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About Cloverdale courier. (Cloverdale, Tillamook County, Or.) 190?-19?? | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1915)
Notice to Contractors. Sealed proposals, addressed t<> the LOCAL AND PERSONAL ITEMS D Cl Q County Clerk of Yam hill County, O r egon, and endorsed “ Proposal to com and other news of interest plete Tillam ook-Yam hill Joint R oad,” in accordance with the plans and speci fications thereof, on file in the offices of the County Clerk of Tillamook and Y am hill Counties, will he received by Attorney James Walton, of Port J. M. Traxler is visiting home the County Courts of said Counties nt the Court House at M cM innville, Ore folks in Portland this week. land, and Thomas Coates, of Tilla- gon until the hour of 2 o ’clock p. m .. July 24th, 1!U5, and at that time and -Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Gillam were monk, were in Cloverdale Wednes place publicly opened and read. Eacli day, returning home from Nesko- Tillamook visitors Wednesday. bid shall be accompanied by a certifitd win. check for a sum equal to 5 per cent of Dr. Wendt fits glasses. Til the amount of the bid. and made pay Mrs. John Fleck and infant, who able to the Clerk of Yamhill County, lamook. Ore. I.O. O. F. Bid and which shall be forfeited to the Mrs. 9. W. Barker, of Estella have been at the home of Dr. County Courts jointly in case the bid be accepted and the bidder shall, for a Falls, was in Cloverdale Wednes Shearer for treatment, have re period of 5 days from the date of award A good fresh supply day. covered and returned to their ing to him the contract, fail, refuse or neglect to enter into the contract and to . . . a lw a y s in stock Groat catches of deep sea fish home yesterday. furnish the bond required by law. Bids will be received for clearing, are being had off the cape this Last Friday afternoon Mark grubbing and grading any one or all of week. the sections as included between sta Edmunds, of Pacific City, while tion 0 plus 00 a nd station 295 plus 84.4. Orders promptly filled County Agriculturist Jones, of playing in the barn, fell and broke The County Courts reserve the right to reject any or all bids or to accept the Tillamook, was in Cloverdale last his left arm. Dr. Shearer was bid considered the best for said Tilla evening. called and set the injured member. mook and Y am hill Counties. TillainooK-Yam hill Joint Road District. Groat are those 26c dinners at The Better Babies’ Contest will By C. B. Wilson, Druggist, Stationer and Kodak Dealer Clerk ot Yamhill County. the Ramsey Hotel dining room, be held at the Grange hall Thurs J. C. Holden, CLOVERDALE, - OREGON Tillamook, Ore. Clerk of Tillamook County. day, July 29. About 30 babies in First publication July 9, 1915. For sale— Good driving team this end of the county have been Last publication July 23, 1915. n a a EASTMAN Non=Curling Kodak Films Tell us Your Needs W m . A. HIGH Bids Want6d Law- entered and it will prove a very for supplying 30 ricks of crapapple interesting event. or vine maple and 5 ricks of fir, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Webb and The ranchers are exceptionally delivered a n d ricked up in wood son Karl are again with their busy this week getting in their shed at schoolhouse. Leave bids Cloverdale friends. hay. The weather being so wet at Cloverdale Mercantile C h .’ s Mrs. J. E. Cockerham and chil the fore part of the season that as store. School Dist. No. 22, dren visited Orotown friends Tues soon as the rain ceased all went to Fred Briodv, Clerk. day and Wednesday. harvesting with a vim. Mrs. Imlah Buried. Mrs F. W. Berger, of Beaver, (Evening Telegram; Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Kraner, ac presented her husband last Satur Salem, Ore., July 19.— Funeral companied by Arba Stiverson and day with a baby girl. services were held this afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kraner, are over the late Mrs A Imlah, who Regular meoting of the W. C. T. enjoying an auto trip outside this died aged 76 vears. They were U. will be held at the church Tues day, July 27 A full attendance is ! week. They left on Tuesday held at the home of her daughter, I morning, intending to visit Salem, Mrs. Harrison Jones, two miles desired. Portland anil Hood River, arriv north of Gervais. Besides this Editor and Mrs. La Masters, of ing home tomorrow or Sunday. daughter, she is survived b> the Amity, accompanied by Miss Mil For sale— A good pony, 6 years following daughters and sons: Mrs. ler, the Amity druggist, are camp Louise Miller, of Salem; Mrs. Belle old, weight 700, well broke to drive ing at Pacific City. Durette, of Fairfield; James Imlah, It is reported a large touring car single or double, a good body cart Salem; Alex Imlah, Cloverdale; caught fire