T illamook
iranui
s Theory Is That It Is the
Star Alcyone.
CENTER
OF
GRAVITY.
to the Astronomer, the
d Star of the Pleiades 1» the
Ground Which All Created
Within Our Ken Revolves.
Ben tbe dream of all tbe ro-
trouumers since tbe time of
■ to prove tbe existence of a
in. says Lawrence Hodges.
1 the New York Tribune. By
ant a heavenly body as much
in tbe sun as tbe sun itself
than tbe earth, round which
with all Its plauets. must re-
lt has been proved tbat tbe
all its satellites are rushing
through space with enormous
but whether the. motion was
light line or a circular path
proved for some time.
eu if it was proved a curved
1 that there probably existed
il suu tbat transcended the
lord In size, why couldn’t we
The only answers are that it
jave to be nonluminous or else
«ay that the light hadn't reacb-
et. But If all the stars, includ-
■ sun. were children of this big
st as tbe earth is tbe cbild of
I and tbe moon of the earth,
rould have bad to have been
iff from tbe big aun with a
velocity than tbat of light in
or tbe big sun not to be visible
II be luminous; also tbe big suu
have to be luminous if any of
dren were, for tbat is tbe ln-
e law of tbe henvens. So the
0 simmered dowu to finding a
group of stars that would take
ice of the central sun.
motion of the solar system hav
en settled as to fact, quantity
Irectloo. astronomers set about
| the center of gravity of the
astral system, for there. If any-
the central suu was to be
A11 astrouomer named Mad-
lught be bad found tbe star to
tbe ue< essary conditions in the
latlon known as Taurus, or the
A closer search proved tbe spe-
ir under examination to be lack-
some of tbe conditions, so this
us left aud the search begun
This same astronomer persist-
bls search with a wonderful
u bis theory and at last fouDd
fulfilling in tbe most wonderful
jojpiete manner tbe necessary
ous. Every one Is familiar with
autiful little cluster kDown ns
Hades, or seven stars. Tbe teles-
however, shows fourteen stars
-ed about tbe beautiful aud brll-
itar Alcyone. which is the op-
rnter of ibis group.
proper motions of all these have
etertniued with great exactness,
ire all in tbe same direction and
nearly equal to each other, and.
a still more Important, tbe mean
ir proper motions differs from
f the central star. Alcyone, by
>oe-tboiisaDdtb of a second of
right ascension and by only
ousaadths of a second in decli
ne re. then, is fouud a mag-
t group of suns either actually
together aud sweeping together
11 space or else composing a
so situated as to be affected
saute apparent motion produced
sun's progression through tbe
il regions.
in extension of ibe limits of re
round Alcyone exhibits also tbe
fol truth tbat out of 110 stars
vltbln 15 degree» of this center
ire sixty moving »outb-tbat is,
tame direction—in full accord-
1th tbe hypothesis that Alcyone
ttDter. forty-niue »bowing prnc-
»0 motion, while only one sin-
lvidual that moves at all con-
) tbe computed motion. Thus
Mier's profound speculation
L Furthermore, assuming Al
ia tbe grand center of the mil
itary composing our astral sys-
I the direction of tbe suu’s mo
bs as before mentioned. Mad-
Ntlgnted tbe consequent move-
•fill tbe stars in every quarter
tosven«
■here the swiftest motions
1 be found In accordance with
■option there they actually ex-
Htber demonstrating the truth
theory or else show lug a well
Msxlble aeries of coincidences,
•v the concluson given out by
b that Aly roue, tbe principal
lb» Pleiades, now occupies the
< gravity and to at present the
M<ral sun about which tbe unl-
< «tars and all created matter
”>r ken Is revolving, each en-
•»•wn special path.
FOOLED THE CITY.
headlight ,
Th«lr M.theds In Battl« and Thsir
System of Signals.
At fighting <>u horseback the .Muon
• re adepts »lid extremely mobile. Kill
they are Incorrigibly lazy au<| «elilom
indulge in aiglit attack. When they
attack In force the liorseuien usually
give 11 lift to tbe foot soldiers who ac
company tbeiu or allow them to run
alongside and hold oil to a stirrup iron.
