Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, March 03, 1921, Page 12, Image 12

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    LABOR ROLES
BURDEN COSTS
OREGON NEWS NOTES
OF GENERAL INTEREST
A shipment of 1500 coyotes and lynx
pelts, consigned to eastern markets,
was sent from Bend last week. The
lot, representing a majority ot the
catches made in central Oregon this
winter, Is valued at approximately >10,-
Principal Events of the Week 000.
Clackamas county is to have one of
Briefly Sketched for Infor­
the biggest road convention in its
ilstory on March < and 8. when all
ball Arbiter.
mation of Our Readers.
ot the road foremen of the county will
uee<. W'i.1 tlie members of the county
Washington.—Federal Judge Kene­
rhe formation of a national guard court and outline the program for tbs
saw Mountain Landis of Chicago was
company has been undertaken at Rose­ coming year.
•
impeached in the house of representa­
burg.
Corn and poultry shows, th«- first tives by Representative Welty, demo­
The total number of agricultural stu­ to be held in Salem next fall and the
crat, Ohio, who charged him with ’’high
dents at Oregon Agricultural college latter next January, were decided up­
crimes and misdemeanors,” in connec­
Is now 882.
on at a meeting in Salem of the Marion tion with his acceptance ot the posi­
Lower Cost cf Service Can Be Secured
The Lacomb oil well is down 840 t out ty federation of community clubs.
tion of supreme arbiter of baseball at
Only by Cutting Expense,
feet and stockholders are optimistic Fifteen of the 22«c!ubs In the county
a salary of $42,500 a year.
Atterbury Says.
as to final rsults.
vzere represented.
Should the house decide to Institute
Percy A. Stevens post of the Amerl-
Eight recently confiscated stills proceedings against Judge Landis on
can Legion at Bend has opened a free were offered for sale at Bend as junk the basis of Mr. Welty’s chargee, a
Urging emergency action by tlie
employment agency.
United States Railroad Labor Board
by Sheriff Roberts, after the copper formal trial before the bar of the
Plans for a new building to be built boilers and worms had been so house would be beld and a decision
to end "gross waste and Inefficiency
Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., who will be
by the Sons of Norway lodge of Bend thoroughly chopped up as to make rendered.
prevailing under present working rules
assistant secretary of the navy under
were begun last week.
further use in the manufacture of
and conditions. General W. W. Atter­
Mr. Welty did not introduce a reso­ the Harding administration.
ilce president of the Pennsyl-
bury, vice
Pennsyl­
The Hood River county court has in­ liquor impossible.
lution proposing impeachment, as is
vania railroad, in a statement to the
creased the Balary of the fruit in­
An attack on the new
i
law empow the usual procedure In such matters.
spector to $2500 a year.
board in session at Chicago said in
ering Governor Olcott to collect all Instead, he arose to "a question of
An electric cancelling machine has revenue from the Interstate bridge high personal privilege," and an­
part:
Many railroads are not now earning,
been received and placed in operation until approximately $77,000 said to be nounced that be “impeached” the
and with present operating costs and
due the state has been paid from judge.
by the Bend postoffice.
traffic have no prospect of earning,
Total tax levies In Union county for the tolls, will be made by Multnomah
Without debate, the Welty charges,
the year 1920 show an increase from *ounty commissioners.
on Mr. Welty’s motion, were referred j London. — Germany, through her even their bare operating expenses,
>580,711.23 to >688,649.30.
Governor Olcott vetoed a bill passed to the judiciary committee for investi­
leaving them without any net return
I delegates to the conference with the
Scarlet fever and measles have i at the recent session of the legislature gation and report.
and unable to meet their fixed charges.
allies here, made reparation offers of
reached the epidemic stage in several providing that the state, cities, coun­
The emergency presented can be met
There were a few scattering nous.
approximately thirty billion gold
either by an advance in freight and
sections of Douglas county.
ties and school districts should be
■ marks, or about >7,500,000,000.
