Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, April 25, 1918, Image 3

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT
womenly toil; killing all that was the minds of the officers of its armies
best and fine in the soul of the Ger­ commands to carry on war with ruth­
man nation. It is a dreadful sacrifice less severity. These frightful ideas,
to the Moloch of Prussian conquest which permeate the minds of the mili-
and militarism, but appaling as is the • tary class, are set forth with brutal
cost, there will be compensation for a I candor in the official German war
suffering and terrorized world if it ibook, published in 1902. The tone and
but end in killing the hard and brutal purpose of this authoritative manual
Prussian system
of gavernment. may be justly judged from the fol­
A headline says that Portland is Short of that the suffering and ruin lowing extracts :
eating fifteen horses a week. And that of this frightful conflict will have
“But since the tendency of thought
is more than “a horse” on Portland. been in vain.—Spokesman Review.
in the last century was dominated es­
—News-Times.
sentially by humanitarian considera­
------ o
In the praise and sympathy given so tions which not infrequently degen­
Don’t get up elaborate means to generously to wives and mothers of erated into sentimantality and flabby
encourage yourself and you family to soldiers in the war, grandmothers are emotion, there have not been wanting
cat unnecessary quantities. The sim­ not often mentioned, but still in attempts to influence the develop­
ple life for America until the war :s France at last, the grandmather is ment of the usages of war in a way
ever.—News-Times.
the soul of the country, according to which was in fundamental contradic­
the foreign news service of the tion with the nature of war and its
John D. Rockafeller has just paid women’s committee of the Council of object.
his income tax, amounting to $30,400- National Defense. “They arc the
"Attempts of this kind will also not
000. I bis leaves him with $22,000,000 women who gave to France the men be wanting in the future, the more so
on which to support himself and fam­ at Verdun, and they are now making as these agitators have found a kind
ily. With the help of the present food it possible abroad for the women to of moral recognition in some provis­
regulations and by putting i.i a war take the men’s places in factory and ions of the Geneva convention and
garden the old gentleman ought to business, to be the breadwinner for the Brussels and Hague conferences.
get through the year nicely.—New­ the children. It is the women cf the
“By steeping himself in military his­
berg Enterprise.
last generation who are taking care tory an officer will be able to guard
------ o------
of the little children, caring for them himself against excessive humanitar­
Don’t beccme alarmed. Germany is while the mothers are at work, ar­ ian nations; it will teach him that
having her inning now—and a mighty ranging for or superintending their certain severitties are indispensable
costly one, too. General Foch is calm CUUtdUUH,
education, being at -------------
advanced --«=»
age to war; nay more, that the only true
over today’s
developments. Why mothers all over again for the good humanity very often lies in a ruthless
VflllPV application of them.”
should we become excited six thou­ of e .1'
Umpqua Valley
their _ country. ” ” _ — ITtvinrill!)
Present-hour German savage-y is
sand miles or more from the battle News.
the deliberately fabricat-d product of
line? He knows w'hen and where to
German military teachings and or­
strike and the blow will be a mighty
Terrorism Is Deliberate. ders.
German officers apply terrorism
one to the German flesh arrayed on German
because the kaiser and the general
the western front.—Umpqua Va’lcy
The cantcntion that the records of staff command terrorism, and the
»News.
German savergy were inventions of rank and file of the German armies
—-o------
Another example with a man with her enemies, heard often and insist­ perpetrate innumerable hideous at­
iconic-back is found in Henry bord. ently in the first year of the war, is rocities because their officers encour­
Henry’s first cry was, “Out of the seldom heard now, and then but faint­ age them, incite them and look on
trenches before Christmas.” This ly. The kaiser’s government itself has with satisfied approval when women
having failed he took another tack practically abandoned that camou­ are outraged, infants sabred, children
and now am.ounces that .after June 1 flage. Denials were ridiculous in the mutilated and cld man massacred.—
Spokesman Review.
he will deliver a submarine chaser face of such irrefutable facts as—
Ruthless submarine warfare, in vio-
every day. Go to it, Henry. If your
' " ' f nations
chaser is as successful as your Lizzie lation of the laws of God, of
Notice.
your name will go down it’, history as and of international canons.
