Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 19??-1917 | View Entire Issue (March 9, 1917)
. o f D ollar» o f Away in This Country. s ii - J ®*5 U Æ We a n throwing sway, or other wise wasting, In tibia country, acme fifteen million tom yearly o f valu able food from • «ingle aoqrca our miik-suply. Wa «Um tha fa t from tha milk and ose K as cream or tart- tor, but tha food-value is asastly in the ncn-fktty parte, which wa eaU containpuously “ skim-milk” and throw •way or give to the pigs. Its sale is •van prohibited by ordinance in New York and elsewhere. Whatever rea son once existed far such a law as this there is none today, writaa John Phil lips fr o s t , chemist for tha Connecti cut Agricultural Station, in the Fore cast (Now York, February). How a prejudice so violent against a valuable •ad wholesome food could have orig inated Mr. Street finds It hard to un derstand. Perhaps, he thinks, it dates buck to the tima whan cream waa separated from tha atilk by gravity •nd akimmad milk waa m rm m rfly old milk. Thors can bo no reason for it today, when ssparattae by em trif- ugal force shortly after milking leaves the akimmad milk fruta. Ho er fai pulpo# ! pma, pe od to givo i A. L. or celery is A. G, Mr. Clinton jo e d aamo by to U registered Jer- It cori 11-26 found that the um of skim milk not only increased the nutritivo value of the broad, but increased the yield “ At the Maino Agricultural Experi ment Station it iras found thot bread bread, and that H was qu it» as com pletely digested as the la tte r.------- «There is, in fact, no end to the ways in which this valuable substance may be employed, and if fa t is want ed, it ran 6e added in the form of but ter, which is often cheaper whan sep arated from the milk than when sold as a part o f it, or of some o f the less expensive fata. Some dishee, of course, would be richer in flavor if the whole milk ware need rather than skimmed, but tat other eaeee the dif ference is not appreciable. When the skhn milk la substituted for the water usually seed there will be an im provement instead o f a loas o f flavor. "A recent Government bulletin made it abundantly dear that the days af cheap meat are past and that this food is likely to grow scarcer rather than more plentiful. It la plain, therefore, that wa cannot vary well afford to lot »0,000,000,000 pounds o f an animal protein food go to waste every year, or aorro only as • cattle food, particularly now when the nations o f Europe are engaged in destruction instead of production, and are looking to us to supply their MYoor Ordir Mori Y n Forget It supply of 80,000,000,000 pounds o f cheap, nutritious, and digcsteble food, which nsverthaleas is banished, both by law and public opinion, from the table and the kitchen to the barn yard. ................ “The art of drying milk has now boon brought to such a point of per fection that the albumen is not coa gulated, nor the entymes destroyed in the process, and milk powders, whether made frees whole or skimmed milk, would be an invaluable resource in the preparation o f domestic diet aries, if we were permitted to have them. One o f the disadvantages of milk is its extreme perishability, ta t dried mUk will hasp indefinitely, and can be used in any way in which milk in its original form cun be employed. Dried skimmed milk would furnish a cheap and constantly available suply o f animal protein. “ The sale o f coodonaod skimmed milk la entirely prohibited in Mom States, and wtaa sold it generally la in largo containers, which are not available for family um. In the form o f cheese, skimmed milk servos pur- poem for which whole milk is not suitable. American cheese o f tha Swim type is best made from skim- mod or partially skimmed milk. Yat the label, ‘skimmed milk -‘m u ’ Death of Cony Pioneer. Hon. Frank A. Stewart, a pioneer o f Curry county, died at the stats hos pital at Salem on Fob. 24, aged 74 yean. Ha eras tarn in Illinois, cross ed the plains to Oregon in 1864, and resided in the Willamette vealley until 1806, when he settled at the mouth of Rogue river, where he engaged in the mercantile, lumbering and. fishing business. In 18M ha purchased the Part Orford Tribune in partnership with his son. Hardy T. Stewart, the present proprietor. Mr. Stownrt was one o f the prominent men of this sec- that cannot -bo cured by Hall’s Catarrh C ure. a CO.. Toledo, O. ‘ have