Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, January 06, 1916, Image 4

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    1
1C Headlight, October 7,
Beef Supply.
zen takes but a mild
tin
on the cattle
le prepared by the
.atistics and Stand-
iber of Commerce of
es should be interest-
al eater. The Federal
al Industry says that
upply in this country
11 the South. That sec-
ce beef more cheaply
r because land is cheap,
od, the pasture season
.-an be produced at a
ice ad shelter durin"
iters is inexpensive. The
.hat has stood in the way
the prevalence of the cattle
■ ich depletes the vitality of
and reduces their weight : nd
communicates Ter.-.s fever. 1 he
rage weight of Southe*'i cattle.is
.oout half that in the noninlected dis­
tricts. It is impossible to stock the
fever district with pure bred ca’rie,
since they do not havi even the par­
tial immunity of native cattle. I he
South loses $50,000,000 a year be tause
of the lavages of the fe/er tic-c. But
this does not begin to express« the
real loss, when what could be accom­
plished with more and better cattle is
considered.
For the last nine years the Federal
and State Governments have co-oper­
ated in ridding the infected area of
ticks. About one-third of the original
tick territory is being treated, with
the result of more and better cattle.
The committee estimates that with
proper activity the entire South can
be rid of this plague within five or
seven years. While immediately ef­
fecting the South, the entire country
is indirectly interested. Not oni” is.
our beef supply at stake, but the great
problem of diversifying Southern in­
dustry and maintaining the fertility
of Southern soil is also involved. So
long as eradication of the cattle tick
was merely a theory of science, con­
gressmen could be excused for oppos­
ing liberal appropriations. But rtow
that experiments have proven that
eradication is effectual and compara­
tively inexpensive and that even the
so-called immune cattle increase 23
per cent in weight after being freed
from the ticks, there is no reason why
any member of Congress, whereever
he lives, should vote to withhold ap­
propriations to complete this valuable
national work.
Notice.
Notice is hereby given that the
State Land _____
Board —
of —
the State of
Oregon will receive sealed bids at its
office in the Capitol Building at
Salem, Oregon, up to 10 o’clock A.M.
on November 9, I9>5, f°r aB ^ie
State’s interest in the tide or over­
flow lands hereinafter
described,,
giving, however, to the owner or
owners of any land» abutting or front­
ing thereon, the preference right to
purchase said tide or overflow lands
at the highest price offered, provided
such offer is made in good faith, and
also privided that the lands will not
be sold for, nor any offer therefore
accepted of less than $7-5° Pcr acre,
and that the Board reserves the right
to reject any and all bids.
Said lands are situated in Tillamook
County, Oregon, and described as
follow’s, to-wit:
Beginning at a point 660 feet north
of Sec. corner common to 14, 15, 22
and 23, T. 1 S„ R 10 W. W. M„ this
point being the meander corner be­
tween sections 14 and 15; thence,
East 396.00 feet along U. S. Mean­
der line.
N. 32 degrees, 45 minutes E. 660.00
feet along U. S. Meander line.
N. 78 degrees 45 minutes E. 759-3°
feet along U. S. Meander line.
N. 24 degrees, 16 minutes E, 482,40
feet along low water line.
N. 3 degrees 20 minutes JV., 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. 840.00
feet along low water line.
N. o degrees 49 minutes E. 2402.00
feet along low water line.
134000
N. 3 degrees 3J minutes W.
1
feet along low water line.
N. 87 degrees 34 mintites w. 1398.96
feet to point on line between Secs.
14 and 15.
.
South. 7302.21 feet to a point
of
beginning, containing 241.42 acres in
Secs. 14 and ii ,T. 1 S., R 10 W.
Applications and bids should be ad­
dressed to “G. G. Brown, Clerk, State
Land Board, Salem, Oregon," and
marked “Application and bid to pur­
chase tide lands.”
Dated August 2t, 1915.
G. G. Brown,
Clerk State Land Board.
First publication, Sept. 2nd, 1915.
Last publication. Nov. 4th, 1915.
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 1 illamook Coun­
ty, by the Clerk thereof and under
the seal of said court, dated the —
day of September 1915, *n a case in
said court wherein W. H. Easom is
plaintiff and Eliza F. Evans, P. J.
Brown and Mae G. Brown, his wife,
Clark M. Terry and Mabel R. Terry,
his wife. J. H. Rosenberg. H. H.
