TILLAMOOK HE ADLIG-HT. OCTOBER peed of a shot PERFECT STEEL BALLS. 19. iQH FOOD OF THE MEXICANS. They Hava Never Yet Been Made, Frijols, and Tortillas the Main Diet of Even In the Laboratory. the Poor. WE DISTRIBUTE THE One of the needs of tbe day is a People at home in tbe "states" may perfectly Bpherical steel ball, and yet think the food of the Mexicans mea ­ l(jing the Velocity of a Missile it has never been made even in the ger It is comprised chiefly jPfrijoIes a Simple Matter. laboratory, much less in the shop for and tortillas, supplemented by the commercial uses. When we consider fruit of the cactus when in season. OF THE the Importance of ball bearings for au­ Tortillas are thin little cakes made SURED BY A PAPER DRUM tomobiles, motorcycles and other ma­ of coru boiled with lime, and these chinery tbe Imperfections in steel balls serve as the chief fowl. Every house must appeal to all as of the greatest has a metate, a sort of stoue trough, L, Whirling Cylinder Regiit.r. th. moment. Of course we make pretty which rests on the ground, and on P ojectil»'» Fliflht With Minute Ac- good steel balls, which could not have this the corn is crushed to a paste Lr.cy at Deiired Distance. ' been manufactured a few years ago. and then patted into tbiu round cakes So far as the eye can discern, they are and tossed on a clay griildle to cook. Wing Shot« and Shot Charges, perfectly spherical, too. and ordinary Don't think as you ride down the persons at all interested in gun tiring measuring instruments will not be abk* street that In every house a child is |nny kind, whether of the revolver DIRECT I to detect any difference in them, but rifle or of hpfl'T ordnance of any nevertheless they are not perfectly being spanked—it is only the patting sound made by the women as they L occasionally come upon the term spherical. deftly shape the tortillas in their juzzle velocity" and velocities of tbe A steel ball for automobile bearings hands. Cfie at stated distances. must be perfect within .0001 inch, anil Tbe lime in which the corn Is sof ud for the bullet to fly one foot its as if they had been stone deaf. 1 ran Dancing In Washington’s Day*. Ule velocity to the mile may be over and shoved one after the other ¿XPORT BEER It was a dancing age. None was too back Into the street out of danger. Ipiited by any schoolboy. By the ie process, too. the bullet's velocity old or too dignified to Join in the pas­ “ ‘When you're told to get back, get KAISER BLUME |00 yards or 500 yards may be de­ time. We have it on the authority of back,’ I said. ‘You obey order«.’ General Greene that on one occasion fined “Then I turned my back and hurried Unsurpassed. Non Intoxicating hirs ago before wing shooting had Washington danced for three hours to another point of the fire. The wall down. Patrick without once sitting fell before I had gone ten yards. I ►me an art the farmer with his MALT TEA Ele loading shotgun and charge of Henry would close the doors of his of­ looked around for the three mon. They Ik powder would shoot directly ata fice to betake himself to dancing or were nowhere in sight! The moment I goose or duck in full flight. He fiddling, and Jefferson dearly loved to my back was turned they had rushed ked a theory of his own as to the I I “rosin” his bow for a merry Jig. The back to play their stream in that place btnlng bird, holding that the heavy story is told of him that once when of peril, and when the wall fell it bur Lt feathers “turned" the shot. He away from home he received news of led them beneath the bricks—dead.” led until the bird had passed him the burning of his father's house. Lost Time. bn. firing directly at it, he could “Did you save any of my books?” he asked of the slave who brought him The late Sylvanu« Miller, civil en­ |g down his quarry. It It was not because the bird was the tidings. “No. massa." answered gineer, who was engaged in a railroad I vulnerable, coming breast on. the negro, “but we saved the fiddle.”