home Herald 1883-89 1890 series | 1894 1895 1896 to newspaper menu Historical Newspapers, OREGON [Herald 1893 is currently only a fragmentary record.} COQUILLE CITY HERALD Coquille, OR. [M. 2008. keywords need updating] YOU DO NOT HAVE PERMISSION TO PUBLISH (or show publicly) THIS FULL DOCUMENT. For permission to copy excerpts. click here. Compilation copyright (c) 2007 by Marilee Miller 1891 ------------ none 1892 ---------------none 1893 OCTOBER [ P-1] CCH Tue, Oct 10, 1893. (Vol 12, no 2) [fm CCH microfilm, evidently the only existing 1893 issue] Poetry Lhc-ref P-1 CCH Oct 10, 1893 For the Coquille City Herald. OREGON. By H. B. Swafford. Iv'e [print] traveled over many lands— Lands fair as e'er the sun shone on; Where beauty smiles and wealth abounds, But none more fair than Oregon. With rapture high I've viewed earth's scenes— Scenes which no human pen or tongue Could half describe -- yet none more fair Than the fair scenes of Oregon. Amazed I've viewed earth's awful hights [print]— As grand as e'er man looked upon— But none more grand, none more sublime Than snowy peaks of Oregon. Great Mississippi, and the rest— Grand rivers, I have sailed upon; But most delightful sail of all Was up Columbia, Oregon. Of luscious fruits I've had my share, These forty years I've traveled on— But, bless my life, this beats them all! These luscious fruits of Oregon. I have been where the few lived high— Where wealth could bid all want be gone; But here the poor who will may feast, And none need starve in Oregon. I have been where mean pests abound— Ticks, bedbugs, graybacks, snakes and so on; But from all such we are exempt Away out here in Oregon. The thunderstorms and wild cyclones Which sweep the trembling earth along, "Hunt other game" and pass us by Away out here in Oregon. A few of earth's heroes I've seen, Whose mighty fame must aye live on; But none more worthy, none more brave, Than those who fought for Oregon. I've seen fair women -- that I have; And we admire them, every one; But none more fair and none more pure Than the sweet, brave girls of Oregon. And then, the boys -- God bless them all! For we love them every one; God bless our girls, our mothers too— Yes, BLESSINGS ON ALL OREGON. On the Big Road, Sept. 26,1893 [M. there was space between each quartet, as it appears here.] [M 2004: For info abt author, who lived in Coq for a time, see P-5 ] = Agric-fruit name P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Marshfield Sun: C. O. McFarlin is making preparations to gather his crop of cranberries. Allied health P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Marshfield Sun: Manager Graham, of the Coos-Bay Roseburg railroad, was confined to his bed Tuesday with a severe cold.+ [cp] Novocom-log Srh Tot-Porter P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Marshfield Sun: Owing to the stage of the tides the big cigar-shaped raft was not taken to sea last week. It will probably be taken out the last of this month. The cradle is being put in place at Porter and work will soon commense [sic] on constructing the other raft. + [cp] Allied Srh P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Owners of stmrs Emily and Weott rcvd $3000 each, and officers and crews $6000, for rescuing the British steamer Bawnmore last July. Nfq [cp] Name Landis P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Legette Landrith, well to do Coos river farmer, skipped country after collecting [M. did he, or just too many questions asked] insurance money when barn burned down. [lengthy.] nq Tot-Coq animal? Transport P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 New Blacksmith shop. Drane & McAdams, props. horse shoeing and plow work a specialty; on corner north of Pioneer Feed Stable. nq Tot-Coq animal transport P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 J J Baker's Livery, Feed and Sale Stables MP single and double rigs, fine teams, saddle horses. Misc-item P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Marlin Safety Repeating Rifles. New Haven, Conn. [M. not a local ad.] nq misc govt P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Info on Pensions, address letter or card to The Press Claims Co, John Wedderburn, managing Atty, Wash DC nq paper P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 J S McEwen & D F Dean, eds and props CCH publ. every Tue. [county] Tax? P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 equalization of assessments. Silk Kanematz expo P-2 CCH Oct 10, 1893 [M2004. This full article is now also in Bcooshistory Topical Kanematz.] Head: OUR SILK EXHIBIT. Sub: Now an Attraction at the Exposition at Portland. The Oregonian of the 6th inst. makes mention of Prof. Kanematz' silk exhibit from this city in the following words: Two exhibits have come in since the fair opened, both of them modest in size but representing industries of great importance to Oregon. One of them