TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, AUGUST Pendleton is urging pay rolls 1 endleton is also promoting a branch State Normal lor itself. Pendleton prefers public pork, having had a taste in the form of a state sanitar­ ium.—Mt. Scott Herald. Why all this talk of distress in Pol and and Armenia when we have ap­ palling lood conditions here at home- lhe price of baked beans in Boston has gone up from 8 cents a quart n> 25 cents a quart.—Telephone Regis ter. • The Portland West Coast Railroad & Navigation Co. has sat in a little game with the Valley and coast towns now for three or more years—and bluffed until some have dropped out But game little Newport has stuck and has finally called for a showdown. Newport was not to be bluffed out' She has $25,000 in the pot and will soon know now whether the company is a four flusher. Woe be if it is!— Sheridan Sun. ------ o------ California has some pending legis­ lation of interest because of the grape industry there. Two bills are to be voted upon this fall, one calling for state-wide prohibition; and another for abolishing the saloon. People w ho really know the situation in the neighboring state, believe that the lat­ ter will carry because most condition.- complained of can be corrected by abolishing the saloons.—News Re­ porter. The New York medical fraternity has agreed that infantile paralysis is caused by insanitary conditions in the tenement houses—by bad air, filth, sewer gas, foul odors, in ramshackle buildings. Then why don’t the author­ ities protect the poor from the results of their own poverty and tear the in­ sanitary buildings down, every one of them, anti build sanitary tenaments' Couldn't that be done, and the lives of those babies saved, The French-British offensive in the west started on June 27 and now en­ ters its sixth week. It has settled in­ to grinding out the slow destruction of the German forces. It has stopped the vicious violence of the Teutonic struggle for Verdun. It prevents Austria-Hungary and Germany from reinforcing the troops contending against Italy and Russia. It strains the resources and nerve of the Austro Hungarian and German government: to'the limit, it bruises the spirit 01 the Austrian, German and Magyar peoples. In these indirect effect it tells most.—Spokesman Review. When the Democratic administra­ tion went into office there were many tolks of simple faith who exclaimed “What a fortunate thing for Oregon that we have elected democratic senators. They will be right _ in the swim. Oregon ( will get anything she wants.” ’ Poor fellows, they knew not what they were talking about and deceived. grievously were they \Vhat have our democratic senators done for Oregon? Compare the work of the Oregon delegation, for in- stance, which is democratic, with that of the Washington delegation, which is republican, and you will see how- fortunate (?) Oregon has been. Washington got just about everything it wanted and Oregon got what the little boy shot at—and is still getting it.—Aslorian. that auto license fees be increased and the proceeds - — expended by the state government for permanent im­ provement of through roads. The idea is for legislative enactment to his eftect and that these license fees > ae the basis of providing interest and sinking fund payments for bond I issues for permanent highway im­ provement by the state.” The num- autos in the state will never be ess, the farmers will certainly object to this scheme provided there is nore than a "basis" raised through such means. It should be first learn­ ed what would be required yearly to - meet the interest and sinking fund on the bonds voted and then make 'he auto license increase accordingly. 1 his we think. Mr. Chapman desires and has no “nigger in the woodpile.” Only farmers and other citizens with automobiles are to meet the interest and sinking fund obligations. Are we right, Mr. Chapman?—Woodburn Independent. STRANGE FISH IS FOUND. Dallas Man Makes Discovery While at Netarts. \\ ith each recurring season strange tales are sprung upon an unsuspecting public by persons visiting the seaside, the evident purpose being to gain publicity for these places of hot- weather gatherings. This coast has, however, strictly adhered to the turth permitting the chips to fall where they may. To this latter class be­ longs the strange discovery made by A. S. Campbell, who last week re­ turned from an outing on the Tilla­ mook coast at Netarts bay, where he caught a fish the likes of which had never before been seen by the oldest inhabitant. He has the jaws of this member of the finny tribe, and al­ though he has diligently searched many works on fishology he has fail­ ed to find anything that applies to this new one. The fish was about four and a half feet long and was devoid of scales. It had long silk like fins and was dark green in color. Its head was long and tapering and its mouth was armed with long spear-like teeth, somewhat similar to those of the shark. Now name it.