Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, December 05, 1924, Page 4, Image 4

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    TILLAMOOK
Mrs. E. E. Cross. All
I About the County | ' [and
children were home with the
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HEBO
May Parks, who teaches school at
Rockaway was the week end guest
of Mrs. A. E. Groskey.
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Garwood and
children, Lee and Barbara, Mr. and
Mrs. Adams and daughter, Hazel,
Wm. Savage, Mr. and Mrs. Groskey
and baby, Glenda, Mr. and Mrs. Vand-
erwal and son. Jack, were present at
the Thanksgiving dinner given by the
Eastern Star chapter at Cloverdale.
A son, James, Jr., weighing 10 1-2
pounds arrived at the Imlah home
Tuesday November 25.
Leona Gray was a guest of Mrs.
Frank Owens and family Thanksgiv­
ing. Floyd Light of Rockaway was
a week end visitor of Arthur Owens.
Mrs. Brainerd, sister of Mrs. F. R.
Beals came home on the noon stage
Sunday.
Mrs. Robert Bryant of Clatskanie
arrived to spend a few days including
Thanksgiving with her friend Anna
Myer. Mabelle Crocker of Cloverdale
spent Wednesday night with Jessie
Hall, Mrs. Myer’s niece.
The work of putting a floor
play shed has been completed.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jensen enter-
tained Mr. and Mrs. Wirt Sappington
and Crystal Thanksgiving day.
Mr. and Mrs. David Walker are stlil
in Portland awaiting the recovery of
Mrs. Walker’s brother-in-law who is
ill.
The Adams and Sappington fam-
ilies motored to Tillamook to the
show Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lewallen ate
Thanksgiving dinner with the grange
of Cloverdale.
P. D. Ott and family spent Thanks­
giving at Corvallis with Mrs. Ott’s
mother.
The Misses Thelma Ayers and
Freda Kirk of Beaver visited Crystal
Sappington Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pierce and child
have rented the Charles Jensen house.
Mr. Pierce is the new mail carrier to
Taft and Otis.
Bud Jones and party were register­
ed at the Tourist Tavern Saturday.
Mr. Jones is a prominent insurance
and real estate dealer of Portland.
George Rummel spent Thanksgiv­
ing with his sister, Mrs. Charles Faff,
and husband at McMinnville, return­
ing with P. D. Ott on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cross spent
Thanksgiving with his parents Mr.
Bert Adams’ parents arrived Mon­
day afternoon for a few days visit
having come by motor from Junction
City with their daughter, Mrs. Hutch­
inson and her husband. Mr. and Mrs.
Hutchinson are both ordained min­
isters of the gospel.
Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Lane, Bridge
and Ade Lane motored to Falls City
and return Sunday.
tion of Homer and family,
Mrs. Fay Morrison and infant
daughter came home from the hos­
pital Sunday. The swelling has gone
Mr. Groskey reports he cannot keep
out of Fay’s feet into his head and
his mind on business.
The school children are busy this
week selling Christmas seals.
James Myer and party passed thru
NEHALEM
the first of the week enroute to
Mrs. E. M. Thompson and daughter,
Devil’s Lake.
May, are visiting friends here.
Guests at the Reuben Price home
The musical entertainment at the
Thanksgiving were Mr. and Mrs. A, Lutheran church last Friay night was
F. Lane and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Price. liberally patronized, and greatly ap-
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5,1924
HEADLIGHT
predated. The. program was largely
musical.
The Rev. L. E. Tabor and family
visited relatives and friends at Kelso
and Longview during Thanksgiving
week.
Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Moritz and son
John, from Salem were guests of
their son P. J. Moritz, Miss Flora
Moritz, and Mrs. H. H. Bosch the past
week.
Schools reopened Monday after the
Thanksgiving vacation. Most of the
teachers spent their vacation at their
respective homes. Prof. Langworthy
and family visited at Newberg, and
Prof. Newman and Wife at Bay City.
