TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JUNE 24, 1909
SHOEMAKERS’ WAX.
The Surprising Properties of Thi* Pe
culiar Substance.
Sea Islanders Fear Them
/is the Abode of Ghosts.
HOLD SOULS OF THEIR DEAD.
—
The 'Native* Offer Gift* and Food,
Sometime* Human to Appease the
Man Eaters—The Hawaiian* Used to
tod Their Dead to the Monsters.
In view of the wide distribution of
■harks ’■nd their strength and ferocity,
qualities which appealed to the savage
mind, it is not strange that the cult of
■hark worship should have arisen. This
worship is especially common in the
■oath »eas. where sharks are very nu
merous. says the Detroit Free Press.
In the Solomon Islands living sacred
objects are chiefly sharks, alligators,
snakes, etc Sharks are in all these is
land* very often thought to be the
abode of ghosts, as natives will at
times before their death announce that
they Will appear as sharks Afterward
any shark remarkable for size or color
which is observed to haunt a certain
shore or rock Is taken to be some one’s
ghost, and the name of the deceased Is
given to it.
Such a one was Sautahlmatawa at
L’lawa, a dreaded man eater, to which
offerings of porpoise teeth were made.
At Sa* certain ford, such as cocoanuts
from certain trees. Is reserved to feed
auCh a ghost shark, and there are cer-
tain men of wbom It Is known that
after death they will be In sharks,
These, therefore, are allowed to eat
such food In the sacred place, In Saa
and Ulawa If a sacred shark had at-
tempted to seize a man and be had
escaped the people would be so much
afraid of the shark’s anger that they
would- throw the man back In the sea
to be drowned. These sharks also were
thought to aid In catching the bonito,
for taking which supernatural power
wa» upcessary.
In the Banks Islands a shark may
be a tungaroa. a sort of familiar spirit
or th* «bode of one. Some years ago
Msnurwar, son of Mala, the chief man
in Vanua Lava, had such a shark. He
had given money to a Manwo man to
•end it to him. It was very tame and
would come up to him when he wont
down to the beach nt N’awono and
follow «long tn the surf ns he walked
■long the shore. In the New Hebrides
some men have the power, the natives
believe, of changing themselves Into
•bark*.
The Samoan native believed that his
god* Appeared In some visible Incar
nation, and the particular thing In
which it was in the habit of appear
ing was to him an object of venera
tion.'’ Many worshiped the shark In
thia way. and while they would freely
partake, of the gods of others they
felt that death would be the penalty
•honld they eat their own god. The
god was supposed to avenge the ln-
■Ult by taking up his abode in the
offender's body and causing to gen
erate there the very thing which he
had eaten until it produced death. In
one village Taema. the war god, was
present in a bundle of shark's teeth.
These! curiosities were done up in a
piece of native cloth and consulted be-
fore going to battle. If the bundle
felt heavy that was a bad omen, but
if light the sign was good, and off they
went to the tight.
In the FIJI islands, Vfavla and other
gods claim the shark as their abode,
and their devotees must never eat of
that flab, for if they did they would be
partaking of the god himself.
It was In the Hawaiian Islands, how-
erer. that shark worship reached Its
greatest perfection. Its worship was
quit* common on the Islands, each one
having a special shark as Lis ances
tral god The worship of sharks was
due largely to the fact that the belief
in the transmigration of souls is quite
general among the Polynesians, and
the Hawallans would teef their dead
to the sharks under the supposition
that I* this way the soul of the dead
tenter the sharks and so animate
ttcr as to incline them to respect
Idles of the living.
ral of the African coast tribes
ip the shark. Three or four times
^-year they celebrate the festival
) shark, which Is done in this
They all row out in their boats
twiddle of the river, where they
■ with the strangest ceremonies,
jtectlon of the great shark. They
:* him poultry and goats in order
hrfy his sacred appetite. But this
*lng. An Infant is every year
Ced to the monster, which has
■ted nnd nourished for tbe sac-
from Its birth to the age of ten,
I day of tbe fete It Is bound to a
ID a sandy point at low water.
