Image provided by: Crook County Historical Society/Bowman Museum; Prineville, OR
About Ochoco review. (Prineville, Crook County, Or.) 1885-1??? | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1890)
W-. ..i(W 0CH0G0 PJtlNEVILLB, CKOOK COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1800. NO. 52. , 0C1IOCO KKVIKW, -y, rblihi- d Bwy Saturday 11V J.r. DOUTfllT, ' TKn.Mioj'KiijscKimorri ),, yor z ou bit UlUlllM . , . . I M r . ii .. i u L. . . (rnyaoiu in nuvwicgj rru 1 Mahonic Buiuuno. If.lTK OITKIAL DIUBCTOUYi ftitrariinr , . . . ..cr.l.ry ni mass , , , lu'. iritiirnf . . ... .. . uko. W. MtMaiua 0. W. .. fH llitia R. H. Ui KMif i , I. Lo.e W. W. rHAVKn Iup4. rl". I lrii-u,, diiprtmit Court .ifr...iaarl .iiiUi IH-lrlrl rjj'iimii AU.Ti.njr .nil o,Mtor (II. H. SrnaMta ....... U. N. Holp ) J- MlTCMtLL llmuia II I. II. Mian W H. lull C. X L'uuaaaiL .niiitf O.Ui'lul Dlrrctoryi .( , ., ., J K WlLLIAMaoa i st? , J. C. ' w. roam til. I. II ILL ... l it llu . Jiimn A.oa. T. M. fcU.l limit J J C l.aaa ... J II Hmu. J w. n. ui roLoi . fa, II r butiiir r - : t J O, liUUlMIT . ,i lii.i'A ii ri uk urn ail. 'uivii.Li-Uiiv filnarllla ? A.ntl m a. a.; airl.a. .-t.i 4ouuii at a r. a. . i ln:- Uivm fflnltlt itnt I'riiittllla tir itur 1'nLt-toara. Prln i. . airltaa al I'llua.llla I'-lna. Ilia- Imiii Mitchell oa . i ,. .i.i in in M u M i errl.e-e al .. r a .auia kJm p , rclurua ,, , , Lf a:i4 'lul.laf r.,iciti: and IUr'ln--toa TrlnnllU i. ..i.i .t . . n. . i.i iin u. riiMl)a ....(Ja) at I r. u. A. I'. I'ama. V. M Nf.KllSii UK Hut IKllfcli. B .. - I ., V.. 1A k V A A U lu IF, .eivml alio, Ivunil naiurua, pi wmvm kunlli I M Baul, W. M. t I'U, P. ij.h.k i l.vi. No. I. u. 0 F. iseela tr kiuMay wtaait. Otilwn toil-in X. i I' W, No. 101. anil La mcoiiJ aul la.t Monday o eauit luuulu. riiivu in Km rinriil No, I ajeete lha lfl Mnn-lar a.elitlit t'l vwrf litoitlh l'UOKKSSiONAI. CAR PS. C. A. CL1NE, Dontltt, 1KV1I.1.K, ------ (IKKUPM All iliulal w.irk J.iua In Ilia mo. I atii;ov4 IaxoI anxtlhrtict auyUttl fur tliryoinltBi ptrarfiun J Irtlh. All milk d-iir at lonliil prlrat. H. P. DELKNAP, M. D., rilYSK IAN AM) Hl'lWKON, MDiittiu.ie, ----- uqxflOs oflca-tn lia'kuK' ilruf ttora. Coo. W, DARNES, ATfOUNKY-AT-UW, ainnvii.it, - - - OpiiquX. OBoa-uii 1 hlrl Hlre-, J. F. MOORE. ATl'OH N K Y -AT-LA W, IMKVII.I., - - - - - - URIOUM. OH-a-lln xraal lea llnl In court houta, aaar lauar ilUrh. D. L. PATEE, CDNTIIACTOU A 1U JLDKR kim kv) i.i.k, ------ llnauK. 1 1 1; i ii - ;.J IT'; )! ' -M a! i- iivrfiiji."ii ntr 'j'" rO'.'.K SADDLES 'd "I iiviv lllTni:il'lliJii. - till M.KH IN 'crvthJnif rtirtninlniar to t'lo trade of thl country. w -III It-imiHfif. Nit KJllVL $crlL(tuvv,i5!te3, &c00, lJ(oMlni Co5 )ViModarftaJarma. wa vrvntv. ft. c) v FOR BARGAINS GO TO . Sichel & Go's. W'nxlilNeton tetter. (From Our IteguUr Corfopiitent.) May it, lrt'JO. Tlicro is a very common impres sion among the American people, cepocially those who disdain to bother themselves with the tirenomo details of congressional action und public finance, thaj tha U. S. treas uriei are flUed wr'Jf?lJtiW loads of gold und Vsilviv,' afid that th problem of "reducing the nur plus" is the great urgency of the times. All manner of chemes have been suggested to this end, and by those who should know bet ter. A few billions for sea-const de fenses, with a neul foitune for ev ery soldier, and a good farm, mod estly stocked, for every poor mini, it is thought would sotoowhiit re lieve this bulging state of affairs. But it remained for Senator Plumb, of KiiiiNus, to bring out ttie mott fantastic remedy. He lias intro duced two tills in congress provid l'ng for an organization culled the "Grand Army of Lubor." All cit izens of 21 yeurs of ago ure entitled to membership. Nooue shall work more than lour hours. a day, nor more than fi'0 days a week, nor more than fix wjekd without an intermission of two weeks. Every county in the United Slate is to be provided with a governmental farm. The govern men t is alao to' and f till this large sum of money undertake public enterprises for ' lies buried in the shudy nook of tlie : tho purpose of providing labor for ! Xehalem. Last week "the old man members, whose daily recompense j came to town that this confession is to he M. I was niade to, and quietly wended Where is all this money coining his way toward the majestic Xeha- from? Tne last statement from Hem in