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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1903)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. January 8. 1903. “C.” BEN RIESLAND. FASHION’S LATE MANDATES. What Dairy Farms. Timber Claims. Home Locations. Town Property. Insurance. Loans. Financial Agent. Houses Rented and Taxes paid for non-Residents. Tillamook City, Oregon. SMITH & JENKINS, Successors to L. N. Barnes, DEALERS IN PRIME MEATS, LARD, etc. At the NEW MEATj MARKET. Only Pine Meats Handled. Give us a Call Hides Wanted. -Quick's Delivery Wagons deliver. Highest Cash price paid for stock. GO TO TIIE RACKET STORE WHEN YOU WANT Dry Goods, Shoes, Notions, Candies and Hru.it. ONE DOOR NORTH OF POST OFFICE, TILLAMOOK, .OREGON. Muit Milady Would Wear If She Appear la tA»a New- cat Styles. Shirt waists of fancy velvets, vel veteens and corduroys are fashion able. Some are made simply, the only trimming- being fancy buttons; oth ers are finished with pas.-en enterics, lace and moire silk in bands or pipings, says a fashion authority. These have show^ buttons, too. Robes are tempting in light-weight cloths, silks and stenciled cloth. Some are beautifully embroidered all over or at the bottom of the skirt and front of waist anil sleeves. Two-toned cloths are revived for these, and make up pret tily when trimmed with some rich pas sementerie or velvet. The newest tea gowns are in empire fashion, with accordion plaited skirts beautifully trimmed with lace medal lions and insertions. They are finished with handsome collars of lace or em broidery. lace frills edging the collars. Sleeves are elbow length, finished with several lace ruffles. Light colors prevail for teagowns and white is much favored. The fancy tor fruit as a decoration has extended to embroideries on din ner and reception gowns. An illuvtT«- tive gown of black point d’esprit made over white satin was trimmed with embroidery in the form of cherries and their leaves, and had cherry red belt and shoulder straps. Another of pearl gray satin and tuMe was embroidered with green grapes. Black grapes were put on a delicate cream lace gown. On sheer gowns are put hand-work embroidery and lace and winter gow ns repeat those of summer in these trim mings. Cord braiding is put on the thinnest gauzes with good results and the silver lace that has been employed so much is combined with white lace. Tiny blossoms are set on dainty fab rics in large rings and scarfs of lace, tulle or satin are threaded through them. Scarfs are also drawn through cloth cut in lattices or circles for trim ming cloth or wool gowns. Flat trimming is standard for fall and wdnter hats. These are a trifle larger than tho.se worn during sum mer. and feathers, breasts, wing* and quills are the trimmings. Beaver hat<s will be fashionable and various tinted velvets are submitted. Hats of silk plush so far are in delicate shades. Black, green, reds, browns and blues are well represented. Blue and green combinations will be numerous and some new fancies in these shades are stunning. Coque feathers are revived in many pretty colorings. Birds are wonderfully tinted, as are breasts. Quills are in black and green combina tions. The rolled brim sailor in all shades of felt and beaver will be fash ionable for general wear. Hardly a new skirt is lined—among the handsome one«, that is. All have instead the drop skirt of taffeta. This skirt of taffeta is ent like the outer skirt, exactly and finished with a plaiting or a ruffle with a plaiting along the edge. We say the handsome ones advistdlv. When the outside is not of good, firm cloth a lining is nec essary to Vein keep it in shape, and when the lining is of some cheap cot ton stuff the wearer certainly would not want it hanging loose. It has one thing to recommend it especially. When it is worn out it may be cast ««•ide. Tn the case of a worn-out lin ing made in a skirt one muH have the whole thing taken apart to reline it, and this is about as much trouble as making a new skirt. With the drop skirt there’s only to buy another. Tt is to be h-oned our stores will keep them ready made. CURIOUS GERMAN COLLIES. ■ ew Breed of !>•■■ Whelped PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS. She»—“Why do they call it ‘an arm of the sea?’’’ He—“Because it hugs the shore, 1 guess.”—Indianapolis News. ( incorporated ), A Thespian Catastrophe.—“So your German shepherds, having had dif Hamlet made a great hit?” “Well, hard TILLAMOOK CITY, ORE. ficulty in getting dogs that were not ly. The audience made the hit; 1 was lazy and pampered, the German Col the target.”—Detroit Free Press. lie club attempted to improve the PAID VP CAPITAL, $10,00(1. “What kind of a stove did the pre breed. The beat dogs in the country historic man use?” asked fthe little A GENERAL BANKIN’!. were collected and bred with wolves Ostend. “Probably he used a moun from the Ardennes, with the result tain rang?."—Philadelphia Record. BUSINESS. that a stronger race of sheep dogs ‘•They caught a man robbing the pub camj into existence. Two specimen* lic library till in a New England tow n.” DirectorsM. W. H arrison , W. W of these dogs have been brought to “How did they punish him?” “Made this country by Samuel W. Portyce, C vrtws . B. L. Enov. him read all the historical novels.”— a St. Louis railroud man, who is a Cashier ;—M. W. H arrison . Cle’Jand Plain Dealer. dog fancier. These dogs, says the "How sweet it would be to live alone I.ilieral Prices Paid for gilt edge sectiri- New York Herald of recent date, are with you in yonder lighthouse!” he ies of all kinds. very much like the wolf in their ap whispered, tenderly. “Yes,” she mur pearance. They have the pointed mured. abstractedly, “and do light jft ■>’«****'« ear, the keen eye and the restless ways of their wild ancestors. The housekeeping.’’ -Smart Set. Beryl— “Well, all I’ve g »t to say h I elder of the two, Stella, is two years old and is of a tawny yellow color. that EH) el is a twro-faced creature.” I WoJf is well-named, for he has all Sibyl—“Yes. and she’d lock belt» if the characteristics of his grandmoth she’d use the other face instead of a AND 4 the present one!”—Baltimore Her- er, a she wolf.* He is nine months old. Both cf the dogs have been aid. Reetem “Pshaw! I must have $20 ! trained to take care of sheep, and they can round up a flock in short by noon to-day. and I left all my money order. Like the wolf, they refuse tc at home in my other clothes. Can’t yon be*p me out?" Wiseman “Sure sleep but in daytime and never so I’ll lend you carfare to go home for it.” happy as when circling around their — Philadelphia Press. charges at night. Barnes—“1 hear your house was Bringing of the specimens to this country was attended with difficulty. broken into t* other night and lots of silver plate and jewelry stolen." They were purchased from shepherds 0 Of Cheenery, Dairy and Creamery ■ in the neighborhood of Mannheim, Shedd-—“Yes! but the rascals entirely »Machinery and Hupplir« we curry a who were not inclined to part with overlooked the ten tons of coal in the the largest stock in the northwest * them until a large sum had been of cellar.”—Boston Transcript. ■ A toll line of I). H. Burrell & Co.’s IB A Satisfactory Man.—New Man — g celebrated Cheese making prepara- £ fered, as they said that animals ol “Here are some noetic contributions lions, Apparatus, etc. any real value were scarce. which came in to-day’s mail. I am not H Send for Catalogue. w up on poetry.” Editor—“'Good! I DESERT PLANT RESERVOIRS. don’t w-ant you to be up < n it. I want you to he down on it.”—N. V. Weekly. Wolves That COUNTY BANK. Are Superior for the Teudlng of Flocks. : CHEESE ; • BUTTER : • MAKERS.: A Ipaaiaa of Caetaa Thai 9tor«a Up Watw la a Strongholi With« END OF A STAGE CAREER. THIS NEW YEAR ON STOKES CO., -A-stoxia,, Oxe. John A. Smith’s Gloriatonic. Cures all Kinds of Rheumatism and Blood Diseases, Our Clubbing Rates Headlight Headlight Headlight Headlight and Oregonian . . 82.25 and Examiner . . 2.35 and Twice-a-Week World 1.75 and Hoard’s Dairyman . 