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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1920)
THURSDAY, NOV. 4, 1920 TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT 7 ’ « Page Five Gem Theatre Special Programs .. ’ "■Rl ■" *——**—— '«ftysfoi FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5-6 I TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9 DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS SURE IT’S DOUG The Crown Prince in the Kingdom of Fun in a United Ar tists’production that upsets the Army of Glooms with a laugh ter barrage that will make your sides ache VIOLA DANA/VBLACKMA1L VIOLA DANA - ------------------------- 1N--------------------------- Blackmail” It’s new and origin al in story and ac tion. Far from any thing that has been attempted before. 1 À ONE REEL Pollard Comedy Adults 25c “THE MOLLYCODDLE Children 15c * •MESPOT’ OIL NOT DEVELOPED FOR SALE Golden Rod Dairy Farm ---------------- ------------------------------- Owing to business opportunity open to me in Tillamook City I offer my farm, located one mile directly south from Tillamook, and all stock and farm implements, for sale. RESIDENCE—New eight room cottage, nicely finished, built-in buffet, white Dutch kitchen, best white plumbing, laundry tubs, electric wash er installed and included. Concrete foundations, septic tank. BARN—Modern new barn, cement floors and foundations, liquid tank equipped with pump and engine for operating, hauling tank, twenty four stalls. Equk»ped with three unit (one man outfit) Sharpies milker operated by electnc motor, feed cutter.. Both house and barn have electric lighting and Tillamook City water. Sleeping shed for milch cows, and machine shed. ALL FARM MACHINERY including tractor and plow, and other equip ment. EIGHTEEN HEAP COWS, three heifers and bull. Included are three pure bred guernseys and two pure bred Holsteins. Two of the guern seys were recently imported from Island of Guernsey. A number of cows are recently fresh, insuring a good income all winter. Hay and root3. One driving or saddle horse. FARM CONSISTS OF TWENTY-FIVE ACRES best Trask River bottom. • nearly all has been plowed or can be plowed. About four acres partial ly cleared. I PRICE $29.000. $11.000 cash, terms on balance. be fully appreciated. Necessity for Importing Foreign Labor Is a Bar to Investment of Capital. Mesopotamia Is a rich field for oil, but the only wells In operation are a few sunk before the war by the Arabs. Not that the British need the Mcso- potaminn wells at present; they have more than they can use. But they are not even prospecting for It, nor are they allowing two r<rreeentatives of a famous oil company o< our own to prospect, though the American oil comes in by Ablaidan and Is sold at sometnmg less than the Pers'an oil. One reason atncug many why big capitalists are not received here with open arms when they come forward with some big scheme for the country ; Is that they generally begin by say ing: “We must import labor.” Now the labor difficulty is serious here. Arabs are not very keen on get ting much work out of themselves. The Kurd coolies seem to be the only ones that take to work and keep at it. One sees them carrying the most un believable burdens. Recently I saw a Kurd carrying a piano on his back, followed by an assistant who was steadying It. but not helping other wise. But the Arnbs are willing to let the Kurds do it. During the war labor was so scarce that to keep going with their railroads and their lfrigatlon scheme's tlie British hnd to Import In dians.—Maud Radford Warren in the ) Saturday Evening Post. TRIAL JURY IN JAPAN j Anglo-Saxon Plan Will Be Accepted, by Government In Revising Their Civil Code. i 1 i Must be inspected to Erwin Harrison BY ■ ' I I ' The Japanese government Is plan ning a revision of Its civil code, and among the changes contemplated Is the Introduction of the Jnry system. To the Anglo-Saxon, who regards the jury system with more than usual pride as a thing of his own fashioning the news Is singularly gratifying, for. taken on the whole, the Anglo-Saxon jury prob ably deals out ax much Justice ax any other form of trial, remarks the North China Herald. There have been mis takes; quite as many ns the trial hy Judge alone has committed. possibly more. But when a numlier of men sit In Judgment, aided by the dire«- tlons of a Judge, their verdict Is not so often wrong ns to condemn the sys tem. Trial by Jury, ax we understand It. entails the onus of proof resting upon the prosecution, the Innocence of the defendant assumed until the of fense Is proved, and the ditty for the Jury of “passing between otir sover eign lord the king and the prisoner ar the bar." It frequently Imparts that qnallty of humanity Into the proceed Ings which enable« the rendition of truer Justice than the law often per rnlts. and on thot wore alone baa hi»- I Iron and Stool Work In India. India has already laid the basis of a steel industry in the establishment of two Important and »aoceHsful Iron and steel works; namely, the Bengal Iron and Steel works at Kultl, which turns out 100.000 tons of pig Iron per month, and tbe Tata Iron and Steel works at Snkchl, about 156 mils« from Calcutta, which I > m a monthly production of about 30.000 tons. Most of this pig Iron Is converted late steel, which lx largely used locally In the production of rails and the smaller structural shapes, but even with the additional furnace« now under construction, which In the case of the Tata works will more than triple Its previous ca pacity, not more than a fraction of India's needs of Iron and steel will lie supplied from these two works. PLAY, TO BEAT FATHER TIME New York Physician's Advice to Thoe« Mrs. Frank Pllnksky and her two Who May Be Conscious of ths small daughters left Friday morning Passing Years. for Albany where she will visit for Don’t grow old—or rather, though law. you grow old as far ns years are son- ceraed, do not get old otherwise. It Is easy to stay young, according to Dr. I»uis R. Weilz.mlller. physical di rector of West Side Y. M. C. A. He avers that most iteople grow old be cause they cense doing young things; not because they need new glands. “A man Is young," said the doctor, “because he plays; he doesn’t play be cause he Is young. He Is tbe product of bls own actions. The old man who sits down after dinner, grouchy because the children mtlke a noise, has already ‘passed on.’ He ought to be Oslerized. All be Is worth to the family is the puy check he brings home. % “But look at mother, who plays games with tbe children, sympathizes with them In their troubles and lias a part In all they do. She remains flexible; she hasn't hud time to grow old. "It is dangerous for some men to retire from business. You know the kind who work nt high tension for long years, doing nothing but strive for money. They get it und then an nounce their retirement; a little later you read a nice obituary saying what a success they had made. They hadn't. “To keep young one must <k> young things. Don’t be dignified to piay baseball, old cat. leapfrog or other lively things which keep the muscle« In trim. Have young associates ami be ■ hoy with them. S;iend time each day studying to be young. Fish, hunt, golf, if you like it, and don't cry quits the first time a muscle twinges; get Into the game harder and go to tbe gym to work out the HChe, or play with the kids until yon forget It. "Take youth with you as yon go toward tlie old age. You can lead Father Time a merry race by thinking young, playing young and keeping physically fit.”—New York Sun. East Holds Rubber Supremacy. Until ten years ago rubber meant rubber from Brazil. Today Brazil’s supremacy Is gone. In less than a : decade the far east has ,|um|>ed to the ! front and now is producing nine-tenths I of the rubber of the world. In the | late sixties. Just when the first experi ments with the automobile were under way, an Englishman. H. A. Wickham, who hnd spent much time In Brazil. ' conceived the Idea that rubber plants i could be grown on plantations. Securing a commission from the In- | tils government he boxed up thousands ! of seeds, chartered a derelict ship up , ! the Amazon, and started for India. The first tree« grew at Heneratgoda I 1 In IWI1. and that same year the first experiments in tapping began. i “ ’ It Sure Helped. Eight-year-old Raymond cam« from a small village to visit In Indlanapo- I Ils the other day. In the village there ! wax no water works and Raymond 1 watered the flowers with a sprlnk- I ling can. Neither did they have a i bathroom at home. And he eyed It , and the xhoweT It contained with won- i1 der. Finally he made his comments to j 1 his uncle, who wax very tall. | “No wonder you all grow so big ' here In Indlnnhpolls,” he said. "Why. Food Plentiful in the Wood«. i y< have that big sprinkling can In It Is said Daniel Boone could take the bathroom so that you can water i his rifle und a Img of salt and live yourself all the time." In comfort on what the woods pro vided. Several men on wagers have Potatoes UMd as Currency. gone Into tlie forest virtually naked Potatoes are now used a» the stand and worked out a living and suitable ard currency In certain remote agri- , clothing equipment. According to foresters of the New cultoral districts of Poland, since the i value of the potato fluctuates less | York State College of Forestry at than that of paper money. In the Syracuse. It Is still possible to find In district around Grodno, for Instance the forests of the state, even without the American Red Cross reports, all tbe use of the game which is so care rhe local help employed In warehous fully protected, sufficient food to make ing or In the activities of the Held life not only possible but pleasant, units lx remunerated In a weekly wage sr.ys the New York Evening Sun. This forest food supply Is dlvkled of potatoes. Into several groups snrh ns fruits, nit»«, herbs, roots and vegetable*. And Lost: a Gent's black gauntlet driving this rtwlees no allowance for the types glove. Monday night somewhere of edible mn-hrooms, for a spee'.al • nn-vlei'^e of varieties M neoe^-ary on thn F4» 4 • • • • !•» ■ ,« m I bv if'" I* O -« LOCAL NEWS •• f Paul Burke and Oren Burke left about two weeks with her mother-in- Friday for Spokane where they will work for a time. George Strozut of Milott, North Da kota, was here over night Thursday on business. Henry Burke left Friday for Ida ho where he expects to make his home. Mrs. Jemima Kirk and nelce, Miss A. Hughes, of Oregon City, returned to their home Friday ufter having pussed a couple of weeks with friends and relatives. Mrs. Des Brlsay left morning for her home in after having spent a few with her son-in-law and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Helsel. Saturday Portland, days here daughter, Mrs. M. E. Olden left for Portland Saturday, where she expects to ra- maln the greater part of the win’er. MI hh Rosa Bartchy, of Roy, return- to her home on Monday, after having spent three months here working. Dr. Smith reports the birth of a boy to Mr. and Mrs. Dave Krake, on the 28th of October and a hoy to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shaw on the 29th. Mrs. Graqt Thayer and children left Sunday for Portland, where they expect to remain for soma time. A marriage license was issued to Fred Travis and Rebecca Barcette, on the 30th of October. Ray Hammond was arrested Mon day charged with unlawfully operat ing an automobile. R. G. Holden, of Portland, return ed home Wednesday after having been here a day or so on a business Albert Maroif left Wednesday for Portland, where he will visit for i week or so. Miss Cecilia Llnggi, who has boon here for several months, Is visiting at her former home In Tacoma, Wash., for a few weeks. She I' ft Wednesday. T. M. Jordan, traveling agent f r the Chicago, Northwest railroad, i. is in Tillamook for a few days busiim.s this week. Mr. and Mis. J. B. Smith, of Kan sas, who are touring the coast states, were Tillamook visitors this wenk. They were pleased with this pert of the country, the rain not bothering thnm » hit, thay «aid