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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1903)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JULY 2 WASHINGTON Shoes for CQen & Boys. Nobby ami up-to-date. They are reliable in every respect. Guaranteed to give satisbidoiy wear For sale bv NULLS & FINLEY. <£be ^illamoob fcjtiiì) light. Kreil C. Bilker, PubllNlier. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. ( strictly One year.......... Six'inonths ..... Three months in advance .) 1.50 75 50 Larger Foreign Markets Needed. i Uniten States, for example, would vig<- - ouslv resent any attempt on the ¡»art ot a European government to call our gov ernment to account tor the lynching of negroes or for any other outrages in which only our own citizens were con cere tied by protesting against such oc currcnces. We should tell any govern niunt doing this to mind itsown business Simila.lv a European government would be fully justified in resenting interference on our part in its internal affairs, so long as no interest of ours was involved. It is certainly desirable that this should be more generally understood, that our ¡»eople should have a clearei comprehension of international obliga lions ami of that courtesy and consider ation which is meant by the term com it v of nations. U liile those in official authority may reprobate as strongly as any other of our citizens outrages in foreign lands that arouse the indigna tion of civilized mankind, they are con strained not to gi ze official expression to their feeling when no American in terrst is aflected. It is not to be doubt ed that President Roosevelt and Secre tary Hay arc in most hearty sympathy with popular feeling regarding the Kishineff atrocity, but they could not commit the government to a recognition of this sentiment without endangering the friendly relations with Russia and at the sume time placing the United States in an unfavorable position among the nations. For our own welfare and and security it is necessary that the gov eminent shall not undertake to interfere in the internal affairs ot any other na. tion, save where American interests or the rights of American citizens are di rectly concerned, and even in such cases great care should be taken to respect every obligation. Nothing could be more unfortunate for us than to be re garded as a people ever ready to inedd'.e • . |the affairs of other peoples. So far as the expression of public opinion is con cerned, that is a matter over which our government has no control. It is nut less affective than a declaration of official opinion and it does not involve respon sibility or imperil friendly relations with other governments. Logan mounted and rode away in the direction of the mountains. A posse started in pursuit of the desperado with in an hour. * * * L. EDDY j ) QUALITY COUNTS Miss Marie Ware and Horace G. Kinley must each answer to the gram! jury on the charge of fraud and conspi racy in connection with land locations. They were held on $2000 bonds each by United States Commissioner Sladvn, and their cases will come up at the October session of the grand jury. The Govern ment’s case was strengthened by the testimony ot a handwriting expert, that the interlineations in some of the incrimi nating papers were made by Mr. Me- Kinlev, and that some of the disputed signatures were written by Miss Ware. * * * The clean bill of health presented by Cuba in its complete freedom now’ from yellow fever and smallpox testifies to the thorough job which the American fumigating brigade di*l when it was in charge down there. A ttorney - at -L aw , T illamook BOTTS, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Complete set of abstracts. In Buying a Office upstairs, North of Tillamook County Bank. TILLAMOOK MOWER RAKE, TEDDER WAGON ... W hl >t ai OREGON ('ALAUDE THAYER, G< to Noting the fact that last year the pa manufactured products of the United A ttorney - AT-I.Aw, vi< States were valued at 5,000.000,000 pr< and that the exports of such products T illamook O regon . wi were only about 3 per cent of that hoi amount, the New York Sun points out ma that we need larger foreign markets arl haberlach UNITED AFTER « YEARS and unless we secure them there must 1 come a curtailment of production, for uri; Mother and Son Meet Again After ATTORNEY AT LAW, great as the domestic market is it can nut a Separation of Almost a not indefinitely consume 97 per cent of the Pcutedtcv ^buohat, Quarter Century. the products of our mills and factories, are Office across the street and north fr« even though there should be no great and We often read in newspapers of fam the Post Office. increase in