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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1915)
X __ — -—---------- T-------------------------------------------- erHOOL BOUNDARY CASE IS ‘hediraSXrtXO"ndi,imike0 ir S DECIDED. illamook Headlight, September 23, 1015 Silege Crops and Silos. f.ir^nd'n Wli° a,,endcd ">* County ?n,d ll,v •'omesteaders' fair al - tail cannot doubt the possibilitv iv S‘-a?e crops this c°un- >■ At bom 01 these fairs were exhib corti, artichokes, it^k'1’ artlcbokes, sunflowers, oats, vetch and clover as good as can e^n8rOWn ,n1On'8°n- AH of these cicps A . will • i make ..... the v best t’tM of siiave •An article in a recent farm )f excellent results in the 'Washington obtained bv 11 . ..I ___ : . Supreme Court Holds that Boundary Board had Right to Change Boundaries. m-nerdhn,C,y’l,hc 'Mature, by general laws or by the people bv gen _ ----- o eral or special laws ” y g The case of school district No. 35, Referring to section 2, Article XI was decided against that district on AA it is ZA in the ex i re! rel vs Cili ’ --- state VA < vs-Gilbert Or said r-. 434, 439, .. IJ4 >, Pac. 1038-' Tuesday by the Supreme Court on 1 o<> 9 1038: “This appeal •rr- from an opinion rendered by , provision of the fundamental law l°tS n?' ",”V v"‘-v "'fringe upon Judge Holmes in the Circuit Court. ‘ the right of the legislature to ton make The Boundary Board charged the : general laws for the formation boundaries of school districts Nos. . corporations I he inhabitation of 1 th of 1 'ection is directed "^ofel'y solely ““ aga "id 'I as high ,-s 45 tons of g 31 and 9, taking part of the terri- section acre, it is safe to say tory from district No. 35 and giving , iction by the legislature affecting .! 011- ' e l to the acre ■ or nucii ot the corn 111 the county it to districts Nos. 31 and 9, and I ly a particularly municipality, ’> city >ar will run as high as 15 to 20 I feeling aggri ved school district No. If we concede that the quoted utter irtichok-s also Gelded heavily and 15 brought suit to annul the ruling XV*.!'1 "S iC°Urlt/:lrt Jud'«“l l"rc- uulyse about tin same as ccrii. sics net fill the silo wi,'i oats and -ns , s tnc plaintiff s argument pro of the Boundary Board. 1 : " jf"i ,'g> 1 cd ¡1 out duii'ig Attorney R. R- Dunivvay represent Coeds, and that school districts are lull-fledged municipal corporation^ • ' l'o',1"ta,‘Kr "1 the si:.nmcr and ed No. 35 and Attorney H. T. Boots having each an autonomy all its own hen fill v.-.th corn er artichoke tops No. 9 Mr- Duniway attacked the case it still remains to consider v,iw,; : •gara in lhe fall? lhe economy of the silo as. a meth- on the grounds that to change the they have charters within the tnian- boundary of a school district it would mg et section 2, Article XI, supra >d of preserving green food for the whether the procedure described vln\Cr *ilonH's 's without question. have to be submitted to a vote of the and n the complaint constitutes ----- —_ an Neither can the efficiency of silage as people and that the Boundary Beard amendment ol such an instrument. a feed be doubted, lhe claim by some had gerrymandered in the matter, Lhsimssinni for a moment the idea that it injures the digestion of the upon both of which proposi.ions he that a municipal charter is a special cow is wholly without foundation ii legislative act conferring upon a par- it is ted in reasonable quantities. lost out on. .icu.ar municipality poweis and priv Heavy milking cows have been fed Judge Burnett, in rendering the ileges peculiar to itself we must find silage for oyer 15 years without in opinion of the Supreme Court, says: a charter for the plaintiff, if at all in any way being injured by it. kind of a silo shall we build? Section 4021, L. O. L. ordains a -he general laws enacted by the leg 1 hat hat is up to the man who is going procedure to be observed in changing islative assembly affecting school to A good silo must first, be the boundaries of school districts, the districts for it is not pretended that air build. tight, second durable and third, details of which it is not necessary any other rule of action affecting the reasonable in cost. Concrete silos to rehearse because no question was plaintiff has been established cither answer these requirements but re made at the argument that they were by the people of the state at large quire a fairly heavy outlay to start not observed in this instance. The through tHe initiative process or by with, lhe patent silos are all right sole contention presented by the similar legislation enacted by the le but usually the cost is out of propor- plaintiff is that the district boundary gal voters resident within the boun lion to the advantages of the few board, deriving its powers, as