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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (March 10, 1921)
A shipment of 1500 coyotes and lynx THEODORE ROOSEVELT pelts, consigned to eastern markets, was sent from Bend last week. The lot, representing a majority of the catches made in central Oregon this winter, is valued at approximately *10,- Accusations Based on Accept Principal Events of the Week 000. Clackamas county is to have one of ance of Position as Base* Briefly Sketched for Infor the biggest road convention la its listory on March 1 and 8, when all ball Arbiter. mation of Our Readers. of the road foremen of the county will ueti w-ij the members of the cour.iy Washington.—Federal Judge Kene The formation of a national guard court and outline the program for the saw Mountain Landis of Chicago was company has been undertaken at Rose coming year. • Impeached In the house of representa burg. Corn and poirtry shows, the 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 of the posi The Lacomb oil well is down 840 county federation of comoiunity clubs. tion of supreme arbiter of baseball at feet and stockholders are optimistic Fifteen of the 22. clubs in the county a salary of *42,500 a year. as to final rsults. were represented. Should the house decide to institute Percy A. Stevens post of the Ameri- 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 charges, a employment agency. by Sheriff Roberts, i after the copper formal trial before the bar of the Plans for a new building to be built boilers and worms I had been so house would be held and a decision Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., who will be by the Sons of Norway lodge of Bend thoroughly chopped up as to make rendered. assistant secretary of the navy under further use in the manufacture of were begun last week. Mr. Welty did not Introduce a reso the Harding administration. The Hood River county court has In liquor impossible. lution proposing Impeachment, as Is An attack on the i new law empow- the usual procedure in such matters. creased the salary of the fruit In spector to *2500 a year. 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 been received and placed in operation until approximately *77,000 said to be nounced that he "impeached" the due the state has been paid from judge. by the Bend postofftce. 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 rounty commissioners. on Mr. Welty’s motion, were referred London. — Germany, through her Governor Olcott vetoed * bill passed to the judiciary committee for investi *580,711.23 to *688,649.30. delegates to the conference with the Scarlet fever and measles have at the recent session of the legislature gation and report. allies here, made reparation offers of reached the epidemic stage in several providing that the state, cities, coun- There were a few scattering nove. approximately thirty billion gold ties and school districts should be sections of Douglas county. marks, or about *7,500,000,000. The wool and mohair growers of exempted from paying royalty on rock, Senator Would Impeach Judge Landis. It was understood outside the Lane county met at Eugene and or sand and gravel taken from the beds Washington.—Impeachment proceed ference that after Dr. Simons, of navigable streams in Oregon. ganized a cooperative association. ings against Judge K. M. Landis of German foreign minister, had finish The state irrigation securities com- A revised estimate of the principal Chicago were threatened in the sen ed his statement on reparations to the 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 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 trict bonds. tistician of the United States bureau to Chicago for the facts In the case in that unless the Germans had some The Clatskanie kraut plant, owned of crop estimates. Mr. Kent’s report which Judge Landis is alleged to have thing more to offer than appeared on by the Oregon Packing company, has shows the total value of the field and discharged a youth who was charged Dr. Simons’ statement, there was no Closed the season with a total output fruit crops to have been *121.973,549. with stealing money after the youth need of continuing the conference. of 800 tons. The Hammond Lumber company's had testified that his salary was but ?>!r. 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 foreign minister: Including some special taxes voted by night and part of Saturday, while more are true I shall seek the Impeachment “If the written proposals are of the several road districts, amounts to al i than 400 men of the mill crew search- of Judge Landis,” Senator Dial said. same genera! character as the expla most *200,000. | ed for two boys, Doyle Morgan, aged nation of them, it isn't worth while for A 25-foot section of the pavement on 11, and Marcus Monge, aged 13. who us to read them. You have a com the Columbia highway, juet west of were lost in the forest, south of the plete lack of comprehension of the Clatskanie, was carried away Sun mill. position of the allies ami your own day by a slide. Senator McNary haB notified the position." Albert Peterson, government trap state highway department that he has per at Ukiah, in Umatilla county, re I obtained passage of a bill by the sen BRIEF CLNLFAL NEWS ports a month’s catch of 19 coyotes ate authorizing the secretary of war Washington.