illanwk
Vol. XX.
llamook
No.
I.
jottings
Ir. Morris, eye specialist.
*
I. T. Botts, for abstracts,
lee Dr. Morris about your eyes,
lead Tillamook County Bank notes *
Hives in bulk or jar at Mills' Cash
ire.
•
ee Mrs. D. L. Shrode for painting
»ns.
*
ee Sturgeon'« before making pur-
ises.
Eastern Hams and Bacon at Mills’
lb Store.
*
'he weather keeps dry but cold, with
s at night.
'he infant child of Lou Johnson died
Wednesday,
'asture to rent for cattle. Apply to
id C. Skomp.
*
»nes & Knudson has received their
Ing matting.
Ir. and Mrs. H. T. Botts left Satur-
| for Portland.
Jarket day has been postponed until
ir in the summer.
hecial sales at Sturgeon’s, beginning
Brday, June 13th.
*
I you have trouble with your ever,
[>r. Henry Morris.
*
bw is the time to see about your
I Don't put it off.
he Tillamook Concert Band will give
Ince on Saturday night.
phi milk cans with the new sanitary
*
!8. —K ing & S mith Co,
Henry Morris will tell you the
about your eye troubles.
■smaking by Miss Emma Delsman,
I the otreet from Ed. Lindsey's. *
les & Knudson's furniture store has
ed a first class stock of carpets. *
IV running, high in quality and low
te, Lawn Mowers.—King & S mith
•
I. Whitney returned from Portland
ndav night, where he had been on
■s.
■•ale, one sow with seven pigs, also
bhoats. Enquire of S. Schiffman,
tOre.
[MG. Tola id, of Dallas, came in
■nesday to «.tend the summer with
Lily.
fk was at irted Monday on tie
Justness building which is to be
k for E. E. Tyler.
Bale, a three year old Durham Bull,
| and kind. T. H. McCormack,
bra'rie.
•
■re the latest instruments for the
■c examination of the eye. Call
■ them.
• ,
■leave your horses in the rain
■ du can tie them in Harris' Tie
■ lOcts.
■alary of Postmaster Severance
■raised $100 after July 1st, mak-
■.600 a year.
■ will be Children Day’s servie«
■IE. church next Sunday morn-
■even o'clock.
■M.irv Bump, of Douglas, Kans .
■on Saturday to visit her daugh-
■. C. A. Patzlaf.
■ed, a man with family to take
■of about 30 cows at once. En.
■6 Schiffman, Balm, Ore.
■Todd, C. W. Talmage and Jas.
Beit on Saturday as delegates to
Bx-ratic state convention,
^■soline scho nr Gerald C came
Btv Friday, her cargo being com-
Bcoal, gasoline and explosives.
■M-'ers. who has been employed
Bintend the election of the new
B|ht plant, came in on Saturday
^■tmily.
^■elborg. who left here some few
^■o for the East, has left New
$■ a visit to relatives at Frans-
^■8» eden.
^■filcox, a newspaper man, came
iBsteameron Saturday to visit
^■ner, the Sage ol Hemlock, at
B$ Hotel.
iBW-ck was charged with assault
^■ry Upon Ralph Bunn at Clover-
kBBundav morning, and Justice
^Bd him $20.
wanted to slash and cut
■^■or particulars phone to Clar-
^Bl, or write him. the address
^^■onville. Ore.
•
coach, gnylv painted in red
took the place of the hack
of the Tillamook North Yam-
I^BIne on Tuesday.
^■n of the Christian church,
3B<he postponement of market
had to postpone the dinner
^Bed giving that day.
■ Blot of material to le used in
^^■’uciion of the Pacific States
MBA Telegraph Company, was
W» on the last trip of the Sue H
Heisel «nd on* of her son«
b Eorope to riail relative«.