1.65 » i B^DDIGiy-kEATlNi CO, • 143 FRONT STREET, a PORTLAND, ORE. | | la Itself. How Ono Mnn'i Many a traveler in desert lands, when in danger of dying from thirst has been saved by the plant known as the water or fishhook cactus. During the moist seston it stores up a large quantity of water for the subsequent dry one, when all the ground is parched with heat, and only channels filled with stones mark the course of former riv ulets. sail the Portland Telegram. So well has this cactus provided for the safety of its precious liquid that it is no easy task to obtain it. The ex- terio.. bkin is more impenetrable than the toughest leather, and. besides, it is protected with long wiry spines curved into hooks at the end, yet so strong and springy that if a large rock be thrown against them they re main uninjured. If the spines be burned <»ff one may. by long and tedi ous effort, cut through the rind with a stout knife; otherwise nothing but an ax will enable him io get at the interior of this well-armored plant. When the top is removed and a hol low made by scooping out some of the soft inner part, it immediately fills with water—cool and refreshing, though a blistering sun may have been beating upon the tough skin above it all day. The water when first obtained has a whitish or smoky lint, but when settled is as clear as crystal. Admlrntiou for the Sta<» Was- the Caste of His Roman Noao. “My wrife tells me that our 1.■»-year- old boy is stage-struck." said a man. smoking his after dinner cigar over on another man’s piazza, according to the Detroit Free Press. “She is worried about it, but 1 tell her to take it easy- it will all come right. I was stage-struck once myself, and that’s how I came to have this hand Stoves and Ranges Fishing Twine, some Roman nose, and to be a re Sewing Machines, Fine Cutlery, spected and prosperous lawyer." “Roman nose." renealed the other Wagons and Buggies, Loggers’ Tools, man. “I can’t see the connection be Farm Implements, Hardware, tween a Roman nose and your being Empire Cream Separators, Paints and Oils. stage-struck." “Well, the connection is there, all right," continued the other man. fondlv caressing the little arch ’n the middle of l is larjr. ornamental n-wp. “At 17 I was badiv stage-str’ich; ami. of course, my parents bitterly op posed all such notions on my nart 'Di<‘ fever continued to increase, how ever, and with two other young men of the same age, I secretly organized nn amateur comic troupe to go on the road when th® time was rine. As a starter we decided to try our great entertainment on a country town not It works out all impurities out of the blood that causes rheumatism. many miles awa.v. We cloned with A package of 50 tablets is twelve davs treatment, for $1.00 ; or two packages for our outfit, guitars and gaudy ward •1 .50. Will send testimonials with all orders. robes one day, and had no trouble For the Gloria tonic sent by mail remit by postal money order addressed to in getting together a pretty fair au TATTOOING FOR HORSES. dience that night, at ten cents each. cnrs. C. GIBSON, 2727, Court St., Baker City, Or. The songs, dances and dialogues went fap*«atrd as Better Than Branding off all right. They were really fun M a Means of Identifying ny, I believe, even now; but at the Carl Fischer to Gertrude 8. Murray. Sw the Animate. close of the entertainment I met Real Estate Transfers. Se, sec. 30, 1 N, 7. $400.00. with bad luck. Owners of pure-bred registered an Emily D. Sheldon to William E. Wheeler, “Ju going out to announce another imals are often bothered by the ques Transfers for the week ending January 5, appearance the next, week I eliimsilv Trustee. E Ji Nw and W. Ji Ne, tion of how best to mark them, to dis 1903. cavg’ t my foot in the folds <»f our 18, 1 N, 7. $1000.00. tinguish them in ease they stray, and By Cooper & Botts, abstractors. impromptu dron-curtnin. and pulled to establish their identity under any Oregon & California R. R. Co. & Union the heavy curtain nolo <>r roller <lo”.n circumstances. The central experi- Trust Company to Nelson P. on my straight Grecian nose the Louis Olsen to James McGhee Lot 4, tnent farm at Ottawa, Ont., suggests I WOMAN BURIED ALIVE. pride of mv mother’s family, and Wheeler. Quit-claim. Lots I' 2 block 7, Stillwell’s addition to Tilla tattooing in place of the more usual mine by inheritance. and 3 and Ne Sw, 31, I S, 7. $435.10. Young Lady Seined witf* Cartairpay, branding. The branding iron not only mook. $400.00. “I was Rssiste»! to my father’s roof Interred, and Mn»oea4en frequently leaves an unsight !y and dis the next. day. with a fractured nose George H. Benson