». - ----- :. 3«h TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, SEPTEMBER] .5, 1918. Hun Boots, Belgian Babes City Transfer Co C. E. MELLETTE, Proprietor. GUY A LEMON, M anager. TILLAMOOK, OREGON. WOOD, COAL, STORAGE, DRAYAGE. — Get our Prices on Special Trips to the Beaches. By Mrs. Hazel Pedlar Faulkner "Where your treasure is,—there will your heart be also.” I The truth of that statement, made so many years ago, has been brought home anew as never before. i What mother does not know the I force of it? And at the price of what infinite pain and suffering, as well as of pleasure and joy, has she realized the rest, “there will your heart be also.” | The hearts of American mothers— countless thousands of them—are over­ seas. In the trenches along the Aisne, on the battlefields of Flanders and Picardy, the treasure of hundreds of thousands of American mothers Is daily being offered up. And to those spots, made sacred by the treasure, go the hearts of a loyal land. I Tie Standard Oil for Motor Carr It Keeps the Engine Young! Zerolene keeps the engine young—full-powered, smooth­ running, and economical in fuel and oil consumption— because it is correctly refined from selected California asphalt-base crude. Gives better lubrication with less carbon. Maae in several consistencies. Get our Correct Lubrication Chart covering your car. At deniers everywhere end Standard Oil Service Stationa. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) H. C. BOONE,^Special Agent, Standard Oil Co., Tillamook, Or. Dr. E. L. Glaisyer, VETERINARIAN, County Dairy Herd Inspector BELL PHONE. MAIN 3. MUTUAL PHONE. It’s the lasting quality and rich tobacco taste that makes Real Gravely Chewing Plug cost you no more to chew than ordinary plug. Peyton Brand Real Gravely Chewing Plug 10c a pouch— and worth it P. B. Gravely Tobacco Company Danville, Virginia CLOUGH’S CARBOLIC COMPOUND For disenfecting where Contagious or ’ infectious diseases are prevailing.^ CARBOLIC COMPOUND is a power­ ful Germicidal mixture and by its use . will improve general stable conditions. C. I. CLOUGH CO. RELIABLE [DRUGGISTS. SEE W. A. CHURCH. FOB, INSURANCE. Fire, Life, Assiient, Automobile. 2nd Ave. E. bet^eea.’lst^and^nd.Sts. ' Successor to J. S Stephens. Bumper Crops Stiffen Allied Line, Morale—Country Districts First in Liberty Loan > Oregon Mothers. Sisters, Wives Back lip Fighting Men by Selling Liberty Bonds STEAM HEATED. STORAGE. The Valve in-head type engine illus­ trated here, lij^e all internal combus­ tion eniinea, requires an oil that holds its lubricating qualities at cyl* inder heat, burns clean in the com­ bustion chambers and goes out with exhaust. Zerolene fills these require­ ments perfectly, because it ia correct­ ly refined from selected California aa- t holt-base crude. FARM GRIT FOILS ( ENEMIES AT HOME I MAKES FOOD SURE ! MISER’S HEART DEAD TO LIFE JOYS There is a legend of a certain man, whose god was gold, and whose pw- slon during his lifetime was the ac­ cumulation of the precious metal. After years of hoarding the man died, but even before his final passing his family jnd friends were astounded to find all trace of hfs heart gone. After his death his treasure box was opened. There, surrounded by his hoarded dollars, lay the heart, secure in the presence of its treasure. To American mothers no more des­ picable man could be pictured. For his treasure, stored in the dark places of his possessions, might have saved many days of strife and sorrow. And his heart was dead to all that the best in manhood stands for. I Of far gentler sort was the heart of that little mother, type of thousands of American mothers whose all has been laid on the altar. There will be a legend about those mothers in some remotely future date. And the light will shine around such as she. “I didn't expect to sew any more,” said a little, bent old lady, who asked If she might have work to do. ”1 thought my sewing days,were over, for Joe took care of me.” And there her eyes glistened and she straightened back as far as pos­ sible the stooped, narrow shoulders. “But he is a soldier now. Of course, he sends me the money to live on. But 1 I can't buy Liberty Bonds with that,” and she smiled with a satisfaction which bespoke decision regarding her next move. I "MY HEART’S OVER THERE NOW’’ "You see, I am getting the sewing to do, so I can pay for my bonds. For my boy is fighting over there, and I can't have him need things I can help to buy for him