TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JUNE 10, 1920. GEM THEATRE FRIDAY- Tuesday, June 15th SATURDAY, JUNE 11-12. TOM MIX “Old Lady 31” FEATURING IN Emma Dunn. ---------- --------------------------- One Reel Pollard Comedy. Adults 25c, Tillamook jottings. ------ 0------ Killed Five Bear And One Cougar “THE FEUD” Adults 25c. Children 15c. j of commodity prices can follow an , Does Love Spur Ambition in a Young increase of frieght rates ust as an in in- ­ I Man’s Bosom? crease of commodity prices followed a ------- o-------- decrease of freight rates. While Is love a spur to a young man’s freight rates are a factor in prices, they are so small a factor that such ambitions? The author of "Kidder & Ko." the they count for nothing as against I the major factors of currency inflat­ Bathe Play that is be shown as the ion, under-supply, extravagant de­ big feature at Gem Theatre, Wednes­ mand and waste due to the war. The day, June 16 proves it with his de­ main thing about freight rates is to lightfully written play. Bryant Washburn has the part of have them higli enough to insure a young man whom nobody believes facilities foi moving commodities and not so high as to retard com­ will amount to very much. Then he falls in love—and he ac­ modity movement. Freight rates either too high or too low are a de­ hieves a success in a typically young­ terrment to commerce and prosper­ man way that will delight the be- i holder; especially if he is inclined to ity, Adjusted where they should be II look upon the rosy mixture of love ' and the product of industry move to and business with tolerance and ap­ the most attractive markets.” proval. Schultz. J Obituary 6th grade: Corrlne Stranahan, Al-1 bert Mayer. Lilly Ann Branstetter was born at 7th grade: Beatrice Oliver,‘Juan- New Harmony, Pike County, Miss- ita Thompson, Frank Erickson, Le ouri, April 9, 1866. She became a Roy Stillwell. I Christian at nine years of age and "—■ Knight, Velma joined the Methodist Episcopal ! Sth grade: Doris Daniels, Edna Riggs, Geraldine Carl­ church, South. In 1888. she remov­ ed to Las Crusas. New Mexico, where isle, Irma Austin. High school: Miles Austin, Marie she lived with a sister for nine years, Mayer, Lillian Great. Ramona Halt­ and, in 1902, was united in marriage on, Cordelia Oatfield, Mae Pesterfleld, at The Dalles, Ore., to Wm. J. Bran­ stetter to whom she was a devoted Mary Lamar, George Lienkaemper. In addition, the following hold the companion until her decease. In 1914, Mrs. Branstetter united excellent record of not missing a day or being tardy during the entire with the Church of the Nazarene at school year from September to June. Madras, Ore., and was later transfer­ Nedra Smith, Corrinne Stranahan, red to the church in Tillamook. For Albert Mayer, Irma Austin, Edna several years she and her husband Riggs, Doris Knight, Velma Daniels, resided in and near Pacific City, Ore., Lillian Groat, Marie Mayer, Cordelia where they were much loved and ap­ Oatfield, Mae Pesterfield, Mary Lam­ preciated by the community. Her last illness covered a period of about inar, George Lienkaemper. Hightest rank in scholarship for three months and terminated at the the four years of high school was at­ hospital in Pendleton on May 24, tained by Miss Bertha Blanchard, 1920 . She was loyal to her Master Henry Anderson was second with a and faithful in her church work, average of 85 per cent. The scholar­ and will be missed greatly by all ship given by the non-conference who knew her. The funeral was hc-ld colleges—Albany, Philomath, Pacific in the Methodist church in Madras, University and Pacific College, was her pastor having charge, assisted by awarded Wm. Wriggle. Willamette the M. E. minister and his choir. A University awarded a scholarship to large company of friends and relat­ Cora Oliver. The scholarship noti­ ives were present to pay their re­ fication was delayed in delivery so spects to her memory, and interment announcement could not be^nade at was made In the local cemetery. an earlier date. W. H. Chance seems to be quite an expert at bear hunting as he has killed five within the last month, bringing three of the hides down with him from the North Fork of the Trask Monday. One day last week some children were playing along the river bank when they saw a frightened deer