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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1908)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, Advertising Rates LFOAL ApvtKTIStMKNTS I First Insetion, |a-r line............... I Each subsequent insertion. line.... B iSiness and professional cards, 1 month .................................... I Homestead Notices ................. ■ ■ 5 Timber Claims .............................. 10 Ij.cals per line each insertion .. Disdlay advertisement, an meh. 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 exceedii g five lines. KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. .STRICTLY IN ADVANCE.) One year........................................... 1 Six months....................................... Three months................................... ibf 3*illamoob Fr*,<i ÄKabligbt. <’ Bffiker. Pul»ll«h«r. Constitutional and Representative Duty. —is Mr. Chamberlain to be sent to the Senate by a Republican Legislature of Oregon, to act and vote with the solid south and with a fartion repudiated at the North, to hamper and embarrass and if possible to defeat the policies of the Republican partv and its Administra tion t Then why did Oregon vote for I aft ? Are we children ? Have we anv j idea about what we want, or bow to i accomplish it. ■ It is in tl>e hands of a Republican Legislature to elect a Republican Sena i tor, and it ought to do so. A score of excellent and fit men might be iiamei’— net recognising any faction—either of whom would serve the state well, and at the same time on political questions continually arising in the Senate, would give the Republican party, overwhelm ingly dominant in Oregon, the represen tation in the Senate to which it is en. tiled. and the Administration at Wash ington the support which is its due Iruin Oregon. The members of the 1 egis- l.iture can select such man ; they need no dictation, and The Oregonian will offer no suggestion. But when the member ol the Legislature takes his OHtli ol office he will hud this initiative statute ol Oregon and any pledge he may ha>e made in accord with >1 dir'fitly al variance with the Constitution and laws ol the United States in this very ini portant matter ; nnd he will find it necessary to make Ins choice, one way or the other. It seems to The Oregonian that constitutional and representative duty ought to prevail.—Oregohian. HARNESS, COLLARS, etc. Y oq Use Them. We Sell Them. OLD CLOTHES IN AFRICA. ths Natives Often Moke Dreadful Mistakee With European Attire. The "ol' clo' man" is a familiar figure In American streets and one by no means without picturesqueness, but no American dealer In old clothes has es tablished a business of such extent of interest as that of John Hyman of Lon- don, whose specialty Is to purchase showy costumes and discarded military and official uniforms for disposal in tho Next Door to Tillamook County Bank. orient and Africa. Even the retiring lord mayors of Lon don have become almost by official tra dition bls customers, and the cocked hat, gold laced coat and knee breeches at which during one season London has gized with awe in the famous pageant of the lord mayor’s procession are likely the next season to delight the eyes of darkest Africa upon the proud person of a darkest African. “I have visited most of the great oriental bazars and watched our goods being purchased.” says Mr. Hyman. “I have seen blacks solemnly walking arouud with waistcoats buttoned be hind instead of before and even men wearing ladies' costumes. I have seen enormously big fellows In clothes so small I could not Imagine for the life of me bow they got into them or how they could get out again unless the stitching gave way." The Prince de Jolnvllle when off the Gabun coast once received on his ship an official visit from two chiefs, father and son. who must, one would think, have been Mr. Hyman's customers. They were known as Big Denis and 126 Fifth Street, Portland Little Denis, and each owned for cere monial occasions a military uniform. That of Big Denis was a French gen eral's. which his wives managed to get him Into. That of Little Denis was a hussar's, and its Intricate cut, numer ous buttons, straps and buckles and painfully small size proved quite too much for him. He sent the prince a despairing message begging help, and a relief party of delighted midshipmen was sent to dress him and bring him aboard. They fulfilled their errand; but, with the mischievousness of their kind, they so tightened every fastening of hfs overtlght attire that the poor youth was nearly bursting with combined