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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1895)
the headlight Will soon enter its JOB PRINTING Eighth Year of all kinds of publication and if is becomlm* more Artistically Executed Prosperous and we are satisfied with every year. Portland Prices these hard times. TILLAMOOK, OREGON. THURSDAY. professional cards . JAVID WILEY, M. D., AT LAMB’S j All calls promptly attended to TILLAMOOK, ORE Office at the ALDKK.MAN, iy HAYDON, M. D, Special attention to Surgery and Chronic DiaeiiHca. BAY CITY, ORE. F. SEAL, Ai. I). P hysician and S urgeon , Will answer all calls day or night. Consulta tion free. Office at the Allen House. TILLAMOOK, OR. H arpers W eekly , H arper ' s M onthly . H arper ' s Y oung P eople , C osmopolitan , F rank L eslie ' s W eekly , F rank L eslie ’ s M onthly . N orth A merican R eview , R eview of R eviews M onthly I llustrator . T he F orum , G odey ’ s M agazine , M unsey ’ s M agazine , M c C lure ’ s M agazine , T he C entury , L adies ’ H ome J ournal , D elineator , O verland M onthly , T exas S iftings , P uck , J udge , truth , E tc ., E tc . Next to Bank, TILLAMOOK, OREGON. P. 0. Box 123. JOHN BARKER, S®œ’y. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, TILLAMOOK, OKI-UON. I T. MAULSBY, TILLAMOOK LUMBERING CO ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary Public «nd Kcal Estate Conveyancer. TILLAMOOK. OREGON. (J LA UDE THAYER, A’fTORNEY-AT-I.A W, ^Mouldings, Brackets. Turning to Order. Proprietor« of the Electric Light System----- .AMOOK. ORE. TILLAMOOK. OREGON W. SEVERANCE, A ENGLAND HAPPY BECAUSE TARIFF IS REDUCE. With hii incrmiae of over $80,000,000 in dutiable imports in this country dur ing the last eight months as compared with the corresponding period of tiie year before, Sir William Vernon Har court, Chancellor of the British Exche quer, was fully warranted in saying, as he did at the Lord Mayor’s banquet last week,that the present “great increase in English trade with America was a most cheerful symptom.’’ The framers Daily Newspapers Delivered^— W/.MAY, 1895. THEY REJOICE YOU CAN FIND PHYSICIAN, SURGEON AND ACCOUCHEUR, JUNE 6. of the tariff of “Beifidy’’ ami “dishon or" will undoubtedly feel equally joyous. But the American people as a whole will fail to see where the "cheerful symptom” conies in. Representative Barbour, of Connaticut, stated the mut ter in a nutshell at the Silk Association’s banquet alien lie declared that “for ev en yard of cloth made in a foreign coun try and brought here and sold there is a yard less cloth to be made in this coun try; and for every dollar which we pay for foreign labor we pay a dollar less to our own wage saniers.” However, let the British people rejoice while they may. A British Ministry will not al ways be in power at Washington. There WRI be an “appeal to the country” in this Republic next year, and then it will be the turn for the American people to laugh. That Telephone. ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Most of us Tillmnookers never saw a railroad and were never in big cities, so TILLAMOOK, OREGON. the telephone is something of a curiosity. MISCELLANEOUS. 1 J C. ÓC E. THAYEK General Banking and Exchange bmdnes» Interest pai«1 on time deposits. Exchange on England, Belgium, Germany Sweden and all foreign countries. Dealer in Drugs, Patent Medicines, Toilet Articles, Fancy Notions, &c. Tillamook. Oregon. G. W. KIGER Compounded DEALER IN Exchange and N[oneiJ ¡Securities TILLAMOOK, ORE •e- Collections Receive Careful and Prompt Attention. BAY CITY, OREGQN. I |I. B^IDÿFOI^D. II • Notary Public and Conveyancer, Does a General Real Estate Business. Pays taxes for non-residents. Bay City, Oregoq. 1 IN CONNECTION vfrMOOK 1 BREAD Pies and cakes, fresh every day. _______ Fresh home made French candies, candies, New supply of fruits »nd vegetables by every boat. ICE CREAM ^-Restaurant in ^Connection. M illinery •»•«....D ress -M aking MI m L J Haggle» Mr« Johnson have a SrMrl.M millinery .lore .nd dre«s making e» tabll.bment. Ijiteet «tyle. in millinery. Tillamook. Or«. C. B. HADLEi GRAND CENTRAI HALL Fin«. Liquor« »nd Cigar» Tillamook. Oregon When Claude Thayer first tried it he tipped bis hat, nodded at the machine and smiled as blandly as if he were mak ing a speech to a crowd of school child ren. When be got through he hung Hie HuriaeUwphoao upside down Tinkey Stillwell came in next to talk with Jas Clark, an old school mate whom he hadn’t seen for thirty years, and who was up to the half-way house l’ink talked along and they recounted old times. Finally the following conver sation came up: Pink—Do you remember the black eye you gave me when we were boys? .las—Yes. Pink—Well, you can’t do it again. .las—Yes, I can, and if you’ll come up here I’ll do it. Pinkey is game, mid he drew back to hit the phone in the mouth piece, but just then the line went down ami Pinkey got control of hi» temper. A lady came ami before Living the phone »lie brushed her hair Imck, and prim)>ed a little Put the thing would not coquette with her One man came in to talk to llohson- villv. He talked so loud Hobsonvilh* could have heard him had he been