Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, July 27, 1916, Image 5

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JULY 27. 1916.
"THE TILLAMOOK SPIRIT.""
------o-----
CARELESS AUTO DRIVING.
tricity, gas .anj the like. The chil­
Wheeler Boosters to Have a Get-
dren ought to co-operate. There is
Large
Number ot Person« ir;it a
to-Gether Meeting.
Railroad cloiinV. K*Ued “ something wrong when a bunch of
------ o------
youngsters grows up in our homes,
(From Wheeler Reporter.)
reÇeiving and never giving, taking
That carelessness on the Dart ni .n daily
I One week from next Monday even­
without thanks their portion of
ing. July 31s,< there will be held a -PXiMed tPoeAehS,ria.nS - Primal food and clothing, never making any
meeting at the Hotel Rector that
contribution of service in return.
shou'd mark an epoch in the history
of Nehalem Bay progress.
That Dreadful Platform.
Every live wire business man and
citizen of Wheeler will be invited to
It is reported that Charles Evans
- -s" Hughes tell asleep while reading the
I participate and help entertain the
guests from Nehalem,
Brighton,
platform adopted by the free trade
Mohler and the neighboring farming S'thanTp"1 ‘’'''^PoPula*™ and convention at Si. Louis. \\ c can well
districts. There will be a few invited
believe it. A stupider, shallower col­
from the southern part of the county ess than . per CCnt of |he ite#nj
location of words was never put Jorth
so we may demonstrate to them the
3 mileage, furnishes nearly 5 pcr as the, doctrine land gospel of a po­
“The Nehalem Bay Spirit.”
-ent of the deaths and injuries re- litical party. It may be said of inis,
The object of this gathering is to portedtothe Interstate ¿ommcrce- as Daniel Webster said of a Demo­
give the participants a chance to be­ '”',Jniillss,°n. During the thre? years cratic platform in 1848;’
come better acquainted in order that ended June 30, 191a, 249 neonh-Lor^
See nothing in it both new and
| they may work in harmony for the killed and 1093 injured at grade cros- valuable. What is valuable is not new
advancement of every proposition Mgns in this State. The recoid is al- and what is new is not valuable.”
that means the progress and prosper­ ■ ‘V5 much worse in (lle sumn)er
The New York Sun recommends
than ln the winter."
ity of the entire district.
that the St. Louis platform be utiliz­
---------
i he program will consist of discus­ inrre'in^rt °V“ 10>00.0 Kfade cross- ed
as a cure for ....u.....»,
insomnia. z-mpioyeu
Employed
sion of roads, river and harbor im­ mgs in California and $3v,000 would I for that purpose, the “dope” might be
provements, and encouragement of De a low estimate of the cost of elim- of some consequence. It cannot be for I
"dA?g .°"n
one 5 crossing.
rossing To
Tu seperate
seperate | 1 a“y other use. ________
.milling and manufacturing plants, mating
I road conditions and any other topic grades at all the crossings would cost
i of general welfare.
over $3,000,000,000 and it is. of
What Hetty Gr«en Missed.
The banquet will be served by the course, out of the question to consid-
Hotel Rector and will be in the best
- .
Hetty Green was not
the
an. —
exPcn.d>t'ure c at this | No,
style of that hotel’s noted service. uine Neither the people nor the rail-1 wealthiest woman. She merely had
roads
can
Qtrinrl
it
”
I
th»»
tnnet
mz-vnoxr
Tim,»
stand it.
the most money. There are a great
The pleasure of sitting at this spread
Meanwhile existing conditions I rnany woman who would not sell
will be worth all inconvenience of at­
tendance.
must be met. It has been suggested I
youth, or their prettiness, or
Now let everybody get busy and | that the legislature should pass laws I l*,c noisest, kickingest baby alive, or
talk and boost for this banquet gath­ requiring all motor vehicles to come e,ven a husband, for all that Hetty
ering. Let us show that this is one of to a lull stop before passing over a I Green had. It is often said by people
the districts that maintains a bunch grade crossing. Io my mind a better I w*llt money that no one would envy
was generally known
of live wires. The Nehalem Bay dis­ suggestion is a law requiring the I ll,e r*ch *f
trict has a great future and our drivers of motor vehicles to drive I 'vhat they had to endure.
