Image provided by: Tillamook County Library
About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1909)
TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, OCTOBER 28, 1909, r tí 15 Days at Our Risk . JmL I 1 Buy any piece off this ware from your dealer—fry it fifteen days. if H in that time you find that ail the claims we make for it are not true, and if it is not just as represented, take it back and gei your money. A own •vice nse s of and pate in ally and ■ting 1 otl les a 'Ise. enti i han to ehes. modi «ash wisi I ear • va- ousa sud -lolla terri >uld. I3M low ve a ndre< we c 38 to kr th hree IL OV ENAMELWARE CAUSES CANCER, SAYS DOCTOR Telia Homoeopaths Particles From Dishes Start Growth, in Stomach. Special Dispatch to The North American. ATLANTIC CITY, Sept. 11. NTRODL’CTION of mod ern enamel ware in the kitchens of the country is responsible for many cases of cancer, was the strik Ing theory advanced by Dr. William II. Dleffanbach, of New York, In a paper en titled. “Observations on the Etiology of Cancer,’’ read before the Bureau of Sani tary Science and Pub lic Health, at which leading experts of the International Homoe opathic Congress met today to discuss ques tions of publie health. The argument advanced was that chip ping of the hard-coated dishes used In prep aratlon of meals allowed minute but dan gerous particles of foreign matter to become mixed with the food. These are taken into the stomach, where the cancerous growth is caused by abrasions which they make in the Wftll» Of the organ. —Clipping from Philadelphia North American, Sept. 12, 1000. t fai •dori mint r wi me fhtfi tr rn «h b the our as t in s a I fl] ' K J ’omj life g la ' rig 27 30 t R< •a tic cal I. ( :hy < han i hop lump o 8 23 15 0 9 (rain dirai i Ho 41g - 4-y 1 ¡cal Tl orea. •;est8 Here at last is the ideal kitchen and cooking utensil— "The Ware That Wears”— made from Pure Spun Aluminum, and guar anteed by the makers to last 25 years with average usage. "Spun” Aluminum, mind you, not cast Aluminum, which will sometimes crack and scale, Spun Aluminum Ware will never crack, peel, scale or break. Enamel ware is iron coated with colored glass, Iron ex- pands with heat. Colored glass does not, but chips off into the food with dangerous results to those who eat it. See newspapermen pping. “1892” Pure Aluminum Ware Saves Doctors’ Bills. It enables you to baKe bread, pies, pancakes, etc., without grease, which is the great cause of dyspepsia and indigestion. Aluminum gridles require no grease; hence are smokeless and odorless. | ; ' “1892” Pura tefani3 Ware Will Mot Scorch or Burn —is easily cleaned, will not rust or corrode. Handsome in appearance. Looks Eke silver, but weighs only about one- fourth as much, and is light and convenient to handle. George III. and ths Wlgmskers. In the Old Germanio Wilderne« When George 111- ascended the throne of England bls wealthy sub jects were beginning to leave off wigs and Io appear lu their own hair, if thev had any.” As the sovereign was himself one of the offenders. Hie per uke makers, who feared a serious loss of trade, prepared a petition in which they prayed bls majesty to be gra ciously pleased to "shave his head” for the good of distressed workmen and wear a wig. as bis father had done be- fore him. When the petitioners walked to the royal palace, however, it was noticed that they wore no wigs themselves. As this seemed unfair to the onlook ers they seized several of the leading processionists aud cut their hair with any Implement that came most readily to band. From this incident arose a host of curious caricatures. The wooden leg makers were said to have especial claims on the king’s consideration. In asmuch as the conclusion of peace had deprived them of a profitable source of employment: hence the suggestion that Ills majesty should not ouly wear a wooden leg himself, but enjoin the people to follow his laudable example. leaving Mummelsee ou a maty morning, you enter a green underworld of strange dew bediamund brilliance Bkirt the head of a deep southward looking valley ami emerge unou a sunny opeu plateau beyond Eekle and look dowu upon Wlldsee. circled by dark pines of au uuluuelied forest that stretches away to the blue and distant hills. It is easy here to Imagine your self back in the heart of the old (¡er- manic wllderne:-«. lu the heroic days when Hagen slew Siegfried with a coward s blow. The morning sun glints upon bright spear tops among tin- trees and the wind brings snmrliis . ,f r > - , war songs shouted by barltnrmt Your heart swells with the lust .q tie and the chase, and It you German blood iu your veins i back through the dark middle a , that dim and mystic youthday of H|H world when heroes met at the Karen na Schlacht. Within the hi,nr find yourself buck in the twent century among motorcars draw beside the hostelry nt Ruhestein w I the Hohenweg drops into the .co- place and crosses the government m cadam before climbing the steep si. of the Rothe Schliffkopf. From ■ Black Forest Pathway." bv Frede-1 Van Beuren. Jr., in Scribner’s. Ax Others See Us. > The original and only genuine Span Aluminum Ware is made by the Illinois Pure Aluminum Co. at Lemont, Ill. Every piece bearing their trade-marK, the Maltese Cross, and marKed “1892” Pure Aluminum Ware is absolutely pure, wholesome and hygienic—guaranteed far 25 yrs. See that you got the right goods and accept no substitute. "The man who can pick out the best picture of himself is a rare bird." said a photographer. "Even an author, who is reputedly a poor judge of his own work, exercises vast wisdom in select ing his best book compared with the person who tries to choose his best photograph. Every famous man or woman who has been photographed repeatedly has his or her favorite pic ture. Usually it is the worst in the collection. It shows hint or her with an unnatural expression, sitting or stauding in an unnatural attitude. The inability to judge of his best pic ture must be due to the average man's ignorance ot how he really looks, or perhaps it can be partly attributed to a desire to look other than he does. A stout man will swear that the photo graph most nearly like him is the one that makes him look thin, a thin man the one that makes him look stout, the solemn man selects the jolliest picture, the jovial man the most cadaverous.— Philadelphia Ledger. A Famous Quotation. Verdi and Bismarck on Title: The composer Verdi was offer d ■> title of nobility by King Victor . nianuel. it was intended that itesh. be created Marquis or Comte de I seto. after the estate upon with h lived. The composer refused the oflur energetically. He considered that \erdi was somebody and that the .Marquis de Busseto would be nobody. Even Bismarck was unable to parry a blow of this character. When the young emperor broke with him he conferred upon bint the title ot l>nue of Lauenbourg. Bismarck received the parchment with this exclamation: "A pretty name! it will be handy for traveling incognito.” Some days after a parcel arrived at Varzln bearing tiie address "Mute, la Duchesse de Lauenbourg." Bismarck, to whom it was delivered, being then at table, arose and. offering the letter to his wife, remarked iron ically: "Duchess, enchanted to make your acquaintance!” A story about Keats is quoted by the late Sir Benjamin Ward Richard Faithful to His Trust. son in his "Lives” of disciples of I was wailing near the elevator in Aesculapius. Mr. Stephens, a friend the factory building for my friend to of the doctor, once told him that one come down when I noticed a small boy evening at twilight when he and sitting in one corner of the hall hold Keats were sitting together in their ing a large, thick sandwich. He eyed student days. Stephens at his medical the sandwich lovingly for a long time, "r books. Keats engrossed in his dream then be carefully lifted off the top ing. Keats called out to his friend slice of bread, took out a piece of dill that he had composed a new line—“A pickle, ate it and replaced all as tie- thing of beauty is a constant joy.” fore. In a few seconds he again re The Steel Men Are Happy. ‘'An ideal wife would not spend $25 False Report against Republicans high price of meat is the swollen for. "What think you of that, Stephens?” moved the top piece, extracted a piece tunes of the Chicago packers. a week on a $20 salary. ’ ’ The dinner given by the independent “It has the true ring, but is wanting of pickle and a piece of meat and re Mr. Taft was very properly indignant * * * “One that does not spend three parts steel manufacturers of the country in some way,” replies the latter as he placed the^top. Again and again the at the effrontery of one of the talkers at Circling the Eiffel Tower in an aero dips once more into bls medical stud of her time gadding w ith the neighbors. ’ ’ hi New York to Elbert’H. dray, the performanc s repeated until all rhe the reception in Albuquerque, who said plane is easy work compared with get ’’One that has the breakfast dishes pickle ntidT’ «st ail the meat were head of the United States Steel Cor that ’’If the Republicans, in the conven- j ting around Uncle Joe Cannon with a ies. Au interval of silence, and again the gone, the s’ « ich. however, appear poration. was far enough out of the washed when her husband comes home tion of 1908, had refused to promise to bill he doesen’t like. poet. ” ’A thing of beauty is a joy for ing intact as ie beginning. ordinary course of thing to attract to supper.” admit New Mexico and Arizona to state M * * ever.* What think you of that, Ste “Why don’t,eat up your sand “One who keeps her home neat and hood the Gompers anti-injunction plank , wide attention. As the independent President Taft imagined himself to ebe phens?” wich and not pick at It in that way?' steel men are all rivals of each other, tidy.” would have forced itself into the Republi a pretty big man until he saw the Grand “That it will live forever.” I asked the boy with some curiosity. “ One who does not harrass the life and as all of them are, in their smaller can platform.