Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, October 04, 1907, Image 2

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    OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 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."
GOOD THINGS TO EAT.
Minnehaha Cake.
Whites of six eggs.
Two cups of granulated sugar,
Three cups of flour,
f1n enn of hntter
Three teaspoons of baking powder,
One scant cup of cold water.
Beat the eggs and baking powder
together and add them to the batter
last, then bake In layers in a medium
oven.
For the filling, use: One teacup
of granulated sugar boiled until it
geU brittle when droped in cold
water then stir into the wax the well
beaten white of one egg and one cup
of seeded raisins chopped very fine
flavor with one teaspoon of vanilla.
When cool enough spread between
layers and on top of cake.
One Egg Cake.
Two cups of flour.
One cup of granulated sugar,
Three tablespoons soft butter,
Two teaspoons of baking powder.
Break one egg in a teacup and fill
up with sweet milk, sift the baking
powder in the flour, mix all together,
adding the egg and milk last, flavor
with vanilla. Bake in three layers.
For filling take one pint of granulat
ed sugar, three tablespoons of sweet,
cream, butter the size of a hickory
nut, boil until waxy when dropped in
cold water, apply to the cake while
tot.
Ginger Cakes.
One pint of cane molasses.
One tablespoon of sugar,
Two eggs.
One teacup of lard.
Three tablespoonfuls of water,
One tablespoonful of soda.
One tablespoonful of ginger,
One tablespoonful of allspice.
Make stiff enought to roll.
Corn Fritter.
One quart of gjated roasting ear
corn,
One-half cup of sweet cream,
Two tablespoons of flour,
One teaspoon of salt,
' One egg,
One teaspoon of baking powder,
Stir Into a batter. Fry the same as
pancakes on griddles greased with
butter.
GET IT
1 ELECTRIC FLAT-IRON
FREE: -ON 30
Save Her Time
Save Her Health
Save Her Weary Steps
Save Your Money
Save Your Clothes
Save Her Temper
Save Her C
omplexlon . U
- 1 1 jT
C Fill in coupon and mail to us
The hon 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. Miller, Agent, Oregon City, Ore.
Gentleman 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 dare.
Namo
Address
DEPT. O. C.
IJTHE THIRTY DAYS' TRIAL OFFER
APPLIES ONLY TO CONSUMERS OF OUR
CURRENT.
VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVS
Whit Cake.
Whites of four eggs.
Two cups of A sugar,
Three-fourtha cup butter and lard,
One cup of sweet creani,
Three cups of flour,
Three level teaspoons of baking
Powder, sifted In the flour.
Beat the eggs to a stiff froth, beat
butter and sugar to a cream then
make all Into a batter and flavor with
vanilla. Bake in three layers.
For filling use: One cup graulated
sugar, three-fourths cup of water.
Boil until tt threads when dropped
from a spoon, stir In the whites of two
eggs well beaten, stirring constantly
until cool enough to spread on cake.
Home Made Bread. I
Mrs. S. D. Miles, an Ohio woman
who is noted as a good bread baker
prefers setting the yeast at noon in
stead of evening. She mixes the
dough In the evening, lets It raise
over night, kneads well and makes in
to loaves early in the morning, lets
It raise again and bake.
Cracker Pie.
For each pie take:
Six rolled crackers.
Two large tablespoons soft A sugar.
Mix sugar and crackers thoroughly
then place In the crust and cover with
good rich milk, season by grating nut
meg over the top, bake without upper
crust.
Orange Float
One quart of water, the juice and
pulp of two lemons, one coffee cup of
;sugar. When boiling add four tea-
spoonfuls of corn starch and boll
fifteen minutes stirring all the time.
When cold pour it over four or five
peeled and sliced oranges and cover
with beaten whites of three eggs.
Sweeten and add a few drops of va
nilla. How to Mold a Child's Note.
A child's nose can be molded almost
as if it were clay, and the "retrousse"
nose that will cause many a heartburn
in after life might be avoided if the
mother would give the proper time
and attention to gently pressing it so
as to lengthen the "snub." Wide nos
trils may be corrected In the same
manner.
FOR HER,
DAYS TRIAL
Preserved Bartlett Peart.
The quantities given will fill four
pint Jars. Select fifteen good stood
ripe Bartlett pears; peel and cut them
In halves; remove core and drop fruit
Into a bowl of cold water to which
the Juice of a lemon has been added.