pride and suffocation when he arrived, aud It was evident be could never be got out of his unwonted finery by any method less drastic than cutting him out. Still, no manner of wearing a com WILL SELL ALL STOCK ON plete costume ever equals In comic ef -• HAND AT COST. fect some of the savages' combinations of unrelated Items. One venerable Af Strictly for Cash Until Further! rican chieftain received his European Notice. guests with an antiquated evening !iiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiuiiiin.iiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:.'iiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiin!iii!: S shoulder cape of pink flowered satin ind spangles worn about his waist as So as to make room for a large stock for Spring and an apron, while his white wool was martially crowned by a military hel Summer Shoes that will shortly arrive from Chicago. met. Come and get Bargains out of the largest and best selected Still another conducted important stockof Shoes in the City. negotiations with an exploring party clad simply and impressively In a lady's large Gainsborough hat, a pair of cavalry boots and a necklace of glistening tin ornaments used to dec orate Christmas trees.—Youth's Com panion. n will not he doubled bv the Repub licans <d Or»gou. we suppose, that it w is a mistake to allow “Statement Number one" to | ut them in a very “peculiar’' position in relation to the election of United Statts Senator. The pledge that many members of the Leg is laturemnde is one that cannot be so soon or too decisively retraced. The Republicans of Oregon, constitut ing a prodigious majority ol the people, ought not to he misrepresented at Wash No Railroad Connections between Astoria and Tillamook iugton during the’hmg term of six years by a Democrat in the Senate. The situ Interviewed w hile in Portland regard ation in which the state ami their party ing the construction of a railroad into are placed came about through a scries Tillamook to connect with the Astoria ol luckless and illconsidered movements rood, Mr Hill said that it w as not prac assisted by fraudulent proceedings on tical, This is w hat appeared iu the Ore the part of the Democrats of the state. gonian : The method and its consequences are all At the hotel Mr. Hill was extremely wrong ; and the result, if it be not arrest reticent in discussing his further plans ed, will be a clear travesty of reptesent- as to railroad construction in this terri atiye government and direct reversal ol tory. It was evident from his manner the political will of Oregon. that he wisbed to reserve making any For Oregon no more wants a Demo announcement he proposed to make cratic Senator than it desired to cast its yote for a Democrat for President. ■ luring this visit until last uigbi's han Through a juggle of politics the prepon quet. •• What ? Build a road from Astoria derant political sentiment of the state ought not to he defied and misrepresent t > Tillamook," inquired Mr. Hill, in re ed. When a mistake has been made it spouse Io a question on that subject. ought to be righted; and no pledge or '• Such a load is impracticable by tliai promise made through forgetfulness of route, It r.ecesaarily would have to tn constitutional nnd political duty, or almost entirely a tunneled road. I’hia i we have from tin assisted or forced by the trick of /alse is the information registration for the purpose of cont roll survey that has l>een made by our en ing the primaries of the opposite party, gineera. Heatdea, the bushiest« that coulii should be considered as having any ne depended on for such an extensn-ii moral or other validity. When a man would not justify the expense of such a finds he is wrong, the best thing he can road. To build a railroad down tin do in to reconsiderand to get right quick; Coast would involve very extensive aim especially so when his mistake is made expensive tunneling. " Every section of a railroad that is in a representative capacity and the rights ot all the people are concerned. built nowadays is constructed with a It is the right of the Republican Senator; view: eventually of tusking it a part of a nnd since the Senatorship is a great permanent railroad system. There must National office, Republicans of all the be pi'uspe'ilive business enough to war states have rights in this Oregon busi rant the cost of building a railroad or ness that »liould be considered. More- an extension of a railroad into any corn 1 he Devil's Advocate. In connection with the Roman Cath over, the Repnblican Administration of ■nullity. That business manifestly is not