Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, May 02, 1907, Image 2

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGÉT. MAY 2. 1Ô07.
Advertising Rates.
L i OAL ADVERTIKMENTW :
First I user lion, |>er line
I 10
Each subsequent insertion, line...
5
Busiiiee» an«l profesaional cards,
1 month ................................... 1 00
Homestead Notices........................ 5 00
• Timber Claims............................... 10 00
I < sials. |>er line each insertion. ...
5
Display advertisement, an inch.
1 month ...................
Oil
All Resolutions of Condolence and
Lodge Notices. 5c. per line.
Cards of Thanks, 5c. per line.
Notices. Lost, Strayed or Stolen, etc.,
minimum rate, 25c. not exceedii g five
lines.
(i'be
^illuinook
Fred C. Baker. Publisher
Imaginary American Perils.
many colossal engineering projects
under way as are now going forward
within the boundaries of the United
Stales. Nur are lhe Panama canal and
the iirigation werks combined the
largest in point of cost in money. 11
is stated on good authority that in
New York city alone, outside of oidi.
nary buildings and government appro­
priations, (600,000,000 is called for by
the large undertakings in charge of
civil engineers. Twothirds of this
amount has been allotted to lhe im­
provement of transpol tation termi
nals, including lhe river tunnels to
reach them. The city is building three
bridges over East river at a • o t of
from $15,000.000. to $20.000.000 each
Sixteen tunnels are in progress under
the broad waterways that surround
Nrw York, comprising six lubes under
lhe Hudson, eight under East river,
and two under the Harlem. Twelve
more tunnels are actively projected,
and the day is near when Manhattan
will be reached on all sides by un­
broken land routes.
In engineeiing
the work at New York is far more
difficult, as well as more costly, than
any in sight at Panama or in the
reclamation service.
* Q ft
Jacob H. Schiff. August Belmont,
James J. Hill and others have recently
predicted that a business convulsion of
the 1873 and 1893 kind was dose at
hand. As these persons are prominent
—3chiff and Belmont as bankers and
Hill as a railroader—tlieir utterance»
attracted
some attention.
Several
newspapers have been making inquiries
among business men in the leading trade
centers on this subject, and the weight
of opinion in all cases is that no serious
check to the present prosperity is in
sight. The New York Tribune has been
getting expressions from Pittsburg. St
Louis and Chicago, and sums them up
in this way: "Pittsburg expects some
slackening, and welcome if, but scouts
any real business depression. Men high
in the steel trade say there can be no
depression there this year or next. St.
Louis is enjoying the greatest business
prosperity in its histoiy, and prospects
<re for more business this year than
last. One of the great railroad equip­
ment companies ieports orders on its
books for nearly 100,000 cars. Chicago
is rejoicing over the republican victory
in the receut municipal election, and
re|M)rts business in every line boom
ing, and on the increase.’’ The same
sort of a story is told by the inquiries
which have been made in various trade
centers by other newspapers.
White Bronze Monuments.
LAMARTINE’S PRESENT.
How th. French Author Got a Big
PrlM For a Little Po.m.
Francolz Buloz, the founder and edi­
tor of the fumona French Journal, La
Revue des Deux Mondes, was by no
means celebrated for his generosity to
contributors. One day shortly after
tlie publication of Lamartlue's “Les
Girondlus," and while the literary
world wus ringing with the fame of its
greut author, Buloz called on him and
asked him to write an article for bla
magazine. Lamartine consented, but
stated that he could not have It ready
for some weeks.
Buloz. fearing that this was only an
excuse and that be” would never get
the article, offered Lamartine an ad­
vance. It so happened that the author
was in need of 4,000 francs at that
time, and be so Informed the editor,
who at once handed over the money.
Three months later he called Lamar­
tine's attention to the fact that the
contribution had not yet been received.
It was toward the end of 1M7, and the
great author was devoting his entire
time to politics.
“While you are waiting for this ar­
ticle would you care for a little poem
I have here?” he asked Buloz.
He enthusiastically replied in the af­
firmative.
Months later, when Lamartine hnd
liecoine minister of foreign affairs, Bu­
loz again called upon him to remind
him of the promised contribution.
