V ol . Coquille HefalfL 27: No. 28. Entered a» «ecoud-cla«» matter May 8, 1905, at the poitolfice at Coquille, Oregon, under act of Congress of March 3,1879. DR. RICHMOND COQUILLE, COOS COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MAE CH 23, 1910. COUNTY COURT PROCEEDINGS. The Following it a Synopsis of the P H Y SIC IA N AND SURGEON. Proceedings ol the County Court Office over Rome's Store, Front St. March Term, 1910. OoquiLLK, O regon . Offloa Phone Main 211. I (Continued from last week ) ____________ I B J Harrison, monthly al­ lowance o f ...................... William Haines, monthly allowance o f .................. A. F. Kirshman, D bntibt . T . - . Oregon. " Dr. C. W. Endicott D kntibt Office on Front Street Phone Main 431. Coquille, Oregon E. D. SPERRY Attorney and Coanoellor at Law. Offloe in Robinson Building W. C . CHASE. ATTORNEY AT LAW Offio in Kobinaon Building, Upstairs T C. R. BARROW Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office Phone 335 Main Residence Phone 340 Main C oquill * C ity , O r * J. J. STANLEY LAW YER j Martin Building • Ï rent Stree W Culin, examining and visiting Updyke, insana 6 50 County Infirmary. P E Drane, merchandise.. 69 20 R S Knowltoo, d r u g s .... 11 15 J A Lamb & Co., hard­ ware..................... 31 50 Coquille Valley Packing Co., meat.......... 8 20 Geo A Robinson, mer­ chandise ......................... 23 50 Walter Hatcher, labor on form ........................................20 00 Skeels k Son, merchan­ dise ................................. 42 10 N Lorenz, merchandise.. 15 50 Land k Lyons, merchan­ dise ................................. 13 90 S H McAdams, sm ithing.. 1 50 Gerrao Mfg. Co., carbo- l i u e ..................... 14 26 Allan McLeod, salary as superintendent of farm 108 33 In Re Roads, Bridges and Perries. East Marshfield Ferry. Coos Bay Oil k Supply Co, oil ................................... 22 85 Pioneer Hardware Co, sup­ plies ................................ 3 10 C O Gosney, J cost of waiting room.................. 23 40 C A Smith Lumber k Mfg Co,lumber....................... 1 06 Alex Hall, captain.......... 120 00 T T GoldeD, e n g in e e r.... 140*00 Geo Rhode, deckhand . . . . 70 00 CoQUILLB, OREGON Coquille Ferry. T : I A. J. Sherwood, A t t o b n it - a t - L a w , N o t a it P ublic , Coquille, : : Oregon Walter Sinclair, A t t o b sk t - at - L a w , N otabt P u b l ic , Coquille, : : Oregon. Hall & Hall, A tto bsets - at L a w , Daalei In R e a i E s t a t e o f all kinds. M arshfield, O regon. E. G. D. Holden L aw teb , J u s t ic e o r thh P e ac e 8. Com m issioner,'General Insnranoe Agent, and Notary Pnblio. Offloe in Robinson Building. Coquille Oregon. if. E. W H IT M O R E . E. F. M OKRISSY Joos Bay Paving and struction general Plans Concrete Con­ Company. contractors anti 5 00 Insane, Office two door* Booth o f Pool offloe. Coquille 5 00 Estimates Given Bricks Stone and Timber Contractor. Phone 151-J Offices 117 Front Street, Marshfield Ore. heo. BcrpanShoe Mfg.Co. Incorporated, anufacturers of he Celebrated Berqmann Shoe he Strongest and Nearest Water roof shoe made for loggers, miners prospectors and mill men. 21 Thurman Street P o r t l a n d , O ik o o n . Inlormatior W anted Information is wanted as to the whereabouts of William Cogtelo. I have important news for him from Van Couyer, Washington. W. W. G aoe , Sheriff. ---- J N McNair* salary as ferryman........................ 100 00 J A Lamb k Co, cables, etc........................................ 91 70 Ira A Albee, 2 months sal­ ary as S 8 ferryman___ 100 00 R W Bullard, 2 months salary operating and maintaining Bullards ferry................................. 100 00 Geo S Davis, 300 loads of gravel, R D 16 ............ 15 00 Levi Smith, surveying S Slough R d ..................... 5 00 Johnson Lumber Co., lum­ ber for R D No 2 5 . . . . 11 09 Pioneer Hardware Co., powder, etc, R D No 14 39 50 Andrew Anderson, labor R D No 14...................... 21 00 A McNair, supplies for R D N o 14.......................... 21 95 Simpson Lumber Co., lum­ ber R D No 14.............. 4 75 Standard Oil Company, oil for East Marsh field ferry 10 50 George T Coleman, pike pole, socket wrenches, East Marshfield ferry 2 50 Marshfield Hardware Co., pad lock, paint brush, East Marshfield ferry 95 S H McAdams, irons and smithing, Coquille ferry 12 25 Ruben Hartley, labor South Fk Rd, R D No 23 8 00 S B Catbcart, surveying. South S R d ..................... 