Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987, August 03, 1906, Image 1

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Volume XIV.
Toledo, Lincoln County, Oregon, Friday, August 3, 1906.
Xmnber 23
5
Teachers' Examination. I Mr. and Mrs. L.M.Starr are enjoying
Kotice is hereby given tbat the County I """"" 6 " " -
Superintendent of Lincoln county 'will
hold the regular examination of appli-1
Joe Graham of Kings Valley is visit
ing relatives and friends in the city.
cants for State and County papers at
Toledo, as follows:
FOR STATE PAPERS
Commencing Wednesday, August 8,
at nine o'clock a. ni., and continuing
uniil Saturday, August, August 11 at 4
o'clock p. m.
Wednesday Penmanship, History.
Spelliug, Physical Geography, Reading,
Psychology.
Thursday Written Arithmetic, The
ory of Teaching. Grammar, Book-Keep-iug,
Physics, Civil Government.
Friday Physiology, Geography, Men
tal Arithmetic, Composition, Algebra.
Saturday Botany, Plane Geometry,
General History, English Literature,
School Law.
FOR COl'STY PAPERS
Commencing Wednesday, August 8,
at 9 o'clock a. m., and continuing until
Friday, August 10 at 4 o'clock p. m.
First, Second and Third Grade Cer
tificates.
Weduesday Penmanship, History,
Orthography, Heading.
Thursday Written Arithmetic, The
ory of Teaching, Grammar, Physiology.
Friday Geogrnphy, Mental Arithme
tic, Schrol Law.
PRIMARY CERTIFICATES
Wednesday Peumansbip, Orthog
raphy, Arithmetic, Reading.
Thursday Art of Questioning. The
ory of Teaching, Physiology.
Dated at Toledo. Oregon, this 23d day
of July, 1900. George Bnthers,
County School Superintendent.
Bids Wanted.
The undersigned, acting as County
Roadmaster for Road District No. 8, in
Lincoln county, Oregon, will receive
bids, per rod, for the buildiug of a
corduroy road ou the Toledo and Siletz
road, beginning at the city limits of
Toledo, Oregon, and running north' on
said road to the farm of Hans Larsen.
1 will also receive bids, per rod, for
building a corduroy road ou the Tolodo
and Newport road, beginning at the
west end of tho J. F. Stewart bridge at
Toledo, Oregon, and running north on
said road to the intersection of the
Corvallis road near the Duudou farm.
I will also receive bids for 75,000 feet
of '2-inch road plank, at mill or de
livered on the Toledo and Newjort
road.
Bids will be received up to 12 o'clock
noon on the 10th day of August, 190G.
Plans and specifications for said work
may be seen at the olliee of Ira Wade,
County Clerk, and bids may also be
left with him or addressed to uie A
Toledo, Oregon.
The right to reject any and all bids
is hereby reserved:
Dated at Toledo, Oregon, this 31st
day of July, 1906.
J. W. Parrish,
Road Supervisor District No. 8, Lincoln
Couuty, Oregon.
Call for County Warrants.
Notice is hereby giveu that I have
funds ou hand to pay all County War
runts drawn on the General Fund, and
endorsed: "Not paid for want of funds"
up to and including March 31, 1903.
Interest on said warrants to cease
from and after this date.
J. L. Hyde, County Treasurer.
Dated at Toledo, Or., this 3d day of
August, 1906.
The Weather.
Station : Toledo; Month: July, 1900
Mean temperature, 61.5
Maximum temperature, 98; date, 2d.
Minimum temperature, 48; date, 5, 7,28.
Total precipitation, 7 inches.
Prevailing direction of wind, nw.
Number of cloudless days, 19.
Number of partly cloudy days, 7,
Number of cloudy days, 5.
Date of light frost, 0,
Date of killing frost, 0.
Dates of thunder storms, 28.
Otto O. Krogstad, Observer.
County Clerk and Mrs. Ira Wade re
turned Saturday from a visit in Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Hall of Siletz
visited in Toledo the fore part of the
week.
Miss Carrie Raines returned Tuesday
from a protracted visit with relatives in
Portland.
Superintendent Egbert and Clerk
Rastall of Siletz were in the city last
Saturday.
J. S. Akin, the dry goods maD, left
Wednesday morning on a business trip
to Portland.
A. T. Peterson took a trip up the line
Tuesday in the interest of the Mutual
Telephone Company.
J. E. Stauffer of Siletz departed yes
terday morning ou a business trip to
Everett, Washington.
Miss Faith Stewart went to Morrison
Tnpidav for a visit with Miss Lillie
Miller. She returned last evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Shedd Rosebrook and
Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Crosno were up
from Newport Sunday and Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude McClure came
over from Wreu on the excursion Sun
day and spent the day with friends and
relatives.
