TH-LAMOOK HEADLIGHT. SEPTEMBER In. i«20. iï52S£52SHS2S2S25a52SZ5Z525a5ES2SH525ISH5ESWÏ5a5asaSa5asa5a5aSasa5HS?C2 SWORE BY ‘TEDDY’ Friendship of a Bank. And especially a bank whose officers are “human'* men who take pleasure in other men’s success. We are in business to help other businesses. Therein lies our success one! yours. BANK YOUR MILK CHECK WITH THE ÔJtUamnnk (Cmtnly Sank Member Federal Reserve System. ROBERTS GENERALfTRANSFER Just Starting in Business Your patronage will be.highly appreciated. Prompt Attention to all Orders. Tenipory Phone Wagoner’s Cigar Store. Both Phones. Hill Military Academ 1 THE SCHOOL FOR 11 YOUR BOY, Portland. Ore I .LL- Yellowstone Park Rangers With Roosevelt to a Man. Himalayan Bear's Foolish Com bat With Stone. Co'onel’s Characteristic Greeting of Down-and-Outer, Whom He Had Known in Happier Daye, le Still Remembered. Like Too Many Members o/ the Hu­ man Race, the Animal Is a Vic- t.m of His Unconquerable Obstinacy. Of the few out-of seas, a visits paid to the Yellowstone, that of Colonel I Roosevelt, who. when pr- blent, spent 24 days of the lute winter of l’.HKl there, has the most prominent page in the nnnuls of the Sprend-I'ngle rangers. He found the scouts, then serving as chaperons for luckless cavalry troop­ ers and doing their own work besides, to lie inert ufter his own heart, and did not hesitate to say so. Before he had been In the park a week every ranger was swearing by hint. “Anybody know the whereabouts of one William Jones?” was one of the colonel’s early inquiries. Jim McBride, the preesnt chief ranger, who was then assistant chief of the park scouts under the late Buf­ falo Jones, knew a Bill Jones, wood chopper and ne’er-do-well, chiefly re- murkable for an Insatiable thirst and a knack of ministering to it in a bone- dry park. He was about the last man In the IEoekles for whom a president of file United States would be expected I to Inquire. "Bill put me Into office once,” snld Roosevelt. “I want to see him, drunk [ or sober." He further explained that the dere- ’ llct had been sheriff during his own days as a ranchman and bad made him , a deputy In a horsethief posse. “It took three days to find that old horned toad and bring him in," said McBride, in recalling the Incident, “lint just to listen In at the colonel's hearty greeting of that down-and-out- er was pay in full. “ ‘Well, Ted, you got a right swell Job since I seen you last,’ Jones re­ marked when they had exchanged how’d’ye-do’s; ‘but that needn’t stand between friends—I got something on my hip.’ "Colonel Roosevelt didn’t partake, lint lie did spend the best part of an hour swapping .varus of tile days when Bill was a ’white man’ and sheriff of Ills county. The woodchopper tried to buck up after Ills talk with the presi­ dent. but it wasn’t to lie done. The next winter we found him dead in the brush over on Bear creek. “The colonel was enthusiastic over the sport of ski running, and was something of n performer on the slabs himself, fora novice. He stripped his feet into them as often as opportunity offered. One morning on a slide near the Canon hotel lie broke one ski and came a heavy cropper. “ ‘The government Ims fallen at last!’ he cried with a molar showing grin, as 1 coasted down to help un­ tangle a living president and a pair of dead sticks. "He was looking at the wreck he had made of the hickory slabs when Capt. John Pitcher of the l-’irst cav­ alry then in command of tne park, ar­ rived. “‘Have you plenty of these?’ Teddy said. "Only a few pairs, anil they are the property of the interior depart­ ment,” replied the officer. “In less than three weeks there came a rush shipment of it hundred pairs. "Next afternoon the president chal­ lenged me to a race on snow shoes from Canyon to Mammoth, n distance of thirty-one miles. Those with him decided that the trip would lie an un­ wise strain Upon him, and begun to argue against Ills attempting it. He got me to one side after a while and whispered: “ 'We ll let them talk, McBride. Just you stick around until midnight. They’ll be asleep then, and well hit the trull!’ "It took ¡larry W. Child ami Cap­ tain Pltclibr two hours to talk him out of that. He wasn’t at all pleased at having to veto his own plan for a secret departure."