out on the stieet Arthur Beals approached the thing cautiously ami deferentially, put his ear to the transmitter and tried to talk into the auriculaiiphone appendage His manners when addressing Mr. Sibley thro.igh the machine were as erudite and gracious as if he were going into the bakery. $1.50 Per Year tegration has been successfully solved by several manufacturers there It is still unknown in Southern and Western Germany; now, however, that it is put on the market in the foim of meal it will doubtless soon find general application suited, as it is, l>oth oil account <d its composition and pleasant taste, for fat tening cattle. The percentage of pro- teid varies between about 30 to 44 per . cent, the fat between 9 to 18 tier cent It is possible to prepare two qualities, one rich in protied and poor in fat, and the other rich in fat and poor in proteid. When, for example, the somewhat fine ly ground meal is sifted, employing a mesh of 1 mm., that which passes i through is much richer in proteid and poorer in fat than the original, while the ’ reverse is true of tkut which remains in the sieve. A Seals and f«»r ■ Alfred Williams, the druggist, and Frank N Elliot, an experienced fisher man, have formed a partnership to en gage in killing sea lions and seals, ex pecting to make quite a good thing out of these animals, heretofore considered worse than worthless, and supposed to be very destructive io salmon . They expect to get good prices for the hides, which make excellent leather. The lion hides are very thick ami make fine saddle or sole leather, ami the seal skins make very tough, soft ami pliable leather, which is suitable for fine shoes Thoy expect also to realize as much or more from the oil than they do for the hides Mr Williams will refine the oil, and it makes an excellent sperm oil for lubricating purposes. Tnere is a large quantity of oil in each lion, and it is easily rendered out and refined . The whiskers, tails,gall and other por tions of sea lions are also valuable and will be saved. Sea lions are plentiful on the rocks at Netarts, ami can be easily sec tire« I in large numbers by anyone who can face the danger of sailing a boat to the rocks. Ben and Joe IIauxhuint will do the shooting. They are experienced oars men and are not afraid of anything In connection with this article, it may be of interest to relate an incident in connection with killing lions a few years ago By some mistake an item was published in the paper« stating a law had been passe« 1 giving a bounty of |3 on each lion killed, ami that on presen tation of the tails to the county clerk the money would he paid. Two or three parties, on the strength of the report, rigged up nt some expense ami put in over h month’s time on the rorka kill ing lions. There was great slaughter ami over 400 tails were secured, and the na ks were depopulated ol lions for a longtime. The cHrcasses were allowed to rot on the rocks or wash ashore, nn«l the oil and hi«les we.e not save«I 'I’l.e enterprising bounty seekers were great ly elated with their catch ami can if * to town with them. They had the tails in three large gunny Micks ami with buoy ant tread and air of coiilideme enteied the clerk’s office and put down their bags of tails. They were the most fool ish loooking set of men i . the woi Id when the clerk informed them that there was no law to pay them, and they sorrow full v carried their tails hack to It is not known what they the boat did with the tails. Noone ever dared to n»k them The kin, «-¡I, etc , from each lion will bring shout |)0 in the market, and if the bounty fellows had saved the valu able part of the animals they would have felt better satisfie«! in the end. Seals ami sea lions are very plentiful and belong to nobo«ly in particular, and it is to be hoped Messrs. Willi»IIIH Hllll Elliot will make some money nili ot their venture. There is no use Io let so much good free mateiial g«j to wa«te A week allo Sunday Clarence Carr, who lives near Gaston, was hunting with his hounds in the Cliehalvm hills mid found a coyote den. He ami Mr Um dug it out mid killed seven young coyotes mid would have killed the old one but for fear of killing one of the «logs which «re valuable coyote hunter« For their services remlere«! the farmer» these men Will get $1 per coyote sculp, |7. The bounty is clearly not enough, for these Mme coyotes would have de stroyed sheep ami goats to the amount A Florida merchant is the victim of of several hundred dollars and it is not an iiiiiisiim ! circuiiislaiices. lie han every dog ami hunter that can kill coy tine«* limes led a blushing bride to the otes.