Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, January 03, 1918, Image 6

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DRAFTING AN ARMY
Conscription Had Its Origin In
France In 1798.
THEN SPREAD OVER EUROPE
lane
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both of
livery ill
Eventus
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causs a
the pro
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there n
munlca
home i
home a
there i
Newu-l
OswtU
Pierce ‘h'h
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run tl
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ri» I
o It.
object
suppofa
ought
oaint
The Terrible Power It Plaoed In Napo­
leon’s Hands Forosd the Other Na­
tions to Adopt ths System—Ito Intro­
duction Into Thio Country.
~TTLLAMO0K HEADLIGHT JANUARY 3, 1918.
4
THE PLATE ON
REGULAR HABITS.
They Ge a Leng Wey Towerd Building
Up Good Health.
Regular habits for retiring must be
considered as one of the best methods
for securing good sleep.
The human Laxly has a wonderful
periodicity in all its «i»ontaueous ac­
tions, and by studying these much of
the machinery of health may be made
to work smoothly.
Witness one habit of waklug at a
certain hour to which we have been ac­
customed.
Regularity in eating is moat impor­
tant for health. The digestive tract
will respond at regular times Just as
other habits will repeat themselves.
Proper food properly digested will do
much for one's health and happiness.
I
It is a mistake to eat too much.
We should try and enjoy our meals
by paying attention to the taste of
food. Do not gulp it down. It should
be masticated and tasted so as to stim­
ulate those nerves which reflect their
sense on the other nerves controlling
the glands of digestion.
When you feel indigestion after eat­
ing a meal note the ingredients eaten
and should it repeat Itself try to con­
vict the guilty food and dismiss it from
your dietary.
Don't make eating a task, but make
it a pleasure, to that the food will di­
gest and be assimilated and applied to
the different necessities of the activi­
ties of life.
Youth demands a greater variety and
quantity of food than does old ags and
especially does it require more protein
and meat.
I
Learning what foodstuffs best ault la
one of the great educational tasks man
has before him, for he no longer has
the intuition of the lower animals. The
latter seem to inherit a sense that di­
rects them what is beat for their body
wants. The vast majority of animals
can differentiate between poisonous
and nonpoisonous foodstuffs —Commis­
sioner of Health Dr. Samuel G. Dixon
of Pennsylvania.
Curious Story Of . Proph
POSITIVETY THE
they Hold the Sultan’s Vast Store
of Hidden Wealth.
LAST 2 DAYS
BILLIONS IN RICH TREASURE.
Outturn’s
Bseides the Gern Leden Throne of
Beaten Gold, These Hoavily Guardod
Caves Secrets the Hoardinge of All
the Groody Rulers of Turkey.
SMASHED
PRICE
SALE
Friday and Saturday,
January 4th and 5th.
WONDERFUL BARGAINS
FROM EVERY
DEPT. OF THE STORE
Everything
on the
Balcony
1
2
We Pay You to Pay Cash
Why They Heve Green Baeks.
An Arabian Titbit.
Cheese today Is not common among
the Bedouin Arabs, butter being pre­
ferred. There is a substance closely
corresponding to cheese mentioned in
Samuel. This consists of coagulated
buttermilk, which Is dried until it be­
comes quite hard. It is then ground,
and the Arabs eat It mixed with butter.
He is twice a conqueror who can
«retrain himself in the hour of victory.
—Cyrus.
Imaginary.
“Father," said the little boy, “every
now and then I hear you talking about
somebody who was old enough to know
better.”
"Yes, my boy.”
"What age is that, father?"
And the old gentleman after some
thought replied:
“My son. there isn’t any such thing.
It's like the golden age—purely mytho­
logical.”
Easy by Comparison.
“You must put your shoulder to the
wheel,” said the earnest citizen.
"Glad of the chanee.” replied Mr.
Chuggins. "I feel lucky if I don't have
to craw! under a motorcar and lie on
my back to fix the works.”—Washing­
ton Star.
Our Help,
“Did you succeed In hiring a new
cook?’*
“Not yet She is looking up my ref-
erences."—Exchange.
Mahogany Trees.
Mahogany trees do not attain their
full growth till they have reached the
age of 200 years.
Tt Is better to be always prepared
than to suffer once.—Latin.
T
Fulfilled,
Visitors at museum, often
ou the sadness of the present
the Egyptian mummies
buried with such great caret
that their rest might never bed,?*
ed But such thoughts never ente/t
minds of natives who p;iiaM lb'r*
cestors' graves, nor do they
more civilized explorer. To.
tlous person, however a stur«1*^'
mummy that R. Caton’Wood^W.2
in Random Recollection," mlrtoa
a sinister meaning.
