Image provided by: Tillamook County Library
About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1908)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JUNE 18, 1908. r‘ THE GENTLE ALLIGATOR. BURIED ALIVE. FRIENDLY ANIMALS. Th« Intimacy B«tw««n Them and Man In Yallowatona Park. D m of the moat pleasant features of the drive through tbe Yellowstone Na tional park Is tbe apparent intimacy be tween mao and tbe animal and bird life In tbe park. Thanks to tbe wise and stringent regulstlpns. no shooting is allowed wltbln Its boundaries. "The result.” Buys an English tourist, "la (Hwltlvely charming. Hundreds of little chipmunks, wltb tbelr gaudy striped backs, scamper Impudently about or peer at tbe passing coacb from tbe roadside. Tbe squirrel did not bolt for tbe nearest tree, but nodded a wel come. All bird life treated us like wise. Even tbe lordly eagle hovered near, and the wild turkey stalked un concernedly through tbe rank grass. We perceived a doe and a fawn graz ing by tbe road. Not until we were wltbln a few feet did they seek tbe shelter of the woods, yet not to fly. They simply moved aside. Here at least mankind was regarded as a friend-one who could be trusted. The only animal who ran away was a brown bear He turned tall at tbe sight of a coaching party. Yet It was quite a common thing for bears to approach close to the hotels at evening to feed on the refuse thrown out. It was an after dinner relaxation for tbe guests to watch them feeding. They munched and disputed the choicest morsels, for the most part Indifferent to the com pany. Only when we became Inquis itive and approached too near did they retire, and these animals were perfect ly free and unfettered In their move ments. It may read like a fairy tale, but It Is solid fact." Tha Mods of Death Selected by a Chi nese Murderer. Rough Justice as It Is administered tn most parts of China is sometimes tempered by Individual tastes, as an ! Incident printed In oue of the China port Journals attest. A man In Sueblen. condemned to die, preferred to be , burled alive, and his wishes were car ried out to tbe letter. During the famine two brothers who lived In Bucbten fought desper ately to stave off starvation from their families and bad blood arose between them. At last the elder brother sold bis father's coffin for food. When he refused to divide tbe proceeds with bls younger brother the latter chopped off bls bead with a cleaver. Because it was too expensive to carry the murderer several scores of miles to the nearest yamen of Justice tbe local elders, including tbe father of the murderer, whose coffin had been sold, sat In Justice upon the culprit and condemned blm to death. He asked that be be burled alive Instead of re ceiving tbe horrible torture of tbe "thirty slices.'' The father Interceded with tbe other elders to get them to grant bls son's request. A grave was dug. and the rietini, with his arms and feet securely bouud. was trundled Is a wheelbarrow to tbe edge of the pit by his wife, There. upon the murderer's own request, bls bonds were loosed, and be walked to the grave, lowered himself Into it and was ready. The victim's wife put a felt hat over bis mouth as bls request, and then she helped tbe elders to till In the grave with six feet of earth. THE EAST INDIA COMPANY. TORTURED TO DEATH What Great Britain Owes to Holland snd Pepper. it is curious to remember that wheu England's commercial greatness was a-maklng her most serious rival was Holland. But the enterprising Dutch men ruined their chances by their greediness. Thero was a popular little couplet which ran: In matters of commerça the fault of the Dutch la giving too little and asking too much. The whole course of English pre dominance abroad might have been changed if tbe Dutch bad not "asked too much." In the closing years of the sixteenth century they had n trade monopoly wdth the East Indies, and they "put up” tbe price of pepper to such a point that the English consumer "struck." A meeting of London merchants made one December afternoon a deci sion the Importance of which to Eng land cannot tie exaggerated. It was nothing less than tbe resolution to form a London East India company. The petition of these merchants to good Queen Bess was granted In a royal charter of Incorporation. The company, founded at first to es tablish direct trade communication with the east and lower the price of pepper, soon took to Itself larger pur poses. Fleets of merchant ships came and went between England and India, «nd from tbe quarrel about pepper the corporation of merchants was des tined. through Clive and its "nabobs," to give England a vast empire.