TILLAMOOK HEAD LIGHT. JANUARY 21, 19C4
I
Death Reunites Them.
Prixe Shooting Contest for Water
fowl.
Prize, a handsome knit Jersey shoot,
ing jacket, and an additional cash prize
of 5Oc. for DM) points; 75c. lor 15oaud$l
for 200 points registered by one hunter
fora dav’s hunt. I’lie contest commences
January 15th and continues until March
1st, The one having most points M ircli
1st will be awarded she shooting jacket.
Customers must register Indore they go
and immediately on return. Parties trad
ing or clubbing game w ill not l»c counted.
For my customers only. Point : Geese,
60 ; shag, 15 ; duck, 10; saw bills. 20 ;
jack snipe, 3 ; king fisher, 5. Sea gulls a
loss of 500 points. Mud hens, coots,
surf ducks, etc., nothing.
See Ralph ACXley, the man that
prepares you for a good time while in
Tillamook, three floors south of the P.O.
Vote of Condolence.
Hall of Alder Camp, No, 219, W.O. W .
Tillamook, Oregon, Jan. 12, 1904.
To the Officers and Neighbors, Abler
(’amp. No. 219. W.O. W.
Your Committee appointed to dralt
suitable resolutions of regret of this
Camp on the death of our late neighbor,
Jesse Kays respectfully submit the fol
lowing :
Whereas, the Almighty, in his infinite
wisdom, lias seen fit to call hence into
the great forest beyond the soul of our
deceased neighbor ; and
Whereas, Our neighbor was an earnest
faithful Woodman who endeavored to
cherish the sentiment »peculiar to Wood-
Craft ; now therefore l>c it
Resolved, TImt in the death of neigh
bor Jesse Kays, this Camp loses a
worthy and respected member, his
family an honored and affectionate bus-
band and father, and the community a
wot thy citizen ; be it further
Resolved, That the sympathy of this
Camp be, and the same is hereby ten
dered to the family of our deceased
neighbor, that a copy of these resolu.
tions be spread upon the minutes of
this Camp, a copy furnished the family
of our deceased neighbor, under the seal
of the Camp, a copv be furnished the
Pacific Woodman and the local press for
publication ; be it further
Resolved, That the Chnrter of this
Camp be draped in mourning for a
period of thirtv days.
O tto H kins ,
W. O. C hase ,
¿ Committee.
C arl H aiieri . ach . )
NEHALEM.
Fred Zaddiich and wife are visiting
friends and relatives at Astoria and
Westport this week. Miss Amir Dean,
sister to Mrs. Zaddach, is quite sick at
the hospital in Astoria, but is getting
better.
I). C. Peregoy,
Henry Told went
Seaside Tuesday.
Albert Crawford is finishing his new
house in uppet town.
G. M. Cobh is logging on Win, Scholl-
nieyer s place, he will rail the logs down
the creek.
W. S. Linkhart is visiting in Rossiand,
Wash.
Johnnie Snvder is home from Alaska.
Born, to the wife of Louis Ludtke,
january 10th, a nine pound boy.
Kline’s have rented their hotel to W.
D. Steel and wife, and muyed on to their
ranch near town.
A ntw religious »ed known ns the
*' Christian Israelites,'' has appeared in
Jloston, with mem Iters scattered through
Charlestown. Somerville, Medford and
Roslymhile. Part of the creed for the
men is allowing whiskers to grow as
long ns possible and the hair to such
length that it has to lie coiled up like a
woman's. They predict the millennium
n 1016.
« * *
There is a i row on in Ohio that is very
interesting, Hanna wants Hanna men
as delegates i and
no
instructions •
Foraker wants Roosvelt men. and in
structed for the President. These two
men have locked horns, and the contest
promises to be very bitter. Roosevelt’s
friends, in view of the talk of naming
Hanna <»i some other man, do not want
to take any chances in the selection of
delegates, but want men who can l>e re
lied ii|M»n to vote for the President in the
convention.
