THE TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, MAY
Sparks from, the Anvil
The only trouble with the democratic
party in Tillamook is that the republi
cans out-number them three to one.
* * *
Don’t get too near the little click in
this city who are writing for the Ocean
Wave and Telephone-Register. You may
get the FilipinoSitch if you do.
* * *
So President Roosevelt has signed the
oleomargarine bill in spite of theinflueace
of the millionaire meat packers to defeat
it, which shows that the president aims
to do what is right.
* *■ *
If anyone should ask you what is the
matter with the Telephone Register and
the Ocean Wave, dismiss the subject by
remarking : “They and their Tillamook
correspondents have the Filipino^itch,
which is broken out all over them.”
* * *
We see no objection to a person chang
ing from one party to another, for that
is their inalienable right and no one has a
right to question them, but when a per
son or a faction find they cannot get a
nomination orcontrol the party to which
they belong and then flops oyer to the
opposite side, they are genuine bolters.
* * *
After reading the Ocean Wave, a well-
known democrat was heard to say to
another, “It that is the d—n trash that
the democrats are writing. I’ll see them
to Jerico before I’ll vote for such a gang
as that.” And from what we can learn
these two democrats are not the only
ones who w’ill vote the republican ticket
on account of this blackmailing.
* * *
One would think that the editor of the
Headlight was in politics by the political
roasting he is getting. True we have
written some truthful paragraphs which
could not be refuted, but if we are to be
roasted for doing that, pile it on, boys,
as much as possible, for the voters know
who is right and will vote accordingly
next month, when we can do the roast
ing.
* * *
“You’re the best friend the county’s
got,” said a subscribe when renewing
his subscription recently, “and every one
down in our section of the county is
going to vote the republican ticket be
cause the Headlight came out good and
strong in denouncing the tax-eaters, and
we re all going to stay with you.” We
merely mention this to show that the
roasting that Maxwell and Sappington
gave the editor at the Fairview primary
was personal rather than public.
* * *
The religious scoffers and atheists who
are writing to the Ocean Wave show to
what class in thecommunity they belong.
It is a poor recommendation for the
democratic ticket when infidels and scof
fers denounce republican candidates and
laud and praise democratic candidates.
It is low down politics to drag a man’s
religion into politics, but this is what the
corrupt and cowardly ring is doing. The
Headlight has too much respect for the
religious views held by candidates on the
democratic ticket to call that into ques
tion in a political campaign. But that
is what the scoffers are doing, but con
sider the source.
* * *
The editor was the victim of a good
joke on Monday. Mr. E. D. Hoag, the
republican nominee tor county treasurer,
came rushing into the office and said that
the body of a man had been found up the
Miami who had evidently been poisoned.
That was just the kind of news we were
looking for, when the editor threw ques
tions at the next county treasurer with
the rapiditv of a Gatling gun. All the
satisfaction the editor got was this, “A
man started up the Miami, and having
wrapped his lunch in the Ocean Wave, it
killed him !” The editor didu’t ask ano
ther question, but thought that the can
didate who could play a joke on us like
that ought to be elected.
* * *
Here is a mathematical problem we
want the “outs” to figure out.
The
only objection that could be raked up
against Sheriff Aiderman was that he
had served a little more than two terms
as sheriff. In other respect he made s
clean record and a good officer. This is
still the ground upon which the ring is
fighting him end boosting Mr Edwards,
who has been sheriff, clerk, surveyor and
came near being county judge four years
ago when he bolted the democratic party
and ran independent. Figure it out for
us, gentleman, for it looks to u9 that the
disgruntled ring has never figured out
this mathematical problem the way we
have indicated.
* * *
A campaign of lies, blackmail, malice
and personal spite is what the democrats
in Tillamook county have resorted to.
The worst feature of it is lhev are trying
to pose as honest«republicans, but, mark
this, ashamed to sign their names to
their campaign lies. Shame on them, for
no gentleman who is worthy of that
name would resort to such a sneak’s
trick. But, then, what else can one ex
pect from grafters, tax-eaters and rule
or ruin individuals. Come out like true
Americans if you want to fight the re
publican ticket, not attack individual
members on the ticket with tactics which
are characteristic of Spaniards and gen
uine Filipinos.