I
slowly
when
approaching
an
inter
­
Most rich people belie the saying
towns and communities will be what
section of a track and highway.
by riding
. _ in expensive motor cars,
we make them.
“Personally 1 have not a great deal |wearing
L strange
‘
_! clothes, living in
Boost! is the slogan.
I of sympathy for a careless driver great * ' houses, employing hordes of
who gets hurt in a grade crossing ac- servants, and acting as though they
AGRICULTURAL NOTES.
| cidcnt. But our figures show that really believe there was something
I when a driver is hurt or killed, three unusually fine about them. But Hetty
By R. C. Jones, County Agriculturist. I or four people with him are also hurt Green made no such pretensions. Be­
I or killed. Last September may be ing enormously rich, in the money
Cooperative Stock Shipping.
In several parts of the state the I taken as a typical mouth. Three auto sense, she was sincere enough to be,
farmers have formed
coorporative I drivers were killed in the state that or, at least, appear, unhappy. The
marketing associations.
In Lane I month and ten occupants of the auto- natural impulse was to be sorry for
county a committee from the Pomona I mobiles were killed at the same time. Hetty Green. Some day, perhaps, we
(orange has it in cnarge and makes a Nine drivers were injured and thirty- will be sorry for all rich people, and
thiprnent every week to the open I seven other occupants were injured. then it will be just a few steps until
market. In Yamhill county a similar These other occupants of the vehicles we arrive at the millennium.
plan is followed. The idea is to give struck by trains were in many cases—
Increased Imports From China.
trie farmer a chance to realize as I possibly in most cases—relatives of
much as possible on his surplus stock. drivers, often wives and children, and
“For ways that are dark and tricks
Last week some members of the if the careless driver when left to him
Farmer’s Union in this county in..de I self so far forgets the safety of him- that are vain, the heathen Chinee is
i up a carload of hogs and sent them I self and those who are nearest to him peculiar,” but there is nothing pecu­
to the open market at the Portland I as to jeopardize their lives in this liar about the fact that during the
I fashion, it is time for the law to step nine months ending March, 1916,
Lmon Stock Yards.
Local buyers were paying $6,75 in and tell him what he must do to China increased her hold on the
American market 74 per cent, com­
for hogs and the load urougnt these I guard them.”
|9.00 with the exception of a few I “The popular impression i is that pared with the similar period ended
r;__l. from March, 1915, because we have a
rough old sows and a couple that I most grade crossings result
were way under size. T he shipping I railways being opened : t-cross high- Democratic near free trade tariff law
As Commissioner Gordon on the books, and with a wage scale
sxpenses amounted to about 45c. per I ways.
100 lbs. and the shrinkage on the car I makes clear, the fact that most of that wouldn’t buy a package of smok­
brought the net price to the farmers I them are due to highways being op- ing tobacco for an American laboring
I ened across railways and many of man, the Chinese find it an easy mat­
I about $8.00.
T he railroad service was very poor, I them are more of a menace than a ter to unload on our market. We im­
ported from7 China during the nine
the car being 31 hours on the road. I convenience to the public.”
Un this account the shrinkage was I With reference to trespassing, he months ended March, 1916, $47,-
790,000 worth of goods, compared
brobab'y more than it would be again. I I says.
