TILLÄMOOK |HEADLIGHT. APH1L» U< 1918 —■ BfiThe Dity We Must Do. WHY WE ARE I AT WAR WITH GERMANY ------ o------ By Charley L. Gant. Over there in the trenches where the bursting shells are rife I Where the boys are bravely fighting for the freedom of mankind. I W e are needed by our brothers to as- By ' sist them in the strife, EPHRAIM DOGGLASS ADAMS Needed where the hills of France by Makes Clubbing Arrangement With Executive Head, History Depart German might are mined. ment . 1 he starry flag of freedom needs our Leland Stanford Junior University bullets, brain and brawn To keep it ever floating where the ty •'The object of this war Is to deliver rant Hun is seen the free peoples of the world from the menace and the actual power of a vast I We’re needed in the battle front till ■nlhtary establishment controlled by an every foe has gone, rrcsponslble government, which, having lecretly planned to dominate the world, I 1 ill oceans waves no more shall know proceeded to carry out the plan without MONG our large circle of readers assasin’s submarine. -egard either to the sacred obligations there are a great many who are in Jf treaty or the long-established prac ' \ oung men, brave men, made of stuff tices and long-cherished principles of In terested directly or indirectly in that’s true, ternational action and honor; . . , This | jower Is not the German people. It Is ! Rally to your country’s flag, the Red, fruit growing, dairying and other the ruthless master of the German peo branches of farming. All of these White and Blue. ple. ... It Is our business to see to ,t that the history of the rest of the i Break the tyrant s galling chains and naturally wish to keep in close touch with ag world Is no longer left to Its handling.” start the world anew ricultural activities throughout the state; —President Wilson, August 27. 1917. and to know about any fight which is being THE MATERIAL AIMS OF GER I Along the road of freedom—it’s a du ty we must do. MANY. waged for the measures Oregon farmers want and against all sorts of schemes that Germany believes that she has the Over in the field of Flanders where right to dominate the world. Her are detrimental to the people and agricultural the ravished mothers weep, militaristic autocracy believes that \\ here sisters hide each saddened face interests of this state. this war is a step toward such world made pale by Prussian lust. We have, therefore, made a special clubbing domination, but that German demands Within the blood-stained fallow arrangement with THE OREGON FAR for the present may rest satisfied with where the fallen heroes sleep. substantial gains In Europe. For years 1 he scared voice of Liberty is calling MER whereby any farmer or fruitgrower, German political writing has been full who is one of our regular subscribers and who from, the dust. of the "terms of peace” after a war. Calling to you brawny boys, you sol is not now a subscriber to THE OREGON and today those terms remain unal FARMER, will be entitled to receive THE diers of the free, tered. The Russian negotiations have OREGON FARMER in combination with Whose brothers brave are holding served to prove that what has for a now the tyrant Hun a bay, this paper at the same rate as for this paper long time been public opinion, is now alone. You’re needed at the battle front out official opinion. The quotations will there across the sea, show this. This offer applies to all those who renew or Your neighbor boys are in the trench First, the more general purposes: extend their subscriptions as well as to all and you ’ re as brave as they, ‘‘If we come victorious out of this war, new subscribers. If you are interested di we shall be the first people an the Loving boys, daring boys, boys who rectly or indirectly in Oregon agriculture, have the sand. earth, a rich stream of gold will pour do not miss this unusual opportunity, but over the land.” "Expansion of our Freedom need your service in a kaiser ridden land, send your order in now. power both East and West, if possible also over seas; political and military To break the fetters from the limbs THE OREGON FARMER is the one farm of mothers sweet and true domination combined, indissolubly con paper which is devoting itself exclusively nected with economical expansion, this To let the sun of freedom in—its duty to the farming activities and interests of we must do. is our war aim.” “The territory open Oregon. It has a big organization gath to future German expansion must ex The wail of babes