Rosenberg and E: M. Condit are de­
fendants. said execution being to me
directed, and being based upon a de­
cree entered in said cause on the 20th
day of September, 1915. 1 h:*ve levied
upon and will on Saturday, the 23rd
day of October, 1915, at the hour ?'
ten o’clock in the forenoon of said
day, a( the Court House door in Till­
amook City, Tillamook County, Ore­
gon, duly sell at public auction, to the
highest bidder for cash in hand, the
following described real property, sit­
uate in Tillamook City, Oregon, to-
wit: Lots five and six in Block eight
in William D. 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:
of plaintiff
Judgment in favor
against defendants Evans and Brown
fcr the sum of $5521° with interest at
8 per cent per annum from date of
decree, $125.00 attorney’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.
place and present any objection
which they may have tneheto.
Witness my hand and official seal
this October 5th, 1915.
(Seal)
John Aschim.
City Recorder of Till».
11100k City. Oregon.
Notice of Dissolution.
Notice i.i hereby given to all whom
it may concern:—That J. W. Maddux
and F. C. Feldschau, have by mutual
consent, dissolved the partnership
heretofore existing between them
I and that said Feldschau, is now tht
sole owner of the business formerly
owned by them as partners, and that
said Feldschau, will pay all account,
owing by them as partners, and col-
lect all sums due them on account of
their partnership business.
J. W. Maddux.
F. C. Feldschau.
Administrator’s Notice to Creditori.
Notice is hereby given, that the
County Court of the State of Oregon,
your
for Tillamook County, has appointed
s only
the undersigned administrator of tht
.hod of
estate of Jesse V. Embum, deceased,
properly
and all persons having claims against
d have been
said estate are hereby required to
: you are in
present the same to him at his resi­
.ldren of the
dence at Tillamook, Oregon, or to T.
ght to spell ac-
H. Goyne, an attorney at law, at his
y syllable?. Is the
office in Tillamook City, Oregon, to­
e not taught the al-
gether with the proper vouchers,
.n to read at sight, the
within six months from the date of
difficulty? If they are
this notice.
poor spellers” they should
Dated September 9th, 1915.
cted to consult the diction-
John Embum, Administra­
ore sending away a letter or
tor of the estate of Jessie
,g of any kind. I sometimes
V. Embum. deceased.
ader if correct spelling is becom-
ig a lost art. I am in constant busi­
ness correspondence and receive let­
Notice of -Appointment of Adminii-
ters written by otherwise well-educat­
trator.
id
ed people who spell miserably. A few
.iad days ago I received a letter from a
Notice is hereby given to all whom!
ed to I young man who had but recently
it may concern; that by an order oil
j start
graduated from a first class college,
the County Court, of Tillamookl
Jenkins, in which were numerous misspelled
County, Oregon, made and entered of
<ie a sliys- words, such as “dissapear” for “disa­
record herein on the 11th day of
anyhow.' ppear;” “dissapiont” for “dissapoint”;
September, 1915, the undersigned was
was cheat­ "tareing” for “tearing;“ "loose” for
Notice of Re-assessment.
appointed the administrator of the
alestate deql lose.” Recently I saw in a druggist’s
, when 1 asked I window "cooling drinks to qucnce the
Notice is hereby given to whom it estate of Jasper W. Buckles, deceas­
objections, he thurst," and in a toy store window
may concern, that the Common ed.
All persons having claims against
1 he becomes a "games for perforation work.” Such
Council of Tillamook City, Oregon,
> keep straight, he mistakes would have been considered
did, at a meeting held on the 4th day said estate are hereby notified to
.h or never get any- a disgrace in the
old-fashioned
of October, 1915, duly adopt the fol­ present them, verified as requird by
law to the undersigned as said ad­
e don't tote fair, he schools. ________
lowing:
ministrator at his office in TillamookJ
sense enough to cover
Resolution.
City, Oregon, within six months oil
and will land in the Buried Treasure of Many Millions in
Summons.
Whereas,
the
Common
Council
of
the date of this notice.
. No, I wouldn’t want him
Tillamook City, Oregon, did, by Res­
North Carolina.
law even if he had sense
Dated this 16th day of September,
I Surgeons killed in appendicitis sur­ In the Circuit Court of the State of olution adopted February 3rd, 1913.
gery might be called on to see what Oregon, for Tillamook County, De-
avoid its pitfalls, because
’
9
’5-
make an assessment of the propor­
A story which was given wide cir­ they can do for the hyphen.
age lawyer can only succeed
E. J. Claassen,
partment No. two.
tionate share of the cost of the mak­
.ng one man’s property away culation is that at the outbreak of the
Administer of said estate.