is a chunk of bituminous coal weighing 100 pounds, taken from a six-foot vein within 21 miles of Portland. * * * The other exhibit is that of silk cocoons and raw silk from the Southern Oregon Silk Station, at Coquille City. This experiment station is under the charge of J. S, Kanematz, A.B., who is endeavoring to introduce silk culture into the state and make it one of Oregon's most valuable industries. Mr. Kanematz says that notwithstanding the season was cold and wet and unfavorable for silk culture, he has done very well and demonstrated the fact that Oregon can produce as good a quality of silk as any country in the world. In quality, the silk is superior to that produced in any of the eastern states. and equal to any of the best in France, Italy and Japan. This silk is unparalled in its tenacity. The cocoons are no larger, but are heavier, and each yields 3 per cent more reeled silk than cocoons produced elsewhere. Silkworm eggs and instruction in silk culture will be free to anyone who applies to Mr. Kanematz. Here is an industry the women of Oregon can engage in, adding materially to the family income and in the aggregate making an important source of wealth for the state. + [red tilde] = Business Directory-Tot P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 +x+ O E Smith, Surgeon Dentist, Marshfield. /J Bennett, atty at law, M'field. [cp]/ John F. Hall, atty at law and real estate agent, Marshfield. / C A Sehlbrede, atty Rsbg. / Dr T. Holden, Dentist, Marshfield. / F A & I U Coq meets every [second?] and fourth Thur. nights D F Dean,Sec. / also Bandon, Sumner, Riverton, South Fork F A & I U's lodge. / [ Riverton mentions: new hall at Riverton.] +x+ above, dissolved health Tot-Marshfield P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 O E Smith, Surgeon Dentist, Marshfield. / Dr T. Holden, Dentist, Marshfield. Tot-Marshfield RE P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 J Bennett, atty at law, M'field. [cp] / John F. Hall, atty at law and real estate agent, Marshfield. Tot-Roseburg P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 C A Sehlbrede, atty Rsbg. Tot-Multi organize P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 F A & I U Coq meets every [second?] and fourth Thur. nights D F Dean,Sec. / also Bandon, Sumner, Riverton, South Fork F A & I U's lodge. / [ Riverton mentions: new hall at Riverton.] +x+ Organiz P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 IOOF, Coq Lodge 53; Coq Encampment IOOF 2o 25 [as I typed it] (Odd Fellows hall.) / Chadwick Lodge A F and A M meets at their hall. / Gar Gen Lytle Post W H Nosler, Commander H Nichols adjutant. Fish Tot P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Coquille Fisherman's Union, Randolph, Oregon; meet every 4th Sat . Tot-Coq P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Photographs Gallery 6 doors E. IOOF hall, C Wilkins. Tot-multi R E timber prices P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 43x125 lots at Bandon, vicinity of parade ground, $125 ea. / for sale 240 acres land Cunningham cr,4 mi fm Coq city covered with fine body of fir timber. $6 per acre, terms easy. / 240 acres North Prairie, 4 mi E of Langlois stock ranch $5 acre. Fair-expo outside-Tot P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 World's Fair Accomodation, The Rosedale Hotel, 6414 Star Avenue Chicago A G Goldsmith, prop. [includes cut of map showing world fair grounds and hotel] [county] Politic P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 People's Party, committee W [or V?] S Fanderburg, T A Walker, B F Ross, C Wilkins, W H Hull Lhc P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 [Head:] Voices from the Dead. John A. Logan: The cause of our depression is money-famine and nothing else. [cp] Senator Dolph ...continued the speech begun yesterday in support of the repeal bill. [M. 2 bills together, head: Democrats must Vote for Repeal or Get No Return Tariff. election laws repeal bill and also house decision on disposition of some property of church of Jesus Christ Latter Day Saints. [not very clear what is happening or how court got charge of case, except tt evid. LDS was bankrupt and receiver had been appointed. ] nq at all Agric-fruit other-locale? P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Rsbg Review: 3 big fruit driers in vicinity Riddle, combined, drying 1000 bushels prunes every day; Riddle & Son's, Catching & Shepphard's, C W Riddle's. Novelty-wood name P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Messrs. Sheridan & Cobb have a most beautiful specimen of maple burel [print] brought to them by 0. Dodge, of Myrtle Point. It is about three feet in length, two in width and about three inches in thickness. It will be taken to the Portland exposition. + Other-coal prices P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Coast Mail: The payroll at the Newport mine last month