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About Coquille City herald. (Coquille City, Or.) 188?-1904 | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1897)
Coquille V O L. D k COQUILLE CITY, OK EG Olí, TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1897. 15. G. H. CARTER, RESIDENT DENTIST, O F IN T E R E S T TO T H E P E O P L E . Oopcuillo Oity-, Oreg FFICE at residence, and door aoath Odd Fellow«' Hall. »Nothin« bat drat- class work. Charges reasonable. vl5nl0 O J J R . J. HURT. M OORE, W J j M E PAHSEKBEK6, Attorney and Counselor at Law. 3>Totary- SPu/bllc, Herald Office, CoquilleCity, Oregon. PEOPLES T HE _L ..■■BARBER SHOP rr\H E BEST, NEATEST np-to-date in the city. Id AND MOST and Cold tialbs—Reasonable Charges, Courteous Treatment. COQCILLE CITY, OREGON. Front street, opposite R. R. Depot, T. W. G IL L HAM. IJIH E Tha C O M M E R C IA L h ----- most modorn arranged BABBEB «H O P in Coqnillo City. M. M. McDonald, Proprietor. H ot and Cold Baths at all honre. Popular prices. Headquarters for Commercial H en. Next door Jonson Bro’s markes. o. L. moon , - A .t x 0 m . Q 3 r . a t - I s a w , U À B SH F IE L D . OBEOON. A gent for the North America In 3 nranooCo. •f Philadelphia, and the London, L iv erpool <fc Globe. John F. Hall, -A-ttomi-ey .a t - L a w , MARSHFIELD, OBEGON. ---------------------------- Dealer in Beat. E statb o f all kind a. ■*» ----- t-Jd----- Bpeoial attention to matters before the Boseburg land offloo, the commiesioner o f tbe general land office and secre tary o f interior at Washington. M Y R TLE CAMP, NO. 197, WOODMEN XTJL o f tha World, meets at Masomo Hall 1st and 3d Monday nichts o f each month. A. J. SnaawooD, Consul. George T . Moulton, Clerk, OURT COQUILLE, NO. 18, FOKK8T- ers o f Amerioa, meets every sc-oondl and fourth Thursday evening, at Masonic Hall, Ooqoille City, Oregon. H. N. L obenz , C. R. G ko . O. L bach , R. 8. C EN. LYTLE POST, NO. 27, G. A. R.. meets every first Wednesday night o f each month. Visiting comrades in good standing cordially invited to attend. H. H. N ichols , Post Com. W. H. N obler , Adjutant. EN. LYTLE, w . R. C., NO. 9. MEETS in Coqtulle City on the first and third Wednesday afternoon in each month. Bias. V iola E l l io t t , Pres. M bs . Ida H arrington , See. G 1HADWICIC LODGE, NO. 68, A. F. J and A. M., meets on Saturday evening on or before eaoh full moon. Visiting breth ren oordially invited. J . P . G oodman , W. M. € . W. W hite , Sec. C UELAH CHAPTER, NO. 6, O. E. S., meets Friday evening on or before each full moon at *8 o’clock from April 1st to October Slat, and thereafter at 7:30; and each fifteen days thereafter at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. Mas. A lice T uttle , W . M. M b «. N ob a G ood , Sue. B /C O Q U IL L E LODGE. NO. S3, I. O. O. F., meets every Satnrday evening. Visit ing brethren in good standing cordially invited. C. A. H abbinqton , N. O. I . S. L awrence , R. S. /S o Q U I L L E ENCAMPMENT, NO. 2ft. L V J O . O . F., meets every first and third Thursdays in eaoh month at Odd Fellows' hall. Cordial invitation extended to all vis itin g patriarchs in good standing. R. E. B uc*. C. P. G . F. B outell , Scribe. ThT AMIE REBEKAH LODGE. NO. 20, 1vX I. O. O. F., meets every 2nd and 4th Wednesdays in each month, at Odd Fel lows' hall. Miss R at C o l l i e r , N. G. 1. 8 . L awrence . R. S. Chair Factory C O Q U IL L E C ITY . I Opposite City Wharf. 1 K EF.P8 ON HAND AND MAKER T o order flnit-elaas R A W H ID E C H A IR S . Manufactured from beet hard wood. J. B. FOX, Proprietor. COOS BAY larble ail Stone m s C. IN. PATERSON, Prop. Manufacturer o f Marble Monuments. H eal- stones. Tablets, etc. Oimetery lots enclosed with stone coping •r curbing. Iron railings furnished to o r der. Correspondence solicited from parties living in the country or other towns » h o n»av wish snvthing in my line o f business. MABanrirLD - . . . . . O aro NOW ON APPEAL AND «ORE IMPORTANT THAN THE DRED SCOTT DECISION. It has a population of 2,187,208. It is called "H ellas” by its people. It has an area of 24,977 square miles. The mean temperature of Greece is 64 deg. Fahrenheit. About one-half of the population are agriculturists and