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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1921)
THE DUNNING SCHOOL OF MUSIC Too Late to Classify for teachers and pupils. The system of Improved Music Study. WANTED. 100 MOLE SKINS. <ILL pay 10 cents each. A. J. Wilks. Cany L. Dunning’s Want to rent big gear one man or one horse stump puller to drag logs with. Robert Watkins, Bayocean. Oregon. For Sale: Sewing machine motor with cables, and rheostat pedal c am píete- 14.50 Singer Agency. Aeolian and Okey records up to 2.00 now 75 cents while they last Tillamook muse Co. method seems to me most practical and I recommend it for the first inuidcal instruction of children or beginners. It ought to meet with favor and success wherever the beginning of a musical education tr contemplated. (Signed) Theo. Leschetlzky. Registration Days Saturday Sept. 3 and Monday September 5. Mrs. J. C. Holden 510 First St. Tel. 138W NOTICE 1931, at tea o'clock a. m at the front door of the County Court House in the City of Tillamook, County of Tillamook, and State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bid der for cash in hand, an the right, title and interest which the within defendants or any of them, had on the 23rd day of July, 1919, the date of the deed or mortgage herein fore closed, or since that date had In and to the above described real property, or any part thereof, to satisfy said execution, judgment, order and de cree. interest, costs, accrued interest and attorney's fees. Dated this 2nd day of August, 1921 JOHN ASCHIM Sheriff of Tillamook County, Oregon First publication Aug. 4th, 1921; last publication September 1st, 1921. The Annual matting of the Tilla NOTICE TO CREDITORS mook Co. Mutual Telephpne Co will be held in the Court House cn betur Notice Is hereby given that Judson day, Sept. 3 at 1: 30. P. M. H. Rosenberg has been duly appoint S. A. BÎIODHEAD, Secv. ed administrator of the Estate of W. 8—25—21 2t H. Hawkins, deceased, by the Coun ty Court of Tillamook County, Ore Article 6 in the Poultry depart gon. All persons holding claims of ment of the county fair should read: any kind against said estate are h*re “Entries, Pens, trios and Bingles.” by required to present the same to Instead or “trios and singles." A Pen the administrator at his place of consists of a male and four females. business in Tillamook City, Oregon, Through an oversight this was omit or at the office of Botts & Winslow, ted in the Fair catalogue. Attorneys for said estate, Tillamook, 8-18-3t Oregon, on or before six months from the date of the first publication of this notice, which first publication is the 4th day of August, 1921. Said claims must be duly verified as re quired by law. JUDSON H. ROSENBERG, Administrator of the Estate of W. H. Hawkins, Deceased □ AC Oregoa't Higher Institatiea of FOR SALE— ONE FULL BLOODED Berkshire sow, one year old, for brood sow. Telephone The Whitney Company 5 F 11. 9-1-21 TECHNOLOGY Eight School*; Seventy Department* OVER AN EARLY TRAIL TO TILLAMOOK CO. FALL TERM OPENS SEPT. 19, 1921 For inlormatioo write to the *e*ietrer Oregon Agricultural College In 1857, Daniel Dinsmoor, of Sil- verton, Oregon, S. D. Snowden, Jo Lyle and a man named Harvard, for- med a party who came over the trail to Tillamook county, whbre Snowden, who was a surveyor, had Oil as Leprosy Cure. a contract from the government to successful hns Dr. P. Hooper survey in this county. Before start been In the Fiji islands In the treat- ing for'the coast, however, the put ¡.y ment of leprosy with chaulmoogra oil, attempted to cross the Yamhill liv that he reports to the Journal of Trop er, at where Sheridian now Btands, ical Medicine and Hygiene (London) in a small scow, with an overhead that In the years 1918 and 1919 23 pa rope. When amid stream. through Dinsmoor tients were discharged on parole, of Harvard’s akwardness, whom one returned, and he now has tell out of the boat, but by still hang six mors apparently cured and ready ing on to the rope, managed to pull himself to shore, through the Ice- for discharge. Doctor Hooper believes that all cold water. The trail to Tillamook was'a dev cases of skin leprosy and some of the ious one, and was first made by the nodular form can be cured by Intra Indtr.ns, and it took the party three WHAT MALE ATTIRE DOES muscular Injections of chaulmoogra days to get over to Tillamook bay. At oil, cure or failure depending largely night, tliev -'.amped in the mountains FOR SOME