THE : OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, NG,JUL?$13,4m3 0 si.., mmmmmmmmmmmm BU'i -'V II v. 1 c m m m . . I ?r I I vv I 1 j -.T .v, I rV w iV-fX-J WW I i W W'A? : I I M-' m -Vi'V llsH!A ;-vs -nr. . I i V V rt i. 1 ;,.:( , ,e I M ,,. 1 iibifiie in WHOLLY BUILT UP .. Few Years; Have Seen fie V; markable "t Development Y of , , -This Beach Mainly: Through Building of Railroad,W". '. There la , nowhere in alt, Oregon so busy a vacation district as between : ehajem and Tillamook bays. They're :vr almosf- buUding v'.'summer title" over ',' Bights House are going up. Tents are w being erected..; The jsound of hammering and of happiness i' In the I air -, jTht Is Garibaldi teacher Buf "don't ' confuse itTwltb -the town of Garibaldi. , Garibaldi beach' ' ' extend for several . mllea,' If include Brighton. Lake Lytle i par. Twin Rocks, Bar View. Ocean park; Garibaldi.'; The beach is" not reg- nlar, S At several ( points.,, the 'hills en croach and tree r grow nearly tO ' the . water' edtfe... Thus t It a district pre senting variety of land view as well-as " the sweep of ocean that attracts hun . dreds of tourist and vacationists. It is easy to believe that within three V year the eight o" ten mile of Gari baldi .beach wilL b entirely; built; up ' with summer cottages and teats. . Jn "(act there Is not so much remaining now to .be done before this prediction becomes ,tb , fact..4- ;:'v, r. -m-.-,. w ; i ' The railroad ban made all the differ- - ence. It used to be necessary going to Tillamook, to go by way of the wagon '.road, a road that was kept In fair con ; dltlon, but not within the power of many to follow both because of 4tim and ex- pense. But now the railroad1 has crept ' down the gorge of the foaming Salmon- berry, through the - broader valley of the Nehalem and to the coast, finding - Ha present terminus at Tillamook city. Every foot of the way 1 delightful. ; The beache are not to be excelled any where. The hills furnish a protection against wind and storm. The climate ' is equable. A, warm day, that-la an ' uncomfortably warm day would be a great rarity on Garibaldi . beach. Tet the people there claim a greater per centage of bright day . than are ex perienced In Portland. Climate and scenery .combine to make Garibaldi , beach on lof the most popular resorts of all the Paclfio coast The population In the towns of Gari- - baldl beaoh has greatly increased alnce . the '"Southern Paclfi.nd Paclfio Rail road and -Navigation company Installed a train; service, two a day each way, that make the hours of traveling few and the time spent at the coast as long as possible. One may: leave Portland after noon on Saturday, spend Satur day night and Sunday at any one of " the many resorts and return to Portland Sunday night ;, '--i , Between Mohler and Tillamook City a, motor train service twice a day is . - provided and this has stimulated the sociability between towns wonderfully. People will be found traveling back and forth between tho communities getting acquainted with each other, enjoying the scenery from various view point and ; adding thu greatly to the pleasure of their stay on the coast The town of Garibaldi 1 the ferry landing of Bayocean, one of the most I nA1 arnlw ImnKAttAil a rha Tltl smAftlr GARIBALDI VILL BE beach resort. It 1 the spit that lie v between the ocean and Tillamook bay. " At few points is It much more than ZOO feet In width, but it is high enough, above the sea to furnish an excellent ', view. . ; " ; ; The variety of entertainment that awaits the visitor to any of the Tilla mook or Garibaldi beacb resorts is add- , ing to the popularity of the district' There are, of course, bathing and surf ' and deep sea fishing, but there are also ' mountains to be climbed and entranc ing trout atreams awaiting the rod. In the mountain gam 1 always to be found and a ruggednes of country " that make one who is city-tired for get there are such things a congested flic cud narrow crowded spaces. On an air line Garibaldi beach is less than (0 miles from Portland. By railroad It Is more, than 100 miles. - m- imm u ' j CLIMATE ANU VIEWS OF LAND AND SEA COMBINE JO PLEASE V ' '.:!..vi.: .V' ' ' I i -r 1 ) : -:;P;. : j - , '"5 ' ' ''y::i.'::'y:-;:;:;'V-x " - : -:';- " t,. : I l i $ 1 (Wiahlocton Bftreeotef: Jb ;Jotanuit) ' Washington, July. IX, Transplanting homeless boy of IS to' 10 years or age from the" crowded districts t the me tropolis to the farm of rural Ke W Tork 1 the taky attempted b the' Lincoln Agricultural . School, Of XJncolndale. N. T, according to information received at the .United State Bureau of Education. It Is a problem .which Oregon may oon have to face, a Portland grow bigger and the farms need men. " i This aohool, which i a charitable in stitution, take boys fresh from the cltyo treats, give them practical train ing &' agriculture, teachea