Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, March 17, 1921, Page 6, Image 6

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    THURSDAY, ÎÎARRCH 17, 1921.
PAGE STY
TREAT GANCES
Declinefef More Than Five Billion
Shown in 1920.
t
„
WOJiEN AND PROSPERTY
HOW does Oregon’s prosperity depend upon the women ? Be-
ause the women do 90 per cent of the buying’ and when they
i sist upon Oregon-made products they help keep Oregon’s pay
io s gomg, and, therefore, Oregon's prosperity growing.
Women not only do the greater part of the spending, bu.
irom those ‘nationalized’ accounts at the First, we know they
do a lot of the SAVING too.
DIRECTORS
John Morgan
W. J. Riechers.
A. W. Bunn
B. C. Lamb.
Henry Rogers
C. J. Edwards.
C. A. McGhee
'ThefTrst National
Younghusbid Gets Permit to
Scale Mcnt Everest, “Roof
of he World.”
Corn Letts th» List With $1,662,000,-
000—ijr,
In Crop» Show Gain in
V^ue, Orange» Leading.
Important D scovery Is Made by
Professor at Harvard Uni­
versity.
i
Washii itton.—The value of farm
crops of fib
1020 and of the farm ani­
idici uud animals sold and
MAN mal products
slaughters, os finally determined by
X.^
the burea^ ot crop estimates. Cnited Experiments i”
No Europen Has Ever Approached States Department of Agriculture. Is i
i
“ Ray. of0»”- Pe,,e,ratin8
$UhB66.00O|XM) or $5.105,000,000 below
Nearer Thn Sixty Miles From Its
the total of 1019. The drop is almost
Rly
Thm Ever Before.
Base an Few Travelers Have
Power Than tve
entirely confiaed to crops, among
Seen Its Upper Slopes.
which the chief declines In value are:
plseoverles
Mans'-
C.“nl|brliniliaiu Duane, professor "f
New York—Mount Everest, the Corn, $1.662,000.000; cotton lint and
wheat. $854.000,- ,Uade L a Harvard, working in
Himalayan p-ak called "the roof of seed, $1,300,000,000;
Id, $325,000,000; biopn.'dfs a
rest.urch studeuts
the world,” vhlcb Sir Francis Voiv •• ■XM> • bay. •’
and oats, $161,-
c;"
wade “ ,"’ssil,lt'’n<-
.Harvard physicists, to se-
is many as ten
C^ XrtV- of more penetrating qual-
chief of which !............. ..
■i of $32,000.000,
XMI.OOO. Other
I.
>>"> •«
ge, $11,000,000;
sorghum cane
000.000. Small
„up»..«», .."VS w
beans, «ugur- '““X
•
and sirup, and I-rofessor Duane that neither
,ho.M » » '*'1 *
<e products of „
• gained $223,-
..... ■«»;
le comparison [STS S
dlum has a marked alle ‘Htlve effect
agnlnst losses, upon tlds disease.
Ictlon In 1020
The Harvard cance commission is
«10, while only erecting i new biflldng adjoining the
the total of ! < Tills 1'. HuntlngtC Hospital in Bos­
md farm ani- ton. where an X-rX Pl«“‘ 'vil1 b« l?’
>d. The wool »tailed, as well -«s the commission s
zed, but it is
Of the ani- radium plant.
What 'iscovery Means.
d, the decline
' $223,000,000,
The sign#**1“® of tbe tllscover’r
000. But on was explaiud >» the following state-
ccount, dairy I meat at latvard.
XX), and poul-
..The dvantage of X-rays over ra­
duced, $160.- dium I that the ,atter 18 scarce anJ
i„,rie cly expensive, costing at pres­
the upward ent more than $100.000 a gram, and
ts of prices,
therefore, only be used In small
products lag ,puntitles.
If X-rays were used It
I was the lag could be possible to make the rays
and animal enormously more powerful than has
■ount of thej been possible with the limited amount
e prices of of radium available.
od of tirin'.
“The trouble with the use of X-
! of 11*20 I»
rays up to this time lias been that
per ceDt of
m product!» they are not as penetrating as the
.
Of smcalled Gamma rays of radium and
the problem of the Harvard physicists
has been to secure this .needed qual-
Ity.
“It was known that to secure pene-
tration It was necessary to secure a
IATS
high frequency of Vibration. The
Harvard physicists, after many ex-
periments, found that a physical law
known as the ‘quantum law’ applied
to the X-ray spectrum, and discovered
that they could increase the frequency
of the rays and thus their penetra­
tion. by Increasing the voltage of cur­
rent used in the X-ra.v tube.
HAS ADVANTAGE OVER RAD:U
NEVER ÏÎ SCALED BY
by lue «Hurts
oriveu out "•
wave there lire
to suppreb i " .iUd as stowaways on
fleeing to
-
British mariner».
