Coquille City herald. (Coquille City, Or.) 188?-1904, March 08, 1904, Image 1

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    Coquille etiti) JfeMà
COQUILLE CITY, OREGON, TUESDAY. MARCH 8, 1904.
VOL 21.
A. J. Sherwood,
A ttorn i t
at -L aw ,
N otaht P o b l ic ,
Coquille,
:
:
Oregon
Walter Sinclair,
A t io b n e t - at - L a w ,
N ota ry P u b l ic ,
Coquille,
Oregon.
Hall & Hall,
\T rmtNBYH-AT-I,A w,
Dealoi iu U bai . E s t a t i o f All k im li.
Marshflekl, Oregon.
T
J. Curtis Snook, D. D. S.
D bbtist ,
Office two doors Hoath Odd Fellow’ s H a I I
Will make Bandon a professional visit
tbe first Monday in each quarter.
Coquille, Oregon.
.E. D. Sperry.
W. C. Chase.
SPERRY & CHASE,
Attorney s at- Law.
Office in Robinson Building,
Coquille,
-
-
-
Oregon.
E. D. G. Holden,
L aw ykr ,
Jastioo of the Peaoe, City Recorder, Ü.S.
Commissioner, Qeneral Insnranoe
Agent and Notary Pablio.
Office in Robinson Building.
Coquille, Oregon.
i
Geo. Russell, M. D.,
P hysician
and
S ubobon ,
Office upstairs in MARTIN BUILDING
Calls promptly answered day or nieht.
Night call will be answered from MrR.
Wickham’ s Boarding House.
Phone, main 136.
Coquille,
:
:
:
Oregon.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF
O o q -u llle
O regon .
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
R , C. D e m e n t
A . J. S h e r w o o d
L. H a r l o c k e r
1 j . H. H a z a r d
I s a ia h H ack er
R- E. S h in e
C O R RE SPO N D E N TS.
National Bank of Commerce,
N. Y. City
Crocker-Woolworth National Bank,
San Francisco.
1st National Bank of Portland,
Portland, Ore.
Transacts a Qeneral Banking bus-
T© tire "O 2norfu.r1.ate
Dr. Gibbon
This old reliable and
most snocessfal spec-
i ialist in San Fraccis-
) co, still oontinnes to
l cure all Sexual and
Seminal Diseases,
ksneh as GonorrheR-
|G l e e t . S t r i c t u re,
■ Syphilis, in all it
■forms, 8kin Diseases.
■ N e r v o u s Debility,
Impotenoy, Seminal Weakness and Losscf
Manhood, the oonseqoenoe of self-abuse
and excesses producing the following sympa
toms: Sallow countenance, dark spots un­
der the eyes, pain in the head, ringing in
the ears, loss of confidence, diffidence, in
approaching strangers, pal natation of the
heart, weakness o f the limbs and back, loss
of memory, pimples on the face, oonghs-
con su m D tion etc.
Dtt. GIBBON has practised in San Fran
oisoo oyer 41 years an i t hose troubled should
not fail to oonsolt him and receive the ben­
efit of his great skill and experienoe. The
doctor cures when others fail. Try him.
CURES GUARANTEED. Persons cured
at home. Charges reasonable. Call or
write.
DR. J. F. GIBBON,
629 Kearney street. San Franoisoo
PATENTS
lY e« adViea, how to obtain patenta, trade nuu-ka,
»PTTWhu,««' IN ALL COUNTNI C8.
,
Pusinya dirrrt wU* H'aiUmfl.m n v n I,my. I
m v u y a n d o f U n thy f e i n t .
P ltw t tn<f
P rie fic . Exclullvwly.
Write or mmt to na at
WSSHIWQTOW, 0 . c .
GASNOW
an endowment. Between two such Predominant Sentiment in America
the fellowship of exchango is natural,
on the Far Eastern War.
The one gives his check and the
In a recent speech before the
responds with an LL. D.”
BY J. 8. KANEMATZ.
Harvard Club dinner in New York
Of
course,
universities
that
are
The
spontaneous
growth of gym.
