litlit VIM ISSUED TWICE A WEEK TUESDAY! AND FRIDAY Largest Circulation of any Paper in "Tillamook County Tillamook, Omkcon, Jri.v 18. 1018. NO. 51 XX. It in the dim of thin Intuit to ivc the I witt bunking Hervicc pohNihlc -and vc do it. It i iiIho our aim to have the very lc?U equipment. Htieh n.s Modern Fire I 'roof Hanking Room, Kite Proof Vault, Hur jlar Proof Safe. Modern Safe Deposit Hoxen and we have them. FIRST NATIONAL BANK TILLAMOOK, OREGON KvcrythiiiK lfnh in Drugs, hvcr.v thing in Sundries. Anything Vott Want. If u-c hnven't it. uv will et it. We wmnt your Inwwr "Gtve s r trial. LLAMOOK DRUG STORE KOCH &. H ILL. B. L KOCH, lit. G. Huxxr. IUII iiJ Muluill Mill l Xit Sntisfnctory How You Can Visit the Pacific Panama International Exposition in Opens 1 Q1 C C,OSC' Feb. 20 IV ID Dec. 9 DOLLAR BY DOLLAR WrlU of Cull for Information I PI A I ICCPkl Tillamook, Oregon i I ibriT - riai XI IV W W Shingles Root Paint Lime : Brick Plaster Drain Tile AMB-SCHRADER COMPANY nd Warehome Front St. between 2d and 3d Ave. West E. HENDERSON Surveyor JOHN LELAND HKNDEKSON Allomey t Lw nd NoUry Public PAJSl. (INCOKl'OKATIM)) UV : ABSTRACTS : RI5AL BSTATB SURVEYING : INSURANCIv Tillamook, Oregon RAILROADS-EMPLOYES FOR ARBITRATION Washington -Itnprnnnintlroi e( (be 10.000 conductor and trainmen of (rrn railway who Hutu votd to strike for higher wagn am managing offlcrt tif tlm railroads agrned at the Whlln Hoti to inbuilt ttirlr differ ence to arbitration under iho provis ion of ttii Clay-Newlanda act, which President Wtlon sud congressional leader prumUed (o maka law. In the meantime no strike will be declared, official! of lllo employe' brotherhood agroeltig to an arinUtlca This victory for arbitration over the t;tk wm iho rult of a two hour 0OUferue., at thn White House be twrnn President Wllaon and congres sional leader, txitli republican and democrat. tli president and inauag or of tlm railroad and reprtenta tte of the llrotherbood of Conduc tor and Trainmen. Southern Pacific StrlV. Vote Taken Han Fpnclo.-Nirly 1000 em ploye of thn Southern I'oclftc railroad on llnrs extending from Portland, Or., to Kl Pan, Tel., members of thn Or der of Hallway Conductors and thn Brotherhood of ltnllro.nl Tralurnen nra voting on tlm question whether or nol to atrlkn. a the result of a dradlock between company official and the employ-' srui-rnl committee orr v. lul Ustitju. The trauliln Imd arltnn ocr thf fall urr of thn company to rxti-nd Inter cbmir.f of rUhta to nltyctrlflcd llnrn. Liie I'ev3 ct the Week A m;nU rnVoluun In CUlua I re-. in!il ii Immluvnt Tin- cuwntneni ha rested lt t: l N t. trk wKtttunt thn aocallud mo lo;i picture trunt. after calllnc mor- . :t lou w.tirr... Tho hfurlnRa cro t;urnd until OctoUr 1. The director of th Nntlonal Kdu ttlonal aascclallou. In conventlOu at ylt Unke. aoli-ctcd St Paul. Minn.. the iiH'Dtinit ptnew for noxt ytnr'a con- vetit'o't. Tho boanl nlw cIioro Ouk lni.il. fnl.. for the 1015 convention. Ii t announced from Hi. 1'nul that the Northern I'ncUlc hn refuned to Krant tho ditnmnd of Ita loleRrnph operiitotK for Sunday overtime or 15 dny vnc- tloni. nllhoiiKh offcrlnt; to mnku minor clmnKea In worklnc coudl ttona It Klvea na n rmtaou untl-ratl-road leKlalntlon. both fodural nni aliitu. AcconllnK to thn report of tho In loritiute commorco coinmlnloii, tho employment of nn "liuuperlunced nnd unlnatmictrd nnulnoor" respona tlily for the wreck of u Now York, New Haven Hnrtford pnsaonKor Irwin June 12 at Slumlord, Conn., in which Mix people were killed nnd '.'0 Injured. The tjueMtlon "Should HoIIkIoh Ho TniiKht In the Schools?" wn nuawered nfflrmivtlvoly hy tho conferouco of minimum attondlnK tho 20th Interna tional convention of Chrlatlan Kndenv or Socletlea at I-o Aunuli. So ftlao wim the quuHtlon of the twchlni; of ex hyKlone. SerloiiH rlolliiB bntween oranRemen nnd imllonnlUtH mnrked tho celobrn tlou of thn 2i:ird annlvtiraury of tho buttle of tho lloyno Ht Htilfnat. Tho flKhtln Inated two