I will remain daring th« sum
I place* Pete ia the "«rars
l»lass endeavoring to aecaie
of a bice looking female for
MenÖlW
TILLAMOOK, OREGON, JUNE rr, 1908
For Sale, One Holstein Bull Calf, 13
months old. grandson of Luude Oregon
de Rol, % white. Price $50. Registered
and transferred. Wm. Hartill. Melville.
Oregon.
•
John Aschim. one of the graduates of
the Tillamook high Bchool. and who was
the night operator at the telephone
office, left oil Friday for Denver, where
he will locate.
For Sale, a span of Black Horses. 5
and 6 years old, weight 1.400 pounds;
gentle, true and matched in color and
gait. For particulars inquire at the
Headlight office.
•
For Sale, a Second Hand Boiler and
Engine ; also a small Donkey Engine and
Boiler, all in good shape and in running
order. Enquire of Frank Long, at the
saw mill in this city
•
A large amount of money is being
raised for the Fourth of July celebration
in Tillamook City, which will be the
biggest ce'ebration ever held in this
county, extending over two days.
Caples & Hoevet have started a lum
ber yard opposite Mrs. Walker’s, and
those wanting lumber can get it from
there by leaving orders at the Tillamook
Hotel or the Yellow Fir saw mill.
-
The steamer Sue H. Elmore came in on
Saturday, her passengers being Claude
Thayer, Mrs. Evans and son, Mrs. Mary
Bump, Mrs. Patzlaf, J. M. Barker. W. R.
Wilcox. Mr. Barrett, L McNeff and Mr.
Myers and familv.
Owing to the play at the opera house
on Friday evening, the young people's
social of the Presbyterian church, which
was arranged for that evening at the
borne of Mrs Whitney, has been post
poned two weeks.
The Nehalem HorseCompany’s stallion
Flanuer will be at Easter’s barn Mon
days, Thursdays and Saturdays ; at
Fred Zaddach's, on the Nehalem, Tues
days afternoons and Wednesday morn,
ings ; and at the Whitney Co.'s ranch
half a mile west of the W. N. Vaughn
place. Fridays.
*
The Sue H. Elmore left on Thursday,
her passengers being Mrs. Tillaston, W.
R. Rutherford and wife, Miss Whitney.
Miss Garfield, Mrs. Snuffer and son, Miss
Lyster, P. Fredofer, P. Raderinacher,
Miss Mapes, R. Alt, two Davis children,
F. Allender, Ed. Catterlin, N. A. Barrett
and T. Coates. She took out also 2310
cases of cheese.
Attorneys representing the Hill inter
ests have been in Astoria looking up the
titles to property, preparatory to be-
ginning condemnation proceedings to
secure rights of wav lor the extension of
the Astoria & Columbia River Railroad
from Seaside to Tillamook. These ac
tions are to be commenced at once so
that construction work cau be well
under way this year.
The members of the Junior Class of the
Tillamook High School will play the
comedy-drama, entitled "Mr. Bob,*' at
the Opera House on Friday evening, the
12th June. This will be the first thing of
the kind ever undertaken in this county
by any of the junior classes of the high
school. The players are well adapted to
their respective parts, and an excellent
representation of the play is promised
Tickets for sale at the Tillamook Bakery.
Married, on Thursday evening. June
11th, at the Presbyterian parsonage, in
Tillamook City, by the Rev. D. H.
Hare, Mr. Percy Berdett Vanciel and
Miss Martha McKimens, in the pr«ence
of a few intimate friends. The bride is
the affable daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George R. McKimens. of Nehalem, while
lhe|groom u front the East, but making
bis home in Portland at present. Tie
happy couple will leave on their honey
moon trip the end of the week.
Prof. W. R. Rutherford has decided to
take a course of study at the State Uni
versity at Eugene the coining school
year, consequently he declined to take
the principalship of the public school i-i
this city. The school board did its best
to keep Mr. Rutherford, because he has
made an excellent principal, giving the
best ol satisfaction in his school work,
•nd in dealing Tillamook he carried
with him the respect of the people of this
community, as well as that of the pupils
of the public school.
of the evening was spent in a social man
ner, tie ladies of the church serving re
freshments The pupils of St. Alphonsus
Academy, also to commemorate the
event, rendered a program Friday morn,
ing.
