Hllamook Headlight, August 5, I9lô. State Press Flashlights. j Representative Hawley has earned the gratitude of the farmers for the manner in which he is championing the Rural Credit plan. We believe he is right, and see no reason why the farmer, who has the best and most staple security in the world, shall be at a disadvantage when it comes to borrowing money for improvements, stock, etc.—Willamina Times. ----- O——r A Virginia editor threatened to publish the name of a certain young man who was seen hugging and kiss­ ing a girl in the park unless his sub­ scription to the paper was paid in a week. Fifty-nine young men called and paid up the next day while two even paid in advance.—Such a thing as this never happens in Ione or the Journal subscription list would be the largest in the state.—lone Journal. Coast-Power Company, OUR “Good looking school teachers should have more pay,” declared a member of the New York school board. Aly. if we apply that rule to Purest Grove and Washington Coun- . ty the taxpayers will go broke in no ' time.—News-Times. ----- o----- The Gervais Star asserts that 300 sack» of spinach are being shipped each day to the Oregon Canning Co. Italians near Parkersville, are culti­ vating nine acres of spinach. It is claimed that this vegetable will yield lour tons to the acre and that two ' cuttings can be made during the sea- 1 son.—News Reporter. PURPOSE IS TO SERVE PUBLIC WELL | THE Our plant is well equipped and maintained in perfect running order. We can furnish you with any­ thing1 in electric supplies or fix­ tures for wiring, lighting, heat­ ing, power, or cooking. We have experienced and capa­ ble men to attend to our lines and to do house wiring and instilla­ tions. The New Dairy Queen. PIANO INSTRUCT! C N. Diploma from Chicago Musical College.—Beginners receive the same careful training as the most advanced. I Terms:—$4.00 per months Instruc­ tion. All lessons given at Studio. Factory Representative for the Chute & Butler Pianos and Player Pianos. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Surgeon 8. P. Co. (I. O. O F. Bldg ) Tillamook . - . . Oregon. ^^EBSTER HOLMES. ATTORNEY AT LAW Furnished Housekeeping Tents Only One Dollar a Day. COMMERCI AL BUILDING, FIRST STREET, TILLAMOOK, J ATTORNEY-AT -I. AW. onice- O pposite C ourt H ouse , Tillamook • - Oregon. J OHN I.El.AND HENDERSON, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW. T illamook B lock , Tillamook - - . - Oregon ROOM NO. 261. Kitehen Ranges and Heating Stoves. © Oregon GOYNE, GEfiERALi HARDOURRE To the Editor of the Headlight: As 1 read the appalling details of the awful catastrophe of war that daily confronts us in the press, I am reminded of the reply made by a father to his boy who asked, “Fa, p- what is the difference between a civ- THE BEST STOCK OF HARDWARE IN ilized man and a barbarian?” The father answered, “A barbarian is a THE COUNTY. man who knocks your brains out with a club at arms length, while a civilized man blows them out a mile See Us for Prices Before Ordering Elsewhere. away.” 1 he present situation in Europe demonstrates, if any demonstration is needed, that there is no such thing as civilized warfare. War is butchery. It is wholesale murder. It stands for sorrow, suffering and death. As well talk of a constructive tornado as | ----- o----- civilized warfare. There was a time when spears and The efforts of the district highway Like some mighty Sampson, the sv.ords were the en|y weapons of war engineers to prohibit the erection of fare. The time may come when gun­ •iigns on the right of way of the Col­ war god seems to be at work to pull fire will be- equally out of date as an umbia Highway deserve the support down the temple of civilization, and effective method of slaughter. The of the county court and the public, I turn the clock of progress back into , .-. the me Dark .'igti. Ages. k Half « ii ui of the luc world nuuu is Germans are already using asphyxiat­ i We are building a ; scenic highway convu|se(j by tbc earthquake of war. ing bombs and the French make use and it is hardly compatible with 1 he demonstration of fire and sword of liquid fire. Thomas A Edison is these intentions to have the landscape go on daily. A continent is torn and quoted as saying electricity may be marred and, in many instances, ab­ ruined by this awful Moloch. Through used for war purposes if methods of literated by ungainly signs. It ili a y the inventive genius of man, new and use can be developed. At the request be a fine thing for “Doan’s foot tremendous dangers faced the dis­ of Secreatry Daniels, Edison has con­ Wash" to cover the vision of the mayed inhabitants in the cataclysm sented to head a commission of in­ autoist at every turn of the road, but of war. I11 terror they must flee from ventors, the purpose of which will be how about the autoists? Goodness their homes in the dead of night, to devise the best possible methods knows there’s a sufficiency of signs leaving all they have behind, least of defense for this country in the in the cities without fencing the open j bomb, spreading ruin and death, i., event of attack. It will be a wide field •highway with them! It is a good ■ dropped upon their defenseless heads of effort and no man knows what thing to start right now to keeping from the sky. revolutions may be brought about in signs off the right of way. Of course, The nerve-racking terror and the the near future.