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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1907)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, OCTOBER 10, 1907 Advertising Batea. L egal A dvk R tihments : 10 First Insertion, per line .............. $ 5 Each subsequent insertion, line.... Business and professional cards, 1 month ..................................... 1 00 Homestead Notices.......................... 5 00 Timber Claims ................................ 1 10 00 5 Dicala, per line each insertion ... Display advertisement, an inch, 50 1 month ..................................... 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 exceeditg five lines. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. .STRICTLY IN ADVANCE.) One year........ Six months .... Three months 1.50 75 50 ^illamook Trail C. Baker. Publlaher. Educational Notes [TO KDITOB OF TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. Few people realize fully the true na ture and scope of education, the neces sary qualifications for teaching or the traits by which a good scholar is known. With a large per cent, of persons, the object of education is to get enough knowledge to form a working capital so as to earn a living, or perchance to pre pare for some one of the learned profes sions. It is, in short, to be able to live by the expenditure of the very least amount of intellectual energy. Such an idea is an erroneous one in regard to what real education is. There can be only one grand object in educating a human being, and that is mental power and moral cliaracter. The uppermost question is not exactly what a person knows, but what can he do with hint sell ? How can he use his mind and body. How does he stand on the great question of truth, justice, honesty, char ity, forbearance, and gentleness ? These lessons along life’s highway, impressed upon the minds of the pupils at home and in the schoolroom, are the ones that make character. There are parents who pull one way and the teacher is forced to work up hill in another way to upset the crooked teaching at home. If by sharp prectice, the parent can “beat his fellow man in a trade,’’ will not the son pav similar tricks, though in a smaller way. upon his classmates and teacher ? If it be con venient to misrepresent the truth, need it be wondered at that thechildren glide in to falsehood with as much facility as the black-snake slides over leaves ? Will not deception at home crop out in full bloom at school ? There is no more try ing position in which a teacher can be placed than that of trying to root out vicious home training. The teacher picks out the spoiled child with as nn- erring judgment as the experienced jockey does the “balky horse.’’ If parents wish their children trained properly, they should work jointly with the teach er, one helping the other. mnsic are as much out of place in the common school as mental philosophy and political economy would he Dur great fault of late is in trying to do too much, and so. doing nothing well. Thus we have incorporated in < ur comae of study, under the style of oral instruc I tion. botany, zoology, and a smattering of all other sciences, except sociology and biology. That a branch is worth knowing is no reason why it should be taugnt in schools where there is an abundance ot other and more necessary work to be done. Our intelligent gram mar school teachers should not neglect their proper bisiness and attempt to transit.rm their pupils into high class students and themselves into college professors. Let every man keep to his own sphere. American's young citizens coming to a primary school in pinsiorts and short dresses, in small jackets a-id wee breeches, may be (ought too small to de mand serious consideration And yet, was it not the wise Garfield who said, ■ The children of to-day will be the architects ol our country’s destiny in 1900''? Pinafore and breeches may l>e considered loo young an audience lor a little temperance talk bv the parent or the teacher ; and yet, are they ? They are too young, it is true, to understand the chemical coposition ol alcohol, the uses it may serve in the arts, the big sounding diseases it may help conquer, and the terrible columns olfigures that represent loss ot property, cases of in sanity. idiocy , crime, and pauperism, through the use of intoxicating bever ages. But pinafore and breeches are not to young to take and hold a moral impression. They are not too young to kuow that a thing is right or a thing is wrong. When it comes to a resolution, they may he like the boy who said be was not “big enough fora plan'* when asked what his plan in life might be. hut that he had “a purpose.'1 When asked what his parpos» was, he declared it be this, to become " a good man like mv father." Our business is to tell the children that the habit of using intox icating drinks is wrong, and to create in them an aversion against all such use. Young