Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, January 17, 1918, Image 8

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JANUAR
Fourth List of Men Classified.
IS
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Class One.
646— Antone Lagler
599— R. F. Liles
722-7-E. Seaman
592— N. A. Wagner
558—T. A. Gillen
621—J. J. Ebberson
508—E. R. Woods
585—Frank Wilson
658—H. E. Brooten
600— Harry Norberg
583—G. M. Bell
582—S. Moon
537—Arthur S. Gilmore
608—A. C. Tatro
Ó54—J- S. Hiatt
561—D. Mondelli
604—A. V. Mitchell
545—C. R. Wright
593— R. Heusser
691—A. L. Learned
628—C. C. Summers.
657—C. O. Curl
677— C. H. Webb
611—W. Webb
626—C. E. Merritt
676—M. L. Gaines
674—M. F. Borba
700—F. C. Affolter
719—E. E. Porter
717—Fred Wyss
313—H. L. Sappington
668—C. Rainey
678— C. Boosinger
644—A. M, Jenck
540— A. E. Curl
705—P. J. Jenck
667—J. L. Steinback
623—U. H. Neiger
493—H. W. Tubbesing
686—C. Plitzkow
704—J. Karaindros
565—A. C. Park
711—H. E. Weiss
640—J. J. Rutgers
702—H. O. Buttler
602—A. Grab
684—John Josi
721—R. Obrenovich
483—O. E. Kellow
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Class Two.
489—H. B. Millis
Class Three.
580—H. E. Jocobsen
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Class Four.
515—C. P. Moody
590—A. L. McCarty
542—W. L. Mayer
562—W. C. Foster
491—N. N. Kirby
538—C. C. Edner
560—E. C. Cooper
653—E. M. Condit
693—C. A. Dunn
633— S. L. Fisher
179—Ö. A. Dahleheim
609— G. R. Dickey
625—Leo F. Wilson
636—F. H. Mansell
522—I. O. Shultz
689— J. S. Lowrence
624—John Pohl
490—T. Honey
629—H. V. Berg ,
595—H. J. Curl
610— Carl Dawson
579—C. A. Makinster
360—J. H. McKnight
709—J. R. Ford
652—1. Channell
I
680—J. E. Mann
688—A. N. Sheets
615—W. C. King
687—G. H. Ethel
692—C. O. Davis
712—W. N. Hulse
659—C. E. Follett
559— J- B. Honey
631—R. R. Stillwell
650—T. B. Hyder
253—Frank Hediger
669—O. D. White
551—Geo. Finch
682— G. E. Boquist
619—J. C. Trent
696— A. D. Thompson
603—L. W. Travis
673—C. W. Witcher
605—C. Jennings
715—C. E. Pickering
701—J. M. Weiss
697— L. Brock
605— L. J. Smith
613—C. Wyss
607—H. A. Witterin
679—W. R. Winkler
635—R. H. Tyson
683— R. L. Himes
643—C. E. Norberg
634— P. H. Long
638—E. J. Iddings
698— G. A. Ryan
‘ Class Five.
553-H. W. Wyld
567—S. Farlos
648—E. Pshcnicknuk
671—X. Fassbind
598—J. M. Bailey
665—G. F. Sanders
¿20—M. Miller
681—G. J, Peterson
219—S. Mondelli
713—P. Rogcsich
563—G. A. Betchart
070—M. Soder
694—Gus Peterson
725—B. Hanson
718—J. Soder
488—K. F. Wlhinger
411—F. H. Wild
651—C. M. Blanchard
663—C. Erdt
Announcement.
BURIED BELLS OF NAKOUS.
HIS LAST PRAYER.
6t.v.n.on Wrot. It For Hi. Family th.
Night Before He Died.
