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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1891)
©illamoah Vol. IV. No. 23 TILLAMOOK, OREGON. THURSDAY. $1.50 Per Year OFFICIAL DIRECTORY UNITED STATES. „...Mont ........................ BSMjAMtK IlAgXISOK V « irreident .......................... L»vt P MogTOS Accrotary ot State J ames (I. B lain » aZcretary ot Treasury C haklks F ob T rx «creltry ol Interior J. W. Mom.» ¿Zeretary of war RapriBLD P xoctox iecretary of Navy ...... B. F T bac V Pctma.ter-General J ohn W anauabkii a ttoraey-Getieral . W. H. II. M ii . i . kk Xaceatary of Agriculture .. J bbeuiah R csb St ATE OF OREGON. A VILLAGE POOH »• P*»i«ovBB. Coventor j G. W. M c B bidb I HiL. M btchan H. B. M c E lroy f *< r !* ic «. ba L*: Accretatyofstste -rr»asurer sud I of Public Instruction I JW . P ^0 Supreme Judges i J. H. M itch ILL | J. N. D olph B. H ermann ( Ji T. Apperson. Senator« Congressman B. F. Bur?h?tCr I, Receiver. THIRD JUDfClAL DISTRICT. loin, senator .................. *............. F. A. M oore Circuit Court .............................. u R P-B oise Prosecuting Attorney U. G. BI noham TILLAMOOK COUNTY. tentative .................... .W m . D. S tillwell H. F. H olden IW. T. W est Caa*issioner |W. G. K elso clerk ........................... ».«k..W. W. C ondbe SheritT Sam 1X)WNfi Treasurer H. H M c D khmott Ausessor .......................... . F. M. L ame Surveyor ...................................... J ohn E dwards School Superintendent ... .. A. T. W hite Deputy Prosecuting Attorney A. W. S everance TILLAMOOK CITY. Recorder ............................................. attorney ............................................... K. it S elfh Treasurer ................................................ G eo , C ohn Marshall I- L. S tillwell ¿J ohn B arker , Preslden Trustees .............. ¿A. P. W ilson fjouN S heets Hardware Tinware! SOCIETY DIRECTORY. lodge no . $7. A. F. & A. M., meets on the first Saturday night of each month. Special meetings for work every Friday night. Visiting breth ren invited to attend. II. V. V. Johnson, W. M. G. O. Nolan, Sec’y. illamook T Now is the time to fit up for winter illamook lodge no . T 94, I. O. O. F niceta ill Odd Pel low’s hall every Saturday night, except the first Saturday of each mouth. W. H. Cooper, N.G. 11. F. Ely, Sec’y. line of stoves at my establishment ORINTH POST, G.A.R meets on S. A. ROBERTS the 1st a 3rd Wednesday 1 p.m. of each month in Grand Army llall. J. W. Maxwell, Commander. C. N. Drew, Adjutant. JOHNSON CHAPTER —V. D. Meetaat 2 P- M- On ist Saturday of each month in I. O. O. F. Hall. J. E. Sibley. High Priest; J. W. Maxwell, King, A. A. Ford, Scribe. TT XM star lodge , no . 76, . U. U. ¥1/ Ancient Order United A n Workmen, meetsavery Monday evening ill the OAR halt at Tillamook. Dr. Weaver, la btedical Director. E. E- S ki . ph . M. w . A. W. FKVKBANCS, Recorder. POST-OFFICE HOURS. (O k S an F rancisco ,) V-TS------ DEALERS IN----- General Merchandise. EAST AND SOUTH VIA SHASTA LINE, They Reep on hands at their store in Hobsonville the largest stocR of goods in TillaniooR County. Our stock consists of Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Hats, Ca|>s and Notions. Groceries, Crockery, and Quecnswsre. Doors, Windows, Lime, Hair, and Cement. Hardware and Nails. g^^Special attention given to filling orders for goods in jobbing lots. < >r«ss trains leave Portland dally. outh I ________ I North. I ?:oo p m I Leaves Portland Arrives I 9:35 a , I _ . •• _ ___ a — i X --» w m Albany Ar I io:23p tn I.V San Francisco Lv A:U m in Ar ssi Above trama stop only at following stations north of Roscbutg: East Portland, Oregon City. Woodburn. Salem, Albany. Tangent, SI.ends, Halsey. Harrisburg, Junction City, Irving, F.u gene. • 2 : NJ p m 5:40 P m Lv Ar ALBANY LOCAL p m Lv 9 00 p m Ar TILLAMOOK, SAN FRANCISCA AND WAY PORTS. Makis riplir trip» ibout niry tv« wiiki, tki vutkir P»raittii(. *r 4:00 p m I.V i2:oo m I.v 6 X> a m Portland Albany Roseburg PAILV (BXCKrT StlNDAV) The fast sailing S tr . T ri cr K k has been specially fitted up for carry ing pas sengers. Following are the rates: 8:55 a m 5:00 a m Ar Lv Portland Albany CABIN PASSAGE ............. ROUND TRIP,.................... STEERAGE (one way)........ [ uOCAL PASSENGER TRIINB DAILY ( EXCEPT »UN- DAY.) I 3:3« p m Lv I P m Ar 1 7 jo a m Lv I s j‘2 a m Ar 9:2.5 S 40 4:26 3:40 Ar Lv Ar Ar Albany Lebanon Albany Ix'bnnon a a p a m m in m Fullman Buffet Sleepers T ourist S leeping C ars Freight, (General Merchandise) J. E. S ibley , Manager, .. »15. ... »20. .... »0. »4 per ton Hobsonville, Ore. B 'or the accommodation of Second i'laas Paasen Kers, attached to ExpreM Train«. The West Side Division IETWEEN PORTLAND AND CONVALLIS. MAIL TKAIN DAILY (KXCBPT SVMDAY.) 7:30 ■ m ta 9A1 • m I Lv ■ >lopm|Ar FortUud North Yamhill Curvali» Ar 5 P m I.V 3» p m t.r I 1J 55 P m At Albany and Corvallis connect with »ins of Oregon Pacific Railroad. axrnsM TBAiwa daily , (axcarr acst »/.) i-’ I.r 1 Ar Portland North Yamhill McMinnville Ram Ari Lv 4 16 a m Lv| 5 4s a m NETARTS BY THE SEA! I " ,#«fc Yamhill. *• KOKRLBk. Manager F. P. ROGERS A sat. G F andPaaa Aft TILLAMOOK * YAMHILL »TAGE BOi'TF. *»«rr Wares North Vamhltl daily racrpl Aus d*y. st j a. m . for Tdlamook. k Tfi'stsook dotty except Suuday. at »> M for Sorth Vamhil _ •‘mh-eight or .xprem bulnn. appIr.lCohn store, Tillamook L. .«nicy atOccMsatal Hotel 'W «BT'is K CRENSHAW M.«.■ ■«« to Ti11omo..k take the »vrntne Mr. D. milked forty cows and had a farm of some 250 acres in extent He raised some grain and vegetables and kept a flick of sheep, and raised a little young stock and a few colts. His main moneyed dependeuce, however, waa, of course, his dairy. Away back in the fifties, when cheesemaking waa in the labor of birth herein America, D. turned from bntter to cheese, and he always staid there. He made full cream stock, although ho was not loath to take off a little cream for household use, rightly believing that excess blitter fat had lietter lid in hiscoffee than in the whey tub. D. dedicated a tear wing oi his dwelling house for a manufactory, one room of which con tained an underheater vat of 1,500 pounds capacity, a press and needful utensils, and the other apartment was fitted with shelve» for curing the cheese. During the cheesemaking season the night's milk was placed in this vat, aud its temperature reduced by lerating. In the morning the bulk of the cream which had arisen was worked back into the milk by washing through a cloth strain er, and then the morning's milk was added. In average warm weather the milk would be sufficiently matured by the admixture of the new with the old, but in cool weather the milk was Judi ciously held a i>eriod of time at a warm temperature, acquiring a degree of acid ity before infusion of rennet Through [he process of manufacture, Mr. D. followed precisely the mode ad hered to by the liest factory makers. Of course he produced just as good stock, and as dealers always regard quality and not the place, where the cheese is made, he got just ns much, and oftentimes a fraction of a cent more, on a pound than neighboring factories. He kept swine enough to consume the whey eliminated, and having it right at his door he was saved the labor of going daily two miles to a factory and fighting for his share of the swill with hoggish patrons. A dairyman who makes np hfs butter or cheese at home, provided ho gets no more for the product than is realized by factories, is sure of saving to his own purse the price charged for Msocinteil making. When he has a large dairy and is far from a factory thia may be come a prime object to him. No dairyman, however, onght to launch into private cheesemaking with out some experience lu the art. —George E. Newell in American Cultivator. T W IfaTWKtJ. i ts platted a town-rite on I liis place at Netarts leach Fine sightly residence lots, view nnsnrp»»se.l sad and more suitable place could Hun- | sheltered from the north-west wind. No U prettier . __ be found for a sea si.le resort ~ Fine surf bathing, gorel Bobing, J • dreda af Dpoole vigit Netiftn Bay every miiniuer and < week» on the liesen «veral^etireTclam» and ov.ters, elegant llve-mile drive o- the bewh, and ptotoreaq« srehed rock, where ttKmssn.U of * e a . rryaglvpa everv <Uv. Jnat theplsce to apend a few weeks thia summer and select a aite fur a roitage by ^he *a * /moat delightinl loeatio®.' Several lntf hurjtwi«ed before wnrvey was made Come via Hheridaa or North Yamhill. .......................... I »■ Os.