OFFICIAL DIRECTORY CHURCHES. Church of the Visitation, Verboort — Kev. L. A. LeMiller, pastor. Sun­ day Early Masts at 8 a. m.; High Mass at 10:30 a. m.; Vesper at 3:00 p. m. Week days Mass at 8:30 a. m. Christian Science Hall, 115 Fifth «t., between First and Second ave. South— Services Sundays at 11 a. m.; Sunday school at 12 m.; mid-week meeting Wednesdays at 7:30 p. m. FEEDING IS IMPORTANT AS PRINCIPAL SOURCE OF PROFIT F a r m e r N o w P r o v i d e s L i v e S to c k W i t h C an n ed G reen F o d d e r« C a lle d “ S i l a g e , ” M a d e M o st C o m m o n ly F r o m Corn« C o w -P e a s , C lo v e r , o r A l f a l f a , C h op ped v " F in e a n d S to r e d In S ilo s. Low Slums Near the Nation’s Capitol Free Methodist church, Fourth st., between First and Second Avenue. J. F. Leise, Pastor. Sunday School at 10 a. m.; preaching at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.; Prayer meeting Wednes­ day 7:30 p. m. ASHINGTON.— Washington is not one grand succession ot marble structures and beautitul parks. There are slums under the shadow ot the capltol that compare in squalor with the East side in New York The capi­ tal slums have the advantage over those in New York in being less ex­ tensive and in being composed ot small houses Instead of lofty tene­ ments. The Washington refuge of the very poor is sufficiently bad to have at­ tracted the attention of sociologists and philanthropists and to have caused President Taft to demand their Improvement In a message to con­ gress. This district is within ten minutes walk of the United States capltol and has for one of its boundaries the bo­ tanical gardens with their wealth of exotics. President Taft. In bii me, sage, made particular mention at vvu low Tree alley, but It is no better u( no worse than the others. Poulbl) the president mentioned only Wllio» Tree alley because it was the only om bearing a name that comports w#i with a state document. The other tom are Pigtail alley, Tlncup alley. Long alley and Hell's Half Acre alley Thee names, with the exception of Wllio» Tree alley, have the virtue of matto| any other description unnecessary Why Willow Tree alley was so oan>e4 nobody remembers. There may tun been a willow tree there once. The district Is hard to find. It It within the outer crust of a block wflict , has a rather fair exterior. A stranger, 1 after fruitless search, appealed to 1 policeman The officer pointed to 1 narrow opening between two build lngs. “ Go on in there, and you’ll set all you want of It," he said "it's 1 pest bole, it Is. I’d go with you, but it’s off my beat.” The officer was lucky. What the fie Itor found after he passed the porul of the slums would not be pleasant ad Juncts to any beaL Uncle Sam Facts A bou t Fleas |#J Seventh Day Adventist Church, 3rd street—Sabbath schol 2 p. m., preach­ ing 3 p. m. each Saturday. Midweek prayer meeting Wednesday 7:30 p. m. A cordial welcome. H. W. Vall- mer, Elder. W Catholic Services, Rev. J. R. Buck, pastor. Forest Grove— Chapel at cor. of 3rd street and 3rd avenue south. 1st and 4th Sundays of the month, Mass at 8:30; 2nd and 3rd Sundays of the month. Mass 10:30. Cornelius — 1st Sunday of the month, Mass at 10:30; 3rd Sunday of the month, Mass at 8:00. Seghers— 2nd Sunday o f the month. Mass at 8:00; 4th Sunday of the month, Mass at 10:30. .-;:r M. E. Church, Rev. Hiram Gould, ■ ■ pastor. Second street, between First and Second avenues. Sunday school Solid Modern Concrete Silo. at 10 a. m.; Epworth League at 6:30 p. m. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 8:00 The principal source of profit in bers cut to a circle, which are cov­ p. m. Mid-week prayer meeting dairying, stock-raising and farming ered with sheet metal or wooden lag­ Thursday at 7:30 p. m. lies in improving the quality and at ging. Each piece must be long Christian Church, corner Third et. the same time keeping down the cost enough to provide for a six-foot three- and First Ave. Rev. C. H. Hilton, of production. In this matter of profit inch length of the circumference of pastor. Bible school at 10 a. m.; preaching at 11 a. m. and 8:00 p. m.; and loss nothing plays such