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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1903)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. MARCH 5, 1903. i USE AMERICAN COACHES. WE WOT YOUR TRARR ft Men’s work Shoes i Í “ logger ÍÍ “ dress u Ladies’ “ “ heavy $1.50 to 4.50 «4 1.50 <4 1.50 <4 1.25 44 A large assortment of Fine Clothing to select from, at Prices that will surprise you. $3.50 6.00 5.00 4.00 2.50 Boy's two piece Suits $1.50 to $5.00 “ three “ 2.50 6.00 Young Men’s 4.00 11.00 Men's -1.00 18.00 * * * ft Boy’s Misses’ and Children’s Shoes of all kinds, and at lowest living prices. ft Hats, Furnishing Goods, Blankets, ft Trunks and Valises, ft ft A full line of Gloves of all kinds. GROCERIES, FLOUR & FEED. TOI>I> A COMPANY ft. TILLAMOOK CITY 7^ ftftft ftftft ftftft ft ft SOUTH PRAIRIE. M. T. Soares came over the river Sun- I day afteroon. Every one seems to be enjoying the La grippe has made its appearance in continued tine weather. this part of the county, and has several Several of the young people spent last unhappy mortals in ks toils. Sunday buggy riding over the fine dry It is very seldom that people in this roads. neighborhood get ill enough to re Mrs. Calvin Johnson has been suffering quire medical aid. but one of those rare severely from a felon on her finger, which times occurred last week when a phy resulted nearly in blood poisoning. sician made several professional calls ii Mrs. Pestcrfield’s sister is visiting her this vicinitv. this week. Fess Quick received a painful injury last Monday while working in the log i a ging camp. The trip line to the little donkey engine broke and struck him on the head,rendering him unconscious for a ( incorporated ), time. He luckily escaped with his life. Several of the young people of the TILLAMOOK CITY, ORE. prairie enjoyed themselves in serenading PAID UP CAPITAL, *10.000. Casper Sch lappie and bride one evening last week. Our school directors expect our school to open next Monday by a lady teacher direct from Nebraska. Ottis Farmer has quit the logging camp and ingoing out on his ranch on the Nestucca river. Grandma and Grandpa Vaughn visited Issae Quick one day last week Willis Powell lost a valuable cow last week. Fate Weils has sold his ranch on Benulah creek to Thos. Goyne, of Tilla mook. Consideration $1,375. The past week has been fine bicycling. Several were seen out on the road last Sunday. .Ralph Buckley and friend of Tillamook were out last Sunday in the neighbor- hood fishing- Program for Prof. Goddard’s Concert. Saturday Evening, March 7. ABSTRACT AND |Cad Doughney has returned to Ne- bak-tn. TRUST CO. . l)r Bartel was up Saturday to see T hos . C oates , Pres. B?I,. BS iqv , Sec. Mr B. A. Todd. Rev. Smith was unable to fill his a ID pbinttnents Sunday, March 1, on account of Iigt ipp. Lagripp is giving Nehalem a call. BARBER AND HAIRDRESSER Rev Roehmer, Mrs. D.S. Bovakin, Mrs. C| L. Alley and others are on the sick TILLAMOOK Piano Solo, Recitation, { Part Song, SHAVING, HAIR Quick Brothers, AND day. T)r. Bartel came up again Tuesday to see Rev. W. J. Roehmer. '/Albert Zimmerman, Duncan Chisholm, Vfm. Frasier and Sam Thompson left for the outside Sunday. »Born, Feb. 27, to the wife of Frank Lundburg , a daughter. Dr. Smith was up Monday to see Mrs. L. McFee. (Donizetti). » NOVICK TO CICKIIITOKH NOTIC* T. llKHHnv I.ITBN.—That the tin dersljtned has been duly appointed by tile County Court <>•' the State of Oregon for Tillamook County. cir”tinf of the last will and u-si.imrnt of JACOB S BLLIOTT.de- <•< .i*ed All having CLAIMS against the <-«tate of said deceased, are hereby re- UfTheK items did not reach us until «juir d <<» present the same to me properly verified as bv law required, at the office of B. Wednesday.] L. Ed<lv. Attorney at-Law at Tillamook > Mr. and Mrs. Gun a*d four little Guns City, Oregon, within six months from the hereof. •Vent off'' towards Tillamook Tuesday date Dated thi- Sth dav of March A.I> . 