Image provided by: Tillamook County Library
About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1896)
X I BURPEE’S ' FARM AMiifAL for ’96 | “The Leading Amerit uzi Seed Cat.ihtgued’ * S h?* Wl .A 3 S fi ft miBlv I ••I o -.- a A BOOK ot 184 pages, m r Headquarters for Sweet Peas ( Atriplex Semi hacen 111 in) Quarter pound 15 cents« NEW DOUBLE SWEET FEA. Bridu of ICaga:-, True to name. Price—Packet 25 cents, half packet 15 cent 3. The Wonderful CRIMSON RAMBLER ROSE, only 15 c icnts. l\LkALI 0OIL$ J i * . . . TUH3 ONTl^Y TpE FOtyUjE pLANT FOI^ on ■ 1 . 1 BURPEE &, CO., PHILADELPHIA, PA. W- ATLEE BURPEE I .........................................■! ■! AUSTRALIAN SALT BUSH ^■¡Descriptive Circular t fore;—hundreds of illustrations, pictures painted from It t>‘llR all iilmut the BEST >1 SEEDS that Grow, a id rare Novelties thatcunnut I** had l), but mailed FREJito all u>ho intend topurebate SEk'Dd. t i i TRIED AND TRI E NOIULTIF.SI The Pioneer Seed Cntaloifiie. Fuchsias, Ktwcs, I! lark berry, The Pearl (.4»<»>cbcrryj Potato««» Earliest Tonin to Lithographs of Double Sweet Pea, Roses, Fivhsift«, B>:ickb?rriee, RasplHrries, New Leader Toinato, huowu» etc. • •••••••«. V«*getablee. — . . Filled with .... „ good . things, old and new. 1’rest.worK on Novelty Pages, entirely new idea—a real work of art. T ” li-’t of — — - — - • • rvui Full Flowers, Vegetables, Small Fruits, etc., with cieeeription and prices. Mailed on receipt of 10c., which may be deducted from first order—really i.-ee»—or free with ua urdtr VICK’S FLORA L (H IDE. ISM. Application fur any of the above. SEND FOR CATALOGUE. Trumbull & Beebe, Dealet« and grower* of Seeds, Trees, Bulbs and Plants, JAMES VICK’S SONS-.. You Want SEEDS, Then, go to HEADQUARTERS forthem. I keep by far the Largest and most complete assortment of seeds on the coast, and sell of my home grown seeds large quantities to Eastern houses every year. 419 and 421 Sansome St., San Francisco, Cal. Northern QroWq Intending purchasers will <lo well to correspond with me before buying. E. J. BOWEN, P. S. Will Mature Vegetables Earlier than those Grown South. 1838 18S5 * Catalogue of garden and seeds mailed free. N ew APPLES, Walla Walla JI !Bi: B. ill I» ill. 57 YEARS 300 ACRES Wash. III III III IRI 1TT7TS S Parry’s Giant, b inches arouml, the largest known chestnut; Paragon. Num bo mid niiinv others. Walnuts Fieneh, Persian, Japan. English and \mencan. Pecans. Almonds, Filberts, Eleagnns I.ongipe«. Japan Mavberries. Hardy Oranges. Dwarf Rocky Mountain ( heriies, free from insects, black knots and other diseases Small fruits, grapes, currants etc. Shade trees, ornamental shrubs. C atalogue F ree . Salary and expenses paid, or commission as preferred. Sit uation permanent. Fine outlit free. Full line choice seed potatoes and nursery stoeK. Prices low. Both local and ti avelilig agents wanted Apply nt once giving age and reference. Mention this paper. Pomona NurserieH. W. 8. LITTLE & CO., Rochester, N. Y. WM BARRY Barr’'> N j Free Exchange Department. $400—California property, for sale or ex —159 acres, first bench land, 30 acres change. A lot 40X150, wit li triangular lot improved. 12 acres can be plowed, balance 7 8 |iooo easily improved. All in tame grass. Good of same area adjoining it on rear, ’3 acie in all, PLANTING Fe*7y's Sssii Annual 2 for J896. Contains more prac tical information for farmers and gardeners than many high- priced text books. Mailed free. D. JI. FEltm A CO., room for garden, chickens, etc., beaulilul sitna- 011, magnificent view of orange orchards, vine yard, ami snow capped mountains in back ground. Four miles from center of cityofLos Angles, four miles from center of t lie celebrated Pasadena, 011 boulevard and electric connecting both places, cheap fares, ami only a few min utes ritle to either place. Best equipped electric line in the Vnited -dates. Both cities will soon —70 acres, 12 acres of it fine tide land, 20 be built together. Value of property $400. Will re* clear roll ng ground, balance good exchange for Tillamook property, ( all at this spruce timber. Fronts 011 Netarts bay, county office for partictulai s. road crosses it ('an keep 10 dairy cows from start, and more by seeding open land to grass. f4ono—2S acres adjoining city, sightly loen- Spring of pure cold w aler, iiiso running brook - tion high and di v, good diainage, high Convenient to school, store. |>ost office and saw mill. Fine view of bay ami ocean. Good iruit state of cultivation, well fenced, new 8 room land. This is a great bargain. Call at this house, barn etc. 