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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 28, 1893)
NEW CHURN. A Hl.k of Hard Wood Revolve. Vertical!; lu the Cream. The English papers contain descrip tions of what is called the New Era Disc tern. a picture of which is shown. It is thus described: |®*The churn consists of an oblong ves- teliwith a circular bottom, in which a disk of bard wood revolves vertically in the! cream. Over this disk is a hood, or jjplarh guard,' so that when the disk is ■pvolved the cream picked up by it is A HARVARD-YALE AFFAIR. APPENDICITIS IS POPULAR. She wears an Eton jacket and a shirt Front stUfiy stan-hed. And russet Bluchers neatly tied ubcie Her instep arched; A sailor hat, with Harvard ribbon tied About the crown, ®-t jauntily upon her curls of fluffy Golden brow n. Kotor« of tlie lllaesM' That of tats Has Becouie Aluioal Faafilonablo. And I wear neat tan Bluchers, though My instep's not so swell; I have a blue serge jacket, and a Stiff starched shirt, as well; Upon toy tangled, curly thatch, a hat With Yale's blue band. And our complexions arc alike, except That I'm more tanned. She says that she's my churn, and looks At me ill feigned surprise When I suggest that she prefers "that Harvard man's brown eye*." He's six feet lour, a great athlete Of Harvard's famous crew*. 1 had the Yale first honors, but I’m only five feet two. —Merritt Keene in New Ycrk Sun. Elevated Kallroud Sights. NEW CHURN. dash' 1 into this cover and then returned to the churn at tho other end of the ves sel. The speed of the disk is multiplied by gearing, so that considerable concus sion is given to the cream, and the but ter is brought in an incredibly short time. Sgt “Unchurned cream is characterized by a great amount of viscosity. Now, this viscosity is the feature which has been utilized in this churn, for by reason of it the disk, revolving perpendicularly, half in the cream and half out. gets coated with a layer of cream, which is «brown off by the tangent force of the revolving disk. Thrown violently into the hood which covers the disk, it re ives its concussion there and imrnedi- ely returns to the churn. When, how- er, that change takes place which the ■■irymaid knows as the ’breaking of the ■utter,' the viscosity of the cream disap- pears, and the disk immediately clears and shows the bare wood once more. When this is observed, the dairymaid Keas> s and thus prevents 'overchurn ing. '■*The churn is open so that the cream can be constantly watched. I saw while riding in u Third avenue .derated car from the City hull station to Twenty-third street, among other interesting things, a mother spanking her boy; any number of people making up beds; room after room of cheap lodging houses in which men were smoking, reading, talking, chewing to bacco; a woman scraping the scales from a fish; a young man kissiug a young woman, and presumably a young woman kissing a young man; a squir rel turning his wheel with tremendous rapidity; a spitz dog. a bulldog, a skye terrier and a parrot with a green and yellow tail; any number of nu n sitting in their shirt sleeves and smoking at the windows; boys blowing "spit balls” upon the jiassers below; young women waving handkerchiefs to the « ugineers and brakemen; any number of unmade lads; a little boy taking a bath: girls and men working sewing machines; a little chap blowing soap bubbles and tho editor of a well known evening pa per taking a drink.—Joe Howard in New York Recorder. Italian Etiquette. if tho woman who visits Rom wishes to follow tradition and "do i s the Ro mans do," sho will be careful never to take tin escort’s arm in a Catholic church. Indeed, the guides instruct those who stroll innocently :.:m in arm about St. Peter’s looking at the pictures, trcecoeu and altars of that wonderful cathedral that they are committing an impropriety. Italians uro very particular about the etiquette of kissing tho hand. A man kisses the' right hand of his mother, aunt or elderly friend and the left hand of his swecthcai t. It is not permitted him to kiss the palm of the hand except in great cud affectionate intimacy. It is regarded i s a token that he is very much in love. Upon arriving at a formal dinner a gentleman takes the hand of liis hostess end Lends low over it as if about to kiss it, but does not do 60. After dinner etiquette demands that ho take In r hand again and kiss