9 COQUILLE CITY, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1884. VOL. 2. K rery B l 'S n i X S C A R D S . ii (A lb : kt I ' ik b .) Life 1« a count o f losses, Every year, r or the weak are heavier crosae«, Every year: Lost Springs with sobs replying, llntY weary Antuum sighing, W hile those we love are dying Every year. . J. M .S iu l ix . J ohn A. G iiay . Siglin & Gray. Attorneys and Counselors At Law, Marshfield. Coos oomity, Oregon. O ffxob — Holland budding, opposite Blnnoo Hotel. v2n2U w. ‘ The days have less of gladness, Every year. The nights more weight of sadness Every year: Fair Springs no longerJoharm us. The wind i and wenth-r harm us, The threats of death alarm us, Every year. SINCLAIR, Attorney at Law. General liiburnuce ard Heal Estate Agent, C o q u il l e C it y , O regon . T. G. O W E N . There comes new cares and sorrows, Every year, Dark days and darker morrows, Every year: The ghosts of dead loves haunt ns. The ghosts of »hanged friends taunt ns, And disappointments daunt us, Every year. Attorney and Counselor at Law , M t i s u m u ) , Oon. s. H H AZARD . Attorney and Counselor at Law . E m etna C it y . ()<» s . To the past go more dead faces. Every year. And the loved leave vacant places, Every year: Everywhere the sad eyes meet us. In the evening's dusk they greet us, And to come to them entreat us, Every year. J. W . BENNETT. Attorney at Law. MAKsnriKLD, O o n . D- X j . W ATSO N . Attorney and Counselor at Law The shores o f lifo are shifting Every year, And we are seaward drifting Every yoar. Old places, changing, fret us, The living more forget us. There are fewer to regret us, Every year. C oos C it y , O on . J. H. NOSLER, Notary Public C o q f i l i . k C i t y . O o n . CAR L H- VOLKM AR. But the truer life draws Higher, Every year; And its Morning-st^r climbs higher, Every year: Earth’ s hold on us grow s slighter, And the heavy burden lighter, And the Dawn Immortal ¿brighter, Every Venr. At'.orncy and Counselor at Law . M ybti . k F oint . C'sas C ovnty O ukoon . courts of Oregon. W ill practice in all the A. M. CRAW FORD. Attorney and Counselor at La.v. 1 4 T b Oil eral insurance agency. Coin in n u i <*a ted. j Editor H e r a l d :— I f this commu­ M ausufielo , Ogn, J. P. EASTER, M- Y ear. nication in the cause of temperance D- is worthy of a place in the columns Physio-M edical and Eclectic Physician and ' <»* >™ir valuable paper, then please 1 print it; if it is not, then consign it to the waste basket. Now to preface this subject, I C. W - T O W E R . M. D., j 7,ill just say, when we hx»k around Physician and Surgeon, ■ us ami see so many good, young M n u H n c L D , O on . 1 men and lxns of tender age and C. ANGELL,: M. D- 1 inexperience, being led astray, and, ; I am sorry to say, ruined by the P h y.iciin and Accoucheur, example of older men, yes, men of C O Q U ILLE CITY. OGN. families, who are raising boys and vlnltf. , girls, it almost chills the blood in my veins. Now, sir, 1 think I can O. E. SMITH, not employ a vacant hour better Sergeon Dentist, than in laying before you a few ofllcc thoughts on the detestable practice M A R SH FIE LD , OREGON. vlul .'1m. of drinking to excess. 1 enter on this business the more cheerfully J. M. VOLKMAR, M. D- because 1 am confident you are a friend to the good cause of temper­ ance. There is no vice that car­ M yutlb P oin t , Coes Co., O ljkkjn . v2ii4.'»tf ries a greater shame and odium in it than drunkenness; there is no J. Z. HOLCOMB spectacle w*e behold with greater S c b o ic a l and M . chakicax . D entist . Office: Over St-i gstacken's Drug ¡Store, in aversion and contempt It sinks a Holland Bu Iding, Front street. man infinitely lx?low the beasts Marshfield, Oregon. that jierisli. This is the preroga­ p n i f i l l professionally visit tha various tive of man —this shameful vice I jwuh on the river. that throws the mind iuto confu­ sion and uproar; lays the under­ 0*. J D E -A .3S T , standing and reason into sad and C oquille C it y , O regon . deplorable ruins; effaces every tiling G E N E R A L AGENCY for the sal»* of City property, houses and lots, timber, farms, that can be called the image of ranches, etc. Office in Herald nuildiitp. God; extinguishes reason and in- ilames the passions; dethrones the judgement and exalts our worst designs in its place. The world & has not in it a more contemptible 3 H T W o r k of all descriptions 'one at short sight than a rational creature iu notice and extremely low prices. this condition. When we are so vln47. frequently eye-witnesses of all the madness and absurdities, and at I. O. G. T. length of the perfect senselessness, Morning: Star Lodge which the immoderate draught No. 464, Meets at Coquille City every Thursday occasions; the wild change evening. Visiting members o f this order, in it produces, should be so fixed in good standing, are cordially invited. the minds of its beholders as to K. of L. render them utterly averse to its cause. May we not justly con­ Pioneer Assembly, No- 3070. clude it to be from hence that the Meets at Coqoille City every Monday offspring of the