TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JUNE 20, 1918. I PLACE OF DISMAL HISTORY STATE’S TWO FRENCH KINGS A/OULD KEEP LOVE IN WORLD Roanoke Island Known-to Fame Be­ cause It Was Site of Raleigh’s Ill-Fated Colony. Both Louis XIV and XV Ruled Over Domain That Included Great Western Commonwealth. The MILKER that SPARES the COW Pathetic Plea Made by Austrian Woman More Than Her English Sister Could Refuse. Off a desolate stretch of sandy beach She was a little Austrian woman There were but two French kings In North Carolina lies Roanoke Island, who ever ruled over Missouri, observes and she was crossing the ocean on a th-- birthplace of Virginia Dare, the the Kansas City Star. The first of great hostile liner. Most .of the other tiiEnglish child born in America. these was Louis XIV, for whom Lit women were the wives of Englishmen Sir Walter Raleigh was responsible Salle took possession of the Missis­ and they could not forget that her for Roanoke island bein'-' placed on the sippi river and of all the country country was at war with their land. ¡ : ■< of history, for in 1 >85 he sent out drained by its tributaries. I.a Salle Tiny ignored her, and she was left n . ionizing expedition to America, and named the country Louisiana in honor much to herself. And yet— and the rough winds of the Atlnn- of his king. For governmental pur­ One morning 11s she was walking fl lie e ast the ship up >>n Roanoke 1s- poses the whole of Louisiana was at­ up ami down the deck In her solitary land. O11 account of the climate, the tached to new France and Frontenac way sln> passed the steamer chair of 1; ■k of food and the ubiquitous In- became the first governor, ruling over a middle-aged English woman who was di.a a the island was voted as unln- the largest domain ever under the knitting at a gray woolen seek, re­ hahf ible by the colonists, who packed sway of one man on this continent. lates a writer in the Christian Herald, their belongings and took the next France owned the central part of the •And suddenly she paused In her walk ship bac to England and civilization. continent from the Gulf to the polar and held out both of her hands. But Raleigh was not discouraged. He sens. Thus Frontenac became the first “Oil,” she cried, in very good Eng­ sent out another colony, which consent­ governor of the region that is now lish, “will you not let me knit a few ed to stay, and tile man in charge of i Missouri. rows on that sock?” the expedition returned with the glad i But It was in the reign of Louis XV, The English woman looked up. And new s. Four years later, when Sir Wai- | who succeeded Louis XIV, that Mis­ her face was cold and rather hard. "I ter Raleigh sent lilm to report on the ; souri received from France the first think,” she said, “that you would progress of the colony, he found on vivifying touches of civilization. Un­ scarcely want to knit on this sock! the island no trace of settlers or set­ der this reign the city of St. Louis was For it Is going to an English colonel tlement save the inscription “Croatan" ; founded ami was named, not in honor —my husband!” carved on a tree. Sir Walter then of Louis XV, who Was no saint, but The little Austrian woman looked gave up the Roanoke island project as in honor of Louis IX, who then had at the colonel’s lady. And there were hopeless. been dead 500 years, and who was the tears in her eyes. “Listen,” she said lloanoke Island has now been in­ most saintly king France ever had. in a low, shaking voice. "I, myself, habited for many years, chiefly by fish- | New Orleans was founded, too, dur­ have a son. He Is an officer In the ermen and life-savers. The latter are ing the reign of Louis XV, and was Austrian army. But if you knew my negroes from the coast guard station named for the duke of Orleans, re­ son I do not think you would hate at Pea Island, which is separated from gent for the young king, who was him! If I knew the colonel, your hus­ Roanoke island by the sound. Pea crowned at five yenrs old. band, I do not think I would hate island, the only coast guard station in I him either. * * •” She paused for this country manned by negroes, Is off CAN’T GET ALONG TOGETHER a moment before she went on, and a dangerous section of the coast. A then—“now that the world is torn by derelict ship cast on the beach is suck­ Women Won’t Work for Women When war,” she said, "we women must do ed farther into the sands by each . what we can to keep a little love in It They Can Help It, Always Pre­ tide. The colored guardsmen have ( * * * May I, perhaps, knit a ferring Men Bosses. established an excellent record in rows on the sock?” a trying and dangerous station.