Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, May 20, 1920, Image 3

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT MAY 20, 1920
What the Editors Say
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sy wsfenr decay*
peint right away with J
PAINT
Hdenend InVh*?6’
beaUty °f your home-
? the care y°u give it.
Weather-beaten and warped siding crack,
and open joints are forerunners^ deiy
Many property owners neglect to look for such
signs, judging their houses and buildings by general
appearances only.
It is good business to make regular inspection of your
property, and to use paint of good quality, which is ; the
surest preventive of decay.
e
Through the varying conditions of weather in all their
extremes FULLER Paint has proved both its pre er^
mg and beautifying quahties-a Pacific Coast Product
for Pacific Coast requirements.
¿xuuucc
71 years of paint manufacturing experience are
every brushful of FULLER Paint.
back of
T
Some of the FULLER Products
HOUSE PAINT'
FLOOR PAINT
PORCH and STEP PAINT
SHINGLE STAINS
SILKENWHITE ENAMEL
—For interior woodwork.
DECORET—combined stain
and varnish in all shades
for refinishing furniture,
etc.
’
VARNISHES
DEKORATO — the Sanitary
Kalsomine
AUTO ENAMEL
W. P. Fuller & Co
1849-1920
Northwest Branch Houses
at Portland, Seattle, Ta­
coma, Spokane, Boise
PAINTS
13
Look Up a
FULLER DEALER
in Your Town
252525252525« 52525252525252525252525252
DO YOU KNOW
That you can save the cost of a
Thor Electric Washer in a year's
laundry bills.
That you do not have to use a
strong soap that will eat the
clothes.
That you do not have to
the
sew on buttons after
:
clothes are washed.
That the Thor Electric Washer
takes but two cents worth of cur­
rent for a family washing.
That it would pay you to see
them at the :
COAST POWER CO
THE ELECTRIC CO
“You Can Depend on This”
says the Good Judge
4
Real Tobacco for
real satisfaction.
The full rich
taste of the Real Tobacco
Chew lasts so long that
you don’t need a fresh
chew so often. That’s
why it costs you less to
use this class of tobacco.
Any man who uses the
Real Tobacco Chew will
tell you that.
Put up in two styles
RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco
W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco
Bru:oi. Cempdoy.
J •
0? EPcaáway, Ne.v Yors Cu/
MILK COWS FOR
, SALE or EXCHANGE '
for Dry Stock
YAGER A BRADY
America has a big portion of the
Old World to supply with many of
the “necessaries” of life. A short
time -ago a lot of us were wanting
Uncle Sam to capture the markets of
the world and he has, to our discom­
fiture. And this is one of the prin-
coipal causes for the high cost of
many of our wants. Where is Wilson
when the prices go up?—Willamina
Times.
Members of the democratic party
in Oregon are staging an exciting
show with Chamberlain the chief at­
traction. and the newspapers of that
political faith are not all in accord
with the melody of the orchestra and
the discord is truly heart rendering.
"Why,” says the Portland mouth­
piece of the party, "this nasty per­
sonal tight certain Portland demo­
crats are making on Senator Cham­
berlain?” To which the Eugene sol-
lst of the same faith retorts: “It is
evident that the democratic party
has lite enough left in it to attempt
to stand for something more than a
little personal organization for the
sole purpose of keeping Gtogre
Chamberlain continually in office”
Selah!—Sheridan Sun.
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Why do?s the government always
seem to work to hit the retailer on
this profiteering business? Retailers
of sugar are only allowed two cents
a pound profit on sugar, but the con-
sciencless speculators who brought
up the supply and raised the price
as high as they pleased are unmo­
lested, except a perfunctory order to
investigate them, which gets no far­
ther. The government agents are
determined that the little country
merchants shall not profiteer, but ap­
parently are unable to see the big
speculators or find out where the
trouble lies. Speculators have grab­
bed up the visible supply of both
sugar and potatoes, and are putting
the screws to the little merchants and
the department of justice is unable
to find them.—Telephone Register.
Opponents of the restoration of
capital punishment are casting on
unwarranted slur upon woman vot­
ers in confidently claiming that the
women vote will be cast unanimous­
ly against the .measure and ull that
is necessary to insure defeat is to
line up sufficient men. The proposal
to restore capital punishment is the
outcome of thoughtful consideration
which resulted in the conclusion that
is the only means to adequately deal
with certain atrocious crimes and
prevent thelrrepetition. The question
is not one of sentiment, and in as­
suming that women voters are sway­
ed by sentiment and not reason, the
misguided people who hope to defeat
the best and leave the state helpless
to deal with such crimes as have
horrified the people of late years, of­
fer a gratuitous insult which is in
no way grounded upon the result of
votes of the women in the past. It
goes without saying that they will
study the problem as it is taken for
granted their fathers, brothers and
husbands do, and this study we be­
lieve will convince them that .repug­
nant as the idea of taking human
life may be, protection to society de­
mands that Oregon follow the ex­
ample of other Btates who after abol­
ishing capital punishment later dis­
covered that a mistake had been
made and restored it.—Hillsboro In­
dependence.
