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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (May 23, 1912)
Tillamook Headlight, May 23, 1912 Th« T«az«l. Ths Queer Elephant Shrew. Th« Westerner's Ideal. One kind of Afric an mice we seldom The westerner's willingness to give 11 Those wbo have never seen a teazel see or rend about is tbe little elepbanl Bp home, neighbors and old nssoclatlons 1 ran imagine a fir cone or "swutnp cat shrew. It la Purely four Inches long, for the sake of a "claim” on tbe prairie rail" set all over with little stiff books. but tbe trunk and shortened tall com In not sordid. His stern preoccupation It Is tbe bur (or tassel or flower head Lined gives it another four to Ove inch with “gettlug a bred” is a part of bls or thistle topi of tbe j>laut dlpsreus. es. Tbe fur. though drab Instead of Inherited passion for personal inde However familiar to people who live gray, is otberwtse like that of a chlu- pendence. I have seen a gray hue Bteal in lands where tbe teazel is extensively < bills, as also are Its large and delicate over the face of tbe settler when speak grown, tbe fact may be that tbe prick ears, while both lu tbe formation and ing of some one who hail “lost bls ly beads of that plaut ure universally Ibe manner of using its legs it reminds farm" and “bad to go out by tbe day.” used to raise tbe nap on cloth. A mul one of a new species of miniature kan For I lie wage earner's lot Ibe true boru titude of persona in this country prob garoo. Again, at times, when In a sit | westerner feels a dread quite lncuiu- ably never beard of It aud would be ting posture, it looks not unlike a fluffy 1 prebeuslble to cities and to old cornmu- Istonlshed to lenrn In wbat euoriuous young chicken which is trying to put | allies. If be ruthlessly sacrifices com- quantities tbe plaut is cultivated. In out of sight a worm that has proved I forts nod culture. It is that be may win France alone many thousands Of acres almost too mucb for it. Indeed, at all (a fool lug of bis own and so call no man at land are exclusively devoted to the 'Jmes the elongated and hlcLly sensi i master. Once be has cleared off tbe rultlvation of tbe teazel. French man tive nose or trunk la very much like a mortgage. Improved bis place and gain ufacturers use enormous numbers of dnrk colored and uneasy worm—that I i ed a soothing sense of financial seen- tbe prickly beads, and from France organ, which during wakeful moments I iity. be will provide books, piano, mu there are exported many millions of is always slightly on tbe wriggle. It sic lessons, trarel and college educa them. They are also raised in Austria. has swift leaping powers. It will tuck tion for bls children, even If In tbe England, Belgium. Poland and tbe Cri up Its appendages and. like a twill, roll meantime bls own capacity to enjoy mea. The prickles of tbe teazel have a over and over In a straight line, and. bas been atrophied.—Professor Edward small knob at the end, and this, mount ed on an elastic stem and set with %fter a meal, which occurs at very Alsworth Ross In Century. great precision on tbe central spindle, •liort Intervals and consists of several t-i'.uthfula only, quite surprises one by affords a little brush sueb as tbe ut Woman and the Violin. ■<llng stock still, apart only from a "A distinguished violinist of this most mechanical skill bas never been ' iiiie quivering of tbe trunk. city," writes Philip Hale In tbe Boston able to rival, at all events at the same Herald, “was talking recently about price.—Harper's Weekly. A Certain Shot. women who fiddled and now fiddle. Tbe aged, wrinkled gamekeeper He complained that uearly all of them T«a T«st«re In Formosa. whistled bis dog and scratched bls classed as great erred in this—they In tbe Formosan tea trade tbe most towsled bead before turning to tbe tried to play like a man; they wished Important man is the cha si. or taster company. it said of them that they had a virile He Inspects and tests samples of all “Yes, slr," said be; “tbe rum rules t tone. He did not except Lady Halle, teas offered to bls firm, and bls judg master I ever bad were old Parson Maud Powell or Miss Parlow. 