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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1893)
How to Make Buttonhole». MILK IN HOT WEATHER. Beat IV »y Fur Farmer un<l shipper Io Take Care of It. Give in a few tinipie rules the best way of handling milk in het weather: I. To keep it sweet for shipping to town. 2. To get the best »suits for butter making. Describe the | !an I* be followed where one has ice and modern I onveniencea and also where these are lacking. When milk is to be shipped for city consumption, it should be most carefully and thoroughly Btrained immediately ifter milking. It should next be aerated tlieroughly by any process at command, but some method is essential if we are to have it in the best possible condition. As soon as it is aerated it should be cooled. Most milk shippers have a snp- I ly of ice and a large tank into which the cans of milk are set. Ice is put in the tank, and the milk is rapidly cooled, being stirred at frequent intervals to prevent the cream from rising. Where ice is not at hand, a spring of cold water, standing at 48 or 50 degrees, will unswer. though it is not so reliable. Many Orange county (N. Y.) milk men rely on springs, especially where they can have a stream of the spring water running steadily into the tank, but even then in very hot weather their milk will, on occasion, spoil en route to the city. Thorough aerution will do much toward keeping milk sweet. When milk is to be made into butter, aeration is not desirable, unless in cases where vegetation imparting disagreeable odors to the milk has crept into the pastures. In i nch a case, a slight aeration would improve the flavor of the butter with only a very small loss of cream. Where a creamery is nt hand, the milk is at once put into it and thoroughly iced. This brings the cream rapidly up. Or dinarily it will be ready for skimming, if desirable, in eight hours. No butter maker today is i.i n situation to compete with the best trade if he is obliged to do without ice. though there are many dairies where r.o ice is used that turn out excellent butter. Springs can be used with deep cans as in the case of milk or it may be set in shallow pans on racks in the coolest cellar at command, la neither case will success be a.i complete us if ice l ad been used. The milk will coagulate la-fore the cream is separate-1, and there is con sequent loss. It is important when cream is raised in the old fashioned pans that the cellar be as well ventilat ed as is compatible with coolness. It should be used only for a milk cellar— u.e ling else.—Rural New Yorker To make a good buttonhole, one should have a rather short, sharp pointed nee dle and thread about as coarse again as the fabric on which the work is to be done. Run a line of small stitches on each side of the place where the button hole is to be, and of ths same len .'th as the finished hole. This will boll the lin ing and outside together so that one w.1! not slip away from the other when being worked. Next catch the thread at each end in a tiny stitch and carry it down each side, leaving it loose over the row of stitches just taken. This makes the buttonhole stronger, prev - nts its tearing out sideways and also aids to the looks of the work when complete. With sharp pointed scissors cut smoot’a’y and straight between the rows of stitching, and then overcast the raw edges, taking small stitches close to the edge. This is to prevent the fraying out of the edges, but if goods are firm it is not always nec essary, though it still make a stronger and neater buttonhole. Commence at the back edge of the but tonhole, holding the work firmly with the thumb and forefinger of the left hand. Put the needle up through the cloth, take the thread next theeveof the needle in the right hand, being it up and around the joint of the needle from you, then draw the needle through the cloth, being careful not to snarl the thread or tangle the loop, which should be drawn snug and smooth, but not tight enough to draw the cloth. If properly done, this leaves a twist or roll of the thread on the edge of the buttonhole to with- stand the wear. Take each stitch back the same dis tance from the edge and the same dis tance ajiart. When finished, each stitch should just tench, but not crowd its neighbor. Do not take a very deep stitch.