Tillaniooic Headlight, September 12, 1012 Pivotlcal States for Taft. bottle goods . Pebbleford, bottled iti bond, per bottle, $1.50 Clarke’s Pure Rye, bottled in bond .. Per bottle, 1.25 Echo Spring, bottled in bond.............. Per bottle, 1.25 Old Crow, bottled in bond, per bottle, 1.50 Hermitage, bottled in bond, per bottle, 1.50 Cyrus Noble, 3 Crown ......................... 1.50 O.T.O., bottled in bond, per bottle, 1.25 Kentucky Dew, 4 gal., bottled in bond 2.25 75 Kentucky Dew, full pint, ,, John Dewar & Sons, Old Scotch Whiskey • • —........................................... 1.50 Black & White, Old Scotch Whiskey. 1.50 1.75 V.O.P., • » Old Scotch Whiskey............ Sandy Macdonald’s Old Scotch Whiskey ................................................ 1.75 Hunter Baltimore, Rye Scotch Whiskey ................................................ 1.50 Canadian Club......................................... 1.50 I. W. Harper ..................... ..................... 1.00 Harvester Old Style .............................. 1.00 1.00 Monogram................................................ Kentucky Dew......................................... • 1.00 Billie Taylor, full quart......................... 1.25 1.00 Coronet Dry Gin............................... Per bottle 1.75 A.V.H. Gin.......................................... Per bottle 1.75 Gordon Sloe Gin.................................Per bottle 1.25 Gordon Dry Gin.................................. Per bottle 1.00 Kock and Rye...................................... Per bottle 1.25 El Bart Gin. ........ Per bottle 75c. Virginia Dare Wine Per quart 35c. Port Wine............... 35c. Sherry Wine............ . Per quart 3oc. Angelica Wine........ • Per quart 35c. Zenfendel Wine .... Per quart 40c. Tokey.................. • • • .Per quart 25c. Claret......................... 75c. White Grape Juice ■ • 50c. Local Beer, quart.. Three bottles for Domestic Beer, quart.Three bottles for 75c. Special Prices for Family Trade. Keg Beer............. Keg Beer............. Local bottle Beer Local bottle Beer ......... 15 gallons ......... 10 gallous 6 dozen quarts 10 dozen pints $5.75 4.00 10,00 11.00 Domestic Beers. Budwiser Beer ........... 6 dozen quarts $15 00 Budwiser Beer............. 10 dozen pints 16.00 Old styler Langer Beer. 10 dozen pints 18.00 WINES. White Port, Old Monk Brand $1.00 per gal, Port Wine.................................. 1.00 per gal. Sherry........................................ 1.00 per gal. Claret ........................................ 75c. per gal. Angelica.................................... 1.00 per gal. Zenfendel ................................ 1.25 per gal, Tokey ........................................ 1.25 per gal. YS. Monogram..................... White Corti Whiskey. . Harvester Old Style .. McBrayer, 13 years old Echo Spring ................. Chestnut Grove Rye .. Kentuckey Dew...... Alcohol ......................... Cornet Dry Gin............. per gal. ■ per gal. ■ per gal, per gal. per gal. • per gal. per gal. per gal. per gal. $5.00 4 00 4.25 6.00 4.25 2.75 2.25 4.00 4.00 AT ILLY STEPHENS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER, Cor. First and First Avenue East. ■r HEADQUARTERS FOR DAIRYMEN’ AND S SUPPLIES STEEL STOVES & RANCES We carry a Larj?e Stock of . < 1 Hardwarfi, I Tinware, Glass and China, Oils, Paint, Varnish, Doors, Window Sash««. 4 ài Ljl Agentsl for the Great Western Saw B ALEX McNAIR CO The Most Reliable Merchants in Tillamook County ft for all stomach troubles—indigestion, dyspepsia, heartburn, gas in the stomach, bad breath,sick headache,torpid liver, biliousness and habitual constipation. Pleasant to take. LAMAR’S DRUG STORE. Artificial daylight haa been pro pavements for several months, and the decision in favor of Bitulithic duced simultaneously by inventors is the result of their investigation in England and Germany. It is a hard blow to persons who allow ‘cides to hardsurface her I and the popular sentiment among themselves to be annoyed by that the taxpayers favoring the “ best streets with a high class early bird,the rooster. and cheapest in the long run’ pavement. policy. _ The Citixens of Juarex are extreme in town -r precession of Pacific North- Prof. Wilson has opened the cam ly fickle. When Oroczo is t)wns that have adopted Bitul- paign in New Jersey and jnade it t hay shout ’ Vive Orozco” with but when the 11 a* the standard pavement, clear that he ia a free trader. The great unanimity, mtinnee to grow in number with response in November will not be federate capture the burg the pop ™ passing week. “gradually reduced.” It will be ular cry ia “Vive Madero.” ‘«test to join the line of p._ pro practically complete before bed time. Tbe late Gen. Booth of the Salva '** >s Cosmopolis, Washington. | : Senator Williams of Mississippi tion army started business on a ‘ »tract having been just just swsrd- award. 