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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1892)
Vol. IV. No. 48. TILLAMOOK. OREGON. THURSDAY. APRIL 28, $150 Per Year 1892. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. LOVE’S YOUNG DREAM ft V. V. JOHNSON, M.Do Olcion next door to Temperance Parlors. Tillamook, • Oregon. L. H ixkr , President. Wni. Kbermau, Vice President Wm. D. Stillwell, Treasurer, L. Crenshaw, Secretary, Wtn. Barker, Superintendent. - - - OREGON. ------- MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF ®ot T«) | T. MAULSBY, Attorney-at-Law. Rough Notary Public aud Real Estate Conveyancer. and Dressed Merchantable Lumber W. SEVERANCE, I A* Moulding of Every Description, Brockets, Etc. Flooring and Rustic a Specialty. DarUTY-DiSTktCT-A ttorney , 3rd Judicial District,(or Tillamook County TILLAMOOK, - OREGON. ALL ORDERS ßLAUDE THAYER, FILLED PROMPTLY Attorney-at-Law. TILLAMOOK, OREGON. OEEŒO1T MISCELLANEOUS, (< A E. THAYER, BANKERS Gmieral Bauking and Exchange husine»». Interest paid on time deposits. Rachauffe on England, Belgium, Germany, Sweden and all foreign countries. TILLAMOOK, ORF.GOX. HE best investment you can make is to insure your life, and thus pro vide your estate with cash at your death, or if you live, give you a sum of money a few years later. T J^ESS& TOEWS, W ood -Y ard . T hd M assachusetts M utual L ife I nsurance C o Wood delivered to any part of the the city. Write the best policy, guaranteeing you cash and paid up insurance every year, so you cannot lose your money in case of misfortune. Send me your name and age and I will send you a sample.policy. T illamook O rx . J F. LARSON, H. G. COLTOH, Gcn’l ig’t, 33 Stark St-, Portland, Oro. W. F. D. JONES, Local igi. BLACKSMITH. Wafon Making, aud all kinds of Wood-work and General Blacksmithing done. Mitt « Machinery Repaired. Î Horae-shoeing a Specialty. N P. ROBERTS, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. [O f S an F rancisco ,] • • • u Wijon Shop in connection. Cabinet Work « d«ue. TILLAMOOK, ORB. Mr*. J. JOHN8ON RUGGLES & JOHNSON, -• a They keep on hands at their store in Hobsonville the largest stock of goods in Tillamook County. MILLINERY AND DRESS MAKING. Our stock consists of Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Hats, Caps and Notions. Groceries, Crockery, and Queensware. Doors, Windows, Lime, Hair, and Cement. Hardware and Nails. g^fSpecial attention given to filling ordeis for goods in jobbing lots. Hats, Dress Trimmings and a General Assort ment of Millinery Goods. We always keep A gents for the latest styles. Maar Court House, DEALERS IN General Merchandise. •hop opposite G. A. R. Hall. Ml** L. J. RUQQLE8 T illamook , O re . TILLAMOOK, SAN FRANCISCO AND WAY PORTS. Mikes regular trips about every two weeks, the weather Permitting. yiLLAMOOK LAUNDRY. Tlie fast Railing S tr . T hcckhe lias been specially fitted np for carrying pas sengers. Following are the rates: CABIN PASSAGE ................ *15. ROUND TRIP,................................................................................... ,$"». STEERAGE (one way).............................................................................................. $9. Freight, (General Merchandise) .... . $4 pfr ton LESTER HART, PROPRIETOR. Washluff gathered and delivered every weak. Work done on abort noticewhen desired. Starched akirta ljcta each. Common Shirta and drawee« Ito lOcta each. Family waahing and ireeii'ff, sOcta Ver dozen. Sulla cleaned to order. a TILLAMOOK, oax. J. Fv. S ibley , Manager, Hobsonville, Ore QENTRAL MARKET, L H. BROWN, P roprietor . Tke Beat Beef. Veal, Pork and Mutton always n hand. F.ffff«. Batter, Vegetable« and Chicken, bought and »Id. SaUsla.tion guaranteed to everyone. Shop opposite the Grand Central. TILLAMOOK, OBX. rpILLAMOOK LIVERY STABLE, JONES B ros . P roprietors . \ • FlraVclaaa »Biffle and double turn-out» kept on Baud. Luck of an Indian Baby ricked Up •• the BaUlafleld, St. Paul is to have a new government building. Tho design was made by Supervising Architect Edbrooke, of the Some Recent Instances of an «ntereelln* United States treasury department, who Sort—A Faint Heart That Failed to carefully revised it for possible improve- The public is familiar with the news paper accounts of the battle of Wounded Knee, which took place during the In dian troubles at Pino Ridge agency in the winter of 1801. But the incidents connected with the finding of tho Indian girl baby on the breast of its dead mother fourdaya later are perhaps not so well known. Win a Fair Girl Who Afterward Kan Away with Another Fellow. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. - THE WAIF OF WOUNDED KNEE. IT OFTEN FINDS ITS REALIZATION THROUGH ELOPEMENT. £ E. »ELPH, TILLAMOOK, TWO COSTLY BUILDINGS. Rtrnetilrea for rnbile Van Now nelng Erected nt St. Paul anal Ronton. — 0 Boarding and tranaient «toi l cared for. f MA T illamook , orr . from N ervous D ebility * ^CRE TRACTS AND V T own L ots . stillwbil . T illa M oox . oak. ¿i^W'BACK.KlDNEVTRbUBLES.NERVOU^ , 0 I we have a relief and cure In your ignorance of effects and vitality — which ia system the elements thus strength and vigor will fol cure or n money _ __ * swe w y • refunded. wwwwwwwm Dr. Sanden's Electric after all other treatments S eminal W eak ness . L osses D rains . I mpotency ofc L ost M anhood R heumatism , L ame gB. OR MONEY ■O ■er sale et teaMahl- prices and on favorable L—line be»« »" <•>* ef Tilla- 1 Carr. W k . D. WHO ARE DEBILITATED. AND SUFFERING 1 ■ S leeplessness JbopMEMORYx G eneral I ll H ealth the effects of abuse», excesses, worry and exposure. For ruch sufferers in our marvelous invention, which requires but a trial to convince the most skeptical. or by excesses, or ex;«sure, you may have unduly drained your system of nerve force electricity—and thus can <d your weakness or lack o( force. If you replace into your i?.\ft drained, wh.ch are required for vigorous strcr.;’th, you »i 1 remove tlie cause, and health, ISjow at once and in a natural wav. This Is ov.r p’ ui xr-d treatment, and we guarantee a g Zi T W 18. S«nd for our Illustrated Pamphlets, free; sent by mail, scaled. Belt is no experiment, ai we have restored thousands to rolxist health and vigor, failed, as can be shown by hundreds of cases throughout thia Slate, who would g’adly kjQjp- J whom we have strong letters bearing testimony to their recovery after using our Belt. I A Ji » TH e‘W DR. SKNDEN ELECTRIC BELT „1-r.nie batterv made into a belt so as to be easily worn during work or at rest, and It gives soothing, prolonged currents feltweak parts we forfeit $5 OOO. It ha, an Improved Electric ^,pcnMry. U>, Jr^teM b^erer given weak men. and we warrant it to cure any of the above weaknewes. and Io enl^e shrunken LmU, « parts, or Will makffregular tripe, the weather perm fioney Refunded. They are graded in strength to meet all stages of weakness in young, middle-aged or old men, and will cure Ing. from TILLAMOOK vo ASTORIA » kd PORTLAND. the°wrerat eases in two or three monlns. Address THE S^AUGUSTA. Per Freight -....rr.xe- .....I« u . Romance has exhausted itself on the subject of elopement and has not yet caught up with fact. No sooner does some novelist portray an imaginary case so complicated that readers say inven tion has reached its limit than some couple in real life get up an elopement that in the bizarre, the ludicrous aud the complicated completely discounts the imaginary case. In short, there is no 1 end to the vagaries of love, and as the I world is progressing rapidly and social ' conditions changing daily, it follows that each new case presents totally unlooked ST. PAUL'S GOVERNMENT BUILDING, I for features. j merits before he turned it over to tho The wealthy old Scotch lady of sixty draftsmen. The appropriation is $800,. who ran off with aud married her son’s 000, but it is not improbable that before playmate of twenty-one, the editor of a the building is completed the cost will I St. Louis iiaper who eloped with the exceed a million. Tho site was donated wife of a theatrical manager, the nu by the city, and the amount saved in merous coachmen who have skipped this respect will bo put into