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About Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1912)
Machinery boller«, «owmilla, ote. Th« MAKE CHRISTMAS MONEY Hoaa and Girl* wanted tn manufacture and aell I'erfwtton Furniture Polish. Agenla pay 16c. Ketatla 26c. Send 60c for formula and dlrectiona. Malarial ceeta Hr. Art!» Mfg. Co., Kept. G, 811-12 Bernice llldg., Taroma. Wash. Wkm la l-OITUM) elee al NEW SCOTT HOTEL larf«, litfht f»<n» ■ («•am bl< lobby; rl«an «fui <>nUr!y. c U mm * I o btmln*«« Mieti.»«); boat plaM for family In ally k(X»MR Me UP. Seventh and Ankeny Streets ConwnUnt from All !>a»<<la by MUeatcar J Economical Lighting Co. tiaaolinc Hollow Wire lighting System. Manila, and Glaoaware Mantle« fc< <’anrh««t«r Abidin. aU th« •nt niahr« uf Krrwa«n« ManO ljuny« J uiik * ft a« Man U m d»e p«r dua«* Writ« ua Amrt. Held S47 Wuluw. An. r«daM LIME FERTILIZER Ala« Lan.I Plaatar. Lima. <*ni*fiL Wall Elaa* tar ami Shing I»« Write fur yr Uwa. NOTTINGHAM A CO. 101 Prwai Btrwt. POMTLAXD. OR. k______________________ J SAVE MIDDLEMAN’S PROFIT WAY TO PREPARE CUCUMBERS Gouu wUtu i «... www,. r mJ ITS Many Methode of Cooking Succulent and Popular Vegetable Are Wall Recommended. All Few persons realise In wbat a wart- ety of waye the succulent cucumber may be used and what a valuable veg etable II le Many peraona who do not dare eat It In the raw state find It as safe as It Is palatable when cooked. Cut in dloe-ehaped places and boiled with carrots and onions It Is very good The onions should be put on to boll first, small ones being used, then the carrots and last the cucumber Drain off the water and seaaon with salt, pepper and butter or a cream sauce Cooked cucumber la excellent tor salad. Boll until tender, drain, cut in thick slices and put In the refriger •tor until ready to use Herve with tender lettuce and thinly sliced green peppers and French or mayonnaise drossing Other vegetables may be added to this salad If one happens to have some left over In th« refrlgera tor, cauliflower being particularly good for the purpose "Left-over" vegetables may be util ised for cream soups In all sorts of delicious combinations For Instance, fry an onion In a little butter, add cooked lima beans, cauliflower, car rots. peppers, peas or whatever you happen to have on band, and bring to a boll with sufficient milk thickened to the consistency of heavy cream und flavored to taste. The vegetables should be cut In small pieces or they may be mashed If a smooth soup Is de sired REAL OLD BUCKWHEAT CAKES Boston Woman Explains Hsr Method of Making This Favorlts Wlntsr Brsakfast Dish. Home one asked for directions for making old fashioned buckwheat cakes 1 had a bag of this kind of buckwheat sent to me from the coun try and wo arc Just reveling tn buck wheat cakes and sausage and maple sirup. I don't know as I can tell you Just bow much I use, but to start them 1 take part of a yeast cake, about a teaspoon of salt, a pint of lukewarm We went dreea«l Turkey«. IKirlie end Oree water. Stir In enough buckwheat to fer Thattkeslvlns trade. Write favour print make thick enough so it can be stirred ed l.M'hlet n<> dreealns met marknUns to s*l pr < ee W rite Uetay. Wo alau want easily l^t rise all day and a night. Vwl, Fuell and all ku>de of Uve Poultry. In the morning, take out about half, r. «. MHMAI.Z a co. or what you need, and one fourth tea Paid-up Capital tlo.oeo. UI-IM Front Mtceet Portland. Oraeoa spoon soda with two or three table spoons of ivi-l milk This makes them brown nicely. Add enough luke Others Could Tell Him. "Have you any object tn piling up warm water to make them spread on When wealth? Perhaps you have an ambi the pancake griddle nicely tion to gratify. Is there anything you through with batter put In a little want to do?" "Thero 4s. When I am warm water, stir In more buckwheat filed financially I propose to aen If and leave In warm place through the Can be put In cooler place at there la really any money In the chick day en business."