Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, January 12, 1922, Page 4, Image 4

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    words,
county of Cook
'Má . aMiAÎif WQrd
S. ‘ the
h* inland «oui
divides Holstein honora i and chara p-
lonships with the ocean shores ot
A WMkty
Tillamook with their eternal verdue
and natural dairy conditions.
When it comm to average produc­
tion, Mr. McCall not only leads the
state, but he has an average herd
production equaled by few breeders
in the United Btates.
When .the
Fare an warmer an Mister Charlie
figures below were complied, but a Vogler what opened up his bizness
short thW bnek, 14 heed
been nose his bizness the cheef sed cause
tested and the average for tire en­ he’s got a big lookin glass in it for
tire herd was 19,467 pounds ot milk the ladies to look an see are thare
and 649 pounds of tat or 810 pounds hats on strate an evrythink an to
of butter. Three of them were 8- powder thare nosea. Its a new place
year-oida, fire were 4-year-olds and to eat when you are good an hun-
gry. Cheep.
one was a 2-year-old.
Jim dash
Clothllde Hengerveld Washington,
Good nit£ I bet Mister Henry
Mr. McCall’s cow was grand champ­
ion at the Interstate fair at Prine­ Hannvnkratt la rich now with mun-
■ •••••yeeeeee
ney cause he «old his dary ranch for
ville Wash.
Florence Idella Sharp, the record I 23 thousand dollars an 3 5 hund­
sow, has no producing kin close up, red more to Mister Tenny. X milked
THE CONTENTED MAN HAS
but she goes back 10 times to DeKoi a cow wunot but I got it most on the
A HOME
2d, and Rose Bonheur is in her ground an the man with wus my
fother's cousin sed I aimed to milk
pedigree.
Many new houses are going up in
Another cow, Florence Soldnne, rite but I didn’t aim rite. It al nt
Tillamook since the advent of the
new year, and others are projected beginning as a senior yearling has a hard to milk a cow only its hard
In the minds of builders while still record of 19,045 ponuds of milk and when you try to lurn with both
hands.
others are considering the matter. 746 ponuds of butter in a year.
jim dash
Westernwold
ranch
is
the
name
While many of the new houses are
If you find a suite case wbats got
cheap in cost and construction, they Mr. McCall has given his farm or
will house the builders, and cut several hundred acres. Most of it is sum close for a lady in It wood yon
rent. With the cut in wages to com­ in a high state of cultivation, and please bring it in to our office cause
it belongs to a lady up to Myrtle
mon labor of all classes, the work­ on which he feeds numerous beef
ers cannot longer afford to pay hign cattle each year, besides producing creek an she wood give you | 25
dollers. My fother sed he gessed
rent, and rents, in most places do the hay and silage for his dairy.—
fcveiythink in it is silk cause $ 25
Oregon
Farmer.
not seem to have followed the cut In
dollers is a lot of money for close.
wages.
Many people however, are
jim dash
Portlanders After Steelheads
still waiting for lumber to be re­
Dora Drake is gone back to Dun­
duced In cost as well as some other
A party composed of Walter F.
Classes of building material. Before Backus, Louis J. Larson, C. L. Bigs- dee again to lurn edgacashun. She
the country gets settled conditions bee and S. B. Kelly of Portland, were
You didn’t see them cutting their
In social and community life, mater­
in the city the front part of the ads this year. You just simply saw
ial of all sorts must come down to a
week, on an angling trip for steel- them making their advertisements
level with the earning capacity ot
heads, Mr. Backus is widely known bigger, stronger, more intelligently
the worker, who is In the great ma­
as on'e of the best dry-fly casters In drawing.
jority. This applies to other com­
the United States, and is an enthus­
modities of general use, which e'eem
That’s why they are rich—John
iastic, all-around sportsman, The Wanamaker, for instance.
to stick and hang at a little below
the Trask,
war time prices. What the country fishermen tried out both
And mind this: The figuring and
and Wilson rivers, going well up.
needs are conditions that will allow
It is learned that they had good the principle involved takes no ac­
jill classes to prosper. Thousands
count of whether the advertising is
success.
of workmen do not own their homes,
done in wew York or Smithville.
and when they expend gll they
The
figuring is done on percentage
NOTES FOR SPORTSMEN
make in a bare living, the|r cannot
of people. The principle Is the same
be expected to get home«,
There
whether your business has been ac­
Do you know that:
should be a spirit of honesty be-
A soyote sometimes has as many customed to deal with 1,006 people
tween employer and workmen, The as 14 young to a litter.
around you or whether you have
man who works should give a good
Rainbow trout have been success­ been accustomed to <bea] with one
day’s work, and work to his em- fully planted and propagated in million people around you.
ployer's interest, and the employer New Zealand.