J. W. Cowman of Monroe, Iowa, ar
rived Tuesday evening for a visit with
his sisters, Mesdames G. R. Schenck
and C. F. Soule.
Contractor Jim Gaitherand assistants
are busy making the fill at the bridge
in front of J. F. Stewart's place ou the
Toledo-Newport road.
Mrs. S. A. Kisor, who has been visit
ing her daughter, Mrs. C. G. Copeland,
at Siletz, returned yesterday morning
to her home at Philomath.
The Toledo and Siletz baseball teams
hooked up on the local uncut diamond
last Suudav. Toledo won, but the
score was too big for publication.
James McDonald and Bon Charles
McDonald and family came down from
Chitwood Wednesday and will spend a
week fencing and otherwise improving
their places near town.
.J. Essig and family of Dallas re
turned to their home Monday from an
outing at the beach. They recently
arrived in Oregon from Lincoln couuty,
Nebraska, the old home of ''we."
Want to Work?
From every part of the state of Or
egon and the whole Northwest comes
the cry for harvest hands, railroad la
borers and sawmill men. Never was
the demand so insistent and the re
sponse so Inadequate. Employers of
labor estimate tbat from CO00 to 8000
laborers are needed today, but where
thev are to come from no one can
More Baseball.
The Toledo and Siletz baseball teams
will mis on the lattcr's grounds next
Sunday. A straight tip is out that
Tolelo is booked for a scalping.
Boarders Wanted.
Apply to Mrs. Elizabeth Comer, To
ledo, Oregon.
Rev. Potter, a former pastor of the
M. E. church in this place, passed
through to Newport Friday evening,
returning home Wednesday morning
Mr. and Mrs. Potter are located at
Newburg, Or., this year.
Smith's tannery is receiving a large
supply of alder bark and will soon be
ready to do business on a larger scale
than ever before. Mr. Smith has
recently put a lot of high-grade leather
on the market.
Wallace Fish left yesterday morning
for Independence, where he will joiu a
harvesting crew. Ho expects to secure
steady employment and remain in the
Vallev until next spring. lie says that
kind of a job will beat bumming.
Messrs. William Scarth and C. E
Hawkins returned Monday evening
from a trouting trip to Drift creek-
They broke all records for the season
having trout to give Rway. Many
friends were called upon to handle the
surplus.
The Leader acknowledges receipt of
an invitation to be present at the mar
riage of Miss Alberta HobartatGrango
ville, Idaho, at the Presbyterian church
Wednesday eveniug, August 15. Th
ceremony will be followed by a recep
tion at the home of the bride's sister,
Mrs. Levi Magee. The lucky man is
Mr. Albert Milton Baker. Miss
Hoburt's many friends in Toledo for
ward congratulations and best wishes.
Master Frank Schlappi entertained a
few of his friends at his he me Friday
answer.
Railroad contractors areshortof tneu,
while the harvest fields are short
banded as well. Sawmill men are pay
ing the highest wages in the history of
the industry ou this coast, f 2.50 a day
for green men who never saw a sawmill
in their lives. Wages for common la
bor in the railroad camps wcie never
so good as they are now. The common
laborer is paid the general wage of
$2.25 a day by railroad contractors,
while some camps offer $2..r)0 for 12
hours, or tho men can work 14 hours if
they like and get $3 for the day's work.
But in spite of these inducements,
men cannot be secured to fill up the
uiil.v luiUuud equips cr round out tho
hort-handed harvesting crews. But
this is not true because evorv idle man
is busy, for there are hundreds of men
to be found iu the North End any day,
watching the electric fans spin at Er
ickson's or Blazier's or loafiug com
fortably in the City Park or plaza blocks
while the industrial interest of the
stute are clamoring for them.
Instead of making hay while the sun
shines, these men prefer to loiter, se
cure in the kuowledge that wlieuever
their last nickel is gone their services
will be in demand and they can go to
work again at good wages. If all the
idle men would enlist in the army of
workers and stick with their jobs as
long as they lasted, the scarcity of la
bor that is now keenly felt, would soon
be forgotten.
No matter what conditions have pre.
viously existed," said C. R. Hansen,
employment agent,"the situation today
is such that any able-bodied man may
secure work at good wages and be pro
vided with good, wholesome board and
accommodations. Many men are now
idle by preference. If these men would
go to work it would help the situation a
great deal, t
"The Northern Pacific has shipped in
a great many men iroin .Minnesota
without exactiug a nickel from them
for fare. It was agreed that, these men
should go to work on railroad con
struction, but many of them have
drifted into other occupations, such as
logging and sawmill work. Of the vast
army shipped in in this way, few have
remained with railroad work, and the
movement has done but little good for
the railroads.
