Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Coquille herald. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1905-1917 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1914)
Every Part uf the Art of L A U N D E R IN G « Has Had Our Careful Attention ÍU1 InJ E s OF It is our business, so it is necessary that we use the very best and latest methods to turn out the best work possible By MARY ROBERTS RINEHART Our service is at your command. If you are not already a customer we would l»e glad to add you to our host of satisfied patrons. COQUILLE LAUNDRY X ILL CO. Str. Elizabeth Regular as the Clock San Francisco a n d Bandon ♦7.50 3.00 First-class fare only Up freight, per ton E. & E. T. Kruse 2 4 C a lifo rn ia S tr e e t, S an F ra n c is c o For Reservations J. E. NORTON A g e n ts, C o q u ille , O re g o n Copyright, 1913, by the Bobbs-Merrill Company SYNOPSIS But even old Isaac choked up at that, J w in ie B ric e a n d h e r h u s b a n d , L a d le y , and I closed the door on him. •‘How queer!" Lida said, looking at q u a rre l. S h e d is a p p e a r s f r o m M rs. P i t m a n 's b o a r d in g h o u s e d u r in g a P itt s b u r g h me. "So Isaac knew your mother? flood. Have you lived always in Allegheny, M rs. P itm a n r e c a lls t h a t H o w e ll, a r e p o rte r , w a s w ith J e n n ie B r ic e a n d L a d le y Mrs. PitmanT* I was born in Pittsburgh." I evaded. s h o r tly b e f o r e J e n n ie d is a p p e a r e d . H o lc o m b e fin d s in c r im in a tin g e v id e n c e ; ^ w e n t a w a y f o r a lo n g t i m e , b u t I in L a d le y ’s room . A n o n y x c lo c k is m is s - a l w a y s lo n g e d f o r t h e h u r r y a n d a c - ing. M rs. P itm a n 's k n if e h a s b e e n s to le n t i v i t y o f t h e o ld h o m e t o w n . S o h e r e a n d b ro k e n . | a m a g a in ." L a d le y is a r r e s te d , b u t as n o b o d y n a a 1 F o r t u n a t e l y , l i k e a l l t h e y o u n g , her d e n c e f ° Un<J h e *" re le a a e d f o r ,a c k o f ®v l* ; o w n a f f a i r s e n g r o s s e d h e r . S h e was H u sh e d w ith th e p r o s p e c t o f m e e tin g H o lc o m b e b e lie v e s L a d le y Is g u ilty , her lover, tremulous over what the j L a d le y r e t u r n s to M rs. P itm a n 's . H o l evening might bring. The middle aged co m b e w a tc h e s h im th r o u g h t h e ce ilin g . A w o m a n 's h e a d le s s b o d y Is fo u n d . H o w ell w a s s e e n w ith a v e ile d w o m a n r e se m b lin g J e n n i e B ric e th e n ig h t s h e d is a p p e a re d . I VT I j J no o n e c a n id e n tif y th e h e a d le s s b o d y , w h ic h h a s a n o d d s c a r on th e b r e a s t , L a d le y Is r e a r r e s t e d . * A p p a r e n tly J e n n ie B ric e w a s a l iv e t h r e e d a y s a f t e r h e r d is a p p e a r a n c e , a n d th i s f a c t is k n o w n b y H o w ell. L a d le y 's tr i a l begins. A lice M u r r a y , a s te n o g r a p h e r , w ith w h o m L a d le y Is I n f a tu a te d , h a s d is a p p e a re d f r o m h e r h o m e T h e e v id e n c e f a v o rs L a d le y . H o lc o m b e a p p e a r s w ith a m y s te r io u s w itn e ss . H o w e ll te stifie s t h a t h e to o k J e n n ie B r ic e a l iv e a w a y fro m P itt s b u r g h . D r. L ittle fie ld Id en tifies th e s c a r o n t h e 11,7™ " V o w e l ? arn d .,8 a y s s ,'° w a s J e n n ie B ric e . H o w e ll. L a d le y a n d J e n n ie h a d p la n n e d a f a k e m u r d e r f o r a d v e r t is in g p u rp o s e s . woman who had come back to the hurry of the old town, and who, push ed back Into an eddy of the flood dis trict, could only watch the activity and the life from behind a "Rooms to Let” sign, did not concern her much. Nor should she have. Mr. Howell came soon after. He asked for her, and, going back to the dining room, kissed her quietly. He had an air of resolve, a sort of grim determination, that was a relief from the liaIf frantic look he had worn be fore. He asked to have Mr. Holcombe brought down, and so behold us all, four of us. sitting around the table— Mr. Holcombe with bis notebook. 