THE SUM)AT OEEGOMAX. PORTLAND. 31 AY ' 1, 1910. 8 ANUT AS AUNAL TO THC COW AS A SQUECL OF BUTTER, ( ( 0 New Vegetable and Said to Be Wholesome, Be mnnln? to Be Used Here As in o - - Europe.' . SINCE the days of our cave-dwelling ancestors the people of the North lands have been eating, for the most part, the flesh and fats of animals, while In sun-kissed tropics the naive ,iave been thriving and finding life one lazy, yawning dream, ordering from a table d'hote menu of fruit and nuts. For a loner time scientists and tthlnkers have been pondering; over this 'truth and recently, with prices of the '.necessaries of life climbing: higher and. rhlgher daily, there has been an effort to modify the present scheme of things by substituting for' a meat diet prod ucts equally sustaining that are right at hand, supplied by Mother Nature. In ' this search for cheaper living, America is learning much from Europe, where overcrowded cities have, made the high cost of living an old,' old story: There has Just come another help that promises to be received here with great enthusiasm. The innovation will mean a merry war between the docile cow and the humble cocoanut for supremacy for it Is nothing less than a substitute for high-priced butter and lard in the shape of an edible fat made from the natural oil of nuts. If the hopes of a company which has started the exploiting of the new butter substitute In America are re alized, the stranglehold which the beef trust now has on the people of this ountry will be, speedily loosened. The new butter may prove to be one of the most successful answers to luxur ious living at a low cost. Nut butter, which is made princi pally from oocoanuts. has the appear ance of lard and is tasteless and odor less. Some of the virtues claimed for It are that it is absolutely pure, where butter Is adulterated with 15 per cent of water and salt. Cocoanut butter Is said to be easily assimilated by the weakest stomach and can be sold at a' profit for less than 15 cents a pound. The men who are trying to educate the American public t.nd i pread broad cast the value of the new product have all kinds of arguments to offer. They point to the fact that today 5.000.000 more persons are subsisting on nuts, seeds and fruit in India. China and the islands of the sea than in the meat eating zones. This1 argument is used to prove the wholesomeness of the nut butter. The new rival of the cow has already made its?1f thoroughly at home in America. Much more so than the aver age American realizes. It is not gen erally known that a factory with a pro ducing capacity of 24.000 pounds of the new nutter' every day in the - year is running at full time in Hackensack. N. J. Very little of the nut butter reaches the American markets. The American SOME IRISH COUSINS OF OUR FAMOUS WESTERN BIRDS Annie Laura Miller Writes of Feathered Singing Friends in Belfast Who Live in Her Garden. BT ANNIE LAURA MILLER. , QUITE rightly the birds ignore the little garden at the back' of the i house. There is a neat cinder walk, a fine square of turf with daffo dils, crocuses and wall flowers coming into bloom this first of April; but it's the fruit trees that are distressln'. I can't look at them without pity, and surely no free self-respecting bird would make a home in them. They have teen pruned and their branches bound tight to the high brick wall, making them, as producers of fruit" in this moist climate, a great success; but as trees, poor things indeed, able to 'move only their tiniest twigs. But in the front garden with its five beach trees. Its high hedge and ever green Bhrubs, Its graveled walk and bit of lawn It needed merely a breadcrumb breakfast daily spread to establish an intimacy between us and the Irish ' birds. As we were leaving home we were amazed at the number of our human friends who developed hitherto unheard of Irish ancestors and when we reached here it was equally surprising to find out that all the people we've met in Belfast have relatives in America. The ties are not In all cases so close 'as one might wish; several people have asked with the greatest enthusiasm: "And you have great numbers of Indians roaming about in the wild state? I understand they are increasing." These blood thirsty questioners- are so disappointed when I tell them how the Indians live on reservations and rally forth In the Autumn to pick hops in the Willamette Valley that I'm firmly resolved to adopt the Irish fashion of saying what Is pleasing regardless of the truth. "Yes indeed..' I shall say. "people who live outside of New York and Chicago and Nlaftars. Falls are in constant terror of their lives. We live in ports, you know, and even then massacres are frequent It's a painful subject, of