<w the finest beach on maieia One of the most successful dairy farm ers ill Indiana is a woman—Mrs. l^mra D. Worley. This lady is secretary and treasurer of the Indiana Dairymen's as sociation and also one of the commission ers to the World's fair from that state. A reporter for the Chicago Times in terviewed her, and her conversation showed her to lieoneof the livest women in America. Mrs. Worley resides at Ellettsville, Ind. Klie began her dairy with one Jersey cow. She has Increased it to forty, and this winter will add I twenty more. It will be seen from this that Mrs. Worley goes in for winter dairying. She is a southern woman and was lorn in Nashville. She makes it a rule to keep in her herd no cow that pro duces less than one pound of batter a day for ten months in the year. Noth ing lees than this [mys, she says. She makes her money largely, this wise woman, by personally attending to and overseeing everything herself, trusting nothing to others. Following is a bit of the conversation ! reported: “In the .lalrr I look after nil tbs milk and cream, tbs seiwratlrm. i-hueulnz. iwklng au<l shipping, nnd I give ihs grean-st altsnllon to my sows, llieir cars nod leantment. We tin.! lbs rtrst silo In nur i-ounty," abs sold, with a ipsid deal of profSMl..nal prblo. Il sonndsd Illis a good soet of a word - allo lint II wm inucli too trelinn-.il for lbs reporter, who frankly confmwod Ibat It did not Is-long to tbs ordinary newe|m|e-r voeabelary. It waa not In the least worth while to pretend to know In ths fa<e of I ba keen eyed little dairy woman. “Oh. a allo-that's an airtight room where corn not quite ripe la cat and aiorisl for winter use.*' Mrs, Worley said that alio aent to mar ket lO.tllt pttutnla of first gnvla batter laet year and hoped to doable I he amount thia year. i ROSgBVKO MAIL KAILT. S;os • ’n Lv DAIRY Made Ona Pay A Flourlaldng Dairy woman. l-he nost-oSce at Tillamook will be open every day In the week from 8 o'clock a. m . to 9 o clock »• i «nd on SundtaV from 1 to a p . m ., and from tto’sr m . Maitacloae at 45 minutes past 7 p . m . Money order and registered buainem close at 5 »'clock r. m . 4 Sophia Severance, Post-mistrea». Vouthern Pacific Route HOME CHEESE A Thrifty Manager Who Well. AA1OTI W«t«Aa Still another cream separator has been Invented in Sweden called the Alfa. It is claimed for this that it necewiitato» leas waste of power than the old ma chines do. The smaller the globules of butter fat in milk the more slowly they rise. This is the reason some cows' milk is longer in raising tlie cream than otlwrs. It Isa fact that the same cow's milk varies in richness at different times. In preparing his bntter tabs for pack ing. Thomas Convey, of WlaMMin, throws in salt, then boiling water, and lets the steam tighten the tnlm while the brine pickles them Last of all he rinses them with cold water and ruin them inside with dry salt If treater] harshly a cow will not “give down" her milk. J. A. Rrnith.aaeuciate editor of Hoard's Dairyman, declares that a creamery in which he baa an interest lias no difficulty In disposing readily at good prices of extractor sweet cream bntter. By the new Wisconsin law tlie word "standard" is to he tirsnded on cheese containing M per cent, of fat. Professor J. Angnstna Vcmlcker, dairy expert of England, has found that night s milk is richer than morning's At the last royal agrirnltnral show In England a machine f<* weighing and hoisting milk was exhibited among the dairy appiianren. Tor winter dairying rosy» onght to be A New Haren letter carrier waa mak ing hie last round (or the day, not long ago, when he unexpectedly found him- •elf a prisoner. It waa about half past 10 in the eveulng, and he was hasten ing from box to box, taking up their oontenta. His key was attached to a small but strong chain, which was fastened about his waist in such a way that it could be taken off only by having the key end of the chain. It Is customary for the carriers to put the key in a breast pock et after opening a box, the box being fastened again with a spring lock. In the present case the key happened not to enter the man's pocket, but slid down inside the box unobserved. He slammed up the loosely closing door, put on the padlock, snapped It and darted onward. He took two steps, and was brought up with a suddeneM that Jarred both the man and tlie [Mist The key waa inside the box and the carrier was a prisoner. To remove tlie chain from his body was out of the question. lie stixal still, therefore, until a young man liap[>eiied along. To him he ex plained his predicament, and In half an hour or so a duplicate