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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1907)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, OCTOBER 31, 1Ô07. Clear Speech. ie STORE that MAKES GOOD ! n s Derss Shoes Boy’s Dress Shoes en ’s Heavy Shoes. Boy’s Heavy Shoes en ’s Rubber Boots. Boy’s Rubber Boots en ’S Oil Clothing. Boy’s Hats and Caps en ’s Hats of all Kinds. ’S CLOTHING, OVERCOATS and FURNISHING GOODS Railroad Men and Farmers, Attention ! We earry just the line of goods that you require for uuinter r-—goods chat mill stand Tillamook weather. and THE prices ARE RIGHT. DD & CO., One Price Clothiers, TIUÜAM00K. GUM ARABIC. N >w, how are people to break them« selves ol faulty enui> iation ? Simply bv ' taking time. In this country we are ' encouraged to do things in a Hurry. To be busy—that is, to be rushed—has been so long an ideal with us that even il we really aren't busy we have acquired the habit ot doing things in a busy way — that is, a hurried wav. We attend to trifles hurriedly. We ven »{leak hurriedly when we Imve plenty of time. Moteover, it is so ertdi- ble in the general estimation to set m buisy tlr.it many people with plenty of, leisure pretend to be busy and dishon- eslij say they are busy, and net as it they were busy, and talk with the breathle&s hurry of people rushed to death. It is very curious, this ideal of seeming j to be rushed as it it were a good in itself mid not a misfortune, a state to be1 guarded against both for one's own ac count and tor the sake of not annoying people about us. Repose, qu et, j oise and easy balance of one’s mental cn I physical qualities must l»e recognized as an ideal before, as a people, we can learn to arrange what is going on in our minds and to express it in clear speech, writes John D, Barry in Harper’s Bazar. So if we decide to trj to speak well, we must accept this ideal and relax from the tension with which most ot us hold ourselves. Then we express ourselves we shall then express not a hurried or an harassed being, but a nature calm and rational. Instantly many of our faults of dictation w ill straighten them selves out, and we shall find our task of clear speaking astonishingly lightened. Notice. This is to give notice that tlieobl water system, formerly belonging to the Tilla mook Water Company, wi? be shut off on 'lie 1st oi November. Bv Order. OREGON Berkshire Hogs for Sale. For Sale, 15 Head of Berkshire Swine, pure bred, of different ages from the famous Ladd stock. To be sold at a bargain.—Apply to Arthur Heals. FARMERS Why leave your horses in the rain when you can tie them in Harris’ Tie Shed for 10 eta. * READ THE WEEKLY OREGONIAN Save Your Money..... OF PORTLAND For the general news of the World also for information about fiow io obtain the best resulis in cultivating the soil, Stock Men Grow Rich by Sav ing the Money they Make. I Raisin^,FruitGrowin^ etc. You can secure this excellent paper by Deposit your Money with Tillamook County Bank, Subscribing for the Headlight. Both Papers for $2.25 in princess of direct lineage he statue of Massa suit at . I., last week, The descend icahontas are not as exclu ) they iiun/iiie. * » * .00(1 persons attended the f Boston's pure food fair, macks handed out as scien ce are quite acceptable in of dear marketing. * O * le paper says " the Yukon is rapidly,’’ but its chief need communications. The idea •ways and railroads supple, other is sound and winning A California paper save Mr. Harriman is "a great executive endowed with the pt iceless gift of imagination ” While the imagination is a good thing in itself, the Wall street attempts to capitalize it are ticklish. « * * In East Africa th#» Germans have pushed a railroad far inland, and in order to connect it with Lake Victoria Nyanxa are digging a sixty-mile canal through a swainpy region. The water way movement at the sources ol the Nile is likely to score ahead oi the Miss issippi. ____________ Photographing the Invisible. * ff * lish expert reports that |5.