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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1902)
I 12. TaB TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JUNE ' ounce to one ounce to each |>oui <1 of butter. But take Ihrt-e-foui ths of an ounce to the pound it would add apprex- Fred <’. Baker. Pubil»lier linntrly five pounds weight to every 100 l ¡jouiidt* of butter. This, with the waler an I casien I hat cannot l>e ex|>elled, will RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. I r ng up the total overrun to near one (STK1CTLV IN ADVANCE.) I f b of the total amo'int. A report of the overrun of the Litch- One year............................................... $1.50 Si < months........................................... 75 fleld creameay of Count'd lent for twelve Three months....................................... 50 months ending April 1, 1902, gives an average overrun of 15 7 per cent for the twelve months. The higliHst per eni- An Expensive, Useless luxury. age was tor J line, wl e i it w is 18 17 per cent, and the lowest lor February, when If it is unlawful tor the governor of it was 13 fl!) |>ei cent. From the foregoing figures it will l»e Oregon to receive more pay than the constitution allows, surely the board of possible for a creamery paying for lb,- countv commissioners ought to be given (MM) pounds of butter fat in a month io the same power to ignore the law when sell 11,500 p< unds of finished butler, or it can save $600 a year, he salary of the 1.500 pounds more butter than the cream ro idmastcr, an appointive offi e. who is ery took in iis butter fat. At 20 cents i paid that amount ot salary in I’illamook per pound this overrun would bring to ride over the county to boss road $300 on the market. supervisors and their work, who are elected by popular vote The Headlight Worth Thinking About. has always been opposed to l he new law which created the office of roadmaster, If a pntron will sit down and take the for this reason, we have too many road bosses already and it gives a lat job for yield of butter-fat from one ot his cows politicians to fall heir to. Taxes are 1 bv mouths during her period of lacation, nigh enough in Tillamook, as most peo 1 and then, with the price of butter fat by ple are well a ware, without tooling away months before him figure out the cash money on useless officers. Because Mult- ' 1 he would recieve if the first month of nomali county had some political “graf ' lactation came in April, and again if it ters” who were ( lit of a job or the politi i came in October, he would doubtless cal bosses had an object in view in get obtain results that would astonish him ting the state legislature to create new says, Prof. Otis, in the Kansas Farmer. offices, to wit, the law giving Multno- I 1 From records and prices of butter-fat mah three countv cominiss o icrs so that j before us, we find that there are diff Joe Simon could control the county urvnees of over $1 per annum in favor of But court, which has s nee been declared un I the cow that conies in in the fall. constitutional, and that of roadmaster, . this is not all. The fall cow will give a i flow of milk during the winter, and to give dethroned Co mnissiotier Steele a 1 lat political job to work politics at the I 1 when grass comes in the spring she will taxpayers’expense. We have no objec I receive a second stimulus in milk produc- tion to Multnomali county multiplying i tion, and the total product for the year its road bosses to a thousand if it is will will be more than if she calved in the The calves will also do better, ing to foot the bills, blit it looks a darn'd spring. —excuse our French—useless and expen since there will be more time to attend sive luxury for Tillamook, or anv other to them, and the skim-milk will be countv in Oregon, outside of Multnomah returned in a good sweet condition, county, to have forced upon it. And for i and bv spring they will be ready to The work on the farm that reason we wish to call state legis turn on grass lators attention to it and demand that will be more evenly distributed through the law be repealed and that the road out the year.