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About Tillamook herald. (Tillamook, Tillamook County, Or.) 1896-1934 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1915)
Cbc ailatsitfofc herald tt. G. Crom&lcy, editor .Auit nudec .1 Wetk Cucsi1.iV and Friday Km'ervd sc-.-ond-ol.iw nutter Mny U, HUO. nt the jm1 sfl.ec Orvgoii. under the net of March 3, ItiS". SOlfrCRH'TION S1..W A VStAK -IN U XCU at lillnmoox, Jldecrtlslnu Hates 1 Knoh MiliM(Unt tHsortUm. Hno -r 1 ..I t IMWfMHVtUli Bt wihimv?i".u ccul AJfirtiwwcU I" noltftm. per llt.e l".rt lnfrtion. rr Hnr - $ .JO Honing & Profeaaion.il enrds.nw. vi? niihacouant insertion, lino .OS nuulav -V-ivart-wivient. per iu'h tA r AM. Display Ad must bt it thl of- ,0-w f on Monday and Thursday Mont- iww to lrown publication In follow 0 tn Tuesday and Friday Issues. .7J Reason bit impwatiw. 1.00 .S6 Homes-teaii rtlt Timber Claim Notloe. per line CnW of thanks, per Hire Locals, lino. rtt irtMrtlftt. O. I. C SWINE TTKSDAV OCTOBKR 10K"i. i have inn' ihotce yMiiK piys lM" "n!c. both sexes the Wind that mature verv iuuh; ()tic of tuv Ik mI Imjh" ic Oil (illtl Ibs.Ul IS UKMltllS u .l My hojs have won ribhiu s in iu!.ory OreRtmian jld t Werttalnt count v ami Mate I.un rwss.U mad in Owcon 1 prferiw to Ukmo1 I'houe M eVritc lor prices JOE DONALDSON YAMHILL MILLING COMPANY IIOIJK. GRAIN, H I D Moving Sim V Fomiltj Blend Oicgon Floww I!, I. Hl l.MANN, Mi in Commercial IU(Ik Mutiml Phone open ! FrottJ tao viewpoint of The Sentinel. TNufh the Panama canal is the recent sHeVa are worst h.!..rr. At On tlm 1lt-llv VS werr he.1 ud in paaaaxe. and some of. made In thn &tU eeerytalne 1h b an them tur.ied bark. It i animated that , "g onl- Doubttes the bieeuit com- j more than a ya-r will b required t j jny takee the same view, j cxem-at.-all the dirt Uiat has allppwlj l-Toci th r)wpoinl of Tha &mtinl. into tho ditch, and Own om toot i Orin irrfcnU ahould hrtrxIN' only' wrhiii. Jhom pmduetd bWeoita-anil Hfain tha , biaroit makw will prolwblr aurticj Tht? otuarday on ot our repoblwan j " . itk nak ninkllil ' KlMIO OUT that ho woukt nver vot fr WiUn ... ks- l.imAM(a WIMA tllMMt .'if loada of chr had rrorntl. !n huv f Mrpon , pedfr..NV York ut to th at. J Ow-fWi4- tttv. nd hruld ; Well. On niu prttv hi tate and we th.nk ah- i about the whole thine. I " vmtnmi nor.- i.t Uin .ft-, ti .h , mit ih hol ! s!i-mde ifood wbn thry l niti Stto. If we are not m,:ken ' prUW Uwfr custom-, still bekxncs to the wouw K1 ,nlu lnw "l no otiMrt. Why doas the Orenn nwrchnnt carry Eatrn-iuiuie eoodi whan ho enn Kt K. H. D. 1, TllUnwoV. viawpoint, Oruwitnii ;h..old wear nona but Ursn nnUe , j olothaei. howM drink none but Oreitoit , but Oro- i coo hi be ' S Coast Power Co. ! ahtr Uvcry Ulcctrlc Necil IKxof Wiilnj; Lithtliit: I'liUfi'i stud , S3D I'U.hllthlt 4ivi Butct.o 111 r I lie Iruiu Djhl CooV.hi; lvltr , HlvCtfU Rj tijtrt I1 wrf f'i .1.1.-.. I. New York State Union. It does beat if all what arcu- nio n Is some of our slanu put menus nut forth. However, we should not criticise the lavmaw too severely, for it has been demonstrated that Mine of our nearby republican editor have been considerably mixed on the the taritf question of late. Ofeeon-nwdc tfoods of the same ijnult- j ty? Why In the nam f common .enc ldoi he carry Koyal MaKine l'owor. ! XaInmuiI Hiscuite, Hurt. Schatrner vi I Marx Clothini:. Osternoor Mattroo. Heinx's Si Varietieti. Chnjo t S.tnborn ', Colfee. 