it does, daries of the plaintiff school district, features that secured the patent. The from the legislative assembly, has no it is manifest that a school district's local stave silo is as good as the pat authority to change the boundaries rule of existence, operation and treat ent silos and much cheaper in cost. of a school district because that is ment is found in the statutes hitherto A \\ isconsin silo can be built for a tantamount to the amendment of the enacted by the legislative assemble in dollar a ton capacity and while not charter of a municipality within the ihc exercise of its constitutional au quite so durable as the concrete silo inhabitation of section 2, Article XI thority to "provide by law for the will give excellent satisfaction for a of the state constitution.. Stated establishment of a uniform and gen period of from ten fifteen years. otherwise, the plaintiff maintains that eral system of common schools.” 1 his silo is built of 2x4s set upright In substantially the present form a change in the boundaries of the and boarded round and round with plaintiff district can only be accom he rule of changing the boundaries half-inch lumber, then acid proof tar of school districts through the action pli hed through the initiative power paper then another layer of half-inch described in section ia, Article IV of a district boundary board has been lumber. 1 lie lumber bill for a fifty m existence from a date prior to the and Section 2, Article XI of the state ton silo, 12x24 feet will not exceed constitution. These portions of the adoption of the amended form of sec $30 and the paper and labor of erect tion 2, Article XL It is one of the es organic law so far as applicable to ing can easily be kept within $20. sential features of the constituent law the question in hand read thus: 1 he number of silos have doubled of school districts. From a view point Section ia.—“ * * ♦The initiative this year and should . easily do so of the plaintiff it might be called one again next year. and referendum powers reserved to the people by this constitution are of the terms of its charter. For all R. C. Jones, Jiat appears in the complaint the pro hereby further reserved to the legal cedure described whereby the plain- County Agriculturist. voters of every municipality and dis iff was deprived of part of its terri trict, as to all local, special, and mun tory was in strict accordance with the Harmony and Pleasant Valley. icipal legislation, of every character, statute. No enactment from any leg in or for their respective municipali islative source whatever has in any John Evans and Otis Dix and wife ties and districts. The manner of ex manner prescribed the boundaries of ercising said powers shall be pre- he plaintiff district. In this respect left on a trip to the valley on Mon i scribed by general laws, except that lie case in hand is easily differentiat day. I cities and towns may privide for the ed from such as Cook vs. Portland, Mrs. Aniil Krebs returned Saturday manner of exercising the initiative >9 Or. 572, 139 Pac. 1095; Thurber vs. from Sherwood, after the death of and referendum powers as to their McMinnville, 63 Or. 410, 128 Pac. 43; her mother. municipal legislation. * * * *” dcKcon vs. Portland, 61 Or. 385, 122 Mrs. G. G. Graves returned Sunday, v Section 2, Article XI.—"Corpora Pac. 291; State ex rel vs. Port of ¡rom Newberg and Amity, where she lions may be formed under general Tillamook, 62 Or. 332, 124 Pac. 037. laws, but shall not be created by the in all those cases the constituent act worked through harvest and prune ' legislative assembly by special laws. stablishing the municipality in ques- drying. ' Oscar, soil of Mr. and Mrs Atnil The legislative assembly shall not en ion described in explicit terms the act, amend, or repeal any charter or roundaries in question. The dclimi- Krebs, underwent an operation for act of incorporation for any munici ation of its exterior lines was partand appendicitis, on Saturday, and is now pality, city, or town. The legal voters parcel of its charter in each instance. getting along nicely. ' of every city and town are hereby In the case of school districts the Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence j granted power to enact and amend constituting act has in no wise ever Mallett, on Tuesday, a son. ’ their municipal charter, subject to the [escribed the boundaries of any par Several Harmony people, who pick 1 constitutional and criminal laws of ictilar district but has committed the ed hops in the vicinity of Banks, re i the State of Oregon.” establishment and control of them to turned the last of the week. The pick Speaking of school districts, Mr. 1 district boundary board. That body Justice Moore in School