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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1906)
HOUSE FOR FREE SEEDS. LOWER BRANCO OP NATIONAL LEGISLATURE PASSES THIS APPROPRIATION. ANTI-MONOPOL Y LA IFS. Regulatlons in France Which Rigidly Prohibit the Cornering of Neces sary Commodities. It seems that our anti-trust and mon oply crusaders might learn something from the methods employed In our Sister Republic of France. There, capitalists are limited in their opera tions of "cornering” commodities. This applies particularly to those products which are considered necessities of life, such as grain and its products, bread, meat, wine, vegetables, fruit, butter, vinegar, coal, wool, silk, etc. Any "cornering” of such articles is a criminal offense in France. It has been so, with varying forms of penalties dealt out, since 1793. The offense has been made so broad and sweeping that It now includes all persons who de stroy or permit to perish merchandise of prime necessity, whether It is their property or not. The criminal code prohibits mani pulations tending to bring about an advance or fall tn price that is not warranted by the law of supply and demand. The law does not Include tobacco, of course, for tobacco Is a government monopoly and controlled absolutely by It. The punishment met ed out to the violators of this law con sists of both Imprisonment and fine, the term and amount being measured by the magnitude of the offense. In addition to this the offending manu facturer, merchant, or manipulator has his factory or bustness establishment placed under police supervision, the ex pense of which he pays for from two to five years. There is no more trouble In handling offending corporations than Individuals. Every director or employee In a managerial capacity Is responsible. For a second offense, the penalty is so severe that it would re sult in the extermination of almost any establishment Members of Congress “Haze” Op ponents of Free Seeds.—Confusion Precedes Final Vote on Bill..—Agri cultural Oratory. When the House of Representatives took up the agricultural appropriation bill, quite a discussion arose over the elimination of the usual free seed item by the committee on agriculture. The House gave to the country during the days of debate, a spectacle that else where than on the floor of that parlia mentary body, would have been known as "rough house.” There was a great tendency to "haze” members when they spoke in defense of the action of the committee. Much was said about the attempt to strike down the hard-working farmer and take from him that helping hand in the shape of free seeds which had been held out to him for so many years. None of the advocates of free seeds emphasized the fact that the total val ue of the package containing five small packets which forms the quota sent to each farmer cost the govern ment 1 V* cents, and that each member had the enormous sum of $150 worth of these seeds to distribute among his entire constituency. The arguments advanced sought to prove that the withdrawal of this subsidy of less than 2 cents to each farmer would drive the entire agricultural voting strength of the country into bankruptcy. ELOQUENCE ON TAP. Some of the speeches made will go rolling down the "corridors of time” as specimens of that matchless elo quence always on tap in the House of Representatives when a great national MEMORIAL DAY. issue is up for consideration. Mr. Henry, of Connecticut, submit No memorial day, or Decoration ted innumerable letters from his con Day, as It Is more generally known, stituents and from organized granges has ever come around, since after urging the abolishment of the free-seed the Institution of the observance, more practice. Mr. Mondell, of Wyoming, than thlrty-flve years ago, when a delivered himself of a humorous better state of feeling existed between speech In which he poked fun at the the North and South, and between Department Mr. Burleson, of Texas, the men who fought In the war, than opposed free seeds because he did not now. There has been a decided ten believe the intelligent farmers of the dency this year to all sorts of Blue and country expected the government to Gray proceedings. The Grand Army aid them in caelr business. Farmers, posts and the Confederate camps have under all circumstances, he said, had mixed themselves up In a most genial supported the government and never way. expected the government to support This does not mean that the special value of the day, to the northerner, as them. Mr. Burleson paid his respects, a commemoration of the services and rather sarcastically, to certain mem death of the Union soldier has lost Its bers who advocated free seeds on the fine edge. On the contrary, It has floor and then in the cloak rooms ' gained in zest The soldier died for sneered at the "Reubens” and "hay the Union, and those who lay flowers seeds” who demanded them. Mr. Bur- on bisgrave cannot do so without tblnk- IS OLD AS HE FEELS. CONFEDERATE DAUGHTERS. The Beat Way to Get Brooms Was A T EIGHTY-FIVE YEARS, SENA- to Beg tbe Money and Buy Them. MRS. GOODLETT OF NASHVILLE— OR PETTUS DISGUSTED AT A veteran of the civil war. In com FOUNDER AND PRESIDENT OF menting on the so-called Panama BEING CALLED AGED. NATIONAL ORDER. Constituents Idolize Him-But They are Preparing to Hold an Election to Decide on