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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1908)
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1908. OUR FARMERS' PAGE. ENTERPRISE READERS ARE INVITED TO CON TRIBUTE AGRICULTURAL, HORTICULTURAL, LIVESTOCK, POULTRY, DAIRY OR "BIO CROP" ITEMS FOR THIS DEPARTMENT. Effect of Drugi In Food. Tho ri'MiiltH of exhaustive experi ments conducted by thn Ilnromi of ClmmlHfry of tho Department of Ag riculture to dolermlno tho poisonous effort of Much drugs iih borax, ben wild arid, bonwmtn of itnilu, sulphato of coppr, sulphur dioxide, , formalde hyde iind salicylic acid when used ah preservatives In foodstuffs have been oiitllniMt before tho lloimn Committed on Agriculture by Dr. !I, W. Wiley, chief of tho bureau, Tho main conclu Minn In that tho expulsion of theso and kindred drug from thn body shorten tho term of tho average man's Hfo In tho United States, and that kidney dis ease, bo prevalent among Americans, la lamely tho result of constant Intro duction Into tho system of mien sub stances. Dr. Wiley told tho committee ho had dlHcoverod that salt solution wax a perfect MubHtltutn for Hulphur In tho whitening and drying f fruit, and ho exhibited samples of apples so dried to prove bin Htutetnent. Stable Disinfectant. WhltewaMh la ono of thn cheapest disinfectants and can ho easily and raoldlv aoolled with a Moray pump. It milk affects tho cream. If tho milk Ih warm tho cream will bo thicker than If It la cold. Third Tho amount separated per hour Ih another factor. TIiIh Ih espo dally Important, for If tho milk la un evenly fed Into tho bowl tho thickness of tho cream Ih vaHlly Influenced. Sterilized Wuh Water for Butter. Thn Kansas Experiment Hlatlon con siders It both practical and economi cal to aterlll.o wiihIi water for butter If It can bo cooled and used Immediately; otherwlHo tho practlcu la useless CX pOIIHL'. Process Butter, Tho government Inspection of reno vated butter lust year Mbownd a total production of 63.000,000 pounds of Much butter, an Increase of 15 per cent over tho preceding year. To Strengthen the Eyf. UdIchm ono ban minimally strong eyea ono tnuHt not rend when ono Ih extremely weary. Exhaustion and fa tigue affect all tho nerves of tho body, and tho optic norvo Ih ho aenHlllvo that It ahould receive particular at- nuiHt bo carefully strained before using tentlon. Nor ahould ono over bo guilty In tho pump, iih any lumpH will clog tho spray nozzle. Preparing Gold Powder. Finely powdered gold may bo pre pared by a IllOHt Hlmplo procoHH. Kill a Hinall ungla.ed earthenware bowl with common kitchen Halt, cover It and expoHo It for aomo hour to heat. Tho stovo oven la u good placo for It. When tho water baa all been drU'd out, put equal quantities of thin Malt powder and honey on a glnaa grinding pinto and mix In with It tho neceHHiiry quan tity of gold leaf, (irlnd thla up very gently, being careful not to pros hard on thn maHH. Tho Halt acts a a dls Integrator, nnd tho honey la lined bo caiiHO It will not dissolve tho aalt. When tho gold la reduced to tho fin cm I posslblo powder It muMt bo thor oughly and carefully wanhed with an abundance of ptiro water to removo tho Malt and honey. Running the Separator. Three polnta worthy of attention when UHlng tho separator aro specified by I'rofoMHor Oncar Krf, of Kansas: First Tho speed of tho bowl haa an Influenco on tho cream. A change In Hpeed from ono separation to an other changea tho percent of fat of tho cream. Hucond Tho temperature of the ly thouHiinda of carloodH of vegetables to tho North and Kant. Tho school children have caught tho agricultural enthuiiluHin and mado a display of the products of their gardens at tho Ban Antonio Kalr, closed recently, that was astonishing. Tholr tomatoes, corn, beets, peas, cabbage, beans and pep pera of every variety were as fine as those dlHplayed by any of the profes sional gardeners. Buffalo Commercial. A Cow's Gratitude. When I lived on a ranch In Western Colorado I saw a remarkable thing done by a cow, writes C, Mitchell to Our Dumb Animals. Each seamin our hay, on being mowed, was stacked In a field about 200 yarda from tho house. We had a milch cow named Turvy. Ono winter Turvy'a calf, which had not been weunod, was kept tied a part of the tlmo to a poHt near the hay, Ono morning my attention was at tracted by tho peralHtent cries of the cow. I looked out ana saw n7 standing at tho bars. Bhe was calling mo and was almost frantic. I snatched up a shawl, threw It around mo and ran to see what the matter was. Quick as sho saw me coming she turned and ran back to tho