The Headlight would call Mayor John
son's attention to matters which need
investigation. This*(Thursday) evening
a bottle crashed through one of the win
dows from the upstairs rooms of the
old Headlight building, which, had it
struck any pedestrian in the head, would
have been instant death to them. That
night, between ten and eleven o’clock,
rocks and missels were thrown at a
number of buildings, some of which
crashed through windows and destroyed
citizen’s property. The other night a
bag of coal, belonging to Eugene Jen
kins was taken and «lumped into the
excavation.
Mrs. M. J. Buttz died in Portland on
Thursday night, where she was taken a
few days previous to undergo an opera
tion for cancer of the stomach. The re
mains were brought back on Sundav,
and next day they were buried in the
Oddfellows' cemetery, Rev. I. V. Parker
pastor of the M E church, conducting
the religious services. Mrs. Buttz was
born at Corvallis, Ore.,in 1862, and was
the daughter of Solomon Mulkey, one of
the early pioneers of Oregon. She was
married to Elam Buttz on May 19th,
1881, and moved to Tillamook county,
where she had since resided. She was
45 years of age and leaves a husband
and six children.
Married, on Sunday evening, at the
home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. A K. Case, in this citv, Mr. Floyd
M. Loomis and Miss Olive A. Case. The
ceremony was performed by the Rev. D
L. Stirode, there being only a few inti
mate friends invited to witness the
happy event The bride, who has a most
happy, smiling disposition, was a great
favorite with most everybody, especially
with her young friends, who wish her
every happiness. The groom belongs to
to Forest Grove, where his family is
greatly respected. The happy couple
left on Monday morning for that place,
where they will make their home, and
they carried with them the congratula
tions and best wishes of their Tillamook
friends.
Commencement Exercises at
St. Alphonsus Academy.
The Sisters and the Pupils of St. Al
phonsus School respectfully invite the
people of Tillamook and vicinity to be
present Tuesday evening, June 16, at an
entertainment to be given at Academy
hall. The doors will be open at seven
o’clock and the curtain rises at 8 p. m
The admission will be free.
For Exchange.
Good 6 room house on corner lot in
Forest Grove to exchange for property
in Tillamook or Bay City or for some
good Iocs or acerage close to the beach.
For paiticulars write to Forest Grove
Real Estate Co., Forest Grove, Oregon.
NO JETTIES AT TILLAMOOK.
Roessler Reports Commerce Doe«
Notjustify Expense.
Washington. June 9 —It will proba
bly be many years before Congress
authorizes any material improvement
of the channel across the barat the en
trance of Tillamook Bay.nnd quite as
many years liefore any extensive im
provement is made in the channel from
the bar to Tillamook Citv. It is the
universal opinion of engineer officers
that the commerce of Tillamook Bay,
present and prospective, don not justi
fy the expenditure of any great sum of
money, and the fact that a railroad is
soon to he extended to Tillamoox is a
further and perhaps more potent reason
why Congress will not authorize large
expenditures on this harbor. The rail
road, now building, will be able to
handle practically all of the freight
originating in the Tillamook country,
and will tend further to decrease ship
ping by water. The water shipments
to anil from Tillamook are today only
half what the« were ten years ago. the
decline having twen steady and giadual.
The decrease is expected to be even
Cheese, savs the Tillamook Herald, is more marked after the railroad liegins
an important factor in the making of operating.
free lunch sandwich« ; no saloons no
The Tillamook situation is fully dis
free lunch« ; no free lunch«, a dimin cussed in a report of Colonel Roessler,
ution of the demand for cheese ; so give recently sent to Congress
His report
us the saloons that we may sell our recommends the appropriation of $5000
cheese. That's surely a bright thought to repair existing works in the harbor,
and logical reasoning and the Herald ; and recommends the annual expenditure
man should have awakened sooner to of $5000 for maintaining a channel at
the importance of bis theme and got it the present depth, as far as T illamook
well groomed for the running in the I City. The Engineer Board and chief of
campaign just closed. Please pass the engineers concur in this recommendation,
cheese —Sheridan Sun.