productive capacity. That trv. ilies being united after many years of paper observes ».hat American manufac whi separation, but it is onlv once or twice in j J^OBERT A. MILLER, turers are coming into more and more no» a life time that a case of this kind comes direct confrontation with an ever- acts to our personal notice. However, this increasing surplus of manufactured A ttorney - at -L aw . very thing has happened in Clarinda wares beyond the requirements of the Oregon City, Oregot within the last week. home market and it says there are two Mr. James Harris, of Tillamook, Ore., Land Titles and Land Offi- line of possible determination of the a son of Mrs. Tip Hakes, of Clarinda, Business a Specialty. question—one limitation of output, the who was mourned as dead for many oilier an extension of markets. years, found that his mother, whom he The Sun ¡mints out the obvious fact W. SEVERANCE, also had been told was dead, was still that there must be an even greater pros living. Anil now with his wile and lit perity than that of the last tew years, tle son, he is visiting her in this city. It A ttorney - at -L aw , and even bigger crops, with a profitable is indeed a romantic story, how they market for them, if the ever-increasing were separated and then re united, and T illamook O regon . mills are to find a domestic market for through the kindness ot Mrs Hakes and At their ever increasing production. Large Mr Harris we have learned the facts two as has been the increase in exports of concerning it. AVID WILEY, M.D., had 1 in a n u fact u res in recent years, reaching Twentv-two years ago the son left the so I»| more than $400,000,000 in 1902, foreign family home at Corning, la., going to the fl P hysician , S urgeon and markets must be secured for a much Michigan where he worked in the pin. the fr greater amount than this in order to neries for some eight vears, then going A ccoucheur . poiso maintain even the present production west in 1889 to Oregon. He took up a Better Roads for Dairyman. were All calls promptly attended to. Of course American manufacturers claim of 160 acres, principally timber partii T illamook .. O regon . fully understand this and are actively Secretary Charles Knight of the land, near Tillamook and has lived there ings t seeking to enlarge their exports. They National Dairy union recently gave his since that time. About ten years ago, are represented in the foreign markets views on the improvement of roads in S. STEPHENS, Mrs. Hakes received a letter stating that The by experienced and energetic agents and the United States. He said : her son was dead and strange to say • Real Estate, Insurance and Philai salesmen, who are undoubtedly doing all “ In company with hundreds of thous- about the same time, the son heard that lectioi Agent for the that is practicable to secure trade and sands of other people throughout the his mother had died. made Northwest School Furniture Co., also how effectively is shown in the fact that United States I am very much interested Some few months ago Mr. Harris met tion fr Notary Public. our exports of manufactures have nearly in the Brownlow bill. I have just re an old Corning friend in the west who -1 loot OFFICE IN OLSEN BLOCK. quadrupled in the last dozen years. turned from a tour of Italy, France and told him that he felt sure his mother mornii This increase has been mainly in the England, where I had an opportunity to was not dead, although he had no posi But w markets of Europe and possibly we shall observe the character of the roads of AND T M. SMITH, M.D., tive knowledge. Then Mr. Harris wrote count not be able to add to it materially. It; those countries. Coining home and a letter to his mother at Corning, but • of dim order to increase the amount of exports looking over our miserable facilities for in the meantime, she had been married P hysician and S urgeon . Where we shall have to find the markets in getting around in the rural districts I to Mr. Hakes and had moved to Page Asia and in South America. Trade made up my mind that it will be neces Office iu T odd ’ s Building. Ther county, however after much delay, Mrs. with the Oriental countries has been sary for this country to do as Euro Hakes received the letter and could poratii O regon T illamook growing, but with the countries south pean countries have done in order to get about scarcely believe the good news. She re ofus, with two or three exceptions, no good roads, i e., have government aid. ceived this letter about five weeks ago quired progress is being made. To obtain the LAUDE THAYER, “ The National Dairy union is organ and at once wrote to her son, who, up corpori trade of those