to Nelson P. Wheeler. W. M. Ladd and wife to Olean Land Co. la Her Caaket. figuring scar. but it fails to ser\e every Sw sec. 22, 1 N, 7. $4000.00. and two very black eyes. By the time Se Sw and lot 4, sec. 18, 1 S, 7. purpose, since it indicates the owner I was well again my ardor for the $600.00. A letter received in Paris from rather than particularly identifies the John W. Farquhar end wife to Olean «tape bail abated; and I believe mv Hue nos Ayres records the death of animal. The tag and button device* Land Co. Nw sec. 27, 1 N, 7; W Ji Ida M. Walker and husbaqd to James D. son will get ovpr the mania, too. My Se, sec. 8 and N Ji Ne, sec. 17, t N, Xflle. Cambaceres. a descendant of the commonly used in the ear are usually wife, however, has not heard the Ward. Se Sw and S Ji Se, sec. 19 famous French general and a member a source of annoyance, due to the 6; S Ji Se sec. 19, Ne and N Ji Se, of one of the leading families in the story of the Roman nose, and she and Sw Sw sec. 20, 5 S, to. $500.00. aptitude they disfUay for attaching rather admires it." sec. 30, I N, 7 and Ji interest in Se Argentine capital, under most dis themselves to everything they may be Harry "R. Brock to J. L. Wright. Lots 2. Se sec. 36, 1 N, 7. $10000.00. tressing circumstance», says a Paris brushed against. The Coase-rva Newaoa. 3, 4 and 6, sec. 34, 1 8, 10. $1100.00. This is the season of the year when Various live stork associations, says Caroline Ladd et al. to Olean Land Co. correspondent of the New York Her ald. the wife of the Italian laborer begins V. S. A. to Edith M. Aldeiman. Patent. the Springfield Republican, have de Nw Se and Sw sec. 27, sec. 28, sec. The unfortunate young lady had just to think of laying in her winter »trek Ne Nw; N Ji Ne and Se Ne, sec. 26, 29, Se Se and W Ji sec. 30. N J4 sec. turned 18 years of age, and her birth vised at one time and another more or of conserva. Conferva is a di.«h with less ingenious, and less or more satis a N, 8. 31, Sw and W Ji Se and Ne sec. 36, day wag celebrated by a grand recep factory devices to insure identiflea- out which no Italian family would I N, 7 and Ne sec. 36, 2 N 6. U. S. A. to Elmer Hall. Patent. Nw tion. All her friends came to offer, ( tion. but nearly all are open to the ob tlfink of paxsing the winter. Every $39000.00. their congratulations and brought jection that they fail in a short time rear about this time the average Ital Sw and Sw Nw, sec. 33, I S, 10. ian housewife may be seen buying present«. to serve the end in view. U. S. A. to John Bolin. Patent. Lot 7, Janies W. Martin and wife to John W. large quantities of tomatoes. The Tn the evening Mlle. Cambaceres sec. 35 and lots 2 and 3 and W Ji tomatoes need not be overchoice and I.irftlr German Hands. Farquhar. W. 1-2 Se sec. 8 and N went up to her room to dress for the Ne, sec. 34, 3 N, 9. »ometimes the softer tlwv are the bet opera. She was in the act of putting Where do the “little German bands” 1-2 Ne sec. 17, 1 N, 6. $1600.00. ter conserva they make. The tomatoes V S. A. to Charles F. Miller. Patent. Tillamook Logging Co. to C. E. Hadley, on her hat. when she fell to the ' rome from? A writer in Blackwood’s are taken home, nut in a press and ground,apparently deed. • \ Magazine »ays: “Inhabitants of the E. Ji Se and Se Ne, sec. 23, 2 N, 7. then squeezed until every drop of hiice J. E. Sibley and Claude Thayer. E The funeral took place within 24-* northwest Palatinate generally are of 1-2 Nw and S 1-2 Ne sec. 31, i< S, 7. hours, as under municipal law a corpse a roving disposition. The shoe hawk has bp*»n extracted. The pulp which re V. S. A. to Mary R. Miller. Patent. main« is spread upon a board and placed must not be kept longer, on account ers of Pirmasens, the bru»h dealers of W Ji Ne and E Ji Nw, sec. 34, 2 N. 7. $5-oo- in the sun to dry. When it has at of the heat and the danger of decom Romberg >nd the showmen and ped ü. S. A. to Asher Tyler. Patent. S Ji U. S. Land Office to James IL Harris. position. tained the consistency of putty it is dlers of Knrlsberg are to lx» met with Receipt. S 1-2 Ne, Se Nw and lot «craped t< getberand placpd in airtight Se, sec. rg and N. Ji Ne, sec. 30, 1 A few days afterward someone start ail over the valley of the Rhine. But these must yield the ¡»alm in numbers iars for the winter. It i« used for mak 2, sec. 7, I S, 7. N, 7. ed the theory that Mlle. Cambeceres ing sandwi/’hes and sometimes forms and enterprise to the mucikanten. of had been poisoned, and the authorities V. S. A. to Ira C. Crowther. Patent. George H. Page and wife to Directors the Hartz mountains, who have made the staple of the laborer's meal. Lon ordered the body to be disinterred and School District 18. 