Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, March 11, 1915, Image 3

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

    Tillamoolc Headlight,
Xlarch II, IÖI5
historical institution often gives out | knew that sound sleep, a clear con­ "It’s a Lonj Way to Woman Suf-
Frage.”
sound advice but this statement is, science and plenty of good plain food
The county jail is taxed to its ut­ we believe, unsound and perhaps make for long life.
(Tune—Tipperary.)
“I never had time to eat lobsters or
most capacity. And the Lord only harmful because it makes it appear
knows what day another batch may that the average man should not par­ w..tch ladies in pink tights with Wall Not long ago to Washington some
suffrage ladies went.
arrive from
Indepcndertfce.—Dallas ticipate in public affairs. Mr. Hadley street brokers.
Observer.
would keep the average young man I “Sound business methods do not “We need advice,” they whispered,
“so we’ll see the President!”
out of the things in which he should» mean crooked methods. I never ask
English ships in the Irish sea are participate to protect his interests. more than 6 per cent for my loans "Women do not want to vote, except
a chosen few.
flying the Irish flag, and having once The carrying out of his argument to and very often less, but 1 am mighty
But we’ll scare the politicians, an
put it up we shudder to think what its logical deduction would give us a careful of every cent.
we’ll put this matter through!”
will happen if they try to take it class government, which is false in a
"It’s all poppycock about a woman’s
(Chorus.)
down with an Irishman on board.— democracy like ours. Our belief is feminish hurting her in business.
Telephone Register.
that the country needs more men in
“A woman's head is as good as a. It's a long.way to worn n suffrage.
It’s a long way to go.
politics, but not more office-seekers. man’s any day if she plays the tant ■
“It's an ill wind that blows no Men are needed in politics, men with the way he does and forget the frills." Also to cotialisms and other i
know.
good.” Our "frau” has developed in­ or without independent means in
Stand firm politicians,
to a pretty good news hustler during order to make and keep the govern­
Congressional Union for Woman
B<- careful what you do!
the two weeks we have been wrestl­ ment truly democratic.—Telephone
Suffrage.
When women are holding office
ing with the grippe, and now that we Register.
t
They'll have no use for von.
have found out that fact we’ll have
Miss Emma Wold, of Portland
her keep at it.—Jefferson Review.
The Historian will write that Ger­ Oregon, Chairman of the Susan B. East to the Atlantic, came a West
ner one day,
------o------
many’s downfall was due less to her A. nthony Memorial Fund of the Con-
It is suggested that the safe and inability to cope with her enemies in giessional Union for Woman Suf- j “Why don't you folks have suffrage
here and give the girls their say?
lock companies are not finding busi­ battle than to her powerlessness to frage, is sending out an appeal calling
ness so good in Oregon now, as Gov­ held her own against them in diplo­ all good Oregon folk to contribute . It works so well in Utah, an in old
Wyoming State,
ernor Withycombe is not issuing macy. The beginning of the war generously to the fund in memory of
many pardons, and the citizens in the found Germany fully equipped for the brave pioneer whose birthday we You’d best give in," he shouted,
prepare to meet your fate!"
state feel more secure from the crim­ the contest site courted; well provis­ celebrate this month. The fund is to
(Chorus.)
inal element.—Harney County News. ioned; with great stores of munitions, I be used in the work for the passage I
and with the raw material for their of the Anthony National Amendment It's a long way to woman suffrage,
It’s a long way to go.
Governor Withvcombe would hav manufacture; armed cap-a-pie; bold, I which will free millions of unenfran­
I
Also to cosialisms and other isms w
an awful hard time if he tried to sat- confident, and arrogant; strong in chised women in the United States.
know,
isfy the Journal and his predecessor everything but friends. In a short I Miss Wold says, “We will remem­
Good-bye, Home and Mother,
in office. Fortunately he realizes fully period before the outbreak of histili- ber how Susan B. Anthony came out
Farewell children too.
that the voters who placed him at the ties, th-re were published in Ger­ , from the East and worked with us fo-
head of the state government picked many several hundred books on war, our political freedom, feel it our priv­ When women are holding office
They’ll have no use for you.
him because he disagreed so complet­ and none on diplomacy. This prob­ ilege and duty to join with our unen­
ely and consistently with the policies able accounts for the terrible isola­ franchised sisters of the other states
of the Journal and ex-Governor West. tion of Germany which, in her ex­ in their struggle for freedom.”
A Kansas paper hands out the fol­
He is wise in acting on this kno%- tremity, is deserted by all but that I Miss Wold was president of the lowing: Early to bed and early to rise
burned child, Austria-Hungary, and College Equal Suffrage League dur­ cut the weeds and swat the flies, mind
ledge.—News Times
the feeble, futile Turk.
Germany’s ing the states suffrage campaign. She your own business and tell no li^.
