Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987, March 17, 1905, Image 1

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Volume XIII.
Toledo, Lincoln County, Oregon, Friday, March 17, 1905.
Number ;i
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gender.
Taxpayers Take Notice.
The statutes provide that unless at
least one-half of the taxes is paid on
or before the first Monday in April,
1905, a penalty of 10 per cent and in
terest at the rate of 12 per cent until
paid from said first Monday in April,
1905, will be added.
J. II. Ross, Sheriff.
.
Birthday Party
Mrs. Dan Grady, assisted by Miss
Maud Horning. Rave a very pleasant
party at her residence on Saturday af
ternoon from 2 until 5 in honor of her
daughter Eleanor's birth. The time
was spent in playmg games, after
which a dainty lunch was served. All
went awuy happy aud wishing Eleanor
many happy returns of the day. Those
present were :
Onda Ellsworth, Julliette Bradeson,
Nellie and Edna Brown, Anna Hawkins,
Aileen Gaikher, Elma Waugh, Marie
Rollins, Alta and Edna Waugh, Viola
Gannon, Eulalia and Galiesa Reed.
Eudelie lie Li i ere, Iiuogene Aiiieu and
Eleanor Gradv.
The Debt Removed.
The Ladies' Aid Society of the M. E.
church met Tuesday afternoon with
Mrs. Charles M. Brown. It was a pro
fitable meeting and the nice lunch fur
nished by the hostess was appreciated.
The treasurer's report showed that the
entire debt of the church building and
parsonage has been paid, and the So
ciety desires to thauk the many citizens
of Toledo and vicinity who have aided
the good cause.
Died.
At Vaquina, Or., March 12, 1905, An
drew J. ttout, age 09 years.
Deceased was born, in Jacksonville,
111., April 18, 183G. and came to Clack
a mas couuty, Oregon, in 1853. He was
married to Sarah Jane Stephenson
November 27. 1856. He moved with bis
wife and two sons, Alonzo and Lucien
who survive him, to Yaquina Bay in
1896, where he has since resided, his
family being present at his death.
funeral services were held at the
home Tuesday, conducted by Key. C. R,
Ellsworth of Toledo, followed by inter
ment in Newport cemetery.
Mr.. Stout was a kind husband and
father and a useful and highly re
spected citizen. The sympathy of
many friends goes out to the bereaved
family.
Boat Once a Month.
John Lindstrom, Mayor of Aberdeen,
is negotiating for the steam schooner
Toledo for service between Portland
and Gray's Harbor. It is proposed to
make a round trip each week to points
on the harbor and once a mouth to
send the steamer down to Alsea and
Yaquina Bay. The Toledo was built
last year and is a first class coaster
but has not been able to find an opening
on any of the lower runs. A. Fay of
San Francisco, a part owner in the
steamer, was making inquiries yester
day for a master for the oraft. Several
years ago there was profitable business
for a steamer between Portland and the
harbor, but the building of the North'
ern Pacific extension killed it off. It
is thought that the heavy travel in the
West this summer on account of the
Fair will enable a steamer on this route
to do a paying business. Oregonian,
Card of Thanks.
We desire to express our heartfelt
thauks the kind friends who assisted
U3 during the illness of our husband
and father. Mas. A. J. Stodt,
A. L. Stout,
L. Stodt.
Flour and Feed.
If you want some good bargains in
this Hue call on John Olson
For Sale.
A good farm of 300 ncres, about 100
acres on river: 1J4 miles good fence,
acres fine orchard, just in bearing; 140
good goats, Hhout half und half wethers
and nannies will increase about 50 or
00 beginning April 1 ; 50 head good
sheep; 7 head cattle, including 4 good
cows soon to be fresh ; 2 good young
horses; everything on ranch goes ex
cept bedding and wearing apparel
One-half mile from schoolbousc, post
office and sawmill. Address
W. II. Daniel,
Elk City, Oregon
Jack Porter was up from Newport
Tuesday.
F. C. Hoffman of Elk City as a To
ledo visitor Tuesday.
William Schneider of Siletz had busi
ness in the citv Tuesday.
A. B. Clark of Elk City had business
in the county seat Tuesday.
Ladies, come in and see my new line
of shirtwaists. Mrs. M."Wygant.
Miss Mollie Blower of Mill 4 visited
friends in the city Tuesday night.
Fred Weatherford of Albany had
business in Toledo Tuesday night.
M. L. Trapp of Chitwood had busi
ness in the county Beat Tuesday night.
Barber George Land ret h was listed
with tbe sick the fore part of the week.
William Thayer went to Brownsville
Tuesday for a visit with bis brother
Doc."
