Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, November 16, 1911, Image 4

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    T illamook headlight , N ovember 16, 1011
Saved Many From Death.
pleased to recommend
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy as
tiie beet thing I know of and safest
remedy for coughs, colds and bron­
chia) trouble.” writes Mrs. L. B.
Arnold of Denver, Colo. “We have
used it repeatedly and it has never
failed to give relief.” For sale by
Lamar’s Drug Store.
W. L. Mock, of Mock, Ark.,
lieves lie ha» saved many lives in
his 25 years of experience in the
drug business. “What I always
like to do,” he writes, “ie to recom-
mi-nl Dr. King’s New Discovery
for weak, sore lungs, hard colds,
ho .-seness obstinate coughs, la
grippe, croup, asthma or other
bronchial affection, for I feel sure
that a number of my neighbors are Tillamook Bakery,
alive and well today because thee
took my advice to use it. I hon­
OPPOSITE .THE ALLEN HOUSE.
estly believe its the best throat and
lung medicine that's made.” Easy Corner Stillwell Ave. and First
‘•i prove he's right. Get a trial hot-
c free, or regular 50c or $1.00 bot­
St. West, and both Phones.
tle. Guaranteed by Chas. I. Clough.
A Household Medicine
That stops coughs quickly and SPECIALTY IN ALL KIND OF CAKES
din s colds is Foley’s Honey and
ALL KIND OF BHtAU.
Tar Compound Mrs. Anna Pelzer,
2’--0 Jefferson St., So. Omaha. .Neb.,
says: "1 can recommend Foley’s
Honey and Tar Compound as a sure
cure for coughs and colds.
It
cured my daughter of a bad cold
end my neighbor, Mrs. Benson,
cured herself and her whole family YOMIO IM ACTION ■ QUICK IN RESULT«
with Foley’s Honey and Tar Com
UHv« prompt relief from BACKACHE,
pound, Everyone in our neighbor-
KIDNEY
and BLADDER TROUBLE
..............................
Chas.
I.
hood speaks highly of it”.
Clough Co._______________
RHEUMATISM, CONGESTION of tbe
‘I do not believe there is any KIDNEYS, INFLAMMATION of the
'♦her medicine so good for whoop- BLADDER and all annoying URINARY
.ig cough as Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy,” writes Mrs. Francis Tur­ IRREGULARITIES. A positive boon to
pin, Junction City, Ore. This rem MIDDLE AGED and ELDERLY
edy is also unsurpassed for colds
and croupe. For sale by Lamar’s PEOPLE and for WOMEN.
Drug Store.
HAVE HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION
Foley Kidney Pills
FAMILY
RECIPES.
I
BRUIN’S BANQUET.
I
Long Drawn Out and Only
•I It Was Whetted
His Appetite.
The valued family re­ ■
cipes for cough and cold
cine, liniments, tonics and I THE FINISH WAS EXCITING.
other remedies have as
careful attention here as
After th« Pork Cours« Gav« Out •
the most intricate prescrip­ * Dessert of Cold Lead Ended th«
and the Unwilling Ho»t Vowed
tions.
I Feast,
Never Again to Fool With a Bear.
I
Our fresh, high grade
A teamster in the employ of one of
drugs will help to make
the big tanneries in tbe west had a
these remedies more effec-
laughable yet trying adventure with a
I bear while on bis way from tbe woods
tive than ever.
with a load of bark. As he emerged
Right prices are also
from the woods with his team be
stopped to give the mules a breathing
assured.
■
i
WHEEL PROBLEMS
horse
Do»« th« Edge of th« Wheel Revolv«
Around th« Axl«T
“The wheel that turns uuder
locomotive or the ear has a long
queer history.” says a writer in
Railroad Man's Magazlue. "but
mystery is still with us and whirls its
hundred questlou marks before our
eyes every minute of the day.
"Of course every one believes that
the edge of the wheel goes around tbe
axle. But does it? Take the end of
any spoke near tbe tire or any part of
the tire and on a still, windless night
fasten a candle to it; theu back off till
nothing can be seen but that candle
flame.
“Let tbe wheel revolve slowly, free
from the ground. The candle flame
makes a circle of Are all right and
goes around the axle. Now lower the
wheel until it rests on the ground and
start uhead. The flame suddenly stops
going in a circle and begins to make
a wavy line, first high and then low.
It goes around nothing at all.
"Men with clear minds can perform
the experiment satisfactorily by tying
a handkerchief around tbe tire In day­
light. but to do this takes a keen math­
ematical Imagination, because the eye
Is confused by other moving objects
and Is not able to see the handkerchief
free from these other Influences.