—East Oregonian. the court cannot stop the signs from awful catastrophe of ruin caused by springing up on property adjacent to all that attends a war of such vast ----- o----- The pack of canned salmon on the the right of way, but if they are kept proportions as the present one can Columbia river this year will be a that far back, the autoist and vehicle- only be realized by those who are large one and will probably be close ists are given just that much more compelled to face the situation. Hu­ to 600,000 cases. The reason for the breathing space. We do not want man suffering is the inevitable sym- large pack is that none of the salmon our highways, by any chance, to fall | bol of war. It is sufficient to stagger is going into cold storage this sea­ into the conditions that discomfort the imagination, and cause the heart son, as it has done in past years. This certain electric roads in Southern to grow faint. Tens ol thousands of is owing to the war. All the fish will California. These conditions arc best men arc but the pawn in the game of be canned. At the beginning of the illustrated by the following: A tourist the nations, to be slaughtered—fed to season indications* were the pack was asked how he enjoyed the scen­ the cannon—to maintain what is would be small, as the run of fish ery between certain cities. “Scenery”? called national honor and commercial was light, but of late conditions have was the reply, “Is that what you call supremacy. Many of the suffers are changed, and it is now expected rec­ those walls of gaudy pictures and the widow and orphans who are left ords for a score of years will be flaring announcements? Out where I to mourn in poverty and unspeakable smashed when the season closes a came from they call them bill boards.’ loneliness as victims of the great military struggle. Poverty, ruin, hun­ month hence. The phenomenal run —Astorian. ger, and famine are the real members of salmon now being experienced in Those who held up their hands in of the alliance. ihe Columbia is due in large measure to the propogatioti of salmon. Four holy horror at the idea of our coun­ Then comes the burden of grinding years ago millions of tiny salmon try selling munitions of war should taxation to foot the bills caused by were placed in the Columbia, and remember that when our country wa, the enormous expenditure of fund, these have developed to such an ex­ engaged in the war of 1861-65, it was necessary to defray the expenses of tent they have now attained the dc- without adequate military equipage the bloody contest. What the tremen­ ■ red size. The river is said to be and among the very first things done dous total will be, no one can ever filled with salmon, and the catches was to send to Germany for arm,. guess. If the war is much longer con­ «re the highest on record.—Pacific Nearly or quite half of the rifles used tinued, it is sure to bring financial in our army were purchased ill Ger­ disaster, resulting in the obliteration Homestead. many. Previous to the breaking out of credit. War means paralysed in­ — o---- of the war. Secretary of War Floyd dustries and a struggling debt. After I here is no such thing as hyphen­ had managed to get a large propor­ the glory of the victory and the des­ ated American. No one can be a citi­ tion of the arm,, both large and small pair of defeat, will come the business zen of two nations at the same time. depression. He may be an American, an English­ within the territory of the southern And w’hen will war cease?—Never man, a German, a Frenchman or an states, where they were at once con­ while sin is in the earth. The present Italian, but he can not be an English- fiscated, and also it was found diffi­ death struggle will doubtless end cult to properly arm the men enlisted American, a German-American, a under the stars and stripes. But for sooner or later, when some nation r rench-American or an Italian-Amer­ purchases we could not have has won a conclusive victory, or all ican. And, apparently, in no country maintained abroad, our place in the field for have worn themselves out. Not till but our own is such a thing as a any considerable time. 1 o make such the Prince of peace comes, and all the hyphenated citizen ever heard of. purchases was held be strictly 