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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1922)
and equipped at cost of $27,000; road work will represent expendi INDUSTRIAL REVIEW j ture of over $100.000. Portland shipped 20.000.000 lbs. Hood River.—109 cars apples1 wool to Atlantic seaboard by water. shipped the past week. Portland Odd Fellows plan to lamath FaKlls.—$150,000 approp erect $200,000 temple. riated by Congress to tight Pine beetle pets that is destroying forests Jewish order plans $100,000 edu of Oregon. cational institution. OREGON WEEKLY Reedsport.—Factory here ship Linn county asks that only prop ping large output ready-made gar erty owners vote on bond issues. age doors. I Multnomah county deficit pearly Baker county tax roll reduced half a million. $10,000. Union Pacific Co. placing orders Linn county game licenses cost for $10,000,000 new freight cars. $7,966 in 1921. Pres. J. D. Brown of Farmers' Lakeview pushing shorter road to Union, State Organizer Stallard of Klamath Falls, to cost $90,000. Non-Partisan League and M. J. Brown of Oregon City to publish Lincoln county suing for $90,000 weekly paper in Oregon. taxes due on spruce timber. Elkhorn.-—Renewed activities in Wendling—55 men working in development of Crown Mining and logging camp above here. Milling Co. to open up in early spring. Mine to be placed on paying State narcotics conference paving basis. way for institutions for dopesters. Portland Telegram to erect three- Eugene.—Local packing company story home. sees bright future; doing $200,000 business annually. Model state farm commission has spent 153,335 fitting up three farms. Salem's fire loss for 1921 was $152,000.17, the heaviest in 19 McMinnville college is now Lin years. field college with a $250,000 endow ment. One hundred and thirty-three mills reporting to West Coast Lum- Astoria Baptists start work on berman's Assn, for th'e weekending $30.000 church. Jan. 7th, manufactured 66,187,169 feet of lumber; sold 48,434,919 Canby—Shacks being moved to feet; and shipped 59,174,397 feet. make room for two-story concrete Forty per cent of the week’s ship building. ments moved by water. Oregon City—American Legion to Astoria—Knights of erect club house. build $40,000 temple. Pythias COUNTY WANTS BIDS TO CLEAR BIGHT OF WAY FOR ROAD The county has advertised for bids to clear the right of way be tween Manhattan and Haddon, on the new beach road to be completed this year. The distance is 3,300 feet. So soon as bids are aciepted, and the right of way cleared, the county will begin the work of building the new road to Brighton, which is north of Haddon. With the road completed to Brighton, this beacn road should be the popular route to Nehalem, and Seaside, and the ad- dition of this long needed stretch of thoroughfare, will tend to popular- ize the beach towns to the south of Manhattan, including the later. HINTS FOR TAXPAYERS FIL ING INCOME TAX RETURNS Taxpayers who filed Income re turns last year need not write for blanks for making their returns this year. The necessary blanks for making 1921 returns will be mailed by Clyde G. Huntley, Collector of In ternal Revenue, to every person who filed last year, as soon as these blanks are received from Washing ton, probably about February 1st. Don’t forget that if you are un married and had a net income of $1,000 or more during the year 1921 you are required to file an Income tax return in the office of Clyde G. Huntley, Collector of Internal Rev enue, not later than March 15, 1922. Failure to do so makes the delin quent taxpayer liable to heavy pen alties. This also applies to single persons claiming exemption as head of a family. to Although the new income tax law increases from $2,000 to $2,500 the Grants Pass—The Cave Highway exemption of a married person Toledo.—Prospect for 1322 very brighl ; new school to erected now rapidly nearing completion. whose net income for 1921 aggre gated $2,000 and did - not exceed $5,000, every married person must file an income tax return if his net income was only $2,000. It the net income of a married person last year was in excess of $5,000, he is allow- ed an exemption of only $2,000. ELECTRI March 15, 1922 is the last day for filing these returns. The law pro- vides heavy penalties for those who fall to fibe by that time. The Biggest IMPROVEMENT ' Yet Made In Milking Machine For compactness, simplicity and rollability the Porfootlon Elootrlo Mllkor has no equal. You can In stall It In an hour. Any farm eloo- trlc light plant runs It. No piping to buy or Install, no gas engine to bother with, no lino shaft to put up, no bolts to buy. Just stretch the wire os bio over the cows for the power unit to run on, fasten up tno rool for the extension eord, plug Into a lamp socket, turn the button and milk. Nothing to got out of erdar. The teat cups, the quality aluminum pall and the “Nature’s Way” milking notion are the same In the Perfection ■ loctrlo as In the old reliable Per fection Mllkor. The Porfootlon electric will save money for you. THURSDAY, JANUARY 19 THE TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT PAGE TWO “Don’t forget to distinguish be- tween net and gross income in mak ing out 1921 income tax returns,” advises Clyde G. Huntley, Collector of Internal Revenue. “Every tax payer who had a net income of $2,000 or a gross Income of $5.000. regardless of the net income, must file a return. This is very im portant and tire taxpayer must gov ern himself accordingly or he will be liable to heavy penalties. These returns must be filed not later than March 15, 1922.” 