Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, August 01, 1895, Image 3

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    Ww Tfcufc.
The Sunset Route.
F orest G rove to T illamook
T he W ilson R iver R oad .
Netarts Beach.
Q uickest , C heapest , and B est
T he M ost P opular B each
R oute to P ortland .
SORT ON THE COAST.
The lies! mountain road, the most niaituifiivut
‘■»»Iieet, with evening ........... Forest Grove
scenery on the Pacific coast. ’ Cheapest rate» of 0 llas“>"ger’ from Tillamook arrive In Portia,id
Happy Camp now ready, bath house« « ill be
toil in the state-
«««.lay. only 10hoar»„„»tag’
prepared soon, ami stages w ill connect w ith the
Forest Grove Stage.
Four home team, fr.oo Bound trip,I3.25
■lay"." &';£• 6:50a "■
Tie«-
Two ”
”
1.50
"
Home and buggy, 1.00
If you want to see the sea
Hrid’n" Tin,n,Ouk-
Wednewlay, I, and
curt, 1.00
lions, the arched rocks, and
Saddle or puck horse.50
tue
grandest scenery in America,
Loose horse or cow 12%
XrE Ton
hotel orof T.C.
come to Netarts. Good ac­
Sheep or swine
05
commodations reasanablc.
telephone'from Por’uami “ “
r'ach”1
Take the Sunset Route for Tillamook. New Wagons, New Stock, Safe Driving.
The
G o < h I accoinmodatlnu» en route.
Mecca of all
Coast Tourists.
Addreu II. J. H adley , Tillamook.
Best Road
Best Beach
Prices to Suit
the Times:
Leading Hotel of
Tillamook
Made to order.
-H-
Repairing done as cheap as the cheapest.
Come and be convinced.
Advocate Building.
Headquarters for Commercial
men and the traveling public.
Sample rooms. Electric lights
throughout. Stage and boat of­
fices. Rates, $1.00 to $2.co per
• lay, American plan.
NEW MANAGEMENT
Especial attention to the cuisine
department.
P. F. BROWNE
Hardware Talk!
H. A. WOODFORD, Prop’r.
Heard at
C. E. ^EYNOLD’g.
I’ll roast you, slid the Stove.
Look out, I’m on a strike, said the
Hammer.
I’ve got you, said the Burb-W’ire.
1’11 catch on, said the Tongs.
1’11 scoop him, Slid the Shovel.
1’11 get your bacon, said the
The finest coast resort in
Butcherkiiife-
Oregon.
Pleasure seekers,
You’re not as sharp as I, said the
when on the beach should cal Tack.
on J. 0. Campbell, or at the
Say nothing and saw wood, said
N etirts «Store fishing excur- the saw.
sions or l>oating- Excursions to the sea lion rocks where thousands of sea
So a general quarrel ensued an 1 if
lions can be seen, and birds too numerous to mention, All kinds of sea fowl you want to hear how it ended and
insures you a how cheap the above named articles
eggs can lie gathered. Mr. Campbell Being a skilful
can lie bought, cull on
s ife and pleasant trip.
Beach!
C.E. REYNOLDS,
“The Sea Lion
NETARTS. OR
is the fastest and safest 1 to-»t oh the Net ti ts bay.
MILLENNIUM COMING.
the Reservation.
Stage Line.
by
THE SIl.KTZ COI NTHY.
A Party of Tlltaiuookar. at th* Opening of
Masonic Notice.
“Happg Camp
Hotel ANO
There will be u regular Ma-
I
-v Mo,,*c communication of 'I'illa-
Lodge No. 57, A . E. <Sc
JA. M in the Masonic hall on
ßSaturday night Aug. 3
All
Jl Master .Masons in good stand- I
ing are invited to attend. Bv order of1
W. M.
F. R. B eals , Sec’y.
RESTAURANT
Sheriff J. H. Jackson, his
Robt
brother
Jackson, • nd Ex-Sheriff JI),
Edwards quietly disappeared last week,
and Inter it was learned that they had
gone to Siletz to be present at the open­
ing of the reaarvalioti.
