T-TT/LAM-nOR HEADLIGHT, JUNE 17, 1900.
ANCIENT BELLS.
The Sacrifice of Kaomouna, the
Hawaiian Beauty.
HER LIFE FOR HER MOTHER
•
____ _
A Story Which Sheds a Bright Light
Upon the Filial Devotion of Kanaka
Women— The Reason a Baby'a Ad
vances Were Not Returned.
they Were Often Quadrangular and
Made of Thin Iron Plate*.
There are several old bells In Scot
kind, Ireland and Wales. Tbe oldest are
often quadrangular, being made of
thin iron plates which have been ham
mered and riveted together. At the
monastery of St. Gall in Switzerland
tbe four sided bell of the Irish mission
ary St. Gall, who lived in the seventh
century, is still preserved, but more
auclent still is the bell of St. Patrick
in Belfast, which is ornamented with
gold and gems and silver filigree work.
The curfew bell Is that about which
most lias been written and said. It
has been thought that It was only used
In England, but it was quite common
on the continent in tbe middle ages.
Tbe ringing of bells by rope Is still
very popular In England, especially In
the country, where almost every ham
let. however small, has Its church with
its peal of bells, which are often re-
mnrkably well rung
The first real
peal of bells In England was sent by
Pope Calixtus IH. to King’s college.
Cambridge, and was for IW years the
largest peal hi England.
About the
beginning of the year 1500 sets of eight
bells were hung in a few of the large
churches.
In the middle of the seventeenth cen
tury a man named White wrote n fa
mous work on bells In which be intro
duced the system of numbering them
1. 2. 3. 4. etc., on slips of paper in dif
ferent orders, according to the changes
intended to be rung. It Is calculated
that to ring all the changes upon twen
ty-four bells at two strokes a second
would take 117 billion years.
One of tbe most famous bells tn the
world Is the first great bell of Moscow,
which now stands In the middle of a
square In that city and Is used as a
chapel. This bell was cast in 1733, but
was In the earth for over a hundred
years, being raised In 1830 by the Em
peror Nicholas. It Is nearly twenty
feet high, lias a circumference of sixty
feet. Is two feet thick and weighs al
most 200 tons. The second Moscow
bell, which is the largest bell In the
world that Is actually in use, weighs
128 tons. There are several bells ex
tant which weigh ten tons and over, of
which Big Ben. the largest bell in Eng
land, weighing between thirteen and
fourteen tons. Is one. Big Ben Is un
fortunately cracked.—London Globe.
Tbe usual Honolulu crowd was down ]
at tbe dock when tbe steamship from
San Francisco pulled alongside tbe
pier on a brilliant, balmy afternoon in
January some years ago. American i
women in summer afternoon costumes,
a few English and a few German wo
men of society, arrayed also for steam
er day. leaned back languorously in
their carriages and phaetons, under the
shade of parasols, listening to tbe lazy
eompllnieniary talk of the duck clad.
Jel et>wreathed young business men
who comblm-d duty with pleasure In
thus waiting for the great steamer to
slip lalK>rlously into her measured
berth beside tbe pier.
All of tbe Kanaka women had bare
feet. They stood about in little groups
as silent as the men of their race. A
few of the Kanaka women carried
tiny brown babies—silent also. The I
youug women were of varying degrees |
of beauty, their figures showing a uni- |
form excellence of proportion.
One of these Kanaka women at tbe
dock on this brilliant January after
noon was particularly beautiful. She
was clad like the rest of tbe women of
her nice. She was fully five feet ten
Inches In height, and the white silk
cord with which, unlike the other Ka
naka women, she drew her white dress
about her waist emphasized the splen
did heroic proportions of her figure.
Kaomouna seemed quite unconscious
of her beauty. The young shipping
clerks, hurrying to and fro on the dock
with their pencils behind their ears,
stopped suddenly when they caught
sight of her. The women in the car
riages, who bad not been long down
from the States or from Europe, saw
Kaomouna and asked the women of
longer Honolulu residence, “Who is
that glorious creature?”
Kaomouna.
with a very sad fnce, spoke only an
occasional word to one of the Kanaka
women.
HISTORY ON A TUSK.
