Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, May 03, 1917, Image 6

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    TILLAMOOK
the Editors Say.
-
o------
People won’t go back to the farm
ii they have roads to get there.—
temizer.
would never be made. Another point
upon which he laid stress was that
even if the objections of the opposi­
tion to certain possible contingencies
were well founded they need not
necessarily affect the proposal as a
whole, for should they arise quick
remedies may be applied by the gov­
ernor or the legislature.— Independ­
ent.
At this time it is claimed, that there
is three times as uiuch flour being
milled than ever before, in the United
------ o------
States. What a prolific field for the
A woman in West Virginia has been
government to do a little regulation
I married three times. Her maden name
in the interests of the consumer.—
was Partridge, her first husband was
Willamina Times.
I
named
Robins, the second husband
------ o-... -
was named Sparrow, and the last
The official report from Berlin man she married was named Quail.
says the Germans gave ground before As an outcome, she has two young
the French "because the position be­ Robins, one Sparrow and 3 Quails
comes uusuited to them." In the same Her grandfather on her mother's side
way, we take it, that a red hot poker was a Swan and the other was a Jay.
becomes unsuited to the man who I He's dead now, and a bird of Paradise
picks it up.—Oregon Register.
I —we hope, but what beats the blue
------ o------
on Hawke
An increase in inquiries for Oregon duce is that they live
in
a
town
called
Eagle, on
I
avenue
farms is now being received iu various
the
whole
I
Canary
Islands,
unless
sections of the state, which indicates
a movement to the west of eastern [ tribe has flowu away since we rushed
people who desire to better their con­ I to press.—Berman Dericks.
HEADLIGHT MAY 3,1917.
are paying for them.
“Our present system is like paying
rent; paying for roads every
month,
*
every
year,
and
at
the
end
of
the
._____
...
...
.
lease we move out with nothing to
show for our payments, for Clacka­
mas County has nothing to show for
the money expended up to 1916.
“Six million dollars at 4 per cent;
500 to boo miles of hard surface roads
at no more expense per annum than if
you wait 20 to 25 years to get the
same roads. Isn’t it good business?”
We condense the foregoing from
the Canby News,—Oregon Voter.
Notice of Final Account.
The undersigned has filed his final
account «3
as gUIIIIIIISUOiv«
administrator *-'•
of the es-
1 tate
of .1.
Harry
Wingate Cottle,
deceas-
-j
'________ __________ _
Tlll.mnnL
ed, in the county court of Tillamook
County, Oregon, and the County
Judge of said county has appointed
Monday, May 14th, 1917. at 10
o'clock a.ra. in the county court room
in the court house in Tillamook City,
Oregon, as the time and place for
hearing objections to said account
and the final settlement thereof.
H. T. Botts,
Administrator of the Es­
tate of Harry Wingate
Cottle, Deceased.
AVVUUIH
Administratrix's Notice to Creditors.
Mail Orders a Menace.
----- o-----
Notice is hereby given, that the
The fight between the retail selling County Court of the State of Oregon,
of goods by local merchants and the for the County of Tillamook, has ap­
centralization of selling in the bands pointed the undersigned administra­
trix of the estate of Thomas Brooten, ,
of a few huge city corporations in the deceased, and all persons having
mail order business is growing more claims against said estate are hereby j
bitter every day. It affects uot only notified to present them to said ad­ >
ministratrix, at her residence at Clov­
the merchant but every citizen in the erdale,
Oregon, together with the I
smaller communities. It is a fight be­ proper vouchers, within six months
tween the country at large and a few from the date of this notice.
Dated March 29th, 1917.
--------- o . —
big cities, between the bread and but­
ditions. Oregon offers opportunities
Ruby Brooten, Admin- '
If
there
should
ever
be
any
uueasi-
ter
of
our
neighbors
and
townsmen
to the workers in home building that
istratrix of the Estate j
Iness
as
to
our
ability
to
transport
an
and
swollen
dividends
for
a
few
east
­
of Thomas Brooten, :
are not found in the East, but to the
deceased.
drone there is no hoping.—Sheridan [army to Europe, despite the menace ern millionaires.
of the Prussian submarines, it should
Mail order houses have grown rich
Sun.
be set at rest by the record of the and are growing richer at the expense
Summons.
'Twasn't so long ago when a few British in getting the Canadian troops of the local merchant and the smaller
In the Circuit Court of the State of
painp of horse shoes could furnish . safely.across the Atlantic. More than cities. Every dollar that goes to them
l"ese nlen have been 1 sent leaves town forever. It is a final Oregon, for Tillamook County.
amusement enough for a real holiday P00’000
Coats Driving & Boom Com­
in the ordinary community, Times I from North America to England and farewell. And the smaller the towu pany, a corporation,
from
there
to
France
and
not
a
single
the greater proportionate part of this
Plaintiff.
horse shoes
>^<^*ave
drive changed. Pitching
I
vs.
