9 Tillamook Headlight, December 10, 101a the cheese scoring CONTEST. Good Intere«.' Taken-List of Prize Winners. The cheese scoring S“‘ urday, which was arranged by the Sm-k County Creamery Asso- T n created considerable inter- .......... — "■« cooperative cheese factories, and the dairymen. The commutes h«v- ing the matter in hand was com- posed of George Williams, Car Haberlach and F. W. Christensen «nd everything was carried out aatiafactorily. There were a large number of entries and beside hie there was a nice display of Tilla- wock’s famous cheese in the rooms of the Tillamook Commercial C lub, where the contest was held To make it pleasant for th- visitors and those interested in the contest while the scoring was proceeding the committee had arranged a pro­ gram. President Shrode, of the Commercial Club, was the first to speak, and his remarks were con­ fined to a speech of welcome and commending the cheese scoring coutest. Mrs F. W. Christensen played an instrumental piece, Mrs. D. A. Mackenzie rendered a vocal solo, Mrs. L. L. Baker gave a reci­ tation and James Hiner also render­ ed a solo, all of whom received hearty applause, and as the scorers had not completed their task they were called upon again to entertain the audience, which they did in their usual pleasant and pleasing way. It was (no easy task that the scorers had to perform, for the rea eon that the make up of the cheese is more uniform, especially the factories which are under the super­ vision of F. W. Christensen, the in­ spector and cheese grader The scorers were E. T. Judd, Deputy llairy and Food Commissioner; O. Friedli, of Portland, and C. Christ­ ensen, formerly a local cheese mak­ er. Mr. Judd was the speaker for the afternoon and touched upon many matters pertaining to dairy­ ing. He made a point of sanitary conditions about the barn, recom­ mending that they be well lighted and ventilated, remarking that no cheese maker could make good cheese if the milk was not taken care of and cooled off immediately or contaminated with germs which originated from the manure pile or other putrid matter about the farm or barn. That is where itnprove- meta were needed, and aa it looked as though the whey would be all disposed of to one concern before long the bacteria from the whey tanks would be eliminated. With better sanitary conditions he did not see why we could not make a better grade of cheese tnsn that produced in Wisconsin. He also recommended that when grass be­ comes scarce it was a good thing to have good fodder, such as kahl and roots to supply the shortage of green feed, for in that way it would keep up the flow of milk. Mr. Judd paid the dairymen a compliment for the manner in which they had organized for the marketing of their cheese. The ten receiving the highest «cores, each of whom received a prize, were as follows: Points. Tkre* ?‘ver8 Creamery Co., John Pennock, maker, cup.. Clover Leaf Creamery Co., 96 66 Harry Thomae, cup ....... 94 05 Long Prairie Creamery, ¿1. M. Beberatien, cup 93 80 Adnan T?ir> Associaiion; s«mm p Tlnner’ clock......... 93 50 ¿rtx-M ? necrea,,,er y A1 Tihan.^i PP'’ 8Uit ca9e ■ • • • 03 45 Christa Creamery, Andrew bhpstensen, suit case b^erroorfe,mery’ Hu«h liar’ 93 33 r’roo‘ Paint .. 93 25 h L >rer Creainerv. i. \v P1“ “ merchandise 93 25 N KerhV .'ey Creamery, N. Maple liJib?-rrel cen)ent.... 9i 41 Fora « Creamery, Guv h°fd» fountain pen . . 7 91 83 »««ENTS BBST HOUR ls> a Prize Winner. «»6X2^° £°°kin«< ^hool re- ’« prize. fo" /*alla Walla all the dWhnnt. werT"» P'M a”d ^«»enf. Best fi 7°° 7 U’ er " of W WAntB?J’ere:. L’yer Cake Cake' Boyer Ave-i Who’s Who in Panama ? Thou hast given a banner to them Sir Edward Grey’s officia! com­ that fear that it may be displayed munication of the British protest because of the truth P«a. 00. 4. of proposed Panama Canal regula­ Time of Prayer—Noontide each day. tion and control has reached It is always noontide somewhere» been taken and aero«« the wakening continents» Washington and From shore to shore, somewhere up in cabinet council. No de­ up in cision was reached in the cabinet, our prayers are rising evermore. Our Badge. A knot of white rib­ meeting, the paper being referred bon; our methods, preventive, edu­ to Secretary of State Knox, who is cational, evangelististic, social and to prepare a formal answer which legal; our watchwords, agitate, edu­ will be made the subject of cabinet cate and organize. consideration. Washington dis­ Why do we wear the white rib­ patches say that the tone of Secre­ bon 7 It ia the beautiful badge cf tary Knox’s reply will be as pacific an organization, heaven born, to promote a holy cause, It is the ns is that of the British protest. bond of fellowship among our mem­ The fact is hardly worth stating, bers. It ia a privilege of which we are sihce