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About The Plaindealer. (Roseburg, Or.) 1870-190? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1904)
- THE Roseburg Plaindealer Published Monday and Thursdays. PLAINDEALER PUBLISHING W. C. CONNER, Km F. H. ROUKRS, Iinw CO. Subscription $2.00 per Year. Advertising Rates on Application. Entered at the Poet Office in Roseburg, Ore., as second class mail matter. Oct. 10, 1904. FOR MDM Theodore Roosevelt of New Y rk. FOR mil HIM Ml Chas. W. Fairbanks, of Indiana. FOB PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS. G. B. Dimmick of Ckekamas Co. A. C. Hough of Josephine Co. J. N. Hart of Nk Co. B. A. Fee of Malheur Co. A YEAR OF PROMISE The year 1906 promises to be of extraordinary inportanee to the growth and development of the Pa cific Coast. The Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition at Portland be ginning next June will alone be incalculable benhet to the entire West, says the Pacific Monthly, but apart from this great undertaking which is practically assured a gratify ing success, there is a spirit in the air of enterprise that presages the beginning of great things. Yet even now we are in the midst of a world movement that is making the Pacific the center of the world's activities and promising the most alluring and brilliant future for the lands border ing this side of the Pacific. A great magnificent, splendid future is store for us, and although we may not realize it we have already passed over the threshold. The writing is on the wall so clearly and unmistaka bly that even a dullard may interpe tate the signs aright. A splendid, greater, grander nation is in the making and its greatest, grandest part will be the Pacific Coast. The first issue of the Grants Pass Herald has reached the Plaindealer exchange table. It is a six-column folio and will be published semi-weekly. J. D. Quillen is manager and R. Smith is in charge of the editorial epartment. The new paper will sup port the democratic party and pnn- iples. In his salutatory the editor -i .i . i: expresses tne idea inat dosepnine county needs a democratic paper not only for the good of the party but for the good of all. He announces that the paper will be conducted fear lessly in the interests of the people and will not refrain from expressing its opinion for fear of losing an ad vertiser or subscriber. RAILROAD TALK. PRESBYTERY MEET. Elijah Smith's Movements Arouse Much Speculation. Annual Session for Southern Oregon to be Held in Roseburg. CAMPED ON COQUILLE. PROMINENT PREACHERS Looking Over Timber Lands and Railroad Route. Secretary of the Interior Hitchcock it last begins to realize that his offi cial record will rise to haunt him. The entire West demands and insists upon his removal. The president it is said will welcome his resignation and will name a successor to him who can prevent fraud without injury to the land business and to the states in which government lands are located. The Hitchcock regime in the est has been one of retrogression, incom petency and failure. Parker is greatly disappointed in Bryan as a spellbinder. If the reports of Bryan's Nebraska speeches be true, democratic headquarters will be slow in sending him a special train through Indiana. A dispatch says he conced ed the electoral vote of his state to Roosevelt and spoke lightly of the democratic ticket. This gave Parker and Taggert cold shivers. They will investigate this report. It might have been ignored but for reports from other localities where Bryan has been traveling. Attorney General Crawford, of Ore gon, gives it as his opinion in the case of a Eugene hotel serving veni son to guests during the open season that it is no more unlawful to use venison on a public than a private table, and that the unlawful act rests with the vender rather than the user. It is good logic. A Wisconsin husband and father came home drunk and proceeded to try to exterminate his family, when his wife seized a rifle and ended his life and her worst troubles at one shot. No need to go to the expense of a trial : justifiable homicide will be the verdict. THE DIVORCE QUESTION. The needless injury done by the law may be illustrated by a very com mon case. When the man or woman has been guilty of such an offense that the law permits a divorce, and the couple themselves recognize that there must be a divorce, and are will ing