John R. Harter,
Plaintiff
ing
of
the
following
improvements,
European
war,
when
it
was
currently
What
is
a
farmer
’
s
favorite
exple
­
First publication Sept. 16, 1915.
11 another and keeping it for him-
vs.
to-wit:
reported that at the close of the war tive? Evidence has been offered that |
Last publication Oct. 14th, 1915.
I Charles R. Soule, Soule Broth-
The improvement of the South side
gold would be in demand, depositors he never heard of "By heck.”
' ers. Incorporated, a corpora­
of Second Street from the Northeast
Amos, there is an object lesson for in certain North Carolina banks with­
tion, J. J. Jones, J. Swank, W.
Brooklyn’s Plymouth Church seems
drew
their
deposits
and
buried
them
corner of Lot 2, Block
2, Maple
in
Slide,
slode,
slide
at
Culebra
cut.
111 in Ferguson’s experience
O.
Wilson
and
Harriet
L.
unlucky.
in
the
ground
pending
the
end
of
the
Grove
Addition,
West
to
Third
Ave
­
on
Wish
we
had
all
that
sludge
that
has
wheat raising. He prides Jiimself
nue West;
“slod” to put in our St. Louis aban­ W ilson, his wife, C. M. Zum-
his skill in the cultivation of al) kinds war.
zalt, W. C. Look and Mrs. W.
It is said, but apparently not upon doned quarries.
Both sides of Third Street, from
of crops, ami, really, he is a very
C. Look, his wife, and W. B.
Stillwell's Avenue to Third Avenue
good farmer, making good at nearly unimpeachable authority, that real
Shively, Assignee,
West; The South side of Fourth
everything he undertakes. However, gold, minded and minted with the
NEW HOME USERS
You can’t inveigle a turkey into eat­
Defendants.
______ —
Street, from Third Avenue West to
he might do much better than he does government’s own stamp thereon
ing
a
cranberry,
says
somebody
who
To
J.
J.
Jones,
W.
O.
Wilson
and
ARE
between
$300,000
and
$500,000
of
it
—
Sixth
Avenue
West;
The
North
side
if he would curb his egotism a bit.
has tried it.
That’s instinct, no Harriet L. Wilson, his wife, and W. of Fifth Street from Third Avenue
For instance, 1 have been trying for glimmers in the ground of Davidson doubt.
QUAEITY
CHOOSERS
C. Look and Mrs. W. C. Look, his West to Sixth Avenue West; The
ten years to convince him of the fact County, N. C. Whether this be true
wife,
the
defendants
above
named;
or
not,
it
is
a
matter
of
record,
which
West
side
of
First
Avenue
West
from
that no matter how good apparently
Oregon’s Supreme Court has upheld
In the name of the State of Oregon Third Street to Fourth Street; Both
his seed may be, if planted year after the ( harlotte Observer deplores, that the opening of Sunday theaters on
You and each of you are hereby re­ sides of Second Avcnue West from
certain
citizens
of
Charlotte
and
year in the same soil, it will inevitably
a
Necessity,
the
ground
that
they
are
to Fourth Stiftete
run down, both in yield and quality. 1 Macklenburg County, which adjoins Otic Oregon lid doesn't imply all quired to appear and answer the com­ Second Street
plaint filed against you in the above : The East side of Third Avenue West
have tried to make him realize the Davidson County, did withdraw their kinds.—Ex.
entitled suit within six weeks from 1 from Second Street to Fourth Street
benefit of changing seed from one deposits from Charlotte banks upon
—— o——
the date of the first publication here­ • The West side of third Avenue West
kiml of soil to another kind—that is, just such a report of gold, and it is
Under South Carolina's new pro­ of in the Tillamook Headlight, the from Fourth Street to Fifth Street
wheat grown on sandy low land admitted that “possibly a portion of
changed to heavy upland clay soil is these withdrawn deposits still remain hibitory law any one can buy a gal­ date of the first publication thereof Both sides of Fourth Avenue West
lon of liquor a month. Doesn’t seem being the 26th day of August, 1915, , from Fourth Street to Fifth Street;
improved by the change. In the same in hiding.”
