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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1907)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. AUGUST 22. 1607 I Bunny Mead Addition mook City. Editorial Snap Shots. TH’ T1 Fl to Tilla We welcome the visitors to Tillamook, The W. S. haves five acre tract, con and to one of the best counties in Oregon for undeveloped resouices and gulden op tracted for by the Tillamook Real Estate | Company, will t»e platted and placed on portunities. the market. Advance sale now on. * * * A« there is difficulty in finding beds for Lots cheapest and best of any in Tilla Call and see the plats at the the visitors who come to Tillamook, we mook. would suggest that the ho»el keepers Tillamook Real I Estate Company’s office ; or F R Beal’s office. build a roost for the men to pirch on. * * * Everybody who come to Tillamook in HAD AN AWFUL TIME the summer are charmed with the whole But Chamberlain’s Colic.; county, for the weather is cool, bright , Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy i and invig r iting. with grass and vegeta Cured Him. tion fresh aud green. It is with pleasure that I give you this * * * unsolicited testimonial. About a year We believe in the whipping post or cer | ago when I had a severe case of measles tain class of criminals, and it would | I gut caught out in a hard rain and the haye a good effect upon criminals who measlte settled in my stomach and hold oeople up with'guns or win» break bowels. I had an awful time and had into a house in the dead of the night and it not been for the use of Chamberlain's hold the inmate up on the peril of their Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy I lives if they resist. I could not have possibly lived but a few ' hours longer, but thanks to thi« remedy * * * I have There should not be anv kicking by I am now strong and well. settlers on account of taxation, because written the above through simple grati. the timber owners pav 65 per cent of the tude and I shall always speak a good taxes of Tillamook county. With that word for this remedy.—S am H. G win , Fur sale by Clough’s condition of affairs, if the county can’t Concord. Ga. get good roads and good school houses Drug Store built rhe next few years, it won’t do so PLEASANT VALLEY ’after the timber is gone. See the point. * * * Road work seems to be the order of It will n< t be long before the people of Tillamook and other “dry ” counties will the dav Ben Turner is enj >yi»’g a viait from be fust a* determined against those who violate th- local option law as they are his brother and nephew of Portland. against the gamblers, and the most H A Kinnaman and wife, of Hem effectual cure for the illegal practice will lock, N. J Dye on I wife, of Tillamook, be a jail sentence lor the offenders,for the visited at the home of M. Woods. Sun people insist upon the Hws being en day. forced, especially the local option law. Mrs. Ruth Desmond and Roxie Woods which has become a most popular law visited friends at Hemlock Saturday in Oregon, and the people demanding afternoon its enforcement, it is the duty of county Master Buell Woods is on the sick list officials to ferret out those who will per sist in defj ing the mundate of the peo this week. Frank Dye and wife. of Salem, passed pie * * * thiough here Mondav on their way to If Nehalem succeeds in getting at least Tillamook to visit their parents. $16.000 for road work next year, not in Little Homer Blum is sick. cluding anv special load tax that mav be voted, that amount of money ought to help out considerably in getting the $1OO Reward, $1OO. work started on both roads to Clatsop The reader« of thia paper will he pleaped t< county’s line. We understand that the learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all it« court is figuring on giving Nehalem that stages and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh amount for road w ork, and if it does the Cure is the only positive cure not known to the settlersup there will have no cause to medical fraternity. Catarih being a constitu