• • «
The United Staten government him i»-
»ned n warning to Colombia which that
country', Authorities, if they are wine,
will intelligently heed. Secretary Root
him pointed out that, despite the asser
tions of ytllow journal« and politicimm.
no «title of wnr»mt( between the United
State« mill Colombia ; that no innugnrn-
tion of hoitillitie« m in night on our «iile ;
that no preparations for war are being
made bv tin, and that neither President
Roosevelt nor Secretary Hay looks for
war. Secretary Root also nave that the
President and necretary of »fate have
ottered the good office« of thin country
toward the netlkment of thedinpnten be
tween Colombia and the republic of
Panama. The netrelary nddn. however,
that the United State«, even if Colom
bin nhonld declare war. would be in no
baste to accept the challenge, but he tells
the Bogota offictnl« that if they are wise
they will not. “by any act of rashness
and violence," pot it "out of our power
to help them."
V * •
It is easy to comprehend Prof. Lang
lev • meaning when he nay* that the Kr
ing mmhine business in picking up.
I
S pokane , W hs I i , Jan. 18—With their
heart filled with sorrow over her tragic
death, the divorced parents ol Louise
Hurris, a victim oí the Clallam wreck,
are apparently becoming reconciled, mid
their manv friends in Spokane predict
that the resumption of their oh I rela
tions as husband and wile is not far dis
tant.
Several years ago, William Harris and
h»s wife, ('arrie, agreed they could no
longer live together. They were wealthy
and a division of property was made,
the wile taking most of the real estate
and the husband retaining mining stock
of much value. Mrs. Harris has since
built the Victoria Hotel, a handsome
hostelry in Spokane, and has lived here,
while Mr. Harris has spent his time in
various cities of the Northwest. Louise,
their only daughter, lived with her
mother when in Spokane. Two years
ago Harris sought to have the old
<livorce case reo|'ened, alleging that he
did not get a fair division of property.
A bitter legal fight followed and his
wife won.
When Louise was drowned in the Clal
lam lifeboat, both parents went to the
Sound to accompany the remains to
Spokane for interment. Husband and
va ife did not speak to each other, and
friends had to make mutual arrange
ments. But since the funeral Mr. Harris
and his former wile have frequently
dined together and are so often seen in
each other's company that a complete
rcconcilliation is looked for.
I
SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY
The maple sugar season lasts onlj
five or six weeks, but it yields Amer
ican farmers over a million dollars a
year.
Paper coal is a form of lignite
found near Bonn, in Germany.
It
splits naturally in films as thin as
paper.
Seventy-eight profit sharing enter
prises, affecting 53,526 workpeople,
were in operation in Great Britain
last year.
The sanitation of the city of Ahme-
dabad, India, is so bad that the mor
tality is 70 per 1,000, with no epidemic
to account for it.
A white badger, which is almost as
great a rarity as a white blackbird.
was killed recently by the Axe Vale
(England) badger hounds.
Signor .Schiaparelli the Milan as-
tronomer, has been elected an associ-
ate of the French academy of science
in the room of the late Baron Nor-
denskiold.
A Roman bowl of Samian make,
said to be 2,000 years old, has been
brought up from the sen bottom off
Beachy Head by a Brightlingsee oys
ter dredger.
Maiden Bower, a pre-Roman earth
work, near Dunstable, England, is in
danger of being destroyed by the ex
tension of a chalk quarry, which has
already been worked to within a few
yards of the ancient rampart.
The Pasteur institute for the treat
ment of persons bitten by rabid ani
mals in Calcutta is rapidly gaining
in popularity among the natives. In
the eight months ended May 31 last,
352 persons were treated, and the
mortality was only eight per cent.
Time Too Short.
Sericulture, the raising of silk
S alem . Jan. 18.—All attempts to sub worms, does not appear to increase in
mit constitutional amendments at the France. The official returns for last
next election, by means ol the initiative, year show that 132,634 persons were
engaged in the industry, as compared
will probably have to be abandoned, be
w th 1 16,214 in 1M0. In IBM the num
cause the time is too short to secure ber was 133,252. The yield of cocoons
signatures to petitions, and also for ‘.he varies with the seasons. In the last
reason that the question has been rais five years it has ranged from 6,898,033
ed as to the power of the people to pro. to 9,180,404 kilos.
pose amendments at this time.
