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About Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1909)
Tp eatln sr F i r ‘ leftN ( ' u a U I n t f . In flrele i cooking there are certain things to be remembered by the Inex perienced cook. Oen is that if a dish la left indefinitely in the cooker it will sour. Soups,, stews, vegetables and such things must be removed after twenty-four hours, and less in hot | weather. Another thing Is that some foods require a longer time on the fire before being put in the cooker than others do. According to Harper’s Ba- zaar, cereals may take only ten min utes, and tough meat h. if an hour; it is best to find out somei .ing about the length of time the different things re quire before beginning to use the cook er. Generally speaking, all indigestible things lake longer than the rest; oat meal, beef stew, corned beef and beans j need more time than steamed pud dings, rice and chicken. A third thing h i remember is tills: Everything that W hen I l n j - l n i r In D o n e . There's smile of relief and a spirit of fun Comes over the farmer w het haying is done; With his haylofts all swelling with sweet-scented hay His smile is as cheery as sunshine In May. The summer’s half over, and out in the field He sees the approach of a bountiful yield; As tali a s his hat Is the golden-topped corn, Which waves Its long arms in the breeze of the morn. As fair and as fragrant as gardens of old Are his fields with their stubble as yellow as gold. flo ra e C «» r n a . Dr. A. A. Holcombe, inspector of th» United States bureau of animal hus bandry, says of treating horse corns: “ As In all other troubles, the cause must he discovered if possible and re moved In a great m ajority of cases the shoeing will be at fault. For a sound foot, perfectly formed, a flat shoe with heels less thick than the toe and which rests evenly on the wall propc-r is the best. In flat feet It is often necessary to concave the feet as much as possible on the upper surface so that the sole may not be pressed upon. I f the heels are very lo,.’ the heels of the shoe may be made much thicker. I f the foot Is very broad and the wall light toward the heels a far shoe, resting upon the walls, may aid to prevent excessive tension upon the soft tissues when the foot receives the weight of the body. A piece of leather placed between the foot and shoe serves largely to destroy concussion, and Us use is absolutely necessary on some animals to enable them to work. Among the preventive measures may be mentioned those which serve to maln- M i v n W « « tain the suppleness of the hoof. The ASiUj dead horn upon the I • S f j l surface of the sole T H E Y/EEKLy A H is t o r ia n ai 1C82— The Duke of Y’ork deeded his right to the Delaware Province to William Penn. 1775— Nathaniel Greene was appointed ed major general by Gen. Wash ington. 1776— Fight in the Hudson River be tween American fire-ships and British men-of-war. 1805— By a treaty with the Indians, their title to almost the whole of the present State of Indiana was extinguished. With his barn full of hay and ills bed 1810— Marshal Bernadotte of Franca ding stacked high, chosen Prince Royal of Sweden. A smile on his face and a gleam in * his eye; 1813— Fort Mtmms, in Alabama, cap moisture for a long w h e n the time is half up and the food The cattle provided with winter re tured by the Indians. time, but protects cooled, the pail Is removed and re- | past, 1814— City of Washington burned by hokse co rns , the livin g horn be heated without opening It, and put j While apples and pumpkins are ripen the British. neath from the effects of evaporation. ing fast. back again. There's a smile of relief and a spirit For this reason the sole should be ] 1818— Illinois adopted a State constitu in all cooking also you must tie tion. of fun pared as little a3 possible. careful ‘ no1 to uncover the pall with 1824— Reception In honor of the Mar Comes over the farmer when haying is tlie food in It before putting It in the quis Lafayette given in Boston. done; M ilk C on tam in a tion . box. It must lie kept tightly covered 1837—Cholera raged In Rome. The turnips are growing, the melons There are a hundred and one places from lie time it Is put on the fir* are prime, 1846— Taking of Santa Fe and annexa or the steam will escape and the meat The harvest approaching, his boun where m ilk can be contaminated from tion of New Mexico to the United the time it is drawn from the udder or soup cool so that It. cannot