Tillamook Headlight, March 27. Highway, Tillamook County Oregon. AMENDS SALOON LAW v---------- . Licenses Only Granted to NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Notice is hereby given that sealed Ilotels Outside of Iacor« bids will be received by the board of porated Cities. County Commissioners of Tillamook Makti Nona Baking Easy Standing of the Contestants. Standing of contestants at Mason, Pennington A Co up to Weduea- fay March 20, for th^upright parlor '1 .. grand piano: .. 63,000 821,070 76 .. 308,710 77 . .. . (8.310 34 J. 480 283,915 80 .. . 65,000 166,2C0 83 .. . . 7C.44O ... 178,480 84 . 192,000 85 .. ... 450,765 ... 43.700 . . 119,675 87 . . . 193,940 88 .. . . 359,875 . . 215.150 91 .. ....... 171,875 ....... 2.365 . 139,635 94 ... 122.U60 ie .. . . 451.810 . 188,475 . . 41,295 118 . . ... 410,620 ... 177.340 99 . . . 407,505 ... 191,36o 101 . 368,791 . 231,645 10Î ... 100,71’5 108 ... . .. 3 j 2, 775 ., 187.740 . 164,780 Ill .. . 300,250 . 214,870 114 . ... 154,160 .. 77,120 116 2940 118 . . .. . 402 770 . 109,435 . 156,880 120 ... 2,025 123 . ... 33,135 . 400,040 . 1,049.940 127 . . 28 ... 439 700 . 1,761 660 129 2J . 226,000 130 . .... 2,000 30 . 190,405 131 ... ... 121 360 31 . . . 264,370 200,370 134 34 .. 202,050 .. 155 435 137 ... 35 .. . 131,680 .903 875 139 38 . 207,000 142 . . . 188,940 37 38 .. ... 213.680 145 ... .. . 125,765 . 186,000 147 .. .... 207,500 39 .. 216,000 151 . . .... 322.120 41 .. 43 . ... 374,760 152 . .... 122,120 .132 000 154 ... ... 105,880 40 . . 249,635 . 987,610 159 47 ... 142,300 . . 91,675 162 48 . 179, “45 165 ... ...1,080,055 49 ... 10(1,410 169 ... . . 199,380 51 .. 5’2 ... ... 188,945 171 ... .... 138,360 . . 194,870 173 ... .... 99'285 54 58 ... ... 213,760 178 ... .... 187,700 62 .. ... 301,225 183 ... . . 217,050 . . 218,8u0 ¿d .. ... 369 170 182 67 .. . ; 2,505 185 ... . . 198,340 68 .. ... 178,400 189 . . . ... 182.705 . ... 250,500 . 391,350 191 09 .. . . 368,015 193 ... .... 184,790 70 137 950 71 ... ... 471.810 195 ... 72 ... ... 98.875 198 ... . ... 07,975 74 .. . . 2,325 199 ... .... 231,045 . 1,070,990 75 Contestants are allowed 10.000 for every subscription they or their friends obtain for the Headlight. Rustling for subscribers is now in order. ____ County, Oregon, until 1 o’clock, the The new saloon law as amended 3rd day of April, 1913, for the furnish­ l>y tl-i State Legislature provides ing of all material except as otherwise tha! liquor licenses cannot be specified, and all labor, necessary for the construction of the improvement gra'i'ed to saloon outside incorpo­ mentioned below ; »aid work to be done rate l 'ities, but rnay be to clubs strictly in accordance with the plans with a liona fide membership of 50 and specification« approve«! and on file an*' to hotels with accommodations in the office of the County Clerk and also in the office of the County Survey­ for fi) guests. Asa number of our or. citizens are interested in this law Bids must be addressed “Board of we will give the bill in full for their Commissioners of Tillamook County ’ and the envelope maiked “Bid for the edification, which is as follows Construction of Section B of the E. E. Sec. 4938. No person shall be Cross County Road.” permitted to sell, give or in any The work consists of clearing right mar-uer dispose of any spirituous of way, grading, preparing subgrade, xna!t vinous liquors, near beer, or [ditches and shoulders, and building all term' nted cider, commonly known • bridges _____ and _______ trestles ____ from _____ Station 43 x ns «srd cider, in this State, outside o : ..... near the Hebo Store, to Station 559 Absolutely Pure of ’he limits or boundaries of any x 01.6 as per plans and specifications inc rporated city or town ; pro­ n iw on file in the office of the County 7he only baking powder vid'd. however, that no near beer Clerk and also in the office of the sin I be sold inside of incorporated County Surveyor. Bidder to submit made from Royal Grape . or by imprisonment in the year includiug adjust­ co.iuty jail not less than sixty «60 ment expenses, etc.... $580,660 33 dnvs nur more than six (th months, Remitted to Home Office. 