as the little folks are, they will lie sure to see intemperance stag, gering about the streets, and we are sorry to think the saloons are so thick in some places that they will smell the evil as they pass the nauseating hops ot the grog peddlers. We must arouse an aversion to these things. And what then ? Some one is said to have remark, ed, that if he could have the sole control of a child tor its first five years, he would unchangably fix his principles Even if an exaggeration, there is truth enough in this remark to make it a very serious one. Let ns, then, create in the little folks an aversion to the drink that sends fathers home to have the tremens, and nails mothers in their coffins before their time. Not big enough to be equal to a "plan’’, tbe childrrn will grow up with an aversion to liquor. They will asso ciate that aversion with the instruction of a loved and loving parent or teacher, and the brain not roomy enough yet tor "life’s plan*' will have ns a guest the purpose to “touch not, taste not, handle not." Some day Pinafore and Breech es will come to you and thank fora long ago temperance talk in the quiet home, in the big brick schoolhouse on t he city avenue, or that humblejlittle red box at the "Corners." G. A. W alker . T_T HOW THEY DINED. Rathods of the English at Tabla In the Seventeenth Century. The old English had three meals a lay. of which the chief meal was tak ,n when the work of the day was fin ished. The first meal was at 9, dinner was about 3 o'clock, and supper was taken Just before bedtime. The Nor mans dined at the old English break fast time or a little later and supped at 7 p. m. In Tudor times the higher classes dined at 11 and supped at 5, but the merchants seldom took their meals before 12 and 6 o'clock. The chief meals, dinner and supper, were taken In the hall both by the old ¡English and the Normans, for the par lor did not come into use until the reign of Elizabeth. Breakfast did not become a regular meal until quite late ly, and Dr. Murray In the Oxford Dic tionary gave 1403 as the date of the earliest quotation in which the word occurred. The meal did not become recognized until late in the seventeenth century, for Pepys habitually took his draft of half a pint of Rhenish wine or a dram of strong waters In place of a morning meal. Dinner was always the great meal of the day, and from the accession of Henry IV. to the death of Queen Elizabeth the dinners were as sumptuous and extravagant as any of those now served. Carving was then a fine art. Each guest brought his own knife and spoon, for the small fork was not Introduced Into England until Thomas Coryate of Odcombe published his ‘‘Crudities" In 1611. Pepys took his spoon and fork with him to the lord mayor's feast in 1663, The absence of forks led to much stress being laid upon the act of washing the hands both before and after meals and to the rule that the left hand alone should be dipped Into tbe common dlsb, the right hand being occupied with the knife. The perfect dinner at the best time of English cookery consisted of three courses, each complete In Itself, and terminated by a subtlety or device, the whole being rounded off with ypocras, after which the guests retired Into an other room, where pastry, sweetmeats and fruit were served with tbe choicer wines. The English were essentially meat eaters, and It w-as not until the time of the commonwealth that pud ding attained Its extraordinary popu larity. Indeed, the first mention of pudding tn the menus of the Buckfeast at St. Bartholomew's hospital did not occur until 1710. and In 1712 Is an Item of 5 shillings for ice—London Times. $ | I | & I | The Oregon Cheese Co.,Incorported, is prepared to buy all the first class cheese that conies along. Spot cash and highest price. Factory men will do well to see R. Robinson, the mana— ger. before selling. He will be in Tillamook a good part of the time dur- ing the season. Only the best stock wanted. Complete set of Abstract! in office. Taxes Residents. Office opposite Post Oft Both phoneg. w. H- COOPER, A ttornky - at - i ,^ T illamook , I THE OREGON CHEESE COMPANY, « haberlach , C arl 126 Fifth Street, Portland. Reference, Tillamook County Bank. attorney - at - law Office across tbe afreet and The Best Hotel. the Pott Office. THE ALLEN HOUSE, H* G0YNE> J. P. flbliEN, Proprietor. Headquarters for Travelling Men. A ttorney - at -L aï Special Attention paid *o Tourists. A First Class Table. Comfortable Beds and Accommodation Office : Opposite Conn ft T illamook , O reg ® 3 J HARNESS, COLLARS, etc. A. You Use Them. We Sell Them. w. SEVERANCE A ttorney - at -L at , T illamook W. A. WILLIAMS & CO., Í2 ., Qi Q H. UPTON, Ph.G., Next Door to Tillamook County Bank. Fir and Spruce Lumber. PPVSICIAN AND SCiGl Office first door East of fi Beals’ office. Spruce and Cedar Shingles. Cheese and Butter Boxes a specialty POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Vanity in a woman Is bad enough, but conceit In a man is worse. You can't tell anything about a man by hls looks. Like mince pies, some of them can look very Innocent. If you can't have your way, take consolation from the fact that every man encounters bls stone wall. When parents are old and poor and become a charge to tbelr children the children often act like all persons act who have been paid In advance. How profligate we are with the hours of rest when It Is bedtime and bow we haggle over the flying minutes when It ls time to get up In the morn- Ing! Mark this In favor of father: The woman who Is charging things to fa- tber at a dry goods store buys more freely and with less worry than the timid woman who charges to her hus band.