If yofi did a satisfactory business
should give fair wages and thus
The shad catch in North Carolina in a community of 1,000 in good
make it possible for the laborer to has
deceased
from 50,000,000 timeB you can do a reasonable good
get his own home. There Is nothing pounds in 1897 to 1,800,000 pounds business in poor times. When few
that so makes for good citiienshlp in 1929.
people have money, you must get a
as to have a home, and be able to
One Bobwhite quail at the Vir­ greater percentage of that few than
earn an honest living.
Therefore, ginia game farm laid 76 eggs in you got before of the many. You do
the relations between labor and cap­ 1921.
it by—
ital should be friendly, and square
Eighteen million dollars is asked
Advertising.
—Ex.
and honest, on both sides.
of congress for the enforcement of
ffvery workman in Tillamook the
eighteenth amendment and
Christian Church
should seek to get a home of his 6250,000 for enforcement of the mi­
The
Junior
choir will "hereafter
own. In some places in this state, ’#• gratory bird law.
meet at night. Parents are urged to
mill owners encourage such ambi­
A wild pigeon lays only two eggs
tion, by building cottages for their while a quail may lay as many as 22 bring their children to the Sunday
School. Preaching at 11:00 a.m. and
jjiCD, and giving them time to pay at one setting.
i
7:30 p.m. -each Sabbath.
I
for the honve, either in monthly in­
There are 15 species of upland
stallments or otherwise In the city I f birds in Oregon.
STATE DIVISION ENGINEER
Therg ar« no woodcocks west of
of Bend, Oregon, both of the lartf#
I
TAKES STOCK OF ROADS
mills pursue the above policy, and the Rocky mountains.
•
-
it works well for both parties and
The grisaly bear Is now extinct
W. D. Clark, state division engin­
the men are contented, and work for in Oregon.
eer for this district, is in the city,
their empoyer's Interest, and there
There are four national bird re­ looking over road conditions In this
is a harmony of interests that not serves in Oregon.
oounty with a view to cooperating
only helps both parties: but also
There are no national big game
with
the county in extensions dur­
builds up the town.
, • > -£• I lr reserves in Oregon.
ing this year. He accompanied mem­
• w
There are 28 Bpeclea of ducks and
bers of the county court Tuesday
seven species of geese found in Ore­
CROOK COUNTY HAS SOME
and Wednesday, and goes with them
FINE HOLSTEIN HERDS gon during the open hunting sason.
to NetartB today. Hie trip here is for
r
.
-
The antelope is the only hollow­
the purpose of getting a line-up on
Tillamook and Crook counties, horned animal that annually sheds
what the state will be asked to do in
Oregon, are about as opposite in its horns.
the matter of county road improve­
most particulars as two localities
Eighteen hundred and thirty-six
ments. and upon his recommenda­
can be, and yet these are the two permits were issued by the United
tions, will depend the amount of
counties in the state which vie for States department of agriculture for
state aid to the county. County
the honor of the state Holstein the scientific collection of migra-
Judg'e Mason and Commissioners Al-
record, as well as for the record herd tory birds in 1921.
average.
Tillamook is noted as a
Twenty-one hundred and thirty-
dairy county, but many people will nine propagation permits for migra-
still persist in considering Crook tory waterfowl were issued in 1921.
a county ot sagebrush and range
Fox farming is becoming an im­
cattle. It has the range stock, ail portant indu'.iry in the United
right, being one of the leading States.
of eastern or central Oregon In the
There are between 10,000 and 15,-
production beef besides having a 000 silver foxes raised in captivity
good many sheep.
But it 18 on Amrican fox farms at this time.
already a dairy county of some
note, and its development along
HOW SOME MEN DO IT
that line is rapid, especially since
the big Ochoco irrigation project
The business man who roils up
was added to those already in the bank accounts in bad times as well
county.
as In good times is the business man
The ranch of Henry McCall, 10 I who advertises all the time, but I
miles from Prineville, on Crooked harder and stronger than ever in
river in Crook county, ia noted far bad times.
