THE BANNER-COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1922 Page Five AGRICULTURE AND LIVESTOCK NEWS Up-to-date Information to Help Develop Progressive Farming v. . -.. uuMMfUnucnkc "inlamuoK Herds bet New buttertat Mar Another cow testing . association mint anu. buuertai record nas gone Dy uie Ooara. Xne May report or uie Oregon associauon wont snows tnat uie 'iiilawoOK associauon wiur cows got an average or 44.4a pounus or tat per cow. This i sa higher yieia than any ever Deiore maue by an association herd in Oregon, says K B. Fitta, O. A. C. and teaeral dairy neld man. The Tillamook association is the oldest in the state and has many good records back of it. It has recently absorbed the other two associations or the county and has about three times the average number of cows per association. The best herd for May averaged 62.29 pounds of fat. The cows are all registered Cuernseys owned by Edmunds and Fitzpatrick. The second best herd was only three hundredths of a pound behind. These cows are grade Jerseys owned by P. J. Sharp.' The best cow in the association, and in any association fn Oregon was "Pet", a grade. Jersey owned by j. C. George. Her record for May was 114.62 pounds of buttertat. The average milk yield of the 2442 cows was 1099 cal lit 1100 for luck probably more than their body weight in a single month. The newest association in Oregon, Columbia county, reports 375 cows averaged 30.82 pounds of fat from 767 pounds of milk for the month. The best cow gave 71.56 pounds of fat. There are 36 herds in the assoiationc, and every owner has provided his herd with a pure-bred sire. Jack Wid ows of Rainie is secretary and A. W. Loy, tester. Farm Reminders Vetch Good Forage Crop Wooly podded vetch makes a good forage crop for rather dry hill land. Where it is not pastured too closely it will reseed itself O. A. C. Ex periment station. Late Spray for Anthracnose Many growers are preparing to add Bordeaux 4-4-50 to the July codling moth spray in order to control anthiac nos.e. When applied that early the effect on the fruit is not so noticeable as later sprays and eperiments indi cate that just as effective control may be obtained. O. A. C. Eperiment sta tion Dust Controls Flee-Beetles Garden flee-beetles are begining to get in their work on potatoes and other garden vegetables. A dust made of one part powdered arsenate of lead to nine parts air slaked lime will pre vent serious damage. . Mix the ingred ients thoroughly and apply the dust to the plants by means of a cheese cloth bag or hand duster Best results may be had by applying it early in the morning or at other times when there is no wind. O. A. C. Experiment sta tion. Calves Kept Growing Heifer calves kept growing contin uously make larger and better cows than those stunted through lack of sufficient feed during some period of their development. Late summer and early fall is a critical time for them as feed is often limited. It pays to give them as well as the milk cows extra feed. Putting up summer silage 'is the way some farmers are meeting the problem of late green feed. They find the practice aids materially in work Ing dairy cattle to the limit of profit able production. O. A. C. Experiment station. Albert Flapjacks Grocers Recommend Albers Quality the hotcakes of the West l A 4' Carefully ' I absolute The Time to Buy Is when others are not buying when money is rather close and prices are low. When spring opens there Is always a buyers' rush, and prices always follow demand. If you want a city home, a farm or any property, look them over now and save mone.y. Come In and sea what I have. Insurance that Insures Seven strong companies, fire, accident, burglary, forgery, causality, auto. L E. TEEPLE 719Main, Oregon Or. POISONED BAIT SUCCESSFUL MEASURE AGAIST CUTWORMS Cutworms can readily be controlled by the use of poisoned bait, the United States Department or Agriculture has demonstrated. This is the way to pre pare and apply the poison: To 1 bushel of dry bran add 1 pound of white arsenic or Paris green and mix thoroughly into a mash with. 4 gal lons of water, in which has been stirred one-half gallon of sorghum or othed cheap molasses. This amount will be sufficient to .treat 4 or 5 acres of cultivated crops. After the mash has stood for several hours scatter it in lumps of about the size of a marble over the fields where the injury is be ginning to appear. Put it about the bases of the plants which have been set out. Apply the mash late in the day, so as to have the poison in place around the plants before night, when the cutworms are active. Apply a sec ond time if necessary. SPRAYING WITH KEROSINE REMEDY AGAINST LAWN ANTS To get rid of lawn ants entomolog ists oi the United States Department of Agriculture suggest drenching the nests with boiling water or pouring in a small quantity of kerosene oil. Sim ilar treatment may be applied to nests between or beneath paving stones. Spraying the lawn with kerosene em ulsion dr with very strong soap wash is also recommended. For large ant nests disulphid of carbon injected into the nest by means of an