Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, February 22, 1912, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Tillamook Headlight. February 22, 1912
OUR SUPREME COURT.
The Fire Alarms.
General Alarm
blast.
X-
X
1 Short Blast
Portion between Stillwell
Ave. and 3rd Ave. E.,
North from 4th Street.
2 Short Blasts :
Bet. 3rd Ave. E. and 6th
Ave. E., South to 8th St.
and E. of Stillwell Ave.,
bet. 4th and Sth Sts.
3 Short Blasts :
All W. of Stillwell Ave.
and N. of Sth St.
4 Short Blasts :
All E. of 6th Ave., E. and
N. of 8th St.
5 Short Blasts :
All S. of Sth St.
Look up the district in which
von live.
Turn in your fire alarm to the
P.icilic Telephone Office.
Notier to the Public.
The two lending magazines .if the
Pucific Coast, the Pacific Monthly
and the Siineet, have been consoli­
dated umler the title of “ Sunset
the Pacific Monthly. ”
It is the intention of the publish­
ers to spare no money nor effort
to make Sunset—tile Pacific Monthly
a credit to the West and a magazine
of ii.'.lion.d vulue mid importance.
To introduce it to new renders
we will make the following special
otb i. Send 50c. in stamps, and we
will pul your name on our sub
sinpuon list for the next four
months, and will semi you free a
copy of the superbly illustrated Mid-
Winter number, and also the fam­
ous Sunset Indian poster, securely
packed in a mailing tube. It will
make a beautiful ornament for
your front room or den.
Send your order to Fred Lockley,
Northwestern Manager, Sunset—
the Pacific Monthly, Portland, Ore.
BAKING
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
Economizes Butter, Flour,
Eggs; makes the food more
appetizing and wholesome
The only Baking Powder made
from Royal Grape Cream ol Tartar
Synopsis of the Annual Statement
of the
Pittsburgh Life and Trust
Company,
Of Pittsburgh, in the State of
Pennsylvania, on the 31st day of
December, 1911, made to the Insur­
ance Commissioner of the State of
Oregon, pursuant to law :
C apital .
Amount of capital paid
up .................................. $1,000,000.60
INCI 'ME.
Premiums received dur­
ing the year .................$2.723,255.57
Interest, dividends and
rents received during
the year....................... 1,212,429.93
Income from other sour­
ces received during the
year.......................
36,878.17
Total income
$3,972,563 67
D isbursements .
Dan Perry, who lias been away
from the county for about 19 years, Paid for losses, endow­
ments, annuities and
returned on Tuesday.
surrender values ....... $2,647,645.15
paid to policy
The National Stock Co. at Dividends
holders during the
Gem Theatre this Week.
218.906.92
yenr..................................
Dividends paid on capi­
tal stock during the
I »<> yon know that mote real dan-
year ................ ............. ioo,ooo.uo
ger lurks in a common cold than in
any oilier of the minor ailment»? Commissions and sala­
ries paid during the
I lie safe way is to take C hamber,
326,797.02
yenr..................................
lain s Cough Remedy, ■■ thoroughly
reliable preparation, mill rid your­ Tuxes, licenses and fees
paid during the year .
self of the cold as <|Uicklv as pos-
sib'e. I his remedy is for sale by Amount of all other ex­
penditures .................... 302,426.67
all tienici ».
Total expenditures . .$3,721,919.09
There is no better medicine made
A ssets .
______
for colds than Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy. It lieta on nature's plan, Market vulue of reul
relieves the lungs, opens the secre
estate owned
$7,530,806.05
lions, mda expectoration; and re­ Market value of stocks
atorea the system to a healthy con-
and bonds owned......... 4,270,418.00
dition. For sale by all dealers.
Loans on mortgages and
collateral, etc .. ..
and
notes
» » & a . a a • » « a • »■ Premium
policy loans .........
4,117,812.71
Cash
in
banks
and
■
FAMILY
» hand .............................. on 316,464.96
uucollected and de­
* Net ferred
RECIPES.
259. 722. 54
| reuiiums.........
Other assets (net) ..... 183,811.00
I
«0
»• ■ tit»» • • • ■
«
The valued family re­
N ci es tor cough ami cold
cure, liniuieiits, tonics and
other remedies liave as
careful attention here u
the most intricate prescrip­
M tions.