50, OJO — 00 or 'J both tine uml iinpriaouiuent. Commissi* ns and sala­ 0401NSSHASTA .'section 4 Tills Act shall not n|>- ROUTtS ries paid during the pi> to tile service jf liquois to trav­ 370.681.68 year............................... elers on dining nnd buffet cure Taxes, licenses and fees wiiile being regularly run and op­ paid during the year.... 50,117.83 erat'd by uuy railroad company Amount of all other ex­ within the state. penditures ...................... CALIFORNIA Sunshine and Flowers MUCH PAVING TO BE DONE Ccttage Grose Street. 8, _ gal , Kittled Local bottle Beer. 10 do*, pints 11.0] atievt conditions soon to be en- in bond ... ............... 2 IS Kentucky Dew. lui' pint, bottled Joyed m Cottage Grove Domestio Beers. I in Kind .................. .......... 75 Hudwieer Beer. 6 doa. quarts $15 OC I John Dewar A Sons. Old Scotch Good Whit. Wash , Whiskey ....... ....... l.X Biidwiarr Beer 10 doten pinte 19® , <>I«1 style I auger Beer, 10 do* pt 11.0C •cl halt u bushel of »resh lime I ; Black A White Old Scotch ....... .............................. 1.511 b» («.Hiring over it t>oergal. 1 do tini elica kpply with a Whitewash brush. and Ilari ester Old Style 1 A' per gal 1 00 Zenfendel get your 1.1MB trona Lamb Stehr ider Moncigrain 1 25 per gal 1 »' Tukey ........ ‘a*.,, iel M 177, who handle ths Kentm'k Dew f ....1.25 per gal largeat and irsaliest line of 1 tau Billie Taylor, full HVlIBATkll LI «« «lid I.ANI>Pt AstKM Coronet ¡hi Gin quart WHISKEYS. Per t>ottle --------- .a the City l*ricea alway s rig lit. I « A. V l|. Gin Moimgram ................ per gal H00 periKittle Whin* torn W hiakrv |»er ifal 'Gonion Sloe Gin l>er Kittle A Foe Sale Gordan,Dry Gin Harvester Old Style per gal l>er Kittle ami Rie McBrayer. 13years el*l (»er gal f 0C .. .per lattile W) aerea ot Kit tom land known a. R,*ck KI Hart Gin Echo S(iring ................per gal 4 Jfi the Peter Hrntit place. The price Virginia tiare Wil rie . |>er Kittle 7.V. t hestudt t ,nive Ry e per gal. 175 ••$*»•«> sers Vincents Jsesb Port Wine Kentuckey Dew per gal. 2. JB |*er , acre Dairy farm m Als. a J >"ey . Imimivenients ii|> to da’e ’ Prie». «115 l«r sere G T Vexaon I BILLY STEPHENS, WHOU8SALB AND RETAIL ■UMMY TRAINS OF 3AGD Subtle Methods Ueed by the Natives 0» Bearing th. Dried aid Salted Dear Central Africa. Tbe Central African native is a mas ter In tbe art of poisoning and klivays on tbe watch ior it. He will never take a drink of water or beer or eat of a dish, even when offered by a peaceful acquaintance, until tbe host bss eaten or druuk some of it to pledge tts hartulessuess. He is always tn fear of treachery, and with good rea­ son. for an assassin is cheaply hired. Vegetable poisons may be made by al­ most auy oue. aud tbe methods of ad mitiisteriug them are cunning beyond description. Oue of the cleverest ways, often re­ sorted to when a man gets into his bead an Idea that a neighbor is injur­ ing him by witchery, is to kill tbe nn suspecting victim by means of poison ed stakes and at tbe same time avoid suspicion, which would inevitably lead to a similar vengeance. procuring little sharpened sticks, the murderer hollows tbelr points and in serfs poisou (usually made by boiling down tbe juice of certain shrubs or creepers) into tbe cavities. These be secretly plants upright, but leaning a little along the path which leads from the doomed negro's but to bis garden. Sooner or Inter tbe intended victim slightly lacerates his bare foot by bit­ tlug one