Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, April 25, 1918, Image 2

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    TILLAMCOK HEADLIGHT. APRIL 25
M ISS salena dick .
TEACHER OF PIANO
PRIMARY AND ADVANCE
INSTR VCTION.
Monthly Musicals given for
given for benefit of Pupils.
Prices Reasonable.
QR. O. L. HOHLFELD,
V ETERINARIAN.
< Jftice at
TODD HOTEL,
Oregon.
'ID ROBINSON, M.D,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
NATIONAL BUILDING,
TILLAMOOK
OREGON.
T. BOAI.S, M.D.,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Surgeon S. I‘. Co.
(I. O. O. F. Bldg.)
Tillamook .... Oregon
ODDFELLOWS' BUILDING,
TIL LA M OO K. OR EGON.
HABERLACH,
T illamook B lock
Oregon
Tiilamook
EBSTER
HOLMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
COMMERCIAL BUILDING.
FIRST STREET,
TILLAMOOK,
.
OREGON
0R- L. L. HOY,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
T illamook B lock ,
Tillamook,
Oregon.
T. BO1XB
T J
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Complete Set of Abstract Boi ks tn
Office.
Taxes Paid for Non Residents.
T illamook B lock ,
Tillamook
w
.... Oregon
Both Phones.
C. HAWK.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Bay City
Oregon
JOHN LELAND
HENDERSON
ATTORNEY
AND
COUNSELLOR AT LAW
T illamook B lock ,
Tillamook -
-
-
• O,egon
ROOM NO. 261.
J
KI.AND K ERWIN
PIANO INSTRUCTION,
Diploma from Chicago Musical
College.—Beginners receive the same
careful training as the most advanced
Terms:—84.0c per months Instruc­
tion.
All lessons given at Studio.
County
Representative
for
the
Wiley B. Allen Co.s’ line of high
grade pianos, player-pianos, Victro’oi
etc.
H
GO Y NE.
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Tillamook
“YOU MUST WORK
8 HOURS EVERY I I
DAY FOR BONDS”
Mra. Frank A. Vanderlip of New
York City, treasurer of the National
Woman’s Liberty Loan Committee, Is
urging upon the women of America
definite and consistent war service,
In a recent interview she said:
"American women must quit being
parasites and learn to give instead of
always taking. An hour or two a
few days a week is not enough for
any woman to give her country. We
must give a full business day, an 8
hour day every day of the week if we
are to count for anything while the
war lasts."
Mrs. Vanderlip outlined the splen­
did work which has been done by the
women of Great Britain and France
and congratulated American women
on having as their allies in their new
work such women.
“If we ever have another war,"
said Mrs. Vanderlip, "women will be
in the trenches. What do the pa­
cifists mean when they want us to
atop before our present job is done?
“There is but one standard for
measuring a woman in this new day
of war. That is dependability. The
woman who can be depended upon is
the one we want. The one who can­
not be counted upon is the one who
will be dropped forever. A profes­
sional spirit is the need of Ameri­
can women, who have been parasitic
for too long. We must stop taking
and glvo. Eight hours a day is a
short day for this great work we have
before us. Two
'
or three hours a day
to the Red Cross is not enough for
any woman to give as her war work,
"We must t get as our personal point
Of view the realization that we can-
not have our cake arid eat it too. We
must ask ourselves, in this war of
equipment rather than men. who must
go without if we have the things we
have been accustomed to. Business
and pleasure cannot go on as usual if
we are successfully to conduct this
tremeudous new business of war.
"We have forgotten, when we are
buying new clothes and eating the
wheat and »weets that we want ami
riding in our motor cars, that we are
hem peeing the Government. We are
standing In the way of the Govern
Dent’s business which m war.
"When you want to spend a dollar
tor candy or unnecessary clothes (and
we buy more clothe» than ws need
because of pride) const that dollar
u a traitor dollar. If you save that
dollar and invest it with the Govern
meut you are serving th« Government
doubly, for you are aiding in financ
ire releasing
re Is_________
lag the war and you aje
the
labor and materials needed for the
unnecesaaries which you have de
manded formerly.
“We are fighting an enemy that is
far from beaten It has won every­
thing it started out after. Its dream
of Mittel Europa is realized now.
Only a military victory can save de
tnocracy. We must sacrifice ourselves
as we have sacrificed our men folks.
We must learn to hate that we may
effectively kill the evil thing that is
ruining not only the bodies but the
souls of its people and threatens the
rest of the world."
LIBERTY BONDS
1. Are United States Gov­
ernment Bonds.
2. Are supported by every
dollar of ths enormous re­
sources of the united
I
States,
3. They bear interest at a
rate higher than earned by any
class
of
other
Government
bonds.