“But you see my position,” answered
the minister, “how busy I am!”
Buloz frowned.
“But, citizen minister, a certain
amount of money was advanced, and
the Interests of my magazine do not
permit me to"—
"How much was It?”
“Four thousand francs.”
Lamartine took this amount of
money from the drawer and laid it
upon his desk.
The editor, however, looked some­
what embarrassed.
“Well, what more can I do for you?
You have your money.”
“The fact Is, I owe you for a small
poem.”
"Oh. that's not worth mentioning!
I'll make you a present of It.”
Buloz drew himself up haughtily.
“Citizen minister. La Revue des
Deux Mondes does not accept pres­
ents. How much do I owe you?"
“Oh, well. If you Insist." answered
Lamartine dryly ns he took up the
4.000 francs and replaced them In his
drawer, "we will call It square!”
The Toronto Globe, in commenting
on Ambassador Bryce’s remark on the
power of wealth to corrupt politics,
calls this the weakest point in demo­
cratic government ;
tells
about
wealthy capitalists buying their way
into the national senate, wealthy lum­
bermen stealing
national
timber,
wealthy railroad promoters bonding
lines over which they had secured
control, in order to pocket a large
part of the proceeds.” and adds that
it" will be interesting to note how the
United States comes out of the present
struggle
against such threatening
dangers to the body politic.“
This sort of talk has been heaid
in the United States as well as out
of it often in the past few years. The
Toronto paper will find that the num«
lief of wealthy who buy their way
into the senate is fewer than it
imagines. It will also find, if it looks
over the returns as they come to hand,
that the wealthy lumbermen who have
been stealing the national timber ate
getting into trouble which will lead
them into the penitentiary, and which
Ims already led one or two of them
into the grave. All of these person»
are being hunted down as common
malefactors, and their wealth will not
save them from the punishment that
the statutes decree for their crimes.
If anybody has any doubt about the
outcome of all this conflict between
wealth and honesty in business and
politics let him follow the case of
Harriman. The government is reach
ing out for that personage, and if it
ODD CUSTOMS.
can prove that lie has broken any law
Every
house
must be decked with
the punishment that will hit him will
flowers on New Year’s day In Japan.
be exemplary enough to deter men in
In Buenos Ayres the police alone
his calling from following his methods.
have the right of whistling on the
The expressions of the legislatures ef
streets. Any other person whiBtllng Is
A Woman is Not a Person.
many of the states on the Harriman
nt once arrested.
Roosevelt episode shows
how the
In Ashanti many families nre for­
A
most
amusing
incident
recently
oc
country stands on that issue. They
bidden the use of certain meats. In
cured
in
St.
Johns,
New
Brunswick,
show that the wealth of all of Har­
like manner others are forbidden to
riman's railways stretching from the where a Miss Mab?i French, niter pass­ wear clothes of a certain color.
big western to the eastern ocean would ing her examination with high honors,
If n carriage upsets or injures an­
not be sufficient to buy him a seat in was denied permission to practice law in other carriage In the streets of St. Pe­
the
Supreme
Court
because
according
to
tersburg or if a person Is knocked
the senate if he started out to pur­
chase it. Canada is one of the poorest the‘‘Act’’only "Persons” were allowed down, the horses of the offending ve­
countries in the world and the United to practice law, and ‘‘women were not hicle are seized and confiscated to the
use of the fire brigade.
States is the wealthiest, but it is pro­ persons”—"only men were persons.”
It Is the practice of the Ashantees
Soon alter a woman was arrested for
bable that the level of civic virtue not
and Fantees to bury one-third of the
only in private life but in political drunkenness, and on trial pleaded "not
property of a dead man. converted In­
station is as high in the United Slates guilty," being "a woman*' and "not a to gold dust, under bls head, and rifling
as it is in Canada or anywhere else on person’*—therefore not amenable to the the grave of an enemy Is considered
law. The magistrate found the law to the proper action for a warrior.
the globe. ________________
rend "that any person found drunk was
Clapping the hands In various ways
In a paper by Henry Laurens Call on liable to fine or iiiprisonment ; and ruled
Is the polite method In central Africa
“ Concc titration of Wealth,” read kt that according to the decision oí lhe Sup­ of saying “Allow me,” "I beg par­
A meeting of the American Association reme Court "woman were not persons, don," "Permit me to pass" and
for the Advancement of Science at Co­ and could not be imprisoned nor fined,” “Thanks." It Is resorted to In respect­
lumbia university. the speaker declared so the prisoner was discharged.
ful introduction and leave taking.
that the modern corporation was respon
As a ¿result the legislature promptly
Doves and Religion.
