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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1891)
I >ll< u ■ inteu- TILLAMOOK. OREGON. FRIDAY. JANUARY 16 JgWN I OTS UOFESSIONAL CARDS. y. JOHNSON. M. 0. G. O. NOLAN, Real Estate AgBnt, Tillamook, Dre. aattdodr to Temper»»«« ÉBrtera. He handles his own property mostly and will sell choice town Tillamook, • Or exon. lotB cheap and on easy terms. w . a . WISE, questions. Now is the time to invest. DENTIST; NeW *et* of teeth made and gúnranteed. í IELPH, « in Post-offi« bull’ll«*. orkcon . T. MAUL8BY, Attorney-at-Law. DXPL'T V- 01S m I CT- A TTOKN K y , Judicial Districi.for Tillamook County LAUDE THAYER, Attorney-at-Law. mociated with McCain & Hurley in Circuit and Supreme Court business for Tillamook county. L. T. BARIN Arthur Stillwell, prop. ----------------- :0:l----------------- KEEP • ON ♦HAW Ben Wittick, a well known photog rapher of Albuquerque, N. M., has been visiting friends in Minneapolis, and to h’ i The Minneapolis Journal is indebt ed for a most interesting and accurate account of the Nava-Supai» of the Supai canyon Seine time ago he went to New settling nt Albnqnorqne. Being » Calibi), a Mexico, tnan of adventurous turn of mind he W ill S oon receive a took a trip up the cunyou and located : <UtUV9, the tribe in tile narrow, valley like iu- MAMMOTH STOCK closure between the mighty walls of I >0ba, (£tr. the Supai canyon Supai is a name r which Mr. Supai gave tile canyon him OK NEW GOODS, » in iM •pdf after having made a trip to the re Fresh Fruits and Barries in season. glen And always keep on hand . On reselling the canyon he found the Indians in the midst of a marvelously a full line of fertile valley, diminutive ns it is. where in connection. nil sorts of grains mid fruits grow in Groceries. Crockery, OREGON. rank profusion, where there are splendid « climatic influences nearly the twelve Glassware, School Books, Stationery, mouth through, and where nil that tends Clothing, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps and Notions. to build up physical powers is i;t baud Grand Central A Fine Line Of Dry Goods. He made investigations, too. into their language, their rites and ceremonies, their legends, and into all the phases of their present mid past history possible, mid lie is continued in the belief that Tillamook, Oregon. they are in no way allied to the Aztecs C. B. HADLEY, - Proprietor. He says, on tile contrary, that ns fur us can lie ascertained they are allied to tT.e Having just finished the Wallapai Most - Commodious an isolated tribe . The tribe is n most singular one. Their Rooms this side of Portland and • — >11« valley home has on either side great Furnished it with tw» if the ledges of rocks running up in benches Finest Billiard and Poti Tables thousands of feet In the valley are groves of cotton wood trees, mid a luxu JAMES A. RICHARDSON, PROP. in the Market, riant vegetation is seen on all sides. am paepa.ed to eaitertaitv my friend* in right There are about 245 or 250 in the tribe of TILLAMOOK, OREGON, the Supai They live absolutely alone ROYALSTYLE. They do not intermarry with other Call and see me when in the city. I have, also tri lies, neither do they mix with the scat tering white people of the regions round one ot the best TERMS: «1.00 A DAY, When they are in need of forage PUBLIC HALLS about. or food outside of that which they can This House is First-class in every Respect get in their own rich valley they sally In the Northwest for public entertainment. out. make their trudes or purchases mid F irst - class B arber S hop C onnected . . return home. They are monogamists, every man having one wife anil no more. f JTHEr' They do not live in a communal form either, but preserve the family in its in tegrity The men are a little above the average height, they me strong aud active, and they are noted for their skill in climbing the mountains mid in bring ---- Dealers in----- ing down the game they need. They are very shy aud suspicious of Indians from BILLIARD PARLORS, other tribes, and it is only by the most careful «nJ adroit mnan^thnt n white Bowling Alley in Connection. man can approach them and gain any information as to their life. The women The best wines and liquors in the market. are smaller in stature, very