The Forest Grove express. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1916-1918, May 16, 1918, Image 7

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    HYMN TO THE NIGHT
Make Cottage Cheese
Food That 1» Nutritious and Cheaper Than Moat
Meat* in Furnishing Protein
I heard tha trailing garnmnts o f tha night
Rweep through bar marbla hall«!
I saw bar a»hla aklrta all (ringed with
light
F rom tha calaatial walla!
I fait har praaan«-a, by Ita apall o f might,
Stoop o ’ ar me from above;
Tha calm , m ajeetlc praaanca o f tha h l« tit,
Aa o f the one I love.
I heard tha a«iunde o f Borrow and delight,
Tha m anifold, soft chlmaa.
That fill tha haunt«xl < oam bere o f tha
night,
Mke aoma old poet'a rhymes.
From tha cool etstarns o f the m idnight air
My aplrit drunk repo««
The fountain o f perpetual peace flowa
there—
From thoae deep clatarn» floes
O holy night! from thee I learn to bear
W hat man has borne before!
Thou layest thy Anger on the lips o f care.
And tfiay com plain no more.
i'ea ca ! P eace! Orestes-Ilka I breathe thla
prayer! *
Descend with brond winged flight.
The welcom e, tha thrice-prayed for, tha
most fair,
Tha best helowad night.
—Ixmgfallasr.
PREVENT FIRE
LOSSES
By the U. S. Department
o f Agriculture
Preparing Homemade Cottage Cheese for the Market.
If a c<in«1*»risiiry la within ri-nsonitMe
dint him '«* tht* rreamcrymsn sometimes
ran a«*ll hla akltu milk th«»r«». Very
few creameries, however, nr«« ao altu-
at«*<]. and the largest «»|>|K«rtunity for
the creamery man to divert akltn milk
and buttermilk Into rhnnnela of hu­
man consumption la by the manufac­
ture «if cnttnKo chc*»se, anya the United
Stitt«»« departin«>nt of agriculture.
This product la enay to make and util-
Itea aklm milk and good Kra«l«»s of
buttermilk.
Cottnife ch«*«»ae la one o f the Inqxir-
tant meat aubatltutea. It contalna a
larger percentage of protein (the chief
material for body building) than moat
oieata and furnl«h«>a thla material at
a lower c«>at. In every pound of cot­
tage ch«'e«e there la alxiut one-flfth of
a pound of protein. n«*nrly all of which
la dlg«»atlble.
Mcata, on the other
hand, usually contain leas protein and
bealdca have a certain waste, such as
bone and other Inedible material. A
pound of c«»ttnge chaste «lally would
supply all the protein required by the
ordinary adult engag«*d In a sedentary
occupation.
The following tnble shows that cot­
tage rh«»ese la much cheaper than
menta In furnishing protein for the
diet.
For supplying protein, 1 pound of
cottage cheese equals:
1.27 pounds sirloin steak.
1.00 pounds round steak.
1.37 pounds chuck rib beef.
1.B2 pounds fowl.
1.40 pounds fresh ham.
1.44 pounds smok«*«l hatn.
1.68 pound« loin pork chop.
1J)1 pounds hind leg of Innib.
1.87 pounds breast o f veal.
il
FEEDING SCRAPS j|
TO THE CHICKENS;;
_______ <>
By feeding kitchen scraps to poul­
try the Inst bit of waste of huinun f«x>d
may be converted Into g«xxl fr«»sh eggs
or meat, as may be «leslml, says the
U. 8. Department «if Agriculture.
Fowls will eat all the leavings that
are In edible form, lly special prep­
aration some things not ndnpted to
human consumption become valuable
fe«*<l for poultry. Fresh bones, crush­
ed or ground, arc a delicacy for them.
They will eat considerable amounts «if
the parings of nil kinds of vegetables
If these nre given In such form that
the birds can swallow them readily.
Many poultry ke«»pers save parings.
Cook them with small potatoes and
other waste vegetables, and fed mlxtHl
with meals.