— I enterprise in Central America, was I f»»t was that it eflw over his : Maud Wilder Goodwin In “The Colo­ seeking local support for a road and attempted to give the matter point. tee of shot. Before he could pull nial Cavalier.” He asked a native: btrigger and the hammer fell on Ten Out of Five. “How long does it take you to carry blH-n ussl .n cap and the compara- It was In an ideal seacoast town of your goods to market by muleback?” te slow black powder could be ig- “Three days,” was the reply. r and exploded, sending the shot Maine, to which they had fled for a ¡Soda Water», Nlptlion», Bartlett Mineral Water. “There’s the point,” said Miller. pty-flve or thirty yards, the bird lazy two weeks, that they found him. Ikown yards perhaps beyond its one of those “natives” with a large “With our road In operation you could take your good« to market and be back f011 when the fowler first touched stock of undeveloped wit. They were out gunning with the na­ home In one day.” ■rigger But firing directly at the “Very good, senor," answered the I after It had passed the shot tive as their guide. A flock of five te* had a strong tendency to drop birds flew over. Raising his gun. he native. “But what would we do with ■ flew, and the bird flying on a I took aim and fired. All five fell to the the other two days?"—Boston Record. MORNING AND EVENING TRAINS, • line “got tn tbe WHy” of the earth, and they were loud In their praises of his skill. The La»t Luxury. “That ain’t nothin’!" said he con- Ten-year-old Arthur had been telling »I'f the modem nitro powders are R*ly quicker than was the old temptuously. “If I’d he»l my other impressively of the number of servants I gunpowder, yet It has been an gun along I'd ’a’ done better than employed in his home. He continued, Tickets and Baggage through to Puget trering problem to determine Just that”—Metropolitan Magazine. "And our house Is flx«-d so that if you want a drink or a window raised or to fast and in what line a charge of THE Sound points, Spokane, St. Paul, Chicago, Arrows and Big Gun*. *111 travel, jn this determina- go upstairs or anything all you have In the days of mailed knights and ' to do is to pull a chain." Denver, Kansas, City, Omaha, St. Louis and revolving drum device has ROAD “But what do you want with so several Important facts which battleaxes there was safety at a dis­ all points East. I been taken in connection with tance of 400 yards. That was about many servants in that sort of a of Individual game birds as far as the best archers could shoot ! house?” asked one of his hearers. Atlantic Steamship Agency, pje etftrta of windage on a shot an arrow. Neade. a famous archer I “Oh." replied Arthur, "we have tbe Agent- of The Oregon Electric Ry. at Forest Grove aud Hills­ under Charles I., states that the ordi­ servants to pull the chain».”