Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, June 24, 1909, Image 4

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    T illamook headlight , june
THEEJIMOT«
How We Are Whirling Around
and Through Space.
THE INFLUENCE OF THE SUN
Without Its Attraction That Draws ths
World Toward It In an Elliptical
Course Our Globe Would Wander on
Forever In a Straight Line.
THE CANNON BURST.
NEW GUINEA COURTSHIP.
Tragedy In a Celebration to Honor
President Tyler.
In 1M4 an accident took place in the
American uavy—the explosion of a big
gnu, the Peacemaker, on board the frig­
ate rrlnceton. off Broad bay, In the
Potomac river, eight miles below
Washington.
Those killed were Abel Upshur of
Virginia, secretary of state; Thomas
W. Gilmer, governor of Virginia;
Commodore Ketnon of the navy, Rep­
resentative Sykes of New Jersey. Rep­
resentative Maxey of Maryland and
Mr. Gardiner, un ex-member of con­
gress from New York.
The severely wounded were William
Wilkins of Pennsylvania, secretary of
war; Miss Wickliffe, daughter of the
postmaster general; Colonel Dade,
Colonel Benton. Judge Phelps of Ver­
mont, Commodore Stockton, command
er of the Princeton, and nine seamen.
On Feb. 28, 1844. President Tyler,
the members of his cabinet and their
families and many other prominent
persons, said to number over 400, were
Invited by Commodore Stockton to
spend the day on the frigate Prince­
ton. which was lying at anchor off
Alexandria. After the guests were on
board anchor was weighed for a short
sail on the Potomac, and the ship pro­
ceeded down the river to a point be-
low Fort Washington. On the trip
down the heaviest piece of ordnance
on the frigate was fired several times,
presumably as a matter of entertain­
ment for the company. The gun had
been constructed from a model made
by Commodore Stockton, and Presi­
dent Tyler expressed a decided inter­
est In tlie weapon. At 2 o’clock in
the afternoon on the return trip the
Princeton anchored off Broad bay, and
the company was invited to luncheon
In the cabins below the gun deck.
After luncheon Commodore Stockton
proposed that the gun be fired once
more ns a salute, he said, to the mem­
ory of the great peacemaker, George
Washington. President Tyler, his cab­
inet and a number of gentlemen re­
paired to the gun deck.
As the gun was fired the breech end
from the trunnion's back was blown
off, and this section was split in twain.
One-half of it fell on Secretary Up­
shur. Two sailors removed it, but the
secretary expired In a few moments.
Governor Gilmer had been struck and
killed by this section of the gun be­
fore it felled Mr. Upshur. The party
on the gun deck was scattered, and
the whole ship shook under the force
of the explosion.
The excitement was great, The bod-
les were removed from the Princeton,
taken to Washington, placed in hearses
at the wharf and carried to the White
House, where they lay In the east room
till the day of the funeral—a day of
general public mourning.—Exchange.
All th* Proposals of Marriage Are
Mads by Women.
Away off in the strange Island of
New Guinea it is leap year all the
time in one Important sense, for out
there all the proposals of marriage
are made by the women. It is consid­
ered beneath the dignity of the male
inhabitants of New Guinea to even
notice a woman, and consequently the
women perforce must notice the men
and must start any idea of weddings,
etc.
So when the island belle of New
Guinea becomes in love she promptly
sends a piece of string to the sister
of the lucky man. If he has no sister
she sends it to bls mother or to some
female relative—this because the man
and his male relatives are assumed
to be above taking any steps toward
acquiring a wife.
Then the sister says to the man in­
volved: "Brother. I have news. So-
and-so is in love with you.” If in­
clined to matrimony the man makes
an engagement to meet the enamored
lady. When they meet it is alone, nnd
they either decide to wed or drop the
entire proposition at once. There is
no courting, for the man is not al­
lowed. theoretically at least, to waste
any time on a woman—not even
enough time to make love to the lady
or to allow her to make love to him.
The betrothal is announced, and the
engaged man in New’ Guinea Is brand­
ed on the back with charcoal, but the
woman’s mark of engagement to wed
Is actually cut into her skin and is
never allowed to completely vanish,
If either one decides to break tlie en-
gagement nothing can be done by the
offended party.
If the girl decides that, after all, she
sent the little piece of string by mis­
take the man is apt. however, to catch
her some time alone and beat her. If
the man jilts the woman her relatives
often hunt him up and administer a
sound drubbing. Blood, however, is
seldom shed, ns the breaking of these
women made engagements is not deem­
ed a very serious matter.