Inspiring Address of
Methodist Bishops
150 million dollars building port
terminals at Charleston, Norfolk and
other places from which not a single
ship sailed during the war?
Do you know the government
spent 20 million dollurs building a
terminal up the river from Charles-
ton which ships could not reach be-
cause the river was too shallow to
float them?
Do you know the government
spent 120 million dollars building
nitrate plants, but did not produce a
pound of nitrate fc* use during the
war?
Do you know the government
spent 100 million dollars on tanks,
but that the first American tank
reached France after the armstice?
Do you know the government
spent one billion dollars on shells,
but that only 17,000 American made
shells reached our forces in France
—about ten minutes’ supply?
Do you know the government
spent 117 million dollars on gas but
that not a single American made gas
shell was fired by the American
forces in France?
Do you know the government
spent 478 million dollars on guns
but that only seventy-’wo American
guns reached our forces at the front?
Do you know the government
spent 7 million dollars on a naval
training camp in Virginia after the
armistice ,wa.s signed?
Do you know the government
spent 79 million dollars on a powder
plant at Nitro, W. Va., and sold it
for 8 million?
Do you know the government
spent 100 million dollars for a nit­
rate plant at Muscle Shoals, Ala.,
and that Congress ha« been asked
for additional appropriations to make
this plant capable of producing fer-
tilzer?
Do you know these items and oth­
ers like them—-cited by Representa- |
live E. E. Pension of Illinois in a |
recent speech—helped to explain the
size of the expenditures for which
the people are paying today and will
continue to pay for years to come?
Do you know the »ovenaent
W
VACUUM
PACKED
a
g
£
s.
1 •
X
PQffri?AN0
QREC
w* PACK DEPENDABLE COFFEE in sanitar?
!
"Oacuum cans—not to improve its incomparable flavor
I —but to insure its delivery, to ÿou as fresh as when it left
4
our roasters.
We are
also roasters of
“Country Club”
Coffee
^Tastes Better, Goes Further’*
DWIGHT EDWARDS COFFEE CO., PORTLAND, ORE
• All
A
Cause For Quitting
Vj /
A ¡ » aá
a a « _
w » i
a,,
■ M I
i |
r jy r T
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day!
A money-maker and hard work saver for land clearer» and wood-cutting
contractors.
One man can move it from cut to cut. Simple and reliable,
hundreds I¡nuse all over the U. S. When not in IMS for wood cutting, the 4II. P. motor will
run mills, feed mills, feed cutters, pumps, etc.
’* Mt If'eeetaxv it cuttief wood fir less diea Scents
J. miUrnu, Burnt. Or».
Quick dellveriea from oixr
I0Opo/Jlf» MroMpAoat
SMttt
tftnt/Ht a minute.
N. F. A<^ra. Lan, LaAf
America must burn more .,
wood for fuel. One Wade
will do 10 men’s work at A
one-tenth the cost. Write
for free Book, “How Dan ff//
Ross cuts 40 cords
a day,” full de* .
1 tails and spec*
ialpnce.
Take it or Leave it
i
■i
0
A Eig Difference
“Esther,” questioned the teacher
of a member of me juvenile
"what is the difference between elec-
trictiy and lightning?”
“You don’t have to pay nothing
for lightning," came the prompt re­
ly.
Sold by Standard Feed Co., Tillamook, Agent
li
No Bother Now
“now’s the elevator service in your
apartment house?”
"It doesn’t bother us any more. The
landlord has rented the elevator for
an apartment.”
COUD
TIBES
A Literary Club’s Discussions
Mr. Bryan, "Senator Hitchcock’s vote
would not bars been worth counting
had he been compelled to rely on
thoee who endoroed bio atUtKdo on
It the treaty.”, .
I
i’ll
«
“Why did I quit him? Because
lie’s crasy—rattle-brained—change­
able you know,” said the stenograph­
er, explaining a recent resignation.
“Why, if I had stayed in that office
a month longer I’d be taking my
meals off a ouija board!”—Kansas
City Star.