District No. in making such changes simply ad- ing is said to have been very poor. W vs. School District No. 115, 60 Or. ninisters and does not amend the Quite a number of people from 118 Pac. 169 said: “These divis laws under which the paintliff dis- Pleasant A alley and Yellow Fir, ions are vested with certain powers, rict exists, even though we may style camped at Sandlake the past week, which they can employ in the partic- hose general enactments the charter where they hunted and picked huckle ula^manncr prescribed. As agencies of the complainant here. berries. of the state, they have no vested Much was forcefully said at the Mrs. C. E. Walker is visiting at right in the property which they may irgumcnt about the evils of gerrv- the home of her daughter, Mrs. Arch acquire, but hold it in trust for the _______ . as exemplified in the nandering general public, and such quasia cor- boundaries of the districts named in ie Davis at Mulin, Ore. | portion__ j „„ A few days ago a farmer in a near- may be changed at the will .he complaint; but we have nothing ” of the power creating them. * - » » o do with such administrative ques- bv community spilled some wisky on A school district sustains no higher ions. We have before us in the in his barn floor, an adventurous mouse relations to the state than a county stance only a question of authority took a taste of the liquor and return occupies, and the rule is settled that ind not of the manner in which it is ed to his hole to think. Soon it ven- the legislative department may divide exercised. The proceedings described mred forth and took another sip, and counties at pleasure, apportioning the in the complaint are not open to the again returned to its hole to solilquise. assets and burdens in such manner as objection urged against them by the The third time it went out, and this ■nay be deemed just anal reasonable.” plaintiff. The decree of the Circuit time took a good drink, then jumping upon an empty box exclaimed "Now Writing about the excerpts from the Court is affirmed. bring out that d----- d cat.” organic act above mentioned in Fred Robitscli and family were Mernan vs. Portland, 57 Or. 454, 112, Debating League Started. visited Sunday by friends front r»c- 402. 403, 37 L. R. A. (ns) 332, Wheeler. «r Justice King used this language: Plans for a Tillamook County de Mrs. Ruth Desmond, Mrs. Alfred It will be observed from the first bating league for the coming winter •entence in section 2 that no restric nave been started at Nehalem, with Reynolds and Mrs. Ike Moore and tion is placed upon the legislature conside/able promise of success. 1 he son Charlie drove to Netarts Mon- *Hn respect to the enactment of gen- local literary society has begun the day to pick huckleberrys. ral laws; the exception being that no season with a great deal of enthus special law creating or affecting the iasm, Notice of Completed Contract. and a committee has been ap jtjnnicipalities shall be enacted by the pointed for the purpose of arranging ORIslaturc, to enact general laws up- for the league. Last winter the peo Notice is hereby given, that the inn. ,.c sub.icct, making it clear that ple of Nehalem Valley were enter County Road Master for Tillamook habitation in the next sentence has tained by joint debates between the County, Oregon, has filed in this of fice his ccriificatc for completion of to 8Pec'aI Dws. * * * * societies of the valley. holding >" that the state may, by three Plans arc being made to encourage the contract of Sandberg & Logus nitituttonal provisions, directly dcl- debating societies at Bay City and Co. on Bayocean County Road from J?. L *°. rT,un*cipalitici» any power Tillamook, and at other cities in the Station 48 plus 00 to Station 69 plus rr».u r ’’’ through the legislature, county, and for joint debates to be 52.3, in accordance with the plans I f1 'ormerly have granted indirect- held each month. Nehalem has some and' specifications, and any person, )■ All the prerogatives attempted to keen debators and new material is be firm or corporation, having objec .. ®?rcl,ed hy Portland in the con- ing developed by the weekly mcet- tions to file to the completion of said work, may do so within two weeks ¿Jlcll?n the Broadway bridge, from the date of the first publication. th.n!er- ■ cou'd have been granted by ings._____________ _ Dated this the 15th, day of Septem via. *?ls'ature, and the power to pro Farm Excursion. to th lcrff°re, having been delegated ber 1915. _ , I. C. Hilden, County Clerk. e city by amendment to our or- seeing farmers interested in All First publication, Sept. 16th, >915. ic laws, is valid, and the right to and lime will do in this Last publication, Sept. 30th, 1915- umli'** ,su.ch powers will continue what corn i- meet at the court house on . ,uch time as changed by general county, ----- ’ *. 