Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, June 01, 1916, Image 3

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JUNE 1. 1916.
BEER BILL IS PROPOSED.
Movement to Permit its Manufacture
in the State.
WISE
MASSEY,
DENTISTS,
r>R H M MASSEY
is a Colleg- Graduate in
Dentistry, registered in < ire-
gon. and has had several
veurs experience, and lias
come to Tillamook County
to make it his future home.
DR. W. A. WISE
le the sanic| Ur Wine who
practiced dentistry in Tilla­
mook County a few years
ayo. aud will be pleased to
again wait on those who
desire his profession®, ser­
vice.
and owners of
Bar View Tent City.
We have Dental Offices in Tillamook. Bay City, Bar View and
Cloverdale, and are equipped to do all kinds of Dental
11 ork as good as it can be done anywhere.
What we Cannot Guarantee, We Do Not Do.
Dr Masa?y guarantees all his work and can be consulted at
Call us by Telephone.
Dr. Wist hat Ha.il thirty year« experience In plate work
and guaa vntee*» what he »ays.
FREE
PAINLESS
EXTRACTING
OUR BRIDGE WORK has
been brought to the highest
state of perfection.
The
teeth on this bridge are in­
terchangeable at will with­
out removing from
the
m outh.
When Plates or Bridge
Work is Ordered.
□
1
“\SEE THAT SOFT MPI
PLATE» WITH FLEXIBLE SUCTION—
The verv best and latent in modern dentistry.
No more falling plates. If you are having
plate trcnble get Dr. Wise’s advice as to
what should be done and the eost of doing
it FREE. We can extract your teeth abso­
lutely without pain—free Where plate or
bridge work is ordered.
J
< •
ELAND E ERWIN,
PIANO INSTRUCTION.
Diploma from Chicago Musical
College.—Beginners receive the same
careful training as the most advanced.
Terms:—$4.00 per months Instruc­
tion.
All lessons given at Studio.
County Representative for the
Wiley B. Allen Co.s’ line of high
grade pianos, player-pian.os, Victrolos
etc.
C00K in a
cool Kitchen
All the heat is concen­
trated where it is needed
—keeps you coo! and
makes for better cooking
T. BUIIU
’ ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Complete Set of Abstract Books tn
Office.
Taxes Paid for Non-Residents.
T illamook B lock ,
Tillamook .... Oregon
Both Phones.
NEW PERFECTION
OIL COOK-iSTOVE
Why not cook with
a modern oil stove this sum­
For Best
Results
Use
Pearl Oil
mer and be comfortable?
Bakes, broils, roasts, toasts.
More efficient than your wood
or coal stove, and costs less to
operate.
Better cooking because the
long blue chimneys g ive stead­
ier, more evenly distributed
heat,' under perfect control—•
like gas. No smoke or smell.
In 1, 2, 3 and 4-burner sizes,
ovens separate. Also cabinet
models with Fireless Cooking
Ovens.
Ask your dealer today.
T. BOALS, M.D.,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Surgeon S. P. Co.
(I. O. O. F. Bldg )
Tillamook .... Oregon.
EBSTER HOLMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
COMMERCIAL BUILDING,
FIRST STREET,
OREGON
TILLAMOOK,
STANDARD OIL
COMPANY
rp II. COYNE,
( California)
’Tillamook
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Office: O pposite C ourt H ouse ,
Oregon.
Tillamook
For Sale by
KING & SMITH CO-
R. ¡JACK OLSEN,
DENTIST.
Run-down ?
Tired ?
Weak ?
[fl. O. O. F. Bldg.)
Let ’er Rain!
Tillamook - Oregon
(
. If you’ve a man's
/ 'y'" work to do, wear
f
Tower’s Fish Brand
0R.
Reflex
Slicker
$3.00
WHEN "RUN-DOWN.”
Constipation causes and seriously
■iKyavates many diseases, ft is thor
» . 'I? cnred by Dr. Pierce’s Pieas-
bt Pellets. One a laxative: two ex
■tree a cathartic.
J.