—Louisvilla Courier- night If tn a few days It doesn't seem very light, add a small piece of Journal. yeast cake, but the older the batter Is the better It Is You will need to Adam's Satisfaction. Adam was surveying the animals add more soda the older It Is. for It he was called upon to name. Hs grows sour, but that makes them more smiled with satisfaction as he re tender.—Boston Globe marked: "Whatever else may hap Fried Apple Sauce. pen. there never will be a shortage This dish Is often called fat apple in the supply of party emblems." sauce. A spicy, smooth and medium alxed apple le best. Ik> not pare, as His Line of Work. "Sam. bave you got a Job now?" the skin la the beat part of real fried •Oh, yea, sah." "What are you doing, apples. Quarter and core,, after first Sam?" "Why, I'a gettln* my wife washing very clean. Fry out sufficient clear fat pork to leave plenty of fat washin’, boss." in tho frying pan for cooking the ap- plea without danger of burning on. SMt—■— lay the apples In skin side down and. when soft, turn and brown quickly without burning. Baldwin apples are tho best of the common varieties, although on the old farm we hnd one tree which we called "spice apples" for lnck of any known name. They were almost a cinnamon or spice flavor and were even better than Baldwins for frying. Mt«« C. M ahomitv , of 270« K St, of $100 or more by buying your Piano or Player Piano direct from factory store. BUSH A LANK PIANO COMPANY 355 Washington St., Portland, Or. TURKEYS WANTED Rheumatism Neuralgia Sprains W. \Va*hiiigl«*n, 1» writ»*«: “ I »uf- f«r«H| with rliwumnllaiit t»»r V»arg ami I ha»w luM It« hl of your Lini ment, auil H I hm « «Ion«* me much go<Ml. M y knep« ib> not aud Lho ■ w oiling han g«>nu.” Quiet* the Nerves M r *. A.W i <»f Tbompton St., Maryville. M<»., writ«« : — •* Th« narvo in my leg wm destroyed five yrvtra ago an<l left nto with a jerking at night •<» that I could not «h»«*j>. A frlnnd told me to try your Liniment and now I could not do w ithout it. 1 find after it* u«o 1 can Bleep." SLOANS LINIMENT •‘Is a good liniment. Ikeepiton hand all the time. My daughter sprained her wrist and used your Linlrtirnt, and it haa not hurt her nm Orarti ayrnp. TMtM Good, V m la time. Hold by f>rnsffi«ts. Mf'114'VlliFÍ.U'líülJ FARM BEES AND USE KELP AS A FERTILIZER Many Farmers Along Mains Coast Gathsr Seaweed In Largs Quanti ties and Scatter on Land. The main In the picture Is one of the many farmers on the Maine coast who gather kelp to put on tbelr lands as fertiliser. Kelp is a seaweed which Is washed up on the shore, and at low tide, farmers along the Atlantic coast gather It In large quantities and spread tt upon their land. This mskes a very good fertilizer, particu larly as so few animals are raised in New England that stable manure Is scarce. However, as kelp Is now be- Qathsrlng Kelp. Ing used quite extensively In the man ufacture of drugs and other things. It Is becoming more valuable for those purposes than for fertiliser, and the wonder is what these seashore far mers will do next to obtain something to enrich their soil. BEE-KEEPING FOR A FARMER No Agricultural Property Will Make Equal Returns for Trouble Caused by Honey Insects. A great many farmers seem to think thst honey bees are not worth any thing, but still they value what they make very highly. Every one of them would be glad to have honey on his table all the time. If they would just take a little extra time and labor they could have all they wanted. Just have a few hives in the back yard, and you will have all the honey you want for your own use. If you have not any time at all to spend with bees, why not let your wife or the children have a few colonies? Bee-keeping is a light, pleasant out door work. Considering the time re quired and money spent, there is nothing that will net the owner any more than the keeping of bees. As high as ten dollars' worth of honey has been gathered by a single swarm of bees; but generally they gather about two dollars' worth In one season. Many people would keep bees If It were not for their stings. A bee keeper does not get stung often—he would not any more think of getting stung in picking up a handful of bees than you would