‘
11 Aft^ th.e H1 fu,ed exI>e<lltlon to ..
ieve Gordon. Walter Ingram
*
to I-ondon the mummy of aB EgrtoT
high priest that he hud hough, fr
Arab near Assuan. When he unm£
the mummy be found on It,
gold plate, upon which was lnsenL*
"He who disturbs my rest and
me to a distant land «hall dig, vwZ
death. His bones shall ne'er b» Jll4
They shall be scattered to the
points of the world.”
Shortly afterward Ingram
,
Somaliland on a big game exj^lJ0
He had a four bore rifle aud wbrau
the elephant region got two good tml
era. So he lent hl, rifle to one of hu
companions, who had not io he,„
weapon, to give him a better cb,nc. J
bagging an elephant He hl "
mounted a pony and went offTlth
three Somalis, armed with a 4S0 m
press, which shoots bullets of only Mu
grains, to bag an antelope or pertun,
panther.
R
As luck would have it Ingram c0
upon a fine old rogue elephant win
magnificent pair of tusks, it wM lw
great a temptation to be resisted. G«l
loping up to the elephant the hunter
fired both barrels at the beatt'i for»,
head from about fifteen yards. The
bullets flattened upon the animal',
skull and only made him very angry
Ingram galloped out of reach and ts
loaded, rode up and fired again, with a
similar result; again galloped awarul
reloaded, and so on until he bad ex­
pended all of the cartridges.
As he was galloping away after his
last shot, with the furious brute in pur­
suit, his pony suddenly stopped stock
still, apparently for no reason what­
ever.
The elephant thundered up,
whisked the hunter out of the saddle,
dashed him to the ground and trim-
pled him to death The tragedy occur,
red in the bed of a dry nullah and was
witnessed by the three Somalis, wbo
had climbed for safety to the tope of
trees. They were armed only with
spears, which, of course, were uselew
weapons against the elephant After
the brute bad gone they climbed dowo.
dug a hole with their spears, placed the
body of poor Ingram In it and returned
to camp with their sad story.
Some time afterward Mrs. Ingnun,
the hunter's mother, sent out an expe­
dition to find and bring back to Eng­
land the remains of her son. The spot
was found, but two rainy seasons had
passed, and the dry nullah had becoue
a roaring river that had washed awiy
the remains to the four points of the
earth. Thus was the prophecy fulfilled.
in the green vaults of the porte lies
bidden away what is perhaps the great­
est treasure in the world, collected for
centuries by Turkey's greedy rulers
and hoarded away from the gaze of
any inquisitive mortal. No one haB
ever been able to estimate the value of
the sultan's jewels, for the treasures
are guarded by day and night. There
are at least twelve seta of heavily bar­
red doors to pass before the actual en­
trance is readied to this Aladdin’s
cava For every lock there are two
keys, intrusted to as many custodians,
each having twenty-four guards. These
are supposed to spy on each other, as
well as protect the guardians of the
keys.
The green vaults of Constatio, as the
treasure caves are called, are within
the grounda of the porte. Approached
through a court called Dar-es-So'adet—
the court of felicity—it is seen to be a
low domed edifice with an Interesting
doorway, enriched with marbles and
tiles.
The jewels appear to consist mainly
of set and unset precious stones. All
Information regarding them, however,
Is kept secret because of the impover­
ished condition of the country, and if
the exact amount of the sultan's wealth
were discovered certain unscrupulous
leaders might be tempted to “break in
and steal.” The gossipers of Constan­
tinople say, however, that If a person
offered £600,000,(J00 for the green vaults
and secured their contents he would
make a great bargain.
Perhnps the throne of beaten gold,
udorned with millions of rubies, pearls,
diamonds, sapphires and emeralds set
In mosaic, is the most dazzling object
in the treasury of the "Shadow of God
on Earth.” How Selim I. ever brought
it from Persia away back in the fif­
teenth century, when traveling was so
difficult, is quite beyond human com­
prehension.
Nowhere in the world are there pre­
cious stones to compare with the two
great emeralds which adorn the top of
the sultan's throne.
One of them
weighs four pounds aud is as big as a
man's band, the other being a trifle
smaller.
On a table of ebony and sandalwood,
witbin reach of the throne, stands a
marvelous golden tankard Incrusted
with 4,000 diamonds. By Its side lies
a platter wrought of the purest gold
and literally veneered with diamonds.