hourH, and wi quilled only nftor tho police chdrged the moha ropentedly. OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAUN TEREST Events Occurring Throughout th State During the Patt Week. Bank Cathltr Paroltd. Salem. ('olncldertt with an n IVtjuncrment that HlaU Hiiptrtntfnd nt of llsaka Wrlr.ht had dnclamd a dividend of 20 per cent for the drpoal tor. of the Ftrat Stat Ilnnk of Philo math, maklcir a totnl of SO per cent declared, la another thai Jnme Krari, caahlrr of the bank, convicted of for gery and aentnnced to crv from two to 10 ynara In the penitentiary, baa been paroled. i The llabllltlea of 'ho inatltutlon 'were tfi,000, nnd Mr. WjIrM bellevea Ithe aatuta will be aufflclant to pay the depoaltora In full, but thorn will be no money for the atockholdera, The bank failed In October. 1911. nnd Kvara, whoie right nam la Kvana. win Indicted aoon afterward. Money be U alleRed to have ueJ fraudulent- jly waa Inveated In n creamery by thn (cannier, and. It U aatd, ho got no ben- 'i:it from It. UNDS TO BE THROWN OPEN i - Governments New Policy Will Aid In i nualnnmrnt nf Cirmnan. Portlnnd. (TnrrylnK out the govern- jmenl'a new policy of aecklng out whiit nrlculturnl landa may lurk within the couflnc of fVrct r?ervc and dealt;- imtinj; ll propony ao wiai u may u ihrown opon for actual acttlement. L'hlef Forester llonry 8, Oravea ar rived In Portland from WnahlnRton. jknurlns M ylalt.iicrc ho expct to settle definitely for recommendation what ifhnll to dono with tracts which have been tho subject of field ngenU' liivuktlgnltor. I'oth In the Sltmlaw ro Klott of nouthweatern Oregon, thn pu mice lands of control Oregon, tho Des chutes region nnd In the Cowlitz river landa In tho Itnlnlcr forostB of Wash ington. Hcretoforo tho government haa mnde llttlo effort toward discovering what tracts ure aultnb! for agricul ture. The prospective settler wns re quired to seek out thn lands himself. I decldo whether ho could us them for j ngrlculturo nnd then make hla appli cation for settlement. Jly tho new plnn. experts of the for eat service will pick out fertile tracts now grown up in trees, report them suitable for agriculture, nnd eventual ly have, them listed separately from the general forest reserves, throwing them opeu for homesteaders from time to time. This will Include land from which the timber has been sold. 14 KILLED; 150 INJURED Rear-End Crash of Electric Train Caused by Mistaken Signals. I .oh Angnlos, Fourteen deud and 150 Injured Is thn toll estimated of a renr-end collision of two Pacific Klec trio nillwny trnlnn filled with Sunday pleasure seukors returning from tho sen shoro nt Venice.. Tho ncoldtMit occurred ut Vlnoyard station In thn westerly cl(y limits of Un Angeles. Two throocar trains, their seatu nnd iIm1b packed with tho usual Sunday merry-miiklng crowd, i l.mm Mtnlled nt Vlneyurd station I by tho breaking of a trolley wlro. One. j of the crew of the Becond train wuh ' sunt back to flag the followlni; trains, The noxt train, however, wept by tho signal "t big" speed, and In tho dark- ness crashed Into tho standing trains. I HeBponBlblllty for th wreck lies. according to tho official 4 the road. between Conductor Albort Rartholo I mal nnd Motorman Josopk Korrstor. Barton Is Given 1-10 Year Term Cofjultlo. Judge Coke passed sen tentm on J. S. llarton. who was re cently convicted of an attack upon MUs Madge Yoakum, to an Indeter minate term of from one to ten yearn In tho penitentiary. The case has been appealed and bond furnished. llnrton Is a Coqullle abstractor and representative from Coos county In the statu legislature. VALE GETS MANY SETTLERS Government to Open Largs Tract to Entry. Vale. The throwing open by the government of U0t000 acres of land adjacent to Vale to homestead entry promises to make this city the mecca of homeseokera during the next few months. A Urge proportion of this land Is fertile valley and bench lamd, below the Dully Creek and Star Moun tain Irrigation