TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, SEPTEMBER 12,1918. "SAVE THE HEADS” CAMPAIGN reaches the addressee, owing City Transfer Co C. E. MELLETTE, Proprietor. GUY ALLMON, Manager. TILLAMOOK, OREGON. WOOD, COAL, STORAGE, DR A Y AGE. STEAM HEATED STORAGE. Get our Prices on Special Trips to the Beaches. Th« V«lve ln-h«*Atype esgia« IUu* trated hart, like all intamaJ «wviu»- tion °n holds its lubricating quaUtlea at cyl­ inder heat, burn# clean in the comr bustion chambers and goes out with exhaust. Zerolene fllh thqpe require­ ments perfectly, because it it correef- /y refined from »elected Ceh£>rnia ae* halt- ba— crude. ZEROLENE Standard Oil for Motor Carr It Keeps the Engine Young! Zerolene keep« 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. Made in several consistencies. Get our Correct Lubrication Chart covering your car. Af dealers everywhere and Standard Oil Service Stations. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) H. C. BOONE, Special Agent, Standard Oil Co., Tillamook, Or. Dr. E. L. Glaisyer, VETERINARIAN, County Dairy Herd Inspector HELL PHONE, MAIN 3. MUTUAL PHONE. ■KSE | 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 Tobáceo Compeoy Danville, Virgini* Food Administration and Health Boards Appeal for Support of , Dairy Industry in Oregon. o----- Because there is at this timé a far reaching need of a greater apprecia­ tion of the value of dairies as an economic feature in the progress and growth of this state, a committee headed by some of the leading scien­ tific and business men of Oregon has arranged for a state wide educational campaign that is now being launch­ ed with headquarters at 835 North­ western Bank Building, Portland, Oregon, Mr. O. D. Center, of O. A. C. is president of the council and E. C. Callaway, of the Portland Bureau of Health, is secretary. Foreign daily conditions are indi­ cated by some of the experiences re­ ported by Jhe Countess Madeleine de Bryas, who recently visited Oregon and who was sent out by the commit­ tee on public information, Washing­ ton, D. C. Countess deBryas told of her work as a Red Cross nurse in France and conditions she saw there, she says the Germans killed off all cattle before abandoning captured French territory, knowing that in so doing, they practically killed the children . All who have returned from the countries of Europe tell of the great lack of dairy products in those countries, and how people across the seas are looking to the United States for foods, practically dairy foods, as well as for men and munitions. Scarcity of feed for stock, and the great demand for meat have resulted in the butchering of dairy cattle .throughout Europe, and it will be many years after the war is over before the herds can be replen­ ished and brought back to their nor­ mal standard. For this reason it is up io America, experts agree, to not only maintain the present herds, but to increase them in order that butter, cheese, evaporated milk and other exportable dairy supplies can be sent abroad for our allies. Evaporated, (or condensed) milk is today depend­ ed upon by the children of Europe to provide the proper dairy food ele- ment in their diet. In a nutshell the situation in this country may be summed up as fol- lows: The public must be encouraged to use more milk and dairy products ot all kinds as a health and economic measure; the dairies must be en­ couraged to keep their herds togeth­ er, looking to the future and. relying on the fact that by so doing they will eventually come out better fi­ nancially, than if they now dispose of their cattle. Professor McCollum, who is recog- niged as one of the greatest author­ ities of the age, said in recent ad­ dress in Portland, to an audience of doctors, nurses, teachers, dieticians, domestic sciense experts, etc., that groups of the progress ot certain mankind can be doorrelated with the character ot the diet, “I want to leave with you," he said “the fun­ damental idea that the keeping of tile dairy animals is the greatest slngh discovery in the histoty of human progress. Those races or groups who do not use milk in their diet are interior in the standard of their health and eificiency. Espec­ ially umong tile children, disease ravages are appalling, among groups or in districts where milk is used only sparingly.” The Food Administration calls up- on the people of Oregon to stand by the dairies, to use dairy products that mean health to them'and sup- port ot home industries, to help the dairymen hold his herds together de­ spite high prices of feed and scarci­ ty of labor and materials. “No greater catastrophy can hap­ pen to a people than the loss of its duiry herds, for the total loss of a people”—Herbert Hoover. ------ o------- 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. "After 11 years spent In the study of nutrltition problems, we are con­ vinced that a falling off in the con­ sumption of dairy products will re­ sult In a high mortality."