1c- nation, are carried away like chaff A hen a persan adopts a permanent gitimate, and so the to war from the threshing floor, and the residence in a county in which he is to a finish. The principle was has fought everlasting kingdom of God is usher­ not not born, he should, for moral and changed since, and it is just as prop­ ed in, will there be real peace. physical reasons, be naturalized. Once er Men may talk of peace, and peace for u, to sell arms to belligerent, naturalized he abjures and rejects, compacts may be negotiated with the in Europe., in IQ»5. ’ ’ ’ * wa * to . y under oath, all the authority of the them in Europe in 1861-65. The time nation,; and all this is laudable, to be Farmer* in Ten States Buy aoo Auto­ three years, and more than doubled land of his nativity and all obligations may come when we shall want the sure. But in the end, the work will in the la>t two year», so that on Jan­ mol Mies a Day. ?’ a citizen thereto and thereof. principle recognized in our favor, and come to naught. War will come again uary I, 1915, by figures furnished by —o..... * bus, then, he becomes a full fledged we must not do today, what we would Armagaddon is ahead of us a strug­ In the current issue of Farm and the various secretaries of state, the citizen of the land of his adoption, wish gle before which the present contest Fireside, the National farm paper pub­ number of cars was 559,730. Of this undone fifty year, hence, es ­ and he is bound to a loyal and exclu­ pecially since the present war gives pale, in comparison. lished at Springfield, Ohio, a contri­ immense total fully one-half belong sive support of its laws and its na­ no guarantee that the permanent The hope of the world is in the butor writes an interesting article to farmers. The number in the ten tional policies, even to the extent of dawn of world peace is anywhere advent of the Prince of peace. And it showing how motor cars affect farm states is increasing at the rate of 13,- active opposition to the laws and pol­ near at hand. When all nation, are should encourage our hearts to know life. In the following extract taken 000 machines a month, 435 a day. The icies and interests of every other na­ willing to join in practica di«™- that Hi, comirte i, near, even at the from the article appear some remark­ average value of these machines was tion on earth, not excluding by any ment than will the refusal to sell arm, door,. By Hisladvent He will make able facts about the use of automo­ »980 ___________ rueans, the nation whose juridiction on the part of anyone of them be war to cease td the end of the earth. bile, by farmer»: I be has expressly fore-sworn.—Astor­ justified,—Telephone Register. War at any price is sometimes nec- Glad day! “Take the ten -states of the Middle ian. L. I. Larson, West, known a»>the grain belt: Illi­ tssary, peace at any price isn’t. F. M. Riley nois, Iowa, K?.naas. South Dakota, Perhaps Russian» retreated for the Where i» the automobile baby car- H has been written, talked and tame reason Yankees did at Bunker Elders Seventh'day Adventist Church Wisconsin, Minonri, Nebraska, Okla­ ruse, just big enough to take you homa and North llakota. Four years and the baby out for an airing. even- sung until it has become almost Hill—powder was short. One year gone and only one war ago these ten state , owned 130,000 "’eltneyed. We mean the question: It continues incomprehensible why •ong Kentucky will reduce next year’» in the whole twelve months. automobiles, the p-.roportion of farm Do.you know where your bov or trench warfare, isn’t the mode in he output of whisky one-third. Some machines was perhvps one to ten. Our Spanish war from February to P,rl i\/onight?” Nevertheless, it is eastern end of the war as it 1» m the consumer» might do well to P*** duc *°day *» it was *!•« firs* western. Why can’t the Russians hold ti.lv nroduced a dozen. This war is no i. The number of motor cars in the»e ultimate ten SUte*, has quadri) pled in the last »imilarily reduce the input. time m ever uttered, and a great singing matter. 1 deal morv 'mportant a* the year» roll their trenches? E REEDY, D.V M., Both Pilone« Tillamook ... I No Civilized Warfare—The Coming of the Prince of Peace Will End It Forever. OREGON. VETERINARY. RUEX. JVIeHRIR & CO THE WAR GOD. T BJ ALS, M D., p . Queen whose achievenment was the w orld s record for the short period of How fleeting is the glory of a Dairy I 1 but three months produced tn a like t,r'4'3®S®iaf3J8Ef3J3J3i3i3iBfi2fB®ffl3EISiHJa/3IHE®I3JaJS13l3iaj3l3l8®8Ef5J3IEEJB®3jEi3J3I3ic Low Queen is best exemplified by period tbs. of milk (11448 the eclipse cast over the yield of the quarts) 24612.8 erstwhile leader of the dairy world, butterfat. containing 1116.05 tbs of Finderene Holigen Fayne No. 1144- Te new world’s record cow, Find­ 551 HFHB, by her stable