Though the women propose the wed­
dings in New Guinea, the condition of
the wife is miserable and unjust In
the extreme. The girl is merely the
property and slave of the husband, He
can beat her unrebuked nnd even kill
her with Impunity if she Incurs his
enmity.—Atlanta Constitution.
There are those who think much of
moving from one point to another of
the eartb—travel they call It—and yet
pay little heed to the wonderful jour­
ney of the earth itself. Many, again,
go to seek a climate while the hurry­
ing earth Is bringing to them one ill-
mate after another In endless succes­
sion. Those who have not hitherto
taken much notice of the earth’s prog­
ress—who have not, so to speak, looked
cut of their carriage window as they
are whirled along—might find a new
Interest In doing so. Look, for exam­
ple, at the apparent size of the sun.
Casual observation shows that it ap­
pears larger In the winter heavens.
Aud exact measurements tell us that
It Is largest on Jan. 1 aud smallest on
July 2. The size of the sun thus marks
the earth’s nearest approach and
greatest distance from tlie sun. Accu­
rate astronomical measurement of the
sun's dlntneter might even determine
the day of the year, for the dally vari­
ation in the apparent size of the sun Is
some nine-fiftieths of n second of an-
gultir measurement. And astronomers
profess to measure the second decimal
of seconds.
There are three ways In which we
are journeying with the earth. There
is, first, the dally revolution, which car­
ries us through a complete circle in
twenty-four hours at a rate varying
from rather more than a thousand
miles nn hour nt the equator to noth­
ing nt the poles, whore no one. by the
way, has ever been. Then we are trav­
eling around the sun cnee a year at
the rate of eighteen miles a second.
Thirdly, we tire Journeying through
stellar space, for one of the most re­
markable facts which modern astron­
omy has brought to light is that our
solar system, the sun with all Its plan-
ets, is on n journey toward the con-
stellatlon Lyra at tlie rate of ten miles
a second.
As we sit In n train nnd are whirled
along it sometimes appears as If the
scenery were flying past us rather
than we past it. So the dally revolu-
tfon of the earth—a thousand ntlles an
hour at the equator—makes the sun
rise acd set, nnd our yearly Journey
makes the run apparently travel
through the constellations of the zo­
diac. If we move round any stationary
Just Before the Spanking.
object cn the earth we see It with a
“Pop, doe3 a chicken come from an
constantly changing ba kgr< und now (» ever 9”
a windmill, now a cottage, now a
“Yes. my son.”
wood, now a church, etc. So as we
“And does an egg come from a
travel round the sun we see It with an chicken?”
ever changing background of stars
“Yes."
now those of Arles, now of Taurus,
"Well, If n chicken comes from an
now of Gemini, nnd so on. The posi­ egg, nnd nn egg comes from a chicken,
tion of the sun among the stars marks which"—
the stages of the earth's annual Jour­
“Now, see here, if you are going to
ney. And ns the earth arrives at dif­ prolong tills line of thought you can
ferent points of Its orbit the times of go right to bed.”
the risings of certain stars vary. These
"But. pop!"
Indications of the earth’s progress
"Well, what?”
hnve been taken ns murks of the sea­
“How does n chicken come from an
sons. Thus when Sirius rose with the
egg?"
sun It was known that the dog days
"Oh, any hen can sit on an egg and
had begun. Early astronomers watch hatch It."
cd carefully for the rising of the dog
"Gee! I'm glad I ain't a hen. It
star. The Egyptian astronomers look­
must hurt to sit on a hatchet !" (Hasty
ed for the helical rising of Sotlils to
exit.)—New York Times.
proclaim the new year.
it Is the earth's yearly journey round
Ths Old Ones.
the sun which enables us to determine
“
We
’
ll
have
to give up the idea of
tlie distances of the stars. The method
puttin' pictures in the parlor, Jane,”
is precisely that adopted by surveyors
for determining the position of objects remarked old John Turnipseed as he
on earth. The direction of the object threw the bridle under the table.
“Why?" asked Ills wife.
whose distance is to be found Is ob­
“Too dear! Why, I priced one In
served from two points a known dis­
tance apart. The rest Is mere calcula­ town today, and the dealer sez. sez he,
tion. in tlie case of the stars tlie direc­ ‘That’s an old master; it's price is
tions are observed from two extreme £500.'