They followed
the old “fish trail” from Slab Creek over
the divide to Salmon river, and wiiitad
on the line until prstiacly noon on July
25, ami at the minute named by the
proclamation they rode into the reserva­
tion.
They did not see anybody else who
were rushing into the new lv opened land
except three of the Mager brothers of
Yamhill county, who had met them by
pie-arrangement.
The stories of so
many people w aiting to cross the line
proved to have originated in the iintnag-
ination of some claim hunter.
These men weis not looking for land
They were after g >ld. The whole party
proceeded down coast below Salmon riv.r
and soon all had claims staked out in
the black sand on the beach, Mr. Ed­
wards, being a surveyor measured them
off, ami the corners were niarked w ith
monuments of stone.
Sheriff Jackson being an old mining
expert, took his pan and tried a few
patistull of sand here and there and
frequently washed out live to ten cents
pet pan . The gold color was plain to be
seen, and no doubt there ate some rich
diggings (or scoopings, rather) along the
btach.
Members of the same party were there
in time past, testing lhe sand, but weie
ordered away by the Indians; and they
went away saying "they were done, and
the sand was no good any way,” but as
soon as the reservation was formally
Opened they were on hand and found
that the unsuspecting Indians hadn’t
found the gold-bearing sand .
The claims will be thoroughly tested
and worked fur all there is in them, and
it is probable they will turn out to be
very profitable, and there are indications
of minerals in the adjacent mountains.
Sheriff Jackson says that the Siletz is
a magnificent country, there being as
large an area of open prairie and bottom
land as there is in the vicinity of Tilla­
mook, and that there is very little brush.
Some of the mountains and benches are
covered w ith a luxuriant growth of grass
and there are tliousiilids of acres of line
tide lands.
But the Indians have already selected
all of the best lands, niid a w hite man
might find a pretty fair piece of land
occasionally yet, but lie would be hem­
med in and surrounded by Indians, who
nrs not very progressive, and tlie govern­
ment will not permit the Indianst to sell
their lands for twenty-five years. As it
is. a long time will elapse before there
are good schools, good roads and other
concomitants of civilizations in the
Notice*
First class in every particular,
special attention to coast tourists.
ßlam& Figh, and (tabs Served A la Mode.
I. O. CAMPBELL,
NETARTS, £)R.
We wish to inform the public that the
North Yamhill and Tillamook stage
line is now making daily trips on
schedule time, making connections with
the 3:30 1’. M. train for Portland.
P. II. M esner , Proprietor.
Ex-Sheriff J. D
Edwards returned
from Siletz Monday and lie gives a glow­
For Sale at a Great Sacrifice.
ing account of the country, and says
80 acres of land in Tillamook county, there is no doubt about the richness of
the gold claims. He left the balance of
described as follows:
8 L
of N \V ’4 ami the S \V *4 of the party there, who are making sluices,
N E ‘4 of sec. 16, tp 3 S, R 9 \V. No in- expecting to mine in a practical way al
once. A large number of Tillamookers
cumlierance,
50 per acre, cash.
are on their way to Siletz, and there will
Address at once. J. F. B arfield ,
soon be a lively mining camp there.
Santa Cruz, Cal.
Comity orders wanted by Beals Bros.
J. P. ALLEN. Prop r.
Noted for It* Fine Cultlne Department.
The Oregonian and H eadlight , only fa oo
Many are taking advantage of this rate.
NEW H0USE-:-NEW FURNITURE
< heap Work.
Best Meals in the C ty.
TILLAMOOK, .OREGON
lamook, Cre.
M. H. LARSEN, Proprietor.
I ARSEN HOUSE
fA^fsr House
'^ hìc ^ ty ^^
’-RA rl S
................... .................................................................................
V beware
of Imitation
Insist on
ARA AflP HA/VP SOPA
in packages
j
Costs no more than inferior package soda— K
never spoils the flour, keeps soft, and is
versally acknowledged purest in Ibe world.
Made only by CHURCH fc CO., l»e< York.
trade marks
gnd labels.
