OREQON'CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JANUARY, 10, 1908. OUR FARMERS' PAGE. ENTERPRISE READERS ARE INVITED TO CON TRIBUTE AGRICULTURAL, HORTICULTURAL, LIVESTOCK, POULTRY, DAIRY OR "Bid CROP" ITEMS FOR THIS DEPARTMENT. HAMS AND SHOULDERS. Improved Methods For Curing and Preparing for the Market. A mkiii it possible after Mm meat 1 rol nil through, tlx hum and shoulder should Im cured. They should Im iiliu'i'd on a tu, thu cellur, Nliln side down. Then for every ion pound of meat inukn a mixture of i pound of (ho best unit, 2 ounce of powiliTi'il saltpeter, mul 4 ounce of liruwii sugar. Till mixture should be well rubbed lulo Hid ham ull over nllit mow" pushed lulo llliek and amirhd tlie Imiiio. Keep olt rubbing until the meut will take no more; then ii them remain on the table for a week, when the remainder of the. mixture can Im rubbed In. Allow them to lie for about two week al toKi'ther, and then liana up by a string placed through the liock, In a cool, dark smokehouse, For two or three day keep up a KiMid Miunlie from hickory chip, smothered with sawdust, during the ty. Keep in a cool place, and be fore spring examine to sen that no Insect have deposited egg. Iust a little cayenne pepper, then cover with coarse uiunMu to 111 thu ham ex actly and Mitch tightly, (ilve a coal of whltcwaHh r chrome yellow, and Iiuiik In a cool, dark, dry place, t For curing In pickle, to one gallon I of wut-T litkn one and one half i pound of unit, half a pound of sugar, half an ounce each of saltpeter and potash. In thl ration tin- pickle can be liicreaMi-d to enough to cover any amouiil of pork. Hull together until all dirt rlHi- to the tup aiul U skim med off. When cold pour It over tho ham or pork, which may be pickled In thl way. Tin rii'-at must be well covered by It, and hould not be put down for al b ant two day after Jilll liik. durliiK which time It Hhoiild be alightly sprinkled with eul t p.-f.-r, which reniovea all the Murface l)lood, leaving the wnt freed- and clean. A K'xitl way to keep hum t to pack In dry !t In a dry place, not having any part exposed or touching each other. Phoephate In MM)'. ArcordltiK to the experiment ot Duclaux, the phoNphatv In milk are present In n u hpe Union and NoHlltot'. The former are phosphate of Inn, aluminum, muKiieNlum ami calcium, Wl lie li e litter COllHllt of lir.uly equal molecular qimiitl'b'H of pho phate of Modlum and phosphate of cnltium. luld up by sodium i. Itr.it". Tiie rult of the examination of varlou kind of milk I that there U about tlce a much calcium phos phate lu MiiMpeiiHlon a In Molullon, and that the compolllon of tho ash of milk of the wont diverse origin t very nearly Identical. An attempt to produce a "phoiiphate milk" by adding phophatc to the fodder ha proved quite Ineffective, the pillk containing no more phosphates than ordinary quantities. Queer Arithmetic. When livestock Roe up a Cent the wholesale price of meat I advanced m cent, and the relall price from a cent and three-quartera to 2 cent. Hut when the operation Is reversed, iu at present, the l and 2 cent de clines on livestock are accompanied by half cent reduction on the whole sale prices, which whittles the de cline down to nothing on retail prices. Mow can you expect your butcher to cut off an entire cent from his price when he has got but halt as much re duction from the wholesaler? For this are the meat combinations. We do not say that the figures are precise, but the rule of preventing the decline from keeping In pnKr tlon with the advances has constituted the great method of making the mar gin between live tjieats and that sold to the consumer greater than ever be fore. Hard working Elephant. The Indian elephant does real work, hnrd work, and lots of It, snys Popu lar Mechanics. A trained working el ephant Is a valuable piece, of property. They nre useit for towing raft and rolling the heavy logs up on high land. In lifting. rrylng and piling beavy railroad timbers they take the load on their tusk and hold It there with their trunk. It I frequently nec essary to trnns)rt a herd of workers, and this Is usually done by ship. The process of binding and unloading the big beasts from the ship' hold Is one morn enjoyed by the apectators than the elephant, who Is placed In a strong canvas sling and hoisted with a atenm derrick. The Buy Bee. Tim value of $25,000,000 placed on the annual output of honey puts this farm crop only slightly behind raw cane sugar, which had a valua tion of $28,000,000. Comparisons with the output of the CI beet-sugar fac- areful of Your