Forest Grove press. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1909-1914, November 16, 1911, Image 8

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    I 1
scribed as follows:
Commencing at
the quarter section corner between
Section 8, Township 1 North, Range
3 West of the Willamette Meridian,
and Section 13, Township 1 North
Range 4 West of the Willamette Me­
ridian, and running thence west 16.86
chains; thence north 2 degrees eaBt
15.80 chains; thence south 87 degrees
20 minutes east 14.00 chains; thence
north 2 degrees east 35.49 chains
thence south 87 degrees 20 minutes east
5.28 chains to the center of the County
Road; thence south 51 degrees 45 min
utes east along the center of road 14.66
chains; thence south 64 degrees 45 min­
utes east in center of said road 4.46
chains; thence south In the center of
said County Road 38.18 chains; thence
west 19.80 chains to the place of be­
ginning, containing 120.62 acres.
You and each of you are hereby no­
tified that there is pending before the
County Court of Washington County,
Oregon, at the Court House in Hills­
boro, Oregon, the matter of organiza­
tion of drainage district No. 4, in
Township 1 North, Ranges 3 and 4
West of the Willamette Meridian, and
that in accordance with an order of
the Court entered on the 21st day of
October, A. D. 1911, in said proceed­
ings wherein the Court ordered the
boundary lines of said district to be
extended so as to include the property
above described, you are required to
appear in the Court Room therein at
the Court House in Hillsboro, Wash­
ington County, Oregon, on the 25th
day of November, A. D. 1911, at the
hour of eleven o’clock of said day, to
show cause why the lands heretofore
described should not be included in
said proposed drainage district, if any
cause exists, and failure to so appear
will be taken by the Court as acquies­
cence on your part and consent to be
included in said district.
By order of the Court.
H O LLIS & GRAHAM,
Attorneys for Petitioners.
NEW AND OLD RECIPES
S O M E H IN T S A S T O T H E P R E P A ­
R A T IO N O F V E G E T A B L E S .
B a k e d B e rm u da O n io n s a D ish to
Te m p t A n y A ppetite— D u c h e sse
Peas— M e xica n O n io n S p a g h e t ­
ti— F o r Frie d G reen Peppers.
il
I
yv/iSCM o f 7 W /1A1NC
IE work of raising the Maine
In Havana harbor is not more
than half finished. While re­
ports have been sent out from
time to time fixing the date for
the final raising of the derelict, not
one of such reports has been author
lzed, not one of them Is or can be
reliable. It was stated nearly a year
ago that the ship would be raised by
February 1, 1911. Today the greater
part of the ship is burled in sticky,
black mud and there Is every possi­
bility that six months will lapse, if not
a much longer time, before the hull
Is fully exposed and raised, if it is
ever found possible to float any part
of It And no one is to blame for the
delay. The job has proved itself lust
about ten times greater and more for­
midable than it originally gave prom­
ise of being.
Ship a Mass of Twisted Steel.
No one who has not seen the wreck
Aid been on it and through It can un­
derstand Its almost Impossibly tangled
condition. The stern of the ship, is
comparatively intact But not more
than a third of what was the original
vessel la recognizable as such. Amld-
shlp the tangle begins. Funnels, con­
ning towers, decks, cabins, engines,
machinery, are all a tangled pathetic
mass that even the most expert of
naval engineers and constructors have
been unable to classify properly. The
whole bow was blown off and turned
around and pointed back toward the
stern. The old controversy of what
caused the explosion Is still on, but
experts declare the uncovering of the
Maine will never solve the mystery.
The titanic force of the explosion
— or explosions, for there were two of
them without question— impresses the
observer as having been appalling.
Think of a force that would break a
s(eel battleship in twain and dance
the half of It about like a cork.
The old controversy as to whether
the Maine was blown up from with­
out or within will not be settled by
the uncovering of the wreck— not
T
Baked Onions.— Parboil
Bermuda
onions tens minutes. When cold re­
move center and All with mixture
of bread crumbs and the chopped cen-
eA 'idf*. seasoned highly and adding a
generous amount of butter. Sprinkle
with? buttered crumbs, cover, and
bake an hour in a pan containing a
little water.
Uncover and brown
lightly.
Duchesse Peas.— Mash six boiled po­
tatoes. add salt and pepper, two ta-
blesp- -•ris melted butter, two table-
spoo
ream, yolks of four eggs. Mold
*n obicng hollow cases, brush with
egg, and bake a delicate brown. Fill
with freshly cooked green peas and
serve at once with lamb chope or
veal cutlets.
Mexican
Onion
Spaghetti.— Melt
two tablespoons butter in saucepan of
grauite ware.
