Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, May 20, 1920, Image 6

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, MAY 2°
Subscribe foi the Tillsmcok
Headlight, the leading
County
Newspaper $2.00 per year,
Tillamook Head­
light,
Weekly Oregon-
co nr
^2,. / Q
Oregon Farmer,
ANCIENT MARVEL OF EGYPT
who use
inch tires
constitute more
than half the
tire buyers of the
world.
To build this spe­
cial molded
in. tire, a $7,000,-
CCO factory was
built and a spe­
cial organization
brought together.
Firestone Plant
No. 2, making
this one size only,
has a capacity
of 16,000 tires a
day.
This quantity
production means
savings for the
car owner—low­
est costs and bet­
ter tire values.
Buy Firestones.
To 60^ of
Amortcafc
Car Owners
Most miles per dollar is a Firestone pledge, to the big car
owner as well as to the owners of light cars. See the new
Standard Oversize Firestone Cord.
Tirestone
Labyrinth Constructed Some 3,500
Years Ago Was a Structure
of Colossal Size.
King Minos, with his labyrinth on
the Island of Crete, is generally sup­
posed to have been the originator of
tbe maze idea; but Egypt has a laby­
rinth, too, and Egypt manages to hold
tbe record for antiquity In almost ev-
1 erythfng, labyrinths included.
This Egyptian labyrinth Is 3.500
i years old. It Is merely a chaotic mass
of rocks piled up in the desert a few
miles out of Medlnet. The outlines of
the walls merge dimly here and there
from the ruins, and from these out­
lines, and the carvings on the stones,
Egyptologists deduce that the laby­
rinth was built by a certain King
Labarys. who was more popularly
known as Amenemhat III.
The structure was 500 by 600 feet.
I
It contained 3,000 rooms, half above
ground, half below.
Remember that
tbe largest hotel In our present day
world boasts about that number of
rooms on a dozen floors and covers a
city square, and some idea of the size 1
of the two-story labyrinth can be
gained.
Nobody has figured out yet why King
Amenemhat built this enormous pal­
ace or tomb. In the lower story, his­
tory says, the sacred crocodiles and
kings were buried, while the upper
floor was, a few centuries after King i
Amenemhat’s time, used as a seat of
government.
The labyrinth was a wonderful
place, one of the most wonderful in
Egypt, If our ideas of it are correct
and its greatness was its downfall.
The citizens of a near-by town, who
worshiped the ichneumon, resented
the sacred crocodiles of the labyrinth.
And so they made an attack upon one
of King Amenemhat’s successors and
reduced the largest structure in Egypt
to a ruin.
LAND OF RACIAL TEMPESTS
Dalmatia Has Been an Unquiet Spot
in All the Years of Her
Tragic History.
VAUGHNS, the Original
Will set it up and put it to work for you to your satisfaction or you don’t pay a cent.
To be had now at the Tillamook Clay works, E. G. KREBS, Prop.
See that clutch and sawholder 7 Put your saw on or take it off in a jiffy. Phone or call.
Help Given by 1 g
O.A.C. to the
Oregon Fanner
Made
It is pure, wholesome and sweet
by a new process which does not mill out
the delicious, nut-like flavor of the wheaL
You will like
FLoür
Order a Sack Today
Patronize home industry and en
joy thia different, better flour
E. S. BETTCHER MILLING CO
flhEX. JVI g NAIR & CO
GENERAL HARDUIARE
Kitehen Ranges and
Heating Stoves.
THE BEST STOCK OF HARDWARE IN
THE COUNTY.
Dalmatia, elongated so that it is
nowhere more than 35 miles wide, tap­
ering down to but a mile at Cattaro,
has been swept by continuous racial
tempests for the last eight centuries.
Croats and Serbians constitute the
Slavic element in Dalmatia, speaking
the same language, but employing two
alphabets. The Serbs use the Russian,
and the Croats the Latin letters and
alphabet.
The Latin influence Is more prev-
alent In the citles, the story of Dal-
inatia being the reason therefor. In
the middle ages the Dalmatians were |
a people without the consciousness of
a country. During the Slav influx into 1
Illyria the Invaders encountered little
opposition, except in the seaport towns.
The Latin element In the cities resist­ i
ed the migration and thus engendered i
the strife for supremacy which per­
sists to this day.