City Professor A. Lawrence Lowell
referred to the fact that Harvard’s ready to beg or ^accept money of pathies in America for Japau in the
charactenzation^s the rich man’B such fellows as Rockefeller are not latter’s present life-and-death strug
college had undoubtedly injured it going to find any fault with the gle with the greatest military power
in the Middle West. While there alcholic antics or versatile rakishness of Europe is surprising the whole
But the world who know
are three poor men working their or haviously incurable indolence of world.
way through Harvard for every one rich men’s boobies who are sent to the history of America need not be
whose father is a millionaire, never­ college, because the college might told that such is the true American­
theless Professor Lowell admitted be cut off with a shilling iu the will ism—the tradition of a free people.
that at Cambridge there is danger of the booby’s father. The worst in­
When Cuba was trembling under
that the students who spend two or fluence of the idle rich in college is the lash of Spanish tyranny the
three thousand dollars for their that they are responsible to a great sympathy of America was with the
lavishly furnished rooms, who drive degree for the abuse of athletics. little revolutionists. Aye, for their
their automobiles and ride their Fifty years ago there were “ athlet­ freedom the best blood of America
horses, will lower the standards for ics” enough in Harvard to swell the was shed!
the under-graduate body. These rankn of the Union Armies with her
When the Republios of South
gilt-edged calves of golden bulls galleut sons in every «tato. No man Africa were defending their rights
who
has
come
out
of
Harvard
since
have already eplit- up the college
ngninst the greed of England,
into various sets and cliques. These 1860 compares in brains or body America was with them and with
with
dozen
of
men
who
were
grad­
idle rich herd by themselves in a
the weak.
building where they have a swim­ uated between 1825 and 1850, when
The history of America is the
ming tank, gymnasium and break­ there was no abuse of athletics. history of a sudden and complete
The
sons
of
Harvard
before
the
war
fast room under one roof. Many of
disfranchisement of the aristocrats
them, says Professor Lowell, are rowed tbeir boats on Charles River; of the air.
It is a history of an
indifferent and lazy.
This is all they made mountain excursions to emancipation of four millions of
true. Theso idlu rich undoubtedly Monadnock and the White Hills: human souls—a history of a war
do infect other students who are not they visited the Adirondaks; they with Spain for the freedom of Cuba,
rich with their indolence.
The went troutiDg and fowling, but for the sake of humanity.
And,
shameful spectacle has been witness­ there was no abuse of athletics, no
humanity knows no color, no tongue
“
athletic”
craze.
The
advent
o
f
the
ed of recent years, formerly un­
or no previous condition of men.
known, of college students of honor­ idle rich with their money, their
Wherever it goes the wand of
able lineage stooping to crime and love of excitement, which belongs
progress touches the auction block,
tbeir demoralization was probably to all idle, dissipated men, has pro­
the slavery pen, and we see, instead
due to the daily exhibit of extrav- duced this vile abuse of athletics,
of misery and superstition, a happy
which
in
its
intemperance
is
just
as
agence and luxury which they could
home and fireside.
not obtain except by playing tbe fatal a form of dissipation to real
Ever since Commodore Perry
intellectual power or force of charac­
part of a parasite or a thief.
ter as excessive conviviality. The knoiked at the door of that Hermit
Theso idle rioh students always idle rich in every clime always drink Empire of Mikado, the wave of
corno from the best schools of the and gamble, always frequent race­ progress traveled far and fast. The
country, and come so well prepared tracks and playgrounds where they shogunism quickly gave way to
that it is an easy matter for them to can yell and bet and bet and yell on commercialism, the despotism to
enter college and to keep up after man or beast, and here the idle rich democracy.
Farmers and mechan­
a fashion with their classes. They meet the idle poor, who are anxious ics become suddenly politicians and
have plenty of money to hire tutors to “ do up” the idle rich, and gener­ in »very ricefield and every forge-
to help them “ cram” for critical ex. ally succeed. This abuse of athletics shop questions were answered and
animations, and they worry through has about run its course in England, discussed.
Thur, became Japau
college without really doing work. nnd sooner or later it will be sur­ one of the world powers. Although
They never become sound scholars, rendered to the custody and guard- an empire in name, the government
occasionally one of them obtains a anship of men who are fit for noth­ is in truth a representative one,
little superficial dilettante culture ing better and of whom we expect more democratic than Great Brit­
which he could and probably would nothing better.
ain.
have obtained without going to col­
In a great contrasting relief
The d .ys may not soon come
lege, but the great majority of these
again when an American college stands the mighty empire of Russia
idle rich college youth are victims
— with an absolute autocrat in the
to the athletic craze, if they are fel­ will be able to conduct its work in
throne and the fevidal knights in the
the
spirit
of
the
founders
of
the
lows of robust constitution, and if
office. With a Hword in one hand
they are not robust enough to row Edenburgli Roview, who took for
and a lash in the other she has con­
or kick football they arc generally their motto “ We cultivate literature
quered and subjugated nearly one
robust euough to gamble and drink on a little oatmeal,” but it is not too
hundred nations and races, and to­
much
to
expect
that
our
colleges
to excess and t > recall the “ Latin
her territory reaches to an
quarter” of Pans by the exclusive w ill g r a d u a t e Houao lu n r o L o i* o io «afnff day
than a bullnosed creature with a big enormous length of 8,000 imies
felicity they appear to find in wine,
from
the
Baltic in Europe far into
calf and a hothouse biceps. In the
women and bacchanal song. The
Not satisfied
recent war with the Boers Mr. Kip­ the Bering in Asia.
