The Scio tribune. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1919-19??, October 29, 1925, Page 3, Image 3

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r.rf **«•* <.»*1
Paire Thre«
THE SCIO TRIBUNE
urbank to I&si
l£k
w oat pg» 'vppratHb^of vati-'«» I
PwMn K* my friend
futnii.
d
«
n
With a
Bottle
They add to the dinner and aleo
ihe bill.
They rauoa men I« wleb. with what
ardor their may.
That the meal which forelallt
theta c«i»e three times a day
in the
Houae
You Are
Alway*
R^ady
FOR DISSERT.
Plant Wizards Life
Work Lobe Taken Oren
by Stanford dhiversity
DICKINSON SHERMAN
VT1IEH BVHBANK Is go
Ing to take life a little
easier after thl* Ha haa
earned the right to lake
whatever rest be chooses
He la seventy six and for
fifty straight years he has
been busy at the work
that haa made him world-
famous.
Just bow much
Luther
Burbank
chouae to take la a ques
lion He la In g*H»d health and I» aa
fond of work as Edison. than whom no
one Is fonder Nevertheless, for two
years he han been gradually getting hla
affairs In shape with the Idea of hav­
ing some qualified Institution take
over his experimental farina at Ranta
Kies and carry on hla work.
Stanford university. It Is now an­
nounced. will take over the Burbank
garde*» for maintenance and perpetu­
ation. The con dll Ion a under which
Stanford waa established require that
each unit ahall have Its Individual
endowment
So a committee la now
at work making the necessary financial
arrangements.
It la not atated how much Burbank
la to receive for hla gardens It la
reported, however, that ha turna them
over at half their full valuation, the
figures to be fllrd by a friendly com
mlttee The story foes that private
Interrata made offers of «ItJIl.OllO, of
«150.UU0 and of S23O.UQ0 and that Bur
bank refused them, on the ground that
he waa unwilling Io “romtnsnlaltae"
bls half-century of work. It la ala?
said that several mid-western and
eastern colleges were desirous of pur­
chasing
These Burbank eliminated
as being too far away.
The story Is that Burbank himself
never would have thought of taking
things eaater. but that two of hie per
eonal friend* Edison and Ford, pro-
|M>ecd the plan and convinced him
of Ila advisability Ihivld Starr Jordan
of Stanford la another personal friend
He too took kindly to the Idea Among
others Interested In promoting the
transfer are I'rraldent Hay l.ytnan
Wilbur. Herbert Hoover. William <>.
MrAifoo, Hudolph Npreckletk Mr* A.
B. Nprecklea. James Hol ph. Jr.. Her­
bert Rlater. Mrs Margaret Hartorla
and William II. Crocker
At Stanford It Is Intimate«! that a
rearrangement will follow the trans­
fer. The preernt idea seems to be that
the gardens will be put In charge of a
special faculty of aclentlats from ail
parte of the world. Thia faculty will
be jointly chosen by Burbank and the
university.
Burbank does not plan
to give up work entirely.
He will
presumably be needed
He la quoted
aa saying that “tn twelve hours run­
ning*' he would not be able to enumer­
ate the eif*r1ments be now han under
way In hla garden*
Luther Burbank was born on a 2ntv
acre farm at lAincaster, Mass He
was the thirteenth child In a family
of fifteen Hla father gave him school
Ing la a private academy and then he
had to go to work. He got a job at a
wood turning lathe In Worcester. The
job ¡Mild i.1 a week Forthwith he In­
vented an Improvement on the lathe,
got himself put on piece work and
earned some day* aa much aa I Hi 50
An s«<>n aa he got together a hit of
money he sent to work at farming
the Burbank kind—In Lunenburg.
