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About Coquille City herald. (Coquille City, Or.) 188?-1904 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1887)
f f c ** oquiUc b i s i \ i ; s s N e a r in g T h e C U ID K . M. M. M URPHY, M. D- llu r b o r . Across a barren reach o f land. I hear the uicRuiug sea, The restless waves die on the strand, in minor melody. And far and wide, At eventide, The sailors' sou^s rin;t free. stime of the wellknown causée; there are others which lie hidden, some by the mantle of Cbristiani- tv, of morality, and some by the cloak of vaiious professions. When will the »acred, hallowed precincis of our Inveii and cherish- i od firesides—the honor aDd Godly influences surrouuding our homes be brought to bear on these vices, which lie concealed from us? Do you think these statements overdrawn? Look at the moral status of society! Look at the dai ly criminal and divorce records, they are simply appalling! Home ties have been broken, solemn vows forgotten and characters shatterd, until the subject is looked upon and treated as a soit of joke. Lit- : tie love and pleasure reigns at home when all our spar' time aud attention is given to clubs, the va rious societies and kindred home- destroyers.—Enterprise. 4 M K tli'M K IN G D O M . A S ^ n w a tto n a l S to r y A b o u t th e I s la u d M o n a r c h D e n te d . Washington, June 18.—Mr. Car- ter, the Hawaiian Minister, pro O FFICE IN H E R A LD BUILDING nounces the rising againstKalakaua C o q u il l e C it y , O n eg on . as an absurd fabrication. During H- FLENTGE, M. D- the reported uprising in Honolulu 1 live within the past ai'ain, Physician & Surgeon, against the King’s few years stay I am a hoy once more, M y r t l e P o i n t C o o s C o ., O r e g o n . The drifting years with joy und pain. in America he says no less than a Forgotten d-sit before. dozen similar stories have been & N. A. DOWNING- M- D- Again with glee j put jn circulation, and each time I hail the sea. Physician and Surgeon, And hid farewell to shore. ^jie “disaffected foreigner” plays a CoytTILl-S C it y , O bk o o m . Call«—ilay or l'iotni.tly attended My mother kissed my boyish lips, conspicuous part. My father loved me tree. “ As a matter of fact,” continued D L. STEELE. M. D Rut u y heart anchored with the ships Dentist Mr. Carter, “ there are not more That sailed the billows blue. Z C yE a irstif3.elci, C r e ^ c n , I left my home than 500 foreigners in the island. O ffice in b o il:* n il l»u’ T o ctvss the foam, Blanco H old . Lun^hm»: <;u* ami other The native population, on the oth And see lands strange and ne w. nutt'iOht tics administered fur the painless er hand, numbers upward of 9,000. ji t r n r t i o n o f t e e t h ________ v i n i For forty years in storm and calm, The foreigners h a v e no voire in I sailed the briny sea. ~ O. E. SMITH. government affairs. They can do Her voice is soothing as a psalm, lurgeon Dentist, At evening-fall, to me, nothing of themselves. The na And rocked to rest M ARSHFIELD, OREGON. tives outnumber them twenty to Upon her breast. villi. one, aud are almost to a man loyal In dreams I seem to be. B. U . ì ì a t a b d . S . F . W ilmgk . to the King I h ad a w ife And ch ild re n fa ir, hazard & They left mu long ago. “ The King controls the army Attorney* a n d C o anse 1 ora at Law. And crossed the silent waters where E m p i e i f r u , ( ’ ik h C o u x t y , ( ' UB< - N and his position, so far as the for v5n37 No storm nor tempest blow. M ra t F o t d m Y i-r m ll.v . eign element is concerned, is one With outstretched hands When we reflect upon the kiud A. J- SHERWOOD, In happy lands of absolute security. If certain of tood that fowls in their wild state A t t o r n e y a t L aw They wait my coming slow. are fond of, and seek for, we are members of the King’s ministry a m d N o t a r y P u b l ic . The clouds are lowering, dark and gray, are distasteful to the people, they Coquille, Coos County, Oregon. forced to believe that this food is A storm broods o'er the deep, petition the King for their removal. The sea-birds whirl athwart the spray, the best, and where is t iere any J. H UPTON, As a rule this is done especially I listen half asleep— COUNSELOR at LVW —NOTARY PUBLIC thing more relished than insects? I am so old Conveyancer and Genera! Land where these objections are shown We find that in seasons when grass Life’ s morning gold AGENT. to lie well founded.” In memories 1 keep. hoppers, etc., are abundant our Collection.