_J tide rises tbe child may utter
1 ef terror, but they are of no
teas it is abandoned to tbe waves,
■harks soon arrive to finish its
ind thus permit it to enter into
I
One of the most apt Illustrations
ever made br Lord Kelvin was bls
likening the luminiferous ether to a
mass of shoemakers’ wax. Wbat Lord
Kelvin said of shoemakers’ wax oiay
be tested by any boy in a manner that
will astonish his playmates. First let
It be said that the ether penetrates all
space. It is as rigid as steel and yet
so flexible that It does not retard the
passage of planets through space In
the least. It Is an invisible substance
which travels in waves through all
things. Now, to illustrate the nature
of such a paradoxical material laird
Kelvin searched everywhere and at
last concluded that shoemakers’ wax
represented it best. He made tests,
and this Is what he found:
He melted some wax in a common
glass tumbler. After It had hardened
he tried to thrust a lead pencil through
it It would not go. Then be placed a
coin on the surface of the wax and
left it there for several days. When
he again visited it tbe coin bad sunk
to the bottom of the glass. The wax
had closed over It. and by lifting up
tbe glass and looking through tbe bot
tom lie could see the coin lying there.
Had tbe wax been as deep as a well
the coin would have gone on sinking
until It reached the bottom. This proved
that the wax would conform only to
very slow movements. If he bad tried
to push It too fast it would have re
sisted him.
An idea struck the scientist. If the
wax acted like this toward the coin,
how would It treat an object which
floated?
He accordingly placed a
cork In a tumbler and poured hot shoe
makers' wax upon it. Tbe wax hard
ened with the cork at the bottom. Yet
when Lord Kelvin looked at the bot
tom of tbe glass in a day or two he
found the cork had disappeared. It
was somewhere in tbe mass of wax
and probably rising very slowly, but
surely, toward the top. Sure enough,
nfter a given period of time the cork
peeped above the surface of the hard
wax, and finally It rose to a point where
It remained half Imbedded In the wax,
Just as it would have done in a glass
of water. It rose no higher than this,
however, and a corkscrew probably
would not have pulled It from the wax.
Yet its own buoyancy bad raised It up
from the bottom through what seemed
an Impenetrable mass of wax.
This. In fact, Is the peculiarity of
shoemakers' wax—that It resists all
sudden or quick movements, but Is
highly susceptible to very slow and
prolonged pressure. If you pressed a
flatiron hard down on a lump of wax
on a table it Is probable you would
make no Impression on it. but if you
left that Iron resting on the wax for a
day or two you would find the lump
flattened out under the Iron. So curi
ous is this property of tbe wax that
tuning forks have been cast from
pieces of It. These forks were capa
ble of vibration, giving a musical note
and being set going by vibration from
another tuning fork, yet when one of
them was laid across the open mouth
of a jar It slowly collapsed and fell
into the jar In a shapeless, sticky
mass.
How She Missed Him.
A poor woman who kept a small
ehop in a northern village and who
was troubled with a husband who
could scarcely be considered a credit
to the family one day found herself a
widow through the sudden demise of
her spouse. A lady who frequently
made small purchases at the shop
called to see her and offer her sym
pathy, though well knowing that the
man's death must in a certain sense
come as a relief, as the wife had often
suffered from Ills violence. She was
not. however, quite prepared for tbe
stoical way in which tbe wife took ber
bereavement.
Said the lady, "I am sure, Mrs. G..
that you must miss your husband."
“Well. mum. it do seem queer to go
into tbe shop and find something in
the till.”—London Express.
A Summer of Haze.
Europe and Asia were covered by
fog during the summer of 1783. Says
Gilbert White (letter 1091: “The sum
mer of the year 1783 was an amazing
and a portentous one, • • • for, be
sides the alarming meteors and tre
mendous thunderstorms. » • » the
peculiar haze, or smoky fog. that pre
vailed fcr many weeks In this island
(England) and In every part of Europe
nnd even beyond Its limits was a most
extraordinary appearance. The beat
was Intense. Calabria and part of the
Isle of Sicily were torn and convulsed
with earthquakes.” Cowper also re
fers to this phenomenon In speaking of
“nature, with a dim and sickly eye.”
