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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1906)
NELLIE GRANT SARTORIS. Mrs. Grant accompanied the young This showing of the Department of couple co New York, whence taey Agriculture, while it makes a com sailed for England. paratively small inroad upon the vast of sugar in the more SKETCH OF THE LOVELY WHITE BLESSED WITH CHILDREN. GOVERNMENT REPORT SUO WS consumption densely populated rejlon east of the HOUSE BRIDE OF THE DAYS UE Al TUT GROWTH IN NEW Mrs. Nellie Grant Sartoris had three Mississippi, yet indicates that the OF GENERAL GRANT. children, two daughters and a son. young beet-sugar industry is making AMERICAN INDUSTRY. The eon, who bears his father s name, substantial progress, and that con sidering the uncertainty of legislation She Met Algernon Sartoris, Her | Algernon, was for a time an officer in Colorado Leads — Industry Every and the great cost of beet-sugar fac Future Husband. on Shipboard un i the United States army and saw some where Proving a Powerful Aid to tory investments, very satisfactory ad Return European I rip-is Mother j service in the Philippines, but his industrial and Social I health compelled the abandonment of Agricultural, vances ere being made in this new oi Three Children. a military career. During the past Development. American enterprise. No American girl, not even President | few years he has traveled extensively In spite of apparent efforts to crip Roosevelt’s daughter, ever had a more and some months ago was married to ple or kill it off. the beet-sugar in TEN ACRE FARMS. brilliant wedding than Nellie Grant, a very beautiful young woman In dustry of the United States is making the beloved child of the great Civil Paris. The eldest daughter, Vivian, steady progress. Bill Allows Government War hero; yet of late years the public, was married a year or two since, but Congress has Just received the an Pending Lut up Homesteads into Small which has always taken a kindly inter the younger daughter, Rosemary, the nual report of Special Agent Charles est in Gen. Grant's family, has heard beauty of the family. Is still unmarried. F. Saylor of the Department of Agri The tendency Tracts. of the times is to en comparatively little of his only daugh Some months since much discussion culture on the status of the beet-sugar courage better farming in smaller ter. was precipitated when it was rumored industry for last year. Fifty-two areas. It is coming to and be recognized When Mrs. Julia Dent Grant, widow that she was engaged to the son of beet-sugar factories were In operation. that tbe proportion is small of farms of the President, was living, her one of the Confederate generals who 5 were standing idle, and 12 were be which are thoroughly tilled and made fought against General Grant in the ing constructed for operation thia daughter spent much time with her mother at the latter’s home in the city campaigns of the Civil War. of Washington, but since the death of Mrs. Nellie Grant Sartoris is a her mother Mrs. Nellie Grant Sartoris woman who has always been held In can scarcely be said to have had a fixed high esteem by a lai^e circle of fem residence In any American city. How inine friends. From her school days ever, she has always been very fond she has seemed to inspire the regard of St. Louis, and she made her home in of members of her own sex, and some the Missouri metropolis during most of idea of her popularity may be formed the time the recent World’s Fair was from the fact that on the occasion of her wedding she was attended by In progress there. Possibly the liking of Mrs. Sartoris eighteen bridesmaids, all gowned alike. Mrs. Sartoris is several years younger for St. Louis is to be attributed to the f fact that her birth, In August, 1855, than her famous brother, Gen. Fred UNLOADING SUGAR D. Grant, of the United States Army, occurred at her Grandfather Dent’s ON country home near St. Louis, the birth but her birthday was three years ear BEETS TO THE place of her mother. When General lier than that of Jesse Grant, the FACTORY Grant was elected President, and in youngest member of this famous fam CARS. deed during the first three years that ily. he and hla wife lived at the White House, the daughter was at school A LUXURIOUS AUTO. Toward the close of President Grant’s first term, however, Miss Nellie made her social debut at the Presidential Capt. Lara Anderson’s Wonderful mansion, and her cadet brother, home Machine of French Manufacture. from West Point, was her escort and Of all the automobiles ever turned out by French or other manufacturers, companion. the one lately made for Capt Lars MET PRINCE CHARMING. Anderson, of Boston, seems to be en General Grant’s daughter made a titled to the prize for originality. It tour of Europe soon after ehe formally is a huge machine fitted up for long