THE TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. NOVEMBER 13.
1902
Notice.
Person, found hunting or treiapMsi,,-
upon M. W. Hairison s ranch will be
l’r°*VUUl1'_____ ___ JOMFH D.SE«.
Died.
A WILD
AMERICAN.’
Eccentric Millionaire Shocks Japan
with His Queer Ways.
A telegram was received from Ash-
Hu* inoruing stating that
b. O. Loomi. was dead. Until about six
months since be was a member of Star
Lodge A.o.u.w. of this city, when he
dropped <iut
Obituary Notice.
Lester Rav was born in Mercer County
Penn, in 1823. Died at Woods, Oregon
October 28, 1903.
He lived in Mercer county with his
parent, till 1829 when they moved to
Portage county. Phil. There lie lived
until 1845, moving from there to Lodi,
\\ is. Dec. 9, 1948, he married Sarah E.
Hopkins They moved to Kansas iu 1858
where Mr. Rey engaged in a saw-milt
biiriiiess. He enlisted in the 2nd Kan
sas Regiment in May, 1861, serving five
months, when lie became disabled in the
battle of Wilson River. General Lion,
who was at the dead of his regimenR
was killed in the same battle.
Returning from the war, Mr. Ray
worked at the carpenter trade. In 1872
he moved to Oregon with his family,
locating in Washington county. In the
fall of 1884 betook up a claim on Big
Nestucca river known now as the Ray
place at Cloverdale. He was one of the
pioneers of Nestucca. At his death he
resided at Woods, five miles from (Clover
dale. Mr. Ray was a member of the Ma
sonic order for forty-five years. A large
number of the brethern from Tillamook
odge attended the funeral which was
held at Cloverdale. He was buried with
Masonic honors in the Odd Fellows’
cemetery.
Mr. Ray was also a member of the
G. A. R., which order assisted in the
funeral services.
The funeral was one of the largest ever
witnessed in this section of the county.
Mr. Ray leaves a wife and seven
children to mourn their loss.
The children resides as follows :
Charles Ray, Cloverdale, Or. ; Mrs
Ella Russell, McCune, Kansas ; Mrs
Jennie Iler, Heppner, Or.; Lester Ray.jr.,
Heppner, Or.; Frank Ray, Heppner, Or. .
Mrs. Anna Lucy, Portland, Or.; Robt.
R. Ray, Woods, Or.—Ocean Wave.
COUL8ONBURO.
N. Coulson and C. N. Johnson went
to Tillamook Thursday to assisting Rev.
R. Y. Blalock iu ploying up on his
ranch.
P. R. Coulson and family were delayed
on their wav to the county mill on
account of slides being in the road.
Mr. lames Hughey is oijt doing some
work on his ranch.
Frank Dye took a load of supplies to
the county mill for P. R. Coulson, Mon
day.
Mrs. C. N. Johnson called on Mrs. N.
Coulson one day last week.
NEHALEM.
Married, at the residence of the bride's
parents, Mr. Herbert Thompson and
Miss Allie Ripley, on November 9th, Rev.
W. J. Roehmer officiating.
Col. H. L. Day, organizer for the
Woodmen of the World, was in from
Portland and dedicated the new Wood
men Hall, Saturday evening. The ladies
served supper in the hall and a general
good time was enjoyed by all.
Miss Minnie Schollmeyer is teaching
school in the Nostrom district.
Thedore Kingsley went to Tillamook
Saturday.
R. D. Sales returned from a seven
month's sojurn in the Sound country
Saturday.
The steamer Vosbnrg expects to go
out Tuesdav morning. The following
is a partial list of passengers : F. K..
Steinnancr and his mother, on their way
to Illinois ; Mrs. Gerntse and children
on their way to their new home la
Washington county ; Mr. Alvin and
wife and son ; Mr. Frank Gunn.
NETARTS.
Geo. Coffman went to the city Satur
day on business, returning Monday.
Ed. Leach and Joe Mapes, of Tilla
mook, spent Friday, Saturday and Sun
day on the bay.
Ben Turney, of Pleasant Valtejr. »
smoking chum salmon on «mskey
Creek. It is rumored that lie will ship
them to Japan.
Chas. Wells, ferd Morns and Elmer
Hoag, of Tillamook, are on the bay
hunting and are the guests of Geo. W.
Phelps.