3 in 1 Oil. Old Dutch Ctcaiwor. ! President ViLon's plan to raise the I bisco Wafen, Ivory Sonp. Harrintr tariff on some article of foreign wan-! (on Hall ColTee. U I- Mny'n mi, ufacture. seems to be causing quite a i Campbell' Soon ami a few h Ired rumpus at Republican headquarters, 'other Baitern-tnade artickni if jut as" While the Republican are in favor of a zootj articles in the same line nr made high tariff, thev seem to be very much , Oregon? ' incensed because the Democrat are It t oecauo the buyer want thee are planning on raisinc Mnv of the 00ig Hni it is tho merchant's businon rates. However, we believe President lo wtut the buyer want. f Wilson' views are quite logical atone Why doe the buver want these Knst-' this line. For instance the war hna ! Hrn-niade articles? Surolv iniro not- iutn with which it will create ufh demand. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR ANNOUNCEMENT DiUribti u Ur wich. I'orlltml, Ore iton. Oct. iS, 1.115. The United Stnt iJejKirtmciit of Labor, throusn lt local I branch at Portland, Oregon, again I direct tho attention of the public to the fact tnat it maintains n OlvUton I Ot Information for tho benefit of em- pioyer of labor it'ohlnc help ami for' the nsititanee of worker sc.sVlnv; em-' ploy men t. While this ervicc in entirely free ami available to all in lxUi city ami 1 - . . t . . ii . . .... cut off our supuly of dve stuff from ! rJotism soouW impel l.im to wish for nir,, , ,, ni. r. .n Germany to quite an extent. The dem- OreRon-mtnle eoodi. !l U ,ho, C"'P" tuid ou aide the j i n - w w iiitiim titui rnun 1171111 n k nm . itti KVt b m irw vt v . its' I J r Another Broadway Feature At inc STAR Wed. and Thurs. A pictttrc you will all like -Played hy an all STAR cast and the photography in ood, Don't forget thin lie tut tful Ihamn in T reels and a Comedy that will drive away the blue malting a (j reel show for the nsuiil price. ocrats propose to put a tariff on tbi class of goods so that home capital will be encouraged to go into the dye mak ing industry without fear of too strong foreign competition after the war is over. The dye making industry will Tho reason that the buyer wants thee gooda i lurrelv bocaute he has sin he names of these jjood in dis play ani other kinds of type so often that he nsfct for that kind without really knowing why. He has tried need protection when the war is over. them, kmiw.s that they are as good as and so will many industries that did ! the advertising says they are, and he not need it before the wsr. The ad- keep on buying because the advertis rninistration proposes to adjust the , jne te3 him to. tariff to meet the new conditions. Be- i There is a solution for this problem fore the war broke out in Europe labor j an,j the Eastern manufacture who ship conditions were such in European coun tries that American manufacturers were able to ship ms y lines of goods to Europe and undersell those countries j in their own morKets. The democrats lowered the tariff on these classes of i his goods from the Mississippi River and Atlantic seaboard am sells thorn in competition with Oregon-made goods has shown what it is. It is to so Impres upon the buyer the name of - i-mn lo goods that goods because our manufacturers along !ne W1 ff lle(n jU3t aB he now these Jines no longer needed protec:i-v ;,j0t?s for jya Raking Powder, Nabis With the termination of the war, how- ro Wafers. National Biscuits, Kirsch ever. this condition of affairs wilt be ' Imurn Clnthimf. and other nationally changed. advertised artfcles. Then the local The condition of the huropean labor-1 merchant will not have to carry East er may be so much lowored, Jrol his : ern-made Roods to satisfy his custom- burdens so heavy that he will agai" be thrown in the dejected