1 ______ my __ ________ _ ___ ______ ^ with niwi> with mending and _ the boy o n e o f i.id n s h a n d s f r a n k l y u n d e r his (>n t h e r e d t l l b |e c l o t h . I “I want to tell all of you the whole story," he began. "Tomorrow I shall CHAPTER XIII. j go to the district attorney and con- O R E G O N a n d W A S H IN G T O N | |FTEU twenty-four hours’ de- less, but—I want you all to have it | | liberation the jury brought in first. 1 can’t sleep again until I get a verdict of guilty. It was a It off my chest Mrs. Pitman has suf A D irecto ry of ea ch City, Tow n an d first degree verdict. Mr. How fered through me. and Mr. Holcombe V illage, g iv in g d escrip tiv e s k e tc h of ell’s unsupported word had lost out here has spent money and time"— ea ch place, location, population, te le against a scar. grap h , sh ip p in g a n d b an k in g p o in t; Lida did not speak, but she drew her also C lassified D irectory, com piled by Contrary to my expectation, Mr. Hol chair closer and put her other hand business an d profession- combe was not jubilant over the ver over hks. dict. He came Into the dining room "I want to get it straight, if I can. that night and stood by the window, Let me see. It was on Sunday, the R. L. P O L K CO., S E A T T L E looking out into the yard. 4th. that tile river came up, wasn’t it? "It isn’t logical," he said. "In view Yes. Well, on the Thursday before of Howell’s testimony. It’s ridiculous! that I met you, Mr. Holcombe, in a Heaven help us under this jury sys restaurant in Pittsburgh. Do you re tem, anyhow! Look ut the facts! How member?" Incorporated ell knows the woman. lie sees her on Manufacturers of Mr. Holcombe nodded. Monday morning and puts her on a ‘We were talking of crime, and T The Celebrated Bergmann Shoe train out of town. The boy is telling Bald no man should be hanged on pure- T he S tro n g e st and N earest W ater tlie truth. He has nothing to gain by ]y circumstantial evidence. You af- P r io f shoe made for loggers, m iners coming forward and everything to lose, firmed that a well linked chain of clr- prospectors and m ill men. V ery well, she was alive on Monday, j cumstantial evidence could properly 621 T hurm an S tre e t We know where she was on Tuesday hang a man. We had a long argument, and Wednesday. Anyhow, during in which I was worsted. There was a P o b t l a n d , O kkgon . those days her gem of a husband was third man at the table-Bronson, the 'D J a"r He was freed Thursday night, business manager of the Liberty the- and from that time until his rearrest a ter" Notice ot Sheriffs Sale on the following Tuesday, I had him "Who sided with you," put in Mr. under observation every moment. He Holcombe, "and whose views I refused By virtue of an execution duly issued left the jail Thursday night, and on to entertain because as publicity man by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the Saturday the body floated in at Se- # . .. . . . County of Coos State of Oregon, dated wlckley. If It was done by Ladley It 7 U lheater he de"lt ln ,icUon rather • the 13th day of June, 1914, in a certain must have been done on Friday, and than in fact. "Precisely. You may recall. Mr. Hol action in the Circuit Court for said on Friday he was in view through the combe, that you offered to hang any County and State wherein Walter Sin periscope all day!" clair as Plaintiff recovered judgement Mr. Reynolds came in and joined us. man we would name given a proper against The Salmon Mountain Coarse "There’s only one way out that I see." chain of circumstantial evidence Gold Mining Company Defendant for the sum of Three hundred Eighty-one he said mildly. "Two women have ' °8aln8t KimT “Yes." & (10-100 Dollars and costs and disburse been fool enough to have a name tat- "After you left Bronson spoke to me. ments taxed at Twenty-three & 00-100 tooed over their hearts. No woman He said business at the theater was ever thought enough of me to have my Dollars, on the 9th day uf May, 1914, Lad and complained of the way the Notice is hereby given that I will on name