1903. CHARLES ABRAHAM ELLIOTT. on their why to Portland. Executor of the last will and testament ®R. R. Creighton, from Spruce, was on of Jacob 8. Elliott, deceased. the river Wednesday selling the Ideal fltcamCooker. gMr. C. A. Robrabaclier, representing the Washington Life Insurance Com- penv, is doing Nehalem this week. ■ Born, to the wile of Lawada .McFee, Feb. 16. a daughter. SJohn Bolin is pushing the new plank to a 1 in lower town. BOULDER CREEK A FARMER OR IS SON Or a townsman will be hired by us at $60 i M onthly and expenses, or 30 per cent.) commission to take orders for our Farm Seeds. Fruits and Flowers. We sell four I grades of fruits, so any competition can be j met. Our stock warranted You do not deliver or collect. Can devote all or part 1 time. We pay you each week. Good chance | to earn money this winter. Write for free [ outfit at once. Perry Nurtery Company, Rochester, N Y J. P. ALLEN, Proprietor. First Class accommodation at Second Class Rats. “C.” BEN RIESLAND Dairy Farms. Timber Claims. Home Locations. Town Property. Insurance. Loans. Financial Agent. ¡upon him. A substitute for anthracite roal has been found by the commission' era of the District of Columbia, and the result of experiments conduct- ed by them is of general interest in view of the probable exorbitant price for hard coal during the com ing winter. After asking for pro posals for the annual coal supply, and receiving only one bid, at. ten dollar» a ton. which was immediate ly withdrawn, the commissioners were forced to seel, a »substit ute. A series of experiments were made in the steam-heating plants and fur naces in tie public schools, which demonstrated that a combination of bituminous coal and coke produced ns good results as had been obtained when anthracite coal was used. The furnaces are fired with a layer of coke, then a layer of soft coal and another layer of coke on top. It is a comparatively slow burning fire, and one that does not violate the smoke nuisance laws. RATE SHELLEY TO BE NURSE. Houses Rented and Taxes paid for non-Rt-sidents. Tillamook City, Oregon Centrally üoeated. Rates, $1 Per Day LARSEN HOUSE, M. H. LiRRSEN, Proprietor. TILLAMOOK, OREGON The Best Hotel in the city. No Clitoew Etuployed. Wanted, a Farm VMr. and Mrs. Hans Jensen went to Wanted, to rent, a dairy ranch, by a , Tillamook Friday and returned Satur sober, mdnetrione, competent married day. man. Enquire at thie office. Mr. and Mrs. Fischer, Mrs. Nicklaus, / Ott !r Alice Glad will and Mr. John Burba Dr. P. J. Sharp, the exper- are reported on the sick list. 3 Miss Ida Nicklaus visited Mrs. Della enced dentist is located in Dr Wise’s dental parlors, HKtsen last Thursday night. ■ H V Chopard is home from .the and is prepared to do nothing * logging imp. but first class work and give ■ jar. Hodgson. of Netarts, visited the the best of satisfaction. If ^llestocca Valley last week. ■ Mr*. Chopard spent Thursday with your teeth need fixing call ^Bkn is on Bay’s creek. Allen House, DRAYMEN. Heavy Teaming is a Specialty with us. Our Delivery wagon delivers to country or citv. gas LAMPS, For Moma, Sfortt and Sírcate TbaX carci.e A« pr corta lo Jnutífttt and Aimutt • - ABC ÍLLÜM5UT0:S Mak» iou» ctore* lírfct m <.▼. A ILanJwara . > V'll u* art I I »rite* 1 X IWWWrir/ Waatoa »JMiafar* ir«* TAFt.r LAWP-. WALL UMR, fHANDKíIÍ K L i’lf’KkT MHFA F»c. MS <^oi*o Fc-w*rser«n iwcnO*!* "o wi. f’o ’ uin. *• Odor. in/a. Tí» V AC 4IGHT. ritory U» pood T-TV/rl«» toe pr» • <- CHICAGO SOLAR UC.'IT CO. JERSEY’S PURCHASE PRICE. Hiaterle Document Which Show« That the State Was Sold by la- dlaaa far Hum, Guus, Ktc. Carefully locked away in one of the fireproof tafes of the New Jersey His torical society there now are two valu able documents that tell of the early colonization of the state, says the New York Times. The first is a deed on parchment from Charles 1L to his brother James, duke of York, afterward king of Eng land, giving him' a grant of all lands from the St. Lawrence river to Chesa peake bay. The only two names on th«* grant that Americans of to-daj would recognize are Nantucket and Cape Cod, which are spelled as they are to-day. The St. Laurence river is designated as “The Great River in Canada.” The deed is beautifully written in Gothic lettering, and the document is in excellent condition. Under each line of writing is a ruling of red. evi dently done with a quill. The parch ment is over two feet in length, and to the bottom is attached what, was once a larsre seal of wax. Gold and silver cords are fastened to the seal. In an upper left-hand cor ner is an engraving of Charles IL. and the borders of the deed are filled with pen and ink designs, delicate and beau tiful. The document is dated from Westminster in th? seventeenth year of King Charles* rMgn. While the deed is apparently the original, for the amount of work expended on it wcuild not be given to a copy, no signatures anpenr. and apparently none was ever placed on it. CENTURY OF PATENT ISSUES. Beirlnnln« July 31. 