Image provided by: Tillamook County Library
About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 9, 1908)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JANUARY 9, 190* Sept. 30, Frank Blaser, male. Advertising Rates. Oct. 7, George Hodgdon, male. LBOAL ADVBKT1SME.NT8 : Oct. 18, Rollie W. Watson, female. 10 First Insertion, perline . .. ♦ ! Oct. 21, Levi Stillwell, male. Each suhaequenl insertion, line.... I ! Oct. 24. Anton Plasker, male. Busineue and professional cards, 1 month ................................... 1 00 j | Oct. 28, Rily Maxwell, female. Homestead Notices........................ 5 001 Nov. 2, Charles Pike, female. Timber Claim,.................................. 1 10 00 5 Nov. 6, John Erickson, male. Locals, per line each insertion ... Nov 19, George O. Vaughn, female. Display advertisement, an inch. 1 month ................................... Nov. 22, Christ Lesund. male. All Resolutions of Condolence I Nov. 28, Harrv T. Crane, female. Lodge Notices, 5c. per line. • Dec. 3. J. W. Gilmore, female. Cards ot Thank«, 5c. per line Notices. Lost, Strayed or Stolen, etc., Dec. 3. Arthur J. Stillwell, male. minimum rale, 25c. not exceedirg five Dec. 14. Luke Wolf male. lines. Dec. 18, Dwight Edmunds, male. Dec. 23. F. W. Talbott, male. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Dec. 24, John J. Johnson, male. -STRICTLY IM ADVANCB.) One year........... ............................... 1.50 Dec. 31, Ernest Worthington, male. 75 Six months....................................... 50 Three months................................... Jan. 7, Peter J. Sharp and Maud Stall cop. Gillum ooh ^eahligbt ( Feb. 14, Herman I. Tobi and Lena Hay«. ‘ Feb. 27, Edwin J. Webb and Mabel Fred C Baker. Publisher. , Husbbeck. i April 13. T. B. Handley and I’earl E. Trout. May 15, Andy E. Nolan and Annie J. Edie. |une 2, Geo. A. T. Ludtke and Minerva E. Alley. lune 12, Joseph P. Finta and Mary Michaud. We giye below the records of Births, June 16, Garret H. Ward and Fannie Marriages, Deaths and Divorces in Tilla M. Baide. mook County for the year 1907, which June 16, Riley Maxwell and Margaret show but little deviation in figures from E. Lncas. the previous years, although there may June 19, Wm. A. High and Isabella a few births and deaths which have not Watt. been recorded. There were 80 births, an March 26. Ainos G. Kirk and Mamie increase of 15 over the previous year. Lowrance. The marriages numbered 28, a decrease March 30. Albert Olds and Addie D. of 7 from the previous year. Death Quick. claimed only 31 persons, being a deci ease April 7, N. R. Mooli and Martha E. Rav. of 3. The divorce court separated 4 mis Aug. 11, James M. Mapes and Jane mated couple, while in 1906 there were Concklin. 3. There would have been a large in Aug. 12, P. J. Hansen and Frances E. crease in divorces, but the governor's Peterson. holiday proclamations prevented the Aug. 12, Thomas L. QuLk and Grace holding of court, which stopped quite a H. Hedges few from getting on the matrimonial July 5, Chas. D. Grout and Almira R. market again. Petteja. Of the 31 deaths, and the cause of the July 24, Adolph Kangiser and Grace same, 6 are in the fatal class, yiz., 3 per. Bowman. sons were drowned, 1 committed suicide July 21, Arthur C. Schlappi and Daisy and died from gunshot wounds, 1 died I Seaman. from too much bad whiskey, and 1 from ¡July 1, Alviu'J. Blum and Eva L. Phillips. an overdose of wood alcohol. As to the Aug. 21, Silas D. Moon and Adelaide V. causes of some of the other death«, 2 Gray. dropped dead out of the 4 deaths from Sept 1, Harry H. Sharp and Mamie heart failure, 1 to surgical shock, 3 to Anderson. paralysis, 1 to measles, 3 to typhoid Sept. 11. Earl R. Ayers and Nellie Smith. fever, 1 to tuberculosis, 1 to pneumonia Oct. 20, William A. Williams and Re and 4 to senility, while a few others died becca A. Green. from old age, complicated with other ail Oct. 21, R. L. Moore and Clara|McKin> ments. ney. There were only 6 deaths of children Nov. 26, S. Barber and Josie Tomlinson. from the age of 1 year aud under. One Dec. 4, David I). Jones, and Leona D. 7, one 8 and one 13. Then it went to : Christensen. One 23, one 27, one 36 and one 38, and Dec. 25, R. T. Boats and Clara Tohl then jumped to two 59. one 51, one 53, four 57, one 59, one 61, one 72. one 83, one 85, one 87, and one 90 years, being Jan. 9. Frederick Mortenson, 85 years. the oldest. Feb. 4. Rav Conder. 