pursuit of the long hidden j tbe treasury showed the amount of j treasure. This is not the only man j svailttblo ca&h on hand to be about that is in search of theso buried ' $35,O(X),000. Senator Gorman, a ! member of the appropriation com mittee, stated 'befoftliev senate that the pension payments from 1891 for several venis will amount to 2U0,UU0,00O, and nobody con-! tradiclcd him. The new tariff hill is said to reduce the public reve nues about 7l.000,000. This will leave for all public purposes, ex cept pensions, about $180,000,000 of tho annual revenue, and which is also about the size of the deficit that will be found in tlie treasury at the end of th next fiscal year, if the bills calling for expenditures which have passed one house and ire likely to purs tho other, are perfected. Desides, the importers are organizing and are determined to cut down the rates on every ar ticle fn the tariff schedule. A delegation of 250 representing ft 1 1 the wholesale imjiorting houses of Xew York City, will besiege the capitol this week, and the import ers of other cities will also be on band. In view of the indifference of the majority in congress to mon ey matters these visiting delega tions will no doubt be graciously received and accommodated. One hundred and eighty-five pen sion bills have been passed by congress this session. Senator Ingalls has introduced a bill to put the minimum rto for invalid pensions til $4 per month. Senator Sherman has introduced a hill providing for a special pen sion of pi r mouth to tlie ur viving soldiers, sailois und untunes who were on Uvird tho slernier "Sultana" when her boiler exploded April 27, lSt;. Two thousand three hundred enlisted men who had been prisoners in the South were packed on bo'ird and sent North. Aliout 8 miles above Mem phis, the boilers of tho Steamer ex ploded at 2 o'clock at night. About 1700 were killed or drowned, and about 200 died nextrday fro exposure in tho water. One hun dred and forty-ono survivors have signed a petition for the passage of the bill. Senator Butler presented the pe tition of the heads of nine families. aggregating 72 persons, that con gress appropriate 100 per capita to enable them to emigrate to Li beria and maintain themselves six months. The petition had a print ed heading, and it was said that uti organized movement in tho South indicated a scheme of wholesale deportation of the colored people of South Carolina. I fi theso -are not .. i ..i i have no cluin upon punlic charity.. FKKK liOJIKS U. H. land odico was recently la- If theso are good citizens why' In Tlie Ureal West .V Ktinurkalilo cated at that point which meanfl should the government pay ! 500 or j- O.Ter-Ite.id It. much to that city. It will bring GCK)togeta family of them out Akron Colorado, lias probably overy Bottler upon tho public do when it lets any number of bad within the past three years expo- n,ain in that section to tho city, citizens in, and charges them noth- rienccd the most rapid gro.vth. of It will be, and iH, head quarters for j .any city in the Wct. It it n.r- lanr.1 rock'-m for 'hut entire Krtiou- - rounded by u country unsiirpit.-..-.nd uf the ttn to. .!,0nl'.l',rf?,i.?. by any on earth for the ne-unca, colohado RXi:fi.iiX.", In the year 1820, it is reported a"d Utility of its noil and tao, May 2'Jth, and in June, that a Spanish vessel came into beauties of Ha climate. Any, and curions .vL! be run from all points Xehalern bay with a largo amount everything that can be raised in cf the eat and eoutn to Akron, of treasure on board consisting of Iowa, Illinois, Indiuna or Onio can Tho rate will be one fare for tha six boxes of Spanish money, each box requiring six men to move it, and the total value was 41,VJ'J,000. The c.muin oeiiu a uirate and closely pursued, put into Xehalem bay, and finding a lonely place agreed with his crew . to bury the money and valuables on a cer- taiu side of the river where a small creek put in, and between two cer-j coveilnment i.asd. ! tain trees. They each agreed with ! Ther- uru 'et thousands of acres; their captain by binding obligation of government land vacant, which that they would never reveal the can be taken under the hon.ei.t.