As it was, the farmers realized on the I “In 1914, 5,396 persons were killed with $27,500,000 for the nine months
car about $250 more than they would I I in the United States and 6,176 were ended March 1915. The Oregonians
I injured while trespassing on railroads and Washingtonians got their share
u they had sold here.
| The day the hogs sold on the mar-1 and these figures are about the same of these imports in eggs that were
Let the top price was $3.10, but 1 I as those reported for the previous laid when the dodo was the barnyard
do not believe any of our farmers I years. During that same year there fowl of old Cathay. As a Chinese res­
would grudge that load of hogs the I were 165 trespassers killed and 217 taurant keeper on the Pacific Coast
extra 10 cents per 100 pounds they I injured in California. In the last 25 was heard to say: “No can cachee
I received. It was a load of Poland I years there have been over 212,000 flied—can catchce scrambled.” They
Chinas, uniform in size, and rounded I people killed in the United States in wouldn’t stand thé strain.
out hard as could be. It was certainly I railroad accidents, and of this vast
ft ■
a fine car of hogs and the uniformity I I number, over 112,000 were trespass­ Free Trade has Glutted the Treasury.
ers.
This
record
would
be
bad
made it very attractive.
Not only did the Republican tariff
enough if those who suffered were
Muk Tests at Fair.
The First National Bank has offer- | tramps and ‘hobos’ but when we find law protect American industry and
ed $50.00 in addition to the money that 75,000 of the total killed were American workingmen, but it kept
put up by the Fair Board for the milk citizens of the locality in which the rhe United States treasury in good
test provided there are 10 or more accident occurred, and 13,000 were shape. When Woodrow Wilson step­
entries. Are you going to let the children under 18 years of age, we ped into the office the outgoing Re­
money go by default? i’leasc send in must admit it to be absolutely dis­ publican administration was able to
hand over to him a handsome surplus |
your entries early so we can know graceful.”
"The grade crossing problem is one to setup housekeeping for Uncle Sam. ,
what to depend on. Everyone who
has a cow that is showing up well which is met with, more or less, in all On March 31, 1913, there was a to-I
countries, but trespass accidents oc­ tai balance in the general fund of
should enter her in this contest.
cur only in the United States. In $184,500,000. Eighty million of that
Drainage Expert Here.
Profs. Larson and Teeter, drainage Europe the property of the railroads was set aside as a working balance.
experts from O. A.- C., are now at is no more used for public thorough­ Democratic extravagance and the fail­
work on the final survey ot jhe Big fares than are privately owned ranch­ ure of the Underwood law as a reve­
Nestucca Drainage District. They es and farms in this country, and nue producer glutted the treasury in
will be in the county for a week or even Canada, with more excuse than short order. At the end of March,
two. Any who need help who have the United States for permitting tres­ 1916, outstanding claims against the
passing in and around railroad tracks, government, unavailable assets, etc.,
not applied, please do so at once.
has rigid, anti-trespassing laws which amounted to $140,433,000. McAdoo
reported a balance at that time of '
are strictly enforced,
Woods and Pacific City Items.
"Referring to the passage of anti­ $126,745,695, which was $13,697,- |
trespassing laws in this country Com­ 000 ’ less than these outstanding
------ 0------
missioner
Gordon adds, “I believe the claims and unavailable assets. The j
Lots of sport these days fishing in
z*
.
- r a. L
II O C 1LV1
C . ,
Secretary
of
the T
1 •*A*aci«r«r
reasury has
twice
,
the ocean, some very good calcites dav will come when it will he done changed the system of government
and
those
of
us
who
are
compelled
to
being made.
accounting in order to hide the con­
Mr. Bewley, of Sheridan, has been think of these things should do all we dition of the treasury, and it is stated
can
to
hasten
its
coming.