'The ment determines tbe price to be paid Sharpe. As blind as a bat, be were.” only great woman violinist I remem In a room admitting light only from “And did be (u «booting T’ eielalm ber was Tereslna Tua. and her great the north tbe cha si does bls work. ed tbe audience In tbe village wort ness consisted in tbe fact that she al He first examinee tbe leaf, then Its lngmen's club. ways played like a woman, She was fusion In hot water and lastly Its odor “Shooting!" replied tbe gamekeeper, womanly and fascinating.' Salnt-Sa and taste. Practically all the faculties with a snort of contempt at tbe ques ens once said apropos of Augusta are exercised In making this test, it tion. “Ay, that be did. Yea, be abot Holmes that when a woman wrote for requires the services of an expert, and reg'lar. When be was in tbe wooda the orchestra she was noisier than any tbe tea tester receives a good salary, and anything rose I'd cry, 'Blrda, air!* man because sbe wished to show that though relatively not so large as ob aud then I'd run behind tbe parson she was not a poor, weak thing on ac taining twenty years ago. A tea tester aud tbe doge 'd run behind me.” count of her sex.” never uses any perfume which would “And then?' aaked tbe audience. destroy tbe tea odor. He must not “Then tbe old gent’d blase away with ' allow the acuteness of his taste to be Gambetta’s Table. both bar'll." There is a curious story told of the come dull. He never drinks domestic “And did be ever bit anything?” table at which Gambetta wrote. A tea. Constant tea testing. It Is said, “Ob, yes! Sometimes It wur a cow previous owner, General Lahitte, min will Injure tbe health. In Formosa tbe or a horse or a pig or a dog. Now ister for foreign affairs In 1849, dis tea testers are Americans or English and again It wur a man. But be al- missed bis confidential servant because men. waya hit something. He were a cer- be believed he had stolen a large sum tain shot, be were!”—London Answers. of money In 1,000 franc banknotes. Blsck and Whits. For many years a large department Tears afterward, when the table bad Spiking ths Guns. to be repaired, the joiner employed for store baa spent thousands of dollars on Tbe expreaalou “spiking guns” is a tbe work found tbe missing bundle placards with which almost every arti survival from the day when all that of banknotes between tbe mahogany cle of merchandise is ticketed through was necessary to put u gun out of ac board of tbe table and tbe drawers be out the store, and only within a Bbort tion (provided, of course, that you had low. They bad lain there unnoticed time did they realize the amount of access to It i was a large nail or aplke for fourteen years. Unfortunately the money that was wasted In using the and a bummer. You simply drove the story does not go on to say that tbe white cardboard with black lettering. null into tbe touch-bole at tbe breech poor servant and bls mistaken master These white cards soon become soiled If the nnll was long enough to turn were alive at tbe time of the discovery and shop worn If allowed to remain In round at the end on tbe bottom of the and that tbe one's character wasolear- place any length of time. The cards bore so mucb the better. It la just as ed and the other's confidence restored. which are bandied by customers In simple, [terbaps simpler, to put a mod blns, trays, etc., are even more so. By eru gun out of action. All you want substituting tbe black cardboard with The Japanese Hades. Is a hammer. The breech block of tbe The Japanese language has no equiv white lettering this store has overcome modern gun is held closed by screw alent for our word “hell,” but has tbe this difficulty to a very great extent. threads. After the breech block la shut word "Jlgoku" Instead. Jlgoku consists The show cards are always clean, on the shell a turn of two or three of, first, eight immense hot bells, rang fresh and bright looking and they last Inches engages the threads. By knock ing one beneath tbe other in tiers. Each many times as long, saving the firm lug a bur ou these threads you prevent of these bells has sixteen additional several hundred dollars In the course them engaging Any attempt to Are hells outside its gates, like so many at a year.