run out of the bushes and plunge into the water and swim across. They heard a scream and soon a cougar, that had been pursuing the deer, come down and paced along the water’s edge, but the deer was out of its reach. The deer came within a few feet of the children and seem­ Tom Mix in a New ed quite tame. Mr. Chance, with C. Olive Thomas Coming in and Powerful Role H. Himes, trapped for the cougar Í Novel Drama of the Sea without success until one morning ..... —o------ Tom Mix is coming, not only in they found the trap was gone. They j When Olive Thomas comes to the what is said to be his biggest pro- searched for it some time, and soon duction, but in a role which is a Mr. Himes looked over a log, and Gem Theatre next Sunday, June 13, distinct departure from found liimself face to face with the in he new Selznick Picture, "Out stuff", Wm. Fox will pure "stunt present hint cougar. It was rather close quarters ■ Yonder,” local fans will see the dain­ in "The Feud" on Tuesday, June 15 ty artiste role which is in striking for Mr. Himes, we imagine, as his at the Gem Theatre. face was about a foot fiom Mr. contrast to anything she has done be­ The opening episode is laid in the Cougar’s nose. After it had been I fore. Bluegrass region back in the days of As the daughter of a lighthouse killed it was found to measure nine hoopskirts and romance. Tom Mix feet in length, being two feet longer keeper on a lonely reef "somewhere is seen as Jere Lynch, whose family than the one killed a short time ago in the Atlantic’’, Miss Thomas is is actively engaged in an ancient called upon to display "her versatility by Ike Wells. I and dramatic talents in a most im­ feud with the Summers family. The i hertiage of hate does not prevent pressive and unusual way. The Car Shortage in Tillamook The Way of Our Clothes The play tells of the love of Ed­ Jere from loving pretty Betty Sum­ mers, but it does lead to dramatic ward Elmer, a wealthy society man, We don’t imagine that all the The car shortage seems to be rath­ for "Flotsam,” a little waif of the complications in which the. feud young people of Tillamook have had er worse in Oregon than in most sea, whom he has met by chance. breaks out with renewed intensity. other places, as Portland is on the Flotsam returns his love but many The role of Jere Lynch calls for the opportunity or taken the time to end jot the Southern Pacific line and obstacles must be overcome before considerable ability an an actor, and go through the laundry and see just the other railroads are branches the two win ultimate happiness. the work of Tni Mix, it is predicted, what happens to our clothes when we send them there dirty and grimy from It, and all the empty cars that "Out Yonder” is said to replete will delight his many followers and and have them returned to us, clean are received are shipped from the with colorful atmosphere and thrill­ bring him new admirers. and fresh again, sc let us suppose southern part of California. The real ing situations. There is a death­ that we are going thru the one here reason for the car shortage is this: I struggle in the lighthouse which, by I. 0. 0. F. News Notes at Tillamook together and having Because of the switchmen’s strike In sheer realism, holds its audience ------ o ... ■ the different processes explained to southern California only 60 per cent spellbound. This is said to be one of Lodge met as usual last Tuesday us by Mr. Wagy. of the needed number of cars are the most realistic scences that the First, the clothes go in at the sent up to this end of the line, I master hand of Director Ralph Ince night, and although there was only about 30 members present the work back door and then are taken out at and the car distributor at Portland has yet brought into being. of the Lodge went on as usual, and the front door, so they can be said to sends them were they are needed E. F. Schultz was ably iniatiated. have been clear through. The dirty most. The Coates mill here at Tillamook The Highway Commission and Tilla­ Two other candidates who tfere to clothes are sorted as soon as they be here, were unable to come, and are brought in, and are mr.