T j LLAMOOS HEADLIGHT, DECEMRSR 24, 1908.
WONDEñS OF THE SUN
Some Facts About That Colossal
Fiery Globe.
AN IDEA OF ITS GREAT SIZE.
, -----
Our Earth and Moon, ax Far Apart as
They Now Ara, Could Easily Move
Around In Ita Flaming Interior—Soma
of the Substancoa It Contains.
THE SWORDFISH.
MAGIC GLASS.
Overlord of th* Sea and tha Daintiest
Feeder That Swims.
The swordfish is the overlord of the
tea. Neither the whale, the shark nor
any other giant of the deep can con
quer him in private fight or public
brawl. Nevertheless he Is peaceful In
the main and seeks the simple life,
amusing himself often with worldwide
travel and always with delicate gusta
tory joys. He is the daintiest feeder
that swims, always kills his own game
and thereby Insures its freshness,
wherefore bls flesh Is a delight to the
palate of mankind and wherefore,
again, men go forth to kill him for
market and thereby at times fall upon
adventures that make the bunting of
tigers and the shooting of grizzlies pale
Into pastimes for the weary weakling.
For the bold swordfish Is still hunted
In mode ns primitive as that the Eski
mo uses to kill the stupid whale, and
jften the sting of the harpoon changes
this luxurious ocean gastronome into
a raging water devil, quick to perceive
bls advantage, charging with the speed
of a bullet and the accuracy of a
swordsman up against the lone fisher
man in the dory who tries to bring
hlni to gaff. Then must the fisherman
measure with exactness the lunge of
the monster, avoid It by a marvel of
ni e side «topping in a plunging dory,
cr he «« ill be spitted like a lark.—Wil
liam Inglis in Harper’s Weekly.
A Curious Mirror That May Bs Mads
Transparent.
One of the most curious inventions
of this age is what is called platinized
glass. A piece of glass is coated with
an exceedingly thin layer of a IfqulJ
charged with platinum upd then raised
to a red beat. The platinum becomes
united to the glass in su< b a way as
to form an odd kind of mirror.
The glass has not really lost Its
transparency, and yet if one places It
against a wall and looks at It he sees
bls image ns in ati ordinary looking
glass. But when llgit Is allowed to
come through the glass from the other
side, ns when It is placed in a window.
It appears perfectly transparent, like
ordinary glass.
By constructing a window of plati
nlzed glass one could stand < lose be
hind the panes in an unlllumlnated
room and behold clearly everything
going on cutside, while passersby look
ing nt the window would behold only
a fine mirror cr set of mirrors In whl b
their own figures would be reflected,
while the person lusl.le remained In
visible.
In France various tri. its have been
contrived with the all of this glass
In cne a person, seeing whit appears
to be an ordinary mirror. approaches
It to gaze upon himself, A sudden
change in the mechanism sends light
through the glass from the ba k.
whercu[>on ft Instantly becomes trans I
parent, and the startled spectator Anils
blmseif confronted by some grotesque
figure that bixl been bidden behind the
magic glass.—New York Tribune.
Astronomy does not always consist
of night studies. There are some things
to ba seen after darkness is gone, both
with glass and unassisted eye. The
dear old moon often gives us a good
daylight view of herself, looking as if
haggard, sleepy and disgusted after be
ing out overnight. The star Venus has
often been seen In the afternoon. Some
comets are on record as having ap
proached so near the earth that the
same could be said of them for weeks
at a time.
But of course the great day attrac
tion is the ruler of our own family of
brother and sister planets, the sun.
Although “medium sized" as com
pared to many of the fixed stars, our
sun Is no lightweight, being about
1,300.000 times as large as the earth. If
some great force could put us in the
CHANCES IN GAMBLING.
center of that ultra mammoth globe,
and the moon also (keeping her at the
same distance from us as she now Is), Ths Rule cf the Unexpected at the
Tables In Monte Carlo.
and there was another moon nearly as
There are systems, some will say,
far away from her, the earth, and the
SPEED LAWS OF 181G.
two moons and all the space between that will defeat the bank at Monte
them could still be contained in the Carlo. I have not found one. Two Ccaches Going Nine Mlles an Hour
factors settle all systems. One is the
great, sparkling sun.
Frightened the English.