BOER TONGUE TROUBLES.
One amendment is already pending,
and there are manv who believe that
other r inendmen is cannot be proposed
until that one has been disposed of. The
direct primary law and the woman's
suffrage amendments are spoke.» of un
There is no question in South Africa
der the initiative this year, blit it is of suppression of tbe language of the
doubt ltd whether the required number people. The language of the Boer
of signatures, 7018, can be secured in the people of South Africa is a patois
called Ta-al, based on the seventeenth
11 days that remain before petitions
century Holland Dutch, with a mix
must be filed, even if it is possible legally ture of many strange words, Kaffir
to submit the amendments.
and English, and with the omission
The constitution provides that while of most grammatical inflections. In
one amendment is awaiting the action that happy tongue you are permitted
of the Legislative Assembly or of the to say “1 is.” It is needless to sey
people no additional amendments shall there is no literature in this patois,
be proposed. This is the limitation con as there is in Hollander Dutch of this
century. The official recognition of
tained in article 1 7 of the constitution,
Hollander Dutch dates from 1882 in
prescribing the manner in which amend the Cape Colony, and is a result of a
ments may be proposed by the Legisla ¡xilitical propaganda of the Afrikan
ture
The initiative and referendum der Bund, says the Pall Mali Gazette.
clause, prescribing the manner in which It was openly announced and hailed as
the people may propose amendments, the “thin end of the wedge” to prevent
does not say whether this limitation the fusion of the Boer and British
shall apply to amendments proposed by strains of the European people, and to
drive the British into the sea.
initiative. The Supreme Court held, in
The veld Boer does not understand
construing the constitution in the refer-
Hollander Dutch; he dislikes the Hol
endum case, that the provisions of the lander outlander only a degree less
constitution are mandatory and must than the British outlander, or than the
be strictly observed. It was decided that French, Italian, German or any other
when an amendment is pending no other outlander. He only hears the Hol
can be proposed, but it was not said lander tongue, or, rather, the seven
whether this applies to amendments teenth-century predecessor of it, in
the text from the seventee-th-century
proposed by initiative.
Dutch Bible read out in the churches
The Legislature of 1903 proposed an
on Sundays by the predikant, or in the
amendment repealing the anti negro hymns chanted by his fathers of the
clause of the constitution. That amend- low lands, who worsted Alva, prose
mriit is now awaiting the action of the cutor of the saints of the Lord.
Legislature of 1905, and until that Leg
A very minute proportion of the
islature has rejected it, or has adopted it Boers have any business to transact
mid the people voted upon it, no other in the law courts or public offices, un
amendments can lie proposed by the less such as are fully acquainted with
English. For a generation before Ma-
legislative body. Whether the people
juba hill the Boers, desiring to give
can propose an amendment in the mean their children a fair start in their
time is not certain, but there arc many business dealings with the business
who believe they cannot. In deciding people of the towns, had? their chil
the referendum case, the Supreme Court dren taught English. The English
held that the reason for the limitation is governess was an institution among
that the |>eoplt should not be called upon Boers of any position. At the present
moment there are none of the Boer
t<»|votr upon constitutional amendments
leaders who cannot speak English;
except after long intervals. Upon the
there are many, of course, who will
same reason it is argued that the limita not. After so many years of active
tion applies to all amendments, however political propaganda of the Hollander
proposed. __________________
Dutch language, in the year before
the war in I*retoria there were only
“Colombia, whose present government five per cent, of the cases in the law
is the concentrated essence of past revo courts between non-English-speaking
lutions, undertook to stop an isthmian people.
AJJ business transactions
canal
Forty six years ago a Democrat were conducted in English; sales and
ic cabinet officer said that no Central or mortgages of farms, sales of mining
South American country would be per. options, dealings in stocks nnd shares,
purchases in shops of imported goods,
mitted ”to close the gates of intercourse
sales in the market squares o f agri
on the great highways of the world, cultural produce. Every Boer profes
and justify the act on the pretention sional man. every Boer politician, had,
that these avenues of trade and travel as a necessity of life, to be acquainted
belong to them ” There is a long interval with English.
between Secretary Cass and some ol the
Prlffi» for I
Girl.