for the sake of their children to separate quietly, they can not do so, but the law compels them to come in to court and blazon abroad the mis takes and unhappiness which belong peculiarly and privately to them selves. The brutality of the law is illustrated by another case, not un common. When one of the married pair goes to the other and frankly and honestly admits that time and circumstances have produce! a change, that he or she loves nother, the law does not permit them to sep arate at all; but if the one who has changed commits adulter-, then guilt receives from the law the freedom denied to innocence. Such a chain upon human freedom can only be productive of deception and immoral lty, says C. E. S. W ood in the I cto- ber Pacific Monthly. IGNORANCE. People don't know about the Pacific- Northwest its resources, its possi bilities, its incomparable advantages If they did, there would be such an influx of homeseekers that the rail road facilities would be taxed to the uttermost to handle them. But they don't know. To the average inhabitant of the East or of the Middle West, the Pacific Northwest Ls an unknown land, mythical, distant, unreal. Many there are, of course, who have read of the beneficent conditions which have been combined to create this wonderland, and have marveled thereat, but have not been convinced. A few have passed through on touring trip, and have been moved to wonder and delight. But they don't know, says the Pa cific Monthly. The fact is, the majority of people who live on the Pacific Coast are themselves unaware of the future in tnr for this rerion. Only a few of wide-compaissing vision have fully mwsiirwl the resources of this coun try. Still fewer those of prophetic souls have read the signs of future greatness. As surely as the sun rises and sets, so surlely doe the course of empire move westward; so surely is the star of progress moving toward the Pacific Coast, as the scene of the next great act in the advace of human development. "The man on the Pacific Coast to day is facing the front of the world." A Portland woman recently soundly thrashed another and younger woman. because the younger one had been re ceiving attentions frdm the elder's husband. Why did she not chastize her unfaithful spouse the cay old duffer. Can anv other state in the West show as high a percentage of farmers who own their farms as are found in Oregon? Over 80 per cent of the farmers say: "My house is my castle and I am no man's vassal." The Sage of Esopus is having a very quiet time: alter election ne will drop out of sight so noiselessly that we will forget his name in a few weeks. The Marshfield Mail says: The dri ver on the mail stage from Roseburg that came into Sumner recently re ports that Elijah Smith is camped along the Coquille river with a party of railroad engineers. Mr. Smith ar rived here about two weeks ago from Boston and since that time his move ments have been ten1 uuiet. He is president of the Southern Oregon Co., which owns 97,001) acres of timber- land. This company is the grantee of the company that built the Coos Bay wag on road from Roseburg and received alternate sections for six miles on either side. The Southern Oregon Company owns one of the finest mills on the coast at Empire, with a capac ity of 150,000 feet per day, but it has been shut down for the past seven or eight years, and at the time threw hundreds of men out of employment, Once each month the mill started up and run for a day just to keep the machinery from oxidizing It is believed that the new move of Mr. Smith for a survey up the Co quille means that this mill will again be started up soon. Its shutdown put a great damper on the enterprise of Empire. One cause of the company's inactivity was no doubt the attack up on its title. It was believed the as signment from the wagon road com pany could be broken and wu men jumped the claims. They contributed $15 each to a fund for lawyers, and McKnight and Seabrook, of this city took the case. It is understood that the litigation is about to be dropped for lack of funds or for other cause and that the company will not be fur ther molested. It is the intention to build a rail road and it will undoubtedly follow up the Coquille river, along the wag on road, to be near the timber, and probably cross the river over to Rose burg. The finest timber is near the summit of the range. The Southern