—Pear son's Weekly. The Horrible Fate of a Number of Regicides. The lot of the regicide when caught is not usually a very enviable one. To be hanged Is the least he can expect. Terpetual solitary Imprisonment Is a far more dreadful fate. It drove Brea ch the assassin of King Humbert of Italy, to suicide, and it transformed Luccblnl. who murdered the empress of Austria, Into a hopeless Imlieclle Among tbe plotters Implicated lu tbe murder of the late sbab of Persia one was tortured to death lu prison, while another was Incased in wet plaster ol parts, which on setting slowly crushed tlie life out of him. Three of tbe as sasslus of a previous shah were boiled alive In huge copper caldrons. So late ns the year 1831 tbe two Mavromlcbaells, who slew Count Capo d'lstra. the first president of Greece, were Immured within close brick walls built around them up to their chins and supplied with salted food, lint no drink, until they died. Damiens, who attempted the life of King Louis XV of France, was first barbarously tor- tured and then tom to pieces by wild horses. This punishment was curried out in one of the principal squares of Paris March 28. 1757. Bavalllac. who assassinated Henry IV. of France, suf fered a similar fate. The murderer of Selim III. of Turkey was publicly Impaled, lingering five and a half days In dreadful torment Those who did to death bls Immediate successor. Mustapba IV.. were tortured and starved on alternate days and de prived of sleep by night until death came to their relief.—Chicago News. The Reason. It was Washington's birthday, and the minister was making a patriotic speech to tbe children of tbe secondary grade. "Now. children," be said, "when 1 arose thia morning tbe flags were wav ing and the houses were draped with bunting. Wliat was that done for?" “Washington's birthday,” answered a youngster. "Yes." said the minister, "but last month I, too. hud a birthday, but no flags were flying that day. and you did not even know I bad a birthday. Why was that?" “Because," said an urchin. "Washing ton never told a lie." — Philadelphia Ledger. Mussels of Philippine. During August and September as many as 1.000 to 1.500 sacks, each con taining nearly 200 pounds of mussels, are dispatched every Wednesday from Philippine alone. Holland, Belgium and France are the best customers of the Philippine mussel farmers, but quite a number of the cherished shell fish find their way across the channel from the Dutch beds to the Britishers' dinner table, In I'hlllpplne mussels form, one may aay. the staple food of the population, They are consumed In every possible manner-stewed, fried. In soups. In gravies and with particular rellNh alive A Pitcairn Knowles In Wide World Magazine. A Retreating Chin. Nothing weakens a face more than a retreating chin. Unfortunately compar atively little can be done for It. It can l>e remedied to a certain extent In childhood by rubbing from tbe throat up and out. holding the bead well up during tbe process Sometimes, too, the trouble may be caused by tbe way the Jaws close on account of the post tlou of the teeth, and a good dentlat may often be of help Randages worn round tbe chin at night, so placed that the lower Jaw la forced forward, will Sometimes remedy the defect slightly, especially when begun on quite young children.—Exchange. Ueeleee Money. Languid Lannlgan After all Is said, pal. money ain't everyting Dry Dew gn n I knows ft frnm experience I wu list found a five dollar bill near de center uv a prohibition stata.—Puck. Net Attractive. "Was It a case of love at first sightT' asked the sentimental girl. "It couldn't have been." answered Miss Cayenne "When they first met be was wearing football clothes and she bad on her motor car costume "— Washington Star. Clothiers and Furnishers. * n “The Store That Makes Good Bargains in All Lines CLOTHING, HATS, SHOES and FURNISHING GOODS. A LARGE STOCK OF MEN’S GLOVE. Consisting cf Horse Hide, Calf Skin and Buck Skin, for Working and Driving. A fine line of Gauntlets of all kinds just received. Broken Lines in Shoes, Hats and Underwear at Greatly Reduced Prices. ECONOMY IN ITALY Roman Season the Only Time When Real Luxury Is the Rule. During the greater pait of the yeat we have only the servants that tiro necessary—my husband's valet.oue but ler. tbe porter who stands at tbe eu trance to tbe palace und a g.ueral utility country boy who In the after noon puts on a livery and acts as foot man. Tbe women servants are a cook a scullery maid, a laundress and two maids besides my own personal one This list is not as extravagant as the same would be In America. Wages are nothing by comparison One can get a good lady’s maid for $10 a month, a competent butler for $10 a cook for $10, a chambermaid for $0 Their fare would seem coarse to tbe spoiled servant of America, consisting, as It does, chiefly of bread, soup, mac aronl and fruit, with tea and coffee of an Inferior grade and fresh meat once a week. We spend nothing that we can possibly help until the Roman sea son. Then we have enough surplus to get an additional number of maids and a long row of footmen (these for th“ most part young women and men from the village of our own estate), and both In our country villa and In our Roman palace we open all the rooms that for elgbt months have been closed and for four months live In luxury.