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About Coquille City herald. (Coquille City, Or.) 188?-1904 | View Entire Issue (June 9, 1885)
I f\ < V IA\ 'J / / t r II era U\ Coi] tv tile COQUILLE CITY, OREGON, TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 1885. VOL. 3. lll’NIJI-XN (1RI»N. ' . i i i s s i : i > r u a :. S j m «* T i n * < l»i«*cu .** lV a o r or W a r . The .«lumbering volcano may at any moment scatter the firebrands Come to think the matter calmly of war in every part of the globe over, with plenty of time, maybe Europe is in commotion, England the late lumanted Legislature was and russia may yet meet in des- »<>* such a very glorious success as | perate conflict. Great Biitain, ! it might have been. There were a notwithstanding her*allios, is alone few bills passed which the Su- i to resent the aggression of the promo coart hasn’t knocked the Cossack who Haunts his banner in ‘ challenge of the world. Denmark bottom out of, or which did omit the enacting clause, or some other lias tendered its services ns medi MartihlieUl, Coo* ronnty. Omton. . . . . . Should it be agreeable to O kmc «— Holland building opponitf Riant*» ) >VOr«tl S ClVlllZiltloU, twit as tile a ii- ; clause, but the people of this great i ator. vjirjn Hotel. | cester of princesses and princes in state would no doubt have! both powers, peace will prevail for 1 other lands. S»rne*e>[ her limp s- “ mosied” nil ng in their accustom- a time. Russia evidently wants W S IN C L A IR , ty’s grandchildren are already mar- | oil way in about as good style had war; will have war, or more territo Attorney at Law, Gon**rnl Inonrwne« amt Kent Estate Agent, rieti, aid she is a great-grandma to they never been passed. The jury ry. What the outcome of a war COQUILH C l I ’ Y, O k k g o S . ____ three little < lies, two of whom are ; law built by that body was all between England and Russia may the sous of Prince William of right except that it didn't jibe be is left to the arbitrament of T. G . O W E N . Prussia, while the other is the with the constitution of the state, tl*e sword. To the student who Attorney and Counselor at Law. i daughter of Princess Charlotte of so the supreme court knocked the dispassionately surveys the field MABHiiriKLO. Oon. Prussia and her husband, Prince bottom out of it on the first round; of English and Continental poli Benard of Sax-Meiningcn. the registration bill was slightly tics, only one conclusion may lie S- H H A Z A R D , Though so small a princess she off on dates, and will probably be arrived at: It must be a collision Attorney and Counselor at Law. j has five Christian names—Theo inoperative; Mr. Bell's bill re between the enlightenment of the h r o a OifitO—«________ dore, Victoria, Augustine, Marina, quiring railroad companies to build nineteenth century and the retro- J. W . I B E N N E T T . ■ Maria. \ ictoria’s reign of forty- switches for warehouses, comes up ! « less^on ^ ie l)md* That Russia eight years has included forty-eight missing, cannot be found any place, • ^,as a ^xed determination to ex- Attorney at Law. | of the grandest years in the history and will never go into priut or *eild ^iei vaid eaipife so as 1° in- MABailTIKLO. 0«»S. j of the world’ s progress. When force; Mr. Ready’s prohibition bill elude the Indies, is cne of the D - Xo. W A T S O N . • she ascended the thr*»ne there wi s lacked a few important parts, and traditions bequeathed by the house ! not a single line of steamships en doesn’t amount to a tinker’s dun; Attorney and Counselor at Law Bourn ano ft’ Through the iu- gaged in regular tratlie across the the tlog law is a little off color, and tervention of England, Turkey was Coos C m , Oos. Atlantic ocean. Now there are, canines of all ages and colors will rescued from vassalage to the Czar J . H .N O S L E R , j more than forty. Then there was be exempt fnjm taxation till the of Ruspia’ and now ungratefully Notary Public not a mile of electric telegraph in solons get their heads together turns her back upon the power that Ctxii'ULK C it y , O on . the entire world. Now there are again, and probably longer; the shields the sovereignity of her two lines of sub-marine cables Agricultural College bill won’t Sultau and demands Cyprus as a C A R L H* V O L K M E R . flashing from one continent to the stand fire, and the Secretary of consideration for the mere privi- Attorney and Counselor ai L iw . other alternately, the mandate of state cannot draw warrauts on the ^eSe a Pas8aSe through the Dnr- M t it l k P o in t . C oos C o iv t Y O h uoos . a king or the message of a lover. strength of the thing, and a law | danelles and Bosphorus. 