« Made— Loans Negotiated* “ You do not think, then,” Mr. DENMARK. OREGON. I sail r.lone upon a sea. fowls do much better. 1 do not Ranches. Wild Land and Town Property The harbor lies before, boncht and sold. UoMtc’ ion« a specialty think that we can receive as fine Carter was asked, “ then any con and pr>>ceeda promptly remit ted. And never storms shall keep from me results from fowls iu yards without siderable number of natives could The ones I loved of yore. L. F. L a n e . J ohn L ane flesh of some kind. It would give be induced to join insurrectionary So fair it lies LANE & LANE, To my dim eyes, better results if fed daily in small foreigners in deposing Jhe King?” The haven of that shore. “ Not a bit of it,” was the reply. Ittorneys ami C<>imsol«‘rs ni Law. quantities than occasionally, as Lucy AlcKeone Stapleton. Land Cases a Speciality. then the digestive organs would “ The Hawaiian natives are strong Office on Main Street, opp >siic Coginopoliian Hotel. V lo c A n d C r im e . not receive such an extreme shock, ly attached to a monarchical form Roseburg, Oregon. of government, and they desire no D U R I N G the p a s t ten days n o less and the effect would be more sat The next person in the J. M. B iolim . J ouk A. G r u . t h a n niue cusesof murder aud at isfactory. I am told that never did change. Siglin & Gray. tempts at murder have been com the hens of Kansas produce as line of succession is Queen Kapio- itUraty* awl Ccans^Iors At Law, mitted within the northern part of many eggs as in the year of the lani, and she would not accept the MariilifteM, Coos county. Ore««-it. O ftto * —Holland budding, opi>osite lllnnco our State. Three murders during grasshoppers; and it was a great throne nnder such circumstances. Hotel.___________ ____________________▼-n-"-» the same period in Washington lesson for the farmers. I am pos The young princess, whom some of w . SINCLAIR, Territory, two in the lower coun itive were we to feed as near as the alleged rebels favor as Kala- Attorney at Law, t i e s a n d sixteen on the Pacific possible while our stock is penned, kaua’s successor, is a mere child of General fnsnrance*Hiid Real Estate Atrent, She came to this thirst for j what they relish when at largp, the twelve years. C o q u i l l e C i t y , O b k o o h . ____ Coast This terrible crime as reported from all parts of results would be as large as in that country a few weeks ago with the The talk of deposing ^ T. G\ OWEN. the Pacific Northwest, tendst > show condition. We nre too apt to for Queen. Attorney and Counselor at Law, a terrible slate of affairs, socially get the laws of nature iu handling Kalakaua and elevating this chi Id M.tBHUiriiiLu. Oon. I doubt if such an and morally, it will also be no our pets, and force upon them food is nonsense. J. W . BENNETT. ticed that in almost every case the and attention that is injurious. idea was ever suggested to her, Attorney at Law. victim is a woman—wives, who When I began rearing improved and even if it has been, those mak- M ash ¡m a t.;», O b k o o k . hud left their husbauds, either from j fowls I thought I was compelled to ing it nre powerless to aid her, no D X j . W ATSO N . abusive treatment, neglect, social ; feed and care for them as was rec- matter what amount of bombast Aitarne» and Counselor at Law differences or other cause. The j ommended in our journals by you may hear to the contrary.” Plijsicinn and Surgeon. m m. F m p IKK C’ lXY, 1 »BKO •*. ----- J. H. NOSLER, Notary rub.ic C oajvxli . k C m . <>i,x. M c M illan brcs . n ic t c g r r s k p H e r s ;, Marshfield, Oregon. Gallery opposite SengHtacken'a drugstore, vfinlii J. J. WILSON W v rru -M V K E R AS" JEW ELER. O o Q .\ iill© C i i y . O g n . j ^ “ \Vurk of all descriptions »ioiie notice and extremely low prices. s h o rt v5u38 Gen. W A L L A C E CAMP- 2 , S . —f ^ •» Meats at Uoquille City every first Satur day afte* full mo- n each month. Members in good standing are cordially*invited. Levi Knvder. H. I. Clinton, ___________ Captain ._________First Sargen t I. O. G. T. Morning Star Lodge No- *64, Meets at Coquille City every J hnrsday evening. Viaiting members of this order, in good standing, are cordially invited. I. o. Coquille Lodge No.53 Meets at Coquille City every Saturday even iag. Visiting brethren, in good standing, eerdially invited. „ 8. P. O. John eon. N. G. A. F. and A. M. Chadwick Lodge, No-68. Meets at Coquille City on Saturduy even ins on er before the full moon in eaob Geo. MoEwajiLW LM. R. G-en- Lytle Post G. A N o - 27, Meet« at Coquill* City, <»n every first Wednesday. Viatin^ oomrads, in K«*l standing, cordially invited. W. Sinclair, Commander. Coquille City Command USTo. 1 , O . 