-ad, place where the treasures were bur- pre-emption and timber culture ied, with a penalty of their lives, act, whicii a person can have for.! unlesfall were agreed, and to nhare the taking A bountiful govern-1 the treasures equally. j 'eui make you inJrpendent j In the year 1832, one of the 8Ur. ; in a few years if you will but act, vivors, idrovj life was saved by a'"ow- The surface of the country . man at that time living near Port- is nearly a perfect level, but still j land, afterwards on a deathbed sloping enough to allbrd good drain-: made the above confefsion. Some 70 vears have passed a wav : treasures, but for several vears past,' men have come to Tillamook ' county, and in the vicinity of the 1 Xehalem have dug large holes and tunnels for the same nurnose. i Time no doubt will reveal many hidden mysteries. But who will find tho hidden treasure on the Xe- halem rivei? The Fossil Coal Deposits. Fouil Journal. Chas. S. Miller and Mr. R. Nor ton, the coal minine exnert who ac companied him, spent three or four fuur Cl-nts in "tamps for return of days among the coal beds neari"eed. These lots ure now worth here last week. Friday thev drove! from $50 to 125, and will, in the into town, and brought with tbem large box of coal samples which they obtained in teveral openings ' to the coal mines. While on their j return trip we had the pleasuro of ; a meeting Mr. Norton, and he in-1 formed us that his mission was a se cret one. He said the people he represented paid him a good salary, and their business required the in formation for themselves alone. The box of specimens that wis left here was marked to "II. Norton, Hotel Portland." Mr. Norton has been in the employ of the Northern Pacific as a coal expert for several years, Lut whether ho came out here for that company or not, we cannot say. It is prohable. how ever, that he came in the interest of the Hunt railro id man, as Tno Dalles people aro in conference with Hunt in regard to building The Dalles Southern, one branch of which will doubtless come through here, on its way to the mines of the Upper John Day. Mr. No: ton will doubtless be compelled to repoit n superior quality of coal perhaps the best on tho const and plenty of it in sight, one vein being eleven feet in thickness. We expect to hear somo good news before long, as there are too many railroads figur ing on tapping this country, and its resources are becoming too well known to long lay undeveloped. The house judiciary committee favorably reported a constitutional i,.niii..nt trivintr won. in the risihti of suffrage. The reformers often win little preliminary successes like this, but we fear that the foxy members of tho house judiciary j committee, in yielding to the Man-1 dishment of the feminine lobby, had in mind the reassuring fact' that before their aim ndmcnt could j 250 men at that joint now. The become a law it would have to ro- city is and will be the railroad cen ceive a two-thirds vote in each tor of that portion of thn statu. hmiRo of eomrress and ones the leg- The population is now nearly two islatures of three-fourths of the! c f mro ue grown in mu greater pro- fumon. Wheat gru.vji in t.jo m.-ar vicinity of Akron, took a diploma lor Liemg tne best grain of the kind exhiuiu-d at the .Nebraska state: fair, held at Lincoln, m .S..-ptem-er; 16H'J. And all crop gro,vu in this latitude can be raised lierj as sue-; ceesiully as anywiieru on eaith. !aUe - -o nreak.s or uraws sueu as rui" or deface so many Western j farms. No protracted struggle with ; ,vhen ho shoots he shoots to kill, rotk8- Your filst g'anee at the ; The latter is in a hurry to get into country would remind you of cne;a fight and will never listen to meadow, only waiting the plow j reason or common sense. The mo- of the husbandman to transform it! lt.nt he gets into trouble he thinks; '"t0 u" Ed " of heauty and pro-: tii:tt his duty is to draw a revolver ducliveness. j and commence shooting. He may Tlie citizens' advertising com- j probably hit tho man he is trying 'mK o Aikon, have placed in the'. t0 kill. He is like the fool-friend lianUs ot tn u c"s"' tiJ(i i'"t,rovc'- ,uent company, one iiiousauu cuy '(,ts th'1' ati3 t0 lje Biven awa' tor advertising purpoi-es, and any per- "bo wni aid them in auvertis- iaS advantages can have one of these lots tree ot charge o; ui-: rei ti US a communication to J. Faehudrich, Sec'y at Akron, Colq- ' orado, und sending the nenies of j ten people who are interested in the West, and liable to be looking for a Western location and sending j'e of u year, if tho predictions of knowing ones