Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, December 19, 1918, Image 3

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT DECEMBER 19,
Says Spanish Flu Resembles Black
Fever.
Thut the Spanish Influent* resem­
bles in great part the black fever,
prevalent at certain periods of the
year In India, and southwestern Asia
is the opinion of certain medical au­
thorities, who met in conference in
Philadelphia recently. At this meet­
ing, all phases of the disease were
considered and it was found that the
' Flu” resembled the Asiatic pesti­
lence in that the patient was strick­
en suddenly with pains in the head
and back, serious neusea* high tem­
perature, and blackened throat, in
the Black Fever there Is also bleed­
ing of the lungs at tile most advanc­
ed stage of the disease, which corre­
sponds to the hemorages, which in­
fluenza patients have, when the dis­
ease has developed into pneumonia.
The doctors attending the conference
were nonplussed over the plague
and could advance no certain theo­
ries for cure, it has thus far baffled
all experiments. That the disease is
caused by a shot tage of sugar in the
system was one theory advanced, but
no deiinite conclusion was’ reached
by the clinic.
DIRECTORS :
A.
Bunn, Farmer.
p. Helsel. Farmer.
C. J. Edu ards. Mgr. C.PowerCo. J. C. Halden. Vite Pres.
B. C. Lamb. Building Materials. John Morgan. Farmer.
W. J. Riechers. Cashier.
Piscatorial Ne3iucca Causes Poetic
Chords to Vibrate.
From the land ol big fish, . clams,
seagulls and pure ozone, "The Poet
of the Nestucca” bids fair to be the
appellation given to our genial
friend Tlios. H. Rogers, who is now
residing at Cloverdale, Tillamook
county. The romantic atmosphere,
the pictorial charms, and tile pic­
turesque scenery of the .streams of
coast country
have touched the
strings of liis peotic muse in:
DECEMBER FISHING
When they go a-fisliin’ here
And catch a mess o’ trout
They don't get excited
And then begin to spout;
For anyone can catch ’em
(Some are 20 Inches long)
Regular old socdolagers
"Allee same big sawlog.”
Trout on riffles,
Trout in pools,
Little trout, big trouta,
In bunches and in "".chools.”
So come and try the fishing,
Show them that you’re lucky.
Trout are running bully
On the Big Nestucca.
—Tom Rogers.
State
The Valve in-heid type engine lllu«-
trated here, like all intornul combus­
tion enHimis, require» an oil that
hold» its lubricating qualities at cyl­
inder heat, burns clean in the com­
bustion chamber» and goes out with
exhaust. Zerolene fill» these require­
ments perfectly, herauee it is correct­
ly refined from selected Cebfomie eo-
thali-baee crude.
ZEROLENE
The Standard Oil for Motor Cars
It Keeps the Engine Young!
Zerolsne keep« th« eng in« young—full-powered, smooth­
running, and economical in fuel and oil consumption—
because it is correctly refined from selected California
asphalt-base crude. Give« better lubrication with less
carbon. Made in several consistencies. Get our Correct
Lubrication Chart covering your car.
At dealers everywhere and Standard Oil Service Stations.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(California)
—that he used to think
he was getting more for
his money by buying a
big plug of ordinary to­
bacco, until he ran across
Real Gravely. Now you
couldn’t make him switch
back to the ordinary plug
again. Gravely has that
good taste that every man
wants. It lasts so much
longer that you get the
tobacco satisfaction you
are looking for without
extra cost.
•
•
•
•
PEYTON BRAND
Real Gravely Chewing Plug
each- piece packed tn a pouch
DANVILLE
Plans
------- o-------
Projects to be defrayed from the
$6,000,000 bonding fund, together
with estimate costs submitted by the
State Engineer Department, are p . s
follows
Polk County line to Corvallis
pave.......................................... $129.500
Monroe to Junction, pave
9 miles . . . .........................
166.500
Jefferson to Albany, pave 9
miles .....................................
