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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1898)
the T illamook weekly headlight . |tw°h.e>Ym’?theti° Vibrati”n *’* ‘h‘t>«ybemmieto contribute totbeculti- A CENT’S WORTH wlnch lias its origin in a common in , vation of a taste for classical music by spiration. placing before the children the pictures Art can be interpreted alone through of"gr’™t nim^ers' Natur*8 k“OW Ot tha‘ WhiCh eU8pire<'’- A u‘,,cher hung a picture of Moz of the wrong baking powder will spoil a half-dollar’s worth of cake. Use Schilling s Best. q . . , |ar^» which the children had framed, on School-room decoration then, the ob- the wall of her school room, i th*- presence ject of which is to cultivate a taste for (By Mr a. R. C. French) of that beautiful face at once enlisted an the beautiful, 1 refine " and elevate the interest in the great musician, and it That which has made man superior to character, and in general contribute to w as not long before every child by his liptrin ' all other form of animal life is his power . the line end of education must begin own effort knew the story and the life to express his thoughts. with such a study of nature as will lead work of that wonder composer. i The primitive man made use of words i the chihl to close habitual attention too, The gem of application for classical I and signs alone but a desire for perinan- . and delight in various forms which sur- music has commenced its growth when ' ent record of thought gave rise to signs ( round him. Until such habits of parti the child is able to recognize the faces I in pictures or hierogliphic writing. cipation in nature are formed the child and knovzs the life histories of the great 6J Later, growing out of this form of ‘s not prepared to appreciate, or be ben- musicians. J expression ¡arbitrary symbols were chos efitted.by any expression of it in art. We would not place a trashy book in en representing sound, these symbols Let us begin this work of school-room the hands of a child, neither would we combined formed written words, to su- decoration in a very simple way for I hang a gaudy badly colored chromo be perceed the more cumbersome forms of believe it to be the way which leads to fore him, and no more should we offend the best resul is. hierogliphic representation. bis natural taste tor harmony by the use Study whatever natural object may be of music which is not standard in its As the races developed and the exper- No-To-Hac for Fifty Cents. iencesof man because more complicated, at hand, a white pebble possibly. Name character. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak Catarrh Cannot be Cured men strong, blood pure. 50c, |1. Ail druggists. and his emotions more refined and ele it for the child, it is quartz, lead him to Let the best and only the best music withLOCALAPPLICATlONS.es they canno vated, the giosser more common place discover its properties; test it with glass; find a place in the school-room. Do reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood Everybody Says So. form of expression of thought no longer it will scratch glass; it is harder. or constitutional disease, and In order to cure it You you not remember how much more in Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the most won yov must take internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh satisfied him. He began to seek compar have thus led the child to a knowledge terested you were in Beethoven’s Moon derful medical discovery of the age, pleas Cure is taken rnternally, and acts directly on isons in his environment for his own ex of simple qualities, and in doing that, light Sonata when you kneiv the |>athe- ant and refreshing to the taste, act gently the blood and muscous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, periences and those of others, and you have started him on a voyage of dis tic incident which inspired it? Your cleansing th« entire system, dispel colds, Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed through these comparisons or the simile, covery which has no end. pupils should never hear it without be cure headache, fever, habitual constipation by one of the best physicians in this country for and biliousness. Please buy and try a box and is a regular prescription. It is com was born the language of poetry. He will find the quartz crystal and ing carried back to the time of its birth of C. C. C. to-dav; 10, 25, 50 cents. Sold and years, posed of tire best tonics known, combined with To this, the inspiration of the voice knowing that you are interested in it he in that little room where the shoemaker guaranteed to cure by all druggists. the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the was added and man poured forth the will bring it to you, and the inital step worked, and his blind sister lightened museous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such won ecstacy of his soul in song. Song could is taken in teaching the crystalline the hours of labor with her music. Thousands are Trying It. derful results in curing Catarrh. Send for tes not tell all the language of the soul, nor forms of minerals. What a beautiful picture is that of the In order to prove the great merit of timonials. free. could it express the languageof all souls. Right here possibly we begin to dec great composer as he played tor the first Ely’s Cream Balm, the most effective cure F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo O 1 here was yet to be added the misin orate the school-room for the pebble and time to these two enraptured listeners, I for Catarrh and Cold in Head, we have pre Sold by all druggists, price 75c. pared a generous trial size for 10 cents. Hall’s Family pills are the best. try of delineation through the art of the chystal find a place in the school while the moonlight flooded the room, Get it of your druggist or send 10 cents to I the painter, and of the sculptor, and cabinet this watchless composition. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N. Y. City. expression of beauty in form and design To know life and to rightly understand Let us study the trees about the school I suffered from catarrh of the worst kind through the art of the architect. building: their habits of growth, of life in all its relations is to know man • ever since a boy, and I never hoped for To Cure Constipation Forever. There is a sense in which every child brandling, form, size, col< r; form, size, There lias lieen no greater student of men cure, but Ely’s Cream Balm seems to do Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. repiesents within l.iin self the sum of all and color of their parts. What trees put of his passions, his hopes, his fears, his evon that. Many acquaintances have used If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Freight handled with dispatch with excellent insults.—Oscar Oat rum, the development of the past. To furnish forth their leaves first in the summer, joys, his sorrow-», than the painter. it 45 Warren Ave., Chicago, Ill. and at lowest rates. Fruit de Prevent and cure Constipation and Sick- means for expression and the growth of and lose them first in the autumn. The Nor has the band of any other expressed Headache, Small Bile Ih aua. livered in good order. Ely’s Cream Balm is the acknowledged what Is innate in i.lie child, he must be children will collect the various kinds diem in language more eloquent or more cure for catarrh and contains no cocaine, trained to a recognition and apprecia. of words native and imported and realistic than his. mercury nor any injurious drug. Price, Bost Accommodations and Cheapest Route Educate Your llowele With Cascareta. tion of the beautiful in whatever lang these too will find a place in the school Illustrated magazines and papers of 50 cents. At druggists or by mail. Candy Cathartic, cure conatlpation forever to or from Tillamook. 16c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money uage it may be expressed literature, cabinet, and fol weeks together the thedayaswell as many other sources Every attention paid to wants and conveinces music, painting, sculpture, or archi- bough of the fir and spruce will have made easily accessible, copies and of passengers. First class table set. • lecture. beautiful the bear and often fordidding reproductions of the great works of the ________________________ best painters. These our pupils should A taste for the best is begotten of walls of the school-room. the highest ideals. A teacher must The birds furnish a near ending source know and their daily study from the zq stand iu the relation of interpreter to i of interest to all children. What kind walls of the school-room will make the child. It is not that he is to under ! of nests do they build? Where do they luminous many a page of the literature For further particulars apply to stand as the teacher understands, feel build them? Of what material are they and history we are teaching, and teach A. W. BEADLE & Co. as the teacher feels, or see as the teach made? It would not be an unusual re in more forcible ways, lessons of time, er sees, but that the teacher is to use the sult of the interest of the children if a manhood and womanhood. No. 14C h 1. St. S. F. or to The onject of school room decoration various forms of art iu training and de pet canary found a home in the school Truckee Lumber Co. Agts. Veloping the character of the child until room. What more pratical lesson in is not merely to make the place in which we teach more attractive, although this ethics than the care of such a pet. he is brought to feel a kinship with the This should be made to lead to the of course should not be overlooked, it f best, the noblest, and the highest ex “I’m nearly dead with Piles ’’ Why care and ownership of some pet at home, should always be considered a means to pressions of truth and beauty. not get well? Bead ad of Vita Medicine an end. a rabbit, a dog, a cat. a chicken what There is one means to this end of Co. No cure, no pay. » The painting suggests the painter, which I have not spoken but which ever it may be, the responsibility which and the door is opened to lessons in bio Ladies, read ad of Vila Medicine Co should tie placed first of all, and that is grows out of the relation of its depen- No cure, no pay. « -• * are every where • the means that present, | dence will be huiuaoying in its effects. graphy. One