- J.OOO of gold is still Io lie of the South African mines, are often mistaken, and Ihls rs to te reckless in the use Workers in the field of photogrrphy claim that an instrument has been de vised which, with the aid of a powerful microscopic apparatus, can make use of ultra-violet light to photograph objects too small to be seen with ordinary mag nilying devices. The use ol photography * * » i«e Cll cm who can name is necessitated by the fact that ultra Bdei li ms violet rays, though they do not affect Hal corn the eye. easily impress a sensitized plate farmer when he saw all ilie or film. Thus the new process actually I crib now contributes to the employes invisible rays to reveal invisible iMeiices. objects. A writer in Harper's Maga » St » zine, calling attention to the ’process al| Street paper inquire«: " May save that one of its advantages is that Vasiil to have finally touched by means of it .protoplasm and micro otcvelt square deal level?" Bet scopic animals and plants may be studied Ifciee who have been violating I very advantageously while in the firing if they feel sure that they have condition. With visible fight proto attorn. plasm is so nearly transparent and » « * homogeneous that most of its structure r ire less telephone adopted by can not be seen, while in ultra-violet the rd Stales Navy will lie a great various constituents of protoplasm show we in the voyage of the fleet varying degrees of translucency, »0 acific. An occasional conver I that they may be seen and photograph, among the sixteen battle ships ed as clearly as if they had beeu stained. >ve a pleasing tnus-menl in He further says : “There ia no prospect waters that bv the use of th s light molerules or * « « Louisville meeting in behall of smaller constituents oi matter mar be ublican ticket three of the speak ever seen or photographed. These fi< i Confederate soldiers and one far beyond the reach of even the ultra ol a Confederate member of Con. violet microscope . but there is a good The present campaign in Ken- reason to b< pe that it may. among > remarkable for the breaking up other things, reveal vital elements hither to uuknowa or Lot imperfectly teen , leiDocratic lines. --W and that its invention may mark «> great an advance tn innroacopv as did the production of the homogeneous im mersion lens.’’ And it will be safe and ready for you when you need it. We conduct our business with the greatest care and courtesy. We carry fire, burglary and hold up insur ance. We offer you Secu rity and Service. Outclassed. Everybody’s kickin’, Kickin' ’liout the best; Kickin’ ’bout the prices 'Aepay for tilings to eat; Kickin’ 'Issit Mie railroads Ao* the governmen*; Kickin’ ’bout the taxes And the way they’re spent; Kickin’ ’bout the autos And the pace they set ; Kickin’ ’bout the giaflers An’ the pull they get. O’d mule looks dejected , Says in loncs demure. “ When it comes to kickin’ I’m au amachoor I” —Washington Etar. Capital Stock, $30,000.00. Total Resources over $320,000.00. M. W. HARRISON. Pres, and Cash. His Dear Old Mother. •' My dear old mol her. who is now eighty three years ohi, thrives on Elec tric Bitteis." writes W B Brunson, of Dublin, Ga " Stie lias taken them for about two years and enjoys sn excellent appetite, feels strong and sleeps well.” That's tlie »ay Electric Bitters affect the aged, and tlie aame happy resulta follow io all cases of female weakness «nd general debility. Weak, puny chil dren too, are gieatlv slreiix'heiuai by them, tiusrantwd by Cliaa I Clough, druggist. 50c. INSURE YOUR HEALTH "io COMFORT on stormy days by wearing a ''urns* SLICKER Clean - Llqht Durable How to Cure a Cold. The question <‘f how to cure a cold witlwMit unneivsMiry low of time is one in which wears all more or leas inter •sited for the quicker a Cold is g'HU-n rid of the tree the danger of pneumonia and other serious diseases Mr B W. L. Hall, of Wsvevly. Vs., lias used Cham- berlaiu’s Cough Remedy for jear« and says : ’’I firmly believe Chamberlain's Cough Romedy to be slesilulely the brat preparACivn on thr iwirirrt for cold». 1 • nave recotnmended 11 to uty friend» and | they all agree with me. For aale Clough a Drug Store. kill ™, couch ano CURE TH« LUNGS *in Dr. King’s Now Discovery ... PONSUMFTION FOB fa»'" Notice to Debtors. Owing loth« fire of the Tillamook Lumbering Co's mill, all parties iiutebt rd to the company will please call and settle at ooce. 'r Fris« ■a.MXT I Two Classes, Amberlike and Bleached, and Their Uses. Gum arable, which forms one of the more Important minor exports of Egypt, is really the sap from a special kind of tree which grows from three to five yards In height, whole forests of which are found in the Kordofan prov ince and also near Gedld. In the White Nile province. The natives are free to collect the gum. The season during which the trees yield their sap runs from December to May. Prior to gath ering the crop the natives prepare the trees by slightly cutting the bark In numerous places. The sap then ex udes. solidifies In the shape of large and small lumps and Is afterward gath ered by hand, such gathering being done before the rainy season com mences. There are two main classes of gum— amberllke and bleached. In the latter the gum is merely exposed to the strong action of the sun—generally In Omdurman—while In the former In stance It Is allowed to retain Its nat ural amber color. The confectionery trade Is perhaps the principal purchas er of gum arable, though a very large number of other industries—chemical works, printing and dyeing mills, let ter press printers and so on—are Inter ested In this product of Sudau.