Pacific Company owns timber 20 miles out from Roseburg, and might be in terested in this move. It also owns valuable coal lands in Coos Bay and spent $200,000 towards their devel opment. The effort was a failure by the process known as the pillar and stall. Now that W. S. Chandler has demonstrated at Beaver Hill that this coal field can be mined by the process known as the long wall and skip sys tem, it may be that the Southern Pa cific is again looking up its coal. It may be that Mr. Smith is planning to cut his timber this winter. Ex-Senator Peffer has taken out "naturalization" papers in the Repub lican party. We give a man credit for growing wiser as he grows older No Democrat has as yet offered a single argument to show wherein the slightest benefit would result from a Democratic victory. The little republic of Argentinia sold her warships to Russia. As soon as John Barret left the country went on a peac footing. Parker's letter of acceptance wasn't so terribly bad, after all Think of such miserable subjects he had to write on. Canyonville. FAMOUS FOLK OF THE NEWS OF TODAY Are in Attendance From Various Points in This Section. The Presbytery of Southern Oregon, comprising the ministers of nil the Pres byterian churches of Oregon south of the Calais. i mountains, incliulini; Klamath anil Lake counties, will meet in regular semi-annual session :it the Presbyterian church of this place on to morrow evening at 7:30 o'clock. Kev. Philo. K. Phelps, pastor of the Aslilaml Presbyterian church, the retiring mod erator wi'l preach the opening sermon After the opening sermon the Presby tery will he amy constituted, alter which the election of a mo.ler.itor ami temporarv clerk will occur, when Um Presbytery will lie ready f ir lm -itie-s. Oa Wednesday a business -ei-ii will be held, and on Wednesday evening a popular meeting, as Staled elsewhere in these columns, in the interest of Home and Foreign Missions, will Ik- he'd. Short addresses on these BUbiectS will be delivered hy Kev. W. tiomlay Con nell, the popular pastor of (.mints Pass, Kev. I H. Hare, one of the hiightest and ablest voung ministers in the state and Kev. Smith, also an ahle and pop lar minister of Klamath Kails. .VI meet ines of the Presbvterv are public, ami being marked hy a great degree of in telligence and culture will lie special to all. The public is in st cordially invited to attend, particularly the popsjlai meet ings on Tuesday and Wednesday even-ings. Probitc Cowl Notts. ' In the matter of the estate .if Mrs. H C. Hebard. deceased. H. 1!. Hebard has been apointed administra'. r under a bond of 3W, and C. T. Nail, H. G. Souuemann and Joe Winchrll, appraisers. T IE c-otnmnnders of Russia's Bal tic fleet, which recently started foe the far east, bear a great weight of responsibility upon their broad shoulders. The Baltic fleet Is Russia's last hope on the see. There appears to have heeu a difference of opinion as to the wisdom of dispatch ing It to tukc par! In the war with Japan. The czar himself ls said to have overruled the counsels of his ad visers, nnd the fleet In consequence hus sailed from Cron stadt for the orient. but even yet there Is some doubt whether It will pro reed far on its course and whether the route chosen ls through the Suez canal or around the Cape of Good Hope This Is the s.ile re maining effective fleet of war vessels in the navy of the csar, for most of those at Port Arthur and Vladivostok have been sunk, damaged or driven Into neutral p..rta by the Japanese. What will happen to It on Its long cruise of over 13,000 marine miles to the northeastern coast of Asia? Will It reach Its destination Intact, and If so what will be tlie status of the war on Its arrival': These questions arose in the mind of the public when the Beet set sail the other day, with the blessing of the -sar and the booming of guns from the forts at Cronetadt. er, panting violently, boarded the train. "I have had to run nearly half a mile," he said, "to catch these cars " Then, addressing himself to Profess or James' companion, he went on: "It's a bad job, air, when old f oik i like you and me has to run." TBe clergyman, frowning, asked the farmer bow old he waa. "I'm elfhty-afcv" was the reply. "Oh," said the clergyman, "there la twenty years' difference between you and me." "Goodness, sir," exclaimed the old man, "yon don't mean to tell me you're a hundred and six T' Get Your Supplies at McNAMEE'S GROCERY Selling the Entire Stock at Cost for CASH VICE AUMIBA1. ROJE8TVESSKT. Stockmrn, Tik Notice. For sale or rent a :Ua.Ml acre stock ranch in Klamath couutv. of which about 'JOOO is line hay laud pr.