“At night the candle flame alone can
be seen, so that is perhaps the best
time to try tbe matter out. Tie a
torch to a locomotive driver and then
send the engine slowly back and forth
while the observer is off some hundred
feet distant in the dark. Tbe torch
does not move in a circle. It simply
goes ahead Bomewhat like a flying ma­
chine rising and falling in tbe wind,
coming to a dead stop at its lowest
point and going twice as fast as the
engine when at its highest point.
"The fact that the bottom of an
engine wheel always stands still is
more easy to learn than the fact that
the top of the wheel moves Just twice
as fast as tbe train, but this can be
proved easily with a piece of board.
"Take a piece of board, say, ten feet
long and lay one end on top of the
wheel. Now move the engine forward
two feet and you will find that tbe
board has gone ahead four feet, just
twice ns far as the euglne. Lay down
tbe board and tie two pieces of string
to the wheel, one at the top and the
other at tbe bottom, where it rests on
1he ground. Now run your engine for­
ward two feet and see what happens.
The bottom string has moved forward,
too, but not nearly so far as has the
top piece of string, although tbe ends
were even at tbe start.”
notes .
Jerking the bit andyein,..
fuse II horse aud adv2T
blockhead.
Your horse many ¡ulMd
please you. but due. Uut
stand your wishes.
You can get no mor,
from your horse Ibun .J J*
him In his food
Good feed will put |lf(b ,
horse a hundred time.
than an eight toot «bip.
If tbe fetlocks me clipped,^
the horse's |PCT k,M "
scratching will never bot^
Never work it team of
together until they are th„r<Z
ly broken, as they will , "
each other.
If dusty hay Is m , , pr )| tt
with water and it will ,aVelb
horse much at.... .
but bet-
ter not feed It at all.
It makes some borsea tt|, „
w«rk them with borsea thati
not travel tip with them j|,M
them as to gait as well
othef things.
spell uud to eat his dinner, which be
carried in a tin bucket. He had
scarcely opened his bucket and begun
to eat when a bear came out of the
i woods on one side of the road, only
Reliable Druggist.
two or three rods in tbe rear of the
wagon. Bruin sauntered along, paying
■BIMBI* * » *-* *:■£** i*i no attention to the team, but the team­
ster, desirous of seeing what the bear
would do, threw a bit of salt pork In
bis way. The bear stopped, smelled at
the pork and gulped It down greedily.
Useful Fattening Feed if Added,
Then the animal, noting the source
Rat •on Gradually.
of the morsel, came toward tbe wagon
and rose on his haunches as if to say
With proper Judgment «>
During th« past 86 year» no rem­
that another bit of pork would prove
edy baa proven more prompt or
use can be made of new corn ii
& A. D bt I s , 827 Washington St., Connersville
Backache, Headache, Nervousness lad.,
is in his 85tb year. He writes us: ‘*1 have
more effectual in Its ouree of
acceptable.
tenlng the early pigs. gay, tbe
lately
suffered
much
from
my
kidneys
and
blad
­
and rheumatism, both in men and
The teamster laughed and tossed out
I bad severe backaches aud my kidnoy action
Farmer. As the pastures begii;
women, mean kidney trouble. Do der
was too frequent, causing me to lose much sloop
a second piece, which bruin devoured,
grow short new corn that Is
not allow it to progress beyond the at night, aud in my bladder there was constant
to dent may be cut and giwg g
reacli of medicine but stop it pain. 1 took Foley Kidney Pills for some time, then Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. Ir and then he posed again. But the
am now free of all trouble and Hgain able to many homes it Is relied upon aa Im­ teamster wanted the rest of his dinner
promply with Foley Kidney Pills. and
pigs. Care must be taken Unit the,
be up and around. Foley Kidney Pills have my
plicitly as tbe family physician. 1. con- himself and paid no attention to the
They regulate the action of the highest recommendation.”
come accustomed to this new
tains no opium or other narcotic, and shaggy Intruder. The beggar, seeing
urinary organa. Tonic in action,
gradually. By cutting the new
nick in results. Chas. I. Clough C.I CUOUGH.Tillamook may be given aa confidently to a baby that the teamster was no longer aware
stalk and all. a considerable
aato an adult. Price 26c; large else 60»
of his presence, snorted sharply two or
the green leaves and finer pan,
three times and walked back and forth
be eaten. As the corn becomes
across
the
road
as
if
reconnoitering
•
r_
!P_
i *
mature and the ration Increase,
the situation. Presently he growled,
bogs will eat less and less of th,
but tbe teamster, thinking that the
der until they are ou practically»
beast would go away if be got nothing
feed of corn.
further, continued his meal.
