• TO Vi 0 TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, October 28, 1920. SO TRAGIC, AFTER ALL FIRST REAL “MONEY WIZARD” MOST FAMOUS PARIS SQUARE NOT • a John Law May Wall Be Callad th« Daddy of AH th« Get-Rick-Quick Schemes Floated. The NEXT PRESIDENT Asks You to Vote for BOB STANFIELD Two centuries ago there “reigned" In Paris a greater personage than the young king, Louis XIV., or his regent, the duke of Orleans—a money wizard, whose operations are recalled by the Ponzi speculative scheme In Boston. He was John Law, a Scotsman, who through his friendship with the duke of Orleans, established a credit hunk on the theory that money is the cause, not the result of wealth. He obtained for the bank a monopoly of the na­ tion’s foreign trade, the profits of which would repay the Investors. In 1716 Law established a private bank with a capital of 6.000.000 livres, with power to Issue notes. It became I an Instant success, and his paper cur­ rency became more valuable than the minted currency of the government Then he formed his company of the west, developing Louisiana territory, with a capital of 100,000.000 livres. New Orleans was built. Trade ex- panded. Shares In the company rose tn value until first Paris and then the whole of Europe went mad. Every- one was growing rich. Law became. director general of finance for France, But the height was reached in De- cemher of 1719, when his enemies, by side schemes, began to break him. He suddenly found himself bankrupt He escaped from France, became a wan­ derer and died In poverty. Place de la Conoord« Enriched by Works of Art of Country'« Qreat- eat Sculptor*. Fair Traveler'« Emotion at Using At. feeling Parting Wu In L*rg« Part Uncalled For. The dreams of many men of genlua have gone Into the making of the Place de la Concorde. Fi Paris. Ga­ briel. the architect, constructed the pavilions and balustrades. 'ftie eques­ trian statue of Louis XV. which stood In the square uutll the Revolution, was the work of Bouchardon. Pigalle, one of his contemporaries, surround­ ed this statue with figures emblematic of Strength, Wisdom, Justice and Peace. The square received Its pres­ ent form in 1854 from designs by The great statues of the Hittorf, cities were made by four famous French sculptors, each of whom did • two figures. At the entrance to the Champs Ely sees, which forms the western boundary of the place, are the famous “Horses of Marly.” by Guillaume Coustou. and at the eastern side at the entrance to the Garden of the Tuileries, are the “Renommées" of Covzevoz—Mercury and Fame be- stride horses. In the center rises the obelisk of Raineses II, towering 7G feet, and weighing 240 tons. It Is a single block of reddish granite, more than 3.000 years old. and It once stood before the temple of Amenhotep, near Thebes. It was brought to Paris in 1836. The temperamental difference h». tween a restrained and an emotional race occasionally brings about kindred effects through accident. A lady, wait- Ing for a belated train, witnessed a most affecting parting between an aged father and his son. both Italian- The old man seemed in a frenzy of woe. He moaned, raved, lifted his clenched hands toward heaven and shook them despairingly. “Poor, poor souls!" she exclaimed, compassionately. “The young man gol Ing away to seek his fortune and the old man left behind. I suppose he fears they may never meet again \ common tragedy, but It grips one’s very heart." "Cheer up!" briskly advised her companion, who understood Italian. "The young chap Is only going to th» next town to visit hla married sister and the venerable old person Is wor­ ried because he loaned him his sea­ son ticket and wishes now he hadn’t promised to do so. He says he know» the boy will lose IL but, anyway, if he does, he’ll break every bone In his body when he gets home. That's all." DOGS AND CHURCH WINDOWS “All who are earnestly desirous that the Republican party shall take control of national affairs, to the end that we may restore the health of the Republic and insure the good of the country,will wish, as I wish, that the voters of Oregon may find it to their best judgment to support Robert N. Stanfield for United States Senator.” WARREN G. HARDING The Next Vice President Wants Oregon to Send a Republican Senator “The success of the Republican ticket in Oregon is earnestly to be de­ sired. More than that, my own desire to preside over a Republican Sen­ ate leads me to hope for and recommend the election of R. N. Stanfield to represent your great state in that honorable body.” CALVIN COOLIDGE. Young Teddy” Makes the Same Request of You “Heartily endorse candidacy of Robert N. Stanfield for Senate. Apart from the fact that a Republican majority in the Senate is of vital impor­ tance just now, he is the type of man all the voters of Oregon should be proud to have represent them. THEODORE ROOSEVELT. Taft Urges that You Vote for Stanfield “Election of Harding is assured, but he can do little unless he has a local Republican majority in the Senate and the House. 