EXTRACTED EVENTS
Volume 15 Number 11 Friday, 13 April 1906
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Condensed County News |
EXTRACTED EVENTS
| Type | Names | Event |
| accident, mill | Smith, Albert | Albert Smith, while hauling shingles from the Smith mill, last week, caught his left foot on a nail while loading at the mill. Before he could get away, a truck ran over his foot lacerating it badly. It is not thought that any permanent injuries will result from the accident. |
| death | Percival, Philomena | The week in Tulalip - Mrs. Philomena Percival, wife of Edward Percival, died Tuesday night and was buried Thursday. Mr. Percival and children have the sympathy of the community. |
| disease | Kellog Marsh Items - Mr. Lockhart's children are reported better after much sickness. The Coulson children are also sick. | |
| disease, scarlet fever | Kellog Marsh Items - The attendance at school has been very low of late, owing to scarlet fever and other aliments among the children. | |
| fire | Astel | Condensed County News - A house belonging to a family by the name of Astel in Stanwood, was destroyed by fire Thursday afternoon of last week. All the contents of the house were destroyed. The loss is estimated at $900. |
| of interest | The week in Tulalip - The Tulalip agency office made a payment amounting to nearly $1,000 this week to the Port Madison Indians as money due the individuals of the tribe for land sold to the war department for military purposes. | |
| of interest | The week in Tulalip - A bounty of ten cents per crow, killed and delivered, was an inducement for the gardener and his boys to kill a few crows this week. The crows are getting so shy now that it takes twenty-five cents worth of ammunation to kill a ten cent crow. | |
| railroad | Dynamite in Railroad Warfare One of the newest tacktics employed in rival railroads in preventing construction of lines on disputed ground was resorted to the other day by crews of the Harriman and Hill railroad system near Portland. To stop the Harriman forces from finishing the work they had undertaken, the Hill crew tossed dynamite sticks, to which were attached burning fuses, down among the workmen. Several times the engineers picked up the sticks and extinguished the fuses. Finally the fuses were made so short that the risk was too great to pick them up and the men had to retreat. Such is the account given to the dispatches. How long will men be fools enough to try to maim and kill each other on account of the spite their employers may have against each other? Are they dogs to be sicked on each other my their masters? If Hill and Harriman, or any other employers of labor, have a grudge against each other, let them personally suffer the consequences. You, men, are brethren | |
| school | An Illegal Practice Our attention has been called to an unlawful habit some Marysville parents have, of sending children to the drugstores to buy intoxicants and poisons without a written order. The druggists have no right under the law to comply with such a request, and they would rather not be called upon to fill orders that way. If anything of that kind is wanted, and a child must be sent for it, - a bad and dangerous thing in itself - let the parents comply with the law, and send a written order with the child. |
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Round About News Items |
EXTRACTED EVENTS
| Type | Names | Event |
| death | Bagley, Daniel | The week in Tulalip - Little Daniel Bagley, son of William Bagley, died at his home last Monday night and was buried Wednesday. Daniel was formerly a school boy and was well liked by all who knew him. |
| disease, la grippe | Cummings, J. H. | The week in Tulalip - J. H. Cummings has been sick for the past few days with the la grippe with which complaint several others at Tulalip are suffering. |
| move | Allen, A. J. | Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Allen left yesterday for South Bend in this state, where they will make their future home. Mr. Allen went to Prosser and other places in the state, but found South Bend most to his liking. It is Mr. Allen's intention to engage in the practice of law in his new location. Many friends will wish Mr. and Mrs. Allen success in their new home. |
| of interest | W. C.T.U. Notes - One hundred and fifty boys were recently examined in Chicago as to their physical qualifications for positions on the various high school athletic teams and only nineteen of the boys examined were not smokers. In a preliminary examination for West Point, in Pittsfield, Mass. one-fourth of the candidates were rejected on account of the same habit. Would our western boys make any better showing? |
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Some Real Estate Transactions of the Week |
EXTRACTED EVENTS
| Type | Names | Event |
| accident, logging | Hendricks, Gus - Ekholm, Eric | Gus Hendricks and Eric Ekholm were seriously though it is thought not fatally injured at Bryant last Tuesday, by the explosion of a donkey engine at Stimson's logging camp. |
| accident, mill | Mathews, Irving | Social and Personal Items - Irving Mathews formerly of this place but now living at Litell, has been laid up a couple of weeks through an injury to one of his knees while hook tending. He is now back at his work. |
| crime | Mergens, M. J. | Social and Personal Items - M. J. Mergens, late station agent of the Great Northern at this point, was sentenced Tuesday to one year in the penitentiary on the charge of embezzling company funds here. |
| crime, theft | Chicago Clothing | The Chicago Clothing store of Monroe was entered by burglars Tuesday night and $400 worth of goods stolen. The burglars escaped. |
| death, logging | Cox, George W. | George W. Cox, a logger in Buck's camp east of Monroe, was killed last week by a falling tree. He was buried in Snohomish last Sunday. The deceased leaves a wife and three children, who reside between Snohomish and Lowell |
| disease, la grippe | The week in Tulalip - The epidemic of "la grippe" has not not abated and a number of boys and girls and employees are still suffering from that complaint. | |
| of interest | Park, Mr. | Round About News Items - Mr. Park shot and killed a good sized bear last Tuesday on the Sanders ranch near Sisco. |
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