TILLAMOOK HEADLÎG1ÏT. ' APRIL 25. 1907 ELECTRIC PROCESS OR TREATING pLiOUR PROVES A BIG SUCCESS- 'OREGON GIRLS, BLESS ’£M ' A Youth’s Sentiment about Pil grims Jamestown Trip. I Increases Whiteness and Improves Bread-Making Qualities of Hard Wheat—Installed by Wasco Warehouse Milling Company for Making White River Flour- % It is predicted that all the mills of the northwest which grind hard wheat flour will in­ stall this new process, the practical effects of which have been demonstrated and proven by the flour itself having been in actual household use for months, with results that sur­ passed the highest expectations. state. As a muscle-builder it has been without a competitor. In addition, it now can have that delicate whiteness of which housekeepers are so fond and of which in bread they are so proud —this by the same process which increases its digestibility and its absorptive qualities, or “ bread- inaking” qualities. Give White River» Float» a trial It is sold in this city by B. O. SHAFFER, txtho is the agent for it ' /« KCS b VJJBAJOMLJ o W'> A Store With REGULAR CUSTOMERS It is always flattering to a store to have many regular customers. Peo­ ple who come again and again must have confi­ dence. A large percentage of our business conies from regular customers who trade here year in and year out They know our methods are right and that they will always be used as we would like to be were we the buyer instead of seller. Why not make this your reg­ ular trading place for drugs and medicines. HARNESS, COLLARS, etc. You Use Them. We Sell Them. W. A. WILLIAMS & CO., Next Door to Tillamook County Bank. Cured of Rheumatism. Mr. Wm. Henry, of Chattanooga, Tenn., had rheumatism in his left arm. ” The strength seemed to tiave gore out of the muscles so that it was useless for work," lie save. ” I applied Cliamla-r- lain’s Pain Balin and w rapped i lie arm in flannel at night, and to my relief 1 found that the pain gradually left me and the strength returned. In three weeks the rheumatism had disappeared ami has not sins? returned.” If troubled with rheumatism try a few applications of Pain Balm. You are certain to I e pleased w ith the relief which it affords For sale by Clouah’s Drug Store. Evolution of the Box Business. All at once the newspapers over the stale arc knocking J. U. Cooper’s propo. sition to take the Oregon girls to James­ town, posing as Oregon Minnehaha's, and are saying all maimer of unkind tilings. They seem to think that the state would be poorly represented and illy advertised thereby. Nonsense ! 'A hy, bless your hearts, brothers, the collection ol girls which Cooper could m ike trom Oregon's best would take the effete E ist bv storm, no matter how they were rigged out. And it's when the girls would start homeward that the country would experience its first rcaI car shortage ! 1 lie surprising thing to us is to see the Oregon pencil pushers. with their reputation for gallantry and loyaltv to Oregon products, posing as sotir-visngctj, carping critics and misan­ thropes. We're ashamed ol the whole outfit. Here is to Cooper and ms Oregon Juanitas I—Newberg Graphic. Obituary. This community was stricken with grief to learn of the death lust Saturday morning of John, the 18 year old son oi W. A. Gage. For a number of days John has been very ill with the men seis and was recov cling when he took a .elapse which re suited in pneumonia and caused Ins sudden death. John has mnnv friends who mourn his death and will always remember him as being a straight forward and highly respected young man. The funeral was held Sunday at the I. 0. 0 F cemetary by Rev. C. H. Way mire, where the body was laid to rest. The heartbroken family have the sin­ cere sympathy of the entire community. —Cloverdale Courier. The box business on the Coast is undergoing an evolutionaly stage. The business is now being considered purely from an investment standpoint, rather than as an auxiliary appendage to a sawmill, where the only consideration largely, was the ability to work up material and sell it. often without even the semblance of a profit. The principal factors which have brought about the change liars l>een the rapid advance in the price of stumpage and the demand for grades of spruce Hnd pine lumber To Purify Milk Supply. A Woman Tells How to Relieve which formerly could not be sold < n the The New |ersey state commission on Rheumatic Pains. Eastern market at a profit. In Southern tuberculosis in animals is determined I have l>een h very great sufferer from Oregon the available pine which can be that the state shall have a supply ol ® (THE RELIABLE DRUGGIST.) secured by small mills to supply tire pure raw ntilk pending such times as the dreadful disease. rheumatism, fora , «/'.w- numtier of years, i have tried mail) wKmBT --zwx mommv'm demand for boxes is practically ex