Not all kitchen waste, howover,
mukes poultry fed.
The skins of
bananas, oranges and lemons are not
edible and should not be mixed with
acraps that are to bo fed to poultry,
for the birds l«»nve yich stuff, and as
It accumulates It ronkes the place
where the they nre fed look slovenly.
Coffee grounds, and tea leaven In small
quantities are nob objectionable, but
In large qunnfttlcs should he disposed
o f separately. Fat meat In Inrge pieces
should not be put with scraps for poul­
try because a h«>n can swallow a much
larger piece of fat than Is good for
her. By cutting waste fat In pieces
In addition to protein, energy for
performing Ixxly work must be fur­
nish««! by food. As a source of en­
ergy. also, cottxge cln»«-s<» (■ < Vaper
Ilian moat meats at present prices. The
following table shows the comparison
when energy Is consider«»«!.
On the basis o f en«»rgy supplied, 1
pound of cottage che«»se e«]uals:
H 1-3 ouncea sirloin steak.
11*4 ounces round steak.
1144 «iunc«-s chuck rib beef.
1044 ounces fowl.
544 ouncea fresh ham.
6
ounces amokiMt ham.
0
ounces loin pork chop.
7 1-3 ouncea hind leg of lamb.
1244 ounces br«»aat of veal.
A yield of 13 or more pounda of cot­
tage cheese from 100 pounds o f aklm
milk can r«»iidlly be obtained, or a mix­
ture of two parta skim milk and one
of buttermilk wilt give the same re­
sults.
The wholesale price on moat
established markets varies from 444
cents a pound during the early sum­
mer to 7 cent« during the winter, the
1017 price showing marked Increases
over former y«»ars. When making as
much aa 300 ixtunds a day the total
coat of manufacture. Including labor,
c«ml, power, water, packing (tuba), and
deprecation on equipment, la from 8
to 10 cents a hundred pounds of skim
milk.
It la quite evident that the cream-
••ryman Is In position to make his pa­
trons a good business proposition. In
most sections he can ofTer them a cash-
market for their skim milk at a price
at least equivalent to the value ob­
tained from feeding to animals.
no larger than one would cut for him­
self Ht the table, nnd by making sure
that the fat does not exceed 10 per
cent o f the acraps fed at one time the
dangers In fowling It Hre avoided.
The best way to save kitchen waste
fur poultry Is to keep a one-gallon Jar,
of glii7.«‘d. or gulvanlzed war«», with a
cover In a convenient place, putting ln-
t«i this scraps of br<»ad, <»ake, and meat
from the table, remnants o f servings
•>f vegetables, cereals, pies, puddings,
etc., and whatever waste from the
preparation of meals Is suitable to
combine with these things In a mash.
Once a day the contents o f the Jnr
should be turned Into n pall of appro­
priate slz«»s nnd ns much ground feed­
stuff mixed with them ns can he stir-
m i In with a strong Iron spoon or a
wooden stirring stick.
The amount
nn«l kinds of ground feeds to be used
will depernl upon the quantity of wa­
ter with the scraps nnd whether any
particular article predominates.
1,426,000 Women at Work;
Replaced 1,413,000 Men.
An Increase o f 1,42(1,000 In the num­
ber of women employed since 1014 la
shown lu figures announced by the bu­
reau of labor statistics.
The greatest Increase was In Indus­
tries which took In 630,000 more wom­
en, but the largest proportionate In­
crease was 214,000 additional women
taken Into government service. Women
have replaced 1,413,000 men since 1914.
Industrial and government work
hnve taken 400,000 women formerly
employed In domestic service or In
dressmaking.
STATE N EW S
IN BRIEF.
1 GETS
BIG S H IP ORDER
Are for Private Parties and
Will Coat *20,000,000.
Approximately 9000 square yards o f
Washington, D. C. — The Shipping
paving will be put down in The Dalles Board has granted permission to Harry
this spring, work to commence as aoon B. Spear, president o f the Weat Coast
as jxxisible.
