Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, January 20, 1916, Image 4

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    TLLAMOOK HEADLIGHT JANUARY 20. 1916
ELAND B. ERWIN,
1 J
A TEMPERANCE DRINK.
To be Manufactured by the Weinhart
Co. and Sold in T ilum°ok.
•
o------
Rather than close down their great
plant al Portland, the Weinharo Co.
have retained their men and are man­
ufacturing a new temperance drink in
strict conformance with the Oregon
prohibition law.
Golden and Amber Nectar is made
of Oregon Hops and barley and con­
tains vital strength-giving qualities
which will make it a lavoritc through
out the state. It took many monttis
of experiment and research to bring
this new product up to its present
state of perfection Mr. Henry Wes-
singer, ol the Wcinhard plant, took a
great pride in creating them. His
identity with business interests tn
Oregon for so many years prompted
the desire to keep the Vvcinhardt
plant in operation after January 1st
and to give employment to many em­
ployees who have been connected
with this concern for years.
Mr. Messinger is determined in his
effort to prevent any violation of the
law in the sale of Golden and Amber
Nectar. He requires a cash bond
of $250 which is subject to forfeit if
any dealer is guilty of selling intox­
icating liquors under the guise of this
new temperance drink.
"Here’s one bit of proof of our
policy regarding this new drink,
said Mr. Wessinger, in talking with a
reporter the other day. It was a letter
written to a man in Madras, Ore.
"Now, in regard to your of January
3rd in which you say that your dis­
trict attorney is going to prevent
you from selling our Nectar, all we
have to say is, that if this should real­
ly be the case, we would prefer not to
ship any at all and return to you the
money paid to us. I his shows that
Mr. Wessinger is absolutely sincere
in his statement that nothing will be
done contrary to law or interpreta­
tion of the law.
“We arc frank to state,” continues
Mr. Wessinger in this letter, “that we
do not desire, even in the remotest
way, to offend any public official or
to do anything contrary to law but as
explained before, the people when
voting on the question, certainly vot­
ed only on intoxicating malt and in­
toxicating vinous liquors. Grape juice
although vinous in its very origin, is
recognized all over the United States
as one of the leading temperance
drinks. Our Nectar is certainly in the
same class as it contains not to ex
ceed one fifth of one per cent of al­
cohol while meat contains one per
cent sugar more than that, and a
number of other food stuffs used in
every day life, contain more or less,
at least a small quantity of alcohol."
There has been considerable misun­
derstanding and a gross abuse of the
term Near-Beer. Many people have
no idea what this term really means.
Originally it was used to designate
beer that contained approximately 2
or
per cent alcohol, hence the
name, while Nectar is particially free
from alcohol containing much less
than allowed by law and therefore is
strictly a temperance beverage.
Twenty-Cent Gasoline and Monopoly.
It is none too soon that the govern­
ment at Washington lias started an
investigation into the high price oi
gasoline with a view to forcing con­
cessions. The public will not be over­
confident of tile success of the at­
tempt, in view of the fact that the
trail leads directly to the camp of the
Standard Oil Company, but it is an
attempt which should be made any­
how. if it fails in all else, it may at
least succeed in throwing some light
on the question low artificial prices
for commodities are maintained in
spite of all the laws that congress
can enact
Nobody honestly believes that the
price now being charged for gasoline
is warranted by market conditions.
Of course, the manipulators arc very
careful to attribute the price to "d.
creasing production of crude petro­
leum and the increased demand for
gasoline for export to
Europe."
But neither excuse will bear exam
ination. The government*« own offi­
cial reports on the industry discloses
the (act that the production of crude
petroleum has been steadily increas­
ing so fast that last year the principal
oil interests purposely retarded pro­
duction as (ar as possible.
The story oi the country’s oil out­
put has been one <>( the steadily pro­
gressive maxima (or a period of ten
years. In iqh , iqij and 1913 the pro­
duction was so enormous that curtail­
ment instead of increase has been the
watchword of the controlling mag­
nates ever since. The 248,44(1.230 bar
rels produced in iqi 3 actually coni
pared with a production of only ijb.
