage capacity will be 35,000 boxes of apples, or forty carloads. At Meyers Falls, residents have decided to erect a frost-proof warehouse fifty by one hundred feet. Yakima cherry growers are now beginning to check upon the the season's profits and find that, though the crop was light, higher prices more than made up for lack of quantity. Many growers made over $1,000 an acre. W. \V. Scott, of Lower Naches, got $3,000 gross for cherries from about 200 trees, which were planted on less than two acres; John Hamberg got $1365 an acre from two acres of Bings. He reports the recor


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