it. —New York World. Not many yearn ago, a tol«.raoly com mon report of the cause of death w.ia inflammation of the bowels. It van a pretty general term and has since been little heard of as different forms of inflammation in the abdominal cavity have become bitt r known. The most startling of all thio is ap pendicitis, inflammation of tho vermi form appendix, a useless and dangerous closed pouch which projects from the cæcum. Almost concurrently with the enormous advance in surgery, which makes opening the abdomen reasonably safe instead of almost certainly fatal, there has been an enormous increase in the number of cases of this disease reported by physicians. The disease has acquired an interest that it could not have while it was almost impossible to treat it siicci ssfully. While only a limited range of treatment was open for any ¡.Ldominal inflammation it made little difference just «hero or what the lesion was : now there are every reason to decide promptly ami accu rately and good hope of a surgical cure in this nml some other affections of the lower viscera. At the samo time, it is evident that much remains to be l. amed as to this particular affection. Until recently it /•was usually suppose«! to proceed from mechanical irritation of some indiges tible substance which beciuno fastened in this slender blind passage. Now there* is a germ theory for it, which gets some support from the fact that occa sionally in a true case of appendicitto no foreign rabetance is found in the ap pendix. In the great majority of cases, however, a solid substance is found, sometimes under circumstances which make it impossible to doubt that it fur nished the starting point for tho attack. There seems also to be a distinct dif ference of opinion among physicians as to tho length of time a case may con tinue. Some say, or lit least imply, that a mild irritation may exist for weeks j or months, while others consider that the acute and brief stage is the only one which dewves to l e known under i the title of appendicitto.—Hartford Courant. Uhe • . ‘ S Of □rsgar]. Forest (JroVe and ^Ebufg. Fer the Cure of Liquor, Opium, IV.orphine, Cocaine, Chloral andTobacc Habits. -^=.- l(El|EDIEg gqd TI^El\TII|EllT Are just the same as at DWIGHT and are authorized by Dr. L eslie e . K eele Y. Complete, Permanent Cures Assured. O ver 100,000 P ersons have been C uredand . no such thing as F ailure is K nown . Boxwood. Among a largo class of craftsmen tho wish has long 1a>en entertained for tho discovery of a hard, compact »»nd even grained wixxl, liuving all the charac teristics of boxwood and for which it would form an efficient substitute. For many years past the gradual dimin ution in the supplies of boxwood and the The Up to Date Dairy man, deterioration in its quality have proved ■ Of course, as a progressive and up to serious facts ill more than one «x'cupa- ■kte dairyman, you are having several tion, including engravers, hardwood new milk cows in these fall months, and deafen, etc., especially the former, on you will want to breed them again in account of the higher price askial for S),■<ember and January. Have you suc'.i the material ami the difficulty of se a bull as a progressive and wise dairy- curing it of tho needed size and firmness Wan ought to have? If you have a good of texture so as to insure the artistic one, and he has proved his excellence, excellence of tlis engraving. don’t change. Otherwise, get a good one. While by far the most important use non can not afford not to do so. It takes of this wo«xl is for the engraver’s art, not far from 175 pounds of butter to pay it is also applied to numerous other Dog anti Cat. for the care and keep of acow 12 months. The effect <>« a dog on a cat’s tail is ptirposi a, such, for instance, as weav ¡The cow that yields you 225 pounds of butter per year is then just twice as pro well worth study. VV lien a cat encoun ing shuttles, mathematical instruments, fitable as the one which yields -U0 ters a strange dog, the tail immediately tnrnerv uses, carving, cabinet work, pounds. And if by selection and jndi- assumts an upright position, ttie back etc. The fact is interesting as well as i cious breeding you can raise some cows becomes highly arched, and the fur important that boxwood is th«' nearest . that will yield 250 pounds they will be stands out straight all over the body. approach to ivory of any w«axl known | worth three times as much as the 200 This sudden change dismays the dog. unil will therefore probably increase ipound cows. A good bull is a paying who brings himself to a halt, and the gradually in value as It lieconu s scarcer. Small wood, under four inches, is used investment. If you never had one be- two regard each otla r t teadfastlv. But if the dog should turn bis gaze considerably ly flux spinners for rollers . fore, get one this fi.ll. What breed? The breed that best suits your fancy. But away for a fraction of a second there is ami I y turners for various purposes, don’t put up with grades of any breed.