Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, May 16, 1895, Image 2

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    iTillmnooh ijcaMipht.
finish, in the east,
W. F. D. JONES.
T he C ounty O fficial P aper
------ Independent in Politic*
RATHS or HI HSl KII'TION.
(HrMiVTLV IN ADVANCE.)
♦ I nO.
. .75.
50.
One year
Six lllOlltllM
Three months
and is growing teacher anil scholar, an I in g >n • r *
in favor every year.
j by keeping tile c'lil f.i ci.i'i I ence
'1 liese are the principal Pacific- and using the trust for bis good
----- BY------
Correspondence Wanted
The H eadlight is for the people, and they
nrv invited to write for its columns
We b.»-
lieve in free exercise of opinion, mid wish to
cue image independence of tliougnt and action.
Local topics are preferred. Our name stands
at the head of this column
and everything,
not otherwise signed, wt* Miami responsible for.
I f j oil write, don’t be afraid to father your own
opinions, but sign your name for publication,
it is cowardly to do otherwise, and articles
with fictitious names have little weight. We
adhere to this condition, except as to local cor
respondents who send news items pure and
simple. In such cases we do not publish the
name of the writer.
Hut it you wish to rxpicss ail --pinion or crit­
icize somebody, you must sign your name for
publication
And. in all case* we must know
the name of the writer. Doit throw out pel tv
personal slings, or deal ill coarse abuse regard
mg your neighbors. Would rather you'd abuse
the editor of this paper. Such letters would be
nioie apt top>e published
In fact people who
hold opinions different from ours are urged to
write them for publication. We’ll answer you
fairly and courteously if your opinions are worth
answering. We air anxious to Imve parties of
diffeerent faith express tlieir opinion ill this
paper. We pride ourselves on granting every­
body to think mid
act according to liiscon
science, regardless of our own beliefs
The puldir doesn t cure nhont 'somebody
going to see his girl,” new fence
bad cold*,”
building of lien coops,” etc
Write about some
tiling interesting oi not at all. Write as plainly
as possible. If you can't spell correctly, or
use good grammar, never mind that
Don't
let a good news item spoil on that account
We
furnis i printed Instructions that will be of
help to those who wish to write for papers
The space in this papet is yours. Milke use of
it if you like
coast woods used in the East. and that of the w hole school For
Tlieir sale is growing, and in every parent has a duty to the
another ten years it is safe to say whole school as well as to his own
the majority of the Eastern yards children—and both for its sake
will carry a complete assortment anil their sake, he is bound to do
CKEE
In speaking of the importance of
co-operation of parents w ith teach­
er» in the work of the school room,
1 shall assume that 1 am addres­
LUMBER “ BOXEg
work, etc., an account of its extra mother are very anxious that I know why “this is so"
ordinary lengths ami clearness, should do well at school." This so.
fir is without n rival. Fir finish one influence, if the child love and
What is to lie itone? The teach-
is better every wr.y than yellow respect his parents, w ill do more er cannot take the time of the
pine finish, which is easily demon­ to make and keep him industrious whole class to clear the pupil’s
strated.
and faithful, than all other influ­
Spruce a light, milk-white wood, ences combined. The parent will
abundant along the coast, has secure this object in a great variety
found much favor in the cast for of ways; in fact, if lie really has
silling, finish, refrigerator ears, the child's welfare and success at
wisiden packages, as it lieai t, there will ordinarily lie no
as it does not communicate a taste great danger of the chilli's failing
of tl.e wood to the contents, It is to perceive it and to lie ufleeted In
for sounding- it
also in demand
Still there are judicious anil
boards, etc.
{injudicious way s of accomplishing
Cellar lumber possesses the pe­ the end which the parent basin
anil for
culiar quality of staving in place
year out anil year in. in cold, hot,
dry mid wet weather. It dot's not
swell or warp, anil is very durable,
despite the fact that it is soil wissl.
It is having a
lemiirknlde sale in
I'lit' sugar pint*
of Oregon lias healthy and more effective super­
not yet been introduced east oftliv vision would be secured if each
mountains.
Iml in time parent should keep himself in
ought to bt< in demand, it is a soil constant communication with tile
Rocky
ol good appearance, and is teacher and the school through his
used extensively in the munii fact • own child, by watching his pro­
wish ),
gress. by iuteresling himself so far
luiiidsoiiie wood, as he is able, in his studies, by
mill needs lio introduction. It correcting the misapprehensions
has been in use for years as inside Hint are always arising between
Tillamook
Bakery,
one
door south of
where
we are pre
pared to do all kinds of
Fine Sewed Work and Seamless
Patching.
W. E. PAGE & SON.
At tlieir Ilobsonville store they carry a large stock of
Tillamook Oregon
Prices to Suit
the Times:
J
- - - - - - - - BOOT$ and
Made to order.
-H-
Dry Goods, Boots inni Shoes, lliinlnai'e, Grts'eries,
Feed, Provisions, Etc.