known F. J. and believe all bualneee able to carry Ms firm. lO iK R C E . Toledo, O. Care la taken Internally, r upon tha blood and mu l l the system. Testimonials H cents par bottle Sold For Hit tier m <i Son about 2,000,000 young salmon fry in Wa bora noted before the death of Mrs. Joseph Windle, of El Dorado, CaUferniarwho was a former resident o f this section. The Windlcs formerly owned a ranch at Lamps but left tare seven years ago. Mr. Windle is a brother of Mrs. O. J. Seeley, o f this city. The following obituary la from the Placerville Democrat: The tenoral of Mrs. Joseph Windle, held at E l Dorado lata Sunday, was vary largely attended, including n number of friends from Oakland and San Francisco. The dsemsod waa held in high esteem by all who knew tar. With a high sense o f justice and the eternal fitness of things, coupled with a loving, kind« gentle disposition, u devout Christian from childhood, and a devoted mother and loving wife, tar memory will linger while manwry lasts, by those to whom she eras en deared. The casket was heavily embowered with beautiful floral offerings coming from loving, kind neighbors and friends in Oakland and Sacramento. Over one hundred people attended the funeral, and the services rendered by the Bov. P. E. Peterson in the church and at the grave wag? vary lmpree stva. Touching reference waa made by him to the exemplary Christian Hte and the Holy Bible on which she pinned tar faith. The singing by Mrs. S. H. Rants was highly appreci ated, and all were deeply affected by tha passing and Interment af thla da- voted wife and mother, gone but sot forgotten. Besides the bereaved husband, and daughter, nine yean o f age, the de ceased is survived by a father, Wm. Sweeting, o f Scotland, and a brother, Harry Sweating, o f England. How’s This? Wo offer Cr.o Hundred Dollar» Reward for any case of Catarrh supply you with aerar al copias, the meantime, all the work yea can de to prevent the nlsutìng o f such po- through your papers will pay id* di vidends. I think that you should bo congratulated on having discovered this peat and can assure you o f my hearty cooperation in whatever you da in the tetara concerning it, Pro- fessor McKay o f the Department of Plant Pathology and I will try to gat down in that district Just as aeon aa Obituary for Bln. Windle. to be prevented, aa they now vary generally are, from getting them, «A t least 1,000,000,000 pounds of butter are made annually in this coun try, and from thla are obtained about 28,000,000,000 pounds o f stimmod milk. About 2,000,000,000 pounds in addition a n obtained from the sale * ■ •6 0 PICTURES 86 0 ARTICLES the troughs at the South Coos river hatchery. The Coos river and Co- quille river hatcheries this season will turn out- about 7,000,000 salmon fly , according to tha estimate o f Supt. Frank W. Smith. STANDS pletion. Tha plant will utilise tha •mall places of white cedar which come from the mill, and which, hereto fore have gone to the lire pit. The plant wiO be operated by electricity and will have machinery fo r the fln- ishing of small lumbar. A craw o f 16 men will be employed. Archie Philip, county commissioner, who was delegated to act aa right-of- way agent for the county in the mat ter o f opening a rand from Glasgow, via Haynes Slough, to North Slough, aacnrad deeds to all tha property re quired, with the exception o f the prop erty o f Julius Nalaon, who oaks $6,000 for a trifle over two and a half acres. Mk> Philip soya that condemnation proceedings will be started at ones. The wirelsm equipment from the wracked cruiser Milwaukee, which ra- Cera and Potato Shaw. Now is the time to gat ready for the big Corn and Potato Show, at Coquille next fall and again a little later at O. A . C. during Farmer’s Week at which tane each county in half a minute at thla pressure. Oth erwise, much spray material la wasted you help to let the world know that with this nonla. If tha nossles are wa can raise such things in Com coun set at an angle o f about 46 digram ty (an your awn fan a.) Don’t wait to tha extension rods, more efficient till it is too lata and than toll about work can be done and it will lighten what you might have dona. Gat good the work of the operator. seed, and have your ground in good shape, begin early. New Home Users —A R E - Quality Choosers M.J.HARTSON COQUILLE OREGON New Hone Sewing Ma- chineCompany , , it ' I