Toe Todd, of Tillamook, is stopping on
the Sand Spit with C. B Adey. Joe is
making it lively for the gff*
Harness
Yen an BSkS your bar
n< » cut soft » « 5,o.ve
ard a9 tough n® wir»* by
using EIKKK A liar-
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lengthen lift lif*-c*Ake ?i
I w twk*« sa »-ng “ 11
©rdiiarJy wooU.
EUREKA
Harness Oil
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H$T*Ja«O on
In a paper on defectives, read by Dr.
Martin W. Barr, chief physician of the
Pennsylvania school for feeble mind
ed children, before the summer school
of philanthropy at the charities build
ing, a remarkable instance was men
tioned by him of eccentricity that has
caused comment in scientific circles.
It was the case of an American mul
timillionaire who is living in far east
ern countries and leading a life of such
peculiarity as to be almost incredible, I
says a New York report.
According to Dr. Barr, this man is a :
neurotic. It is estimated that his for
tune is in the neighborhood of $10,-
000,000,but no attempt has been made
to have him declared incompetent;
he is left free to run his course. His
family are refined and socially promi
nent. Whenever they speak of the
son’s course, they refer to it as his
“nervousness.” They will not admit
that he has a deranged intellect,
though he has left friends and posi
tion here to take up a life among the
“Hanins,” the grave diggers and so
cial outcasts of the far east.
“He was a physician, rich, handsome,
cultured, of aesthetic tastes,” said
Dr. Barr in his paper, “a graduate tot
one of the most prominent medical
colleges mi America, and a man who
had made a pronounced hit as a
specialist.
His fortune enabled him to secure
every medical appliance known to
science and for some years he en
joyed phenomenal success. Wine and
women proved his bane. He sank
lower and lower. His peculiarities
no longer tolerated at home, he
drifted from capital to capital of Eu
rope, and finally established himself
in Japan. With an appetite still un
satisfied, he exhibited new phases of
moral degeneration, causing pis
body to be tattooed with wonderful
skill, every picture a work of art.
Hrs back bore a huge dragon^
shading of every scale showing per
fection of detail. This, on revisiting
America, with utmost vanity he
shamelessly exposed. He was tugn^d
out of the clubs.
‘ 1
Returning to Japan, be bought a
performing bear and wandered from
place to place clad in the garb of
Hanin, exhibiting himself and his
bear, and distributing photographs of
each and all in endless variety.
‘•This master of eccentricity,” said
Dr. Barr, “shocking both Europe and
America, and astounding even Jap
anese next hired a squad of Japan
ese boys, practically buying them
outright from their parents, who. at
tired in full uniform, are trained in
military exercises. To these are op
posed an equal number of monkeys,
dressed as Chinese soldiers, and thje
war of China and Japan is constantly
renewed for the entertainment of him
self and his satélites, who watch in
the ecstacy of delight the suffering
of the poor brutes. Rewards are of
fered, and the more bloody the con
test and the greater the atrocities,
the more intense the gratification.”
AN EXTRAORDINARY COW.
“It does me good to ride downtown
with Slick in the morning,” remarked
a middle-aged citizen, according to a
story in the Detroit Free Press. “He
lives out in the suburbs and there is
always something doing out there.
Before Dick left town his wife and
>>aby were the smartest on earth, and
now that he has become a country
jake his horses, cows, dogs and chick
ens are the smartest on earth. There
he is now; just you go and sit by him
and start him on his cow.”
“Hello, Dick, how are you? Jlow’a
the farm? How’s your cow?” asked
the mean man, who went over to sit
by the farm novice.
“Oh, the farm’s all right; and the
cow—” replied Dirk; “well, she ought
to be teaching school—that's a fact.
She’s the smartest cow I ever saw.
Last night, sir. when she came up to
he milked—she’s not one of these
silly, feeble-minded cows that have
to have somebody drive them up to
get their feed—no, sir, when Joseph
ine came up she was alone—the little
Jersey heifer. Daisy, that we bought
to keep her company in the pasture,
was not with her \Ve didn’t worry,
for we thought Daisy bad loitered
and would come along soon.
“But Josephine acted strangely.
We couldn’t get her in the barn at
all; she stood in the lane looking to
ward the pasture and bawled ami
bawled and bawled. We thought she
was only calling Daisy to hurry up
and come home. StiU she wouldn't
go in and still she kept on bawling.
Then somebody suggested that Daisy
might be in trouble of some kind; so
we all left Josephine and went down
into the pasture.