MODERN WOMEN A woman dressed in male attire upon how early the treatment begins. under the big trees, in the snow, while the rain fell In torrents, and came into a store the other day, and cougars made the hours of darkness among other purchases, bought a All He Could See. bunch of not too strong cigars. As A sharp-tongued, red-fneed lawyer doubly dismal by their cries. On the way over the party cafnped she was about to leave she said: was cross-examining a witness as to "Oh,yes; I want twdor three box his sobriety. "You were seen." he he- at Fort Yamhill, on the Siletz Indian es of matches. How am I ever going reservation, and were confronted at gan, "entering the Spread Eagle as to smoke without matches?” soon as the doors were open or soon the gate of the stockade around the "Do you really smoke, enquired block house by a soldier in the uni afterward?” the grinning salesman. “Yes,” replied the witness, “but not form of Uncle Sam. From Lieutenant "Surely," replied the woman, Phillip H. Sheridian, afterward the to drink.” “Haven’t I just as much right to famous General Sheridan of civil “Wh8c object had you in view then?” I war fame, they received a pass thru smoke as my old man ? I used to chew the resevation. Dinsmoor described gum something fierce, but I got fac Notice of Sheriff’s Sale Sheridian as a small man, with an ial paralysis, and had to quit. Now old army blouse, who smoked a that I wear man’s clothing, I seem to In the Circuit Court of th» State of strong black briar pipe, and who crave tobacco. I guess it goes with Oregon for the County ef Tillamook laughed heartily when he heard of the attire. At any rate, I do enjoy rr.y Snowden's intention to do surveying cigar, and I have mussed my new Security Savings and Trust Com over "in the Tillamook wilderness.” trousers all up by striking matches pany, A Corporation, Plaintiff where the men do. But I should Dinsmoor talked quite a bit with the worry. I’ll get some new ones when vs future great general, and Sheridan W. W. Ridehalgh and Zoe C. Rlde- these get to looking bad.” evinced much interest in deer hunt halgh, his wife, W’. T. Ridehalgh, When the woman tourist had de ing, and exhibited an old army yager parted, the clerk quit grinning. "Say and Alana Ridehalgh, his wife, which he said was “bad medicine" he said, addressing another of his and Ridehalgh & Co. Inc., a Cor for deer. sex: “Ain't this old world of our's poration, Defendants. The party proceeded on the trail By virtue of an execution, judg the next day, and their progress going some?" And the other clerk answered in ment, order, decree and order of sale necessarily, was slow. Their horses issued out of the above entitled were burdened with a number of the affirmative, and gazed moodily Court in-the above entitled causé, to fruit trees whlih were sent from at an empty cigarette case. me directed and dated the 1st day of Salem to Robert Hague, a son-in-law August, 1921, upon a judgment and of Uncle Dan Waldo, of the Waldo REVEAL their army training decree rendered and entered In said Hills in Marion — county. ------- Mr. Dins- Court on the 19tli day of October, ' moor related to the writer that those Ex-8ervlct Mtn Instinctively Line Up 1920, in favor of Security Savings « trees were the first ever planted in When a Crowd It Walting to Trust Company plaintiff, and against Tillamook county, and that they Bo Served. W. W. Ridehalgh and Zoe C Ride grew and bore fine apples, halgh, his wife, W. T. Ridehalgh The party under Snowden sur Army training still manifests Itself and Alana Ridehalgh, his wife, and veyed the western part of thP county Ridehalgh & Co. Inc., a Corporation. ’ from the mouth of the NehaK-n In civilian life, and former soldiers defendants, for the sum of Fifteen southward to Netarts bay, including automatically fall into line when they must wait to be served. In the army Hundred and NÓ-100 (81500.00) the present fine Tillamook valley. Dollars with interest at Eight (8 per ‘ Mr. Dinsmoor, the narrator of the the men spent n great deal of their cent) per cent per annum from the ! above story, died some years ago at time waiting In line for mess, drawing 18th day of February, 1919, and the ' his home in the Waldo Hills, and stuff from the supply sergeant and a further sum of Seventy-five and No- ‘ was well along In years, He wan a dozen other purposes. The old army training revealed It 100 (»75.00) Dollars, Attorney's great hunter, and at an advanced Fees, and the further sum of