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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 28, 1905)
fouSavG Monsy. JOB PRINTING GET YOUR JOB PRINTING done AT When you Want Butter Paper, ♦ the Headlight Offiee. WE HAVE IN STOCK THE PURE PARCHMENT. Literary Supplement. Tillamook, Oregon, December 2ö, 1905. President by the people and for a term of seven years with Ineligibility for re ROOSEVELT IN DIXIE. measures everything by a money wage election. He opposed the requirement —a totally false and deceptive stand of a property qualification for voters President Speaks to the Followers ard of measurement of the best thing riSC/WJ HOME OF THE FAMOUS and also opposed the plan to make LIKELIHOOD OF CREA TION OF DE that human life affords. of Lee. slaves equal to freemen for purposes of In the United States two hundred GEORGE MASON PURCHASED GARDEN FAR MS THE FOUNDA representation in Congress. He re- PARTMENT OF INSULA R AFFAIRS. and fifty thousand of our people are President Roosevelt’s recent tour TION OF NIPPON'S POWER. BY TOM WATSON. fused to sign the Constitution as being annually destroyed by the great white plague, tuberculosis. adopted, and fought against its ratifi Field Covered by Secretary of War through the South was one continuous In Japan the disease is practically Considered Too Wide — President ovation from the people of Dixie, in 30,000,000 People Sustained in Com I American History Made Beneatn Its cation by Virginia. fort on Only 19,000 Square Mile* unknown. In the Virginia convention to ratify May Suggest Change to Congress. fact his visit has been heralded as be of Cultivated Land. I Bro*“ Verandas- Has Been Heator- Why? the Constitution Mason led the opposi ing as triumphant as the return of I td to its Original Beauty. Because the Japanese breathe fresh tion and standing with him were Pat Slnce the war with Spain, the enor any Roman emperor. Dixie was cap- (From “Chicago,” Tlie lUreat Central Market air. I Tom Watson, of Georgia, author of rick Henry, James Monroe, Benjamin July, 1SU6). by the Hough Rider President What would the Japanese think If I. "Life of Thomas Jefferson," is re- Harrison and William Grayson. The mous growth of the business of the ured At Richmond, the old Confederate War Department has given rise to an “A hundred years hence, leaving they were told that their people could I sorted to have bought Gunston Hall, leaders for ratification were John oft Capital, the greeting extended to him not have fresh air because they did expressed opinion in high govern I virriiiia. 15 miles from Washington, Marshall, Edmund Randolph, Richard ment circles that the time is fully ripe was unusually cordial. After much China out of the question, there will not have more money? 11nd"which was fiom 1750 to 1792 the Henry Lee, George Washington and for the creation of another executive parading and speech-making, tbe Pres be two colossal powers in the world, Or could not have exercise because huhie of George Mason, friend and ad James Madison, yet so great was Ma department to handle the control of ident was taken for a drive through beside which Germany, England, they could not afford to belong to viser of Thomas Jefferson, George son’s Influence that In 168 votes, the the island affairs of tbe government. the residence section. In the center of France, and Italy will be as pygmies— athletic dubs? >1 Washington, James Madison and Pat majority for ratification was only ten It is predicted that the President will this section is the great equestrian Or must go without food because rick Henry. The house is preserved and this majority was obtained only make some such suggestion in bis statue of General Robert E. Lee. At the United States and Russia.” they lacked money to buy It at a If any one had told Emile de La- and a few rods from it is the grave of after the required number of States forthcoming message to Congress. butcher or a grocery store, when Uiis point occurred a scene of the Pres Mason. The pyramidal piece of gran had already adopted the Constitution. Following the Spanish War, the War ident's visit which will probably be veleye, when he made this prophecy, every Japanese gardener has the land from which he knows how with Ills some years ago, that within a few ite shown in the picture stands above Department naturally took control of remembered when all others nave Of a Famous Family. years the power of Russia on the sea own labor to get all the food he needs the island possessions that came to the faded into oblivion. Ins grave and is inscribed: The first American Mason was George United States as a result of that con Surrounding the Lee monument is would be annihilated, and her laud for the abundant nourishment for GEOIIGE MASON, flict. These islands, Cuba. Porto