Bnt,Shm ‘n Md a magistrate here
one cal
been dl8COVere<J
7.-01 ,dl Ainnrd ships that sailed
DR. J. G. TURNER
Eye Specialist
Permanently located to Tillamook
Private office in Jenkin’s jewelry
store. Latest up-to-date lnstru-
ments and equipment. Evenings
and Sunday by appointment.
1„ p. rutor im“me trip were sentenced
to pn.v a tine of $100 each or serve one
B1..uth in prison.___________
G.SN GOBS ARE DIET
GF HUNGRY CHINESE
Complete Lens Grinding Factory
on the Premises. Any lens dupli-
•
cated.
X.
(
BARRICK & HALL
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Oregon Nurse Writes That
Misery Stalks Through
North China.
National Building
Tillamook. Oregon
X,
That a steady diet of ground up corn
cobs and sweet potato vines is not
conducive to an ideal physic.il condi­
tion is attested by Miss Marie Ru=tiu,
graduate nurse, well known in Oregon,
who is now in charge of the Taylor
■
Memorial hospital, under the manage­
ment of the American Presbyterian
mission at Paotingfu, China.
In a letter written by Miss Rustin
less than eight weeks ago to the mem­
bers of the Sangrael Christian En­
deavor society of the First Presbyter­
ian church in Portland, Miss Rustin
tells of tbe appalling conditions
throughout North China, where 45,-
OOC.COO men, women and children are
confronted with starvation and where
15,000 are dying daily. Miss Rustin
h; ■ been at Paotingfu for about three
yf ■ rs and for many months past, like
all other mission attaches and relief
wo: ■kers in China, has been concentrat-
ing all efforts on the task of lessening
the suffering of the famine victims.
While Paotingfu is on the outskirts
of the great drouth-ruined famine dis­
trict, just south of Pekin, Miss Rustin
writes that even there all the missions
and relief stations are literally swamp­
ed with the supplicatiops of many
thousand men, women and children
who are half-clad in thin rags, weak
from undernourishment and struggling
desperately to keep alive on root»,
bark or anything that offers susten­
ance. The situation in the heart of
the famine section, she says, is simply
beyond the imagination.
“We are doing all we can,” writes
Miss Rustin, "here in our hospital try­
ing to build up the weakened bodies
of famine sufferers who come to us
in frightful condition. We are getting
patients who have been trying to live
on ground-up corn cobs and sweet po­
tato vines. We have all been asked
to give until it hurts, and now that it
has grown so cold we do not dare to
think of freezing, starving thousands
right at our door. In going to a soup
kitchen where we feed 670 people
twice a day, I was surrounded so by
the poor creatures that I thought they
would crush the life out of me before
Gets Enough Voltage.
I could get in and coming out it was
“I*rofessor Duane reports that the the same way. They are so hungry
tube goes to pieces under a voltage of end cold they are desperate. Person­
more than 150.000 volts, but that a ally I have gone without $3 worth of
*•"*•*•*
■k.—«, l -- ,
mijk a month that I used to use,
.... ; ..¿l <•_.
at an ano nave I
tnined to make the A-rnys ver.v
as effective for certain medical pur­ eaten bread once a day for the last
poses as the Gamma rays of radium. three months, In order to give to the
“Long continued exposure to X- famine poor. Through this personal
mys Is so dangerous to the operator sacrifice I have the joy of knowing that
that the greatest pains Lave to be three girls who might have been sold ,
taken to protect 1dm from them. In : have been saved from a life of shame
the JefTer»on physical laboratory at I and misery and that one man will be
Harvard. where
Professor Duane kept alive for five months.
“A friend sent me a eheck the other
makes his experiments, the X-ray
plant is kept in a loom by itself and day and I was able to save a girl from i
th« rays are sent out through a mi­ being told and she will be put in
I
nute slit In the wall. Tlie brick wall school. Things are being started to
at this point Is reinforced with lend help th?se pour souls, but there is ;
and a lend screen is placed across the long, hard pull until the harvest time
door. Many experltnentors In various You c.-i all help by giving to th
places have been killed or seriously , China famine fund and share in the
i great opportunities of saving life and
injured by constant use of X-rays.”
opening the way for Christianity, to-
, the Chinese people will surely be in
BRITISH MASONRY GROWING terested in what we have to tell them ;
of the gospel if we are good to them
Report of United Grand Lodge Show» now in their great trouble.”