! and that report wi<l limit the appro,
Last Friday being the tenth anniver) priatioa to be made in the nes*. river and
sary of the ordination of Rev. L. A. Le i harbor bill.________________
Miller to the priesthood, • large number
of bis parishoners gathered at the parish |
house that evening to sbour their respect
a Businen Directory of each City.
for th« rev. gentleman which was turned
Town and Village in Oregon and
Washington, giving a Descriptive
into • social gathering, and during the
Sketch of each place, together with
eveuing Father Le Miller was presented
the location and Shipping Facilities
with a well filled purse. This he grate- '
and a Classified Directors of Each
fully accepted, who thanked his osrisk- (
Business and Profession. R. L. Polk
& Co Inc , Seattle, Wash.
iooers for their kindnvss. The remainder .
Polk's Gazetteer
>1.50 per year
Statement of Condition of
Tillamook County Bank,
Of Tillamook City, May 14th, 1908.
3125,480.41
19,224.06
333.66
4,834.83
2,604.68
53,731.18
3,997.05
20,003.52
Loans and Discounts
War. and other securities
Overdrafts -
Building, Fur. and Fix.
Other Real Estate
Deposited with Bank
Other Resources
Cash on Hand
Capital Stock
Dep. subj. to check
Dem. Cert, of Dep.
Time Cert, of Dep.
Savings Deposits
Certified Checks
Undivided Profits
Other Liabilities
3 30,000.00
117,251.32
12,075.48
49,732.92
15,250.90
16.74
4,820.03
1,053.00
3230,209.39
3230,209.39
State of Oregon,
J „c
County of Tillamook, )
I, M. \V. Harrison, being first duly sworn, on my oath say that I am president and
cashier of the Tillamook County Bank, and that the foregoing is a true and correct statement of
the financial condition of said Bank on May, 1908.—M. W. Harrison.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 27th day of May, 1908.
H. T. BOTTS, Notary Public for Oregon.
Bids Wanted.
Notice is hereby given that the County
Commissioner, Geo. W. Bodvfelt, will be
at the sawmill of Lamb and Burdick on
the Sandlake road, on Wednesday,
June 17 th, 1908 at the hour ol 10 o’clock
a.m., to receive bids and award con
tracts for cross-laying and improving
certain portions of Sandlake road. All
persons interested and wishing to bid
on same will meet Mr. Bodvfelt at the
above named place, at the time specified,
and submit their sealed bids to him. By
order of the County Court.
G. B. L amb ,
County Clerk.
Wonderful Passion Play
will be given in
Tillamook City, June 1 7,
Bay City, June 18,
Cloverdale, June 19
Bids Wanted
Notice is hereby given that the County-
Court of Tillamook County, Oregon will
receive sealed bids for the graveling of
that portion of what is known as the
Beals’ road at Nehalem, Oregon, from
the beginning of said road to angle 19,
of mile 1.
The approximate distance to be gravel,
ed is % mile. The approximate amount
of gravel to be used on said road is 600
cubic yards. All bids must be at certain
price per cubic yard, and the said gra vel
to be distributed over the entire dis
tance as may be directed by the County
Court or its representative. The work
must be completed on or before October
1, 1908. All bids must be filed with the
County Clerk on or before 10 o’clock
a m. July 1st. 1908. The court reserves
the right to reject any and all bids. By
order of the court.
G. B. L amb ,
County Clerk.
A Beautiful Life - Size, Hand Painted, Living,
Moving Play of the Life of Christ, with all His
Miracles, from His Birth to His Death on the
Cross.
OVER
TWO MILES OF FILM.
Costing thousands of dollars.
Commencement Exercises at St.
Alphonsus Academy.
On Tuesday Evening, June 16th
To the Public.