3 R . a ., Meet« in thiH place every first and third T«e«day in e a c h month. All members in standing are cordially invited. A. T . Lillie, Commander. T . V . N ich o ls, C A B IN E T NO. 47. COQUILLE CITY, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1887. YOL. 5. MAKER. Bandoh, Oregon, Pictur* Frames, Door and Window Frame« made, Raw« filed and Furnitnre Repaired. All work done to order. Price« Reasonable. N o t Gold Beach Hotel. Portland World, under the caption j many, must feed soft feed and all of a "craze for murder, has this to \ f He» medicine I could get. 1 found say on the causes leading to the jt a great mistake. I am willingly perpetration of crime in this state: confirmed that soft feed and with * * ‘‘ W hen the man murders the wrong doings is nl the bottom of woman who either is or was his much of the disease that fowls are wife, he is the direct crazy result of the lightness of thought with troubled with. The crop is a small which the marriage yoke is assum mill with material for grinding ed, too often with the knowledge their food, so constructed by na of how easily it can be thrown off ture; then why not feed a variety when it begins to chafe. The “al of grain according to nature’s laws. liance for life,” becomes an alli ance for pleasure, and when that —World’s Enterprise. Noble & Hyde’s pile driver is at Centerville, driving piles for the stave mill. Strawberries were plentiful in town last week at 50c a gallon. This is about as cheap as they ever get on the bay. It is probable that tbe work of rearranging the machinery in the O. S. I. Co’s, mill at Empire will soon be commenced. The boilers are now in place in the Oregon Southern Packing Co’s, cannery at Empire, and the bal ance of the plant will soon be ready. The property of the O. S. I. Co. was sold by Geo. H. Dunham, Master of Chancery, at Empire on Thursday last It was bid in by G. W. Loggie, supt., O. S. I. Co., for $120,000. W. Hall, who lately arrived from the city, has charge of the O. S. I. Co’s, books and store at Empire, formerly under the management of James Webster, who resigned and went below on the Arago. Some of the old miners were There is said to be 400 persons in New York who count their wealth put to work at Newport last week. by the million. Yet no one ever Word to this effect was brought earned a million dollars. It would from the city by Wm. Campbell, take the labor of several hundred underground boss, on Ihe last men a lifetime to earn that amount. How did these millionaires then \rago, and at present about 00 men get their wealth? They may have are in the mine. The superintend got it legally, but that does not ent received a dispatch last Sun prove they got it honestly.—Inde day, wherein it was stated that all pendent Ciiizen. old hands who were known not to ------------- --------------------- The Union Pacific’s Inst move have taken a prominent part in has been to creep slyly into San the late strike might be put on— Francisco. It will be a bad rival at least this was the substance of of the Southern Pacific. i the message. _______ I f woman is unfit to be entrust ed with a piece of paper that ex presses her preference for a law maker, she is unfit to be entrusted with the morals of the boys who are to become the future law-mak ers. There was a time not long ago when woman was not consid ered competent to govern a district school during the winter term, be cause she had not the physical strength to thrAsh the unruly big boys—an indispensuble qualifica tion for a school teacher. To-day there are upwards of fif teen thousand such women who are governing a million of boys and training them to lives of use fulness without tbe rod. And yet, iu the face of this triumph of moral force over brute force, and her conceded superiority as a gov erning power, she is paid from twenty to thirty per cent, less than the male teacher simply because she is not a law-making factor iu the commonwealth.