>■ « ‘RiLr Editortai Page of the Tillamook Headlight COMMENT iw'iìw ¿Vi u . tv< »1 / in>v7av’i tv, tt. > V/ J. WÍ>.'$V7Í Wtamoofc Spring seems to have a persuas- proach of the two trucks from differ­ i\ e effect in sprouting newspapers, for ent directions. Many cases are seen, Volume 1, Number 1 of The Capital however, of children taking great Review has reached our desk. chances with motor cars. They have Review is published weekly at been noticed to dare autoists by run­ seat of state government and ning directly in front of them, dodg- promised to make the two daily ing out of the way only in time to’pers of that town sit up and take escape being hit. Parental disci­ tice. pline, coupled with school instruction and warnings, should help greatly in eliminating this venturesome spir­ The geese are flying north, but a it in the younger children. few days ago snow was observed on the mountains in the south of the county, Which are you going to be- BAY CITY’S CHANCES FOR lieve ? PROSPERITY fttaùlisljt had left the pavement at the ap­ From Exchanges Big Concert i Ti resto n GIVEN UNDER "’HE AUSPICES OF THE MONDAY MUSICAL (LIB COMMUNITY CHORUS-30 vfH^S Mrs. F. D. Small____ Mr. E. E. Koch ......... Mr. Tom Coates......... Kiwanis Male Quartet Will Not Increase Prices on * Solid and Pneumatic Truck Tires Until May 1st I Never lyts Firestone been so well ■ted to five operators the greatest sure of Cushion, Traction apd Mils- at the lowest cost Today, economical manufacturing and distribution are showing the fullest re- Mdts. Our favorable purchases of rubber, I b advance of the 160% increase brought the British Crude Rubber Re- Act, aid further in maintaining IB old price levels. tever the Truck Service—the Firestone Dealer Has the Right Tire restooe developments of the past two s have made pace for the industry set new recordsAn sura, economical nee. Five tires—the Heavy Cushion, the Truck Type Cord, Mavt-CusMon, the Giant Sobd and High Typo—cover the aeods of or haulage in all its forms. Each distinct work which it doss beat, possesses a definite and special for the operator, Truck owners, using pneumatic tires, will find the answer to every demand of rapid, economical transportation in the Firestone Truck Type Cords with the tread that increases carrying capacity and improves trsetion, and the powerful gum-dipped carcass construction. FEATURES w men, employes and citizens generally ministered the serum. The Tillamook company lias been are forming an organization quietly Wa. leauing all others in drill attendance to combat breaking up and tieing up W wkiy Paper la Independent R for several months and it was evident the logging and sawmill industries Published Every Efiday By The from the start that memb< rs of the and may eject wobblies bodily. “•» leadlight Publishing Company, Inc., company would never relax until one On one logging railroad operating llamook, Oregon hundred per cent record in attendance trains on heavy grades the engines Managing Editor was made. Captain Shearer and the Were found without sand the past members of his company are doing week, and a sabboteering wobbly was . - Telephones the Alphonse and Gaston act, the found sleeping in the sand house see- Pacific States, Main 68 captain saying the company did it and rig lha. none got into supply boxes. Mutual Telephone the company disclaiming the credit He was arrested and deported, as and laying the lauiels at the door his efforts seemed directed at wreck­ as second class mail of the commanding officer. The vic­ ing trains and endangering lives of in the U.S. postoffice at tory can be equally distributed, how­ men who were members of the Four Oregon. ever, as bf>th elements contributed. L brotherhood, besides innocent com­ URI PTION RATES Captain Shearer found the w::y and mon laborers not in any union. $2.00 )M «MS, By Mail led. His company to a man followed. The lumber industry seems on an $1.00 B, By Mail ......... Bay City, after lying a number of assured basis of profitable operation C. C. Chapman, who edits the Ore- —Oregon Guardsman. $ .75 years in a more or less dormant state gon Voter, has worked himself into a iths. By Mail ..... + ♦ + for the next four or five years. High Payable in advance has received encouraging news of a terrible stew because A disgruntled, discontented, roving wages and good hours are the rule Governor number of industries that plan to es­ Pierce has removed, or may remove, class of our population alwigcs pick and employers are vieing with each ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ tablish in that place in the near fu­ some political barnacles from public the most prosperous time to spill other in housing their labor. ♦ ture. Sane public sentiment will settle office in this state. Friend Chapman their rotten propaganda. The condi­ OUR EDITORIAL POLICY ♦ It was a number of years ago that seems to forget that the positions he tions all over America today are good the wobblies.