Much of the early Dalmatian rivalry
was economic, the tradesmen and
farmers naturally wishing to exchange
their goods with the Hungarians. The
maritime cities preferred to do busi­
ness with Venice, which controlled the
Adriatic.
s-
4. ..’ • ' •
How Chinese Ute Peach Stone*.
“GOD BLESS Y OU'S" MEANING
Expression of Solicitude That
Be Traced Back to the De­
cline of Athena.
The Greeks and Romans had their
“Long life to yon!” Gesundlieit I 1»
now verboten. But we still say
"Sante" and “God bless you!” after
a sneeze.
This expression of solicitude can be
traced back to the decline of Athens.
One of the terrible devastating
plagues which darken the pages of
European history was raging In the
famous city. The flower of Greece. ,
her foremost writers and artists, the
founders of much of our modern cul- |
ture. were ruthlessly cut down. The '
dead piled high, and daily Athenian ,
courage was taxed to the fullest. But
to every home where lay a victim, the
elixir of hope, the rainbow of prom­
ise. was the sneeze, for it indicated
to the watchers that the danger was
passed, that the patient would recover.
A few centuries later another epi
detnic assailed Europe, but this time
the sneeze, being a symptom of the
malady, was a bad omen.
In this age of witches, goblins, med­
icine men and leeches superstition I
flourished. Some of the most intel- ,
lectual minds of the time accredited |
charms and soothsayers. It was there- ,
fore nothing extraordinary for the I
pope to decree the exclamation "God
bless youby anyone who heard a
sneeze. This was supposed to com- I
hat its evil powers and prevent the |
spread of the disease.
And “God
bless you!” with its kindly human in- I
terest has come down through the
ages.
NO KNIFE AND
LOSS OF BLOOD
No Plasters and Pains for Hour»
Or Day».
' TUMORS, PILES, FISTULA, GOITRE
DISEASES OF WOMEN
Four Years Study in Europe.
Over thirty years experience
Portland Phyucal Therapy Labora­
tories. 412 t« 417 Journal Building
Portland____________ Oregon
■srGw R mds inti
Chinese Study Real Work,
Even a Chinese pocket dictionary
contains more than 10JMX) characters
representing words, and if a man In-
tends really to master Chinese he
must learn to recognise them all—"a
stupendous task.” However. 3JMM).
4.600 or 5.000 syllable* are all that a
Chinese of average education requires,
and. If anyone will persevere until he
haa thoroughly conquered a thousand,
he will be in a position to have some
appreciation of a novel and to maoter
tbe dlfficnltieo of • simple buatttM*
doemuent. But for tbe sincere studeM
• thousand
—Chesterfield
1 I ’HE most companionable bunch of
tobaccos ever rolled into a cigarette
— silky, aromatic Turkish, and fine,
full-flavored Domestic, expertly chosen
and expertly blended. That’s Chester­
field. And they sure do "satisfy!
ïîesterfield
(
✓
“Okapi” Astonished Explorer*, and
Only a Few Specimens Have
Ever Been Obtained.
Some time before 1890. Stanley, the
explorer, had word from the pigmy
negroes of a new beast In the impene­
trable depths of the virgin forest
which borders the Semliki river in the
Relgian Congo. The Wambatti natives
described It as a species of donkey
and called It “Atti.” From their fur­
ther description, it seemed to he. a
hoofed animal of considerable size,
which lived upon leaves. In 1899 Sir
Harry Johnston himself saw the pig­
mies. who fully confirmed wliat Stan­
ley had already told him. but added
that tbe strange beast was striped like
a zebra.
In 1901 a Swedish officer. M. Karl
Erikson, obtained a complete skin and
two skulls, which he sent to Sir Harry
Johnston, who then belitAed the beast
to be of the giraffe tribe, previously
found in a fossil state in Greece. It
was, however, proved conclusively that
although of the giraffe family it was
not the animal of ancient Greece, but
a new beastj altogether. It was su!>-
sequently given the name of “okapi.”
No more than a dozen specimens of
this wonderful beast have been se­
cured.
CIGARETTES
ELECTION, MAY 21
STATE ROADS
Vote 302 X Yes
For 4% State Road Bond Limit
NEW IN THE ANIMAL WORLD
BALLOT TITLE IS AS FOLLOWS:
302 X Yes
303
No
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT—Referred to the people by th*
Leg-siai ive Assembly.
