Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, September 18, 1913, Image 4

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    Tillamook Headlight, September 1». If»3
A Clever Russ at Home Gave Him tha
Information Ho Wanted.
A wealthy merchant in Pari» who
does an extensive business with Japan
was informed that a prominent firm In
Yokohama bad failed, but I tie name of
the firm he could not learn. He could
have learned the truth by cabling. but,
to s»ve expense. Instead be went to a
welb known hanker who had received
the Jiews and requested him to reveal
(be name of tbe film.
“That’s a very delicate thing to do,”
replied tbe banker, "for the news Is
not official, and If I gave you the name
1 might incur some responsibility.”
Tbe merchant argued, but In vain,
and finally be made this proposition:
“I will give you.” he said, “a list of
ten Anus I d Yokohama, and I will ask
you to look through It and then tell me,
without mentioning anyr name, wiietb
er or uot tbe name of the firm which
bus failed appears In it. Surely you
will do that for me.”
"Yes,” said tbe banker, "for If I do
not mention any name I cannot beheld
responsible In any way.”
The list was made. Tbe banker looked
through It trod as tie banded it back to
the merchant said, "Tlie name of tiio
merchant who bus failed is there.”
"’1 beti I've lost heavily," replied the
merchant, "for that is the firm with
wlilcli I did business,” showing him a
name on the list.
"But how do you know that is the
firm which has fulled?"asked the bank­
er In surprise.
"Vigy easily.” replied the merchant.
“Of the ten iianies on tlie list only one
is genuine, that of Hie firm with which
I did business. All tbe others are fic-
tltiuuS."
THE HUMAN FACTORY.
Its Machinery Develops With the In­
tellect That Directs It.
A liuman being Is a kind of factory.
The engine and the works and all tlie
various mnchlues are kept in the base
meat, and be sends down orders to
them from time to time, and they do
tlie work will'll Inis been conceived up
in headquarters. He expects the works
down below to keep on doing these
things without bls taking any particu­
lar notice of them, while lie occupies ills
mind, ns the competent head of 11 fac­
tory should, with the things that are
new aud different and special and
that Ills mind alone can do; tlie things
which, at least In their present initial
formative or creative stage, no ma­
chine» ns yet have been developed to
do and which can only l>e worked out
by the man up tn the hendqunrters
himself, personally, by the hundlwork
of Ills own thought.
The more 11 human being develops
the more delicate, sensitive, strong and
efficient, the more spirit informed,once
for all, the machines in the basement
are.
As he grows the various sub­
conscious arrangements for discrimi­
nating. assimilating, classifying ma­
terial, for pumping up power, light and
beat to headquarters, all of whlgh can
l>e turned on at will, grow nigre mas­
terful every year. They are found all
»laving away for him. dimly, down in
the dark while lie sleeps. They hand
him up in Ids very dreams new mid
strange power» to live and to know
wIth.— Geripd Stanley Ix-e In Atlantic
Magailne.
The German Empire.
WOMEN ON HORSEBACK,
RED TAPE AND A TUB
SAVED HIS CABLE TOLLS
Bath In 8«n«gal Was Something
Like ■ Surgical Operation.
Tlvey Cut a Queer Figure Before Side-
eaddlee Were Invented.
Home years ago, when the capital of
tbe French colony of Senegal was a
dull, unprogressive town where official-
Um aud reil tape prevailed, a French
traveler, with a friend, had a most
amusing experieiee «lieu lie wished
to obtain a hath There was no bath
Ing establishment in tbe capital of
Senegal nt the time, but rumor bad It
that it was possible to purchase baths
at the hospital.
Accordingly tbe travelers repaired to
the hospital, where they stated tbe
purpose of their visit
“Certainly." said tbe official, "take
seat».
Your names, surnames and
birthplace?"
"But we merely want a bath.”