* » *
If we mistake not. no matter what
may be said about the different candi.
dates, most every voter in the county COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL
has his mind made up who he going to
vote for. And fora correct indication as A Good Argument by Prof.
to the result, the same enthusiasm and
G. A. Walker.
determination will be manifest at the
polls as was conspicuous at the republi
The high school is an established thing
can primaries. That enthusiasm is not in this country It has couie to stay, and
dead by any means, for having syvept from its popularity 1 have no fear that
one public abuse off the slate which the the people will be influenced by those com
taxpayers had been groaning under, the plaints that are brought against its sup
republicans of this county will do the port at public expense. Many reasons
same thing with the abusers themselves might be given for the maintenance of
next month,which should end the system the high school as a part of the public
of a few individuals being able to work school system. A few of those reasons
a “graft” machine.
will lie briefly considered.
* * *
THE HIGH SCHOOL AS A STIMULUS.
Republicans in this county will go to
The interests of learning in the com.
the polls next month with as much in mon school and the college are one.
terest and determination as they did Public and private institutions, primary
when they attend the primaries, for they and college education, are but parts of
have a clean ticket to vote for. And as one complete whole. As the school boy
a few cowardly, disgruntled republicans and the college graduate have a personal
and democrats have undertaken to at identity, so also the unity of all scholar
tack the personal of the republican ticket, ships must be seen in the sum total of
let the republicans in Tillamook rise to school life. The stages differ only in de
the occasion and show by their votes gree, not in nature.
that it is a personal matter with them
“From Nature s chain, whatever link
also, and the way to sweep this cowardly'
you strike.
Tenth or ten-thousandth, breaks the
element into insignificance is to snoyy
chain alike/'
them under as the tax-eaters and grafters
When the common school advances,
were at the republican primaries. You
As the col
ha ve the power, and at the polls is the I higher education flourishes,
ilege
glows,
its
magnet
life
should
pre.
place to finish up the job in no uncertaiu
sound and make a clean sweep of Tilla I vade the domain of the district school.
mook county’s and the taxpayers worst 1 The very presence of the college in a
state is an inspiration and a blessing to
enemies.
all good learning, of whatever name.
Tillamook county should show its ap The ideal hopes and purposes of the best
preciation of Congressman T. H. Tongue talent in our common schools center
by giving him a good big vote in June. here. As the high school gathers the
Leaving politics out of the question alto first-fruits of the lower grades cf instruc
gether. we must all admit that Mr. Ton tion, so the college opens its doors to
gue has worked faithfully in congress for satisfy the aspiration and ambitions of
this congressional district, and especially those who may complete th? preparatory
for Tillamook county, so the wav to ap course with honor. The stimulus from
preciate his services is for one and all to I above may be felt throughout the sys
vote for him. We are all interested in tern, elevating, energizing, and stimulat
the grow th and industrial development ing all its parts.
of the county, and now that it has just
It is a reflex action upon the lower
started in to expand and to become a grades. Education works from the top
manufacturing center, it is extremely im downward. Those countries have the best
portant that we have an active con primary and grammar schools that, pro
gressman at Washington who is inter vide most liberally for secondary educa
ested in Tillamook harbor improvements. tion. The work down in the primary
This is something which concerns every and grammar departments of the grad
dairyman, manufacturer and those who ed schools is much superior to the work
own property, so n vote for Mr. Tongue done in the same grades in rural schools.
is a vote for our own interests.
Every pupil enters the lower grades with
this goal constantly before him. Heat
This is something that Tillamookers tends more regularly and studies more
should ponder over, especially our demo earnestly that he may finally obtain th?
crats friends. Are they going to deprive honors attached to his admission into
Tillamook county of representation in the higher de partment.
the state legislature ? A vote for Mr. C.
The humblest home and school in our
Grissen, the democratic nominee for joint land feel the influence of th? college and
representative is a vote for a Yamhill the high school, and bless them for the
man and a vote to deprive Tillamook of incentives, the opportunities, and the
representation in the state legislature. possibilities which they furnish. Every
A vote for Mr. B. L. Eddy, the republi science taught there, every trmli unfold
can nominee for joint representation, is ed. every professorship actively employ
a vote for a Tillamook man and repre ed, and every dollar spent in facilities
sentation of the county in the legislature. for h'gher instruction, adds directly and
That's it, gentlemen, and what are you indirectly to the common stock of agen
going to do about it ? Vote for the Yam cies which benefit and build up the com
hill man, whose county has plenty of mon school; and he iv ho for any reason at
representation in the state legislature, or tempts to degrade any department of
vote for the Tillamook man, whose coun higher instruction, is engaged in the
ty should have a representative. Surely, foolish undertaking of pulling down the
for the reputation of Tillamook, there is roof which shelters him.