projects, nnd belug bus ceptlblo of Irrigation cannot be taken up undor the 320-acre homestead law, ICO acres being the most any one per son can homestead. Of this land, 73,000 acres have been held la a petroleum reserve, nnd, 37, 000 acre wero withdrawn for tho Harper reservoir project. Settlers huvo boon petitioning thn Interior de partment at Washington for the past wo years to release the petroleum re orve lands, and have Just succeeded u having thU done. The land will bo opon for selections, according to advice received by the Vale Land of fice, on July U, at 9 o'clock A. M and filings will be received after A. M. August 18th. Advertise in tho Herald, twcaUM tho Herald has the largest circulation of any papa in tha county. BALKAN SITUATION ;JAIL TEN I. W. W. S NOTJMPROVEDI STREET SPEAKERS Ixmdon. The lialkan States appear ' to be again In the malting pot There City and County Officials Movt la no slga of pc at present. Greece nd Bervla have declined so far to agree to an armistice. The Turkish army Is advancing by forced marches from TchataIJa and liulalr, apparently with the consent of Oreece and Ser via, to attempt the recapture of Ad Hanople and Thrace. Houmanla la aald to be proceeding to occupy a much larger extent of Hulgarlan territory than she previous ly clalmod. and Greece Is burning to avenge the Bulgarian massacres, con cerning which horrifying details con tinually appear In official reports It suod from Athens and Salonlkt. Ac cording to these reports, ears and fin gers of Oreek women still wearing ear rings and rings were found In the pockets of Hulgarlan prisoners. IDAHO BANKERS SET FREE Kettenback and Kester Pardoned by President. Washington. President Wilson has granted unconditional pardon to Wil liam K. Kettenbach and George H. Keiter, Lewlaton, Idaho, bankers, con victed on the charge of having falsi fied records of the First National Hank of Uewlston, Idaho. The pardon was granted after tho president had conferred with Senators Borah, of Ida ho; Lane, of Oregon, and Kern, of Indiana, and after they had strongly appealed to the president to do Justice to men. who, they showed, were mar tyrs to abuse of privilege by govern ment prosecutors formerly employee" by the department of Justice. But for this pardon Kettenbach and .... . I a fAV itiAiieriAiruT Keater would encti nave oeen reauireu i HHTaJi Jkuifai iBut-r ii.tfuea x - to serve five years in tne penitentiary People in the News Two agents of the Itallnn govern ment left Home for the United States to take back Porter Chnrlton to Italy to btand trial for the murder of his wife at Lake Como, June 7, 1910. State Supremo Court Justice Goff of Now York denied former Police Lieutenant Charles Becker, sentenced to dlo for the murder of Herman Ros enthal, a gnmbler. a new trial. Successful treatment of tuberculos is by means of X-rays was announced by Dr. F. II. Gibson, of Denver. In a paper read before the National Society of Physical Therapeutic. Francis Bowers Sayre, who is to marry Miss Jessie Wilson, daughter of the president. In November, has In tlmnted thnt he would enter social settlement work after his udmleston to the bar. His fiancee Is deeply In terested in the work. Superior Judge William A. Huneke of Spokane has signed an alternative writ of mandate against the city coun cil, commanding It to call a recall election against Mayor Hlndley and Commissioner Fallley before Junn 21. Because a train crew had thrown hltu off the train of which he wns try ing to steal a ride, Frank Smith. J2 years old, It Is alleged, tried to wreck O.