OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 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." with half cup of sugar, then Mir In I To Clean 8teet Knlfs. It tho beaten yolks of throw eg. on" Cut an IrlHh potato In half, dip ono cup of bread crumbs, and one cup of ! of the tlrsi In the bilckdust which "GOOD THINGS TO EAT." White Cake. One and one-half cups of granulat ed sugar, Whites of four eggs, , One-half cup of butter and lard ( mixed. Two-thirds cup of water, Sift two and one-half tenspoons of baking powder Into enough flour to make a medium hatter. Beat the egg to a stiff froth before adding to the batter. Bake In three layers, use whites off eggs for filling and flavor It with lemon essence. One cup of lard, One teaspoon of soda. One tablespoonful of ginger. One tablespoonful of baking pow der. Dissolve tho soda In half cup of hot water, dough. Flour enough to make a soft Sugar Cakes. One cup of sour cream. One-half cup of lard. Two cups of sugar. One teaspoonful of soda, One-half teaspoonful of baking powder. milk. Beat the whites of the eggs stiff and add them to the other Ingre dients. Butter a plain mold or basin and put a layer of this mixture In tho bottom: then a layer of marmalade, alternating until the dish Is filled, But the dish In a moderate oven ami bake three-quarters of an hour. Turn out on a flat dish and put whipped cream around the mold. This may lie served hot or cold. Is generally used for cleaning knives Hub the blade of the knife and the stain will Immediately disappear, Lemon Pie. One cup of sugar, Two tablespoon of corn starch, A cup of boiling water, Butter half the size of an egg, f!mt.l rlml mill Intro nf m li'tmm ----- , ... ... Cook together till clear, and when sleep m uie morning, cold add the yolk of an egg. Line the IMicatcly colored good of any kind plate with paste and bake; then fill. "h'mU never be washed without a putting on the white of an egg with cult tr bath first, taking rare In a It e Kimar for ic tnir: then nut in rvnnim. ... "........ Notes. If the water la hard a tiny bit of soda no larger than a pea, will make the vegetable cooked In It tender and of a better color. Ordinary wa ter docs not require nucIi addition. After lifting a carpet add two tn hlespoonfuls of turpentine to a pail ful of water and mop the lloor. Boll all dainty white clothe In strong pillow cnsoH. This saves much wear and tear. A half hour's sleep after dinner Im to many women worth two-hours' "A STITCH IN TIME SAVES NINE" the oven and brown. fir.!- -aL r Eggless Ginger Cake. Cream one-half enn of hutter. add one cup of granulated sugar, and beat I This fine recipe comes from New light. Add one-half cup of sour ! Orleans, the sender of which states; cream, two well-beaten ecs. two! '"It came to me from an epicurean cups of flour sifted twice with one balf teaspoon of soda, the same of cln amon, one-third of a nutmeg grated, a saltspoon of cloves, and one cup of currants. Bake abont forty minutes. Kelly Island Cake. One cup of butter. Two cups of granulated sugar, Three enps of flour. Four eggs. One-half cup of sweet milk, Two teaspoons of baking powder. Bake In layers. Use any kind of filling desired. Cream Sponge Cake. , , Two well beaten eggs. Two cups of soft A sugar, One cup of sweet cream. ' Two level teaspoons of baking pow der. Flour enough to make the bat ter medium stiff. Flavor to suit taste. Bake In three layers in medium oen. Jelly Roll. One cup of sugar, One cup of flour, Three eggs. Three tablespoons of sweet milk, One-half teaspoon of soda, One even teaspoon cream of tartar. Spread thin and bake In a quick oven. Turn the pan while warm and spread with jelly, roll In a piece of cheese cloth and allow cloth to re main on till cool. Ginger Cakes. Two cups of soft A Bugar, One cup of Orleans molasses, Half cup of sour cream, housewife several years ago, and we being southerners of the southerners, consider ourselves Judges of good eat ing. It Is considered unapproachable by my children and grandchildren." The recipe: Put a pint of good syrup Into a deep bowl. Stir In sifted flour until the mass begins to break or to crumble (the exact amount cannot be speci fied, as different flours vary, but be gin with two cups and add until above results obtain). Add two large table spoons of the best lard (melted after it Is measured) and a little less than one-half teaspoon of salt. Next stir In one tablespoon of ginger and one tea spoon of clnamon. ami lastly one and one-half cups of boiling water in which are dissolved three level tea spoons of soda. Bake In a slow oven from forty-five minutes to an hour. This cake may be enriched by adding raisins and spices. sieve or colander, Four well-beaten eggs, One full cup of sugar, Teaspoonful of butter. Nutmeg to suit the taste. Make Into a very thin baiter with rich milk; fill three undercrusts; bako In moderate oven. Boiled Cherry Pudding. Two pints of buttermilk, One teaspoon of soda, A pinch