Successor—in Case He Dies. Something unusual is happening in Alabama. The people unanimously want Edmund Winston Pettus to con tinue to serve them in the United States Senate as long as he lives. Yet they are preparing to hold an election to decide upon his successor. The rea son is that when Senator Pettus' pres ent term expires, in 1909, he will be 88 years old, and the election is to be held because Alabamans fear he will not live longer than that. But “Grand pa" Pettus is indignant. He says he is as spry as he was at 60 and that be expects to live out the whole six years of another term. He is candidate for re-election on the platform: "A man is as young as he feels.” Senator Pettus had reached the time for chloroforming, according to the so-called Osler doctrine, back in '63— about the time he was performing deeds of daring in defense of Vicks burg, fighting with the Confederate army. It seems that the situation had become desperate; volunteers were called for a forlorn hope. A brigade of reckless Texans offered for the service, and Pettus offered to lead. And he did lead—led where fight was hottest, and at the head of the column, his six feet four looming large in front, that protruding lower jaw set on tak ing those works at any cost. Where that tall figure rose and that black straight mane waved those Texans followed. They loved him for his dar ing, and when all was done and they learned that he was from Alabama and not from Texas they Insisted on adopting him for their State, and by one acclaim he was christened "Old Texas.” Pettus was a Forty-Niner. He rode from Alabama to California on horseback with a company of some forty of his neighbors. * He was a mere lad then of twenty-eight, but had al ready had adventures in the Mexican war, in which he fought. At eighty- five his record is said to be something like this: Enjoys a game of cards, reads his Bible, loves flowers, runs no bills, carries a red bandana, calls his wife sweetheart, has a fund of subtle humor, and being a Senator who works, hasn’t time to think whether the Grim Reaper is twenty or only ten years off. That, his friends believe, is a good enough platform in itself. Joys la Tree Planting. In the early spring the tree fakir Is thriving upon the fad for foreign trees and shrubs. About the time the snow disappears in early spring the tree fakir takes his grubbing hoe, his prun ing shears and a ball of twine and goes into the woods. There he grubs up tree sprouts—sumach, oak, alianthus, hick ory, beech, poplar, chestnut—or almost anything else will serve his purpose. These he trims and prunes and ties up in bundles for removal to the place where they are to be stored. When the spring tidying up of the home garden commences the tree fakir makes bis appearance in public. He will show pictures of rare Japanese or Chinese or Mexican or East Indian shrub trees and offer to supply you sprouts at a figure that is most Invit ing. You see an opportunity to get a plant worth $12 for $1, and then you think of the envy which that queer, red-leafed, wide-spreading bush will excite In the breast of your neighbor— and you buy. By and by you shout with joy and call your wife out to see the tiny leaves, and then you begin to brag and look down upon your neighbors. You invite them in to see the wonder, and you talk learnedly of horticulture in Japan or the East Indies. And then your glorious tree bursts into leaf—when you discover that you have bought an ordinary, common, everyday sumach or a maple, or, per haps. a scrawny little peach tree. Then you lie in wait for him, and you meet with another disappointment. He doesn't come around any more. Aftertbougbts. SCENES IN ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETRY. Where Are Burled 26.000 Union and Confederate Dead. 1. Monumept to 2,111 "Unknown Dead.” 2. Mansion House of Gen. Robert E. Lee. 3. Amphitheatre Where Memorial Services Are Held. RED TAPE IN DAYS OF ’81. The ratio of married couples living to celebrate the golden anniversary Is 1 to 11,000. According to Pekin reports, the Chi nese bandits are almost as active as leson challenged anybody to show a i ing of the Union and its sacredness. East Side rioters In New York. single resolution passed by an organ But the Union is now secure forever. A Milwaukee poetess won a barrel ised body of farmers favoring this The rancors of war time are dead. The work of the hero of that war is of flour in a poetical contest. Few “species of graft." Mr. Mondell held the attention of ; complete. There Is now no further poets are so lucky in landing the the House until he had concluded, and occasion for maintaining the conflict dough. bla speech was the one cool, dispassion that be had part in. "Chicago bristles,” says Henry At the side of the soldiers’ graves. ate episode of the day. "The question James, proving that they took him on la.” said be, "Shall we continue to en In this year of 1906, many stalwart the usual sightseeing trip through the dear ourselves to the hearts of our grandsons of men who are buried stockyards—bogs and cattle. constituents by distributing among there will stand with flowers in their • __— them a few packages annually of seeds bands. 