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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1902)
I President to be Operated Upon. SOUTH PRAIRIE. . The night ’ s rain of hist week was ap I ndianapolis , Sept. 23rd, 3 p.m.— During 1901 the United States im ported $90,000,000 worth of sugar. Over preciated by everyone, causing the dust “ As a result of the trolley accident at a quarter of this sugar was contributed to l>e laid and the smoke to disappear. Pittsfield, Mass., the President received Melyin Lamb made the overland trip several bruises, One of these on the left bv Cuba, from which island imports h iving a value of $ 26,000,000 were re- to Eugene on his bicycle last week, where leg, between the knee and the ankle, has developed into a small abscess. The c ived. Next to Cuba the Dutch East he expects to enter college. Mr Govne moved everything out of President is entirely well otherwise, und Indies were the principal source of sup ply, furnisning $17,000.000 worth. his house while it was in danger from for has continued to meet the engagements of Iris itinerary, but in view of the con- From Germanv, which contributes the est fires. principal part of the beet sugar, shipped , Mr. Quick is now hauling milk to Mc- tinuousness of the abscess, Drs. Collier and Cook, of Indianapolis, were re to the United States, there were imports tosh & Co’s, factory. quested to meet Dr. Lung, the President’s valued at $16.000.000. Brazil supplied John Marolf has returned home, after physician, at Indianapolis ; Dr. Richard unusually large consignments of sugar spending several months in the east. son, of Washington, D C., being also one in 1901,the value amounting to $5,348, Mrs. Marion Lamb and son Ernest of the number. In the opinion of the 000. Our imports troni the British West last week to doctors the trouble necessitates an oper Indies for that year were valued at $5,- left on 1 he stage for Eugene spend the winter. ation, which they think should be per 059,000. British Guiana sent shipments Alvin Johnson and wife left for the val formed at once at St. Vincent’s Hospital, worth $4,803,000. From Austria-Hun in this city. After the operation the gary, which is another important beet ley to bring in a load ol oats. sugar country, we purchased $3,737,000 Ed Moran and family spent a couple President will require complete rest, pro bably for 10 days or two weeks. It has of days at the beach last week. worth. The only other countries that supplied | T. H. Goyne of Tillamook has been do been necessary to cancel all the remain, imports valued above $1,000,7560 were ing some surveying in the neighborhood. ing engagements of his trip, and he will go directly from Indianapolis to Wash Santo Domingo, Pern, Belgium and ington this evening. Egypt. The shipments received from , NEHALEM. “ The physicians say that the case is Santo Domingo were worth $2,959,000, Miss Mary Schollmeyer has closed a not in any way serious and there is no and those from Peru $2,802,000. From Belgium sugar was imported to the term of school in the South Fork dis danger whatever. This statement is value of $1,725,000 and from Egypt to trict and expects to go to Hebo in a made that no false rumors may disturb short time to teach at that place. the people, and that they may be the value of $1,654,000. Mr. and Mrs. Geo Dean and son Al authoritatively advised of the exact fred are visiting relatives and friends on nature of the case. The Alleged Timber Frauds. G eorge B. C oktelyou , Mr. A. Holman, staff reporter of the the river. Secretary to the President.” Wm. Stinhauer is in on a visit from Oregonian, who visited Tillamook a lew weeks since, being a guest of Mr. Thayer Oregon City. Martinique Not Starving. Rev. W. J. Roehiner made a wheel trip while he was in this city, in writing upon the alleged timber frauds in Eastern to Roseburg and returned last week. N ew Y ork , Sept. 22.