oil can or a small syringe is recommended to kill the ants. The fumes of disulphid of carbon have a vry disagreeable odor and are inflammable, but they are not injurious to higher animals in the open air. CULL THE CHICKS Culling the chicks frequently during the entire brooding period. Remove the srippled, sick nd weakly chicks and either kill them or put them under a separate hover where thev will nev er get back in the flock of vigorous cnicks. Most such individuals will never make good birds, but, if they are put by themselves and treated carefully many of them can be grown to broiler size and marketed, thus yielding some profit REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Linfield College to O. E. Fregtag and M. Agnes. Lot 3, block 30, Glad stone. Laura E. and Carrie W. Mullan to Harrison D. Brady, E 50 ft of lot 4, block 28, Milwaukie. Guy L. Ravin to Jessie E. Raven, lot 7, block 47, O. I. and L. Co's. 1st addition to Oswego. F. A. Jessie Rosenkrans to Blake and Annie Bowland. Lots 13 and 14, block 13, Gladstone, Oregon. Lily Mengel to C. A. and Mary Tro fill, part of block 108, Oregon City. A. W. and Annie L. Graham to Ros well L. Holman, part of lot 8, block 27, Oregon City. A. W. and Annie L. Graham to Ros well L Holman, part of lot 8, block 27 Oregon City. R. L. Holman to H. S. Goldman, part of lot 8, block 27, Oregon City. S. 214 7th Street., Relol Holding Co., to H. R. Smith, tract 20, Willamette Tracts. -J. L. and May Haye to H. L and Mabel M. MorrelL 1st addition to Wil lamette Falls Acreage Tracts. ' May and Alfred Groemer to C.-W. and Myrtle, lots 19, 20, 21, 22 and 23s, 30 'ft, 7, block 9, Milwaukie Park. arrah A. Murratto to M. E. and Birdie Caldwell, lot 10, block 15, Gladstone. ' Joseph E. and Lillian B. Hedges to L. A and Edna C. Henderson. Lots 7 and 8, block 104, Oregon City. Dora Dahrens to Henry and Augusta Hammann, lot 5, block 2, Sandy. Maud P. and Chas. C. Spencer to George and Greta McLaughlin, lot 1 and north Iff feet of lot 2, block 3, Canemah. MARRIAGE LICENSE Oliver E. Buchholz, age 22, Oregon: C,ity, Route 6, to Ruth L. Ball, age 18, Oregon City, route 6. Harold C. Miller age 26, Salem, Ore., to Dorothy Stafford age 22, Oregon City. Richard M. Miles, age 25, Oak Grove to Jessie Renfrow, age 19, Oak Grove. Walker C. Carter, age 30, Portland, to June E. Russell age 28 Portland. Glenn E. Hilton age 19, Scotts Mills, Oregon to Myrtle E. Henderson, age .26, Oregon City. John H. Smith, age 32, Portland, y We are making a lead of LUMBER We are putting out an exceptionally good grade at I 4. exceptionally low prices. this for the bulk of the lumber that goes into a house 2 p it will pay you to see us We can furnish all the i a house and give you the WILLAMETTE RIVER LUMBER CO. Wholesale and Retail I Phone 63 s 16th and llllllllllllllllllllllllllll Holly. Garden liiiiiiiiiii Beautiful garden soil-in 1-2 acre and one acre tracts--fronting on the Willamette river, adjoining the West Side highway--the best paved road in the state Here you have the purest water electric lights-all modern con veniences. The new bridge will soon be completed and the de mand for west side property will surely enhance the value. Buy Now before prices advance. We can sell you a beautiful lot on improv ed street for $275 --$55 cash and balance $10 per month. O. DILL MAN REALTOR Phone 427 Oregon City," Ore. Oregon to Louise Dixon age 25, Port land. Henry Endres,. age 38, West linn to Marie Friedrich, age 36j Parkplace, Harry G. Elligsen, age 34, route 4, Oregon City to Maude S. Davis, age 26, Oregon City. Edwin E. Thompson age 31, Oregon City to Alice Boss, age 18, Oregon City. ' . Portland Voters Bond For Schools At the Portland school election last Saturday, the voters favored a tax levy of $1,000,000 and bonds for $3, 000,000 for school purposes. These funds will enable the district to carry out a building program which will re lieve the general congestion o school rooms by providing for several new buildings in different parts of the city, to provide additional rooms to present buildings and to retain such subjects as music and- Industiral work which without these additional funds would be dropped fro mthe curriculum. F. S. Pickering the candidate of the Federated Societies ,was elected over the present incumbnt A. C. Newell by a 3 to 2 vote. Rush To Portland Festival Foreseen The fifteenth annual Rose Festival and Floral Pageant Is to be held in Portland, Oregon, June 20 to 23 in clusive, and is expected to break all previous records in point of attend ance. Features of the festival will be the arrival of the "Princess" down the beautiful Willamette River accompan ied by gaily decorated water carft; our No. 3 common lumber. C In as much as you can use and let us show you. lumber you needto build f very besf service and price, f. Main Oregon City f 2 impressive coronation ceremony of "Queen Harriet"; a Rose Show; an an nual regatta in which motor boats, racing shells and other water craft will participate; athletic contests in Multnomah Field, Portland s natural amnhitheater: floral Darade. in which over 200 gorgeously