put on her." Saturday the Nth day of August 1914 "I ho|>e not," I retorted. Mr. Rey papers used, or would not use, his stuff. at the front door of the County Court nold’s first name is Zachariah. He said the Liberty theater had not House in Coquille in said County,' at Hut. as Mr. Holcombe said, all that had a proper deal and that he was 10:00 o’clock in the forenoon of said had been proved was that Jennie Brire tempted to go over and bang one of day, sell at public auction to the high est bidder for cash, the following de was dead, probably murdered. He the company on the head, and so get could not understand the defense let a little free advertising. scribed property, to-wit: "I said he ought to be able to fake Commencing at the Southwest corner ting the case go to the Jury without of Section lii, Township 82, South of their putting more stress on Mr. How a good story, but he maintained that a Range 12 West; thence running South ell’s story. But we were to under newspaper could smell a faked story a 50 chs: whence West 30 chs; thence stand that soon, and many other mile away, und that, anyhow, all the South 10 chs; thence West 5 chs; thence things. Mr. Holcombe told me that good stunts had been pulled off. I Soutn 20 chs; thence East 35 chs; thence evening of learning from John Bellows North 20 chs: thence East 10 chs; of the tattooed name on Jennie Brice agreed with him. 1 remember saying thence North 60 chs; thence West 10 and of how, after an almost endless that nothing but a railroad wreck or chs; to the place of beginning. Said search, he had found the man who had a murder hit the public very bard these tract being known as the Salmon Moun cut the name away. days and that I didn’t feel like wreck tain Placer Claims, containing one hun At 8 o’clock the doorbell rang. Mr. ing the Pennsylvania limited. dred sixty acres, more or less, also a "He leaned over the table and looked quartz claim commencing at a post of Reynolds had gone to lodge, he being at me. ‘Well, bow at)out a murder, the Long Tunnel, or better known as an Klk and several other things and the More Tunnel, on the West end of much given to regalia In boxes and then?’ he said. ‘You get the story for Salmon Mountain, and running in a having his picture in the newspapers your paper and I get some advertising Northerly direction lini feet to a fir In different outlandish costumes. Mr. for the theater. We need it, that’s tree, marked (1), which is the supposed Pitman used to say that man. being sure/ center line of the claim; thence in a denied his natural love for barbaric "1 laughed it off, and we separated. Westerly direction, 300 feet to a stake But at 2 o’clock Bronson called me up marked (2); thence in a Southerly di adornment in his everyday clothing, again. I met him in his office at the rection, 1500 feet to a Cedar tree i took to the different fraternities as an theater, and he told me that Jennie marked (3); thence in an Easterly di excuse for decking himself out. But rection, 600 feet to a fir tree marked this has nothing to do with the door Brice, who was out of the cast that week, had asked for a week’s vacation. (4); thence in a Northerly direction, j bell. 1500 feet to a stake marked five; thence It was old Isaac. He bad a basket She had heard of a farm at a town 300 feet to a stake marked (1); thence I in his hand, niul he stepped Into the called Horner, and she wanted to go 100 feet to the place of beginning, and hall and placed It ou the floor. there to rest. also a Placer Claim filed upon by Phil " ‘Now the idea is this,’ he said. "Evening, Miss Bess." he said. "Can ip Guthardt, lying North of the last de ‘She's living with her husband, and scribed claim and also the Guthardt you see a bit of company tonight?" "I can alwuys see you," I replied. he has threatened her life more than Quartz claim on the West end of Sal mon Mountain, described as follows, to- But he had not meant himself. He once. It would be easy enough to wit: Beginning at a post at the mouth stepped to the door and, opening it, frame up something to look ns if he’d of Discovery Tunnel, thence