Rico an iron fence, inclosing a circle of forces defeated again and again by tbe himself and family. Aitkor of the Bill of Hight« and Mason, great-grandfather of Mason of Gunston. He was a commander of a and the Phlllippines, fell to the care of lawn. The crowd was thick:1' grouped pygmy nation of Japan, would he The Garden Farm. pint Con.tltutlon at Virginia. troop of horse at the battle of Wor tbe War Department as long as they around this circle. Inside,' standing j have believed it? , 1720-1702. No, neither he nor any one else, at Of the 46,000,000 population of cester, where he fought in the Stuart were under military rule, but when upon the base of the monument and Japan 30,000,000 are farmers, or nor« Gunston Hall is on a ridge command cause, as did Colonel John Washington, civil government took tlie place of wandering about upon the lawn were that time, would hi.ve credited It The Incredible, the unbelievable, has correctly speaking, gardeners. The ing a fine view of the Potomac river, a a near relative of John and Lawrence martial law they were still left with sevent.v-tive broken, tottering old men. the War Department. clad in gray and carry’ g small Con- actually happened. There Is no result Japanese farm Is a garden. Irrigated ederate flags. Many hobbled upon without a cause. What is the underly and fertilized, aud BClentittcally and Kept From State Department. crutches, and nearly all leaned upon ing cause of this marvelous strength Intensively tilled. It would seem natural for them to canes. Here and there an arm or a of Japan? And a recent writer, describing the belong to the Department of State, but leg was missing. The voices of the old It is not in battle ships or siege guns life of the Japanese farmer, says:— they have been purposely kept from men were low, and they paid no bee I not In torpedo boats or field artillery “Measured In money, he is not rich. the province of that department in or to the crowd around theta. They —not In arms or armor—not in muni But he dwells In a comfortable and In Gunston der that foreign powers might not I were waiting for the President of tlie tions of war or equipment for battles viting home, purged of every taint of Hall have a chance to say anything about United States, he was to drive past on land or sea. Russia bad all these, dirt and dust. The transparent paper them. The bureau of insular affairs the monument. From time to time a and yet she has suffered crushing, hu walls of Ills house, made of bark from was created to attend to questions little, old man climbed epon a pedi miliating, and overwhelming defeat his mitRuinata shrubs, flood his dwell affecting our island possessions, but ment and stood, like the -ery incar What, then, is the secret of Japan’s ing with light and keep out the wind. this bureau has been under the imme nation of the Lost Pause, shading Ills strength? He enjoys good food served in dainty, diate control of the Secretary of War, eyes and gazing toward the coming but inexpensive dishes made of native Elficiency of the Unit. woods. Even In the homes of the and out of reach of foreign represent of the great, the powerful, the world- atives. It is In just one thing, and that 1 b poorest, there are no visible signs of renowned successor of Lincoln and poverty. There Is no squalor In agri With the turning of Cuba over to Grant. men! the Cubans and the passing of Porto It is In the efficiency of the unit cultural Japan. The humblest peas It was such a sight as this which ant farmer Is,clean, Industrious and Rico to tlie State Department and greeted the President when Ills car It Is In the physical and mental pow Guam and Tutuilla to the Navy De riage dashed up to the monument. er—in the health, strength, and intelli comfortable. The area of Jfenro corners 1»O$M partment, matters became even more Before the old men realized it. the gence of the .lapniiese people as a abandoned on many Ainericau Itu'ius involved. President was facing them and shout whole, and as a consequence, of every to wild mustard. fi'inn'I..Mrt Pig weed, would furnish eomt'oi tahl« living to a NO ing. “Come closer.” With confused ex-j individual soldier and sailor. Burden Too Great. ST and mental effi- whole family In rural Japan, the old men hobbled for- I And ___ this , physical . Almost of greater importance, at clamatlons cosfW ■vll ------------ ------ ■fcjtl witli BU1U11 small piVlCUHC pretense Ul of llllliuu- march- VIVUVJ' ciency Ul of <iu an vumv entire people ----- —of ui the vixxx ca»" en- idea of the trifling present, than the Philippines, is tlie ward, I, Willi forgotten the tire citizenship nation agricultural Japan was given TtJ ‘ -........................................ _ of * the " Japanese ' _ canal zone. Secretary Taft tried to iug. They had almost an American who has _«pent fifteen shunt this burden to the shoulders of years In the Empire. Frequently he Secretary Root, but failed in his at takes a vacation In the farming re tempt. lie is now preparing to make gions. He has good food, sleeps on a visit to the isthmus to see how the clea n and comfortablequilts In ltnpec- work on the big ditch is progressing. cable houses is carried about in coun- Mr. Root declared that the bureau of try carts,and at the end of two weeks insular affairs was lietter equipped finds flint Ills total BXMMBS h»1» not to handle canal affairs than any other Grave of exceeded ten yen, or five dollars.” department of the government And from the garden farms—the However, when Secretary Taft George Home Acres—of agricultural Japan left for the Phlllippines and It was have come the soldiers who hove ? understood that Mr. Root would be Mason dentil to drive the ItiiMlans from Man come Secretary of Slate, it was said cimii.-i .mil ie:i|i.il mto eternity In se 905 to be Secretary Taft s wish that the ll, r th.it tio-y mi^iit wipe the mbnace *■- canal matter be transferred to Mr. Root of tin- Russian vy from the seas that rrive. wash the shores of tMr WflW'Y.ffiW.' and there has been much speculation during the summer and fall as to who ■ji 0 a.m. N Nation of Home Acres. I mile distant It Is about Ave miles be- Washington, English Royalists and the would eventually oversee this big job. 0 p.m. ■ low Mount Vernon and three miles be- original Washington immigrants. On one hand it has been realized that It is an old say Jug mt a man will not tight for ,-i l ardln | low the ruins of Belvoir, the home of | The Mason family was originally of Secretary Taft, has had a great deal rrive. it Japanese have iwVfl I the first Fairfax In Virginia. Gunston Warwaiekshire and there are many more than his proportionate share of tight like demoiiN to < a Hall was probably without equal in Mason memorials in the Church of the government work and responsibility, tut Ions of a nntldn of Trinity at Stratford-on-Avon. and again it was understood that one I that part of Virginia at the time of Holy — ‘ We Instinctively tW ___ I its building, and is as well preserved Colonel George Mason, the first, was, of the arguments used by the President rles of Japan as the victories of her I as any other colonial house in Virginia I however, not a Warwaiekshire man, to Induce Mr. Root to re enter the Cab leaders. I It is eighty feet long and forty feet I but was born in Staffordshire. One of inet was the President’s personal de We are naturally hero-worshippers. I wide and is built of bricks twice the his fellovz Royalist refugees to Amer- sire that he should undertake the di But there, again, we are superficial. rrive. rection of the can work. , His accept 1 ica was Gerard Fowke, of Gunston, a I size of those made now. To the right Our military men were loud In their I kithe nortl1 entrance is the room ' hamlet in Staffordshire. The old Eng ance of the trust would have enabled praises of the masterly way in which Op.m. I which was occupied by Jefferson on hla lish Gunston Hall was standing a few Secretary Taft to devote more of his Kuropatkin played the game of war. I frequent visits to Mason. On the river years ago, and was owned by the Gif time to important Philippine govern And Rojestvensky must have the rriie. credit due lilm for sailing bls fleet four I portico is where Mason and Washlng- fords, descendants of the same Giffords ment questions and the business of the army generally. It seems to have been thousand miles and planning so . .11 who were Royalists with Fowke and I ton played at draughts by the hour. decided, however, that Mr. Taft is to 5 a.m clently to provide It with coal and pro o®?Tera' Years after the war Gunston Mason, ana who owned Boscobel, near continue permanently as the Panama visions. Hall in dilapidation was acquired by Gunston, where Charles II. lay In con canal builder, this decision having been 0 a.m But Oyama and Togo had the men, I tolonel Edward Daniels, a Northern cealment after the battle of Worcester. reached at a recent Cabinet meeting. and every Japanese soldier and sailor msn. The place was partially restored i The commonwealth commander at rrive These questions, togi-thcr witlijiues- Is not only a hero but a leader. If fy him. Colonel Daniels In the days of Worcester was General Fairfax, and it tions relating to tlie general staff, the every officer In the Japanese army and was a strange fate that made a depli reorganiznion of the army, and other reconstruction was the editor of the ant 0 p.m navy alsive the rank of Captain were of this man a neighbor to the Wash Juchinond Journal and was once a can ingtons of Mount Vernon and the internal affairs, have made the Secre stricken dead tomorrow, their plna* didate for the House of Representa would be Ailed and Japan would cMg tary by far tlie hardest worked man A- rirt Masons of Gunston Hall. Belvoir, the tinue to prosecute the war to final tives, but was defeated. He was a In the Cabinet. Fairfax estate, lay immediately be tory. The secret of her power lle^M ™se friend of President Grant, and 5 am. Taft Travels Far. Gunston and Mount Vernon the fact that In Intelligence, in mei^H t^niels really controlled the patronag» tween The first American Mason and Is proved, if in no other way. and physical strength, in In^Wld^H Op.m. « i?