Shipbuilding company, of Everett,
Three thousand freight cars have Wash., to enter up«»n the construction
been allotte«l to the Pacific Car & of approximately $20,000,000 worth o f
Foumlry company, o f Portland and Se­ concrete ahips for private account, and
attle, for immediate construction, ac­ guaranteed to insure delivery o f a|l
cording t«» eon tract« approved by the steel required for reinforcement.
Specifically, thia company ia author­
Fe«leral Railroad Purchasing commis­
ized
to build 10 cargo carriers o f 7500
sion.
tons each; 20 bargea o f 200 tons each,
The same group o f business men and eight seagoing tugs each 200 feet
that advertise«] two citizens recently long. In the building o f these ships
In the now fam ou s “ slacker a«i” at La 15,000 t«»ns o f steel reinforcement will
Grande, has adopted resolutions throw ! be required.
ing the business support «>f La Grande
Mr. Spear left for New York to con­
behind the local authorities in stamp­ clude arrangement« with the parties
ing out I. W. W. agitators.
for whom these concrete ships are to
be
built. He refused to make public
Twelve million, six hundred and
forty thousand pages o f reading mat­ the names o f the purchasers.
ter are included in the 201,753 Repub­
Fancy Train Names Go.
lican and 85,805 Democratic pam­
Omaha— After Jane 1 all names for
phlets, mailing o f which to the regis­
ter«] voters o f the state was just com­ passenger trains will be eliminated
pleted Friday by Secretary o f State throughout the entire country and
Olcott. The total coat o f the pam­ trains will be known only by number,
according to information at Union Pa­
phlets was $11,608.65.
cific headquarters. The orders eman­
Official notice was issued Friday by ate from Washington, as fancy names
Colonel Ellia, commanding the defen­ are said to be advertising.
ses at the mouth o f the Columbia, that
Twenieth Century Limited, Broad­
artillery target practice with the big way Limited, Pennsylvania Limited,
guns will commence at the forts at Overland Limited, Rocky Mountain
8:45 next Monday morning, and con­ Limited, Dixie Flyer, Seminole Lim­
tinue during the daylight hours until ited, Royal Palm, Shasta Limited,
c«»mplete<]. All vessels are warned to North Coast Limited, and similar glit­
keep emt o f the danger zone during tering names will be abolished.
that period.
Tobacco Cards Approved.
N. Campbell, register o f the Port­
Paris— The issuance o f tobacco cards
land United States Land office, was in
Toledo this week, as a witness in a was approved in principle by the cab­
land case. Mr. Campbell says there inet. The cards will not be o f the
are 14,865 acres o f land in this county same character throughout the coun­
a part o f the old Oregon & California try, like the bread and sugar cards,
Railroad land grant.
Agricultural the municipalities being permitted to
land in this tract probably will be re­ enforce the regulations according to
stored to entry within the next 60 local needs. The cards will be deliv­
days. This land is all contained in ered to male consumers more than 16
townships 12 and 13 and ranges 8 and years old. Each consumer must name
the dealer whom he intends to patron­
9 west o f the Willamette meridian.
ize. The object o f the card is to ob­
There is little probability that there tain fair distribution o f the available
will be any decrease in the cost of tobacco supply.
wheat substitutes this year, according
to W. W. Harrah, Pendleton farmer,
Fair Salmon Ran Reported.
who has just returned from a meeting
The Doty Fish company, of Kalama,
o f the agricultural council o f the Food reports a fair run o f salmon since the
administration.
Mr. Harrah found opening o f the season, though it is not
corn conditions bad, both as to the con­ up to last year’ s figures. Most o f the
dition o f the remainder o f last year’s salmon caught have been small fellows.
crop, considerable o f which has spoiled Numbers o f shad have been caught,
in storage, and as to the acreage this but sturgeon are Bcarce.
year, which will be smaller than that
o f last.
t Millions of dfillars' worth of agri­
cultural w«*alth la <1«*stroyed by Are
«•ach year In the Unlt«»d State*. At
iwirtnal prices and with an average
yield It would take the sreater part of
the potato crop of the country to off­
set all that la lost annually through
flr«*s on farms.
