TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JULY 29, of the renewed wet campaign. listen to such representations and la The Volstead enforcement act, consequence to Bhow Germany any which prohibits the manufacture or leniency or grace in the exaction of This column is glad to have the sale of beverages containing more the full terms of the treaty. Slug­ endorsement of Col. House, The col- than one-half of 1 per cent of alco­ gard or liar, it matters not which, onel says that a peace treaty could hol, stands today an effective hairier she has danced the dance of death, have been made in December. 1918. against the evils of the saloon and and now it is fitting and just that our allies wanted to do so and the general indulgence in raw she should be compelled to pay tho "it ups the obv„ us thing to spirits. Why tamper with it? Why piper, even if the doing so ’’bleed« So said the G. T. Mr. Wilson yield to the forces that want to bring her white.” The example of what however insisted on making a league back the brewery and the saloon? France has done tells unmistakably of nations covenant first against the Why blind ourselves to the patent what Germany could do if she will­ express wish of Europe. As a result, fact that legalization of the manu­ ed.—Harvey’s Weekly. world morale was shot to pieces and facture and sale of 3 or 4 per cent country is still technically at beer would revive a demoralizing The Highway Decision. traffic and reset the breweries in pol­ —Gazette Times. itics in every county in the United ------ o------ inere is gratifying assurance'givX Senator Chamberlain has endorsed States? There should be no misunderstand­ en by a decision of the state supreme the candidacy of Governor Cox in un­ equivocal language. When he comes ing. If the breweries are legalized court the other day that the „orderly on the stump, he will be more equi­ the saloons will follow, in one guise process of the highway commission's vocal for "Our George” does hate to or another. Judge Turner and many work of designating the routes of ruffle the feathers of Republicans, others of his way of thinking do not state highways will not be interfer­ for it is by their votes that he has want them back, but they are too I ed with by local considerations. The highway commission act had remained a bright luminary in the trustful. A new cover would then be political firmament all his life, He provided for illicit traffic in raw been adopted before the people returned from Washington, D. C„ spirits, for drunkenness would not voted on the initial bond issue of last camp tit as a fiddle for an ag­ be prima facie evidence, as now, that $6.000,000 for construction of cer­ gressive campaign. He will do his the drunken man has been doing tain designated state highways, it best to allay the feeling which exists business with bootleggers, and the , was the common understanding that against him in the Democratic ranks. work of enforcing prohibition of the I 1 the law had conferred upon the com­ traffic in heavy intoxicants would be­ mission a certain discretion; that a come tremendously more difficult and strong point in favor of the bonding was predicted. “Cox is in per­ costly. act was that the highway commis- fect harmony with Wilson.” Know­ An overwhelming majority of the sion was to be free from the en- ing the Wilsonian requirements, it states have declared for real prohibit­ tanglements, local pressure and in­ is perfectly evident then that Mr. ion. Congress, responsive to the slstence upon favoriteness that coun­ Cox’s mind went willingly along public will, enacted the Volstead en­ ty courts find it so difficult to ignore. with mine. Both of them were in Now this understanding of the law accord already on prohibition, Wil­ forcement act. The supreme court has been upheld by the highest of the United States has sustained son having done his best to defeat court. A wholly proper function of it nationally and Cox having done that act. the state highway commission has along, hard light to It has been his best to defeat it in Ohio, while been sustained. In design,.ting state obliterate the saloon and bring the Harding voted for it three timea in highways it need not adopt as state the senate and voted to pass it over powerful brewery and distillery in­ highways only those roads through to their knees. They have I terests president Wilson’s veto, and that in a county laid out by the county spite of the fact that he came from fought desperately from one trench court, but may select the route that to another, and now that the last a wet state, that had elected a wet seems to the most suitable for gen­ governor, Cox, on a wet platform.— trench is taken they are casting a- eral public use. Public confidence In bout for a covert scheme to win back Gazette Times. by indirection, by smooth and dec­ the road building programme will be eptive professions, much of the strengthened by the decision.