Th* First Word.
"That Is what I call an Ideal mar
riage.” Hardy declared to his wife as
they were walking homeward after an
evening at the Car >l!s'. “Actually. I
believe, both think absolutely alike.”
“Yes, they are certainly charming.”
Polynesians hare an ancient fa assented Mrs. Hardy: “but about tbe
tting of tbe flight of Ina. the thinking. Joe. If you will notice, she
tr of Vaitoringa and Ngaetna, generally thinks first."—Youth's Com
i sacred isle. After the sole panion.
| ber at tbe edge of tbe break
fl sneb disastrous results to it-
Th* Poor Women.
tn tbe angry princess tbe latter
“Why does a woman always want
led tbe shark and by Its help ' another woman to go shopping with
rd tn reaching tbe sacred is-, hert’
reeling thirsty during tbe voy- I "She gets the other woman to make
■ cracked a cocoanut on the I tbe selections and then takes some
forehead, and this accounts for thing else.”—Louisville Courier-Jour
■P now found on the forebead nal.
h*rks
[ Absolutely Hopeless.
ÿon might learn to love me." be
BOA CONSTRICTORS.
Tho Young Shift For Themselves
Soon ■* Hatched.
will stand for the season 1909 in Tilla
■ mook at Tillamook City, Beaver and
Hebo. Ville is the largest and best pro*
portioned stallion in the county.
L. E. S anders . Owner.
ment and decree being for the sum of
$450.00, with interest thereon from the 3rd
day of September. 1907, at the rate of 7 per
cent per annum, the further sum of $75.00
attorney** free, ami the sum of $45 05 costs
Th* Grip With Which Thi* Habit and disbursements, and commanding and re
quiring me to make sale of the following
Holds Its Victims.
described real property. to-wit: Lot tour (4).
Every slave of the weed will know in Block eight (8), of Miller's addition to
Tillamook City, in Tiliamook County, Ore
better than I do how much truth exists gon,
to satisfy the decree rendered in said
In a story told me a few evenings ago cause for foreclosure of a mortgage ex
to plaintiff and held by him.
by a well known committing magis ecuted
Now therefore by virtue of said execution,
trate in New York.
judgment, order and decree and in com
with the command of said writ. I
We were seated at a club table dis- pliance
n ill <>n Friday, the 25th day of June. 1909,
cussiug various kinds of dissipations, at the hour of IO o’clock a.m.. at the front
especially tbe fascination that liquor door of the Court House, in Tillamook City.
Tillamook County, Oregon, sell at public
and gambling are said to have for men auction, subject to redemption, to the
who cannot resist the Impulse to grati highest bidder for cash in hand, all the
title and interest which the above
fy one or tbe other of these passions. right,
named defendants or either of them had
on
the
date of the mortgage of plaintiff'
The judge spoke:
a is: On September 3rd. 1907, or since
“In my opinion the most overmaster herein,
h id in or to the above described real pro
ing craving known to our race >; that perty to satisfy said execution, judgment,
and decree, interest and costs, and all
for chewing tobacco. Opium In some order
accruing costs.
H CRENSHAW.
forms may be as bad, but I am sure
Sheriff of Tillamook County, Oregon.
CHEWING TOBACCO.
It Isn’t worse. A few weeks ago an
Incorrigible was brought before me,
and after hearing the evidence I sen
tenced him to the Island for three
months. He appeared to take It very
sensibly until a police officer as a
teaser whispered Into the man's ear, as
I afterward learned, that he would not
be allowed any tobacco while In the
penitentiary. The poor chap turned
pale, rose in his seat and held up his
hand as a sign that he desired to ask
me a question. I motioned to him to
speak up.
“ 'I say, good Mr. Judge, will you do
me a great favor?