mate, Find­ i erne Pride Johanna Rue, calved at erne Pride Johanna Rue No. 121083 the age five years, four months HFHB, the new world’s champion. and four of days. Her sire is Johanna I he regining Queen like her prede­ Rue 3d’s Lad No. HFHB and Electric lights and water in every cessor is one of the brillinat lumin­ her dam is Jondine 26939 Pride No. 60247 aries of the Holstein-Friesian breed, HFHB. She was bread by Bernard tent; go surf bathing or hunt for and her remarkable performance, an Meyer of Finderne, N. J., and is now crabs and clams; tent city is under nounced June 16 last by the Advan­ owned by the Somerset Holstein direction of Bar View hotel; many ced Registry office of the Holstein- Breeders Company of Somerville, N. entertaining features; no liquors al­ Friesian Association of America lowed sold. Rates by week, $5 and up; breaks all world’s records for butter 1 he test was made under the super- sleeping tents and board at hotel, $2 fat production, and for all other , vision of the New Jersey Agricultur­ breeds by yielding in 365 consecutive I al College. In a seven day’s test be­ per day and up. Write W. A. Wise, days 28403.7 tbs. of milk (13211 ginning 358 days after she calved, the Bar View, Tillamook County, Ore.. quarts) containing 1176.47 tbs. of new world’s champion produced 602.4 or 210 Failing Bldg., Portland Ore. butterfat. The average yield per day tbs. of milk and 28.831 tbs. of butter­ ..................... therefore, was , slightly uvcl over 36 quarts fat, and for a second time established of milk of MUI.IVI butter put per U<»y. dav a new mark in the division of records — — — and —«• 4 tbs. WX ' The ru- Holstein-Friesian u-<-. .................... - heifer, — Find- begun not less than 240 days after erne Holingcn Fayne, the disposed calving. “Note to Great Britian delayed” is a headline that occur« as often in the j daily papers as t subtile "That ”’1''“ on and the temptations in life in­ Night" occurs in the movies. What's crease. If every lather and mother in the matter with that note? We've Dallas would wake up and get the given Great Britian everything else idea firmly fixed in their minds that of importance ranging from our mer­ the most important thing in the chant marine to the Panama Canal, whole scheme of rearing a family is so why not give them the note? If to know where the sons and daugh­ they don’t like it we can apologise.— ters spend their evenings and how, it Astorian. 1 would mean fewer heartaches. -I.™ . It is 1 easy for any one who is curious on After almost a year of devotion and this question to find out these things self sacrifice, the American Red any evening on the side streets, in 1 Cross Corps is to be recalled from the park, etc. We don’t believe that the battle grounds of Europe, on ac­ Dallas is any worse than other towns count of a lack of further contribu­ of its size in this respect, but, frankly,. tions in sufficient amounts to war­ from what we do know, we cannot ____ This ___ rant their staying. It has been won­ say that it is very much better. derful the way America has poured does not apply to any one in particu­ food atjd funds into the war zone lar, but it won’t hurt us to think through this great organization, but about it. Sometimes a wholesome there must, be an end to this liberal­ curiosity along these lines by a par­ ity because the doners can see no ent is the means of saving a son or a hope of any cessation of the cause daughter. Give the matter a thought. that makes the need of this assistance Not you, but the other ones—the par­ ents who need the advice.—Folk —Umpqua Valley News. I County Itemizer. ELAND B. ERWIN, I J ■Mi The automobile is one means of atiording more healthy recreation to the farmer and his family as well as to the city dweller. Such a vehicle is becoming one of the necessities on the farm.—Pacific Homestead. I J. CLAUSSEN, . LAWYER. DE U TSCH ER A D V O K A T E 2!3 T illamook B lock Tillamook Oregon DENTIST. (I. O. O. F Bldg.) Tillamook - Oregon Util 1U ATTORNEY-AT LAW. Complete Set of Abstract Hooka in »»nice. Taxes Paid for Non Residents. T illamook B lock , Tillamook - - . . Oregon Both Phone«. c - hawk , PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Hay City Oregon QR. L. L. HOY, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON T illamook B lock , Oregon. Tillamook, J2^R. ELMER ALLEN (Succeaaor to Dr. Sharp), DENTIST. Commercili! Building, Tillamock HABERLACB, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. T illamook B kock Tillamook J- • • [Oregon pR. GEORGE J. PETERSEN DENTIST, Sncceaaor to Dr. Perkin« TILLAMOOK, OREGON. f ' EORGE WIL! ETT, tjr ATTORNEY AT I AW T illamook C ommercial B oildino Oregon Tillamook • R E. E, DANIELS. CHIROPRACTOR. Ixxrai Ofllce in the Commercial Building, TILLAMOOK - ORE' EAT VIERECK’S BREAD, TILLAMOOK BAKERY At All Grocers.