of salt. Mix together and add enough flour to make a stiff batter. Then add one pint of seeded cherries. Put this in a muslin sack which has been previous ly dipped In boiling water and place In a kettle of boiling water. Boll one hour. Sack must be large enough to allow pudding to raise. This may be served with new milk, sweetened to taste and a little nutmeg added. Quince Marmalade Pudding. Cream a tablespoonful of butter KEEP BRIGHT AND YOU WILL KEEP BUSY Electric light is the magnet that draws trade. The bright store is the "hypnotic eye" of business. People .can no more resist the attraction of a bril liant, Electrically lighted store than they can resist the clarion call of a brass band. Is your competitor with the Electrically illum inated show windows, bright interior and sparkling Electric Sign getting an advantage over you? The moth never flutters around the unlighted candlel Up-to-date stores nowadays consider shop window lighting a necessity, whether they remain open after dark or not. Competition forces modern methods. A show window brilliantly illuminated with Electric light will make many a sale "the night before.'' Electric light compels attention, makes easy the examination of your display, shows goods in detail and fabrics in their true colors. And don't neglect the Electric Sign. It is soliciting "tomorrow's" business every moment it is lighted burning you name in the public mind. It is a solicitor that never becomes weary never stops work costs little. Sweet Potato Pie. ly to shrink when Immersed In water. We wish to warn all housekeeper imalnst using chloride of lime or ox- nlle acid to bleach their wash. One pint of potato rubbed through a ,,,,. roU ,, ,,,. tll fHirc, and In a short lime even the best of linen will be full of holes. Bathing during profusod perspira tion Is more to be roiiituended than bathing when the ImmIv has cooled off. Inasmuch as In the latter rase the vitality may be too low for reaction. (Ireasy food of any sort, and too Fudge much sweets are bad for any one Take two cups of brown sugar, .'" ""'J""1 Ul Pl'll". Kt I'N-nty One teacup of water. of tn'nh 'rlng greens, dates and rhu- A lump of butter the size of a wal- '"lr0, ' nut, four tablespoonsful of chocolate. Perfume Is the expensive luxury or the dressing table, iiy autitiig nan Corn Chowder. an ounce of olt of geranium to a pint ti... -i iv. ., n... of snlrlts of cologne, you will have a l ill ru. v'l ii',-i -i ii i u ii,-f-n til , . , . bacon in a kettle with two fine v- vl"T "" chopped onions and brown. Add a lit tle water, lump of butter the size of an egg and one quart of green corn scraped from cob. When tender add one cunful thin cream and erve. Many like it better without the onion. Season with salt and pepper. a strong one. month and It will tie Tomatoes With Noodles. Boll the noodles thirty minutes In salted water and drain. Have ready some cooked tomatoes passed through a elve and seasoned to taste. Put t noodles In a baking pan and cover with tomato Juice. Put dots of but ter ever the top and bake thirty min uses in a quick oven. Corn and Potatoes. Wash enough medium-sized pota toes fr dinner and put In a large ket tle. When the potatoes are nearly done put In roasting ears, with outer husks and silks removed, but with a thin layer of Inner husk tied alMitit the ears. Steam till done and serve at once. The potatoe will hold the corn up out of the water. If extra work Is going on. the kettle may be hung, gypsy fashion, out of doors. Good for picnics also. Quince Jelly. A nice Jelly can be made with the skins, cores and hard part of th quin ces. Put them In a kettle and cover them with water, cook slowly until they are soft and the flavor Is ex tracted; then strain through a cloth. Measure the liquid and put over the fire In a preserving kettle and boll 20 minutes. Measure pr many pint! of granulated sugar as there are pints of Juice, put the sugar on tins an-l place In the oven fo heat. When the juice has boiled the required time add the Juice of one lemon for each quart and stir In the hot sugar. Let the liquid boil up once and take from the fire. Turn the liquid Jelly Into glasses, but do not cover until the Jelly Is cold. Let this stand a ready for use. Those who have tender feet will find much relief by a frequent change of shoe. It Is not only hygcnle. but economical as well to change one sliiws often. Two pairs of shoes used alternately will last a long as three pairs used successively. After laying a carpet use a mop of clean cloth wrung dry from warm water to which has been added two tablesMM)tiful of turpentine. Wipe the carpel all around the room f'r six or more Inches from the baiehourd. This will serve to check moths. Apply turpentine on carpets under heavy furniture not on castors or that Is not easily moved. If you are troubled with fever blist ers, moisten a tiny bit of alum w ith a little water and rub thoroughly, tint gently, over the surface just as