Tillamook Headlight, June 3} Iftlô ¿a Uncle Silas Says. ------ o------ I like an enterprising trader, if he is honest, but the man who will take ad vantage of another’s necessities to drive a sharp bargain, I have no use for. It is but little short of criminal to do so. When one can exchange something with another person on a fair basis of respective values and make a good profit by the deal, that is all right, but to know that a per­ son has something you want and that he must sell at once, even at a sacri- nce, amt jou take the advantage of that fact to practically rob him, it is •imply highway robbery and. if you have any conscience, you won’t feel like gloating over your success. You’ll not forget the fact that you have wronged him, and,'although you may not- want to acknowledge it even to yourself, the fact will come home to you that he has been made poorer by your scheming Remember the good old saying: No man can long be self­ satisfied when he remembers the pov­ erty of other people, for which he is responsible. You chappies who have attended agricultural college a term or two, and thus obtained a smattering of theoretical knowledge of how to man­ age a farm successfully, are constant­ ly trying to influence your fathers and uncles to go into extensive exper­ iments. You have pet theories, either wholly or partially impractical, and, when we won’t tumble to your racket, you whisper, one to the other, some­ thing you think is sarcastic, such as. ‘‘You can’t teach an old dog J new tricks.” L„ and ’ the other fellow will answer: “ No, but you can buy a young d°g that can be taught new tricks.” Say, chappie I "'ouldn’t say a word against the agricultural col­ lege, for they are doing wonderful work in the education of farmers, and I am keeping tab on them and learn­ ing something from their bulletins constantly; but, when you come home from college with your head up in the air, your noses pointed skyward, and try to impress me with your wonderful knowledge by telling me about things I knew long before you were born, you make me feel tired. Now, you’ll get over that and feel better, 1 am sure, if you’ll get this straight in your heads and not forf> for a minute. You’re only in the a, b, c’s of even theoretical knowledge of farming, while most of your fathers and uncles have graduated in that very best of schools—experience See? Nothing of flesh and blood can work to exhaustion constantly and not break down. A day or so off is as necessary for working animals as it is for people. To a hard-worked horse rest is almost as necessary as food. Not only should he have a tree run of the pasture for several hours, but his stall should be made comfortable for him by being wide enough for him to lie down and get up easily, but it should be well bedded with clean straw, for, unless he lies down regu- larily his rest is never complete and his joints and sinues stiffen. While it is true that some horses sleep in a standing position and continue work for many years, it is equally true that they would wear much longer and do their work much better if they rested naturally. Bare land unstocked and unworked is unproductive and an expense, be­ cause taxes have to be paid on it, and that alone in a fey years will eoual its value. When you go to farming on your own account you will do well to remember that and put every bit of your land to some use, whereby you can get from it at least the cost of its maintenance. Now, don’t say it don’t pay to employ farm labor for I’ve done so many years and raked off a fair profit every time, and I don't work my men overtime either. I have always toted fair with my men giving them a day off occasionally when work was not pressin 4 and they have always done better work for the favor. No, it don’t pay to have idle land growing weeds to poison your whole farm and make more work in getting rid of them than it would to raise crops on it and get a profit from them. ------ o------ An acre of ground will produce more of almost any other meat than it will of beef in the ordinary course of farming. But, given free or cheap r?nge, and beef—or a sort— can be produced at low cost, therefore the absolute necessity for plenty of pas­ ture room on the farm. If they are spring calves you can keep them growing and in good condition