TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, FEBRUARY 13, 1919. FOOTBALL IS ANCIENT SPORT FROM BEGINNING OF TIME Was Popular Among the Old Romans and Also Found Somo Favor With the Florentinos. wss A FIRM FOUNDATION RESERVE BANK GOVERNOR SEES ERA OF PLENTY WIN $3 A WORD BY WRITING A VICTORY SLOGAN I Lynch Urges Westerners to Make Victory Loan Success. Says Prosperity Dawns | Governor James K. Lynch, ot th« Federal Reserve Bank of San Fran­ cisco, has addressed tile following open letter to the people of the Pa­ cific Coast and the other states com-1 Good Victory Liberty Loan slogans are wanted by the general publicity committee of the Twelfth Federal Reserve District with bead­ quarters in San Francisco. The committee will pay as high aa |3 a word. First prize will be *30, second prize *20. and third prize, (10. Slogans should be limited to 10 or 12 words. Send all slogans to SLOGAN EDITOR, Room 301, 430 California Street, San Francisco, California. The contest closes Saturday, March 22. I to make good, our men to bring home. | This will take from five to six bil­ lion dollars. Let us get ready and raise IL A big task, but the last, and therefore, easy. All together, shoulder to shoulder, and the Loan goes jver! "The 'Ninety-first’ is the Pacific Coast Division; remember their achievement, and honor ourselves by living up to it. "JAMES K. LYNCH.” THE SUPREME TEST JAMES K. LYNCH Governor, 12th Federal Reserve District Regardless of what territories may be lost or won by the belligerents in the world war. Germany, above all the ! nations, has gained most, and next to Germany the United States has bene | fited to a greater measure than any of the other powers involved. Ger- ; muny has thrown off the yoke of me­ dieval kalserlsm. The United States is a nation. The Liberty Loans were one of the greatest nationalizing factors. The Fourth Loan welded 20,000,000 bond buyers into investing patriots—the , kind of patriots who are willing to sacrifice for their country. The Victory Liberty Loan—the last of the Liberty Loans—comes in April. It will be for billions of dollars to fin- I ish paying for the job of freeing the world. But It will be something great- i er than that It Is going to be the supreme test of that nationalisation ' which has sprung out r * the loins of prised within the Twelfth Federal Re­ serve District: "To the Citizens of the Twelfth Fed­ eral Reserve District: "The Fifth 'Victory' Liberty Loan in tn sight Let us thank God that it In not just the Fifth Loan. Victory rnenns the end of the War, ths end of Loans, the dawn ot Peace and Pros­ perity. It mama that the market price of 'Tmmment bonds will soon »tab­ men nt par or better. It also means that commercial, agricultural, and in- Bantrial afhdrn will stabilize, and that i the Hun-tnapired clamor will cease, i “We were advised that the war wonld last through 1*1», probably through 1M0, ao we were prepared for that; to have done leas would have meant suicide. We prepared to crush the Hun an his own ground, and he ' prudently quit. It cost us some money hot it saved the lives of half a mil- ' There are carpers who say that the patriotism has cooled; that the loan can t be “put over" on patriotic Those carpers are dollar *r°un,ds' Americana. To them Carter Glass, our new Secretary of the Treasury, Mid in New York. "We are going to invoke the patriotism of the American people, and I am going to do it confidently, Don ot our men. Was money ever and there Is going to be such a re­ sponse aa was never witnessed befnr» better spent? “Now we have bills to pay. promises in America." MONTHLY WAR STAMP QUOTAS F W FOR TWELFTH DISTRICT The Tnasniy Department hae assigned to the Twelfth Federal Reserve District the following monthly quotas to be raised in War Savings Stamps during 1919: .$ 4,200,000 January --------------- 4,800,000 February -------------- 5,400,000 March ____________ 6,000,000 April _____________ 6,600,000 May ______________ 7,300,000 June--------------------- 7,800,000 . July---------------------- 8,400,000 August___________ 9,600,000 September ________ 10,800,000 October ___________ 12,000,000 November_________ 13,200,000 December_________ Total $96,000,000 The total to be rained throughout the errantry is $1,600,000,000. Origin of Atmosphere Goes Back to Events Occurring Tone of MIL Hone of Years Ago. Can you Imagine Julius Caesar play­ If we recall the teaching of geology ing quarterback on the Rome univer­ and astronomy, telling us bow the sity eleven, or Brutus skirting the ends earth was once too hot to sustain life, In those days when the forum was as we shall see that the mixture of guses busy as a three-ring circus? No? Nev­ ' that covers the solid surface of the ertheless It was a probability, for it earth, and that we familiarly call air. appears now that football originated must have had a very Interesting his- with the Romans. I tory. According to one widely accept­ A few uneducated persons used to ed theory of the earth's origin, all I think that football was of Greek in­ that we know now as the solid earth, vention ; but Trench and C biu ? s and all the liquid matter that now trained news bounds, aided by Italian fills the ocean beds was once gas­ The gases of the atmosphere propagandists, have fastened it on