PETERSEN
DENTIST,
Successor to Dr. Perkins
TILLAMOOK,
Every spring most people feel "all
out of sorts ” — their vitality is at a
The coat that keeps
low ebb. Through the winter months
out all the rain. Re­
smit up a great deal in heated house,
flex Edges stop every
office, or factory, with little healthy
drop from running
sxercise in the great outdoors—eating
in at the front
more than necessary — the blood be­
Protector Hat, 75 cents
comes surcharged with poisons 1 The
best Spring medicine and tonic is one
Satisfaction Guaranteed
10WEj?;y
made of herbs and roots without alco­
Send for free Catalex
g
hol—that was first discovered by Dr.
Pierce—years ago. Made of Golden
A.J.TOWER CO. *
peal root, blood root, with glycerine, it
6
is
boston
is called Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery. Ingredients on wrapper.
“ eliminates from the blood disease­
breeding poisons. It makes the blood
C. HAWK,
nch ana pure, and furnishes a founda­
tion for sound, physical health.
Sold by medicine dealers, in liquid
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
ur tablet form, or send 10 cents to Dr.
Cerce’s Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.,
Oregon
•or a large trial package of tablets.
Bay City
Salem, Oregon.—"As a spring tonic,
™ build up a weakened, run-down
and to give one an appetite, I
J?Dnd Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical
^»c^ery good. A friend had recom-
■Snded it and I found it all that she
;£1Jn,ed f°r it-”— M rs . J ake G isdeb ,
8. Bellview Street.
GEORGE
Q arl
¡OREGON.
haberi . ach ,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
T illamook B eock
As has been expected a proposed
amendment to the prohibition amend­
ment to the state constitution to per­
mit the operation of breweries, has
made its appearance. That such a
measure would be submitted to the
people through the initiative has been
street gossip since the prohibition
amendment was adopted in 1914. The
following statement has been issued
by those in charge of the movement,
with the proposed initiative measure:
We, the undersigned, feel that there
is lack of logic even from a prohi­
bition point of view, in allowing beer
and intoxicating liquors to be brought
into the state, yet to forbid the man­
ufacture of beer in the state. We have
undertaken to put on the ballot an
amendment to the prohibition amend­
ment, giving to the Oregon farmer,
hop grower and brewer an equal right
with the outsider. We have constitut­
ed ourselves a general committee
favoring this amendment, and submit
to the public our reasons as follows:
First. A law which permits the con­
sumption of liquor brought into the
state from the outside, yet discrimi­
nates against even a light beer made
in Oregon frem Oregon barley and
hops, is neither logical or just and
seems to answer no good purpose
whatever.
Second. We believe it is not even
good temperance reform because it
inevitably encourages the importation
of the strong spirituous liquor on
which transportation charges are Iqss
and discourages the use of a light,
non-intoxicating malt liquor. In oth­
er words, it forces a consumption of
whisky instead of a consumption of
beer.
Third. It drives thousands of dol­
lars out of the state, which if beer
drinking is to be permitted at all, had
better go to Oregon barley and hops.
Fourth. We feel that the true meas­
ure of regulation ought always to be
based on the amount of the drug al­
cohol contained in any drink. It seems
to us not scientific, nor in the cause
of true temperance, to place beer in
exactly the same character with whis­
key and other spirits. We think the
two real evils are the saloon and the
spirituous liquors, but this amend­
ment does not open up the general
question or the general policy. It
goes no further than to place the
home industry, as to beer, on the
same footing with the outsider.
the
Fifth. By this amendment
amount of alcohol permitted is not in
excess of four per cent. This is prac­
tically as low as beer can be brewed
and keep. We believe and we think
the general world agrees that such a
beverage is not an intoxicating liquor.
Sixth. It is our opinion, based on
the experience of Germnay, and the
great temperance reforms made in
Denmark, Sweden and Norway, by
encouraging the brewing of just such
a light beer as here proposed, that
this amendment will really promote
both temperance and moral integrity.
This is one of our strongest motives.
Those who are interested and have
time, men or women, are asked to
volunteer as circulators of the peti-
tion, but no money will be paid for
securing names.
The following is the proposed
amendment.