------ o-----
Instead of
governmental farms great blunder of the war, next in dis­ is now deeply interested in this work pay your debts, use enterprise and
credit system, the individual states astrous consequence to the disorderly for National Suffrage and as a mem­ buy from the one who advertises.—
could do vastly more good for them- retreat from the environs oí Paris, ber of the Congressional Union is Greenfield (Iowa) Free Press.
selves by providing for cheaper mon­ was acceptance of Turkey’s dangerous working for the passage of this Susan
In view of the difficulty of getting
ey. Cheap money is the fount that aid. To Germany Turkey neutral was B. Anthony National Amendment. the various states to enact uniform
makes the brook of industry flow a thousand times more serviceable This amendment was introduced by legislation on commercial subjects,
and without it the homeless farmer than Turkey on Germany’s side. In­ Susan
B. Anthony in 1875, an<l Representative Porter’s campaign for
can hardly hope for a home or the deed, Germany would have been through the efforts of the Congres­ such uniformity in dealing with the
manufacturing industry hope to pros- much better off with the Turk fight­ sional Union was brought to a vote criminal insane will likely be a .tild
per. It is estimated that the farmers ing against her, for then the Porte in the Senate on March 19, I9>4. an<l goose chase.
of the United States owe $5,000,000,- might have preserved the integrity of in the House January 12, 1915. for the
Mr. Taft’s advocacy of a national
000 and so cheap money will mean the Dardanells, which the allies are i first time in history. It lost in the
university is not new. It was urged
millions of dollars in savings to the now forcing, and through which we Senate by only 11 votes. It is again
on Congress by President Wa.sbit.g-
may soon expect to see Russia pour­ I on the Senate calander awaiting ac­
farmer.—Astorian.
ton. He also left a legacy fo.- its en­
------o------
ing her hordes of fresh levies.—Spec­ tion. The Congressional Union is the
dowment in his will, together -villi an
Portland has passed an ordinance tator.
only organization that is concentrat­ argument in favor of educating the
providing for a uniform wage for un­
ing on the Susan B. Anthony Amend­ youth in America instead of sending
Hard on Our Neighbors.
skilled labor on city work of $3 per
ment at this time.
them to Europe. The great state uni­
day and a daily newspaper paints a
It numbers among its members versities and the richly endowed tltii-
reseate picture of the happylot of the
From the Coos Bay Times we se- such prominent citizens as Mrs. T. T. versities under private manager ent
men fortunate enough to work for lect at random some chioce gems re- Geer, wife of ex-Governor Geer, Miss
have removed the chief necessity, as
the city and draw the high pay. But lating to the citizens of that locality. Frances Gotchall, publisher of the
seen by Washington, but there is still
it maintains an oppressive silence
The editor of that paper must be a first suffrage paper printed in Ore­ need for a system of standarization
concerning the unskilled workmen brave man, we know that had we any gon with Mrs. Abigail Scott Duniway
such as Mr. Taft proposes with his
not in the city’s employ, who must cause to say these things about our as editor, Mrs. Mary E. Nolan, phil­ usual force and clearness.
pay an increased price for city im­ people, that we would feel the neces­ anthropist, Mrs. James Karr, promi­
provements and whose tax will be sity of wearing a coat of armor, Here nent in educational work, Mrs. Alva
increased in order that the select few are a few of them:
I Lee Stephens, Vice-President of the
$100 Reward $100.
may enjoy the advantage of short
The reach A of till, paper will In­
In the bright dictionary of some Parent-Teacher Association, Mrs. L.
to learn that there is al leant one t
hours and big pay.—Hillsboro Inde­ Coos Bay youths there is no such W. Therkelscn, Press Chairman of disease that M-ience has been able to cure >
all its stages, and that is Catarrh
Hili'
pendent.
word as work.
the State Equal Suffrage Association, Catarrh
Cure Is the Only positive cure now
In after years when the Coos Bay Dr. Lillian Baker and Dr. Florence known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
being a constitutional disease, requires a
The frightful experience connected woman wants to take the conceit out Manion, prominent physicians, Mrs. constitutional
treatment.
Hall's Catarrh
is taken internally, actinic directly upon
with the present war can best be of her husband she digs up an old Maud Richards, well known teacher Cure
the blood and mucous surfaces of the system,
judged, when one considers the latest letter he wrote her during their of Portland, and many other women thereby destroying the foundation of the
disease, and giving the patient strength In
report of the English prime minister courtship
building up the constitution and assisting
of note.
The
nature in doing its work. “
■*" proprietor.
—
in an address to the house of com­
.............. power*
Every head of a Coos Bay house-
have so much faith In its curative
that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any
mons. He stated that by the first day hold would like to have his wife wor-
Man Who Didn't Succeed.
case that it fails to cure, Send for list of
of April ’he combined armies and ry about him, but she seldom docs
testimonials.
