Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, June 26, 1913, Image 5

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    Tillamook Headlight, June 26, IÖI3,
ED THE MOROS
ts the Sultan’s Suit Saw on
Board the Charleston.
IN framing a treaty .
r,l Bate» Had a Sort of Circu* on
, Hand» While Negotiating With
, Filipino Potentate For the Trana-
, of the lelanda to Uncle Sam.
AN ARCHITECTURAL MARVEL
St. Sophia and Ita Wondtrful Dome
That la Said to Bo Doomed.
Tbe world would mourn were the
great dome of St. Sophia to fall. There
are persisteut reports that the struc­
ture 13 in danger, that the masonry Is
rotten and crumbling and that tbe
i final doom of tbe edifice is not far off.
When ft is remembered that St So­
phia was built in the sixth century,
that it has for more than thirteen cen­
turies withstood the vicissitudes of
fires, earthquakes, sackings and bom­
bardments, rain and wind, beat and
cold, tbe marvel Is that it has endured
bo long.
Having stood through all
these ages, there will be the keenest
regret if it finally yields to the destruc­
tive forces of nature.
St. Sophia is often spoken of as the
grandest monument of Christian archi­
tecture. It is the perfection of the
Byzantine style, differing from the ear­
ly Romanesque and late renaissance
of western Europe and the beautiful
Gothic which must be considered the
ideal of ecclesiastical architecture. It
may not be as impressive as other
great editlees built from five to ten
centuries later, but its strength, solid­
ity and grandeur, together with its
great a lutiquity, give it a place unique
amoug churches.
Tlie i collapse of St. Sophia’s dome
would be
I a greater loss than was the
fall of the
I
Venetian campanile, and its
reconstruction would be utterly impos­
sible. Tbe problems of Its building
were so intricate and complex that the
secret of them died with the architect
Antbeuius tn tbe sixth century. It has
been said that St. Sophia, “like Kar­
nak, in Egypt, or the Athenian Parthe­
non. is one of the four great pinnacles
of architecture; but, unlike them, it is
no ruin, nor does it belong to a past
world of constructive ideas, although
it precedes by 700 years the fourth
culmination of the building art in
Chartres, Amiens or Bourges and thus
must ever staud as the supreme monu­
ment of the Christian cycle.”—Cleve
laud Plain Dealer.
treaties ever were negotiated In
v interesting and ludicrous clrcum-
than those that attended the
made in 1899 between General
r- and the sultan of Moro.
I. n. after much dillydallying, the
pin» potentate was Anally induced
„,ne on board the Charleston, the
eral's beadquarters, every effort
made to put him In good humor,
and bls suit nartook freely of
k but refused all food as coming
a ¡be hands of Christians. Yet they
e in no danger of starving, for
■ had been careful to bring with
a enormous sacks of rice.
■ten the guests were conducted
r tbe man-of-war they marveled
its mechanical mysteries. At tbe
restion of an officer tbe sultan
•lied an electric button, and instant-
Chlnese servant appeared. Again,
esponse to a suggestion, he touched
button twice, and a United States
ine stood In the doorway.
nm that time every ornament
«rd the ship that In any way sug-
ted an electric button was pushed
tbe sultan or by some member of
suit An officer conducted him
i a dark room and showed him how
inm the buttou that adjusted the
itlng apparatus. The flood of light
t resulted left him with gaping
nth and dilated eyes.
is wonderment continued to grow
»iigbout tlie afternoon, and when-
r an opportunity afforded he re­
ONE DAY'S WORK.
ted the performance of pushing
•trie buttons and turning electric
its on and off. He even went so That Is All There Is Before You, So Do
It to Perfection,
when be thought himself unwatch-
You have a hard thing to do. So bard
to try to appropriate one of the
It is that your breath comes short when
ited bulbs.
then ice water was brought In the you think of it, and your heart sinks
ip of Ice In the pitcher was imme- i down and becomes a bottomless pit of
ely seized by his royal highness despondency.
as quickly dropped to tbe floor, ' If you let it go on sinking down and
the lump gradually diminished in dowu you are done for, so stop it!
the sultan's party looked at it in Climb up again and look around.
| You underrate your own courage if
Melon.
