TILLAM OK HEADLIGHT, MAY 29 ’ 1919. oAdds years to the life of your car Correct lubrication with Zerolene means bet­ ter performance and longer life for your tar. By exhaustive study and actual tests the Standard Oil Company Board of Lubrication Engineers has determined the correct consis­ tency of Zerolene for your make of automo­ bile. Their recommendations are available for you in the Zerolene Correct Lubrication Charts. There is a chart for each make of car. Zerolene is correctly refined from selected California crude oil. It keeps its lubricating body at cylinder heat, holds compression, gives perfect protection to the moving parts and de­ posits- least carbon. It is the product of the combined resources, experience and equipment of the Standard Oil Company. Get a Correct Lubrication Chart for your car. At your dealer's or our near­ est station. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) eA grade for each type of engine H. C. BOONE, Agent, Tillamook, Ore. HEIGHT BRINGS NO TERROR ‘ADORN’ FACE WITH MUSTACHE HURLS SEEDS LONG DISTANCE I KEPT THEIR NATIONAL LIFE Airman Ha» a Feeling of Exhilaration and Healthfulness When “in the Clouds." Hairy Ainus Would Seem to Have Peculiar Ideas as to What Adds to Feminine Beauty. Witch-Hazel Haa Record of Forty FCvt or More, as Shown by an Experiment. Some time ngo I was wnlking In the country with a friend, when suddenly we heard a soft hum high overhead, snys a writer in a British information bureau bulletin. It took us some time to find the tiny black speck, which looked no larger than a gnat, far away In the blue. “How awful it must be,” my friend muttered, “to be at that ghastly height.” And I smiled, as I remem­ bered having once thought that my­ self. . As. a fact one has no horror at height The higher one Is, the less real does the world beneath seem, the more stable rind safe is the machine In which one is comfortably sitting. Height, regarded from a housetop, may be unpleasant. From 10,000 feet It is delightful. The pure, sweet air at high altitudes stimulates, like wine, and the world beneath stretches away ull. round to the misty horizon, and looks like a gigantic sunlit map. I expected to feel giddy, if not airsick, when I first went up and was amazed at the feel­ ing of steadiness and stability. One has no feeling of giddiness, once contact with the ground and station­ ary objects is broken, but only a sen­ sation of singular health and happi­ ness, and on coming down after a series of smooth spirals there Is an uinnzingly strong feeling of “wanting to go up” again and taste once more the sweet, fresh air and delightful thrills of the new world. “But what a dreadful noise the en­ gine must make,” I heard some one remark the other day. Apart from the fact that the ears are covered by a warm leuther flying cap there is, on the contrary, some­ thing very soothing in the even note of the motor, and after being In the air for some time it is rather apt to make one feel sleepy. The higher the altitude, the stronger the feeling of exhilaration seems to become, and the world is apt to seem dull qind drab when one descends again to slow plodding over the earth. The Ainus. the “Celtic” race of Japan, live in the Island of Yeddo. al­ though the race has become so re­ duced that, it is estimated, there are now not more than 16.600 or 17.1MMI of them left tn the country. The most noticeable peculiarity about Ainu women Is that they hive tattooed upon their upper and lower lips what resembles a mustache. The women are not considered attractive and their matrimonial prospects are quite injured, without tills decoration. The mustache is tiegun whqn the girl is quite a child, until It extends partly across the cheek, the material used being the soot from burning birch bark. The face Is cut and the black rubbed In. • Afterward It Is I washed.In a solution of ash bark I liquor to fix the cob>r. The Ainu women are said to be usually finely formed, sffaight and well developed, with small hands and feet. Their eyes are a beautiful soft brown, their hair black and most lux­ uriant and their complexion olive, with often a deep, rich color In th lr cheeks. The native cloth—of which their garments are made—Is woven from the fiber of the bnrk of the elm tree. —Louisville Courier-Journal. • The curious manner in which the witch-hazel spreads its seeds has b. >ti d<»<-rlbe hit by the flying missiles, but I •hould not like to have one strike my eye, especially if the eye were near ilia capsule. The discharge Is accom­ panied by n snap almost like that of a squill pistol. If scouts