Image provided by: Cape Blanco Heritage Society; Port Orford, OR
About Port Orford post. (Port Orford, Oregon) 1880-1882 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1881)
\ notice . of the United States falls short ev- ry year of the demand of our fac L v \n (h i it i' at I THURSDAY. - DEC. 8. IS S I. tories, and hence our m anufactur R o se »! k . i , (la ., N ov . U>, ISM. i 'O T U ’K IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT ers, iu order to supply the defici W i i . iia m M eM vxx, whose I’ost w o o l . .(JB O W IX C AM» T H E ency m ust have foreign wool, 1 uttiee addre s is Ktler.eburg, C urry Co., TA R IFF. O re g o n , has til's (lay applied for n p a i anil, to the extent they are obliged nt lor Placer Minin:; G round situated We have waited and watched for to im port, such m anufacturers, in Sixth M uling D istrict, Curry County, a pro-tariff journal in Oregon to are, apparently, tho injured par Stale of Oregon Tow nship No. B,, South of Range i t W eil, B iililU et'e vaunt the benefits the wool-grow ties, since they m ust pay the M eridian, designated as I. >1 No. m . and ers of the United States derive American duty in addition to tho describee as I ‘¡lows. Io wit: B eginning nt n point North tw enty from a tariff of ten cents the pound price tho staple bears in London. two decrees thirty m inutes East > on im ported wool. O ur vigils B ut, as a m atter of fact, this con bains from the me inter corner post at Hie n o rth * e s t corner of Scetio i >i South have at last been rewarded. The tingency is provided against iu of Kan e 11 \\ t. Will .inette Men Dalles M ountaineer, Col. T. S. advance in the lower price paid for ilian; theim e N orth tw enty-tw o and a half degrees East, tw enty e. .line.; thence Lang editor, devotes near two col tho stock of American grown wool. E ast seven ch ain s^ Hiene. South IS.PS um ns of his large paper to a show Hence, the American wool-grower, luilns, thence West 14.(11 chains Io the place of beginning, containing -J ing in tho premises. We have not only docs not receive any more acres. Tim above described Placer M ining always known, and had supposed for his clip in consequence of tiio laiui was located by W m. MeManii a u that the m ajority at least, of wool- tariff on imported wool, bu t is \ n I n d e p e n d e n t J o u r n a l, d e v o t e d lo Hit' I n t e r e s t s o f t h e S o u t h e r n C oast recorded in Ihe Record of Mini ig Claims C o u n tie s G e n e r a lly , m u l o f C u r r y C o u n ty P a r t i c u l a r l y In'said Countv of Curry , D regon, on the growers in this country knew al actually compelled to take less, gstli day of Eel»., Isso, bv W alter S u t so, that such tariff never did, and for lio lias, practically, to pay the ton,C ounty * ‘lerk of said ( 'nunty Any auk all persons claim ing adverse in the very nature of things, nev tariff' ou tho annual shortages of ly any portion of said m ining ground er can, enhance the prico of Amer American production. of W illiam MeManii, are required In tile th eir adverse claim s with the R egis ican grown wool the veriest shav O ur Curry county wool-growers ter of tlie Land Olliee at Roselnir, O re ing of a shaving in price. Look received for their last S pring’s gon, d u rin g the sixty days' period of publication hereof, or th eir claim will nt the facts: The price of wool clip, about an average of twenty- he barred by virtue of the provision« of is, year after year, reg u lated in five cents the pound. Now, is the S tatu te. W m . F. B i :\. i w i n , th is country by tho London m ar there one of them who Hatters nov24wd Register. himsoif that lie got thirteen cents ket. Loudon is a free port. of this twenty-five on account of American m anufacturers of woolen the existing tariff'of thirteen cents FINAL PROOF NOTICE. fabrics ha '»ituaily cmBbine to fix the pound on foreign wool, and L and O f fic e Yr I the maximum prico to be offered that, but for such tariff' he would R osiuivku , <»r., Nov.'Jft, HSt. | have receive-: only twelve cents V O T 1C E IS HEREBY GIVEN TH A T for wool each year; and in so do per pound? If there is one such, tlie follow ing nam ed se ttle r has ing they keep the London market let him stand up and we will in tiled notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and th a t steadily in view. Tho price they form him that the London m ar said proof will lie made before Hie Judge ket was open to him at from 38 to fix upon is ju st high enough to tip or Clerk of Curry county, a t E llensburg, 12 cents the pound, where his O gn, on tho scale in favor of the home clip would n e t him 28 cents the H a O ird u y , D e c e m b e r 31, 1X41, market, freight and charges to pound. Hence the im possibility Viz: Wii.i.t.vM T avi o n , Homestead No. London considered. This much of tlio tariff' having been of any .