“ ‘Certainly, if it be within my pow
er,’ I replied.
“ 1 hear my tobacco will be cut off.
Cannot you make my term six months
or even a year If I am allowed to have
chewing tobacco?’ ”
The judge had to explain that he
couldn't do anything of that sort. He
relieved the prisoner's mind on the
tobacco question by telling him that If
he was a habitual chewer tbe prison
physician would order a small quanti
ty of the weed for him dally.
“Never did I see a greater change In
■ human face,” concluded his horor.—
Brooklyn Eagle.
Preparing an Alibi.
If culture remains confined within
the splendidly bound volumes of the
new library that has Just been bought
by a New Yorker It will not be the
fault of the rich man's secretary. He
is doing everything he can to let it
loose.
“I am cutting the leaves in all the
books," he said. "The chances are
nobody belonging to tbe family will
ever look inaide these books, but the
bosa has friends who may go snooping
around through tbe library sometimes.
In case tbey do he doesn't want them
to gain tbe Impression that literature
Is neglected In this house, so I nm
making sure that tbey will at least
find the leaves cut.”—Exchange.
Th* Fine** City In Great Britain.
Edinburgh may be noted for Its
learning and for beauty of situation,
Dublin may rank as one of tbe most
beautiful cities In tbe world. Oxford
may boast Its colleges and Canterbury
Its picturesque streets and grand old
cathedral, but London stands supreme
—tbe finest city of Great Britain.—
London Captain.
A Paying Garden.
“No money In gardening? Wby, I
know a uiqp who cleared $30,000 last
summer from less than an acre.”
“Impossible! Utterly absurd!"
“Not at all. You see. It was ■ roof
garden."—Boston Transcript.
If You Can Get Up.
Th* Best Way.
Old Ben Franklin was about tbe
wisest product this country ever pro
duced. and he never said anything
much better than that tbe best way
to find money is t» earn It.—Atchison i
Glob*.
I
For Real Estate,
Whit Ails You?
Do ,oo fosi weak, tire-’ ileexidesA |
— SEE —
have frequent headache-
<■•’ xuigu*
bitter or bad taste In muniins. "heart
burn,'' belching of gas, acid isings in :
throat e?*r eating. stom»<\ gnaw or
burn, fl ui breath, dizzy s-.--.ls, poor or
BAY CITY. OREGON.
variab's appetite, nausea 't times and
kindred symptoms?
If yoX^ve any conslde- .ble number of OB ■ K » «1 « «1« ■«« • I
iha^boveSVaqdoms »•’* are suffering
trom'Wliou«nat/sNrpin iiVST with Indi- I
■ THE POET SAYS
testionXcH^TpeJrwwi D.- PJereels GoLieq
“ Beauty draws us
Meli,-al Discovery !jj_made up of the nio<(
by a single hair.”
valuable niedic'nal principles known to
tnedlcai science for the permanent cure <>l ta « * a.« a rt* 1***1*
TI iih sepins like something of I
tuch abnormal conditions^ It i* a~mo»l I
efficient liver invigorator. stomach tonic.
nn exagerntion on the pai l of the |
bowel regulator and nerve strengthener.
poet, if at least does not apply to i
The "Golden Medical Discovery ” is not <*
men.
The man with n single .
a patent medicine or secret nostrum, a
hair would not draw worth a
full list of its ingredients being printed
cent, unless as a curiosity.
on its bottle-wrap per and attested undei
oath. A glance at its formula will show
People to look their l»est need I
that it contains no alcohol, or harmful
vvei
hair. th'\v need all they
A
habit-forming drugs. It is a fluid extract
have.
If the hair begins to go it
made with pure, triple-refined glycerine,
is time to use
of proper strength, from the roots of the
following native American forest plants.
IMPERIAL HAIR TONIC.
vil , Golden Seal root. Stone root, Black
Thi« preparation saves hair. It
Cherry bark. Queen's root, Blocdroot, and
stimulates the hair bulbs, cleans
Mandrake root.