Some good furniture and cooking
utensils for sale cheap. Inquire at the
Depot.
Dr. Thomas Parker returned Satur
day evening from a business trip to
Portland.
John Marshall of the Newport Navi
gation Company went to Portland Tues
day on business.
Mr. and Mrs. William Brazelton, who
have been sick for some time, are up
and around again.
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Pruett of Yaquina
returned to their home Tuesday even
ing from 'a visit at Albany.
Barred Plymouth Rock eges, fancy
stock, only 81 per setting of 13. Mrs.
George Bethers, Toledo, Oregon.
Clyde Fox, the well known musical
Siletz rancher was in the city Tuesday
night and left next morning on a busi
ness trip to the valley.
C. C. McBride arrived in Toledo from
his Yichnts ranch about 2 o'clock
Wednesday morning and went on to his
former home at Eddyville by rail.
Ted McElwain returned Wednesday
evening from an absence of several
months at his other home Inkster, N,
D., where he saw some real winter.
August Fischer of Corvallis, manager
of the Corvallis Flouring Mills, was in
the city Wednesday, en route home
from a business trip to Marsh field and
other points in Coos county.
Rex Davis of Jefferson, a former citi
zen of Lincoln county, passed down to
Newport Monday evening for an outing
He is at present traveling salesman for
Folger & Co of San Francisco.
Leon Rosebrook, who had been pay
ing a brief visit to his folks, departed
Monday morning for San Francisco to
accept a place in an orchestra of one of
the leading theaters. Age considered
Leon is one 01 tiie nest musicians on
the Coast and he is steadily climbing
Some of the old and neglected apple
trees in Toledo are "lousy" with woolly
aphis. They should be cut down and
burned, being pest breeders, and
ueither useful nor ornamental. We
understand there is a bit of law cover
ing tbe case which might be brought
into action.
Mr. and Mrs. E. 51. Hoffman departed
yesterday morning for Eugene, where
Mrs. Hoffman will remain during the
coming summer. Mr. Hoffman will go
into the Bohemia mining district, where
he has accepted the foremanship of
oue of the Oregon Securities Com
pany's ore mills. They expect to re-
turn to Toledo next fall.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Green have been
placed under arrest for the murder of
E. G. Sharratt. The former had an ex
amination last Saturday before Justice
Wakefield, who committed him with
out bonds. Mrs. Green probably had a
hearing yesterday in the same court.
More liext week. Particulars next
July.
Captain R. A. Bensell of Newport was
a Toledo visitor yesterday. Mr. Ben
sell reports that the outlook at New
port is unusually encouraging. While
it has long been recognized as the finest
summer resort on this coast, it is now
attracting attention as a winter resort,
with the result that a number of east
erners are preparing to build cottages
for winter use. The climate the year
through is about the best to be found
a fact which travelers aud homeseekers
are learniug.
Newport will experience
quite a grow th this summer, and tho
season promises to be the best in its
history. .
That Awful Bear Fight.
Tbe Leader noted last week that
Owen Beam captured a little bear cub
on his farm on the Siletz and took it to
Albany. While in Toledo Owen, ably
supported by Johnny Wells, related
the story of the capture of that cub,
ith many interesting details. They
told how the mamma bear stood up and
sberoicHlly battled with the abductors
of her little black baby ; how they
the abductors pulled their trusty five-
pistols and filled Mrs. Bruin's head full
of lead or would haye filled it full of
lead, bat the bullets all glanced off
without doing serious damage. How
ever, the fusillade caused the shereic
mother to lose her nerve, and she fin
ally took to the brush and left Messrs.
Beam and Wells in possession of the
gory battlefield ana also her baby.
There was a pair of the cubB when the
fight began, but in the scrimmage tbe
mother accidentally sat upou one of
her infants and killed it. All this, dear
reader, seems to have been a dream, or
a nightmare. At any rale, Oscar Wood
of Siletz says he sold Owen Beam a
little bear cub for the insignificant sum
of to so we are informed. Next!
St. John's Church.
Services on the first and third
Sun-
days of each month.
Sunday School at 10 a. in.
Morning Prayer and sermon at 11 a.m.
Evening Prayer at 7 :30 p. m.
Everybody invited and will be made
welcome.
Rev. Frank Owen Jones,
Minister-in-Charge.
Dried Italian Prunes
4 cents per pound, at
H. S. Pbuker's,
Nashville, Or.
Real Estate Transfers. '.
March 10 Lester Waugh and Alice
Waugh to Joseph Blower, lot 13 in
block 5 in Graham's 5th addition to To
ledo. f190.
March 13 F. M. Williams to Thomas
Williams and B F King, eli of nw
section 34, township 10 south, range 10
west. 8700.