-ked. The is the only one of the many mills mook County Roads will now wait until July 6, when marker used is the latest mechanical that are being handicapped by the ------ o------ shortage of cars in which to ship the i ~The County Court was in Portland the next class will start in the work. device, made for that purpose, which The County Convention of the I. is something like an adding machine, lumber, It is rated as being able to | last week to attend the meetings of use only 3 4-10 cars per day, and as ! the State Highway commission, and O. 0. F. meets in Wheeler, Saturday, and something like a typewriter. The clothes are then put into the each car will carry only twenty-five ! they bring back the following report June 12. All day and evening ses­ washing machines, which churn sions. On account of the gas short ­ thousand feet of lumber, and the las to what was done in regards to daily out put of the mill is from the road work in Tillamook county. age a goed many will be unable to them until the dirt is removed. They eighty to ninety thousand per day it | “To Insure all year roads and not attend, but all who can go, will be are then put into a round machine, is necessary to pile the most of it lose the grades, the state highway well repaid tor their efforts, for all which works on the principal of up for shipment at a later date. If commission ordered that one hun­ such meetings, help to fulfill the centrifugal force, which wrings them. The clothes are not dried, with the the conditions do not change in the dred and eighty miles of road to be works of Odd Fellowship. Bro. Peter Schranz was reported exception of the woolens, which are very near future the mill will close. ready for contracting at the July The situation Is bad also at Wheel­ meeting. About fifteen miles of this progressing favorably, but as his placed in another round machine, called the tumbler, which rolls and er, while at Brighton the streets are will be In Tillamook county. By the house keeper has left, he is greatly tumbles them. There U steam in the even piled full of lumber, The com- time the winter rains set In the high­ in need of a housekeeper, and if any­ inside of the tumbler, and when the one knows where help can be secur ­ pany is recelvlng only a few cars way will be in condition to carry clothes are taken out they are soft, and are able to ship only a small heavy traffic. The rock Is to be plac­ ed, please report to your secretary. Bro. H. C. Hanson reported bedfast warm and dry. The sheets, pillow per cent of the lumber that is cut ed on the road and macadam placed in Portland, at the Congress Hotel, cases and towels are run through daily, so it Is causing new docks to on top of them, and when they have the flat work tumbler, which used to be built, that a greater amount of been down a year or two they will and Br. Ross Chllcott about ready to be called a mangle. It consists of a lumber can be stored before the mil) be in better condition for hard sur­ leave his quarantine where he has huge roller, made on the same prin­ been housed up for the past few is forced to close. facing than they would be if paved ciples as the ordinary clothes wring­ Ray Grate, the S. P. ageat, said Immediately following the making of weeks. It you know of any other er, and when the clothes are run there would be a change soon, and the grade. Also by the time the Bros, who are sick, be sure to report thru it, are dry and ironed when that the supply would eventually be­ roads have been pounded down by them at our next meeting. Rebekahs attended in large num­ they come out. come normal. traffic, the bond market and the lab­ bers at their last meeting, there be­ The most Interesting process Is tbe or market may be such that the com­ ing over 100 members and visitors ironing of the shirts and collars. The Increase in Frieght Ratei Urged mission may feel Justified In resum­ in the Lodge room. shirts pass throug several different ing the prograhnjpe ofTfiird-surfac- All Encampment members request­ hands, the first machine that irons As an educational campaign to ing. Not all tbe highway sections ed to attend Lodge this Thursday the backs and the fronts, another acquaint the Jublic with the relation ordered rocked are In the programme eve, June 10, as we have a large one, a small round one, irons the col­ between frieght rates and commodity for hard-surfacing, however, but the class to be obligated in the Patreact- lar bands, and women Iron the ial, and instructed in the