Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914 | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1911)
SAN DIEGO MISSION FLOAT WHiCH WILL APPEAR AT THE CELEBRATION IN SAN DIEGO. CALIFORNIA. JULY 19 TO 22, 1911. CHIEF JOSEPHINE IS CHAMPION OF AMERICA BIG FIRMS EVADE TAX LAW! Deceive the United States In Salar« Returns—Offloe Boys at • 10,000 a Year. Denver, Colo Nomewhsr* tn Deni Eltfbt-Yvnr-Oltl Holstein Cuw, Owned by Agricultural De« ver there are several maybe a score purlnicnt of University of Missouri, Mukva — of offloe boys who are drawing fabu Grunt Hecord. loua salariée for opening mall ami running errands The boya don't know that they are drawing these sal arlos of $3.0'10 or $5.000, or even |IO,. 000 a year, but they are Just the same * Hut It la only In the reporta of *n-| mini net Incomes that are being made! to the United Htatcs Internal revenue! officers by Denver corporation* Hint I these salarle* appear. Under corporation las law salaries ! are deducted from the not total nun | taxable Revenue officer* say the total I ■g salaries this year as shown by the I returns has taken an enormous jump ' If some of the reports are true, they any, there are many firms In I trover who are giving away money every day. Then there are salaries listed for employes now living In three-room fiats that. If really paid, would suable them to live In mansions Chief Josephine, Champion Dairy Cow. This la the milkman's problem [ she requires of each 1s carefully com ! ‘How can I produce the greatest puted from the chemical composition San Diego de Alcala (St. Janies of ground-breaking and dedication of the years in which to propagate it. Flor imfiunt of milk uml butter at the least of the feeds. expense?” During the warm summer months Alcala) was the first mission in Cali first building of her Panama Califor ists say the time is none too long. fornia and was founded by the leader nia Exposition, to be held during the Chief Josephine, bred and owned Josephine consumed about 30 gallons BRIEFS. of the Franciscans. Junipero Serra, in entire year 1915. t>y the agricultural department of the of water dally. Through the whole routine of her I U. S. Grant Jr., son of the 18th ( Diversity of Missouri at Columbia, 1769. Near this mission Cabrillo president of the United States, is now has come nearer solving this problem dally life Josephine la never forced to landed in 1542. the first white man on To Build a Beautiful City. , do anythlug; above all, she la never president of the Panama California than any other cow on earth. the Pacific Coast of the United States. The Pacific Northwest has sent out One of the beautiful features of the several men who are taking a prom Exposition, to be held in San Diego It coats 77 cents a day to keep •'ruck or excited Josephine Is no freak. What she has celebration and pageantry planned in inent part in big affairs in other throughout the entire year 1915. i tosephine and her dally production Is done can be repeated in uny normal San Diego for July 19 to 22. will be places. Sir Thomas I.ipton has signified his worth more than $4 One of these is Frank P. milk giving cow the Ramona legend, taken from Helen Alien, the constructor of the Alaska- intention of bringing one of his Sham Thus Josephine ntakea ns much It Is a fact that any cow can he do- Hunt Jackson’s romance of Ramona Yukon-Pacific exposition, who is now rocks to San Diego in 1915 to take ■a> h day as the average mechanic. and Allesandro. , veloped to give milk Iwyond what Is director of works of the Panama Cali part in ocean yacht races that are be She makes more each year than today considered a good average It It is the purpose of the committee fornia exposition, to be held in San ing arranged during the Panama Cal the average preacher, and almost an Is largely because dairymen do not in charge to costume Ramona and her Diego. Cal., during the year 1915. ifornia Exposition. nuch as the average college professor know the Intent possibilities of their friends, as well as hundreds of char Mr. Allen has associated with him Chief Josephine Is now a little over herds tl nt the present average Is so Lyman J. Gage, one time secretary acters of that period, in suitable dress Bertram G. Goodhue. who is designing and to have her hold court with King the buildings and John Clark Olmsted, of the United States treasury, is one Ight years old and Is of the Holstein I low Cabrillo. who for this occasion will be who devised the landscape features of of the active vice presidents of the breed, otherwise known as Frisian or All that In required for n start la a transformed from a bluff old piratical the 1400-acre park in which the expo Panama Califonia Exposition, to be Holland. cow that In normul In every respect Of course, Josephine's diet Is care- sea dog to a magnificent creature of sition will be built. These three men held during the year 1915 at San From thia jadnt man In the chief Diego, Cal. 