Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, March 18, 1920, Image 8

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. MAB CH 18, 1920
What the Editors Say
TILLAMOOK COUNTY BANK
CAPITAL AND [SURPLUS,
$50,000.
Member
Federal ¡Reserve
System.
Back of YOU there is always
a FEDERAL RESERVE BANK.
ACK of every member bank in the Federal Re­
serve System is the strength of the organized,
banking resources of the country-
By dealing with this bank which is a member of the
Federal Reserve System, the system’s facilities and re­
sources are available to you—virtually just across the
street—What is this worth to you in giving confidence
as to the stability of your banking arrangements.
OFFICERS
R. E. Williams
H. T. Botts
David Kuratli
C. M. Dyrlund
B. L. Beals, Jr.
President
Vice-President.
Vice-President
Cashier.
Ass’t Cashier.
DIRECTORS—
H. T. Botts, Chairman.
James Williams
R. E. Williams
John Erickson
David Kuratli
Wm. Maxwell
T. W. Lyster
D. Fitzpatrick.
Albert Marolf
Cut down your tire and tube expenditures by anticipating
your Spring and Summer requirements and getting—
Absolutely EREE
~ one “Ton Tested” Tube, of corresponding size, with
every Vacuum Cup Tire bought at our store. Act
quickly. This offer is LIMITED. Once it expires,
it will not be renewed. Early ordering will avoid
disapixjintment.
VACCUM TIRES, WITH FREE TUBE, IS 20 PER
LESS THAN ANY OTHER MAKE.
ALDERMAN & POORMAN.
NOTICE.
Have sold my interest in
the Tillamook Transfer Co.
have bought into the
City Transfer Co., and all of
the old customers who wish
me to do their work will find
me on the Job.
------- o-------
Some of those University of Oregon
girls who say that the man they mar­
ry must be making at least $250 per
month are doomed to bitter disa-
! pointment. There are not plumbers
i enough to go around.—Oregonian.
o
A pessimist wants to know what’s
j the use of making money nowadays,
j What you don’t spend for living ex­
penses goes in income taxes, and if
. there should be any left after that,
they’ll take it for inheritance taxes.
—Umpqua Valley News.
------- o-------
The federal department of justice
i has solved the high cost of meat and
says that hereafter every family can
' have cheap meat. All it has to do is
to ask for the cheaper cuts. If it is
still not cheap enough, no doubt the
attorney general will urge them to
eat dog meat.—Gazette Times.
Internal revenue officers in raids
on three private residences in Eu­
gene seized the enormous quantity of
twenty-eight pints of home made
beer. If they would spend more time
running down genuine moonshiners
and less time prying into private
homes, they would accomplish a good
deal more for the cause of true tem-
perace.—Oregonian.
The home is the worlds greatest
savings bank. Industry and thrift
are attiibutes of any man who own a
plot of ground and builds a home on
it. Homes yield the highest interest
of any bank in the world. Besides be­
ing a paying investment in a finan­
cial way, a home creates greater
earing ability. The home owner is a
citizen of the community. He is in­
terested in seeing property values in­
crease. He is also a better workman.
Of course it is fine to have a ‘jitney’
to go fishing with, but it is finer to
have a home to sleep in and eat in.
You can come nearer telling the rest
of the world to go to ---------- , you
know. Try it and see.—Itemizer.
Heed These Words and Save Millions.
■ —o
The essential principles of good
If the grand jury investigation of
bond sales by State Treasurer Hoff road-building are stated with force
discloses nothing more than appears and precision by Frank W. Gilbert,
already clear, the state official is at president of the Eastern Washington
least convicted of poor business man­ Highway association. Mr. Gilbert’s
agement of his office. Investing state judgment, based on years of practical
funds in securities at an advance of study, may well be emphasized by
more than 10 cents on the dollar over reiteration:
"It is time that the people of this
what they could have been bought
from the municipality issuing them state, who are being made dupes of,
is a species of frenzied finance which through the political machinations
would bring a private institution to of proponents of different types, cal­
grief in a short time and if persisted led a halt on their tactics. The ma­
in will even put a crimp in the state terial supply men would better call
finances. And incidentally perhaps it off about 75 per cent of their terrific
is pertinent to inquire how it hap­ overhead and give the municipalities
pens attention was first directed to and the state the benefit of the sav­
the transaction by a newspaper and ing. » * • paving ingredients
if the grand jury investigation would should be sold and used on their i
have bee made had it not been for merits. No royalty should ever be
paid to any of these concerns for pat­
that publicity.—Independent.
ented processes. * *
* The selec- j
------ o-------
There is a state organization to op­ tion of paving materials for our '
pose capital punishment on the ballot highways should not be determined
in May. One of their chief advocates through political influence nor the
lias declared that people who favor outlay of great sums of money for
capital punishment are "fool, super­ the creation of public sentiment.”
