THE BANNER-COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1922. Page Five AGRICULTURE AND LIVESTOCK NEWS Up-to-date Information to Help Develop Progressive Farming Great Meetings At O. A. C. A. F. Gray of Milwaukie -will read a paper on the suckerless filbert at the state horticulturists and nut growers associations at O A. C, November 23 25. Oregon horticulture" inorchard fruits, small fruits, nuts and vege tables will be brought out at its' best at the convention. Special sessions will be held Thurs day farenoon and all day Friday, with a big joint session on handling the or chard and garden soils, Thursday after noon. Pruning will, be the opening subject, with the joint session on soils in the afternoon. A rally will be held in the evening withN. R- Moore, mayor of Corvallis, B. W. Johnson, president of the State Horticultural Society, Fred Groner, president of the nut growers, and James T. Jardine, director of the experiment station, speakers Thinning for better crops will be the subject of the fruit men, Friday morning, and pest control will feature the program in, the afternoon. A ban quet with a discussion, of desirable horticultural legislation by Earl Percy of the Oregon Co-operative Growers' Association, will be held Friday night. Various phases of the handling, transportation and marketing situa tion will be considered at the closing session, Saturday forenoon. All talks by growers and college men will be followed by round table discussions. Among the successful growers and sci entists already listed are the follow- XV T7 riwin vino-nroeiHfinf rf ; hoi. different soil types and the require ment of crops with the actual re sults from the field trials with the different methods of soil improvement, will be of great value. A careful study of these points with a thorough con sideration of the discussion of general principles and the description of indi vdual soil types will furnish the most necessary and useful information for the practical improvement and per manent preservation of the productive ness of every soil on every farm in these counties.' , Fumigate For Weevils Dried beans and peas inentded for storage need fumigation to prevent weevil injury Infestation by weevils is so general that the treatment is al ways advisable. Use carbon " bi-sul-phide, two tablespoonfuls to five gal lons of seed, or at the rate of one pound to 25 bushels. Place the seed in fairly air-tight containers and pour the liquid over the surface,- or place the liquid in shallow trays on top of the seed to be treated. Close the con tainer and allow the fumes to act for 24 hours. The treatment does not in jure the material for seed or for food purposes. ' : Farm Reminders It is illegal to sell cider that has hot been preserved or sterilized. Cider may be preserved by using one-tenth of one per cent of benzoate of soda. This method la not alwavs successful. in preventing the formation of alco- The safest way is to use only TO DESTROY CANADA THISTLE First Step in Eradication- Is to Pro vent Seed Development Disk in Early Fall.- - The Canada thistle, also known as the cursed thistle, is one of the worst weed pests. It spreads by Its root sys tems as well as by seed. Its eradica tion entails a large amount or work. The first step in' eradication, say university farm men, is to prevent seed development. After the grain has been cut- the infested laad should be plowed deep enough to bring the roots of Jthe" thistle to "the surface. Disking the surface cultivation in the early fall will prevent the growth of North American Fruit Exchange, who good sound apples for cider making, will speak on transportation and mar- i Thoroughly strain the product, place keting of fresh fruits. jin Slass or tin containers and sterilize M. J. Newhouse, assistant general jfor 30 minutes at a temperature of 160 manager of the Oresron On-onera five i degrees Jj . Growers, formerly" manager of the Clark County Prune Growers' Associa tion, will discuss the prune outlook in Oregon and the northwest. E. A. Clark, president of the Kings Food Products Company, will discuss the dehydrated and canned fruit and vegetable outlook. : H P. Barss, station plant patholo gist, will discuss disease control Sam TT Rrfram wmffpi- rf a 9.apro evergreen blackberry patch, will dis cuss his method of raising, handling and marketing. A. L. Lovett, station entomologist, will discuss insect control. L. S. Otis pioneer black raspberry grower, will give his methods with growing and handling. Vegetable Quality Wanted Those who sell . vegetables to the public, as for example, the retail gro cer, find there is a distinct prefer ence among the buying public for cer tain varieties, but above all, for quali ty produce, which has the best flavor, correct,size, color, shape and solidity, A