ir. Shuck suggested to tbe sultan you tell yourself you cannot accom­
t he order one of bis men aloft and plish this task which looms before you.
ill him when he reached tbe crow's
Men have done great things before
t Tbe first order was easy to exe- now—things which make one gasp at
!, but when a return was ordered, the splendor and glory of human
voice baving failed to carry, a achievement. Do you think their
[iiphone was brought, and into this hearts never failed them; that they
sultan shouted for tbe man to re- never looked forward with utter weari­
3 under penalty of iustant death, ness to the heights they must climb
nediately the thoroughly frightened and the seas they must cross and the
ro dropped to the deck. The ruler years they must wait before success
k tbe dimensions of tbe strange crowns them?
utbplece and declared that he would (- How did they manage it?
ke one for himself.
Tbe secret is simple.
be most amusing Incident occurred
Through the eyes of imagination they
en tbe sultan upon invitation tired a pictured tbeir distant goal as close to
t automatic gun. The explosion of them; they saw it only one day ahead.
first discharge appeared to root Then they did one day's work—cheer­
i to the spot. His hands gripped fully. hopefully. And still the goal was
trigger, with the result that shells one day distant—only one day—and. in
itinued to pepper tbe surrounding fact, it had been brought one day
ters.
nearer.
igaiu and again tbe royal gunner
Sometimes through weariness or dis­
;g<>d tbe officers to stop the action of couragement the goal vanished from
I
i Infernal machine, not kuowingthat sight, but the acquired habit of plod­
means of doing It lay in his own i ding on steadfastly, step by step, one
ids So thoroughly frightened was ! day at a time, from hour to hour,
that It was impossible to make him brought them close to it in spite of
sen bls hold, and an officer ordered I themselves. And so. necessarily, at
l tape cut, thus stopping tbe supply last they ''arrived."
ammunition.
For tasks In hours of insight willed
Can be through hours of gloom fulfilled.
'be one pounder was next brought
o play, but the sultan refused to go i Never were truer words spoken.
ir one of tbe eight Inch guns, which i T.et us make the most of our "hours
of insight.” never thinking of tbe vis­
bad been inviteu io Are.
leantime tbe knives of his attend- ions we see in them as delusive dreams
bad been taken to the dynamo I and Impossible ideals.—London Ex­
and charged with electricity. press.
___________
:b tbe result that the suit were of
Helping the Bride.
1 opinion ttat tbe evil one himself
When Mrs. Blank, who bad always
» aboard. They begged and implored
be taken ashore and. quite forgetful lived near the coast, was married «be
tbeir bags of rice, scurried down I went to live In a small inland town.
Shortly after her arrival she called
1 Rang ladder.
•t night tbe searchlight was brought on her butcher and ordered a quart of
bear upon the Moro town of Bus «callops.
"Why. Mrs. Blank.” said the dealer,
and the instant desertion of the
guess yvu
yon will
" "• find
— those
------ --- at tbe
rn followed, even the dogs leaving , “ I guews
-----, weeks
„„„ thereafter
,uc,rU,lc, „„^dressmaker's.
And,” he added kindly,
For many
no
ount of persuasion could induce the 1 remembering that »be was a b rid e,
think they’re sold by the yard. —Lip
isbltants to return.
General Bates made bis beadquarters ' pincott's.
*
•be town of Jolo, and thither the
Disagreeabl« Advic*.
Han and h s staff came on several
“I asked him how he got rich, and he
raslons to llscuss tbe treaty. Sub-
ijuently they made another visit to I told me, but I shan't follow his advice "
"Why not?”
! Char'esto >. This time the mother
“1 don't like his methods.”
• he sultan accompanied tbe party.
“Dishonest?”
4 during th • visit a phonograph own-
"Not at all. He said be simply wved
by one of tbe officers rendered se-
’•lons for the entertainment of tbe bls money Instead of spending it for
I everything he thought be wanted. —
eats
•be aged dame sat entranced Detroit Free Press
vougbout the performance, and it
In R um !«.
•’ not until the time came for her
"What Is tbe matter?” demanded tbe
n Io affix his signature to the treaty
•• she awrkened On one condition grand duke.
"Exrellency, your cook demand» •
,T would she permit tbe sultan to
™ the phonograph must become hers rac»tlon."