.
Tbe real home of the boa constrictors
; Is in tbe tropical countries. Mrs. Boa
I seeks a sandy place. VTbeu she has
I found it she colls herself into a great
Notice of Sheriff s Sale.
I and almost flat corkscrew. Then by
In
the
Circuit
Court of the State of Oregon,
Just two or three turns of her body
for Tillamook « ounty.
she digs a shallow hole in the sand. Mitchell. Lewis & j
Stavcr Company, a I
This is ber nest. In this hole she lays I corporation.
Plaintiff*. |
about twenty-four eggs. The eggs are
vs.
I
about as large as those bantam chick , E E Tyler,
doing
ens lay and are a dark cream color. j business >mder the
firm name ofjE. E.
They are oblong and more tbe shape i Tyler
Ac Company.
i
Defendants.
J
of a pecan than of a ben’s egg. Tbe
is H ereby G iven ,—That whereas 1
shell is not hard, like a ben's egg. but I an N otice
execution ha* been issued out of the
yields to tbe pressure of your finger, above entitled court, in the above entitled I
j cause, date May 17th, 1909. commanding
something like rubber.
I me as Sheriff of I illamook County, Oregon,
Having laid ber eggs In the nest of to sell the hereinafter described property,
personal and real, belonging to the said
sand, the mother boa winds herself defendant
which has heretofore been at
Into a perfectly flat coll, like a round tached in -.ml cause to satisfy the sum of
$3.204.87.
interest thereon from Sep
mat. This done, she gently pushes tember 29th. with
1908, at the rate of ft per cent
waves of sand upon the eggs until per annum and for the further sum of
with interest thereon, at the rate
they are covered from four to six $1500.00,
of 8 per cent per annum from September
Inches deep. Then she settles herself 29th. 190* .i'i'i $75 ih> as attorneys ice*
the cost* and disbursement* of said
upon the top and stays there for nine and
action and accruing costs
teen days. At the end of this time a
And whereas all the personal property
attached in said action has heretofore been
lot of little snakes may be seen push sold
as perishable property, except the build-
The following leading medical authorities,
ing their way out from the nest and i ing erected upon the Sorth 55 feet oft of ’.ot among a host of others, extol the
in Boek Five, in ihayer’s addition to roots fur the cure of just such ailments as the
away Into the world to get their owu I I One.
the town of Lincoln, now I illamook City.
I sbovesymptomsindicate: Pruf.R. Bartliolow.
living. They don’t show a bit of affec I Now I will on the 25 th day of June 1909, i M. D., of Jefferson Med. College. Hida.: Prof.
at the hour of ten o'clock a.m. of *aid day, 11.C Wood. M. D..of I niv.of Pa.: Prof Edwin
tion for their mother or for each other, ; in
front of »he Court House door, in Tilla l M. Hale. M. D., of Hahnemann Med. College.
but glide away, probably never to be mook City, Oregon sell at Public Sale all the Chicago; Prof, John King. M. 1».. Author ot
right,
title and interest of the said E E. American Dispensatory; Prof. J no. M. S-ud
together again. Is it any wonder, Tyler, in
and to lot number four (4), in der. M. D.. Autnorof Specific Medicines; Prof.
when they act so Just after behut Block number eight (8). in Miller's addition Laurence Johnson. M. D.. Med. Dept. Univ, of
to
Tillamook
City, and 55 feet off the North N. Y.: Prof. Finley Ellingwood. M. D.. Author
hatched out. that boa constrictors nev End of Lot One
(1), in Block five (5). in of Materia Med lea and Prof, in Bennett Medi
er like anybody and never have any Thayer s addition to Lincoln, now’ Tilla cal College. Chicago. Send name ar.d ad
mook City, and also the building erected dress on Postal Card to I)r. IL V. Pierce. Buf
thing to do with people if they can on
the last named tract, to the highest and falo, N. Y.. and receive .frr<* booklet giving
avoid it?
best bidder for cash.
extracts from writings of all the above medi
Dated this 19th dav of May, 1909.