them, proper living conditions, and then find places for them with families of farmers, thus helping the boy - to - better oltlsenshlp and giving the atata more and - better farmer. . . ' : - ', . "' . I.lnr-oln school la made' a different as possible from' the tradlional. "Insti tution.". Groups ofr attracpv cottages replace 'the old-time Single,. ragestruc ture of the cities; instead Of ' the big common dining hall Usui fn charitable Institutions, a number of small dining room are provided;, and each group of boya ha a separate sleeping . apart ment . Every effort Is made to , produce a real home environment t where the child may develop under conditions a nearly as possible like those-, of a nor mal home. The school has a farm or (00 acres, with model dairy buildings and a herd of about Its cattle. The boys are taught to produce absolutely clean milk and to grow fruit and vegetables by the most modern i methods, i ,' ? Rome and social training Is , empha sised In the Uncoln school. Mot only are the boy trained" to be good, farmers, but they are fitted for entrance to the better ' Class of rural homes. we feel that our training makes a .boy a, very acceptable member of society." declares Brother Barnabas, superintendent. of the school. "Our aim Is to teach the boy to know and respect himself r to give him the means wbsreby he may be en abled to earn an honest' iivllhoodf to Upper, leftA permanent beach resident Right Llfesaving- crew, Bar Vjew, Garibaldi beacb. MiddleBeach "passenger, tralM.,l . Be " low Gathering rock oysters at low tide. t , , . teach him habit of thrift and economy. O that some day from the savings of his Industry he " may become a home owner and live a simple life under con ditions which give him correct Idea of hi civic and social obligations." '.;,' vPeipetual Motion.. ,e From the Omaha World-Herald. The scientists of the agricultural de partment whq have held that the soil 1 Inexhaustible, and have been charged by their opponents with i believing in per petual " notion, ' have ' come back with the reply that perpetual motion 1 one of the law of nature.' The sun take up water from, the sea. It Is spread over the land and return to the sea. and that goes on perpetually. The planets , re volve around the sun, with no decrease In their motion. Beside that,' matter la Indestructible, andth only changes are changes in form. So they, take- the charge of believing In perpetual motion very calmly. ., . ' In the cultivation of the land they ay that under the right conditions very lit tle matter Is taken from the soil . and that with the return to It of all the un used products, and what the land gath er from the atmosphere, no exhaustion take place. It la like the gathering of the water from the seas and the return through the rivers. It goes on forever. -W.H ,r-v5,"V."?'f;"'. f Vf,'f. ?-''l'-i.' 1 11 ."'.v-. i'::Vi,;i:M: Paris, July ll.-r-A French eplcur de scribes n the Matin the best way. to prepare that essentially French bever age, black coffee.' The Important rules are: V .'i ;iiv--.v)ti"i:""V'': Grind th Coffee only at the last pos sible, moment Use water .which has been boiled quickly. . Do not fill the fil ter of fro coffee pot too full. The, cof fee -should not be too much sweetened. It should be drunk In littl sip as' hot a possible and allowed to be savored, by the . palate before' being swallowed in "little, satisfied mouthfuls."- The habit of emptying a llquer gas of brandy Into ,Uia coffee .'oup is described ; as ;"lm morai." ? 1;, is 4 i -isM' - j'is - V'.'j.,N 1111 "' " .' 1 1 1 . 1 1 .' 1 " ''v FAMOliS'TRATVTREE'V 'X .. IS iSLOWLY DYING New Tork. July -Ltouch Interest on the part of residents of the entire Sleepy ' Hollow ' section shd ' of visitors to the scenes of Washington 'Irving' s romance la .displayed In the '' death of the ..kneient "Treaty ; Tree ; at ; Fhlllipse Manor ; Thia -mammoth chestnut some twenty-odd feet in circumference at Its base, has been slowly, dying" for a' year or mors and the only- signs of life re maining' now are two or i three clusters of leavea among it giant branches. - It bravely withstood-the ravages , of the diseass Which has destroyed practically all the' cheatnut ? trees throughout the east and is probably the last one to die in the Sleepy Hollow and the Tarrytown sections.: - ';? '.'"". - - This monarch of the primeval forest has been known In . history . as ;, the fTreaty Tree" from " the fact , alleged that under Its' branches ; the last treaty was made between the whites and the Wequadequeek Indians - who ; inhabited the Sleepy, Hollow territory. It is also alleged that undsr its romantic shade Washington ' Irving: wrote his famous story, The Headless Horseman,"- the scene ' of , which 1 in Phlllipse Manor. Although the Treaty Tre Is now prac tically dead it will jrot be felled, but is to be preserved by the Phlllipse Manor company,. A. number of long .trailing flowering vines have been planted about LAKE On the.P. R. & N. R. R., The "GEM" of Garibaldi Beach Resorts SEE THIS PIACE BEFORE BUYING ELSEWHERE - ' . ; .We have a"building restriction that will insure you against "shacks'-- t . , I ft I'.i ' ' being "built next door.