1.05 acres in Ne a post-mortem examination made. the whole world their own. 1 hey are don Exchange. Nw sec. 27, I N, 7. Sw sec. 35, 5 S, II. $1.00. When the coffin was opened it was not f*> often seen on the continent a* V. S, Land Office to George H. Benson. < hanre the < hampion. they formerly were, but they go to Twc mortgages securing $1735.00. found, to the horror of every one, that Like many another ¡xipular idol. Receipt. Se Sw and lot 4, sec. 18, England, the Cape, Australia, the the veil which covered the face of the I S, 7. > Two mortgages satisfied securing $375.00. unfortunate girl wa« torn and her face states. < anada, Brazil. Argentina, and Crevceus was ttf humble origin, and worked unusually hard for his honor». scratched all over. From these facts ' one band ha« ventured a* far as ( hili. Hi«* trainer, the celebrated horseman, I have known of only two bands that it appeared clear that Mlle, Gamble- , John Mcfartney. tell»us that, ax a colt. did not come from tbi* district. The ere* had been buried alive and had ' Crescriis “was plain looking, a wk ward torn the veil and scratched her fare in , one was from Nassau, the other from iri all hi« movements and had little of Pforzheim, in Baden * her struggle to get out of the coffin. the appearance of a coining cham l The case, though not reported in I pion.” As a yearling, th»* c< It injured llatirai New /.ealaadrra. the press, haa produced a moat painful himself «o badly that “his owner. Mr The New Zealander is unhereally impression in Bueno« Ayrea. the more George H. K*t/hnni. a weaIthy voting honest. Nobody tries to steal from so as Mlle. C ambflrere» wa» very pretty iMixinesw man. of Toledo. O.. who had tnvders. Hotel room doors are neter and beloved by all who knew her. engaged in the hor«e breeding busi- locked; many ha*e no locks. Hats, net* on account of failing healih. or coats «nd valises are left around in Apple Fritters. dered the colt killed. *n \ s th»* National discriminately. and the ow ner»a i w ay • Peel the apples and slice thinly. tint! their property where tl ry put it. Magazine. The farm superintendent Take a quart of flour, two eggs, half Neither does the waiter, nor tie belt forgot his orders the colt wa» allowed a cupful of auger and enough sweet boy. nor the chambermaid hold up ( to run in the paddswk several days and milk to make rather a thick hatter. thrtraveler They do every thing »>ke«J it recovered before he remembered the Stir in the sliced apples and fry till of them, ami do it cheerfully As there orders of Mr K»*tcham. Thus it was brown in boiling lard. Sprinkle with are no II» door robbers, neither are by an accident that Crewetis. 2:02*4. sugar as soon as taken from the ket there many highway robbers, and the i the greatest trotting h<»r«r the world tle.—Albany Argus. percentage of murders is very small; • ver knew, cm-aptd being killed.” LET US FIGURE WITH YOU TILLAMCOK hy g AgetiU for • H DeLaval Cream Separators, g « w s * ata •.'•«■a i « i K iF C, E. REYNOLDS, Undertakerand Em balmer. All orders promptly attended to. Office : ON TIIE MAIN STREET, OPPOSITE TIIE ALLEN HOUSE. j ' m F. S w W b C î B J ( - chares ■ yr.- - W w Wv/wk W ."xrz > Sewing Machines. Now is the time to buy a 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. Those machi nes are a better article than the peddlars are charging $65 and $75 for. J < 1 i Red Shoe House Don’t hunt the town over looking for shoes that will fit and wear well and keep their shape. The Red Shoe Rouse has in stock shoes and slipj>ers of dain tiest kind for Christinas gifts for Mother, Wife or Sister, Brother, Husband or Sweetheart. The public is invited to call, I will be pleased to wait on you. P. F. BROWNE, Agent. BEST HARD WHEAT FLOUR, Sold by COHN & CO Tillamook. Or.