Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, August 11, 1898, Image 3

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    tue
T illamook weekly headlight
Battles and
Diseases.
pitching from the boat, anil ere long the
star:» looked down pityingly into his
upturned
fa \ as, asleep in the Slum,
stern,
■
with one swollen hand upon the helm
and the other trailin'? over the side of
■AKXULOX» hittSPtfDt co.
d
If you want the latest
news in detail of the
American-Spanish con­
flict. subscribe at once
for the
This is the story of one who participated in many
naval and infantry engagements during the war.
jFrom wounds received then he suffered for years, but
to-day. rejoices in renewed strength.
¿Z’
“Gimme the money!” he yelled wild­
ly, ns they struggled; but the boy
only gave a pitiful cry, and got up
with him. Then they began to strug­
gle as they stood, writlung, reeling,
striking, and suddenly they plunged
headlong down towards the water.
There a cup-like dent in the bank
caught anil held them, but the boy fell
beneath and was partly studied, ami the
man got upon him with Ins knees and
held him while he tore the money from
his pocket. As he got up, the boy, like
one in a terrible dream, clutched him
desperately about the knees, but the
rum-crazed father struck him a cruel
blow in the face ami he fell back sense­
less at the water’s edge.
It seemed a long time before con­
sciousness returned to him. The saws
sang on at the mills, the clouds blew
over, the tide running outward licked
War News
• Leu luuilivr luut father
out to sea. ail’ that I’m jfuin' after him!"
shoute.l Paul. “Oh, Carl, tell her I'll
brinj- him back to her if I live—if I—
live! ' anti lie laid the boat about on
the water, and sent her out with all his
strength.
“Tell mother I let him go! Tell her I
cmildn't wait to see her! O Curl, l>e
g‘X»d to her if me aud father never
come back—no—more!" Then the voice
failed; the boy upon the cliff could hear
it no longer, and tinned and ran toward
tlie bonne, and Paul went outward on
the swells.
He sat facing the great furrowed
front of the head as he pulled. Would
he ever see it again? All that he loved
was up there, save the poor father toss­
ing toward tlie sunset, lie saw figures
ninning to and fro upon the height;
his mother was among them! A chok­
ing lump rose into his throat, but he
never once slackened his tlvsjterate
stroke. Outward he went, outward,
outward, as if life and hope lav only in
the dangerous central sea. The head
began to sink; slowly it went down,
but his eyes never left it for a moment.
Soon its top al >ne was visible, a bluish
spot with moving specks upon it. Then
slowly that, too, went down, aud reap­
peared, and sank again, and he was
alone upon the wide, mysterious sea.
lie closed his eyes, his breath coming
hard with the struggle, and a great
wretchedness fell upon him as the land,
There is a distinctly peculiar halo that
invests the being of an old soldier in the
eyes of the present generation. The sight
of him arouses a feeling of admiration for his
brave deeds and heroic achievements.
Among those who bravely fought was
D.-. L. J. Clark, who, when but a beardless
boy, heard the testa of war sounded«
It fired his patriotic spirit to a fervency
that found relaxation only in his realization
Of fighting in the battles.
To the call of President Lincoln for troops
in th: lxtttf part of ’b\f young Clark
promptly responded.
There was need of mtn in the navy, and
HE SANK DOWN ILL WITH AGONY ANI
he Joined that service in the mortar fleet
EXHAUSTION.
of Admiral Porter, which soon after began
the boat, he went plunging onward intc operation® on the Mississippi River.
At the terrific bombardment of the
mystery and gloom.
Vicksburg forts, the hero of this story fell
on the deck of the Juliette with a shattered
arm from a charge of schrapnet
He lay in the hospital for months, and
when he had recovered sufficiently to be
(To be Continued)
moved, was sent to his home at Warren,O.
Though partly incapacitated for active
Pl.’OI-LSSIONAL CARDS.
service, his patriotic zeal got the better of
him, and when the call for more troops
came, young Clark enlisted in a company
formed by Capt. Joel I. Asper, at Warren.
• It became Co. H.of the 7th OhioVolunr
PHYSICIAN, SURGEON
tetrs and was sent to the Army of the Poto­
mac under General Grant then campaigning
AND ACCOUCHEUR,
in Virginia against General Robert E. Lee.