—Chi- i Silently, but with tears In her A “mere man,” writing in Woman’s cago Dally News. Home Companion, makes this com­ eyes, the English woman handed ________________ l ment on women in business. the gray wool. BEES FOR WAR MESSENGERS “Another reason I have noted why women don’t appropriate the big jobs OBEDIENT TO QLD COMMAND Their Employment Is Said to Have Is that most members of their own sex—to say nothing of the members Gone Far Beyond the Range of ours—would rather work for a man Palestine Farmers Still Remember of Probability. Biblical Injunction in Refer­ than a woman. The most successful ence to the Gleaners. woman I know Is the head of a big A secret long cherished in the Brit­ department in a very big business. She ish war department 1ms just been dis­ After the lentils and similar crops covered—the use of bees as messen­ knows that her feminine instinct is the bean family have been gathered worth thousands to that business. Yet gers. by the Palestinian farmer, the barley she is glad that the president of the No longer will the aide de camp harvest comes next, and lastly the business Is u man; she wouldn't take spur bls staggering horse through shot the president’s job if she could get it; wheat. and -hell to carry the message to the When harvesting, the men wear a and no matter how much she believes leather apron and sometimes a large front. Instead he will don his gloves in her own Instinct, she recognizes and mask, and. going to the portable that there Is an element of judgment padded glove. The women have none beehive back of headquarters, seize in the man that, working with her In­ of the protection provided for them, one of the faithful little insects, and stinct, produces a perfect combination. says the Christian Herald. Sickles are of two kinds, one, the kaloosh, is send the well-trained messenger I “I hired a stenographer once, for In­ small and with quite a dull edge and through the air. stance, and assigned her to n woman. Whoever possesses a receiving outfit At noon of the first day she went out is employed when the crops are short can rend the secrets of tile wireless; to lunch and did not come back, I and scanty. These do not cut the one can cut the wires of the ordinary found a laconic note on her desk, It straw, but rather help pull tip the telegraph, and the pigeon does not al­ rend: ’I won’t take dictation from n grain by the roots or break off the brittle stalks. The other, called man- ways escape the bullet. woman.’ Any man or any woman in Therefore, other means have been business can give similar testimony, pal, is much larger and supplied with sought. In America, the general staff Women would rather work for men short, slanting teeth, and Is used on the tall, well-grown grain fields. dreams of using as a dispatch bearer than work for women.’ I Reaping with these simple imple­ I —the bee. ments and binding the sheaves with The bee, like the carrier pigeon, Warmth Not In Surface. their own straw, a considerable guided by its marvelous Instinct, re­ "The Britisher is just as warm­ turns to the hive from wherever he hearted and kindly anil friendly ns we amount Is left behind and many of the tuny be liberated. Tiny dispatches, are,” writes Herbert Corey In Every­ ears drop off, but once the reapers ■winch can be deciphered with the mag­ body’s, “but he must be operated on have advanced, they, actuated by al­ nifying glnss, enn be attached to its with a full kit of tools before one finds most religious scruples, will not pick lip that which has been dropped, even breast. it out. [hough they be severely poor them­ But something better still Ims been “Not long ago I was riding with a selves. for they unwittingly follow a found. By an ingenious process the young officer on the British front. He wings of the tiny insect are sensitized, had just heard tlint Ills favorite broth­ command not given to them but to for­ and by means of microscopic photog­ er-in-law was located In some unknown mer inhabitants, the tillers and reap­ ers of this land: “Anil when ye reap raphy the message is Imprinted there­ village near by. 