Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, August 30, 1917, Image 7

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    USK JN PARK
THE FORWARD LOOK.
r
It le Never Too Leto to Moke a Freeh
8tart In Life.
Cjassed as One of World’s
Colossal Spectacles.
;DEUR OP THE SCENERY.
M,vnt McKinley. Most Lofty of
f ” ’ 0, Cs«"
‘ry’. Towering Peak.,
cu"try
f
th,Titanic Glory of th. New-
ILtloosI
p«rk U1 Ala,,ka Whlch
r “ -rested in tbe spring of 1917
t
tbe monster spectacles of
I u To say tbHt Mount McKln-
L ' 3)3*' ieel ab”’® sea level alld
tTratiie loftiest peak In America
II w Bo idea whatever of Its
B ^eri are several mountains
LHImalayas which materially ex-
f belgbt. one which rises more
13000 feet above sea level, and
Lunt McKinley to the observer Is
Lilian any of these.
Lreason is that the greatest Him
[, are seen from valley. 7,1X10 to
kfeet In altitude, while Mount Me-
L rises abruptly from valleys
L feet and even less in altitude,
[riiltor to the Mount McKinley
Lt) park will look up more than
U feet to the double peuk, the up-
114,000 feet of which are covered
L perpetual snow.
L enormous mass is the climax of
test Alaakau range which extends
L y east and west across southeast
L Alaska, separating the vast
kern Inland from tbe more popu-
t ountry whose shores are the
jof Alaska. The range parallels
imigbty Yukon many miles to It.
Now aud then a man pauses to take
account of .tm k aud look, back ru^
fully over the course of bu life to note
i the many places where he made the
wrong turn or was shoved off the track
by adverse circumstances. He «are to
himself, believing what he says, that
if he could retrace bl. steps and take
a fresh start, knowing what be knows
now, he would not make such a mess
of thing, again.
He can put his finger down on the
very spot In the map of his life where
he went wrong. There was a blurred
place on the trail, where there was no
trace of the footprint of any who
passed that way and no mark of the
woodman’s ax upon a tree. It was
for him alone to choose the way to
take, and In hl. haste and fever to
arrive he chose wrongly and has wan­
dered ever since.
A man plays a game, or runs a race
or conducts a business, or marries a
wife, or choose, a friend, or elects a
calling, or forms a habit, and by and
by the conviction is borne In upon him,
like a growth weighing on the brain,
that he was In error. Now It is too
late to retrieve. He must wear for the
remainder of hi. days the millstone
due to the wrong decision.
What Is he to do? He strangled bls
chance newborn. He exchanged bis
birthright for pottage. It Is of no
avail to plead that he had bad advls-
ers, that he was misled, that he was
the tool of environment, that a base
heredity rose up to claim him and a
latent taint in the blood broke out and
wrought un irreparable mischief.
The past is there, and its legend is
deeply graven on bis brow or seared
by the brand of the Iron that has en­
tered into bls soul. Can he go back?
The years and the closed doors and
the finished chapters tell him no.
But the forward look and the fntu- 1
rity provide him with a better way to
take. When Mrs. reterkln, in the sto-
ry, had spoiled her cup of coffee by
putting salt in it and was trying to
redeem the error by the neutralizing
action of all sorts of chemicals tbe
lady from Philadelphia suggested that
she make a fresh cup. Seeing that you
can’t go back, why not make a fresh
start exactly where you are? Decision
has a miraculous way of finding a
standpoint of rock tn the middle of a
quicksand.—Philadelphia Ledger.
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THE TILLAMOOK
HEADLIGHT
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MAKES CLUBBING ARRANGEMENT WITH
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Offers Unusual. Oppcrtuniiy^ To Its Readers
MONG our large circle of readers there are a great many
who are interested directly or indirectly in fruit growing,
dairying and other branches of farming. All of these nat­
urally wish to keep in close touch with agricultural activi-
ties throughout the state; and to know about any fight which is
being waged for the measures Oregon farmers want and against
all sorts of schemes that are detrimental to the people and agri­
cultural interests of this state.