—Atchison Globe. T. BOTTS, A ttorney - at -I j X R. T. BOALS, M.D., PHYSICIAN Orders for Lumber promptly attended to. TILLAMOOK LUMBER. CCKDPÆNY, r i Tillamook Iron Works & SURGE TILLAMOOK. Office; Olson Building. Residence: Mrs. W alteri A A A. K. CASE, C. HAWK, PROPRIETOR <1 PHYSICIAN & 81 General Machinists & Blacksmiths. Boiler Work, Logger’s Work and Heavy Forging. Fine Machine Work a Specialty. bay city , o : ? a, Montaigne in a letter to a duchess giving her his opinion of the best method f to be adopted for the education of her V V V W «IF w W W W V ’V W V WV vJl son, observed that philosophy should be opened to the boy’s mind at a very early period. Montaigne was right. Canned Paintings. Children are born philosphera. Their Tainting under glass may now be strongest desire is to know. If their preserved Indefinitely. Had the men of mental powers could lie “materialized*' old known this the pictures of Apelles by aome clever "medium.'■ the combined might still live In the first freshness of faculties would assume the shape of n A Certain Cure for Croup- their colors, and the work of Raphael huge interrogation point. Then when Used for Ten Years Without and Michael Angelo would look today a Failure. their speculation and curiosity are at as it looked when It left the painters' Mr. W. V. Bott, of Star City. Ind., fever heat, why not lead them through hands. The method of preservation Is hardware merchant, is enthqaiasiie in the fruitful groves of philosophy? While his praise of Chamberlain's Cough simple. The canvas is placed In a Buy your LIQUORS direct from the WHOLESALE HOUSE the question-asking impulse is strongest, Remedy. His children have all lieen vacuum. It Is preserved, like fruit. It why not indulge it, thus feeding the in subject to croup and he has used this Is sealed up from all the destructive In at WHOLESALE PRICES and save the middle MAN'S PRO. Since remedy for the past ten years, and fluences of the atmosphere. intellect while its hunger is keen ? FI T, which means50 to 10» per cent on your PURCHASES. though they much feared the croup, his metal figures In the operation the can One reason is that no one has vet ap- wife and he always felt safe upon retir vas might Indeed be said to be canned. peered who has made hienself wise ing when a bottle of Chamberlain's There Is no reason why paintings kept enough to answer the questions that an Cough Remedy was in the house. His In this manner In a vacuum should not ordinary bright child will ask . at least, oldest child was subject to severe atiacks endure Indefinitely. of croup, but this remedy never failed to 2,500 Gallon, of Double Stamp Whiskies, to answer in a manner intelligible to a effect a speedy cure. Hi has recoin, Regular price, $5 00 per gallon............... .................... at $3.50 per gal. child The scriptures were purposely mended it to friends and neighlxirs and A Safe Place. 2,500 Gallons of Pur» Old Rv» Blend Whiskies, General William W. Belknap went to written in imperfect dialects to give all who have used it say that i| is un Regular price, $6 00 per gallon ....................... at $4.00 per gal. room for broad interpretations, and equaled for croup and whooping cough. the war of the rebellion as tbe major 2.50J Gallons of Pure Old Bourbon Blend Whiskies For sale by Clough's Drug Store. of tbe Fifteenth Iowa Infantry. In one avoid the necessity of patting religious Regular price. $6 00 per gallon..................................’ of the companies of that regiment was at $4 00 per gal. truth in statements whose exact term, Notice. Gallons ot Lvnn Rye or Bourbon Blend a young fellow named Darby Greely. 