New York Evening Post, comment­
ling expressed bitter contempt for with these vast possessions, she
ing upon Professor Lowell’s state­
the Euglish youth, “ the nuddled now extends her arms of greed into
ment, says that “ these idle rich
oafs at the goals,” who were bois­ Manchuria and Korea, and finally
students are within reach of the col­
terous champions in the sham bat­ into Japan.
lege authorities, and cun be made
tles of peace, but had no stomach
In this war, therefore, Japan is
to work; if not, the college has it­
for real war when it came, and now fighting for her very existence, for
self to blame for the disturbing
Mr. William Wrtson, in the Fort­ her home and her liberty.
Russia
element.” This is true, but who
nightly Review, says that ‘‘athletic­ stands for conquest, for ignorance
ever hears nowadays of a college
ism has possibly served some use- and greed, significance of which
finding any particular fault with the
ends, but the worship of musclo has can well be seeu by her stubborn
idle rich? E. Benjamin Andrews,
gone quite far enough nnd it is resistance to the new ChiDa-Ameri-
the head of the University of Ne­
about time brains had its turn.” can treaties for the open-door pol­
braska, the other day bluntly de­
Referring to Kipling’s bitter satire, icy of Manchuria.
clared that the universities are de­
Mr. Watson says:
The late declaration of Tokio
pendent largely for their support on
“ I cannot think it a fact of very government guarantying the inde­
the rich, and he defended the busi­
cheerful augury that in moments of pendence and integrity of Korea,
ness methods of John W. Rockefel­
a thrilling historio crisis, when it places her in a position somewhat
ler apparently for no more logical
might have been supposed that similar to that occupied by the
reason than that Andrews andRocko-
every adult brain in the land would United States over Cuba in the late
feller are both Baptists. The strong­
bo touched to something of solemn­ Spanish-American war.
est protest against the acceptance
ity at thought of the national peril,
o f Rockefeller’s money by the Uni­
Is it any wonder then that the
one could have seen the young man­
versity o f Nebraska comes from Ida
sympathies of the liberty-loving
hood of the country trooping in its
M. Tarbell, who says:
people o f this great republic are
thousands to fleet the time in rapt
‘ Money is one of the minorneees- and exoited contemplation of a kick­ with the plucky little men of Dai-
Nippon— tb6
“ Yankees of the
sities in making honest thinkers and ing game.— Oregonian.
Orient?”
courageous actors. It is useful in
an educational institution only in
But, as a nation America will ob­
Sacramento is Receding.
the hands of men who prefer to do
serve a strict neutrality.
without it rather than to dull the
Sacramento, March 2.— Advices
conscience of faculty, students and from all river points show that the
D o Y o n W a n t N tr e « (t fe .
friends by compromising with any water is receding, except at the
If you want to increaso your
kind of moral or intellectual subter­ island in the lower part of the river
strength you must add to and not
fuge. I f the acceptance of a gift where it is at a standstill.
take from the physical.
In other
from John D, Rockefeller brings
words, the food that you eat must
with it tacit recognition of tbe com­
Crude Oil Prices Cut.
be digested, assimilated and appro­
mercial principles which he has em­
priated by the nerves, blood and
ployed wity more conspicuous suc­
Toledo, Ohio,
March 1.—The
cess than any other man in the Standard Oil Company today cut tissues before being expelled from
Kodol Dyspepsia
country— if it closes the mouth of the price of crude oil three cents tbe intestines.
Cure adds to the physical. It gives
any man in Nebraska to the corrupt­ both east and west.
It is under­ strength to and builds up strength
ing influence of these principles, no stood that the Kansas oil field de­
greater calamity can befall the Uni­ velopments indicate that the Ohio in the human system. It is pleasant
versity of Nebraska than to accept fields must take a back seat and to the taste and palatable, and the
only combination of digestants
his money.”
high prices are doomed.
that will digest the food and enable
Three-fourths of the newspapers
tbe system to appropriate all of its
War
Veterans
Claims
are
Denied
and about two-thirds o f the peoplo
health and strength-giving quali­
of Nebraska agree with Miss Tar­
Salem, Or., March 1.— The su­ ties. Sold by R. S. Knowlton.
bell; but the chances are the regents
of the University will accept the preme court this afternoon decided
money and erect "a religious tem­ the case o f J. It. Boyd, respondent,
Two for Ihs Price of One.
ple” as a monument to the memory vs. F. L Dunbar, secretary of state,
appellant,
from
Multnomah
county,
of John D. Rockefeller and his
We have made arrangements
“ methods in business.” The wrong Sears judge; case reversed. Opin­ with tbe publishers o f tbe A M E R ­
of this proceeding would seem to be ion by justice Bean.
