Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, September 21, 1923, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    f RIP
o SEPTEMBER 21. 1923
COMMENT
jiUamcoti l^fabhgtjt
Indviwad—
Pase»
Published Every Friday hy the
gH<Hight
Publishing
Company
Tillamook.
Oregon
4.
¡7^11 a rri—n.
Managing Editor
"¿tered a* second clan mail
Bitter in lhe l'Ä pootoffice at
ftllaxKX’k Oregon.___________________
BSCRIPT1ON RATES
Tear. By Mali
..... $ xm
dtt Month». By Mail ------------ 11.00
Months. By Mat-------- $ .75
Parable in advance
Tele phones
Pacific State«. Main 68
Mutual Telephone
♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦
♦ 01 R EDITORIAL POLICY
*
0
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
0
♦
0
♦
♦
♦
♦
I. Te advocate, aid and sup­
port any measures that will
bring ’.he most good to the
most people.
J. T encourage industries
to establish in Tillamook
county.
3. To urge the improvement
of a port for Tillamook City.
4. Tv insist on an American
standard of labor.
5. T be politically indepen­
dent. but to support the Can­
dids' s for public office who
will bring the moat good to
the
people of Tillamook
county and of the State of
Oregon
KKi.-kX
A
SEPTEMBER 31. 1923
11 I 1
PROCEEDI RE
movement against Wal-
rct is uncalled-for bit of
,t< by a number of asi-
uai» of small mental cal-
tender feelings have been
>unt of alleged acts of the
tar. or. :
mce he was installed in
gover:
off»1 ¡as : January.
The re real! is nothing more than the
reactions vf a bunch of political hacks
who, before Pierce's election, got him
to mas promisee which he was un­
able tc fu.fill and which they must
hav- Known in reason tat he would
sever be abie to carry out.
A re-under the Oregon law de­
pend- upon malfeasance in office and
wmt if these disgruntled politicians
may have a hard time proving this
tharg-.
The Headlight has many times fail­
ed to agree with Governor Pierce in
but is unable to see any
his politi
reasvr ir this for wishing his recall,
fcpposin: g Oregon’s governor has
Ba<i a failure of his job— we have
had wo se ones, and quite recently
at that
The recall petitions will tret very
httk ,1. -ort in this county for the
p«op.- I lore are too intelligent to fall
for such buncombe, and for that mat­
ter the movement will receive a de-
drive : rubbing all over the state.
Oreg-’ in pie will not support a recall
which wa- initiated in the spirit which
this is
The :
ser M
politic U
am» in«
game commission w arns
HUNTERS
Th- ate game commission is print
iag p,a ards warning hunters to be
caiefu
nen stalking deer. One of
the sii
recently posted in this
toon-; a - the following mighty good
•dvk.
”Mer Do Not Have Horns. Neither
Do Fen:
Deer. Never Puli a Trig-
You See The Homs.” State
ttt Un-
Gam- < >mmission.
Th.
ice is timely. Already re-
porti
axon's toll of numan life is
filter:n in from outside sections.
Two of -.nree men have been ki.led or
viur-
this season, and the season
aew a j->od deal of being over. A-
aotbe- cause of death or injury to
hunt. • 1 that inexperienced hunters
4re when they see brush moving in
th» woods. A man cannot well get
•rosn<; :n the woods without disturb-
,!'Z small brush, and the man who
Sres a’ moving brush, is either a fool
w ar ro ompetent hunter. The game
MNnission'l advice to "first see the
tarn? of the deer,” would if followed,
Pte»en‘ a lot of accidents and per­
taps human life.
According to the present law on
thi.‘ subject, a man who fires at or
•"Kin': a fellow man in the woods,
■istamng him for a deer, or other
«0*
oesides other penalties will
taw ms license revoked forever. In
«ther words, if he gets excited and
fuvs at a human being, he will never
ha»» another chance to hunt in the
•’■ate of ( iregon, and probably will be
TIIXAMOOK HEADLIGHT
Editorial Page of the Tillamook Headlight
blacklisted in other states by name
and description forwarded by the
Oregon authorities. F'ew old hunters
are guilty of mdiacrimmau* shooting.
The dangerous one is the inex­
perienced boy or over-eager young
man who is obsessed with the one
idea of getting game.
The brushy and densely wooded sec­
tions of the coast range are particul­
arly favorable to hunting accidents.
