Tillamook Headlight, December Ifl, HIGHLY COLORED FUN. AND EAUTIFUL GIFTS AT HOWARD WAHLEN’S, Jeweler. JEWELRY. WATCHES, You will always find here Every Watch sold by us is the very latest, whether it be Guaranteed to Give Satis- solid or gold filled, you can depend on the style being the faction. very best,8 the quality and Special for Saturday workmanship good beyond any #1.00 WATCHES 65c, question. Special for Saturday. #1.25 to #1.50 Tie Clips, 50c. CUT-GLASS CLOCKS. We are going to Close We have a large assortment Out our Line ofCut Glass To of Mantel and Fancy Clocks. We are Agents forthe Big Ben. do this we will cut the Price Special for Saturday. in Half. #1.00 Alarm Clocks, 65c- OPEN EVENINGS. HOWARD WAHLEN, Leading Jeweler, Tillamook, Oregon. to Fourth Class Postmaster amination Ex- who can comply with the require­ ments. Application forms and full in­ formation concerning the require­ Saturday, January 18, 1012. Tile United States Civil Service ments of the examination may be CotuiiiisMion unnounceu tlmt on the secured from the postmaster at Ne­ date above an examination will be halem, or from the U. S. Civil Ser­ Commission, Washington, 1 Leki at Tillamook, Oregon, ns a re- vice I suit of which it in expected to make D. C. certification to till u contemplated , Applications should be propetk 1 vacancy in the position < of fourth executed and filed with the Com-1 class postmaster of class (a) at Ne 11 ,!**'*>n at Washington within 7i halem, Oregon, and other vaenn-' •'“Y* before the date of the exami | dee as they may occur nt that of nation, otherwise it may be im- i ilce, unless it shall be decided in the practicable to examine theappli-i interest of the service to till the vi<- cunts. U. S. C ivil S ervicecommission ! cancies by reinstatement. The c< m peueatiou of the postmaster at that office was for the fiscal year Age limit, 21 yeure und over on the dine of tbe examination, with the exception tliut in u state where G. McGEE, M.D women arc declared by statute to l>e of lull uge for ull purposes at 18 years, women 1H years ot age on the date of the examination will be PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. admitted Applicants within the tciritory supplied by the post ctlln for which the exeiiiinaiton is an Office : One Block East of ■ lounceil. Tlie examination is open > to all citizens of the I'nited States Post Office. I F FAMILY RECIPES * The valued family re­ cipes for cough and cold cure, liniments, tonics and other remedies have a* careful attention here aa the most intricate prescrip­ tions. Our fresh, high grade drugs will help to make these remedies more effec­ tive than ever. Right prices assured. are also Reliable Draggiat. Home to the Folks FOR Christmas and New Year Holidays I TOWER’S FISH BRAND REFLEX SLICKER KEEPS OUT ALL THE RAIN Algsbra. The science of algebra li said to have been the invention at Mohammed of Buzlana about 850 A. D. The sci­ ence was Introduced into Spain by the Moors. The first treaties on the subject in any European language is believed to have been that by Ixtca Pacoll in 1494 The first English algebra was written by Robert Record«, teacher ot mathematics at Cambridge, about 1557. He was the first to use the sign of equality. THE 1 R eflex E dges P rotect Y oc - e I Has authorised a low round trip fare from all points on its lines in Oregon; from points on the Corvallis & Eastern; Salem, Falls City and Western and the Pacific Railway & Navigation Co. ot W ater C annot R un I n A t T he F ront W ATtar boot —D urable SATISFACTION GUARANTEED $1 00 Everywhere A J. TOWER CO. BOSTON Tower ONE AND ONE-THIRD FARE ! i » SALK DATES: Decenilier 21st to 2;>th inch’sivc anti from December 2Sth to January 1st, 1913, i tvlusive, witl> tinnì return limit Innuarv 2nd, 1913. For specific fares from any station, train service, sale dates, limits, etc., call on nearest Agent, or write to JOHN M. SCOTT, Ceserai PatteBger Ag«at, Portland, Or«goa Tillamook Baker’s Bread Sold at All Grocers She Knew th« Symptoms. There is a certain bright English actress who comes over here every year or two to play an engagement, says the Saturday Evening Post Among her admirers on this side is a middle aged theatrical man of a seri­ ous turn of mind. He Is courtly, but Las beeu called tiresome in conversa­ tion. One afternoon at her suit in a New York hotel the sprightly lady was brewing a dish of tea for a couple of newspaper men. The telephone bell rung, and the hostess answered th« call. “Yes," she said, “this is Miss Blank. Who? Oh, Mr. Blink calling, is ltr Then, in a tone of weary resignation, “Very well, send him right up.” She hung up the receiver and turned to tbe newspaper men. “Boys,” she said, “you’ll have to tod­ dle away. My sick headache to com­ ing on.” Th« Gold Lien« ef Raking. Fronting the Imperial palace at Pe­ king are two beautifully carved lions of enormous size which, if we are to be­ lieve the mandarins, are of solid gold and have been there since time im­ memorial. When the combined armies of England aud France advanced on Peking in 1800 the Chinese painted these statues gray in order to make the Europeans believe that they were of bronze and therefore to insure ngainst their being melted. Later, dur­ ing the Japanese war, these lions dis­ appeared for a time, but at the con­ clusion of peace they reappeared in their original position. Tbs value of these relics ia said to be incalculable, and they are tn native eyes a symbol of the unity of the empire.