Tbe uioiiiiled uieu then make a charge,
wheel round aud retire and make way
for the footmen, who crawl along the
ground, almost invisible, and who rise
to tbe attack if they couie within strik
ing distance of tbe euemy. As a rule,
the Rlffiuus prefer to lure detached
parties into au ambush or defile and
thus inflict heavy loss U|K>n them. The
mounted men seldom dismount to lire,
aud their tiring, being from Ibe sad
dle. to very inaccurate. Should the ad
vance of tbe white troops be slow or
hesitating the Moors iffect a bold
combination between borsemeu aud
footmen nnd geuerally succeed in In
flicting heavy losses on tlielr euemy.
The prime tactic» of the .Moors are to
delay the advance of nn enemy ns
much as |>osslble by mouuted rifle tire
uutil they can discern Its extent and
direction and subsequently to try en I
veloping the advancing force. Tbe
tribes also indulge In sniping, but not
to a very great extent, aud they also
fight Individually. They do not neglect
opportunities for stratagem and cau
effect some very clever ruses. They
are also guilty of abusing tbe services
of tbe white flag in action.
Tbe Moorish Intelligence system Is
an excellent one. and the tribes are
seldom without Information regarding
the movements of an enemy. They
have also an excellent system of sig
naling nt night by means of small tires
dotted about the bills and ravines,
whl h are obscured and revealed In
accordance with an Ingenious code of
signals kuown to themselves.—Chicago
News.
J. R. HARTER.
Real Estate and
Financial Agent
Insurance.
OFFICE
--BEE —
BAY CITY. OREGON.
Cesi no more than others.
Don’t buy uutij you investigate.
Let us send yon our catalogue.
Ask us about the 1910 automobiles-
you won’t regret it.
CbERNINC & PRESSING
neatly done
Automobile Salesroom,
at the
Chapman aud Alder Sts. PORTLAND.
Wagons and Buggies:
330 E Morrison St, PORTLAND.
EYES AND TEETH.
«
V*
«
You spend from $5.00 to $20.00 per year on your teeth
and think nothing of it.
Which would you prefer to loose .
YOUR EYES or YOUR TEETH ?
Your eyes can be looked after from <1.00 to about <8.00.
and this will be the total expense for about 3 to
5 years, and often a ureat deal longer.
Remember you can get NEW TEETH, tint not NEW
EYES. What VALUE do you place on YOUR
EYES ? What per cent of insurance would you
pay to keep them as good as at present ?
Make yourself a ’Xmas, present of a pair of glasses *
All work guaranteed to tie satisfactory in every respect.
Dr. Henry E. Morris.
V*
Did You Ever Try
HARRIS’S NEW FEED AND
LIVERY BAHN,
If not, give him a call.
Second
block South of P.O.
w. g . H arris , Prop.
I
KILL the COUCH
and
CURE
the
LUNGS
. King’s
New Discovery
WITH
Achievements Born of
Visions In Sleep.
It Is well known, says H. Addington
Bruce in Success Magazine, that
dreams have stimulated men to re
markable intellectual achievement»
and have even supplied the material
for these achievements, Thus Cole-
ridge composed “Kublnl Kbao" in a
dream. Tartinl got bis "Devil's So-
nata" from a dream In which the devil
appeared and challenged him to a mu
sical comnetitlon. It was a dream that
gave Voltaire tbe first ennto of his
"Henriade." and Dante's “Divina Com
media'' Is likewise said to hare been
inspired by a dream.
Many novelists on tbelr own admis
sion hare obtained the plots for «orne
of their best works from materials
provided In dreams. A particularly
Impressive Instance Is tbat of Robert
Louis Stevenson, whose ‘"Chapter on
Dreams" In bls book "Across the
Plains" should be read by all who
would learn what dreams can do for a
man intellectually. The solution of
baffling mathematical problems, the
ideas necessary to complete some In
vention. have been supplied by dreams.
Occasionally tbe dreamer has been
known to rise in bis sleep and jot
down tbe Information thus acquired.