2,500 Regular price, $5 tlO per gallon ................. ' st MM 1 would bring religious expressions with N otice is H ekbhv G iven —That on When the regiment was marching over * in thesharp lines of a scientific defination Monday. October 21, 1907, the County the gangplanks on to the steamer 5,0110 Gallon, of Fine Old C.Hfornia Pott, Sherry" A^iic«' Muscat. Madera and Malaga ' gc >ca. or the severe logic of a mathematical Board of Equalization will meet at the Sucker State the major sat on his Regular price. $2 50 per gallon........................................................... |1<M gaI demonstration. So the language apoken Court House cf Tillamook County. horse close by. As Darby Greely Oregon, and publicly examine the assess stepi>ed on the plank hls mother grab to children must be highly figurative, ment roll for said year, and correct nil the ideas concrete, and abstractions and errors in valuations. descriptions ol bed him and pulled him to her bosom. •harp distinctions must be deferred to a lands and other property. Said board M 1th intense emotion she cried and eii! 5"ses °* ^?.r<,.’er *h'skey, bottled in bond at $12 00 per dos later period. Hence, though the child will continue in session from day to crooned over him and then, seeing the 500 Cases of Millvew Whiskey, bottled inbond...... major, she cried, "Darby, me b'y. stick • lav. until the examination, corn ct ion $1<1 00 per dos. may reveal in philoaophy, as a smoker 500 Case, of Stanford Rye W hisker. Pure Blend .......... . and equalization of the assessment roll •lose to the major an' ye'll nlver git ♦ 11 0<» tier doz. 500 Cases of Ramer Bourbon Whisker, Pure Blend............ “..... dreams in his fragrant clurt, the clear shall tie completed. All persons inter, hurted." $11.00 per doz. 5,000 Oases of Port. Sherry. Angelica. Muscat, Tokar, propoaitions and thorough convictions rated in the assessment ot their property and Malaga................... of science are lor the maturer miod to are requested to appear at said time .................................................... -........ St $4.00 per doz. Difficulty. and place, as no change can fie made master and retain. What is difficulty? Only a word in after the adjournment of the board. Again, our pupils are not the children Dated at Tillamook, Oregon, Septem dicating the degree of strength requi site for accomplishing particular ob of nobles. Whose time is to he •pent in ber 24th. 1907. jects; a mere notice of the necessity A. M, H are . elegant leisure and philosophic specula for exertion; a bugbear to children and County Assessor tion From the lowest to the hig best, fools; only n mere stimulus to men — »be public school children are expected Samuel Warren. Out of Sight. to put their knowledge to some prac "Ont of sight, out of mind.” is an old tical use So to give such training as saying which applies with special fore» A Good Motto. shall fit children for business, should be to a sore, burn or wound that's heen It is only tbe thinking man who says treated with Buck lens Arnica Salv» things Worthy of utterance. Some talk the office of the common school. To It a out of sight, out of mind and out this end I would refer all philosophy and of existence. Piles too and chilblains the livelong day, yet say nothing. theory,save such as is needed to make dtMiqiear under its healing influence H»ng_thls motto on the wall of mem- by Chas. I. Clough cry. "Speak little; say much.” practical operations intelligible, to the Guaranteed druggist 25c. B ' high school. Why Sb« Laughed. Let children be able to do. and they Nell -She always laughs at him so: A Criminal Attack will easily and naturally come to know. on an inoffensive citizen is frequently •nd yet be Isn't at all humorous. Belle Centrally Located. Rates. $1 p<p day The practical branches are reading, made in that apparently uselem little no . but I believe «he beard that ba wrighting, spelling, arithmetic, at lar as tube ».IM the • append,«.'; It sgener- remarked once that he admlrwd ¡71* r'hn °f Prn‘r"<‘«1 conetipa- ner teeth. solving prsbletnsis concerned, history, t»on. Mlowtog liver torpor Dr King', grammar, geography, vocal music, and New l ife 1,11«. regulate, the liver pre Pure hearts are glad, and they who drawidg nui But 1 I submit that the pbil phil K uiawiug ---- — —• wsraa vs*»« «-«Phy of arithmetic and th. theory of | CU^h.'d^ “ Ch**' Y fread the paths of duty (nd Gods world sweet OREGON. TILLAMOOK, The Largest Mailorder Liquor House on the Pacific Coast. 'Jp HOMAS W. R( PHYSICIAN & SU Office : Opposite Po»t Offa Residence : Allen H ook , MIKE JACOB & COMPANY. 51 FRONT STREET. PORTLAND OREGON. We are offering for the next 60 days as follows: J Freight and Express Prepaid and no Charge for Cooperage. On Five Case Lots we allow a discount of 50c. on each Case. Of five and ten gallon kegs and half barrel Lots we allow a discount of 25c. per gal. MIKE JACOB & CO "J 51 Front Street, Portland, Ore LARSEN HOUSE, M. H. üfl^SEN, Proprietor. TILLAMOOK, The Beet Hotel in the city, OREGON No Chinese Employed. R. BEALS, REAL ESTATE, F inancial Tillamook, Oregon R. P. J. SHARP, RESIDENT DBttl Office across tbe street fc Court House. Dr. Wise’s offia sarchet , T . The Fashionable Cleaning, Pressing «d ing a Specialty- Store in Heins Pb Gallery. OBERT A. MILL® A ttornky - at -U* Land Titles, Laud 0fr*! ness and Mining U* PORTLAND. Room. 30« Co«*«*1 Did You Ever^ HARRIS’S NEW livery If not, give hi»“*' Everything first-cla* block South of W. G. HARift