Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, January 28, 1915, Image 5

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Tlllnniook
IKI. S
DREAM COMES
Al H R YI-.ARS
I RIH
noticed Hl Ustuhishmrnt, Bild hr look
• I a little older and a little stouter
than I»«- had in the «Irram turivi y«*att
ii«ny I ’old at Kansas City Has Inter
rsl at Ait bison
I* » c« I
I hr K ansa*
related
’
W«i t»4H
ion
41
:
II
b
any
I
lor
1 lie mellitic
i«y the
ent* withm th iamil
4 dream, r a
rtain t
KO II <|Ui(C
l< » fort ncr / A {« Li«<>n
»al dr
I lit
1 xvornati s|
hat are X"
c lami ed ratio r lh
r< it
n
•*
W
h
B
chat
ity
tale • man,
*
mt» a* she
x* s the dirai
ra* h «»nr a P‘
rief, but ail now
hi th«
w h mg grief
«
-«i
i O
* wi • » a
' ’
thr F
it
WB
HW F "
^■i r r !
I ’ • h
' i11
tal f i
* «
^■l ’ • r I - «• I
p. i i. .
ata
(as
upon
the
I ilgntru, and was surpfisrd !.. w.-r
brother do such an unhkrlv thing,
thr family, ai
not associate candle* with drath
rn she w<>ke •he wa* in a rol.l
pr< spirati'id ?
i
tur r I • r ? 1 L « r w » » . ! I « 1. ■
be ' m '
' « I
But : « •
i
ht< «Irr 11 « x < f J
. d hr I l|| -
^■hr following morning th« iamilx
rt< rix « d w< rd that thru bl h « ü <- i
the counlrx had burned to the grouml
du mg the prêt r«lr ? i ’hl
^■Altcr that Mis* < dreamed
Mil
dr« 4:11 of lit I lathct
d' al h
ini'
al* « ' A few in- nil.
-«if
yt;<r*. ami alw a \ y 11 xv,> id!
. d
ihr loss of totnr frond or relativ«* or
the d« I rm iii'ii <1 ■ no | ■r«»p« rt)
wh ich fthr felt more than 4 property
ini* rr»t tu «uh t < cur r« .
of the
dre • rn, precisely the same incident
wu enacted In id« her l.ithri
lot
her bi ■ -the r p.i in.
. « ■ u* I it .1 nd
pr. K ceding to light the b ng unused
can*lh* m th« branch« <1 « .oi«ll<-stick*
on thr <>ld mantel
^B*h«* night her brother’s fiancee di« d
th« Irram cam«- trio, and a.-«in it
can * on th» night l»rf«»t. a m< ss-1/»
thti' told of th« «b ath «>! .1 I»« lox« I 11 a
cle It recurred so inevitably, ami 1111
ftilin/l\ foretold xoim di >■•!< r. that
Miss ( <ain« to fear it like a specter
She would wake shuddering
ami
Weeping, but nrxer c«>lll«l be induce I
to tell her dream
Brother Enacted Part
;
^p’rars passed and Miss ( mari i< <1
Sk>r a long time she was free of the
ha mting vision I hen cam«* th«* crown
of inothrrliooit. and afterward ff mm
»eiint illtiraa t<> the little habj
' >.ie
nh 1 - it was before they lost h«»pr
th* drcam came again, and the follow ■
in 1 dav the baby «In d
■’I hr next death foretold bv th«'
^Bcam was that of thr woman's father
^■he warning vision came thr night
b< torr the message telling of his slid j
Brn illness in a distant city, and three I
fti hts brf«n« his death
.
■ When the body was brought home
it was laid in thr small, old fashioned
d twing room.