Fifteen 1 age, could knock a deer over with self strongly during the recent hot and 20-100 (815.20) Dollars, costs his Winchester in short order. >|>ell at the Brooklyn Central Y. M. and the costs of and upon this writ, I The old pioneer said that the lilla <’. A., when apparently most of the commanding me to make sale of the mook Indians used to hang ab >ut KUSH) niembera «might to take advan following described property to-wit. •-amp, and beg tobacco, which they tage of the swimming pool. Crowds The Northwest Quarter of the prized highly. They pci slated in call of young men stormed the locker Northwest Quarter (NW 1-4 of NW ing him the “hyas tyee” of the parly rooms each evening. The ex-service 1-4) of Section Twenty-one (21), because bo could talk “Jtugon* men set the example by lining up and Township One (1) North, Rang-- They also begged the tin cans ax fart taking their turns to reach the gate. Ten (10) West of Willamette MerfU nx they wore emptied by the con» As each elevator disembarked its loud lan; also a tract of ltnd described a? nutwary, ami strutted about high*'’ Pie ¿ormer soldiers automatically went beginning at a point on ordinary pleased. to the rear. Younger men who had high tide and water line One him 1 not bad this training and sought to died Thirty-five (135) links South COUNTY BILLS ALL0WEL e<lgr In fur Up the line were promptly and Three Hundred Sixty-seven 1 pulled out and sent to their station. (Continue 1 from Page. 3) (367) links East of the meander No ex-servl<-«f man who has xtmwl In corner between Sections Twenty Remington Typewriter Co, .. .9.00 line t<- draw a pair of socks or get a (20) and Twenty-one (21), Town- ! 1 Kathleen Mills, salary ... 125.00 mess kit full of "slum” will permit ship One (1) North, Range Ten ■P. W. Barrett. Printing .... .. 29.25 anyone to get abend of him. /(10) West of Willamette Meridian: I A. H. Gaylord, Insurance .. . . 36.00 and running thinoe South Slxty-five Varying Strength of Sunllght. degree«*« (65 degrees) East on ordin-' i T. C. Percy, repairs ............. .. .2.00 Tin i, i« practically im sudi llillig ary high water line Two nnd Ninety V. M. Stewart, County Poor .. 30.00 -eight hundredths (2.98) chains, H. V. Ailey, salary A Ex. .. .175.40 ss overflgbtJug. wrili-s J. II. Kurlan- thence North Nineteen and 15-100 . H. M Farmer, salary A Ex. .186.60 der, in üexi-rilijig for Ute General Sci (19.15) chains; thence West Two Mrs. Frank Merrick................. .146.05 ence Qtiurterly a «erte« of testa müde hy the litri.Ilm.' servier department «f and 70-100 (2.70) chains; thenc 1 ; Chas. F. Prnkow ................... .157.66 the Edison lump work«. He Bilds: 'Tn- South Seventeen and 89-100 (1?.8*> chains to the place of beginning, con P W. Ba.rett ......................... ......... 35 vestfgatlon of platea wfilcli ar. aulii lo 2Ä5 00 I m - werllehted will usmllly sbovi limi. taining five (5) acres, lees right of i Tills mock General Hospital way conveyed to the Portland Rail Bunsen A Pcterso-i Supplier -.24.90 If anything. tliey are «laringi) umler- way A Navigation Co., all in the I Benson A Peterson supplies . . 22.95 lightctl.” These test* »hownl ttiat smillght In county of Tillamook, and State of F J. Klinehan ....’. ........... ...9.35 sa o|s*ii fepi mrsMurrs H.issi foot can flre<on. t Mrs. Cora E. DeFord............. . .35.00 Now, Therefore, by virtue of Baid |.H. B. Johnson, Election .... ,..3.00 dir power (whlrh meati« thnt It five« the illsmlnatlon tluit would la- tri ven execution. Judgment, order, deer»« and order of sale, and in compliance Pau) Vanderpool, county poor ..19.00 I hy 8,<««> <-andb*s a foot disi not), with the commands of said writ. I ' J. F. Jones,, Dtet. Sealer .... ...9.53 licht will on the 3rd day of September, I , A. W. Ki Iburg, county poor . . .10.70 CORVALLIS VICTORIES OF PEACE EQUAL THOSE OF WAR Whether the task is the construction of a colossal harbor improvement project, or the administration of a newly acquired insular poaaeaaion, the Department of War is always prepared to bring to the task a high degree of skill and master ful judgment. How “peace hath her victories no less renowned than war" for the military department of the nation is interestingly described and illustrated in one of an instructive series of articles on Our Govern ment now being distributed exclusively by this Institution. We shall be pleased to see that you receive the com plete series, if you will send as your name and address. • Tillamook County Bank GOLDEN ROD DAIRY * t Quality Dairy Products *----- Milk, Cieam, Cottage Cheese Erwin Harrison Both Phones Nelson A Co. County poor .... 