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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1906)
an TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, SEPTEMBER 27. 1906 Dairy Dots. Advertising Rates. L egal A dvkktisments ; First Insertion, per line................... $ 10 5 Each subsequent insertion, line.... Business and profesHional cards, 1 month ....................................... 1 00 1 Homestead Notices........................... 5 00 1 Timber Claims . ................................ 1U 00 L* teals, per line each insertion.... 5 Display advertisement, an inch, 1 month ....................................... 50 1 All Resolutions of Condolence and Lodge Notices, 5c. per line. < 'ards of Thanks, 5c. per line. Notices, Lost, .Strayed or Stolen, etc., minimum rate, 25c. nut exceedii g five lines. O,ç flÉillamaok CROPS Äjcabligbt BY ELECTRICITY. Calves enjoy clean, fresh water, says D. Otis in Jersey Bulletin. A test whs made by weighing the water given to thirteen calves that ranged from two to three months of age. It was found that 868 pounds of water were consumed in seven days, or nearly ten pounds per day per head. It wan also noticed that tile calves drank several times a day, sipping a little at a time; even after their ration of milk they would take a swallow of water. The dairy law passed by the Michigan Legislature during its last session is pro nounced by many to l>e the best of its kind. It marks the beginning of State inspection and supervision of our dairy industry. Under this law it is the duty of the State dairy couimissioner to in spect creamerias, cheese factories and farm dairies. He must give instruction at any time and place where he deems it advisable, and constantly work to secure a better quality and greater uni formity of dairy produce. , from time to time to publish a list of dealers who were deceiving the public j|le re#u|^ has been the catching of a lot of the unscrupulous varietà in the net A “black list” just published by the de partment contains the names of twenty- two firms, distributed from Boston to Denver, and from Minneapolis to Atlan ta. One firm adulterated its alfalfa seed as much as 45.73 per cent, but the aver age adulteration was about 15 percent. The department will examine any sample package sent it, provided the packages are originally sealed by the seller. The Chicago Woman’s Club has under taken the task of cultivating a taste for white butter and proposes to open a campaign for that purpose in the fall. The club was aroused to active warfare against colored butter by a newspaper article telling of the death of a farmer’s boy as the result of eating some of the dye with which the butter was being colored at the farm. The truth is that the coloring of butter is a senseless cus tom, nothing but a fad or fashion, that has no basis in common sense. It is just as good when left uncolored, if it is right in other respects, and gains nothing by the coloring except an imaginary impro vement in looks. If it gets its color natu rally from the cow, all right, but if,when churned, it is white, let it alone and use it that way. Of course, it will take some time to do away with the siily notion that butter is not good unless of a golden color, but in time even the stupidest may be taught better. Butter should not sail under false colors any more than people. Artificial coloring is a fraud to start with, and by covering a poorer article with good looks as its only recommenda tion encourages that sham and false pre tenses which is all too common in com mercial transactions. Let us have whiter butter and whiter consciences. Recent Experiments in Europe. By spreading currents from a statical electrical machine over a plot of grow, ing carrots Prof. Lemstroem of Helsing fors, according to B. Tolksdorf, in the Leipsic Illustrirte Zeitung, has increased A good wa> to test the individual the yield by 39 per cent during the first cow is to get a number of the drugists* year and 90 per cent in succeeding years, ounce test tubes. They cost about a as compared with similar plots not elec nickel each. Take a block of wood and trically treated. On small parcels of bore holes in it the size of the tubes, one land experiments with potatoes, the for each tube Fill the tubes with milk currents being generated in the earth by from each cow, keeping record so you means of copper and zinc plates sunk at will know which is which. Set in a cool intervals and connected by insulated place for twelve hours, and the amount wires above the growing vines, have of cream upon each tube will be a fail recorded an increased yield of from 69 index of the cow’s place in the herd to 100 per cent. The large harvests of Of course, this is not as accurate aH the Spitzhergen and Finland—more bounti Babcock test, but it is far less trouble. ful than in districts lying much further It takes all the resources of the dairy south—have been attributed by many man to keep his cows from falling off