Tillamook Headlight. September 26, 1B13 feet ; tlience south 57 deg. 03’ east 104 4 feet to the south line of said 7, containing 1.67 acres, N otice ib H ereby G iven ,—T o section a strip of land 40 fret wide all whom it may concern : That the also extending 20 feet on either side of Common Council of Tillamook City, the following described line of the 1 Oregon, did on the 16th day of northeast of the northeast September, 1912, duly adopt Ordin­ quarter of quarter 18, in township ance No. 248, providing for a contin 1 S. of range section 10 west of the Willa­ uatiou of Sixth Street, in Tillamook Meridian : City, Oregon, from the West line of mette Beginning at a point 2633.46 feet econd Avenue East to the East end north and 1172.62 feet west of the . said Sixth Street as it is now es­ quarter corner of said section tablished in Central Addition to east township 1 S. R. 10 W. of the 1’illamook City, and the said Com 1». Willamette Meridan ; thence south rnon Council did on said September 57 deg. .03 east 193.5 feet; thence 16i i. 1912, appoint Henry Rogers, south 10’ east 223.2 ft.; thence M. Me cliior and T. H. Goyne, three south 6 25 deg. deg 55’ east 157.8 feet; disinterested freeholders of Tilla­ thence south 54 deg. .05’ east 107.4 mook City, to view such proposed feet: thence south 27 deg. 50’ east street and make an asseasment of 309 thence south 33 deg .08’ the damages and benefits on ac­ east 3 feet; 297.9 feet; thence south 5 deg. count of the laying out of the street 20’ east 20.1.39 feet, containing 143 mentioned in said Ordinance, and did appoint Thursday, the 17th day acres. This Summons is served upon of October. 1912. at the hour of 8 by order of the Honorable o’clock p.in., at the Council Room you R. Kelly, Judge of the above in t e Commercial Club Rooms, in Percy named Court of the State of Tillamook Block, Tillamook City. Oregon Circuit for Tillamook County, Oregon, as the time and place for dated on the 21st day of September, said viewers to meet. therein ordering that Sum­ You A re F urther N otified 1912, served upon you by publi­ that the boundaries anil terminus mons be thereof in the ‘‘Tillamook of the proposed street, being a con cation Headlight,” a weekly newspaper of tinuation of said Sixth street, are general circulation in Tillamook described as follows: Beginning County, Oregon, for at 'east once a at the southeast corner of Block 1 week for six consecutive weeks from of Harter’s Addition to Tillamook the date of the first publication _ in the West line City, and being and the time for you to of Second Avenue East, and run­ thereof, said complaint begins to ning thence West 300 feet to the answer run according order from southeast corner of Block 1 of Cen­ the day and date to of said first publi-. tral Addition to Tillamook City. cation as shown in the said Summons ’ MTTÏ Oregon ¡running thence South 60 I feet to the Northeast corner of Block and said Order. date of the first publication 2 of Central Addition to Tillamook of The this Summons is the 26th day of City; running thence East 301) feet September, 1912, and the date of the to the West line of Second Avenue last publication thereof and the East and running thence North last date upon which you are re Second along the West line of to answer on or before is, Avenue East 60 feet to the place of quired and will expire on the 8th day of beginning; the Eastern termini!» The Industrious circulation of the falsehood that President Taft threatened 1912. of said street is the West line of November, a veto of the Sulloway bill was one of the chief plays of his opponent« aad W ebster H olmes . the Second Avenue East, and worked some Injury to his popularity, as his adversaries had planned. Ttot Attorney for Plaintiff. Western terminus of said Street in I there was no truth In this every senator, representative and other public cMI Sixth Street, the East end of in Tillamook City, Oregon, as i could have known if he cared to inquire. "Yet it was a good enough Merge« Notice. ; till after the nomination.” the same is now established lying between Blocks 1 anil 2 of Cen­ Now these same men are with equal Industry and untruth circulating the N otice is H ereby G iven ,—That tral Addition to Tillamook City, anil on Monday, October 21, 1912, the report that President Taft signed the act of May 11 most unwillingly and w*e the property proposed to be ap­ County Board of Equalization will only coerced into it at the last moment. Nothing could be more untrue. propriated for such purpose is at the Conrt House of Tilla­ There had been an overwhelming popular demand for additional pension described as a strip of land 52 32 meet mook County, Oregon, and publicly legislation. The people were most earnest In their wish that the veteran« who feet in width off the entire south examin the assessment roll for aide of the said described street, said year, and correct all errors in had saved the nation should be properly cared for during the years that re­ belonging to Ida Martiny, and a valuations, descriptions of lands mained to them. The nadonal encampment of the Grand Army of the Re­ strip 7.68 feet in width off the entire