I “Give her « knoutlng.” was tbe «o
once,
for a time that phonograph threat- tocratlc command.—Kansas City Jour­
*d to l>e the means of upsetting all nal
________ —
E*ra! Batm' »veil laid plan* for the
Th« Sol«.
lienhle taking over of the Islnnds. !
• fortunately the owner was prevail-' He (during a number»—I don't rare
.»bon to part with the machine In much for thl» «olo. Sbe-Bolo! C«n t
f Interests of his government and you see that there are two ladle« »Ing
• treaty wi» executed.-E. C. Rost In ing? He—T««. but one ba«o't •»/
robe. -Bootoo Transcript
®tury Magaxine.
m ,«
I
THE PARSON'S MISTAKE.
n
JOHN LELAND HENDERSON J OHN LELAND HENDERSON
Secreta ry-Trea».
ATTORNEY
Attorneyat-Law and Notare
AND
F abile.
COUNSELLOR AT-LAW.
Changed Hi* Mind About th« Cua-
tom* of th* Fine Folk».
A Scottish parson whose parish was
remote from great cities was Invited
to a bouse party at a certain castle,
and after much persuasion from his
family and friends accepted. Mrs.
Walford in "Memories of Victorian
London ' says that the elderly clergy­
man had never before been Inside a
large country house and was not at
all familiar with tbe customs io vogue.
He arrived about 5 o’clock and found
the men just returned from shooting
and the ladies from driving, all being
at tea In the hall.
It seemed nice and sociable on a
chilly November afternoon, and. de­
lighted to find such simplicity prevail­
ing where he had not looked for It, he
partook heartily of cake, sandwiches
and so forth.
At a little before 7 o’clock some
neighbors, who were merely calling,
took themselves off. and the rest of
the company broke up and went up­
stairs with bedroom candles In their
hands.
“Weil, this Is better still." thought
my humble friend, and he rehearsed
to himself the phrases he would use to
describe the situation afterward. He
would emphatically repudiate the no­
tion that the “aristocracy” kept lute
hours and were too much addicted to
conviviality. He beard himself say­
ing: “Late hours, indeed? I haven't
been to bed so early since I was a
boy.”
He judged that he had been asleep
some time when the sound of a gong
reverberating through the passages
made him start up In bed. What was
the meaning of It? What terrible
thing had happened? Could the house
be on fire?
Finding the back stnlrs close by,
down be rushed to the housekeeper's
room nnd electrified the good woman
by demanding breathlessly:
“What is it? What's the matter?"
“Lor', sir. nothing ain't the matter.”
said she reprovingly, "except that
you’ll be late to dinner. The second
gong sounded five minutes ago. and
you're not half dressed 1”
Such speed did he make, however,
on being thus enlightened tliat he ac­
tually got into his evening clothes and
wns In the drawing room before half
the other guests appeared. "But,"
said he, “I never had the chance of
delivering the speech I bad so care­
fully prepared exculpating great folks
from the charge of evil ways.”
Tillamook Title and
Abstract Company
A* Thrilling Behind the Scene» a» For
the Audience In Front.
The opera is “Tosca.” You sit breath­
less in your seat In the last act waiting
for the climax, when Tosca shall find
Cavaradossi not shamming, but dead
by the trickery of tbe slain Searpin,
and shall run and leap over the para­
pet to be dashed to pieces far below.
Tbe captain and bls guards look over
the edge, aghast at the sight. You rise
from your seat thrilled.
Now go behind the scenes and watch
Tosca leap. Nearly every one who can
leave |tls post does go back stage, left,
for this climax, which is as exciting in
the reality as it is in the pretense for
those who sit on the other side of tbe
footlights. Before tbe curtain went
up a stage hand had dragged across
and thrown down just beneath the par­
apet a mattress some twelve Inches
thick and the size of an ordinary bed.
Tbe opera moves swiftly. The soldiers
fire the volley, and Cavaradossi falls.
Tosca, learning tbe truth, rushes to
the parapet, looks backward toward
tbe audience, stands magnificently de­
fiant and leaps
It Is a good three feet in the vertical
to the mattress. Do not think that the
prima donna, however plump she may
be. strives to save or catcb herself.