1 earnestly urge all who vote for Harding to vote for Stanfield.” WILLIAM H. TAFT Hughes Believes in Stanfield “I cordially endorse the candidady of Robert N. Stanfield for United States Senate. In addition to Mr. Stanfield's qualifications for that office, it is of very great importance that there should be a Republican majority in the Senate to support a Republican President and make possible an efficent and successful administration. 1 sincerelv trust that the people of Oregon will not fail to elect Mr. Stanfield.” CHARLES E. HUGHES. Don’t Waste Youi Vote»Trying to Send a Democrat to Washington to Support a Republican President. VOTE THE REPUBLICAN TICKET STRAIGHT — Dairymen, Millmen, Logger and Fishermen will have Protection from Democratic free trade by Voting tor FLOWERS HIDE GREAT GUNS Monster Weapons of War at Gibraltar Covered by Beautiful Clusters of Acacia Blossoms. While the rock of Gibraltar, viewed from the ocean. Is Impressive, strong, gloomy and forbidding, flowers grow about the steep walls, and the great Victorian batteries, occasionally fired, are screened and sheltered by acacia blossoms. Here are concealed 100- ton guns, sinister and threatening, marking the highest achievement In gun development by British engineers. The north and northwest sides of th* rock are honeycombed by foltlfl- catlona. There Is a town and harbor on the west protected by batterie* and forts rising from the base to th« snn> mft of the rock*. Modern gun* of the most formidable pattern frown from wn M inhabited th* halgkto. The tewn 25.060 by a British colony efTbout c- persoue. according to th« IBM ceuau*. Everything 1« under strict military relation*. The stained-glass representation of the “Pedlar and his Dog," to which attention I. ¡s been directed by the dis­ covery of i boundary stone of “Ped­ lar’s Acre." on *!>*■' site of the new county hall, was removed, owing to the alleged In<-»ngruity of introducing the figure of a dog in a church window, says tlie" Westminster Gazette. Quite recently Chancellor Prescott of Carlisle refused a faculty a stained- glass window In a Westmoreland church because the design included a dog; and perhaps the only existing ex­ ample of dogs used for ecclesiastical decoratlou» are to be found tn Lord Brownlow's private chapel at Asb- beldgc. IB this ctareb eoe «tainad-gtaa* window detUrta T o M m nod Sara in bed and a dog »Wtoplng ea Bbe quHL while Bi another window Jed to shown being ■tracked by three me*. one of whom * I bolding a deg by a obaia. Daudet an Gambetta. Frequently the great man La some­ thing of a boor, but It Is probable that Daudet exaggerated a trifle when be wrote the following of Gambetta. the great French statesman: "I can still see him entering the dining room, his back bent, his shoulders swaying, bls face aflame and one-eyed also. As soon as he appeared all the other equine heads around the table were raised and he was greeted with loud neighs of ‘Ah. ah. ah; here’s Gambetta I’ He sat down noisily, spread himself over the table, or threw himself In his chair, perorated, struck the table with his fists, laughed loud enough to break the windows, pulled all the table cloth toward him. got drunk without drink­ ing, snatched the dishes away from you, took the words out of your mouth, and after tnlklng all the time went off without having said anything.” British Warehlp'e Great Guna At first sight It may mem Strang* that the Hood should carry o.dy the same armament as th« Queen Eliza­ beth. built some eight years before the Hood. As a matter of fact, the Queen Elizabeth’s guns are forty-two calibers in length; but the guns of the Hood are forty-five cnllber long and have greatly Increased muzzle velocity. It Is believed that the gun weighs a lit­ tle under one hundred tons and fires a 1,950-pound shell with a muzzle vel­ ocity of 2.800 foot-seconds. Another Improvement over the Queen Eliza­ beth Is that the new guns have an elevation of 30 degrees for a maximum range of 38.000 yards. The loading gear has been so Improved that the Hood ,1s credited with being able to fire a salvo of eight guns every thirty- five seconds.