T illamook ysicians and fees . cal View of tho Doctor's Charge For His Services. , who discuss the physiciaaa* juently miss the essence of it. natter of fact, under present jondltlons the charge made to Utby and well to do is the nor- jd proper fee; the lowered made to those less fortunate cessions. The tremendous field physician's charity Is therefore underestimated, for It extends eat majority of his patients. Jen times, when medicine was all art and but little science, was unknown. Like other art- > leech received an honorarium, lgbt of which depended natu- ton the resources of the patient, popular Impression that physl- nke the rich pay for the poor Is •t They extend their services to 1, and all are supposed to pay as s they can afford for services irlceless and Impossible to rep- idequately In money values, ttempt made to establish stand a by law Is sure to work In­ to the physician. The “stand- ? would have to be much high- the average fee at present and 'ould have to be some method rclng its sure payment. Only le standard fixed, as now. by llty of the wealthy Is it possible poor to receive the benefits of best professional skill without tbeir self respect—New York I Journal. POWER OF MUSIC. vskening That Cams to Ste­ nson on Hearing Ole Bull. »rnemann Bull, who was one of >ous wizards of the violin in ■teenth century, had little dlffl- i swaying au audience by the >f bls wonderful performance favorite instrument Teat violinist was greatly ad- y Stephenson, the Inventor of omotlve, although the latter le appreciation of music in his i call of some uature one day epbenson to Ole Bull's home, lie business on band bad been ted the Inventor arose to go, pon the master pressed him to and hear the tones of a famous rhich had lately come Into his on. ull began to explain the mar- ronstruction of the violin, the exactness required in each t part The Inventor became ad In the subject. Finally Ole plained how the-sound waves educed and the relation of the parts to their production, itlll explaining, he drew his bow across the strings in a ! exquisite music. inson listened, spellbound. Ole yed on. When the music flnal- away Stephenson burst into id sobbed. "There has been ng in my life that was lack 1 at last I’ve found out what PERFECT HEROISM headlight , august si , 1011 EARLY DAYS OF COACHES. Rsr* Courage of Dr. Frans Mueller In When Complaint Was Made That “the Hie Tragic Death. World Runs on Wheels." Heroism has been defined as “tho John Taylor, an English poet, kuowu brilliant triumph of the soul over the as the “water poet." who died in 1654. flesh”—that is to say, over fear—fear had this to say about the use of of suffering, of sickness, of isolation coaches: and of death. An instance of this The superfluous use of couches dazzling and glorious concentration of bathe been the oecasiou of many vile I courage is given In Mr. Frederick Row­ and odious crimes, as murder, theft, I land Marvin's book. "The Excursions cheating, hangings, whippings, pil­ I lories, stocks and cages, for house­ i of a Book Lover." Dr. Franz Mueller of Vienna, who keeping never decayed till couches I fell a victim to the bubonic plague came into England, till which time when that disease was first under bac­ those were accounted the best men teriological investigation in that city who had the most followers and re­ In 1897. contracted the malady from tainers. Then land about or near bacilli In culture tubes. When be be­ Loudon was thought dear enough at a came certaiu that be was infected, he noble the acre yearly, and u ten pound immediately locked himself in an Iso­ bouse reut now was scarce 20 shil lated room uud posted a message on a lings then. But the witchcraft of the coach quickly mounted the price of window pane: "I am suffering from the plague. all things except |>oor men s labor and Please do not send a doctor to me. as withal transformed in some places 10. In any event my end will come In 20, 30, 40, 50, GO or 100 proper serving men into two or three animals—vide­ four or five days.” At once a number of his associates, licet, a butterfly page, a trotting foot all of them young physicians, with man, a stiff drinking coachman, a much to live for and with full knowl­ Cook, a Clark, u Steward aud a But­ edge of the chances to which they ler, which bathe enforced muuy a dis carded tall fellow (through want of would expose themselves, stepped for­ means to live aud grace to guide him ward aud uot only offered their serv­ in his poverty) to fall Into such mis ices. but in some cases Itegged to be chievous actions before named, for sent to Dr. Mueller. The patient re which I think the gallowses In Eng fused to permit it and died alone with­ land have devoured as many