03,966 barrels in tQOh. a gain of nearly
loo per cent in seven years. And not
only has there been an effort to hold
down production in 191 and 1915, but
it is a further fact that reverse stocks
of petroleum in the United States are
the largest ever recorded and that ex
ports of gasoline were, during the last
ten months of 1915, less than the ex­
port* during the corresponding period
two years previous. The country will
await the government's action with
interest
Germany Witholds Dyes.
———•<>— ——
In appealing to Secretary 1 an«m
to use hi« best indeavors to pursuaih
(treat Brittan and Germany to pcimit
the export of dyestuffs to the Unite.
Slates, the National Clothiers' Asjo
nation seems to overlook the effort-
already made in that direction and th
eapye of their failure In a recent let
’ " *
er, in I- .st
»ylfaaia, Mi Lansing explained that
the impuisibiHty of obtaining anilin.
and Similar dve> is due primarily t.
the refusal of the German
ox
•ment to permit the expor
if
dye» except on the cond
equivalent amount* of cotti
fi> wav of Rotterdam in exchange It
¡» propo.ed that the United State-
piarant^e >h.t the ships hearing the
cotton shall proceed without hinder
ancr to Rotterdam and that the cot
ton »hall be transmitted through Hol
land. The fault is not that of Great
Britain, unless its attitude toward
shipment of cotton to neutral points
with Germany as the ultimate desti­
nation be construed as a justification
for Germany’s position. Great Britain
has already lifted the embargo on
specific shipments of dyestuffs from
Germany and has also mollified the
embargo it previously k id on the
shipment of cyanide of soda and log­
wood from Jamaica and British Hon­
duras.
Germany has a right to lay a con­
ditional embargo on dyestuffs, but
the condition is not regarded as rea­
sonable by the American State De­
partment. There is little prospect with
compliance of it. Whether Germany
will adhere to its position is a ques­
tion. So far as immediate results are
concerned, the lifting of the embargo
would profit Germany little. It could
receive nothing in direct exchange.
It would merely establish a credit in
the United States which could not be
used until the close of the war or un­
til the present blockade is greatly
modified. On the other hand, the de­
velopment of the dye industry in this
country would rob Germany of a mar­
ket for one of its principal products
after the war. When Germany be­
comes convinced that it can drive no
immediate bargain, it miv consider
its future commerce and lift the em-
ba rgo.
_________________
Money Needed for Horse Breeding.
— — M------------
The Rusisan government had an ap­
propriation lor norse breeumg in
.914 totaling more than $4,000,000,
toe czar auo.ng a million dollars more
110111 ms piivaie purse, while the ap­
propriation lor t..e same work in lire
uinieil ."slates during the same period
was cut lrom trie original appropria­
tion oi $¿0,000 to $30,000. Aow it is
stated that the Bureau oi Animal I11-
uustry 01 the Department oi /agricul­
ture, under whose uirection the work
is carried, has been nolliicd that it
must cariy on its operations for the
coming twelve mouths lor $25,000.
In talking with G. Arthur Bell, who
has the work in hand for the Bureau
ol Animal Husbandry, that official
said:
“We find a d esire to patronize our
horses growing constantly, but u li­
fortunately we are hampered by the
lack oi sufficient money to go on with
it in the way its importance demands,
it is a work that would make a big
showing in a year or two, and it is a
project which calls for much thought,
in 1913 we had 43 stallions to which
1557 mares were bred. In 1914, 43
stallions were in service, and 2013
mares were bred. Because our appro­
priation was cut to $30,000 for the
past season we had 10 reduce the
number of stallion to 37. Notwith­
standing this, there have been bred to
date more than lyoo mares, and when
the return for the Morgan horse, at
Middlebury, Vi., are all in there will
be ipore than 200 mares, or an average
oi about 55 marcs per horse, against
47 >n 1914 and 38 in 1913.
