T illamook headlight , may 2- What the Editors Say. & e>~*~2-*C«C? «-M * Tij ” > to I * - U,ut n aotor tQr” y«r. „ ’* •alt. ’• ** «0 not -4 16 5 VPcor Y- , »otor for °’n»rs. 'V1y Tour, "I * piwon pnfirelysatisfactory Zerolene, “a moit satisfactory motor oil”—tliat is the testimony of the leading automobile distributors oi the Coast. They know from the record» of their service departments—and we know from exhaustive tests—that Zerolene, correctly refined from selected California asphalt-base crude, gives perfect lubrication with least carbon deposit. Zerolene is the oil for your car—whatever the make—the oil for all types of automobile engines. For correct grade, get our Lubrication Chart covering your car At dealers everywhere and Standard Service Stations STANDARD OIL COMPANY (CALIFORNIA! ZEROLENE Michigan Lady Suffered Such Pain» In Back and Head, But Say» Cardui Stopped These Bad Spell». Palmyra, Mich.—Mrs. Chas. T. Ful­ ler, of this place, writes: “In 1911 I got run-down, and I suffered great pain... with both dull and sharp shooting pains...also back and head. I was weak and could only drag around, and should have been In bed, for I really wasn’t able to be up. At times I would have spells that would be so bad I'd have to go to bed, and suffered intensely... I decided to try Cardui, and saw a great Improvement in less than a month's time. I used 7 or 8 bottles and was stronger...I got so much better that my strength returned and my work was easy for me. Cardui did me a world of good. It built me up in health and strength. I haven't had one of those bad spells since. I haven’t had to take any more medicine since or have any doctors either and have been able to do my work right along ...I recommend it to other women highly as the best medicine I know of for women Who suffer from female trouble ” If you suffer from female troubles, follow this advice. Get a bottle of Cardui today and give ft a thorough trial It should help you, as it has helped thousands of other women in the past 40 years. At all druggists. EB-M Summ°ns. General economy is needed, but not the kind that ties up trade and de­ presses industry. Everyone can dis­ tinguish the difference between pru­ dent living and wastefulness. If a man buys a suit of clothes, a pan of shoes or a hat. his money foes into legiti­ mate circulation and furnishes uses for capital and employment for labor. —Ovserver. It is whispered among the Granges that there has been a good deal of ex­ pense as well as Spence in the State Grange lately ami that the present master is the original man who put the Spence in expense. At the next meeting of the State Grange the bet is that the present master is to be de­ clined thus: expense, ex-Spence, exit Spence,—a declension devoutly to be hoped lor by all those who believe in the great mission of the Grange and want to see rural Oregon progress.— Oregon Voter. The government must stop the gambling in wheat and other food stuff and lock those gambling centers until alter the war and it would be a good idea to keep them locked. The wheat gamblers have gouched mil­ lions out of the common people dur­ ing this war. Gamblers in other food stuff have also made millions. The gamblers do not produce a thing ex­ cept hardship, woe and misery, for the common class. The gamblers make millions on what others pro­ duce.—Banks Herald. War conditions and war prices have already placed the average American in a financial position where he can­ not decently be asked to pay for the war. . . . Reducing large incomes for the period of the war and until the war debt is paid (and soon paid) will have a salutary effect on the country. It will tend everywhere '.0 economy and thrift, which by reduc­ ing the demand for luxuries, will lower the cost of necessities to the general public; whereas the alterna­ tive of creating huge bond issues and leaving them unretired for yea^s in­ evitable tends to inflation, to extrav­ agance and to raising the cost of liv­ ing—already an oppressive burden.— Oregon City Enterprise. Colonel Roosevelt’s step into the war arena—with two hundred thou­ sand volunteers—has been checked by Congress. Mr. Roosevelt’s propo­ sition to fight Germany with his army of volunteers was certainly a patriotic deed and shows the true spirit of the loyal American citizen that he is. If congress will not permit a brave leader with two hundred thousand anxious volunteers backing him up to enter the foreign lands to fight our enemies, why talk of send­ ing the flower of American youth in­ to the trenches? The war between the United States and Germany is only in its infancy. Ko person can foretell what a day in the future will bring forth. The present attitude of Russia is to be reckoned with and it may put an entirely different light on the war situation within a fortnight.—Ump­ qua Valley New’s. Men did not volunteer fast enough to moboli^c an army and so the gov­ ernment resorted to conscription. Money has not been volunteered suf­ ficiently to pay for the war, so why not draft it? Is life worth less than coin? The United States should emerge from this war with no debt. Drafted money should pay for it. The lives of this generation will pay their price and the money of this genera­ tion should pay its part. Is it right for the government to send soldiers into the trenches and on their return home have them go to work to help pay the national debt? When a man offers his life that is all he should pay. That is enough: Men, money and food should be drafted and we should pay as we go with men, money and food. There should be no war_ debt, and now since money has failed to volunteer, the time has arrived when it should be drafted.