state pasteurization of the supply is medicine« but never got much relief hausted. It is necessary to build rail established. To this end the commis­ from any <»f them until two years ago. roads, which, of course, adds to the sion has planned to obtain the aid of the when I Itoughl a bottle of Chamt>erlaiii initial coat. The same conditions are farmers of the state tn its fight by pay Pain Balm. I found relief tiefore I had used all of one bottle, but kept on apply­ Hur in California, where the bux re ing full value for nil condemned tuber ing it and soon fell like a different 0 quireinents are probably five hundred woman Thnaigh my advice many of I no matter how cnlosis cows. my friends here tried it and can te|| you million feet annually and rapidly grow­ bad the weather In the township of Howell, containing liow wonderfully it I ihh worked.—.M rs ing. In the pine belts of Eastern Ore one ol the largest dairies in the rtate. You cannot S arah A COLK. HO 8 New St., Dover, gon, Washington and Idaho and in the twenty cows out of one hetd of forty Del. Chamberlain's Pain Balm is a linl. afford to be without a spruce producing sections of Oregon and examined hy State Inspection E. B ment. The relief from pain which ii TOWERS Washington, similar conditions apply Voorhees and Franklin Dye were found afford« is alone worth many times it« cost. It makes rest and sleep possible. ' WATERPROOF with equal force I to be consumptive. The animals were For sale by Clough's Drug Store. OILED SUIT The increased cost of bos lumlx-r is condemned, and the dairyman was OR SLICKER. making itself felt in the character of awarded 1680. the full value of the cows. lumber being utilized in the manufacture Notice of this award, which is the of boxes. One Southern Oregon box largest thus (ar made bv the commis­ SIGN OF THE FISH company baa been experimenting with sion. has been sent to dairies in the state, an orange box with pine slats and fir nnd the commission hojies that this will ends It is only a question of time when encournge other dairt men to ask for an fir will become a common box material. inspection of their herds. The claim Hemlock, which Inks been used for made by those active in the pnre milk Beware of Ointments for Ca- several years as a substitute for spruce crusnde, and especially bv those waging tarrah that contains Mercury, in limited amounts is now being re­ the fight for state pasteurization of the as mercury will -Orel, deuroy the wnwof etuell «nd completely dereo.e the wholelye garded with high favor for certain kinds milk supply, that 40 per cent of milk teat when enlenns it thronxh the mm-ona ear- fam »ach articles «hould ne»nr re need ex­ of boxes, where the question of anon cows are tubercular, is borne out in the es I OS preecriptio«« from reputable phyMctuon, tartable wood is not a factor. There lisa *« the demxse they will do in ten fold to the Howell instance. rood you can pumtbly derive from them. Hall • been an advance of over 50 per cwtf In < starrh Cure. manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Timber Claim for Sale coat of box stock during the past twelve Co.. Toledo O . contain, no mercury, and ia taken internally, acting directly upon the blood mouths. Stick which could formerly lie On Nehalem Bar m S«v of Sw M o- and mucoua surface« of the ayalem. fn buying Ha Family rn>.Jvr conaHpaUon. I I t ? CLOUGH P MAKE EVERY DAY COUNT- 1 WINGLESS BIRDS Io ma WHOLE TRIBES WHOSE HEREDITARY PROFESSION IS THEFT. The following sensible letter appeared ; in the Oregonian : In a discussion of the |amcstowu Ex- position and the part the West will play | in it, the question is raised why this j j band at Oregon girls desires to masquer­ ade in squaw blankets ? Is it because they think it will be perfectly charming ? Stireh thev do not wish t< give Eastern ers the impression that the West is a wild country—yet to be tamed ? It puzzles me to know just how these g'ris will enter Jamestown to attract the Nutriment More Available. given to the Bluestem flour, and I at the same time its bread-mak-j The process in detail is some­ most attention, Will thev swoop down Real Lightning Does It. upon tiie town with a blood curdling ing qualities are so improved as what as follows : A flaming discharge of electric­ to make it actually the superior ■ The kernels are first scoured war whoop ? Or will they march stolid behind their chief, with determination ity. tearing air into ions— of famous eastern flours, known and milled, by the usual roller ly written in the very tread oi their nioc The ionized air being pun>|>ed the globe over for quality. patent process. The same puri­ casincd leet ? into the agitator of a flour mill so fying currents of air are in If this is the idea to attract attention Increases Its Digestibility. it icache-H and treat« every minute to our