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About Weekly coast mail. (Marshfield, Coos County, Or.) 1902-1906 | View Entire Issue (July 4, 1903)
!sr5sro ' " - i ! : y. "' m w i p sj ' WtoHVlMIMI""" VPlllMlJi Jl, I.iilII(I, " 7ij(r- . 'trftotfi raw t,ip?fa . . . i.,. .-,... . --'" -H' JfcU'rfwf' . ., nwyMT" . ""wr - " "X" ' y . f mm . . A.4. v-f 4Wta " a- . .,i ttq-,wMw 4 '' - " ' mius-M I!'. ft ftl i VE I Id I " ' , ;Y COAST MAIL TELEPHONE, MAIN 45. E tcrrf In the PostoKlcc at Marshfielu, as Second CIms Matter. JJA1L PUBLISHING CO., Proprietor. C, LEVAR, F. X. HOFER, Editors nnd Managers. 0. W, WOODWARD, Foreman, Ii.ued Every Saturday. Terms: In AJ ai.ee, $t.50 Year, $1.00 Six Monthi DAILY; Uy n-, 'of advance payment ft.y, accents a month; 4 months for 1' price is 5 - 7--- Mnndsv. jufU every nn"" w-..r. . Base Ball Schedule!, AT MAlWliriKLD. May 21 Mrhiie!d v Xo'tli B-a.l. W011 by MArehftVM 4 to 3. ,1 .no 7 Mwr-hde.d ve lUndon. Won by H..iilon, H to 2. ,lme IK MaishtMd vCoiiuiUc. Von by MhmI.uVM 3 to 2. .1 ,ly 5-M-uiliHfM vs North ind. It ly 111 MarOitield v Bandon ,U- U Mnrslilleld vs Cctjuillf. Aiik. 1'i MnulifieM v North Bend. AiK'. :.0 -M.rtli fit-Id vs llandoti. f-p'. 2) Msr'hrlrM v Candle. at o q. I. lk cm Mayd Oqui.l-- H.indun Won l.y Batulun. 0 ti I. May SI C aullle va Mtuihtield. Wuii by MiulitiWd, 7 to 2 ,lntie21 C-oiille v N itth Ueud. W on I. North L'end, 13 to S. ,lu1y C.;'iii! vs Biinlrtii. .In j 1.' C'-'-iiUe v M.uthCtld. Aiiir 2-f - ulli vi N.'tlli Bend. ,ne. l'i o'-iui!l- v.- Kandou. Au: 2 C cpiille v Manhtlcld. fc'ept. Ill CoumIU v Noith Bend. AT NOHTIt BEM Jiinc "North Hend v- Coqnillo. Una l.y Nurth Beml 10 to 4. June 11 North Bend vs MarehfiV.d. Won hy MaMi'lcdl, 7 to 5. Jum 2:5- N.irili Bend v Bandon, Won by North bend 0 to 4 July 1"J North Bend vt Coquille. July 2ti .North Bend va Mnrtlificld. Aug. H North Bend va Bandon, A112. 30 North Bond ve Coqullle. fc'ept. ti North Bend va Murahfield. Bejit. 20 North Bend ve Bandon. AT nANOOS I.iy31 Bandcn vs North Bend. Won by Bandon 4 to 3. June It Baudon va Uquille. Wc.11 by Btndoti, 12 to 2. June 2l Bantlon vs Murehtleld. Won hi Bnr.don, 4 to 0. July 12 Bandon vs North Bud. July "(5 Bamlon va Coqnille. An. 2 Bandon va Murfchfield. Aur. 2.i Bandon va North Bind. Fept. OBnndon va Cofiuillc. h'ept. 13 Bandon va Marshfleld. bTA.vnt.NO or thk cLcns Won Marthtleld 4 North Bend 3 Coqullla 0 Bandon & l.JS 3 0 1 STICKS TO OLD CUSTOMS. The laureate Court of tba Ual4 , tats Is WddA to Us , Traolttoas. 1 The supreme court of the United States docs business on an antiquated iJim While it undoubtedly is the most dignified body of men in this country, if not in the vorld, it baa its peculiari ties, and they are striking ones, says the Indianapolis Sentinel. One of the traditions of the court prevents news paper correspondents from attending the tesslons of the court In their pro featlonal capacity. Provision Is made for a representative of each of the prpnt press associations, but the corre f ndents have to push and crowd In 1). Mud the renr roiling with the hun r s of other tpectntors. Usually t. y have to stand up, and if they are H-en tuM:ig notes an attendant escorts 1 hem to the door. The result is that the UOO or more correspondents have to 'Uepend on their meniory for their re ports of proceedings in the eupreme courtroom. There is another cusiom of the court fcMoh pwvenU coiiespbndwU from WEEK ' sceJnrr the opinions handed down until thev hrtre secured authority from the 1ndge who seerally dellTer them from .the bench. 