Tillamook"Headiight, December 14, 1ÔII DOEIM FANTASIES Cause and Effect In the Visions That Come In Sleep. A DREAM'S CURIOUS SEQUIL. lt Expli'R.d th. Meaning of th. Oft Th,t ' c“ w” Cliwinfl th. Slumberor’. Throat. Rapidity Of th. Dream Process. SPAIN’S NATIONAL ANTHEM. ‘La Marcha Rsalls” Was Composed by Frederick ths Great. Frederick the Great was the com- ■ poser of the Spanish uatloual autbem. | Frederick s ambitious were varied. He 1 performed on the flute. [I? desired to ■ be thought a poet. lie quoted Latin. ! but his quotations would have made I Cicero stare and gasp. During that i remarkable friendship which existed between him and Voltaire the author of the "Hetiriade' exclaimed with de rlsio.n, "See the dirty liueu I have to i wash." holding up Frederick s manu script. w hich had been sent him to re vise. In the field the great warrior carried nbont his own poems In bls pocket and a bottle of poison, so that he should uot be taken alive. Menzel's picture depicts the king with his flu'e. and Bach dedicated to him one of his compositions. The story of the composition of the Spanish national anthem Is full of in­ terest. A little while after the couclu slon of the Seven Years' war Frederick nt a court reception to the surprise of every one produced a march which he had composed. The Spanish ambassa dor. both a musician and courtier, asked for a copy to send to his royal master. Charles III. That monarch admired the piece, and It wns often heard at the Escurlal. After a time I: was laid aside and almost forgotten In lSlSI. after the deposition of Isabel la. Marshal Serrano Instituted n com j>etitlon among composers for a nation al anthem. Some 500 compositions were sent In, but none of them was s«> Inspiring as Frederick's march, which had been exbutned from the archives This was chosen and Is today known as “La Marcha Rsaiie."—London Globe Obituary Notices. WITCHCRAFT IN SCOTLAND. THE HIGH IDEALS ^»“««Llheynieasur® of the’State’i» crying need’in hie behalf. ''We 'do Beatrioe Layng’s Fate at the Hands of Of S. W. Miller, President of the not know that the ex-Senator would the Mob In 1703. S. W. Miller Piano Factory (himself a That belief In wth-bernft and brutal accept the office again, but we are piano builder by trade) has been the' hazarding that and assuming that treatment of alleged witches once means of bringing the S. W. Miller sufficient pressure can be brought loomed large In Scotland la shown In pianc up to its present high standard to bear upon him to take up the Stewart Dick's '“rhe I'ugeunt of the of supreme quality. The S. W. Mill­ work he laid down three years ago, Forth." In 1706 Pltteuweem gained unenviable notoriety from a series of er’s matchless musical qualities are re­ in justificationot his own fine record prosecutions of old women, and the tained for a lifetime, in fact they mel­ in that office and for the successes pamphleteers of the day were kept low with age (like a good violin) and he can bring to Oregon. We know busy on both sides In defending and it is this feature vr* of uiaiiiiauiiug maintaining their he Oí wa9 LU v IT I 1 him intimately, ___ nv nus for UIIC LIB one of us denouncing the actiou of the magis­ trates. The author says: | Tillamook conducted the services. The the S. W. Miller to be the most talked ofOrgon, we know his fitness and “it seems that a blacksmith, one | interment was at 2:30 o’clock Monday of piano today on the Pacific Coast. his willingness and his splendid Patrick Morton. Iieing taken ill. de We have a new carload of these ex­ faith in the doing of great und grate­ dared that he was bewitched, and on I after ioon in Bay View Cemetery. f cellent pianos just received direct from ful duties of such a post. his instigation a number of old worn The fire which destroyed the home of factory and can make you low prices en were thrown Into prison. Bullied by the magistrates and ministers or i Chas. Easom at midnight Monday, Dec. and easy terms of payments. California will Sell the town by day and tortured by their 4th severely burned Charles and his JONES AND KNUDSON for one half daughter Iva of 15 years, and Alber RICE.