and other property. Said board public had asked for such legislation. The remarkable fact of the lndorsemoM North side of said tract formerly will continue in session from day of the Sulloway bill by the legislatures of twenty-seven state« wm an belonging to J. R Harter, and not duy, until the examination, cor- astonishing development of depth and wide extended feeling on the rahjMt- included in the platted lots of Har­ to rection and equalization aesess- Could any president be expected to disregard such a manifestationt C«n ter’s Addition to Tillamook City. ment roll for said county shall be talnly not William H. Taft, whoBe great heart has always appreciated the And all persona claiming dama­ completed. ges by reason of the appropriation Dated at Tillamook, Oregon, service of the veterans and who has ever been quickly responsive tn th« of the said property for said street popular will. are hereby specially notified to file September 24, A. 1912 M. H arb , No one doubted at the beginning of congress that he intended to approve a their claim for such damages with County Assessor. pension bill. This knowledge had to be used with the utmost discretion, how­ the undersigned, City Recorder of ever. The presidential campaign was opening. There was a general expecta­ Tillamook City, Oregon, before the time appointed for the meeting of tion that the Democrats would make a strong effort to “put the president and Argument for the Initiative the senate in a hole" on the pension question. The fear was not allayed until eaid viewers as above set out. Done by the order nf the Common within a few days of the passage of the act of May 11. This required the Millage Bill. Council of Tillamook City, Oregon greatest circumspection on the part of the president and his friend«. But «a Dated this September 16th, 1912 The initiative millage tax bill, soon as the act of May 11 began to take shape In the senate and month« to T B H andley , City Recorder of Tillamook City, providing for a six tenths of a mill fore It actually passed there was no real doubt that the president would alga Oregon. tax, four sevenths for the use of the bill which would be Anally formulated. At the Invitation of senators I was a constant visitor to the capital whits the Agricultural College, and three the bill was going through Its various stages. I was also made a means of ! sevenths for the use of the Univer Summons sity, ami providing also fora single communication with the members of the Invalid pensions committee of the ’n the'"ircuit Court of the State of Board of Regents, wan prepared by house. With me went most frequently Past Commander In Chief John R. King less frequently Past Commander Slaybaugh of Potomac, Commander Oregon for Tillamook Conn ty. a joint committee from the Govern­ E S Godfrey. Arizona; Commander Granville C. Fiske, Massachusetts; Com­ R Pnttgr Realty ) or's special commission appointed mander N. H. Kingman, South Dakota; Commander N. P Kingsley, Pennsyl­ ■ m party, a Corpo- I ration. to solve Oregon’s higher education­ vania and other prominent comrades who happened to be in the city and Plaintiff, ful problem, and from the Boards of whom the senators wanted to see and counsel with. vs We met Senators Crane. McCumber, Curtis, Smoot, Burnham and others of Regents of the two institutions Lawrence R, Wheeler, William M. Wheeler working in conjunction with the the president’s closest friends and adviser«. They were confident tn their as­ and Margaret M. Governor and with ihe Presidents surances that the president would sign the bill The comrades named felt no Wheeler, hie wife, of the two institutions, and is offer­ doubt of the result at least two months before the bill was signed. Nelson P. \\ heeler, As we all know. President Taft put himself to great personal inconvenience ed as a substitute for nil the pre AHieM Wheeler,John E. Wheeler and Mur sent legislative bills for support In order to sign the bill and let it begin at once Its beneficence to the veterans. The bill was not ready for his signature when he left for Princeton, N. J. He garet C Wheeler his ami government of the two institli- T’isde the journey back to Washington expressly to sign the bill. He reached wife. Eleanor R tious. Wheeler, J. H. Cook, the V. hlte House a little before 11 p. m., Saturday. May 11, affixed his signature This bill does not increase tlie ■even minutes before midnight and had to leave Washington again the next nnd-------------- Cook his wife, and Peter average rate of taxation for the sup <1a . Of these facts I was personally cognizant, as I was present when the Mil Wheeler and--------- port of the two institutions as was signed. JOHN M’ELROY, Wheeler, his wife. shown during the last ten years Editor National Tribue«. Defendants. ) I fully concur In the foregoing. To Lawrence R. Wheeler, William The average during thia period M Wheeler nnd Margaret M. is a trille over six tenths of a mill, There Is absolutely no truth In the statement that the president was op- Wheeler, his wife. Nelson P. The State of Washington is at po«ed to any pension bill. On the contrary, we were assured, as stated above, Wheeler, Allie