" ‘Wliy,’ sez I, ‘it looks like a second­
points In the earth's orbit Instead of
front the two ends of a base line. The hand plctur’.'
" 'Yes, It Is,' sez be.
process Is called triangulation when
“Then, thinks I, if a secondhand
applied to earth measurements, and
everybody understands what it means. plctur’ costs that much it's no use to
When applied to the stars It Is called price a new un. So. Jane, I reckon we’ll
parallax and remains a mystery to have to hang up a few mottoes. 'God
most |>eople. Such Is the obscuring Bless Our Home' and the like, nnd let
the plctur's go.”—Pearson's Weekly.
power of a word.
The "little more” and the “little less”
City of Snow White Domos.
of Browning are forcibly Illustrated tn
The little city of El-Oued. with its
the direction of the earth's Journey
round the «un. An elliptic course dif­ population >f 8,000 people, at th# ex­
fering very little from a circle, com­ treme south of the province of Con­
bined with a tilt of the axle, gives us stantine. in Algeria, la unique even for
the seasons. But If till« difference and a Mohammedan city, because of the
tilt did not exl«t there- would be no great number of its snow white domes
seasons nnd one climate would rule or cupolas. So extraordinary is the
the year If, agnln, the- course were great number of these cupolas that
more elliptic, then for the hemisphere many writers have referred to El-Oued
whose winter occurred at the earth's ns "the city of a thousand cupolas."
greatest distance from the «mi there The homes of the residents of El-Oued
are constructed of white plaster and
might be a glacial period.
"The straight line," says Miss Helen were it not for the whiteness of the
Keller, “symbolizes duty. It Is a dull domes would be tnken at a cursory
thought drawn ent endlessly." And glance to be a city of coke ovens —
this seems to be a reflection on what Popular Mechanics.
we had thought was the earth'« path
As Good <■» His Word,
of duty round the sun. for this |>ath Is
lie- I always make It a point to
the curve known as the ellipse. More
over, the thought makes the »un a prod t by r the mistakes of others
She 1 got weary of George Brixton
tempter of the earth front the strict
path of dnty, for the earth, we learn because he never seemed to know
from our Newton, If left to Itself when to > go home.
He then bade her good night —Olere­
would wander on forever through
space in a straight line It Is the sun land Leader
Which draws It from this dull course
Ons Masculina Trait.
into the pleasant curve of aubjection
Gwllllams Mm. Bingo always strike»
Yet the sun'» victory Is only partial,
the earth's actual path being a combi­ m** as being such a masen tine woman.
She cant
nation of It» own straight line of tn-' Mrs. Gwtlllams She Is
ctlnatlon and obedience to the pull of stand the least bit of pain without
tbs sun And ao Instead of tbs “dull linking a big fuss over It -Chicago
thought drawn out endlessly" we have ( Tribune.
tlie beautiful thought of the changing I
Death is a frlrnd of ours, and he
seasons, the flowers and fruits of ths
earth, wltb Its ever varying weather.1 that Is not ready to entertain him Is
sunshine aud storm, beat and cold.
| not at home.—Bacon.
FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.
Her Summary Method of Snapping
Official Red Tape.
When Florence Nightingale came, in­
stantly a new intelligence, Instinct
with pity, aflame with energy, fertile
with womanly invention, swept through
the Scutari hospital. Clumsy male de­
vices were dismissed, almost with a
gesture, into space. Dirt became a
crime, fresh air and clean linen, sweet
food and soft hands a piety. A great
kitcheu was organized which provided
well cooked food for a thousand men.
Washing was a lost art In the hospital,
but this band of women created, as
with a breath, a great laundry, and a
strange cleanliness crept along the
walls and the beds of the hospital. In
their warfare with disease and pain
these women showed a resolution as
high as the men of their race showed
against the gray coated battalions of
Inkerman or in the frozen trenches be­
fore Sebastopol. Muddle headed male
routine was swept ruthlessly aside.
If the commissariat failed to supply
requisites, Florence Nightingale, who
had great funds at her disposal, in­
stantly provided them herself, and the
heavy footed officials found the swift
feet of these women outrunning them
In every path of help and pity. Only
one flash of anger Is reported to have
broken the serene calm which served
as a mask for the steel-like and reso­
lute will of Florence Nightingale,
Some stores hud arrived from Eng-
land; sick men were languishing for
them, But routine required that they
should lie Inspected by a board before
being issued, and the board, moving
with heavy footed slowness, had not
completed Its work when night fell,
The stores were, therefore, with offi-
cial phlegm, locked up and their use
denied to the sick. Between the needs
of hundreds of sick men and the com­
forts they required was the locked
door, the symbol of red tape. Florence
Nightingale called a couple of order­
lies. walked to the door and quietly
ordered them to burst It open and the
stores to be distributed!—Cornhill Mag-
azlue.