Place a preserving kettle with two
pounds of sugar and one pint of water
over the fire; stir to partly melt the
sugar, boll a few minutes, removing
all the black scum: put In the pears,
cover and cook until a straw will pen
etrate them easily. Then fill them
with the sirup into the Jars; let the
sirup overflow, at once turn upside
down until cold, then sot aside.
Green Grape Jelly.
Stem the grapes, removing any that
are Imperfect; rinse well In cold
water, put Into a stone jar and sot in
a pan of boiling water. Ctok until
the grapes are soft, mashing with a
wooden spoon. When the seeds are
separated and the Juice flows freely
strain through a Jelly bag without
pressing, as that might make the jel
ly cloudy. Use what Is pressed out
to make up for marmalade or jelly for
IJelly cake. Allow to each pint of the
juice a pound of sugar. Cook the Juice
In a porcelain or granite kettle twenty
minutes, then add the heated sugar;
8t,r mtil n,elte(1 aml !ho Ju,c
up again, then turn Into sterilized
glasses. When cold cover closely with
brandied paper, as all grape jelly ia
liable to mould, and cover the tops
with papers pasted down with the
white of an egg.
How to Relieve Tired Feet.
If the feet become tired and swollen
from long standing a hot sea salt
bath will do much toward relieving
them. The following dissolved in the
bath water will also be found good:
One ounce of alum, two ounces of
rock salt and two ounces of borax.
Peach Cobbler.
For this purpose the richest and
ripest fruit is selected, usually some
variety of the yellow peach, because
of Its superior richness. Butter a
deep earthenware pudding dish. Line
the sides of the dish with good pastry,
then fill the dish with peeled peaches
torn In halves Instead of cutting.
Leave enough pits to Impart flavor.
Sweeten abundantly, then cover with
a rich layer of crust sealing down so
that none of the Juices may escape.
Bake In a hot oven about three-quarters
of an hour, covering with paper
If there Is danger of It browning too
rapidly. When nearly done draw to
the oven door, dredge with powdered
sugar and set back to glaze. A real
old-fashioned cook is a stickler for a
few spoonfuls of brandy poured over
the peaches before the top crust Is
put on but the majority of folks find
it quite delectable enough without any
spirituous additions.
Notes.
When the eyebrows fall out, this
tonic application will reform them at
once: Three ounces of red vaseline.
one ounce of tincture of cantharides,
one ounce of Jamaclca rum, five drops
of oil of rosemary. Mix all thorough
ly and apply twice daily with a tiny
eyebrow brush. .
To plump out the hollows under the
chin, massage with cocoa butter, us
ing rotary movements and working
from the neck out. Practice whistling
and singing to round the throat and
fill out the flesh around the chin es
pecially. Use a small, stiff brush to nib the
silk out of corn on the ear; it Is very
effective.
The eyes of newly born Infants are
always blue. They do not begin to
assume their permanent color until
the sixth or eighth week after birth.
To thoroughly clean wall paper mix
some flour and water into a stilt
dough and rub well the walls, taking
a fresh piece of the dough when It is
dirty. ' "v
Who can give us a good receipe for
preventing sweet pickles becoming
soft? An Enterprise reader wants to
jknow. '
The Germans know how to pickle
small fish so they are very palatablp,
land the vinegar softens the small
; tones that one may eat them without
Inturv. Fntprnrlse reader wants the
! receipe. ' I "There Is a littlo closed room In tho
Before washing lace curtains soak ; rear of the house that I did not no
Ithem for a couple of hours in cold tice Just at first," said she. "It Is a
! water. This will remove the dust and dark, inner room, but I must get In.
ihelp to make them a good color. "Do you need it?" asked he, "Are
I To clean finger marks on doors rub there not enough rooms without it?
them always with a piece of flannel i "It is not that I need It," she ans-
Idipped In parraffln oil, and the marks
I will dlsannear like magic. Wino with
,a cloth wrung out oi water to lane
laway the smell.
j Statistics compiled by American
I guarantee companies show that, as re
igards honesty, women are superior to
jmen. Women in America are employed
i in business as extensively as men, and
I yet the record shows that, almost
every embezzler and defaulter was a
man.
Do you know that Pinesalve Carbo-
jlized acts like a poultice in drawing
out inflammation and poison? It Is
antiseptic. For cuts, burns, eczema,
cracked hands It Is Immediate relief.
