Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, January 02, 1919, Image 7

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT JANVABŸ 2. 101Ö.
ai
pertinent remarks .
If the German people are really
going to elect their officials, the
first one they'll need Is a coroner.
— o
Presidel Wilson has smashed ano­
ther precedent. He went on a pleas­
ure trip and took his mother-in-law.
It is said that Paris is “full to over­
flowing,” which may help explain
tbe transfer of George Creel’s bill
posting crew to the French capital
from arid Washington.
Free Trade Folly.
The Democratic party believes in
taxing American industry to the
limit. It believes in penalizing pro­
ductive enterprise to the point of
confiscation. As President Harrison
Bald, it hates the sight of an Ameri­
can smoke stack. But it believes, on
the other hand, that the foreign pro­
ducer is a benefactor, who can be
depended upon to phllanthropically
give the American consumer the best
of it even after he has mastered the
American market through tbe des­
truction of domestic competition. It
sees no necessity of a foreigner in­
vesting money in an American in­
dustry, because he will keep his
money at home and hire his work
done by a peasant in rags, a peon in
’ a coffee sack os a coolie in a breech­
clout. The democratic party will
throw the doors of customs houses
open and invite him to walk right in
and help himself, even if thereby, as
in 1894 and 1914, three millions of
American wage earners are made
jobless.
They’er going to spend a few mil­
lions establishing aeroplane mall ser­
vice. It might be a good idea first to
get the regular mail service off of a
local freight schedule, some of the
mere taxpayers think.
-------o-------
In view of the things that have
been done to the lowly taxpayer by
the Democratic free spenders, it may
be that the weather man has decided
to be merciful and temper this win­
ter to the shorn lamb.
- o- - —
The fellows who say we ought to
The Allies “View With Alam.**
have the second navy in the world
------ o------
ought to admit that the place to
Washington dispatches seem to
build any but the first navy is well convey the impression and direct in­
inland, where the first navy can’t formation, that neither England nor
get to it. Germany knows that.
France are Inclined to accept Mr.
Wilson’s proposition relative to a
After Congress gets through pass­ “League or Nations.” A Washington
ing the Carlin ripper bill to enable dispatch to the New York Tribune
President Wilson to hire and fire the says that "the French ^gree frankly
federal judges it ought to complete and fully with the majority of the
the job by authorizing him to declare Senate of the United States, but not
and fill congressional vacancies.
with the President of the United
States. . . . They do not conceive
Maybe the reason Mr. McAdoo as possible an international army or
wants the government to keep the navy, or an international court or
railroads five years is to give them high commission to settle disputes
time to use up all the time tables, between nations, or any of the other
stationery and dining card menus he institutions considered indispensable
has had printed with his name on in to any practical working of a league
lar^e type.
I to enforce peace.”
-------o-------
| The same dispatch says of Great
It seems that all you have to do to Britian, that "the British having of­
convince a railway manager or tele­ ficially joined the French in refusing
phone or telegraph superintendent to be bound by the freedom of the
that political ownership is a good seas point in the President's fourteen
thing is to place his name on the fed­ terms. . . . The British objections
eral pay roll. And if that doesn’t to the League of Nations, as reach­
convince him he gets fired.
ing this country, do not for obvious
reasons conform precisely to the ob­
It must be admitted that Mr. Mc­ jections expressed by many men of
Adoo has thought up a fine scheme both parties in Congress. The Monroe
to perpetuate government ownership. Doctrine, which, as Senator Reed
By the time tbe politicians have had pointed out on the closing day of
the railroads five years no one will congress, America would not desire
vzant to tackle the job of running to submit to any world tribunal,
them again, and their owners will does not enter into British calcula­
not want them back.
I
tions at. all.”
I It is obvloas that both England
The government has on hand as and France are skeptical about Mr.
residue of war activities trainloads Wilson’s League of Nations as an in- ,
of discarded typewriters; neverthe­ stltutlon of the earth. As the Ameri­
less it has just bought 385 Remmlng- can Economist has repeatedly point­
ton and 2150 Underwood typewriters ed out, no association of nations in
at a cost of 3170,387.50. On with the the present stage of human develop­
dance, let joy be unconfined; the ment, will prevent-the natural ele-’
Democratic party’s future is behind. ■ ments of human nature from crop-
------- O____
' ping ___
out hi international affairs.
We judge from the peevish remarks while
_______ every citizen
______ , of the
_ J United
by
written f for the
" _ papers *■
“ Senator gtates Wants peace and harmony
Jlmham Lewis about slickers with among nations and urges everything
gold wrist watches being the admira­ possible to practically secure it.
tion of signing Inamoratas in Wash­
ington that pink vests and sunset
wiskers have been overshadowed Buy Your Meat for Canning Now.
with the fair sect by spurs and put­
-------o
tees and shoulder-straps for a season.