1 ranee Will pructiot* in all the* courts of Orejjou. And iu addition to the hundreds suit in order; the pilotage bill i ^1MS taken advantage of England s of thousands of miles of electric sprang aleak and is non compos | tribulations to menace Egypt that R P. T H O M P SO N , wires strung across both continents, i mentis; one corporation bill was so I *s solemnly uuder the protection SURGEON DENTIST. Office ut Ketudence, Coquille City, Oregon. the subtle spark rules beneath the ■ loosely drawn as to include in the of the crown of England. Ger stormy waves to I ear the greeting ----O ---- i city a farm, and the owner will he many is invading the African col- of Bethlehem’s shepherds, and re bankrupt paying taxes; another in- 0,iists that look for succor to the Str.ct atlrntion paid wo preaeremg ihe nuiuriv’ t«eth. Artificial dentures m- mind the great world that— corporation bill (Stayton, Marion flnS 'v,ncl* llas carried its civiliza- uertm' .»n any 1m*« now in use. Work “ One in heart ami one in thought wart to ni%e satisfaction. Uu41 county,) is minus the enacting i tion to the shores converted from Shall all the people l>e; clause, and this thriving town will i abject slavery and darkness toCom The hnnd* of hntnnn brotherhood * J. r . EASTER, M. 1). Are clasped beneath the aea." be compelled to wait until this 1 parative enlightenment. In fact, P in a t e las . S u b -tens and OitirETUtci an . As Americans, we must confess august body convenes again before ! England is at this moment at bay. Bpecial attention given to ütaeHaea of wom en and children, and all chronic f orinilo 1 there have been things in Queen it can become a city; the courts of ^ et, a ra> ^B^t breaks through du^itxr. Ca t.*s of obatetrics <10; teeth et- tract ed for iiO cents each. Sjat tal treat ment ; V ic to r ia 's reUM! that hardly meet two counties in i no judical district the sombre clouds that overhang for Kheuiunliam and Neuraipiu l»y the med- 1 Russia has our approval. And particularly we meets on one and the same day, ! England’s destinies. Dated vapor hath. I Ucce at residence in Coquille City. dislike the way in which she has and one Judge will have to posse.-s ; within her bosom a serpent that Poland is married her daughters to impecu the ubiquitous quality of being at i has not been crushed. G W . T O W E R . M . D. nious German princes and then two places at once; the solons said the vulnerable point of Russia, Physician and Surgeon, asked the representatives of an al that Curry county should be re j The Nihilists may suspend their M vBHrTrnit-D, Oos. ready overtaxed people to vote leased from back taxes, and they J operations ami echo the patriotic money for their support that has tried to ring in Baker county, blit feelings which animate all lovers w . C .A N G E L L , M .D . been wrung from the hard hands crippled the poor thing so it was of their country, but Poland lias Physician and Accoucheur, and Sooty brows of England’s ta the opposition of countries to iloring classes. But if the English vetoed by the Governor; the last COQUILLE CITY. OGN. people can stand such oppressions, and least trick the Legislative gang avenge in common with the moun Vlllltf. It was it may be wrong for us Americans did was to miss fire on Senator and tains of the Caucasus. to tipbra’d her for it. only a few years ago that a wild, O. E. SMITH, go home without an election. The old queen has been a great ajü££ Sergeon Dentist Had there been some other revolutionary enthusiasm seized que« n in her day, and her reign office the youth of Poland. Assassina has been a triumph of intellect means of making the general ap M A R SH FIE LD , OREGON. and industry ovei ignorance and propriation and paying the lady tion was rife and secret committees v in l :ha. slo’th. Her subjects have lieen clerks, Oregon would have got organized a baneful reign of ter- J . M V O L K M R M . D . busy factors