Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, March 24, 1921, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    =
THE TILL AMPO!! HEADLIGHT
*
■ 'yr**-?
-------------------------------------------------
-
RICH FORSAKE
FIFTH AVENUE
DR. J. G. TURNER
Eye Specialist
Permanently located In Tillamook
Private office in Jenkin's jewelry
store. Latest up-to-date instru­
ments and equipment. Evenings
and Surday by appointment.
Tradesmen Steadily Break Exclu­
siveness of Noted Residence
District of New York.
Complete Lens Grinding Factory
on the Premises. Any lens dupli­
cated.
“A
BARRICK & HALL
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Advertising Is The Key
To Bigger Business
MRS. VANDERBILT LEADS WAY
X.
Z"
THURSDAY, MARCH fr
New Exclusive District Expected to
Spring Up in Section Where Near­
Slums Existed Before—Long
Fight for District.
National Building
New York.—Stealthy but steady ad­
vances by tradesmen, covering a period
of more than twenty years, have vir­
X.
y
tually broken the residential exclusive­
'----------- ~------------------ ------ -------------------- X ness of Fifth avenue, known the world
over as the home precinct of the Van­
DR. o L. HOHLFELD derbilts,
Carnegie«, Harrimans, Plants,
Fricks and other wealthy families.
VETERINARIAN
Qne by one mansions which housed
international personage« and gave to
Bell Phone 2F2.
MutualPhono
Fifth avenue much of its glitter and
fame are surreoiltvring to commercial
Tillamook, Oregon
enterprise, and the rich are seeking
y
homes in new “exclusive’' parts of the
city.
Real estate men, wbo have
watched with Interest this aggression
Dr. J. E. Shearer Dr. A. C. Crank
of trade, say that another decade will
have wiped out the last Mt of residen­
Drs. Shearer and Crank
tial exclusiveness In the avenue.
MEDICINE & SURGERY
Tillamook. Oregon
V
.
c---------------
*
Mrs. Vanderbilt Moves.
National Building
ARDLY thirty-five years
ago, newspapers adver­
tisements were so com­
monplace, so lacking in inter­
est-compelling features that to­
day they would scarcely attract
attention. Certainly they would
sell very little merchandise.
H
The change tn Fifth avenue was re-
fleeted In the recent purchase of prop­
Tillamook, Oregon
X_______________________________________
y erty bordering the East river at Fifty­
eighth street by Mrs. William K. Van­
Z~------------------------------------ — “X derbilt. Sr., when1 site intends to build
a home in a section known as Sutton
R. T. BOALS M. D.
square. This trit of property is direct­
ly across from Blackwell's island,
Surgeon and Physician
where a city iwison Is located, and is
I. O. O. F. Building
almost underneath the Manhattan ap­
proach to the Queensborough bridge.
TILAMOOK, OREGON
Real estate men expect that Mrs. Van­
derbilt’s migration to tbe East river
X.
will mean n new exclusive district In
n part of tlie city where neur-slutns
existed before.
-Mrs. Vanderbilt, who a few years
back helped to make Fifth avenue his­
CADILLAC CARS
tory with her lirllllant social activities,
said when she purchased the East
river property that Fifth avenue had
Leaves Tillamook Dnlly at 8:00 A..VI. “lost its residential atmosphere, which
« ns Its most valuable charm." Traffic
-■eaves Portland (Hoyt Hotel) daily and crowds, resulting from the trade
Invasion, she said, had taken awny Its
at 8:30 A. M.
Milkes connect ions with Rockaway exclusiveness.
Stage Line.
Wage Fight for District.
The fight to “save" Fifth avenue has
Cars are warm and comfortable.
been waged since the late nineties,
« hen real estate men began to get op­
tions on property near the mngnlticent
mansions. Members of the Vanderbilt
family and others owning homes there
expended millions of dollars in buying
To Employers of Iaibor
up property In an effort to stem the
By the
tide.
Much of this property was purchased
at exorbitant figures, and after a lapse
of years has fallen back for business
use. Hotels, blinking houses, jewelry
stores, millinery and tine tailoring es­
The Oldest Office In Oregon
tablishments have gradually crept
Headquarters for
northward along the thoroughfare.
• Farm, Dairy. Mill, Logging
The home which Mrs. Vanderbilt is
and office help of ull kinds.
forsaking nt Fifth avenue and Fifty-
Phone Bdg. 2272
second street «III become the site of a
11 N Second St. Portland, Or.
trust company. Its sale was made pos-
slide as the result of the disith of Mr.
Vanderbilt In I’lirls, «lien the house
owned by Ills estnte, was sold to the
highest bidder. The first actual break
In the Vanderbilt holdings came when
Gen. Cornelius Vnnderhllt lensed ills
doritworry the man
home nt Fifth avenue and Fifty-fourth
k -; who works in a
street to n shoe firm.
The residence of the lute Henry
Frick, steel magnate, will eventually
go to the city for use ns n museum.