That's because he
and wide as the home of a rvnmrk- TH1NK8.
|
able herd of Holsteina
Bsginning
His thinking tells him that when ,
where Holsteina were
scarcely times are good everybody has money |
known, Mr. McCall has given hie and it isn’t hard for his ad to reach
entire herd official records, and, not as many customers as he needs to
being entlrel y satisfied with the buy his stock ot goods—say 50 out
se«sn-day test, his cows are all put of evei» hundred people, or 50 per
oa full year testa This he considers cent.
the real measure of a eow's produc- I But e
times are bad perhaps
lag capacity and he Is as well satis­ only 56
e out of every hundred
fied as any Holstein enthusiast can «pend easily. He knows that where
be that the breed will give the best his average 'hdvertisement reached
account of itself when the full yekr 5o spenders out of the hundred In
test la made universal
good times, in bard times the same
Mr. McCall owns the cow which advertisement with the same reach­
holds the state record for butterfat ing power, will still roach 10 per |
production. This cow is Florence Id­ cent of the 50 spenders, or 35. But
alia Sharp, sad her record is 17,135 tbat's only half of what ho is accus­
pounds of milk and 916.8 pounds of tomed to and needs: now he must
h*ve all ar nearly all the 50 spenders
in order to equal his good times bus­
iness. So he girds up his ioins. fixes
up a bigger ad. s walloping attract­
ive ad. and if he doesn't reach all
ths 50 spender^ he comes pretty
nsar to It.
That is ths system of ths biggest,
shiswdsat advertisers in America
A”
(Continued from Page One)
The regulations of the Depart­
ment prescribe that persons desiring
rural delivery service shall provide
and erect at thejr own expense box­
es conforming td' official specifica­
tions and requirements, and that
boxes shall, if practicable, be erect­
ed on the right-hand side of the road
regularly traveled by a rural carrier
and in such position as to be easily
and safely accessible for the deliv­
ery and collection of mail by the
carrer without leaving his convey­
ance. It is required by the Depart­
ment when, because of traffic condi­
tions, to travel from side to Bide of
the road would endanger the lite or
the carrier and the safety of the
malle, or would be in violation of
State and local ordinances in respect
to the nse of the highways, that all
boxes be erected on the right-hand
side of the road as regularly travel­
ed by the cantier.
“Carriers ara directed to make re­
port to postmasters of any 'boxes
which do not conform to the regu­
lations, or which are improperly
erected, and postmasters are reqiiir-
ed to notify patrons maintaining the,
boxes to remedy ths defects, and it
the patrons fail to do so, to make re­
port thereof to the Department. In
this event the facts are reviewed,
and If such action la found to be
warranted, instructions are issued
tor (he wi(h<^rawal of qervlce until
"the requirements are. compiled with.
irj/'An observance an. the part of
patrons of the regulations noted
above is essential to an expeditious <
and efficient service, and you are re­
quested to cooperate in an effort to >
maintain the best possible service ■
by promptly correcting the irregu- ■
larity in your box as Indicated by
the item or items checked below,
thus facilitating the work of the
carrier and avoiding any .interrup­
tion in the delivery and collection of ’
your mail.”
sum ».-wv
nfoe ar-
preaunts wild
she wus
i I got —
hhv CUC
"Ud
fabnse to ware an candy also.
jlm dash
Mister Stork wus up visiting Mis­
ter Lee Cooper to see thare new
baby I gess wlch is jess a girl. I
gsss it cries all the time cause girls
they dont ast for what they want
they jess cry an get it to keep peece
in the fambly my fother sed.
jlm dash
Susie Colsun what went up to
Salem to visits sura relashuns for
Christmusa is back ages.
Jim dash
Presbyterian Church
Mister Church sed now 1« the
Sunday
School—10:00 a.m. Morn--
time to get your Ufe inshu rance
lng Worship—11:00 a.m. Subject,
wile you are a live so your wife
“In the Hollow of His Hand.” Even­
cood get dressed up like a lady. All
ing Worship—7:30 P.m. Subject,.
you got to do is pay him about 3 25
"Prodigal Sons.” All are welcome.
dollers a yeer an when you die your
ALLAN A. McREA, Minister.
wife oood get a new dress he sed.
jim dash
I ast Mister Worrell up to, the
C. W. Jensen of Beaver was in
hotel did he no sum fresh news an
the city last Saturday.
he sed well Georg thare are plenty
of fresh guys whats drummers here
but I cant reed thare names on the
£OOaOOaOOOOOOQMOOOOQCOOOOOOQOOOOC>OC»aoe>*90C*9QOGOOOQ<
register cause they rite by ear an
the only way you cood tell who are
they is to lissen wile they are ritin
I gess. Mister Worrel is popler with
On Prices At
the travelin public also my fother
8ed-I
t
WAR
WAR
-WAR
Tillamook Furniture Co
ley and Farmer form the local party,
together with County Surveyor
Coates and Roadmas&r John Car­
rol.