In such cases he usually forgets all
about tbe helpful dream and on awak
ing to greatly surprised at finding tbe
record he has made of it. which shows
that—as with tbe visions so potently
Influencing health—It to possible for
dreams to aid a iiimi in an Intellectual
way without bls being consciously
aware of them.
’XMAS. CARDS AT JENKINS’.
©
»
V*
V*
Finest Line of ’Xmas Cards
in the City at Jenkins’.
When making ’Xmas. Pre
sents, don’t forget Dr. Morris and
your or your loved one’s eyes.
S
FOR C8P8J18
AND All THHOAT AND UINC TROUBLES.
GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY
OB MONEY REFUNDED.
Out nf town
>io
t un hat o
( . i a
BDtl bri tg«w< rk
.»
[■hod iu oi.o <Uf
if nrctw «r>.
r/o will giio ycu fl flrM
22k rcld flf £' •; I
erm for
$ ”. f )
MoUf C tcwth b.C *
. ^¡22kBfMMeTflal1. 3 50
“nMinr
1
)
F. Ihifl I. •; )
Kbilvflr Fili nr»
K uh
.
Bargains in Canned Goods,
Dried Fruits and Rasins.
Tomatoes,
Corn .
Peas
Beans.
Peaches
Pears .
Cherries
50
50
25
25
25
25
$1.90
2.20
a case
a case
a case
. '■ ‘I
2.r )
, P'itAB
5 JU
(Geel tbd »vb-
-
|t 8 Ler fu.M I. I 'J
a. w. a.wu.’, newnrA e <». mi
P "i let* Edr’t.urt • I
2t Tf«M inaMtlK B W r»BTUWB
gKD I •_
work ouAnr.M*>:~
hibw' F.f G’Mrtion ‘ r.-o •
• rdtirvu. G ’»•uH'tt.hm T
I n h M wt’i k
jtlouvrne) - trio
doz. Cans
itose*
ronTiu'.Ni
»10» BU”»»! 1 • ¥ »■ » » V
• ILIHM >*”TLJ>'WO
____
»
ItBDft*
t.bil
2.10
3.30
3.90
3.75
IHEWORLDSBREATESISiV.IK
LIGHT RUNNING
lb«.. 3 CROWN KASINS..........
lb«.. FANCY DRIED APPLES
Il>«.. FANCY PEACHES
lb«., FANCY APRICOTS
lb»., LARGE ITALIAN PRI NES.
1 ba., SMALE ITALIAN PRUNES
..
$3.00
.. 5.60
2.15
3.40
1.30
RAY FEED CO
«ms»»««»
y
%
N
N
N
9
Look ! Look! Look !
And then look deeper into the
20th CENTUARY WONDER
Mb
THE
*
*
ALADDIN MANTLE LAMP,
A marvel in light and simplicity. It doe« not burn oil or gasolina,
but gas generated from keroaene (coal oil). Oi*«« at l»»«V Av* time«
the light of an old fashioned lamp. It will «a»e half your light Mil and
give heiter «attofaction than any light now in the market. An orna-
ment to any home i. Cairied about Hie bou»» or «tore the sam» a» the
* ordinary lamp
AW
«
«■*-
No Danger.
World’y Aunt-See here. Edith, tbat
young man to whom you've engaged
ymrself-to his future aanured* Niece
- Oli. yes. ann’ie! He was baptized as
a child.-Judge s Library.
TOGGERY I
Everything first-class.
DREAM INSPIRATION.
Bird's Milk.
"I fed him with bird's milk." Tbls
curious expression was used by the
old sultan of Turkey, while a prisoner
on bls way to Halonikl. with reference
to Ilia brother Mohammed. Ills prede
cessor on tbe throne. Abdul ilstnld
was lamenting bls own fate and tell
ing bis captors how little he deserved
It and bow kind be bad been to bls
Ths Good Dinnor.
Tbe successful housekeeper was brother. "I fed him with bird's milk."
planning a dinner for a few of her be said, as If tbat were tbe greate«t
busband's friends.
kindness be could show.
