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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1902)
« TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. December 18. - '•DELPH1A MAN WHO DARED NOT SMILE. “at the Quaker /'all Founded. A naturalised citizen of the United States, D. Asadourian, an Armenian, who is in business in Cleveland, was locked up in Constantinople. Turkey, charged with conspiracy. Through the offices of some Turkish business men he was released under $5,000 bonds, effective during his stay of 50 ,wUgrown accu®tx>me<l days. He has just returned to his n perbial expre««ion. home here, reports a Cleveland ex As «low as a Jladelphian,” ha\« change. Concerning his experience he never g<>ne bejjo the humorous con said: "I went there on business. As soon sideration of tbnatter, writes Dr. William Ellis Tgs, in the Chicago as my presence became known the of ficers eame for me. They questioned American. I he newspapa have made it the me. asking if I spoke the Armenian brunt of h porous thrusits, tho language. This I denied, because had theme ’lias fiy*he<bfood for carica I admitted it I am ture that 1 would turist» on oc^ion» when more mo never have returned to America. The fear American Armenians. mentous problns have lain in »lum Turks They think that in America the peo bering quiexmee, lecturer» have scored introditory points about it. ple have an advanced knowledge of and knights oihe "heel and clog” high explosives, which might be used ha»e come to ?«ort to it as a vindica to blow up the sultan. They suspected tion when oldanxl memorable gray- me of being in sympathy with the Ar haired ¡red 1 joke® jokes hi» hie failed to find market menians. After putting me in prison they had some men come into my cell playhoiA» of the beautiful city in the playhouea and tell funny stories in the Armenian of home«. So far ha» 1 s over-indulgence of a language. They wanted me to betray vrell-taken crii ism extended', that one my knowledge of it by laughing. But may hear in I gland and as far away I didn’t laugh, for had I smiled I as the orient, lories invested with rid- would not be here now to teil the tale. ejt Philadelphia, the long- The stories were very funny, but I »1 ¡cule for patie, suffering and 1 |e lever-complaining ver-com plain ing home managed to keep a sober countenance <>f aa lo»elj a im loving a community of in spite of my wish to laugh.” "H’ople as l/iMif made. 'W ’ ’/ ier cr made. IN MODERN LONDON, •i\>ertain lei/m-er in Scotland, com- rwtiri4".Jd£ diiapoaition of his fam- I. ^id: three children liv- in Philadelphia, Pa.” A ■ ,e!l kimwn lor.’g distance walker ath- losing the championship in a A host of quaint old customs, says time walk from Washington to Nexv the London Daily Mail, linger round York, consoled his defeat and amused and about the famous "King’s Guard” his admirers by declaring that he was at St. James palai e. but perhaps» none far ahead of his old-t ime record, when, is more curious than that, which de on arriving in the city of Philadelphia, crees that his majesty’s health shall his feet went, to sleep, anil he was un not be drunk at dinner, except w.hen able to proceed further with his ac the Scots guards are on guard. 'Die customed ngility. omission, when one reflects that this The members of a flourishing base one toast, even when no others are ball tea'ni, on alighting from the train, drunk, is invariably honored every each appeared armed, with a gigantic evening at every regimental mess and alarm clock which they proceeded to guardroom dinner throughout the carry about the town to keep them British umpire, is sufficiently strik- awake. ing. A still more unfortunate, but actual The explanation lies in the fact ***•<£unrenee ia the one recorded in the that the regiment from across the Eiairits* journals that Philadel- border was at one time suspected of Fr.the only city in the world en- a leaning toward Jacobitisni, and so Ut’lhe distinction of having had the officers were specially ordered to its citizens run over and killed drink his majesty’s health after din 1 Undertaker’s hearse. ner, those of other corps being for (»rs n«ppeaw the fancy’s fickle foi- bidden to do so in order to make the tir-forming us that they come to enforced loyalty of the Scotsmen Jpl lia and tell jokies one season, stand out in clearer relief. Vig ’he next to find they have It was also ordered that they \ etrated the slumbering per- should not be allowed to use finger of the easy-going citizens, glasses after dinner, lest they should us, Philadelphia becomes the drink to "the king over the water,” •ome. the joker’s jest, the and finger glasses are, in ■ conse , i> t/s hope, while its unaveng- quence, tabooed there on these occa |Xons nre born, live and die in sions to this day. pr.