persons who are evening. Visiting members, in good stand­ accustomed thus to disguise them­ ing, are oordially invited. selves, often prove remarkably sober. They avoid in their riper O. F. I. o . years their parents’ crime, from that detestation of it which they Coquille Lodge N o.53 M eets at Coquille City every Saturday even contracted iu their earlier years. ing. Visiting brethren, in good standing, In childhood, on first beholding cordially invited. the effects of drunkenness, we are A. F. and A. M. stricken with astonishment, that a Chadwick Lodge, No-68- rational being should be thus Meets at Coquille City ou Saturday even­ changed, and be induced to make in g on or before the the full moon in each himself the object of scorn and m on th . contempt The drunkard teases John Goodman, you with his impertinence—mis­ W. M Surgeon. C ity . Omce a ’ i-etuticne« in Goqniile v2ullftf w. Physician and Surgeon. i. B. WriiM WATCH-MAKER JEWELER, O oq.'U .ille C i t r Or. IS T H E R E A N Y D A N G E R ? takes your meaning and hardly “ There is a pretty general feel­ The following is what a few far- ing that the continent of America knows his own. At times he fal­ ters in his speech; unable to get seeing, patriotic men have thought was not discovered by Columbus, through an entire sentence; his and said: and civil liberty established by the The following extract from a re­ hands trembling; his eyes swim­ Fathers of the republic, to the end cent letter written by Hon. David ming; his legs too feeble to sup­ that fifty millions of people might port him; until at length, you only Davis, once a judge of the supreme be made tributary to a band of rail­ know the human -creature by his court, now a senator, of the United road magnates, or that farmers, shape. I cannot but ¿add that States, indicates the serious nature artisans and merchants might, by were a person of sense to have a of the problem before us: hardwork and keen competition “ Great corporations and consoli­ just notion of all the silly tilings raise lip a dozen Vanderbilts, with he says or does, of the wretched dated monopolies are fast seizing eaoh several hundred millions ot appearance he makes in a drunken the avenues of power that lead to dollars.- Those who entertain this fit, he would not want a more pow­ the cbntrol of the government It feeling have Income persuaded that erful argument against repeating is an open secret that they rule the time has anived for the indus­ the crime. But as none of us are states through procured legislatures trious masses of this country to inclined to think ill of ourselves, and corrupted courts; that they tire protect themselves, if they ever in­ so none of us will know how far our strong in congress, and that they tend to do so. It will certainly not vices expose us. We allow them are unscrupulous in the use of be easier after the adversary has excuses, which they meot not from means to conquer prejudice and ac­ grown stronger. In this contest any but ourselves. This is the quire influence. This condition of every delay is to the disadvantage case with all, and it is particularly things is truly alarmiug, for unless of the people. Let the issue be de­ the case with drunkards; many of it be changed quickly and thor­ ferred for a few years, and nothing whom would undoubtedly reform, oughly, free institutions are doom­ but a miracle or a revolution as vio­ could they be brought to conceive ed to be subverted by an oligarchy lent as that of France will over­ how much they do of which they resting upon a basis of money and throw the oppression. Of all mis­ ought to lie ashamed. Iu the lan­ of corix>rate power.” leading delusions, there is none The present secretary of the guage of the poet: more mischievous than the notion Anti-Monopoly League, says: “O wad some power the gif tie gi’e that popular suffrage and popular “The channels of thought and us, power are synonymous. Given the the channels of commerce thus own­ To see oursel’s as ithers’ see us.” means of bribing multitudes, of in­ ed and controlled by one man, or Nor is it improbable that it «is timidating others of wrecking oppo­ by a few men, what is to retain cor- the very consideration, how much nents, coupled with actual posses­ druukeuess contributes to make a jx*r>ite power or to fix a limit to its sion of the government, and adverse man the contempt of his wife, his exactions upon the people? What sentiment must bo paralyzed. I f children, his servants, and the is then to hinder tiiese men from the suffrage is to be our salvation, great amount of sorrow to his par­ depressing or inflating the value of it must be applied sharply while ents, and of sober spectators, j all kin.ls of property to suit their there are still odds on the side of which hath proved the cause that caprice or avarice, and thereby unbought and unterrorized man­ it hath seldom been the reigning gathering into their own coffers the hood.” vice of any people possessed of weatlh of the nation? Where is the A hundred columns might be limit to such a power ns this? refinement of manners. filled with similar