ICAN F A R M E R by which we are
This was a suit to compel the able to offer this great farm paper
obvious when we remember that the
secretary
of
state
to
draw
a
warrant
University of Nebraska is supported
and tbe H e r a l d tor the price of
by public taxation and has no real for $129.50 for services as an In­ tbe H e r a l d alone— $1.50, for the
The court re­ j next 30 days. W ho will be the
need of relying upon rich men and dian war soldier.
imposing the influence of such men cites the facts of the appropriation first to take advantage of this op­
upon the teachings of the institu­ made for the payment of the veter­ portunity? This is a great offer
tion. It was W. H. H. .Murray who, ans’ claims and holds that when the for our farmers a’hd dairymen.
after describing the Rockefeller type appropriation was exhausted the
of successful land pirate in business, secretary had no authority to audit
and pay claims of veterans no mat­ n e s t R c i i u m I j - l o r C o n » l a | » : i i i n n ,
said:
ter bow meritorious they were.
“ The finest remedy for constipa-
“ You can metulizc a man so that The court says that where an ap­ J tion I ever used is Chambertaiu’s
every one of the millious of pores in propriation is made for a specific i Stomach and Liver Tablets,” says
his skin stand for a dollar mark. purpose and there is no other war­ I Mr. Eli Butler, of Fraokyille, N. Y.
But I know o f no one who gives rant of law to pay the claims, no j “They act gently and without any
such a metallic tnetam »rphons of a warrant can be issued after tbe ap­ I unpleasant effect, and leave the
man any thought unless it be some propriation is exhausted.
The de­ bowels in a perfectly natural con-
degeneration university that wants cision of tbe lower court is reversed. ! dition."
Sold by R S. Knowlton.
The Idol Rich in College
Professional Cards
1
NO. 34.
Evolution ol the Lumber Drogher.
W e Give
A Pacific Coast-built lumber
schooner with a carrying capacity
of 1,600,000 feet is now en route to
Our entire'time to the
Portland from Honolulu, and an­
other craft of the same type, but
with a capacity of 2,000,000 feet of
lumber, has just been launched at
Eureka, Cal. All along the Pacific
I f you want to sell your Ranch send us a descrip­
Coast these big carriers have been
going into the water is rapidly in­
tion, price and terms. If you want to loan your
creasing numbers, and with an in­
money write us.
crease in size has come a reduction
in the cost of operation, so that, so
I. S. KAUFMAN & CO.,
far as the limber trade is concerned,
MARSHFIELD, OR.
the old square-riggers can operate
only at a decided disadvantage.
There is an unusual amount of
truth in the Oregon motto “ She
flies with her own wings,” even
when it is applied to the greater
portion of the Pacifio Coast, for
since Joseph Oale and bis little
band o f pioneers constructed the
schooner Star of Oregon near this
city more than sixty years ago, the
“ Oregon territory” has been en­
gaged in tbe business of building
GOLDEN B U ILD IN G ,
COQUILLE CITY
nearly all of the vessels used in
marketing the lumber product of K e e p s c o n s a i r t l t j r o n
H a n d P raeh . M e a t,
the Northwest.
o f -A-lJL K i n d s .
And the Oregon and Washington
shipbuilders have covered them­
G a n n e d iB e e f a n d P ic k le d Pork-
selves with glory.
Their vessels,
size and type considered, have been
the finest and fastest of their class,
and from the standpoint of durabil­
ity they average well up with the
mental ships.
The old barkentine
Melanetbon, built at Coos Bay in T h e la t e s t in
1867, is still sailing the seas, mak­
ing fast passages and carrying good
cargoes, and the Oregon-built oraft
Webfoot, Portland, Tam o’Shanter
and others varying from thirty to
a t M r s . C. L . M o o n ’s
thirty-five years of age, still get
around with the regularity of clook-
You will find the latest in spring and summer Millinery
work, and despite their age and
comparatively small carrying capaci­ at my store.
ty, earn dividends for their owners.