'Two orchards, one hearing, profusion of sin.-.il Luils mid berries, fine gar office or on J. H. Jackson city. den Close to nc demy, i O minutes walk to house, just the place for 11 mini who wants For Exchange—California anti other prop court to take life easy. Cnn milk ten cows, keep erty : horses, chickens ect. on place. Place will bling 1^8 acres improved fruit and grain farm 3*2 Increase, or can be sold out in parcels at a miles from Elmira, Solano county, California,. gootl large profit. Easy term-. other property to Large house and bam. All in cultivation and sell. Call al this office or on A. Letcher, the fenced Windmill ami well. jeweler. 40 acres partly in bearing fruit in Vacaville valley, t’aliloriii 1. House and stable, water running. 1700—23 acres, all bottom land, best sedi ment land in the world, 5 acres plow land, 160 acres in grain farm, Fresno county Cali in grass. Big root crops, will support 7 cows fornia. House, barn ami well of good water. now, 15 or 20 w ith little work, running water 640 acres of timber hind in Monterey county, on one side, fenced, on main road. 3 miles to California, unimproved. city, 1 mile to crenmeiy. Laud easily cleared. 22 lots in San Diego, California. Will support one family now and two if cleared. $400 casli anti $800 on time. Call at this office or 2 lots and house in San Francisco city. on I.. D. Ackley, Wilson river. 6 lots in South Monrovia, California. 2’2 acres, unimproved in Oakland, California. 2 lots in Moro Bay, ban Luis, Obispo county, 4 pt $6oo—160 acres Pleasant Valley, 15 acres A uJ slashed, burned And ceeded. Good California. house and barn. Ho actcs bench land, 2 acres 80 acres iu Davis county, low a. orchard. _____ . $250 . . cash ___ balance on 5 . years . time. 1 acre improved, Los Angles, California. Call at this office or on .1. J. W. Buckles, Buckle«. Nestocton. *’ 6 lots in Ft. Scott, Kansas. Hott 1 building and lot in Wilbur Washington. 1 fl J25°—4° acre«, no improvements, all hot 1 LI tom land, small timber. $100 ca-li, bal 2 houses in Portland, Oregon. 85000. ance 011 easy terms, ('all at this office or on 80 lots in Seymour, Texas. J. W Buckes, Nestocton. b lot« in Chicago. Illinois. 16.J acres in Scott county. Tennessee. $63o—130 acres of Innd, 40 acres ready for Will trade all or part for dairy ranch in Tilla the plow, 15 acres first class bottom land, mook county, Oregon. I adjoining Beaver post office and creamery. No Call nt this office and address A. GotrlitZ, . buildings. Fine sprng on tin* place; county road within atones throw. Will be sold for Monta Villa, Oregon. ff.30. Call at this office. buildings, running streams of water. On coun ty road. 2 miles from post offiee, school house oil place ( an keep ’> cows easily. Best bar gain in the comity. Mustbesohl soon; berft of reasons tor selling. Price $i2oo. easy terms, apply at this office where full information will be given. well begun Is half done. Begin well by getting Ferry's Seeds. Don't let chance determine your cron, but plant Ferry’s Seeds. Known und sold everywhere. Before you plant, get DETROIT, MICH. 4 ■X FiELD p SISliESX FLOWER ** -e T « ? Progressive Farmers and Gardeners Want and MUST HAVE the Best. FOR FIFTY YEARS “PLANT'S SEEDS” have been household words in thous ands of homes throughout the West and South. Our motto is “the best or none.” Our seeds always prove vital and true to name. SenJ tor our New