—F. G. Times. altar, «nd three times he I ihs been call ed U|>oii to mourn their exit from him Meal of Sunflower t ake not from grim death, but from eloping Sunflower cake has been found, ea|>e- with his brothers. It is to be hoped eially in Rumia, one of the Ixest auxil that when he ha» supplied his brothers iary cattle fwl» Ae early »• the year with the modem Eve'« he will be allow- »taut 100,000 cental» of sunflower e<l the luxury of some me to love and oil (oil of the see«ls of llelianthua an- cherish without relative interruption nuus. were manufacture«! in Ruaaia.and Work on the Ing rail at Stella is pro its amount ha» increase«! year by year, it being esteemed as a very palntabk gressing rapidly and it is e«|>«<twl llie alimentary oil The oil was formerly raft will be fully loaded soon after June obtaine«! bv hydraulic means; the resi 1. The cause of the breaking up of the dual cake is harder than any other va first raft was the splitting out of logs at This trouble will lie obvia riety of oil cake, ami for this reacon a|>- either end pa refit fy it ba» not found ■ wider appli ted this time by placing a strong wire cation. Denmark am! the northern net over each rod of the raft. This done countries import large quantities annu .Messrs Roliertrron and Bain are confi ally, as do also the eastern province» of dent they can get the Ing cigar to San Germany, ami the problem of it» diein-1 Francisco in safety. TILLAMOOK LEADS THE EIN EST NATURAL DAIRYING COUNTY. II. B. Luce, state dairy and food coin missioner, has issued from the state printer’s otlice a pamphlet which con- tains his reports, and is full of matter that interests dairymen . In hi» report of visits to the various counties he gives Tillamook more space than any other, ami says the following : “It is the finest natural dairy county in the state, and manufactures more butter and cheese perhaps than any other county in the state, but unfortunately its dairymen have the unthrifty habit, too common in Oregon, of running their dairies only six months in the year, and during the spring and summer seasons, when dairy products are cheap But some new blood, some eastern en terprise ami energy has lately been in troduced into that county, and several creameries and cheese factories have been started, which are doing good work and some of them are operated for the first time, in the winter season “There are several small creameries, one at Bay City, one at Garibaldi, one at South Prairie, which is a creamr y and cheese factory, and one owned by Mi- Mills, on Wilson River. “The Fairview creamery is the largest butter-making concern in the county, being situated a few miles from Tilla mook city It is a co-operative busi ness, entitled the Tillamook Dairy Asso ciation. 1 was unable to get a report of its production from its secretary, which I regret, as its product for a yeirr would surprise the reader. It was only estab lished last May, and the product of but ter for the month of August following was 12,447 pounds, from four hundred cows. “The Tillamook creamery, at Tillamook city, is the largest cheese factory in the state, and makes some butter also. Its output of cheese for the two months ending September 15, 1894, was 30,000 poiuuh. It buys from 4,400 to 4,700 pounds of milk per «lay. It is owened by a Portland company, Townesml A Co., and I was unable io get a report of its annual production “The Big Neatucca Cheese Factory As sociation, situatdd on the river Big .\e>- tncca, was run three months in 1893 and made 19,000 pounds of cheese which net ted 8 cents per pound, and four month« in 1894 with an output of 22,000 pounds. ‘ There are numerous dailies in this county where butter is ma«le in the old way, ami it is impossible io estimate the production. 'The dairymen do iml use mill feed, but depend entirely upon (he abundant ami nutritious grasses for the production of butter and cheese “Notwithstanding this fact some of their herds in full flow of milk give n- suits which would suipiise dairymen in the east whose herds have been bred from the best strains in the world. But the Tillamook «lairy cows have been for years undergoing careful selection so that they have produced In-ids equal for richness of milk to the best in the coun try I'oi instance, M i Johnson's heid of sixty cows on the Trask river tested over 5 per cent of butter fat for the month» of July ami August. “ Tillamook county, and the whole tim of coast counties inclmling < 'lat»«>p, li II - mook, Lincoln, Coos and ('urry, haven climate and «oil especially adapted to dairying, though they have compaia- lively but little prairie land, and own g to the «lilliculty and «-xpense of « leering their timber Limls, their development in dairy interests will be necessarily »low. “But for the man who lias open land, well set wh I i native grasses, it is the i'le tl «lairy country in Oregon, for there is im expense for high-pi ic» «l f. e«l»luffs, as th«* giass is abundant and ample for the pro«luction of rich milk «luring spring, summer and fall, and during the winter with th» single addition of liny “Butter fat, in l illamook county, in the winter <Joes not »oet more than three cents a p«nin«l, while the lowest co»t in counties where mill fee«! ia used, accord ing to Prof. French's statement liefore the Oregon Dairy Asaociution in Salem, whs tight cents M [It should he rememheied that the numlier of creameries ami cheese fartoi- ica have almost d<aible«l since Mr. Luce waa here, and the laigeat one of all is just now lieing completed Mr. Luce gives Washington county credit with having the greatest number of creamer ies, there being about a dozen, and some of them rather small affairs. Tillamook ia away a hen« I of that now ]