President Taft will be entitled to sup- to be fouti'l in the Tillamook country olic ceremony of canonization there is port, not to opposition, Ironi Oregon, The railroad business is not like the an official called “the devil's advocate." The vote for Bryan in Oregon, for mercantile business. The merchant can When the church Is ready to proceed with the steps preliminary to the can President, is the measme of Chamber establish Inmself in buainnss and conduct onization, an able man Is appointed to business as long as it pays him and that Iain's strength lor Senator, and the Re assail the memory of the candidate publican majoiity of the state is as much then he is privileged to quit. But it in and to bring against him all possible entitled to the Senator as to the Presi not so w ith a railroad. There must be charges, which the other side must dential electors and to the choree tor business to meet operating expenses and satisfactorily dispose of. This accuser President. These are the great political a reasonable return on tlm investment Is known as the “devil's advocate,” offices, through which the policies ol the w hich is a permanent one. The business and not until he ts silenced by the dis country are directed. man can go out of business, but the rail proof of his charges can the canoniza tion be accomplished. By a law enacted through initiative road must continue to be operated. petition, it is attempted to compel 01 They Own the Soft Impeachment. require niemlrcis ol the Legislature to Seven Years of Proof In an address to the Canadian club *'I have had seven years of proof that forego and iepudr.de their duty under la Montreal. Mr. James Bryce said: the Constitution and lawsol (he United Dr King's New Discovery is the l »CMI "I do not thiuk it would be advisable medicine to take for coughs and colds States Senators, and to accept and con and for every diseased condition ol tor me to say much, for I have the form to a totally different instruction throat, chest or lungs.'* says W V I good fortune to be a Scotchman my Such law. with the instruction under it, Henry, of Panama, Mo. The world ha- seif. I won't pursue the theme of is void ub initio. No promise or pledge had thirty-eight years of proof that Dr what contributions Scotchmen should King's New Discovery is the best rein asked.exacted or granted, under such edy for coughs and colds, lu grippe, be able to make to Canada's litera instruction. should be considered as hav nsiliiiia. hay fever, bronchitis, hemor ture and science, for the very simple ing tut least weight or binding force in rhage of the lungs, and the early stages reason which was given by a friend of mine, who said. '1 uever argue with morals or conscience. No man can sign <dconsumption. Its tnuely use always Scotchmen that they are a great na prevents the development of pneumonia. away ins right to perform his consti Sold undergnaranleest Clias. I Clough's tion—they admit it.’ ” tutional duty, it in enough to say that drugstore. 50v. and #1 OU. Trial Uottk such promise in this caxe was made free. Cost of Courtesy. without sufficient consideration of the The adage “Courtesy costs nothing” Watched Fifteen Years. circumstances and facts and constquen “ For fifteen ve»r I have watched the would If true offer sufficient reason to its. This subject was a novel one. It working of Bucklen's Arnica Salve; Insure Its observance by practically was pressed by an unscrupulous partisan and it luw never fail'd Io cure any sore, every member of the commercial com opposition, large part ot which register boil, ulcer or burn to which it was ap munity, It being fairly obvious to most plied It has saved us many a doctor ed under false p«et<use, and then when bill," says A F. Hardy, of’ East Wil- of us that courtesy is an excellent the pledges were secured helped io Ion, Maine. 25c. at Chas. 1 Clough's lubricant for the machinery in busi ness. To be always courteous in busi nominate Republican candidates, in drug store. ness. however, requires a very consid vi »Litton of the intent ol the primary erable expenditure of meutal effort, Mind Your Business! la w and of lair politics . and tmaily to 'f you don’t nobody will. It is your which very few of us are capable of make (heir election sure declined in most bueiuesa to keep out of all ties* trouble sustaining at all times -Magazine of cases to put forlhlh mocratic candidate». you can and you can and will keep out Commerce. It was a trick game, hum the laginning of liver and laiwi-l irviible if you take Dr King's New Lite Fills They keep Bismarck's Love of Nature. a d ought to bind