Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, August 14, 1919, Image 3

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    TILLAMOOK HEAD
who Ii
LOW PREMIUMS.
IMMEDIATE SERVICE.
Responiible For The
Living Cost.
High
A concerted efftort is being made by
administration politicians and news­
papers—newspapers and magazines
both of the outspoken and camou­
flage "independent" kind, to make
the people believe that the responsi­
bility for the mounting cost of living
and the failure to punish profiteer­
ing, is due to the Republican Con­
gress elected last November. Having
won national power in 1912 on the
high cost of living issue, and every
day since the inauguration of Presi­
dent Wilson having witnessed a
steady rise in the level of the price
of necessities, these Democratic poli­
ticians and papers actually have the
loffrontery to attempt to raise this
issue once more in their own behalf!*
Everybody knows, of course, that
never before in the history of this
country has there been such whole­
sale profiteering as during the six
and a half years beginning with
B President Wilson's first inauguration
H Elected on the strength of demagagl-
B cal outcry against plutocracy, is is of
B , official record that since President
B ; Wilson’s inauguration more million­
New Insurance
B aires have been created than during
Rank
Company
issued in
B the entire preceding history of this
Oregon, 1918
B country, and this through no in­
. *4,010,647
Oregon Life, Portland................
crease in the productive resources of
. 2,795,423
New York Life, New York . ..
the American people, but through
. 2,613,760
Mutual Life, New York...........
speculative processes.
<5
. 2,398,555
Aetna Life, Hartford...................
Several factors have contributed to
. 2,221,000
Northwest Mutual. Milwaukee
excessive living costs, The adminis-
2,024,311
Metropolitan Life, New York .
tration has been criminally extrava­
1889 ,532
Western Union Life. Spokane .
grant in the expenditure of public
. 1,601,025
Equitable Life, New York . . .
money. It accumulated vast stores of
. 1,553,736
Travelers, Hardford...................
food and clothing at prices far above
. 1,337,500
Kansas City Life. Missouri . . .
the ordinary market level, and these
. 1,067,239
Idaho State Life, Boise.............
it has refused to throw upon the
. . 1,030,000
Mutual Benefit Life. Newark .
market for the relief of the high
..
913,177
Penn Mutual Life, Philadelphia
price situation. Vast stores of food
.. 900,786
Prudential Insurance, Newark .
have been shipped abroad for the al­
810,444
New England Mutual, Boston
leviation of conditions in Europe,
not only during the war, but since
the signing of the armistice, with
j the result that price levels have been
heightened. There has been a tre­
mendous inflation of the currency
under the operations of the federal
reserve act, with consequent depre­
ciation of the value of the dollar.
The war has disturbed the whole bas­
is of business, and disordered busi­
ness conditions have had much to do
with the creation and maintenance
Address H. R. BLAUVELT, Executive Special,
Information Cheerfully Given.
of price levels which, if long contin­
Corbett Bld., Portland, Oregon.
ued, or increased, will produce genr
z
eral bankruptcy in the United States,
! and, possibly, grave social and polit-
| ical as well as industrial conditions.
But in view of the demagogical ef­
NO ESTIMATES TO REGRET.
ALL VALUES GUARANTEED.
lfort of the administration spokesmen
| to place responsibility upon a Re­
publican Congress helpless to relieve
the situation, tor this oppressive
t
condition of affairs, the truth should
Taking No Chances.
THESE JOKES AKE ON THE ARMY gan exploring a little town.
Their attention was attracted by a j "Dick,
darling,” hinted
Mrs. be plainly spoken. Most of the profi­
^S..la^!r.lnS a® ia8t M | Youngbride,~"do"you remember how teering in this country at this time,,
!
Gratitude.
her tongue would allow.
we used to sit on one chair at papa's” so much of the profiteering as is done
Speaking of cooties. Col. Orrin H.
The two Irishmen gazed with ad- I “That was all right at papa’s,” re­ by big business, is directly due to the
de Wolfe, assistant adjutant of the miration, their mouths wide open,
refusal and failure of this adminis­
Western Department of the Army, then Terry said: "Pat, will yer lis­ plied the practical Dick, “but I’m tration to enforce laws now upon
not
going
to
forget
that
these
chairs
has a story that he got while In ten to the fluint way that foreigner
the statute books for the dissolution
cost me good money.”