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On tbe night before Death gave him
hie. band Robert Lou!» Stevenson com­
posed and read to Ills family tbe fol­
lowing prayer:
“We beseech thee. Lord, to behold us
with favor, folk of many families and
nations, gr cred together In tbe peace
of this roof: weak men and women,
subsisting under the covert of thy pa­
tience. Be patient still; suffer us yet
awhile longer with our broken pur­
poses of good, with our idle endeavors
against evil; suffer us awhile longer to
endure and (if it may be) help us to do
better. Bless to us our extraordinary
mercies; If the day come wheu these
must be taken, have us play tbe man
under affliction. Be with our friends;
be with ourselves. Go with each of us
to rest; if any awake, temper to them
the dark hours of watching, and when
tlie day returns to us. our sun and
comforter, call us up with morning
faces and with morning hearts, eager
to labor, eager to be happy, if happi­
ness shall be our portiou, and, if the
day be marked for sorrow, strong to
endure it.
“We thank thee and praise thee, and.
in tbe words of him to whom thia day
is sacred, close our oblation.”
GEMS OF TRANSLATION
Soma Cruda Spanish Found In Amari-
can Business Catalogues.
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Until Further Notice 2 per cent of your total
Purchases will be returned in Cash.
Friday and Saturday
BARGAINS
Be Sure to Visit the Store Fri­
day and Saturday for on these
Two Days you will find wonder­
ful Bargains in Each Depart­
ment.
Friday and Saturday Sale of
A man who has learned Spanish in
Spain picked up one of the numerous
American business catalogues that are
sent to Latin American countries in
alleged Spanish. This is what he read,
according to the Pan-American Review:
"In an automobile catalogue splen­
didly issued and richly illustrated, but
full of absurdities on account of its in­
sufferable translation, 1 read this cap­
tion at the foot of a magnificent illus­
tration, ‘Cinco pasajeros curros para
viajando,’ just as if we would say in
English, *To traveling car five passen­
gers,' instead of ‘five passenger car for
traveling.’ In a leather goods catalogue
the caption ‘Harness for a single horse
buggy’ is translated hito Spanish in
this way, ‘Harness for a bachelor horse
full of bugs.’ ’’
You can find in many hardware or
machinery catalogues the most striking
translations; for instance, corkscrew
for screwdriver, nut for screw, gobbler
for bolt and hair curl for corkscrew!
All of which must spread laughter
and sunshine in South America.
American Lady Corsets,
$1.39
For Actual Values to $2.00
An assemblage of several models in a com­
plete range of sizes, though not every size in
each model. There are models showing 1J to
5J inch busts and 8£ to 14J hips in Coutil and
Brocade fabrics. Whether you require a slender,
medium or Nursing Model you will find your
size in this Bargain selection Friday and
Saturday in the Dry Goods Depart-
1 QQ
ment, Main Floor, at per pair
»piaO-F
Origin of a Popular Hymn.
The following illustration given by
D. L. Moody suggests the true origin of
P. P. Bliss’ hymn, "Let the Lower
Lights Be Burning:” "A ship on Lake
Erie bound for Cleveland harbor was
overtaken by a storm, and as they
neared the port tbe pilot could only see
tbe upper light—the light from tbe
lighthouse streaming to them through
tbe storm and darkness. Tbe lower
lights were not burning. Tbe pilot
could not see how to steer into the har­
bor. It was impossible to sail back
again upon tbe lake. The ship bad to
go forward, and for the want of the
lower lights aloug the shore the vessel,
now at the mercy of tbe huge, roaring
waves, was dashed to pieces on tbe
rocks, and many of tbe crew perished
before help could reach them. P. P.
Bliss was associated bi those early days
with D. L. Moody in Christian work,
and be must have heard Mr. Moody use
this illustration, which gives a beauty
to its meaning.”—Christian Herald.
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PRICE
PRICE
Every
Every
Dress Skirt
1
i_
2
PRICE
2
PRICE.
SATURDAY ONLY
REMNANTS
É PRICE
Careful About His Grave.
Desirable Length of Fabrics of all
— Remnants of
—Remnants of
—Remnants of
—Remnants of
— Remnants of
—Remnants of
Cretonnes and Silkalines.
Silks and Satins.
Wash Fabrics.
Wool Dress Goods.
Damask and Sheetings.
