Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, January 25, 1924, Page 3, Image 3

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    AY, JANUARY 25, 1924
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TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT
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Editorial Page of the Tillamook Headlight
11^ guerilla tactics. Why not come out your federal income tax, get ready
in the open and lay their cards on the for the knock on the door, when the
Weekly
Paper table like good American citizens, state income tax steps up on the
»pendent
led Every Friday by the
and place their case honestly before porch.
Company the county court, instead of hiring
Publishing
About 8,000 school teachers of the
usurai fu xmie n, puas>Ì»»oti»
key­ slate wilt have to plume up state tax
this year. Many persons who are ex-
Editor hole sleuths?
empt from the federal tax income
The
fact
that
the
county
court
is
Manager
standing by the taxpayers in seek­ law, will be liable under the state
second class mail ing to get an honest re-cruise of the law, so it will be in order for most
r-
■R
in the U. S. postoffice at timber of the county should enlist everybody who has money or proper­
r*
Oregon.
every honest taxpayer in their cause. ty to take an inventory, and become
The Headlight believes in the IN­ acquainted with the demands of the
8UBS< RIPTION RATES
TEGRITY of the county court. It be­ new law. While it had a hard time
ie Year, By Mail .................... $2.00 lieves that the court is on the side getting into the ring, it doubtless is
9 » <( MtartAs, By Mail ................ $1.00 of the taxpayer, and that it is trying here to stay, provded some body
ree Moni I
By Mail ............ $...75 to work for the best interests of the doesn’t find a flaw in it’s make up.
] Payable in advance
county. The timber interests have
initiated the fight. It has been done
Telephones
The work of helping the starving
in a cowardly, sneaking manner, and children of devasted Germany, is a
Pacific States, Main 68
the matter, the Headlight proposes commendable one. The war is over,
♦ in accordance with it’s convictions in and with it should vanish hatred and
* to stand by the court and county in­ unfriendly feeling. The efforts of
DITORIAL POLICY ♦ terests, rather than those of men the French to extract the last “ounce
♦ whose official residence may be traced of flesh,” and to bleed a country to
vocate aid and sup- ♦ to luxurious offices in the Flatiron death, is not the act of a civilized
y measures that will * building or other apartments in New nation. In war the United States
le most good to the ♦ York city, or other eastern cities, was against Germany, but now the
♦ leaving the dirty tactics of evading two nations are at peace, and contin­
I (i 2. To encourage industries « legitimate taxation in the hands of ued hate gets no nation or individual
to establish in Tillamook ♦ tools, who for a consideration do the anywhere. The children of Germany
♦ swamping and spittoon work for were not to blame for what the war
county.
3. To urge the improvement ♦ their bosses.
lords did, and it is an act of human­
of a bort for Tillamook City. ♦
Not only is there an effort to dis- ity to help to keep them from starv­
4. Tolinsist on an American, ♦ credit the county court, but there is ing. It it was humane to succor de­
♦ also a vile plot to make it appear vastated Japan, what about a coun­
standard of labor.
5. To|[be politically indepen­ ♦ that Tillamook county is bankrupt, try whose blood is so largely infused
dent, but to support the can- ♦ which is locally known to be a lie of in the population of the United
>pn didat^t for public office who ♦ the vilest sort. Taxpayer, citizen, get States ?
1
will Bring the most good to ♦ your eyes open, and resent this con­
the «people of
Tillamook ♦ temptible scheme to discredit your
The dispatches tell us that Calif­
fegfl eotgH and of the State of * officers, and to put your county in
ornia is praying for rain. We Ore­
♦ the bankrupt column!
gonians might give them a few
♦
The Headlight is casting no asper­
♦ sions on honest timbermen who say showers and never miss them, but for
some inscrutable reason best known
they are not concerned in this dirty
FRIDAY JANUARY 25, 1924
to himself, Jupiter Pluvius is partial
scheme to blackmail the county. Sev­
UI.TS
to Oregon. Maybe Jupe has heard
eral
of
them
have
placed
themselves
iRGE^^^
on record as not being in any way how in the past Californians used to '
Y 0* VRRULES DEMURRER concerned
tell a story on the Webfeet that it
in the present scheme to
rained
thirteen months out of each
mouk ■
discredit the county court, or to evade
year, up here, and that ever since,
ity won a trick in the game their just responsibilities as taxpay­
the rain god has been trying to make
=■ HillatXc ........... — ---------
„
ro last week, when Judge
ers.
