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About The news=record. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1907-1910 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1908)
WORLD WATCHES THE BIG PACIFIC FLEET. Oreatest Naval Fighting Strength Under Flag for the Long Cruise. jlOWEB OF AMERICAN NAVY. Movement Is Significant, Marking Transfer of Theater of Action from the Atlantic. . Not since the war with Spain has there been such a tense feeling In naval circles as that which marked the pre parations for the departure of the great fleet, under Admiral Evans, for the Pacific. All the vessels which were to be a part of this greatest naval dem onstration In our history assembled at 'Hampton Roads. The President's yacht, the Mayflower, swung Into historic Hampton Roads bearing President Roosevelt and the li!gh ofllclals of the Navy Department. Promptly sixteen huge battleships of the United States navy dressed ship and began firing the President's salute of twenty-one guns each. The May flower came to anchor In the roadway. Gigs and cutters put out from each battleship bearing the flag officers to the Mayflower, where they were, receiv ed on deck by President Roosevelt and his official party.. On their return to their ships the Mayflower hoisted an chor and proceeded down the roads to ward the entrance. Here the little yacht stood out of the roadway while the same sixteen battleships passed by lier, decks and fighting tops dressed and roaring from their guns another President's salute. Rands aboard ship played the na tional airs. This was the farewell to the commander-in-chief of the army end navy to the American battleship squadrons, wihlch then began their cruise to the Pacific ocean. The torpedo flotilla bad already started, as Its progress Is so much THE The vessels prominent in the and Torpedo Boat Destroyer. slower than that of the buttleshlps that two weeks more will be consumed thau y the latter In tho Journey toward their destination San Francisco. ' All tho nuvy yards of the Atlantic coast have been busy for weeks in fit ting out the ships. At Hrooklyn, New York, Ronton, Norfolk, Philadelphia ami Charleston painters, carpenters ttml machinists have participated iu the great activity. High up on the amokestackft the paint brushes were moving back uud forth and tlie sound of hammers and saws has been cease- loss. Nor has there been any chance for idling by the enlisted men. The IKiwder magazines have hud to le filled and the quantities which have been taken aboard have caused some specta tors to wonder what It Is all about. The large supply of ammunition Is nec essary because of the project to have target practice on the long Journey. Then also there will be many salutes to tire and these will eat up thousands of dollars' worth of powder. Further more, In case an emergency should arise while the fleet Is In distant wat ers there will be no lack of ammuni tion, No such emergency Is expected, but the fleet "will keep Its powder dry" while trusting In dlvlue Providence! GreateM Fla-MIn stroaa-th. The fleet which Admiral Uvans takes to the Pacific Includes all the new tiattleshtpa and the best armored cruis ers. It la the flower of the American navy, far superior to that which de atroyed the Spanish fleet nine yearn ago. The Louisiana carries the largest crew 050 officers and men. The Con necticut, which Is the flagship, la the finest ship of the navy, costing $4,000,- 000. Among the other battleship are the Alabama, Georgia, Kansas, ; Vir ginia, Minnesota, Ohio, Rhode 'Island, Kentucky and Vermont In all there re 32 battleships and armored cruisers. besides the flotilla of torpedo boat de stroyers, repair and supply thtpa. Toe nTt,i,,,MMit-,J.ii, ,..)fcj.y..v .ww!?'