Democrats of to dav.
From Germany comes a story nf
S saw
novelty and charity. In the town of
When William Homer Leavitt was liy.
Haichmann prizes are offered year
irg in Newport, struggling fur promi. ly for men who will marry the ugliest
nence as a portrait painter, he won the or most crippled w< men and s 1 m > wom
heart of Wilhelmina Cook, one of the en over 40 who hate been jilted as lewst
humble villagers ot that abode of the twice. The money for the prizes was
wealthy She was willing to share hi» left by a rich financier, who provided
poverty and to work herself in order to that out of the funds an income of not
less than $80 should go to the ugliest
keep up a modest home But when Mr.
girl and $60 ts a cripple.—London
Leavitt got a commission to go to Lin News.
coln, Neb . and paint the portrait of
William J. Bryan, his ambition sound
Rrttlns for < hnrlty*« Sake.
Betting on the results of the recent
above his humble sweetheart and he pro
longed Ins task while he was making municipal elections at Rome wan per
love Io ami winning the heart of Ruth, mitted by the government. The profits
the daughter of the wealthy editor of were devoted to charitable purposes.
—N. Y. Suu.
the Commoner.
* « *
Tk» Real Reais*.
This ts how the St Louis Globe Demo
Blanche Did you part owing to a
crat looks upon the land frauds
Those
Pacific coast conspirators were not satis- misunderstanding?
Rosa--neat me, no?
We un
tied to steal the government timber—
they weiitcback and took tbe land.'*
derstood each other too wall.—Lon
don Tit-Bita.
I
I
L. EDDY,
BEHIND 0« ARMY REGISTER.
The war department is six months
behind in its annual publication
known as the Army Register,
Is due to the confusion which
arisen in the preparation of
lineal and relative lists of army of
ficers and the difficulty in determin
ing the position of the numerous ap
pointees to the army during the last
is months. It was expected that
Secretary Root would give his ap
proval to the lists this week, but ut
the last moment it was d »covered
that signal corps officers were pro
testing against the construction of a
law which placed them at the foot of
the relative list, regardless of the
fact that most of them were entitled
to positions much higher in the list
by reason of prior service in the vol-
unteers.
This question does not affect the
promotion of the officers of the sig-
n i corps, but it has an importance
in giving them precedence over lieu
tenants of the artillery, cavalry and
infantry, and govern their seniority
on courts of inquiry and courts-mar
tial.
More important still, however, is
the question of quarters. The high
est ranking officer at a post has the
selection of the place where he lives
I and the choosing of a habitation is
governed by the position of an officer
on the relative list. For this reason
the signal corps men are anxious
that they shall not be slighted, and
through Gen. Greely, chief signal of
ficer, they have sent an appeal to
Secretary Root that their prior serv
ice shall not be entirely ignored.
The protest has served to delay ap
proval of the completed lists and to
postpone further publication of the
annual register.
SHORTER MISSISSIPPI ROUTE.
In every town
and village
may be had,
the
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
O regon .
T illamook
T.
Mica
Axle
Grease
BOTTS,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Complete set of abstracts.
Office upstairs, North of Tillamook
County Bank.
TILLAMOOK
...
OREGON
COOPER,
that makes your
horses glad.
A ttorney - at -L aw ,
O regon .
T illamook ,
LAUDE THAYER,
A ttorney - at -L aw ,
Has just received from
Chicago.
O regon .
T illamook
First-class Nobby FOOT WEAR
of the Best quality and
Latest Styles :
(2> arl haberlach ,
Consisting of Gentle
men’s and Ladies’, Misses
ATTORNEY AT-LAW,
and Children’s Shoes, Boy’s
J)eitt»chrv
¿Abvohnt,
and Misses School Shoes
!
Office
across
the
street
«and north from
made out of the best mater-
the Post Office.
ial for winter wear.
It will pay you to ex-
J^OBERT A. MILLER,
amine my goods before pur
chasing elsewhere.
A ttorney - at -L aw .
Oregon City, Oregon.