—Polk County Observer. This is a good joke on Bro Cates. The critter was a Dallas bed bug. Wasco County Read Bonds. A compromise between the farmers of Central and Southern Wasco coun­ ty and the business men of The Dal­ les has resulted in a new plan for bonding the county for roads. The Dufur Dispatch, which opposed the former proposed bond issue on the ground it was “too much Columbia Highway,” says of the new plan: “t he agreement finally reached and the bonds which will be asked for is $260,000. Of this ainout it is pro­ posed to spend $135,000 on The Dallcs-California Highway, or be­ tween The Dalles and the Jefferson county line, and $125,000 on the road across the northern part of the coun­ ty. “By the terms of the agreement the southern part of the county gets the larger portion of the good roads money and gets enough to make a good road entirely through the coun­ ty- “It is not expected to construct a hard surface road but the road bed will be graded and then in all proba­ bility graveled. And in the road that is to be constructed across (or partly across) the northern part of the coun­ ty, a part of it which included in the estimate, is a road that will have to be constructed anyhow and is one that is badly needed by residents of the Mosier section. "There is but little doubt but what the bond issue will carry for the roads are badly needed and about the only way to get them is through the medium of a bond issue."—Oregon Voter._________________ Realizing that a discussion of just what four years of Democratic ad­ ministration has done to these United States would be calamitous, news­ paper defenders are solidly lining up in an effort to cloud the issue by pre­ tending that while one party stands for peace and the other would have war. But it is hardly likely that even few people will be fooled. No, one man nor party can involve the United Stales in war, and should war come it would be in response to a popular de­ mand. McKinley used every effort for The Titantic Case Ended. peace and yet he could not stem the Four and a quarter years after the demand that we intervene in Cuba and the Spanish war followed. The Titantic disaster, the admiralty W ilson administration has meddled branch of the Federal District Court and muddled in Mexico and Republi­ of New York has just given judgment can speakers have pointed out those that the officers of the steamship mistakes just as they will point out company were not guilty of negli­ economic mistakes, and argument gence, and that prosecution of suits administration for damages based upon the allega­ that a Republican would have waged war instead of tion of neglect of duty cannot be un­ meddled will fool nobody, It would dertaken “in any court of any country have met the problem just as it has or jurisdiction.” The company stood met others of like nature, notably the to be sued for some 218,000,000 Vcnzuelan question.—Hillsboro Inde­ damages; but under the decision will pay to those who accepted settlement pendent. pro rata; the amount to be divided — —O-.... - If liquid fire is to become an ac­ among those claimants being $800,- cepted weapon of war, the Lnited 000. The decision is valuable as history, States will be in a position to surpass all other nations in the deadliness of for it must be regarded as resulting that which it can use. This has been from a very long and careful investi­ proved by tests at the Frankfort, Pa., gation into the Titanic disaster. The arsenal of the invention of Julius belief that reasonable care on the Dolges, a Philadelphia chetuist. It can part of the officers would have pre­ be turned on the enemy in the form vented the collision with the iceburg of a liquid fire that cannot be ex­ has been fostered by very circum­ tinguished and will continue to burn stantial reports. The court’s decision, prevail. It wholly ab- nOWCVClf must tiiuot H 1 v for days. it can be employed as a however, ‘ A cloud of heavy black smoke that ef­ solves the officers from * blame, fects the lungs and causes those who judgment from such a quarter is er -. inhale to choke; or it can be combin­ titled to acceptance. ed with chlorine or cyanide and result HEAR WITHOUT EARS. in a terrible devastation to an enemy while remaining safe to the men handling it. It can be mixed and com­ Police and Detectives Are Using Lip Reading in Place of the Dic­ bined with poison and kept in air­ tagraph. tight containers ready for use. It can Thousands of deaf people are today be shot through hose under air pres­ sure and can be controlled so as to throwing away all hearing devices ignite after a given t eriod. It will and enjoying all conversation. This burn on the water, and tanks have method is easily and quickly acquired been made to carry it on aircraft. It through our system. Absolutely the can be dropped on warships with dis- only thing of its kind in the country. asterous effect, for it melts metal. It i , Our proposition is entirely original. can be made for 25 cents a gallon and Cost is trifling. Sec what New Inter­ a representative of the British gov­ national Encyclopaedia says on Lip ernment is said to have offered 8500,- Reading. Hundreds of people with normal hearing are taking up Lip 000 for the invention.