Monday on the Three and harness. Will sell cheap or David Imlah, Lostine, and John Rivers road near Dolph and was will trade as part payment on a Imlah, of Fairfield. good second-hand motorcycle. For entirely consumed. In d ian s o f E cuador. particulars write L. S. Crafts. Perhaps nowhere on the globe do hn- Mrs Harry Thomus enjoyed a Woods, Ore. mnn beings so much resemble passive visit from her parents, Mr. and beasts o f burden ns In Ecuador. In The first Courier office call over fact, the Indians used to be designated Mrs. Houston, of Tillamook, Sun the telephone this morning was In documents as “ smaller beasts of day and Monday of this week. harness and buggy. rance, Cloyerdale. Will Eyes tested and glasses fitted— from Billy Owen asking in an ex cited voice how much space we had any kind. Prices right. A. H Harris, opticion. At Tillamook left in the paper. We immediately had a vision that the war was Drug Store, Tillamook, Oregon. Mrs. Samuel Estabrook and ended and the bottom had dropped j Miss Helen Brown, of Seattle, are out of the price of all kinds of: visiting at the Chas. Ray homo. foodstuff and that a page ad at Miss Brown is a neice of Mr. Ray least would be required to give The pastor will he at Oretown quotations to the public. After several ineffectual attempts to get Sunday, hence there will be no what he was saying we heard the morning preaching service. Sun word “ grandpa” and then grasped day school snd evening services the situation for the attack very as usual. much resembled the one he had in Messrs. John Holgateand Edgar the office a few months ago. This Gilbert, of Beaver. J. W. Wallace. time wo are pleased to quote that James Goldsworthv and S. C. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Werschkul Woods, of Hemlock, attended Ma are the proud parents of a baby sonic lodge here last evening. boy. burden" to distinguish them from pack animals. Loaded, they elamlier up the steep streets as stolid as little gray burros. One set's many an urchin of seven years bearing on his back a load of bricks as heavy ns he Is. One wo man, bent under a burden, carries a child nt her breast Another laden wo man plies distaff and spindle ns she creeps along. Here is a file of bare foot women bent under londs o f earth or bricks escorted by a man with n whip. — Professor Edward Alsworth Ross’ “ South o f Panama.** THREE INQUISITIVE SCOTS. A nd H o w T h e y H app en ed to O rig in a te th e J u te In d u s try . James Logie, who Is supposed to know more about jute than any one else in America, tells in a very In teresting way how jute came to be known to Europe and the west: • “ In 1840, on a Saturday afternoon, three Dundee flax spinners were walk ing to their beautiful residences in Broughty Ferry, about four miles east of Dundee, on the banks of the Tay, and ns usual strolled along the docks. A t thnt time there were several Clip per line sailing vessels trading with Dundee In Indian products, principally grain, linseed, etc., lyul on this par ticular Saturday one of these vessels was discharging her miscellaneous cargo, and these canny Scots observed a fibre in some quantity on the dock and made Inquiry ns to whnt it was. “They were told It was some Indian product that had been obtained In Bengal, and was suitable for the dun nage o f ships. They examined the fibre a little more carefully and all thought it would be possible to spin the fibre on their llax machinery. The result was that Monday morning they made a bee line for the agents of the ship and asked what they were going to do with this waste material. "They got the reply, ‘W e propose dumping It into the river,’ and when they expressed a wish to experiment with it they were to'd they could cart it nwny from the dock and were wel come to it if they paid the cartage. Thus the Jute industry started—for the filler turned out to lie nothing less than whnt we know commercially today as ‘Jute.’ " —Exchange. M o re to Come. Pessimist— You haven’t had all that you wanted In life, huve you? Optim ist—No. but I haven't had nil that 1 didn’t want, either.— Brooklyn Life. H o lla n d ’s W in d m ills . A man's wealth may he measured T h ie v e s D on’t L ik e D ucks. by the stocks and bonds he owns In Ducks are good watchdogs for the New York, by the cattle he has In A r poultry yard. No matter what time of gentina. by the chnln of gold eagles his night the thief may come, the ducks wife wears In Tehuantepec, and so on. will quack.—Farm and Fireside. But In some parts o f Holland the man Per of windmills a man owns gives D efined. the clew to his financial rating. They | "Pop. what’s a cynic? A man who Is fight the water, shelter the family, af- ! tired o f everybody?" ford an occupation and provide an in I “ Yes, son, and who tires everybody.” come for their owners — Philadelphia Ledger.