Siletz news / (Siletz, OR) 199?-current, November 01, 2000, Page 27, Image 27

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    NOTICES
Top 10 Ways to
Lower Your Home
Insurance Costs
1. Be sure to shop around.
2. Raise your deductible.
3. Buy your home and auto policies from
the same insurer.
4. When you buy a home, consider how
much insuring it will cost.
5. Insure your house, not the land.
6. Beef up your home security.
7. Stop smoking.
8. Seek out discounts for seniors.
9. See if you can get group coverage.
10. Compare the limits in your policy and
the value of your possessions at least
once a year.
For free consumer information on
homeowner’s insurance, as well as how to
file a claim, and on other insurance-related
topics, contact the Insurance Information
Service of Oregon & Idaho (IISOI) at 1855
SW Ridgecrest Drive, #107, Beaverton, OR
97008. Telephone: 503-643-6355 (Portland
area) or toll-free at 1 -800-457-8713 (outside
Portland area). E-mail: iisoi@teleport.com.
Fax: 503-641-3338. Visit our Web site at
www.insuranceoregon.org.
Insurance Information Service of
Oregon & Idaho (IISOI) is a non-profit,
non-lobbying, consumer insurance
information and advocacy organization.
Founded and funded by property/casualty
insurance companies, it has been serving
consumers since 1952.
Internet, con’t from page 26
9) Don't panic! No one can harm your child
through online chat as long as he or
she follows your rules.
10) Educate yourself! Read SafetyEd’s
parental advice resources, especially
“Understanding Cyberspace Chat” at
http://www.safetyed.org/help/chatlive/
understand.html
Internet Safety Resources, Education
& Child Advocacy \NVM.sateXyed.org
Tribal Council Applications Due
Applications for names to be placed
on the 2001 ballot for candidates in the
Siletz Tribal Council election.
Name:___________________________
Tribal Roll No.:_______
' ftr " IS¥ i iv SSt
Add ress:_____________________
City:__________ State:____ ZIP:______
Telephone/Contact #:______________
I understand I must be an enrolled
member of the Confederated Tribes of
Siletz Indians of Oregon and 18 years of
age or older. This application must be filed
with the Election Board by 4 p.m. on
Dec. 20, 2000.
I also understand that if for any
reason I decide to withdraw my application
for Siletz Tribal Council, I must withdraw in
writing by Dec. 26, 2000; otherwise, my
name will appear in the voters pamphlet
and on the ballot.
(Signature)
(Date)
If you would like your picture to appear
in the voters pamphlet and Siletz News,
please submit a recent 3x5 photograph
of yourself along with your application.
Mail this application to:
C.T.S.I. Election Board
P.O. Box 490
Siletz, OR 97380
History, con’t from page 29
The commission even tried to make our people feel guilty about the boarding school
that had been provided, saying that white people had to pay to send their children to
school (not realizing, perhaps, just how dearly our people too had paid for the boarding
school in Siletz).
At one point, old William Strong stated his feelings on the matter, saying that the
government would do what it wanted anyway, no matter what the Indian people had to
say. He also said that when it came to something with money in it, we never could get
anything out of it anyway. The commissioners promised that if the agreement was signed,
future generations of tribal members would always be able to receive allotments from
unclaimed lands within the ceded area. They also promised that clear titles would be
given on the allotments within five years (the ones just recently assigned) instead of
waiting for the 25-year automatic trust period stipulated under the General Allotment Act.
George Harney spoke about the value of the timber on the remaining reservation
lands and wondered how that would be figured into the sale price. The commissioners
replied that the timber was in such steep ground and most of it so remote and isolated
that it had no market value and therefore would not affect the sale price.
The majority of the people finally decided that they had better accept the commission’s
terms and signed the agreement on Halloween Day - Oct. 31, 1892. I think there must
have been a feeling that the government would simply take the remaining lands as it had
done before if they didn’t accept the terms of the agreement.
In writing their final report to the secretary of the Interior, the commissioners
congratulated themselves on driving a close bargain - 74 cents an acre for 191,000*
acres. And in spite of what they told George Harney and the rest of our tribal people at
the negotiations, they wrote: “We found the lands mostly mountainous and densely
timbered with good fir and cedar trees, and well watered with rapid running streams,
which will furnish a good means of getting the timber and lumber out.”
Complicated designs of complex groups of politicians and businessmen are
sometimes hard to figure out, but not necessarily in the case of our 1892 agreement.
27