Hlble for lhe concentration of the wealth passed an "Act" "designating woman as
“One thing I remarked and think
of tl»e nation into a few hands. The cor­ person.” So Miss French was allowed
worthy of notice Is that ever since
poration, he s lid was a monstrosity, and her degree in law.
Noah’s dove every religion seems to
the wealth of Rockefeller and other enor
But no study of woman's political consider the pigeon as a sacred bird.
inously rich men is the product of this progress can be just that does not take For example, every mosque swarms
vicious institution. The remedy, accord into account her rapid and enormous with pigeons, and the same exists In
ing to Mr. Call, was the public owner development in the faculty oí organiza­ most Italian market places. The Hin­
ship of public utilities. The law must tion, and in intelligent interest in public doo pundits and the old Assyrian em­
correct the conditions brought about by concerns. These are absolutely essentia! pire also have them, while Catholics
the corporation. Il should I m » made co­ to the formation oí democracy, to the make It the emblem of the Holy
operative instead, as now, the instru wise and safe exercise of the suffrage ; Ghost.”
Ijidy Burton In her account of the
ment of private greed.
and it is precisely in these that the phe­ Mobnmmedan mystery play of "Has­
* a *
nomenal record of the woman's move­ san and Hossein" says:
A novel and interesting decision was ment is most clear.
"Then comes the bier with Hossein's
recently handed dow n by the supreme
The strongest proof of woman’s long corpse and his son sitting upon It sor­
court of the state of Texas The case inferiority is her lack of association ; rowing and embracing him and a beau­
was that of a lady who had sued the only in religious bodies was she allowed tiful white dove In the corner whose
Fort Worth and Denver City Railway to organize ; and the strongest proof O| wings are dabbled with blood. The ef­
Com|>any for damages on account of her rapid approach to equality is in the fect upon the excited crowd Is awful.”
—“Life of 8lr Richard F. Burton."
physical and mental suffering in be'ng uncounted thousands who now gather
ex|>ellrd fioiu one of the defendant's together in Clubs and Societies of every
Where He Worshiped.
passenger trains. The lady in question description, charitable,
reformatory,
As the new minister of the village
was a member of lhe Christian Science educational, social, political ; and of all wns on his way to evening service he
cull, and the Attorney for the defendant sizes, from the handful of the "Ladies’ met a rising young man of the place
endeavored to establish this fact during Literary” to the International Council whom he was anxious to have become
the trial, explaining that the plaintiff Women, which in 1899 represented an active member of the church.
“Good evening, my young friend," he
would hot take medicine, and that it through its many constituent national
was her belief that she suffered only organizations a membership of six mil said solemnly. "Do you ever attend a
when she thought she suffered, and it lion. In the next Quinquennial meeting , place of worship?”
"Yea, Indeed, sir, regularly every
was only a question with her whether of 1904 lhe National Councils joining ' Sunday Yilght." replied the young fel­
she suffered or did no|, and that as a had double in number, but the sum of low. with a smile. "I'm on my way
Christian Scientist " she lived in a spiri­ their respective memberships is not at to see her now.”—Ladles' Home Jour­
tual plane above mental and physical hand.—Charlotte Perkins Gilman in the nal.
suffering«; that it was an article of her May Woman's Home Companion.
The Myetlo Number Five.
faith that there was no such thing as
Five Is the great sacred Chinese
mental or physical suffering and that she Relief from Rheumatic Painst.