I
I know 11 gentleiiiHii who him worked
the past ten years and Ims not yet
received Illi |>uy, and lie only asks $80
per year, or |800 in ah, ami lie did good
work too.
lie lum built n live loom dwelling,
barn, lum n leu-year-old fruit orchard,
ami lias cleaned quite >< bit of laul. He
now < Hers to »elI it for tile tiguies named
and 1 think lie is foolish for doing so,
but tliat'a hi« lookout, and lie lias
authorised me to sell it.
Tlieie is W'1 acres in tlie place, 85 acres
of it upland, uud 14 acres waterfront,
suitable for a Imivee. Tlmre is one mile
of water front altogether, tlie place being
a peiinmnlii ill the NestUCca bnj, uud it
is convenient to the mean Ireacli, the
bay, river and near a 1’oet Ofice. Thia
is tlie beat bargain in Oregon, and.I hope
this advertieement will be aullitient to
sell it.
Kewpectfiilly,
R. R. H ays , Tillamook, Or.
All photo * reduced to »nit hard time«, from
75 cent« per perdoxen upward*.
H eino A bt S tudio .
(Wholesale Quotations.)
O ats —Grsy
P otatoes Y loo tbs
Ojnoxs
”
W heat —-Willamette
Walla Walla
’•"C«’» V dos.
G ee .’1» **
Caicsaxa-Old Y dos.
Spring ’’
BCTTAJ.—Brine
”
Store, in Rolls
’
< hoice Dairy
E<i«s—Oregon
LASD, Oregon
’» Eastern
B acox —< tear Sides
»»
Hams
••
Shoulders
FUHR-Willamette
□try Brands
lieulHh Camp.
A II ka DILOHT mail accompanied l>y a
minister, made a visit Io Beulah land
last Friday to administer spiritual suste­
nance to the lost Sheep up in that
neigliboi rlioood, but found I list Chaplain
Fred Kahkee, of Bowers A lunch’s log­
ging cutup, had tlie morale and religious
proclivities of tin, neighborhood well
developed, so the missionaries had
uotliing to do but watch the men cut ami
haul the mone’er giants of the forest
They are taking out logs nt a rapid
rate, and while there we saw a log lfl
feet long, and over (> leet ill diameter,
drugged from hie lair and dumped into
Beulah creek
They are cutting spruce
for the Truckee mill, and it is the finest
spruce in the county.
Judge Linville handles tlie goad stick
witli grace and skill, and does not swear
and inutilute the oxen like some bull
punchers do. It takes more skill to
steer file cattle than to steer a big ocean
steamer.
Clyde Clemens rides the logs and
handles the dogs in a manner that is
truly interesting. He is an active and
valuable malt in a logging canqi.
All seemed to lie doing good work,
and theta is a fine prospect of putting in
a large number of logs bafore Christina.,
when it is exjiected to float them to tide
water by the help of the winter rain*
The camp dining room in presided
over by two young ladies, and the din­
ner meal seemed to Is* highly appre­
ciated by all, including the scribe
and pharisee
Johnson’a camp, just below, on Beulah
creek, in putting in a large number of
logs every day at little • x |« ii M, and the
outlook is encouraging for the loggers,
who will probably make a handsome
dean up thin winter.
POOR MEN’S SAVINGS
When the New Slot Machine Get* to Work
We’ll Sail In Yacht*.
THEY WILL SUFFER BY A DEPRE­
This little Populistic device is confi­
CIATED CURRENCY.
dently expected to double the wealth of
the whole country by doubling the prices
Fallacy of “Cheap Money” Argument Made
of everything that any one has to sell
Clear Laborer* Are Not Debtor* Free
without increasing the prices of anything
Silver Will Enrich Wealthy Mine Own­
that any one has to buy.
ers at the Expense of the Poor.
As soon as the Populists get control of
our treasury department they will in­
The honest people (and they are a ma­
stall about 1,000 of these 16 to 1 slot jority) of this country will have nothing
to do with “free coinage at 16 to 1,”
when they understand what it means.