"We have endeavored always to
place the horsese in districts where
there was the greatest med for im­
proving the gineral purpose horse,"
continued Mr. Bell. "In every instance
I think, we have accomplished our
object, and we have had to limit the
season of the thoroughbred Octagon
and the trotter Richford Jay, 2.1354,
SO gnat in the desire to' patronize
sirs of their splendid type.”
Sin Killer” Griffin's Fifth,
A colored evangelist, famous as
long as a quarter of a century ago.
because of his declaration that lie was
brave and able enough to fight sin at
close quarters and "killit every time”
is resurrected from what has long
seemed to be a growing obscurity
through a demonstration of his faith
by his works.
Sin Killer (.riffin has been con­
flicting a revival at Hot Springs, a
place which has often figured iri news­
paper reports as one given over to
many ot the frivolities of life, f ast
Sunday a number of colored converts
were to be baptized in the big lake
mar Whittington I’ark Winn the
party reached the selected spot, a u
toot a ligator, which had escaped
tom the government collection in
tlif park, showed himself on the face
«1 the waters, and headed a course to­
ward the evangelist and the converted
me mtering the water with him
Sin Killer" Griffin’s faith, courage
«nd promise were being put to a
supreme test It afford* us pleasure to
say he met the test nobly. Crying out
to some men and boys in the crowd
inr"i1tk
1al.li«""»r «i‘>« 'toms
•in clubs, he led the meeting in prav-
‘' i""1 “f'erward in a song before the
¡’»<1 o which the great reptile had
urmd tail and was swimming rapidly
toward the oppos.te shore. There'was
to'PRl-ition that he would
—rted who
ids.
n a
'
.-man nan been de-
i»t he had fled, and that the
led to spread among the
<1 been killed forever. And
•¡nd courage prevailing. |,e
lni^^aY.Un,° ■n>rntance.
n" Kator did not come back
lers wil. " «»)’ that the- brute was
rd away with
......... rocks and stones,
"Sin Killer"
«x.uer Griffin
t.nffin ,i(v, h,.
"Sh/kiti '”c fr’r
,he Lor'1
•
Killer can come just as
I roving his contention as the
' v ’li conic to proving "heirs
Men are at their best at the age of
',•«" i scientist; or worst, perhaps
’ ' 1 ,e dRC of ‘he hopeless derelict
One mightthink thaf before found-
", a town in the pine wood» the
l'«ndcr would clear a«;,y ten square
. .
Ot surrounding timber for safe
>> s sake.
Why do <o many reporters write
hat a lire did such and such damage,
tri te ,t was extinguished’"-Valu
nl exchange. And why is the blue
pencil so unmindful of its duties?
Families with children have largely
'¡•d out of the districts where auto
m d< s are tbKkest. except those
o nave sufficient play room around
ir Homes; and it is just as well or
r.
Old Saws Autoized.
The auto’s the thing.
A tire saved is a tire bought.
Gasoline makes the auto go.
Oil in time keeps the engine fine.
\vlnie there’s gasoline there’s hope.
Be careful and you’ll never bepinch-
ed.
It’s a long stretch of sand that has
no end.
An autoist is judged by the company
he rides.
Unto each machine some accident
must befall.
All the world loves the owner of a
new model.
A four cylinder car may look at a
twelve.
Tis a wise autoist that knows his
own machine.
A reckless driver and his machine
are often parted.
Trust in the Lord and keep your
tail light burning.
A car in the garage is worth two on
the sales floor.
You never miss the gasoline till the
tank runs dry.
He who rides in the rear scat can­
not choose the way.
(Jut of the fullness of his gasoline
tank the good tourist lendith.
In the spring a young man’s fancy
turns to thoughts of a new model.
Let thy mufiler remain closed, for
the muffler oft proclaims the man.
Speed and the world speeds with
you, slow down and you slow down
alone.
All machines that glisten are not
gold, but if they glisten you may be
sure they don’t need painting.
Seest thou a man dilligent in his
driving he shall get to the next town,
he shall not tarry long on the road.
Democrats and Merit System.
