JBrookshire I was reading on this subject quite a bit last night. There were a few other guys with a similar problem, one it was a bad turbo seal, another a head gasket leaking to an oil gallery, and another guy it was a broken compression ring.
On the turbo situation I think the seal was letting boost pressures blow back into the crankcase via the oil return hose. So, you might try removing it and getting a long piece to route to a jug then start it and let it idle a minute or so (not too long so it won't empty the crankcase). I don't know if this would be concluse though without having boost but if you free-rev to at least 2500 it may give you enough boost to see if it's blowing past the seal (and you see vapors coming from the drain hose).
Another thing to do . . . with a warm engine crawl underneath while it's idling and take a close look at your draft tube. If there's a pulsation to the vapors, you probably have a head gasket or broken ring problem (more likely head gasket, I doubt broken rings happen very often). Another check if the gasket is suspect is a compression test, but getting a hold of the gauge and adapters for Cummins isn't cheap, and not easy to find/borrow. This test may not be that conclusive anyway.
I am having a similar problem with mine. I did the head gasket 15000 miles ago and am blowing oil out the draft tube. There is noticeably more vapor out the blowby tube. 10k miles ago it was a slow, gentle vapor, now it's coming out at a steady velocity. I'm using at least 1 qt of oil every 1000 miles, not long ago it was more like 2500+ miles per quart.
I have 366,000 miles on mine now so it's likely a new set of rings are in its future. It just bothers me how quickly this became a problem. Before I only had a drop or two out the blowby hose at night, now in the morning there's a small puddle about 2" across on the ground. I'm going to check my turbo, it's the original, and I drove it hard towing 9000 miles across the US last month.
Vaughn