Property One cf ihe secrets of our success Safes, Piano and Williams Bros. Phones, Office 1121, Residence torlen, which have a capacity of 49,500 ton of beeiH dally, may seem odlou. yet tho product of thl coddled and foMterod Industry $ 15,000,000 wa le than double that of the buy hive ciimiiiunltle. The bee In effect pay the Interest on the ouhlln debt $24,310,320. Hhall not tin lnect which Napoleon made an Imperial emblem have some state recognition such a MassaehuHctt Klve to the codflMh In It legislative hall? A a matter of fact, the prod uct of the New England fisheries, which have been tho aubject of treat leu and International conventions and occalotially rained the specter of war, amount In value to only half the bee' product.. At leant the bee deserve a aharc In tho national affection which I lav ished on the hen. Thl IndiiHtrlou worker maintained It reputation dur ing the year by giving poultry prod uct a Value of noO,IMM),000, exceeding that of the wheat crop. That the dairy product counted for more than any crop except corn testifies to the luiMirtaiice of another of the humbler farm IndiiHtrlea. The great propor tion to which the leaner agricultural product have grown, the orchard with their minor Item of 1,754.1(27 bar rel of cider, tho $113,000,000 worth of miscellaneous vegetable, tho C, ooo.ouo ton of cottop eed, orco plan tation waste but now furnishing the equivalent In value of seven 20,000 ton battleship, make a nature wonder story of never falling InterestNew York World. Applet and Salt. Eat fresh apple with salt after every weal, advise a phyMclan who ha made a spi-clalty of atomach and Intent Inal trouble. They aid dlges tlon wore effectively than any dniK. and people who make them a pari of their dally diet rarely have itidlKMllotl. Take apple, (rooked or fresh, with unit w hile dining or Immediately after and eat them between tltnea when huiiKry. Cultivate thu apple habit, and Instead of eating bonbon and pMKjry, aerve them In aomo form for afternoon tea ir for Uitht lunihe In the morning. Eat thern In the Hum mer even more than during the win ter month, for nothing I better or more nourlHhlng for the entire system Value of the Stallion. Colman' Itural World remark that In breeding hornea the aire 1 wore than half of the harem. A prepotent nlre mut bo a full-blooded animal of the breed which he represent. A stallion need lo traeo for at leant five generation lo purebred ances tor to ponaenn tho characteristic of the bn-ed to a degreo that lie will transmit with uniformity the leading qualltlea of the breed to hi offnprlng. A mixed bred Ntalllon will nhow an Inclination In hi progeny by the law of atavism to reproduce characteris tic of different breeds. Machinery for the Farm. Inventor are constantly adding conveniences for our every-day work. At a recent state fair a man wa ex hibiting an automatic poultry feeder and waterer. And that wa not all; the feed and water were warmed for winter feeding, it consisted of a gal vanized Iron hopper, with holes In the side for the fowl to pick the grain out. In the center of the grain bin was a water tank which supplied water to a little trough at the bot tom from which tho fowl could drink. If hot water wa put In tho tank at night It would warm the feed around It. and when the fowls came off tho roost In the morning they would have a warm breakfast awaiting them. It lisiked practical. Pulp from Bamboo Crass. The Agricultural College, Toklo, recently announced that It had dis covered a method of making pulp of bambiM) grass sasa Tor which the highest results are claimed. Tho bamtsM) grass Is very common in Ja pan, and has been put to little use. It Is proisist'd to teach tho method to the Jurmneso fsr'ners, and, as it Is hoped tliut tulip will be ' produced cheaply by It, both the farmer and the consumer should benefit. The matter Is still under Investigation, and no details are obtainable. Cause for Rancid Butter. 