------ o------
Although the Democratic national
platform declared in tavor of the
nonest and rigid enforcement of the
civil service law, to the end that mer­
it and ability should be the standard
of appointment and promotion, rather
than service rendered to a political
party,” nobody familiar with Demo­
cratic traditions and tendencies took
it very seriously. There was little
surprise when Secretary Bryan was
found wri.ing to an ofiicial in charge
of a trust we had accepted for the
Dominican Republic, asking if he
could not find some places, salaries
paid by our ward, for "deserving
Democrats.” Instead of this injuring
him, the oldest friends insisted it
would “strengthen
him with the
party." Although the presidents a for­
mer vice-president of the national as­
sociation, for extending and protect­
ing the civil service, was pledged by
his record as well as by his platform
to the policy, he signed acts which
limited instead of expanding it. None
of the employes provided by the new
currency act were put under the civil
service. The deputy collectors ot in­
ternal revenue and the deputy United
States Marshals were taken from un­
der it. The cider of Mr. Taft in cov­
ering fourth- class postmasters could
not be utterly rescinded, but it was so
altered as to give the politicians a
chance, a chance they seem to have
generally improved. Congress seem­
ed bent on excluding assistant post­
masters, but the White House grew
alarmed and sounded a warning. But,
under the guise of economy or im­
proving the service, the Post Office
Department is in many places accom­
plishing by order what it was not em­
powered to do by law. In some
Southern cities the office of assistant
postmaster has been abolished, the
postmaster being empowered to ap­
point a new clerk instead.
Men of proven efficiency have been
demoted, to permit promotion of
others. Sometimes these demotions
were so great that the incumbents,
either as a metter of self respect or
from sheer necessity, retired from th<
service. .After a postal employe has
worked his way to a good position
and has incurred obligations and ad
opted a standard of living in keepirf-
with his income, it works a great hard
ship when he is demoted. tVhcn this
is arbitrarily done it is a gross injus­
tice to the employe and a flagrant dis­
regard for the public service. When a
postal employe, after years of service
is forced to resign, his condition is
pitiable. All he has learned has no
commercial value, for the government
monopolizes the business in which he
has become proficient. Its disregard
;>l the civil service will be no mean
indictment against the Democratic
party..
the NEWEST REflEDY
Tariffs and Cost of Living.
If Senator Gore of Okla, will again
poll the delegates to the Baltimore
convention, as he did when asking
each if he knew what he was about
in voting that plank in the platform
. favoring the exemption from tolls ot
American ships tn coastwise trade
using the Panama Canal, he might
i again get negative assurances from a
Urge majority. The present Opportun­
ity presents itself as one. result of
oificial figures now available, show-
i ing the cost of living during 191.1,
i the first full calendar year under the
I present tariff law. The platform
adopted by the same delegates who
I have since borne testimony to their
own negligence, placed a particular
I emphasis upon the high cost of living
under a protective tariff. “The high
1 cost of living is a serious problem in ;
every American home,” it said. " 1 he 1
I Republican attempts to escape re-*
sponsibility of present conditions by
1 denying that tncy are due to a pro­
tectice tarith. We take issue with tueui
! and charge that excessive prices re­
sult in a Urge measure from the high
i tariff laws enacted and maintained by
the Republican party » * * and wc
assert that no substantial relief can .
be secured until import duties on the
I necessities of life arc materially
re­
duced and these criminal conspiracies
(the trusts) are broken up.”
In the very first plank of the same
document it is reiterated that a pro­
tective tariff is a breeder of trusts.
1 he demonstration now at hand
proves cither that trusts are not de­
pendent upon high tariffs or that
high prices are not dependent upon
either trusts or tariffs. In every line
of household necessities, food, cloth­
ing, fuel, light, lumber and building
materials, and
house
furnishing
goods, prices are higher than any one
of the four years of 1 aft’s administra­
tion, speciiically arraigned in the
Baltimore platform. Records of 1914
prices, now set out in the Bureau of
Labor Statistics in its annual bulle­
tin, and covering a period of fifty
years, show them to have broken the 1
records of high prices, in most lines,
during most of the half century pre­
ceding.