1865 was a good while ago. The baby that was born In a parlor A certain amount of the decorating of unknown vintage and uncertain car on the Lake Shore road can claim heredity of the fragrant onion the ! this year will be done by veterans' that whatever success he achieves later great-grandsons. For there were old luscious rutabaga, and the humblejbut in life was due to early training. glorious—'the kind that mother used to ■ fellows In the ranks of Bull Run and at m»kg—pie promoting pumpkin, or shall Gettysburg on txrth sides. But there Henry James calls himself a "frus wfc with Spartan self-denial, forego were youngsters, too, and thousands of trated American.” Those of us who thli ancient and potent promoter of these we have with us still. They are have tried to understand Mr. James’ honored above all other men and pro books belong in the same class. our claims to statesmanship?” Mr Mondell concluded by convulsing perly, on Memorial Day. It Is their The Washington State Supreme „ House with a famous poem wnt- day. Nothing can be more impressive Un by ^e’poet lariat" of hi. State than, their annual turnout. It is the Court has given George H Melse $14,- on the subject under d.scussion by nation's most beautiful spectacle, and 000 for the loss of a leg. George’s the honoring of it weaves Into Amer financial standing la now assured. *hWben Mr. Cocks, the representative lean lives the enduring pattern of . 'president Koosevelfs district on l>atriotism. Dr Wiley, the Government Chemist EjTsfcnd. began to Is looking Into the question of how long Boston has a public school teacher— refrigerator plants may keep food with iree-seed evil be soon had the House t^Tears. Messrs Sullowey and Mias Clara Donne—who has taught out detriment to the consumer. He is, of course, after ths cold facta. | continuously for fifty-seven years. (Costlawd os next »•*•> circumlocutlqn oliice, gave some amus ing reminiscences of the working of the “rep tape” during the days of 1861. “I was quartermaster sergeant in a New York regiment and had been detailed to assist in handling a bunch of recruits,” he said. “At the end of the first week I discovered that we were out of brooms, and when I re ported the matter to the lieutenant he told me to stop off at tbe ordnance store when I rode in to get the rations. Strove for Years to Unite Various Southern State Organlzations- Active Worker In Many Charitable Institutions. Few have accomplished more for living patriotism as well as peri>etuat- lug the memory of the heroic «lead of the Southland than Mrs. M. C. Good- lett, of Nashville, Tenn., the founder and first president of the United hers, whose birth has ments and loving tribute lug and dead Southern object in uniting the South was to bring pull shoulder to should Confederate veterans in necessary aid to the needy the war between the State historic places of the Con record the part taken by women, as well In untiring’" the war in the reconfltrgM South as in patient e hardship and patriotic d*.,_____________ Ing the st niggle; to honor the wflfkory / of those who fell In the eervi0$ M the Confederate States; and to. cherish ties of friendship among the member* of the society. She worked for years striving to ■I organize the United Daughter« of the ( <'.>nf<sl.-ra<-> In-fore even her own association of which she was presi dent would co-operate with her In call ing a convention and inviting other Daughters of tile Confederacy to Unite In forming a national association. At - this time, besides being President Otthe w Tennessee Daughters, she was a mem ber of the National Conference pf Charities ami Corrections, the atlooal Prisoners Association, and the National Humane AssocintIon, and was edth cated up to the point where she could see the advantage of eousolldating the scattered forces of Conf »-derate work ers who were few and fur apart. Her work with the national association* showed her tlie great possibilities 1* concert of action, and, having time, means, and social Influence to back her in the work, she determined to carry out her plans, and unflinchingly fought opposition from start to finish. The . result was that on September 10, IfflM, / the Society of the United Daughter* of £■ the Confederacy was- organised at x Nashville, Tenn. When the Tenneseeana announced a Y little over a month ago that they pro posed to have a portrait of Mrs. Good lett painted and placed In the museum at Richmond, Va., appeals came at once from the chapter of the States re questing that they might also con tribute loward honoring their founder. The requests were complied with and i the portrait was unveiled at Nash ville, Tenn., June 8, 1905. Granted. MRS. M. C. GOODLETT, President United Daughters of the Confederacy. I made out a requisition for half a dozen brooms and he signed it. When I got to the store I showed It to the sergeant In charge and be laughed at me. “ ‘You must get it signed by the major,' he said. “I finally hunted up the major and he told me that the order must be on army form 7iX),H97K, and not on foolscap. I told him that my party were recruits and we had no statlon- ery. He told me to go or to send to Washington and get some. I explained that this would take long and that the brooms would not do any good if we did not get them sooner. He then asked if the lieutenant was tbe com- mander of my corps. I answered that of course he was not. ‘Then,’ I was told, 'he must put under his name “For Officer Commanding.' ” “I went back to camp, and after writing out a new requisition