- An Expatriate In Everybody's Maga zine. ,0 O The The Angler Fieh. A singular superstition about the angler tish Is entertained in some parts of Sweden (Bohuslam. according to Malm and Smith "It is so feared by many that tbe tackle is cut as soon as the 'mouster' reaches the surfa e. and its captor hurries borne In order to get there, if possible, before the misfor tune portended by tbe monster over takes bltn." Tbe extreme of misfor An Anciant Susi Canal. It Is certain that In ancient times a tune-death- Is believed by some to lie canal connecting tbe Mediterranean indicated. Nilsson tells that tbe Swed and Red sens did exist. Herodotus as ish fishermen on tbe banks "believe cribes Its projection to Tharaoti Necbo. that on board the vessel on which an •WO B. C. The honor of Its completion angler is taken some one is dimmed to They therefore never ot Is given by some to Darius, by others die soon. to tbe Ptolemies. How long this canal hardly ever take the angler ou board, continued to be used we do not know, but prefer to cut tbe line and thus lose but. becoming dually choked up by tbe book with tbe tisb." An anemometrical faculty is attrib sand, it was restored by Trajan early uted to the angler in Massachusetts In the second century A. D. Becomlug again useless from the same cause. It According to Storer, “among tbe fisher- was reopened by the Caliph Omar, but met) In some parts of the bay there was dually closed by the "unconquer Is a common saying. 'When you take a able sands" about A. D. 767. In which goosefish, look out for an easterly storm.’ ” state It has since remained. This an cient canal, from Suer, to Bubastls. on A Human Foot Warmer. the east branch of the Nile. Wtt M It Is interesting to learn that Julius miles long, from 108 to ICO feet wide Caesar found our Celtic ancestors Just and 15 feet deep. suffocating themselves with smoke. Giraldus. tbe early Welsh historian, His Prayer. describes a family as sitting round O'Connell had got a man off at one tbelr smoky central tire by day and time for highway robbery and nt an lying rouud It by night. But they other for burglary, but on a third oc could have bad little comfort from it. casion, for stealing a coasting brig, the for tbe same historian tells us that one task of hoodwinking the Jury seemed of their princes eked out his fire with too great for even his powers of cajol a human foot warmer. This officer’s ery. However, be made out that tbe duty was to keep his master's feet crime was committed ou tbe high seas warm by cherishing them In his bosom ami obtained an acquittal. The prison during meals. For this puriswe he ar Ilf ted np his hands aud eyes to heav squatted under the table, and no doubt en and exclaimed. "May the Lord long It "did him proud" so to nurse the roy spare yon. Mr. O'Connell, to me.'”- al moccasins.-T P's London Weekly. Argouaut Thought Ho Was Smart. The Man With the Gnn (boastfully and cynically)— I have l>een engage) to at least a dosen girls. Miss Sweet Girl (looking annoyed!—And always tieen unlucky In love. eh? He—Oh. I don't know I've never married any of them What?—Philadelphia Inquirer. TODD & CO ■J Getting Him Out Into the Open For the Camera Man. I have seen a barefoot boy when the alligator refused to respond to bls call wade In tbe mud to bls waist, explore with bls toes till be felt the wiggle of tbe gator beneath them, tbeu worry blm to the surface, grab blm by tbr nose before be could open bis Jaws anti tow the creature ashore to be phoo graphed. When an alligator that we were bunting era «led into bls eave I held a noosed rope over his mouth while tbe boy poked a stick through tbe mud until It bit tbe creature in bls bldiug place, and soon I bad biu snared, ready to be dragged out on tbe prairie and tied, to be kept till th. camera man w’as ready for blm; then we turned tbe reptile Ico3e on a bit ol prairie, and tbe boy and I. armed with sticks, beaded him off when he tried to escape, w hile tbe camera man. with bis bead in tbe hood of bls Instrument, fol lowed the creature about, seeking fot evidence in the case of reason versus Instinct. When the camera man was through with him the alligator w as set free, a final shot belug taken at blm ns lie walked off Our hunter boys could never be imnle to comprehend our rea sons for restoring to tbe creatures their freedom They understood tbe photo graphing, but when this was done wb.. not collect a dollur for the re| lie's hide? Their manner Implied that tn this question no sane answer was pot slide -A. W Dimock lu Harper's Mag azine. TODD & CO., Tillamook. Ji Opened Up for Business is erecting a plant at PORTLAND, OREGON