Illustrated Catalogue free : PLANT SEED CO 812 and 814 N. dlh Street, ST. LOUIS, MO. € if $ I I ■Í a ZEÒTJG-S Woven to order. If you want your rags made up, call at my home, see samples and get terms. M rs . J. W aldvogei ., Tillamook. CITATION. STARR, the largest early \|y --■7X7’ apple, (2 inches around, and '■yikQ" 'I marketable first week in July 'I alesmen wübec * Timber the C ounty ‘' ourt of the S tate of gon for the C ounty of T illamook . Pears, Nut Trees, and NuveltieH. (¡E0. gTA^ETT 0^* rhe Editorial and Business Management of this Paper Guarantee thia generous Proposition. I n 65 Front St., Portland, Oregon. Send for Catalogue. AND ITS ^CURB To the E ditor »—I have an absolute remedy for Consumption. By its timely use thousands of hopeless c tses have been already permanently cured. So proof-positive am I of its power that I consider it my duty to snid two bottln fret to those of your readers who have Consumption,Throat, Bronchial or Lung Trouble, if they will write me tlxelr express and postoffice address. Sincerely, T A SLOCUM, M. C., tai Pearl St., Hew York. All those wishing to sell their timber claims on Wilson river and tributary to it will please semi description of land ami price thereof as early as convenient to T. Steinhilber. ROCHESTER, NEW YORK. V egetables F lowers and F arm S eeds ronsiiinplion W A 1 O re In the matter of the estate of Citation A. G. Anderson Dt *ceased To Annie S. Ander 01.. Amanda Audersuu, Teley Anderson, George Anderson, Mamie An derson, Agnes Anderson. Roy Anderson, Lillie Anderson, U lllie Anderson and Ruby Anderson Greeting: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, You are hereby cited and required to appear in the county court of the state of Oregon, tor the county of Tillamook, at the court room thereof, at Tillamook, in the said county on Tuesday, the 3rd day of Marell, 1896, at 10 o'clock, in the fore no >i of that day, then and there to show cause, if any exist, why an order should not be made by sa’d court, to sell the following described real property of the above named estate: 1'he nc *4 of section 14, tp 2 s, range 9 w. Al so the w of the se ami e *2 of the sw '4 of section 12, tp 2 s. range 9 w. Also the se ‘4 t.»'section 21, tp 2 11 range 7 w, all in 'Tillamook eo.inty, Oregon, for the pur poses prayed for in the petition of the adminis- tiatoi of said estate. Witness, the lion. W. W. Cornier Judge of the County Court of the Siate of Oregon, for the County of I1' ’ I Tillamook with the seal of said court — ■*- affixed this 22 dav of January 1896. 35-39 Attest: T. 11. G oyne , Clerk. SHERIFF’S SALE. I n the CiBCUiT C ourt oe the S tatk gon for the C ounty oe T h . la . mook . of O re Isaac J. Stratton Plaintiff vs Vinton S. Rice i and E, Thayer and C. Thayer Defendants. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an execution ami ortlei of sail* issuetl out of mid umlei 1 h . seal of the alxtvc enlith d court. 011 a judgment mid decree of said corn t made and entered ¿hi the 27H1 day of August 1895, in favor of the defendants E. Thayer ami C. Thayer, for the sum of one hundred dollars and the sum of ten dollars tliei icosts and disbursements. And on a judgment and decree in favor of the plaintiff Isaac J. Stratton for tho sum of four hundred and sixty-two dollars with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent per iinniiin from the 24th day of March 1891, ami for the further sum of one hundred dollars and sixty- one dollars with interest thereon at the rate of S per cent per annum from Match 25th 1891. and for the sum of one hundied ami titty <1<>II.11 s attorneys fees anil the sum of seventeen and fifty-onehundredthH dollars this costs ami dis bursements. Commanding me to make sa’.e of the follow ing described real property to-wit situated in the county of Tillamook and State of Oregon: The north half of the south east quarter, south west quarter of the north east quarter, and the south east quarter of the north west quarter of