scientists to the electrical influence of now . The cows should be made as com the aurora borealis. These phenomena fortable as possible. During very hot occasioned the artificial experiments of weather it will pay to keep them iti the Prof. Lemstroem, which tend con barn during the daytime, letting them clusively to show that the action of out on the pasture during the night. Of electricity is betieflciai to growing and course, this will make extra work, for Preaching vs Publishing. ripening vegetation. the cows should be given some green When the gospel was first preached it Explanations are variously given, feed while they are stabled. The water appeared to be the only way to com some referring the cause to electrolysis supply should be pure and the watering municate an idea. Only the learned of nutritious salts in the ground, thus trough should be kept clean, We all could read, besides an epistle required a rendering them assimilable by plant know that we should do these things, commission to deliver it. Now the roots. Olliers bold that electricity in but the trouble is, in our rush of other average man is looking for something creases the osmotic activity of the plants, work, we are apt to neglect the best that is worth reading about. the sap flowing more abundantly under money makers on the farm. D jii ’ i The expense of publishing over preach its influence. In certain vegetables ami neglect the cows. ing is reversed. If we employ a minister grains experimented upon, copious There have been some curious de. to preach the gospel we must first have watering was needed to prevent I he velopments recently in the milk business an expensive building, and he must first plants from withering under current. have gone through a college and theo Possibly the better irrigation thus pro and one cannot foresee just what the outcome is to be. It looks as though logical course, then if you can congre vided would in itself largely explain the they may be as radical a revolution from gate a dozen men to hear him, after success of the experiments, even though present methods as the separator ac publishing his arrival and sermon or no electricity had been applied. Savants complished in its way. One of the subject for weeks before hand, we have have sometimes been made to appear things discovered is that milk drawn done well. A publication goes into the very silly through some «.uch obvious from the cow by the milking machine homes of men* they don’t have to put on explanation of the results of their labors. and packed at once through tubes or 3 boiled shirt and an expensive suit of But the effect of electricity upon the pipes in bottles w ithout coming iu con- clothes, and feel like a pig in a poke, atmosphere, setting free a constituent tact with the air will keep unchanged and come to the time of the ringing of a portion of nitiogen, which is the sub for many days, and so can be delivered bell, but in their leisure they can pick stance of all plant foods, has long been a subject of scientific observation. Ina to city trade absolutely pure and un up a paper and see what is published. changed in taste, and that the present The Independent church has but one thunder shower the raindrops catch the process of sterilization, etc., be done idea to ad vance, and that is the gospel nitrogen freed by the lightning in the away with. For infants and invalids, of the kingdom of God. This is both form of nitric acid, which is an efficient as well as those in health, this insurance published and preached in two ways, fertilizer. It is quite possible that Prof of milk free from disease germs is of one as a reward for the just, the other a Lemstroem is merely imitating thia tremendous i mportance. free gift to the penitent. natural process in his 1 Ielsingfois ex If a man is seeking the kingdom of perimehts Exchange. A good deal of discussion has often been provided as to the cost of bringing God, a publication that attempts to un A Few Pointers. up a heifer calf. Mr. (.’lark, of the ravel this mystery will be welcome, if not he can pass on to something else, but Laws for the compulsory eradieati >n Alabama experiment statien, has re if we go to church and the preacher is corded data. The record covered the of certain weed« are now in force in not wound up topreach the gospel, there period from birth to maturity, approxi twenty-five states and territories. mutely two years. One of the calves, is no alternate but to take a miserable Somebody who is very exact in his which weighed at birth fifty-six pounds, nap. statement sax s the sunflower bears 4000 To attempt to publish the gospel is no consumed during the first year of her seeds, the poppy 82,00 and the tobacco life 159 pounds of home milk, 273 pounds more imposing than to preach it. It plant 70,820. of skim milk, 66 pounds of bran, 224 appears strange, because we are not A Wisconsin farmer. who had some pounds of hay and was pastured for 161 accustomed to it. J. 0. G ove . Canada thistles