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About Coquille City herald. (Coquille City, Or.) 188?-1904 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1897)
m VOL. RESIDENT DENTIST, o q u IH © C it y . OF INTEREST TO THE PEOPLE. C r e g FFICE at residence, and door sooth Odd Fellows’ Hall. ¿Nothing but tirst- O c I hhh work. Charges reasonable. ] ) U . J. B U RT. MOORE, IL L promptly respoud to All calls, day or night. C O Q U IL L E gU GEN E C IT Y , OREGON. PA N N EN BERG, ATTORNEY LAW at C O Q U IL L E CITY, O R E G O N . Office in Coqnille City, Oregon. F. DEAN, USTotary OP-u-lDllc. Herald OfRee, Coqnille City, Oregon. THE PEOPLE’S.:^- 1 . . . BARBER SHOP . . . . O ... . r p H E BEST, NEATEST A up-to-date in the city. AND MOST Hot and Cold Itatlis—Reasonable Charges, Courteous Treatment. COQUILLE CITY, OREGON. Front street, opposite It. tt. Depot, T. W . G IL L HAM. iJ iH E The C O M M E R C IA L h ----- most modern arranged BARBER SHOP in Coqnille City. II. M. McDonald, Proprietor. Hot and Cold Baths at all hours. Popular prices. Headquarters for Commercial Men. Next door Jonson Bro’s markes. 0 . X * M O O N , -A .tto r n .e y - a t - L a / w , COQUILLE C ITY. OKEUON. Agent for the North America Insurance Co. ®f Philadelphia, and the London, Liv erpool & Globe. -A -tto r n e y . a ,t - X j a -o cr, M ARSHFIELD, OREGON. Dealer in R eal E state of all kinds. A. S b W ... A .t t o r n © y - a .t - L a w , liim’&iirg. Oreg«n. — i-j-i— Special attention to matters before the Rose burg land offioo. the commissioner of the general land office and secre tary of interior at Washington. y r t l e c a m p , n o . 19 7 , w o o d m e n of the World, meets at Masonic Ilall 1st and 3d Monday nights of each month. A. J. SirauwooD, Consul. George T . Moulton, Clerk. M 10 U R T COQUILLE, NO. 18, FOREST- yers of America, meets every second ami fourth Thursday evening, at Masonic Hall, Coquille City, Oregon. H. N. L obknz , C. R. O ko . O. L f . a c i i , B . S. C EN. L YT L E POST, NO. 27, G. A. R.. meets every first Wednesday night of each month. Visiting comrades in good standing cordially invited to attend. H. H, NionoLS, Post Com. W. H. N osler , Adjutant. G BN. L Y T L E . W. R . C., NO. MEETS V T in Coquille City on the first and third Wednesday afternoon in each month. M bs . V iola E ll io t t , Pres. M bs . Ida H arrington , See. M I a DW ICK LODGE, NO. (W, A. P. J and A. M ., meets on Saturday evening on or before oaoh fall moon. Visiting breth ren cordially invited. J . P. G oolman , W. M. C. W . W h ite , Sec. C ^ U E L A H CH APTER, NO. «, O. E. S., 3 meets Friday evening on or before ich full moon at 8 o'clock from April 1st » October 3lat, and thereafter at 7:30; and tch fifteen days thereafter at 2 o’clock in le afternoon. M b s . A l ic k T u t t l e , W . M. I ks . N o b a G o o d , S ho . O Q UILLE LODGE, NO. 5 8 ,1 .0 . O. F., meets every Saturday eveninR. Visit- |n" brethren in Rood standiUR oordially C invited. ^ ^ H abbisotos , N. G. J. 8 . 1 .1 wbkiicb , R. S. OQUILLE ENCAMPMENT, NO. 26. I. 0 . O. F., meets every first and third irsdays in each month at Odd Fellows 1. Cordial invitation extended to all vis- ig patriarchs in good standing. K F K . E. B ück , C. P. F. BoüTKim, S c r i b e . ______________ F a m I k “ b e b e k a h l o d g e . NO. an. L I. O. O. F., meets every 2nd and 4th dnesdays in each month, at Odd F©1- s’ hall. Miss l U l C o llib b , N. G . 1. L aw bence . R. S. Chair Factory== C O Q U IL L E C IT Y . I Opposite City W harf.1 eeps K on hand and m akes to order first-class R A W H ID E : C H A IR S . Manufactured from best hard wood. J. B. FOX, Proprietor. C O O S A Good Mat). vlfmlO SU R G E O N A N D P H Y SIC IA N . W ÿ NO. 2. COQUILLE CITY, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1807. 