In a skirmish near Richmond, he was
All calls promptly attended to
wounded again and was sent to the hos­
TILLAMOOK, ORI? pital. He remained there for some time,
PHYSICIAN AND
SURGEON
with all it held, was parted utterly
Office at Alleu House, Tillamook, Oregon,
from him. But he did not pause; out­ vlephoue No 7.
ward, outward he went, crying in his
heart to God for time, for daylight, in
which to save the one he had lost.
Suddenly he leaped up and looked
ATTORNEY AT LAW
narrowly across the vast expanse noth­
ing was there save the ever-changing
belts of light and shade as the fleecy Deputy Diblikt Attorney of Til'amook County
Office in Alderman U.Jel B lil.'iug
clouds blew over, and with a piteous
cry ho sprang to the oars and drove the
Tillamook, Oiegon
“GIMME
money !”
YELLED heavy boat onward. Oh, if lie could
WILDLY.
but reach his father ere the sun ceased
softly at his hair, but he lav still with to brighten distant objects on the water!
lie pulled with every muscle strained
Iris bleeding face, turned back in the
sunshine, a mute protest against the well nigh to breaking. At last he felt
himself turn siek with labor, and fell
ever-cursing evils of the cup.
After a time he moaned like one in a U}»on his knees and dashed his face and
troubled sleep, and turned himself. head with water. He was dripping with
The cooling water touched his face and sweat and his lieart, was fluttering from
Tillamook, Oiegon
he awoke. Then it all came back to loug and violent action. He thrust his
him—the struggle and the dreadful hot arms in the water to the shoulders
hour, and he got upon his feet and stag­ as lie hung over tho side of the boat, and.
gered up the bank. He looked up the his dizziness passed. Then he leaped up '
QLAUDE TIIAYER,
shore to the town, and there his father again anil pulled feverishly forward.
was, a hatless sot, reeling from tlie The first great surging sense of crime
grog-shop by the water side. The boy’s and pollution never lifted itself from
ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW,
blue eyes began to blaze; his very his spirit for a moment. A deadly ex­
blood seemed to curdle with hatred and haustion began to creep upon him. but
TILLAMOOK, OREGON
loathing. The man came n little way he could not rest; tho boat kept leaping
down the shore where some boats were outward, and over all the face of the
rocking and tugging at the chains deep there was no sound save the oars \y J. MAY,
which held them. Evidently he pur­ working* in the locks, his laboring
posed getting1 into one of them to sleep breath, and the low slap and gurgle of
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
the water under the advancing prow.
his drunkenness away.
At last the sun began to go down,
The boy watched him walk waver-
TILLAMOOK, OKKCON
ingly out upon tlie landing-plank to a and he rose in the boat and strained his
But
large four-oared boa€ The chain hung eyes again across the waters.
JJ. J I'A' V.
loosely over the stake at the end of tho nothing was visible, and he sank down,
« O scar I1 a yter
plank, and the man’s foot caught under ill with agony and exhaustion, 'l’lie
[)ALY & Il A YTER,
it, lifting it from the stake, and he fell sky seemed to turn round above him,
forward into the boat, giving it a great and the ocean seemed to shift from side
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
lurch outward. The wind had been to side. He was a pitiable picture as he
blowing steadily from the hind all day, sat there, clutching t he boat in his dizzi­
DALLAS, OREGON.
and long crested swells were running ness. His hat was gone, one arm was
westward ns far as the eye could reach. bare to the shoulder where his shirt had
The man, from being stunned, or in a been torn away in his struggle with his ROBERTA. MILLER.
stupor, did not rise, and the boat began father, his face was .streaked with 1
blood and his hair bung about his throb­
drifting outward. The oars had been bing* temples in sweat - dampened
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
removed, and the boy turned about strands. liis tongue was like dust in
with a noise in his ears like gurgling his mouth, and his throat seemed parch­
or >•:<;<IN CITY,
water. The sun seemed to get dark to ing. Oh! for a cup of water from the Land Titlesand Latid
OREGOJ
lorn; the greatest struggle of liis life spring on Beaver head! But what right Office Business a Specialty.
had come.
had he to ask for water? lie, a mur­
He started to get the Itoat at the derer, searching for innocence!
Mr, Met 'AIN.