stacks. When J reached the place I found her calf almoHt choked to death. He had wound the ropo with which ho was tier round and round the pont, and twisted It so tight that his tongue was lolling out and bloody foam dripping from his mouth and noso. I quickly untied him, and his mother, by her every action, showed her Joy as the rescue. of tho carclesHneHM of reading or writ ing facing a window. This, too, Is a cruel strain on the sight. Washing tho eyes morning and night In water as hot as It can be borno Is a wonder- appreciated. ful tonic ror inoso tiKcrui servants, which aro so easily Injured. When wo consider how wo neglect their wel fare by using them by fading daylight and insufficient artificial light, by forc ing them to do work when they aro weary and by denying them tho rest for which they long, wo have cauHO to wonder not that they sometimes be come mutinous and refiiHo to fulfill our demands, but that they are ever faith ful In our service. They will, as a rule, bo aa good to us as wo aro to them. Garden and Farm Schools. An agent of tho Department of Ag rlculturo at Washington has lately nimlo the statement thut tho City of Ban Antonio, Tex., hus developed In ' keep the roadbeds In condition Novel Road Making. (Uunl Roads" Is a subject of such absorbing Interest In all parta of our country that any Information leading to tho betterment of our highways Is Here Is a method oi r,,u,i Improvement which Has ueen tried out at the Pope-Toleda factory with good results. This Ih said to add a high degree of efficiency to speed and driveways, boulevards, etc., as well as beneficial to heavy roads: Tho Pope-Toledo Company covers a large area. At the rear of the factory buildings Is a circular speedway, while between tho buildings are drive ways. These roads aro subjected to very acvere use from testing cars con stantly, passing over them, going out and returning to the factory, generally at great speed; heavy traffic of large trucks, heavily- loaded touring cars, etc. Naturally, these drives and speed ways were auito dust nuisances, to say nothing of tho constant repair work to much ' Tha Profit ot Packing Meat. ' Tho Fulton (Mo.) Gazette says: "A 200-pound hog when killed and dressed loses 40 pounds, which would leave 1C0 pounds of meat. Say the two bams ; weighing 30 pounds, sell at 15 cents a pound and bring $4.50; sides, 40 pounds, at 12 cents, $4.80; shoulders,' 20 pounds, at 10 cents, $2. CO; sausage,' 20 pounds, at 10 cents, $2.00; lard, 20 : pounds, at 10 cents, $2.00; bead and I Jowls, 15 pounds, at 4 cents, CO cents, j ribs, 8 pounds, at 5 cents, 40 cents j $1C35 in all counting the value of j the meat which It all sells today for j In Fulton. So you sec, In place Of get-, ting Just $8 for this hog, tho feeder! gets $10.35. The general Impression,! however, Is that a 200-pound hog on , foot, after being dressed and cured, i would leave 140 pounds, Including lard, j backbone, ribs, Jowls, etc. Taking these figures, the average price per pound for dressed meat is about 10 cents but make It 10 cents per pound and the cured hog would bring. $14, against $10 for the 200 pound hog on foot.' We believe the farmer would get more money out of his hogs to pack his meat If be could readily dispose of tho bacboncs, ribs and sauHago, but the difference In profits would not be as great as this, unless the prices In cured meats were higher than the figures given. , Dairying That Pays. A few farmers make a handsome In come from their dairy many achieve a moderate success some, do not be gin to make as much money out of their cows as they should. There Is a good profit In milk, but the farmer must know, first of all, what this profit Is, and second, how to get the profit out of the milk, ice man who wants to have his cows pay a good profit, and pay this profit all the year round, can not study the problem too carefully. k Its public school a system of school gnrdens that Ih one of tho finest In tho country. Tho expert, who mado tho tour of InHpectlon through the South, flnda great Interest In tho movement to ninko gardening and agri culture a part of public education. Soil and climatic conditions have combined to develop thousands of acres of gar dens in that section, that ship annual- Li KEEP BRIGHT AND YOU WILL KEEP BUSY- i'fiiritnentlne haa been done, and the Pope-Toledo people say they have final ly hit upon a road treatment which gives excellent results and Is very eco nomical. The Popes have already been prominent In "good roads" move ments, and these experiments have been as much In behalf of good roads generally aa for the preservation of their own roads. The Pope-Toledo factory has its own steel-treating fur naces, some oil-heated. They take tho sediment from the oil used In the heat ers, which Is crude oil, and with an or dinary sprinkling can, such as Is found around any flower garden, sprinkle this oil over the surface of the road. Three treatments a season, It Is said, makfs tho roadbeds waterproof, lays J l the dust and prevents ruts, breaking or emuanamenis, eic. lucy unicic that the average road, first given the proper surface make-ready, and then given this oil treatment, will soon show decided Improvement In wearing qualities, easier riding, absence of dust, etc. 