the struc with their fair charges, and all the ar ture itself. The appropriation there dent lovers of the frontier who have fore means that at least $800,000 will captured brides with the shotgun are lie invested above tho ground. Ordi outdone by pretty Anita, seventeen- narily a fourth or more of thia amount vear-old daughter of the famous Lucky would lio expended fora site. The build Baldwin, of San Francisco. The native ing will contain the postoflice, United of California is said to develop a tem States courtrooms and offices for the perament ns inliaininablo as that of customs and internal revenue service. sunny Italy, and when Miss Anita was It will occupy an entire block, the front fifteen her father declared he must tako being on Fifth street, the rear on Sixth, and the side entrances on Market and Washington streets. The rear entrance will be used exclusively for the receipt and dispatch of mail matter, and will bo reached by a driveway extending from Washington to Market. The first floor will be occupied by the postoflice, the second by tho customs service, in ternal revenue, surveyor general, super vising inspector of steam vessels and pension agent. Tho third floor will bo given up to the district and circuit courts and their officers, liesides rooms for witnesses, grand and petit juries, judges, marshal and deputies, district attorney and clerk of court. The fourth MR. AND MRS. BALDWIN. her away from school. It was out of floor will be divided into filo rooms, tho frying pan into tho fire, however, dormitories for the railway mail service, for it r«iuired but ten days in a New' etc. The building is to lie in the form York Ixiarding house for her to form a of a hollow square, although the first marriage contract with Edward Mar- floor will bo roofed over entirely with glass. There will lie a tower at the shutts. According to his story sho suggested main cntranco on Fifth street, which that they wed at once, and then she will rise 162 feet above the sidewalk. would return to California with her All of tho latest conveniences will lie father and wait till his consent could be used, and the building will lie an orna obtained. Marshutts hesitated aud was ment to Minnesota's capital. Boston is not lagging in theso archi lost. Her father took her to the Bald win home in Sau Francisco, and within tectural days. The city hall, while it is a few months thereafter she and her by no means unsightly, has nevertheless distant relative, George Baldwin, were been left so far behind by recent build engaged. .Her father wns «pially op ing achievements tliat it has been decided posed to that arrangement, so tho young couple went out on an ocean exdjtrsion last January Jmd when fivo mifite from shore were jjfetcd by tho Rev. Julius I-nonileling^jRll this remained a secret till the young folks left town together a few days ago. Marshutts had meanwhile made his DOSTON'S (TTY HALL. way to San Francisco, but when ho met Anita iu tho street she "didn't kuow to remodel it entirely. The result will him.” It has since transpired that her Ixi an ornate ami commodious structure father had set a detective to work, who of which, as tho illustration shows, any hail managed to recover all letters from city might bo proud. In its reconstruc Marshutts; the family now declares that tion the building which has hitherto the wliolo story is a whim of his brain, been the county court house will ba en aud were it not for a few trifles of col larged and its upper stories connected lateral evidence tho discarded suitor with the presont city hall by a bridge. would be in a bad fix. The family pre A Steam bout Inventor. sented him with a ticket to New York and James Rumsey was ono of the inventors money enough to pay bis expenses, but he obtained a position in San Francisco of the Bteanilsiat. When denied his rights, and returned the favors. Baldwin senior's ns ho lrelieved, in his native country lie fortune runs away up in tho millions, went abroad and obtained patents in and as ho baa but two daughters, young England, Franco and Holland. In 1792 George Baldwin