Two parties may be in the same
neighborhood, and each party is un­
conscious of the presence of the other,
hence, at times become careless. But
at all times, the hunter should heed
the warning:“Never pull the trigger
until you see the horns."
The plasterer and bricklayer are
uncrowned kings in their respective
positions. They have to be approach­
ed humbly, and most of them demand
the $15 to $18 per day that they
charge, to be paid in advance. It is
said that when a bricklayer or plast­
erer is off duty in the big cities, he
may easily be mistaken for a prince
or a coal oil king. Of course, these
tradesmen are supposed to work dor
their money, which is one thing in
their favor. There are men who do
not work for what they get, and they
have the bricklayer badly distanced.
There is brother Ford, whose income
is something like $1.000 per minute.
He doesn’t work with a trowel, either.
There are other fellows who don't
work They steal what the other man
makes, or they peddle bunko games
and bunk stock. They proceed along
the lines of the least resistance, and
use their wits to defraud, instead of
using their hands to work. After ail.
while the bricklayer and plasterer are
held up as an example of high wages,
they are at that a whole lot better
than a lot of the plug hat cormorants
who steal under the protection of the
law, and along alleged business lines,
what the workman makes by hard
toil, and in the category of workers,
are included the farmer, the ordinary­
business man, the laborer, clerk, and
a whole lot of men w*ho do the drudg­
ery of the business world.
tures of the same God who created
the Caucassian, and made him white
instead of brown or black. In due
time the races am exDected to get rid
of hate and greed and national prej­
udice, which is really an outgrowth
and extension of the old cave man
tribal prejudice, and then will come
the reign of the Brotherhood of man.
It will come, but through evolution:
and we must admit that evolution is
slow, and cannot be hurried, there­
fore let us be as charitable as pos­
sible, and do the best we can.
Canada is coming to the United
States. According to the statement
of a well informed Portland man in
Tillamook, last week, there are more
than forty thousand Canadians in
Portland alone. Instead of the Unit­
ed States furnishing • a large immi­
gration to Canada, the reverse is true.
Canadians are coming to the United
States in large numbers, and the num­
ber is yearly increasing.
One of the outstanding features of
the fair was the splendid cattle ex­
hibit presented.
Tillamook county
has reason to feel proud of the show­
ing made in that respect. All in all,
the fair was a success, and there was
a fine attendence from all over the
county.
When two fighters can divide up
close to a million dollars for a» hour’s
work in the ring, as in the case of
Dempsey and Firpo, the fighting game
would appear to be the nation's lead­
ing industry.
and if properly carried out at all times
produces a safe water suply. This
is purely a mechanical process and
consists of passing the water through
a scries of layers ot sand of varying
sixes from small granules to large
pebbles, the entire series being about
six feet thick. This process only re­
moves the dirt and solids. This meth­
od requires the construction of spec­
ial mechanical apparatus, and is ex­
pensive for the small community.
The third or chemical purification
consists of the addition to the water
of some chemical that destroys the
germ life, or practically all of it, but
is not harmful to the consumers of
the water. It is generally acknow­
ledged by scientific men that the
most satisfactory method of chemical
purification is by the process of
chlorination. That is by adding to the
water minute quantities of chlorine or
its compounds. This process has be­
come so general that it is now m use
in practically every city in the coun­
try, with one or two rare exceptions.
In the larger cities it is used in com­
bination with the method of storage
or Alteration. It has the advantage
of being inexpensive to install and
inexpensive to operate. It is a practi­
cal method for the small communities.
No community should depend en-
processes of obtaining pure water. At
some time or other there will occur
accidents to interrupt the continued
purity.
At such a moment there
should be available for instantaneous
purification.
HIS FATHER’S VOTE
SAVED THE STATE
Have you ever noticed that when a
In this city resides a man whose
bear story is told it relates about a
BIG bear ? Presumably all the mid- father played an important part in
die-sized ones and the little ones saving Oregon to the United States
in the early stages of Oregon's exis­
must keep out of sight.
tence, when the settlers were halting
between two opinions;— whether to
Tillamook needs a hundred houses organize its sparsely settled territory
for rent this winter. Who will build under the United States of whether
them 7
to become a province of great Britain.