fond of TOILET ARTICLES AHD 9RUGGIST NOTIONS adornment and given to fantastic deco Jons Davidson, Proprietor. rations of their fnces. The Supai Indians appear to be far OLSEN 8 BLOCK, TILLAMOOK, ORF.. A GENERAL ASSORTMENT above many other tribes in morals. They look with scorn upon nny one who Of all goods usually kept in a well ap asks them questions ns to their married N P. ROBERTS, relations, bolding that this is no one's pointed Drug store constantly business but their own. and the fact that on hand. the woman of the tribe who goes wrong COjlTiy^CTO^ und BUILDER is subjected to the most pronounced neglect, and generally is put out of the way, is pretty good proof that they are possessed of a sort of simple, heroic vir Wagon Shop In Connection. tu*. .......t (f iáfiro anb OCCIDENTAL < HOTEL. . W. DRAPER IURNEY, BARIN A DRAPER, ArroRNXYSAT-LAW, IN CITY. ORF.OON. kperieuce as Register of the B hero recommend» us in our *ss before tho L and O ffice I or the Courts aud involving the practice in the G inbkal L and O ffick . BEST ACCOMMODATIONS IN THE CITY. B. BROCKENBROUGH, ATTORNEY AT LAW. fUte Special Azent of the General Laud Office.) OREGON CITY,. OREGON. Usme.t.ada, Pre-Emptions, aud Timber Laud Applications, a Specialty. Osrics: and Floor L amp Ovrtca B vilrin ». M-oOt» MISCELLANEOUS. DRUGS • AND> JLA RS change business. Kxchange on England, Belgium, Germany, Swede* and all foreign countries. TILLAMOOK, - - - OREGON. TRACTS AND LOTS For sale at reasonable prices and on Favorable terms. Location, best in the town of Tillamook. Q/ïeôcüpticiî> QompouiidtcL Anything they have not in stock will be supplied on short notice, arrangements having been made to that effect. Next door to the Temperance Parlor. NDRY | -------------o Washing gathered and delivered every week. Family washing and ironing, a spec ialty. Work done on short notice when desired. PHYSICAL CHARA CT ERISTICS. ^Ijop, Opposite (j. TILLAMOOK. OREGON. G\ 'Reynolds, PROPRIETOR. From TILLAMOOK To ? GARIBALDI ■ A V ¿L umber C ompany , pHOTO^ApHE^. ( I SAN F®ANCÏS130. ) ---------- DEALERS IN---------- AANDtALL+WAYtPOINTS^- I am rdnuing a rtr*t class A. No. 1 Sailboat from to T illamook and all way points. Call on JAMES A. RICHARDSON, Tillamook. pall, Tillamook, Dregon. Suits cleaned to order. LRSTIR HART, Qencral CABINETS Í 3( per doz. ALL OTHER WORK AT COR- RESPONDINGLY LOW % RATES. Tßerehandize, >> ©ALL and inspect MY WOI^K I Mr. Wittick found eleven of the nien totally blind. He believes this to be due to the splitting of the arrows when the bows were stretched too taut. Some of the women who would Is« seen sitting barefooted in front of their thatched roof houses have the most peculiar big toes that ever were seen on a human liv ing The toes were not so very large, but they were of abnormal width nt the ends In some cases the big too would be an inch and a half broad at the end and very flat and thin When Mr Wittick uud his party entered the canyon they found the Supai very gentle and hospitable in their aboriginal way. but very reticent at the same time. Proceeding down the canyon through the fertile valley. Hlong which was a slender stream of never failing water, the purest nnd sweetest in the land, they reached a magnificent waterfall, where the Bilrer stream plunges over n preci pice 257 feet in height, and falling in u stream of the rarest beauty down to the pool below Cottonwood trees were felled, laslft-d together and a ladder made tn sections, the whole seventy-six feet long, and down this the explorers climbed in their exit from the home of these strangely interesting semi-savage folk. The beautiful streum has been utilized by the Indians in irrigating those portions of the valley that were sterile, and it appear* that for centuries they have known of this method of aid ing nature. A Japanese Ntglit Rid.. We had now to take a long night ride, and at length we rushed out into the moonlight, onr fourteen runners appear ing and disappearing as we came in and out of the shadows in the long proves sion of our train. We whirled past the honses of the small town, indiscreetly close to the paper screens, lighted from within, against which were profiled the shadows of faces, sometimes with pipes or cups lift ed to their lipa ortho outlinesof coiffures piled tip on