Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, June 26, 1902, Image 3

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    THE TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JUNE 26, 1902
GLORIOUS FOURTH.
The Biggest Celebration Ever Held
in Tillamook County.
COHN
& CO.’S
Holiday Goods are the Largest and Best in the City.
A Splendid Stock to Select from when you want anything for the Fourth.
We make a specialty in several lines and will offer Bargains between now and the Fourth in
Gent’s Fashionable Summer Clothing and Shoes,
Ladies’ Stylish DRESS GOODS, GLOVES, RIBBONS, etc.
ARIZONA.
r.
are ever adorned by any of the thousand
beauties that might he placed in them.
1
The Devil was given permission one1 day [ to EDITOR OF TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT.] The acme of bare, blank dreariness is
reached in these schools. Who does not
To select a land for his own special sway,
The memories of the schoolroom cling remember the expanse of rough smoky
So he hunted around for a month or more
And fussed and fumed and terribly to us through life, and influence us in no wall, relieved by nothing save, perhaps,
Dealers in
slight
degree : hence it should be the a,dustv|line of cobweb along the angles?
sworn,
But was at last delighted a country to brightest of all places. There youth, The "old (rusty stove, broken, perhaps,
with its loye and beauty, its keen appre­ and minus a leg, the drunken pipe that
view,
Where the prick!v-pear and the cat-claw ciation of tasteful adorment, its never- zigzags its way to the smokiest part of
failing admiration of the beautiful in thei*room, the dilapidated wood-box,
grew.
With a brief survey and without further nature or art, spends much of the first the,;patched| blackboard, the dusty, un­
year
when all impressions are lasting.
curtained windows, the grimy, uncom­
excuse
As the helitrope seeks the sunlight, so fortable lienches, where little forms lose
Headquarters for Dairymen’s Supplies.
He stood on thebanksof the Santa Cruz.
the soul of the little learner turns to all grace, and little faces grow weary
He saw there were improvements to beautiful things, grows in contempla­ and pitiful—all these are parts of the
Agent for CHARTER OAK STOVES. Western Washing Machines
make.
tion, and drinks in their sweet qualities average district school. Yet fond
Large Stock of Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Glass.
For he felt his own reputation at stake. The highest purpose of education is to parents send their children to these
An idea struck him : he swore by his make the person receiving it a better places, and earnestj teachers stand there
hours
and happier, as well as a more useful working for them, and both think they
STORE in Tillamook
To make a complete vegetation of thorns. individual. Beauty, like all other things of ask a possible thing when they urge the
He studded the land with the prickly, supreme worth, is almost limitless in its young creatures to be good, to be am­
pear
application and influence. Little children bitious, to practice all the virtues. Can
And scattered the cacti everywhere,
are invariably delighted with the most a child be good when the love of beauty i
The Spanish dagger pointed and tall,
striking forms of external beauty. and comfort which has been planted in
And last the cholla to out stick them all. Flowers, pictures and music find sincere his heart is outraged every hour by his
He imported the Apache direct from hell, admirers in tiny boys and girls. It is surroundings? Teachers, parents, school
The size of his sweet scented ranks to only when worldness creeps into their directors, ask yourselves this question ;
hearts that they become in anv sence ponder it carefully, then answer it in
swell,
And a legion of skunk whose loud loud callous to those natural jovs. Inocence works not words. If the above be a i
and the love of beauty thrive in the picture of your schoolroom, begin the '
smell
Was to perfume the country he loved so same soil, a fact which cannot be taken work of beautifying it to-day. The
too strongly into consideration where labor belongs to parents as well as to
well.
the training of children is concerned. teachers and directors, but, I know, by
And for his life he could not see why
■
The rivers should any more water supply, For the love of beauty, though an in­ experience, how hard it is for teachers
And he swore if they furnished another herent possession of man, is, like most to impress parents and directors with
HAVE OK HAND
precious things, of delicate quality. It this fact, especially in district schools, in
drop
You might take his head and horns for needs encouragement and careful nurture whose behalf I write. I say, however, I
if
it is to continue a permanent element to every teacher, “ begin the work,” the ;
mop.
of character, an abiding influence for children will prove earnest helpers, and
He sanded the river viutil almost dry,
good in life. Beautiful schoolrooms often impart their enthusiasm to the
And poisoned them all with alkali,
And promised himself on their slimy among pleasant surroundings should apathetic parents. The first iequisites
Ship
be the rule, and not, as they now are. are soap, water
and whitewash.