float on the winds ering the news of importance to farmers, tend from the North Sea and the Bal from off the moaning sea, dairymen, fruitgrowers, stockraisers and tic to the Persian Gulf, absorbiu* absorb.' rhe The voice of our own country’s babes Netherlands and 1 Luxembourg, Twit- poultrymen: and it has the backbone to at who prattled as they sank. zerland, the whole basin of the Dan- The wails of mothers, pitiful wails, tack wrongful methods and combinations and ube, the Balkan Peninsula and Asia bad legislation, and support honest leaders come to us on each breeze, Minor.” and beneficial measures. We are confident From throats choked by the kaiser’s Second, the immediate alms: Our that our readers will congratulate us on our hands, his rotten hands and rank. relations with Turkey have drawn us Beyond the seas are death and hell being able to make this splendid and at into this war. . . the Bagdad and desolations track, tractive clubbing offer. Railway must be extended by ua to Where .Freedom’s white winged dove the open sea. even to India Itself ” of peace should have her sacred nest “Belgium must remain under German Where sunlight’s golden rays should domination there exists no fall the land is cold and black. better line of attack for the German Or reddened with the sacred I blood army in a future war with Franoe,” from patriotic breast. whom it is necessary “to weaken to such a degree that she can never again Tried boys, and true boys, with every inch a man, be dangerous to us.” ‘‘Will anybody | believe that we will hand over the Go plant the flag at Berlin’s gates, you will I know you can. lands which we have occupied in the West, on which the blood of our peo Break the chains which bind the slav- ple has flowed?" "We are not an in fs—leave Liberty in lieu. stitute for lengthening the life of We owe the world its freedom—its a duty we must do. dying states.” But it Is on Poland and Western Nature’s ever smiling God is not in Russia that Germany has all along war and strife, fixed her eyes. "We ought not to And Nature’s God has never heard a lei fall the sword from our hand be- War Costs Billion a Month. kaiser’s kultured prayer; for» we have assured our future. Our ------ o---- own no God who wields a sword to I eastern boundaries must not remain • The war is costing the United States take a baby’s life, where they are.” “Livonia, Kurland, almost a billion dollars a month. want no God who sows the seed of Esthonla, have been for more than 1 March I, the government had more THAN EVER sorrow everywhere. seven centuries sister-countries united than a billion dollars in its general In all this loss of blood and life I see ' j/our rajiy fund and total cash assets of more through German traditions It is true I no hand Divine, Germans do not yet represent 10 per , deysmustbe than four billion. But even with the cent of the inhabitants; but their char I see no pity, love and grace of Him revenue soon to be realized from the I who died for man, productive acter filters through the whole.” "Let income tax and that coming in from But I can hear the devil's voice, be us bravely organize great forced mi the sale of thrift stamps and other yond the river Rhine, grations of the inferior peoples. Pos sources of revenue, this does not terity will be grateful to us. We must Satan Bill Hohenzolern, and so the i leave a sufficient margin for financing I whole world can. coerce them! This is one of the tasks such a huge war. Until congress pro of war. Such forced migrations may Truest boys that ever trod the soil of vides for drafting more of the big in any land. appear hard, but it Is the only solu comes and a larger per cent of ex Hon. . . . The Inefficient peoples, Take your kits upon your back your cess profits, further bond issues will guns within your hand discouraged and rendered indifferent be inevitable. Cut full in shoulder, chest to the future by the spectacle of the It is a duty you must do, so go and superior energy of their conquerors, do it well and arms-comiortuble. sta#. Constipation and Indigestion tnav then crawl slowly towards the Go blow the Prussians, Huns and These arc twin evils. Persons suffer Iona w'canno. UJaterproof absolutely Turks and Kaiser into hell. peaceful death of weary and hopeless ing from indigestion are often troub S atisfaction AJT oweruj senility." The writer of this was here G uaranteed »° sto * led with constipation. .Mrs. Robert viewing especially the nan-ilerman Allison, Mattoon, 111., writes that The Crown