e OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1907. THE HOUSEHOLD PAGE. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE LADIES SOLIC ITED FOR THIS DEPARTMENT. TELL YOUR VAL UABLE RECEIPTS, HOW YOU MAKE FANCY AR TICLES AND ABOUT THE DESIGNS AND CARE OF YOUR "ROSE GARDEN." "TRIED AND TRUE" RECEIPTS. ' Puff Cakes. Two cups of sugar. Three cups of flour, One cup of butter. One cup of sweet milk, Throe eggs, Threo teaspoons full of baking , powder. Ilako either in layer or loaf. ! Flavor to suit taste. filling or icing: One cup of sugar. one-fourth cup of butter, one-third cup of sweet milk. Let boll until waxy, Btirring until cool. Ladies Yellow Cake. One and half cups of flour, One cup of sugar. One-half cups of butter. One-half cup of sweet milk, One teaspoon of soda. Two teaspoons of baking powder, Yolks of four eggs, One teaspoon vanilla. Bake in layers in medium oven. For filling use one cup of sugar, enough water to melt the sugar. Boil until waxy then stir in the well beaten vbite of one egg. Home Made Buns. One and a half pints of bread sponge, One pint hike warm water, One cup of granulated sugar, Two-thirds cup of lard. Sift in flour enough to make a oougn as sort as can be kneaded. Let raise three hours, then pinch off pi-ves of dough half the size of an egg. handle carefully and gTease each piece of dough with a little melted butter; place in a pan leaving space of an inch between buns, let raise four hours and bake in a quick oven. Marbled For delicious cream one cupful cupfuls of sugar. Cookies. . . ' marbled cookies j Mixed Greens, of butter and two : Use sour dock, dandelion, wild let Add four well-beat- 'teuce and mustard leaves; clean thor- en eggs, then three scant cupfuls of -GET IT i electric mm FREE: -ON 30 Save Her Time Save Her Health Save Her Weary Steps Save Your Money Save Your Clothes Save Her Temper Save Her Complexion Q : i f I III Fill in coupon and mail to us The frcn will be delivered, with all necessary equipment, absolutely free of charge CUT OUT COUPON AND MAIL TO US TODAY PORTLAND RAILWAY, LIGHT & POWER COMPANY C. G. Millery Agent, Oregon City, Ore. Gentlempn You may deliver to me one Electric Flat iron, which I agree to try, and if unsatisfactory to me, to return to you within 30 days from date of delivery, If I do not return it at that time you may charge same to my account at $4.00. It is understood that no charge will be made for the iron if I return it within 30 dr. Namo Address DEPT. 0. C. CfTHE THIRTY DAYS' TRIAL OFFER APPLIES ONLY TO CONSUMERS OF OUR CURRENT. 0 Hour sifted with two heaping tea 'spoonful of baking powder. Divide :tho batter In half. To one-half add either half a cupful or a cupful of grated chocolate, according to prefer i once, some people liking more and other loss of this flavoring. To the j other half add the juice and .mated ,rind of an orange. After Havering :both parts, combine them in one- streaked lump of dough, and roll It Ivory thin. Cut the dough Into fancy cookies with diamond, heart-shaped and triangular cutters. Pake them in a rather hot oven. If the butter is ! fresh add a pinch of salt. I Sponge Cake, Four eggs, Two cups of soft A sugar, Two cups of Hour. Two teaspoons of baking powder. uu iwo-iuiru cup oi uou.uk Flavor lth vanilla. Hake in two largo .,, .... . 