On the ground surrounding this daz­
zling site are scattered thousands of
rubies, pearls, turquoises and emeralds
mingled with exquisitely carved dia­
Don’t Shut Yourself Up In an Office.
mond buttons. The magnitude of the
The man who shuts himself up in lit
whole thing makes one gasp with office makes a great mistake, think,
amazement.
Thomas E. Wilson, the Chicago packer.
There are effigies of the sultans clad In the American Magazine he says:
in robes of state from 1451 to 1839,
“The trouble with the executive who
with jewels on the feathers of their
is too inaccessible is that he loses mote
turbans, daggers and swords which are by the arrangement than anybody else.
priceless, as are the wonderful rubles In shutting others out be shuts bin­
and emeralds in the clasps of Ibrahim self in—away front the numerouii ad­
aud Holy man II.
vantages of personal contact and pointe
No museum in the world can boast a of view. There's nothing like looking
richer collection of armor, scimitars, a man in tlie eye and hearing his story
shields, pistols, saddles, sandals, canes to get at the meat of a situation. Mo«
and the like, all bejeweled or wrought executives prefer to have everything
of gold.
brought to their attention in writing.
When the sultana gives a banquet in That plan may be a time saver, butsj
her harem the treasury is generally own experience has been that it will
raided for the occasion. At one of pay to get all Information possible by
these revels bouquets of diamond flow­
face to face Interviews.”
ers stretching from shoulder to shoul­
der were worn by the sultan's favor­
Lessons Learned by Divsr».
ites. The sultana herself was adorned
Experiments made by the British ad­
with ropes of pearls of unparalleled
size, and in her ears were birds the miralty and the United States
size of butterflies holding in their beaks prove that deep sea diving is feasible.
sparkling gems. The sultan's grand­ It has been found that the shorter th
daughter, a mere infant of eleven, used time a diver take.« in getting to the bot
to be tortured by having her hair done tom the better. l>ecause his body
up in a knot on top of her bead inside sorbs less nitrogen. Also, the di»«J
a diamond crown, the front of her must have at least one and onehl
dress covered with diamond orders, cubic feet of air per minute st •
while her bands were incased with depths. Lacing the legs of the diver»
golden mittens studded with precious suit increases his stability and I*rml
him to come to an erect position «■>
stones.
Few are aware that the sultan is in ease. It also lessens the danger« ’
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same as
Wesley Rush,
falling or being suddenly blown to th
Executor of the last Will and Mrs. Morton uses. Foster-Milburn receipt of the largest income paid to surface.—Popular Science Monthly.
any
earthly
sovereign
—
something
like
Testament of James Hughey, Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
£1,006,000 a year—and has the right to
deceased.
ask for more should his privy purse
A Ready Witted Parton.
H. T. Botts.
run short. The treasury of useless
The evening lesson was fr0ID *
Attorney for Executor.
II. T. Botts, Pres. Attorney
W’ealth boarded away in the green book of Job, and the minister had M
at-Law,
vault, if converted Into cash and used read. “Yea. the light of the wi<W
for national purposes, would transform shall be put out," wbea lmmedlktW
UR. J. G. TURNER,
John Leland Henderson, Sec-J
the miserable Ottoman empire into one the church wan in total darkness
retary
Treas., Attorney-at-
of the richest powers of the world.—
"Brethren," said the minister, wltt
EVE SPECIALIST.
Law and Notrary Public,
Exchange.
scarcely a moment'« pause. ‘‘In view 0
PORTLAND — OREGON
the sudden and startling fulfillment 0
The Swan«« River.
Regular Monthly V isits to
this prophecy, we will spend a *’
It is related that when Stephen Col­ minutes in silent prayer for the e.eitnc
Tillamook and Cloverdale.
lins Foster was composing “The Old lighting company."— Boston Transtripl
I.aw,, Abstracts. Real Estate,
Folks at Home" he was at a loss for
WATCH PAPER FOR DATES.
the name of a river which would be
Insurance.
Just His Luck.
melodious and also fit the rhythm of
Both Phones.
“So you're going home?” ssld tbto
the song.
TILLAMOOK—OREGON.
A brother suggested “Pedee"—“Way man to the wanderer.
“Yes; tomorrow.”
down upon the Pedee river.”
“I understand they are preparing t»
‘No.” said the composer. “Pedee is
That will produce four
fatted
calf for you?”
.
not poetical enough."
"Just my luck. The d tor has m««
Good Crops of A lai fa in
Ornamental Fire Places Built
Various other names were tried, only
me cut out all fat foods.'—loaM»
of Brick and Stone. All Fire
1 ear, at Prices in reach of
to be rejected by the fastidious author.
Statesman.