only one thing to do, and that is to vote
While all this is true, there still remains
for Mr. B. L. Eddy.
in many of our states, including Oregon,
* * *
an unbridged chasm between the com
Every once in a while Tillamook is mon school and the college. Want of
visited by the state fish commissioner unity, sympathy, and relationship is the
and the promise is repeated that a sal complaint which goes up from the lower
mon hatchery is to be established on one to the higher ranks. The high school is
ofkthe rivers or streams in Tillamook needed to bridge this chasm. Where the
county. Thus far it has turned out ex primary school, the grammar school, the
actly as the Tillamook railroad—all pro highschool, and the college ar? succes
crastination. Mr. F. Van Dusen, as state sive steps up the educational ladder, and
fish commissioner, appears to be follow are so constructed that each ascending
ing in the footsteps of his predecessors, round is made stronger by the multipli
for he made a promise last week that he cation of support from the bottom, is
would establish a salmon hatchery here, our best system. Prof. Huxley, th?
so it remains to be seen what Mr. Dusen’s great English naturalist, says upon this
promises amount to. Somehow, we have point: “No system of public education
very little faith in these promises, for is worthy of the name unless it creates
what we have seen in previous years it a great educational ladder, with one
jooks to us that these periodical visits to end in th? gutter ar.d the other end in
different parts of the state by some of the university.”
the Oregon commissioners is for a little
INDUSTRIAL VALUE OF A HIGHER
newspaper puff and to run up the mile
EDUCATION.
age. But we hope that the new fish
Education makes labor more skillful
commissioner is not built that way and
that his promise is as good as his bond. and more productive. This proposition
With so many fine streams in Tillamook, is based on wide comparison of intel
with plenty of fish, no better place in ligent and ignorant labor, and is sustain
Oregon can lie found for salmon hatcher ed by such a multitude of observations
ies. Once again we hold the hatchery that it is no longer questioned by any
proposition against the state fish com one familiar with the facts. The hand
missioner and hope there will Be no is found to be another hand when guided
cramfishing nor empty promises con by an intelligent mind. Processes are
performed, not only more rapidly, but
nected with it.
better, when faculties, which have been
exercised in early life, furnish iheir as
$1OO Reward, $IOO.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to sistance. In great establishments and
learn that there is at leant one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all its among large bodies of laborers where
stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh '
Cure is the only positive cure known to the men pass by each other, ascending or
merlinal
i t V. Catarrh
medical f fraternity.
Catarrh h*>ititr
being m » rntiafihi.
congtitu- ' ! descending in their grades of labor, just
On ial
im I disease,
dinoiitip requires
roriiiirf«« a 11 constitutional heat.
™
lio
tieat- I
.
. "
meat Hall s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, as easily and certainly as particles of
acting directly upon the blood and mncouR tur-I
r •
. ........ «1; 1
face« of the system, thereby destroying the different degrees of temperature glide
foundation of the disease, r
—* giving the
- 1 | . by each
...
..
. found
-
. to
.
and
other, there
is
be an
patient strength by building up
np th«,
the . cunstitu-. . |
1..
•
w * *
* * M
15.
1902.
They demand easements, and the miser
able hovel ischanged to the neat cottage.
It is true that an educated workman
demands higher wages than an ignorant
one, but hi« work is worth more. Capi
tal is not far-sighted when it looks upon
the workman as a mere machine. A
machine may be set to the task of
running another machine, but the re-
suit has never been satisfactory.
The laborer is more thana machine. He
is a human being, and his rights as such
are as sacred and inviolable as those in
herited by the more favored child of
fortune. The artisan may be a hewer of
wood, but if his life answers its highest
purpose, he must also be hewer of
wrong. The laborer may be the head
and guide of a family, a member of
society, a citizen of the state, and out of
these relations flow duties of the highest
importance. To prepare to meet
higher obligations of manhood, is
highest function of education.
