Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, March 02, 1899, Image 4

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    DOESN’T LIKE SUFFRAGE.
a
Woman fen,. It Itrmlnd. Her uf
Uri, Ina When fehe W.l
The
a Child.
tare««»
Found
Foor
ß L. EDDY,
j. p. ALLEN,
Proprietor-
ATTORNEY- AT-L AW,
Two women were discussing the
question of women casting votes
equally with men. One was rather
young and pretty, with an air dial
spoke plainly of her always having
her own way. The other was middle-
aged, comely and genial. Said the
young one: “There is no use talking,
women will never have equal suffrage
as long as they persist in staying at
home as they do. Why don’t they get
out and register? The men have
given them the chance of voting for
school trustees and one thing leads to
another. What they ought to do is to
call a great rally and embrace the priv-
ilges they have offered them. It is a
great thing to deal in the affairs of the
state, even if they are merely educa­
tional. I voted.”
“Men always put in good school
trustees,” said the elder woman.
“And I helped them do it.”
“The ‘privileges’ allotted woman in
the matter of voting in this state re­
mind me of when I was a little girl and
Jived on the farm. My father used t•”>
take me with him to town whenever he
went, because I was fond of the homes
and cried if he left me at home. And I
thought I ought to be allowed to dr.'ve.
so he humored me by letting me take
hold of the ends of the lines and cluck
to the horses, deriving as much joy
from it as if his strong hands were not
guiding and directing the horses ahead
of mine. But I thought I was driving
and making things go my way. That is
what women voting for school trus­
tees reminds me of.”
And the young woman did not say a
word, for there was nothing to be said.
SHE RAN OVER TAR PAPER.
And the Nocturnal Bicyclist Thought
It Was a Hole in the
Pavement.
The girls were talking about bicycle
riding and telling of the accidents that
had befallen them. When it came Mist
Flit’s turn, she painfully changed her
position on the easy chairand said:
“In the live years 1 have been riding
a wheel I never was seriously hurt until
a week ago and I suppose you girls wili
say I wasn’t hurt then. I was going
home from a friend’s house when my
light went out.
It was only three
blocks to my home and as the road war
good all the way and policemen are
scarce in that neighborhood I thought
the rest of the distance could be
scorched in safety, and away I flew. Il
was on Washington avenue, where the
shade trees are so thick that the por­
tions of the road between the lamj
posts are in deep shadow.
“Bending over the handle bars, I was
making it hum when right under my
front wheel I saw a horrible black hole
There was not time to turn out; I co uh.
only brace every muscle and taki
chances on landing all in a heap. Well
I was the worst demoralized heap yoi
ever saw and I wobbled along nearly r
block before my nerves would permit
me to go back and examine that hole.
“When 1 did I found it was nothing
but a ragged piece of black paper lying
on the perfectly smooth roadway. But
it gave me the worst jolt I ever receive«,
und it hurls me yet.”
STAMPS OF 13,000 KINDS.
Many of Them Are Only
Animal'«
Mile« from the Spot Where
the Shot We« Fired.
Zallen [we.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
LONG RUN BY WOUNDED DEER
Gotten
i«
to Annoy Enthusiastic
Collector«.
The largest postage stamp ever is-
sued measures four inches by twe
inches, and was the old United States
live-rent stamp for packages of news
papers.
The quarter-shilling stamp of Meek
lenburg Schwerin, issued in 1856, is the
smallest postage stamp ever issued, be­
ing less than one-fourth the size «¿f the
ordinary stump, says Tit-Bits.
There are 13,000 different kinds of
postage stamps issued in the various-
countries of the world. Some of these
are made only for collectors by coun­
tries wishing to make money easily.
The French colony of Obock. for in­
stance. issued no fewer than 200 varie­
ties; this overdone philatelic spot l»eing
administered by a governor and eight
functionaries and the capital being a
village of huts.