'H.. H. Tubbesing and George Loer-
peeble were business visitors at the
county seat last Tuesday.
Miss Vivian Tohl, a student at the
O. A. C., spent Thanksgiving with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Tohl.
The contractors began pouring con­
crete for the foundation of the new
high school building Tuesday of this
The Loerpoeble and H. H. Tubbe
week.
Clarence Boggie. one of the Shedd sing families ate tlieir Thanksgivini
bank robbers is reported to l^ve dinner at the home of Mr. and M-.
worked in this vicinity last summer,! J. B. Lommen on the south fork.
not robbing banks, however.I _______ (Continued on page 5)
Home Made Ice Cream
We use only recognized high grade mater­
ials in making our ice cream. It’s richer too than
most imported ice creams and consequently has
a finer flavor. You’ll be delighted with it. ’
Order from your confectionery.
Golden Rod Dairy
cincorporaUd
WwA 571 DEPARTMENT STORES
Tillamook, Oregon
Opposite Sunset Garage
ANNOUNCING
PLAYTIME
now in sunswept
CALIFORNIA
SECOND STREET
Opposite Conover’s Grocery
Travel in secure, cozy
comfort via Shasta
route.
Four trains daily to
San Francisco.
SouthemCalifomiaEx-
press carrying through
sleepers to Los Angeles
daily.
And you’ll like Southern
Pacific dining-car service
— highest quality food
deliciously prepared and
served at your accustomed
meal-time.
Low round-trip excursion
fares; stopover privileges.
For full information, aik
Southern
Pacific
Real Insurance Service
Through a fortunate purchase by our New York
buyers we are able to offer you this unusual sav­
ing in new Wool Dresses. They arc made of good
materials, such as Poiret Sheen and Poiret Twill,
in a range of colors.
While some are more elaborately trimmed than
others, all are smartly styled. The sizes range
from 16 to 44. See these dresses!
RAY GRATE,
Ixtcal Agent.
Fire and All General Lines
A Share of Your Business Will Be Appreciated
SPECIALIZING
RELIANCE LIFE
Perfect Protection
Rose J. Wilkes
Felt Slippers
Lula Thurman, Assistant
For Women
stion
Padded sole, spring heel,
ribbon-dock trimmed.
This smart style in
black suede is very pop­
ular. Made with covered
Spanish heel.
Lattice
front and plain toe. An
excellent value.
$1.69
$6.90
DEPENDABILITY
Fn’c’s “Delicious” Bacon is not only
“everything the name implies” hut its
preparation by the exclusive Frye pro­
cess makes it unusually savory and
mild flavored.
It’s splendid food for children, tdo—if
they don’t care for bacon they quickly
change their minds if you try’ them
v.ith Frye’s “DcCicious” just once.
Universality
NIVERSAL telephone
A Savings Account—the gift that is not
all seen at a glance, but which can grow
into whatever the person who receives it
most desires!
Every side of Bacon stamped with
the brand name “Delicious ’ is U.S.
Government inspected for absolute
purity and its choice goodness never
varies b-car.3c it comes only from
cd.cfuhy sjloctcd young grain-fed
porker:?..
U
service must be universal
in scope—it must reach anyone,
anywhere. But it must be unl­
versal also in cost it must be
within the financial reach of
everyone, everywhere.
A ears of research have been
required to provide the tele­
phone instruments, switch­
boards, wire and supplementary
apparatus which afford inter­
communication between house­
wives, shopkeepers, farmers
and millions of other American
telephone users.
Tilla
But these facilities do not in
themselves make America’s
telephone service a universal
service. Telephone engineers
have spent years of additional
study in order to build, maintain
and operate this nation-wide
system so economically that the
cost of service may be kept at
all times well below its value to
the telephone user.
Upon the two fundamentals*
of extensiveness in scope and
economy in cost the Bell System
has built the most universal
telephone service in the World.
The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company
J
____
BELL SYSTEM
Dn« Polley • One System
Universal Service