Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, September 07, 1893, Image 3

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    PERSONAL GOSSIP.
Difference That a Crain Halloa Stakes
When Pasture« Dry Up.
When the dry weather checks the
growth of grass in pastures, the cows
greatly decrease in milk flow. In such
droughts the feeding of gram to stock
maintains the growth in size or weight.
MILK WITH AND WITHOUT GRAIN.
To ascertain the effect of a grain ra­
tion on cows at pasture. 1. P. Rober s
and H. H. Wing, at the New York
Cornell station (B. 36), have fill for three
summers a nature of two parts corn­
meal. one part bran and one part cotton­
seed meal to Jerseys and Holsteins.
Each cow was fed a gallon daily in two
feeds, night and moniing. In 1183. with
good pasture through the summer, the
grain fed cows produced less milk ami
as much butter.
The grave of George Eliot at High­
gate, near London, is reported to be in a
wretched state of neglect.
Mrs. Humphrey Ward is writing a
uew novel, a companion work to "David
Grieve” and "Robert Elsmere."
General William Mahone of Virginia
has permanently retired from politics.
He is quite wealthy and says that pub­
lic life has no rewards nor temptations
for him.
Alexius Columbus, a former ship­
builder. now nearly 97 years old, who
claims to lie a lineal descendant of the
great Christopher, has been discovered
in Buffalo.
Dr. J. Collins Warren, the new pro­
fessor of surgery at Harvard, is a direct
descendant of General Joseph Warren
of Bunker Hill fame and is of a distin­
guished medical family.
Brigham Young, Jr., one of the numer­
ous sous of the late president of the Mor­
mon church, advises his people to regard
jiolitics as next to importance to religion
and predicts that the Mormons will be­
come "powerful politicians and saints."
John Hays Hammond, the noted Cali­
fornia miner and manager of the Bunker
Hill and Sullivan silver mines at Cour
d'Alene, Ida., has gone to Johannesburg,
South Africa, to take charge of the eight
great gold mines of the Barnat brothers.
Rev. Ralph Swiuburn. who lives near
Charleston, W. Va., is the oldest railroad
man living in this country. He was
born near Newcastle-upon-Tyne, in the
county of Durham, Aug. 4, 1805, and
begun to work on railroads in the year
1818.
Among the distinguished citizens of
Philadelphia past 90 years of age, the
Rev. Dr. Furness is one of the most re- :
markable of personages. He takes long
walks like a boy without fatigue. He
hears well and can read at night even in
the cars without glasses.
!
as» is
A
HEAD¿76
\v
Bhc i-
KEELEY
I N S T IT U T E
1111-1133.
(lives the County anil City News in full, be­
sides all the important telegraphic news
and selected miscellany, and com­
ments fearlessly and indepen­
dently upon all topics.
..CSl"Df Gregari.
Forest [JroVe and fyjgeburg.
JOB * PRINTINÍ
1 .etter lleads, .Note Head«,
Bill lleads, Statement», and
Envelops, Business Card»,
\ isiting Carde, Placarti»,
Shipping Tags, Poster»,
<iiiti.*r-8iiipea andCi rullare.
Commercial Job Piinting.
For the Curs of
Liquor, Opium
Morphine, Cocaine, Chloral
andTobacc: Habits.
1 LEGAL BLANK PRINTING
Wedding and Ball Invita­
tions, Tickets, Folders and
Book work done to order.
We keep the l»‘Ht qualities ol
]Ki|H*r cards, and stationery,
and can always guarantee
satisfaction in that line.
T^EJ\T»{E|4T
Are just the same as at
DtflljHT
and are authorized by
Df. L eslie e . K eele Y.
BUTTER WITH AND WITHOUT GRAIN.
Complete, Permanent
Cures Assured
POSTOFFICE ANNALS.
In 1890. with good pasture, grain feed­
ing did not increase the bntter. In 1891.
1660—The English postal system as at
with short pasture, the grain fed cows
yielded enough more milk and butter to present constituted founded by order of i
I ay for the grain, but each grain fed Charles II.
1G63—The postodee and post routes
cow gained 28 pounds more flesh.
O ver 100,000 P ersons have
were let to Daniel O’Neill as the highest
been C ured and no such thing
Unhappy ChecNe Standard!
bidder for the contract.
as F ailure is K nown .
We have on our statute books a law
1681—A penny post was established in
which we call a "double header." be­ London as a private enterprise by Rob­
cause it is doubly violated. This law ert Murray, an upholsterer.