The credit of originating that method
of stamp issues belongs to the secre­
tary of an engraving company, who
bound himself for a period of ten years
to supply yearly, free of charge, post­
age stamps to the different govern­
ments of South and Central America
on condition that each yearly serie,
differs in design, and any surplus stock
nt the end of the year belong to the
company, which also retains the dies
and plates for the production of re­
prints.
Tohmrro Plant • • a Floral Fmblrm
There is one flower, says a writer in a
London paper, which has apparent I v
Veen overlooked by Americans in their
search for a suitable floral emblem,
which, I think, is worthy of their at
1t ntion. I refer to that of the tobacco
plant (nicotiana) in its many varieties.
It is handsome; the | lout is. 1 believe,
indigenous to America, and its im­
portance as the solace of the human
race is indisputable.
I have often found evidences in the
T illamook , O regon
woods of a game animal which has
escaped the hunters after being mor­
tally wounded by them, said an old
H. COOPER,
hunter who. according to the New York yy
Sun. has shot over the neighboring
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
ground of the three states radiating
fiorn the tri-states monument in Port
OREGON.
Jervis, N. Y. Ao animal wounded by
TILLAMOOK
a gunshot that does not prove in­
stantly fatal may travel fur miles be­
fore it drops dead. Once when after yy
j. MAY,
birds in Sullivan county, near night­
fall, I came across very recent signs of
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
deer. I hastened to cover a near-by
runway, hoping to get a chance shot.
T illamook , O regon .
I always carry a few loads of buck in
my belt. Within 40 yards of the place
a splendid buck broke cover and darted
11. GOYNE,
like a shadow across a little cleared p
place. I fired, but upon careful exam­
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
ination of the ground could find no
signs of having hit. It was quick work,
Office: Opposite Court House,
but there was no reason fora man with
a good eye to miss. I followed the
T illamook , O regon ,
trail for a short distance without find­
ing any trace of blood. It was quite
dark by this time, and I gave up the
0LAUDE THAYER,
search.
The next day I took it up with anoth­
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
er man who knew the ground well, and
although we searched for hours we
T illamook , O begox .
could find no trace of my charge of
buckshot, which always creates consid­
erable havoc in the brush and sap­
(J. J. DALY,
¡OSCAR HAYTEK.
lings. I am too old a hand at the game
to shoot at the treetops when I see a
£)ALY
&
HAYTER,
deer, and we concluded that the ani­
mal had departed with my uncom­
ATTORNEYS-AT-L AW,
fortable load of nine buckshot con­
cealed somewhere about his person.
D allas . O regon .
Two weeks later I heard that, on the
morning following my adventure, a
farmer living within four miles of the ROBERT A. MILLER,
place had found a dead buck only a
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
few yards from his barn. lie shipped
his find to New York and received for
O regon C ity , O regon .
it $40. Until this moment I have with­
Land Titles and Land Office Business a
held my lamentations.
Specialty.
First cliiHS accommodation
at second class rate.
meals in THE
CITY.
Til'amook, Ore
Headquarters for ForeBt Grove Stage Line.
II
I
WELL, WE'VE GOT IT AND MORE TOO
If 3TCVL
to
ZSTcie G-erxtle Heise
To a. ZSTloe Easy Eva.g'g'sr,
Ccme to Otzx staJole arxd.
CS-et it.
The Tillamook Livery and Sale Stable
TILLAMOOK
A
(JAMES MCCAIN,
¡A. W. SEVERANCE.
I»
^[cCAIN & SEVERANCE,
Englishmen have no idea of society in
the continental sense. Banquets, balls
and parties, public and private, have
alwaya formed an accompaniment to
the parliamentary session; but the se­
lect coteries which meet almost daily
in Paris—in the informal gatherings
termed “salons,” where friendships are
cemented with that mixture of grave
and gay conversation in which our
mercurial neighbors excel—are foreign
to the English life, says the Pall Mall
Magazine. In its records, as well as in
its surroundings, Holland house stands
out a brilliant exception in this respect.