Meat will be high this winter. Get
------- o
it now for canning, while it is cheap.
It is reported that former President
Beef by the quarter, 9c. to 14c ; per
Taft has been refused a passport re­ pound.
quested for the purpose of addressing
Beef steak, 18c. to 28c. per lb.
a meeting in England on the project
Beef pot roaBt, 12 %c. to 22c. per
]
of a league of nations. The editor of pound.
a socialist national organ was reliev­
Boiling beef, 9c. to 17c. per lb.
ed of military duty some months ago
Beef for stew, 6c. to 15c. per lb.
to enable him to travel around Eu­
All meats are government Inspect­
rope with a commission of socialists ed.
with an endorsement of the Depart­
Tillamook Meat Co.
ment of State gave a quasi official
status. But of course Mr. Taft is no
TESTED AND PROVEN
socialist.
o-------
Up to date the cablegrams have ad­ There u a Heap of Saloce in Being
vised us that in Italy, France, Aus­
Able to Depend Upon a Well-
tria arid the Ugraine President V*l-
Earned Reputation.
son is regarded as a god. while in
Berlin he is said to be looked upon
For months Tillamook readers
as a fairy godmother. A propoganda have seen the constant expression of
work by an American socialist. Prof. praise for Doan's Kidney Pills, and
George Herron, translated into sev­ read about the good work they have
eral languages and widly circulated done tn this locality. What other
used the word “divinity” in connec­ remedy ever produced such convinc­
tion with President Wilson a dozen ing proof of merit!
times. Is it possible that George Creel T. J. Campbell, retired farmer, Ash
has undertaking the task of provid­ St. Dallas, Oregn., says: “For a long
ing a deity for the new religion re­ time I have been using Doan’s Kid­
cently patented by President Eliot ney Pills when my kidneys have
of Harvard?
needed attention and in every in­
stance, I have found them all they
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy.
are represented to be. I couldn’t rec­
------ o------
ommend a better medicine for back­
Before using this preparation for ache and for regulating the kidneys
a cough or cold you may wish to than Doan’s Kidney Pills.”
know what it has done for others.
Price 60c. at all dealers. Don’t
Mrs. O. Cook, Macon. Ill., writes, "I simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
have found it gives the quickest re­ Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that
lief of any cough remedy I have ever Mr. Campbell had. Foster-Milburn
used.” Mrs. James A. Knott, Chill­ Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.—Pd Adv.
icothe, Mo., says: "Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy cannot be beat for
coughs and colds.” H. J. Moore, Oval
Pa., says: "I have used Chamberlain’s
TOWER’S FISH BRAND
Cough Remedy on several occations
when I was suffering with a settled
cold upon the chest and it has always
brought about a cure.
REFLEX SUO
Cure at a Cost of 25 Centi.
“Eight years ago when we first
moved to Mattoon, I was a great suf­
ferer from indigestion and coastipa-
tion,” writes Mrs. Robert Allison,
Mattoon, Ill. "I had frequent head­
aches and dizzy spells, and there was
a feeling like a heavy weight press­
ing on my stomach and chest all tho
time. I felt miserable. Every morsel
of food distressed me. I could not
rest at night and felt tired and worn
berlain’s Tablets cured me and I
have since felt like a different per­
son.”—Paid Adv.
Practical as a
plow, and just
as necessary.
Make every
rairy day
count.
Waterproof»
Absolute
are Marked
ihm—
.fit.
AJ.TOWIRCÜ. BOSTON
FIRST OF SEEDLESS ORANGES
HOW SARDINES ARE PACKED
I
flLiEX. JVI g HAIR & GO
In 1872 United States consul to
Bahia (Brazil), W. F. Judson, was told
by the natives that 60 miles inland, up
the Amazon, were native orange trees
bearing fruit without seeds. Accord­
ingly he sent natives after tree shoots
and some of the fruit
The shoots were packed in moss
and day and sent to Washington.
They were set out by the agricultural
department, but attracted little atten­
tion until tht next year, when Horatio
Tibbetts of Riverside, Cal, took the
surviving four shoots to his home and
planted them. One died and another
was eaten up by a cow. At the end of
five years the two surviving trees bore
18 handsome seedless oranges. Next
year the oranges were even better, and
the trees bore about a box of ths fruit
From that time on the cultivation of
the seedless oranges about Riverside
progressed rapidly. As there were no
needs to raise the trees from it was
found necessary to graft buds of the
seedless trees into seedling trees.
Riverside has grown from a small
village to a town of 10,000 acme de­
voted to the cultivation of navel ’ or­
anges. It Is the greatest orange pro­
ducing locality In the world. The two
original trees were fenced about and
carefully guarded leet barm should
come to them, and they are now en­
joying a green old age.
PROCURE OIL
FROM
BIRDS
Inhabitants of the Island of 8t Kllda
Are Especially Favored In Re­
spect of Light.