Prince. populations of South America. when she First moved to Mattoon she How is America interested in the ------ o------ was a great sufferer from indigestion European political and territorial re and constipation. Food distressed her sults of this war? Well, first, we are Have you noticed in all the battles at and there was a feeling like a heavy *t war. Germany believes that peace the front the crown prince is always weight pressing on her stomach and cow. on the terms she outlines, means in command? That is simply to em chest. She did not rest well at night, a Geimany victorious. That means a phasize Prussianism. That piece of and felt worn out a good part of the continuance of military autocracy in royal insignificance is to teach the time. One bottle of Chamberlain’s Germany—a continuance of an aggres people that the cause of the Huns is sive policy—a continuance of German inseparably involved in the Prussian Michigan Lady Suffered Such Paini Tablets corrected this trouble so that I faith. in its special destiny to rule the dynasty. It is a standing proof that she has since felt like a different per I world. son. For sale by Lamar’s Drug Store. kultur is a family matter and that In Back and Head, But Says I Against that German ideal we are royal blood is the sine qua non of the I fighting. But we are also fighting German cause. Every time we see the Cardui Stopped These Nature Cures The Doctor Takes The Ito save the Americas from the “next crown prince mentioned as a leader Fee. Bad Spells. |,icp in German imperialism. In the in battle we know that Hohenzollern- There is an old saying that “nature I first year of t he war. the one great ism is all that country is fighting for cures, the doctor takes the fee,” but Ifear expressed j,y German officers was is as everyone knows you can help Na and if it goes down their cause [that a long war in Europe would Palmyra. Mich.—Mrs. Chas. T. Ful ture very much and thereby enable it ["cause America to wake up.” Wake lost. < ler, of this place, writes: "In 1911 I to effect a cure in much less time IjP to what? Not to the need of got run-down, and I suffered great than <s usually required. This is par The Bloody Cost, [American participation io the war. pain... with both dull and sharp ticularly true of colds. Chamberlain's [The German officers thought America shooting pains...also back and head Cough Remedy relieves the lungs, Ineligible for this war. But they did. The _ great loss of life in the current I was weak and could only drag l liquifies the tough muscles and aids in I,n<! do, fear that America would big battles is the terrible fact con around, and should have been In bed. I Its expectoration, alleys the cough l*’ake to the danger to herself, her cerning it. And to think that lite is all for I really wasn’t able to be up At and aids nature in restoring the sys times I would have spells that would ■Ideals her institutions, her interests, tem to a healthy condition. For sale frod that being awxkened. Germany's lost because of the vanity and ambi be so bad I’d have to go to bed, and by Lamar’s Drug Store. suffered intensely... tion of the kaiser makes him the i*1* step tn work' domination would I decided to try Cardui, and saw a greatest murderer of all time. He has great improvement In less than a Card of Thanks. harder than the present one I There is no hope of a changed Ger- killed a million men to save the curse month’s time. I used 7 or 8 bottles of establlsh'ng those peaceful of Hohcnzollernism. That is all there and was stronger...I got so much To th: many kind friend« that as better that my strength returned and sisted me with their loving sympathy fid friendly relations which should my work was easy for me. Cardui did is to this conflict — all there is to the BJstennine international conduct — if in my hour cf sorrow and death of ff*nnany gains her objects. or any bloodshed, the ruined home and the me a world of good. It built me up In my son, I wish to thank each and health and strength. I haven't had one fn of them, in 'his w-ar. She ha» fatal cost. He is trying to Germanize of those bad spells since. I haven t every one, and for the beautiful floral her heart upon certain maternal had to take any more medicine since offerings. ^Htcti. rve must see to it that »he the world. He is setting up kulturc as or have anv doctors either and have Flank De Vroy. influence which, as every- BJ®** not gain them. Then her first the ruling been able to do my work right along blocked. we may