—Ore­ Mr. Amos Pinchot’s Committee of ground that they lost by open fight­ gonian. Forty Eight is launching its Third Party campaign in fine shape. It is ing. Just now they are light pedal­ understood to have renounced “On­ ing on light wines and beer, but al­ ward, Christian Soldiers,” as a cam­ ways with hope and expectation paign song on account of its militar- that if the country can once be start­ A woman w hose stocking was her istic suggestion. Instead it has a- ed on the back track away from pro­ hibition the reaction will not be bunk lust her savings when her I gar- dopted the familiar classic: Forty-eight bottles, hanging On the halted until the evil traffic will come ter broke. That comes to banking back in old-time prosperity and po­ in an institution not under supervl- wall! siun of a bank examiner. Forty-eight bottles, hanging °n the litical power.—Spokesmen Review. ------ o------ wall! Sauce for the Goose. Take one away German "Efficiency” From them all; “Come upstairs and let me wash Forty- even bottles, hanging on the France convicts Germany. We do your hands,” said mother, when she wall! for not mean in words, but in deeds. By arrived with her little daughter s What the Anti-Saloon League will her works of rehabilitation and re- tea at granny’s. say to it remains to be seen, or heard. stoiation she convicts Germany eith­ “1 don’t want to go up!” wailed Harvey’s Weekly. er of colossal and shameless lying or Winnie, aged 4. “Lei her wash them down in the of disgraceful laziness and inefflcien- Recent victims of smallpox are in scullery," called grandma. "She can a position to give a full and compre­ cy.Let us recall what happened to the do It just as well.” hensive opinion of the anti-vaccina­ northern Department of France, and “No,” her mother said, firmly, tion measure which will be upon the tl|,en note to what has since been ac­ want her to come up with me.” ballot at the November election. complished there. That chief indust­ Winnie went upstuirs as slowly as These victims have been compelled rial region of the Republic was com- possible. to undergo an exceedingly disagree­ •pletely devasted. It did not suffer "Oh,” bhe said, turning a wrath­ able experience to say nothing of ex­ merely the ordinary and inevitable ful .tearful face to her mother, “why pense and loss of time, simply be­ ravages of war; or merely the crippl­ don't you obey your mother?” cause some one else was indifferent ing or destruction of the sources of or careless and did not take proper military supplies. It suffered every A Close Policy precautions to pretent spread of in­ 1 evil that maligenant genius of de- He had been tramping for hours fection. It is true that individuals struct Ion could devise and could ap- and not once had he passed a place have a perfot right to decide upon ply. Boasted German thoroughness where he could refresh himself. At measure., affecting their own bodies never was more strikingly exemplifi­ last, as the sun was sinking, he ar­ and health, and they may select any ed than in the deliberate, wanton, rived at an old inn. When the wait­ school of medicine they see fit, or no | gratuitous obliteration of everything er brought his order he looked at it school at all, and that is their own pertaining to civilization. Every­ and then at the waiter, remarking: partitcular business But they have thing that could be stolen was sto!/ 1 "Is this the best you can do in the no right to so excercise their individ­ and shipped to Germany. Everything way of sausage?” ual decision so as to affect others, that could not thus be "conveyed” "Why? Isn’t It good?” said the and that is precisely what the anti- was destroyed. It was as of old: surprised waiter. vaccinationist and the one who holds “Nor house, nor fence, nor devecote “Good” repeated the hungry tour- quarantine regulations in contempt in CruBtumerium stands.” Every 1st. “Oh, yes, it look’s good, but tho does. As to vaccination for smallpox, building was burned. Every machine ends don't suit me.” there is a difference of opinion, but it was mashed or stolen. Every orchard "The ends?" said the waiter fur­ is a matter of fact that prior to the was cut down. Every well was poll­ ther "What’s the matter discovery of the effect of inoculation uted or choked up. Every road was with perplexed, them?” the disease raged uncontrolled. It is destroyed. So far as It was humanly “Not far enough apart,” was the also a fact ihat where vaccination is ' possible, with almost infinite re­ reply. the rule and strict quarantine and sources for the accursed work, every The waiter had no more to say. isolation of the occasional case which work man was annihillated, with the does appear enforced, the disease 14 malignant intent of making of the quickly stumped out. Against these land an uninhabitable wilderness. Am I Right! proven facts we have a movement of That was less than two years ago. When I am The Editor perhaps well-meaning persons who What have the French done since? I'll print a newsy sheet who seek to amend the law so each In the Muerthe and Moselle, that Small enough to hold and read i may decide this important matter for land of death between Verdum and While walking in the street. himself.. As we have said above, Metz, they have rebuilt 80 per cent Opinions, “lfs" and comments we believe the question can be left of the demolished manufactories, and I’ll put my pencil through. to the sufferers from the exercise of I to that extent have resumed their And only print what I can swear the right of personal decision.