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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1894)
-N ♦ > Vol. VII. No. 14. PROFESSIONAL TILLAMOOK, OREGON, THURSDAY, AL’CVST 30, 1894. CARDS. THE NEW VERSION JAVID WILEY. M. I)., PHOM HIM THAT HATH NOT SHALL HE TAKEN AWAY, ETC I’ll Ysl TAN, SCRGI ON ANTI At'Ct >tJ( TI Et'lt, All call* promptly attended ta Office at the A mukeman . TIi.I.AMOOK. ORE. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. I The granaries are lull of wheat, the banks are full of gold, the I'.S. I treasury is lull ol un-eoined silver, and 1 he manulacturer's warehouses are full ol unsold goods. Besides, I the country is lull of good men who have plenty of muscle, and I IL1.AMOOK, 0KEG0X. I "‘lo be glad to exchange ill'V «WYïY/lu < »»• 4J ! I »f muscle for Hour, dry goods or silver. The harvest is bountiful, the stores J T. MA ELS BY, I are lull to overflowing, and, why ATTOKNEY-AT-l.A W, can't we be enjoying it? There is Notary Public and Real Estate Conveyancer. no use to say it is overproduction, TI I.I.A MOOK. OR EGON. because there is a demand for all these things, and the parties who are needing them, yea. suffering (J LAUDE THAYER. lor them, have something to oiler ATTORNEY-AT-1. A W, j in exchange for them, viz: labor. , But, money, a circulating medium, TII.I.AMOOK. OREGON. I and enough of it Io do the business, I is hiking. We cannot overlook the A. \V. SEVERANCE, ¡great convenience it affords in ex- j change of products or labor. T he ¿Ab AT LAW, ! capitalist will not loan bis money OREGON. on muscle, and the laborer has no ----------------------------- other security to oiler. The farmer MISCELLANEOUS, can't get money 011 his land with -----£------------ --------- out paying an enormous rate id’in terest, ami with a good prospect of losing all that he has, because he can’t sell his produce. The laborer BLACKSMITH. hasn't got any money to buy pro Wagon making, and all kindfe of Wood-work duce. The manufacturer can't and General Blacksmithing done. MUI afford to pay a big rate for money Machinery Repaired. to operate his plant, because there Wagons Made to Order. is nobody who has money to buy Horse shoeing a Specialty. his productions. The money power, like the Standard Oil Company, has <1HK. the country where the hair is short. The man who is in debt, even Prices to Suit though it be small, not one-fourth the Times: the value of his property, is being forced to the wall, and his property is being taken to pay his debts. Made to order. The man of small means is being —H- Repait inti done as cheap as the cheapest. frozen out everywhere. Many men Come and be convinced. of means are being forced to go in Advocate Building. debt in order to live. The money P. F. BROWNE power has forced a decrease in all values, excepting for the gold it lioldsf, and it is gradually coming in possession ofthe property of the country. It is a sorrowful fact to admit, but the fact is evident that the rich are growing richer and First Class in Every Particular. the poor are growing poorer very Bhaving, fast, just now. It's like a poker Mair Cutting, Shampooing game; the man with the big stack of chips is freezing the other fellows BATH ROOMS IN CONNECTION. out very fast. Should this thing The patronage of the public is respect- continue long, we'll soon be at the mercy of a few land lords who will ully solicited. own the whole country. Of course, it will not go that far, but every Ripans Tabules cure biliousness. ' lilllSi'lo i<tl* fLtlll* I. F. LARSON CHAg. pETER^ON. B^BER SHOP $1.50 Per Year. dav that the present system eon tinues. the worse it is for the in dustrial classes. Perhaps a majority ofthe people are not actually suffering, ami are not likely to suffer, yet they are not enjoying the fruits of their labor as I hey should. T he money power is getting tin'cream of the whole thing. There is a great minority, however, that is actually suffering. T hey are actually stint inje themselves for food, and haven’t as good clothing as they deserve, l liey are not aide to accumulate anything for the future, ami what they have accumulated by long years of labor is rapidly vanishing. Peolpe who feel these things the worst, should not fail to take an active interest in conventions and elections for the two years to come. Tile politicians who get forward by dividing up the spoils with their henchmen, should be retired. Men thing better than the ordinary. Costly carpets, expensive furnit ure, and wide lawnsareout of place at poor man's home. It would show l>ad taste for a poor man Io make such pretentions. But, a man of relhieuieiit. wealth, and social proclivities, must have a degree of luxury ami eom- fort around him. lie doesn't re eeive proper re.-p ict if he doesn't. The common, every day plebian may have an ambition to own a line house ami drive last horses, but he should crush any such aspirations as fast as they conn . His wile may desire to dress in ti e fashion, and have a music teacher f>r the children, but she should remember that silks would look out of place on her back, ami that her little brats bad better learn to wash dishes than to I ihi I at the piano. The children may look with at da... 1 .■ . .......... I#'a while and not for the iftbn- ■ isiaa-toys i»tui tinsel foH|per|e«t nruV I •'*« . ■ : W 1 * 11 ■ ■1111' 1 measures of relief. They must stiller a while longer before they are in a proper slate of mind to lake deci hive act ion. w DAMN A POON MAN. ANYWAY I One suit of clothes per year is etrough for a laboring man or farmer, and. in fact, more than they v.eed. 815u.suitof clothes, readymade, that "looks line on a common in- divid^tl. Overalls anil old clothes may < ■ worn most of the time. A 815 sr.it is not the finest grade of cloth, and they don't always lit, but no one should grumble about that.* A who owns a bank or a railroad ought to have better cloths. He should have two or thre«*tiilor made suits every year, of the best grade of imported goods, costing 830 to 840 per suit. This is ne<■•ssary in order to make a decent appearance. Salt bacon, salmon potatoes, and bread are good enough for common people. They will live longer eating these than if they feed tin knieknacks. A laboring man who kicks at such things is hard to atMfy. OfCoHfse, a man of leisure, should ^K-are tenderloin stake for lAa! >a|t. a dainty luncheon at upon, SI a dinner of six courses, itb win. in the evening. A mail of ed'4*‘<l taster require» sojne- I a Under Democratic policy wheat is fed to hogs .ml human beings go unfed. But pmhaps the country needed “the char.gc,” that it might know by contrast what blessings it had.—OregiMtnu.