ficially minded people.” Another
Mr. Gilbert then goes to the heart <
speaker stated that she feared that of the problem in this paragraph
the impatient and intolerent spirit that should be heeded by every pub- i
of the soldiers who have but recently lie official who has a determining ,
returned from the war would prevail voice in the construction of high- |
in putting the capital punishment ways:
amendment back on the statutes of
"There is no surfacing that can be
the state. She also argued that every placed on our roads which will not
person who votes for the restoration deteriorate in time to greater or less
of the death penalty is morally and degree, according to the amount of
spiritually responsible in part for traffic which it bears. There is not
the death of murderers who might a paving which can be used which
thereafter be punished for their will not go to pieces if dishonestly or
crimes. The lady undoubtedly be- , improperly laid, or if placed upon a
longs to the "sob squad,” and is so ! subbase which has not been thor­
superficially minded as to make a oughly drained, compacted and after
very serious reflection on the intelli­ all weaknesses have been corrected.
gence of our patriotic soldiers and a That is why competent engineers are
lot of other good people who think employed and only reputable contrac­
as they do. The trouble with the "sob tors should be allowed to take on the
squad” is that they let their sympa­ work.”
thies get away with their brains and
If these sensible conclusions are
their sense of justice.—Telephone kept in mind, along with a public
Register.
determination not to allow any fav­
ored group to get a monopoly grip
Death In The Air.
and by advantage of improper laws
compel the state and the municipal­
The number of deaths from diseas- ities to build roads exclusively of
j es of the heart have doubled, in the their material, we shall avoid enor­
large cities of America, in the last mous and costly road grief in Wash­
four years, and now exceeds that ington.”
from almost any other cause.
There are now more than 7.500,000
General Contract Bids Wanted
automobile vehicles in the United
States, and are likely to be 10,000.-
Bids are wanted for the general
000 by the end of the year.
These two current items of infor­ construction for a press brick and
mation are apparently quite discon­ tile building, two stories and base­
nected. and yet they may have a ment.to be build for Morris Schnal,
connection so vital and important as at Tillamook, Oregon.. Plans and
to command the gravest national specifications may be had front Mor­
ris Schnal at Tillamook, or front the
concern.
The suggestion of relationship be­ office of the architect, F. M. Stokes,
tween them Is found in the fact that 1003 Chamber of Commerce Bldg.,
the exhaust fumes from gasoline en­ Portland, Oregon.. All bids must
gines contain a large
quantity of submitted before April 18t.
carbon monozlde gas. which is not
only exceedingly poisonous, but is
also particularly detrimental to tl e
Ils first effect when inhaled
*3 Is heart.
markedly to decrease the oxygen­
ation of the blood This It does when
mixed with the atmosphere is even
so small in proportion as one part In
two thousand. From that it proceeds
to cause paralysis of the nerve cen­
tres which control the heart, and
therefore, paralysis of the heart it­
self. There have been reported a
number of deaths of persons in clos­
ed garages, apparently from un­
known causes, which upon Investiga­
tion were found to have been due to
carbon monoxide poisoning.
Such tragedies may readily hap­
5zs252S252S25?5?j252S2525?52525¿5?52‘??lr¿52.,r25?.5?.52S25252S2S2S2S2S2S25252 pen, when a motor is running in a
small closed room. But they are pos­
KS£S2S?S¿í> ¿5 25 ¿5 25¿s 252525252525 252525 ¿525252525252525? 5252525252525252 sible in the open air! Let us consider
Exhaust fumes from the average au­
tomobile contain about seven per
cent of carbon monoxide. The com­
bustion of one gallon of gasoline
produces at least fifty feet of th|s
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
deadly gas. It is estimated that tn
New York City alone, 700,000 gal­
lons are consumed daily. This means
that there is injected into the air of
that city every twenty-four hoo- ’
some 35.000.000 cubic feet of ‘
R»s. sufficiently virulent
polwn
WAttKHOVSK AND OFF1CK-
to a dangerous degree
,o ’1,la,e
cubic feet ofay.’
«’’»»nty billion
COW. FRONT AND Sun AVK. WKST. TlIXAMtXlK OR
Prices Right.
