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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 18, 1900)
THE TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. January 18, 1900. HARDWARE AND DAIRY STOVES & RANCES. Large Line Charter Oak Stoves. Star Estate Ranges, Umpire Air Tight Heaters, Doors, Windows & Glass, Churns & Butter Workes, Milk Cans, Paints & Oils. HARDWARE. te te te We carry the Largest Stock of á Hardware in Tillamook County. te Before buying Nails, Windows, te Doors and Sashes call and get te our prices. te ___________________________ UTENSILS. GROCERIES We carry a First Class Stock of Groceries and Provisions! Canned Goods, etc., which will be found complete in every line I We want your trade and will do our best to give satisfaction iu al I transactions. We keep in stock a nice line of China, Crockery, Glass I Tinware, etc. CHINA & TINWARE] * McINTOSH & McNAIR. Tillamook Ülbc 4* J ÛlilLtiitook Fred C. Baker. Publisher. Official Paper, Tillamuok City and County RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION ( strictly in advance .) One year.............................................. 1.50 Six months.................................................. 75 Three months..................................... ’50 Office at corner of Main and 2nd streets. CURRENT TOPICS. Resolutions have been intro duced in congress calling upon the secretary of the treasury for information in regard to deposits of public funds in banks and also as to the relations between the national treasury and certain banks. The inquiry is an en tirely proper one. It has been alleged that Secretary Gage has favored one or more banks in the matter of deposits and that the relations of the treasury with these institutions are not strictly in conformity with the law. It is the duty of congress to give attention to these allegations and to ascertain the facts and it is not to be doubted that the secre tary of the treasury will be found most willing to furnish all the information asked for. Under the law of 1864 the secretary of the treasury is authorized to de posit receipts from internal re venue in banks that are govern ment depositories and which fur nish government bonds to secure such deposits. Pursuant to this authority and in order to give relief to the money market, Secretary (Jage ordered the inter lial revenue to be deposited in banks complying with the law and he designated one New York bank, which has long been a government depository, as a s >rt of fiscal agent of the government to distribute the deposits to other banks. This gave that institution the handling of a very large amount of public money and was held by some to be a discrimination in its favor for which there is no warrant in law. In a recent interview Secretary Gage said in defense of his course: “There came a panic in Wall street on the 18th of December and stocks suffered an awful depreciation. There were fears that the depression would spread over the whole country and the treasury was looked to to put money in circulation and relieve the stringency. There was only one way for us to do it and that was to deposit money in the banks, so we gave notice that deposits in banks would be increased and that those deposi tories putting up more bonds as securities would receive the de posits. Sixty-six banks re sponded and put up additional bond securities.’’ Of these the National Citv bank ofNew York put up $400,000,000 in bonds and having thus given the largest security was deemed by the treasure officials to be the proper institution for gathering and ^distributing the funds de rived from internal revenue. a * • from $15,133,493 to $93,715,951. cerned in the naval battle at iljcabliqbt Those interested in the cotton Santiago should be the means er' HOW TO REGISTER. resident at the time of registration, upon . appe ils to their higher morality. conviction shall be punished by imprison- And Other Features of the Regis meat in the penitentiary not less than one year, nor more than three jears, or tration Law. Every elector in this state must regis by a fine not less than $100 nor more ter between the first Monday in January, than $2000, or both such fine anrt im 1900, and May 15, at 5 o’clock p.m., fol prisonment. Any person who shall falsely swear to any affidavit required by this lowing. Such was the law passed by the last shall be deemed guilty of perjury, and legislature. A voter way register with a upon conviction thereof shall be punished notary public, justice of the peace, or accordingly." Forthose who for anv reason cannot county clerk. Electors are not subject to I expense in the matter. A book contain go to the county clerk for registration, ing the registration of all voters in the the law enables them to settle the matter county will be prepared, and from this with a notary public or justice of the general book smaller ones will be made, 1 peace, special blanks being provided for giving the list of electors in each voting the purpose. These officials do not col lect any fee from the elector, but receive precinct. Electors will be numbered, consecu ' 10 cents for every blank filed with the tively, in each precinct, as they are en county clerk. The® only evidences of their standard of mo-.« alitv are to be found in their fraudulent™ capitalization and their conscienceless & crushingout of competitors by means™ the individual man would be ashamed toK employ. One needs only to read the liis-H torv of the most colossal of these cotn-H bines, the Standard Oil trust, the An.