course, and one hates at my age to wear a wig. but I've been scalped several times myself and would have been killed if the cow boys and cavalry hadn't rescued me.' But our feathered friends? They. too. re really all Irish cousins of familiar Western birds'. Thers are two exceptions so far as our garden goes, the English sparrows and the starlings. The English sparrows can claim closer ralatlonshlp; they are. brothers and sisters of the mil lions in the United States. They have none of the shyness of other birds, so no sooner was the breakfast spread on the gnass than they pounced uninvited upon it. Every succeeding morning has shown them first at the meal, and If it is a lit tle later than usual they stt on the hedge svnd chirrup for it in no gentle tones. The starlings have no relations at all In America. Occasionally they come In Product, Cheap, ' AsWri S "' "ummv mi IIIIIM mmrl ( COca6VZGr GiZZ&ttsr people are hard to make swerve from their allegiance to the old-fashioned cow brand and have been very slow in using the new sort. The enormous output of the factory is exported to the Philip pines, to England and to France. The field of supply from tne cocoanut trees is unlimited. It could go on for ever meeting increased demands. There are now 20.000,000 cocoanut trees planted every year, and. if the demand for new 'butter warranted it, that number could be readily Increased. As the cow reigns supreme in the domestic kingdom, so does the cocoanut in the vegetable king dom. No matter to what extent the cocoanut butter is used, there will never be any danger of the cow losing her popularity. 9he will always be appreciated for her milk and it is safe to predict that she will always be kept busy supplying it. The process of separating the fat from the milk and meat of the cocoanut was discovered several years ago by a French chemist. His success was the result of years of patient effort and achieved only after repeated failures. Until his inven tion it seemed impossible to manufac ture a preparation that would not be come rancid when exposed to the air. His discovery was received with tre mendous popularity in France at once. Twenty million pounds of the product are now being used by the French ' people. In France nut butter is not offered as a substitute for the real thing, but is sold on its merits. Robert Skinner, American Consul at Hamburg, recently reported to this Gov ernment that Germany is i.slng daily 200.000 pounds of nut butter. ' In foreign countries the people have so accustomed themselves to the -product that it is eaten us it is manufac flocks, stalk about the garden and gob ble the bread crumbs up greedily in the twinkling of an eye. At the first glance one thinks them shiny-coated blackbirds. then one sees the long legs, the awkward stride, the very short tail, and one has a good laugh; they are so like gawKy country boys, bursting out of clothes too email: but a nearer view shows lovely mothlike edges of brown on their glossy feathers, and one comes to admire their whistling and singing, and' strong, swift flight. Lately they have been going about by twos, investigating the chimney pots with an eye to housekeeping. In our lift : ';-H0 t r -r - : : ... WH'i:- fit " pi- iV. 1fr4 TP'' " -.11 Aim JlW ?!sWMJ J r - m ill s'. ' Kflf'wKW tured, 'used for cooking and at the table. The promoters of the indus try here, .however, have hit upon a dif ferent plan for increasing its popular ity. Butter made from milk will absorb almost any odor which comes its way. Nut butter Is said to be even more deli cate. For this reason it has been sug gested that persons using the nut but ter mix with it 30 per cent of real but ter. The nut butter absorbs quickly the flavor of the butter made from milk, and a palatable mixture is the re sult. Where butter and lard are used in cooking, the nut butter may be used straight" with the best of success. A slight percentage less is required be cause of it requiring no water. Franklin G. Colby is at the head of the new enterprise which has been launched at Hackensack. He is jen- thusiastic over the future of nut but ter, and predicts a complete revolution of the use of nutritious fats in America. "We are far behind Europe in this respect," said Mr. Colby, recently. "Nothing in the food V. -e ever success fully attacked such important staples as lard and butter as this nut butter. We are up against the -beef trust and I suppose it will fight us. We are ready let them come on. 