*’ He added. “Now that Canyon of the Colorado. The Grand A happy prophecy Indeed! "Why.” be answered, looking up Held c<>iu|>etitor8 of the steel trust, and soul out of a man.” the Republicans have entered into a con- | Canyon dwarfs everything and over with great innocence. “It ain't my “ One who'enjoys hisjprosperity and is over which Mr. Cary presides, the tract on the subject, possibly they mav ' awes everybody. The Forests on the Niger. sandwich.”—Woman's Home Compan welcome to him which has just been ready to sympathize with him in ad let the territories in.” Mr. Taft’s re-! The insects of Africa are expert dis ion. * * * given shows an era of good feeling versity and helps to make the home .«ponse was prompt and pointed ; “Lest | It is apparent that the Peary-Cook- ease carriers, and they come in such Where Women Swim Best. among the men of that important happy.’’ it may go on without contradiction, I Mount McKinley-North Pole contro numbers on the Niger that one hardly “One who thinks more of her children “The Korean women are the best branch of trade which was not known, want to say right here that there never versy has come to stay, and that the dares to use one’s lamp or go too near a light of any sort at night. These swimmers in the world." said a life in the past, and such as would not be than a bull pup. ” was any chance of the passage of what Ananias Club will gain tremendously in forests on the Niger are deadly places guard. “The Korean pearl diving Is In “A women with more gray matter in looked for in any great Held of iu Mr Gompers requested in the Republi membership. for all their bauuting attraction and their bands. They swim—they don't her upper story than red paint on her dust ry. * n * can convention. The resolution that 1 take a big toll both of European and boat—they swim out to the pearl fish President Taft may have been too out But the difficulty which the steel i busybody face.’’ wanted the convention topass on the j native life. Yet the first three days on eries of Quelpart, lugging baskets with “A woihen who dresses well is remem manufacturers, small and great, meet subject ot injunctions was defeated, and i spoken in telling the people of Arizona the Niger, with all its mud and its them. After this swim of halt an hour bered more (or herself than her clothes. ’ ’ now is not the competition of rivals, a resolution milder in form was put in I and New Mexico to avoid the Oklahoma smell and its mangrove flies and its they dive down fifty feet and fetch up “A women who cares more tor her but the endeavor to fill their orders the platform. This is historv, and I don’t plan of erecting a state, but it was good frogs and its crickets, are enough to queer one shelled pearl oysters its big on time. In most of their workshops home and children than for afternoon want history to be recorded other than advice nevertheless. give the newcomer an inkling of the as babies. They dive till their basket« * * * drawing power, the fascination, of are full—the baskets are corked to the oiders which are ahead would bridges and parties.’’ as we understand it to be.” It would be perfectly agreeable to the what is probably the most unhealthy keep them afloat—and after three or “A women who realizes the value of keep them busy for five or six months, Every Republican in the country will Department of the Interior to have Gif country in the world.—W. B. Thomp four hours' work they swim back if not another request were received oeroxidies as a distinfectant. not as a applaud the president for his repukc to ford Pinchot detailed to command the son in Blackwood's. home with their catch. The big one m the interval. The home demand so ! hair dye.’’ this prevaricator. The time to expose a expedition that is to ascend Mount Me shelled oysters are valuable as pearl ”A women who does not consider her | far exceeds the supply that railways falsehood is at the moment whe’i it is Kinley in search of Dr. Cook's records. Dodging a Slander. mines and ns food too. A half dozen and other large interests which want I home complete when it consists of her uttered. This was the first appearance During a suit for slander brought in Koreans will sit down to an oyster as * * * self, her husband and a dog. ’ ’ iron and steel fabrics are, in many ' ot this particular piece of mendacity. Mr. Barrie has made thousands of an Ohio town one of the parties was gayly as you or I sit down to a broiled “A women who reads, understands 1 Gompers, Mitchell and a tew other lead instances, compelled to go outside of lobster. Sometimes when the great women love him, hut the women he asked by the presiding magistrate: the country to get thviu. This is om ( and obeys her Bible.” "is It true, as alleged, that you de shellfish is eaten raw it quivers and ers of the American Federation of Labor, loved and made his wife has found Dr. Danger in his sermon advocated a j of the reasons for the heavy imports | all of them Democrats, had, in January another man she loves more, and one. clared that Thomas Mulkins bad stolen moans slightly as the knife Is plunged at this time The imports of mer- , combination of tiie ideas presented. Es and February, 1908, at tempted to coerce ■ too. who could never make a Peter Pan your pocketbook?” Into it."