Places
absolutely
guaranteed
At length a gazetteer was obtained,
all. $50 to $165 per acre.
not to smoke or money re­
and Foster looked through long lists
Located in Northern Cali­
funded.
Quite 80.
of names until he reached Suwanee or
fornia.
Brick work of all kinds done
"There is a report 1 d Ells has « _
Swanee, as it is usually written.
on short notice.
The suitable name was found, and in en to painting her fie e. »nd J
For information write W.
We make a specialty of re­
tills
manner was immortality l>estow«Ml buying rouge tile other day.
B. S herman . Yreka, Cali­
pairing smoking Fire Places.
“That certainly does lend color to
upon that hitherto almost unknown lit­
fornia ; or P. E. W alker ,
report."—Baltimore Amer? an.
tle
sonthem
river.
—
Philadelphia
Rec
­
Agent, Ramsey Hotel, Till­
ord.
amook, Or.
I
Right is the eterim! sun,and the,
TILLAMOOK ORE
A little loss frightens; a great one cannot delay it« coming-" eD<le 1
tames.—Spanish proverb.
lipa
«
Conscription originated In France in
1708. At that time the country had
just passed through the long and
bloody war of the French revolution,
which the monarchs of Europe had
banded together to crush. France, un­
der Napoleon, had come forth victori­
ous, but her army was exhausted, and
it was evident that some new system
of recruiting would be necessary, as
volunteer enlistment no longer sufficed.
It was then that General Jourdan
brought forth and passed the law es­
tablishing conscription. Since then it
has been the basis of all French mili­
tary legislation and, to a certain ex­
tant, of that of all other countries.
It was through the terrible power of
conscription that Napoleon was enabled
to carry on the glgantlo wars which
characterised hie reign and by means
of It, after losing In the snows of Rus­
sia the largest army that up till that
time had ever been put into the field,
to reappear a few months later with
another army almost aa large.
Out of necessity the other nations
were forced to follow France's exam­
ple, and conscription became general.
Under the French reglv.e every cltl-
sen between the ages of twenty and
twenty-five was liable to service for
five years. Prussia, however, still fur­
ther developed the powers of conscrip­
tion by reducing the period of service
In the ranks and passing her soldiers
as soon as they were sufficiently train­
HIDING THE WARSHIP.
ed into a reserve force, thus by de­
grees training her whole population.
Smoke Screen« and How They Are
Thia latter system, which was con­
Used In Naval Engagements.
sidered as one of the most farreachlng
The manner in which the density of
and important events of the last cen- the smoke screens is regulated during
^fury. owed its origin to the conditions • battle is interesting. By partly shut­
Imposed on Prussia by Napoleon at the ting off the draft to her boilers a bat­
treaty of Tilsit, whereby Prussia was tleship is made to emit clouds of smoke
restricted to a standing army of 43,000 which screen her from the enemy. But
men. She kept to the letter of the law how can the stokers, who are far be­
by maintaining her army at the pre­ low deck, see the stacks so that they
scribed number, but her trained citizen can regulate the smoke clouds to the
reserve force was limited only by the proper density? By an electric "eye,"
population of the country.
says Popular Science Monthly. The
The military history of the United eye is placed near the top of the smoke­
States is as remarkable as the rise and stack, and it records the exact density
rapid growth of the nation itself. In on electric meters conveniently located
1790, as fixed by an act of congress, in the boiler room.
the rank and file of our army amount­
This remarkably clever eye is simply
ed to 1,216 man, and in 1814 an English a wire coil of selenium which is car­
Beginning Monday, January 7th we will pay
expedition with only 8,SOO men was ried in a bousing on the inside of the
to
every customer 2 per cent of their purchases,
able to seize and burn Washington.
smokestack walls. An electric light, in
in
Cash
and at the time the purchase islmade.
Conscription first made its appear­ another bousing directly opposite, plays
ance here at the time of the war be­ its beams of light squarely upon the
It is to your interest to pay cash. Figure it
tween the states. At the beginning of wire. Now, selenium, as is well known,
out for yourself and you will be surprised at the
the war in 1861 our whole regular force has the peculiar property of changing
wonderful saving you will make by paying cash
was but 14,000 men. At first the north­ Its resistance to an electric current
ern army was Increased by volunteer when the light falling upon it changes.
on this new basis.
.
enlistment, but the unexpected pro­ The weaker the light the greater the
longation of the war proved this meth­ resistance, and vice versa.
od too slow to replenish the waste of
Evidently, then, the denser the smoke
the armies, and in 1863 the govern­ emitted through the stack the weaker I
ment resorted to a draft.
POINTS THE WAY
the light that gets through the smoke Stomach Trouble and Constipation.