biography suggests con temporaries, and the work is extended and appealing for recognition. I refer , The child never tires of watching that Asthma or Catarrh . Nocitre.no pay. ‘ , the brook, how it ends because of the suggestiong of the subject to the multiplied forms of the beautiful ^usy worker, Read ad. Vita Medicine Co. • itself. here and deposits there, all the time mak- as it exists in nature. * If one would know a man he must People ent and sleep well who une Nature is the key to art; to know and lound and beautiful in form the Vita Remedies. Read ad. No cure to feel a love for nature is to have the rough, angular pebbles in the bed. know the times in which he lived, the * no pay. means at hand for the interpretation of I The brook will tell the child as no book spirit which actuated those times, and t he chaiacteristie features of them, and all art. There is a beauty in the sunset can what erosion mearson t ie i-urface of None but Vita Medicines cure Blood ROUND this is history. History cannot be color never approached by the brush of I the earth, and Tennyson s Brook, Diseases. No cure, no pay. Read nd.” TRIP known without knowing the place, and the artist; an inimicable delicacy in “Which chatters, chatters as it flows Vi'a Medicines cure all sick people. the coloring of the flower and a gorgeous To join the brimming river Will carry this is a phrase of geography. No cure, no pay. Read ad. • To know the world’s great master splendor in the rainbow that defies im him to the side of his own brook, and pieces of art is in itself a liberial educa itation. | **ven sinK f°r him the song which Vila Me dicinesrmike sick people well tion. I doubt not that the power to en Read ad. No cure, no pay. • There is music in the flow of rhe riv i childhood learned. joy a great poem or a cathedral of rare u let, and in the song of the bird un-1 Nothing can be nearer the heart of the Nerves made whole by Vita Medicines. beauty can be traced in many a case heard in grandest symphony. Grandeur .child than the flowers, and especially Read ad. No cure no pay. • _ I A dear —• — o» are «... «Lziyy — when .I. <1.1 lm zvolla I by iv [ though years of Hard work with books they he calls them and sublimity in the lofty mountains and men to a first suggestion in some their names. When flowers bloom [ Liver and Kidneya made well by Vita which a soul may feel but not ex press. home or school-room decoration. Medicine, ltend ad. No cure, no pity. A tranquility and peace in the quiet of their fragrance and brightness should never be wanting in the school-room. | We should always rememlier that the the valley which to experience is rest. “Oil, How I suffer—Rheumatism best fruits pass through periods of long mid Nenrelgia Can’t lie cured.’’ Yea One can not read those liues of Will Here is the material for a practicsl les- ! est maturity. son in art, in the study of harmony of it can. Read ad of Vita Medicine Co. iam Cullen Bryant's, No cure, no pay. • color, and pleasing effects secured by j If the child has become familiar with “Thou who w’ould'st see the lovely and the picture of Dante mourning for Bea tasteful arrangements. The influence Opium, Drunkenness or Tobacco Habit the wild of a few growing plants in the school trice, iu later life lie will be much more i cured. No cure, no pay. Read ad of Mingled in harmony on nature’s face likely to read, “ The Divine Coruody, ” I room window cared for by the child is | Vita Medicine Co. • Ascend our Rocky Mountains;” and in every familiar reference he may Until hix eye has feasted upon the always an active though a silent educa- ■ meet to that which is known, or w hich ; Vita Medicines make red blood. Read WTO M.ka «H ot every «w 4ar«, the wretber pernnttln«. beiween Aiiorte and TTOawaok Clt| broad landscape of hill and valley, fruit 1 tor. ad. No cure, no |my. carrying freight and paaaenge-R. When a child sympathies are awaken bis experience can interpret for him, he ful field and flowing brook stretching ELMORE, SANBORN A Co., Astoria, or COHN & CO., Tillamook, Agfa. ed through his love for nature he is in a ■ will hear the call of Virgil to Dante. far away from the lofty summits that hu condition to appreciate in the best sense | “Still go onward, and in going listen.’ has sought. the spiritual beauty embodied in good Nor understand Mr. Browing until literature. Matthew Arnold has said he too has held the sea shell to his ear, that the acquision of good poetry is a “To hear the murmur of the wave.” ONE GIVES RELIEF. discipline which works deeper than any No» know the beauty of “Thanatopsis” other discipline in the range of work of I Cav*at«, and Trade-Mark» obtained and all Pat-1 -----Dealer in----- until he himself has wonder amidst the < ent busineseconducted for MoorRATt Fcts. our schools, more than any other, too. it I Oua Orncc is O ppobitc U, •. PATCNTOrrtct STUDEBAKER WACONS, beauties of “God’s first temples.” i ana wc <-anaet-uro patent iu 1 cm tuua thau those works of itself. How much more we 1 remote from Washington. Nor can he read the “Lines to a Wat Osborne Mowers appreciate the song when we know the J bend model, drawing or photo., with descrlp- erfoul” until his thought has been led as