Permit me, in this connection, to
allude *o what is called the “ over-
education” of labor. This is the latest
phase of the opposition of aristocracy
to popular education. It is now willing
to concede that a very little learning is
not a dangerous thing for the laborer,
but capital and caste are greatly con
cerned lest the common people be spoiled
by too much education. They see special
danger in the attempt to put facilities
for acquiring a higher education within
easy reach of the children of toil, and
the free high school is assailed as the
common enemy of both capital and
labor.
I have only time to say that this op
position to the high school rests upon
the same basis as the former opposition
to the common school. A high school
education now no more unfits a boy for
manual labor than an elementary educa
tion did when comparatively few re
ceived it.
I
Twin Family Medicines
WILL
Save a Doctor Bill and may be Your Life.
HOW IS YOUR LIVER ?'
OREGON LIVER REGULATOR hits the point. For a sick headache, the kind
that is caused from a deranged stomach, dizziness, nervousness, dyspepsia, consti
pation or any ailment of the stomach, liver or bowles, there is no medicine that
wiil relieve you so quickly and permanently as OREGON LIVER REGULATOR.
Regular size, 25c. and 1.
D. J. Fry, Salem, Oregon.
Star, Idaho.
Dear Sir,—Enclosed find 25c. for a package of Oregon
Liver Regulator. We used the medicine when we lived in Salem and
found it superior to anything weever tried for headache and bilious
ness.
Yours truly.
R ev . A nson C ox .
A FEW WORDS MORE.
THE HIGH SCHOOL SHOULD BE FREE.
The high school should be free, and the
same educational privileges extended to
all classes. In a government like ours. *
whose chief corner stone is that all are
created free and equal, it is impolitic to
have society divided into different strata
of social caste by unjust discrimination.
Make the high school a pay school, and
non and assisting'nature in doing its wor.- almost in variable rul? that the educated the tendency of higher education will be
i to such an end. Ix-t the state demand a
The proprietors have so much faith in its cur» I , ■
_• „ *
u;
1 1
tive powers,
that they
they offer
off^r One
One Hundred
Hundred Dol-
Doi- laborer rises to a higher and lilghei fee tor the higher knowledge which it
nweri, that
lars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for I
in the kinds of labor preformed,, ! imparts, and it places the seal of igno-
list of testiinonisls.
testimonials
______
M
r
'
Address. F. J CHENEY ft CO. Toledo, O. land also in wages received, while the | rance upon many who aie now striving
Sold by I>ruflri.«r». 75c
ignorant wink like dredgt w to the bottom for a liberal education. By such an act
Hall s Family Fills are the be«t.
it spreads a banquet for the rich from
The same lesson has been taught and I which the hungry poor are excluded.
The guide» to darkness find their way enforced by the world’s exposition«. In
lustice, as well aw the interests of
to their own element.
all the great comparisons of national society and free government, demands 1
that
the poor girl and boy shall have an
Half the troubles we complain of are Mkill, the superiority of educated labor
I equal chance with the rich in the search
troubles only because we complain of ha* been attested in a most striking man after knowledge. The boy without
them.
nwr- Hn(l
nations are appealing to , monev must have the opportunity of
A stock market philosopher says mar. ' education for success in the industrial i making himself the intellectual peer of j
riageisjust as good as a failure if the markets of the world. The day of mere , the young man of leisure. Such oppor-
i tunities are furnished by our free high
girl has money.
| muscle has passed. and the day of mind schools and other educational institu
Weigh your friends in the scale of pros-, has dawned. Every form of industry tions.
The free high school is the poor man’s
perity and they will be found wanting now demands ingenious brains and the
college. From it will go forth the
—to borrow your money.
cunning fingers of edu<;ated labor.
fatherless I m » v equally equiped with the
It may be all well eHough to “know
Education improves the condition of rich man's won for the duties of honest
thyself,” but if you are wise you will the lalmrer. Nowhere do an educated labor in any profession nr employment.
not boast of the acquaintance.
Nehalem, Or.
G. A. W alker .
people corer their nakedness with lags.
EKYS H eale JNING
Meaning Best, Quick Cure. A
Z_ new
_ remedy
__ __’r for all aches and pains. It is the justly
celebrated Pain Killer—guaranteed or money back, Try it for an ache or pain, ex-
ternal or internal. Regular size, 50c.
B enjamin W heeler , residence Highland Addition. Salem, Or.,
a sufferer from rheumatism, says: “Fry’s Lightning Healer is the
best and the only medicine that ever gave me relief. I believe it will
do all that is claimed for it.”