-lu. ing on 1 an average 1 1-- ton per acre. Well ' watered, alfalfa does well on this ranch, a ready sale for hay From .VJ to SOU I head of cattle can le supported from time the hay is off until Jauua r. For particulars enquire of J. ii. Flunk. Roseburg, Or. Anay Officer Coming. Bun b Prataeriag. A T. Fetter, of the Drain Nonpareil, has lately visited Portland, and among other statements made to the Oregon Daily Journal we notice the following: "Drain has grown more than say other town along the line of the South ern Pacific this year. The population is how 600, and will be much larger this time next year. It is the distributing point for a large territory in north Doug las county, and is admittedly the beet route for a railroad to Coos Bay. In June of last year a gang of 25 surveyors left Drain to survey a line of railway to the coast. Tbey have been at work continuously since that time, and aie now in the vicinity of Uoll Beach, in Curry county. Thev are expected to meet near that point another party of surveyors who are working up from Eureka. The route from Drain to Coos bay is almost a water level, there being a low pass through the mountains of the Coast range." Oil Prosptcu Gesa at lassos. Mrs. Frank Hopkins visited io town two days last week. B. D. Cornelius and Root. Couglar closed their beer hall last week as their license had expired. Misses Kthel Dyer and Mamie Winters, of Kiddle, were calling on friends here last week. H. J. Wilson went to Roseburg hy private conveyance last Wednesday, re turning Friday evening. Mrs. J. W. Swank,', who has been a great sufferer from jpczema for more than a year, is very much improved. Mr. W. H. Graham and family, of Days Creek, will soon move to town to take advantage of onr school facilities. Mrs. Katie O'Shea Weaver had a nar row escape from death Thursday . While attempting to remove some shells from a gun, it exploded, and a bullet narrow ly missed her. Her face and eyes were filled with powder, and her face cot by pieces of shell. Saturday evening a goodly number of friends of Rev. L. C. Zimmerman and family unexpectedly made their appear ance at the parsonage, bringing lunch with them. The occasion waa a fare well call, as the family expect to leave Monday for Eugene, where they will re side next year, while Rev. Zimmerman serves the Monroe charge, to which the last M. E. Conference assigned him. Fred will attend the High School, and Lloyd the Business College. Their de parture is regretted by all, irrespective of religious ties. Amicus. Bandon Oil Company is boring for oil on the coast south of Bandon. The drill s now down 1100 feet, and the expert in charge of the work confidently expects to encounter oil at a depth not greater than 1400 feet. The drill haa passed through the first and second strata of oil sand and a lake of salt water. The flow of gas is so strong that it blew the sand pump out of the well. It has been cased off at three different points. A hat held over it before it was shut off w aid be carried some distance! in the air. The Bandon Oil Company is capi talized for 90,000. The stock is held principally by Bandon people. The greatest confidence is felt that an oil lake will be tapped and another indus try added to Coos county's resources. The sailing of the fleet waa interpret- ed as an announcement that Russia has no Intention of considering terms of peace and that the war moat be fought to a finish. The supposed dead- ; nation of the armada ls Vladivostok, ixiug before the vessels can arrive i there that port will be Icebound, so the fleet must wait to enter it until late In the spring of 100B. The commanders of the fleet are all men of proved bravery and exceptional ability as naval offi cers. ice Admiral Hojestvenaky is In chief command. The fleet ls divided Into two squadrons. One contains the righting monsters and the other the torpedo boats and colliers and various sorts of auxiliary vessels. The squadron com bear iHDil mandera are Bear v i ai lean M Admiral Enqulst and Rear Admiral Voelkeraam. whose name is nlso given as Von Felkeraon and lYlkeraon. There waa an impraeeive scene when these officers went on board