Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, November 28, 1918, Image 8

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT NOVEMBL0 28. 1918,
WALLABY QUICKLY WIPED OUT ENGLISH FLAX FOR AIRPLANES SHORT BUT EVENTFUL LIFE LIVE ON ARTIFICIAL ISLAND
Australian Pest Didn’t Last Long
When Its Pelt Became of Value
In the Market.
Before the advent of the rabbit and
th'e fox in Australia the rock-wallaby
made its home among the cliffs bor­
dering the Snowy river, where it
passes through southern Monaro (N.
S. W.), literally in thousands.
The
little red-brown quadruped was then
becoming a grass pest, and as his skin
was then worth only 4 cents the pelt
hunter didn’t bother much about him.
But an Interested mutton merchant
some years ago put a premium on the
skins, and the writer and a mate
started out one winter morning, with
about two inches of frost on the
ground and every tree powdered with
hoar-frost. for the wallaby ground.
The artillery consisted of two guns,
one a single muzzle-loader.
(The
breech-loader was then a rarity on
Monaro.) By noon the hunters had
downed over sixty wallabies, The
beasts were so numerous in some
quarters that two wallabies occasion­
ally fell to a single shot. Soon after
that the pelt trader scented profit,
and the work of demolition began.
Now these cliffs are silent and desert­
ed, save for Reynard and the eternal
rabbit, which crops the wallaby pas­
tures close and from this rough coun­
try will never be exterminated.
Town Where Old Industry Is Being
Revived Has Long Borne an
Evil Cognomen,
How strangely ancient nnd modern
meet in the formation of a new gov­
ernment department for the produc­
tion of English flax, observes the Lon­
don Chronicle. We find manufactured
flax fibers in the lake dwellings of
Switzerland; we find it in the tombs
of Egyptian greatness, where it
wrapped the mummies of 'kings and
queens whose life stories we knot
From it we fashion linen and cambric,
as well as sails for boats, and dainty
lace to deck a ruthless "flapper." But
the new department is to raise 10,000
acres of flax largely for airplanes.
Pinchbeck, where the old Lincoln­
shire flax Industry is being revived,
bears a bad reputation among metal­
lurgists, and is accused by the un­
learned of having originated an op-
probrlous epithet whlch has spread
from the material to the intellectual
and moral worlds, As a fact this is a
cruel libel on a charming rural village
which has always been more con­
cerned with agriculture than with
metals. Our term “pinchbeck,” applied
to anything that is a sham or unreal,
comes not from the village but from
Christopher Pinchbeck, a watch and
toy maker, who Invented an alloy of
copper and zinc that ruined his trade
rivals at the beginning of the eight­
eenth century. Pinchbeck’s place of
DULL AND CHRONIC HEADACHE business
was, alas! situated In Fleet
Affliction, Physician Asserts, May In­ street
Marie Pauline Bonaparte Crowds« Salt Water Natives Who Wage An Al­
most Constant War on Solomon
Many Adventure* Into Her Few
Head Hunters.
Years of Fortune’s Smiles.
Marie Pauline Bonaparte was one I Built up artificially on reefs or
of the numerous family of brother? ! sandy pits, numbers of miniature Is­
and sisters of the great Napoleon lands dot the tranquil waters of shel­
She was quite the most beautiful of j tered coves among the Solomon is­
the girls and the gayest In nature­ lands. Gertrude Emerson writes in
two qualities that endeared her to her I Asia Magazine. Here live, separate
Illustrious brother, but that also from the head hunters who inhabit the
brought her more or less Into trouble. unhealthful mangrove swamps and un­
Like the rest of them, she was born dulating grasslands of the interior or
'n Ajaccio and shared the rise of the the lofty spurs running down to the
family fortunes. When she was sev­ sea, a salt-water people more or less at
enteen she married one of Napoleon’s enmity with the bushmen. Yet these
staff officers. General Le Clerc, and salt water people are as fond of their
went to live at St. Domingo. He died fruits and vegetables, for which there
in 1802 and, as a young widow, a mere is no room on their narrow, crowded
girl of twenty-two, she came to enjoy island, us the Junglefolk are of their
the society of Paris. She was exceed­ fish. Truce Is declared on regular bi­
ingly popular, had her portrait done weekly market days and on neutral
as Venus reclining on a couch after territory along the coast the women of
the artistic fashion of the times), and both peoples meet and do their bar­
married the Prince Borghese. She gaining. The dwellers on the artificial
went to Rome with him, but tired of it islands are skillful in all things per­
there and went back to her beloved taining to the sea, especially in the
Paris. Various escapades started gos­ building and handling of canoes. For
sip about her—especially her rather upon this slender thread their exist­
offhand treatment of Marie Louise, ence hangs. The elaborately carved,
which caused her removal from court. crescent-shaped canoes may alwuys
' This sobered her a bit, and she ac­ be seen plying busily among the is­
companied her brother in his first lands. Frequently they are the only
exile to Elba and begged, after his sign of human habitation in a world of
overthrow, to live with him at St. otherwise empty sea and rooted palms.