The wool and mohair growers of exempted from paying royalty on rock, Senator Would Impeach Judge Landis.
passenger rates, or by a reduction in
i It was understood outside the con­
Lane county met at Eugene and or- sand and gravel taken from the bed*
operating expenses.
Washington.—Impeachment proceed­
ference that after Dr. Simons, tile
With declining prices and wages in
ganized a cooperative association.
of navigable streams in Oregon.
ings against Judge K. M. Landis of
: German foreign minister, had finish- Industry and agriculture, the country
The state irrigation securities com-
A revised estimate of the principal Chicago were threatened in the sen­
; ed his statement on reparations to the demands that the solvency of the rail­
mission has approved the entire Issue crops grown in Oregon in 1920 was ate by Senator Dial of South Caro­
conferees, Lloyd George, the British roads must be assured by a reduction
of $1.250,000 of Medford irrigation dis issued by F. L. Kent, agricultural sta­ lina.
Senator Dial said he had sent
’ prime minister, replied in substance In operating expenses, and not by a
trict bonds.
tistician of the United States bureau to Chicago for the facts In the case in
further advance of rates.
The Clatskanie kraut plant, owned of crop estimates. Mr. Kent’s report which Judge Landis is alleged to have that unless the Germans had some­
Tlie National Agreements, rules and
by the Oregon Packing compuny. has shows the total value of the field and discharged a youth who was charged thing more to offer than appeared on working conditions forced on the rail­
Dr. Simons’ statement, there was no
I
closed the season with a total output fruit crops to have been $121,973,549. i with stealing money after the youth
roads as war measures cause gross
need of continuing the conference.
of 800 tons.
waste and Inefficiency.
The Hammond Lumber company’s had testified that his salary was but
.Mr. Lloyd George told the German
The road fund of Columbia county, mill at Astoria was shut down Friday $90 a month. "If I find these facts
Would Save $300,000,000
in> lulling some special taxes voted by night and part of Saturday, while more are true I shall seek the impeachment foreign minister:
I estimate, that tlie elimination of
"If the written proposals are of the
Several road districts, amounts to al than 400 men of the mill crew search­ of Judge Landis," Senator Dial said.
this waste would reduce railway op­
same genera! character as the expla­
most $200,000.
erating expenses nt least $300,000,1 • X).
ed for two boys, Doyle Morgan, aged
nation
of
them,
it
isn
’
t
worth
while
for
It would lie far better to save tills sum
A 25-foot section of the pavement on 11, and Marcus Monge, aged 13, who
i
us to read them. You have a corn­ by restoring cawdltlons of efficient and
the Columbia highway, Just west Of were lost In the forest, south of the
plete lack ei comprehension of the economical operation than to reduce
Clatskanie, was carried away Sun­ mill.
position of the allies and your own wages.
day by a slide,
Senator McNary has notified the
We believe that as the wages of rail­
position.”
Albert Peterson, government trap­ state highway department that he has
road employees were tlie last to go up
per at Ukiah, in Umatilla county, re­ obtained passage of a bill by the sen­
they should also be the last to come
ports a month’s catch of 19 coyotes ate authorizing the secretary of war
BRIEF CfcNEEAL NEWS
down, but we do insist that for an am­
Washington.—The letter of Secre­
and three bobcats.
ple wage an honest day’s work shall
to grant an easement over the Celtlo tary Colby declining to transmit iti-
Governor Thomas E. Campbell, of be given. The public has the right to
Raymond B. Eshelman, former flax canal property in Wasco county for 1 formation on the negotiations conduct­
expert at the Oregon state peniten­ I the right of way required for the ed with the view to treaty action with Arizona, has signed the anti-alien land insist that this must bo obtained.
The public has also the right to ex­
tiary, died at Salem hospital after an Columbia river highway between The Japan was received without comment law.