—Ethel und James Dorrance in Munsey’s Magazine. Many foresighted merchants and manufacturers recognize that the friendship of an important bank is a priceless business. I Opens Sept. 15th Transfer Wood, Gravel. Phone 37 W. TillamookJTransf er Co Liberty Temple. Bird Study of Interest. A novel opportunity for studying the Influence of extremes of climate on birds Is offered by the English spar­ row. This bird was Introduced Into New York city soon after I860, did not reach California until 1871 or 1872, but lias recently been found by Dr. Joseph Grinnell of the University of California to have settled iu the heart of Death valley at Greenland ranch. This location Is 178 feet below sea level, with a temperature nt times ex­ ceeding 130 degrees F, and great dry­ ness. How development will be af­ fected is a matter of much Interest “I’m Getting a Thor Electric Washer Too “I just had to drop in tin my way home and tell you, because I’m so delighted at the thou­ ght of getting an electric washer. “We talked it over last night and Harry said if yours saved you anti the clothes so much, I must have one too. “Having decided to get one, I was determin­ ed to have the very best, so. as you suggested, called at the Coast Power Company and asked for a demonstration. “They explained everything, but what pleas­ ed me more than anything were the little it costs to operate. It won’t cost as much as sending clothes to the laundry, and after I’ve finished paying for it, I’ll save that much money every month “| Do the same- you’ll lie just as pleased. Navy Dirigibles World’s Larg.st. Two superdlrlglbles, the largest in the world, are planned hj' the navy, and one of them now being built in England, will attempt a transatlantic flight next fall. Captain Craven, direc­ tor of naval aviation, recently told the house naval committee. American an vol officer« and enlisted men who will fly the British-built ship to America an* in England training. In asking *2,700.000 for construction of h second miperdlrlgfble. Captain Craven ssld l< would he 50 feet longer than the Brit­ ish built craft, which Is 644 feet.— Scientific American. Unceasing Vigilance. “Why win It that the prohibition sleuths raided the Blngt'angers?" “Blngbanger happened to remark In the hearing of one of them that theirs was n bottle baby. The Electric Store. HUNTERS! HAT APPEALS TO W you more than the feel of a good Winchester shot­ gun you know can be de­ pended on for accuracy and sure action the instant the covey lifts. When you are following your pointer through the fields on a crisp Octo­ ber morning, alert for the sight and sound of wary birds, you like to feel that both your gun and ammuni­ tion are going to do their part. W/NCHC5TÍR I REPEATING SHOTGUNS —are made to answer this call. They are designed with just the right drop and shoulder fit and are manufactured of the finest nickel steel, every part properly tempered and hardened and beautifully finished. Winchester shotguns are made in four models, in both hammer and hammerless, including the latest .410 shotgun, the ideal gun for family shooting, practice and small Held game. IQ JERSEY CATTLE. Chester White Swine We have one pure bred bull calf for sale, whose dam has an officila record of 473 441bs. fat. Register of merit class AA, age 3 years. His grand dam on the sire side has an official record of 614.81bs. of fat. Class A A. Place a pure bred Jersey bull at the head of your dairy herd, and by,doing so you will increase the quantity add quality of Tillamook cheese and price per lb. Jersey’s are the world’s best cheese cows, Tillamook included. Why is she the best cheese cow ? Jersey cow testing 5 per cent., 1(M) lbs. of her milk will make 12.901bs.of cheese,and milk tesiing 3 percent will make 8.301bs. of cheese. lOOlbs. 5 per cent milk thepercent of fat lost in the whey is 6.00, while in the 3 per cent milk the percentage of fat lost in the whey is 9.55. The per centage of fat in milk retained in cheese testing 5 per cent is 94.00, while the 3 per cent milk the percentage is 90.45. Cheese containing a large per centage of fatis better, because,first,fine flavor and taste; second, of its better consistency; third, of its improved aroma; fourth, of its increased di­ gestibility ; fifth, of its more perfectly an­ swering the requirements of a complete food as balance ration. - Notice o All members of Fairview Grange who have received notice of Fire In­ surance assessment please mail eheek to Frank • Bester. Mias White has opened her studio at M. R. Hannkratt’s residence, and Is organizing classes this week. Those wishing lessons can find Mias White at the studio. 