4. They do not represent a
war gift or donation but the
highest type of profit-produc­
ing investment.
5. They are In denomina­
tions ranging upward from $50
to suit the convenience and the
finances ef svory American who
wants to help his country.
8. They are transferable and
constitute an Ideal security.
7. if you are willing to help
your country any bank or trust
company will help you bv ac­
cepting your order and arrang­
ing terms of payment without
the Imposition of any commiw
slon or charga for Its services.
ANY BANK WILL HELP YOU
WATCII I’AI’KR FOR DATKS.
II. I. Botts, Pres
Attorney
ntl.aw
John Lehinil Henderson, Sec­
retary Treas., Attorney-at-
Law and Notrury Public.
LIBERTY
LOAN
MOTHER
GOOSE RHYMES
Sing a song of peunfes,
For pennies now rank high;
Five and twenty pennies
A thrift stamp will buy.
Sixteen stamps of thrift
Will buy a little bond
And bonds will give short shift
To Hans and Fritz beyond.
Buy Baby Bunting
A baby bond for hunting
Submarine and Zeppelin
Before they bunt the Babykin.
Tillamook Title and
Abstract Co.
Bse saw. Marjorie Daw.
Prussia shall have a new master.
Bls name will l>e Iiemocracy
Which spells a .l inker disaster.
Abstract*. Real Estate,
Insurance.
Both Phones.
Stag. sing, what shall we sing?
Let «very one open bl» own purse
string
TILLAMOOK— OKKGON.
An Historical Document With Punch
• IN THE WAKE OF THE HUNS,” an absolutely authentic
and official War picture, is considered the most immpressiv.
histoneal document of the War that ha. been released to (late.
• IN THE WAKE Oh THE HUNS, which was taken bv
the Cinematographic Division of the French Army, show-, the
■ French fast on the heels of the fleeing Huns, also the actual
German trenches at Beauvrene; part of the Von Hindenberg
line; the famous cast!» of Coucy and the ohservitory post from
which Brin e Eitel Frederick was able to contemplate this havoc
and desolation under the dictum of German Kultur. These and
nnnv olh-r cues of a similar character depicted in these three
reels awaken one to the grim realization that German Militarism
must be stamped out and that America is carrying the fight to
. firnsh to make the world safe tor democracy.
Imagine the orchards from New ) ork to Oregon, maliciously
eut down for no purpose, save that of satisfying an ignoble
spite. Such scenes are shown m IN THE WAKE OF THE
HUNS.” There is no cheap sensationalism in this picture. It
is .1 big. dignified, careful edited picture ^whieh should be seen
bv every American, in order to rr '
u
when lighting the Hun. There wi
Luke Comedy. “Popular Price.
Prominent Woman Worker
Says American Women
Must Quit Being
Parasites
- Orego
TCRXKR.
In the Wake of the Huns
Martha
Newlaad.
These films will he shown at the
Princess Theatre
REMEMBER THE TUSCANIA.BUY A BOND
Whois
THE WAR, THE FARM
AND THE FARMER*
Simpson?
By Herbert Quick
Member Federal Farm Loan Board
What the Imperial Gennan govern­ der as a thing against which we
ment offered the farmers of America could not defend ourselves.
We should have allowed this new
in its ruthless submarine warfare was
not the loss of profits, but slavery to horror to become a part of all future
the saber-rattler of Potsdam, He pur­ wars, and have been responsible for
posed to make us slaves by murder- its incorporation into international
Ing the people who took our products law.
to market. By all the laws of civil-
We should have proved that be-
ized warfare, commerce under a neu­ cause the fire which bums up our
tral flag was free from any hindrance farms’ usefulness is beyond the hort-
except the legal interference justified I zon. we would submit to the kindling
by war. But the Germans not only of it.
»topped merchant vessels.' they sank
We might have accepted the sev­
them
Sank them without warning, enty cents for whest and the six cent»
without trace—the
most devilish for cotton, but we could not bave
thing war has seen since the savages done it merely because we were
scalped our ancestors and threw commanded to do it. By so doing
screwiraing babies into the flames of ws should have accepted degrade
burning cabins.
tion. Ws should have begun, after
The German plan of sinking mer­ winning our freedom in our own
chant vessels without trace Is based revolution and establishing a union
on the murderer's maxim that "dead on ths foundation of liberty In the
men tell no tales.’’
It was exe- blood and tears of our war between
outed by the msssacre of men. wom­ the states, to knuckle under to autoc­
en and children, who, having com­ racy! We should have basely yielded,
mitted themselves to small boats in up- our birthright as Americans.
the open sea after their ships were
Such a thought is Intolerable. Peace-
torpedoed, were mercilessly raked
at such a price would not be peace,
with gunfire, and exterminated to the
hut only a preparation for a future
last unprotected, unpitied soul! These
Better
revolt against subjugation,
are the murders that stain the hands
any sort of war; better war forever»
of the Kaiser, his advisers and min­
ions. These outrages were perpetrated that that.