This Is n dead loss
to the nation— for the fact that most
Individual losers are partially relm-
hurH«»<l by Insurance d«x»s not In the
Icnst retluce the drain on our national
resource«— and It la a loss that la large­
ly preventable.
The problem of fighting or prevent­
ing fire In the country <!lstri<*t* la a
most serious one, for organized Are
prevention work such as has been de­
veloped to a a«»lence In many cities 1«
practically lm|x>sslhle In the «»untry.
Home Area on farms may be unavoid­
able, but a great many of them could
he prevented by a «^imperatively small
nmount of time Intelligently appll«»d
by the Imlivldual farmers In the study
o f «mdltlons which are likely to cause
Are, and by placing simple nnd Inex­
The C. A Smith Lumber & Manufac­
pensive flre-Aghtlng equipment In con­
venient places nb«»ut the farm build­ turing company at Marshfield, has just
finished the installation o f a big power
ings.
Wheat— Bulk basis for No. 1 grade:
The farmer should study his build­ plant as a reserve unit o f energy to
ings and their contents from the point utilize in case o f accident to the main Hard white,’ $2.05. Soft white, $2.03.
o f view o f the Are Inspector of the plant,.which supplies electricity, first, WTiite club, $2.01. Red Walla, $1.98.
city, whose sole business Is to see all for the Smith industries and electric No. 2 grade, 3c less; No. 3 grade, 6c
the things that can be done to im­ cranes, and, secondly, to the Oregon less. Other grades handled by sample.
Flour — Patents, $10 per barrel;
prove conditions ao that Are «wnnot Power company, which distributes for
residences in whole wheat, $9.60; graham, $9.20;
easily start, nnd to determine tha business houses and
best ways of Aghtlng any Ares that Marshfield, North Bend, East Side and barley flour, $14.50@15.00; rye flour,
may atari. He should remember that Enlgewood, and power for small man- $10.75@12.75; corn meal, white, $6.50;
yellow, $6.25 per barrel.
any preventive or protective measures ufacturing plants.
That the people o f the range eoun-
Millfeed— Net mill prices, car lots;
which he may take are for his own
benefit, and that protection sufficient try east o f the Cascades will not sub- Bran, $30.00 per ton; shorts, $32;
to prevent a Are Is chenp ns com­ mit to any decrease in grazing lands o f middlings, $39; mixed cars and less
pared with the loss entailed by the this great range section during the than carloads, 50c more; rolled barley,
average farm Are. Every building or war, when the products are so needed $75@76; rolled oats, $73.
Corn— Whole, $77 per ton; cracked,
set of buildings has certain points by the nation for feed, was evidenced
$78.
at
Bend
Thursday,
when
the
Commer­
which are more susceptible to Ares
Hay — Buying prices, delivered:
than others, but adequate protection cial club unanimously adopted a resolu­
Eastern Oregon timothy, $29@30 per
tion
condemning
the
bill
recently
in­
must be provided for the entire prem­
ton; valley timothy, $25@26; alfalfa,
ises before the owner can be sure that troduced in congress by Senator Mc-
$24@24.50; valley grain hay, $22;
Nary
which
would
add
80,640
acres
o
f
some weakness due to oversight or
clover, $19@20.00; straw, $9.00@10.
neglect will not neutralize the g«xxi ef­ grazing land now in the Umpqua Na­
Butter— Cubes, extras, 37 Jc; prime
tional
forest
to
the
Crater
National
fect of all the work previously done.
firsts, 37c; prints, extras, 42c; car­
park.
Most farmers carry Are Insurance
The Gladstone school was closed this tons, lc extra; butterfat. No. 1, 41c
on their buildings and contents suffi­
delivered.
cient partly to repay for any losses week for the purpose o f fumigating
Eggs— Ranch, current receipts, 34c:
the
building.