'he harvest of your land, thou shult on. “He was quite ’bucked up’ about it— 1 tot make clean riddance of the cor­ I am sure he said bucked up—because ners of thy field when thou reapest, Obliterated Mattie. tills was a real brother-in-law. He re­ neither shnlt thou gather any gleaning “If I have to come in here again to galed me with stories of the brother- ->f thy harvest.” speak to you children I shall punish in-law’s youth. He met friends and you well, mind that!” warned mother, asked where the beloved brother-in-law | To Save Foolish Motorist. angrily. “I don’t want to hear another might be found. By and by we ran I The officials of the Long Island sound from either of you today.” She across the brother-in-law, i went hack to her work, and a mos: un­ knee-deep in mud in a particularly de­ ' ral,way have begun another year’s . ............ campaign to try and prevent motorists hoped-for silence Billowed. Filially, stroyed village. This Is precisely what from committing suicide by driving In going back to the children’s room, she they called to each other: front of moving trains. Last year the found Edna calmly playing with her “Fancy me finding you here, old Long Island had 109 grade-crossing dollie, but Mattie had disappeareil top!' ‘Ripping. Isn’t it? Come filling jiites smashed by automobile drivers, “Where Is little sister?" anxiously and have a peg.’ ” j It was a favorite game to drive at high demanded mother. ' «peed into these barriers, smash them “I’ll explain about her,” berimed Watches on Trim Ankles. ! ind then clear the track just a few Edna. “You ’member you said y >u Residents of Newark, Del., suffered a ’eet ahead of the oncoming train. Mon- didn't want to heard another sound shock the other afternoon when two lay’s newspapers usually carry long from either of us today, and I minded well-known young women appeared on •asualty lists resulting from foolhardy you nicely, but when I gave Mattie a Main street wearing ankle watches. motorcar drivers, who celebrate Sun­ few pokes she got ready to commence There were several narrow escapes day by going to eternity Instead of screeching again, so 1 pushed her into from accidents when drivers of auto­ their intended destination. There are the closet and locked the door on her, mobiles forgot their wheels In the ex­ reckless drivers in every state and in and," she triumphantly addl'd, “you citement of the moment. ..very city of every state. Indianapo­ couldn’t hear n sound out of her now Nearly every store door and window lis hns its share and sooner or Inter If she screeched her head off.” held a rubberneck and repented culls they will learn that the game between of "What time is it?" but the yotmg the nutomohlie and the locomotive is Too Aiuch Soap Bad. women did not seem to mind In the in unequal one. The locomotive wins Many persons abuse soap by making lenst the furore they were raising. ?very time. a stiff, creamy lather in bathing, They were neatly and attractively under the belief that this is neccessary dressed. They wore low shoes, with A Smoke Inspector. to dissolve dirt that fills the pores of black silk hose, the watches strapped The president of a woman suffrage the skin. On the contrary. Dr. Samuel to their trim left ankles. Gne old resi­ organization is n mighty person. Dr. I»xon. health commissioner of Penn­ denter who got n closer view of the Anna Howard Shaw spoke in the as­ sylvania, says very little soap is re­ v atehes remarked: sembly hall of the Claypool hotel on quired to break up dirt and permit “Well I be --------- . I have read of the opening evening of the annual con­ water to remove foreign substances such things, but never saw it before, vention of the Woman’s Franchise from the pores so that glands may and right here nt home.” League of Indiana. The room was perform their normal function. Ex­ built to hold 500 persons comfortably; cessive use of soap usually tills the Argentine Meat-Packing Plant. but about 800 were there that evening. pores with fatty substances and re­ Some months ago n group of Pata­ Mrs. Richards Edwards of Peru, presi­ sults In imperfect action of the sweat gonian capitalists songht anil obtained