at least the first half year in pasture with very little feed ofher than grass and you can carry them through the win­ ter on roughage from the silo, with a little grain, and bring them out in the sPr ng in condition to be carried alot g through the summer and kept growing fast to be fatened the follow tnw winter for the early spring mar­ ket, when they will bring a good price. Land has come to be worth something these days and it is a con­ siderable factor in the cost of pro­ duction. Ttatt is one of the principal reasons why beef is high and will re­ main high. Live stock combined with general farming whereby the farm produce is fed to the stock and sold as meat is the surest way of success. ------ 0------ Rats about a farm will soon eat up all the profits. They are feasting on what you raise while you are sleeping while you are raising more for them to feast on. Now, here is a sure way •o get rid of them: Dissolve 5 pounds of copperas in ten gallons of water and add to that enough fresh slacked hme to make a moderately thick whitewash. Apply this liberally to all places where the rats go, and they will desert those places at once. Put some of the whitewash into and around their holes and along their runways wherever it is possible to do They will change to other place«, but you mn't iollow them up with the wash, and eventually they will leave your place altogether and will not re­ turn while the wash remains. Wars of the Future. 1 he war of the future will be the war of the inventor, even more than l2„y- Sc,fnce- mechanics and -OAa .woust 11E a.w se ‘a-tuq Xtpupap lutionized modern warfare to a terri­ ble d-gree. Talk to men who remem­ ber the Crimean war, and they will tell you that the present conflict is not war; it is wholesale mu rd r, fear­ ful, horrible and inhuman. The wars of the future, however, if the scien tist is to be believed, will be ever, more destructive. At present he is experimenting with heat rays, If, he contends, light ravs can be thrown upon a hostile position " ’ h the searchlights, why cannot heat rays be similarly reflected; and if heat rays can be sent to a distance why not the hottest rays possible— namely, those of the oxy-acetvlene torch? Before such a fircy -’are fort­ resses of steel and stone would melt, the biggest guns would crumble down into rods of steel, and whole regiments of men might, with one blast be shriveled into ashes. Neither do scientists consider it outside the bounds of possibility in the future to devise means of deton­ ating explosives at a distance by wire­ less waves. The latter at present scat­ ter in every direction, but the day may come when it will be practicable to restrict them to only one direction, so that they mav be aimed; and it is not too far fetched to predict that some future general, touching a but­ ton, will send soeeding to their tar­ get, which will be. perhaps, a.n entire army division, wireless impulses so powerful that they will electrocute e'-' ry man within their range. In regard to big guns, experts sav that the limit is by no means reached with the manufacture of 17-inch firinr monsters. The prophesv 60-inch and even 80-inch guns, which will be able to shoot sixty or eighty miles, the range being given by aviators signall­ ing by wireless. Again plans are already under wav for the construction of monster sub­ marines, with a cruising radius from London to New York. Thev will be able to carry batteries of tornedocs and ample fuel and provisions for the long cruise. They will thus gain some of the independence of land possessed bv dreadnoughts for even they must visit coaling stations or be attended bv colliers. The next half centurv in­ deed, may see battleships swept from the seas, and some nation holding the masterv of the ocean by virtue of a fleet of submarines. Dissolution of Partnership. The partnership of C. C. Smith and L. E. Partridge, doing business at the Gem Theatre, has been dissolved by mutual consent. May 16, 1915. C. C. Smith. L. E. Partridge. Notice to Water Consumers. ------o----- Notice is hereby given that the Til­ lamook Water Commission has set Monday, June 14th, 1915, as the date for the hearing of objections and re­ monstrances if any there be, to the schedule of water rates as formulated under recommnedation from the State