166.500
First crossing south of Gosli
en to second crossing rock
1 mile .....................................
6,000
Walker to Cottage Grove,
pave 4 miles.............................. 74.000
Winchester to Roseburg, pave
5 miles ................................
92,500
Yoncolla to Oakland, rock
I
10.4 miles...........................
72,800
Myrtle Creek to Dillard rock
12.8 miles...........................
76,800
Wolf Creek to Grove Creek
■ rock 5.8 miles....................
34,800
Grants Pass to Jackson Coun­
ty line, pave 6 miles .... 105,000
Central Point north pave
I 5 miles................................
92,500
Siskiyou section ..................
50,000
! Marshfield south (14 feet)
pave 12 miles................... , 250.000
Multnomah county line to
Hillsboro, pave 8.1 miles 149,850
Newberg to West Dayton,
pave 5 miles.......................
92,500
Tillamook county pave 5
miles.....................................
92,500
Astoria to Warrington, pave
5 miles ................................
92,500
Overhead Comstock ..........
10,000
Wasco County, pave 5 miles 92,500
La Grande to Hot Lake,
pave 9 miles....................... 166,500
Haines to Baker, rock 14
miles ...................................
84,000
Hood River to Mosier, rock 175,000
Divide crossing, rock . . .
16,000
Wasco County, gravel 14
miles ...................................
84,000
Sherman county, gravel 8
miles.....................................
48,000
Gillam County, gravel 10
Miles ...................................
60,000
•Morrow county, gravel 2 4
miles-.....................................
130,000
Umatilla County, gravel SO
miles .....................................
180.000
It tars farther—that't whs joe
can tri »*« t°od laitr of thii clou
of tobacco urithoat extra coat.
P B GRAVELY TOO ACCO CO
Highway Commission
Work for Next Year.
VA
The Headlight is the Best
County Newspaper.
Total ........................ ... $2,790,200
Projects to be defrayed from the
U -mill tax fund and the auto license
fund, together with estimated costs
submitted by the state Engineering
Department, are as follows:
Grading and rock. Grand
Ronde ................................ $ 45,000
Grading Seufert’s...............
150,000
Bridge Deschutes ...............
25,000
Sherman County.................. 100,000
Gilliam County ....................
140,000
’John Day ..............................
20,000
I Morrow County ..................
30,000
I Hood Rlver-Moser .............
175,000
¡Klamath toward Bend ...
25,000
• Lake County .........................
10,000
Klamath to Jackson county
25,000
Total ..................................... »735,000
------- o-------
The State Highway Commission, is
now improving the Three Rivers
road, which will cose over »1000.-
000.
1918.
brought victory to us,” declares Col.
PERTINENT REMARKS.
-------o-------
Creel. The men who did the fighting,
------- o-------
With Colonel House over there and their relatives and friends, cannot
Battery A, 4th Regt., F. A.
II. D. Camp Zachery, Taylor Colonel Lewis over pere the adminis­ too often be remembered that the
tration is worthily sustained on both war was won not by the soldiers,
Ky., Dec. 9th, 1918.
but by the word wizzards and ink
'sides of the Atlantic.
F. C. Baker, Tillamook Oregon.
artists in the swivel chairs at Wash­
Dear Sir.—The following narrative
founu birth in this Camp and Corp­ j Paris is going to entertain shortly ington.
oral Petel L. Kuppcnbender and a few kings and queens, and if we
Emil .11. Wooley take great pleasure read the papers aright, a number of West Fays Deficit on Losing Eastern
in advancing it to their home town jacks and a tew two-spots.
Railroads.
---- —o------
paper for publication. They also
Southern politicians don’t care
state that it is the facts of the war
“1 stand ready and anxious to re­
as we see it oil this famous front what is done at the peace conference lease the roads from the present con­
called Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky., just so no effort is made to compel trol." said the president in his ad­
Of course this may not be appreciat­ the abdication of King Cotton.
dress to Congress last Monday; "and
------- o-------
ed by the public at large, but from a
I must do so at a very early date. By
It may be that the reason that the waiting until the statutory limit of
military stand point it sure can’t bo
people did not think well of Jesse time is reached I should be merely
beat.
