Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, August 13, 1903, Image 4

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. AUGUST 1^
TILLAMOOK
JOTTINGS.
4ANY PEOPLE ACCEPT TIPS.
LIGHT FCR THE FISHES.
Real Estate Transfers.
Furnished by H T. Botts, abstracter.
lit
The insurance on V\ ill Easom’s house
Ban
U.S.A, to Herbert V. Aliev. Patent.
was $1000 and $200 un furniture.
E ’/2 N w, sec. 18, Se Sw and lot 4,
Carl A. Palzhiff*. of Oregon City, has
sec. 7, tp 3 north, range 9.
Bought out I). T. Edmunds* store and U.S.A, to Freddie L. Mills. Patent. Se
For catching bass at dusk the fol­
t he store is closed today to take ail in­
lowing plan is sometimes tried in
Nw, sec. 33, tp. 1 south, range 10.
ventory of the stock.
U.S A. to Roliert W. Robbins. Patent. the upper part of the state. The
fisherman anchors in comparatively
Vi n e Nodine, who is painting the new
E 1 2 E L». sec. 18, tp 2 S. range 7.
deep water outside the lily pads.
school building, had the misfortune to U.S.A. to Anna E. Roenicke.
Patent.
He rigs an extra rod and allacne.-« a
fall from the scaffolding to the ground, a
Sw Nw, sec. 5 and lot 1 and S Va Ne,
nine-foot leader to the end of the
distance of 30 feet. It was thought at
sec. 6, tp. 4 south, rançe 10.
line. At the end of the leaner he
first that he was seriously injured, but U S.A. to Mogens Sommer.
Patent. ties a heavy sinker, and about five
beyond a good shaking up he appears to
S ,z2 Sw, sec 17, tp. 3 south, range feet above the sinker a larg-* bob
or piece of cork, which has previous­
uninjured, for he is at work again today
10.
phos­
U.S.A, to Halbert L. Fowler. Patent. ly received a heavy coat of
Lots 1, 2 and 3, sec. 2, tp. 1 south, phorus, says the New York Sun.
More It’s Stirred, Worse it Gets
Without hook or bait he casts tliir
range 7.
line well in toward the ¡»ads, the lin^
Frank \\ heeler, father of Fred Wheeler, U.S A. to Margaret K. Williams. Patent.
being Leki in ¡»lace at the surface by
desires us to sav that the statements
Sw Nw, sec. 6. tp. 1 south, range 7
a second cork.
marie by Mrs. Fred Wheeler are not true. U.S.A, to Frank Nordberg. Patent. Lot
The l.ne is reeled out, and the rod
He claims that she is an irresponsible
14. sec. 29, tp. 4 south, range 10.
laid on the side of the I oat. Then
person, she went to Portland with ano. U.S.A, to Charles I. Clough. Patent. selecting a lively minnow he bails
ther woman to have a good time, took
tp. 2 south, his casting rod and drops the min-
E 14 E
«ec. 28
now within a foot or two of the
lodgings there in a rooming house, was
range 7
told by her busbend that if she went to U.S.A, to Francis H. Cross. Patent. other 1 ne. He then lights his pipe
and awaits developments,
h rom
Portland with the woman not to return
E V2 Ne and Nw Ne, sec. 33 and Sw
time to time as the minnow swims
and that she has returned to Tillamook
Nw, sec. 34, tp. 2 south, range 9.
away from the lure a new cast is
for the purpose of making trouble and William C. Morton, et al., to Lorena B. made.
Robey. Block 13, J. C. Bewley’s
to secure money. That is the other side
The explanation of the success of
of the case ami the reasons, Mr. Wheeler
addition to Bay City. Life estate this plan of catching bass is that the
I
reserved. $1.00.
fish are attracted by the phosphor­
claims, his son would have nothing more
to do with his wife and that he broke up Clark E Hadley and wife to D. T. Ed­ escent bob and in swimming around
munds. 25 feet off west side, lot 3, it find the bait. The plan has proved
his home after she went to Portland.
successful when small frogs or craw­
block 9, Tillamook City. $900.00.
We may mention that wc interviewed
fish were used instead of minnows.
Mrs. Wheeler, in company with other A. Horace Adams and wife to A. G.
