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About Cloverdale courier. (Cloverdale, Tillamook County, Or.) 190?-19?? | View Entire Issue (April 6, 1916)
LOCAL I a AND PERSONAL H £3 t a 1 AND OTHER 6i NEW S ci j OF IN T E R E S T ♦* D. A. Bailey was a Tillamook visitor Joe Wilson and family returned home Monday. Tuesday from their winter’s stay in A big line of Easter cards at High’ s California. They came over the moun tain in their machine and while Mr Drug Store. Wilson was enjoying handshakes with V. Spaulding and family spent last his Cloverdale friends said lie was glad Sunday in Tillamook. to get back home. Frank Yach, of the Little Nestucca Plasker Bros, for all kinds of olulull country, was in the city Tuesday. ing, hath room outfits and fixtures. Til Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kuinm, of Beaver, lamook, Ore. were Cloverdale visitors Tuesday. Mrs. Kullow Passes. Mrs. Washington Fellow, of Ilelio, a Will itoenicke. of Sandlake, was do pioneer of Tillamook county, died at the ing business in Cloverdale Tuesday. home of her sou Tuesday afternoon at Full blood, single comb, White Leg 5 :30 o’clock of complications caused by horn egg for setting. Order now. Ivan advanced age. Her aged husband has Gist. the sympathy of the entire community. Mrs. Geo. Worthington spent, a !'♦. Obituary— Hannah Margaret Pomeroy days this week visiting her mother in was born August 21, 1836 in the state of Tillamook. Ohio. She was united in marriage to Frank Owens anil family spent Sun Washington Fellow October 22, 1855, day with Mrs. Owens’ sister, Mrs. John and crossed the plains in 1805 with ox teams. They setfled in Washington Blum, near Tillamook. county, moving to Tillamook county, Mrs. A1 Boon entertained her sister near Hebo in 1888, where she resided and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Bay Letson, until her death, April 4th, 1910. She of Tillamook, Inst Sunday. leaves an aged husband, five sons and Lloyd Peek and family moved last several grand children. The sons are: Monday and are now living in tents on Thomas, George, Orley, Celley and Edward The funeral services were held the Frank Owens’ ranch. in the Oddfellow cemetery April 5 were Dr. Shearer is having the interior of interment was made. Fully a hundred his office and residence repapered and of her neighbors were present, many the woodwork white enameled. briiiL'ing a contribution of flowers. Rev. A number of our citizens visited F. S. Ford was present and conducted Fletcher's beach Sunday to view the the service. whale that had been washed ashore. Great are those 25c dinners at the The Literary Society will have a meet Ramsey Hotel dining room, Tillamook, ing in the Cloverdale hall tomorrow Ore. evening. A program will he rendered S A N D L A K E H A P P E N IN G S ; 11. M. Cross notified us by letter to announce that he has withdrawn his Mr. Blanchard, of Hemlock, preached candidacy for county school superin at the school house Sunday evening. tendent. The Sunday school at the lake was Mr. and Mrs. Frank Worthington well attended. All enjoyed the basket and daughter, Miss Edna, of Tillamook, dinner and the stroll to the beach. were visitors here a few days the latter Mr. Carter went to Hemlock Sunday part of lust week. to see about a planer. Glenn White a nd .fames Bailey with their families moved this morning to Everett Allen and family have moved Garibaldi. They will work on the road away. They are going to live at Walla in that loealitv this summer. Walla. Abner Griest, an old and highly re- John Cameron went to Tillamook soeeted citizen of this part of Tillamook Sunday. »•••untv, died at his home in Beaver, Mr. and Mrs. Schvler Edwards were v sterday forenoon of cancer of the at Cape Fiawauda beach last Sunday. stomach. Artichoke Seed For Sale. The ladies of the 1’ reshvterian church Anyone desiring artichokes for seed will meet at the church Tuesday after- iioon at 2:30 o'clock to organize a Ladies' can secure same by calling on Chas. Aid Society. Every lady who conies i Ray, Cloverdale. Price, dug 2c per lb., in the ground 1 Kc per lb. w II he guaranteed an office. Charles Fox, Dan Fletcher and Lester B iv were elected Mon lav at Tillamook a hoard for the Little Nest noon drainage district. The hoard elected Dan Fletcher president and appointed John Rodberg secretary. To the Voters, Ninetoealh Judicial Dis trict. I am a Democratic candidate for the 1 nomination to the office of Circuit Judge, Nineteenth Judicial District. If nomi nated and elected, 1 shall try to do mv II. A. Miles, of Woods, was with his duty and maintain my independence. Cloverdale friends Tuesday and left S. S. Johnson Wednesday morning for Tillamook to Take the old reliable White stage for attend the session of the county court a comfortable, safe and sure trip to und present a pi tition for a Wtt.T road Tillamook. in his locality. Bids Wanted. The annual congregational meeting of Bids will he received by the Cold the Presbyterian church was held last Spring* C‘ e e • Factory for the hauling Thursday evening. Reports from the of cheese to Tillamook and supplie* various departments of the church were Kick. Send bids to Ivan Gist, Clover- read and approved. Rev. F. S. Ford dale, Oregon. was called t < fill the pastorate another Dr. Wendt