shepherds. No part o f. Greece is 40 miles from the sea, or 10 miles from the hills. The Greek flag is a white crosB on bine ground—the Bavarian colors and the Greek cross. It is the only country in the world whose armies are provided with the Gras guus aud paper cov ered cartridges. It has rivers and many hills. None o f the former are navigable, an I many of the latter fortified. Greece is more thickly populated than auy other eou’ntry in Europe, with an exception o f Sweden and Prussia. Only about 70,000 of the inhabi- (ants speak any other laugunge than Greek, and ouly about 20,000 profess auy religion other than the orthodox. Its present boundary limits were determined by an arrangement among Great Britain, France, Rus sia and Turkey, concluded at Con stantinople on July 21, 1832. The chief characteristics o f tbe average Greek ate bis inquisitiveness, fondness for excitement, love of discussiou, desire for knowledge, an aptitude for learning and aggres sive patriotism. The climate has two striking peculiarities—the heat in summer and the cold in winter are far more intense than those o f any other country in the world lying in tbe same latitude. Get once remarked that in traveling through Moreatn March he found summer in Messena, spring in Laconia, and winter in Arcadia, withont having moved beyond a radius o f 50 miles." Able Arguments By Judg* Maguire and Col. Ralston, Attorneys fo r the ta ilo rs — De [The following pathetic poera is taken from the March number of Will fense ot Freedom In the Last Ditch. Carleton’s Magazine, ‘-Every Where,” appearing under an illustration of a court scene and the titlo “The Sack of Flour.”] Guilty, Judge, and I own the crime— I slipped away with a sack of flour; They nabbed me just in the nick of time— I'd have bad it homo in half an Lour. Only the constable on tbe hill Knew that 1 must have jumped tbe bill; Knew as well as he could, that I Hadn't the money with which to buy. Office, Empire City, Qregon. F. DEAN, Information About Greece. Was it a Crime? S U R G E O N A N D P H Y S IC IA N . IL L promptly respond to all calls, day or night. COQU1LLE OITY, OREGON. THE FAMOUS 416GO CASE “ Larceny?” that’s the proper word; There’s never a crime but Law can name; Only I wonder if Law has heard That any one but the thief's to blame? Soy, did the constable on the hill Tell you about the closed-up mill ? Toll you of men that must beg or steal To give their babies and wives a meal? Yes, I have begged—and I ’ll tell you how: I walked the roads and fields and lanes, And asked for work with a pleading brow, And came back empty for all my pains 1 Say, did the constable ou the hill Tell you the wheels of trade were still? Tell you, when work was dull cr dead, The wife and the child might go unfed? Guilty, Judge—lot the Law ho paid; But if you had children, four or five, As pretty as God has evtr made, And lacked the food to keep them alive — Lacked the method but not the will Their cries of hunger to stop and still, And then saw oceans of food in view— For God's sake, tell me, what would you do? Sav, if you had a wife whose heart Had fed your own for a Bcoro of years, And never a moment walked apart From all ot your griefs and hopes and fears, And now in that faithful bosom had grown A little life that was part your own, And hunger harrowed them through and through, For God’s sake, tell me, what would you do ? Dollars by thousands stacked away; Harvests rotting in barn and shed; Silks and ribbons and fine display, And children crying for lack of bread! Wealth and Famine are hand in hand, Making the tour of a heart-sick land; Half of the country’s future wpal Crushed by the Present’s selfish heel? Hno in prisou without delay; Only— please work me double time And scud my family half the pay ! And tell my children, if ever they ask, That I was working my gloomy task, Not for pleasure, or money or gain — But for the love that I had for them. — W SCORES THE STUFFED PROPHET. E ditor Henri Watterson, Adm lror and Sup porter, Now Dubs Him Traitor. Louisville, K y ., April 2 5 . — A sen sational editorial from tne pun of Henry Watterson has appeared in the Courier Journal, part of which ¡ b as follows: “ Forewarned is forearmed. The