Image provided by: Tillamook County Library
About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1902)
THE TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, NOVEMBER 6, 1902. Circuit Court Docket. Judge Burneet wdl Told circuit court ■1 Monday. The .locket, which is very eht again, contains the following cases State of Oregon, plaintiff, vs. 8. M. Hays, defendant. Larceny. The California Safe Deposit and Trust Co., plaintiff, vs. E. H. and Mary Green Cowing, defendants. Action for money. Claude Thayer attornev for plaintiff. I acific Lumber Co., a corporation, plaintiff, VS. Claude Thayer, defendant. Action for money. B. L. Eddy, attornev for plaintiff. C. Ben Riesland, plaintiff, vs. William and Carrie Tinnerstet. defendants. Ac- tion for money. Cooper & Botts, attor neys for plaintiff; B. L. Eddv for defend, ants. Joseph Sander, plaintiff, vs. Yellow Fir Lumber Co., defendants. Action for money. C. W. Talmage attorney for plaintiff. P. McIntosh and A. McNair, plaintiffs, ▼«. J. W. Buckles, defendant. Action for money. Cooper & Botts, attorneys for plaintiff. Theodore Kingsley, plaintiff, vs. Tilla mook Logging Co., defendants. Action for money. B. L. Eddy attorney for plaintiff; Claude Thayer and G. 0. No. Ian. attorneys for defendant. John Hoffman, plaintiff, vs. W. D. Glad well, defendant. Suit of replevin. Cooper & Botts, attorneys for plaintiff. C. L. Rogers, plaintiff, vs. Andrew and Jane Conklin, defendants. Foreclosure Cooper & Botts, attorneys for plaintiff. Real Estate Transféra. Tran fers for the week ending Nov. 3rd, 1902. Furnished by Cooper & Botts, abstracters. Claude Thayer and wife to N. A. Harris. Warranty deed. 10 acres in secs. 25 and 36. tp. 1 S, R 10 W. »500.00. N. A. Harris and wife to A. W. Fox. Warranty deed. 10 acres in secs 25 and 36, tp. 1 S, R. 10 W. $460.00. Ed. G. E. Wist and wife to Roger Ma. honey. Wartanty deed to 10 acres in sec. 36, tp. 1 S, R. 10 W. »1.00. Claude Thayer and wife to Jennie Gup- til. Warranty deed. Lot 1, B. 32, Thayer's 4th addition to Tillamook City. Catherine Gibson Williams, et. al., to Stephen Tillotson. Warranty deed. 3% acres in Sw corner of the Haynes D.L.C. »300.00. I.O.O.F. Lodge to Homer Mason. Lot in cemetery. M. J. McDonough and wife to James Armstrong. Warranty deed. N Vi Se 14, Sw H Ne 14 and Se 14 Nw Ji- sec. 5, tp. 2 S. R . 8 W. »700.00. A. G. and F. R. Beals to Peter McIntosh. Warranty deed. Parts of lots 7 and 8, B. 10, of the town of Lincoln (now Tillamook City). »2000 00. August G. Brauer and wife to John Brauer. Warranty deed. St» Ne and lots 1 and 2, sec. 1 and Eli Se 14, Nw X Se 14 and Ne 14 Sw 14. sec. 12, tp. 3 N, R. 6 W. »500.00. Henry Hamilton and wife to Delos A. Blodgett et. al. Warranty deed. Se 14 Nw 14 and lot 3, sec. 3, tp. I N, R. 7 W. »500.00. U.S. Land Office to George W. Bacon. Receipt. SeJi Nw 14 and lot 3, sec. 3, tp. 1 N, R. 7 W. M. J Durfee and husband to A. G. Beals. Quit claim deed. Small tract in sec. 30, tp. 1 S, R. 9 W. »125 OO. I HALTOM that made Prices Cheaper and Values Better in 1 illamook. A More True Statement Could not be Made, Proof of the pudding is in the eating. Watch the popular trend of trade and you will be thoroughly convinced that this Low Price Store has in the short time of two months grown to be the Shopping Center of Tillamook. NEW RUBBER GOODS AT ABOUT HRUf. Another demonstration of the Cash Buyers’ Union purchasing pooler. Men’s Men’s Men’s Men’s I Long Snag Proof Boots, pair $3 50 Women’s Ribbed Back Storm Rubbers 37c Short Snag Proof Boots, pair 2 50 Misses Storm Rubbers 29c. Short Plain Boots pair 2 20 Children’s 24c D Storm Rubbers pair 50 Bov’s 40c i I The Popular Store is all aglow with New, Stylish Merchandise. Each Department has been replenished. Christmas is just around the corner, and Good Old Santa has made this his Head quarters. A more complete Holiday line could not be had even in the City. All are invited to come and see the pretties. They will surely cause your very heart strings to tingle with delight. COME ! BOULDER CREEK. (Received too late last week). Mr. and Mrs. Nicklansmnd little sons Tommie and Herman, visited at C. A. Smith’s, Sunday. H. L. Jensen came in from the camp to spend Sunday with his family. Mr. and Mrs. L. Jensen and daughter. Miss Mary, were up from Hebo one day last week. More of the hop and prune pickers are coming in, and lucky they are to get in before the rains commence. W. D. Glad well is the proud papa of a fine babv girl, born