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HOW TO MAKE GOOD BUTTER Cburamg Requires Temperature Measurement at £>i£Ferent Stage*. THERMOMETER ESSENTIAL f>u\>' C-'tarr ton Not Ma«e &coe fcutter —C-iearoiness tnt First Requisite Tt* best loout it th* woric art to mt larm horn* wiuct ti_*et it rtib* ujC xireptr* .Leu. nutter Irebnl.r chumet aeveraJ timet a * *«i: it out of tn* iuxuriet incident ji the farm, i-tid more than re pi.' i Mm ntiiiit nutter mater 'or tn* :• .•: •.4 a. ' »et Tut wort ii »o: c:: i. . . t'u: b'.rupuiout cieamiineat mutt o* -jobervec at every stag* Ah atßav t ..; li' A.'. t't *fch&eC iti'. S'.:il* lore and after '.turning. CSfWSB F rst Ct«rinoerstion. '."!->; Ire. consideration it th* cream wbicb should contain about St' per cent butter fat J. gallon of cream ot this ttandard .• .*ic ai.out i pound* of butter It is better to chum tb* cream, not tb* whole milk Th* ciean snouid ue cooled immedsate.'j after : • omei from tfc* separator and kept at coid at post ml* until tfc* time for ripening, which snouid b* don* at a teaper a lure ne'.aeet 65 ceg i and 75 d*g F When tb* creaa jt it H I hour it shovue '•* '.ot-.ed :: ■ : :.r :.::->? temperature or below and held so for at ieast two hour* before churning be gint Sutcebsfui butter making dependt largely on the temperature at which churning is done, but there it no or.* temperature proper tor every season of tt* year Ct-jrr. .tg .* a ',fw i. process, and if it it don* under the taa* ji.t ot one cay at ot axi otter tt* resuitt should b* identical INFORMATION FOR TRAVELERS Add rest any of the firms below for furtner uaformation Gifts Typical of the Northwest Hand made froni Ai&skiai Gold, Copper kid Alaskan Ivory In BERRY'S HANDCRAFT SHOP Hid FOURTH AYE., SEATTLE "LUCERNE HOTEL AT LUCERNE WASHINGTON on Beautiful Lake Cbelan" ndtiiX. fieJufef fvwjfcr. dt-JatxXjg. iiaountaiu rUIVa/tiif. bftliiiug, ft d*-l.E>lfuj •pel U. *vui Yfc-»£?i<jii »• s-atLVr i<U-*J. r»t«-ft rs-aa/^u*tl*-. Paralafc-M rkbinfc *i*d t*n! i-.fc.fx** H*rt J>»it> sjum J.jUifcJU '/l&i*r%. Pff pftrti'-uiftr* writ*. W. W. Chambers, Prop Lucerne, Wash. WE SPECIALIZE in Developing, Printing and Enlarging Mail Order* Receive First Attention E. W. STEWART & CO. THE CAMERA STORE 111 Columbia St. Seattle, Wash. ON MAIN LINE GREAT NORTHERN SCENIC RAILWAY RAINIER NATIONAL PARK "WHERE THE FLOWERS AND THE GLACIERS MEET" N„w open, with 100 addition roome 5S with prime l*lhi —*t I'uradiiM Inn T«UI »...,u.u.odtnoi.. for Vli pwaMM Keait ft. He«d for mm BpsrsSsrs mi rssss. SSUSSSHIW ISSSS tfctSSBS SM BtSvtM unily »l M ». in RAINIER NATIONAL PARK COMPANY TACOMA PORTLAND SEATTLE Tli*- lem pert*.u~t is tL* :actur wLicl niust v* vnrtvt it' per. nniiorm results Tnert if uottinf a. tut oic supe ■S regarding iiunemu.Cii.f. suet at turn 114 '-n* cEurt backwards or put", mr a horsesbo* uti: mtc it v ruat* the nutter run* II tht tern iw-iiture i* UK. low. th* chaniing p* j ru»c iv unnecessarily prolonged or r tllto} it* lmjKlßKibi* tl OOtait butlt-T Too high * churning temperature it also in 1* avoided because nutter tat will b* jost. tht butter will v* ao't tut wil. not keep »*':. bur.er on.*- :t :> 2.a u'.et a: ton high a churning temperatur'- or era. a '. with som* patent chums. Put it will not v* suet guoc butler i- summer whet th* • i.r* pas- I u--c and led ot praisf tb* best tern peratur* it o»".»~-L ;i net F uuC tit aeg F la winter it will range tram M deg. F. to 66 tiep F Tli* dry taat bousing it nam* tnc approbating eno t>: th* lactation period coctribut* tt ■ttn difference 1; tb* chum if not ioabec over one-third Jul. and no", tcrnec tot- last, then butter atonic ■■'.nut under 'jut** respect:** tempera ture) - a firm, grarular condition it t-oot: '■' :: .tir.e- *- - tr t? it available tb* cnnns cat be attacked to a motor, but tb* speed must t>* »-egulat*c u> correspond 10 tb* best rat* o! hand ct t-t t r s ••out r*« lutiont a minute »»» tne Birtte*- if the Cf>utri. Butter color .