the Imperial yacht Caarovena at Ciusastadl and said farewell In person to his Imperial majesty the csar. Than, with destroyers ahead and abeam. Ad miral Kojestvensky's flagship, the SOU Edwin Hawley, whose sensational coup aa a railroad king haa been the talk of Wall street recently, arrived Id New York an unsophisticated country lad and was glad to earn $10 a week In an office and be bossed around by ev erybody. He went to school in rail road financiering to the late C. P. Huntington and ls now the trusted ad viser of the widow of his preceptor. It ls said the Huntington millions have Increased perceptibly as the result of his counsels. Hla recent feat In wresting control of the Chicago and Al ton read from the well known finan cier, K H. Har riman. gave Wall street s surprise and revealed that a new power in the railroad world had arisen He ls known in "the street" aa "the anwin bawxkt sphinx." Mr. Hawley waa born Id Chatham, N. T, in 1800. He has been president of the Minneapolis and St Louis railway since 18W and president of the Iowa Central railway since 1900. He is fourth vice president of tht Southern Pacific railway and a director in several other roads. He lives In un pretentious style In New York city, but has a beautiful country place on Long Island. If you If you If you If you If you If you If . n don't know Cil' on or sdilret want want want want want want to buy a furnished to buy a rent a to to to PAT build move farm rooms ItOlUU a h a bonx FJ F. pattern, !!K5, K-eeburg HrftOD. HUNTERS ATTENTION TlT m 1 lsjaBueltMejaBjjMaBBjjejM ju ' , Ji asaJfMy , JjaBBBBBaaatt..-.- --J.-J " sbbbbbbbbbbbbbLbI Wf M '5'- Thf open seasoj f i l.er banting will commenc July ;uil before bui 14 your gun and ammunition you should first call at the popular hardware s ore and consult Prices that Please SK.SYKES i Major C. A. Oillette ol San Fr.ncisco was in Med ford for a couple of .lays last week for an investigation with regard to the establishment of an Army caval ry piet in Jackson county. The oiheer is looking about, so it is understood with instructions from Ocneral MacArihur to find the most suitable place for the establishment of such a p st He was driven over the valley by Captain Oor- 1 don Voorhies, one of the big orchardists sal everv site suitable was shown to : him. The Government will require four sec tions of land upon which to erect build ings and for maneuver grounds. There is a great area of level land on all sides of Medford, and it is not improbable that a suitable site will lie found. It is understood, not officially, however, that Eugene and Portland are the only other localities which can possibly lie enter tained in competition for the location of the post. It is stated that Major Gillette will be in Roseburg in a few days to look over the country tributary, to see what it of fers as a suitable tract for the proposed cavalry post site. Congressman Her mann is also just in receipt of the offi cial report of General Mac Arthur in which he recommends the establishment of such a post in Western Oregon. It behooves the Roseburg Commercial Club to bestir itself or the proiosed pos is likely to go to Jackson county. varoff, gulf led the fleet down the Finnish The Baltic fleet, or second Pacific tievt. as It will now be known, com prises some very powerful war vessels. It Includes the battleships Knlas Souva roff. Borodino, Im- jvemtor Alexander UL and Orel all ves sels of 13.000 tons displacement ; the Nsvarin of 10JJ00 tons. Slssol Veiiky, tons, end the Otslla bya of 12.074 tons, which ls Rear Admiral Yoelker earn s flagship The fleet also numbers the cruisers Admiral Nakhimoff. Dmitri Donee. ot, Aurora and Almas, Rear Admiral Enqulst's flagship. Altogether there are some fif ty veaeela In the fleet Little Admi ral Togo haa been a brave but care ful fighter and still haa quite a few good ships with which to ward off the powerful newcomers. George W. Peck, who has been named for governor of Wisconsin by the Democrata. la no stranger to the office He held It before from 1881 to 1806. Probably he will always be more famous aa the author of Peck's "Bad Boy" than as a politician He ls said to resemble Joe Howard, the Journalist. The governor tells a good story on him self in this connec tion. He says: "We were at a hotel In Chicago together the other day. A man I'd never seen before came np to me and slspped me on the back