Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, June 24, 1920, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TILLAMOOK’HEADLIGHT, JUNE
Topics of Interest.
My Compliments, Mabel
There’s nothing so good as a cup of
Folger’s Golden Gate—strong but not
rank or bitter.
Different in taste from other coffee
and better
<Till ’V^B ■
V
B
Cut the Can
S teel
cut
1CÔFFÊ
VACUUM PACK
Let’s settle
this right now!
1 1
No h<n ever smoked a
better cigarette than Camel!
You’ll ftri Camels unequalled by
any cigartte in the world at any
price bacuse Camels combine
every fe&ure that can make a
cigarette upreme !
Camels erjert blend of choice
Turkish ad choice Domestic
tobaccos pts Camels in a class by
themselve. Their smoothness
will appeaito you, and permit
you to smok liberally without tir­
ing your tas>!
Camels leavtno unpleasant ciga-
retty aftert3te nor unpleasant
cigaretty odo!
You’ll prefer (imels blend to either
kind of tobaci smoked straight !
Camel» are »old eOvrhore tn ecientihcally sealed
package» of 30 cifyo» for 30 cents; or ton pack-
aie» [300 ciiarett^n a gist »me-paper-covered
carton. We otro/r recommend thio carton for
the homo or office
or erhen you travel
Tobacco Co.
lam, N. C.
Notice to Water Coniamen
----- o-----
RUEX. fleHRIR & CO
GENERAL HARDU1AR
Kitchen Ranges and
Heating Stoves.
THE BEST STOCK OP HARDWARE IN 1
THE COUNTY.
See Us for Prices¿Before Ordering Elsewhere
Sprinkling will be permitted free
of charge under the following con­
ditions: from 5 p. m. until 9 p. m.
each day all east of 2nd Ave sprinkl­
ing on Monday, Wednesday and Fri­
day; all west of 2nd Ave E, Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday. All water
to be turned off In case of fire. Sprin­
klers found running after 9 p. m..
water will be turned off and sprinkl­
ing right will be cancelled for reat
of season.
By order of Tillamook Water Com-
| mission, June 1*. 1920.
By E. D. Hoag, Supt.
I
What worries President Wilson
most Is that hl* mandatory over the
United States Senate doesn’t seem to
be working.
N. 8. Hawes, president of the Am­
erican Banker's Association, address­
ing the closing session of the annual
convention ot the National Associat­
ion of Credit Men at Atlantic City
said: "We must cease this orgy of
extragance. Thrift and production
are essential, The time has arrived
for the people to cease this era of
extravagance. and put the United
States back on a business basis. We
must ration credit, We must kill
speculation. We must discourage, es-
««•■cially -peculation in commodities
as well as in stocks and bonds. There
is just as much speculation in com­
modities as in Wail street. The time
is here to say ‘Stop!’ to these specu­
lators, and tell them to get into leg­
itimate business if they want to get
money.’”
-------o------
New York Tribune: “President
Wilson's telegram to the railroad
brotherhood’s accusing Congress of
‘inaction’ is unfair and ungracious.
Congress has had to struggle with
demoralizing conditions growing out
of the war and grave shortcomings
in its conduct. The primary task of
the legislative branch was to check
extravagance in public expenditure
and eliminate war deficits. It had
little assistance in this task from 'he
adminstratios. which submitted esti­
mates last December calling for ap­ I
propriations of more than $5,000,000,
000. Congress, though facing and
granting leitiinate demand:: for high­
er pay for the army, ths navy, the
postal employes and ether ne.-«rving
public servants—demands not even
considered in th» estimates—succed-
ed in cutting appropriations down |
nearly $1,50^,000,000. Moreover, it
passed a budget act, restraining reck­
less executive demands and setting
up an adequate control of federal ex- I
enditure. This act was vetoed on a
technicality in the closing hours of
the session, the President assuming
the risk of preventing its application
until after the esimates for 1921-’22
are submitted. The passage of the
budget act was an achievement of
great importance. The President
himself realize.. Its importance. But
he refuses to give this Congress cre­
dit for doing what former Congres
couldn’t be persuaded to do.”
Charles Crane says, writing in the
New York Globe: "There are but two
sides to the industrial and social
question—the right side and the
wrong side. The right one is the ex­
perience of the ages, which is, that
man must work for the sustenance
of those who are his dependents. To
work and save is the duty of every
one and as savings are only stored
up by labor, the right to them Is just
as sacred as is the undisputed right
of every man to his labor of today.