‘t».C, for tlie Eh, of N E q , N W '4 of N E '4 ami Lot I, section 20. I W, S R 11 W. Col. Lang will bo compelled to benefit to him whatever, b u t rath He nam es tlie follow ing as Ills wll er a curse. Let those en terp ris concede, for, to gainsay the prop ing men in Curry county who are nesses to prove his continuous residence upon, an eulilvation of, said laud, viz: osition that London rules the wool engaged in sheep husbandry do- Williiim Kirk, 11. G. Blake and Geo. Seott, of Clieteo; and A, II. Moore, of market of the world, would be to vote a kittle thought to this sub E llensburg, ( »logon. shut one’s eyes to a fact whose ject,^and we think few, if any of Also at the same lim e and place, II. tlrc3u will atta h themselves to the (1. Bi.Alii:, A dm inistrator of tin, Estate dem onstration is emblazoned u p tariff' Juggeranant, influenced by of Henry Sigh, deceased, H om estead on our com m erce and i^p'a'r* of this sliamele - false pretense. No. 24.'!!, for Ihe S E 1, of S W ',. N '» of The wool >i »ducer, in common S W 4, section 2ft; ami Lots I and ft, see the exuerienea * J,‘-*'rery man who Hon 20, T Id, S It 11 W. handles wool to any appreciable with the pc q>Jo of all callings ami lie mimes the follow Illg w itnesses to pursuits, is compelled to pay prove his continuous residence upon, extent in any country of the globe. about an uv. age of 69 per cent, and cultivation of said land, viz: Now, this brings us to the consid over and abov e a fair prico for all William K irk, Jo h n Cress well, W illiam Taylor, George Scott, all of Clieteo, ('o r eration of some comparative facts. the woolen he buys, clothing, r\ County Oregon. Wool has ruled in London at blankets, and all, to a few manu W m . F. B enjam in , facturing corm orants; for theib dee 1-5 Register. about an average price of 38 cents protection is of tlie kind that does per pound for good grades ever protect. FOrt SALE. since onr wool tariff was enacted. We ask C >1. Lang of tho Moun Z H IE A P E O R CASH, A DESIRABLE How many wool-growers in the taineer to g vo us his candid opin ' / lot of land containing SO acres. ion upon this proposition: Is it United States have received as Apply io I’ oht ..................... am Co not possible that the existence of high an average price during the our tariff on imported wool oper B U C K L A M B S FOR S A L E . same period? And how can it be ates to lessen the price the Ameri possible that the price of Ameri can staple e ’"iman.ls in the Amer- I HAVE A FEW COTSW OLD BECK I lam bs on my place near Newcastle can wool can be influenced bv the market? In th is —si»»ce it is well w hich 1 w ill sell for <«•> each. known that our American m anu ,1 W. W ILSON. tariff under this state of the facts? facturers maintain combinations Can it be supposed that foreign among tin nis ‘Ives iixing the maxi wool would seek a market in this mum they will pay for wool, and livery and country at 32 cents, and pay a tar and since lin y always understand in advance that, owing to the iff of about 13 cents for the privil shortage of production in the ege. to boot, when the London United States compare ! with their m arket bids 33 cents duty free? requirem ents, they most im port to The assumption is preposterous. complete their supply, is it not LOUIS KNAPP, PRCPR. reasonable to rtsaume m at they fix The fact is, the whole fabric and tlmir bids for the home grown sta F o rt O rfo rd , ■ O re g o n . ¡cope of our tariff legislation as ple at a lower figure in view of affecting imported wools, in its the tariff they m u-t pay on the 'light, length, breadth, depth and quantity they in i*t import? Bear thickness, is an im posture, a de in niiml timt, o v in g to the prico Good N ud iti« H o rse» Io Let o n II«»« in London, a freo port, it m ight ception, a fraud, and was cor.c iv- happen that the wool im ported by n o ahl<- T e r m « . •d and carrie 1 out with the p u r our m anufacturers and wo ns pose and in the hope to deceive siime tnat you agree with ns that American wool-growers into the our m anufacturers mc - t im port— v o ild co.>t th. in more by the sum ¡upport of the whole range of the of the tariff than they had paid j/etty larceny tariff enactments for American wool the same year. T h e P O S T E s ta b lis h m e n t bein& S u p p lie d mpíre hemicai The Col. will have to adm it that which disgrace the tatute books W ith th e L a te s t a n d R e st Styles o f J o b T y o a , of the nation. If the world's wool our im portations of wool for 1880 were more than equal to half the production were more than equal total production of this country, W e S o lic it rd e rs fo r W o rk in th a t Line . to the demond for that staple, then, which fa-t shows that onr m anu indeed,woifld a tariff on its im port facturers were c impelled to go 3 0 nion quare ation into this country “ protect,” outside to complete their supply instead of foreign wool-growers to that extent, th * American wool- having to seek the U nited States N.Y. ity grower. But the wool crop of for a market for their product ons •he world is inadequate to tho rc- in . comp titiou with our home PTON & SON, PROPRIETORS, q ".¡rein mis o mankind. The clip producers. PORT ORFORD POST. N THE PQ 'ORFORD POST, ONLY TWO DOLLARS A YEAH. ADVERTISE l?J THE POST, T yp e —A ttra c tiv e D isplay : FEED STABLE, Co.' C E U S C . ,