—Housekeeper. . UTOTITUTB Oregon- Forest CjroVe and ^eburg. j i I | For tho Cure of Liquor, Opium, Morphine, Cocaine, Chloral and Tobacco Habits. i 1 ^E^EDIE^ tqd THEJ\TJ]E|«T j Are just the same as at DVViljHT and are authorized by A L..>ng Cruise on a Little Yacht. Tho littlesteam yacht Niobe made fast j to the dock in a slip) at the foot of the . Randolph 6tieet viaduct recently and completed a cruise of over 6.000 miles. She was built in St. Louis and is owned by Will D. Campbell. O:i board are I Charles A. MacKnight, engineer; O. H. Harpham, pilot; F. L. Mowder, Allie O ver 100,000 P ersons have Cullnaine and Frank Booth, steward. The Niobe is a small boat to start on a been C ured and no such thing ernise liko the one she has just com as F ailure is K nown . pleted, being only 88 feet long and 10 feet beam. She is run by kerosene, hav ing a water tube boiler and coinpsjund BEWARE OF in. incs. The Niobe le.'t S . L >: ii last October and started for New Orleans. Arriving there early in the waiter, the party spent the entire time cruising around the coast C Tfespndonca and personal visits and visiting the smaller lakes which at either Institute or at the Portland abound in Louisiana. They lived aboard consultation office, Third in Morrison tlieir boat all the time und dined sump> tuously on the game, oysters and fish Streets, invited. Butter Yields ut tlayslope Furiu. following c.re some of our best yields which to.ithern Louisiana affords so F. L. T aylor , plentifully. Arriving in New Orleans by the Babcock test: M edical D irector , again early in May. the Niobe was head No. of months Per cent ed up the Mississippi on May 11. The fat. in milk. F rank D avey , 7.0 trip up the Tatber of Waters was a lei June 1«. Tcplii............ ...............15 2 M anager surely one. Every town and city on the 7.3 Nov. 4, l'et............... ............ 3 route was visited end thoroughly in- 7.3 Nov. 4, Lucy Long.. ............ 11 FOREST GROVE. spiected. The members of the piarty 7.4 Nov. 4, Imogene................... « 9.Ö I ce. 5/Iinoi.ei:v....... ............ 0 have four pneumatic bicycles alxiard, F. P. L onergan , ......... 9 «.« Dec. 15. Imogene and at each stop these were brought out t.2 Nov. 4, Virgo lia....... ............. 1 • P hysicician in C harge . and the sightseeing done with comfort. KI Dec. 15. Virgelia----- ............ Il When the mouth of the Illinois river C. B. C ampbell . The cows are nil thoroughbred Jer seys. I consider my work correct, as I was reached, the Niobe v.-as headed up B usiness M anager . this tributary, as the purty wished to have liad ample experience in sampling visit the World's fair.—Chicago Times. ROSEBURG. and analyzing. The following are the results of the Knglnr. Ilun by Compr-wed Air. fat determination on skim und butter Visitors to the Transjxirtation build milk made Marell 2. 1893: Skimmilk— cream gathered by DeLaval No. 2 Bepii- ing yesterday had an opjmrtnuity of see rator: temperature 85 degrees. Jersey ing a novel sight in the exhibition of milk: fat. a bead about the size of a several great locomotives running at pinhead, too small tor reading. But full ejieed, yet not moving an inch from termilk—ripened cream, churned at 64 their jxisitioiis. This exhibition, the first of its kind, degrees: time of churning. 20 minutes: churned in Davis No. 2 churn. About was got up by the Baldwin Locomotive six quarts of water were used for rins works. The engines are ra’seil so that ing down the clinrti. Amount of butter. the driv.rs will safely clear the trucks, ;72 pounds: fat. a bead about the size of and as they f.y around with lightning a mustard wed. too small for reading. — express 8[>ee<l the sightseer has an op- portunity to stand in one »¡«>t and see a E. Tarbell in Rural New Yorker locomotive run Go miles per hour for a Tile Columbian Cheeae Test. whole hour if he desires to do so. The motive j>ower is compressed air. It is known that the Guernseys will have to meet the lightest charge of food which is furnished from a compressor in TILLAMOOK, « OREGON. consumed. The Jerseys are 214 ponnds Machinery hall through iron pq»-s. One curious feature of the exhibition ahead