running beckoned to some one across the street. made away with her. We’d get a week of excitement, more advertising in a Northerly direction to a post It was Lida! marked North centerpost; thence run She came in. her color a little height than we'd ordinarily get in a year. ning in a Westerly direction, ;JOO feet ened. and old Isaac stood back, beam You g»*t a corking news story and find to a post marked N. W. C. thence run Jennie Brice at the end, getting the ning in a Southerly direction, 1500 feet ing at ns both. I believe It was one credit for that. Jennie gets $100 and to a [Hist marked S. W. <... thence run of the crowning moments of the old a rest, and Ladley. her husband, gets, ning in aii Easterly direction 300 feet to man’s life—thus to see his Miss Bess say. $£00.’ the South Center Stake; thence in an and Alma's child together. "Mr. Bronson offered to put up the Easterly direction 300 feet to a post "Is—Is he here yet?" she asked me money, and I agreed. The flood came marked S. E. C. thence in a Northerly nervously. Just then and was considerable help. . direction, 1500 feet to a [lost marked N. "1 did not know he was coming." E. C. thence in a Westerly direction, There was no need to ask which • he." It made a good setting. I went to my 300 feet to a post marked North Cen- There was only one for Lida. city tslitor und got an assignment to Stake situated in the Johnson Creek interview Ladley about this play of "He telephoned me and asked me to and Salmon Mountain Mining District, his. Tbcai Bronson and I went togeth and being adjacent to and lapping over come here. Oh. Mrs. Pitman. I’m so er to see the Lmlleys on Sunday morn* the Salmon Mountain Placer Claims as afraid for him!" She had forgotten ing. and ns they needed money they described in this instrument, all in l oos Isaac. I turned to the schoolteacher's County, State of Oregon. Taken and room and opened the door. "The wom agreed. But Ladley Insisted on $50 a levied upon as the pronerty of the said an who belongs here Is out at a lec week e.’itrn if he had to go to Jail. We defendants or so much thereof as may ture.’* I said "Come in here, ikkle. j promised it. hut we did not intend to b e necessary to satisfy the said judg and I'll find the evening paper for let thiugs go so far as that. ment in favor of Plaintiff against said you." "In the Ladleys’ room that Sunday defendants with interest thereon, at morni ng we worked It all out. The "•Ikkle!” ’ said Lida, and stood star hardest t h e rate of 6 per cent per annum from thing was to get Jennie Brice’s t h e 9th day of May, !9;4 together with ing at me. I think I went white. cons* mt. but she agreed finally. We "The Indy heah and I Is old frl»*uds." arranged a list of clews to be left all costs and disbursements that ha\e or may accrue. Isaac said, with his splendid manner. nrou nd, and Ladley was to go out In W . W . G age "Her uiothab. Miss Lida, her moth- I the night and u > be beard coming back. 7-7-5t Sheriff, ____ _______ . L ii ild. him. tv_ uurffrel with Ills, wife • P O L K ’ S' B u sin e ss D irectory ( id that afternoon,'"although 1 don’t be | lleve they needed to be asked to do it —and I suggested also the shoe or slip per to be found floating around." "Just a moment," said Mr. Holcombe, busy with his notebook. "Did you sug gest the ouyx clock?" "No, no clock was mentioned. The —the clock hus puzzled me." "The towel?" "Yes. I said no murder was com plete without blood, but be kicked on that—said he didn’t mind the rest, but he’d be hanged If he was going to slash himself. But, as it happened, he cut his wrist while cutting the boat loose, and so we had the towel." "Pillow slip?’’ asked Mr. Holcombe. "Well, uo. There was nothing said about a pillowslip. Didn’t he say he burned it accidentally?” "So he claimed.” Mr. Holcombe made uuother entry in his book. "Then 1 said every murder had a weapon. lie was to have a pistol at first, but none of us owned one. Mrs. Ladley undertook to get a knife from Mrs. Pitman’s kitchen ami to leave it around, not in full view, but where it could be found." "A brokeu knife?" "No; just a knife." "He was to throw the knife into the water?" "That was not arranged. 