pauper la!, . class, which competition our 'labor..... so much drea-. or the peoples of Eu- capped in securing competent help becausa of his rvmotuncat from the , i ordinary labor markets. Therefore it , . is particularly to such, comprising j f farmers, rancher, orchardUl. stock-; f men, canners and manufacturer, that the Govornmunt tenders its free cr ncc. Employers can be p'lt in prompt t I. ...ill. L.ll.ul r .....t.Hlu i... i.. f almost any race or nationality and for any kind of work including dumnstic j service. t Every Pimtmnstur ti an authorized ! agent for the Government' Emplv- j A ...ill it. t v rations from employer or unemployed. . Or such application uikI rtKiuests for information may be sent to the Dis trict Headquarters urn! or the following nildress : Ulllcar in Charge. Distribution Brunch, U. S. Immigration Service, till Railway Exchange Building. Portliiwl. Oregon. The Service Is tree. 2 INCH POST IRON BEDS SPECIAL! $7.50 Ainmer Fatniture Co. Wood! Wood! W'ood! rope, as an outcome of the wai may carry on their industries in such per fect co-ordination and harmony that waste will be placed at trie minimum and their production forced to the maximum in their endeavor to regain the wealth that has been destroyed. era. It will not do any good for Coast manufactures to go to sleep theorizing that Coast pesple should buy Coast made goods from patriotic motives. While they aie sleeping so.Tieone in Cottage Grove may be reading a mag azine, a Portland newspaper, or the Cottage Grove Sentinel. A display line catches his eye. The next day he buys a Kirschbaum suit because that is r r . r . . I .... l. .. wnicnever me case may u.-, ,v.u ,iianiB !!,. t,.M him t, hue. Of course he could get just as good clothes made in Oregon of Oregon Industry will, beyond question, forced to withstand tremendous com petition from the European countries when the war is ended and we should be prepared for it. A DISPLAY OF WISDOM. (Elbert Bede in Cottage Grove Senti nel.) This week the Sentinel carries for the first time the advertising of the Pacific Coast Biscuit Co's Snow Flake Biscuits. The advertising is well got ten up, tolls some facts every Oregon ian should know and gives the reader an appetite for the foods advertised. But this is not to be an ad for the: chosen wisely wool but he has never seen a display line that would lead him to believe that woolen goods aro even made in Oregon-consequently the money spent for that suit goes to pay laborers who spend all their money on the other side of the continent. Oregon manufacturers have got to beat Eastern manufacturers at their own game. ! They have j;ot to change indifference to Oregon-made goods into n demand ; for them. The Pacific Coast Biscuit Co. has in. using the country Pacific Coast Biscuit Co. i newspaper in Its campaign as the mad- ALEX. M'NAIR & CO, U1EH1L HARD W AUK s KITCHEN RMNQES mnti HE4TINB STOVES See Us for Prices Before Ordering Elsewhere LAND FORTRESSES OUT OF DATE. New York linns It will lontitiuc to be physically poitbr, no doubt lo built a !urt so strong that no shell could penetrate it, whether fired dir ectly at high angle or to full upon it vertically from the clouds It would require merely to calculate the force of explosives and the resistance of steel and concrete, and make the steel and concrete thick enough. But it may Imvc ceased to lit worth while. A fort will still be vulnerable from be low ground. Its foundation could not be laid so deep that an enemy might not drive a tunnel under it. and then it would be necessary to put enough high explosive there to blow the fort