—Dr. E. V. McCollum, Johns Hopkins University Keep Writing to Boy» "Over There” And Wait. to the disturbed ocean traffic. Another cause of complaint Is the Insufficient manner in which mall Is addressed. Foreign governments refuse to for­ ward mall which Is improperly ad­ dressed. Between 1,000,000 and 2,860,000 letters is part of the cargo of each fast vessel, sailing Irregularly, to which the mail is entrusted. "Don’t write to any department in Washington regarding the non-deliv­ ery of mall to members of the Amer­ ican expidltlonary forces," Praeger advises. "The war department is too busy delivering mail to spend time following up complaints. Address your letters properly, then have pa- i tiene«." The British Navy. o When the British fleet the day war was declared, was suddenly lost to sight and took its appointed station as guardian of the seas, ltB fighting strength was far less than it is today. Of warships and auxiliary craft it now has 6,500,000 tons, as against 2,500,000 in August, 1914. The per­ sonnel has increased about 300 per cent. It has transported in that per­ iod more than 20,000,000 men to all destinations. No German battleship or cruiser has in four years passed the barriers that the British navy imposed. Ger­ man sea commerce stopped Instantly. The kaiser’s high seas fleet has been held in a vise; the German flag has disappeared from the water. A policy of strict secrecy has re­ quired that Great Britian’s navy should do its work unknown to the world. Summer and winter it has stood waiting for the Germans to leave their safe harbors and seek a decisive battle. Steadily in all weath­ er it has patrolled the pathways of commerce and guided thousands of ships weekly through the mine fields and submarine zones. Never has it relaxed its vigilance, never has it given the treacherous U-boats a day of rest. Whatever befell on land, Great Britian’s navy has been there, an impregnable bulwark against Ger­ many's plans and hopes of victory. Some day the story may be told in full of the achievements of the Brit­ ish navy in the war. Incomparably more formidable today than it was at the beginning of the war. it is hold­ ing the Germans prisoners on land and assuring to the allies and neu- trals freedom of the seas. Japan Should be Trusted. ------ o------ It is curious how a suspicion of Japanese motives still persists in parts of America and the west, and how the old bogy of a yellow peril seems even now to dominate certain minds. Japan has proven over and over again within recent years her loyally fulfilling her engagements and her staunch trustworthiness in diplomacy as well as in friendship. The mistake ordinarily made about Japan is the unjust supposition that her aims are purely paterial and that her ideal is nothing better than un eastern version of Prussian mili­ tarism. Japan, like every other be­ liever in real-politik, thinks tn^t a nation is respected in proportion to its streqgtth, and that unless the strong men armed keeps his house, ills goods are by no means sate from ambitious rivals. Since 1868 Japan has become a diligent pupil of west­ ern civilization and has set herself to the consolidation of a great world power in the east. But she did not, tor this reason, depart from her an­ cient principles; she only transform­ ed them in accordance with the ex­ igencies of the present. Patriotism is a flaming ideal with new Japan, be­ cause her fighting ardor is no new thing, but based on many yesterdays. Whenever or wherever Japan moves we must be sure that she will be in­ spired with the patriotic idea of se­ curing a triumph for Dai Nippon, and we may even go bo far as to say that she is unlikely to commence any great undertaking without a definite chance of reaping therefrom some solid advantage. But how can the kingdoms of the west blame her for this sincere regard for her own safe­ tyt She 1 b an inland power, M we are; Bhe depends on her navy as we, too, depend on ours. It ìb not only for national salvation that she arms herself, but for material welfare. o - ■ Don't stop writing to your men In service "over there” because Uncle Sam is a little alow in delivering his mail. That is the advice ot Otto War Profits. Praeger. second assistant postmaster general, who has issued a circular ------ o letter in regard to mail for soldiers War profits tor 1917 exceeded in Europe. 