Its distance from us Is 92,897,000 bank's limit, which prevents the dou
The outcry dally growing leudor in
miles, a very tedious little Journey If bling system so often advocated; the England against the excessive speed of
wfl could make it by customary meth second, the extraordinary Idiosyncrasies motor cars lends Interest to the fei
ods. You can find plenty of accounts of chance. Ited or black will often lowing passage from the Annual Regis
ip- books of how long It would take a run In long series. 1 saw fifteen reds ter for 181G:
railroad train to get to it, and you can < otne up in succession on one occasion,
A new coach was started In the
ascertain It yourself by a little figuring seventeen uneven numbers in an un spring to run to Brighton, a distance
You will learn, for Instance, that a lim broken series on another. One even of fifty-two miles. In six hours. • • •
ited express traveling 1,000 miles per ing on a losing day I was playing on This, however, became alarming, par
day would arrive at Sun station in rhe first six numbers and persistently
tf-'Ularly in the populous nel Thb-r’i'-tt’
nbout 254 years, during which time for some hours the last twelve num
of Newington, through which it passed
bers
Invariably
turned
up.
Once
I
saw
there would probably be a few deaths
and the parish officers there caused in
on th» train. If when the engine ar 21 come up four times in succession
formation to be laid ngaiust the d:-fv
rived It could give a blast of the whis when mathematically it should have
ers for driving furiously on the publl
tle loud enough to be heard here, the taken 144 coups to make it show that
road so as to endanger the lives of his
people at this end of the line would number of times, and still more strange
ma jesty’s subjects.
have to wait fourteen years before the rhat on this occasion each time It
The result of this Is to be rcr 1 In
signal arrived If it proceeded at the ■time up a gentleman had staked the
limit on the number—namely, 180 Mansard's “Parliamentary Reports."
usual velocity of sound.
But the eye. most wonderful of con francs—winning in ten minutes some June 10. 1810.
The attorney general moved for
veyancer, can traverse all that dis- thing over 24.000 francs. One readily
tance In between eight and nine tain- sees by these Instances the unexpected leave to bring in a bill the object of
tiles. It takes that length of time very often happens—in fact, more of which was the protection of the Ilves
for light to pass between the two ten that not.—Arthur Hewitt In Bo and limbs of his majesty’s subje- ts by
correcting the enormous abuses ot
hemian Magazine.
worlds.
stagecoach drivers. Within these few
XVhat ts the material of which that
days it would be hardly credible what
The Hog.
great fiery globe Is composed? The
No other animal has been more modi a number of applications he had re
following substances have been detect
ed by the spectrogcope and may be fied by civilization and none reverts celved on this subject.
Some accounts were enough to freeze
considered as surely a part of it: Bari more quickly to the original wild type
um, calcium, chromium, cobalt, copper, than the hoe. Three generations of one with horror. A gentleman of ve
running w“d suffice to turn the racity bad Informed him that on Tues
hydrogen, iron, magnesium, manga
nese. nickel, platinum, silicon, silver, smooth, round, short snouted razor day. May 21. at 5:30. the Trafalgar
sodium, titanium, vanadium. It • Is back or hazel splitter thin, lank, leggy, and Regulator coaches set off from
thought that the following substances lop eared, anarp snouted, an Ishmael Manchester and got to Liverpool at
are also there, although the proof, In bristles, ninnine like a deer, if run 8:20, doing this Journay In two hours
while strong. Is not absolute: Alumini ning be possible, fighting as only a fifty minutes, at the rate of twelve
um, cadtulnm, carbon, lead, molybde wild hog can fight when battle is im miles an hour.—New York Sun.
num, palladium, uranium and zinc. It perative The tusks, which have been
Fiji Islanders’ Sugar Cane Dance.
is a singular fact that gold has not .vet half obliterated tn the process of civi
A very curious and exceedingly elev
been discovered In this great golden lization. get back size and strength
At a year old they are formidable, at er dance may be witnessed in I'Ll call
orb.
The fact that “all Is action, n’l Is mo two murderous, at three or five more ed by the natives “the sugar cane
tion." not only In "this world of ours,” deadly than a sword They afford a meke,” or sugar cane dance.« It rei>-
but throughout our entire universe. Is certain Index of age up to six years, resents the growth of the sugar cane,
Illustrated by the sun. for. while nil the but are commonly broken in fights In the first figure the dancers squat
__ ______
... shake their
.uv.. ur.wa,
ground,
heads.
planets of our system nre revolving long before that time. Wild boars are lOW On the
around it. It Is not Itself still; it would very ill tempered and when worsted tn shut their eyes and murmur slowly
seem to be having a waltz of its own. fighting often revenge themselves by and softly an unintelligible sentence.
It turna on its axis, it has another mo ripping the bark from trees as high as Gradually they all stand up together,
growing taller and taller, and as they
tion about the center of gravity of the they can reach.
