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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 19??-1917 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1917)
Logging Train Accident. ipreme Court of United States Decides that States May Outlaw the Liquor Business and C|her States Can not Force Btyze on Them. • e la w of W est Virginia flaking the State Bone Dry and Forbidding the S alt or Transportation of Li quor for Beverage Purposes Also Afirm ed. Another loggias train accident oc curred just couth of Norway at 1:10 Wednesday morning, in which one car wae totally derailed and two went off the track at one end. Trainmaatar Jones eaya that one of the logs became loose and fell, go ing under the trucks and throwing them from the rails. No responsi bility in the m atter has yet been de termined. The track was torn up for 200 fast and a work train was sent from Marshfield as soon as possible to repair the damage. It was four o’clock before the track was cleared, so that the regular trains in both di rections that day ware oonsiderably delayed. Judge 8Upwerth has notified the attorneys in the Kinney tax cases that they must fils their briefs within ta ndays. He is expected over hare to hold court and hear cases in which Judge Coke cannot sit early in Feb ruary. A CITY PARK? MORE BUSINESS FOR COUNTY The adjourned session of the county court which was to have been held Tuesday was postponed on account of the funeral of Judge D. L. Watson. The Amt business taken up when b e n a t Coos City; Neil O w n, b o n a t Coos City; Dorothy, bern a t Coos City (now Mrs. Ctanaeo L Tuttle) and Laura Lavina, b o n a t Marsh field. TVs Watson family had its origin la Scotland from the earliest tradi- tiods M ia lam ed that they wan among the follower» pf John Knox, the leader of M m Reformation of the 16th century (1649-1672). The battle The transfer of the franchise to the McDonald, Vaughn Logging company to use a part of the cdtanty rood in the Sumner neighborhood to the Smith- Powers Logging company was ap- L S ro fS S » ep m h b M fiw Ir Vo tary with that of tM C anoh^ tfo Commercial Club Takes Ac tion To Get Service With Leas Delay at Bay. The meeting of the Commercial Chib Wednesday evening was mors largely attended than usual, it being known that the m atter of the exist ing train schedule was to be up for discussion as to what, course Coquille should pursue in attem pting to get our mail delivered in Coquille the same evening it arrivée in Marshfield. The wishes of the Bandon people for a daylight schedule which would bring them their su it in the evening by arranging the schedule so the Lim ited would leave Portland at 6 a. m , were considered. All those interested, about 12,000 in the Coquille valley, are unanimously #f the opinion that there must be unity of action by the commercial bodies of Coquille, Ban don, Myrtle Point and Powers, If we are to secure s satisfactory schedule; but in view of erhat the S. P. officials have previously said it is certain they will not consider chagning the Lim ited schedule to make It leave Port land at • a. m. Consequently Co quille has felt that the reasonable thing to ask was local connection with the Limited a t Marshfield, although a change patting mail and passengers in hers at three or four o’clock would be appreciated by Coquille aa well as Bandon. In order to attem pt to secure such concerted action it was moved by A. T. Morrison that a committee of three be appointed to draft a resolution in regard to train sendee. The chair ap pointed A. T. Morrison, C. A. How ard and C. B. Barrow, who immedi ately prepared the faBowlgn rusota- tion which has been sent to the com mercial bodies of the other towns in the county: tsain service to Coquille valley Tbe Watson family furnished men for the American Revolution, who took part to tha battles of Cowpens, King's Mountain and Yorktnwn. The family crossU the Mississippi into the “Buffalo ^Settlement” as it was than known to tha CaroHnas. D. L. Watson’s grandfather was named James Watson and bis grand mother, Sarah Barber Watson; Ms dhthsr was James Watson, Jr., born to South Carolina to 1806 and moved with his parents to Missouri and was reared on Note creek, Pike county. He married Easily Franklin to 1866 and they became the parents of. 18 c h ild ren. He moved to Iowa, where he raised a family of eons and daugh ters, and ta 1868 migrated to Oregon, where he was known as tbs father of the Oregon branch of tho Watson fam ily. Ha dtad a t a good aid agm Tan About a Month More. The work on the Court House An nex is now nearing completion. The contractors tail us that it will require about throe weeks to get the steel cells now in place to the upper story riveted together and that a weak or two will suffice to finish the construc tion work after that. The