Lace, Ribbons, etc.
ALL AT HALF PRICE.
“Key” Not a Spanish Word.
The word "key" as used In Key West,
the island and city of Florida. Is not,
as supposed, entirely a Spanish word.
Key is a Spanish corruption of an
American Indian word meaning an Is­
land. a sand bank or a rock In the sea.
—Exchange.
Honest Graft.
Stella—I wish I knew where I could
steal some money in a law abiding and
respectful way. Bess—Dear me! What
do you want with so much money as
that?—Life.
Two of a Kind.
‘‘Where did you get that stuff, kid?"
“I was teached it.”
“Teached it? Who learned yon to
talk that way?”—Kansas City Journal.
the more labor it requires.—Am lei.
Lady’s Coat
Lady’s Dress
A Pittsburgh man's will recently re­
ferred to a "flowerless burial plot” and
gave directions for a brick and cement
grave where no flowers or plants are
ever to be grown. He made provi­
sion for $7 a year for watering grass,
which is to be allowed on the grave,
and directed that the fence about the
plot be painted with a certain kind of
aluminum paint, applied with a camel's
hair brush.—Exchange.
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Lady’s Suit
2
Considerations of health which effect
cabinet changes are always terrors to
governments. Peel attributed his abili­
ty to sustain the premiership to the
fact that his nose bled every night
Tough old Palmerston had no such re
lief, so bought himself a mighty tow­
ering desk at which he had to stand.
If he slept at bls work he fell and so
was aroused. But he had his own test.
Before his house ran high iron railings,
and at dead of night the old Spartan
would stealthily climb them twice and
so learn whether he was physically fit
to govern the empire.—London Chron­
icle.
Poetry.
I wish to announce that I have
"Do yon enjoy modern poetry?”
recently taken over the fire insurance
“Very much. It’s such good fun try-
business of the late Mr. J. S. Steph­ Ing to figure out what It means.”—De-
ens and am prepared to give prompt troit Free Press.
attention to a'.l insurance matters.
The less heart a man puts into a task
W. A. Church.
Every
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Health and Office.
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Every
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Bargain Table
25c
Bargain Table
ON THE BALCONY
UNDER BALCONY
Articles up to 50c. in
value. Every item a
desirable Bargain. Your
Choice Friday and Qp
Saturday.
Each
‘
Articles up to $2.00 in
value.
Some of the
most wonderful Bar-
gains we have ever
offered
Your
Choice.
Each 25c.
THIS IS STRICTLY A CASH STORE.
Buying and selling for Cash enables us to sell
at lower prices. You benefit.
STORY OF A PAINTING.
Nature's Curioua Freak on the Border
of the Rod Sea.
Ik. Chang, th. Arti.t Mad. In .-y.
Spirit of Sevonty-eix.”
A singular phenomenon occurs on the
borders of the Red sea at a place
called Nakous. where intermittent un­
derground sounds have been heard for
an unknown nuinlier of centuries. It
is situated about half a mile distant
from the shore, whence a long reach of
sand ascends rapidly to a height of 300
feet This reach is about eighty feet
wide and resembles an amphitheater,
being walled by low rocks.
The sounds coming up from the
ground at this place recur at intervals
of about an hour. They at first resem­
ble a low murmur, but ere long there
is beard a loud knocking somewhat like
the strokes of a bell, which at the end
of about five minutes becomes so strong
as to agitate the sand.
The explanation of this curious phe­
nomenon given by the Arabs is that I
there is a convent under the ground
here and that these sounds are those of
the bell which the monks ring for pray­
ers. So they call it Nakous, which
means a bell. The Arabs affirm that I
the noise so frightens their camels
when they hear it as to render them
furious.
Scientists attribute the sound to
suppressed volcanic action, probably to
the bubbling of gas or vapors under
ground.
