Image provided by: Deschutes County Historical Society; Bend, OR
About Cloverdale courier. (Cloverdale, Tillamook County, Or.) 190?-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1917)
CLOVERDALE COURIER STATE Published Every Thursday Frank Taylor, Editor and Publisher. “ E n te re d as second-class m a tte r. Nov em ber 13th, 1905 a t the post office at Clo- verdale, Tillamook County, O re g o n ,u n der Act of Congress, March -ird. 1878. NEWS NOTES The Place Cloverdale People Should V isit Brief Items of Interest from Various Towns in Oregon. ScBscKienoN K ai 'ia T he H alsey high school has organ $1.00 One Y ear, in a d v a n c e .......... lzed a band of 23 pieces. Six M o n th s ............................... ................. 50 Twelve thousand turkeys were ship Single C o p y .............................. ................. 05 ped from Douglas county la st week. R. R. Lloyd, Forest Grove, was list A dvkrtisinq R atks ed as killed in action in a Canadian Displayed Advertisements, 00 r e n ts per inch per m onth, single column. All c asualty list. T he a nnual m eeting of the Oregon Local Reading Notices, 10 cents ]>er line for each insertion. Spo rtsm e n 's league will be held in T im ber laud notices 110.00 P ortland December 9 and 10. Homestead notices 5.00 J. A. Churchill, s ta te su p e rin te n d e n t Political A nnouncem ent Cards $10.00 of public instruction, will be a candi J ob D epartment d a te for re-election, he has announced. My J o b D epartm ent is complete in every T he N orthw est H ereford B re e d e rs’ res(>ect a n d I uiu able to do all kinds association was organized a t a b a n Commercial J o b P rinting on short quet of H ereford b reeders a t Portland. uotiee a t reasonable prices. D angerous weed seeds not common T H U R SD A Y . N O V E M B E R 29 1917. in Oregon have been found In Minne sota No. 3 oats shipped into the s ta te recently. ATTACK ON LIBERTY BONDS. A th re e -d a y C h a u ta u q u a will be held The action of operators on th e New York stock esehange with reference to ' n Sherwood, beginning on 1 luirsdav Liberty Bonds, should not he discourag November 29, and ending Saturday, ing to th e people who do not deal in D ecem ber 1. A cam paign has been sta r te d at stocks and bonds. It will he noticed th a t recently th e 3*^ per c e n t bonds Lakeview by m em bers of the St. P a t wrere a t par while the 4 per cents wure rick's church to ra ise funds to build a m odern hospital. below par by a good percentage. Identif.cation ca rds will be provided H olders of large blocks of th e 4 per cents realize th a t they must pay taxes ail sta te officials entitled to exemp- upon th e m . Therefore they consider \ Don u nde r the law from the pr< ese n t th e 3 ' j per cents which are not subject subjec tr a n sp o rta tio n tax. Bruce Dennis, sta te director of the to taxation, are in realitv ttie best in vestm ent, at least th a t is th e way some s ta te council of defense, urges the of the big holders figure the transaction. a p p ointm ent of a county agent in ev The holders of small a m ounts of the 4’s j ery county in Oregon. need |n o t borrow any trouble b icause! h r a n k J. Miller, eha. m an of the they are not obliged to pay taxes on Public s *rvlce commission, has a n th e m . In am ounts below $5,000 the nouneed his candidacy for re-election as a m em ber of th a t commission. 4’s escape taxation. T he Oregon sta te sw im m ing and Assessing the 4’s when held in large blocks is ano th e r way th e government diving cham pionships will he held at has ta k e n to make th e ric h man pay his ! the M ultnomah A m ateur A thletic club share of th e expense of carrying on the ; ln P ortla nd S a tu rd a y night, J a n u a ry war. j 12. -------------------------- j T he sale of Red Cross C hristm as THE SLAB CREEK SAGE SAYS! seal3 for the Oregon Association for the Prevention of T uberculosis will I t may be all right for a woman to from D ecem ber 1 until Christ m arry in haste and repent at lea.