/
and the simple : games no longer life has been lost on the way. This burden is called upon to bear.
Haberlach and Amanda
Retail stores are a prime necessity Carl
amuse us. It has got to be something has been accomplished under convoy
Haberlach, his wife and Frank
of
the
British
Navy
alone,
in
spite
of
to every town, hamlet and city. S. Sugimoto,
more exciting, more expensive and
Defendants
more modern before it attracts the the (act that the submarines would Spending money at home is a neces­
To Frank S. Sugimoto, one of the
attention of the present generation.— have sunk any transport they could sity to the prosperity of that home above named defendants in the name
have reached, and without assistance town. Sending money away for some of the State of Oregon;
News Times.
from the American Navy. If the time thing that could be purchased from
You are hereby required to appear
and answer the
complaint filed
It is understood that the war de­ should come for us to send an army the local merchant is a direct blow to against you and the other defendants
to
Europe,
we
would
have
the
benefit
partment has several very good reas­
the merchant, to the local newspaper I in the above entitled Court and action
ons for not wanting married men not only of the protection heretofore and banks, to every citizen of the en-|on or before the last day of the time
in the ranks. First, a married man given the Canadians by Great Britain, tire town. If persisted in and en­ prescribed in the order for publica­
tion of Summons herein to-wit: the ‘
with the responsibilities of supporting but of our own naval forces as well, couraged it means stagnation or 25th
day of May, 1917, and if you fail
which
by
the
time
we
have
a
force
a family is apt to worry more or less
worse for focal business interests.
to answer for want thereof the plain-
about them; second, die government ready for transportation will be much
Every one who has studied the I tiff will take judgment against you
would feel morally obliged to support more extensive than they are now.— question sxcept the mailorder hous-l1^41 your damages be assessed and
for the land sought to be
these dependent
persons, which Oregonian.
es themselves and those directly de­ awarded
appropriated and described as follows
------
o
------
would require heavy additional ex-
pendent upon them for a livelihood— to-wit:
*
1
Here's a “bit” of news that savors
A strip of land 40 feet in width
penditures; third, the possibility of
is opposd to them as an evil of the
of true common sense. It may have
over, through and upon the lands of
future heavy pension claims are re-
present economic system.
taken the war to do it, but it is al­
the defendants, for the use of the
duced to a minimum in any army of
The costs of doing business are the plaintiff and being twenty (20) feet
most worth the price: Corvallis high
single men.—News Reporter.
same but the mail order method of in width on either side of the follow­
school girl graduates this year will
--o------
buying results in a loss of interest on ing described center line thereof, to-
wear graduating gowns costing a sum
When the law provides that 70 per
the money that is paid in advance, in wit:
at ths government quar­
_cent of the road tax must be expend- in strict conformity with the univers­ a delay in receiving and exchanging ter Beginning
(%) stake on the North boundary
al disposition toward economy—not
in the district where it is paid and
unsatisfactory goods and makes it of Section 24, Township Two South
the remaining 30 per cent shall go in­ more than |$. Such is the edict issu­ impossible to examine merchandise of Range Ten West, thence along the |
to the general county fund, how can ed by the board of education. This is previous to receipt and payment for North boundary of Section 24, on al
true course North 85 degrees 4354*
* district expect the county to pay for in conformity with the action of the the goods. It has little to defend it ex­ minutes.
West 1262.76 feet to the 1-16'
boards
of
enducatiqn
in
many
of
the
its permanently improved roads? For
cept a supposed saving. Even when corner ou the North line of the
larger
communities
of
the
state,
and
this reason about ail that a district
that saving is apparently real it re­ Northwest quarter of Section 24;
thence along the East boundary of
can do under the present law is to tax will fit in with the idea that has been sults in a loss to the purchaser.
the Northwest quarter (!4) of the I
itself and untie its general and special
for ««"> moon,-except
No man lives in the world alone. Northwest quarter of Section 24 on a '
funds and then call on the county ívr | «Pon «he part of the graduates and a
No one is absolutely independent of true course South 1 degree 07 min-1
what assistance that can be given. | portion of the fond parents. Twenty- his neighbors. Prosperity must be in­ utes West 939-7 feet to the center
Resolutions demanding that the coun . ­ I five and $50 graduating gowns on the terlocking, mutual. Whatever benefits line of the right of way of the pro­
posed extension of the Coats Driving
ty do the work can accomplish noth part of some have caused the parents one member of the community must and
Boom Company's Logging rail­
of o‘hers to stretch themselves un­
ing, for the county lias unly 30 per
in measure benefit every other mem­ way; thence along said center line on
reasonably
in
order
that
their
own
a straight course South 76 de’grces
cent of the tax.—Independent.
children might not suffer from envy ber. (Jtie man's loss is the loss of 38 minutes West 1298.6 feet; thence
------ Q---- -
everyone.
on this happy occasion.—Umpqua
along a line curving regularly to the
Without entering into the merits of Valley News.
