Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, February 22, 1912, Image 3

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    Tillamook Headlight, February 22, 1912.
LOW FARES WEST.
Daily March 1st,to April 15th,
ECONOMY IN MEAT.
In Its Sturdy Vigor It Io Rsprooenta-
tivo of Our People.
Indian corn to a native of America
i The Indians cultivated It when the
| white man flrst came, and their legends
| carried it back to Manitou, or Great
I Spirit, from whom it came as bls
choicest gift to man. says the Wash-
| ington Post Without it the earlier
1 settlements would have perished.
It grows tn ail parts of the United
States and in its every stage presents
varied charms and attractions, more
alluring to the eye than waving fields
of wheat or rk*e, the white cotton or
the splendid sugar cane, with which it
vies in stateliness and outranka In its
gorgeous and changeful hues of green.
One-tbird of the human family lives
on rice, but it Is not the third that
counts. The date palm to everything
to tbe desert dweller. So to corn to
the American, although often Indirect­
ly. He eats it on tbe cob and off,
makes of it Innumerable kinds of food
and turns it into bogs and cattle.
in its sturdy vigor Indian corn ls
representative of the people. It strikes
its tap root deep into tbe earth, while
tbe lateral roots reach out ta every di­
rection. It droops under the long
drouth, but given two or three rains
toward earing time it yields a harvest
that puts the gloomy prophets to
shame.
Avoid Waste by th« Judicious Use of
Odds and Ends.
TO
The cook who broils the tough end
of a porterhouse steak, roasts the ribs
I d a roast, throws away the bones and
juices left on the platter by the carver
FROM
CHICAGO .... . $33.00
ST. PAUL ............ $25.00 and dlscurda as unlit for use the meat
CINCINNATI
37.00
KANSAS CITY.. 25.00 from which the soup stock Ls made is
' guilty of wicked waste.
MILWAUKEE.. 31.30
OMAHA............... 25.00
The end of a porterhouse steak ls
ST. LOUIS .... 32.00
DES MOINES.... 27.85 unfit to serve when broiled. It should
NEW YORK.... 50.00
INDIANAPOLIS. 35 65 i be cut off. This, together with the
DETROIT ......... 3S.UU
DENVER............. 25.00 bone and Juice left ou the platter, a
bay leaf, three or four cloves, an on­
From other eastern points in 'proportion.
I
Tell your friends in the East of this opportunity of moving West at ion, a carrot and some parsley, will
I low rates. Direct train service via Burlington Route, Northern Pacific, make several cups of bouillon. The ribs
| Great Northern and ”North Bank” Lines.
should be cut out of a roast when pre-
You can deposit with me and tickets will be furnished people in j paring It for the oven. These, with
I the East. Details will be furnished on request.
■ the leftover gravy, may be used In a
W E CO a; AN
T. COOPER, Agent,
similar way for stock.
Gtn’l. Freight and Pass. Agent,
Hillsboro, Ore.
In maklug stock the long, alow proc­
Portland, Ore.
ess of gentle boiling extracts the fla­
vor from the meat and coagulates the
albumen. Only a Utile of the latter Is
extracted. Therefore the meat loses
but little of Its nourishing properties.
! There are numerous ways In which
[ such meat can be made appetizing.
• Combined with rice and tomatoes a
To further introduce our high-grade photo­
delicious luncheon dish may be made.
Butter a baking dish and line with hot
graphs we will give FREE one handsome
boiled rice. Fill the center with bits
of meat well seasoned with salt, pep­
per and onion Juice. Cover with rice.
with each $2.00 order or better.
Bake twenty minutes tn the oven.
CALL AND SEE OUR SAMPLES AND JUDGE FOR YOURSELF.
Turn out on a platter and pour over
THE BRITISH MUSEUM.
it a well seasoued tomato sauce. It
la a toothsome morsel.—National Food
Care With Which It la Guarded Prom
Magazine.
HEINS’ OLD GALLERY.
Fire and Thieves.