Therefore, if the story of buried to be as far reaching as the old-fash­ and if you fail so to appear and And the East Site of Sixth Avenue
sections of country there are often
answer, the plaintiff will take a de­ West from Fourth Street to Fifth
many different kinds of soil, and so M<asI*r<' is ,nir’ t,lcr<' '» R°l(l in ioned temperance pledge.
it is easy for farmers having different North Carolina lands, in fact as well
cree against you as follows, to-wit:
Street. All in Tillamook City, Ore­
It is said that there are at least
soils to improve their seed by ex­ as in the theory. It does not appear
First.
That the plaintiff have gon.
changing seeds with each other. But however, that the gold hidden in .’,500,000 golf players in this country; judgment against the said defendant,
By constructing concrete sidewalks
Ferguson only laughed at me, boast­ North Carolina lands consist of bur which ought to withhold enough till­ Charles R. Soule, in the sum of along said portions of said streets
E. T. HALTOM,
ed as always having raised the best led coms entirely. It is estimated that able land from cultivation to raise the seven hundred and oo-loo dollars with which improvements had heretofore
wheat in the county, and scouted the there is in North Carolina lands a price of rural real estate. Thus does interest thereon at the rate of eight been done according to proceedings
I illaœook,
-
Oreg on.
idea of exchanging it for that which sum of $3,500,000,000 lying as useless golf help the farmer.
per cent pcr annum from the 22nd taken in that behalf by the Common
he considered of inferior quality, I I as the buried currency.
The New Home Sewing
day of July, 1911; in the further sum Council of Tillamook City Oregon,
I
Newspapers in the Southwest and of one hundred doliars attorney's in reference thereto, in the year 1912
for ten years he has planted wheat
I here is a practically unpopulated
Machine Company,
«seed grown on the same ground, ami area of some 22,380,000 acres in in the Western section of the country fees; in the further sum of $38.62 and
a\ho.Ugj4-lht.quality seemed all right, North Carolina, it is said, four-fifths generally, are freely discussing the with interest thereon at the rate of
San
Francisco, Cal.
Whereas,
in
making
said
assessment
the yield has decreased half a bushel ot which is valuable for cultivation— prospect of rural credits legislation, six. per cent per annum from the 30th a portion of said assesment was
an acre every year. 1 talked about it a desert capable of being made to as the next session of congress draws day of January, 1915; in the further made by charging the proportionate
v ith him today, and when I told him blossom like the rose. It is twice the near. Congressman Henry of Te^is, sum of $61.63 with interest thereon cost of said improvements to a
the average wheat yield on our farm sue of Belgium, and is said to be who has heretofore championed a at the rate of six per cent per annum number of lots as a whole, and the
this year was nearly five bushels an capable of furnishing every man in $500,000,000 bund issue for the relief from the 30th day of July, 1915; and amount to be assessed to each indi­
acre more than he had raised, and our that European state a farm of twice of cotton planters, is making a de­ for his costs and disbursements of vidual lot was not in each case asses­
yield had been about the same for ten the size of the fields he has been used mand for a rural credits law, the this suit.
sed, and by reason of all of the lots
successive years, he nearly took my to cu livatmg. At that is is said there chief plank in the platform in which
Second. That the mortgage des­ not being assessed individually for
he
is
canvassing
his
state
as
a
can
­
breath away by frankly acknow ledg
would still lie left 9,000,000 acres for
Cheer up I Get to work
didate for the United States Senate. cribed in the said complaint be fore­ each lot’s proportionate share of
lug that I was right in not planting I woodland development.
in a F ish B rand
closed and that the following discrib­ said cost, question has been made as
It
was
Mr.
Henry
who
introduced
the
seed year after year in the same soil
Although there have already cotuc
to the validity of sàid assessment,
where it was raised. He went on to 1? N°rth ( arolina several successful first of the rural credit bills in the ed real property, tow it:
Blocks, three, four, nine, ten, eleven, and by reason of said assesment hav­
...» conven-
»„...»..
sav that he had recently read that Belgian colonies since the outbreak House, very soon after the
wheat raised in Mexico, where the Of the war. it is hardly probable that ing of the special session of Congress seventeen, eighteen, nineteen, twenty, ing been raised the Common Council
.twenty seven, twenty eight and is in doubt as to the validity of such
peons have been planting the same tiny possible publicity of this oppor­ April 15, 1913.
twenty nine, and lots from one to assessment, or the portion thereof
seed on the same ground many years, tunity Will lead to any considerable
which was made against more than
resulting in a change from phenome­ transfer of Belgian farmers to the
An extra session of the Senate, call­ seventeen inclusive and from twenty one lot as to any one item thereof,
to twenty six inclusive of block
nal yields of fifty years ago to five to I ar Heel State.