1 . . ...... layers and use chocolate filling. Dutch Apple Pie. To make Dutch applo pie without apples for each pie use One cup of water. One tablespoon of vinegar. One teaspoon of butter, One scant cup of granulated sugar, Season with nutmeg. Crumb four crackers In an ordinary !pie crust and pour the mixture over .the crackers. Put on top crust and bake. ' j j0 cook Mushrooms, j Wash mushrooms thoroughly. Place Enough butter in a skillet to fry a chicken and let it get hot. Put in mushrooms, sprinkle wlih salt and -pepper and fry about ten minutes tin- ;der tight-fitting lid. .oughly, wash, then place them in a FOR HER DAYS TRIAL O ' of boiling water with a luun bono ithat Is about half cooked before add ing tho given. CiKik altogether unill tho moat is done, Servo with vino .ur to suit taste. Preserved Qulncs. j Teel and cut some fine ripe apple tpiiuees in quarters-if large In eighths; remove the core and drop the fruit tis soon as peeled in cold water; ;drnin and weigh the quince; place them in a ki ttle of boiling water and i'ooil until tender; remove with a skim , mer to a largo Mat dish. For six 'pounds of quince allow four pounds 'of sugar and one quart of the water ;the quinces were cooked in; place water and sugar over the fire, boll a few minute, then add the quinces; (cook five minutes, fill them In jars to 'overflowing, close nt once and set aside. Underwear Other Than Wool. People should begin to understand the benefit of wearing light clothing In the winter time. Old- time flan nels are ruinous to a healthy, robust life. They keep the pores of the skin clogs ed and moistened with presplra- tlon. which forms a crust over the skin, interfering with It natural func- jtioIls Undergarments of linen or cotton are heavy enough for winter In th,8 cllml,tl. The only need I a j heavy coat. Considering tho extreme departments anil office heat or our buildings, dividual doors. it is absurd for any sane In to wear heavy things In- Figure Developer. Vaucalre tonic Is an excellent fig ure developer. It I not a drug but a i food, and act directly on the glands i,,n S n hearty accord with the agl and tissues. Formula: Four hundred 'tatlon for the establishment of a hlo- grains of simple syrup, ten gram of 'extract of galega. ten grams of tinct- i ii re of fennel. Take two soupspoon ful In water before each meal. Kx itreme emaciation Is a disease ami Ispeetion trip to the Ontario and Wal .shouid have the attention of a physl-owa salmon hatcheries, will take the dan. ! mutter mi with n!l of the loilviM-slt li's jln the state In an effort to get them A Fine Salad. ,to work together for a fully equipped An attractive winter salad I made (station, that the student and profes of comrpint orange and white grapes, Uors may curry on experimental the grapes being cut In half, with the 'work. .seeds removed, and the little orange cut in slices, served on crisp lettuce leaves with French dressing. ! I Green Grape Preserves. Take six pounds of green grapes, cut them open on one side and with a jsharp knife remove the seed. Weigh the fruit and use equal miantitlos of (sugar. Put the grape in a kettle with just enough water to enver; bring to a boil, skim, then sprinkle over the grapes one-quarter of the sugar allow ed. Itring to a boil again, pressing the grape under the syrup, but use care to keep them unbroken; add more sugar, ook fiv minute, repeat ing th'1 operation until all the sugar has been used. As soon as the syrup 'Jellies turn into small jars. When cold .the grapes should show distinct in the clear jelly. Vine Plant Pie. Make a mixture of One cup of granulated sugar, One-half cup of water. j One egg and yolk of another, , Lump of butter size of a walnut, One tablespoon of Hour. Place crust in pan, .'dice vyino plant in the crust and pour the mixture over it. Bake without upper crust, then make a frosting out of the white of jono egg, and spread ovr the pie. Set .back In oven and let get slightly i brown. Notes. i I .v koou way io use poactK-s too, ! green for the table is to bake