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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1905)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JULY 13 (Tlje Tillamook Hrabligbt German Food Adulteration Love, capacity for friendship, every kindly emotion, every humane desire, Dr. H. Matthes, of the University of have long since died out. He trusts nobody, not even h;sconfidential business Jena, Germany, is the director of a agent, not one of those with whom bureau for the examinations of foods. he has acted in the past. The very wife In a recent rejs»rt he remarked on the of his bosom is an object of suspicion. ¡□differences of the masses to a lack of Friendless, alone in his big mansion, he purity and reliability in such articles, awaits his end, that most miserable of a state of things which is only too com all ends that can come to any human ¡ mon in other lands as well. Dr. Mat being. One passion alone remains. His thes examined over 500 samples in 1903 ap|ietites are gone, his food has ceased and 1,364 in 1904, These figures do not to nourish him, he can-take r.o pleasure include milk, of which he looked at 116 in anything tangible or mental, but his samples. It was found that apricots contained avarice grows stionger with the length ening years. It is a characteristic of this sulphurods acid ; effervescent lemon trait that it becomes stronger and ades did not contain a trace of pure fruit stronger the more it is indulged. Like juices; butter contained too little fat and Oils, Paint, Varnish, Doors, Window the green eyed monster, it makes the too much water; so-called baking butter meat it feeds on. A veritable Franken consists of oleomargarine; egg noodles Sashes, stein, it eventually devours th* one who contained no yolk of eggs, or at least has created and nursed it. It is a pitia only very small quantities; huckleberry ble spectacle, from which we turn with juice was spilled completely; raspberry disgust and loathing and, like one in juice was greatly diluted, and some oculated bv a poisonous bite we has samples contained glucose and coal tar dye stuffs; mincemeat contained sul. LSI ten to seek an antidote. VitlM? Here on the Pacific coast we find a phurous acid; ground mace contained man to contrast with this miser, His flour, ground toasted bread, Bombay Agents for the Great Western Saw. name is Burbank. Couple these two mace and nutmeg; marmalades were names. Sage and Burbank. And they mixed witli glucose and colored with arc well worth the coupling. The one, coal tar dyes; milk was watered, skim as we have shown, has spent a long med and often very dirty; pepper con. life for self alone in the most sordid tained lime, sand and a good deal of The Most Reliable Merchants in Tillamook County. of all pursuits. The other has lived shell; sausages contained flour, boracic for humanity. He has taught the agri acid and coloring matter; and preserv. cultural world how to obtain great re. ing salts contained sulphurous, boracic, suits by the application of science to flouric and benzoic acid. cultivation. He has produced new BOTTS, Gen. Linievitch’s present desire is t fruits. He has discovered new flow ers. Not an orchard, but will be en. fight, A week hence he will probably A ttorney - at -L aw . riched as the outcome of his work, not want to leaye Manchuria on the Siber Complete set of Abstract Books a garden that will not be more beau, ian limited. * * » tsful because of his diecoveriee. While (I As soon as Carrie Nation and her in office. Taxes paid for non Page was hunting for a new dollar, ■ Burbank has been searching for new hatchet left Kansas on another of their Residents. tarries,* apples, plums and plants, He national tours, Mr. Rockefeller tele, Office opposite Post Office. has shown us how to improve old graphed to Btart his pumps to pumping Both phones. species and create new ones. He gives oil again. * * * us an edible cactus to feed man and The characterization of Preeident Instep Skirts, Cloth and Silk Coats, Raglan’s Rain Coats. J1 animals in the desert, a blackberry Roosevelt as an international bully without thorns, frost proof fruit trees, shows that Mr. Carnegie occasionally ^2^7 H. COOPER, Exlusively to Measure. <l, plums without pits, a fragrant dahlia, gets some very inferior material in hit* SARCHET, the Tailor, Tillamook, i an improved prune and many other corner atones. Come early and secure first choice. A ttorney - at -L aw , rare and valuable forms. Burbank has * ★ * Satisfaction guaranteed in all cases. If Mr. Wallace will own up that he taught every farmer and gardener in ran away from the isthmus because he . ik- wv the land the value of applied science O regon T illamook , and has enriched beyond measure the was