—Myrtle Point Ameri­ ♦ a community organization of Bay is fretting about are in the hands of There is plenty of work ar. 1 wages can. 1. To advocate, aid and sup- ♦ City threatened to move the county the Board of Control, of which there are on the advance. A question never ♦ ♦ ♦ port any measures that will ♦ court house from this city to the are three members. It takes at leasi answered is why don’t peopl? leave And there are thosd who are al­ bring the most good to the + bay. The idea was more or less two to cause a “removal.” the country if they don’t like it. Now ready talking about the coming poli­ ♦ scoffed at and subsequent events ap­ most .people. the ever undesirable class of 1. W. tical campaign. Most of us are glad 2. To encourage industries ♦ parently proved the scoffers right. W., members are pulling a strike. that the thing is still far distant from to establish in Tillamook ♦ Now, from some place, comes the A woman residing in the Willam­ This bunch is composed mostly of Ig­ actuality. — McMinnville News-Re­ ♦ brighter prospect. Bay City is in­ ette valley, who had been sent a fev norant foreigners led by a few smart porter. county. 3. To urge the improvement ♦ habited with a bunch of live peo­ choice specimens of the named ve­ ones who stay idle and get the mon­ ♦ ♦ ♦ of a port for Tillamook City. ♦ ple. We trust their optimism is not rities of dahlias by the Sunset garage ey. We sometimes think the laws are Lester Bowman, of Tillamook, coun 4. To insist on an American ♦ unwarranted and that they grow wrote to that concert here recently too kind, or the jury too easy, with ty, was home for the weekend.—Falls ♦ I and prosper. standard of labor. acknowledging receipt of the root • gj ■ “'roe oeeeh” and all< '’ ing the City news in l’olk County Itemizer. 5. To be politically indepen­ ♦ * + + and in her letter she said, “I have Red Card trouble makers so much dent, but to support the can­ ♦ T. P. Bevens, who is operating a planted ‘Leo XIII’ right near the liberty. The minute one of them gets didates for public office who ♦ PUBLIC SENTIMENT WILL CURE ‘Kaiser’, but set them both a long into serious trouble he looks to this I sawmill on his place near Airlie, was EVIL will bring the most good to ♦ country that he hates for p-oteetion in the city on business last Friday, v. ay off from ‘America.’ ” the .' people of Tillamook ♦ —and he gets it. Stop the J W. W lie reported that a few days before With the proposed “walkout” of county and of the State of ♦ agitators by nipping in the bud their one of his mill employees killed a ♦ the I. W. W.‘s set for next Thursday, Oregon. plans before they are put into action. porcupine that weighed 25 pounds. + Americans who have the good of —Vernonia Eagle. This is the first animal of this specie ♦ + + + + + ■>♦ * their country at heart should be on ♦ ♦ ♦ that has been known in this county It has been done. Many Company the alert to prevent any outlawery or commanders thought that the fe.it Western lumbercamps are said to for many years.—Polk County Item­ sabotage being perpetrated. FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1923 was impossible, Certainly we have be systematically invaded with im­ izer. * * * The mere act of leaving a job or | never heard of it being accomplished portations of I. W. W. agitators com­ Mr. and Mrs. Paul Skeels are leav­ “SAFETY FIRST” FOR SCHOOL striking in a body is not denied to before either in the Oregon National ing in on the brakebeant route from ? CHILDREN any organization of workmen, as long Guard or in the National Guard of eastern centers and concentrating on ing Corvallis for Dallas where Mr. the timber industry. Skeels is to be located in business. as it is done quietly and without un any other state. In one sawmill center as high as For the past year and a half he was Company K, 162d, Tillamook, went The move on foot to inculcate the necessary demonstration. This is ipirit of ‘safety first” into the minds free country and as long as any clas. over the top with a drill attendance fifteen organizers with red cards and manager of the grocery department >f the young school children is a or organization observes the law in March of one hundred per cent plus printed matter are making a house at Miller’s. Mrs. Skeels assisted in The enviable record just made had to house canvass of the workers, in­ the millinery shop of Mrs. Imogene nost laudable one, and, in view of they should not be molested. 