,THE GREATEST
Secretary Carlisle, in his Memphis
speech, made it clear who the real debt
EVER IMVRJ8TB®
ors and creditors are. Read this part of
bis speech and then ask yourself if you
think it right and just and fair to de­
clare that dollar debts shall be paid
with half dollars. Here is what Carlisle
raid:
One of the most effective arguments
made by the advocates of free coinage,
in some parts of the country ut least, is
that the people are in debt, and that it
TAKE
is the duty of the government to relieve
them by such legislation as will enable
them to procure cheap money for the
purpose of discharging their obligations,
and in support of this argument the
most exaggerated statements are made
as to the depressed aiid suffering condi­
tion of our farmers, wage earners and
other producing classes. This argument
concedes that under the proposed system
of free coinage at the ratio of 16 to 1 all
the various kinds of currency in use by
the people, including the silver dollar
itself, would be worth less than they are
now, for, of course, if this is not to be
the result money would be no cheaper.
To assert that the people are in debt
is simply to say that they have traded
mtichinesln the United States mints and
with each other on credit; that one part
employ several thousand of their faith­
of our fellow citizens, relying upon the
ful, mind cure followers at feeding these
integrity and financial standing of tlmir
machines, keeping them in gocxl work­
neighbors and acquaintances, have lent
ing condition and in carting the treas­
them money on time and sold property
ures away. Bryan estimates that in one
to them without demanding immediate
year all of the available silver in the
payment in cash, and that in this way
world could be passed through these ma­
they have enable^ many people to carry
chines. This will double the value of all
on a useful business and live in com fort-
silver, and therefore of all wealth, for
able homes who otherwise could not
silver is the only true measure of wealth.
have done so. If it is a crime to lend
We will therefore have twice as much
money to a man who wants to borrow it,
food and clothing as now, and will en­
or to sell property on credit to a man who
joy such prosperity that some of those
wants to purchase it and has no ready
now suffering from lack of food may bo
money to pay for it, let the perpetrators
expected to become insane with joy.
be properly punished, but let us not in­
As soon as we get accustomed to 16 to
volve the whole country in confusion
1 prosperity so that we can stand a
ami disaster and immolate the innocent
greater amount, Bryan will introduce
and guilty alike in order to punish the
his 8 to 1 machines, and in another year
real offenders. If our ¡>eople are in debt,
wealth will again be doubled. The daz­
they owo each other, and consequently
zling prosperity that will follow will be
about a» many would be actually in­
likely to overcome many who, only two
jured as would be apparently benefited
or three years before, had been over­
by scaling the obligations down to a sil­
worked and underfed. Many cases of
ver standard. The indebtedness of the
prosperity sunstroke are expected to fol­
farmers, mechanics and other laboring
low the use of Bryan's 4 to 1 and 2 to I
classes of our people, although largo in
machines, which will be employed as
the aggregate, is quite small in com­
soon after the use of the 8 to 1 machine
parison with the whole indebtedness of
as public safety will permit. The mil­
the great railroad and manufacturing
lennium will certainly dawn when the
corporations, the national and state
1 to 1 machine begins to get in its work.
banks, savings institutions, trust com­
Those who have not succumbed to over­
panies, insurance companies, building
doses of prosperity can then have every­
associations and other organizations en­
thing that human desire could ask for,
gaged in financial and commercial enter­
including all of the necessaries and lux­
prises. These various organizations are
uries of life, palaces at low rents, steam
indebted to the people to the extent of
yachts, plenty of leisure, with little or
many billions of dollars, and while it is
no work—in fact, an abundance of ev­
true that many of thepeoplo are also in­
erything that can be produced on this
debted to them their debtors and cred­
earth, with plenty of time for enjoyment
itors are not the same persons, and there
of same.
fore the debts cannot be set off against
All of this is as it exists in the intox­
e:ich other and extinguished in that way.
icated minds of the 16 to 1 silverites.
1 deny that there is any such thing us a
In actual practice it will be found that
distinct “debtor class’’ in this country,
the slot machine will work the reverse
for, while nearly every one owes some
of what its friends expect, and that half
debts, large or small, nearly every one
dollars will come out instead of the
has also some debts owing to him. In
whole dollars dropped in. All who are
other words, he is both debtor and cred­
now putting sound money in savings
itor. The laboring people, as a rule,
banks, life, fire or accident insurance
owe very little at anyone time, while
policies, building and loan, and all
their employers are always indebted to
similar associations, will, under 16 to I
them, because wages are not paid in ad­
free coinage, get out only unsound mon­
vance, and besides many of them have
ey—that is, dollars worth only about 50
small deposits in savings and other
cents Fiat money is and always has
banks, in trust companies, in building
been as poor a substitute for sound mon­
associations and large numbers of them
ey ns was alchemy for chemistry
have their lives insured for the benefit
of their wives and children, and conse­
“COIN’S FINANCIAL FOOL.”
quently they are creditors of the banks
and the insurance companies. The sav­
H1R HOIJLOQlfY.