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K,rMPHStlon contains 2,21» square
E Its northern slopes, which over­
Eq Tanana watershed with Its
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■ mining industry, are broad val-
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■ lubablted by enormous herds of
B
K* its southern plateau la a
n
Etnal winter wilderness through
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K gliders of great length and
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Knooi bulk flow Into the valleys of
B
Kitth. In this National park, which
L
■ railroad now building by govern
K Into the Alaskan Interior will
J
B
Kto the public, America [xmseaaes
Ke acensry upon a titanic scale.
Km the stormy south Mount Mr-
Lt is wholly inaccessible. But
Kthe plains of the north vnlleya of
Br trade lead one from another to
A Chang, of Bass.
■lot
"And now. Bella." said little Mary
Bit 11 in awe Inspiring regfou of mas to her doll, "you must lay down for a
Bnonntalns and lee capped peaks,” while and go to sleep."
Kore Browne of the Campfire club
‘‘You should say 'lie down,’ dear,”
Ke<l before the senate committee put In little Mary’s mother.
■territories. "The Piedmont plateau
“Bella,” said Mary Impressively, "I'm
Bfollows the range affords a beiru- going to lie you down, so don’t you
Broadway direct to Mount McKln cry.”
■ end when you reach the plateau
“ ‘Lay you down.’ dear." came the
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1 llflcultles vanish and you see a second gentle correction.
Whatever !
Lthat is unique on this earth. You
Mary was much puzzled.
■ the huge mountain line of perpet- she said. It seemed to be wrong. She
Innr. rising like a great wall on declined to cope longer with the in­
■»»theast. You can ride a pony to tricacies of the English language. “Bel­
len Mount McKinley rises 17,000 la," she announced. “I think you better
■ ibore you In a glittering wall of sit up!”—Los Angeles Times.
L and Ice. It is flanked by stu-
■m mountains, which make a won-
Kilometers and Miles.
■tl setting for the monster.”
Wireless telegraph transmission dis­
Berth of the vast mountain, however. tances are often stated In kilometers,
■ rilling country dotted with beau- nautical miles or statute miles. To
■ lakes and forests and inhabited convert tbe number of kilometers to
er
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lemrnious herds of caribou. In fact, nautical miles, multiply by fifty-four
«special reason why congress set and point off two decimal places. To
kt the region at this time was to convert from kilometers to statute
ker-c tbe wild animal life in ad- miles multiply by sixt.v-two and point
of the invasion of hunters which off two places, if tbe distance is given
Iwwgovernment railroad will bring
In statute, or land, miles and you want
■ Alaska, the road as projected ruu- it expressed in kilometers, multiply tbe
Biwithin twenty miles of this great number of miles by 101 and point off
I"’ nature’s spectacles.
two decimal places.—Popular Science
parlira Sheldon of the Boone and
.Monthly.
rtat club told the senate eomrnlt-
Itbat aeveral times he has counted
Wadding Music.
piny as 500 mountain sheep in a
"Custom.’’ says a writer in the Wo­
p day of ordinary travel and that man’s Home Companion, "bas decreed,
R of caribou numbering frotn 1,200 to be sure, that tbe simplest and most
P11 *re frequently seen.
conventional musical program for a
H • game refuge and breeding wedding In church is, as some one has
F»d tbe new National park con- tersely expressed It, ’Lohengrin to go
[** Alaskan game which elsewhere In on. Mendelssohn to go out on and
Wldly disappearing. As In the case something soft during tbe ceremony
p 'flowstone National park, the Something a bit different would be
ifitlon serves as a perpetual cen- ‘Tannhaeuser’ to go in on and Swedish
g«me supply for large nelghbor- Wedding March’ from Hochzeit zu
lireas.
Wulfsberg’ to go out on."
*«e animals do not greatly fear
"• ¡»«cause they have never been
Treeless City Streets.