2 50 J H Milner, spikes eto H D No 8 ...................... 30 70 Work on Golden Falls K D No 6. Road Joseph Larson, la b o r .... 120 75 Joseph Schspers, labor. .. 69 50 Pioneer Hardware Co, p o w d e r ........................... 18 00 Alfred I'yberg, boarding and lodging men for Rd 128 55 Newel Price, labor.......... 78 60 Arthur Anderson, labor, 61 50 Max Dement Bridge R D No 23. J W Hall, labor and timber 55 50 A M Snyder, labor.......... 18 75 G W Barklow, labor........ 12 00 W F Slingeby, labor and supplies fu rn ish ed .... 217 60 Eroerv Goble, labor.......... 14 00 Leander Barklow, labor.. 14 00 A R Davenport, labor.. 41 00 John Toaksm, viewer on North Fork Rd ......... 6 60 Lloyd Spiers, viewer on K. Holverson, the tailor, has just received a large lot of sample* of suitings. Call and See them and CONTINUED ON FOURTH PAGE. get his prices. A W o rd to the Farmer« of the Coquille Valley $1.50 P er Y ear CHAS, A. HAYTER INSTANTLY KILLED Farmers, stop work a minute and think over the situation. Is your income sufficient for the labor and Employe of the Crane Logging Camp money invested? No it isn’ t. The Fhlls From Moving Train and middle men are howling prosperity Meets Horrible Death for the farmer. It is true that at the present time it is some better, Crane's logging camp, a short especially for a few who have spent half a life time getting a place im­ distance below Riverton, was the proved, and who have choice dairy scl ' ic o f a horrible accident on cows, far above the average. With Thursday afternoon at lour o ’clock, everything raising, trusts and com­ when Charles A. llayter, one of the bines flourishing nnd the boycott in workmen, was ipstantly killed by in New York, which is spreading falling in front of a heavily loaded At the time of the so rapidly, farmers have little show. train oflogs. accident Mr. Hayter was acting as How many farmers have you heard brakeman on the train, which was say, “ I can’t afford to hire.” I have heard many say that they can’ t pay on the way from the woods to the river. As the train was passing the wages that other industries pay. the blacksmith shop, Mr. Hayter This means that the farmer over­ works himself. It means with all threw from the tender on which he the money invested and his over­ was riding at the time, a l-butt chain which was in need of repairs. time, which is usually fourteen or fifteen hours per day, there isn’ t The chain was heavy, whighiag a hundred pounds or so, and in cast­ enough left after the taxes and ex­ ing off the heavy weight, he lost penses are met, to pay the going wages. Farms do not pay their his balance and was unable to again owuerB over 4 per cent on present recover his footing and fell between values of land. Figure it yourself. the engine and cars, the latter pass­ Cleared bottom now selling lor ing over his body, boraibly mangl­ ing it and causing instant death ¡8200 per acre rents for $10, which G. W. Sinclair was standing is less than 4 per cent after ex­ penses are taken out, saying nothing but a few feet away at the time of the accident but could not reach of soil exhaustion. Belter farming him in time to render assistance, requires skill, intelligence and that good business judgment be exer­ one pair of trucks having already passed him when he reached the cised, Like the successful merch­ spot and before the body could be ant, the farmer must be a good buy­ extricated eight wheels had passed er, good seller and a good manager. over it. To accomplish this the farmers must The deceased was born in Coos organize. Where they have united county, a son o f the well-known they are prosperous. The problem pioneer family of the late Mr. and is: To sell farm crops so enough Mrs. W. L. Hayter, who resided so money will return to the farm to keep many years on the Hayter home­ up improvements. stead near Arago, aud had he lived Middle men have combined or till the third of next month he individual corporations have grown would have been twenty-nine years so powerful that the price of every of age. He leaves a young wife farm crop nnd the distribution of it and two small children, beside six is controlled by them. Persons sisters and seven brothers to motim who have made a careful study of his sudden and untimely taking off, the problem report that only 32 per one of the latter, William, having cent of the money paid by the con­ gone to Alaska several years ago, sumer of farm products