■ And now comes the strang«* part «»’
the story It was evident ami thr fam
i|,v had co A k * out upon th«* porch to
lii awhile in th« dusk ami speak of
th' beloved <l«ad I'resrntlx the son
Of the.«lead man rose and ent< rcrl th-
h' Usr In a few moments his sister,
f ring that lie might give way to hi*
fiief, followed him As she stood in
doorway of the drawing room h« r
mother passed around the bier an I
pi ocerdrd to light one aftri another,
th c candles on the manllepiec«*. 11»
W'"'
r M
had 11 » *
I 1 : ' 4 1 •
» - • •« I 4 1 • •
if ite xx 111
Hf
ir»! I
Mhr first night
it came
wl
tai
W è
face
I hr
k
came l • • her first when
•
ht ’
yr u
ms were wa
they would
hit het, hr
of the ca
n< x r r be r ti
only m "si
I
H 1*11
:
It was thr sl< t-pmg vision in all it*
d« tails come true
At hist it srrimd
!•> thr woman that she must be dream
mg again,
mtolligr nc
told
her ««Ih* rw •
there was
f
thr sec
be true limi her
*w be
I teadiitflit, J/inunr.v
State Press Flashlights.
...■■■»Q—....
"VkilsOtt tak< * a swing aroun«l thr
• 1 ulilry,“ 1» thr heading in a «tally
pap 1 I aking a swing at anything
I* .1 new way of fighting on the «1« fen
vivr, ami I'l' wi'biit Wil*«jii will sure
hav» to del« ml himself in the neat
lampaig)) War lax ami thr high cost
llxn
l 1 th> *« I ipmg tllh«* »d
—o
If thr r port that an order «4 ^0,000
<.•*<* «.f O’l.d* fixed milk l».«S been
plac’d with
irnc fi firm* l»y Great
Hriti in a»««! Ft uce, is tr r, it will
tn« in in advj’u ■ m price* m thr I*.,
cific ''»Mxt 1« rritory and higher «juota
J
II d *
f •
t lir 1 .« • « . |
fliipf I he p.«»t three wr»k* the con­
dense«! milk mark« t has brrn sluggish
I hr total expenditure outsidr 'if c««"*.
missions will amount to $1,57*1,000 for
that big or«lrt
News Reporter
indisputable figures prove that thr
■
Democrat« fall short $ c ,7. cmm >.<« oo
making ti e tartfi produce enough rev
emir t«» Hire! the rx| ruses of the g«ix
eminent umb r what they term R*
publican extravagance
I hey fall
1 rt $ 1-•»,000.000 of rm rtmg expcn*
tinder I >c m* i t’atic extravagance They
alway« promise a tariff for rrvenu*
only, but tlxir tar 11 f* never produce
enough revenue I hry always promise
economy, but they always practice
«xtravagaucr
< Iregonian
again
W ith il*
pa* rd out of her
d«>rrn
more
woman *
that m< «meut
The w. »nirti* democratic club of
it* terror
( hi< ago .idxrtti*cd tor an ablrrmanic
tr vtalwarl, ptar
< andldalc for the city election that
•rd to a feeling
W4* 4 clean, respectable citizen
ciitren of
r liar! hr ha I
In * 0 sense, m t nc< r**aril\
4 c c«dlcg
arily a
sen
graduate, a leader, not a follower, a
xotcr luf bathing beaches and play
grounds, a friend cd women suffrage
Prohibition
Senator Stone
Give*
A *a
and an advocate of subwax *
V »rws and Score« Drya.
■n-keeper won thr ««idorsrment oi
the «lub, although there were other ip
of Mi«*< uri.
• nt* in the persons of a machm
ret. . a broker, a mini 1« r, a physitian
qiirstion told the Senate
and a manufacturer
How pc will
he *t'‘"d Hr ha«l opp«>*e«l
c«>mr «•lit al the election 1* how a
prohibit! »n m hi* state,
...alter <d
in the "W in
dv City ”
hr w .1 * <1 Pl'osed to nation wide prohi
I wrthertHorc. hr xxa* opposed
If the price of our great Cc real
to thr pr •••«■nt pr«»p«»sal to make the
wheat keeps advancing much more,
of
Columbia
dry.