1 recent tragedy, most timely,. Acts of violence or sabotage, how- been achieved through the agency of citing them to undertake a general Bath.—Corvallis-Gazette-Times. ♦ ♦ ♦ While the little fellow that was ever, should be punished severely, a “do or die” spirit with which all strike and shutdown. In the Coos Bay region business While the funeral procession of tilled a few days ago was entirely in and as a preventative for such things members of Company K have been vis rights as regards traffic rules, yet nothing is more efficient than public inoculated. Captain Jacob E. Shearer being the attending physician who ad- vis life would have been saved if he sentiment. » b : . 3 TILLAMOOK HEADLJGHT AY, APRIL 27,1923 Piano Violin Vocal Selection AT THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH MAY 4TH, 1923, 8P.M CHILDREN 15c ADULTS 25c TICKETS AT KOCH’S STORE Judge Holmes, who died suddenly’ at his home in Tillamook,, Saturday, was proceeding from Tillamook to Salem Tuesday where burial was to be, trouble developed with the motor of the hearse near Grand Ronde, and the undertaker, Mr. Henkle, called on his brother-in-law here, Fred Thomas, to come to his relief. Fred hastened to Grand Ronde with his hearse and the transfer was made. So much delay had resulted and with the time set for the services at Salem rapidly ap­ proaching, the procession was speed­ ed and the run made from Grand Ronde to Salem in an hour and three- quarters. The burial services at Sa­ lem were under the auspices of the Elks.—Sheridan Sun. ♦ ♦ ♦ Mr. and Mrs. Walter Nichols, of Tillamook, visited Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Frink Sunday.—Falls City news in Polk County Itemizer. ♦ ♦ ♦ fashion ♦ ♦ ♦ The Wabbegwanna club met at the home of Mrs. Merrill Smith with Mrs Aiderman as assistant hostess. A pleasant evening was had by all, fol­ lowed by a dainty lunch. Other members present were: Mesdames Ford, Hanslmair, Matthews, Oathout, Oathout, Shearer, Larson, Thomas, Keesee and Miss DeFord. * ♦ ♦ + + + + + + + + ♦ ♦ - + ♦ + ♦ 1 Beginning in this issue is a . ♦ 1 new feature added to our ever ■ ♦ 1 increasing up-to-the-minute ser- ♦ 1 vice. “Familiar Sights” by G. + B. Nunn has been running in ♦ The Wheeler Reporter for a ♦ number of years and during * that time have never grown ♦ old. Be sure to read them * each week. While short they ♦ are to the point and can easily be remembered and will cause many a smile. If for any reason you take offense at any of them do not hasten to this office in a belig- erant mood, but hop into a fliv­ ver and hunt up the author at Wheeler, chances are that you will be cooled off before you reach that fair city. Be sure to look for this department, clip them each week and file away they will make good reading some future time. +♦+♦♦♦♦+♦ ♦ ♦ + + To the Editor: Acknowldeging re­ ♦ ceipt of your paper of the 6th. + It is well known that your paper was ♦ founded on optimism and a determin­ ♦ ation to render a public service that ♦ really serves: it is fearless and ambi­ ♦ tious to do the right thing and al­ ♦ ways conscientious of its responsibili­ ♦ ty to the people as a whole. * It has always believed and preach­ ♦ ed the square deal for all and has ♦ been for the home city first, last and ♦ all the time. + It has always striven to imbue the + citizens with the spirit of progress­ ♦ iveness and to have fair play take the + place of greed. + It has always taken a leading part ♦ in making the home city a bigger, + brighter and busier city. ♦ It has done much to make its city ♦ better industrially, commercially and + morally and has at all times earnest­ + ly and unselfishly worked for the in­ + terests of every citizen. + E. R. WAITE, Secretary Shawnee, + Okla., Board of Commerce.—April + 14, 1923. + + OREGON INDUSTRIAL NEWS FAMILIAR SIGHTS B. Nunn, Editor Wheeler Reporter Cows. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Morris Leach ♦ ♦ Rollio Watson expounding ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Astoria $10,000 to be expended on new creamery at Astoria. Newberg—Ten year contracts with fruit growers to be offered by Ore- gon Canning Co. Machinery worth $65,000 shipped to Ashland to develop oil shale depos- its. Court House ♦ ♦ Cinders from the sawmill. Twenty men building the Lost Lake highway. Hubbard berry growers to have can nery. Let the Firestone Service Dealers Keep Your Trucks Moving There are 800 Firestone Service Deal­ ers, located in the principal trucking center«, fitted by natural ability and a thorough knowledge of trucking, to help you chooa* the right tire for your roads, loads and service. Price Protection