—The letter of Secre and three bobcats. tary Colby declining to transmit in to grant an easement over the Celilo Governor Thomas E. Campbell, of Raymond B. Eshelinan, former flax canal property In Wasco county for formation on the negotiations conduct expert at the Oregon state peniten the right of way required for the ed with the view to treaty action with Arizona, has signed the anti-alien land tiary, died at Salem hospital after un Columbia river highway between The Japan was received without comment law. Since January 1 sleeping sickness Illness of Hevera) weeks. by the senate foreign relations com Dalles and the Deschutes river. has attacked 247 persons In New York, Fire, caused by the explosion ot Due to cessation of construction mittee. The letter was in reply to a hot paraffine, gutted the Interior of work In June, 1920, on the Jordan val communication of the committee, for 64 of whom have died. Herbert Hoover lias accepted Presi the Willamette Valley Telephone coin ley irrigation project, the desert land i warded at the instance of Senator dent-elect Harding’s offer of the cab puny’s office at Falls City. board has decided to cancel the con Johnson of California, requesting in inet post of secretary of commerce. The Pacific Power & Light company tract existing between the state and formation on the subject. Fishing on Sunday would be punish has asked permission of the public the Jordan Valley Land & Water com Secretary Colby Bald In his letter service commission to increase gas pany of Boise, Idaho, unless arrange- [ that the record of the negotiations able by a fine of *50 under a bill in rates and street car fares in Astoria. ments are made immediately whereby was practically that of a preliminary troduced in the Arkansas legislature. Regular 36-hour service on trauseon. Hurry Wilson, a laborer of Eugene, construction operations will be resum comparison of views, coupled with tinental air mail, beginning May 1, has left for his old home in Boston, ed. recommendations still the subject of was announced by postal authorities. Mass., declaring hla intention of walk There were four fatalities in Oregon examination." Eleven auxiliary police were killed ing the entire distance from coast to iuo to individual accidents, in the ' “Substantial progress In a Sinn Fcfn ambush at Macroom,. coast. toward an ultimate agreement," Mr. week ended February 24, according to The taxpayers of Astoria school dis the report of the state industrial ac- | Colby added, "through Informal con- County Cork, Ireland, it was officially trict voted on the question of authoriz oiilent commission. The victims were: versatlrns conducted by Roland S. announced. John Stevenson, supreme represen ing an indebtedness of *75,OOP for the John M. McCue, logger. Cottage Grove; Morris, ambassador to Japan, and Bar tative of the Knights of Pythias and building of an annex to the high school Martin Crause, donkey engineer, Port- i on Shidehara, Japanese ambassador.*' past grand chancellor of the order,, building. land; Charles R. Phillips, laborer, Pow j died at his home in New York. A new engine lias been purchased ers, and Tony Creek, edgennan, Glen In addition to the 50,000 acre« of by the Hoed River fire department nt wood. A total of 358 accidents were timber acquired a few mqnths ago in a cost of *13,000, and a new fire hall reported. Elmer Smith, From Centralia, Refused Cowlitz and Lewis counties. Washing costing *35,000 has been finished and Permission to Speak. The Durkee and Bridgeport irriga ton, the Long-Bell company has pur •quipped. tion districts have forwarded to the Raymond, Waifi.—Elmer Smith, chased 2500 acres for a townsfte. John McCue, nil expert logger em- state engineer for approval plans for radical speaker, was prevented from Approximately *350,000 will be paid ployed by the Western Export X- Log the construction of the Burnt river speaking at an advertised meeting to war veterans in Oregon by the state ging company near Cottage Grove, was reservoir In Buker county. The dis which was to be held here Sunday of Washington this spring, through lnatantly killed when he vat struck by tricts propose Io construct Jointly the afternoon at the Arcadia hall. the operation of the Washington state n falling tree. reservoir for the storage of 5100 acre City officials and leading members bonus act. More than *250,000 will I The annual report of iho Mount feet of the waters of Burnt river for of the Raymond post of the American Angel Creamery company shows that a supplemental supply for the irriga Legion met Smith at the station when be paid to men who now reside in during the last 1! months total sides tlon of <198 acres of land within the he arrived from Centralia. As he got Portland. ■ mounted to *194,000 and *164.000 was two districts. off the train he was told of the useless Washington Code Upheld. paid to patron* for butterfat. The conferees on i th« agricultural ness of his attempt to apeak. Mayor Olympia, Wash.