the lie good for California. But of
fsififfSkigley overruled the demur-
With these men the Headlight has course he has failed. Most of the
""^^^^■county's answer in the mat- no quarrel. Neither should the peo­
Californians like to come up here '
B injunction brought by the ple have. These men have civic pride.
each summer to get a good drink of
rests to stop payment by They pay their taxes without cavil,
water, and they have also taken a
of warrants issued to M. and are willing to pay on an honest
great liking to our beach resorts.
for • partial re-cruise of cruise. They realize that they are
And
they know a good thing when
The a part of the county, and do not do
y timber tracts,
they see it.
olved is $10,000.
business through a board of directors
ney, the man who caused in New York city. Such men are en­
——ion to be filed, it is said, titled to respect and the confidence
Figuring on the number of out of
tot arnnber owner in this county, of the people, but those other fel­ the state automobiles that came to
far 'as records show, and just lows—
Oregon last year, Sam Kozer, secre­
>m he represents in the matter is
They do not care whether Tilla­ tary of state, believes that the number
lysteryl which will later come out. mook is painted black, green or blue. of visiting automobiles to Oregon
dentlyAe is a hired man of some They want to escape JUST TAXA­ this year will run from 750,000 to 1,-
’-ike Some other very much in- TION, and they don’t give a tinker’s 000,000.
Automobiles entering the
w^° a^ect a dam how they do it. Hence, they set state are presumed to register when
at interests in the county’s wel- their yapping pack of swampers on they come in, but Mr. Kozer states
OU -> hut who seem zealously devoted the trail of the county court, and that last year not more than half of
■jgl the tinker interests nevertheless. burn Greek fire, and raise a big the persons driving such vehicles ob­
nffiBtof the ru,ing ^y Judge smoke screen—anything to fog and tained visitors permits. In addition
put the next legal move becloud the issue, and get the tax­ to the number of state visitors to the
nber interests.
payers SUSPICIOUS. The better Tillamook coast during the summer
lie are wondering just class of business men of the county months, it is believed that fully half
y’s interests are in the do not believe the silly drivel of the of the out of the state visitors will
who is Kinney? At the hired press agent, or the slyly mal- also come to our beaches. A short
ssion of circuit court he icous whisperings of the keyhole and route from Portland to the Tillamook
and was represented by pussyfoot sleuth, who intimates the beaches has become a necessity; and
No one here up to date worst but is careful not to make any when the Roosevelt highway is fin­
for Kinney as a timber DIRECT charges.
ished, we just will have to have it.
he county, and for that
The Headlight is in the fight to Better get it going, while the sled­
, there is wonderment as stay. It stands for the integrity of ding is good.
st in the case, when he the county, and resents the lying
as no timber at stake. statements about its financial bank­
Questionaires are being sent out
a growing suspicion ruptcy. It will attempt to UNMASK
a stool-pigeon, and a some of the real conspirators, and to the district foresters in the states
ho is taking orders from show them up for what they are. In of Washington, and Oregon and Idaho
for reasons best known its work it will ask the support of all by the government to ascertain sta­
tistics concerning the production of
s are hiding,behind the honest citizens.
lumber. In 1921 Washington led in
heir woula-be champion,
the production of lumber, and Oregon
y be asked in the same
was second and Louisiana third. For­
A
big
airship
manned
by
United
are certain individuals
est officials incline to the opinon that
States
officers
and
men
is
scheduled
and formenting the
Washngton will maintain ts lead,
n investigation of the to start to discover a new continent
with Oregon a close second, but that
? Why are these men somewhere up near the North pole
this state will show a big increase
terested, and whom do early this year. It is believed that
in production is also certain, The sur-
nt ? The whole plan a great continent really exists north
vey is made every two years, and sev­
to stir up a big smoke, of the northern shores of Alaska,
eral months will elapse after the
e taxpayers and the pub- and the United States has built a big
questionaires are in, before the re­
to
seek
it.
Stefansen,
the
|
a.rship
r suspicious by myster-
sult of the survey will be known.
ooting, wagging of the Artic explorer, believes that such a
country
exists,
and
it
was
originally
articles sent to the state
ting much, but positive- peopled over a five hundred years
Since coming out for Coolidge for
ago by a Norwegian colony, who mys­ President, Mr. Ford has again made
I nothing.
rvident to the people that teriously disappeared from Green­ application to the government to buy
W court could have been land. Eskimo traditions, and scienti­ Mussel Shoals. This time he should
|r ;■ th" re-er n-c ,'f tim- fic deduction give rise to the belief be successful.