The steamship was made fast to the
pier, and the passengers began to troop Picture Made by a Cave Man Millions
over the gangplank. There was one
of Years Ago.
man with bls pretty young wife and
Long ago, so long that even a scien
three-year-old little girl. The little girl tist would hardly dare venture a guess
was the first to catch sight of Kao- as to the date, a man clad with only
mouua as she reached the bottom of a wild beast's skin about bls loins was
the gangway. She quickly freed her sitting at the mouth of a cave in one
band from her father's grasp and ran of the rocky highlands in what Is now
toward Kaomouna with baby words. southern France. He was scratching
Kaomouna smiled at the little girl, but with a sharp flint on the fragments
did not offer to take her up. Instead of an Ivory tusk, perhaps picturing for
she folded her arms, looking down at some youthful ndmlrers adventures
the little pink faced child pleasantly. through which he had passed or ani
When the mother had taken the little mals he had slain. That Ivory chip
girl she raised her eyes to look at Kao was stored away as a treasure, to be
mouna.
lost and forgotten after the cave man’s
“Did you ever in your whole life see I death. One day a man named Lartet,
such a perfectly beautiful woman?” digging In the cavern floor, found It.
asked the youug wife of her busband On It was scratched a very fair rep
In a whisper when he came up. "And resentation of the hairy elephant,
Tita seemed to take to her Immediate- probably at once the oldest picture
ly. If we could only have her for a and tbe oldest human record In ex
nurse for Tita 1”
istence.
Kaomouna beard her.
We know tbe cave man was a faith
"Kaomouna would love to be that," ful workman, for tbe melting Ice fields
she replied In a soft Kanaka acceuted j of Siberia have yielded a perfect speci
speech, smiling. Then u look of pain j men of this extinct mammal, and the
came Into her face. “But It may not r
_________ , picture
______ _____________
paleolithic
Is a true copy. Not
be—It may not be!" And. with her only has this ancient sculptor given us
hands nt her eyes, Kaomouna turned a sample of the earliest art, but be has
suddenly and disappeared among the left us. more valuable than all. a his
departing men and women of her race. torical record of his time, for this
Throe months later the parents of Hide picture Is simply a page from the
the little girl were at the dock to cave man’s history which, translated
gether to witness for the lirxt time the Into twentieth century English, says.
reddest of sights—the departure of the "Men. thinking men. were contempo
leper» for the island of Molokai. The raneous with the hairy elephant.”
Kilauea Hou. tbe leper steamer, was
No record that any of humankind
out in the stream, and the letters were have ever left is half so ancient as
being carried out to her tn barges. A this. The oldest Egyptian papyrus Is
litter was borne through the roped In a thing of yesterday compared to this
closure for the lepers, On it lay a paleolithic sculpture. While the cave
very old Kanaka woman In tbe final man was living In Euro|>e the valley
stages of the disease. At the side of of the Nile was yet only a wild waste.
the litter wnlked Kaomouna. Her face Egypt was not yet Egypt, and civiliza
was very sad. The ]>arouta of the lit- tion us we know It had scarcely mado
tie girl wondered, They spoke to an a beglnulng.—Lippincott’s.
official of the Hawaiian board of
health, who was busy In the task of
Shy on ths Son.
embarking the lepers.
"But I do not know the candidate,”
"Surely," they said, "she does not said an old Yorkshire farmer who was
accompany the lepers?’
appealed to for ills vote.
"Who - Kaomouna?' replied the
“lint you know his father?”
health official.
"Oh. yea. she does.
"Yes, I kuow him, and he's a grand
But It Is her own choice. Kaomouna, man."
you know, lias been secreting her old
"Then you will surely vote for his
mother for a number of years. We al- son. won’t you?”
wnys knew then* was something mys
But the old farmer was still doubt-
terious about Kaomouna that is. we rut.
have known It for the hist five years,
"I'm no so sure about that,” he re-
She had made queer visits to a palm piled; "It’s no every coo that has a
hut far over in the Nuuanu valley, cauff like hersel'.” Liverpool Mercury.
Last week we followed her. We felt
then* was leprosy In It. We found tier
Queer, but Expressive.
mother In the hut. I Kaomouna bad
A Danish girl who has recently come
bad her In hiding, trying to save her to this country to take a course In
from Molokai, ever since the disease trained nursing was complaining to a
became evident, Kaomouna Is not lu- frlepd the other morning of having
footed In the least. She has been care overslept herself. "And no reason why
ful
But she elects to follow her such a thing should befall me. for I
mother to Molokai.
