Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, February 19, 1920, Image 3

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT
FEBRUARY 19, 1920.
W. H. Christensen Elected President Oregon, where he spent eleven years
Tillamook County Creamery Ass'n. of his life, then moved to Napa,
Roads Seem Pressed Flat By
Wonderful New Triplex Springs
HE wonderful Triplex
Springs of Overland 4 ef­
fect such a change in riding
comfort that bad roads now
seem to ride like good roads.
T
ease of control and low fuel
and tire expense of 100-inch
wheelbase.
Overland 4 has the steadiness
of larger cars of long wheel­
base, with the light weight,
Equipment, including Auto-
Lite starting and lighting and
three-speed transmission, is
high class, in keeping with the
general character of tire car.
The Tillamook County Creamery
Association held its annual meting
at the court house on Monday.
Meeting called to order by Ben
Kuppenbender, president, when nine­
teen of the directors were present.
Annual reports were read by the
Secretary and Inspector, both reports
being accepted as read and ordered
published.
W. H. Christensen was elected
president.
Carl Haberlach was elected secre­
tary.
Ben Kuppenbender vas paid $150
for expense money on trips to Port­
land, and a vote of thanks was given
t him for his efforts on behalf of the
cheese industry.
First National Bank was elected
treasurer,
F. W. Christensen was engaged as
inspector.
It was decided that the association
equip an office and Carl Haberlach,
Sollie Smith and Ben Kuppenbender
were appointed a committee to report
at the next meeting.
Resolutions adopted that this as­
sociation recommend that hereafter
all factories be painted a Colonial
Yellow, white trimmings and black
roof. Mr. Peck of the Agricultural
College appeared before the meeting
and spoke on
improvement of
grounds.
Matter of joining with Coos and
Curry was taken up and it was de­
cided not to do anything at this time
regarding amalgamating the two as­
sociations.
The average attendance for last
year for the thirteen meetings was
16 directors, which shows a good in­
terest in the work.
Live Stock Quarantine Order Protec­
ting Tillamook County.
F. C. PANKOW, Star Garage, Tillamook, Oregon.
Summons.
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for the County of Tillamook.
P. E. Rogers, plaintiff.
vs.
D. W. Snyder, defendant.
To D. W. Snyder,the above named
defendant:
In the name of the State of Oregon,
you are hereby required to appear
and answer
the complaint, filed
against you in the above entitled
cause on or before the last day of
the time prescribed in the order for
this summons, as hereinafter shown,
and if you fail so to answer for want
thereof, the plaintiff will take judg­
ment against the defendant for the
sum of $193.20 with interest there­
on at the rate of 6 per cent per an­
num from the date of filing the com­
plaint herein, and for an order di­
recting the sale of certain personal
property of the defendant attached
herein as security for the satisfaction
of any judgment obtained by the
plaintiff against the defendant here­
in and for the costs and disburse­
ments of this action.
This summons is published by order
of the Hon, Geo. R. Bagley, said or­
der being dated Feb. 5, 1920, which
order directs this summons to be
published for six successive weeks,
the date of the first publication be­
ing Feb.. 12, 1920, and of the last
publication March 18, 1920, and the
date for answering herein expires
March 25, 1920.
Johnson & Handley,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
Address: Tillamook, Oregon.
Administrator’s Notice to Creditors.
:
j
|
i
;
Notice is hereby given that by an
order of the County Court of the
State of Oregon for Tillamook Coun­
ty, the undersigned, John Paquet,
has been duly appointed administra­
tor of the estate of Fred Paquet, de­
ceased. Notice is further given to all
persons having claims against the
said estate to present the same to the
undersigned or to his Attorneys,
Johnson & Handley, at Tillamook
Oregon, together with the proper
vouchers, duly verified within six
months from this date.
Dated February 12, 1920.
John Paquet,
Administrator of the
estate of Fred Paquet,
deceased.
Prohibiting the importation of any
cattle into Tillamook County, Ore­
gon, until said animals have been tu­
berculine tested within ten days of
such movement by a graduate veter­
inarian from a recognized veterinary
college and certificate of authority
given for such movement or when
the cattle originated from a Federal
accredited and tuberculin tested
herd.