—Address Mrs. Kuntz, guards by night, who never let them From Factory to House Dealers. Isick Box 178, Tilla monk, Ore. sleep, but kept them awake by prick and little daughter Alberta Elizabeth. I Ing them with pins, these miserable Alberta inhaled the fire and was burn- old women were soon Induced to con , ed internally. While all was done for The quicker a cold is gotten rid Fuit J” for U. S. Senator. fess anything. ot the Je«H the danger from pne u ' her that love and skill could suggest "One woman tn particular, Beatrice she passed beyond from the home of The Astorian has started in to moiiiu and other sericua di^ea^ea Layng. had been singled out by Mor David Martiny in Tillamook, Dec. 6th boost ex-Senator C. W. Fulton for *lr. B. \\ , L. Hall, of Waverly, Va. anye: “I firmly believe Chamber ton for Ids special vengeance. He 1911. She was boin June 15th, 1905. United Senator. It says : Iain’s Cough Remedy to be abso­ said that she came asking him lo I lutely the best preparation on the The funeral was at the home of Dav­ To this end the Morning Astorian make some nails for her. He. believ­ market lor colds. 1 have recom­ id Martiny at 11 o ’ clock Friday Dec. , is presenting for the . J consideration mended it to my friends and thev ing they were for some evil pnrjiose. J------ ” H. Irvine of of ' our people at la ge, as a business all agree with me/’ For sale by refused to do so. and she went off 8th. The Rev. James muttering Imprecations. Wheu be fell Bay City conducted the services. Ber­ matter shorn of all petty polities the Lamar's Drug Store. ill she was beard to say. 'He mlctit tie’s body was laid to rest beside baby name of Ex United States Senator blame his ane tongue for his ill.' Ou Carl’s in Bay View Cemetery, but Charles W. Fulton, of Portland, as thia tissue of trivialities she was Im Bertie and Carl are “In the Children’s the one man qualified to correctly prisoned, and practically under tor , Home in Glory.” and soundly again represent Oregon OPPOSITE THE ALLEN HOUSE. ture she acknowledged to the minis­ in the upper house of the Congress “I had been troubled with con ters and magistrates that she had And we are doing this despite the Corner Stillwell Ave. and Firs made a wax Image of Morton and stipation for two years and tried differences which once existed as all of the best physicians in Bris- St. West, and both l’huile?. stuck pins In It. tai, Tenn,, and they could do notli- between this tine citizen and this “After a long period of Judicial bul- ing for me,” writes Thos. E. Will- paper; differences which, for the lying she was set free or. in other iams, Middleboro, K v. "Two pack­ words, bonded over to the mob to ages of Chamberlain’s Stoma« hand certian good of the Suite, liave’heen 8PECIALTY IN ALL KIND OF CAKI3 work their will on < her. Hanged on a Liver Tablets cured me.’’ For sale set aside, because of our deep con­ ALL KIND HI- hmfaii . rope between a i ship and the shore, by Lamar’s Drug Store. viction of the ability of Mr. Fulton she was oelted with stones till half dead and finally r pressed to death un­ der a door. It seems that In those days no one was safe against the wildest accusations which might brought against him." It was a personal experience of a ««„alar character that first impressed ZTme. some years ago. the impor- of dreams as a subject for se­ rious Investigation, says H. Addington Bruce in the Outlook. Until then I had shared the opinion prevailing among laymen—and. it would seem, among most scientists also - that dreams are entirely fanciful and meaningless. But my experience was such 1 could no longer believe this. To state it briefly, it involved the recurrence of a most bizarre dream. At least twenty times during a period of six months I had the same dream- namely, that a cat was clawing at my throat' The stage setting and the ml nor Incidents might vary, but always the central episode was the same, an 1 usually the fury of the dream cat's onset was so great that it would iwaken me. Naturally this recurrent dream puzzled me, so much so that I spoke about it. Then one day the accident of a heavy cold that settled in my throat bed to a medical examination, which. Bucb to my surprise, revealed the I I »resence of a growth, requiring Imine- linte treatment by the surgeon’s knife, SCHOLARS IN CHINA. lome time afterward it suddenly oc- fnrred to me that since the removal They Rule the Csuntry Where All if the dangerous growth 1 had not Foreigners Are Called Boors. mce been troubled by the cat clawing i The scholars rule China today. Dress Iream. Its significance now began to is of more moment there than in any |nwn on me other country, yet the scholar, al I had suffered no pain, not even in- though poor und meanly dressed. Is kvenience. from the growth In my received with honor by the highest in SASH WINDOWS. nroat. In tnct I had not consciously : i the land. ven aware of its presence. But un “The superior man" of the classics pestlonably the organic changes ac- ! Is the equivalent of the "good man" Probably a Dutch Invention Seventeenth Century. tnnpanylng It had given rise to sensa- with us. This man. his character and The history of sash windows is some­ ions which, slight though they were, his conduct nre the constant