section five, township 2 south, range a w<st, Willamette Meridian, containing ioo acres more or less. I will on the 14th day of March 1896, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon al the front <loor of the court house of Tillamook, of Tilla mook county, Oregon, in 'Tillamook city, in said county and st.’te, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder foreash all the right title and nterst which the defendant bad at the date >f the mortgage mentioned in the com plaint or now has in or to said real property, to satisfy said execution, order, judgments and decree, intIciest ami costs, and accruing costs. Dated this 13th day of February 1896, J. H . J a < KsoN, Sheriff of 7 illainook County, Oregon. 3H-42 MRS. NEWMAN. 0 4 pi «2. km >—acre*, on niRtii load, lo mile« IU from town. will K only 4’j miles when new road i« completed. Store, 1’. O. and school I12 miles, good location near hay and beach, bo acres clear, an acre« good spruce timber, bal ance brush easily cleared. All iu grass. Both old ami young orchard. Good improvements, m-w barn Part cash, part on time, and will take house and lol for part payment. Call at this office. —3 lots ill Bay City, the livery stable near W. S. (‘one's hotel, on n $8y> property water front, good livery «tabic building, room for 25 head of horses, vehicles etc. Lots are 25 X50 each. Good location for livery buBtncss. Price of which f3so cash will l»e required, balance on casv terms. Call at this office or on Win. Mills, City. 4 Q } <>)-6 acres, half of it open meadow F land, balance small brush, easily clear fl6oo-5 acres, city limits. 2-story 9-room ed, fenced, ten minutes walk from court house. hou-e. good barn etc. 1J2 blocks laid out 011 good graveled road, good for orchard or in lot*, tl ie young bearing orchard. I»etries in gra-s. Can lie subdivided profitably. Good provision, 5 minutes walk to court house. Verv drainage Fine place for chicken laiicli 01 gar de.-irable pioperty. Favoralde term«. Also. 6 den. Call at this office. block* ad,«cent, W ill be sold aepaiHlely or alto gether. All sightly property, ami citv building in that direction. Call at this office or on J. W. 4 Q $i^>o—io acres, improved, hou-c and barn -a O chicken yards.*•!«• berrj garden, main Haskins, city. road, graveled, 10 minutes walk from city, plenty of hav land. 7 acre« in meadow, good for 1 /I. f»»r land- an I home- South and West, sulnlivisioii in acre lots, just outside of city AT* apply t > Rai way and Emigration News limits, best bargitiu in 1'illamooK county. Half cash, balance easy terms. Call at this office. 52.S. ( lark St.. Chicago. Dressmaker Of many year« experience in the East, solicits the patronage of the ladle* of Tillamook and vicinity. Shop at Mrs Sturgeon’s Mr«, M. Newman. 3 La Grippe! D r . II. P atchkn ’ s SPEC, is rapidly becoming an indispensible family medi cine. It not only takes effect immed iately, arresting the pangs of influenza, P. F. BROWNE. I but acts on the etnunctories of the sys tem; thus freeing it of the accumulations of La Grippe of long standing. This is A I \/ATIAW IQ FRFF H I Those of you who have Mtarved on the wind why rheumatism so frequently yields to nLVAl I\J1N 10 rncc .. . gwept pi-ii|g of Ka|isas watched your crop» this treatment and Disturbances of the Lungs, Stomache, Kidncyu ami Bowels wither anddie for the want of moioture, and if they do live, aee then» eaten Ly graashoppera or chinchbugs are so quickly overcome. 