— a swish and a bound, and the cat has rollers for rink skat»«, etc., ami if free disappeared over a fence or up a tree. from splits to of equal value with the Hoard's Dairyman. Stimulated by the presence of a dog, larger wisxl.—New York Sun. cats have bc< u known to climb to suck Dairy anti Creamery. The Reward of a Bridge Builder. I If yon propose to take up winter dairy heights that they were unable to de It has frequently lieen observed that scend the way they went up. — Ex ing next year, breed your cows late this public benefactors erfteu have no other I fall or early this winter, so they will change. reward than the conscionsmss of their (come in at the right time. good deeds. The inhabitants of the lit An Owculatory l eaf. L Denmark has driven other lands from Rcadess are familiar with the picture tle town of Doschwitz, near Dresden, the first rank in the butttr markets sim- which repieser.ts a little child in uigbi are determined that no reproach shall be leveled against them in a matter ot fply and solely by co-operation among attiro standing before its mother's mil H'.ie plain, common farmers of the coun ror and kissing tho image reflected by this kind. Their burgomaster is a try. They put their little means to the glass. Mrs. Newly Ki«h recently worthy man who has ruled over them with signal ability, and who. in partic gether, they studied and experimented, cal lei 1 npon one of our New York poi [they found out who in a given neigh- trait artists ami desired a copy of th-i ular, has succeeded, during his tenure tborhood had the best talent for practical picture painted of her daughter. Lu; of office, in constructing a bridge over (superintendence of a factory, who on explained: the Elbe at a pla«-e where several pre »the other hand was the beet financier “I do not believe in kissing upon the vious attempts to do so had failed. fund could make money go farthest, and lips, so you will please paint it so that Th'* communal council have assem- ■again who could take care of tile cows she will l.e kissing tho reflection on bleil tn solemn delils-ration to consider so as to get the most and the best out of the forehead." — New York Herald. what reward to offer to their distin [them. This being ascertained, they de- guish«! fellow citizen, and the upshot to An Vaaimwsrabls Argument. ; termined to have everything as clean and that ho has been officially informed us sweet as ¡>ossible and to utilize ma " Now. for in» tauee, ” said Watts. who that, in recognition of his services, he chinery as fast as it was proved to be had lieen airing hi» views on evolution, will Le permitted to cross the bridge as good. The Danish government gave "if the conditions were such that often as he likes without paying the them encouragement, too. so that now horses were comp« lied to climb for their halfpenny toll. London Daily News. Denmark holds the banner as the butter food, it would be but a matter of time Manilas««. making country of the world. From until a race of horses with claws would Learn from the earliest days to in Denmark came the cream w parator. be developeil. from Denmark came the fashion of ster • What i,oi.seus«'!" replied Fotta. sure your principle against the peril of ilizing all milk ami cream before it was "Haven’t cats bet u tryiflg to learn to ridicule. You can no more exercise your reason if you live in the constant sold or used. What plain fanners in sing for the last 4.000 years?” dread of laughter than yon can enjoy Denmark conld do. plain farmers in the In order to prevent “rear end” col your life if you are in th«' constant United States can also do and do it better, for ln-re we hnve every advantage lisions a wt'Stem railroad 1ms issued an terror of death. If you think it right of soil, sunshine and climate. order that