—Chica go News. Why It la That Ice at Times Will Crack or Burst. Ice never bursts from freexlng. As so.vn as the liquid of which It Is com posed Is frozen solid expansion ceases. The cracking or bursting of lev is brought about In this way: When wa ter Is subjected to extreme cold lee crystals will gradually form on Its sur face until the same are covered with a thin coat of what appears to be wet anew. From this outer coating of Ice crystals all subsequent freezing goes downward, the Ice thickening accord ing to the degree of cold. The water ■which la being converted Into Ice now begins to expand, creating a pressure upon the unfrozen water below. This pressure Is both downward and out ward. and In case the water under ob servation Is In a vessel the sides and bottom of the receptacle supply the re el stance. As the freezing process continues the pressure upon the confined water and air In the Interior of the bulk Increases until something yields. If the vessel be stronger than the lee stratum that has formed over the surface the layer of ice will be bent upward at the cen ter, that being the weakest point on account of the fact that the outer edges of the congealed mass are frozen fast to the aides of the vessel In which the experiment Is being made. In this condition the center of the Ice contin ues to rise or bulge until It bursts PAYING THE PENALTY. from the resistance of the water below. The Way Beckmann Begged Frankel's Could the vessel be tapped from below and the water drawn off no amount of Pardon Before Witnesses. One day Beckmann, the comic actor, freezing would be sufficient to crack was Induced to take off a well known or bulge the Ice layer on the surface. newspaper editor, Frankel by name, In one of the characters he was repre THE “GWEED NEEBORS.” senting In Berlin. He performed bls task so cleverly that at the close the A Belief In Fairies Still Exists In Parts audience broke out Into loud calls for of Scotland, Frankel. The Journalist brought au There still lingers a widespread tie action, and Beckmann was condemned lief In the north of Scotland that ni.. to go to the house of the Insulted par "fair folk." or “gweed neebors," as ty and there beg bls pardon in the the fairies are called, still live In the presence of witnesses. At the hour ap hills, aud during the first days of con pointed Frankel sat in the circle of his valescence a mother must be zealous family, together with a number of re ly guarded lest oue of tlie “wee people” lations and friends who had beeu con come and rob the child of Its nourish vened for the occasion, waiting the ar ment. Sometimes they succeed lu enr rival of the delinquent. He tarried rylug off the mother. Here Is oue of long, and half an hour had passed In the superstitious legeuda: weary suspense when at last the door A north country fisher had a flue opened, and Beckmann put his bead In child. One evening a beggar woman and asked: entered the hut aud went up to the “Does Mr Meier live here?” cradle to gaze into the eyes of tho “Oh, no,” answered Frankel. “He babe. From that time good health left Ilves next door.” it, and a strange look came Into Its "Ah, then, I beg your pardon,” eal<l face, and the mother was troubled. An the actor and hastily withdrew, hav- old man liegglng for food passed that Ing thus acquitted himself of the im- way. When he caught sight of the poserl penance, to the grent annoyance child he cried: of Frankel anil the Intense amusement “That’s nae a bairn, It's an Image, of the assembled witnesses.—London and the gweed folk has stoun his Tit Bits. speerit." Thereupon he «et to work to recall Posters In Paris. tho fisher’s bulrn. A peat Arc was French law gives the authorities of heaped high on the hearth and a black every village aud commune complete hen held over it at such a distance that control over posters. “No one," writes It was singed aud not killed. After our consul general, “Is permitted In some struggling the hen escaped up France to deface streets and public the lum. A few moments elapsed, places with crude, ostentatious an and then the parents were gladdened nouncements of bls business or other by the sight of a happy expression subject. Billboards are Infrequent In once more on the child’s face. It throve Paris and are generally built perma from that day forward.