Among lhe troubles that beta t man- | number. There are five virtues, five
did not actually suffer." The court kind
rheumatism is one of the in «mt colors (yellow, white, green, red and
would not permit lhe attorney to bring aggravating. • I suffered with it for black), five household gods, five planets
out this point, and a verdict was given over two years, ’ says Mr. Rolland (Saturn. Venus, Jupiter. Mars and Mer­
for the plaint iff. On apical lhe supreme Curry, a patrolman, or Roy West, Fla cury). five ranks of nobility, five tastes,
" B.mirtimes it settled iu my knees and
court reversed the decision, holding that lain«*«I ine so I could hardly walk, at five cardinal points (the middle, east,
it was an eirer not to allow the de other times it would be in my feet and , seat, south and north respectively)
_
aired testimony to I* introduced, since hands so I was meapacitaled for duty. and fire tones.
---------------------------------
j -Tfc
it was peitiiicnt to the main and essen­ One night aben I was in severe |«in
I one from it my wife went to the
He Had te Stay.
tial issue in lhe case. Io wit. the mental and
drug store Itere and came kick with a
“You venture Into Wall street occa­
and physical suffering of tl^e Haintiff iiottie of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. I
Thia dtcisnai suggests a new line of was rubbed with it and found the pain ¡ sionally?" said the lamb.
"My case,” answered the magnate,
rroaa examination in damage suits where had nearly gone during lhe night. I "Is different from yonra. "I don't dare |
kept on using it for a little more than
lhe plaintiff is a believer in (Kristian twowrekarnd found that it drove the venture out of It for fear of what they
Science.
rheumatism away. I have not^iadany' would do In my absence."—Washington
e
»
tioul»le from that disease for over three I Star.
f ,
_ |
Never before las the world sevu a® months 'Fur sale by Clough s Drug Store. I
------------------ —
TT
-A- X.
T. BOTTS,
A ttorn ^,
Complete set of Aby^
|( you contemplate the purchase of any
Cemetery Work, it is worth your while to in­
vestigate While Bronze, a material that makes
the only durable Monument, and surpasses
Marble and Granite in line, artistic finish.
No moss growing, cracking or crumbling ;
no cleaning or care required. Better in every
way than granite and less expensive. Leading
Scientists endorse it as living practically index
tructible. Correspondence solicited.
C. E. REYNOLDS, Agent,
in office.
Taxes
Residents,
Office opposite Pw
Moth Phu,»,
w.
H.
COQPj
A ttorney - at -I j
T illamook ,
Tillamook, Oregon.
C arl ha berm .
M. F. LEACH,
ATTORNEY AT-u»
Jleutecluv
Dealer in
FRESH and CURED MEATS,
LARD, HIDES,
WOOL, Etc.
Office across the street and,
the Post Offi«.
H. GOY NE,
A ttorney - at .L s
‘‘Clean and Wholesome,” our motto.
Office : Opposite Coan
T illamook , O reo
The Best Hotel.
THE ALLEN HOUSE, A. w. SEVERAS;
J. P. ALLEN, Proprietor.
Headquarters for Travelling Men.
A ttorney - at -U
Special Attention paid to Tourists.
A First Class Table. Comfortable Beds and Accommodation.
.. On
T illamook
0
Fir and Spruce Lumber.
H. UPTON, Pb.c^
P pysician
and
S vig
Office first door East of
Beals’ office.
Spruce and Cedar Shingles.
Cheese and Butter Boxes a specialty.
R.
Orders for Lumber promptly attended to.
T. BOALS, M.I
PHYSICIAN
TILLAMOOK LUMBER. COCDP/?NY.
& SURC
TILI.AMO0K.
Office: Olson Building.
■J
Residence: Mrs. Walk eri
41 k j A k . JS e . j A i
J5bt Jfik
ArdBr A
j JI k .
afik Jflk jfk jfig.
i A k j & l j A t
x&t
j 0 k j A k
A. K. CASE,
-^pHOMAS W. ROSÍ
Í Tillamook Iron Works
Í General Machinists & Blacksmiths.
PROP2IETOR
Buller Work, Logger’s Work and Heavy Forging.
Fine Machine Work a Specialty.
