TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT that the Editors Say. —o— Uarion County apparently wishes btain all ,he benef,ts 11 can froni 10 .. institutions, but it is not willing *“ v its share. Look at its oyer- »»8 vote against a new peniten- | n wants more business for Sa- ! , »<t it voted against the road So ds There are those who want to 1 b°'e Salem a lesson and remove one U one th‘ state institutions to other arts of the stat*' lhe COIn,non- ' „«Ith might as well begin to locate I the penitentiary somewhere else.— j ytws Reporter. though they do not advocate the same extremes of violence. The I W \\ long ago branded itself as a con- sptracy against the law, andthe latest phase of its activity marks it as an enemy of the United States in the ihti *“■, By continuing their agitation against war and con- scnpt.on, after war and conscription have become the law of the |am£ tlw ,11*1 Socialists are traitors in do ng that which was formerly lawful however mischievous. ’ Agitation against war no longer has a legal status in the United States - Oregonian. _____ VSXXvcti Investments for Gain. ------ -o — — Marconi says America can win the „ar with flyers. Speaking officially he said: “The airplane is an enormous factor in this conflict and will, 1 be lieve, grow even more decisive. The United States will be looked to for this contribution in a great measure. It will require a hundred thousand flying machines to subordinate the other methods of war to the air ' fighting; 10,000 would help mightily but they could not settle the war; too- oou, 1 think, would. If an overwhelm ing force of airplanes could be mus tered so that the enemy flyers would be driven from the air, they would be helpless in ranging and directing ar tillery, ami would, of course, be at an incalculable disadvantage. — Tele phone Register. ----- o----- The ovation tendered by the people of France to General Pershing and the members of his staff is of course intended as a tribute to the American nation as a whole. The joyous acclaim of welcome accorded Pershing more over, is a hint of the reception that awaits American troops when they reach France on their way to the front. It is going to be a rare privi lege to participate in this experience, a privilege that considerably will compensate for the sterner duties and more arduous work which will follow. But it is good to know that American troops which go to France will still be among real friends, whose admira tion, loyalty and desire to be of ser vice, will equal similar tendencies on the part of the friends at home. Mili tary service in France is not going to be entirely confined to a dull and monotonous grind. The American soldiers will be “heroes” in the eyes of the French from the minute they land.—Observer. Three billion dollars in round fig- urcs, or one half more than called for was subscribed to the Liberty Loan. Secretary McAdoo after thanking the banks and citizens generally who acted as committees for the sale of Liberty bonds, said: ‘Without gen erous and patriotic support __ of the __ press of the nation, the hope of those in charge that it W’ould be a popular loan would not have been realized. The untiring efforts of the newspa pers throughout the campaign were a constant inspiration to the various groups of other workers. The foreign language press in 36 languages, gave daily proof of the undoubting loyalty of peoples of foreign birth. Countless other kinds of publicity were contributed generously. Alt this and more was done to make the loan a success. It was done without thought of return, simply to aid the govern ment. 1 shall be most grateful to the press it this acknowledgement is giv en publicity.” Make An End of Anarchy. For some years past, Oregon has been noted as a state of uncertainties for the investor, due to freak and radical legislation. The reaction came, however, and in recent elec tions the voters turned down every thing of an experimental nature and Oregon has been slowly climbing out °i tiie mire of bad advertising into which it had fallen. In the mean time, a set of new of ficials have been put into the public utility commission and some of them are not familiar with the past condi tions in the state against which the people turned at the polls. I o popularize themselves and in an effort to secure votes at the next elec tion, they seem to be playing up the time worn arguments of down with the corporations. I hey have made un necessary reduction ’ in rates of the largest light and power company in the state which has been struggling to get on its feet after several years, during which time it did not make in terest 011 its indebtedness. Now they take the case of the rail roads asking advances in freight rates and practically decide it in advance and seem to advocate that no increase be allowed regardless of the justice of the matter. 