* State of Virginia. A spry oid Fowke settled in the northern neck of bv This the immense a mount of traveling initiative In patriotism, In gU that .'CM gentleman who has personally known Virginia, dine by Secretary Taft in the- past yent to make up :l liyliluiy Unit, «AMF but Fowke later removed to a hundred celebrities of other genera- Maryland. George Mason, the a®“«"“- He has been to Panama, to the I liillp- Japanese soldier a lid alior 1B h,e lives on land adjoining Gune- Oyma or a Togo in ernbryth '*4'” Mary Fowke, daughter of Ger ton Hall and which was a part of the married You might destroy ever! ebl* fly ard Fowke, and they built a home In “tate. Gunston Hall passed to Joseph Maryland, Japan possesses, destroy nil aB| which they called Gunston “Pecht, of St. Louis, and by him was Hall, in memory ami munitions of war, take ,-iWR/ gflBt of the English Guns iiOnlP^tely re8tor®d and beautiAed. He ton tile clothes on their backs ,nn4 Mflb These people were grandparents Ion via “iea three years ago and the place con of George Mason, the fourth, or George port every soldier In her ariVy S* I O.K every sailor In her navy back tinued in possession of his heir« and Mason, one of the shores of Japan as naked as the iia|K|i tn charge of a colored overseer. ) In 1750 this man married Anne Eilbeck were Istrn, and leave tbe nation wq* . A. 8TATUE OF GENERAL l.EE AT RICHMOND. Ealry Opposed to Slavery. of Mattawoman, Maryland, and 8°°” own devices, and In a few years «HP Group of Confederate Veteran« Walting to Hee the Preetdent George Mason was the Sage of Guns- after his marriage began the ey®®11®” would completely reproduce trelr «n. it was he who after conference of Gunston Hall, Virgin!“, wh ch h» old marching orders In their confusion. — Is a plain and distinct result of their naval and military power and be stronger than ever. They simply huddled forward to the mode of life. ana correspondence with Washington named after his grandparents place In The Japanese [>eoplc are strong be But destroy the men of Japan and » fence. The line was not reformed. ew up the non-lmportatlon resolu Maryland and the ancestral home of Then the President spoke to the South, cause they live na the human animal substitute for them the dull-witted tions offered by Washington and the Fowkes In Staffordshire. must live to tie mentally and physi peasantry of Russia or the enaemlc ignoring the crowd lieliind him. He Mason was one of the vestrynlP '’ dopted by the Virginia House of Bur- factory operatives of England, and spoke only to the wearers of the gray. cally strong—next to nature. wsses in 1769. One of these resolu- Pohlck Church, four They breathe the fresh air. you have destroyed Japan. He spoke as the President of a re t ons pledged the signers to buy no ton. Washington and William Fairfax They eat plain food. united country. His voice seemed as ■laves imported after November 1, 1769. were also vestrymen there. Men Before Battleships. They neither atarve starve nor g' JB. the voice of a nation speaking to the Mason was the author of a tract They are mentally and physically True to hie warlike Impulses and In- followers of Lee. UNCLE JOE CANNON'S ADVICE. ■tyied Extracts from Virginia Char stlncts, President Roosevelt catches up The veterans devonred every vigor active. ts and Some Remarks upon Them," They are an "out of door" people. the echo from the great tia.ya.1 baUl* ous syllable of the President's address. i.J)^?rtin8 the contention that the Brlt- NeVewra?»eefeHatb* Al' They tiDGprflfand nnt.erstand tbe law» laws of health, which inis pi-t )>•«■ fought, and call« They returned his earnest gaze with a « p?rliatnent had no right to tax the on tie- «Hli.try f.,r more bettie «htag. looks of unmistakable good will and and obey them. "nerican colonies. This tract had a i!o|.--f. .