—Harper's. CLOUGH. T— | Grotesque Sport That la a Part ef th. Holl Festival. The curiously childish horseplay of the Holl festival, which is celebrated aunually by the maharaja of Patiala, la descrllied by Mrs. Charles Bertram in “A Magician In Many Lauds. The author made the acquaintance of the famous Hindu ruler during a tour or India aud was invited to remain over for the festival. Early in the morning I went to the club, where I found many of the guests, wbo were taking part lu the ceremony for tbe first time We were provided with a complete new suit of nindu garments, and our dressing was superintended by the maharaja s servants. We had camels, elephants and victorias provided for us. I was on an elephant in a kind of box, and we drove in procession to tbe palace in the native city. We were received with great acclaim by the natives, and I was led to be­ lieve that it was to be decidedly a dig­ nified occasion. But I was woefully mistaken. The fun had not begun. Certain formalities bad to be gone through before the signal was given. We took our seats in the courtyard of the palace at a long table that was loaded with large gilt dishes filled with different colored balls as large as oranges and filled with Holl powder. At n signal the brother of the mahara­ ja came to the front of the table and salaamed to the prince, who took one of the balls and threw it gently across the table, striking the officer on the breast. The ball broke and scattered the powder over bls costume. Then there was a general scramble, and In less time than it takes to write hundreds of balls were flying about, their many colored contents scattered broadcast on the crowd. Next baskets of loose pow­ der were thrown upon us in handfuls. It was no use to expostulate. The moment you opened your mouth some­ body filled it with powder. The battle grew fast and furious, when suddenly an enormous stream of water from a fire engine drenched everybody. The colored powders became wet and. min­ gling together, dyed us all in brilliantly variegated hue«. After this sort of thing had gone on for half an hour it ceased by mutual cousent, and we returned to the pri­ vate gardens of the maharaja, where we were most unceremoniously pitch­ ed into a tank of running water. I was dyed a deep scarlet all over my body, and it was fully a month before the color entirely disappeared from ay face and hands. OF RARE A WORL lMM- »• ROYAL B aking P owder A bsolutely P ure Cooking under modem methods and con­ veniences is made so attractive the whole family is becoming interested. “These biscuits are delicious; this cake ¡4 excellent,” says the father. “ I made them,” says the daughter, and both father and daughter beam with pleasure. Royal Baking Powder has made boat S baking a success, a pleasure and a profit, and : the best cooking today the world over is J done with its aid. A CURIOUS COINCIDENCE, THEY WERE VERY RICH What Elsa They Were Was Quaintly Told by Mary Lyon. When in 1837 Mary Lyon founded Holyoke college she collected the mou- ey required for its first building in sums thnt ranged from 6 cents to $1,000. She got 1,800 persons to sub­ scribe. Her feat gave the new enter­ prise an unusually wide foundation iu the public interest, but she did not ac­ complish it without much hard work or without gaining wide exjierieuce of human nature. One evening Miss Lyon arrived In the village of Ashfleld. Mass., at a home where she was always vvelcomcd. gladly. She was full of hope and en­ thusiasm. Would the squire take het at once to W„ jvhere, she had learned, there was a family of wealth that might give liberally toward the semi nary building? "Supper and a good night’s rest. Mis Lyon,” was the reply, "and then m;- horses shall take you there.” The next morning as they were start Ing the squire's wife laid n gentle hum on Miss Lyon’s shoulder, with th. warning: “Do not expect too much, ins dear Miss Lyon. We know the pcoph I fear you will not be successful.” With a beaming face Miss Lyon re plied: "Ob, I am told they are ver;, rich. I am sure they will help liber ally.” When she entered the house on her return Miss Lyon went quickly to her friend, and. grasping her arm. while conflicting emotions played over her face, she said: "Yes, it is all true, just as I was told They live in a costly house, It is full of costly things, they wear costly clothes”—then, drawing nearer and s’most closing her eyes, she whispered with unforgetable emphasis, “but. oh, they’re little bits of folks!”