soon as you notice that a blister Is begin ning to develop. Camphor applied In the same way Is also t-mracloua. STATE NEWS. Chicken Pie. Chicken pie made by this recipe Is excellent cold: Save the neck, the tips of tne wings, the gizzard and the liver of the chickens, and the feet. Pour boiling water over the feet; leave them a moment, then pull off the outer skin and nails. After these are removed put the feet with the other parts. They are quite Import ant, as they contain the gelatine which forms the gravy around the chicken when the pie Is cold Into a delicious Jelly. Stew the skinned f"et, wing tips, neck and giblets, which have been well , cleaned. In Just enough water to cover them, add a slice of onion, one of carrot, and let the water simmer gradually till It is reduced one-half; add a few drops of lemon juice or a teaspoonful of tara gon vinegar and some Jellied stock, If necessary. Pour this gravy around and over the chicken In the pie and cover It with a paste, and bake It until the crust Is a fine brown. It Is better to strain the gravy before pour ing it over the chicken. Some people add little egg-balls or slices of the yolks of hard-boiled egg and rings made of the whites. Piccalilli. One peck of green tomatoes, chop ped fine; put In layers In a Jar with layers of salt; let stand overnight; drain, and add eight onions, eight pep pers, two large (or three small heads of cabbage, all chopped fine; whole spices to suit taste, one cup of sugar if you wish, vinegar to make moist enough; heat It all up together. Can be canned or put In a jar; keeps fine. To Save Cakes Sticking. Stand your pans on a damp cloth Immediately after taking them from the oven and the cake will come out PORTLAND RAILWAY, LIGHT & POWER COMPANY without sticking. C. G. MILLER, Agent OREGON CITY, OREGON Washing Fluid. Take 4 pounds of sal soda, put It In a porcelain, granite or brass kettle; add four quarts of cold water, let boil until dissolved, then add a 10-cent box of chloride of lime (first mashing the lumps), boll about a minute, then remove from the fire and let stand ov er niirht. when the lime will have circumference were settled. Pour off the clear liquid In to Jugs and bottles and keep tightly corked. A tablespoonful of washing fluid la the amount used for a tub of I Thomas Otis Brown, who escaped from the Oregon State Prison, was taken Into custody Saturday afternoon at Van eonver. Although Brown, since his rapture, has made no attempt to deny blsjdentlty or the fact that he Is an escape from the Oregon prison, he de clined positively to leave her'" with the officer until extradition papers are secured. Brown was sent to the state prison from Grant county, under sentence of two years for forgery, and at the time of hi escape had about eight month of hi time to serve. The Oregon Stato Bar Association will hold Its seventeenth annual meet Ing In Portland November 19 and 20. Reports from construction -ramp along the California Northeastern are to the effect that 300 men have been added to the force during the past week, most of whom were brought from Portland. The contractor have been endeavoring to push work and as soon as Idle men began pouring In to Portland from other railroad work thev were sifted out and tho best class engaged for work on the Klam ath Falls line. The Pendleton Savings Bank de rldeil ti remain closed, under the governor's holiday proclamation, be cause of Inability to secure money due from the larger bank and on grain shipments and a steady drain on Its cash on hand through unexpected withdrawals at a critical time. The director of the Kansas expert ment station. C. W. Burkett, believe that agriculture should be taught In the public schools. He declare that there Is Just as much knowledge, Just as much thought. Just a much inspir ation to be derived from the Btudy of soils, plants and animals as there Is In the study of foreign writers countries and activities. The state entomologist of Illinois has the sum of 125,000 appropriated by the last lef?lslature to fight farm Insect pests. Bonanza. Klamath county, Is at present headquarters for an oil ex citement. Two parties made a race for the same land thl week, consist ing of 1,700 acres In the upper end of the lJingell valley. une party headed by K. B. Hall, succeeded In filing leases first. A mild gold ex citement also is on In this vicinity and a shaft has been sunk about a half mile north of' tho Hot Springs tract. Gold has been found In this section but never as yet In paying nuantltles. Plans are under .discussion for the holding of a general agricultural fair for Linn. Benton and Lincoln coun ties next vtar. In the event that such a fair Is decided upon It will bo made an annual event and the State leg islature will be asked to make a small appropriation, probably about $2500. One of tho surprises at, uie jam hill county fall at McMlnnvlllo was exhibit of English walnuts. Speci mens measuring by 6 Inches In on exhibition. There Is more than 1000 acres of young walnut trees fast coming Into bearing, some only five years old. The Prince orchard at Utinuee, This is gospel truth when applied to the care of teeth. A small k 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. 