-; : V - . - rr:Vf tsflfe This Ridge for Less Than You Have toJ Pay for Ordinary Beach Lots '; The view is unlimited, the location is perfect, our terms are easy, and we only ask an opportunity to show the most desirable beach prop erty in Oregon. .-Your case diagnosed free. , V. , ' 507 Journal Building Garibaldi Beach OCEANLAKE ... -v ( , . ..... "' - ..' TtiXrtir 1 Ilf A tULAVi V J ."' V.!;:',':. ' TUCCI? TWA DlTCriDTC ar but .one;mile apart,;' fcofhlhavmg the ' 1 nCOC 1 1 f U lVEiOVivl O same hard sand beach and safe serf bathing. ; For information apply to Frank Tompstt, Oceanlake ; to Frank - P. Miller, Postmas-. , :tRpcfai ?4;r,4'!' Owners;Jri"' and, selling: agents, for. " 7Q2 SPALDING B:LP&!;j TROUT THAT CAUGHT: HIMSELF , X stepped on - "Tea," admitted the easterner who has been summering in Portland, ."trout flahlnrr . 1 , rm1nv . nm nrnnnftiii f sport I do not believe' that the trout however, . is 'a dangerous animal. He ; Is mere coy and reclusive; .' . "I thought . of course, that' I knew all about trout fishing when I came out ' here. ; I had . learned most of the pools In the eastern mountalna ; I thought there were some Streams In the Appalachians, too. But the eastern streams are rivulets compared with the mountain rivera of the west But I was going to tell you about how I caught my first trout in the west, rather than my opinion that the grandest scenery in the world la right within 100 miles of Oregon, any direction. - - "I put on my old clothea and rubber boots and took the Interurban train up the : place ' where the . Sandy - and Bull Bun rivers Join. There I found a trail and followed It about two mllea up the east bank of the Sandy.' X found a pool that, looked as if it had been made for trout. I started to wade. That stream from the trestle of the railroad looks 1,..; .. V .... w.. .-J- Its base which will cover the tree com pletelyThS'LTreaty Trte atand almost In the center , of the Phlllipse Manor property. close to th Hudson Blver and In full view from Broadway or" the old Albany post, road. s Forgetting: Worry, v. :r For the man who has Worked" at his desk .until the world . has . yirned . blue VVK HiK U11K11I y IjULS till " A desirable resort for those who want a quiet home; ; ; Jriace. OCEANLAKE is platted around a beauitf ul , resh water lake within a hundred vards of the ocean. Good mountain water. Profile rocks ih front of resort r ''' . Temperance clause in deed. All trains stop at Ocean-' ; , lake. : Ing distance telephony :. terms. '''",": '.jii". .:'t;V-i.jM';: - '.. '.-.; i-, .r ;. X,-:f.. U x-S--:l , i'tr. - ' T Business center of Garibaldi Beach.' Postoffke. Rail-v road station. Mountain water. juocs v ana up. , easy ..terms. (i.fi'.iS.rtVnfl..'' -w-ri'.-V-t. 4,-,'- - a slippery ! stoned ' ; Very fordable. The first thing I did was to step on a slippery stone. The . current tried to steal my leg. I re fused. The foot went down stream.. I went after It until by heroically sacri ficing my pole and grabbing at a Jutting rock I caught myself.' - a There I was sitting in water about four deep and about 40 miles swift, holding on to a brown rock, thinking of . my trials, speaking rather harshly I'm afraid, when I looked to see where my pole was. It had gone : down stream,, the neel end had caught between two rocks and the tip was beating up and down as though a big wind had caught ' it I got back to my feet, worked down stream a little to Investigate.' caught hold of the rod, and found that while I had been floundering around my loyal, . pole which I had all ready for a cast had gone fishing on its own account and had attracted a trout that when I got him -out was at least 27 Inches in length. - "No, X haven't the trout or a picture of him. When I started . to put him In my basket, he gave one mighty flop, and hit the stream ten feet away. Be fore he swam - away he gave me ' the . fish laugh. Don't know what that 17 Go trout fishing and see." and cheerless, clam digging 1 recom mended. He must rise early In the 1 morning whlla ths tide -Is 1owrWhen --T-he finds a long neck ho must dig like . fury to get him arid frequently lose him before learning just the twist oft-''' the spade that 1 necessary to success. The quiet surroundings, the seat of the" sport, ths salt air and ths distance of -work are altogether calculated to make V" even the-tlredest forget worry. . - . . ,, ,, ! -. t 1 - PHONE Mar. 4240 Resofils Long distance telephone fi.-c y jrt- i 'i''' -'t -'-"v" ' 'v1 ,: ' ' . ' . ....IS I. 1 I ill '.l - ,t -'a 1 '"; '