Be it enacted by the people of the
State of Oregon, that:
Section thirty-six (36) of Article
one (1) of the Constitution of the
State of Oregon shall be and hereby
is amended to read as follows:
Section 36. From and after January
I, 1916, no intoxicating liquors shall
be manufactured or sold within this
state, except for medical purposes,
upon prescription of a licensed phy­
sician, or for scientific, sacramental
or mechanical purposes; provided,
however, that it shall be lawful to
manufacture within this state, fer­
mented malt liquors containing 4 per
cent or less of alcohol, manufactured
exclusively for shipment outside of
this state; and provided further, that
it shall be lawful to manufacture and
sell and deliver in this state by the
manufacturer to any person or indi­
vidual, in original packages only, such
fermented malt liquor, containing 4
per cent or less of alcohol, in such
quantity or under such regulations as
may be prescribed by law. Until oth­
erwise prescribed by the legislature
this right of sale and delivery shall
be limited to the same quantity as
persons are now permitted to import
into the state under existing laws,
and such persons may not within any
one period fixed by law both import
and purchase locally.
This section is self executing and
all provisions of the constitution and
the laws of this state and charters
and ordinances of all cities, towns
and other municipalities therein, in
conflict with the provisions of this
section, are hereby repealed.
"Co-operating” in Mexico.
o------
The reports from Mexico and the
__
Mexican boarder are not indictive of
the peace and harmony that Wash­
ington seem to believe exists in that
ELMER ALLEN
region. Two regiments have been
withdrawn from Gen . Pershing's
¡(Successor to Di. Sharp),
force and are now on this side the
line, while the main body is moving
DENTIST.
backward to some point nearer the
Commercial Building, Tillamook United States. As the army fell back
Mexican soldiers are moving into the
territory vacated, and are said to be
spreading abroad the conviction that
QR. L. L. HOY,
the Americans are in retreat and are
persued by the Mexicans. Color
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON being
is given to this by the petty attacks
I
upon detatched bodies of the Ameri­
J E. REEDY, D.V M.,
T illamook B lock ,
can force by Mexicans who are call­
ed banditr, but who are more likely
VETERINARY.
Tillamook,
Oregon. to be under the direction of authoriz­
ed military leaders. The report that
Both Phones.
Gen. Cavazos, a Carranza officer, had
JOJ1N
I.EI.AND
HENDERSON
ordered the eleventh cavalry, under
Oregon
Tillamook
Maj. Howze, to "retreat northward,”
ATTORNEY
after demanding the return of corn
and horses seized from Villistas, is an
AND
The Unhappy Alternate.
indication of the feeling of the Car­
------- 0-------
COUNSELLOR AT-LAW.
ranza followers, who are said to be
Crawford—If you go to war you re
,
T illamook B lock ,
"co-operating" with us. It is some
likely to be killed.
.
.
- Oregon satisfaction to hear that all of these
Crabshaw—While if you remain a Tillamook -
1 demands were refused.
neutral you’ll probably be torpedoed.,
ROOM NO. 2B1.
Tillamook
i
[Oregon
If the men who are attacking our
troops arc really bandits, then the
work lor chicli
oiiicicd Mexico is
not finished. It they are not bandits,
then the Mexicans are dealing treach­
erously with the situation. At any
rate, it is quite evident that they are
not co-operating, nor do they intend
to co-operate, in the suppression of
the Villistas, and the reported agree­
ment at Elf’aso is but another ruse to
gain time. In the meantime we are
adding nothing to our prestige bv re­
tiring under circumstances that can
so easily be made to appear to the
Mexicans as a retreat. Our soldiers in
Sonora are as brave and as efficient
as any force of similar numbers in
the world, but they are not being
compelled to take a course that gives
the impression of cowardice to a peo­
ple who arc, to say the least, not
friendly to us. If co-operation means
anything at all it means active service
by the forces of both nations to a
common end, not a backward move­
ment of the one under fire from the
other.
Democrats and the Shipping Bill.
It is admitted that the only wav the
revised Alexander ship purchase bill
got through the House was by em­
phasizing the provision compelling
the governemnt to cease to operate
snips within five years after the end
of the war. In other words, the House
has voted to borrow $50,000,000 to in­
vest in vessels at a time when all the
shipbuilding yards are working at
lull capacity and when the price of
ships is exceedingly high. The de­
mand is so great that the Pacific
.Mail has sold vessels as first price,
though so old that if the ordinary de­
preciation charge had been made they
would have been worth less than noth­
ing. The other day a ship a century
old was put into commission again.