Jle
ÍA. w. S kvhkas , k .
head and save the man; then he stood caught the oars and sent the little craft
still with his fists clenched, and desperately onward. Presently he stood
C PAIX & SEVERANCE,
watched the boat come down the bay. up and looked abroad again. Half the
No one seemed to notice it, and outward sun was in the sea, ami a great road of
ATTORNEYS AT-LAVV,
it drifted, home on the long, rolling gold ran from his boat into the very
swells. It passed by the boy, and he heart of it. Suddenly, as he gazed, a
TILLAMOOK, OltEGON
wavered and strained in the conflicting moving dot entered the golden way,
currents of feeling that beset him. and began drifting into the sun. A
UT A. WISE,
Should he save him? He saved him but piercing cry of joy leaped from the l»oy’8
yestermorn! Lo, his reward! But was lips. He seized the oars and the boat
not he who might save a life and would flew onward. He was far to the south
DENTIST,
not, almost as guilty as he who took of his father, and miles and miles of
The
Dekutn
Building
T illamook
one? Something like this passed through water lay between them: but that one
3d <k Washington, Portland.
Our-:
his mind, but he could not reason; his glimpse was more refreshing than days
thoughts seemed scattered and confused of rest and leakers of wine. Oh! if
by his anger.
God would but stay the sunset. Would
The l>oat drifted through the mouth but keep the day alive another hour!
of the bay; there the unbroken wind But even while he prayed the light be-
quickened the swells, and it passed into
the open deep.
Thousands of miles of gan to wane, shadows rose out of the sea
water spread away before it. and with­ and huddled together here ami there,
out food or oars the unconscious father the filmy runners of the night came
went outward into the glimmering over the ocean from the east, the west­
G. W. KIGER,
waste.
ward moving darkness rolled slowly
dealer in
At last the boat dwindled to a speck over him, and he was alone with the
and died in the blue gulf, and a great stars upon the wide, mysterious main.
white cloud shut down upon it. like the
Cries of despair broke from his lips at
marble covering to a grave. At that a last, a sickening faintness fell ujion
poignant sense of separation fell upon him, and his swollen hands dropped
Collection» R.ce.v. Careful and
the boy, the first sharp throe of anguish, limp from the oars.
Prompt Attention.
Heaven was
as the bond that nature had placed be­ against him! lie was a murderer! a
BAY
CITY, OREGON.
tween them parted, lie stood appal led murderer! alone with his heart upon the
at the*deed he had done. A vision of the taunting, spectral deep.
man starving, raving, drowning, rose
Slowly. the night v. < re on, every mo­
before him, and, with a cry of terror, ment a thorn pressed deep into his heart
he broke through the hate and rage by remorse and fear. And what would
that bound him. and rau towards the the gray dawn bring? Would it bring
head.
his innocence back to him? or only the
The boat was lying there with prow morning
,
’s flare upon the empty, bean*
upon the yellow sand. He pushed it toons
(
waste? At last hi * head began tc
out and leaped in and spread out the fall
j
from side V» side; at time® be aeemeft
oars, those trusty water-wings that
were to move him upon the u ildest,
Banti»* «nd Fi'hsngc butinSM
strangest journey of his life. JIc swept
Krerybody Says So»
I ttteM paid o» í>«e dsp****’.
her out upon the swells. Thank fortune,
Cascareis Candv Cathartic, U.e ft' «t won­
I'm i. -je on I k -nd B K*«*. Oermasy.
his arms and chest were well nigh as derful m»-dical d.acoveryof the ur ®, pris­
ât t and refnahinir tn lb** taao*. id 1 « X «weden and all fu.etgn conntrtea.
thickly muscled as a man’s! His
and poettivc ly on ki.-uej», liver and b .w.H®,
halting legs would not l»e needed in chousing the entire mV m. dl*i < I <*o ■ %
this bitter race! He thought of hi® cure he® loche, fer/ r, habitual . < i.«th al ro
mother and looked up at Beaver head. %nd bi.tousne®®. Pi< a®* buy and try a v x
of C. (!. C UwJ*T ; 10. », «ent»- bold aud
Oregon.
Carl wu* Blanding upon its verge.
4
^uarauUxd tu cure by ail Uru^.iU.
G.0-N3rAN-
E^chinge and RJoneiJ jSscuritiejt
Oregonian
but finally recovered, and went home.
Shortly after, he began the nudy of veter­
inary surgery, and, when completed, went
to Chicago, where he has resided for thirty
years, and is now one of the leading sur­
geons of that profession in the city.
His old wounds began to trouble him
several years ago. He grew weak, tma-
ciAted and thoroughly debilitated. His
friends began to despair of his life.