and skilled laborers in along as « ell had the Legislature rorism. l o quell this movement the foundation nml progress of our Physician and Surgeon. never met, and would be $35,000 ' t,ie despotic power of Russia was young State. They have not only M yk tle P o in t . Ct*c3 C oca C o., O rbüok . found us a market for all our pro- better off They levied a 4-raill! iavoked and a Polish conscription v-'nVótf Thousands of duce, but they have come among tax and will create a $6,000,000 I determined upon. us to tell their share of our sober surplus, when 2-mills would be i d»- bright men fled to the forests, ¡D E -A JC ST, forests and to plow up their full 1 enough. Some of the Legislators while the committees called the C o q u ille C it y , O regon . quota of our broad prairies. In G EN L u a U AGENCY for the sale of City want another whack at the people nations to arms and proclaimed a the advancing civilization of Ore property, UoU:*«-a unti loia, umber, farmi*, series of democratic reforms. The runcut h , etc. Office tu ilcrnid building. gon, the sturdy Briton, in his before 1887. nobility and clergy eagerly joined tweed garments and heavy walking “ There was a powerful lot of the in the revolutionary movement. shoes, has played no insignificant J. F. HALL, part. And it is in compliment to young brethren who imagined Langiewiez, a young man, was ap Surveyor, the industry and intelligence of the F ob Cooa C ounty , O huoon . themselves democrats when the pointed chieftain of the forces that Office: With T. G. Owen, Eaq., Marshfield. self-exiled John Bull who has lie- were raised to contest the battle fc#"Perfect maps of all surveyed and en come one of us, rather than from republican party was in power. tered lands furnished on short uotite^ vinl any particular degree of reverence That was because they thought with the hated foe, but before he we may owe Ills sovereign, that ue <lemoorAcy meant to Mo as you could organize an army, Polaud L O, G. T. lift our hat to-day and with linn J please, law or no law.’ They be was fl(Kided with Russian troops. echo the shout of “ God Save the Morning Star Lodge gin to see that it means entire obe Langiewiez, with a small body of Queen.” No* 464, ------------- ►»#►«-------------- dience to the law no matter who men, returned to the forests and Meets at Coquille City every Thursdny H o w ( m i l i i i n i t s 1 C 1 *<* m i d F a l l . evening. Visiting members of this order, m may be president nor what party kept up a gurrilla warfare that good standing, are cordially invited. It is known that the Atlantic is in power, only a litlla more so lasted two years. He yielded at coast between Cape Hatleras and last, hopeless of the redemption of Cape Cod has been sinking stendi- under a democratic president. his native country from the iron I ly for centuries, and it is within When the young Utah democracy O. F. I. O . In the event j the bounds of probability that be- organized not a fe.v young Saints heel of the despot. Coquille Lodge No.53 fo»e 2,(KM) years have elapsed the were found in its ranks, and among of hostilities between Russia and Meets at Coquille City every Sutardny even cities of New York and Brooklyn them Attorney Thurman of Provo, Great Britain, Poland is as sure of ing. Visiting brethren, in good standing, may be under water. When the raisit g against the tyraut as is tfie o<*rdiallv invited. Dutch colonized Manhattan Island but since the fact has become sun that announces the morning. 200 years ago, the Indians told patent that the jiolygamists have A. F. and A. M. them that in the time of their nothing to hope from t!ue demo The dawn of Surraatia’s freedom Chadwick Lodge, No* 6 8 grandfathers' it was jxissihle to cratic administration except a do- will commence with the advent of Meets at Coquille City on Saturday even- ; cross Hell Gate dry shod from OI 1 G rna.id that they, shall obey the " ! e stH,,,lrird that bftar8 tlle Ugbt other. Professor iag on or r before the the full moon in each Lank to the on its folds.—Ex. laws, it is unJerstood that Mr. of tins age month. --------------»«+►.