Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, October 30, 1919, Image 8

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, OCTOBER 30, 1919.
\ biggest stock show in the northwest
, and will attract people from all parts
of the Pacific Northwest. Probably
Fred C. Baker, Editor.
Tillamook County will get a square
deal at the show, which it did not
per year $2.00 [ get in the cheese exhibit at the State
SUBSCRIPTION
j Fair.
eillanuuik
Advertising Rates.
Talk about the high coat of living,
Display Advts, per inch........... 20c.
Locals ............................ per line 7c. | the government seems to be doing its
1 best to keep up the high cost of liv-
Readers, with reading matter
per line................................... 7c. Ing, for Secretary of War Baker last
Notices of meetings etc, per line 7c. .April, ordered the sale in Europe of
commotion. But the reopening of
the saloon, once effectively and wise­
ly closed, means an orgy of drunk­
enness, dissipation, waste, idleness
and criminality in metropolitan cen­
ters, and a demoralizing and wretch­ i
ed experience whenever the saloon is i
tolerated. In times so tense and un­
certain it is an unhappy and unfor­
tunate reversion to old dangers, now
greatly aggravated by the reckless
and restless temper of many men and
some women.
1 The president has sought to render
a service to the makers and owners
of stores of liquor. But in doing it he
has served the country illy. It would
be better, far better, to pay these
men out of the government treasury
for their losses, and turn their whis­
key, beer and wines into the gutter I
than to permit it to be passed out
over the old-time and sadly disgrac­
ed bars.—Oregonian.
[a billion dollars worth of supplies,
[including foodstuffs, shoes, clothing,
I textiles and other necessities of life,
'and ordered that it be sold at a sac­
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rifice in order that it might not be
It is getting along about the time [brought back to the United States.
of the year when the Portland Jour­ Pursuant to these orders surplus
nal published a lot of lies and persis­ [commodities in France which had
ted in doing so as to the igning of ' cost the government $1,426,000,000
the armistice.
, were sold to the French government
tor the sum of $400,000,000 . It is
Now that the Governor 1
irecalled that the Secretary of Wai-
claimed Armistice Day, November 11, also prevented the sale of surplus
a legal holiday, and the event will be supplies in this country amounting Rap Is Taken at Baker’s Bargains.
celebrated in all parts of the state, to $120,000,000 in value until com­
Senator Sherman, of Illincis, read
Tillamook City should have a cele- I pelled to do so by the action of the
bration befitting the occasion.
liepublican House and Senate. He into the Congressional Recoi . a story
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had directed the Quartermaster Gen- printed in the Washington Post,
Armistice day is Tuesday, Novem- eral to give a written pledge to the showing how Europe is still being
ber 11, and is a legal holiday. Wear American Canners’ Association not to offered big bargains by Secretary
a Red Cross 1920 membership button 'sell 200,000,000 cans of vegetables Baker, while keeping up the cost of
foodstuffs at home, and followed it
that day, which will be a sign of your ' on the American market.
•up with a few remarks of his own
patriotism on this great national
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event.
| Fifty five senators have decided to bearing upon the subject.
"Just now when the housewife can­
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I Americanize the League of Nations
This is another reason for the I covenant, notwithstanding the pro- not buy a pound of sugar in Wash­
Senator
Sherman,
high cost of living. Circuit court ■ test of President Wilson and his ington,” sqid
used to convene twice a year and a i blind followers in the democratic "when prices are soaring beyond the
week’s session at each term would ' party. This goes to prove that more reach of ordinary incomes,, when
dispose of the business. Now we have 1 the league of nations covenant is fruit cannot be preserved for lack of
four terms and several adjourned discussed, less friends it obtains, for sugar, it will interest the long suf­
sessions. The October term Just over there are provisions in it that should fering public to know that the army
took 22 days with two condemnation and must be changed. The president | surplus of government supplies in
suits sent to another county to be | cannot fool the people all the time, the United States is proposed to be
tried and other cases held over.
I for they are now aware that the bold to the people in Europe.
------ o —
“Here are 17,000,000 pouryis of su­
'peace treaty could have been signed
The sugar famine in the United last March but Mr. Wilson went back gar which will be shipped from this
States is attributed principally to the To France determined to block the [country and placed at the disposal of
failure of President Wilson to pay ;peace treaty and incorporate in it [consumers in Europe. And a large
any attention to the request of the [the league of nations covenant. In | number of other things are to be sold
U. S. Sugar Equalization Board to [the unsettled state of affairs in the jail of which is calculated to arouse
buy the Cuban crop, as was done United States and the whole world some interest among American con­
last year. But Mr. Wilson has his this was a foolish thing to do, and sumers.