—Ex. masters come off their political high horses and give the taxpaver* a rest It Some are digging ditches to enrv the the editor of the Headlight had anv in water off the land, while others toil to fluence with the county courts through bring it on. It is a question which class out Oregon the roadmasters head« would has the safer proposition. fall into the political basket with that * * * rapidity they would wonder where they I a re a t. _______________ Mr. Brvan’s New York admirers, who called themselves the “Liberal Demo Economy of Postal Savings Banks. cratic party,” will hold a state conven tion in New York city next Saturday. In the current number of Harper’s1 Their flag is inscribefl : “No reorganiz ers. ” They will indorse the last Demo monthly magazine Dr. Richard T. Ely, i one of our foremost American political' cratic national platform and thereby economists, discussing a novel industrial read themselves out of the party. (£be J ^ilLiinook ï.)cabligbt. experiment declares ; “Having recently traveled some 8,000 or 9,000 miles, and having constantly in mind this question put to me in San Francisco. What is the greatest present economic need ?’ 1 am incline to believe that no one measure would do more to cultivate the economic virtues and to promote the economic welfare ot the people of the United States than postal savings banks.” While some may disagree with Dr. Elv that postal savings hanks would fulfill our great est ¡»resent economic need, and others might even deny that they are necessary to answer anv present demand, there is almost general agreement that postal savings banks could be made a most vital factor in promoting economic welfare. The economic virtues to which refer ence is made are. thrift, prudence and foresight A ¡»eoplc that lives only for the dav is subject to disturbance by every wind sorm The most prosper ous peoples, on the contrary, are those which have cultivated to the fullest ex tent the economic virtues that provide against the stress ot misfortune and dis aster. It has been argued and fairly proved that nothing serves to arouse among the common peop’e so strong an interest in the stability of the government as does the wide spread patronage of postal savings banks, giving each depositor a direct concern in the faithfulness of the government as custodian of his funds. It is as a stimulant to the economic virtues that postal savings blanks over shadow all financial considerations. The chief objection entered in that such institutions could not be made to pay out, and while this can be controverted, vet even it they did not pay out in dollars and cents, in promoting the economic w< Ifare ot the people their value would be incalculable. It is certainly an encouraging sign when political economists, who look at the subject from an entirely dispassion ate and disinterested standpoint, urged the establishment of postal savings banks as an economic measure. Overrun of the Creamery. d i>4 ti.iii ■ ■ r ■ <1 ■ ••ldr»n I In V» < 1 1 ia poni «ai» F1' r' ’ '*W H-r — * t ÍCr ,*rr <» « *» ihn- ■on «nit w y*»t correspotuhmcH received by newspapers leads one to believe ninny producers of milk do not understand that term. Milk at ert aineries is bought and pa id for on a scale of its butter fat contents, determined by the Hillock test. The operation of this test is to carefully se- cyre an average sample of each pat roll’s milk This ia put in a bulb-like glnsH ttiln* having on its neck a marked scale aimtler to the » u nl e n on a thermometer tube. The milk i* mixed with a meas ured |M»i t'on of acid and several of these tubes are placed in a centrifugal machine and whirled, this motion and the action of the acid on the milk ruptures the covering of every indix idiial fat globule contained in the milk, the butter fat thus released being lightest part of the milk by laws of gravitation, •»••♦»ka the up|M*r part of llv» tube, w lit re th » depth of the oil column can be r» a 1 nround* sin! hundredths, to the KO p u «Is of milk This reading and t«st is usually taken once a week and tie av«r>ge of tinse four or five teals show the num ber of pounds of biitbr fat in each 100 poun Is of milk deliveie I by this partic- ular p t on This is true of all t ie ¡Nit rons Tie contract calls to piv»” nr for the numt»er of pounds of ut *r fat delivered, not for the num •«. of tin finished butter Many p ople t»eli» ve I hat butter is pipe fat. with the addition of a little salt The graiest American authority on foodstuff*. Prof Atw ater of the Wesleyan university of Connecticut, gives this an alysis of butter: Fata. 83.5. water, .11 mineral salts. 4 casien. I B; making 16 5 per cent of aubatancea other than fat in finished butter The amount of salt used in butter varies from one half of an Quaint Features Of Life Save a Doctor Bill ancl may be Your Life. HOW The captain ofoneoi the ships caught in the neighborhood of the Martinique eruption and covered with volcanic ashes reported that his coinpass “danced a jig and boxed the entire card without coining to a stop.’’ A metallurgist who secured some of the dust from an incom ing vessel and subjected it to analysis found that it was composed of 5 per cent of magnetite,l he most magnetic ofall minerals, and 71 percent of other slight ly magnetic produtes. Under the circum stances lie is inclined to forgive the needle in question fur its terpsichorean enthusi asm. A story is told of n Ceylon planter who wanted to go away for a day's shooting. Approaching his men lie said ; “Although I mvself will be absent, yet I shall leave one of my eyes to see that you do votir work.’’ And, to the surprise of the natives, lie took out his glass eye, placed it on the stump of a tree, and ¡eft. For some time the natives work ed like elephants, but at last one of them’ seizing his tin in which he carried his food, approached the tree and placed it over the eye. As soon as they saw that they were not being watched they all lav down until sunset. obligationa made by their flrui. W kst A T ruax Whoteaa e Druggists. Toledo.O. W aiiung . K înkan ik M akvin . Wholesale Drugffists. Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cuie is taken internally, act ing directly u | m » u the bloSd and mucous sur faces of the ■*> stent. Erice 75c per bottle. Sold by all Driiggtsts. Testimonials free. 'Hall's Family Pills ate the best. akes short roads. jUtud light loads. for everything everything ---- — that runs on wheels. Sold Everywhere. J IS YOUR LIVER? A FEW WORDS MORE. I A Twin Family Medicines Professional Cards. The work of completing the dome on the tederul building at Chicago is delay* ed by the fact that there are only four teen “human flics’’ in the United Stales K 'it her a pointed (pies- who can do “steeplejack*' work at such t'„„ s!> .1 * • ' . great hight and Liicy are all employed. OREGON LIVER REGULATOR hit» the point. For a sick lieadache, the wc The pay looks very large to a man until . he reaches the building and looks lip at lhat is caused from a deranged stomach, dizziness, nervousness, l’-'sl>el)S|. • \ the dome where the work is to be don . |»ition or any ailment of the stomach, liver or bowles, there is no wiil relieve you so qnieklv and permanently as OREGON LIVER KB ■ Lorin Eggelston, postmaster and one Reg ular size, 25c. and 1. oi the wealthiest merchants in Millerton, D. I. Fry, Salem, Oregon. Star. Idaho. N Y.. has made a special study oi the Dear Sir.—Enclosed find 25c. for a package of Oiegon tramp question for years In company Liver Regulator. U e used the medicine when we lived in Salem and with his wife and J. H. Whittaker and found it superior to anything weever tried for headache and bilious- wife of Malden, Mass., he will take his Dess. Yours truly, R ev . ANSON L<>\. vacation in gypsy fashion this season. 1 hey will travel through the country, l k V s he ‘ lek .^^’ the men selling and ¿raiding horses, A new remedy for all aches and pains. It is the just v while lite women tell fortunes and sell Meaning Best, Quick Cure. ___ lace and oi her gypsy wares. In an in celebrated Pain Killer—guaranteed or money back, Trv it lor an ache or pain, ex terview Mr. Eggleston, who contem ternal or internal. Regular size, 50c. plates starting on the trip about July 1, B enjamin W heeler , residence Highland Addition. Salem, Or., when his term as postmaster will have a sufferer from rheumatism, savs : “Fry’s Lightning Healer is t ie expired, said he had decided that the best and the only medicine that ever gave me relief. I believe it \\ 1 easiest life to lead was that of tramps do all that is claimed for it.’’ Above medicines for sale by and gypsies Country people are credited with being endowned with robust appetites, as there is nothing like pure air and healthy exercise to foster a relish even for simple fare. From Brittany, how ever, comes a story of the prowess dis play e»l by the guests at a particular wedding feast, which, if it be in strict accordance with facts, would secin to show that they are marvelous adepts in playing the knife and fork. It is * * * true the party was a large one, it being One of the measures submitted to the described as consisting of upward of 200 attention of the Massachusetts legist a- persons. But the amount of the solids i lure is a bill to establish an “industrial and liquids which it is represented as