BEWARE OF
requires that al) cheese branded "stand­
1C90—Murray having sold his penny
ard" must contain at least 30 per cent post undertaking, litigation arose regard­
pure fat. bnt cheese buyers who have ing it. It was adjudged a part of the
handled and tested those standards find general postal system and annexed.
that they average not over 25 per cent
Cirrispudencs and parsonal visits
1692—A general postal system for the
fat. But. to cap the climax, the buyer,
at either Institute or at the Portland
when he receives those misrepresented accommodation of the American colonies
standards, willfully obliterates its brand v.xa planned by the British government.
consultation office, Third an Morrison
1710—The system of American post of­
and miraculously transforms them into
Streets, I.ivited.
a full cream cheese. Hence he is shrewd fices and post routes was put into opera-
enough to see that large quantities of t on by the British government.
F. L. T aylor ,
our cheese being in fact one-third skims
1726—Envelopes for letters mentioned
M edical D irector ,
are sold in all the principal markets of by Swift as in common use at this date.
the world as full cream cheese.
F rank D avey ,
They were large square pieces of coarse
I ask. Need he be very shrewd to see paper folded over the letter and fastened
M anager
that such a law. violated as it is every with sealing wax.
day in the year, must inevitably work I 1740—There was talk of discontinning
FOREST GROVE.
great havoc upon Wisconsin full cream the poet between Loudon and Edinburgh
F
P.
L
onergan
,
nlseese? He also knows that we have on account of the fewness of le ters. On
swept the deck at every recent cheese one occasion the post carried but one,
PHYSICICIAN IN CHARGE.
exhibit and that only a few days since and generally there were only three or
C.
B.
C ampbell .
we laid Canada in the shade by several four.
points, and he asks himself why then
B
usiness M anager .
1753—Benjamin Franklin was appoint­
does Canada outsell us at every point? ed first deputy postmaster general for
ROSEBURG.
On investigation be finds that Canada the American colonies.
1 rohibits the manufacture of everything
but a full cream cheese, and when a con­ _17C9—Mail coach routes were estab­
sumer buys a Canadian cheese he knows lished by Franklin from Philadelphia to
what be is buying and will pay accord­ Boston, connecting with all the leading
ingly. while we by law have been mak­ towns en route,
1774—In this year the English mails
ing Irtish of our cheese, and the consum­
er when he buys a Wisconsin cheese were first conveyed in coaches. The first
doesn't know whether he is buying trash mail by this startling innovation was
<>r cheese, and he says to hitnself. "1 sent from London to Bristol.—St. Louis
will not be deceived: I won't buy it un­ Globe-Democrat.
less 1 can buy it for trash." and pays ac­
RAILROAD TIES.
cordingly.—Address at a Dairy Conven­
tion.
There are 10 lines running out cf
Summer Slirinkuce of Milk.
Chicago competing for eastbound busi-
During the het. dry months, when ness.
f'.ies are abundant, cows are almost sure
There were 2,444 railroad accidenta in
to shrink in the milk flow. There are this country in 1892; 790 persons were
some points about this matter that ure killed and 2,685 injured.
OREGON
well to consider. A great many dairy
TILLAMOOK.
O
A belt recently made for the Brooklyn
fanners follow the practice of turning
City
Electric
Railway
company
is
116
the cows into a small |«isture at night
f_r tbe sake of the convenience of find­ feet long, 72 inches wide and weighs
1.800 pounds. One hundred and twenty
ing them easily the next morning. Dur­
lides were used in its manufacture.
ing the day the cows are so bothered by
A new plan is being considered to con­
flies that they will not eat what they
should even if it is easily procured. Lf struct a belt line around Columbus, O.
they cannot graze at night, the result The proposed line is about 13 miles, and
will be they get too little food in the 24 the cost is estimated at $1.250.000. Part
hours nnd must of consequence shrink of the right of way has been secured.
A custom was established some time
All kintlw oí turning «Ione Io order.
in their milk.
The wise dairyman will see to it that ago by the roads entering Columbus, O.,
Moulding* and brachetti of ail kinds.
the cow has plenty to eat. If it requires to give state employees a ¡>assenger rate
a little extra study and effort on his part of a cent a mile on all occasions. The
to get it for her. he will do it, for he custom has been abandoned, and now
knows this important fact—that if the full fare is charged.
cow shrinks in summer he can never get
All the tracks of the Boston and Maine
her back to as large a flow in the fall as road at Boston are to be covered with a
be otherwise would. Good management shell. It was the first intention of tbe
of the cow is one of the foundations of company to allow the tracks to remain
success in milk production. Flies in the uncovered and to have light shells built
We make a discount ut ten per cent,
daytime ami confinement at night will above tbe platforma.
for cash orders.
tieat the best cow in the world.