theme what obscure, but the probability Is lad made an impression on my sleep- of approbation. His virtue, his honor, ig consciousness sufficient to excite bls social relations, bls manners In that they were a Dutch Invention and that they were introduced Into Eng­ I to activity. My recurrent dream public and private, are carefully de­ »nsequently was to be regarded as a fined. His dignity Is among his high­ land soon after the revolution of 1688. The derivation of the word “sash’’ In fmbollc representation of the disor- j est qualities and must be maintained this sense is the Dutch “sas,” a sluice- br In my throat—an attempt to inter­ at any cost. old English ‘'sa8se.” In Queen Anne’s bet It. to explain It. And, Indeed, In contradiction to the popular Idea reign they were yet so comparatively ben In the dream, for all its fantastic of dignity, however, the superior man uncommon as to be mentioned as a bagery and symbolism, the seat of will play battledore and shuttlecock special feature of houses that were be trouble was indicated plalnly I with his feet and fly kites, while the advertised as “to let.” In the Tatler. loufh as I could appreciate after the boys, like old men, stand sedately by for Instance. No. 178, May 27-30. 1710, Irgeon had completed his labors, and look on. This he does as a meth­ there is this advertisement: kn experience was reported by Al- od of Instruction and to show the “To be lett. In Devonshire Square, fd Maury, one of the earliest scien- children how the superior man can re near Blsbopsgate, a very good Brick Ic Investigators of the phenomena lax when his high purpose is to enter House of 3 Rooms of a Floor, and a I sleep, who dreamed that he was good Hall, with very good light and ling in Paris during the Terror and tain and educate the young. To the Chinese the foreigner Is a Id been put on the proscribed list. dark Closets, the whole nouse being boor and a barbarian. It seems n well wainscoted and sash'd with 30 Iter many exciting adventures he I hopeless task to teach him politeness is captured, tried and sentenced to The Chinese wonders why the for 8asb Lights, a very pleasant and con- venlent Office below Stairs," etc. lecution. He saw himself dragged lough the streets amid a clamoring elgner leaves his own country nt all From England they passed into Is it too small for him to make bls liv France, where the first to put them up altitude and forced to mount the Ing. or lias he come to observe the su was Marshal de Lorge at his new Mold and bare his neck to the fatal |w In that Instant as the guillo- perfor people? If so be is to be com house at Montmartre. Speaking of mended. But. alas, what a boor he Is! this. Lister In 1699 writes In his “Jour­ K knife descended he awoke to find —National Geographic Magazine. It a piece of the cornice of his bed ney to Paris:'* “We had the good for­ tune here to find the marshal himself. ■ fallen and struck him on the neck, An Oversight. He showed us bls great Rush windows, ■testifying even more impressively to Sir Herbert Beerbolim Tree, the fa I twofold action of the dream proc­ bow easily they might be lifted up and land to Its rapidity Is a dream ex­ mous theatrical manager, was present down and s’ood at any height, which Bence of my own. In this dream at a supper In London a short time contrivance, he said, he had out of England by a small model brought on ■as walking alone at night along a ago where Signor Grasso was an bon fb? road. It was lined on both ored and much feted guest. When purpose from thence, there being noth­ B* by trees which, ns I learned the banquet was over and every one ing of this poise in windows in France f1 a man who presently joined me. was departing. Grasso was so con­ before.”— London Standard. f laden with fruit. I picked some fused and carried away by the atten Bs and ate them as we walked and lions and embraces which had been Origin of ■ Postal Cuttom. The road seemed to overlook showered upon him that „he thought­ The steamship Oregon was tost off Bwd valley in which I saw a soli- lessly directed his taxi driver to drive Fire island on March 14, 1886. She My companion told me that him to the stage door of the theater was rammed by a coastwise schooner, B*s In his home aud invited me to at which he was playing. remaining afloat for half an hour, a ■ H>* night with him. After a tir- “What on earth does he want to go time which made it possible to save ■ walk we reached the house, a back to the theater for at this time of every person aboard. When her mail IF,wo room cabin, ne retired into the night?” asked one of those who was Ashed up and delivered the pieces ■toner room and I went to bed in were waving him adieu. were