and all those other I mothers’ boys. I "You see, my heart's over there now." , And her treasure, meagre to the vanishing point almost, is following it loyally and bravely. | Oregon, mothers, can you do less? Your hearts are overseas, and your treasures must follow. The Govern­ ment, through its Fourth Liberty Ix>an, ( offers you a special opportunity to ' send your treasure following in most effective fashion. Every Liberty Bond we buy means so much of the war paid for and put out of the way. Every dollar we offer I to the Government, to put Into Its war fund, bespeaks an earlier return for our treasure and a brighter day for our land. Who lends generously and willingly | in this fight, gives manifold, for she gives when the need is sorest, and ’he promised return is great. — Only the farmer» know the ex- treme difficulties which hampered the I production for the allies this year i of the bumper crops necessary to I feed the troops battling at the Euro- I pean fronts and the civilians working for them behind the lines. The public has heard few reports of the widespread sabotage which has worked for the benefit of th« Hun, wBether practiced in the name of German propaganda or I. W. W. "education”. But enough was re­ vealed at the trial of the I. W. W.’s In Chicago to show that few regions have been free from destructive agents who made frequent use of scores of Ingenious arson and dyna­ mite devices to destroy standing crop« Crushed and bleeding in the ruin of its homes, its hospitals, and stored grains. everybody does know is that its schools and churches, Belgium has nevertheless been not th« the What farmer made good, and with the weakest of th« allied enemies of Berlin. its sufferings have conservation through the Food Ad­ united all humanity in its cry for redress, and its indomitable ministration's supervision, kept the spirit has routed the emulation of all its champions. Johnny Yank in France, the French German "honor”, killed by its revelation that it regarded a Poilu and British Tommy with un» sacred treaty as a "scrap of paper”, has been buried beneath th« limited supplies of good wheat flour. bloodied ruins of a neutral nation's shrines. When the boots of the German superbeast welter in German blood behind the Rhine, the Kaiser's dupes may finally emerge frorw the self-hypnosis which made them think themselves “super- front men”. Reflect the measure of your disavowal of the Hun's rape of civilization in your oversubscription to the Fourth Liberty Loan. FRITZ ‘FRISKED’ FOR GUNS I I j ; i ’ i For winter wheat alone. It is pro L posed to increase the area by 45,- I 000,000 acres. These figures provide I for a minimum of 513,000 acres of I winter wheat in California. 590,000 in I Oregon, 754,000 in Washington,' 377,- > 000 in Idaho, 256,000 in Utah, 46,000 I in Arizona, and 5,000 in Nevada. Thia is an increase of eighty per cent I over 1917 acreages for Washington, I but very much smaller increases for ? the otler states of the Twelfth Fed ; eral Reserve distjfcL | I -■ In presenting these figures, the De­ partment of Agriculture points out I' that it is absolutely neçessary that Fritz usually Is a docile prisoner, but no chances are ever taken on hi» â tremendous wheal crop t»e brought trying to take along with him to the prison "cage” a pistol, wire-cutters, in ÿext jréaí lo fenqw somewhat the a compass or a saw to aid escaping. reserve siipplTes, accumulated from Allied prisoners are searched by the Germans for food, but this Ip en- the record'crops of 11*12-1915, and de­ tirely unnecessary In thé case of German prisoners. pleted through the dependence of al) Your subscription to the Fourth Liberty Loan will help keep the Allied the allies on us. There is no doubt in anybody's mind fighters in plenty. that the American farmer will re­ spond instantly and effectively to any situation presented to him, as this one, by the government. , There is fió doubt Ííiat the native wit and courage of the American farmer will rout natural and criminal enemies to his Victory crop success as his sons are outwitting and out' fighting the Hun from the Vosges to Picardy. «. ■ NO, THIS IS NOT IN TRENCHES FARMS ANSWER WAR LOANS FIRST Those Who Can But Won’t Buy Liberty Bonds Are to Feel Weight Public Scorn “Jesus did not say Blessed are the Peaceful,’ but Blessed are the Peace. T»ikers,' and I say let's have five mll- lon more of th»m In khaki."