It Is very doubtful whether the Brit­
HISTORIC FIRES.
ish museum could ever be burned
down. It Is more likely to be swamped
The Most Fateful of All, Perhaps. Was first There Is enough water stored
the Burning of Mosoow.
there In tanks to last for many days’
A list of great cities burned would continuous pumping in case by any
be a list of nearly all the great capi­ cbauce tbe ordinary supply gave out
tals of the world.
Persepolte, the
Every policeman on tbe premises,
splendid residence of a long series of too, te also a tireman, being especially
rulers whose tributary provinces ex­ trained before be takes up bls duties.
tended from the Indus to the Helles­ There te not a nook or corner in tbe
pont. was burned, with all Its pal­ remotest part of the building which
aces and temples. Babylon and Car­ could not be deluged In two minutes
thage were so utterly destroyed that If necessity arose.
thhlr very location has become a mat­
Not ouly Is there little chance of the
ter of doubt. Rome was burned eight museum itself being burned down, bn*
times. Jerusalem four times, and. also auy building near it. for that mat­
though they rose from their ashes—
ter. for tbe museum looks after them,
The second tempi« 1« not ilk« the first.
too, hardly less carefully.
Athens. Syracuse. Bagdad. Alexan­
Thieves have Just about as much
dria and Antioch now exhibit only a chance us tire has. Immediately after
shadow of their former grandeur. The closing every gallery and every room
Phoenicians, like the Spartans and As­ In the building Is gone through, search­
syrians. disappeared with the ruin of ed and locked up. and then tbe whole
their capitals, but the most fateful process Is repeated again an hour lat­
conflagration recorded tn the history er. this precaution being directed
of the world Is perhaps that of Mos­ against Are rather than thieves.
cow.
It I m a full hour’s hard work merely
“They talk as if the fate of Europe to lock or unlock all tbe doors ia the
had been decided at Waterloo,’’ says building —Pearson’s Weekly.
De Bourienne In his memoirs of the
first empire. “If Napoleon bad beaten
Saved Ann a Ducking.
The advanced Piano selling methods originated in Wellington and Blucher a dozen time«
A colonial shrew who was threat­
Tillamook by the store of Jones & Knudson makes a it could not hnve retrieved the reverses ened with tlie ducking stool was once
the three preceding years. The
big saving in the price of a Piano to each customer, be­ of
auved by this plea:
truth ls that the French Caesar and
cause we save them the Portland jobber’s profit and his fortune were ruined by the burn­ “You wish to duck Ann Wlllott te
cure her!" her defender declared. "New.
Besides
there is ing of Moscow That city was the fu­ It she be uot cured where is tbe gala
the BIG AGENT’S COMMISSION. “
“
neral pile of’the great nation.”—Ex­
In ducklug her? And if she be cured
change.
all the women who now keep a guard
k
over their tongues through distaste to
The Collar of Homer.
Among the curiosities preserved tn he likened to such a known, notorious
the Fabre museum at Montpelier. and contemptible scold as Ann will do
I
France, is the famous “collar of Ho­ so no longer: but. although it te hot
mer." invented und worn by the great like any should become such as she.
In dealing with your own home merchant, whose Italian poet Altieri. This distinguish­ vet all will scold a little more than
word regarding the quality of the Piano he is selling ed man began the study of Greek now they do. the check of her exam­
ple being removed
Now. It te better
you can be safely taken in perference to an agent’s when more than forty-seven years old that Anu. being a single woman with­
and made such rupid progress in that
statement, who perhaps you will never see again. We language as to astonish all who knew out family to afflict, should go unpun­
» him.
He proclaimed himself "cheva­ ished and unducked, but despised by
distribute direct
lier of the order of Homer” and ap­ all. and wng her tongue as she will,
peared with a collar ou which were en­ dnudlng therein for the whole town,
graved the names of twenty-tbree po­ than that she should be silenced and
ets. ancient and modern, and to which the tougues of other women run more
was auspended a cameo portrait of free."
This argument s*>ems to have pre­
Homer. Ou the reverse side of this
preserved relic ls an Italian distich vailed. fur Ann Wiliott was never
A new pearl in the crown of the world’s best composed by Altieri, which translated ducked.
“Alfierl himself In creating this .