■ moc; ii neces nary, wbe: it * < •**m it strained into tb* churn When butter granule* are ormed the tire of wheat grain* it it ime to strain off th* buttermilk and • iith th* butter in the ehuru in two watert ol tb* sum* temperature a th* buttermilk Tb* thermometer *s ientia! for this, nt for all th* other i'.'-urat* estimat** of tettperature in -_n* mriwi! steps of butter miking Three-! ourth* of an ounce of tall it worked su per pound of butt*r Th* K-orkinp of tt* butter if a very im portant part of th* process and sboulc roceiv* careful attentiot Overworked ■butter is sti'-ky. gna«9 m appearance. I and has a gummy jErgain. Fnder vorked buttetr is very api to be mot tled because of t heuaeien distribu tion of the salt If a good harvest of applet is de aired for next year thin now. "TRAVEL DELUXE" Inter City Auto Stage Service Hotel Seattle PIONEER SQUARE SEATTLE. WASH RATES —Moderate —Satisf actor y CAFE in connection R. L. HODODON Manager Scenic Hot Springs "A MODERN SWISS CHALET" One til mt (oo»t »ttr«rflv« weterinf SBSPM in the entire world WM. L JONES, Manager Stemc, Weihineton Write lor booklet MILLER TRUNK AND LEATHER GOODS CO. "INDESTRUCTO TRUNKS" 1007 Second Aye. Next to Pig'n Whittle Seattle 8 EE BEAUTIFUL PUGETSOUND BY STEAMER Write for descriptive folder Puget Sound Navigation Company FOREST FIRE RULES 1»m Governing Firet in Na tional Forest Are Drastic. A* a result of numerous inquiries «f the forestry service regtrding permis si on iv build fires m camps and other •' piaces the loresxry department have j issuec the following instructions "Tb* provisions oi section S. chap iter Jt'i laws of MM. winch if efe--r in* June J l . prohibits kindling Irs it i the lo.ls or dangerously netr any tor est material lor recreation purp.-t.es "Oangerously near' wili 1* cousr-ued mc t piace where th* f.rt n..i M | ot tae ground or be blown :; th* rut tt ii.fiair.fi.i-:m* fores: cet rit purpoß* of tins law is to prevent mi ne-, c- --tr: tret and . i-fine the public use of forests to certain prepared grounds It should be distinctly un berstooc that the :t» does not pro hibit campfires when kindled tt ;.. es where fire will not spread, and at i safe distance front the ioreFts or in flammable material Fores*, oft: ers w ill judge when fire is in a safe j at t Must Be L'rrer-T Need. "In the enforcement of this law it will t>* our policy to forbid kindling fire where there is the least danger of itt communicating with the '. rests either by wind or by spreading on the ground, and to refrain from i- suing' permits to kindle fires In the forests except in cases where there it an urg enl need and a very good reason to do so. This applies par iculsrly tc. kind ling fires for idle or unnecessary pur poses The eforts of forett eft- tr- should be directed toward educating frequent ers of the forest to select safe placet to build their fires If a fir* has been kindled in a dangerous place the dan ger should 1* explained to them and the party using the fire should be re quired to extinguish it: at tht same time the officer should direct ihem to official camping grounds, or ;• .' ' a safe place to rekindle the fire Piedpe Required. Where permits are granted the per mittee must pledge to kindle fre on sand or gravel bars of streams or bod ies of water al a safe distance fl - iv flammable debris. What cons litotes a safe distance depends much on the condition of the weather, particularly the wind The danger of sparks being blow n to inflammable debris ai d stand I ing snags should alw ays be considered "There may be some ir.