Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987, August 20, 1896, Image 1

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olume IV.
DIRECTORY.
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" AS 1 " our"y "regon, Irtursday, August 20, 1896
in
ISTottiing.
MNUlLJi COUNTY.
Tol. Carter
Jno. I). Daly
S. V. Hurt
B. F. Jones
George I-andis
.1. h. Ilvde
H. ti. Irvin
Z. M. Derrick
Silas Howell
T. M. Coombs
Chas. Williams
F. A. Godwin
hntv ( iimnil-'sloners ' onri meem on eu-
' alter lie nrsi .Mouuay 111 i-enruary,
'.luni1, August. October and December.
ift ?entor -
JtiilKe
jJ.'l'Siporliitendeiit
rto.'nr
,rier
,i:ussnners
CI1UTIT COL'KT.
.I.e. FulWrtim, Judge
Yn'cs Pros. Attorney
c.nvi'nsK on -un .Monuay mjuivanu
ilBil SloiKlay In January ul each year.
CITY OK TOLEDO.
June Mayor
imrt Hoi-order
Until Marshal
Knijfjtfl I
. Alexander, I
:W1 iiniij;,! j
:oll meets on the first Monday evening in
4 month.
Toledo precinct.
iftto:'eii-o J. A. Hall
.iu.u J. C.Aitrce
NEWPORT.
-Tenf the Pence (ion. F. Sylvester
Me, . II-Crutehlleld
VACCINA.
-nf ttlv! !ll'-e -T. S. Booth
;:i'j;c . I.. alkins
Kl.K (M Y.
-i-r the IVBud A. N. Claris
u'o.e Alex P.urkhalter
LITTLE Kl.K.
-w e i-f tl'.c Peace Chas. Henderson
... a. Derriek
-f the I'eaec I. S. Hunti-iuton
!'.- X. F. Edwards
;-k ivi:!t c!ti::-:K.
11' IV Puu-e H.iro'l Hitl
Joseph Uourley
Tll'EWATKll.
f - ( -hi- Peace X. ,f. liocdman
W. A. Viilito
Loiii-TElt.
0 of the aiv I,. A. Peel:
''le XV. P Taylor
iJ)'.Vi;il AI.Si-J.v and Y ACHATS.
e..f!!;e Peace Win. Wakefield
nule lohn Early
SALMON ::ivi'it
i-'nf the Peace Chas. hWd
11 M. Ucrion
f the Pea cm.
'it:i'hle
110M8.
'l.lsr KPttVuPALCHTRC-it-
rf three we-As, ni'-mltm and i
i.e.-tlne vt-jr mominj; s-rviee;
every k'!-, t lOoVIor-k ni
'e.:.nes,!a'.' ?viii',u'.-,
K. V.-. I'o'iTEU, Pastor.
V. H. ConV
.(ieo. K. Croxford
'liCIIESAN'ii SOCIETIES.
ervifes
Number 24.
"'IT cnnic'i f-rtvtK:it i:.lxop.l
ii;.Mi.,vi -e the tLInl rfitMdav "nf ever.-
II it. mi. ah nre liivltiid to attend.
1 lui- .'..i.i-h. M(si..ua,y. oesldcni-e,
r. :(:-, it:, itr.
I.odt'e. No. 10s.
c..i:.;i at their bal'.
Meet
In 1 his
KiSXO, Pe.-'v.
P. A. MILLEK, X. U.
r.-iir.-1.,
- fi-l-r W.
ire No. lKi. of Vmi-.iiiin Cnv.
'"e'':HV e-.'fitilli: 'i-i:ii'iu
ure .iii-uft v.e'e :ne.
w. a. :iai:tc;!;
.1. r
e; retarv.
, X.
or: J.odrre No. N' nieeTs every
11.. visj:f,i-,; I .tot hers are cor
I'Vlld. i.. o. Ol.:.-.?OX, X. tl.
re:r.ry.