of these sharp stakes. He takes no notice of tbe scratch, for he is used to such trifling injuries, but in a few moments his foot and leg begin to swell, and an hour or so later he expires In agony. The bark and roots of several trees and shrubs yield virulent poisons when properly brewed, one of which has tbe peculiar effect of at once paralyzing tbe organs of speech. Tbe gall of the crocodile when dried In the sun and pulverized is also very deadly, The most fatal poison, however, is that prepared from an ugly, whitish tree called ujungu in German East Africa It grows in only a few localities, and few natives will venture to cut it down, for a mere prick with a splinter will cause terrible and sometimes fa­ tal Inflammation. The negroes say that neither moths nor snakes will KO near it and that birds never rest in its branches. • To make this poison tbe wood Is burnt and its ashes are mixed with water and then boiled down to a thick paste, Tbe natives will travel bun- dreds of miles to procure this paste, with which hunters anoint their ar- rows and spears and the bullets of their guns, dipping them after tbe smearing In hot beeswax to form a protective covering against loss of power as well as against accident— Harper’s Weekly. Scattering Disease. Dr. Leonard Hill of London bolds that it Is an “offense against society for any one with a cold to cough, sneese or even talk without covering his mouth with bis handkerchief. Colds kill tens of thousands every year,” the doctor adds, “and yet we persist in tak­ ing no special precautions to escape them. We go to great, trouble to pre­ vent the spread of diphtheria or scarlet fever or smallpox, bnt the person with a cold, who is scattering deadly mi­ crobes everywhere, we treat as perfect­ ly harmless. I thoroughly agree that during the sneezing, coughing stage the Iterson with a cold should be isolated, so that the germs be Is constantly scat­ tering may not be breathed iu by Ma neighbors.”—New York Tribune. Total ex pendati res. .$1, 111,644.«3 _______ASSETS^_________________ I You Can See in California: THE ART OF POISONING. A Pet Dog Cemetery. Dead dogs fare better than many Value of stocks and bond» owned .............. $1,511,035.00 men in one town in England, whet* there is an exclusive cemetery for rich Cash in banks and on hand .............................. 140,370.92 women's pets, Expensive dogs must have showy graves, and the owner of a Premiums in course of ccllection and in trans­ toy spaniel, blue blooded Pomeranian mission ......... 295,8(r2.96 or a French poodle doesn't think any­ Interest nnd rents due thing of paying $100 for a burial plot ided to see for myself just wf- Bdeo looks like today, uotes a wn M the Christian Herald, and tu get »Minted with the people who now MMt the old traditional homestead Atiui and Eve. 1 wanted to see Ba Ma, too. aDd the excavated pal •f King Nebuchadnezzar—wbere haadwritlug appeared on the wall- 1 wanted to get a picture of the to •f Babel, which still lifts Its batts bead above the flat empty plain Mesopotamia. Bo I crossed the odd pout, on bri that spans the yellow Tigris at £ dad. slipped through the massive a gate, passed the supposed tomb of badla and mingled with the plig Mede on the great Shia caravan t that stretches down from Turkes and Persia, crosses Chaldea and Jm the golden domed mosques at I Mia and Nedjef. Millions have j •d this way In the centuries, brin with them the salted and dried b< rf their dead for burial In the sa ■oil outside the walls of tbelr Shia cities. Two hundred tbooi mummified human bodies have pa through Bagdad In a single year, b by hese Shia devotees. For miles along this strange hlghwi our “arabanah.” drawn by four gi •loping mules, passed these weird deat caravans, silent and mysterious. Tt bodies of departed relatives were« rled