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. Plates $5. Crowns and Bridge-work $5. Painless Extracting, and free when plates are ordered. Ten-year guarantee with all work. OREGON DENTAL PARLORS Over Harding's Drug Store and Postofflce. WORLD NEWS O. D. EBY ATTUUNKT-AT-I.AW. Judge Olln Wellborn. Out llanh of Uicg.in City, HEADQUARTERS Choice Cigars and Tobaccos, Ice-Cold Hop Gold Beer, High Grade Bottled Whis keys and Wines. linapp&Nobel MAIN STRICT STRAIGHT & SALISBURY PLUMBING TINNING and GENERAL JOBBING. Wind Mill. Pump and Hydrau lic (lam a Specialty. Phone 2C82. Oregon City, Oregon. In tho dls-! Minify lonnnl. atmtmrt f urnlnltiid. In4 "in mini ni im ahk-m ". ji- w btnliirai Iranurlri) fined the Santa re $rin.non for re bating. The fine I based on CO counts at $5(100 each. The reclptx of the Vancouver it- office for the ale of dtatniis, etc., for the year eliding September :n, were Jlfi.Mt. a gain of 2,n:iu over the pre vious year. For the benefit of Its army of em ploye who might have trouble se curing rtiHh on their pay check ,the Chicago & Alton bus deeld-d to re- store the pay car and It started over the road .Monday, paving off nil em ploye In currency. Of late years all the roads have resorted to the check system, but the Alton people believe It will help condition everywhere to turn lixwe a lot of actual currency. (told and (old certificate and by help ing the employe of the road, who number thuxaudri, "l nlso liven up matter In all the territory upanned by tho Alton Une. The population of Spain N ome- tiling like iS.ooo.oon, or a trifle les than thn combined population of New York, reiinnylvanla, IlllnoU and West VlrKlnla. Tho blRKct tomato patch In the I'nited Stnte. If not In the world. l In Clark county, Missouri. Just nouth of tho !) Molne river. In this patch there are 170 acre of tomato", and It I enact ly a mile In length and about one third of a mile In width. In the Mate of New York there are 12.000 abandoned farm, represi-ntlnx an area of I2.oon,oun ucre and eatm bin of rarlim for a population of 250, 000. t I stated that farm land In that Slats have rteerenne.1 $l7'.(io(i.. 000. It I Htatcil (hat farm HoMs in Slla II. field ha been appointed Judge of the district court of Alaska Any farmer boy who have a aup nly of bumble bee will confer a fav or on the Agricultural Department by reporting them at once. They are wai.ted for hlpment to the I'hllliv pine ,to be used In the crom fertili sation of plant. It ha been found that honey bees are not trong enough for thl purpoMo and there ate no bumble bee over there. Secretary Metcalf will ask congreH to appropriate $ 1 25,03 1.3U9 80 for the navy for the next flcal year. Now that the electric car ha come to atay, and the few horse car that we eo eem to n relic of the dark age, It I Interesting to note that the flrt. horse railroad wa built In 1R20. The State Hoard of Railway Com mUaloner of Montana Monday Issued an order permitting th Northern Pa cific to withdraw paswenger train of the accommodation da between Hel ena and Livingston. Iigan and liutte and Mlsaoula and Spokane. The or der permit the withdrawal of the train for a period of 90 day from No vember 9. and It I stnted that the action I taken to give the mad an op portunity to relieve tho freight con gestion In coal, wheat, lumber and other commodities. The anti-cigarette law, which ban hed thl kind of amoklng material from the state of Washington wa de clared void by Judge E. H. Sullivan. In the Superior Court on the ground that the title doe not conform to the body of the act. LOG CABIN SALOON BENNETT & FOIMAL Proprlttors. OREGON CITY. OREGON It I a well know fact that person living In the Pine forest do not suf fer from kidney disease. One dose of Plnule at night usually relieve backache. 30 dBys' treatment, $1.00. Your money refunded If not satisfied, Sold by Huntley Ilros. CASCADE LAUNDRY Clothe Washed "Whiter Than Snow," Family Washings at Reasonable Hate--No worry, DO regret If you phone 1304. Our wagnn will call. Pnona 221 Office P. O. Bid. Mala BL Pioneer Transfer And Express C. r.ORISEZ, Prop. Successor to C. N. OIIEKNMAN Sand and Gravel Orsgon City Orsgon. LIVY STIPP ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Justice of the Peace. Office In Jagger Building;, Oregon City I water about two-thirds full; when i this year yield 14 tona. ready to boll your clothes, have your The Ilutte Falls Sugar Pine Lum boiler two-thirds full of water, and ber Company, of Modford, nan failed, into this put two tablespoonfuls of Liabilities given at $30,500 and aa Javelle water. Bets $100,000. We have a buyer for timber landsand 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.