"Exactly. What Is your name. and
where and when were you born, and
are you government servants, soldiers
or officers? No? Well, the rules do
not provide for this. Just a moment
I will read them again. Yes. here Is
your case
You niiist first make out
on stamped paper an applhallon to the
governor of I be colony
After favor
able notice from the governor you
send another application to the chief
colonial doctor, who will send for you
and examine you."
"But we lire not 111."
“It is the rule.
Having examined
you. tlie do- tor will give you two non-
comnils-lom-d officers' bath tickets, to
be delivered to the assistant doctor.”
“Why the noncommissioned officers'
bn th?"
“For the reason that in our accounts
we reeogtdze only two categories of
persons- offi. ers mid civil servants, tile
latter taking rank with officers or pet­
ty officers
You are not offictul at all
If officers were to find you fn their
baths they would probably make a
row."
"What period of time will all these
forma lilies consume?"
"Two or three days, provided your
application is approved nt tlie gov­
ernment house."—Chicago Record Her­
ald.
Before Queen Catherine de’ Medici
started tbe fashion of sidesaddles by
having a board slung on tbe left side
of her horse to support her feet «11
poor women rode ou a pillion behind a
man. All women of tbe better class
rode astride.
A lady to prepare for riding bent
forward and took hold of tbe lower
hern of tbe back of tier dress skirt,
drew it through between her legs «nd
wrapped her skirts around her legs
down to her knees, then folded the rest
of her skirts across the front of her
person.
Then she drew on a pair of large
trousers, the legs of which ended just
below the knees, where they were
sewed to the tops of a pair of clumsy
riding boots. Tbe upper part of the
trousers was open In front, and tbe
flai»s folded across tbe person and fas­
tened by a band around tlie waist A
hood was worn on the head, and a
mask protected tbe face from sun and
weather. She rode on a man's saddle
and wore spurs and carried a quirt
(riding wlilpi looped on the right wrist.
Tbe same style and kind of quirt Is
now used by our western cowboys
and plains Indians and was formerly
carried by the Cossacks.
A lady In riding costume, whether on
foot or on horseback, was anything but
a graceful figure.
Our great-grandmothers rode on side­
saddles. but their great-great-grand
mothers rode astride if they belonged
to ■' gentry class.
(.... plains Indian women, even when
th >y changed their buckskin skirts
that came to the knee and tlielr buck­
skin leggings for the long calico skirt
of white women, always rode astride.—
Washington Post.
A
I
ORIGIN OF QUARANTINE
Dr. Richard Mead’» Action During the
Plague of 1721.
To Dr. Richard Mead, who was in
consultation nt the deathbed of Queeu
Anne and became physician to George
I., was due the credit of having first
established quarantine.
in 1721. when tlie plague ravaged
Marseilles and its /•ontagfou» origin
was discredited. Dr/Mead declared tile
plague to lie "a oflitagious distemper,' »»
nud a quarantine waa enjoined, He
also proposed a system of medical po­
lice, which finds Its counterpart In tile
health officers of today.
It was he
who declared. “As mistiness is a great
source of Infection. so cleanliness is
the greatest preventative."
He It was who said nearly 2(10 years
ago: “If there be any Contagious Dis­
temper In the Ship the Sound men
should leave tlielr Cloaths, which
should be burnt, the mon washed and
shaved and. Imvjng fresh Cloaths.
should stay In Lazaretto-that is.
quarantine thirty to forty days
The
reason for this Is Iwcnuse Person» may
be ris'ovci'Ml from 11 Disease them-
selves and yet retain mutter of Infec
tion alsiut them 11 considerable time.”
In practice Mend was without a rl
val. Ids receipt» averaging for several
years betneeii iil.tmo and 17.000. nn
enormous sum In relation to the value
of money nt that period He possessed
a rare taste for collecting.
But Ids
Isioks, Isis statues. Ids medals, were
not to amuse only Ills own leisure.
The bumble student, the unrecotu-
mended foreigner, tile piaar Inquirer,
derived ns much enjoyment from these
treasures ns tlielr owner At ids table
might Is- seen the most eminent men
of the nge. Pope wn» a ready guest,
and the delicate poet was sure to tie
regaled with Ills favorite dish of
sweetbreads.