♦-
One can approach the great
The New York State College of For-
of caribou. There are also many eetry says that within New York .U e
bear of great size.
there are 20.000 miles of street¿«P«We
1 “’tensive educational campaign of sustaining a growth of 5.000,000
The Same Law for All.
SPRUCE CONTRACTS LET.
been Inaugurated by the depart- .hade trees which can be made worth
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1 of tbe Interior for the lnforma- «100,000,000 In Increased property
I heartily believe in organized la­
1 tbe people concerning the hlth- value. Besides making our cities more Oregon Mills i. Fumi.h Material For bor iust as, and even more than, I be­
1 ®knowu quality and extent of beautiful, trees are of definite v.luel to
Airplane«.
lieved in organized capital. I am very
proud of being an honorary member
tbelr scenic and health, for by absorbing
—o-----
®>nal possessions, under which gases they purify the alr.-Tree Talk.
Washington, Aug. 22 — The air of one labor organization, but I will
Merest in our national parks Is
craft production board today advised no more condone crime or violence
n? with unanticipated speed, and
Senator .McNary that it had awarded by a labor organization or by work­
Nursing 8iokly Plant».
ingmen than 1 will condone crime or
teallzatlon, interest and prac-
Sickly plants, like sickly people, can­ -rnt-a<ts to the Multnomah Lumber wrongdoing by a corporation or by
lox
Company,
North
Bend
Mill
A
** the condition as well as the not sUnd extremes. Sickly ^ Plants
capitalists. A square deal for every
. 0 Bifiotial parks development. may often be more qu “kly brought Lumber' Company, Astoria Box Com man. That is the only safe motto for
Patronage of the parks has in- back to health by watering e- th very par.y and the Brighton Millsf Tilla­ the United States. We hope to ad­
mook County) to furnish spruce to
tnpldly and steadily.
warei water only. Low vlfaU‘-
the government for atrplanc manufac­ vance throughout the world Jhe peace
7**tlon in the public interest not be raised through the use o j hilly ture The amount to be furnished >s of righteousness and brotherhood;
**" Promoted between railroads water or less than 110 degree, of tem­ not to be made public, but the price surely we can best do so when we in­
internment, between concee- perature.
the standard »105 per thousand ft., sist upon the peace of righteousness
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and brotherhood within our borders.
,r"l park managements and be-
he cutting to be accordmg to new In securing such a peace the first es­
Specification.. The board advises the
u2*’k* I-arge private capital
Anewering With Another Que.tiora.
wTat’s 4eome of tbe old fashioned Senator that all contracts for spruce sential is to gua:-antee every man the
d
to eu,er several na-
most element-ry of rights, the right
servant
girl who us.'d to entertain her »1 be awarded through the board to his own life. Murder is not debat­
for tb‘‘ enlargement and
whether
for
the
United
States
or
the
of hotel and transports- I tiean in tbe kitchen?"
able.—Theodore Roosevelt in Leslies.
■Shucks! Wbaf. become of’the M
T/0* I’rlr-es to the public have
This arrangement has been made to
I fashioned kitchen that used to be big in-ure an equitable distribution of the
wherever possible.
What is Beat for Indige.tion?
«oug^Toragirl to entertain company
nn.ee and to see that sufficient
jn
Detroit Free Press.
■» hB*Udoir Q»rdanlng.
Mr. A. Ribinson, of Drumquin,
«nruce is furnished to American air-
Xn< factories to meet our own army Ontario, has been troubled for years
, f . l’our wlfe uiaking out with
Thoughtful.
and navy plans. The tendency will be with indigestion, and recommends
.
she u raining In a flower-
the new clerk <-b**rve dne pre- m supervise and hold down foreign I Chamberlain’s Tablets as the "best
“Poe.-----
to super . , t
b(,]i,.v, J have been medicine I ever used.” If troubled
ih?
