TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, MAY 30, 1918 JEGISTRATION DAY JUNE 5 1, «heeler, Tillamook and Clover- dale Places to Register. All men w ho have become 21 years I of al>1 s*nce Ju,le 5* will be re- I Mired to register, Wednesday, June 5, I 191^' I flaces of registration in Tillamook Cyunty are designated as follows: Oliicc of Local Board, Cvurt House Tillamook City, Oregon. Zimmerman Hotel, W heeler, Ore. Cloverdale Hall, Cloverdale, Ore. These places of registration will be ’ I open 110111 7 a m. until 9 p.m. Wednesday, June 5, is the date of «eat importance to every man in the Vniled States who has attained the ,ge of 21 years since Registration P pay on June 5, one year ago. For on this coining June 5 will be held another Registration Day, on ghich every man who has passed his jist birthday since last June must register with his local draft board. This applies to non-citizens as well JS to citizens. No man who comes within the age limit is exempt from registering, unless he is already in the military or naval service of the Unit­ ed States. And men 21 years old who for any reason have been discharged from the military or naval service must register on June 5. The registration will be conducted by the local draft boards throughout the I nited States. Each draft board is required to post publicly the location of its registration place, and men 21 years old must present themselves there on June 5 for registration. The registration place will open on Registration day at 7 o’clock in the morning, and will be open until nine o’clock that night. No excuse will be accepted for fail- lire to register. The burden of inform­ ing himself of the time and place for registration is by law placed on the registrant himselfc Failure to register is punishable by imprisonment up to one year in jail. Attempts to evade registration will bring disaster to the evador. All city, county, state and United States peace ofticers have been specifically direct­ ed to assist in bringing about a com­ plete registration of men 21 years old, and to examine the registration lists and report immediately to the Feder­ al authorities the names of any per­ sons liable to registration known by them to have failed to register. Men that are too ill to appear at the registration place must send some competent person to the local board to obtain a registration card with au­ thority to fill it out. This card when filled must be mailed or taken in person to the local board in time to be filed on Registration Day, June 5. Provision is also made for registra­ tion by mail of men 21 years old who will unavoidably be absent from their jurisdiction on Registration Day. All such persons should proceed immediately, without waiting fur Reg­ istration Day, to the local board near­ est to the place in which they happen to be, and have their registration cards made out by this board. The card must then be mailed by the registrant, together with a self- addressed and stamped envelope for return of a registration certificate, to the registrant's own local board. As this registration card must reach the local board by June 5, men 21 years old who will be absent from their home jurisdiction on June 5 should make haste now to have their registration cards filled out so they can mail the cards without- delay to the proper board. The War Department has issued the following official warning to all men coming within the 21-year-old age limit. "Caution—All male persons, citizens of the United States, and all persons residing within the United States, who have, since the 5th day of June, 1917, and on or before the day set for registration by the President’s procla­ mation (this coming June 5th) at­ tained the age of 21 years, must reg­ ister. The only exceptions are per­ sons in the military or naval service of the United Slates, which includes all officers and enlisted men of the Regular Army, the Navy, the Marine Corps, and the National Guard and Naval Militia, while in the sit vice of the United States, the officers ItU sJldlVS, CUV vm ’vv.v in the Reserve and enlisted Officers .’ _____ . _ . Corps . men in the Enlisted Reserve Corps while in active service.” Agricultural News Notes. ------ o------ Ry R. C. Jones, County Agriculturist. ------ o "Can The Cockerels Week." The week of June 3rd to June 8th has been designated as “Can the Cockerel” week for the entire state of Oregon. The reasons—1st. Thousands of dol­ lars are lost annually in the country by producing fertile eggs. 1 he infer­ tile eggs keep much better and longer, •ithcr for cold storage or for preserv­ ing in water glass. 