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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1894)
Vol. VII, No. ¿2 TILLAMOOK. OREGON. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25. 1894. PROFESSIONAL CARDS 0AVID WILEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN, SI IRGEON AND ACCOUCHEUR, All calls promptly attended to Office at tb« A1.1 ikk . man . yy TILLAMOOK. ORE. SILETZ RESERVATION Hie following shows the ngree- nient and eniu-tment of the senate in a shortened form: 1 he treaty by which the Indians on the reservation give up the land made in October 1892, witli the ¡chief men ol the tribes, and, on the I part of the United States, by R. P. Ttl.I.AMOOK, OREGON. T. MAULSBY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary Public and Real Estate Conveyance!. TILLAMOOK. OREGON. fJLAUDE THAYER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Ttl.I.AMOOK. OREGON. x TILLAMOOK'S TIMBER [The following was originally written for another county by one ♦Special attention to Surgery and ' Boise, W. H. Odell and 11. II. Har- of our exchanges. It fits Tillamook ■ ring as commissioners. The whole county so well that we appropri Chronic Diseases. BAY CITY, ORE. j reservation was ceded to the gov- ate it.] ■ eminent, except a few sections, The principal kinds of timber i which are described as follows: that grow in Tillamook County are, may , [Section 9 in tp 9 s, r 11 w, ofW M, Fir,Spruce, Cellar, Hemlock,Larch, j and w 1 of see 5, el of sec 6 and e . Cottonwood, Alder ami Maple. Fir ATTORN E Y-AT-L A W, ' A of w A of sec (5, tp 10 s, rlO w, I is principally used as the lumber HAYDON, M. I). \y J [ from 5 cents to 4 cents, but give notice that they will omit milk, sugar and lard from the cheaper kin '. They are considerate not to omit the flour also. W. SEVERANCE, attorney - at law , TILLAMOOK, OREGON. MISCELLANEOUS. I. F. LARSON blacksmith . Wit gon making, and all kinds of Wood-work • nd General BlackNinitlimg done. Mill Machinery Repaired. Wagons Made to Order. £<T- Horse shoeing a Specialty. TILLAMOOK, ORE. CHA$. pETER^OM. BARBER SHOP. -------«4»------- First Class in Every Particular. Shaving, Mair Cutting, and s | of sec 8, w A of see 17. and see 16, tp 9 s, r 9 w, and e A of n e } and lot 3 of sec 20 and s y of n A of sec 21, tp 8 s, r 10 w. These were ! reserved forsale, with the provision I “that the timber on said five sec- I lions of land may be ent and niuii- I ufactured by the Indians of said Siletz reservation for their own use and for sale. The purchase price was 8142,600, of which $100,- 000 stands in the United States treasury to the credit of the Indians, bearing interest at 5 per cent., the balance being disbursed among the individuals. The lands allotted to the Indians they are to pay taxes on, the taxes being deducted from their interest fund and turned over to the state. The agreement was to be ratified by congress to be binding, and subsequently (July 13, 1892) was so ratified and ap proved. The mineral land shall be dis posed of under the laws applicable thereto, and the balance of the land so ceded shall be disposed of until further provided by law and under the townsite law and under the provisions of the homestead law: provided,however. That each settler under and in accordance with the provisions of said homestead laws shall, at the time of making his original entry, pay the sum of fifty cents per acre in addition to the fees now required by law, and at the time of making final proof shall pay the further sum of one dollar »er acre, final proof to be made kitliin five years from the date of f entry, and three years’ actual ■sidenee on the land shall be tablisbed by such evidence as is >w required in homestead proofs i a prerequisite to title or patent. $1.50 Per Year. the East; its fiber is close and straight and the w«M»d itself is odor less. The bark makes an excellent tannin extract and contains a greater quantity of the same than any other wood. As a finishing wood it cannot be surpassed. It is a very tough wood and and makes good barrels, hoops and staves. Larch, although not found in as great a quantity as the above is very valuable and makes excellent sash and doors. The Alder ami Maple of this county make very fine furniture. OH. LORD! of commerce: most of the lumber at present shipped to San Francisco Governor-Elect W. P. Lord, in a and ioreign points is Fir. recent after dinner speech in San Fir is a very strong wood and Francisco expressed himself in can be obtained in almost any favor of free silver, and said tlie length and width desired. In many sentiment in that direction is grow instances Fir is more desirable ing much stronger in Oregon. He than oak especially for railroad attributed the increased republican construction work; itisan excellent majority in this slate to the liberal wood for eonstructiira) work, both tendency for free silver expressed outside and inside finish, also bridg 1 by the republican platform. The ing and car building. 1< tregonian goes into hysterics about Spruce has lately become a very I it, and ventures to assert that important factor in the lumber Judge Lord's words may have trade. It is a soft, odorless and been misquoted. There is no doubt tasteless wood, with very little or about what our nextgovernor said, no pitch; its color is milky white, however, and the Oregonian can very much resembling our «■astern now class him with tlie cranks, pine, in fact so much so that it is idiots and d------ d fools that it taking the later’s place in tin- talks so much about. Lord ought eastern market and sold as a sub to be sent to thesenate. stitute. The quantity and quality The Portland Sun lias surprised of that along the coast far excels everybody. Its news service is that further inland. It is mainly second to none in the northwest, used for siding, sashes and doors, wagon boxes, box material and for; its makeup is attractive, its edito tubs and pails. Its pulp makes rials are spicy, able, fearless and exeelent paper; it can be used for independent, it has a good adver most any purpose except where it tising patronage, and its circula must bear a heavy strain. It is j tion is already running up into the capable of receiving a very fine thousands. It has ail the Appear finish and accepts any kind of paint ance of a perinameiit success, and it richly deserves it. T he Sun is a rea- ily. Red Cedar is one of our most credit to Portland and to Oregon, valuable woods; it is a soft pitchless and we believe it will touch a pop timber and has the usual strong ular chord, and derive a large and cedar odor; it hardly ever rots, lasting support from tlie people. many trees that have fallen and It is a friend of the laboring man lain undoubtedly for centuries have and the industrial classes generally, been found as sound as green ones. | is dignified in its tone, and we It is new mainly used in maim-1 hope the people ofTil la mook county fact lire of shingles, sash and doors,' will patronize it liberally. Every mouldings, siding ami in fact can one sliouhl gel a copy and see what be used as a fine finish wood and it is like, anyway. T»ie daily issue in the manufacture of small articles is only 65 cents per month, and we both for structural work and house supp«>se it will soon issue a weekly at a reasonable rale. The Oregon hold requirements. Hemlock (Alaska Pine) is beyond people have paid inoiHqxily prices to a moss-back monopoly paper The bakers of Washington have n doubt one of the woods of the long enough. duced the price of a loaf of bread future; it is entirely unlike that of.