—-Oregonian. ■ —o------- I reading for the many additional ben­ C. C. Chapman (etc.) has tackled' efits gained. You can understand the important question of financing what the actors are saying just as far highway improvement, ai d has settl­ away as you can see them. The eye ed upon a plan that is p! ausable and understands beyond the range . of may become quite popula r with many hearing. Send no money, but mention automobile owners, who are tired of this paper and state whether or net poor thoroughfares and ar e willing to you are deaf. All particulars will be pay extra for added pie asure and sent you absolutely free and with no what would really be a great saving J expense to you. Address. School of in pocket to them. The pr oposition is I Lip Language, Kansas City, Missouri I I STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION. Jackson County Gave the Editors the Time of their Lives. (Contributed.) It will be many a day before the last word of warm praise for the hospital­ ity of the people of Medford and Jackson Comity has found expression in the press ot the state. 1 he enter­ tainment offered the Editorial Asso­ ciation made the recent convention the most successful in its history. A lasting benetil to the association must result. This fact as well as ad­ miration for the public spirit shown by the good people of that county has won for them a secure place in the regard of news paper min from every section of Oregon. One feature, entirely incidental and, we believe, never occuring to Ben Sheldon and his assistants who ar­ ranged and carried out the entertain­ ment program, was the interest cre­ ated in the ambition of the people of that section to have Ashland’s normal school re-established. Discussion of lhe pending measure for a normal at Pendleton, brought the matter to the editor’s attention. The fine impress­ ion created by Ashland’s new Lithia Park and the fact of her abundant ability to make good with a normal school located in her midst, so strongly impressed upon the editors during their visit there, will work to the advantage of the Southern Ore­ gon school whenever their effort is renewed. | $ ? ■ Incidental to the discussion, wc would like to raise the remark that one of the best things ever done for the cause ot Ashland's Normal was the bringing of the editors of the state to Jackson County. Both the magnificent entertainment provided by Sheldon and his assistants ati-i the , culture, public spirit, love of the beau­ tiful; in fact every element goi ig to make up a fine little city of good homes, and good schools, evidenced by the people of Ashland, left an im­ pression on the large and representa­ tive group of Oregon editors assem­ bled there which will not soon be forgotten, and will undoubtedly be reflected in their attitude toward any effort to place her normal school on its feet again. One. of the most important men in the state, who was with the news­ paper men at their recent convention at Mdford and Crater Lake, stated to a group of Medford men gathered round the big fireplace in Crater f-tke Lodge: ‘ This is the most val­ uable piece of. community advertising in one 'stunt' ever pulled off in Ore­ gon.” Wc arc not certain but facts warrant this statement, strong i as it is. In the first place, the gener­ al impression of the people of Jack- son County, taken home by these newspaper writers from every section of the state, is extremely complimen­ tary. They certainly made good as hosts. Secondly they demonstrated that Jackson County had built, out of her own funds, one of the finest ( mountain roads on the coast which, by every right should be considered a state road and a state job. The trip corrected a false idea held by many | of the visiting editors, that Jackson County had built up the north side of the Siskiyou Mountains and Califor­ nia up the south side. The Oregon line is six miles the other side of the summit, which means that Jackson County has built up both sides of the range. The fact that Crater Lake is a won­ derful asset to the state, if made read­ ily accesible, was impressed on these men most forcibly and an/ proper move to secure aid for the improve­ ment of roads to the lake will have the hearty sympathy of the newspa­ per men of the state. o------ Again, the impression gained in the little city of Ashland convinced us all that she was abundantly able to make good in maintaining a normal school when the one which was once there shall be reopened by the state. That school will have a host of friends among the “opinion moulders” of the state when it again comes up for con­ sideration, especially if, as two years ago, its plea is carried over the state by Ben Sheldon, of Medford, through whose efforts the success of the con­ vention’s entertainment was almost entirely due. ____ __ DAIRYMEN. I have inquiries for weaned calves of all kinds. If you have any for sale, call me up on either Phone or write me, giving full particulars as to age. breed and condition with price of each, and I will call and look them over—Remember—I can use anything in the baby calf hne and can use them any time, summer or winter. Call up when you have one for sale and I will call for i'. SMITH, The Calf Man'. O This Isthe Time J PHYSICIAN AND SURGON, NATIONAL BUILDING, TILLAMOOK OREGON. 