It has been estimated that as high I left, radius being 1146.3 feet for a
as twenty . . per cent of . the rural
retail [distance of 29.3
through
tbc road bond Uw, there can be no
---- -------
, feet ------
„.i a cen-
buying for the county today is done |tra? angle.of indegree 28 minutes to a
question of the urgent necessity for
The G°od Roads Way.
r|P°*nt
Ike West boundary of Sec-
the adoption of some plan or system
through mail order houses. If |i
lnc Ilion twenty-four Township 2 South of
fanner
will
not
buy
from
the
that will give to the state of Oregon
mer-I Range 10 VV est, said point being on a
There is no reasonable argument
mer-1 true course South 2 degrees
47 ......
min-
the roads necessary to the develop­ against good roads from the progres­ chant in his nearby town that___
___ „
ist
*334-7 feet
... from the
ment of her agriculture prosperity. sive farmer's standpoint, in the esti­ chant will not be able to buy from thel1* ‘ 1**
• • . .
. .. ~
.
I I government Section corner common
Oregon has regions that are as rich j mation of Grant B. Diniick, of Ore­ farmer, nor sell
h.m the things he re- I to
to Sections
24 and
23. all
in
Sections 14.
14, 13.
13, 24
and 23,
all in
as* the richest, yet they are lying idle gon City, president of the Willamette quires. If the fanner says: “What of Township 2 South of Range to West
[of Ike
the Willamette Meridian; thence
for the reason that the cost of the Valley Southern Railway and for it?” in time of good crops, the nier-|of
Ce.n,e.>
011 Í. re8'?'a.r^
transportation of the product of the many years County Judge of Clacka­ chant will be forced to say: "What ol I
curving ft. line
the left
radius
"being
and to
central
angle
17 degree^
arm is forbiddingly great. People mas County. A. R. Dimick, of Los- it?" when the farmer is in need of L46.3
1146.3 ft- and central angle 17 degrees
liould give this much thought before Angeles, brother to—Judge Dimick of accommodation or credit. It is not I 23 minutes for a distance of 347.7 feet;
efusing to vote on the first big Clackamas, gets his garden truck only "a poor rule that doesn't work thence
on a straight course South 58
‘
hance they have had to begin a com I fresh from the garden before 7 both ways" but it is not a rule that degrees 07 minutes West 1270.8 feet
a point on the West boundary of
rehensive system of stale wide road I o'clock every morning from a farmer works profitably either way it does to
the Southeast quarter of the North­
.instruction.—Seaside Signal.
who lives 52 miles front Los Angeles. work. Mutual interests are the only east quarter of Section 23, said point
being on a true course North 2 de­
o——
. He brings it iu by auto over a hard true interests. No deal is profitable grees
22 minutes East 601.4 feet from
Experts say that '«<>•■>
“>5®
surfaced road. Judge Dimick says it where one man gets the best of it.— the 1-16
corner on the South bound­
it of the oil in the present oil fields takes the farmers from Beaver Creek Polk County Observer.
ary of the Northeast quarter of Sec­
1 been taken out, and all evidence neighborhood, 6 miles from Oregon
tion 23 Township 2 South of Range
cates a gradual decline in output. City, one and one-half hours to drive
to West of the Willamette Meridian
"The Round-Up."
in Tillamook County, Oregon, con-
B|re three and a quarter million into town when they make up their
taming in the aggrega
o
aggregate 2.71 acres
-^-^les in use, and the annual minds to come and can conic with a
and »•>
all being situated in Sections 21
.
.. - .
. ,
.
|»nd
Edith was light-hearted and merry Lnd 24 said Township and Range. ’
dition is about 25 per cent, so that little "jag" of garden truck.—Oregon
over everything. Nothing appealed to I An addition any damages if any
unquestionably this country is facing Voter.
her seriously. So one day her mother I Plc.re be, and that the Court includes
a shortage of gasoline, it is well
decided to invite a very serious young 11,1 **? lHla! judgment the terms agrec-
knowd that there has been great
Twelve Disciples.
..