I disease, requires a constttutionanl treat complain, for the county officials are giv tional ment Hall’s Catarrh Cute is taken internally, ing Nehalem people a square deal, it is acting directly upon the blood and mucous a pleasing thing to note that the citizens sui faces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient of the north end of the county are now strength by building up the constitution and pulling together for better roads and assisting nature In doing its work. I he proprie tors have so much faith in its curative powers, more of them. that they offer one Hundred Dollars for any * * * that it falls to cure. Send for list of testi The people of Tillamook county were case monials. amongst the first to take a decided stand Address» F J. CHENEY & CO . Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. against gambling and the saloons, and Take ¿jail ’ s Family Pills for constipation. Since then other counties have been fol lowing suit, with the prediction that a number of other counties will be added to those which are already “dry.’’ Shut ting down on gambling and closing up the saloons is conceded to be a good thing lor Tillamook, and 1 ot withstand ibg that the gatnbleis and saloon advo cates predicted that it would kill the city And county—exactly the opposite is TO the case,—from a business standpoint business men ol Tillamook City are not wanting to go back to the saloon regime and the gambling thievery. Even at Astoria the “lid’’ is beginning to be put on, first in Sunday closing of saloons and WHEN you are temporarily now in shutting down on gambling, which will mean that ri large number ot ’’ short of funds do not give parasites in that city must either go to vour note to anv and every one work 01 migrate somewlieie else. The from whom you mav be pur spirit of the times in Oregon is hostile to chasing goods or supplier, but gambling and saloons, brought about largely by the Press, mid now that borrow vour money at this weak kneed sheriffs and proaccutioK at. bank. You will always know torneys see the drift of public opinion, just what you owe. and we they must do their duty and enforce the allow you the privilege of repav law This is a healthy sign in Oregon, and although the gamblers and saloon ing anv amount a t any time, keepers can always find a lot of pimps to charging your interest only for dotheir dirty work, the people of the the time you have the money. state are thoroughly in earnest in insist Can handle a few good, short ing that these dens of vice be wiped out time Real Estate Loans. Money Lioan L Ite Insurance TERMS, 8 PER CENT INTEREST For twenty-live cents you can now insure,ourself ami family against any Imd results from an attack of colic or diarrhoea doling the summer montila. That ia 111»- price of a bull le of Chamber lain's Colic, < liniera ami Diarrhoea Remedy, a meilicitie that lias never iieen known to fail. For sale by Clough's Dtug Store. AND GOOD SECURITY Tillamook County Bank, Tillamook, Oregon. Red Front Shoe Store Has received a fine Assort ment of Fall and H'mter SHOES, consisting of .Hen's and Woman’s foot wear of the best quality. I have also a FIVE STOCK of Boy’s and .Missses School Shoes, solid sole leather, insole and coun ters. No paste board counters. .My Children's Shoes are the best in the City. Don't run all over town looking for cheap shoes. Goto the Red Shoe Store, where you will find the Shoe that you are looking tor. No C harge for St wing rips on Shoes bought of us. P. F. BROWNE. Aqent. TIME CARD Astoria A Columbia River R J •2* 1 •S4 J ■ 1» A 7 7 H a ‘ •22 m a tn 00 H OO ZU 9 20 35 9 35 (»5 IO 05 13 IO 15 9 40 11 45 25 V 3 4 4 4 ♦ 5 5 m io 15 27 49 54 23 03 l.T ’ P osti , ani » G ori r R asirr a m 5 05 11.30 I-v. A stori a Ar 5.20 12.35 . W arrantor C.BXRHART a 43 1 |Q FRAUDS a 50 1.30 5 55 1.35 At H oliday L v 9 IO 10 10 1O •so 1 •34 >1 STRVHNR •45 I •35 I •44 J •43 1 a m 1 to in IO 23 10 25 11 12 12 12 13 45 05- 31 40 45 1» m.