it can go without the saying that a belligerent exchange of proud. It is a plea for purity of life. opinions is not warranted in | It is a pledge of total abstinence. the diccussion of a question It preaches the prohibition of the which, however, diverging may be liquor traffic, It proclaims the gospel of peace. the points of view from which it is It is a prayer for home protection. seen by the participants, can never It predicts a safe path for chil­ result in b-lligerent action. dren’s feet. It is an emblem of patriotism. The pointe of view in thiB case It is a protest against the drink certainly diverge widely. The pro­ test is against the action of the habit. It is a promise of hope to the United States Government which temp’ed and help to the suffering. It prophecies the coming of will admit the passage, through the canal, free of tolls, of vesse s en­ Chtist’e kingdom in all hearts, all homes and all governments. gaged in our Atlantic and Pacific Let us wear the white ribbon and coastwise trade The British min­ follow its gleam. ister makes an excellent use of poor The Bible on civic duty. "Am I my brother’s keeper 7” is material. Predicting his entire case upon the assumption that diBcrimi the whimpering cry of Cain. It is cry of every moral coward in nation in the laying of tolls is ex­ the the world. Every man who sets pressly provided against in the his heart to do wrong to his brother tlay-Pauncefote treaty of a few or his neighbor straight way dis­ years prior to our acquirement of claims any responsibility for hie brother’s welfare and justifies the sovereignity in the canal zone, he cruel wrong which he does him with proceeeds in reason that to levy the cowardly cry of Cain. The in­ commerce passing­ dividual who manufactures, sells, tolls upon th'ough the canal in all foreign or in any other way provides in­ drink to his neighbor ships, while leaving vessels plying toxicating knowing that it will do him both in the coastwise trade of the United physical and moral harm, does it States to pass free, would tie to in the spirit of C«in. For his wick­ place the cost of building the canal, ed net there is no defense, so he de­ fiantly repudiates his obligation to and of its maintenance, upon do good, and not harm to his neigh­ foreigners. What we gather from bor, and puts himself forever in the Sir Edward’s contention on this class of the first murderer. Taken point is that he thinks the accumu­ from the final chapter in the great Does the Bible stand for lating tolls levied upon foreign debate, prohibition and abstinence. By commerce uflinp the canal would, Rev. E. L. Eaten, D. D. and Geo. in time, equal the entire interest G. Brown. and sinking funds of the debt. The quickest way to excite Demo­ Since the debtB and the interest must be paid, and our government cratic incivility is to mention civil has net only made itself responsi­ service. ble for the payment but has done An up to date navy is urged aa a all of the work, that contention ia war preventive, and it ia undoubt­ tantamount to one that, in financial edly one of the beet, if not at the enterprises, preferred stockholders, head of the list. paying more for their shares, are Last yeaa Japan spent $600,000 on entitled to no guarantees not en­ military aeroplanes, the United joyed by the holders of common States $11,000. Carry the news to coming in at a much lower price. It the Democratic House. would put first mortgage bond­ Some of the big European power« holders on a par with the holders speak of themselves aa peacemak­ of debenture bonds. Acknowledg­ ers, Their increasing army and ing the debt, and the necessity of navy budgets don’t exactly look it. payment, the pith of the British Rear Admiral Wainwright re­ position is that those who have marks that “Many believe in the created the tangible property from navy as something that gratifies the proceeds of the debt, and are the pride but has little to do with charged with its administration, the real business of life.” The shall have no compensating ad­ Democratic House omits even the vantages for their greater bur­ pride. dens and responsibilities. Mr Carnegie is said to have plan­ This new and rather strange idea is worth a closer ana lysis. The pro- ned a final gift of$475,000.000 through est of the foreigners against build­ his philanthropic trustees. This ia ing the canal, and carrying its in­ about the size of Uncle Sam’s in­ terest charges, made by Sir Edward vestment in the Panama Canal, Grey estops them, equitably, from which also suggests peace on earth, protesting against the management good will to man. of the property by o’.hers who have Secretary of the Treasury Me- assumed all the risks end brought Neagh, in the annual report of the success out of the failures of such operations of hie