«f Affection for the place, un- 1 of the thrusts, and not infre- SALARIES OF ACTORS. enjoying them. th* vve seen consumptives deliber- jeefuse the offer of home and com- jhs'ith an almost indisputable ns of restoration to health and Salaries of actors vary from almost & /» a 1 onger I ife. in the moilnt ainh nothing to $500 a week, with a few 4. f>>uth, southwest and Colorado, exceptions that go above that, writes 41 v might remain in the city of F. E. Fyles, in Leslie’s Monthly. I seemingly H y and dir there “ doubt though that any supporting I bontentrd. Tn two cases par actor outside of Weber <Y Fields’com ; 0.^4. . , \hat each could have •Arosi" -.»th, pany gets more than $500. Those ,<a compik that wealthy and •><y < that go above are stars, many of I / < onxrftxi relatives would tr' the «1 . ., whom receive a fixed salary and a . «'» uh , Ori away into the percentage on the profits. A female X*‘ry," nA air and balmy stm- bj sV1Red |O leave the star who crowded a New York thea ter the season before last for six ♦ . ' \e winter came, and months received only $150, while her t "•<!*?. held by the leading man was getting $250. But existence that is Rangv she was a risky venture for het man- rglial the | ager, who lifted her from a minor Mb«r or » serious f and a scien- ■ to <-t>llHv position to stardom, and a failure KR i gisti r « ¿t of Philadelphia’». would have cost him much. Many tn Uy. Orr^o, ? * people. . i> . »9(>3 stars are their own managers, and t the men who engage a business man to direct •rd Willinin »indie great cor- lu« I 1>O| 1 , of in vast busines» their affnirs for a salary, as they would a supporting actor. The gains kdver«ely the ?e alive to their I to fill th. ir. of actors are absurdly exaggerated in Li l 17th ila; its, and comprise the public mind, and even among Then as one wishes L RegiMlcr. eiHfy jn t,he World. themselves they endeavor to keep up the deceit. A reason that so many N otick F um noticeable in the Silndelphia. English actors are imported is that players of the first class in London Ihn engage in the actual eon vast city’s Interests take or receive a third less than equally tal mrtunity to nssure the ented and well-known Americans. rre is nothing slow about Roraia’a Later Years. s of that tow n. The voters In the National library of Florence »nntrary—let a man in an Italian historian has found a doc betray every sense of honor ument. which contains many interest ty to his constituency, and ing and hitherto' unknown facts in re elect him hs long as he regard to the latter years of the fa allegiance to the powers that mous Lucrexia Borgia. According to signifies subserviency -»er ««ion whether it be good or It she took the veil and joined the con same is true in business, gregation of the Brothers and Sisters of Penitence, which is better known s not »lone, I add, to the honor under the name of “Tertiaries of the lelphla business men. yet a Order of St. Francis.” She received the man who desired could exact ny honest condition of em- veil from the vicar general, Ludovico de la Torre, anil Giovanni Gonzaga from his hard worked arti wrote to her mule that during the Ad they would humiliatingly last ten years of her life she wore a io It rather than run the risk And of a lost position. This is penitential shirt. She died in !51Mand w as buried in the robes of her order. a no diaparagament it is aim t. nth. i Unmeitlr >*<*!■» nt View. If there was anything upon which Mrs. Upjohn prided herself it was her coffee It was always rich, black and strong, and she trustrd the mnk ing of it to none but her own fair hands. This is why the visitors in the par lor. from whose presence she bail rx »•n«e<l herself for a few moments, dis tlnctlv heard through the partly open door the loud, horrified voice of the kitchen girl: 'Ter goodness’ sake, ma’am, you’re not goin* tn feed the company on the horrid taisek stuff you drink yourself, are yr?” Chicago Tribune Aaavr Csm l)rafae«e. Here is a novel cure for deafness. According to several Dutch papers a deaf woman, who resides at Krom- menie. hail a quarrel a few weeks ago with some of her neighbors, and as a result got into a violent passion. As she is TO years old, her friends feared that this sudden ai <1 terrible outburst of anger would injure her. I ut instead it completely cured here of her deaf ness. In Memory of VI nt or leu It has been decided to found an eve hospital and an asylum for the blind as Ceylon’s memorial to the late Queen Victoria. Ifoanla i Tlmft-Jr for Snatto Afrlea. Timber • m .J*.