expressions from Drunkenness prevails most Wlmt shall be said of the spirit of a newspapers published in all parts among the savage and uncivilized; free people who will submit with­ and now on file in the office of the amongst those of rude understand­ out a protest to be thus bound hand National Anti-Monopoly League. ing and less delicacy of sentiment. and foot?” Comment is needless. The public Hon. Jeremiah S. Black, ex-judge welfare IS in danger, and tKe in­ Climes, as there are in men, there must&be in all nations; but the of the supreme court and ex-attor- fluence of every patriotic citizen is more civilized, have perceived ney-general of the United States, invoked to avert it. drunkenoss to bo such an offence recently stated: Respectfully, Ac., “All public men must take their against common decency, such a L. E. CH ITTENDEN, Titore can prostitution of one’s self to the side on this question, Frost National Anti-Monopoly ridicule and scoffs of the meanest, be no neutrals. He that is not for League. We must have that in what ever else they might us is against us. Headquarters, 7 Warren St., transgress, they would not do it in legal protection against these New York. this particular wav, but leave a abuses. This agitation once begun, * C oiiiitiuiilculc«]. vice^KO degrading to the wild and and the magnitude of the grievance being understood, it will force our E d . H erald : uncultivated portion of mankind. rulers i< * give us a remedy against it. IV. H. Brown, t tie great ship- (Continued next week. 1 »»>»• The monopolies w ill resist with all builder of the Novelty yard, New A Tor G r u i » * In S lu r p . 1 notice in several papers state­ their arts and influence, but fifty York city, was a poor boy from ments to the efleet that many sheep millions of people, in process of Connecticut, who worked for my are dying this spring from a dis­ time, will learn the important fact father in 1828. He got his start in ease. known as grub in the head. that they are fifty millions strong.” New York and built the steamship Governor Gray, of Indiana, in a Southerner for the Charleston, S. The cause, symptoms, and result of this malady are correctly de­ message to the legislature of that C. trade. He also built the Atlan­ tic, <4000 tons. George Steers, of scribed in tlve articles I have seen. state in January last, said: “In my judgment the republic Williamsburg, built a pilot boat foi If taken in time the disease is eas­ ily cured, but if not there is no cannot live long in the atmosphere tlio Sandy Hook pilots, and they remedy. It is caused by a peculiar which now surrounds the bailot- sceiug his ability, gave him a start. He built the Yacht, America, kind of tly which deposits its eggs box. Moneyed corporations, to se­ in the nostrils of the sheep in hot cure favorable legislation for them­ which won the Queen’s cup, and weather.. These eggs 'develop to­ selves, are taking an active part in the clipper ship Young America. wards spring into grubs, which eat elections by furnishing large sums j The fame of McKay, well known into the brain and invariably pro­ oi money to corrupt t-lio voter and J to the world, needs no commentary. duce death. A sure remedy is this: purchase special privileges from the 1 N<*w, in approaching our own sec­ After the hot weather is over and government. If money can control tion, we come to Mr. C. Danielson the eggs deposited, make a strong the decision at the ballot-box it of the Coquille river. The ffrst ves­ decoction of Scotch snuff and assn- will not be long until it can control sel that lie built was the schooner bedita and then inject with a syringe Coquille. The next was the Dan­ about a tablespoonful iuto each its existence.” This is in entire accordance with ielson, and now ho is building an­ nostril. The sheep will reel and stagger like a drunken man after the views of Daniel Webster, who other. T hese vessels are, more or the operation, but there is no dan­ said: less, flat bottomed, but the present ger. I was brought up on a farm “The freest government cannot one so nearly resembles a sharp iu New York, and have seen this remedy applied on thousands of long endure, where the tendency schooner that when she is launched sheep, and always with success. of the law is to create a rapid ac­ it will be difficult to distinguish the This induces the most violent sneez­ cumulation of property in the difference. Her nuxlel is perfect. ing, which dislodges and ejects the hands of few, and to render the Length of keel, 100 feet; breadth of eggs. No sheep properly treated in masses of the people poor and de­ beam, 30: depth of hold, feet. the manner described will ever die She is to have a top-gallant fore­ of the disease. But when the grub pendent.” The press, with the exception of castle and will bo schooner rigged. is once hatched and developed there is no remedy.