'The situation in this country is known to be critical. With an ever-increasing population we have a decreasing desire on the part of the people to take up farming. The supply of lard and butter is being reduced every year and the de mand is steadily increasing. This is the real reason for the constant increase in the prices of these products." The farmers of the country have been predicting from time to time that more than half the people of America will have to do without butter in a very few years. neighbor's garden. Just over the hedge, a red currant bush is blooming, and from force of Pacific Coast habit I look for the ruby throat to be humming there, but he never conies, for our humming birds have no cousins at all in the British Isles. Friendliest of all is ft certain robin red breast. He is a very distant cousin of our big Western robin, a little olive brown bird with a rusty red throat and breast. During the cold, dark Winter flpv. he ?.it on the hedse. singing his With such an outlook it will not be at all surprising if the nut butter substitute is received with as much favor here as it has been abroad. If, as its advocates assert, it is healthful, adequate and cheaper, there is no reason why its in troduction should not be welcomed. The introduction of nut butter into America can not help but be of great value in reducing the present high prices of butter and lard. With the popularity sweet, canary-like song, "brave wid his heart forlorn," as If there were leaves on all the trees and the Sun shining. He used always to come to breakfast, but the past two weeks, if he comes at all it is only for a bite; he is too busy now to eat or even to sing, and is getting rather thin and bedraggled, all because he has taken unto himself a mate she looks ex actly like -Mm and Is building a home in the honeysuckle vine on the dining-room wall. His work must beein. I think, -as P3on as the birds have finished that exquisite A- '1 i. f the new product must naturally come . decrease in the demand for the butter chorus wa hear when we happen to awake just at dawn, for when we come down to breakfast he looks as if he had done a day's work, although he keeps steadily on hopping about in the shrubbery, choos ing dried leaves and bits of fiber to use as building material. His load gathered, he files to the hedge, where he rest a minute, looking in at us; then, taking us Into his confidence, flies straight to the nest. It is marvelous the amount of ma terial that has gone into the nest, and it isn't .finished yet. One almost expects him to sit on the hedge and sing a song of trivmph when his home is completed. The Irish blackbird has none of the ways of his American cousin. No water side home for him nor noisy assemblies in the treetops. He is a shy bird of lawns and gardens, a plump bird with a dull black coat and a bright yellow bill. He has an impulsive way of rushing y 4,1 IMI H KaK. -i.ZJL W, 1 iiiii 1 1 sss ; a . ' v. s i iiiii i- s'u, - -is- asi.' 1 Ills .-.xXk ' o'-, ,. T-.-yr? m w made from cow's milk. WIOi this de crease will naturally follow a glutting of forward looking as if he would fall until he tips his broad tail and so bal ances himself. One has been with us all Winter, appreciating the breakfast we provide, helping himself bountifully and often robbing the smaller Diras. Two lay blackbirds used to come, -dull brown birds, with lighter throats very like the song thrush, but one morning they ha'd a fearful fight and only the conqueror comes now. She is Mrs. Blackbird, with a home in our neigh bor's garden, not" far from the tree where Mr. Blackbird perches to flute and sing with much sweetness and vim. The blackbird sings only a short time during the year, defects somewhat trying to his admirers. Even Tenny son wrote - some stanzas to him in a vein perhaps more scolding than poetic, enumerating benefits such as sparing his life and letting him eat cherries conferred by the poet, and asking for songs in return, telling the bird that if he failed to sing in the Summer he would find nothing to eat in the Spring. The song thrush that spent the Win ter In our garden has left us, and we sorely miss his evening song. At dusk he mounted to the top of a beech and sang such a quaint song, a whistle and chuckle and cluck, then a long note of piercing sweetness, not so free nor certain a melody as the one our russet back thrush sings, although the two birds are almost identical in appear ance. Most domestic of all the birds is the little hedge sparrow. He took a mate before the Winter was over, a mate dressed like himself in stripes of black and golden brown, a quiet tarb for birds of such sprightly manner. Every day they come together rather late to eat the tiny crumbs the other birds have overlooked. There is a chaffinch, too, with a gay and varie gated coat; he Is apparently mad on the smbject of color, for his call note is "pink, pink," and one is surprised to see coming in answer to it a demure little grayish bird. On snowy Winter mornings gulls and terns came flying in over the garden, circling restlessly until the storm cleared, and on clear, frosty mornings members of the crow family came flap ping Into the garden, looking at us with great distrust and scaring the small birds all into the hedge. No doubt they have reason to dread human beings; certainly they are unattractive to us, though the grey-necked Jack daws have interesting ways. One is building across the street popping in a chimney-pot with stout twigs and pop ping out again for more. For his sake I. hope that he watched that particular chimney-pot a long time before choos ing it; a' sudden fire might upset his household, and the sober Mrs. 