An incentive genius, who first saw
Reynolds. S
of S y2, sec. 28, tp. 2 the lure in use at Upper St. Regis
parties, to ascertain whether the reports
south, range 10. $900.
were correct that she had been wrongly
lake, sent to New York for a bat­
treated, when we took down her state , A. G. Reynolds and wife to Eliza Ann tery, waterproof wire and ground
Watt. S V2 S
sec 28, tp. 2 south, glass electric bulbs. For some rea­
ments ami published it at her request.
son the elaborate apparatus was not
range 10. $950.
We have given both sides an opportunity ,
to be heatd, not that we wish to prolong William \I. Webb to Burt M. Webb. 30 a success.
Those who made the experiment
acres on south side of N >4 Ne, sec.
a spicy case that would please and de- ,
say the lure is equally effective when
20, tp. 3 south, range 10 $300.00.
light the gossips. We, as well as a num 1
used in trolling. For this purpose
her of other citizens, thought that Mrs J. S. Stephens and wifeto W. J. Stephens, the lure is made of cork or light
Lots 5, 6, 7 and 8, block 16, pine. It is attached to the line about
Fred Wheeler was not receiving right
Thayer’s addition to Tillamook. ten feet in front of the hooks.
treatment and was an object of commis­
$400.00.
eration ami Christian sympathy. We
have material on hand for another spicy Christoper Mills and wife, Plat and
PENGUIN PUGILISM.
dedication of town of Beaver, in
article, which would show some addi­
The
Bird« Quarrel Over Purloined
sec. 30, tp. 3 south, range 9.
tional light why Fred Wheeler was desi
l*ebblen and Show Science
rous of getting his wifeout of Tillamook, Donald MacLachlan to Mary Mac-
in Fiifhtinif.
Lachlan. Part of block 4, J. C.
but will not publish it at present, for
Bewley’s addition to Bav City. $1.
more the matter is stirred up worse it
It was curious, says Prof. C. E.
Vinton S. Rice, by sheriff, to Isaac J. Borchgrevink, writing of penguins
Stratton. N *4 Se, Sw Ne and Se in Leslie’s Monthly, to see how some
Peerless “Hurd Wheat” Flour
Nw, sec 5, tp. 2 south, range 8 of the lazy birds would quickly
make off with the pebbles with
$1198.68.
is guaranteed tlie best flour on
which they build their nests, and
this market. Money back if it State of Oregon to L. M. Taggart, W which
through great care and work,
sec. 36, tp 1 south, range 7.
don’t suit. Makes more loaves of
had been accumulated by one of the
>400.00.
bread than any other flour. J. A. Monroe and wife to William John­ band, the moment the owner hap­
pened to turn his back. The osten­
Price$1.10 a sack. Cohn & Co.
son.
Block 3, Bark addition to tatious attempt of the culprit to look
Tillamook. $1000.00.
are agents for it.
innocent when caught in the act’
Francis H. Cross and wifeto J. S. Davis. amused us mightily. The rightful
E *2 Ne and Nw Ne, sec. 33 and Sw owner of the pebble was sure to
Whitecaps Near Walla Walla.
Nw, sec 34, tp. 2 south, range 9 pursue the thief and jhen the two
would fight desperately till blood
W ai . la W alla . Wash., Aug. 10.—-A
south. $450.00.
Sometimes
threshing crew on Frank Hague’s ranch, P. M. Churchman and wife to A. A Way­ covered their flippers.
they stood up to each other like
near Hadle) Station, north of here, bru­
mire. 50 x 100 feet in Woods. $1.
pugilists, giving and taking punish­
tally “ whitecapfied” a fellow harvester E. E. Selph and wife, by sheriff, to J. S.
ment like men, and they exhibited
named Ray last night, taking turns at
Stephens, Lots 5, 6, 7 and 8, block surprising efficiency in the art of
horsewhipping the man as he was tied to
16, Thayer’s addition to Tillamook. hitting. Sometimes they seemed to
a header wagon, and then rolling him
1316.00.
remember the pebble, the cause of
naked in tarwe«*d, finally running him Franklin R. Webber and wife to Wilson the quarrel, but 1 noticed that the
out of the camp with a rifle ball
River Lumber Co. About 29,000 one who first gave in generally
whizzing after him.
acres in tp. 1 north, ranges 6, 7 and walked off with the pebble, while
the other, blinded by success, was
This was Ray’s storv in Walla Walla
8 west, and tp. 1 south, ranges 7and
left with the honor. Meanwhile the
this morning, when became in to swear
8 west.