1 js jn favor of limiting the president ng been | slumsidewalk with a soap box for a th* bitulithic on a of the United States to two terms 1 platform. It was enough for a man ™ r of her principle streets. he citv cit and ,rln "drocate • constitutional of bis qualities, to found a World ____ -- ----------------- w > b«.-L tO*OC11 01 c«*»»opo!is amendment to that effect Tbe two- -Wide institution. gon. * inve,**<atiiig the various term idea seems to be the rule uow. I SMOPOLIS FOR GRESS. PRO BUSINESS MEN WANT TAFT. The Republican National Com ‘ mittee has information which leads it to believe that New York, the Successful Administration of whole of New England, with Ohio, the Finances of the Indiana and Illinois, will be car Government. ried for Taft. These states atandiug alone would not elect him, but Chairman Hiles has issued a „ many other states will be sure to formal statement declaring he has go the way they do. New Jersey fourni conservative business men has usually accompanied New York to lie for the re-election of President in the election returns. It has done Taft because of his record as au this constantly for over twenty economical chief executive. The years. The only doubtful state of statement, which met the approval New England, under the old classi of President Taft and Mr. Sheldon, fication, was Connecticut, but that follows: state has been giving its electoral ‘ T find that conservative business votes to Republican candidates for men look with favor on the candid so long a time that it is hardly like acy of President Taft for re election ly to discontinue that practice in because |they know he has been a 1912. Indiana, too, used to figure conscientious and successful ad in the doubtful list, but it was car ministrator of the finance of the ried by the Republicans in the four government. Usually a public of latest presidential elections and ficial who imposes a check on the perhaps will be this time. Of course increase of expenditure finds that no Democrat claims either Ohio or he has performed a thank'ess task. Illinois. “The situation in the treasury Without New York's forty-five with which President Taft waa con electoral votes no Democrat sup fronted was very different from that poses that his candidate can carry which confronted Roosevelt when he the country, and there ia a fair pro became President. Mr. Roosevelt in bability that Taft will get more votes 1901 assumed charge of a govern, there than Wilson. He had a plur- ment whose disbursements for that The ality there of over 200,000 in 1908. fiscal year were $471.190,857. and it is hardly probable that Wil- receipts for that year were $91,000,- eon can overcome that long lead. 030 in excess of the disbursements. "The agggregate of public expen Wilson is a little too radical for New York’s liking So much of the diture increased steady for several New York businrss population re years under Mr Roosevelt. During sides in New Jersey that that state the last year of his administration can be looked^upon by the Demo the total of the current operating crats as doubtful thia year. When expenses had attained the unpre Wilson carried the state for govern cedented figure of $662 324,441 and or in 191G any Democrat could have during that year there was a deficit won it for that office. Thousands of $58,000,000. Thus, by ignoring of Republicans iu that state, aa in opportunities for effecting economy every other, remained away from b*rcsidant Roosevelt had permitted the polls that year. The New Jer a surplus of $90,000,000 in 1902 to be sey Republicans were further im come a deficit of $58,000, 00 in 1909; peded by having a singularly weak and during that period of seven years the ordinary expenses of the candidate for governor. The issue government had increased $191,000,- in 1912 is larger than it waa two 000 or 40 per cent. years ago, and this time the Repub “Hence the increase of the coat licans will go to the polls. of conducting the ordinary govern- i Usually the Republican ticket mental operations during the Ro proves to be stronger iu November osevelt regime waa almost six per than it seems to be in August, the cent annually; it was 4 per cent dur information which the Republican I ing the preceding periodof lOyeara, National Co-umittee ia getting re and approximately 3 per cent per an garding the loyalty to the party of num during the decade of ’82-92. I most of the big states of the East “Mr. Taft might have looked and West is probably founded on fact. The taste of Democratic rule with complacency upon this phase which the country received from of government