cook. teous time. States. till it reaches the table in the form of Put everything in as quickly as possi Ah! Lucky the farmer who wanders 1847— Republic of Liberia inaugurated. sweet milk, cream or butter. First, a afleld ble, and cover at once. ....U n ite d States troops defeated And sees the approach of a beautiful great deal of bacteria, impurities and the Mexicans in battle of Cheru- I le u l i l i anil lie u u Iy H in ts . yield! disease germs get into the milk at the busco. — Boston Herald. Clam broth is good for a weak stom barn or lot In which the cows are 1851—Great riot In New Orleans, grow ach. kept. Second, a great many more oi ing out of the Cuban expedition. C u ltiv a tio n o f Corn, Cranberry poultice Is recommended A t the several experiment stations these owe their existence in milk tc 1854—C ity of Milwaukee almost de for erysipelas. stroyed by fire. corn has received more than its share the attendant and the place in which Daily exercise with light dumb bells of attention, and many experiments the milk is kept. The moment the 1856— Wilson Shannon removed iron» the governorship of Kansas. eventually cures round shoulders. have been made in order to learn how cow shows signs of being ill, or when to derive the largest yields and to even a slight eruption is noticeable, a 1860— Prince of Wales opened the V ic coil liver oil in tomato Try tali V E L V E T AND LACE, V E L V E T AND S T R A W A N D V E L V E T ALONE. toria railway bridge at Montreal. grow the crop most economically. person may contract disease by partak «•ntsup If you want to ma ke it pala- . . . . A Democratic convention as | Opinions differ, however, as climate, ing of her milk. Impure water is an table. sembled In Charleston, S. C., to who was sent out to interview lending variety and soil are factors governing other way in which milk is contami ward hardening his hotly and accus with the Must ard! phi ster-i made secure the election of Stephen A. If the cow Is compelled to toming himself to exercise the muscles citizens us to their politics. “ May 1 every crop. The Indiana station found nated. Douglas as President of the U n i white of an egg do not blister the in a healthful fashion, the tietter will see Mr. -------- ?” she asked of a stern that the best results were obtained by drink out of a mud hole, filled with ted States. skin. disease germs, she cannot help but tli" possibilities he for tiis recovery. looking woman who opened the door planting seed in May. It has been 1862— Buffalo and Niagara railroad T o cun a sting of lipe or wasp, mix The conditions which make for health at one house. "No, you can’t,” an drink a large number of those germs shown that the greatest average yield opened... .Union naval expedition common arili with water and ¡ ippiy and happiness are: A moderate diet swered tlie matron, decisively. "But I of both ears and stocks have been ob into her system, some of them being proceeded up tlie Yazoo River, in at once. of plain, wholesome food, a life of reg want to know what party he belongs tained when the stalks stood about sure to reach her milk. Milking the Mississippi. Wlicn a cut will not heal, saturate a ularity, and above all, healthful exer lo,” pleaded the girl. The woman twelve or fourteen inches apart in the cow into an open pail when the barn 1863— Gen. Rosecrans arrived in front piece of ih iirliciit cotton with coal cise in Ihe open air. A patient may drew up her tall figure. “ Well, take rows. of Chattanooga. . . . Lawrence, K an Thick planting, however, re is filled with dust, and from which oil and bind on. lie very weak and even confined to a good look at me,” she said. “ I'm duces the size of the ears, and the per there hangs an untold number of dirty sas, burned and sacked by Quan- trell’s band. Nothing takes the oil from the skin lied, hut so long as there Is no fever or tile party he belongs to.” — Universalis! centage of grain, but thick planting cobwebs, or milking her In an offens more quickly than a soap that does existing inllanimalory conditions that Leader. has, in dry seasons, produced the ively smelling lot, where the filth is 18G4—Free mail delivery commenced in Chicago. might be aggravated by activity, noth not agree with It. heaviest yield of stalks and the high ankle deep, or milking a cow whose est yield of ears. So far as depth of udder, flanks and legs are covered with 1866— The New Y'ork papers for the If you wish !o scent ttie false pom ing need hinder him from making a first time were able to