Kepairing done as cheap as the cheapest.
Come and be convinced.
Advocate Building.
P. F. BROWNE.
Special Attention to Orders in
Hardware Talk!
Heard at
C. E. ^EYNOLD'0.
STEAMER TRUCKEE
Agents for the fast sailing Steamer Truckee,
carrying passengers and freight from San Fran
cisco, Tillamook and Portland,
Trips every
two week«, weather permitting.
—R ates :—
Cabin, one way. (Tillamook and S. F.)
Steerage ”
$15 oo
9 OO
Caldn. Hound Trip.
$24 oo
Freight, general
merchandise. San Francisco
or Portland, $3 00 per ton.
J. E. SIBLEY,
Principal Office, 249. Berry St., S. E.
Manager Store and Mill. Hobsonville Oregon
Mills at Truckee, Cal..
1’11 roast you, Slid the Stove.
Look out, I’m on a strike, said the
Hammer.
I’ve got you, said the Barb-IV ire.
I’ll catch on, said the Tongs.
1’11 scoop him, said the Shovel,
I’ll get your
bacon, said the
Butcherknife'
You’re not as sharp as I, said the
Tack.
Say nothing and saw
the saw.
'Headlight and Orcgorpian $2.00
H. A. WOODFORD. Proprietor.
said
So a general quarrel ensue:! and if
you want to hear how it ended and
how cheap the above named articles
can lie bought, cull on
C. E. REYNOLDS,
Hardware Merchant,
New House.
Finely Furnished.
Stage Offices.
wood,
Tillamook,Or.
THE ALDERMAN
First Class in the Strictest
Sense of the Word. Rates St
to S2 per day.
Tillamook. Ore
F xtraordinary
A nnouncement
HOUSE
J. P ALLEN. Pron'r.
Noted for its Fine Cuisine Department.
ONE HUNDRED ANO FORTY-FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS
Best Meals in the City.
TILLAMOOK. OREGON
to be distributed in Presents amongst
subscribers to the San Francisco
WEEKLY EXAMINER
the greatest and best Weekly News­
paper in America, recently enlarged
to sixteen pages.
M
H
LARSEN
rropr etor
I ARSEN
TUarrook, Cre
HOUSE
Price, $1.50 per Annum
The first gift consists of this beautiful
home, and—
(«Wir House in thc citt - first class in evert respect - rates vert
REASONABLE-CENTRAL LOCATION
do the best he can, and ill ninetv-
ninc cases out of every hundred,
he will not he able to regain liis
looting in class; he will lose all liis
interest in his
studies, and the
time which should be spent in
preparing liis lessons will lx*
view.
When
this subject
is wasted in idleness or in mischief.
brought before
parents, great
I reei gnize the fact that there
stress is generally laid on visiting may be lie emergencies which will
the school
I am inclined to think lender the occasional absence of a
that undue importance is uttaehed pupil from school desirable and
to mere visiting. Some good re neci-HMiry, and I also understand
stills may come from it. Both very well that in ease of sickness
the eastern states in the shape of
shingles, floors,
flnisli, siding, teacher and pupil may lie made to
porch columns and posts.
It is a feel that the public eye is u|sm
favorite wood wherever used, mid them, and may be thereby spurred
will eventually
displace white to make some exertions to satisfy
ilie.
the public.
But
a far more
lire of doors.
Redwtsid is a
mind of this seemingly mysterious
subject. The good of the majority
is the object for which the teacher
must work. No. the pupil must
\\ e have opened a shop
the
We repair,and clean sewing machines, and
warrant them to do good work or no pay
/'lease call and see us and try
pair of boots
made of leather tanned at Netarts bay.
pine anti hardwood. Fir flooring
is eqtllll in every way Io maple,
a lifetime. For
mid will last
bridge timbers mid ear construction
tion. wu see plainly that the par­ these. The pupil who is absent
ent should interest himself ill the several days in a month, losing a
child's education, and should con­ number of
recitations, becomes
vince the child that lie is so inter­ hopelessly diseoiirageil eventually,
purposes less lumber is used on este
It ought to be an abiding unless lie lie of an unusually hope­
account of tin* great strength of fir thought in the child's mind, spoken ful disposition. Soon all is dark­
mid for boat building, derrick or unspoken, that “My father, my ness and blank.