ed to save ti ne, would only waste it three
Strong, easy fitting,
six bushels per acre of very poor
The unpopulated ciditvable lands of by entering upon an "investigation" I two, and lots one and from twentysix and the Common Council is desirous
light, and water­
quality 1 told him that there is as North < arolina, it is estimatcil. would ot Mexican affairs, and our relation 1 to forty seven inclusive of block six­ of removing any question as to the
proof, absolutely.
much sense in interbreeding his ani­ approximate 175,000 farms of 50 acres to them, as is now proposed. What is ' teen, an>l lots from twenty eight to collection of the cost of said improve­
mals beyond a very limited degree as i Jch 1 he average 50-acre farm in the there to investigate? The only mys­ forty eight inclusive of block fifteen, ments, and to that end proposes to
Reflex Edges stop
there is in planting seed that has, in Siuth will bring a good farmer about terious affair about our connection and lots troin one to eight inclusive, make a new assessment, or reassess­
water from run­
a large degree, lost its productive vi­ it200 gross per annum, which amount with Mexican matters happened on | and from fifty seven to sixty one in- ment upon the lots of land which
ning in at the front
been benefited bv said improve­
tality by interbreeding; that the laws multiplied by the possible
Black, Yellow or Olive-khaki.
000 the night when the revenue cutter 1 elusive of block twenty one, and lot have
ments
to
the
extent
of
their
respec
­
one
of
block
twenty
six.
and
lots
one,
of the animal and vegetable kingdom North Carolina fifty-acre farms, rep
-ÇGWEÂIÇ
bearing John Lind from \ era Cruz
Protector Hat. 75 cents
are exactly alike in that respect, and, relents a 6 per cent interest upon a «ast anchor off Pass Christian, Miss., two, and sixteen of block twelve, all tive and proportionate shares of the
Satisfaction Guaranteed
lor the first time in ten years, he principal which should approximate whether President Wilson had gone in Avalon, in the County of Tillamook full value thereof.
Now therefore, be it resolved, That
aj towerco
agreed with me.
1 the value of these lands.
to meet him, and the prisident at and State of Oregon.
*'S BOSTON
midnight, and in a long cloak, put off Be sold in the manner prescribed by the Common Council of Tillamook
Mother, don’t you believe that one
in a boat, boarded the ship and met law and the proceeds of such sale City, Oregon, hereby declares its in­
How’s This?
I Lind below decks. That incident applied to the payment of the said tention to make the new assessment,
of the chief difficulties that many
^CCGQCQOQOOOOCQQOQOOQO*
or re-assessment be made upon the
We offer Ox» H vnd »» i > Dot
R»wagl» smacked so much of corsairs and judgment.
people experience in getting on com­
any eaw ,,r iatarrh that eannot 1,, cured
I bird. 1 hat the defendant, Charles lots or tracts of land which have been
fortably in life is their own covetous­ or
pirates
in
general,
and
in
particular
Sidney E. Henderson, Pre».,
R. Soule, and all persons claiming benefited by the improvements afore­
ness’ 1 he desire of the individual to by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
I 01 I afitte, who used to ravage those through
Surveyor.
I
F.
J.
CHUNKY
*
CO
.
Telclo.o
said
to
the
extent
of
their
respective
or under him, be forever bar­
own the earth is something inborn,
i waters, that the fact of it remaining
”*/ un«ter«l<nixl hnre known I-* I
and. although warned by the teach­ . >
unexplained rises a question which red and foreclosed from setting up proportionate shares of the full val­
ings by experience, the expectation of
the senate might try to answer, were any claim, right, title or interest in ue thereof; that Monday, the 1st dav
orto the said lands, or any portion of November, 1915, at the council
being able to corner and grab every­
it really a serious one.
thereof, excepting the statutory right room in the City Hall, in Tillamook
thing on earth, worth living, is the
NATIONAL R1NK-OF t’OMMRRCK.
City, Oregon, at the hour of 8 o'clock
of redemption.
acme of human aspirations. When 1
Notice of Completed Contract
Hull*«
f'ag.wwk
»■»
Tilled«».
(>.
Fourth, That the plaintiff be per­ p m. be and the same is hereby ap­
w^a a little boy 1 heaped my plate
John Leland Henderson, Sec­
----- °~ ~~ ~
''¡th goodies—pcans, peas, potatoes,
Notice is hereby given. that the mitted to become a purchaser at such pointed as the time and place when
retary Treas., Attomey-at-
«.....
the Common Council
of Tillamook
meat, with apple sauce and pudding
County Road Master for Tillamook i sale.