From Exchanges
Uncle Sam., who has ever been
noted for his open hand, is just now
extending both his hands to the suff­
ering poor of Japan. Our Uncle Sam­
uel was first of all the nations to ten­
der aid to the victims of the recent
appalling calamity in Japan. While
there are many things in the Japan­
ese character that are not lovable, in
a time like this, it is well to hold the
dictum of the mind in abeyance, and
let the heart utter its tender message
of sorrow and compassion
The
masses of the Japanese are not to
blame for the attitude of the Japan
aae militarist party, and after all
they are human beings, and are eras
28 W
LAMB-SCHRADER CO
DON’T LET THE RAINY DAYS STOP YOLR
MOVING
THE CITY TRANSFER COMPANY
IS PREPARED TO SEND EXPERIENCED PACKERS TO
YOUR HOME WITH CANVAS TO COVER
ALL YOUR GOODS
jwMono i o i omo i cfttOMoix*^
COMING!
TO TILLAMOOK FOR ONE WEEK
Ind Real Service
AT THE
CITY HALL
♦ ♦ ♦
Tom Grenfall, who has just return­
ed from the coast, brought back with
him probobly the largest clam ever
taken into captivity. It weighed 4
3-4 pounds, and was still living after
he reached home. He had to call for
help to pull him out of the sand. Hon­
estly, that clam was so big that he
just nicely filled an ordinary shoe
box. Tom holds the clam record till
somebody breaks it, which we opine
won't be very soon. The capture was
made at Netarts.— McMinnville Tele­
phone Register.
♦ ♦ ♦
Lucier was persuaded by Matthieu
to vote for an American protectorate.
The elder Matthieu was a clerk in the
employ of the American Fur comp­
any at one time. He was barely over
21 years old when he cast his famous
vote. He was also a charter member
of the first Masonic lodge in Oregon—
Oregon City No. 1. He was later
made a past grand master of the
Oregon Masons, and was buried by
the grand lodge of this state. F. X.
Matthieu was born in Montreal, Can­
ada, in 1818, and died Feb. 14, 1914,
at the age of 97. He served in the
Oregon legislature in 187R-8, two
terms, and was the first constable el­
ected in Oregon, after it became a
territory, and served under Jo. Meek,
who was U. S. marshal.
A monument was erected at Cham­
poeg, upon which appears the name
of Matthieu and his fellow voters,
who saved Oregon to tbe United
States. When 97 years old, Matthieu
Our Motto: “Quick Service and Reasonable Rates.”
The survey of the proposed road to
the Tillamook country through the
Wilson River pass has been com­
pleted by Engineer Earl Hobbs. The
distance between Forest Grove and
Tillamook is about 57 miles. This
means a route between Portland and
Tillamook of 83 miles.— McMinn­
ville News Reporter.
Sheriff Ferguson took into custody
this week for the sheriff of Tillamook
county Tom Cook of this place, charg­
ed with being drunk in a public place,
and a man named Dugan charged
with driving an auto while intoxi­
cated.— McMinnville Telephone Reg­
ister.
Feeling was high when over a hun­ identified the spot at Champoeg, gon settlement. He was buried at
dred men of French Prairie met at where the historical vote was cast Butteville, not far from the scene of
Champoeg, on the banks of the Will­ which decided the destiny of the Ore- the voting.
amette river. The forces were about
evenly divided. Some were for organ­
izing under Great Britain, while oth­
ers were partial to the United States.
It was after much discussion that Jo.
Meek of Tuality plains, in what is
now Washington county, drew a line
in the earth with stick, and shouted:
“All who are for the United States,
follow me over this line.” When all
of those who were for the United
States were counted, it was found
that there were just fifty on each
side. At this juncture F. X. Matthieu
father of John F. Matthieu of this
city, and Etienne Lucier came up, and
when asked to vote, promptly stepped
over the line drawn by Meek, and all­
ied themselves with those voting for
the United States, thus giving a maj­
ority. Then followed the organization
of a territiorial government under
the protection of the United States.
Had Matthieu and Lucier voted the
other way, Oregon, would probably
have been English territory.
CALL US DAY OR NIGHT
THE DOWNWARD PATH
The spectacle of six young men en­
tering a car to be taken to the state
penitentiary last Friday morning
from this city, was not an inspiring
one.
