Coquille herald. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1905-1917, March 09, 1910, Image 4

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    Coquille Ifenild.
Patrons of the Seattle Symphony
j Orchestra’s popular concerts yes-
D F DEAN,
P R O P R IE T O R . tetday acclaimed a new Seattle
musical prodigy in the person of
Countv Official Paner. 9 -year-old Violet Bourne, who ap­
P U B LISH E D E V E K Y W EDN ESDAY.
peared us soloist with the orchestra
J e i o t e d t o m t t o n t e n a l a n d >ooial op at the regular Sunday "pop” affair
'I I d m g o f t h e C o q u i l l e Vallejr purtioularly
at the Moore, and whose astonish­
• il o f C o o s C o u n t y g e n e r a ll y .
h i b s o r i p t i o n , p e r y e a r . i n a d v a n o e . l.AO ing talent won instant and hearty
recognition. Violet is a diminutive
Phone, Main 55 .
misi whose physical limitations ap­
peared inconsiderable in her play­
L etter From C. L Freer
ing of Mozart’s "Concerto for Piano”
in D minor, with orchestra accom­
Our townsman, F. T. Crewe, is
in receipt of a letter from a friend, paniment.
Seattle has never witnessed sueh
Chas, L. Freer, who was a resident
a spectacle as that of the tiny girl
of Coquille for a short time, which
seated at coocert grand piano, play­
is of interest to many people here,
ing with the bou I of an artist one of
especially miners. The letter was
the classical works of the great Mo­
written from San Marcos, Mexico,
zart. Her little bands seemed ab­
and we give below a few excerpts.
solutely incapable of approaching
Among other things he says: I am
the technical requirements of the
just beginning to get the lay of the
piece, yet it went as smoothly and
country through my bead.
The
as effectively as if given by a ma­
language bothers me a great deal as
yet, but am picking it up by degrees. ture ana experienced player, while
This is a bard country in which to iu Interpretation and understanding
prospect, being quite rough, and the work was given a flawless in­
none too much water, and no horse- terpretation.
Through the three movements of
feed, except a little corn and fodder
the masterpiece the ev,lienee heard
we can buy from the Indians.
As to prospects, we find the for­ Violet with amazement, until the
mation good; granit and porphyry, moment of relaxation came, and
the best in the world for gold bear­ then, when the little artist had fin­
ing prospects. There are several ished, a mighty burst of applause
pretty good mines being worked welled up from the big house.
Absolutely unaffected and un­
by American and English capitalists,
also a few high grade stringers are moved by the spontaneous tribute,
being worked to a slight extent by the child wonder returned to the
Indians who pack the rock on piano to attempt Liszt’s "Hunga­
burrows to water where they grind rian Rhapsodic No. 2 ,’’ which she
it in arrasters and wash it out in played with indescribable self-con­
wooden bowls. So far I have seen fidence and power, considering her
no placer grounds that would pay age. But bettei than the "Rhsp-
to work with boxes, although there soilie” was the second encore, given
is some gravel that would pay very after repeated demands from the au.
This was Paderewski’s
well with a good head of water for dienee.
familiar
"Minuet,”
and here the lit­
piping.
tle
artist
was
at
her
best. The “ Min­
I have formed a copartnership
with an American by the name of uet” was played beautifully.
Max Steindel, ’cellist, was the
Woodward and a Mexican named
other
soloist
The program con­
Bornario Sanches, and we have
opened a little store to trade with tained two Grieg numbers and the
the Indians. Our idea is to in this overture to “Stradella.” — Seattle
way make a living while we are Daily Times.
---------» - . * » - ------------------------
prospecting the country. The In­
dians know all the old Spanish
mines here, and most of the gold
nnd silver-bearing ledges that are
exposed. If we can trade with
these people and get their confi­
dence, we can get them to bring in
samples and, when they bring
good ones we can go out and see
where they get them, and determine
whether or not they are good
enough to follow up. Will get an
assny outfit bb soon as possible.