Extraordinary? had what do you call It In English?
Why. not at nil! You do not under 1 kuow. a sleep watch - all set.”—Wash
stand the filial devotion of Kanaka ington Star.
women—men. too. for that matter. Such
cases are common enough."
A Quiet Spot In the Suburbs.
Tbe parents of tbe little girl looked
"Gayboy has given up horses and
at each other
There were tears In drink and all his bad habits and has
the mother’s eyes.
settled down in a quiet little plaro In
"That Is why she folded her anna the suburbs.”
and would not touch Tita!" she said.
Where?"
“In thia world of God. civilized or un
"The cemetery."—Illustrated Bit».
civilised. could there be anything more
noble?'
Kind Hearted.
All was ready, and the Kilauea Hou.
“And did you enjoy your African
with Kaomouna and lier mother on trip, major? How did you like the
board, slowly started down the har savage» ?'
bor. the Kanakas on tbe dock setting
"Oh. they were extremely kind heart
up the wetrd. plaintive death wall.— ed They wanted to keep me there for
■Washington Star
dinner."-London Opinion.
A TINY BIT OF GROUND.
I
The Registered Percheron stallion Ville
will stand lor the season 1909 in Till«
What May Be Done With a Plot Twen
mook at Tillamook City. Beaver and
ty by Fifty Feet.
Hebo. Ville is the largest and best pro
A space 20 by 50 fret may under in portioned stallipn in the county.
H
L E S anders . Owner.
tensive culture be made to yield fresh
vegetables for a small family through
Notice of Sheriffs Sale.
half tbe year. With 40 by 50 feet or
50 by 100 there can be a garden spell In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon,
for Tillamook < ounty.
ing riotous plenty.
Mitchell. Lewis
be !
Have tbe spading done as early as
Staver Company, a I
corporation.
possible, use thoroughly rotted ma
Plaintiffs, I
nure and supplement it with some
vs.
I
E E- Tyler, doing
good
commercial
fertilizer,
either
business under the |
firm name ofjE. E. |
broadcasted and raked In or put In
Tyler & Company, I
bills or drills.
Defendants.
J
NOTICB IS H brbby G iven .—That whereas
It Is a waste of seed, strength and
an execution has been issued out of the
In
poor
soil,
time to plant a garden
Ul. in .„ the
....
--------- entitted
above entitled court
above
daiV ^May
May I
17th,
1909. communaing
”*’
The seed will come up. tbe spindling cause, ’ date
• Sheriff
of lillaniook County. Oregon,
me
as
S
“
"
plants will be harder to work than if to sei. 11 the -- hereinafter
described property,
------- -
they were luxuriant, and the resultant personal and • real, 1. belonging to the said
t which
has
heretofore^
defendant
which
•«<»•
••'•••-.*■*
crop will be mostly conspicuous by Its ♦ached in said cause to satisfy the ------
sum ot
87 7. with*interest
* ' :
.«iwvu/vw
Ir.im MFI!,
thereon from
Sep-
absence. So, if it be impossible to do
9th 1908, at the rate of 6 per cent
t
ember
2*.
more, make small rich beds, four feet per*
annum
and
for
the
further
sum
ot
per -------
wide and as long as the manure holds $1500.00,
$1500.00, with interest thereon, at the rate
of 8 per cent per annum from September
out. and sow them crosswise with 29th 19OK, and ,73.00 a. attorney’, lee«,
such things as radishes, lettuce, cress, and the eo»ts and dixbursement. of said
and accruing costs.
parsley, beets and onions. Make the action
Ami whereas all the |>ersonal property
rows a foot to eighteen inches apart attached in said action has heretofore been
»old as perishable property, except the bu’Id-
or sow the radishes broadcast. Let ing erected upon the North 55 feet off of ..ot
tuce also yields more for broadcast One, in B oek Five, in I hayer s addition to
the town of Lincoln, now lillaniook L'ity.
sowing. Pull out the thriftiest as soon
Now I will on the 25th day oi June 1909.
as edible and leave tbe rest to grow. at the hour often o’clock am. ot said day.
in front of the Court House door, in 1 illa-
Radish tops make excellent greens, mook Citv. Oregon sell at Public Sale all the
something better flavored than mus right, title and interest ot the said E E.
in and to lot number four (4). in
tard. By sowing thickly you can have Tyler,
Block number eight (8). in Miller's addition i
to l illaniook < itv. and 55 feet off the North
dishes of greens.