state, why not go tn the nearest particle of flour— Exhaustive tests have shown motion as in any other modern reservation for 20 or 30 oi the most bux roller mill, keeping the flour free Tlile new process lias so im­ th it the digestibility of flour is, om looking squaws aud send them ? The proved the qualities of hard wheat increased greatly by this electric' from dust particles and the ma­ real thing is far better than the imita flour that it bids fair to revolu treatment. The ionized atmos­ chinery sweet and clean, The tion. Girls never appear so well when lionize tile milling of Oregon and Washingion hard wheat. phere seems to absorb certain complete flour is then blown trying to imitate someone else, nor yet make intowhat is known as an agita­ so pretty as when they arc their own I oily properties which sweet selves starch less accessible to the di-1 tor. First to Be Installed. Process in Detail. 1 am very proud of our state and wi h gestive juices. Experiments [ Hundreds of Tillamook house­ Connected with this agitator is to always show it at its best advantage. have demonstrated that flour keepers who have been making thus freeded from these oily sub­ a pump, operated by a dynamo, When could we do this better than now, bread of White River Flour while delightful memories ol the Lewis stances lends itself more readily which forces the f lour into an and Clark Exposition at * still fresh in during the last few months will to assimilation. This is one aeriform fluid, the ionized air. the minds of those Easterners ? And be interested to learn that every This fluid, which looks like air reason why some health foods whom could we find better to do it than particle of that flour has been have been found easy to digest. but isn’t, comes from a tank, Oregon’s fair daughters of today ? For, treated by electricity. The im­ through which are constantly who represents the social and home life Makes Health Food of It. proved bread-making qualities playing actual f lashes of light­ it not w omen, and what is more eloquent of the flour, and its whiteness in This electric process practi­ ning. The flashes operate upon of civilization and progress than the re comparison with any other hard cally transforms flour into health purified air, literally tearing it fined ami cultured home ? wheat flour, are due mainly to food. Not only does extracting to shreds with the force of gal­ More responsibility rests upon the the installation of a new electric this oil leave the flour lighter in vanic action. The nature of the dainty shoulders of these girls than they process in the 2,000-barrel mill color, but gives it a liveliness air is ratically altered. imagine. Therefore, let them not hide of the Wasco Warehouse Milling and absorbent power which is their light under a bu-htl, but each one company, at The Dalles, Oregon, impossible for flour which still Ironized Air Tastes Sweet and Rare individually appear at her best. No girl where White River Flour is retains its oil. This gain is This irenized air is so remark­ can afford to do otherwise, and dress as made. This White River mill without sacrificing anything that able in its properties that breath­ we love to see our mothers and sisters is the first of the kind to be in­ is a benefit in the wheat. ing it is a delight. It produces dress. Then, indeed, will they represent our Oregon in all that is truest and best, stalled in Oregon. Rich in gluten—containing a an exhilarating effect akin to and we boys will be so proud of them Has Whitest Bloom. higher per cent of this nutritive that produced by the adminis­ that we will toss our hats up in the air Hard wheat flour, made from substance than any other wheat tration of ozone. It tastes sweet and yell : “Three cheers for our Oregon Bluestem wheat, has long been —our own Oregon Bluestem and rare, like rich mountain air girls—God bless ’em.” recognized as superior in bread­ wheat has been the pride of the cf limpid purity. R. R. H ollingsworth . making qualities to any other Pacific Coast flour, and the equal of Minnesota flour. The Minne­ sota flours, however, have had the advantage over the coast hard wheat flours, in that they whiteness have possessed which the Bluestem flour has lacked. By this electric treat- ment, the whitest bloom is CRIMINALS IN INDIA Animal (htdltltl That Fouad la New Zealaad. An official of the Smithsonian insti* tutiuu was recently speaking of some of New Zealand. Robber« Boru aud Kept So by Caste« of the wingless birds “Those wingless birds have always They Are Fullte and Modest I util been of especial Interest to me,” he tke “Prefsaalon” llrqulre« Them to said. “Nowhere else than In their Become Cruel and Ferocious. native laud could they have survived. India Is usually spoken of as a land for that Is the only laud lu which no where life and property have become