Since January 1 sleeping sickness pect that the railway executives, with
illness of several weeks.
by the senate foreign relations com­
Dalles and the Deschutes river.
has attacked 247 persons in New York, the cooperation of the regulatory
Fire, caused by the explosion of
Due to cessation of construction mittee. The letter was in reply to a
bodies rind the employees, will as rap­
hot paraffine, gutted the interior of work in June. 1920, on the Jordan val­ communication of the committee, for­ 64 of whom have died.
idly aa possible reduce the cost of rail­
Herbert
Hoover
has
accepted
Presi
­
the Willamette Valley Telephone com ley irrigation project, the desert land warded at the instance of Senator
way operation so as to insure eventual-
dent-elect Harding's offer of tlie cab­
pany's office at Falls City.
board has decided to cancel the con­ Johnson of California, requesting in inet post of secretary of commerce.
ly a reduction In rates. Ultimately a
The Pacific Power ft Light company tract existing between the state aud formation on the subject.
Fishing on Sunday would be punish­ readjustment of basic wages will bo
has asked permission of the public the Jordan Valley Land ft Water com­
Secretary Colby said In his l"ttcr
service commission to increase gas pany of Boise, Idaho, unless arrange­ that the record of the negotiations able by a fine of $30 under a bill in­ required. .Meantime It Is to the inter­
ests of all concerned, Including labor,
rates and street car fares in Astoria. ments are made Immediately whereby was "practically that of a preliminary troduced in the Arkansas legislature. that the rules and working conditions
Regular
36-hour
service
on
transcon
­
Harry Wilson, a laborer of Eugene, construction operations will lie resum­ comparison of views, coupled with
shall lie maiib conducive to the highest
tinental air mall, beginning Muy 1,
has left for his old home in Boston, ed.
recommendations still the subject of
efficiency In output per man.
was announced by postal authorities.
Mass., declaring his intention of walk
Losses in Income irreparable
'I hero were four fatalities in Oregon examination."
Eleven auxiliary police weir killed
ing the entire distance from const to luo to individual accidents, in the
"Substantial progress lias been made
When wages have been too low the.
in a Sinn Erin ambush at Macroom,. harm dime lias been offset by retroac­
coast.
week ended February 24. according to toward an ultimate agreement," Mr.
The taxpayers of Astoria school dis­ tlie report of the state industrial ac- | Colby added, "through Informal con- County Cork, Ireland, it was officially tive increases. Losses of railway net
operating Income are Irreparable. You
trict voted on the question of authoriz­ J oldent commission. The victims were: versatlc.ns conducted by Roland S. announced.
John Stevenson, supreme represen­ cannot innko retToacrive tomorrow the
ing an Indebtedness of $75.000 for the i John M. McCue, logger. Cottage Grove; Morris, ambassador to Japan, and Bar­
building of an annex to the high school Martin Crause, donkey engineer. Port- on Slifdehara. Japanese ambassador.” tative of the Knights of Pythias and savings tlmt sliould have been made
past grand chancellor of the order, today.
building.
I land; Charles R. Phillips, laborer, Pow­
Tim board runnot possibly write the
died at hfs home in New York.
A new engine lias been purchased ers, and Tony Creek, edgerman, Glen­
rilles nnd work'ng conditions of every
RAYMOND
BARS
RADICAL
In
addition
to
the
50,000
acres
of
by the Hot d River fire department at wood. A total of 358 accidents were
railroad in this cwnntry and adjust
timber acquired a few mqnths ago in
a cost of >13,000, and a new fire hull i reported.
them equitably tn varying geograph­
Elmer Smith, From Centralia, Refused
Cowlitz
and
Lewis
counties.
Washing
­
costing $35,000 has been finished and
ical, operating and’social conditions.
Permission to Speak.
