TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT. JANUARY 10. 1918. Have confidence in the association and do not take any stock in idle gossip, and if you are in doubt about Legal Advertisements. First Insertion per line ............ $ .to anything regarding the cheese indus­ Each subsequent insertion, line. .05 try, get the naked facts before rushing into print. This is a little friendly ad­ Business and Professional cards vice to kelp the cheese industry. one month..................................... t.oo Locals per line each insertion... 05 There appears to be some misunder­ Display advertisements, an inch and Lodge Notices, per line . .05 standing in regard to tie. news item appearing that the Federal Govern­ All Resolutions of Condolence ment an boost the cheese industry. Ranks are run on confidence and so should the cheese industry of this county. Dispatches describing the work of the aviators on the various fronts no longer deal to any such extent as in the past with single combats, man to man. This means that aerial warfare, like that on land, has developed in an unexpected direction and is faat los­ ing its pictuiusque and rouia.itic feat­ ures. Ti.e fliers, nowadays, do compara­ tively little of the military hunting for solitary antagonists that gave them feme as “aces." instead, they work in carefully organized groups, the members of which are expected to show, not independence and initiative, but the ability to carry out with ex­ actness plans minutely laid out for them by superiors who never quit the ground. Each member of the group has an assigned post and place in its opera­ tion.-,, and usually they arc divided, some flying at a gieat height, some at a moderate one, and the rest up only a few hundred feet. In other weirds, they have "flanked.* just as do '.ccrestrial fighters, but the flanks am up . ::j down, not at right and left. They must be guarded none the less on that account, and sometimes they arc “turned," with the familiar dis­ astrous results. Aviation is hccouie a “service” like another, and its principle is co-opcra- tion. Thence will come military re­ sults, but not much, or at any rate not so much, of fame for individual avia­ tors.—New York Times. ' THE QUESTIONNAIRES. ■o------ Third List of Registered Men Who Have Been Classified. o------ First Class. 298—Jos. Altenberger 347— C. W. Reynolds 466—W m. Brill 517—C. S. Langton 436—Fred M. Jeffers 466— Gordon Burge 382—J. Maguire 404—Emil Grimm 473—Joseph V. Alley 390— P. Salit 495—E. A. Kebbe 461— B. G. Darby 320—L. J. Edwards 429—F. E. Cross 454—H. V. Follett 432— E. C. Smith 417—D. M. Brooten 323—C. F.. Swenson 371—A. L. Smith 203—C. Carson 395— E. O. Patchell 241—J. A. Affoltcr 468— U. Edwards 317— O. H. Beckwith 414— Fred Brown 49—J. Wester 449—Anthony Berns 342—A. G. Krumlauf 345—B. Center 391— L. D. Hetrick 406—H. Miller 212—D. V. Jennings' 438—O. O. Carver 289—J. S. Plasker 251—L. D. Rush 392— Fred Pickett 396— F. W. Hunter 336—C. Wyss 227—P. Popoldopulos 410—H. Reust 348— P. L. Frost 409—H. R. Goldsmith 373— P. L. Kuppenbender 40t—W. D. Buckbee 376—C. W. McMillan 484—E. C. Scovell 478—G. C. Papamanthaos 374— D. L. Steinback 535—E. P. Jeffrey 384—R. B. Driscoll 318— J. J. Kuper 380— J. Hiner 72—G. O. Trude 469— W. R. Lawrence 365— Leo Batzner 50t—J. S. Walker 268—P. Fraser 586—G. W. Durrcr 460—W. W. Turner 594—E. L. White 532—A. A. Schlappi 448—Reed West 471—M. Blazer 462— H. Hollett 596—C. M. Hollett 487—C. E. Eckloff 445—H. Hcisel 554— M. Hansen 444—V. Goodrich 514—B. W. Neilson 352—E. Kosric 492—Rusk E. Tatro 453—Frank J. Miller 433— E. F. Gollon 386— F. Adams Jr. 467— H. H. Schlappi 447—Frances Buckles 531—R. M. Repaso 557—Gilbert Rock 524—Reuben Wilkins 601—G. A. Bodyfelt 476—John Leslie 