—Journal of United Labor. M O N T H L Y R E P O R T O F T O E O R E G O N YI’E A T E H R S E R V IC E . - M a y 1 8 8 7 .— Report« prepared expressly for the Portland Journal of Commerce by B. 8. PaRue, Observer, Signal Service, U. 8. A. T im p e b a t u b * . :s I STATION. Astoria........... ; P o r t l a n d ........ E ast P o r tla n d Eo!a............... j Albany.......... Ivm ebn rR ........ i Empire P rkcipitatioh . \ * r i *3 0 i « o ’* • a * c a. • C , * 1-3 £ ® £ * !*. - * Dh £ « S ’? 2 > r- 25 B 2 a 9 0 a • M ä si ä 0 c H i o rtï.o ;IT,.0 f>7.9 tl.H W.Oi Ht.2 511.7;.... ; iHi.O so.o > < NO. DAYS S« o § 1-2 - 8 ;.g S* P « I e lo ca 35 7.33 18.851 91.85 74.27 +17.58 12 4.77 +2.33 49.91 49.56 +0.35 13 55.H1. . . . ÎKÎ.0 32.0 ¡58.741.4' H8.0. 42.0 57.2 U .3 102.01 31.7 3.37 +0.91 42.01 39.64; +2.37 10 2.91 10.80' 52.40 49.19 +3.21 11 1.53 -.29' 38.47 34.14 +4.33 13 1.00 Ä 1 A c ® « .S > O ** cz « 5* ^ es m ► « MA .......I.................! 10, 6 9 8 !J » S ° 1015 SW 12.10. NW 7116!......... 8 1013. N 6 411 N a B 8 15; 8 NW I C ity .. >3.0 -0.5 85.0 44.0 5.11 +2.15 63.86 61.56 +2.30! 9 ! 12 2117 NW i Ashland.............. ........' I! Link villa..............r,.r».l NW 92.6 24.0 0.54-1.04! 10.2l| 14.93 -Ü72; Lake view..............52.1 92.5, 20.0 1.05; U.ll 13.60, 17.14 -3.51| 6 6 1213 8 j Fort C lom ath... . . . . Biv ........................: . . . . Ita n d o n .......... ------------- June 23.— Per mission was asked by the Coroner from tbe Board of Health yester day to exhume the bodies of eleven supposed victims of tea buns made by a baker named Palmer. This includes Palmer’s own wife and six children, whose deaths in rapid succession created a sensation in the upper part of the city three years ago. The request of the Coroner was pleasure palls, the passi >ns seek D row n ed At T h e Dnllew. granted, and in the afternoon four other sources of gratification; this T h e D a l l e s , June 23—A sad bodies of William F. Diebel’s chil breeds dissension, jealousy and abuse: these bring separation, that drowning accident ocoured in this dren exhumed, and portions of the brings pride to the surface, and the place last night, in which Miss viscera removed for examination. wounded devil of pride seeks satis Mary Hoy, aged about 18 years, j The mortality in this family led to faction or revenge, the victim of these passions becomes a maniac, and Edward Snipes, son of George an examination of Palmer’s tea and murder is the result. Our civ R. Snipes, of this place, abcut 23 buns, which resulted iu the discov il laws of marriage and divorce are years of age, lost their lives. It ery by a chemist of two grains of a farce and Deed remixleling.” seems James Semple aud Misses chromate of lead in one of the while the able editor of the World Lizzie and Mary Hoy were out buns, used for the purpose of im strikes at one of the main incen boat riding, and iu riding down parting a rich yellow hue. Three tives to the increasing ratio of near the Umatilla House were bail- weeks ago Mrs. Rush, living on crime end the utter disregard of I pd and req „ e8ted to let Edward Fifth street, above Leigh avenue, tbe institution of marriage, yet it SDipPS aml HarIy Mahear get into died, and she is believed to have is far from being the direct cause the boat. Mr. Semple Advised been a victim of the poisoned buns. leading to these terrible, tdoraly tbpm not to do 60_ „ tbp lxmt wag The names of seven pereonfl sick tragedies, which so recoil on socie-! a Bmal, affair an(, not , sfe for ^ in the neighborhood of Palmer’s ty, that it is in no small degree re- I many. They insjsted aud wpr6 aI. bakery, at No. 504 Leigh avenne, s,mumble for one-fourth of it a t! lowed to get but wprp cautioDed are furnished as of those who be least. Modifying the divorce law ; to k Bti„ or tb would ca ize came sick after eating the buns. will not check it, as the law bear- ! thp b()at They did not heed the W a s h in g t o n , June 23.—It is ing thereon is stringent enough ; mlvice. bttt b cuttiog np, with now were it but allowed to operate.; the rPsu|t that thp ^ waB t|)rned stated to-day that President Cleve land has concluded there will be 1 he principal causes that lead to bottom up and the occupants no necessity for an extra session of the divorce court,—to separation, thrown into the river. In the CoDgress. dishonor, murder and down in the , scramble for the boat the presence ------------- >. >>< ■— .