The wrong side of the question is
that of those who would destroy and
disrupt all property under the false
claim ot assisting those who have
but little. There can be no such as-
slstance, because the first effect of
the attempt would be to break down
society, which would mean that all
would fall together, and the first to
suffer would be those who now work
with their hands. The employee is
entitled to have the knowledge that
he is a preferred partner in his line
of industry and receives the largest
share of the income of the company
of which he is a part and that the
success of his concern is his success
and his advantage, and it is only his
enemy who teaches by picture or pen
the economic fallacy that the inter­
ests of the employed and employer
are antagonistic. The great fact is
that both must stand or fall togeth­
er, and working in unsion there will
be fair compensation and prosperity
for employee and employer. Whoever
teaches otherwise surely does not
gather together, bji scatters abroad.”
24.
Ing trees and turning aumersaulta.
she may be more picturesque, but she
is gathering nothing but goat feath­
ers. Seven farmers, a school teacher
and a tin peddler may line up along
the fence and applaud her all after­
noon until she is swelled with pride,
but when she gets back to the barn
at sundown she will not give much
milk. She will not be known as a
milch cow long; she will be a low
grade of corned beet, a couple of
flank steaks and a few pairs of three
dollar shoes."—Ellis Parker Butler.
WEAR RATTLES ON ANKLES
Girl* of Mozambique Don Them to Aid
In Keeping Time in Their
Peculiar Dances.
Consider a country as big as the
Atlantic states from Florida to New
York, with the capital near the south­
ern boundary, he.«ing a population of
more than 300.000 inhabitants, of whom
only about 1 per cent are white, and
you have Mozambique, a Portuguese
colony In Africa to the south of what
was German East Africa, says a bul­
letin of the National Geographic so­
ciety.
Mozambique is one of the oldest of
all European possessions, and one of
the richest In agricultural possibilities,
but is one of the least known countries
In the world. There are five towns
and a small, up-to-date capital city,
with a number of military posts and
outposts. There are no deserts, salt
sinks, swamps or mountainous wastes.
The colony is altogether inhabited by
about twenty tribes.
Among the curious customs of the
land is the wearing of rattles by the
girls on their ankles at dances. Hol­
low spheres are made of palm leaf or
grass and are partially filled with large
seeds or pebbles. The noise of these
ankle rattles is supposed to assist In
keeping time In the dance. Similar or­
naments are frequency worn by the
boys.
The popular music used at a batuque
or ball Is that of the marimba, or huge
xylophone, which gives out a blood-
freezing death chant during the
pression’' dances of both men
women.
Perfection s Price
In Tire Building
A fire-maker’s first problem is fo decide how much he cai>
give for the money. This, and every other question in tirtf
building, depends upon policies.
A super-tire, such as The Brunswick', can be made only by ai
concern which knows well and appreciates that there is noth-»
ing exclusive in the tire industry except high standards.
Since 1845 the House of Brunswick has held first place in
every line it entered. Brunswick Tires, as more and mor®
motorists come to know them, will certainly be awarded that
«coveted place held only by the superfine.
Motorists who buy one Brunswick usually adopt if for
complete equipment Yet this is not strange, since the first
one so completely proves its superiority.
If the name of Brunswick certifies to you, as fo most men.
an extraordinary tire, at no higher price, would it pot be good
business to test one or two Brunswick Tires ?
THE BRUNS WICK-BALKE-COLLEN DER CO.
Portland Headquarters: 46-48 Fifth Street
PEPPER TREE OF GREAT SIZE
Also Is of Quick Growth and Its Drop­
ping Branches Are Particularly
Ornamental.
As the elm or maple tree Is to the
New England village, so is the pepper
tree (Schlnus molle) to southern Cal-
tfornia cities and towns. For beauty
of shape and color, for grace and for
shade, It Is a tree almost unique, Be-
Ing of quick growth, the pepper tree
soon attains a large, luxuriant size
and the great drooping branches form
cool archways which protect passers­
by from the too vigorous rays of the
summer sun.
The delicate feather leaves droop
and sway like those of the weeping
w’illow. Silvery green, they glisten in
the yellow sunlight, and when the
panicles or clusters of tiny pale flow­
er» festoon each slender branch, the
whole tree is a shimmering, fairy bou­
quet. Soon the path under the arch­
ways Is sprinkled with the tiny green­
ish flowers, and grapelike bunches of
green berries hang from, the trees.
Later, as If touched by a mysterious
fire, a vivid red flames from each
branch of berries.
The sunshine
glances through the green feathered
leaves upon the swinging bunches of
red fruit, and the trees glow In color.
The breezes lift and turn, shake and I
twist the myriad brilliant berries un­
til soon a gorgeous scarlet mantle Is
spread for all to tread upon.—Chris­
tian Science Monitor.
IhHmin inmihlhh > h
1
.......
ihiiiiumiiiiiiiiiniiniiniJiinnjiJH«'"»
Sold On An Unlimited Mileage
Guarantee Basis
Chas. F. Pankow
WNCff£51£R
Laughing in Your Sleeve.