Rair-road Commission. A copy of the proposed rate is on file with the City Recorder at the City hall and all water users and tax- peyers are requested to call there and inspect the same, Office hours 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The metineg will be held at the City Hall at 7:30 p.m. and if no objections are presented at that time, these rates will be adopted and declared in im- mediate effect. John Aschim, Collector Notice to Farmers. The Tillamook Lime Products Co, is ready to furnish ground lime stone to the farmers. The lime stone is ground so as to pass a 1-6 inch wire screen. The lime stone will cost $5.00 per ton in sacks at the plant. A charge of 3 cents per sack or 60c. per ton extra will be made for the sacks unless sacks are furnished by the customer Only grain or meal sacks with a close weave should be brought as the fine dust or powder will all be lost it the sacks have a course weave leaving only the course grains of limestone in the sacks. A set of new grinding rollers arc being installed to increase the capac­ ity and produce a finer prxluct. Address all comriuni’.Vion» to u. G. Jackson, Box 413. Tillan.oe.l'. Prof. Roland G. Usher, after having been quoted as confirming a state- 1 t he ment made in New -• York ■ that knew of a secret understanding be­ tween the United States and the al­ lies, made in 1897. has discovered that such an admission is water on the Austro-German wheel. He now dis­ claims having authorized and other statement than that such a secret un­ derstanding was entered into in 1897 with Great Britian, and probably with France, but that he is without definite knowledge of its continuance after the Spanish war He rests his case upon what he wrote in “Pan-German­ ism” in which it was stated that such a compact had been made before the war with Spain. DIKED TIDE LANDS AND FINE BOTTOM LANDS $150 AN ACRE I will »ell you 10 to 40 acre* and give you easy terms of payment >1 you want them. Write me for further information. Wm. G. Stearns. Corbett Bldg. lVrtland. Oregua. Summons for Publication in Fore­ closure of Tax Lien. feet to the northeast corm r of tr„ct fi -old by Geo. W. lsigcr and wife to A Frank Marcy by deed dated October In the Circuit Court of the State of 10, ¡902 and recorded i:r Book ”Z” of Oregon, for Tillamook County. Dept. deeds, page 31, records of 'lillamcok County, Oregon, thence south 15 de­ No 2, in equity. grees east 320 feet to southeast < \valter J. Logus, Plaintiff uer of Marcy tract, thenc north v s. degrees east 23.456 fat to the James H. Mendenhall, Defendant. 10 James H. Mendenhall, other­ point, all in Tillamook County, wise known as I. H. Mendenhall, the of Oregon. A WISE. And that said sale will be made above n .med defendant. lu t ic name of the Slate cf Oregon jeet to confirmation by s. id court. N. McMillan, guardian Y ou a . • n.reby iiotuicd that Walter the per.on and cstat ;us, ti.e plaint ill lierti.i, is the J. o Frances Xavi'r Moreau owner and holder cf three outstand- Ct (Frank Marcy.) a ir.rj ■nrideetned Certificates of De­ First publication May 27, : per the recorded plat, situate in tin istrator at the office of Webster County of Tillamook, and State of Holmes, in Tillamook City, Oregon, Stat ii Oregon, tax etc. $6.88; Certificate No. within six months of the date of this 978 for lots 18,19 and 20 of said block notice. Í) 3 of said Pacific City, tax etc. $5.44; Dated this 13th day of May, 1915. Operated by W. A. WISE, 210-2 3 Failing Builditijr, Pott Clark Smith, Certificate No. 1035 for lots 8,'9, 10, ( ) Administrator of said estate. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, and 17 of sa:u sea foods to eat when you come to Cl I ) and you appear to be the owner 01 u In the Circuit Court of the State of Bar View. Order house for those who wish to record. Oregon in and for the County 01 use a sdeeping tent and board out. You are further notified that said 1 illamook. Walter J. Logus has paid all unpaid Gee R. ljams, Laura M. Kcrron I)r. Wise will be at the Hotel from May st to May lfitli, taxes on said premises for prior and formerly Laura A1. ljams,Les­ and will do dental work bv appointments. subsequent years with rate of interest lie ljams, Evelyn ljams and on said amounts as follows: Ethel Miller, formerly Ethel Ì ax Kate ljams, Years Da te Kept. Amount. of Plaintiffs, 1 Tax. Paid. No. Int. vs. 1912 Oct. 25, 1913 921 $3.92 15 per cent 19 1 2 Oct. 25. 