. v-.r.a.g'rt v Ml ,,, "GOOD-BY, BOB: TAKE Chicago Inter Ocean. progress of the fleet will be watched with Interest by the whole world, and will be accompanied by the prayer that no occasion may arise tor a display of that awful power of destruction which lies within Its guns. The significance of the transfer of the battleships stamps the event as an eoch In the history of the United States. It transfods the theater of ac tion of the navy from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean for the flrs time since the United States became a nation. It reduces "(the naval representation of the country In the Atlantic from second place to the lowest place among the naval powers of the world, but It raises Its representation In the Pacific ocean to lit; highest place, where the United States Is now a poor second. Whether "for fun or for frolic," as Rear Ad miral Robley Evans has expressed it, GREAT AMERICAN PACIFIC SQUADRON. picture are the Battleships Wash ington, Tennessee and Rhode Island, ' i the battleships upon arrival in the Pa cific will do the United States full honor. , The date of arrival at Rio Janeiro Is Jan. 11, 1008, and the day of de parture ten days later. Here the crews will he alolwed shore leave. Leaving Rio Janeiro on Jan. 21, the fleet will proceed Blowly to Punt a Arenas, or Sand Point, where It is due to arrive on Jan. 31. Punta Arenas Is the last stop before rounding the Horn, and five days will be passed here In coaling from colliers hired by the government The distance ADMIRAL EVANS. of this leg Is 2,230 knots. On Fib. 5 the fleet will round the Horn, regarded by all naval officers as the most dan gerous point In the trip, and Feb. 23, It Is due at Callao, Peru. 2350 knots from Punta Aretas. Another stop of ten days will be made at this point for coal and shore leave. "r The last leg of the trip which la fixed as to dates calls for th departure from Callao on Feb. 28 for Magdalena bay, Utxlco, where the United States has ZETEB YOUBSELP." maintained a target practice station for several years. Magdalena bay la on the peninsula of Lower California, 3,012 bnnta frnm tl 11 n n nif 1 (Wl Irncita trnm San Francisco. Here the fleet will re- main at least a month engaged in target practice. Upon the completion of this work It will sail for San Francisco, where It Is expected to arrive about the middle of April or the 1st of May. On the Journey around the Horn the battleships will pass the second torpedo boat flotilla, which sailed for the Pa cific on Dec. 2, and at San Francisco, If not at Magdalena bay. It will be Joined by the armored cruiser squad rons under Rear Admiral Stockton and Sebree, consisting of the cruisers Penn sylvania, West Virginia, Maryland and Colorado and the California, South Dakota, Tennessee and Washington, the later two ships now nearing their destination after a trip - around the Horn. In addition the battleship Ne braska, which has Just . been commis sioned, will Join the fleet as well as the protected cruisers Charleston, Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Louis and the gunboat York town. Rattle drill will occupy the time of the fleet for some days, no complete fleet of the American navy, having been trained In sea evolutions in recent years. In all probability a part of the fleet at least will visit Puget Sound before returning to the Atlantic coast again, No plana have been made for the re- peciauy or wooien socks. Amazing it "" -,. r k,.j k 1h how manv male blushers have a was that the effect of trees on wheat determination of the President that it m v sn i - jv iw; uai1 trnow. shall return at some future date. Bell AlrahlD I.an netted. The successful launching of Dr. Alex- ander Grshara Bell's recently completed Baddeek, Nova Scotia. Tho .hip ta buill up of 3.050 unit tetahedrons. which are .o disposed a. to make the ship Itself one great leuiuearon, wuica uas tor its Daae - . . , . i , . aT-ugiu. -a. uc sft- ritu nuns a in twpreu (ill two of their sides with silk. Th. tntl urrace tnus exposed is over 2,000 squars feet The motor uaed Is of toe Curtis type, four cylinders, 20 horse-power. It weighs 120 pounds, which brings the total weight of the ship up to Jim pounds. Owing to snowstorm in progress at the time of launching, no attempt was made to fly the machine. While Dr. Bell has ", " .T .V --"- - great faith In the success of his Invention, hs does not aseome to have entirely solved the problem of aerial flight Jawa to Protest Tnetr Rteata. " Representative Hebrews from ail parts of the country met at New York to or- ranis, a committee or central bureau to -hirh amtlicatlona for r.lif ttoo may be sent by any members of their have beee interfered with In any coon try throughout the world. Delegates to the burean will be ta proportion, to tne pope- INGENIOUS THEATER FLOOR. - i Cam Convert Auditorium in Few Bflnntea Into u Ballroom. The movable stage which Steele Mackaye