| a m a m « 35 fill 7 2*' A 43 a 20 7.3SI R 45 A 25' 7 41' Tr ains marked Ar Ql’lNCY CtATAK ANIS Cl-IFTON Ar. A storia L t a.tn. p.m. S 15 5 50 H 35 a 40 9 7 It V 25 7 2<» 9 .10 7 25 50 05 25 30 95 •29 • •RO I P 4 3 2 2 2 m a m 00 N 15 35 7 55 39 a 57 30 a 50 25 5.45 BRANCH •39 pm I pm 3 11 2 OS l.T W arrrntnnAr 3 33 12 15 Ar Hammond L t 3 2a 1 2 20 Ar Et. Rte venate • run daily- R. Co •21 *23 p.m. 12 15 10 55 10 40 H» 05 9 52 9 15 • 20 pm IO OO N 40 N 25 7 50 740 7 04 5IÒ A p.m. p.m am 1 13 35 3 35 7 54- 12 25 3 29 7.45i 12 21 3.25 7.42 The voyage to Cape Town from Southampton or Madeira Is a long one. sixteen to twenty days, says the Travel Magazine. And so we And pas times organized on board far tran scending the ordinary concerts, ama teur theatricals, deck games and the like familiar to all of us on the ordi nary ocean going liner. The programme Is an ambitious one. comprising boxing, gymnastic drill, ob stacle racing, cockflghtlug. cricket, baseball and football, egg and spoon races for men and girls and children, ordinary deck games and evening amusement, such* as concerts and dances. The sack race for grown men Is the delight of all the children, who love to see their fathers tied up In sacks and progressing by kangaroo-like bounds, whose uncertainty is made stUl more precarious by the pitch and roll of the great vessel. Nor must I forget the bolster and pillow fights, with competitors perched on horizontal bars. with their legs tied beneath. Some fighters display rare gamenees aud staying power, so that the onlookers feel quite grieved when they “go un der” In a very literal sense. Now and then an unfair wag will coat his trousers with resin and thus contrive to keep bls balance In a way enabling him to withstand all comers. Of course the prizes are made up of the entrance fees paid by competitors, which may amount to 60 or 80 cents per head. THE LIGHTNING ROD Franklin’s Theory Was Known Away Back In Talmudic Times. In an article on “Current Topics In Ancient Literature" J. D. Eisenstein says in the Sydney (Australia) Stand ard: “The lightning rod was Invented by Benjamin Franklin In 1752 to arrest the electricity of the thunder. When the information of the discovery reach ed Rabbi Saul Iiatzenellenbogen of Wllna, he said that the theory was not new, because it was already known In Talmudic times, and he showed a pas sage in the Tosefta (third century) where it says that 'on Sabbath It is permitted to place an Iron near the hennery to safeguard the fowls from thunder and lightning strikes.’ The Talmud vouches that 'there Is nothing superstitious about this belief.’ (Tosef. Shabb, chapter 6. end.) “The system of telegraphy, In a crude mauner. Is curiously described by Judah b. Jacob Chayat In hls com mentary to 'The System of Theology' chapter, 'The Gate of the Chariot’ (see page 218b. ed., Ferrara, 1558). Chayat is perhaps the first Hebrew author who transliterates the term •magnet,’ and he explains the physical phenomena as follows: ‘If you break the magnet Into two parts and sep arate them at any distance, even a thousand miles apart, any movement caused by a Joining wire to one part will be repeated by the other part’ (quoted also in Shelah, page 30a. ed., Amsterdam, 1708).” I * i I I , ' I have just opened up the most com plete line of STAPLE & FANCY GROCERIES in Tillamook, all new and Fresh. The prices are no higher than others. v* We most cordially invite you to g come and look at what we have and V* get our prices, whether you buy or S not. W. « M. MILLS, Opposite the Post Offiee TOUGHS OF PARIS. They Are Known as “Apaches” Work In Gangs. Les Apaches— They work in gangs. In the under I world their associations are complete and distinct. Fame has come to them —to the gang of Bebert of Montparno. of Gegene of the Courtille, the Green Cravats, the Costands of the Vlllette. the Mont-en l’alr of the Batlgnolles. Against these bands the police war In vain. They wage their battles In open day—for some "moms" that Bebert has stolen from Gegene. A band comes down from the heights of Belleville or of Charonne and raids a peaceful quar ter—a home going cab Is surrounded, the passenger stabbed through the win dow and Fobbed. They prey on the