1 hese tactics do not help Oregon and such decisions arc doing more to keep the state at the bottom of the list of western states in manufactur ing and growth in population than anythin" else. To see the lumbermen fight a 15 percent increase in freight rates when they themselves have doubled the price of their own products is lauglvable. Due to the increase cost of lumber, the United States will pay millions additional for the ships it builds to fight the submarines. This is simply an illustration, as practically every product in the coun try has advanced in price from 25 to 400 per cent except railroad and util ity rates, and yet the very people who furnish these great industries with supplies at these advanced prices ex pect them to continue furnishing their services as the same cost. Politicians who use such policies to gain popular favor are not standing for the American spirit of fair play which we are advocating to the world today, and are injuring instead of helping their own respective com munities. Seaside Signal. Wood Mriggs. ----- o----- There is only one word with which to characterize Wood Briggs, the in imitable Kentuckian, and that is gen ius. He objects to being called a dra matic reader for he detests anything “stagey." He does not permit the term elocutionist, for he does not elocute. Briggs just walks out on the platform and with an announcement that he is only ‘a garden variety of story teller,” quickly looses himself in several of the most brilliant char ter studies the platform has ever witnessed. Taking for his feature character studies, the negro of antee- bcilum days, Briggs brings a sympa thetic understanding to his art that makes his negro dialect stories, clas sics. Briggs knows and loves the type —a few of whom still totter and mumble about their old hunts of slavery days. I o hear the immortal classic “Vuele Dan’l.” as interpreted by Briggs, is a memorable event .He speakes from his heart when he tells the story of Uncle Dan’l, the old darky who pleads in court for his wife, who has been arrested for beat ing up Uncle Dan’l himself. Briggs visualizes this character to astonish ing reality—the serio-comic curcum- stances of the stiuation, the pathetic tenderness of the old fellow, his loy alty for his contentious spouce*-and above all a philosophy from which anyone may draw a lesson in practical Christianity. . Wood Briggs completely satisfies the Chautauqua demand for clean, wholesome entertainment Then de spite Mr. Briggs’ contention that lie is only a story teller, it is equally true that lie is as much a lectures,as an en tertainer. His mastry of negro dialect and drollery is unsurpassed and has not been equaled since the days of "glorious" Bob Taylor. When the anti-governmental agita tion of Emma Goldman and Alexan der Beckman, the anarchists, took the form of obstruction to effect prose cution of war against Germany, the extreme limit of American patience was passed, and the Government properly treated the entire anarchist organization as a treasonable con- spiracy. Arrest of the two leaders was quickly followed by a raid on their headquarters in New York, where a card index to the subscribers of the anarchists’ newspaper was seized, and by another raid on the Russian group of Anarchists in that city, where 30 men all of them allies and several of whom could not speak a word of English, were captured. Several of them were in the act of printing a hand bill announcing a meeting to denounce the state military census mu actually to protest against the a ■*’ ' ‘1C announcement was couch ed in the usual inflamatory language, and on the wall was a crude painting ol an anarchist throwing a lighted bomb at a building. The close affinity between the anarchists and the I. W. ”• was shown by the presence of a red I. \V. AV. banner. If there had been any truth in the anarchists’ lurid denunciations of the f'Overnment, they would not have been permitted to establish an organ, Bowel Complaints in India. circulated through the mails, which ba« 10,000 subscribers in the United In a lecture at one of the Des states and Canada, nor openly to bntntain an office in the metroplis, Moines. Iowa, churches a missionary ■rrkman’s snarling boast that he is a from