End of Lot One(l). in Block five (5). in
Say the garden is 40 by 50 feet, this Th
’yers addition to Lincoln, now I ilia->
is something what the planting of it mook City, and also the building erected |
on the last named tract, to the highest and
should be: Dwarf early peas, medium best
bidder for cash.
early and late peas, beets, early and
Dated this 19th dav of May, 1909.
H CRENSHAW,
later: beans in succession, including
Sherifl of Tillamook County, Oregon.
bush limas: carrots, radishes, toma
toes, cucumbers, peppers. Do not ad
Notice of Sheriffs Sale.
venture upon corn unless it be sweet
N otice is
H ereby
G iven ,—That in
corn planted on the pea space as a sec pursuance of a decree of foreclosure and
ond crop, to come In just before frost. order of sale duly rendered and entered in
its Journal bv the Circuit Court of the State
Make an asparagus bed all across one of Oregon, for Tillamook County, at a
end of the plot, setting two-year-old regular term of said Court, on the 19th day
of April, 1909, in a certain suit, wherein
roots and fertilizing the bed heavily in William Ryan is plaintiff, and E. E. Tyler
early summer just after cutting ceases. and Delia L Tyler, his wife, and Mitchell,
Lewis «V Staver Company, a corporation,
Teas are so hardy they may be are defendants in favor of said plaintiff and
against
said defendants, and in pursuance
past,
provided,
planted before snow is
and bv virtue of an execution and order of
of course, the ground is right when sale duly issued and under the seal of said
they go In. Make it fine and light. Court in said cause, to me duly directed,
dated the 1 sth day of May, 1909. said judg
cover the seed at least three Inches ment and decree being for the sum of
deep, then tramp the earth over them, $4-50.00, with interest thereon from the 3rd
dav of September. 1907, at the rate of 7 per
setting tbe feet so one track touches cent per annum, the further sum of $75.00
the other, A quart of seed will sow attorney’s fees, and the sum of $45.05 costs
and disbursements, ami commanding and re
a hundred feet of drill the proper quiring me to make sale of the following
thickness, An ounce of beet seed will described real property, to-wit: Lot tour (4).
Block eight (H), of Miller’s addition to
sow the same row length.—Circle Mag in
Tillamook City, in Tillamook County, Ore
gon, to satisfy the decree rendered in said
azine.
A MINISTER’S STORY,
Didn’t Have the Intended Effect
Upon the Congregation.
It is said that a New England min
ister once told the following story just
before the collection was taken up:
“I have heard of a man, prosperous
and well to do, who went to church
one Sunday and put a cent—Just a
plain copper cent—in the collection
box.
“On the way home he was overtaken
by n sudden heavy shower and. hav
ing no umbrella, crawled Into a hol
low log by the roadside to keep him
self dry until the downpour was over.
"Soon the log began to swell, and
the wetter it got the more it swelled
until the sides finally closed in on tbe
prosperous citizen and held him in a
grip like a vise.
“The rain ceased, but the unfortu
nate man was unable to move hand
or foot. He shouted for help, but no
one heard him. He was about to give
up In despair when be suddenly thought
of the cent he had dropped into the
collection box that day. and It made
him feel so mean and small that be
crawled right out of tbe log without
any further trouble.
"Now. if you expect to get caught In
a shower and be obliged to take refuge
In a hollow log on the way home, by
all means put a cent In tbe contribu
tion basket! If you don’t anticipate a
crisis of that sort—well, you will know
what to do when the basket is passed ’’
The minister expected a shower of
silver and bills to follow this story,
but unfortunately just as the collec
tion tiegan a black cloud passed over
head. it suddenly began to sprinkle,
and the pennies fairly rained iuto the
contribution basket. Only one quar
ter. a solitary dime and a lone nickel
were found among the coppers, and
they got In before the shower began.