Land Titles and Land Office
Business a Specialty.
J-^AVID WILEY, M.D.,
▲
A canal is being projected by well-
known men of Whiteside county. Ill.,
to run along the Illinois banks of the
Mississippi river from Fulton to the
three cities of Moline, Rock Island
and Davenport to avoid the danger
ous rapids in the Mississippi above
Rock Island and also to shorten the
distance by water from Clinton to
Davenport, la., by about 70 miles.
The canal as projected would leave
the Mississippi at Fulton, run east 17
miles to Rock river, near Lyndon, and
then south to the Hennepin canal,
which was constructed three years
ago and enters the Mississippi near
Milan. The new waterway would vir
tually be a changing of the course
of the Mississippi, making it flow
more nearly straight south, shorten
ing distances at least 100 miles be
tween large cities on the river and
avoiding the dangers to navigators at
Rock Island, where the United States
has spent thousands of dollars.
Engineers who have examined and
surveyed the route declare it feasi
ble and say that when completed the
canal will be one of the great inland
waterways of the middle west and
mark an epoch in the revival of traffic
from St. Paul to Peoria and points on
the Illinois river by making them ac
cessible through the Hennepin canal.
ITALY SEEKS OUR COAL.
la
Italy may be the next European
country to try American coal as a sub
stitute for the English product. Sig
nor Hugo Pizeoti, United State« con
sul at Turin. Italy, who is now in thia
country, is said to be negotiating for
the delivery of 4,000,000 tons of bi-
tumin-ou» coal, for export to Italy.
It probably will come from Alabama,
although the Cape Breton coal also
has been considered by him.
Prominent coal dealers in New York
city say they fail to aee any margin
of profit in such a transaction They
cla-im that so long as our present pros
perity continues the demand for coal
in this country will equal the supply,
thus keeping the price of coal up to a
point where it would not be possible
to compete with British coal even
with the export tariff added on
It was stated recently that the Ital
ian government had entered negotia
tions for the purchase of a large tract
of bituminous cos I land in West Vir
ginia. The report never has been con
firmed officially, however.
MARCONI’S MACHINES.
One of the most interesting elec
trical tests ever mads in Canada wax
performed at
the workshops of
Thompson «ft Co.. Montreal, which firm
has built the dynamos and the two big
transformers for the Marconi station.
The»« are the highest voltage trans
formers ever constructed in this coun
try. Aside from a few long-distance
electrical systems in the western por
tion of tbe United States no occasion
fiur the use of such powerful machines
has arisen anywhere.
The test was a weird performance.
The transformer, which contains over
>0 miles of wire, was built to have ap
proximately a capacity for increasing
the voltage of an electric current hav
ing a voltage of 2.000 and amperage
of 20 to a current with a voltage of
40.000 with an amperage of one. U hen
the connection was made the trans
former was tested to M.000 ▼oit».
more then doable its specified capac
ity.
P hysician , S urgeon and
A ccoucheur .
All calls promptly attended to.
T illamook .. O regon .
No cli.'irge for sowing rips on shoes I
purchased of me.
P, F. BROWNE, Agent,
S. STEPHENS,
• Real Estate, Insurance and
Agent for the
Northwest School Furniture Co., also
Notary Public.
OFFICE IN OLSEN BLOCK.
LAUDE THAYER,
Ageut for Fireman’s
Fund and London and Lanca
shire Fire Insurance
Companies.
Tillamook .. Oregon.
In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, ,
for Tillamook County.
Department No. 1.
State of Oregon.
I
Plaintiff,
vs.
Frank Severance, administrator >
of the Estate
of Herman I
Erown, deceased,
Defendant.