Helena. But this request was denied When the interminable circle of the
her and she died in her favorite city, horizon softens and disappears and
Paris, of cancer. She was about the fever-laden evening mists creep in,
forty-five and still young looking and when the pale waters reflect as in a
exceedingly beautiful.
mirror the burnt-out sky of day, the
canoes, silhouetted against the lumin­
variably Be Traced to the Pres­
ous water, slide swiftly to the method­
ence of Rheumatism.
OLIVES PLANTED BY CONVICTS SETTLED QUESTION OF VOTE ical beating of paddles, accompanied
Rheumatic headache may be acute,
by the low barbaric chanting of dark-
Decision of English Registrar Almost
but in most cases it is dull and chronic, Magnificent Plantation* Result of Work
skinned men.
Worthy
to
Rank
With
That
Made
Begun to Furnish Occupation for
lasting for weeks, months or years. It
Famous by Solomon.
Malefactors in Jail.
Is slightly more common in women
FROM MINDS’ SECRET PLACES
than in men, and it occurs very rarely
Not since the days of Solomon, per­
Olives have struck a climate they
below the age of 20, and most common­
ly above 40 years of age. The pain is approve of in South Australia. The haps, lias a more perplexing problem Come the Materials for Dreams Which
Sometimes One Finds So Hard
real and may be constant, or fairly trees are the hardiest possible grow­ confronted a Judge than that recently
, to Explain.
steady with intermissions, writes Dr. ers, require practically no attention, presented to an election registrar in
Hugh T. Patrick in the Journal of and seem impervious to the disease England. A certain voter possessed
You read a book and forget every
American Medical Association. It does that affect fruit-trees. They have been a house which stood half in one parish
The question word of it. Years later a scene from
not occur in instantaneous shoots or rather in disfavor in the towns, owing and half in another.
brief excruciating paroxysms, Nausea to their slowness In coming to ma­ consequently arose as to in which par­ the same book will come into your
and vomiting are not present with It. I turity, but owners of full-grown trees ish, or whether not, Indeed, in both, mind as a dream; you will not recog­
There are good days, bad day*, but have found them a great money-pro­ the householder was entitled to vote. nize it and will marvel where it came
witli more or less pain or soreuess al­ ducer of late years. The olive doesn't After some discussion a ray of light from. Or you will see a person casual­
ways present. The headache is worse produce berrle*jjntil its twelfth year. was vouchsafed to Solomon. In which ly on the street and be perfectly un­
Consequently ««owners are shy of parish, he demanded, was the man’s conscious of it. But every experience
after exposure to cold or dampness.
Unfortunately, In both. is registered in the mind somewhere,
This form ot headache is really a planting for commercial purposes. bedroom?
rheumatic affection, und evidences of There is a movement on foot to get Then was it that Solomon stood fully Und some day you may see that same
past rheumatism are almost always the government to subsidize growers revealed; the infant, of mature years, person in a dream. Perhaps some of
found. Its exact nature is obscure; bac­ at so much an acre for the first ten should be cut in twain. The parish the great store of impressions hidden
terial infection of the tissues of the years. The oil has almost trebled in in which the head of the bed stood away in your unconscious mind will
aching region is probable. Treatment price the last few years, and the ber­ should have the honor of the vote. come to the surface in n dream in such
consists of prolonged, repeated appli­ ries are in demand at $100 a ton. Fifty­ Which is all very well, except that a way that you will feel that ttiere is
cation of heat and the employment of seven years ago the then sheriff of the there are many voters whose feet take something mysterious about It.