Horticulturists
got to speaking
By
JOHN
him aa n Yankee wlw had turned
hla Inventive knack toward growing
things an ex|*rim»ntal crank with a
mania for Improving on nature Bur
bank himself has written
1 desired lo deal with the forces ot
lite and mold the plastle forme ot liv­
ing oraantsin* rather than elaaetfy
fi>*4 and Immutable phenomena
which would appear to bo the province
of the geologist
The chief work of the botanist of
yeotsrday waa ths study and classifi­
cation ot drlsd shrivoied plant mum­
mies. whooo souls had fled, ralhsr than
the living plastic form*
Ws have
learned that they are aa plastle la our
hands aa clay In the hands ef the pot­
ter or color on the artist e canvas, and
oan readily bo molded Into more beau­
tiful forme and colors than any palmer
or sculptor can over hope to bring
forth
in 1R72 tn Massachusetts, when Bur­
bank was twmty three, he undertook
to improve the potato Rayo Burbank :
In this . un’ry the pptMOfifi ware
nubby and amall and sub)oct to rot.
and when they ran to any else It would
be In one direction so that they looked
Uh* lady nngara
Sometime* they
would be all ayoo running clear to the
coater They had to
trained to pro-
duee good roots, and that was a mattsr
of selection and Inviting surroundings
They had to bo taught lo stay la the
hill I found th* o**d-ball of an Early
Hose, which seldom bears •••4. and
got thirty-two plants from It that were
practically all different
From thee*
camo the Burbank potato. I sold It
for 1l*o It has probably contributed
fl1S.SS0.SSS to the food values ot the
world
Burbank arrived October 1. 1*T!L
In Hants llosa. Sonoma county. Cali­
fornia
He was unheralded and un­
known. But he had In his baggage ten
Burbank potatoes that ho had re­
tained from the Maeaachusetta aale
Had the “Plant Wlaard“—he got the
name early—chosen to padlock hla
gardens and keep hla mouth abut he
might easily have posed aa an Interna
tional mystery He chose Ihe opposite
policy and when eueresa arrive,I he
proceeded to take ths public Into hla
confidence. In IKK! he published hie
first work, “Ngw Creations In Fruits
and Flower*"
Other volumes fol­
lowed ; in them he described grid pic­
tured hla achievement*
He worked
alone, with no pecuniary assistance, I
until 1WM. prhen the Carnegie In
stltute granted him llO.Onn a year
for ten year* Burbank la not wealthy.
It I* st a ted—merely well-to-do.
The tilla of one of Burbank's hooka.
“How Fiante Are Trained to Work for
Man.“ la signlflcant of hla methods.
He «-«nel.Ure that he trains plant*
He cannot train the Individual plant,
perhaps, but he trains the plant family
through generation after generatlop
making use of croon breeding, en­
vironmental Influence» favorable to
variation, selection of those qualities
valuable to man Nature herself play*
a Burbank prank every now and then
—for esample, the Delicious Apple
and the Temple Orange (soon to be
on the market! are both "sports"
And Burbank pats Nature on the back.
Hla genlua consists In Infinite pat lessee,
la eodleoa pain* la tbs ability to aid
Nalure at Ihe
u»>u»mi.
plants iwlv by the millions, be de­
stroys |»lants wholesale, lie once made
an estimate that during a Aftern
year period of experiment more than
a million si<ectniens were destroyed
In the making of 150 new creation»
It took A">.ia«» hybrid vines to produce
bls white blacktierry He saya:
Th* matsrlal* to b* combined ta
or»** fertilisation nvuat be carefully
Sometlmee the
an*lys*<1 snd **l*<-t*d
rignt convblnstluB* ere very dlffieult
tv obtain
I have watted
walled years.
year*. In
many Inetanr** to secare a plant with
on* n**ded quality lacklag In any ot
th* form* I had avallabl* tk>m*tlm*a
a friend, or one uf my oollectore In
another rountry. ha* found th* el*meat
I needed tor thia purpo** uaually In •
plant growing wild
With II I tue-
c**d*d In making a finar plant than
had *v*r b*tur* *al*t*4
To auinmartae the results of Bur-
hank's work would take many volumes
In fruits ho haa produced prolific and
precocious varieties; has lengthened
the season three months; has made
Important structural changes; haa ee
cure»! entirely new varieties For »X
ample, he has matte a stonelraa plum,
lie haa hastened the bearing age of
the cheatnut and walnut by several
year*
He has produced the white
hlacki>erry and the plum cot. a cruse
between the plum and apricot.