—The state supreme With ’the exception of measures appropriation bill i allowed three strict- Lawler, at a special meeting of the carrying emergency clauses, all bill* ly Oregon items, put in by Senator city commission Saturday issued a court, by a five to four decision held the civil administrative code, recently passed at the recent session of the McNary, to stand. with a little reduc- proclamation prohibiting the speech. passed by the legislature, not subject legislature und signed by the governor (Ion in two cases, i. An appropriation Smith insisted on going to the build to referendum, and denied application will become operative on May 25. ol if *15.000 to fight the pine beetle in ing. When Smith arrived at the Ar for a writ of mandate to compel the Farm bureau representatives from the forests of Klanlath county was cadia hall City Marshal Pederson secretary of state to receive referen ail pHrta of the state have been at ngreed to, along with *15,000 for the would not let him enter. dum petitions. The code, which re work the past week obtaining mem irrigation experiment station at Herm organizes the entire state government ber* among the fanners of Columbia iston and ,9000 for a frost service in Giri Talks Over Week. and provides a cabinet of ten mem county. A total of 456 was signe I the Rogue river valley, with head Chicago.—Miriam Rubin. 8 year-old bers to be appointed by the governor, A mass meeting of the farmer* of quarters at Medford. victim of an illness which has baffled will become effective April 1. the county was held at Baker Satur The personnel of the new fish physicians Sunday slept silently for day for the purpose of organizing the mission for Oregon and the new an hour. The girl started talking more Immigration Bill Passes Congress. wheat grower* of the county Into the game commission, as provided tor in than a week ago and Sunday whs the Washington.—' The senate bill limit- Oregon Cooperative Grain Growers. the ségrégation bill« which were passed first time her conversation had ceased ing immigration i from uny European Central Oregon’s first hlghwsy work it the recent session of the legislature tn more thnn 212 hours. After the nap, country during the ftfteen-month of the spring season commenced near and which have been signed by Gov however, she began talking. period beginning next April 1 to 3 Bend with the laying of concrete cul ernor Olcott, have been announced by per cent of the number of persons. verts on the Bend-Horse Ridge road, the governor. Member* of the fish Jail Sentences For Bootleggers. born in that country, who were in the recently authorised by the Mate coin commission are: Frank M Warren. Portland. Or—-Federal Judge R. S United States in 1910, was passed by mission. Portland, appointment to June 1. 1925; Bean anuounced from the bench that the house. The Winchester hospital for the cure Christian F Schmidt, Astoria, appoint hereafter he would sentence to the of tuberculosis, which was originally ment to June I, 1924; Al H Power*. penitentiary persons convicted of vlo Anti-Cigarette Bill Passed In, Idaho. proposed to establish at Winchester, Powers. Coos county, appointment to lating the national prohibition laws. Boise, Idaho—The lower ’«>use of »» county, has filed notice of ill* June 1. 1923. The state game commis He made the declaration after he had the Idaho state legislature passed the » with the state corporation sion personnel follows State at large sentenced a man to three months in anti-cigarette tall by a vote of 33 to commissioner. George H Kelly, Portland, five-year Jail for illicit manufacturing of liquor 19. The meaiwre recently passed the Colts, calves and other livestock In term; game district No 1 (counties senate. ths Topsy vicinity of Klamath county, west of the Cascade mountains), 1. Humptulips Flood Washes Out Tracks. having disappeared rapidly within the N Flelschner, Portland, four year Hoquiam. Wash.—The highest water Nine Indictments in Bank Crack last few weeks. W L. Fraln took the form; llert Anderson. Medford, two- in dour years In the Humptulips river Tacoma. Wash.—The* county »grand trail of a mountain lion and after Jour year term Game district No. 2 (coun washed out the bed of the Northern jury, investigating the failure of the rtnys succeeded In killing ft. ties east of the Cascade mountains), Pa.tftc railroad from undenntath Scandin»vian Vmerican bank, return M. C. Mecheni governor of Nev M. A. Lynch. Redmond, thru* year about 1009 feet of track. e<l nino true bills. ■Mexico, lias telegraphed Governor Ol term; Blaine llallock. Baker, onwyear cott that he will place before the term. Under the new laws, the juris Champ Clark Seriously |||. legislature of his state a resolution diction over commercial fishing and Washington.—Champ Clark item-' urging the people of thefeouthern cuiu over the administration of affairs of eraiic leader ef the house, was describ monwealth to participate In the worltf * the wild g.-me life of the state are com ed as dangerously III b> a phjBiciuaî. ax position to be held in Portland tn pletrly divert ed and plat ed under twu bulletin. separate commissions. 