Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, October 25, 1906, Image 2

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, OCTOBER 25. 1906.
Advertising Ratea.
L egal A dvkktismknth :
First Insertion, per line.................. $ 10
Each subsequent insertion, line....
S
Business and professional curds,
1 month .................................... 1 00
Homestead Notices........................... 5 00
Timber Claims................................. 10 Oo
Locals, per line each insertion ...
5
Display advertisement, an inch,
1 month ....................
50
All Rraolutions of Condolence and
Lo Ige Notices. 5c. per line.
Cards of Thanks, 5c. per line.
Notices, Lost, Strayed or Stolen, etc.,
minimum rate, Me. not exceedir g five
lines.
íbe (J'ilkimoob
Ijcabligbt
Fred C. Baker. Publisher.
Biggest Battle 8hips.
There is talk in Washington of build­
ing a 20.000-ton battle ship at a cost
of $10,000,000, in order to outclass
by a large margin any warship now
afloat. The British Dreadnaught re­
cently launched at Portsmouth, which
will cost $7.000,000, has a displace­
ment of 18,500 tons and embodies
some new ideas. At one discharge her
guns will hurl, with the maximum of
force, twice as much metal ss any other
naval vessel now in commission, while
her armor is intended to be proof
against all forms of attack, including
submarine. She is the longest battle
ship yet planned, carries ten 12 inch
guns, and is unique in her turbine driv­
ing power.
Naval builders calculate
that the Drendnaught, which is ex
pee ted to join the fleet next year, will
tie equal to two or three battle snips of
the largest existing class, and that
alone she might decide a heavy engage
ment.
But some American naval experts
claim that the Michigan and the South
Carolina, the twin battle ships author­
ized by Congress a year ago, will lie
able to concentrate a heavier fire than
the Dreadnaught in certain directions,
for each will havo eight 12inch guns
in four turrets in a line, the extreme
turrrets of four guns astern against
the Dreadnauglit's two. The new Con­
necticut is a It),000-ton battle ship,
with both broadside and turrret Imt
teries. Since the smashing, in aliout
half an hour, of the Russian armored
fleet in the^Sea of Japan, the naval bu
reaus have deemed that colossal battle
ships must lie the main reliance. But
the lessons of thj recent war are in­
distinct, because the Russian fleet was
poorly trained and miserably handled
ill action. The cry is for bigger battle
ships, and the tournament goes brave­
ly on.
In San Francisco the citizens have
bought 19,000 revolvers for defense
against criminals during the corning
cold season. Frisco will be no place
for the innocent bystander this winter.
W * »
While talking against the govern­
ment, and predicting multiform dises
ters. a democrat ought to he ashamed
to pull down his share of the nation's
prosperity.
* * *
The American people have made up
their minds that 2 cents a mile is
enough to pay for tiding on the cars
Public opinion is always on time,
whether the radroads are or not.
* * *
Already the Japs have adopted the
idea of running exhibition trains for the
display of (merchandise. The enlight­
ened races got a lively running mate
when they woke up a hermit nation.
* st *
England's bigge t battle ship has a
speed of 22.4 knots. This is serious
news for the armored cruisers, which
have hitherto been built on the suppo
sition that they could run away fiom
the heavy weights.
* « *
Under the Ohio antitrust law an of­
fending corporation can be proceeded
against on its general reputation for
wrongdoing This regulation will make
it a little harder for Mr. Rockefeller to
pettifog himself out of court,
* « w
On a steamer of the llamburg-Amer-
ican line a novel appaiatus for the pre­
vention of seasicknera has just lieen
tried, it being the invention of Robert
Otto, of Leipsic, It consists of a com.
fortalde arm chair, the seat of which is
vibrated lartli perpendicularly and trans­
versely by a small motor placed under
the chair which is connected with tlie
ship's electric plant. A motion is thus
given to the chair which is found to
counteract the movement of the ship.
As soon as the passenger feels an attack
coming on.he takes his feat and the in
disposition quickly disappears.
« * «
One of the iu<«t amusing features of
the fall campaign ie the vigor with which
the candidalee of the two old parties are
denying that they aie socialists. Mr.