The new station of the Central Rail-
road of New Jersey at Atlautic High­
Dairy and treaasery.
lands has leen finished. It is one of tbe
«•
The ancestors of the Gm maey and Jer­
finest in tbe state and waa Inuit in con­
sey cows were found in Normandy and
nection with tbe vast improvements
••
Brittany more than a century ago. Tbe
made at the Sandy Hook steamboat ter­
Norman cow waa a large red animal minal.
The Brittany cow waa a small black one.
'»be two breeds became mingled in one
PITH ANO POINT.
and croeaed to tbe channel islands. Tbe
Missouri lewis the world in lead pro­
modern tendency has been to differen­
tiate the specie« again, developing frren duction.
. -+- «
—•-»---------- ra— î
the mixed channel ialaniLs' breed one
The name bank b derived from lainco.
family of red or orange tinted cows, a bench.
TlUamaak,Dre
First St.i Opp. Occidental,
which are called in our time Guernseys,
Forgery waa Lrst made punishable by
another family of spotted black or fawn death in 1CS4.
colored cows with dark man. some­
The Germane were tbe Erst to employ
what small* r than tb<- other branch, and
gunpowder for blasting rwka.
these we call in our time Jerseys.
A gold coin flcprwiates 5 f er cent in
Next time a Imtterv t ingm-d agent al
C. B. HADLEY. Proprietor.
■ fair or elsewhere tm s to delude yon value in I* years of constant use
There have l»»n X) snit'i'iea commit­
into believing oleotnargxnne la Iwtter
than batter tarn on him and ask him ted on tbe Eiffel tower, in Paris, since
why his millionaire employer, wbomak i its couatructiou.
tbe stuff at his factory. does not iuw it
More than •o.iao «taupe are said to ba
found every year Iotas u the letter boxes
ine eail of bntter
American butter today ia far super** of the United Kingdom
■nd Pool Tablai
to what it waa SO rear« ago Tina u
A cubic foot of newly fallen snow
partly owing to improved cows, partly weighs H pocmlaand has 12 times tbe
□ REQON.
TILLAMOOK.
to laprvie) metbois at making butter i bulk of *" equal weight cf water.
! TILLAMOOK
Fakes and Imitators!
everything needed in a first class y
printing office is found in
He ini.ioiiT
«
The plant is ve
for a town of the size and
additions in the way of
paper is
borders, cuts, ty pe and
p
r i n ted
machinery are lioing
Il tin* very
made all the time, j
boat style of
The machinery and
the art, as to
fixtures are of the >
mec h a n i cal
latest and
nml
ty|sigrapli-
approved
•nl
Hp|ieiiranee,
and every
the print is clear,
the advertisements
artistic, and the very
Is
’st quality of pii|ier
found in /,
is
uaed.
No efforts are
country
spared to make the II kad -
ioiit the best county
' newspaper in Oregon, or
the North West, for that
You need not feel
bi semi the I I k mi.lour
east to friends or prospective
f immigrants—its appearance will
convince anyone that we have a
prisqa-roiis ami enterprising county.
Tillamoolç Lumbering Co
:
HEADLIGHT
Saw & Planing Mills.
I
i
Proprietors Electric Li^ht System
C. H. SMITH, Proprietor.
Grand Central Billiard Hall.
STOOD THE TEST WHILE
other |m|irr« have come and
gone. II yon pay for it a
year in advance, you are not
likely to lose your money.
Hulmrription price for the
Ila i di ion v fl .Win advance.
THE # BUREAUSÄLOON,
FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS.
The llgAIMJGirr is tbeohlest
l’a|ier, tbelemling |m|s-r and
has tlie largest circtilation—
larger tlian tbe circululion
ol all otlier county |Hi|ier».
It lias la-en Itere ftyearsaml
■ I
I
_fr
II It
J 1
1
a I
1!
*
1
ianois and &qaii
1
PIONEER PAPER
If you wish to advertise
Tillaiiusik County, send the
H sadi . ioht abroad. It will
from time to time contain
rehalde ilew-riptive articles
regarding Tillaiiusik ami its
womlerful reaourres and will
let the world know of our
excellent timber, our rich
larining and dairy lamia,
ami cur magnificent rivers.
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