entered society, and everywhere re Journeys and In point of speed equals ceived the most distinguished atten any of the present-day touring cars. The Anderson car is fitted out with tions from the royal families of Great Britain and the Continent. On the reversible furniture. There Is a com bination bed and bureau that is cer way home on the steamer Russia she TWELFTH met Mr. Sartoris, the Prince Charming tainly a work of art, and then there CONSECU Is a cook stove and dining table ar who was later to win her heart and TIVE CROP hand. From the moment that the en rangement that can be hauled out at AT LEHI, a moment ’ s notice. The whole ma gagement of Miss Grant was an UTAH. chine, in fact, is a kind of miniature nounced the whole American people hotel on wheels with accommodations manifested an interest in the brlde-to- for eating, sleeping, working or idling, be which never found a parallel save according to the fancy of the owner in the enthusiasm for Alice Roosevelt The fact that the lucky man was an or his guests. Englishman and not a citizen of the republic, while it was a matter of deep A Family Affair. year. The factories last year bad a to produce the maximum yield of regret to many persons, including capacity for slicing 40,050 tons which the land Is capable. A few President Grant himself, was not al “Once upon n time there lived a total of beets daily. years ago the man who would have lowed to cast a damper upon the Joyous good man of New York, who was In the acreage planted and the that 10 acres of farm land was a occasion. Mr. Algernon Sartoris war soliciting contributions for the.erect ion sugar manufactured from beets Colo said sufficient area for a man to make a ____ _____ _________ but twenty-three years of age _ and Miss of an orphan asylum,” said the story rado leads, having F vested 85,000 good living from would have been Grant was only nineteen when, on | teller. “He hail lieen to many rich acres and manufactured 91,000 tons looked upon as a crank. Now there Thursday, May 21, 1874, they were]people and received liberal contrl- of sugar. Michigan came second In ure thousands of little 10 acre and even acreage with 77,000 acres, but third 5 acre farms from which men are in sugar with 06,000 tons. California making more money than many grew 51,000 acres and produced 73,- others are from attempting to till 20 000 tons of sugar. The next states in times that amount. That 10 acres, order were respectively Utah, Idaho, under favorable conditions, will pro Nebraska and Wisconsin with a total duce a living is recognized in a bill of 71,000 acres and 64,000 tons of which has Just been passed by tlie sugar. Other states grew 17,000 acres House of Representatives and which of beets, producing about 17,000 tons will likely be passed by the Senate at of sugar, or a total for the United this session. It is an amendment to States of 307,364 acres with a produc the National Irrigation Law. Under tion of 312,920 tons of sugar. that law the homestead ' entry upon land irrigated by tbe govern RAPID GROWTIT LOOKED FOR. public ment ranges from 40 to 160 acres, to Indications are favorable, the report lie determined by the Recretary of the states, to the further growth of this Interior, according to the conditions of pursuit both in Irrigation and rain the reclamation. It was recognized, fall districts. "The industry Is prov at the time of the passage of tlie law ing to be a powerful aid to commer in ”02, that In some sections of the cial, agricultural and Industrial devel country 40 acres was an ample area opment. It promotes irrigation. Immi for a farm. It is now seen, and ad gration, land settlement, the building mitted in the bill above mentioned of railrbads and trolley lines, the that 10 acres is not too small a sub making of other Improvements, and division under favorable conditions. the upbuilding of various Industrial Another amendment was recently enterprises. Such results can only lie made to the Irrigation law allowing appreciated by those who have visited tlie government to establish town-slti-s the factory districts In Colorado, and divide the land thereunder tip Utah and Idaho, or In other newly Into various slziil tracts ranging settled and Improved areas throughout from town-lots to 10 acre allotments. the West. The beneficial effect of the When this bill which Is now before the industry is also shown in the better Senate b-comes a law it will there settled, more highly developed agri fore be possible for the government, cultural districts of the East, where, in any of its Irrigation projects to dl- after beets have been given a proper vide and sub divide its laud Into trial in competition with established I town and farm iiults ranging all the ••rope, they are demonstrating their I way from lots up to 160 acre farms staying quantités and potency In in MODEL, BUBAL HBITLEMIENTH. dustrial development.” BEET-SUGAR GROWING. 