print cable cultivation is concerned, the yields, dirt and filth— in such cases it is im padour, lay It on the rose Jar or on start in physical culture. news from Europe of the previous when corn was cultivated one, two possible to avoid contamination of the tup of It and cover for several hours. l''r H llu g In ju r«»* Hi«» S l o m n c h . day. and three inches, have been equal. In milk. It is believed that more disease A sure relief from thirst when water "D o you know that your stomach germs are given the human family 1870— Irish National Congress met In continuous corn culture heavy appli Is not to be obtained Is derived from slumps -actually slumps from two to Cincinnati. cations of fresh horse manure have through milk than are given in any holding a dry pebble or a button in four inches in your body if you make 1872— Arapahoe Indians massacred the other agency; and we also believe that not been profitable, but the effect of the mouth. guard of a government mule train, a practice of worrying and fretting?” a very heavy application of manure less attention is paid to the care oi and robbed and burned the wag Buttermilk Is excellent for the com said a woman lecturer. "F irst your milk than to any other food consumed has been noticed for many years. ons at Dry Creek, Colo. plcxlon and may be used dally, wash mouth droops till you can't lift the There does not seem to be much differ upon the table. 1873— First kindergarten school in The Brooklyn Suffrage Association ing with It, letting It dry on, and then corners of It. Your chin gets big— ence in yields due to any particular America established in St. Louis. C oolings ('r e n in . oh, you're anything but an Impressive recently celebrated its fortieth anni rinsing in warm lint not hot water. implement used, while hill and drill Different conditions on the fart., 1883— Completion of the Northern P a picture then! But worse conies. Your versary. plantings of corn have produced the cific Railroad to the Pacific coast. iii>> s S u i t . stomach slumps and coils up on Itself, Italy gives dowries to poor girls. In same average yields. The “ cheeking" w ill govern arrangements for the cool ing of cream. there windmills are 1884— Foochow, China, bombarded by and your diaphragm sort of falls on Sicily alone there are 634 societies for the French. used, many farms cheaply con your .-'iimiicti and your stomach gets this purpose, with an endowment of of corn is still the most popular and profitable mode of growing the corn struoted milk-houses in which can be 1886— Eight of the Haymarket Anarch irritated and creates poisonous gases. $:i, loo.ooo. at the least cost of labor. The results placed a tank or half barrel, through ists sentenced to death in Chicago. "Then your heart feels as If It were If Japanese parents do not find mat at one station may not correspond . . . .President Cleveland opened the which all water is led from the wind giving out, and you say; ‘Oh, 1 don't rimonial companinos for their sons with those obtained elsewhere, but mill to the stock-watering tanks. With Minneapolis Industrial Exposition know what's the matter; I can't climb by telegraph. and daughters, both parents and chil where the work has extended over a the cream cooled and held in these these stairs l must have heart dis dren are looked upon as disgraced. number of years the results should be tanks the arrangement is everything 1890—The remains of John Erisecon ease.' Heart! Legs are to climb stairs removed from New York to Swe The Rev. Dr. Anna Sh ivv declares accepted as important, if not conclu required. with, and poor misguided women think den with great honors. sive. that this year's congress of Interna Where windmills and milkhouse>. they've got to pull themselves up with tional Woman's Suffrage Alliance has are not used, a half barrel can be set 1894—Thirty-seven miners killed by their hearts. A V n ril S c ra p e r. explosion at Franklin, Oregon. "Stop playing dirges Inside your accomplished more than The Hague Besides its use In tlie barnyard, this near the pump and a cheap shade con 1897— President Rorda of Uruguay as conference. structed. The water can be pumped selves. Tuek your abdomens back into j is handy for covering potatoes, level sassinated. Mrs Helen Woods Miller left »20.000 ing rough ground, filling ditches, etc. by hand with small expenditure ol the right places; don't worry and to Brown University to he used in its It should be made of 2-inch lumber, time and labor. The cooling of the 1908—John