They were set in uniform
sizes of type—no display lines
to catch the reader’s eye. They
were not illustrated and con­
tained no interesting news fea­
ture, as do the really good
modern advertisements.
Tillamook Stage Line
But in 1880, the first great
advance was made byan eastern
store which has grown to be
one of the greatest in America.
At first the advertisements
were small, but, as they de­
veloped the business, larger
space was used. Gradually the
full column was reached. Then
the double-column, and. finally,
the entire page was recpiired,
for the daily advertisements of
a single store.
Help Furnished Free
PIONEER
EMPLOYMENT CO
Today^ advertising can be cl
known quality, whereas onlv a
few years ago it was purely a
matter of guessing.
MISTAKEN notion has
long existed in the minds
of many people (and does
still in some) to the effect that
the merchant who advertises
must charge more for his goods
or sell au inferior quality. It
is claimed that lie must get a
larger profit in order to pay for
his advertising.
Contrary to this false belief,
the advertiser is able to sell
cheaper than the man who does
not advertise. And the reason
for that fact is quite simple.
The advertiser sells many
more times the amount of
goods that the other sells. That
is an undeniable fact. Accord­
ingly he gets back his invested
money so much sooner and is
enabled to reinvestit again and
again, \.hile the other turns his
money over only once or twice
in the same time.
Thus the
advertiser can
afford to do business on a
smaller margin of profit and
make more than his non-adver­
tising competitor.
Every business man knows
that tpiick turnovers are the
way to successful business. And
good advertising || bring the
quick turnovers.
I
;
tbriny
?flsh
Brand
4
1
ReFlex
Slicker
p b He has lhe best-
'iookfor waterproof
r T’I m
AJ.TOWERCQ
1 5-MZ1Z ; X a ,¿ X j ö
'
¿> irr T1 c , it lnd ^ e
ff
S braito
rvr*vw*r»f
'
Z<M<
Foley’s
Honey and Tar
COMPOUND
IS PlI ASANf TO TAKE, and
»x.otlx the ruw, inliamed auriacca: alopa
the rasping, «Irnngnng feeling in the
thro i. Il ia made of the purest, fresh*
<»t »nd hural ingredients to be hud, con­
tain. no opialra or other harmful drugs,
and cost» twist nt much to make aa
any itmiahuti id It.
-
Every User a Friend
"Mi litils bo, had a saver« atfacb at crone
•nd I hon.all • fteheve hr would have died it it
ti.d not hrralnr Foies a It on I-v and T.l. Twa
a..«« I.lirvrd him and ho went to .'r.o and
• ulivibl. ilnun.'.a
Maa W It. Thornton.
3W3 W lOih Si . lir.la H.-k, Ark
I am in my *>s
-nth year amt I wan
troubla.l with a IK k
aii'i.iv throat I am very
t lad Io tall ym, that I '. o’. Hr. av nod Tai l.aa
atooed Ihm. "-G.O F R..... tab. tOarlon. N.«,
.Foley’s Honey and Tai it re,cm- ‘
■Smiled lor coughs, colds, h-arr area,
tickling«t the thrml, epas.nodic croup,
vrliooprsg cough, lugnppe aud bronchia)
«ought.
.
*-
TERROR DREAM KILLS VOICE
Family Near Death. Farmer Visions
Fatal Crashv-Becomes Mute and
Hair Turns White.
r
I
t J".
THE CIRCULATION
THE HEADLIGHT COVERS
TÏLLAK00K COUNTY LIKE A BLANKET.
Olinwa, town, A total loss of speech
followed a dream tn which II M Jes­
sen, a farmer, dreamed that he saw
• Ills wife and cblldron mangled under
an ovexturned automobile.
Jessen and |,ti family had planned
»
;<>
an automobile trip to Sioux City. De­
t
tained by farm chores, he followed the
i
i.
ear by train and arrived In Sioux City
before Ills family did. Sitting in the
lobby of n hotel, lie dreamed of the
tatO.t accident.
Awakening. he frantically waved
V
his nrnis and opened and closed Ills
mouth, Imt could not speak. Wien ills
family arrived they said their car had
•dulled on a North Western track, and
n train camo within a few Inches (>f upskilled labor in all departments,
: '
sheriff to return the money collected
the car before It stopfH'd, narrmvl) requesting their concurrence lu n
lot ¡under the bicycle tax law. which h
averting u fatal crash.
minimum wage of 30 cents per hour is termed the "southern district.”
Jessen appears to have been strick­
been declared unconstitutional.
en permanently deaf, and his hair has in southern territory, somewhat high­
er
turned white.
' rates to he established in other
THIRTY YEARS AGO
rones where conditions ju-• ■ lfy.such
Found a ^u'e for Indigestion.
Miners Earn $5 000 a Year.
reduction to become effective April (From Headlight of March 20. 1891 ).
"I upc Chamberlain's Stomach and
, Çurtllff. Wok «. S- u,. .
mimn. 16th. April 7th is the date set in là?