Address II. S. CHBNBY At CO., Teledo
navy of England would cost the peo­
The average Coos Bay man thinks They sing of men who build the mills Ohio.
Sold
by Druggists. 75c.
ple the enormous sum of eight and a he is many notches above the average And girdle the earth with steel:
Take Hall's Family Pills for coqstliiation
half million dollars per day. Think of man.
Who fill the hour and wield the pow­
these stupendous figures, then add to
er
Many Coos Bay people could earn a
them the vast amounts needed by the living writing if the magazines would That molds the publis weal.
other combatants, all of which must pay for hard luck stories.
Honor to them that in honor do
EAT VIERECK’S
eventually be paid by the survivors
Some Coos Bay men are such The work that the world must need,
of the awful carnage, through years gloomy nuisances that they should be And yet in chief I hold a brief
BREAD,
to come.—Umpqua Valley News.
classed as pestimists rather than pes­ For the man who didn’t succeed.
------ o —
‘1 is not to excuse the indolent:
simists.
TILLAMOOK BAKERY,
An English judge, in deciding a suit
Some Coos Bay men talk to amuse No plea for the down and out;
between two parties over the owner­ others, but the women talk to amuse Nor specious rot condemning what
ship of fragments of shells picked up themselves.
The leaders are about.
on the streets of Hartlepool after the
Coos Bay people are like a box of Merely to ask in a casual way
recent bombardment by the German apples—all are not good and only a Of those who chance to read,
fleet, said that any one was a fool to few arc near perfect.
For fairer view, and kinder, too,
place any value on them as souvenircs
Some Coos Bay men dividt their Of the man who didn’t succeed.
He added that if the Germans paid time between being mc5n to their His house is small, his table light;
another visit to the place that there wives and nice to other women.— His family must endure
would in all possibility be so many of Umpqua Valley News.
The snubs and sneers of the bucca
the fragments to be had, that no one
neers
would bother about them. Consider­
Whose doubts fall on the poor.
The World's Richest Wurm.
ing the renewed activity of the Ger­
Yet his is a home and no hotel.
man fleet, the vigor with which they
His wife is a wife, indeed.
There is not one woman in Tilla­ There's nothing above his children*!
conduct such bombardments, it would
seem that the English judge is a man mook, if she was the richest woman in
love
of keen preception and sound judg­ the world, who would live the same as To the man who didn't sue eed.
Mrs. Hatty Green. No doubt this Admitting it’s true that he did not
ment.—Umpqua Valley News.
w oman is a conundrum to most wom­
make
Some day the farmers may wake up en.
The most of his talents ten,
Mrs. Hetty Greert is living in a He won no pelfs nor raised himself
to the fact that all the fun he has
been having going for the railroads comfortable little room just off the At the cost of his fcllown\en.
and other great corporations is com­ butler's pantry in a brownstone house His hands are clean, his heart is white
ing home to root right on his own in East Sixty-second street, near His honor has been his creed—
farm. Every tendency of tjie co-call- Madison Avenue, N. Y.
Now who are we to say that he
A single cot, one straight backed Is the man who didn't succeed?
ed tax reformers is toward higher as­
sessments on land and tow-ard the chair and a high, old fashioned bu­
—Peter Reed, in New York Post.
single land tax. It is hard to make reau complete the furnishings. The
the farmer understand that after all room is heated by a small oil stove.
President Shaughnessy of the Cana­
Mrs. Green consented to an inter­
the hullabaloo of years, the trusts
re­ dian Pacific Railroad is quoted as say­
1
that have been “dissolved are not on­ view, in the course of which she
ly making money out of it but they : vealed her ideas of women’s dress, ing that some persons estimate the
t
are assuming all the costs back upon I morals and business. Some of her additional wheat acreage under crop
in Western Canada as high "as 40 per
the consumer. It is a nice endless statements follow:
chain, this scheme of "taxing the > “A girl has a hard time being decent cent, but speaking conservatively, J
r»— —-
should say we could safely count on a
on $6 a week.
•U« —
other fellow," and the only man
20
or
25
per
cent
increase
in
acreage,
“
A
young
girl
is
the
prettiest
thing
can escape is he who has no taxes to
with the problem of buy ng Herren*
find it distinctly Hflvunte-
pay and who neither eats nor wears in the world. It makes me sick to see ( and this ought to produce a record , z yon will
.
.1 I
....... ..
t_ <
" It would be too much to ex- t geous to
come and
<!o your
select
is - a “dead
clothes. That man L
---- one.
- ”— her beauty spoiled by silly dressing I crop.
__ here.
'
You will get the best
pect
such
a
gain
in
the
United
States,
ing
[ and a makeup that screams for notice
,
..