W. Kern formally notified you'll be all right." of his nomination for Vice Presi department of comparative anatomy. : and hard wood If nossihle; tlie scraper creari w ll’ heat the water. Run out dent on the Democratic tic k e t.... S n y k n n i c t Ii I t i K t i m i d . Tlie rest of her estate Is to go to the I should be 6 to 8 feet long, and 2 feet the warn! water and pump a fresh The British steamer Dunearn foun Pick out the folks you like tlie least. Woman's College, Baltimore. j high; its life w ill be prolonged If supply in which the cream can set dered off the Japanese coast with and watch tin ill for a while; over night or through the day before a loss of fifty-tw o lives.. .The Mary Chilton was not the tlrst per They never waste a kindly word, they being added to the supply can. When Prussian government granted to son to land from tlie Mayflower at never waste a smile. women the privilege of higher edu another lot of warm cream Is to be They erilleise their fellownien at every Plymouth, according to investigations cation. cooled, the operation ran be repeated eliance they get; by Samuel Arthur Dent, which have A large box can be set over the barrel T h e y n e v e r f o u n d a h u m a n J u s t t o s u i t been recorded In the proceedings of to protect, the cream from the sun t b e t r f a n c y yet. AS TO FOREST FIRES. the Bostonian Society. From them l guess you'd learn some The farmer’s ingenuity may suggest Mrs Susan Frances Hemenvvay, w ho things, If they were pointed some other protection equally as good M u s t o f T h e m M i g h t l i e P r e v e n t e d was one of the chief heirs of Mr. Ftose, out— There are a dozen or more arrange W e r e P ro p e r M easn re* T ilk en . Some tilings that every one of us who founded the Rose Polytechnic at ments. Inexpensively and easily made According tn a bulletin issued by should know a lot about. Terre Haute, in her turn left about whieh can be devised on every farm the Massachusetts forester's office, the When someone "knock.-" a brother, $.-.00,000 to the institution and an en H A N O T nARNVVRO S I H U ’ IK. for the proper care of cream. These State might easily be devatstated of ; -s around the loving cup— tire block In tile heart of the city Say something good »l out him, if you for the use of the school. hod with a piece of iron or steel, as remarks suggest only the principle ol its forest by fires In 62 years if pre have to make it up. -flown; moreover, It a m do good keeping the cream in good condition ventive steps and replanting were not - H Fontaine Little. undertaken. Tlie report says; “ Rail work without the iirs- .Xie ovener I 'u p k i i i K : l i n t » . roads are the largest piodueers of for I ' l i M t u r l i i K ** It o«*p. must lie at least 4 feet from scraper, In Hake 1 u rfliiln a tliin u M m lg lii. In packing your lint tor the summer Some writers claim that sheep est fires, with nearly 40 per cent of Curtains. especial!) those reaching vacation see that the crown is well to allow for load, and to keep same front under tlie horses feet. A very ought not to be pastured on land more the total. Next conies the unknown, after tills model the sill only, are often difficult to stuffed, so it will not become crushed. than one year before It Is plowed and with 25 per cent. Then there is i « a approvai. It make fall Into graceful folds. There It is not necessary to use tissue pa large barnyard may be cleaned In a reseeded, owing to parasites, but It has per cent caused by smokers and 7 per short time, nnd several loads of is often too much fullness In one place per for this Stockings, handkerchiefs cot. It allows him been shown that sheep have been kept cent from burning brush. If some of to Ills heart's iv ii I and too little In another, despite the and other soft articles of clothing will in.untie saved. Simply drive the load ni ti where wanted, lift scraper up by the free from parasites by the use of tar. the unknown fires could be traced out, I many efforts to Improve their condi answer tlie purpose quite as well. If •:isy tu put Oil nliti handles, leaving load, and repeat the turpentine anil salt. Bore 2-lneh holes probably smokers would figure more the hat boasts of ribbon loops see that ' same time tli.it It tion. In a pine 10g. fill with salt and smear heavily in the total. This can be remedied by laying the these, too. are kept in shape with operation. ad vautages. It Is “ Incendiary fires and boys setting tar around the top nnd sheep will tar l ’in tl et!ve te