1 Bring your Friday at one o’ ' clock. Notice of Completed Contract. n-rnt010?1 tbe lawmaking depart- auto and your neighbors who haven t ------o----- -k,°* our state, provisions for one. The excursion will be to some of Notice is hereby given, that the liv „ be roade by the legislature the farms who have used lime and to ’.I®*'», applying alike to all some of those who are growing corn County Road Master of Tillamook County, Oregon, has filed in this of t>enrli<lpaLl,‘cs that class, or by the tnaJ. 'hrough the initiative, by the so that each may see for himself fice his certificate for the comple can be done. tion of the contract of Jeffry & Buf- ment of either genral or special what Be sure and come promptly at one ton, on the Eugene Atkinson County ■*’ on the subject.” o’clock, so that the trip ca.i be made Road,, between Station 42 plus 87 Tiiu„ State ex rel vs. Port of and Station 139 and 1.5 and any per 637 ?°ok; 6j Or. 332, 341, 124 Pa c before milking time. R. C. Jones. son firm or corporation, having ob- Jsstici HAnn' Cas- ,9'4C d8d’ -Mr County Agriculturist. iictions to file to the completion of cornAC Can says “Such municipal said work may do so within two weeks lU,,„ratloI’5 ’re always subject to One cant help liking to read what from the date of the first publication m»lo>?n,r? an<’ reK!Jlation of the law- Dated thij the 8th day of Sept. 1915. direr/a l state in the manner Col. Roosevelt has to say. «hat J. C. IJolden, Kcii hy the constitution. City of pity he battered up hts own halo. • County Clerk. 451 .lnv,IIe vs‘ Howenstine, 56 Or. Why don't those folks who can t ¿'• 456. 109 Pac. 8l Whj|e ,hese pub- make Ohio go dry ®<”e. First publication, Sept 9, 1915. .... in . — corporal- rP°raltons are capable of adopt- Is segregation yet to be the olive Last publication. Sept. 13. 19>5- M1.1a "d "<l amending atiimaing t their charter, they branch between wets and drys The Cleveland branch of the Ger- Mat/r*',’no< ,o he agencies of the Money talks What guarantees have man-American Alliance ! ent a protest I'zi.i,.- Reneral control is left in the we that those who want b®rro.* a '«»lattve assembly.” ■ _____ to Ptesident U »hon against the billion of America are going to win osrd Briti-h French loan. A boy- *•> ?.r?nt‘M n Eakin in R ìr R» Poverty is good for experience, we propos on bank« joining the loan is urg- ’ fas’,' 66 Or. KMS.I34. Pae — * •*— "ipcrienccs you coti O! oi ¡h, "Article XI, section 2 are told. One of the ex CUa contii.. .2-1 confers powcis look back on of course. WIDOW ADOPTS MINISTER. I GERMAN SPIES ’ INFEST ENGLAND. ----- o----- Rev. A. C. Blackstone, of Ashland, is Made Heir in $100,000 Estate. Scotland Yard Constantly on Look out for Them. Ashland, Or., Sept 21.—Rev. Arthur ----- o----- R. Blackstone, pastor of the Baptist London, Sept. 0.—The admittedly Church here, has been adopted by a thorough and efficient German spy wealthy widow, Mrs. Aurelia Fergu- system is up against a most thorough >on, and made her heir. and efficient stump in England. His benefactress’ estate is reckoned One of the unhealthiest obstacles it $100,000 or more. for agents uf the enemy's intelligence 1 he minister retains the name of department is the anti-spy section of Mackstone. He is a young man with ocoiland Yard. family and has filled the pastorate Utt'Cial reports, just issued, show or more than a year, coining here dial ten alleged spies of various na- nom central New Ycik. To forestall lOiuditics, all of whom were declared .•riticisni, Mr. Blackstone announced 10 be w c i king for Germany, were lie fact of his adoption from his pul- nagged before any of them had bein it recently. It is understood that 11 t ngland three weeks. Four readily necessary papers have been made cut confessed. md that the will of his benefactress 1 tus 11st. however, represents hut a >as been rewritten. I ractional part if '.he nuWt recent rv.its of the British dragnet. On two J-BOATS TO SINK NO LINER iccasions, it is unofficially declared, he authorities in London cleverly ON SUSPICION. nanouvered to round up dozens of lerlin Issues Strict Orders Against ■pits who had been operating in Lou- Ion in the guise of British hrniy.offi Errors. cers. The method was as simple as ----- o •vas it effective. The war office is said Berlin, Sept. 21, via London, Sept. ,0 have informed all army officers in 22.