—Business. the gun without tbe breech block be- antechambers, so that there are In all I ________ lug perfectly closed would, of course, 130 hot bells. Second, there are eight Wesley’s “Narrow Nock of Land.” be of material assistance to ths enemy. large cold bells, each with Its sixteen Tbe actual first aud last house In ante-bells, making tbe same number of England is a shed where a woman Office Lawyers. cold that there are of hot bells. Be «ells specimens of rock. Just below “Office practice Is wbat the average sides these 272 hot and cold bells for tbla. as one goes down tbe zigzag path lawyer seeks for now,” remarked an offenders of the common sort, tbe wily between the rocka. on tbe neck of the attorney, "auil that Is the business that Japs bavo twenty mammoth "bells of l>eulnsular Is a flat stone about two makes tbe lurgest returns for the least ■tter darkness," Into which will lie feet square and rising six inches above wnste of tissue. More money Is made consigned the spirits of children who tbe grouud. This, tradition asserts. Is nowndnys by keeping clients out of take tbe name of Dal Butsa, or Great that upon which John Wesley sat litigation and free from tbe dangers Buddha, In vain. wbeu be composed the hymn— of tbe I hw ' h delay than by defending Lo, on a narrow neck of land tbcui, even successfully, in court. It 'Twill two unbounded seas I stand As te Papa’s Wealth. Is safe to say that there are some Secure. Insensible! “Mamun, wbat Is papu worth?” tl.ooo lawyers who ara making a very It Is also stated that Wesley wrote “I don't know, dear, but it must t>€ good living In New York from law a great deal. I beard him say once other hymns there. Apparently he had business that rarely or uever takes that he had put $100,000 Into a mining it this time (July 30. 17431 experienced them into court and that there are a company's stock.” ■ bad spell of weather at I-aud s End. large number of lawyers who from “What's the name of tbe mining for be writes. “1 saw a strange sight— their counsel work and directing great company T' tbe sun shining In Cornwall.”—English . nterprisea and corporations, advising “Wildcat, I think be said. I pre Illustrated Magazine. : nd guiding wealthy clients, take in sume they named it that because It's «-.icb year princely—yea, even fabulous la some unsettled country away out on —nmouuts."—Lawyers' Diary. the frontier.”—Chicago Tribune. Sems English Names. It is a difficult matter sometimes to spell an English name from bearing It pronounced For Instance. Farqu- bareon Is pronounced Fabrson. This, however, la "simple as A B C” com pared wtth the weird renderings of some other names Who, for Instance, would dream of pronouncing Wool- fa rd Is worthy Oosry, Wreufordalelgh Hensley or Wyrardlsbury Kaysbury?— Pearson's Papa Did Teo. "Thia Is my son Frederick. Mr. Fos- 41ck." said Mr. Glanders proudly. In troducing bls five-year-old boy to his He Ought to Get It. caller. “On wbat grouuds do you seek a 41- "Well. Frederick." said the caller, vorve from your wife?” asked th« law “do you obey your mamma Y* “Yea, air." replied Frederick prompt “Simply because of a pun," replM ly, “and so does papa." tbe long suffering husband. "Tea so*, she's a sculptress, and It gets Her Cultivated Taste. nerves to bear ber remark "How Is your daughter getting oa (Huso a day, Will you love aa with her music y I mold r “- New York Ttmea “Very well." answered Mr Cumrvx. Central «Í Chlldre«. Wife irradlug* After thetr tion be seut her a legal documnat Ing ber contre! of their ch Rd band (wtth a aigh>— 1 wt«U X where we could get a do would give ua control of IVareon's Weekly. aim With Qlevoe. Assistant Udltor Here's a wrttee to us asking wt Ed It or-Tell hl ilwui wttb rsepect — “■be has got along so far that when 1 ask ber to play anything I like she looks haughty end says, 'The Idee?”— Washington Star His ■«•«laity. “Do yon stwok severs! language«, th- “He. my son." replied Mr Henpeck. •Mtng sadly at his wife, “but 1 do know the mother tongue." Judge Aid« 1« Huteey Mrs Brown- Haven't you found por •aaally that history always repeats Usait' Mrs Ritto Sot always Tbe Mighburs repeat moat of my history —Maw York TU ms Nat «re. Nature aevee did betray tbe heart Rat loved bee TH her privilege «•rough all tbe years of tbla eer Ufo joy to jey - Wvrdewonb Notice of Sheriff's Sale. -JOHN L. HENDERSOI In the Circuit Court Qf the State of Oregon for Tillamook County. attorney a COUNSEL Peter Byrom, Plaintiff, LOR-AT-LAW, vs. The Garibaldi Beach }■ Tillamook Block,Tillamook,0t. Company a cor- j po ration. Room No. 261, t Defendant. j • - - * ----- ------ a___ Under and " • by virtue of an order of sale and decree of foreclosure T. BOTTS, issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Tillamook • A ttor n by - at -L aw , County or. »he 30th day of April, 1912, in the above entitled suit, Complete set of Abstract wherein Peter Byrom, the above named plaintiff, obtained a judg n office. Taxes paid for non ment and decree against the Gari baldi Beach Company, a corpora Residents. tion, defendant, on the 24th day of April. 