in a! Jd'-ep pan until tender, with enough ' j water to keep from burning and half; la cup of granulated sugar. j j A splendid way to cook mushroom. i Is to split in halves, soak for a few 1 hours in salt water and then roll In ' icraek'T crumb and fry until brown, : issinie a young chicken. j For furniture polish, take on"-third linseed oil and two-third turpentine; i ! shake well, apply with a very thin ' cloth, and wipe with the s-anie, j j For marred furniture, take half an i jounce each of turpentine and llty-eed 'oil, an ounce of coal tar and shellac. 'Keep in a wide mouthed bottle tightly corkod. Shake before applying with ;a sponge. ! One of rny earliest recollections I of being set down upon a low stool on ithe hearth rug with mv hack to the fire, "to roast out. a cold." And when j I was presumably) done to a turn I I was raced about and made to "toast my feet" until I was In a glow from jtop to ton. It was one of my jCr's "ways," and no woman or moth nurse jever had a 'better. ! Farm Page It Is said with much truth that t woman will condone any offense which she Is convinced has been committed for love of herself. A powder for moist hands: Two drams of oxide of zinc, two dram of boric acid, four drams of lycopodium, one ounce of Btarch, one-half ounce of powdered orris. Add a small quantity of spirits of camphor to the water when bathing the hands. Puffy places rr nr i . rori nin, Poor Blood You can trust a medicine tested l0 years! Sixty years of experience, think of that! L:xperienee with Ayer's Sar saparilla; the original Sarsa parilla; the Sarsaparilla the doctors endorse for thin blood, weak nerves, general debility. Hut PYfii thU RrM nltt mmltcttit tAtttiot 0i tti (m i unik II Ilie tivur U limi'liv Mint Mm It.tWflu rMltlKltt. lt lt tx'at ioiilili I nM, vi-ii iliuithl tuktt latittlvA (fot' I A) ' I'tttt lilltf Ukilttf ttto Nll;.u.rtUU. Vtt J. CT. Arr Co., T iwU, Vui. .a WtumfWoluntm of rutin U10K. AUt ': CI lit!. Cllt.KKY I'lCTtlRVl.. iers V hv no rt.rt'U I W putillih tt,6 f.'t-niuui of nil our mtuiii. under the eyes signify kidney or liver trouble, lack of rest or nervousness, Stringy locks A good hair curling fluid Is made of one half ounce of pure powdered horux. fifteen grain of gum arable, three fluid dram of spirit of camphor and eight ounce of. warm wnter. Dissolve the solid in the warm water, cool and add the cam phor. Apply to the hair, which can then be curled on the Iron or arranged In flat ringlet and pinned with an in visible halrplu until dry. Oyster Culture on the Oregon Coast. Master Fish Warden It. (', Van lu- jlogleal station at Newport, for the 'purpose of studying and fostering the oyster Industry on the Oregon ("oast, and when he return from a, brief In- Narrow Escape From Waterspout, Cap.iiln Jorgenseti, master of tin- jschooiicr And .Mahmiey, report that , his vessel hal a narrow escape from Idcstruetion t.y a wat'-rpent on Sun day morning. About S o'clock, when the schooner was between the light ship and Tillamook Head, the water spout appeared In t;H. dlctanc,) uieb r a thick black cloud. While small at first, the cloud gradually increase.! in size as It u;ipro;iched the Vessel. All on board the schooner were thor oughly al.trn: il. a the craft wto di rectly in tin, track of the sxiut, but when only a .hort distant';- away Lie sprout suddenly broke and dropped Into the sen. with a report lUo Lie discharg" of a heavy cannon, i Captain Jorgensen say he ha jseen many waterspout during his life at sea. but never before witnessed one as latge and so dangerous 1'iol.ln;; as thin one. The Future American Highway., The "future American highway," ac cording to an Inventor whose pam