16. J ) I t . Q. H. CARTER, O t B A Y an! Stone Works C. W. PATERSON, Prop. Manufacturer of Marble Monuments, Hea 1- stones. Tablets, etc. Cemetery lots enclosed with stone coping or curbing. Iron railings furnished to or der. Correspondence solicited from parties living in the country or other town, who mav wish anything in my line of business. M arshpifld - , . . . . O bbo BY ELLA WHEKI.KH WII.COX. My lord Fat Purse whs n very good man, He had houses and lands Ra’ore, And with each new day he had somo new plan For nidinR the needy and poor. He gave to the churches, he "ave to the homes, He gave to the tramps by the way, Yet the terrible curse in the land grew worse, And the poor grew poorer each day. My lord Fat Purse was troubled and sad That his thoughts and toil seemed vain, “ But I do what I can,” said this very good man, “To ease the waut and the pain. ’Tis the will of heaven that some shall be rich And many be poor, I see, „ I can do no more than to give from the store That a just God gives to mo.” Y it acres and acres of fertile soil Lie idle under the skies. While my shrewd lord waits and holds his estates Till prices of land shall rise. Deep in the breast of those acres broad Which are selfishly grasped by one; Lies wealth for many—free gifts from God Like the wind and the rain and the sun. Food in the ocean and food in the soil— Free gifts from a hand divine— And who dare hiuder the fisher’s toil, Or say, “ Lo, the sea is mine?” Ah, my lord Fat Purse, no wonder the curse Of poverty hangs like a pall, When you hold by fraud the lands which God Has meant for the use of us all. A PORTLANDER VISITS THE EAST. were spoken for no purpose of demagogism. Inspects the Labor Conditions and Gives a “ Thousands upon thousands of Fearful Prospect. the most distressed men and women listened to them, and while the Hon. D. Solis Cohen, one of the speakers had no intention to cast a shrewdest and broadest of Portland firebrand intc their midst., I dread business men, has just returned i to contcmplute the ultimate result. from an extended visit in the east J am certain that ice are on the eve ern states, where he went on busi- j o f a social revolution unknown to ness and to investigate the social | modern history, and which no leg and business conditions which are islation can tluoart. In truth, I now in a state of striking eruption. | fea r that we have reached a crisis Mr. Cohen has been interviewed by in the gigantic magnitude o f the a Portland Telegram reporter. In : distress o f our people that no leg the interview he said: islation can well neutralize . ' ' — “The great problem now to be Capital Journal. solved is the disaster arising from | the centralization of trade in the j large cities, which is sapping the A MONSTROUS CRIME. ambition of the y ou n g business men I there. Ex-Covernor Horacs Boles on Our Iniquitous “ Monopolies and trusts are now | Financial Policy. making money faster, than ever, j savs he, “ while those outside of t heir i And I know also that the curse pales can hardly make ends meet. of a monstrous crime is upon us But there is any quantity ot money today. That here in this land of — tons of it—seeking safe invest-] the free its victim is a prostrate ment, which caanot be found any nation, whose granaries are burst where.” , ing with food, while millions of “ What is your estimate of sate men, gaunt with hunger, go forth investment, according to the idea o f ; lrorn homes where famine reigns the eastern capitalist?” was asked of j and wander up ami down its streets, Mr. Cohen. . pleading for work they cannot ob “Where they can get three dot- tain, begging for bread they cannot lars’ gilt edged security for one." earn, because everywhere the wheels “ Don’t you think that the opera-1 of industiy are clogged and all the of a protective tariff law will arteries of trade are congested by change conditions? this hypocritical cry for gold—for “ Not the slightest," emphatically j gold enough to sustain the mone and decisively answered Mr. Cohen. tary systems of all the nations—a “ The tariff is not the potent factor j cry that cannot be favorably an iu the restoration of a prosperous swered, because to give to the world state of affairs as we were always what they ask would cheapen that led to believe. I have discussed the which they already have. tariff with quite a number of prom There are no words in the English inent and intelligent Republican language at my command to ex manufacturers and importers, and press my utter abhorrence of a they are unanimous in the opinion financial policy that I believe was that no kind of I ariff will cut a fig designed to enrich a limited few at ure in decimating the existing dis the expense of the toiling millions tress of the country. Someevengo of the world; that is doubling the to the extreme of throwing the value of a single form of property ports wide open to free trade, as a and cutting in twain the price of matter of experiment. every species of earthly possessions “ The only thing that strikes me of men; that is reducing the laborer as a means of taking a number of to a serf, the debtor to a slave, the thousands of hands out of the field world to contending classes that of idleness is the bareness of the forbid the long continued existence country of manufactured goodB. of republics like our own.