The German empire was constituted
as at present .Ian. 1. 1871. After pre
llmlnary negotiation» during the course
of the Friiiico-l'nissliin war the par­
liament of the north German confeder­
ation (with which Baden. Hesse-1 >arm-
ntadt. Bavaria and Wurttemls-rg had
receutly allied themselves a In an ad­
dress dated Dec. it), 1870, requested
King William of Prussia to become
German emperor,
All the sovereign
prluee» of German alate» and the three
free and Hanseatic towns having Join­
ed In offering tbe lin|>erlal crowns, the
proclamation of William I. as emperor
was made at Versailles Jan lit. 1871.
Matthew Arnold and the Girls.
The first relclistag was opened nt Ber­
Of Matthew Arnold as 11 school ex
lin March 25. and the imperial const!
amlner n tale Is told by a fellow In
tiitloli was adopted \pril I i. is I
tor of a class of girl pupil teachers
Philadelphia Pre»».
that lie asked Arnold to examine for
him
Arnold gave them all tlie excel­
Noi So Soriou».
lent mark
A doctor who hud l>een auminoned
"But." said the other in»pector,
hnstlly nllghted frutti bis carriage to "surely they are not nil as good as they
finti a womun avvallili» hlm < m thè can Is- Some must lie better than oth­
d<s>r»tep. liut wlthout tho anxlou» look er». "
he expected In thè clrcuinstaiice»
“I
"Perhaps that is so,” replied Arnold
understand.” he
"But then, you see. they are nil such
ha» »wallowetld
very ulce girls.”
i» her
"Oh, »Ir,” wti» the reply, “I'm glad
Professionally Considered.
to teli you we Iliade a mlstnke! It
"The Declaration of Independence 1»
wann't a «overvlgn; It wa» vuly a half- n wonderful document.” said the patrl
peuny?'—Lomi'Mi Mail.
otic cltlxen
“Yes," replied the legal expert “it’s
one of the ablest document» 1 ever saw
A Good Kaouee.
"Now. then," demanded I.lliaehmaii'» And the most remarkable thing Is that
wife the next morning, "what's your with all the ability It represents, no-
excuse for coming home in that con­ body appears to have received a cent
dition last night?”
for drawing It up.” Washington Star
"Well to tell you the truth. m dear."
he replied, "none of the hotels would
Present Troubles.
take me in."- Philadelphia i'rosa
"Ah. pretty lady." sold the tartune
teller, '•yon wish to he told »trout your
A Big Difference.
future husluud?"
"How rejoktst the knights of old
"Not much." replied Mr» Galley
were when they got their lady's glove;-' "Pre coine to learn where my present
"And how mean they look now hiwlvind I» when lie’» ataelit"-Pldln
delplda l‘rr»M
When their girl given them the lult
toff!"—Baltimore American.
.
, e
—— —
Turning th» Phraa».
“They
to «'»ill him a la>in'bend •
* Nsv»e a Near Relativa.
•That wnm before be mirrvedriV’
“Pa. who is Mr» UraixiyT**
"Vos Now they e«|<vwn It »11 Tarent
‘8 he Is an «>hl lady «bo la always
■'ipp<Med to ladoi.g to aome other ly They call him a man of bn rd. notM
uiau'a fn tu I ty.°— Chlmtfu llecorü tler- tense“- Washington 8t»r
aid.
D stanti? Related.
His Mistake.
Foot I underststei Dohoon married
Fen raon So be nn-
r rich widow
den>tuod. Im*, tint II proves to be a
lulauiadeiaUudlug. lioaluM Xraaacripi.
R. I» E. HEWITT
Snags In English.
Two 8trsnuous Lives.
A Russian artist who Ims so thor­
OSTEOPATHIC
Clovis Hughes, the French Journnlist.
oughly mustered the English language
PHYSICIAN AND SURGED
I Poet and duelist, filled bls fifty
that all Rs subtleties are as familiar to
OBSTETRICAL SPEClIy^
of life with sufficient excitement him as are those of the language of the
I J tars <
ike him worthy of special men czar was telling a few frieuds about
Both Pilone».