court.” It is designed to set up a court, having dispatched is enormous. During tins wonderful meal the gallant ' composed of fair-minded and impartial men, authorized to investigate all the 200 were served with an ox, four calves, 1 facts relating to an industrial dispute fifty fowls, sixty pounds of sausages, and decide what shall be the minimum fifty pounds of butter and 300 pounds of work day in accordance with tests de bread, which were washed down with finitely stated. Labor and capital shall the contents of eight barrels of eider Not a trace of be regarded as partners in production. and one cask of wine. eatables and drinkable was, it is added, W * * left alter the meal, and, as nothing is We are hearing a great deal about flat said about its subsequent effects on the salaries for state officials and the calling party, it is to be presumed that it agreed , together of4he state legislators for the with the festive gathering, good diges ' purpose of putting them all on salaries tion waiting on appetite and health on to reasonably compensate them for their both. i services. Whatever the state legislature does in this particular it is going to be The Irrigation Bill. up against it, for what with the paltry ' salary of the governor and the princely The irrigation bill, as passed, creates perquisites of the state printer, some- 1 thing should be done to bring them with a reclamation fund from the sale of public lands in Arizona, California, Col in the bounds of reason, even if it is un constitutional, so all that is needed is a orado, Idaho, Kansas, Montana, Ne lit tie common sense when the legislature braska, Nevada, New Mexico. North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South meets. Dakota, Utah, Washington and Wyom * * * ing, less the amount to be paid to local Ever since Senator Hoar spoke against land offices and 5 percent due the state the Administration policy in the Philip under existing laws of educational pur pine9 the anti-Impcrialists have gloated poses, the reclamation fund to he used upon his speech, have rolled its phrases for the construction and maintenance of around their tongues and have par irrigation works in the states and terri roted it lustily as the bible of their creed. tories enumerated. Provision is made for Copperheads lune sung its praises as the payment out of the Treasury of justification for their slanders of the deficiencies in the allowances to agri armv. Democrats have drunk it thirst culture college owing to this disposition ily as sustenance for their issueless cam- | paign. All enemies of the Government, of public lands. The Secretary of the interior is authorized to examine, survey every foe of the constituted authorities, and construct the irrigation works and have leaned heavily upon Senator Hoar. report the cost thereof to Congress at And just as the time approaches to vote each session. upon the bill substituting civil for mili Section 4- provides for the letting of tary government in the Philippines the contracts for the works contemplated in venerable Puritan, rudely and without sections when tne necessary funds are warning, pulls himself out from under available in the reclamation fund for the leaning burden and lets them fall such section. to the ground Section Spiovides that “no right to * * * the use of water for land in private own i One of our subscribers on the “outside” ership shall be sold for a tract exceeding in writing about the Headlight, amongst 160 acres to any one landowner and no other things says : “I give it particular such right shall permanently attach 1 attention, owing to its ‘breexiness.’ It until all payments therefor are made 1 must be the climate.’’ We have been nc- and no such sale shall be made to any ! cased of a good many things and have landowner unless be be an actual bona had to patiently pack all manner of epi fide resident on such land or occupant thets heaped upon us of late, but that of thereof, residing in the neighborhood of being "breezv” on account of Tillamook such land.” climate we do not know whether to take Section 6 authorizes the Secretary to seriously, as a compliment ora joke. Blit use the reclamation fund for the opera when we mention that the communica tion and maintenance of the irrigation tion came from the confines of the Capi works. tal Journal, which is in the habit of emit Section 8 requires state control over ting democratic “hot air” as though it waters of non-na vigable streams, such as came from Mount Pelee, we