1790, the Number Granted In Thin Cowntry Ha* Been 4XN.G21. The census bureau lately issued a report dealing with the cooperative relation of patented inventions to manufaetur; s, which shows that New York, though third in population and patent rank for the first decade <>f the 100 years has since been first in both, ns w/'ll as manufactures. It is nn interesting fact, in considering the lht <'f states presented in the report, that the manufacturing rank of a state as a rule approximates its patent rank, says the New York’ Sun. The report savs: The first patent granted by the general government, was to Samuel Hopkins. July 31, 1790. for nn im provement in pot an«l nenrl ash manufacture. The Iasi patent grant ed for the vear 18S9, nt the close of the first b'O years of patent issues, was tn Wilhelm Dre -e”. December 31. 1889. for nn electro nm,rnet <• tvnespftino- machine. The-*« tw•• • at- ents are «uggestively symbolical of the nrngress of t’e century in in vention and manufactu <* ■ the fir*t akin to the primitive in«l ’stri*'s of a ne v rmintrv “nd the • " t «••*•*• ing the exacting demands of a lilghlv or ganised industrial system. The total number of ’.'“tent« Lsiied du”ln«r this century «»f invention vras 428,621.** A feature nf ihe report is the steady growth shown in the number of Patents «’ranted to citizens of for eign countries. NOT THE SAME NAMES. Louise Goddard. . ..............“Oh, Italia, Italia,’’.............. The Tillamook Glee Club. Mrs. H. H. Aiderman, accompanist. CUTTING A dance at E K. Sco veil’s new house SHAMPOOING, ETC Saturday evening was well attended and Electric Baths nicely fitted up. Goodfor a good time reported by those present. Christ Larsen and A.Anderson went to persons suffering with rheumatism. Till amook last week to work in the log-' glug camp. A. J. Sharp left Monday for Seattle. .Wtn. Chisholm went to Tillamook Sat urday to work in the logging camp. HOUSEHOLD MOVERS vFrtd Bea Is came up to Nehalem Sun While a number of passengers were waiting for the morning t rain at Pablo Beach one day recently they heard the wail of a child, seemingly in great dis- tress. Jerry Delaney, deputy sheriff and a former Cincinnati policeman, headed a number who hastened to search for the cause of the cry. A short distance away they saw a big al ligator dragging a child away, having secured a hold of its dress in its mouth. The child was shrieking in fright, says a Jacksonville correspondent of the In ter Ocean. The posse rushed to its rescue, and the alligator redoubled its efforts to ward getting into the bay near by. A big dog belonging to the child came running al<»ng and dashed at the saurian’s head. The alligator w hacked its tail around with great force and struck the dog, knocking the animal toward the gator’s mouth, which opened with a gulp, taking in the dog. The saurian killed the dog and swal lowed him with ease, dropping its hold of the child’s dress in the st ruggle. The posse at once Rifled the ’gator. It was 15 feet long. It is thought to have been made fiercer by hunger, as it is seldom they will attack human beings, and especially eo near a habita tion. The. child was uninjured. FIND A SUBSTITUTE. Selected. B. ) LATIMER, BROS., list. The coaches used in South Africa are built in the United States—at Concord. Moat of them hold 12 people inside in rows of three, six people facing and six back to the mules, sajs Lippincott’s Magazine. By experience we ¡earned that the two corner seats back to the mules are most agreeable. Luggage on these journeys is a consideration, as it is charged for at the rate of a shilling a pound, but each passenger may take a rug—or “blanket,” as they are always called—and a small basket of food. The gieat object is to get us much food as possible into a small space, for when we traveled we could only be sure of two meals- one break fast and one dinner—during the three days and nights of continuous travel ing. We made inquiries about the out side places, thinking they might be preferable; but some fellow-passen gers, who were old hands at such traveling, explained that when the coach upset the out>ide passengers were those to suffer; those inside come off, as a rule, with a few bruises, the others getting broken arms and the like; and this outbalanced our desire for the open air. Not that one suffer ed from want of air, for the coach has no windows at all; glass would not stand the jolting for an hour. Ihere is a tarpaulin that one may unroll and pull down over the windows when the rain conies in intolerably. The sun one must bear, for if the tarpaulin is down it is too insufferably hot. SAURIAN SEIZES CHILD. . “ Irish Diamonds,”........... (Pape). Miss Selma Allen. Monologue, “ Haunted by a Song,” .... Mrs. Louise Goddaid. T LL IVUOK Tenor Solo,.... “All ! I Have Sighed to Rest Me,” .. . .