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. PORTLAND RAILWAY, LIGHT & POWER COMPANY C. G. MILLER, Agent OREGON CITY, - , - OREGON Red Glass and Blue. Red glass hastens vegetation, while blue glass suppresses It Sensitive plants, like the mimosa, grow fifteen times higher under red glass than un der blue. Hints From the Hired Man. It Is as good practice to grease the ax as the saw. Ever try It? As soon as tho garden stuff Is out of tho way, turn the chickens loose. A bone-cutter will pay for Its cost In a BeaBon In Increased egg produc tion. Do not sow alfalfa In the fall. This rule holds good everywhere except In the extreme South. Saw a vinegar barrel In two. Cover tho outside with coal tar, and you have two durable water tubs for the horses or cows. If you are making a fine grade of butter or you have fresh eggs for sale, printers' ink In the local paper will help wonderfully. Home and Farm. Industry of Bees.- When you eat a spoonful of honey you have little notion as to the amount of work and travel necessary to pro duce it. To make 1 pound of clover honoy bees must deprive 62,000 clover blossoms of their nectar, and to do tins requires 2,750,000 visits to the blos soms by the bees. In other words, one bee to collect enough nectar to make 1 pound of honey must go from hive to flower and back 2,750,000 times. Then, when you think how far these bees sometimes fly In search of these clover fields, often than not ono or two miles from the hive, you will begin to get a small Idea of the num ber of miles one of the Industrious little creatures must travel In order that you may have the pound of honey. "Parsifal" at Portland. A play as broal In its Interests as humanity Itself; elaborate and spectac ular In production, weird iu Its por trayal of the elemental passions, .l sorblng as a dream of the highest good, yet keen and Intense In Its ap peal to the Individual; such is the description of the Wagner wonder drama which Portland Is to see in Its new English dress at the Marquam for one we-ik, starting February 1C. It Is generally conceded to be a condition of dramatic art that human Interests must be paramount, and this condition has been complied with In the translation of "Parsifal." Abstract Ideas and poetic fancies are made real In the characters and experiences of living persons. Tho faith that good shall be the final goal of ill, forms the legend wrought out to certitude In the action of the play. The futility of low cunning, craft, duplicity and all the unlovely brood of the nether world, when opposed by the nobler Intelli gence which comprehends but disre gards them all, Is demonstrated in this thrilling drama, which centers around the personality of the son of many generations of soldier sires, whom his mother would have made a sheperd of but whom destiny made a king. There is sound philosophy and true art in the final description of thff personality of Parsifal. A guileless fool In the eyes of the foolish not by wrath, nor by cheap worldly wisdom, but by pity enlight ened. As a spectacle, "Parsifal" is a tre mendous enterprise; the scenery is on a lavish scale and the illuminations and electrical effects form a striking feature of the production. An aug mented orchestra of 20 musicians will render the soul-stirring strains of "Parsifal" as an accompaniment to the wondrous text. The hour of commencement will dif fer from that of the former custom, the long dinner Intermission having been eliminated now permits of giv ing the play at one sitting. The cur tain for the evening performance will rise promptly at 7: 45. Auditors shoul 1 be In their seats when the perform ance begins, as none will be seated during the action of the play. Seats ordered by mail will be for warded on receipt of remittance and self-addressed, stamped envelope di rected to C. N. Ryan, manager Mar quam Grand, Portland. BOOTH HELPS STUDENTS. Ben Franklin who used to run a newspaper down East years ago, also edited an almanac