—Scientific American. SIZE That on Leipzig Battlefield, Though Higher, Less Costly Than mortal to Italian King. Leipzig possesses a monument which rises only a few Inches short of 300 feet “The Battle of the Na­ tions" monument stands in the middle of tlie plain where Blucher routed Na­ poleon’s army. One million cubic meters of earth were displaced to make room for Its base. It Is sur­ rounded by an enclosure a quarter of a mile wide and nearly half a mil» long. Next to the Pyramids it is the high­ est in the world, but it is by no means the costliest This distinction belongs to the national memorial to Victor Em­ manuel IL erected on the Capltoline hill In Borne at a cost of »20.000.000. It took 31 year« to complete this bug» pile of marble steps, covered with etatuee, bas-reliefs, and mosaics. Sac- coni, the architect who designed it died Long before the work was finish­ ed. but he left models complete Io every date«, bls original plans ware never tampered with. Colors Bave the Egg*. We Eave heard a great deal about protective coloration in nature, and when wo eapaider the advantages which accrue to protectively colored eggs we tuay wonder why some eggs have remained pure white through th» ages, why others are of the most con­ spicuous greenish blue, and why stilt others stand out by their spotted or speckled patterns, says the American Forestry Magazine. White eggs ar» for the most part laid by hole-nesting species of birds like the owls and woodpeckers, and since the eggs are well hidden In tljelr dark cavities It has not been necessary for them to develop protective coloration. The bright greenish blue eggs of most of the thrushes, for example, must b» hidden In nests which are concealed In dense vegetation and the speckled eggs of the ground nesting sparrows depend for their safety upon the good, hiding of the grass-woven nest. Modern Casablanca. Simple Trick of Artist Student’s Bookcase. An excellent bookcase for students Everybody has noticed that the eyes Is made In the following way: Pro­ in some portraits follow one wherever cure for shelves four smooth boards, be goes In the room. It Is a bit un­ 20 Inches long and 10 Inches wide, canny to move about an apartment and about two-thlrds Inch thick. and have the eyes of a picture always Screw a slat on to the extreme ends upon one. Some superstitious persons of the sides of the shelves to accom­ are afraid to go Into a picture gallery modate the text-books. Screw the where portraits of their ancestors are other slats to the shelves one and to be found. The effect Is simply an one-half Inches apart This will leave optical Illusion and Is secured by hav­ an open space of seven Inches In the ing the eyes in the portrait looking middle of each shelf. There are no directly toward the front Under such slats on the ends of the shelves. Take circumstances the pupil Is necessarily the long screw from the top of a dis­ In the middle, with an equal amount carded piano stool and fnsten It to of “white" on each side. This rela­ the center of the under side of the tion does not vary at all with the lowest shelf. Screw the bookcase Into posltkm of the observer. No matter the piano stool. The revolving book­ where you stand the pupil will be In I case may be stained to match the stu­ the middle of the eye and the eye will dent’s furniture. seem to be looking at you. Kissing to Cure. “Come to mother, dear, she’ll kiss It and make It better.” Isn’t this the regular thing when a child sustains an injury, real or Imagined? Little do they real'ze. these Indulg­ ing mothers and husbands, that In this mock ministration they are but imi­ tating the practice of old time sorcer­ ers who pretended to cure diseases by sticking the affected part. In their superstitions, myth-tenanted age they found the people easy prey to their Im­ positions, hut today even the hnhy Is skeptical of the curative powers of a kiss on a hralsed kneel Bird Outruns Horse. Anyone who has traveled through Western Texas becomes familiar with the mesquite tree. or. as It sometimes grows, a shrub. In some