department, just foreigners as had once undertaken transmitted to Congress renews the task. It can be said, further, his earlier urging of an improved that since there was no obligation banking system. There can be no upon foreigners to build the canal, denial of the necessity of improve­ neither is there any obligation upon ment in the present system, and them to use it. That they will not the secretary can not even be use it unless they find its use pro charged with exaggeration in say- fitable to them is as plain as the -ing that the Federal Government, various tricks and devices through so long as the present faulty sys­ which, Sir Edward Grey says, the tem is retained, will be responsible discriminatory toll regulations for the commercial, financial and could be avoided There is no industrial disasters which flow from question for submission to The panics. But the desirability of hav­ Hague Tribunal, which Sir Edward ing a better system being generally names as a last resort, unless it disappoing for the business world might be the interpretation of the to find that the secretary sees only Hay Pauncefote treaty, which we the end but not the means. The have a right to interpret for our- present system promotes and de­ selves according to the dictates of veloper panics, he declares, but he equity and sense, and in pursuance seems to offer nothing more than of many precedents in English glittering generates by way of history. providing a better one. The revi­ sion of the law, he says, should, much bithulithic laid aside from affording flexible and elastic currency and reserves, IN ALBANY DURING bring the banks into an organized SUMMER. co-operation and provide for a central agency through which they Season’s Contracts Will Ag­ can work free of political or trust gregate Sixty-three Blocks. control. A lbany , Oregon, Dec. 11, 1912.— Over 60 blocks of Bitulithic Pave­ ment are lieing completed this year. ” a’ ««me. 1 he people are much pleased with ru ln<1'’rvd.euPlaLn* »ravel bitulithic, a. used, and are Hr«,, p]La,’h t Oct '12. looking forward to a long period I*arSD. i °rt‘and: Bitulithic has h«t !or.' o first prile free from rCpaitB an excellent reputation for wearing. Albany is now on a par with any ^‘-•Vkt8-!. Taxes paid for non- Residents. GIFTS FOR LADIES. GIFTS FOR MEN. L Tillamook Block. Botto phones. C arl haberlach , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Tillamook Block. EORGE WILLETT, A t rOkNKY-AT-LAW. Tillamook Commercial Bnildiug T illamook O rkgon T. BOALS, m . d . OREGON. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Sherry Wine................... .............. 35c. BOTTLE GOODS. TILLAMOOK. Angelica Wine.............................. ” 35c. Zenfendel Wine per quart 35c. Pebbleford, bottled in bond, Tokey............................. per quart 40c. Tillamook Block. per bottle....................................... $1 50 Claret......................... per quart 25c. Clarke’s Pure Rye, bottled in White Grape Juice......................... 75c. bond, per bottle.............................. 1.25 Local Beer, quart, 3 bottles for 50c. O d Crow, bottled in bond, per Domestic Beer, qt., Shuttles for 75c. M. KER RON, bottle ............................................... 1.50 Hermitage, bottled in bond, per Special Prices for boitle ....................... 1.50 Family Trade PHYSICIAN &. SURGEON Cyrus Noble, 3 Crown ................ 1.50 O T. O ," bottled in bond, per Keg Beer.....................15 gallons $5.75 Tillamook Block, bottle .................................................. 1.25 Keg Beer.................... 10 gallons 4.00 , , Kentucky Dew, H gal., bottled Local bottle Beer, fldoz. quarts 10.00 in bond .. . ............................. 2.15 Local bottle Beer, 10 doz. pints 11.00 Tillamcok, Oregon Kentucky Dew, full pint, bottled Domestic Beers. in bond ......................................... 75 John Dewar & Sons, Old Scotch Bud wiser Beer, 6 doz. quarts $15.00 Whiskey.................................... 1.5G Budwiser Beer, 10 dozen pints 18 Co c. hawk Black & White, Old Scotch Old style Lauger Beer, 10 doz pt 11.00 Whiskey ........................................ 1.50 V.O.P., Old Scotch Whiskey... 1.75 WINES. Sandy Macdonald’s Old Scotch White Port, Old Monk Brand, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Whiskey......................................... 1.75 $1 00 per gal. Hunter Baltimore, Rye Scotch Port Wine......................... I.00 per gal. Whiskey ......................................... 1.50 Sherry...........................................1.00 per gal. Canadian Club................................. 1.50 Claret............................................. 75c. per gal. BAY CITY, OREGON. I. W. Harper..................................... 1.00 Angelica....................................... 