It is seldom profitable to fatten
The bear ventured near and finally
on a full ration of corn alone ini
climbed up the load of bark at the
tot. They soon cease to thrive and
hind end of the wagon. The man was
not eat as large a ration as Is
unpleasantly surprised at this move­
The balanced ration will y|
ment of bruin's, as he was wholly
largest gains and almost inrsrf
unarmed.
the cheapest gains. Alfalfa pa
Accordingly he threw a bit of pork
good, bright alfalfa bay of the
Into the road, at the same time yell­
or fifth cutting supplied to ta
ing to the tvear to direct its attention
hogs will be a very efficient and
to the meat. The bear dropped dowu
nomicnl means of balancing tbe
and went and picked it up, but as
ration. It supplies tbe protein,
soon as it was swallowed and there
Is deficient In corn, and glres t
was no more forthcoming he made an
to the ration. Soy beans, where
other charge upon the wagon.
able, will serve the same
The teamster started tbe mules on­
given aa a fifth part of tbentl*
ward. but knew that he could not hope
Any feed, if rich In digestible
Plant« Breaking Up an Island.
to escape with his heavy load of bark.
teln. may be used with profit
The luymau would scarcely associate
An idea struck him. He would coax
too high In price. The latest I
the bear on by feeding tbe lunch to great strength with so delicate and stuff to be used for this pnqioseit
fragile
a
thing
an
maidenhair
fern,
him until they should come to a
packing house byproduct railed
Oils. Paint, Varnish, Doors, Window
friend’s house n mile or two along thi yet If Its roots have not sufficient age” or ’’meat meal.” This b
room
they
will
break
the
pot
In
which
road. Then he would get a gun and
trogenous product, while high hi
Sashes,
the plant grows. Blades of grass will
shoot the old fellow.
Is so rich iu protein that only i
force
the
curbstones
between
which
The teamster sat on tbe bark, facing
amount is required. It has
they
spring
up
out
of
their
place,
and
backward, his big dinner bucket at
successfully and profitably W
band. When the bear enme up with In a single night a crop of small mush­ many experiment stations and
Agents for the Great Western Saw
the wagon and threatened to climb rooms has been known to lift a large tlcal men that there can be w
stone. Indeed, plants are on record as
upon the load the teamster tossed out
having broken the hardest rocks. The ns to its value. To a fatlealg
a piece of pork. The supply of this
Island of Aldabra. to the northwest of of 150 pounds weight one-ball
edible was limited, so he tossed the
Madagascar, Is becoming smaller of tankage daily Is sufficient
beast a slice of bread, which fell but­ through the action of the mangroves
Care must be taken that there
The Most Reliable Merchants in Tillamook County
ter side up. Bruin nosed it. theu
that grow along the foot of the cliffs. flcient trough room for each bog
licked the butter off and left it.
«I
They eat their way into the rock In ceive Its proper allowance.
The next slice fell butter side down, all directlous. and into the paps thus
While corn is the chief grain
and tbe bear ignored it. Boiled eggs formed the waves force their way. teniug hogs, almost any of the
and cheese fared the same. Bruin In time they will probably reduce the may be used. Kaffir corn is
wanted pork. The teamster dealt this Island to pieces.—Scientific American.
lar iu composition and if
out in small bits, which failed to satis­
properly balanced gives
fy, and tbe bear was growing ugly and
nearly as good as corn, Wheat
Bathroom,
In
Paris.
aggressive.
the equal of corn, pound for
An
observant
English
Journalist
iu
At length the teamster saw his friend
I In fact, hogs will do better m
at work in a field and called to him to Paris has—as a hot weather amuse­ alone than on corn alone. Wte
Q
for backache, rheumatism, kidney or bladder trouble, and urinary irregularities.
run for his gun. Tbe man seemed to ment-made a private census of bath­ Is about the same price per
JL Foley Kidney Pilla are tonic in action, quick in result«. Refuse substitute*.