an im­ the circle as well as several Inches for Prayer meeting Thursday at 8:00 p. portant part as the question of feeds the lap or strap Joints. The forms are and feeding. The natural feed for ani­ raised by loosening them at the Joints j m. Congregational Church, College mals. the one on which they do best, and setting them up again on the fin- | W ay and First ave. north. Rev. D. is green pasture. In climates subject lshed section of the silo. HERE may be those who Imagine BJT YOOO om YJ j Concrete for silos should be rich in T. Thomas— Sunday school 10 a. m.; to frost, man has made the same pro­ RCCOVE« T g l S . It Is an easy thing to kill a flea. Morning service 11 a. m.; evening, vision for animals as for himself by Portland cement and should be put T IC 1 F ■ 8:00 p. m.; Junior C. E. at 3 p. m.; providing them in winter with canned into the forms mushy w et Mix it one But If they will read certain facts re­ Senior C. E. at 6:30 p. m. green fodder called "silage.” Silage is part cement to two parts sand to four ported by the United States public made most commonly from corn, cow parts crushed rock. Four parts of health and marine service their minds LODGES. Knights o f Pythias— Delphos Lodge peas, clover, sorghum, or alfalfa, mere­ clean pit or bank-run gravel may be will be disabused of the notion. The No. 36, meets every Thursday at K. ly chopped fine and stored in large used Instead of the sand and rock. information is given in a pamphlet en­ o f P. Hall. Chas. Staley, C. C.; Reis water-tight cans known as “ silos.” In Measure all materials on the basis titled “ Notes on Agents for F’lea De­ Ludwig, Keeper of Records and Seal. that one bag of cement equals one struction." FTeas. it appears from malia, a powerful germicide arid to G. A. It.— J. B. Mathews Post No. cubic fooL Many persons raise the these notes, survive all the usual sectlclde, was “ apparently dead In 11 6, meets the first and third Wednes­ concrete In buckets, but the work can means of Insect assassination and hours,” but "re v iv e d ," another kept R C IN F O R C IN Q - day of each month at 1:30 p. m., in be done more quickly and easily by others less common. tor 20 minutes in a mixture ot creo K. of P. hall. John Baldwin, Com­ using a horse together with a der­ Obviously the flea ts a hobo among sote. soap and water was still alhrt A mander. * rick or a well braced jib-boom fixed to Insects, for one ot bis deadliest ene­ after fifteen minutes, but died Art Masonic— Holbrook Lodge No. 30, tr « an adjoining building. mies is green soap. A flea dipped en­ minutes after that A. F. & A. M., regular meetings held The first cost of concrete silos may tirely in a tincture of green soap suc­ first Saturday in each month. D. D. it took 100 per cent carbolic add f or may not be greater than that of the cumbed beyond resuscitation in two Bump, W. M.; A. A. Ben Kori, sec­ more than one minute to kill a flea; best of any other kind. The time is minutes; another ceased his move­ of two fleas that were made to swim retary. H “ now at hand when farmers, like rail­ ments in forty seconds and was dead W. O. W.— Forest Grove Camp No. in a one one-thousandth mercury chlor Ho 1 roads and corporations, are consider­ in ten minutes; no fleas of any of the 98, meets in Woodmen Hall, every tde solution, a powerful germicide, om IK ing the lasting qualities of buildings species examined survived the soap. Saturday. A. J. Parker, C. C.; James was alive after ten hours, trie othei H. Davis, Clerk. Concrete silos need no insurance; In a humane attempt to suit the after eighteen hours; powdered eul ■ » they do not blow down or burn up. Artisans— Diamond Assembly No. tastes of the flea In the manner of phur was practically inert and ueelesi k ? They never have to be painted or re­ dying the investigators tried oli or 27, meets every Tuesday in K. of * for killing fleas. Hydrocyanic acid li V P. Hall. C. B. Stokes, M. A ; John paired. With other kinds of silos dur­ pennyroyal, oil of peppermint kero­ among the most powerful poisons, yet A O Boldrlck, Secretary. ing their short lives, these expenses sene, miscible on, the refuse from the five fleas exposed for 46 minutes to alone equal the first cosL Concrete F’lntsch gas tanks and many other Rebekahs— Forest Lodge No. 44, A » hydrocyanic gas were alive at the end meets the first, third and fifth Wed­ lasts forever. chemicals. A flea left to swim in tor- of the tesL Ir» nesdays of each month. Miss Alice V Crook, N. G.; Secretary, Miss Carrie m m » «. .» ■.»