1.00 per gal. Harvester Old Style........................ 1.00 Zenfendel......................................1.25 per gal. Monogram......................................... 1.00 Tokey............................................ 1,25 per gal. R. BEALS, Kentuck Dew................................... 1.00 Billie Taylor, full quart............ 1.25 WHISKEYS. Coronet Dry Gin........per bottle 1.00 Monogram ...................... per gal. $5.00 A.V.H. Gin................... per bottle 1.75 REAL ESTATE, Corn Whiskey. , per gal. 4.00 Gordon Sloe Gin... .per bottle 1.75 White Harvester Old Style . . per gal. Gordon Dry Gin .... per bottle 1.25 McBrayer. 13years old.per gal. 4.25 F inancial A gent , 6.00 Rock and Rye...............per bottle 1.00 Echo Spring ................ per gal 4 25 El Bart Gin ..................................... 1 25 Grove Rye. per gal. 2.75 Tillamook, Oregon, Virginia Dare Wine . per bottle 75c. Chestnut Dew..........per gal. 2.25 Port Wine...................... per quart 35c. Kentuckey Alcohol. ............................ per gal. 4.00 Cornet Dry Gin...............per gal. 4 00 , H. GOYNE, AT BILLY STEPHENS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER, COR. 1st and 1st AVENUE E A ttorn by - at -L aw . Office : Opposite Court House T illamook , O regon . The Secret Terror. The haunting fear of sickness and helplessness is the secret terror of the working man. Health is his capital Kidney diseases ear? a man's strength and vitality They lesson his earning capacity. Foley Kidney Pills bring back health and strength by healing the disease. They are the beet medicine made for ki iney end bladder troubles. The genuine are in the yellow pack age. Refuse any substitute. Lamar's Drug Store. Croupy Coughs and Wheesy Colds. Tne quickest simplest way to rid the children of dangerous croupy coughs and wheezy stuffy colds is to give them Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound. It gives almost in­ stant relief and stope a cough promptly. It sooths and heals. Contains no opiates. Lamar’s Drug Store. _ _______________ J~y. P. J. SHARP, RESIDENT MM with the problem of.buyfng Harness you will find it distinctly’ ndvanta geoun to come and do your select Jng here You will get the best qualities, the most thorough «.nd conscientious workmanahip. and b« charged the most reasonable price* A Night of Terror. We can supply single or double Few nights are more terrible than Sets or any single article that yoa that of a mother looking on her may be|in need of.; | ~ child choking and gasping for breathe during an attack of croup, and nothing in the house to relieve it. Many mothers have passed nights of terror in thia situation. Next Door to Tillamook County Ikwik. A little forethought will enable you to avoid all this. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy io a certain cure for croup and has never been known to fail. Keep it at hand. For sale by all dealers^______ W.A, Williams & Co Dr. Wm. Sadler, author of “The Cause and Cure of Colds,” says that common colds should be taken seriously, especially when they "hang “hang on.” Foley's Honey and Tar Co Compound is a reliable house­ hold medicine fur coughs a nd colds, equally effective for children and for grown persona. Take it when you feel a cold coming on. It will avert danger of serious results and cure quickly. No harmful drugs, Umar’« Drug Store. flow’s Th!« ? W« offer Hcsnaan Donvaaa H bwjib for any caaeLf Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Care. P. F CHENEY * co., TcMo. O. We. the underlined have known P. I. Chaney for the laat 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all bualne«« transaction« and flnanclally able tn carry out any obllnatlona made by hla flrm. NATIONAL RANK OP COMMRRCB, Toledo, O. Hall*« Catarrh Care In taken InUrnallv actin« directly npon the blood and mu ♦Q”* aarfaeea of the avatem ’»«»Imoni «1« 7S c»nt" per bottle «01.1 by all trrngglata fake Hall'a Family Pllla f ,r constipation DE.4T1ST - 1 t Office across the street iron the Court House. Dr. Wise’s office. a I SARCHET, » The Fashionable Tailor. C.eatiing, Pressing and Rcpai. ing a Specialty. St »re in Heins Photographic Gallery. • J. CLAUSSEN, LAWYER, JkutRcher Jlbüohixi. 213 Tillamook Block, T illamook REEDY, O rkgon . D.V.M., VETERINARY (Both Phone«). Tillamook Oregon A Morning Reminder. You awake with a mean, twstv taste in the mouth, which remsxw you that your stomach is in u bad condition. It should also remix! Su that there is nothing so £ od r a disordered stomach aa Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets. They build up ihn •yitmi, awfet nalu'V Io roclore natural conditions, aad aro »« ITMtl» in their action that on» barJtyraaL (■M a medicine waa taken. Chamber«, o'* arssold avsrywbsrs. Pries *