public. Band wars upon band. There are nightly duels on the fortifications cr under the bridges- when the Beau Totor meets Polgne d’Acier, knife to knife. In a savage and not unloyal way. Young all, from sixteen to twenty-two, rarely older. Where do they come from ? Everywhere. They grow on the pavements of Paris, along the gut ters—foundlings or deserted children, sons perhaps of that laboring class which Is on the edge of crime and beg gary. The life of the Apache Is short, but for every one sent to the Jail or the guillotine two stand ready at the door of the slums. They used to haunt the den of the Fere Lunette.—From “The Slums of Paris,” by Vance Thompson, In Outing Magazine. CLOTHING ! CLOTHING i At last our stock ofClothing has arrived. We have everything to suit the most fastidious. We have suits for the small man, the large man, slim built and stout built. They have the style, quality and fit. We have also just received a large shipment of Furnishing Goods, CONSISTING OF Dress Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery Shoes and Hats Always the best stock on hand. TODD & CO Tillamook Nurses and Cancer. “I find the trained nurses brave The average persou has no idea how enougn In most cases of contagious dis much muscular effort Is expended In ease." said a Brooklyn doctor, “but writing a letter. A rapid penman can thqre Is one thing at which they balk.” “What's that,” asked a friend— write thirty words In a minute. To do this he must draw hls pen through the “smallpox?” “No; cancer. They have all the un- space of sixteen and a half feet. In forty minutes hls pen travels a furlong tralnel woman's horror of that dis and in live hours a third of a mile. In ease. The most faithful of them will writing an average word the penman go without an engagement for weeks makes In the neighborhood of sixteen rather than take a cancer case. Yet curves of the pen. Thus in writing the peril is slight compared with what thirty words to the minute his pen they face almost without thought.” “Isn't it contagious?” would make 480 curves. 28.000 curves an hour and 86,400.000 In a year of “A malignant case is If a scratched 300 days of ten hours each. The man baud Is brought Into contact with the who succeeded In making 1.000.000 cancer. Three cancers out of four, marks with a pen In a month was not however, are not malignant and can be at all remarkable. Many men make dressed without gloves safely. The 4.000.000 while merely writing.—Min trained nurses balk at all of them.”— neapolis Journal. Brooklyn Eagle. Cleaning a Sickroom. Intoxicated Midge Fliaa. Most of us know how untidy a sick room becomes and how annoying the dust of the sweeping Is to the patient. “To remedy this.” said a trained and capable nurse. "1 put a little ammonia In a pall of warm water and with my mop wrung as dry as possible go all over the carpet first. This takes up all the dust and much of the loose dirt. A broom will take what Is too large to adhere to the mop and raise no dust. With my dust cloth well sprinkled I go over the furniture, and the room Is fairly clean." Concerning the life history of the particular little midge that patronises the arum In England very little Is known, yet ft is certain that when «rums are blooming these midges give little time to anything besides drunken orgies within their shelter. You have only to cut open a bloom at the narrow neck portion and look down to the lower part to see the helpless insects lying In heaps, all more or less Intoxi cated—Intoxicated from overIndulgence In arum pollen.-Strand Magaxlne. Opened up for Business SAPPINGTON & GO A Full bine of Groceries Flour, Feed, Tinuuare and Cfroekery. We Ulant all Kinds of Produee Call and See Us .Olsen Building, ä £ ho Two Views. Reatan For Haavy Wheels. “What a pity you are engaged so Everywhere in the old world the young, my dear!" said the maid who wheels of wagons and carriages are was beginning to carry weight for nge. two or three times as heavy as those “You will never know what fun It Is on corresponding vehicles In America to refuse a man.” and so appear clumsy and cumbersome “No. I suppose not,” rejoined the fair to us. The explanation of the differ debutante, “but you can't Imagine how ence Is that our wheels are made of much fun there is in accepting one.”