Bryan explains in every speech he
makes that he is ■■ not a socialist.''
He always adds, however, that socialism
should lie lieaid respectfully and argued
down kindly. William Randolph llearat
insists al least once a week that he is no
socialist. The socialists too insist just as
warmly that he isn't, so that ought to
settle it. Candidates ut the Lincolr.
Republican Party in Pennsylvania have
got out a round robin to etale that they
are not socialists Tom Johnson asserts
he is no socialist. Mayor Dunne, of
Chicago, says he to a near socialtot and
that near socialism to tbe beat possible
I
antidote for pure socialism. The patriot
who is willing to serve the plain “ pee
pul,” has a rather hard time of it. If he
is too conservative he is called a corpora­
tion tool, if too liberal he is called a
socialist.
* * *
That the government of the United
States under the constitution has com­
plete power over the great modern cor­
porations known as trusts, and that their
officials may be compelled to answer any
and all questions concerning trust meth
ods is, in brief, the opinion rendered by
the highest judical tribunal, the Supreme
Court at Washington last Monday.
Two cases were involved, the first being
that against the tobacco trust, whose
agents and officers had refused to an­
swer questions before a grand jury : and
the second against the paper trust, whose
officers refused to show books and an­
swer question before the government ex­
aminer. This decision is expected to
give instant vitality to all of the anti­
trust laws that have been enacted and to
enable the department of justice to ob­
tain all the evidence it needs in the en_
forcenient of the laws. The court holds
that corporations, being creations of the
law, have no immunity under the con­
stitution. As individuals the officers
may claim immuuity if their testimony
tends to incriminate, but their testiv
uiony may be used against any of their
associates who are not compelled to
testify. Corporations retain their rights
only bo long as their acts are lawful.
Thus the beef packers, regardless of
j remises from Gai field, can betaken
liefore a grand jury and compelled to
disclose their secrets, while the Rocke­
fellers and Rogerses must unbosom
themselves as to oil trust affairs, on de.
mand of the courts. Prosecutions will
be radically changed. The power of
supervision belongs to the creator cf the
corporation, whether state or nation.
San Frandisco’a Reincarnation.
Bad Stomach Makes
Bad Blood.
You can not make sweet butter in a
foul, unclean churn. The stomach serves
as a churn in which to agitate, work up
and disintegrate our food as it is being
digested. If it be weak, sluggish and
foul the result will be torpid, sluggish
liver and bad, impure blood.
The ingredients of Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery are just such as best
serve to correct and cure all such de­
rangements. It is made up without a
drop of alcohol In its composition; chem­
ically pure, triple-refined glycerine being
used instead of the commonly employed
alcohol. Now this glycerine is of itself a
valuable medicine, instead of a deleteri­
ous agent like alcohol, especially in the
cure of weak stomach, dyspepsia and the
various forms of indigestion. Prof. Finley
Ellingwood, M. D., of Bennett Medical
College, Chicago, says of it:
When combined. In lust the right propor­
tions. with Golden Seal root. Stone root.
Black Cherrybark, Queen’s root. Blood­
root and Mandrake root, or the extracts of
these, as in Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery, there can bo no doubt of its
great efficacy in the cure of all stomach,
liver and intestinal disorders and derange­
ments. These several ingredients have
the strongest endorsement in all such
cases of such eminent medical leaders as
Sociological.
A German sociologist who has been
examining the relation between the rate
of wages and tbe amount of crime in va­
rious sections ol his country finds that
the districts which make the beat show,
ing. with one exception, have the best
wages.
ING
1//
THEYPQNT51IP9FF
; in office.
I
Taxes paid form.
Residents.
Office opposite Post Office,
Both phones.
w.
H.
COOPER,
‘•Clean and Wholesome,” our motto.
A ttorney - at -L aw ,
Over 30 Years experience in the Business
HARNESS, COLLARS, SADDLES, &C,
T illamook ,
O rego
C arl haberlach ,
Everything Needed in the Harness Line
you will find, at
W. A. WILLIAMS
attorney - at - law ,
Office across the street and north fro
the Post Office.