The first attempt to carry tt out met from the electric lamp and falls upon
----- o------
------ o------
with forcible resistance and led to a the selenium. By connecting the sele­
afflicted with The Statement of this Hillsboro
Those who are
serious riot in the city of New York, nium with avi electric meter and the
constipation Resident Will Interest Our Readers
stomach trouble and
which lasted for several days. All op­ ship's lighting mains the electric cur­
should read the following: “1 have
Our neighboring town Hillsboro
position, however, was put down and rent going through the meter will be
never found anything so good for points the way in the words of one of
the draft executed with all possible lowered by the increased resistance.
stomach trouble and constipation as its most respected residents:
forbearance and justice. Exemptions The meter is very sensitive and shows
Shamberlain’s Tablets. I have used
Mrs. W. H. Morton, 1439 Second
and substitute purchases were so free­ the slightest change in Bmoke density.
ly given in the north that the draft had Moreover, it is calibrated to indicate them off and on now for the past two St., Hillsboro Ore., says: “1 can
years They not only regulate the act­ always speay a good word for Doan’s
little effect except as a stimulus to exactly what the actual smoke density
Kidney Pills, since they pulled me
the states in bringing to full strength is, so that tbo stokers can regulate the ion of the bowels but stimulate the
liver and keep one’s body in a through a terrible attack of rheumat­
their quotas of volunteers by voting cutoff of the draft to a nicety.
I
healthy condition,” writes Mrs. Ben­ ic pains. For over a year, I wasn’t
bounties.
Glass plates are placed in front of
able to dress myself and every cord
In the south, however, conscription the lamp and of the selenium coll to jamin Hooper, Auburn, N. Y. For and muscle in my body pained so that
sale
by
Lamar's
Drug
Store.
was sweeping from the first, and to­ protect them from soot. The plates
I couldn’t rest day or night. I was in
ward the end of the war it became are kept clean by streams of com­
constant misery every minute. During
Notice to Creditors.
omnivorous. Every man between the pressed air directed against them.
this time trouble with my kidneys set
----- o-----
ages of seventeen and fifty five was le­
in
and they were irregular in action
un-
Notice is hereby given that the
gally liable to service, the only excuse
and congested. I felt sick and nervous
Danger In Haeta.
_______
____
,
County
drrsigned
has
been
by
the
being physical incapacity.
all over. I couldn’t get anything to re­
In a Vermont town they tell of a suit­
The total number of men called un­ or who, after some years of devotion, . Court of Tillamook County, Oregon, lieve the suffering, until I began tak­
appointed as executor of the last will
der arms by the government of the finally proposed to the lady of bls and testament of James Hughey, de­ ing Doan’s Kidney Pills. In a few
United States between April, 1861, and choice.
ceased, and he has qualified as such. weeks, my kidneys acted more freely
and the rheumatic pains began to ease
April, 1865. amounted to more than
“But, Henry,” protested the lady, All persons having claims against the
2,750,000, nearly half of this number “this Is really suddent You had better ’ estate are required to present them up. I stuck to them until I had finish­
being raised by conscription. If to this give me a week to think it over!”
I to the undersigned, together with ed about twelve boxes when I was
able to get around as well as ever
we add the 1,100,000 men from the
“Very well, my dear,” said Henry, ' proper vouchers as required by law,
southern states the total armed force “And,” after due reflection, be added, at the office of H. T. Botts, Attorney and do my work. Today I can get
of the country at that time amounted “perhaps it would be as well if I at Law, Tillamook City, Oregon, around without any pain or effort. I
to almost 4,600,000, drawn from a pop­ thought it over myself at the same within six months from the date of take a box of Doan's Kidney Pills
Price 60c. at all dealers. Don’t
this notice.
ulation of only 82,000.000.—Philadelphia time!”—Puck.
'imply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Dated November 8th, 1917.
Ledger.
Why the United States banknotes
are printed with green backs is not
generally known, although there is a
most excellent reason for It. The great
drawback to paper currency, says the
Baltimore American, is the likelihood
of its being counterfeited, and there­
fore experts are constantly at work to
contrive ways of making It impossible
to copy such bills.
Stacy J. Edson w as the man who in
1857 invented the green Ink that Uncle
Bam usee on his bank bills. The ink.
which was patented, la anti-photo-
grnphlc— that is. it cannot be photo­
graphed. nor can counterfeiters in try­
ing to get a facsimile of the notes move
it with alkalies. The secret of the in­
gredients of the ink of course is care­
fully preserved.
JT HE MUH^
Tillamook Title and
Abstract Co.
Irrigated Land
Ì
RALPH E. WARREN,
i