good product, well grown is often times half sold. Soil Survey Reports In Press. " Soil survey reports for Washington, Multnomah and- Josephine counties have gone to press and should be avail able by January 1. A study of the soil map and experiment station data con cerning the plant food content of the Hannchen barley, the best spring variety, gained much in acreage in 1922 and most producers were well pleased with its yield and quality. Hannchen first showed promise in Ore gon in 1909, when it was successful, at the experiment station. Plenty of grit should be provided for the pullets in the, laying quarters. Fowls not provided with grit soon show a loss of appetite and begin to lose weight. Proper use cannot be made of the feed without grit to grind it. The most progressive potato grow ers, who expect to certify or to have good seed, are sorting carefully before the potatoes go into storage." This takes less storage space and removes the potatoes likely to start spoilage in the pit. No farmer should try to test out cop per carbonate dust for wheat smut control, unless he has rigged up an ef ficient dusting machine such as a clos ed drum, fitted with projecting cleats on the inside, which will pick up the grain and powder as the drum is ro tated, letting it fall back again thus insuring a perfect coating. Such a ma chine should be revolved for two min utes, which will be sufficient to coat every kernel thoroughly. The stand ard proportion is two ounces of high grade copper carbonate powder to a bushel of wheat. "M y X-.-: Srifc..:-: Vf- Canada Thistle. the plants, while plowing later in the fall will expose the roots to the action of frosts. - If the plant persists after all this punishment, as it probably will, a three-year rotation of grain, clover and corn or some other cultivated crop will furnish the knockout blow. Reinforce ment can be prevented by a repetition of the rotation. - Filling The Silo By F. L. Ballard. Silo filling time is at hand. Prelim inary arrangements include getting the silo and silage cutter In proper con dition. All bolts in silage cutter should be tightened and the knives sharpened. In the case of a stave silo the hoops should be adjusted, as doubt less they have become loosened during the summer season. If the silo is of concrete and the inside is rough it may be well to paint or paraffin. One of the most important factors in silage production lies in the proper stage of cutting the crop. Immature crops contain a high percentage of sugar and make silage of poor quality. Crops standing in the field until they are brown and dry require the addi tion of much water to replace the natural plant juices. Silage from such crops does not pack well. The best time for cutting corn is when the ears are well dented and are beginning to glaze. Sunflowers should be at least 60 to 70 per cent in blossom. - Oats and peas should be cut when the oats m ... v. - "WW I Transactions . If How convenient is the elimi nation of correspondence and travel. How profitable, in the econ omy of time, is the immediate answer and the avoidance of delay. How satisfactory is the direct personal touch.' : ' Convenience, profit and satis faction will be found in the use of the long distance telephone lines. Every Bell telephone is a Long Distance station. -- . The Pacific And Telegraph Telephone are in stiff dough stage and when the peapods first begin to turn'yellow. It is important that the silage cutter cut in uniform lengths, or poor silage will result Farmers purchasing a sil age cutter should consider the possi bility of uing it for chopping hay also, as this practice is found, profitable when hay is high in price. The crop should be cut into pieces of uniform lengths, three-fourths . of an inch or less. It la much better to cut silage too fine than to have it too coarse On the average one-half inch is a most Satisfactory cut, If the silage, will ex ude moisture freely when a double handful as squeezed tightly it Is suffi ciently moist. If the water runs out in a stream there is too much moisture and a few loads of oat or wheat hay should be run in. In case more mois ture is needed, water should be added. If a hose is not available it is best to set a barrel high enough so that water may run from it to the blower. One of the most important points in silage making is proper packing Con tinual tramping must be given the sil age as it . comes from the blower. Otherwise air centers the food mass and spoilage results. With large cut ters it is often necessary for three to six men to be actively tramping in the silo. The middle of the silage mass should be kept lower than the edges and most of the tramping done on the edges. ' It is best not to feed silage for two or three weeks after filling, as it re quires about