'ally and systematically looked after, factor man with a training such ■« silks and satins. promise the most beautiful grouping As nearly as possible Ramona’s of buildings ever built. In the harbor of San Diego this ■die Is fed nlfalfa hay and corn silage la Imparted nt the college of agricul court will enact the principal scenes spring were eighteen warships at an 'or coarse feed and for grain she la ture of the University of Missouri, of the romance, with Ramona as the chor. The members of the crews had ■Iven a mixture of corn bran, linseed and nt other like colleges the country They Want a New Rose. central figure. No pains are being a week of boat racing on the bay and real and cottonseed meal. The amount i over. The Panama California Exposition, declare the racing course one of the spared to make the representation as accurate historically, both in action which is to be held in San Diego best in the world. secured In trying to grow clover with throughout the entire year of 1915, and costuming, as possible. out first applying limo or wood aclx-s San Diego will h >ld four days of Huge mission arches are to be erect has offered a prize of $1,000 for a rose to the land. ed in the streets of the city. The to be called the “San Diego.’’ The pageantry and celebrating beginnng As calculated by the station, th« whole city will be suitably decorated Floral association of San Diego has July 19. to celebrate groun 1 breaking and hundreds of persons will be on the suggested that this rose should be of a for the Panama California Exposition Experiments Conducted I'V Hhodv net returns per acre during th« first six years w«re $279.40, and during th» streets night and day in appropriate deep golden yellow, with the hardi to be held in that city in 1915. The Island Station Show Nil -econg six pear |«*rlod. 1371.46 or costumes. As far as possible and hood of the strongest varieties now pageants will surpass in spectacular itvturna—No Success in $92.06 In favor of the last two rota Growing Clover, compatible with business. San Diego grown, but this is only a suggestion. effect anything ever held on the Pa tolas. _ — ________ will simply suspend ordinary activi The contest is open to all persons in cific Coast. Frank P. Allen, ”who ^built ties, dress herself in gala attire and the United States, any floral society or F r 12 yearn the Rhode Island ex Life on the Farm. do nothing but entertain her guests, club, in fact any person or association. Alaska-Yukon Exposition, is director A contented and lute llgent rural eat, drink, sing, dance and be merry. The rose must be shown at the exposi of works of the Panama California 'erlment station has been making ex i teriments having as their basis a ro- population la the true basis of a per The celebration is in honor of the tion in 1915. so that there are four Exposition, in San Diegojn"1915. atlon of ¡MitatiM-s. rye and clover. The [manent agriculture. 1 here are several •otatlon consists of winter rye the conditions essential to th« b«st conn whitewash applies! to the entire trunk Irst. clover or clover ami gruss the try life. The sms-ess of th« farm as a will act as a deterrent. •econd, and potatoes the third year. business enterprise Is of prime im On an averngn for the whole period portance. It must return an Income CLOVER AND ALFALFA. >f 12 years plat No. 11 received per sufficient to Insure all of th« neccssi By Ge«*nce Sev4*rance, Supt. Western Waahintfton tcre 54 pounds of |M>tnsh, 9 16 |s>unds ties, most of th« conveniences and Experiment Station. >f phosphoric acid, 27 2 pound* of nl some of the luxuries of life. The com ; A'ofcs and [ns fractions from Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations Red clover is preferable to alfalfa rogen and 250 pounds of lime; plat munlty life of the agricultural pi.pu- ■ of Oregon and Washington. Specially Suitable to Pacific Coast Conditions | wherever the crop is desired primarily No. 14, 58.2 pounds of potash, 0 1 hit Ion must be such as will stimulate for its beneficial influence ¡upon the siunds of phosphoric acid, 26.9 pounds m< ntal activity to amply satisfy the <FLAT-HEAD APPLE TREE BORER trees the insect probably goes deeper soil and when a'short rotation is de >t nitrogen and 232 pounds of lime, social aspirations of the countryman into the wood from the beginning sired. For two or three years after cn l plat No. 13, 67.7 pounds of jsitash, and his family. 