lusty in the time predicted. valiant men within these thirty or At the end be wrote a farewell let­ forty years as would have been a suf­ ter to bls parents nnd placed it against ficient army to beat the foes of Christ the window so It could be copied from out of Christendoms and, marching to the outside and then burned the orig­ Constantinople, have plucked the great inal with bls own hands, fearful that Turk by the beard; but, as Is afore­ it might be preserved and carry out said, this is the age when wherein the the mysterious and deadly germ. "world runs on wheels.' VANILLA BEANS. ASTORIA CENTENNIAL SERVICE During the ANNUAL CENTENNIAL, the Steamer « Will make three round trips weekly, between BAYOCEAN and ASTORIA, leaving BAYOCEAN Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, The T. B POTTER COMPANY7 has made a special round trip from Bayocean, good any time during the CENTENNIAL. Tickets for sale at Bayocean. The Steamer Bayocean leaves Bayocean in plenty of time to catch the first evening train to Portland, for those who wish to made the trip through from Tillamook, providing a through trip in a halfday. By this schedule, it is possible to make the round trip to Portland, by rail and water, in two days. EEALTT $4.00 KEPT HIS MOUTH SHUT They Are Not Beans at All, but Pods I The Lady Guaranteed Silence, and She Filled With Tiny Seed. Made Good. The vanilla plant is the only orchid Unexpectedly au uptown pastor who of any industrial value. As orchids encouraged congregational singing go. tho plant is not unattractive, fbr gained a new parishioner. Keen the foliage is much greeuer aud more though his delight lu hearing his peo- enduring than in the case of most of ple slug, there was uue member of bis the species. It is a climber, aud when flock whose endeavors be uever eu the leaves are fresh it brightens a couraged But .he mau saug without small tree trunk wonderfully. The encouragement, much to the discomfi Vunilla planlfolia, to give It Its full ture of pew holders anywhere near name, is a terrestrial .parasite. It him, who claimed that his loud, unrnu climbs from the ground, but ouce es­ »leal voice threw them out of time and tablished has feeding stations on the tune. bark ull along the line. The leaves— Repeated complaints convinced the loug. very smooth and light green- minister that somebody would have to are alternate, aud at the axil of each ussuine the responsibility of silencing Is a sucker u few luebes in leugth thut i the ambitious singer. He decided that fastens Itself securely to the tree, ly­ I the man's wife was best fitted for the ing flat uguiust the bark. t job. Owing to a difference in rell- The blossoms are Inconspicuous. It ' glous views husband uud wife attend Is the resultant i>ods that are the va­ ed different churches, but the minister nilla of the iudustrial world. They ' knew her, so be called and explained are slim pods six to eight inches long | his predicament. She was genuinely aud when dried for the market are of surprised. a rich, deep reddish brown. These "Do you mean to say he sings?” she are called vunilla beans, but without said. warrant. They contain no bea-i; the “Tries to,” amended the pastor. seed in them is as fine as dust. *1 nese She thought a minute. “I shall have seeds are the black specks that are to come there to church,” she said. usually found tn the finest grade of “I shall be glad to see you." said the vanilla ice cream, the best chefs the minister. "But what effect will that world over preferring to grind the have on your husband's singing?" “bean" rather than use the extract. The look she gave him was more Vanilla is found growing wild in the significant than words, and they Bahamas, West Indies and Central meant a good deal. America. In Madagascar and some of "John will never open his mouth the neighboring Islands ft has been when I am around." she said, Escaped the Bullets, mes Craik, who was Washing Introduced and no-v forms an impor­ And John never has. — New York mlly physician, was with the tant article of export. Bnt American Times. of Ills Country in the ex pe­ vanilla is the best.