reach the and from whom no tidings have producer. That leaves 68 per cent been received. His whereabouts are in the bands of the middle men. Is unknown. it necessary to pay 68 per cent to Undertaker Arthur Ellingson pass the necessities of life from the went down on the evening of the producer of them to the consumer? accident and brought the remains Does it not impress the reader that to Coquille and prepared them for a system that exacts so much toll is burial. a very expensive one? Is it not The funeral services were held at time, and particularly in view of the M. E. Church, South, and were the revolt against the high cost of conducted by Bev. C. H. Cleaves, on Saturday, on the arrival of the living, to make an ernest attempt steamer Dispatch. toward better business methods on Interment took place in the the farm, in marketing farm produce Masonic cemetery, and the remains and equalize between the producer were followed to their last resting and consumer. Situated as we aro place Dy a large concourse of sor­ rowing relatives and friends from on the Coquille river w ith reasonable Myrtle Point, Arago, Coquille, Riv- transportation to San Francisco and ton and Band on. The bereaved Portland, the best markets on the wife and little ones have the sym­ Pacific coast, all we need do is to pathy of the entire community. ......... ... * * • * -------------------- organize, pack and grade in an up- F o r D lR enM ’Pi o l Ih c S k in . to-date manner, ship in bulk and Nearly all diseases of the skin the association dispose of it as the such as eczema, tetter, salt rheum market demands. When a farmer and barbers’ itch, are characterized now takes hi« produce to the city by an intense itching and smarting, which often makes life a burden the first question asked him is what and disturbs sleep and rest. Quick farmer’s union he represents and he relief may be had by applying is told that his goods would sell Chamberlain’s Salve. It allays the better if they bore the brand of an itching and smarting almost in­ Many cases have been association. Conditions are chang­ stantly. cured by its use. For sale by R. ing and we must be up to date. S. Knowlton. The Farmer’s Union in the United New Plant for Bandon. States are becoming strongly rooted. There are thousands in the East. The Bandon Recorder says: The A great many states are strongly construction o f the new Perry ve­ organized. Texas farmers got their neer plant is now well under way, cotton raised. California her dried fruit, Washington and Eastern and the building will be completed Oregon their grain besides many and the machinery installed ready other things. Read the Pacific for operation in the near future. Farmer’s Umon, the official paper When completed it will be a mod­ published at Pullman, Wash., and ern plant in every particular, and the Equity Farm Journal published at Indianapolis, Ind. The organizer Mr. Perry will be able to turn out (Mr. Hill) for the Farmer's Educa­ the finished product in bis line at a tional and Co-operative Union of very rapid rate. In the meantime America will be in Coos county in a he has been obliged to start up and short time. Think it over. In run at the old stand for a while in bettering farm conditions it will mean considerable. It means that order to meet the demand of orders we can clear off the brush nnd already in. Mr. Perry is very much stumps and Dave better conditions encouraged with the outlook lor for our children. The agitation for busines at all times. He is in­ belter road», Port Commission, etc., stalling the most modern machinery can be easily solved, for the farmer then can build his own roads and | obtainable and the plant will be up likewise the ports, for there would ' to date in every particular. be ten times as much «hipping, riP M iM n i r i i j k i f . Don’ t knock, don’ t say the farmers When you want a pleasant physic won’ t stick together, for they will, snd the Grange is not all we need; give Chsmberlain’s Stomach nnd we need everything that will help Liver Tablets a trial. They are us, especially the modern society mild and gentle in their action and ot the Farmer’s Educational Union of America, which meets pesent always produce a pleaaant cathartic conditions. effect. Call at R. S. Knowlton’a A F armer . drugstore. a HURRY Or Your Neighbors W ill all Know That SECRET Before you do. Y ou will also be M issing a Great Opportunity by not Investing while these Lots are Cheap