destructive animals are to be found. safe under British rule. True, the Being unable to fly, they could uot bauds of thugs have been broken up, have escaped from swift huutlug ani­ mals, if any there had been. And In the Pindbaree hordes have been sup­ this connection It Is Interesting to uo!o pressed, uud the British police system that In all probability the kakapo, or Is spread over the whole country, but great ground parrot, once had the use the criminal tribes or castes, those of its wings, but, being a grass seed whose hereditary "professiou" Is rob­ feeder and finding no enemies on the bery and nothing else, remain, their ground. It lu u process of evolution lost lustiucts strong, wanting only opportu­ Its ability to fly, though able to run nity to practice their traditional call­ very swiftly. These birds are so gen­ ing, which the Indian caste system for­ tle aud so unconscious of having any enemies that If a person sit down near bids them to abandon. These tribes are most numerous and one It will presently tuck Its head un­ most wayward In the united provinces, der Its wing and go to sleep. They lu which are Cawupur and Lucknow, only breed once in two years, and the the cities associated forever with the mother bird carefully hides the nest from her mute, though why is not Indian mutiny. Half of the division is Oudli, the na­ known. tive province last annexed by Britain, “The weka, or wood hen, is another many of whose old men vividly re­ specially interesting species of the member when every “talookdar,” or wingless birds. These birds mate for feudal chief, lived in a fortified castle life and take tun about In hatching aud retained a swarm of armed men, and watching the brood. One of the who received no pay, but lived ou the pair Is never absent from the nest, the country. They were official robbers, one ou duty being supplied with food aud their example gave free scope to I by the other. There Is something al­ the “professional” robbers, or, as they most human in the sight of a male have always been known lu India, the weka leading bls family out for a criminal tribes. stroll on the beach when the tide Is These tribes are the Sauaurlahs,- the low. Barwars, the Sunslahs, the Dorns, the “Another is the roa, which is distln- llahurabs, the Aherlahs, the Buurlabs, gnlshed by a remarkable beak, long. the Bliatus. Each tribe has its own slender and slightly curved. The roa, dialect, dress and customs. like the kakapo. Is a night bird, and Its A singular feature of Indian life is chief food is earthworms. Its sight Is that persons who would be considered very poor, and It may often be seen depraved characters In a European standing In the moonlight with the tip country and would bear the stamp of of Its beak resting upon the ground, their uature on their faces are not de­ apparently listening or feeling for the praved In their own estimation or in vibrations of a worm’s movements. that of the people at large. A casual The male of the roa does all the hatch­ murderer Is not ashamed of himself ing. nnd the young birds come from nor abhorred by Ills neighbors, who the shell with all their feathers, mini­ welcome him back among them If be atures of their parents and with ap­ escapes the gallows and is released parently nil tbelr Intelligence, as they after n term In Jail. The universal be­ nt once start out to search for food lief that all things are decreed by fate ami rem to require no instruction as accounts for this amazing state of to the best places to find it.”—New feeling. Much more, then, are men re York Herald. garded with Indifference or even re­ spect whose time honored, hereditary RECORDS. and natural profession is robbery with murder. In the number of his titles tue Duke So the members of these tribes go in of Atholl, with twenty-three, holds the and out of the towns nml villages with­ record. out misgivings, and there Is not a sign The record bean for costliness Is ths In their faces or manner to Indicate vanilla, which sells at *12 a pound re­ that tlielr business Is robbery and mur­ tail. der. The record for ham sandwich making When a gang encamps outside of a Is a thousand saudwlches lu 11 hours town the Inhabitants feel uncomforta­ 25 minutes. ble nnd take precautions, but cherish The record lodging house Is one fur no 111 will against the strangers. And accom mu­ when roblrcries and murders occur al­ pilgrims at Mecca, which most immediately within a radius of dates 6,000 persons. The record steam heating apparatus twenty miles they take more precau­ tions, lmt regard the whole affair as a cost *180,000. It is that which bests visitation of Providence, like a flood or the 11,000 rooms of the Vatican. The record soprano voice was Ln- a fire. crezla Agujardl’s. This lady, who died These habitual criminals are not de proved In any sense understood