M. Wheeler, John present paying for the same |>ur ■ • he would give his approval to the bill when Anally passed, whloh was E Wheeler nnd Margaret C. poses seventeen hundredttia of a evidenced by his hasty return to Washington for the purpose. Whee'er his wife, Eleanor R JOHN R. KINQ. Wheeler, J H. Cook mid----- mill more than the Oregon bill calls Cook, his wife, Peter Wheeler for: namely forty five hundredths —From the National Tribun«. i '-.I W heeler h-s « ite lx the N ame of the S tate of of a mill for the University and OREGON, You and each of you are thirty two hundredth« of u mill for hereby required to appear .indan the Agricultural College. • wer the complaint filed against The growth of the two institutions you in the above entitled court and action, on or before the hint day of will certainly keep pace with the the time prescribed in the Summons growth of wealth in the state, as herein, which «aid order was made lias been shown by the experience and daterl on the 21st day of of all other states using the millage , September. 1912. and if you fail so to answer (or want thereof the plain­ basis of support. tiff will have judgment against you This bill expressly repeals the mid each of you, for the appropria $56(1,000 appropriations of the legis­ lion und condemnation mid assess, lative session of two years ago, now ment of your damages in the uliove entitled court and action, on the submitted to the voters under the following described real property, referendum (official numbers on ot which you are the owners of an the ballot, 372. 373. 374. 373,) for their undivided intereat therein, to wit Beginning at u point 2371 31 feet approval or rejection. The present standing appropria north and 101(1 M feet west of the east Quarter corner of section Is, tiona to be continued for one year township 1 S., range 10 W of the are most urgently ueeded to give Willamette Meridian in Tillamook County. Oregon, thence south fldeg. the institutions a start in buildings It? east 65.2 teet; thence south and to carry them through the 25 deg .V east 137.8 feet; thence period while the mill tax is being west 223 29 feet, thence north 207.05 collected. i<-. t ; C . : — ,e acquire It by doing good aa harm, yet nothing left In the way of buildl-ve 5 deg 2T west 128 41 feet; thence up M —Id alt down bold., to th. tae. of puHin, down. h 7J. th^T south 7deg. 27’ east 247.16feet,thence , uve of the initiative law, and the probable caee highly dang.roue-“-Frsm Mr. Lincoln'« »peoch ’«Xei tta south 48 deg .< essi 145.04 teet; bill should be voted upon its mer­ Yeung Man a Lyceum. Springhold, III. ’’ ’ ■•VW» tto Ute««.-« south 70deg 46* east 361 25 its. Notice. THE PRESIDENT SIGNED MOST WILLINGLY r i ■SfäfT J”0.?! \TERM j tfaine Don’tWant Free Trade COMEDY IN A BOOKSTORE. ^usqr ffxpsrisncs In sn Attempt Buy a Rare Work. te « cxMTSspondeut of the Glasgow Her­ ald contributes the following amusing account of an attempt to buy a rare Maine is pre-eminently m, lllfricu| tural state, and the Democrat^ spellbinders who canvassed it for» few weeks before the election- Speaker Clark, Gov. Eons of Mas- sachusetts, Gov. Baldwin of Con necticut, Vice Presidential Candi. date Marshall and the rest of them —laid special etrees upon the tariff ae the main ieeue of 1912, and as of especial interest to the farmers That Democratic bogus farmer^ free list bill which the president vetoed was cited as an instance of the Bortot “relief” which the tillers of the aoil would receive if proj Wilson should carry the country in November. Then Maine went right ahead and declared against Wilson and his party. Why did Maine turn down the school-master? Because it be­ lieved that he had no know ledge of the real needs of the people, and particularly because it saw that he was on the wrong side of the tariff question. Maine heard the best arguments which could be made against tlie tariff and the Republi- can party, and then it cast its bal­ lots for both. In bis "Autocrat of the Breakfast Table” Oliver Wendell Holmes men­ tions a curious book called ‘’Thinks 1 to Myself as having been written and published in England by a person of quality about the beginning of the last century. Some time ago. among a number of secondhand books exposed for sale outside a shop in Glasgow, 1 noticed one In elegant but faded bind­ ing. It was “Thinks I to Myself,” in two thin volumes. The first sentence took my fancy: "I was born of very worthy, honest and respectable parents -at least I think so!” I went into the shop with the vol­ umes and asked the old man of the in­ terior. “What is the value of these?” He turned them over carelessly and said: "These are of no use to me: they’re Just so much waste paper." This struck me as an original way of selling books, and I gravely responded, “Very well—how much for them, then?” "Three ha’pence,” he said. “Per vol­ ume?" I asked. "For the two." he re­ plied. whereupon I put the books Into my pocket and handed him the money He looked at me wonderingly and in­ Prof. Wilson also assumes that quired. “Where did you get them?" lie is bigger than his party. This u “Outside, at the door." "Why.” he a good year to