decorated floats will take part; a sporting and tourist exposition portraying scenic beauties of the Pacific Northwest and a Civic Band. Three entire blocks in the heart of Portland have been transformed into a hesuitiful sarden elaborately decor ated with clusters and strings of rich ly colored electric lights. Approxi mately $10,000 will be awarded in prizes to winners in the various con tests. County Fair Fund From State Is $2002 Under the' law relating to county fairs there is a levy of one-twentieth mill tax upon the property oi tne state of Oregon as equalized by the state tax commission. From this fund, $2602.82 will be turned over this year to Clackamas county by the state. It is provided that no county shall receive more than $15,000 and since Multnomah's claim is $17,400,771 there is $3,400.71 excess which is divided among all the counties. Lebanon Local cannery will dis tribute about $200,000 to farmers this season. . , RECIPES Rice Croquettes One-half cup rice, 1 teaspoons salt. 1 quart boiling water, 1 tablespoon but ter, 2 tablespoons milk, 1 egg. Cook . rice as in preceding recipe. Add butter, milk and egg. Cook and stir a few minutes longer. Turn out on a platter to cool. Shape with the hands into little cones, roll in crumbs dip in an egg slightly beaten with 1 fablespoon milk, roll again in crumbs and fry in deep hot fat The fat should be not enough to brown an inch cube of bread in 40 seconds. These croquettes are very nourishing and should be served when the meat course is light. Halibut Baked With Milk Four-pound cut halibut," cup milk. Vs. teaspoon salt, teaspoon paprika, hard boiled eggs, 1 cup buttered bread crumbs, rich white sauce, lemon. Scrape skin of fish, dipping first in boiling water. Wipe dry. Kub with salt and pepper and put in baking pan. Pour in the milk. Bake until the fish loosens and pulls away from the bone. Boste often with the milk in the pan. it will taKe aoout an hour to bake a four-pound cut of halibut. Remove skin and lift out the bone. Fill the cavity left by the 'bone with bread crumbs moistened with rich white souce. Sprinkle che surface of the fish with the remaining crumbs, dot with bits of butter and put in a hot oven to brown. Serve with white sauce in which slices of the hard boiled eggs have been heated. Or the crumbs may be eliminated and the fish garnished with slices of egg and lemon and served with drawn butter. The perfect 36 bust is no more, writes a sartorial correspondent. In the days of her prime, before flappers owned their own cigarettes, she flourished. Now she is gone, forever. In her place is the willowy creature with a figure like a twelve-year-old boy and dresses that are suspended from sharp shoul ders. The fashionable figure now, is smaller than the 36, more undeveloped. The stylish girl accentuates this thin, wispy appearance. Store Now Opens at 9 A. M. Saturdays . Phone: Pacific Marshall 5080 THE "THE STORE THAT UNDERSELLS BECAUSE IT SELLS FOR CASH' New Summer Dress Cottons In Endless Variety and Temptingly Priced Burton's Fine Dress Tissue at 75c. yd. Complete satisfaction is assured in style, quality and coloring if your selection is made from our splendid stock of the famous Burton Tissues. They come in 36-in. width and are shown in a complete as sortment of the new check, plaid and stripe styles in all colors. You'll find them a very high-class summer fabric very moderately priced. AN UNSURPASSED SHOWING OF THE NEW SPORT SWEATERS ATTRACTIVELY PRICED FROM $2.98 TO $18.00 ART SILK SCARFS OF THE BETTER QUALITIES, $3.50 TO $7.90 THE SWEATERS come in the popular slip-over effects in round or V shape neck, plain or turned-back cuffs and with belts to match. Plaids, Stripes, heather and novelty patterns in plain or fancy weaves. All-wool art silk, mohair, silk mixed and organzine silk Sweaters in all sizes- THE SCARFS are shown in the best styles and shapes, well made and finished with fringe ends they are made from fine art silk and are of the better sort. Included are the desirable weaves and colorings includ ing the extremely popular Roman stripes and gloss stripes. Standard Berry Crates AND Folding Hallocks VEGETABLE PLANTS, FLOWER AND GARDEN SEEDS Dependable Poultry supplies and feeds are a large factor in ! successful poultry farming. Our prices compare very favorably with pre-war times. Larscn & 10th and Main Insure with your Home Companies PACD7IC STATES for business risks McMENN VILLE or FARMERS MUTUAL 4 for residence and country properties E. H. COOPER & SON Bank of Oregon City Bldg., Phone 366 S. F. Scripture GENERAL BLACKSMITH ING AND HORESHOEING Automobile and Truck Springs Repaired I am selling the LAHER ELECTRIC BOLTLESS SPRING The best spring made, guaranteed Phone 276W 108 - 5th St between Main and Water SL Miller's Shoe Store Men's and Boys' Shoes, Gloves, Laces, Shoe Polish, Oils and Greases EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING Main Street Opposite Post Office The Best MOST IN VALUE THE BEST IN Company Oregon City 4 "I In Quality Store Closes Daily at 5:30 P. M. Saturdays at 6 P. M. Home Phone: A 2112 QUALITY hi