-u e , , a s ’ T he w ork on the L a th a m Divide b u t a married m an has no leisure. road n e a r Cottage Grove, which ta k e s Duties of other people is always clear the place of several miles of the worst to u’s. road on the Pacific highway, will he The owner of a sm a r t dog does most com pleted this week. Succum bing to a stroke of apoplexy, of the barking. J. L. Stockton, r.n ol ’ tirn m e rc h a n t Life is one continuous round of u n of Salem and a form er p re sid e n t of finished business. the Oregon Retail M erchants' associa E p ita p h for a b a r te n d e r: ‘He had a ticn, died a t the age of 70. ‘sm ile’ for evervbodv.” Mrs. M ary J a n e H em enw ay, who crossed the plains to Oregon with h e r I t is as difficult to convince a s t u b p a re n ts in 1853, died at h e r home in born m a n as it is to fatten a windmill E ugene a t the age of 67 years a fte r bv r u n n in g corn through it. an illness of several months. J a t e z Wilkes, pioneer of 1845, vet Keep Perishable Food e ra n of the Indian w ars and a re side nt Cool, Clean and Covered of W ashington county practically con tinuously for 70 years, died a t his home in Hillsboro, aged 85 years. H eat, dirt, improper handling, flies, Plow ing and sowing fall grain is insects and r a ts or mice a r e the g r e a t still progressing throughout Linn est food wasters. The moment meat, fish, milk and eggs comity, with th e result th a t the la rg a re allowed to get w a rm they begin to est s e r f a g e of fall grain is now p la n t ed In re c e n t ye a rs in the W illam ette spoil. B acteria and germs multiply rapidly valley. in slightly w arm food and quickly A m eeting of the Pacific coast con m ake it dangerous or unfit to eat. ference has been called for December Keep perishable foods In the coolest, 3 by Dr. A. D. Brown, of Oregon Agri cleanest place you cau provide, prefer cultural colloge, se c re ta ry of the asso ably In a good refrigerator or ice ciation. T he m eeting will be held house, but a t any r a te In covered ves sels suspended in the well or in the in San Francisco. S h e rb e ts will soon go out of the coolest clean place In your homo or m arket, for the Pacific N orthw est Ice cellar. Dry cold is a b etter preservative than Cream M a n u fa c tu re rs’ association has d am p colil. adopted a resolution to elim inate s h e r The drrst particles in the a ir ca rry bet from the list of frozen delicacies, molds and germs. to conserve sugar. Meat, fish and milk a re Ideal breed J. E. Colgren, of Wallace. Idaho, rep ing grounds for such germs. Keep your re se n tin g the Bethlehem Steel com food covered so th a t those bacteria and germs will have as little chance as pany. ha s gone to Pistol river, Curry county, w here he is to inspect deposits possible to get on your food O rdinary cleanliness demands th a t of f e r r o m a n g a n e s e , sui-l to exist in flies he kept out of our homes and large quantities in th a t district, aw ay from our focal Blackleg and rabies a re still preva H ealth protection i ^ k e s it essential lent on the c e n tra l Oregon c a ttle to banish flies. KeeproU fo-’d covered, range, according to R A. W ard, a g ri or a t least screened from these carrie rs culturist of D eschutes county In the of deadly disease and filth. Destroy past week alone 20 head of c a ttle flies by every possible means. have died from one or the o th e r cause. S. C. Morton, editor of the St. Hel T h e condor is the osrly bird which ena Mist s a d m ayor of St. Helens, has keeps Its offspring in the nest for a year. T he young c a nnot fly for tw elve been appointed cou a ty Judge of Co lumbia county to succeed Judge R S m ouths a f te r being batched. H a t t s a of St. Helens T he vacancy Biblical critics of today have no was caused by the death of Judge Hat- doubt th a t the behemoth mentioned in tan. Jo b is the bip|4>potamus and th a t the F o rty or 50 Indians of the K lam ath leviathan denotes th e crocodile. Indian reservation a re to become full- “ I wish Erltz would w rite his figures fledged c ltite n s of the United States, plainer. I can't possibly tell from bis according to S u p e rin te n d e n t J. it. letter w hetber it is 1.000 or 10.000 kisses | Johnston, following a m eeting of the th a t be sends me.”