The government is to buy ships un­
der such abnormal conditions and
operate them, not to make money,
but to reduce shipping rates or to at­
tend to routes that are not at present
attractive to private shipowners. No­
body can tell the yearly deficit the
treasury will have to take care of.
When all the interned vessels of the
central powers and all the vessels
now used by the entente allies in
carrying on the war are again free for
use in foreign commerce, and when
the belligerent nations no longer
need the articles that comprise so
much of our export at present, the
government will try to get rid of its
$50,000,000 worth of ships. It is this
“businesslike” measure the House has
approved.
In doing so the Democrats have
violated every
tradition and the
pledge of their last two platforms.
Encouragement of* the
merchant
marine in each instance was pledged,
"but without additional burdens upon
the people and without bounties and
subsidies from the public treasury.”
The present bill is a raid on the
treasury, immediately and prospec­
tively. The Democratic party in Con­
gress has repeatedly announced its
policy, “discriminating
duties and
tonnage taxes.” In the l'ifty-eighth
Congress is made a minority report
in favor of this policy. It renewed it
in the Fifty-ninth and the Sixty-first
congress. When it got control of the
House it urged the policy anew. The
author of the present bill has advo­
cated that policy. M r. Underwood got
a clause providing for it incorporated
in the Underwood tariff act, but the
executive department suspended it. It
was ambiguously worded and has
been interpreted by the Court of Cus­
toms Appeals to mean that very
favored nation is entitled to the 5 per
cent differential. The large free list
also tended to minimize the effect.
But it had party sanction. The pres­
ent proposal has never been approved
by either party or by the country. It
is to be hoped that the Senate will
consider it on its demerits.
in every way. It fed them; it loaned
Uiern hundreds of dollars ot Ameri­
can gold; it supplied them with can­
non, rifles, shells and powder with
winch 10 kill the brave soldiers of the
latherlaud. Hundreds of thousands of
our defenders were killed or wounded
by missels made in the United States.
"We have a greater grievance yet.
\\ hen the very life of our empire w as
at stake the government of the Unit­
ed States interfered in an unfriendly
way with our effective use of the sub­
marine. It threatened us with war and
under duress we had to yield, for foes
beset us on every hand. For these
wrongs wu must have recompense. I
am directed by my imperial master
to inform you that unless an indem­
nity of $10,000.000,000 shall be paid
or pledged within 10 days from this
date the German navy will collect this
or a greater sum from the seaboard
cities of the United States."
With our present unpreparedness
what answer could we make to that?
We could offer to arbitrate, some one
may say, and if we did Germany
would answer no, and remind us that
we had refused to arbitrate the sink­
ing of the Lusitania.
We should then call in vain on the
British allies for aid. “We are done
with lighting for a while,”
they
would say. "We have made our peace
with Germany and shall keep faith.
The United States would not come to
our aid when we sorelv needed her
support. Now she might fight her
battles for herself.”
Our golden wealth would not pro­
ject us then. It would be the lure that
brought navies and armies across the
sea. We should have to yield or fight,
'nd what manner of figure could the
United States cut, starting out to
fight the seasoned German legions
with a little army that has its hands
overfull dealing with a few’ cutthroats
and bandits bevond the Rio Grande?
—Spokesman Review.
Salty Human Beings.
W. A. C. quotes the following from
a report of an address by Dr. vVood-
ward:
"We eat so much salt that the
South Sea Island canibals, with a
natural appetite, cannot eat us, be­
cause, they say, we are too salty.
Every man needs twenty grains of
salt in a day—he gets about 400. This
means that his tissues are invaded by
a surplus of salt which cannot be
eliminated. The result is a hundred
ailments. The excess salt, for instance
causes our people to have such brittle
bones that when they stumble over
something they break a leg or arm.
W. A. C. asks; 1. Do we eat too
much salt? 2. Are the above quoted
statements correct.
REPLY.
1. Yes.
2. They are correct in part. In part
they are incorrect. Animals which eat
grass must have salt. Carnivorous an­
imals get all the salt they need from
their food. Cannibals are carnivorous
animals, but at that there is no proof
that they would balk at an Illuiios
doctor.