repeat this experiment, let them not forget tlilB warning.” GOOD INVESTMENT IN SMILE A pleasant smile Is the mjist lnex pensive Investment on earth and It Is the greatest one to bring a return. How I wish everyone could realize just what it means to smile. I think we*all would smile oftener If we did. So many people have told me how hard It is for them to smile. Here Is my re­ cipe—here It is, very simple: When you are about to smile, think first that —in your smile you are to promise something. That is really what a smile is for. It is a promise, and you may make it any kind of n promise you like. Some people hardly move DECIDED ON VERDICT BY LOT their lips at all in a smile, while oth­ ers smile entirely with their lips and Hawaiian Jury Couldn't Agree and leave their eyes expressionless. BELL PHONE, MAIN 3 MUTUAL PHONE. to Settle the Matter Drew The best smile of all Is the one Slips From Hat. that promises most. At your mirror you may practice smiling with great Substituting the goddess of chance success. Just conjure up the person for the goddess of justice, a jury in you want to smile at and fit the smile the Honolulu circuit court a few days to the vision. It will surprise you ago drew lots to decide the fate of to know how many different kinds of 12 Chinese charged with giimbliug. promises one happy snille may sug­ The incident is without precedent In gest. It is so like a happy party to the annnls of the courts of Hawaii, have a person around who smiles on says the Wailuku (H. I.) Times. The general principles and promises nothing jurors were discharged by the court . at all but gladness for the very joy’ and their action branded as “Illegal, of living. Cheerfulness such as this inexcusable anti highly reprehensible.” is life’s finest tonic.—Exchange. For disenfecting where Contagious or According to the story told in court, the jury could not agree. Tired of the Where Trees Are Milked. infectious diseases are prevailing. I prolonged ami fruitless efforts to In British Guiana and the West In­ reach a verdict, it was suggested that dies, particularly on the banks of the CARBOLIC COMPOUND is a power­ the balloting be abandoned and that River Demerara, there grows a tree they draw lots. Twenty-four slips of i known to the natives as the “H.va- ful Germicidal mixture and by its ‘use paper were prepared, 12 bearin'.' the ' hya,” which yields from its bnrk and will improve general stable conditions. word “Guilty” and 12 “Not guilty.” j pith a Juice slightly richer and thicker The slips were shaken up and drawq than cow’s milk. The tree is about front a hat by the jurors, who had forty feet in height nnd eighteen agreed that the first 12 slips of one i Inches in circumference when full kind drawn should determine the ver­ ! grown, nnd the natives use Its juice dict. The "Not guilty” slips won nnd • ns we do milk, it being perfectly hnrin- a verdict of not guilty was conse­ i less and mixing well with water. The RELIABLE DRUGGISTS. quently returned. Cingalese, have a tree, they call "Klriagliumn.” which yields a fluid In all respects like milk, while in the for- a5Z5E525E5Hra5Z5HS2S2SZKSZ52SB5Z5252Sa5Z52SaSZS2SZSE5ZSBii'HSH5a5Z5Z5HSc^ Anthem Many Centuries Old. The youngest of the nations has the , ests of Paru grows a tree called the oldest of hymns. Such is substantial­ "Massenodendron,” which gives a mllk- ly the case. For while the indei>end- llke Juice. It can be kept for an In­ ence of ‘the Jewish commonwealth in definite time and shows no tendency Palestine was assured by declaration to become sour. On the other hand. of the British government more than a certain trees in the valleys of Arngua year ago, that commonwealth "is not and In Canaguu yield a similar fluid, yet organized to the extent that the which, when expos«*d to the air, begins Polish and Czecho-Slovak states are. to form a kind of cheese which very Yet its prospective citizens, though soon becomes sour. In the Canary still scattered far and wide through­ islands there Is a tree called “Tabn.va out the earth, eherlsh as the dhfef of Dolce,” of which the milk, thickened their anthems one whose weird and Into a Jelly, Is consfdtred a delicacy. hnunting melody dates back not mere­ ly generations or centuries but thou­ Brothers Saluted and Died. sands of years. It is said to be the Such possibilities as have been pre­ Identical melody which was sung by sented to the men of our destroyers Miriam and her companions to cele­ have been well met. There are exam­ brate the crossing of the Red sea by ples of heroism not surpassed by any­ THE BEST STOCK OF