Law, Notrary Public.
looming up in the distance. Then my
Fifth. I hat the plaintiff have such City, will meet for the purpose of
< ounty, Oregon, has filed in this of-
T.ke Hall'» EamUy Pm, fjr eon,Upat|O„.
levelheaded father would say: "My
five his certificate for the completion other and further relief as to the making such re assessment; that the
Tillamook Title and
City Recorder shall give notice of the
boy, your eyes arc bigger than your
of
of M. I. and John co*}ri. may sccm just and ecuitable.
, the
, contract
,
time
and
place
so
appointed
in
th-
stomach.' Oh, that first plate of ice
Jenck.
E.
E.
1
his
summons
is
served
upon
you
Jenck,
on
the
E.
Cross
County
Householder! are obliging enough
Abstract co.
cream! How good it was! Then I not to care where a saloon is. so that Road, from Station 448 pin« 00 to by publication thereof by order of manner required by the Charter of
reasoned: If one is good, two should ll isn t in their block.
Station 456 plus 00 and from Station the Hon. A. M. Hare, Judge of the Tillamook City, Oregon, and that at
Law, Abstracts, Real Estate,
said time, or at such other time or,
be twice as good and three thrice as
Board of Naval Invention is now 408 plus 38.1 to Station 496 plus 958 County Court of the State of Oregon, times as the Common Council mav I
Surveying, Insurance.
Rood, and »o on. But, somehow, my th^TT
’* V rfady?” One—two- »n accordance with the plans and for the County of Tillamook, made
Both Phones.
theory wouldn’t work. The s«tond three: Invent!
adiourn
said
matter
to,
the
Common
specifications, and any person, firm and entered herein on the 26th day of
»
plate of ice cream was not So good as
GO TO
01 corporation, having objections to August, tots, in the absence of the Council shall proceed to make such a
the first, the third worse, the fourth— mm "’• u'. °f 'he ,,."<,i»nal»<is Star tile to the completion of said work Circuit Judge.
in ,hrfn~nncr Pr«crib-
M. ***»*-»
HANSEN
impossible. So, too. with the food I feelh
lO'*1 d°'i
™ o? me vnartcr of
smav,
may do so within two weeks from
?.f Tillamook
TiI,:,mook Citv
Cit
E. J. Claussen.
Y00“* of P”« •» U" ..o( ,hc ,irst Publication.
,o ,levour' Father was right Inv ■ r "
-
»
ptiwvii;
TILLAMOOK
- - OREGON.
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff.
thereb?'A7\?;'
,rV,L
pcrkon,s to take The Swiss Watchmaker,
Whether there was tqo much eats or »ny price ; and m his two-legged Dated this the .'8th day of Sept. 1915.
thereby
are
hereby
required
l ot enough o( boy, the result was al­ master .1 „ when he lose, hi. neive
*000000000000000000000001
notice of such proceeding and to
...
,J- f Holden County Clerk,
FOR REPAIRS,
ways the same. Covetous people look
govern themselves accordingly
Enough experiments have been
publication, Sept, jo, iqi >.
Notice.
i
over the newspaper ads for bargains " •»dt- to decide that the work of sub­ ^«^t publication, Oct. 14, 1915.
Has
one of the best equipped rt”
Now-,
therefore,
all
persons
con
­
------o—- ■
and find cheap farms, houses, autos
cerned
are
hereby
notified
that
a
re
­
pair
shops
for making parts on the
like
1 jugating |he Chinese isn’t at .ill
Any one intending to take
amusements and want them all. Fools
Try those 25c dinners at the Ram front the Wilson river on my gravel assessment will be made as provided, Pacific Coast.
I hey couldn’t enjoy them all To A.i’"?";;“ ?*“ r',‘c' >’fSC"thern
prem­ for in the said Resolution and at the
so the door of China continues ’ey “Good Fats.” M 'A. Olson for- ises, are requested to consult ine be-
enjoy any great number they would
Mail and express orders promptly
time and place therein specified, and
to be more or less open
fore doing so.
Elleben.
•
4
attended to.
all persons concerned are h-rebv
Mrs. A. L. Donaldson. quircd to appear at said '
OREGON.
time X and BAY CITY.
A Rainy Day Need
Not Be Dull
Reflex
Slicker
$3.00
.
I
I
.