1 MRS NELLIE GRANT SARTORIS. joined In wedlock in the East Room of the White Houae In the presence of more than two hundred distinguished persons, including the representatives of the foreign governments, officers of the army and navy. etc. Mr. Sartoris had been educated In England and Oermany and was the son of Mr. Edward Sartoris, of Hamp shire. England, and hie wife. Adelaide Kemble, daughter of Charles and sister of Fanny Kemble, well known to the stage. Prior to the marriage the groom assured General Grant or nJ* entire willingness to reside with his bride In the United States but won after the wedding his brother tn Eng land died most unexpectedly and be was virtually obliged to return to hla native land to assume the management t and tuition*, which were catered In a book he had for that purpose. Among these many names there appeared. ’Mrs. Russell Rage. 325.’ Tbe good man went to Mr. Rage s office, and. showing him the contribution entered In the book by Mrs. Rage, asked If be could not give a like sum. And what do you suppose be did?" "Well. I snppose he at least doubled it,” remarked a listener. "Doubled It! Not Russell!” ex claimed tbe teller of tbe story. "Why, he simply took bls f>en and wrote •Mr and' before his wife’s name, and hand»«! the book back to the- good man.”—Harpers Weekly. ‘7 GROWS MORE THAN IT EATS. This plan will doubtless develop One feature of this report Is a series some of the finest examples of proic of tables accompanied with outline porous rural communities to be found maps designed to show graphically the anywhere In the world. Many of the magnitude of sugar production I d that best developed sections of some of part of the country lying west of the tbe western states Include great Mississippi River. These Indicate that numbers of little farms and fruit tiu- estimated production of sugar nineties of B, 10 and 20 acres each, west of the Mississippi io 1906 will ex where tbe appearance is almost like ceed by 24,000 tons the amount of ' the outskirts of a village. With such sugar consumed In the same area In i a dense rural population there Is an 1DO0 (tbe latest year for which we ' ideal combination of practically all have reliable census figures). Tlie , the advantages to be found In city estimate of production for 1906 Is life and the splendid results of country made by assuming that all the beet- 1 work and living. Hon»»«. In such a sugar factories. Including 10 new 'community, are almost within a stone ones, will run at tbelr full capacity for throw of each other, the population I* campaigns of 100 days, and that the I sufficiently largo to stnqiort splendid cane sugar product for 1906 will be tics roads, goot! school and churches, water I nnd lighting Improvements, good same as that of last year." sewerage, etc. Thus the lonesome- TABLE RTTOWING PROnrCTTAN nosa. the isolation and the many un AND UONRUMPTION OF SUGAR IN attractive features of tbe big farm dis STATES WEST OF THE MIRKIHR appear while yet the joys nnd the I PPI RIVER. whoh-eomenoes of country life are all Pound« e** **• non present r»n* misrur. 1006 . The report accompanying this bill suitar, 190®.. 7M.9M.iWI0 states that «Inc. the passage of the triynr pr«>- Irrigation set. It has develop«-d that rfwwi mn® ..................... 1 nan nno on some of the lands to be lrrlgat«L Total wnrir ooo»nm«*d 1900 1,4X1 920 .VK particularly those in frnft and truck farming districts, less than 40 seres Eof prodorfioa over rm>- •nmptloa...................................... 4A.15O 40® Is needed for the support of the family, The amount of beet-sugar which and In fact experience has demon will be produced In factories east of strated that the average farmer Is | the Mlssls-tlppl during this year If mere prosperons on a «mail than on a run at tbelr full capacity, will also large Irrigated farm. In view of thia , equal about 17 per cent of th«- «-on- I rendition of affairs It has been deem«! sumption ef sugar to tbe tnaa Mtoa Iwtae to reduce to 10 acres the mfnl- laetppi are*. . 1 • . •* [ buki entry which may be allowed. s ■. ’ Jiu îr 3v.<r<m«n xxigl Copyrighted, 1894 By Hup« «■Brotüt»»', ostom termed them radix milioni m. CHAPTER I. The great bell of Beaulieu was ring From Eve downward,what good hath come from any of them? Who brings ing. Far away through the forest might be heard its musical clangor the plnlnt?” "It is Brother Ambrose.” and swell. Peat cutters on Blackdown "A holy and devout young man. and fishers upon the Exe heard the “A light and a pattern to every nov distant throbbing anil falling upon the sultry summer air. It was a common ice.” “Let the matter be brought to an sound In those parts—as common as the chatter of the jays and t.ie boom Issue, then, according to our old-time monastic habit. Bld the chancellor ing of the bittern. Yet the fishers and the peasants raised tbelr heads and and the sub-chancellor lead In the looked questions at each other, for the brothers according to age. together Angelas had nlready gone and Vespers with Brother John the accused nnd was still far off. Why should the Brother Ambrose the accuser.” “And th* novices?” great bell of Beaulieu toll when the “Let them bide in the north alley shadows were neither «ort nor long? All round the Abbey ti.e monks of the cloister. Stay! Bld the sub- were trooping in. Under the long, chancellor send out to them Thomas green-paved avenues of gnarled oaks the lector to read unto them from the and of llchened beeches the whlt«- ‘Gesta beat! Benedict!.