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. Alien Co.s’ line of high grade pianos, player-pianos, Victrolos etc. ? □ TILLAMOOK, ORE. ■ ' T. Buna LI Right at this season is the very best time to buy beds— when our stock is full and complete for your selection. Above, for example, we show one of the beautiful new Simmons Steel Beds as advertised in the Ladies' Home Journal and Saturday Evening Post. Come in and let us show you the full line. They are the famous light weight, electrically welded steel about which you have been reading. There is not a nut or a bolt in the whole bed to rattle loose. And the finishes are beautiful. The quality of our merchandise is the best that human skill and ingenuity can produce; our enormous buying power lowers the price to the point where they cannot fail to interest even the most experienced buyers. Let us prove to you that we can and do sell you the greatest home furnishing values at prices i.o other concern can equal. Jones-Knudson Fur. Co O'" Ben Sheldon of Medford, the man who was responsible for the conven­ tion’s going to Southern Oregon and wh6 had charge of the entertainment , was brought into the discussion more or less as he is looked upon as one of the spokesmen for the people of Ash­ land and the southern pait of the state who arc anxious to see the nor­ mal at Ashland reopened. Sheldon campaigned the state for that schco! . two years ago. AVID ROBINSON, M.D., ELAND K ERWIN, Ben Sheldon campaigned the state for that school two years ago, but we doubt if he ever did anything that will help its cause more than the bringing of these newspaper men to Ashland and Jackson County, which was largely due to his individual work. One of the “asides” under heated discussion at the convention of the ! State Editorial Association recently held at Medford was the proposed Normal School at Pendleton. Bro. 1 E. B. Aldrich of the East Oregonian ; and Fred Lockley were on hand to up hold the affirmative side of the ques­ tion, with Clark Wood, of Weston as I vigorously battling for the opposition, j 17 1916. A a . ATTORNEY-AT LAW. Complete Set of Abstract Boo- >■ Office. Taxes Paid for Non Residents. T illamook B lock , TillatnooK .... Oregcr Both Phones. T. BO ALS, M.D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Surgeon S. P. Co. (I. O. O. F. Bldg ) Tillamook .... Oregon s ^^fEBSTER HOLMES, ATTORNEY-AT LAW COMMERCIAL BUILDING, FIRST STREET, TILLAMOOK, flUEX. MeNAIR & CO OREGON rp H. GOYNE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. GENERAL HARDOUARE Kitehen Ranges and Heating Stoves. THE BEST STOCK OF HARDWARE IN THE COUNTY. See Us for Prices Before Ordering Elsewhere Office: O pposite C ourt H ouse , Tillamook - Oregon. JACK OI.SEN, i DENTIST. ((I. O. O. F. Bldg.) Tillamook • Oregon QARI. HABERLACH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. T illamook B eock . Tillamook [Oregon 0R. L. U. HOY, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON T illamook B lock , Tillamook, It's the uniform unva rying heat cf a good oil stove, and the perfect control, that keeps the juices in—that pre­ serves the savory goodness of the meat —and gives that even ||g brownness all over. r vicier, fasiior 1‘c^sl —a cleaner, coder kitchen, and les» fuel expense A NEW PERFECTION OIL COOWOVE All theeonvenienceof gas. Cooks everything any wood or coal ran will cook, but keep* J ;r Reif Resulti Use Pearl ^nur kitchen cool. The long blue chim­ neys do away with ail smoke and smell. In 1, 2,3 and 4-burner sizes, ovens separate. Also cabinet models with Fireless Cooking Ov­ ens. Ask your dealer today. STANDARD OIL COMPANY W Wl L&al \j ’—■I i* 2/ ■ .fj PL l 1 - - Oregon. J OHN LELAND HENDERSON ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT-LAW. T illamook B lock , Tillamook - . . - Oiegtm. ROOM NO. 201 C. HAWK. PHYSICIAN AND SUPOR»'’ Bay City J Or'g<- E. REED i, T< V M VETERINARY Tillamook Both PI101 ■ ... • Oregon Have Your House (Czliforoia) Tillamook For Sale by KING & SMITH ALEX McNAIR CO THE "GREATER OREGON With new building«, better equlprnrnt, and ffiiinr Addition* to it« Fru-ulty. the I HI»r-.lt y of Oregon will begin It* foriy-firM yonr.Tiir-t- day, Sept ember It. 1*10. N pec lai training In (ommiTce, Journalism. A rrlil tertu re, L aw , M«*<||r| nr.Tear hl nr, Libra- ry Work. Mu»lr, Physlral Training and Wine Art«. Large and «trong (Icpurtme-iti of Liber- ttl Kducatlon. Library of more than 6 "1.90 9 volume«, flf- twn building« fully equipped, two «plrmlld rymnaalums. Tuition *rroo. I>or ml tor lr« for men and for omen. Expense« lx*w eat. Write for free catalogs, addressing Registrar UNIVERSITY OF OREGON El'GEMK. ORBOOM — .«■•A—-flim lr 1 DONE RIGHT at RIGHT PRICES. Automobiles Good Values in Used Cars 1—1914 Ford, a snap ......... 1325.00 I—Buie Delivery Truck .... — 1913 Ford Body 125.00 15.00 See ROSENBERG At Tillamook Garage.