—Fliegende Blaetter com petency commission at K lam ath T om m y—Pop. w hat is a theorist? Falls Four sororities a t the Oregon Agri- Tuinruy's Pop—A theorist» my son, is a m a n who tbiuks he is learning to sw im j c ultural college. Delta Alpha. Alpha by slu in g on the hank and w atching a Chi Omega. Pi Beta Phi and Beta Tau ____ _ g e ts , have adopted Freng£ wgr or j b e h e ld phang, in o rd e r to aid th e French gov ernm e nt in the care of the F rench children. Clay Tailm an, commissioner of the general land office, has w ritten to R epresentative Hawley stating tha t none of the Oregon & California gra n t lands will he thrown open until next spring, when some of the classi ' fications will ho in shape tha t people may go on the lauds early. Nine conventions of the L a y m e n ’s I Missionary Movement will be held in j Oregon and W ashington in F ebruary and March, according to an announce- 1 incut by F ra n k C. Jackson, of Seattle, secretary of the Laym en's Missionary Movement. T he com m issioners of the port of Bandon have adopted a resolution to extend the sp u r je tty inside the harbor to connect with the south bar jetty. Funds will be derived from the sale of bonds, which ha\ e already been voted by the port. Increased business is m aking neces sary the second enlargem ent of the Brooko-Scanlon L um ber company- plant at Bend in two years. Extension cf the dry shed aud the installation of five new planing m achines a re the chief im provements. P re lim in a ry work has been u n d e r ta k e n by engineers of the O.-W. It. & N. Co. to te s t the c h a ra c te r of the soil underlying the surface n e a r the right of way just west of Cascade Locks prelim inary to c onstructing a $100,000 d rainage s /s te m for the pro tection of the m ain line tracks. L ongstorem en of Po rtla n d and the Columbia river district have been gra n te d an increase in wages of 5 ce n ts an hour stra ig h t time and 10 ce n ts an hour overtime, m aking the pay 65 ce n ts an hour stra ig h t time and $1 an hour overtim e on all but genera! coastw ise cargo, which rem ains 60 and 90 cents. Se c re ta ry of S ta te Oicott has issued a w arning to automobile ow ners of the sta te th a t the business of the a u to mobile d e p a rtm e n t is lip.hie to become so congested by Ja n u a ry 1 that unless applications a r e sent in a t once it m ay become a physical im possibility to forward th e licens'-.s on the day of the receipt of the application. T he first case brought ln Cir^con u nde r the new federal child labor law was brought a t Portland, when an In formation was filed against V, P Sheasgreen, proprietor of a box fac tory, charging him with having ship ped goods froiq^ his factory outside the s ta te while causing a boy under the age of 16 years to work more than eight hours a day. F our of th e 504 cases reported to the sta te industrial aceid?nt commis sion during the week ending Nove-m her 22 were fatal. They were J. Mc Cormack, Portland, killed in c o n stru c tion w ork; B ert Baxter, Tillamook, killed in logging operations: Nels Eng- lund, Knappa. killed in logging opera tions, and Roy E. Fitch, Mabel, killed in sawmill operations. T h irty thousand pounds of w-heat belonging to ‘‘wealthy men living in Portland, S eattle and oth e r places” has been seized by agents of the fed eral food a dm inistra tion's office, upon instructions issued by W. K. Newell, a cting a d m in istra to r for Oregon. This supply was located and sealed in v a ri ous duck preserves along the Colum hia river, particularly Sauvles island, during last week. Sheriff P a rk e r, of Eugene, su p pressed an effort by Allen H. Eaton, form erly of the University of Oregon faculty and m em