State Manager J. J. Handsaker, In j
Big Increase of Lodges
charge of the executive work for Ore
in 1920.
gon for the combined China-Near i
e /,**-96’—J*“** **■**’'
as many East campaign, 606 Stock Exchange I
In
*** W,r* »■»«tilted In 1920 building, Portland, says the situation
minions ' wl&dJh“’e P"rt’ of ,he <1(- is no less serious in the near east the -
Lodge of England,
t,Grand in China, and liberal funds must be
In any of the previouSJ^S,llctlon 89 raised for both causes if wholesale
death by' starvation is to be prevented,
Ing to a report Just made]mnr"X„ cr even lessened.
Similar Increases were announced b^
Scottish and Irish Grand Lodges and
Chapters.
Freemasons Hall, the craft s Lon-
POUR INTO JAPAN
'»on hindquarters, has become too
small for the demands upon it and
Practlca">
the return from India of the Duke of
' A.rordlng War
to Tok
Ommaught. the Grand Master. Is
Papv.
awaited for the completion of a big
Tokyo.—German residents i»
extensios. sihenm Including a new
Masonic Temple and offices to be country are steadily Increasing „
erected a.« a memorial to members “witheYflma'”r>~. As com!
who fell In tlie war.
las
pre-war days the number
IMs MU ’
P^tically double(1
~N
DR. O. L. HOHLFELD
VETERINARIAN
Z‘ I"-«»
lubricatio;
Tillamook, Oregon
Z
--------------------------------------------------- -- X
Dr. J. E. Shearer Dr. A. C. Crank
Drs. Shearer and Crank
MEDICINE & SURGERY
National Building
Tillamook, Oregon
I
(
R. T. BOALS M. D.
Surgeon and Physician
I. O. O. F. Building
TILAMOOK, OREGON
7
X.
Tillamook Stage Line
CADILLAC CARS
Leaves Tillamook Daily at 8:0 (/ a .M.
..eaves Portland (Hoyt Hotel) daily
at 8:30 A. M.
Makes connections with Rockaway
Stage Line.
Cars are wann and comfortable.
Help Furnished Free
To Employers of Labor
By the
PIONEER
EMPLOYMENT CO.
The Oldest Office in Oregon
Headquarters for
Farm, Dairy, ynn. Logging
and office help of all kinds.
Phone Bdg. 2272
14 N Second St. Portland, Or.
. .' .. ’fer#
STANDARD (XL COMPANY
(CALIFORNIA)
r
FMI
EROI
*- 1 Vvl LLIll
ehuuiiu
■thmus
:e most
treniely
K dally
notably
racefu1
'n», ¿J
For Culverts
Well Lining and Droning
Purposes Use
CEMENT PIPE
ÎIRTS
*• Alec
- All Sizes’ Manufactured By
Both Phones
M .•<
iMWe»
forbid-
to Irta I
H im «
127.R
om $M
o nt»1
At last ac-
tiwirvu- at. l.xii
Try a
Headlight Classified
• » Mate 1
campati and eomfortabla b»i
«
' ■): beaullfal.
0E*MANS
wsrdtai foand ttea ardor Bar«»
nan*««
m h<sn, STOWAWAYS GO TO ENGLAND
C It «
t»*n I» ’ F xwid an Every Cunarder From New
rank <h
York Recently, Say Brit­
<r Ur»-,
4*ed b«
E, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL
ish Marinara.
Most of the newcomors are employed
tXhnMatle*x ”rraS BS ‘■■'«'neers or
rethnldans. According to the same an
wonh,moT;t?,*,DlCal’ an"
worth more than 10.000,600 yen have
^imported from Germany kc»
Southampton. Bugiami — Crtmin.i.
MutualPhone
Bell Phone 2F3.
Sformy Days*
'
donTworry the man
,.^7/ who works in a
ReFlex
SMjSIlcker
¡ J Hehasltiebesb
iookfof waterproof
^îrmentmade
lOWEBj
°°STON MAis
-
'triBuM©
rytm-WHi*'
-
Foley’s
Honey and Tar
COMPOUND
TO TAKE. «d
•octb« the raw, inflcmcd surfaces; step«
thrnj!aspu,?-' s,raJn«!in« feel'ni in the ‘
«t . H ft ” ?’ade °* ,he Pure”.
*” and finest ingredient« to be had, con­
tain» no opiates or other harmful drugs,
and costs twice as much to make as
any imitation of it.
.... ,E’erY U«* • Friend
? Honey BDd T,r '• recom-
tickling of the throat, spasmodic croun
COU<h’ ,,<rippe •od »»roachtoi
woouoot
BOOUOO
LAON»
’ I I) A
W V’VfcXjc
AUO TEXT'S
Eveiybody reads
Headlight ads.
Tillaniock Eakuy
The home
f)f ao< d bread
H«'d ail kinds of tinepaatry
Everything Strictly
Sanitary
OUS. VOCLEJt, Pn.