may Ire considered iu ho demonstrated to tho satisfaction of luck if the relenting is done all right— the English that a lxiat could be pro pelled ill n shallow rivor against a rapid and "all the neighbors say" it will be. Wlien one reads in the papers of tho current liv the force of the sanio cur elopemeut of a very young couple and rent, tho power being reversed, so io their capture before getting married, ho sjienk, by means of “settling polos" nuturaliy wonders if they afterward against tho bottom. The money was wed. Well, generally they don't. The put up for a scries of experiments on the parents know that if tho sixtecn-ye.ir- Thames, when ho died suddenly in the old girl and cighteen-year-old lx>y can midst of his preparations. Ho was born Ire prevailed on to “wait until yon’re old in Maryland in 1743. enongh,” they soon get too old. Ono of tho funniest recent cases of motherly generalship was that of Mrs. Scarbor ough, of Trenton, whoso nineteen-year- old Isaac eloped with cighteen-year-old Beulah Sieman. Tho young man nearly killed thoScar borough family horse in reaching Phila delphia, and then tried to sell horse and buggy for seventy-five dollars. This led to tho couple's arrest. The mother arrived, tmik what little money tho young folks had left, sent Beulah home by one train and took her son on an other. She then named the date when they might marry. All Trenton had a good laugh at “tho kills,” bnt (and this was in Octolrer, 1889) tho lapse of years has, so far us can Ire learned, left the youth and maiden as lrefore. Journal ists who have kept close watch of such cases think that eloirers on -e thwarted and separated for a year are three times out of four wparated for g'xxl. In short, wo must accept tlie cynic's ver dict, “If they do not marry while they are young and foolish they never will.” Tlic Growth of Cllien. An English paper, in speaking of the rapid growth of American towns, says j that England can show some remark able examples of that kind, too, the most notable lining the town of Crewe, which has grown from a hamlet of fifty-one rouls in 1 MUI to n place of 30,(XXI jxipula- tion in 1892. In the United States there is scarcely a city which has advanced at all which cannot ls>ast of a greeter growth than 50,000 in sixty years. Be sides, there are now scores of places which were not in existence until Crewe was a quarter of n century old and yet surpass it in population. A World*« Fair Fenture« Most jrersona have only a vague sort of an idea of what an Eskimo vil lage looks like, and therefore that fea ture of tho World's fair is certain to 1« greatly enjoyed by the visitors. Seventy- five natives of the frown regions will oc cupy the village, and while the effort to depict life near tho north polo will lie attended with considerable difficulty in Chicago in umtner, it is expected that They Wanted Whiskers Ouee. the exhibit! in will give a very good How ths pteiuttires of early nuinh<xxl general idea of tho mode of life of the are dixcotiiit«l in after years! Among Eskimos. the most conspicuous men in public life To Have a New Clerk. who are smooth shaven are Governor The old Phelps ball in St. Paul's, Lon McKinley, Secretary of War Elkins, don. whose peals every European tourist Judge Nathan II. Goff, Senator John G. has heard, is to go, as the famous place Carlisle, Senator Arthur P. Gorman an<l of worship will soon have n new clock, Governor Horace Boies. Yet it is rea the hammer of which will strike upon sonably |>ro1>able, as a wag recently sug the bell known as Great Paul. Great gest«!, that each of these distinguish«! Paul weighs nearly seventeen tons, and gentlemen remcnilrers to this day with the hammer which will cause it to give what emotions of intense delight he forth its sonorous tones weighs ubuut noted the incipient growth of down on 7<X) pounds. his upper lip. and how carefully he In many countries of the world, most nursed the infant hirsntes. especially in England, Franco and Ger Huuthern California has gone into tho many, not only the pennants, but the buidneM of raising English walnubi iu middle classes and the nobles, believe lamest. Mori' than a million aud a fi«t !.