(■vwiAAri 1» - Austin. V , % " I. A . O. F.—Washington Lodge No. I* ‘ ' 48, meets every Monday in I. O. O. F. Ire* 4 Hall. \Wm, Van Antwerp, N. G.; * * • the grenades would be discharged rap Robert Tailor, Secretary. — ► **• ? idly into the fire and. bursting, would Modern' Woodmen of America— S c o o p D e t a c h a b ly C o n n ecte d a n d smother the flames- - JoU Camp No. 6228, meets the second and H a s G r o o v e s fo r T in e s — Another "crank's" plan was to con fourth Friday of each mouth. Sam A d v an ta ge s a r e Showing Reinforcing. struct huge screens of ashesto« Marshal, Consul; Geo. G. Paterson, Easily S e e n . Clerk. which could be placed around tree» dry weather or In winter, when green near a tire and thus prevent them ig­ Rosewood Camp, No. 3835 R. N. A combination implement that ts niting. Of course this way did not at­ A., mujrts first and third Fridays of pasture cannot be had, this feed is handy for farm and stable use has each.Mionth In 1. O. O. F. Hall. Mrs. equally good In producing a flow of tempt to explain how the problem ot been designed by a man In the state milk or in putting fat on animals. One Jt S. Allen, Oracle; Mrs. Winnifred H ILE the field officers of the U. S. transporting these screens through of Washington. It is a fork and shovel acre of a crop harvested as silage will Aldrich, Recorder. Forestry service are taking pre­ rough moutalnous country could M combined, and Its advantage Is that tt Gale Grange No. 282, P. of H „ feed twice as much stock as the same cautions against tire in the great na­ solved. takes up no more room than one of meet« the first Saturdays of each amount harvested In any other man­ A third plan was to locate a num­ these tools and can quickly be turned tional forests o'f the west, the forestry month in the K. of P. Hall. A. T ner. bureau is besieged constantly by ber ot nuge sprinkling carts In eacfl Buxton, Master; Mrs. H. J. Rice, Like a glass fruit Jar, a silo must be from one into the other. The basic "cranks" and real Inventors, chiefly forest ana drive them to a Are. tur# Secretary. water-tight and jointless to keep the implement ts a fork, and the shovel the former, who propose all sorts of on the water and, presto! your flr* silage from molding or “ dry firing.” portion is adjustably connected. In ridiculous plans for coping wttn the CITY. would be out— the Inventor said. H» FY»r this reason, and also because no the head of the scoop are holes Mayor—J. A. Thornburgh. flames. One of the most novel of was told to go to, unless he could pro Recorder— R. P. Wirtz. painting or repairing is ever neces­ through which the tines of the fork th«se recently came rrom an eastern vide a sprinkling cart big enough to Treasurer—FI. B. Sapplngton. sary, solid-wail concrete silos are pass when the scoop ts to be attached, and across the bottom ts a mAtnl strip man who proposed that an artillery tack'e a tire such as raged last tall to Chief of Police— P. W. Watkins. coming into general use organization be formed in the forest Idaho, the flames of which mounted Street Commissioner— E. B. Sap- The best silos are built circular In with a series of longitudinal grooves. pington. service and equipped with huge mor­ over 200 feet In the air and burned shape The size depends upon how Health Officer—Dr. J. S. Bishop. tar batteries, which would shoot the ties off a railroad bridge, and st many animals are to be fed dally, the Councilmen—Chas. Hines, George S. another point Jumped clear across s grenades ailed with chemicals. Allen. V. S. Abraham, Carl L. Hin- quantity In pounds for each animal s This man's plan was to have a bat­ valley half a mile wide, converting man, O. M. Sanford and John Mc- daily feed, and the number of days It tery of these mortars hauled