Image provided by: Deschutes County Historical Society; Bend, OR
About Cloverdale courier. (Cloverdale, Tillamook County, Or.) 190?-19?? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 2, 1912)
TT WORDSWORTH’S RECITATION. The W ay the English Poe* Received Ralph Waldo E rr »rson. When Fincrson. the great American writer, cairn* to England |nud h vis It to Wordsworth, says nn Fngllsh magazine. Wordsworth bud Just re turned from a Journey and w as In his garden w ritin g a poem on what ho had aeon. The visitor found the grout poet a w hite haired, tall, spm ely built man. of a rugged, rustic type, with nothing, unless It w ere the fine eyes, to hint of the poet. Wordsworth made no ceremony over the visit of the man from a far land hut said in stan tly when he w as cabl'd to greet him. “ If you are interested In iny poetry perhapa you will like to lienr these lines." Emerson politely agreed, and this Is w hat happened. Emerson has him self written the stor> down for us The old poet thought for a few moments, the n stood forth and repeated with g reat animation an • entire poem he had written. “The recitation," the American ph! losopher wrote afte rw ard , “was so nn looked for and surprising Words worth standing apart and reciting to me in a garden w alk, II!-«* a schoolboy declaim ing—that a t first I was near to laughing; but. recollecting myself that I had come thus far to fee a poet and he w as ch antin g poems to me. 1 saw that be w as right and that I was wrong, and I gladly gav e m yself lip to lienr." STOVES OF HON. doubtless to i»e found in the m aterial J ol which they a r e composed, which ap ; pears to be lodes ton»? or m agnetic Iron ore. - H arper's W eekly. A Legend of Agincourt. For m any centuries we English iiuvo plumed ourselves upon the victory of Agincourt. Indeed It Is from King Hmirv V.’ h address to h!s soldiers on Clint occasion, as given by Shako- Hpoire that the mo.to of this Journal Is taken . “ F am iliar In their mouths as household w o r d s " Rut t he French have an account of the affair uot so mud» to our cr»-dit It w as arranged, according to this table, by the two leaders that only the nobles on each side were to fight King Henry V then a rtfu lly ennobled bis whole array and hence got the best of the enem y Shakespeare u n w ittin g ly gives a little countenance to the legend when he m akes the king declare in the above mentioned address. "R e ye ne’er so vile, this day shall gentle your condi tion."—Loudon S ta n d i rd Potatoes, Skins and All. “Only u few persons besides those who hav e been through an Irish fain- lne and have learned the value of a potato know that the skin and the eighth of an Inch of the spud next to the peel is the best part of n baked m urphy.“ said the proprietor of the best and most popular resluurunt up town. "R ut I'm one of the few. and every potato before it goes Into t’_t oven in my kitchen is si rubbed with u brush so that not a speck of sand remains. Resides, we hake none but the big. smooth potatoes, l soil more baked potatoes than an y two rest a u rants in town, and a lot of my patrons have learned to eat 'em skin and all. Not a few have learned, loo. that a baked potato with no seasoning but salt lias u Hue flavor, a more truly potato flavor, than cun be got with butter and paprika and the other fool ish tilings non-Irish connoisseurs use to spoil the best of vegetables.“—New York Sun. » I will fell at public auction on what is known as fhe “Old Walker Place,” 3^ miles east of the Neskowin cheese factory, on \ Thursday. February 15, 1912 Peginning at ; i I | 1 l j j t following described property, o wit: One half blood Jersey * bull— 4 years old * j ; j 10 a. m , the 4 ealves o sboats 1 gray mare— 12 years old ! dozen hens I wagon 1 grindstone 1 side hill plow (> 10-gallon milk cans o They Suporserled the R e r u n S t u k i In the Eighteenth C< nlury. j A beating ap p aratu s called a "siiiba" i (stovei was widely use I ainoin; the higher class of Romans nefore the be ginning of the Christian era This class of heaters was fixed and Immova I » I « ». b e s id e s being in set end other re spec is wholly different ironi tin mod ern stove In (ieriuan.v a n i Ni-andina via they were used In l-uthn oims and lust received from Albany Nursery. hofhouv.c'.: during tb* 1 , ages They w ere u su ally const meted of brick, stoni» or tile and were of linineu ic si.a* 0 They sometimes co v e rai tin whole side of a tw enty or I h r t y fot-t room and ofien extended out Into the room as mueh as ten feet. In which case the Hinooth. flat top w as u led for a l si stead, tin* healed su rface Imparting an agreeable feeling <>r warmth dining those cold nights of I tig ago when sin Ii things as covers were unit - ran* Cardinal Poliginie of France was per haps the tlrst to attem pi llie «'»».istruì* tton of a stove wholly of iro i. tills ill about the beginning of the < lg’ lecitili Tlie Fngine Ilia gives you the least century The (Irsi real Imnrovenient trouble, produci**» l in* greatest horse over the old Roman ••sudai' was power and roti«utiii*H%tbe least gasolene. Terms: S i x months at fix per cent, purchaser giving note with good brought about by Fran klin la l i e year and approved security. No property to be removed until terms of sale 171.'» One of bis efforts produced a typical bn*'c burner, almost perfect and are complied with. a model of workm anship Stoves were not u*e«l in private houses i< an.» great extent prior to the y«*ar I' 'J I nuloi Standard CAILLE Peri action Motor Marine and Stationary Engines m i 1 grapha phone, H) double» faced records 1 rocking chair 20 bushels potatoes l stove Some hay and other articles too numerous to mention JESSIE WARD, Prop. L. M. K R A K E R , A uctioneer. W. H. CHRISTENSON, Clerk. Traveling Stceex “T n n e lln g stones." from the si e of n pea to six Inches In diameter, are found In Nevada W hen distributed up u n lloor or other level vor fare w thin tw o or t hree few of one a not her they Inumai la t d v la*uln to travel to ward a coutiiiou center M i n i there lie huddled like a d u tc h of eggs In u nest A single stone r im m e d to a distance of three and a l a i r tv .t ti|*on b e in g roh ised at ouve . . . - | with wom'er fui ami som ewhat laonieal eeler 1» i< Join Its fellows These «pieer stoma» tire found In a region that Is compara ttve.y level and Itttie more than tom rock S a t t e n a l over this (girren re ginn nr»* Itttie bnstns frinii a few fed to a r«al or two lu diam eter, and tt Is In the boti «ins of those that the roll lug «tones art* found Tin* cause for the drang»» cominci of these stones Is 3 dozen loganberry plants Ilay rope, carrier and fork 2 doz Oregon champion goose berry plants 1 doz Dodges Prolific Rhubarb plants \ v ' ■ "J HUNK TAYLOR, AGENT. CLOVERDALE j H. P. KERR, C. E. OLAF OLESON CIVIL ENGINEERING AND SURVEYING . . T illam ook, - - Oregon THE TODD i CLOTHES CLEANING, PRESSING AND REPAIRING Tillamook’s Newest ^39 Parlors over Everest * Learned's ; Cloverdale. Ore. aud Best Hotel P W. TODD. Prop