Something over a hundred years
ago the Indians who were slaves to
the Spanish mine owners in this
part of the country, rose up and
drove the Spaniards out— that is
those they did not kill. The Span­
iards before going, in most cases,
cived down the mouths of their
tunnels or rocked them up, and
now they are over-grown with brush.
This makes them hard to find and
accounts for so many lost mines
here.
Woodward and I were in an old
Spanish mine about a month ago;
we went with au old Indian.
We
had to waile up to our waists for
the first 100 feet through stagnant
water, and when wo got through
the water we ran into a swarm of
hats — millions of them, it seemed,
and their wings sounded like a
gale of wind going over our heads,
nnd the motion of the air put out
the lights as fast as we could light
them. We finally managed to get
in about 1000 feet, but the air was
so had that our candles would not
hum, and we were obliged to turn
back. Next day we tiied it agaio.
We took two big keroaene lights,
and we reached the stop« where
they had been working last, and we
hnd just started to get samples
when our lights again went out.
We hnd been looking for this and
hnd taken careful note of the turns
amt distances so we could not get
lost in cane we had to make our
way out in the dark. We crawled
on our hands and knees for a long
distance when we again tried the
lights and they burned all right
and we came out without further
difficulty. What few samples we
got were good rock, hut it was a
small vein, the beat of which we
presume had been worked out.
Most of the timbers in this old mine
nre ebony and they are still good.
There is quite a lot of ebony in this
country, hut it is scattering. This
is the limbi r used principally for
building
I believe something
could ho made out of the bard
wi oils, he-ides there are several
pr. sped» on which it would pav to
do some work.
There is an old
In lian working with an arranter. I
weighed up the gold he and his
hoy took out in one week, which
came to an ounce and a half. He
offered us a j interest in it to go in
with him. It is a small stringer
and we are waiting to see if it is go­
ing to widen out and dip down, in
which case will try and do some­
thing with it.
The F inchot P olicy.
There are undoubtedly two sides
to the great question of conserva­
tion which is now agitating the
American people. To date there is
no question but that the Pinchot
policies have been the popular oneB,
but there is a growing feeling that
when the people of the northwest
get all the facts before them they
will not be so enthusiastic about
conservation.
Here is one H db of
argument advanced against the Pin­
chot policy: The east has, practic­
ally speaking, no more timber.
Where the timber once stood great
oianufacturing industries have risen
giving employment to hundreds of
thousands of men and women. The
eastern timber is gone, but in its
place has come great commercial
development. The east has pros­
pered under the change, but now it
says to the west: “ Our timber is
gone; we want the western timber
to stand; true you cannot build up
great commercial centers and cre­
ate homes for settlers unless you do
cut down your timber.
However,
you can wait.
It took the east a
long time to dovelop; why should
the west be iu such a hurry?”
Whether this argument of the
Pinchot policy is true to the let­
ter or not, the fact remains that
there is much merit to it.
The
northwest lias hundreds of thou­
sands of arris of land tied up in
forest reservations. Those sections
will certainly not develop so long
as they are not open to settlement;
without the settler, how is the
northwest to be developed? Cer­
tainly it cannot progress as rapidly.
When a newspaper owner lfAs form­
er Uuited States Senator John L.
Wilson returns fiom Washington
City after an exhaustive study of the
question and announces that the
Pinchot policy, popular as it is, is a
great drawback to the northwest,
and that he is prepared and pro­
poses to fight it, there must be at
least two sides to tho question.
4 1*1 on mu ii t
P h y * lr
When you want n pleasant physic
Rive Chamber I ain’R Stomach and
Liver Tablets a trial.
They are
mild "n<l Rent!© in their action and
always produce a p]eas«nt cathartic
effect. Call at R. S. Knnwlb n’n
dr ur store.
T iiiih u rla iid
x ti
xt 1
a
m
N j N et Sec 12 Tp
Address, Joseph
burg, Oregon.
o o
28
R
10
\V.
