Fighting a Railroad By M. QUAD C op yrigh t, 1916, by the M cClure N ew sp a p er Syndicate. When the surveyor» for the B. and B. railroad reached within a mile of the town of Scoville they were stopped by the owner o f a farm, who threatened ' them with an action for trespass if they set foot on Ills land. it was old Ransotne who had lived on that farm since he was born aud was now over sixty years old. Boy and man, he had been known us stlugy aud mean, und no one had ever dealt with him a second time. His w ife was about like him in her disagreeable way. The two seldom or never disagreed with each other, but they disagreed with everybody else. The town o f Scoville wanted that railroad aud wanted it built at once, but there was old John blocking the way and his old w ife backing him up. It must cross ills eighty acre farm to reach the town. The surveyors argued und coaxed, but it was of no use. The railroad Anally guarded its sur­ veyors and the line was run. but that was only the beginning o f the tight It collected its forces and began the grading. Old John was out there with his gun and his w ife was there with a club, but the lusty men laughed ut them and carried them o!T the scene, and In a few weeks there was the hooting and tooting that the oi l couple dreaded to hear. They would not sell, and the railroad waited for them to propose some sort o f settlement There was a highway about u quar­ ter o f u mile to the south o f the Iljtn- soine farm, and the new railroad cross­ ed it at a level. The soft earth was soon gullied out by the wheels of the wagons, and this left the tracks three, or four inches above the surface. When old John observed this be yoked up his oxen and hitched them to his wag­ on and went after a load of wood. When he returned with it to the cross­ ing he stuck there. The oxen could not pull the wagon across the rails. The old man sat down to patiently wait for a train to come along. One appear­ ed In sight in about cn hour and found Its progress blocked. It took all the train hands and some o f the passen­ gers to boot to get that wagon across the track. There was fuming and threatening, but old John was very quiet and calm. He repeated this per­ formance once a day for a week. Then the railroad put down planks and the scheme was defeated. “ Well, w e'll have to try some other trick,” said tlie old folks to each other. And as a result o f their planning they went out at night with a big pail of soft soap and smeared the rails for a distance o f thirty rods. The next train that came that way did not whizz past; it stood still and whizzed, and it iook the best part o f an hour nnd a barrel o f sand to make the wheels go round again and have n grip on the rails. Old John was arrested for this soapy trick, but they could prove nothing against him, and he was discharged from custody. A fte r this a new at­ tempt was made to bring about a set­ tlement. but it was doomed to failure from the start. Then came another adventure. Old John cut the grass in his meadow, nnd while drawing it to the barn to store aw ay he drove across tlie track at a point on his own farm and a wheel somehow came off the wagon and dumped hay and vehicle In a grand heap. There was Just time to get the oxen out o f the way when a locomotive o f a freight train plunged Into the mess. H ay end splinters flew over half the county, and the whole train was derailed at a cost o f many thousand dollurs to the coini>au.v. There were two lawsuits begun im ­ mediately, one by the company to make the old man pay damages and one by Old John to collect the worth of a wagon and a ton o f bay. The rail­ road folks could not show any scheme on his part aud was the loser in its suit A Jury also held that an en­ gineer who would slam bang into a load o f bay in broad daylight should be held responsible, and Old John got about throe times the value o f the property destroyed. By and by when the pumpkin season had come old Mr. Rausome kindly permitted a passenger train to run into a wagonload o f them—that is. his oxen stopped to rest when the wagon was halfway over the track. H e was heard shouting at them at the top o f his voice and seen to flourish his gad in an ex­ cited manner, but he was forced to es­ cape to save his own life. Pieces of those pumpkins were picked up miles away, and a week nfter the wagon was wrecked again, nnd one o f the oxen was converted into fresh beef. Here was groundwork for another lawsuit, and the jury decided that a^v railroad that would strive to lessen the pumpkin crop ought to pay for it right smartly. It is very probable that the old couple might have returned to the soft soap trick if they had been given more time, but fate willed it otherwise. They were coming home from a call on a neighboring farm, and it was a gusty, rainy night. As they approach­ ed the crossing they saw the light o f a locomotive approaching, but defiantly kept on their way and were struck nnd hurled into a field nnd both instantly killed. No one in Scoville was mean enough to say they were glad o f it. but the B. and B. railroad saw its chance and moved quickly. Before it could be sued by the heirs it went into court against itself and was legally permit­ ted to settle the claim for $5,000. They say that the ghosts o f old Ran some and his w ife haunt the farm. Hard to Tell. “ I see your son is home from col­ lege, Mr. Jims. Is he developing well?” “ Can’t hardly tell y e t He's only had his moving picture camera a week.” — Baltimore American. Under New Management THE "GREATER OREGON" W ith new buildings, better equipm ent, and m nnr addition « to It* faculty, the University o f Oregon w ill begin Its forty-first year, Tues­ day, Septem ber IS , teie. Special train in g I,. Commerce, Journalism , A rch itectu re,L aw , M edicine,Teaching. L ib ra ­ ry W o rk , M usic, Physical T ra in in g and Pine Arts. L a rg e and strong departm ents o f L ib e r­ a l Education. L ib ra ry o f m ore than AS.OOO volum es, f i f ­ teen b u ild in gs fu lly ««n ip p e d , tw o splendid gym nasium s. Tuition P ro «. Dorm itories fo r m en and fo r wom en. Expenses Lowest. W rite fo r free catalogs, addressing R egistrar UNIVERSITY OF OREGON EUGENE, OREGON PROFESSIONAL CARDS F. R. BEAU Tillamook Abetine* Company REAL ESTATE Tnoa. Ptnwn oaarwrn eise on VMS» W rit« for Literature. C< m Dining Room run a « Family Style Meala 25c. Rooms SO and 73 Gents, Special Rates by the Week. Pacific Meat & Produce Co. (R . D. Werechkul, Prop.) . ahnm or TiLuaMOOie co pw tt * ORBBON. TILLAM OOK, T IL L A M O O K C IT Y . T.H.GOTNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW Conveyaous&ch Etc. Opp. Court Hoorn. F W. ORWBON WILLIAM» I R E L IA B L E H AR N E S S M A K E R 9 Hkrness aud Saddlery É Pullman Tiras and Tube«— Beit Tillamook, Oca. * on earth. TffDmao ok, Oregon. • Tillamook Undertaking Co. R. N. H E N K E L , Proprietor. Night and Day calls promptly attended. Next Door to Jones-Ktiudson Furniture Store. T IL L A M O O K , - - OREGON FRANK TAYLOR, Notary Public CloTerdalc, Ore. _&!.__ ^J.1 __ C It pays to advertise in the Cloverdale Courier O regon S tate F air The Todd Hotel Tillamook, Ore. L S. HUSHBECK, Proprietor. w Salem, Oregon Sept. 25-30 ine. A r e Y o u G o in é ? A ll Trai n s Sto/) cut F A IR G R O U N D S LO W ROUND TR IP FAR BS W ill he on sale fro n t a ll sta tio n s in Oregon 8 c p t . 2 1 e t-3 0 th In e . The reta rli lim it is O c t . 4 th Phone ord«ra filled. Deliveries Ask locai ageat fot fare», train «ervice, etc. made North and South. Cash Paid lor Hides Phone, Shop. 13-S-6. Raa. 6-C-2 John M. icott, General Pasaenger Agent. Portland, Orefon. S O U T H E R N P/YGiriG