' to lua
Oue of bis claims tu distinction the difficulties he encountered. “You
Residence and Office inWlllU
' tJoU
hud engaged In a trench
have so many suiiertiuous letters.” be
I wus tbut be
Residences
duel which re; ■suit'd fatally-for the »aid “that when I began to think 1
T.,J±AMOOK’
° wgon .
!
He
was
a
tempestuous
'other umn
was'becoming a master of your lan­
1 nidlril! Hhd d was once suspended from guage I succeeded In having myself
|~^R- ELMER ALLEN
if deputies
deputies ro>
for insulting
¡the .hauiber of
laughed nt a dozen times a day. I be­
I remarks to the president, which dll
gan to Jearu English in Boston, Its
(Succeseor to Dr. Sharp),
not at all curb him. He wrote a num- American fortress.
One day while
¡tier of novels, poems ”'»< pli,v’
walking with a friend 1 saw a street
dentist .
which lie sought tu «plead socialistic
said, 'what a funny name
propaganda, and be »rote a preten­ sign 'Oh,' 1 1
Kneelaud street!’ I pro Commercia! Building, TilJamock.
for
a
street!
tious flte act drama In verse called
K. ‘You're wrong.' said
•I e smnmeil de Danton" ( Tbe Sleep uouuced the
•You pronounce it “Nee-
(,f Dautou"). which was produced at mv frlemL '
Tlie K is silent’ I took J2)R JACK OLSEN,
' the opera Cotuique. His wife contrib­ land” street
, heart Tbe next day I
tbe
lesson
to
uted her share of excitement by killing
went into a restaurant 1 looked over
a public official In the palace of justice
dentist .
the bill of fare. 'Give me some "id
lie au-e of an alleged insult. Before
uevs."’ 1 said The servitor looked at
(Over F. R. Beals office,
she was tried she wrote and acted La
me aghast. Finally in desperation 1
Vegeaoce fie Mme. Clovis Hughes.
Tillamook - Oregon
The play deph ted her sensational net pointed to the record of what I want
and represented her ns triumphantly ed. ‘Ob! Kidneys,’ be said. ‘Excuse
me.' 1 rejoined haughtily, ‘the K is J OlIN LELAND HENDKRSox
exonerated by the court. When her
silent’ ”
_______
trial came the court did as piedicted.
Gloves.
1 The origin of gloves Is very ancient
S ime authorities assert that they were
known in Bible times, from references
made to "shoes" which were thought
to be Identical with gloves. The first
clear accouut of gloves comes, how-
This writer
ever, from Xenophou.
r.l'ks of Qie f’erslaus wearing gloves
spe
on their bunds to protect them from
Homer describes Laertes
(lie cold
working I11 bis garden with gloves
upon Ids bauds to protect them from
tlie tliorus. nud Varro mentions this
apparel ns being worn by the Romans.
Gloves have been tokens of solemn and
iinpjitaiit things from the uiutb cen­
tury. They were adopted as a rite of
tbe church, and later tbe transferring
of laud» or titles was always attended
with the presentation of gloves. In
THEY DIDN’T MIND DIRT,
tlie eleventh century tbe method of
< lialleugiug to single combat by throw­
In the Days When Clothes Were Dyed,
ing down a glove was instituted, and
but Never Washed.
Ibis custom still remains lu sume coun­
I d the matter of tbe washing of
clothes, not to sny the washing of tries.
themselves, our ancestors were a trifle
Pierpont Morgan’s Fairy Palace.