LIMITATION OF FOUR PER CENT STATE INDEBTEDNESS
FOR PERMANENT ROADS.— Purp'iso: To amend Section 7 of
An.» le XI of the Constitution of the State of Oregon bo as to permit the
creation uf debtsand liabilities including previous debts ana liabilities
for the purpose of building and maintaining permanent roads to th»
amount of four per cent of the assessed valuation of all the property
in the State of Oregon, instead of two per cent as now provided by law.
NO PROPERTY TAX—NO DIRECT TAX
NO INCREASE IN AUTO LICENSE FEES
NO INCREASE OF GASOLINE TAX
Keep these three facts in mind. The present auto license fees and
gasoline tax will pay both the principal and interest on all the bonds
under this amendment, and will yield an annual surplus besides for other
state highway work. No additional taxation of any kind.
FEDERAL FUNDS MUST BE MATCHED
Oregon must have sufficient Highway Funds to match Federal apportion­
ments or Oregon cannot get the benefit of Federal money for Oregon Roads.
Increasing this constitutional limit is a necessity. Unless limit is increased
either state roads cannot be completed for many, many years, or must be finished
by direct property taxation. This measure averts direct property tax for state
highways and makes early completion possible. Let’s get the roads built now.
Income from Present Sources Sufficient to Pay Principal and Interest.
The (act that revenues from auto license fees and gasoline tax, without Increase of present rate*,
will bo ample to pay both principal and interest on the»> bonds, is clearly set forth by official iirnr.e
in the State Pamphlet, mailed to every registered vot. .-. Refer to State Pamphlet for verification.
Examine the table carefully. It i roves that no property tax is required and th it present rat*, for
aut ■ license fees and k . ib tax will redeem princr al ana interest and yield surplus besides.
For Interest Tables, Pamphlets or further Information, write to
OREGON ROADS AND DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION
W. L mows««. taaM. US tint S: PartM
C. (. (lUPXW, (luire,, tuotive («Mints. L I. tail
Campaign Headquarters, 311 Worcester Building, Portland, Oregon
VOTE 302 X YES—For 4% State Road Bond Limit
"The People of the Pelup Peninsula.”
We were floating down tbe beautiful
Plongdong when, descrying a glorious
whangdoop hid amongst the igfans
along the swamgit (shore), I instantly
ordered the mogpong to row the goo-
pang toward it. Obeying my command
with an alacrity that proved his devo­
tion to me, tbe little fellow pulled lus­
tily on the right tingwop (oar or pad­
dle) until, by virtue of his efforts, we
were headed In the direction whence
had come the vision of the multi-col­
ored whangdoop.
M.v renders will
readily appreciate the tremendous ex­
citement that seized me when I say
that the whangdoop was of unusunl
size and of a conformation thnt would
preclude the possibility of anyone for
a moment mistaking It for the ogplup,
which, as everyone knows, ft so much
resembles.—(After the Manner of Most
Travel Articles.)—From Life.
Women and children are to he seen
Woman "Spilled the Beans.”
in grain-raising, dairying, horticul­ in the markets of China picking up
ture, stockraising. poultry production peach stones, which are put to several
Less than a century ago a German
and other branches ot agriculture, uses. Rroken Into pieces and dried professor of chemistry succeeded re­
have
in the sun. they furnish excellent ma­ peatedly In producing small quantities
of gold, which he exhibited to fellow
terial for fuel.
Saved Oregon More Than
Another profitable use of the peach scientists whose keen interest may
Higher Education
stone Is made by artists anil engrav­ well be imagined. It was later ascer­
ers, who carve them Into different tained that a devoted servant, anxious
Has Ever Cost
I forms of animals, Some of the larger to give his master pleasure, had
front its very beginning in Oregon. I stones. If round enough, are carved bought gold leaf and surreptitiously
The College hiiR reduced cost of pro­ Into finger rings, During the season contributed it to the contents of the
duction. improved quality of product, one may see In the interior of South crucible. One one occasion, however,
and helped keep down the pests of China yards of poor people full of the servant was sent on a distant er­
i'.irnt, garden, orchard and field.
peach stones drying in the sun. After rand, and left money with his wife
being
denned, the small stones are for the purchase of the requisite gold
Lik
the State University
used for fuel, groups of small boys leaf. She spent the money for drink.