575—A. Donaldson 117—D. Aitkin 5jo—J. A. Hansen 482—N. R. Schcese 494—G. Zaddach 5 29—R. Peste rfield 475—R- C. Neilson 507—I’. E. Edgar 047—E. Hcusser 498—C. K. Baker <190—Harley Garland 540— R. Barker 521—A. R. Told 544—L. F. Darby 571—E. O. W inzent 620—A. S. Measor 570—Emil W ooley 3<>9—F. W. Schneider 616—F. B. DcVroy 569—Emil Scholltneycr 350—F. E. Adams Third Class 346—A. Butts , 420—R. S. Hull 415— P. J. Jacob 387— E, D. Tomlinson 541— E. L. Stewart 355—F. K. I.ystcr 552—V. G. Blanchard 381— J. W. Kavs 87—A. O. Dahl 339—C. A. Lvster 555— J- Zurflueh Jr. 505—V. S. Brown Fourth Class 249—Chas. Altenberger 4^0 — L. Woodford , 478—L. Read 480—G. L. Lane 430— F. M. Gould 431— A. A. Mason 366— O. J. Platt 389—A. C. Bisbee 48t—»G. Witt 455—W. G. Grauman 428—T. E. Prize 357—W. R. Parker 314—A. L. Dickey 3*2—L. B. Lucas 377—L. A. Burke 419—F. J. Bigg« 286—1. F. Gist 108—P. William« 412—V. M. Stewart 324—W. Rohitach 284—H. C. Witt ,» 45 t—J. N. LaGault 359—M. G. Hugnenin 252—A. Bcebchiscr 485—J. A. Imlah 463—R. L. Shreve loa—O. Church 523— 4- J. Sackatt 470—M. C. Blaser 422—A. A. Edmunds 356—T. C. Stuart 441—M. Eggenberger 511—F. Patchell 393—B. L. Beals Jr. 439— J. F. Thomas 440— G. D. Wells 518— W . G. Kirk 45—M. Sr.ndidgc 443—G. E. Tinncrstct 519— O. F. Lucas 578—L. E. Dick 413—C. H. Kinnaman 426—E. H. Zurflueh 367— F. H. Alvoid 551—G. Erickson 458—J. F. Beatty 424— Guy A. Allmon 513—R. H. Van Nortwick 525—Raymond W . Hammond 452—W. Stuivenga 51a—R. Fanner 425— A. E. Browning 528—W. Sappington 533—V. Donaldson 465— B. A. Folks 591—F. McGinnis 240—H. I. Sheldon 437—R. W. Elsea 472—H. Bowen 340—E. E. Koch 539—Jas O'Brien 661—I. Z. Wells 587— R. E. Wilson 568—B. A. White 589—J. W. Williams 550—G. Oliv cr 581—C. M. Thomas 526—C. J. Worthington 548—J. B. Delsman 577—V. P. Magarrell 614—T. R. Peterson 516—A. L. Pennwell 477—W. G. Holst 533—W. H. Kent 379—W. H. Barkerbower 496—Ray Grate Fifth Class. 385—M. Marijanovich 301—H. Klug 375—R. Larsen 418—Richard E. Buttz 312—E. L. Harrison , 330—F. C. Reed no—C. M. Reynolds 434—A. B. Miskovich 457—B. Bcovich 486—R. W. Bennett 22—A. B. Clark 479—M. Raicics 12—L. Woods 408—F. Reust 329—B. Thompson 506—P. Nay ha 464—J. H. Magarrell 44t—J. A. Benson 449—O. A. Olson 79—D. Newman 285—C. S. Carter 321—S. Blanchard 368— P. Perak 588— L. G. Seifer 584—C. T. Stephens 504—F. C. Wallett 403—Matt Zanich 572—Edw. Torngrcn 405—Anton Pcrnar 354—L Gusetis 617—G. F. A. O. Goebel Men Serving the Colors 7 E offer free our Safe Deposit service to men i the training camps or at the front. Bef( ° leaving home, every man should bring h^ valuables or important papers, keepsakes cor’ respondence and other precious possessions to thi Bank and we will arrange the space for keeping them safe during the owner’s absence without charge. There is always danger of loss, when valuables are kept at home. DEPOSITS OF MONEY ARE ACCEPTED BY MAIL- AND MEN IN THE SERVICE ARE INI ITED TO SEND DEPOSITS BY MONEY ORDER. TILLAMOOK COUNTY BANK UNEXCELLED ON WEST COAST OF STATE Tillamook, Gre. LET TILLAMOOK FEED THE NATION THE FOOD ADMINISTRATION has recom­ mended CHEESE as a substitute for meat. Tilla­ mook County may well prepare the bettering of dairy herds and increased output of this staple pro­ duct. The First National Bank will both support and co-operate with all legitimate development. DIRECTORS . A. W. Bunn, Farmer. P. Heisel, Farmer. C. J. Edwards. Mgr. C. Power Co. J. C. Hotden, Vice Pres. B. C. Lamb, Building Materials. John Morgan. Farmer. W. J. Riechers. Cashier. TILLAMOOK. OREGON. “MONEY SAVING GUARANTEED PRICE PLAN” We protect you against advance or decline in price. Delinquents to Date. 416—Cecil B. Howe 459—Wm. Claude Hatfield 411—Franklin H. Wilde 402—Jas. Roy Estabrook 383—Salvatore Di