87.2 pounds of phosphoric acid. 27 1 H. F. .Wilson. Assistant Entomologist. Oreiron where it feeds and lives until ready for seeding, red clover produces hay and Agricultural Colle*«. Corvallis. pupation. In other sections of the pasturage about equal to that pro isiunds of nitrogen ami 232 pounds of Value of Lime. “The records of the entomologist of United States it has been reported as duced by alfalfa, but generaly it prac lime each year. Fresh lime, unalaked, weighs about Previous work showed that the pro the Oregon Agricultural college show working mostly in the parts of the tically dies out after the third year. 80 pounds per bushel, and will absorb that there has been reported injuries trees ranging from the base of the Alfalfa keeps up its yield indefinitely portion of merchantable tubers In the about 27 pounds of water from the air, potato crop Is greatly Increased by trunk to the limbs. if properly cultivated. Hence, alfalfa by this species in Oregon for the last liming, even sometime* In cases where forming hydrate of lime, it also ab fifteen or twenty years, and that these There seems to be a difference of is preferable to red clover if the pri the total vb-ld remains the same. The sorbs carbonic acid from th« nlr and ' injuries are usually upon two or three opinion regarding the health condition mary purpose is to secure a perma results obtained so far Indicate that la gradually conv< rt«d Into carbon- year old trees. With the large num of the trees attacked, but in Oregon nent, long-lived meadow or pa-iture. ate of lime. One bushel of rtone lime ber of young trees that have been set the first signs of trouble appear as a Alfalfa is also more likely to make a after the three year rotation Is well will make about three bushels whin started, further liming once In six out during the past few seasons, these result of the damage caused by the in fair stand where the soil preparation slaked. Air-slaked lime la always re reports have grown more numerous, sect itself. Besides the apple, a num and seeding are not done with suffi years at very moderate rates will be ferred to when It Is recommend» d for ■ufllclv nt. and a considerable number of trees ber of other trees are attacked, as the cient care. The general Improvement of the soli land. Sixty bushels of slaked lime Is To obtain uniform success with have been reported as killed. pear, peach, prune, and some shade was found to have far less l«*n> ficial u good dressing for one acre. clover, it is important to observe the Usually the fruit grower notices and forest trees. effects upon the rye crop than upon following essentials: that some one or more trees planted Clean culture should be thoroughly Success With Farming. With the Im the previous season appear unthrifty. practiced, and nurseries should not be 1.—Good seed. 2.—A firm seed bed ftotatoes and clover. provement In the soil It was neces When a family with loo acre* pro Upon examination, the trees are found located near infested orchards. When which will hold moisture near the sur to -be attacked at a point near the a tree seems to be injured beyond re face. 3.—A shallow but well pulver sary to omit nitrogenous top-dressings duce* w hat It needs ami can exchange surface of the ground by a long, flat, covery it should be removed and ized mulch. 4. Seeding with a drill or for rye. with the result that the yields some products for taxes, repairs, edu broad-headed worm, which has worked burned, so as to get any larvae or other implement which will place the of straw were somewhat lessened and cation. etc., ami «an also maintain th« along the bark, cutting a broad chan pupae which may be present in the seed on the firm, moist earth under those of grain Increased. The ex per land in a productive stat«. It thus nel and usually girdling the trees. infested tree. the loose, dry mulch. 