eous. Rome. The Romans, not really know­ are simply composed of these particu­ ing that it was football, called It "cal­ lar elements which are gaseous at the present temperature of the cium.” It appears to have been a goodly, rough-going game, full of earth's surface, which have not en­ spirit, feet and broken elbows, played tered Into complete combination with more on the soccer order than the the solid matter of the earth’s crust, and which have not been whisked Rugby style In common favor. With the fall of the Roman empire away Into space by contrlfugal force, “calcium" also fell out of the spot­ this being the fate that Is supposed light, not to appear In fuvor until the to have befallen the former atmosphere time of the Florentines and their of the moon, and some of the lighter Medlcls. There Is no record of Ma­ constituents of our own atmosphere. chiavelli having participated In the In the past when the earth’s temper­ games, but we Imagine that If be did ature was much higher, and when he played a foxy, clever game. Gio­ many other condlt'ons were different, vanni de Bardl, a well-known Floren­ it Is more than probable, for instance, tine newspaper mau, wrote as follows that, long before man appeared, the proportion of carbon dioxide in the air In 1580: was much higher than at present. This “The calclo (later name) Is a public would account for the extreme lux­ game played between two groups of E5asa5a5asasas25H5a525a5a5a5a5H5Hsa52525asa5a5H52S252sa5asasas2SB52sa52s uriance of vegetation, to which young men on foot, not armed, who every lump of coal bears witness, the playfully compete In making a ball, by carbonic aoid of the air being one of means of their feet, pass outside of a the most Important constituents of the certain line back of the opposite food of plants. Again, it Is quite cer­ group. The ball Is mediocre in size, tain that, at a very much more remote filled with wind, and the game is period, which must certainly date Be sure you are free from this dreaded disease, which works such played purely for the honor of win­ back tens of millions of years, the ravages in the mouth and causes the loss of sound teeth and often ning.” temperature of the earth’s surface produces disease and death by distributing its poison to remote was so hot that water could not oc­ cur in its liquid form. At that time parts of the body. If taken in the early stages it can be success­ one of the most Important and abun­ fully treated. Come in and investigate. dant constituents of the earth’s at­ Spanish Province Centuries Ago Held mosphere was gaseous water, or water vapor. Undisputed Naval Sway—People Still Proud of Achievements. PY()R RIlOEA’SS* CATALONIA GREAT SEA POWER The Moors were expelled from Bar­ celona in the ninth century. Catalonia had more than four centuries' start over Seville and six over Malaga. It Is little wonder, therefore, that Span­ ish enterprise, If such a term Is ap­ plicable, Is seen at Its best in Cata­ lonia, because It has had a real oppor­ tunity to express Itself. Catalonia has always looked beyond Its geographical limits. It has. In fact, looked sea­ ward. It was on the waves that the men of Barcelona found riches and glory. They were the rivals of the Pisans. Genoese and Venetians, and Barcelona can boast of a naval his­ tory as great perhaps as theirs. Cata­ lonia for a time held sway of the sea, and It was only upon the consolidation of Spuln at the beginning of the six­ teenth century and the rise of the great modern states that the city was eclipsed as a sea power. The Cata­ lonians, proud of their achievements, looked with little favor upon Colum­ bus’ discovery of America, nn enter­ prise which had been promoted by neighboring Castile. The Razor In History. Tn tracing the history of shaving It should be sufficient to go back to the Greeks and Romans, upon whose civili­ zation our own is based. Ben rds were highly esteemed among the former up to the time of Alexander the Great, who was smooth shaven. One reason for the abolition of the beard among soldiers was the fact that it afforded the enemy something to lay hold of. At an earlier period the wearing of certain types of helmet and gorget had protected the beard. The Romuns wore beards down to the time of the Gallic wars, while the Gauls, albeit barba­ rians, were smooth shaven save for the mustache. The antiquity of barber shcps and razors In Rome Is variously given by historians. Some have claimed that the first barber shop, at least In that part of the world, was opened In Sicily in 300 B. O., while other authorities make thia date far earlier or later. The Sicilian seems to have been the first barber. Lucky Kiss. A man named Winch, a butcher of Sydney. N. 8. W„ recently took the liberty of kissing a handsome girl who was one of his customers. She re­ sented the affront, and Winch was prosecuted. He was fined hesvlly by the board of magistrates, and lengthy notices of the case appeared In the press. The publicity given to the pro­ ceedings happened to attract the no­ tice of a firm of solicitors in Sydney, who had been appointed trustees of certain property which had been left to Winch by a distant relative some years before, the solicitors up to then having been unable to find any trace of the missing heir. Winch