afraid of getting the yellow fever, whole floral and vegetable worlds. Nor all will be forgiven by an administra has lie done all this fol money or made tion which has suffered something money as the result of hie magical pro from men with yellow fever contracted OARL HABERLACH, The Best Hotel cesses. The financial benefit of his near the equator. * * * discoveries will not enure to him, but to ATTORNEY -AT-LAW, Il is announced that this year there mankind at large. In fact, he carries Peuteclter on his experimental work at a loss, and will be no curtailment of output in the this reason it was found necessary to iron and tjteel nulls of the Pittsburg Office across the street and north from the Post Office. vote him a large annual appropriation district «luring the summer months J. P. flbLtEjM, Proprietor from the Cernegie fund, established to This will be an innovation. Always heretofore there has been a slackening aid in all kinds of original research. In Headquarters for Travelling Men. H. GOYNE, this age of graft and greed it is well to of production for from four to eight emphasize the difference tat ween types weeks in the middle of the year at Special Attention paid to Tourists. for the benefit of the rising generation. that center. This has been the case A ttorney - at .L aw . A First Class Table. Comfortable Beds and Accommodation Which would you rather be, Rissel I even when business activity was at its highest. But 1905 will be an excep Sage, dying of gangrenous greed, and Office : Opposite Court House, leaving a vast hoard of gold, or Luther tion to this rule. There will be no Burbank, laboring for the world in his shutting down of the iron and steel T illamook , O regon . enchanted gardens by the shores of the mills this year, even for repairs of ma chinery. shores of the Pacific ?—The American * * * H. UPTON, Ph.G.,M.D., Farmer. According to the report of the Good a headquarters For Fred C. Baker, Publisher Graft. Thia peculiarly modern word has been invented to describe a peculiarly modern disease which threatens the ruin of the world by eating the very heart out of civilization, says, truthfully, American Farmer. It is found more or less everywhere, but has attacked our own Country ami Russia with especial viru lence. Usually it is applied to official corruption but it by no means stops here. It permeates every branch ot bust uess, ruling the merchant as well as the manufacturer, the contractor as well as i the promoter, the lawyer, the preacher and the captain of induatry. A very comprehensive term in the word graft, embodying as it does greed, peculation, bribeay, unlawful gain of all kind, the root of the evil being love of money. It was graft more Chau all things else that defeated Russia. This vice corrupted liwr administration, sapped her resour, cew, demoralised her army and navy, and exposed the whole empire as a mass of festering sores. In this country it is not quite so bad, but bad enough. It was graft that caused those postal scan- dais last winter. It was graft that brought about the impeachment of a Unite«! Stales ju«lge. Graft is at the bottom of the beef trust scandal, the Standard Oil robberies, the rebate rascalities and the criminal features of the big labor strikes. The labor leader frequently thrive by graft and the business firms they op|x»se indulge in the same game. Farmers suf- fer most from this insidious enemy of honesty and thrift, and they, of all' classes of our people, should unite for its extermi nation, The swindling town ship trustees who pay school supply men unlawful prices for all sorts of goods are grafters from way back, ami as this is a country office, farmers have to foot the bills. The graft micro pe of this species is at woik more or less iri all the states, but has been especially active in Indiana of late. Scores of trustees are under suspicion or investigation for wasting the township funds and accept ing bribes from school supply men. The latter are frequently no better that “green goods’* dealers, lightning-rod ami hay fork peddlers and similar scoundrels who prey on farmers. The saddest feature a taut the infam ous business is its invation of the judi- ical bench. Recently it w’as ascertained in Indiana that a number of the Circuit Court Judges, when called as specials to try cases on change of venue, had not hesitated to commit perjury in order to make live or ten dollars extra. The State allows them $ » a day while actu. ally engaged, and in several instances they swore to three days, when they had only worked on one. The state auditor was compelled to disallow hundreds of dollars of t liese fraudulent bills, hut the dishonest judges go on holding their offi ces an«l drawing their salaries. These are