Buggfes. hty rskes, plows and other farm < tion. We advise, it patentable or not, tree o( singer. On the walls of the school-room i machinery You can save money by charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. i he has watched the bird in its migration, there should be a place for those whose [ dealing with mr. A PaMFHtCT, “ How to Obtain Patents,” with Special Prices on Buggies and Spring , cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries to Him who from zone to zone guides names are prominent in the list or the > wagons. sent free. Address, its merry flight aright. C. A. BAILEY, J world’s great writers and thinkers. A child cannot admire with Bryant. Tillamook, Ore. The face reflects the soul, and the pre- i Oxx. r.T.NT Orrict. W..HIHOTOII. o. C. I ' “Ihe beautiful clouds with fold 60 sence of a good face is always a power soft and fair, for good. The desire to know the lives Swimming in the pure and quiet air, and works of those whose faces hive lie Its fleeces bathing in sunlight, while come familiar makes the teaching of blow important lessons in biography, and the Its shadow o'er the vale moves slow,” To everyone going to the new introduction of good literature a very gold Helds Until he lias learned to see in the sum natural and easy step. mer cloud something of the same beauty A BOON—A BLESSING. Do you not find that the reading EouíiÉ'ell» WiJuai. that Bryant himself saw. ! liooks grow stale and improfltsble to the I 50 KaUblU'ied Or discover with Lowell that “there's children? Put them aside often—en- practical questions answered, The only Hagar'ne on the never a leaf or a blade too mean not by gneiM work—not by tirelyif they be not a necessary evil,— Pacific Coast. To be some happy creature's palace. ” May-At-homes — but by experi life giving litera- and read good, strong ence, that has been there—lived Ita literary matter represent» the beet Will it not help to bring brightness to Not petting them I ture with your pupils, there—worked there—and ia thoughts of »licit W1..1IS as Hjxllnxt many a day to so feel thesun-shine and now going back there, to get Hjortli Boyescn, Charles Warren Stod i with comments, nor harrowing them the joy of a fresh summer morning, to | with too frequent questions. -■—. I believe dard, Edith M. T! lotnan, Jonquin Miller. (M. a <**•*:. *• *mitr u. tor • U» rHs RICH ask ourselves the question. Its illustrations show in the best style i thoroughly that at the end of a year of the glories of the ]’ icific C< ast. idling when to start—how' “Is this a time to be cloudy and sad, I faithful effort in such work, you will It is a pictorial history of the Crest 1 r li t will <• wi st to lxk<- When our mother Nature laughs around, ■find yourselves rewaided beyond all West. Il covers the whole basin of the —'lowtogo—bow to live—how Pacific, including China, J-pan, and And even the deep blue heavens look I your calculations. Io keep well—wliat to do when ' Corea. You want it, ma does your lick—where to go there—bow | A child’s mind is a wonderful worker glad, i family. io prospect—how to mine there, ' if we only trust it ; hi» im igination is as And gladness breathes from the blossom slid much more. One Sample Copy, ioc . Single Numbers, «sc. I easily improved and guided as his judg Yearly Subscription, f.f.oo. ing ground?” T IS iTREASURY« * TREASURE ment and his memory. All Poetmaatere sre not bur l«rd to take As teachers we are too apt to lose euimet Iptlmie. One of the forms of art which is com- Its material has never before mon( an(i mor, «very yesr to be re- lieen tiublisl.ed—it is privately eight of the fact that we t understand Overland Monthly Pub. Co. [Hinted—can only be had by .rieneea 1 .,^niied ax an important factor in the largely through our own experiences, S am FwAMOtero, OAL. tending to E f*r«taB*cn, Send Fl»« rent« to Tn« Rtrsni CnrwtCAl. C owtawv , M o . to 1 education of a child is music. Tacoma, Wash , and enclosing Spr uc6 St., New York, and they will l>e tent to you by mail; or C ure for Colds. Feve-ra ■»'<» (Irwral P»* Tennyson says of himself, bihty, Hmall Ikuia». ■ per b< tih I mean music a. the old masters con 15 carton« will lie mailed for 4 8 eent«. 1 he chances are ten to ak-ta. “I am a part of all that I have met,', one that R.pani Tabu let are the very medicine you need. Music that is language of Oiw Small Ihle lk*MH iiiubt i'-ra Rder to any Imnk here for It is true of each one of us that no ceived It week eioue* Torpid Live»». XX. per buttla evidence ol good faith. wakened great «ul’- Scbod-r«x» decoraii«- i responsive chord can ever be ai----------- - Steamer * Ruth Direct from S. F. to Tillamook. <2\. you tlxirst-y'? JLie 3TO-CL tired.'? ■\77"ill "Z"cxx tapiro soirxetlxlrxg''? Mil sail from F. about Mag • 8tlj find every 10 dags after Is tixe place to gret it Clailr keeps tlxe Tcest. Cozxxe and. se© fox 37-oxxrself. Reduced Fares! 3.60® Astoria and Tillamook pacific Steamer W. H. Harrison, or R. F. Elmore, C. A. BAILEY Don’t Spend a Dollar for t Medicine C.A.SNOW&CO. until you have tried uvenana KLONDIKE KATAKISM K K You can buy them in the paper 5-cent cartons K K Ten Tabules for Five Cents. If you don’t find this sort of Ripans Tabules At the Druggist’s