A. L. Aiderman will piyt.on a stage Liver Tablets for indigestion and fin,i
notice
for
the
hearing
of
any
):ne
shorty from Garibaldi to Neha] « they suit nty case better than any dys
com-
a, st....Mr**
.1*
via
the
beach.
plaints
or
suggestions
that
may
pepsin remedy 1 have ever tried and
t
Ing to C.fWrt uni »i.niio arp fK|rfv
Th steam cchooner Rosie Oisd i. 1 have used many different medicines
mon.
Ihmpite this, the government made by the individual employes Or
iS h.iylnxdltlieult,. in .•nlle,.(|,1g i„,.,H',gi their representatives. The notice >r. formerly of this place, h is gone In' J am nearly fifty-one years of i -■
ps follow»;
commission as a sealer and nt last o
t
V-ï.À!J,V'U
and have suffered a great deal from
.............
- -w— «->. w
;
or (I .-tn wtjv summoned
counts was at San Francisco fitting indigestion. I can eat almost any­
♦ t
“Effective April 16. 1921. this
"t Tl-'h i>tiMi . nt, Imt ntih- jo
out for a pouching cruise in Berln,- thing I want to now," writes George
numbar were is«>mitti¿ t’ò mitm '
Company proposes to make reaaonabl’
»«a- ,
’
W. Emory, Rock Mills, Ala. The.---
reduction In the rates of pay of corn
I Tiier® is soni® talk of moving tlv tablets contain no pepsin but streng­
uion or unskilled labor in all depart­
5»ven Life Sentence.
1. 0. O. F. Oemetary to a higher *bd then the stomach and enable it to di
\\ hcrlfiic, W. Va.—j.lfe Imprison ments. In fixing new rates there wiV
nmnt m .- is the énonce ptissvil upon be taken into consideration decree­ Hrii-r location farther away from th gest the food naturally.
|
a voar-otd Samuel Rlevenx for ing cost of living, character of work city
Onion Peak
Mr. Kinney of Astor­
of Little Rock. Ark, In court
etc., as well as wage* Paid for »initial
The Pneumonia Month
(tier the boy had pletuksf guilty
ia has an expert coal man prospe.
Match li a typical pneimiem
barge of toi”M«r. The lad wm work In outside industries.
ing the coal fields of Nebhlem. '
month and usually gives a high ra'-
si nr bnvlm kllle’ C F Grand­
“Rettdi'sl Is therefor made for your
Orcton
La-*t week Mr. Paei* rfr*.
ft ear Inap, or, u, ., slm
near
of mortality for the disease. After
cofteihrence in minimum of 30 cents map currier, in company with ‘
I
per hour in southern territory, effec­ Eilis of Grand Ronde. overlook and n long and hard ytnter, bn -y stem
tive as above, somewhat higher rites captured two California tuurderei'i lose» much of its resistance and- pee
When every cold
to be established in local ft les or zones They qultely gave up their arms and pie’ grow careless
Souf -in Pacifi Compaaj
no matter how slight, is given prompt
where
condili^
stlfy.
then began their return trip In charge
Ann J ce» Redl
Waget
and inteHigent attention, there
co are any ob.lectlutts. of the sheriff
much less danger of pneumonia. It
J H. Dyer. G neral Mi r
-
fuisday. h April 7th. 1931,1» tr.e dati
should be borne In mind that -pneu­
Southern Pm iflc Camp:.
today or­ set for earings of any complaints or
Twenty Yean Ago
monia Is a germ desease and breeds
dered a notice faxted informing all suftaealiona of eiter individual em­
i From Headlight of March Id, 1901) in the throat. Chamberlain's Cough
employee co <cernod that tlic Company ployes or teir duly appointed repn-
The electric light (onijkiuy is pir Remedy is an expectorant and clean«
proposed tn take reasonable reduc­ X ntatlves.and sue meeting to take
ting in pole» »nd making errang
out the germ ladened mucus and not
tions in the rates of pay of common or place In the general offices of thik
nients
to
Ijght
the
residency
portion
only cures a cold but prevents It ra-
■ -—■■
■------------- - -
.
*______
Company In Nan Francisco."
of the city with eleeiric lights
sultfng In pneumonia. It is pleasant
Approximately 10.000 employ»« ari
We »ntiee that eo'me of th# county to* fake. Children take it willingly,
affected by the announcement. The courts in Oregon’ have directed thj
Adv.
Green Stockings?
¡
"b
a
You may be Sure*
says the Good Judge
A
That you are getting full
value for your money
when you use this class of
tobacco.
The good, rich, real to­
bacco taste lasts so long,
you don’t need a fresh
chew nearly as often—nor
do you need so big a chew
as you did with the ordi-
* nary kind.
Any man who has used the
Real Tobacco Chew will
tell you that.
Put up in two styles
W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco
RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco
'A'- . -..i-,
|Tiy a
noany. 1
ZiGàdligìit Classified