* It may save rolied brothers gathered to the sound. them from foolish and pernicious It had been no sudden call. A swift babbling.” The Abbot was left to himself oneo messenger had the night ’. efore si>ed round to the outlying dejtendencles of more, mid bent his thin gru.v face over the Abbey, and hail left the summons bls Illuminated breviary. So he re for every monk to be buck in the mained wlille the senior monks 1'1' 41 cloisters by the third hour after noon slowly mid sedately Into the < liamb<yp tide. So urgent a message had not seating themselves upon the long been Issued within the w-nory of old oaken benches which lined the wall Lay-Brother Athanasius, who had on either side. At tbe further end, in cleaned the knocker since the year two high chairs ns large us that of the Abbot, though hardly so elaborately after the Battle of Bannackburn. Meanwhile, In the broad an lofty carved, sat the master of tlie novices chamber set apart for occasions of and the chancellor, the latter a brond import, the Abbot himself was pacing and portly priest, with dark, mirth Impatiently backward and forward, ful eyes and n thick outgrowth of with his long, white, nervous hands crisp black hair all round his tonsured clasped In front of blta. His thin, head. Between them stood a lean, thoughtworn features and sunken, white-faced brother who appeared to haggard cheeks bespoke one who had tie 111 at ease, shifting Ills feet from indeed beaten down that Inner foe I side to side mid tapping his chin with whom every man must face, but hud tlie long parchment roll which he held none the less suffered sorely in the in Ills linnd. Tlie Abbot, from ills contest. In crushing bi passions he point of -vantage, looked down on the lilt'd well-nigh crushed himself. Yet, two long lines of faces, placid nnd sun- frail as was his person, there gleamed browned for the most pnrt, with the out ever and anon front under his large bovine eyes mid unllned features drooping brows n flash of tierce energy which recalled to men's minds that he came of a lighting stock, and that even now his twin brother, Sir Bartholomew Bergliersli, was one of the most fa mous of those stern warriors who bad planted the Cross of St George before the gates of Paris. With lips com pressed nnd clouded brow, lie strode up and down the oaken floor, the very Impersonation of asceticism, while the great bell still thundered and clanged above bls head. At last the uproar died away in three last meas ured throbs, and ere tbelr their echo had ceased the Abbot struck n sum II gong which summoned a lay-brother to his presence. “Where is the master of the nov- ices?” “He Is without, most holy father. “Send him hither.” Tbe sandalled feet clattered over the wooden floor, and the Iron-bound door creaked upon Its hinges. In a few moments it opened ngnin to ad mit a short, square monk with a which told of their easy, unchanging heavy, composed face and authoi- existence, Then Im turned Ills eager gaze upon the pale-faced monk who Itatlve manner. “You have sent for me, holy faced hlin. “This plaint Is thine, as I learn. father?” “Yes, Brother Jerome, I wish that Brother Ambrose,” said ho. “Bring this matter be disposed of with as In Brother John, and let him hear the little scandal as may be; and yet It Is plaints urged against him." At this order a lay-brother swung needful that the example should be a open the door, and two other lay- public one.” "It would perchance be best that tbe brothers entered, leading between novices be not admitted,” i uggested the them a young novice of the order. master. "This mention of a woman He was a man of huge stature, dark- may turn their minds from their pious eyed anil red-headed, with a peculiar meditations to worldly and evil half humorous, half defiant expression upon his bold, well-marked features. thoughts.” “Woman! woman!” groaned the Ills cowl was thrown back ui>oti hla Abbot "Well has the holy Chrys shoulders, and bls gown, unfastened THIS MAGNIFICENT COTTAGE DINNER SET FREE Forty-two pl««’«« of A-n«rt<«n China «»wnl p-,rr«t-*ln) <1.-01 FRRR for « «mall eltib of aub- v rijAl'inn. 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