—Inde- pre-war Industries. In the Ardennes On oath is really true. pndent. ______ ____ and the Nord, bordering on Beligum, 1’11 censor every trade ad. i where the greatest fighting occurred And “classified” as well, Folly of Premature Paroles and the devant ion was most complete I’ll print with ink that will not the percentage of restoration is 78, ------ 0------ smudge A young man convicted of steal­ whlile in the district of Lille it is Offset, dry out or smell; ing an automobile fell into a faint in 84. Throughout the entire territory And sell the sheet at less than cost Judge Stapleton’s court, when he ravaged by the war in northern And buy it back when read. was sentenced to two years in the France, out of 3,700 important In- When I am The Editor-- penitentiary and refused a parole. dustrial establishments utterly anni- I (You’ll be a marvel!—Ed.) What was in his mind, probably, was hlllated by the Germans, 2,810, or I that he would get a parole. He was more than 75 per cent, have been re­ overcome only when he learned to created and are again prosperously Too Much Appetite his honor that he wa< to spend the at work. One day Jones was complaining All this, let us bear in mind, has next two years in prison. Judge Stapleton makes the sur­ been done tn a year and a half, by that he was not feeling as fit as an­ nul and a friend suggested that he prising statement that 75 per cent of French themselves, alone und unaid­ go in for exercise. the men paroled appear in court a- ed, out of their own resources. They gain on second offenses. He de­ have had no help. They have re­ i “I know,” wan the doubtful rej Un­ der, “but I am afraid 1 couldn’t af­ nounces the whole system as a farce. ceived not a dollar of indemnity from i ford It.” A correct theory of the parole is Germany. And they have been bear­ “Can't afford it!" wonderlngly ex­ that it should be earned by good be­ ing meanwhile enormously heavy | claimed the other. “You already havior, and not granted as an act of taxes. Yet they have thus far re­ have a horB«, and Just think of tho indulgence before punishment. Too habilitated themselves. On the other hand, what of Germ­ appetite it will give you.” inuity judges sentence, and then sus­ "Yes,” responded Jones pend their sentences. They take a any? Not a rod of her territory was sigh, “and just think of the with a appel to chance. But they commit the pub­ ravaged by the war. Not a city or It will give the horse.” lic to the »time chance. The parole town was burned. Not a building hoard. Investigating the record of an was destroyed, save a few military applicant, acts upon what he has establishments and railroad stations Sounded Right done in prison and not upon what he bombed from the air. Not a piece “Well, that's enough to try the of her machinery stolen. Not a well promises to do tn order to stave off patience of Job!” exclaimed the __ vil— a committal. The one is sound and was defiled, not an orchard cut iage minister, as he threw aside clip wise humanitarianism; the other is down, not a road was destroyed. Her local paper. entire domain was left intact. Just as sheer weakness and folly. "Why. what’s the matter, deal ?’• If young men who steal automo- it was before the war, ready for her asked the wife. biles and diamond rings are not to resume her industrial activities “Last Sunday I preached from the punished, and are not to know when unimpaired. text, ’Be ye therefore, steadfa ,’• Yel to-day the burden of all Germ ­ they do it that they will be punished answered the good man. "but the when caught, more, .not fewer, young an utterances is a wail about her printer makes it read. Be ye there men will steal automlbiles and rings poverty, her prostrated industries, for breakffast’.” and others such things. Oregonian. and the impossibility of her paying any indemnity to the nations which she has spoiled. Huch utterances are Raised With Care Brewen Renew Their Old Deceptive capable of one of only two interpre­ The business man had decided to ~~~ Methods tations. Either Germany is lazy, try an office girl and was interview­ ------ o------ stupid, and inefficient beyond all de­ ing applicants for the job. Ex-Senator George Turner thinks scription or imagination, or with He eyed rather suspiciously a fuir "there is ample room under the 18th monumental mendacity is affecting amendment to fix the standard of in­ such a condition in order to get out young thing who wore a somewhat toxicants so that the people may en­ of paying a rightful indemnity and flimsy silk blouse and a lot of gaudy joy the innocent indulgence of light fn order by deceiving the worlds