of the Gnernseysin yield of green cheese, which isa very comfortable mar is the steamlike appearance of the ex gin to hoi 1 against the credit which the haust out of the smoke-tack while the latter will have in the less cost of food engine's cylinders are almost at the eaten. After the cheese is cured, score-1 freezing jioint. This phenomenon is due and valued, und account taken of in- to the fact that the compriimed sir as it I reuse or decrease in live weight, the expands rapidly in going through the relative standing of the breeds in the compound cylinders absorbs heat rajhd- cheese test will be accurately deter ly, or. what is an equivalent, generates cold. Consequently, when the air is mined. ________ All kind* <4 turning Io order. finally exhausted, it is *o much colder Dairy Notaa. than the surrounding atmosphere that it Mouldings and IsuckHs of all bind»*. Great heavens! A keen < yed visitor in precipitates the moisture in the latter a «-ertain cheese factory repsirts that he and forma a mist, just as in the case of counted six men around the weighing exhaust steam, only the conditions un cans all smoking cigars or vile pq-es. der which it is formed are exactly re Ashes from the manager's own cigar fell versed in the case of the cold air.—Chi into the miik Thia ia the worst one we cago Inter Ocean. have heard in many a day. It is enough to curdle tlie bloo 1 as well as the milk ••Splendid" W m Made for America. that is made into cheese by those unsps-ak- We make a discount of ten per cent. I asked Commander Dickins wiiat ob nbly dirty men! servations the Duke de Veragna made at lor ,-asli orders. There is one fact that seems estab the World's fair. He informed me that lished in regard toGuem-ey butter Its during th* tour oi the exposition build natural color is the deepest and richest ing* both the dnfce and duchess fre uf that of any of the -lairy breed*, nnd it quently exclaimed. •Maguiticencia. pre- requires less bntter color, usually none cioeoF ' Everything they saw on the st all. grounds.” »al l the commander, "was In the great dairy test at th" World's magnificent and precious. They were fair butter, cheese, cream. sKitumllk almost sp echleas when they saw Niag bnttermilk. cost of bntter color ami in ara AH through the state, and eaj«e- crease or decrease in weight of the cows cially during our journey along th* during the test will all be taken into Hndson *t sunart. the ducal party was coiisideranon a* well as the coat of f.««l . ----- ----- -•---------- lost in wonder. The duchess. who had Red R om -, an English Dexter cow been gazing npou th" laadscaje for «no" First St., Dpp. Occidental. Tlllamaok(Ore weighing only 762 pounds, gave in one time, turned to me and aaid. 'The word year 10.072 pounds of milk, thus p-ro “spleudi I" must have been made to de during nearly 13 times her own weight of scribe America' "—New York Presa lacteal fluid Narrlacr l^lllpallaaa. Bull power saves the cost of an engine A curious iimmag»' has recently taken f.r cream separating and feed cutting Chinamen are being rapidly broken in place m France. THt-gr-eon M F-lonard Lornet. waa born at Artaii» June 9 1*72. to do the dairy work of Califomi.i He is • 95 centimeter« ia bright. The The New York <tairyimin pc-nonis-e» bride. Miss Eliae G«-<-'■«. was hornet the tmiue of his favorite anuu.il "brow Amplephuis July 3. i 7L Sbe u 83 If the World's fair judge» can .iev-nie centimeter» in h> ight. Tur l*et num the question, we shall know by next fall was a brother of ti»e gr<»>m. 19 years of which state m this L'uiun m tkes the best age ami M cratitueten ,n height, an-1 the Fins Billiard and Pool Tablea. tmtter ->r cheese. Cast will cotne into maid of booor a aster of Hie bride and mmpetitioo with west in a m-et inter 70 centimeters tn height.—New York TILLAMOOK, • - OREGON. ■ «ting w:w Herald Dr. le ^ lie e . K eeley . Complete, Permanent Cures Assured. * I TILLAMOOK 1 ---------------- ---------- - H Fakes and Imitators! Tillamoo^ Lumbering Co. HEADLIGHT Saw & Planing Mills. Proprietors Electric Light System. THE BUREAU-#> SALOON, C. H. SMITH, Proprietor. FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS. '¿rand Central Billiard Hall. C. B. HADLEY, Proprietor. Qt 'ino, Xiaitcn and Siqais. *