Of course we all realize the active Janies was that he did not know prolonging the period of doubt and
part these distinguished Corporals enough to hire a good press agent.
uncertainty which is hurtful to every
of the Field Artillery ^placement
------o------
interest concerned.”
Depot have taken, and wish very Woodrow’s appeal did sorely vex us;
This raises a question as to future
much to have their immediate vicin­ We dealt the same a solar plexus;
rates, a question of large importance
ity know’ of their valor. In order to And, in an ending almost tragic.
to the people and the industries- of
make the whole thing clear this The name of "Wilson” lost its magic. the Pacific Coast region, says the
following narrative in the form of a
Spokesman Review.
I Admiral von Tirpitz, upon entering
poem has been composed.
Under government control and op­
Switzerland,
shaved
off
his
long,
We’ll soon be back from this terrible
eration Director-General
McAdoo
flowing
wiskers,
from
which
we
take
war,
soon faced a growing deficit which
it
that
lie
lias
no
intention
of
joining
Covered with honors and medals
lie met by arbitrary advancing
the bolsheviki.
galore.
freight rates 25 per cent, tin advance
Back from chasing the horrible huns.
that was applied to the lines all over
We
insist
that
the
constitutional
Back from the road and crash of the
the United States without the slight­
rights of the senate should be main­ est regard to the earnings of par­
guns.
tained. The members should be per­
Back from doing our duties well.
ticular roads or groups of roads . Li v­
mitted to read the treaty of peace
Regular heroes, we are— like hell.
ing a particular region.
before they ratify it.
We’ll soon be back on the job again,
When that increase was ordered by
■—-—o-------
Out oi the trenches, the cold and the
the goverment ail of the transconti­
The plan now is for the adminis­
nental lines, with the sole exception
rain.
tration to take over the wireless tel­
Using our mouths instead of our
of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St.Paul
egraph lines too. It will soon be that
guns
were earning fine profits, But many
a fellow can’t even talk in his sleep
Back from doing our wonderful
southern roads and lines east of
without having the results recorded
stunt.
the Mississippi were losing mpney.
in a federal dictograph.
Of marking time on the Louisville
Tlie net result of Mr. McAdoo’s
front.
blanket increase was to compel the
“A great work greatly done”, is
Yes we ll soon be buck frotn doing George Creel’s description of the ach­ people and the industries of this re­
gion to contribute vast sums to the
out bit,
ievements of Ills bureau. The great­
Showing our "courage” and proving ness of the work is only surpassed by support of railroads in distant re­
gions.
our "grit.”
the magnitude of George’s modesty
When the increase was ordered by
Playing our part in the awful jam. in talking about it.
tlie government Northern Pacific
By ruling some meals on Uncle Sam.
and Great Northern in particular
lu fact there is nothing that could
Why not arrange to pay the pas­
were handsomely prosperous for war
pussiuly mar,
sage of the people who like bolslie-
Our wonderful record in winning vikism better than Americanism to times. The Northern Pacific's annual
reports shows that it earned on its
tlie war.
Moscow, where they can feed on
We know wiiat we’ll face when we’re husks witli the other swine until own line in 1917 nearly 10 per cent
an its capitol stock after the pay­
home once more,
they get a stomach full?
ment of all operating expenses, in­
How they’ll "kid” us and "josh”’ us
terest on bonds, taxes, etc. ..About
about our “war”.