It U unique among English homes,
standing as it does in its own lovely
gardens, surrounded till lately by the
fields of Kensington, now in the middle
of a densely populated district and
within a walk of the center of London.
It has ceased for half a century to be
a country home and, though it has
changed hands repeatedly, its treasures
remain intact. Its architecture is char­
acteristic; its portraits and busts recall
all the most interesting personages
who have lived there. Every room if
filled with rare objects and historical
relics; it has neither been robbed tc
pay death duties nor spoiled by vandal
taste. It possesses, moreover, a special
interest as the center round which re­
volved for nearly half a century all that
was brightest and most intellectual ir
an age of strength and great achieve­
ment»—those whose influence so pro­
foundly affected the political events of
the day .
A DURABLE SIGN.
It Was feed at Harper's Ferry Thirty
Years Ago and 1« Still In
Good Order.
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
T illamook , O regon
B. HENDRICKS,
•
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Careful attention paid to Land Office
work and collections, notary public
work and practice in all the
Courts.
Office in the J. II. Bridgeford Building,
near the post-office,
BAY CITY ..........
OREGON.
|I
J) AVID WILEY, M.D.,
SURGEON
PHYSICIAN,
All call promptly attended to,
T illamook , O regon .
0
6.00 BOUND TB1P.
3.50 ONE WAY.
PHYSICIAN
AND
SURGEON.
TILLAMOOK,
ASTORIA
AND
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Land Office at Oiego 1 City, Ord
January i6tli, i8d
Notice is hereby given that the follow!
TILLAMOOK
named settler has filed notice of his intern
tn make final proof in support of his claim, I
that said proof will be made before the Con
Clerk of Tillamook county, Oregon, on MJ
4th, 1899, viz :
JERRY MURPHY,
H. E. 12335, for the ® ’2 of Nw a,,d F, % o]
% of Sec. 5, Tp. 2 S, R. 7 W.
He names the followii g witnesses to pi
his continuous residence upon and cultiva]
WILL BUN THE
of said land, viz :
William J. Carver and George A. Barto]
Trask, Oregon ; George W. Sappington,of ’ll
niook, Oregon; Albert L. Whitten, of Tri
Oregon.
C has . B. M oores , Kegisti
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. I
Will make trips every five days, the weather permitting, between Astoria anil
Land Office at Oregon City, 0f|
Tillamook City, carrying freight anil passengers.
January 26th, i8fl
Notice is hereby given that the follow
named settler has filed notice of his inteul
to make final proof in support of his claim,I
ELMORE. SANBORN & CO.. ASTORIA ; or COHN & CO.,
that said proof will be made beiore the Coil
Clerk of Tillamook co , at Tillamook, Orel
TILLAMOOK. AGENTS.
on March 10th, 1899, viz :
ESTHER M BRAMMER, formerly ■
ESTHER M. ARCHER;
H. E. No. 11,872 for the W % of Ne
Se fl
Ne and Ne'.i of Se ’4, Sec. 27, Tp. 1 S, R. ifl
He names the following witnesses to pl
his continuous residence upon and cultivfl
of said land, viz:
Edward O. ohnson, Dryden L. Baker, fl
Nelson, John Hagney, of Tillamook, OreKoifl
C has . B. M oores . Registfl
Steamer "W. H. HARRISON
or R. P. ELMORE.
WHEN YOU WANT LUMBER,
E. HAWKE, M.D.,
OREGON.
Telephone No. 7.
OF
C. & E. Thayer.
Remember that we keep the best of
everything in Steck and at prices as
low as the lowest-
FOLLOWING IS OUR LIST OF PRICES :
COMMCN ROUGH LUMBER at $8 00 per thousand feet,
SHIPLAP at $9.00 per thousand feet,
General Banking »nd Exchange bnsi-
SIZED LUMBER at 9 00 per thousand feet,
iicHs interest paid on time deposits.
