Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, March 21, 1918, Image 5

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    THURSDAY. March 28
AT THE GEM THEATRE,
nothing
AGA11ST the
1
YCbNG MAN
¿X 7€.-»v - mat
Hr u AS MO
’• .SEV
if
? c-oo-i
¡.^:ro
'...cap
Goldwyn Pictures
present .
■ . lzr a
MAE MARSH in
Tuesday
The Cinderella Man Mch- 26
Otix'er Msrorco'sfa motis Sta yc Succi rr
by Edward Childs Carpenter
- L J
FOR LIBERTY.”
"la. - - —.
-■*
T
* a mBH
“THE CINDERELLA MAN
Five reel William Fox Photoplay,
featuring Gladys Brcckwelland
“THE RETREAT of the
GERMANS at ARRAS.”
Adult' 20c
MAE MARSH, the Quaint Star of
the Screen will appear in
her third Goldwyn Picture
»♦
Taken from Oliver Morosco’s stage
success by Edward Child
Carpenter.
GEM THEATRE.
TUESDAY NIGHT, March 26th
Children 10c.
Adults 20c
Children 10c
MORAL OF U.S. ARMÏ.
slandered troop, deci, lare that, out of
wh en the postal truck came in;
thousands of men admitted to the
The orderly fishes one out tor Jim;
confessional,
only
three
f
Dr. Jack Olson, of Tillamook,
>ave confess*
he takes it without a grin.
ed to sins of any magnit ude. A cor- And
then, as he opens the envelope—
Sends Some Valuable Infor­
respondent of
an int ernati joaiiy-
eeyow!
How that man did yelk
mation from France.
known daily- newspaper, w hose bus:*
“A letter from James J. Junior, boys!
ness it is to get facts ar id to report
the youngster has learned to spell!"
Dr. Jack Olson, who is First Lieut, them accurately, add, this.
So
nothin* would do but the bunch of
with the 164th ATnbulance Co., sta­ * "I was in the only tow n of any size
-as had to read the letter through;
tioned in a
evacuation Hospital in the whole area occupied b' the
•■somewhere over there," sends the troops referred to on the ight when ’ I was all writ out by that kid of his,
and a mighty- smart kid too.
following
interesting
article and they were first paid _ off
oi'.' in
„. France. The
poem:
. majority of these in er* received from For it isn't every six year old at school
as can take a prize.
| two to three months pay,
ling in
Like the boy wrote J im as he had
To the fathers and mothers, sisters some cases $100 or more.
streets
done) and y< 1 O
and brothers, wives, sweethearts and , " ‘■re crow ded w
SOr
-g op
eyes!
friends of the men in the American I everything in sight, from candy and
Expeditionary Forces:
i chocolate to clothing, but—it s the a
Well, Jim had a mighty good Kew
We hear that you have been regaled solute truth—1 did not >
a - -g.e
Year's; he stood the squad a treat,
with some alarming stories about us {drunken soldier, while the provost I And now, tead o’ turning out sloppy
of the A. E. F. and our conduct here guard records show the smallest num-
he’s ¿¡v-a s trim and neat;
in France. In fact, some of those | ber of arrests. Since then I have seen
lieutenant passed th
stories haw been relayed to us. and it ¡a good deal of the troops referred »1
if Jim keeps on that way
they weren’t so far from the truth hc •as ’North-Eastern,' as a result o
aria* li
ripes on his
_ w
might
be inclined to _ get really ____
mad. I which 1 can unhesitatingly state tha
more pav.
But know ing the authors of some of I*1 *be troops training in the United Dor.
them—for some of the hysterical I States con
conduct themselves
stripe has really been over here—our they’re doin^ uvoiy.
r.g in-
Finally, the commanding
first inclination is to laugh.
But, after all, it's no laughing mat­ thi> same body oi nun—and our co
sever
ter to be talked about behind our manding officers
und to 1
tally coir
backs in such a reckless and irrespon­ critics and aJ
proper •
sible way by reckless and irresponsi­ petent on
ble people, though no doubt some of way oi
“I nei
them have the best intentions in the
world and think that they, and they the I’m
:r letters. :
.c ,o goo«l a
alone, can save us. (They have prob­ !have an
ke him;
ably told you that, and asked you to ! As to conditions in gene
ay be a g:
Allied
and
neui
ot
military
ooserve
contribute money to their w orthy
cause, haven't they?) What hurts have exprt* cd themselves as asto
earin’ irom ’em
most, however, is the thought that, fished at the remarkably good Leba
he joy oi life
though we know you are loyal to us •or of this army of yours. The wor
and have the firmest of faith in us, does move. Armies no longer live 1.
perhaps these dire tales may have forage, loot and pillage; but even at “For Liberty” at Gem Theatre.
------ o----
caused you anxiety, may even have ¡that, this pay-as-you-go, behave-as-
A new U illiam Fox photoplay is
brought you to believe that perhaps, I you go American Army has been a
ar.n,unctd for next Thursday, March
after all, we had become a bit neglect­ Irevelaton to our European allies.
Take it all in all, these American 4S at the Gem Theatre. It is called
ful of our trus’
and that, so believ­
ing, you might have been sorely, and ' Expeditionary Forces constitute an For Liberty” and it deals w ith events
entirely unduly, distressed in spirit. I army which is in every way a worthy of today.
Gladys Brockwell is the star and
Be assured that these sensational successor to the first army of liberty,
stories are nothing but myths. Abso­ whose commander was George W ash­ that in :t*elf insures a brilliant per­
lutely nothing else. And we have the ington. it is proud of its heritage, formance, for it is declared that in
facts to prove that they arc. Listen: proud of you people at borne who are spite of all the fine work this star has
The percentage of venereal disease supporting it and w ho are backing it done, her performance in the new
in this army of yours is three-tenths ! with your labor, your money, your play which is to appear here shows
oi one per cent.—the smallest percen­ (hopes and your prayers, proud of the her in a different and greater light.
This story tells oi the conditions
tage on record of any army, or any Government that sped it on its way-
civil population, in the world's history . overseas. proud of the c*sc for that immediately preceeded the war
It is a sober army, and a well-behaved which it is fighting—the greatest m Berlin, and oi the terror and alarm
one. The statistics in the possession cause which any army was ever call­ that came when the declaration was
of the Judge Advocate General’s de­ ed upon to champion. It would rather made. It is, however, a story of me
partment prove that there have been, rot under the soil of France than to hie of a brlliant woman who goes
in proportion, fewer cases of drunk- do anything that would cast discredit through all the ordeals that beset
ness, fewer breaches of military dis­ on the homes it left, w hich w ould im- American women who were in Ger­
cipline among its members than has I pugn in any the good name of the many at the time, and who is true to
been the case with anT army w
v. hose
____ ' 8reat people from whom it was re­ her country and to her love. The love
elvrrr -t predominates and survives
cruited.
records have been preserved.
Bear all this in mind, good people war and tribulation. 'For Liberty is
Now, to speak of specific instance.
A certain self-constituted "board of back in God's country, u you hear a story of a w oman's hie that is won­
morals” is quoted in a dispatch from any more stories about us made up derful an inspirirg It is set in the
inter.-
the United States to the effect that out of the same whole cloth, If by midst o: war, and this makes it
such
1,046 men from the "northeastern any chance any- of you should hesitate sely real to us who knew that
Slates” were locked up in the guard to believe us. w rite to our command­ conditions prevailed, be* who oc’.»
truth.
house following their first pay day, ers, or chaplains, our doctor*—any­ have a glimmering of the real
lay is
body
in
authority.
They
will
back
us
It
is
understood
that
the
p
for drunkenness.
that is the story; here are the facts. to the limit— and we, for our part, quite new m its treatment of th ■k pues-
bcaut*
Since the troops referred to as will guarantee to come home to you tions with which it deals, and is
I
clean
in
body,
exalted
in
mind
and
ifully
set
and
finely
cast.
coming
from
the “north-eastern
states" came to France, the total num­ heart, and with the record behind us
ber of their men locked up in the of a man s sire job manfully done.
Death of Mrs. C. M. Alien.
------ □------
guard house for all offenses—not for
Jim*
drunkenness alone, mind you—has
Cynthia Mason Alien was born ’x
been exactly 134 to date. In other Honest, but Jim »as the sorest man y, 1848. at ¿tod on. X. Y.
words, the seif-constituted champions
in ail o’ Comp ny G;
March 1A »&7A »he was married to
of soberiety generously multiplied by You could sing ana tell stones the Xeison Allen, who died in 1901, at
eight the number of men imprisoned
whole right long, but never a cuss Stocton, X. Y. Mrs. Alien leaves three
for all offenses—including as it does
gave he.
children to mourn her absence, Gkr.n
these punshed for infractions of rules, You couM feed him turkey st Christ­ Allen and Clair Alic... both of V
insubordination and the like—and pas­
mas time—and Tony the cook s no sylvania, and Mrs. Arthur Beals, oi
sed the enlarged figures on to you as
slouch—
this place.