conqueror would return to his nest
out warrants for the alleged whitecaps. Julia Custis and husband to George I and fin! that his kind neighbors had
As evidence he displayed cruel cuts and
Watt Lots 11 and 12, block 31, I used the opportunity to pebble their
welts covering him from head to heel
Pacific addition to Bay City. |200. nests from his possessions while he
Rav said the threshing crew accused him Charles W. Mead and wife to Charles S. had been away struggling so valiant­
of attempting to outrage the cook, an
Davis, jr. Ne, sec. 18, tp. 2 north, ly to catch the thief of one single
pebble.
elderly woman.
range 7. $1500.
Sta te of Oregon to Wright, Blodgett Co.
AN UNINHABITABLE LAND.
Ninety Are Lost.
Se Se and lots 2, 3 and 4, sec. 17,
Boundary
Between Vtnh nnd Arlsona
lots 1, 2, 3 and 4, sec. 20, and lot 1,
P aris , Aug 11.—An awful catastrophe
a Desert from One End
sec 29, tp. 2 north, range 10 ; also
occurred last evening on the Metropoli-'
to the Other.
tract of 10 acres in section 20, tp. 2
tan Electric Railway, which runs mostly
north,
range
10.
$1500.
underground, in which 90 peisonsare
A well-known civil engineer, H. B.
believed to have lost their lives. Eighty-, Giles Gilbert and wife to Franklin R. Carpenter, who has recently com­
Webber. Quitclaim. Ne Sw. sec. 1, pleted the survey of the southern
two bodies have been recovered, and the
tp. 1 south, ranges. $1.00.
line of Utah, says the boundary be­
search continues.
One or the trains I
broke down at Menilmontant7^vl»ich is Lillian R. Anderson, et al., heirs of Peter tween that state and Arizona does
Morgan to Homer Mason. Quit not cross a foot of cultivated land.
a poor and populous section of the city.
claim. 70 acres known as Morin It traverses a desert, which is cut
This train was promptly emptied, and
tide land, in sec. 23, tp. 1 south, up by great canyons that are almost
the train which followed was ordered to !
impassable. The length of the line
range 10. $1.
push it to the repairing sheds. On the
is 277 miles. Landmarks along the
One
mortgage
filed
to
secure
$750.00.
wav these two trains caught fire, but
line will make it possible for the
One
satisfaction
of
mortgage
$900,00.
boundary to be located without any
the employes succeeded in escaping
«
Meanwhile a crowded train reached Les 1
Bids Wanted.
Chiironnvs. the preceding station, and 1
the officials, seeing smoke bouring out of
To furnish Tillamook public school 40
the tunnel, gave the alarm. A panic cords of four-toot wood, one-half spruce
ensued, the passengers struggling to limbs and balance crab-apple ami vine- ’
maple; Size of wood not less than 4 inches ■
esca pe.
and not over 8 inches in diameter. To
Amid the increasing smoke many at­ l»e delivered by September 10th, 1903. ,
tempted to return along the line toward Bids must be in by August 20th, at office I
Belleville and were suffocated. The offi­ of Th os. Coates clerk
cials seem to have lost their heads and
Cohn A Co. carry the lari.st
are unable to sav how many passengers
went out. The firemen for several hours stock of flour and feed in Ine
were unable to enter the station or the city. Their Price* are as low
tunnel, owing to the dense smoke, which •1 any.
poured out in black clouds. Meanwhile
j
tens of thousands of anxious people
I
gathered about the station. All the
!
police nnd fire engines were on the spot
THE OLD RELIABLE
and the excitement was intense.
Finally the firemen succeeded in flootl-
ing the burning mass, and shortly after­
ward they were able to enter the tunnel
E. II. Harriman, head of the syndicate
which controls the California North­
western Railway, is planning to make
that road part of a Const system that
will eventually have its northern termi
nus at \storia, where direct connections
will be made with the Oregon Railroad
Navigation Company’s line. The ex­
tension of the local road to the State of
Washington is not a project contení
plated for the far future, but is actually
under consideration. Engineers of the
IÏ irriman syndicate are already engage« I
in defining the route ami estimating the
cost of ami the time that will I k neves
»arv to carry out the enterprise.
difficulty in the future. Just east of
the Colorado river a sandstone butte
rises 1.G00 feet above the plain, and
the very peak of this butte is exact­
ly on the boundary. Mr. Carpenter
named the peak State Line butte.