Pianos is the reliable S. W. MILLER, the most desired says.
order of tl>e chevalier of Homer has j
pld Time Verdicts.
of all good home Pianos. The S. W. Miller Pianos Invented an order more divine than A certain medieval Jury, as related
In tbe Oxford and Cambridge Review,
that of auy king.”
¡and Piano Players represent a
sitting upon tbe case of a man and
bis wife who had been struck by light­
The Pipe of Peace.
The North American Indian usually ning. returned tbe reasonable verdict,
In another
made his pipes out of a kind of stone "No one is suspected.”
known as red pipe stone, of which case. when the body of a man similarly
there were large deposits In the old killed was Unit fifttnd by bls wife, tbe
Jury was grntlfylngly definite in its
For their manufacturers, distributors and pur­ Sioux country, and the Great Spirit 1« finding that “she te not suspected." in
said to have given his indorsement to
chasers, as like a good violin they mellow and improve this particular material, which might modern days tbe verdict In a case of
Inflicted death te apt to be "tem
with age and there is a complete absence of that tinny, have been a Sioux monopoly. In these self
porary Insanity.’’ This was beyond
1
a
z-1
«
4- V*
x-» 1 <•*««
U« n »-» n
words:
"This
atone
is
red.
It
1«
your
metallic tone so often found in the class of Pianos
our medieval predecessors, hot their
It belongs to you all. Out of
formula showed a glimmering of tbe
usually sold by traveling agents. The much talked of it flesh.
make no more tomahawk«, war
idea that a man most be mad to take
hatchets nor scalping knlvee. Uae It
nix own life, verdicts tn such cases
only to make the pipe of peace and
often being that tbe victim bad acted
smoke therefrom when you would pro­
“by temptation of tbe devil.”
pitiate me and do my wilt”
PORTLAND and HILLSBORO
CHE____
Fi'ee !
Free !
Free !
SPECIAL 30 DAYS OFFER
Are You Giving
Your Live Stock
a Fair Deal ?
You like a little salt and pep­
per—a
little mustard—a little
lemon extract—a little this and
thut to flavor your grub. Your
cow, your steer, your hog under
natural conditions would have a
chance to get a bite of this, a bite
of that and a bite of the other
thing and so get a variety in its
feed. But under the unnatural
condition in^Jwhich you keep
them, they get every iiay about
the same sort of stuff to eat. As
a natural consequence they get
“ off their feed.” Even if they
do not, their digestive organs
need the tonic effect which comes
from a variety of feeding stuffs.
Watkins’ Stock Tonic
Is a scientific preparation which
not only improves the flavor of
the feed you feed, but also sup­
plies that tonic element so needed
to make yoqr live stock do their
best.
’There is no longer any doubt
about the need of a tonic for the
modern domestic animal kept
under artificial conditions. You
must give them something to
help them digest their feed and
get the greatest good from it,
Watkins’ Stock Tonic supplies
this need. It makes the animal
relish its feed more; it aids in
the digestion and assimilation
of the feed, and in addition to
that, it has a tonic effect upon
the whole system.
Your animals need a tonic of
this kind. Watkins’ Stock Tonic
is not a secret preparation. We
tell you the actual ingredients
that are used in it. You know
exactly what you are buying, and
pound for pound it will go farther
and do more good than any other
stock tonic or so called stock
food ever made.
The Watkins Man will be glad
to leave you s pail on trial,
backed by the Watkins guarantee,
Deliverd by Waggon.
R. R. ROBERTS
AMERICAN CORM.
Bromide
Photo Enlargement
The Tillamook Studio
An Actual Added Advantage
FROM -f FACTORY TO HOME
FROM L MAKER TO USER.
Typical Tone Triumph
Be sure you have the correct time.
Buy your watch here and you will
have llie best time alway— ever ac­
curate and dependable. Our stock
of (Gold and Silver Watches for
Ladies and Gentlemen i include»
some of the best time pieces ever
ever
made. Ail kinds of Jewelry of the
best grades at the lowest mark e
prices. Jewelry repaired while you
wait.