— depths of a living hell,—are, to an * • « _ . ., r . .. .V . of mind necessary to save them The following is the new sched extent, yellow-covered, trashy, vile selves was lost by some of the par- ule for the Drain-Empire City literature, the writers of which are ty, and in the struggle the boat route: Leave Drain on Mondays, to blame for all the evil resulting wi+s turned over and over until Wednesdays and Fridays at 5:30 therefrom. Unrestrained passions, Miss Hoy and Mr. Snipes became a. m., arriving at Empire City the a craving for outside influences, a exhausted and sank. The accident next day by 5:30 p. m. Leave lack of deliberation on the subject occurred in the river opposite the Empire City Mondays, Wednes of marriage, love at firs! sight and days and Fridays at 5:30 a. m., and freight depot a total disregard for the love and arrive at Drain the next day at 5:30 p. m. influence of home. These are Subscribe for the H e r a l d i? *2 ? A3! g Season i« counted from July 1st to June 30th, inclusive. l ll ii ii .i P f o p b * D i e d . P h ilad elph ia , [Coos Bay News.] W o m a n a s a } G r o w in g P t w e r . I liille ttu fo r 1887 . M ay The temperature has been above the normal through out the state, except along the coast aud in the extreme southern part A marked and unusually cool period extended over the state, from the 1st 15th, the ex treme lowest being on the 10th, lltb and 12, except at Lakeview where it was 20 deg. on the 1st From the 15th to the end of the month it was warm and dry. A wave of unusual heat passed over the state on the 29th. Roseburg reports a maximum temperature on that day of 102 deg, the highest point ever recorded there. It was about 95 deg in the northern part of the state on that day, and above 90 deg in ths extreme southern part, The observer at Bandon (on the coast) reports “ a hot wave commenced about noon of the 15th, and at noon of the 16th the ther mometer recorded 85 deg; by 6 p. m. it bad fallen to 56. This was the highest figure ever reoorded here since our reoords commenced (13 years.)” At Roseburg, dar ing prevalence of the hot wave on the 29th, vegetation was burnt, strawberries on vines were baked, wax candles, in houses melted, and honey combs were reduced to bees wax by the sun. R a i n f a l l . — The rainfall has been above the May average in the Willamette valley and along the coast, and below the average south of the Willamette valley. The rainfall was marked by two decid ed periods; from the 1st to the 13th the rain was nearly continuous, tbe heaviest being on the 1st at Asto ria, on the 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th in the interior valleys and along the coast. From the 13th to end of month it T em perature — »■« 0 £ V. £ ! 53 I was dry, with an occasional showei. Observer at Bandon reports: “The rainfall for the week ending May 7th was 4.52 inches. This was the heaviest fall we had in one week in May siuce our records commenced.” T hunder S torms .— Thu n d e r storms occurred ou the 22d and 23d in the Umpqua valley and in the southern part of the state, and on the 18th at Lakeview. S now . —Light snow fell at Lake- view and at Linkville on the night of the 9th and during the 10th. H a il . —Hail fell occasionally on the 10th during the showers at Roseburg, and at Bandon on the 7th during a heavy storm of wind and rain, also on the 10th the ground was white with hail. W inds . —The winds were gener ally northwesterly throughout the state. At Albany the winds were veriable, and at Astoria they were southwest; Lakeview south. On the 3d and 4th a gale from the southwest occurred at Astoria. On the 7th a gale in the Willamette valley and along the coast; on the 9th brisk winds in the Umpqua valley. F rosts . —Frosts reported as follows: P ortland — On the 12th. E ola —On the 11th. A lbany —On the 11th and 12th. R oseburg — On the 10th and 12th. The frost of the 12th was heavy and did some slight damage. B andon —On the 11th and 29th. L in k v il l e —O n the 1st, 7th,9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 17th and 20th. L ak e vie w — On the 1st, 2nd, 7th, 11th and 12th. G eneral C onditions — During the first part of tbe month cold, rainy and windy; latter part of the month, warm and dry.