padded cell and two other colto bava been brought up from the basement of the main building and are how being est up to the airy quartan of the third story, which is going to bo a romant- ably interesting place to visti when outside the county, and Wheraas the above-mentioned change in schedule has resulted to public by requiring sa over-night Bergs, last Friday left her without tog stop a t Marshfield both going to god means of support. Mm. R. O. Thorps, coming by the United States Supreme Court from outside points to this wife of the Lutheran minister at on January 8, when that tribunal af Marshfield, will be paid tha money firmed the constitutionality of the to expend for the best interest of the Wsbb-Konyon Law. By a significant family. coincidence this came almost simul Mm. J. P. Childs, who is on the wid, taneously with the passage by the oar's pension list, was advanced $60 Senate of two important anti-liquor to go to Spokane, where she ha* measures, one malting the District of friends, on signing a relinquishment Columbia dry, and tha other prohibit of all claims against Coos county. ing the transmission of liquor adver Loo J. Cary was delegated a special The pension of Mm. Lis sic Yates representative tisements through the mails into Sta of the 'Coquille Com ares reduced from $82.50 to $26 per tes which prohibit such advertising. mercial Club to visit Bandon and taka month, one of her children having at the m atter up with The Washington correspondents ex the Commercial tained the age of 16 yearn, and being Club there. He went pect these to both to become laws. down on tho no longer entitled to public aid. The Webb-Kenyon Law, passed in Relief this morning and It is hoped A. H. Chubbeck, who had been a united policy can bo agmad 1918, prohibited the importation from upon. working a t Hauser, got sick and Com one State to another of liquor “in- Myrtle Point and Powers, of course, missioner Philip was authorised to will enjoy the same benefits sa will spend $12.60 in buying him a steamer any manner used” in notation of the ticket to San Francisco, Chubbeck law of tho Stats into which the liquor has a wife and family in California is being imported; but it was virtually but declared tha dog th at was with not to operation, tha Boston Tran him was the only friend he had. He script explains, pending the Supreme dug up the funds to pay for the dog's Court decision on its constitutionality. passage too, and urban last assn the Now that it has coma, t£e decision animal was standing on the bow of ton for the necessary application is hailed by editors ami Washington blanks to form an association, and the KUburn os she started out. correspondents as marking- the begin when those ere received a meeting Chubbeck could ha vs gone to the ning of s new era In the prohibition will bi held to form an association. county infirmary, but preferred to go movement to the United States. But The failure of tho city council to bock to his family, little as hs cared while all agree that the immediate close their option on the Patterson effect of this ruling is, aa the counsel Grove tract for a city park, which ex for tha Anti-Saloon League says, that piree the 28th of February, was com “the States may now prohibit the pos mented on at length by L. J. Cory, session, receipt, sale, and use of in who told tho result of the council's toxicating liquor and not be ham action the evening before and do pered by the agencies of interstate ctored the city was giving the ten commerce,” there is s wide divergence “Tho hearing of thè docision upon men, who had made it possible for the of opinion aa to what the ultimate re thè question of tho individuai rights city to secure the tract for $2,000 a sult will be. On the one hand, the of States la no hoo interooting than champions of prohibition predict that Hs hearing upon tho prohibition qun- with tide powerful weapon their drive tioa. It upholds tho individuai State against the liquor forces will seqtHre in Ho amortion of independent aothor- a now impetus; but, on the other, tbs Hy over sodai legislation, and goea spokesman far the liquor inter eats ar so far as to afford each Stato protec- gue that as a result of the Supreme tien against invaeion of ite rights in Court’s decision many States now thia roopeet by any other State. In ery. nominally dry will soon return to the additimi, it upoots completaiy thè eon- It wes stated also that the Sumner- Cooe City road will bo advertised at tantion that a Foderai Heonsa to raan- tho February mooting as wefl as tho ufactur* or sali liquor takss prece- Coalodo to Coquille portion of tho dohea of State taw. . . . . county highway. Tho bridge at Coos “Uria marks thè beginning of e new CHy wiH coot SMM0. ' epoch ta thè prohibition ssovemrnt n e enforoed, eh Wall sa thè assorta 1