5. Absence of Iment. also taught that It Is advisable solves a problem that will benefit fu The place of infestation may be de a nurse crop. 6.—Avoiding pasturing to sow grass seed with the clover, as ture generations. Not only should Its Perhaps the best preventive meth tected by the discolored bark covering the clover until it is well established. grass usually more readily survives un success be announced, but Hie method ods are mechanical barriers. Tnese der extreme winter and excessive dry by which It succeeded should be pub 7. Protection from squirrels. the tunnel made by the borer. may be defined as something placed The adult of this insect is a green Only seed of high vitality and free summer conditions. No success was lished for the benefit of others. about the trunk of the trees so that ish, metallic brown beetle measuring from noxiuos weed seed.s should be the adults cannot lay their eggs upon a half-inch in length. The body above purchased. The vitality may be de the bark. ______ is flattened, and in fresh specinjens is termined by counting out two hundred Newspapers or untarred building or more seed.s representing an average coated with a grayish powder. The paper will do for this purpose, if under side of the body is bronze col of the entire lot and determining the bound with string and tie<l at top and percentage of these which will germi ored. The adults come out in the spring, bottom, so as not to permit the beetles nate between moist blotting papers <»r The string used cloths kept it growing temperature. and, after mating, the females begin crawiirg under. laying the eggs upon the bark; the should be such that the expansion of Examine the seed carefully for the forthcoming larvae bore into the bark, the trees can break it, should the presence of weed seed. The cleanest excavating a broad burrow just under growth be excessive. Window screen looking sample may not always b« the the outside layer. The broad heads of may be used, but must be placed far best, because of the very noxios char the larvae cause the necessity of a enough away from the bark so that acter of the weeds represent« 1 by n wide burrow, and as the insects the eggs cannot be laid through the few seed.s. Poor seed is dear at any Cotton should price, and it is false economy to pur grow this channel is made wider, so meshes of the wire. that frequently it may be three- be placed about the opening at the chase poor seed because it is lower in eighths of an inch or more in width. top so that the beetles cannot crawl price. The source from which the The larvae continue feeding through under. In case of any of these bar seed comes does not seem to be as im out the summer, and when full grown riers. the dirt should be mounded up portant in the case of clover as in that bore directly into the sapwood of the above the base of the tree so that the of corn or other farm products. In tree, pupate, and remaining there un adults cannot crawl under them at the experiments of the Washington exper til spring, come forth as adult beet bottom. iment, station in 1902 seed was secured les. Reports of injury usually come ’ A good stiff whitewash containing from thirty-eight different sources, in in the fall of the year, as it is then crude carbolic acid should be applied cluding several foreign countries. that the insect has finished its work to the trunks of the trees above the Practically no difference in results was If the orchardist thinks obtained, except a poor stand where and the tree begins to show the effect | barriers. of the injury. In the case of large these are too troublesome, perhaps the poor seed was used. 1 POTATOES, RYE AND CLOVER i F4W ORCHARD i I TWO-PIECE GATE VERY HANDY We Are Never Satisfied. Money From Waste. Some of the street cleaners' gather That which Is well within our grasp feels mean and Insignificant, while ings sold by Glasgow, Scotland, last that which Is far beyond our reach year were: Clinker, for $81.916; tin, •eems absolutely necessary to our light Iron, etc., $26.249; scrap iron, very happiness—wo are never to be $3*.675; waste paper, $32,694; bottles, «ulte satlft ' ' »1-2T9. ________ Does Not Remove Blame. Expert Chets on vessel*. The term "son of a sea cook" Is no Injury caused by carelessness is not longer a title of reproach. The highly remedied when you say: "I didn't paid specialist who presides over the mean