on his farm, saj s he ex days. When she was one year old she Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. terminated them by rutting them off an had cost $12.86, and she weighed 435 This is a liniment, remarkable for its inch under the ground and giving them pounds. During the second year her »treat power over puin. It quickly allays a dose of common salt. rations were made up of sorghum hay. the excruciating pains of rheunialisin A record kept of the fruit produced silage, oat straws, corn stover and a and makes sleep and rest possible. For from an orchard, or even of each tree, little cotton seel and bran. The sale by Chas. I. Clough’s Drug Stole. Results of and comparing it with records of other pasturage period covered 224 days. The results on the farm, will show very cost of the feed was 9 09 for the second favorably for the trees as sources of year, she weighed at the end 665 pounds. profit. Thus the total cost of feed up to the time A writer in an exchange sam ahre<l<ie<i of maturity was $21.95. coi n fodder makes good feed, good lied, Veracious residents of Kankakee ding and good manure. Shred when county, Illinois, have found a new com. perlectlv dry and store under a rain plaint against the carp, now so plentiful proof roof, in not too great bulk and it1 in the rivers of Illinois. It is declared will keep all right. that the milk cows that wade in the If the bogs are crowded and the rivers, and the finest and moat piolitic weather is cold they will pack close to Jeiseys now come home with dry udders. gether at night for warmth, when pos An investigation soon showed the cause. sibly the one underneath may be crushed. Many farmers fenced in their cows and Two or three in a pen will thrive better thus saved the milk. Olliers more than a large number. thrifty worked a * heme that may yield Sheep will not drink ice cohl water un them a small fortune. It is said that less compelled. consequently they at they stretched nets over the udders of the times do without water as long as |H>esi cows and attached fish hooks to the nets. ble. The water for them should l»e When the carp came to denude the warmed, as it is essential for the ewes to bovines of theii lacteal thud they were drink a large proportion in order to pro caught. Each cow, on Che return home I at night, would bring flue strings of vide milk for the lambs. Ash. the sale of which adds handsomely “Mighty ns are steam and electricity to the income of the agricului ists. N. B. in the domain of industry,** »nvs Mr. —While reading this story, rvmenilier Edison, “they air but allows of the that it was sent out in the dog davs, I mightier power ol concentrated thought otherw ise known as “the silly season. ‘ as expressed in type and spread Irefote Like the war yarns brought into camp the world.’* Everybody knows tttht Mr, by the ’ reliable contraband' during the i Edison refers to the leading newspap. rs civil war, it may be classed under the j head of “ important, if true.” T. BOTTS, M. F. LEACH, Dealer in FRESH and CURED MEATS. LARD, HIDES, WOOL. Etc i in office. Taxes paid for nons Residents. Office opposite Post Office. Both phones. ^^7 H- COOPER, A ttorney - at -L aw , T illamook , O regon . Over 30 Years experience in the Business HARNES, COLLARSS, SADDLES, &C, OARL HABERLACH, Everything Needed in the Harness Line you will find at gkuteihcr ¿Kbuohiit, W. A. WILLIAMS Office across the street and north from the Post Office. Up to date Harness Shop. The only complete shop of kind in Tillamook county. I handle no shoddy goods, but prices will compare with those that do. Next door to T illamook C ounty B ank . Local Phone. ATTORNEY AT-LAW, H. GOYNE, A ttorney - at . L aw . The Best Hotel THE ALLEN HOUSE, J. P. flUUEfl, Proprietor Headquarters for Travelling Men. Special Attention paid to Tourists. A First Class Table. Comfortable Beds and Accommodation. Fir and Spruce Lumber. Spruce and Cedar Shingles. Cheese and Butter Boxes a specialty. Office : Opposite Court House, T illamook , O regon . W. SEVERANCE, A ttorney - at -L aw , T illamook O regon . H. UPTON, Ph.G.,M.D., P pysician and S urgeon . Office first door East of F. R. Beals’ office. K. R. BEALS, Orders for Lumber promptly attended to. REAL ESTATE, TILLAMOOK LUMBER COMPANY. F inancial A gent , Tillamook, Oregon. A. K. CASE, PROPRIETOR Tillamook Iron Works General Machinists & Blacksmiths, Boiler Work, Logger’s Work and Heavy Forging. Fine Machine Work a Specialty. OREGON. TILLAMOOK, ] )R P. J- SHARP, RESIDENT DENTIST, Office across the street from the Court House. Dr. Wise’s office. ^1^ SARCHET, T . The Fashionable Tailor. Cleaning, Pressing and Repair ing a Specialty. MAIL ORDER LIQUOR BUSINESS. Buy your Liquors from the Wholesale House Direct. We Want Your Business We can furnish all kinds of Wines, Whiskies, Brandies, Bin and Hum at wholesale prices. Send us your orders. We ship in plain cases and prepay freight. Read over our price list and mail us your orders. Monev refunded if goods are not satisfactory All orders will be treated strictly confidential. We ship nil our goods C.O.D . or you can make remittance with your order. All persons who have purchased pro. pertv Irom B I*. Hutchins' esta'e com FOLLOWS municate with the undersigned and save expense. B. P. H itchis «. J r ., 12 quarts Sheehan s Private Slock. Rye or Bourbon.......... Ysoo’ Gallon. $3.00 725 Hawthorne Avenue, Portland, 12 quarts r-.llamook Rve and Bourbon Ore. 12 quarts Delaney's Malt Whisker...... 