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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1902)
18. 1902 Crystal Crepe Paper, All Ct ■ ors, Special The Popular more inviting Sunday9» Boat was truly the “Ships Arrived99 in time. >ew merchandise for the liolidiiy trade. More salespeople to serve you. Trade in the forenoon if possible. -SOME every purse,- INDUCEMENTS- •NUFANGL’ TROUSERS, for dress, in several patterns, Prices from $3,95 a pair to $5.00. CLOTHING DELAYED In Transit Causes us to more than divide profits with you. Sun days Boat brought our Stock of Holi day Suits and Over Coats, that should have reached us several weeks ago. This is Hiller’s Perfect Fitting Clothing, the best ever— Prices like these will Suit a great many. At $1.00 a pair our famous Queen and Carmen Kid Gloves, all sizes, all colors, and black and white, $1.25 and $1*40 values included in this sale. Each Glove fitted and guaranteed. Suitable ’X mas Gifts these, sizes can be exchanged after ’Xmas HEN’S FURNISH INGS, Furnished nonarch Cheap, shirts, in white and colored WEAR, NECK in the most popular styles. Arrow Brand Col lars, a dozen styles. KID GLOVES$1.00 a pair, Mocha Glov es silk lined, $1.35 a pair. $13.50 Vai’s, Spec’l $io.oo Skirts, made up of a number of different fabrics, in as many different styles. “ “ Plain “ “ Storm Rubliers — Boys Long Boots — Short “ “ Storm Rubbers — Misses heavy, Peble Top Boots *• Storm Rubbers — Children's Peble Tops Boots “ Stor m Rubbers — Women’s ■“ “ SILK HUFLERS, Black, White and Checked, $1.15. R bbOHS, Neck Ribbons, Hair Ribbons, big supply. Baby Ribbon 1 CCflt a yard. AT $2.25. Just as stylish, just as well wearing, as the agency hat at $3.00. Derbys, Pandor as, Fedoros, Graecos and Rail-road. Popular style Shoes, at less than Popular Prices SOUTH PRAIRIE. Mrs. HcGree and children, of Tilla mook. spent Saturday and .Sunday with her sister, Mrs. Dan Billings. Mrs. M. B. Green returned home after spending several weeks in Washington. There will be a basket social nt the school house next Saturday evening, 20th. Hans Webber has returned home after working for several months near Tilla mook. Mr. Christensen, of Oretown, is making cheese in Mr. Grey's place. M isj Clara Moran spent several days in Tillamook last week. Bell Johnson and Ed. Moran are en gaged in moving the logging camp build ings- ________________ The schooner John F, Miller was tow ed out Wednesday by the Voabnrg, Sam Lu nd burg and Albert Zimmer man returned from Seaside Saturday, haring gone out with some beef cattle. August Sandburg and Will Richardson went out to Seaside lest week an.i are working in the 8eaaide saw mill. Duncan Chisholm and Wm. Frasiar were passangers out on the Voaburg Saturday. Oscar Burgman and Winters are log ging on Bor’s place. Wtu. Norris has a new house about completed in In zer town. George Cos is building a new house in lower town. A letter from A. J. Sharp informs us that when the Schooner Una was 10 days out from fan Francisco that Clarance Daughney was taken down with small pox. The schooner landed at San Deago and was in quarar.tine when last heard from. Mrs Hannah Simson was in a short time ago and made final proof on her claim before P. D Newell. Road Supervisor Morrison Is opening up a new road between lower and up per town. D. C. Peregoy has the contract to build a new achoolhmise in the Sand hill district, co replace the one deatroyed by fire last summer. Bill Chialilom and Joe Duncan went oat Tuesday Co Astoria and Portland. BLAINE Prof. Hollie Role, of Yale College, to teach a term of 12 months of school ; also they have secured Mr. Carl as jan itor. Messrs. Seth Moon and |im Woods were covering bad mud holes with cor duroy last week. Miss Mav Ficher, of Boulder, was visiting friends here last week. Tom Coulson, of Coulsonburg was a caller last week. Our storekeeper. Mr. Patterson, re turned last week from the Metropolis with a four horse load of holiday goods. The oleo interests have l>egun thti^gj eflorts to have the new oleo tax law declared unconstitutional, choosing the ■ federal court at Cincinnati, O., as the forum. Ths test case is now on, having been brought by an action to recover the . penalty prescribed by section 2 of the act. It is being made on a forty-pound ' package of oleomargarine, which was | made with half