Up to date Harness Shop The only complete shop of the
kind in Tillamook county. I handle no shoddy goods, but my
prices will compare with those that do.
Next door to T illamook C ounty B ank . Local Phone.
H. GOYNE,
A ttorney - at .L aw .
Office : Opposite Court House
The Best Hotel.
T illamook , O regon .
THE ALLEN HOUSE,
A.
J. P. AULEN, Proprietor.
Headquarters for Travelling Men.
W. SEVERANCE,
A ttorney - at -L aw ,
Special Attention paid to Tourists.
A First Class Table. Comfortable Beds and Accommodation.
T illamook
V
Fir and Spruce Lumber.
0
O regon ,
H. UPTON, Ph. G..M.D.,
P hysician and S urgeon .
Office first door East of F. R.
Spruce and Cedar Shingles.
Cheese and Butter Boxes a specialty.
Beals’ office.
T. BOALS, M.D.,
Orders for Lumber-promptly attended to.
PHYSICIAN
TILLAMOOK LUMBER. C0ÎDPÆHY.
——
——----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ft.______________________________ '
. .
A. A afla A A A A AAA A A A A A gj, A A^ AA AA A SW
r
A. K. CASE,
i
« Tillamook Iron AAforks f
r
PROPRIETOR
<
General Machinists & Blacksmiths. !
<
ír
TILLAMOOK,
& SURGEON,
TILLAMOOK.
Office: Olson Building.
Residence: Mrs. Walker’s.
R. BEALS,
REAL ESTATE,
F inancial A gent ,
Tillamook, Oregon.
Boiler Work, Logger’s Work and Heavy Forging.
Fine Machine Work a Specialty.
J2)R. P. J. SHARP,
OREGON.
t
MAIL ORDER LTQUOR BUSINESS.
Buy your Liquors from the Wholesale
House Direct.
RESIDENT
DENTIST,
Office across the street from tbe
Court House.
Dr. Wise’s office.
SARCHET,
-L . The Fashionable Tailor.
See Dr. Henry E. Morris.
Cleaning, Pressing and Repair­
ing a Specialty.
Office: Palace Hotel.
When you bqy
We can furnish all kinds of Wines, Whiskies, Brandies,
«In and Hum al wholesale prices.
Send us your orders. We ship in plain cases and prepay freight.
you want
complete
protection
and long
service.
These and maty
other good points
are combined in
Read over our price list mid mail us vour orders Mnnev
i i
are not satisfactory All orders will lie treated strictiv confidential d d 'f g"°1'8
WET
WEATHER
CLOTHING
We ship all our good, C.O.D , or you can make remittance with vour order.
WE OFFER AS
T “ '
12Qts.
TOWERS
FISH BRAND
OILED CLOTHING
You can’t afford
to bqy any other
a J
CO
c .- ao an
'
/
HlA
co wo
kill ™, couch
ANO CURE
thi
FOLLOWS :
LUNC8
King’s
Now Discovery
WITH
___ PONSU«FTION
Prias
F OR ¡ ouch « s ° c
Surest and Quickest Cure for all
THROAT and LUNG TROUB­
LES, or MONRT BACK.
Buy on Credit!
this $60 Machine for $25
Fwm mrta
S m 4. ball Warm.' lock*
•Uteb doable Iwd. self,
tbroadiaf »hauls: baa
•alomalte bobbin wladar
and othar Iatan' l,i>ww
»•>“ This In lbw ANH-
TRCST MACHIN. It |a
the msm aachlae aernta
arv satinsyoufor AU
auaehawat.ravith eaeb
Gallon.
12 quarts Sheehan's Private Stock. Rye or Bourbon
. $8.00
$3.00
12 quarts Tillamook Kve and Bourbon ...................
. 8 50
3.25
12 quarts Delaney's Malt Whtskev....................
. 8.00
3.00
12 quarts Gordon White Rie Whiskey 7777.7777777.' . 8 OO
3 00
12 quarts Old Gold Bourbon Whiskey ........ .
7.50
2.75
12 quarts Crescent Rve Whiskey ............ 777777.......*........... . 750
2.75
12 quarts Old Port Wine............................ 777777"............. 3 50
1.25
12 quarts Old Slierrv Wine ........ ............................................... 3 50
1.25
12 quarts Old Angeticn Wine..............................