operations of five the capers of the Democratic House or six per cent by pointing to the in the recent sessions will turn practice of the last 20 years, But thousands of votes against Wilson he chose to dedicate himself to the on November 5. Globe Democrat. task of setting a great business house in order so that instead of increasing the burden of expendi Smile. Smile Smile.' tures $31,DUO 000 a year during each of three years, President Taft’s ad Smile! That genial captain of in ministration has reduced the dustry, Charles A. Coflin, president ordinary disbursements from $002. of the General Electric Company, 000,000 per annum to $654,000,000 per says that “a sense of humor takes annum and the deficit of $53,000,000 a man uver many a rough place ” for the laet year of the Roosevelt We are inclined to be too serious. administration has been turned Muckers have made the people be into a surplus of $36,000,000 in the lieve that it is better to kick than to last yearof the Taft administration. smile, better to see the shudows than to enjoy the sunshine, better Why Does He Think So? to tear down than to build up Hence this era of trust-busting, rail road-smashing and tariff tinkering. Speaking before the Hull Moose Hence the clamor to upset the convention at the court house hint courts, to substitute the town meet Saturday, F. W. Mulkey, of Port ing for the well regulated conven land, told his hearers that they tion and to make the town crier would find themselves opposed by take the place of the president. Is a subsidized press that would dis the world any happier when it cries tort their aims and the extent of The statement than when it smiles ? Is there more their movement. joy in the graveyard than in the was unsupported by fact or argu banquet hall? Mr. Coftin is a phi nient. It was made for the effect losopher. He preaches the true that it might have, and the utter philosophy for this time of unrea ance of its sheds a sidelight on the son and unrest. He does this in mental processes of the ex-senator spite of a name that would indicate that is anything but fluttering to an entirely different frame of mind, him. Why should Mr Mulkey at once says Italie'a. jump to the conclusion that a news paper that does not agree with him Honesty or Dishonesty ? is a subsidized organ ? While the Roosevelt crowd appear Why should he refuse to believe to have a patent on “honesty” and |hHf there are men and newspapers have much to say abou* giving the that have honest convictions ? people an opportunity to decide all Why, when a newspaper takes a questions for themselves, they have Mtand that is opposed Io the prin. arranged matters in Kansas sothat ciples that lie is advocating, doea the Republicans of that state abso he immediutely decide that the lutely have no way io which they piqier has been lioiight, body und may vote for the Taft electors, in aoul ? Doea Mr. Mulkey believe that fact there will be no Taft electors in the Sunflower state. The Repub Much a tiling an an horteat and in licans there have the alternative of dependent conviction is unknown, either voting for Roosevelt, the and that men express only the bolter, or Wilson, tbe Democrat, thought* that they have been paid The vote in Kansas in 193» was to express ? la the only kind of political utter 197,216 for Taft and 161,286 for Bryan, or a majority of 36,<MJ0 for the Re ■ net that he knows anything about publican ticket. Under the gag the kind that ia pure hared by acme- rule now in force it doesn’t require bodv'a dol'ara ? an astute observer to predict what "If you would find wliy other the thousands of disfranchised Re people do ttiinga, link into your publicans in Kansas will do on own hi art.” vu)v a German poet. November 5, andGovernor Wilson's Did Mr. Mulkey look into Ilia own chances of carrying the state are heuit and discover there that no surely rosy. But, its anything to body ever doea anything or any any beat Taft with the bolters, so they thing unless he ia hired to do it ?— are probably satisfied. However, Oregon Register. how about tbe “plain peepul’ hav ing a voice in government ? Or are Antoine Deloria, Postmaster at they not supposed to have a voice Garden, Mich., knows the exact when they oppose tbe third term facta when be speaks of the cura demagogue?