prove true, be worth j four tiu,es whllt is ,10W abketJ fur! tue,u- It is an opjwrtuiuty never j bt,foru offered to secure an absolute j 10 a P1,,ce 01 PPV ' " c"" terprisuig anu groning i tsie.u city. The lots referred to are each 25x 132 in size and all. the streets upon which they are about are CO and SO feet wide. They are in what is known as "Glenwood," an Akron, Colorado, suhiirb, and the citizens' committee through Mr. Fa-ehndrieh, ! its secretary, guarentees them to be smooth, level und upon a slightly elevation, overlooking the town of Akron. The title is also guaran teed to be absolutely perfect. Akron contains a set of business men who are alive to her advant ages as well us her interest, and this year $.':0,000 is being expended by them to induce people looking for a Wt stern locution to settle amongst them. They want and are determined to have 50.000 people iu this city by 1S05. They want laborers in their coal mines, they want capitalists to de velop their silver and gold mints. Akron is to day tho largest and most prosperous city in the state east of Denver. I is a division station of tho B. & M. U'y and is the southern terminus of the Akron it llolyoke U'y, which will, in all prohablity, bo built to Colorado Snrimis in the near future. Akron is in the line of tlie Nor ih western K. U. building into Denver, and is sure to catch it, and the Leaver valley branch of the B. & M. wilt also be built to Akron. Tho B. it M. shops aro there and material is now on tho ground to greatly en large) them Tho railroad employs ; thousand and. by January first next,, Ithtv be icvo it will bo oU'JVJ. A they round trip, over the Chicago,. KocH IhLind t i'aeilio from Chicaao and intermediate points, and over tha .Miouri PueiCn! from St. Louis and the South, to Omaha, Nebraska. Fr0iu Omaha take tho D. & M. Ii. j j. to Akron. The above offer of a free lot ap- j j,i;c, only to those who will, prior to Juno 20 aid them in a reasonable wayj ; making these excursions a, 9Uccefc3. ' . Kama, cit, Tim,, "The man to be feared for the trouble that he can nia'io in the West is not the 'dead she-;' who has killed a dozen men," said an old timer from Arizona at the Midland last night, "but the young blood, a combination of the cowboy and tenderloot. the former 13 usually quick, cool and level headed, and that we are constantly praying to ; Le delivered liom. Ills capacity for mischief is unbounded, but his j p!un3 (or getting out of a scrape aro j neVer matured and are sure to fall j through. I don't object to taking a hand in a fight when a lot of ex- , perienced men are on the ground. but when a lot of greenhorns com- Uience shooting I don't object to hunting up a new location." il.nl Nut the Naiid. Petrol! Free Pres. A few days ago a citizen called upon a well-known athlete and en gaged him to give lessons in boxing, and after about a month the teach- er suid to the pupil: "Vou are in good shape now, and VOu needn't be afraid to put. up your hands with any of the boys." i wo days alter, the pupil returned Witti a pair ot uiacu eyes ana a I nosa with the bark all off, and tho instructor exclaimed : ' Great Scots ! man, hare jou been in a light?" "Yes." "And got licked?" "Yea." "How was it?" "Why, thero was a fellow I wanted to liek. That's what I came hero and graduated for. I met him yesterday and sailed into him, or started to sail into him, when" "When lu3 crowd pitched into you." "Oh, no. I found I hadn't tho sand. Indeed, I tried to run away, and ho hammered Halifax out of me. Y'ou are a nice man!'' "What about?" "To take my money and get mo licked." "Licked! Licked! Why, yon rabbit, do you think learning to box gives you sand? If you hud only told mo that you lacked grit and yet wanted to lick some one, I should have taken another tack. I should have taught you how to sit on a high fence and punch him " in tho eye with a knj fishpole aa he went pa3t." Tho state teachers' institute will bo held in Salem, Juno 30. Many teachers will probably go thence to the national association, which will convene in St. Paul, on July 8. It is proposed to establish head- quarters for this state at St. Paul. Theso headquarters will be main tained during tho week of the asso ciation, and will include a bureau of information, relativo to Oregon, for tho information of visiting teaciiers uoai otucr Biawa, (good 121 f p.j f rlco o.il 23c, (poitiga lUref 1