“She stopped fowling aa we started
down the lane. and. sure enough. at
the farthest corner of the pasture,
in a little triangle of land where
three wire fences cross each other,
making a queer little pen. was Mies
I>aiay. She had got in. out of girlish
curiosity, «nd couldn’t get out. We
had to pull down a piece ef fence to
get her out. Now. wasn’t Josephine
smart? I think so.”
The other men all said that Joeeph-
ine ought to have a telephone out In
the pasture so she could call up the
house when Daisy got in trouble.
FREE! FREE!
FREE !
NEXT SATURDAY, NOYEMBER 15 th .—We will give to each of the first 24
customers, making a $2.00 purchase a beautiful Picture, full size, 194 by 194, mounted
on gray Court mat. These Pictures are the exact copy of one of the most popular paint
ings of to-day. We offer this special inducement to encourage ï early trading1. While
we’ve increased our corps of sales-pcople, still we are not able to take care of the
afternoon crowd. The early bird—you know the rest—so come to see us earlv
Saturday morning.
Saturday, as usual, we will more
than divide profits with you
Saturday Special
Saturday ¡Special
Comforters, 78c
$3.98
SILK WAIST,
made of heavy Tefetta
silk. Front and back
tucked full length, in
the new slot seam effect
silkoline covered, cotton
filled, single size.
At
99c.
SIZE LARGER, cotton
filled, silkoline covered.
SHIRT WAIST at 50c
made of heavy fanci
striped flannelette, sty
lishly made, all colors
and sizes, a “ bargain"
in the strictest sense of
the term.
LARGE SIZE COMFOR
TERS, cotton filled, silk-
oline covered, tied with
wool.
OUTING FLANNEL, 5c
YD., heavy, well fleeced
outing flannel, in dark
patterns only. Only 10
yards to a customer
EXTRA LARGE SIZE
COMFORTERS, both
sides covered with good
quality silkoline, wool
tied, filled with nice
white cotton
At $1.19,
At $1.48,
¡Saturday ¡Special.
MEN'S SHIRTS 35c.,
made of extra heavy
twill, double front and
back, 36 inches long.
PANTS, $2.00
PAIR, regular $2.75
value. Made of extra
^ey
heavy all wool Kelsey,
well tailored, cut full
See this bargain by all
means.
$1.50
MEN'S HATS,
Rothschild Bros. Fox
Brand, made for a $2.00
seller. We have iliem
in all styles at $1.50.
Purchase
your ’Xmas
PRESENTS
SflHTA
CUAUS
has truly made this
popular Store
headquarters.
I
Mad Battle For Weilth.
C hicago . N ov . 10 -Condit on. almost
anarchiatis prevail m the Un ted State.,
„«lingtoJohn H. Whiu. Epiaoop.1
bi-tK.p of North Indiana la a sermon
at Grace Church yesterday be declared
«.hat the American people hf.d forgotten
their duties in a uiad rus’i for wealth
and fame.
“It is ev**ry man for himself,” he de
dared. ’’The typical American is heed
less of bow he achieves his end. Those
that came in the way are trampled upon
or poshed aside. It is this lack of re-
ap*-ct for the withes and rights of others
that has brought about conditions in
this country that border on the a •
archislic. ”
Irreveience, dec’ared Bishop White,
wm responsible for the exciting evil
conditions. II*- declared that the Ameri-
ern education tended to create irrever-
erence, and thst the strenuoatty of
American life had tl»e effect of increas
ing the irreverent spirit.
’ Our Institutions/' said the bishop,
•• have luul such a rapid growth, and
our progress has lieen so wonderful that
we are filled with an admiration of our
selves that suqNUMes our admiration fur
any thing else.”;
u
The moat severe snow storm of the
y«»ar ia raging in the northern part of
M>*ntata. ami the Great Northern Rad-
raod is compelled to use it* rotery plows
to keep the tracks clear. AH hope of
finding Superin terete nt B F. L Egan
has been abandoned, and the Great
Northern Company lias offered a reward
of
for the recovery of his body. It
was first stated the reward of
had
l>een offered, but a bull« tin issued pteos
the sum of $V«0.
noui uihile the
Stoek
is complete.
Post Office
An exchange says] that of cigarette
smoking boys. W) per cent ha«I poor
-*»<■?>«■• *»
emt wnre har«. «0 per
cent unmannerly, and 90 ^rcent .tupid.
ThU «xxM.ni. for 2» per cent of them
, How »bout the balance?