only a few samples, but if all the wblespreading operations of graft were made known it would take many vol umes to describe its poi*oiiouH transac tions. It is not battleships or more soldiers Hint we need, hut an uprising against graft ill all its forms. This country is in no danger from a foreign foe, but it is in the most deadly danger from the intrenched demon of graft. Japan has shown us—alas, that we had to go to pagan country to find out— that a nation may accomplish the great est things both in war and peace with entire freedom from graft. There is no graft in the Japanese army or navy. Every «iollar appropriated for the sol diers goes right to the spot intended. No officer has been getting rich by peculat ing in the supplies. Not a breath of scandal has twun heard ataut the mighty host while engaged in the most terrible of ware and *|»vnditig hundreds of mil lions of dollars. No embalmed t>eef 1 scandals, no chargee of incompetency or dishonesty, no skulking, no pilfering. | I n it any wonder that such a force as this should gain victory after victory I over graft ridden Russia T But it is our I especial budnew to reform abuses at home and not hunt for evidences of vioes in other countries. All the people can nsNist, of course, but it is upon the' millions of holiest farmers that we must j • lejanid to drive the money changes from ' the temple and the dishonest trustees, judges and other officials from office. DAIRYMEN’ AND S SUPPLIES STEEL STOVES & RANCES We carry a Large Stock of Hardware, Tinware, Glass and China, McINTOSH & McNAIR CO., NEW SUMMER FABRICS. Ï Headquarters for Ladies’ Tailoring, i Dress and W alking Suits, Dress Skirts, J. THE ALLEN HOUSE, Another Dash for the Pole. Lieutenant Commander Robert E. Peary started for the far North on July 4, in the steamer Roosevelt, which has been built expressly for Arctic explo ration from plans suggested by Perry from his experience in former trips to the Northern regions. Peary's aim is to establish his headquarters at as high a latitude as he can reach with his ship, and then, seizing the most fa vorable time, which will probably be May or June next, make a dash for the pole with his dog sledges. This time he will attempt to get a base far ther north than he had in previous ex- peditions, and thus be in a tatter posi tion to reach the goal. In the 300 years of Arctic explora tion, in which such navigators as Hud son Cook, Sir John Franklin, Parry, Kane, Nares, l>e Long, Nansen and Abruzzi have figured, discoveries have been made which have enabled geog raphers to map the globe to latitude 86 degrees north, or four degrees from the pole. Abruzzi, an Italian, who at tained the farthest point north reached by any explorer to the present day, went to within 237 statute miles ot the pole in 1900. In Antarctic explo ration the obstructions are far greater than they are in Arctic voyaging, fewer persons have participated in it, and the popular interest in it is much smaller. The nearest point in the south A Miser and a Man. pole reached by anybody to this lime Russell Sage is dying at the age • of was by Capt. Scott, a British navi ninety of Ncnility and imliecihty. 1 He, gator, who touched a spot within 670 has devoted all the years of his long miles of that pole in 1902. hie to one object, and it success consists ! What are the incentives for the at in attaining one's ambition, Russell Sage tempts to discover the north pole P New may ta pronounced successful. He made light will be gained on the question a god ol the dollar, labored incessantly of ocean currents and terrestrial mag to accumulate money, and on the eve of netism. All doubt as to whether there his enforced departure can show an is an open sea or a new island or con enormous hoard ot some hundreds of tinent around the earth’s apex will he millions. But he has gained his money removed. The big blank spot on the nt the sacrifice of every thing else. His maps of the higher Arctic regions will only enjoyment (or years has consisted j be filled up. The glory of succeeding in counting his gold, but even this was I where other explorers and counties not without alloy, ns it is the nature of for three centuries have failed will the miser to live in dread of loss. ta attained. The successful explorer, Though Coo decrepit to leave his house, whatever his nationality, will gain the his mind still dwells on his ruling world’s plaudits. For his little hour (Mission, and he grata for the miserable of triumph be will ta the largest per. pitta nee allowed him each week as a aonage on the planet. director in vario« corporations. The An alliance of Gaul. Briton and lap love of money has eaten out of his would ta one of the strangest things heart every human trait and