Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, September 05, 1924, Page 3, Image 3

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    FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,1924
TILLAMOOK
COMMENT
HEADLIGHT
PAGE
Editorial Page of the Tillamook Headlight
inn
3
FEATURES
uiiiiiiniii M
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+
♦
PROCLAMATION
* Tillamook Day at the County
+
Fair
+ “Lets Go!”
+ The County Fair Board hav-
♦ mg designate Thursday Sejrt.
+ 11th as Tillamook Day. Let us
♦ do our part and make this the
+ biggest and best Tillamook Day
♦ ever held at our Fair. Therefore
+ I. J. Merrel Smith, Mayor of
♦ Tillamook City, Oregon, do here­
+ by request the citizens of this
♦ city to help make this the “one
♦ big day.”
♦
Respectfully,
+
J MERREL SMITH, Mayor.
+
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + +
iillamook
4 n Independent Weekly Paper
published Every Friday by the
ge8dlight
Publishing
Company
Tillamook, Oregon
Harrison.
Manager
"YnTered as second class mail matter
id the U. S. Post office at Tillamook,
Orégon
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One Year, By Mail ---- ............ $2.00
$1.00
Six Months, By Mail ... .......
$ .75
Three Months, By Mail .........
Payable in advance
Telephone
Pacific States, Main 68
♦ ♦♦ ♦ + *«*♦♦♦ + + ♦
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♦ OUR EDITORIAL POLICY
♦
* 1. To advocate aid and sup-
♦ port any measures that will
♦ bring the most good to the
* most people
1 ♦ 2. To encourage
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industries
to establish in Tillamook
county.
3. To urge the improvement
of a port for Tillamook City.
4. To insist on an American
standard of labor.
5. To be politically indepen­
dent, but to support the can­
didates for public office who
will bring the most good to
the people of
Tillamook
county and of the State of
Oregon.
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a powerful corporation better to serve
the people, whatever the opposition,
do that. Expect to be called stand­
patter, but don’t be a standpatter.
Expect to be called a demagogue,
but don’t be a demagogue. Don’t
hesitate to be as revolutionary as
science. Don’t hesitate to be as re­
actionary as the multiplication table.”
♦ ♦ ♦
“Don’t expect to build up the weak
by tearing down the strong. Don’t
hurry to legislate. Give administra­
tion a chance to catch up with legis­
lation.”
* ♦ ♦
“There is no problem so great but
that somewhere a man is being raised
up to meet it. There is no mortal
standard so high that the people can­
not be raised up to meet it.”
♦ ♦ ♦
FRIDAY, SE1TEMBER 5, 1924
“It is only when men begin to wor­
ship that they begin to grow.”
“It is not a change that is needed
John T. Nolan, self-styled Com­
in our Constitution and laws so much
as there is need of living in accord­ mander of the National Disabled Sol­
ance with them.”
dier League, Inc., which, to the best
♦ ♦ ♦
of our information, consists of the
‘The law of life, the law of pro­ above-mentioned Mr. Nolan and two
gress is the law of obedience, the or three grafting confederates, is
law oi aervie<"
flooding the state of Oregon with ap­
♦ ♦ ♦
peals for money under the guise of
Accom-
“Education which is not based on helping disabled veterans,
religion and character is not educa­ panying a cleverly worded circular,
well-designed to gain the sympathy
tion.”
of the unsuspecting reader, is a pack­
Tl’NlNG THE SCHOOL IN ON LIFE age of five pencils. These profes­
sional beggars who are trading on the
misfortune of our wounded comrades
The funny column of a daily paper do not ask for charity—they only ask
tells of a teacher who asked Willie you to send One Dollar in payment
to locate several cities and he an­ for these pencils, which probably cost
swered, “1 can’t locate ’em but I less than five cents wholesale!
know how to tune in on every blamed
This National Disabled Soldier
one of 'em.”
League has absolutely no standing
That story carries a first rate idea in veteran circles and its agents are
for teachers. The schools will open not recognized in any of the govern­
soon and millions of children will ment bureaus handling veteran busi­
come from the free, playful, natural ness in Washington. It is the same
social child life to the different at­ organization that Mayor Edward L.
mosphere and life of the school.
Bader kicked out of Atlantic City
Teachers will try mistakenly to after breaking up a so-called conven­
change most of the child’s physical tion of the “League” when he read
and mental habits in a day. The an advertisement in an Atlantic City
shift from hours of activity to hours paper calling for fifty delegates to be
sitting still will cause much illness
among them if the teacher is not
careful. From learning what is in­
teresting and what appeals to them
they will be forced to change to set
lessons about things that they do not
use daily and that they probably feel
never will be any help. Fortunately
more and more schools are fitting
themselves to make the child life in
them more free, easy, and natural, i
The rows of stiff desks are being re­ i
placed with study tables and chairs;
the textbook is giving way to the li­
brary; the deadly silence, to the hum
of busyness; and restraint and re­
pression, to encouragement and ex­
pression. The schools are “tuning in”
on life.