"Secretary Baker says he is doing
eyes too far off the ground, of course, nobody but the president is responsi­
to give consideration to such small ble for the present unrest and un­ this so as not to disturb market con­
matters as the food necessities of the satisfactory conditions existing to- ditions existing at this time in ths
mere American people.
Iday in the United States. That is gen­ United States. The prices we have in
------ o------
this country today ought to be dis­
erally admitted by every fair minded
President Wilson showed exceed­ •person. It is now up to the president turbed, and must be, if any relief is
ingly poor judgment when he vetoed and the Democratic party whether to come to the consumer. We have
the prohibition law, not only so, they will accept the league ot nations been investigating for two months
but he disappointed many of his best ■covenant now that it is to be Amer­ and there can be no relief unless
friends. Somehow, the president has icanized by the Republican party. there is a lowering of prices to levels
not been using good judgment of late, ;The president has a following of 41 which the sale of these commodities
especially when there is such an in the senate opposed to reservations, in the United States, instead of
overwhelming sentiment in favor of 'and they can defeat the league cove- abroad would tend to produce.”
the entire country remaining "dry”. |nant if they so desire, for it takes
If the president did this with the only 33 votes to do so. Well the Pres­
At nearly every convention some
hop of the democratic party obtain­ ident and Democratic Senators do so, agent
of
the
administration
ing the “wet” vote at the next elec­ seeing that the President made the bobs up with a resolution endorsing
tion he is going to be fooled.
statement that the covenant was [the league of nations. Whenever
not to be changed in any particular, there is real debate and deliberation
The McMinnville News-Reporter even to the dotting of an "i” or the the resolution is defeated, but ad­
says: “The News-Reporter has re­ crossing of a "t”? The President at­ vantage is taken of the fact that few
ceived commendation tor not carry­ tempted to force the senate to accept men feel 1'ke getting up and fighting
ing cigarette advertisements. We did the covenant, but the Republicans even a fool proposition when it is
not know our readers were quite so have seen fit to Americanize it be­ presented in an affirmative form by
some glib-tongued propagandist. Th?
observing. For their benefit let us fore accepting it.
administration has made a business
say v. e turned down three contracts
for two or three years of working
for cigarette advertising.”
A Mistake.
resolutions' through religious, educa-
Gee Wiz, we almost had a duck fit
-------o
itionai, business and other conven­
when we read this, for In the same
President Wilson assumes a heavy tions and is rather expert at the job.
issue of the News-Reporter we ob­ responsibility in his veto of the pro­
served there were cigar, tobacco and hibition act. Clearly, he has under­ IBut as expressions of opinion these
plug cut advts. What’s the difference taken to restore in the “wet” states [resolutions usually violate the sentl-
Bro., and why draw the line between a short "wet" period before constitu­ ! inents of the delegate body and are
| simply rammed through because the
cigarettes and plug cut?
tional prohibition can become effec­
[ crowd is always rather helpless un­
tive. Logically he must, and suppos­
The dairymen of Tillamook county edly will, now end the war-time pro­ .less somebody starts a fight.
appear to be taking more interest in hibition by declaring demobilization
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I
the Pacific International Live Stock complete and restoring the status-
It’s a queer thing that an adminis-
Show, whicji is to be held in Port- quo in the breweries and distilleries istration which says it has ninety
land, November 17-22, and froni and the surviving saloons of the percent of the people with it and acts
what wc can gather Tillamook coun- country.
as if it believed it is unable to get
ty will have quite a large number of
If the
stores of liquor lawfully the voters to act that w'ay in any of
dairy stock and hogs on exhibition, manufactured and still on hand the elections that have been held
besides a good display of cheese. Up could be disposed of in any way ex- since the unanimity r is supposed to
to the present time 4 6 head of stock cept through the medium of the sa­ have set in. The Seventh Alabama is
have been entered from this county loon. or of public sale to any and all the last district to record the tremors
and 15 head of hogs. The Pacific In­ comers, the president’s astonishing of an approaching political earth­
ternational Live Stock Show is the act would have produced no great quake.
Editorial Snap Shots
$
in
E. S. BETTCHER BULLING C0.S
Guaranteed 7 per cent Three Year Refund
Stock is Offered to the Pubiic in Small
Blocks for a Limited Time Only
nJ
******
fO
I
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This stock is placed on the market to interest the dairymen and
kl
business men of Tillamook and vicinity that the local mill may be­
S
come a truly community enterprise, serving the people as a people’s
mill.