17.40 T. E. Epplett, court house ....50.00 Cloverdale Mer. Co. supplies ....9.55 G. B. Lamb^ Expenses ............... 14.12 G. B. Lamb' salary ....................150.00 Marian Hare, salary .................... 95.00 G. B. Lamb, expenses.................. 12.50 T. E. Epplett, salary.................. 90.00 Tillamook Mer. Co. supplies ....22.24 W. R. Gould ................................149.2’7 W. H. Hardt................................... 114.77 Joe Magarrell ............................. t. 78.98 Oscar Hanenkratt ........................ 49.80 Bert Smith. ..................................... 71.82 R. C. Magarrell .............................4.25 Homer Mason, salary ................182.41 Homer Mason ................................. 32.90 C. A. Johnson, salary................ 155.00 Myrtle Wallin, salary ............... lot).00 1 H. L. Gilham. salary ................ 268.46 r F. S. Yorks Lumber Co............... 122.80 j Crystal Laundry Co., Laundry .. 17.25 ! Oscar Hanankrat ............................ 7 .47 J. L. Burke, Sheriffs office .... 15.00 Burroughs Adding Machine Co. 20.80 Glass & Prudhomn^ Co. supplies 5.68 Tillamook Herald, printing ....15.62 W. S. Coates. Surveyor................ 48.00 W. E. Anderson, Surveyor ....26.25 A. H. Gulstrom, surveyor.............18.75 Walter Stark, surveyor ................ 1.87 Vern Larson, surveyor ................ 17.00 Road Builders Equip. Co................ 1.63 Tillamook Co. Mutual Tel. Co. ..10.00 C. A. Steele surveyor .................... 3.20 Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co....................47.30 Tillamook City Water Comm. ..25.00 Coast Power Co................................ 49.92 H. S. Brimhail, supplies ............10.45 Nelson & Co. county poor........... 29.88 Albion Mfg. Co. supplies ............42.50 Frederick Post Co. supplies . ..03.69 Reeher Furniture Co. supplies ..6.30 Conover & Conover county poor 44.30 Ade Lane............................................. 19.95 Irvin Hubbard .................................43.14 Irvin Hubbard ................................. 43.14 *Tes Wright ..................................... 9.57 Lowell Mathews .............................1,7.<)7 Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co....................... 8.00 Mrs. F. J. Metzke ........................ 30.00 Preston Williams ........................ 61.50 W. S. Coates aurvazox.................... 3.56 L. S. Hushbeck, eo-iity poor ..131.40 Howard Owens 1 ep tiro ................ 3 99 Tillamook Garage supplies ....167.46 Snnset Garage, supplies ............36.65 Ned Myers ...................................... 1.60 R. S. Hull ......................................... 14 36 Southern Pacific Co.........................3.43 R. T. Boals, county poor ............ 25.00 T. H. Goyne, salary.................... 128.25 Mutual University of Oregon CONTAINS: The Graduate School. The College of Literature. Science and the Arts. The School of Journalism. The School of Architecture The School of Law. and Allied Arts. The School of Medicine The School of Business The School of Music. Administration. The School of Physical Education. The School of Education. , The School of Sociology. The Extension Division. Fall Term Opens September 26 A histi standard of culture! and oroiaaaional echolarakip han become one of the outstanding marks of the State Universitr. For a eataloyuo. folders on the serious schools, or for any information, write THE REGISTRAR. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Eu»ene Ore PIONEER EMPLOYMENT COMPANY 14 North Second Street Portland — Oregon Furnish dafry and farm help— hay and harvest hands— mill yard and camp help. W rite for out magazine “Employment Service . Phone Broadway 227* I A street between bqlldipgs measures 3.000-foot candles. Shadow in a atreet between buildings measures 300; under a tree in the open, 500. Ths light on an office desk next to a south window has au intensity of 110-foot candles; one ten feet in, 70, and one 18 feet in, 50. At Inside benches be tween two sxpoau.