It spoke a story of what a
wrong conception of life will do for
a young man. Two or three of the
number who were conveyed to the
state penal institution were hardened
young men. whose faces showed dis­
sipation and degem-racy. Just what
were the conditions that brought their
downfall, is hard to know. They may
have been reared in idleness, or they
may have been well reared, and yet
took the wrong path. When a boy gets
it in his head that the law is unneces-
saryjind that there should be no res­
frictions thrown about him in his tend
ency to live without work, to steal or
violate the law for the precarious
profit it brings, he is in a most dang­
erous condition of mind. Everything
depends upon the attitude of the
mind. If a man prefers the society
and ways of criminals and toughs, he
will soon arrive at the end of his
tethei, and sooner or later be one him
self. One of the saddest comment­
aries in the case of these convicted
young men, is the fact that they are
not only hurting themselves and soc­
iety, but they also are gneviousiy
wounding the mind and heart of some
good old mother, or father, who in
their old age, are humiliated and
shamed by the very ones they tried
to rear and nurture in the right way.
The young man who will persist in
bringing trouble to a go<x! old mother
or father, or to other law abiding re­
latives, must have a heart of stone.
The caravan of six boys going to the
penitentiary from this county is
enough to induce wayward boys and
girls to give pause, and take stock of
the trend of their lives. One road
leads to good citizenship and the re­
spect of one’s fellows; the other leads
to ruin and social oblivion. The sign
post warns of tbe forks in the road.
Young man, before you make the mis­
take of your life, take the right road.
FEATURES
THE BUNGALOW CAFE
BEGINNING MONDAY, SEPT. 24
HIZZ VAUD'VIL CO
s
i
G(X)I) SINGING, DANCING, MUSIC
CHARACTER IMPERSONA
TIONS AND FARCE
COMEDIES
MARRIED COUPLES FIRST NIGHT
FREE
protesi your house
pom the weather
ADMISSION: Children 10c; Adults 30c, including
tax
The oldest married couple attending show first
night will receive a prize worth $10.00
WATCH WATER SUPPLY,
SAYS THIS PHYSICIAN
.
1
—w
(By F. D. Stricker, M. D.)
At this season of the year when ♦
tourists, campers, hunters and fish­
ermen are roaming at large in every
nook and corner of the State the prob­
abilities of an otherwise reasonably
safe water shed tiecoming polluted are
greatly increased. It is therefore ad
visable that extra precautions be tak­
I was thinking
­
en to safeguard against a possible in­
terruption of the purity of your
carrying
our books and and
water.
if people
appreciated credit
There are three general methods of
and why
water purification: first, sedimenta-
tion or storage; second, f ¡iteration;
the
a
and third, chemical.
The method of storage is not safe
unless it be used in combination with
either chemical purification or Alter­
Then my next thought turned to
who
ation, It is uaed in exceptional in-
met
promptly and
stances where an ample lake or reser­
express
thanks to
voir removed from the access of hu­
man beings is available, and where
patrons, for
ef­
the water is practically free from
to
a smile.
solid mater. Harmful bacteria do not
multiply naturally in clean water,
and by keeping it stored for a period
of months before it is used a certain
amount of purification takes place.
The second method, that of filter
ation is fairly satisfactory method.
j fFT>T»T»TWIWI»I»T¥I¥lVft^^
s
ON MY WAY
TO THE STORE THIS MORNING
of the many past due credit ac
counts we were
on
I wondered
really
accommodations,
they always stood
grocer off when they were little short of
cash.
those
always
their bills
we take
this opportunity to
our
those
we know they appreciate our
forts
give service with
CONOVERS’ STORES
■*.
I t is the effect of rain, wind and sun
on the unpainted parts of a house that
“weathers” it —that makes it age and
decay. But when a house is well painted,
the tough, elastic “film” of paint shields
the surface like a rubber coat protects
a man.
All Fuller house paints and stains, Pure Prepared
Paint, Phoenix Pure Paint, Pioneer Shingle Stain,
and Concreta for stucco, brick and comrete sur­
faces, have high protective properties as well as or­
namental value. They are manufactured from for­
mulas that are the result of 74 years paint-making
experience. Fuller paint products give long, posi­
tive protection.
Get in touch with a master painter before tbe weath­
er causes your house to show signs of decay. Or
write to our Service Department for advice and a
copy of the free "Home Service” booklet. What­
ever your paindng need, W. P. Fuller & Co. makes
a paint for the purpose.
W • P FULLER & CO.
301 Mission Street, San Francisco
PAINTS
A. C. & H. ANDERSON
Nehalem, Oregon. _
1
VARNISHES
GEO. W. PHELPS.
Garibaldi, Oregon.
NELSON A CO Bay City, Or