India told of going i’.l~ ‘he in ‘plizen of the world.” not of the terior of India, where he was taken ' nited States, is eloquent of tiieir de sick that he had a bottle of Cham li rmination to accept none of the berlain's Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea responsibilities of citizenship but to Remedy with him and believed that use American liberty for destruction it saved his life. This remedy is used successfully in India both as a pre- °f American" institutions. In ordinary times it may be well ventative and cure for cholera. You enough not to molest them, but only mav know from this that it can be de to watch them and pounce on them pended upon for the milder forms of whenever they attempt an ovet act of bowel complaint that occur in this destruction. When the country is at country. For sale by Lamar s Drug w*r, however, their open destruction Store. of organization of the Nation should TILLAMOOK ASTONISHED BY be treated as treasonable acts in aid MERCHANTS STORY. c,f the enemy, and capture of their ----- o — membership list should be made the A merchant relates the following: opportunity for gathering the whole “For years I could not sleep without organization into a place where they turning every hour. Whatever I ate c*n talk treason only to each other caused gas and »ourness_ Also had or to stone walls and iron bars. They stomach catarrah. ONE SPOON have abused our hospitality, and by FUL buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., their present conduct have forfeited a, mixed in Adler-i-ka relieved me ‘‘II claim on our consideration “Safe INSTANTLY.” Because Adler-i-xa ly First" should be the Government’s flushes the ENTIRE elimentary OKHto in dealing with them. tract it relieve. ANY CASE constipa There is little to choose between tion, sour stomach or gas and pre *ne avowed anarchists and their first vents appendicitis. It has QUICK cousins, the I. W. W. and the pro- EST action of anything we ever sold. ’erman Socialists, whose sentiments J S. Lamar, druggist. acts are equally treasonable, JUNE Notice of Sheriff's Sale. Econonucal Notice is hereby given: That pur suant to a writ of execution issued out °f Hie Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Tilla mook, dated the 19th day of June, >917. upon a decree rendered in said Court on the 18th day of June, 1917, in the cause wherein Louise Wein- hard, Anna Wessinger, Paul Wessin- ger and Henry Wagner, executrixes and executors respectively of the last. and testament of Henry Weinhard, deceased, were plaintiffs, and F. H. Astmann, Veronika Ast- niann, and Veronika Astmann, as asignee of F. H. Astmann, for the benefit of the creditors of F. H. Ast mann, were defendants, in favor of said plaintiffs and against the said de fendants for the sum of twenty-seven hundred dollars, together with inter est thereon from January 17th, 1912, at the rate of six per cent per annum until paid, and for the further sum of two hundred fifty dollars attorney’s fees and for the costs and disburse ments of this suit, taxed at $17.75, which said execution is to me direct ed, commanding me as Sheriff to satisfy the said decree by sale of the real property hereinafter described; Now, therefore, in order to satisfy said decree, I will, on Saturday, the 21st day of July, 1917, at 10:00 o’clock in the forenoon of said day, at the front door of the Court House in Tillamook City, Oregon, sell at pub lic auction (subject to redemption) to the highest bidder for cash in hand, all the right, title and interest of the said defendants in and to the following described real property, situated in the County of Tillamook and State of Oregon, to-wit: The East ................ Half .................................... (E^%) of the North East quarter (N.E. %) and the South West quarter (S. W. ¿4) of the North East quarter (N. E. %) of Section five (5), in Township One (1) North of Range Ten (10) West of Willamette Meridian, containing one hundred nintcen and 82-100 (119.82) acres, more or less. Dated this 20th day of June, 1917. W. L. Campbell, Sheriff of Tillamook County, Ore. Notice of Annual School Meeting. ----- o----- Notice is hereby given to the legal voters of school district No. 9 of Tillamook County, State of Oregon, that the annual school meeting of said district will be held at the high school building, to begin at the hour of one o'clock p.m. on the third Mon day of June, A. D. 1917. This meeting is called for the pur pose of electing one director for a diree year term and school clerk for jne year, and the transaction of busi ness usual at such meetings. Dated this 7th day of June, 1917. Ira C. Smith, District Clerk. Notice to Creditors. ----- o ■ - Notice is hereby given t"at the un dersigned have been by the County Court of Tillamook County, Oregon, appointed administrators of the Es tate of Daniel W. Gilbert, deceased, and have qualified as such. All per sons having claims against said estate are required to present the same to the undersigned at Beaver, Oregon, for allowance with the proper vouch- ers within six months of the date of the first publication of this notice. Dated June 7th, 1917. Edgar K. Gilbert, William J. Gilbert. Administrators. 