1913 922 2.94 Mrs. Melvin V enen and John i 1913 Api. IK, 1U1 + 4152 1.64 Doe Venen, her husband. 1913 Api. IS, 1U14 4152 1.21 1 91 3 Api. H. 11)15 r.4<; 7 Frank Le Duck and Mary Roe 6.78 1911 I cb 9, 19 15 161 2 04 Le Duck, his wife, 1 J J + Feb, 9. 19 15 161 1 .53 Defendants. I‘J 14 A ¡»rd X, 1915 4282 5.1U Spring Suits From $30.00 and up. We also do To Mrs. Melvina Venen and John Total amount of taxes Doe Venen, her husband; Frank Le pa id since date of ile- CLEANING AND PRESSING. Duck and Mary Roe Le Duck, his wife 1 linquency .... 25.16 and to you and each of you, defend-1 You James H. Mendenhall, orther- above named, in the name of the wisc known herein as J. H. Menden­ ants hall defendant herein, as the owner State of Oregon you and each of you I TILLAMOOK. required and hereby commanded of the legal title of the above describ­ are Phone J 27. 1st St. and 2nd Ave. ed real estate, and of the whole there­ to appear and answer to the com­ * of, are hereby further notified that plaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 25th lthe said Walter J. Logus, the plain­ tiff herein, will apply to the Circuit day of June, 1915, beinb more than Court of the County and State afore­ six (6) weeks from the date of the said for a judgment and decree date of the first publication of this I $ J against you, foreclosing the tax lien summons, and if you fail so to appear | against the property above described, and answer to the said complaint, for | and the whole thereof, and mentioned want thereof these plaintiffs will ap­ in the three said certificates. And you ply to the Court for the relief prayed | arc hereby summoned to appear with­ for in their complaint, in substance . in sixty days after the service of this as follows: For a decree determining , summons or notice, exclusive of the the adverse interests in and to block 1 day of service, and defend this action, fifteen (15) in and of Miller's Addi- • or pay the amount due, aggregating tion to the Town of Tillamook in the ' in all the sum of $61.14 with interest County of Tillamook and State of li (• figured at the rate of 15 per cent per Oregon and declaring these plaintiffs to be the owners in fee simple and annum to the 25th day of April, 1915, entitled to the possession of said together with the costs and disburse­ ments, and thereafter until paid at the premises as against any and all per­ same rate; and this summons is serv­ sons whomsoever, and yourselves in ed upon you by publication, and you particular, and for their costs and are hereby summoned to appear and disbursements of this suit, and for answer said complaint, or defend this such further relief as to the Court suit, or pay the amount due as afore­ may seem meet in the premises. This Summons is served upon you said, within sixty days after the first publication of this summons, exclus­ by virtue of an order of the above ive of the day of the said first publi entitled Court, which order was made cation; and in case of your failure to and entered on the 17th day of May, do so, a decree will be rendered fore­ 1915, directing that publication there­ closing the lien of said taxes and of be made in the Tillamook Head­ costs against the land and premises light, a newspaper of general circula­ above named. This summons is pub­ tion published in the County of '1 illa­ lished by order of the Honorable A mook and State of Oregon for a M. Hare, County Judge of Tillamook period of six (6) successive weeks. County, State of Oregon, in the ab­ Date of first publication May 20, 191'. sence of the Judge of the Circuit Date of last publication June 25, 1915. Charles A. and Claude M. Court of said County, and said order Jones, 1307-9 Ycoii Build­ was made and dated this 21st day of ing, Portland, Orrgi n. “I he Insurance Man May, 1915, the first publication of Attorneys for Plaintiff- which is the 27th day of May, 1915, and the last publication is the 29th Citation. day of July, 1915. All papers and pro­ ------ o----- cess in this proceeding may be served upon the undersigned residing within In the County Court of the State the State of Oregon, at the address Oregon for Tillamook County. hereinafter