That leap is too great an opportunity
for histrionic realism to lose one little
part of Its effect She lands plump at
full length, fairly taking the breath
out of her. while the back stage watch­
ers get the real gasp. It is perhaps
half a minute before she recovers her­
self. Then she gathers herself togeth­
er. all businesslike again, and hurries
through tbe press of stage hands, cho­
rus, supes, principáis, down front stage
to receive the curtain call«.—New York
Post
Paptr Money.
The earliest paper money issued In
America was in Massachusetts In 1690
In order to satisfy the demands of
clamorous soldiers. Tbe first authoris­
ed by the Continental congress was In
May, 1775. Six years later it ceased to
circulate as money.
Benjamin Franklin and bls partner.
D. Hall, printed the bills of the colony
of Delaware On tbe face of tbe note
In conspicuous letters was tbe warn­
ing, “To counterfeit Is death.”
An Endearing Act.
Wife (pleadingly)—I'm afraid. Jack,
you do not lore me any more—anyway,
as well as you used to. Husband-
Why? Wife-Because you always let
me get up to light the Are now Hus-
band—Nonsense. my lore! lour get­
ting up to light the Are makes me lore
you all the mor».—Lippincott'«.
Why Th«y Are Happy.
•There goes the breotiful Elsie!
They «ay «he I« very happy with her
bnsband, tbe youDg srtMF
“Happy! Well, aa you take ft! It
I« true they harroonlxe splendidly Ha
doe« not understand bee. and abe doe«
not understand blmT-Ellegend« Blat-
tar.
_____ _____ ____
T illamook B lock ,
... Oregcn
flrui mook
Room No. 261.
H. T. BOTTS,
(INCORPORATED),
Law : Abstracts : Real Estate
Surveying ; Insurance
TILLAMOOK. ORF.
BOTH PHONES.
Sherry Wire................................... 35c.
Angelica Wine............................... 35c,
Zenfendel Wine....... per quart 35c.
Tokey¡............................ per quart 4Cc.
Pebbleford, bottled in bond,
per bottle.................................... $1 50 Claret ............................. per quart 25c.
White Grape Juice........................ 75c.
Clarke's Pure Rye, bottled in
I
bond, per bottle......................... 1.25 Local Beer, quart. 3 bottles for 5Ce.
Domestic Beer, qt., 3 bottles for 75c.
O:d Crow, bottled in bond, per
bottle .................................... ... 1.50 Special Prioes for
Hermitage, bottled in bond, per
Family Trade.
luutle.............................................. 1.50
Cyrus Noble, 3 Crown ............... 1.50 Keg Beer.................... 15 gallon« $5 7f
O T. O , bottled in bond, per
Keg Beer.............
10 go ons 40
bottle ................
1.25 Local bottle Beer, Odoz. q .arts 10 I*
Kentucky Dew,
gal., bottled
Local bottle Beer. 10 doz. pinta 11
in bond .............. ................
2 15
Kentucky Dew, full pint, bottled
Domestic Beers.
in bond ..........
......................................
75 Budwteer Beer, 0 doz. quart« $15.0-)
Jolin Dewar & Sons, Old Scotch
Budwiaer Beer, 10 dozen pints 18.00
Whiskey............ ...................... 1.5G Old style La uger Beer, Wdoz pt 11.0
Black A White, Old Scotch
Whiskey ......... ............................ 1.80
WINES.
V.O. I’., Old Scotch Whiskey.... 1.75
Sandy Macdonald's Old Scotch
White Port, Old Monk Brand,
$1 00 per gal
Whiskey .................................... 1.75
Port Wine........................ 1.00 per gal
Hunter Baltimore, Rye Scotch
Sherry
.
1.00 per gal.
Whiskey......................................
Canadian Club........... .................
Claret ............................... 75c. pergul
Angelica................ ..
1.00 per Kul.
I. W. Harper..................................
Zenfendel.................... 1.25 per gul.
Harvester Old Style......................
Monogram......................................
Tokey................................. 1.25 per
Ixentuck Dew................................
WHISKEYS.
Billie Taylor, full quart .........
Coronet Dry Gin....... per bottle
Monogram ................... pergal. $5.0!
A.V.H. Gin............. . per bottle
White Corn Whiskey, per gal. 4 00
Gordon Sloe Gin. . . per bottle
Harvester Old Style ..pergal. 4.25
per bottle
Gordon Dry Gin ..