H. BROOKS
LAMB-SCHRADER CO
CEMI NT LIME, PLASTER. LATH AND
BRICK: DOMESTIC STEAM AND
SMITHING COAL.
when we consider that this produc­
tion of poison gas is not equally dls-
| tributed in either time or place, but
is largely massed into less than the
twenty four hours and into a cam-
paratively few of the most crowded
thoroughfares. The disasterous effect
of the poison fumes upon vegetation
has long been noticed along the prin­
cipal driveways of the parks. If the
gas has the effect upon trees and
shrubs, in the open, it must have a
far worse effect upon the much more
susceptible organs of human beings
on streets where vehicles are much
more numerous than in the parks,
and where tall buildings on both
sides cover the narrow streets into
veritable catch sinks for noxious
emanations. There is reason for be­
lieving that the air on such a street
—say Fifth Avenue or Broadway—
with a score of cars on every block
pouring forth carbon monoxide, is
sufficiently vitiated to induce in
those who frequent the deadly lesion
of nerves and heart. What the condi­
tions would be in a crowded vehicu­
lar tunnel under one of the great
rivers, it is appaling to contemplate.
The moral is not, of course, to
abandon the automobile, but to get
rid, in some way, of the poison gas.
The automobile, it is needless to say
is one of the indispensable products
of modern inventive genius, and will
continue increasingly to be used. It
may be chemically impossible to
avoid the evolution of carbon monox­
ide in combustion of gasoline. But it
surely should be possible for some
inventive genius to find a way of
neutralizing it, or of preventing its
free and crude emission into the air.
Methods were readily devised in the
War for the manufacturing poison
gasses and hurling them against the
enemy. It would be an intolerable re­
proach if in time of peace we could
not, with equal efficency, protect
ourselves against them when they i
are emitted as a by-product of an in­
dispensable mechanism of civiliza- '
tion.—Harvey’s Weekly.
the inexorable
LAW OF AVERAGE
One of 100 average healthy men twenty-five years of age, forty
years later
THIRTY-SIX will be dead.
ONE will be rich.
FOUR will be wealthy.
FIVE will still be supporting themselves by work.
FIFTY-FOUR will be dependent upon friends, relatives or
charity.
Don’t Be One of the Fifty-Four
PROVIDE AN INCOME FOR YOUR OLD AGE. HERE ARE A FEW PRINCIPAL
FEATURES OF A NEW POLICY ISSUED BY THE AETNA LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Life Income at Age 60 or at Age 65.
1. These two plans of insurance mature
similar to endowment insurance; one at age
60. the other at age 65. But both plans pro­
vide that at maturity you will receive $100
monthly for 100 months and as much longer
as you shall live, or under the former contract
you may receive $13,800 in cash, and under
the latter $12,130 in cash.
2. Under either contract if you die be­
fore maturity of the policy your beneficiary
will receive at least $10.000, and under pol­
icies which contain the Double Indemnity
clause this amount will be increased to at
least $20,000 if your death results from an
accident.
3. If the policy contains the new Aetna’s
Disability clause, and you become permanent­
ly and totaly disabled, no further payment of
Original Insurance $10,000.
premium will be required. If such disability
occurs before any payments have been made
by the Company you will receive ,100 per
month during your life time, and if you die
before maturity of the contract your benefi
ciary will receive 110,000; but if you are
living when your contract matures.
matures, be it
either one form or the other, the monthly
payments will be increased to $200; or you
may accept $13.800 under the former, or
$12,130 under the latter, and continue to re­
ceive the $100 per month during your life­
time on account of disability.
4. Either of these policies is written for
larger or smaller amounts than Illustrated
above. Fill the attached card and mall to-day,
and we will give you full information.
FILL-OUT-AND-MAIL-COUPON
With the understanding that I incur no obli-
gation whatever, please quote premium for a
Life Insurance at Age
paying me $ ...............
per month.
I was born
_______ day'.
Occupation _
Name
Address
month
ROLLIE W. WATSON
“The Insurance Man”
INSURANCE-THAT-INSURES-IN-ALL-ITS-BRANCHES
TILLAMOOK, ORE.
Representing the Aetna Life Insurance Co
Attention.
I have a most beautiful line
Spring and Summer Hats for
ages (A speciality on Paris Novel­
ties). My prices r~?
__ v always
are as they
have been—very reasonable.
Mrs. E. F. Rogers..
Notice to Property Owner»
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Notice Is herebygtven to nil prop-
erty owners having street assess­
ments that have not been pa'd thul
the delinquent list is being prepared
by the City Recorder, and if not
Paid, there will be additional cost of
Advertising.
fl
Notice to Tax Payer».
1919 taxes are now due and pay­
able. and must be paid before April
ath to avoid additional interest.
Interest at the rate of 1 per cent
per month will be added after that
date.
•
GE
K
W. L. Camp’,>el|, Sheriff.
100 Laying Pallet» For Sale.
Leghorns
2?. , ™
8tr,ln Your
of 300 at $4.00 each, or as they
'
* forn’ldable state
Of affair».
—. it qacontese far worse i «>'»» $3.00 each
Wiu. Stuivenga
THF.
blood
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