by the In 1783, could easily strike C In altlssl- people. They simply have the mis­ mo. The record for millionaire honesty fortune to belong to a trade which Is nupleasnnt for the neighborhood—like was held by the late Charles T. Yerkes, who, on recovering hlB fortune a dyer’s or a tanner’s. They are well satisfied with them­ after Ills failure, repaid the claims of selves and nrc ns careful as other peo­ all bls old creditors with 6 per cent ple of tlielr respectability. They have compound interest. no unusual vices; they do not get drunk Mr. Howells and the Pool. or riotous; they are civil, courteous A person called upon a certain editor and unassuming. Cruelty and ferocity are with them neither habits nor pleas­ of the Atlautlc Monthly of the name of William Denn Howells aud, producing ures, but simply methods of business. During the excitement of a sudden a poem and courteous note of declina­ nttack the people If they do not run tion, Indignantly demanded an explana­ away will turn out and aid the police tion. “Do you mean to intimate that this In repelling or capturing the robbers. But If a police Inquiry begins two or Is not a good poem?” he challenged. “By no means,” hastily remonstrated three days after the robbers have done their work unmolested the ireople will Mr. Howells; “1 tulnk It la very good usually do nothing to help In tracing Indeed." “Then why”—In a somewhat mollified them aud will even deny that they tone—“do you decline It? I consider It have lost anything. For many years past the government the best I have ever written.” “Ab, well,” said Mr. Howells, “after of India has worked to luduce these criminal tribes to settle down to a all. we have very few differences of opinion. Do you know,” he added In peaceable and industrious life. But progress Is very slow. Vagabond­ his gentlest voice, "I have long regard­ age Is bred in the bone and marrow of ed It as the liest that Tennyson has the tribes, and marauding Is tlielr cho­ ever written.” — George Harvey In sen occupation. From time to time men North American Review. will suddenly disappear, perpetrate several daring dakaitls In another dis­ Aseliorlss a Ll, trict and escape over the border luto A very effective method la employed one of the Independent native states to keep a lightship always In practl-^ which cluster round three sides of the cally the same position. The ship Is, united provinces. moored by three anchors which rest The word “dakaltl,” also spelled “da in the sea bed In the form of a triangle. colty,” means robbery by a gang of When the tide niters Its direction the armed men, uml a dakalt, or dacolt, is vessel, of course, swings with It, but only to a limited extent. The ship can­ a member of such a gang. An assault by robbers In India dif­ not change right over, as It would It fers from one In Europe or America In only one anchor were used, for the that It always takes place at night three anchors each Ox It In a different and Is accompanied by n tremendous position and do not allow It to move amount of noise. The Indians are a more than a few yards. noisy people at all times, and In a rob- Wher. Mrs. Brons Had Bool. liery with violence tpe robbers’ object Is to terrify their victims Into a panic; The Dear Child Oh. Mrs. Brown, hence whether travelers be waylaid on when <114 you get back? Mrs. Brown— a lonely road or a wealthy man’s Illes« you dear, I was not away any. house tie attacked In a village the as­ where! What made you t<)lnk so? Ths sault Is always made suddenly, with Lear Child—I thought you were. I loud shouts and yells aud In the case of heard tny mamma say that you w a village with beating of drums and at loggerheads with your husba waving of lighted torches. over a week.—London Answers The persons attacked bellow for all All Rlakl. they are worth, but rarely offer resist­ A man always puts on the )< , ance, and the general effect Is so terri­ fying to the cowardly people that the last, and when he puts on tiX neighbors either fly or else barricade shoe flrot—on ths right foot—he tlielr doors and lie still till the robbers puts on the left shoe on the right foot. have got at least a mile away with A man most always puts the right shoe tbelr plunder. Even the shrieking of wo­ on the left foot and the left shoe on the men under torture does not put heart light, foot.—Baltimore American. Into one of them, for the men of a The Early Bird. house that la attacked try to bolt for tbelr Ilves If they can and leave the Mrs. Homebody (engaging cook)— women to the mercy of the robbers, Very well, then; you may come tomor- who apply fire to them and torture them row at 10. Cook OI’<1 sooner com In more atrocious ways to make them 8. mum. Thin If Ol don't loti tell where the valuables are kept. Nrw place Ol can lave In tol York World. matluay —Puck. I ichool Wain­ lock .