March 14 Acacia Cole et al to Wm
Alexander Spence and Jesse Spence,
part of lot 1 in block 5, Nye and
Thompson's addition to Newport. $50.
March 10 J F Stewart and Ella Stew
art to Tho9 Leese, 6.83 acres in section
8, township 1L south, range 11 west,
Case and Bayley's addition to Newport.
8500.
March 9 Mary F Crawford and J II
Crawford to T H Gildersleeve, 6 acres
in section 17, township 11 south, range
10 west. $475.
March 13 Virgil Howell et al to
Walter Howell, GO acres in sections 32
33, township 13 south, range 11 west. 81.
March 13 Walter Howell and wife
to Virgil Howell et al, (55 acres in sec
tions 32 and 33, township 13 south
range 11 west, f 1.
I will sell my gasoline launch "Ya-
quina" at a bargain if
bought within
D. Wetmore.
the next thirty days.
Dr. J.
How to Stay Young.
How old are you? Tbe adage says
that women are as old as they look, and
men as old as they feel. Thai's wrong.
A man aud woman are as old as they
take themselves to be.
Grow ing old is largely a habit of the
mind. "As a man thiuketh in his heart,
so is he." If he begins shortly after
middle age to imagine himself growing
old he will be old.
To keep one's self from decreptitude
is somewhat a roatur of will power.
The fates are kind to the man who
hangs on to life with both hands. He
who lets go will go. Death is slow only
to tackle the tenacious.
Ponce do Leon searched in the wrong
place for the fountain of youth. It is
in one's self. Orie must keep one's self
young inside. So Unit while "the outer
man perisheth, the inner man is re
newed day by day."
When the human mind ceases to exert
itself, when there is no longer an active
interest in the affairs of this life, when
the human stops reading uud thinking
aud doiui?, the man, like a blasted true,
begins to die at the top.
I You are as old as you think you arc.
I Keep the harness 011. Your job is not
' done Ex.
The Lradeb and Oregonian, only 2.
C. B. Crosuo had business at Corvallis
Monday.
A full line of Rubber goods at Stew
art's store.
Hon. J. K. Weatherford of Albany
had business in the city last night.
For Plain Sewing-Call on Mrs. L. L.
Comer, at M. E. Parsouage, Toledo.
Nathan Drumniond of Eddyville was
in the city the fore part of the week.
George Landreth sells the best talk
ophones on the market. Hear them.
City Marshal Al Hall went to Albany
yesterday to take a course of treatment
uuder Dr. J. L. Aiken.
George Freeman of Portland, a skilled
painter, has decided to locate iu Toledo
and will bring his family here about
April 1.
Mrs. Mae Kearns came down from
Portland Tuesday to visit her father,
who is sick. We are informed that Mr.
Lewis is improving.
Select your garden seeds earlv and
don't forget to ask for a free ticket in
Krogstad's Talk-o-phone drawing to
place in or about .Tune first.
The old subject of connecting eyery
well-populated part of Lincoln county
with the county seat by telephone is
being revived. It's coming to that one
of these days perhaps sooner than is
generally supposed. The only things
required are a combination ot capital
and barmonv.
Death of Moses Parker.
Moses Parker, aged 73 years, died at
his home near this city at 10 o'clock
yesterday forenoou after an illness of
a couple of weeks of bronchial pneu
monia. The funeral will be held from
the family home at Sand Ridge at 10
a. m., on Wednesday and burial will be
had in Sand Ridge cemetery.
Deceased was a native of Ohio and
came to Oregon in 1852, since which
time he has been prominently identi
fied with the progress of this state
IT. . . . ..
lie was ior many years prominent 111
the business affairs of the state and for
a number of years conducted a ware
house in Albany, erecting and operating
the warehouse that was later remodeled
and made into the Red Crown Mills
now running here.
He was a member of the Grange and
of Safety lodge No. 13, A. O. U. W.
He leaves a widow and four sons, all
residing in Linn county, to mourn his
death. Mrs. Virgil Parker of this city
is a niece. Albany Herald, March 11.
Moses Parker was a brother of Allan
Parker of Toledo, aud well-known to
many of our citizens.
"The Deestrict Skule."
"The Deestrict Skule" will eutertain
patrons aud friends at Woodmen Hall,
Friday night, March 31. Particulars
next week.
Firemen's Ball.
The Toledo Fire Department gives a
ball ton i ir Lit at Woodmen Hall. Tick
ets only $1.
Call for County Warrants.
Notice is hereby given that I have
funds on hand to pay all County War
rant's drawn ou the General Fund, and
eudorsed: "Not paid for want of funds"
up to and including July 10, 11)01.