, '
,
* 016018 and conditions contained in
------ o------
waste in the industry, and many min­
person to dinner and he was placed plaintiffs offer |o put in not more
lu Oregon City there are “ Twelve next to the light hearted girl. Every- I than three crossings on the grade and
ing engineers say that the drilling ol
wells should be under federal super­ Disciples of Road Efficiency." they thing went well until she asked him: I track level at the most convenient
I place the number to be designated to
vision and there should be careful are self styled disciples and seem to "You speak of every one having a you and your co-defcndant, at the
conservation of oil Henry Ford is sol be preaching some firstclass road mission. What s yours? ?" "My mis- trial of this action, at the expense of
sion” said the person, “is to save the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff
convinced that some substitute for I gospel,
gasoline will have to be found that he I They relate that during ten years young men." 'Good!" replied the will take judgment appropriating and
condemning the lands hereinbefore
baa a force of experts experimenting I Clackamas County has spent l about girl; "I'm glad to meet you. I wish I described
for the right of way to-wit:
with kersene and alcohol - I’elcphom | $J.000,000 on roads, and only in
1 191O you'ld save one for me.'
use, and that it will take judgment
[did they get anything permanent for
against you and the other defendants
Register.
I their money—about three miles of
In a certain military tribuna 1 in I for the costs and disbursements of
this action.
Level-headed people who really de-1 permanent road.
England recently a caretaker was I This Summons is served upon you
They show that Clackamas County's claiming temporary exemption on the by publication thereof bv order of the
sire highway improvement and who
in their arguments against the pro- I contribution to the State millage tax ground that he had not yet succeeded Honorable A. M. Hare, County Judge
posed road bond, are not merely I is only $7,500 per year, while the re- in finding a suitable substitute for his of Tillamook County, Oregon, in the
absence of the Honorable George R
seeking to excuse an opposition to all I (urn <0 Clackamas County, if the work, which included the manage­ Bagley, Circuit Judge, of the above
I
Road
Bond
Bill
is
enacted,
will
be
20
improvements will indorse the view
ment of an electric installation, patent entitled Circuit Court, which order is
expressed by Mr. E. B. Tongue at I miles of pavement worth at least ventilating apparatus, and so on Rut dated the loth day of April, tpi7, and
last Friday’s road meeting In effect $.*00,000, and ask whether it is not to the chairman of the tribunal a skil­ the date of the first publication there­
of. being the 12th dav of April, 1017.
it was that the bonds offer the first good business for Clackamas County led caretaker seemed an unnatural and the date of the last publication
practicable method yet presented tor to support the Bond Issue
combination not to be encouraged, will expire on the 25th day of Mav
pulling Oregon out of the mud. and
"When you bought your farm," ask and he expressed the opinion that |«I7.
Webster Holmes.
at the mud itself is a complete the Twelve Disciples, "didn't you “any old thing with a mop and dust­
Attorney for Plaintiff.
swer to the opposition Mr. Tongue make a small payment down, and pan would do." Couldn't you get
bly called attention to the fact agree to pay the balance in install­ some elderly respectable women to
Notice.
was impossible to present a ments, and didn't you pay a higher take your job during the war?” he
-
9
■ -
asked And the caretaker, with the
hat would not be open to objec- rate of interest than four per cent?
The stallion Liberal, black Perch­
and if wj waited until a flawless
“So it is with road bonds, you will sweetest of smiles, answered: “And eron. will be at the Harris him once
plan
,<nulated a beginning have the use of the roads while you Couldn’t you sir?“
a week for two days, Friday and Sat­
urday, commencing April 21st.
We are now located in our new
stand at the FRYE WAREHOUSE
at the S.P. Railroad, near the S.P.
Depot, where we welcome all our
customers to call and see us. We
carry a full line of Feed. Silosand
Our prices
Farm Implements.
1
are the lowest for the value re-
ceived. Let us know your wants.
Down town office at A. C. Ever­
son's Real Estate Office. Both
phones at warehouse and office.
W. KUPPENBENDER
Tillamook, Oregon.
Clough’s
The Best Antiseptic Healing Germicide
Creo-Septic is completely aoluable in water. Two
tablespoonfills to each gallon of water is the average
strength to be used. Being of a soapy nature it proves
very effective for washing the animals and stable uten­
sils, and if used in general improves stable conditions.
$2.00 a Gallon
CHAS. I. CLOUGH,
Reliable Druggist, Tillamook. Ore
FRANK HEYD& CO
General Contractors
and Builders.
Estimates & Plans Furnished.
SEE
OUR
Special
Call at our plant and get prices
save you money.
ONE BLOCK WEST OF P.O.
Both Phones.
count
R B
Conn
HÜEX. MeNflIR & co
GEHERflU
Kitehen Ranges and
Heating Stoves.
the best stock of hardware
the county
S« U, for prices Before Ordering Bls<wll.