Schrems, Rose-
_____ ...
Sol Blumauer and Eugene
I loch, copartners under
the firm name and style
of Blumauer Hoch.and
C. O. Gilkey, Defendants.
To C. O. Gilkey, one of the above nam­
ed defendants:
In the Name of the State of Oregon, yfc One of the Most Up-to-Date Shops in the City ^
you are hereby notified that you are re­
quired to appear and answer the com­
plaint filed against you in the above en­
titled court and cause within six weeks p C o q u ille ,
from the date of the first publication of
this summons, tow it: Witnin six weeks
from the 9th day of March, 1910; and If
you fail to appear and answer on or be­
One-hall acre in hetiies nnd a
Three lota, all cleared, ready
fore the 20th day of April, 1010, that be­
for building; $ 300 .
six
room cottage close in, good
ing the last day presented in the order
R ¡ 3 . KNOW LTON, President
GEO. A. ROBINSON, V. Pres.
of publication, judgment will be taken
8 lots 3 blocks from postotHce;
barn,
chicken houRe nnd wood
againstvou for want thereof and plain­
R. H. MAST, Cashier
» 800 .
sbed. If you are looking for a
tiff will apply to the court for the relief
demanded in his said complaint, a suc­
17 acres close in, at a nignin.
home, you will buy (hi« place
cinct statement of which is as follows:
2 1-2 acres close in, the price
For a decree reforming the description
for »1250.
of the premises mentioned inn certain
«ill suit the buyers.
mortgage given by you and Cora B.
Five room bungalow and lot,
2 large lots and a 6 room
Gilkey, your wife, on the 5th of May,
50x100; »1700.
house; n good huv for $2100,
1904, to Sol Blumauer and Eugene
Hoch, copartners under the firm name
CAPITAL STOCK $25,000
80 acre ranch, 25 hend of cows,
and style of Blumauer & Hoch, and also
Some of the l>est residence lots
reforming the description of such prem­ A Reasonable Share of Your Business Solicited the best buy in southern Oregon;
in Coquille, size 80x100. price
ises as contained in the complaint,
ihe
price
is
right.
First Class Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent
decree, execution and order of sale and
»200 to »240; terms »25 down
Six large lots nnd a new seven
the sheriff’s return thereon, sheriff’s
and »10 per mouth.
room house; » 1900 .
certificate of sale, order confirming said
sale and sheriff’s deed under such sale,
as each appears in a certain suit for the
foreclosure of said mortgage and the sale
of said premises and particularly set
forth and described in piaititiff’s com­
plaint herein, so that said description
in said mortgage and in all said instru­
ments and proceedings concerning said
foreclosure and sale shall read as follows:
Beginning at a point S. 79 degrees E.
115 ft. from the H. E. corner of block 3,
Lard,
in the town of Coquille City, as the said
For These and Other Good Buys see
block is laid out and numbered on the
original plat of said town as filed and
Hams,
recorded in the office of the County
Clerk of said Coos County, Oregon, run­
We Carry
Bacon,
ning thence S. 79 degrees E. along the
N. side of First Street in said town 24
ft.; thence N. parallel to Hall Street in
Sausage,
said town, 100 ft. or more; thence N.
79 degrees west 24 ft.; thence 8 . 100
Fresh and ^alt Meats.
feet or more, to place of beginning; that
Office on First Street, Op. Hotel Baxter. Phone Main 591
the date of the certificate of acknowl-
edgemnt of said mortgage be reformed We are heaaquarters for everything in the meat line. Your
to read the 5th day of May, 1904; for his
wants always receives prompt attention.
costs and disbursments in this suit and
for such other and further relief as to
the court may seem meet and equitable. COQUILLE V A L L E Y PACKING CO.
Service of this summons is made by
publication in pursuance of an order
made by the Hon. John F. Hall,
County Judge of Coos County, Oregon,
dated the 7th day of March, 1910.