—From Factories will soon open to supply a Letter Written by ex-Governor the demand, and when the market Boies of Iowa. becomes glutted they will shut down again. It seems to me that any remedy offered so far is but a tem India's Artificial Famine. porary one. “One thing that not only struck The most conclusive and direct me forcibly and unpleasantly was testimony that the famine in India that I could find no Portland paper is purely artificial comes from Rev. on sale east of Omaha. In fact, I T. S. Wynkoop,American missionary, scarcely heard the name of this in a letter to friends in this country, citv mentioned once where I heard quoted in the Cleveland Recorder. Seattle spoken of a hundred times. He says there is enough grain and And the papers of that city also can rice in India to feed everybody, but be found on sale at nearly every it is held by great grain merchants news stand. Besides that, was who have forced up the price, and greatly annoyed at reading in the “ the government decides that it is eastern papers that Wolff A Zwicker not their province to interfere with were building United States torpedo | trade.” He last winter "visited a boats on the sound, and that they district where the crops of the had a great plant at Seattle. autumn were large, and as the land ■•The eastern labor muddle is an holders get high prices, they are other subject not ensify grasped by better off than for many years. Yet one not on the scene. It is a menac among ttie peasantry great distress ing national octopus, invading some prevails, though not actual starva of the soundest intelligence in the tion.” country, and seeking nothing moTe Mark the distinction between the than a’ fair change to subsist. “ owners”of land and “ the peasantry,” “ One Sunday after I attended one or actual cultivators, and remember o f those monster labor meetings, that tbe working farmers of this remaining there from 2 to 8:30 country are, at least negatively, o ’clock in the evening. I listened working to bring themselves (or to men whose utterances were their successors) into the condition plethoric with wise suggestions such of the Indian peasantry in that they one does not hear from the do not advocate the one means of I political rostrum, anil which I fe lt1 escape.— S. F. Star. Free There Must be a Mistake. Navigation. His First Pants. I’ m five yearn old today. I am. An’ I guess that’« pretty old, ’ Cause folk« all say how big I be, Whenever they is told; l A n ’ asks ain’ t I root»* a man, An’ what’ ll mamma do Now that her baby’ s got < n pants An* had his curls cut, too! Tbe Monitor-Miner brings indict E d . H e r a l d ; T be obstructions to navigation by driving piles, ment against tbe Oregon & Cal making enormous booms and shoal ifornia railroad company, first, fo r ing the waters of Coos bay and its swindling tbe government out o f tributaries having become a vir its land grant, so called; second, ulent disease, liable, in this in for pretending to make bonafide stance, to terminate with the clos- sales of this land to settlers and I’ m awful g'ad those carls is cat, now I’ m all a boy; iug of the Isthmus slough, one of swindling them by not giving a | ! An’ ’ Cause folks’ ll never make mistakes the finest shelters for vessels load valid title; third, for continually An’ say *Ue'a mamma's joy!*’ ing on the bay with coal or lumber, discriminating against our citizens But roAmaia, though she smiles at me, Is kind of crying, too! tbe assistance o f space iu your and business men in freight aud I woi.d *r hyshe keeps those carls, An* why that little shoe? columns to ventilate this fraudulent passenger rates, whereby citizens business is most respectfully sol of Portland can ride from llmt But when I asked her why it was, She smiled at me nn’ said, icited. Knowing, as the public city to San Francisco for *5, Almost everybody tabes some laxative though she’ d lost her baby, must know, that you are always whereas it oharges onr citizens That She'd a little man instead; medicine to cleanse the system and keep the ready to prblisb matter conducive three times that amount from Med I gueHs that’s cause I’ ve got on pants— blood pure. T hose w h o take SIMMONS Real truly pants they ure! to the welfare of all, without