1'liU authority Is not always Riven, the lodge ewrcUIng his own discretion about it. Not infre quently the correspondent has to go to th home of the judge to grt the written authority, and perhaps by the time he gcU back to the eapltol the of fice of the chirk i the court Is closud. PLACED DUTY BEFORE WORK. M 1 Eniplors JTS)b MmttU rHIh tkv tM- .., , p4ard. A London preacher had an Interest- i- .n..tnj nnt Inner fliro with R hlin gry roan. The mendicant explained that he had found It absolutely Impos sible to get wtrk. He had applied or er where, always to b turned away, and at lart nothing remained for him but to beg from door to door for the food that wa nectMary to ktp llf In his body. The clergyman's heart waa filled with rHty. The poor man seemed to be honest, and after bslng furnihd with a good meal he wan ssktd whrames sage would reach him. lie gav an ad dress and went away. Then the preacher sat down to think the matter over. He knew of no work that he could find for th man, but be decided to inent a job. Accordingly the next day the preach er sent a mesa&go to the luckless man, saying: "Com at once. I have a position for you. We- need a man to clean our tchool house and keep it in order." He received an Immediate reply as follows: "Sorry I can't coma. Iharctomarch with the unemployed to-dy Would to-morrow do?" PITTSBURG WITHOUT THE H. Varltloa la Ipelllas lb Cltr'a Ham In Often tnuUiig to R1U rr Xo. f. la it PltUburg or Pittsburgh, any way? Of S3 companies indexed in the official guide with the names of that city forming a part of their title, five ay "burg" and 18 say "burgh." Tho sitchea, or old-stylers, appear to have It, supposing the official guide to be ss Inerrant as Usual, aays the Hallway Age. The city papers differ, the ma jority aspiring to the aaplraU to which the progressive Post sssms in Ite title to say Geel But referring egain to the guide, it appear that 1G cities named in railway title, which have the disputed final tyllabls, those beginning with New, Pratta and Mid dle call themselves burghs, where Fitch, Blooms, Hose, Flsmings, Gettys, Harris, Earn, Lords, Ogden, Btras, Philips, Vick and Waynas are plain burgs 13 against three. So the Gees appear to have it hers. But aggre gating the Pitta and other burgs and burgh In the 39 railway titles exam ined it is found that the burghs have a majority of three. Nevertheless the liailway Age vote for the common sense burg, and demur to wasting pa per and ink on the superfluous h.. CHIMNEYS OF CONCRETE. XaUrUU ovr Ud la Oombsoatloc with atl In tk Conatroatloa of Loflr ImokMtadM. Ono of the latent uses of the com bination of bteel and concrete foi building purposes wai exemplified at Los Angeles, Cnl., a few months ago An enormous chimney for the pouei station of a number of electric road was constructed of that material, re ports the New York Tribune. The height of this chimney from the base (which was 15 feet below ground) wai 1&0 feet. The lower portion was 16 feet square, outside measurement, but nt an elerntion of 51 feet the structure nnumed a cylindrical form and hod a diamnter of 15 feet two inohes. Because unequal heating of various parts might lend to unequal expansion, resulting