Stefano 335—Peter Hogan 280—Arthur Jas. Rust 282—Clarence M. Babcock 274—Chas Harry Griffis 194—John Aris 156—Ernest Prusch 233—Nilo Skytie Nelson Beginning January, 1918, Gasoline will be sold on a cash basis— TICKET BOOK, 100¿al. $24.50paid in advana TICKET BOOK, 50 ¿al. $12.25 ff This will save you 2 per cent per month over the usual monthly charge plan. This means 24 percent per year to you. Wiring 12-Inch Gun. According to the Millgate Monthly, no tewer tu rn 117 miles ot steel wire are wound on a 12-iiich gun that weighs 13% tons. I11 appearance this wile, which is of the same quality as piano wire, resembles tape. It is a quarter 01 an inch wide and a tenth of ail inch thick. It is tested to a break­ ing strength of 110 tuns, l’lie wire un­ winds from a reel as the gun barrel revolves, and a tension of about 50 tons to the square inch insures mech­ anical accuracy in wrappmg it around the gun. \ arious parts of the gun receive dif­ ferent thicknesses of wire. At the breech of a 12-inch gun, where the ■chief strain comes, there are 92 lay­ ers, wiiicii give a thickness cf nine and a half inches of wire, but at the muzzle there only 14 layers. Over the wire the gunmakers shrink on steel rings at white teat. When they cdol they contract and grip with immcncc force. The rifling of the barrel is an automatic process, an example ctf wonderful mechanical ingenuity. W hen flie gun is finished experts sest the accuracy of the rifling with plastic gutta pcrcha. 1 here is found the widespread de­ nunciation of the Underwood-Sim­ mons law bv a commanding portion of southern business men scattered from the Carolinas to Texas. Almost all of them are accredited Democrats, yet they declare they are for the Re­ publican policy of protection because they have vision broad enough and far-reaching enough to read the si ns<| of the future. When we have high co«t under a Republican admit due to the tariff. When v . 1 dcr the Democratic . i i due to agencies ov ernnicnt has no c< ff STAR GARAGE, TILLAMOOK CARAGE. I ALL WRONG. The Mistake is made by Many Tilla­ mook Citizens. Look for the cause of backache. To be cured you must know the cause. If it’s weak kidneys \ ou must set the kidneys working right. A resident of McMinnville shows you how. hrank Graitt, 432 Lafayette Ave., McMinnville, Ore., says: "Doan’s Kidney Pills are the only medicine that does me any good whenever my back feels lame and stiff. Heavy lift­ ing and exposure gets mv kidnevs out of fix once in a while. I can hardly '■’t anything, and when I get down it is difficult for me to straighten up. Affr I have taken Doan’s Kidney rtls for a few days, my back feels strong as ever.” I rice 60c., at all dealers, Don’t simply ask for a kidney semedy— get Doan's Kidney Pills—the same as Mr. Grant uses. Foster-Milburn Co., Props, Buffalo, N. Y. H. T. Botts, at-Law. I’res, Attorney John I.eland Henderson, Sec-? retary Treas., Attorney-ata' Law and Notrary Public. Tillamook Title and Abstract Co. ¡.aw P 11 s ? •I Abstracts. Real Estate, Insurance. Both Phones. T illamook —O regon . Ornamental Fire Places Bud of Brick and Stone. All Firl Places absolutely guaranteed not to smoke or money rd funded. . I Brick work of all kinds don on short notice. I We make a specialty of rd pairing smoking Fire Places! RALPH E. WARR TILLAMOOK ORE Irrigated Laa That will produce 1 Good Crops of Alalfn Y ear, at Prices in react all. $50 to S i 65 per at Located in Northern fornia. For information wntel B. S hewman , j forniti ; or P. K- . 3 Ajient, Ramsey Hotel, i amook, Or. I Do you know the differ«"« 1 trade and a protective lar back in and c°ntra i the spring and summer 0 .1 | we got up the war. n '’J dollar’s worth of PPrte -J I for cash; in 1914 'I *as 1 of liver on credit.