Fiance in command of a fighting kid talks the damned language!”
and punishment of combinations in
regiment of negroes who never were
unfair restraint of trade. Before the
too busy fighting the Hun to have a
present administration came t > pow­
Some Gig Ones.
joke now and then.
er a great anti-monopoly statute
They were having a contest to see
big top sergeant while under fire who could tell the biggest war lies.
was on the books,—the Sherman
a cootie gnawing at his back,
anti-trust law. The Democratic party
“I drew a bead on a Boch airman
although the shells were whizz- with a rifle, wirelessed him, “Hands
had complete control of the legisla­
by at an alarming rate and rifle up" and made him come down Inside
tive as well as the executive branch
bullets were winning their way to­ our lines.” said one.
of the government for six years, and
ward the rear, the sergeant had to
additional laws were passed, which
”1 whistled like a 75, scattered an
stop ai d attend to Mr. Cootie. He enemy machine gun squad, captured
we were told by President Wilson
reached over his shoulder to grapple the gun and took the whole crew
would put an end to the monopolistic
the new enemy, and as he did so he prisoners,” said another.
exploitation he claimed was general
inclined his head forward. At that
"I sneaked a limousine, ran it to a
Life is the art of giving at the time of his . inauguration.
lime a big Bertha whizzed right over German corps headquarters, told the
Neither the old law nor the new
pleasure
his head, barely touching his iron C. G. I had a message from the Reich­
ones are being enforced by the ad­
helmet.
ministration’s Department of Justice.
stag for him, and brought him back
i he Eergeant looked at the cootie to our regimental P. C.” said the
No concealment is made of this situ­
a minute almost lovingly. He hesi- third.
ation. The responsibility, therefore,
MOUTHPIECE
ra.ed a moment, then remarked:
in so far as present conditions are
“My spirals never come down,”
CIGADBTTBS
"Mr. Cootie, you shuah did save my said the fourth.
due to the profiteering of big busi­
life uat time. Now I’se gwin to rave
have added much to life, for ness, lies directly at the door of
youah’s. Back you go to your pasture
President Wilson, and the adminis-
they are pleasing thousands tration
COAXING YOU TO SMILE.
foh life.”
and party iu power. Let no
of discriminating smokers one be deceived by the efforts now
And back it went right beneath
the undershirt.
Not Ashamed of His Religion.
who appreciate the art of being made to unload the responsi­
------- o-------
tile wooly-headed Uncle Rasmus
good
tobacco well blended. bility from the shoulders of those to
No Time Limit.
was accused of disturbing the peace.
whom it belongs, to the backs of
They will please you, too.
"How long should a man keep his Officer Mort Randolph explained it
those who will have no opportunity
m around a girl do you think?" i as follows:
to enforce the anti-monopoly laws of
10 for 13c
asked the sweet young thing.
I “Your honor this man was running
the land, or put new laws on the
The John Bollman Co. Branch
"Until he hears his wrist watch up and down Mill River road, waving
statute books over presidential oppo­
strike,” replied the young man in his arms and yelling at the top of
sition, until March 4th, 1921.
Let it not be forgotten that Mr.
khaki.
his voice, and otherwise raising the
••yvhy. wrist watches don’t strike, mischief, at 1:30 o’clock in the
Wilson got into power saying that
this country was in the grasp of the
do they?”
. morning. The people of that district
"Of course not.”
| complained, and they had u perfect
monopolistic special interests, of
------o
highly organized and tyrannical big
' right to.”
business, and that it was his high
, The judge frowned at Rasmus, who
Where He Should Be.
purpose to smash the plutocracy and
“You’ve fallen out of line not less 'didn't seem to be particularly wor-
end forever the influences he claim­
than five times; you should not be ried. “What do you mean by such
His Honor
ed had the American people by the
cried
the
in-
|
becoming
conduct?
”
in this regiment at all,’
throat. How does the account stand
sers’ training
»tructor at the officers'
----------- manded.
, "Religion, Judge,” was
at the end of six and a half years?
camp.
Have the wrongs complained of been
"Where should I be?” demanded sponse.
"Religion! Are you a holy roller,
corrected? Has plutocracy been pul­
the recruit.
verized? Has
profiteering
been
"In the flying corps, and then or something like that? I have reli­
gion, Rasmus, but 1 don't get up at
brought to an end? Has the cost of
you’d only have to fall out once.
¡midnight and tell everybody about
living, either actually, or relatively,
------- o-------
been reduced for the average man?
lit.”
