Tillamook Headlight, April 18, 1912. d- ì MR HEADQUARTERS FOR ATTORNEY & COUN8EL- DAIRYMEN’ AND S SUPPLIES TEEL STOVES & RANCES We carry a Lar^e Stock of r Hardware, n HENDERSON L. I JOHN LOR-AT-LAW, Tillamook Block, Tillamook, Or. Room No. 261. T. BOTTS, T T • A ttornky - a T-L aw . A Complete set of Abstract Books n office. Taxes paid for non- Residents. Tinware, Glass Tillamook Block. Both phones. Oils. Paint, Varnish, Doors, Window Sashes, C arl haberlach , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Tillamook Block. Agents for the Great Western Saw ALEX McNAIR CO Q.EORGE WILLETT, The Most Reliable Merchants in Tillamook County -LÙ J J J A ttorney - at -L aw . E Tillamook Commercial Bonding. T illamook OLEY NEY PILLS T. for backache, rheumatism, kidney or bladder trouDie, and urinary trreguiannw» Foley Kidney Pills are tonic in action, quick in results. Refuse O regon . II. GOYNE, A ttorney -A t -L aw . Office : Opposite Court House, Chas. 1. Clough, Tillamook. T illamook , O regon , re You Giving rour Live Stock a Fair Deal ? "We Show to Advantage Yon like a little salt and pep- ■r—a little mustard—a little imon extract—a little this and fiat to flavor your grub. Your ow, your steer, your hog under atural conditions would have a hance to get a bite of this, a bite f that and a bite of the other fling and so get a variety in its fed. But under the unnatural fondition in which you keep liem, they get every day about he same sort of stud to eat. As 1 natural consequence they get ‘off their feed.” Even if'they Io not, their digestive organs leed the tonic effect which comes rom a variety of feeding stuffs. Watkins’ Stock Tonic s a scientific preparation which lot only improves the flavor of he feed you feed, but also sup- iliesthat tonic element so needed o make your live «tock do their >eet. There is no longer any doubt ibout the need of a tonic for the modern domestic animal kept tinder 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 a pail on trial, backed by the Watkins guarantee. Deliver* by Waggon. I FAMILY • RECIPES. I T. BO ALS, M.D., PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, *0 .* ana * « * ■ ar ■ HiH Single and Double Sets of Harness that we keep in stock We can supply your Harness needs on short notice and we make for the very best people in the locality. If we did not give them complete satisfaction they certainly would not continue to patranize us. We do the veiy beat quality of work at a moderate charge, and solicit your patronage. ______ W.A, Williams & Co Next Door to Tillamook County Bank. 4 « fl I fl fl 1 I TILLAMOOK. The valued family re­ cipes for cough and cold cure, liniments, tonics and other remedies have as careful attention here as the most intricate prescrip­ tions. Tillamook Block KER RON, M. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Tillamook Block, Our fresh, high grade drugs will help to make these remedies more effec- " tive than ever. Right prices assured. Tillaincok, Oregon. are also C. HAWK, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, CLOUGH, Reliable Druggist. BAY CITY, OREGON. R. BEALS, Ask for Mokatil REAL ESTATE, F inancial A gent , Tillamook, Oregon. J ^R. P. J. SHARP, RESIDENT Now is the time to have that group picture made. R. R. ROBERTS Let u« show you our special display of attrac­ tive new styles. We are perfectly equipped for making group pictures and will please you with the quality of our work. HARPER WHISKY Monk's Studio. DENTIST, Office across the street froir th« Court House. Dr. Wise’s office. Home Made at the Cold Storage. 8ARCHET, I . The Fashionable Tailor Mother knows she has made the test, Tillamook Baker’s Bread C.ea'jing, Pressing and Repair­ ing a Specialty. I S» »re in Heins Photographic Gallery. J. Is the Best, We use Olympic Flour. CLAUSSEN, LAWYER, Çeutechrr Jl&pokat. aij Tillamook Block, ¡SS?-’ SWEET PEAS - T illamook Our “Hotot* collection VETERINARY ac.l. m. I Both Phone* >. Tillamook - . 1 Oregon, G. 1. Olcugh. Druggist I Majestic Even In Its Ruins Is the Historic Old Edifice. ITS BLOOD SATURATED ARENA and China, L* ROME’S COLISEUM I p s. ISAACSON, I VETERINARY SURGEON AND DENTIST, Todd Hotel, Tillamook, Formerly with th* army transport Dta. Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, cl.ao ’W On th« Oooasien of Ita Inauguration Flvo Thousand Wild Animal» and Ten Thouaand Captive« War« 8lain In an Orgy That Laatad a Hundrad Day«. ■acond only to the Acropolis at Ath­ ena In interest to the antiquarian and historian In his study of ruins of Eu­ rope la the Coliseum at Rome. This historic edifice was erected during the reigns of Vespasian and Titus and In honor of the latter. It Is said that 60,- 000 Jews were engaged In lta erection for tan years. It was a feudal fortress for a long time and finally a quarry from which were built churchea and palaces until by lta consecration as holy ground on account of the number of martyrs sup­ posed to have been Immolated there, further ravages were stopped. It la said to have given seats to 87,- 000 spectators and was lnagurated A. D. 80. the same year In which Titus died, on which occasion 8,000 wild an­ imals and 10,000 captives were slain. The inauguration lasted 100 days. An ecclesiastical tradition makes the archi­ tect to have been a Christian, one Gaudentlns, afterward a martyr. This structure was originally called the Amphitheatrum Flavium, but since the time of Bebe It has been known as the Coliseum, probably given it because of Its enormous size. The Roman Coliseum became the spot where prince and peopl^,mct* to­ gether to witness those sanguinary ex­ hibitions the degrading effect of which on the Roman character can hardly be overestimated. The circumference of the building Is 1.0-11 feet, the height of the outer wall is 157. the length of the arena 278 feet and Its width 177. It covers an area of six acres. It is only by ascending to the upper terrace that the enormous size of the Coliseum Is fully seen, and hy moon­ light the effect of size nnd massiveness Is much Increased. The ruins south of the Coliseum are supposed to have been the Vivarium. In which were kept the wild beasts for the combats. As a general description of the build­ ing the following passage of Gibbon Is said to be perfect: "The outside of the edifice was Incrusted with marble and decorated with statues. The slopes of the vast concave which formed the In­ side were filled and surrounded with sixty or eighty rows of sents. of mnr- ble likewise, covered with cushions and capable of receiving with ease •bout 80,000 spectators. Sixtvfour •vomitories’ (forty that name the doors were very aptly distinguished) poured forth the Immense multitude, nnd the entrances, passages and staircases were contrived with such exquisite ■kill that each person, whether of the senatorial, the equestrian or the ple­ beian order, arrived at bls destined place without trouble or confusion Nothing was omitted which In any re ■pact could be subservient to the con venlence and pleasure of the sjiectn- tors They were protected from the •uu and rain hy an ample canopy, oc­ casionally drawn over their beads. The air was continually refreshed by the playing of fountains and profusely im­ pregnated by the grateful scent of aro­ matics. "In the center of the edifice the arena was strewed with the finest sand nnd auccesslvely assumed the most differ­ ent forms. At one moment It seemed to rise out of the enrth like the garden of the Hesperides. nnd was afterward broken Into the rocks and caverns of ’Thrace The snbterranenn pl|>es con­ veyed an inexhaustible supply of water, and what bad Just before ap- penrad a level plain might he suddenly converted Into n whin lake, covered with armed vessels and replenished With ths monsters of the deep. "In the decoration of these scenes the Roman emperors displayed their wealth and liberality, and we read on various occasions that the whole fur­ niture of the amphitheater consisted sitker <>f silver or of gold or of amlier. "The poet who describes the game of Cartons tn the chars, ter of a shepherd attracted to the capttol by the fame of tb«ir magnificence affirms that the nets Aesiguad aa s defense against the wild beasts were of gold wire, that the por­ ticoes were glided and that the ’belt’ or ctrrie whk li divided th« «evertI ranks of spectators from each other was stud­ ded with a precious mosaic of beautl fal stone«.’’ la aan -t’hi< ago New». CAViTIES IN THE SKULL Rjom Cnough Inaid« On»’» Hand to Hid« Bulky Artielia. Every one is uot aware that than to space inside a iierson’s bend for storing away heavy and bulky foreign arUclOB. Oue man who had made a specialty af burglary and jail breaking now shows how be waa aided In his work by Util­ izing this human attic storage room. He concealed a large skeleton key aud a saw twelve Inches long, coiled like a watch spring. In the cavity reached through his nostrils. But In the Lou­ don Lancet Dr. Rushton Parker relates a more remarkable case of the carrying of a large foreign body in that space of the beud, a MR that without the victim knowing that bls bead was so tilled up ■nd weighted dowo. A young farmer consult«* Dr. Par­ ker at the Liverpool hospital for a nasal abscess that bad troubled him some time Probing the nostril, the surgeou found that a loose mass, apparently of metal, occupied a considerable space behind the noee and above the roof of the mouth. So large tans thia object that It was removed with difficulty through the side of the face. It proved to be a gun breech and an Iron bolt The breech measured 3 by by 1 inches. The bolt was three Inches long. The weight of the two was a quarter of a pound. This mass of metal had been lu the man’s bead for five years, though be bad not suspected Its presence there. A muzzle loadlug gun bad exploded In his bands and shattered bls face. The wound healed without leaving any out­ ward deformity. His only affliction was symptoms of a nasal catnrrh. The young farmer made a rapid recovery to perfect health with the removal of the Iron from his head. STRANGE BEDS. In Germany a Person 6hould Be an Acrobat to Sleep Well. Habit conceals all sorts of absurdi­ ties It makes oue aclie to sec an Ilina- tratlou of n Japanese sleeping bits k. hoi lull ed out just enough to permit of tile neck bi lug adjusted thereto. The Ge.imius’ uollou of iilgiil npuie (I es uot :' com­ fort There are luuuy III made utnl uu- satlsfiictor.v lids ifroui the Auu-li.uil point of view) to be found In the kai­ ser’s domfti.ous. German beds, almost without excep­ tion. are single— ho much ro. Indeed, that the o< eupant. If be attempts to de­ viate nil iixli or two from bls position, finds himself sprawling on the Hour The sheets, bed blankets, etc., are made'just to fit the lied* uud tire never wide enough to tuck In. They are sel­ dom wore Ginn tin Inch or two wider than the mattress, uud it requires the skill and experien e of an r.erolmt. es­ pecially In Hie case of a foreigner, to keep the bedclothes evenly balanced over one. Many of the German hotels use th* French pillow, which is about half the size of the mnttreis and stuffed out so Inird nnd plump thnt about the only benefit the tired traveler gets frotn It Is to have it serve as u rest for Ills back while he sleeps In a sitting position. The majority of pillows found In Ger­ many. however, are wedge shaped, of the same material a* the inuttreaa, nnd come to a point near the center of tba bed. Ou these the sleeper (If he sleeps* rest* on un Inclined plane nnd looks liken body on one of t he narrow planks In the morgue In Par's, with n sheet thrown over It.— Hnr|ier’« Weekly. Some Consolation. The man who soinetiuiea spoke Ids IhouL'Iit* aloial hud In eu more < on ern- eu «halt not«," w hich bad I eea f. ’.o muttered. "Well. I've uev< r kiiied uu >- body, anyway,"- l-.i er> laxly'«. Funny Man. Henri Bergson In his recent bo "Laughter.’’ lays stress on the fr.t that uian. long ilefined ns "the lai! L Ing aulninl,” Is also the only laugl.a' e anhnal There Is nothing really co n leal except human beings The aina,«* World Is aolciuu betide the so eu. ■■ 1 lords of criwtlou. Mau akin« is nu vie je>'t of ridicule Agreeing an a Paint. "I wish you could make my wife look on th* bright side of things.’’ "Perhnpa there 1« no bright side to her life." "Noneenae! Hasn’t she got ■ home anti n h uh ba nd?" "That’« what I was thinking of -L<-r husband.”—Houston Post. Letting. Hoax-I winder why Tightwad al­ ways wears those will and petiw •Hits? Joux I suppose be« suae a salt •n<1 «lilt «bould be good tor two eeasons.— I’blladelphla Itwofd Th« Art>eti« T«mper*m«nt. Millet the painter of "The Angelas.” •h« Most Have B««n P«p««r, bad a eta nd lor agreement with a firm (taughter Papa. Jack 1« rotulug up of art dealer* who t««ok all bis work In exchange for regular iwymenta of 14M tonight to ask your conwut to <>«r mar­ ■ month When he was told that they riage Be kind to him. won’t you? roafd «ell a «Ingle picture for a* much Father-Very well, dtugbtar HI «ay Bn. —Roeton Tranw »to« •• f2.<»*» lie wild •"That 1« their affair A« Inng aa I have el! I need and ran |«lnt what 1 Metallurg I «ML like end ea I like It I do not mind whet fMrtor lafter exatnlnatloti) Madam« they get for toy pictures" — Ixmdou you base a constitution of Iron ome«tlr beppln««« the only tolse of •in h«« many tools but a ite to toe paradise that has sirvived tbs tall- L'Eat range. handle tbst Ais them alL UoiaMB.