insisting
lh*»tri<t
< olumbia <lry,
we who do not raise it but bu y it in
that a better result could br acre >m-
the form <»f bread, will realize that
phshed through regulation than hr
other people except those in the ac-
prohibition
In the course of
tual sphere of thr conflict must help
sprech Stone declared hr was n«»t
pay the expenses of war. If flour
friend or advocate of liquor intcrc st s.
shouud advance to the extreme to
and at the bright of an eloquent fight
winch is prophrsir«! by many. it will
sai I "I wt*h there wkt no whisky oh
not be long until thr American house
wif< will have to resort to thr exped­
Stone had taken the floor to reply
ients «J the German and French got
to some of the fricmlt of thr Sh<p
eminent* in regulating how much
pard amendment, who, hr thought«
flour and how much potato must go
had impugned motives Io those lena*
into the usual loaf of bread The
tors who thought differently from
wheat baron will relish this state of
them He Mid
affairs, but the bread buyer will groan
!4
k
r
n
hr
*‘l am unwilling that a v
I mpqua \ alley Newt
without saving a ward in contraven­
—~O-—-
tion of the attitude taken by most of I
In the Middle states particularly
the senator* who have spoken in
Iowa, there is 4 law’ which makes it
favor of the adoption of the commit
mandatory on thr farmers or renters
tee report If I should judge men by
to kce;
»tp thrir
their truer
fence rows clean from
thrir intemperate utterances I might
weeds and brush 1 hr tall grass be-
imagine that Some of those who have
tween thr fence and thr road is ordrr-
honored us with their opinions had
rd cut twicr each year That is a law
taken something into thrir mouth*»
which would change thr physiognomy
which h.id stolen away their brain-»,
of W illamette xalltx f irms W ill thr
Alcohol 1* not the only thing which
legislature dare to face thr problem
will do this. N ar r «>w ne**, int<»lerance,
and enact such a law ’ It will meet op
big.<tr>- things of that kiml imbed
pe*ttt*ui from the shiftless and those
«I, d m the hearts of men to such an
who do not care for their neighbor’*
extent a* to make th« in think thev
property How often you and I have
are better than their fellow*, mike*
seen a progressive farmer fence his
them believe th« x are infall.ible, takes
plate anew, remove thr old fence«,
away a man’s capacity lo think or
eliminate the unsightly brush, and
conduct himself fairly in hi* dealings
possibly right ac <»«s thr
1
road his
w ith hi* fellow men
m ighbnr better able to > do the same
I In*» debate has proceeded on a
kind of improvement, keeps his place
basis too nartoxx and altogether false
untidy, hi* fences are rotten anti the
I hey take the position that we who
brush marks the line of his field*»
It
are of>po*e«l lo prohibition .1* a policy
is just to the thrifty, careful farmer
are th«* friend*, advocates, champi«»n*
to have his neighbor show so little
of th«* saloon
I don’t think that very
interest in the public welfare’- New.
creditable claim for .1 senator to make
l\ cportcr.
I
I he man who says a thing like th.it
<»(
human
err-
is a very narr«'Wr sort
Governor lames Withycombr in his
at ion
message to the legislature gave to th«’
**l do not believe in prohibition ai a
people of Oregon a document that
national or state p«di< y T hat question
will for .1 long time to come stand out
w as before thr proplr of Missouri ami
as a model He studied well thr prob
defrated by something like 250.000
Irins, formed his opinions, said what
vote,«. If a majority of my fellow
he wanted to sav in language plain,
citizens were of the opinion that it
such as no man may misunderstand,
should be adopted ami written into
and then stopped The message is just
our constitution, no man in thr state
such a one as the Rural Spirit antici
woul«l have been more earnestly in
paled lames W ithveombe has been
favor of its literal enforcement. I
trained to reason clearly and to anal
thing a state has a right to determine
vre without prejudice the problems in
that police question for itself In my
mind \’ot onlx has Governor Withe
own stale I look thr local option po­
comb« advocated efficiency in things
sition. I et each community settle th •
administrative, but hr demands econ­
qm stion. Bill cxpeciallv Id each state.