2nd—Cockerals consume large amounts of feed that could be used •or the laying hens. What to do—All surplus cockerels, culls, and undesirable adult males tl’ould be disposed of as soon as pos­ sible; either by sale or by killing and ®se on the home table or canning for future consumption. Young cockerels should be disposed of as soon as they ccach marketable size. 2—Males to be retained as breeders should be separated from females as •oon as possible and kept in seperate quarters until again needed for breed­ only one vote. We care a great deal ers. 1 he local buyers will pay good pric­ what the readers think about it, for they have many vote:. They and their es tor what you have to ofter if you fellow-Democrats in other states have w.sh to sell. Whatever you do "Swat it in their power, sometimes, to send the Rooster and produce infertile to the Senate and the House of Rep­ eggs. resentatives men who will vote for a Labor For The Harvest With the shortage of help this year 1 tariff policy that sends our raw ma­ terials to Europe or Asia to be manu­ many have anticipated great difficul­ factured and shipped back to us. We ty m getting the hay put in. Exchange should lik to know what the readers 01 work will be very essential. Our of the Journal and ether Democratic Government has anticipated the newspapers think of the facts.—Doy­ shortage and provided that soldiers lestown (Pa.) Intelligencer. may get short iurioughs for the har- vest season. EMERGENCY WAR FUND Paragraph 4 of General order, 31, issued by the Provost Marshal Gen­ eral stales that "furloughs may be Initiative Measure to be Voted granted enbloc to men that are wil­ on in November. ling to accept them upon request of farmers." The farmer must state I he following letter was received wages paid in the vicinity and show from the State Council of Defense: that they will pay them. The participation of the American 1 hinking that several men may be _ needed during hay harvest, the people in the world war against County Agricultural Council members Prussian Autocracy has involved the have been instructed to receive appli­ •United States in Nationci expendi­ cations for help and turn them into tures on a scale unprecedented in this office. If men cannot be secured history. In addition to the demand upon ill other ways a request will be made for several of these soldiers to help each citizen to Meet his share of this out. If you are going to med extra expenditure by payment of federal help see the Council member nearest taxes, it is incumbent upon each of the states as commonwealths, to car­ you. the list of members is as follows: ry their respective share* of the bur­ E. K. Scovell Nehalem; Janies Wil­ den. 1 he demands upon Oregon up to liams, 1 illamook; C. A. tswenson, Til­ this time have not been extremely lamook; Chas Kunze, 1 illamook; Mrs heavy, but they will increase with F. Worthington, Tillamook; Jesse each month of the war. 1 he hospitals and sanitariums are Earl, Tillamook; Eugene Atkinson, Sandlake; R. C. Magarrell, Beaver; already taxed to their full, capacity Fred Robitsch, Hemlock; Ole Red- and the care of repatriated and con- berg, Oretown; and Rollie W. Wat- valescent soldiers will require the , construction and equipment of ade- son, Tillamook. i quate hospitals within the very near I The National demand tor in­ Council of Defense Notes. . future. creased food production will require funds available for loans to farmers At a meeting of the Executive Com­ for purchase of seed and payment of ■ mittee of the County Council of De­ labor. The possibility of external foes fense held Monday evening, it was and the practical certainty of internal voted to request the business houses dissension and sedition will require in the county to close on Memorial adequate police and military protec­ day from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., and to ask tion in all parts of the State. the people of the county to comply To meet these unusual demands up­ with the President’s proclamation on the State Treasury, the legislature asking that the day be observed as a which will convene 111 January, 1919, day of prayer for the success of the would normally be called upon to make very heavy appropriations. An arms of the Nation. It was also the unanimous opinion insuperable obstacle to such appro­ of the Council that the citizens of priations by tile legislature exists in Tillamook should turn out in a body the constitutional amendment enacted to give the 21 men a good “send off” al the general election held Novem­ | who are called in the next draft. ber 7th, 1910, which provides that. "Unless specifically authorized by a [ These men will leave on the train Saturday morniing, June 1st. Let majority of the legal voters voting upon the question, neither the State every one who can be at the train. nor any county, municipality, district or body » » » shall in any year so QR. O. L. HOHLFELD, Robbing American Labor. exercise the power of taxation as to VETERINARIAN. raise a greater amount of revenue for The editor of the Portland, Oregon, purposes other than the payment of Office at Journal, an intensely partisan Demo­ bonded indebtedness or interest there­ TOBI) HOTEL, cratic paper, is up in arms because the on plus six per cent thereof.” wool of that part of the country is T his constitutional amendment was Tillamook - - Oregon. shipped east to be manufactured into adopted without any thought of