TILLAMOOK ^iiaiwi¡aiia(iiiiia(iiiiia(ñiriaf¡aiigira[ialioiraiisníiffiIrai¡g!PiWra'P'ra'iniñiGaíia.'ñir5:^rra^na^riorisfS!P The Seven-Passenger BîG-SIX i The Seven-Passenger BIG-SIX A car of 126-inch wheelbase, with 60-horsepower Studebaker-designed and Studebaker-built demountable head motor with two range car­ buretor, shock absorbers, artistic straight side slanting windshield with ventilator base and integral corner lights, jeweled eight day clock, ton­ neau lights with extension cord, Gypsy top with rectangular plate glass window in rear, 33 x 4' inch cord tires, weight 3,125 pounds. upon her sex to notice It. |Jg Scott dropped Diana at her ho« with a grim “Think ft over, cid <1. «hat you heard this afternoon. And p tana «lid. Sbe staved off her moth rationings about the aft- pr’s eager ernoon by pleading a headache. Nhe would tell about it In the , and couldn't she please lie •- excused -- from dinner? By CONSTANCE SCUDDER But long before Mrs. Wilsons bout for arising, a wraith of a I »ana. pale ttS |,er namesake, let herself out of .Copyright. 1S1». by th« McClur« New» tlie house unobserved, mailed u * paper Syndicate ) ter to the senator at the corner box Diana Wilson wasn't born with n and then, for the time In her life, t.— first - silver spoon In her mouth. Nothing boarded a public conveyunce unac- so ordinary ever happened to Diana. eompanled am! walked into tbe can- Every one has silver spoons nowadays teen two hours before her regular Diana's had been gold, with a pint Diana shift. Help was short, (num monogram. hustled Into her apron. if it ),:ld been good *■''»> llt ,h'' "Two: sunnysfde up. please.” The time to Incrust baby spoons with dlu came from a red-haired youth order nionds. Mrs. Wlls.u. would have seen D. The voice was familiar, In O. to It that It had them, too, In suffl- glanced up and smiled. Tlie Diana cient number and of the first water. lieutenant to whom It belonged Mrs. J. Henshaw Wilson had more young frequent visitor at the canteen, money than brains; but to do the lady was a had gotten to be very good They Justice we nntst suggest the thought friends, indeed. that even Solomon would have been * • • • • » • hard put to ft, hnd his wisdom been Intervening stars stand for These forced to stand tlie same comparison. hours of that day, during which the At any rate she possessed gray mat­ beat laid plana of Mra. J. Henahaw ter In sufficient quantity to enable her to have her own way about things, ns Wilson “gauged" very much aglee in­ deed a mle. This story has to do with one Diana was taken on the rebound. great exception, And, of course, like Lieutenant Granger, a stripling M. I’-. everything else In our national and private life that Is out of whack jusi knew nothing of Mrs. Henshaw or her plans. He pleaded well his cause. now, It can be traced directly to the At eleven o’clock Mrs. Wilson late war. her daughter’s absence Diana had been an obedient child covered the eanteen. A voice always. She hud done Just the proper phoned thing at the proper time and In the formed her that Miss Wilson had one Was some manner in which she was bidden to half tin hour before. home? Mrs. Wilson In bringing her do It. had In her second yer “out" the society qnlred, for that Indy hnd ascer- world threw Into rhe discard the mad rained that no car hnd been ordered pursuit of pleasure and turned fever­ out of the family garage that morn- ishly to the rolling of bandages, the fng. “Why, 1 don’t know, I'm sure,” an­ frying of "ham and," and personal su­ pervision of the morals of our army swered tlie voice, "Miss Wilson went and navy. Diana chose the canteen out accompanied by Lieutenant Gran­ ger." as her medium of serving. Worried by Dinnn’s unwonted as­ Mrs. Wilson did not force Diana to give up the canteen idea, for two rea­ sumption of independence. Mrs. \\ 11- sons. First, some of “our very best son waited—and waited. Diana Wil­ people” were going Into It. Second, son never returned, but at five o'clock she was very busy just nt that time In the afternoon a young woman who planning for the prelude to the great much resembled the one who had event in iter daughter’s life. Mrs. Wil­ stolen out of the Wilson house In the son had married for money. It had morning returned, very much pinker been a high step up the social ladder of cheek than her mythological name­ for her. She meant to use tlie ad­ sake. And the only consolation Mrs. vantage she had gained to boost her Henshaw Wilson has been able offspring yet one rung higher. Senator Brendon was the star to salvage out of the wreck Is the ameli­ Harding-Scott which Mrs. Wilson had hitched her orating fact that Mrs. Mrs. wagon, nnd Dlnnn’s beauty find takes a proprietary Interest In wealth constituted the motive power Laurence