Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, June 10, 1920, Image 3

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JUNE 10. 1920,
What the Editors Say
O
Last night’s Telegram introduces
i the latest method of getting joy out
of life, "The Electric Jag,” by which
you can get as much kick out of a
dry battery as out of a quart of real
| liquor. Imagine the irate wife of to­
morrow armed with the rolling pin,
1 meeting her staggering hubby at the
head of the stairs with the admonish-
| ment: "There, John Henry—I knew
1 it. You’ve been down to the power
station again!”—Gazette Times.
German Extraction Votes
------- -o---------
VAUGHN’S, the Original and Best
Will set it up and put it to work for you to your satisfaction or you don’t pay a cent
To be had now at the Tillamook Clay works, E. G. KREBS, Prop.
See that clutch and sawholder ?
Put your saw on or take it oil in a jiffy.
Phone or call
The Whole Secret of
A Better lire
Simply a Matter of the Maker9s Policies
This you will realize—once you
try a Brunswick—that a super-tire
is possible only when the name
certifies that the maker is follow­
ing the highest standards.
For tire making is chiefly a mat­
ter of standards and policies—cost
plus care. Any maker can build a
good tire if he cares to pay per­
fection’s price.
All men know Brunswick stand­
ards, for Brunswick products have
been famous for 74 years.
Formulas, fabrics and standards
vary vastly in cost. Reinforce­
ments, plies and thickness are a
matter of expense. And these vari­
ations affect endurance. It rests
with the maker how far he wishes
to go—how much he can afford
to give.
For there are no secrets nor pat­
ents to hold one back.
To ascertain what each maker
offers one must analyze and test
some 200 tires—as our laboratories
have done.
Then it is S matter of combining
the best features and building ac­
cording to the highest standards.
Once you try a Brunswick you
will understand how we have built
model tires, regardless of factory
expense.
Yet Brunswick Tires cost you the
same as other like-type tires. Our
saving is on selling cost, through
our nation-wide organization.
We realize that you expect more
from Brunswicks, and we assure
you that you get it. ONE Bruns­
wick will tell you the story.
And then you’ll want ALL
Brunswicks. No other tire, you’ll
agree, gives so much foE your
money.
THE BRUNSWICK-BALKE-COLLENDER CO.
Portland Headquarter»: 46-48 Fifth Street
Sold On An Unlimited Mileage
Guarantee Basis
Cord Tire« with “Driving” and “Swastika” Skid-Not Tread«
Fabric Tire« in “Plain,” “Ribbed" and “BBC’ Skid-Not Tread.
Chas. F. Pankow
The three Oregon precincts which
probably contain the largest percent­
age of voters of German birth or ex­
traction are East Mount Angel, West
Mount Angt.! and Sublimity. Their
vote tor president was as follows:
East Mount Angel.
Hoover ............................
0
Johnson............................
261
Lowden ............................
8
Wood................................
4
West Mount Angel
Hoover ..............................
3
Johnson............................
TO
Lowden ............................
3
Wood................................
T
Sublimity
Hoover
4
Johnson
117
Lowden
11
Wood ..
27
More than one-third of Johnson’s
plurality over Wood in the whole
State of Oregon came from these
three precincts.—Oregon Voter.
On a Strike
------ o-
Did you ever see the like?
Everybody’s on a strike?
Carman,
Barman
Engineer.
Diver
Driver,
Bank cashier.
Ash boy.
Cash boy.
Grocer’s clerk.
Aviator,
Hotel waiter.
Maid of work.
Rail man,
Mail man,
Jolly tar,
Preacher,
Teacher,
Opera star.
Mail assorter,
News reporter.
Office cat,
Printer,
Sprinter,
Basebail bat.
Butcher, baker.
Undertaker,
Traffic man,
Proud piofessor.
Stern confessor.
Movie fan.
Did you ever see the like?
Everybody’s on a strike?
—Susie M. Best in the School Index.
It was not a catch question in any
sense of that term.
It was a fair, straightforward,
searching inquiry, going to the heart
of the subject in controversy—just
such a poser in Socratic logic as Lin-
con put to Stephen A. Douglas in the
historic Lincoln-Douglas debates.
Governor Allen's question put Mr.
Gompers in a dilemma. If he had
answered that strikes in vital key
industries were private wars between
capital and labor the answer would
have been tantamount to a declara­
tion that the public has no rights
which warring labor and captial are
bound to respect.