commercial butter pur- ' chased in the open market and 50 per ! cent oleo oil, made according to the for- ' inula by which the highest grade of oleo < is made. Judge Miller Outcalf,law part ner of Senator Foraker, represeuts the oleomargarine interests and is backed by the consolidated oleo interest of the whole country. This will thoroughly | test the validity of the law. Which j ever way the case is decided it will be appealed to the supreme court, where an early decision will be had. The eternal i revenue department, as well as the oleo people, have been anxious to have the constitutionality of the law tested. It is claimed by the oleo people that, in this law, congress is delegated police power, and has destroyed the produc- ' tion of the poor man’s butter. They will seek to show that old time preju dices against oleo have died out, and that it is as pure a product as comes from the creameries and equally as wholesome. Hill Not A Pessimist. St. Paul, Dec. 15.—J. J. Hill, who has just returned from an Eastern trip, says that the alleged interview sent out from Chicago in which he was made to take a pessimistic view of industrial and finan cial conditions, was purely imaginative and that he did not talk with newspaper men there. “The business of the country is under going a readjustment to meet changed conditions," said Mr. Hill. “The most alarming thing is the decrease in our ex ports. We are importing much more than we export. This is not due to a larger home consumption ; it is because our articles cost too much. Our people demand better things than do those of other countries aad our production has been overtaking the needs of the countrv too rapidly. The things we manu facture coat more than other nations will pav and they buy elsewhere. Agn- cuftural products, provisions and such things sell readily everywhere. They are not affected bv local conditions. I do not know what will be done. “ It is hoped that some adjustment will be made to meet the conditions. There is too much speculation now. and too much boom. Just how it will come out I do not know." SUPPLIES Hardware, Tinware Oils, Paint, Varnish, Doors. Window Sashes Agents for the Great Western Saw M c I ntosh & mcnair The Most Reliable Merchants in Tillamook County A Great Irrigation Work The dam of Assouan, which was opened on Monday, is the newest engi neering wonder of the world in the land which holds the earliest of such won ders that still stand. This penning of the .Nile four hundred miles above the Pyramids has been a work of a geuera. tion, abandoned as impossible by the Egyptians and the French, but pushed to success by Bntish skiU and persever ance. This and the Assiont barrage Solomon Hirach is dead. After an ' will give Egypt a reservoir of 1,000,000,- illneas of two weeks he passed away 000 cubic yards of water every year, Monday in his palatial residence at Jef crops wih be dependent no longer upon ferson and fifth streets, Portland, of the risings of the Nile and the fatness heart trouble. Since being ill he bad of the land will exceed that of the days had several severe attacks of heart of old trouble and the last one, at 11 06 o'clock All the while that Great Britain was that morning, proved too much fur hie engaged in war in South Africa this failing strength. work of peace in North Africa never It is the general opinion on the istb- slackened. It is said that this great mm that Pa to« Inland i« at the bottom enterprise cost between $100,000,00’ of the aggreseivene«« of England. It ie and $125,000,000 and there is no doubt believed that England haa combined with that it will many times repay the ex Germany under the futile pretext of col penditure. The water that will I* lecting unacknowleged debt» a nd to pun stored will, it is stated, flood the Nile ish President Castro for his firm deter, ▼alley for fifty miles, assuring a great minntion not to allow England to quiet increase in the agricultural products of ly usurp Patou Island and other valua that region and a regular yield. It is ble acquisitions in the neighborhood of h.nrdly possible to overestimate the value of this to the countrv. The cum- the Orinoco River. I I pletion of this greRt work, which ha« been going on for rears, i« at once highly creditable to British policy and notable cridence of Britiah «kill and persistence. Education