the head—all pictures more Japanese than their very originals; then between rounded hills on which stood masses of maple trees; then near to empty space« of water: then sank into dark hollows, at the Iwttoni of which a river ran ns fast the other way. 1 watched and looked ns long as fatigue allowed, but fell asleep in the uncom fortable hnruma, waked every now and then by some sudden jolt to my extended arm and head. Occasionally I had dreamy glances at what 1 remembur 03 a vast blue plain, with lofty colorless mountains at one side, and perhaps 1 saw glimpses of the sea The night air was cold in the hol lows after the sweltering day, and 1 found my arm and face damp with the dew. A Japanese poet would have said that it was but the spray from off the oars of some heavenly boat which sailed that night across ths starry Btream of the milky way. In the dawn we saw the white walls of the castle of the city of Osaka, and ran across its many bridges, nil silent in the morning. —John La Farge in Century. Where I* She? Where is that "divine perfection of a woman," entitled "the loveliest of her sex,” to be found? "There!" "There!" "There!” shout no end of enamoured bachelors, each [minting nt his heart’s idol. The husbands ¡ire less enthusias tic. for it isu lamentable fuel in uwtlietica that matrimonial familiarity modifies very materially the ante-nuptial opinions of the parties implicated with respect to each other. But almost every unmarried man with a malleable heart knows or has known some woman whom he re gards or has regarded as "the loveliest of her sex." Yet the superlative is ridiculous, for the simple reason that there exists no absolute standard of womanly beauty. The sculptor who shaped the Medician Venus thought ho had combined all the rarest physical charms of the sex in that remarkable work of art, and yet we hare heard it criticised us too short, too tall, too plump, too thin, etc. etc.; and a six- foot-four Vermonter who went to Romo to perfect his taste in vertu recorded in a ‘visitors’ register" there the unsenti mental dictum that "the figure is pretty good, wbat there is of it, but there isn’t more'n half enough." So that oven the statne which, weure told, "enehanta the world" is not everybody's paragon.— New Yoik Ledger. Smiled lu French» The late Judge Noyes had a remarka ble voice. It wns the voice of a man of tine physique, and its owner used it as skillfully ns a trnined elocutionist. Judge Noyes' voice was of remarkable timbre, and it was wont to be his boast that "give me an audience of 10,000 peo ple in the open air, and I'll make every one of them hear." When Gen. Noyes was minister to France his great voice, round and musical as a note from a bronze bell, wns the marvel of the French people. Lew Rosen, the playwright, was in Paris when Gen. Noyes came to repre sent the great republic at the French capital, and was engaged as French tutor for the American minister** family. Gen. Noyes had difficulty in learning French, and freely confessed it. One day Mr. Rosen called upon Henri Mar tin. tho famous French historian, and in the course of the conversation he mentioned Gen. Noyes’ difficulty in ac quiring French. “All," said the great writer, “Gen. Noyes does not need to learn to speak ze French language; he smiles ze French language."—Cincinnati Commercia I Gazette. Advantage* of Ini perfect Vision. Few people probably realize how rare, optically speaking, is n really perfect or Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps Views of Tillamook and vicinity for sale. normal eye among human iieings. Out All work guaranteed first class of 200,000 persons examined by German and Notions. Groceries, Crockery and in every re*|«ct. oculists only one was found who had normal vision, and lie, strange to say, Queensware. Doors, Windows of G all B ry One door south ei-. saw nothing, ns the generality of man Letcher's Jewelry Store -hi* kind see tilings. A star, for instance, to Lime, Hair and Cement. him was a perfectly circular figure, with TILLAMOOK,.................... OREGON. Hardware and no radiating points, and he seemed to TOGRAPHEF(S bo incapable of recognizing lines and Mrs. J. JOHNSON Nails. Miss L. J. RUGGLES projections essential to many geometri cal conceptions. LOWEST LIVING RATES. May not the myope and astigmatic Copying and Enlarging in Oil. Pastel, comfort himself, therefore, with the re flection that his vision, if in the strict Crayon India Ink and Water Colors, a sense defective, lias compensation* not specialty. Call and examine our work to be lightly disregarded? Is it not bet Srvnto N ear G. A. R. H all . ter to see tilings in a picturesque way, TILLAMOOK, • - OREGON with harsh outlines softened and with ——------------- r.