every paawnger train must to differ from the times and to make In the absence of the somewhat ex have a flagman on the rear platform a point of morals, do i>; however mo pensive implements for sterilizing milk, constantly, uml thia flagman must not tic, however antiquated, however pe it can be done by means of the com leave his jsjst to «at or sleep until be to dantic it may appear, do it—not for mon double boiler used for cooking oat relieve«! by some one capable of stand insolence, but seriously and grandly, as a man who wears a soul of his own meal and fisxis that burn easily. This ing watch. in his l>o«om ami docs not wait till it article is sometimes called u farina boil- 1 The dtocharge of a river to the vol is breathed into him by tho breath of er. sometimes merely a double boiler. Where the sterilized milk is needed ir ume ot wat« r it |»ior. into the sea with fashion.—Jenmiw Miller Monthly. moderate quantities only, (or feeding in a given tins , usually expressed as The Time For Him to Laufli. an infant, it may be sterilized in the so many fort per second. It to enti- Mack--Y ou can’t blame me for farina boiler as follows: Let the morn mate«l by finding the breadth, the aver ing's milk stand three hours in a cool age depth and the average rate of a laughing when yon say such ridicu lous things. They ’re enough to make place, then dip off the top. nsing only river at its month and multiplying. a horse laugh. about half the quantity set: (mt Uns in Jack Thm let the hone laugh. No one can Is- calle«l «lucated alio the top of the double boiler and let the When 1 say anything sufficiently ridicu water around it boil for half an hour. has not ««If knowledge. It underlie« lous to raise the rtoiHliti«« of a donkey, One advantage of this milk is that it all true Windom and save« one from will keep longer without turning sour calling that virtue in himself which he why. then you are at liberty to langb as long and a« loud a« you please.— It is beat to prepare a sufficient qnantit' calls vice in another. Boston Transcript. at once to last 24 hours. The first newspaper publish«! in Hol Says George E. Newell: It always pays land appeared on the morning of Jan. A Wh««e«r From Vermont. a dairyman Letter to stand by a manu H. 1<5<. It was called De Woocketycke A ton’s egg recently open-d in a local facturer who to -lotng honest work tvr Courante Van Europa It to now the bakery was found to contain a well de him than to take up with a new man Haarlem G.urant. veloped frog nearly two inches long. who builds a factory far the | nrpoee of It was separated from the body of the "running oat" the old proprietor. ■ gg by a film of allaunen. The frog, Great fcr. —in p t two of t r ‘ the Lot «VSi M ■ ' 1 1 Ml « attached to tbs egg shell, to now pre Begin early to fee«! ensilage. Add oil- aww« t f- uwol. bran and either ottone«s-d meal (La . Br.raoo a. 4 ,*u-waa m the ash. served in alcohol.—8t- Johnsbury (vK) Dispatch. or gluten mead. w. A of Bo_.<«x I BEWARE OF lakes and Imitators! Cirrespondence ind personal visits it. either Institute or it th« Portland consultation offici, Third in Morrison Struts, Invited. F. L. T aylor . M edical D irector , F rank D avey , M anager FOREST GROVE F P. L onergan , P hysician in C harge . C. B. C ampbell . B usiness M anager . ROSEBURG. LUMBER CO (OF BAN FRANCIBOO,) Dealet a In ENERAL * MERCHANDISE. They keep on I ihik I at tlieir ntore in llobMoiiville the largest Ntoek oi gotxI m in tliiH county coiiBintiiig of ry Goods, Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Hats, Caps and Notions. Groceries, Crockery, and Queens- ware. Doors, Windows Lime, Hair, and Cement. Hardware and Nails. attention ttiven toNlHnf orders for k < h ><I m in jobbing lotn. Agent* for the fiut sailing TEAMER TRUCKEE Tillamook, Han Franctoi'o, Portland and way porta. MHire« regular trij* every two week«, weather permitting. e fast sailing steamer Truckee has been specially ted up for carrying passengers. The rates are: ('«bin Passage Ktw*rage (one way/ 115.00 |9.00 eight. General Merchandise, Portland or San Francisco, Five Doi lars per ton. J. E SIBLEY, M anager , m H obsonville , O kit NELS THOMPSON. 'alii Maker & Furniture Dealer. IEIT Dill Tl LlIXEI’t ILKUMITN INB. $tocl^ of Furniture eVer brougfjt to Tillamoo^ City. All new good a In the latest styles. S-roll ««wing and all kinds of fine wood work done to order. Tillamook. O»«sor*.