3 50
1.25
12 quarts Old Muscat Wine........................................................ 3 5<>
1.25
12 quarts Old Madeira Wine............................ .........
3 SO
1
25
12 quarts Sweet Catawba Wine..... ...'...«”'7.'.™.?.?'.'.”””......
4.50
1.75
12 qutrts Sanduskv Port Wine..................
4 50
1.75
12 quarts Old Tom Gin .....................................7...77................. 8.00
3.00
12 quarts French Cognac..................... 777.77.7.77777............ 9 OO
3 50
12 quarts California Grape Brandy .................
8 OO
3 OO
12 quarts Stanford 3A Rye.................. ...77............................. 11 00
4.00
12 quarts Rainier 3A Bourbon ...7777......................................
11 00
4.00
12 quarts Monogram O. P. S. R,e or Bourton‘7.7............... 12 OO
5 OO
12 quarts Rock and Ri e ............................ ..
6 00
2 25
12 quarts Peach and Honey ....7.7.7.77777777.777 .............
6.00
2 25
12 quarts Millvicw Whiskey, bottled in bond . 7.7.7.7.77.77.77 10.00
.v
3 50
Remember, werelund you vour money and repay freiuht both
i.
___ _
if w
goods
anr not sat^nctorv We nre exclu»«, wholeM.lede.kr, and sell way«
otur goods at
wholesale price,. Nothing but the best.
Store in Heins Photographic
Gallery.
J^OBERT A. MILLER,
A ttorney - at -L aw ,
Land Titles, Land Office Busi­
ness and Mining Law.
PORTLAND,
OREGON.
Room, 306 Commercial Buil’IiflK-
Did You Ever Try
HARRIS’S
NEW FEED AS>
LIVERY BAR>\
If not, give him a cal’.
Everything first-class. Second
block South of P O.
W. G.
HARRIS, Prop-
Address all Orders to
M. JACOB & CO.
Wholesale Liquor Dealers.
404 Washington Street, Portland Ore
We assort esses. if des.red . you can take as many bottle. of Rny
Centrally Uoeated.
„ TO’„ wi,h
p
Rate«, *41
day
LARSEN HOUSE,
Proprietor.
TILLAMOOK,
OREGON
Tb« Best HoUl in ths city,
I
T. BOTTS,
• A ttorney - at -L aw
Complete set of Abstract Bu
Dealer in
FRESH and CURED MEATS,
LARD, HIDES,
WOOL, Etc.
"In dyspepsia it serves an excellent pur­
pose. * * ♦ It is one of the best manufact­
ured products of the present time in its
action upon enfeebled, disordered stomachs;
especially if there Is ulceration or catarrhal
gastritis (catarrhal Inflammation of stomach).
It Is a most efficient preparation. Glycerine
will relieve many cases of pyrosis (heartburn)
and excessive gastric acidity. It Is useful in
chronic intestinal dyspepsia, especially the
flatulent variety, and In certain forms of
chronic constipation, stimulating the secre­
tory and excretory functions of the Intestinal
glands."
LATIMER BROS.,
N. O. Nelson, the wealthy St. Lon's
manufacturer, who lias instituted profit-
sharing with employes nnd customers,
writing of “Business Pure and Tainted"
in the Independent, says that our judg­
ment is blurred by the various current
exposures of rascality which purport to
lie exceptionally, and that we overlook
the patent fact that all endowment in­
come "is drawn from the slavish labor
of underpaid men and women, who are
taxed without their consent, or from the
monopoly of land or franchises.'' Thus.
F. Ryan, in a brief comment on Nelson's
article, frankly sidesteps the whole ques­
tion ot social reform by saying that the
subject oteliminating competitive effort
to acquire money is too large for him ;
nevertheless, even Mr. Ryan thinks it
right that "competition between men
should be brought between constantly
narrower and narrower rules of justice.*’
He thinks this is the direction in which
humanity is tending.
M. F. LEACH,
Agent Wanted.