"grow” they wave their arms tiud
solar system, and. besides, It Is on its
tremble all over from ankle to bead,
way. with Its flock of planets, toward
Her Exercise.
some distant point In space at the
Many readers think Insufficient exer like the tall, tasseled cane waving In
rate of 9H0 miles per minute. These else Is responsible for worrying moods the wind, and still they keep on chant
facts and figures sound strange and
"Dare I whisper It.” writes one cor ing louder and louder. The last fig
hardly believable, but they have been respondent “Though I am a mnrrled ure represents a series of combats
demonstrated mathematically over and woman, with two bonnie bairns, when meant to symbolize the exactions ot
over again by astronomers of different my worries and temper prove too much the chiefs, who compel the “kaisl "
times and lands.
for me 1 shut myself up In my room willing and unwilling, to come and cut
Ona of the most interesting things and dance a wild Scotch reel. I al their crops.—London Standard.
to be seen upon the sun Is Its spots, ways did it when I got in a temper as
for this great king of planets Is not a child as a sort of vent to my feel
Ambulance Field Examination.
entirely Immaculate. Some think these ings. and I do It still and probably
Scene—Hamilton South Haugh; sol
are caused by cyclones, aome that they shall continue to do so as long as I’m dler supposed to have beeu wounded
are eruptions from within the sun’s sufficiently energetic.”
la brought to surgeon's teut by bear
surface. some by cool matter from me
Certainly a Scotch reel ought to pro ers. Bearer (reporting)—Severe scalp
teors falling Into the hotter atmos vide enough exercise to exorcise any wound, sir, accompanied with lusetisi
phere. and this last idea would seem demon of worry if lack of exercise is bility. Surgeon—Well, what have yo.t
the most sensible one. Such a great the cause of It.—Home Chat
done? Bearer—Dressed the wound, sir.
flaming furnace as the sun apparent
and gave him a little whisky and wa
ly 1». giving out life to a colony of plan
A Bad Quarral.
ter. Surgeon—Whisky and water! How
eta. must have food, and possibly the
“Why don't you try to get him to did you expect an Insensible man to
great heat giving, life Imparting crea straighten up?”
swallow that? Bearer—He axed fur't,
ture may when spots appear be taking i "He's his own worst enemy.”
sir.—London Illustrated Bits.
Its rations.
“Well?"
These spots. often thousands of miles
•It s pretty hard to patch up that
Tricks of the Trade.
in extent, although they look ao small kit d of a quarrel."-Louisville Courier
Buyers of patent leather should look
from earth, can many of them bo seen Journal
out for skins in which holes have been
with an opera glass. but It Is necee
neatly covered with a piece of thin
Dxscribing th» Climate.
aary to combine the Instrument with
paper which is varnished over,
“la your climate changeable?” asked finished side being puttied up the nu-
smoked glam, which can be fastened
wlth a
U|«on it with rubber bands either at tho the stranger.
mixture of glue and lentber dust.—
"Not very.” anawered Farmer Corn- ■ho*
eye or vf»w end - Brooklyn Eagl».
Manufacturers' Monthly.
•■«esel. "It keeps shiftin’ around a
’’•tie till It strikes a kind of weather
A Favor Appreciated.
Genius.
"1 bav» come to Inform you," said n«b««dy likes; then It sticks."—Wash
As diamond cut» diamond and one
• he young man who thought the firm Ington Star.
bone smooths a second, all parts of
would have to go out of business If
Intellect are whetstones to each other,
Just Lika Her.
he neut away, "that unless my salary
Hewitt I didn't know that yon lived and genius, which is but the result
is raised I shall have to sever my con
on the first floor. I understood your of their mutual sharpening. Is cbar-
nectfon with thia establishment"
•Tbauk you,’’ replied the general wife to say that you lived on the sec seter too.—Alfred Tennyson.
ond floor Jewett—If you knew my
manager.