If he had answered that the public
had rights in such conflicts the an­
swer would have carried an admis­
sion that he public rights should be
protected. The Kansas law' does pro­
tect the public’s rights, and is fair
alike to captial and labor. There Is
no other way to provide such protec­
tion and Mr. Gompers knows it.
Hence his refusal to answer Gover­
nor Allen's fair and proper question.
But while the great labor leader
sought refuge in silence the public
knows the exact nature of his silent
answer. Though he dare not flatly
admit it his position 1 b that such con­
flicts are merely private war between
capital and labor; that the public
must suffer in meekness and inact­
ion; and that the law and the courts
must not interfere in the slightest
when labor and captial fight out
their differences savagely and ‘‘shoot
up” the country pretty much as feud­
ists in a southern mountain commun­
ity shoot up the terrorized country­
side.—Spokesman Reviews
-■WfNCHE5TÍR^ .
Saturday Target Practice
For Boys
NY boy in this community who
> has a .22 caliber W inchester Rifle
can try for ¿^W inchester Junior Rifle
Corps Marksman medal and diploma.
A
Fathers and mothers like their boys
to get the training, under the direction
of National Headquarters. No joining
expense—no dues.
We invite you to send your boy to
us to equip him with a W inchester
Rifle and arrange for him to receive
this valuable training.
Up to the Minute.
---- o - --
My shoes they cost me fourteen bones,
My hat is fashion’s shining light;
My shirt of silk, so loud it groans.
Oh, won’t I be a nifty sight
In overalls.
King-Crenshaw Hardware Co
Myself and all the other dubs,
We always join the latest clube.
And though it make my friends
weep.
I’ll jump the fence with the other
sheep,
In overalls.
Like all the rest of fashion’s fools
Who brush aside the wisest rules
I’ll bindly follow, if I’m led,
In overalls?
Where even angels fear to tread
And now I lay me down to sleep;
My coat and pants, you may them
keep,
But if I die before I wake,
Oh please be kind and do not
My overalls.
Far out upon that wide black
That flows from here to other side
I hear a shriek from a drowning
wretch,
Who careless-like forgot to fetch
His overalls.
But when I come to Jordan's shdre,
Far from the white lights galore,
I’ll stand upon the river’s brink,
And pray the water Will not shrink
My overalls.
And when I come to the pearly gate
And there my awful record state,
I’ll hear St. Peter howl and shout,
“Let no man in that is without
His overalls.”
And when I ride the clouds above
And greet the dames I used to love.
Though nary shirt or shoe be mine,
I know they’ll say, “You look just fine
In overalls.
And as I walk the golden street,
In peacock feather and Mohawk sheet
Perchance I’ll hear the dismal bell
That tolls from out the blackest hell
For him who in silly pride
Refused to cover his precious hide
In overalls.
-Schoolfleld-Danvllle (Va.) Progress
J
Wanted
CHTTTUMBARK
We Pay Highest Cas Prices
See us before selling
COAST HIDE & JUNK CO
Our Motto :
Why Airmen Have to Walk
A Square Deal to All.
------ o-------
After we had spent a billion dol­
lars on aircraft during the war, con­
gress voted $25,000,000 for the army
air service during the present fiscal
year. With that sum it secured only
five new ariplanes, one each of five
experimental models. Almost the
whole sum was expended on mainte­
nance of the organization, training,
research and engineering and exper­
525252S2S252S2S2525252S25252S252525252S2S25252S2525Z5?5ZSa5K2S2525?5252
imental work. With the exception
of those f’e experimental maclnes
and a few Fokkers which Germany
jack harper
surrendered under the armistice, all
the airplanes of the army are two
{BALL SHOP, TILLAMOOK.
years old. Most of them are the
Take yournHorses there and get
notorious De Haviland 4s, some of Notice of Annual School Meeting
First Class|Shoes for them.
which, said Senator Wadsworth,
I guarantsepllfwork to be
have been remodeled to give the fly­
Notice is hereby given to the legal
er "some show for his life."
voters of School District No . 9 of
satisfactory, if not, bring it back
That shameful story of inefficiency Tillamook County, State of Oregon,
and I; will make good without
provoked Senator King, a democrat, that the Annual School meeting of
extra charge.
to denounce the wasteful conduct of said District will be held at the High
fcWe pay top prices for Hides.
his own party. He summed it up in School building, at the hour of 10 o’­
the words: “Millions were expended clock a. m. on the 21st day of June, H5Z5H525Z5Z5ZSZ5B52SZ5H5H5E525BS2SZ5Z5Z5c!SZ5E5H5HSH5H5i25ES25?SB5B52525i
and not a machine constructed." 1920.
