Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, October 14, 1920, Image 6

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. OCTOBER 7. 1920.
REE!
LX
AMERICAN WOMEN
DOING FULL SHARE
FOR THE COUNTRY
Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, Wife of
Republican Nominee, Praises
Her Sex.
|i
OISCUSSES HIGH LIVING COSTS
Declares In an Interview That
Present High Prices Can Be
Reduced by Votes.
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'■ :-y
Cut down your tire and tube expenditures by anticipating
your Spring and Summer requirements and getting—
Absolutely FREE
I 7
—one "Ton Tested" Tube, of corresponding size, with
every Vacuum Cup Tire bought at our store. Act
quickly. This offer is LIMITED. Once it expires,
it will not be renewed. Early ordering will avoid
disappointment.
4
♦
Tillamook City, Oregon.
3
Rexall Remedies
means King of all and all
preparations put out under this
name whether they are medicinal
preparations, toilet, preparations
or other merchandise, are made of
the very highest quality of materi­
als obtainable, the finest ingredi­
ents put together in the most scien­
tific way. in the most up-date day­
light laboratories and guaranteed
to give satisfaction.
The following guarantee is
printed on every package.
"The United Drug Company and the Rexall Store
selling this preparation, guarantee it to give satis­
faction. If it does not, go back to the store where
you bought it and get your money. It belongs to you
and we want you to have it."
WHAT MORE LIBERAL GUARANTEE
COULD YOU HAVE ?
C. I. CLOUGH CO
THE REXALL STORE,
Tillamook City - - . Oregon,
CITY TRANSFER
LOCAL AND
LONG
DISTANCE HAULING
1.OO-F- BUILDING
BOTH PHONES.
Kill That Cold With
CASCARA
QUININE
for
FOR
AND
Colds, Coughs
La Grippe
Neglected Colds are Dangerous
Tsk* no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the Aral aneeze.
Breaks up a cold in 24 hours — Relieves
Grippe in 3 days—Excellent for Headache
Quinine in thia form does not affect the head—Cascara is best Ton i
Laxative—No Opiate in Hill’s.
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ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT
MILK COWS FOR
SALE or EXCHANGE
for Dry Stock.
By Eatalllne Bennett.
Mrs. Coolidge sat in a day coach on
1 a alow local train between Boston ami
Northampton and talked about her
husbuud. her children, the high cost of
living and the domestic problem. The
conductor and the brakeman stopped
as they went through the car to talk
to her. She had made friends with
them In her frequent journeys back
and forth to keep in touch with her
children In school in Northampton and
her husband at his duties in the state
capftol. She knitted diligently as she
talked. During those trips she knits
all the winter stockings and sweaters
for her two boys—John, aged four­
teen, and Calvin, twelve.
“Too many people are afraid of
work,” she thinks is the fundamental
reason for the high cost of living and
the much discussed domestic problem.
“I think the only tiling the women
of the country can do now.” she said,
with the quiet conviction of one who
has thought it all out, “is to vote for
the men whom they think will make the
right laws and see that they are en­
forced. Tbey have done all they can
In the home. I think the reason there
is so much sugar on hand now is be­
cause people are doing without it in
their homes.
Women Have Done Their Share.
“American women have done, anil
still are doing, their full share. They
have sacrificed and saved and substi­
tuted and made over. But that isn't
enough. They’ll have to vote the high
cost of living down.
"Here In New England, where It is
a little hard for us to give up pie," she
laughed at the tradition that has be-
come a joke, “we have learned to use
all kinds of cheaper substitutes for
butter and lard, and In my own house­
hold we have experimented with dif­
ferent fruit combinations to find some­
thing we like and that will take the
least sugar. Apples must be tart to
make good pies, but we have found
that blueberries take less sngnr and
the combination of apples and blue­
berries, half and half, Is delicious, re­
quires less sweetening than apples and
has more character than the blueber­
ries alone.”
Knows No Domestic Problems.