first gun of the battle of 1000 is fired somewhat early, but it was fired by the Reform Club in New York last Saturday night. The Reform Club is made up exclusively of the personal followers of Mr. Cleveland. It exists, in point of fact, to exploit the fame aud to advance the interests of the cx- presiilent. The names of Fairchild and Hornblowor and Peckham are a sufficient guarantee that the asso ciation has no other sources of inspiration nor any further point of destination. “The dinner, an accouut of which nppenred yesterday, was given to place Mr. Cleveland in the field as a candidate for president, and from this time forward all the appliances of a small but intelligent machine will be put forth to make a campaign of education Aud a canvass for Mr. Cleveland synonmous terms. “ It is a grievous feature of public nffairs that great issues are so often complicated by lesser issues, and that the virus of private aim not infrequently percolates the veins of the fairest policies.” Mr. Watterson adds that Mr. Cleveland is the author of the pro tection gibberish which tho national convention in 1892 refused to adopt, and declares that ho split the Dem ocratic party in twain prior to the national convention of 189C. Mr. Cleveland had stated positively six months before that convention, Mr. Watterson says, that he would under no circumstances be a candi date, “ the elements o f order in tie party could have got together and united on some leader equal to the task of meetiag and heating the extremists.” His removal to New Jersey is declared to be the first adroit step in his new plan of campaign. “ Every day of his life,” Col. Wat terson asserts, “ in that fine, effem inate Italian hand, he will write from two to 50 letters, addressed to persons in every part of the coun try;” that, posing as a retired states il l C a r l e - ton . man and philosopher, playing upon the credulity of the simplo miuded and easily fluttered, he will leave no string untouched for stimulating the activity of the expectant, and “day and. night this Reform Club, having in charge the circulation of Democratic literature, will he si lently, surely working to the one end, which lie, and they have before them—his nomination in 1900.” The article concluded with a bit ter persoual arraignment of the for mer president, who is declared to be destitute of imagination, con sumed by egotism, and differing “from the riffraff of his class only by Ins high pretentions and p ro found duplicity.” S. F. Star: Gasoline vessels have been much used iu the harbor and as small freight vessels on the ocean, much to the convenience of a large class. But the craze for regulation of private matters by public law threatens to drive them off the water. The number of men needed on any of them is very small, and on some the captain is also crew and engineer. But the fussy Wash-, ington solons have got up a law re quiring an engineer on each, who must pass examination before a board, with a lot of other red tape. This will disemploy quite a number of men and inconvenience more. If congress would mind its own business, the states could attend to theirs. Washington, D. 0., May 1— in the United Stites supreme court to-day J u d g e Maguire and J* H. Ralston, attorneys for appellants, fi.ed a petition for a rehearing in the cele brated Arago case, on appeal from Judge Morrow’s decision in the district court for the northern Cali fornia district Theyinloo ask for a recall of mandate. . Thu is the case of Robert Robert son vs. Barry Baldwin et al. Judge Morrow denied the appli cation for a writ of habeas corpus in the case of RoberUou and three other seamen, who were held for failure to perform certain duties, on t h e ground that the term “ involun t a r y servitude” did not apply to cases where tho contracts were en tered into willingly by both parties. Robertson’s attorneys, in their pe tition a n d a r g u m e n t , drew m an y comparisons b it ween the holding of the court and the fugitive slave Messrs. Maguire and Ralston in their brief presented to the court to-day declare that the construction given to the thirteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States, and particular* to the