The Durkee anti Bridgeport irriga­
ton.
the
Long-Bell
company
has
pur
­
It rests entirely with the board tn
equipped.
tion districts have forwarded to the
Raymond,
Wntfh.—Elmer Smith, chased 2500 acres for a townsite.
determine whether thfs whole situa­
John McCue, an export logger ein- state engineer for approval plans for
radical speaker, was prevented from
Approximately $350,000 will be paid tion shall drift into chaos, and or­
ployed by the Western Fxport ft Log tlie construction of tlie Burnt river
speaking at an advertised meeting to war veterans in Oregon by the state derly prorwltire become impossible ex­
ging company near Cottage Grove, was reservoir in Buker county. The dis­
which was to be held here Sunday of Washington this spring, through cept at the price of railroad bank­
instantly killed when he was struck by tricts propose Io construct Jointly the
afternoon at the Arcadia hall.
the operation of the Washington state ruptcy. financial shock sne] stil| wider
a fulling tree.
reservoir for the storage of 5100 acre
City officials and leading members bonus act. More than $250,000 will unemployment.
Tito annual report of tho Mount feet of the waters of Burnt river for of the Raymond post of the American
The Labor Board’ can prevent this
be paid to men who now reside in
Angel Creamery company allows that a supplemental supply for tho irriga­
catastrophe by declaring that the Na­
Legion met Smith at the station when Portland.
during the last 12 months total sales tion of 1198 acres of land within the
tional agreements, rules and working
he arrived from Centralia. As he got
conditions coming over from the war
amounted to $194,000 and $164.000 was two districts.
off the train he was told of the useless­
Washington Code Upheld.
period are terminated at once; that
paid to patrons for butterfat.
Tho conferees on the agricultural ness of his attempt to speak. Mayor
Olympia. Wash.—The state supreme the question of reasonable and eco­
With ’the exception of measures appropriation bill allowed three strict Lawler, at a special meeting of the
currying emergency clauses, all bill» ly Oregon items. put in by Senator city coniniisslon Saturday issued a court, by a five to four decision held nomical rules and working conditions
the civil administrative code, recently shall l>e remanded to negotiations be­
passed at the recent session of the McNary, to stand with a little reduc- proclamation prohibiting the speech.
passed
by the legislature, not subject tween each carrier nnd Its own em­
legislature and signed by the governor lion in two cusei
An appropriation
Smith Insisted on going to the build­ to referendum, and denied application ploye's; nnd tlmt as the basis for such
will become operatLe oil May 25.
of >15,000 to fight the pine beetle in ing. When Smith arrived at the Ar­ for a writ of mandate to compel the negotiations, the agreements, rules,
Farm bureau representatives from the forests of Klantath county was cadia hall City Marshal Pederson
nnd working conditions In effect on
secretary of state to receive referen­ each railroad as of Dm-emher, 31, 1917
alT flirts of the state have been at agreed to, along with $15,000 for tho
would not let him enter.
dum petitions. The code, which re­ shall bp re-established.
work the past week obtaining mem irrigation experiment station at Herm­
organises the eutire state government
_ If the hoard will do fh|s, fhe T nbor
tiers among the farmers of Columbia iston and >9000 for a frost service in
Girt Talks Over Week.
and provides a cabinet of ten mem­ I'ommlttee of the Asnoelatlon of Rnil-
county. A total of 456 w as signe I
the Rogue river valley, with head-
Chicago—Miriam Rubin, 8 year-old bers to ba appointed by the governor, way Executives will urge upon ev-
A mass meeting of the farmers of quurters at Medford.
victim of an illness which has baffled will become effective April 1.
ry railroad company a party to De-
the county was held at Baker Satur­
The personnel of the new fish com­ physicians Sunday slept silently for
elsinti No. 2; that no proposal for
day for the purpose of organizing the mission for Oregon mid the new étate an hour. The girl started talking more
the reduction ,.f haalc wages shall |1P
Immigration Bill Passes Congress.
wheat growers of the county into the game commission, as provided tor In than a week ago and Sunday was the
Washington—The senate bill limit­ made within the next succeeding nine­
Oregon Cooperative Grain Growers.
the segregation bills which were passed first time her conversation had ceased ing immigration from any European ty days. This wlt| afford an oppor­
tunity to gauge the economies which
Central Oregon’s first highway work it the recent session of the legislature tn more than 212 hours. After the nap,
country during the flfteeu-raonth can be aocompltsbed through more
of the spring season commenced near and which have been signed by Gov­ however, she began talking.
period beginning next April 1 to 3 efficient rules and working conditions.
