Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Hubbard enterprise. (Hubbard, Marion County, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 4, 1921)
siniiiiiiii!iiiiiiviiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiv£= during the lunch hour will prove a | THE GIRL ON THE JOB | 5 S How to Succeed—How to Get 5 Ahead—How to Make Good E 1 By JESSIE ROBERTS 1 siiiiiiiiiziiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiuiii? AFTERNOON HEADACHE complete cure. Try to find out what it is thafglves you your headache, and then go for it with vigor. You can almost cer tainly cure it. THE WOODS VIGILANCE NECESSARY TO KEEP CHICKEN HOUSE FREE OF MITES BY DOUGLAS MALLOCH (Copyright.) ft --------- O--------- — ?! -n THE ROMANCE OF WORDS between three and S OMEWHERE four-thirty many a girl develops a "C A B A R E T ." headache at her work, and takes that headache home with her. There are several reasons why this afternoon headaehe comes on, and if you are troubled with it, you want to ask your self a few questions and look closely into'your daily routine. Perhaps you have a way of getting up too late to give yourself the nec essary time for your bath and dress ing and breakfast. You should have a good breakfast, with cereal and an egg, for you have much work between breakfast and lunch, and dinner was a long while ago. And you ought to eat slowly. Or perhaps you don’t eat the right sort of lunch. An eclair and a cup o f coffee or chocolate won’t do. You are bound to develop a fine headache on that sort of diet You don’t need a heavy lunch, but it must be nour ishing. A bowl of toast and milk and a baked apple with cream will give you the sort of food you can work on. If your food is all right, possibly you are working in a badly ventilated office. This is almost sure to bring on headache and lassitude. If you can- •not have the window open enough to insure good air, you can probably man age to get out by an open window two or three times during the day, and there take a half dozen or more deep, full breaths. Sometimes the pain is caused by eye trouble, and then of course you must ask the advice of an oculist. Sometimes it comes from rushing too much at the beginning of the day. Don’t try to do all the work there is jin the first portion of the morning. You can’t use up all your steam at the first take-off and hope to keep it, too. Often a brisk walk of half an hour into prominence B ROUGHT of late years because of the • large number of hotels and res taurants which have advertised "dancing cabarets” or "jazz cabarets” or have used the term as indicative of a place where one can secure food and amuse ment at the same time, "cab aret” has come to be regarded as a new addition to the Eng lish language—a word which, from its form and pronuncia tion, is evidently French. As a matter of fact the term was originally of Gallic origin, but it is by no means moderp, having been widely used in Eng land during the Sixteenth cen tury as a synonym for "tavern.” There was nothing musical about the cabarets of this period and the only amusement they afforded was that which the travelers furnished. While the word was used by Bramhall in one o f his works published in 1685, it passed out 'o f the lan guage soon after that and did not return again until about the middle o f the Eighteenth cen tury. At this time, however, its stay was short and its popular ity limited. Not until the danc ing craze struck the world a few years ago was it resurrected in its present sense. It has changed its meaning so much of late that, if a hotel ad vertised a “ cabaret” and did not provide at least an orchestra, it would be accused o f fraud— while as a matter of several centuries of custom it Would be entirely within its rights. DO W N G RA DE. Y ES, boy, I know—you do not think; You only hear the glasses clink And feel the bogus joy of drink. Life looks all summer through a glass The whisky road is green with grass— But life and summer both will pass. It’s easy now to drink or not, To drink a little or a lo t; But after all your drinking, what? May It not happen ere the grave The thing you laugh at you will crave?— The master will become the slave? G od! I have seen them: Boys like you, The froliekers of fighting crew, Who never thought and never knew. Who took the road that dips and gleams, That runs ahead of singing streams (Yet somehow never downward seems). For Small Coops a Hand Atomizer Will Suffice for Applying Insecticides. With this same foolish passion played, Poultry raisers are all too familiar heavily infested houses the mites are The same old merry journey made, with the common red or gray mite to be found in all parts of the build Who took the road of easy grade— which infests poultry houses. In gen ing, including the roof. Where they eral those who are making a specialty are less numerous the infestations Till night came on, till sank the sun, of poultry raising have comparatively usually are confined to the roosts and Till shadows gathered one by one little trouble with mites, or at least nests and the walls immediately ad Around the path, and-day was done. For small coops a hand they keep them reduced to a point jacent. where they are o f little importance. atomizer will