in picking up a downy little chick. Honey is a good food for the sick snd well, old and young. It can be used a great many ways In the kitchen In preparing things for the table. TO HITCH A CORNSTALK POLE With Fastening of Chain Near End of Each DoubleTree Considerable Trouble Is Obviated. Hooking a stalk pole by fastening a long chain from notches to cleavers In the center of the double tree, often causes a lot of trouble by the ends Casserole of Lamb. Two pounds of latnb from back, two tablespoonfuls of drippings, two and one-half cups of well-seasoned stock, one-half tcaspoonful of onion Juice, five tablespoonfuls well-washed rice, one cup canned or stewed tomatoes will be needed for this recipe. Cut the lamb from bones in pieces suitable for serving and dust with pep per and salt. Fry tn drippings, add rice and onion juice, then the tomato and stock. I-et come to a boiling point, pour Into casserole and bake tn jerking back and forth, caused by slow oven till tender—about two light and heavy places in the stalks. hours. With the fastening of chain near tho end of each double tree the trouble Baked Chicken Croquettes. Is obviated. Take two cupfuls of minced cold chicken, three tablespoonfuls of chick Locating the Apiary. en stock or gravy, a half cupful of In starting an apiary the first fresh bread crumbs, a teaspoonful of thing to be considered Is the selec onion Juice and one of drippings, a tion of a suitable location for the dash of pepper and a teaspoonful of hives. This should be in some open salt. Make the minced chicken and or nearly open place where there to It add bread crumbs, onion, parsley, will be no overhanging branches from salt, pepper and the gravy; mix all trees to interfere with the operation together. Brush custard cups with of the apiarist, convenient to some drippings; put In tho ingredients. building to be used as a shop for Place tho cups In pan of warm water preparing and storing hives and ap and bake twenty minutes. Turn out paratus, and near enough to the house on hot platter; serve with green peas to bo easily watched In swarming around the edge of platter. time, and. above all, tn a place suffi ciently level to make It easy to get Fluffy Cakes. around the hives and keep the grass Cream six ounces butter with a mowed about and around them. quarter pound sugar, add two eggs well beaten. Stir in half a pound of Buying Bees. corn starch and two teaspoonfuls Bees may be bought at this seaaon baking powder, beating well. Mix one very cheaply and, if you are a good tablespoonful milk with one teaspoon judge of colonies, they may be bought ful vanlla extract and stir In. Butter and moved a few miles In a spring and fiour gem pans, half fill with mix wagon If handled very carefully. But ture. Bake In hot oven for ten min it 1s next to Impossible to ship hives utes. full of bees and honey by railroad at this time of year. Anyone con templating bnylng had better con Spiced Currants. Four quarts stemmed currants, two tract now and ship in early spring pounds granulated sugar, one pint after the most of the honey has been vinegar, one teaspoon cinnamon, oonsumed, and the combs toughened wy ut cloves sad aUaploa, Varieties Should De Grown In Wide Rowe to Allow cf, Cultiva tion by Horse and Hoe. The ground between the rows and around the bushes should be kept tine und mellow. If the soil Is al lowed to become hard and allowed to grow up in weeds and grass, the yield will be cut short, and the fruit will be small and of inferior quality. All bush fruits should be grown in wide rows, so the greater part of the culti vation can be done with the horse, boe and cultivator. The proper distance to plant cur rants, raspberries, blackberries and gooseberries in the fruit garden is five feet apart each way for horse cultivation. For the small family gar den plant In rows five feet apart and three apart in the row. This will al low of the larger portion of the culti vation being done with the horse cul tivator. The ground around the bush es must be broken up and mellowed with the boe. Expert fruit growers maintain a dust mulch until the