omy farther than that, points out ex
I'he slates arc supposed to be sover­
.nelly where money tnav be saved
eign over things affecting solely mat­
with no deterioration in service One
ters of their internal concern. I thi ik
of the tilings advocated which, if
they should remain so in settling po­
heeded, will be far reaching is that
lice questions like this.”
thr people not only demand efficiency
and economy in state administration,
One way to end the war would be
but that countv government is bx far
to declare an armistic until the vari
too expensive in this state. Ruril
«»us parties could agree on who start­
fiRhiimr
about.
I
ed it and what they are I „
If copper or other contraband has
been cone«.lied in cotton cargoes, thr
I)« purlin« lit of justice should insti
lute prosecutions for purjery in the
making of false manifests.
I
I •hould
br made
to f*«I
2b.
the
I DPT»
lo avy
hand of thr Gw Publi< •cntimciit >•
*tr««ngly against the saloon, ai d it 1«
just as strongly against thr seller ot
intoMoants who use* dark alb y* a* ♦
plat r of Lusine s*
1 lo- slot k argument <>f the propi«n
ruts of the open x.iloon 1* that prol.i
bttiuri does hot prohibit I lo Lootlr-r
g< r. they iwri, will be al way 1 ainon'/
us and will sell rrmrr lopior than
w«»uld hr sold under 4 »ysirrn
It
rnsed saloons
But if thr bo ’leggtr
k* that every offense will be |U’.-
ixhed by fine or impr 1*'oimrrit ¡r
both hr will not always • br with 3*
Hr will mend hi* ways or go •
w he rr
I hr proplr «jf Lato- count,
Jon,/ ago declared that thry wanted
no more liquor sold here and now thr
people of thr whole stat«* have mad«
thr vanir declaration 1 he law should
lie enforce«! ami the bootlegger and
the b’md pig operator xhould br giv­
en sh«»rt shift
Oregon Register
....... O——...
Representative Smith’s bill forbid­
ding the posting or painting of adver­
tising matter along the Columbia
Highway ought to be nu'lr a matter
of unanimous consent
It it said that
there are two side# to every question;
tht* bill present one that is as nearly
one-sided as rp r a question can b<
It call* for * orncthing that public ten
timrnt entirely approves. It is to be
reg«-tied that th« r is even the neces-
sity for law-making on this Mbjec';
but unless there is such enactment
some fellow* will post or paint hit
glaring “ad” along the beautiful high-
way, and then *ay to a remonstrating
Cî V\ hat are you going to
I it
Pity it is that there
in the community; but they’re
and the one way lo restrain
by authority of the
I s I o
that if they do thi* thing they
Ic to suffer for it. It is
one >f those little laws that .• c need.
It will m rve to preserve the beaut.'
of a cenic highway destined to be
among the most famous in the world.
—Telegram
— ■■
It should not be assumed
cause the '¿range is opposed to a
mill state r<»ad levy its members
opposed to good roads
They
mainly concerned, just as are a m>-
jority of all residents of the rural
counties, on how thr fund raised is
to be expended, Merely making the
levy dosen't
doscn’l nccc
necessarily
ssanly mean that
good roads will follow, and the far­
mer dosen’t relish the idea of some
state bureaucrat < xpendiug hi* monev
exclusively in the interest of and at
the dictation of certain interests. First
devise a rational plan of highway im­
provement and surround the expend
ing of thr money with proper restric­
tions and the farmer will cheerfully
do his part The plan that meets his
approval may not involve a highway
the length of thr state and valuable
only to those who live immediately
adjacent to it, neither may it mean a
highway from Portland to the sea.