the cloth and clotting and is then ship- entrance of the United States into the ped back to the Pacific Coast to be world war and without any provision ! AVID ROBINSON, M.D., sold to the consumer. The editor of the unusual expenses et the State I grows dramatically eloquent in de­ incident thereto, llie only solution of PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON manding to know why that wool the difficulty was therefore obviously should be shipped across the country the enactment by initiative of a law NATIONAL BUILDING, and back, thus involving an expendi­ autahorizing a tax for war purposes. the ture for freight, and depriving OREGON. The matter was submitted to the TILLAMOOK western communities of the mom y Legal Committee of th-. Stale Council that is paid to the mill owners and of Defense a’ld referr-d to a sub-com­ mill workers for transforming the mittee consisting si James B. Kerr, raw material into finished goods. Chairman, Honorable Joseph Simon, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Undoubtedly the editor of that pa­ Honorable Bert Haney, United States per made a great hit with his readers, District Atorncy. The bill drafted by Surgeon S. P. Co. who believe in commodities made at them was submitted to the Attorney (I. O. O. F. Bldg.) home. It is sincerely hoped that the General and revised by him, and its Oregon editor made such a strong impression present form has the approval cf the Tillamook - upon his readers that they will not Slate Council of Defense and of the OBERT H. McGRATH, forget the line of reasoning he urged S;<.tc Officials directly interested in upon them. It is hoped they will re­ the matter. COI’.X.SELLOK-AT LAW, member the logic of that argument on Mr. James B. Kerr, Chairman cf the election day, for, if they do remember Sub-Commitee which drafted the pro­ ODDFELLOWS’ BUILDIN?, it, they will not cast their ballots for posed bill, was also the audio-’, at the TILLAMOOK. OREGON. or equest of Mr. RoLert E. Smith, Ed­ any candidate for the Senate House of Representatives who be­ itor of the Tax Liberator, of the Con- Con­ P ortia . nd O ffice lieves in the Democratic doctrine of stitutional Amendment. Both Mr. 1110 W ilcox B ld . Free-Trade, which encourages people Smith and Mr. Kerr arc heartily in to buy in Europe and Asia instead of accord will: the objects and purposes ^ARL HABERLACH, in America. cf this proposed initiative bill, and ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Since the Journal editor has men­ the Tax Liberator has announced ed­ tioned wool in particular, let us call itorially that its enactment by the T illamook B lock his attention to a few facts. people is of the utmost importance of The Underwood-W ilson Tariff act the state of Oregon and will not en­ Tillamook Oregon became a law October 3, 1913. but the croach upon the letter or spirit of the reduced rates on wool manufactures constitutional limitation upon the tax­ •^^•EBSTER HOLMES, did not take effect until December 31 ing power of legislative bodies. of that year. 1 here remain d a period The bill proposes the state tax of ATTORNEY-AT-LAW cf only seven months under the Dem­ one mill upon all taxable property in ocratic law before the war in Europe the state of Oregon to be subject to COMMERCIAL BUII.DING,T. upset all trade relations. In that seven epprepriation by the State Board of FIRST STREET, months we imported $10,879,813 Control, consisting of the Governor, worth of wool as compared with $2,- Secretary of State and State Treas­ TILLAMOOK, - OREGON 852,052 worth in the corresponding urer, to ceaie automatically at the ex­ I period in the prcceeding year, under piration of the war, and any unex­ the Republican law. 1.1 other words, pended balance to revert automatical­ QR. L. L. HOY, we increased our purchases of wool ly to the irreducible school fund. cloth in foreign countries to the Under the election law, in order PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON amount of $8,000,000. What does the that this measure may be placed upon T illamook B lock , Democratic editor of the Journal say the ballot and in order that the peo­ ple of Oregon may have an opportun­ Tillamook, Oregt n. to that? In that seven months’ period we in­ ity of expressing their opinion as to creased cur foreign purchases of whether or not Oregon shall do its T. Buna women’s and children’s dress goods full share in supporting the United nd our purchase States Government in this great nat­ by nearly $4,000,000, a: ’ ATTORN EY-AT LAW. of other manufactures of wool to the ional crisis, there are required the sig­ Complete Set of Abstract Boeks in natures of 22,533 registered voters. extent of $6,000,000. Office. In seven months we sent to Europe , I Petitions have been sent out to rep­ Taxe« Paid for Non Residente. $20,000,000 more than we did in the resentatives in various communities ‘T illamook B lock , corresponding seven months in the and will be circulated within the next preceding year to pay for woolen few days. Every