—Blue Mountain Eagle. Congress Can Stop in a Day. Speculation Enactment of the administration’s measure to empower the government to fix reasonable food prices would put an instantaneous extinguisher on speculation. It would destroy at a stroke rhe motive of greed, for spec­ ulators everywhere would understand that government prices would not be their prices. An indication of the way it would work is seen in the recent,action of the navy department in commandeer­ ing naval supplies to Atlantic ports. Congress passed a law in March em­ powering the government to take that method in the purchase of all supplies for its own needs and its policy is clearly defined in a letter from the paymaster general of the navy. “The government is willing and de­ sirous of treating all dealers with fairness,” wrote Paymaster McGow­ an, and is prepared to pay an equit­ able price for provisions required for the navy. However, in arriving at such prices the present abnormal con­ dition of the market, in so far as in­ flated prices are concerned, will not govern the prices to be paid.” The law of March 4, 1917, under which this action is taken, provides reasonable redress against possible administrative injustice. Any dealer not satisfied with the prices tendered by the government can take half in cash and sue in the regular courts for the balance of his claim. This is an excellent law, but it does not go far enough. Its principle should be extending to the fixing of prices by the government on neces­ saries bought by the people for their homes. It is the only effective way of stamping out speculation and check­ ing the unwarranted upward inove- ment in many commodities which government surveys have shown to be in ample supply.—Spokesman-Re- view. The Kaiser’s God. -------- o------ The German Emperor appears to suffer from a religious mania which projects his own character into his imagination of deity, say the Boston Herald. It is evident from his words that the kind of God he worships is unknown to modern religions and un­ acknowledged by civilized t nations. The god of the Hohenzollern tribe or family it may be, but it bears not the slightest resemblence to Ggd, the Father of all, who "made of one every nation of men to dwell on all the face of the earth.” It is a fero- cious diety that smiles on the Kaiser out of his mirror. The following brief selection from his sayings, well chos­ en by Mr. Lovat Fraser, illustrates what passes in Emperor William’s mind for religious thought: I represent monarchy by the grace of God. Only one is Master in the Empire and I am that one; I will tolerate po other. You must all have one wijl, and that is My will; there is only one law and that is My law. If 1 order you to shoot down your relatives, brothers—yes, even your parents—you must obey me without murmuring.—(Speech to Potsdam re­ cruits.) 1 he spirit of God has descended upon Me because I am German Eni- peror. I am the instrument of the Most High. I am His sword, His representative on earth. Woe and death to those who oppose My will! Death to the infidel who denies _ My , mission! Let all the enemies of the German nation perish! God demands their destruction—God, who by My mouth summons you to carry out his decrees.—(Proclamation to army, Sept. 13, 1914. If there is any shadow of blasph- ___ .... emy in these words the Kaiser, we may believe, is unconscious of it. He seems to think of some sort of puppet perhaps a pocket god somewhat like Laban's gods, of which we read that Rachel "put them in the camel’s sad­ dle and sat upon them." At any rate, changing a word or two in an ancient sentence, many thoughtful people will feel bound to say that the Kaiser created a god in his own image, in the image of the Kaiser created he him. He is always in the hands of physician«, but none of them as yet successfully answered the question, “Canst thou not minister to a mind deseased ?" In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Tiliamook County. there are now more than 30,000 pig Verna 1.. Mast. Plaintiff. clubs in the United States. W hen the vs. census of 1910 was taken there were Reuben H. Mast, Jr. Defendant. only fifty-nine. The pig club, which To Ruben H. Mast, Jr., above nam- is rapidly tiecoming a national insti­ ed Defendant. is a scheme by which the In the name of the State of Oregon tution, bankers and the boys and girls of the you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against country are enlisted for co-operation you in the above entitled suit and in food production. Bankers are urg­ court on or before the last day of the ed by the Department of Agriculture time prescribed in the order lor the to lend boys and girls money to en­ publication of this summons, and ii gage in pig club work, and they are you tail to so answer for want there­ responding in increasing numbers, as of plaintiff will apply to the court for the figures show. .Another scheme the relief prayed lor tn the complaint, fostered by the department is known to wit: For a decree forever dissolv­ as the "Endless chain”. By this sys­ ing the bonds of matrimony now ex­ tem the banker provides a registered isting between plaintiff and defendant cow for a local club, and at the end of and that plaintiff have the custody the season receives two choice gifts THE BEST STOCK OF HARDWARE IN and care of the minor child, Reuben in return, which he may put out with Harrison Mast; and that plaintiff be other boys and girls under the same the endless decreed to be the owner of a one- arrangement. W here THE COUNTY. third interest in and to the real prop­ chain has been tried both sides have erty described in the complaint; and si i med to be satisfied, and the result See Us for Prices Before Ordering Elsewhere. that defendant be adjudged to pay­ has not only been beneficial to the tile «uni of thirty dollars per month food supply but it has stimulated lor support of said minor child, and healthy interest in pig raising where for such other relief as the court may it will do the most good.