dis ford to San Francisco; fourth, for L ive r REGULATOR (liquid or powder) With truly pockets in the sides get all the benefits o f a mild and pleasant tinction, aud tooppose high-handed refusing to pay taxes to help sup Just like they make papa! * — Journal of Agrioaltnro. j laxative and tonic that purifies tne blood and lawless efforts, it is felt that port the couuty that assists in and strengthens the whole system. And ------- * - this request for space io your supporting it; fifth, for deliberately more than this: SIMMONS LIVER REGU impartial columns will not be io delaying the U. 8. mails, eipress The teaobprs o f the Roseburg LATOR regulates the Liver, keeps it activa vain. There is nothing political in and freights in order to promole schools haye experienced a cut in and healthy, and when the Liver is in condition you find vourself free from this issue, as nil the people are in its hnsmess, and totally disregard their salaries. The salary of the good Malaria, Biliousness, Indigestion, Sick- terested, unless it may be consigned ing the rights of the people. principal has been reduced to *70, Headache and Constipation, and rid o f to the domain of political eoonoray. Either o f these charges ought to be the under teachers to *37.50, aud j that worn out and debilitated feeling. An attempt is to be made to dis sufficient to condemn the heartless the janitor’s wages reduced from These are all caused by a sluggish Liver. Good digestion and freedom from stomach forever. — Medford *30 to *18. cover tho authorities who coutrol corporation troubles will only be had when the liver the navigation of our streams, and Monitor-Miner. Sydney, Australia, can now boast is properly at work. If troubled with any ---------------*-»♦»«--------- -—• also to find out whether the Black of these complaints, trv SIMMONS LIVER The report of tbe officials o f the the larges-town hall und the largest REGULATOR. The King of Liver Medi Diftmocd Coal Co., the Southern organ iu the world. cines, and Better than Pills. Pacific Co. and others who own La Grande luud district, which ¿ 0 -E V E I I Y p a c k a g e - « * coal and timber lands adjacent to includes Baker, Grant, Morrow, T o C a r o C o u n t!p a tto n F o r o v e r . [1 t h e / . S t a m p in r e d o n w r a p p e r , the Isthmus slough have any rights Umatilla, Union and Wallowa T i k e Oasenro ts C andy C a th a rtic . 10c orSRo. O J . I I . Z c l l l a & C o .. P h i l o . , P a . to the free navigation o f that stream counties, showB a total land surface I f C. C. C. f a il to e uro, d ru i;« u ts re fu n d money. which the owner of Eagle Point, area in the district of 8,843,000acres, on said slough, is bouud to respect. of which 15,360 acres are reserved, A $65.00 Machine » - * * • » * "flr lin Q to n ” His boom extends beyond the 2.820,525 acres have been disposed of, lenving a total o f 5,671,215 acres middle of the channel, and where For $ ) t & . 5 0 LATEST there was 20 feet of water at a yet undisposed of, of which 4,394,- BEST recent period, there is now 8 feet, 601 acres are surveyed and 1,076,- CHEAPEST a decrease of 12 feet. The 614 acres unsurveyed land. Union Shipped to anyone, slough at the mouth has become county embraces a total land surface anywhere, on 1<J days’ free trial, area of 2,028,000 acres; 978,114 very shoal, caused by this boom iu y o u r o w n acres have been disposed of, ajid h o m e , without extending from a deep water bend asking one cent . ou its western side nnd washing there is yet available 1,349,186 in advance. away the eastern bank, making it acres, o f wbioh 867,353 acres are 10 years' written unsafe, already, to load a vessel of eurveyed and 481,833 acres nnHnr- warranty w i t h tbe usnal draft above the month. veyed. O f the land in Union yet each machine. No disinterested person will undisposed of, 75 per cent is A strictly high-grade Sew traverse this statement; none but timbered, 20 per cent grazing land ing M a c h i n e , f i n i s h e d throughout in tne best pos those who, possessing saw logs, can and 5 per cent farming laud. sible manner. It possesses a ll float them down stream until that modern improvements,audita Prof. S. E. McClure, of Eugene, mechanical construction is day that their timber becomes a member of tbe Mazamas’ society such that in it arc combined simplicity with great strength, exhausted and the strpsm has that made the ascent of Mount thus insuring ease o f running, become a