During
the
past
three
that may occur; but this Insurance Is
a
nurnher
o
f
candled»
35c; selects, 36c per dozen,
paid from premiums which are nothing weeks there have been a numoer oi | poultry _ Hens 27c; broiler8 40c;
cases
o
f
smallpox.
more than a tax collected from the
ducks, 32c; geese, 20c; turkeys, live,
Far back in the mountains, 41 miles 26@27c; dressed, 37c per pound.
policyholders for this purpose. The
loss occasioned hy a serlousC Are Is east o f Albany, isolated and alone,
Veal— Fancy,'18J@19c.
such that very few people can afford Ben Wilson, a shirker, o f German
Pork— Fancy, 23<523Je per pound.
to he without Are Insurance, but at­ parentage, was arrested Tuesday by a , Sack Vegetables— Carrots, $1.15 per
tention of the prevention of Are detail o f the Albany Home Guarcls, sac|(. turnips, $1.50; parsnips, $1.25;
$2
would result In re«lu'lng the number brought to Albany and placed in the
o f Area, and, therefore, the rate of pre­ county jail.
Potatoes— Oregon Burbanks, 75c@
miums necessary to cover the fire
The citizens o f Poe Valley, in the $1 per hundred; new California, 10c
losses. This would be felt quickly In j Klamath Falls vicinity, have been so per pound; sweet potatoes, 10c per
mutual rompunlos which nre owned j desirous o f securing good roads th a t1 pound.
nnd managed by the policyholders they have co-operated in grading and
Onions—Jobbing prices, l @ l } c per
themselves nnd In which the premiums 1 making the highway in that district pound.
second to none in the county. They
nre Axed by the actual losses.
May 13. 1918.
have donated time, labor and teams to 1 Cattle—
Prime
steers.....................
$15.25(515.50
this cause and are rewarded by having 1
Good to choice steers. . . . 14.00@15.00
Girls Wearing Overalls at
an excellent road.
Medium to good steers.. 12.00(3; 13.00
Need o f farm help is beginning to ! Fair to medium steers . . 9.50@10.50
University of Washington
cause serious complaint about Rose- Common to fair steers . . 8.00fir 9.00
burg, for the first time since the war Choice cows and heifers. 13.00@14.00
II«»overnls! Whnt are they?
began. Farmers have been scouring Com. to good cows and hf 5.50(32 8.00
The official garb o f the American every nook for help, while men are
Canners...................................... 3.50(g) 5.50
housewife. That’s nil.
quitting the farms to go to the Pacific Bulls..................................
6.50® 10.50
No, they're not trouserettes. Nor highway work, the sawmills and the
Calves................................
8.50(513.00
have they a split-skirt effect.
shipyards. The railroad is also hiring Stockers and feeders.. . . 8.00@10.00
The girls In the cookery classes at every available man for various posi­
Hogs—
the University of Washington, Se­ tions, even as bookkeepers.
Prime m ixed............................... $17.40(5 17.50
attle, have donned them In place of
The extension department for work Medium m ixed................. 17.00@17.25
the all-white garb hitherto In use In in agriculture and home economics Rough h ea v ies................. 16.00(5 16.25
the home economic« department
in Yamhill county
will take the Pigs.’ .................................. 14.50@ 16.50
"Hoovernlls” are real dresses of form o f a second farm home study Bulk....................................
17.25
light blue ehnmbrny, belted, with white tour next Thursday,
when
mod­
Sheep—
collars and cuffs. Aa the name Indi­ em farm homes will be visited in the Prime spring lambs........ $17.50(5 18.00
cates, Herbert Hoover, the national county under the auspices o f the coun­ Heavy Iambs.................... 16.00(3)17.00
food administrator, has Indorsed them. try life council o f the county. A train Yearlings........................... 15.00@15.50
He wants to see every American house­ o f autos will leave McMinnville on W ethers............................. 13.00@13.50
wife wearing them.
Thursday morning for the round trip. Ewes................................... 12.00(312.50