TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, OC 1 OBER 9, BOTTS & WINSLOW, NIGHT AND DAY CAMP IS LIFE SAVING STATION Attorney s-at-Law, TILLAMOOK, OREGON. TILLAMOOK BLOCK, OBERT H. McGRATH, COUNSELLOR-AT LAW, ODDFELLOWS’ BI ’ IL DIX ? T. BOALS, M.D., PHYSICIAN AN1) SURGEON Surgeon S. P. Co. (I. O O F. Bldj? ) Tillamook EBSTER HOLMES, ATTORNKY-AT-LAW COMMERCIAL BUILDING, STREET, OREGON TILLAMOOK Tl.'oae Girds, ss Well as the Albatross, Are Frequently Taken With Rod and Line. Curious though It may seem. It 1« fact that birds are caught with rod anil Un- In many parts of the world. The pastime Is declared tn tie almost as fasclniiting ns fishing. Gillis In Newfoundland nre caught In this way In large quantities. In New England fishing for gulls and petrels Is an Im- por’nnt Imlustry. be method of bird fishing is prac- dy the same as that of ordinary ng. Two mtn go out In a d >ry throw pieces of cod liver on tho water. When large quantities of birds have been attracted to the spot more cod liver is thrown out on a hook This the birds greedily swallow and us fall easy victims. Aibetross are fished for In the same ly off the Cape of Good Hope. A piece of pork is attached to n Iona line and thrown overboard. The bird will eye it for a long time, gradually and cantlous’y making toward it. Snd ’ >n- ly he will seize it and hold It in ids beak. When he discovers that h- is caught he will sit on the water and vigorously flap Ills wings. However he will be drawn into the boat nnd made a captive. Albatross flshlcg Is good sport, since the bird requires careful handling. So long ns he pulls against the line It is easy enough. The moment, how­ ever, he swims forward the hook will drop from his beak unless It Is skill­ fully manipulated, nnd the b!r«l will find himself free. Both phones. FIRST OPEN THE DOOR FiSH FCR G'JLLS AND PETRELS AVID ROBINSON. M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON MADE BY FRENCH SCULPTOR NATIONAL BUILDING, Interesting to Recall That Houdon Crossed the Ocean to Model Bust of Washington. OREGON. TILLAMOOK Tuberci.losis kills 150,000 persons tn the United States every year. These two women escaped. They are shown in the Night and Day Camp conducted by the St. Louis Society for the Relief and Prevention of Tuber­ culosis. They are among the fortunate ones because they knew how to take care of themselves when this great menace threatened them. They knew VETERINARIAN. that the cure lies in plenty of fresh air, even If the temperature is away below Mutual Phone freezing, sunlight, good food and rest under proper medical supervision. Kell Phone—2F2 Tuberculosis is not only curable but Is preventable as well. The prevention lies largely In right living, in building up a strong bodily Oregon. Tilla mook resistance. Eight out of ten persons are Infected at some time In their lives, according to figures of the National Tuberculosis Association, the leading t agency In the United States in the fight upon this disease. This organization GOYNE, is sponsor for the annual Red Cross Christmas Seal sale, from which the ATTORN EY-AT-LA W funds to carry on the work throughout the year are chiefly derived. £)R. O. L. HOHLFELD. T." Office: O pposite C ourt Tillamook E jjse O. ¡gon J OH'i LELAND HENDERSON, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR. AT-LAW Tillamook - - - • Oiegua L. L. HOY, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON T illamook B lock , Tillamook, Oregt 1. HENRY C. VIERECK, M. D. SPECIALIST. Disease of The EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT Only 310 Selling Building, Portland, Ore. L atest r RURALITES HAVE BIG HEALTH ADVANTAGE Abundance of Fresh Air and Sunlight Do Much to Check Ravages of Tuberculosis. Wœter/i Electric P ortable S ewing M achine No more tiresome treadle pushing - no more backache a little electric motor does the hard work. A foot control gives any speed desired. ! ! The entire machine in its case can be carried anywhere—it’« no larger than a typewriter. Ask for a demonstra­ tion. COAS1 POH ER CO THE ELECTRIC STORE Z2SS x! X DANGER IN CLOSED WINDOWS. X National Tuberculosis Association, Which Sponsors the Annual Sale of Red Cross Christmas Seals, Reports 150,000 Deaths Each Year From the Disease. People who live In the smaller towns and on farms have a great health ad­ I * i vantage over the city dwellers In that ■ they hnve ever an abundant supply of fresh air and sunlight These two gifts of nature, so lavish­ ly bestowed, are not always appreciat­ ed to their fullest extent. They are I two of the strongest weapons against the menace of tuberculosis, or con­ sumption, ns It Is sometimes called. I But consumption is not unknown In the rural districts. The death rule Is sometimes as great In these sections ns In the more crowded localities, chiefly because of carelessness or indifference to law.