for the manufacture of their world famous PORTABLE WELL DRILLING MACHINES for water, oil, gas, etc., etc. A moderate amount of money will start you in a profitable business. i Spare minutes are tbe gold dust of Don't Imagine you are a good con time, tbe portions of life moat fruitful versationalist Just because you talk a tn good or evil, the gaps through which good deal — Atchison Globe. temptations enter —Mrs. Thrall. A pull Line of Groceries, Flour, peed, Tintuare, and Crockery STAR PORTABLE DRILLING MACHINES have been proved by Competitive Tests to be The Best In The World. For full particulars regard ing well drilling machines, tools, supplies, etc., write to We CUant all Kinds of Produce. Call and See Us THE STAR DRILLING MACHINE CO. k PORTLAND, OREGON, or AKRON, OHIO, Olsen Buildina ooPosii»th» iiuiuy, Tillamook Jioti va THE MAN WHO SWEARS BY THE FISH BRAND SLICKER. is the man who has tried to get the same service out of some other make I To the Public Having bought the Feed and Im pie* ment Business of B. O. Snuffer in this city, I am prepared to furnish everything in the Implement line. Good goods at honest prices. Give me a call. Yours for business, CLARENCE HANENKRATE Clean Light-Durable Guaranteed Waterproof and Sold Everywhere at $300 IU.UITMT10 CATALOG Oil ntf THC A,KINO A ‘ co QO.'OO O * ■ OOOhuhb fiuA. 'lui tuYVIfiU ¡fl Ml i ti< .LIGHT RUNNING D“ A. D. PERKINS, KILL ths coil; AND CURE THK LUI RESIDENT DENTIST. wm* Dr. King’s New Discowl Office in Olsen Building. All Work Guaranteed. TILLAMOOK. OREGON. F0RC8K C Millan Photo Studio, Opposite the Post Office. M ANO ALL THROAT AND LUNSTN^ GUARANTEED SATISFACE OB MONEY »EFUNDI» Portrait-, Views, Enlargements, Crayons. Why He Wa- Angry. “You made « mistake In your paper." said an indignant man. entering the ed itorial sanctum of a dally journal. "I i Jfvon want cithers Vibrating Shuttle. Rotary shuttle or a S: nulo Tlirrad (Chain St.lchJ was one of tbe competitors at an atb I s-- eIng Machine write to letlc entertainment last night and you THE NEW NOTE IE WHO MACHINE COMPANT referred to me as 'the well known Orange, Mass. Manv -wi-, i. h at • n..1-to »ell r-cardlect at lightweight champion.* " sual.lr, 1111 the New IImuv is made 17 wear. "Well, are you not?" Inquired the : Our vuaranty never runs out sporting editor. Aol<l b, ■nihorlaol desierà only, "No. I'm nothing of the kind." was rva sals sv the angry response, "and It's confound E. T. H ALTON, Agent. edly awkward, because I'm a coal dealer"— Philadelphia I .edger Deafness Cannot be Cured Thought fir Was Going to Shave. Tbe new rubber In tbe Turkish bath had formerly been a barber Ths Sign of Wedlock. Thus It was when his first patron Rhe-What Is the proper formula for came In that the new rubber looked a wedding announcement? He—I know him over and said pityingly. "Wash wbat Is ought to be She—What? He— yourself sometimes, don't you?"— Lou la- "Re It known by these presents."—Bal rille Courier-Journal. timore American. SAPPINGTON & CO EVERYTHING FOl PHYSICIANS’ prescription ^ Did Vou Ever Try HARRIS'S NEW FEED AND LIVERY BARN, If not, give hitn a cal1. Everything first-class. Second block South of P O. w. g . H arris , bv local application«, as they cannot reach the | di mm » «cd portion of the ear. There ia only one I H. GEMXRR way to cure deatneae. aud that ia by conatitn- | tlona) remedic* P«afnea* ia cauaed by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the] bu*tachian Tube When this tube get* inflaiu- i ed you have a rumbling *ound or imperfect hearing, and when it la entirely closed, deafnesa is the result, and un raa the inflammation can ; be taken out and thia tul • reutorud to its nor- | mat condition, hearing will be destroyed to»- | ever, nine ca*»s Mt «»f tt« ate rau«ed by Catarrh which is nothing but an inflamed con dition of the mucous surfaces We will gn-e One Hundred Dollars for any I case ot Deafness (caused bv catarrh) that can- ' not be cured by Hail a Catarrh Cure T * * circular», free. send fot . on|y Exclus! F. J CHKXKY fc CO . Teledo, O. Sold by Druggists, -sc. Take Hall s F amxly PtUa for cooslipatiou. I Prop. _______ W. WOLFE. :■ ■■ ■ - - GESSNER & WOLFE, 4 ■ Practical Painters. Agent for Acme Paints, Var- nishes and Brushes, ve Painlhouse in Tilla mook County. OPPOSITE ALLEN HOUSE. We specialize on present ntt'’* compounding and thefts carry a stock which repff1 ««•ntg everything that pb'* cians hereabout are likdv W prescribe. All ne»v pharmaceuticals are here** soon as out and our lu*'’1 prescription dru#« is plete at all times. Onlvf0^ of highest purity and q«**’ are ever used. Physicians who arc 9u*inted with our stock*" methods invariably M °/ best results from the c*nes they have presrfiW when they see our label 09 the bottle. Expert services dav or sifbt- Prices as low as ativwbfrf- Mav we fill your CHAS. I. CLOVG8 Reliable DrW* Tillamook, Ort-