TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, FEBRUARY 23, because the people joke over the custom. 6-bf Tillamook Oraòbgbt The precedent thus eetablished might logically result in the abolition of the Fred C. Baker. PublUlier. senate. The fact remains, however, that the The Local Option Situation. results attained by the free distribution The Jayne bill, which was prepared bv of small packets of seeds through con­ the liquor interest to defeat the provi­ gressmen consist mostly of a pleased grin sions of the local option law, was sent on the face of the constituent favored. to the graveyard bv the senate on Er- Better seeds might be purchased of any day by a narrow majority. But no one reliable seedsman at 5 cents a package, need imagine that this will eml the fight I The custom costs much more than it w hether the liquor interest is to Uvome comes to. People buy their seeds now. the political dictator in this state or : adavs. Time was when seed houses whether the people of Oregon is to rule. j were scarce and new varieties hard to Without giving the present law a fair ; obtain, Then the custom actually in trial, the liquor men blitted in to defeat ; troduced valuable seeds and gave neigh it. First, the will of the people was d< I hors “a start’’ toward more valuable feated in several counties and precincts j crOp8. ft was not a joae in the old days, oil account of some technicality, or, in | Now it is a good old custom in a new other words, on account of the negligence i day. It has survived its usefulness. < r carlessm ss of county officials failing to j Pass it up.—Live Stock World. comply with some trivial matter in call- I ing an election. Another instance of this , Most Money Made in Winter. will come up at the next term of the cir- j “ This should he the harvest time for ed Sunday. H.A. Kinnaman and family,H. 1 Fol a nd and family were visiting at W. Kinna- yip man’s Sunday. Rev. White passed throug our neigh borhood Monday. Some of the neighbors are burning slashing during the good weather. H Poland went to town Wednesday. Miss Effie Holt, Mrs. Pichercau and daughter Hortense, were visiting at A. Kiiinaman’s Monday evening. B. Wallace’s house is going up slowly, Hermann Tobi is back in this part of the country again. He is building Mr. Dye’s house. II. A. Kinnaman and wife went to Pleasant Valley Thursday. Little Buel Woods, of Pleasant Valley is quite sick. Lou and Clyde Kinnaman are still working at the Yellow Fir mill. Clyde says it isn’t hard for him to keep the steam going, as the wood and gas both work well. C. Mills has been riding around the last few fine days, wonder if some one is about to sell out. Tom Coulson is working on his new house up East Beaver. Headquarters for Ladies’ Tailoring, if Dress”and Walking Suits, Dress Skirts, Instep Skirts, Cloth and Silk Coats, Raglan’s Rain Coats. E Exlusively to Measure. V SARCHET, the Tailor, Tillamook It is reported upon authority that of the total number of cattle in the United States today considerably over half are what may correctly he called native scrubs. By this is meant that they are not even worthy to be called graded, which term signifies that an animal con- tains some pure blood of one breed or another. The total number of pure breds in the country is extremely low, being estimated at less than one-fiftieth of the total qumber of living cattle. The num ber of grades is estimated at about one- sixth of the entire bovine population of the country. This does not look as if pure bred breeding was being overdone, orcven as if the time was very near There is when it would be overdone stirelv plenty of room for pure bred cat­ tle breeding yet. There is money in the business, too * * * The state of Kansas, with $400,000, ami a stiff-backed population, has set about the task of fighting Standard Oil, with $100.000,000,000. and tentacles spreading all over the United States and foreign countries. The battle between the Sunflower State and the greatest of all monopolies and its ultimate outcome will well be worth watching. Back of the state of Kansas are powerful influen­ ces which have not yet appeared upon the canvas. The people of that state have appealed to Thomas W. Lawson, of Boston,,who has already paid his sar­ castic compliments to Standard Oil, to take the generalship of the fight, but it is doubtful if he will accept. However, it is figured he mav be relied upon for any friendly counsel. In Pennsylvania there is a powerful independent company ami it has been asked to join hands in the battle. An English syndicate with dazzling capital is said to stand ready to build a pipe line to the Gulf of Mexico and thus give Kansas a market for her oil. * * * Within the walls of the far-famed Kremlin Palace nt Moscow, and almost underneath the historical tower from which Ivan., the Terrible watched the heads of his enemies falling beneath the ax on the famed Red Square and within a stone’s throw of the great bell of Mos­ cow, Grand Duke Sergius, uncle and brother-in law of Emperor Nicholas, met a terrible death on Friday after­ noon. The deed was committed bv a single terrorist, who threw beneath the carriage of the Grand Duke a bomb charged with the same high power ex plosive which wrought Minister von Plehve's death. The missile was pack­ ed with nails and fragments of iron, and its explosion tore the imperial vic­ tim’s body to ghastly fragments, which strewed the snow for yards around. Every window in the great lofty fa. cade of the Palace of Justice was shat­ tered and bits of iron were imbedded deeply in the walls of the Arsenal, a hundred yards a wav. M * * President Roosevelt said some sensible words on the race problem for North as well as South in his Lincoln day address, The problem as he states it, is to so deal ’’with the man of one color as to secure him the rights that no one would grudge him if he were of another color.” He points out that while the South violates thi^principle in many ways in its treat meat of the negro, the North is not al­ ways free from blame in its dealings with the black man as a laborer and a member of society. What the President urges is to so adjust the “relations be­ tween two races ot different ethnic type that the rights of neither be abridged not jeoparded ; that the backward race be trained so that it may enter into the possesion of true freedom, while the for- ward race is enabled to preserve unharm­ ed the high civilization wrought out by its forefathers.” This involves not only a training ol the black man, but also of the white man, for it is on the latter, in the United States, that devolves the great task of extending the privileges of freedom and of working out the destiny of the advanced .civilisation which has ts home in this country. 