. and the Normal
Inlying Instead some "Dutch metal.”
picking out the larger ones.
it has helped bring school, business,
The kernels are sometimes sold to which she put Into the pot. This led
and borne into vital contact, and has chemists and druggists. They tire to a discovery of the fraud, prompt
helped demonstrate that
preserved in bottles and used as revelation of which by the professor
gave rise to Immense amusement.
Higher Education is of Direct cough medicine after the kernels are
turned Into white powder.
This
Old Chinese Burial Places.
Help to the Country Districts
white powder is a very popular, con­
I
SluMiglial's old buildings on the Bund
But higher education in Oregon is venient and cheap medicine for poor are rapidly disappearing, and with
in ninny villages as a remedy
crippled by great increases in attend­ people
their destruction many discoveries In
for coughs.
ance. by lack of buildings, by the
the way of old burial places are be­
fallen buying power of the present
ing made.
While excavating for a
Scientist
Was
Fooled.
millage support, and by the failure
new building two Chinese graves were
A
few
years
ngo
Doctor
Emmen*,
of the millage support to grow.
discovered. Upon being opened, the
You are respectfully urged to vote a distinguished American scientist. coffins were found to be In a good de­
was
convinced
flint
he
had
discovered
for the new millage, support bill on
cree of preservation, considering the
May 21. the Higher Educational re­ a "missing element" between gold and length of time they must have been
silver, which he called "argentaurnm.”
lief measure.
lying In the swamp. The inscriptions
He melted Mexican dollars in a cru­
------- o-------
upon the stone tablets marking the
cible.
dissolved
the
silver
with
nitric
Paid adveristment inserted hy Colin
graves are llllglble, so any conecture
acid,
and
exhibited
u residue of un- hs to their age is almost Impossible.
Dyment in behalf of the Jotnt Alum­
ni Relief Committee for Higher Ed­ deniable gold.
An urn containing a quantity of hones
Explanation lay In the fact that
ucation in Ore., 614 Pittock Block.
was also unearthed.
there
was
originally
some
gold
in
the
Portland.
sliver out of which the dollars were
Something to Be Thankful
minted. Tills Is commonly the case
Beck—So your wife always Inalata
(owing to imperfect metallurgical
on having her own way.
processes) with the older Mexican
Peck—Yes; but she changes her
coins.
CANCER
"When good fellows get
together, I’m right there
Can
Whenever in Need
of Anything in the
DRUG LINE
Please remember that we keep
everything that belongs in a
well equipped pharmacy.
We
pride ourselves upon the purity
<>f our drugs and the care we use
putting up prescriptions.
We have everything that is
usually needed in the sick room
and can secure in the shortest
time possible any special pre­
paration or appliance that may
be suggested by a doctor.
Remember that our Prices are Always
as Low as is Consistent with the
Quality oí Our Goods
LAMAR’S DRUG STORE,
Tillamook, Oregon.
In The
Jessie
Honte J
To RO
bove
In the
You :
•nd an
S*inst ¡
on or b
Publlcat
Du fail
»ant th
to the c
‘n the <
aarriag
the piai
forever
mind so often It’s not a bit monoto­
nous.—London Answers.
allowed
OF COURSE IT IS UNPLEASANT
John Sharpe Williams hasn't yet
accused the non-rubber-stamp sena­
tors of having planted foating mines
In the path of the "George Washing­
ton” but he has a few months to
serve yet before he begins to bay at
the moon.
The reason the Plumb plan eam-
paign continue* I* that a lot of the
big fund collected to put It over is
■till uneipended. Everybody knows
tbe Kbeme is na dead
home:
U, N
South
Merid
tion t
»Ubi
»cribe
Count
Orego
Ith da
to have you suspect that our low
prices mean low quality In our talk­
ing machines too. Our only answer to
such suspicion Is an Invitation to call
and judge our talking machines with­
out regard to our price«. Then »0
your suspicion will vanish and you'll
recognize our good faith,
cognise our good faith.
•nd tha
Mainst
•“d disi
This s
der of
Judge o
’•id ordì
•nd the
°f this
On>«r. I«
* the lai