made im under the nun until it forced an alli possible all those things which are ance of Teuton and Tartar, which would usually sup(H)scd to coulcr happiness. be stranger still. I Fine Line of Choice GROCERIES Mg Roads Commission the people of Illi PPYSICIAN AND SURGEON. nois have spent approximately $75,- 000,000 on their wagon roads during Office one block west of the the last twenty five years and yet these roads are in little better condition now Allen House, Tillamook City. than they were twenty.five years ago. Calls answered promptly. Obviously there has been a great waste, which is ascribed to the makeshift methods and a neglect of (a scintific R. BEALS, study of the road problem. The old Romans knew how to make roads “ for REAL ESTATE, keeps,” and some of those constructed by them two thousand years ago, are F inancial A gent , still in good condition. * * * Tillamook, Oregon. Not long ago an order was placed with one of the Carnegie mills in Pittsburg for enough steel ties to equip ten miles of '"pHOS. COATES, track on the Bessemer and Lake Erie A Agent for Fireman’s road, that runs from Pittsburg north Fund and London and Lanca ward. If follows a test made for six shire Fire Insurance months on a half mile section of that line. The Pennsylvania road has also Companies. ordered a few for experimental use near Tillamook .. Oregon. Emsworth. The New York Central i Company already has a lot of them in service near Castleton, and others have OR abstracts of TITLE, I been tried for months on the Lake Shore GO TO road. Some of these ties are said to have been in constant use for two years, TILLAMOOK ABSTRACT * * * The supreme court of Mississippi TRI ST CO. has affirmed a sentence of life impris ontnent upon a white man proved guil T hos . C oates , Pres. ty of a criminal assault upon a black woman. ’The Memphis News-Scimitar concludes that this is the first in ' W. SEVERANCE, stance on record anywhere in the South, and certainly in the state of Mississippi, where a white man has gone to prison A ttorney - at -L aw , for such an offense The fact that not a few men of the white race have been T illamook O regon . arraigned on such a charge only to be promptly acquitted, and the other tact that, because of the certainty in results 1 S. STEPHENS, of all such trials but a small percentage • Real Estate and Fire, Life, of such outrtiges are reported, make the Health, Accident, Insurance. action in Mississippi all the more inter esting and important. Agent for the Northwest School Furni ————————————— ture Co. nnd Oignns and Pianos. Notary Public. S tats of O hio , C ity of T olkdo ♦ q L vcas C ovmty , »' ! Office Southwest from the Court House, J C hknk \ make* oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F J. U hknks x in the building occupied n» a music »tore.' J Co., .loiutt basinets in the C.»tv of Toledo County au<i State aforesaid, and that Mid firm will pay the mm of ONE Hl NliK^D Doi.. LAKS for ea< h and every case of Catarrh tost cannot be cured by the use of H all s C atakrh Cum FRANK J. CHENKY Sworn to before me and subsetibsd in my presence, thiaoth day oflkvember \ 0. itSo I A Rotary Public. I Hall’s Catarrh Cure ia take internally and acts directly on the blooti and rencous surfaces of the system. Send lor testimomsla free F J CHENEY A CO. Toledo, O Sold by Orufxitts. -jc Hall s Fam J) Pills are the best ——::i"lnoiu;-i|.||n,,, iiiiiif—......................... II you are in want of Good Trees, guaranteed true to name, The EASTWOOD NURSERIES, Gresham, Oregon, Fruit and Ornamental Trees, Small Fruits, Vines, Fine Assortment of Rose Bushes. Send us list of trees wanted and prices will be quoted by return mail. Mrt'fy' ‘£at J hav<’ this 27th ’’"J’ of December, 1904. inspected and ,. tl'e Nursery Stock ot Mr E. P. Smith, of The Eastwood Nurseries, Gres- ,.i 1 ’ ?• . ’ nilri far as 1 aln "Me to ascertain, have found it in good, market, handb l’" "nd d'ar °.f a"V wrio,,s 'nsect pest or disease Their methods of handling and growing stock are first class. WJLBLR K. NEWELL, Commissioner First District. and Spruce Lumber. Spruce and Cedar Shingles. Cheese and Butter Boxes a specialty. Orders tor Lumber promptly attended to. TILLAMOOK LUMBER. COMPANY. AA. A < 4 BARBER HD HAIRDRESSER. HAIR Repair Shop, Opposite McIntosh fy McNair's. • A. J __ t LATIMER, BROS,. SHAVING, Repairs Guns, Locks, Typewriters, Keys, Bicycles and Sewing Machines. Makes a Specialty of Plumbing. K. CASE, PROPRIETOR Tillamook Iron Works 4 General Machinists & Blacksmiths. CUTTING I SHAMPOOING. ETC I Electric Baths nicely fitted up Goodfor 4 4 ft- persons suTering with rheumatism I Holler Work, logger’s Work and Heavy Forging Fine Machine Work a Npeeialty. TILLAMOOK, OREGON. I I » » » > » > ►