hope that her body knows, there is not t a spark of ...I recommend it to other women Rheumatic Pains Relieved. may awaken from their dream spirituality in it. It simply represents highly as the best medicine I know I “I have used Chamberlain’s Lini- of for women who suffer from fwnale ttnplr*. * We fight for a world peace, the selfishness and materialism of the | ment for pains in the chest and lame- ” . . also fight for self-pres- age, which gives no place to ircedom trouble. but If you suffer from female troubles, ! ness of the shoulders due to rheuma yvation. i id our beat chance to save democracy or humanity. If the hatetui follow this advice. Get a bottle of ' tism, and am pleased to say that it fr**slves Is thia present moment— personality of the kaiser would step Card’ll today and give ft a thorough I has never failed to give me prompt out of the way and give tree play to trial. It should help you. as It has relief," writes Mrs. S. N. Finch, Bat helped thousands of other women In the human spirit the war would soon avia, N. Y., For sale by Lamar’s Drug Thl» |( t Se secón«* of a series of tan end and there would not be another the' peat <0 yeara. At all drugr'"’X, Store. ’’’dee by Professar Adama one. The TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT The Oregon Farmer Offers Unusual Opportunity to Its Readers A TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, 1 yr.$l 50 OREGON FARMER, 3 years - $3.00 $4.50 By Our Clubbing arrangement, both for............................ • $1.50 /M ore 7W' Towns fistita REFLEX SLICKER DULL ANO SHARP SHOOTING FAINS .t SOME REASONS WHY WHEAT MUST BE SAVED “A Man Cannot Think. Work or Fight When He Is Hungry”—We Must Feed Our Soldiers. “We have the preservation of the world on our hands. Every single living human being in this republic, from ocean to ocean, should make it his or her special purpose to save food.” These are the words of E. F. Cullen, personal representative of Herbert C. Hoover, in a recent address. "Men will resist any power but the power of starvation." said Mr. Cullen. "Hunger in the final analysis, I b the only force that can weaken a nation and demoralize an army. Food is strength, and without a perpetual sup ply of strength, the world can stand in danger of tottering. weakening and falling into utter chaos. A man can not think, work or fight if he is hun gry "The allies today are practically wholly dependent upon the United States for food. Upon this nation rests the responsibility of preserving the world from Prussianism. This is the task of the people of this nation— to produce and save food enough to keep a steady stream of essential sup plies moving towards the front so long as it shall be necessary to wage this war. If at any time we fail in this, we must inevitably go down, with the allies, to defeat. This is no ex aggeration, but a serious tact. It is the purpose of the United States Food Administration to bring the realiza tion of this fact home to every Ameri can man. woman and child, and to en list the individual aid of our hundred million people in producing and sav ing food. The Food Administration is not asking you to eat less; it only urges that you substitute one nutri tious food for another equally nutri tious food, thus saving the vital sta ples needed by our armies and the armies and peoples of the allies. We must, during the next three months, save wheat especially. Our surplus has already been shipped abroad, and a hundred million bushels more are needed. When you eat a slice of bread less, omit the crackers with your soup, or otherwise conserve on wheat prod ucts, you are contributing towards the hundred million bushels needed over there by our fighting man and the exhausted people of Belgium. France and England who have for more than three years been bearing the brunt of this war, which is our war. Keep this in mind, and bring it before the minds of your thoughtless friends and neigh bors.” FOOD ADMINISTRATION FACTS Still With Us. Wifey (reminiscently)—oh! for the good old days. George. Ilubhy—What old days, Susan? Wlfe.v—Why, the days of our grand parents, when there were so many brass knockers. Hubby—H'm! Marie, there are plenty of knockers around now. and all of them seem to have abundance of brass. No Light on the Subject. “Who is the author of the saying: “Meeting the devil before day?” ask- a correspondent of the Adams Enter prise, and the editor replies: “Dunno. Sometimes we are under the Impression that we said It ourself, after we had successfully dodged a well-aimed kerosene lamp, on a 3 a. m. stairway.” Blended Emotions. “What n peculiarly Interesting face your friend, the poet, has." gurgled the romantic maiden. “It seems to com bine the elements of sorrow and happi ness. each struggling for supremacy.” “He looks to me more like a man who was married and didn’t know it,” replied the cynical bachelor.