Tbe congregation, It seeuis, had al)
left their umbrellas at home, and they
were not taking any chances.—New
York Times.
tt
Got the Number.
Police Captain—You say that an au
tomobile containing several persons
sped along the street «nd struck down
an old man? New Officer—Yls. sor.
Police Captain—And that after cbas-
Ing this auto for several blocks you
finally succeeeded In getting tbe num
ber? New Officer—Yls, »or.
Police
Captain—Good! What was the num
ber?
New Officer—There wor Just
folve persons In th' car, sor!—Circle
Magazine.
— SEE
against tub
Ladies’ Home Journal.
W. C- TROM
BAY CITY. OREGON1
while truth Is gettiug It» b«»»
on " and no dnubt hundreds of thousand*
Of good people read tbe
malicious attack upon Dr. R. V. Fierro
and his "Favorite Prescription publiUuo
In the May (190»' number of the Ladle»
“ Beauly draws v
Home Journal, with Its great black dla
l».V a kingle hair”
nlav heading», who never saw the hum
ble.ygroveliug retraction, with It» ,nc““'
>■ 4 4».
ipicuous heading, published two month*
This seem. like soniHi^
later. It was boldly charged In the sland
an exageralion on th* yang,
erous and libelous article that Dr. Pierce< •
poet, if at least does noCipg,,
Favorite Prescription, for the cure of
men.
Tlie man with . J
woman’s weaknesses and ailments, con
tained alcohol and other harmful ingredi 4 hair would not draw „71
ents. Dr. Pierce promptly brought suit 4 cent, unless as a curi<M||v 1
against the publishers of tho Ladies
4
People to look Ih.,r ¿,1
Home Journal, for
Dr. Pierce alleged that Mr. bolt, the
hair, they need all t|lf.
yet tinier
»ditor, maliciously published the article i
have. I' -’ ’
‘
4
containing %uch false sn?
is time to use
the Intent of Injuring
matter wl
-
- hit i I'll.......... Al. II UK 1» Erm."
business urthermore, that no alcohol, ot 4
urlous.
or
habit-fo
r
n..ng,
drug*
other
Thi> preparation we,
will revolut
er were, contained In his "la- «
sre. or
stimulates the hair bulha CK,
¡ption";
that
said
medicin*
vorite
s 1 lie scalp of itaiiilrufformei;
Is mad fyim native medicinal roots an.)
no harmful Ingredients what ■ and promotes new growth^
contaj
secret In I
.d that Mr. llok's malicious state-
were wholly and absolutely false 4
thought tha
' retraction nrint ed bv suttj J u U Hl d l
audit 00.
’ 'oncknonjishte tintt. tli> v 4
—
'aiiaTvsesoF"F.ivorite Pre? g*.« "W: J
i« ■«an.00
“*' tall,
billion» of < ’
1 CHAS. I. CI.OUGH v tan^.17
i
These f actswe re also proven in the trial oi
the action In the Supreme Court. But the
business of Dr. Pierce was greatly
the publication of the libelous arthle with
its great display headings, while hundreds of
thousands who read the wickedly defamatuiy
article never saw the humble groveling re
traction, set in small type and made a> incon
spicuous as possible, ’’’he matter was, how-
ever brought before r. ' iry In the hupretue
Court of New Yor'. Htaie whleh oiomptiv
rendered » verdict :n the Hector» tj»“
Thus his traoucere came to grief aaa ra»*
slanders wer« refuted.
®
Reliable Druggists whos* °riK1
5 and Prescriplion Expesrancb of p
” in nt hi m in in m ■. 11>know
Did You Ever Try
HARRIS’S NEW FEW
LIVERY BARN,
Essentials of Oratory.
"I have my speech nearly com-
pleted."
“I suppose you bare marshaled your
arguments In serried ranks?”
"No: 1 haven't taken up that part of
U But I have selected my anecdotes." I
I
—Washington 8tar
TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. Notice is
hereby given that the undersigned has this
31st day of May, 1909, filed in the office of
the County C erk of Tillamook County, State
ot Oregon, petition for the vacation of all
that portion of the map or plat of Bayocean
Park lying North of the South line of Twenty
seventh Avenue and for the vacation of all
the streets, avenues, boulevards, and alleys
of said Bayocean Park lying North of tl e
South line of Twenty-seventh Avenue ; that
said petition recites that the petitioner and
the signer of this notice is the owner in fee
simple and in possession of all the real
property affected by said vacation ; that no
parties other than the petitioner are in any
wise interested in said vacation and that it
is the intention of the petitioner to replat
and rededicate the property.