The price of coal oil Is a matter of
no interest to the inhabitants of the
island of St. Kllda, a favorite haunt
of that animated oil can, the fulmar,
observes the Cincinnati Commercial
Tribune. So rich In oil Is this sea
bird that the natives simply pass a
wick through its body and use It as a
lamp.
The oil Is also one of the principal
articles exported from the Island.
It Is found in the birds' stomachs, Is
amber colored and has a peculiarly
nauseous odor. The old birds are said
to feed the young with it, and when
they are caught or attacked they light­
en themselves by disgorging it.
In St Kllda It Is legal to kill the ful­
mars only during one week In the
year ; but during that week from 18,000
to 20,000 birds are destroyed.
The mutton bird of the Antarctic
also carries its oil in the stomach and
can eject this oil through the nostrils
as a means of defense against ene­
mies.
Quantities of mutton birds are
slaughtered every year for their oil on
the coasts of Tasmania and New Zea­
land. In Its composition and proper­
ties this oil closely resembles sperm
oil.
Made First Cash Register,
A man named Jacob Rltty, a mer-
chant of Dayton, O., took a vacation
trip to Europe. While crossing on the
steamer, he sauntered one day into the
engine room and noticed a device that
mechanically recorded the number of
revolutions of the propeller shaft. Im­
mediately came the idea to the mind
of Mr. Rltty: "Why not Invent a ma­
chine that would re<?ord each cotn put
Into the cash drawer Y’ When he re­
turned home he Invented the first
"cash register.” John H. Patterson
was keeping a grocery store In a small
town 80 miles from Dayton. He heard
of the Rltty contrivance, sent an or­
der for one, and that was the
Inventor’s first order. The machine
was crude, but It Interested Mr. Pat­
terson and he saw how It could be per­
fected. "If it’s good for my store,” be
argued, “why not for all storesT’
Forthwith he went to Dayton, bought
the Rltty Interest out, and started the
National Cash Register Co., which has
now 1,800,000 machines and every
year turns out more than 60,000 cash
registers.
Primitive Station.
There is in England a railway sta­
tion which has only one train each
way a week—at Blackwell Mill, si tu­
ated mid way between Miller's Dais
and Buxton. Blackwell Mill consists
of eight workmen’a cottages on the
banks of the Wye. They are occupied
by railway workmen, and it Is for the
convenience of the wives who wish to
journey to Buxton for marketing that
on Friday mornings the 9:10 train
ffom Miller’s Dale stops at Blackwell
Mill. The two uncovered platforms of
the “station” are of the length of a
railway coach, and composed of rough
stone nt^| gravel. The “walt'ng room”
is a plotelayer’s hut, where the trav­
elers are glad to shelter from the keen
wind on winter mornings. The train
carries the stationmaster, who distrib­
utes the privilege tickets.
Loops the Loop In a 8torm at Sea.
Looping the loop in a kite balloon
was the hair-raising feat performed
some time since by a young balloon­
ist when the government was testing
the use of captive balloons on battle­
ships doing convoy work, according to
a story in Popular Mechanics Maga­
zine. The balloonist In question had
been aloft In his basket several hours
despite very rough weather when a 40-
mile gale struck the fleet. Instantly
the gas bag made a spinning nose
dive, swinging the basket and occu
pant through a complete circle. No
sooner was one loop completed than
another and another followed—fifteen
in all.
The process of preparing sardines la
very simple but requires experience
and great care. Upon the arrival of
the sardines at the factory they are
immediately placed on large wooden
tables about forty feet long, where
they are cleaned. This process takes
only a second, and a fairly efficient
worker can clean from 800 to 400
pounds of fish per day. according to
a writer In Fishing Gazette.
The fish are then placed In rata of
brine, where they are allowed to re­
main from one-half to two hours, ac­
cording to else. They are then placed
in wire trays equipped with prongs in
upright position, where they are al­
lowed to dry for about an hour before
they are ready for cooking. This la
done by placing the trays in large steam
ovens, where the fish are subjected to
a pressure of about two pounds of
steam, twenty minutes being consumed
in properly cooking the small flah and
as much as thirty-five minutes in cook­
ing the larger slses.
This cooking has to be carefully
watched; If the sardines are subjected
to too much steam they become some­
what brittle and break when being
packed. Some sardines are cooked In
oil; however, an extra charge Is made
for this process, and comparatively
few are sold.
After the sardines have been prop­
erly steamed the trays are placed on
long counters for sorting, which la
done by carefully selected and well-
paid girls. After sorting, the tins are
filled with oil and placed on shelves,
where they are allowed to remain for
about twelve hours In order to Insure
the proper Impregnation of the oil.
Pure olive oil Is used In preparing
most sardines, especially the best
grades, but for some markets a mix-
ture of olive oil and high-grade pea-
nut oil is desired.