"Although these men have beeu as
similated by the other industries of the
Northwest, they are but as a drop in
the bucket. However, these men are
likely to get back into railroad work
with the approach of winter, when the
logging camps shut down."
The Harriman lines in the state are
iu need of 300 men for betterment
work, while 300 more could be used to
good advantage on bridge and concrete
work. This number is needed by the
maintainance department, exclusive of
the lnrge amount of new construction
now going on.
A thousand men are wanted on the
Lewiston-Riparia line, which is being
built jointly by the O. R. & N. and the
Northern Pacific. The contractors on
the Elgin brunch of tho O. K. & N. want
from 400 to COO men, while 500 more are
needed by tho Harriman lines alone be
tween Portland Riid Eastern Oregon at
intermediate points.
It is estimated conservatively that
the North Bank road, now undergoing
construction by the Portland and Se
attle Railway, needs from 1500 to 2000
men. The Klamath irrigation work is
also reported to be short handed.
Ericksou & Potterson, probably the
Jones, is working on the Columbia Val
ley Railroad and needs men to fill up
his camps. George McCabe, who is
completing the Elgin extension of the
O. R. & N., has had continual difficulty
in securing men euough to do the work
and he paid tho record price for com
mon, labor, $2.50 a day, in order to com
plete Ids contract.
These men, as well as contractors in
other lines, report that work has beeu
retarded because men could not be se
cured in large enough numbers. The
constant shifting of the men is com
mented upon by employers. After a
short time spent iu one camp the men
wander off to other work or to spoud a
long vacation in idleness.
From the harvest fields comos a call
for men. It is estimated that at least
2000 hands are ueeded to gather the
grain crops. So severe is the shortage
that it is leported from Walla Walla
that a family of society girls took charge
of their father's teams to help him
gather his wheat crop.
Within the city limits there is plenty
of work. Contractors who aro putting
up new buildings in tho business dis
trict have difficulty iu keeping full
crews and signs are noticed on the work
stating that men are needed. The
sfoetcar lines that are being built
about tho city need more laborers, as
well as the contractors who ure putting
down sewers and building streets.
The shortage of common labor that
was reported several months prior to
the Lewis &. Clark Exposiiinu has ap
parently continued unabated, although
the situation has now reached au acute
etiige. It is likely that the uew railroad
work constantly being opened up will
cause this condition to continue, pos-
ibly all winter and another summer.
The Coos Bay extension of the South
ern Pacific, the Chicago, Milwaukee &
St. Paul extension to tho coast, the
extension of the Hammond Hues in tho
pring, together with the continued
activity iu the lumber trade, promise to
keep an army of men busy for months
to come. Oregoniau.
largest employers of common labor in
the state at this time, now have the
afternoon from two until five, in honor : construction of 138 miles of railroad
of his sixth birthday. The aftomoon
was spent in playing games, the chief
attraction being blowing bubbles.
Lunch was served by Misses Aileen
Gaither and Tida Schlappi. Thoso
present were, Misses Stella Gannon,
Lucile Gildersleeve, Clara Harding,
Gertie and Eva Comer, Masters Beal
and Taience Gaither, Tommy Harding
and Lester Hoover.
under way. The Pacific Coast Con
struction Company, of which H,
Huson is president and general man
ager, also has a large amount of work
in hand for the O. K. & at various
points, and the company is just com
niencing the rebuilding of the main
line of the O. R. & N. from Troutdale
to Bonneville.
Sidney Smith, of the Arm of Smith A
Jack Morgan of Euchre Mountain is
a the city.
G. L. Gray was a passenger Valley-
ward this morning.
The Leader and Oregouhui both one
year for only 82. That's fair onougb.
Ed Avery was iu Elk City tho fore
part of the week doing some plumbing
Lost A VV. II. V: emblem pin. Find
er please leave at this office and receive
reward.
Mrs. M. Uuffoid ol Portland is visit
ing relatives uud friends iu Toledo ami
Siletz this week.
Hon. Walter L. Tooze and family of
Woodburn passed through to Newport
Wednesday evening.
Denutv County Ulork 1-iee Wado to
turned Wednesdav evening from
business trip to Portland.
Mrs. Hughes, who has been visiting
at the home of her mother, Mrs. Allon
Parker, returned Tuesday to her home
tit Astoria.
Will Hoeflein, who has been visiting
at home for several days, returned
Tuesday to Coburg to renew ucquain
tances with his job.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Blower aud son
Cecil were up from Mill 4 yesterday, ac
companied by Prof, aud Mrs. George
Coote of Corvallis, who uru visiting
them.