term “ involuntary servitude as used therein, iu the decision rendered by the court, is of great importance to tbe people of the United States gen erally, and very materially affects the liberties and rights not only of these appellants, but also of great numbers of such citizers other than the appellants. The argument in favor of the position that servitude under a con tract voluntarily made can never become legally involuntary under the terms of the thirteenth amend ment, is that a contrary construction would he destructive of the mer chant marine service, because in that service it is necessary that sail ors he bound to serve upon the ships to which they are articled for the voyage, or other term for which they contract, and thnt in this respect the merchant yiaiitt« V’- ' ’**® .“ ' ever has Teen essentially different from all other private employments. “ We cannot," they say, “ concede that even the truth of that assump tion would justify or permit a con struction denying the protection to American sailors that is guaranteed to all citizens by auy provision of the constitution, but the assumption is without foundation. If the con struction given by tho court to the thirteenth amendment he adlieared to there is great danger that design- in“ persons not sufficiently regard ing the sacred rights of their fellow citizens to liberty and the pursuit of happiness, may take advantage of their pecuniary distress and difficulties to reduce thorn to a con dition of slavery under the form of contracts to labor, and in this behalf it is a matter of common knowledge that thousands of impoverished citi zens at all times and millions of citizens in periods ot industrial depression, being landless and there fore without means of independent self-support, can be readily induced by reason of their helplessness and the overwhelming pressure of thoir inability otherwise to procure the common necessaries of life, to sign away their liberties, either for life or fixed terras, precisely as these ap pellants, under pressure of that very privation, were obliged to enter into the contract for servitude, the rigors and unendurable hardships o f which they sought to escape by fleeing from the immediate control of their masters to the soil of the free state of Oregon. “Indeed, it is alarming to con template the extent, to which con tract slavery may bo forced upon the landless laborers of the country, white as well ns black, by a mere concert of action, prompted by the plainest inducements of self-interest on the part of employers, to exclude such landless and therefore helpless and dependent laborers from em ployment until they shall be com pelled by their privations to sign such contracts for personal servitude as will bind them for life or for long terms to the contract and dominion of individual masters.” ------- ~ 1 ’* * " " ~~~ ‘ Talk has revived in Washington of building a new house for the president, and it is suggested that $50,000 for the lot and $450,000 for the building will cover the cost. S. F. Star; One of tbe latest and almost unnoticed exploits of the United .States supreme court in usurping the function of state leg islatures and courts is in deciding that the Utah jury law is uncon stitutional. It empowers, as does that of California, uine jurymen to render a verdict in a civil case. Are there any “ states" at all? If so, for what do they exist? The United States supreme court regulates what Representative Sayers, of Texas, they may or may not do, and in wants the government to offer a terpolates its usurpations at its own prize of $50,000 for an engineering sweet will. scheme capable o f controlling tho Mississippi. S. F. Star: Millionaire Bradbury T escher—Children, how iq the has been fined $5 for spitting on a JohnLie L pto- car floor and has appealed. Laws earth divided? are not for millionaires to obey, and d ite — Between the sugar trust, the he has money enough to prove the I coffee trnst, the beef trout and Oil Cotnpauy. ordinance “ unconstitutional” —tho the ritandaid -I. -----— » ■$» » “ last refuge” of the wealthy as X o - I j -IW for Ulty t » t s Cuar\iitoe<i totr.rco hm.niran- ■ against equal rights. m 3 , bicod pure. Asked Him to