e Granger. For when Diana which were to land her In the posi­ told her mother the overwhelming news 1 of her sudden marriage to a tion coveted for her by her mother. Just ns Mrs. Wilson's absorption In man who was to sail overseas that her plans blinded her to the risks In very n'ght, and whom Mrs. Wilson seen or even heard of. It 1 allowing Diana to become Interested had never In canteen work, so Diana's Interest was not In the mother's power to retaliatory measure employed I In the work kept her from realizing take the that the engagement was being traditionally by irate parents since the world began and cast the disobed­ forced upon her. ient daughter out into the cold, cold Senator Brendon was bachelor, a large, stupid man who world. Because, you see, J. Henshaw, got by on his family name and a before he died, had had the wise pompous manner. He had money— prescience to leave the greater part of but not enough, and was a gallant ad­ hfs plethoric fortune to Diana. Doctor Granger Is back now, and mirer of the "weaker sex.” For him, competent women, women who dis­ Mrs. J. Henshaw Is living alone on a played executive ability outside their liberal Income and the thoughts of own homes, did not exist, Mrs. Wil­ what might have been. son assured him that Diana had no such talents. JUST HOW THEY ORIGINATED To Diana the honor and glory of being a senator's wife made a strong Enterprising Chicago Newspaper Man appeal. But It was all an indefinite Has Traced Some Common Cus­ thing—something that couldn't come toms to Their Source. to pass until the horrible war was over. Meanwhile there were innumer­ The common custom of shaking able “ham nnds” to be prepared for hands. according to an encyclopedia insatiable young American appetites. In which we have every confidence, Diana, bustling around in immaculate was introdneed by the Phoenicians, apron and cap. was thoroughly happy. who signified their agreement to a The senator rarely appeared in per­ bargain by clasping hands. son ; he was too busy In Washington. The common custom of offering His infrequent visits left Diana quite one's left arm to a lady originated In overwhelmed with flattery and gal­ days when one was required to keep one's right hand on the hilt of a sword. lantry. Which reminds u»— It did occur to the prospective The common custom of treating bride to wonder a little that the wom­ en with whom she was working daily dates from the days when a drink of were not more profuse in their con­ whisky cost a dime, and continued gratulations upon the announcement more or less generally for many years. The common custom of making a of the engagement; but Diana pos- | no exaggerated Idea of her own touch was initiated by a man who l;r- lance—and of course everybody went on the rocks in the stone nge, w: --'eeped through and through with and It has been practiced ever since. The common custom of winking the one Idea. Mrs. lb rd'ng-Seott, who belonged In originated when the serpent began the first numeral column of New- to chat with Eve while Adam was do­ York's four hundred, was working ing the chores, and it still enjoys a alongside Diana In the canteen one considerable vogue at beaches and on day. She watched the girl for a while excursion boats. The common custom of swearing and then spoke. In tier usual abrupt way, “Child, are you at all interested was invented when the first hammer hit the first thumb, and it has been un­ in suffrage?" "Why. I never thought much nbout dergoing constant Improvement ever since. IL" answered Diana abstractedly. Tl>e common custom of swearing- “Would you like to come with me off began the first of January of some to a meeting this afternoon?” An invitation from Mrs. Bardlng- year, but it was never really enforced Scott was similar to that of a queen. until the first of July, 1910. The common custom of going One did not decline. When Diana an­ nounced to her maternal parent at away on a vacation was inflicted upon luncheon that Mrs. Bardlng-Scott humanity to make mankind appreci­ would call for her that afternoon— ate a Job and a bathtub with plenty they were to nttend a meeting in com­ of hot water on tap.