TILLA MOO HEADLIGHT, AUGUST 5, 1920. What the Editors Say Get Goodyear Value In Tires for Small Cars Don’t be misled by very cheaply priced tires, for tire economy is not a matter of vzhat tires cost originally but of what tire service costs in the end True Goodyear mileage and economy are built into Goodyear _____ 1 lires, of the 30 x 3-, 30 x 372- id 31 x 4 inch sizes in the world’s larger t tire factory devoted to these sizes* C. I; you own a Fcrcf, € hevrolet, Dorr, Maxwell or other car taking one of these sizes, you can equip it with Good­ year Tires at your nearest Service Station» • Go there for the exceptional v- "ue in thesetires madepossibleby Gooo year’s resources, expei fence and demon­ strated expertness in tire manufacture 3OxS>Z> Goodyear Dourlc-Cure Fabric, All-Weather Tread...... 30x3t/2 Goodyear Single-Cure Fabric, Anti-Skid Tread Go" year r." 1st eu-xiscoit r.j more loan the price you ire asked to pay for tubes of less merit—why risk costly casir"Z when sure protection is available? 30;: 3’/j size «K naterproef bag. •ir1- Goodyeai Service Station for Tillamook City is at the STAR GARAGE TIRES, TUBES AND ASSESSORIES. We Give Goodyear Service C. F. PANKOW, Proprietor Var aI*d a year i to resort to dishonest and coarsely up of angles and Is, therefore easy | and a half of peace lave abandoned : abusive tactics in the national cam- to work with, in my opinion he is ' to grateful desuetude much of Mr. ; paign that is now beginning. It is not a man who will be asy to work.’ Wilson’s oracular utterance. But the I to be regretted that overzealous men St. Louis Times: “Mr. Cummings’ historian now leading the Democrat­ , and newspapers should take a quick This is putting in epigrammatic and keynote speech at San Francisco was ic party by virtue of his high office I descent into falsehood and billings- colloquial language something that false in its key. His reheasal of a- is not aware of it. As he was before ' gate in the belief that they are aid­ needs to be kept in mind in view of chievements of the first administrât-1 the nation’s entrance into the war, ; ing their candidate and defeating the Democratic attacks charging Senator Harding with being a plastic -in the ion contain outright falsehoods and he is nearly two years behind the de­ , political enemy. Their efforts are hands of the Republican old guard. intentionally misleading statements velopment of world opion ion. From j worse than worthless, for they injure fully as bad. yet his worst distort­ the rear platform of progress he ' their own champion’s cause and in- A man may be roun’d but he‘may be ions were in discussing the league of views only the horizon of the past.” ; spire sympathy for the individual hard. Hardness does not necessarily mean angularity. We have a man nations. He took direct issue with Detroit Free Press: “The only nat­ they attack. This applies to Demo­ of sharp, obtrusive angles in the Mr. Bryan and Senator Walsh who ural conclusion is that the Democrats crats, Republicans and all other part­ White House now. It will be a re­ contend that the 20 Democratic sen­ are deeply distrustful of the titular isans alike. Few issues have ever ators who supported the co-called leader of their party, Mr. Wilson risen in the United States, w'hich lief to get there a man with fewer or no angles and we need not fear that Lodge reservations were not nullify­ rules them up to a certain point be­ have so deeply stirred the peope as he will not have a mind of his own ing the treaty but seeking to make cause he has a strategical advantage that which involves the league of because he lacks angles.” It effective, with proper safe-guards over them, and because he posesses nations proposal. Too many men of American rights. Constitution and a machine of Federal office holders and newspapers have heated them­ St. Louis Times; "There seems to instiutions. His charge that a Re­ whom he controls. But the leaders selves unduly regarding it, and have publican majority of one in the Sen­ of the party are not in his confidence I indulged in language which was nei­ be a popular delusion that James M. ate was responsible for the treaty s and he does not possess their confid­ ther becoming to them nor helpful Cox is a great vote getter, He was elected governor of Ohio in 1912, defeat, does not square with the ence or regard.” to their cause. The long struggle votes on vital reservations. Only 20 in the Senate aroused intense feeling i ' after two terms in Congress from Democratic senators believed the re­ on both sides. It is not fair to say the Third District. But anybody New York Telegram: "Had we fol­ running on the Democratic ticket servations were nullifying. They o- that all the accusations of unworthy lowed Mr. Wilson’s self-determined motives and all the' personal abuse that year would have been elected, beyed Mr. Wilson s orders.” lead and accepted his league coven­ uttered throughout the debates are the Republicans casting 272,500 and ------ o------ Progressives 277,903 in the guber­ ant. uncrossed as to a "t” and un­ Pittsburgh Dispatch: "Britishers, dotted as to an “I,” just where i now unsavory memories, and are natorial contest. But in 1914 Mr. seen to have had no influence what ­ who are criticizing their government should we have been at this present? Cox was defeated by a vote of 524, for failure to impress upon the lea­ Our American independence surren­ ever in deciding the issue? The 625 to 493.367, or over 31,000. with gue of nations the necessity for a dered, this year’s Fourth of Julyi sting of malice remains, and there the Progressives still voting 60,971. constructive course in harmony with would have found us under the au- | is bitterness in some hearts, but the He won again in 1916, but by a mar­ the pledges made for the child of thority of a group of foreign politi- 1 issue must still be met and determln- gin of only 5,199, compared with a Versailles, are only exposing the pit­ cians, one of them alone having a ; cd on its merit. without regard to margin of 35,522 plurality for Sen­ iable weakness of ijv promised with­ six-to-one voting power preponder­ persons or motives.” ator Pomerene and an 89,503 plural­ out extracting the slightest benefits ance over us. We should have found , ity for President Wilson. In 1918 to the world. Popular command to ourselves in an entangling alliance Waterbury (Conn.) Republican: owing to wet and dry question, Gov. have the league of nations prove its • with what shows encouraging prom- ; "Samuel W. McCall, former govern- Willis, who got the nomination over fiber by intervening between nation­ ise of being another world war, with or of Massachuetts, has made a state- the protest of Hamilton county was al ambitions and the stability of Asia instead of Europe the scene of ment concerning the Republican defeated, losing the election In that what remains of Europe do not seem conflict. Of course the Armenian nominee. Senator Harding, that con­ one county. Gov. Cox received 48«, to have taken into consideration that mandate would have been ours, and tains a valuable distinction. The 403 and Willis got 474,459. Cox was the league is composed pratically of many thousands of American young ! statement follows: "The common no­ 114,000 under Wilson two years be­ i England. France, and Italy, with no men. in the army and navy, would tion being put out about Mr. Hard­ fore, while Willis’ vote was less than authority, and that each is pursuing be now lined up to slaughter and be ing does not give the correct opinion that of Hughes by 40,400. Mr. Cox the course best adapted to promote slaughtered in a Turco-Bolshevik, 1 of the man. I know him. I have has been a fortunate candidate. its own interests. They are no doubt Gengls Khan, Tartar war. the object­ ‘ spoken with him and I have read There Is no indication of his superior w-illing to function in it*6 name of ive of which would be to establish some of his important speeches very vote-getting power. He has merely the league of nations if the league British, French. Italian and Greek earefully. He ia a man of large been the recipient of political wind­ will give reasonable assurances that authority over vast Eastern territ- I mold and whlle he Is a man not made falls.” \each will get what it desires, which orties. There are other correspond­ up of angles, and ia, therefore, easy i Is different from what its allies want. | ingly rich rewards of Wilsonian dip­ to work with, in my opinion he iaI The administration office holders But how ean that be possible?” lomacy which might have been ours not a man who will be easy to work.’ who let the war profiteers rob the if we had obeyed the imperious Wil-; He will not be under the control of government and the war profiteers Chicago New»: ’’Prophesying back­ »on command to »wallow the league ; any clique. He will act on broad, who did the robbing naturally do ward has considerable possibilities of and stop talking, but perhaps these general Ideas and will act on hts own ( not want any talk about how things rhetorical embellishment, but ia two may be sufficient for immediate responsibiltyr There is nothing nar-' were put over on the United States row about him. He is bound to run i Treasury during the war, but why without great value as a help to pro­ I contemplation in free America." well and will make a flrat-claaa Pre- ' anyone else would want to stop In­ gressive action. To prognosticate aident.’ The significant diatincition , vestigation and criticism of that col- solemnly thing* long ago rotated in ■ to which we allude in found in the' oaaal piece of Incompetency and job- the dust of the past Is at beet no j words: Whli» bn ia a man not made j bery is not at all clear. ■ewe than a i u nratlv» operation. A syx • f T 4- a «* 4- 1 OplCS 01 XUuClCSl« i year and a ^a,f Going to feed cherries to the Tllla- mookers, was what a couple of finan­ ciers started out to do Monday. One was 25 and the other 70. They had a truck, load of Willamette valley cherries—Lamberts, Bings, Royal Annes and Black Royal Anns, and they were intending to get 15 or 1$ cents a pound from the rich dairy- men for the delicious fruit. It’s nice to have rich dairymen, and that they re rich is tine for the cherry traders.—Willamina Times. If men will raise more bogs and cattle there will be more meat and cheaper prices. If men will put in full time in the shops and factories there will be more clothing and the price will be cheaper; if men and women will buy only the things they need and not so many of the things their vanity merely craves there will ue fewer piodteers and fewer oppor­ tunities to fleece the public. The pro­ fiteers have thrived because men and women have been willing to pay al­ most any price asked for the foolish things they did not need.