1912, which said decree was, Tillamook Block. on the 30th day of April, 1H12, re corded in Judgment Book 3 of said I Both phones. Court, at page 41, I am commanded to sell: All the following described lands and premises situate, lying and OARL HABERLACH, being in Tillamook County, State of Oregon, to-wit: All the Tide lands fronting and ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, abutting on Lota One (1), Two (2) and Three (3> of Section Twenty- two (22), in Township One (1) North Tillamook Blocs. of Range Ten (10) West of Willamette Meridan, containing 96.34 acres, more or less : Also all the Tide lands fronting Q.EORGE WILLETT, and abutting upon Lots Three (3) and Four (4) of Section Twenty-one A ttorney - at - law . (211, in Township One (1) North of Range Ten (10) West of Willamette Meridan, containing 109.85 acres Tillamook Commercial Building. more or less, save and except that portion of sard described lands con T illamook - O regon . tained within the limits of a certain right of way heretofore conveyed by Peter Byrom and wife to the Pacific Railway and Navigation H. GOYNE, Company. Togethe. with tenements, heredi taments and appurtenances there A ttorney - at L aw . unto belonging or in anywise ap pertaining. Now, therefore, notice is hereby given that on Saturday, the First day of June, 1912, at eleven o’clock T illamook , O regon , a. m. of that day, at the front door of the Court House in the city and county of Tillamook, I will, in obedi ence to said order of sale and decree of foreclosure, sell the above des T. BoALS, cribed property, or so much there of as may be necessary to satisfy plaintiff’s judgment, with interest thereon and costs to the highest PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, and best bidder for cash. Dated this let day of May, 1912. TILLAMOOK. H. C renshaw , Sheriff of Tillamook County, Tillamook Block. Oregon. G eorge W illet , Attorney for Plaintiff. 1 N otice is H ereby G iven ,—That a petition has been filed in the County Court of Tillamook County, Oregon, by.Clarence E. Hanenkratt, a true copy and transcr*Pf thereof and of the whole thereof, is in words, letters and figures as follows, to-wit: In the County Court of tbe State of Oregon, for the County of Tillamook. To the Honorable County Court I above named: We, the undersigned, hereby al lege and show to you the following facts, and petition you as follows: I That we, and each of us are reai- | dents and legal voters within Gari- 1 baldi Precinct, in Tillamook County, , Oregon; and have b“en such for more than 30 days next preceding the date and signing of this peti tion, and the filing thereof; having been and now are actual residents and legal voters within said Pre cinct for more than 30 days next preceeding the 1st day of May, 1912. That the said Hanenkratt, is a man of a family, and intends to build, open up and personally con duct a restaurant, lunch room and confectionery store on the ocean beach in said Precinct to beat least 3 miles outside of the Town ofGari baldi, for the summer and tourist trade, and also desires to obtain a liquor license for the accommoda tion of the traveling public who de mand it; but owing to the peculiar provisions of the liquor laws, he must obtain a liquor license the same as if applying for a saloon; We hereby petition you to grant a liquor license to the said Hanen kratt, for a period of one year from the date of the granting of the same, to sell epiritoua, malt, fermented and vinous liquors, and hard cider or fermented cider, commonly call ed hard cider, in said Precinct of Garibaldi, to be at least 3 miles out side of the said Town of Garibaldi. Dated this 1st day of May, 