28, 1917 Roasts Toasts NOW IS THE TIME COOK WITH PEARL King Crenshaw Co i TILLAMOOK CITY. Now is the time to consider kitchen comfort this summer—now is the time to buy an oil cook-stove. Look for the specially-decorated win dows of the merchants listed at the left. The orange discs proclaim a message welcome to every housewife. They tell how the New Perfection drives out the drudgery and discomfort of summer cooking, and at the same time gives better results than your regular kitchen range for all-the-year-’round cooking. This is New Perfection Oil Cook Stove Week. Ask these dealers to explain how the long blue chimneys of the New Perfec tion Oil Cook-Stove prevent all smoke and smell. Learn the comfort and econ omy of cooking with Pearl Oil. NEW PERFECTION OIL C/LOJL STOWE ' m WeeK Call for Bids. Three Rivers Creamery Association wishes to receive bids for cheese maker for year ¡918. Mail bids to H. M. Farmer, Beaver, Oregon, on or before July 6th, 1917. Company re serves the right to reject any or ali bids. Three Rivers Creamery Asso. ■tOWEltj Call For Bids. School district No. 57 will accept bids of 15 cords of hard wood, de livered at (he Hunt school house. Bids to be opened July 12. The board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Mrs. Blanche Hart, Call for Bids. •r'i ' •- r Don't fvss aroxind half drenched when iKeFISH BRAND i Sealed proposals will be received by School District No. 7 to build a new school house at the forks of the Ne tarts county road. \):ds will be open will keep yo\i dry and ed July 7, at to a.nt. at the office of the County Superintendent, at his of comfortable fice in the court house. Plans and DEALERS EVERYWHERE specifications of said building may be obtained of AV. A. Clark at forks of OUR BOth YEAR Netarts County road. A certified A.J. TOWER CO BOSTON check of to per cent of all proposals made payable to W. A. Clark, Clerk i must accompany all bids. DON'T RISK NEGLECT The board reserves the right to reject anv and all bids.. Don’t neglect a constant backache, W. A. Clark, Clerk. | sharp, darting pains or nninary dis- 1 orders. The danger of dropsy or Forethought. ! Bright’s disease is too serious to ig People are learning that a little nore. Use Doan's Kidney Pills as forethought often saves them a big I have thousands of other grateful peo- expense. Here is an instance: E. W. ■ pie. A Forest Grove cas' K M Stev Archer, Caldwell, Ohio, writes: “I do ens, retired farmer, 329 Fourth St., not believe that our family has been Forest Grove, Ore., says: “/Although without Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera it has been several years since 1 have and Diarrhoea Remedy since we com had any occasion to take Doan's menced keeping house years ago. Kidney Pills, it hasn't lowered mv When we go on an extended visit we estimation of them in the least, for J take it with us.” For sale by Lamar’s know from past experience that they Drug Store. are a medicine of merit. 1 couldn't recommend a more reliable medicine To The Public. for lame back. If at any time I hav< “I have been using Chamberlain’s occasion to take a kidney remedy Tablets for indigestion for the past again, it will be Doan's Kidney Pills, six months, and it affords me pleas for I know they can't be beaten.” ure to say I have never used a remedy Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t that did me so much good."—Mrs. C. simply ask for a kidney remedy—get E. Riley, Hlion, N. Y. Chambeedlain's I Doan’s Kidney Pills—th< same as Mr. Tablets for sale by Lamar’s Drug I Stevens had Foster-Milburn Co., Store. Props., Buffalo, N. Y. REFLEX SL1CKERS3. HARRIS-AMMER FURNITURE COMPANY announce the arrival of their new SPRING STOCK ! OF Rugs, Linoleum, Ranges, Furniture, Beds, Mattresses Make your selections early while our stock is complete. DR. ELMER ALLEN, DR. GEORGE J. PETERSON. Dentists. National Building. Tillamook, _ Oregon.