When hot add four
ounces spaghetti, broken small, a half
onion chopped, one teacup canned to­
mato, half teaspoon salt, six shakes
cayenne.
8t!r till slightly browned
Add a large cupful of hot water and
simmer till water is absorbed and
spaghetti Is tended.
Stuffed Cucumbers.— Peel four me­
dium sized cucumbers cut in two
lengthwise, remove seds. Prepare Oil­
ing of one cup minced chicken or
veal, two tablespoons cream, one ta­
blespoon crumbs, salt, pepper and
parsley, minced. Fill and bake cover­
ed a half hour, surrounded by one cup
white stock.
Uncover with butter­
ed crumbs and brown flve minutes.
Caullflowwer
Timbale. — Press
through sieve one cup bolted cauli­
flower, add one-third cup crumbs, two
whole eggs, and one yolk beaten till
well mixed, half teaspoonful salt, dash
salt, dash of pepper, one-half cup
.cream or milk. Mix thoroughly, turn
into buttered mold, and bake till cen­
ter Is Arm. Unmold, serve with drawn
butter.
Fried Green Peppers.—Cut open,
lengthwise, four green peppers. Re
movejieeds. slice peppers crosswise, SHE WAS
EXPERT SHOPPER
. and 1-y in boiling water.
Let them
stand until the water Is cold. Drain Clerks In Atchison Store Were Awe-
and • wipe peppers and fry in butter
Stricken by Skill of the Woman
Serve with flsh.
Customer.
An Old-Fashioned Dish,
When In doubt about what to eat—
eat ham and eggs. This time of year
the appetite has a fashion of becom­
ing indifferent and refusing to re­
spond at the mention of dishes that
usually cause it to take on a keen
edge. Ham and eggs, served country
style, will usually supply the want.
In frying ham country style choose
slices not too thin. If vary salty. It
may be necessary to parboil It. Trim
and place in a heated fryingpan. using
no fat, and fry over a quick lire for
ten minutes. Allow six eggs to a
slice of ham. Break the eggs Into a
bowL Add two tableapoonfuls of
sweet cream and beat thoroughly.
Bait and pepper slightly and when the
ham Is almost done turn the eggs
over It la the pan and fry until they
set. Serve on a large platter gar­
nished with curly parsley.
Early this morning a thin, well-
dreased woman walked rapidly Into an
Atchison dry goods store where a big
sale was going on. She stopped at the
first counter she came to and began
ransacking It. The woman at the
counter fell back and a clerk hurried
forward and respectfully looked on
The woman's hands bandied the goods
on that counter with the practiced
skill of a surgeon when he is perform­
ing an operation; she did not miss one
piece of goods, and then with a bard
glitter in her eyes and setting her
thin lips more closely together she
darted to another counter, plunging
head first Into the material piled two
or three feet high. The other women
at the counter looked at her deferen
tlally. and the clerks gased fascinated
From counter to counter the woman
went, without glancing to the right or
to the left. She examined every yard
of goods, every ready-to-wear gar-
If a million experts render their "In­
disputable” opinions. The consensus
ot opinion is now, as it ever was, that
an outside mine explosion preceded
and precipitated the interior explosion
— that of the ship’s magazine.
All
testimony goes to establish the fact
that there were two distinct explo­
sions. But the Spanish folk will nev­
er admit that there were two. Those
who even incline to listen to the sug­
gestion that there might have been
two contend that If two occurred that
within the ship must have been the
first Soma, but not many, Americans
hold to the opinion that the wreck
was caused solely by ar explosion of
the vessel's magazine.
Lends Color to Theory.
But the fact that the destruction of
the vessel celebrated on Calle Cuba,
In Havana, before it occurred, and
that that celebration was participated
in by Spanish royalists, has a decided
tendency to lend color to the theory
that the wreck was planned.
Lurid stories of all sorts to "new
discoveries” which are calculated to
“ clear up the mystery" are on con­
stant, dally tap in Havana. Within a
week a circumstantial yarn to the ef­
fect that a wire cable leading from
the bow of the Maine to Cabanas had
been discovered went the rounds. All
such stories are myths. But the Im­
pressiveness,
the wierdness,
the
creepiness, the oppressive unc^nnines
of the wreck Itself is by no means
mythical. It gets on one’s nerves.
Eighty-eight men perished when the
Maine went down. About 25 skele-
tions — or parts of skeletons —
have
been recovered.
As
this
Is written three skulls gleam their
ghastly welcome from the slime that
covers the tangled wreckage. The
bodies cannot be reached until the
tons of twisted metal that lie upon
them are cut away and removed.
Here a thigh bone, there a rib, over
yonder part of a hand— these are the
grew so me finds that the workmen
make every day.
ment. every piece o f embroidery, lace.
etc.