places where it may grow to be thirty or forty f’*et high. It Is commonly known as the -«inpnrrnl, says the American For­ estry .Magazine of Washington. Here it is scrubby and masses Into dense clumps It being the home of that fa- n«ms bird the “road-runner" or chapar­ ral cock, and other Interesting species, ft is a form of big. ground cuckoo, that only takes to flight when hard pressed ; while on open ground It can run so fast that an ordinary horse can­ not keep up. This time next year some of the Democratic red shirts who are now- the Republican vote in the Solid South are going to be thinking it ov­ er in a federal penitentiary. ------- •-------- No true religion saps patriotism in the American republic. The man whose nationalism is «wry in this country really has something the m«tt«r with hla religion. A fire guard In the Shenandoah na- tlonal forest not so long ago found him­ self In a predicament similar to that of Casablanca, although his decision was not so silly. Discovering that there were three ben re at the foot of the lookout tower In which he was stationed without arms of any kind, he telephoned for permission to leave nt the first chance to get a gun. The- district ranger replied that the for­ ests were dry, that a fire might start anywhere at any time, and that he must stay where he was. bears or no hears; and the guard stayed. After a time some one who had "listened tn" came to hie rescue.—Youth’s Com­ panion. Japs Eating Frog Meat. Frog meat made Its first appearance­ last month In the menu of one of the most popular restaurants of Tokyo, Japan. Frogs had never been consid­ ered ns a food until very recently by the Japanese. In 1918 Dr. Watanabe brought some edible frogs from the United States. They were kept at the Infectious dis­ ease experimental station, where ex­ periments were made In breeding and raising. The government has taken steps to encourage the raising and eating of frogs. World’s Smallest Newspaper. The smallest newspaper in world Is now being printed In New York city. Its pages are only about five Inches wide and six Inches long, but they contain short news Items that are very easily and quickly read. An­ other odd newspaper published In this same city is cnlled The Deaf Mutes' Journal, all of its editors and general staff being members of a deaf and dumb school. However. The Deaf Mutes' Journal Is a real newspaper in size and contains four pages of in­ teres ting reading. Quaint Industries. Observation of the world's Industri­ Disillusioned. als reveals some very quaint callings, Wnftlng for his shoes In a while- for there are queer habits and strange vou-walt repair shop, he was Im­ desires on the part of various races, pressed by the apparent femininity and always there are those who cater neatness and self-respect of the to those customs or undertake to sup­ ■•Hing woman attending the counter I ply the wants. As queer a trade or He didn’t like to see her handling profession as pny Is that of “tooth- worn shoes. He wits wishing she were stalner.” which flourishes In parts of hi another environment. Just then his Asia, where the natives regard black -hoes were passed along from the I teeth as a crowning beauty. The tooth- workman to her. She took them, stalner, equipped with little brashes looked at the tag, called a boy and and boxes of coloring matter, calls on pointing to the meditating customer, his customers at regular Intervals. In «aid: general, the operation Is not unlike “Take these te that gink over that of blacking a shoe. 1 uere." preparing to scare out or count out ROBERT N. STANFIELD for U.S. SENATOR Both In Ancient and Modern Times Animal’s Representation Has Been Frowned Upon. MONUMENTS OF VAST Definitely So. “What Is your Idea of a practical Joker "One I can sell for a dollar and buy • pork chop.”—Cartoons Magazine. 1 The Reward of ’’Merit’’ DB. J. G. TURMER The following is from the editorial columns of the Birmingham (Ala­ i bama) News, a democratic organ, of September 27. 1920: Just at tip to the men who might want something from the Democratic administration—the records of con­ tributions to the party In its time of need will be kept, "la your name. name written there?” will be a migh­ ty pertinent quest ton after March <, It to not—good-night! Eye Specialist Permanatljr Located In Tillamook Private Office in Jenkin's Jewelry Store. 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