Motorist (on country road)—Par­
don me, friend, but have you the cor­
rect time?
Farmer (producing watch)—Don't
keep any artilicial time, mister. It’s
jest 3:37 p m, and if you're a city
chap you kin do your own addin’,
subtractin’, muitiplyn’, or dividin', as
the case may be.
•»
's
s
It’s
Coaxing You to Smile.
“What did you discuss at the Lit­
erary Club last night? asked Smith.
“Oh, we discussed Shakespeare and
No group of American citizens is
better qualified to interpret and ex­ Prohibition, Browning and Prohibit­
press the patriotic thought of the ion. and Emerson and Prohibition,”
replied Jones.
American people than are the 34
bishops of the Methodist Episcopal
«
church. The public will therefore
turn with interest to the address de­
livered on their behalf at the quad­
. 1
rennial conference of that great
church in Lies Moines Sunday. Affirm­
ing that foundations are distributed
declare that—
“Everywhere free institutions are
threatened. The church must not
fail in the effort to preserve them,
We can not give sympathy to bol-
shevism, whether ot the -red mob or
the soft sentimentalist; to anarchy,
whether of the street or the chair.”
“Between the radical ana the re­ I
LEE M. TRAVIS
actionary; between the anarchist and
the contender for special privilege,
feudal brutality and domination of Candidate for Delegate to the Demo­
wealth; between radicalism and ' cratic National Convention, First
District
standpatism; between autocracy and I
——<o------
anarchy; between tyranny of wealth
and tyranny of strength, the church VOTE FOR 26 X LEE M. TRAVIS.
OF LANE COUNTY
must this day speak in clear tones
and minister to order and righteous­
Lee M. Travis of Eugene, one of
ness. Those who array class against
the 1st district candidates for the I
class, man against man. in any man­
San Franciso convention, has been
I
ner are not friends of society.”
widely known throughout Western
On the inspiring platform all the
Oregon for many years as one of the
great Christian denominations of this
principal live wires of the University
country are in full accord. The senti­
City. He was delegate to the Den­
ments here spoken by the Methodist
ver convention in 1908 and a mem­
bishops have been affirmed again and
ber of the commission which selected
again by the bishops of the Episcopal the site for the Oregon log temple at
church, the high prelates of the I
the San Francisco exposition.—Ore­
Catholic church and the leaders rt gon Voter.
other denominations.
It could not be otherwise, for
The reason why a woman voter
Christianity and class hatred are In,- should be a Republican is exactly
I compatible, and the spirit of Chru- the reason why a man voter should
. tianlty is irrevocably set, as the be; namely, that the Republican
Methodist bishops so well express it. party does a better Job of running I
I alike against the tyranny of wealth the country.
I and the tyranny of strength.—
•------ o-----
; Spokesman Review.
William Jennings Bryan ia out in
a statement taking another wallop
A Few Fact! Worth Coniideration at the adminstration’s uncompro­
mising stand on the peace treaty and
From the Kansas City Star
the league of nations, He call» at-
------- 0-------
Do you know the government tention of democrats to the Georgia
spent from 1917 to 1920, 36 billion primaries, where, as he says, "lew
than one-third of the democrats
818 million dollars?
Do you know the total appro prta- stood for the treaty without reser-
tlons from 1789 to 1917 were only atlona," and he bolds these ought to
be a warning. “In Nebraska,” adds
40 billions?
Do you know from 1917 to 1920
ths government collected in I sim II
billion 99 million dollars and borrow-
ad 1« billion?
*•
*
1
OOD mileage, good looks,
good traction—all to an
extreme degree—are features of
these tires. In their making and
in their selling, the Fisk Ideal is
a vital factor.
G
The Fisk Ideal: “To he the best
concern in the world to work
for, and the squarest concern in
existence to do business with.'*
1
r»/
Next Time—BUY FISK
ACKLEY &
rni LLER
/
VOTE FOR GOOD ROADS
Vote 302 X Yes for
4% State Road Bond Limit
Notice of Meeting of Sunaet Drainage
District
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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a
meeting of the owners of land situat­
ed In Sunset Drainage District will be
held at County Court House in Till­
amook City, Tillamook County, Ore­
gon, on Tuesday the 26th day of
May, 1920, at the hour of 1:00 o'­
clock P. M., for the purpose of elect­
ing a board of three supervisors. Said
meeting will be held in pursuance of
order of the County Court of Tilla­
mook County. Oregon, made May
11th, 1920, decreeing and ordering
the organization of said district in
accordance with petition therefor.
Dated thia May 13 th, l|20.
■P
H
Homer Mason,
County Cterh,