cal authors and many others endorsing, in the
Each little snake measures from
H. CRENSHAW,
strongest possible terms, each and every in
twelve to fourteen inches in length
Sherift of Tillamook County, Oregon.
gredient of which “Golden Medical Discov
ery "is composed, f
and Is about ns big around ns a lead
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant MW» regulate and
Notice of Sheriff’s Sale.
pencil. It is said that they eat nothing
Invigorate stomach, liver an<l m-wels. They
mar he used in conjunction with "Golden
at all during the first six months of
N otice is
H ereby
G iven .—That in Medical Dlwovery" If bowels are much con-
their lives or until they are old enough pursuance of a decree of foreclosure and •tlpKted. They're *lny and sugar-costed.
order of sale d-i’y rendered and entered in
to catch and crush to death small ani its
Journal by the Circuit Court of the State
mals and swallow them whole. Tbe of Oregon, for Tillamook County, at a
NOTICE OF VACATION.
term of said Court, on the 19th day
boa constrictor never bites-it has no regular
of April, 1909, in a certain suit, w’herein Of that Portion of Bayocean Park
William
Ryan
is
plaintiff,
and
E.
E.
Tyler
poison fangs- but always kills by coll
Lying North of the South line of
Delia L Tyler, his wife, and Mitchell,
ing about Its victim and crushing It to and
Lewis 8’ Stavcr Company, a corporation,
Twenty-seventh Avenue.
death. Fully grown, the boa constrictor are defendants in favor of said plaintiff and
said defendants, and in pursuance
TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, Notice i* !
Is thirty to forty feet long and as big against
and by virtue of an execution and order of hereby given that the undersigned has this I
around as the large part of a man's sale duly issued and under the seal of said 31st day of May, 1909, filed in the office of I
Court in said cause, to me duly directed, the County Clerk of Tillamook County, State
leg.
dated the 1 Sth day of May, 1909, said judg
■There’s always room at the top"
"Yes. but sometimes the elevator
isn’t running "-Cleveland leader
>k her bead.
no idea.” she said, “wbat a
Tbe more we study the more we dis
cover our ignorance —Shelley.
nt I am.“—Chicago Post.
Percheron Stallion Ville.
The Registered Percheron stallion Ville
o| 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 j
of said Bayocean Park lying North of tie i
South line of Twenty-seventh Avenue ; that I
said petition recites thut tne petitioner ami I
the signer of this notice is the owner in fee I
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 Commissioner*
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 tliv
said petition can be presented.
POTTER-CHAPIN REALTY CO.,
By H. L. C hapin , Vice President.
W
C TROMBLEY.
a
■
■
S
a
0
a
the scalp of dandruff or eruptions,
and promotes new growth.
Try
it now.
Pi ice 50o. and $1 00 a bottle.
m * a w .«i » «I..*.**«
a CHAS. I. CLOUGH CO.,
a
Reliable Druggists
a and Prescription Experts.
B « :■ .* * * * * •: * * *::■
Did You Ever Try
HARRIS’S NEW FEED AND
LIVERY BARN,
If not, give lii:n a call.
Everything first-class.
Second
block South of P O.
W. G.
H arris , Prop.
Administrator’s Notice.
In the matter of the estate^
of Julia A. Mapes, de-?
ceased.
>
N otice is H rreby G iven ,—That the un
dersigned ha* been duly appointed by the
( ounty Court of the State of Oregon, fol
In the County Court of the State of Oregon, Tillamook County, administrator of the
for Tillamook County.
estate of Julia A. Mapes, deceased.
In the matter of the Estate]
All persons huving claims against said es
of Josie Alice Davidson, /Citation.
tate are hereby required to present the same
A Minor. )
projierl.v verified, as by law required, at the
To Olive Alice Dodge, Guardian of the office of W. H. Cooper, in Tillamook City,
above named minor, Josie Alice Davidson, Oregon, within six months from the date
the above named minor,
Frederick M
hereof.