The said petition will be presented to the
county court of the county of Tillamook
sitting as a Board of County Commissioners
for the transaction of county business on the
27th day of July, 1909. at the hour of ten
o’clock A. M, or as soon thereafter as the
said petition can be presented.
POTTER-CHAPIN REALTY CO..
By H. L. C hapin , Vice President.
block South of PO.
W. G.
I
er. If we co
disrupting g
vacuous spa
H arris ,
od of artlficl
leal as that
'brilliant aa I
STEIEI1“5“““
W B
fra W SHlreach. altho
YCU LOOK FOR T:,we c“n“ot '
'fjouclilainaFta^^
cause for foreclosure of a mortgage ex
ecuted to plaintiff and held by him.
__
M fa, that dire
Now therefore by virtue of said execution,
judgment, order and decree and in com
»J*-) The expert null IreScbel said 01
pliance with the command of said writ, 1
will on Friday, the 25th day of June, 1909.
------- “Um« waa Just at
at the hour of IO o’clock a.m.. at the front
ic. reiiibii.aMin^gtreinbUnc al
door of the Court House, in Tillamook City,
Tillamook County, Oregon, sell at public
FIN □ OUT WH!0f_°?lr anaIyl
auction, subject to redemption, to the
by ihoottag wr rm There are
highest bidder for cash in hand, all the
right, title and interest which the above
rtamed defendants or either of them had
on the date of the mortgage of plaintiff
herein, viz: On September 3rd. 1907, or since
Administrator’s Notice
h id in or to the above described real pro
perty to satisfy said execution, judgment, In the matter of the estate,
order and decree, interest and costs, and all
Ask your local HartO cheap a i
of Julia A. Mapes, de-/
accruing costs.
ceased.
I
or Sporting Goodf^taRt when we
H CRENSHAW.
N oticb is H erbby G ives .—That the un-
chant for the
Sheriff of Tillamook County, Oregon.
dersigned has been duly appointed by the
If you cannot obb.“* ■ W
County Court of the State of Oregon, for
ship direct, exprreM*« •R>UDQ U|
In the County Court of the State of Oregon, Tillamook County, administrator of the
paid, upon receiptold. W® Ml*® It]
for Tillamook County.
estate of Julia A. Mapes, deceased.
In the matter of the Estate e| ]
All persons having claims against said es
lo;; Price.
pended In tl
of Josie Alice Davidson, i, >Citation.
tate are hereby required to present the same
—------------
crowdei
A Minor. ,
properly verified, as by law required, at the
Scutl 4 I'ciiH in nt ¡imps forl40>htn<m all v
To Olive Alice Dodge, Guardian of
______
the office of W. H. Cooper, in Tillamook City,
111',.* >-'*■.!/ < < > .1
• > I 1'.q.
> ■ , r i > , Al
> 1 lliiliri;
iifllnnr, ...
*
Illustrated
above named minor, Josie Alice Davidson, Oregon, within six months from the date
larftof latest additions to ourJ» StOrlD OT
the above named minor,
Frederick M. hereof.
Davidson, Monta V. Davidson. Joyce B.
Contains points on shooting,b(*F CODll
Dated this 11th day of June, 1909.
Morse. Laura Dodge. Ernest Dodge.
nition, the propt reareof
W. B. ALHRRMAS,
G reeting : In the name of the State of
etc., etc. Our attractive TeaCr’® COulu Mf
Admistrator of the estate of
Oregon you are hereby cited and required to
Lit hograplie.-l II an ger mailed 4dTlfjr Bl!, ft!
Julia A. Mapes, deceased.
appear in the County Court of the State of
where for six cents in
Oregon, for the County oj Tillamook, at the
J. STEVENS ARMS &
Court room thereof, at Tillamook City, Notice of Appointment of Adtnin-
a
1». O. Box 4097
“¿7“
Oregon, on Monday, the fifth day of July,
* Chicopee Falls, Mass., T.