In flowers bo hne given perfume
to those which lacked It and enlarged
and beautified many. From the yellow
California poppy ho created a flower
of magnificent crlmaon. He made the
Hhaata daisy from the common Held
daisy of the East and daisies Dorn
Enrol* snd Asia
He has created a
new calla, amaryllis, clematis, gladi­
olus and columbine
I’oasibly the moat valuable product
of Burbank's long years of work Is
the cactus without spines or bristle*
He began work on the prickly t-esr
(opuntla tunal In IHM He had cactus
specimens sent him from all over the
world. Ho raised thousands of seed
ling* It was not until Bafl that he
won sucres» and gavs the world a new
forage plant
Luther Burbank Is mach more than
s horticulturist of genln* He Is a
forceful personality, with hla own
Ideas and philosophies.
His latest
¡Kwtmlt. here reproduced, show* *
strong face And be has given the lie
to the old saying that a prophet Is
not without honor save In hla own
For Ranta Itoaa greatlv
country,
honors !*• "PtefJt 'Visard." an shown
by the pictures taken at the Burbank
Jubilee of 1fr.£I. when the munlrtimlly
owned Burbank park was dedicated
This perk will contain ■ collection
of hla products
l-ong years ago the Bard of Avon
declared It "wasteful and ridiculous
eiceaa . . . "te paint the Illy, to
throw perfume on the violet “ But
Luther Burbank haa done juat this
and done It better than anyone else Ho
the world haa beaten a pathway to bls
door and Emerson has the laugh on
Khak«apeara
Ilevsertw a*e an Important featurv
tn every dinner. In most famllle* For
those who en Joy
and never prcpars
tbem. II will I m
hard t« underwt and
Ihr amount of ttm»
II takea lo prvpare
even simple de»
sert*
Banane
L*rv»»a
Whip — lb.ll
to
gether two cupfuls of sugar. t»o cup
fol* of water and the grated vellow
rind of * lemon; wtien It hatra add
»if package ,,f gelatin which has
been softened In cold water.
Mr
until dissolved, then add the sifted
pulp of four rip* hunanas miked »Uh
the jule* of two lemons 1‘our all Into
• large howl tv cool, ami when the
e-lje* begin to harden tout thr mil
ture with a large slaed egg beater
continuing to beat until the wbo!e Is
creamy, then It may b* poured Into
a nmld find chilled
Lemon Rsialn Pie—Take one cup
fill of large raisins, add one cupful
of sugar, one large lemon. Juice and
grated rind, a tnl>lra(HM>nful of Hour,
on* cupful of waler, one tablespoon
ful of butter. Bake with two crusta
F,lt*d Soong* Cak*—Romp the ren­
ter from a deep *|,onge cake and fill
with mashed end »seetrned fruit,
either peacbea, bananas or »trnwbrr
He*- any fruit tn season Cover with
sweetene,! whipped cream and serve
at our*
bpiced Tea Cak*s -Mix and sift one
and one half cupfuls of flour, two tea­
spoonfuls of halving powder, one eighth
of a traapoonfol of nutmeg and on*
quarter teasprwmfnl of mace Cream
one fourth cupful of shortening add
one cupful of sugar, two well beaten
eggs; add one-half cupful of milk al­
ternately with the flour. Add a few
raisins and bake In well greased
muffin pan* Cover with maple frost­
ing and sprinkle with nut*
Time’s
Change
During lbs l«»t few year* the Nor­
wegian slate rabways have reduced
Ihe number of their employe*» by from
£»,<*«• to t^IMkl ’ibis reduction bus la-en
due to keen competition from motor
baaae* anti a« n result It bn* Iveeu de­
cided to confine new construction and
Improvements to the main line* leav­
ing the buanea to lake care of I ho
traffic In sparsely populated country
districts
Further reduction* in lief­
sonnet are planned.
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F
A'.I
K Y V * /’'** k
-
DEMAND ’’BAYER” ASPIRIN
Aspirin Marked With Bayer Cross'*
Has Been Proved Safe by Millions.
Warning! Voles« you see the nam«
"Bayer" on package or on tablets you
are not getting Ihe genuine Bayer
Aspirin proved safe by millions and
prvacrÜH-,1 by physicians for 25 year*
Hay "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin.