Sherman says salt equilibrium can
easily be maintained on less than one
fourth the amount of salt eaten.
When we increase the amount of salt
eaten there is an immediate increase
in the amount passed in the urine,
sweat and feces.
Godall fed a man diet free from salt
The first day he excreated 70 grains
of salt. The next day 35 grains. By
the twelfth day it had fallen to 2.5
grains.
The body contains 1540 grains of
salt. When sqlt free food is eaten for
two weeks the body will lose about
160 grains. Moderate variation in the
amount of salt eaten makes no par­
ticular difference. If a slight excess is
eaten the kidneys and sweat glans
throw it off in a few hours.
A great excess increases the amount
of tissue burned up. It also throws an
extra strain on the kidneys. Possibly
people who eat far too much salt
wear out and break down earlier than
th"v otherwise would.
The statement that we eat 400
«■rains of salt a day. that we are pick-
led in brine, are rather strong.
Bunge explains the reason why we
call for salt on potatoes and some
other vegetables. Potatoes are rich in
potash When we cat them the potash
is eliminated as potassium chloride,
and. in being eliminated, the potash
stimulates »he elimination of sodium
sulphate. These processes rob the
tissues of «alt. Salt is craved to repair
the loss.—Ex.
Our Great Danger Will C°me After
the War.
----- o -
Mr. Roosevelt told his Detroit au­
dience that “the extreme naval party
in Germany has recently advocated
war with the United States on the
ground that in the end, as the result
of such a war, we would have to pay
all the war expenditures of the Ger­
manic powers and their allies.”
When he discussed publicly affairs
of this gravity Mr. Roosevelt is ex­
ceedingly careful of his facts. Un­
doubtedly there is a considerable and
influential party in Germany that
wants its government to break with
Cannery Laundry.
the United States, and break now,
over the submarine issue. Probably
"Terrors of blue Monday for the
the policy of these radicals will not
prevail. Less reckless advisers of the farmers’ wives and the inconvenience
kaiser are reminding him that for the of living on the farm will be elimi­
moment Germany has foes enough, nated," says President W. H. Paul-
and that the entrance into the strug­ hamus of the Payallup & Sumner
gle of the United States would turn Fruit Growers’ Association. "Action
the tide of war and lead to Germany’s was taken by the directors of the as­
sociation at a recent meeting to es­
defeat and downfall.
A greater danger will confront the tablish a laundry at one of the can­
United States after this war. Should neries and do the washing and iron­
the Germans win, or fight to a draw, ing of the flat work for the members
or even come to peace terms that at 4 cents per pound.”
A circular sent to the members a
would leave them defeated but not
few days ago stated that 5 cents a
crushed—look out then for squalls.
When this war is ended many pound would have to be charged, but
scores will come up for settlement— on consideration it was found that
among them the claims of the United the work could be done for 4 cents or
States for idemnity for lives of Amer­ probably less.
The laundry equipment will cost
icans lost on the Lusitania and other
torpedoed passenger ships. However about S2000 to install. Owing to the
the war may end it is certain that fact that the canneries have plenty of
Germany will be left financially poor. | floor space and ample boiler capacity
Enormous war debts will depress her there will be no expense for those
people and weigh crushingly on her items. The main cost will be for ma­
industries and trade. The payment chinery.
A laundry in connection with a can­
then of large cash indemnity to the
I nited States will not be popular in nery would not be a experiment, for
the Geramn empire. The radical naval a farmers’ coopcrateive laundrv has
party mentioned by Mr. Roosevelt been in operation at Chatfield, Minn.,
w II claim and get a hearing then. It for some time and it has proved a
will urge that the German govern­ great help to the wives of the farmers.
ment bristle up to the United States
with heavy counter claims.
The Democrats would be pleased if
What then would happen if the
German ambassador should present *hcv could force the Republicans to
'o our secretary of state a declaration 1 make the campaign on foreign rela­
in substance this: "We will allow tions.
Villa is said to be operating under
vovr claims for indemnity, but as an
ofset against our own greater claims. an assumed name. But Villa under
The United States was not neutral in any other name would be just as vil­
the recent war. It aided our enemies lainous.