attempted to make a feature of theatrical construction many years ago Is outdone by the reversible audi torium floor introduced In a new Apollo music ball on the Rue de Cllchy, Paris. This device makes It possible to change the parquet Into a dancing floor in sev en minutes. . The floor is reversible. On one side It Is fitted with 500 chairs of the usual LdNv Down Barrow for Capacity. folding variety. On the other side It The drawing shows a low down bar Is planked with hard wood, waxed and row ln sufficient detail to enable any polished. one to make a similar one. We tJhlnk During the performance each night it that next to the low ' down cart it Is Is pitched at an angle of about 15 de- the handiest thing around the buildings grees, like the floor of any other the- and garden that we have, says a writer ater. When the show Is over and the in Farm and Fireside. Its capacity Is dancing begins it is absolutely level. more than double that of the ordinary AH who patronize the house will see kind, and the load is much more easily the transformation every night. When put aboard. It has the advantage of the curtain falls the seatholder will be getting into close quarters where the hustled back Into the orchestra circle cart would not go, and for use about and the foyers. Then the mechanism the feeding alleys, the stable, the lawn will work. and the garden there is hardly anything The floor, or rather the two floors, that will take Its place, are built on each side of a framework For the framework get two pieces of of steel girders. This Is hung on, plv- hardwood two by two inches will ots and when the machinery Is set in project to form handles on one end motion It simply turns the other side and for the wheel frame oh the other, up the huge seesaw it measures about At front '.end of box in rear of wheel 45x50 feet stops at the appropriate a piece of the same dimensions Is mor angle when It la to be an auditorium tlsed Into the frame to hold It rigidly and Is secured there by strong i sup- and to make the front end of box ports. frame. Pieces 1V61V4 Inches are also When it reaches the level position to mortised Into the bottom of the legs, serve as a ballroom equally strong sup- both front and back. These form the ports hold It there and provide for the 1 ; safety of the dancers. When it stop In either position It Is in' Immediate communication with the- other parts ol the hoU8e' a9 a11 tne necessary "tept are attached to It either to reach the! orchestra circle when ft Is level or ths stage when It Is inclined at an angle. Stage and floorare continuous when used for dancing, the electric footlights being attached to a disappearing frame work, while a section of solid flooring foundation for the floor, which should takes their place; o of three-quarter-Inch boards. The The entire contrivance- cost $14,000, 'es are mortised Into the shaft or han of which $9,000 was- spent on the floor ale pieces, the front ones resting about and Its mechanism and the rest on the three inches from the ground and the twenty-seven foot deep brick-lined well rear n securely braced, as shown In through which: the floor revolves. New York Sun. A) plutocrat has It; a demagog wants Most men can be honest, unless they have a chance not to be, A woman's Idea of social standing is being so snippy that everybody hates bcr. v A girl that doesn't get married can make everybody believe she Is glad of it but herself. It makes a woman feel about twenty times richer to call her husband's money his estate. The difference between pleasure and duty Is the difference between going fishing and to church , A woman will work harder to get a fact that In many Instances conslder nlce, Tresh complexion than a man will ble difficulty Is expressed In obtaining to get a million dollars. ( i growth of grass under trees. There As people always give ten times as distinct evidence that plants produce much in wedding presents as they get, xlc conditions In the substance In where does the difference go? hlch they grow; as a rule the ex Whore womnn la p.im i. nr. off the roots of a cer- tending she Isn't so she can put the responsibility for such thlngs.on her A man has to know a lot about some particular tning not to be always try- lng to show what he knows about ev- erythlng. A woman's enjoyment of a visit f writing long