this time for proper fer mentation. v RECIPES Contributions to this column are invited Meat Balls With Tomato Sauce One pound hamburger sauce and one half pound pork sausage, one onion minced fine. Put some bacon or other fryings into a pan and copk the onion to a light brown, mix with meat and make into flat balls and roll an flour and fry. After they are done add a can of canned tomatoes or cut up ripe fresh ones and put over and cook an hour all together. Potato Cake Two cups sugar, one cup butter, one cup mashed potato, two cups flour, four eggs, 14 cup sweet, milk cup melted chocolate, one teaspoonful cin namon; cloves, nutmeg, vanilla to taste; cup walnuts, two teaspoons baking powder. This cake is excellent baked in a loaf or layers andput to gether with a filling as follows : One cup sugar, five tablespoons sweet milk, one egg; vanilla, chocolate to taste. Put all together and cook till it thick ens, then stir till ready to spread. ' Carrot Pudding One cup grated carrots, one cup grated potatoes, one cup flour, one cup sugar, one cup raisiri,s one-half cup butter, one level teaspoon - each of allspice, cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon and salt. Mix all together well, except the flour, put one teaspoon of soda into the flour and sift it into the other ingredients, boil in a double boiler for three hours. MANY USERS OF TELESCOPE Dealers. Report Practically a Steady Demand for Glasses In All Months of the Year. Wo sell telescopes all the year round, but the demand for them is 'greater in summer than In other sea sons," said the salesman in a New York optician's shop. "Perhaps that Is because itis easier to remain out doors and study the stars on a sum mer night than it is when the weather Is colder. "Also, in summer people buy tele scopes for other purposes than to study the stars. Folks on the sea snore get them to look at passing ves sels, at the clouds and other things. We sell some also to those who live In the mountains and use the tele scope for lookout purposes. But of course, the greater number of tele scopes, especially the high-power glasses, are bought' for" the study of the heavens. "Annually we sell an average of 200 telescopes . for amateur use. They range in size from the hand glass, with 1-inch lens, to the glass that Is supported on a tripod and has a lens 3 to 3 Inches In diameter. Larger lenses than the 3 inch size are sel dom bought by amateurs. They are for professional use." .NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT . Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has filed her final report in the estate of Joseph Haas, deceased, and the Court has set Monday, the 18th day of December, 1922, at the hour of 10:30 a. jn. o'clock on said day, in the County Court Room in the County Court House in Oregon City, Oregon, as the time and place for hearing any and all objections to said final report, and the discharge of said executrix. Dated, 16th Nov., 1922. , . . MARY! HAAS, Executrix' of the last will and testa--ment of Joseph Haas, deceased. G. B. Dimick & - W. I Mulvey, Attorneys for Executrix. (ll-16-5t) - iron t?ipewhch is the western cor ner of a tract of land sold to Mar shall N. Dana, his wife was as re corded on Page 620, Book 167 of Deed Records for Clackamas Coun ty, Oregon, and running thence North 59 deg., 20 min. west 23.37 ft to a point marked by an iron pipe, thence - North 61 deg, 50 East 357.4 ft ( to land belonging to John F. Risley, thence South 8 deg. 52 East tracing the boundary line between the lands of John F. Risley and the estate of Alice M. Starkweather, a distance of 21.19 ft. to the aforementioned land owned by Marshall N. Dana and Nora V. Dana, thence South 61 deg. 50' ,West tracing the Northern boundary of said Dana land, a dis tance of 338.3 ft. to the place of be ginning. -together with all the right, title and interest which the said decedent had therein at the time of her death." Said sale of said tract will be for cash. -Dated at Oregon City, Oregon, 9th November, 1922.- H. G. STARKWEATHER, Administrator of the Estate of Alice Jtf Starkweather, De - ceased. , - J. J. FITZGERALD, Attorney. 421 Mohawk Building, Portland, Oregon, iU.I.." !-.; . ' ll-16-5t SUMMONS ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE : Notice is hereby given that in pur suance of an order of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County, made and entered on the 26th day of September, 1921 and entered and recorded on page 466 of Volume 9 of the Probate Journal of said. court in the matter of the Estate of Alice M. Starkweather, Deceased, the ad ministrator of said estate -will, on the 18th day of December, 1922, offer for sale at private sale at the residence of H. G. Starkweather, the undersign ed, on the River Road near Oak Grove, Clackamas County, Oregon, the follow ing described tract of land: A part of the J. S. Risley D. L. C. in Township 2 South, Range 1 East of the Willamette Meridian in Clack-..