What is
"1 must have apple pie and cheebe bird's milk? Not tbe Turkish equiva
for deasert." she remarked wltnout • lent of tbe milk of human kindncM.
flicker of indecision.
but a European brand of condensed
“But 1 should thlDk you would want milk bearing on the can a picture of a
something more dainty this time ot bird on a nest.
year," suggested tbe woman who al
ways worried herself sick over ■ com
Hi» Conundrum.
pany dinner, “an Ice or a frozen pud
“Mtotab Walkab. kin yo’ tell me de
ding.”
dltfuuce 'tween a cold in de bead an'
“Ob. but apple pie to my husband's a—a eblekeo coop wit' a hole I d de
favorite dish! When be has company rufe?"
1 always serve wbat be like» best;
“No. Ram: that's a bard one. Wbat
then be tbiDka bls guests bsve bad Is tbe difference between a cold in the
such a good dinner, and everybody bead and a chicken coop with a bole
to happy. At least my busbaDd and I In tbe roof?'
are happy, and if the guesta aren't no
“De one am a case o' Influenza, an’
one is tbe wtoer.“-New Yort Pres».
de uddab am a case o’ out flew bens,
sub.”
Bible Eating.
"ladle« and gentlemen, tbe vocsl
I am told by a lady resident tbat In wonder. Professor Wabbles Izzeers.
the Hampshire parish In which 1 am will now sing tbe popular ballad en
Cwdwoud Coun.el Fes.
?,’a county farmer sought ■d- writing there 1» living at tbe present titled 'The Lips That Carr«« a Stogy
°® • Golden City attorney time a good woman who once ate a Khali Never Touch Mine ' "-Chicago
•i®g bls wife for divorce on New Testament, day by day and leaf Tri bu ue.
■A that she did not agree with by leaf, between two slices of bread
What*» In a Nam«.
• horse trade be bad made. and butter, as a remedy for Ota. Thia ‘
Returned Traveler-By the way. Mr.
advised him. and tbe v as treating tbe Bible as a fetich with
Mann, your daughter. Ml«» Etta. 1«
to pay him for It in a vengeance — Ix>ndon Notes and
married. ton't «he* Old Kealdeiit —No;
A few daya later the wife rtes.
•f the little children went to
the could hare married a flue yoong
He Left.
** the first loatallment of Ibe
fellow once, but »he threw him over
late.
“1 may hare remained a trifle
* ■•loaded It In tbe lawyer's
on account of bls name Kbe said It
but her remarks wen too pointed.'
City star.
vna bad enough to be Etta Mann, but
"What did she say. FerdyT
■be drew I be Hoe at Etta Knoi.-€hl-
"Told me tbelr lease was about to cago Tribune
J'” Color Scheme.
* aome lawyers esrTy green aspire"—Louisville Courier Jourual.
TILLAMOOK HOTEL.
WAGONS,
UCCIES, For Real Estate,
AUTOMOBILES
W C TROMBLEY.
Intellactual
Exciting Experience of a Famous Ani
mal Trainer.
“Show a lion that you are his master
and he will be submissive; odcc per
mit him to get the notion that you fear
him and his antipathy will incrense.”
said Frank C. Bostock, the famous an
imal trainer.
In Illustration of the lengths to
which owners of wild beasts will go
In order to retain control of them Bos
tock told tbe following story:
“Some years ago when we were at
the Hippodrome, in Paris. I decided as
a special attraction io go Into the are-
na with Wallace, a huge African lion
that all our trainers bad despaired of.
The house was crowded, We placed
the lion In a cage sixteen feet square,
and this was put Inside a twenty foot
ring. Two assistants were stationed in
the outer ring In case of accident. I
had scarcely got Inside when tbe beast
leaped at me. it bit right through my
left band and with one blow ripped
the flesh off my back. ‘Clear out’’ I
shouted to the two men In the outer
ring. 'I am going to open the doors
and let him Into ths big arena.’
“1 was as furious as the lion. My
pride as a trainer was wounded deeper
than my back. I flung open tbe doors,
and the lion sprang out. Tbe blood
was pouring from my wounds. but In
the excitement of the moment I felt
no pain—only a mad desire to be mas
ter. 1 picked up a 'property' chair, and
when the beast came again 1 struck It
full across the muzzle: then, seizing
my whip, I actually became tbe ag
gressor.