nobody. That it was i'iliousness. malaria and jaundice out Speaking of the country and the agisted by ti e competition of Rrpuhli- , of your system 25c at Chas I. Clough s long walks he took daily. Bismarck can (actions with each ulh?» doesn’t drug More. Slid he loved nature, but the amount furnish mnw, nor change its nature I of life he saw awed him. and It took For Chronic Diarrhoea al all htne now is approaching Io gel "While in the ariuv In IMS I was a great deni of faith to believe that r d of these juggling and fraudulent taken with chronic diarrhoea." says an all seeing eye" could notice every practices la politics, and to start tbe George M Felton, of t>outh Gibeon, Pa. living atom when one realized what It "Have you ever sat on the |»r cedent that will prevent repetitions " I have since tried many remedies but meant without any permanent relief until Mr of ch mes that dehat lhe purposes and A W Mlles of tins place persuaded me trass and examined It closely? There methods of the Conetitutiun and the to try Chamberlain s Colic, Choi via and le enough life in one square yard to Will ol the vast majority ul the people. Diarrhoea Remedy, one bottle of whii li appall you." be said -Lady Randolph For sale by all Churchill. There is nothing better than ulwdience Moppet It al once." to lhe Constitution and laws supprea Druggists._____________ Proud. sum of these indirect ions and bunco “So you enjoy seeing your boy play Wood Wanted games. football." Bide will be received until Noy. 16, by Question is straight and direct Is a ' I should mv I do." answered Fann “It makes ma right Democratic Senator—Mr. Chamberlain the Red Clover Creamery Co , for fifty er Corntoesei cords of f'iur loot alder wood, twenty. proud to see him out there an' realize from Mtksissiptn. imbued through and1 through with Southern political ideas, five coni» to lw delivered and piled in that he is ths young feller I was once which tojeiate no dissent, but send to their sited on or before April 1st, 190#, sble to whip.**—Washington Star. • mgress etery Senator and Represents* I nnd twenty.five cords on or before Sept I 1st 190». Actions are the raiment jf the man live to support their theory and idea S. S bvuuxci , S vv . NOVEMBER 12, 1908. I —Herodotus. W. A. WILLIAMS & CO., The Oregon CheeseC o.,Incorported, j is prepared to buy all the first class cheese that comes along. Spot cash and highest price. Factory men will do well to see R. Robinson, the mana- j, ger, before selling. He will be in Tillamook a good part of the time dur- Only the best stock •| ing the season < nan ted. T—I x Complete set of Abstract. Residents. Office opposite Post Ofo Both phones. W. H. COOPER, A ttorney - at -L aw T illamook , C arl haberlach , attorney at - law , Office across the street and 1^ the Post Office. H. GOYNE, A ttorney - at L ak Office : Opposite Court Hou^ T illamook , O regon . A. W. SEVERANCE, PEOPLE OF TILLAMOOK CITY AND COUNTY. A ttorney - at -L aw , T illamook R. T. .. O regos , BOALS, M.D., PHYSICIAN & SURGE® TILLAMOOK. Office- Olson Building. Residence : Mrs. Weiss' home, mii Mrs. Walker's. yy. i. M. smith , PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Office over J. A. Todd & Co.. Tillamook, Ore. P. F. BROWNE. Agent. C. HAWK, PHYSICIAN & SURGI I have just opened up the most com plete line of BAY CITY, OREGON. STAPLE & FANCY GROCERIES in Tillamook, all new and Fresh. The prices are no higher than others. AV e most cordially invite you to come and look at what we have and get our prices, whether you buy or not. Taxes paid in office. THE OREGON CHEESE COMPANY, NOTICE T. BOTTS, A ttorney - at .^ ^J^HOMAS W. ROSS, PHYSICIAN & SURGEOJ Office : Opposite Post Offlu. « » » & Residence : Allen House. Tillamook,0« R. BEALS, REAL ESTATE, F inancial A gk >1 Tillamook, Oregon. w. M. MILLS, Opposite the Post Offiee ~j~^R. P. J. SHARP, DENTIST, RESIDENT Office across the street fro®* Court House. Dr. Wise’s office. Al'V SARCHET, The Fashionable T#» -L . Cleaning, Pressing and ing a Specialty- Store in Heins Fhotognp* Gallery. OBERT A. MILL® ATTORNEY-AT-LAW i I^and Titles, Land 0®<* ness and Mining L®*- The Edison Phonograph Will stir you with its marches, amuse you with its rag time songs and dances. It sings as sweetly as the most cultivated singer and renders perfectly the tones of the various instruments of orchestras and bauds. Phonographs, lu.50 and up. Record, 35 cents. PORTLAND, _ Room. 306 Commercial 8"** a Tillamook, DRUG STORE, Oregon S fscialvv . OWING C B oom LAMARS Ornes Bvsixess L axo 4 CO lawyers . 334 WoscasvsxB’ji** «ooL-Se’sA’o’tWvl pobtland . oré *’0-