But if hr is Io contribute his money it
is reasonable that thr farmer’s inter­
ests be considered, and until they are
considered it is not to be expeetr I
that he will cheerfully agree to any
Hilk-
old scheme that may bob up
boro Independent
Senator Vinton of Yamhill county
has introduced a bill in the state sen­
ate which prohibits tite operation 01
motor trucks on any public highway
in the state, outside of incorporated
citi«s, during the ti.nc between the
months of October and April, except
where the highways arc hard surfaced
There can be no fault found with thr
intent of the bill, but it appears to u*
to be too drastic and it is quite prob
able that for this reason alone it will
fail to get the legislature’s approval
Tio-re is no denying that we need a
law to restrict the use of motor trucks
upon unpax cd public highways, but to
forbid them the use of the roads en­
tirely for a period of six months in
th«' year is hardly thr right wav to go
about it. There is just much need for
hauling during these months as at any
other time of the year, probably more
To prohibit operation entirely would
work a hardship on every locality in
thr state There is another, and to
our belief, a better remedy for the
misuse of countv roads and that is to
the enactment of a law that will give
th«' county judges of thr state ample
authority to determine the nature of
tire a truck shall have while runnln r
on unpaved highways. After all it is
the tire that dors thr damage and it
has been demonstrated that the wide,
or ‘’twin’’ tire, even on soft road ,
lends more to pack than to cut the
surface. There is a wide difference
between the roads in Clatsop county
and those in eastern or southern Ore­
gon and for this reason the right to
determine the kind of tire permissible
should be left to the county judge of
the countv in which the truck is in
use
\storian.
Every good citiirn will approve the !
State sovereignty is about thr old
Speedy convictions that have followed
America, w*»*’
thr numerous arrests of booth vrrrs < st political issue in
the possible exception of the taiift
u itiim the |;|Hf few* days. I he bootie/
ger is an undesirable citizen w ho( question.
EMPIRE MILKING
MACHINES
Are best yet.
Sec tue and I Will prove it
A. J. Carpenter, Agent
■> - t
i • am 1 1 rtS 1 F* !
è ’ w i
» r1 A 11 ■ « 1
it iLLj?JU
Some of rbe Reasons Why
’•r
r *n «A - r — -
‘‘ y «!»-' « ■ U -. • ry da", >e&r in.
it. L jf l «sa honor, <X tr*e L mm C material*.
Outwears Three Ordinary Range»
77'*- «>-* r . - e ?
• i,.r^ 'y 'f c / _ -
Maikiibla -cn <. • t brcuh char j '
and malUa^fa imn.
n u->n' i rutt nÀa «Z««/.
Economical In Fuel
T',<-
~f • »’ Ma ft
r - ~t»d 1 ■. '. fi*, t'vecher with
altffart remain air tight,
rf i
* \ • para aikett'ii bc»ard,
Ly an < . <n • n rrtifr.e 7O,4 on «M«ait —sad
r*- a-.d pure a«b«»toa
' ■ ■ f .-I.
' • - » 'yrr
• f •• n rr^td ghafvas. ?»■ iprtngt.
Mai . abla irc,n ©ten rach» Sl.U* 0-1 a-
in,.- -a:
- t -7 con'j.n.
tli-
The Great
BSTIC
Charcoal and Malleable Iron
Bo*i J
MJ. of
C hareo*l
Iroa.
addinf
MM to
tifa of
I' anK«
a ulltic
ALEX. McNAIR & CO
> ~A
Printing Point Does Not
Bob Up and Down
In an L. C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter
the point on the paper which is to receive the
type impression is stationary at the instant the
type hits. The carriage does not bob up and
down when the shift is made to write capitals.
Why?
Because the type is shifted—not the carriage
The only movement of the carriage is back and
forth on its closely adjusted ball bearing runways—
and this does not take place while the print is being
made. There is no lifting of the carriage.
This is one reason why L. C. Smith & Bros, type­
writing is free from blurs and every letter in the right
place.
4si for firmonstration
L. C. Smith t/ Bros. Typewriter Co.
Horn. Off.--. .nJ Rctory: SYRACUSE. N Y.
306 0 k st., Portland, Ore