-taneer where sasd or gravel bars cannot be found and it might be necessary tc kindle fire on the forest floor, in such case a moist open place should be se lected which is clear of overhanging limbs and mots and at leatt fifteen feel distant from standing or down timber Before kindling fire the g/rousd should be cleared of all leaves moss, limbs and decayed wood, being careful that there are no hidden limbs or roots beneath the fire may then b<- kindled on the moist soil. When fires are so built every spark must be thor oughly extinguished with water bef' :• leaving it." "BILL" —THE ALL ROUND BOY Kitsap County Boy Can Do Many Dif ferent Kinds of Work. When a boy can run the hundred yard dash, pole vault, broad jump catch on a baseball team and be the punter for the football squad, he is usually tailed an "All-around boy.' William Nelson, president of the Fern wood Boys' and Girls' Garden club of Port Orchard, can qualify for the title 0 Fall around l>oy" but in a different line. William is twelve year.-! old and besides doing most of the regular boy stunts, can cook, sew, can fruit. rais< poultry, tend garden and take care of the cows. He is the only boy canning club member in the county, and last year canned more fruit than any other member. His mother was called east a few weeks ago and he and his ten year-old brother, Oliver, are doing all the home canning, besides caring for the home garden as well as their own William and Oliver both belong to the garden and poultry clubs, while Will iam is also a member of the canning club. They are raising a Jersey heifer calf as a side line. One of Washington's Leading Industries aJR SAVLS BOARD FLOOR Botrc fioors usua-;y are short-lived v: an i* allowed to circnlatw an de: them. This may be provided lor p. means t>l openings in the iounda turn wall*, which should be closed during tie winner A board floor cot viti: ooe-lourth imb o: tn* sand, will, scratching material on this makes a pood floor Tbe litter and (ii it removed readily when de sirefl and '.rest materials provided II the wooden floors are constructed within 2 ra- S inches of tb* ground it is -ssertia. mat tee foundation wails :.- .instructed in such a way that rats can not pain access beneath the floor Limit Student List U. of W. Must Run on $250,000 Lea* Than Last Year. Limitation of entrance this fall at the University of Washington seems to be inevitable While last year s deficit o! ffMJTI was taken care of .:.st legislature, and an increase rom 74-2 of a mil! to 1 310 mills •as granted tht university, thus rais ■ s :tt time Ircm IttUN to tI.ZIZ.- I yet. ••unfortunately," say* Dean Condon.. 'This increasr does not be come available until the second half of teb Wfl— i and the fiscal policy of the institution is to pay as you go Dunne the interim therefore, we must limit our student bey to such members as can be cared for without additional expense for instructors, equipment or rooms. Enrotlmeit Vaj Be 5.00 C. "The enrollment may run anywhere from 4.&W> to S.eWc according to the evenness with which demands are divided among departments of work As fast a.- classes art closed students « '>* accommodated as far as pos sible crowded courses and th* deirree to which we succeed in do . ... will largely determine the <■■'- entering students we can a- :-ept Thus, those desiring work in the Colleges of Pharmacy. Forestry Engine--.:.;.' and .--.mc others may be accommodated without difSculty. while courses in Business Administra tion and some other subjects will probably be c-los-ed early " At the recorders' office it is ex plained that the proposed limitation of enrollment next fall is being worked out as far as possible on a scholarship basis. In general, old students whose .scholarship qualifjcatious meet the re quirements fully will be given prefer -nce This does not include students -ntering this summer, except in spe cial cases of those making up de ficiencies for entran- c. Students com ing.froin other toilettes with advanced -landing and entering lresnmen hav ing clear entrance credits of the uni .