mod-puddle. The pro Rainier Tuesday, 3d inst.. lost his durability, and making it im possible for the machine to be prietor of this boom has enclosed tooting while descending the moun put out of order. It sews fart and makes a perfect stitch more than half the width of the tain Wednesday and slid down a Coupon, if with all kinds o f thread and stream, and if his opposite neigh steed declivity. all classes o f material. Always H e struck on a sent C. 0 . D. ready for use and unrivalled bor should follow his example the pile o f rocks, and was inBtautly for speed, durability and qual or on tria l ity o f work. Notice the fol slongb would be closed. It must killed. The accident occurred be lowing points ot superiority! he here mentioned that tbe Isthmus low the danger liue, and was caused slough is a wide stream. As the I y attempting to descend the moun Th e Head o f the “ Arlington” swings on patent socket hinges, firmly held down by a thumb boomer is now progressing in tain in the dark. screw. Strong, substantial, neat ami handsome in design, and beautifully ornamented in gold. Prof. McClure Bed plate has rounded corners and is inlaid or countersunk, making it flush with top of table. further efforts of a lawless character, »as a graduate of tbp Oregon Highest A rm —Space under the arm is 5U inches high and 9 inches long. This will admit the a------ 4_._T-4----- -a--------- .... -------- f l . ' f f , ................................................... * ----- to “ ling’’ more o f the stream, efforts University and Harvard College, cr, o to suppress his voracity will now holding now a professorship in the ----------- , --------------------------. -------- -----o f th____________ . . . ------------------ — -j---- , beneath the bobbin winder, and has a scale showing the number o f stitches tothe iuch, and can be in older. In the promotion of former institution. He was about be changed from 8 to 32 stitches *o the inch. Feed Fs double and extends on both sides o f needle; never fails to take goods through; never slops at seams; movement is positive; no springs to an industry, facility must be 32 years o f age, unmarried, and break aud get out o f order; can be raised and lowered at will. Automatic : Bobbin W inder—For afforded for its progression; logs popular among bis associates. He filling the bobbin automatically and perfectly smooth without holding the thread. Machine does not run while winding bobbin. Light Running—Machine is easy to run, docs not fatigue theoper- must linvp booms io which tngunrd carried a life insnrnnce o f *3000 ator, makes little noise and sews rapidly. Stitch is a double lock stitch, the same on both aides, will not ravel, and can be changed without slopping the machine. Tension is a flat spring ten them against loss; but no individ iu the YVoodmun o f the World aud sion, and will admit thread from 8 to 150 «pool cotton without changing. Never gets out o f order. ual possesses the right to obstruct an accident policy of *2500. The Needle is a straight, self-setting needle, flat on one side, and cannot be put in wrong. Needle B a r i i round, made of caae hardened steel, with oil cup at the bottom to prevent oil from getting a navigable stream to an extent on the goods. Adfustabie Bearings—All bearings are case-hardcued steel and easily adjusted Cottage Grove Leader: Anton with a screw driver. All lost motion can lie taken up, and the machine will last a lifetime. which interferes with the safe Attachments - Kach machine is furnished with necessary tools and accessories, and iu addition we Pfanoer, the Forest Grove banker navigation of any vessel that trades furnish au extra set o f attachments iu a velvet lined metal box, free o f charge, as follows: One ruffler nnd gatherer, one binder, one shirring plate, one set o f four hemraers, different widths up ‘ n the port. The people of the who recently closed his hank and to 7/ i o f an inch, one tucker, one under braider, one short or attachment foot, and one thread cutter. Woodwork o f finest quality oak or walnut, gothic cover and drawers, nickel-plated ring# United States have some rights; decamped,was a gold-bug Democrat to drawers, dress guards to wheel, and device for replacing belt. but there are individuals who eau- and voted for McKinley and kicked R f l U ’ T D A Y HIGH PRICES FOR Q | | Y DIRECTLY OF MANUFACTURERS AND AND DEALER S PROFITS Dura I I A I SEWING MACHINES DU I S A V E AGENT'S ---------------------------------------- uot appreciate that fact until they on what he called 60-cent silver dollars. A report on the condition ____ O U R ______„ G R E A . T O < F F E R . $ 2 3 . 