1 only gave him a genera! outline. He was to adil any interesting details that might occur to him. The idea, of course, was to give the police plenty to work on and just when they thought they had It all and when the theater had had a lot of booming and I had got a good story, to produce Jennie Brice safe and well. We were not to appear in It at all. It would have worked perfectly, but we forgot to count on one thing—Jennie Brice hated her husband." "Not really bated him!" cried Lida. "Hated him! She Is letting him hang. She could save him by coming forward now, and she won’t do it She is hiding so he will go to the gal lows." There was a pause at that. It seem ed too incredible, too inhuman. "Then early that Monday morning you smuggled Jennie Brice out of the city?" "Yes; that was the only thing we bungled. We fixed the hour a little too late, and 1 was seen by Miss Har vey’s uncle walking across the bridge with a woman." “Why did you meet her openly and take her to the train?” Mr. Howell bent forward and smiled across at the little man. "One of your own axioms, sir,” he said. "Do the natural thing; upset the customary or der of events as little as possible. Jen nie Brice went to the train because that was where she wanted to go. But as Ladley was to protest that his wife had left town, and as the police would be searching for a solitary woman, I went with her. We went in a leisure ly manner. I bought her a magazine and a morning paper, asked the con ductor to fix her window, and, in gen eral, acted the devoted husband see ing his wife off on a trip. I even"—he smiled—"I even promised to feed the canary." Lida took her hands away. "Did you kiss her good by ?” she demanded. "Not even a chaste salute," he said. His spirits were rising. It was, as of ten happens, as if the mere confession removed the guilt. I have seen little boys who have broken a window show the same relief after telling about it. “For a day or two Bronson and I sat back, enjoying the stir up. Things turned out as we tfad expected. Busi ness boomed at the theater. I got a good story, and some few kind words from my city editor. Then—the ex plosion came. I got a letter from Jen nie Brice saying she was going away, and that we need not try to find her. I went to Horner, but I had lost track of her completely. Even then, we did not believe things so bad as they turn ed out to be. We thought she was giving us a bad time, but that she would show up. “Ladley was in a blue funk for a time. Bronson and I went to him. We told him how the thing had slipped SUl''1 “ »vreniuliig for the polite tba't * J. INERW000 Pm . our meeting broke up. .\or would Mr. 1------ l. N. HA/AKD, C m NI ii Holcombe explain any further. K ( SHINE, V. Tros C SANFORD, Am. Cuhlo FIR ST N ATIO NAL BANK (To be continued uext w eek) * -•* ------- --- - OP C O Q U IlillB , O RBG O fli For County Surveyor T r a n s a c t » a G e n e r a l H a n k in g H ubinesb I hereby announce myself an in dependent candidate for ihe office Store ot Dlroetere. 1 Ctr rsM saesaU of county surveyor of Coos Conntv, H. O. lwu.u i, A. J. Sherwood, National Bank of Commerce,New York City Oregon. I am a regular graduate L. Harlook.tr, I,. H. Hazard, Crocker Woolwortb N ’l Bank, San Francisc of the Kansas Slate Agricultural f.aiah Hacker, K. K. Shin.-. First Nutionall Bank of Portland, Portland College, class of 1884 Engaged I for 14 years in the location, con-1 struction and maintenance ol tail | roads, with the C. B. & Q. Ry , R . 8 . K n o w l t o n , President G e o . A . R o b i n s o n , Vice-Pres. Mo Pac. Ry , A. T . & S. F. Rv , R . H . M a s t , Cashier. C. R I. & . Pac. Ry., and for 10 years employed in iriigaliou and raining engineering work. Am al so a member ot the Oieg n Slate Society of Engineers. Mill you support me a! the polls? C O Q U ILLE. OREGON E H. K E R N Farmers Merchants Bank Opened for Busmes March. 