He
HEMSTREET i GABRIELSDN
Boot and Shoe
Shop
ents are incompetent to superintend
the education of their children,
and that such imperfectiom would
in tlieir case result only in med­
dlesome and annoying interference.
sing the parents themselves. I
So it would in a few cases; but the
begin by asserting that the parents
great increase earnestness and fi­
are more largely responsible for
delity in the many, would more
the education of their own chi I-
than compensate for any such an­
dren than are professional teach­
noyances. And I think teachers
ers. the community at large, or the
will bear me out in saying that
state. ’I’o give to every child a
they would much rather cncoiin ter
physical, intellectual and moral
the flurries which might attend a
nurture is a duty imposed on ever
universal solcitude, than be stag­
parent. If for convenience,'or the
nate on the dead sea of uni versa!
sake of getting better results, we
idi fference. But however illiter­
delegate any part of this work to
ate a paren t may be, there is one
others, if we commit the child to
service he can render his child
the keeping of nurses, mid to the
which will be valuable beyond all
curative art of physicians, his
compilation: he can see to it that
intellect to the guidance of teach­
the child be regular and punctual.
ers, and his soul to the tuition of
Among the evils that may be
YELLOW UH IN THE EAST.
the Sabbiilh school instructors and
connected with a school, there ar
pastors, we may thus delegate the
none greater limn that of irregular
Rapid strides are being made in
work—we cannot delgate the re-
of
attendance.
The effects of this
the matter of pushing sales
VVe
shall
be
sponsibilil v.
evil are not only telt by the school
I’acilic-const woods in the Eastern held accountable for the education
as a whole, but they extend in a.
markets. Our Kansas City corre our children receives, whatever
still greater degree to the individ­
sponeiit informs us that “the Kan may be our agents in giving it. ual pupil. Much of the irregular
sits City retail yards are using Pa­ 't he teachers are responsible to us, attendance in our schools is caused
<vu to posterity.
by a missuiiderstandiiig of its
cific-coast woods, and there is
We have, then, arrived at a
effects, on the part of those who
hardly a yard here that does not
very important and far reaching
have a large control of the mutter.
carry some in stock.’' No it is
parental duly in connection with
In consequence of this fact, many
with the yards at Minneapolis, St. secular education. Parents being
pupils are absent from sclioiq
Paul. Duluth, Denver, Salt Lake always responsible for tlieir chil­
through an indifferent view of the
must always
City,
St.
Louis, Indiiinn polis, dren’s education,
results.
Parents are often to
( ‘levelanil, Bufl'nlo, anil other dis- watch and superintend it. When blame for the backwardness of
Tliree year« we send our children to school, we their children in school, and it is
tl'ibuting centers,
ago lumber from the coast, with the do not and can not, as some think, not to be wondered at that the
possible exception of redwood, was transfer to others all the care and pupils sometimes fail to retain
a rarity, an untried experiment responsibility of their education. tlieir places in class, Experience
Ln less we send with them our
mill of slow sale.
shows that most of the “dem. cling’’
watchful
solicitude,
wrapping
(io through the interior yards in
in school is caused by irreg-
Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska, Minne­ them about ns a protection against l ular
pnpil
attendance.
The
sota, and the Dakotas, anil one evil influences, null attracting to who is absent a day here and
i
a
will find red cedin' sidings, spruce them all possible influences for day there, has lost a link in
i the
sidings, fir floorings, redwood, mid good, we are unnatural and recre­ chain of reasoning that must be
mid occasionally cedui doors mid ant parents; amt it is more than continued from lesson to lesson; he
fiiiiah. The
superior qualities, likely that in future years, the is conscious of weak places in liis
burden of duty which we
I 111 11 liso 1111 ■ light
exceeding clearness,
recitations. The loss of one or two
iippciirancu mid durability of these would not bear w hen our children recitations might lie remedied to a
woods have caused prejudice to were subject to us, w ill come back certain extent, by extra exertions
disappear as snow melts in the a heavy loud of unavailing sorrow , on the part of the pupil; anil yet
warm rays of the midsummer Him. and will sit anil brood on our he is lower. He loses the enthusi­
Architects, cm builders anil rail­ hearts, w hen tlieir ignorance shall asm that a class gives him from
road men have found that the rebuke us, or tlieir misdeeds shame not being present to recite with
tensile strength of fir, greater than IIS.
them. In almost all classes there
Applying this principle to the are new thoughts anil ideas devel­
oak, cannot be excelled, and lire
using it in preffert'iiee to yellow details of ordinary school instruc­ oped in every recitation. Heinses
lu ^
Of
of woods from the coast. —Pacific wliat lie can to make his own
Lumber Trade Journal.
children diligent, teachable, and
dutiful.
CO-OPKRA TION IN SCHOOL WORK.
It might be objected to this view,
(Written for the H badlight by G. A. Walker by some teachers, that many par­
of Bay City.)
LOUISE
Leaves Tillamook every
morning (except
Sundays; about 8 o clock, returning about noon
Tiipa made in the afternoons also on Saturdays
Steamer touches at all points on the bay.
there must be a relaxation of the
ordinary requirement». But are
there not oftentimes that children
are kept at home tor this little
thing ami that little thing, when
it would lie better for all concerned
that the children should lie in
School? It is convenient I know,
to keep them at lioin« to do this
and that, but think what evils are
entailed upon them, when by a
little inconvenience and effort on
the part of |iarents, they might Is*
made happy in school, keeping >
|tnce with their wide-awake class
matt*»?
(<' oh I thhc J oh
I
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