Golden sleeves and cuffs. They are then l> ices. Agent Ray Grate, of the ones in Tillamook are. "For the road to Tillamook, the Rule degrees; then a big boiled crab passed on to the finisher who C . ithern Pacific Company received « . orange and black poster today, commission will advance the money feed following in the dinning room. smoothes and folds them, Did you know that a simple stiff white collar v“lch is being effectively posted in to Yamhill county to grade from Come! Sheridan to Willamina, and the state As the warm weather comes a- passes through about seventeen diff­ th» local passenger station. Ihe poster sets forth the actual I will surface it.. From Willamina to round again, the same old story, erent hands while it is being.laund­ cost of transportation by frieght of a Tillamook county line the commls- must have ventilation in the lodge ered* And then a great many of us ___ _ sion will ask Yamhill county to co- room, and this time something is go­ think that laundryman ought to get ______ , used considerably in this commodity Community, and Bhows that a 25 per operate on a new road so far as the ing to be done, come in and see the rich by charging a few cents apiece for them. After they are washed Yamhill Ctnt increase In the freight rates route " * is “ within v —nn county. ventilator. Some feed the committee put over they are pressed out flat by a ma­ would have little. If any significance From Hebo, to the end of the pav- I Ing In Tillamook county, the engln- last night, you should have been chine, then another small device 1 the consumer, for example: dampens the seams, and still another i eering department is Instructed to there. Freight Rates on Your Clothes. Lodge meeting always on time turns them. They are then put into It costs less than 15 2-5 cents to arrange for rocking as rapidly as the a round receptable which shapes fhip a suit from Chicago to Tilla­ i county has enough grade completed Tuesday evenings at 8. H Its ________ o __ __ __ F. F. Conover, Sec. them, this piece of machinery re­ mook. average weight is 4 _____ lbs. ' to justify calling for bids for rocking. minds us a great deal of a collar bag. An increase af 25 per cent in freight. This same policy applies to five miles Mr. W’agy says that he has seven rates will add less than 5 cents to north of Tillamook city. An over- Neither Tardy Nor Absent hundred regular customers, all the l head crossing will have to built at each suit to this coast. way from Belding to Neskowin, as Juno, between Tillamook and Bay The people of Oregon are willing The following pupils tn the Tilla­ there Is no other laundry In the to pay a rate needed for a reasonable City and the commmission will ac­ county, Fourteen people are empioy- return of the money invested to as­ cept the proposition of the Tillamook mook Public Schools have been nei­ ed, and lt keeps .Mr. Wagy very busy ther tardy nor absent during the last < county court to build the approaches sure good railway service. Similar posters are appearing in for the cost. The county has steam semester of the school year just clos­ indeed. attending to the office work railroad stations from El Paso to shovels which it can put to work at ed: 1st grade: Carmelita Johnson. Jack Restaurant Open At Rockaway Portland and from San Francisco to that place within a month. The cost . of the overhead will be 30 per cent Hubbard. Carrol Christensen, Chest Ogden. ------ o------ The Elmore Annex Restaurant, Agent Orate «aid in an interview. each fot the state and county and •r Smith, Harold Hiisbeck. Robert Johnston. next to the Elmore Hotel, is now "A frieght rate that is too low for I 40 per cent for the company.” 2nd grade: Nedra Smith, Doiothy open for the season Chicken dinner the railroad Is too low for the ship- I Tucker, icker. served Sundays from 1 to 5 p. m. •er. In the economic readjustments | that ate lnevltaMa, commodity prieaa and frieght ratoa will seek approxl- I ■lately a eoaawe leveL A decrease Children 15c. Calf Club Meeting. There will be a special meeting of the Jersey Calf Club next Saturday, at one o’clock, at the Court House. All members of the club are re­ quested to be present. Busines of in­ terest to you to be transacted. Parents Invited to be present help the club get a start. By order of the president of Jersey Cattle Club. The