rep-esenting the number of men lock­ I Bat Jim woa!dn‘t join in "Three
In ¡tris Mrs. Alien was convert* 1
ed up for drunkenness alone! No won­
cheers tor the cook.’’ Gosh, but he and united with the baptist Church
der you were scared—as they prob­
i__ a a roue?.
in which church she remained until
ably intended you should be.
coming to Tillamook, when >. joined
Just to refute them again, here is a
the Methodist Church.
was done,
quotation from the report of a Protes­
r
Mrs. Allen was a great m
chin
with
the
ter-. Chaplain on active service with
■i-a-gun;
these sinie maligned troops from the
cd him to hold s
r
nertr,-eastern states.” Bear in mind,
: vou asked tor
too. that this particular chaplain has
5
March 1
®*en in the army but a short time, and
tn jercs.
«
{heretore brings a fresh ard impartial
Judgment to bear on the problem*,
1
This i n what he says:
I Abo
3
1 tae re
“In Pcrfortnirg my priestly func- I CA
Fa’mei
tier, s it has been my privilege to trav-
Vf a r '
el cor idcrably among the troop«, and
bur
* pl.-; ases me immensely to be able to
hing."
state
at I find moral conditions A id the
lUO't
tisfactory. The military au-
To the
tho’iti - are rigilent in removing
II. J
I hereby
tetr, pt d itions. We have a clean arn-y;
et-ea
and I am honestly convinced that the
K
men i- France are in less danger mor­
cket
ally 1 in they would be in service in
their own country.”
*T
men in France are in less
con
finger morally than they would be in
itrvic' in men
their VW>1
own WU.IH/.
country.” That
• -•
*s* c -se is worth repetition. Ponder
°n that, dear people at home.
Rt spectra!’y.
Her $ something more. The Catho-
H. V. Alky.
I* ch¿pUin attached to these tame
An engine that wrings from gas
more power than was ever taken
out of gas before—through its
Hot-Spot” and “Ram’s-Horn”
Manifold—Chalmers devices
(A
Tests of exhaust vapors have shown weaknesses in many
engines. By such tests you can always tell how good an
engine is.
In the great Chalmers engine so very little in the way
of unused or unburned gas comes out of the exhaust as to be
almost negligible. The gas is used up —all of it —in the
Chalmers.
——----------- -———
The moment it passes from the throat of the carburetor
it strikes the now noted “Hot-Spot” where it is heated and
“cracked-up” and then rushed on to the combustion cham­
bers via the “Ram’s-Horn” Manifold.
When the spark touches it off there is translated a power
such as a gas engine has never known; all the brute force
imaginable, yet tamed down into a softness that is as smooth
as deep water.
Once you play with it with your right foot you will be
amazed at the thrill it’ll give you.
A.. ;:r~'
1 b
TOWN CAM LANDALTMT
LtMOt'PVl I TAMtNGI*
UMOCMNK LANDAULTT
TOVUNC SCDAN
■
•
•
S.’WS
CAAJUOLXT. PPAXia-NGta - fin
TOWN CAJU PPAXMNCtR
IM
DCTKOIT StUlCT TO CHANOS WITHOIT XOTKI
Dealer, D. L. SHRODE.
-A
,Ik, yield:ng j6Ao pounds of but-
i- n - king a L rge yearly rec-
i» due to calve again within
By
seing ru
hose rec
? th* Ring,
id Z2*=7 I
Miss V'll
ttanrd I
oodland
<r
>re tha 24 pur ds of
r aftvr having trees
kt es*
cord. dis*
F -yne,
Hol
IB
alter
of milk
P<*
r Meal D Koi Walker
A W. Morri« A S' rw,
aliforn ia. Her sire if
<t H alker and h»r darn
V' Iley M < ad and.
Mr.RCHASI S WIIE ADVISES
TILLAMOOK WOMEN.
Miss Valley Mead De Ko. Walker
<
ras are _-rmz
a co*w so scori
rampi oc «hip bwr
è* tfcer o- e «aatebes tbem iw
Miss Valer Mead De Kol Calker we« day*
of of milk. y;*'<-
bai just added
J4ed t'
to tbe dairy f
Cahrc-nia by br-ak-.-g tbe *' •rd for i ter Her pn
butteri*! prodaction m t^c junior,days from fl
h tre—**1-
I but
ryt
D
?
■f
the
r ir*
rrod. -4 is-
240 pound«
■COf¿
6 pou
ciaf is
k. glycen
-i-ka. O!
I me IN
Mit Adler*!*
naH in?