'Rancidity In butter Is caused by the various butyric acid ferments, and although In the product, the process l.t usually more gradual than In the case of milk and cream, on account of the butter fats constituting a com paratively unfavorable medium, the production of free butyric acid, tn-en In small quantities, Imparts a very rnnk and extremely disgusting flavor to the buttur. Note. t When , It can be avoided horses M Furniture Moving Transfer Co. 1333 525 Main Street ought not to bo worked la-a cold rain, Unsound grain ahould nover be fed to a horso; they should have food of tho best quality, A growing hore 1 morn Injured by Improper shoeing than one that iu fully developed. It take but little to ruin a good team when pushed beyond their sirength. A pound of comb I said to cost the bee 10 pound of honey. Thl I tho reason for alway supplying the comb foundation. It bring the owner of tho bee double It cost In honey. Two or three week before lambing time increao the grain ration to about three-quarter of a pound In order to encourago a largo milk flow. Feed lightly on grain for two or three day after lambing. Never let a ewe run with the flock. When thl I permitted and twin are bom, the first born wander away and become mixed with the flock be fore the mother ha a chance to own It, and the chance are that later she will refuse to have anything to do with It. One good service I all that I nec essary to produce a complete litter of pig. '.ran and ground oat are good for the cow now a a change from corn. If you have no aweet clover hay, the cow will get along until pasture without falling much. The old cow I a dandy whether In the beef herd or In the dairy. Keep the calf growing all tho time. Don't let It become "stunted." Empty sklm mllk from can a aoon a they are returned each day. A butter cow la valuable In propor tion to the amount she require of fism to make a pound of butter. Green food I of great assistance In securing thrifty, vlgorou chick and tho most rapid growth. It may be supplied In varlou form and way. Co at the work of growing an or chard a you go at the work of grow ing any other crop. Plant with care, protect In every way possible, culti vate and fertilize. The great desire to make large sum of money out of small capital and with little trouble I a drawback to tho poultry business. Many people expect large return from the outset, which J unreasonable. rgg that have been subjected to a temperature lower than 40 degrees for any length of time should not be used for setting, and, of course, a temperature lower than that will kill the germ quicker. How can we expect an underfed cow to produce a full supply of milk? Might a well expect to put 100 bush el of corn through the sheller and expect 110 bushels from the spout, to say nothing of the cobs. There are but few farmers who can not keep 10 cows on tbelr farma. The time spent In caring for them and the products come In the even ing and morning, when the farmer cannot work In the field. When an exercising lot can be had, It should be long and rather narrow, so a to prevent the horse from run ning In a circle, which so often re sult In a slip or fall, which may prove to be very Injurious to the animal. In a long lot tho animal will have a chance to extend Itself. Little chicken should be fed often 11 they are to grow rapidly. rnsh-lald eggs will hatch a little aooner than those kept for aome time. All egg selected for hatching should be perfect In form and the shell Ann. The greatest mistake In feeding for eggs Is In giving with food which make fat Instead of providing those elements which go to make up the egg. If laying lien are given as free range a possible they will lay fewer soft-shelled egg. Their forage will Include much Umeformlng material. I Education Through Correspondence. i The University of Oregon ha ar I ranged correspondence courses, that ' are now being offered by the Univer sity. They are arranged especially for teacher, student preparing for college, women's clubs, teachers groups, Granges, home-makers. The I'nlverslty Intends to add additional course In economics, political science, history, English literature, mechaulcal ; drawing, civil engineering, as Its re sources permit. The correspondence ! work ha met with a hearty reception in all parts of the State. More than two hundred students enrolled for the various courses during the past month. CONVENTIONS FOR PORTLAND. Conventions will be held In Port land during January, as follows: January 13 and 14 The Northwest Retail Harness and Saddlery Manu ufacturers' Association. January 14, 15 and 10 Oregon Hor ticultural Society. January 17 and IS Oregon State Press Association. January 21 and 22 Retail' Grocers' Association. January 21 and 22 Oregon Retail Hardwaro and Implement Dealers' As sociation. January 23. 