HARDWARE IN the children of Israel and the destruc­ thing In tlie history of our navy. For THE COUNTY. tion of Pharaoh’s pursuing hosts. Instance, there is the case of the two young brothers who were wireless op­ See Us for Prices Before Ordering Elsewhere. erators on a destroyer which was bad­ Permanence of the Heroic. The way that the memory of heroes ly damagetl by an explosion. Stagger­ 7 survives for tens of centuries in popu­ ing' forward, away from the Injured X lar story and tradition is astonishing. part of the ship, these boys met the And no hero has left such a great le­ captain. Not realizing how badly they gend as Alexander the Great. The were hurt, he ordered them below to Turks In complimenting the national get medical attention. “No, sir,” said the elder brother; hero of Albania, surnamed him Iskeq der (Alexander) Bey, and the follow­ “give It to some of the poor devils ing passage from Steel’» “India back there who've got a chance. We're Through the Ages” Is evidence of the done for. Please notify our mother - WHOLESALE AND RETAIL extraordinary Impression made upon we died on duty." And at that the the Hindu mind by the exploits of the pair saluted tlieir commander and col­ CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, LATH AND Macedonian in the Land of the Five lapsed. In n few seconds both were deud.—Gregory Mason in the Outlook. BRICK?; DOMESTIC STEAM AND Rivers: "In every little village ’Julliinder’ SMITHING COAL. Leather From Various Skins. (Alexander) is still a mime wherewith to conjure, nnd the village doctor still in the hunt for new sources of leath­ Warehouse and Office Cor. Front and 3rd Ave. West. Tillamm It Or. claim», with pride, to follow the ’Yu- er strange things are turning up. It nani’ (Ionian) system of medicine.” has been ascertained that tlie skins of 25Z5Z5Z525E5 frogs and toads cun be tanned nnd turned to account for card cases and Improved Wire Fly Catchers. otfier fancy articles. The government . Tangle-foot wire instead of paper Is fried or boiled eggs and home made Home-Made Luxury. fisheries bureau says tlie skin of the butter with a good cup of hot coffee. used to catch flies In hospitals, conva­ -------o------- codfish furnishes an excellent leather, There's luxury for you!” —Atlanta lescent camps anil like places. Pieces As to the "luxury tax,” Editor Constitution. of hay-baling wire, two feet long, have tough ns parchment und very durable, a hook bent on one end. nnd by dip­ file same is true of salmon skin. Eel Finch, "The Richland Phllisopher," ping or with a brush are coated with »kins are employed tn Europe for bind­ For Sale or Trade. hays: a hot mixture of four pints of castor ing hooks, und In Egypt, slim- soles are "The writer can set all the luxury oil and nine nnd one-half is nnds of made from the skins of certain fishes Have about 40 acres of land, south crushed resin. The oil is heated and caught in the Red sen. Sturgeon skin that he is looking for by eating good home-made gorn bread and drinking 'of Trask liver six miles from town. ■ ho re-in grndnnl!> stirred in. When afford« a handsome ornamental loath- rood buttermilk. If yon are looking Plenty of wood on place. Wood v.-ill ■»e win* orc luma up rite 11!«*» nllglr er. nnd tin- hide of the armored garfish ' ir a good breakfast. just try some more than pay for place. Will ti k<> rm tbe- : nt I st) •>. fast. \i hell tin is much mluiil in E<: ;>**. Iielng ay was still lurking bash­ the rest of Ills victims. She was fully behind the eastern- horizon, grab placed in a machine, composed'of four the family milch barrel and hurry out wheels, connected and armed with behind the barn to give old Flossie, the spikes so that the victim would be family whale, her morning milkin’? In torn to pieces ns they revolved. A the spring when the little whalelets be miracle, it is said, prevented the com­ gin to show uib think of the gross an­ pletion of this project, ns a flash of nual output, of poetry that would be lightning severed the chords with Inspired in the breasts of our literati. which she was tied, shattering the en­ It would be n rank and Infamous In­ gine nnd killing tlie executioners. justice to let Puget sound have a mo­ Maximus ordered that she be carried nopoly of the national supply of dairy beyond the walls of the city; scourged whales. nnd behended. From the circum­ stances relating to tin* wheel, the well- That Black Cat Stuff. known circular window In ecclesias­ “Superstition is certainly a funny tical architecture Is known ns Cuth- thing,” observed the almost philoso­ arlne-wheel, and also