—Telephone Register. Mr. Gompers designates the award of the railway wage board as a sop thrown to the workers, but to raise the millions involved in the sop ev­ ery pound of freight hauled must be taxed and the cost of living to every man, women and child in the United States,' including the men whose pay is increased, will be raised another notch. The award is simply another episode in the race between costs, and had it been more to Mr. Gom- per’s taste would have only meant that living costs would have gone even higher. First wages are raised and as a consequence cost of pro­ duction or haulage increases until they wipe out wage betterment, and another wage increase and further enhanced cost follows. The process is endless and resembles a cat chasing its own tail. If instead of endless in­ crease we had boards which figured out equalization and determined how conditions could be brought to al- ready high pay instead of making conditions worse there might be a rift in the cloud, but it appears that chasmg around the endless circle was pteferred and in the end the railway employe will be no better off than lie was before he got his raise while a considerable number of other people will be a little further in the hole.—Independent. I nvest C onservatively SPECULATIVE investment seldom pays, stocks, mining ventures and all other schemes of hit or miss” nature take money out of the com­ munity and all too frequently out of the individual's pocket—never to return. There are sufficient substantial enterprises right here in Tillamook County to keep your money busily working. DIRECTORS. johx ; morgan . A.W. BUNN. HENRY ROGERS C. J. EltWARDS, B. C.5 LAMB, W. 'J. RIECHERS, 'McGHEE i CLOSING SALE I am Closing Out my entire Stock of Household Goods At Greatly Reduced Prices Come and Investigate A. L. PACE Why Cities Grow. A natural human desire to elude the divine mandate, "In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread,” has always been the seat of many of our earthly troubles. As inter­ preted to mean the kind of perspi­ ration that accompanies tilling the soil, it may account for so many a- bandoned farms and the swarming emigration of the agricultural popu­ lation to the cities—where, indeed, the sweating doesn't stop, but is in thousanus n instances greatly stay- ed. On the farm physical exertion well- night reaches its maxmium. Stripped for the struggle with nature, reduced to the merest remant of clothing, the gladiatorial combat is carried on. There are no fat farmers, unless they have become “landed proprie­ tors” and have delegated all violence of labor to other hands. It is the cry from Macedonia now that the hired man is no longer to be hired; and all the racking toil of the farm descends upon one hapless pair of shoulders; no one is to be had for love or money to share it. The rendering of the soil into na tures hands ugain is quite account- able. And when the rewards of eas­ ier employments in the city are so great, even partial dependence on a sense of conscientious self-sacrifice is not to be expected.—St. Louis Globe- Democrat. Waihington Leads States. Washington leads the United states in the number of standard boys’ and girls’ clubs, according to a recent re­ port received by F. L. Audrain, Washington state club leader, from the national leader at Washington, D. C. Washington has 479 standard clubs. South Dakota Homes next with 468 and the nearest to rival either of these is Kansas with 200. ”A standard club," says Mr. Au­ drain, “is one that has a membership of at leusl five boys or girls working on the same project, with a local club leader in charge, and having an organization w ith the nccessury oili- cers as prescribed in a club consltu- tion, together with a definite pro­ gram of work for the year.”’ We Live Long. ------ o------ Despite Jazz music, the strain of presidential elections nnd rising liv­ ing costs, Americans are close io be­ coming the longest lived race, reports to the vital satisfies bureau indicate. The national death rate has taken a big tumble, according to the fig­ ures. Plural births arc occurring In greater numbers than ever before. Approximately 30,000 twins ate born per year. Births for 1920 are ex­ pected to total more than 2,000,000. Census reports show that nearly 4,- 000 persons con be found any time, who claim to be 100 years old or more, while the number past 90 Is well over 30,000. Incidentally, more women live to be 100 than men. - - • M » BAYOCEAN SHEET METAL WORKS TILLAMOOK, ORE Joggling prices Is not our forte, as it Is with some. We don’t try to take advant­ age of alack production, rising mar­ kets, abnormal demand, and tempor ary conditions. You can always be sure of rlgh prices and fair treat­ Franklin Roosevelt’s chief claim ment here. on fame is that he beam the name of —- o --- a man Democratic leaders wore their Bay ocean Sheet Metal Works. vocabularies out denouncing while he was alive, but next comes the First Street, Tillamook, Oregon. significant fact that he is first assis­ tant to Josephus Daniels, who has been editing the Navy department C. DUKTER. for the past few years. w. Tbe biggest single factor in the high cost of living is the high cost of government, and the frightfully high coat of government 1« a legacy of Wiiaoniam. * DENTIST. TILLAMOOK BUILDING ¡ (Over Halton»'»). T illamooh- Oregon, A QR. O. L. HOHLLFKD. VETERINARIAN. Phone— in t- ■ , ■ Tillamook Mutui ühi Oregon