countries several condi ized throughout the north in every con Agent for Fireman’s reports on receiving the letter, decided to visit tions are necessary. Perhaps the most gressional district which has any her immediately. In Ton Lots or by the pound. to a fin Fund and London and Lanca important of these is direct communica amount of agricultural constituency, Mrs. Hakes is an old lady of about 70 fa ult fo tion. There must be American steam- and 1 am of the opinion that the pro- shire Fire Insurance corpor; years and her joy in clasping her son in ship lines running between our ports gressive farmers who are dairymen will Companies. her arms again was almost boundless. their re and those of the southern countries. be in favor of the bill for national aid. She says she can never let him leave her that th Tillamook .. Oregon. This was pointed out by President Me- I am so much interested in its success again, after all these years of separation. Kinley, who said : “ One of the needs tl a I am willing to use my influence to The C Mr. and Mrs. Harris will return in a WM. GALLOWAY. GILBERT L. HEDGES of the time is direct commercial lines have the dairy farmers petition for the is equip few’ days, to their home in Oregon, and EDGES & (¡ALLOWNX from our vast fields of production to passage of this bill. I would be willing at Hills they are very much in hopes that Mr. the fields of consumption that we have to give several hundred dollars out of ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. to perm and Mrs. Hakes will return, with but barely touched. Next in advantage my own pocket to see the roads in this 16 feet i them. They have an ideal home in the Make a specialty of Land Office Business to having the thing to sell is to have the country improved like those of France.’’ that a t mountains. The house contains eleven OFFICE IN WEINHARD BUILDING, convenience to carry it to the buver.” it suflici' rooms and was built almost entirely by Room 1 and 2, Another requirement is that American The significance of the excessive w’et Mr. Harris himself. He hued the lumber, quired <1 OREGON CITY, ORE. manufactures shall more carefully con weather and floods west of the Missis, DEALERS IN for all tl made the weather boarding, carved sult the peculiar wants of the people of sippi river was shown by ihcir area in enablisl panels in the doors and made almost all OR ABSTRACTS OF TITLE, the southern countries, European manu corn, savs the Live Stock World. Last building the furniture in the house. The house is facturers make goods esjiecially for year Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska and GO TO ndjoinin, one story, on account of the severe those maikets and our manufacturers Kansas had 31,546,000 acres, or a third winds they ha vein the mountains. Many TILLAMOOK ABSTRACT AND m ist do the same to get the trade. A disp of the total area of corn in the country. tourists spend weeks at a time there and That larger foreign markets arc They raised 1,037,000,000 bushels, or 40 uatiou ii TRUST CO. in this way Mr. Harris derives a con needed, in order to maintain our in per cent of the total crop. A reduction very grn siderable income. The house is about T hos . C oates , Pres. B. L. E ddy , S«. dustrial activity and go on developing of 10 ¡>er cent in the area would mean that Tur fifteen miles from the nearest town and our manufacturing resources, is per 3.100,000 acres. It is entirely a weather break of Quick's Delivery Wagons deliver, Highest Cash price paid for stock. Both phones. all provisions are carried over a moun fectly obvious. To acquire the markets problem in corn at present. It i» reli tain trail, it takes two days to make we must be able to compete in the ¡nice authority * * * the trip. Mr. Harris is comfortably and quality of goods with any other It is estimated that 418 acres of land •ecotion fixed financially and says that he enjoys country. At present the <y»st ot produc iu eastern Colorado is occupied by their villi the vigorous climate of Oregon. His tion here is higher than with anv of our prairie dogs. Land where the prarie and man OF SAN FRANCISCO, DEALERS IN wife is a native ol that state and this is competitors in the world’s markets, dogs live is worthless for grazing, as imprisi'i" Turkish which necessarily places our manufac thev pollute all the grass that they do her first trip beyond its borders.—Clar inda Herald. turers at a disadvantage. not eat, and they will in a few years eat 14,000. the grass so close that it will die out. Fuzxy Worms at Walla Walla. A «nit < International Obligation» Then thev emigrate to fresh fields and teat the e> rejieat the process. The area occupied W alla W alla , Wash., June 27.