1 his cause coining on to be heard upon the
api lication of J. N. Hart. District Attorney,
for an order requiring all persons interested i
In i he estate mentioned in the information
heiein, to appear and show cause, if any
they have, within a time to be fixed by the
Court, why the title to the land described in
the information should not vest in the State
of ( regon, and it appearing to the Court
that upon the filing of the information here
in, a summons was duly issued to Frank
inancial
gent
Severance Administrator of the estate of
Herman Brown, deceased, the defendant
above named, and the person in possession,
requiring him to appear and answer the in- |
formation herein within the time allowed :
by law in civil actions ; that the said sum- '
OR ABSTRACTS OF TITLE,
mons has been duly served upon said de- |
fendant in person within Tillamook County,
Oregon more than ten days prior hereto ; |
GO TO
and it further appearing to the Court that I
this action was prosecuted bv J. N. Hart, I
TILLAMOOK ABSTRACT AND
District Attorney of the Third Judicial Dis
trict of the State ot Oregon, by the leave and j
under the direction of the Governor of said I
TRUST CO.
State ; that B. L, Eddy has been employed |
by said Governor as additional counsel' in T hos . C oates , Pres.
B. L. E ddy , Sec.
this cause ; that on or about the 12th day of
September 1899, one Herman Brown died j
intestate in Tillamook County, Oregon, and WM. GALLOWAY.
GILBERT L. HEDGES,
the said decedant was, at the time of his
death, an inhabitant of said county, and the !
owner of the following described real pro
perty situated therein, to wit :
The North Half
of the South Half;
ATTORNEYS.AT.LAW.
(bj), of Section Two (2), in Township ;
One <1) South of Range Seven (7» West Make a specialty of Land Office Business.
of the Willamette Meridian ; that
the
said Herman Brown was the person last OFFICE IN WEINIIARD BUILDINO,
seized of said real property, and he died
Room 1 and 2,
without heirs, leaving said' real projierty
escheated and vested in the State of Oregon,
OREGON CITY. ORB.
subject only to the lawful claims of credi
tors ; that Frank Severance, the above
named defendant, is the duly appointed,
qualified and acting administrator of the
estate of said Herman Brown, deceased, and
as such administrator, said Severance is in
possession of said described real projiertv i
claiming such possession for the purpose of !
ttorney at aw
subjecting the same to the payment of cer
tain claims of creditors against the estate of '
said Herman Brown, deceased.
It is therefore
regon
illamook
O rpkrkd : That all persons interested in I
the said estate of Herman Brown, deceased,
he. and they are hereby, required to appear '
before this Court, and show cause, if any
they have, within sixty days from the date
hereof, why the title to the real property
described in the information herein, and
being the estate of Herman Brown, deceased, |
late of Tillamook County, Oregon should •
not vest in the State of Oregon ; that this i
order be published for at least six successive
weeks from the date hereof in the Tillamook ;
Headlight, a newspaper published in Tilla
mook County, Oregon,
Heavy Teaming a Specialty with us
Done in open Court, this 9th dav of
November, A.D.. 1903.
Our Delivery wagon delivers to country
GEO H BURNETT. Judge
F. R. BEALS,
REAL ESTATE,
F
,
A
Tillamook, Oregon.
y T EDGES & GALLOWAY
w.
A
severance ,
-
-L
,
O
T
.
Quick Brothers,
HOUSEHOLD MOVERS
AND DRAYMEN.
or citv.
STATE OF OREGON,
Countv ofTillamook. » s,s’
1 HOM HR MASON, County Clerk and
Cl -rk of the Circuit Court of the County of
Tillamook and State of Oregon d<»
.......... hereby
certify that the foregoing copv of order has
been by me compared with thie original, and
that it is a correct transcript therefrom, and
the whole of such original order as the same
appears of record at mv office and in mv
custody.
In Testimony Whereof,
have hereunto set bv hand and affixed
the seal of said Court this 13th dav of
November. 1903.
HOMER MASON. Clerk.
G. F. Franklin
DOCS ALL KINDS OF
WATCH, CLOCK
AND JEWELRY
REPAIRING
In first class style.
FOR SALE
Dairy Farm of 120
Acres on the Miami,
Ensraving a Specialty
SEE THE
Tillamook Lumber Company
In Tillamook County, Oregon, Five
miles from tidewater. Good road. Pnce
$1,750, on easy terms.
For further information see County
Commissioner L. Parrish, Hobsonville,
Oregon, or write to Amon Rose. Temple,
on. Cal.
FOR
SHINGLES aid BOXES.
Shingles $2.25 1000.
I