Above medicines for sale by
ROBERT STURGEON, Tillamook, Oregon.
CASE &
FOWLER,
»
PROPRIETORS
Tillamook Iron Works
General Machinists & Blacksmiths.
Boiler Work. Logger’s Work and Heavy Forging,
Fine Machine Work a Specialty.
OREGON.
TILLAMOOK,
*
ft
►
L. N BARNES,
.A-t ttie ITE'77
WHO PAYS THE SCHOOL TAX ?
It is frequently asserted that the bur
den of school taxation is caused by the
high school, that it falls heaviest on the
poor, and that the high school is mostly
patronized by the“rich,”or by those who
can afford to keep theirchildren in school
while the children of the “ poor” must
go to work. These assertions are false.
They show either hostility to the high
school, or ignorance of facts. They are
made by two classes of individuals, by
the small politician whose heart is
always bleeding, on principle, for the
“poor,” who is always ready to avail
himself of any cry or claptrap to foist
himself into notority, or by the well-
meaning but indifferent individual who
takes the “ talk’’ of his friend, the poli
tician, for the truth, and is too lazy to
investigate for himself.
Now, in the first place, it is not true
that the burden of school-taxation is
caused by the high school, and falls
heaviest on the poor. On the contrary,
were the high school of almost any city
of the state abolished, the school tax of
the citizen of average circumstances
would not be diminished a dollar, and,
as an actual fact, more than 60 per cent,
of the high school patrons of any of our
towns or cities belong to the poorer
class of people who pay little or no tax I
to its support, but enjoy its educational [
advantages at the expense of their richer .
neighbors. If those be regarded as [
“ poor” whose property valuation is be-1
low »1 ,000, then statistics show that at
least 60 per cent, of the graduates of the
high school for many years have been I
“ poor.” Finallv, it is well that every
body should bear in mind that a lie un
contradicted and persisted in can never
become the'truth, and that persons who
go around slandering the high school
either have an ax to grind, or belong to
that class who have the most to wav on
subjects about which they know the
least.
In the average public high school it
costs less to impart instruction in the
branches taught than it does for the
same class of work in the private
academy. The average cost per week
for educating each pupil in the high
schools of Michigan is less than fifty
cents. The cost per week for instruct
ing pupils in the private schools of the
same grade is over one dollar. These
private schools may be patronized and
supported uy those who are able and
willing to pay for the exclusion which a
high tuition affords, but they are beyond
the reach of a large portion of the pupils
in our public high schools.
FRYS
MEAT MARKET,
Is still here and expects to remain.
Thanking you for past favors and a continuance of your trade
Cash paid for HIDES and PELTS and FURS, Etc.
FAT HOGS WANTED right away to pack down.
®
J. S. LAMAR,
I
WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANT.
I have the largest and best assorted stock of old
Wines and Liquors that has ever been imported into
this City.
' Whisky, $2.25 to $8.00 per gal. $
Wines, $1.00 to $3.00 per gal. |
-¡H «'Ql .-111 .-¡11 .-frl ..'¡IKcfll Hl-j
..-TV..-iiV. fri-. -itl ..fil ..'JU
Don’t drink cheap doctored stuff when you can
buy it pure and unadulterated from me.
Truckee Lumber Co.,
OF SAN
FRANCISCO,
DEALERS
IN
FIR & SPRUCE Lumber
BOX SHOOKS
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
And LOGGERS’
SUPPLIES
AGENTS STEAMERS ‘ W. H
KRUGER” AND
For San Francisco and Los Angeles.
Hobsonville, Or.
“ACME.”
J. E, SIBLEY, Mgr
DAIRYMEN !
It will pay you to use
The Empire and Mikado
CREAM SEPARATOR.
For Economy and durability they have no equal.
Write us for particulars.
Prices quoted on application.
ÓC STOKES CO.,
^.storisi, Oie.
Centrally Lioeated.
Rates, $1 Per Day
LARSEN HOUSE,
M. H. LiARSEN, Proprietor.
TILLAMOOK,
The Beet Hotel in the city.
OREGON.
No Chinese Employed.
Allen House,
J. P. ALLEN,
Proprietor.
First Class ^conunodation at Second Class Rate.
Best TvCeals In tlxe Cltv
TILLAMOOK,