—Spectator. nently Into a wall, where they are tax ed according to their superficial area. ft Might Hava Been Worts, When a building is In construction and Mark Twain, during oue of hla lec board screens are erected to shield the ture tours, was waiting ut a station public from dust and other annoyance for a delayed train. Tlie lecture com such temporary screen will soon be mittee and several townsmen were covered with posters of amusements with him and talking their boat to pass and other business, but each poster so the time away. Oue man told about a displayed has been previously submit frightfully unhealthy town be bad read ted to the authorities, a license obtain atsMit, and It was a grewsomo tale of ed, and each sheet bears the canceled «lying uud burials aud that sort. "It revenue stamp, according to Its size.” might have been worse," Twain fol lowed, In bls slow and direct manner. A Long Swim. "I lived In that same town for two A tramp lias beaten all known rec yoara, and I never died once -not ■ ords by swimming twenty-seven miles single time.” The way ho said It in thirty minutes. He did not mean to seemed to daze the crowd, and not a do It. lie merely tried to steal a ride I man said a word tn response. “Of from St. I aiu I r to Chicago on the rear course you may tbluk I’m lying," the of a locomotive tender. When the humorist continued, "and I’m sorry, for train started he fell over backward I can’t get any witnesses to testify through the open manhole Into the ttBt I didn’t, because every laxly else water tank. The noise of the train that lived there la dead.” drowned tils cries for help, and he was obliged to swim until the first stop Germany's Strict Laws, was reached at Alton. When taken m no country Is the government out he was nearly dead, but the engi more Atrl.-t than In Germany. If a for neer was so unfeeling as to call bls at eigner wishes to remain I d n town for tention to the fact tlint the water was some d*y> be must take hla passport only four feet deep, aud he might have to the police and receive In exchange stood up. The conductor, also unfeel for It. together with a sixpenny piece, Ing. asked him for hla ticket, but the a permit <’ard, which entitles him to tramp Bald Le had not come by rail, remain the »e for six months. The but by water.—Youth’s Companion. passport Is | dgeonlioled. If, however, you desire f> change your lodging Strangs Bequests. both you and your landlord must give In his »will Stephen Swain of the notice to the j Plica. Thia system rec pariah of St. Olave. Southwark, gave ommends Itself not a little, for It pre to John Abbott and Mary, bls wife, vents pauper inmigration No Ger sixpence each “to buy for each of man la allowed to leave the country them a halter for fear the sheriffs uuless he can :|h"»W he has done the should not tie provided,” and John military aervlc»» requ.*re'l °F him. • Aylett Stow left the sum of 5 guineas man Is on the point of Bt.'fting be must for the purchase of the picture of a delay bls departure until h«‘ **** " viper biting the band of Ills rescuer passport showing that be ■ fr,’e to be presented to an eminent K. C man. as a reminder of "hla Ingratitude and Insolence.”—Grand Magazine. Moisten ths Buttonhole. Every man knows the difficulty and Not Lika a Woman. agony of a refractory collar stud. With “nave you Interviewed that female I a breakfast to eat. a train to catch criminal?“ and an appointment to keep, few “I have tried to.” things are more maddening than the “Tried to?” collar which simply will not ally Itself “Yes, but abe refuses to talk.” to the stud But few things are so “Refuses tn talk! Head your article easy to remedy All that Is necessary 'Man In Disguise/ and make It three Is to dip the thumb and forefinger In columns on the flrat page.“—Houston water and slightly moisten the obsti nate buttonhole Then the stud slips Poet. In without a murmur. Chinee to Provi Himtilf. Rbe I would never marry a mao A Fast. who waa a coward. He—About bow De Rtytw- fall a man a brick and be brave would It be neceeeary for him feels plrnaed Gunboats He does De to bo In order to win your appro vail Style- Bnt call him a bard, red, Inani 8be Well, he'd bare to have courage mate, olilongated object and he’ll re enough to- er propone.—Chicago Nows. sent It. At Midnight. Rata, areordlng to a government bul Mamma -fib. no 1'aragnrlc would letin. eat IlflO.OOO.WD worth of grain annually, and yet in spite of rats and not ba good for him l’ape-Maybe rates the farmers manage to do pretty not, fiat I think It wwild ba good for well.- Kauaaa City Star. .. '■ I the rest of the family ML t. THE FREEZING PROCESS. " The