a."iy. ho perhaps, in the future mili tary strategy will adjust itself to the idiu that fortifications can not be permanent, wherefore they had bet ter be even more than impermanent, serving only as temporary bulwarks against an oncoming enemy. The most rigid, the most irreducible thing so far discovered in this war is a trench filled with soldiers, supported by artillery and machine, guns, That protection is what saved ,the great fortress at Verdun in France. The case between coast defenses and warships is very different. There the offensive haj, i.ot overtaken the de fensivc. This has been proved in the Dardanelles. The inodcrncst warships carrying the large guns afloat, failed to reduce the defenses some of which could hardly be called up to date, much less modern. The fire from warships must be direct. whaTdo YOU ThInk. When a ten year old child plays on a pile of tics on a railroad right of way ami inc tics tan and hurt him, one is naturally sorry for the boy, but how does this accident ivc the guardian inc right to sue the com pany for $20,000 when tjic child wa hurt while trespassing. , If a suit like this can be maintain ed and collected as is now being at tempted against the Great Northern railroad in Washington, why could it not also lie done if a child came into your back yard,, climbed on .your woodpile and caused the, wood to fall on him. It will be interesting to watch the results in tliiscasc. " " f Vine iM.'tple, eord Dry Alder Mody Sprue: " Dry Crab Apple, cord $r.oo Hacciitor'.s Notice to Creditor NOTICE HHwby'iOlvpn.l that th UMjurniifrird, John II. Ilnthaway, by an unlet of the County Court for Tllla- mook (anility, turn bi-n duly nptatlntmi Executor of tho Uit will nml Usiammit !' Ilnjt.miii II. Hathaway. d.c.w. J..; Notice Is further given tlmt alt pr- f HO ""ving any claim agn(nt stud . statu aro Imrehy required to tirtont .-sv "nm" wlt'l ix months from this ilutu to ' . umluMlgrtil i Aloha, FULL MEASURtf. GOOD WOOD DE. Washing! , tV y, Oregon, or lo my LIVERED ANYWHERE v-wimw, 107 f. 0. 0. l- building, Tillamook Oregon, togullmr inHrUQOrU X, QTIwriWCCKf i wllh l,r,'l'' vouchor. ' Route i , Tillamook. LEAVE ORDERS WITH L. S. JOHNSON. Notice ol Administrator's Final Account N0TICR1S HEREBY GIVEN thai the iindenlgned hdiniiilatrntor for tint Estate of ,1. A, Robert. Deceased, ha filed in tho County Court of Tillamook (auinty, Oregon, his final ncetiunt, nml that Nnvcmbci Cth, 11)15 nt 10 o'clock A, M. has been fixed as tho time and the olllce of the County Judgo of Tilla ir.ook County, Oregon, uh tlm plaeu for the heiirlng of said final account. All persona Interested in sulil settle ment aro notified t" anpoiir nt snld time and place nnd niMko known nriv objection to the discharge pf said ad ministrator. 0atid September 27h, 1915. ...JMI, 1'. It. Jockson, Administrator . of the Estate aforesaid. Notice , 'WJJJI 1 OwlriK to the fact that wo shall be obliged to discontinue our business after January 1st, wo hereby irivo notice that till account owing to thu undersigned, Hnd unpaid nflor the 20th of October, 191B, shall bo handed to oiir Attorney, Mr. Wlllimn Marx, for attention. ZSZ Chits, Puterron, ' , Q.t8. ilnrnei. . , Dated Sept. 21. 1115. J'dni II. Ilathnway, Executor of tlm last will nml twsta incut or Benjamin II. Iluthhwny, deceased, " Eat Viereckfs Bread TILUMOOK BAKERY AT ALL GROCERS TW.inlir.1 i.-4wisMassSSSSSgg PETER BECKER iuMcrchaot!Tailof r t- REf' AIRING rl.0r a Trt, tjwi.. t - m . . . . IlKOIIlM thu liroi.-n .."V l 10' l lIUHri fU.. ..... iumi umu 1 1, k-A. 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