!
lax. The laundress of tbe twelfth cen­
Pierpont Morgan’s wonderful bouse j
tury must have held a position which
In Prince’s Gate differed little on tbe
was practically a sinecure, while it
outside from its neighbors, merely two
seems within the bounds of possibility
houses rolled into one, but Its interior
that In those days she did not exist
suggested nothing so much as tbe fairy
at all. There were, tnsooth, few gar­
palace of Aladdin. In tbe hall a spring
ments which would stand washing,
and tire dyer was driving a brisk trade was pressed and part of one of the
before the laundress was even thought walls "fell away” In tbe approved
of. A little dye must indeed have cov- style. You walked down into a base­
ment. which at first sight resembled
ered a multitude of spots.
In the days of the Tudors and Stu- nothing so much as one of the lower
arts washing was a trifle more In evl- decks on a large liner. Hanged along
deuce than formerly, but those articles the walls were what appeared to be a
which were permitted to find their number of safes, but they were really
way into the "buck pan”—as the wash­ doors opening into small rooms, into
ing tub used to be called—were few each of which a particular portion of
and far between. The wealthy of tlie Mr. Morgan's collection had been
middle ages got over the difficulty of brought There were rooms for Eng­
obtaining clean underclothing with lish silver, for porcelain and for half a
primitive simplicity by not wearing dozen other objets d'art No one who
any. while the lower orders wore was ever fortunate enough to be shown
coarse woolen garments that would round by Mr. Morgan himself cau for­
no doubt have "shrunk In the wash.” get the experience.—London Bystander.
To prevent any casualty of the kind
Mercury Poisoning.
they remained unwashed.
Velvets, taffetas and richly dyed
"1 would suggest," says a doctor,
silks, such as those worn by the no­ “that, whenever persons are found to
bility aud gentry, could not. of course, have swallowed bichloride of mercury, ì
l>e washed, aud should any person of several eggs be forced dowu their
high degree I h ? the possessor of a linen tliro.it». The albumen lu tbe eggs will
shirt it was a tiling which was care­ form a chemical compound with the
fully made known to all his friends mercury, which will be insoluble. Then
and relatives ns being extremely la tbe poison will pass out through the
mode and a tit subject for congratula­ intestines or lie vomited by tbe vic­
tion. but washed it never was for fear tim.
it is always a good thing to
of Injuring Its pristine beauty.—Lon­ pump out the stomach first or to in- I
don Taller
i iluce vomiting Many times It is neces-
| snry to act quickly if the life of the I
I person is to be saved, and it takes :
Witchcraft.
In many parts of the world—Greece,
for Instance— flie believer in witchcraft
still gets hold, by hook or by crook, of
hair, nail parings and so forth from
an enemy** head and hands and bums,
bnriea or does something else w ith
them In order to entail unpleasant con­
sequence» upon that enemy. And uni­
versal folklore reveals the concern of
savages to dispose of their own hair
and null clippings to prevent an enemy
from getting at them. Australian na­
tive girls, having had a lock of hair
stolen from them, expected speedy
I death 11» a certainty. — Ixmdon Tele­
graph.
Virtu«» of tho Nur»«.
»m V"1"* ,h*
Most of Th«m Do.
“It only De«!« determitintton ta live
a hundred yvers." nays » well known
health writer
A grout maur people
have dsffwwlned tn live a century or
die In tlie attempt and they have di«|
In the attempt -New Orleans »tear
nnv.
*Ori* of “Woliir"'
„„71 '2?'.r th*
cago lUxonl Herald
replied-CUI-
Tsking
ChsncM.
"A min never k«e» anything by po
mene»», »ahi th(, OM
•">
“I know » h(|
næn „¿0 DeTpr |b
Good Pl,».
It 1» » »nod plan while wattins f
’or
your ship to come In to kill tin»,, p?
‘T go-
Ing to work to «ini something- New
Orleans ITcnyune
,b* o^-aoen.
I
ATTORNEY
AND
COUNSELLOR.AT LAW.
T illamook B lock ,
moolc t-
Til
-
. ’Oreg0I1
.
Room No. 261.
T. BOTTS,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.’
Complete Set of Abstract Boohis
Office.
Taxes Paid for Non Residents.
T illamook B lock ,
Tillamook
.... Oregon.