Thursday, October 23rd. This is the fourth daughter and Mr. G. says he thinks it’s too had there’s no wood chopper to keep them company. [The editor is sorry, but lietler luck nest time.) Maurice Bays visited with the Nick- Ian's boys last Sunday. Miss Rachel Woods is working for Mrs. Gladwell nt present. We are torn to lose Mr. Jas. Woods’ family from our neighborhood. They have moved into Mr. John Moon's house at Blaine. Mrs. Walter Kinnnman was up from Beaver last week. Mr. Fischer, our newcitiieu, is a glove maker. We have been informed he in tends to open a shop and make gloves this winter. It is reported that H. A. Chopard is having a fine new boat built at Tilla mook. _________________ SOUTH PRAIRIK. Preaching nt the school house Wednes day and Thursday evening by Rev. Star' buck, of the Adventist church, was well attended, Preston Marolf left this week for a pleasure trip to Portland and Califorhia. One of our leading young men got his arm thrown out of place last Sunday while driving fast through the prairie, after which his fair companion safely guided his horse for him. Employees of the Hadley logging camp have been running logs down the river since the recent rains Miss Ivy Roberts is visiting her sister, Mrs Ed. Moren, this week. NEHALEM P. D. Newell went out over the trail last Tuesday on his way to Eugene to join his family who are attending school at that place. Prot. G. A. Walker commenced school in the town district on Monday. Post Office Corner Post Office Corner Jim Thompson run on a snag Saturday evening and sunk his gassoline boat on his way from the mouth of the river to town. Tohl's boat was passing and took off the passengers. School commenced in the Onion Peak district Monday, Miss Olive Starton, from Newberg is the teacher. The Pacific Cable. Rapid progress is being made in the Hand Cream Separator. THANKSGIV Roosevelt, tlie tread powers which ran the PRESIDENT’S President of tile, laying of the Pacific cable and the indi separators while the men were ING PROCLAMATION. United States, do hereby desig cations are that the promise of the corn When co-operative creameries nate as a day of general thanks party as to the time in which the work began cows were not numerous, I milking. Thursday, November 37th, ia De would l>e completed will l»e fully carried The old gathered cream fac giving Thursday, the 27th of out writes John W. Becker of the •igaated as a Time to Give Praise It was promised that the line to tories have been coming around the coming November, and do j the Hawaiian islands would lie laid by Ohio Dairy school. A farmer to God for Blessings Enjoyed. recommend that throughout the November and it is piolaible that the had but a few, and in order to to hand separator cream. A land the people cease from their company will not be to exceed a inonlh get enough cream to make the young man in La Crosse, Wis., W ashington , Oct. 29th.— business pay, a cream gatherer began buying hand separator President Roosevelt to-day issued ordinary occupations and in behind that time. Two years was nam drove through the country cream a year ago and churning his proclamation designating their several homes and places ed as the period within which the I'ne twenty, thirty or forty miles. it in a hand churn. This sum Thursday, November 27th, as a of Worship render thanks unto would l>e complete«! to Manila and it is Wedding; Bella. The next day he made a trip the mer his business has increased day of thanksgiving. The pro Almighty God for the manifold said that the company will, if there ate no unforeseen accidents, do very much Cupid visited the residence of Mr. and same distance in another direc to 2,500 pounds of butter per clamation is as follows : blessings of the past year.” better than promised. Mr». J. W. Hellenbrand, oo Thursday, tion, and the third day in still day. Only lately we have heard “ According to the yearly cus It must t»e assumed, remarks the New October 30th, when Hugh Gardner of an eastern firm that is making INDIAN OUT »33,000 another point of the compass. tom of our people, it falls upon 1 York Journal of Commerce, that the carried off their charming daughter, The cream was raised in shotgun and shipping out of Minneapolis the President at this season to Robbed by Cultus Montana White work will meet with n<» further obstruc Blanche, as a happy bride. Hugh and cans, set in cold spring water. a car load of butter per day, appoint a day of festival and tions from congress or any of the execu Men. Blanche were both old residents of Little In western Wisconsin there were made from hand separator cream. thanksgiving to God. Over a I B utts , Mont., Nov. 2.