0. A. C. Jerseys, Front Eight cows, half-sisters sired by Maple Park Chief, an O. A. C. sta tion registered Jersey, have com pleted their first-calf records fclth an average yield of 8278 pounds milk and 44-.4 pounds butterfat per year at 2% years of age. The dams of these cows were all aired by Golden Glows Chief and averaged 555.4 pounds of fat at 5 years. These yields are equivalent on a mature basis to 574.7 pounds fat for the mothers and 603.3 pounds for the daughters—a gain of 7 per cent in one generation. Fruit Cannera Helped Northwest fruit canners and pack ers have a chance to attend the first canners school ever offered in the north Pacific district, beginning January 30 and ending February 24. This is a service course designed to take the college horticultural prod ucts section, the first and oldest in the United States, to the canner. How to control organisms in fruit and vegetable products, their rela tion to ripening and preserving, bac teria in food preservation, and other problems fundamental to the can ning industry, will be explained in the light of recent investigation by the college experiment station. Ad justment and repair of seaming ma chines w‘ll be in charge oí a repres entative of the American Can com pany. ttlcClaven Coast Highway Seems Probable That the route from Dallas to Tillamook may be made a part of the state highway system in the near future is . borne out by an- nouncenrent made by the hlghway commission this week that it had or dered a survey to be made from the corner of the farm of County Com missioner Ezra E. Hart on the Salt Creek road, and following grades wTiich will cut out several long hills and many dangerous curves on the present road. Some time ago Chairman Booth, of the highway commission, expressed himself as favorable to including the Salt Creek road in the state’s ”sec- ondary highway” program. If the new road is built It will not only ve a great benefit to Dallas, but will be a great saving to residents jf Sa lem and other valley points in get ting to ana from the many beaches la Tillamook county. Autocrat Cord built for mileage HE massive tread, sturdy and properly dis tributed—the McClaren “Mileage Strip”, a broad, continuous band of solid rubber running through the center of the tread and entirely around the tire —the Double Grip Groove, preventing skid ding and skid wear—all these are special features of the McClaren Autocrat Cord Tire that insure greatest mileage. T I I I True tire economy lies in getting the most miles per dollar of cost. Come in arid let us show you how the McClaren Autocrat Cord will give you new tire satisfaction in longer life and more mileage. Every individual who had a net income of $1,000 or more during 1921, if single, or If married and not living with husband or wife, must file an income tax return with Clyde G. Huntley, Collector of Internal Revenue, not later than March 15, 1922. Sold by BROWN'S SERVICE STATION FARM REMINDERS Como and see It work. Tillamook Metal Works Spring seeding for pasture may be done at this time, A good mixture for well drained lands of western Oregon is English rye grass 6 pounds, Kentucky blue grass 3 pounds, meadow fescue 3 pounds, and white clover 1 pound..—O. A. C. Experiment station. Letters come to the plant patholo gy department each year from farm ers who have lost their peach crop because of peach leaf curl. This dis ease can easily be controlled with one thorough spraying with Bor deaux 8-6-50 applied before tire buds swell. It is best to choose a bright day in January for this work. —O. A. C. Experiment station. Rastern Oregon fcrmers reseeding •elds of partially frozen out wheat should s«e spring varieties as nearly similar to the partial stand as pos sible. Federation, hard federation, and Baart are good to sow with forty fold. Marquis and even Hybrid 121 may be used in reseeding Turkey red. Hybrid 143 is a good variety te use in reseeding white elubs of the winter habit.—O. A. C. Experiment station. Fnslt trees that are allowed to grow thick and bushy from lack ol proper pruning cannot well be thoroughly sprayed. See that the spring pruning leaves the trees thinned out enough to admit an abundance of air and sunlight as thia practice will rend to prevent the development of diseases and will make the regular spraying more ef fective. —®. A. C. ■xperlment sta tion. ANNOUNCES the arrival of the NEW SPRING MILLINER Y • • and invités you to call r a - r i i 'a t ? n Wooly aph's on fruit trees can best b - controlled by spraying with a combination of lime-sulphur and miscible oil applied in late winter. Regular dormant strength llme-snl- tur. 12 to 100, la need, to which la added 2 gallons of heavy miscible oil to each 100 Ballon« of dilute spray, The oil should ba diluted with an equal quantity of water, while agl-1 tated vigorously. The oil emulsion is then added slowly to the spray mix-1 turn when the tank Is nearly full ! and while the water le well agitated. I Choose a period of clear settled weather tor the application e< the spray MISS PATTERSON t i t'