—r-ity and some specific college -.herein, will be considered next Oth ers will then be received until the maximum is reached. Remaining ap plicants will be placed on the waiting list- Letters Sent Old Students. Letters have gone out to old stu dents.'' reports Mrs. Sadie N Mark assistant registrar, "asking for ad ranee payment of tuition before Au gust IS. The returns from these let ters will furnish a basis for our first count, but no complete estimate of probable enrollment can be made un til later." Mrs Mark calls attention to a fact often ignored by students, that high IChOO) graduation and ability to meet the genera! entrance requirements of the University do not necessarily ad mit the student to any specific college therein. Thus, a student who wisher to enter the College of Engineering and Mines must have advanced mathe matics and science in addition to his seneral admission credits For this rea-on students still in high school are urged to make a study not only 0 sreaeral requirements for admission but those of the specific college they wish to enter. The scholarship requirements of a grade of Su per cent or better in at least two-thirds of tne subjects ao cepted for graduation from high school, and entrance to the univer sity. will not be imposed this fall Some rock crystals have as many as 300 different sides. Puget Sound Excells"as a Huckleberry District Of Paget Bound at * huckleberry parev-JJei.ee Mr Jot Smith (rem Long Branch. Wash., writes in a most entertaining and instructive manner in an eastcrr Washington pa Western Washington is huck.tberr; district lies across Fug--. ft fom Tacoma. is about 3H miles last* and eight wide extending from Port Or chard on the north to Long Branch on the south .- - .t Pier'.e tnc Kitsap counties Tali But* Grows Here. Throughout the district the hackle berry grows »nc in great abundar. • and "during the season thousands o! boxes are shipped out into commer ciai markets The huckleberry here is the tali or 'higb busfa"' variety, as distinguished from tht iow bash" va riety found in Idaho The bushes grow in places le to 1J feet high, but usu ally three or four feet The berriea vary in six*, the largest being of the me of large garden peas, and range in color fro ma rich purple to a dull black. The picking season begins about September 1 and continues unt;l the fall Bains have softened the fruit usually by November, but a few ber ries can usually ft found on tht bushes as late as January ML U is safe to estimate that If per cent of th e $004 or r-(•'■'.' people residing in the district derive a substantial por tion of their income each year from huckleberries, and earnings of fttt to ISM in a season by experienced pickers have not been unusual. One family near Grays Harbor, consisting of parents and three small children, last fail picked and marketed FSM worth Three men who camped on my place last fail during the season picked and shipped a little more than C(>M> pounds, which they sold for 11 and 12 cents a pound. The bulk of the berries go to local cancers at Puyallup and Olympia and the cannery demand has never been known to have been oversupplied Some shippers ship direct to grocers in Portland. Tacoma and other cities and usualiy get i' to 5 cents more than the local cannery price. Picking is laborious, chiefly on ac count of the amount of walking in volved, why* the berries are very plentiful, they grow sparsely on most .: tie bushes, and rapid picking de pends on devoting time to only the most heavily iaden tushes. Some pick ers carry a sort of apron, spread on a frame and suspended from the waist and shoulders This is held under the branches of the bush and the ripe fruit beaten off into it with a flail in the form of a heavy switch. Berries picked in this manner, as. in fact, ber ries picked in any rapid fashion, re quire