stamped with a statement that “Ah.” said Sir Herbert Tree, “I ex- they bad been in the wreck, the first B*>ter. I Bad not been long asleep J-In my dreams, I was awakened pect he has forgotten to kiss the Are instance of a practice which la now •anoise of somebody running, and man!” employed by direction of the interna­ ■"•tight Instantly flashed into my ! tional postal union. The credit for I V that my host wns making off Fireproof Wood. this simple device is believed to be Though there are a number of dif- dne to Edward M. Morgan, at tbnt ■ money 1 leaped up sbout- »top!" I ferent kinds of wood, ebony, ironwood. tin» in a subordinate position in the ■*lrerltably awoke and as I did . etc., of such close, hard fiber that even New Tork postofllce. who foresaw that ^FtFtly heard on the pavement the fiercest fire has difficulty in “get a few minutes' work with a rubber fl* W’D^'"T the sound of bur ting hold" of It. there Is only one sort, stamp would forestall an infinitude of ^B~*a"s and a voice crying ex- so far as now known, that Is practical­ complaint.—New York Sun. ■7 ..top. atop!" At once it was ly fireproof. This is a small scraggy t these two words, penetrnt- tree, a native of Booth America, call When Turkey Was Great. sleeping consciousness, had ed the shopala. with thick, tough TNrfcey at her height was In posses- 'be necessary stimulus to set stringy bark full of a sort of fire resist of every famous city of the an- process which. In the frac- • Ing sap. This curious shrub grows daat world except Rome. She held ""'end. had Interpreted them largely on the great, grassy savannas by the sword Athens. Corinth. Sparta. fl, . an«l had presented the which are swept by fire almost every Grecian Thet.es. Constantinople. An '»» Interpretation in the form year during the beat of the summer ttech. fMncla. Ct eel phon. Baltylon. little narrative of noctur- There It thrives splendidly, for the an Nineveh, Bagdad. Jerusalem. Daman- ^p»ut»re nnnl scourge kills off only Its bigger cos. Mecca. Medina. Alexandria, and hardier competitors and leaves the ** produced by the ro. Memphis. Egyptian Thebes nos_ lal Mutants. One sleeper. ground free for the growth of tbiR Carthage. Rome were lo ruins, ■r h.’raa liRbtiy tickled with a vegetable asbestos. the Turk was master where they of ru. ? k'rrible dream of a ; be,n< al'prMtely sp- ; Ths Ship of State. M ’’lolently from his | Sir Wilfrid Laurier once took a fall A Frank Prafaranc«. H h,. •’ « hose feet a hot out of Sir Charles Tupper, for years “Doesn’t your wife wan' the privl K, W1|lrl‘" I',ar*d. dreamed that ! lender of the Opposition, and Sir John lot» of going to the |> o II r aial <-swtlng a 0T,,r ,IO1 •« vs. Inn Macdonald. Bantering them on tbelr ballot as an enlightened und reopen of the same sort self praise for their own |>o'ltlcal scrv ■HHe citizen Y' hn, »'Irping of the cover ices to Canada, he admitted tbnt they “Tea.” replied Mr. tlpw e < t . “but had sailed the ship of state fairly sue ake'd rattier here a new hat '-Wash ^B r,f”"rp an,l torture by eessfully. adding: “Sir John was at ■•hJ" banf,i's who tnsleted tbe helm and supplied the brains, K toto r. al kn”w b >w to convert while Sir Charles supplied the wind. Mte Failing ■ l tr» hi h’*1'1 hl’ naKpd His blowing filled the Mils." Harker - Doesn't Cnttem. the tailor, ■»H. to compel him to mind you of a doctor? Parker-i Slml Net Long. ebould say not. Re remind« me of W •• th//'’ of " s"«’” d«™* Rinks (who ordered a pancake half that tittle Mil I owe him etery time K m of ■ I'stlent with an hour prrviouslyi-Er-1—«ay, wlit Wn meet Ixxtdon Telegraph fl < tMn followed by a tbat iMincake be long? fl» ti* '^«'fonued Into n Waitress—No. Mr; It'll be round 'h’nr,‘ Thru be waited patiently anotlMr fl h ”0 Plates. half boar. Carl Edward, infant son of Albert L. and Lizzie J. Easom of Nehalem, was | born March 24th 1910. He was strick­ en with Cholera Infantum Nov. 24th. 11911 and died Saturday Dec. 2nd. He faded as a flower in the budding ' and went to the garden above, where j ‘‘The flowers bloom forever.” The I funeral services were from the home I of Charles Easom in Nehalem at 2:30 i o’clock on the afternoon of Sunday, j Dec. 3rd., the Rev. James T. Moore of | Tillamook Bakery, HEADQUARTüjRS FOR DAIRYMEN’ AND S SUPPLIES STEEL STOVES & RANCES We carry a Large Stock of Hardware, Tinware, Glass and China, Oils. Paint, Varnish, Doors, Window Sashes I Agents for the Great Western Saw ALEX McNAIR CO The Most Reliable Merchants in Tillamook County OUT KI 1 for backache, rheumatism, kidney or bladder trouble, and urinary irregularities. Foley Kidney Pill» are tonic in action, quick in result». Refuse substitute«. Chas. I. Clough, Tillamook