Stirring the soil caution against fire.
cigarettes orders which it is
of th< actual needs with indigestion or constipation give
v
...
v
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placed
w
excess
c
H.
always
throws
'hink
Wa" a11 very we,l‘ but 1
else’, wastebasket.
nie4 government« The board them a trial. They are certain to
,
l*rf,ln>e from an atomizer into some one <
.,
I
if the allies «< re given all prove beneficial. They are easy to
a *)f Irrigation
'Hawton they need."
need.’’ — Puck.____________
i uUn' rum thev a«kcd for there would take and pleasant in effect. Price 25
”*’oltrsiuan-Revlew
I.
the battle of life. £enX7 left to manufacture airplanes cents. For sale by Lamar’s Drug
Economy I" half
M to
Store.
; in the United States.
It Is not so hard to earn “
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We have, therefore, made a special clubbing arrangement with
THE OREGON FARMER whereby any farmer or fruit-
grower, who is one of our regular subscribers and who is not
now a subscriber of THE OREGON FARMER, will be en­
titled to receive THE OREGON FARMER in combination
with this paper at the same rate as for this paper alone.
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This offer applies to all those who renew or extend their sub
criptions as well as to all new subscribers, If you are interested
directly or indirectly in Oregon agriculture, do not miss this
unusual opportunity but send your order in now
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THE OREGON FARMER is the one farm paper which is
devoting itself exclusively to the farming activities and interests
of Oregon. It has a big organization gathering the news of
importance to farmers, dairymen, fruitgrowers, stockraisers and
poultry men; and it has the backbone to .attack wrongful methods
and combinations and bad legislation, and support honest leaders
and beneficial measi res. We are confident that our readers will
congratulate us on our being able to make this splendid and
attractive clubbing offer
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Tillamook Headlight, One Year $1.50
Oregon Farmer, One Year - -
1.00
1
$250
By Our Clubbing Arrangement,
both fot
in worry. You
spend It weU.-Spuri*®“-
for duty. -Anon.
L ••
$1.50
-ja
POINTS THE WAY
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The Statement of this Hillsboro
Resident Will Interest Our Readers
Our neighboring town Hillsboro
points the way in the words of one of
its most respected residents:
Mrs. W. H. Morton, 1439 Second
St., Hillsboro Ore., says: “I can
always speay a good word for Doan's
Kidney Pills, since they pulled me
through a terrible attack of rheumat­
ic pains. For over a year, I wasn’t
able to dress myself and every cord
and muscle in my body pained so that
I couldn't rest day or night. I was in
constant misery every minute. During
this time trouble with my kidneys set
in and they were irregular in action
and congested. I felt sick and nervous
all over. I couldn't get anything to re­
lieve the suffering, until I began tak­
ing Doan’s Kidney Fills. In a few
weeks, my kidneys acted more freely
and the rheumatic pains began to ease
up. I stuck to them until I had finish­
ed about twelve boxes when 1 was
able to get around as well as ever
and do my work. Today I can get
around without any pain or effort. I
take a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills
now and then however and they keep
my kidneys in good condition."
Notice of Final Account.
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Notice is hereby given that the un­
dersigned has filed his final account
as executor of the will of John Guest,
deceased, in the County Court of
Tillamook County, Oregon, and said
court has appointed Saturday, the
29th day of Septcmbar, 1917, at 10
o'clock a.m. at the Court House, as
the time and place for hearing objec­
tions to said account and the final
settlement thereof.
Dated this August 30th, 1917.
William Henry
. avmjr J,
J. VJUWI.
Guest.
Executor of the will of
John Guest, Deceased.
II. T. Hotts, Free., Attorney
at-Law.
John Inland Henderson, Sec­
retary Treat»., Attorney-at-
Law and Notrary Public.
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Tillamook Title and
Abstract Co.
;
{ Low,
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I am in the market at all times for I ( >
your baby calves—Smith "The Calf ?
Man,”—Both Phones.
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Abatractw. Real Fatate,
Insurance.
Both Pho nee.
TILLAM<X»K—OREGON.