Interest on said warrants to cease
on and after said date.
J. L. Hvdk, County Treasurer.
Dated at Toledo, Or., this 10th day of
March, 1005.
Tbe Portland market is bare of broil
ers, with the price at 25 to 50 cents. A
little three-months-old chicken deliv
ered tliere brings a Halt dollar, aud is
snatched from the coop by buyers with
such a demand thai there, is no supply.
The wonder is that effort is not made
to meet this demand. Nothing turns
into money so quickly, or apparently
pays such a profit on the investment.
Corvallis Times.
How unsatisfactory the mail order
method Is. A man near here who got
his wife through the matriiuonial news
paper route is now asking ihe court to
grant him a divorce. It serves the poor
man right. He should have patronized
the home market aud he would have
known what he was getting. Never send
away for anything when you cau got
the fame article at homo, and there is
less possibility of getting cheated.
Estueudn Nous.
Day to Honor Heroine.
July 6 has been selected as Sacajawea
and Order of Red Men day at the Lewis
and Clark Exposition. Ou this date
the bronze statue of Sacajawea will be
unveiled with formal ceremonies. The
Sacajawea Statue Association will share
the honors of the day with the Order
of Red Men in giving due recognition
to the neglocted heroino. The exer
cises will ho uttended by many noted
women who will come to attend the
National Woman's Suffrage convention
and the National Association of Chari
ties and Corrections, which will be held
at that time. In order to participate in
the ceremonies, the Order of Red Men
changed their day at the Fair from
July 20. A feature of the exercises
will be the presence of several thou
sand school children each wearing a
buttou upon which is the likeness of
Sacajawea.
For the purpose of honoring a ne
glected heroine tho Sacajawea Statue
Association, composed of prominent
Oregon women, was formed some time
ago with Mrs. Eva Emery Dye as Presi
dent. The Association has raised the
money for the orection of tbe statue
and chosen the design. The statue was
executed by Miss Alice Cooper of Den
ver, Colorado, and presents a young
Indian woman with n papoose strapped
to her back. The girl pointing toward
the distant sea, her face radiant and
head tiirown back and eyes full of dar
ing. A short hunting skirt, made of
deer skins, aud.leggins, show a figure
full of tho buoyancy and animatiou of
youth. Tho statue is composed of Or
egon copper and cost $7,000.
Tho entire sum necessary for the in
stallation of this memorial has not
been raised, but contributions are being
solicited from women all over the coun
try, and it is expected that the total
amount will be subscribed to pay off all
indebtedness by the time the statue is
unveiled. Western women have been
eutlmsiastiu iu lendiDg their support
to this commendable movement. Tho
statue, which is the first ever erected
iu honor of an Indian woman, will oc
cupy a conspicuous position iu tho
center of Columbia Court, the central
plaza of tho Exposition, facing Lake
view Terrace, where are statues of
Lewis aud Clark.
Sacajawea was an Indian girl, a mem
ber of the Shoshone tribe, who joined
the Lewis and Clark expedition, which
crossed tbe mountains to the Pacific a
century ago, while tho party was in
midwinter quarters among the Mandau
Indians, iu what is now North Dakota.
Sacajawea was then the mother of a
young babe. She was tho ouly woman
on the expedition, aud shared with the
men the hardships of tho toilsome
journey across the continent. Sho was
tho friend of Captains Clark aud
Lewis and generally rode with them in
advance of the party, where her pres
ence sorvod to allay the suspicions of
the tribes tbrougli whose country they
passed. Ou two occasious sho saved
the lives of the party, pointing the road
when every oue else was lost aud starv
ation was staring the little baud in tho
face.
Sacsjawea accompanied the party
through its entire journeyings. llrr
husband, Charbunueau, was taken along
to act as guide aud interpreter. When
the expedition, on the return, trip,
reached the country of the Mauduus,
Charboiineau decided to slay there, and
his ever-fuithful wife remained with
him. It is presumed that she died
shortly afterwards.
It may be safely said that it it had
not been for this Indian girl, Lewis
aud Clark would probably never have
reached the Pacific. Tlie women of tho
country deserve groat credit for making
it possible for this heroine to share in
the honors of the explorers at the Ex
position commemorating the expedition
of a century ago.
Here's a Snap!
By special arrangement with the pub
lishers Tun Li:adi;ii is enabled to make
tbe following unparalleled offer to its
readers:
Twentieth Century Home $1 00
'Cosmopolitan Magazine 1 in
Lincoln County Luadkh 1 M
$3 50
We will give all throe to our sub
scribers one year for only (2.25. Call
aud see sample copies of these standard
magazines. You can't nfford to bo
without them ut this price.