'X A. M.-v
rt I.od--e Xo. y.'i. rniiiliir
; " :.ttitrda; ti-i -ir ite'oie cur-h
H'inv lir,,if.v. r,re ,.. .r.l ! 1 v
. A. II. I'.A.'-iPToX, M. Vi".
ii-ti ;
;iy fouiicii v... 7,-1 Xiui.-mii fition.
e.s n .,.. nudf-Mirth Frl.lav nlchtsol
lit... ln.vRtn4 frierol' ere v'.-onio.
- I I-.aIi!-, ;-ee. II. F. JONKS. Pres.
"'1,1 ,(:).. X, Tll ;r. ,.,), Dei'ree,
.'' l.;..i':i'cis In the o.id IV'.lowslial! in
'i "II 1 ntMiu;-. vmlnv- of oech we"h.
-v..-, ,. H'"V"IK AKX01.D, X. G,
A-VITiH, f.ei-r.,larv.
he !.,-!
s'iiv.r!.i
n'-oln Pn!- No. ni. meets in
p'urs Hull on the first and
eiioh -irn!i. .
. , ., t. staxely, r. c.
I. Adjntent.
' ,- We"ern Star T.odce No. 78,
.' ''H the odd F-Pows' half; Yiiqiifnn,
)' ..' eveiiii!f, Vlsitlue brothers are
i'v!'"'? t:- A. MlI.LEIt, M. W.
l-A l.--. lie"order.
't'-WN OF
TTIK Wort ,!). pncahontiiR
'i, Toledo, Orcfon. meets on
tnir-t Thursdays in each month in
"" -. hull. Visiting neighbors are
"M IV I,
' AltMil.li,
' onsnl.
n:o. DETHERS,
Clerk.
FOll-
ON
E DOLLAR.
JUST READ THIS:
For the next Thirty Days we, will send
the LEADER to any address,
ADDRESS OF WELCOME.
ar tor m
We want One Hundred new subscribers
during the next thirty days and make this
especially low offer to secure them.
Tvo.iatoG.yun,
Reg. Pharmacist.
DRUGS, BOOKS ETC.
leclo, . Orecon.
HALL,
"stice of the Peace
loledo, Oregon,
Mnrtiran. --m .... .
ea tf, .u lh '""eetnesi. Careful attention 1
ea iu all buship.. o, .-., ,i .
The LEADER is the leading paper o f
Yonninu T.ji.v. Tt is the official paper of
Lincoln County. It gives all the County
news without prejudice or partiality.
scribe at once
This offer is Casli and is only good till
September 20, when the price will be again
orivunr.ofl tn SI. .50. This offer is good to
lold subscribers as well as new.
Sub
Delivered by County Superin
tendent Irvin to the State
Teachers' Association.
It is with pride that I have the
honor to welcome so distinguished
an assembly to the pleasures of our
little village by the sea. To you
whom is entrusted next to that of
the parent the most sacred cause
that has ever been the lot of man to
pursue. Into your hands has been
placed the happiness of the home,
the prosperity and perpetuity of the
nation, and the iutureof the human
soul.
The examples of the great and
good from among you whose names
are christened by a liberty loving
people, and whose efforts have
brought to us the inalienable rights
of life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness, is certainly a sufficient
incentive for you to labor earnestly
to maintain such a glorious herit
age.
It is yours to teach the young
that their own arm is their demi
god, and that it was given them to
help themselves. It is yours to
teach them to go forth in the world,
truthful and fearless; to look upon
labor as honorable, whether it be in
the schoolroom, the study, the office
the workshop, or the furrowed field.
It is yours to teach them that
there is no effort of science or art
that may not be exceeded; no depths
of philosophy that cannot be deeper
sounded; no flight of imagination
that may not be passed by strong
and soaring wings; that nature is
full of unknown things, and what
hitherto has given prosperity and
distinction to others is equally open
to them.
It is to education, imparted chief
ly through our publis schools, that
we are to look for safety at home
and our consideration and dignity
abroad. Every year we see fresh
proofs of its utility and blessings;
and although our territory has
stretched out wider and wider, and
our population spread farther an
farther, they have not out run its
protection and benefits.