to ■‘Jewelry.” "1- -er— hope you were carefully wines and beer without reintroduc­ get a chance to hoard her wealth in ing the evils of the saloon and the preparation for another assault up­ i brought up?” I,e st am hie red nervous­ ly. general Indulgence In raw spirits, ' on civilization. "Oh, yea, thank you,” replied 'ha That Judge Turner should be won In either case, it would be folly to damsel; "I came up in the elevaor over to the view shows the danger What the Editors Say. Coaxing You to Smile Goodyeai Service Station for Tillamook City is at the STAR GARAGE TUBES AND ASSESSORIES. We Give Goodyear Service C. F PANKOW, Proprietor | thence east to the place of beginning, containing six acres; also the north Notice Is hereby given, that the e half of the northwest quarter of sec- i undersigned has filed his final ac- tlon thirty four, all in township two count as administrator of the Estate South of range nine West, .»»id con- of William H. Perry, deceased, in the taining 206 acres. County Court of Tillamook County, If you fail to appear and eh">w Oregon, and that said Court has ap- , such cause, said order will be duly pointed Monday, August 2nd, 1920, made and entered. at the Court House in Tillamook This cltat on is made by authority City, Oregon, at the hour of 10 o’­ of the Hon. a. M. Hare, the Judge of clock a. m as the time and place for the above entitled Court in accord­ hearing objections to said account, ance of an ordor duly made and en­ and the settlement thereof, tered on the 25th day of June, 1920. Dated this July 1st, 1920. Witness my hand and the seal of John William Jennings, the said Court on this 28th day of Administrator June, 1920. (Seal) Homer Mason, Citation. Clerk of the County Court of the In the County Court of the State State of Oregon, for Tillamook coun­ ty of Oregon for Tillamook County. By H. S. Brimhall, Deputy. In the Matter of the Estate of B. Irndorf, deceased. To Anna Abplanalp. Magdalena Koenig, Frelda Seiler, Alixes Cleon, Administrator's Notice to Creditors. Louis Cleon and Lena Margrite Cle­ on,, heirs at law of B. Irndorf, De­ Notice is hereby given that the ceased, and E. J. Glenger, Adminis­ undersigned, D. A. Browne, by an Kath- trator of the Estate of Alice order of the County Court for Tilla­ rina Balmer, Deceased and E. J. mook County. Oregon, has been duly Gienger, Administrator of the Estate appointed executor of the estate of of Margrite Cicon, Deceased, greet- Thomas P. Browne, deceased. Notice Ing: is further given that all persons hav­ You and each of you are hereby ing claims against the said estate cited and required to appear in the must present the same, duly verified, above entitled Court and cause on with proper vouches, to the under­ the 19th day of August, 1920, at 10 signed or to his attorney, S. S. John­ a. m. on said date, to show cause, if son, at Tillamook, Oregon, on or be- any lherebe, why and order should I foro six mnths from this date. not be made and entered herein, auth­ D. A. Browne, orizing and enpowering M. Ablanalp. Administrator of the Estate of Administration to sell at private sale, Thomas P. Browne, deceased. for cash, to the highest bidder, In the July 8, 1920. manner required by law, all the right title and interest of yourselves , Notice to Water Consumers and of this estate In and to the fol-1 lowing described real property, being | situated in Tillamook County. Oreg-; Sprinkling will be permitted free on, to-wit: of charge under the following con­ The West half of the Southwest ditions: from 5 p. m. until 9 p. m. \ quarter of Section twenty seven, the each day alj east of 2nd Ave sprinkl- Northeast quarter of the Southeast, . ing on Monday. Wednesday and Frl- quarter of Section twenty eight, and , day; all west of 2nd Ave E, Tuesday, beginning at the Northeast corner I Thursday and Saturday. All water I of the Southeast quarter of the i to be turned off in case of fire. Sprln- Southeast quarter of Section twenty i kiers found running after 9 p. m.. i I eight, and running thence Soutlfon ' water will be turned off and sprinkl­ section line forty rode; thence West ing right will be cancelled for rest twenty four rods ; thence north forty ' of season. rods to the north line of the south­ By order of Tillamook Water Com- east quarter of the southeast quarter ■ mission. June 14. 1920. of said section twenty eight; and By E. D. Hoag, Supt. Notice of Final Account Í- i > ‘•’CkaJh Here Are The Things That Make Housework Easier iHIS week we are making a special display of the House­ hold Utilities which help so much in housecieaning. VACUUM CLEANERS Carpet Sweepers Carpet Beaters Curtain Stretchers Clothes Lines Clothes Racks Curtain Fixtures Mops and Brooms Brushes Tack Hammers Screw Drivers Furniture Polish Paints, Wax, etc. the helpful Utilities you need King-Crenhsaw Hardware Co the TVf^C/f£5T£R stork ROBERTS GENERAL TRANSFER Just Starting in Business Your patronage will be highly appreciated. Prompt Attention to all Orders. Tenipory ITione Wagoner’» Cigar Store. Both Phones.