I want a bogus dollar, just based on mere pre ings bank depositors in this country last
tense,
*
year numbered 4,777,687, and the wives
I hate the “goldbug's" gold on«» that is worth
and children of the depositors who de­
a hundred cents,
For I'm a “silver beetle,’’ as all the world can pended upon these accumulated earnings
■ee,
for future support doubtless numlx-red
An<l except my precious humbug you will And 10,000,000 more. There were 1,925,340
no bugs on me
depositors in the national banks last
I can give you learned statistics from Rome to year, and 1,724,077 of them had deposits
Adam Hint th
And quite a miscellaneous lot of fulluch'H of less than $1,000 each, while state and
private banks and loan and trust com
therewith
To prove that all our troubles In panics new panics held deposits for 1,436,688 peo­
or old
ple. Our life insurance companies, to
Are but the rank production of a dollar made
say nothing of companies insuring prop­
from gold
erty against loss by fire and otherwise,
I brook no British meddling with the “white*
had 7,505,870 policies outstanding last
stuff that I laud,
For what care we for England or the folks year, upon which the premiums had
who live abroad?
been paid, or were being paid, by the
They t» ¡1 us two and two make four, as sure people, ajid the mutual benefit and as­
as I'm alive,
And so to be Arneriean 1 vow that they make sessment companies had 3,478,000 mem­
bers. The building and loan associations
five
D' m - s anybody think the Yankee nation cannot had nearly 2,000,000 members, all of
whom ha<l paid their money in as re­
say
That anything's a dollar and make it» value quired by the rules of the body to which
stay ?
they lwlongitd. The hard earned savings
Should England ever dare to, by the flevolu
of the poor ought not to lie sacrificed to
tJon's birth.
We will suddenly annex her or wipe her from the avarice of the wealthy mine owners
the earth
or the ambition of aspiring politicians,
We need a pile of money, and it isn't England’s anil if th«, people who have a substantial
ngiit
interest in the welfare of the country
To refuse the kind wo offer If she does, I and a just appreciation of their r«*spoii-
want to fight;
For if we Yankees legislate that water runs sibilities as citizens will exert their
pr<qsT influence in public affairs this
up hili
In spite of all creation I will Let you that it great w rong can never lx, perpetrated.
will
Ö6 ™ 1 - Bryan Patent.^
I know the silver bullion that the people had
to buy
Piled up would make a monument broad base
and six miles high,
Beside« the minted silver which nobody takes
away,
But we ought to keep on buying it tn spite of
what they say
1 don't care a continental for Wall •rtr«** t or
Grover <
For all the bloated goldbugs ar«- as m<-an mm
they ran Is-;
a sort
Ho I’ve sent broadcast my pamphlet
of numm«-r school
To show the folks the wisdom of “Coin’s Fi
nanrial Fool.”
—Joel Benton in Harper's Weekly.
Mntal money, accnrdinK to the Popu­
list idoH, I» a relic <it barlxirixiu, but
next any of them are vwy uuxioua to
accumulate Huch relic*
No l>eba«ement of Currency.
The silverites mm -I c to gain support for
their fail by the pretense that the friends
of sound money want only gold umm I as
currency. The fpewhes and writings of
the cheap dollar axlvocatex always rep­
resent their opponents as in favor of do­
ing the business of the country with
gold alone. There is not the slightest
basis for this charge. Noone prop*« s, or
has ever projM*ed, that we uhonld cease
using silver and paper currency, nor ran
the silverites point to a declaration by
any defender of our prewnt system in
favor of such action. What is insisted
hi is that every dollar nwtl shall lie of
equal value, ami that no debasement < f
me currency, through free coinage* of
silver or flat m ney, shall be permitted.
1