”
engaged by Deals bros, to run the
that another method of bookkeeping
summer resort at bacilic City Uns
is soon to be adopted, in order to put
The War and Household Service.
season.
up a bluff at the close of the fiscal
ti i had a dead man buried under
year. And if a “working balance
my place 1 would not talk so much
It is claimed that 100,000 house- should show up around the U. ».
about other people.
maids could be placed at once in Treasury they would chloroform it
Postmaster Deuel’s wife is improv­ American homes that are clamoring arid send it to Redfield’s trade muse-
ing.
for them. Ordinarily the shortage in um.
z
1 oo iftany pessimists in this neck domestic help has been made up from
of the woods.
the throng of alien girls that come
The Situation.
Morrice Bays is building a new barn crowding in from Europe. The war
to replace th« one that blew down has cut off this supply. It is towomen | If a man were to witness a ruffian
what the shortage of chemicals is to robbing his neighbor’s house, as­
last winter.
Or. Ness and Mr. Hollingsworth, of the industries.
I Newberg, are camped at Mcl’hillips
As the manufacturer has learned saulting a woman, murdering children
camp ground, you may find them resourcefulness, so the heme has to and permitted it to go on unmolested,
what sort of a citizen would he be
every day trowling on the river. They adapt itself to new conditions. Now considered?
This is exactly the situa­
is the time for young hands. There is
have made some good catches.
It would be a pleasure for people no good reason why the mothers tion in Mexico. Ruffians to the south
have been robbing, murdering
who own autos if they could make the should be baking bread while their I of us assaulting
our neighbors and
loop, by coming one side of the river daughters arc at the parties. What and
have even invaded our own yard and
and back the other, but the County are all these home economic clubs, murdered some of our own family,
Ferry’s landing on each side at but a return to the days of grand­ and yet we are told, in the interest of
Woods are in bad shape, even a Ford mother's girlhood, when the arts of humanity, that we must not interfere.
gets stuck, and it it was not for a big the home were early and easily taught The robbery and murders and as­
.husky man like Deuel to lift them to the youngsters?
It has been too bad that these girls, saults continue, and the man intrusted
'out there would be little travel that
when
they grew up. undervalued this with the destinies of the United
way.
States Government for the past
It's a poor policy to follow to try training, and preferred that their three and one half years has deliber­
to get a fellow tired. How do you ex­ children should give their time to ately and persistently refused to put
pleasures the older ones could not
pect a man to pay you?
a stop to those crimes and has there­
If some people were aware their have. They seemed to place higher by accentuated the danger of our own
knocks were a boost, perhaps they values on slight smatterings of music, country. This is the real issue in the
painting, fancy work, and social pol­
would take a tumble to themselves.
present campaign for the election of
Times are getting pretty hard when ish, than on the higher culture of president. The Republican candidate,
ministering
to
the
needs
of
the
family
one carpenter tries to get work away
Mr. Hughes, has promised that, if
from his friend by telling the house­ circle.
elected, he will at once put a stop to
Romain
Rolland
has
said,
"A
wom
­
builder that he could not build a
an is in possession of all her senses the disorders in Mexico, that he will
chicken coop for him.
only when she is working—only lend the aid of the United States Gov­
when she does she pt "esses all her ernment to th* re-establishment of a
ent in that country
Stray Heifer.
charm and alert suppleness of move­ stable gover
and make it once more a safe place
ment.”
A stray heifer, with black spots on
Modern science has been busy in for human habitation. It is a crime
*»ch side just below the hip, 2 year the kitchen with many labor saving against the Mexican people and the
old, been on place two months. Own- ■ ppliances. The housewife who can’t American people and against civiliza­
fcj'ease call at J. C. Chaffee’s place get a maid from Europe, owing to the tion to longer permit conditions to
»Jfmles south of Tillamook or phone war, is often able to shorten her la­ exist as they now exist in that coun­
W. R. Davis, Mutual phone.
bors by use of vacuum cleaners, elec- try.
i
$
WISE
?
and
MASSEY,
DENTISTS,
l>Jc. H M MASSEY
*s a College Graduate in
Dentistry, registered in Ore­
gon. and has had several
years experience, and has
come to Tillamook Cuuntv
to make it his future home.
and owners of
Bar View Tent City
We have Dental Offices in Tillamook, Bay City, liar View and
Cloverdale, and are equipped to do all kinds of Dental
Work as good as it can be done anywhere.