phlet 1 reviewed In 1'ugineerlng .New, will be a paved roadway - feet la total width, divided by longitudinal curbs Into eight separate roadways, four for passage In each direction. Hu provide twij sixteen foot roadway for animal traction vehicle and a four foot walk tit each side for tho stray pedestrian who may stll! Indulge In tho nntiiiuatcd tnetho l of locomotion that nature furnished. The rot of tho width Is devoted to automobile roadfl. As tho cost of this remarkable high way would mount up to between $1HV 000 and $".00,000 per mile, the Inventor docs well to call It a "highway of tho future." To Build Automobile Roads In Nevada. A good road association J reported j to have been formed In Nevada for i tho purpose of stimulating the build- j ing of road exclusively for tho uo of automobile In the southern part of j tho stale, Vhore automobiles are be- coining tho means of rapid tramtlt across the desert. It Is proposed to j build, among other, road from Tono pnh to Coldileld to connect the mining amp of Manhattan and Itttllfrmg mid other smaller mining camps, later ex tending the road to Waller I.alo ervati in and then north L4 r( t.c toad, Tt? lit S Brevities THE HALL OF FAME. ,laine Lewi of Terrell, Tex., wan excused from Jury duty recently be cause he hn Iweuty lwo children, Henry TI(iuiimui of I'lilliidi'lphlu shot himself two .Mar nun, and now he must explain In court wliethur he did It accidentally of Intentionally, For thirty -one year .luhu F, Twls Iim been station nu'ent at Shaker Sta tion, Conn, He Iim itlu been postmas ter of the town for the Name length of time. Albei t Sult'iu of Denver recently dis covered a pure ituggei of gold at the foot of a peach tree, supposed (o have been buried there by a former owner of tho f a rtu. Complying with an order of the court to pay Id w ife $;i, Joseph Fix, a New York car conductor, tendered her ;ioo pontile. Till she refused, but the court decided Unit It wax legal tender. I r. .James 1 Wellington of Swansea, It. I., posse-ise the oldest lullltla com mission In that state. It hour tho date fit Sept. Ul, ISItt, and iv im signed by tiovcftior MarciiH M rtun, Tim doctor 1 eighty nlno yearn of ago. Although Daniel Kinsley I seventy eight year old, hi face In still fni from wrinkle, his eye are clear and steady mid hi step I clastic. Ho Iiiin been employed for ilfty year In tho Worcester (Mil.) courthouse. Frank It. Mowrer of Ohio, at present consul general at Leghorn. Italy, ha t'oii transferred to lw consul general at Copenhagen, Denmark, exchanging place with Lriiest A. Man of Florida, who l-cooiue consul general at I.eg horn. F. It. Kllng, n railroad bridge builder, fell sixty feet from a bridge at !!ruc vllle, Md., recently ami lauded In shal low water. H" wa smoking when ho fell, lie didn't bse a bit of tobacco and kept en smoking when he walked out of (he stream nnlujurisl. Dr. Franklin Sloeuui of Liidlugtuti, Midi, l;;n been advised by the ittlM- slau ambassador at Washington that I the I'.ar ha decided that he I entitled J i to the Sl.ooo.uoo fortune left by hi fa- lin-r ami couiwcuicii oy tne litiNsuitt government In the uprising of 1h;i, Senator Tillman I by birth ami by education n polished gentleman. No 1 mini I mere familiar with nil the en- ; gaging conventionalities ,,f hocUiI Inter- f ! course, and few men In the senate are ' ! better vered ill literature and lilsory. j ! Mr, Tillman I growing richer every , j day. Ho I nun of the popular Icetlir- j ; or of today. I i Leorg- Mayhew Motiltou, who u III t lie the tirst major general of the I!!!