J. J. S t a n l b y ,
Attorney for Plaintiff, Coquille, Oregon.
parnjers
ai)d Merchants
of Coquille
Bat)H
p iO N E E R M E fIT M A R K E T
STUTSM AN
&
CO.
Burn the...
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION.
Notice is hereby given, that by an or­
der of the County Court of Coos Coun
ty, Oregon, made on tho 15th day of De­
cember, 1909, Minnie Smith was duly
appointed Administratrix of the estate
of Charles B. Wilkins, dececsed, and
that letters testamentary have been du­
ly issued to the said Minnie Smith, and
that she is now qualified and acting.
Therefore all persons having claims
against the said estate are hereby
notified to present the same with
proper vouchers attached, to the said
Administratrix at Coquille, Oregon,
within six months from the 9th day of
February, 1910, the final publication of
this notice.
MINNIE SMITH,
Administratrix of the estate of Charles
B. Wilkins, deceased.
Geo. P. Topping,
Attorney for Estate.
ROUSE C O A L
Incandescent
Electric Light
Pres*
Accepted throughout the civilized world
the
as the most universally satisfactory il­
Buton
THE BEST COAL
IN COOS COUNTY
$5 Per Ton
luminant for all purposes the Cleanest
Leave Orders With
Most Convenient, and the CHEAP
and
here
you
EST light known.
Harry
Flanders
Or STUTTSMAN & CO., Phone Wain
591
That furnished by the C O Q U IL L E
R IV E R
E L E C T R IC
CO
is
first
have
class and up to date in every respect
it
The rates place it within reach of all
Do You Intend to Build?
Frank Morse, Prop., Coquille
Did you stop to consider that a building made
out of cement blocks is almost indestructable
and fireproof?
Did you stop to consider that the first cost is almost the
last cost?
Did you stop to consider that sand and gravel, washed and
cleaned by the ocean, together with proper proportion of
Portland cement, makes the finest blocks and bricks in the
world.
Yours for business,
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice is hereby given that the un­
dersigned, Charles I. Kime, w as, by or­
der of the County Court of the State of
Oregon, for the County of Coos, duly
made and entered on the 4th day of
EQUIPPED WITH WIR e L e S.
January, 1910, appointed administrator
of the estate of J, H. Kime, deceased.
All persons having claims against said
estate are required to present the same,
with proper vouchers, to the under­
COQUILLE CON CRETE WORKS
signed, at Myrtle Point, Coos County,
Oregon, within six months from the
Capt. E. D. Parsons
date of this notice.
Dated this 26th dav of January, 1910.
CHARLES I. KIME,
Administrator of the Estate of J. II.
Kime, deceased.
Sails from Portland Saturdays at 8 p m.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Notice is hereby given that the under­
Sails from Coos Bay Tuesdays at service of tide.
signed has been appointed executrix of
the Last Will and Testament of David
TH0S. B. JAMES, Agt Sails From Ainsworth Dock, Portland, Wednesdays at 8 P. M.
Mathers, deceased ; and all persons hav­ GEO. MULT0N, Agt.
ing claims against the said estate are re­
Marshfield
Coquille
quired to present them, with the proper
vouchers, within six months from the
W.
F.
M ILLER ,
Agent,
Marshfield,
Oregon
date of this notice, to the undersigned
executrix, at the office of J. J. Stanley,
PAUL L. STERLING. AGENT. COQUILLE, PHONE NO. 181
in the city of Coquille, Coos County,
Oregon.
X. J. SHERWOOD Pre.
R. (. SHINE. Via e Prêt
Dated this 16th day of February, 1910. |
I. H. HAZARD, Cashier
0. C. SANFORD. Ant. Cashier
BESSIE MATHERS,
.3 5 1 C A L I B E R
Executrix of the Last Will and Testa­
ment of David .Mathers, Deceased.
Steamer
Alliance
Coos Bay and Portland
Portland and Coos Bay S. S. Line
RAMONA
Sails for Portland Every Saturday
Self-Loading Rifled
Board by Day, Weel^ or Month
A s its name indicates, this rifle reloads Itself, the
recoil o f the exploded cartridge doing the w ork.