■
Our fresh, high grade
■ dings will help to make
0 these remedies more effec­
tive than ever.
<*
M
Right piiccs are also
assured.
4 • • • • a
0
M
CLOUGH,
Reliable Druggist.
■ * • ••••••■•a
Hut L/er.'t oj f ionics
Our
“PROFIT-SHARING
Investment Certificates
a re REAL Money Makers
Send for Booklet
I
I
Í
:
i
0
■
A, originally made up the »upreme
court consisted of a chief justice and
five associate Justices. In 1807 a sixth
associate wa, added when a new dis­
trict had been created to take in the
new western territory comprising the
states of Ohio, Tennessee and Ken­
tucky. In 1837 the expansion of the
nation westward again called for an
Increase In the court, and two mor*
associate Justices were added.
In 1863 a ninth associate Justice was
needed, but five years later, when ap­
proaching vacancies made it likely that
President Andrew Johnson might hav*
the appointment of the new members,
congress, then In open antagonism to
the chief executive, reduced the num­
ber to seven, thus preventing him from
making an appointment.
This number two years later, after
the Inauguration of President Grant,
was increased to eight associate jus­
tices and a chief Justice, and a, the*
constituted the court has remained.
The last alteration In the court wae
declared at the time to be due to po­
litical reasons as clearly as the reduc­
tion In 1868. as the addition of a new
member made it possible for the court
to reverse Itself In the legal tender de­
cisions —New York Post.
ROYAL
3
Colonist Fares
It, Chang«« In Number, Sine, It Wa*
First Organized.
One long
district signals .
BACK TO THE FARM is now the slogan, and the low
’N
Total assets . .
$24,045,822.26
Less special deposits in
any State (tf any there
be). .............................
67,188.00
Total asseta admitted
in Oregon............. $23,978,634.26
L iabilities .
Net reserve...................... $21,136.1 133 (JO
Total policy claims . .
256,162.23
All other liabilities.......
281,877.89
Total liabilities.......$21,674,863.12
Total insurance in force
December 31. 1911...... 87,768,918.00
B usin sss in O rbgon for the
Y bak .
Total risks written dur­
ing the year.................$ 122,967.00
Gross premiums
re­
ceived during the year 43,351.79
Losses paid during the
year
.......................
15,100 00
Losses incurred during
the yeur ...........................
7.500.00
Total amount of risks
outstanding in Oregon,
December 31, 1911....... 711,26000
Pittsburgh Life and Trust Com­
pany.
W. c. B aldwin ,
President.
Statutory teaident general agent
.mil attorney lor service: Win. S.
Nash
Bid* Wanted.
Bids wanted for hauling cheese
and supplies for the Flmore Cream­
ery for the year. Reserve the right
t > reject all bids. Bids to be mail­
ed to Joe Donaldson by the Sth of
March, 1912.
J ob I'UNALIWON.
President Flmore Creamery.
Bids Wanted on Wood.
Clover l.eif Creamery Co. will
receive bids for dl) cord, or less of
604 ÍÜ Cot battolandola
Alder or Hemlock wood, four foot
lengths, to be delivered at its fact­
R
I’. S. ISAACSON. ory as follows:
4'corda on or tiefore June 1st.
VETERINARY SURGEON 1912. J) cords on or tieture August
1st. 1912. and 21) corxl« on or before
AND DENTIST,
October 1st. 1912.
Hida should be
Todd Hotel, Tillamook,
mailed to Curl Haberlach. Secretary,
Formerly with the army transport on or before March 15th. MU.
Div.
Company reserve« the right to re­
x Guiliutr ol Ontario Veterinary
ject any or all bids
\
College, class '91.
C lovmr l.k.ximicxnu Cu
From the Middle and Eastern portions of the United
States
To OREGON AND THE NORTHWEST
prevailing daily
March 1 to April 15,1012.
over the
SOUTHERN
There is one fundeinental differ­
ence between the Independent
church and other churches and that
is the second birth John*3—3 “Ex­
cept a man be born again, he can­
not see the kingdom of God. ” 3—5
“Except a man be born of water
and of the Spirit he cannot enter in­
to the kingdom of God. ”
I .concede that these statements
were true at the time Jesus was
speaking to Nicodemus, but there
has been three events transpired
since then that has affected every
gentile child born into the world,
making a second birth absolutely
unnecessary. 1st. Matt. 21—43. “The
kingdom of God shall be taken from
you, and given to a nation bringing
forth the fruits thereof: ” 2nd. The
atonement of Chris'; and 3rd. The
gift of the Spirit.