had the desired Improvement made. When I returned to the major he explained that it was all wrong. Instead of saying ‘required for such a regiment and company, six brooms,’ I should have concluded It with 'brooms six.' I scratched out the line and rewrote It. I was then told such corrections were not allowed, and a new requsi- tlon was necessary. I drew up a new one and asked If it was ail right The major reluctantly said he thought it would pass. I then rode back to camp nnd got It signed. Taking It to the ordnance store I was Informed that nothing could be Issued on such an irder. It had to be registered. I asked for further particulars, and was In formed that tills could lie done at the major's office. Once more I trotted back and eventually a corporal placed my patter under a little stamp and In flicted a mark something like a no tary’s seal. Again I went to the ord nance store. “ 'Is this all right now,' I asked. “ ‘Yes,’ answered the sergeant. ‘It's a bit irregular, but it will do.' “ ‘May I have the brooms now?’ " ‘You can’t have them at all,’ an swered the sergeant, severely. “‘Why, In Heaven’s name, can't I?" " 'Because,' he replied as he turned away, we haven’t any. We are all out of them.' ” Scrutinise your rbsnse carefully; a dan- seroua counterfeit thousand dollar bill baa been discovered. Pirates bare stolen s Htandard OU vessel. There Is sppsrenily no longer honor auiouf members of tbe profession. Dr. Wiley, chief chemist of the Agricul ture! Department, says that hottlad whis key la tbe safest. Of course It Is, ss long as It stays bottled. Tbe Chicago New« ways that » man may flirt with aome of the girla all the time and all of the girls sorrte of the time; but that no man has a right to flirt with all tbe girls all tbe time It Is solemnly asserted that the two grast political parties t<ol»tb»r. only sp.at Pair million dwi'srs darin« th* last presidential campaign. How ro-ild tb»y manag» to pay for stationery alone with such a miserly allowance. Daughters of the Confederacy. No one but a woman of such force of character united to the social training that comes from Inheritance through a long line of ancestors, together with parliamentary experience, could have conceived and firmly established In so short a time a society that now num bers 40,(XX) members. Mrs. Goodlett Is very modest in speaking of this cherished child of At the Grant family dinner Major General Frederick D. Grant told thig story on himself: "I was booked to speak at a large dinner In town and the toastmaster felt It Incumbent upon him to make my path as smooth as possible. He therefore spoke of my father and said I strongly resembled him. This had the desired effoct on the people present, and they gave me their best attention. "Although I spoke as well as I could, I felt that everyone was disappointed In me and I sat down with relief that It was over. "The toastmaster rose and smiled at me. Then he said to the guests: " 'Didn’t I tell you he was just Ilk* his father? He can’t speak worth * cent'" _____________________ r-*- STOW \S BWPIW6 IT IS NOT AN EASY MATTER to make a million people believe that so good a magazine as Maxwell's Homemaker Mag- agine can be published for ten cents a year. But we are because the magazine speaks for itself and tells its own story. Here is wbat one of our subscribers at Crockett, Tezas, writes: ‘‘The March number of your excellent magazine is before me. It is certainly filled with helpful articles, and I would be glad to know that every family in Texas had the benefit of its teachings. The first article in this number, • A Homecrofter’s Garden,' should be preserved for reference. Titz A zticlz • H zalth in ths H oms ,’ ir cazkfully follow «!», would savx skkniss in «vzav family . Anything that I can do to assist you in extending your circulation in Texas will be gladly done.” Our circulation has grown so satisfactorily that with the April number we were able to enlarge the magazine and add several new features, and it will continue to improve every month. If you have not yet seen the magazine, write for a free sample copy. It will convince you that for only ten emit a year you can get a magazine of more real genuine value than any other magazine that is published to every one who is really studying how to make the homo life better and happier, how to lighten the housekeeper's labors, how to bring up the children and keep them and the whole family well and strong all tbe time, and do it all on a moderate income. “ The Delights of Gardening” in the April number would open tbe door of a new life in many a family if they would read it. And here are some of the other Departments: Stories and Sketches, Little Folks in the llome, Home Etiquette, Tbe Home Gurden, Garden Notes, Editorial Comment, The Home Study, Music in tbe Home, Entertaining in the Home, Home Sewing, Cure of tbe Home, Health in the Home, Home Cooking, Building the House (with plan and design for a cottage home), Home Handicraft, Home (beer. Nou will get this April number and in addition O ni W hol * Y kaz ' s SussoumoN, covering twelve copies of the magazine, one each month for twelve months, if you will put one dime in five two cent it am pi in an envelope with your name and address I wn/v it plainty}, and mail it to MAXWELL'H HOMLMAKEB M AGAZINE, 1406 Fisker Building, Chicago, III. I)o It Now—Don’t Delay