bounty, that all this fight that a new continent lies somewhere
I body would never have byond the Artic circle, and that vol­
Kn.l again, if the county canoes and geysers give it a temper­
king for the re-cruise in ate zone. The big airship Shenan­
of the taxpayers of the doah will either discover it. or pile up
i
If
It not EVIDENCE that somewhere in the Artic ocean.
|r. be trusted ? Stop and the quest should prove successful,
An all day trip by train from Port­
Ker. Would the timber and a new country is discovered where land to Tillamook, is not without its
life
can
be
sustained
as
in
the
United
kt anybody they could
compensations to the traveller who
States and other temperate zones,
J
If so, why
uses his eyes.
flying
to
the
new
land
may
not
only
(hat the timber interests
Starting in at Manning’s mill on the
hg the county court IS become possible, but popular, How eastern slope of the coast range moun­
about
taking
up
a
homestead
up
in
that they CANNOT
tains, the train begins its climb to
hat body. Why do they— the Artic?
the summit. The road winds through
2 11 ■.JA
of the timber who are
well tilled farms until quite an ele­
re-cruise— not come out
vation is gained, when the farms fall
state their grievances if
behind, and one sees the occasional
▼•? Why should they
and scattered home« of those who
ie an honest cruise of
have hewn modest abodes oat of the
»• It looks rotten, and
timber. These hill dwellers have
rowing belief that there
stock, and nearly all have a :mall
deeidely ROTTEN ia
hard of dairy sows the m k from
»r they would not mo
which is shipped eastwar
the
hy
RIDE TO THE COAST
IS FULL OF WONDER
little stations that occur a intervals
along the road. This fact was glean­
ed by the presence of the milk cans
that rest upon the platforms of the
a calk os. litis xaci was lurthei ac­
cented by a view of herds of cows in
the pastures, or on the near by moun­
tain ranges. As the train gets high­
er up toward the summit, the crowd
of mill men and loggers who are al­
ways in evidence, going or coming,
drop off a some mill or logging camp,
and vacant seats become more num­
erous.
At the station in East Portland, a
very stout woman got on the train,
and in addition to her other belong­
ings, with which her arms were en­
cumbered, she carried a canary bird,
which later indulged in fragmentary
twitterings, and several times essay­
ed to sing. In its efforts it was aid­
ed by the stout woman, who puckered
her lips and whistled little bars of en­
couragement.
When birdie finally
got to singing the fat woman seemed
greatly delighted, and looked around
at the other passengers with apparent
pride, which without being uttered
meant: “I told you so!” The pass­
engers were entertained by the can­
ary until a logging camp was reach­
ed, when the fat woman and the would
be songster from the Hartz moun­
tains, got off the train, and that part
of the entertainment ceased.
Next on the program was when a
couple of young men began to talk
about the various logging camps in
which they had worked, and to find
fault with the two inches of snow
that lay on he ground. They were
from California, and berated them­
selves soundly for leaving the sunny
climate of middle California for the
“frigid” atmosphere of Oregon. Each
predicted that after a montn’s work
they would be on their way back to
the redwoods. MTien finally they got
off the train two acclimated Oregon­
ian loggers who sat near them in the
smoker, expressed their opinions
about the Californians quite freely.
One of them had known one of the
Californians in former years.
“That bird,” said the Oregonian,
“never sticks longer than a month
anywhere. When he gets in a new
camp, he usually begins to find fault
with the food, and growls and kicks
from the time he arrives until he
quits. Why, that fellow,” said the
Oregonian, wouldn’t stay in Leaven­
worth more than two weeks on a two
years sentence.”
Lunch was taken at the summit,
where fifteen minutes is allowed by
the railroad company to appease the
hunger of passengers who do not pro­
vide a lunch for the trip. Here, the
east-bound passenger train from Til-
FEATURES
lamook passes on its way to Portland, vistas to view that otherwise would heights, but—it takes income to buy
As the train gains the summit and not be seen. Mingled with the ghost- bacon. A homely conclusion, but a
starts down toward the sea, the tim-
appearing trees, are newer growths practical one, nevertheless.
Down on the lower reaches, many
ber becomes in evidence, and is a that give one a view of white and
tbc-vr I? T.cv>'(*
,.’«',nr.Ltil ./¿'.J iu.Ils aie eu-
p’ t.vj: •>«; ccz.tTMt tj '.be Vriwl cvjr green, and upon the
sections on the eastern side of the strewn the charred remains of the eountered. And they are increasing
mountains. All the streams then be­ trees that fell bravely in the holocaust rapidly, and as the timber along the
railroad is used up. little logging
gin their pilgrimage to the sea, and of tree disaster.