Then, with the swiftness of an ar­
row. she shot Into the basement of the
store, and from a damaged egg beater
to bolts of cloth her hands flew over
everything in that basement Every­
where the woman encountered awe­
stricken glances from the other wo­
men and the clerks. At last the town
clock began striking 6 p. m Clerks
removed their aprons and covers were
placed over the goods preparatory to
closing the store for the nigh t and
that small, thin woman, with a tri­
umphant gleam in her eyes and a grim
smile on her lips, carrying a handle
about as large as a walnut, walked
out of the store, and every clerk there
and every woman knew they had seen
a magnificent "shopper" In full opera­
tion.— Atchison Globe.
•use for Immense Sum.
A suit In which a French woman,
lim a Cotton. Is the present plaintiff,
beats the record of the Jennens case.
This lady Is the legal heiress of a
goldsmith who In 16U lent the gov­
ernment of Venios 900,000 crowns, the
Although the explosion occurred In
February— over 13 years ago. by the
way— the night was hot and many of
the crew slept out on the port side
of the berth deck. Most of the bodies
recovered have been from this part
of the ship. Down in the engine
room— when that is reached—from 25
to 30 bodies probably will be found—
bodies of the poor devils who worked
down below the water line and who
hadn’t a condemned man’s chance
to get away.
In the Captain’s cabin and In the
other quarters that have been uncov­
ered and mud-relieved, articles of va­
rious sorts in most remarkable pres­
ervation have been found. The most
striking thing in this line is a box
of rubber bands In a perfect state of
elasticity and preservation. Their im­
mersion in the intensely salt waters
of Havana harbor appears to have im­
proved them, if anything.
Bits of
leather sword hilts, shoes, caps have
come out practically uninjured. All
metals, however, show the effect of
the Immersion.
There is, roughly, 25 feet of mud to
take out yet before the Maine can be
“ raised.” The piling that forms the
exterior of each of the caissons com­
posing the cofferdam Is 50 feet long.
Between 25 and 30 feet of water was
pumped ouL There is nothing but
mud remaining. But it is glue-like
mud and is 10 times harder to get rid
of than the water was.
Hydraulic
pumps have been installed, but the
work put upon them is so unusual
that they haven't been successful as
yet
Oxygen-acetyllne
apparatus
has
been used to separate— ‘ cut up” — the
steel and iron of the ship where it
was necessary to remove those tan­
gled portions hampering the further
work of excavation.
This apparatus
resembles, In a way, a plumber’s blow
lamp.
Only the intense heat cuts
through metal as a knife would
through butter.
A five-inch square
piece of steel was seen severed so
quickly that the operation appeared
to be almost magical. The method of
cutting away the opposing metal parts
will be continued until the wreck is
entirely removed.
Incrusted With Oysters.
The whole part of the ship so far
exposed is incrusted with oysters and
barnacles— mostly oysters. Hundreds
of thousands of the bivalves have at­
tached themselves to the hulk. The
incrustations appearing in the pic­
ture are all oysters. When the water
was being removed from the coffer­
dam thousands of fish and eels
splashed and struggled In the Inclos­
ure. There were many of the several
hundred workmen employed by Major
Ferguson who took home strings of
flsh every night when they quit work
Now, of course, there is nothing but
slimy mud within the lnclosure.
The work of constructing the cof­
ferdam, and. In fact, practically all of
the executive labor connected with
the ’’raising,’’ has been conducted by
Major Hartley B. Ferguson, who Is
one of the main board. Colonel W il­
liam Black and Colonel Mason Patrick
are the other two.
The cofferdam
has been repeatedly tested and In sev
eral places re-enforced, and, while It
is the first one of the sort ever con­
structed, the complete success of It
has marked a place in the history of
engineering.
But successful as ths
work has been remarkable, the cold j
fact probably Is not more than half
finished.
T h e F a s h io n fo r H o usekee p ing.
It is no longer fashionable not to
know on which side the bread is but­
tered or how to cook a potato. The
intelligent society woman nowadays is
scientifically domesticated.
She can
meet her own cook without flinching
and can. moreover, give that autocrat
"points” on culinary matters.
P io n e e r of P sy c h o lo g y .
The modern science of psychology
was brought to this country by G
Stanley Hall, who established a lab­
oratory of psychology at Johns Hop­
kins university as early as 1883.
FOR THOSE FOND OF SALSIFY
Old Recipe That Has Been Popular
With European Housewives for
Many Years.
Wash and scrape the salsify roots,
cut off the extreme joints, stand them
up and grate them. Beat three eggs
light and stir them gradually into a
pint of milk, with sufficient flour to
make a stiff batter. Instead of grat­
ing the salsify you may cut tt into
pieces and boll it till quite soft, so
that you can mash It easily.