13 years. Of the 80 births 44 were males and 36 Feb. 17, Esther N. Maxwell, 61 years. females, and of the 31 deaths 20 were Feb. 27. Frank Archer, 72 years. males and 11 females, one hall being March 7, Peter J. Berns. 23 years. oyer the age ol 50 years when they died. j Marell 25, Florence E. Hansen, 38 years. Marriages. A YEAR’S RECORD. Of Hatched, Matched, Dis- Matched and Dispatched in Tillamook County. DOGS IN BAGDAD. Why Thsy Do Not Loot the Bazaars of the Town. Births. H THE ALLEN HOUSE, Food Bagdad 1» alive with more or less hungry dogs. How is it that meh packs of furies do not loot the bazaars of the town? The explanation Is as simple as It Is Interesting. The Bag dad shop fronts are absolutely open The goat and mutton carcasses are hung where every dog that runs can reach them. But time out of mind the first glance of a dog's eye toward forbidden dainties has been visited with the swift descent on him of a cudgel or a hatchet. On one of a series of marches paral lel with the Euphrates I chanced to meet a desert horde whose greyhounds are In high repute. Buying a brace of saplings, I took them on with me, lodging them In the tent and doing everything that was possible to make them feel at home. Surprising to relate, they obstinately refused both food and water. The re mains of a venison pasty seemed at once to attract and repel them. A pan of water appealed to them even more strongly, but they would not go up to It. After a time a Persian muleteer ex plained the mystery In a twinkling. No sooner did he upset the water and toss the viands on the ground before them than the silky eared ones ran In like Trojans and made up In a few moments for a day’s fasting. Accustomed to lap from the river, from irrlgatlonal channels and from sheets of surface water and reared among people who do not use tables, they had been taught by many a buffet to keep their noses out of cooking pots and vessels of every description. In Bagdad man and beast alike drink of the great river, which also forms the arterial common sewer of the city, the place where clothes are washed and the “Stygian wave” Into which Is dragged every beast of burden when It Is not left to lie where It has fallen. The muddy bottom, with the water ever receding, the exposed surfaces thick with impurities and the tropical sun “sucking up all the Infections,” must be a regular hotbed of miasma and pestilence. And yet, mlrablle dlctu, Bagdad Is not, as eastern cities go, unhealthy. But let the reader imagine to himself what the Bagdad of the foregoing slight description would be like with out the dogs that scavenge It. Refuse animal and vegetable matter Is largely disposed of by the dogs, In situ.—Nine teenth Century. Complete set of Abstract Book, j. P. AbLiEN, Proprietor. in office. Special Attention paid to Tourists. A First Class Table. Comfortable Beds and Accommodation. Office opposite Post Office, Both phones. H. r props lEToa , Tillamook Iron Works < < i COOPER, A ttorn ey - at -L aw , T illamook , O regom , General ZVIackiinists & Blacksmiths. I Boiler Work, Logger’s W ork and Heavy I urging. Fine Machine Work a Specialty. i 4 jU ™ nF TILLAMOOK, W W w OREGON. "tF NF WT HIT V ► C arl » 4 haberlach , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Jlmtechrr £ buck at, Office acron the street and north fr< the Poat Office. I have just opened up the most com plete line of /JA H. GOYNE, A ttorney - at -L aw . STAPLE & FANCY CROCERIES Office : Opposite Court H01 T illamook , O regon , ill Tillamook, all new and Fresh. The prices are no higher than others. We most cordially invite you to come and look at what we have and get our prices, whether you buy or not. W. SEVERANCE, A ttorn e y - at - L aw , T illamook J2^ W. M. MILLS, Opposite the Post Offiee O regon . T. BOALS, M.D., PHYSICIAN & SURGE01 TILLAMOOK, Office: Olson Building. Residence: Mrs. Walker’s. □ entrally Uoeated. Rates, $1 Per day C- LARSEN HOUSE, ARCTIC COTTON PLANT, Ths Climax of Nature’s Irony In the M. H. URRSEfl, Proprietor. Far North. The climax of nature's irony In the arctic Is the cotton plant, says the Cir The Best Hotel in the city. No Chinese