The announcement is made at
And they’ll say that “we were sol­ Washington that the U. 8. Employ­ that time the Waif Street Journal
said "the Great Northern will show
diers of peaeful ways,”
ment Service, "has increased its ef­
Oh, we ll hear ail that io the end of ficiency nine hundred per cent, by its dividend covered by about the
same margin.”
our days.
increasing the number of employes
But these lines have other rich
And we’ll only reply to the boys who on its rolls from 100 to 1,000.”
sources of income. They operate the
"kid”
-o-------
Chicago, Burlington &. Quincy under
By Goa we tried, and that’s more
This talk about President Wilson
joint lease, guaranteeing the Bur­
than you did.
not advising with the Senate about
Signed in behalf of the most He­ the peace treaty is all bosh. He lington’s stockholders 8 per cent in­
terest. The Burlington is the richest
roic Corporals,
dropped in at the capitol on his way
railroad in the United States. It
Peter L. Kuppenbender,
to the boat to tell ’em just how it
earned a surplus in 1917 of nearly
Emile M. Wooley,
was all going to be, .didn’t he?
$30,000,000. Discussing that remark
of Tillamook, Oregon.
able record the Wall Street Journal
The old term "British free trade”
Administrator's Notice to Creditors. isn't half strong enough to describe said:
"Out of last year’s surplus Burl­
------ V------
the Democratic tariff policy, for
Notice is hereby given, that the Great Britian is collecting $10.22 per ington paid out $19,951,038 in di­
undersigned Thomas McGlinchy, by capita in customs yearly as against vidends 18 per cent on the $110,-
ail order of the County Court for Til­ $1.70 per capita in the United States. 938,100 stock—and iiad left a bal­
ance of $9,454,994. Roughly speak­
lamook County, Oregon, has been ap­
ing, half of this belongs in equity to
pointed administrator of the Estate
Just before retiring. Secretary Mc­
ol Edward McGlinchy, deceased, late Adoo recommends sweeping increas­ the Great Northern and half io the
of Tillamook County, Oregon. Notice es In salaries for all the office hold­ Northern Pacific. The regular divi­
is further given, that all persons ers under his jurisdiction. There are dends of 8 per cent take care of the
having claims against the said estate a lot of folks in this world who are interest on the collateral trust bonds
are hereby required to present the mighty generous with other people’s exchanged for tlie stock. Th« 10 per
cent extra dividend, except that ac­
same, duly verified and with proper money.
cruing to holders of tlie $3,266,000
vouchers, to the undersigned admin­
minority stock, was ciear additional
istrator, at 546 Marshall St., Port­
When Col. Bryan said in 1912 that
two Hill roads,
land, Oregon, or to his attorneys when Mr. Wilson got through with income to the
amounting to $5,380,000 for each.
within six months from this da»*.
the Democratic party there wouldn’t
Add this sum to half the divided sur­
Dated this December 17, 1918.
be any party he ought to have said it
plus and there is a total of a little
Thomas McGlinchy,
publicly, because that is the only
Administrator of the Es­ prophecy he ever made that is going more than $10,000,000 to represent
the interest of each of the controll­
tate of Edward McGlin­ to come true.
ing roads in Burlington’s income of
chy, deceased.
------- o-------
1917.”
Johnson and Handley,
There are some people who are in­
Participation by these three sys­
Attorneys for the administrator.
clined to believe that in resigning,
tems In the 25 per cent blanket in­
Tillamook, Oregon.
Secretary McAdoo merely gave evi­
crease in freight rates was a gross
dence of his knowledge that It is
Injustice to the people served by
Executor’s Notice to Creditors.
easier to raise salaries than to pay
them. If the lines are returned to
------ o------
'ent, and easier to grab industries
their owners, vigorous effort will be
Notice is hereby given, that the than to run ’em.
needed to bring about a rectification
undersigned Earl N- Fllsinger, by an
------- ol—
of that wrong.
order of the County Court, duly
The administration entertains two
made and entered, has been ap­ theories taken from the philosophy
pointed executor of the Estate and of the late P. T. Barnum. One is that
WRONGLY ACCUSED.