—Commanders of German submar the metropolitan aaca to refrain on a ines have received strict orders, it has certain day of recent date from travel ■>cen learned authoriativcly, that in ing on any trains of the great system case of doubt as to the intention of of underground railways of the met iners they are to take the safe course. ropolis. The order was strictly obey They are positively instructed in ed . Every officer’s' uniform that these cases to peimit the ship to boarded an underground train that .scape rather than run the slightest day contained a spy. The spy bag risk of error. full that night. This order suppliments the instruc- was Several days later, the war office is ions as communicated to the Wash said to have repeated its warning, ington Government by Ambassador this time instructing officers to keep Bernstorff on September I.. There is off of the motorbusses that travel by eason to believe the new regulation in London's busiest streets. llrady is known to Washington and it hundreds result was similar. The spy bag irobablv was embodied in the mes The filled again. sage of instructions sent the German was But this is only one of the many Xmbassador a few days ago. methods through which spies a e It is understood here the United States already has been informed that caught in England. Another is chem carious officers of the submarine istry. It was chemistry that told the vhich sunk the Arabic agreed from British authorities that what appears observations taken while the subma- to be an American passport is not ine was on the surface and through always the real article. A government he periscope while it was submerg chemist informed the authorities that 'd that the Arabic was planning an the great and powerful red seal of the ittack. Nevertheless officials con- American state department had been ■erned may be found willing to admit forged by the enemy; that the secre that the Arabic in reality was acting tary of slate's signature had been mnocently, in spite of her suspicion photographed from a genuine Ameri Attaching to her behavior and chang- can passport in Germany and applied s of course. io a spurious document carried later There is reason to believe the set- by a spv in England, It was the lement of the controversy may be chemist ’s proof, linked with other .cached along those lines. features that followed, that causc'd the spy to confess that he was furn rAX ON AMERICAN ished the forgery to obtain military MUNITION MAKERS. secrets in England. This forgery is today in the hands Administration is Seeking Plan to of the British authorities for r campar ison with other suspicious looking Re*ieve Ever Increasing Deficit. documents bearing the seal of the That a special tax on American United States. nunitions manufacturers who have nade money selling to the foreign □pen Letter to Ford Asks About lelligerenls in the war has been con- Peace Fund. idered by administration officials as >nc way of evercoming the constant New York, Sept. 13.—The trustees xccss of expenditures over receipts of the American Defense Society sent ince the war began became known in open letter today to Henry l ord, last week. what he incans by his offer. of $10,- The idea for the tax was apparently xx),000 as a fund for "peace” purpos aken frohi lhe report which comes es. from Berlin that the German govern- With the question, the trustees ask nent plans al the end of the war to about sentiments made on August 9 lav a heavy portion of the war debt by Ford and P. L. D. Perry, his I.on m the shoulders of the German and don representative. Ford is reported Austrian munition manufacturers. 10 have said that he had contracts to Those officials who were asked to supply 15CX) ambulances to the British tiscuss the point refused to talk for Government. Perry was reported to publication, init it was stated on high have said that the company had fin- mthority that there is nothing in the ished 12,500 automobiles of various laws of the United States which kinds to the British government, and would conflict with such a plan, and that it had 8000 unfilled orders. He that it would be entirely feasible. was also quoted as saying that the For months the treasury statements British Government was having its have shown excess of expenditures soldiers trained in the Ford works, ning all the way l he trustees of the American Defense over receipts, runnini to $35,000,000. The Society ask Ford if these reports ■rom $20,000,000 t_ reasury statements at the end of the were true. last fiscal year showed that the gov- The letter then goes on to say: rnment's special war tax, imposed at “The greatest danger now facing he beginning of the European con this country has arisen directly from flict, had failed to sustain the normal the exportation of arms and muni- government revenues by millions of .ions of war. This traffic, which the iollars. president and his advisors have held Special attention to war munitions ip .0 be entirely legitimate and of is a source of emergency revenue is vhich you, Mr. Ford, appear from the directed