™ thracite Coal trust and the WhiskyB trust to form an idea of the moral code™ by which these concerns are governed. What is true of these monopolies of pub-H lie necessities is equally true in a degree™ of the combinations that control nearly™ every field of industry. The trouble with most of the modernB college presidents and professors is that™ they see everything through the multi.B millionaires’ spectacles. The million-^B aires make munificent gifts and bequests™ to universities and colleges and there*™ fore they can see nothing wrong in the™ morality by which, these millions have™ been amassed. In a spirit of grateful appreciation® and of more grateful anticipation theB collegiate political economists refuse to B believe that any harm can come from B •»•lybody or any concern that has sliow-^B ered such benefits upon them and the in.™ stitutions that are through them enabl-B ed to pay high salaries and grant long B and frequent vacations. trade have felt that there ought of withholding the rewards due to have been proportionately as to the other officers and men of great an increase in the exports the fleet. Of all the men who of manufactures of cotton. Na participated in the war, none de turally they are looking to the serve better than Captain Clark markets in which there is the of the Oregon and Commander greatest demand for cotton goods. Wainright of the Gloucester. China is one of the greatest users Through the advancement of of cotton in the world. I11 1897 others Captain Clark actually China imported cotton goods to ranks two numbers lower now the value of $54,000,000. The than he did when the war broke United States furnished that out. It is high time that petty year cotton goods to the value jealousies should go to the rear. of only $7,438,203, or about one- * * * seventh of the whole. Here is The twentieth century pro a market capable of absording at blem is still being discussed all least four times the manufactures over the country, and bets are tered in the general county register. The of cotton that we send. It is be being made upon it, showing a clerk shall require of the elector such in THREE VOLUNTEERS MET lieved that under the new con ; great deal of foolishness, on one formation as his registration number, DEATH IN THE JUNGLE. ditions, with the advantages side. As a man is not of age day of registering, full name of elector ; I given us by the possession of the until his twenty-first year of liv business or occupation ; age of the elec This is The Opinion of General tor in years ; country of nativity ; if Philippines, not only our cotton ing has closed and not when his Summers. trade with China may be greatly twenty - first birthday arrives, naturalized, the time, place and court of It is doubtful if the fate of the three increased, but tarde in other de make the application to the twen naturalization or declaration as evi I Oregon volunteers who disappeared near partments as well. The cotton tieth century problem, and the denced by the legal proof exhibited by the | Marilao, island of Luzon, will ever be elector. known. The unfortunate men were growers of the South and the case is closed. The actual and precise place of residence I Clarence Mills, R. C. McCoy and J. E_. manufacturers are not in favor of the elector at the time of his register * * * I Lawrence,' all of company M., Secoud of closing the door of opportunity. This is worth repeating : Oom ing will be asked, and the precinct, and, Oregon volunteers. They disappeared They see in the expansion policy if in the country, the township, section a wider market for their staple Paul is achieving as great a rep and range ; in cities and towns having April 28, 1899, and no trace has been product, and none of the sophis utation for bottling up British streets, bv specifying the name of town found of them since that day. Love Story Told in Brief. At the time the Oregon regiment was tries of Mr. Bryan will make troops as Hobson did bv his _ i or city, the street or other location of the camped near Marilao. The three young them over into anti-expansion efforts toward bottling up the dwelling-place, with the number of the I men obtained passes to go on a foraging He was young, handsome, cultured,™ popular, and also a paison. Is it any® Spanish sailors in Santiago har dwelling, and if it has not, then such a ists. bor. One danger to which Paul description of the place that it can be expedition, and started out in the di . wonder that he was the cynosure of® * * * rection ot Bullacan. Before starting, j maiden’s eyes and that his holidays wereflB Referring to the assurances will ever remain impervious is readily ascertained and identified. If the they w ere cautioned bv the officers not marked with slippers without number® elector be not the head of the house it obtained by our government that he need have no fear of must be stated, and upon what floor to go far away from camp as the rebels and other toilet trifles, worked by fra-® were on every side, and there was great t gile fingers belonging to gentle maids in B from European powers that the being Hobsonized. thereof and what room the elector occu « « * danger of falling into their hands. open door principle will be ob • his congregation ? pies in the house. If there are anymore deserters It must also be stated whether the The last seen of the trio they w ere en served in China, Secretary of Agriculture Wilson said that from the union army who want voter is able to write his name or mark tering a bamboo thicket some distance i Then he fell in love—as even a parsonB from the