Sold by Huntley Bros.
Bound to Stop Them.
In a suit lately tried In a Maryland
: court the plaintiff had testified that
'his financial counsel took him In
hand for cross-examination and under
itook to break down his testimony un
ion this point.
i "Have you ever been bankrupt?"
! asked the counsel.
"I have not."
"Now, be careful," admonished the
j lawyer with raised finger. "Did you
ever stop payment?
"Yes."
"Ah, I thought we should get at the
truth," observed the counsel, with an
unpleasant smile. "When did this
: suspension of payment occur?"
1 "When I had paid all I owed," was
'the naive reply of the plaintiff.
1 It is a well know fact that persons
'living In the I'lne forests do not suf
ifer from kidney diseases. One dose
iof Pinules at night usually relieves
j backache. 30 days' treatment, $1.00.
Your money refunded if not satisfied.
Sold by Huntley Bros.
THE CLOSED ROOM.
A little old locksmith, who waa also
u genlo, sat at his bench, working dil
igently, when the door opened and a
breathless woman entered.
"I am about to take possession of a
new dwelling a man's heart," she ex
plained. "Those who have lived In It
before have carried off the keys. But
you will be able to fit nu out, will you
not?"
"What kind of a place Is It!" asked
the accommodating little locksmith.
"A rather conventional house, largo
and sunny and commodious," she re
plied. "There are no mysterious pas
sages about It, and no blind doors. The
locks ought to bo easily fitted, al
though some of them have grown
rusty from disuse, and a few of the
doors have never even been opened.1'
"It Is sometimes so with a house,"
commented he.
The woman nodded. "But I could
never be happy living In a part of any
house," sho said. "I must occupy It
completely."
The locksmith took down his great
key rings without answering.
"Now this," said he, holding out a
key to her. "Is the first you will need.
It opens tho outer door of the bouse
Into the vestibule of Interest."
"Oh," said she, with a little laugh,
"that Is already open. I shall not
need that key."
Ho gave her another to the wide
central hall of confidence, and the
took It, glad to get It, of course, but
without great enthusiasm, and hung It
on her girdle.
"And this Is the key to the living
room of comradeship," he went on.
"That, I suppose, Is a large west fac
ing apartment, with plenty of win
dows and a good fireplace. It Is usu
ally the most cheerful and the most
comfortable room In the house."
"Perhaps," said the woman. "I
shall sit there a great deal, 1 am
sure," and she slipped the key care
fully In place.
The locksmith delected another
from one of the rings.
"This fits the lock on the door of
the room of constancy," said he.
"I'm afraid that room has been
rather neglected," she said, with a
charming little grimace, "but I shall
look after It at once."
The locksmith's eyelid flickered at
the way the red bow of her lips
straightened Into a thin line.
Then he gave her other keys, little
and big. naming them as he gave her
them, and she hung them one by one
upon her girdle.
"Hut." said she, when he would
have put the key rings away at last,
"you have given me none for the un
used nx.ms of which I told you."
He hesttated, fingering the keys on
a small ring which he had not touch
ed. "You are certain you wish them?"
be asked.
llll.A... nil , ll,.r.'"
rttJW.C tut' IHitvio.
"Oh. very well." said he, and drop
ped Into her pulm two slender keys of
beaten gold.
"Now." said she triumphantly, with
a sigh of relief, "I shall go where I
please!" !
And she went away, her girdle
weighted with the keys as the stom
acher of Cleopatra with Its jewels.
Days after she came back, so radi
ant that her beauty made the eyes of
the little old locksmith blink as they
always did 'when the sun, catching
them wide open, would flash his auda
cious smile straight Into them.
"Well?" interrogated he of her.
"They fit!" she cried. "Every key
turns Its lock like magic! It Is quite
wonderful, Is It not?"
"By no means." he replied. "You
are a very clever woman and I am a
I locksmith and genie. Between us we
! should be able to accomplish mosi
things.
The woman's answering smile was
vague. "There is something else,
said she. "I need still another key."
"Bless me. What key Is that?"
A shade of annoyance lay over her
lifted eyes like tho dapple of shadow
over a nool.
jwered, "but that It mocks mo with Its
i closed door. I have looked In at the
kevhole and can see nothing but dust
and shadows and cobwebs. But I am
sure there Is something else there."