------ o------
towns
Zeppelin raids on helpless
a benefactor of the human race.-
Notice is hereby given that the
and cities, with .their fiendish efforts ' County Court of Tillamook County,
Bend Press.
, •,
to
slay
women
and
children.
------ o------
I Oregon, will receive bids for too
The introduction of poison gas and
“W e must wait,” confesses Hindcn-
I cords of wood, either hemlock, fir or
. alder, same to be 46 inches in length,
burg in a significant report to Em- liquid fire.
The taking away into slavery of 'and to be delivered at the Court
Peror William. “We must wait, A
living
thing.
battle is a
1...........
„ ___
„ We must al- thousands of noncombatant men and House by September 15th, 19‘8. Pro­
posals to be opened at 10 a.m. May 2,
time for everything to mature. women in Belgium and b rance.
The recent bombardment ot 1 aris 1918, and must be accompanied by
For more than three years the kaisers
teneral staff has been holding the bv long range artillery and its wanton certified check for an amount equal
word of promise to the German mind killing of women and children in to five per cent of amount of bid.
The court reserves the right to reject
an,i breaking ti to the German eye. churches and hospitals.
The unholy alliance with the Turks
Always that procrastinating word,
and all that involved of wholesale any and all bids.Erwin Harrison
*ait; always the disappointing expcc- |
of women and childrtn in
County Clerk.
•>tion; always the wearing down of slaughter
nower and the further Armenia.
mili-
German man power
The execution, under signed mil»
•acrifice of lives that Germany can­
tary orders, of thousands of noncom­
not afford to lose. If a battle is a liv-
batants in Belgium, France and other
jn? thing, as Hindenburg affirms, war
We have been looking for you to
come in and settle your account. You
*’ ■* killing thing, and Hindenburg invaded countries.
These and many other hideous atro­
,n<l the other German generals are cities arc all a part of the carefully got the "grub”, We need the money.
killing Germany by inches—killing its
You intend to pay eventually, why
elaborated Prussian system of war­
soldiers in battle, killing its children
riot
now?
fare I ong before the war the German
Tillamook Feed Co.
through malnutrition, killing its worn-
general staff poured insistently into
,n through hardship, anxiety and un-
WITH THE EDITORS
Discuss Questions of
Interest to People.
•V
APRIL 25,
1018.
Cheese Reports for Coos-Curry.;
By an interview with Claud II.
Giles, salesman for the Coos and Cur­
ry Counties Cheese Association, we
gather the following information in
regard to the cheese handled by the
association during the last year and
which represents the cheese manufac­
tured by the factories which are mem­
bers of the Association during the
period from March 1, 1917, until Dc-
cember 30th, 1917.
As Mr. Giles does not keep the
books of all the factories but only of
the Association therefore he can not
give the amount of milk handled but
the above figures show the strength
of the associated factories which rep­
resent the bulk, though not all o' the
factories of the two counties.
The figures of the association fur­
ther show that the average price re­
ceived for cheese f. o. b Myrtle Point
was a trifle better than twenty-two
and two-tenths cents per pound on
the entire yield. Figuring the high
rate of freight charged between local
points and the main markets the asso­
ciation has certainly made a very
creditable showing for the first year.
The further fact that the first attempt
to standardize the output of the two
counties was made this year under the
Name of Association Factories
Argo Cheese Factory .............................
Bandon Cheese Company .....................
Coos Bay Mutual Cheese Factory ..
Cloverdale Cheese Factory...................
Crystal Creamery Co...............................
Denmark Cheese Co., ...........................
Langlios Dairy Products Co................
Lundy Cheese Factory ...........................
Myrtle Wood Creamery .....................
Norway Creamery ...................................
Sugarload Creamery No. I.....................
Sugarloaf Creamery No. 2 ...................
Sugarloaf Creamery No. 4 ...................
Sunrise Creamery Co..............................
Star..................................................................
Totals
Origin of the Khaki Uniform.
• ------0------ .
Some years ago, in India, a company
of English troops grew w:ary of ex­
posing themselves in white cotton
uniforms to the fire of the enemy
snipers. So they adopted natures good
old law of protective coloring and
daubed their uniforms with mud from
the banks of one of the sluggish
streams.