was over $7000. A considerable sum to be disbursed in hard times [sic]. + [cp] Srh P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Coast Mail: Bandorille in Tue u/cargo freight principal for the Coq; left Wed. [cp] Novocom-log Srh P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Coast Mail: The big raft did not get out and the National City left without it on Monday. Water on bar not sufficient to float tt mass of timber; delay unfortunate, may have to stay inside for winter. Nq at all Condit RR outside-Tot P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 40 tramps got off train Grants Pass last Sat nq Srh novelty-wood, woolen mill Tot-Coq-valley P-3 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Sun: Bandorille on last trip fm Prtlnd brought down 100,000 shingles for woolen mill Bandon. It is singular that shingles should be imported by that company, when nearly every trip the Bandorille makes out of the Coquille river she carries a consignment of shingles to some place or another, and they are of a first-class quality. = County-court P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 C.B. News. Postponement of circuit court will cost county several hundred dollars. nq Fish locale P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 CBNews Fishermen lower bay; Sun night Geo and Pete Olson had high boat, catching 135 salmon. nq Fish enterprise Tot prices p-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 CB News Cannery Empire shut down a few days last wk, started again Sat; trouble with fishermen has been settled, now get 15 c ea for silversides, with free gear. Agric-fruit locale P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 CBNews. Robt.Rooke, N. Coos river, “Coos River Beauty “ apples. : RR P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 C B News. The train arrived from Myrtle Point in an hour and 17 minutes, Sunday. When the new portion of the road is ballasted, the trip will be made in an hour. + [cp] UR Tot court agric-crop machine P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Middle Creek: harvest over, thresher come and gone; L A Lawhorn working w/Heller Bros machine, called to Empire on jury duty. UR church school names P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Middle Creek. Union Sunday School: J M Lasswell, A Brown, W P Lasswell, Mrs L A Lawhorn, Mrs Edward Lasswell, Mrs J M Lasswell, tchrs and supts, etc. / Elder S B Hollenbeak preached at school house wk ago Sun, and Rev Bunch last Sun. UR crop names P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Middle creek. Lark, Lee and Fred Mast helping harvest vicinity Lee, North Fork. UR conditions P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Middle Creek. The people here have plenty of “confidence,?? but what they need is more money. Give us plenty of the latter and we will have one of the best-natured neighborhoods in existence. Rumbler. + Temperance church P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Coq WCTU full session Meth. ch. Fri Oct 13, 1892 3:00. [M2004: as typed, but shouldn't it be 1893?] RR P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 The train this morning made slow progress between this place and Myrtle Point, owing to the soft condition of the road. No accident happened, though a car got off the track once or twice. + [cp] Climate agric P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 damage to farmers, late and heavy rains; grain and late hay, most prunes, plums, peaches, potatoes seem lost. Srh misc-word P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Stmr Bandorille storm-bound on bay full wk; left bay this am for river and may be here as citizens read this; lg amt freight. nq Church names Nosler P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Parsonage committee repairs; L P Maury, J S Lawrence, T A Walker, J P Messer, E W Stillwell. / mtg of First Universalist Society, W H Nosler [county] tax? P-4 CCH Oct 10 1893 co bd of equalization to resume next Mon. Srh home-seekers outside-Tot P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Wm. Russell, prominent Oregon City man, in last wk via bay, Stmr Bandorille; contemplates locating here. LR Srh "first" conditions novocom-mill LR transport prices P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Some of the savings effected by the breakwater at the mouth of our river may be surmised by the following: A resident near Bandon was the first that ever brought a wagon into this section of the country on board one of the little schooners that used to come in here at that time from San Francisco. He was charged and paid $50 freight for it to the owner of the vessel, Messrs. Grube & Rink, who owned the little sawmill near Judge Lowe’s place on the lower river. He tells us he can now get the same sized wagon here for $5 from the same place, and thereby effect a saving of 900 per cent on