The domestic problem, which Is clos
Ing homes all over the country and in
creasing the hotel population, is some
thing of which Mrs. Coolidge think-
she has no personal, practical knowl
edge. She never keops but one ntnid
and she never hns been without one
Ir the fifteen years of her married life
she has had only two. The first one
sbe Inherited with the furnished house
into which she and Mr. Coolidge
moved when they were married and
took with her when she moved, The
second came when the first left to go
and live with her sister.
There must be a reason for their
staying. It was suggested to Mrs. Cool
ldge. and she thought possibly there
were several. She thought the type of
maid had something to do with It.
Her’s both have been American wo­
men old enough to have a sense of re
sponslblllty to their work and Intelli­
gent enough to respond to reasonable
courteous treatment.
“A good many women who keep only
one innld have trouble In thetr house­
holds because both mistress and maid,
hut chiefly the mistress, are afraid of
work. A Woman expects one maid to
do the cooking and scrubbing and ev­
erything else anti still be dressed up lb
black dress with white cap nnd apron
ready to answer the doorbell any mln
ute. It isn't humanly possible. I nl
wnys answer my doorbell myself. I
do it for two reasons. In the first
place, there Is no one else, and. In the
second, I like to greet my friends at
the door myself."
Have Home Orchestra.
Mrs. Coolidge is of medium height
with brown ltalr, hazel eyes that hold
a good deni of merriment nnd a very
quick sense of humor. At home sit"
and her children have a little orches­
tra. Mrs. Coolidge playa the piano
John the violin, nnd Calvin, after con
slderable discussion. In which he fa­
vored a bass drum, compromised on a
banjo-mandolin. They piny hymns and
war songs usually the hymns they
learn In the Congregational church and
Munday School of Northampton. They
avoid difficult nnd unfamiliar mush
because the object of the orchestra Is
Entirely recreational and not edtica
¡tonal. T'nut Is a part of Mrs. Cool
»dge'a educational policy—that chll
.Iren chould work when they work and
play when they play nnd keep the two
separate. That was why site sent h.et
boys to the public schools of North
ampton when they were five years old
Every morning when she Is In North
ampten. Mr«. Coolidge take« her Boa
ton bag and go«*a ts market. If the
neighbor next door la going Mrs. Cool
tdga go*« with her In the car. Othar-
wlae site walks She ha« no domestic
policy. She buys, »he say», “what the
family need and can afford ”
DR. J. G. TURNER
Eye Specialist
Private Ofllce in Jenkin's Jewelry
Store.
———o-------
No
here'
en to the legal
vo. Pr o
Schot
ict No 9, of
Tilly in
?oun
of Oregon,
a
>1 me
said district
will
he ci at
igh School
build 11 r o: the
• of October,
1920
le afternoon
to vo.e n th • proposition of levying
a spoci
•let tax.
n noun of money needed
Ths o ■
by the :ii
t during the fiscal year
beg' tin ing on Jun ■ 30. 1920. anil
ending on •Line 30. 1921, Is V>stiniat-
ed in the foilowin-, budget and in-
eludes the amounts to be received
from the county school fund, state
sell >ol fund, special dis: riel tax, and
other moueys of the district:
o
u
■o
■o
o
Evenings and Sundays by
I
o
O'
•O'
FAIRBANKS-MORSE
n
HOME
LIGHT
PLANT
;j
•
Cariy 40 Lights.
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BUDGET
Estimated Expenditmes.
Teachei
tnlai'ie- ................. $31,535
800
Fit.uii tire.....................................
Apparatus & supplies..........
2.000
Library books ...........................
Flags ............................................
Reparis of school houses, out­
buildings or fences ............
Improving grounds.................
Playground equipment ..........
800
Transportation ot pupils ....
2.600
Janitor's wages......................
Janitor's supi lies......................
250
Fuel ‘............................................
2.200
Light and power......................
600
310
Water............................................
Clerk's salary ...........................
225
Postage A- sta’ionery ............
50
For the p-vin't'o! bonded debt
inter»-.
'o,. i—u>'d und
Sections 126, 1 52 to 156. fc 4
of School Lav of Ore . 1919
Interest on w ui i ants...............