-e* euly 20. Whan a Bushel Isn’t. “Thirty-two quarts make one busn- el,” recites Young America glibly and positively. But the housewife who has purchased family supplies for years is not at all sure that this Is not one of the many rules that have exceptions. Specialists of the bureau of markets. United States Department of Agriculture, say that the heaped bushel varies with the price of the product and the weight bushel varies widely in different states. A bushel of sweet potatoes Is 46 pounds in the Dakotas and 60 pounds In Maryland. A bushel of tomatoes is 45 pounds In Oklahoma and 60 pounds In Virginia. A bushel of unshelled green peas is 28 pounds In Massachusetts and M pounds In Pennsylvania. Baes Eaten for Revenge. Bees are usually employed as manu facturers of houey, which is every where considered a delicious food, but there are places where the bees them selves serve as a food. The negroes of Guiana, when stung by a bee, proceed to catch as many as they can and In revenge eat them. It would be Interesting to know what happens as an effect of the sting thus taken internally. In Ceylon the natives hold a torch under the bee swarm hanging to a tree, catch them as they drop, then carry them home, boll them and eat them.—Popular Science Monthly. SAYS WAR HELPED RELIGION Big Fight Made Soldiers Better Men, la Aaeertlon Made by Man Who , Knows Them, The American soldier came out of the war with more religion than he went In, according to Rev. Henry Rus sel! Talbot, canon of the National cathedral at Washington, who arises to defend the doughboy from the libel that the "war ruined him.” “He Is a better man for having been tn the army," asserts the canon, refer- rln; to tl>e veteran, the Stars and Stripes states. Canon Talbot was senior chaplain of the First division of the American ex peditionary forces. In a communica tion to national headquarters of the American Legion at Indianapolis he admits the American, as he saw him In France, was ‘‘uncommonly timid In the exercise of his religion. He was frightened at Ills own religious shadow or he might have been grossly lgnor- ant of the content and practice of hit religion." But us the First division’s senior chaplain, the canon was In charge of all the private belongings of the 1,800 Americans killed In the ten days' fight ing In the Argonne, and in nine out of every ten of the men’s kits found a crucifix, scapular, prayerbook or testa ment. “And in those days," Canon Talbot writes, “the Flisl division was not carrying unythlng it did not deem essential.’ “There was a kind of collectivism which outruns the ordinary standard* Mt honesty," declares the canon, "but underneath there was Implicit, if not explicit, reverence for the Son of Man.” DOGS GUARD SICILIAN HOMES “Italian Bulldogs,” as Th.y Havs Bsan Nicknamed, Obviate Need for Locks on Doors. In Sicily the Inhabitants have trulned dogs to protect their homes against brigands and other lawless characters. These Sicilians on leaving their homes seldom bother to lock doors or win dows. They have trained their dogs so well that the animals can take cars of the most cunning of criminate. »When a thief enters one of these homes tffe dog does not attack him. He receives him in silence, even wagging his tull sometimes in apparent friend liness. But no matter where the thief may go, the dog follows, never liming tight of hits for a moment. He follows the thief from room to room, The thief may load himself up with all the loot he likes, but the dog views his thiev ing with Indifference. ■ It Is not until the thief attempts to leave the place that the'dog displays any real Interest In him. He then l*e- comes remarkably active, lie Jumps In front of the culprit, barring Ids way and defying him to attempt to leave. If the thief makes a break for the door or window the dog Is upon him. As a rule Ike animal springs fur the throat, but wherever he sinks his teeth nothing short of death can make him release tils hold. If the Intruder attempts to draw a weapon the <log Is upon him like n tl.ish of lightning These dogs have been nicknamed Italian bulldogs, hut they are of a mongrel breed with Just a trace of the genuine bulldog tn their hliaxl. They more closely renpfnbl* wolfhounds.—North Clinton H**r »»!<!. I ! Unearth Home of Cave Mtn. On«, of the iih M « of inni»> of relict of prrhhtortr num in Austria A u * î »1 m hm* hw*n <llm,ov#,r**<l hi ft ha» hern • av iiriir iH-iir .Mlxnltx M'.xnltx Tl»v known HH ' Dragon's lOnunii'n D«vi. I »«fi, ’ U hrlflM Pinivsl- fi 'or »HiorfiioiK deposit h of f»h<»«filmte, In » hie mve I. imn » yiiid« from the ofienlng. <-vl<teiwe* of liuinmi iMfiifMi- were miCHvefUMl. lent I Illi titles of qihfrfz Implement a Utensil« Mini hiiniiin I'«fit’s Hin iikcn >»> 1 I