85,000,000,000; for 1918 they will Few persons know how devious Is not be much less. An 80 per cent war | the route of a letter mailed in the profit tax could therefore be made j’ home town" and directed to a man to yield about 84.000.000.000 while I overseas. Praeger states, and fewer the varoius taxes on corporations 'still stop to consider that mail for a and excess profits proposed by the million and a half men Is being de­ ways and means committee can not livered to several hundred camps. yield more than 82.750.000.000. : Mall for the American troops In the Whence, arises, then, the question ¡English. Canadian or French armies whether the war profit tax or the ' is dispatched as foreign mall to the excess profit tax would be the most government with which the soldier productive! It is all a matter of the is identified and is delivered to him standard by which war profits are by that government. measured. British practice impioyed All mail for the American er'wdl- the earnings of prewar years as the tionary forces Is handled by th« standard. United States postal service, which Friends of the American profiteer delivers It to the proper military pos­ are proposing as the standard, not tal authorities In France. Mall order­ the prewar years 1911, 1912 and lies with every unit of the hrrnyl 1913. when average earnings ware keep the main office informed of the! normal, but the years 1914. 1919. transfer ot individuals or regiments. I 1916. when earnings were towel Complaints arise chiefly. Praeger ly swelled by the war profit» to» * j says, from the fact that persons com­ joyed as a busy neutral Mitas, municating with our troops do not How great a difference this make» take into consideration that approx­ to mad” -ar by a comparison be­ imately 30 days are required from tween a average «arnlng* for the the time of mailing until a letter real , JWar period, 83,795,000.000 and the earnings of 1916, 18,786,- L. HOHLFELD, 060,000. The case is clear. VETERINARIAN. If it is the net income for 1914-16 Mutual Phone. that is to be deducted from current Bell Phone— 32J net income before we arrive at war Tillamook - - Oregon. profits, the yield from war profits taxation will be modest indeed. Ac­ cordingly we may expect all the force AVID ROBINSON, M.D., and ingenuity of the profiteers to be applied to the task of inducing con­ PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON gress to fix 1916-16 as the normal. DR °- NATIONAL BUILDING, =T! Glaring Example of Non-Partiaan TILLAMOOK League’s Abuse of Power. ------- o-------- T. I BO ALS, M.D., A farmer buys a piece of machinery, pays part cash down and gives his note for the balance. Or he buys a bunch of steers to fatten, getting the money from a bank or from a cattle loan company for the purpose and giving his note and the steers for security. Or on other ways he bor- rows money on chattels with the chattels as security. Then comes the state government after the- farmer has borrowed his money, and suspends foreclosure proceedings, so that loaner of the money has no recourse for the pro­ tection of his security. The farmer can laugh at the implement house that sold him machinery and the im­ plement house is powerless either to collect the money or get back the machinery. Likewise he can laugh at the cattle loan company, for has not his chattel note been rendered im­ possible of foreclosure? In Bolshevik! Russia that is typical of what has been cafried out. It also has been adopted us the proper thing by the Non-Partisan League state government of North Dakota. What the effect is on implement sales and cattle loans may be imag­ ined. The minute the new edict was promulgated, no implements could be bought on time payments. The poor lurmer who needed the machinery nad to do without, for all possible lien protection to the dealer was sus­ pended. The pooi farmer could bor­ row notning on cattle for the same reason. So acute did the situation become in North Dakota that ere long