CIVILIZATIONS OF THE PAST
Nations With High Degree of Cultiva­
tion That Are Now Only Memory
In History's Pages.
Thousands of years ago—long before
the great western nations of today,
long before even Greek and Roman
were heard of—there were more or
less advanced civilizations on both
sides of the Pacific. China, for exam­
ple, had grown into a stable Mongol­
ian kingdom perhaps 4,000 years be­
fore the beginning of our era. A
Chinese author writes: "There Is no
existing nation la the world that has
a larger past than China. She has
seen the rise and fall of the ancient
Egyptian dynasties; the extension of
the Persian empire; the conquests of
Alexander; the irresistible advance of
the Roman legions; the deluge of the
Teutonic hordes from the north, and
the birth of all the nations of modern
Europe.”
The Japanese also, a people com­
pounded of various elements, but
chiefly Mongolian and Malayan, stood
stood at the beginning of our era on
a high plane of civilization, and even
then exhibited the tendencies and the
adaptiveness which distinguish them
today.
Then away to the east In Central
and South America, civilizations
waxed and waned, reaching their high­
est development In the Aztec and In­
can empires, the latter of which was
an extremely Interesting example of
despotic socialism.
Rupert Brooke In Fiji.
Fiji In moonlight Is like nothing
else in thia world. . . . It’s all dim
colors and all scents. And here, where
it’s high up, the most fantastically
shaped mountaina in the world tower
up all round, and little silver clouds
and wisps of mist run bleating up and
down the valleys and hillsides like
latntyi looking for their mother.
There’s only one thing on earth as
beautiful; and that’s Samoa by moon­
light. That’a utterly different, merely
heaven, sheer loveliness. You He on
a mat in a cool Samoan hut, and look
out on the white sand under the high
palms, and a gentle sea, and the black
line of the reef a mile out, and moon-
Ught over everything, floods and floods
of it, not sticky, like Honolulu moon­
light, not to be eaten with a spoon, but
flat and abundant, such that you could
slice thin golden-white shavings off
It, as off cheese. . . .—From "Collected
Poems of Rupert Brooke: With a
Memoir."
Marriage.
Marriage Is the nursery of heaven.
The virgin sends prayers to God, but
she carries but one soul to him; but
the state of marriage fills up the num­
bar of the elect and hath in It the In-
bor of love and the delicacies of friend­
ship, the blessing of society and the
union of hands and hearts. It hath In
it less of beauty, but more of safety
than the single life; It hath more ease,
but less danger; It is more merry and
more sad; is fuller of sorrows and
fuller of joys; it lies under more bur-
dens, but is supported by all the
strengths of love and charity, and
those burdens are delightful.—Jeremy
Taylor.
Brand New Head.
"What a good head the baby has,”
exclaimed Aunt Madge, who had come
all the way from Anderson just to see
the new baby in Ashland avenue.
“He’ll be president, sure.”
"It ought to be a good head,” put In
little brother, whose three-year-old
nose Is out of joint, "he only has used
It two weeks.”—Indianapolis Star.
GEfiERRU HARDU1RRE
l^itehen Ranges and
Heating Stoves.
THE BEST STOCK OF HARDWARE IN
THE COUNTY.
See Us for Prices Before Ordering Elsewhere.
Dr. E. L. Glaisyer,
VETERINARIAN,
County Dairy Herd Inspector
BELL. PHONE. MAIN 3. MUTUAL ZPHONE.
CLOUGH'S CARBOLIC
COMPOUND
For disenfecting where Contagious or
infectious diseases are prevailing.
CARBOLIC COMPOUND is a power­
ful Germicidal mixture and by its use
will improve general stable conditions.
C. I. CLOUGH CO.
RELIABLE DRUGGISTS.
LAMB-SCHRADER co
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, LATH AND
BRICK’; DOMESTIC STEAM AND
SMITHING COAL.
Warehouse and Ofiice Cor. Front and 3rd Ave. West, Tillatnotk Or.
a
SEE
W. A. CHURCH,
FOR INSURANCE.
Fire, Life, Accident, Automobile.
2nd Ave. E, between 1st and 2nd„Sts.
Successor to J. S. Stephens.
There was
a Crowd in
the Store
and they were trying to josh the Tobacco Man
“Have a chew on
so long it costs noth­
me,’’says he.“Break
ing extra to chew
off just two or three
this class of tobac­
co.” • • • •
squares. That’s a
It goes further—that’s
man’s size chew of
why you can get the good
Real Gravely. It
taste of this class of tobac­
holds its good taste
co without extra cost.
BRAND
PEYTON____
Real Gravely Chewing Plug
each piece packed in a pouch
P g COAVElY TOJIACCO CO~, DANVILLE
VA-
The Headlight is the Best
County Newspaper.