mentioned. In the matter of the estate of T. Address: Tillamook City, Oregon. Handley deceased. John Leland Henderson. To Iola 1. . Handley, Charles Attorney for Plaintiff. Handley, T. B. Handley Jr., E. Handl y and George Dewey Handley and all persons unknown interested in Notice to Crei itor». said estate. In the name of the State of Oregon, you and each of you are Notice is hereby given that the hereby cited and required to appear County Court of the State of Oregon, in said court on the 4th day of June, for the County of Tillamook, has ap­ 1915, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, pointed the undersigned administra­ at Tillamook City, Oregon, and then tor of the estate of Thatnas B. Wat­ and there show cause, if any exists, kins, deceased. All persons having why an order should not be made claims against the said estate are re­ directing the administrator of said quired to present them, properly estate to sell, at private sale, for cash, verified, to the undersigned at his the following described real property office in Tillamook City, Oregon, to-wit: That parcel hounded by be­ within six months from the date of ginning at the S.E. corner of a tract the first publication of this notice. conveyed to Jacob Jacobson b- John First publication. May 20th, 1915. B. Handley and E. C. Handley, ex­ Last publication, June 17, 1915. ecutors, by deed recorded on page A. H. Gaylord. 600, Book 43 of Deeds, Yamhill Coun­ Administrator of the Es­ ty. Oregon, thence East to the center tate of Thomas B. Wat­ of B St. in the Townof McMinnville kins, Deceased. in raid county, south 222 feet to S.E. corner of tract conveyed by Geo. C. Notice of Guardian Sa'e. Chandler to Charles Handley, by deed recorded on page 328 Book I.., Notice is hereby given that by vir­ records of deeds of said county, west tue of an order of the County Court 264 feet to S.W. corner of last men­ of Tillamook County, State of Ore­ tioned tract, thence north to place f gon, made and entered on the 27th beginning. Also all of lots 8, 9. and to day of May, 1915 licensing the under­ of Cozincs acre lots in College Addi­ signed to sell the real property here­ tion to town of McMinnville, Yam- inafter described, the undersigned hrll County, Oregon, which 1i. « west will on and after the 24th day of June of the O. ft. R. R's tract, except a 1915, at Tillamook Oregon sell at pri­ strip 18 feet wide along north side of vate sale, for cash, to the person off­ said lot 8. Also lots 3, 4, 5, and 6 of ering the highest price therefor all the Block 4 of Mrs. VV. P. Chandler’s Ad­ right title and interest of France« dition to the town cf McMinnville, Xavier Moreau (Frank Marcy) in and Oregon. A one seventh interest in the to the following described real estate, above described tracts be sold. This citation is served upon you b” towit: Beginning at a point 58.16 chains order of the above earned court Mav west and 42.15 chains south of the «. I9>5, by publication thereof, and northcast corner of Section at, T. 1 the date of the first publication is Upton Sinclair ha« written virtes N„ Range to West of the Willamette M ‘v 6, tqt5 and the date of the last the about the submarine; but Upton, you can never do it justice without prose Meridian, thence north 74 d-grecs publication is June ,1. loll cast 7.08 chains.for an initial point 01 : many will not, like some of that in your jungle talk. Witness the Honorable A. M. Hare, ertake In sic It is the corn clubs and the pig tract herein conveyed, said point be­ County Judge c>f / can't go to clubs in the South that are opening ing the southeast comer of what i ((recon, and the a 3- k around little the eyes of bovs to the tvanny of known as ’’ e Riston 5 acre tract fitid this fth day America >c big King Cotton. Those boys uill be the thence north 16 degrees west 2» fer' farmers of the future. thence svtyh 74 degrees west 23.4; > § Bar View Hotel-Furnished Tents.3 Now Open lor the Seasen. Un lo • Management of DR. W : 8 » Bar View Hotel AND FURNISH TENTS On the Beach at Bar View, Tillamook County, Oregon. 3 § EXCLUSIVE TAILORING J » J. w. EDWALL, YOUR FIRE INSURANCE IS SAFE WITH-THIS-AGENCY, OVER #160,000,000.00 IN-ASSETS Represented by this Office ÉÉC^AFETY ” ERVICE OUR AIM ECURITY. Li t Us Write Your Next Policy RûLLIE è W. WATSON