Those who direct the affairs of the
arjny in India heard of this camou-
flage and proceeded to make some in­
teresting experiments. What they dis­
covered eventually pleased them, for
eventually a uniform of this color as a
standard was adopted for all the
troops in active service in the East.
Khaki, the name given the color of
I
inspection service of the Association
The Concrete Ship
and the fact that our inspected cheese
must make its own name on the mar­
If the concrete ship will stand the
kets of the coast should be considered tresses of the open sea, as a great
in connection with these figures and many technical experts tell us it will,
then it cannot be conceded this has the Germans may as well admit the
been a great year for cheese industry final failure of their attempt to cut
of the counties and that greater years*1 communications
between America
arc to come as our product becomes and the European allies.
better standardized and advertised.
There is no definite limit upon the
The fact that several competing amount of concrete shipping that
creameries and cheese factories arc could be launched in a year once the
figuring on entering the Association enterprise is full swing. The raw ma­
this year and thereby standardizing terial is available in unlimited quan-
their output will greatly improve con­ ties in easy reach of every port, and
ditions as the fact that uninspected the labor that is required in preparing
cheese has been going into the lrtar- it is chiefly common labor, requiring
kets from this locality naturally dam- little special training. Much steel
ages the entire output of the two reinforcing will be needed, but
'counties.
compared with steel shipbuilding
Mr. Giles says further that a stand­ , demands of the concrete ships
ard brand will be placed upon all cas­ I small. And the final operation
es handled by the Association in ad­ "pouring” a ship is said to proceed
dition to the factory brand as has with incredible rapidity.
been suggesteel by many of the main
The ship when launched, so it is re­
buyers of the coast who promise to ported, appears perfectly servicable.
help advertise the Coos and Curry It is heavy, and will require more en­
cheese. These brands have been or­ gine power for a given cargo capacity
dered.—Coos County American.
than ships of either steel or wood. It
will be more expensive to operate, but
Tillamook totals; cheese, 4,974,328 so much cheaper to build that many
tbs.;
money, $1,188,845.70;
price believe that a great commercial future
23.52 c. It». Over Coos-Curry, 1.32c.; is assured for it after the world’s
making $65,000, more for Tillamook shipping has returned to a normal
cheese.
basis.
Nobody cares how much it costs to
build or operate the ships, provided
Pounds Cheese
that they will float. This we cannot
294.53«
know for certain until the ship re­
89.497
cently launched on the Pacific Coast
171,60t
has been fully tried.—New Republic.
43.‘83
78,534
48,6411
A Dry Victory.
262,987
—o
179,705
Ratification
of the
prohibition
•09.415
amendment
by
the
Massachusetts
318.369
legislature is a considerable
dry
328,322
triumph. A great industrial eastern
71,809
state, containing a large and diversi­
32,744
fied population, a commonwealth rich
192,698
in sizable cities, Massachusetts is in a
9,484
far different class from any of the 10
states that have proceeded Iler in
$495,445 45
2,231.525
forcing this curious and "concurrent”
amendment. That southern states,
thc new uniforms, is the Hindu word with their local and racical reasons
for muddy. While the original khaki for adherence to a federal assumption
was cotton, thc’soldiers campaigning of authority so contrary to the state
in Trance wear wool of this muddy- rights doctrine, should go "dry” is
gray brown color.
natural enough; and the proposed
'I lie mud-color tinge is not obtained concurrent authority of enforcement
by immersing the piece of woven ma­ may be a slave to tender consciences.
terial in a bath of khaki dye and then It is natural that some small states,
cutting up the fabric to be made into some
simple agricultural
states,
uniforms.
should cling to the amendment. It
The regulation color
would be possible for states contain­
simply the result of the
ing a minority of the population to
inz of wools. No fewer than eight dis­ thrust prohibition upon mighty com­
tinct color*, enter into the preparation munities, nations in themselves, like
of our khaki, some of which, when New York. The action of Massachu­
seen individually, have a very vivid setts shows that a populace manufac­
ting, , such as a brilliant red and a turing state, whether or not fairly
bright orange. It is the cunning com­ representcl by its legislature, may
bination of these colors which pro­ adopt a fashion which lias deeply
duces the ultimate mud tone.
troubled the tribe of politicians.