to a suit­ streams in Its path into steam and Namer. may be necessary to feed them. The able hill near a forest tire, from which cooking the flsh therein. City School. silo should be of such size that a layer School Directors— M. Peterson. Mrs. | of silage at least two Inches In depth Edward Seymour. H. T. Buxton will be removed each day after feed- Clerk— R P. Wirtz tng has begun This prevents a thin Justice of the Peace— W. J, R. Beach top layer from molding A dairy cow Constable— Carl Hoffman. HE entire army ot the United requires about forty pounds of silage COUNTY. States la to be inoculated against per day, and the following table is typhoid fever, officers and privates Judge— R O. Stevenson. based on this amount Forty pounds Sheriff—George G. Hancock. alike. An order has been Issued by It also the average weight of a cubic Clerk—John Bailey foot of silage. Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, enter of Recorder— T L. Perkins. staff, making It compulsory tor every locate the silo where It will be con­ Treasurer—E. B. Sapping ton. officer and eullsted man In the army venient for feeding Usually it It Surveyor—Geo. McTee. Joined to the barn by meant of a under torty-flve years ot age to sub­ Coroner— E. C. Brown. ject himself to the typhoid fever vac­ Commissioners— John McClaran, John chute and passageway with doors. Since the tllo and Ita contents are cin e This order applies to ail those Nyberg. heavy. It must be built on solid School Sup't— M. C. Case. who bave not heretofore had typhoid work for the surgeons of the army t® ground. The bottom of the foundation (ever or who nave not ben Inoculated perform before each one has under­ should go below frost line The tllo with the germ. Heretofore it baa been gone treatm ent S. P. TIME TABLE. may, with advantage, extend four to voluntary on the part of an officer or The “ typhoid prophylatlc.” as It ** Fork and Shovel In One. North Bound. five feet Into the ground Dig the pit private In the army whether ne should called, has been prepared by Major Sheridan No. 4 .................. g -27 m large enough to allow for the thick­ subject himself to the experiment, but Resell of the medical corps, atatloos4 Corvallis No. 2................... 4:63 p! m.' ness of the circular walla and a foot­ through which the tinea alao peaa and (r o c this time every one serving In at the army medical school In this ing two feet w ide which aervea to hold tha shovel firmly I Uncle 8am'a fighting force must un­ city, and will be distributed to to* South Bound. In order to save lumber the con­ In position. The usefulness o f such ' dergo the experience various forts and poets throughout tb* Corvallis No. 1 ................... 8:44 a. m. Sheridan Nr. 8 ---- 1 ...............6:00 p. m. crete it poured Into forme which can a tool can readily be understood. In Estimates complied at tha war dé­ country. It is estimated that in about be moved op at the concrete seta or a case where a man has both ahovsl- partirent show that up to the preeent a month's tlma every officer and maa become# hard. These movable forms Ing and forking to do. aa around a time about 17.000 Inoculations for ty­ tn tha army will have been Inoculated. SITM CRIBR FOR consist of two circular shells three to barnyard, he can accomplish the work phoid bava been made Of tha troops Very little If any Inconvenience a* * four feet high, so made that one flu hr a quick transformation of this de­ who were sent to the Mexican border result of the inoculation la fait by tb* within the other with spec« between vice Instead of haring to go and get oearlv li.OOO bad been Inoculated The patient He does not loee a stngi* for a six-inch w elt The hortsontal a different Implement every once In a f i n U t » Paper «rith AO the Nava. Only tl total strength of the army at present day s duty nor la ha compelled to tak* framework consists o f t he 4 inch »• * r m r . Tka Frees ta rnuippwj «a «a. av4 '• 7«w«o« ao there wui be plenty of to hla bed. - Gives T H r L 2 - 0 M iL* COMBINED TOOL HANDYONFARM Cranks O ffer Forest Fire Remedies W In ocu late Soldiers A g a in st Typhoid T THE FOREST GROVE PRESS