M |>i
When the war ended, the aviation
This meeting I h called for the pur­
section of the war department had pose of electing one director for a
supplies, machinery and parts worth term of 3 years and a clerk, and the
hundreds of millions of dollars, but transaction of business usual as such
it is "practically broken down.” "Too meeting.
many employees, too many alleged
Dated this 3rd day of June, 1920.
experts, too many persons absorded
Attest:
H. T. Botts.
the funds appropriated, but produced C. A. McGhee,
District Clerk
Chariman
no results.” The actual outcome is
that airmen have to walk.
Executive officials wail that con-
gress is niggardly, and that they Notice For Hearing Final Account “
And Report.
n
cannot give the people what they
I
want because they have not eough
BELL PHONE. MAIN23. MVTUAL^PHONE^
In the County Court of the State of i Q
money. Their action goes to show
that, no matter how much money Oregon for the County of Tillamook, ju
they have, thep spend it all on over­ In the matter of the estate of Henry Cn
i Miller, deceased, by H. C. Potter, I c¿S¡SíS2S2SiS2S2SÍEiSe£íS2SÍSZS¡S2SWSZSeS¡S2S2SÍS2^¿.S2SÍS?S!S2SiSiS¿
head expenses.
A dead lock follows between an ad. 1 Executrix.
ministration which is incapable of I Notice is hereby given that II. C. !
producing results and a e congress i Potter. Executrix of the will and es- i
which refuses to vote money because tate of Herman Henry Miller, deceas- j
no results are produced. Waste can­ ed, has filed her final account and ;
not be stopped and results cannot report in said cause on the 13th day ,
says the Good Judge
be produced until there Is a complete of May. 1920, asking for final settle­
ment
of
said
estate,
and
by
order
of
[
change of administration and the ,
You will save
spendthrifts are sent home.—Oreg- | the County Court of the County of ■
money by using
Tillamook, entered the said 13th day i
onian.
the Real Tobacco
of May. 1920, Saturday the 12th day |
of
June,
1920,
at
10
o'clock
a.m.
of
i
Chew.
The full,
Governor Allen'» Poser Mr. Gompen.
said day, is fixed as the time, and the
--------- 1>--------
rich
tobacco
taste
Mr. Gompers logically lost the de­ county court room of the county
lasts
so
long,
you
don
’t
bate Friday night when he refused court house in the city of Tillamook
need
a
fresh
chew
nearly
City,
County
of
Tillamook
and
State
tc inn we.- this question propounded
i of Oregon, the place for hearing the
by Governor Allen:
so often.
"When a dispute between capital said final account, and objections, if
Smaller chews, too, and
and labor brings on a strike affecting any thereto, said notice to be pub­
more genuine satisfac
the production or distribution of the lished in the Tillamook Headlight, a
necessaries of llge, thus threatening I newspaper of general circulation In
tion.
* ’ 4 successive weeks
the public peace and impairing the - hald county for
Any
man who uses the
.................
-
....
I
and
for
5
conMcutive
and
successive
public health, has the public any I---- —-----------
Real Tobacco Chew will
rights in such a controversy or Is it a '
?e„
SHOEING.
• •
.
Dr. E. L. Glaisper,
VETERINARIAN
County Dairy Herd\Inspector
—0—
s
“You Can Bank on It”
A WADE does IO mens work :
W tk. O»4*■f atetes.
Standard Feed Co., Tillamook, Agent
private war between captial and lab- I ' tlon to be the 13th day bf May, 1920
or? If you answer this question in and the last to be the 10th day of
the affirmative. Mr. Gompers, how June, 1320.
H. C. Potter. Executrix
would you protect the rights of the
of the Estate of Herman
public?”
Hanry Miller, deceased.
The labor leader declined to an- j
swer, asserting that was a catch ; I John Leland Henderson
I Attorney tor Executrix.
question.
tell you that.
Put up in two style»
RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco
W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco