Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, September 07, 1923, Page 2, Image 2

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT
TILLAMOOK COUNTY
SEPTEMBER 11-12-13-14, 1923
I
Tuesday, September 11
10. A. M. Judging Live Stock
11 A. M. Cortello’s Flying Circus
7 P. M. Cortello’s Flying Circus
7:30 P. M. Free Moving Pictures
10:00 A. M.
Boys and Girls stock judging
10 A.
11 A.
1 P.
1:30
7:00
7:30
M. Live Stock Judging
M. Cortello’s Flying Circus
M. Calf Club Judging
P. M. Racing
P. M. Cortello’s Flying Circus.
P. M. Free Moving Pictures.
10:30 A. M. Baseball Game (Whitney Lum
contest.
ber Co. vs. Nehalem)
11 A. M. Cortello’s Flying Circus
1:00 P. M. Racing
Wednesdy, September 12
Racing Program for Sep 12,13,14
Friday, September 14
Thursday, September 13
2:00 P. M. Canning Demonstration (Girls
Club Work)
2:30 P. M. Boys and Girls Calf Club show
ing contest.
7:00 P. M. Cortello’s Flying Circus
7:30 P. M. Free Moving Pictures
11 A. M. Cortello’s Flying Circus
1:00
3:00
3:30
7:00
P. M. Races
P. M. Livestock Parade
P. M. Calf Club Parade
P. M. Address by J. D. Mickle, far­
mer Dairy & Food Commissioner.
7:30 P. M. Sham Battle Demonstration
by Co. K., Real shells and lots of
noise.
2 races of three heats $25,1st; $15 2nd $80
1 Shetland Pony Race, ...................... $ 5.00
1 hour marathon, free for all, greatest no.
of laps (This race for one day only
one horse race to be eliminated.)
First $25; 2nd, $15; 3rd $10. $50.00
Egg Race, free for all, 1st $3; 2nd, $2, 3rd
$1.00 ....................... . .................. $ 6.00
3-legged race, school children up to 8th
grade, race for each grade $1 $ 8.00
Sack Race free for all $3, 1st; $2, 2nd; $1,
3rd ........................................................
1-4 mile race, free for all...................$ 5.00
100 yd. dash, for children up to 9th grade $1
oooon
Music Every Afternoon and Evening
by McGhee's Orchestra
COUNTY NEWS IN BRIEF
BRIGHTON
Miss McVnaid and Miss Alice Se­
well, who have been occupying the
Bert cottage, returned to Portland
this morning after a months vacation.
Miss Sewell is an artist anti has a
studio in Portland.
G. J. Stewart and son. Garland, who
cranked up the old Ford and started
out two months ago to find a new and
better home, have returned to Bright­
on and are fully satisfied to settle
down right here. They were all
through the middle west, stopped in
Colorado and then went on to Okla­
homa and tried it there. Some one
asked Garland if he harvested any
and he said, “No indeed, it was all we
could do to get our breath and stay in
the shade.” So they started back to
work in the Brighton mill.
Mrs. Pau! Malberg has been enter­
taining her two sisters from South
Bend. Mrs A. Fundara and .Mrs. A.
Loind grist.
Mr. and Mrs. Fleet Fox and family,
who have been visiting relatives here
for three weeks, have returned home.
They also took a nice lot of canned
salmon along. Mr. Fox is a butcher
for the United Meat company and had
his hand badly cut so he had a good
long vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Lee of Portland
visited the week end with Mr. and
•Mrs. P. Burgess. They took Max­
ine and Howard, who have spent the
summer here with their grandparents,
back to start in school.
Harold Baker from Rockwood left
for home Labor day after a two week
vacation with his grandparents here.
♦ ♦ ♦
NEHALEM
Mrs. Charles Ewan left Sunday
morning for Fargo, South Dakota,
where she will visit relatives during
the next two months.
Mrs. Millie Smith went to Port­
land Sunday morning to visit a sis­
ter. Her stay will be indefinite.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Richardson of
Portland are guests of Charles
Kuntz and family this week.
W. M Macphail, president of the
Warren Construction Company, was
in town over Sunday.
Thomas Murphy and wife, John
Welch and wife, and Herman War­
ner and wife, ail of Portland are
visiting the families of W'illiam
Norris and J. W. Thompson
Mrs. Preschoff and Mrs. Steer, of
Oregor City, Mr., and Mrs. Dunn
I.
and Mrs. Hoffman, a sister of And­
rew Klein, from Portland, visited
the latter and family over the week
end.
Dr. Carter B Macgruder, govern­
ment inspector of Naval hospitals,
and his son.G. M. Macgruder who is
in the U. S. Army, spent several
days here enjoying the fishing. The
doctor is a Virginian, but has spent
a good many years in government
service.
The new rock crusher recently in­
stalled by Tillamook county at the
Clatsop quarry is reported to be an
industrious machine with a ravenous
apjietite, eating up more than one
hundred yards of rock each day.
The fish boat Ikaros which was
forced on the beach at Neah-kah-
nie last week was hauled overland
to Nehalem by Anderson Bro«., and
launched in the river Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Mead drove to
Cloverdale and returned last Satur-
day, bringing their two children.
Dean and Dorothy, who have been
spending their vacation ' with their
grandparents at Brooten Springs.
Miss Nettie Ewan who has been
acting as ‘Hello girl,' at the local
office all summer, resigned her pos­
ition Saturday in order to enter
High School which opens Monday,
September 3. w
j. P. Moritz and William Norris
have each had their property on
main street improved to the extent
of a new roof. Helmar Ristrom did
the work for them.
Two young men from this vicinity
Ira Ludtke and a companion whom
we know only as Slim, have fre-
NOTE: Bring All Your Exhibits if Pos
Bible Monday, Sept. 10th
quently gone in a small fish boat
from Nehalem bay to Tillamook bay
and return,
and thought it fine
sport. Last Friday while crossing
the bar of the later bay, they met a
huge wave which capsized their boat
turning it upside down with the
boys underneath. By the aid of life
preservers, they were able to swim
ashore, which they reached about
one hour later not much worse for
their experience. Some time later
the boat drifted in, coming through
a hale in the jetty.
Some time Friday evening while
driving on the beach at Manzanita,
Mrs. Bertha Madsen of St. Helens,
came near losing her car, an Olds­
mobile, by being swamped in the
sand. The ear is said to have gone
down to the top of the fenders, but
a number of spectators with the aid
uf ropes and planks were able to
rescue it. It took a garage man
several hours next morning to clear
the machinery of sand.
Thj Nehaleni schools opened on
Iuibor day. The teachers in the
grade schools are. principal, Zola
Kirry; intermediate. Miss Cullom;
primary, Mrs. Franklin Knight. At
the Unon High school the teachers
are. principal, Miss M. L. Stevenson
with Mrs. Snuyder and Mrs. Rons
as assistants.
Roseburg to have
and state depot.
38-room hotel
Hood River—Work moving rapidly
on ML Hood loop highway.
BRIDGE STEEL HERE
FOR NEHALEM WORK
A part of the steel for the Nehalem
bridge has arrived, and workmen are
putting it in place on that structure.
The remainder of the ateel, it is be­
lieved, will soon follow. The steel
has been delayed for a cosiderable
time, and has held the work of finish­
ing the bridge up for some weaiu.
Both approaches and piers of the
new bridge are in. and when some fills
at either end of the bridge are done,
and the balance of the steel has been
placed the bridge will be ready for
travel. The new dyke road between
Nehalem and Wtieeier will, however,
not be ready for travel for some
time yet, states County •urveyvr
Coatee, as the overhead cro sings on
the south end of the toad over the
Southern Pacific railroad will have
to I m - built. Thia road, when com­
pleted, will connect the townt of
Wheeler ami Nehalem wth a fine
road, and will later become a link of
the Roosevelt highway via the tieach
route, and will cut down the distance
from Tillamook to Seaside to a con­
siderable extent.
POLK CO. WIZARD
RIVAL TO BURBANK
A sleek looking individual, wearing
leather puttees, a corduroy suit, and
Astoria Odd Fellows to build new a flowing Windsor tie, in which was
temple.
stuck what might have been a fairly
good imitation of a paste diamond,
sat in the corridor of a local hotel,
one day last week, talking to a far­
mer tourist The reporter tuned his
radio, and waited:
“Say, fellow, I don’t know you from
Adam's off ox, but I’m telling you
that I've got Lucifer Burbank skin­
ned a country block, when it comes to
tree propagation. I've read every­
thing Burbank ever wrote, and I’ve
seen that bird down on his farm in
California, and have talked with him;
and he admitted to me that I had him
faded when it came to crossing trees.
Why. say, fellow, I can take a com­
mon oak grub tree and cross it with
a pear tree and in two years I’ll have
pears growing along with the oak
puff balls: You may think that’s go­
ing some, but my method can cross a
hasel switch with a devil’s walking
stick and get a two bushel basket full
of bananas,—’’
Just then a ¿all, angular woman
with a determined look came into the
hotel, paused in front of the wizard
and eyed him truculently.
“Up to your old tricks of telling
how you have got Luther Burbank
faded, I’ll bet,” she said laughing in
a harsh tone of voice.
"Are you ready to go, Evangeline,”
asked the wizard meekly, rising from
his chair.
“I’ve been sitting out there in that
old Lizzie for an hour, waiting for
you; and if you don't get out and
tune up that car and get us over to
the beach, I’ll do a little stunt of
seeing how far I can throw you out
into the middle of the street,
the woman angrily.
•
“I’m coming right now,” said the
tree wizard, going toward the door
The woman, laughed, stepped closer
to the little knot of chair warmers,
and said:
“Don’t you believe one word that
bird told you. He is the champion
liar of Polk county, and is so lazy
that I have to lick him morning and
evenings to get him to slop the hogs
and milk two cows. If I’d known
how to drive that Lizzy, I’d have left
the cheap skate at home, and come
alone. I got him through a mat­
rimonial pa(>er, but lord, how I got
bunked.”
Then she gave an Amazonian flirt,
and vanished through the hotel door.
WILSON WATER UNFIT,
STATE DIRECTORS
A notice was published in the last
issue of this paper over the signature
of the directors of the Fairview
Water District in which the users
were “warned against using the water
in the preparation of uncooked foods,
or for drinking purposes without first
boiling the water.”
The water for the association conies
from Hughey creek, a mountain
stream, which supplies the people of
the Fairview district, the center of
which is about two miles east of
town. So far as reported, no sick­
ness has resulted to the 100 users of
the water, but it is said that the com-
missioners will clean out the reser­
voir and take other precautons to
prevent contamination. At th! time
of year, when the water supply is
low, many insects get into the water,
also dead leaves and other detached
vegetable matter, and this has to be
looked after. It is said that a good
rain would wash all this stuff away.
It is stated by the commissi
that
the water is normally pure and whole
some, but the notice was given at the
instance of the state board deputy,
as a precautonary measure until the
reservoir can be cleared of a p ible
collection of vegetable and otlu mat­
ter which is a result of the cha ire of
the season and low water. It
aid
that no trouble has been expe ncid
with this water in the past.
EDWARD WILLIAM
Edward William Stasek, wi
lied
in this city August 29th of
er,
was born in Kaukauna, Wi •-in,
March 1, 1885, and came to Till, 'i ' ' k
county, Oregon, in 1891, with I par-
entsjames Stasek and wifi
De­
ceased is survived by his fathe: and
mother, a sister, Alice Stasek of Till*
mook, a brother, Henry of NeL iem,
and Alvin and Rudolph brothers, who
live in Vancouver, B. C. Deceased
was a member of the Elks, anu that
lodge attended funeral services in the
Catholic church on last Saturday In­
terment followed in the Catholic < cm-
etery south of town. The funeral ar­
rangements were in charge of the lo­
cal Knight of Columbus.
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