letters to those at home, telling them all the grand things she is doing Just as If she really were. Male Bluahera and Their Care. "A good many men blush." said a physician ; "some so painfully that they come to me to be cured. The cure I recommena is an old one. Is the abandonment of overheavy clothing, es- . . . . , predilection for thick socks of wool. I But some blushers wear light enough clothes. To them I can only recom mend a nerve treatment I advise them to make speeches at banquets, to witnesses In murder trials, to go th wrestler develons hi. - ",!BIt diSt dlsor f Iu8f'n A m a ., m As a rule, It passes away c v" " - " ---j OOlll jcuii i'vn viiwub Aituca'tvui" .e ' rathar'a Adherent. "Wasn't that Mlsa Bancs who lust passed 1" , "Yes, that was my 'Aunt Helen -v,.r aunt, .hi Ah. on vonr moth- .. T.,nnoaer ' side, r suppose r "Not much! She always sticks up for dad. Philadelphia Press. uamaiir trn War. - "Spent your vacation In the moun- tain. ht Did you stay there long?- "Yes : but I came home short" Houston Post ' - wben 3roun Tl w,nt M Wax dress, her mother Is liable to say: "Mercy, what do you want to go Into mourning rorr LOW DOWN BABBOW. the cut If desired the sides may be built from the floor solid and straight up, but' we find It better to have a per manent bed from floor to top of han dles, with removable side boards to slip on for use in handling bulky stuff. ' Heavy material, such as bags of fer tilizer, large stones, etc., are easily han dled with this type of barrow, as they may be loaded between the handles di rectly from the ground. Fruit Trees and Graaa, Extended experiments recently con- Jucted m England have shown clearly mat fruit trees suffer very materially, and are often killed outright, when trass Is allowed to grow under the tree ind close no to the trunk. Various orobable reasons for this effect such M the removal of plant food and of water by the grass, also the supposed liberation of carbonic acid, which might prove Injurious to the roots of the trees, were respectively demonstrated outBlde the Vmm cause of In- ury, and, finally, after seven years' irork. It was concluded that the Injurl Mia Dftoot pnnld nnlv be due to some ?ol9on0U9 BUhstnnce formed In the soil By the roots of the grass. On the other hand, it Is a well-known tain plant are more toxic to the same "5, rron-Rpeniiuga on lue kiuwiu ui vy hv-u l wa8 tested, and after eliminating, as , 0f injury, such factors as re- m0val of plant of food or water by the roots, it seemed that the roots of the latter bad some direct effect on the growth of the wheat- which suffered In ill the experiments. The seedlings were placed In plant pots, benee the roots of i the tree and those of the wheat plants were In dose Contact Trees of various kinds were used In the experiments, and the retarding In fluence, although noted in every in- anc. u.ucr .u u.,, least active In checking growth, pine PPears to De one to ine excreuon or v " The Peaah Crop of 1008. The fruit crop the past year was n8ht- but 11 brought a very good price, homa m have an elco,lent crP In betln Issued by the State, The drought during the summer. ,T0PS8ive prow-th and; the . . , Tt j l lr"' v "u,k "? that were well cultivated have now passed Into winter quarters in good sondltlon. There Is a great variation i hi the number of fruit buds set.on the lifferent varieties of peaches, and In , lifferent orchards, but the plums seem to be uniformly full of fruit buds. Trees tnat nave not oeen prunea wen '-..ti aesaon have relatlvelv noor set. "cn . tins of fruit buds. Plum and cherry trees do not require as much pruning is do the peach trees. Peach trees may be pruned any time, from the first of December to the middle of March. The branches should be cut back to about sue-half of the length of last season's growth. This form of trimming will thin the fruit and keep the tree from This Is a distinct advan- in gathering' the fruit and In praying the Carina- Hama and Shonldera. As soon as possible after the meat la cold all through, the hams and shoul-. ders should be cured. They should be placed on a table in the cellar, skin side down. Then for every 100 pounds of meat make a mixture of four pounds of the best fine salt, two ounces of pow dered saltpeter, and four ounces of brown sugar. This mixture should be well rubbed into the