to” nor are you absolved from blame and responsibility by those kitchens is a chef with an internatlun words. al reputation. Making Work Easy, How many of you sisters ask our denr Ix>rd to help you through the tri We noticed, while at a sale the als of the day when you get up In the other day, a n«w Idea along the gate morning? I do. Try this; It makes line, that I believe Is good enough to tha work easy —Tennessee Housewife. pass along, writes C. O. Thomas In the Homestead. The gate was made The Other Way Around. wide enough to allow a hay rack to Mr. Angus—"If you knew how to pass through. The small section of cook we could save money." Mrs. the gate made the handling easier Angus—"If you knew how to save when a person wished to pass money we could employ a cook.”— through, beside* lessening the strain Answers. ou the gate were it made in one I AREAL I DIGESTIVE 9 HELP If the stomach is too weak to properly digest your food try HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS It strengthens, tones and invigorates the en tire digestive system. Start today. TOU LL ACKNOWLEDGE ITS SUPERIORITY fee Good for Hair. Explorer* say that the frigid tone* giro Immunity from common colds. Hut no recent explorer seems to have mentioned the old bellvf that long ►>■ ¡»urns among tbs Ice are good for Hie hair This was the firm conviction of whaling skippers In the days whan Dundee was the port for the Arctic. It was said that even the baldest of seamen contrived to grow a puaauble crop of hair before returning. Greatest Little Invention. The greatest little Invention thnt has been given to the world Is ths iuctfer match. It was Invented In 1827. It la small, but like Portia's candle. It baa shed a great light InlC the world it gave man mastery ol fire. Before thia fire had been a con trary hired man. but uow II became an obedient servant A Poor Job. "Yes. sir," said the great financier proudly, as ha tllcked the aab from bls IS penny cigar, "I am the architect ol my own fortune." “Well," rejoined th« friendly critic, all I've got to say Is that it's a lucky thing for you there were no bulldli g Inspectors around when you wsis constructing IL"—Ex ( bangs. _______________ An Important Art. Th« art of bring agreeable should b« Instlllod Into every girl In the schoolroom. Thia la far more Impor tant to the average girl, and far more conducive to h«r g«n< .al happiness In life than much of the useless "cram mlng" which forma ao large a jarrt of many a school curriculum.—Gentle woman. TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY for Red. Weak. Weary, Watery Eyes andGrunulated Eyelids. Murine Itoesn’t Smart Soothe* Eye Pain. Druggists Hell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 26c, 60c, $1.00. Murine Eyo Halve In Aseptic Tubes, 25c. $1 00. Eyo Hook* and Eyo Advice Free by Mall. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Guesswork in Lite. Rllencn and solitude are also won derful solvers of problems and guess- er* of riddles There Is a good deal of guesswork to this life It's not all logic. It's not all a choice between two goods Many of these mysteries can never be unraveled, nnd w« have to take a chance at them, do the best we can and let them go. A Hard Road to Travel. A drunken man. whom a friend was trying to bring to his homo some miles away, was constantly crossing from ono aide of the road to the other, ao bls friend said to him: "Como on, Pat, come on; the road Is long." “I know it is long.” snld I’at; “but It Isn’t tho length of It, but tho breadth of It that's 'killing me."—I<e i'uini "Irish Life.” She Hasn’t Changed. Emancipated woman la nothing morn than human; I think that you may aafely set that down. A women I could mention wouldn’t go to tho convention because she didn't have a ■tyllgh gown Washington Herald. tlon. The larger section of the gate shuts against a short post, which was set In the ground nnd sawed In such a manner as to leave a back for the To Clean Glove*. gate to shut against as illustrated. A mixture of finely powdered full The short 2x4 Is hold In place by er'* earth and alum la excellent for strap Iron clips, and holds the gate cleaning white glove* It should he rigid. In doing chores, when passing nibbed In well, then brushed off and through It, the 2x4 Is slipped back on the gloves sprinkled with dry brun the larger gate, and the book used to and whiting keep the gate closed.