Brink.
The controle of all who from them 1 he exceptions. It is an injustice and a Cleanse the building and the plat of
cruelty to children to compel them to ground surrounding it. If you can,
Also all Sizes
should drink.
He said there was one more improve­ spend their days within bare and un­ take Saturday for the work ; this will
sightly
walls
and
amidst
rude
and
un
­
show
that
you
do
not
wish
to
interfere
ment to make,
So he imported scorpin and rattlesnake, couth environments. It is vaguely sup­ with the school program ; that you are
That all who came to this country to posed that education and refinement willing to sacrifice something for the
liave some essential connection with beauty of the room, and will inspire the
dwell
each other. But the supposition seems pupils with a desire for one of“ Aunt
Would be sure to think it almost hell.
little more than mockery when we see Dinah's clarin’-up times.’’ On this day
He fixed the heat at one hundred and a lack of everthing beautiful in many encourage the “ big hoys” hy judicious
eleven
cities, as well as in almost all country smiles, and they will do all the hardest
And banished forever the moisture of schools. Something very much like tor­ work, leaving the easv and ornamental
heaven.
ture is no doubt often endured, consci­ part for the girls. The uncomfortable
And remarked as he heard his furnace ously by teachers and unconsciously benches cannot be remodeled, but they
roar,
by scholars, from the dirty walls, hack­ can be cleaned ; the smoky
walls
AND
The heat might reach five hundred or ed benches, and general cheerless and whitened ; the stove polished ; the floor
more.
hovel-like apperance of nasty schoolrooms and windows washed ; and the yard
After fixing these things so thorny and in rural districts. The indifference of freed from its debris.
Freight in 5-ton lots and over $3.50 per ton.
well
parents in this matter is surprising
Without interfering with play grounds
He said “I’ll be d----- if this don’t beat Children go from homes which are mod it would be comparatively easy to have
Freight in ¡ess than 5-ton lots, $4.00 per ton.
h—1.”
els of neatness and taste, to study and a plot of grass and perhaps also borders
Passenger rate, $3.50.
Then he droped his wings, and away he recite their lessons, and to sit for hours of flowers in eyery school yard. The
flew
in places akin to barracks. No wonder children could be led to take pride in
And vanished forever in a blaze of blue. their school work seems simply an allotted every school yard. The children could
And now, no doubt, in some corner of task, a business matter purely—at best, be led to take pride in keeping the
a task, to be got through with as ex- grounds in order, especially if the respon­
hell
He gloats o’er the work he has done so peditiously as possible. The contrast sibility was placed on their shoulders.
Of Cheesery, Dairy and Creamery
between a pleasant home and a dreary In this as in all oilier things pertaining
well.
Machinery and Supplies we carry
And vows that Arizona cannot be beat schoolroom is of itself depressing to a to education, it should be ever kept in
the largest stock in the northwest.
Where there is no mind, that children need guidance,
For thorns, tarantulas, rattlesnakesand sensitive child
A full line of D. H. Burrell & Co.’s
pleasant home for contrast the matter rather than absolute rules.
heat,
celebrated Cheese making prepara­
is even worse. An opportunitv for the
There is no good reason why every
For with his plans fulfilled so well.
tions, Apparatus, etc.
exertion
of
an
influence
of
an
impressive,
schoolroom
should
not
be
attractive.
He feels assured that it surpasses hell.
Send for Catalogue.
permanent, and high kind upon a child's Given cleanliness and respectable furni­
mind and morals, is lost when the ture, the children.with a little encouarge-
CANAL AT PANAMA.
schoolroom is not much better in ap­ nient from their teacher, will often do
pearance than a bare and miserable the rest ; put growing plants in the
PROPRIETOR OF
Senate Adopts Spooner Substitute home. From such homes many public windows, hang pritty prints and other
school children come. Such children, ornaments upon the walls, and provide
143 FRONT STREET,
i W ashington . June 1»—An iathniain il not vicious and diseased, are usually many things which will add a homelike
PORTLAND, ORE.
canal, while iH’t yet absolutely assured, cowed and spiritless. Their aesthetic appearance to the schoolroom. In these
¡ h nearer to construction than it has ever natures have been cramped, and all their pleasant ways moreover, latent tastes
Agents for
DEALER IN
been. The Senate today, by a majority pure ambitions crushed. They need the and capacities of boys and girls may be
DeLaval Cream Separators.