------- o-------
the last will and testament of Karl you can make any old thing go if It
Grauinann, deceased, late of Clark is advertised well -enough, and the People Became Suspicious of Young
County, Washington. Notice is fur­ other that the American people like
Soldier in Need of Help.
ther given, that all .persons having to be humbugged.
One afternoon a young officer,
claims against the said estate must
none too steady on his feet, vainly
------- o-------
present the same to the undersigned,
It used to be argued that a politi­ tried to board a street car. He simply
or to his attorneys, witbin six cian could run a business with bet­ could not make both feet reach the
months from this date, with vouch­ ter results for the people than a busi­ same place at the same time.
ers duly verified, according to law. ness man could, but since the thing
A young woman and her escort ar­
Dated this December 17, 1918.
has been tried on, and the result has rived on the scene. "I don’t care if he
Earl N. Fllsinger, Exe­ been higher cost and poorer service is drunk. He’s a soldier and the
cutor of the Estate and the people are not sure about this.
cars might wait for him.” “Do you
the last Will and Testa­
want me to go over and help him?”
------- o------ -
ment of Karl Graumann
asked her escort, and at the affirma­
The
effort
of
the
Democrats
to
deceased. Address,
tive nod he started across the street.
frame a four-billlon dollar tax bill
Salem, Oregon.
The young man reached the soldier's
for 1920 is doubtless inspired by a
Johnson & Handley
side, and he greeted gladly the prof­
desire to leave the country something
Attorneys for the Executor,
fered help. The soldier tried in vain
to remind the deceased by—and
Tillamook, Ore.
to brace himself up, but lie slumpi-d
what could better serve to remind us
ingioriously. The young man put his
of the Democratic party than a big
arm around him and helped the sol­
Mrs. Isley’s Letter.
tax
bill.
------- o-------
dier with his head sunk on his
In a recent letter Mrs. D. W. Isley,
breast. As they waited for the car an
The Washington department are
of Litchfield, Ill., says, "I have used
automobile shirked around the cor­
much
worried
over
the
problem
of
Chamberlain’s Tablets for disorders
ner. and the soldier seized the
of the stomach and as a laxative, and how to drop civil employes without stranger like a frightened child. At
causing
distress.
The
only
fellow
have found them a quick and sure
last a car approached, and tho
relief.” If you are troubled wjth in­ who gets no sympathy in Washing­ young man put the soldier on board
ton
is
the
one
who
provides
the
mon
­
digestion or constipation these tab­
and spoke to th«- conductor. When
lets will do you good.” For sale by ey with which to pay government he came back he told the girl that
gills.
Lamar's Drug Store. I’d. Adv.
the soldier had come home from the
— a—
I David Lawrence» after tooting the front the day before. He had serv«-d
Buy Your Meat for Canning Now.
two years in the trenches. He was
administration's horn for many mon­
------- o-------
suffering from shell shock.
Meat will be high this winter. Get ths, finally wrote an article saying
"Yet”, added the young man who
it now for canning, while it is cheap. that President Wilson was losing out had helped him in reluting the inci­
with
the
people
because
nobody
dar
­
Beef by the quarter, 9c. to 14c per
dent, "he was condemned and laugh­
ed to tell him the truth, and to
pound.
ed at by the crowd who did not
prove the statement of the Washing­ know.”
Beef steak, 18c. to 28c. per !b.
Beef pot roast, 12’Ac. to 22c. per ton newspaper which had bought the
right to reprint the Lawrence arti- I For sale or trade, one sorrel maro
pound.
Icles from the New York Post refused six years old, weight 1500 tbs; and
Boiling beef, 9c. to 17c. per 1b.
I to print that one.
one colt, three years old, Iron gray,
Beef for stew, 6c. to 15c. per lb.
------- o-------
weight 1100 tbs. Will trade for good
All meats are government inspect­
I "It was the ideals of America rath­ dairy cows. Andrew Vetsch. Elmore
ed.
*2
Tillamook Meat Co. er than the force behind them which ¡ranch.
I
Tillamook’s Heroic Corporals .