Both Phones.
QARL HABERLACH,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
T illamook B lock ,
A Park of Glacier*.
Oregon.
Glacier National park is situated in Tillamook
northern Montana. 260 miles northwest
of Yellowstone park in an air line and
447 miles by railroad. It is under the ^EORGE WILLETT,
control and supervision of the secre­
tary of tbe interior, who is represented
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW]
in tbe actual administration of the
park by a superintendent, assisted by T illamook C ommercial B uilding ,
a number of park rangers who patrol
tbe reservation. Tbe park Is bounded Tillamook
• Oregon.
on the north by the Canadian line, on
tbe east by the Blackfoot reservation
and on the west and south by the Flat-
head river. It has an area of about
915.000 acres and derives its name
from many glaciers which are scat­
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
tered throughout its area. There are
eighty glacldrs between five square
T illamook B lock ,
miles and a few acres in area. The
park is n rugged mountainous region Tillamook -
• Oregon.
and contaius over 250 lakes, which are
surrounded by steep and beautifully
wooded mountains.
M.
KERRON,
Time In Teheran.
"Time is a difficult problem In Te­
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
heran," says the Baroness d'Hermalle
T illamook B lock ,
fn “Peeps Into Persia." “At approxi­
mately midday a cannon Is fired on the
. Oregon.
Cossack parade ground, but the ap Tillamook
proximatlon depends entirely on tbe
soldier who fires ft. We all think he
fires it when he feels hungry, as it is
C. HAWK,
very erratic. Anyhow, when Invited
out to dinner we always Inquire of
our host whether he keeps legation or
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
gun time. Sometimes there Is half an
hour's difference.
Neither of these
times Is ordinarily correct
Correct Bay City
. Oregon.
time, not a commodity tn request in
Teheran, Is kept by the Indo-European
telegraphs, for whom It Is telegraphed
SARCHET,
from I.ondon every morning at day
The Fashionable Tailor
break, when the line is clear, so that
connection is practically Instantane­
ous.”
Cleaning-, Pressing and Repairing
a Specialty.
“Shouting" In Australia.
“Treating" is a form of hospitality
Witch Burning.
There are countries in which the exe­ that Is perhaps more common In Aus
Store in Heins Photographic
cution of women as witches is only a tralla than anywhere else. There it is
Gallery.
thing of yesterday. The last Instance known ns "shouting." It is a legacy
of witch burning occurred as recently from the "flush times” of the gold
as 1888 in Peru, and In other parts of fields—the "roaring fifties”—when to
H. GOYNE,
South America eases continued to oc­ refuse to drink with a lucky digger
cur until well into the second half of meant running a risk of being shot on
a T torneyat - law .
the nineteenth century. Englund's own the spot A writer says: 'To shout
last conviction for witchcraft took means to Insist on everybody present
place at Hertford In 171., and Scot- friends and strangers alike, drinking Office: O pposite C ourt Hovsi,
land condemned a witch ten years nt the shunter's expense, and as no one
. Oregon.
later, r
‘“ Spain and Germ: Rr re- will allow himself to be outdone In Tillamook
while
talned a judicial belief fn witches and this reckless sort of hospitality each
the Justice of killing them until 1782 one shouts in succession with too fro
and 1796
'*
qtiently deplorable consequences.”
P. J. SHARP,
Sir William Osler In a lecture nt
Johns Hopkins training school named
the seven virtues of the nurse: "Tact,
without which no woman can be sue-
crssful mid her chief protection In the
mechanism of life; tidiness. It being
the primary duty of a woman to l<x>k
well: taciturnity, which should be cul­
tivated as a gift; sympathy, gentleness,
S'lence Preferred.
the birthright of a nurse; cheerfulness I J M Barrie, the novelist, has c_;‘
said
and charity, the Inst and greatest of that
one of the “ ......
most ' enjoyable
social
! -
“J'-’.’‘»OIV social
all.”
functions ' he ever attended was a din-
I tier at which he turned to his neighbor
Vagus.