camp. They had their guns, I can properly do—with the daughter of a B some idea of the vastness of the their record straightened out his ballot. If the elector’s inability is ap but no shots were heard iu that vicinity. interests involved maybe gained they had better apply to congress parent in consequence of some physical When they failed to return a search was deacon who was also a doctor; who B I from the fact that while ten without delay. There is still infirmity, such as blindness or loss of a made as far as possible, but nothing diagnosed the affair as promising and B years ago our exports from the room in the pension list for a few limb, incapacitating the applicant from could be found to show what had be offered his blessing. All went smoothly B for a while and then, vacation season be- B Pacific coast to all countries ag more bounty jumpers who took writing, this fact must beset down in the come of them. ing at hand, the parson planned a trip |® register. Should the disability be illi gregated $26,000,000 and five up their abode in Canada while General Summers is of the opinion that teracy of the voter, the clerk shall, in ad soon after entering the thicket they across the salt, salt sea, and bade adieu, B years ago $42,000,000, the steady the fighting was going on. dition to stating the fact, enter as full a were surrounded by natives, and captur i with farewell words, to his flock and B increase in Pacific coast exports * * * description of the physical peculiarities ed or killed. He says ne hoped for a long . farewell kisses to his promised bride. has raised the aggregate to $73,- A person cannot go anywhere of the elector as possible, giving height, * * * 000,000 a year ago. What pro on the civilized globe without approximate weight, complexion, color time that they had been captured and Later he journeyed homeward. On the ■ were alive but the recent rescue of pris portion of this was sent to the finding an Irishman. Men of of e ves and any visible marks or scars oners from the Filipinos failed to bring vessel was a young lady, “a pretty B trained nurse.’’ And Miss Mary was in < frient we are unable to say, but this race have become prominent and their location. any news of the three Oregon volun no wav contrary when the parson yield- it is a fact that the trade of the I in every nation on the face of The law is very explicit and enters into teers. i ed to the charm of her society, forgot Pacific coast with that quarter the earth and now one of them smallest details ; until aftera person has “1 am now convinced that the men his fiancee an the banks of »he Hudson of the world is steadily increas has been elected chief of the Win gone through the process of registering were killed soon after leaving camp,’’ river and won Miss Mary's consent to be his and only his, before the banks of the ing, so that the maintenance of nebago Indian tribe in Wiscon he will think he is under suspicion for said General Summers this morning Newfoundland had been reached. murder. the open door in China means a sin. j “There isn't the slightest evidence that * * * Should an elector change his residence they were captured and are still alive. « a e great deal for the states on our Was there trouble when he got home ? western border. It is said that A judge of the Iowa supreme after registering, he may, before the books They did not desert, hence they must have The text, “Love one another,’’ had got ships are needed on the Pacific court has promulgated the opin are closed, cause his former registration been killed. I thiiik their retreat was muddled up in his brain and he read it, “Love another,” and let the old one go. coast faster than the shipyards ion that twenty-two years is long to be cancelled, by a request in writing to cut off by natives who were lying in Of course there was severe comment, but the clerk where he registered, on a spe wait in the bamboo thicket, and refus the old love gave him tip and wished here can supply them and that enough to hold office and he will cially prepared blank. Section 12 of the happiness. It didn't come. Why? all the ship-building plants, from voluntarily retire. It is always law says : “No ¡»erson shall register who ing to surrender as they most likely did, him The new love was of a different faith and were killed on the spot. San Francisco to Puget sound, refreshing to find a man who is not a qualified elector in the precinct in “The surrounding country was full of the orthodox members of his church were have enough business on hand kuows when he has had enough. which he registers, and who is not a rebels. They made a desperate attack not willing to accept her. So of course there was trouble. to keep them going for a year to re ident thereof, or register in a name on us the night following the disappear- | « « < * M * come. rather than his true name,and no elector ance ot the three soldiers, which shows There is no doubt about the The worry threw the parton into a * * * Boers being behind the times shall register a second time in the same that they must have been near us in fever, the fevor into an aberration of precinct or register in any other precinct mind, the aberration into committing Too much encouragement and non progressive, They have great numbers that day.” foolish act of trying to blow out given an enterprise sometimes not yet learned the value of a until his first registration has been can. Clarence Mills was a native of Clay the what he supposed was his brains. He celled.” six shots and four of them sank in has a boomerang effect. In Mich