5 0 I* ouv Special W holesale Price, but «€ > O O O # are compelled to d o so. I lie ball in order to introduce this high-grade sewing machine, we make a special cou- Coupon pon offer, giving ' _ every v reader --- o ' f this paper a chance * * to get 4 a “ first-class “* nia- having commenced to roll, keep it of his bauk shows that o f *48.390- .................... No. 8970 chine at the lowest ‘ price ever offered. On receipt o f $18.50 caah and coupon, .................. r ___ ..Jove-described machine anywhere securely packed and moving and let the good work go 49 deposited witti him, *20,216 37 crated, and guaranteesafe delivery. Aten years’ written warranty sent with on until we discover who controls was subject to check and *5000 each machine. Money refunded if not as represented after thirty days’ test were demand certificates of deposits. trial. We will ship C. O. D. for f 19.50 with privilege o f twenty days’ trial on the wntprway o f the Isthmus slough 1 I f s e n t w ith o r d e r * receipt o f $5.00 as a guarantee o f good faith and charges. I f you prefer thirty The cash on hand when the bauk for Arlington days' trial before paying, send for our large illustrated catalogue with testi — the United States, tbe state of was closed was *1744, und even monials, explaining fully how we ship sewing machines anywhere to any ) SewingMachino % Oregon, or a simple citizen of one at the lowest manufacturer's prices without asking one cent in advance. No. 65 The l>est plan is to send all cash with order, ns you then save the $1.00 dis Marshfield who owns about one that amount the depositors esunot count. Remember the coupon must be sent with order. touch. These depositors would be hundred acres of marsh and mud- well satisfied if they could get the Or make your order direct tlirouyii tlie H kualu , as u y e u i, w u u u u t fiat on the Isthmus slough. Iu tlie meantime, no mind conscious of 50-cent dollars that Mr. Pfanner extra jliarge. kicked BgaiDst. TI.ere were a good rectitude, no law-abiding citizen, many such bilks as Ffauner in the need feel alarm. P. B. P. last campaign, and they were all ---- »4«a-s---------------- FROM D EN VER ,” Hie big western reform gold-bugs. Capital Journal "X " Rays. newspaper which reachesfiO.OOO readers every OF SALEM . Jason Elker.wlio left Lake county week, although only 47 weeks old. is filled Gold standard Andy Gilbert, of recently with a band ot sheep, writes with reform nows and stirring articles from Subscribe for the people’s daily—$8 a well-known and powerful writers as year; woekiy, .$1 a year. Same rates by the Salem, is proud of his boy’s free the Lakeview Examiner from Wild such Rev. F. F. Faasnv re, Eugene Bloodgood month. silver cartoons in the Denver News. Horse, Nev., that the 12,000 head Beebe, Myron W . Reed, Henry Cohen, . But he draws the line at his own of sheep which were bought inLake S. Morgan, and a host of others, equally The Daily Capital Journal, 1 year.. ..$ 3 00 prominent. b o y . . . . McElroy and two other county by J. B. Okie and are being To make you acquainted with Facts is to Tho H huald 1 year................................... 2 00 professors couldn’t be fired because driven to Wyoming, ruu into some make you a regular subscriber—for you The two worth............. ....................$ 5 00 get along without Facts — conse the charge of drunkenness couldn’t poison iu Clatlow valley, and 1000 of can’t quently for a short time, we make you this Both given for one year for. .$4 20 reckless offer: For 10c. wo will send you be proven on them, but a student them were lost. Facts «‘very week for 10 weeks on trial and a couldn’t get his degree because one of ' ‘Merrie England,” the bo- k which The Weekly Capital Journal, 1 y e a r ..f l 00 Roseburg Review; No wonder copy saloonkeeper said he had sold him so startled England that for nearly a year The II ekald ................................................ 