Whenever the time comes for new
on neutral vessels when all that civ­
ilized warfare gave the Germans a sacrifices, let us remember that we
right to do even with the merchant fight, uot for our liberties tomorrow,
vessel tinder a hostile flag, was to or next year or twenty years from
stop It at sea and make it a prize of now, but for our freedom today. Not
for the right to live in the future, but
war.
To kill the civilians on board, even for the right to make a living thl»
under a hostile flag, was nothing but year;
German oppression had begun to
unmitigated murder. And these mur­
ders were committed in order that ws pinch us before we entered the war.
might be enslaved!
Having the if we had not declared war. but had
right to take the sea with his fleet, accepted the conditions of life ordered
but being afraid to do so for fear he for 11s by the Kaiser, we should today
might lose it, and being unable by be a poverty-stricken people. Our
fair means to stop the selling of our factories would be shut down, our
products to his enemies, the Kaiser workmen unemployed, our people
declared that he would do it by the starving, our fanners ruined by the
foulest methods ever resorted to in poverty of those for whose consump.
war.
He declared the sea closed, tion they grow their crops, There îa
and that he would keep it closed, not loss and sacrifice in the war, but
there would have been far more of
by war, but by murder.
To have submitted would have cost loss and sacrifice in accepting ths
us dear in prosperity but that would German terms, We should have lost
more tn money than we have spent
have been the least of our loss.
We should have had to grovel be- 1 in the war. but we should have lost
W
fore the German government.
I something far more precious.
We should have had to accept mur-' should have lost our souls.
(This Is the second of three articles. The third to be published next week.)
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
for the NOMINATION for
VlOVtmOT
Born, September 1, 1877.
Son of the late Capt. A. M. Simpson
pioneer shipping snd lumberman.
Educated at Mt. Tamalpais Academv
and University of California.
Worked as a laborer in 1M9, at $1.50
per day, in the ship yards on Goos
Bay, Ore.
Rose from the ranks to executive head
of a large lumber and shipping indus­
try employing many thosands of men.
Started the town of North Bend 1901.
Fostered community progress, found­
ed and developed many enterpiises.
Mayor of North Bend, 1902-1914.
Patriotic work in connection with
Liberty Loan, Red Cross and War
Stamp activities, for the last twelve
months,
11 is executive ability, his business experience
and his constructive policies, DO make him:
“Your Kind of a Man for Governor
Love is the Greatest Thing in the
World. Nobody Loves your family
as you do. Who, then, will provide
for them if you do not ?
W. A. CHURCH
Insurance.
2id Ave. E. between 1st and 2nd Sts.
Allied Children
when Right has
Wrong,
We children shall have
make
A friendlier woild, for
sake!
conquored
By \bbie Farwell Brown in Vigilants,
helped to
r.nglish children over sea,
kindnesses'
Boys and girls who talk like me,
W ho gave up butter, candy, meat,
And barely take enough to cat,
So that Belgian babies may
For Sale and Rent.
N’ot go hungry every day;
■ - o-------
V\c will save and offer.
1
Sixteen good caws, 13 fresh, Pnc'-
-
milk “
AruUhow what Yankee kids can do! If $75 each. Good market for
acre dairy ranch. Will lease for J *
Little boys and girls of France!
i 5 years. Price $300 a year, part can c
'you liked to sing and dance
worked out
on |)li.Ut.
place. Good btliluif?5’
___ ___
lugh and chatter all the dav
„-u, will
«ill leave farming
well fenced,
farmin? toils
,0LlS
Just as we do at our play.
on plrce. :. Camp grounds on plate, '■*
1
arc tears now in your eyes!
front, % mile to beac-i-
mile on water
wi
'? c will be your true allies,
Come and sec me at once as if-
r-ven as your lathers arc,
here first served.
_
I >vc shall reach you from afar!
E. G. Calkins, Otis, Ore-
Polish boys with flaxon curls-
irkeyed small Italian girls,
Notice
'
ved Armenian, Serbian, Greek—
■ - 0-------
aunt with
'cry tongus the sufferers speak'
All persons having accc-
erywherc in allied lands
with x»'h;
me, kindle settle same
-
, ,
Children stretch their little hands,
Iccn Mills, at the City Recor(’cr!'
Hungry, homeless, cold and sad
ficc in the City Hall.
our promp
Oh. how it will make us glad
tention to the payment of y°ur
lo remember we have done
will save you the costs of collectl
Something kind tor everyone
Grant Mills-