1912. J. G. Balmer, Garibaldi. C. V. Stoker, Garibaldi. H. Mitchell, Garibaldi. L. L. Smith, Garibaldi Roy Dunham, Garibaldi. E Beelitz. G-ribaldi. John Aellig, Garibaldi. A. F. Goff, Hobsonville. Ben Johnson, Garibaldi. Sam Johnson, Garibaldi. Andy Hayden, Garibaldi. J. A. Smith, Garibaldi. Win. Dowd, Garibaldi. Wm. Keys, Garibaldi. W. H. Derby, Garibaldi. Chas. Fonger. Rockaway. A. L. Daggett. Rockaway. W. H Evans, Rose City. g M. KERRON, L. W. Fowler, Rose City. Joe Surino, Garibaldi. No.ice of Sheriff’s Sale. F. C. Robison, Garibaldi. Victor Brener, Garibaldi. N otice is H ereby G iven ,—That PHYSICIAN & SURGEON M. Adamson, Garibaldi. in pursuance of a decree of fore O. C. Hawthorne, Garibaldi. closure and order of sale duly ren Tillamook Block, Car) Loll, Garibaldi. dered and entered in its journal by R. E. Jackson, Garibaldi the Circuit Court of the State of Tillamcok, Oregon Charles Bowers, Garibaldi. Oregon, for Tillamook County, at Lloyd C. Smith, Garibaldi. a regular term of said Court ou the Archie C. Smith, Garibaldi. 15th day of April, 1912, in a certain Grant Marshall, Garibaldi. suit then pending in said court W C. HAWK, D. Johnson, Garibaldi wherein Robert Osborn is plaintiff B. S. Thompson Garibaldi. and William L. Reifenberg and Chas. Morgan, Garibaldi. Lillian C. Riefenbergaredefendanta. E. Krumlauf, Garibaldi. in favor of plaiutiff and against said M. F. Robison, Garibaldi. defendant, decreeing that plaintiff PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Gus Leon, Garibaldi. have and recover from said defend L. H. Holt, Rockaway. ants the sum of $1000.00, with inter C. E. Crowther, Rockaway. BAY CITY, OREGON. est thereon at the rate of 8 per cent H. M. Davie, Rockaway. per annum from September 8th, C. F. Alexander, Garibaldi. 1911, for the further sum of $200.00 oseph Swahaw, Garibaldi. attorney’s feeB, and the costs and . W. Cook Garibaldi. disbursements taxed at $17.25, and . S. McDonald, Garibaldi. also the costs of sale; and. further . \V. Foley, Garibaldi. decreeing the foreclosure of the 1. F. Bowman, Hobsonville. mortgage in tbe complaint in Said REAL ESTATE, A. G. Krumlauf, Garibaldi. cause described; and in pursuance P. By rom, Garibaldi. of an executic-a and order of sale F inancial A gent , H. K. Emery, Hobsonville. duly issued out of said court under AJvin A. Jurha, Hobsonville. the seal thereof in said cause, to me Wm. Kennedy, Hobsonville. Tillamook, Oregon. duly directed, and dated the 27th Frank Ekroth, Hobsonville. day of April, 1912 commanding and C. Heyes, Hobsonville. requiring me to make sale of the lames Heyes, Hobsonville. following described real property, P. J. SHARP, H. T. Sheldon, Hobsonville. to-wit: M. M. Mead, Lake Lytle. “Beginning sixty (60) feet west of L. L. Mead, Lake Lytle. the Northwest corner of Block four Geo. M. Gunderson, Lake Lytle. RESIDENT DE4TIST, (4), James M. Fuller’s Addition to A. Longenbaker, Lake Lytle. the town of Bay City, Tillamook C. C. Byers. Sea View. County, Oregon, being the North Office across the street frotr tbt I. A. Hush beck, Lake Lytle. east corner of the tract to be des Court House Joe Snetainger, Lake Lytle cribed; thence West two hundred M. Moroney Lake Lytle. (200) feet; thence South one hundred Dr. Wise’s office. Henry Jennings. Lake Lytle. (100) feet; thence East two hundred ng tooth was twelve inches long and H. P. Sheldon, Rockaway. (200) feet; thence North one hundred measured fourteen Inches round tbe Arthur Davis, Rockaway. (100) feet to the place of beginning, W. T. Coates, Rockaway. vot. After tbe animal bad l>eeti se and 8ARCHET, C. L. Lindsay, Rockaway. urely fasten with chaius hla mouth The Southwest quarter of the L. G. Evans, Rockawav. *■ - The Fashionable Tail* wus pried opeu aud a quantity of co Northeast quarter of Section eigh J. H. Smith, Bar View." -slue applied to deaden tbe pain. teen (18), township One (1) North, Thomas Quinn Garibaldi. Range nine West of the Willamette When this was done a bole was bored C. R. Sutton. Garbaldi. Meridan, in Tillamook County, C.eauing, Pressing and Repair ibrougb tbe tooth and au Iron bar In C. E. Hanenkratt. Stat» of Oregon,” ing • Specialty. serted. Theu a rope was twisted I. Clarence E. Hanenkratt, being Now, therefore, by virtue of said truuud the bar. and four horses were first duly sworn, say: That I am execution, order