Imitations may prove dangerous Adv.
Hatter Belgian Road a
Considerable strides In automotive
transportation are being made lu Bei­
ci um. Neglected roads outside of tbs
larger cities are tx-mg repaired and
put In condition to receive heavy
tratte.
st.p th* I'ela.
Th* hurt of a burn or * cut atop*
whan Col* * Carbollaalva I* applied It
h*»l* quickly without scar* Sic and
see by all druggist*, or scad lie to
1 h* J W. Col* Co 117 R Ku, lid Av*,
Oak Park. Ill —Advertisement.
SPECIAL GOOD THING«
Too Much So
A salad which is good at any eeas<m
and <>o any occaaluu Is th* following:
Fruit 8*l*d —
Four a cupful of
billing water over
half s pound of
date* drain and
cut Into eighth*
removing the
stone*
Add to
Ihe date* one cup­
ful of finely cubed, good flavored ap­
ple* two slices of minced plueappl*.
—the apple and ploeapple may be mt
Into strips for variety—sprinkle with
salt, two tablee|HH>nfula of French
dressing awl onwhalf cupful of finely
cut celery. 1-et stand on hour then
serve with mayonnala* Herve In ap­
ple cu|>e on lettuce for a change.
Florida Orange «ticks.—Cream one
fourth of a cupful of butter; odd
thrvw-fourthg cupful of sugar; Leal un
til smooth. Add two egg yolk* <>o»
fourth of a cupful of orange juice and
the grated rind of an orang* Mil and
sift three-fourtha of a cupful of flour,
on»-fourth cupful of cornstarch and
two teaepoonfula of baking powder
Add to the Oral mixtura, and whan
well blended fold In Iba well boato*!
whiles of two egg* Grease a Shallow
pan. sprinkle with powdrred sugar
and chopped walnut meat* Pour In
the cake batter and bake tn s moder­
ate oven twenty-five minute*. Remove
from the pan. cut In half crosswise
and put together with orange filling.
Cover with orange Icing nd cut into
narrow stripe for serving.
Orange Filling.—Oram together one
tablespoonful of butter and three
tableeiKM-nfuls of powdered sugar. Mix
two tablea|HM>nfula of flour, one-third
of a cupful of euaar and <n* egg yu*«
until smooth
Add one-fourth cupful
of or*ng* juice, one teaspoonful of
lemon juice and one teaspoonful of
grated orange |*«l. Cook over hot wa­
ter. stirring cunMantly until the mix­
ture thickens. Add the butter mix­
ture and cool before spreading.
Cltru* fruits are Invaluable la the
diet of young and old. They supply
the salts which help to keep the body
functioning properly.
Quick Deoeert— Whip a pint of
cream, add a cupful and a half of
cream rheeoe, a cupful of walnut
meats and one cupful of date*, cut Into
amall piece* Serve In ilirrtet cups
garnished with a cherry.
An ear or two of cooked green corn
la an addition to any potato salad.
Cut the corn from the ear and mix
well with the potato.
“Plw, what io a biga miet!"
**A bigamist, my a<>n. la a super-
optimist.“—Michigan Gargoyle
Promote
good Health.
Take cats ot your BCotTUk h.
It la the beat friend you hart.
H ' I i • ; RS Cehbf . I
Stomach Bitters taken before
meal» —improvea the appetite
anli difettion and imparts
a feeling of robust health.
At All Drug gift a
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Mw A*« m >
À
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ac*.u
fl
«•* Twb
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.V i
s
[IOSTETTE1
Don t Suffer
UseCuticu
With Itching Rushes
S*«*. Ot
HINDKRCORNB
. «U.p* »II |NBÍ».
MORTON
HOSPITAL
| HAIONA1L1- HOMIUM ]
IBM PINI ST.. Ml HUmOMO
Otdof» OLD RELIABLE Ey« Wit*
r*ll*v*a sun and wind-burned *y*s
Hocen t hart
< lenta I a* la H»d FeM
H«s. tie at all druggists er by «
DICK IT DRUG CO- Bristol. V*-T
BATHE TIRED EYES
JO
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