Church of the Cordial Welcome (Methodist Episcopal) "The Glory and Peril of the New Era in Religion” will be the theme of the morning service at the Meth­ odist church next Sunday. Sunday school at 10 a. m. A class for every one, a competent teacher for every class. We need you and you need us. Come. In the evening will bq rendered a Children’s Day Program by the child­ ren of the Sunday School. To which every one is moHt corldally invited Republican County Committeemen Thos. B. Watt, Wheeler. Frank Paul, Trask. Sam Moulton, Sunnymead. H. C. Jones, Stillwell. T. W. Lysjer, South Prairie. C. W. Ross, Rockaway. H. W. Tohl, Nehalem. W. H. Christensen, Neskowin. Fred C. Baker, Maple Leaf. C. A. Elliott, Kilchis.* Wirt Sappington. Hebo. Paul Cooper, Foley. Minnie Maxwell, Fairview. Chas. Ray, Cloverdale. J. J. Hollett, Blaine, R. E. Wilson, Beaver. Win. Powell, Carnahan. H. T. Botts, Tillamook. George Williams, Goodspeed. Ira Smith, Hays. If all these quatify this will leave the committee short 10 members, which no doubt, will be filled when the committee meets. Nehalem Notes ------- o------- Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Walker after spending a week at the State Grange in Bend. Or., returned to their home at Mchler last Tuesday. On account of the rain last Sunday there was no ball game played be­ tween the Nehalem ball team and Beaver ball team. The Lutheran Ladies* Grace Soc­ iety held their monthly meeting last week. June 3rd, at the K. of P. hall. A large crowd attended. J. J. Spencer from Portland was here last Saturday transacting busi­ ness. I Beverly Daniels returned to his home at Mohler after spending sev- eral months In Portland, studying dental work. Mr. and Mm. Jack Leslie, of this city returned from Portland after spending a few days there. Miss McMillan, who taught at the 3rd grade: Richard Anchim, Cath- | Special attention given parties on Nehalem High school a few years ago. Is visiting at Manzinlta beach eriM Schultz, Clarenee Burdiek. reservation. "Quality our Motto.’* for a short time. 4th grade: Joseph Wriggle. Carrol SUMMER VACATION TICKETS are now on sale TO Tillamook County Beaches Located 100 miles due west of Portland be­ tween Nealt kah-nie Mountain and Netarts Bay. These beaches include Garibaldi Beach resorts, Neah-kah-nie, Manzanita and Bay Ocean. Newport (Oregon’s old favorite resort) On Yaquina Bay—Large Natatorium— Ample Hotel accommodationand camping facilities. Crater Lake (Opens July 1st) One of the natural wonders of the world A Lake in the heart ot an extinct volcano. Other Attractive Outing Places Detroit (Breltenbush Hot Springs—Mt. Jefferson County. McCredie Hot Springs Josephine County Caves (Oregon’s Marble Halls) Shasta Mountain Resorts Columbia River Beaches Mt. Rainer National Park Yellowstone National Park Glacier National Park New Summer booklet contains general information on the different Oregon resorts; Summer Excursion fares; Hotel and Camp rates. Inquire of local agent for further particulars. SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES. JOHN M. SCOTT. General Passenirer Agent. Mechanical Engineering Leam at Home ! Employers everywhere are looking for men with mechanical ability. Splendid salaries and rapid advancement are offered to those with special training. There is an easy delightful way in which you can learn right at home in spare time. For 28 years the International Correspondence Schools have been giving men and women just the training they need for success In mechanical engineering and more than 200 are subjects. Hudreds of thousands have stepped Into good positions through I. C. S. help, but never were opportunities so great as now. Let the I. C. 8. help you. Choose the work you like best and send us a post card or a letter. This doesn't obligate you In the least and It will bring you information that will start you on a successul career. This is your chance. Don’t let it slip by. The most Important thing you have to do is to write that letter or post card now. , International Correspondence Schools of Scranton, Pa Local Representative— FRED CHRISTENSEN, Care Tillamook Hotel, Tillamook, Or. ROBERTS GENERAL TRANSFER Just Starting in Business Your patronage will be highly appreciated. Prompt Attention to all Orders. Tempury Phone Wagoner's Cigar Store. Both Phones.