—A >|>eriHl to live departments. The urgent necessity Nestucca, and are well and favorably The hand separator will skim century and a quarter has passed the Miner from Butte ssys that one of that exists for direct communication be known by all. The room was beauti a number of creameries that just as close as the factory ma since this country took its place the most sensational robberies that has | tween the United Htatea and its | m «ses built upa business, making 2,000 fully decorated in evergreens and flowers. At 12 o'clock Mr. Gardner to 3,000 pounds of butter a d^y. chine, the skim milk is in much among the nations of the earth, ever occurred in the history of Western sions in the Pacific will doubtless lead took Miss Hellenbrand from the arm of Then came the centrifugal better condition for the young and during that time we have Montana was enacted at Plains yester- the government to use every effort to her fatherand led her to the altar, where cream separator, where the milk stock, and one man can take the 1 had, on the whole, more to be ' day, news of which has just reached this advance the work. The commercial in place. A wealthy Flathead Indian cereals, also. that are concerned in the the Rev. K. Bailes made them husband was hauled to the factory and cream from the milk of half a | thankful for than has fallen to ! named Machell was rohlied Saturday completion of the cable are constantly and wife. After the ceremony all were dozen patrons to the factory with skimmed. In the old gathered the lot of any other people. night of »22,000 in cash, the money con- growing in importance and will of seated to a groaning lioard laden with cream method, the cream three no more work than that of each | Generation after generation has j listing of »100 bills and »20 gold pieces. course exert (heir irifiuemre against any ducks, chicken and every good thing to ; or four days old was often sour, of the half dozen men. It is' grown to manhood and passed ! Machell was a visitor in Plains Satur obstruction, should it be attempted, eat and a good deal more than could | mouldy or off-flavored, and the economy all the way round if away. Each has had to bear its day night, and during his absence, ut since the consummation of this enterprise be eaten. to 2 cents less done right, but that little word peculiar burdens, each to face its ! about 10 o'clock at night, a man dressed will mean a very decided saving to The bride and groom took the head of ' butter sold for I “if” is the door to the settle special crisis, and each has1 as a squaw visited his home on Camas merchants doing business with the Far the table and an hour and a halt of fun than separator creamery butter. ment of the whole problem. known years of grim trial, when Prairie and engaged in conversation East. The Pacific Cable company is and frolic followed, when the bride and By the deep setting gravity the separator is kept' the country was menaced by mal ' with Machell's squaw. Mrs. Machell certainly prosecuting this important groom started for Amity, from thence to method from 0.5 per cent to 1.5 “If” Portland, where they will spend their j per cent, with an average of clean; “if” the cream is pro-j ice, domestic or foreign, when noticed that the visitor was not an work with remarkable energy ami di rect communication with Manila a year honey moon. about 0.8 per cent fat, was lost, perly cooled ; “if” the cream the hand oi the Lord was heavy Indian squaw, but a white man, as he hence is altogether probable. 1 could not talk good Flathead, but she is delivered to the factory every The bride was tastefully attired in while by the centrifugal method upon it in death by flood or pesti- I did not susfiect anything wrong until white organdie trimmed with lace and but o. 1 per cent fat was lost. day, then, and not until then, tence, when in bodily distress , »he saw two men run from an outbuild ribbon. Blasts From Ham’* Hora. Thus the centrifugal separator can we expect to have as good and anguish of soul it paid the ing. carrying something with them Those present were: butter as by the creamery sepa beat the gathered system in both penalty of folly and a froward I Then it was that her suspicion was Elequence is not th«* lungs. Bride and gioom, Mr. and Mrs. Helfen- rated system. heart. Nevertheless, decade