typewriter in war. When it Upon the day of election the judges, as county Dakota. He enlisted at Hub tired head and didn’t hurt him in the least. igan there exists a law giving 1 comes to the use of the rifle, how soon as an elector applying tn vote has bard, Or , where his father, H. L. Mills his The doctors took them out, marveling cent a ]K>und bounty oti all sugar ever, they are well up towards given his name and residence, shall ask now lives. greatly over the incident J E. Lawrence was a native of Frank made from beets and it is said the front. M * » the elector if he is registered, and must lin county, K v. He enlisted at Hubbard. * * » that the state will lx called upon During his illness he was tenderly also examine the register. Even though His nearest relative is given as 0. B. nursed, but not by the pretty shipboard to pay nearly a million of dollars Twenty-five thousand men in a person may I k * registered his vote may Lawrence, of Tillamook, Or. nurse. She learned, through friends, </ to the wide awake Wolverines Pittsburg, who have just had be challenged before his ballot is actually R. G. McCoy is a native of Oregon. his former engagement and had sense in the box. If not registered the elector who, by establishing small co their wages raised, start in the He enlisted at Portland, and his nearest enough to give him his congee and go operative refineries, find them new year with ample reason for is to be considered challenged. In c iseof relative, presumed to lie his father, is back to the hospital where her services were in demand. Then, what happened? selves iu clover through the swearing off voting the demo a challenge the voter may subscrilie an given as O. McCoy., of Helix. Or.— The other .Mary (her name, by the bye. was written Minnie) was remembered, rapid development of the beet cratic ticket, if thev ever acquired oath on a blank provided for that pur Telegram. pose, and this also must be sworn to bv — and when he got well he pleaded the sugar industry. The wheat yield the habit. not more than half a dozen freeholders. THEIR HIGHER MORALITY. lamentable effect of sea air on the heart of the state has fallen off by that was on the bounding billow while In trying such cases the election judges its mate was <»n the shore, so that she— reason of farmers giving up rais have power to issue subpoenas to require At the meeting of the American Econ woman like forgave him, took him back ing grain and devoting their at TWO LIVE PAPERS the Attendance of witnesses liefore them omic association, the principle subject of to her arms and hunted up the laid asi ie tention to the saccharine root, The last section ot the law gives the fol disensión was the trusts. 1 he presi wedding finery to furbish it for early use. now coming into prominence all lowing warning ; dent of the association. Prof. Hadler, of * * « The reptilar s.ibacription price of “Any county clerk or clerk of any cotni Vale university, declared that he had over the country ; and the At the wedding the pretty nnrse is to THE HEADLIGHT is St. 50. and tv conrt, or any deputy of either of such financial effect on the state treas little confidence in the efficiency of gov be present. She will look at the bridegroom the regular subscription price of officers, or any judge or clerk of election, ury is such that efforts will be ernmental supervision or control of and whisper under her breath "ileum ' the Weekly Oregonian is $1.50. or any justice ot the peace or notary pnl>- made to repeal the bounty law. these great combinations of organized and at the bride, add to it, "Eet tuum ' Any one subscribing tor THE lic. who shall willfully disregard any of Mine (once) and thine (now). Perha|>s capital. Instead of governmental con. she will wonder whoce next ? For the The point made is that a local HEADLIGHT amt paving one the provisions of this act. or who shall trol he urged the necessity of higher mor heart is fickle almve all things land des industry should not >x fostered vear in advance can get both the willfully fail to perform any provision of ality, which would lead tie trusts to perately wicked. Does not the good at the expense of the whole bodv this a<t. or any peraoa wh<> shall willfully treat the public with sympathy and jns. book say so ? And will the parson, ot citicena iu the commonwealth. HEADLIGHT w hile in the pulpit, ever take it for a or fraudulently register more than once, Ten years ago our exports of cotton cloth to China were valued at $1,519,265. In 1891 our cotton exports toChina went up to $5,334,800; declined in '893 to $1,638,657 ; increased in 1899 to $9,823,353. In twenty years our exports of manufac tures of cutton have increased in • « • value front $10,853,950 in 1879 and to $23,567,914 in 1899. During It is a shame that a personal the same period the exports of squibble over the merits of the WEEKLY OREGONIAN iron and steel products increase 1 two men of highest rank con- One Year for >2.35. i or register under any but his true name, or attempt to vote by personating ano ther who is registered, contrary to the provisions of this act. or knowingly reg- I ister in any precinct where he is not a tice. President Hadler plainly has not vet discoverer! that corporations have not souls and the organized classes, as he calls then, cannot he putsuaded to treat tnc pu >I k with sympathy and jaatice by text ? » « « Bnt a woman's heart, oh. wonder o all earthly wonders—"I hare traveler far. ’ uyd an old man, once ; .’’I have seen many strange things ; bnt ¡th« strangest one of all is a woman'» heart.