— a;d at th Not a gie.it many people have an in- by prairie dogs in eastern Colorado Millions of a brown, fuzzv sjiecies of 1308 licet tclligent understanding of international would support 6,000 steers. These at c itrrpdlar which appeared simultane I >o ration« obligations. Comparatively few have 3 vears old are worth 1150,000. There ously with the present damp, showery in the offi a correct idea of what is known by the is a determined effort on the part of the weather, following a prolonged drv spell, tween Jar comity ot nations. This is shown in states where the prairie dogs flourish tu AGENTS STEAMERS - W. H. KRUGER" AND are marching, a serried host, across the " REDONDO.” amount the ap|H?als that arc made to our gov eradicate them, and no doubt this will For San Francisco and Los Angeles. Walla Walla Valiev tonight. Where they trmiaacte ernment, whenever anything occurs bear fruit in eventually clearing the hail from no one knows. Apparently torney t'h abroad to arouse popular indignation range country of them. they feed on garden stuff and growing been auth here, to formally protest and even to * » * crops. Tonight the army is trailing j tiona, lo«' interpose with a view of preventing th»* Harvey Logan, the Montana train- slowly along the north bank of Mill proceedin, recurrence of such an event, although it robber under sentence of 30 years’ im Creek eastward toward the mountains, will be the mav not in the remotest degree affect prisonment, escaped from the Knox much troubled by the numerous water Treasurer, any American interest. There have been County Jail, Tenn. While his guard’s courses, which arc interrupting its march manv instances within the last twenty b ck was turned, Logan threw a wire south. Bobber* years of the popular misapprehension in o er his head and lassoed him, tying Oliver Dewitt, who came in from Dry mile« iron this resjHVt and doubtless there will l»e him to the bars of the cage. Having one Creek today, said millions of the worms robbed Jsi 5 .... 1 ha\e the lar«est «nd best assorted stock of old mote of them in the future, although un entire floor of the jail to himself, Logan are emerging from Joseph Herbett s lived there doubted ly'public in lighten meat respecting next secured two pistols that had been A .7. ’ n “ and Liquors that has ever been imported into wheat field and crossing the road in a tons, who international obligations is growing. pl iced in the corridore of the jail for use this City. 1 be iwpu i< solid column 200 yards wide and about C" Il should be 1‘crtectlv obvious to every by officers il needed. When Jailer Bell boo*- barr three miles long. His horses and rig killed -qpqp body of ordinal \ intelligence that it is appeared in answer tn a knock from trwder' set scores of them, but the rest kept right not the duty nor the light ot one gov Lngnu, the prisoner passed out a bottle, the yard, a on. The green mass of crashed worms ernment to interfere in the internal af s ring he wanted some medicine. As the door t< showed plainly that growing crops was , fairs of another. Every nation must l»e the jailer put out his hand to get it, he charge for sewing npf hit James • the source of food suppl,. and ranchers permitted to administer its own affairs covered him with a pistol, forced him to ig soles on Boots and tear damage. The visitation is an en- without question fro n another nation, unlock the door and take him to the tirelv new one here. , I pie. Both Shoes purchased of me. so long as the consequences of such basement of the jail Then he forced B F. Engle reported tonight having I Don t drink cheap doctored stuff when you can administration do not menace the rights Bell to take him to the Sheriff's stable buy it pure and unadulterated from me. oi interests of any other country. The and saddle the Sheriff's horse. This done seen a similar phenomenon in Man »n I County, Oregon, 20 years ago. g 1 I C , And all kinds of FARM Implements That is the reason uuhy people go to GANGLOFF SNUFFER ANO J OSBORNE IMPLEMENTS STUDEBAKER VEHICLES^) Have stood the Test FLOUR&FEEDÌ TILhfliDOOK, C ORE SMITH & JENKINS, Successors to L. N. Barnes, PRIME MEATS, LARD, etc At the NEW MEAT MARKET. Only Prime Meats Handled. Give us a Call. Hides Wanted. Truckee Lumber Co., My Large Stock of SHOES has ar rived, best quality that ever offered for Sale in this City. The Public is in- SUPPLIES vited to call and convinced. HR & SPBUCE Lumber BOX SHOOKS GENERAL MERCHANDISE And LOGGERS’ Hobsonville, Or. $ j J. E. SIBLEY, Mgr s. LAMAR, & WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANT. £ Whisky, $2.25 to $8.00 per gal. ® £ £ Wines. $1.00 to $3.00 per gal. * ?