1 8 9 0 Notice to Creditors In the County Court of the State of Oregon In and Eor the County of Coos. In the Matter of the Estate of Mi chael Grant, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been duly appointed ad ministrator of the estate of Michael Grant, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same duly veri fied as by la\y required to the under signed at the office of John I). Goss, 1st Natl. Bank Bldg., Marshfield, Coos County, Oregon within six months from the date of this notice. Dated this 26th day of May 1914. Eugene Grant 5-26-5t Administrator. co rrespo n d en ts : Ladd & Tilton Bank, Portland National Park, New York First National Bank, San Francisco First Trust & Savings, Coos Bay - Ts (CHO-- .TÄ-ii-SHO- ’T>- OLD RELIABLE-EQUIPPED WITH WIRELESS ij STEAMER BREAKWATER ALWAYS ON TIME $ Sails from Portland at 8 A. M., July 2nd, 7th, 12th, 17th, 22nd, 27th. Notice Io Creditors (JF Sails from Coos Bay In the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Coos. In the Matter of the Estate of Mary L. Peterson, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been duly appointed Ex ecutor with the will annexed, of the es tate of Mary L. Peterson, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same duly verified as by law re quired, to the undersigned at the law office of C. R. Barrow, over Geo. A. Robinson’s store, Coquille, Coos county, Oregon, within six months from the date of this notice. Dated this 30th day of June, 1914. Elson M. Peterson, Executor. C. R. Barrow, attorney tor Executor. 6-30-51. E a s ie r T h a n and R id in g . "The president of this road.” remark ed the man in the corner of the smok ing compartment, "is one of those old fashioned railroaders. He began as brakeman. Instead of riding over the line in a private ear to inspect it be walks over it." "I don’t blame him.” declared the man who was making his first trip ou the road.—Exchange. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Reported for The Herald by the Title Guarantee and Abstract Co. June 15 Hannah Johnson to John Johnson, war deed parcel of land adjoining blk 21 Bandon. $10 Hannah Johnson to John Johnfon, war deed 1 acre in sec 36 twp 28 s r 15 w. w. in. $10 F. A. Holman et ux to Leroy F. Par ker, war deed lots 1, 2, 3, blk 11, Azalea Park add to Bandon. $1000 June 16 S. Vanderbrug to Lewis E. Doll, war deed lotR 12, 13 & 14 blk 20 Bay Park. $10 At 12:30 P. M., July 4th, 9th I lth, 19th, 24th, 29th. ill: P. L. STERLING, Agent t _ _ ^ _ Phone Main 181 r q tit, I .i-S, &>&>i:-o®s*oo<xw>oooooooooeo<% ^ Fred Von Pegcrt I 61ME C. I. Kime & VON PEGERT GARAGE X Machine Shop G e n e r a l ‘‘lacksmithing. U Wagon Making, bachino ^ Work, Pattern Making. COQUILLE, OREGON ___________ Roseburg Myrtle Point Stage And Auto Line Leaves Myrtle Point 7 a. Arrives Roseburg, 5 p. Leaves Roseburg 6 a. Arr. Myrtle Pointby5 p. in. in. m. in. Make reservations in advance at Owl Drug Store, Marshfield. Carrying Baggage- and United Stales Mail J. L. LAIRD, Proprietor Office al Laird’s Livery Barn, Myrtle Point, Both Phones 60 C E N T S i i Chas J. Whealy et ux to Alva Doll, war deed lot 15 1)1 k 2 Azalea Park add Why not have an extension telephone installed in to Bandon. $10 your residence, the price has been reduced to Nicholas R. Reichert to Geo. Doll, 60 cents per month. Think of the un war deed lots 12 & 13 blk 14 Railroad add to Marshfield. $10 necessary steps this will save you. John T. Clsen et ux to C. W. Mynatt et ux, war deed of °f of Coos B a y Home Telephone Co. ew >4 sec 4 twp 25 s r 12 w w m. $600 Main Office Marshfield, Oregon C. W. Mynatt et ux to J. T. Olsen et ux, bond for deed ehj of e% of 8W^ of sw% sec 4 twp 25 s r 12 w w m. $600 Katie Arnold et vir to Floyd O Reed, $750. war deed 29 acres in sec 16 twp 29 s r 12 fler, w d swt 4 of nw'4 swj^, sec 26, tp lot 2, blk 26, North Bend, $300. w w m. $7000 2 6 s r l 4 w w m , June 24 Florence Warner et vir to School Dis R. T. Cowgili to R. J. Hurd, q c deed 1-3 interest in lots 31 and 32, blk 44, trict No. 52, w d parcel of land for r C. A. Smith Timber Co. to Frederick North Bend. $10 school house in sec 28, tp 30 s r w w m, I A. Warner, Trustee, w d right of way $ 10 . I for railroad over various lands on South June 17 j Fork of Coquille, $10. Southern Oregon Co. et al to Margu- June 20 Chas. Stauff et ux to Geo. Watkins, riete Bridges, war deed lots 7 & 8 blk E. B. Taylor et ux to Mary Randle- j q c d ne >4 of ne1.., sec 7, tp 25 s r 12 w 29, Perham Park add to Marshfield $10 man, q c d s,!