-TG------ AN: variations in curves and angles in liar Wanted Something In III* ¡low. A man stepped up to the delivery win mony with one's sense of beauty, than to HEY have just received an immense stock of general yiLLAMOOK dow at the postofdee Sutnrday night be field rigidly to the letter of nature merchandise which they are selling at prices never be- and in a savage voice said: "See here, utid so find the external world an affair £JVERY STABLE yon fellows. I want my money l ack of blank monotony?—Boston Beacon. fore quoted in this part of the country. Hat«, Dr«»« Trimming» and a General You can't frail me thia way. "Whats Mueer** In Ufo. uble A«»ortment of Millinery Good». the trouble/' inquired th» clerk. "Wai. F or I nstance : Dr. John Hunter, the eminent surgeon, I hired on* of your gosh duraed boxes 15.00 per bbl. B est B rands C alifornia F lour adopteil a rule which may be recom We have just received a nice line of fall most two weeks ago and have not got n mended to all When a friend asked itOCK letter since I had it; but I aee most er oarefuHy cared for. goods, gall and see them. the other fellows that has boxes g«ts him how he had been able to acomplisb much in the way of study and discov O regon . aomethin' iu theirs. Give me t ack my so Stillwell & Eberman, T illamook . money. 1 say!" It was useler« to argue ery in lui busy life be answered: "My with him. so the clerk tol«l him there rule is deliberately to consider before 1 Propri stara bad been some mistake, and if he ralleil commence whether the work in practi around lab r Ins wouhl fin«! something tn cable. if it be not practicable 1 do not C. H. BODLE, TILLiMOIl, SAN FRANCISCO ANO WAT PORTS. the box. H.' went off satisfied, while attempt it If it be practicable I can ---- »^e, Proprietor of the^xx---- th» clerk filled the box with patent med accomplish it if I give sufficient pains to ■aku rtgilv trips about mry two walks, ths wtatkir Pirnlttlig. it. and having begun I never stop until iciu» circulars. — Belfast Age. «itti barber Shop. the thiug is done. To this rule 1 owe Th» fast sailing S t *. T bi - gkkz has been specially fitted up for carrying pn jjp Shaving, all ray succem in life."—New York Halr-outtln^| Old Oreiu»’* Depth- aeugers. Following are the rate»: jé Seafoam, At th* depth of about 3.500 feet ware* Ledger. In the lai CABIN PASSAGE • |1S. ROUND TRIP, are not felt The temp-ram.-« 1» the Shamnoo. ill mountains re* City styles, jg gul STEERAGE ng only a trifle from ’ho The best of 105 y run old. He to the burning sun <4* Freight. (General Merchandme) t-cl»»» shop in th» taut locality over and mu hand. This is I mile down the water hi r uMv. • ■ trial. Shop, one For further information af, Egg*. butter^ over a ton to the sqnar- iff b and chicken» <U^i y S ' gVTBAL« feet «ride were filled * ■old. to •vapumte' E. S ibley BATMtal LL TIMES. j In «vary •*». 1 he two io< id Central. . . O»roo» J g _ T. li « m ' ‘ ÿ* L. H Brown, i AMERICAN pO^lT CO. Ctu +MILLINERY> T h Some Interexting Fact* About the Nava- Supai* — They Live In a Stupendous Canyon tu New .Mexico—In Many Re spect* They »are Clvllixe«!. Billiard:-: Parlors, OREGON. - TOWN SURROUND TILLAMOOk, - . w. SEVERANCE, ACRE TRIBE ED BY A NATURAL WALL Shooting-Gallery urr Public and Heal Balate Conveyancer. It T. BURNEY REMARKABLE “Fool table! ATTORXEY-AT-LAW. TILLAMOOK, Conespozidence Izx-vited.. T A soiaa. THE RACKET store ‘Fine! i Hute anb ORFGON. ìllamook . No trouble to show property or answer emperance parlor, VERY QUEER INDIANS. rbserwllle DRESS-MHK1NG. Nd Nt A Natural Harr le Exten Slavery, as 1* w for its extensipu on both of whic* of cheap labor and which connff^Mkarv*i institution] tobacco qfl where ona< ably tilled d ly establish itself, will show that the Ap of luoumaina widens as we go ward tilft Pennsylvania until it occu pies nearly one-fifth