afresh as a result of the ef bove quotations to be one of the forts of the allies’ Financial Commis- Jiicf beneficiaries, has engendered don to float a loan of $ 1,000,000,000 liscord among certain classes of your for war munitions in this country, countrymen. ind the opinion was expressed here “Underneath the whole submarine hat an extremely small tax would question now so acute between Ger let a tremendous revenue. many and the United States lies, as It is known, however, that the you are well aware, the resentment ol president is opposed to any measure inns to the allies. If the situation which will immediately impose a fur- {rows more acute, if war conies, will ther tax burden upon Americans. The you lie contributing to a $10,000,000 general financial situation through world peace fund,' to be spent out the country is such as to make it against preparedness in the country desirable to avoid such a move if pos you would have so directly helped to sible, but the excess of the govern precipitate into war?” ment's expenditures over receip s continues to hover around the $30,- 000,000 mark so far this fiscal year ¿¿¡son's New Submarine Battery I« Described. and there is every prospect that the “deficit” will go higher each month Spring Lake Beach, N. J., Sept 13.— Alexander Dow, manager of the De Ford Profit Sharing is Big Problem ro’t Edison Company and president to Handle. rf the first organization of .ompanirs in convention hrre, and An interesting side issue in connec crank H. Gale, of Schenectady, said tion with the Ford profit sharing today that the submarine storage bat with more than 300,000 Ford owners ‘.cry which has been attributed to has developed since the checks began 1 homas A. Edison's invention was to leave the Ford Motor Company's largely a modification of the old offices. Every day the mails disgorge storage battery. 1 he discussion arose bushels of letters and post cards ask over the report that Edison would ing for information in regard to the address the convention on the inven mailing of profit-sharing checks and tion on Wednesday. "Mr. Edison,” Dow said, “has many other matters pertaining to the disbursement of more than $15,000000. merely taken the old storage battery On account of the overwhelming used in automobiles and elsewhere mass-of this correspondence inquiries for years, and modified it in one or regarding individual checks cannot be two particulars that better adapt it to the submarine use. Much has b^en answered at this time. One must witness the activity in the said about it that is highly imagin Ford offices to appreciate the amount ative. The chief modification was in of detail connected with the check the use of an alkaline instead of an mailing work. A majority of the let acid solution in the battery. Mr. Edi ters are from anxious profit-sharing son acted or< his knowledge of the Ford buyers who fail to realize the fact that salt water in contract with size of the task of mailing an acid solution forms chlorine gas out more than $15,000.000 in $50 par which is most likely to cause death in cels. Some fear that their name has submarines. His new batter is his been lost sight of or that their check alkaline battery, which has been used for a good while m automobiles and may have gone astray. So thorough is the checking of all elsewhere, with new casing and new the work that when the last checks nynin tings.” are mailed out it is unlikely that many corrections will need to be made. It 'I he earth slides on the Tanaina is also probable that a number of the Canal near Goldhill are much more Ford owners who have written to the extensive than were reported at first company will have their query ans and probably will tie up U>< water wered bv the receipt of a profit shar way for at least ten days. This infor ing check within a short time Al- mation was received today by the war t'lorK-h the work is going forward as department from the acting governor rapidly as possible. of the Canal Zone. Notice of Sale on Foreclosure ------ o ■■ ■ ■ • Notice is hereby given that by vir tue of an execution and order of sale issued out of the Circuit Court of the Stale of Oregon for T ilia.nook Coun ty, by the Clerk thereof and under the seal of said court, dated the — day of September 1015, in a case in said court w herein \\ . H. Easom is plaintiff and Eliza F. Evans, P. J. Brown and Mae G. Brown, Lis wife, Clark M. terry and Mabel R. Terry, his wife, J. II. Rosenberg, H. H. Rosenberg and E. M. t omtit arc di- findants, said execution being to me directed, an 1 being-based upon a de cree entcreel in said cause on the 20th day of September, 1015, 1 Jiave levied upon and will on Saturday, the 23. d day of-October. 