Davidson, Monta V. Davidson, Joyce B.
Dated this 11th day of June, 1909.
Morse, Laura Dodge. Ernest Dodge.
W. K. A liikrman ,
G reeting : In the name of the State of
Admistrator of the estate of
Oregon you are hereby cited and required to
Julia A. Mapes,deceased.
appear in the County Court of the State of
Oregon, for the County oj Tillamook, at the
Court room thereof, at Tillamook City, Notice of Appointment of Admin-
Oregon, on Monday, the fifth day of July,
•trator.
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 iven ,—That the tin
there be, why an order should not be granted dersigned has been duly appointed admin-
directing Olive Alice Dodge. Guardian of the strator of the Estate of ALBERT A. FORD,
above named minor, to sell the real property deceased, by the County Court of Oregon. I
belonging to the estate of said minor, at for Tillamook County. Now, therefore, all
private sale fo. cash in hand, which said real person* having claims against said estate,
property is situated in Tillamook County. are herebv required topresent them to me at
Oregon, and is more particularly described Tillamook City, in Tillamook County, Ore
as follows to-wit :
gon, with proper vouchers, on or before six
An undivided one third interest in and to month* from the date hereof.
that portion of tlx Donation Land Claim of
Dated at Tillamook, Oregon, June 14th,
James Quick and Anna Quick, bounded by 1909.
beginning at a point on the West line of said
K. G. FORD.
claim twenty hve and 50-100 (25.501 chains
Administrator of the Estate of
South of the North West corner of said claim
Albert A. Ford, deceased.
and running thence East twenty-one and
75-100 chains ; thence North eleven and
50-100 chain* ; thence Bast eighteen and RESTORATION TO ENTRY OF LANDS
25-100 chains to East line of claim ; thence
IN NATIONAL FORES I
Will cure a cough or cold no
North fitty| (50) links ; thence West forty • N otice is II krkby G iven —That the lands
(40) chains to West line of claim ; thence described below, embracing BO acres, within 1 matter how severe and prevent
South twelve chains to beginning, containing the Siuslaw National Forest, Oregon, will
twenty-seven (27) acre* more or leas in l»e subject to settlement and entry under i pneumonia and consumption.
Tillamook County, Oregon.
the provision* of the homestead laws 1
This Citation is issued in accordance with of the United States and the act of
an order of the above entitled court in the lune 11. 1900 (34 Stat., 233), at the
above entitled cause, made and entered on United States Land Office at Portland, Ore
This is to certify that all
the 18th day of May, 1909, a copy of which gon, on August IO, 1909. Any settler who I
order is hereto attached and made a part of wan actually ami in good faith claiming any druggists are authorized to re
this Citation, marked Exhibit “A.’*
of said lands for agricultural purposes prior
Witness the Honorable H. F. Goodspeed, to January 1st, 1906. and has not aban fund
your money if Foley's
Fudge of the County Court of the State of doned same, hu* a preference right to make
Honey and Tar fails to cure
Oregon, for the County of Tillamook, with a homestead entry for the lands actually
the seal of said Court affixed this 19th day occupied. Kaid lands were listed upon the j your cough or cold.
Contains
of May, 1909.
application* of the person* mentioned be
Attest:
J. C. HOLDEN,
low, who have a preference right subject to no opiates.
The genuine is in
(Seal)
Clerk.
the prior right of any such »ettler, provided
SLFUSE SUUTITUTU.
Exhibit u A ”
such settler or applicant is qualified to make I yellow package.
In the County Court of the State of Oregon, homestead entry and the preference right is |
for Tillamook County.
exercised prior to August loth, 1909, on
In the matter of the I
which date the land* will be subject to •
Guardianship of Josie ’ Order for Cha- settlement and entry by any qualified per
Alice Davidson.
( tion.
son. The land* are a* follow* : The Hw %
A Minor. J
of Ne 'L the F. 14 of Nw ‘4 of Se %, See. 3, T. .