key was brought from tlie poetoffiea and lie wns released. —New Haven Register. HI* Manner Waa Ills Fortune. “Ills manner Is worth n hundred thousand dollars to hint I" That Is what one of the chief men of the na tion lately said about a boy. "It wouldn't be worth so much to one who meant to la* a fanner or who had no opportunities, but to a young college student with ambitions it is worth at least a hundred thousand." The boy was a distant relative of the man, and had been brought up by careful pa rents in a far off city. Among other things he hail been taught to be friendly nml to think of other [tersona before hlniHclf. The boy was on a visit in the town where the man lived. They mot on the street, and the younger, recognizing the elder, prompt ly went to his side and s[x>ke to him In Ills cordial, happy, yet respectful way. Of course the man wns pleased, and know that anybody would have been pleased. The sentence above wns the outcome of it. A little later the boy eauie Into the rooni, just ns the man was struggling Into his overcoat. Tlie boy hur ried to him. pulled It up at the collar and drew down tho wrinkled coat lie naatli. Ha would have done It for any man, the haughtiest or the poorest,— Congregationallst Aii EiiurniiiH» Mun Monkey. It Is certain that the orang outang at tains an enormous site, fully equaling the much debated African gorilla. Those specimens which have reached Knrope ulive are mere pygmies. I have seen skins in the possession of natives (?ataks) whose original owners must have boon something terrible to behold, line, Indeed, could not have been less than six feet high and two across the shoulders, though the anus and legs hail not been preserved. The hair on this skin waa eighteen Inches long. I also saw at a Bntak liouse a skull of a mowas, evidently a very old spool men, whime teeth and Jaws were no whit Inferior in strength to those of a tiger. I tried to buy the skull, but the owner would not part with It, and told a long story ns to how It came in Ills possession From his want of front teeth ami Ills defective Malay he wns almost unintelligible, but I made out tlint it had been slain by his father or grandfather after a desperate encoun ter: and. Indeed, the deep cuts in the bone must have Ix-en done by a strong ami and a heavy weapon.—Chamber's Journal, BAH. th» Experience of a Reporter tn a Snltt- vun County Setllsment. A reporter seeking Information of * former resident visited Oakland valley, 8ullivan county, the other day. While awaiting the Monticello train at Port Jervis the reporter Inquired of a group of loungers where he would be most likely to obtain the required informa tion. “When you get off the train," said one man, "take the main road, and in the first house to the right Ilves an old fellow who can tell you all yon want." “I'd see the supervisor If I were you,” said another; “he has held office nine teen years and knows everyliody.” "Or the poetinaster. In those little villages the postmaster knows every body's business," suggested a third. “Take the little path down the hill and you'll come to a sawmill. Ask the boss." was the next suggestion and it was followed by this: "There's only one storekeeper In tlie village; ask him." The last one was, “Old Bell Case ’ll tell you all you want to know." At the foot of the very steep hill leading from the railroad station the ro|K>rter met a fine looking, Well set up man in top boots, rough trousers, a woolen undershirt and a slouch lint, who in answer to an inquiry, said lie was Ben Case. He knew nil about the limn the reporter was seeking, and gave tlie information freely. As there wns no way of leaving the village until tlie next train, five hours later, there|K>rier determined to visit the other persons to whom he had been directed. He thanked Mr. Case and walked to the sawmill and asked to see the boss. The workman directed him to the general store near by. There he met Mr. Case again. In answer to an Inquiry for the sawmill's owner, or for the general storekeeper, Mr. Case replied, "They're uie." As It wns unlikely that he could give more Information ns general store keeper and mill owner than ho had al ready given as plain Mr. Case, the re porter naked to be directed to the supervisor, and again received the re ply, "That’s me." “You seem to lie nearly everybody here, Mr. Caso. Where shall I find the lewtmiisterl He may know more than you've told me." "Wiuil, I don't think no, but you can ask him if you like. I'm the post master. " Unwilling to ask any more questions, tho reporter started for the white house to the right of tho road. There two young women, busily engaged In do mestic duties, said their father had gone to the store, but would return In n few momenta Would the visitor waitl The reporter waited, and In about an hour the ubiquitous Mr. Case arrived. "Come, girls," he said, “I am ready for dinner. Igty a plato for the stmnger. He wants to see me bad."