1915, at the hour of ten o'clock in lhe forenoon of said lav, al lhe kouit House door in 1 iil- a.noc.k City, 1 ilia nook County, Oie- gon, duh 'ell at public auction, to t': ■ ugliest ladder ter cash in hand, l e follow ini d. ciibnl real property, s t- uate in T illamook t ity, Oregon, to wn Lots five and six in Block eight in William 1> Stillwell's Second 'Ad dition to the- Town of Tillamook (now Tillamook City), for the pur pose of satisfying the decree in said cause' and the- cost and expenses of the sale, as follows: Judgment in favor of plaintiff against defendants Evans and Brown for the sum of $?.52.to with interest at 8 per cent per attnytu from date of decree, $125.00 attosney’s fees and $15.80, costs and disbursements and judgment in favor of defendants Rosenberg and Condit against de fendants Clark M. Terry and wife for $232.10 with interest at 8 per cent per annum from date of decree, $50.00 attorney’s fees and $10.40 costs and disbursements, besides the expense of sale. Dated this September 23rd, 1915. H Crenshaw, Sheriff of Tillamook County, Ore. First publication Sept. 23, 1915. Last publication Oct. 21, 1915. Notice. Notice is hereby given that the State Land Board 01 the Stale ol Oregon will receive scaled bids at its office in the Capitol Building at Salem, Oregon, up to to o’clock A.M. on November 9, 1915, for all the State’s interest in the tide or over flow lands hereinafter described,, giving, however, to the owner or owners of any lands abutting or front ing thereon, the preference right to purchase said tide or overflew lauds it the highest price offered, provided such offer is made in good faith, and ilso privided that the lands will not be sold for, nor any offer therefore iccepted of less than $7.50 per acie, mil that lhe Board reserves the light to reject any and all bids. Said lands arc situated in '1 illamook County, Oregon, and described as follows, to-wit: Beginning at a peint (Zo feet north of Sec. corner common to 14, 15, 22 md 2j, T. 1 S., R 10 W. W. M.. this point being the meander corner be tween sections 14 and 15; thenee, East 3'A oo feet along U. S. Mean- 1er line. N. 32 degrees, 45 minutes E. 6C0.00 feet along U. S. Meander line. N. 78 degrees 45 minutes E. 759.30 feet along U. S. Meander line. N. 24 degrees, 16 minutes E, 482,40 feet along low water line. N. 3 degré» s 20 minutes W., 1135.00 feet along low water line. N. 5 degrees 33 minutes E 419.50 feet along low water line. N. 15 degrees 18 minutes W. 84000 feet along low water line. N. o degrees 49 minutes E. 2402.00 feet along low water line. N. 3 degrees 37 minutes W. 1340.00 feet along low water line. N. 87 degrees 34 minutes W. 1398.96 feet to point on line between Secs. 14 and 15. South, 7302.21 feet to a point of beginning, containing 24142 acres in Secs. 14 and tt,T. 1 S„ R to W. Applications and bills should be nd- Iressed to "G. G. Brown, Clerk. State Land Board, Sahin, Oregon,” ami narked "Application and bid to pur chase tide lands ” Dated August 21. 1015. G. G. Brown, Clerk State Land Board. First publication, Sept. 2nd, 1915. Last publication. Nov. 4th. 1915. Call for Bids. Bids will be received by Tillamook City, Oregon, for the improvement of second Avenue East and connecting .treets to the South boundary of T ¡11- tmook City, extending South fioni he North side of Ninth Street. The improvement consists of paving with .oncrcte, with the curbs and gutters, <11 to be in accordance with plans ami .pccifications therefor on file with <he City Recorder. Bids will be re ceived up to 8 o'clock p. in., on Thurs- lay, September 23rd, 1915. All Lids nu^t be accompanied by certified check for 5 per cent of the amount of the bid, to be forfeited if the aucces»- ful bidder shall not enter into con tract for the making of the improve- nents and give approved bond for the performance thereof within la days from the date of the awarding of the contract. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids. Address City Recorder, Tiflamook City, Ore gon. Dated this second day of Sept, 1915. John Aschim. City Recorder of Tillamook City Ore. First publication Sept. 2, 1915. Last publication Sept. 23, 191s. IIow’8 This? We ofer Oxa Hexusrn OoLi.sas Hiwort or sny case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Care. F. J CHBXP.V * CO. Teledo <» We. the underrlznert have known F. J. '■hmer for lhe ln«l 15 years, nml l.rlleve him f^rfectly honorable in a'l buslne«« transact ons and financially able to early out any obllgnilons ma4e bv his Arm. XATIOXAL BINK « F COMMERCB. Toledo, o, Halt's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting dire« t ly up.-n the blood arul mucoiie surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free Price 75 cents |>er bottle Jold by all Take IIall e FaaiUj I'Uls for cvastlpauua.