ber ries are half size, then a thick coat of long strawy manure, grass or rot ted leaves is spread over the entlr« ground about four inches thick. This mulch prevents the growth of weeds, and keeps the soil cool and moist. When this method Is fol lowed the yield will be greater, the berries free of dirt, and much larger size, and of extra fine flavor. AU fruits succeed best when given plenty of sunshine and air, along with Intelli gent culture. The common practice of planting the bushes along the gar den walk or fence row Is bad, as the bushes cannot be cultivated econom ically. The yield and size of the ber ries Is greatly increased where there Is a full supply of moisture. The Irrigation for fruit and vege tables Is being extended as a result of testa made by practical men. The method of Irrigation for vegetables snd small fruits practiced by market gardeners of Boston has been found economical and profitable. FOLDING LADDER MADE SAFE IMPORTANT! For th« protection of th* public wo have brought suit against a tirai of dentists near our office, to prevent them from placing our name in largo white letters on the front of their building. It hi* tak en us 26 years of con scientious, painstak ing and skillful work to make THE WISE DENTAL CO. known thru'out tho North west a* absolutely ro bable and at the top of the profession. We In personal att en da n ce. DR. W. A. WISE will not allow ocre good name to be jow- pardixed by men who have no connect!«« with thio office. We have only ONE of fice, and that io in the FAILING build ing, southeast corner Third and Washing ton streets. Tho en trance is on Third St., and an elevator car ries passengers to our floor. Do not be misled, nor forget these important in struction*. Aak te sae Mm. so that roe can be sure you are in the right pisen. PLATE«. WITH FLEXIBLE SUCTION Our Interchangeable Facing, a “Wise” Idea Our Eridge Work hp« been br/’fht to th« high««t state of perfection. The teeth on this bridge are interchangeable at will without removing from the mouth. The ▼ery*)ate«t in modern dentistry- Me more falling plate«. We Given 15-Year Guarantee. 25 Yrs’ Active Practice ia Portland WISE DENTAL COMPANY Fall lag Boildiag. Soatheaat Corner Third and Waahingtoa 8U.. ENTRANCE ea THIRD RT. Phone«: Main 2929; A 2029. Portland. Oregon. “DEAD SHOT NEW PERKINS HOTEL DR. PEERY’S VERMIFUGE FOR WORMS ROMAN EYE BALSAM Directions Given snd Illustration Shown of Quits Convenient Im plement for Orchard. For Inflamed Eyelids A ladder built like this Is very handy about the place In picking fruit or pruning trees. For a ladder ten feet long use two pieces one and one-fourth Inches thick by 5 inches wide for up rights, writes Barton Evers of Forsyth, Mo., In the Farmers' Mail and Breeze. For the supports use two pieces of one PILL CO. NEW YORK W right ’ s * I ndian V egetable Hair Mussed by Lightning. Edward Kones prefers in the future to comb bls own locks and wishes lightning would leave them alone. When his house, in Sullivan county, was struck the electricity plowed small furrows about his skull, taking the hair off his head in every place it touched. His Injuries, besides de ■ stroying his hair, It is said, were slight—Philadelphia North American. Pettits Eve Salve NOTE REDUCED RATES Most Centrally Locate«! Still at It "I wonder what has become of my husband. Three days ago I sent hint to match a sample at a department store. He hasn't been seen since." "I saw him yesterday. He was at the third counter of the fourteenth aielsv and was Just starting for the four teenth counter of the third aisle.