12 quarts Gordon White Rte Whiskey House and Lot for Sale. 12 quarts Old Gold Bourbon Whiskey 12 quarts Crescent Rve Whiskey House and lot for sale, situated on the 12 quarts Old Port Wine....... . water front, adjoining Long's sawmill. 12 quarts Old Sherrv Wine .... 12 quarts Old Angelica Wine . Price *500. Address, J. W. Green, 390 12 quarts Old Muscat Wine.... Vancouver avenue, Portland, Ore. 12 quarts Old Madeira Wine ... 12 quarts Sweet Catawba Wine 12 quarts San.lnskv Port Wine.. Tax Notice. 12 quarts Old Tom Gin ................. The taxpayers of Tillamook County, I 12 quarts French Cognac.............. Oregon, are hereby notified that the last i 12 quarts California Grape Brandy half of th«*»r taxes for the year 19<»5, and , 12 quarts Stanford 3A Rve............... 11.00 levied in January. 19ofl. are non- pay able 12 quarts Rainier 3A Bourbon ................. 11.00 and will become delinquent on the first 12 quarts Monogram Cl. P S. Rye or Bourbon 12 no Monday in October, 190fl. at which time 12 quarts Rock and Rie ......................................... 0 00 interest at the rate of 12 per cent per 12 quarts Peach and Honey ............................ 6 00 annum will be charged tn sddition to lb 12 quarts Millview Whiskey, bottled in bond 10.00 percent penalty wlm-li said interest will Remember, we refund you vour ... ______________ • -• money ;------» and ----- repay freight both wavs if goods he computed from the 1st Monday in are not satisfactory. "e are exclusive wholesale dealers April. 1906. and sell our goods at wholesale prices. Nothing but the best. D ited at Tillamook, Oregon, Septem ber Udi, 19u6 Address nil Orders to il. C renshaw . Sheriff of Tillamook County, Ore. Store in Heins Photographic Gallery. JZ^OBERT A. MILLER, A ttorney - at -L aw , Land Titles, Land Office Busi ness and Mining Law. OREGON. PORTLAND, Room, 306 Commercial Building. Notice. WE Pain from a Burn Promptly Relieved by Chamberlain’s Pain Ba m. OFFER AS M. JACOB & GO 404 Street, Portland, LARSEN HOUSE, I Complete set of Abstract Book- “ Clean and Wholesome,” our motto. Wholesale; Liquor Dealers, Mr. Jatue* N. N k ' iio I hh , a nierchant and fuMtin.ister al Vernon, Vonn., make« The i fiscally dealer in seeds is as bad as the following Malemnnt: “A liitie child Washington Ore. But Cured by Chamberlain’s a mifk poisoner. Ixvausehe hits the great of Mu had Strain« was recently in great We a,.ort c.-e., if dr.irtd ; you can take a. m.ny botde. of any khrd .. you wish Colic, Cholere and Diarrhoea cause of agriculture a mortal blow right pnin fr-nn a burn on Ihe hand, and aa cold apt.hcalion only incrraaeil the in- . Remedy. at the beginning. A man can raise no llainntatkm. Mr. Sirauv come to me for “When my boy was two years old lit* crops from seeds that have been imsrep« —nuethiiig to «top the little one's fain. ! had a very severe attack of Imwel com resented. A dishonest seed dealer, there- , From the many liniments I carry in Centrally Located plaint, but by the 11*' of Chamberlain’s Rates, $1 Per da *.-.a to use Chamber- , ^ore. should be hunted out of the coun* I stock. I advintMl him Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy ham s Pain Balm, i and the first appiica-1 we brought him «»lit all right." says j i trv like a mad wotf. He should not he i lion drew out ilie inflammation and gave ----» Maggie Hickox. of Midland. Mich. This , a I lower! to du business a single minute imr^-Jiat» relief, I have Used thia hni , remedy can be dvpvndod upon in the j aiter being found out. but held up to the meiit myself and recommend it very I in«x**t severe cases. Even cholera in | often for cuts, burns strains and lame | LARSEN, Proprietor. fantum is cured by it. Follow ihe plain •corn of all men. Congress at its last hack, and have never known it to damp. OREGON printed direction»* and a cure is certain. session authorised the department of pdnt." For sain by Chas. I. Cluu^h a •‘or »ale by Ubas. i Clough a Ding Store agricult „ lure to examiuc allalia seeds and | biug Store. The Best Hotel in tbe city. No Chinese Eraployed. WAS A VEhY SICK BOY A ttorney - at -L aw • M. H. TILLAMOOK, LATIMER BROS., BIBBER IBB BlIBDSEStEB SHAVING, HAIR CUTTING SHAMPOOING, ETC Elcetric Baths nicely fitted up. Ooodfor persons su<Tering with rheumatism. STAND FIRM Wien you buy an OILED SUIT SLICKER 1 or demand Its the easiest and only way to get the best Sold everywhere kill ™, couch ... CURE TH. LUNCS >n Dr. King’s New Discovery /’»0NSU8PT10M oiqj>w«-