realize the state of the case and set rooms. He calculates that In all the com or on'v n little W**
off on a dead run for his bouse, a flats and private houses of Paris there pay to use It. Barley is
quarter of a mile distant But th« are about 2.800 bathrooms. And this quite so well by begs
supply of pork was out before he re­ writer, lying In his own bath and mak­ be used as a fattening
turned, and tbe poor teamster was in ing another calculation, will bet a breeding stock it is better
bathful of water that he could get up Cottonseed meal, although *
a sorry plight
The bear climbed upon the load. The and pitch a cricket ball from the gar­ richest feeds, is never
teamster tossed him the last piece of den about his modest flat this way as far as we know at pre«*-
pork and then Jumped from his wagon and that over as many bathrooms. It be fed for limited period»«*
and tore down the road. Bruin, prob­ is a curious little difference of national I quantities with good remit*
ably thinking that the teamster was architecture. And the quaintness of
fleeing with a stock of coveted pork, the difference comes with the fact that
Swine Succumb te S
started after him. The terrified man you see more people In London who
Swine should l>e fed 1‘y1-
had a fair start, but be stumbled over look—yes—dirty than in Parte. Even food In order to keep
a stone and fell full length, and the the beggar in Paris is clean In face. An­ I tracts in the t>e*t •
bear was close upon him when there ger nails and clothes.—London Chron- should be supplied with
icl*.
cold water mid mi abuod"
came the loud report of a gun.
and h sanitary waltowRl
Tbe friend bad come at last Tbe
H« Didn’t Know.
Fat bogs are extreme^
teamster rose and looked round. There
“I didn’t expect any better treat- to sunstroke, as they r*
lay bis late pursuer tn the road. dead.
The teamster declared that never again ment than this,” said the lady on the freely and have their
would he fool with a bear.—Harper’s pier scanthingly to the Inspector whom turn reduced by the e
she suspected of rudeness. “You can’t perspiration as can
Weekly.
make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear!" celleut plan I’ to freq"*’'
‘‘Aa to that I don’t know, madam.’’ hogs’ bodies with water
They Bumped,
A true happening which has been said the Inspector placidly. "1 do not cool. A hog prostrated
made the subject of a cartoon occurred recall any ruling of the treasury de­ should be conveyed » *
at a fashionable golf club near lam- partment on that point. If yon are where cool water -b”"*
don A young man Interested In golf bringing I d any of either you’d better the bead mid neck. **
solely for the sake of the social at­ declare them and leave the classifica­ rest of the hsiy.
mosphere one day decided to play a tion to u«.”-Harper’s Weekly.
Water For De’rt
round
So he sauntered leisurely
The amount "f mi l
Th« Island of Hongkong.
dowu to the caddy bouse, where he
Hongkong la an Island about eleven cow will depend tip*
met a certain peppery lord. Not know­
ing the gentleman and barely 'coking miles long, with a width of from one water she drink«--**
at him. the somewhat foppish youth to three miles, and consists almost en­ course, but it stand»
■skml. “Are you the caddy master tirely of a series of bills. There is a the cvw cannot r***
here?" Without an Instant’s hesita­ good road around a portion of the is­ has plenty of wat* **
tion Lord ---- replied. "No, I am not. land on the sea front, hot the grades this water Is warm.
but I happen to know that he is not in up the mountains are too steep for In a pond or a waK
need of any caddies this afternoon.” practical automobillng. and the streets not like it so ’el1 •'
It was some time before either recov­ generally are not wide enough and not enough of it A*'•
strongly enough constructed to i>ermlt milk flow will fall *
ered.-Boetm Transcript
water is necessary *
»he use of heavy cars upon them
•nd It costs uioi*F
Tongue Could TelL
with it.
_____
An Enthuaiaat.
* I-ast night. George, you told me you
loved me more than tongue could tell, »Town«—Oh. yea. he’s quite an M
Ring th«
thuatast. He goes In for things in real
and oh. George, that wasn't true!”
Every bull ca|f
__
“Why. darling, what do you rneanF earnest. Browne—Yes; If some one
"1 mean that it wasn't more thxn ware to send him on a wild goose «•e ’«r of
my tittle brother’s tongue could teiL chane he’d apeak of blmei^f after- be unsafe te li-’«**
He beard it nil!"
•• a sportsman -Catholic Kt»nd From that tln,y."^L
Mt
tf he Is of »
•f a dairy
ffl patterns are ror, to be follow«*
■vil te wrongbt by want of thought *ean« by wine» •
more than good rute—Lock«.
Mfely
» well aa by want of beert.-Hood.
« 1B> • -IBI Ml-Ml • -IBI ••■l *
CLOUGH,
Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy
Coughs, Colds and Crouo
HEADQUARTERS FOR
I
AIRYMEN’ AND
S SUPPLIES
i
STEEL STOVES & RANCES
We carry a Large Stock of
Hardware,
Tinware, Glass
I
NEW CORN FOR PIGI
and China,
ALEX McNAIR CO
FOLEY KIDNEY PIILS
Chas. I. Clough, Tillamook
w. J. STEPHENS, Distributer for Tillamook, Ore
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