•Tbe Spirit of Rerenty-«te*-tba f.
tnous drum and fife trio-tarn. fr2
W llbrdMh Bl d
Arvhil'«d J|
WHEN WOMEN FISH
The artist emerged from overall. U(1
a Wellington (O.) wagon Bhop . "T
ture called "l‘lu< k No. 1." display^
a Cleveland art dealer's window
traded tbe attention of the dtacrtmL
nating and paved tbe way to a kind of
partnership with James H. Iivdw
through whose suggestion the "Seven
t.v-six” picture was begun.
In its early stages this painting w..
called “Yankee Doodle,” and it wj
first planned along seriocomic fins,
“But one day," declares Mr. Willard “I
caught a glint in the eye of the 'old
man who pored for the «enter dgure
who was posing, and in a flash it ro
vealed itself to me what all this stood
for, and I could go no further. Th#
real picture pushed everything els.
aside and went ahead and painted It
self.”
The old man whose flashing eye. tn-
spired this change of conception w(<
tbe artist's father, Rev. Daniel Willard
a man of revolutionary stock.
Thus curiously it was only by the
merest switch of an inherited senti­
ment that this symbol wu. prevented
from becoming a fanciful burlesque to
live only for tbe brief day of Its cr»«-
tion.—Everybody's Magazine.
It Makes the Trip Such a Jolly and En­
joyable Ona.
THE BATTLE OF LIFE
It does not serve to mellow a man's What a Man 8hould H.v. .nd B*
disposition to take a woman or two
th. Ag. of Thirty-fiv*.
into the boat when be goes bass fish­
Jack
bait
aaye lu the American My.
ing. For women alwuys want to fish,
azine:
yet never could they or would they
“At thirty-five a citizen should have a
stick those horrid, nasty, wriggling
wife and children; he should hav( «
angleworms on the book.
80, between baiting their books and permanent trade, business or profes-
removing the perch and pumpkin seeds 1 sion; he should own a home; be should
and straining your spine to keep the 1 have money in bank and a commensu-
boat from turning turtle and the lines rate endowment policy half paid off;
from getting snarled up. you have a . he should be through with experiment­
most enjoyable day’s outing, do you ing and on his way, realizing the
not? Yes, you do not! I'll run the risk dreams be dreamt when he had time
i to dream, walking over the paths he
of answering that question for you.
And then, when you finally hook a laid in the road building years, hiking
five pound bass weighing at least three on bis second wind beyond the point to
pounds and eight ounces by bls own 1 which he laboriously strained bls way
standard scales, and play him for | theretofore.
twenty minutes against their earnest j “Youth is a tonic and its manifesto
entreaties not to bling that big, ugly tlons are grit mid giimeness. hope aud
thing into tlie boat or else they’d jump | yearning, ambition and hard tackling,
out—you calmly ease up on the line and energy and pep and good as new recov-
give him back, also his freedom, do eries and gay times and extravagances
But youth is a bargain commodity-
you not? Yes, you do not!
And when the day is spent they tell priceless to own, cheap to buy.
“ ‘He's only a boy,’ says the world,
you what a gorgeous time they have
bad and make you promise to fetch aud be goes at fifty cents ou tbe dol-
them again, and you promise, of course i lar.
“Therefore youth is the time to in­
do you not?—Cartoons Magazine.
vest. and sometimes later comes the
i time to collect Somewhere is the turn­
Gasoline Poison.
I think it is marked ‘35.’
The poisonous character of the fumes ing peak.
arising from a gasoline engine may be
Magnifiosnt K.l.t.ur,
appreciated by the following extract
One of the greatest natural wonders
from a recently published book: "If a
gasoline engine producing five cubic in the world is tbe falls of Kaleteur, la
feet of CO per minute were allowed British Guiana. Tbe valley through
to run in a tightly closed garage that which tbe river flows, below the falls,
was twelve feet high, fifteen feet long is quite Impassable, and probably no
and fifteen feet wide— that is, having a one has ever reached the bottom of
capacity of 2.750 cubic reet—it could the fall. The fall is 741 feet high,
produce an atmosphere if tbe latter more than four times the height of
were thoroughly mixed containing Niagara, more than three times th«
about 1 per cent CO in about five mln height of Bunker Hill monument, 200
utes. This percentage of CO in air is a feet higher than tbe Washington mon­
fatal proportion and would probably ument and 300 feet higher than St. Pe­
kill a person in less than a minute. ter's dome. A smooth but rapid river,
In fact, an exposure for as long as nearly 400 feet wide, flows quietly to
twenty minutes to an air containing as the brink and turns quietly downward.
little as 0.25 per cent CO would make In its fall it breaks into soft white
mist and reaches the bottom in a chaoe
most people very ill.”
of seething clouds. There Is a gentle
roar. Only now and then, from the
Burns That Kill.