90c j>er large bottle, 50c per small. Inquire of your saw your potatoes and gardens destroyed by gophers and prairie dogs--those of you who have faced the famine in Druggist. Nebraska, Larned corn to keep from freezing to death, fed your rattle nine months out of the year—those who have weathered the withering Blasts of the Dakotas, had your ears and feet frozen off’, shivered Ly a red hot stove or lived w ith the death dealing zephyrs w hen tlie thermometer marked 60 degrees below freeze—you who have raved the uncertain and changeable freaks of old Boreas in Iowa and .Minnesota, dug through snow Dinks to get Is a rom your house to your Inrnyard, or witnessed your Buildings go up in a cyclone,—you who have shaken with the LOCAL DISEASE gue on the Waliash, coughed your lungs out in (’hicago, wrestled with yellow’ fever in Memphis, or sneezed yourself and is the result of colds snd sudden climatic changes. Uly*on the alkali plains of Texas—saw your buildings, household goo^ls, and crops floating placidly down the swollen It can be cured by a pleasant remedy which le applied di {Mississippi, saw your fodder rot in the shock, the weevil taking your wheat and the devil getting your nearest rela rectly Into the nootriia. Be- in^okk’y * giveo tives -you who have seen crops fail seven years in succession, )»osead through a “busted ’ oi’. loom in Pennsylvania, the devastations of war in the South, the strikes in New York city, or tried to eke out a thing on the )«llow clay hills of Vermont—you who have worked hard f»»r years, vet poor, everything mortgaged But the old woman and chilren, and Is scknowledred to te the meet tboroojrti Naaal Catarrh, Cold In Head snd Hay rev «till living from hand to mouth- you who arc Lvksli lera, weary of well doing, ami discouraged in trying to earn a remedies. It opens snd cleanses the niaaI j „ allay« pain and inflammation, heals the sores, pro living honestly—if all these and many other afflictions have yoar lot, why, at one fell swoop end all your tects the mem brace from cold«, restores the sen^e of taote and smell. Price Ste. at Drag gists or by mail troubles by coming to Oregon, and to lillamook, where you will find alwulution from most or the evils of the world. 1 XLT BROTHERS. 64 Warrs® BtraeC, Hew York. Repitii I ng done as cheap as the cln»prM Come hiii I be convinced. S CATARRH Ely’s Cream Balm I COW AND CALF WISDOM. Cut Thia Out und Keep It by You For Ke fere nee. Wo have bad the best success this year with calves that wo removed from the cows as soon as they were dropped. They learned to drink at cnoo. The cows did uot monrn for them as they (the cows) were gently uud kindly treated. After the third day give the calf skimmed milk warm with flaxseed jelly end the water in which some wheat bran an J middlings have been boiled. After they are a few weeks old the grain need not bo strained out. This grain balances tho cream which is taken out. Then feed regularly. It does not pay to feed even milk to calves iu a haphazard way. This has been proved to be tho most proli table way to raise calves. Arrange to have a greater number of tho cows fresh in September and Octo ber. A cow coming iu fresh in the au tumn will give at least one-third more milk in a year than ono fresh iu the spring. Give tho cows a good feeding of bay before turning them out to pasture. Do not neglect this year to provide plenty of soiling crops. Sow a quantity of outs and peas. All that you do not use green will bo valuable when matured. Plant a big patch of sweet corn. You cannot feed too much of it. Repair all the pasture fences before turning tho cows out. It will save time by and by, as well as keep the cows in good habits. A good remedy for lice ou cuttle is Persian insect powder dusted freely in tho air. As soon as you discover them go for them with something; do uot al low them to multiply. A cow that i - worried or uncomfortable iu any way will not do her best. If you make pets of your cows, they will help fill your pocketbook. No person who owns a eoxv can afford to have her afraid of him, for it is a loss every time she is frightened or ill used in any way. The cow is simply a milkmaking ma chine, und for best results sho should be kept in tho best possihlo working condi tion. Tho best conditions are quiet und comfort. Look carefully after the udders of the fresh cows. Tho udder of a cow is a very complicated and delicate affair and should receive careful attention. If thero is any inclination to cake or inflamma tion, bathe