—Oregonian. MERCHANT’S WIFE ADVISES ¡deem meet with equity, and for the TILLAMOOK WOMEN. Notice of Hearing of Final Account. arc, to the said account and the set- j costs and disbursements of said suit. Sit tight and don't get excited is a 1 his summons is served upoa you "I had stomach trouble so bad I tlemcnt of said estate Notice is hereby given, that the un­ by publication by order of Hon. A. good rule for us all to follow just at could eat nothing but toast, fruit, and Dated A pril nth, 1017. present, tor there is a certain amount tersigned has filed her final account Marina A. Larsen Execu­ M Hare, County Judge, of Tillamook of hysteria in the many different hot water. Everything else soured Executrix of the last will and trix of the last will and t ounty, Oregon, in the absence of kinds of propogandas that have ap ­ and formed gas. Dieting did no good. lent of lohanna Marie Larsen, testament of Johanna the judge of the above named Circuit peared since war was declared. The I was miserable until I tried buck­ Court, which said order was made and ed, »nd that (lie County Court thorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed ■Marie Larsen Deceased. dated the 19th dav of April, 1917, and situation is certainly serious and de- j m Adler-ika. ONE SPOONFUL >1 Oregon, for the Coun- the date of first publication thereof is mauds the thoughtful consideration , benefitted me INSTANTLY” Be­ >k, has set the loth day Notice. April 19. 1917. and date of last pub­ of all good citizens, but that does not cause Adler-i-ka empties BOTH large 1917 at ten o’clock a O1 — lication hereof, and the last date on mean that everything else must be ' and small intestine, it relieves ANY ■om of said court, in stallion Liberal, black Perch- 1 T,•••••«•«•, viacx which you are required to appear and dropped and we must mark time. The CASE constipation, sour stomach or ■‘t’aniook County, eron. will be at the Harris b..„ ,„„ once r answer is May 3b 1017. nation faces the problems of success­ 'nd place "or a werk lor tvyi» days. Friday urn and prevents appendicitis. It has and Sat-1 fully prosecuting the war, but they gas Johnson A Handley, • if •" •< 1 urday, cointHencing April. Jt»t QI ICKEST action of anything we will be met. Crop conditions through- Attorneys for Plaintiff. ever sold. J. S. Lamar, druggist. flLiEX. JVIermiR & CO GENERAL HARDUJARE Kitehen Ranges and Heating Stoves. 2 C. E. Spence says that he did not start the mud slinging, but at the same time it is noticed that, whoever started it, he does not deny that he has at least done his part in keeping it going. An alibi that sets up a de­ fense that one fellow started what the other finished is not convincing. —Independent. out the country arc below the aver­ age and we must uot only feed our­ selves, but also sec that Europe does not go hungry, but notwithstanding this we are not going to starve. As we view the situation, it simply means a little more hustling and economies where they will count, but hysteria should carry us no further. There is no reason why business pro­ jects should be postponed, necessary building carried on, nor in fact why our routine should be changed except as it might divert labor or other re­ sources from industries to the war. Times at present are prosperous, but this prosperity can easily be changed if we ail make up our minds to stand still. Therefore it is wise for us all as far as possible to pursue the even tenor of our way, selling what we have to sell and also buying liberally if not extravagantly of what the other ieliow offers and see to it that there is no clogging of the industrial ma­ chine. Keep in mind that the country is just as wealthy as it ever was, but this wealth must be kept in circula­ tion.—Independent. J . I Citation. ----- o— In the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Tillamook County. In the matter of the estate of Frank Foisblom, deceased. To all unknown heirs of Frank Forsblom, deceased, and any and al) other persons interested in the estate of said Frank Frosblom, deceased: In the name of the State oi Oregon, you are hereby cited and required to appear in the County Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Tillamook, at the court room thereof at Tillamook City, in the county of Tillamook on the 30th day of June, 1917, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of that day, then and there to show cause, if any exist, why an order should not be made by the above named court directing and authoriz­ ing the administrator of said estate to sell at private sale, for cash in hand the real property belonging to the said estate, situated in Tillamook County, Oregon, and more particular­ ly described as follows, to-wit: All the right, title, estate and in­ terest acquired by Frank Forsblom in the tract of land of about 61-100 of an acre, in Sec. 23, Tp. I N., R. 10 W. of W. M., as well as any and all other rights acquired, under and by virtue of that certain bond for deed execut­ ed by Andrew Peterson in favor of said Frank Forsblom, dated Dec. 8, 1914, and recorded at page 288 of Book “30” of the records of deeds of Tillamook County, Oregon, and also described in the Tract Book of the County Assessor of Tillamook Coun­ ty Oregon, at pages 23 and 24 thereof as Tracts Nos. 44 an