Dolly Madison.
Mrs. Dolly Madison, the wife of the
third president, is described by Gris­
wold In this way:
“Dolly Payne, born In North Caro­
lina, hns been educated according to
the strictest rules of the Quakers in
Philadelphia, where at an early age
she married a young lawyer of this
sect named Todd; but, becoming a wid­
ow, she threw off drab silks and plain
laces and for several years was one of
the gayest and most fascinating wo­
men of the city. She had many lovers,
but she gave the preference to Mr.
Madison and became his wife in 1704."
The Mistress of the House.
"She s(>ends all her time In the
library
"Ah, she is literary?”
"Not especially. But the cook won't
allow her In the kitchen, and the maids
don’t want her about the halls or par­
lors.”—Pittsburg Post.
Deduction.
"Tell me what yon ent. and 1 will
tell yon what you are.” boasted an
amateur «age.
"Well, I ate a welsh rabbit and a
lemon pie last night.”
"You’re a fool.'*—Kansas City Jour­
nal.
24 looo.
VOSBERG WILL GOON TILLA
MOOK RUN
Steamer Will Carry Both Freight
and Passengers Down Coas;.
Major Weitzel,
Registered No- 33271,
Commencing today the steamer George
■
R. Voaburg will be operated between
Portland and Nehalem and Tillamook,
in the freight and passenger trade. She
will be the first steamer that has over
been placed’on this route, and the oper­
ators of the new line are confident of the
mill be in Tillamook City about July loth,
venture proving a success. The craft will
1909, and uuill remain as Uong
leave tonight on her initial run in the
as Business Justifies.
service.
Accommodations for passengers have
Coine early and look over the horse, his breeding
j ust been fitted up, and a Government
and
the
honors he has won aud book your mares.
license issued permitting her to carry 15
The Major is now finishing a very prosperous season
people. Heretofore the Vosburg has
over the same field for the fourth year.
been operated as a tugboat, and she will
continue to take schooners in and out
For further particulars consult the posted bills or
over the bar at the other end of the line.
write to
But it is said this work wdl not inter­
DR. E. F. ROGERS, V.S.D.,
fere with her maintaining a weekly
schedule out of this port. On thedown
Ouuner and manager, SRUE1W, Ore.
trip she will carry general merchandise
and return with farm products, such as
is carried by the Sue H. Elmore and
First Class Roon,
Argo. She will make the third steamer Centrally Located.
nag»»
running regularly out of Portland to
ful.
Tillamook. Until a few months ago the
Elmore took care of the entire traffic
« niff
down that way, a fact cited as illus­
trative of the growing importance of The Only First Class Hotel in Tillamook, Ort the i>
that section of Oregon.
A Modern Hotel.
Traveling Men’s Home.
Tourists' Headquarters. Uw
Captain C. P. Rorvik, recently master
j. p. RAMSEY, Pro.
X
of the steam schooner Yellowstone, is in
er
gu
command of the Vosburg. He says this
?e an
is one of the best short runs out of Port-i
nt ng
land. The skipper explains that the
the «
new railroad being built from Portland
itrles
to Tillamook and Nehalem will make
ea ere
i of |
business unusually brink by the water
reds
route during the next few months. Be­
■intbs
sides, it is pointed out the summer re
galle
sorts there are proving more popular,
iaxlm
which will greatly benefit the passenger
travel.
The skipper is authority for the state­
li era
• and
ment that on a sand spit near Nehalem
live
a great quantity of beeswax has been
IgMti
uncovered. It is believed to have form­
jraltn
ed a part of a cargo of a Spanish ship
t tw<
wrecked there more than 100 years ago.
on»,
Old fashioned candle sticks have also
of ov
been found in the collection. An effort
sens
is being made to recover as much of the
mllei
rtlng
buried treasure as possible, The opera.
vest
tions are necessarily slow, as the spit is
alneni
CHEESE, Tillamook to Portland
inundated by high tides.