patriotic voter will Tillamook .... Oregon manufactures mills , sj 111«11M H. • — - ■ made — in European - , Both Phones. sign. paying a profit to European capital and paying wages to European labor. C. HAWK Best Remedy for Whooping Cough In the same time we increased our ------ o — — foreign purchases of cotton manufac­ "Last winter when my little boy had tures by $7,000,000. We were shipping PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. the whooping cough I gave him cotton across the ccean, having it Chamberlain's Cough Remedy” writes made into finished products there and Oregon Mrs. J. B. Roberts, East St. Louis, Bay City buying it ourselves, thus paying the Ill. "It kept his cough loose and re­ freight both ways, paying the Euro­ lieved him of those dreadful coughing H GOYNh. pean factory owner, paying his em­ spells. It is the only cough medicine ployes, and depriving our own work­ I keep in the house because I have ers of work and wages. What does ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. the most confidence in it.” This rem­ the Democratic editor of the Journal edy is also good for colds and croup. Office: O pposite C oukt F jusk , think of that? For sale by Lamar’s Drug Store.— Really, however, we car : wry little Tillamook * . O. tgon. what the editor thinks of it. He has Paid Adv. Uncle Sam will Hand Him Real GRAVELY Chewing Plug in a Pouch Irom You The U. S. Mails will reach any man in Uncle Sam’s Service. When you send him tobacco, let it be good tobacco—tobacco worth sending all that long way—the flat, compressed plug of Real Gravely. Give any man a chew of Real Gravely Plug, and he will tell you that’» the kind to send. Send the best! Ordinary plug is false economy. It costs less per week to chew Real Gravely, because a small chew of it lasts a long while. If you smoke a pipe, slice Gravely with your knife and add a little to your smoking tobacco. It will give flavor—improve your smoke. SEND YOUR FRIEND IN THE U. S. SERVICE A POUCH OF GRAVELY Dealer« all around here carry it in 10c. pouches. A 3c. stamp will put it into his hands in any Training Camp er Seaport of the U. S. A. Even ‘‘over there” a 3c. stamp will take it to him. Your dealer will supply envelope and give you official direc­ tions how to address it. P. B. GRAVELY TOBACCO COMFAMY, Danville, Va. 77ie Patent Pouch keep» it Froth and Clean and GootP —It it not Rtal Gravely without thie Protection 5tal Established 1S31 WOMEN and GIRLS LEARN TO WEAVE ITS EASY HELP YOUR COUNTRY We Pay 20 Cents Per Hour While Learning. After Learning Paid by the Yard at Good Prices. Daylight Modern Workroom-Clean and Sanitary. GOOD OPENING ALSO FOR MEN AND BOYS. Oregon City Woolen Mills, OREGON CITY, OREGON. JOHN LELAND HENDERSON " ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW T illamook B lock , Tillamook - . . • Oregj*. ROOM NO. 2Ö1. J ÄS' .M ore than ever jyour raJiy L da/s must be productive itlutorkrcaiiirs /S&i' TOWERSMRANI) ELAND E ERWIN PIANO INSTRUCTION, Diploma from Chicago Musical College.—Beginners receive the same careful training as the most advanced Terms:—$4.00 per months Instruc­ tion. All lessons given at Studio. County Representative for the Wiley B. Allen Co.s' line of high grade pianos, player-pianos, Victrolor etc. 7 F' REFLCK SUCRE F? Cut full ir\ shoulder, ch st and arms-comfortablc. s lor\£ œeannê ■ 'Merprocf absolutely SATISrACTlON AJ.T ower C q guaranteed »»» tw 0R J. G. TURNER, EYE SPECIALIST. PORTLAND — OREGON Regular Monthly Visits to Tillamook anti Cloverdale. T he L atest t WATCH PAPER FOR DATES. Ornamental Fire Places Built of Brick and Stone. All Fire Places absolutely guaranteed not to smoke or money re­ funded. Brick work of all kinds done on short notice. We make a specialty of re­ pairing smoking Fire Places. I RALPH E. WARREN, Electricity’s latest gift to the housewife greatest since the electric iron and electric vacuum cleaner—the TILLAMOOOK. RE. H. T. Botts, Preu. Attorney nt-Law. John Leland Henderson, Sec­ retary! Treaa., Attorneyat- Law and Notrary Public. Western Electric P ortable S f . wing M achine Tillamook Title and Abstract Co. I.aw No more tiresome treadle pushing - no more backache a little electric motor does the hard work. AtiRtractH. Real Estate, InHurance. Both Phone«. A foot control gives any speed desired. TILLAMOOK—OKMOON. LEARN STENOTYPY The New System of MACHINE SHORTHAND I The Most Wonderful Invention for business Efficiency in 50 Years Strnotypr It Ihortbanf wriw«n by ■ tiny machin« I«tt«a4 of by pen or paacil. It Ittuporior to all other arateaa of Iborthand. Iiiior «o latro and at plain at print. Oaly FOUB MONTHS Seqalred Operator? get brttrr ta arirt by foaton of treat«« •Sciency — to HU per at oath. M The typewriter h*» topplanted iontbtnd, Steaotypy Will rappltnt pencil tborthaad. For Nil I«feraallea addret« POLYTECHNIC BUSINESS COLLESE OAKLAND, CAL. The entire machine in its case can be carried anywhere—it’s no larger than a typewriter. Í I Ask for a demonstra­ tion. COAST POWERC3 THE ELECTRIC STORE. ss !