was com­ municated with by the firm, and, hav­ ing duly established his Identity, be­ came the possessor of a snug little fortune. Wonderful View From Stirling. It Is from -the top of a sheer crag, more than 400 feet above the sea, that the famous "links" of the Forth may be seen to best advantage. It is al­ ways a wonderful view from Stirling castle, wonderful for its sheer beauty, and wonderful, too, for the wealth of history which surrounds every town and village which dots the plain, through which the river winds on, picking up the light here and there, vanishing into the haze of the distance, and then emerging again as the mist maybe, suddenly rises; whilst far awcy on the eastern horizon. Just a gray outline agalast the sky, is the Forth bridge, wi.ere the river has given way to the Firth. LAUGHED AT OWN CARICATURE Charles Dlckene Has Been Called Vain, but Thia Story Seems to Prove Otherwise. The reproduction of a very rare car­ icature portrait of Dickens appeared in a recent number of Dickensian. William Miller was the author of the portrait, which was advertised for tn vain by F. G. Kit ton, more than twenty years ago, for insertion In his book, “Charles Dlckena by Pen and Pencil,” says Christian Science Moni­ tor. Dickens first saw the portrait tn question when walking along Picca­ dilly with Disraeli one day. He was vastly amused, and, entering the shop, bought several copies, one of which was sent to the Hon. Mrs. Richard Watson at Rockingham. In a letter written from Gad's Hill place he says: “I hope you may huve seen a large­ headed photograph with little legs representing the undersigned. It has Just sprung up so abundantly in all the shops that I nra ashamed to go about town looking In at the picture windows, which Is my delight. It seems to be extraordinarily ludicrous and a better likeness than the portrait done in earnest. It mude me laugh when I first came upon it. until I shook again. In open, sunlighted Pic­ cadilly.” People Eat Too Much. Life would not be near the struggle It Is if we did not eat so much, ob­ serves a writer in Ohio State Journal. It does not require very much toll to earn enough food to keep soul and body together. And then, what Is the better part of It, Is that the soul and body kept together oo just as little food as necessary make for each other the very best company. Just once give the body more food than It needs and see how the soul protests. Just enough and no more is the doctrine of life and health. We read the other day of a great English author describing his persistent diet which was bread and butter and fruit On that he lived, thrived and did his great work and Is happy. The Idea that stuffing the stomach conduces to health and strength Is not to be trusted, and espe­ cially where anxious mothers cram the little bodies of their children with all kinds of treacherous food to make them grow fat Snowball Fight at Elmwood. There Is a charming picture of a snowball fight at Elmwood, with the three young nephews, in Lowell’s es­ say, “A Good Word for Winter,” writ­ ten In 1870. "Already, as I write. It Is twenty­ odd yeurs ago. The balls fly thick and fast. The uncle defends the waist-high ramparts against a storm of nephews, his breast plastered with decorations like another Radetsky’s. How well I recall the Indomitable good humor under lire of him who fell In the front at Ball’s Bluff; the silent pertinacity of the gentle scholar who got his last hurt at Fair Oaks; the ardor In the charge of the 1 gallant gentleman who. with the death wound In his aide, headed his brigade at Cedar Creek! How it all comes back—and they never came!” A Truthful Grocer. “I presume these eggs are strictly fresh?” suggested the housewife as she poked around in her pocketbook for a dollar bill. "Well, they were strict in their youth,” responded the truthful grocer, “but eggs Is like a great many people, you know, gome of ’em kinder relaxes as they gets older, ma'am.” The results of neglect Particular attention paid to plates and bridgework. Examination Free. Both Phones. WA II7ICF ■ A. vv Tillamook County Dentist, office and Residence, across the street South of County Court House. The Tillamook Transfer Co., has contracted the wood output of the Coats Lumber Co., Mill. If the wood supplj’ from this plant is not suf­ ficient for the local demand we will fill orders from other sources. Place your orders for wood with us. TILLAMOOK TRANSFER CO •» LIBERTY T >7i ’LE ïêsafaiaaHaMaHHaaaaiaBaiHôfi 2525ZS25E52S2525252525252SZS2SÌ525252SaS2SBS252S252S252S25Z525Z525Z52S25 LAMB-SCHRADER CO WHOLESALE AND RETAIL CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, LATH AND | BRICKf; DOMESTIC STEAM AND SMITHING COAL. Warehouse and Office Cor. Front and 3rd Ave. West, Tillatnock Or. | __________ ffi 5B52S252S2Sa5ZS25a52S25E525a52SZ52S2SBSHS252SE5a5?52Se5ZSZ5HS We Most Economise -Everybody is Doing It I » I iO/xZ>RESS\YkC» th M 403 will waterproof your old oil clothing, boot*, hata. tarpaulin«, «invaa, etc. OKIES QUICKLY —MAKES CLOTHM PLIABLE For M yeara the ataodard for Fireman, Team- atera. Sallora. Sportamen, Farmer a. If your dealer doaan't carry It. aend *1 for pint can. Do it youraelf. P. A. MATTHEWS A SON 'Sole Mantra.) F.UREKA t t CALIFORNIA Save Your Old Oil Clothes, Boots, Etc.