-Philadelphia Bulletin. “Your honor," responded the man, chandise are close to the highest point pecially should a women be neat and 1 a Republican Congress into the enact or any kind of a pan, and who, perhaps, ' i did not go so far as that. I merely The Man and the Lion. litly, keep herself nicely dressed, always of the past. ment of legislation which would, in labor would not even know how to open a said that if Mulkins bad not assisted “When I was once in danger from a It is evident now that steel making 1 have the meals ready when her husband j contests, virtually legalize the boycott pot. me in looking for the pocketbook 1 lion,” said an old African explorer. "I is at tiie lieginning of an era of ex arrives home, love her children and home, and abolish the injunction. might have found it.”—Chicago Rec tried Bitting down Httd staring at him. read the Bible .faithfully and go to I pansion which will carry it abo*e ord-Herald. as I had no weapons." the highest point of the past. In Sep church regularly.—Philadelphia Record. The only visible justification for the I fQr chUdrdni raft, turd. Nd tplattt “How did it work?” asked his com tember the pig iron output was 2,38),- ! Before and After. panion. She was a frivolous, fashionable 000 tons, which broke all the records "Perfectly. The lion didn't even of young woman with beaux galore, but fer to touch me." for u month. Tina would mean » one man with only a small Income "Strange! How do you account for production of over 28,000,000 tuna foi I seemed to be the favorite. ttr u year, which would be greater than the “You'll have to work hard before “Well, sometimes I've thought it record twelvemonth of 1007, when the I you win that girl," said his mother. because I sat down on a branch of * production was 95,781,000 tone. Aa the ! "And a good deal harder after you very tall tree." yield iu the early half of the year was win her," answered his father, who comparatively small, the 1909 aggregate knew what he was talking about Very Queer. will hardly reach that of two years ago, "My husband has been out late every just before the panic. But from present ' Hi» Poems. evening this week attending Important May I offer you this little gift, Frau club tflbetlngs.” indications 1910 will go far beyond the lein Kate?” 191'7 figure in iron and steel production. “Yes, so has mine. They belong to Excuse me—1 never take present» the same club, you know." The jubilance of the steel mill men at the from men.” “Why, how queer! My bushand say* Gary dinner is easily accounted tor. Re “But It is only a copy of my book of he hasn't seen your husband in 8ii publican pros|writy is with them, as it poems.” months!"—Cleveland Leadei. will be with the rest of the country be "In that case I will accept. I thought fore the present calendar year closes. It was something valuable.”—Fliegende Pure Aluminum Souvenirs given away free during this «ale. fOLETSHONEY«®TAR FARMERS READ THE WEEKLY OREGONIAN OF PORTLAND > For the general news of the More Men Give Views As to Model Wife. The Some interesting mnscnline views as to what constituted an ideal helpmate were stated last evening by Rev. Dr. Forrest E. Hanger of St. Paul's Reform ed Episcopal Church, Broad and Venan go atreets, who preached on "A Modal Wife ’’ At his request various male members of the congregation sent him letters expressing their opinions on this interesting subject, and these he read, to the great wonder and edification of the large number of women pteseut. Some t the views expressed follow: I World also for information about liow io obtain the best results in cultivating the soil. Stock Raising, Fruit G rowing etc. You can secure this excellent paper by Subscribing for the Headlight. Both Papers for $2.25. The Place For It. An old Scotswoman was advised by ber minister to take snuff to keep her self awake during the sermon. She .rt8klr' "Whr dlcn« y« Put the snuff in the sermon, mon?" ^e Shake. What did you My last night when ' ack you to marry him?'' ’ I shook my bead.” "Sideways or up and down?"-Bos- ton Transcript. 11Tb*r'> p'*t7 *n k^P’ng »n un just promise.-German Proverb. The Way She Dressed Him. “What do you want to be when you grow up?” was asked of a small boy by the visitor. “Ob,” said he, “I want to be a man. but I think mamma wants me to be a lady.”—Ladles’ Home Journal. The Experienced Father. Wife-My dear, the nursery needs re- decorating. What would you sugge* for the walls? Husband-Corrugated iron.—Woman's Home Companion. A Food Expert. “What la a “Any man buy enough Philadelphia food expert?” who can make his for the family table - Ledger —