—The Quebec Oregon and Tillamook, had this to say Fred Robitch returned from a trip to Steamship Company’s steamer Koranna in the Oregonian : has arrived from the West Indies. Astonu Saturday. “In al) this land-grab agitation it is Theodore Kingsley went to Tillamook Among her passengers was Captain wise to bear in mind the general and Sunday. Walter McKay, agent of the steamship substantial rather than the technical in company in the West Indies. Captain Robert Crawford is buying cattle for terests involved, for ur.der the reverely McKay ssid : technical view some of the very best the Astoria market. •‘ I was at Fort de France, August 30, Miss Gladys Newell was a passenger the day of the most recent eruption of people of this and of every other new state might be adjudgd wrong-doers. At out on the Harrison Monday on her wav Mont Pelee. The explosion was terrific, Tillamook some two weeks ago I came to Eugene. and the rumblings and detonations were upon an interesting case illustrating this Mrs. John Larsen and daughter, Mar- continuous for a long time. This ex point, and the facts are worth recital by ene. came home from Seaside Sunday, plosion, it is expected, caused the death way of illustration. Some time hack it where they have spent the summer with of 2000 people and covered an extent came to the knowledge of the local com her daughter, Mrs. C.C. Clark. of territory 10 times greater than did munity at Tillamook that a great corpor E. K. Scovell has his new house in the eruption in May last. ation, through its possession of a large closed. Alex Anderson is doing the car “ Martinique, in the northern part, is amount of land script, was taken steps penter work: greatly devastated, but the south is in to file upon a fine area of forest land in Fish are running slack at present. full blossom und is thriving. We are the Coast Range Mountains. There was Mrs. C. C. Clark of Seaside is spending shipping more freight now than before »^natural and general desire Io forestall a few days on the river. the eruption. It is a mistake to say the corporation filing by individual en Miss May Grimes, of Seaside, is visit the people are starving and are crowd try under the land laws, and while there ing Miss Helena Sandburg. ing the fertile parts of the island, The were many persons in the community fact is, considering that so many have whose lights had not been exhausted, BOULDER CREEK. been victims of the eruptions, the there were few who had the ready money Mrs. Myra Hughey of Fairview was in fugitives are comparatively few in num- required—some four hundred and odd her. There ih no need of food supplies.’’ dollars—to make the trip out to the land our neighborhood one day last week. Mrs. Emily Johnson, who has been office ut Oregon City, to pay the filing The German Socialist Congress which and final payment charges. Persons dangerously ill with pneumonia, is re opened at Munich, September 15, who had lived in »he country for years, ported to l»e some belter at present. and whose hardihood and energy had in j Fred Nicklaus has been staying at II. adopted resolutions providing for the inauguration of meetings throughout large measure contributed to its subju- j L. Jensen’s and working on the road -gation and civilization, found themselves | C. V. Getcliell left Sunday morning Germany to protest against the price of meat, and to authorize the Deputies to wholly unable to avail themselves of a I for his home at Ilebo. personal right under the land laws which I ' II. A. Chopard came in from Hadley's interpellate the government regarding rhe scarcity of meat and the lioycott might have been to each the foundation camp’Friday and went back Sunday. We are informed that Mr. Ayers lost against foreign meat. of a small fortune. * * * In this situation several persons hav his hay during last week’s conflagration. The society for the protection of the ing ready money at command came to | II. L Jenson has been teaming be the support of their impecunious towns-1 tween this place and the Valley the past interests of the German chemical in dustry, in session at Frankfort, has un men and advanced them sums which en-1 week. animously passel a resolution against Will Thun was seen in our burg last abled a score or more to make their fil-' the prohibition of the use of boric acid ings, the transaction resting, of course, Wednesday. • upon good faith and mutual confidence ' Mr. and Mrs. Wert Sappington and for the preservation of meats, and has among townsmen and neighbors. View-1 Miss Mary Jensen came up from llebo appealed to the Bnndesrath to reverse cd strictly and severely, with a wish to Sunday to visit at II L Jenson’s home. its decision in this connection in view of discover technical wrong and with in-( M.T. Soars has come back from the the present scarcity and dearness of difference to practical and substantial camp and was at work burning his meat. * * * right, this transaction is subject to criti slashing last week. At New York a peculiar damage suit cism, for in making his filing each entry lias been brought against a street rail- man made oath that he was taking the Blasts From Ram's Horn. wav company by Simon Eurtz, w ho lend for his own exclusive benefit, where- j seeks to recover $10,000 because of a as his real intent was to share profits ■ A bright preacher does not always fall which compelled him to shave off his make a shining church. with his financial hacker. beard. Zurtz is a tenor singer in a syna "On the basis of this proceeding a [ Tbe money-seeking church is not con- gogue. Since losing his beard he de great hue and cry has been raised and cerned with man-saving. clares he cannot longer follow his pro several claims have been "held up.” No-1 The worship of material miccess is fession. The rules of the church forbid it. body has paused to consider that no likely to work the spiritual failure of * * » where in this proceeding has anybody I America. The business of this year’s State Fair You may try to do many a day’s wor has been closed up sufficiently to show been harmed ; that tbe Government has received its full due ; that the bona fide ry. but you can only do one day's work that the Fair came out $3000 ahead. settlers and occupiers ol the country ra- | at a time. Of this sum $2300 was put into perma ther than a foreign corporation have | God (lid not design the church to he a nent improvements, leaving $700 cash acquired the lands; that the practical mere lying-in hospital, but a recruting on hand. This was the greatest Fair the (piestion relates not to a point of tech- ( office for God's soldiers. state lias ever had. It drew the largest nicnl law, hut to broader motives ofi The Gnat Physician never lacks crowds and closed with the largest a- patience and he knows that the bitterest monnt of profits. right and justice.” medicine often pure» the quickest. True education looks to the strengthen Spectacles Found How’s This? ing of the hull of the ship rather than to We offer one ITaudred Dollsrs Reward for A pair of spectacles in case, thick glass any ca»e of I'.tarrh that cannot lie cured bv the guilding of the figurehead. «re at the Headlight office. Hall'« Catarrh Cure. When we get so selfish that we want F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Props., Toledo, O. the earth we are not likely to give much We. the undersigned, have known F J Bargains. Cheuey for the last 15 years, «nd believe him thought to the world to come. perfectly honorable in «11 business trsns- Ten per cent discount, or $1.00 worth actlona and financially able to carry out anv Man cannot do without a creed’ He obligation« mad* by their firm of goods for 90 cents. Calico 5 cents per WasrA T mvax , Whole«« e Druggist», Toledo O yard «nd other things in proportion at must have a backbone, but this is only a W alping . K inhan * M arvin . Wholesale the Racket Store. Terms cash. bpart of him. If he is all backbone, we Druggists, Toledo. O. « Catarrh Cure la taken internally, act should call him a post. with no back lone, ing Hall directly upon the blood and mucous sur face* of the svsteiu. Price 75c per bottle. Sold Shot Through The Neck i a jelly fish. Sugar Ì Importa. W ood RVRN. Of., Sept 21.—G U. Mc Guire, a dealer in confectionery in this city, shot his brother-in law, Fred Prevost, a grorrrnmn, of the firm of Prevost Bros,, at live o’clock this after noon. Prevost was shot in the neck, narrowly escaping with his life. The assault w as the result of domestic tn»uIk ies. in which McGuire s wife and mother- in-law figure prominently, and occurred during a qiiarirl between the principals. At the time the shot was fired by Me Guirv hr held in lus arms his infant child, and Prevost struck or attempted to strike him. McGuire insists that tbe shot w as Hird in defense of his child and himself, and was unavoidable He was at once placed under arreet. on a war rant iseued by Justice h. Overton charg ing assault with intent to kill. Prevost is i rMing easy and unless bluod-pofooidng »ball set in will doubt lees recover. by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. Eureka Harness Oil^ nct nly th 'b '.Tie-* •»ri! th« , hor*’ Ì < N'ttvr. but nmk?4 th« ' Iratbtr »oft an.I plhibh*. put« Hin mn- tl I ut to If.M twk « «S Ivhfl : • it t r 'lunrily t\o«M. • I RTvrr-krr» la CM»—BÜ II«4« by STANDARD Dll. CO. Headlight Headlight Headlight Headlight PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS. JAILED FOR SCORCHING. Hard Luck.-”That U tough luck; I g<> into bankruptcy yesterday, Sk morning my cashier al»eo.d.with my money."—Fliegende Ulaett«'■ And the Piano Was Silent.-««- AD but I cawn't play with b,,th ha,U'* j She—“Then I’ll play with one hand and you can play with the other. -Har vard Lampoon. . Man's Manifest Duty.-He- It I«» woman's duty to tie beautiful if can.” 8he-"And it is a man a duty tc make her think she is whether she ii or not.”—Stray Stories. He—"1 gave Jones a bit of advice. I told him that before he married his girl he should look her *»2»bAr She—“Well, what happened? „ He- "Jones married the mother. Louis Post-Dispatch. “It is a wise old saying.” observed the humorous and thrifty farmer, aa he pocketed a roll, "that money makes the mure go.” Then he hitched up the old mare and gave the automobile a tow into town.—Town Topics. The Trial Trip — "Theairshipinvent- or is elated that bis craft should have come down »0 gracefully.” ”Yea, he reminds me of some of these noble men ” "How is that?” "Proud of his descent.”—Chicago Daily News. It Disguised Her.—“She’s abusing the photographer fearfully. She says nobody recognizes her in the picture. conies of his insisting on her ’’That comes . 1__ C___ U — «rv^vlz <4 ’’ •hutting her mouth when he took it.” — Philadelphia North American. Briggs—"Funny about Harry. He waa saying only a few weedcs «go he wouldn’t have Maude if there wasn’t another woman in the world, and now their card,* are out.” Griggs—"That s all right. There is another woman in the world.”—Boston Transcript. Tod Sloan, the famous American jockey, was sent to prison for two days ut Faris for scorching'* with an automobile in tbe Bois Ale Boulogne. Sloan wanted to pay a tine, but the judge d'instruction before whom he was arraigned refused to impone any other penalty than imprison ment because of the flagrancy of Sloan's offense, he having been re peatedly warned by the police that he was violating the law. Sloan was taken to jail. Sloan and his racing car are known by sight to all the Parisians of the boulevards, for no one drives quite so recklessly as the American. Not even Fournier dares to run at racing speed in the heart of the city. The leniency with which the police treat ed him led Sloan to imagine himself immune from arrest. Be was un deceived in a fashion that he wilt not soon forget, for of all dismal places a French jail is the worst. Sloan has had several accidents with his motor car, and last August ran into a tree at Trouville, causing his companions to sustain serious injuries. Fournier and ( barren had hopes for a time of making Sloan Into a great chauffeur, but he proved to be too reckless. Incapable of handling a heavy car running at high speed with the lightning cer tainty of a master driver, Sloan, nevertheless, is daring in the highest degree and takes amazing chances. His presence in a great race would, in the opinion of the manufacturers and chauffers, mean disaster to him self and others. FUTURE OF FLYING MACHINE. BOOTBLACK LOSES FORTUNE. Edison agrees with Hiram Maxim and Prof. Langley, of the Smithsonian Institution, that the really successful navigation of the air will come with the building of flying machines which depend on their power for buoyancy, not on gas reservoirs of any kind. San tos-Dumont is so far in accord with | these eminent students of the problem . he has tried so well to solve, that; he | has been reducing the size of his gas balloons as his airships have succeed ed one another and placed more and ! more reliance on the motors he uses I for speed and steering. It says little against the possibilities i sf aerial navigation, observes the Cleve- ! land Leader, that one very promising experimenter in the same field where Santos-Dumont has won renown has TILLAMOOK just been dashed to pieces by the burst ing of his airship while several