are glad to are used in irrigation. hearthat the “breeziness” of the Head light is so refreshing in that office. It How’s This? must l»e the climate over in Salem which We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for produces so much “hot air.” so would any caae of Catarrh that cannot be cured by advise the Journal’s staff to came to Till Hall'a Catarrh Cure. amook this summer and become possess F. J. CHFNEY * CO., Props., Toledo, O. We. the undersigned, have known E. J ed of more “breeziness” which is lacking in a num Iter of newspapers in the Will Cheney for the last 15 year«, and believe him perfectly honorable in all buaineaa trans amette valley._________ act Iona and financially able to carry out any AXLE AREASE 1902 School Report. Report from District No. 2. South Prnirie, month ending June 13, 1902 : No. pupils enrolled. 20. Neither a I »sent nor tardy Iva B Wells, Clara Morin. Ray Morin, Lloyd Powell, Oscar Taggart. M bs . J. C. T aogart , Teacher. Notice. You can now get a good meal or lunch at anv time you feel hungry. The Bakery has opened up its restau rant again. Give us a call and we will convince you that our meals are all right. C. A. V oolk *. TillaiiioidS-flgkery. ROBERT STURGEON, Tillamook, Oregon. B. L. EDDY, A ttorney - at -L avv , O regon . T i llamook H. COOPER, A ttorney - at -L avv , O regon . T illamook If. GOYNE, A ttorney - at -L aw , Office : Opposite Court House, T illamook .. O regon . LAUDE THAYER, CASE & FOWLER, Tillamook Iron Works > Boiler Work. Logger’s Work and Heavy Forging. Fine Machine Work a Specialty. O regon . > 4 A ttorney - at -L aw . Oregon City, Oregon. Land Titles and Land Office Business a Specialty. A. A W. SEVERANCE, - -L , BARNES, ttorney at MEAT MARKET, T. BOTTS, A ttorney - at -L aw . Is still here and expects to remain. Thanking you for past favors and a continuance of your trade Cash paid for HIDES and PELTS and FURS, Etc. FAT HOGS WANTED right away to pack down. N N N WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANT. N I have the largest and best assorted stock of old N & N Whisky, $2.25 to $8.00 per gal. <- Wines, $1.00 to $3.00 per gal. | N Don’t drink cheap doctored stuff when you can buy it pure and unadulterated from me. & & Truckee Lumber Co., OF SAN FRANCISCO, DEALERS IN BOX SHOOKS AGENTS SUPPLIES STEAMERS ‘ W. H. KRUGF.R” AND For San Francisco and Los Angeles. Hobsonville, Or. P hysician , S urgeon and A ccoucheur . All calls promptly attended to. T illamook .. O regon . T M. SMITH, M.D., -A- a P hysician and S urgeon . Office in T odd ’ s Building. T illamook ‘ ACME ’’ J. E, SIBLEY, Mgr DAIRYMEN ! REGON. ] )R o. H. DAVENPORT, D entist . Makes a Specialty of Crown and Bridge Work, Tillamook City .. Oregon. S. STEPHENS, Agent for the J * FIR & SPRUCE Lumber GENERAL MERCHANDISE And LOGGERS’ Office in the O lsen B lock , Over the Bakery. T illamook .. regon . J^AVID WILEY, M.D., J. S. LAMAR, Wines and Liquors that has ever been imported into this City. HOME MUTUAL AND LONDON & LIVERPOOL GLOBE INSURANCE COMPANIES. Agent for North West School Supply Company, Notary Public. TILLAMOOK, — OREGON AM. AU DE THAYER, Agent for Fireman’s Fund and London and Lanca shire Fire Insurance Companies. Tillamook .. Oregon. or abstracts It will pay you to use The Empire and Mikado CREAM SEPARATOR. óc STOKES CO., Astoria, Ore. Rates, $1 Per Day LARSEN HOUSE, of title . co TO TILLAMOOK ABSTRACT AND TRUST CO. T hos . C oates , Pres. B. L. E ddy , Sec. For Economy and durability they have no equal. Write us for particulars Prices quoted on application. Centrally Uoeated aw O regon T illamook -A-t tlxe XTE-txr Itf 3 O regon . T illamook T^OBERT A. MILLER, General Machinists & Blacksmiths. T illamook , A ttorney - at -L aw , » PROPRIETORS OF C. & E. Thayer General Banking and Exchange busi ness. Exchange on England, Belgium, Ger uiuny, Sweden, and all foreign countries TILLAMOOK. ORE M. H. UARSEfl, Proprietor. TILLAMOOK, The Best Hotel in the city. OREGON. No Chinese Employed. T. SARCHET, lillamonk Custom Tailor Shop- Allen House, G entlemen : I beg to inform you that I am open for business with a very choice line of J. P. ALLEN. Proprietor. First Class accommodation at Second Class Rate. pantings and suitings to choose from- All wishing anything in my line please give me a call. Shop next to harness store, in office previously occupied by F. R. Beals. Best Meals in tlxe Citxr TZX-X-A.ZÆOOK:, oies. Your» trulv, T. SARCHET- P.S.—Repairing of all kinds, pressing and cleaning.