—Chicago Atnerl- pany—Mrs. Wilson was so overjoyed can. that she quite forgot to ask what the The Bulgarian Wife, meeting was about. The wife of a Bulgarian rarely goes But at that meeting the goose of Mrs. Wilson’s plans was cooked a out without her husband, does not re­ beautiful brown. For two hours Diana ceive callers in her husband's absence, sat with burning cheeks and listened seldom appears In a restaurant, a cafe to as thorough a scarifying of Senator or a place of public amusement, and Brendon as the vocabnla^es of the never goes to any such place unless five Infuriated women who addressed her husband accompanies her. the assembly could produce. For Sen ator Brendon had been Indiscreet Dog Barbera. enough to express publicly his real In Paris there are a great number of reason that he had hitherto camou­ “dog” barbers. Some of the shaved flaged tinder a pretended reverence for animals are fantastically shorn, leav­ •fate's rights. He did not believe, It ing rings of hair adorning their bodies, appeared at last, that women had suf­ alternating with denuded strips. ficient Intelligence! Mrs. Harding Scott made no com Pens Lost by Million«. meat on the way home, but Diana Over 4,000,1X10 peus are destroyed was too furious at her finance’s slur daily. Best Laid Pians I i 1C "’J Willi M L 1 — The Five-Passenger SPECIAL-SIX. A car 119-inch wheelbase; with 50-horsepower Studebaker-designed and Studebaker-built demountable-head motor; improved carburetor with ’'hot-spot”intake manifold; cowl lights at corners of windshield;out­ side and inside door handles; tonneau light with extension cords; 32 x 4 inch cord tires. PRICES ON APPLICATION. See GEO. WILLIAMS, Dealer 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 It. 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-, reefing 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. 1 his 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 weekB, 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 A- Handley, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Address: Tillamook, Oregon. I NOTICE The Tillamook Transfer Co. is now under the sole management of J. P Maginnis. We are equipped to handle Brayage of any Kind, anywhere ipr * w iiii n ■ ■ a « a a ■ « a a a a a a For 'Wood, Coal or Drayage îtillamook transfer co *4 ■> « ■ « a ■ .* • b » a « « w B n B « p a B LIBERTY TEMPLE “We Deliver the Goods. HORSE SHOEING JACK HARPER, BALL SHOP, TILLAMOOK. Take your Horses there and get First Class Shoes lor them. I guarantee all work to be satisfactory, if not, bring it back and 1 will make good without extra charge. We pay top prices for Hides. Administrator's Notice to Creditors. BAYOGEAN SHEET METAL WORKS, f TILLAMOOK, ORE. ¿FIRST CLASS PLUMBING Todd Bldg. NHT To | Ì •------ o------- 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. Notice of Proposed Vacation of Stree* SERVKE HELL PUO.NE. MAIN J RHHnns2s2SM2HS;a^^ MUTV AL PHONE Th ltd East 1 Sev Claude Thayer. Estelle Thayer, Talmage Claussen A- Mannix Attorneys for Petitioners. Tillamook Head­ light, Wertly deg«™- Oregon Farmer, d* o n r* §2./5 25E5EKSa5H5E5¿5?-5E5E5a5E5E5H5E52Fd52SZ5E5E5E5E5E5E5H5E5E525E5E52S¿5¿ ‘7?¿ Stradivara Phonograph The Sweatest Tone Phono graph made. Plays all records of their best without the harsh metallic sound found in so many 'l 111 11 ■ 111111 b « 11 1111111111 p I S SOLD BY KOCH & BENNET! TILLAMOOK, ORE. 5E5HSa5ES2SESE52SaS2SE5E5B5ESESESasa5ES2SaS2525E5ESE525E52SHSaS252Sa5E52 CLOUGH’S CARBOLIC COMPOUND For disenfecting where Contagious or infectious diseases are prevailing. CARBOLIC COMPOUND is a power­ ful Germicidal mixture and by its '.use will improve general stable conditions. C. I. CLOUGH CO RELIABLE DRUGGISTS. HSÎSHSa5ÏSÎSÏSÏSÎ5?5ESH5a5E5aSEF252SESE52S25ESa5H52SE525E5ES2S2SZSaSES2S # < County Dairy Herd Inspector Subscribe for the Tillamook Headlight, the leading County Newspaper $2.00 per year, NEXT TO POST OFFICE. 252SH5E525E5ESESE5E5ESHSa5E5ê5S5E525ESE5E52SE5E5E5E5E5252S252SESE5E5ESPS • VETERINARIAN, Block 33. And the said petition Is now pend­ ing. and will, at a meeting of the Common Council of Tillamook City. Oregon, to be held on Monday, the 5th day of April, 1920. be taken up tor hearing and disposition. All per- <>ns concerned are notified to govern thenuselves accordingly. COAST POWER CO 0 Dr. E. L. Glaisyer, Call at our Store Both Stationary and Swinging Wringers, V Notice is hereby given that Claud Thayer and Estelle Thayer have fil- ed with the City Recorder of Tilla- niook City, Oregon, their petition praying for the vacation of the fol- lowing described tract of land in- ^'í®:5ÍSÍSHSÍÍiíSÍSZS2SÍS2Sa55i'252S25Zj¿5í5Z5?j,¿52S2Sí52s252525252se52sl> eluded within the present dedicated Ln L" street, to-wlt: Beginning at the northeast corner of Lot 3 in block 33. of Thayer's Fifth addition to Tillamook City, Oregon, and running theuce west 50 to the southeast corner of lot ■’ lid block 3 kasl line of in a s< direi 'Ct lit WASHING IS A PLEASURE When you use a “Thor Electric Washer City Vulcanizing and Tire Shop. Expert Tire Service. Vulcanizing and Retreading. AU Work Guaranteed. Let Me Keep You Out of Trouble. I carry a Stock ol Goodrich Tires, Tubes and Tire Accessories. Your Patronage Solicited. J. C. HOLDEN, 2nd STREET, OPPOSITE 0.P, TILLAMOOK. as2S25ÎSÎS2S2s^52szs252S252S2S2S252St!SaS25aSESHSESZSESa5asî!S2SZ5Z52S252S