- Iloj national guard. Is an architect ; ! mid builder of grain elevator and ha i been connected with the national i guard since 1s.m;, He wa Inirn In ' ; Keadsboro, Vt In ls.M, and when two ; ! Jeiir old wa taken to I'lilcngo by hi ; ' parents. Ceiieral Moulton has U-eti ' 1 brlgadli-r general since l'.ioj, and pre ! vlomdy wa Inspeetor general of the , ! stale orce and l ol'nel of tho Second regiment. , OLD FASHIONED. i What ha become nf the old fash- i loiied man who said of hi dog, "It 1 j doe everything but talk?" 1 I What hn Im H f the old f ish- j ! loued man v ho told of his great fear ' by saving. "My lialr stood on end-;" What ha ecome of the old fash- ; loiied woman who prepared for a com- : puny supper cold sll 1 ham, Ibmtlng Island and marble cake? i What ha become of the fellow who '', went to nee hi girl every other Tltes- day night until they were engaged, 1 and then Im went regularly every Ttie ! day night'' ; What ha become of the old fasli- ; oml boy who went down the street 1 holding up two linger a a sign that ho was going swimming ami wanted company? Atchison (ilebe. NEW YORK CITY. New York city lias 10." bunks. New York clly ha .'1,11-7 tit-emeu be sides the member of twelve volunteer companies in Klchinond borough. New lork city 8 acreage I more 1 than that of Chicago and Philadelphia combined, or '.'1!,21S as compared Willi l'.)d,7."7. Although New York I a "hitching posth-ss" city, there are less runaway horses In It streets than In the ator 11 go city of one-tenth of It population. Thousand of travelers on New York's elevated railway regret, tho poorly maintained and dilapidated sta tions on tho lines, and In Kevenil In stances tho attention of the board of health has biui called to their insani tary condition Now York Herald. EDITORIAL FLINGS. When they enter a (heater women should check their hats and men their thirst Chicago News. Kven Luther Ilurbutik hasn't yet suc ceeded in grafting tho milk weed to tho strawberry plant and producing strawberries and cream.-Sotnervlllo Journnl. Possibly tho abolition of reduced railway rates to clergymen will result i In the congregations paying their min ister enough to travel as other per sons. Kansas City Times, Whenever n ball player makes nn error It Is published In tho papers. Tf tho sumo thing should bo done of ns whenever we make errors tliero would bo Homo pretty black records. Akron Boncon-Journnl. 1 HEADQUARTERS K)li Choice Cigars and Tobaccos, . Ice-Cold Hop Gold Beer, High Grade Bottled Whis keys and Wines. Kiiap'p& Nobel MAIN STREET STRAIGHT & SALISBURY PLUMOINQ TINNINQ and GENERAL JOBBINQ. Wind Mllltt, PumpH and Hydrau lic IUm n Specialty, Phono 1!CK2. Oregon City, Oregon. LOG CABIN SALOON BENNETT & rOUMAL Proprietors. OREGON CITY. OREGON) CASCADE LAUNDRY Clothes WasliKd "Whiter Than Snow." Family WashlnK at HeanonahlH listen--No worry, no regret If you phona I2U(. Our wsgon will rail. ( .hon, im- Omro I. (I. Hid. Main St Pioneer Transfer And Express t I. GMM!Z, Prop. Successor to Sand C. N. (illKICNM AN nd Gravel Oregon. Oregon Clfy ' . . ... FRED C GADKC Plumbiiuj & "i.'iino Hut Air lurttdrci, tlup Pipes. Pumpi, Spray Fumpi. Kittr Pipe. All Klinl of Juldilng a Specialty nstliuates (i'ven on All Classes of Work. IJes. t'hciirt 1514-Hhop ISIfl 914 N. Main St., Oreaon City, Or CALIFORNIA WINES ! Strictly ill .KCOrJ.WCC With the ! Pure Food Law. COBWEB WINE HOUSE 4 17 Main St. - Oregon City Hcckel Si England 1 j The Hub Saloon has changed hands, Carlson & Block scl ; ling out to Heckel & England 523 MAIN STREET THE BRUNSWICK W. H. SILCOX, Prop. Hotel and Restaurant Host Service and Accommoihiiionii Main St., Opp. suspension Bridge nv mmmi si tf imM Hjfih: : i A DELICATE BEVERAGE !A 8AFE STIMULANT, A GOOD MEDICINE. For sale by ' E. MATHIE3.