It is to the efficiency of our pub
lic school system that we are to
look for protection from the 350,
000 people who annually come to
our shores from other climes, many
of them reared in ignorance and
vice, who do not know the com
forts of home or the meaning of lib
erty. Take away the influence of our
schools and we dare not consider
the dark and hidden recesses of the
future. God grant that to our vis
ion, and to to that of our children,
may never be opened what lies be
yond. There have arisen but few ques
tions in our nation's history that
requires more careful consideration
than that of our foreign immigra
tion. In our peace and prosperity
we have overlooked its magnitude,
ana its possible mnuence on our
Then it is to you teachers, who
have chosen the profession that lies
so close to our nation's life, that
we extend, in the name of Lincoln
county and the City of Newport, a
most hearty welcome. Welcome to
the renewed health an d vigor that
you receive from our refreshing
breezes, and the cool and sparkling
waters of our springs. Welcome to
the joys of gliding over the smooth
and placid waters of our bay, and
to gather from its shores the rare
and beautiful flowers, or to capture
from its hidden depths the many
varieties of fish that it contains,
that are said to furnish food for
brain as well as body. We offer
you an opportunity to enjoy that
"unspeakable thrill" that so often
accompanies a voyage on the bil
lowey deep. We bid you ramble
over our hills and through our val
leys, and by our brooks you will
find, "Spots where the twilight
loves to hide, and places where
fairy echoes glide." As you come
from your heated cities and their
dusty streets, we welcome you to
our groves of fragrant pines, moss
cushioned and o'erhung with vines,
where the bright-plumed birds will
charm you with their varied notes.
If you wish to study the grand
uer and force of the waves, you
have but to appropriate what the
skill of engineers, with the expend
iture of o'er $600,000 have con
structed, and you can walk with
comparitive ease and safety into the
very midst of the seething mass.
Then visit the life-saving station
and become acquainted with the
gentlemanly crew, with their strong
arms and brave hearts, that dare to
baffle these mighty forces, risking
their own lives that the lives of
others they may save.
If you call upon your uncle at
his lighthouse at Foulweather you
will find his house-keeper kind and
courteous. They will explain to
you how careful your dear relative
is for his nephew and neices who
travel by sea.
We cannot ask you to view his
toric battle fields, or massive busi
ness blocks, but we can ask you to
enjoy with u in its granduer and
beauty one of the most delightful
resorts it has ever been the lot of
man to visit. At low tide we ask
you to examine our aquarium, that
for interest, extent and variety is
unsurpassed in the known world.
From Seal Rocks, on the south, to
Otter Rock on the north, it is one
vast stretch of intense interest.
Here you may be terror stricken by
the roar of a thousand sea lions, or
you may watch the sly sea otter,
whose silken coat of gray is more
valuable than much fine gold. Here
is the play ground for scores of
whales that send up tninature gey
sers, and stretch their huge forms
on the surface that they may inter
est to the scene.
If you look into the liquid crys
tals of the waters, the most won
drous enchantments are open to
you, reminding you of the fairy
tales ot childhood s dreams. The
form of government. Our safety is coiorirjg surpasses description; viv-
I . .L.i I
1 in me mci umi me uoys arm
girls
men
and women of tomorrow. And may
you be faithful to teach them that
the safety of their homes and their
country is in twining each thread
of the glorious tissue of our coun
try's flag as closely about the heart
strings ot their affections, that come
weal, come woe, that in life or in
death, that they will stand by the
Stars and Stripes. They have float
ed over our cradles; let it be our
prayer and our struggle that they
shall float over our graves.
id greens alternate with brown and
yellow; rich tints ranging from pur
ple and deepest blue to a pale, red
dish brown. Among the coral
mosses play little fishes, sparkling
with red or blue metallic glitter or
gleaming in golden green or bright
est silver lustre. When day de
clines, with the shades of night,
this fantastic garden of the gods is
lighted with renewed splendor.
Millions of microscopic creatures,
like so many glowing sparks, dance
through the gloom. (For further
particulars I would refer you to
Prof. Condon.)
And again we say welcome.
VMU UD tU Ui V.