—Judge. A Natural Leader. “Were you fighting with that boy next door?” “No, mother.” replied Willie Wiggs. “We were not fighting. I found it nec essary for the welfare of the neighbor hood to discipline him. And he was so Indiscreet as to put up a show of re sistance.” HIS IDEA One ounce less of meat each day for everyone means a saving of 4,- 400,000 meat animals a year. Save your ounce. The sacrifice is small, but the result for your country is large. 1,186.000 tons of sugar will be saved the first year if each of us usee one ounce less each day. This will keep sugar plentiful and cheap. The Allies are all in the same boat, a long way from shore and on limited rations—and Lncle Sam is running the relief ship. Its up to us to save t"e cargo. Reduction, watchwords. Production—the Food will win the war. Produce it. 1918 Save it. If you run your household on three pounds of sugar a month per person, when fall comes the grocer won’t have to hang up the sign "No Sugar.” The second helplug Is getting to be bad form. There’s lots of money to go round, but bacon, beef and wheat can’t make •he circuit. Save your share. Waste and want are twin sisters and neither beautiful. Potatoes for Patriotism. By eating potatoes instead of wheat the people of the United States can help win the war We have not enough wheat for the Allies and our selves. We have an abundance of po tatoes. Wheat flour Is a concentrated food and therefore good for shipping; potatoes are bulky and are conse quently not suited for limited shipping apace, nor are the Allies so short of potatoes as of wheat. Next to cereals, potatoes have been In thia country the mainstay of starchy food, which supplies energy. The more potatoes we eat, the less wheat we need A mediumsized po tato, weighing about ounces, sup plies about as much starch as two small slices of wheat bread one half inch thick. In other respects also, the potato measures up wall with wheat bread and even has the advant age over it in supplying certain salts which the body needs to counteract the acidity resulting from the use of such foods as cereals, meat and eggs. By exercising her ingenuity the house wife can prepare potatoes in many different attractive ways, thus Increas ing their proportion in the family diet and conserving wheat and other sta ples needed for shipment abroad An Important use of potatoes, also. Is tn the mixing of breads, in which mash ed potatoes up to fully ten per cent may be used without detracting from its appearance or taste: In fact, many persons bold that potatoes properly mi>"d In bread, improves both appear ance and flavor. “Hard luck again.'* “Why ao?” “Just got lilt with a horse and cart; when It might have been an uutomo- bile." Is It Not! It's easy to say what another should do In the struggle for glory or pelf; But when the same problems are put up to you Ain't it hard to decide for yourself? A Philosopher's Wisdom. “Sir Isaac Newton was a prudent man.” “Why do you think so?” “In experimenting with the law of gravity he sat under a tree and let an apple fall on his bead It was so much better titan sitting under a ladder wait ing for n hodenrrier to drop u brick." Present Responsibilities. “Now, the economic conditions we’ll have to meet when the war Is over—" “You're away ahead of your story, friend." said Senator Sorghum. “What we’ve got to do now Is to look after the economic conditions now required to get the war over.” Outmatched. “Do you think the widow Is setting her cup for him?” “No; she tells me he Is clever but impossible." "Mercy ! If the widow finds him Im possible, he must be clever." A Mild Rebuke. “Judging from the pictures of Miss Decollete In that society paper, she Is In urgent need of being taken to a hospital." "For what reason?” “To have her cuts dressed.” Suitable Place. “I should think they could eaally raise chickens on Ia>urd ship.” "What are you talking about?” "Aren’t there hatchwnys convenient and doesn't a -hip often lay to?" Lost His Head Also. "What happened «hen you encoun tered the burglar?” "He took my breath away." “Anything cl«e--anythlng of valuel" asked the officer t»e< hunlcally.