—Harper s Weekly. tal ns t the French and Indians Easy to Identify. and the next year he attended A Chinese prince in this coantrj- vis­ Played No Favorites. Braddock in bis fatal cam- John Addison Porter, once secre­ ited police headquarters in New York f. Fifteen years later, while tary to the president, overdrew his ac­ and was much interested in the thumb g wild lands in the western count on one occasion, when he went ! mark records preserved there as a of Virginia, Dr. Craik en- off on a vacation, nnd Comptroller method of identification for criminals. d a band of Indians led by an Tracewell disallowed it. When Secre- "We have used thumb marks for lef, who Informed the physl- ' tary Porter returned to Washington lie several thousand years as seals on *ough an interpreter that be I told tho president about it, and Presi­ I mercantile and other papers." the Chi­ le a long journey to see Colo- dent McKinley telephoned to Trace­ I naman told the man In charge of the hington. at whom tn the battle well to come to tbe White House. On ! thumb mark bureau, “but we do not mgahela he bad fired bis rifle his a-rival there Tracewell was ask­ use them in any other way." Imes and ordered all his young ed why he bad disallowed that ac­ "How do yon identify your crimi­ do the same. In fact. Wash- count. and he replied: nals?'' asked tho thumb mark man "1 disallowed It. Mr. President, be bad two horses killed under "Oh. we havn a very simple method 1 day. and his coat was pierced cause it is my duty as comptroller of of Identification—we cut off their the treasury to protect tbe money of . r bullets, yet he left the battle- heads "—Saturday Evening Pont. the people from every kind of ml scon era tebed. straction of tbe law. If you should Newfevndtand. draw one month's salary in advance 1 > Chemical Experiment. In spite of ease and swiftness of should certainly disallow It." — Cincin ­ the genial - - Quaker. - - Tsaac T. i communication wo break down over met a boy with a dirty face nati Commercial Tribune. the pronunciation of names that lie » 1 he would atop him and ln- outside our front door There Is New­ Into tho Next 8tate. be ever studied chemistry. A disheveled cltlsen rushed Into the foundland. Our eotlleat speculation In '. with a wondering stare, police station and shouted for venge American settlers. But yon can't pro iswer, "No.” nounce It so as to satisfy everybody. then, I will teach thee bow to a nee. A visitor has protested. The name “ The motorcar that hit me five min ■ curious chemical expert- i has three solid syllables. One must said Friend Hopper. “Go ntea ago was No. 41144." he sputtered win In English months the accent la ke a piece of soap, put it in “I can prove that be was exceeding generally put on the second syllable, d rub It briskly on thy bands the speed limit, and I want-I waut"- for the dogs found tbeir day. That • You want a warrant for bis ar I Tbou bast no idea wbat a is wrong, quite wrong. But do you froth It will make and how rost ?" “Warrant, nothing; What good know whether you should say "No*- liter thy skin will be. That'« or “Nfaland?”-London Oroo I *1 experiment. I advise thee would a warrant do me at the rate he fain' He. was going? 1 want extradition pa "—Life of Isaac T. Hopper. pers.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Waated Effort. Ancient History, •'Sorry. Bill. I can't coma to the the­ Ths Ready Romancar. itl’fied.” Mid tho young man ater with you toeigbt Now. don't look “Clumsy of you to fall overboard I .o cram. Yoe eia't craea. really. are Just home from college, "that ice of electricity was under Mid the critical friend. replied the 'yer. Bill?” ore the flood." _____ "No. I ain't exactly croea. Lie. but to a mistake atlll it la a Wt aggravating foe a chap be a fool.” snorted tho old man who never conft , - I ever - '• «wam to find be’i was bod bls face and bands n. "Tbe biggest fish ’•»* for nothing, ain't Itr-London Tele­ ardon. bat Noah mast bare alongside* and I couldn't used some kind of an art temptation to dive for him."-Wash graph _______________ tagton Star. _______________ MtMskv". Ropeohonaiblo Abeootmiodvdooo»- Wltneas-He's • «rthy. mane IM "Why are you ao very angry rreb h. yer honor • !•»- Magistrate -Ktaac*. wit arm! Walter?" . _ “He proposed to me last night "Well, yer h- om- *'• ,be truth " "bwm't «Batter We want uono “What of that?” "Nothing Only I accepted Mm th*- It here !»rxl.« Telegraph night before."-London Stray Stories 1 AY0CEAN YAMHILL & TILLAMOOK Daily Stage Line. Shortest and Quickest Route to Portland. LEAVES TILLAMOOK ................................. 4 P “>- ARRIVE YAMHILL ....................................... 3 p m. Connecting with PORTLAND (TRAIN. FARE, 15.00. MRS. J. C. IIOLDEN, Agent, Tillamook. Hotel Royal, Ageut, Yamhill. ' < HEADQUARTERS FOR DAIRYMEN’ AND S SUPPLIES STEEL STOVES & RANCES We carry a Larj?e Stock of I Hardware, Tinware, Glass and China, » Oils, Paint, Varnish. Loors, Window Sashes. ■ tu * I Agents for the Great Western Saw ALEX McNAIR CO The Most Reliable Merchants in Tillamook County. FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS H JL for backache, rheumatism, kidney or bladder trouble, and urinary irrefularitiea. Foley Kidney Pills are tonic in action, quick in roanlta- Refuae substitute«. Chas- I. Clough, Tillamook 't