- amas County, Oregon, bounded a3 . follows: " Beginning at a point marked by an In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clack amas. CHARLES R. JOHNSON, Plaintiff, vs. EUGENE DUPItTS, sometimes called Eugene Dupins, FERDI-" NAND ZIMMERMAN, GEORGE SHIPLEY, MATHEAS WOLF, S. W. WHITE and THOMAS GRANT, Defendants. To Eugene Dupius, Ferdinand Zimmer man,: George Shipley, Jtfatheas Wolit S. W. Smith and Thomas Grant, the above named defend ants : ' - In the Name of the State of Oregon: iou are hereby required to appear ind answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit within six weeks after the date of the first publication of this summons, to-wit:' On or before Thursday, December 21, 1922, and upon your failure to answer the complaint or otherwise plead in this suit, within the ,said time, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said complaint, to wit for a decree that plaintiff is the owner of the following described real property: - - Lot 14, Block 30; Lots 6, and 7, 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 see what I have. Insurance that Insures Seven strong companies, fire, accident, burglary, forgery, causality, auto. . E E. TEEPLE 719IMain, Oregon Or. Block 10, and Lot 13, Block 32, situated in the Oregon Iron & Steel Company's First Addition to Oswego, in the Coun ty of Clackamas and State of Oregon. And .that by said decree it be de clared and adjudged that plaintiff is the owner of said premises, and is entitle. to the possession thereof, and that you, the defendants above named, have no estate nor interest whatever in or to said land or premises, or any part thereof, and that you and each of you defendants above named be for ever debarred from asserting any claim whatever in and to said land and premises adverse to the plaintiff, or to his assigns, and for such other and further relief as to equity shall seem mete and proper; and for plaintiff's costs and disbursements in this suit This summons is published by order of Hon. J. U. Campbell, Judge of the Circuit' Courtxf the State of Oregon, for the County of Clackamas, made this 26th day of October, 1922. Date of the first publication is Thursday, Nov ember 9, 1922. Date of last publica tion i3 Thursday, December 21, 1922. W. S. U'REN, , Attorney for Plaintiff, - ' Orgonian Building, (ll-9-7t) Portland, Oregon. fFroi shop I I We Fix Anything $ Bicycles, Guns, Umbrellas, re- & 1 paired; Saws filed; Lawn Mow- y j, ers, Scissors, Knives, sharpened. All kinds of soldering done. 2 Keys made and fitted. f HOWARD & KANNEY, X Prop. 5. 109 Seventh St. Oregon City LIAS Oil HEAVY DUTY CORD Oversize 30x3 ' : ' $13.75 32x4 24.50 33x4 24.70 34x4 : ' 25.35 New Standard Size 30x3 11.30 Also 30 x 3 and 31 x 4 straight sides. "Goodrich motorcycle and bicycle tires. - north-West Tire Co. Warren & Blodgett, Prop. 407 Main St Oregon City coo I t !" - iP t :? Tl : - - Jf.l , r Cook With & I lElectricity Countless thousands of American hbusewives ' would never have enjoyed real efticiency, econ omy, convenience and cleanliness in their kit - chens had they not obeyed the national slogan cook by wire. Portland Railway, Light & Power Co. Store Now Opens at 9 A. M. Saturdays ' Phone: Pacific Marshall 5080 The Most In Valus The Best In Quality THE BEST IN QUALITYTHE MOST IN VALUE Store Closes Dally at B:30 P. M. Saturdays at 6 P. M. Home Phone: A 2112 "THE STORE THAT UNDERSELLS BECAUSE IT SELLS FOR CASH" . . A Most Attractive Display of v THE NEW LACES - - At Prices Surprisingly Moderate Lower than the same quality Laces will cost under the new tariff. Therefore, this is the opportune time to buy. Here you'll find an unsurpassed collection of dainty and beautiful im ported and domestic Laces in styles, widths and patterns especial ly adapted for the making and trimming of the new season's gar ments and for holiday sewing. " . . . These Assortments on Special Display ' Ecru Linen Laces at 25c and 35c Yard " Handsome Cluny patterns in widths especially desirable for trimming centerpieces, scarfs, etc. Imitation Crochet Laces at 15c a Yard Wonderful values in both bands and edges in heavy and light weight meshes and patterns. - , . Imitation Russian Filet Laces 25c to 59c a Yard ' New arrivals in these popular laces in 9 to 18 inch widths for spreads, scarfs, curtains, etc ' Val, Imitation Crochet and Linen Laces at 5c a Yard At this price we are showing dainty linen Laces in Cluny patterns in white and ecru. Also imitation crochet Laces in popu lar patterns and dainty French and Zion Val Edges, Insertions, Edges and Beadings in round and double meshes. "