the freight of this one article alone. + Other-mining climate locale P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Uncle Joe Hudson and son, little Joe, up fm their ranch on Sixes, Curry co, driving thru rain; prospected their place, will work their mine this winter; Little Joe had in a bottle 67 c worth genuine yellows, extracted fm nine wheelbarrows of dirt. Mr Hudson’s place 6 mi fm the bridge on Sixes river, and he crossed the river 28 times in tt S mi. on return home. [note, says the bottle was a brief prospecting on his own (boy’s) hook.] Tot? names P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 One of handsomest residences in county lately built for J P Tupper; substantial bldg, artistically finished to look light and graceful. Designer-bldr Mr. Loggie, now a permanent resident Bandon. [M. Tupper Coq,or Bandon house??] Climate Srh Misc-word P-4 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Heavy storms; 10 day. Many vessels driven back to SF bay and other points. Many barbound or refused to go. Nq at all. Pioneer-reunion music health character? Harris names P-5 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Resolutions by Coos pioneer assn; thanks to MP for generous and cordial manner in which received and entertained us at this 2nd annual reunion; Hon J A Gray, interesting and instructive address one of best features of mtg. Mrs C W Tower, songs. Resolved, That we express our appreciation, and extend our thanks to the Libby band, Ladies’ Military band, of Roseburg, Trombone band and Myrtle Point band for the excellent music rendered during the time of our meeting. Resolved, That our sincere sympathy is extended to our venerable president, Capt. W.H. Harris, that he is unable to preside on this occasion, and hope he may speedily regain his usual good health and live long to honor our reunions by his presence. Respectfully. Alex Stauff, Isaiah Hacker Fannie C. Dixon + [cp] Crop P 5 CCH Oct 10, 1893 West Oregonian: A car load of tanbark was shipped from this place Tuesday. We trust this is a beginning of a profitable industry which might be carried on in this vicinity as we are informed there is [sic] large quantities of bark growing around here. + [cp] Silk Kanematz fair agric P-5 Oct 10, 1893 Prof. Kanematz is informed that there is no award for a silk exhibit at the state fair, held at Salem, as the board of managers were not aware that silk was cultivated in this state. While there will be no award, the state agricultural board will make favorable mention of it in their report. + [cp] Church poetry moving character? P-5 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Rev H. B. Swafford honored us with his views on “Oregon" before leaving for California. His poem appears in the Herald today. It contains several good points in his own clever style of stating them, and will be kindly received by his many friends here. + [cp] [M. see poem on pg P-1] Item misc-word P-5 CCH Oct 10, 1893 J C Doane, representing “marble on steel” cooking kettle and utensils, canvasing co. for introduction of his goods; headquarters Marshfie1d. nq Dairy prices music P-5 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Five shares Coq Creamery stock, 2 good milch cows, one heifer and one spring calf, all for face value of the stock $l25. Nfq Also one good $l30 organ for $50;inquire this office nq Name Tot Vital-stat P-5 CCH Oct 10, 1893 married: Kentuck slough, Oct 1, 1893 by Judge Watson, Thos Lenet and Clara Baker; Marshfield Sept 30,by Justice Hyde, Andrew Hendelin, Mary.Johnson. . born Coq Oct 6,1893, MM Leroy Curry, daughter. Born MP Oct3, Prof and Mrs A N Knight, dgtr. died, at Rsbg Oct 1,1893 Tom Corwin, infant son of Judge and Mrs J C Fullerton, age 9 mo. Died Halls cr, Sept 28, Evaline, infant dgtr MM Smalley, age 18 mo. died at Angora, Sept 28, Ida, beloved dgtr MM Thos Rookard,15 yrs. Organize Coq name P-5 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Coos Co FA & I U mtg Coq Oct 13 l:30, W C Wrenshall, secy Airship Joaquin-indir fair P-5 CCH Oct 10, 1893 George Miller of Eugene expects to have his skycycle perfected in time to fly to San Francisco for the mid-winter fair. + Health Tot-Coq P-5 CCH Oct 10, 1893 James Brooks, young man this place, taken seriously ill with cholera morbus and thought to be beyond relief; sm. Bottle Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhea Remedy, which promptly cured him; he says would have died but for remedy. Farley & Slagle; Tenn. sale by S L Leneve, druggist. Nq [M note: then would town be in Tenn, or in Coq?] [cp] Health P-5 CCH Oct 10, 1893 [ad.] Gladstone has a Clear Head...Smith’s Bile Beans. nq = item tinware Tot-Bandon P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 John H Yager, hardware ,stoves, tinware, lamps ,etc, Bandon. Misc organize P 6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Co. 0, 0. N. C., at Marshfield, is mustered out.