We have never, at any time, need­
ed this demonstration to convince us
that the Baltimore platform makers
did not know what they were about 1
in adopting these resounding résolu- |
Drotection trusts
trust« and
ami
tions touching protection,
prices. I hat the people of the same
mind is indicated in the million and
quarter majority of Taft and Roose­
velt over Wilson. The demonstration
is now so complete that we entertain
a hope that, if Senator Gore will
make another poll of the Baltimore
delegates, a majority of them, anxious
to save their faces, and having now
formed the habit, may be willing to
admit that they voted for these two
planks without knowing how.
•
1 he man who bought a fur over­
coat may yet have a chance; he ought
• o take it to Pasadena, cal., where it
snowed last week lor the first time in
ten years.
------ o------
Na matter how entertaining “com­
pany may be, you have to hear most­
ly bromides; nay, you perpetrate
hem yourself.
I he Origin of Bashfulness.
<« ’
*---- “°~~~
Hashfulncss, says a magazine writer ■ S>aVewLy°Ur money;” and, where-
’ore
Why, so you can spend it in
i' a distinct form of selfishness. That larger
lumps.
IX, pirh.ips a good way to put it, for
When the wine is in, the wit is out;
¡1 i-hful people could be made to
"hough in occasional instances, it is
■elieve it they would be cured. So it
.he wine that brings it out.
is well to urge bashful
--------- fol
.„I ks to think
of others a and make
companions
of
---- "'•■■P'niuun» vt
\ oung men crowd into the cities
ine neglected ones in a throng. By
.or excitement and amusement. In
oing them some kindness, if it is ater life, they might crowd into the
' "thing more than giving them atten­
country for peace and quietude if
tion, the bashful man will forget hiin- • hey knew how.
'' If ;"ul
naturally, think naturally,
"•piak naturally, and leave the gather­
ALL TLRED OUT.
ing Hl good form with a feeling of
self-satisfaction.
..
------ °------
But bashfulness is not selfishness Hundreds More in Till»mook ¡n the
Same
Plight.
U is in part at least, love of good
opinion of others and fear that one
Tired all the time;
will not so bear one’s self as to gain
Weary and worn out night and day:
it. It is lack of confidence in noe’s
Hack aches; head aches,
power», a distrust in one’s ability to
our kidneys are probably weaken-
do the things expected. It is underes­
timation of noe s self and over esti­
} ou should help them at their work
mation of other». That is very far
l et one who knows tel) you how.
from selfishness; in (act, its very op­
posite. The bold arc far more selfish M uS Lyna £earson- '<>>7 Third St..
Ore. My, ".Pain ¡„ mv
than the bashful.
From whatever source bashfulnea» sack bothered me a great deal. I had
nav spring, however, it is foolish headache» and often felt tired. 1 tried
and harmful. It curtails one’s useful- i number of medicines but nothing
give me much relief. After
icss and makes unhappiness where
"here should be the joy of perfectlv taking Doan s Kidney Pill, , ,hort
uatural actmty \\ c cannot all shine di1.'«.! WTuCnUKrr*T frrf fron* k«"**
ti
,T,hc kwkache and other
Hike, but every person can shine in »
WM !w"'- (Statement given
J*r“iukir way. and that i«
< rough. B eased be the man or womsn
"’’T/i”
Mr.
who can devtse a preventive of bash said:
-... "I 1^ have had no kidnev trouble
tuiness.
’o sneak of .«ince using Doan’s Kid-
One of the scoffers who h-s al ney H||s "
Fricj" sec at »11 dealer. Don’t simp-
r' ’d' returned from the “shorn," S.1V«
• J! * kidney remedy—get
>1 von want the real sea smell take n
•SkJ’b’T* ‘■’J*»'’* «’owrv into a'mnstv Mr':7elr,4nfk P"'S:-,hf
•Jheries
' WM '°° BMt ,hr Mrs. Pearson has twice Public!», rec
"mmerded
Foster-Milburn
Co
f rops., Buffalo, N. Y.