An old lady once told the writer of
persistent massage of the area of pain, Adelaide Jail, looking for a job for his them to the polling booth, but whose
which is most usually at the back of charges, put them on preparing the heads are no good when they get there. a dream she had. citing it as a com­
the head on both sides, and may ex­ ground and planting olive trees, and Does not the Italian proverb say, “If plete Justification of her belief in
tend down to neck, shoulders and the result today Is a magnificent and a man has not a head he should have Spirits. Willie on a shopping tour she
mislaid a valuable umbrella, and for
back. It Is tender to deep pressure, but profitable plantation in the vicinity of feet.”—Christian Science Monitor.
the Jail. Hence the term “Gone
the life of her could not reinember
not to surface pressure.
,
pickin’ oljves” when a sport refers to
what she had done with it. It worried
King Victim of HI* Own Jest.
jl loan wi)9 has been sent along for a
Probably the greatest admirer Of her considerably, and that night she
Vasiness of Mexico. ~ “
perfumes among the old Asiatic mon­ had a dream In which she saw herself
It cannot be reiterated too often : light sentence.
archs seems to have been Antiochus go into a restaurant, hang up the um­
that Mexico is a vast country,
Epipbanes the Illustrious, king of Sy­ brella, and nfter eating her lunch go
Early Egyptian Hairdressing.
' Mexico extends in length over two ,
away, forgetting it.—New York World.
The hairdressing of early Egyptian ria, according to Don Martin, who has
-
t
thousand miles, or Is as long as from
-c J i
Iceland to Africa. It measures a thou- j times is interesting. Wigs were ex­ gone into tills perfumer^ question for
.y Monarch's Costly Whim.
sand miles across the widest area. It ; ceedingly popular, th.otigh many dy­ the Los Angeles Times. At all An-
King Alfongo’s ruined pulace of fjan
4s vast, it contain^ fV?ry climate from nasties, for both mer and women, 'fhe floehus* feasts, games and processions
Ildefonso at La Granja Is one of the
tropical to northern; it has huge moun­ women, however, lr. vnrlops instances, perfumes held the premier place. -
'i’ll? jting teas once hathipg fn the freaks and one of the glories of Spain.
Inclined to iej their
tains, Some of the greatest vylcanoej were rather
In the world; anJ some of the largest own hair grow long, arranging It with public batfiS, when sofa? prlytlte per­ It was a Bourbon monarch who Invent­
XtXjjrs are to tie found in the south, exlfenjg simplicity by hanging a fore- son attracted by Ute fragrant odor ed it—at the beginning of the eigh­
although water is lacking in (he north. auTef each shoulder In front and which he shed abound. ftcvostvd him, teenth century. Philip V was out hunt­
ng thè rest bang straight down saying; “You are a httnpy man, O ing one dny and rested at a sunny farm
The north is flat and hideous, the.
thè
bjek. It appears, from some old king, you smell lh A most costly man­ called the Grange, occupied by monks.
south bgautlful and faountalnoua.1
ner^’
The monks had humored the moun­
Mexico produces every class of ore and I statues, that they occasionally inter­
AntlochtlM, being much pleased with tain upon whose slopes the farmhouse
AU^rj form of agriculture and sgme o{ wove beads or some sort of a pendant
was built and had made their beautiful
t?lb most picturesque and beautiful old with these front locks, which doubt­ the remark, replied: “I will give you
gardens conform to the ways of the
As
much
as
you
desire
of
thia
per
­
less
helped
keep
them
In
place.
Then,
Spanish towns in the world remain
giant
fume.
”
The
king
then
ordered
a
large
too,
they
sometimes
wore
a
sort
of
from the days when they were built
But the.king compelled the moun­
filet a device perhaps borrowed from ewer of thick unguent to be poured on
by Cortea tn 1519.
tain to obey him. He blamed smooth
One cannot help being struck with the Greeks. More elaborate head­ the flatterer's head and a multitude of places on precipitous slopes, curry­
the coutrust between the two const*. dresses were also Indulged in. Some poor people soon collected around to ing away thousands of ton* of earth
On the Pacific shore everything 1* dry; statues show strange, almost conical gather what was spilled. This caused and stones, and from the valley be­
on the Oulf (Atlantic) everything ia affairs upon the heads, which archaeol­ the king Infinite amusement but it low he brought up miles of fertile
weL A depth of eight or ten feet of ogists say contained hall* wet with made the place so greasy that be slip­ earth to form new fields and gardens.
soil la common.—From “Mexico," by some fragrant oil which trickled slow­ ped and fell on hla back In a most un­ By the time be bad finished creating
ly through the hair and over the neck dignified manner, which put an end to
Mrs. Alec-Tweedie.
a new landscape and filling the new
and shoulders. Perfumes were said bis merriment.