and aaked me whether I'd take anything. I said yea. I will. He ; aaked me what It ahouid be. I said I'd have a glass of beer. I waa a beer , man He looked surprised and want ed to know if we hadn't better make it a bottle of wine I told him no: I'd never cultivated a taste for cham ! pagne yet and I couldn't afford to be j gin now. He stared at me and said 'You tell me you don't drink cham paarue. and you're Joe Howard P name Isn't Joe Howard.' I said. saktsl me what my name was and told him He paid for the beer.' aaVassTBBSBV I Chico Nursery Co. Wjt ! I INCORPORATED sSBbW 1 We off it one si ihr lar est aid Fm st Stocks B L on the Pacific Coast ! I I mm Mil W ) Wzpi Write Immediately for terms 5 Chico C a 1 i f n r n i a Wi BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBSBBBBBBBBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBWSBBBEEmBBBBnSBmBBBBBBBl fve ..' -w . -v-w a, t . r NORMANS' ICE CREAM PARLORS FINE CONFECTIONERY HENDRICK S BLOCK OPPOSITE THE S. P. RAiLBGAD OEPOT.- im M H. I I f Tropical Frui's Cigars, Pastries The Best Ice Cream Soda bxab ADaumax rxQrisT. laps art Good Property. One of the profitable fields of industry that is caiahle of development in this vicinity is the cultivation of hops. There are numerous bottom fiats that would make good hop yards and the profits to be derived from hop growing will probably average better than any other crop in the future. There are very few farmers who have not suitable land for five, ten or twenty acres of hops. Horace Putnam has 10 acres of hops and gathered 10,500 pounds. Hops are selling at 30 cents a iound. His crop from ten acres is worth more than $:'. 000. J. II. Stocker it Son have six or seven acres and bar fee ed 7,000 pounds worth l'J.100. The hop crop this year is light, but when :t00 an acre run 1 secured from such a crop, il is a pretty safe guess that there is money in it. Drain Nonpareil. Tracy'i Fa Rifle. Dr. Shaw, physician at the Oregon State penitentiary, waa in Koaeburg Friday on bis return from a hunting expedition in the vicinity of Glen dale. He waa exhibiting a gun of more than ordinary interest, although a com mon modern 30-30 caliber Winchester rifle. The interest the gun created was from the fact that it waa the deadly rifle carried by Harry Tracey, the desperate escaped convict, during his memorable flight through northern Oregon and the state of Washington two yean ago and with which he killed eight men. The stock of the weapon bears marks of rough usage and on one side waa to be seen a letter "H," made byhe ban dit with a knife during a spare moment in bis flight. Ayers Doctors first prescribed Ayer't Cherry Pectoral over 60 years ago. They use it today more than ever. They Cherry Pectoral rely upon it for colds, coughs, bronchitis, consumption. They will tell you how it heals inflamed lungs. " I had a very Iwd cough for threa jean. Tlnii 1 triad Ayer-n cherry Pactoral Myaore lunga wars aoon healed and mj cough dropped Ik as. Pbabl Btdb, Unthrla Centra, la. Me., soe.. Sl.oo. MJmK for i.C. ATBBOO.. mSSiUSmm Old Coughs Dr. Edmund Janes James, who baa just been chosen president of the Uni versity of Illinois, haa always Brad ta an educational atmosphere Be waa born In 1SS5 at Jacksonville. III., where Illinois college la located, and attend ed the Illinois State Normal school. Then he went to Northwestern uni versity at Evanaton. 111., and on grad dating there took a course at Harvard. After hla Harvard coarse be went to Germany to study economics at the University of Halle and other German institutions. Economics, finance and government are the specialties In ed ucation to which Professor Jamea haa devoted himself. He became a pro fessor In the University of Pennayl- ranla and waa call ed from there to a professorship In the University of Chica go. He was elected president of hla al ma mater North western uulerslty In 1902, and goes from that post to the handeli tp of the University of 1111 nols, one of the largest educational In stitutions In the United States, with a corps of Instructors numbering over 800 and nearly 8.800 students on Its roll. President Jamea ls a lover of good stories, and he relates that be waa traveling not long since with n clergy man, a man about sixty-sis . who looks older than he really la, a fact of which he ha tea to be reminded. At a small rvral station an aged and bent faraa- The Chinese minister. Sir Chentung Liang Cheng. Is a good story teller. He waa being eutertalned In Washington recently, cn.1 the conversaUon turned upon the c. ' expression of Russian opinion thai IBM farther Kuropatkin gets away from Ku rokl the Larder It will be for Kurokt to reach him. Sir Chentung. with the prudence of hla race, did not so much as smile, hut made the following contri bution "When I was at Phllllpe Andover 1 went strolling one day in the fields wtth a young woman I admired. We encoun tered a very vivacious bull, which un dertook a flank movement. The farm er, who aaw the situation, shouted. Tall back, fall back. We fell back, but the creature came on. 