—Polk Count/ Obser tive value of Foley Kidney Pilis. He says: “From my own exiier ver, ________________ 1 ience I reccommend Foley Kidney jsi . • Pills, as a great remedy for kidney Fov EXCHANOI, desirable city trouble. My father was cured of property in Medford, Ore. for acre- Sidney disease and a good many age near Tillamook. H- C. Glos of my neighbors were cured by _ Hile ” For sale ^ock. Z» Realty St., Med'ord, Ore- Foley _____ Kidney «ale at Lamar’s Drug Store Store Lamar's SPINNING EG8&, i Rel-gion of Fluid Friction te Big ffte lidity of ti e Earth. An Interesting experiment eiMMtt the phenomenon of fluid frtettaa. I'aae two eggs, one raw. tbe other bud boiled, and suspend them by worse from au electric light Biture se “ntr support, their long axes Petes vertical. Then if they be geutly turned sreunff once or twice It is found that white the boiled egg continues te revolve the mw one comes Immediately te Met. This difference is due to the fact that tbe boiled egg te a solid body, the whole egg turning, while the MW egg Is a fluid contained In a aboil, the shell aloue being turned by the twisting of the wire and tbe fluid remaining sta tionary. Tbe investigator who devised this and the following experliaaats em ployed It as one of tbe pcnoth that tbe earth Is a solid body and Mt a thin crust of rock surrounding a ffnid or “pasty nucleus." In that cms , be held, the observed swinging and sway ing motions of tbe earths alts tn pro cession and mutation would bo Impos sible The same phenomenon to shewn tn the following experiment, though tn a directly opposite way: If two eggs be spun rapidly on their stdeo on a mirror or other fierfectly smooth sur face tbe experimenter by gently plac ing his hand upon tbe boiled egg as It spins stops Its movement perma nently. Rut If tbe same exiwrlment he made with the row egg It will Immedi ately begin to spin again when tbe hand la removed Indeed. It ia extraor dinary how long one cun hold his baud upon the raw egg without destroy ing Its motion. The reason of this te apparent. The fluid within tbe shell continues to revolve, although the shell ttoelf Is stationary, while In the other case tbe whole egg Is stopped. If one attempt to spin the eggs on tbe mirror, after the manner of a top. be will And that the tmlled egg will spin for a considerable time, but that tbe other will fall almost immedl iteiy on Its side It has tieen observed that this experiment furnishes a solution of Columbus' problem— how to mike an egg stand on end First boll the egg bard aud then spin It—Harper’s Weekly. BRIDES IN JAPAN I First They Are Arrsysd In Whits Silk, Then In Red. Brides la Japan follow the same cus tom which prevails In the west-'ru world —that of wearing white at the wed ding ceremony, at least during a part of it. But the significance attached to the choice of this color Is quite differ ent on the two sides of the world. The Japanese bride Is dressed first la reeplendeut garments of white silk, tlie sleeves of the costume usually being about three feet iu length, while the •ash, an Important feature, meaauree about eleven feet in length. Bnt white Is the mourning coir* la Japan, and the bride leaving her par enta' bouse considers herself tissi Is the sense that she will never return alive, preferring death to divorce and in consequence wearing a white cue to me. After the exchange of cupe of sake with the bridegroom, which la tbe roust Important part of the wedding cere mony, the bride changes her coetutne to a red one. This Is called iromnoshl (changing color), lied Is supposed to have a purifying power and perhaps clears the minds of the parties of all association of mourning This fa the origin of the .Inpnuese custom of using white costumes at wed dings. but many people In modem Ja pan do not any longer have time to bother their heads with these que lions of color and simply go ahead him ! mar ry according to the accepted custom, with no thought of what tbe colors sig nify.-Oriental Review Wanted to B« Sura. A OertDHU farmer left Id« Imine« un hitched In frout of a hardware stole In Gary. When he came out after no In terval of a half hour they were goua. There had been uu sound of a ruu- away, ao the farmer surmised that they might have gone homa. Ha pimiied bls wife, saying: "Chillis. Is« dur horses dere?" A negative fume over tbe phone, fur hr added "Nor iter vaguu eider/'—Chicago Boat Didns Look It A pb<a«rH|.ber wliu bad taken Dr. las Maclaren's ph ture de.tro)Ml lbs When there wai a loSHliler- ■agatlee able demand fur the picture the phot <- re filler'« l»<ot<b lieart waa dlatvrbed. a ad be renin rked aggrlavad "that man ini' tit line tell’t me be was fatuoua aud I «uuld have ke< p't blm. Hadldna look like K. ’-t'brlaUao Kegtetov The Knd e* a Carear. “Why have pm <l»eu up the Idea of Suing In for a pnifeealoaal rerrert" asked her friend "he-iaa I have met a perfectly •piei>dI<1 man wbu thinks I would be a lovely ornament te u bun<al»w that ha baa hl. rye uu t.'hkagu Kecovd Hee- ate. IntsreaSiw^ Rihai-Ja< k Hoggard told om a tong aterí last night Kitty-la ba aa la tera« ting story tettar? tettivi I shuuid aay an Ha held hi« sndtoere freo» start to flaloh -Hesiue Traaaerlgt. — — ■ — • i