hun COUNTY BANK dred feet above the streets of Paris. Such deadly^accidenti are likely in the . ( incorporated ), stages of any successful device TILLAMOOK CITY, ORE. I early for locomotion on land or sea, as well as in the air. It is to be expected that, PAID VP CAPITAL, $10,000. a great discovery will always be paid A GENERAL BANKING for in blood. That seems to be the law of life. BUSINESS. But the point in regard to flying ma Directors :—M. W. H arrison , W. w chines which appears to constitute an insurmountable barrier to their lasting C vrtiss , B. L. E ddy . success is that they differ totally from Cashier ;—M. W. H arrison . any other machine or appliance which Liberal Prices Paid for gilt edge securi- man has used in practical travel, as to ies of all kinds. their destruction if forced to stop while in tbe element they are designed for. smessa The idem! flying machine would resem ble a ship, of great speed and power, S which could not be kept off the bottom of tbe sea when it stopped moving. But. how many persons would ever I) ride on a boat which must sink if it. Now is the time to buy a ceased tn make headway? If it meant new Sewing Machine for dest ruction for the engines of a steam $22.00, with drop head and ship to stop, would steam have made all the latest improvements the least impression, in peaceful travel and in the transportation of fre;ght. at M c I ntosh & M c N air ’ s . ■ upon the sailing vessels with which It is the B onita S ewing steamers comuete? In war or for sport M achine , and they range ventures might have been made with in price from $22 to $35, steam craft, but in the cniirBe of nor p mal traffic nothing would have been with ball bearings. They done with any type of vessel sure to are little beauties, perfectly •ink if its machinery stopped. made and something new on That is a very good reason for be the market. These maclii- lieving that the dreams of wholesale navigation of the air by flying ma- . nes are a better article than chines. which have been cherished in J5 the peddlars are charging many lands for more than a century, will always remain fancies rather than •olid fact». TILLAMOOK Sewing Machines. I I < Í J WOOD SAW. Brock Bros., and Oregonian and Examiner and 1 wice-a-Week World and Hoard’s Dairyman Far.cnar Bank Bank notes for about half a cent each circulate freely in Paraguay It hhcked,WndnO'7 ‘° °ne * iloots blacked and eight to pay the postage of a letter to England. Yet one of them Will buy in season IS oranges Y ^un an” °r * waUr®«»on.-^<: W"— •- tU Frv.,1, The cantmieres form a runt the Fre^h\7 my - ki Herman, the bootblack, was at the southeast corner of the New Ymk city hall, He has been playing th« races, and is not a bit bashful about telling how much he won. At the end of the eastern season last fall.” he said, "I had cleaned up about $40,- 000. I made all this money in just about four months. Me Tammany friends in the city hall gave ma the straight things to bet, and 1 made money io fast that I had to put some fresh pockets in me dud«. "When I was making me killing plays on the tracks I didn’t wear no different clothes than what. I have on now, and that's the reason I never got touched. When the Tammany government went out my hick went, out. too. One day at aqueduct I lost over $10,000. After that I couldn’t find noth’xr but stiffs, and three day? ago I was broke. I hadn’t enough to buy a new shoeblacking outfit, and I went to the lender of me district and he gave me the money to buy this box and set of brushes.” Herman asked the reporter not to print his full name. He said his wife didn't know be had been "leading a double life.” TO BE REWARDED. Col. Louis H. Ayms, of Chicago, the United States consul at’ Guade loupe, who went to Martinique to recover the body of Consul Prentis and look after the relief work, is coming home. He is said to be much run down physically as a result of his services in the devastated inland. The United States tug Potomac, Lieut. Ij. B. McCormack commanding, left San Juan, Porto Rico, for Port de France, Martinique, to get Consul Ayme and carry him to San Juan, where he will take passage for New York. The state department eent word to the navy department that it was not sure that the consul was still at- Fort de France. He has not been heard from