Wanted, Salesman. Many make $100
to $150 per mouth ; some more. Stock
clean ; grown on reservation, far from
old orchards. Cash advanced weekly.
Choice of territory.
Address Washington Nursery Com
pany, Toppenish, Washington.
For the past six months the East has
been submerged with books, picturesand
other matter relative to the San Fran, Prof. R. Bartholow, M. D., of Jefferson Med­
cisco disaster. It is now time to tell the ical College, Chicago; Prof. Hobart A. Hare.
M. I)., of Medical Department, University of
great story of its rebuilding. Every per. Pa.; Prof. Laurence Johnson. M. D., Medical
Department, University of New York; Prof.
son in this community Ims a deep per­ Edwin M. Hale. M. D.. Hahnemann Medical
sonal interest in the rapid reionstruc- College.Chlcago: Prof. John M. Scudder, M. I),
and Prof. John King. M. I)., Authors of the
tion of San Francisco. It is of the great­ American Dispensatory, and scores of others
the leading medical men of our land.
est importance that the people of the among
Who can doubt the curative virtues of
East should become acquainted with the a medicine the ingredients of which have
a profeanltsnal endorsement?
wonderful work of reconstruction that such
Constipation cured by Docnor Fierce’s
is now in progress, and to note what Pleasant Pellets. One or two a dose.
has been accomplished in the six months
following the fire.
The first comprehensive publication on
this subject was found ill a special ed­
BARBER AND HAIRDRESSER
ition of the San Francisco Examiner, of
Sunday, October 21st. This special ed­
SHAVING, HAIR CUTTING
ition consisted of 100pages, it isexpiess-
ly designed for Eastern mailing to per­
SHAMPOOING, ETC
sons who have heard of the disaster, but
are unfamiliar with the work of recon- Electric Baths nicely fitted up. Goodfoi
struction. Every copy mailed Eust will
persons suffering with rheumatism.
do a little towaid correcting distorted
opinions.
Dispite nil of the various philanthropic
and legislative efforts to prevent or to
limit child labor in the various states of
this nation, the fact that thousandsand
thousands of little children are still at
work in our mills is vouched for by Mrs
John Van Vorst in a series of articles be­
gun for the Saturday Evening Post.
Mrs. Van Vorst is the author whose
reputation was greatly enhanced by
President Roosevelt's famous race sui­
cide letter in commending one of her
books. She has spent six weeks in var­
ious cotton-mill towns in Maine, New
Hampshire. Georgia and Alabama She
also made a study of the Fall River
(Mass ) mills, where "tbe nearest ap­
proach to an ideal stale of affairs" ex­
ists. At Birmingham, Ala , she was
excluded from the mill where she took a
letter of introduction. At Anneston she
got into the mill as a casual visitor
and found children nt work varying front
4 to 12 in age. Some of the children told
her how their age at the mill was given
two or three years more than at home,
thus satisfying the conscience of the
overseer. These child workers are des­
ignated in the mill reports merely as
"hands."
’ T T
An Awful Cough Cured.
“Two years ago our little girl had «
touch of,pneumonia, which left her with
an awful cough. She had spells ol
coughing, just like one with the whoor.
ing cough and some thought she would
not get well at all. We got a bottle ot
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, which
acted like a charm. She stopped cough­
ing and got stout and fat,” writes Mrs.
Ora Bussard, Brubaker. Ill This remedy
is for sale by Chas. I. Clough’s Drug
Store.
So Ckiucse.
■
Besutifally located in
offer» unsurpassed facilities for
I ture and education of young worn*"
I opportunities in Music Art Lanruat«’«
ature. Well equipped Phrftical «nd (
oratories. Herbarium and Mineral Cab®«
largest and oldest Ladies* Seminary m tne
Northwest, it enioys a national
;r^r
parting the best physical, mental and
c^gl
ing and developing true womanhood
socially and educationally for the
-
station. Confers Academic and Co,,r*’a'\-Ktwgl
by State Authority. Interference withj«
of non-Catholics is scrupulously avoided ‘
is ideally located amid inspm"«
tages. Social opportunities such as at*
in no other city on tbe Const Buildup
commodious well lighted, heated and jr
i
h