Wiiat we Cannot Guarantee, We Do Not Do.
Dr . Massey guarantees all his work and can be consulted at
one;
A
OUR BRIDGE WORK has
been brought to the highest
state of perfection.
The
teeth on ibis bridge are in­
terchangeable at will with­
out removing from
the
in outh
Dr. Wise has ha<1 thirty years experience in plate work
FREE
PAINLESS
EXTRACTING
When Plates or Bridge
Work is Ordered.
THAI j>*
PLATES WITH FLEXIBLE SVCTTOX—
The verv be^t and latest ,n »norterndctitUtrv.
No more falling pluu».
It vou are I.avia’.’
plate trnnble get Dr Wise's nd vice ns to
what should be done anti the eoet ot doing
FREI.
Wrenn extract vov.r teeth almo-
bitclv Tvithout pain—free where plate or
1 /gc work is ordered,
bn
i
<r
$
I
A Standard Piano with a reputation for quality
and durability is a good investment.
You have purchased lasting satisfaction. The
Wilev B. Allen Co.
J
handle none but the best makes such as the Lud­
wig. Milton, Harrington, Kingsbury, Wellington,
etc. These pianos are absolutely guaranteed by
the makers against any possible defect.
popular styles at the Jones-Knudson Furniture Store.
Call in the Store any time. Sold on easy payments.
“ Your-Moneys-Worth-or-Your-Money-Back.”
Leland B. Erwin.
t
s
TOBACCO IS PREPARED
FOR SMOKERSUNDERTHE
PROCESS DISCOVERED ¡N
MAKING EXPERIMENTS TO
PRODUCE THE MOST DE-
LIGriTfUL AND WHOLE-
S$OME TOBACCO FOR CIG-
W*SÄEHCANOPli ■ESMUKERS
?. A. puts new j’oy
into the sport of
smoking!
OU may live to
be 110 and never
feel o’.d enough to
vote, but its cer­
»J PROCESS PATENTED
JULY 30 LM1907
tain-sure you’ll not
RJ.fiEYMOLDSiOBACCOCOMTW
know the joy and
W i K3N n S m . en .HC.U.$A.
contentment of a
DOES HOT BITE THE7ÛNGUE
friendly old jimmy
ll
pipeorahand rolled
cigarette unless you gut on talking-terms
with Prince Albert tobacco!
I I
!
¡
l>K W. A WISH
ie the NnmcfcDr. Wise who
practiced dentistry iu Tilla­
mook County a few yenrs
ago, an<l will he pleased to
again wait on tbo«e who
desire his professional ser­
vice.
....... ..
lomg burnii NG
*'* PIPE
-.** — - AMD
—
Prince Albert it cold eoery-ohere
in loppy red bagt, Sc; tidy red
tine. ¡Or; handtome pound and
half-pound tin humidore-and -
that cleoer tryital glau pnand
humidor uitb eponge-moietener
top that keeps the tobacco in tveh
eplendid condition.
Y
U I >1 .■ 11' 11 . ................... ...
P. A. comes to you with a real reason for all the
goodness and satisfaction it offers. It is made by
a patented process that removes hite and parch I
You can smoke it long and hard without a come­
back I Prince Albert has always been sold without
coupons or premiums. We prefer to give qualityl
Prince Albert affords the keenest jape and cigarette
enjoyment! And that flavor and fragrance and
| coolness is as good as that sounds.. P. A. just
answers the universal demand hor tobacco
without bite, parch or kick-back!
Introduction to Prince Albert isn’t itny harder
than to walk into the nearest place that sells
tobacco and ask for "a supply of P. A ” You pay
out a little change, to be sure, but it's the ehe er­
füllest investment you ever made I
»