0
This stock is guaranteed to yield a minimum of 7 per cent an­
nually, although the dividends will, no doubt, reach a much higher
level
rd
The stock can be turned back for refund at par at the expiration
X»
For further information call at the mill or ask your Banker.
President Butler of Columbia
University Says Saving
Only Remedy
San Francisco.—President Nicholas
Murray Butler of Columbia Univer­
sity, speaking here before the Com-
i..'rcial Club, said, “punishing profi­
teers Is a good thing, but it won’t
reduce the cost of living. If we .''i-d
all their hoarded goods it would do
little good.
"Onl the operation of Inexorab ■
economic laws can bring us back to
tolerable conditions. The remedy is
to save, to practice public economy
and private thrift. We must save
and invest In productive industry.
Borrowing for non-productive rea­
sons mean bankruptcy."
In the opinion of the best econo­
mists in the United States the peoples’
greatest weapon against high pi Ices
is the Government’s Thrift and War
Savings Stamps. Every family sho...d
have a budget, just as every success­
ful business has a budget. The first
thing on that budget should be the
amount to be saved from the weekly
or monthly income—not the amount
to be spent. Make what you save
govern the amount you spend, not the
amount you spend govern the amount
you save.
War Savings Stamps bring 4 per
cent interest, compounded every three
months. Hit high prices below the
belt by investing in United States
securities. The dollar you save today
will be worth twice as much five years
from now.
HAND GRENADES
USED 500 YEARS
AGO IN BATTLE
Government Giving Awry
Bombs Intended for
Doughboys’ Use
Washington. — Hand
grenades,
which the Government will shortly
make available to thrifty individuals
through banks and trust companies as
souvenirs of the Great War, date
back five centuries as war weapons
They were known to have been used
in 1427 at the siege of the Fortress
of Casamaggiore, on the River Po,
the defenders using a glass bottle
filled with powder.
The term ‘‘grenadiere’’ grew out
of the training of the best qualified
among the soldiers of Louis XIV, in
1765, to hurl these grenades. In En­
glish history, as well, the grenadiers
are found from the Seventeenth Cen­
tury on. The Russo-Japanese war,
however, developed the grenade into
the effective weapon it proved in the
Great War. Jam tins, tomato cans,
and other metal receptacles were
salved from scrap heaps and filled
with powder. These were the imme­
diate forerunners of the modern cast
iron,
corrugated
TNT grenades,
known as the Mills Defensive Bomb,
which caused so much destruction
when hurled into a German trench
or dugout, rt is the Mills grenade
with the TNT removed that the Gov­
ernment is putting out now as sav­
ings banks.
Ask any bank how to get one. You
don't have to pay a cent for it.
------ W8 8------ 1
ErtltrrHIi
NOW AND THEN
Sanitary Market
Watch Our WINDOW For
!
Saturday
“Get this straight”
says the Good Judge
The tobacco that gives
you the most lasting
chew is the kind that
saves you money. You
don’t have to take so
many fresh chews. The
rich tobacco taste stays
right with it. That’s
why you take a smaller
chew.
THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW
put up in two styles
RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco
W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco
General Graves, commander of the
American forces in Siberia, is doing
as well as could be expected of a com­
manding officer sent to war with in­
structions not to take sides.
The administration plan of talking
the high cost of living to death seems
to be working about as well as the
other plans it has developed for
fulfilling platform pledges.
------- n —■ ■
Secretary of the Treasury Carter
Glass advises the people to exercise
thrift. How the people of this coun­
try wish the administration would
cease lecturing about economy and
begin to practice 11.
•
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The government has been offered
$5,800,000 for the industrial town
and plant at Nitro, W. Va., on which
the administration spent seventy mil­
lions without beginning production
in the establishment. Come easy, go
easy.
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President Wilson’s victory at the
peach conference reminds us of our
country editor’s description of his
triumph over an irate subscriber;
“Fastening our nose between his
teeth and our heair in his hands we
held on firmly until help arrived.”
The failure of the so-called labor
conference at Washington to get any
where in the matter of reaching an
agreement on the matter under con­
sideration does not mean that it has
not accomplished its real purpose—
namely,, to provide some administra­
tion campaign thunder for 1920.
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Wm. Z. Foster, organizer of the
steel strike, told a Senate committee
that since his I. W. W. days he had
abandoned the syndicalist and an­
archist views he published in a book
a few years ago. It is unfortunate
i hat Mr. Foster overlooked announc­
ing any change of heart until his
book had been dragged into the
light during the past few weeks.