**/^ N. nloni* ported irom be Used in re- during!»’ î 1902 I NIW TIPPLE FOR WOMEN. Many women at the east have taken of late to a new tipple imported from Holland and called oil of roses, re ports an eastern exchange. It is a cordial in name only. It is none of the sticky, sirupy components of the other insipid cordials, but has a pe culiar. almost biting taste that appeals to the feminine palate. This cordial js flavored with bride roses and is the invention of a firm in Amsterdam that was organized' in 1575. A bushel of selected roses are crushed into a press and the essence is extracted by a complicated system. This distilla tion is enlivened with alcohol and other spirits, hut naturally the flavor of roses is responsible for the increas ing popularity of the drink. 'The cor dial tastes like a rose smells. The color is pale pink and as the distilla tion of "huile de roses” requires an enormous amount of roses and great care, this is the most expensive cordial on the market. A mere tablespoonful for 25 cents. The firm in Amsterdam exports this liquor in genuine Delft jugs that the purchaser retains, and the average woman derives much pleasure taking home the tiny jug from which 6he has quaffed the de lightful cordial. It may be said of this new tipple, however, that it induces inebriety just as quickly as a whisky toddy, cocktail or "sour.” and the resultant headaches are just as distressing. CREAMERY TILLAMOOK COUNTY BANK. J BUTTER ( incur porated ), We want consignments of the best article and cannot get too much. We are Headquarters for Butter and will get you top prices. TILLAMOOK CITY PAID UP CAPITAL, »10,000. EVERDING & FARRELL, Portland, Or. A GENERAL BANKH BUSINESS. Directors M. W. H arrison , C urtiss , B. L. E ddy . Cashier XL W. H arrison . Truckee Lumber Co., Liberal Prides Paid for gilt edge securi- ies of all kinds. OF SAN FRANCISCO, DEALERS IN FIR & SPRUCE Lumber I Sewing Machines, Ï > * BOX SHOOKS GENERAL MERCHANDISE And LOGGERS’ w is the time to*buy to’buy a Now new Sewing Machine -■ for — $22 .00, with drop head and all the latest improvements at M c I ntosh & M c N air ’ s . It is the B onita S ewing M achine , and they range in price from $22 to $35, with ball bearings. They are little beauties, perfectly made and something new on the market. These machi nes are a better article than the peddlars are charging $65 and $75 for. I SUPPLIES AGENTS STEAMERS ’ W. H. KRUGER” AND “REDONDO.” For San Francisco and Los Angeles. J. E, SIBLEY, Mgr Hobsonville, Or. Allen House, I J. P. p. ALLEN, Proprietor. First Class accommodation at Second Class Rate. HARD ON THE CONDUCTORS. BARNES, ••rs on Street Care Hand Them Lots of Hills. It is a pity that certain employments deprive many women of their inalien able right to pretty feet. New York doctors protest that they do not find the situation among shop girls quite so deplorable here as it is reported by a St. Louis specialist, but they ad mit that standing for hours at a stretch certainly does have a tendency to produce flatfootednesa, states an exchange of that city. "By this I do not mean that you will not find hundreds of ¡»airs of pretty feet among shop employes,” explained one doctor. "Some of the prettiest feet in New York are this moment hid ing their charms behind the counters of our big stores, but some of the ug liest ones are concealing their deform ities in the same placs. "Most people who are on their feet all day are bound to have trouble over the shape and size of their extremities. Those who stand fare worse than those who walk about, for the move ment and circulation tend to prevent the flatness which so many clerks complain of. For that reason, the waitress, for example, will find that her feet retain more of their natural virtues and* acquire fewer viceji than the shop girl’s.” 9torea Ttoaal Home of the < tolnrhilla. The chinchilla, the little animal the size of a squirrel, is met with only in the Andes of Bolivia, Ecuador. Peru and northern Chili, and is never found under a height of 9,000 or 10,000 feet. The Indians are eager trappers and hunters of it for its fine fur The «kins are well seasoned with salt anil made up into small package* for dis patch to the towns, whence they are shipped abroad. I one of this kin J bring it to me, I will guarantee to make it keep perfect time or it wont cost you MEAT MARKET, anything. I