Whereas, it is provided in Section
3, Chapter 14, laws of 1913, "It
shall be the duty ol the Stale Live
Stock Sanitary Board to exercise a
general sanitary supervision over the
live stock and poultry of this state
and as far as possible to protect the
poultry and live stock of this state
from disease; to take all measures
necessary and proper in the judg­
ment of the board to eradicate infec­
tious, contagious, and communicable
disease that may exist among live
stock and poultry of this state, etc.”
and
Whereas, Tillamook County, Ore­
gon, has carried out a general tuber­
culine testing of the dairy and
breeding cattle of their county, and
have largly eradicated bovine tuber­
culosis; and
Whereas, if protection is not af- !
forded to the new tuberculine tested
herds of lillamook County, Oregon,;
by requiring all cattle coming into I
said Tillamook County, Oregon, to be
tuberculine tested and proved free
from tuberculosis, the herds will not
remain so free and will again become
affected and the tuberculine eradica­
tion work already carried out will
be of no avail;
Now, therefore, We, the State
Livestock Sanitary Board of Oregon
do hereby declare that all cattle that
are not tuberculine tested and are
not from tuberculine tested and ac­
credited herds are presumed to be ef­
fected with tuberculosis and must be
tuberculine tested within ten day’s
time prior to their entry into Tilla-
moot County, Oregon, and a certifi­
cate fully describing such animals
and suck teat shall accompany each
shipment or movement of each an­
imals ¡«to Tillamook County, Oregon.
All persons and railroad companies
are hereby ordered and warned not
to import, trail, drive or allow to
drift into the said Tillamook County,
Oregon, any cattle unless accompan- I
ied by a certificate as heretofore de­
scribed showing them to be free from ,
tuberculosis as indicated by a nega­
tive reaction to the tuberculine test
or from a tuberculine tested, free and
accredited herd.
Issued at Salem, Oregon, this 13th
day of February, 1920.
Oregon State Live Stock Sanitary
Board, By W. K. Taylor, president,
W. H. Lytle,Secretary.
Death of J. A. Monroe.
The funeral of J. A. Monroe, a well
known orchardist who passed away
suddenuly on Monday afternoon of
last week near Santa Clara, Califor­
nia, was held at 2 o’clock from the
funeral chapel of Mrs. Emma Hirsch,
thence to the Christian Church
where the services were conducted by
the Rev. Mr. McCullough, of San
Jose. The burial was in Santa Clara
cemetery and a pretty collection of
floral tributes were placed upon the
grave. The following served as pall­
bearers: J. M. Kilwell, W. A. Buick,
Geo. Melovich, R. S. Streter, J. A.
Bunds and R. C. Elliott.
Mr. Monroe passed away at his
residence near Santa Clara February
9, at 3 o’clock p.m.. Death was caus­
ed by paralysis of the heart. The
deceased was born in Boon county,
Missouri, August 30, 1849, where he
lived until he was 26 years of age,
where he met and married Anna C.
Steen, July 20, 1873. To this union '
j was born three daughters, Lula
i Pearl Alice May, and Jennie Glen.
; There are left to mourn his loss his
widow, Mrs. A. C. Monroe, Mrs. J. H.
Brombley.of Napa and Mrs. D. W.
Luther of Santa Clara; his grand-
| children Donolwena Luther, Le Van
Leland and LeRoy Brombley.
The deceased moved from Boon
County, Missouri to Linn County,
Kansas; from there to Portland, Ore­
gon, and from there to Tillamook,
1
X
don’t
ship your furs
where he fillowed contracting and
building for a number of years,
when he bought an orchard near
Santa Clara where he resided until
death.
He accepted Christ and was bap­
tized when 21 years of age, and had
lived a consistant Christian life, so
was ready when the summons came.
And Somebody Called Alaska "God's
Country!”
Bert Phillips, the sandy-haired
(what there is of it) Scot, who makes
semi-monthly trips to Tillamook has
not always sold canned string beans
and nickel cigars for Mason, Erhman
Co. Several years ago he was pros­
pector, soldier of fortune, and fur
trader in Northern Alaska, and his
experiences there have given him an
almost inexhaustable fund of memor­
ies, some mericfully saved from trag­
edy by his ready dry humor, 'lhe
other night in the lobby of the Tilla­
mook Hotel, he and another hard-
boiled old tinier who sold hardware
and things like that, were swapping
yarns and B. P„ reminscensed thus­
ly:
"My pal and I were once caught in
the marshes of the upper Youkon
country and forced to remain there
for three months. Our grub consisted
of cold pancakes, baked monthly; we
had no netting and the mosquitoes
bit us into two big red lumps night
and day. Day in and day out for
ninety days our chief sport was
scratching the bites: the air was
constantly moist and soggy and the
water stagnant; we had no clean
linen, because we didn't dare re­
move the B. V. D.’s fiom our backs
for fear the mosquitoes would find
some new and exposed vulnernable
section ripe for an attack; we swelt­
ered in the day and froze af'ei sun­
down; we ran out of tobacco and
matches; and Or Gawd, them pan­
cakes! One evening my pal, who was
a married man, drank the dregs uf
despondency. He sat huddled up in
Eskimo fashion for a while, and then
broke the silence with his mournful
tones: "When I get back, if I ever do
get back to civilization, I’m goin’ to
put one of my kids on each knee, and
have my frau sit in front of me and
when all is quiet and attentive, I
shall tell them the history of this
trip word by word, day for day, omit­
ting no painful and lurid detail.
And when I’ve finished—doggone
’em—if they don’t cry I’ll lick ’em!”
Only of course you ought to hear
Phillips himself tell this.
The Highest Prices Ever Known
That’s What You’» Get from “SHUBERT”
WE WANT ’EM NOW-AN¿> WïI.L FAY THE PRICE TO GET ’EM
>=ttXTRA AVERAGE
LARGE I [f»T ’■ -
p’tA
--ROE
■
AvtaAGE
: *» r’EDIL -1 .
; xTBA -
N? 2 *
N-ISMALL
r ■ r--A Gt | f YTR A TÇ AVERAGE AS TO S'ZE BQuALlTVj
ï N K
Fine, Dark
Usual Color
Coast
30.00 to 25.00 20.00 to 15.09 15 00 to 12.90 10.00 to 8.50 10.00 to 6.00
20.90 to 16.00 15.901o 12x0 lXOOta 8.50 8.00 to 6.50 8.00 to 5.00
15.00 »n 12 00 11.00 to 9.(0 8.00 to 7.00 6.00 to 5.90 6.00 to 4.00,
MUSKRAT
Spring
Winter
8.C0tG 7.00 6.50 (a 5.50 5.09 to 3.75
6-50 to 559 1 5/a to 4.90 3.50 to 2.75
3.57 to 2.75
2x0 to 1.75
s K.U N K.
Ñ91 MED !JM
I
N?l LARGE 1
N?lEXTRA LARGE
GXTfiA TO AVCRAuS EXTfiA ’ ' AVERAGE
Black
Short
Narrow
Broad
KOO to 12.00
19.09 to 9.00
8.90 to 7.90
5.00 to 4.09
11.00 to
8.5, to
6.5910
3.75 10
9.50
7.50
6.99
3.25
EZTFA TO A.E3AGE
9.25 to
7.25 to
5.59 to
3.00 to
8.25
6.75
5.00
2.50
N°l SHALL
EiTOA 10 AVERAGE
8 90 to
6.5.0 tn
4.75 to
2.25'o
300 to 2.00
2.50 to 1.50
GOOD IMPRIMÉ
A5 TO Size 6 QUALITY
7.00
5.50
4.25
1.75
7.00 to
6.00 to
4.50 to
2.25 to
3.50
3.00
2.00
125
Tncse extremely high prices for Oregon Furs are based on the well-
known “SHUBERT” liberal grading and are quoted for immediate ship­
ment. No. 3, No. 4 and otherwise inferior skins at highest market
value. Ship your Furs now—when we want ’em. You’ll get “more
money” and get it “quicker” too.
“SHUBERT” RETURNS WILL MAKE YOU HAPPY
SHIP TODAY—AND KEEP ’EM COMING FAST
SHIP
All
YOUR
FURS
DIRECT
TO
____
A.B.
SHUBERT'«
THE LARGEST HOUSE IN THE WORLD DEALING EXCLUSIVELY IN
AMERICAN
RAW FURS
25- 27 W. Austin Ave. Deptl898Chica<jOi U.S.A4
County Bond Sale.