—Judge. most Important fact as to the nary range of the bow was between boro sell through tickets to all points east. I r* ’hot from a modem shotgun 320 and 400 yards, though it is on rec­ Drop» and Minim*. Fares and train schedules will be forwarded on request. r’ nt forty yards the shot are ord that one man was shot a distance Drops vary in size according to the ^2’’’"' fl>T •f’Proxlm«le,y fifteen of 403 yards with the wind. Compared conditions under which they are pro W. E. C oman . G. B. J ohnson , l ,h* lending pellets in the with this is the latest naval gun with duced Some are large and »ome are General Agent, f rrentest velocity and kUl- • range of fifteen miles. small, some long and «ome abort Tbe General Freight & Pass. Agent, [***• «t this instance even tbe Portland, Ore. Astoria, Ore. drop of tbe druggist Is called a M Pallet, are of sufficient force Hotter Than He Thought. minim, of which 480 go to make a 1 The boy whose business It was to fluid ounce and Wt00 to make a gal- a’ f0 modern pmo- answer the telephone rushed Into -he | Ion. An actual experiment In filling a I 7*. f0 reckon with the room of tbe senior partner. j one ounce measure will probably show “Just got a message saying that your that 400 drops make a fluid ounce. The ik ,h<*' fb<* ’T10*1 of ,he '"‘•'’«ti e nf the wind In house was on Are." he said average drop 1« 20 per cent larger than ■•Dear me“* returned the senior part­ Ike i-hsrre. and out of |o fhe ner in » bewildered sort of way. "1 tbe minim. «^ttt’y tn kill h rather than knew tny wife was pretty hot about Too Big ■ Pill. tipple it-Marvin nniton something when I left home this morn­ 1 The man In b"l had never been «Irk r»m TrihsBe ing. but I didn't think it was so bad tvofore The doctor, wishing to aarer- a« to set tbe bomw on fire“' | t»fn his temperature, pointed the th*r- I mometer at him »nd commanded. I Q«ms. ■swrty Ch«ng«d. » m Ji” arrives bmn* I •Open your mouth. Jim " "Bare r«m s*m Ml«« Beanpole »Ince I “Writ a minute doc." objected tbe œ t-Wetl. what In the world pTkm 'XMn* ho®'* at ,nT •be Inherited a fortuner ' ;>aticnt. “I don’t blteve I can »waller “Ten She to greatly changed. ’ ' a* w"* p*llp»7 ms «e- I that."—Judge (’•«yHrtt my dcarPnck 1fn«r _ to be frlchtfntto -Wefl. lit habit» gather by unseen ■s brook« make rivtr», river* mn te hatrei at -And we ate’a divinely elender ''’’’’•M —»Se» by «es« Dryé oM rul*. Bud,ih. HIGH CLASS PRODUCT S. W. Miller Piano Factory From Maker to User From Factory to Home PIANO BUYER Our Piano the S. W. MILLER Jones Knudson Furniture Co Columbia Bottling Co., Astoria, Oregon ASTORIA to PORTLAND NORTH BANK Notice of Sa'e of Tide Lands. N otice is H ereby given ,—That the State i.auil Board of tile State ' of Oregon will sell to tlie highest bidder at its office in tlie Capital Building, at Salem, Oregon, on December 5tli. 11'11. _____________ .it 1(1:01 o’clock ii.ru., of said day, , all i.:: the State's „ interest in the tiiie anil overflow lands hereinafter described, giving however to tlie owner or owners ot any lands, abutting or fronting on suili tide and overflow lands, the preference right to purchase said tide and overflow lands at (he highest price offered, provided such oiler is made in good faith, and also providing that the land will not be sold tor nor any otter there tin accepted of less than $7:50 per acre, tlie Board reserving the light to reject any and all bids. Said lands are situated in Tilla­ mook County. Oregon, described uh follows : Beginning at a point which is the Meander Corner between Section« 16 and 15 and running along high water line the following courses : X. 50 degs., 04 W. 400.00 feet. X. .57 degs., 45* \V. 359.t! X. 09 deg«., (U’ \V. 6M.i the line of Lot 2, then the course to low water line. N. 0 deg., 26* fv**t. then a loti g low water couiHe«- S. 61 ilegs., 44’ E. 219.88 feet. S. 87 ilegs., 32’ E. 294.92 feet. S. 50 degs., 53’ E. 270 86 feet. S. 68 deg».. 