’
*
2, I
Backaciio, Rheumatism and Dropsy.
INSTRUCTION.
1'IANO
Diploma from Chicago Musical
College.—Beginners receive the »am«
careful training ai^the most advanced.
I
Terms:—$4.eh*lftr months Instruc­
tion.
All lessons given at Studio.
County Representative for the
Wiley B. Allen Co.s’ line of high
grade pianos, player-pianos, Victrolo«
etc.
Kldncv Bladder and L'rlc Ackl troubles
bring misery to many. VVhen the kidneys
are weak or diseased, these natural filter}
do net cleanse the blood siitllelurHlyy*«*
the poisons are carried to all parts of the
body? There follow depression, aches
and pains, heaviness, drowsiness. Irrita­
bility, headaches, chilliness and r^cu"
matism. In some people there aro shatp
pains in the back and loins, d.stressing
bladder disorders and sometimes obstin­
ate dropsy. The uric acid sometimes
forms into gravel or kidney stones. »' hen
tne uric acid affects the muscles and
joints, it causes lumbago, rheumatism,
gout or sciatica. This is the time to try
"Anuric.* ,
.
....
During digestion uric acid Is absorbed
Into the system from meat oaten, and
even from some vegetables. The poor
kidneys get tired and backacho begins.
This is a good time to take "Anuric,
the new discovery of Dr. Pierce for Kid­
ney trouble und Backacho. Neglected
kidney trouble Is responsible for many
deaths, and Insurance Company examin­
ing doctors always test the water ot an.
replicant before a policy will be issued.
Have you ever set aside a bottle of water
for twenty-four hours? A heavy sedi­
ment or settling sometimes indicates kid­
ney trouble. The true nature and char-
actor of diseases, especially those of tho
kidneys and -urinary organs, can ot.cn
ba determined by a careful chemica an-
alrsis and microscopical examination--
this Is dona by expert cbemists ot thj
Medical Staff of the Invalids’ Hotel. It
TOU wish to know your condition send a
sample ot your water to Doctor Pierce s
Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and de­
scribe your symptoms.
It will be ex­
amined without any expense to vou, and
Doctor Pierce or tils Staff of Assisting
Physicians will Inform you truthfully.
T BO ALS, M.D.,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Surgeon S. P. Co.
(I. O. O. F. Bldg.)
Tillamook ...
- Oregon,
HOLMES,
EBSTER
ATTORN EY-AT LAW
CO M M E RC IA L BUILDIN O,
FIRST
"p H.
OREGON
COYNE,
ATTORNEY-AT LAW.
Ofiice:
O hiosite C ovet H ouse ,
Oregon.
Tillntticok
Read all abont ycurself, your system,
physiology, anatomy, hygiene, simple
homo cures, etc., in the "Common Sense
Medical Adviser," a book of 1006 Pa^es.
Send to Dr. V. M. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y..
three dimes or thirty cents in one-cent
stamps for a cloth-bouud copy.
R. JACK OLSEN,
Tillamook
S Sidney E. Headers-n , Pres.,
K
Surveyor.
K John Leland Henderson, Sec-
0
retary Treas., Attotney-at-
K
Law, Notrary Public.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Complete Set cf Abetract BosJkg xa
OfBce.
Taxe» Faid for Non ReeideaM.
T illamook B lock .
Tillamook
Law, Abstracts, Real Estate,
Surveying1, Insurance.
Both Phones.
-
-
Oreg, c a
-
T. But i s
S Tillamook Title and
8
Abstract Co.
TILLAMOOK
STREET.
TILLAMOOK,
KNOW THYSELF 1
....
Both Filone».
OrgfQM
E)R. L. L. HOY,
OREGON.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
T illamook B lock ,
A Rainy Day Need
Not Be Dull
ELMER ALLEN
,(Succe»eor to Dr. Sharp),
Reflex
j T Slicker
$3.00
DENTIST.