He was but a shadow of his former self,
weighing only 90 pounds, a loss of nearly
50 pounds. He had the best medical atten­
tion, but it did not benefit him.
** Finally a friend gave me a box of Dr.
Williams* Pink Pills tor Pale People,** said
Dr. Clark. 44 After taking the pills I was
so much benefited that I purchased a half
dozen boxes and took them.
44 They were of more benefit than the
ablest physicians* treatment. By their aid
alone, I soon regained my strength.
441 weigh 160 pounds new, and except
for injuries that can never le remedied, I
am as well as ever.
441 consider Dr. Williams* Pink Pilfc for
Pale People the best remedy I know of to
build up a run-down system.**
To-day Dr. Clark is a picture of health.
He is 59 years old, an active member of
Hatch Post, G. A. R., and resides at 4935
Ashland Ave., Chicago.
Many veterans have found Dr. Wil­
liams* Pink Pills for Pale People of inestim­
able value in counteracting the unhealthful
effects of army life. All druggists sell
these pills and highly recommend them.
Fullest telegraphic re-
f>orts, which can be re-
ied on. Daily and Sun­
day, 85c per month;
weekly, 12 pages, $1.50
per year. Address
OREGONIAN PUBLISHING CO.
PORILAND. OR.
fe
4
Charles Peterson,
Shaving
Hair Cutting
Shampooing
OCEAN PARK CAMPGROUND
I
.John Malaney Sr. Prop.
Hot and Cold Baths
i
mu Everything Strictly First Class
The finest Camp Ground on the Oregon Coast.
The SitiiHtion is one of iiniiHiiiily beauty.
It 1«protected front the wind.
It iw nettr it lovely bench,
Il ailords fine bathing and lionting facilities.
It is near tho liest dishing in An>eriea.
Supplies will lie brought to yonr door.
All price«are reiiHoiutble.
vdyaiXal'inic/b
Barber & Hairdressers
John. Malaney’’ Sr.
Shaving, Hair Catting,
Shampoolng etc. ,
Woods, Oregon
New Buildtng, Next door to Post Office
When You Want a First Class Wheel
GO TO
JONES BROS.
LiVer'i]
✓
when you want
lias
lib-
Model cf1897
Model of 1898
r*
A Nice Rig and
A Good Safe Team
that you can drive with com­
fort anti enjoyment.
Our patrons will find every,
tiling in firal clans s'nnpo and
our prices i'e>tH<>n>ible.
See my Price«
r*
I
r*
All these wlieel« me fully gi
wheel« ate itiekle pltiletl.
cltlHH wheel “The Itleitl’’ for
JONES BROS.
CLARENCE TILDEN
— DEALER IN ------
burniture Ztore and
P-Sabinet £>
—
Nice dry wood of any kind, any length
teeired at lowest living ralua.
Keep* <m Hand a Complete Stock of---------
*--------------------------------------------- ““J
rurniture- Matting. Weill Paper. Window Shad*”. am
I l< ><>r Oil Cl<»th.
All Kinds of Cabinet work I u- niiui Scroll sawing eti
etc. done on short notice.
Screen doors and Windows made to Order.
i _ l .
«
~„.:r.. .. . =:
~
When you are in town pin! want to slop st a nice hot» I, the ¡dace to g > in to
THE TILLAMOOK
E l LAL G. E. IWIST Propriafar.
This Hotel hes just been rrwly furnished ardput In
first class tfj eir ei.d in ddw by iai the best In th^ city
E verything C cmfcrtaele /. nd H cmflike
Terms Reascn»ble,
Tillamook Ore
C. & E. THAYER
i» I »•»
I h*.
Best iiioal» in tlirj City
Tillamook.
Til'amuuk Ore
sdqiurh r« Ur Pure at Grv.®
WONDERFUL
CureofClironic Diseases
j’lli
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I,In.lit tl.f-ir
« till «.•inc y< Hl
I LI LKA 1 ED V TA
I . COUIH t\ H-li I,.||
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II m vittg n N.V«kin of ini-«licl.ira fi.ilo.]. <1 or»
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«lint HW the » U<f tllHt IM I > .11 ifii.M- htiN mi filili.
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1' K « 0 <in<<t’ '■II- tliny urn 1 1) i.lv, y. ,
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II..-V ahMolut’ ly Gt AMAN ' 1O ;< .110 hi i.jl . .«r« -
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fo yuir
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When « cur 1 egma t • • > *'*‘l ” p ' in »our
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