Resign. Rev. Plummer, of Altoona, Pa., by a vote of 6 to 1, was asked to resign his pastorate. The Dispatch says: “ Rev. Plummer fell from favor by establishing a free souphouse aud agitating the Pingrce potato patch scheme, to the neglect of his people and church. Yesterday morning and last night Rev. Plum mer expressed himself so forcibly ou affairs that several of the most | influential families left the church.” | Charity and helping the poor is j Almost everybody takes some laxativa no part of the creed of modern medicine to cleanse tnqsystem and keep tha churches, whose pews aro filled by blood pure. Those w h o take SIMMONS rich robbers who live by taking in LlVFR RLGULATOR (liquid or powder) terest, rout and profit. Tho devil get all the benefits of a mild and pleasant was never served quite so well ns he laxative and tonic that purifies the blood and strengthens the whole svstein. And is by modern congregations, who more thas tills: SIMMONS LIVER REGU use the churches as display for LATOR regulates the Llvdr, keeps it active and healthy, and when the Liver Is in tine clothing. .....» «♦>♦ — good condition you find yourself free from Clarence— How did people cipher Malaria, Biliousness, Indigestion, Sick- and Constipation, and rid o f before slates were invented? John Headachi that worn out and debilitated feeling. — The Bible sayB, my friend, tbaf I here are ail caused by a sluggish Liver. people multiplied ou the^face of Good digestion and freedom from stomach troubles will only be had when the liver the earth. s properly at work. If tre ubled with any A Chicago man who advertises a jf these complaints, try SlAlMONS LIVER saloon for rent adds significantly, .! “ Gl'LATOk. The King o f Liver fAedl- “ excellent opening for an alderman.” rlnes, and Fetter than Fills. GOOD FOR EVERYBODY To Cur« Constipation Forever* Take CuMcnreU Candy Cathartic, ldc o r S c . If (' t' f' »-.*1 m e»* * (Inr'vlKt* refund money. f t F.VKIIY P A C K A G E 'S * i f ' « 1 tio K S ta m p In r o d o n w ra p p e r, Cl T I t ./« H i l l & C o.. I*hila.. P a. ÄiBWÄ "flrllnQton” Se"- - Sewing piacliliie A $65.00 Machine For £18 . 50 LATEST BEST CHEAPEST Shipped to anyone, auywhere, on 10 days' free trial, lu y o u r o w n h o m e , without asking one cent in advance. 10 years* written warranty w i t h each Ynaclilue. A strictly high-grade Sew ing M a c h i n e , fin is h e d throughout in tne beat pos sible manner. It possesaea all modern improvemeula, and its mechanical coualructiou is such that in it are combined simplicity with great strength, thus injuring ease o f running, durability, and making it im possible for the machine to be put out of order. It sew» fast and makes a perfect stitch with all kiuds of thread and all classes o f material. Always ready for use and unrivalled I for speed, durability and qual ity of work. Notice the fol ARLINGTON.” lowing points ol superiority; Palace Cars Decaying. Hollidaysburg, Pa., April 18—On a i ail road siding four miles above this place stand thirty, two Pullman palace cars, closely guarded day and night by watchmen whose only duty it is to see thnt no one inter feres with the process of decay and despoliation which ttie elements have inaugurated. The cars are the property of the Pennsylvania Railroad Compaoy and represent an outlay o f about «409,000. These hnodsome coaches have been dragged through the slow and tor tuous processes o f litigation for over five yenrs. Both the railroad and the Pullmau company have claims on the cars, and until a final decision is rendered iu the cocrts these maguifioent vehicles of travel by rail ore left to rot aud crumble in the opeu air, exposed to all kinds o f weather, and will soon be unfit for any use except kindling wood and old scrap iron.