Jesus was speaking to Nicodemus,
a ruler of the Jews, about a man’s
possibilty of entering the kingdom
of God, who was born and raised
before the gospel dispensation. As
yet the kingdom of God had not
been taken from the Jew and given
to the gentile, or had Christ died
for the sins of the world, nor had
he fulfilled his promise that he
would send the Holy Ghost. Nico­
demus was blind to the whole gos­
pel and he was no wiser afterChrist
had explained it to him.
There is one principle set forth
in the scriptures and that is by the
word of two or more prophets shall
every truth be established. This is
the only time that Christ spoke of a
second birth, but time and again
he spoke of the children and the
kingdom of God without implying
that at any time in after life they
must experience a second birth.
Matt. 19-13 Mark 10-13, Luke 18-15
all agree that young infants were
brought to Christ and that the dis­
ciples rebuked them but Christ
called unto him and said, “ Suffer
little children to come unto me,
and forbid them not; for of such is
the kingdom of God. ” Again the
disciples wished to know who was
greatest in the kingdom of God,
and Jesus called a little child unto
Him, and He set him in the inidst
of them and said, “ Verily I aay
unto you. Except ye be converted
and become as little children, ve
shall not enter into the kingdom
of heaven. ” From the words of
Christ and the fact that the kingdom
of God is given to the gentiles, the I
atonement is universal and the
Spirit is poured out upon all flesh
I conclude that every gentile child
born under the gospel dispensation
is exempt from a second birth.
That it is born redeemed and as
capable of a spiritual development
as either a physical or mental, and
that all religious rites and formal­
ities are superflous and uncalled
for.
Every Protestant child, as soon
as it comes to years of accounta­
bility, is confronted with the doc­
trine of a second birth, no matter
if it was born and raised in the
arms of Christ, it must be de­
nounced in order that the evange
list to make a great display of sal-1
cation, but what does the popular
second birth consist of? Writing
one’s name on a card, holding up
> or arising for prayers,
one ■ ’ -
s i hand,
only to be confounded, to get into
the church, at the expense of loos- 1
ing sight of the kingdom of God. 1
Thousands
thousands of people are living a I
hopeless. Godforsaken, backsliden
life, just by being bumfuddled over
an attempt to a second birth when
in fact they were born right, and
all they needed was to have been
raised in the atmosphere of the
kingdom of God.—J. C. G ovk .
T-
Bids Wanted for Hauling Cheese.
i
Clover Leaf Creamery Co. will
receive bids fur hauling ite cheese
and supplies during 1912. Send
bids to Carl Haberlach, Secretary,
on or la-lore March 15th, 1912.
C lovfr L baf C rbamekv C o .
Grtwiom« Monument Erected
Turk, In Servia.
PACIFIC
is the best means cf carrying it out
FARES FROM
CHICAGO
.... <533.00
ST LOUIS ---
-
32.00
OMAHA......................................... 25.00
KANSAS CITY -
-
-
25.00
ST. PAUL
-
-
-
- 25 00
,
From other cities correspondingly low
Colonist Fares are WEST-BOUND only, but they can be prepaid from
any point. If you have friends or relatives in the East who desire to
“Get back to the Farm,” you can deposit the value of the fare with
your nearest local agent and a ticket will be telegraphed to any addres8
desired.
Call on the undersigned for good instructive literature to send East.
JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent,
PORTLAND, OREGON
A TOWER OF SKULLS.
The Independent Church.
t
by the
A strange monument of modern bar­
barism still survives at Nisb, in south­
east Servia. During the war of Inde­
pendence In 1809 the Servlau garrison
here exploded a powder magazine and
perished therein rather than fall into
the hands of the Turks.
A battle had previously taken place,
and the Turks commemorated their
victory by erecting a rude tower, ora-
mented with the heads of their ene­
mies. Old people will tell you that
there were ouce 1.200 beads, but as
the tower was never more than twen­
ty-five feet high this is probably aa
exaggeration.