the lisiker curtain, when ready to he hung, along crushed tissue paper hat f i c i M ir * I n C a l v e * . their noses while eating salt. Sheep fires maliciously, which we imagine is the Ironing board evenly. It should made from a great carefully Into the trunk, so It will A stockman claims that when calves soon learn to eat tar. One sheep much the same thing, together make then be doubled and very lightly not slip around in transit. ■rials. J or 4 years old become sick and die raiser keeps It mixed with turpentine 11 per cent. It ought to be noted that pressed with a cool Iron Fold again with scours It Is due to indigestion, and salt, where It Is accessible at all of all the 1,229 fires, five— which were r II»«* I I i i ** I m <*na M r l . and press and continue folding until **«»rr> II«* S|itikt', apparently, and yields to treatment times. About one-half pint of turpen set by lightning— were the only ones Moll« r on tho desk A It measures only about four inches. Old Lady ito druggist) I want • with pepsin if taken In time. A tea tine to one peek of salt Is the proper which were absolutely not prevent \ rtilium on tlie machine. Place on the rod. and the curtain will box of canine pills. spoonful twice a day given in a little proportion. able. The rest in large part could w, Id tinger nails. hang gracefully. The iron should not Druggist What's the matter with warm m ilk after feeding will cure have been prevented if the people A note In to jot down Important be so hot as to form deep creases. K lfc trlo A gric u ltu re . the dog? It. and If given when the calf is born, would go to the same lengths that irania W illiam Low of Scotland will ex Old lauly ( Indignantly l i » ant von and continued for a few days, will pre ♦hey do in cities." P to m a in e P o ison in g, Sib il • when jou feel like tattling periment on a large scale with the to know. sir. tha: m> husband ts a vent It. The pepsin Is the common The first thing to do ts to cause vo Loyalty to >our Arm. gentleman The druggist put up some kind sold In drug stores, and ran be application of electricity to agricul E lio t D e fe n d * B o o k S h e lf. miting by drinking freely of warm A cheery "Good morning." ture. About twenty-three acres, di quinine pills in profound silence-* purchased by the pound. Former President Eliot of Harvard water and putting the finger in the A little consideration for the feel vided in a number of fields, will be Young Pilgrim . has replied again to the numerous crit throat or »onie emetic. Then take a lugs of other». utlllred for this purpose, each field icisms of his five-foot book shelf be I.ark of W itter l e s s e n * M ilk F lo w . full Injection o f some warm water Into Don't let the cows shift for them Including a nonelectrlfled or controlled cause It omitted the Bible and Shake I I . Pa.-r.l, ( «in % ii I «*•«»«»n c c . the bowels and drink freely of olive He now nays that he left out selves In the matter of water. They plot for the purpose of comparison. speare Judge— You are a freeholder? It Is a common error to suppose oil. If there 1s pain In the abdomen must have all they want of such a A network of wires will be run over the Bible because many things tn It Talesman— Ye», sir. 1 am. (hat health and strength depend on or bowels, apply hot cloths, frequently temperature as w ill Induce them to the fields at a height of about IS feet are antiquated happenings of a bygone “ Married or single"-' taking plenty of strong meat and day. and that it Is a question whether changed. drink enough to supply their needs. from the ground. The poles will be drink, living In warm rooms, clothing "M arried three years last June.' either the Bible or Shakespeare should put I0d feet apart one way and 300 W « « the P u r t f . snugly and avoiding cold air. and et " l l a i e you formed or expressed any Many a cow "falls down” In her milk take the place of many other good production because she Is starving for feet another way. By means of trans books. He denies that he has consent perlnlly cold winds, says Good Health A matron of the most determined opinion?" The sooner the invalid gets hit mind character was sncountcred by a young "N ot for three years, your honor.“ — water, the water being either difficult form er» the voltage for the network ed to the extension of his shelf to six of access or too cold to be palatable. will be raised to 100.000. foot. free (rom this and make* a start to woman reporter on a country paper. Success. m y § F not on,y retaln3 * v> !