How much longer are the people
'Dat’s des de difference, Judge, 1 ¡
Not Used to Fits.
going to be deluded by demagogues
A rather plainly dressed young ain't ershamed ob mine.”
who ride into power denouncing the
O-----------
man went into a furnishing goods I
“plutocrats”? Legitimate business
store and asked to see a suit of
A Sartorial Diet.
has been made a target; yes tremen­
clothes. "Oh, don't bother about fit­
She was the sort of woman
dously heavy burdens of taxation
ting it, just wrap it up as it is—and,
always tells everybody her business.
have been heaped upon honest trade
by the way, put in a hat."
and industry, yes. But what has .seen
"Any old number around seven With a cheery smile, she settled her­
self at the counter of the hosier's
done for the people through elimina­
will do.”
c
tion of the evils of speculation and
Any shirts?” ventured the clerk, 'shop and began:
Ornamental Fire Placet Built
“My husband has just been very ill
exploitation? These evils have been
wonderingly, selecting a hat.
of
Brick
and
Stone,
All
Fire
vastly increased, not diminished. Thli
"Yep, throw in three or four, and —very ill, Indeed. So 1 have to do his
Place« absolutely guaranteed
administration cannot escape a judg­
don't mind the size, for I was a pri­ shopping, and I want a shirt.”
not to «moke or money re­
“Certainly madam." said the assis­
ment upon its record by attempting
funded.
vate in the A. E. F. for over a year,
to shift this responsibility, or ch< ago
Brick work of all kind« done
and I'm afraid if I get any duds to fit tant, courteously. "Stiff front and
on «hor» notice.
the issue.— National Republican.
me now I won’t feel at home," said cuffs?”
"Oh, no!” she exclaimed, in horri­
We make a apecialty of re­
the former soldier.
pairing «moking Fire Places
fied tones. “The doctor says he must
It Is »aid that as we didn't fight to
------ o-------
avoid anything with starch in.”
j
prevent all those other nations from
Then What Happened?
------- o-------
robbing China we ought not balk on
At a Saturday morning inspection
the Shantung business. In other
Sure Proof.
a private was not wearing a belt.
TILLAMOOK. O«E
word«, if you can't stop all the rob­
William J. Burns, the detective,
First Sergeant: “Have you a belt?
belt? ”
beries, you have no right to decline
»aid
in
a
Scranton
lecture:
“
To
a
Private: "No. sir.”
to join in pulling oft a safe-blowing
First Sergeant: “You report to the well trained detective every incident
yourself when requested to do no by
quartermaster sergeant for a new 1 is pregnant with significance—yes,
the league of burglar«.
one and-tell him to charge you for every incident is as full of meaning
---- —o
as
—
well,
I
am
reminded
of
a
story.
REGISTERED
AND
GRADES
the one lost. I’ll stop this careless-
A Columbus, O., Baptist clergyman
A
young
man
sat
in
a
parlor
alone.
Of Any Breed.
’iesa.”
nays it isn’t suiprising that the Paris
sir; but I To him a beautiful girl entered.
Private: “All right
me:
peace conference made a mess
of
•
------
o
------
loaned you the belt about two week» Thereupon the young man took
things when Divine guidance was
six
cigars
from
his
upper
waistcoat
AUCTION
SALE
EVERY
ago and you still have it."
never asked during the session. If
ipocket, laid them carefully on the
this minister were a regular reader
SATURDAY
AFTERNOON.
'piano and then advanced toward the
Easy For Some People.
of an administration newspaper or
Two Irishmen who had tried in girl passionately, his arms out­
magazine he would know that Divine
stretched. But the girl drew back
Dr. J. E. REEDY
vain to learn French arrived at their
guidance was there without being
'you
have
loved
before,'
she
said.
”
In Barn Near Depot.
first billet on French soil and be­
asked.
Oregon Life
Insurance
Companies
§
In Oregon During 1918.
a
s
c:
g
ILLUSTRATION OF OUR IMMEDIATE SERVICE.
The late Frank Dye had only two policies, one in Oregon Life
the other in a Fraternal Order.
Oregon Life paid in 3 days. The other paid in 36 days.
IMPEPIALES
RALPH E. WARREN.
Stock Exchange
I
Scraps of Paper.«
------- o-------
William Allen White says England
will have a bolshevik administration
within six months. Won't it be nice
to be tied up with ’em, then. in a
leeganations?
------- o-------
They have just named the «pot
where Washington crossed the Dela­
ware, but who shall honor the place
where Wilson double-crossed the
Chinese?