Bend with the laying of concrete cul­ ernor Olcott, have been announced by
per cent of the number of persons.
It also will afford additional t n
verts on the Bend-Horse Ridge road, the governor. Members of the fish
Jail Sentences For Bootleggers.
born in that country, who were in the in which to realize the benefits of
recently authorized by the state cotn commission are: Frank M Warren,
Portland. Or—Fede ml Judge R. 8. United States iu 1910, was passed by rurthor decll»e in the cost of uV| K.
mission.
Portland, appointment tn June I. 1925; Sean announced from the bench that the house.
R»ll.f Imperative and Equitao«.
The Winchester hospital for the cure Christian F. Schmidt. Astoria, appoint- hereafter he would sentence to the I
The course which we aro neconl.
Of tuberculoid». which was originally j ment to June 1. 1924, Al H. Power», penitentiary persons convicted of vfo
Anti-Cigarette Bill Pa»«ed In, Idaho. -nffing is „ot only lmRra^ hut
proposed to establish at Winchester, Powers. Coos county, appointment to Inting the national prohibition laws.
Boise. Idaho.- The lower 'raise of
Doujjljs county, has Hied notice of di» June 1. 1923. The state game comm Is
The W.r Labor Board declared that
He made the declaration after he had the Idaho state legislature Mated the
loYution with the elate corporation
corporaTlon j »Ion personnel follows: State at large
he war period wa, an Intemgnum to
sentenced a man to three months in anti-cigarette lull by a vote of 33 to
,.‘.'er bv
»or em
commissioner
<i«orge II Kelly. Portland, five-year jail for Illicit manufacturing of liquor 19. The measure recently passed the
ployé» for the POTp<x'
Colts, calves and other livestock In term, game district No 1 (counties
bettering
senate.
”r impairing the positlo* •/g either,
tho Tops) vicinity of Klamath county, west of the Cascade mountains), I. Humptulips Flood Washes Out Tracks.
Tn. perpetuate as th»
rapidly
within
the
norma! rules
having disappeared
N. Flelsctaner, Portland, four year
Hoquiam. Wash.—The highest water
Nine Indictments in Bank CrasA
and
» » working
A» *" condition
tlio rail
last few weeks, W. L. Fra tn took the i term. Bert Anderson. Medford, two- in dour »ear» in the Humptulips river
Tacoma, Wash.—Th«» county grand reads, tho extrnordinnry provlsh, •<,
trail of a mountain lion and after Jour year term Game district No 2 (couti washed out the bed of the Northern jury, investigating th» failure of the tho war t>erlod Is a dMhict
vlolntlot,
ist ot the Cascade mountain»). Pacific railroad from undertmath Scandinsvlun Imerican bank, return­ of all promises, Th* war has
dava succeeded In killing It.
now
been
over
governor
of
New
Lynch.
Redmond,
thro»
year
r" M. C- Mechern
M A
mor(> ths» two years The
ed niu« Kite bills.
»boat 1000 feet of track.
tims
has
Mexico, has telegraphed Governor O! term; 1 Blaine Hallock, Baker, one-year
come when. |f ,h. railway
are to be efficiently and economical!)
cott that he will place before the term. Under tho new law», the Juri.-
Chamberlain Resumes HI* Seat.
Champ Clark Seriously |||.
operated.