Employed. cle. Wherever cotton blooms, declines the miner, Ice Is not far below. One may trudge for miles through fields of cotton, the white, silky tops swaying defiantly In the arctic breeze. The blossom Is silky, dninty. Illusive as the down of our own yellow dandelion. From the beginning of June on until August the tundra Is white with the cotton plant Unlike the cotton of the southern states, the fiber Is short and soft, having more of the texture of silk March —, Mrs. Johnson, 50 years. than of cotton. April 9, Mons Lund, 90 years. The cotton plant will In all probabil April 13, John II. Gage, 18 years. ity some day be the means of develop April 21, Erast us W. Saunders, 1 year. ing an Alaskan Industry giving em April 28, Warren N. Vaughn, 83 years, Next Door to Tillamook County Bank. ployment to thousands. Today, howev April 30, Ezra Hauxhtirsl, 57 years. er, the cotton fields are purely decora May 6, John Randall, 50 years. tive—a splendid sweep of Immaculate May 16, Jacob F. Graham, 36 years. bloom In a bleak, timberless landscape guarded by hUls ever hung In veils of June 1, Alfred Deane, 75 years, deepest purple. In great bouquets It Is June 7, Florence C. Curl, 2 years, occasionally met In a miner's shack, June 11, Donald \V. Dann, 4 months. while not a few housewives gather the June 19, Fred D. Pike, 27 year«. cotton for pillow filling. June 19, l’anzy B. Hobson, 7 years. Throughout the cotton fields flowers June 24, M. Wilstrom, 75 years. bloom In abnormal splendor, as be June 27. Mary M Lai sen, 71 y ears. comes a country In which the sun Aug 23, Alvin Ayer«, 59 year«. shines continuously during summer's voluptuous reign. It is an intoxicating Aug. 29, Charles E. Williams. 9 years. Joy for the flower hunter to gather Sept. 15, August Burmester, 51 years. great armfuls of purple larkspur, blue <>ct. 25, Mary Detter, 54 years Oct. 28, Andrew E. Hassel berg, 27years. bells, monk's bead, primroses, sweet peas, beautiful- purple and red asters Nov. 1, Raymond Shortlidge, 1 year. large as the most cultivated, lilies of Nov. 7, Rachel Marcus, 57 years. the valley, baby breath, yellow arrow, Nov. 10, Infant ton of Geo. Hodgdon. sage rose, pink and white arctic gera Nov. 19, Mary Hauxhurat, 87 years. nium, crimson rhododendrons and gi Dec. 22, Pauline K. Robitach, 5 months. ant fireweed, all growing on the hill sides. To enumerate further is to re produce a florist's catalogue. C. K Johnson v» Svnthia D. Johnson. Concerning “Christian Names.” Geo. W. Phelps vs Serentha 8. Phelps. 126 Fifth Street, Portland. May one Interject a gentle protest Rebecca Green vs Marion B. Greeu. against the use of the phrase "Chris I Heference. Tillamook County Bank. Mattie Mills vs Eli O. Mills tian name" In this connection? The ' W. J. Gilbert vs Eva Gilbert. Romans said praenomcn, the French | say prenom, and we have used the ; word 'Tonename'’ for the last 365 Rank Foolishness. " When Httneked by a cough - -w- or -- • years. It is as Incorrect to speak of j i .'old, or when your ; ' throat is sore, it is the Christian name of a Jew, for ex- | rank foolishness to take any r.;_ oilier 1 medicine than Dr King', New Discovery," I ample, as It would be hopeless to ex ! | reya «ay, C. O. Eldridge, of Empire, Ga. " I ! | pect a Christmas card from a Jewish have hsve used New Discovery seven years j rabbi. Again, the middle name of a and I know it i, the t>e,t remedy on'earth Roman wu his gentile name—that of | for eough, and colds, croup, and all his gens. On the surface, what a pret throat and lung trouble,. My children ty confusion of Ideas it would have are subject to croup, but New Die. been to hars spoken of the name as at | eovery quickly cures every attach." once gentile and Christian?—London , Known the world over as ihe King of throat and lung remedies Sold under Notes and Queries. guarantee at Chaa. 1. Clough's drug Fiction Ready Mads. •tore. 5oc. and fl <K>. Ttial bottle free "Have you ever read any of Mrs. Galley's stories?” The Pure Food Law. "Yes. they're awfully Improbable, Stcretary Wilaon my «, ’’ One of tl>e ob ject, of th, law t, toinform th,consumer aren't they? 1 don't see how she Im i of th, or<Manre of oertaiaharmful <iriiR, sglnes such things.” ' in madicinre.” Iha law requirre that "She doesn't imagine them She Just th, amount of chloroform, opium, mor. makes notes of the excuses her hus phin», ami other habit forming drug, band gives her when be gets home 1st« k- v WILL SELL ALL STOCK ON E£ lw Mated on th» label of each | bottle. The manufacturer, of Cham at night.”