FLOORING. No. 2, at $12.00 per thousand feel.
FLOORING, No. 1, at $16.00 per thousaud feet,
Exchange on England, Belgium, Ger­
RUSTIC, No. 2, at $12 00 per thousand feet,
many, Sweden, and all foreign countries.
RUSTIC, No. 1, at $16.000 |>er thousand feet,
No. 1. FINISH, at $15.00 per thousand feet,
TILLAMOOK. ORE.
MOULDINGS.
per foot, per inch in width.
ALL BIN. PLANKING at $7 per 1000 feet.
1»O YOU
KNOW THE NEWS
Inquiries have been received by the
Baltimore & Ohio railroad concerning
the man who painted a station sign at
Harper's Ferry. The Western Society
of Engineers bus the sign now on exhi­
bition in its rooms in Chicago, says the
Baltimore American.
The engineers are using every effort
to ascertain who mixed the paint and
applied it to the sign, which was placed
in position at Harper’s Ferry station
about 30 years ago.
The summer heat and winter storms
have in no way dimmed the luster of
the paint used to make the words'‘Har­
per's Ferry." The words stand out as
boldly as the day they were formed by
the artist's brush.
The wood around the letters has been
worn about one-sixteenth of an inch by
sand beating against it by tierce winds,
but the letters have withstood the ele­
ments.
It j. claimed that no paint manufac­
tured nowadays is equal in durability to
that w hich waa applied to the old sign,
and if the person who mixed it is living
and will take advantage of the secret
he possesses as to its composition, it is
■aid he can. by engaging in the paint
manufacturing business, soon accumu­
late wealth.
AND
ACCOUCHEUR.
9 *
Tillamook
Lumbering Co
You can have it all for
PER..
Cflp PER...
MONTH aUU MONTH
in The Evening Telegram, of
Portland, Oiegon. It is the larg­
est evening newspaper publish­
ed in Oregon ; it contains all the
news of the state and nation, Try
it for a month. A sample copy
will be mailed to yon free. Ad­
dress
THE TELEGRAM,
Portisi! dOr,
INSURE
WITH
Claude Thayer.
Agent for Fireman's Fund and London
and Lancashire Fire Insurance
Companies.
SAMPLE COPIES of the Headlight wi-|
be sent free on application. Send a
postal card or leave your name at the
office. Il pays tosubecribe for the lead
ing, newsiest and brainiest new paper
CLUBBING RATES—Weekly Oregon .an
and Headlight, per year, f2 2'> ; the
San Francisco Examiner and Head­
Territory I ■•tplarei.
light. $2 25. New York Thrice a-Week
Throughout the entire world there
World and Headlight, $2.00. Strictly
are about 20.000.000 square miles of un­
cash in advance.
explored territory. In Africa there are
6,500.000 square miles; arctic regions.
<h«inl 11 multi «■ n Hiatal Shot.
3.600.000; antarctic regions, 5.300.000;
"Isatwl. does your husband get angry
The sultan, in fear for his personal
America. 2.000.000; Australia. 2.000.000;
when he tells you to wake him early and
mifety, has taken to revolver practice,
Asia, 200,000, and various islands, 000,-
you dor't do it ?'*
lie shoots at a target daily, and has. it
000.
is reported in Paris. Iweoine so profi­
"No. dear; he knows that I know he
cient that he can fire with equally fatal
mtnraed Cattle In Maine.
doesn't mean it."
facility with either bis right or his left
The practice of dehorning cattle is
hand.
.
largely increasing in Maine, and It will
Benedict—I
that a Chicago man
probably not be many years Iwfore a h suing for a divorce on the ground that
r.l... a , a .....It«'. Hit.,
I cow with horns will Ite a curiosity.
he was hypnotised when begot married.