— New York Bnn. Th. ning at Weddings. The “giving and taking of a ring” Is absolutely neciwsary In a regular chureli wedding, but the ring need uot 1» tho property of the contracting parties I know an English chureli dignitary who ones performed a wedding with the ring of a hunch of keys, as “the ring” had been forgotten. In many Instances I have found tho ring too small for the bride's finger, so that It could not lie slipped over the knuckle. “Never mind, sir,” said tho impatleht bride groom, "goon; wo can fix that when we get home." But briilegrooms are not usually so self [Mswsmsl. It Is astonishing how helplessly stupid the bridegroom gen eral ly Is at a wedding, lie limes Ills presence of mind and conducts himself like a child. On the contrary, the bride Is cal in and composed. —Rev. T. Ah« Hrssk« th« A p« 1 1 — «nd lb« Hat. “No, I'm not superstitious,'' said a P. Hughes In New York World. citizen In conversation, “but my wife *Twaa So llan.ly. Is. Hlie went out yesterday and forgot I overhead two Indies talking to one her [Mirasol, so she came book and laid down her pocketbook to get her [Mira another aloud on the [sircb of the sol. then went out and forgot lier Grand hotel, anti ths dialogue WM pocketbook; so back she came tlie sec thorotiglily occidental: “You must come and sea me on your ond time and sat down. way home.'' said one. “ 'Aren't you going outF I asked. "Is It furl" the other asked. “ 'Yes, but if I went out tlie second "Oli, no," replied number one. "It's time without sitting down to break the only twenty four hours out of your »pell I would have bod luck.’ “She got up and went out. and I saw way. Ytat can get to my place in a that she liad sat down on a brand new day and a night from Cincinnati silk hat thnt cost me eight dollars and Come, won't you f "I certainly will." replied number had mined it. That waa not very good luck for me."—Detroit Free Press. two, “since It's so handy." The two women thought no nmre of Study nt Sea lllrda. traveling a day and a night in the cars In tlie vast range of subjects the than a bom New Yorker would think (jiiite«l Hlatre tiali commlssimi lias to of going to Brooklyn—not so maeh. In study that of aea birds is not to bo fact—Julian ltalpii lu New York Hun. overlooked. Purely scientific considera An fll»tnr*r«l Bw«r4. tions are secondary to utilitarian ones, I ■realise it often happens that the only The sword carried by Ethan Allen nt bait obtainable by fishermen are birds, the battle of Ticonderoga is now in gulls and terns. Without the gannet J>*kson. Mich. It has an old fashioned inaekerelers could not tell where the blade, twenty seven inches long, nickel fisli were, and the little sea gooeo. and venerable; the handle, which Is of phalaropua, always Is a g>M»l sign of hone. Is seven inches long: the m<Hint- tlie presence of mackerel.—New York Ing Is of silver wash«] with gold On Times. one of tlie bands of the scnbliard the name "Ethan Allen” Is engraved. A C«rr«rtljr |«t«rpr«t«4. dog's liend of silver fonti» tlie end of Driver—Tliere's a woman Jumpin up the handle, and from thia to tlie guani an down, sliakln an umbrella at us an is a sliver chain. —Buffalo Express. yellin. Conductor—Wants to know what A Glgatitl« time o’ day It Is. I s'pose. The Inrgcst ligbthouse lene In Ibis Driver—Now site's runnln. dHintry waa matte by n Puri» finn and Conductor—Hold tipi Hobby site shlpprd lo thè United Htates board of wants ter git <m. —Good News. lightlioose director» In Auguri, IMKA It waa Intende.] for a lentern as big n> Whlttl.r*. Pel*. John G. Whittier pets threw dogs In a amali ebureb, thè lena proper tura» bls old age—-a Newfoundland named tiring II feet In helght and II l-l in Roger Williams a He.itch terrier dubbed width, thè Internai dlameter. or “bulle- JVe*-—E’en* - -sr"- gyS," bglpa 8 feet 8 In-hea. — St. Ixraia