with hot wuter and rub thor oughly with the band. Milk out often. If the caso is a very bad one, it may be necessary to poultice the entire udder in flaxseed meal swung in place by cords and bagging. The poultice should be put on hot. Do not allow a cow or any animal to go out to pastuio in poor condition. De aot turn out too soon. Give the ground time to settle und the gruss to acquire strength. A cow that has aborted twice or three times should not be retained, but fatten ed us soon us her milk flow is reduced. Are you fattening calves? Plan to save time und strength in handling them. Large hooks in the siding behind tin cows render tying and untying of the calves unnecessary. Don’t have ropes, but collars and chains. These ure easily unfastened, und no calf can suck or chew one in two, while the collar and buckle never slip off or choke a calf. A teaspoonful of allspice in the mess of the scouring calf will cure him usu ally. It may need repeating once or twice.—Dorethy Tucker in Farm Jour nal. SMALLER THAN THE BABY. At Least One Creaiu Separator Adapted to Household I se. Ouo of tlie separator companies has made and put upon the market a machine that will take tho cream out of milk for a family having less than teu cows. It can be worked to advantage even witli two or three cows, the company claims, illustration shows one of these SMALL CKEAM SKI* AHA TOR. “cute” little separators. It was on ex hibition at tho New York live stock show. So far as we know, this is the small est and lightest cream separator yet in operation. It is no harder to work than an old fashioned dasher churn was, and a woman or girl can easily operate it. The machine is worked by pulliug back mid forth, in und out, the bund to which tlie hand is attached in the pic ture. This revolves the internal parts with suilieieiit rapidity to presently send tho milk whirling out of one of tho two spouts s< en in the illustration, the cream at the other. Tho machine will separate 100 pounds of milk mi hour at most and any quantity less than that. Win n it is remembered that the sepa rator in tho household does away with all tho heavy labor of skimming milk and washing mid lifting the pans, ull the expense of keeping a large supply of them on hand mid u large milkrooni spaco, besides tho delay pi waiting for cream to rise by tho old fashioned grav ity process, the wonder is that there is uot such a leparator on every farm. Where the cream is disposed of at the butter factory, the dairyman, by the separator method, can skim his cream at home mid haul only it to the factory, leaving tho skimmilk at home, to lai fed warm und fresh to pigs, calves, chickens and even the children sometimes. Who Can Dent It? Mr. A. M. Stevene, who Jives in Washington state, sends to Hoard's Dairyman the following statement of how his cows averaged over 800 pounds of butter a year each. 1 send statement of milk delivered to the creameries for the year beginning Aug. 1, 1891, tiud ending July 81, 1895, made from monthly utateinents given mo by the proprietors of cieumeriea of We Have Learned. V»’e have learned liy the uid of the milk delivered, butter produced and Babcock tent thut rich cream mid cold money received: Pound« Pound« churning add quality und quuutity to Tent. butter. Value. the product mid huve lowered the churn August, 1894 ...... milk. 147 b6 6,71)4 4.8 ing teuipeiature nearly teu degrees, mid & ptvmber......... . 7.(42 5 0 bl*. 677 91 U October .............. .. M.U7U 467 2< 1 97 r.r. 5.0 wo now extract a rich cream for the November......... . tl, 458 6.0 044.202 78 26 purpose of churning ut tho lowtempern- December......... .. 5,(19 6.4 040. Mfl 79 JO turo. We lieve allo learned that cold Junuary, 1895.. ... Ä.18Ü 6 2 EU5.02Ü 04 25 . 6,043 6.0 65 5. ) temperatures make u firm, waxy bodied February 286.1.77 49 11 butterwliich is desi led.—E. J. Grulium. March................ .. 6,Cd9 4.« L28.ÍM0 April ................. ... 