On this 18th day of May. 1909, came Olive 4H,R. 10 W.,W.M. listed upon the appli- I
Alice Dodge. Guardian of the person and cation of A. F Gardner of Beaver. Oregon
estate of Josie Alice Davidson, a minor, and Fred Dennett, Commissioner of the General ,
petitions the Court for an order to sell at Land <»fficc. Approved May 21st 1909:
private sale for cash, the real property be Frank Pierce, First Assistant Secretary of I
longing to the estate of said ward, described the Interior.
as follows :
An undivided one-third interest in and ’to
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
that portion of the Donation Land Claim of
United Htafes
Office,
James Quick and Anna Quick, bounded by
beginning ata point on the West line of said
Purdand, Oregon,
claim twenty-five and 50-100 (35 60) chains
May 27th. 190».
south of the North West corner of said claim
Notice is hereby
given that
tin*
and running thence East twenty-one and 75-
1OO chains; thence North eleven and 50-100 Northern Pacific Railway
Company, !
chains . thence East eighteen and 25-100
chains to East line of claim ; thence North whuae post office addreiw is St. Paul, 1
fifty (50) links ;
thence fcest forty (40) Minnesota, lia* this 27th .day of May j
chain* , to West line of claim ; thence South 1909, filed in this office its application ;
twelve chain* to beginning,
containing
twenty-seven (27) acre* more or less in Tilla to select under the provisions of th««
Act of Cor»green, approved July 1, 1R98
mook County» Oregon
And it appearing to the Court that said (80 Stat. 597, 620) as extended by the I
Guardian
has filed an Inventory and
Approvement of all the estate of said Act of Congreae, approved May 17,
ward a* provided by law, that there I90fl. Lol 2, sec. 24, tp. 1 S., R. 9 weal,
is no personal property belonging to W M.
the estate of said
ward ;
that
said
Any and all persons claiming adver- i
ward has no income whatever except
the rents of »aid land and the best rent ob seljr the lands deMcrtbrd* or <ie*iring to
tainable for the rent of said land is 910 00 object because of the mineral character
jicr annum), that the least sum sufficient for
the maintenance and education of said ward of the land, or for any other reason, h»
is $175 OO per annum , that the taxes on the dis|K»aal to applicant, should file
said land* average $5.00 per year . that the their affidavit* of protect in this office,
petitioner is nut able financially to support, on or f»efore the 16th of July, 191'9.
maintain and educate said ward a* she
A lx, th non 8. D k B mek ,
should be supported, maintained and educated
without using the proceeds of the sale of the
Kegistrr.
said lands ; that it will be to the best In-
tere«t of the said ward, and that it is neces
sary in order ♦ «• support maintain and
educate the said ward that said land should
if yrm whip rithrra VH MtlngBhntfl*.
tie sold at private sale for cash.
Hh u II le or aMIrtjl«- 7hr<*R(1
Aoin
It is therefore hereby ordered that the next
hawing
hin« writ»»to
of kin of said ward and all person* interested
in tbe estate of said ward be, and they are
THE HEW HOMI STWIXO MACHINE COMPACT
hereby required to appear before thia Court,
Orunfj«, Mass.
at the Court room thereof in Tillamook City,
Many«* *
<rr r»t.
tos«H»*|tw1lsSB^
Oregon, on Monday, the 5th day of July.
«aual
ty,
t
it
th«* Krw If ««me is made to
1909. at 1O o'clock a.m of said dav. and
I Hu su* > sfrtv never run* out
then and there show cause why license
should no* be granted to said Guardian to
Suiti by i«uthi»rire«l stentor*
—
sell the lands a* prayed for.
H. F OUODSPF.BD.
OFFICE
TILLAMOOK
HOTEL.
Jud(*
Foley’s
Honey
and Tar
A Guarantee.
a
J. S. Lamar, Tillamook.
Hawk ¿¿Miller, Bay City
DIE WORLDS GREATEST SEWING MACHINE
J. R. HARTER,
Real Estate and
Financial Agent.
Insurance.
E. T. IIAÏ.TON, Agent.