EUGENE JENKINS,
Reliable Jeuieler,
Next to the Post Offiee
S. W. Miller Pianos
I
I
Are the envy of agents who are trying to compete
with us, but on the other hand the S. W. MILLER
PIANO is the pride of every owner.
Tillamook Bakery,
OPPOSITE THE ALLEN HOUSE.
Corner
Stillwell
DON’T FOOL YOURSELF
Ave. and Firet
By paying more for any Piano than the price we
ask you for the S. W. MILLER, for there is no better
SPECIALTY IN ALL KIND OF CAKES Home Piano today on the market, and we kindly
i invite you into our store to make us prove it to your
ALL KIND OF ll'lio
¡entire satisfaction.
St. West, and both Pbonea.
_________________
R. A. WAHLEN, D.O.
Eye Sight Specialist.
Jones & Knudson, i
TILLAMOOK, ORE.
Diving Animals.
One thing that none of the land liv­
ing animals does la to dive. No mat­
ter bow bard pressed a swimming deer,
rabbit, squirrel or other purely terres­
trial animal may be. it will remain
above water But the muskrat, beaver,
ice bear and otter dive immediately.
Very Realistic.
First Paris Artist—Vy you pnt tat
aalt wld te paint? Second Artist-Ret
to for a marine picture. I make zs
paint salt: zen when ze English put
Mir fingers to zalr lips zay say: “Eet
to wonderful; almost taste ze aalt on so
ocean Zan zay buy.”—Satire
A Question of Depth.
"Besnty." said the ready made phi
toaopber. “to only skin deep.”
“1 can’t agree wlib you.” said the
positive man “If beauty were meas­
ured by that standard the rhinoceros
would be one of tbe most charrales
animala.” —Exchange.
Price« for Hogs.
Tho Retort Moteimoniel.
Light hogs 15o lb«.. 8«4c.
uu ib«. to an a*. Pc.
JV lb«, to ¿X Ib«. 7Sc.
30) lb*. and over. 7c.
Tulamook Meat Company.
Direct Factory Distributors for Tilla<
mook County.
■be—Ton can’t ever aerose me of
helping you to make ■ fool of your
aelf
He—I don’t know about that
Toe said yea when I asked you to
marry ma Baltimore America«.
The Modern Practice.
Tbe younger Pliny tells us that the
Roman lawyer. Regulus. had a habit
of painting round bls right eye if ba
was counsel for the plaintiff, his left
eye If be was for tbe defendant. In
our time« If a lawyer te painted around
bis right eye It means that a witness
on the other side baa met him sine«
court adjourned. If both eyas are
blnckrd It signifies that he saluted him
rwhe Instead of once. That’s alL—
Loa Angeles Ex press.
Generous.
"fio you are a bill collector.” aald
Mr. I’lacbpenny.
“Yes Here te one”—
"Keep it. my boy. keep It Tea seem
to hare a nice collection there. Far be
T from me to break It up.“— Phlladol
t>hla Telegram.
O'«honest
Harduppe—Is Wigwag honest? Bor
roweli— Wed. be came around to my
boose tbe other day and stole a« um­
brella I had tiorrowod from him.—
Philadelphia Record.
I-ct every man. if possible, gatbet
some good books under bla root—
Channing
AMATEUR SMUGGLERS.
WB Larga Fart Anonymous Letters
Play In Their Undoing.
About 25 per cent ot tbe amateurs
fiBBRht smuggling are betrayed by
■Baeymous letters written to the cus-
Ma officers of tbe port of New York,
flhto statement la made by the sur-
«Mor of the port of New York, who
“Mtocb of our Information concern-
|Rg tbe amateur smugglers cornea from
■BMjrmous letters. Discharged serv-
UM«. envious dressmakers aud Jewel-
MB, «wen friends, give the informutlou
WMcb brings results. We get Infor-
■Bttoa from persous who have beard
■Mara boasting of bow easy It is to
Mfluad tbe government. These are
«■My trades people who bear their
OMtMners declaring bow much cheaper
M m may buy their goods abroad.
*9tocharged servants write many
•Mtoymous letters. One letter 1 re-
toamber from a lady's maid contained
■Beh detailed account of tbe purchases
at Jewelry. dresses, trinkets and other
atttrtea that we knew were right in
making a search.