MODELS OF PERFECTION.
PERFECTLY
SIMPLE
SIMPLY
PERFECT.
Needles, Oil, Belts and all kinds of Sewing
Machine supplies, Repairing a specialty.®
New Home Users
are quality chosers.
For Sale By
SHARFF n> DUBIVER
172 3rd Street
NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE
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Notice of Sale of Real Property By
Administratrix De Bonis Non
In the circuit court of the State of
Oregon, for the County of li! iiltnom-
ah. Probate Department.
In the matter of the estate of
Leonard Krebs, deceased.
Notice is hereby given, that pur-
suant to power and authority grant­
ed to the administratrix de bonis
non of the estate of Leonard Krebs,
deceased, by the above entitled court
on the 3rd day of September, A. D.,
1919, the administratrix de bonis
non of the above entitled estate will,
from and after Saturday, the 25th
day of October, 1919, offer for sale
and will proceed to sell at private
sale to the highest bidder, for cash,
subject to the confirmation by the
Circuit Court of t're State of Oregon
for Multnomah County, all the right,
title and interest of said estate in
and to the following described real
property situate In the County of
Tillamook, State of Oregon, to-wit:
“A tract of land formerly known
as Lots Five (5), six (6), Seven (7).
Eight (8) and Nine (9), in Block
Three (3) in Ocean Park, situate in
Section Ninteen
(19), Township
Four (4) South, Range Ten (10)
West, Willamette Merjdlan, In Tilla­
mook County, State of Oregon, con­
taining .60 acres, more or less, as
shown in Assessor’s Tract Book as
Tract number 930.7
Bids offered In writing for said
real property may be made at any
time after the publication of this
notice and before making sale, at
the office of Emil P. Slovarp. Attor-
ney at Law. 608-9 Henry Building.
Portland, Oregon.
Dated and first published Septem­
ber 18, 1919.
Helen Krebs. Adminis­
tratrix de bonis non of
the Estate of Leonard
Krebs, deceased.
C. C. Stout and Emil Slovarp,
608-9 Henry Bldg., Portland, Ore.
Attorneys for Estate.
What is a dollar? Foolish ques­
tion—you say? Not at all these days
of H. C. L. and profiteering. Cer­
tainly a dollar isn’t what it was ten
years ago. It isn’t what it will be
five years from now.
A dollar is what you can get for
it 1 : h-vns, butterflies, or bunk—no
mor.
no less. A dollar wouldn’t
be wc
anything if you coulon’t get
anything for it.
Ten years ago you bought, weil
say, bunk at one dollar a share, Now
bunk costs two dollars a share, That
doesn’t mean that bunk has doubled
in value. It means that your dollar
is worth half what it was ten years
ago.
This Is, therefore, not the time to
!
spend your dollars. They will bring
you only half what they are worth.
■
This is the time to save them.
LOSS OF BLOOD
They will bring more later on. NO KNIFE AND
That is the history of dollars. Values No Plasters and Pains for Hours
run in cycles. As sure as you are
i
Or Days.
living five years from now a dollar TUMORS. PILES, FISTULA. GOITRE
will be worth more than it is now.
DISEASES OF WOMEN
probably twice as much, So when
you save a dollar now you are really . Over thirty years study In Europe
Four Years Study in Euiope.
saving two dollars. Tree- dollars as
Over thirty years experience
you would any other cori .jdity. Buy
them when they are cheap.
Portland Physical Therapy Labora-
Stick every dollar you can into War | to.’ies. 412 to 417 Journal Building
vlngs Stamps now. Carrying 4 per
Portland
Oregon
cent interest compounded quarterly, a
War Savings Stamp bought this
Ornamental Fire Placet Built
month for $4.20, will be worth five
dollars January 1, 1924.
of Brick and Stone, All Fire
By 1924
Place« absolutely guaranteed
the dollar will be worth twice as
not to smoke or money rs-
------------------------------------- T----- J 1
much as it is so you will really have
funded.
ten dollars for the 14.19.
Brick work of all kinds done
on short notice.
ri S
I
- O’- ■ .....
We make a specialty of re­
Frank Vanderlip says the secret of
pairing smoking Fire Places.
Agent For
success is “Thrift and common sense "
Buy W. S. S.
PAGE AND ALLEN AUTOMOBILES
CANSER,
Wheeler Garage.
of three years at the option of the holders, making it really in the form
of bonds with the holder thereof allowed a voice in the management.
MEATS
1
RALPH E. WARREN,
TILLAMOOK, OKI
Write
For Demonstration
And Prices.