— Phila delphia Record. ThP Ha e i o f the “ Arlington” swing* on patent secVet hfrrre*, Nrmtrhe M dorrVt fiyn thumb screw. Strong, substantial, neat and handsome in desigu, and beautifully ornamented in gold. Bed plate has rounded corners aud is inlaid or cotintersunk, »inking it ifusli with top o f table. Highest A rm -Space under the arm is 5# inches high and 9 inches long. This will admit the largest skirts, and even guilts. It Is Sell-Threading—Absolutely no holes to put thread through except eye o f needle. Shuttle is cylinder, open on end, entirely self-threading, easy to put in or tnke out; bobbin holds a laigc amount o f thread. Stitch Regulator is on the bed o f the machiue, beneath the bobbin winder, and has a scale showing the number o f stitches to the inch, and can be changed from 8 t o 32 stitches to the inch. Feed is double and extends ou both sides o f needle; never fails to take goods through; never stops at seams; movement is positive: no springs to break ami get out o f order; can be raised and lowered at will. Automatic Bobbin Winder— Por filling the bobbin automatically lly and perfectly smooth without holding holditt the thread. Machine doea not run while winding bobbin. I.ijjl____ n. I.lght Running—Machine is easy to i run, does not fatigue theoper- the same on both aides. ator, makes little noise ami sews >ews rapidly. Stitch is a double lock stitch, stii will not ravel, and can be changed without stoppiug the machiue. Tension is a flat spring ten- gjf * changing. * ¡g out Hit o f order. sion, and will admit thread from 8 to 100 spool cotton without Never gets _ . aighl self-setting needle, fiut on one side, and cannot be put iti wrong. Neudla The Needle is a straight, Ear is round, made of c on the goods, with a screw driver. Attachments— Each machine is furnished with necessary t furnish ail extra set o f attachments in a velvet lined metal box, free o f charge, as follows: One luffler and gatherer, one binder, one shirring plate, one act o f four hemmers, different widths up to H o f an inch, one tucker, one under braider, one short or attachment foot, arul one threncl cutter. Woodwork o f finest auality oak or walnut, gothic cover and drawers, nickel-plated riuga to drawers, dress guards to wheel, and device for replacing belt T PAY DIRECTLY OF MANUFACTURERS AND SAVE AGENT'S AND DEALER S PROFITS $ 2 3 .8 0 la our Special Wholaaale Price, but . OUR GREAT OFFER. _ :e this nigh-grade sewing machine, we make a special cou- in arder to introduce Or make your order direct through the HiMr.n, kb ngent, without extra shnrge. “ FACTS Daily Capital Journal FROM DENVER,” the big western reform OF S A L E M . newspnper which rencheafiO.OOO leaders every week, although only \7 week* old. ia tilled Subscribe for the people's daily—$8 a with reform news and stirring nrticles from year; weikly, $1 a year. SumerateH by the such well-known and powerful writers a 4 Rev. F. F. Passmore, Eugene Bloodgood month. Beebe, Myron W. Reed, Henry Cohen, W. S. Morgan, and a host of others, equally The Daily Capital Journal, 1 year.. ..$ 3 00 prominent. The U hhald 1 year............. 2 00 To make yon acquainted with Facts is to make you a regular subscriber—for you Tho two worth....................................... $5 00 can't get along without Facts — conse Both given for one year for. .$4 20 quent!} for a short time, we make you tlm reckless offer: For 10c, we will «end you Facts every week for 10 weeks on trial and n The Weekly Capital Journal, 1 y e a r ..f l 00 copy of • ‘ Merrie England,” the boi k which The H kuald ................................................. 2 00 so startled England that for nearly a year The two worth......................................fS 00 10C.000 conies a month have been sold. The work contains about 85,000 words, and we send it coinpleto and unabridged with Facts Both 1 vear fo r ...................... $2 40 10 weeks for only a dime. We want 50.000 | new readers immediately, nnd trust that every individual reader o f this paper will take advantage of this offer at once, before j it is withdrawn, as we reserye the right to return all moneys received from above offer RS. a . O. AIKEN UAH NOW A COM - which reaches us later than till days from | . nlete and fashionable Block o f M il 1 date. Don't dissapoint us, but sit right 1 linery at Lenore's drug ator«. j down today and write the publisher?