hams all over, and some pushed Into hock end around the bone. Keep on rubbing until the meat will take no more ; then let them re main on the table for a week, when the remainder of the mixture can be rubbed in. "Allow them to He for about two weeks altogether, and then hang up by a string placed through the hock, In a cool, dark smokehouse. For two or three days keep up a good v smoke from hickory chips, smothered with sawdust during the day. ' Keep in a cool place, and before spring exam ine to see that no Insects have deposited eggs. Dust a little cayenne pepper, then cover with coarse muslin to fit the . ham exactly and stitch tightly. Give a coat of whitewash or chrome yellow, and hang in a cool, dark, dry place. For curing In pickle, to one gallon of water take one and a half potinda of salt, half a pound of sugar, half an ounce each of saltpeter and potash. In this ratio the pickle can be Increased to enough to cover any amount of pork. Boll together until all dirt rises to the top and la skimmed off. When cold pour It over the hams or pork, which may be pickled in this way. The meat must be well covered by It and should not be put down for at least two days after killing, during which time lry should be slightly sprinkled with Salt peter, which removes all the surface blood, leaving the meat fresh and clean. A good way to keep hams is to pack in dry salt In a dry place, not having any part exposed or touching eacfc other. Bar (of Drying Clothes. If your wife- wants a clothes bar so she can dry her clothes In the bouse, then borrow a -inch auger, a plane and a saw if you have none. Get some light pine lumber 2 inches wide and 1 Inch thick, cut 8 bars ; 4 bars 3 feet 11 Inches long, these are for the lower ones. . The 4 bars for the top are 1 foot 11 Inches long. You can make It an wide as you wish and 8 rods are needed to go crosswise for holding the bars together and to hang the clothes on. Dress the rods to about 1 men square and make them smooth so as to not tear the clothes. For bars the size as given above the rods need to be of the following lengths: Fd,ur rods 4 feet long ; 2 rods 4 feet 2 Inches long'; 2 reds 3 feet 10 Inches long, 1 rod 4 feet BAR FOR DRTINQ CLOTHES. 3 Inches lung, this Is the center rod and must project 3 Inches at one end; cut another rod 4 feet 4 Inches long. use It for the top and have It to pro ject 2 inches so ns to receive the piece shown In the engraving to regulate the height You can shut or open it to any width you want It Exchange. Winter Shelter for Stock. With the approach of the cold month as the farmer Is making prep arations for his comfort, he should not forget to similarly provide for the ani mals on the farm. Especially young stock demnnd good. warm shelter, and this should be pro vided for them before the real cold weather sets in. Warmth to a young animal is equal to a moderate amount of food. Animals exposed to the frosts and storms of winter are almost sure to catch cold. If not contract some other disease that will either enfeeble them or prove fatal. Farmers that do not take this matter into consideration often have animals take sick and mope, and, perhaps, die, without the fact for a moment being taken Into account that their sickness Is due to the cruel exposure to which they have been subjected. Truly it has been said that the merci ful man Is merciful to his beast and the man who Is not is not only unfit to have the care of animals, but deserves to, lose them. Stndr of Mnahrooma. A singular and very Interesting and useful institution has been established In the little city of Tarare, near Lyons, France. It Is a mycologlcal bureau where expert Judgment Is furnished -concerning mushrooms, many of which are poisonous. Since the establishment of the bureau nobody buys mushrooms ' which do not carry Its ticket of Identi fication and guarantee, and all the country people frjom miles around bring their mushrooms for examination. One surprising result has been the discovery of scores of edible mushrooms, which before nobody dared to touch. tnartera for Fowla. When comfortable quarters are pro Tided for fowls, says Prof. Watson, the nutritive ration of the food should be about one-fifth; that Is, one part protein or muscle-producing compounds! tr M,e n.rta Af rtrhnliTftrtB mm v a 1 and fat-producing compounds. 4