4
TILLAMOOK,
OREGON.
PHYSICIAN & SURE
Office : Opposite Port Ofc
Residence : Allen House, Tillan»
k
:
r 5F -tr w w w’v w w ww v vw
R. R. BEALS,
REAL ESTATE,
F inancial A ge
MAIL ORDER LIQUOR BUSINESS.
Buy your Liquors from the Wholesale
House Direct.
We Want, Your Business.
We can furnish all kinds of Wines, Whiskies, Brandies,
Gin and Bum at wholesale prices.
Send un your orders. We ship in plain cases and prepay freight.
Read over our price list and mail us your orders. Monev refunded if goods
are not satisfactory. All orders will be treated strictly confidenli.il.
We ship all our goods C.O.D , or you can make remittance with your order.
WE OFFER AS
FOLLOWS
Tillamook, Oregon.
J )R P. J- SHARP,
RESIDENT
DENTE
Office across the street fr«
Court House.
Dr. Wise’s office.
SARCHET,
T . The Fashionable T«|
Cleaning, Pressing and Rt?
12 y t.. Gallon.
ing a Specialty.
12 quarts Sheehan's Private Stock, Rye or Bourbon........ $H.OO
$3.00
12 quarts Tillamook Rve and Bourbon ............................... .' 8 50
3.25
12 quarts Delaney's Malt Whiskev.................... ..............
8.00
Store in Heins Photograf-
3.00
12 quarts Gordon White Rte Whiskey............................
8 00
3 00
12 quarts Old Gold Bourbon Whiskey ................................... 7.50
Gallery.
2.75
12 quarts Crescent Rve Whiskey’....................................
7.50
2.75
12 quarts Old Port Wine...............................................
3.50
1.25
12 quarts Old Sherrv Wine .......................................... ............ 3 50
1.25
J^OBERT A. MILLEI
12 quarts Old Angelica Wine ..................................... "...7.™” 3.do
1.25
12 quarts Old Muscat Wine.........................................
3 50
1.25
12 quarts Old Madeira Wine......................................
3.50
1 25
A ttorney - at -L aw ,
12 quarts Sweet Catawba Wine.....................................
4 50
1.75
12 quirts Sanduskv Port Wine.....................................
4 50
Land
Titles, Land Office S
1.75
12 quarts Old Tom Gin......................................... ..................... 8 00
3.00
12 quarts French Cognac........................................
ness and Mining La*
9 00
3 50
12 quarts California Gr.ipe Brandy ...................... .
8 00
3.00
PORTLAND.
O«68
12 quarts Stanford 3A Rve..............................
11.00
4.00
12 quarts Rainier 3A Bourbon ........................ .
11 00
Room, 306 Commercial Baikal
4.00
12 quarts Mon.igram O. P. S. Rye or Bourbon
12 OO
5.00
12 quarts Rock and Rve .........................................
___ --------------------------------------- -
6 00
2.25
__________ ------ ________
12 quarts Peach and Honey ................................
6.00
2 25
12 quarts Millview Whiskey, bottled in bond .
10.00
3 50
Did Yoti Ever Try
Remember, we refund you vour money and repay freight h oth wavs if goods
are not satisfactory. We are exclusive wholesale dealers and
our goods at HARRIS’S NEW FEED 1
wholesale prices. Nothing but the best.
LIVERY BARN,
Address all Orders to
M. JAGOB & CO.
Wholesale Liquor Dealers.
51 Front Street, Portland, Ore.
We assort cases, if desired ; you can Take as many bottle, of any kind a. yon wi.h
Centrally Uoeatad.
Rates, $1 Per day
LARSEN HOUSE,
M. H. LARSEN, Prprietor.
TILLAMOOK,
The Beat Hotel in the city,
OREGON
No Chinese Employed.
If not, give him a calf |
Everything first-class.
Stf*
block South of P.O.
W. G.
HARRIS, Prof
LATIMER BROS
UIIEI ill HIIBIEttEI
SHAVING,
HAIR
CLTT»
SHAMPOOING, ETC
Elcetric Bath, nicely fitted up
persons suffering with rbcutnsU^