-I, i -. h id battle ship«. Ha Their children draw their strength loving friendship. Somewhat abruptly caKncieX 0 " ’ toffitae “® vogue in pre-revolutionary times. from tbe Itosom of mother earth. had more of th.m than Tom. Bat ba the President stopped, waved his hat. Mason and Washington attended the ,tor8y one day when he wl.hed ta enb And above and beyond all, they are didn't have tlie melPW^^^^^flnTanT It was to them like the balm of Gilead, them. Russian Institutions could ena’ meeting at Fairfax Court phasize the necessity for tel0 COL. CLARENCE R. edw 'ARD?’ b ^. and shouted, “Good-by, and good a nation of homes and home owners. get Chief of Bureau of Insular A ffairn and P06 " “use, ’ Virginia, in July, 1774. Wash- in« Vlr8inia, In wasn- - whole . truth truth, an and d farther ; now how • ma Each family Is In a home and sech not produce them. CIU sible New Cabinet Officar. luck. ” Now, would it not be wise for the Jton was moderator of the meeting. " aece’lved by half-truth: innk _ , 1» in a garden where health and house but aft. after . ----- look nines to Hawaii, to China and Japan. “Good-by, good-by.” they shouted, home MasOn presented twenty-four resolu- may “ leceivea rented a uj house, strength are gained by the labor of people of thia country to wake up to and a moment later President Roose w?n? .1“ adT0C»ry of non-intercourse ft went back to the real estate He has Just left Washington for his velt was out of sight cultivating that garden for a living, the fact that tbe foundation of our "Zon“trip to the Isthmus. Through as a nation la not In an army oin.< the toother country. These res- . with a complaint. And In these garden homes the peo strength a navy, but In our citizenship. .d"1 °na wer® adopted, and were also ‘ g„Y profess to have told me th,® his connection with the affairs of the pie of Japan have far more of real or And also wake up to the appalling Philippines, he has become Involved WmtBed by ““ Virginia convention at „ £ Btormed. “but you haven t Expert Naval Testimony. pleasure and happiness snd the genu fact, powerfully portrayed by Robert in August, August, 111*. 1774. at It was “he whole truth. There« that h! questions wholly outside the regular ine enjoyments of life than the aver . 7 When Dick Thompson, of Indiana, Hunter in "Poverty,” hla recent book me — line of the War Department. age wage worker In our country. «at body which elected Peyton Ran- told that we are delllwrnteiv bill..wing In These are some of the reasons which was called to the Cabinet as Secretary “°'Ph, Richard Henry Lee, George la“Reafny ‘“¿“proteted th® «ent, "I lead the footateps of England and degener the President and bls ■dyhwrs to of the Navy It Is said that he had Washington, Patrick Henry, Richard diatlnctly remember d^r\blD^ The White Plague Unknown. ating our citizenship by crowding our consider the creation of another de never even been on a large vessel. One "'and, Benjamin Harrison and Edmund la^h aydes " went Ä kicker*"You partment to take working people Into cities where ^7 h°J We hare fallen into a smug and they live in an unhealthful environ J'endleton delegates to the First Con- &a„^n °^W»t ta ihi^ the of his earliest visits was made to an self-complacent and wretchedly super- .„n1®"taI Congress, and that Congress informal inspection on a large man flelnl habit of thought which loses ment and are weakened by poor food and Inadequate nourishment. lutlonst,,*.y a<,0'ted th® Mason reso of war, lying at the Navy Yard. He sight of the life that a people lead and The lesson to lie learned by this na- thif climbed up on the deck, was escorted rtTanVes are that, within a Favored Election of Presidents by Best around the vessel, admired and com time the War Department will be re siri Answer me that. __ BULLpoqSUSPENDERS pliment« 1 the beauty and cleanliness of the People. re* lieved of some of lte heavy burden«. M«<i« in l.lVM and WeJgtot«, for Man «n<l îowth fair« )< itffttM. it all and Anally peered down the hold. aft*r once declining election, u live Stock Matters. Mm* i/rtr« With mors «laatic, warranted noa-ruMinf nwtal parta «ad He looked back at the officer, took off a »Molate Ir «nbreafcabl«. -NI, pliable Hull !»<>< leather end*, ibay «re ■nd once refusing to serve after elec- There I* no pie or potato«, father, FOaiTlVBLY TMt IUIMNDIR MAOK. hli fit—*, wiped them, looked down -°bsaid the u .J° th® Conti cental Congress, sat Tfyou dealer aaaot * >I , we will, p—A paid, for M».e.,ts b HEWKIA pQT-ft» 1-rreHHuHMnd.r.ndH.rtM.Mr. “^a‘ Pretty Uttte CaW' ^"‘uton'tbe'blieksmlth-. toil-worn again and then Anally turned to the * Constitutional Convention of commander and exclaimed. “Why the bapc. U, ST UVCOL* Vf . BOMW, MAM, " _ Co. , in that great body he opposed ValtMkM« B IUM, •* Pr«M »*4 l»0", ftMM , thing's hollow!" kpn TDfl’am.** said BtaTprinted • childish klan. ,, ’J7- saying it was a source of “na lots. L. A NEW CABINET OFFICE. THE STRENGTH OF JAPAN. 7'S7'’ j 3 Ml f "A er ■r : ! 1(1 A fl λ • » Vj X 5. Ì. J 9 h j i E- ■ P [4/ A I 1 (3S tional weakneee and demoralization. «• advocated the direct «lection of the «’S ““"L um v vvu m If. I" J