McBrayer. 13 years eld. per gal. 6.00
.
per
bottle
Kock and Rye.......
.... per
i>er gal
gal. * 4.25
Echo Spring.................
El Burt Gin ...........
Chestnut Grove Rye per gal. ' 2 75
Virginia Dare Wine . per bottle
Kentuckey Dew......... per gal. 2 25
Port Wine.....................per quart
Alcohol............................ per gal. 4 00
Cornet Dry Gin.............. per gal. 4 CO
BOTTLE GOODS
ATTORNEY-AT LAW.
Complete Set of Abstract Book* in
Office.
Taxes Paid for Non Resident«.
T illamook B lock ,
Tillamook .... Orel
Both Phone«.
QARL HABERLACH,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
T illamook B eock ,
Tillamook
i.
OlfiO*
*
QfEORGE WILLETT,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
g ,
T illamook C ommercial B vilt
Tillamook -
orek.,n.
T. BOALS, M.D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
T illamook B lock ,
Tillamook .
s.
M.
.
.
. iOregon.
HERRON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
T illamook B lock ,
Tillamook
.
• Or< gon.
¡AT;
BILLY STEPHENS,
c - hawk ,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER COR. 1st and 1st AVENUE E
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
*
A THREE FOOT LEAP.
Playing Safa.
*
*1 want you to understand tny word
’"■’’’•wtor-WEst tn your opinion. fs as C»d M tny bund-
Nothing can pebbly be conceived In
“* secret of good reads?
the world or even out of it wblcb can
•That
’
»
why
I
’
»
wnetate Chauffeur—The aecret of Insisting O“
c«»b.’-Detroit Free M called good without qualifcetlcn
’y "’•d* I« u> |0lj 'em — Chicago
except a food will.—Kant.
Pre»
Ibuna
Raault af Hit Research«*.
SIDNEY E HENDERSON,
President.
I
I am a power for great good if you do
not abuse my use.
In cases of need-I do my work well.
I am a builder up of health and strength
—in the hospital or in the home.
For the invalid or the convalescent—for
the tired or overworked I offer a great
help.
A little of me goes a long way.
I have been among you for three gen-
erations
I
Bay City
SARCHE1.
The ¡Fashionable Tailor
T
«
Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing
a Specialtv.
Store in Heine Photographic
Gallery.
H. GOYNE,
AT TORNE Y-AT LAW.
Office • O pposite C oukt H ousx .
Tillamook
Oregon.
V. J. .SH aai ,
RESIDENT DENT’«=T,
I'm known as Cyrus Noble throughout the world
W. J. Van Schuyvcr & Co., General Agents
Portland, Oregon
Oregon.
Office : Cr Limerei.d l’lock.
Tillamook
- Oregon
J. CLAUSSEN,
.
LAWYER.
"Majestic Ranges eland the teat
Aad Ccuk aad Bake aad are the beet.*
E
DEUTSCHER ADVOKAT.
213 T illamook
B lock .
i
Tillamook
Keep Abreast
of the Times
T N OLDEN DAYS, when buying
a cook stove, people would buy
the one they could get the cheapest;
that's because there were only a
few makes on the market and
were all practically the same in
construction and material.
It's ‘‘Different Now! There arc •lose to a thousand different range«
on the market tixlay—good, bad and indifferent. W be people use a little
forc-i 'ht in selecting their range, ant! they make no mistake in selecting
T ee R ange W ith a R f . putatiom —the range that is recommended by
every user; die range that has stood tire test—
The Great Majestic Range
toe rtngc that is made of MAU.nABi.tt and Cn ar co al T row —the range
that S avbs Fuiiz—L asts L om . kr —C osts P- actically N othing rob
Pt;rAi«5—H eats M ore W ater Q uicxer and IU ttbr , and G ives B bttbb
G ef exal SAnsEAcnoM T han A nt O tulm
IL ang B M adb —
and we can prove it!
Alex. McNair Co
▼4
’M
J
•
,
Oregon.
E. REEDY, D.V.M.,
VETERINARY.
Both Phone*.
Tillamook
Oregon,
G.
McGBE. M D
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office :J Next door to bt*r
Theatre.
»