0 ¿I a a a £ Most «-II<1 animals. It appears, are stupid as well us gree ly and obs’l- nate. Utit f- r s’ ver brainless o >- stlnncy In the face of opposition there Is. the best authorities contend, no animal like the Himalayan bear. If he finds n thing in his way lie will nl ways pu>h it aside if he can, even though it would be easier to go around the obstacle. The wily natives of India have ob­ served that trait in bls character and from It have contrived a trap to catch him. They select a tree with a suitable horizontal bough. At a point on the bough about ten or twelve feet from the fork they fasten a bait like- I ly to attract the hear—honey, for ex­ ample. or goat's flesh, Then from an- other bough above that one they sus- pend a heavy block of stone. The rope Is so fastened to the upper I bough that the stone hangs between the halt ami the fork of the trees. The boar scents the bait from a dis- i tance, comes to the tree, sees the food i on the bough and climbs up the tree. Reaching the bough, be walks along it I to get at the bait. But suddenly lie I notices the obstacle In his way and I pushes It aside with his paw. The stone swings out of rhe way for a sec­ ond; then it swings hack and hits the bear on the paw. With a growl of Irritation the hear pit lies it aside more violently. The* stone swings away again; then it returns with greater force* and hits the bear on the* 5?5Z5H52525a525?5eS25H52SZ5H5252SH5H525H52525252S252S2S2SESBS2S25î5ZSa53 chest. With a snarl of rage the bent gives the stone n tremendous thrust and sends it up into the air in a wide eSE3âSH5H5?-5H5HSE52525H52Sasasaiï25H525H5H5HSHSïl5HSa52525a525asa5aS25aSES curve. Then down conies the stone in a similar ctt’-'i* and hits the bear n thumping wl-nt-k on the ribs. Most anlr -is would desist after that third bb •*• ■ not so the bear. He Is now in n t> rfi ■¡•tl.v nmd raw. and a hen r Is n d boxer. He bits OH1 with Ills pr. s. right and left nnd High ’st Cash Price send- the st' •* ■ inrtllng forward In h still wider cvi vc. Then, after a f<‘ V secor ■<'s the ‘ ' <• comes back und h’m the b letir a bi rille “uppercut ’ on thp Till?.r.ock 2nd Hebo. Jaw. Bui t alas! tl ■<• bear never ven r to SHSHS !S¿^ST5?.>^52Sc525H5Z52S?5?5?_‘J ¿575H5HS25H5Z5?5H5B5HSH5ZSêSS5HSH5253 si-hoc* *i end Ici 1* d the law f •ravlty. E'er* blow >*» >dts the stoi ” Is re­ turnei d tenfold. And ns the IIP im < no bi- • 'Ins to l>< * knot-'cd out. is the ben r I flint gets knocki*»! otft. Then the wily natives h,d!i"r below rush in with a net and throw it quick­ ly over him. And that is how any “zoo” or menagerie gets its Hima­ layan bear. a a Don Meadows Jersey Farm, JOE DONALDSON, Prop. We carry a full line of these shot­ guns and cordially invite you to come in any time, look them over, get their feel and make your selection. King Crenshaw Hardware Co We Buy CASCARA BARK. Xi I At KuppenrenJer’s Warehouse, Administrators Notice of Sale. ------ o------- Notic ■ is hereby given that by vlr- ”te of an order made and entered in te county • uurt of the State of Ore- on, for Tillamook county, in the latter of the Estate of B. Imderf, ' ceased, tli0 undersigned adminis- igtor of said estate has been author­ ized, licensed, empowered and direct­ ed, from and after the 25th day of September, 1920, to Hell and will sell for cash to the highest bidder, the following described real property sit­ uated in Tillamook County. Oregon, belonging to the said estate, to-wit. The West half of the Southwest quarter of section Twenty-seven, the Northeast quarter of the Southeast quarter of section twenty-eight, and beginning at the Northeast corner of the Southeast quarter of the South­ east quarter of Section twenty-eight, and running thence South on section line forty rods; thence West twenty- four rods; thence North forty rods to the north line of the Southeast quarter of the Southeast quarter of said Section Twenty-eight; and thence East to the place of beginn­ ing. .containing six acres; also the north half of the northwest quarter of section thirty-four, all in town­ ship two South of range nine West, and containing 206 acres. Said sale will be made subject to confirmation of said County Court. August 26. 