The pain of a mosquito bite I. cnn«e<1
O'Retch—I w onder if any man ever
Fnewlatlon at the Barth.
by a fluid p<>i,oii injected by the in­
net into the wound in order to make
At the present rate of increase the got married without first being hypno­
the blood thin enough to float through
population of th* earth will double it tised ?
the moMjuito'a throat.
self in 200 years.
I
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Land Office at Oregon City, Ore.,
January 16th, 189I
Notice is hereby given that the follow
named settler has filed notice of his intend
to make final proof in support of his claim, J
that said proof will be made before the Coni
Clerk of Tillamook co., at Tillamook, Ored
on March 4th, 1899. viz :
WILLIAM J CARVER,
H. E 12333. for the s of Ne % and E of
»4of Sec. 3«. Tp- » K 7 W.
He names the fo lowing witnesses to prl
his continuous residence upon and cultival]
of said land, viz:
George A Barton, Jeremiah Murphy. Da]
Murphy and John Murphy, of Trask. Oregoi
C has . B. M oores , Registd
Reduced
HOLLAND HOUSE.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STA^
OF OREGON, FOR TILLAMOOK VOUNi
W. P. Book.
plaintiff,
v«
Jehiel Foreat,
defendant. J
1
To Jehiel Forest, the defendant above hand
In the name of the state of Oregon, you]
hereby required to appear and snswei the cJ
plaint filed against you in the a ove euul
suit on or beiore tlie last day of the time J
scribed in the order for the publication of]
summons, which time is six weeks, and b< J
to run from the dav of first publication hen]
to-wit, January 12th, 1899, and if you tail □
appear and answer, for want thereof plaiJ
will applv to said court for the relief denianl
in the coinplaint herein. The relief denianl
is the foreclosure of a certain mortgage]
ecuted and delivered by you to the Aberdl
Bank, of Aberdeen, Washington, on or ah]
November 20th, 1894, bearing said date, to]
cure the payment of a certain promissorv u|
of yourself for E»44 oj , dated November aJ
1894, and payable on or before two years affl
date, with interest after date at the rate!
ten per cent, per annum, which said mortgJ
conveyed unto said Aberdeen Bank for that u|
pose the following described real propet]
situated in the county of Tillamook, StatJ
Oregon, to-wit : The North East quarter]
S .clion twenty-six (26) and the South East qn|
ter of Section twenty-three (23). in townsl]
om’U) North of Range eight (8) West of fl
Wiliam tte Meridian ; and which said nfl
and mortgage were on or about November afl
1894. indoised and assigned to this plaintiff, al
on which there is now due plaintiff the sum]
$1234.80, with interest thereon at the rate of fl
percent, per annum from Dece»uber 20th, ufl
until paid ; the further sum of >58.50 naidfl
taxes on said premises, the costs and dlsburl
ment of this suit and the sum of ficooo I
tomey’s fees herein. It is further demanded!
said complaint that said mortgaged real p|
perty be «old as upon execu ion and the pl
ceedsof said «ale be applied in payment of ■
said sums due plaintiff and that you be for efl
barred and foreclosed of and from any and I
right, title and interest in or to said inoriga(jl
premises and every part theieof, except stal
tory right of redemption, and that the pfl
chaser at said sale be put unto immediate pl
session of said premises by the sheriff.
■
This summons is published by order of fl
Hon. G. W. Sappington, County Judge ofTifl
niook county, Oregon, made and dated at Tifl
mook Citv, Oregon, on January 10th, 1899, ■
time prescribed in the order for publicatfl
being once a week for six successive weeks, fl
the date of first publication being Thursdfl
lanuary 12th, 1899.