. St
i 1 it i<*H the m int thorough and
Mt. Angel Times.
qualities,
wherever she goes. Every girl should I but it is very evident that if cl'malic » conscientious workmanship und be
—O------
VIIUICI WHO |Z,
W I favorable,
W.V.WW.WJ the wheat
— charged the mist reasonable price«.
prove
“No man under present conditions, have pretty clothes, if she can afford ’ V conditions
We can nupply «ingle or double
I
crop
of
T915
is
going
to
be
a
btimper.
has a right to go into politics unless them.
Sets or any single article that you
'
It
will
be
all
needed,
too,
though
not,
“I've outlived our executors and six
he has independent means, recently
may tie in need of.
1
j we trust, at the altitudinous pricer
said President Hadley, of ) ale I ni- doctors who gave me less than a year
versity. The learned leader of that to live. 1 turned the trick because 1 now prevailing.
State Press Flashlights.
I
EMPIRE MILKING
MACHINES
See me and I Will prove it
Printing Point Does Not
Bob Up and Down
In an L. C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter
the point on the paper which is to receive the
type impression is stationary at the instant the
type hits. The carriage does not bob up and
down when the shift is made to write capitals.
Why?
,
«Because the type is shifted—not the carriage.
The only movement of the carriage is back and
forth on its closely adjusted ball bearing runways—
and this does not take place while the print is being
made. There is no lifting of the carriage.
This is one reason why L. C. Smith & Bros, type­
writing is free from blurs and every letter in the right
place.
Ask for demonstration
L. C. Smith Ô? Bros. Typewriter Co
Han» Off.« .nd Factory l SYRACUSE. N. Y.
T' i
Bä
1 ui 1
; ? i
Some of the Reasons Why
A Perfect R her - nl-Molyt My ¿rpsndabl«, every day, year in,
year ouU
out. Built
Buiit on honor, of th«
the best
beat rnatoriali.
material*.
Outwears Three Ordinary Ranges
77 !• nnly ronnt made entirely of charcoal and malleable iron,
l.'iallcab.a non < o.i t break charcoal iron won' t ruet like tteel.
Economical In Fuel
Ths
<»’ the Majettlc rro riveted (not put together with
I ».13 ;rid toys |.utty)—they will w/ouoi a remain air tinht,
h ¡.u. ’j 1 .Lber beat nor cold aflects them. The Majeetia
h t il tl»roi rhout W’tb pur«
hoard,
1.1 .J ’ 1 plat..» by an open iron i/rntinu
you canaeoit —anti
i‘ • j ,
(.ro r.lwa: i. A-,r tight joint* and pure r * her tot
l»nii>g aa i-re a.i evvD bakniR h> at, *uvini/ «»ne-half the iu«!«
/ 11
drop to fo 1» r-vid shelve».
eprinae.
MaUeobh iron oven rache e I.U o out automatically, bold«
in-/ whatever they contain.
•
A 15 Wall. Ma
Lamp
iW.A, Williams & Cc.^
Portland, Ore
305 O k st
11?2 Great'
lAUBSTI©
Charcoal and Malleable Iron
I in m J
with
<
Pur«
Alberto«
Boa id
Mado of
Charcoal
Iron,
addin*
3CO% to
life of
Range
I» r.A' Lost
CO»” ' »
nc«t«r/o'»
W'l L ©CVt
YOU
WAll*
Fnftre T«»p
L>oor* ar.d
Frame«
made of
Malleable
(an tbreak
—Snr n/<
r««>rvnir r/h.Vh F
I í V a a
(hrou 'h tb
r H- r I • krt I t.tni’p 4 nwi ■ n j ji . •> of coprir, uotting
t>
I • t I .mri finir e nf fire ‘» <. !t I h -
I*» frelon* of ’• ator in * v«rry
f< ff i. in to»» arid by tumult a lover the fr«jn»t anti rwrvoir rrr
a^ayin '
A n ■ •• •-’u.jv-«* nt« .! Af. •/« »<<.' ’ritir'. f/fruirt.l
iifh part do»-4 awn/ with » »ov«i igf a .lie* mmfOatvii tub
pi# prevents floor from ratr* njfrc •»»*cvfrea,«,he«t»t e®.
A ilt ua to j / o / w you the grvutvtt
you
to hurt • Ufo
'• or you'll bo fir»' to bw »Mu­
nir store, and
the <7r«w«
tany exclusive foaturea ex-
I't in» 1 finti out why the *./<>/«--//r ia «*•<>$ R’rotu» /
th : all t-’hrr rnnirm» vmrre r»t«mt rangea are wear Mt.
, i. f ,»■. < tt
at a-«/ pr.cu aad it al. oUd
be ia iuwr
■>,
FOR SALE BY
ALEX. McNAIR & CO.