1905^ è Come early and secure first choice. Satisfaction guaranteed in all cases. J Fir and Spruce Lumber. Spruce and Cedar Shingles Cheese and Butter Boxes a specialty. Orders for Lumber promptly attended to. TILLAMOOK LUMBER. COÎDPÆNY. THE ALLEN HOUSE, Independent Church. The object of this church is to advance the gospel, the glad tidings, the good news of the kingdom of God. The socialist gives us all that can be con­ ceived by an atheist for the betterment of social conditions. The doctrine of the kingdom of God, all that God has in store for those who love him. The kingdom of heaven at hand. I want something now. The socialist tells me that I will have to wait until they have a majority. The religionist, until I get to heaven or until the end of this world. Thy kingdom come. When ? Now would suit me best. God is the soverign of the Church—governmeut and neighborhood, It is my accountability to God that determines my worth as a neighbor, a citizen or a mem­ ber of the Church. And this is the Important hsue of the independent church, not to parley about fancies. God glories in his kingdom and it is his will that all men be­ come subjects to his kingdom. ” The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof.” The kingdom of God is the only evolution from our present condition. God deals with the rich to whom the poor look for their daily bread, until they decide to trust in God. The coal mines, oil wells, forests, public domain, labor saving implements and machinery, facilities for transportation, waterways, etc., are for the nation that trust in God’s soverignty, but if we distrust God, the resources of the nation will be monopolized by the few’, and obtained by bribing the people we have entrusted to re­ present the interest of the nation. God ordained that men build homes and raise natural families to glorify his name and fill his kingdom. The resources of this earth are for no other purpose. God holds men ac­ countable to their treatment of other men. • With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again.” "He that cometh toGod must believe that he is, and that he is a rew’arder of them that diligently seek him.” The antagonism of the sectarian churches is obviated by the Independent Church Sectarian churches stand on what Chris­ tians may differ. The Independent Church on what all Christians must agree. A father had a large family of children. He proposed to make a boquet. He suggested that each go and gather a bunch of whatever appeared to him or her the most beautiful kind of dowers. One chose a rose, another a lilly, etc., each contending within himself that his kind was superior. When they came home no two had the same kind. The father bv arranging them had a delightful boquet of the choicest flower*. Sectarian churches have one issue that they impress above everything else. If you go into a Catholic Church you will see the glory of the cross above everything. If a Baptist Church, baptism, showing forth in the death, burial and resurrection of Christ . but if in an Adventist Church, the second coming of Christ is the central thought. There arc different ideas of the future home 1 of the redeemed Some think this earth is to l»e made a desirable place, while others think that heaven, where God resides, is the place, but wherever it is. there is no one but that will allow that the redeemed will be made up of Chriatiaqs from every church and they will have to dwell together throughout eternity Methodism. Presbyterianism or any other ism or ists will have lost its characteristics. W hy not learn to associate together in this world » If ys love not your brother whom he have seen, how can you love God whom ye have not seen. N ho is my brother but the redeemed. The Independent Church stands for the soverignty of God. To become a subject of his kingdom is but to subscribe to his will. Just as one would become a subject of Great Britain by taking the oath of alliegancc to the King of England, or a Catholic by alliegance to the Pope Kvery one will agree that there is a divid­ ing hne between the lost and redeemed and the possibility of both belonging to the same church and that God alone is the eter­ nal Judge We may pass our opinion, but it | is not infallible, it is left to God to swtain or reverse. j c. , The Best Hotel J. P. ALtUEN. Proprietor Headquarters for Travelling Men. Special Attention paid to Tourists. A First Class Table. Comfortable Beds and Accommodation Pacific Navigation Co STEAMERS—SUE H. ELMORE, W. II. HARRISON. ONLY LINE-ASTOTIA TO TILLAMOOK, GARIBALDI, BAY CITY, HOBSONVILLE. Connecting at Astoria with the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co. and also the Astoria & Columbia River R. R. fol San Francisco, Portland and all points oust. For freight and passenger rates apply to SAMUEL ELMORE & CO. General Agents, ASTORIA. OR B. C. LAMB, Agent. Tillamook Oregon. Agents R & N- R R- Co '. Portland. Agencs 1A. & 0. R R. Co., Portland. Sue H. Elmore carries Wells Fargo Co.’s Expres Ac dSs. jtfk j A kj A c . j A t j A A Ä Ar. A Ac A A A A A A A AAA A A. K. CASE, < PROPRIETOR < Tillamook Iron Woks < < General Machinists & Blacksmiths 4 4 4 4 Boiler Work, Logger’s Work and Heavy Forging Fine Machine Work a Specialty. TILLAMOOK, OREGON. Rates, $1 Per Day Centrally Located. LARSEN HOUSE, M. H. LARSEN, Proprietor. TILLAMOOK, OREGON The Best Hotel in the city. No Chinese Employed. SELLING AT COST ! THE RED SHOE HOUSE IS I/// Goods Closing Out its Entire Stock of BOOTS AND SHOES AT COST. ail First Class and up to date. My health compri. to make „ chanRe Thu Kepamng Neatly Done. P- F. BROWNE, Salesman.