Judging by the fact that we have
this expression in French, German and
Latin, there must be a lot of surrep­
titious laughter In the world, But a
laugh's a laugh for all that, and it’s
good for the digestion. It’s hard to
Montclair (N. J.) Herald: "The see how anyone could have a laugh In
waste and extravagance due to mis­ any of the tight little sleeves thnt are
handling war preparations—unwse de rlgueur this season. There’s hard- '
contracta, antiquated methods, the ly room to have an arm In them. But i
general lack of business wisdom at not so In the “bell” sleeve of last sum­
Washington coupled with indiffer­ mer, which was a diminutive replica of
ence all along the line—amount to so the sleeves worn by the ancients, who.
many millions that nobody can guess not concerned with changing fashions j
with even approximate correctness with the seasons, wore one style long
what the total is. The public has enough to make It famous. With them,
had several conspicuous examples of when anyone seemed to be screening
waste pointed out in a manner that his face behind the long flowing folds
has made a lasting impression. It is of his sleeve, there was nlways the
fairly familiar with the airplane suspicion that he was “laughing In;
muddle, the extravagance In ship­ his sleeve.” And to this day laughing
yards, the excessive cost In establish­ behind anyone’s back, whether It be a
call
ing plants to manufacture munitions, fan or a hat thst screens It, we
laughing In your sleeve.
and it also knows that building the
i
cantonments was attended by outra­
I
Ingiorioti* Obatructloniat*.
geous waste. However, a few figures
Some folks are at their best In sprag
on camp building costs are enlight­
ening.
A congressional committee glng the progress of others. They mis
which investigated the
War de­ take the right to obstruct for evident-«
partment expenditures has reported of the power to construct. Yet whai
that out of 1206,000,000 paid for the child does not know the difference’
construction of sixteen national army Any fool can stand In tt«e way of prog
rose. And the more obstinate he is th«
cantonments, $78,000,000 could have better success will he have. But th<
been saved. A rather big figure! fact that he <larv oppose himself to th«
But that is not all. National Guard combined judgment of others doe« not
and special camps and hospitals were prove him a man of strength. In fact
constructed at a total cost of $1,200, the chances are agslnst hla being tr
000,000 and it is charged that from rhe right. There may be some pleasur«
30 to 60 per cent was lost from waste In bucking the crowd, hut It takes t
and idleness. The fact is that in al­ hero or a fool to do It. All honor t<
most every direction the administra­ the mnn who. knowing he Is right
tion needlessly ««pent millions be­ dares to face any odds In the exercls«
cause of lack of intelligence and a of his conviction. The world will heat
pronounced indifference by some of from "itch In the buildings they leav«
those charged with carrying out the as marks to fidelity and fn I th.—<31-11.
scheme to place the Nation on a war
footing.”
Pfant’* Great Vitality.
There Is a creeping moss found It I
Jamaica. in Barbados and other
About Goat Feathen
Islands of the West Indies, which b
"No one ever succeeds by allowing called the "life tree,” or, more proper
himself to be deflected from the most ly, the “life-plant.” Its powers of vl
Important business of life, which Is tsllty are said to be beyond those ol 1
making the most of the best that is any other plant It is believed to bf ,
in him. Even a cow does better If Indestructible by any means except
she sticks close to the business of eat­ Immersion In boiling water or the ap
ing grass and chewing the cud. When plication of a redhot Iron. It may b« I
she starts in to learn to whistle like cut up and divided In Hny manner
a catbird and to flit from field to field and the smallest shreds will thro» I i
likj a butterfly, it Is safe to say that out roots grow and bud. The leave«
she is no longer a success in life. of thia extraordinary plant bar* beer
planted In a close, airtight, dark box '
When a cow stray* from plain milk-
withauii nw.'sture of soy sort. MN
producing methods and begin* cllmb-
attil they grew.
The Winchester Pattern Will
Help Your Trapshooting
INCHESTER shot-shell wads
do not allow the gas from the
powder charge to escape past them in
the gun barrel.
W
This is just one of the many reasons why a
W inchester Gun and Shells make the perfect
pattern that is such a help in shooting. Come
in and let us tell you about the target-pul­
verizing W inchester pattern and show you
the Guns and Shells that produce it.
King-Cienhsaw Hardware Co.
th .
TViNCHtSTCK »To«
BAYOCEAN SHEET METAL WORKS
TILLAMOOK, ORE
Juggling
prices is not our forte, as It Is with
some. We don’t try to take advant-
age of slack production, ri.-ing mar-
keta, abnormal demand, and tempor­
ary conditions. You can always be
sure of righ prices anti fair treat-
ment here.
Bayocean Sheet Metal Work*.
Pirat Street. Tillamook. Oregon.