E. J. Avery and family, Miss Grade
Thurston, William Ciawfoid, A. M
Gildersleeve and family and Walter
Harding and family will go to Otto
Rock tomorrow for a two- weeks outing
Prof. B. J. Hawthorne of Eugene, in
structor iu Psychology at the Univc
sity of Oregon, visited Tolodo friends
Tuesday, leaving that ovouing to join
his family iu their summer cottage at
Seal Rocks,
Dr. Adams, the Portland dentist,
passed through to Newport yesterday
evening and will bo joined by Mrs.
Adams tomorrow. Dr. Adams will be
in Toledo the latter part of this month.
Date will appear in Tim Leader.
Claude lloll.urt roturned Tuesday
evening from Alsa, where he has had
charge of a branch of tho Corvallis
creumery for the past two months.
Fern liaydeo, who has had charge of
the creamery here during Mr. Htilburl's
absonce, has accepted a position at
Altree's mill.
Praises Oregon's Apples.
D. L. Yagdjoglou, a wholesale fruit-
dealer of Vladivostok, is a guest at the
Hotel Portland. He will remain here
a month or six weeks, examining the
fruit conditions of this state. Mr.
Yagdjoglou is a Greek, although he has
lived in Russia nearly all his life He
has been in the fruit-importing business
for many years, and, together with his
brother, conducts one of tho largest
fruit houses in Russia. Yagdjoglou
Bros, make large purchases each year
from W. B. Glafke & Co. of Portland.
The business of Yagdjoglou Bros,
during tho war between Japan and
Russia was greatly increased. While)
actual fighting was going ou between
these two nations, this firm was import
ing much fruit from Japan, which was
taken to Vladivostok by Japanese
steamer. Yagdjoglou Bros, have an
enormous trade with the oflioers of tlm
Russian army, who consume most of
the fruit shipped into the country from
Oregon.
This is Mr. Yagdjoglou's first visit to
the United Slates. Since leaving
Russia, 35 days ago, ho has learned to
peak the English language enough to
make himself understood. Iu addition,
bespeaks five other languages fluently.
While hero ho will travel about tho
state, investigating the fruit crops, and
also study tho ways of 'the American in
doing business.
Mr. Yagdjoglou is of the opinion that,
the greatest apples iu the world comes
roni Oregon. Oregoniau.
Miss Esther Copeland of Siletz niado
a brief visit in Toledo Wednesday.
Dr. and Mrs. II. B. Dabney returned
this morning from an outimr at Seal
Rocks.
Rorn At Rainier, Or., July 29, 1906,
to Mr. and Mrs. George II. Umbangh,
a 10-pound son.
Ed Wade, accompanied by William
Cowman, went to Elk City this morning
to buy some cuttle.
Mrs. Gray of Philomath arrived i.isl
eveuing for a visit with her daughter,
Mrs. George Bethers, and tnmilv.
J. L. Rexford of Corvallis is inspect
ing Toledo and vicinity with a view to
purchasing a nice little farm. Ho for
merly lived in the Big Elk country.
Mesdames Lizzie Graham, Livinio-
Altreo and M, Hufford will go to Nye
Creek today to "camp out" for awhile.
Joe Graham will probably go down to
morrow to keep house for them.
Messrs. Samuel Center, Al Waugh
and George McCaulou left Tuesday
morning on a hunting and fishing expe
dition iu tho Tenmile country. They
were well supplied with ammunition
anticipation and ether things.
0. li. Def.nurier was over from Silct.
the fore part of tho weok. As slated
by Tim Leader last week, Mr. De
Laurier was tendered the principalship
of the new high school. After a talk
with tho school board, he decided not
to uccept the position. Clerk Hawkius
is now in communication with other
pedagogues; also podagoguessos.
1. J. Popiu of Chitwood wns in the
city yesterday after a load of lumber,
with which he will put the finishing
touches on a large new barn. He ex
pects to leave in a couple of days for au
outing at Bolknap Springs, ou tho
Mackenzie river, accompanied by his
wife nud Mrs. Harry Porter. They will
mako the trip by WHgon, and expect to
be irono about two mouths.
W. E. Foster, who has been visiting
at his old home ju Indiana and chasing
over the country for several mouths in
the interest of his health, arrived in
Toledo the fore part of the week fr
another visit with C. II. Gardner, the
hardware man. When Mr. Foster gets
old euough to settle down, he will prob
ably locuto in Toledo possibly in about
twenty years.
At the M. E. Church.
Texts ami subjects for services at tho
M. E. church Sunday, August 5, 1906:
Morning Text, 2 Samuel, 18:29. Sub
joct, "Is tho Young Man Safe?"
Evening Text, Hebrews 11:4. Sub'
joct, "What Constitutes Acceptability
with God?"
For Sale.
A good second-hand New G. llowo
sewing machine. Price $15.
Mrs. Georuk Bktiieiis,
Toledo, Oregon.,