+ [M. Ong =Oregon Natl Guard] Church locale P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 bay papers: Rev Horsfall will continue to reside at tt place nfq Church P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Rev C R Blackwell,Portland, new minister this circuit by ME conference. / Meth parsonage put in repair for family of new minister; J S Laurence did work. nq. Tot-Arago-name Srh P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Mrs C F Bullard,San Rafael, Cal, arr on Arago to reside w/son, Clark Bullard, at Arago. nq . Organize Tot-Coq Nosler P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 floor mgrs F A & I U ball next Sat night, Masonic hall, C Harrington, C Strang, Nelse Lammy, W H Nosler. Misc mail? P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 New form of postal money order to be issued this date, will not go into use this office till present supply old ones used. Health Tot-name misc-word-fellow-citizen P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Fellow citizen, D P Strang, taken down suddenly last wk w/cholera morbus and for 2 - 3 days suffered much; has started on duty again. [cp] Novelty-wool Tot P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 handsome residence abt being erected at Bandon for Clark, pres of Woolen mill, and another for Mr. Palmer, vice pres. Name Coq-R health saying P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 [M. 2005; this was in with a Bandon entry. Is "here" Coq or Bandon?] Frank Poore, formerly on river and well known here, several days last wk; looking well as ever -- nothing poor about him except he is racked w/rhumatism [sic], poor fellow. Visit health outing Srh P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Judge Stewart, Mrs, dgtr, 2 sons, left Bandon on Bandorille Fri Sept 22 for Portland; greatly pleased w/visit and say they will make our beach their great summer and health resort for the future. Book fair P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Agent wanted for sale of “Bancroft's Book of the Fair” in Coos; Bancroft Co, SF. Other-coal Tot-Coq RR-spur P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Coal -- well we should say so. It is not only abundant, but the best on the Pacific coast and as good as the best in the city markets. This is what our co- operative mining company has struck less than a half mile from our town limits. A tramway is being constructed to bring the coal down into town. + [cp] Srh P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Govt engineers, river and harbor improvements, needed. Organize humorous story P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 [Head:] Flag Presentation [Sub:] The Women’s Relief Corps Surprises Gen. Lytle Post, G.A.R. [humorous story, lengthy abt a flag presentation.] [ M. get at library in full.] climate P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 monthly weather report, Bandon mean temp 56; max temp 69 on 15th, min temp 41 l8th, 23d; total precipitation 7.O8,above normal 5.29in; prevailing wind N.; greatest precipitation 24 hr, l.25 on 20th. Clear days 8; partly cloudy 9; cloudy 14; rain 11, thunder storm 5, l9th, 2Oth. Geo Bennett Or Weather Station nq health P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Hill’s Double Chloride of Gold Tablets destroy desire for tobacco, Ohio Chemical co. Item Music P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Chicago Cottage Organ the popular Organ. Health P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Prentiss Rectifying Pill for Constipation; Ladies Complexion. Nq Tot-Marshfield P-6 CCH Oct 19, 1893 CB Marble and Stone Works, C W Paterson [sic] prop. Tot-Multi food P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Marshfield Pioneer Market and Family Grocery, Lorenz Bldg, Coq Tot-Coq food item P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Johnson Bros; fresh and salted meats, bologna, head cheese, vegetables, canned goods, coffee, sugar, teas, tobaccos, cigars. nq Fruit-outside P-6 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Judge Riddle, southern Oregon fruit grower, will have 200,000 lb in prunes. Nfq Racism outside-Tot P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Astoria is organizing perfectly against the Chinese. + [cp] School outside-Tot misc-word inmates P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1892 The deaf mute school at Salem will have 41 inmates. + Novelty-woolen outside-Tot P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 woolen mill, Albany, contract fm Philadelphia for 4000 US Army blankets. Nfq health P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Bald Heads. Skookum Root Hair Grower. ad. [N.Y, not local company or rep.] School? Condit-signs of times P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Prof. M.V.Rork will speak on the issues of the day at the several places