’ceordance with the e-o
legislature of his state a resolution diction over commercial fishing and
Washington, D. C Senator Cham »
Washington--Champ Clark 0
»izior. Cf th. Teanzaortatlon act t
nistration ot
of affairs
affair: of
urging the people of the Southern c.im over the administration
-.1 eond.t.ons of ^pt.yXt
* •
he ria tn had sufficiently recovered erstic leader of the house, was i).
monwealth to participate In the world a the wlid genie life ot the state are com
’•mtn his recent Illness to appear upv, ed as dangerously HI by a physl
erkmg condition. mu.t be P„.arJ
exposition to be held in Portland iu pletely divorced and phi< od under two the floor ot the senate Saturday.
d incrMMd efficiency of labor
bulletin.
separate commission».
1925.
GERMAN OFFER FAILS
TO WIN HEARING
Auction Sale
AT 10 A.M
The following Personal Property-
38 Head oi High Producing Grade
Cows.
10 Heifers Ranging in age from 1 to
3 years old.
Several Hogs and Young Pigs.
1 Pure Bred Holstein Bull.
3 Head of Horses.
1 Wagon; Farm Machinery.
Kesponsible buyers desiring credit will be
able to make satisfactory arrangements with
representatives of one of the banks, who will
act as clerk.
Sale Will be Held at my Fann adjoin­
ing Tillamook City.
UNDER COVER IE IT RAINS.
COL. J. W. HUGHES,
Come and enjoy the day whether you buy or
Free lunch at noon.
F. R. BEALS
SECRETARY IS SILENT
ON JAPANESE TREATY
CHRISTIAN
REFORMED
M.
Pu»>
Suh.lw i
Hnndny
Ile »vorn»)
A Lent
Bunday s
worship 11
come
7 30
iV il
Goli
Communion and I
A. M
Blbl
ol at 10 tí
F K
ty at 6: 36
d
t
T
11
W
liar
thank
ìli
■ at
I tor
\ ed I
be Aposte»
30
lw r
nd I
pay you
Wl<
klndn
Ser-
nwn at 7;30.
»i it
cost, big
Card
M
L Tivker, Minister.
i
turns'the
Qlock
^Backward
Thursday H(ealth Talk No. 5)
(By F. L. Howard, D. C. PB, C.)
Among the so-called incu rable chronic diseases is as­
thma. Sufferers from asthma have come to look upon
their conditiin as somejfilng to be endured, rather than
conquered. The sufferer from asthma seldom dies in a n
attack, but the suffering I s agonizing.
The cause is a degree of li isplacement of joints of the
spine at the base of the n.-ck sufficient to cause pres­
sure on tlie spind nerves affecting the bronchial pass­
ages. The sufferer from asthma usually has a hump or
curve in the spine at the ba se of the neck, Chiroprac-
tic spinal adjustments res*ore the displaced joints
to
their proper alignment, thereby removing
nerve
pressure. Hundreds of asthmatic
sufferers have found this way the
road back to hearth.
CHIROPRACTIC:
CORRECTS
DIS£A5E3^THE FOLLOWING :
HEAD
EVES
CARS
NOSE
THROAT
ARMS
HEART
LUNGS
LIVER
STOMACH
PANCREAS
SPLEEN
KIDNEY J
BOWELS
ArPENOHI
ACT 'TODAY’
DELAY POSTPONES HEALTH
CONSULTATION IS WITHOUT
CHARGE OR OBLIGATION
Forest L. Howard
OOM
LOWER
LINK
CHiROPRACTOIL
31V-12 Tillamook Building
Phone 34-W
LOWER PHiCHEO
RVE5,IMP055IBU
TO FURNISH
PROPER IMPULSES
IFE ANO HEALTH
0 THEW0R4AH5
ANO TISSUES
REX
Wednesday, March
2 FEATURES
hing til 11
A
OleaMi
Getting Rid of the
Cause of Asthma
ill
na A lì d<‘ TÄ4H1.
Andrew A imyw # an j
Lewis Anderaon and f^auly
NO RAISE ÏN PRïfî