♦ ♦ ♦
OUR CHILDREN
“There is no need for Americans
The opening of school draws our
thoughts toward the children, with to lack confidence in themselves or in
their problems and the perplexities their institutions. Let him who
they must meet, and the future that doubts them look about him.”
is in store for them. Through the
day they are aided and guided by the
teacher who bends every effort to be
helpful to them in all ways. Do we
always give her the help she deserves
and needs? Do we take an interest
in what she is doing for our children
and for their future which means the
future of a great nation?
Let us awake and remember that
Now is the time to can them for winter use.
they are our children in school hours
They
are plentiful and cheap. Also remember
as well as at other times and do what
that we have a big, complete stock of Fruit Jars,
we can to help the teacher help them.
paid $3 a day each.—Pacific Legion. matic officers of other consulates in I Calcutta.
The planning, preparation, and
serving of wholesome and attractive
meals from products readily avail­
able on the farm was a 4-H club
activity In which over 18,500 farm
girls enrolled in 1923, according to
reports to the United States Depart­
ment of Agriculture, and carried to
completion the work outlined for the
year. Greater use of milk and milk
products and of fruits and vege­
tables, and more varied use of sea­
sonal foods are some features of the
improved methods of meal prepar­
ation demonstrated by these young
homemakers under the direction of
cooperative extension workers.
Calcutta, India. August—On the
occasion of the brief stop here by the
American round-the-world flyers to
have their planes transformed from
sea to land planes, a dinner was given
in their honor by the Calcutta Post
of the American Legion. Mor than
200 guqgts were present- including
civil and military officers and diplo-
r
The Intense Fire Place Heater
Transforms a Fire Place into a Pow­
erful Medium for Heating
It converts on ordinary fire pace into a prac­
tical, efficient heater. Becomes a permanent fix­
ture. There is nothing to adjust, replace nor get
out of order.
It draws the cold air off front the floor con­
tinually and discharges it back into the room at a
high degree of temperature, distributing it every­
where throughout the apartment, and a constant­
ly higher temperature is the result.
FRED J. PYE & SON
“Anything Made of Wood”
Mill Work
Plans Drawn
y
RIPE TOMATOES
and GREEN BEANS
COOLIDGE
♦ ♦ ♦
“Men do not make laws. They but
discover them. Laws must be justi­
fied by something more than the will
of the majority. They must rest on
the eternal foundation of the ma-
jority.”
Pl eSSUGAR—$8.20 per sack, Cash with order.
TEAS—Nothing of cheap quality; our 60c
bulk teas will please.
BROOMS—The Little Polly, the housewife s
♦ ♦ ♦
“Statues must appeal to more than
material welfare. Wages won’t satis­
fy, be they never so large. Nor houses
nor lands; nor coupons, though they
fall thick as the leaves of autumn.
Man has a spiritual nature. Touch
it, and it must respond as the magnet
responds to the pole.”
frlCIlIt doesn’t cost you anything extra to trade at
Satisfaction Store-Market
♦ + ♦ ~
E. G. Anderson
“Do the day’s work. If it be to
protect the rights of the weak, who­
ever objects, do it. If it be to help
unnuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii
Ulti
I
Caps, Rubbers, etc.
FRUIT—Pears, Apples, Prunes and Grapes
are now in good supply.
COOKIES and CRACKERS—We always
have a good assortment of the best lines.
COFFEE—Growing in sales all the time.
Our 45c Satisfaction Coffee is all its name im-
PHILOSOPHY AND
DOCTRINE
=
The
Corred Styles
Oregon
State
Agricultural
____ H
College
OFFERS
A Liberal and Practical
in
Fall Millinery
I
I
Education
In the several pursuits and professions in life
trough the following schools and departments-
The School of Basic Arts and Sciences
<he sciences,
cialization
is built.
nical sped-
’.
The Ten Technical Schools
Commerce — four departmen’s
Agriculture — thirteen depart­
B. S. Degree
ments
Forestry—two departments
R s m . S. Degrees
B. S., M. S. Degrees
Mims—three departments
B. S. Degree
Hom* Economics—five depart Vocational Education—five de-
ments
partments
B. S., M. S. Degrees
B. S., M. S. Degrees
Military Science and Tactics—
PhaTsTPH C. Degrees
five units.
■Chemical Engineering
B. S. Degree
B. S. Degree
,
■ l^es nhvsical education, industrial journal-
The training inc1®^®3 £ *it Entrance and graduation re -
ism. social sciences, and Through the usual rating orgamza-
quirements are stands‘
u the best graduate schools m
tions the
exceptionally well organised to develop
Beautiful hats in all the newest
’napes and materials await your
approval.
Panne Velvet, Lyons
Hats of ..i».v
Satins,
vt, Bengalene Silk, t. S«ya«.=,
Feus and in pleasing combinations
these materials.
Specials for Saturday and
following week
Felts at........................ $3.75
Velvets at_________ 5.95
Larson & Hechtner
Admission of Freshmen September 23, 1924
The all around dependable store of Tillamook
THE REGISTAR
Mrs. Mary Runkle
Beals’ Building
IT PAYS TO PAY CASH
at
For illustrated booklets and specific information write to
f” >
I
I
Mt
Oregon Agricultural College
CORVALLIS - OREGON
I
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