of the southern states, extending southward so as to in clude half of Virginia and North Caro lina, a ronsiderable part of westeni South Carolina, much of Georgia, Ten- ueesce und Kentucky and a part of Ala bama. tn this section the character of thé soil and form ir the surfaoe and th* na ture of the climate make the land nn- suited for the extended culture of either tobacco or cotton. The result was slav ery never firmly established itself as an economic institution in nny part of this vast territory. Here anil there in thé more fertile valleys a few slaves were employed, but there nre counties in this area whore a slave was never held, and whore, to this day, a negro is so great a curiosity that jxxiple will journey mftei to Is'hold him. Th«‘ natural result of this distribute was that the south were so motives from When the rebellion occu pnlachian country was a disaffection toward the Cou vaijed: to a great ox tent the men cast their lot with the north, or at leant gave their sympathie» to the Federal «»use. Tile pco'ples of eastern Kentucky nn«l Tennessee and western Virginia—»nd generally thoso of western North Caro-" lina as we!l--recrnite«l the ranks of thé Federal iirmy.—Professor N. 8. in Scribner's. Donr.ld is a little boy who fin delight in tho society of his [iota, lens are his treasures, and even a furry aud weather I caten donkey i him such an affection that ho whole day when his father buy the little beast of bn most people, however. Donal line between what is worthy tion an l the coin which is spu On«1 <lny nil old lady from a tng town ca’iic to «’inner, uml tn self very agreeable to the little first lie swuied to take a great f her. but. ns hi» mother noticod. t the imcst's invitation to Visit some in lilTcronce. "Don't yon want to go h day with Aunt Relwwx'aF asked uia that night when Donald was in cot. "Don't know M 1 do." was the b reply. "But I heard her tell you she beautiful great cut. und that yon play with It." Raid Donald "That's nil v scornfully, "bij kept on talking after ull!" "Not a real cat?" "No: only u tortoise * Companion. It.pldly Altulr.eil Wealth The rec« ally removed president of the Argentine Republic was three years ago; r.t the time of his election, n poor lawyer'. |s>or in attainments uh well as in purw. In fact he wits not wo. .h, nil told, $2.C0<1 when lie was imide president, un.l nftt-r getting the benefit for three year» of it |.',0,«>00 salary he is now intmensidy wealthy # This spe;«:s well for the perquisites bi a good office, but it is true of «‘very office in prtqiortion to its (mpKtnace. Anything or anybody in the republk' can be bought, the only question being price President Celniun's full name? Well, it i» Honor Don Miguel Juarez Celinou. He now has £O.(XX).(XM» in Lrmdon, of is currently believed to have, und it is nothing more than reasonable, for it is known that the Bnenos Ayres Wuter Works compr.'iy, an English syndicate, paid him un itnmeiise sum fur the privi- leg««. and this is only oug stance of niiiny. I Io also owns a « in Buenos Ayres und a I stocke«] ranch in the pr liova. of which bis brothdSI^H — Kansas City Tim«« Negro«» tturaly Commll Snlrlile. "There are plenty of cases on record iff which colored people have l>een killed by members of their own raco. but it negro seldom, if ever, commit* suicide." ob serves Coroner Frank. “I know of no nationality or race in which self is bo rare, and the reason I* of the extremo philosophy which terizes the colored man or w every thought "There may lie a good deal of grum bling. but so long as the uext meal ahead Is provided for there is nothing so much as solicitude, let alone anxiety, and just where despair can be foul a colored man it is hard to e.iy. I negro may labor under a good raanj advantage«, but he certainly I* ab Ins white brother in the matter of eri Ing himself heartily on th» least possible provocation, and of never thinking of such a thing m meeting trouble half way.”—St Louis Globe-Democrat How "Provide»«»’' Work». At Battle Ground, Ind., a brakeinart on a freight train left the switch opert and sat down with a friend for a smoke and a game of racber. At the end of an hour, much to hi* »qrpriae. a passenger train came along and was ditched.—De troit Free Pres». A highly recommended corn cure 1* to