Commercial Building,
J
Strong, cary fitting,
light, and water-
pi oaf, absolutely.
Reflex Edges stop
water from run­
ning in at the front
Tillamook
E. REEDY, D.V M„
VETERINARY.
I
I
Both I’boca».
Tillamook
Black, Yellow or Olive khaki.
Protector Hat. 75 cents
Satisfaction Guaranteed
...
BOSTON
I
G'r«g»a
MENDERS®!,
: J OHN LELAND
A.J .TOWER CO.
«.5
Orage*.
Tillamook,
Cheer up ! Get to work
in a F ish B rand
Leap Year Science.
At the Scientists’ meeting last week
Dr, Kittenhause, president of the New
fork Life Extenlion Institute, said,
the presence of ¡7,000,000 unmar­
ried men and women is an evidence
of mental and physical decline." It
is hoped this scientific utterance will
lot have any depressing effect upon
he anticipations of the lair sex, upon
■ his advent of leap year, but will in­
spire them to extra efforts to rescue
the men from their decline. Such an
effort would go far to disengage
• hem from the sorry fact imputed to
them by this scientific authority.
As to the men, we are justified in
he conclusion that the decline is
rather mental than physical, and is
•xhibited in the fact of a prevelent
idea that celibacy is itself a noble des-
my, to offset which the unmarried
nen should recognize tenders of the
ri 1 lr.’ whcn ,hcy come in the form
■it blushes and smiles that are the
uore tempting offers of marriage be­
cause they are inspired by modesty
nd gentility. Don’t care what the
scientists say. 1 he men are all right
out they are simply deficient in the
tnderstanding of their golden oppor­
tunities.
- ’
FOB
ATTORNEY
I
AND
I WILL GIVE $1000
CO U NSEI.LOR A T-LA W.
T illamook B lock ,
Tillamook •
-
.
- Oi«gou.
ROOM NO. 261.
If I FAILtO CURE >■> CANCER * TUMOR 1 trut
before It POISONS d«»p lliris or ittKta to BONE
Without Knife or Pain
No PAY Until CURED
HABERLACH,
WRITTEN GUARANTEE
No X Ray or other
swindle. An Island
plant makes thecure
Any TUMOR, LUMP or
SORE on the lip, taco
or body long is
CANCER; It never
pains untillast stage
t20-PAGE BOOK sent
FREE, 10,000 testi­
monials. IrRs Is aan
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
T illamook B lock
Tillamook
0R.
.Qragaa
GEORGE
Any LUMP» WOMAN'S BREAST
a* n A11 n E D
J.
DETERS«!
J.
DENTIST,
alwayspoteons deep arm-
Successor to Dr. Darkies
■«UAnUbllpit »land» and KILLS QUICKLY
One woman inevery 7aiesof cancer— U.S. report
We refuse many who wait too long & must die
Poor cured ut half price if cancer is yet imall
TILLAMOOK,
Dr. & Mrs. Dr. CHAMLEY & CO.
OREGON.
c- HAWK,
"Strictly RstlsMs, Grrntsst Csncsr Syaclsllst llvln»"
4340 I 436E Valencia St., San Francisco. Cal.
KINDLY MAIL THIS to soami •» CANCER
PHYSICIAN AND
Bay City
NEW HOME USERS
ARE
QUALITY CHOOSERS
. Or«««*
4
QEORGE WILLETT,
ATTORNEY-AT IiW
T uuruoi Cü«Mr*cuk H llebj *«
lillao.ook
Ot»»»»
.
E. K, DANIELI,
CHIEOEEACTO*.
Local OCìc» La th» Ccat*»«WMl
Building.
for salb by
TlLtAMOOK
TillRtrook.
.
- ORE
Have Your *
House
Wiring Done by
Oregon.
The New Home Sewing
Machine Company,
San Francisco, Cal.
BREAD,
, Cost power Co.
TILLAMOOK BAKERY
DONE RIGHT
EAT VIERECK’S
At All Grocers.
I
at ’
RIGHT PRICE*