“Nearly all tbe attempts at suaug-
■fhM by amateurs are tbe results of
Maury and extravagance. They want
M collect souvenirs and presents and
■ay no duties. Tbe plea of ignorance
to an longer an excuse. Tbe matter of
paying duties is talked about every
“A woman arrived tbe other day and
■rnMr«d $500 duties to be sure she bad
everything right
We found only
anongfi to charge her $350 In duties,
■be saved $150 by trying to be bou-
ect. Nobody who plays fair with the
United States will ever have any trou­
ble on the docks of New York.’’-New
York World.
DISTORTED HISTORY.
Napoleon’« Downfall as Recorded In a
Russian Textbook.
Reasons of church, state or other
policy have frequently caused the schol­
ars of one country to tamper with the
history of another with which It has
been intimately connected. A curious
instance of such a distortion of French
history was that found in a Russian
textbook used lu all Russian public
schools and edited by a great Rus­
sian scholar. Ilovalskl. Tbe following
may be cited as an illustration:
“Conte XVL was a good aud peaceful
king. After a long and famous reign
in which be was most happy In his
choice of minister of finance be died
quietly In Purls, beloved by all his
people. Ills death was caused by a
hemorrhage.
“The successor of Louis XVL was hte
son. I.ouls XVII. During hte reign the
brave royal army commanded by Gen­
eral Napoleon liuuaparte captured tbe
larger part of tbe European continent
for tbe French crown. But tbe faith­
less Nn|>oleon showed tendencies to­
ward misusing his power aud was sus­
pected of burborlug dishonest schemes
against the legitimate ruler. With the
help of Ills majesty tbe emperor and
autocrat of all tbe Russia a. bls pinna
were frustrated, and he was deprived
of all his possessions, honors and rights
to a pension. He was then exiled Io
tbe Island of BL Helena, where be
died.”—Chicago Record-Herald.
Queer Brand of Poverty.
"Before attempting to Impress stran­
gers with slum life It Is well to hike a
preliminary survey of your route,” a
New York woman said. “Not long ago
I entertained an up state friend who
wished an Insight into the extreme
poverty of the city. I startl'd out in
the hope of giving her something to
think ubout for the rest of her nat­
ural life and succeeded beyond expec­
tations
We had peuetrnted only a
abort distance Into the poverty strick­
en district when we saw signs in three
windows In one block advertising that
a general housemaid was wanted
there My friend refused tu go a step
farther.
"’If that la the best yon can show
me lu tbe way of poverty.' she aald.
T might ax well go home I can’t af­
ford to keep a servant myself.’New
York Sun.
Firet Stocking Frame.
Tbe first stocking frames are said to
bars lieen made by William Lae. ca­
rats of Culverlon. In HiMi, und were at
first worked by hlui with tbe assist­
ance of bls sweetheart or wife. Like
most other Inventors, be failed to re­
ceive a suitable reward for hte labor
and te aald to have died at Parte In
1010, starving and broken hearted.
The stocking weavers’ company, estab­
lished in 1663, for the next ninety
years had almost s monopoly of th«
business, but Great Britain today
makes nearly one-half uf the stockings
made in the world. Germany Is a
eleee second.—National Magazine.
Preparedness.
Begin the morning by saying to thy-
aelf. 1 shall meet the busybody, tbe
«■grateful, arrogant, deceitful, envious
and unsocial, but 1, who bave seen the
nature of tbe good, that It te beautiful,
•nd that of the bad. that it Is ogly.
ton be injured by noue ot tbvai.—
Marcus Aurelius.
■ound te Have II.
“My wtfe can’t decide on a car "
"Thta model te thè last word In tour
Big care.”
"The test word, eh? Tben she’ll
bave it”—Beatile Poet-IntelMgeix or.
Getting Used te It.
“How long have you been married?“
"Ro long now that I can quarrel with
my husband without bursting late
team."—Detroit Free Frees.
Tbe heaven« are as deaf as oar as­
pira t ions ar* high —Thoreau