keep the most reliable time Is still here and expects to remain. Thanking you for past favors and a continuance of your trade 1 Cash paid for HIDES and PELTS and FURS, Etc. FAT HOGS WANTED right away to pack down. toy Rirthqaakra. < million Uhu«. J* bren pieces that are to be had at prices in reach of all, if you are expecting to buy one, come and see me before you invest, it will save vou money, time and worry. C. F. Franklin A A A .A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A. A CASE & FOWLER, PROPRIETORS Î Tillamook Iron AVoks < General Machinists & Blacksmiths 4 4 Boiler Work, Logger’s Work and Heavy Forging Fine Machine Work a Specialty. y 4 4 TILLAMOOK, OREGON. ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft THE UP TO DATE JEWELER. C* E. REYNOLDS, Undertaker and Em balmer. All orders promptly attended to. V VW WWWWW W-9* W W W NF’sS Office ON THE MAIN STREET, OPPOSITE THE ALLEN HOUSE. Steamer Geo R. Vosburg "Will Run Between Tillamook and Astoria. r I « Freight in 5-ton lots and over $3.50 per ton. i Freight in less than 5-ton lots, $4.00 per ton. i Passenger rate, $3.50. I Ship Freight by A. & C. Railroad in Care of « : Geo. R. Vosburg. i NEHALEM TRANS. CO. ■ STEAMERS—8UE II. ELMORE, W. II. HARRISON. ONLY LINE—ASTOTIA TO TILLAMOOK, GARIBALDI, BAY CITY, HOBSONVILLE. Connecting at Astoria with the Oregon Railroad it Navigation Co. and also the Astoria & Columbia River R. R. fot San Francisco, Portland and all points east. For freight and passenger rates apply to SAMUEL ELMORE & CO. General Agents. ASTORIA. OR B. C. LAMB, Agent, Tillamook Oregon. Aizpiit« Agents i PROPRIETOR OF AND : PORTLAND, ORE. Agents for DeLaval Cream Separators. A R Co Portland. c R R R Cq p .. orl|and F. LEACH, Tillamook Meat Market CHEESE BUTTER MAKERS Of Cheeserv, Dairy and Creamery Machinery and Supplies we carry : the largest stock in the northwest. A full line of D. H. Burrell & Co.’s Cheese making prepara : celebrated tions, Apparatus, etc. : Send for Catalogue. ■ B^DDIClj-kEATINi CO, i 143 FRONT STREET, Pacific Navigation Co. Never See Day!i*t*t. Down in many of the great coal ntisies of Pennsylvania are telephones, tool repairing e*tabliahnienta. black smiths* shop» and various other insti tutions that the surface worker would never think of as connected with cav erns WO or more feet away from day light. A moving picture show portray ing work in the mines was given in t\ie city last week. One f the views con tained a miner holding the receiver of a ’phone in a subterranean pay sta tion. An attempt is made in the large mines to provide everything necessary to prevent employe» from going to the surface during working hours. J keep time is useless, if you have tlxe 1TEW WHEN PRETTY FEET SUFFER. I'hoM Vft ho Have to Stand All Day Fare Worse Than Those Who Can Walk About. ? A Watch or Clock that wont Wkea the TimiMi Are Good, PM«en- The only persons in town who have a _ grudge against prosperity are street car conductors. Their aversion to prosperous conditions is explained in this wise: Good times bring bills, bills mean the handling of much change, and change means woes innu merable on the part of the harassed conductors, says the New York Times. "1 can’t remember the time when we fellows have been called upon to change as many bills as we have han dled in the past six months,” said one of these public servants one day last week. "Of course there are no hard- and-fast rules to go by in any business, but in general you can tell a. man’s financial condition by the size of the coin with which he habitually pays car fare. Reckoning frqm that stand point, the times that are hard on the general public are clover for the con ductor. All he has to do then is to go around and gather in the five-cent pieces, and as a consequence our men tal condition is such that we appear really angelic. But just let a wave of prosperity strike the country and the passengers take a fiendish delight in pestering us with one and two-dollar bills. Two-dollar bills are the favorite street ear currency these (Lays, and to' meet all the demands made upon my pocket 1 have to start out from the barns with about one-third my own weight in small change. ■ « - « $ I b ■ * Red Shoe House A large and well selected S tock of B oots and S hoes for fall and winter trade, just ceived and more on the wav. DEALER IN Fresh and Cured Meats, Hides, Wool, etc Shop next door to Larsen's Hotel. Tillamook] f I^NULUE vapor a jaana It will pay you to call and examine my Stock before pur chasing elsewhere. I Mt CHICAGO. P. F. BROWNE Agent