dent of the franchise league, thought glands, which Is recognized as a cause a concession from the Argentine gov­ «he detected un odor of smoke. From of disease, especially of a respiratory ernment to establish a packing plant her position on the stage she sent a nature. in Rio Grande, in the territory of Tier­ message to Miss Allah Bush, of Kent­ ra del Fuego, the southermost district land, to investigate the source. Mongrel* for War Work. of the republic. The plant was to fur­ Miss Bush left the room for a few “The psychology of the dog In war Is nish a market for the stock of the minutes. When she returned she sent a subject to consider now that the sheep and cattle owners of that dis­ up to Mrs. Edwards the message: military demand for dogs in growing." trict. and to stimulate the growth of “I have seen about the smoke. I have said Cleveland E. Ellis, of Raleigh. the Industry there. The company or­ had it stopped."—Indianapolis News. N. C., recently. Dugs are Invaluable ganized. brought In the necessary ma­ in trench warfare. “They scent the chinery. and commenced nt once on Quiet Water Supply Pump. enemy's approach, carry messages ami the construction of the plant Itself. On A nioseless water supply pump of locate the wounded. The thoroughbred February 20 operations were begun «mall capacity Is described In Pottlar dog Is usually good at one or two with the killing of 10.000 animals. Mechanics .Magazine. At n distance of things. The pedigreed prize-winning ten feet, It is claimed, the only sound dog Is good to be looked upon, and not Pudding With Bug*. to be heard is the hum of the motor. The rice pudding with raisin* tn hnd much more. “But there is another dog. a very appvnl«’ especially to the Utile three- It operates nt a speed of 500 revolu­ useful dog. and plenty of him. This year-old Ruth. who passed her ptate tions a minute and therefore can be Is the stray 0 to SI25 per month. The typewriter has •epplanted longhand. Steeotypy will «applaat petini «hnrthand. For fail information address POLYTECHNIC BVMNFSS COLLE« OAKLAND, CAL. Cholera Morbus. This is very painful and dangerous disease. In almost every neighbor- hooq someone has died from it before I medicine could be obtained or a phy­ sician summoned. The right way is to I have a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy in the house ; so as to be prepared for it. Mrs. Chas ; F.nyeart, Huntington, Ind., writes: “During the summer of 1911 two ci ! my children w ere taken sick with cholera morbus. 1 used Chamberlain's i Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy and it gave them immediate reliei."—For 1 sale by Lamar's Drug Store. —Rd. Ad Palmyra, Mich.—Mrs. Chas. T. Ful­ ler, of this place, writes: "In 1911 I got. run-down, and I suffered great pain... with both dull and sharp shooting pains...also back and head, I was weak and could only drag around, and should have been In bed, 1. for I really wasn’t able to be up. At times I would have spells that would be so bad I'd have to go to bed, and suffered Intensely... I decided to try Cardui, and saw a great Improvement In less than a month’s time. I used 7 or 8 bottles and was stronger...I got so much better that my strength returned and my work was easy for me. Cardui did me a world of good. It built me up In health and strength. I haven’t had one of those had spells since. I haven’t had to tal e any more medicine since or have any doctors either and have been able to do my work right along ...I recommend It to other women highly as the best medicine I know of for women who suffer from female trouble.” If you suffer from female troubles, follow this advice. Get a bottle of Cardui today and give It a thorough trial. It should help you, as it has helped thousands of other women In the past 40 years. At all druggists. EB-14 Dairy Ranch for Sale. 160 acres on Tillamook River, near Yellow Fir Mill, keeps 13 cows, 3 heifers, bull, horse, 8 hogs, which go with place. Capacity can be doubled. Price $i-,;oo. Must change climate, account of wife’s health. E. R. Gainer, Hemlock, Ore. Call For Warrants. Notice is hereby given that war­ rants from Nos. 616 to 700 inclusive of School District No. 9, Tillamook County, Oregon, are called and are payable at this office. Interest ceases this 6th day of June, 1918. Ira C. Smith, Clerk.