«-------------- Guyot estimated that the loweriug John Goodman, A l|uc<*r C l l j iu t b r A i r . Thurman and others have (if they W. M. of the Atlantic coast was twenty- two and one-half inches every ever were out) gone back into the The Pueblo of Acoma, situated centurv. At the same time it is tt bosom of the Mormon chureh, ninety miles west of Albuquerque, G. A. R. certain that the greater portion of Gen* Lytle Post, No* 27, the American continent is rising, body and soul. Yes, verily, these is one of the most remarkable communities in New Mexico, or Meeta at Coquille City, on every first while the continent of Australia nre times that try the soul of the the United States. In the middle Wednesday. Vsiting to.urad8, in Ijocd is certainly sinking.— [Boston saints and make mice of Mormon of a Gilley six miles in width, atandinp, oordiully invited. Journal of Commerce.] . men.” —Salt Lake Tribune. Walter Sinclair. C jmrrander. stand 3 a butte, and on the top of Following is Toni Merry's edito- L. F. L ane . J ohn L ane . rial in the Su iday Meicury on the LA N E k LANE, Queen’s birth-day: Tii-day the Queen of England Attoynm auJ (touiisrlors at Law. and Empress of India, as she is Land Cases a Speciality. Office on M ain Stn<et, op p osite CoHiuopolitHii now known, closes the sixty-sixth llotol. Oregon. year of her existence and the forty- Koseburg, eighth year of her reign ns queen J . M .B io l » . Joint A .G bat of the United Kingdom. She has Siglin & Gray. been a great sovereign, not only as Attoruovsand (onnselorN At Law, a ruler of the wry center of the Says the Salem Statesman: j j j NO. 43 A C iold rn l l a r i r s t . this is Alcoma. Eight hundred people are living there, and they The following from the Salem and their ancestors have gathered Talk is wholesome, aud is as appli there the sum of their possession for cable to other parts as to the W ill. nearly three centuries. This butte is arnette valley: one of the many that are remumts We have ascertained by careful of a mesa that has been worn away ly inquiring in regard to the mat by the erosion of the ages and sur ter of those acquainted with the vives only in flat-topped mountains facts, that not less than one million here and there. The valleys be j dollars are annually expended by tween are fertile, and untold gen the people of Montana fer dried erations of men have seen them fruits, w hile one-third of that sum covered with grain and flocks of is expended for the same purpose sheep. Some time in the seven by the people of Idaho. Thirteen teenth century the Laguna or val- hundred thousand dollars a year iu leyludians made war upon the virgin gold scattered amoug the Acoinas for the possession of the orchardists of Michigan aud Utah, country, and the latter being the | which could as well as hot be se- weaker occupied this butte as a i cured by the people of the Willam defensive position lielieved to be ette valley! This state of affairs impregnable. Their judgment has must not be allowed to continue. been abundantly vindicated. It There is no good reason w hy we has proven a Gibralter of strength should not this very season secure, and safety. The comparison is not and through the future time control inappropriate, and in approching this princely trade—a source of it from the nortli I was struck with wealth w’hich will prove permanent the resemblance to the pictures I and increase in richness forever; have seen of that grim old fortress for never, so long as present cli that frowns ovtr the strait of the matic conditions exist, will there Mediterranean. The height above de fruits of any kind dried any the valley is near ly four hun Ired where in all that vast extent of feet, and the walls in several places country stretching from the head are nearly perpendicular. There watars of the Columbia to the head are two means of ascent, one by a waters of the Missouri. It em flighf of steps cut iu the face of the braces inexhaustible natural wealth wall and rising at an angle of forty- of otlier kinds—the richest and five degrees, and the other by a most varied mineral regions of th® fissure in the rocks leading up inti earth, and stocli rauges of almost the heart of the mountain. Both limitless extent—aud will possess ways have been trodden by human aud sustain in the fullness of de feet until the steps are hollowed out velopment a population of millions. like shallow troughs. Either one is By managing the business right exctedit.gly difficult