On Thursday afternoon at 4:30 at ry
in
the court house, $112,000, 5'/i per
cent Tillamook County Road Bonds
were offered for sale, Mr. Robert
Morton, Ji„ representing Keeler
Bros., of Portland, was the success­
ful bidder. A list of the well known
bond houses that competed, and their
respective blds follow:
The Citizens Bank, of Portland,
J I I I I I i i i I i i I i i i i I i i I I I I I I I i I I i I I I I I I I i i I I Ml I I I I I I I I i i i i I i I i I I I I III I
Oregon, affered par and accrued in­ 6
terest a premium of $560, which is In
one hall of one per cent. Certified
check for $5600.
Morris Brothers, Portland, Oregon. K
We will, upon delivery of bonds to B
us, pay you par and accrued interest. K
This bid is unconditional, It being B
understood and agreed, however, B
!
that we are to receive the unqual­ B
♦
—
ified approving opinion of Messrs, B
Teal, Minor & Winfree, Attorneys,
I
Portland, Oregon, on all legal mat­ B
B
ters in connection with this Issue.
B
Certified check for $5600.
Lumbermans Trust Co., Portland, B
B
Oregon.
SOLD BY
We will pay par and accrued inter­ B
B
est to date of delivery. It is under­
B
stood that approving opinion of Teal,
TILLAMOOK. ORE.
Minor & Winfree to be furnished.
252S2525HS25E5HS25aS?S?525î52S252S25asa5a52SZSH52S2S2S25B52SE5Z5íLE?.‘TP ~
Certified Check for $6000.
Carstens & Earles, Inc., Portland,
Oregon.
We will pay for each thousand
dollar bond the sum of $1000 plus
accrued Interest to date of delivery
of bonds to us. We to be allowed the
sum of $900 for closing up proceed­
JACK HARPER,
ings and attorney’s examination of
BALL SHOP, TILLAMOOK.
record. Certified check for $5600.
E. L. Devereau & Co., Portland,
Take your Herses there and get
Oregon.
First Class Shoes for them.
We will upon delivery of said
I guarantee all work to be
bonds to us, pay the sum of $110,-
400 and accrued interest from date
satisfactory, if not, bring it back
of said bonds to date of delivery.
and I will make good without
Certified check for $5600.
extra charge.
The Ralph Schnelock Company, of
We
pay
top prices for Hides.
Portland, Oregon.
We beg to submit bld of par and
accrued interest from date of bonds
to date of delivery, together with a
premium of $1,050.00. Cashier’s
check for $5652.50.
[q
Keeler Brothers, Portland, Oregon.
We will
upon delivery of the
bonds to ub in Denver, Colorado, or
Portland, Oregon, at our option pay
you the sum of $1001 for each I
$1000 of bonds and accrued interest
up to date, the money to be furnish­
ed to the county as needed in con­
struction work, or earlier at our op­
tion. Cashier’s check for $5650.
The bonds were awarded to Keeler
Brothers, of Portland, Oregon af
their bid.
Stradivara
Phonograph
B
S
The Sweatest Tone Phono­
graph made. Plays all records
of their best without the
harsh metallic sound found
in so many.
KOCH & BENNETT.
HORSE
SHOEING.
§
Notice to Contractors.
------- o-------
Notice is hereby given that the
County Court of Tillamook County,
Oregon, will until 10 o’clock a m. of
March 5, 1920, receive bids for the
grading of a county road from a
point on the Wheeler county road
across the tidelands to a point on
the left bank of Nehalem river, op­
posite Nehalem City, according to
the plans and specifications on file
in the office of the County Clerk.
On the date mentioned above the
Court will publicly open and read
the blds but reserves the right to re­
ject any and all blds.
Homer Mason, Clerk.
First publication Feb. 12, 1920.
Last publication Feb. 26, 1920.
If we get the Americans in this
country Americanized, there will not
be much trouble about Americaniz­
ing the aliens.
I
BAYOCEAN SHEET METAL WORKS,
TILLAMOOK, ORE.
FIRST CLASS
C. H. JONES TRADING COMPANY
PLUMBING
BAY CITY, OREGON.
Todd
Bldg. NnT
TO S ’ Supplies,
SERV,CE
Fruit,
Groceries
and Campers
Dry Goods and Gasoline.
Phone Main 71
BAY CITY DRUG CO.
Entire New Stock of Candies.
New Syrups. Come and See.
Phone 32.