- of hen it li Few, Indeed, lire the farm houses or the homes in the smaller cities and vlPuges that cannot have an outdoor sleeping porch On the contrary, we often fliKl tl.at the windows of sleep­ ing rooms In the home are shut tight in the mlsiuken belief that night air is harmful Tills paves tlie way for disense, espe dally tuberculosis, wl>lcb generally at­ tacks the lungs White Plague Kills 150,000 a Year. Electrcity s latest gift to the housewife greatest since the electric iron and electric vacuum cleaner—the »«»KKI! atXXKKXXXXXX X X X FACTS ON THE ARCH X X ENEMY OF HUMANITY. X X X X Tuberculosis kills producers— X X chiefly men and women between X the ages of 16 and 45. X! X It claims workers—active men X' X and women In the homes, the of- X flee and the shop. X It causes 150,000 deaths In the X X United States every year. The white plague claimed 150,000 Ilves last year In the United States. More than 1,000,000 Americans are suf­ fering from It today. These figures are complied from reports of experts all over the country nnd sent to the National Tuberculosis Association, the leading agency In the country to com­ bat this disease. Tins organization Is sponsor fur the Red Cross Christmas S«al sal<>. from which its llntiuclul sup- pi rt is chiefly derived. As medical science hits proved con­ sumption is both preventable and cura­ ble, the suffering caused by this dis­ ease Is largely unnecessary. Most tu­ berculosis victims are between the ages of eighteen and forty live. It costs the United States tn economic waste alone about $500,000,000 annually. More than 1,000,000 persons In this country are suffering from active tuberculosis right now. It menaces every community, every home and every Individ­ ual. AND YET TUBERCULOSIS IS CURABLE AND PREVENT­ ABLE It Is spread largely by Ig­ norance, carelessness and neg­ lect , The National Tuberculosis As­ sociation and Its 1,000 ntHliated state and local organizations wage a continuous winning war on tuberculosis. The work of these organiza­ tions is financed chiefly by the sale of Red Cross Christmas seals. Drive the menace of tubercu- losls fiom your door. Si ”1 :l Historical reminiscences, awakened by present relations between France nnd the United States, recalls that In the early days of the American re­ public French artists made the first sculptural representations of Amer­ ican men and events. America had portrait painters, as witness the sur­ viving portraits of Washington, but no ‘‘statuaries,” ns sculptors were then called, of equal merit, The med- als commemorating the American Revolution were struck chiefly in France, and Houdon crossed the ocean to model the bust of Washington nec­ essary for his statue of the American general and president. It was a grave question whether the sculptor should clothe the general In modern costume or dress him, after the art fashion of the time, in the classic garb of a Roman, and, as the story comes down, It took the combined opinions of Wash­ ington, .Jefferson and Franklin to se­ cure a statue of the Father of his Country in his own proper garments. Stanley’s Subterfuge. X ..................... Possessing an ample ,, purse of hei « X j own. also a Puritan conscience. Stan- X X I ley’s mother discourages the accept- X X once by him of gratuities from adult X X friends. How he evaded the spirit if X X not the letter of the law Is told by X X William H. Dimock. X X “Sure. I knew tlio kid’s ma doesn’t X X like folks to slip money to him, but I X X also know—thanks to a good memory X X —the sweet sense of peace and pros­ X X perity a nickel yields to a boy,” he X X says. X X “I almost stepped on the youngster X X while steering for a 10 a. m. break­ X X fast nnd shot him to the little place X X bn the corner for the latest peace X X congress headlines. When he returned X X with the paper I noticed his little X X hand looked awfully empty; also it X X had not been withdrawn. So I slipped X X a coin into It. X X ‘‘Stanley’s mother later reminded X X him lie had been admonished never, X X never to ask for money for any little X X X I XXXXXXXXXKXXXXKX service rendered. “‘But I didn’t, mother,’ answered *hnt vnlinnt I1.tie George Washington. FIGHTING TUBERCULOSIS. T Just held -mt my hand.’”