Add a
little pepper and have ready over the
fire a deep frying pan or skillet with
plenty of boiling lard. Put In a large
spoonful of the batter, and into the
middle of each drop a spoonful of the
mashed salsify. Fry these fritters to
a light brown on both sides and take
them out with a perforated skim­
mer. You may fry the masbed salsi­
fy without the batter, taking large
spoonfuls and dipping each in beaten
egg first, and afterward twice over In
grated bread crumbs, so as to resem­
ble fried oysters. Or you may first
boil the roots and merely split them
in two before frying them In fresh but­
ter, or baking them brown in the
oven.
B e e fste a k Pie.
Flank steak or a slice from chuck
or upper round can be utilized for
the meat pie. Cut It In fingers, dredge
each piece with salt and peper.
Should the amount be scant pare,
quarter and parboil a few potatoes. A
few ounces of raw tarn cut fine and
added serve to Improve the flavor.
Make a rich biscuit crust and roll out
almost a half-inch thick.
With this
line a deep baking dish and fill with
the prepared meat, etc. Add a half
cupful of rich stock, fit on the top
covering and bake in a moderate oven
for an hour and a half, covering at
first that the crust may not become
too brown. Have ready a quart of
rich gravy. When the pie is taken
from the oven pou. carefully in as
much as it It will hold, serving the re­
mainder separately.
E c a lu s C akes.
Tw o cups of flour, pinch of salt, one
heaping spoonful
baking powder,
three-fourths cup of lard. Mix togeth­
er and add water enough to make it as
stiff as pie crush Divide into eight
pieces. Take each piece and roll out
just a little, spread with butter, a few
seeded raisins and a little sugar. Fold
the raisins in, then roll in a round
shape about one-quarter inch thick.
Spread top with butter and sugar.
Bake in hot oven. Very good.
P ro b a sc o
Pick le s.
Tw elve large cucumbers, peel and
take out seeds. Three dozen small
cucumbers, one-half dozen sweet man­
goes, one-half dozen hot mangoes,
four little red peppers, one quart
onions, put all through the coarsest
meat grinder, then add two handfuls
of salt, one quart of cider vinegar, one
pint of granulated sugar, boll all to­
gether for one-half hour, then seaL
Boiled water poured through a tea
stain will remove the discoloration.
To keep the larder sweet place a
pan of charcoal in It, for this helps
greatly to keep everything sweet and
wholesome.
Grease stains on leather may be re­
moved by carefully applying benzine
or perfectly pure turpentine.
Wash
the spots afterward with a well beat­
en white of an egg or a good leather re­
viver.
To economize on cost of lard, bay
suet from your butcher, fry out at
home and mix the two in equal quan­
tities.
The result serves admirably
for frying purposes, for making bis­
cuit and for ordinary pastry.
To prevent tomato soup from cur­
dling add hot tomatoes (with soda
in) to add the thickened milk.
Wash windows, mirrors and tiling
with a pail of water tr which a tab le
spoonful of kerosene is added Polish
the window with chamois and tissue
paper and use woolen cloths on tiling,
as It absorbs moisture, saving work.
To make a Jelly bag, get a square of
a wool flannel— say 18 Inches—fold
the two opposite corners together, fell
the side seam, making a three-corner­
ed bag. Bind the top with heavy tape
and fasten on the upper side two or
three strong loops to hang It by.
present value of which with Interest,
is estimated at about $4,000.000. The
heir of the original lender was a
Frenchman, Jean Thierry, who died
before the loan was repaid. There was
a lawsuit over his succession, and
Louis XIV. claimed the estate, and
annexed the French portion of 1L
The suit was still dragging on at the
time of the directory, when Bonapart
forced Venice to repay the loan. Since
then France has been the custodian
of the Thierry estate. The govern­
ment has been sued dozens of times,
but to no purpose. Now. Mme. Cot­
ton Is suing the government of Aus­
Mann’s Cake.
tria and Italy, as well as that of
One-half cup butter and one cup of
France, because each In turn has
sugar creamed together.
Add two
owned Venice.— London Chronicle
eggs well beaten, one-half cup milk,
one and one-half cups sifted flour and
The Sweet Thing.
one and one-half teapeoons baking
Clara— He says he thinks I am the powder.
nicest girl in town. 8hall I ask him
to call? Sarah— No. dear; let him
Date and Ginger Sandwich.
keep on thinking so — Town Topics.
Chop the dates and preserved gin­
A Plain Inquiry.
TVarden. what are most of
en doing here!" "Principally
lime madam."
ger, moisten with syrup from the gin­
ger Jar and a Uttle lemon juice Cook
itil tender and use with bread. Pre-
red ginger may be used alone and
without cooking