Lamartine and other travelers relate
that they saw hair still clinging to the
skulls, which must have formed a
grewsome spectacle. During many
years visitors were In the habit of
carrying off skulls as souvenirs, but
when Nish became Servian the remain­
der were taken away for decent bur­
ial, all save a few that were too deep­
ly Imbedded.
I d recent years the remains of the
tower have been covered over with a
roof to protect them against the ele­
ments. and they are regarded as a
pious object of patriotic pilgrimage.—
Wide World Magazine.
and the Country are bound to­
gether by the telephone line.
The farmer and his family use 'the rural telephone con­
stantly, calling up each other and the market town on all
sorts of matters and for all sorts of supplies and information.
City people also find the rural telephone of great advan­
tage. A traveler from his room in the hotel talks with the
farm folks miles away. Without the telephone he could not
reach them.
“Jack In th. Box Island,.”
It is said that the natives of the
Aleutian Islands have given the uame
“Jack In the Box islands” to the curi­
ous chain that extends out toward Asia
from Alaska. They are like stepping
stones laid for a giant In the ocean by
which he might tread the sea dryshod.
A writer in the Philadelphia Ledger
savs that they may perhaps be used
some day as the Florida keys are used,
as the support of a seagoing railroad,
with the widest gaps covered bv rail­
road ferryboats. These islands appear
and disappear tn a curious way in con­
nection with the activity of Bogoslof,
a small volcano that is among them.
Fire island appeared tn 1883, Perrv la-
land in 1905. McCullough peak I d 19O<L
but disappeared the next year. Ab-
other Island became visible In 1909.—
Christian Science Monitor.
A Robber’s Real Terror.
The only really satisfactory burglar
alarms are living ones, and th, beat
of all Is a crying baby. No man will
enter a bouse or remain In oue If ba
hears a baby crying, for the simple
reason that he know, that some one
will be about
The small dog. we may add. ia alee
a burglar alarm, and there ia a story
told of Sir Walter 8cott and a burglar.
The author of "Waverley” had defend­
ed a veteran cracksman, and In grati­
tude he gave his counsel a little ad­
vice. It ran something In this way:
“You are a rising ,un. but 1 am going
down, The best way to frighten
‘ housebreakers is to have a amall dog
about. He'll always be on tba alert
and la better than the ordinary watch­
dog.”—London M. A. P.
The farmer himself may travel far and still talks home
over the Long Distance Lines of the Bell System.
7 7
z
e
I
:
i
:
:
:
:
:
I
Th« Sphinx’« Riddle.
Ths riddle which the sphinx pro­
pounded to the Thebans and the solu­
tion of which she made a condition of
her withdrawal from the state was aa
follows: “What animal has one voice,
at first four, then two and at laat three
feet?” Oedipus discovered the answer
to be "min.” who In Infancy, from
using bls band« as well as bls feeCta
walking, may be said to have four
fm tall four»), tn after life employe
but two. and In old age to these be
adds a staff, which may be reckoned a
third. Upon this solution being given
the sphinx Is said to have thrown
herself headlong from the citadel.
THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE
? & TELEGRAPH CO.
¡¿jX
------
xgsfrv
Every^Bell Telephone is the Center of the System.
:
Use
: I
BEAVER : :
STATE : :
Hard Wheat :
• -W.
I)
Patent Flour
:
I
: A TRIAL CONVINCES J
:
:
Every Sack Guaranteed I
i to Give .Satisfaction
:
I
Wanted for Cash. Cheap Faria
Land in TiUamooh County
The Best Hotel.
W e have a customer who will buy 1
tor spot cash a cheap farm in Tills-
muok County.
Answer at one*.
-Ralph Acklev Land Co., ITU Fifth
St.. Portland. Ore.
Herr it a message of hope and
»‘•“’Olieertrx.m Mrs C. I Marti.,
■noae Mill, Va. who is tf>e moth«
of eighteen children. Mrs. Martin
was cured of stomach trouble and
constipation by Chamberlain'a Tab-
lets after five years of suffering,
and now recommend« these tablets
to the public
Sold by all dealers
THE ALLEN HOUSE,
J. P. ALiLiEN, Proprietor
Headquarters for Travelling Men.
la bsF
Special Attention paid to Tourists.
A First Class Table.
Comfortable Beds and Accommodation