"Am I to understand, then.” the wife you would know that she always
Nor “The Long Green.”
young man asked, “that you accede to stretches i a story —Exchange
HIcks They say that the blind can
my demand?”
distinguish colors by the sense of
"No
touch
‘ — That's nothing. One
■•hanked yon because yen
Thty Married,
Wicks
had »Be^xu^of an unpiessuat du-
Trot tier ( (who
*
_________
haa been
abroad)—Bo does»t bate to be blind to feel blue.—
ty. I ••*•»» bate to diacbarge
______
a man Maud and Charlie finally married? Boston Transcript.
who *111 be unable to hold a"job suy Miss Hosner —Yes. Trotter—I suppose
where else."- Chicago Recent Herald ’bev are happy
Mtss Homer-V»-
A Comparison.
doubtedly; they each married some
Tn s certain store there Is a salesman
Not until we know all that God one else,—Chicago News.
earned Green Small Clarence learned
knows can we estimate to the full the
his name and said. "Say. Mr Greets, I
power and the sac red nets of some one
IVbat do we lira for If not to make there a a man living two doors from ns
life which may seem the humblest in life less difficult to each other K-Qaoaaa who has a name tho same color as
the world—John Ruskin
Kliot.
yours 1"
HARNESS, COLLARS, etc.
You Use Them.
We Sell Them.
fl
f
Í
p
set of Abst^
in office. Taxes
*
Residents.
Office opposite
W. A. WILLIAMS & CO.,
■
i-v . t MB
A t T o » n E y .4 t .1
P q , a .
Pkoxe,.
Next Door to Tillamook County Bunk.
W.H-
I have 'ust opened up the most com-
píete line of
®
A ttornky - a T.L í |
T illamook ,
STAPLE & FANCY I
GROCERIES
1
haberla ^
C arl
ATTORNEYAT.Uti
©eutetlur 3^
in Tillamook, all new and Fresh. The
prices are no higher than others.
We must cordially invite you to
come and Inok at what we have and
get our prices., whether you buy or
not.
Office across the street
the Foxt Offia.
H. GOYNE,
A ttorney - at -L ai .
Office : Opposite Court H«
W. M. MILLS
T illamook , O mko ,.
A.
w. SEVERANCE,
A ttorney - at -L ai ,
PROPRIETOR
T illamook
» Tillamook Iron
»
4 General Machinists & Bia
4
4
4
4
smiths.
T. BOALS, M.D.,
Boiler Work, Logger’s Work and Heavy orging.
Fine Machine Work a Specialty.
w
PHYSICIAN
l
O regon .
T illamook ,
w w w 'rmr
Residence : Mrs. W«M' how,
Mrs. Wnlktr't.
J~^R. I. M. SMITH,
\
PHYSICIAN & SUR(
\ Office over J. A. Todd i
J. P. ALiHEHx Proprietor.
Tillamook, Ore.
Headquarters for Travelling Men
Special Attention paid to Tourists.
A First Class Table.
Office- Olson Building.
V
THE ALLEN HOUSE,
& SURGE!
TILLAMOOK.
:
-<r w v vv w ’V'A
The Best Hotel.
..
Comfortable Beds and Accommodation
w.
C. HAWK,
PHYSICIAN & si
PURITY
BAY CITI o:
above everything distinguished
'^p’HOMAS W. ROSS,
WEINHARD’S BEER
PHYSICIAN & SU1G1
From the Common
Office : Opposite Poit Ofc
Used ou the family table it turns a dry lunch
into an enjoyable sustaining meal, makes home
cheerful, keep the men at home and offers
effective aid to real temperance.
Residence : Allen House, TillisoA
R. BEALS,
Orders should be Sent to the
REAL ESTATE,
Columbia Bottling Co.,
Astoria, Oregon
F inancial A c
Tillamook, Oregot
~|~-)R. P. J. SHARP,
Agents for the H. Weinhard Brewing Manufacturers of the
Tillamook Rock Brand Carbonated Beverages.
RESIDENT DENT®
-FURS=HIDES
«>«.
•"«'I-'
-nU«,
IlhMrMlni .11 Far A.’ro.l.
All
• nd to become ■ me-
Office across the street fiffi'
Court House-
Dr. Wise’s office-
-4
ATA SARCHET,
i
A . The Fashion»bkTfl
Cleaning, Pressing and M
ing a Specialty’
1 lie Oregon Cheese Co., Incorported,
is prepared to buy all the first class
cheese that comes along. Spot cash
and highest price. Factory men will
do well to see R. Robinson, the mana
ger, before selling.
He will be in
Tillamook a good part of the time dur
ing the season, Only the best stock
wanted.
THE OREGON CHEESE COMPANY,
126 Fifth Street, Portland
Store in Heins Photog^q
Gallery.
OBERT A. MILLS’
ATTORNEY-AT-LA*' J
Land Titles, Land Oft«
uess and Miniof La*
PORTLAND,
Room. 306 Gommerò»***^
L and Orrtcs Brstxssx
a S fscultt
co**
OWING
*
lawyers -
Room Next to the US ux
roRVLASV, OR͔0'