, .,..
The Court had its road and other
policies pretty well mapped out to­
wards the close of the last year, but
he damage done to roads and bridg­
es by the flood, caused them to
change the program. The Court is
now working out a new program for
the year, and these trips will have
to do with future calculations.
New Prices
Old Prices
$65.00 48 in. Oak Extension Table and Six Chairs. -- $56.50
-........ — 14.25
18.00 Simmons Old Ivory Bed... ........
• 975 45-lb. Cotton Felt Mattress ....... ............ -..... — 9.25
9.50 Three-quarters 40-lb. Cotton Mattress ...... — 8.50
15.50 2-in. Con. Post Bed ........................ .................. — 12.50
26.50 No. 22 Mission Heater ______ __ -...... ........ — 21.50
18.00 No. 22 Holley Heater ................ .......... ......... — 15.00
16.50 No. 18 Fern Heater ............. ......... .................. — 14.25
Prices cut 10 percent to 25 percent, other bat gains at this
store.
We are located on 1st Street across from Long Dist. Tel.
Exchange.
MESSERSMITH BROS. Props.
Tel. 73W.
»W 6 0 0 00000»
OBITUARY
Grace May Blum was born at
Hemlock, Oregon, Oct., 28, 1916,
and died January 4, 1922. aged 5
years, 2 months and 6 days. Deceas­
ed is survived by her father and
mother, four sisters and three broth­
ers, a grandfather, grandmother and
a'host of friends, who mourn her de­
parture.
Funeral services were held at the
Tillamook United Brethren church.
Bev. J. E. Fry officiating, with in-
tqrmept in the Odd Fellows ceme-
tery.
She was a bright and lovable
child, a sunbeam in her home and
at school, where teacher and pupils
loved her. We do not mourn without
hope, as we will meet her again in
that country where there Is no
death. Four young girls, Ethel Dye,
Mildred Shoemaker, Rose Mitchell,
and Eunice Hall were pallbearers.
The Lord has given, the Lord has
tagen away. Blessed be the name of
th* Lord.—(Contributed.)
luJ iQiTJufi!
J
NATURES
OWN
FOOD
«
A
Milk is nature’s own food.
Easily digested and »on-
tains in proper proportion
bhe elements necessary for
the proper growth and de­
velopment of the body. It
should have first place in the
diet of every child and a
large place in the diet of ev­
ery individual.
Get more real nourish­
ment at less cost by buying
more milk. Order Golden
Rod Dairy Clarified milk.
Its Clean.
• --
Last Friday several Carlton Ore­
gonians took advantage of the snow
and hitched their horse to the old
bob-sleds for a real sleigh ride. Mr.
and Mrs. W. D. Pierson were among
them, an<J picked our family up en
route. They all aeemed to enjoy the
outing and were even heard compli­
menting the weathr man.—Carlton
Sentinel.
GOLDEN ROD DAIRY
Bell 6F13 or Mutual
25251 c'
New
Arrivals
*
at
The Satisfaction Store
Fine Brick Codfish
25c per lb.
Fancy Boneless Codfish
35c per lb.
Smoked Herring
40c and 50c per box
Fancy Holland Herring
$1.45 per keg
AlaskaHerring, very fine, 10 lb. kits,
...So. 35
Alaska Herring in bulk
20c each, 2 for 35c
Good sour Pickles
Si.95 Per keg
Nice Petite Prunes
$1.75 per 95-lb box
Fancay Italian Prunes
15c per box
X
There have been ao late advances in groceries:
Sugar, Butter, Cream of Wheat, Buckwheat ’Flour,
Corn Meal and some kinds of feed are cheaper than
they have been for a long time
All our prices are on a cash basis; you can do
; well here as at any other store -n Tillamook.
E. G. ANDERSON
.-J
i