a firework of the pher. “Take, for Instance, the feller same name. Tills St. Catharine, who who Is scared to see a black cat run i lived in the fourth century. Is not to be confounded with the equally cele­ across Ills path. “He’ll argue that there Is nothin’ brated St. Catharine of Sienna, who supernatural about him mid a black lived ten centuries Inter. cat happening to be near the same place .at the same time. An’ when it Our War With Mexico. comes right down to tacks there ht The Mexican war of 1846 lasted really nothin’ supernatural about a nearly two years. The first actual col­ bluck cat any way you llgger it, he'll lision and bloodshed was on April 25, say—just an excess of black pigment 1846, between a band of Mexican in the coloring matter of the cat’s troops that had crossed tin- Rio Grande hair, and, besides that, maybe one out and a company of American soldiers. of six or eight cats is black. On May 17, 1846, President l’olk sent “He reasons, too, that a black cat’s a special message to congress reciting duty probably calls It across the street tlie facts nnd grievances, and said: about the time he happens along. “As war exists, and, notwithstanding About the time he gets It all flggered all our efforts to avoid It, exists by tlie out a coal-colored feline darts out of act of Mexico herself, we are culled the alley Just ahead of him anil makes upon by every consideration of duty a bee line for the other side of the and patriotism to vindicate with de­ street and that feller Jest about loops cision the honor, tlie rights nnd the the loop trying to head that cut off."— Interests of our coiintry.” During 1846 IndlnnapoHs Star, the baffle of Palo Alto was fought, Muy 8; battle «if Monterey, September 21. In 1847 the battle of Buena Vista, Birds Destroy Caterpillars. When the buds open In spring, February 22; battle of Cerro Gordo, broods of tiny, hungry caterpillars April 17; City of Mexico captured Sep­ emerge, only to be preyed upon by the tember 14. Our forces occupied Mex­ constantly increasing flights of birds ico City September 12, 1847; the Stark that peer, swing, flutter, nr hop from and Stripes were placed on the na­ twig to twig through all the woods. tional capital and a treaty of |s*ac« At this time these caterpillars are not was signed February 2, 1848. at all noticeable, and are very difficult Honey. to find; still, the greut majority nf them are readily found and eaten by Honey Is the best substitute for birds, and therefore never become ap­ auger that has yet been found. In­ parent to ordinary observation. As deed, It Is more than a substitute, It summer comes and the caterpillars is a real food. Few people, unfortu­ grow In size, each hrmsl is reduced nately, know how to keep honey. All In number, until, as they approach full too often ft Is stored In an Ice chest size, a blind which erstwhile num­ or a eol«l cellar. Under such condi­ bered hundreds of little crawlers has tions It Is almost certain to solidify shrunk to n score or two. a "baker's or turn Into candy. The best place to dozen." or even less. When the stir» keep honey Is on the top shelf In a »Ivors pupate they are still attacked warm cupboard. If you find that It by birds. an«l the moths or butterflies has hardened set the container In a as they emerge and try their wings pan of hot water until the cont«*nts are pursued by their swifter fentb- liquefy again. There Is little adultera­ ernl enemies. tion of honey these days, for adulter­ ated honey Is easy to detect. You enu buy It and ent it without fear. t Blarney Stone Tradition. rhe Blarney stone Inscription Is get- i Hurrying Tim«. ting dim. It reads: “Cornmch Mac- ' Carthy: fortls me fieri faclt, A.D« ! "Goodness!” gasped tlie sergeant of 144!«.” Tin- tradition about the atone the guard, sticking Ills head out of the Is, of course, that when the Spaniards window. "What is the mini pluying were urging th«- Irish chieftains fc nt?” linrnxs tin- English, one Cornmch Mc- Private Murphy, who was on sentry Dermod Carthy, who held the castle, go, was running ns hard ns he could had concluded an armistice with the from end to end of his beat. "HI, Mike!” yelled the noncom., lord president on condition of surren­ dering ft to an English garrison. Car­ “what's the trouble?” "Sure, nn’ there’s no trouble nt nil, thy put off his lordslilp day after dnv with fair promises and false pretexts, at nil 1" replied Murphy, panting as he until the latter became tlie laughing paused In bls scurry. stock of Id« acqti Intnnc'-«. and the "Then what are you running for?” former s lu.-ieyc«! al I