ber of the legislature from Lane county, to hold a meeting in the P resbyterian c hurch of Fair mont, a suburb of Fugene. He con tended tha t a speech by Eaton in do fp rse of his participation in the Peo ple's Council for Democracy and Peace would Incite a rlct. T hat K lam ath county Is adapted to th e culture of sugar beets on an ex tensive scale has been proven again this year by the experim ents conduct ed In different p a rts of the county, ■ c o r d i n g to E. J. Ftannlgan. field su p e rin te n d e n t of the U tah Idaho Sug a r company, of G rants Pass, who has b “en looking a fte r the growing of about 100 acres of beefs at K lam ath Falla this y ear for his company. During the three years and little m ore th a t the w o r k m e n s eomnen«a tion law has been In operation 12 wo men who were left widows through in d u stria l accidents have rem arried, and as a consequence $67,165 34. which had been placed in a segregated fupd G o l d e n ’s W O M E N 'S S H O P tn In New and up-to-date Quarters Onlva s liort tim e ago the (¡oliloti Co. started business in Tillamook City. Its birth plate was in a $'-1) rented store on First street. It soon created favorable impression with its high quality goods and low prices aigl now it occupies the best store on the main business street, (the store formerly occupied bv Mr. W illiams.) Our success is the reward of reliable Merchandise at decidedly lower prices than charged elsewhere E very woman who desires Stylish, well-fitting Clothes will 1« interested in the new Fall and W inter Coats, Suits and Skirts at Golden s Women’s Shop Showing th e most wonderful values in the season's latest and most a p proved styles in Women’s and Misses’ High Class Suit*, Coats, Dresses and Skirts Made to your measure, to fit vou perfectly, in anv style and m aterial of your owu selection, or of your own m aterial. A complete line of Ready-to-wear Suits, Coats, Skirts, Dresses, etc., in beautiful styles and fine materials. Every ga rm e nt is perfect in fit and faultless in w orkm anship. Come and enjoy th e pleasure of looking th ro u g h this beautiful line w hether you wish to buy or not. * G o l d e n ’s W o m ° n \ Main S tree t ? * ° £ , TILLAMOOK, OREGON It Pays to Advertise in the Courier, Costs but Little More CALIFORNIA to Go East via You will enjoy the diversity of Scenery Many changes of Climate Opportunity to visit SauFranciaco— Los Angeles—El Paso—San Antonio— New Orleans—or Salt Lake, Denver, etc. Choice of Routes and Trains 4 Trains a Day Portland to San Francisco Let as make ap an itinery and arrange your trip Ask any agent for particulars or write J o h n M. Scott, General Passenger Agent Portland. Southern Pacific Lines io m eet the m onthly paym ents lh a t would be due to then», has been re turned to the general fund of the s ta te industria l accident commission Uncle Sam will no longer be trifled with by m e r c h a n ts coming under the proclam ation of P re sid e n t Wilson, is sued O ctober i. classifying those who m ust ta k e out licenses to conduct their business Federal Food Controller Hoover telegraphed S ta te A dm inistrât or W K Newell, acting for Oregon, or ders to notify all who have not as yet ta k e n out licenses Th.a Is the final word, It was emphasized, and failure on the p a r t of any m erchant coming u nde r the order will m ean th a t ho goes out of h tsin e ss. To p re v e n t boarding of rngar. W. K. Newell, a c tin g food a d m ln ia tra to r of i Oregon, has announced th a t regula- : tions sim ilar to those adopted In other sta te s governing the sale of sugar would become effective throughout the sta te im m ediately. Sales to fam ily c o n su m e rs a re limited to 91 p u r c h a se s; hotels, r e s ta u r a n ts and board ing houses a re limited to a 10 d a y s’ supply; fa rm e rs living a t a distance from p u rc h a sin g points may buy in 25 pound lota>, su g a r may not be used as a leader for special sales o r to encourage th e sa le of o th e r m erchan dise.