and decree, and in attached thereto to drag th« offending one of the above signers of the compliance with the commands of S» »re in Heins Photograph* molar out —Loudon Tlt-BIta. foregoing petition, anil that I circu said writ, I will, on Monday, the lated the same; that each and all of 3rd day of June, 1912, at the hour of Gallery. the foregoing named petitioners 10 o'clock a. m. at the front door of Speak to tha Horse. The hutnau voice has more or lees signed the same in my presence; the Court Houae in Tillamook City, marked influence on all animals. In that each stated his name, address Tillamook County, Oregon, sell at J. CLAUSSEN, and residence correctly; that each managing horses especially tbe voice is a legal voter in Garibaldi Precinct, public auction *o the highest bidder for cash in hand, all of the right, LAWYER, Is of tbe greatest use. It should be in said County and State, and has title and interest which the above quiet and. though confident and mas actually resided therein for more nameddefendants, or either of them, Jlttvohat« terful. not loud and boisterous. No than 30 days next preceeding Mav had on the date of the mortgage one should ever touch a horse without 1st., 1912; that ull of the facts set described in the complaint herein, 113 Tillamook Block, at tbe same time speaking to It.—Ex forth in said petition are true aa I to-wit: On September 8th, 1911, or verily believe. since had in and to the above des change. O regon C larence E. H anenkratt . T illamook cribed real property, to satisfy said Subecribed and sworn to before execution, order and decree, intereat An Aeoepted Story. and coats and all securing costs. “Quills bas really bad a story accept me thia 1st day of May, 191'2. [ skal I W ebster H olmu , H. C renshaw , ed at last.” remarked a journalist to a E. REEDY, DVM., Notary Public for Oregon. Sheriff of Tillamook County, ol league. Oregon, N otice is F urther H ereby Surely not.” was tbe rejoinder. GIVEN. —That said petition will be Dated May 2nd 191Z VETERINARY “Tee He went home at 2 o'clock presented to the County Court of Ibis morning wttb aa awful yarn, and the State of Oregon, for said Til There never was a time when pen (Both Phones). Me wife believed it” lamook County, on the Sth day of pie appreciated the real merits of *3 '! June. 1912, at the hour of 10 o'clock Chamberlain'a Cough Remedy Tillamook in the forenoon of aaid day and more than now. Thia ia shown by baaed thereon said Clarence E. the increase in sales and voluntary Hannenkratt will at «»¡d time testimoninls freon persona who have place, date and hour, apply to said been cured by it. If you or your County Court for a license to be bell granteii to him. to aell within eaid children are troubled «nth a cough or cold give it a trial and become Garibaldi Precinct, epiritoua. map acquainted with its good qualities. I vinous liquors and hard cider for For sale by all dealer«. o,,e >e«r frum the date It would sumriae you to know of TÌ llHIUCOk BclkCfS of Mid license. _ JUU «V» mll'W OI Dated thia 1st day of Mav. 191Z the great good that is being done 4 L arenck E. IlANENKRATT by Chambertnio’« Tablets. Darius Brean Downey, of Newberg Junction. N.D.. Now io the time to get rid of your writes, "My wife ba* been using rheumatism You can do it by ap Chamberlain's Tablets and finds plying Chamberlain's Liniment them very effectual and doing ber If you have any and massaging the parts freely at lots of good.” 1 each ap applicatron. For sale by all trouble with vow stomach or bow el« give them a trial. Sold by all I dealers. dealer«. | I Romance of a Status. The statue of Charles 1. which sow stands In London was sold to a brazier durlug the commonwealth with tbeun deratundtug that it should bo broke« up. The buyer, however, saw a chance to make money and buried It instead. To cot er hie action he made a ItTga iiuuil>er of bronse knives and forth, which were eagerly bought by both royalists and Puritans as souvenir«. Wlteu the mouarcby was restored t« (lower tbe statue was dug up «gala uud bought by the government to be piared lu its present position, where tt Ims remained since 11174. Notice of Application for a License To Sell Spintone, Malt, and Vinous Liquors, Etc. i H 9*ut«ckffr I Mother knows she ha? made t-Qe test Is the Best We use Olympic Flour.