in fractures or at least un necessary strains), and perhaps for other reasons also, it was decided to adopt n double wall uystrm. The outer shell begins with n thickness of nine inches just above the square portion, later gets along with six inches and flnikhe with five inches. For the in ner shell the thicknesses at corre sponding elevations are five, four and one-half and four inches. In conse quence of the reduction in both walls the space between Uiem increases with height. It begins with 11 inches and ends with 10 Inches. Fortheouter wall the Ingredients of the concrete were, mixed in this proportion: Cali fornia portlnnd cement, ono part; sand, two parts, and fine broken stone, four parts. The formula for the inner thell wns 1:2:6. Perhaps the moet common ratio for concrete is 1:3:5, but engineers vary It frequently to suit special conditions. Employing slight ly different compositions for different parts of the same work is a practice often followed. In order to give greater strength uf the structure twisted steol bars were arranged in the concrete, both vertic ally and -hoizontally, in accordance with a well known patented system, On tho outside one cannot detect tho mUl, but it Is ihersw 44.iai--.Laa 44 1 1 1 III II t II I H -M-t K A BOY'S FOURTH OF JULY f BvA.'B.LfcWIS. VfOU benm lo feci patriotic ut least twa weeks bcfoic the Fourth, niuHf you jjcl two or three lickings il doesn't tmike any iHftercucc. You sell your b:ututn rooster, your skntcsaud your jnck knife nnd hide the money wheic your mother enn't Audit nnd end it to the heathen. If she jrabs you by the hair and waked on out of n sound sleep ntNuij;ht and vurjts to know wliat lus become of the silver tcajot, you don't kt.ow. Vnu begfu about the 1st to read upon G:or;;c Washing ton nnd ccctnmuts nnd leui'juade, and you don't wonder that wc licked the British. , - . On the 2nd you yet to I&ictugtou and Hunker Hill, and if anybody says the American curIc is a tin buzzard you lick him till he can't holier. On the 3d you knock the copper bottom off the family wash boiler and sell it for 10 ceuts, raise three nickels on dad s best razor and get rcaJy fot a whopping old time on the moi row. If dad should h tppen to discover that his razor is missitii:, you will bravely tell him that you arc ready to sufler for your country's sake, and he will probably see that you do. You will be up at dayliyht on the glorious Fourth to sec the sunrise of liberty and to count up what you have saved to contribute to the cause of potroistn. If you want to devour half a cocoauut and three bananas before breakfast don't let the British stop oti. After 'breakfast is .swallow ed you go out and get it in the neck with a Arccracker, in the eye with a torpedo and all over with the powder from a toy cannon In the afternoon you march in procession. Don't make any difference which procession it is, as long as your father doesn't seize you by the hair -and haul you out. Washing ton! Liberty! Independence! . All cheer and cat peanuts and drink lemonade. Grand display of fireworks in the evening, ju which you assist and bum. your other-heel and the rest of the brim ofl yotit straw hat. Rockets, roman caudles, volcanoes, pin wheel, red fire. You cheer with the other kids and compel Lord Cornwallis to surrender with 12,000 men. Midnight town quiet burns hurt like sixty three or four lickings