—Youth’s Companion. FREEZING TO DEATH Sensations That Com. With Exposure to Extreme Cold. In the course of a series of experi­ ments with extreme cold carried on at Berlin, Raoul Pictet, an investigator. Inserted bls bare arm beyond the el­ bow In a chamber refrigerated to a temperature of 157 degrees below zero F. and kept it there for several min­ utes. He suffered no permanent dam age, but experienced a number of pe culiar and painful sensations. Tbe chief of these aud the most trying was a feeling of pain in the bones of the hand and arm. The pain increased steadily. It was located chiefly in the interior parts of the arm and was far less severe in the portions near or at the surface. The skin was purple when the member was withdrawn. In about ten minutes n vloleut reaction set In with violent burning sensation of the skin wherever it bad been exposed. Investigations carried on with dogs indicated that the process of freezing to death is not necessarily an unpleas­ ant one. Placed in a temperature of —125 to —150 the animals displayed quickened breathing and heart beats, with a decided rise above normal in the blood temperature. These signs pointed to a sudden and violent auto­ matic effort of the heart to preserve the bodily temperature. In spite of en­ ergetic heart action the temperature of the blood fell gradually to 71 degrees. At this point the heart action ceased very suddenly. The sensations of bodily warmth and languor mentioned In descriptions of death by violent cold can easily be un­ derstood in view of the above expert aaente.—New York Baa. Killing Time. Perhaps the busiest time of the year in old colonial days was November, called "killing time." When the chosen day arrived oxen, cows and swine which had been fattened for the win­ ter’s stock were slaughtered early in the morning that the meat might be hard and cold before belug put in the An Ancient English Weekhouee. pickle Sausage«. rvllcbee and head­ Ia the rewords of St. Thoma«' hospi­ cheese were made, lard tried out and tal, London, la an entry of the year tallow saved. 1570 to the effect that "to consider:! tlou of the bote tyme of the yet»" the poor be allowed "every one a day three pyutto of Bera for two nwnttai." a quart at dinner and a pint at supper and at th« end of two month, return to 'There old« ordinary allowance, which la one quarto." Th« food at this ancient workhouse was to be dealt with as liberally as the drink. TS al­ moner and steward were to “bye no byffe but ef th« beat, withont bones ar.d Iu spectall without the marybon aud none other to be bowgbt." ! Dramatic Climax to a Trial In a Frendi Court. Coini'idenre—ebnnt-e- plays a tretuea- dous part iu biliiuiti history, Fate 1« another name for the same tiling; so to lurk. All these words are merely oar puny euphemisms for X, the uuknowi quantity. Not a day passes but the story of a remarkable coincidence is brought tu public notice. A stranger incident net- er occurred, however, than this one. the account of which is in an old copy of the Chronique de Paris. A youth of about nineteen vu brought to trial for having broken th« window of a baker’s shop and stolen a two pound loaf. The Judge—Why did you steal tin loaf? Prisoner—I was driven by hunger. "Why did you not buy it?” “Because I had no money.” “But you have a gold ring on yonr finger. Why didn't you sell it?" “I am a foundling. When I was tak­ en from the bank of a ditch this rtnj was suspended from my neck by a silken cord, and I kept it in the bops of thereby discovering at least wbo won my parents. I cannot dispose ot It” The procurer du rol (king's attorney! made a violent speech against the pda- oner, who was found guilty and *1- tenced to Imprisonment for fire yean Immediately upon this a woman more worn down by poverty than age cm » forward and made the following decla­ ration: "Gentlemen of the Jury, twenty year» ago a young woman was married toa young man of the same town, wboaft­ erward abandoned her Poor and dl> tressed, she was obliged to leave ter child to the cure of ITovidenc*. 1» child has since grown up. and M** man and the husband have grown old­ er. the child in poverty, the misery and her husband in prospedh They are all three now hi court The child is the unfortunate prisoner wbos you have Just pronounced gniHl- mother Is myself, and there sits t e I her." pointing to the king’s attorMf- POETICAL FEATS. Difficult Rime» Had No Terror« f* I Browning or Byron. Poets muy be baffled In t belr «*• for rimes, but It takes a great rd Wolverhampton- home hi« orders nere „o one was ' peremptory, but was ** i prised Mian ba , OST -Ji olieyed. Vue day he detect«'' daughter« making " «be rather exaggerated t "You "re on« of the women that was ever rr her. "Well," was th« rtieerfrt „ rt** glad to be a master?!** J partmeut of creation- — - 91