Tillamook A Weekly Paper Published Thursday bv. the Every Leslie Harrison Editor Bentrioe I deadlight Publishing Company. Inc. Tillamook. Oregon Eves Heskett Health Lecture. Give« Both Telephones Entered as second-class matter tri the pobtortlce at Tillamook, Oregon. - ■ ' ■ Jll a - ' Subscription Rates One year ... Six months . Three months Payable in advance “Noma tter where they live there e a nearby U. S. Dealer with his nearby U. S. Factory Branch" WHERE IS THE TROUBLE ? The article appearing on another page of this paper regarding ’he. av erage income per cow in Tillamook county does not speak ho well for our dairy industry as it might. If these figures are true many <f our local dairymen do not make half a living from their herds, for the ordinary number of cows on a farm Is about ten. This would be a re numeration of something like |700 per year from these cattle, out of which amount must be paid ibe many expenses incidental to con- ducting a dairy farm. Whether it is the poor grade of livestock, the method of fettling and caring for them or the maTiuf.ictur : Ing and marketing of the cheese that causes the deficiency it is not for us to say, but in the face of these figures it appears that some thing should be done to impiove cun ditlons. THE U. S. CHAIN TREAD OST everybody knows the easy-going sort of man who never takes a tire seriously until gets a blow-out. How long he will resist universal tire education is a question. M But this is sure— It is the duty of every citizen o: Tillamook city to take in at least one of the three celebrations about the county this Fourth. More people are finding out every day that between leaving things to luck and getting real economy there is a big difference. The crime committed tills on the main road out of the county is an indication of what is possible in that line in this neck of the woods. It Isn’t so hard to turn a trick like that and get away with It as many think. In line with the policy of the Cad- i mean Chautauquas to Include in its i programs all matters of general in I terest to a community, Beatrice Eves Heskett has been secured for this year’s program. She is a Wellesley graduate whose educational work in The route to be traveled through the University of Nebraska and oth- - the state by the first trainload of er large schools and upon the Chau Hiitlers who are scheduled to arrive tauqua platform has placed her in the from the Middle West on July 21st front ranks of American women lor un inspection of the state's ag health advocates. Appearing in trim gymnasium cos- ricultural resources, was an-ioitnced by the Oregon State Chamber of tume for her Chautauqua address, Commerce today. she points out the need for physical The task of arranging ai ninor- training to be accomplished through . ry which v ould inc'.-de the rtpre recreation centers, public play sentative distircts of rh$ binte in grounds, graded and high schools, the limited time allowed under tho colleges, and in the home. She illus homesekers’ ticket, iwenty-oue days, trates some simple exercises and was an exceedingly difficult <:nv, ac shows how any man or woman or cording to Secretary Quayle. 1 he child may be kept in perfect health matter ha» been under advb.ement with a minimum of effort and ex since the Land Settlement C'onfnrenc pense. held In Portland June 7th, and ev ery effort has been made to r..ule the An American Legion h >me to cost party over the state in the most ef- I *125,000 will be ejected this sum fectlve way. according to Quayle. mer at The Dalles, Ore Many a car-owner has come to U. S. Tires because he couldn’t afford to keep on paying that difference. They pay a net price—not “some thing off list” that may net mean anything in the first place. he One of the few tires cf which it may be said the» they deliver economy veer in and year oct and tire after tire. The U. S. Chain Tread gives sufficient traction on all ordinary road sur faces. It is p.-cbably the handsomest, and by til odds the most popular, of il <- whole U.S. Rubric Tire line. » They get fresh, live tires, being made and shipped while this mes sage is being written. No matter where they live there’s a nearby U. S. Dealer with his nearby U. S. Factory Branch. U. S. Tires keep moving. No opportunity to get old and dried out. No shifting here and there trying to find a market. Every U. S. Tire a good tire, wherever you find it anywhere in the country. United States Tires are Good Tires Probably seven out of ten users of U. S. Tires came to them only after they’d had enough of “dis counts”, “bargain offers”, “clearance sales of surplus stocks” and other similar appeals. Because the U. S. policy is a good policy that serves the car-owner all the time. U. S. NOBBY TREAD They have found economy— and they stick to it. Doing the very best for him that human good faith can do. U.S. RED & GREYTUBES U. S. USCO TREAD U. S. CHAIN TREAD U. S. ROYAL CORD United States Tires United States Rubber Company Sunset Garage AVERAGES COUNT Life Is nothing bat n lot < f nv erages. Nobody _v :r had ev erything his ow i way. Instead of depln> |-./ luck of profit this last yeir lake a three or five year aver Ago. It will make you feel alci.ut cheerful again. I’ps and downs will r >ui", bu t a ’nationalized account here at th«- FI tb I N -m! will produce more ’ups' 'hart ‘d wns’ Home of ‘Nationalized A-counts." DIRECTORS Jolin Morgan W. J. Illecbera. A. W. Bunn B. C. Lamb. Henry Rogers C. J. Edwards. C. A. McGhee ■ ■ L ■* - — _--y ^L1 7- 1 '/ 3 The first National Bank i Transfer Wood Gravel TRANSFER Phone 37W Tillamook Transfer Co. Liberty Temple. COAL • CENEMT • LIME 28 W LAMB-SCHRADER CO COMMUNICATION Watts, Cal., June 14, 1921. To the Editor: In your Juni 2nd paper you mention that Oregon will gain a Congressman. I cihirn that there should be only one house of Congress: I mean that the U. S. Sen ate should be abolished. Also that the number of congressmen should be decreased to 100 and that they should be elected at large. About the “Pensions may be paid monthly” article, I would say i hut is needless expense, The pension is an income, Only a few incunea arc paid even as often as quarterly. Banks usually puy every six mon'Its or annually, Much better ¿o eave the expense that the mon'hly payment of pensions will cause a» a small help toward raising a fund for old age pensioners. The soldiers i.f the civil war are mostly unde- SO years of age. young men compared I to about 50,000 persons in the IT 8. j past 90 years of age who are get- ting no penslon. Boost for old age pensions. THOMAS H CORD VIER Members of the Kings county. New York American Legion posts will visit ‘he grave of Col. Trrodore Roosevelt at Oyster Bay July 4 to deposit a memorial wreath ani c< n- duct a brief service. “The super-slacker of the Ur ¡to,I States.” as he describes himself is being sought by federal auth-i-Mes aided by members of the American Legion throughout the N- ,-i He has written to Governor Hart if Washington, requesting fht.t name be placed at the top if slacker list. He wrote that he P. E. Saylor, of Genessee, Idiho, although he successfully dodged draft by moving to another city assuming another name, he has Joyed all the glori.*« of a retururd A. E. F. hero through the p.irrh.ibe of n soldier’s dlschTge anil »evF-rjl war medals.. And yon onsht to hear me tell the girls of all the bat tles I was in. he writ»« TEMPTING, tasty and rich in nutrition, O lympic Wheat Hearts make a cer eal both appetizing and satisfying. Of creamy whiteness this ‘‘meat of the wheat” fulfills the requirements of breakfast or luncheon efficiently and economically; adaptable for many goodies ’tween times, too. The OLy MPIC Line :ncludcs i pc. Iced, wrapped and sealed. A t Y our G rocbrs A long W ith O lympic F lou » pancake flou « WHEAT HEARTS F A R I N * CAKE ANO PASTRY FLOU« BUCKWHEAT FLOH« HEALTH BR«» WHITE CO»« «T*1 TELLO* COBT «UL ROLLE 0 OATS STEEL CUT OATS WHEAT FLAKES The Headlight for Good Job Printing