*
-
Versailles with the beat pictures hl*
_**•
to be extremely popular among these
Arabian Table Cuatoma.
taste suggested, Philip was ready to
early people.
r
Th*
Tomato
In
History.
"Whenever I visit San Francisco I
die In debt to the tune of 45,000,000
Edward Albes of the Pan-American
---------------- :--------------
dine with an Arab—a business ac­
peseta*. For that Is the sum which
union.
In
discussing
th«
matter
of
the
Painting the 8al«non
—
quaintance—and the member* of bl*
the monarch spent on San Ildefonso.
Red le the preferred color for sal­ tomato, sold a number of years ago
family," said Thomas Hartwell of
that
the
word
“
tomato"
seems
to
be
mon
flesh.
It
is
the
"dog"
salmon'*
Mexico City, In an Interview at New
Borneo Not Yat Civilized.
York. “In their eating they «till at­ misfortune to have meat of a dirty ot Aatec origin, and given as “tomatl”
Although civilization has made ex­
tempt to follow the custom* of their grayish hue, so that it 1* almost un­ by some authorities and as "ixtomate”
by others. The word still persists In cellent progress in some part* of the
country. At their table I tasted for marketable.
Recently, however, a fish dealer tn some of the older Mexican town East Indies, barbarous practices by the
the first time the most popular Arab
dish, which Is called pilaf. It Is made Boston made a delightful discovery. names, as, for examples, "Tomatian" natives on the Island of Borneo still
continue, according to O. K. Hoey, a
of olive oil and a few nut kernels mixed It was that some salmon-colored paint and “Tomatepec." The weight of merchant of Batavia. Java. He said
with rice. My host's wife makes her (which be happened to be using for opinion among historical botanists is
that traders who visit Isolated sections
own bread, which la baked in flat cakes painting a truck) would transform a that the plant and culture for edible
of Borneo found It necessary to re­
an Inch thick and compare* very well dog salmon offhand into a fish of the purposes began in Peru, whence it
spread to other parts of tropical main constantly alert In order to guard
with the baker's bread which the most expensive variety.
America.
It Is known that It was cul­ against attacks by Dyaks, who, how­
Americans use. The Arab Is a dry eat­
The way it worked was really »>•
tivated for Its fruit in the warm cli­ ever, are gradually being driven farth­
er and does not take hla coffee with markable. It appears that the stuff mate? of America centuries before
er Inland.
his repast. I find that my host and his was a coal-tar product, and when the coming of Columbus to this con­
“On the Island of Ball the men still
family sip their coffee In small cups freely applied with a brush so satu­ tinent
load themselves up with many jewels
and regard It as a luxury. They still rated the meat with dye as to giw
and heavy chains as ornaments." he
hold to the belief, in spite of the fact It a fine salmon-red tint clear through.
declared. “The natives make good In­
The
Mule.
that they have lived in this country
Unfortunately, the local health au­
To our mind the one breathing thing comes from their rice fields and traf­
for several years, that those who do thorities, lacking appreciation of the
fic in pearls, but until n short time
not make a noiae with their lipa tn fine arts, seized the fish and the paint in creation that has been the most ago the sight of an automobile caused
cruelly maligned is the mule. No more
drinking coffee are illbred."
and shut up the studio.
hard-working creature walks the great amazement."
»
earth; none with a more faithful past
Portugal** Many Holiday*.
Arctic Cold.