—The Reed Publishing Co., 1509 Larimer street, COMPLETE STOCK-EVERYTHING De uyer, Colo ._____________ *______________ Glens Falls Republican: I f all the cows iu Illinois were standing heads and tails in single file, the leader might have her nose staffed in a feed-box in Maine, while the jast one thoughtfully switched Hies in sunny California. J. C. Stubbs and three other o f ficers o f the Southern Pacific Kail- road Company have been indicted by the federal grand jury at New ! Orleans for violating the interstate commerce law. The report comes that a girl at Tacoma was caught by a devil fish, and etcaped by leaving her shoe in j his grasp. The octopus carried it | ont to sea thinking he had the girl. ly A N T F .D - FAITHFUL MEN OR BUY chinc nt the lowest price ever offered. On receipt o f $ 18.50 cash and coupon, we will Miip the aoovc-dcscribed machine anywhere accurcly packed and emied, nndgunranteesafe delivery. A ten years’ written warranty Rent with each machine. Money refunded if not as represented after thirty days’ test trial. We will ship C. O. D. for $10.50 with privilege o f twenty days’ trial on ipt o f $5.00 as a guarantee o i g- .d faith and charges. I f you prefer thirty , trial t i l l before W-fi.re paying, send for our large illustrateci illustrated catalogué catalogue with teatl testi- days' . ?njUg(u ||. * how we - ship *-•- sewing • machines -*•' anywhere ^ *- - — monlals, explaining fully to * any- --------------------- st mainiti________ _________________ ___ The best plan is to send all cash with order, at you then aave the $1.00 dis count. Kemember the coupon must be sent with order. Charged With Perjury on the Witness Stand, Fresno, Cal., April 30 — A sen- nation was sprung in the trial o f Profeesor Sanders, charged with forgery aDd suspected o f tbe mur der of William Wootton, this raoruing, by Judge Carroll Cook, o f San Francisco, who presided in Judge Webb’s stead. The judge had instructed tbe jury and dis missed it. Turning to the attorney the judge said: " I am satisfied one witness in this case committed wilful nod cor rupt perjury. I refer to Dr. G. D. McIntosh, the expert on penman, shio. I therefore order him in the custody of the sheriff, with bonds fixed at $5000.” McIntosh was the expert in be half o f Sanders. Ha is well known throughout the state as an expert in handwriting; also as a minister o f the gospel and a school teacher. -------- - » «•» i --------- The curate (entering suddenly) Ob, I h e g y o a r pardon, but could I — that is to sav, could you tell me who is the master o f this bouse? Lady (with saucepati)— I f you wouldn’t mind stepping outside a minute, young man, that’s just the point we’re going to settle. HIGH PRICES FOR SEWING MACHINES I ) V V women to travel for responsible estab lished house in Oregon. Hn Is nr *780 end expenses. Position permanent. Iteterenoe. r “ |’c *ow‘ self-add reseed stsinped env lope. The National, Htnr I near slice BUlp.. Chi- 60c. fl. All u r u a iw » eago. Millinery. M NEW. T o tlxe XT nfcrt\xnate Dr Gibbon Large Assortment, Seasonable and Up to Date. This old reliable nnd mont successful spec Call early and make selection nnd get ial ist iu Hun Prat cis drug store. co. still continues to oetJO) price*—at Leneve'n MRS. A. O. AIKEN. cure all Hexual aud j Hemmal Diseases, I «neh «s (lonorrhea, * n l e e t . 8 t r . o t u re, Syphilis, in nil its | f or m s . Skin Diseanes. N e r v o u s Debility, firpotencv. Si miniti Weakness and lions of Manhood, the c< nsecpi^nce of self-abuse I and excesse« producing the following symp toms: Hallow countenance, dark tqwiU un ' der the eye«, pam in the head, ringing in the ears, loss o f confidence, diifidenc'* in ¡ COR. F IR S T A N D H A L L STS. eppronching strangers, palpitation o f the 1 Near U. R. Depot, heart, w^akneas o f the limbs aud bark, loes o f memory, pimple« on tLc face, coughs. ) COQ L IL L E CITY, OBEGON. consumption, etc. DR. QIBBON ha« practised in Han Fran- 1 ?IR R T CLASS FARE, by the «ingle ■ cinco over 30 yearn an 1 those* troubled should * meal, day or time bo nh nt. not fail to Connaît him end receive the !» ti - etit o f hin "Tent »«kill end ♦ xp> r enee The dottor w ir n when others (nil. T ry him. 0C K E 8 Ul AKVNTEKD. P ilo n e ir d Comfortable sitting room. i «t home. Charges reasonable Call »» Rates to suit the tinten and »write. Dit. J K. GIBBON. made known on applicai ion. G-jr. Kearney ntroet, Han Prati cisco. Cul M r s . .Sheppard’s Boarding House, i '