by aroused, as the wealth had been stored hrand and daughters, Cora, Edith and quantity and quality of butter. The l»est self-help is helping others. It is all a question of whether ¡ ____ 2 we have struggled on in But the separator system had that building. The robbers jumped Maude and son Oscar. Mrs. C. F. Keller The milk must the dirty, shiftless, careless ( ward and upward. We now on their horses, which were near by, and We live to die that we may die to live. and sons Carl and Robert. Mr. and Mrs. j its objections. methods will prevail over the abundantly enjoy material well the one that had lieen talking to her True religion is duty linked to the J. K. Whiteman and daughter Grace. be carted to the factory and then We being, and under the favor of joined them, and the three rode hurridly divine Miss Gertie Gardner and Dick, Rev. K. back again, and the expense of most economical method. are making dairy history. What You cannot fatten your soul on furni Bailes and wife. R J. Desmond keeping up a rig to haul the the Most High we are striving away. As soon as she reached the Plains with ture The newly married couple were the milk and the time lost in wait will the historian of 1910 write earnestly to achieve moral and the news, several of tlie white citizens of The infernal must fall before the recipients of several beautiful and useful ing for skim milk was consider in this matter ? spiritual uplifting. that place accompanied Machell to his eternal presents able, while the skim milk would Those who talk of the waning influ “ The year that has jnst closed home to find if the story was (rue, which $1OO Reward. S1OO. be of less value for feeding than ence of ch arches should ponder the fact has been one of peace and over was proved on their arrival there. A The poor in giMwis are often rich in The rewUrs of this paper wil' be pl-s-wt tn if separated with a small separa that in Shamokin the pastor asked for flowing plenty. Rarely has any score of young Indians started out to grace Reverent sons will become revered I—ni that there w at lea.t -n-e dn-a tart <11—-a— that —ience ha. been able to cure in all its tor at home. A few patrons got coal And the ¿piners immediately went people enjoyed greater prosperity try to locate the robbers, but no elew fathers stages, sort that hi Catarrh Hall a Catarrh to work and put eighteen tons of an has been found such small separators and took than we are now enjoying. For core ia ore only positive cure known to the It take* much misery to make some medical frMernity Catarrh belt* a «.entire the small amount of cream to thracite in the church cellar. Morgan (this we render heartfelt and Machell is the wealthiest fallblood In men seek mercy. Ooual Ilisnaue, require, a constitutional treat could do wo more. dian on the reservation, lie has large meet Kalt's Catarrh Cute is taken internally t the factory. They believe that solemn thanks to the giver of actin, dimctly upon the blond sod Baoeoti.sn- The waiting work furnial.ee ussufficMiiit A report that J P. Morgan is about to faoe. of th« .y«em thereby .leetroyio, th* the increased value of the warm good, and we seek to praise herds of cattle and horses. antT was al warrant to do it. foundation of the di—ano. and tfviac th* buy up a share in the Staffordshire ezial ways known tn have mnnev. but few trnttant wrength by builrtie< up th. coaautu skim milk over that returned fields, has created lirely interest in Him, not by words only, but by He cannot consecrate his gift who lion and '—«tin« nature in doing ita wr-rk. people knew that he kept it at home. It deeds, by the way in which we develops, however, that the old Indian fears to hare it consumed the penpeiet <rv have ar much faith In ita eera- from the factory, was enongh to Enfbnd. The greatest reticence i« oh tire poa-r>. that they o«--r one Hend-ert tkrl Tara for aer case that it fella to «era. Sen t for pay the cost of the separator and served. Imt it m stated that a meeting of i do our duty to ou»elves and to was afraid to trust his money in the It dosen t take much gold leaf to cov lint at testim-WURi* the labor of running it. Some local coal owners will 1» IwM on Wed iour fellow-men. A Mrru. F J CHKMKY ft CO . Toledo O bank, and kept it in an old trunk in an er the |>upi| of the eye. tel 1 by Drwuti TV of them exercised their bulls in newlay to consider the matter “ Now, therefore, I, Theodore outbuilding nt his home Mali • F a 01 Uy Pilis are tbo best-