2 00 10C.000 conies a month have been sold. The a glass of whisky. A high-toned the Oregonian thinks prosperity work The two worth................................... $3 00 contains about 85,000 words, and wo institution of learning must enforce has struck the country—it lias a send it complete and unabridged with Facts Both 1 year fo r ...................... $2 40 delinquent tax list filling twenty- 10 weeks for only a dime. We want 50,000 morals, you k n ow .. . .Thomas Nast readers immediately, and trust that has sold bis services to the insurance one columns. Those whose homes new every individual reader of this paper will trust to help crush the life of prop are beiug sold may possibly yiew take advantage of this offer at once, before it is withdrawn, as we reserve the right to erty owners. No wonder that young tbe case in a different light. return all moneys received from abovt offer men like Davenport are superced reaches ns later than ¡JO days from Notwithstanding the refusal of which date. Don’ t dissapoint us, but sit right ing that once greatest cartoonist of the senate to confirm T. V. Pow- down today nnd write the publisher?— I he the world in the affections of the derly as commissioner o f immigra Reed Publishing Co., 1500 Larimer street, people. Nast is now practically tion, the president sigoed his com Denyer, Colo. C O Q U IL L E C ITY , O R E G O N unknow n.. . .The chief attraction mission and he will assume the T o t ï i e X J r i.lo r r u n .a t e in Oregon’s Agricultural College office until congress meets again. L L kinds of farm work solicited. Hors- catalogue is a picture of a class of shoeing and plow work a specialty The Pall Mall Gazetteof London soldiers in uniform. The boys learn Supplies for logging work, wedges, dogs, This old reliable nnd rings, cant-hooks and everything used in to protect their crops up there be estimates that thonsands of tons of most successful spec- : logging camps kept on hand. Satisfaction fore they learn how to grow them. wheat will be required from the in list in San Frar. cis guaranti ed. Shop on corner north of Pio- . . . . Oregon needs better public Pacific coast, owing to the shortage co, still continues to noei Feed stable. (19 i f . cure nil Hexual and o f the crop in New Zealand and schools and fewer institutions where Seminal Diseases, worn-out politiciars can get drunk New South Wales. ti 0 S&tvW such as Gonorrhea, M r s . S h e p p a r d ’s 111 G le e t, 8 t r . c t u re, while holding professorships. A N T E D -F A IT H F U L MEN OR GOOD FOR EVERYBODY “F A C T S Daily Capital Journal WALTER DRANE, Blacksmith and Wagonmaker, Dr Gibbon A Roseburg Review; Bradstreet’s reports say that the shutting down of cotton mills in order to work off sccnmnlated stocks and force higher prices is succeeding. But where does the promised “ pros perity” of the workingmen come in wheD his wages stop? Several Falls River, Mass., cotton mills, emploviDg 1800 hands, closed last week indefinitely. Over 100,000 tons o f bay will be put up io Lake county, says tbe Lakeview Examiner. W women to travel forreepnneitileeetati- Inhed honee in Oregon. Salary $7*0 expeiieea. Position permanent. Reference. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. The National, »tar Inanranoe Bldg., Chi cago. The salmon pack will smonnt to nearly 500,000 cases o f which all but 50,000 cases were packed ou the lower Columbia. Tbe annual earnings of miners in Silesia, Germany, are, after sub tracting the insurance, only *147 to 200. To C or« C o n s t ip a t io n F orersr, T a k e C ascaret* C andy C a th a rtic »# t ' f . n 10c or f a ll t s s i i r s d r u ti/ ix ln re fu n d end 'V 'N r f g i '« Syphilis, in all its forms, Skin Diseases. Nervous Debility, Inn.potency, Heminal Weakness and Loss of Manhood, the consequence of self-abuse and excesses producing the following symp toms: Sallow countc*nance, dark spots un der the eyes, pain in the head, ringing in the ears, loss of confidence, diffidence in I approaching strangers, palpitation of the heart, weakness of the limbs and back, loss I of memory, pimples on tLe face, coughs, consumption, etc. j DR. GIBBON has practised in San Frnn- ' cisoo over 30yearsan J those troubled should I not fail to consult him and receive the ben efit of his great skill and experience. The doctor cur s when others fail. Try him. CUKES G U A R AN TE ED . Persona cured at home. Charges reasonable. Cull or 1 write. D R . J . F. GIBBON. 625 Kearney street, San Francisco, Cal. Boarding House, COR. F IR S T A N D H A L L STS. Near R. R . Depot, CO Q U ILLE C ITY , O B EG O N . 7 IR 8 T -C L A 8 8 FAR E, by the single meal, day or time hoarders. A limited number of nicelv-hept r«K»ins, with clean and comfort able bedding. Comfortable sitting room. Rates to r>ait the times and made known on application. 1