ahead country saved till next time, and who wouldeu't be a patriot? T i iiiiiniiiM l-oK-w:ww- .J PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS. j Sooner or lattr j)rKjrtunlty will comu to thosVwho laintle vhllothcy wait. Chicago Dally .New. Tlie ComplalnU "lo yoirr neighbors keep chicken?" "No," aiuwcrcd tho suburban citien, "thatV jut U10 tmu ble. They don't keep 'em. They turn 'em loose." Washington Star. At the Cotillon. She "Anil how tV) you like .Mr. Stout's nuvr German fig ure?" He "Well er I bhouhl er corpulence is hardly peculiar to the Teutonic race, you knorr." Harvard Lampoon. An Avrful Jolt. "la your face for rent?" asked Miss Muff. "Weally, I aw fall to compwulicnd youah quowy," rejoined young Sof ted. "Why riw do you awsk?" "Hecauso," re plied Miss 11., "It han such a vacant look." Chicago Daily News. Took Time to Healke. Tho Coroner "How could the victim havo arisen If he had been iruituntly killed?" Tho Witness "Well, the only way I can ex plain it is to to say that the automo bile passed so quickly that he did not realize at first that ho wu actually dead." Brooklyn Life. Went the Limit as Usual. Newitt "My wife went shopping to-day and she had exactly $48.12 when sho started out." Ace urn "How do you know that? Did you count it before Bho went out?" Newitt "No, but' when she como back kJiu told me tluvt was the amount she had spent." Philadelphia Press, Unusual Provocation. "You ought to know better," said the oculist, "than to rub your eyes after handling papsr money. Unless it is perfectly new it's full of germs." "Hut this was a thou sand dollar bill a fellow handed me to look at. I rubbed my eye to ace if I wa awake," responded the patient. Chicago Tribunn, .-...ui,,t H-K'f4' Hill H44M-HhH-- ' I 4-1 WARDROBES OF ROYALTY. Ladlaa of XohlUtjr Who Hnva Co a tnaaaa Knouuh lo ChnaKt Irv I 1 .. aral Tltnaa Boli Oar. I The. cmfrca of Germany and the czarlrm of Itutsia are the rnoft fortun- I ate women in Kurope, if good fortune iDi-mus. the ability to wear ilr.it raiments and to chanyrlheir costume as often Jas it my pleaso their fancy. It I Mild that to keep the wardrobe of the Gor man emprctK protverly rt-plenikhed re- quire the ynMnt werrlce of a dozen dressmakers, and that on occaMona of court festivities or when her innjety prepares for an important journey thin rtgulnr stuff Isjnrrcawd to JO. We are Informed that thi wonderful wardrobe coiu 1st of 100 evening and state ilrcifiH, at least two vititlng and carriage cKiimes ami moru than 150 housv 0 ml deinitollcts annually. All Uies are made by hand down to the uiinuV:At particulars. The emprtsa of Itueein is nald to be Uie most extravagant dreasvr in Ku rope, although naturally xlmplc in her tastcn. llvr adherence to plain drert provoked so much grumbling among the ladles of tho court during the ArM few years of hermnrrlugctliotuhewent U an extreme of magnlfleenei' Mhich one finds, it difllcult to nsociaU) with tho daughU-r of the mild Princc.a Alice of Hesss, NAtlonalltlas and Knlelda. Bbootiug Ih by far the most popular method of ending life, with polsounnd drowning In the order limned. Tho percentage of suicides Ik highest among those whose mothers were born in Trance, with Germany und lttiMin Poland aecond nnd third. The dtflTh rate from niilclde of thoKe whose moth ers were born In the United States was much loww. Chicago Iuiot