Not far from this butte is another,
which stands 1,300 feet above the
plain, und was named Tower peak.
These two gigantic stones will al­
ways be a guide to persons who have
enough curiosity to penetrate the
desert in search of the state line.
Lived Down Hi» Reputation.
The king of Italy was unpopular
at the time of his coming to the
throne, because of the stories of his
extreme economy, but has lately
shown that, though he is circumspect
in his expenditure, he is liberal and
benevolent. He gives largely to char­
ity, both organized anti individual,
and in his social life seems ready to
make an outlay that is necessitated
by his position. Among his recent
benefactions was a gift of 100.000
lire to the town of Palermo, to be
distributed among the poor and three
charitable institutions. Of this sum
50.000 lire is to go to the poor. 30.000
lire to the town hospital. 10,000 lire
to the marine hospital, and 1,000 lire
to the Red CroM society.
Writer» Who Ref»»« Titles.
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
7HLM /S NO SUBSTITUTE
It I. Wot Al.««
••>«
State Normal Sehooi,
W«“»« *“
Heel»««
«.Itila
“Ain I,” said the w
man who takes tips?
•’You, for instance,
conist that in a few
millionaire, will be i
that Smith was look
dealer, and you recon
go there. Well, Smit!
leaves a heavy order,
not surprised when y<j
later a box of fine cigars, with your
tobacconist’s compliments but d
those cigars are not a tip, what are
they ?
“Brown is a buyer for a big manu­
factory. The firm he patronizes is
sending him every week or two boxes
of toilet soaps, cases of perfumer},
dozens of golf balls, and barrels of
clams. Those are Brown’s tips—the
gratuities he gets for his patronage.
“Robinson sends a rich friend to his
tailor with a note of introduction, and
the rich friend buys four suits. Isn’t
Robinson being tipped when the tailor,
the week following, makes him a
present of a set of English flannels?”
The waiter made a disdainful ges­
ture, says the Philadelphia Record, and
ejaculated:
“Pish I Tipping, they say, is un-
American, and a waiter of proper
pride and independence would scorn
to accept a quarter or a half in re-
turn for the serving of a meal. But
I say that tipping runs clean through
our social system, from top to bot­
tom, and all of us, excepting only the
elevator man, are taking tips of one
sort or another all our lives.”
.. .........
Schoo 11,
tor nil lu.oiehnuf ?||
opi'i'ool method, v I I
grade.l work
school. The (iemJw
.
this school as t„tk?
1
sttpplv.
“i
The Training [>_,
sists of a nine grttZ*
about 250 pupil, ’
its branch«, inji^'
T
Drawing and
Normal course the best and quickest way to State Certifie,k
Fall term opens September 22nd. For catalogue or informât«.
F I>. KESSLER. President ;
Or J H V ,
GANGLOF
ARD
SNUFFER
FOR
GRAHAM. WHOLE WHEAT, PRIM
HILLS U.S. BEST and SPOTll
Also all kinds of FEED.
CELEBRATED STU DEE:
ini
'1
at
1
eit;
I
cit;
1
da’
IS GROWING IN FAVOR.
Tendency Toward Disposition of
Hainan Dead by Cremation B«-
•onùng More Popular.
WAGONS,
SURRIES.
1
the
1
the
(
tri
The custom of cremation prevailed
throughout the civilized world before
]
the Christian era, excepting among
bu
the Egyptians, Chinese and Hebrews,
1
and recent statistics show that there
for
is a constant and growing tendency
I
iJ
to return to the custom.
The disposition of the human dead
by ineinceration has been meeting
J
ret
with more and more favor, that has in
5
no wise been retarded since the first
wc
cremation society was formed in Lon­
DEALERS IN
don in 1874. That same year a crerna-
tory was erected in Milan and two
da
years afterward one was built in
(
Lodi, Italy. In two years more there
on
was one in Gotha, Germany, and aft­
erward they began to appear in all
lands.
The first one in this country was
erected in Washington, Pa., in 1883,
and the one in Fresh Pond. L. I., came Quick’s Delivery Wagons deliver, Highest Cash price paid for stock :
two years afterward. In this latter
eight bodies were cremated the first
year and 7« in the second year. In 1900
the total has passed the 600 mark, and
during last year it reached 654.