pf eight vote«, adopted the Spooner sub­ stimulating influence of brightness and developed and utilized, and thus a work
stitute for the Hepburn Nicaragua C miin I beauty constantly about them to arouse more directly educational be done. What
* * * b ib « « a * * rf
■nil, the vote on tlie Hiilmtitute lieing 42 their dormant faculties, to take away is of still more importance, children
Shop next door to Ijirscn's Hotel, Tillamook'
i .31. After two amendments to the their too frequent and abnormal stoli­ acquire a sense of attachment for, and
measure had l>een made, one proving for dity. In education to little account is possession in, the schools they attend.
l commission to sujierviHe the const me­ taken of silent external influences by Schoolrooms should seem, in some de­
lon of thecsnal.and the other providing which the senses are most readily and gree, like second homes instead of mere
»r the issuance of $180,000,000 at 2 per deeply affected. The trouble here as in places of work and confinement. A fruit­
*nt gold Imn Is to raise money with other educational short comings is that ful source of antagonistic feeling being in
tiicli to construct the waterway, it was our schools ha ve been too largely ruled this manner removed, the minds of
iMsed by u vote of 67 to 6.
by an idea—the acquisition oi the great­ pupils would naturally become more
It has been evident for several days est amount of facts in a given time. A receptive. And by the simple presence of
I have just received direct
lat the Spooner substitute, which in more philosophical view of education beautiful surroundings, a surer founda­
STEAMERS—SUE II. ELMORE, W. II. HARRISON.
1ef provides that the President shall considers the development of the whole tion for intellectual acquirements might from Chicago, the best quality
ONLY
LINE—A8TOTIA TO TILLAMOOK, GARIBALDI,
|.*ct the Panama route if he can obtain ofa man’s many-sided nature.
lie laid, and the work of conscientious and latest styles of footwear.
clear title to the Panama Canal
External or sensuous beauty refines earnest teachers, would perhaps be less
BAY CITY, HOB8ONVILLE.
Consisting
of
Gentlemen
’
s,
^.npany's property. and otherwise he ! character, through the emotions and the often in vain.
Connecting at Astoria with the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co. and
toll adopt (he Nicaragua route, would ■ moral sense rather than through the
Last and not least, however, comes Ladies’, Misses and Children’s
also th» Astoria & Columbia River R. R. fol Han Francisco, Portland
¡minand the votes of a majority of the ' intellect. It is an old, old idea that the teacher and her ap|>earance. It is
and all points east. For freight and pawwnger rates apply to
Lnate. The Panama route was con- ! night and gloom are more conductive not necessary that she should possess a Shoes that was ever offered for
tored more desirable by the senate i to crime than day and sunshine. There faultlessly lieautiful face and figure. But sale in the City of Tillamook.
SAMUEL ELMORE & CO. General Agents, ASTORIA, OR
in tue Nicaragua route. The only ' can lie no doubt that men would be there should be on her face a kindly and
B. C. LAMB, Agent. Tillamook Oregon.
It will pay you to call and
-st ion left open is the title to the pro* ’* ■ more virtuous if tliev could always have intelligent expression, which constitutes
.
, JO R * N. R. R. Co.. Portland.
examine
my
goods
and
prices
be
­
Agents
& c u K Co porlland
rtv. and that the President will de-
-* i brightness and beauty in their everyday I the chief charm of any countenance. A
mine if the H'MR hc should adopt tlie ¡lives.
|j
1 he verv tact that splendor teacher’s attire should f»e in good taste, fore purchasing elsewhere.
late’s amendment* to its bill.
_ _____
____ ______
, makes vicious , places
so _____
attractive
proves and suited to the dimentions of her
Horgan of A ab ma closed todays that men crave satisfaction for their purse. However cheap the material, let
will, an earnest appeal for (he nHtaral aesthetic tastes. But the usual it never Ixr slovenly, gaudy, or monoto­
qition «if the Nicaragua route. He .
splendors of vice would not lie so nous. With this room, and this teacher,
I le*e:i precede I by Clark of Montana 1 alluring if men's finer feelings had not few children will turn from school with
hipport of the Nicaragua route and Al- 5«.^ so often repressed or misdirected in hatred. A new interest in the place, and
hi «»f I ».v.x m
the •■'r
Hp<»oner
vhildhoo<l.
A child iihi
may » and nii
should
... >u.qnrt of .....
....... ciiiki
iiuuii .