'Fall back, fall beekr be cried again 1 can't fall back any farther.' I replied; we have reach ad the limit.' -Limit: Limit" screamed the farmer. "Gosh blame your durn fool eyes! There ain't no limit to a game wtth a ball.' " BIB CHBTTCXO L1AJIG CKK3Q. Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, DIAMONDS AND SILVERWARE Watch Repairing a Speci-i ty A Cn7mr.n PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER ra Z7CllatrlIIClll, JEWELER - - OPTICIAN The PBcaiDEirr j auks One Ayer's Pill at bedtime Insures a natural actton next morning. Right Rev. Henry Tatea Sat D. D.. blabop of the diocese of Washington and boat of the arch bis bop of Canterbury on hla visit to the American capital was formerly rector of Calvary church. New York, where be did a great work among the poor. He aecnnecl several Diauopnca before accepting the one be now holds It Is an Interesting coincidence that B I a h o p Satterlee waa confirmed and married In Calvary church, where be waa rector for thir teen years, and he waa consecrated there as bishop of Washington. When be waa made rector of Calvary an orna mental and very substantial Iron fence with stout Iron gates protected It from the public dur ing the greater part of the week. With the advent of the new rector the fence and the gatea opposite the main en trance disappeared and "an open and welcome" took their place. BISHOP SATTKB- DO YOU WANT To Buy Bonds? If v you want th.ve tht par the btrsl ltTi1enL A iumti.- tMuratlon a better in MenS than any UnW The beM plate to get a bnftine education l Garland Business College SILVERTON, OREOUN Wo have a t'orrvponlenie 'mr-w in .-hor-.haa.l in Teslisale J. B. GARLAND, Principal Drink Soda From.... N! HOME MM I RUMS CURRIER'S FINE NEW Ml NiTAIM ud Crisp" ThrBtST Tallies fc IceCreaa COQUILLE'S BIG DAY. Hundreds Attend the Woodmen's Big Log Rolling. The ipiiet town ofCotjuille was dressed in gala attire last Saturday in honor of the Woodmen of the world. K very where Moated the colors of the order red, white and black. It waa a lone man who did not wear an emblem of the axe or stump, it was a holiday, a log-rolling they term it. Coos and Curry coun ties joined hands for one grand picnic and to welcome new Woodmen to the fold. Hundreds of visitors were there from the outride, and everewhere were greetings of peace and fraternal love. It was the most notable event of the kind ever held in Southern Oregon. A month or more ago it was proudly announced that 200 new members would be initiat ed at Coquille by the Woodmen Oct. 8. The expectations were more than rea ized for 239 men took the solemn vows of the order in Masonic Hall that night. It waa moat appropriate tbat the Wood men should hold their meetings in the forest. It was no make-believe of chil dren or lodge room that greeted the eye at Coquille. The forest was real. Co quille itself is in a grove of myrtle and other trees, and on all sides is the tall timber tbat makes famous onr I'acitic Coaat. It is most appropriate that the lodge there is named after the graceful queen of the foreet, Myrtle Camp. The speech-making was done in a grove of myrtle treea, and there in the shade of thoae primeval trees on a warm October day waa good fellowship over a basket dinner. tTen Wasted. To cut cord wood at Glendale. Oood Fir timber to work in. Price paid, f 1.75 per cord. Apply to W. F. Minard, Glendale, Ore. tf At This. A complete and up-to-date street hats shown line of at the Bell Sisters. Just Received CAR LOADS 2 Mitchell Farm Wagons Road Wagons Champion Binders, Mowers, Reapers, Hay Rakes, Etc. We can save you money on auythinn M the Wagon or Implement line. Give us a chance to figure with you and you won't 1 egret it. J. F. Barker & Co., Grocers, Phone 301