There are now 26 crematories in the
United States. In the year that New
York's first crematory was opened
Se
only 46 bodies were cremated in the
entire country, while last year the
number was 2,645.
SMITH & JENKM
Successors to L. N. Barnes
PRIME
LARD,
MEATS,
At the NEW MEAT MARK
Only Prime Meats Handled. Give
Call. Hides Wanted.
Spruce and Cedar Shingles.
Cheese and Butter Boxes a special
PESTS OBJECT TO YELLOW.
Mo.qnlto.. will Avoid a P.r.on Who
Wtiari Clothing of Th «4
Color, It la Said,
SLAB WOOD, 16 inch, $1.80 pw
DELIVERED.
Orders for Lumber promptly attended to.
Mosquitoes have their prejudices
ind one of these ia a repugnance to
jellow. For this reason residents in
•no.quito-infe.ted parts are strongly
recommended to wear as much yellow
and to have as much yellow about them
as possible. This advice comes from a
French scientist who has been investi­
gating the psychology of the little
peat. One of the tests was as follows:
He took a certain number of boxes
and lined their interiors with cloth of
different color, and different shades of
the same color. Then he liberated in
the room a large number of mosqui­
toes. believing that the colors in the
box would attract them.
At the end of a certain timehe closed
his boxes and then began to count. He
found that the insects had a decided
liking for dark colors in preference
to white and that the most were found
in the box which had been lined with
dark blue. Not a single one w as found
in the box which contained yellow.
This test may not be conclusive, but it
.ems to prove that there ia .omething
in the tradition that dark stockings
atraot more mosquitoes to the ankle,
than do light ones.
Odor, from th« Skin.
A French medical review assert,
that the human skin possesses a cer­
tain odor which varies accordin» to
the individual, the age and the race.
This was noted by Rider Ha»»ard
in "Allan Quatermain.” When l'm-
alopogaes and Quatermain sat in the
tree together waiting to kill
phants on a dark night the
moved away from the lee of
white man. not relishing the white
man'» personal essence. The nerv­
ous system ia .aid to exert much in­
fluence over the odor of the cuta-
neoua secretion.,
Hammond cites
the case of a woman who always
gave out the odor of pineapple when
she was in temper, '. anil that of an-
other who emitted a violet odor
when Buffering from hysterical- at-
tack.
One-Row Cornfield.
A Kingman county (Kan ) farmer
i. growing a row of corn 25 mile,
long, not because he has to. hut be-
cau.e it amine. him. It coil, around
a So acre field.beginnin» at a corner
and endin» in the middle.
The London academy is authority
for the new. that Rmlyard Kipling
might have been knighted along with
Gilbert Parker and Conan 1>. yle. but
that he deelined the offer. Tlie ac.vd-
«niy further .late, that Mr. I.eeky I
Mammoth Indnstry.
refused a peerage, contenting him-
In »he Uniteci State, more than
«elf with membership in the new Ur-
IO < «AO AAA ar« , inv„t«d
. ¡
. n makingf«.'
Mn.o00.000
<1« vX Merit.
________ ___
tilizera.
B
TILLAMOOK LUMBER. CO®
tr
b<
ol
ni
«I
J. S. LAMAR,
WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHA’
I have the largest and best assorted stock«!
Wines and Liquors that has ever been imported
this City.
h
•«- <4' SPSFW
I Whisky, $2.25 to $8.00 per ga
i Wines, $1.00 to $3.00 per gal
-
Don’t drink cheap doctored stuff when yotl
buy it pure and unadulterated from me.
___________ __________________ __________ -1
WILL SELL AT
COST
Until the 1st of Sept.
i
Now is the time
new Sewing Mach»'*;
Bargains
$22.00,
with drop be*’’ J
In Ladies' and Gent s ÍÍ all the latest
improve? J
Boots and Shoes.
at M c I ntosh &
It is the B onita S e 4 I
M achine , and theysH
in price from $23
with ball bearings. ■'
are little beauties, pert-»'
made and something«*
the market. TheseMfi
ties are a better article'^
the peddlars are chiqfc
$65 and $75 for.
Quick Broth®
HOUSEHOLDMO®
AND DRAYMPB
Heavy Teaming is a
• JI
Our Delivery wagon (MnO J
or city-
I