Outstanding warrams..........
Insurance ............................. ;.
Total estimated amount of
money to be expended tot all
purposes duttng year ... $73 6 v ■ '
s put a Flea in Your Ear about Electric Lights on theFaim
Total estimated receipts, not
including money to be rec’d
from tax which it is proposed
to vote .................................. $36.436
Recapitulation
Total estimated expenses for
year ....................................... $73.660
Total estimated receipts not in-
eluding tax voted............
36.433
Balance, amount to be raised by
district tax........................... 137.234
A
I
V
Four Hundred and Ten Dollars..
The cost is so moderate that it's a big paying investment.
I A
R. F. ZACHMANN.
o
i hat an election w ill he held in -aid
District at the High Schoi 1 Building
on the Stith dav of October. 1920, n’t
one o'clock in the aliernoon, to voie
oil the question of inci< .i.-ing the
amount of the tax levy in said dl
triet for the > ,ir 192'»-21. by mo.,»
than six per cent over the amount of
'■licit levy for the year immediately
p.eced'iug.
li
tai v- • ty ■■■ rt . • t
• addi­
tion i amount by special levy lor i he
followi »g teasi ns:
It has been lOUitd neee; rv to pay
•nm-tM salaries to .ill teach rs mil
everything purchased i higher.
Dated his Sth day u1'October. 1920
All»-
C. V McGee, Cl' k. H. T.
Holts. Chairman Board of Directors.
(>
■O'
■O'
<>
¿»O'
For the convenience of our patrons
we maintain a receiving station
for Blackberries in the
Todd Hotel building.
Small & Urie
Transfer
AdministrflFot's Notice of Hearing of
Final Account.
Notice fs hereby given (hit the
one-isigned hi.- tilc-rt in 1 lie C’ttn'y
.oli.i of rhe st v
O.c hi . foi Thi
con ty. I,;- •.tm. ■■ c unt 'i
.ulmlni. . run
<1 the ( ' He of A!
phoii.iv J. Piovoov . deebused,and the
i he eaid court hat- appointed S ,»."■-
.day. the 30tl>’duy ol October, 1.920.
at 10 o'clock, a. tn., at the com r
room of .-aid court, in Tillamook ci
Oregon, as the tint > and place tor the
hearing of ’he eaid account and the
closing of said estate, and any and
all persons having any objection« to
said account are required to present
the same to said court at said time
and place.
Sidney Provoost,
Administtator of the estate of Al­
phonse J. Provoost, deceased.
<)■
JE
BLACKBERRIES
Estimated Receipts
From county school filmi ...ulng
coming school year .......... 310,000
From state school fund doling
coming year...........................
1.236
Cash now in hands of disirici
clerks .................................. .. .
200
Estimated amount to be received
front all other resoui ces dur
ing coming school year . . 25.00'
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You’ll find it easier to keep competent help ; you'll greatly
reduce your fire risk ; you and your wife will live longer; and
everybody be always happier after you’ve had us install an
Electric Home Light Plant.
a
Wood,
Gravel.
Phone 37 W
Tillamook Transfer Co.
Liberty Temple.
G. H. BENNETT & SONS
Contractors and Builders.
Announcement
-------- o--------
Notice of School Election to Increase
Miss White has opened her studio
Tax More than Six Per Cent Over
at Sam Moulton's residence. 513 West
That of Previous Year.
Equipment
Appointments
Notice of School Meeting.
Dated this Sth day of Oct., 1920.
Attest: C. A. McGhee.
H. T. Botts,
District Clerk
Chairman
Permanatly Located tn Tillamook
Latest Up-to-date Instruments and
YAGER & BRADY
Roan
Stillwell Ave., phone, Bell 32-W. and
Notice is hereby given to the legal is organizing classes this week. Those
voters of School District No. 9 of wishing lessons can And Miss White
Tillamook County. State of Oregon. at the studio.
SBSP57J
• All Kinds of Building
and Repair Work.
Vlans* and Estimates
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Furnished,_____
ADDRESS:
*
BOX 542, TILLAMOOK, OR.