nndneither the fruit raisers of the Willamette is tolerably safe. This stairway valley need not fear competition in is a precarious footing along the this vast field of supply’. I f Sa sides of a gash in a rugged mo m- lem firms specially engaged iu tain. With all the dangers ami fa handling fruits will not take the tigue, it is a laughable sight hi see matter in hand, then let the Salem a |ierson—some other person — Board of Trade move. Here are make the ascent One ha; to sti i le m ar kets—rich ly rem u nerati ve '»ver the fi s ire, one f*>ot on the markets—for every pouud of sur righthaud side aud the other on the plus fruit we may wish to sell. left, and at the same time press the Let not another apple or plum rot hand alternately on the rocks for on the soil of production. If the support. Au Indian will throw a mountain merchants cannot be live.sheep around his neck and go persuaded at once to break their up quite rapidly withe ut touching connectiou with the eastern mer either hand to the rocks. An ac chants, so far ns the dried fruit cident occurred on the stairway a trade is concerned, why then pro few generations age. Several men ceed under the ordinary rules of started up, each with a sheep on trade, to make them do so, for the his back. When nearly to the top consumer has a right to the best the sheep carried by the foremost and the cheapest Let agencies at man became restless, and the once be established in the leading shepherd in trying to hold it fast towns of the mining districts for lost his footing, and in falling the sale of Oregon fruits. Dele swept his companions over the gate a qualified man or men to at precipice, and they all fell on the once enter the field to mnke th® rocks at the foot in a lifeless heap. necessary preliminary arrange The Indians have carved a repre ments. Have general agencies iu sentation of the accident on a rock Butte City, Helena, Murray, near where it occurred, which scar Thompson Falls, and other promi cely serves to steady the nerves of nent points, where samples shall those who go by that route.—Ex. always be on exhibition and prices The £ iipplj- oT Beer. Two-thirds of the supply of good table beef comes from cattle raised on comparatively small tracts of land, in the states of the Mississip pi valley. These cattle are raised on grass and fod d er-n ot txclu- sively on grasses or wholly on ccrn. The high price of beef and the grazing scarcity of the best kinds is a subject which cattle-raisers have much to do, and it is still a problem witli them how to meet the great anil growing demand for table haef, even at high prices. The success of ranch beef (which constitutes table beef) depends on abundant crops of corn aud other grain. The last thiee corn crops in the Mississippi valley have been less than the average. Food for cattle has been scarce. This state ment, considering the extent of our country and a gr?at number of new workers, may 6eera a 6trange one, but it is true nevertheless. As a result, a smaller number of cattle have been raised for beef, while at the same time the Colorado and Wyoming ranches have been over stocked, rendering the cattle unfit for market. It requires two or three years of good corn crops to make good beef. given. Thus let us go to the consumers direct. In this way this valuable trade may be grasped, and Salem may enter into success ful rivalry with Los Angeles as a fruit shipping point, and to our fruit raisers «ill be brought back something akin to the prosperous times of the past. ll.tr«l on .uYrinujiv. In Tennessee the last session of the legislature passed an act pro hibiting the preaching of polyga my in tlie state and making it a misdemeanor. Three Mormon elders arrived at Elizabethon, in Carter county, and began at o lc g proselyting among the natives and preaching their doctrines. They were arrested under the provisions o f the act and placed in jail. They at once telegraphed for Elder Mor gan, head of the Mormon church in the south, and propose to test the constitutionality of the act. The Mermen church is making rapid progress in that state, and the result of this contest is awaited with deep interest A few more stringent acts of this nature will demonstrate to the average Mor mon mind that his acts of immor~ ality must cease.—Ex.