(Verdi). Thos. Coates. COUNTY BANK Recitation, “ Leadville Jim,”......................................... Harry Tuttle. Baritone Solo,.... “Dreams of My Own Land,” . (Douglas Dean). G. Goddard. . “ My Old Kentucky Home,” . (Grobe). A GENERAL BANKING Piano Solo, Maud Sturgeon. BUSINESS. Recitation, “ The Minister’s Grievances,” Louise Goddard. Directors :—M. W. H arrison , W. W. C urtiss , B. L E ddy . ^oon Song, “ The Georgia Minstrel Show,” (McIntyre & Heath). Cashier ;—M. W. H arrison . I’rof. Goddard’s Pupils of the Public School. Liberal Prices Paid for gilt edge securi- Recitation....................“The Usual Way,”... ies of all kinds. Pauline Aiderman. WM. GALLOWAY. GILBERT L. HEDGES. Darky Love Song,.. “ Ma Lady Love,” .... (Edwin Brill). T T EDGES & GALLOWAY G. Goddard. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Recitation, “Kentucky Philosophy,” Blanche Goodwin. Make a specialty of Land Office Business. I OFFICE IN WEINIIARD BUILDING, “The Slumber Boat,”. .(Jessie L. Gaynor.) Vocal Solo,. Room 1 and 2, Hazel McNair. OREGON CITY, ORE. ------------------------:---------------------------- Baritone Solo, .“ A Little Boy in Blue,” . . . (Theo. Moroe). OR ABSTRACTS OF TITLE, Mr. P. McIntosh. CO ;ro f NEHALEM Lar*« CüBTeynne«« for Travellm* la South Africa Mude In the I nited States. * We keep a full line of CLOTHING, bought from firms that take a pride in putting out a well made, as well as stylish clothing. I Our stock of SHOES is the largest in Tilla mook, comprising all kinds and styles, from the best Factories. I I CHICAGO. 1 < < . Miss Kate Shelley, the heroine of many poems am! writings in prose, who when a child saved a train load of people from death by creeping over a frozen bridge near Moingont. Boone county, la.. In a raging storm and warning the engineer of the danger, will next, next month enter the state insane hospital at Cherokee, la., as a nurse, She has already been engaged by the asylum officials, Miss Shelley Is quite old, luit has lost none of the fascina! Ion brought about by her childish deed of hero stir ism. The bridge «»ter which crept now spans the La Crosse river, a few miles from La fr<mne, having few been moved to that point years affo. Nomenclature for Bird* In lOnnlnud and America I* >ot ut All the Same. In reviewing n book about “Beasts and1 Birds in America,’* the !x»nd<on Spectator warns English readers against the confusion that may arise in their minds by thr application of the same name to different birds in England and the United States. “The consequence.” it remarks. “Is that the critical English schoclb« y who reads of robins pecking a wicked squirrel U.Merko’) to death will perhaps toss the book away as untrustworthy un less he is a reader of Wendell H< hces. and remembers the allusion to the day when young Americans were mis led by the English books with local color not filling the new country. In the books that came from Engkmd’the robin was a little domestic bird that fed at table instead of a great fidgety, jerky, whooping thrush.’* But the whooping thrush (Tardus migratorioiik) of North Americn ha<i>a red breast like the robin of England, and so the name was given to him. and it waw a mob of whoopjng thrush es. and not robin redbreasts, that did “Meeko,” t.hr mischief maker todeath. And so. it may be added, the ancient rniKunderstanding and controverhy be tween English and American tourists at the Atlantic liners’ tables as to what la a partridge, a pheasant, a grows«, etc., will go on to the end of ti me. K«~CM»iv? Klndnr«i A singular case is that of Patrick Logue, of Altoona, Pa., who has been prosecuted for cruelty to animals, his <»fT«,ri4” c<»nsisting of excessive kind ness. Logue is so fond of an intelli gent horse owned by him that lie will not allow flu* horse to work or even be exercised. For four years the horse has not been out of the stable. Logue feeds it and cares for it ten derly, but he has steadfastly refused to tak«‘ it out. Consequently the Hu mane society has brought suit to force him to give the horse some work >r exercise it daily at least. Fine Trlbnte •«» Markey. John W. .Mackay, the Irish-Amer ican multi-millionaire, who died re cently in London, hud a fine tribute paid to him once by a friend. “Mack ay,” said he, “is one of the few rich men I should ¡ike to know if hr were poor.” E*il|ratlA* of Jew*. During the last year so,600 Jews •migrated from Roumania. #