T h is places the com plete control of the rifle under
the trigger firmer, w hich perm its rapid shooting
w ith great ease and accuracy. T h e .351 Caliber
H igh-Pow er cartridge, has tremendous killing
power, making it heavy enough for the largest game
Sample l^oonjs
W lN O M ESTE* R e p ì a t i n q A r m i O ”».,
Wickham
House
MRS. G. R. WICKHAM
Proprietress
Phone Main 13X.
Nice Bati)s
The safe and reliable twin-,
screw
Th<
and Speedy,
Str E izabe'i:
M a .t e
W it! m a k e r e « , i l s r t r i p , h v tu e e n
OOQU.IIe River an i ‘.an
,
F _ rancisco.
Partie« wishing coal from the
No Stop-ovar at Way Ports.
Route mine will tpply to Harry Electric T-'uhts. Everythin* in Fir
Fltodtrc.
®«e
F IR ST N A T IO N A L B A N K
OR C O Q U I i i ü B , O R E G O N ,
T r a n s a c ts a General B a n k in g B u sin ess
Catalogue fully describing t/iis rifle , “ The Cun
that shoots Through S t e e l,” sent upon request.
Special Attention Paid to
the Traveling Public.
C a p t. O la e n .
F u r N a is,
~ ~
S keels
vs.
. . . .
D esig ns
C opyrigh ts A
p trst-C laee
A T THE
to w rite for our confidential le tte r before a p - |
plying for p a te n t; it may b# w orth -nor,~_
W e prom ptly o btain U. 3. and F o rd a
PATENTS
charges are m oderate.
Scientific American.
A handsomely llhintrated weekly. I .arrest eta
0pp. U S. Patent Office,Washing! 1 , D.u.
_t _ on p _
atentability.
rKE E _ report
- ’New York
1
1
■ ■ ■ "■■ 11111
■
M e a ls a t a ll H ou rs
F r o m 6 a m to 9 p m .
Skookum Restaurant,
C. A. H A R R IN G T O N , Proprietor.
W e M a k e R a t o s to
re g u la r B o a rd e rs.
S p e c i a l A t t e n t i o n O l v e n to
C ö m m e p e itti M en
W e g "tèi
:v e l
thè
he ÍM
m ’*t legal service ami advice, and
1
otti
T ry us.
SWIFT
&CC,
P a lo n t
la w y e r s .
Got your table logs turned at
Quick A Currv’a. They have some
Branch Office, fl# F R t, Wi 'ashiDcton, D. C.
patterns already out.
Hard wood.
TRY AN AD IN THE HERALD
Cl per set.
MUNN
1
T I R E attorney’« fee. Kcnd mi«’' '*' T E I
ii ph<
hc:o and we send an I M M E
fA T
Anyoneiw*nd!r.f a sketch and description may
quickly »»certain onr opinion free w hether an
IW n tio n 1» probably patentable. Common»«*
none strictly confldentlol. HANDBOOK on I m eats
sent frea. oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn A Co. .eoetve
tpecial notice, w ithout ch»r*o. in tb s
m latlon o f any scientific lonm al. Term«, f 3 a
year: four m onths, |L Mold by all newsdealer*.
■■
S e rv ie « .
• n . i T B A D E M A n K S ;>r r.-f
c .
Correipondenta
N atio n al Bank o Comm erce. New Y o rk ( it
C rocker W o ol worth N ’lB an k , San F rancise
F irs t N a t’l B an k of P o itlar« ', F oitlar« .
111
N ew H aven , O o n n .
« t —« nc^Karani
6 0 YEARS*
EXPERIEN CE
P atents
Bo»rd • ( Director»
R. O. D em ent,
A . J . Sherwood,
L . H arlocker,
L . H . H azard,
Isaiah H acker.
R . E. Shine.
F R E D
S L A G L E
T A IL O R
C O Q U IL L E .
-
.
OREGON
»