teach egotists a gasped. “1 thought you were selling sound American lesson. them I” Bryan and Wilson would not view the forty five electoral votes of HUMAN OF BIRDS. MOST New York as tainted if they had Not Only In 1 ¿Iking, but In Eating, any expectation of carrring the state. the Parrot Imitates Man. It is not only In imitating human In condemning the Detnodrrt’c speech that the oarrot excels most of party of New York Prof. Wilson the birds. The parrot Is alone among should include New Jersey, which birds in taking food in Its claws. With these two characteristics It makes more is largely made up of New York's or less use of that which distinguishes overflow. “Do you not think it counts for humanity from the rest of the animal something,” asks Prof. Wilson 'to kingdom—the hand and the larynx. The monkey uses its hands and the stay out in the cold on a conviction elephant its trunk in feeding. Various for sixteen years?’’ Of course it animals have a habit of pawing their counts, unless the people’s jury food. Rodents have serviceable toes. convicts for a life sentence, which Still, the parrot is pre-eminent among is not improbable. birds In this regard. The secretary "The politican who goes around bird Is said to attack reptiles with its claws, and some observers have said the country spreading discontent that owls make partial use of their re­ should be muzzled, and the men markably flexible perching toe some­ who create dissensions among the what more than does a hen In scratch­ people and cries out that President ing for food. However, there is no Taft is a thief, is as bad as the other bird which, when given a piece worst rebel in the Mexican revo­ of food, will accept it In Its claws. lution,” declared Rev. Phillip Burke Parrots, of course, do not talk, as pastor of Our Lady of Sorrow’s we use the word. In their wild state and are not known to be imitative of Catholic Church, at the annual ban­ neighboring sounds nor to possess the quet of the National Association of repertory of the mocking bird. It is Advertising Novelty Manufacturers. therefore a question whether or not In addttion to its troubles on ac- their use of the claws is largely lml- count of lack of cash to meet its in­ tative also. The shape of the parrot's debtedness and other engagements beak would indicate that some assist­ of the larger sort, Germany now ance in eating has always been a part has a high-priced food problem on of the bird's characteristics. Like man. the parrot makes its ap­ its hands. The latter is far from be­ pearance in the world naked and help­ ing new, but it has now reached a stage in which societies of workers less.—Harper’s Weekly. as well as municipalities are ap­ pealing to the government for relief. A Wide Acquaintance. Alarmed at the situation, the A nouvelle Hoile dowager has afford­ government is understood to be ed much amusement while clambering planning radical action. It is con­ up the slippery rounds of Washing­ sidering the advisability of admit­ ton’s social ladder. One day after she ting Argentine chilled meat. had returned from circumnavigating the globe she essayed to entertain a drawlug room with a boastful account of her travels. She had been every where, and her flow of slaughter house English was .. '''merited by frequen’ waving* of her liediamonded hands and forceful noddings of ber tiaraed head. “Did you see the Dardanelles?" ask The valued family re ed a sprightly debutante. cipes for cough and cold “And the Himalayas?" Inquired an cure, liniments, tonics and other fair young bud. other remedies have «s “1 dined with them In Paris." replied careful attention here as the dowager triumphantly. And she woudered why everybody the most intricate prescrip­ smiled.—Chicago Tribune. tions. i : I Our fresh, high grade drugs will help to make these remedies more effec­ tive than ever. Whooping Cough Superstitions. Whooping cough Is the subject of more quaint snDeratitlone In England than almost any other disease. In Northamptonshire It Is believed that If a small quantity of hair la cut from the nape of the sick child's neck, rolled in a piece of meat and given to a dog the whooping cough will be transferred to the animal. In Cornwall the child Is fed with bread and butter which has been passed three times under the belly of a piebald horse. In Lancashire they •till tell you that whooping cough will never attack a child that has ridden on a bear.—Loudon Answer«. Right prices assured. are also CLOUGH, Reliable Druggist- Well Werth It. As dentists know very well tbst peo­ ple do not call upon them merely for pleasure, tn«/ are not likely to be of- fended at this bit from the Washing!' □ Star: “Didn't that man complain when you charged ulm for a broken appoin meat?" “No." replied the dentist. “He «aft breaking an appointment with me ’ worth every c-ut it costs." A Question of Title. After another season." said Farm r Orwntoaaet. “1 gwss we'll bare a ctof.” “What's a cbefT" asked his wtfe. “A chef la a man with a big enom h vocabulary to give the soap a dlff. r- ent an ma every <1ay."-Waahlngt.>o '¿•'•V^qX to/p. —Frsm toe chaeta DaUy Boo, Marta U, XMfl, FAMILY RECIPES. I i I