IllBl
strator.
1909, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon of that
day. then and there to show cause if any
N otice is H ereby G ives ,—That the un
there be, why an order should not be granted
directing Olive Alice Dodge. Guardian of the dersigned has been duiv appointed ailniin-
above named minor, to sell the real property strator of the Estate of ALBERT A. FORD, I
belonging to the estate of said minor, at deceased, by the County Court of Oregon,
private sale for cash in hand, which said real for Tillamook County. Now, therefore, all
property is situated in Tillamook County. persons having claims against said estate,
Oregon, and is more particularly described are hereby required to present them to me at
as follows, to-wit :
Tillamook City, in Tillamook County, Ore
An undivided one third interest in and to gon. with proper vouchers, on or before six
that portion of the Donation Land Claim of mouths from the date hereof.
James Quick and Anna Quick, bounded by
Dated at Tillamook, Oregon, lune 14th,
J
beginning at a point on the West line of said 1909.
claim twenty five and 50-100 (25.50) chains
K. G. FORD.
South of the North West corner of said claim
Administrator of the Estate of
and running thence East twenty-one and
Albert A. Ford, deceased.
75-100 chains ; thence North eleven and
50-100 chains ; thence East eighteen and
RESTORATION
TO ENTRY OF LANDS
25-100 chains to East line of claim; thence
IN NATIONAL FORES I
North filty| (50) links ; thence West fortv
Cures Backache, Ki
N
otice
is
H
ereby
G iven —That the lands
(40> chains to West line of claim ; thence
South twelve chains to beginning, containing described below, embracing 60 acres, within Bladder Trouble.
twenty-seven (27) acres more or less in the Siuslaw National Forest. Oregon, will
he subject to settlement and entry under
Tillamook County, Oregon.
It corrects irregol
This Citation is issued in accordance with the provisions of the homestead laws
an order of the above entitled court in the of the United States and the act of strengthens the kidneys
above entitled cause, made and entered on June 11. 1906 (34 Stat., 233), at the
the 18th day of May. 1909. a copy of which United States Land Office at Portland. Ore will eliminate the in
order is hereto attached and made a part of gon, on August 10. 1909. Anv settler who
was actually and in good faith claiming any from the blood and ti
this Citation, marked Exhibit "A.”
Witness the Honorable H. F. Goodspeed, of said lands for agricultural purposes prior
Judge of the County Court of the State of to January 1st. 1906, and has not aban the whole system.
Oregon, for the County of Tillamoot, with doned same, has a preference right to make
Commence taking !
the seal of said Court affixed this 19th dav a homestead entry for the lands actually
of May, 1909.
J occupied, said lands were listed upon the
Kidney
Remedy at or.,
applications of the persons mentioned be-
Attest
J. C. H0LDBN,
•îw’ , ’
V'rerence right subject to avoid Bright's Disease i
(Scu,)
.....
Clerk.
the
prior
right
of
any
such
settler,
provided
Exhibit '* A ”
in the County Court of the State ot Oregon such settler or applicant is qualified to make betes.
50. and $1.00 bon
homestead entry and the preference right is
for Tillamook County.
In thematter
__
______
_ of thej ,
exercised prior to August loth. 1909, on
Guardianship of Josie I Order for Cita- which date the lands will be subject to J. S. Lamar, Tillamf
Alice Davidson.
/ tion.
'ntrJ
anv qualified per-
? .I ,Th' lan<i. are as follows : The Sw W ! Hawk & Miller, Bay
A Minor. J
'
On this 18th
lHth day of May.'
May. 1909, came Olive 48N' r ‘’ 10* WWWfMWlA^f * U’ Scc
Alice Dodge.
Dodge, Guardian of the person and
« -M-. listed upon the appll-
estate of Josie Alice Davidson, a minor, and cattonof A. F. Gardner of Beaver, Oregon
petitions the Court for an order to sell at Land tOffi"ftt’ <;onln,'’*ion'r of theGeneral
Approved May 21>t. 1909'
private sale for cash, the real property be.
be Land Office
secretary of
longing to the estate of said ward, described îtataÆ'’ Wr“
as follows :
An undivided one-third interest in and to
that portion of the Donation Land Claim of
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Tames Quick and Anna Quick, bounded bv
United Slates Land Office,
beginning at a point on the West line of said
claim twenty-five and 50-100 (25 50) chains
Portland, Oregon.
south of the North West corner of said claim
„
,
.