Waging War on the Rabbit.
record; none now more in demand in
Christmas day ia not no generally
Ren rds do not freeze except where the world’s service. What would we
Australia has spent millions in fight­
observed a* New Year's day. It ha*, the moisture from the breath is con­
do In this wsr without the mule? What ing a pest of rabbits, for which a man
moreover. only three different date*. verted Into snow; but the color can we do without him after the war who turned loose three pairs of rab­
The only country whose holidays re­ glands are rendered somewhat torpid
is over? Still he is despised and kick­ bits In New South Wales, in 1850. la
veal Uttle nf It* political, racial or re­ by the cold, and dark beards gradually
ed around worse than though be were responsible, and which has made nec­
ligious origin is Portugal. This I* It* become lighter, until after a while
a
bound dog. It is a shame. In the essary a woven-wire fence 1.200 mile«
calendar: January 1. dedicated to uni­ they seem entirely changed In color.
readjustment of thing«, let us right long, shutting off ’he fertile agricul­
versal brotherhood; January 3L dedi­
Another curious fact about the cold this wrong and. If we have nnythlng to tural regions from the central and
cated to the memory of all those wlfi> cf the Arctic regions la that when a
eastern semi-desert areas, where rab­
fought and died to establish the repub­ person stops walking or working In say to the mule, let us say It to bls bits most abound. We have a few
face, which is wiser than saying It to
lic of Portugal; May 3, In memory of :iny way whereby the feet get exer-
rabbits tn our own country west of the
his heel*.—Los Angele« Times.
the discovery of Brasil by the Portu­ ri«». the •■Me of the foot loses all sense
nockies. According to the biological
guese ; June 18. municipal holiday at of feeling.
survey of the department of agricul­
A Drawback.
Oporto; October 5. the date of tbs es­
In all extremely cold lands, the
ture. fully 200.000,000 wild rabbits are
“An automobile ha* a big advantage annually killed in this country, yet
tablishment of the Portuguese repub­ moisture exhaled from the body con­
lic ; December 1. Flag day, to eomm< m- denses Into small, hard crystal* which over a horse, as It never gets fatigued." men touring across the continent in­
"Perhaps not but Its wheel* arc variably speak of the number of rab­
orate the independence of tbs coun­ make quite a bit of nolle aa one walks
always tired."
try ; December 25. Family day.
about
bit* seen.
This Store Will be Closed all Day
Thanksgiving, Thursday, November 28th.
¿Nlen'sand Women 's
New Fall Apparel
In a Great
Reduction Sale
A N extraordinary event affording the
A thrifty shoppers of this county an
1 A- opportunity for securing New Fall
Wearables at prices very much below
the actual worth price today.
çJMen ’s
Overcoats
$34.80
Rosenwald and Weil’
famous Ballymede Over­
coats in the latest shower­
proof and heavy weight
fabrics at a saving every
discriminating man will
be quick to seize.
oJ/Wen’s
Dress
Shirts,
$1.00
Golf shirts in neat styles
anil good looking fabrics.
Laundered
or
Preach
Cliffs. All sizes.
Flörsheim
$5.85
Copyright Hart Be haff ner A Marx
The Entire Stock of
Ladies ’ and Misses
Fall and Winter Apparel
Reduced in Price
Ladies'
Suits.
now.
i:ow.
now
now
$22.35
.$31.90
$41,35
$53.45
Ladies' and
Misses' Coats.
$ 19.65 ( ’oats now $17.65
$25.00 Coats now $22.45
$29.85 Coats now. $26.45
$34.45 Coats now. $31.65
$38.45 Coats now. $35.35
$57.85 Coats now. $51.95
$68.45 Coats now. .$61.35
Serge
Dresses,
$19.46 Dresses now $16.65
$25.00 Dresses now $22.45
$29.85.'Dresse8 now $26.35
$33.45 Dresses now $30,90
Dresses.
Petticoats,
$19,65 Dresses now...$16.90
Petticoats tiow. . $4.29
$25.00 Dresses now.. $22.45 $6.35 Petticoats now . $5.47
$31.50 Dresses now... $27.65 1^.85 Petticoats now . $7.45
Plain and Fancy
Cotton Petticoats
$2 and $2.50 value» .. $1.69
Crepe de Chine
and Georgette
Crepe Waists.
$7 and $7.50 values .. $5.88
The Entire Stock of
New Fall Millinery
Reduced in Price.
Pattern Hats, designs from our own workrooms,
and other baautiful models all at Reduced Prices.
See our New
Showings of Useful
Xmas Gifts.
II Wool Blankets.
Table Linens.
Towels and Bath Mats.