"The room of the past' murmured
he.
"Yes," she nodded, "and I must turn
the lock.
"Why?" he asked. "Why must
you."
She flushed, anil her eyes fell. Then
she lifted them defiantly.
"It Is my house, is It not? -Besides,
it needs air and light."
The wise little locksmith smiled
curiously; and the woman's color
deepened beneath the smile.
"It Is not curiosity that urges me,"
she flamed, as if he had accused her.
"The whole house has need of my
care."
He shook his head.
"Leave the room closed," said he.
But she held out her hand per
emptorily.
Give mo a key for It," she com
manded.
There Is none In the shop that will
fit that lock."
"Make one, then,"
"I could not. if I would."
"What shall I do?" she cried.
"The man has a key. Ask him for
it, If you must."
She smiled at him In quivering dis
dain. ,
. "Surely there must be a duplicate
somewhere," she urged.
"There Is none," said he.
She stared at him in amazement.
"You mean that you cannot help me
to get in there," she demanded.
The locksmith made her his pro
fondest courtesy.
"Madame," said he, "there are
things which even you and I can not
do with all our cleverness and skill."
ALMA M. ESTABROOK.
"A STITCH IN TIME
SAVES NINE" tt tt tt
It Costs Less to Fill Small Cavities
And the pain of having one filled is less also.
Save money, pain and your teeth. Consult us
when you discover the first break.
Platea $5. Crownt and Bridge-work $5. Palnlete Extracting, and
free when platet are ordered. Ten-year guarantee with all work.
OREGON DENTAL PARLORS
Over Harding's Drug Store and Postoffice.
STATE NEWS.
A Lane county farmer lost thirty
goats from his ranch recently and al
though he has hunted high and low he
has not been able to find them.
Thinks they must have listened to
the "call of the wild."
Though HO year old. II. C. Webb,
of Lebanon, hunted China pheasants
this year, as In the past, and he tisik
out a hunting license Saturday fur
that purpose. lie lacks a year, how
ever, of being the oldest man to se
cure a license In Linn county this
year. That honor belongs to Am
Nicholas, of IMalnvlew who Is 81
,em o.d .... ! ....., i..e ......
niiuuT in m nmir. i ri'iiim
largw numoer oi tiu men nvc urii-ui-
ed hunting permits this year.
Southern Oregon Is aliout to enjoy
the greatest mining boom In Its his
tory, according ui u.i. i. ti. rvi M".-.
who has Just returned from a trip to
the Mountain Treasure quart mine,
Oregon Is one of the four Stales of
the t'nlon which have In tho past
year escaped a bank burglary, (ieor-
gla. Maryland and Virginia being tho
others.
Deputy uistrici Attorney jonn si.
Wall has started In to enforce the
Sunday closing law at McMlnnvillo
and other Yamhill county jown. He
has filed fifteen complaints against
as many saloonkeepers.
i-ounty scnooi Mipennienocni vt
ij. jHCHHon, oi i.iiui r.mii.j.
great srarcuy i uu ii.th huh
that many schoolH will bo tumble to
op.-n on account of this condition.
This week will see it..' enn OI me
harvest of the most profitable prune
cron Oregon has produced In a dozen
years. The yield has been aliove the
average in quantity, the rrtiit is rirst- j,a "Washington, covering acres of
class In quality and prices are at alKr,,m Bml regarded as one of the fin
top figure. The total pack of prunes j,,,, 1(j(H America cost only
at Salem will aggregate 8,non.(Hii , j 7,m
tsitinds, or .- carloads, it is sain
$.".()0,t)0( will be received from the Or
egon crop.
Two hunters from Eugene slept In
an old hut In the Cascade Mountains
one night last week and In the night
were disturbed by a rat on a shelf In
tho corner. One of tho hunters be -
came tired of tho annoyance and shot
tho rat from his couch In the corner
i The next morning on looking for the
rat he was found dead a few Inches
from a can of dynamite. A narrow
escape for the hunters.
There are upwards of $22,000 In the
banks of Oregon for whom tbero Is
no known claimant, These sums are
amounts on which there have been
no drafts, additions or claimants for
seven years, and tho persons repre
sented are believed to be dead. No
one coming to claim them within the
seven years soon to close the sums
will go Into the State treasury.