—Brockton Enterprise Tl>e National Tuberculosis Associa­ tion has launched an extensive educa­ Bird Builds Several Nests. tional campaign. A recent health sur­ S-ie birds get very nervous and be­ vey revealed >i yearly death rate in the come «excited It you approach United States of 150,000 and there are their i and among them Is the today black-tln. ted green warbler, says the American Forestry association of Washington, which Is conducting the SYMBOI HOPE national birdhouse building contest for school children. Another thing about this bird is that it frequently builds several nests. Whether this Is because It changed its mind after building the first one and decided to select a better location or with the deliberate purpose of deceiving any intruders who might come along is not known. The bird is very beau­ tifully colored, the top of Its head and the region nearly down to the shoul­ ders being a yellow green, the back olive green, the throat and breast jet black and the under parts white with Some ye w In them at times. Early Progress of Ind' ‘ry. Prior to 1SH5 the progre made in the development of the «ntomnhlle These are the years when people can be summed up as follows: In gen­ are moat active, the years of their eral style the body was a park greatest production. The sn Utting out phaeton, a ponderous complicated of these lit es just alien they are at contrivance, which would crush the the height of their usefulness means pavements as it passed over them. The an annual loss to the couutry of near­ gnsollne was stored In a large tank ly half a billion dollars. In front. The motor and controlling Fresh air Is the cheapest of medi­ apparatus were placed beneath rtie cines. Outdoor sleeping porches are bed of the vehicle. Excessive weight not only for the sick. They help well and complicate«! machinery helped in folks to keep well, and the country a great measure to make It an utter dweller can have this aid to healthy failure. One wenk spot after another llvlcg at far less inconvenience than This Is the emblem of the National developed. The axles became heated, his city netghbor. Tou can help directly by seeing that Tuberculosis Association which an- then the gears got out of order. The you an«l your family are living tinder nually iponeor» the sale of the Rod noise of the explosion of the gnaollne v as suggestive of a railroad locomo­ the most healthful conditions possible. Cross Christmas Seals, tive.— Chevrolet Bulletin. Cau ts Half Billion Loss Annually. flsh In the era. we would mslntntnVltL’** DISTRIBUTIOPv OF 15.000,000 HAND GRENADES STOPS Wear D partment Cancels Contract to Supply Treas­ ury With Bombs San Francisco--The V. r Depnrt- ment has reiusid to proceed with the delivery of 15,000,000 hand grenades to the Treasury Depart. - ment for conversion into savings banks to stimulate thrift and the sales of War Savings Stamps, ac- cording to a lelegtatn received by C, A. Farnsworth, associate director of the War Loan Organization of the Twelfth Federal Reserve Dis­ trict. A contract which the Treas­ ury Department had with the War Department was cancelled. The grenados, filled with TNT, were ready for shipment Io Ameri­ can Expeditionary Forces when the armistice was signed The plan of the Treasury Department was to convert thcra gri ■!.?:’?s Into savings banks by removing the explosive and to offer them as souvenirs of the war to purchasers of War Sav­ ings Stamps and Treasury Savings Certificates of the 1919 series, The plan met with instantaneous suc- cess throughout the country, inil- lions of them having been ordered, They were to be awarded through hanks and trust companies which In the Twelfth Federal Reserve Dis­ trict alone ordered nearly lOO.Ottn of them. These orders will all have to be cancelled “To say that 1 am disappointed Is potting ft lightlv.” said Farnsworth 'The demand for the grenades was tremendous, which proved that they were an excellent means of stimulat­ ing the habit of saving and invest­ ment In government securities. Moreover, they were the best pos­ sible souvenirs of the war. How­ ever. a Certificate of Achievement to be signed by Secretary Glass will be given Instead of the grenades to the person who would be entitled to a grenade.” W. 8. 