^ of seL, sec 20 & w'.J of w m, $10. U. S. of A. to Dolly J. Smith. Patent ne'4, sec 29, tp 27 s r 13 w w m, $10. June 25 e!o of ne1^ A lots 1 & 2 sec 30 twp 20 s Reynolds Development Co. to M. J. M. 1!. Tuttle et ux to E. N. Teni|iest et r 13 w w m. Campbell, s war deed lots 10 & 11, blk J al w d, n'., of n«,!( of lot 4 sec 13 twp U. S. of A. to Hiram C. Wright. Pat- 16, First add to Marshfield, $600. j 29 s r 14 w »■ m. $10 tent e l 2 of sw1* it lots 3 A 4 sec 30 twp W. L. Green et ux to Mr. & Mrs. J. Mintie Howard to Henry H.Lehmkul 1 29 s r 13 w w m. W. Kubbernuss, w d lots 8 & 9. blk 18, Bennett Trust Co. et al to Marshfield amended plat of Breakwater add to 1 w d, lot 1 blk 2 Portland add to Bandon $10 Lodge No. 1160 B. P. O. E. war deed Bandon, O *-Kc $300. lot 7 blk 8 Marshfield. Alex Hakvist et ux to Otto Richter “ S h e is h id in g s o he w ill g o to th e C. A. Smith et ux to E. W. Wright, g a llo w s /' Thoe Barklow et ux to Clarence M. q c d lot 11, blk 5, E. B. Dean & Co’s, w d, lot 3 blk 3, Runkertiill add to Marshfield. $250 up. We didn’t want to go to the po- Barklow et ux, war deed parcel of land second add to Marshfield, $1. $800 j June 26 lice and confess if we could help it. in Myrtle Point. Geo. Witte to E. S. Gordon, agree Finally he agreed to stick It out until ! Pillsbury Lumber Co. to Simpson U. 8. to Sarah .1. Fisher. Patent, she was found, at $100 a week. It took Lumber Co. war deed eb, of ne% sec j ment to convey lots 21 & 22, blk 13, lota 1 A 2 A ne'^ of nw1^ aec 24, twp North Bend, $4800. all we could beg. borrow and steal. 28 twp 24 8 r 11 w w m. $3200 29 a r 10 w w m. But now—we have to come out with June 22 June 18, 1914 the story anyhow.” W 1!. Hamilton to Kedellia A. Ham Geo. J. Schaefer et ux to L. T. Wil Mr. Holcombe sat up and closed his Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph I cox, w d lots 14 & 15, blk 9, Schaefer’s ilton w d, 12 interest in Iota 1 A 2, blk notebook with a snap. "I’m not so Co. to Pacific Telephone & Telegraph j $1 $275. 43 Coos Bay Plat. C. sure of that." he said impressively. “I Co., w d $10. Right of way heretofore add to Central Place, Margaret 1. Smith et vir to John H. wonder If you realize, young man. that, granted by J. A. Yoakam. Annie C. Isaacs et vir to G. A. Sav New man w d, lot 13 blk 30 Sunset Cltv having provided a perfect defense for age, war d eed '2 interest in lots 19 & June 19 this man Ladley. you provided him • $10 with every possible inducement to Reynolds Development Co. to Bertha 20, blk 22 & lot 12, blk 30, Coos Bay Frank A. Sscrhi et nx to Bennett $10 make away with his wife. Secure in F. Evans, s w d lot 9, blk 18, First add ; Plat C, Trust Co. w d, lots 1 2 3 4 blk 10, South your coming forward at the last min to Marshfield, $300. j Chas. S. Hoffman et ux to Mattie B. Marshfield. $1000 ute and confessing the hoax to save G. T. Treadgold et ux to C. R. Moore Shaw, w d lots 1 to 16 & 20 to 29, blk C. A. Smith Timber Co. to C. A. him, was there anything he might not $900. i Smith Kir Co. wr .1, lots 6 A 7 see 14 Ipw- w d lot 12, blk 16, Woodland add to 18, Boise add to Marshfield, have dared with impunity?" Bandon, $10. John Farley et ux to Cora Mabelle 31 g r 12 w w m. $1 "But I tell you I took Jennie Brice out of town on Monday morning." Marshfield Realty & Trading Co. to! Farley et al w d lot 1, blk 66, Empire Marshfield Realty A Trading Co. to "Did you?" asked Holcombe sternly. city of Marshfield, q c d Street and City, $1. | Michael C. Maloney w d, lots 1 A 2 blk But at that, the schoolteacher, hav Ferry slip, $10. June 23 6 Dean A Cos Second add to Marahtiehl. ing come home and found old Isaac , Milton Lattin et ux to Lizzie J. Stif- $10 T. T. Svalte to Howard N. Shaw w d ! pound asleep In,her coz^.coiner. tM^ug i i ■