8
B. L. EDDY,
Attorney for Plaintifl
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Land Office at Oregon City, On
February nth, 1> i
Notice is hereby given that the folloi
named settler has filed notice of his intes
to make fi al proof in support of his cli
and that said proof will be made before
County Clerk, of Tillamook co., atTillaid
Oregon, on March 251I1, 1899, viz :
MYRON F. REYNOLDS;
Pre. I). S. 7970 for tlie Se % of Se *4 6ec. 4. 1
of Ne '4, Sw »4 of Ne K, Sec. 9, Tp. f 8, R.l
He names the following witnesses to n
his continuous residence upon and cultivl
of s id land, v.z •
Charles E. Bester and Lucius S. Maynaij
Tillamook. Oregon ; Janies R. Harris, of Ill
worth, Ore.; Charles Himes, of Tillamook,!
C has . B. M oores Regisl
NOTICE OF GVAKDIAN
SALI
In the County Court of the County of 'fl
mook, Slate of Oregon.
I11 the matter of the estate of Fredrick MJ
Montie V. Davidson, Minors.
The petition of George Williams, guard!]
the above named Minors, for an order tol
certain undivided interests in real prod
coming re ularly on to be heard, and it aq
ins to the court that it is for the best iuli
of the s id minors that their undivi ed on]
enth interest in and to the real property!
cribed in said petition l>e sold and the iq
derived from the sale thereof be placed q
terest, or otherwise invested so as to derlq
most benefit therefrom for tl e said minci
is therefore ordered that the next of kin o'l
minors, tc wit:—W. W. Quick, Rhoda Johi
Nellie Stillwell, G. C. Davidson, Mary Dfl
Jano Deane, Bell Pye and Anna William«]
a 1 other perso s interested in said estatfl
pear before this court on the 7th day of Mi
A. D., 1899, to show cause, if any, they can |
said sale should not be ordered.
G. W. SAP! INGTŒ
County Jud]
Dated this 9th day of February, 1899-
ADMINISTRA KIR’S
NOTICl-l
Direct From S. F. to Tillamook
The undersigned having been on tbfl
day of January, 1899, duly appointed
the Hon. County Court of Tillamj
county. Oregon. Administrator of tbfl
Freight handled with pjspatch and at lowest rates. Fruit delivered in good order tate of NEHALEM SCOTT, deceased]
>ere<>ns having CLAIMS againsttbel
Best Accommodations and Cheapest Route to or from Tillamook.
Cstate, are hereby notified to present]
.very attention pmd Ito wants and conveniences of passenger. First-class table set. same, duly verified to me within]
month
” from the date hereof, at thefl
WILL SAIL FROM SAN FRANCISCO ABOUT OCTOBER 30th AND
of Handley & Handlev, at TilllB®!
Oregon.
EVERY 10 DAYS AFTER.
Dated this day, January 12h. 1899. I
For further particulars apply to
H arry M itchell . Administrât«!
EEAFLE ¿ c Co.,
No. 14 C alifornia S treet . S ax F ranoso ; or to T recker L umber C o .
WHERE TO INSURE.
THE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON
GLOBE INSURANCE CO.
AGENT FOR TILLAMOOK
J. 8. STEPHEJ
HOME MUTUAL INSURANCE CONFI
DAIRYIVIEN—Attention !
AGENTS FOR TILLAMOOK.
BIGGS & STEPHE>
SCHOOL DESKS AND SUPPL'*5
EVERY DESCRIPTION.
WHEN YOU WANT
. Higgins Salt.
Cheese Color.
Butter Color,
Rennet.
Butter Paper
Separators.
Butter Workers.
And any Other Dairy Supplies
WRITE
de STOKEs Co.,
FOR PRKF4
”ST0Rlfl- OREGON,
WR PRKE3 AND CATALOGUES.
J. S. STEPHENS is agent
Northwest Scliool Furniture Co®l
for Tillamook co.
EDGAR LATIME
BARBER AND
SHAVING,
HAIRDRESSEI
HAIR
SHAMPOOING,
ClTH
ETC.
Electric Baths always ready. C
persons suffering with rheum«
Building next door to the Pu*i