Taking a practical view of the mil­ roads will extend back into the vast
the headwaters of the Salmonberry,
a beautiful mountain stream appears, lions of feet of fallen timber on the untouched and unexploited sections
Barely
and that stream is followed all the ground, comes the thought of its of the Coast range slope,
way down the west slope to tidewater. practical utility as a fuel resource have the immense stretches of timber
Its silvery sheen accompanies the for the poor of the big cities. But on the coast side of the mountains
train down the mountains. Gradually most of it will not be removed from been touched; and hereby is a tale
it grows in size, and dashes its foam its resting place. The labor of col­ that the fuure will unfold in the lum­
crested current against huge rocks, lecting it, and the cost of transporta­ ber industry.
As the hours flit by, the train
over fallen trees, through small log tion, preclude.1' any further consider­
jams, always emerging to continue ation of its utility. In time to come,
(Continued on page 6)
it may be used for wood by the settler
its rush toward the sea.
who
comes
ino
the
mountain
section
“Always hurried to be buried,
for a home. But even that will be
In the bitter, moon mad sea."
after all logging operations have
TILE YOUR FARM
Along the route, falling over steep
ceased. The land might make a home
declivities, sometimes two hundred
ASK THE MAN
for a man with a small dairy herd.
feet in height, dash tiny rivulets,
WHO HAS TILED
One thing the settler would be assur­
from upland springs, to join the Sal-
ed of, is fine spring water, fit for
TILLAMOOK CLAY
monberry in its wild journey to the
the consumption of a god.
And
ocean. And they are numerous at
WORKS
health giving properties inhabit the
this time of year, when the melting
snow, following the line of the least
resistance, and obeying the law of
gravitation, leaps to the canyon. And
they are not without scenic charm.
They have within them the poetry of
motion, which is always attractive to
the eye of the lover of nature.
Thus it is, that the fellow who
finds time hanging heavily on a long
trip, misses the poetry of the oc­
casion, and curls up in his seat and
sleeps, or stays awake and finds
fault with the engineer or the com­
SUNDAY and MONDAY
pany for not making greater speed.
TOMORROW
But to the person who loves to see
the kaleidoscopic changes that flash
anew, the trip is interesting. Itis
also suggestive of many things,, and
one can pass the time very pleasant­
ly, if one will, in musings; and the
thoughts that come into one’s mind,
are like the broadcastings of the ra­
Zane Grays story of Wild­
dio. For man himself is a receiver
fire.
of thoughts, and once the mind is at­
tuned to the right vibraions, he
PLUM CENTER COM-
choose his own program without
terfcrence ty anyone.
Returning to the Salmonberry,
TUESDAY
WED.
is a pleasing panorama, and the eng­
ineers who chose it as a route for the
first railroad that ever came to Tilla­
mook, chose well.
It is a scenic
route, but the circulars of the rail­
road company barely and rarely men­
Made by an all star cast
tion it as such. It needs more ex­
on the Portland Water­
ploitation, as a scenic route. Few
front.
railroad routes in Oregon outshine
the trip down the beautiful Salmon­
berry to the sea. The hills constitute
an interesting background.
Forest
fires have scarred many of the titans
of the forest, and denuded them of
life, but they fill in the perspective
and have their place, and also open
The New
TINSHOP
THEATRE
When
Romance
Rides
Harbor Patrol
Fighting
CENTER
EDY
1st round
Better than the Leather
Pushers.
The Better Man Wins.
COUNTRY STORE
VAUDEVILLE EVERY NIGHT
SAME OLD PRICE 10 and 30 CENTS
1H9INM-SATIIÄL
Stump Acres Earn No Money
land will "eat its head off” in taxes and
in the loss of crops you could produce on it. Stumps
U NCLEARED
don't earn anything—they're ‘ squatters” and should be
Vz
replaced with cropa.
The lower coat of clearing land with Pacific Stumping is
shown by the increase in the number of ranchers in this
neighborhood who are using it today. It shoots, stick for
•tick, with any standard stumping powder, but you get
one-half more sticks for your dollar. Pacific Stumping does
the job right— more land cleared at less expense. And
Pacific Stumping docs not freeze or give a headache from
handling.
We can give you complete explosives service. Our stocks
include Pacific Stumping and other du Pont dynamites for
use on the farm. Let us figure on your requirements.
more per dollar
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King-Crenshaw
Hdw. Co.
TILLAMOOK GARAGE
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NON-FREEZING
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