tit* glasses. Tilla- veur. Dr. George was elected ail elder nmok, Ore.. I. O O. F. BM. and Cha*. Ra\ iv-ciccte a »rustic. We have just received A Beautiful New Assortment — of— HAND PAINTED CHINA And you will find in this line some very seasonable Gifts for Birthdays and many other occasions. W in. A. HIGH Druggist and Stationer, CLOVERDALE, - OREGON Notice for Publication. ( publishkr ) 03660 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR U. 8 . LAND OFFICE at Portland, Ore gon, April 3, 1916. Notice is hereby given that Lewis S. Feene, of Beaver, Oregon, w ho, on Oc tober 11th, 1912, made homestead entrv No. 03660, for n e > 4 of n e > 4 , section 35, township 3 south, range 9 west, ¡Barnette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final three- vear proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before the Clerk of the County Court for Tillamook County, Oregon, at Tillamook, Oregon, on the first day of June, 1916. Claimant names as witnesses: O. W. Finnaman, Elisha P. Mills, R o bert C. Magarrell, William S. Speece, all of Beaver, Oregon. Proof made according to law under which entry was made. N. Campbell, Register. Evils of Worry. FOOTBALL SIGNALS. Story of How the Use of the Number System Was Inaugurated. According to R. W. Maxwell, the famous Swarthmore player, numeri cal football signals, now so necessary to playing the gridiron game, first originated in 1888, when Pennsylva nia Military college used the system against Princeton and won from the Tigers by a score of G to 0. The New Jersey team was bewildered by the novelty, but the advantage of the system was realized and Prince ton adopted it, followed by Yale and Harvard. In telling of the birth of the signal system Maxwell says: “ Signals seem to be an absolutely essential part of football, and yet it was not until 1888 that they were invented. From the November day in 1SG9, when Rutgers and Prince ton played the first game of football, until 1888 the colleges got along by using systems which varied with ev ery eleven, letters being frequently used. It was left to Pennsylvania Military college to originate the present system of numbers. “ It was on a chill November aft ernoon in 1888 that Pennsylvania Military college flashed the number system on the football world and, incidentally, used the signals as the means of a coup whereby Princeton was whipped at Chester by G to 0. The numbers not only mystified Princeton, but they so speeded up Penn Military’s play that it was able to outrush the Tigers at every stage of the game, which was witnessed by more than 1,000 persons, a great football gathering for those days. From that dav the use of numbers for signals spread rapidly. “ In defeating Princeton Pennsyl vania Military did not use trick plays, spring some new formations or work the ‘shoestring’ stunt for the first time. The players outgen eraled their opponents, and the out generaling was done by using a sys tem of numbers for signals. “ Football signals now being used by all of the teams were used for the first time in this contest. Princeton was swept oil her feet by the speedy play and was outclassed and out played. It was the most successful coup d’etat ever sprung by a football team. It made such an impression on Princeton that the coach adopted it for his team, and within a year Yale, Harvard, Pennsylvania and others also took it up. Peun also was defeated in that same year. This revolutionized football.” — New York Times. Worry hurts health. Worry not only aggravates, hut in many cases is responsible for certain disorders of the human system. People who are subject to spells of worrying ure found to have an irregular pulse. Respiration often is repressed, the blood circulation impaired, and the extremities be come cold. And just ns worry impairs the blood circulation so, too, it inter feres with the proper action of the stomach’s digestive apparatus. This interference with the secre tions o f the stomach is apt to make the worried man or woman a con firmed dyspeptic. Guncotton. Worry by continuously interfer Intense shock or heat explodes ing with sleep often leads to more guncotton, and its power can be or less chronic insomnia.— Pitts gauged from the fact that it is tiie burgh Press. force which blows great holes in ships through the agency of mines Giving Him Warning. and torpedoes. The advantages of “ If you come home early this aft guncotton for military purposes are ernoon please go around the house that it can stay for any length of and enter bv the back door.” said time in water without injury, its ex Mrs. Dodsworth. plosions are unattended by smoke, “ What’s on foot?” asked Mr. Hods- and it ignites at a temperature half lortli. that required to explode gunpow “ Nothing’s ‘on foot.’ thank heav der. A peculiar characteristic of en! I will entertain the Browning guncotton is that a brick of if, when club this afternoon and I don’t wan? wet, may be placed on a bed of hot any object so intensely material n> coals, and as the moisture dries out you are to profane the soulful at tl»e cotton will flake and burn quiet mosphere we shall have created bv ly. If dry originally, however, the several hours of study and recita guncotton will explode with terrible fnrnp nbout 3?0 degrees of heat. tion.” — Birin in ■ ham Herald