24 and 25 Pacific Fed eration of Implement and Hardware Dealers. Willamette League Officer. Willamette Development league has' elected the following officers for the ensuing year: Ernest Mass, pres ident; O. O. Graves, secretary; Frank Capen, vice-president; J. F. Sunders. ; treasurer. An executive committee of five will be appointed by tho president. , Tho work of the league has lapsed ! because of the recent Interest In the proposed purchase of the water ays- tern, and as soon as tho question la j settled the officers will plan a scheme I for the promotion of tho growth of tire 1 town. z STOCKHOLDERS' ANNUAL MEET ING. Notice Is hereby given to the stock holders of the Crown Boy's Mining and Milling Co. of the annual meeting at Willamette hall, Monday, Jan. 13th, 1008, at 8 p. in. Election of officers and other Important business. IJy order HOARD OF' DIRECTORS. D. C. BAKER, Secretary. It NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHT A little Innocent laughter, A little genuine fun, Not forgetting to make the sun shine When In the aky there' none; Thl 1 the way to be "up-to-date" And happy In 1908. A little loving service, Or deed of klndnes done, A little bit of charity E'er the setting of the sun; Nor forgetting to be "up-to-date" And happy in 19'os, A pleaaant word for the lonely, A happy smile for all, Our very best endeavor Where'er our lot may fall, I the surest way to be "up-to-date" And happy In 1908. So here' to the year that' coming, And here' to the year that' gone; Here' In the odd we've been fighting And to the battle won; And here' to whatever may be our fate All through the year 1908. ELSIE DRAYTON BLOOD. : The Tie That Binds Grayson settled himself comfortably In hi seat, hi gaze resting on a wealth of chestnut hair and a fair, white neck Visible over the back of the next seat. The train started and there came back to him a faint odor of vh lets, and In a breath hi mind had leaped back over the chasm of time to that October night five years before. Again he stood well back In the shadows watching, faxclnated, In sil houette on a curtain of bis home two people, a man and a woman, In each other's arm, hi wife and a Btranger. After they had gone he waited for his brain to clear and his blood to cool then sauntered In. Then came the ac cusation, the protestation of Innocence and the parting. Grayson was a law yer, and he smiled now at the plea of Innocence after the evidence of his own eye. He had then removed to another city, but he had often wondered during those five years what had become of hi wife, for he had heard nothing of her since that night, and now he was on hi way to see her uncle. "Strange why Derwln sent for me," he soliloquized, "for he knows that Evelyn and I parted and that I " Something fell on hi knees. Inter rupting his thoughts. It was a wom an's hair comb. He picked up the dainty ornament and looked at the fair head from which it had fallen. And at that moment he was startled to see another bron head bob up over his seat, and a pair of big. blue eyes look ing Into his. The child's movement aroused the mother, and as she stirred Grayson leaned over, the comb ex tended, i "I beg your pardon," he said, "your comb fell. Here it Is." He wondered why she started so violently, and why she made no move to take the comb. Then she slowly turned her head. "Great heavens! Evelyn!" he cried, startled. For a moment they regarded each other In constrained silence, the child looking now at her mother, now at Grayson. "The surprise Is mutual," she mur mured at last. A cold look crept Into the eyes that traveled from her face to the child. A flash of anger answered hlra as she clasped the child to her breast. "I am on my way to see your un cle," he remarked, then added: "At his request." "We are, too," she returned, "also at his request." Just then the child reached a dim pled hand toward him, and he drew away. "You need not fear," cried the moth er, "for she Is your own flesh and blood." Something rose in Grayson's throat, his face reddened. "I didn't mean I didn't know " he paused in confusion. HI wife turned away, tears in her eyes, and the child still gazed at him over the mother's shoulder. He hesitated a moment, then stepped out into tho aisle and into her seat, noticing for the first time that she wore a band of crepe on her arm. "Who is that for?" he asked, touch ing It. "My father." "Your father," he repeated, aston ished. "Why. I thought your father died before before we were married." She did not answer at once, and, as he looked at her the old love that had once filled his breast, the love that never had really left it, but simply died down and lay smoldering away, suddenly burst into flame again. Gradually the child had edged away from her mother and was now close up beside Grayson, her little hand creeping into his. Suddenly he took her In his arms, crushing her to his breast. For a moment all was still, then: "Mamma's crying," she whispered They both