Auimi
' hihi be care for it, will instantly be manifest,
position Orlv
C
minor tvnnndntent»,, tnnght to be diiurrimating in regard to and a week’s enjoyment will amply
■mt th »se it’dic il**d I. w-re adopted, beautiful objects, lore, harmony, deli. repay all trouble and expense.
jolliers being voted dowui.
*
easy and lienutv of form a# well as
Nehalem, Ore.
G. A W alker .
CALL AT
—-----
— —■
I brightness and color. Teaching of this
kind
is
the
cultivation
of
aesthetic
tastes
Call
for
County
Warrants
HI!
AVINO,
(>; tuT.ate is the g >1 who looses her j so essential to a well-rounded character.
• )*»r and never tindi» it again.
All County '(jenerai Fund Warrants,
HAIR CUTTING,
Like other culture it >• liest given during
i is a d-*pbtrahk fict tiiata girl can formative period of life, or in school “Series E,” endorsed prior tn June 1,
8HAMP(X)1NO,
get h*r that bi» I ut once.
1899,
are
now
payable
and
will
be
paid
days. It requires special teaching. But
Diere it not for ihmgs «c are going no special teaching can be adequately when presented.
When you want anything in
b. lift* would not lie worth living.
Interest ceases June 16, 1902.
efiective unlevs it is sustained by the per­
tus <»f taen after laying upsomrtliing manent illustrations or object lessons
W. H. C ary , County Treasurer.
Jewelry,
Watches and Silver
EVERYTHING STRICTLY FIRST CLASS
a vsiny day get discouraged I m - chum * | provided by heautilul surroundings.
By E. D. H oag , Deputy.
Ware.
A
complete line of the
iwti’t ram.
In cities,' teacher» are brought into
young man may have no husine^s to close competition with each other, and ! Accorrlinu to th« Chicago cod«, it i«
latest
and
best goods in Stock
a pretty girl, I hji he might make » nearly every one makes an attempt to I poMibfe to riot a few wrong».
□re of it.
at all times.
beautify the room where her pupils con j Th« prospect for unircrsal peace,
BARBER
HAIRDRESSER
No charge made for sewing
dmh|v r<>u nevpr heard <4 the man gregrate. but, from lack of lunds or judg­ ' started in South Africa, now glows in
SHAVING,
HAIR
CUTTING,
See my regulator forcorrect
rips
or
nailing
soles
on
shoes
I
the
horizon
ot
Kansas.
Carrie
Nation
ment,
the
attempt
is
olten
futile.
Few
was I i led by kindness—but if you
rooms are actually decorated, but many j has been pardoned.
I was nothing more than hearsay.
purchased of me.
time, I get Western Union time
SHAMPOOING, ETC
e d ff -reiwe between a restaurant have in them some curious and tasteful i Henceforth reader» of foreign dis.
twice a week, direct from Port­
[latches
will
now
have
their
thonghts
oltjects
that
Irreak
the
monotony.
Few
1 cafe is n<a so much in tin* quality
Electric Raths nicely fitted up. Good for
p food «• in the aise of j our pocket« city schoolrooms are utterly devoid of jarred by the overworked phrase of the
land office.
Agent
and
Salesman.
person»
su<Tering
with
rheumatism
beauty. Very few country schoolroom» veldt, ”1 regret to report."
after the reelc<»ning
Adoring Country Schoolrooms.
M c I ntosh &
mcnair ,
HARDWARE, TINWARE and CHINA.
STOVES, RANGES and HEATERS.
The Most Reliable GROCERY
LUMBER AT TILLAMOOK
A
j
TAFT
DRY FLOORING, CEILING,
Finish
Rustic,
Wainscoting, Mouldings and
of ROUGH LUMBER.
Lap
i
Steamer Geo. R. Vosburg
CHEESE
BUTTER
MAKERS
Will Run Between
Tillamook and Astoria.
Ship Freight by A. & C. Railroad in Care of
Geo. R. Vosburg.
NEHALEM TRANS. CO,
M
B^DDIClÇ-kEiTlNIÎ CO.,
F. LEACH,
Tillamook Meat Market
■ Fresh and Cured Meats, Hides, Wool, etc.
Red Shoe House
Pacific Navigation Co.
Edwards & Sladden,
TIME!
TIME!!
Baite
Franklin’s Jewelry
Hot and Cold Raths.
EDGAR LATIMER,
RRD
P. F. BROWNE,