— hickory, a wood unknown abroad, Chicago News. which supplies the requisite strength OUR STYLES In smaller mass —Travel Magaxlne ONEJET 7 Ths Ons Thing Left. JETS a “But what will there he left for you TWO THREE JETS A Matter of Economy. to do after your tolling and scheming I GALVANIZED.... >1.00 “You're not so strict with that young and self denial have brought you the THREE JETS. BRASS.................. 1 25 ster of yours as you used to be." said millions you covet*’ Popley's friend. "What’ll there be left? Gosh, I can •'No; for economy's sake I'm not." go to New York and spend 'em. can’t replied Popley. "Every month I used I?”--Chlcago Record-Herald. I to have to buy myself a new pair of _ ________________ ■ ♦. Suited Him. Her Suitor—I wish to marry jour daughter. Mr. Her Father (sternly)— My daughter, air. will contlnua under tba parental roof Her 8ultor—Well. Mr, the parental roof looks good to me. •3S 1 -3? , —San Francisco Chronicle. Ton may succeed when others do not believe In yon. but never when yon no not believe tn yourself. < Mi«« Notdh«“ uuvk ot t'w Monmonth Ni tms lectad and Rejactad. At the Fort Pitt foundry, Fort Pitt, Pa., were east In 1867 for the monitor Puritan two twenty-inch guns, which Captain W. C. Wise, then chief of the naval bureau of ordnance, proposed to call Satan and Lucifer. This proposi tion called forth a protest from the pastor of a Presbyterian church at Pittsburg, who characterized it ns “most unseemly. If not Impious. Hls letter was referred by the member of congress to whom it was addressed to the department and finally came into the bands of Captain ise for reply. In answer be called attention to the foreign custom of giving to vessels such names as Jupiter, Juno, I ulcan, Venus. Juggernaut. Inferno and Luci- fer and Satan to convey an idea of tlie power of the destructive agent used in battle. These guns, argued the learn ed captain, were not Intended for peace and the utterance of good will toward men, but to inflict as much mischief and destruction on human be ings In time of war as their namesake, the devil, tries to do at all times He further reminded his clerical critic that a number of clergymen had witnessed without protest hls act of “christen- ing” In presence of a large assembly of ladies and gentlemen the first twen- ty inch gun cast for the navy as Beel zebub. However, the argument did not prevail, for religious sentiment was effective in preventing this use of Bib- Heal nomenclature.—Army and Navy Journal. •‘Everybody 3 tould Know** sayaC. ii. II»)'». • prominent buiintaa llettog disposed of olir business and man of Bluff. Mo , that Bucklen it Art nica Salve ia the quickest and sure«, | *»«re OWM»« •>» healing salve ever applied to a sore, burn or wound, or to a case of pile». , ” P-.» uee.i it and know what I’ui lullo g about." Guaranteed by Chas I. Clou*.* d.uggist. Mo. Xok county Bank. C ohn & Co. Why Penmen Get Tired. slippers and him a new pair of pants.” —Exchange. p.m . „ 1 •» 5 40 5 331 4A Jo 27 A 3C- ---------- —. Two Significant Onos That Wore Se- How the Long Trip From Madeira to Capo Town Io Enlivened. ■ ”1.........1 a m i ».M 3.50 11.00 7 45 5.35 10.40 7 IS 5 ON 9 4S 7 10 5 OO 9 40 7.05 4.55I 9 35 ....... 1 •4! ! •33 J »43 NAMES FOR ________ BIG GUNS. SPORTS AT SEA. Accounts Must be Settled. THE parish 1101 St It Hurt Him. Tommy—Did the fowl hurt yon, Mr. Squires? Mr Squires-What d'you mean, my dear? What fowl? Tommy —Well. I wanted to know If It hurt, 'cause mummy said you had been hen pecked for twenty years.—Strand Mag azine. A Substitute. “Anna, you wished to buy a dlc- donar y ?” “1 have married a profeeaor tAitead.’’ —Meggendorfer Blatter. ST. ALFBONbVa «•>-** CLOUGH'S MAKE A VAP0* LIKE CLOUGH’S CARBOLIC Keeps the Flies One Quart, at 5Oc. makes IO Gallons. CLOUGH, Reliable Druggist- If after using CARBOLIC COMPOUND you are not satisfied co—’*'