suffice for applying in ’Twas then they turned; but now the On the other hand, farmers and others secticides as sprays, but for larger hill ^ who raise poultry as an incident to houses a bucket pump, knapsack Was high behind them, and the rill other operations frequently find their sprayer, or barrel pump is desirable. Within the valley dark and still— A rather coarse spray should be ap chicken houses overrun by mites. plied from all angles and thoroughly Detecting Presence of Mites. Around, the level of the plain; The attack of this blood-sucking driven Into the cracks. The floor also Above, a rocky path of pain mite is of an insidious nature which should be treated, as many mites fall To climb, if they would rise again. does not readily draw attention to its to the floor when the roosts are being presence, and often the poultrymato removed. I am no preacher called to preach; in tests conducted by the United Is not aware of an infestation until he I am no teacher fit to teach States Department of Agriculture is attracted to it by the irritation pro You younger men of better speech. duced by mites on his own body during the last two years a consider through coming in contact with the able number of materials used as Yet I have walked the merry road ' (Copyright.) Where laughing rivers downward infested coops. The presence of the sprays have proved effective. One of 0= =o pest may readily be determined, how the so-called wood preservers was flowed, ever, by the detection of small areas found immediately effective, and its And climbed again with all the load. on the boards specked with black and killing or repelling power lasts for With all the load a man acquires white as though dusted with salt and months. As this material is rather Who follows after his desires pepper. This is the excrement of the expensive (about $1 per gallon), and : Until he finds his lusts are liars, mites, which are hidden in adjacent Is too% heavy to spray well, it is ad cracks or rough places. More careful visable to reduce It with equal parts Until he finds, as find he will, examination will reveal masses of of kerosene. The peace, the joy his age to fill Crude petroleum Is almost as effec mites in hiding, together with their He left behind him on the hill. eggs and the silvery skins cast by the tive, retains Its killing power for sev My preaching is not perfect, Jack; eral weeks, and in most localities it is young. Yet truth, at least, it does not lack*— In moderately -Infested poultry very cheap. It iWill spray better if For I have been there boy, and back. houses the injury to the fowls is not thinned with one part of kerosene to (Copyright.) easily - apparent, but the constant four parts of crude oil. ----------— O --------- — It has been found that one thor blood loss and irritation are shown by decreased egg production and the ough application of either of these poor condition of the fowls’ flesh. In materials will completely eradicate heavily infested coops it is not un the mites from an infested chicken usual for the chickens to become house, but ordinarily it Is advisable droopy and weak, with pale comb and to make a second application a month wattles. Sitting hens desert their after the first, and in some cases a nests and thus ruin the eggs or, as is third treatment is required. These often the case, they are found dead on subsequent applications may be made with a brush, using the materials un D ID YOU D R E A M OF Y O U R R E L A the nest, being killed outright by the attack of thousands of mites. In ex diluted and covering only the roosts, T IO N S ? treme cases a considerable number of their supports, the walls adjoining, fowls succumb, even though not sit and the nests if they are infested. o s t r a d a m u s , Aibertus Magnus, This method of application is effec Mother Shipton and wise gypsies ting, and all are so weakened as to tive for the first treatment also if fce very susceptible to various dis seem to agree that it is a good omen the houses are not heavily infested. to meet one’s uncle in a dream and eases. Poultry should be kept out of the Owing to the fact that mites feed portends a happy marriage or a good treated buildings until the material substantial legacy, or both. But meet during the night and secrete them is well dried into the wood. selves In cracks and crevices during ing your aunt in Dreamland is not so Using Pure Kerosene. the day, their presence very often is propitious, for it signifies that you will Pure kerosene and kerosene emul shortly be called down for something overlooked until a very heavy infesta tion has developed. In such cases sion in double the strength ordinarily of which you are not guilty. In meet they should be attacked energetical applied to plants will destroy all ing relatives in dreams the signs seem ly. Although not hard to kill, the mites hit, but these substances have to be considered to hold whether greatest obstacle is the difficulty of not body enough to destroy those those .seen be alive or dead. If you reaching them in their hiding places. j mites which are in more protected dream of seeing the dead alive it is Dust baths will not control them, as, situations', and several applications at an especially good omen. To dream at