40’ E. 218.64 teet. S. 62 degs., 55’ E. 188.80 f-et. S. 72 »legs.. 38’ E. 275.90 feet to the Section line betw'ceil 15 10 then S O deg , 04' W. iM'.OU feet to the beginning, and containing6.9 acren of tide land in front of Lot 3 of Section 16, T. I S.. R. 10 W of W.M. Bids should be accompanied by a regular application to purchase mid exchange for the full amount offered and should be addressed to (>. G. Brow:' Clerk State Lami . Board, Salem. Oregon, mid marked " Application mul bid to purchuse tide hind».” G. G. B rown . Clerk State Lund Board I Dateti tliis 7tli day of September, 1911. Notice of bile of Tide Lande. N otice is H erehy G iven ,—Thnt the State Land Board of the State of Oregon, will sell to the liiglient bidder at its office, in the Capital Building, at Salem, Oregon, on December 26, 1911, nt 10:00 o’clock a.iri., of said day, nil the State in­ terest in the tide and overflow lands hereinafter described, giving, how­ ever to the owner or owner« of any lands abutting or fronting on such tide and overflow hinds, the pre­ ference right to purchase «aid tide and overflow land« at the highest priCS offered, provided such offer 1« made in good faith, and nlso pro­ viding that the land will not be sold for nor any offer therefor accepted of less than $7.50 per acre, the Board reserving the right to reject any and all bids. Said lands are situated in Tilla­ mook County, Oregon, and des­ cribed as follows : Beginning at a |>oint which is the meander corner between Sections 7 and 8, T. 1 S.. R. 10 W. of W.M . and running along high water mark following courses : \V 61 deg«., 04.......... 39 »legs., :«»' W. 61 dega 45’ w. 85 degs., 13’ \v »7 dega.. 54’ w. »8 deg«. »>' w. 9 degs.. Mf w 29 dega.. 12" w. 24 deg«. 15' E. 325 47. 37 deg«., 21’ E. 738.42. 67 deg«., 44’ E. 1277.:«. 62 deg«., 1? E. 282.27 to tlie section line ifetween section«7 »nd ». 571.74 to piner South ol beginning, containing 37.3 ucres of tide Ian»! fronting on Lot« 5 mid 6, of Sectiou 7, T. 1 S, R. 10 W of W.M. Aino Beginning at a point which is the meander corner between Sections H and 9, T. 1 S . R. 10 W. W. M . mid running along high line the follow­ ing courses. i N. 62 deg«., 5»’ w. 115.25. S. 71 drga.. 07’ w 301.90. 9. 55 deg«., 07’ w. 222.90. N. 75 deg« ... IW w. MS 7o N. 07 deg«., ar w. 279.00. N. 14 deg«., 25’ E. 574.90. N. . 55 deg«., 00’ w. 054 30. N. 43 »legs., 44’ w. 555.00. N. 35 dega., 37’ w. 870.20. N. 47 degs , 14’ w. 223.40 N. 30 dega., 27’ w. 040.00. N. 49 dega., OU' w 1197.90. N. 81 degs , 26' w. 577.00. 8. 73 deg«., 55’ w 283.00. 9. 55 »leg«-, or w. 797.50. dega. 9. 34 _____ __ , IMI’ w. 1X100 toM.C. between Section« 7 and M. North 571.74 to b.w wuter line and then along low wuter line the following cournea: E 172.29. , " N. 62 degs E. 780.95. N. 70 deg«., E. 453. OH. 9. M dega , B 590(0. 9. 07 deg«., E. 141» 1.00. 9. 40 deg* , E neo 9o 9. 35 deg»., 734.4». E. 9. 52 deg« , E. 1314.80. 9. 02 deg«., E. 12*10.09 8. 70 deg«., ... 1115 57 to the 8. 49 deg«., _ E. line of Lot 1 of Section 9, T. 1 S. R. 10 W., then Wewt 1929.57 to the place of tieginning, contwining L44 « of tide lund fronting on Ixit« 1, 2, 3 »nil 4 <>l Section », I'. 1 8., R. 10 , of W M Bi'l ebotild I«- ni-companied by >« regular »pplii ation to purchase and eschunge for the full amount offered and «tumid tie uddr'-seed to <,. G. Blown. < lerk State l and Hoard. Salem, <)i<-gonr and inaiked ’’ Application and bid Io purchaae title land«.” G. G BwoM X, Clerk State I-an»l Ifcierd. Dated thi« 10th »lay of Octeker, 1911. _______________ Notice to CT »inters Tin« i» to give notice that hunt­ ing i« prohibited on my place «nJ those who do •<> will lie proaecuted to the full eitent of tbe law- J. II. U atnawa «.