started. The mother mado a motion to take the child, then her hands fell, and she turned again to the window. "Evelyn?" "Yes." "When we parted " "You thought me unfaithful. You were cruel. You would not believe me. You you " "But the man I saw " "Was .my father." For a moment he was silent; the look In his eyes was hard to fathom. "Why didn't you tell me then?" "I couldn't. My father was Paul Berwln, who wrecked the Endlcott bank, and to see me once more he took awful chances of returning to America. It was fear for his safety that kept me silent." "But I never dreamed of such a thing. Where did he die?" "In Valparaiso. That is why I am going to Uncle Anse. . Father left a big fortune, and the money is all go ing to be returned to the bank." "Does your uncle know the cause of our misunderstanding?" Ben Franklin who used to run s newspaper down Eaat year ago, also edited an almanac which contained aome wise sayings. Here is one of them: "The way to wealth, if you desire It, I a plain as the way to market. It depend chiefly on two word Industry and frugality. He that get all he can honestly and saves all be gets (necessary expense excepted) will certainly become rich." What Ben said wa not only true at that time, but It still hold good at the present day. There I no better way to ave than to have a bank account We will be glad to have you atart'an account at thl bank, you are not tem-pted to spend it. The Bank of "Yes, I told him." "I thought bo. I am the lawyer he sent for. Oh, what a fool I have been, a brute, a perfect brute." "Mamma, what' a brute." "I am, dear," answered Grayson, "I like brutes, don't you, mamma?" Grayson' heart was beating wildly. "Evelyn?" "Yes, dear." She was looking at the child. "I I don't deserve it," be mumbled, hoarsely, "but I I'll try to to repair the " he broke down, gobbing. HI wife laid her hand on hi knee, and he Instantly covered it with his own. "We must never part again," he whispered. "We can't with a Ue like tbi." There was a grinding of brakes and the train began to slacken speed. A whistle of released air followed, and they were at their destination. "And now, Mis ," he paused In confusion. "Her name is Crystal," answered the mother. And out on the platform of the sta tion an old man gave a shout of joy as be saw a man and a woman kiss each other and there was a little child between them, her arms around their necka. Boston Post. Found. A Jersey yearling heifer at my place, 5 mile from Oregon City, near the Redland road. Owner will call and Identify. FRED HEIDEMAN, 2t2 R. F. D. No. 2, Oregon City. Pine salve Carbolixed act like a poultice, draw oat lnfiamatkm and poison. Aatls.ptie, healing. For chapped hands, lips, cuts, burns. Bold by Huntley Bros. 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 candle 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 illuminatf d 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 "tomorrowY' 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. PORTLAND RAILWAY, LIGHT & POWER COMPANY C. G. MILLER, Agent OREGON CITY, - - OREGON Oregon Qty Death of Ernest Hitchman. The death of Ernest Hitchman is a shock to his many friend. He made such a heroic struggle for life, his comparative youth being in his favor, that there was a general feeling of hope for his recovery. Ernest was highly esteemed throughout the com-, munlty in which be lived. Withal he wa a social favorite and much be loved. He wa a warm friend, faith ful and always ready to extend a help ing hand. He was born In Minnesota 2C years ago, coming to Oregon when a very small boy. He married Miss Verna Barber in 1903. She and two small children are left to mourn his departure. HI death was due to tu berculosis, after a lingering Illness of five year. He was a member of the W. O. W., which order honored him to hi last resting place In Rock Creek cemetery, Tuesday, December 30. Drinking Water Off a Corpse. A public meeting was held in For est Grove Monday and action taken toward finding the body of Boren Lam bert, a logger, drowned In Gales Creek near that city ten days ago. He was engaged on a drive for the Base Line Lumber Company when he lost his life, and the people here think the company has not been as active as it should be in trying to recover the body A considerable sum has been raised and men employed, who are making a careful search of the stream. The drowning occurred less than a mile above the pumping station of the city water supply, and people do not like the thought of the body remaining in the stream so near where their drink ing water comes from.