1920. M. Abplanalp. Administrator of the Estate of B. Irndorf, Deceased. Co-operative Law Library. An interesting experiment In library co-operation Is being worked nut in the Long Beach public library. Long < » Beach. Cal. Forty or 50 attorneys of the city of Long Beach have sent law books from their private libraries to the public library for the purpose of forming a co-opemtfve law library. Those contributing books in this way I are entitled to take books from the co­ operative library, keeping them for a period of five days, and the general public is allowed to consult the hooks at the library. The hooks are marked. “Loaned to the Long Beach Public Li­ brary." Some of the attorneys Join Ing In the plan have each contributed as many as 200 books to the co-opera­ tive law library. It would seem that this idea might lie worked out success­ fully in other lines of endeavor, thus making the resources found In books available to the largest possible num­ ber of people. Nickel All Cows Are Alike ¿o the EMPiRE ARD milkers or easy milkers— H nervous or cal tn cows —large or small teats— even or uneven uddei.i —they are all alike to the Empire. It milks them all. And Empire teat cups stay on with- out surcingles harness MILKING MACHINES are now equipped with our new Super-Simple Piston­ less l’ulsator. 'No wearing pistous to leak vacuum. It operates teat cups with absolute regularity. Cows like it. It soothesand quiets them. Results in greater milk flow and also increases period of lactation. Como In and see this different, better milking machine or, it you wish, phone us and we'll bring the machine to your farm: no obligation. J. BURCHARD. MILK COWS FOR $ SALE or EXCHANGE tor Dry Stock. YAGER & BRADY CITY TRANSFER LOCAL "Let’s Pretend.” Everybody Ims things to put up with. There are sure to he ups and downs, ind even days when everything seems -o out of tunc that It can never he right again. To make home a lumpy •nee Is the housewife’s business, bnt •itiless she can nt least appear luippy herself she is not likely to make ti success of It. This will lie much ens er If she Ims had her early training in the game of “let’s pretend." Very ew of us nmke the most of all the ■linnees for happiness that come to is. It’s n difficult thing to do. But we* can all try to do so, and that Is half the battle!—Washington Post. LONG DISTANCE HAULING IO-OF- BUILDING Money. Nickels -which are really copper­ nickel. being n mixture of the two metals—were first coined In this coun­ try to give encouragement to nickel mining, important deposits having been found in Pennsylvania. Since then many other uses for the metal have been found. But at the present time 85 per ci*nt of tile world’s supply of nickel is derived from the mines of the Sudbury district, in Can­ ada, where the reserves of ore are enormous. Of the bnlance. France pro­ duces the bulk, contributing 11 per cent. It has been suggested that Great Britain, practically controlling ns she does the world’s nickel, might switch from chf*Ht>ened gold and nmke the white metal the basis of her currency. —Philadelphia Ledger. AND BOTH PHONES. JUCATION PAYS FOR THE INDIVIDUAL AND FOR THE STATE A I ersou with No Education has but One Chance in 160,000 to Render Distinguish Service to the Public W till l ommon School Education 4 Chances W ith High School Education... . 87 Chances \\ ith College Education ... .. 800 Chances Are You Giving Your Child Pis Chance 7 THOSE STATES ARE WEALTHIEST THAT MOST IN EDUCATION HAVE INVESTED Oregon Agricultural College Though a “Liberal and Practical Education pre­ pares the Young Man and Young Woman for Useful Citizenship and Successful Careers in AGRICULTURE ENGINEERING MINING HOME ECONOMICS COMMERCE _____ PHARMACY FORESTRY VACATIONAL EDUCATION The .Training Includes PHYSICAL __________ ______ ________ EDUCATION, MUSIC, ENGLISH, MODERN LANGUAGE. ART «nd the Other Essentials of a Standard Technicttl __ College Course. FALL TERM OPENS SEPTEMBER 20, 1920. TUITION IS FREE. _____ for information write to THE REG1STAR, Oregon Agricultural College, Corvallis, Ore. Our Flour and Wheat Exports. Between July 1 and January 9. th** United States exported 82.083.000 bushels of wheat and 8,773.000 bar­ rels of flour, a total equal to 121,90*,- 000 bushels of wheat BAYOCEAN SHEET METAL WORKS TILLAMOOK, ORE. i Announcement COAST POWER CO *‘r Notice to Tax Payers. This is to advise that the last half of taxes must be paid on. or before October 5, 1920. After that date, in­ terest at the rate Of one per cent will be charged on all amounts remaining unpaid. After November 5th, peldiy ’f 5 per cent will be added an* in­ terest will accrue at the rate it 12 per cent per annum. W. L. Campbell. Sheriff. Jiggling prices Is not our forte, as It Is with some. We don't try to take advant­ age of slack production, rising mar­ kets, abnormal demand, and tempor­ ary conditions. You can always be sure of rlgh prices and fair treat­ ment here. Bsvocean Sheet Metal Works. Firjl Street. TUbunook. O.egoa.