May 27th, 1909.
and running thence East twenty-one and 75-
Notice is hereby given that the
lCH) chains ; thence North eleven and 50-100
chains . thence East eighteen and 25-100 Northern Pacific Railway
Company,
chains to Bast line of claim . thence North whose post office addrpss is St Paul
fifty (50) links ;
thence West fortv (40)
M"»
chains ; to West line of claim ; thence South i™"?!0?-' h“ ,hi" 27th d“-v
twelve chains to beginning,
containing
»0», filed in this office it, application
twenty-seven (27) acres more or less in Till«,
to
«elect
under
the
provisions
of
the
mook County. Oregon
And it apjwaring to tbt Court that »aid Act of Congress, approved Iiilv 1 1 wqh
iJOStat.
597.
«»0)4.
extended
hv
ti^
Guardian ha. filed an Inventorr and
Appraisement of all the estate 6f »aid
hi
at
.o
’
"
“
’
**!:'.
n
PP
r,
”
'-<>
May
17,
ward aa provided by law. that there
“C 4’ ‘P ’ S -R» •«’t.
1» no personal property belonging to W.M.1''
the estate of said
ward ; that
»aid
ward has no income whatever except
Any and nil persons claiming adver
i-J'm ’.Of
land A ad the best rentoK
tamable for the rent of said land is no tin sely the lands described, nr desiring to
|wr annumj; that the least sum sufficient for Object because of the mineral character
the mat men* nee and education of said ward of the land or for any other reXn I.
i» »l ’.T INI per annum
thnt the tazes on
saM lands average »3 00 per rear that the ™.
,O »PPbcant. should file
iwtltioner is not able financially to support their affidavits of protest in this office
“?ain,."?a •"d vdueate .aid ward a. .he
on
or
la-fore
the
lSth of July ipqy
should be supported, maintained and educated
wiUiout u.mg the proceed, of the sale of t“
A iu BRHO n 8. Daks,™,
•aid lands : that it will be to tbe be.t In
terest of the said ward «nd that H £Tec£ _____________________
Register.
•ary in order to support, maintain knd
rfueate the ,md ward that .aid iind ,ho* «
be »old at private Mie for cash
•nouio
i. of
therefore
hereby
that the —
of It
Mn
„id ward
.nd ordered
.11 pSo„
RIFLES-SHIliwKiS.
PISTOLS
KidnetM
m the e.t.te of said ward be and they
hertby required to appear before thi. <*Lr7
•t the Court room thereofin Tillamook cTtv
The Sister Stat»».
meraed tn i
as a racuun
perfect trct
Yet the pers
tall shows tl
there, but a
I; attenuate
Is the cause
We ought,
to awake t<
NOTICE OF VACATION.
If not, give him a al
Of that Portion of Bayocean Park
Lying North of the South line of
Everything first-class. Sthiut
— ”W1»
Twenty-seventh Avenue.
THE WORLDS GREAÌ ESI SEWi*
LIGHT RUNNII
Positive Reasons.
The Minister—Mackintosh, why don’t
you come to church now? Mackintosh
—For three reasons, sir.
Firstly. 1
dtnna like yer theology: secondly. I
dinna like yer slngin', and. thirdly. It
was tn your kirk I first met my wl*e.
—Dundee Advertiser.
Probably tbe slater state« are: Mira
Ouri. th» Misses Slppl. Ida Ho. Mary
I-and. Callie Fornta Allie Barna. Ixiu-
Ira Anna. Delta Ware and Minnie
8ota.-L»tta Iowa Beeord
For Real
Verdict for Dr. Pierce
Percheron Stallion Ville.
H. F GUODSPFHD.
Judge.
J. R. HARTER
Real Estate and
Financial Agent
Insurance.
OFFICE; TILLAMOOK HOTEL.
THE REW HOME
Oronfje»
Many «ewing machines arei®*u
quality, but tbe »Kew bo rjBfW
Out guaranty n<
bold by
1
E. T. HAL.TOS, I