* * *
After having been incased for six
months in a plaster cast, which covered
his entire body except his head and the
lower parts of his legs, the Rev. Horace
Porter, victim of a bicycle accident, has
returned to Plymouth Church, where he
is assistant to Dr. Newel IDwight Hillis
The accident which occurred in 1900,
caused the drawing up of Mr. Porter’s
limbs so that he was unable to stand.
An extraordinary operation, the cutting
of several important ligaments, was per
formed, and the pastor, after six months
in a plaster cast, is now* able to walk
with crutches. These probably will lie
discarded shortly.
St 41 4t
Joseph Siegen thaler, of Beaverton,
Orr., aged 17 years, while out hunting
Saturday afternoon, near bni home, in
company with Henry Voss, accidentally
discharged his shotgun, the charge
taking effect in the abdomen, Death re-
The
suited feur hours afterwards.
Coroner. Dr. C. L. Large, was notified
and the cause of death being so evident,
deemed an inquest unnecessary. The
young man was born near where the
accident occurred. His father is now in
Mexico. There are three sisters and
three brothers, who live at Bear er ¿on.
• * »
*• Political corruption ’ was the sub
ject of an address More the People’s
Institute at Cooper Union, N.V., hr
Rabbi Steplien 8. Wise, of Portland, Or.
The most prolific source of political
corruption,’’ be said, " is the spirit of
Corner
blind, bigoted partisanship. Men think
today ymrties are ends in themselves.
They are only means to the end which is
the country’s good. Politics! corruption
could not last an hour if the so-called
rcs|>ectable classes did not tolerate and
suppport it. Let us have an end to this
Irish-American.
German-American or
Zulu-American. We are all Americans.
I am an American. In my religion ami
moral teachings I am a Jew*, but I would
not vote for a Jew unless he were three
times as good as his opponent for fear
that he might discredit that religion.''
* 41 41
1
that Henry St. Rayner will lie obliged
to leave the state, if lie desires to con
tlnue his law practice, and thst he may
even then be refuwd Hdmitturice to
practice, should this matter comcjto the
ears of the court or the attorneys.
41 4t *
A special agent of the Interior D«*pmt«
merit is msm to lie sent to Oregon to
investigate the alleged frauds in making
entries under the timber ami stone act
Agents detected nimilar fraud in states
further East and succeeded in straight
ruing out some tangles moncfis ago and
suits are pending io conceal patents in
certain cases now. Probably the pro
cedure will lie followed in Oregon,
under the order recently issued susjiend
ing entries under the timber ami stone
act In Oregon. Applicant* will lie
oblige«! to show cause why the eritrta*
should not l>e rejected, and the N|M*<*ial
agents will make inde|»endefit investi
gation for H«*vretary HItch<u»ck. wlio is
determined to stamp out this fraudulent
practice. _________________
An investigation that has l*en made
by the War Department into the allega-
tion by the antiim perislistic committee,
dellvere«! at the Lake George conference,
to the effect thst Father Augustine, a
Catholic priest was killed by the water
cure in the Philippines, has apparently
confirmed the main fact that the man die«i
as the result of the administration of the
cure, but il also has lieen fourni that the
persons who adminiatere«! the cure to
Elast* From Ram'* Horn.
secure insurgent funds, of which lie was j
the custodian were volunt^rs from V’er-. Charity seldom crawl* out <4 a
moM, mid are now beyond the reach of ; crowded purse.
military justice, having been mustered j Paint cannot make a picture by its
out of service.
own power.
4t 4i •
Poverty makes a goodly frame for the
By order of the Supreme Court in an picture of purity.
««pinion htnded down by Chief Justice
It is no use praying for bread while
M«x»re, Henry St. Rayner, an attorney we are stealing butter.
well known in Portlrnd, in connection . No amount of culture could make a
with the MclMioel murder ras^. was cabbage grow into an oak.
or«lered debarred fr«»n> the courts of
Effort do not always produce the best
recor«l of the Kuite of Oregon, Justi«*e effects in spiritual things.
It ts possible to smother the fire of
Moore says that P»e evidence, in which
Nt Rayner is charged with having *ub» zeal by too much fuel of effort
Th* only fruit that will keep in the
stitnt**d two sheets of testimony in pre-
kingdom is hand picked and heurt-
l»aring hit bill <>f exceptions, is soconclu.,
packed.
give thst the Supreme ( ourt is forced to
Too many church r<dls are only cradle
its unpieasant cuncluanm. Thi» means rolls and the prcachtrs cxjiert rockers.