-< • ’ XIXTKA LANVNI. After the battle there lay on the flelil 100 warriors and twenty women amt children. Of the troops, twenty-nine were killed and thirty-eight wound«!. On the afternoon of the fourth d..v succeeding tho contest there was found, fast bound by a strap to its lifeless mother and partly covered with anow. a live Indian baby girl. The child, which is supposed to Irelong to the tribo,of Uncpap<is, was onlj Blightly frozen about tho head, hands and feet. She was taken to tho agency by the direction of General L. V. Colby, commander of tho Nebraska State troops, and kept until tho hostilities ended and tlie state and federal troojxi returned to their stations. General Colby then took tho little waif to his homo at Beatrice, Neb., where lie and his wife adopt«! her as their own. Tho Indian Woman who had charge of her at the agency gave her the musical Indian name of Zintkn Liinuni, which means Lost Bird. The dusky maid lias fuilon into good hands. General und Mrs. Colby have no children of their own, and Ziutka Lannni must, rely on the stoicism of her race to save her from being spoiled by the homage she receives. She is at p:va ent with her foster parent» in Washing ton, where Mrs. Colby goes evory winter to issue The Woman's Tribune. A Kcinurknble Book. Tho most wonderful book in the world, perhaps, is “Tho Pateion of Christ.” It is the property of the French Prince Deligne, and is piincijaillv re markable from the fact that it is neither written nor printed. It consists of alternato leaves of blno and white, and as tho letters are cut out of the white pages, it conveys the impression of tieing print«l with blue ink. The volume was a curiosity as long ago as 1640, and it is related that Rudolph II of Germany, on ono occasion offer' d 11,066 ducats fur it, and even then did not succeed in ob taining possession. It ia intimated that many years of lalrer of a particularly skilled artisan were expended on “Thp 1’i.ssion of Christ," as the letters are all perfect and clean cut.- Working nt High Altitude«. The contractors on the mountain rail ways are experiencing great difficulty in getting laborers. The altitude of many of these roads is ao great that, ac cording to the celebrated French civil engineer, M. Charles Legrand, a long period of acclimatisation ia necessary Irefore it is safo to undertake manual laborof liny but the lightest description. The illness, which is tho penalty of a disregard of this rule, is said to cause the most Rente pains in the hem! of the sufferer, which sometimes develops in sanity. I>e Le««ep«' Sorrowful Ohl Agr. Ferdinand de Le..sops earned tho grati tude of the ci vilized world many years ago by constructing that “silver link" known ax tlie Suez canal. Now he is, in the winter of his life, according to tho official document which has heen sent to tho United States, “accused of swindling and breach of trust." it is specifically claimed that the great engineer manipu lated a deal by wliioii lie caused tho Universal In- ten reeanie Puua- ma Canal com pany to purchase furtheaiituofW.».- 598,7 io frafics the Tanaina railroad, which ia aascijed. to have been worth only about 35,-ote.lxxi francs Do Lesscpa is lu'cnsod of.having, wjtli the aid of others, iibsofbed 'lie very neat “difference" of about 6O.tXlo.ixH) francs. • For the purpose of ascertaining t-. true facts of tho case, letters rogatory have boon issued by Judge II. Prinet. bf ’ the French court of apiwala. and affirmed by A. Fallicres, “keeper uf seals, minis ter of justice and of religious sects." whose signature was vouched' fdfclby Henry Vignand, first neefatary id the United States legation iu Paris. There letters rogatory will have tho effect of compelling Americans who luul partici pated in the transaction in one way or another to testify concerning De Les- -U se|M' meth'Hls. Evidence is Uow ireipg taken in New York city. Z» ... The schools ill Japuu are always iv^l •» ■ attended in the autumn, for allouai I . every teacher devotes one day of tliht