in oblong bundles, lashed to ti backs of pack animals. Veiled wo® rode In queer, cagelike boxes, slut ene on each side of a mule or a came The men. clad In the round, hard and padded clothes peculiar to slans. marched behind, prodding M lagging donkey or camel. VIGOR AT SEVENTY. Great Work« Performed by Men Evo Beyond That Ripe Age. Who talks of fifty years as the ttj ininating point In man's career? Wi all the great work performed by t even lieyoml seventy erased from I tory tbe human race would be bei of some very proud achievements. Jefferson founded a university by own activity after bi had passed tin score years aud ten. John (Julncy , ams. although be had been presld, of tlie United States and five timet foreign minister, wrought as a c gressman by far his greatest de after be was sixty-tive. His rob father sat in a constitutional coni tion when be was almost a non narian. Franklin did valiant ser in helping to frame the coustltn of the United States after be badt ed a serene and contented eighty. Seventy saw Gladstone bo vigoi that be was still good for tbe grea battle of Lis political life and a miership. Germany's first emperor, the ve able William, saw Waterloo as a dier, but fifty-five years later was recting armies at Sedan and well an empire after tbe fall of Pl John Bigelow at fourscore was met ly as virile as a boy. and bis pox as an author were not dimmed. Frederick Fraley was an active b ness man. president of a bank and national board of trade since tbe S[ isb American war, and yet be 1 prominent euough tn 1844 to serve a committee that welcomed to Pb delpliia Daniel Webster. Science is making lives longer tl they were in the days of our gra fathers and also far more comfortxl The same agency that prolongs bo vigor will surely lengthen tbe ag« man's most virile mental labor.—Pt delphia Ledger. Th. Heaviest American Brain. Dr. Edward A. Spitzka, the bi specialist, credits the late Edward Knight with having the heaviest At lean brain on record. Mr. Knight' well known tn Washington and ww patent attorney of note. At tlie H of his death his brain weighed 1. grams General Benjamin F Bn' bad a bhiin which weighed 1. gram«, the next heaviest recorded. cording to Dr. Spitzka. The be«’ braiu on record anywhere in the 1 Is given as that of the Russian and novelist. Turgenev, which tl the scales at 2,012 grams. 8«nd Cur. For Fatigu.. Owe of the most efficacious ctirw fatigue from overwork consist! walking barefoot in sand. The M af the sole and heel are slightly tatexl by coming in contact wit* grain, and accelerate the circuit of the blood in all parts of the t The effect produced Is highly lot, ■ting Besides this, the monotony M ample extent of yellow sand *> rtass a soporific effect on the t* wtoeb Induce« sleep.—fixchange. The Sponsor. "Way. yon told me Ballelgb waa ■- ■fad and had a large family. Bad him to be a confirmed bacKi* “■e ia. In a manner of apeak ngl Ba to wedded to his art. and be b** tefB* family of unpaid bills. ■oa I stood for most of them "—I* Tael Tliues. Bids Wanted Hi. Abaantmindncaa. Professor «after dinner, looking at "Why clever?“ Bid« wanted for the building oc oc ­ ­ Ms empty plate tn a ragai— There, cupied by Honey A Pet* Bids must "Woil. he’s done all his steall* we ’ re had spinach and egg again! be in bv the let April.-Address to gatiy“—Detroit Frre Pros* You know perfectly well. Amelia, that the Secretary I G.O.F Lodge I can’t Mt It!—Fllegende Blatter Silk Producing In«««*«. For Sale A 'tw pure bred barred mouth Rock Cockerels $1 50 nino pure Barred Rock eggs DEALER. CUR let sud let AVKNUh fi per eetting Frank Bester. Toil feel think, hope Too will be sum to dream enough before von «tie without arranging for ft-J sterling There are mor* than 300 «pe--i«a Silk producing Insects. tbooch ’ it» of these art of any peactlcsi «