most, only the few which remain ten-day intervals are needed to de of one’s mother, after not having.seen on the chickens during the daytime stroy all the mites. her for a long time, indicates that you will be destroyed. Arsenical dip, such as is used to will make friends again with some of The first step necessary to destroy destroy cattle ticks, has been found $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$* your relatives with whom you have the mites is to get rid of the hiding fairly satisfactory for use against had a falling out. There is a common places so far as possible. The roosts chicken mites. Several applications impression that, one’s mother being should be taken down and all unnec are required to eradicate the mites dead, it portends some misfortune to essary boards and boxes removed. In from poultry houses; see her in a dream. Not so say the authorities; it is a propitious omen, and to dream of speaking with her SHOCKED CORN GOOD SILAGE capacity of the silos Is not great indicates that you will soon receive enough to take care of the entire crop. I know not where in all this world I’d small onion, one tablespoonful of flour, I some good news. But if one hears his It is a good way of improving a valu Refilling Silo With Surplus Even in find one egg, one stalk of celery, one-half mother calling out to him in a dream able feed.” Another half so precious or so dear, Middle of Winter Is Most Eco Or one whose love would hold so firm and a bay leaf, four tablespoonfuls of b u t-' it is an indication that he should mend nomical Practice. kind ter, one * teaspoonful of salt, one-half his ways and pay stricter attention to Concentrated Feeds Best. Throughout the changing fortunes of a teaspoonful of pepper and one-half 1 his business 4 perhaps engage in some The use of artificial lighting can "Corn cut at the proper time and each year. cupful o f cream. Put the milk, bay new venture. If one dreams that he In all my life I cannot hope to pay put into the shock can be made into not be said to stimulate egg produc That priceless debt of faithful loyalty; leaf, celery and onion into the milk is making his home with his mother it good silage, even in the middle of the tion in the same proportion that con I ask no sweeter bondage than to stay and let it simmer for twenty minutes, indicates security in fortune. To sum winter,” says Alvin Kezer of the agron centrated feeds do. | A debtor to her precious love for me. then remove the seasoning vegetables. up, to see relatives, alive or dead, in omy department of the Colorado I For it I’d yield the honor men confer; Sound Business Basis. I For it give all wealth and eminence; Add salt, pepper and two tablespoon fairly good health in your dream is a Agricultural college: "Of course, such fuls of butter; let stand where it will most favorable prognostication. | And all I have 1 humbly offer her— Profitable farming is a matter of silage will not be as palatable as when My deepest love and truest reverence. (Copyright.) keep hot. Prepare the fowl for roast siloed early and there wiH be more business and farms can be most suc I know none other I could so enshrine O mechanical waste of leaves and other cessfully operated only on a sound i Within my heart, save her—that mother ing and stuff it. Brush with butter and dredge with flour, then place in a mine. —Mildred E. Little. parts of the corn plant. because the business basis. deep pan and brown well in a brisk shocked corn had been stored for part oven. When nicely browned pour over S E A S O N A B L E GOOD T H IN G S. Improves AH Pastures. of the winter, either in the shock or in the milk, cover the pan and cook Different pastures will need differ stacks. But if this dry fodder is run O SERVE three attractive meals slowly until the fowl is tender. Re through a silage cutter and the proper ent treatment, but they will all be im daily for so von days in the week, move the fowl, strain the liquor and amount of water run in with It, it will proved by the application of a coat 'the house mother must plan ahead sev thicken with a tablespoonful of flour. make good silage and a much more of manure. eral days to avoid monotony. The Beat the egg, add it with the cream, palatable feed than the dry fodder, Value of Iowa Lands. recipes below are but suggestive of very slowly, to the strained gravy. which will be eaten by the stock with what one may prepare and have va*. Heat very carefully but do not boil. The average value of plow lands in less waste. Serve the gravy with the fowl. riety: "Sometimes, shocking the surplus Iowa is $219 per acre. (©, 1921. Western Newspaper Union.) H IS P L A T F O R M corn after the silos, are filled and re --------- O--------- Jack: I hate to kiss a girl through Co-operati^a marketing is one way Chicken au Lait. filling from the shocked corn is a very Ganges’ Changing Channel. a veil. for the farmer to get cost plus a de economical practice, a practice worth T o prepare this, take a five- The Ganges is constantly changing Fred: Same here. Pm for open remembering, especially when the cent profit on his products. pound fowl, one quart of*milk, one Its channel. countenances, openly arrived at» SCHOOL DAYS N MOTHER’ S , -vi COOK BOOK y htto* /VWivtiß. T