the Non-Partisan Leaguers repealeu tne edict. They saw by ns practical ap­ plication that the people it hurt most were the very farmers it was aimed to protect. For it destroyed the cred­ it security which made possible the sale of farm machinery or cattle to those who could not raise hard cash to finance the transaction. The edict produced a condition of unexampled chaos, that could be remedied only by its repeal. A remarkable feature of the edict was that it was promulgated by the State Council of Defense and sent forth by the Attorney-General of the State, t lie Attorney General as w ell as the State Council of Detense were entirely under the domination of the Non-Partisan League.—Oregon Voter. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Surgeon S. P. Co. (I. O. O. F. Bldg.) Tillamook .... Oregon R O bert h . . mcgrath , COUN’SELLOR-AT LAW, ODDFELLOWS' BUILDING, TILLAMOOK, OREGON. P orti and O ffice 1110 W ilcox B ld . QARL ha BERLACH ATTORN E Y- AT-LA W. T illamook B lock Tillamook Oregon EBSTER HOLMES, ATTORN EY-AT I.AW COM MERCIAI. BUILDING, FIRST STREET, TILLAMOOK, . OREGON 0R. L. L. HOY, PHYSICIAN ANDSURQECN T illamook B lock , Tillamook, - - Oregtn. J I T. box 1 b L A . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Complete Set of Abstract Bocks nr Office. Taxes Paid for Non Residents. T illamook B lock , Tillamook .... Both Phones. Oregon PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON .... Bay City Oregon QK J. G. ^TURNER, Burden of War Will Last Long. EVE SPECIALIST. PORTLAND — OREGON Regular Monthly Visits to Tillamook and Cloverdale. watch paper for dates . Running the government prior to the war cost tins country about $1,- uuo.uoo.oov annually. When Toni Reed’s Congress was criticized for appropriating f 1,000,000,000, he re­ marked that this was a billion dollar country. It is now a twenty four bil­ lion dollar country, and will remain so as long as the war lasts. Certainly the war will cost that much this year and there is not likely to be any re­ duction until the war ends. After the war, according to Henry I. Rainey, ranking democrat on the ways and means committee of ! the House, the United States will cou- i tinue to be a five billion dollar a year nation. That is the amount of reve­ nue which Mr. Rainey says will be needed at the close of the war to pay interest on bonds, to retire bonds and for the expenses of the govern­ ment. The present revenue bill, sup­ plementing the bill* ns of della s raised by bonds, is expected to raise 88,000,000,000. The principal sourc­ es of income will be from excess profits and luxury taxes. Luxury and excess profit taxes will have to be re­ duced *ft«r the war, but the losses from t bt»« sources can be made up by inti saitoa in tariff rates. The tar­ iff w <11 http to m«et the loss of at least |40v,000,000 in revenue from prohibition. Somebody must foot the bill.—Leslie's Weekly. J OHN I.ELAND HENDERSON ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW. T illamook B lock , Tillamook - - - ■ Oiegja. ROOM NO. 2B1. rJ~' H GOYNE, ATTORNEY. AT-LA W. Office: O pposite C ourt 7£ jusk Tillamook 1 ) 1 J 1 ) - . . O. egon. . H. T. Botte, J Pres. Attorney at-I.aw. John Leland Henderson, Sec­ retary Treaa., Attorney-at- Law and Notrary Public. Tillamook Title and Abstract Co. Notice of Hearing of Final Account. Law O - - ' In the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Tillamook County. In the matter of the estate of Amanda L. Donaldson, Deceased, by Chartes Edwin Donaldson, adminis­ trator. Notice is hereby given that the un­ dersigned has filed his final account as administrator of the estate of Amanda L. Donaldson, deceased, in the County Court of Tillamook County. Oregon, and said court has appointed Saturday, September 14th. 1918. at 10 o'clock a.m. in the county courtroom, in the county courthouse of the county of Tilla­ mook. State of Oregon, as the rime and place for hearing objections to said account and the final settlement thereof. Dated August ISth, 1918, and pub- ILaheJ It Uto TJJaiivok L'eadllght, th« 12 wt ptbllc. xioa of which to AUA»1 iltb. 1*11. aa4 the last pub Duu. a to Lick. J»j|. a*A tha ■ i**r at lustaw u fir*. 08—a Dc-ualdsor., Administrator. John Leland Henderson. Attorney for Estate. OREGON. — Abstracts. Real Estate, Insurance. Both Phones. T1LL A MOOK—OREGON. TOWER’S FISH BRAND I Há4topn>W Ablkiisly. S nü Ác liu ir G» DEALERS EVERYWHERE. A.J. TOWER CO BOSTON.