Ocean. BARGAINS. If all tho worLI wero filled with troos On which gfeat bargains grow, And ore could pjck what one might please, You'd still do as you do; Because our store is one big treo 4 And bargains everywhere you see. ' ' . Thomas Hirst. n FOR SUMMER HEALTH 1 Hot wi'alhor diseases are largoly t homo emi bust be ituatdt-d by liberal uto ol illMuioctiiiur during tho sum mer mouths. Procnutlon uhould bo tnkon to koop nil drains, from Infection. l'oor iliotnffCtAtitn are worst than tiono hocnuio thoy idvo a snnso ol recnrlty without the reality. Wo aro prepared lo furnli illslnlectaiits that you can depend on; ran tfll you whnt it beat (or each purpoio and how to ueo It. The cost Mill bj very little, SENGSTACKEN'S PHARMACY; . Marshfield, Oregon otMMMttHWMltMtWUtmWimiHIIIIIHIN (ELATERITE Is Mlnornl Rubborl YOU MAY INTEND HUILDINO , , or An4 It n.. iy to KKI'LACK A WOKN'OUT ttOOt ELATERITE ROOFING Ttlttlht plict ol ihlngltt, tin, lion, ui and cravtl, and alt prtpared rooAnfi. for (tat and tuep turlacat, ju(1i, vlly. tic. Katy lo lay, Tampartd (01 all cllmalti. Ktaionabli In coat. Sold on rrnclt OuaiantttJ. It will pay lo aia lor prlcat aod lnlo(inalon, THE ELATERITE ROOFING CO Worcostor DulldlnR, Portlnnd. IHIIIIIIIIIIH 4M"-H- I UNION BUTCHER SHOP Now .Shop. Now Building. Evorythlng cloan.nnd frosh. Comploto lino of tho choicest Boof, Pork, Mutton, nnd Vonl. Socond door south of postoff Ico. t f CHAS. & RICHARD NOBLE, Propr's. -h-tH-s immniuii1 i - H - H tlHHHsinDJOalMatalBMPanfllllallllllNHian Time I Steamer flyer 2 1.KANBS. s n Mar.sh field, 8 a.m. h Ktupirc, 10 a. 111. Mnr.slifiehl, 2:30 p. m. m Hmpiro, 4:30 p. 111. 29 Fart from M;irsli(ielri a iswiiraJMCTu(aiCTtntMaoOT63Hsaawcr3iacawa YOU LIKE FISH? OF COURSE YOU DO. Prognbly you llko (0 niti'li tliutu, II 'h Hiirely grcut uport. Hut it yoti waul fl.sli to cut liottor ciiiiio to our Htniul. We Hiipply good, f r-li flt.li, and don't put 011 a Bleep prlco. Wo liiiow we can fntifify you with IIhIi here. ELLERBY & MANNING Chicken Factory for $1 Consisting ol (iliiHtnited phut (o'iniiK. ing and oporatliut the Natural 1 1 "n1 In cubator, a noiv ilovJco (or tetiiiix hen (hat beats tho old way tun liu.i-H owir AlsoO, K. Hroodor plan, O. K. Iiuj for mula and O. K. Emi lonnuhi. Fred Mathioon, Murbldluld, Oregon. Eole Agent (or Cooa Comity, U 7 1 in d A w FROM THE STUDIOS. W11II puiMT Hint Is iImIimiiM nnd colored (11 cuimluHv nrtistlu Mylu cojtn no :110m tlutii liifurl-ir kinds, Wo Show a Stock from which you can select appro prlrttc pni4r for any purpose a'l niHv this kviuoii, C A. JOHNSON UNION FURNITURE STORE JSCOSC43eaStre49Sj a germ dliat)is. Tim health ol the Z sinks, cloootu, otc, froo S fllllllllllllHItlllllHH - f - ri t mm hiiiiiiiiiiumh Table eapmr Blapo" I.HAVKS1 Km pi re, 8 n. 11 . Marhhfield, io::o. Kiupire, 2 p. m. Maislifitld. 4 p, ui. to Ktnnirc ami return 7 ?c. QOW WHY DKALKHIN f Flour nnd feed, vegetable, ennno goo..H, cuiuliei. inilH. clgnrn ami tobacc mill a choice. lino of grocer .os. Dry ami Jnpniieno OodiIh Kroo Unlivery. Hotel Guerin. OHO. II.lUKHlN,Prop. Myrtle Point, Oreunn, (Iirndqunnui for tliu Travollin Public. Flno Sfimplo Rooms Fpoi LADIES lo, i,tvii jour order Wa Idtu nniiu to bkirt1! nnd unlur ukirk, your moaaiiru Willi MISS RUBY DESMOND Agent (or Parle Bklrt Cc H Ql I M 8 11 $- ..w "' - .rf. 4 iV'i V i J -- -.- U - ,.y.M i. ii M. iii..rtmwi()jt!"' ki