I nnd
iXx you
».x.. _
____
and nttkoH
asked. “
"Do
converse?
” __ No; 1
didn't exactly know how to take
. dou't." replied his neighbor.
the missis this morning." said the "
'Nor do
I I,” »aid Mr Barrie, aud they did not—
lady'» maid to the cook
t.ondou Mail.
“What did she «ay?”
s
"When I remarked that I wn» afraid
N»ws to Him.
her complexion could not be improved
"Why Is It tb it th«'v never
by '•old cream »he told me I needn't
place the
pictures of living num on banknotes?”
nib It in.”-Baltimore American
asked the fellow who had beanie rieb
"Ray Isn’t Sw nolle. the honker. ■
relative of vanir» ?"
"Tee: he's • mWMn - nhout 41.U0t-,0lk)
I
removed." Chicago Tripette
OWU track. - Plutarch
I
time for a physician to arrive on the
scene Bichloride of mercury will not
produce a painless death. It is a poi­
son that paralyzes the liver. It cats
through the walls of the stomach, and
tlie victim generally dies in great
agony." — Des Moines Register and
Leader.
Gladstone on Disraeli.
G A. Storey. A. R. A., recorded a
touching incident he witnessed at the
academy banquet of 1881 when a por
trait for which Beaconsfield bad sat to
Millais shortly before his death was
auioug (lie exhibits. “This unfinished
work, pale unjl even ghastly, was in
one of tbe side galleries. Gladstone,
catching sight of the picture, went and
stood long in front of it * * * No
oue disturbed him. At tbe end of tbe
feast Gladstone rose and in tbe finest
and most feeling tone delivered a pan­
egyric ou the great man who bad
passed away.
In a voice clear and
sympathetic and full of emotion he told
us of bis admiration for tbe sterling
qualities of tbe man who, though op
posed to him in politics, was in no
other sense 11 u opponent He spoke as
only one generous in heart aud of a
broad aud great mind could speak of
another great man who bad passed
away. Tbe speech surpassed anything
1 ever beard.”—London Chronicle.
Clock.
n’"«» 'Men
— to ths
king of „ clock,
" ’•*«"« to tne that
• rl.x k has » langusee o'f 'l'ù
‘
*:-»ffWn He
• " Hi. —
•«roeiy s language say a dl
•Met
h
The Incentive.
"1 hare »truck a new line of writ­
ing." said Scribbler. "I write articles
from the point of view of a multimil
llonnlre."
"Indeed! How do you manage to get
In the right spirit?”
"Oh, that's easy. 1 write on the aft
emoon of pay days."-Exchange.
An Old Gam».
J\°Ur wlfe found • hou<'e «>at
suit« her?"
Aes; but don't any anything about
Li o
,n fluffing the land
d that she won't take It unless he
r,'X’l>C<,™X,he r”’rl°r "nd ,hre«
room«. -Detroit Free Press.
I«
after th
I. t
RESIDENT DENTIST,
Office : Commercial Block,
. OrefO*
Tillamook
J, CLAUSSEN,
.
LAWYER,
DEVTSCHER ADV0KAT.
E
2!3 T illamook
- (»r«ir<*
Tillamook
J.
E. REEDY, D.V M.,
Strang» Truth.
’V. “”'t IOTe WUI »° whe™ ’•
VETERINARY-
Both Phone*
m *ppears
«Iwffyg sent
W,,h " ri<,h father' Wh’
Tillamook
Th» Princip»!*» Jest.
w G
I» It thuswfae?—New Orleans Ptcayuoe.
’!•'>» Cluing »0 hnrd Mr, h1,
1s
' X, 71'*-’P"'-Kvi)|entlv an sbbr»
I 'Bon of lachrymose.-Judga.
B’ t-elng hap|<r We Mw anon/Ilw<^
bvuetiu upon the world.
B lock .
. oretn*
M c GKE, M.D
PHYSICIAN & SURGEt*
Office : Next door toS*
Theatre