'Jackdaw looks as if she could scold on occasion. But the best fun of all has been the tits, cousins of our cheery chickadees. We rave them a meal all their own. half a cocoanut dangling by a string from a tree: one meal. I said, but good ness knows the many meals they've had out of it. For three weeks they've been there almost constantly, the tiny blue- tits, all in yellow and blue, with broad catch of white like mustaches going back from their bills, giving them a fierce, masculine appearance, in spite of their dainty size and color. A pair- of them often eat together, though the gentleman has the more comfort- hie nrrii. finite as the big chair at table belongs to the master of the household, while the mistress must al fi - li " 4 .4 V -y fSL the market with the real butter and lard, and a consequent lowering of prices. most stand on her head to eat, the cocoanut spinning ' all the time like a merry-go-round. Like them, only big Ker, with a blackcap, are the ox-eye tits: but merriest or an are tne ainpy little coaltits. They look as if they lived in a coal bin, but the male has airs of superiority, nevertheless, and eats in solitary state, while the lady sits nearby, waiting for his sooty lord ship to finish; then "sweet, sweet," he calls, and she comes to the second table. Easter morning was very misty molsty and no doubt that was the real reason, for birds are much Influenced by the weather, and often are slow to stir about when it is damp; but not one of our feathered friends appeared until church-time, and then only the English sparrows, least sensitive of all bird kind; and one couldn't help fancying that thev were boycotting us because It was the special morning for human beings to eat eggs. American Consulate,. Belfast, Ireland, ' April e. "SUPING" WITH - CARUSO Curious Scene Tenor "When the Oils Up." Great "Ex-Super," in Harper's Weekly. Back of the throne we waited with palpitating hearts for our "debut" in opera. Our attention was attracted by the entrance of the great Caruso, accom panied by his valet, carrying a towel, a glass of water, and an atomizer. Then he beEan to "oil up." He "honked" the rubber bulb on the atomiser and sprayed his throat and nose repeaieuiy. E eh," he snorted. "Ay an. e , as he tried his voice. After this a gar ble. .His attendant gave nun a imiu ... . ., I., hi- Wrtclm vial, wnicn ne men awn..v Surely, we thought, ne must w now; but no one more gargle, and then dipping his fingers into the glass of wa ter, he moistened nis nosi.rii. "Now, gentlemen, ready!" "One two three," commanded the stage director; and we boosted Radames- chair with its precious load onto our snouiaers. Jim looked at me and I looked at Jim. It was appallingly heavy, and we two were getting all the weight; some of the other "supes" were either under sized or were ducking under the bur den; but we sallied forth, shaking and trembling in our knees. Caruso pounded on the floor of the chair with his staff, and we halted. The King then rose on his throne and sang a few words of welcome. Another tap of the staff and we brought the hero down, slowly: one two three. Again lifting the ponderous but now empty chair to our shoulders, we marched off stage. Then grabbing Amonasro (Scotli) by the arms we re-entered, restraining him in his rush onto the stage. As often as I have heard Caruso in "Aida," I have never failed to see him "oil up." Even while the act is in progress, and he turns in despair after having Anniers thrust upon him as a wife, the tenor, in raising his hands to his head, takes-from his bosom the lit tle vial and swallows its contents sur reptitiously so far as the audience Is concerned, though -in full sight of the ballet and the "supers." Then, turning again, he is Radames, singing as fer vently as ever. Sometimes, while stand ing thus, he made us laugh with his funny faces of mock despair. i : ? : , ' - A.1T . ' J1 " ; . lu---' . ;m trY"-"- .-an- 1rmn.i....-i'" imnrmnf t BLACKBIRD - SEST, IX FERXERV, OAKLEICH, BELFAST. "J ' - in hi ."h- am t'. mi W " " " '""