and dates here named: Coq City Fri and Sat Oct 13 & l4 [lists other towns, as well] Commission-house P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Irving B Cook, Home Supplies a specialty, S.F. (for consumers) Paper-cut item saying P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 A Good Seamstress is a Household Necessity. Seamstress Sewing machine, Nat'l Sewing machine Co, Belvidere, Ill; [incl. cut of machine and table] CBR schedule P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Tuesdays and Fridays Trains leave Marshfield at 7:20 a.m., arriving in Coquille City at 8:45; at Myrtle Point at 9:30. Returning, the train will leave Myrtle Point at 9:45 a.m.; Coquille City at 10:15 a.m.; arrive at Marshfield at 11:45 a.m. + [cp] Climate P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Rain and mud. / Sunshine again. Food prices Tot-Coq P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Lard, Johnson's Bros., $l.50 can. name P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Jason Randleman. Health moving Tot-multi P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Dr. Brower, MP, has located at Ashland. Crop Tot-Marshfield harness P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 trade grain to Anderson at Marshfield for harness. Names RR-passeng P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 0 Dodge and Grundy Short passed over to the bay on today's train. + [cp] Tot-Bandon-name P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 B. Vowell moved to Bandon, put up neat res. there. item Tot-Coq P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Red Seal baking powder, Harkness & Scott, Lorenz climate P-7 CCH Oct 10,1893 S W winds thur-fri last wk church P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Rev Blackwell, Portland, new M E minister this circuit, this place Sun night outside-Tot Tot-multi P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 S J Tuttle and family returned fm Petaluma; now at Bandon (family) and this city (Mr) Tot-Coq P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Johnson's Bros. / Knowlton. Name P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 John Koon returned fm SF this a.m. Srh P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Stmr Antelope laid over Sun for repairs. Climate P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 rains so heavy river almost banks-full. [cp?] Church P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Rev Mr Thornton, new Methodist pastor, and family, arr. Name Srh animal P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 J Henry Schroeder expects to shop [M.2004. as typed; prob means ship] a lot of hogs on stmr Bandorille for SF; will go in charge this trip. [cp] School paper-clubbing P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 tchrs, subscribe to Western Pedagogue (Oregon St School Journal); tt and Herald both for $2.50 yr. Srh P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 light house, Bandon, will be great advantage, will be commenced on or abt Dec 1. Silk Kanematz plants P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Our silk expert, Prof. Kanematz, informs us that a good number of persons have ordered mulberry trees, with a view to going into silk culture, including a larger number from Myrtle Point and vicinity than from this locality. + [cp] Srh freight-rates Tot food other-coal P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 until further notice, schooners Parkersburg, Ralph J Long will bring freight to Parkersburg warehouse (storage free); rates flour, iron, salt,coal, all kind freight of low value,$l.50 ton; all other freight $2 ton nfq [cp] church names entertain music Nosler P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Sunday School entertainment, Meth; Miss Umra Lukens [sic] choir, recitations, other; Vera Seed; Rena Leneve; Maud Nosler; Zetta Messer; Josie Lyons; Eva White; Jessie Simmons; Capt Lockwood; Miss Lilly Lyons; Alice Jenkins; Lilly Way; also a "fish pond". Tot-Bandon church P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Bandon Recorder: Wrenshall Bros at work on new church. Tot-Bandon climate P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Bandon Recorder. ...Bar rough this wk. Tot-Bandon-name health P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Bandon Recorder. ... S D Barrows vy ill typhoid; a little better but quite low; Mrs Barrows sick. Health Tot/outside P-8 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Gus Erickson, former resident bay, drowned Columbia river; Emily Erickson brother. Tot-Bandon-name Srh moving outside-Tot P-7 CCH Oct 10, 1893 Bandon Recorder. ...Mrs. Euphemia Dyer, daughter Ethel to make home Calif for a while; goes via Marshfield and will be joined by husband near San Jose, who will go down on the Bandorille. = home 1883-89 1890 series | 1894 1895 1896 to newspaper menu |