-W. It. & N. fast mall train on the lino two miles east of Hood Rlvcer on a curve within 1U0 yards of a high trestle. At a meeting of merchants In Lon don. Lady Balfour was one of the speakers and told of a method she had accidentally discovered to silence cry ing babies, which she said she had al ways found successful. She said cry ing babies would soon fall asleep, It lain with their heads slightly lower than their feet, at a "gradient of about one In 12." Ploughing his way through a mob of 1000 persons, a block front the Ore gon Packing company's plant at Port land, where a strike la In progress, Governor Oswald West Saturday planted himself two feet from a barrel on which Tom Burnt, a Socialist ora tor, waa making a speech, and, Inter rupting the talk, shouted to tha ora tor that If any more disorder took place he would take such action as would quickly aulet tha disturbance ol tsa peace. Beaus Maney at Banslan. Baatoa. Ia tha last law daya husl ess men and others have found them selves possessors of half dollara which are not genuine. Upon Investigation It la learned that the circulation of the counterfeit money began during the Fourth of Jnlv r.elebmtlon In Bandor Approximately -50 of the half deluw coins was placed In circulation here. to Prevent Meetings in Portland. Portland. "We will fly the red flag of anarchy over the marble palace up there!" shouted Tom Burns. I. W. W. speaker, haranguing from a soap box at Sixth and Washington streets. The next minute Frank Curtis, Dep uty Sheriff, under orders from Sheriff Tom Word, stepped forward and pull ed Burns from the soap box. Tou are under arrest," said Curtla. Almost on the Instant. Sixth street, tilled with a crowd of several hundred persons, only a comparatively small percentage of whom were L W. W.'a, became a scene of the wildest disor der. As Burns was pulled down another agitator jumped on the box. At the same time Word and five other of his deputies Jumped forward. They were reinforced by a dozen pa trolmen under Sergeant Roberts, who had been posted on the outskirts of the crowd under strict orders from Mayor Albee to preserve order at the meeting. The raid that ensued waa made as the result of concerted action planned by Sheriff Word and Mayor Albee. Both were present In the crowd. Speaker after speaker who tried to mount the box was seized and placed under arrest Sheriff Wcrd himself stopped the procession of speakers after 10 had been arrested by seizing the soapbox. Secretary Says He Is Compelled to Lecture to Augment Income. Hendersonvllle, N. C. While here Secretary Bryan declared he was com pelled to deliver Chautauqua ad dresses to supplement his government salary, which he declared was not suf ficient to meet his expenses. "As this Is my first Chautauqua lec ture since becoming a member of the cabinet," said Secretary Bryan. "It may not be out of place to say that I find It necessary to lecture In order to supplement the salary which I re ceive from the government. As I have lectured for 13 years this method of adding to ray Income la the most natr ural one to which to turn and I regard It as extremely legitimate." Wnshlngton. Following Secretary Bryan's statement that he had to spend his vacation on the lecture plat form because he could not live on the secretary of state's salary of $12,000 a year, Senator Brlstow Introduced a resolution calling on the president to "advise the senate what would be a proper salary to enable the present secretary of state to live with comfort and to enable him to give his time to the discharge of his public duties." When Mr. Bryan's nttentlou was called to criticisms In regard to his lecturing, he replied: "In devoting a part of my vacation to lecturing. I am doing what I believe to be proper, and 1 have no fear what ever, that any unbiased person will criticise me when he knows the facts." Dynamite Plotter Freed. Leavenworth, Kan. Edward E. Phillips, convicted at Indianapolis of conspiracy in the alleged dynamite plot. Is the first of the 33 men to leave the United States penitentiary a free man. Plotters Against Huerta Arrested Mexico City. A plot to assassinate President Huerta. General Felix Dlas and General Blonquet, tho war minis ter, has been frustrated by the iirrest of one deputy and 10 others of no great prominence, , u Ml .5 LAMAR'S ! VARIETY STORE Tillamook, Ore.' "DROP IN AND LOOK AROUND"