—John HtHw Baer at the Northern California Liberty Loan Conference. On top of this the farmsr «et th« pace for the reet of America with his subscriptions to war funds. It was the agricultural districts that first re­ ported their quotas oversubscribed­ in the Third Liberty Loan. Doubtless it wtll be the farmers who first report "Over The Top” in the Fourth Liberty Loan, in spite of the fact that the loan will be twice the size of any previous. This sounds easy, from superficial consideration, since the Third Loan 1 oame at a time when t’.e farmer needed his money to put in and har- 1 vest his summer crops, and was with­ out receipts since last summer and fall, and had been called upon in the Second Loan as well. But it would not be a simple mat­ ter, even if the Fourth Loan were not larger than the Third, because th« government is calling for increased acreage on all cropB, and especially on wheat, the great Western staple, . to provide for the army of five mil­ lion American troops with which it is expected to crush the Hun utterly next year. BIG ARMY NEEDS GREAT CROPS “BADGE OF SHAME” AWAITS FOURTH LOAN SLACKER ¡ The open reason for Liberty Bond »lackers begins Sep»mher 28 in North­ ern California counties and at the re­ cent conference held in 3an Francisco the best methods of smoking them out Into the open were discussed. A few :ounty chairmen were for "strong arm" measures where the cases were fla­ grant, but the opinion prevailed that there should be no act not in accord with the rights afforded all under the Stars and Stripes. It was the sense of the meeting that »lackers should be called before a Ju- iicial committee made up of the lead- •rs of the community and after It had been determined that the defendant was capable of subscribing and still re- ’used his name should be published in he newspapers, creating a "Badge of Shame" for those refusing to perform their duty. YANKEE WHEAT F eeds all allies Strange, lent it, with bathe still In use In England that were bulH by the Romans, that just across in France you can't get a bath once a month In the trenches. The Yankees shown above are visiting the old Roman plunge at Hath, England, while enjoying the hospitality of our British cousins. While en route to France, thousands of American soldiers have had their hearts warmed by the cordial entertainment of the English. Make your sub­ scription to the Fourth Liberty ixran as hearty. General Petain, cheering his troops at the beginning of the fifth year of the war, said: "Not long ago, I said to you: ‘Abne­ gation. patience; your comrades are arriving.' "Today I say: 'Tenacity, audacity; you shall force victory.’" American dollars must back up the overwhelming American armies — Buy Fourth Liberty Bonds. We'll wallop Wilhelm well with Lib­ erty Bonds. ' The world won't be able to finance more than six months of war,” said the most eminent economists before the European conflagration got under full headway. America's war sched­ ule will convlnc/ German economists that we give no thought to the cost of re-establishing Democracy. Buy Fourth Liberty Bonds and end the war in the sixth year. A bond slacker is the Kaiser’s back­ er. Buy a Liberty Bond Instead. There is least of all a doubt thal the American farmer will lag in his response to the call of the Fourtb Liberty Loan because of his increased responsibilities in other directions. It was Oregon, whose orchards, farms and cattle overshadow all lies other wealth, which first hoisted ths Third Liberty Loan Honor Flag in the West, and it was that othei purely agricultural state, Iowa, which barely nosed Oregon out of first plac« in the national race for the honor. Both Oregon and Iowa will be ths special marks for all other states to shoot at lu the Fourth Liberty Loan race. A dark horse probably will win the acclaim due the first stats to fill its quota. The answer of the nation to the American sized task of raising the American-sized Fourth Liberty Ixian must be prompt and overwhelming. With American troops glorying in the laurels wrested from the boasted best trained fighting men of the world, those at home cannot return s less emphatic response to the call upon them. I^t every man do his share. The Ban Francisco Liberty Izrae Committee has adopted the straight geographical canvass for the Fourtl Liberty Ixmn campaign, and the sev enteen districts of the city have bee» given names of sectors of the Allied battle front. Every hundred-dollar Bond makes I Hun dread more. Lend hand to Unci« Barn or ben» knet to Kalter.