8. THE FRUGAL ••it Is the thrifty an'1 frugal who are th e backbone of the nation. It is they who supply its funds. It is they upon whom rests its credit. It is they who are not dependent upon soefetv. It is they who support nil Its I; titutions. particularly its charitable ones. Tf is ihev who are not haunted hy the crim spectre of want throughout thei’' lives It is they who are forming habits of self sacrifice and providence. And fun- lher. it Is they who. as a rule, are (he happy persons • • ♦ If is the thrifty who have en;ovment because they can afford it. and enjoyment unhaunted hr the fear of want tomorrow. It is the thrlflv who are happier In the present because not fearful of the future—ths saving, frugal, insured classes of the country It is the thrifty who can af­ ford to give their time to public mat­ ters. because not tied down to tho actual needs of the day. And further. It is the thrifty who. by habits of self- sacrifice and foresight and frugality, are bolding the character that made the n it.on great wlion it was voimg. and that alone can keep the oRtinn great A man or a nation is worth what he saves and not what tie ■pends "—Edward A Woods The United State» flovemment -cits War Savings Stamps to glvr <• er .nan. every woman, everyrblld the chance to save. A Thrift Stamp coats 25 cents. A $fi War Savings Stamp costa $4 21 this mon'h Buy one at the poet office Get started w. 8. 8. Thrift prompt» tn industry and en- cwurages self-reliance. Buy w 3 S. m-ttfra Next TtteetHy ‘acü.WM ÏÎJ «tinkeï * extensif*- O.MHKer S A From »tert to finish — - - -> - J ake repairs and for th<| ing reservoir. L. Berkey, The Soberin'? Bundle By Walt Mason. When you have a bunch of boodle in the bank just up the pike, you'll stand up for Yankee Doodle, law and order and th? like. Then no ermd of devasta­ tion, such as Russian outlaws shriek, will r 'reive your con­ firmation— -oil’ll denounce it like a stre.i'i. When a man is broke and busted, with no package I.nd away, he is evermore disgusted with the Jaws ive ail oh< y. He would see our courts all leveled, and the Judges on the rack, and the plutocrats bedeviled till they -nva up all their stack He would see all things upended, Justice b" ro"ffnr mite; then his chances would lie spl-n- dil to ace--:':’ 'e soma loot I have seen some agitators stirring up the people’s souls, and tin . ■” wore cast-off gaiters and tl ulr pants were full of holes they said their chains were ing. as they damned the pinto- crat; if they’d only do some hanking they would soon get over ♦ha*. J have beard the spielers thriftless putting up their weary song; I have heard the weak and shiftless saying everything Is wrong But the man who saves his money thinks the Russian creed absurd, and he thinks It beastly funny that so many yawps are heard.—Copyright, 1919. (By permission.) Walt Mason buys War Savings Stamps. Do you? w. s. s. BUYING WISHES “The man who buys only what he needs, and when he needs It. would neither sustain a ‘marked down sale’ nor a marked up or.e He would apply the law of demand according to its ul­ timate power, and the level of supply and demand would Booner be readied. It follows that as long as people keep on paying high prices, bo.-a’ise they think they must have better living con ditions’ and still better, and buy be­ cause of a wish rather thaa a iegiti- mate want, prices will remain abnor- mally high, * * * The consumer does know at all times what he can make do.’ what he ran and ought to pay for a necessary article, and if he lives up to the law of economy and necessity, he exercises the power of demand upon price to an appreciable extent helps to lower the cost of living, marily goods are made to ns« and to sell. And when a people will use thrm they will not sell: when they will not sell they come dowu in pi ice or go out of ex.stence • * * To us« a earning phrase, much of our p esent- dav trouble is due to the fact that 'we want what we want when we want it.’ The truth is we have cut loose' from our war-lime moorings In econo­ my. • * • But the effects of this great war are net over II we re. niue in hav­ ing everything we want, the other re­ sumption must wait. An ounce of econ­ omy is worth a pound In price. Less railing and more working, less spend­ ing and more saving would go far to­ ward reducing the high co«t of living ’’ Commercial and Financial Cbron.cle. A Thrift Stamp is an ounce of econ­ omy. A War Savings Stamp Is a pound of the same stuff Get It through your head that high wages won't bring bet­ ter times unless you save rart of theta. Save and Invest with Uncle Sam. W. 8. 8. There are 1.200,0v0 children attend­ ing grammar school in the seven states of the Twelfth Federal Reserve Dis­ trict. Figure It out yourself what they alone would save In a year If they each bought one |.S War Savings Stamp each Brath.