“—* Washington Herald. — Ancients Knew of Elevators. Red Crr«8 Ball Blue will wash double as many That the ancient Romans knew clothes as any other blue. Don’t put your mooejy how to works lifts is the latest discov into any other. ery reported from Rome in connection Her Experience. with the Palatine, excavations. Pre Mrs. Bacon—"I understand one ea« Romulan remains have been found, in cluding 12 ancient lifts. One of the learn different languages from th« latter, which descends into the earliest phonograph?” Mrs. Ebert — "Well, known city. Is now being cleaned and since our neighbor got hts I know my A Folding Safety Ladder. put into working order tor the Arch- husband has used language I neve* by four-inch stuff. Bolt the two sup oeological Congress. heard him use before." ports together in the middle. Spread Rvd Crow Ball Blue, al! blue, beet bluins value the lower ends as shown and use a rod in the whole world, makes the laundreaa smile. for the connection at the upper end. The longer the ladder, the heavier the Whale Whips Five Crews. uprights should be. Such a ladder The largest whale ever captured In can be folded and carried with ease. that vicinity was caught in Fred Pe rez’ fish nets, near Santa Cruz. Five launches tried to tow the monster to the pier without success. Nett and ropes broke and the task was aban Do you look forward to doned. The whale was fifty feet Ions mealtime with real pleasure The Banana apple is well worth test Mothers will find Mr«. Window*» Sootnin* or do you have that “don’t flyrup tf e best reruedv to use *or their cluldrau ing. * urlng .he teething period. care” sort of feeling? Then, Pruning shears can be used every by all means, try a bottle of month In the year. No Wife for Him. The quickest growing tree for a shel "What do I want with a wife?" ter belt Is the willow. snorted Bachelor Bockwedder, on read Pear trees planted on thin ground ing an old maid's reasons for not are nit so apt to become blighted. wanting a husband. "I have a game Prune the currants and gooseberries rooster that is vain about his fine | as soon as the leaves fall, or early feathers, a goat, that chews the rag. next spring. an aeroplane that gets me up in the Strawy, stalky manure makes an ideal air, and an automobile that keeps me mulching fertilizer for both young and all the time broke!"—Judge. It coaxes the Appetite, aids old apple trees. For a farm of 120 acres about 20 Unforgivable. Digestion, prevents Consti acres should be given up to the build Blobbs—“Why do those two girls pation, Biliousness. Colds, ings and orchard. both hate you so?" Slobbs—"I once Grippe and Malarial Disor In latitudes where crimson clover Innocently remarked that they looked will grow, try sowing It for a cover alike."—Philadelphia Record. ders. crop In the orchard. While sandy soils are probably good for strawberries, any soil not too rich will bring good results. The surest and quickest way of eradicating white grubs in a green house soil would be to steam It Potash should be applied to all kinds of fruit trees, especially to the peach and other stone fruits. If climbing cutworms bother or chard or other crops by eating buds and foliage, scatter poison bait about You could not please us bet Ripen the pears tn a dark place. ter than to ask your doctor They will assume a fine color If ripen about Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral ed between the layers of woolen blank ets. for coughs, colds, croup, bron Plow the ground for the lats or chitis. Thousands of families chard. Disk It In late fall and It win always keep it in the house. be In good shape to plant next spring.* The approval of their physi Heei* fruit trees In on well drained cian and the experience of ground, putting two feet of dirt on ths many years have given them roots and covering the tops with about Bix inches. great confidence in this Remember that the wood ashes that standard cough medicine. come from the cook stove, fireplace or Sold for seventy years. t furnace are the best kind of fertiliser for the orchard, lawn or garden. Any good doctar will tell you thst s medi The best fruit trees for sma tpwu cine like Ayer's Cherry Pectoral esnnot P. N. V. Na 48-'ia lota or gardens are peaches m Jher- do its best work if the bowels are con ries. Apple trees take up too much stipated. Ask your doctor if he knows room and are much longer In ooming anything better than Ayer's Pills for cor recting inis sluggishness of the liver. Into bearing OH! “You Mealtime”^ H orticultural N ote - s Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters Coughs and Colds ■ad« k» w. *. 0. ITU OO.. twv.iu