which contained some wise sayings. Here Is one of them: "The way to wealth. If you desire It, Is aa plain as the way Xt market. It depends chiefly on two words Industry and frugality. He that gets all he can honestly and saves all he gets (necessary expenses excepted) will certainly become rich." What lien said was not only true at that tlmo, but It still holds good at the present day. There Is no better way to save than to have a bank account We will be glad to have you start an account at this bank. you are not tempted to spend It. " The Bank of Oregon City YOUR BILL FOR GROCERIES will show a comfortable saving if you do your buying here. And our lower prices In no case mean lower quali ties. It Is the saving on standard groceries that makes buying here truly economical. We have too much faith In your discernment to offer you Inferior qualities at any price. Daily arrival of new season goods in Dia mond W or Preferred 8tock Canned Fruits and Vegetables, Xmaa Candles, Nuts, Dates, Raisins, etc. A. ROBERTSON 7th Street Grocer C areful of Your Property One of ihe secrets of our success in the Baggage and Transfer Business Safes, Piano and Furniture Moving Williams Bros. Transfer Co. Phones, Office Il2f, Residence 1833 525 Main Street A SMOOTH ARTICLE is turned out by the basketful in this laundry shirts, collars, cuffs and all else requiring starching and stiff fin ishing. Our latest Improved appli ances, coupled with skill born of long experience, enable us to turn out first class work quickly and cheaply. CASCADE LAUNDRY Oregon City, ... .. ... -Oregon How Animals Perspire. Prof. E. L. Trouessart of, the Paris Museum of Natural History, In a re cent lecture on animal heat, remarked that the dog, whose respirations In repose number only 25 to 30 a min ute, may in running acquire a rate of respiration as high as 350 a minute, says the Youth's Companion. The ef fect of this acceleration favors the dis sipation of animal heat by evaporation from the pulmonary vesicles. The dog perspires very little, orjnot at all, by the skin, pulmonary tatting the place of cutaneous transpiration. It is this fact which enables the dog to pursue its game so long and per sistently. , . Animals of the cat family, on the other hand, do not possess this pecu liarity, and for that reason tigers, pan thers and lions He in wait for their prey, but do not pursue it over long distances. . The bird possesses pul monary transpiration In a very high degree. Gives $500 to Loan Fund of the Uni versity of Oregon. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Feb. 10. Hon. R. A. Booth, of Eugene, has Just given the student loan fund of the University of Oregon a check for $300 to be used as an irreducible educa tional loan fund for students. The fund will be known as the "Booth Loan Fund" and will be kept separate from the general loan fund, which lit present is distributed in loans rang ing In amounts from $15 to $80 among ten students of the university. Since Ihe establishment of the general fund five years ago, more than 30 students have been enabled to complete their college course who could not otherwise have done so. The university hopes to establish during the present year a loan fund of at least $5,000, to be loaned under tho direction of President Campbell, or seme one designated by him, to boys and girls all over Oregon who wish to complete their education, but w ho can not do so without assistance. It is believed that a loan of approximately $100 a year, at a low rate of interest, to be repaid In two years after gradu ation, is much more preferable than an outright gift In the form of a schol arship. The fund will be guaranteed by ten men against loss. Two signa tures will be required on each note and a small amount of life insurance will be taken out to insure against loss by death. The present loan fund amounts to approximately $1000. Fine Cattle From Molalla. William Stennlnger and Major Hun gate, of Molalla, came in from that place Monday with four head of cattle that they sold to Farr Bros. The cat tle averaged 1350 pounds each, and the price paid was 4 cents. The huge beeves were the cause of much curi osity along the road from Molalla to Oregon City and elicited a great deal of favorable comment on their size and general prime condlton. Oregon City Royal Bakery J. E. SCHAFFER, Prop. Formerly 7th street Bakery Best Quality Royal Table Queen Bread FOR SALE BY ALL GROCERS AND AT BAKERY GIVE IT A TRIAL. Shop remodeled and reopened by February 15 for inspection. Book and Job Pointing Ail Hinds Low Prices Prompt Service Stat Press Job Room OREGON CITY, OREGON 0 0