—R. H. McClollan that portion which is owned or sub­ She has a round bilge; is sharp for­ in Sheep Breeder and Wool Grow­ sidized, are with the people in this ward, and her after floors have suf­ er. fight. The New York Times (Rep.), ficient dead-rise, which is a great ‘‘The fact is,” said a prominent under date of May 10, in an article improvement. Danielson deserves retail druggist the other day to a regarding the encroachments of praise and will, in time, rank with young man with thin legs and corporate power, says: the first builders on the coast. note-book, “ that these nostrums “ It is not only absorbing to it­ The schooner will have twenty-six for the complexion with which the market is Hooded are worse than self the fruits of labor and the feet, in depth of centerboard. humbugs, for, far from being ben­ gains of trade and piling up wealth S. D. Goodrich. eficial, they aro in most cases pos­ io the hands of the few, but it is itively injurious. There is plenty “ Pa,” said a Chicago small boy, controlling legislation and endeav­ of money to be had in that sort of quackery, for there is ahvays a oring to sway the decisions of courts as he observed a man coming up sale for any stuff ibat pretends to in its own interest. Wo are " jw at the street who seemed to wish the possess curative properties for the a stage in the contest where the sidewalk was a little wider, “is that skin. Put up some rose water. in people may vindicate their author­ a delegate?” “ I do not know, my bottles, lable it ‘Bloom of Youth,’ ity and place these corporations son,” answered the old gentleman. or anything else that sounds well, under the regulation of law.” The Brooklyn Daily Eagle “ Ho has the symptoms, at least” and the women will rush to buy . (Dem.), in a recent editorial said: —Boston Post. it.— 8. F. Chronicle. NO. 47. T h e R iv e r m id If a r b o r R i l l . The Itiver and Harbor bill, which passed the house on Thurs­ day, and now goes to the senate, appropriates something like $12, 000,000, to various purposes of in­ ternal improvement It differs in many respects from previous ap­ propriations having similar pur­ poses in view. The expenditures are to be made under the direct suix3rvision of the United States Board of engineers, which is re­ quired to prepare and submit plans for all improvements in rivers and harbors contemplated by this bill. There is nothing in the act which can be construed as a limitation on the powers of the board. It is absolute upon all questions of expenditure’ While the appropri­ ations for the improvements con­ templated by the bill are liberal, they are not excessive. No more imperative duty devolves uixm congress than the proper improve­ ment and maintenance, through Federal appropriations, of tho rivers and harbors of the country. A R oim -ily Cor N IobbrriiiK ( ' o w n . Toledo, W. T., June 1C, ’84. Ed. Willamette Farmer: I have a Holstein cow that, while chewing her cud, slobbers, and certainly must lose the strength of her food, »is she slobbers very bad. If you can tell me the reason and a remedy in your next paper, you will oblige. C. D. E l l is . A nswer .— Remove the cause, whether irritants in food, dregs or sharp bodies lodged in the tissues; examine the teeth well for decayed overgrowth or irregular teeth. I f you find any diseased ones, have them removed, and the trouble will cease. For simple inflammations use the following: Change the feed; open tho bowels by injections of warm water and soap, or give one pint of olive oil, and wash tho mouth with vinegar and water or carbolic acid, one half ounce to one quart of water, or one ounce of bo« rax to one quart offwater, three or four times daily. I f the throat is sore and swollen, apply a mustard poultice to the throat ; after an hour wash off and rub in more, and give internally two drachms fluid ex­ tract of belladonna in a pint of wa­ ter. If erasious or ulcers appear apply three times daily with a feather dipped in a solution of ten grains of tumor caustic and one ounce of water. C. W . J e f f e r e y s , V . S. —— — — 0 ----------------------- ------ O u r DmtKliirrM. Not only in tho Old World, but here—and, perhaps, increasingly here—on account of our democrat­ ic or republican institutions, it has come to be one of the most serious problems of the time as to what careers we can be able to open for our daughters—what shall be don© with them? I agree with tho most conservative, and say that, just so far as is possible, tho answer to that question should be, marry them. I believe that tho truest, noblest and most satisfactory ca­ reer for any woman is first to bo found in the home. I enre not what she m»iy be able to do be­ yond the limits of that home; if she has the brain and training of a statesman, the arts of an orator, the power of a printer, or the cult­ ure of a musician, poet or novelist —no matter what—still I believe, in the main and in the long run, even such women as these iiud their truest place, their resting point, the point of departure, in the home, provided that they can be properly and fitly married. The idetil woman is in her own home surrounded by loving chil­ dren and guarded by the strong, manly arm of the husband—one who sympathizes with her in all she can do and is ready to help her in the noblest career she is capable of attaining. Subscribe for the H erald .