«; gut
Captain Rorvik expresses the opinion
Tuuins, 12g Cents per Cast
that Nehalem is destined to become one
of the greatesr seaside resorts on the
idem
Trips, 15
coast after the new railroad has been
»i
«»
ope.
completed. In addition to its other at­
nlnen
frod
tractions he says that vicinity provides
the best fishing and hunting in the state.
F. P. BAUMGARTNER, Agent Couch Street Dock, Portland, Oregox
He declares that it is the home of count­
B. C. LAMB, Agent, Tillamook, Oregon.
cb
less thousands of wild pigeons.—Tele-
le hu
g ram.
— —— - - -
jbefo
The Iowa Bred Prize Winning Standard
Bred Trotting Stallion,
HOTEL RAMSEY,
Tillamook. Oregon.
Pacific Navigation Co’s
STEAMER SUE H. ELMORE,
The ONLY Freight and
PASSENGER^
Boat making regular trips between
TILLAMOOK AND PORTLAND.
FREIGHT, $3.00 PER TON.
Women
Should
Tran
Nerves
Their
We hear women talk of '• nerves!
nerves!" as though they looked upon
them as their greatest foes, All the
physical pleasures of life are brought to
os through our nerves, and even the
higher joys of the intellectual and the
spiritual life we become aware of only
through the medium of feeling, and for
this reason alone it Icehoovesone to keep
one's nerves in a noimal, healthful
and responsive condition.
The fact that the nervous system is
amenable to training and that its hab.
its can be unerringly cultivated at one’s
own will, and under one’sown direction
or with outside assistance if necessary, is
a fact of growing importance. This is so
because the recent work of scientific men
is showing us to what a minute degree
nerve habits can be controlled and also
because, especially in America, our cli
mate and our modern civilization are
making greater demands upon nervous
force and contribute to the unconscious
formation of detrimental nervous habits.
The time has come, prophesied by Mr.
Oilman's '• neolitic man”:
We’re going to wear great piles of stuff
Outside our natural skins,
We’re going to have diseases
And accomplishments and sins.
Worry, ill temper, hast, laziness, over
work, selfishness, egotism and distrust
are in many cases l>ad habits of the
nerves.—Anna Sturgea, in the Delinea­
tor for June.
Making Children SelfReliant.
Women Who Are Envied
Those attractive women who 1» cwu
lovely in face, form and temper arete * °PP'
er.vv of many, w ho might lie likeIhm WWI
A weak, sickly women will be nrri(«>wini
and irritable, Constipation or Khi*!l of a
poisons allow in pimples, blotches, hi ring
eruptions and a wretched cotnplrii« Igrles,
For all such. Electric Bitters work»», jn
ders They regulate Stomach,
.
Kidneys, purify the blood; give
nerves, bright eyes, pure breath,
velvety skill, lovely complexion. Mu'“- “
charming women owe their health wk
beauty to them. 50c. atChas. I. ClougbilOII» «
Mr. William R. George, the founder,
discovered through experience that the
only way to make boys and girls self-re­
liant and independent was to throw
them on their own resources, and that
the only way to teach them respect for
law and order was to have them create
and execute that law themselves. So,
in the George Junior Republic, at Free­
ville, N. Y., and in other junior republics
which are being established in various
bu
-----------------------------
parts of the country, the boysand girls
MA80NIC
L0 DOB dSMl
become “citizens’’ ot a minature dem
No. 57, meets on thirdSiw
ocracy, wherein they perform the same
dav of each month «perfet
duties and bear the same responsibilities
that will be bound to fall on them, when
I.OO.F. Hall, at 7;80 p.*Brea.
they become of age, in the great repub­
rt rea
F rank S everance , W,M.
lic. Here, in this little community, ex­
poustl
E rwin H arrison , Srt-
isting conditions are frankly accepted,
and the youthful inhabitants learn to
ject
R. A. D. PERKINS, rd» in
live in the world as we find it today,
and not in some ideal state.
The plan which Mr. George organized
RESIDENT DENTIST.
was not launched in its entirety, but is
Office in Sturgeon’s Building.
the result of years of experience in con
nection with fresh air colonies. Here the
All Work Guaranteed.
children were having everything given
TILLAMOOK.