1925. Auction Sale WOULD SAVE $300,000,00 Urging emergency action by the 1 United States Railroad Labor Board to end "gross waste and inefficiency prevailing under present working rules and conditions, General W. W. Atter bury, vice president of the Pennsyl vania rallroud, In a statement to the board In session at Chicago said |D part: Many railroads are not now earning, and with present operating costs and traffic have no prospect of earning, even their bare operating expenses, leaving them without any net return and unable to meet their fixed charges. The emergency presented can be met either by an advance In freight and passenger rates, or by a reduction In operating expenses. With declining prices and wages In Industry and agriculture, the country demands that the solvency of the rail roads must be assured by a reduction In operating expenses, and not by a further advance of rates. The National Agreements, rules and working conditions forced on the rail roads us war mensures cause gross waste anif Inefficiency. Would Save *300,000,000 I estimate-that the elimination of this waste would reduce railway op erating expenses nt least *300,000,C-JO. It would be for better to save this sum by restoring conditions of efficient mid economical operation than to reduce wages. We believe that ns the wages of rail road employees were the last to go up they should also be the last to come down, but we do Insist that for an am ple wage an honest day’s work shall be given. The public has the right to Insist that this must he obtained. The public has also the right to ex pect that the railway executives, with the co-operation of the regulatory bodies rind the employees, will as rap idly as possible reduce the cost of rail way operation so as to insure eventual- ly a reduction In rates. Ultimately n readjustment of basic wages will bo required. .Meantime It Is to the inter ests of nil concerned, Including labor, that the rules and working conditions shall he matih conducive tn the highest efficiency In .witptit per man. Losses In Income Irreparable When wages have been too low the harm done hn» been offset by retroac tive increases. IzHses of railway net operating Income nre Irreparable. You cannot make retroactive tomorrow the savings Hint should have been made today. The board cannot possibly write the rules and work’ng roadltions of every railroad In this cwmtry and adjust them equitably tn varying geograph ical, operating and.«octal conditions. It rests entirely with the board to determine whether this whole situa tion shall drift into chaos, and or derly procedure become Impossible ex cept at the price of railroad bank ruptcy. financial stioejt «nd still wider unemployment. The Labor Board’ can prevent this catastrophe by declaring that the Na tional agreements, rules and working conditions coming over from the war period are terminated at once; that the question of reasonable and eco- nomlcnl rules and working conditions shall be remanded to negotiations be tween each carrier and Its own em ployees : and that as the basis for such negotiations, the agreements, rules and working conditions In effect on en< h mllmad a*, of December, 31, 1917 shall be ro-estahifshed. If the board will do this, the Labor Committee of th» Association of Rail way Executives will urgP upon ev. ry mllmad company a party to De ■ Bion No. 2. thflt no proposal for i ho reduction of haste wages shall be mmle within the-next succeeding nine ty days. This win afford an oppor- tunity to th© economies which can be aocompHshed through more efficient mlns and working conditions It also will afford additional tjne In which to realize the benefits of a further decline In the cost of Hvl:«. »silsf Impsr.tlve and Equit.m, Whlrh w,‘ The War Labor Board deek,m<l that the war period wa8 an interregnum, to he used neither by employ,» nor em l*»m for the purpose hetterfllg or inquiring the position of either Tn perpetuate as th» IM3rniil, n,!p„ and working conditio»» „ Itl(1 ,, ma<K the extraordlnaty provision, f T.ll“nr,,,‘r';X’ ” " "f «11 promises, The M.„r M*n over more thru two }e.,r, Thr Responsible buyers desiririx credit will be able to make satisfactory aFX3ngements with representatives of one of the banks, who will act as clerk. Sale Will be Heid at my Farm adjoin ing Tillamook City. UNDER COVER IF IT RAINS. COL. J. W. HUGHES, Come and enjoy the day whether you buy or not. Free lunch at noon. F. R. BEALS. Getting Rid of the Cause of Asthma Thursday H(ealth Talk Noc-5) Among the so-called ineu rable chronic diseases is as thma. Sufferers from asthma have come to look upon their condltiin as something to be endured, rather than conquered. The sufferer Iront asthma seldom dies in a:) attack, but the suffering Is agonizing. The cause is a disgree of d isplacement of Joints of the spine at the base of the neck sufficient to cause pres sure on the spinal nerves affecting the bronchial pass ages. The sufferer from asthma usually has a hump or curve in the spine at the base of the neck, Chiroprac- tic spinal adjustments restore the displaced Joints io their proper alignment, thereby removing the nerve pressure. Hundreds of asthmatic sufferers have found this way the road back to health. CHIROPRACTIC CORRECTS DISCAStSym ACT TODAY DELAY POSTPONES HEALTH CONSULTATION IS WITHOUT CHARGE 'OR OBLIGATION Forest L. Howard CHIROPRACTOR. 31V4.2 Tillamook Building Xfl ^ LOW£R LOWER PtNiHED KtVE5,IMP055IBU TO FURNISH PROPER IMPULSES iLIFE AHO HEALTH TO THEBORMW L ANI> TI55UE5. , H ealth - Visóff be effc sntiy and economical'^ perated. m accordance with the a.-n v...... of the Transportation mal condition« of employment amt c’ '•crk.ng conditions must be rjstor- vnd mcroMH efficiency labop 2 FEATURES NO RAISE ïN ÈWfJ II.adii*»’ Claaaifled st, big result«. Ads-«m«ll following