------ O—
What encouraged Mr. Wilson to go
to Paris and match his wits with
Clemenceau and Lloyd George was
the success he had enjoyed matching
his wits with Carranza.
o
Since President Wilson sees what
happened to his Idea of what a sen­
ator ought to be, out in Michigan,
he cannot be blamed very much for
not letting the Senate cross-examine
him In public.
------- o—----
Milwaukee people
are mailing
sausages to their relatives in Ger­
many. Under the Burleson system of
swift mail delivery, by the time that
sausage reacbes its destination the
Germans will think its another gas
attack.
------o------
Doubtless if the Kaiser were to
make a tour of the United States, he
would get record breaking crowds,
but that wouldn't demonstrate his
popularity or approval of whatever
he might talk about. Curiosity is the
great crowd puller.
,
We have reached that stage In an
administration pledged to that "sim­
plicity and economy befitting a dem­
ocratic government” that a mere
*25,000,000 for aircraft, offered to
a department which has already
spent a billion dollars building
planes and training officers, is treat­
ed as too small change to be worth
picking up.
------ O-------
The price we paid for the nothing
we went to Paris for, and got. Is
gradually coming to light. We gave
Shantung to Japan, we promised
Italy financial assistance, we signed
a treaty of alliance with France, we
gave Great Britian the exclusive free­
dom of the seas. This is a good bit
to trade for a six year term as presi­
dent of the world at $200,000 a year,
isn’t it?
The Albany (N. Y.) Evening Jour­
nal: “Marshal Foch interviewed by
a correspondent of the London Daily
Mail, paid high tribute to Great
Britain for the production of a mag­
nificent army in so short a time after
war found the empire almost unpre­
pared. Also he insisted that Great
Britian ought to maintain large ser­
vices of military material, because
that is one of the obvious and indis­
pensable precautions to be taken.
Unless it is taken, the next time
England will be in the same position
as the last time—she will not be
ready, and we shall have to wait for
her. Then Marshal Foch believes
that there will be a next time. He
has no faith in the perpetuation of
peace under a new order of the
world. And nobody will deny that
Marchai Foch's opinion has weight.”
[ and
V
u
L
c
A
N
i
z
all kinds of tradì
All Work
GUARANTEED
We carry a Full Line of
United States Tires,
Also Used Tires and Tubes.
.
We take your Tires in Exchange.
i
N W est C oast R ubber C o
G First Street, next to McNair’s Hardware Store.
«
I
TILLAMOOK, OREGON.
-
J
your immediate need is a de­
pendable, painstaking handling of
some business or financial matter,
read the last paragraph of this ad­
vertisement. Our desire is to go
less directly to the point.
BUSINESS
FINANCIAL
LADIES. rmgwmt the m.n, ad.
CONDITIONS are maturing new
problems almost daily and this bank
has prepared itself with facilities very
Tantw, io a peraonal checkin, ac-
count, will find ua ready to do every-
thin, poaiible to make their tranaae-
4
valuable to a wide variety of interests.
tiona with thia bank a pleaanre to them.
’
AND
TO THE FARMER AND RANCH
ER. our membership in the Fedtrnl
Rtter— Syetem is an advantage.
It
give* ua a broad and practical ability
to meet their particular needs. The
TO THE
THRIETY. n offer 4%
interest compounded twice yearly for
their savings plus the security of
Stront Roau Owned But*.
4
same connection nerves The Bueinee<
Man Here each of t hese differing lines
of endeavor will find that conferences
with our officers often bring out ad­
vantages which anxiety and business
cares have hidden from them.
JN the final analysis, it will be found that this
tn-
stitution is governed by a spirit of helpfulness, and,
whatever your business interests in this section may
be, you can confidently rely upon its cordial, intelli­
gent and personal co-operation.
TILLAMOOK COUNTY BANK
Tht Strfin/ Home Bash
BIG
HARVEST
DANCE,
at Fairvie
riday,Aug.2i
As the harvest has been finished |
Tillamook County and the barns are ft
of the best hay that has ever been place!
within them,let us all celebrate by haviij
nne of the Grandest Dances the Coun j
has ever had.
The old and the young must attend.!
Wilkins’ Jazz Orchestra will furnil
the music.
j
The hard wood dance floor that
made Fairview famous, you can’t help
joy yourself.
A Special Invitation extended to t<
Lunch served at midnight
V