OHEG05
to them—clothes, food, etc.—and when
needing correction were whipped in the
good (?) old-fashioned way. What was
the result ? Increase in tendencies to­
ward pauperism and greater antagonism
I have some new and second
against control, with no higher respect ladies’ and gent's wheels at a bargain-
for the rights of other. Here, certainly
Will not be undersold by W*
was need for a change, and Mr. George, firms.
desiring to do the best he could for the
Come and see my stock. I »■
k ,
children, decided to do the most reason- pared to build you any kind ot
able thing. First, they were to earn at short notice.
fit
their clothes, and then finally their food
Bargains never before seen in ^“‘od ba
as well. At first there was rebellion, mook for cash. Old bicycles taken.
but Mr. George curbed his sympathy
and simply waited. When the young-
sters discovered that there was no other
AT THE OLD STAND
way but to work for.what they want­
ed and needed, they started in one alter Notice of Appointment of Adn**
strator.
another, and herein was founded the
motto that the republic holds today.
N oticb is H brbby G itbn ,— That tj*
designed has been duly appointed w»
Nothing Without Labor,1' .
•trator of the Estate of MARTHA J.
Men Past Fifty in Danger.
Men past middle life have found com­
fort and relit in Foley's Kiclnay Remedy,
especially tor eidaiged prostate gland^
which is very common among elderly
men. L E. Morris, Dexter, Ky„ writes;
•'Up to a year ago my father suffered
from kidney and biadder trouble and
several physicians pronounced It enlarge -
menl ot the prostate gland and advised
an operation. On account of hie age we
were afraid he could not stand it and I
recommended Foley's Kidney Remedy,
and the first bottle relieved him. and
after taking the second bottle he was no
longer troubled with this complaint.''— Of Interest to Farmers
and
J. 8. Lamar. Tillamook ; Hawk A Miller
. i k-a.
__
r------------J Mechanics.
Bay City.
karmer and in<-cliaiiici< fr.quently meet
wni.
«light
and injuriesVhfch
mjurie/wlud,
M'.
1!'.."
1!*1'1 accidents and
cause them much n.moyancS.nd I.Ji nf
Trouble Makers Ousted.
When a sufferer from stomach trouble time. A cut or bruise may t«. cured ¡n
takes Dr King'» New Life Pills he's about -ne-third the tim/ u.un|lT re
mlghtv Riad to we his Dvspepnia U„J quiredby applying Cliamberlam sLini'
Indigestion fly, but more lie's tickled nei.t as so (n aa lhc („jljrv ,g
»<"-prams.
over hisnew, fine appetite, strong nerves Jirei Mlnofn',t9 1,150
healthy vigor, all because stomach, liver iXi! 11 fieri i
’’nd rll’’un'"‘»
and kidneys now work right. 25c at I
I lire is no danger of blond
Ubas. I. Clough s.
»n tnjn y when
.hnmberlain's Liniment i.
'd
Everynnv wouldjhe benefited by taking
Foley a Orit.o Laxative for constipation
‘e
Uo,,r* I>rug
stomach and liver tronble. as it sweetens Store.
the stomach and breath, gently stimu
Jriftingto-
I a tea the liver and regulates the bowels wilEVZ
and is much superior to pills and ordi wards Bright» disease by ne<rl«m;..
nary laxatives Why not try Frier's
Orino Laxative todav ?—J. H, j ,m'„
Tillamook Hawk St Miller. Bay City ‘
Bioycles.
ED. SNODGRASS,
KINS, deceased, by the County Court ’
State of Oregon, for Tillamook Co« •
Now. therefore, all persons having 5*?^
against said estate, are hereby
a
Present them to me at Tillamook City.
iliamook County, Oregon, wit"
vouchers, on or before six months from
date hereof.
-Aj
Dated the 21st dav of Tune, 1909.
C. N DREW.
rf,
Adminstrator of the Brt*. j
Martha J. Haskins,
NOTICE FoR PUBLICATION
DepRrtment of the Inferior.
United States Laud office. Portl—
March J’rt
Notice is
hereby riven that WiX
G DUNGBY. of Tillamook. Oregon.
March list, 1909, made application
Ki try, No. 01T&7. for W
of He
j
township 1 North, range 9 Weat.
Meridian, has ft rd notice of
make final timber proof, to
< f —>
to the land above described,
I
Cooper, V 8. < ommUaioner at
Oregon, on the 30th day of Aui""’
Claimant names as witnesses
.
„ 1». E Goodapeed. of Tillamook.
Egbert 'modspeed, of Tillamook "r*rnfd
C. Bewley, of Tillamook. OrafO®-
Martiuy, of Tillamook, Oregon
A lgebnob S. DaissE"' Re»
S