recieaning before shipment, and for this purpose a vtriety of mechan jc&T~-Cit:*tnf rattle iii USe. Our *uch cleaner installed by a cannery last sea son at Gig Harbor had a capacity of three or four tons of cleaned berries daily and was crowded to capacity for several weeks Ship by Parcel Post. During the last three or four sea sons thousands of boies have beer, shipped out by parcel post, but there is a report that there are to be re strictions on this traffic this season By the time the berries are dead ripe to overripe many of them burst in packing .ir.d handling and the boxes in transit leak and leave a trail of WHY HUDDLE Around a Heating Stove when in AROVVKI.P rijir Ir** Turn*oi will krry. cv. rr? iwb w»r» r ii* rr.ll* I'M wt*lbri Cr,> orif ,~*r. inM*ti it in ivlri rvi hv nnh a Mn*'.l Saw mml n<v*Wi. Kr r tSr AKl'Wl:l> Kw« why I is It-, w*-n-. *.r fsj rtare fu*r*ntrrd prren* T»fr.C> g»* *z*t 4n»( ngSl wriir for foMrr urn! *y*\-i*l Mimwx-r Tvnc* hsl. SEATTLE PIPELESS FURNACE A MFG. CO. »«*• »r,J Ay» W &**n* Wa TRIES SMWUS.*- ROSfs ftl *Rlv Every Marvel Pump Is built as it intended for our own use. 2 moving parts For Information write Marvel Pump MinufKhirinj Co. Christ Olson, Mgr. 206 First Aye. So.. Seattle toC. F. BAASCH'S For Satisfaction in DELICATESSEN and LUNCHES •IS Six! AYFNI'F. SFATTLF. Near Madison Street dark purple juice, which does r."- prove the condition or appearance miscellaneout mail tr.t-ttr the appearsn- » of fruit and en these leaky boxes, the fruit it • ■ iLjured i! not •• or- t: ; weeks in transit nor exposed tc tig .emperature The huckleberry ; '• firms, is a pie fruit of rare flu • . superior excellence ai . ma; served almost indefinite..' by tht plest of packing or canning tn--- Kor canning for pie purpj. i— :, ts used and the only proee.-t. quired ie to bring the fruit to the : iug point, either oefor* or ally ing in the container With an ti; ■ ence of several naaaont after ; hundreds of jars in this mant,'-- not recall ever having had ot.r Ax even simpler method of tht berries lor pie* is to pic.-.' ti ■■Mated te a barrel or earth er. MA, MW w ith '.old water arc wei| a cover over to keep them frorr. f. ing. 11 kept iti cool storage tit :• • thus packed Kill keep severe.; mod without material iatei • • ••. A delicious jam nay be v r :-- • j huckleberries by adding a:. weight of sugar, mast ng ar.c :• ii . thoroughly and packing to exclc the air Berries to r«e patkec b J manner require to be perfectly - and fresh, but 1 ha*e kept the] this form four or five yearr flat or get* stronger <.'.:-• a but this may he restorea ty c brie! cooking when the jam cpt:.-_ Until a few fun ai. ttM - re ceiTed by pickers in the prima:; kets raised ;•:•::. 4 t • -nt; .. ; but for tbe last three seas::.? : has rax gee free. It to IS ceits at. ;. kers have prospered accordingly. SI*OKA Xlr A rompifc:!!* Mha( *:.i' fclienff W penneDem. 1 ' ■SftiUvl '* " • Sfl-crriMPO* Cli It* Kfcis JW'l Ul iiw WW fcw«#id up***. Sheriff ObWM t btag rerrctl' ot) behalf <•! A O C i.'i en. »; i. : .. jfcr*mr w ir the ttattr. pi . Irptbl 1 I - i Ik* iepaftry (.? :b* REBUILT TYPEWRITERS Guaranteed Far Sale or T-aie Writ* ior dewcnptvt ictlcrr anr pre: WHOLESALE TYPEWRITER CO ti7 tni Arc.. Suttie. Wuh. SPECIAL "W* b*v*r tuzn* mode, >_■■-«* 1 art iicr xj?v $35.00 tf Down. St Per Mar.-t E. W. HALL CO. •II Xnd A recur Sw.ie Wur. Vl> n*r* yi'i *: lew. tf i*r r-«-.: .: '. Si andt Ocr w-nstrt gutrstirt .» yes! lanassfJan, AMERICAN JEWELRY CO. "Tkt ntrft-x Hou* for t:: .v.\h arw EittbUtW MM Xotr Vine-. SEaT73_S lainnri rmw Pm a»Mifa« F. 0. STE\ ENS Vi-ijc HOTEL STEVENS MODERN AND CENTRALLY LOCATED FIRST AYE. AND MARION SEATTLE THE EPASD TH ATS IS DEWAND Fischer B'-os. C: Seattle BOOS ox- DOG DISEASES ,Aai bow at Jrrd Vt.si fret t» ur sddreu fcj ii/# ftcibar H. CL.AY GLCATR CO. nrc. 11S WW Sis* S-_-s»t Sew Tart. X. T.