Dress Trimming and Fancy Goods in General. Stamp­
This early Oregon fleet was made
ing
done
to order.
up of vessels too small to compete
successfully with the big square-
rigged craft in the foreign trade,
but the vessels that have been con­
FRONT STREET, COQUILLE, O R
structed within the past few years
are rapidly crowding the square-
riggers out of the business.
Real Estate Business
P. E. Drone,
Butcher,
CashP aid for Hides in any Quantity
MILLINERY
IV Ir s . C . IV X o o n
Captain A. M. Simpson, who as
their names will attest,
built
schooners from Alpha to Omega,
and then began all over again, has
been the most piominent factor in
d e v e lo p in g
to »
s n ip o u n a iu ^
-u d
shipowning industry on tho Pacifio
Coast.
His diminutive schooner
Alpha could not carry very much
lumber and she never strayed far
from the Pacific Coast; but her
successors have gradually widened
the field of operations, aad Oregon-
built craft are to day carrying Ore­
gon lumber to China, JapaD, Africa,
Australia and South America. The
Oregon and Washington schooner
with a capacity of 600,000 to 700,-
000 feet of lumber, launched ten or
a dozen years ago, was a monster
in size compared with its predeces­
sors, but it is small compared with
the craft that have entered the
water within the past three years.
The 2,000,000-foot of lumbor car­
rier of home construction is already
here.
It has reached this size by
such easy stages and has so quietly
worked the old type ol lumber
droghers out of business that it is
difficult to place a limit on its size
or utility in the future.
1903
Qoos Q ounty A cademy
1904
This school, which has been in successful operation during eight months
of the past school year, will open its Second Annnal
Session Monday, October 5, and continue for Eight
Months.
The Following Courses are Offered:
COMMON SCHOOL,
NORMAL,
HIGH SCHOOL,
ACADEMIC,
COMMERCIAL,
MUSIC,
A reasonable reduction will bo made to students desiring to take
a mixed Course.
Special inducements will bo given to a limited number of teachers
bearing Certificates and taking tho Normal Course.
Circulars with full Courses of Study issued soon.
particulars call on or address
u iV . H . 2v l T J I - . K H 3 “H ’,
For further
S u p e r in t e n d e n t
Coquille, Oregon.
CALIFORNIA CO-OPERATIVE MEDICAL
The nntural products of the Pa­
cific States have done much to ad­
vertise our greatness, and added
glory is now being reflected by ouf
COM PANY.
success in turning out a manufac­
tured product that is the equal if
Branch Office, Pharmacy Building, Coquille City, Oregon.
not superior to that produced in
any other part of the world.
The
typical Pacific Coast-built schooner
is in a class of her own, and she is
a credit to the localitv from which Are purely co-operative in every rsspect and tho Company will spare
she hails.— Oregonian.
neither time nor money In teaching tbo people at large the
great and inestimable benefits which come to each and every
— --------- * .
■ ■
R u c k l e * '» A r n i c a S a lv e .
member of its system.
Has world-wide fame for marvel­
ous cures. It surpasses any other
salve, lotion, ointment or balm for
cuts, corns, burns, boils, sores, fel­
ons, ulcern, tetter, salt rheum,
fever sores, chapped hands, skin
eruptions; infallible for piles. Cure
guaranteed.
Only 2oo, at R. 8.
Knowlton’s, Druggist.
Their Methds
Chas. Grissen
Music Co,
T o C u r e a C o ld In O n e D a y .
Take Laxative Bromo Qnlnloe Tablets.
All drajzgiiita reload tbe money if it fails to
care. E. W. drove’s Signatare it on each
box. Ufa.
C o ld » ca u s e
üvEarslYfield.. O re
Agents for leading makes of
P n e u m o n ia .
One of the most remarkable cases
of a cold, deep-seated on the lungs,
causing pneumonia, is that of Mrs.
Gertrude F, Fenner, Marion, Ind„
who was entirely cured by the use
of One Minute Cough Cure.
She
says: “ The coughing and straining
so weakened me that I ran down in
weight from 148 to 92 pounds.
I
tried a number of remedies to no
avail until I used One Minute Cough
Cure.
Four bottles of this won­
derful remedy cured me entirely of
the cough, strengthened my lungs
and restored mo to my normal
weight, health and strength,” Sold
bv R 8. Knowlton.
Pianos and Organs
VYe bay for Cash from Manufactures and therefore can
sell yon st bottom prices. Wo also carry a full line of
Violins, Guitars, Banjos, Strings
And everything else in the music line.
CHAS. G RISSEN M USIC CO.
I O
M
O- F
H A LL
A B S IIP IE L D ,
-
-
O ZESIB-