—Philadelphia Tress. HANI) AT COST. berlain * Cough Remedy have always Comfort. Strictly for Cash I’ntil Further i etaimed that their re many did not con lain any of there drug«, and the truth Little Mary's mamma gave Uncle Notice. , of thi, claim i, now fully proven, a. Do Ben. the coachman, directions to mention of them I, made on the label drown a lot of kittens, but not to let Thi, remedy n not only one of the Mary know of It. She heard of the No as Io make room for a large stork for Spring and refeet. but one ot the I wet in use for order In some way and said to ben. coughe and colds. It, value has been »■miner Shoes lhal will shortly arrive from thkago. proven beyond queMion duriug the with tears In her eyes: “Uncle Hen. ('•me and get Bargains ont of the largest and best selected please warm the water it will be many yeav, it ha, been in general more comfortable.”—St Louis It epub- stock of Shoes in the City. use For Mie by all Druggwt,. lie. I hawk , PHYSICIAN & SUKGEO’ OREGON TILLAMOOK, BAY CITY, OREGON. HARNESS, COLLARS, etc. Yon Use Them. PHYSICIAN We Sell Them. ^pHOMAS W. & SURGEOi Office : Opposite Post Office. R. R. BEALS, REAL ESTATE, F inancial A gent , 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. Tillamook, Oregon JJR- P. J. SHARP, RESIDENT DENTIST, Office across the street from tl Court House. Dr. Wise’s office. -p SARCHET, -T . The Fashionable Taili THE OREGON CHEESE COMPANY, Cleaning, Pressing and Repaii ing a Specialty. Store in Heins Photographic Gallery. J^OBERT A. MILLER, NOTICE A ttorney - at -L aw , Land Titles, Land Office Bui ness and Mining Law. TO THE PEOPLE OF TILLAMOOK CITY AND COUNTY. I ROSS, Residence : Allen House, Tillamook, W. A. WILLIAMS & CO., Divorces. Taxes paid for no» Residents. Headquarters for Travelling Men. Deaths. Jan. 25, Peter W. Jacobs, male. Jan. 27, Edward Peter Blum, male. Feb. 8, Charles L. Butterfield, male. Feb. 10, Abraham Cohn, female. Feb. 16, Fred C. Christenson, male. Feb. 19, B. J. Stephens, male. Feb. 21, |ohn J. Webber, female. Feb. 27. Sollie Smith, female. March 3, Westlev Rush, female. Match 6, E. Hannankrat, male. March 6. John L. Blum, male, March 8, Fred Lowry, female. March 9, Arthur E Holden, female. Match 11, Ed ward Garlick, male. March 19. William <)wens, female. April 4, S. T. Childers, female. April 13. Albert Easom, male. April 15, Earl Rice, female. April 15, B. Jacobs, female. April 17, Ernest Ginger, male. April 23, John Sc hield, female. April 23, II. 8. Davidson, male. April 24 Peter Asp. male, April 31, Frederick D. Fike, female. May 2, David Simmoi.s, female. May 4, Chris Hanson, male. May 4, Charles Bowers, male. May 4, John | Huwser, male. May 24, N. J Crawford, female. May 30, Frank N lllingsworth, male. May 30. Joseph Pi ice, male. June 1. Thus. L. Handley, female, lune 1, O. B. Reed berg, male. |une 7. Danis J. Duinn, male lune 8, Thus. R. Johnson, female, June 17, l.aiiada McFee male. June 18. James Beech, female. lune 23, William Illing«worth, male. June 24. Frank B. liuti, female. June 26, Lawrence E Sanders, male. Inly 1, Wm. D. Glad well, male. July 8, George Higgins, female. July 10, l has. S. Wells, female. July 16, Fred Blum, male. July 17. David Shrude, female. July 24, Frederick Kabkee, male. July 25, Frank Tone, male. July 27, Bub Richards, male July 28. Warreu Vaughn, female. July 29. Joe Sanders, female July 30, Harry Warren, male. July —. Fred W Robikh, female Aug. 6, Jacob Errckson, male, Aug. 10. Isaac Wells, male. Aug. 10, Charles II Woolf«», female. Aug 10, Jacob Swifter, female. Aug. 30. A. V. Fretbetg, female. 8<|H. 6,JE. K, Gilbert, male Sept. 7. Bghert G«n»d»pecd. male. Bept. 14, Emil Helknbuyck, femalrv «ept 19. Stephen R Lamb, female. 97, Plcston Xiaruli, female. T. BOTTS, • A ttorney - at -L aw . The Best Hotel. OREGON. PORTLAND, Room, 306 Commercial Building- THE RED FRDNT I P. F. BROWNE. Agent. jOOKÌK*|DM DdMUDJtmn k\ l\ \ ““13 /TyL a,lw"*M»0 «■ovjomo muum amtx aq> ç . [ w 6 o )P^« in , oipsuDmatpct \\ jg L SX HJYjnSfiNVlNIKUW MsmmsoiiMNVwau. I