Having sold my implement and
vehicle business to Clarence Hauen
kralt, 1 desire to thank the public for
the patronage received for the pant six
years and hope you will give Mi. Han-
•Mkratt a call.
Yours to serve,
B. O. S nuffer .
PROGRAM.
We Come to Greet You................................ Opening Chorus.
The Old Man, Recitation ............................ . M. McIntyre.
There’s Room for You up Higher, recitation, Miss T. Durrer.
The Harp that once Through Tara’s Hall, piano solo,
Miss E. Munson.
HOBSONVILLE.
Mayor Johnson and wife took dinner
Sundav with Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Man-
dis of this place.
Mr. Miller employed in the mill here
had the misfortune to break one of his
ribs Monday afternoon.
•
Mrs. Lou Riefenburg has been quite ill
for quite a number of days part. Dr
Hawk, of Bay City, is the attending
physician.
Mrs. Weening was a Hobsonville
visitor Sunday.
Jessie Riefenburg has been visiting her
parents here, since her school was out.
William Tulcup has been under the
weather several days.
Ass't Supt. Temperley, of the U. S.
Lifesaving service left last week with his
family for Neah Lay, where he will
superintend some work in the futme.
Mr. Temperley an I family will lie great
ly missed by their many friends in and
a roti no Garibaldi. And we only hope
that they will have work to call them
back.
Paul Refldaway, one of the carpenters
in the mdl here, leavers this week for
Portland.
Gus Nelson, of Bay City, left Sunday
on a business tripout title
THE FICKLE FORTUNE OF AUNT JERUSHIA.
Cast of characters :
Aunt Jerushia.................... Miss Neoma Young.
Elizabeth Ward................... ,, “ Zella Kunze.
Sally Belle Ward ............... ,, Clara Lucas.
Nell Ward........................... „ Nellie Chase.
Fluffy Ruffles Ward........... ,, Melva Ward.
Billy.................................... Dewey Michaud.
Das Heimwech, Violin Solo............................ M. Mahoney.
The Naughty Boy, Recitation ........................ M. McIntyre.
Ten of Them, Recitation ............................ Miss L. Woolfe.
What I Mean to Be, Recitation................................. Minims.
Chasing Gazelles, Instrumental Duet,
Misses N. Chase and M. Wade.
Uncle Job’s Sacrifice, Recitation......................... R. Maxwell.
A Second Topsy........................................................ Dialogue.
La Madona, Reverie ................... .................... Miss A. Todd.
The Level Crossing, Recitation ..................... Miss A. Perry.
The Tyrolese and his Child, Vocal Solo . .Miss J. Davidson.
Accompanist, Miss N. Chase.
The Actor’s Story, Recitation..................... MissG. Weimer.
I’m Going to a Party, Vocal Solo......... Miss A. Fitzpatrick.
Flag Drill ...........................................................Senior Class.
Topsy, Recitation ................................... Miss A. Fitzpatrick.
Grandpa’s Birthday.................................................... Operetta.
First Bank & Trust
Company,
Graduating Honors Conferred upon :
BAY CITY, ORE.
Capital Slock........................ $25,000.
Offers every facility for safe Ivin king,
and solicits your business.
Commercial. Havings and Trust De- i
purtmerila.
Interest at current rates on checking
accounts.
•
Our little book,Helpful Hints on
Banking.'' explaining how to do your1
banking by mail M ready.
Send for a copy. It's fra« for the
I
Miss E. Munson, Mrs. C. A. Patzlaf, for Music.
Misses Katie Sheets, Lillian Young, Helen Epplett, Ida
Nicholas, Bessie Terwilliger, for Stenography.
Misses Theresa Durrer, Mildred Phelps, Master Michael
Mahoney, Eight Grade Diplomas.
Medals presented by Rev. L. A. Le Miller, Rector Sacred
Heart Church :
Miss Theresa Durrer, for Penmanship.
Miss E. Munson, for Music.
Miss Hu Ida Bergstrom, for General Excellence.