“Tbe audience was In something like
a panic, and loud cries of 'Enough,
enough!’ were raised. But I hadn't
finished. In ten minutes I had subju
gated Wallace to such an extent that
he cowered like a dog. I got out of tbe
cage and just fainted away, From
tbat day no one attempted to teach
Wallace.”—rearson’s Weekly.
I
16. 1909.
MOORISH SOLDIERS.
One of the Hoaxes Perpetrated ly
Theodore Hook.
I d the early part of the nineteenth
ceutury great preparations were made
io Euglaud to receive a Spanish am
bassador who rvax ex|aa-ted to arrive
at Southampton
A mischievous idea
came iuto tbe bead of Theodore Hook
(born 1788, ( died 1841,. novelist and
journalist and above alt cuutriver of
that diversion knowu as tbe hoax. The
English fleet was lying off Southamp
i ton. Hook, then a young man, knew
many of tbe younger officers.
He
formed bis scheme, aud oue morning
a launch set out from tbe fleet and
drew up at tbe quay.
In thia launch was be who purported
to be tbe Spanish ambassador In al
most royal robes, arrived two days be
fore tbe expected time. Tbe mayor of
Southampton, who was to receive tbe
Spanish envoy, was greatly flustered.
It was all so sudden. He did tbe best
be could. Several comiuinies of sol
diers. some on foot, some mounted,
were called out. Tbe bells were rung.
The ambassador, accompanied by a
number of young otllcers of tbe fleet,
was escorted with much pomp to the
mayor's palace. There was a banquet
aud speecbmaking. one of the young
officers acting as Interpreter for tbe
ambassador.
After it was «ver and tbe Spanish
envoy was supposed to be on his way
to London tbe true ambassador arriv
ed. There was but a sorry reception
for him. The other ambassador, who
was Theodore Hook, having ]>erpetrat-
ed tbe greatest hoax ever known on
a mayor and a city, bad exhausted
tbe hospitality of the town. Tbe scan
dal was so great, tbe mayor nnd the
people of Southampton bad been so
outrageously cold, that to make any
stir about tbe affair would only cause
them to be laughed at all the more.
With the exception of tbe dismissal
of some of the naval officers who had
taken part iu it little was done, and
tbe affair was allowed to blow over.—
Indianapolis News.
MASTERING A LION.
* 1tostonees they expect to
“M of game."—New York
D ecember
INI «IW HOr.í SÍWIN8 MACHIN! COMFATJ
Oh
Mh
*
Foley’s
Orino
Laxative
W. A. WILLIAMS & CO.,
leit Da or to Tillamook Cooatjr Baek
¡Sold by Cha*. I. Clough.
No Economy Thara.
I
■»
For Stomach Trouble, Sluggish
Liver and Habitual Constipation.
It cureB by aiding ail of the
digestive organa—gently atimu»
late* the liver and regulataa the
bowela—the only way that
chronic constipation can ba
cured. Especially recomra-:uded
for
women and
children.
Cleara blotched complexion».
I riaaunt ta taka. R b I um «ubBtrtirtaa.
HARNESS, COLLARS, etc.
You Use Them.
We Sell Them.
Rmci-In ft axai» they never »ay.
•What's In a nameT
Leoo«-Wby I
not* Brons —It's taken for granted I
that h's the whole alphabet -I.lpplo
»•tta.
OrnnOL't M m »«.
Minyww-’im«
ne -, are mw-4* Io »<ll
«J ' • 11
Quality, Lut the
i« m*
to
■W till
• .i .
_
Buld by »uil»<»»l,< <1 «I« .l»i» w«ty<
ra»
SEE
f.
H. F. RODDY
At HOWARD WHALEN’S Jewelry Store
want «Ith«»» Vlbnitlng»mittb- K
lth> i>r • «h,»'" f l.r'tul
« A tiit A j
H>-WU1« Mio hin« will« U»