7,; jw 4.4 IM12.940 64 44 Dairy and Creamery. It is time now to breed cow» for dairying next winter. They will come in along ubout October. It is ustouirhing how much work can bo got of u bull when he is trained to it. He can work in »ingle harness like a horse, and the same harness even can be used if the collar is put on backward. Ho can be guided by the ring in his nose. All the light hauling required on tho farm can be d"'ie by the bull, in fact, and it will do him good—work some of the wickedness out of him und rnuko him gentler. He ought to saw all the woo<I and grind the feed. In large dairies ho can work the cream separator and do the churning. When tho milk spatters from a cow's teat, it is bei'auso there is something wrong with the open'ng. Bonn times it is a wart, which will have to be remov ed. There are sometimes two holes in stead of one. When this is the case, dilate the teat with u quill. After the cow is milked shove the quill gently and slowly into the opening of the teat and let it stay there till next milking time. Then remove it until the cow is milked, after which insert it again and continue to do so till thero is no more trouble. If you use tobacco utall, drop it when you are about cheese and butter making or milking. To make butter come this time of year try tho following : After the cream is separated or skimmed, as tho case may be, it there iu not enough of it for a churning, put it iu a cool place whore it will neither sour nor get badly chill ed. When there is enough for cliuruing. pot all together and warm it up to 7<5 or 80degrees, if 75 is uot sufficient, tr_; 80. Use your thermometer and ke°p th« cream from 75 to 80 till it g< ts .oi r and ripe. It ought to be ripe for the < hum in 24 hours. A starter of sour milk may be used to liurry the ripening, tie ..«)• that is not usually mcessary. When your batch of cream is ripened, cool it quick ly. If it is very rich iu butter fat, cool to 64 degrees ; if no* so rich, cool only to 62 degrees, then churn May.................... .. 0,(148 June.................... .. 0.217 July.................... .. 6,842 Total ...74,043 4.9 4.7 6.2 IjOb.fllO 1128.910 8QU.07U 44 28 Ifil 7« 47 27 4.1W),5.-/9 8742 88 Wolttivo milked 13 cows, six of which were Jerseys 8 years old lust Muy, three grado Jerseys und four cows of mixed breeding. Twelve cows produced calves. It required the milk of one cow mid half thut of another for use iu the fam ily uutl to raise the calves, leaving the milk of 11 'j cows to go to the creamery. The average per cow for the year is 0,4UO.lt pounds of milk, 006. 179 pouuds of butter, muocuting to au average of $01. >59 per cow. The above figures are taken from the creamery monthly stateiueu's. Whey Fed l-lj*. Homo of my neighbor», tho nearest one included, say they can get no value out of whey and don't think enough of it to draw it homo, but I know them is some money in it when it is lightly fed to pigs. List year I kept 12 early pigs after they were 4 weeks old wholly on whey till Hept. 1, when thi>y weighed not lees than 125 pounds each. Before that time they were with the mot .er and were given bee ides tier nurse a little grain each day. When I took them away from her mid began giving them noth tug but whey, they did not weigh much above 80 pounds each, but suppose I call it 40 pounds. This would give a gam of 86 pounds, which at $0 per 100, the price 1 got for them, would leave a gain of $5.10 per pig, or a total of *83.20, winch is $2.20 more than I claim credit for. You see, there is money in whey so fed. I can allow you now eight pigs that until four weeks ugo have bad nothing but whey since they were a mouth old, and they are fully as g'Sid as those I had last year at this time. I don't pro pose to leave my whey in the factory vat for others to draw away just so long as I can get such a value from it when fed to pigs. When it comes to feeding it to calves, however, I paw. 1 don't want auy whey kept calves in my stables, either to raise or sell.—Cor Hoard'» Dairyman. * -