recently. It is under stood he will be promoted for bis splendid work. UNIQUE MEMORIAL SERVICI. Chlca<o Pastor Preaebr» at Father’« To Find the North Pole. An expedition i. helnsr planned in ’ orway for the discovery of the north magnetic pole, if indeed meh a All Orders for Sawing Wood promptly •pot exiat*. for it has been e.ippe.t- •d that what is called the magnetic attended to. pole may no» be a definite point, but a considerable area over which the needle would «land vertically. There it also a question as to the absolute flxity in position of the magnetic TILLAMOOK CITY, OR. pole. Capt. R. Amundsen is to com mand the expedition. and the ship Gj-a has been purchased for its use Call up on Tuttle’s phone. » tO he m“<le in the »Prine of 1903.—Youth's Companion. Our Clubbing Rates '• i ' a :nl P'W'T -4 r ii«A« bi t ho wor 1 kühl i f n cvm- bhwikm. Give Your Horse a Chance ! AC Butte, Mont , the wife and child of Chin Quon, the wealthiest Chinaman in the Northwest, Vere kidnaped from his home in the Chinese quarter. Two men and a woman drove up to the house and were seen to enter. Later they emerged with the woman and child, who seemed to be gagged. Neighbors tried to inter fere, but the kidnappers drew revolvers and drove them off, threatening the crowd. The police were unable to find any trace and drove off. Next morning Quon found a note under his door, saying that he could recover the two by leaving $2000 ina can} on back of the mountains. The Sheriff has started < n the trail of the kidnapers. The English government has d.cided tlist the new South Africa colonies are to be required to pay $500,000,000 toward the cost of the South African War. The colonies are, however, to *>e allowed ample time in which to make this pay ment. It will not be collected until the extension of trade and expansion of revenue peimit. Consequently the loan will not be floated for twocr three years. Mining profits will probably lie taxed 10 per cent more than they were before the war, and money will also be obtained by granting all kinds of concessions and mineral rights. Sir Robert Anderson, who was at head of the criminal investigation partment of the Metropolis police force in London for a long period, has written an article, affirming his conclusion that a radical change in dealing with profes , aional criminals is necessary. He favors a registration of this dangerous class and would render it compulsory for judges ■ to commit them to hard labor when ever proof is shown by the police that I they are professional criminals, preying , upon the community, lie believes the constant conviction and sentencing of habitual criminals for short terms of lm. prison men t to be a waste of punitive energy when they coul.l he branded for what they are and kept under restraint, like lunatics, at the pleasure and dis. cretion of the crown. Crave on lOOtb Annlvarsary of His Birth, The Rev. Delno C. Henshaw, of Chicago, the other afternoon preached a memorial sermon at the grave of his father, James S. Hen shaw, af Kalamazoo, Mich. The oc casion for the unique affair was the hundredth anniversary of his father’s birth. He gave a brief biography of his father, of whose eleven children four fought for the union in the civil war. He declared that the old Puritan stock was passing away. Sons of Americans are not being brought up in the man hood of their forefathers, but flock to the cities and learn to drink, smoke, and gamble. The national standard of righteousness is being lowered. Tbe children are not get ting trained in religious principles nor getting moral fiber in tbe pub lic schools. Wasta to We KI«« BrtwsrJ. u er-ment ha, „ w„mnn „a.ort of nurse at.-..., nio|er younir soldiers especially. She f younff or handsome. na , rule .L often marrie.) to a àoldièr of th *’ *menl. —Philadelphia Press. ' h The East end of London.disappoint ed at not being included in the royal procession, is organizing a monster petition to their majesties praying for a royal visit shortly after tin coronation. Tbe promoters antici pate 1,000,000 signatures. N«w Braaeh of Tr«d«. Headlight for Six Months -i, i *"* * " !.’ • R'”M1 ®-* «ay, the Alfalfa Summer camps have become in much of an institution that the New York furniture dealers this •»“«■ are taking notice of them and trying their trade. I