A party of seven Hawaiian young
ladies will be entertained at Portland
Saturday. They are chaperoned by
.Mrs. Edyth Tozler Weathered, well-
known to the people and especially to
tho newspaper fraternity of , Oregon,
The Second Eastern Oregon Dis
trict Agricultural Society will glvo its
17th Annual Fair at The Dalles Octo
ber 812. Wednesday, October !), has
been decided upon for Portland Day.
Eugene has made a record for prog
ress and has set a pattern for all
cities under ten thousand population
for the entire Pacific Coast. Sho has
built a first-class, bard surface pave-
nutnt frr.m the rlet.nt ontlrelv Ihmnirh
v - - "
the business district and has contracts
for double that amount. Her new
We have a buyer for timber lands and for two ten
acre tracts.
We have for sale some fine river front properties.
-Have made some nice additions to our list in last few
days.
W. F. SCHOOLEY & CO.
606 MAIN STREET OREGON CITY.
This is Kospcl truth
when applied to the
care of teeth. A small
orifice today becomes
treble In size in a few
days, or weeks; and In
cases where It lays the
nerve bare often causes
untold suffering:.
electric cars equal those to h seen
In larger cities, Shu has raised a
twelve thousand dollar advertising
fund and will employ an expert at
$rimi a year to handle her publicity.
In the busted Oregon Trust & Sav
ings batik at Portland was $10,400 or
Linn county's money,
Tho state W. C. T. V. convention
meets In Eugene October 15, 10 and
17,
While playing around the rampflre
at Horst Hro. hopyard. near Inde
pendence, Monday evening, the 6-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. Clark
stumbled ami fell Into the fire and be
fore help could reach her was liurned
to death.
Hon. Waltetr L. Too. report the
lMwni,ju at Fftlllt cy ,mv ,(), rl,H(,
i,,wn ,, , ,,,,.,., ,ro ttml ,.
(,,rH w ,nrl ,, w,, R
; lively winter.
C. II. Reynold, the Portland man
who several months ago shot and
killed a prominent musician from
Walla. Walla, who had luterferred in
i hu famy aITMln,( wM Kquw j
... n.i,.,,.,,.
j rh. Thomas has leased a l.ka
;m.ar i)U).,m vista and has established
!a j,,,. r,.rTe
j A lnd(, cnr lf f MM (llkn
nwny ,,., Tillamook the other day by
Itiip vtenmcr Elmore, the value .f
which was lfi.::.M and In addition
there were 20 bushels of cranbcrrlea
which had tx-.n grown on the Sand
luke bogs of Tillamook county.
One old lady In Oregon suld she
never had much use fur Governor
Chamberlain until sho saw In
th
ami
'iiin.ra where tits rough syrup
t,iher retn. ill.-s had cured mo many
pm,,,,., she bus U guii to believe that
, lH tMntl tt ,,r,.Hl K,K1() wth n mi,(1.
, lneS.
The Capitol at Washington cost $13.-
000,000. The Congressional Library
"An artist," said tho man with tho
iMilnted whiskers, "must not think
alsnit money." "I Hiipixtxe not," an
sered Mr, Cumrox, "Every time I
buy a picture, the artist wants enough
to keen him from thlnklnir about mini-
;,.y fr the rest of his life." Washing- '
ton Star.
AUCTION SALE.
On Saturday, October 12, 1307, at 2
p m tho personal effects of J. II.
Koblnson will be sold at tho office of
the Electric Hotel to pay board and
other expenses of said Robinson. Fol
lowing Is the list of articles to bo
sold: 4 Robes, 7 Blanket Table Cov
ers, 2 Bath Robes, 1 2-ploco Suit. 6
pairs Pants, 1 Smoking Jacket, 1 Mac
Inaw Coat, 1 Coat, 4 Flannel Shirts, 3
Pillows, 1 Linen Coat, 2 Vests, 2 Hats,
4 pieces Flannel, 1 pair White Blan
kets. 2 Cotton Shirts, 1 Fishing Rod,
1 Rule, 1 pair Overalls, 2 Whisk
Brooms, 1 pair Ico Skates, 1 Suit Pat
tern (bluo flannel) 3' yards, 2 palm
Shoes, 1 pair Gloves 4l-3t
$50 REWARD.
I will pay $.10 cash reward to tho
person who will apprehend and furn
ish proof for conviction of the person
who steals my chickens and farming
tools
RICHARD F. KUBISCH.
4