Burns are generally classified in hidden caverns at the bottom, a deep,
t*ree degrees of severity. First degree thunderous growl arises that give»
burns are simple reddening of the skin. some hint of the forces contending
Second degree burns result in blister­ there.
ing. Third degree burns are followed
A Pacifist.
by actual destruction of the skin and
At the age of three years Reginald
tissues.
Death is almost certain to result if was already a celebrated coward. IT
approximately one-third of the body ticularly he was afraid of all fourfwt
surface is burned. Often burns of ed animals. There was talk In the faa
much less extent are fatal. Death may ily of adopting a dog.
"Would you like to have a dog, tn.'
result from shock, from acute kidney,
liver or blood disease resulting from son ?” said the proud parent.
"No,” said Reginald.
the toxins of the burned skin, or the
Somewhat later Reginald returned*
burns may later become infected and
his father's side. Evidently he
kill the patient from bl<s>d poison.
been turning over in liis mind the prop-
osition recently submitted.
.
Educate the People.
"I'd like to have a dog,” said be, “>
Illiteracy is one of the problems with
which the American people are con­ I could have one with Ills mouth sbnt
fronted, There should he a pressure —New i'ork Post.
of public opinion and of public effort
A Poisonou. Frog.
brought to bear to wipe out the dis­
People in general look upon all
grace. Each community should see to
it that every child of school age is un­ des of the frog as being perfectly h
der instruction. Increased efforts to in­ less. Should you l>e traveling in M
duce those of adult age to enter night Granada (United States of ColoniUi
schools should be made.—Memphis however, you would do well to let a c
tain little tree croaker sc' erely •'*"
Commercial Appeal.
He secretes a poison equally as de«
as that of the rattlesnake. It elU
Wild Pigeons.
Until little more than fifty years ago i from his skin In tlie shape of a ml«,
the most abundant bird In North Amer­ liquid.
ica was the wild pigeon tEctopistes ml-
Not So Cruel.
grntorlusl. It moved in immense flocks
“I heard tlie other day of a
calculated not by thousands, but by
millions, and it is not known today if a difficulty who was culling repeat
single pair of this native American bird for help, and nobody would go to
is alive.
aid.”
“How cruel!”
Ai Man Grows Older.
"Not necessarily He
Another time when a man realizes and there was none to l«e had. ""®*n
that he Is older than he was comes more American.
when he finds that he doesn’t mind It
at all when he has to wear spectacles
Set. Logic at Deh.nc.-
instead of eyeglasses and doesn’t even
"There is no effe"t without a
care about tortoise shell rims any more quoted the wise guy.
—Ohio State Journal.
"How about w!<n n woman '
her mind?” asked the simple n>
Easily Explained.
Philadelphia Record
Mistress—How do you manage to
make such a noise here tn the kitchen?
La at Kind th. Worst- v3fjn,nt
Cook—Well, just you try to break four
■!i ' f I*
Teacher—r
to P
plates without making a noise!—Lon are there? Pupi’ T • ■
Tpa >
."
i'
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don Ideas.
What are they? pupil Lirlr.drat- th fo
Life.
and epidemic.
Like Unto Like.
•»« D
"Her new hat becomes her.”
Th.
N om Ki»»-
"Why. it's a perfect fright!"
The no.e k'.-x e-
ln,
, -
"You heard* what I .ald/’-Brown-
'hich
apart as the !
(
a
Ing's Magazine.
lory f
the Maoris of New Zealand.
•• co