Tillamook HeadU¿ht » snober 2. IOi3 m of wEiw. Kl -* tn »£ TlflKl- ■ >1 ■*D*’«*> w THE 11« ■.- riions i 'C £î. wwre ta fia. -a - VI! l''t sc ' Huff ■ it t ie Lag:: -a -ae- , - v :nMt I 1 -le* ■» "»it *3:» -rn fue» rf w» inc •>ui i "Tie i n v r.i I»* l-idti***!1 gu. I raaaa x l de if gll -HU* "Hi irter’’ '.r^r wrim»* •i«n-nt*n_ tieir ti».- rare» re iris ia-g hut >wi i.r tuwrisC i 12gS- » id tun •» vtrk ir~it igflïty wrw-r <.*»*-*-*u r tn * r it east • — of tn lour ».♦ he threw nr.- i ’fin * ** mew hue ex I ->y lu» -cfirro iw mñL V ïw ■hen T n fend ym an «y y*» years ' ir» t; ice "le ywnri n ~~ R., ia~i . n v r-iai.' ■Pages from tn A.iven.-irnos De Ea.e- rimev. jvn.fi-n ficubtard "it was werr/v- I3lt lev "-T TTÏ ■*•" the -rorrifioro if Leng Live« Seaniard*. Though the average age of Spaniard is among the fewest in Europe-thirty Scoed o* Anímala. A—nri.ag to the naturalists, no ani- two years and for mouthy against nal 3» known to have exceeded the fifty years in Sweden and Xorwij- speed ltt-iined by the famous race yet Spain remains the land of hundred- 1* rae .«yvonby ’-«in'anewns photo- year-old people. South of the Sierra Morena there; m.-ds show the full length of one complete «ride of alwut twenty-six are fifty to sixty a hundred years oM feet la the stride of the fastest racers las every miiifen ink ¡tints. In Ul­ 'he kind quarters and limbs are raised lage and other parts of Andalusia IDti rnr..«;*iersbly higher than the 'boulders hundred-year-olds are reckoned it r.ts. And whei lad from this relatively great height is every million inha brought downward ami forward, wide- a Spaniard once attains that age he ty separating from each other, as a ttMjaliy bancs on t. life for ten to it sportsman «ay«. "to avoid striking the teen years «*nwr One of the famous long lived men of fire egs." The bare which is hunted Barca, «holla wth fast d*«s has not in reality the Spain was Dr JI ■ speed of the dog. The dog, on the other burled in the Chur h of San flebnatlM ■tind. does mt attain the speed of the at Seville, having 121 years to his horse. The giraffe is said to run at the credit, according to the church rec­ rate of fiftren yards per second under ord. He left 30» des* endintx-Bostoi ___ ___ the most favorable conditions. The Post. rieç bant, going at a rate of two yards The Pilmrtto State. a «eennd. carries a weight approximat­ The origin of the state arm« of South ing that carried by six horses. Carolina la thus given in the tustori«: “On Jone 28. 1771. a force of less tbaa Perpetual S A eurfeus m arring custom obtains 100 Carolinians. tinder commanl of inu-nz central Australians, who. al- Moultrie, | -Keeled by the rude forti- tbougb representing perhaps the low- flcation of Sullivan'« island, in Clurlw wt and most degraded type of human ton harbor, made of the trunks of the beings, have managed to evolve a most palmetto, repulsed the attack of u Brit­ •omp-ex «rstem of rites and ceremonies ish fleet under command of Sir Peter which governs almost every action of Parker, and when the «tale of South 'he'- !tv»s Then a busband dies the Carolina was organized the state letl which was first used in May, 177T, Wflj widow points herself all over with white pigment and for the space of a made to commem-rate this victory. A year must not exhibit herself to a male palm tree growing erect on the sea­ member of the tribe on pain of death. shore represents the strength of tflaJ Tor the rest of her life, unless she mar­ fort, while at Its base au oak tree.tori t ries igain. which is sometimes allowed, from the ground and deprived of IB. she must not speak, bnt communicate branches, recalls the British Seat MM with the other women by means of a of oak timber, overcome by the pal-. . | dm language, consisting of move­ mette.** Maay are ":ie charms -xfepred by ao- •iery v -mci w.rj» a graín of «upersti- ->.<» a • nsakoir imi me of -.le r.- -' -. .. tiuit -v ira by a yotng «atr- v. -> .oenils tnn.-h of her time •t Atlact.. • t; Arent-nn being -al’.e*i (• her —ir-j.*;.* pendant—a poiisn-d «nb- «.aa* e a pea.-ts and s tn “»• been developed by these savages to mae asyorf fr- m my rasfisem to t» a marvelous extent and by which their anted stock of ideas can be fully ex­ tap aty hnle torfcet limpie, are t nr pressed. —Mew Tort Tribeae. Crocodile In a Tree. An African hunter once found a large crocodile banging in the fort d a tree about ten feet from the pound. As the place was fully half a naile^ from any water it was difficult to ar^ count for the crocodile's strange peB-j tton. When question*-I about the sob >ect the natives explained that It »•»- put there by an elephant It that when the elephants wade low ’ Fancy Mica. That the rearing of fancy mice can bn made not merely an interesting bobty. but also a source of substantial profit, is illustrated by the experience of a Scarborough rEng'andi man. hun­ dreds of whose tiny pets find their way the Lake Ngami to bathe the diles are tn the hi! it of wortyiaf l annually into the hands of the British them and biting tt>*~--: legs. Bo*’ admiralty. Tame mice are required times when an elephant is annoyel prtnripalty for use tn submarines. beyond endurance it pi- ks up its toe Jnau " But his life was like that of Aubrey Beardsley—upside down —the day was the night 'I Briggs-DM j •er wife wok I when you went honte so late lust ! Griggs-Tow don't know what » I have « wife who was owe a trwhw Why. she made tn* « ' hundred time, on a slate. 1 mi home by in «'dock Exchange « ! to the front -Milwaukee News. In Training. "Have you been to sea In the last six or right yearsv“ "Xot elu*sible to please anybody-PM* l>Wa I-«dger Lev. and the Me* Kitty—They say. you know, t» makes the world go round.^^ Maylw so, but It cannot ■»" eligible young men go rous*-” R sm aB n| M m * MMIvnan - «tren I mseriad ywse reabre l’wse earning SM a wee#; twa latee I h>mnM out my cm^toyar. fmnghter - And |*M la a