& , Hf 1ffa,iflMHjifitrIijw igydm 8 , THE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, ' i.. i i -in -i wi ninirirmiiriurnit rrrnrnTTrrr lllfl TTfTTt T-Tt miliTI T IT-rITnfilriirTPrSiff"TVl-J"-''-jAnrf SUNDAY, JULY 21. 1907. vnja&axvaLmixT&usmrTXtt3ai 7rvrLMVAVuixxwa,xaa?nxjmT-wB3iTVismacBaBxSttu "mm tJn.ri.tf.rg-M KfovmjxsemmaTsaaj .remwrj SSaZLSSPJSSISlSSISiSSKSSBKRSSSSl, 3wX3r& HOW THOUSANDS OF POUNDS Men's Straw ami Summer Hats ARE SAVED THE PEOPLE OF . GREAT BRITAIN EVERY YEAR Sff t ,t. J .. 1. 9"1 i. fe w thfii SHOWING THE MUNIFICENT BENEFITS RESULTING IN ENGLAND WHERE PUBLIC UTILITIES ARE DIRECTLY UNDER THE JURISDICTION OF THE GOVERNMENT. IN SOME OF THE CITIES THE GAS PLANTS ARE OWNED BY PRIVATE CORPORATIONS BUT SUCH IS THE WORKINGS OF THE SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT CONTROL THAT FEAR OF PUNISHMENT EFFECTUALLY " REMOVES ANY POSSIBILITY OF IMPOSITION ON THE PEOPLE i i x Municipal operations of public util ities In Great Britain, as observed by a committee of experts sent abroad last year by the National Civic Fed oration, Is treated at length in a ser ies of roviews by members of the committee, which were made public today. Theso roviews of the ex ports' reports, written by Milow 11. Maltbie, Wilton Claik, vice-president of the United Ga3 Improvement Com pany of Philadelphia, and Charles L. "Edgar, President of the Edbon Elec tric & Illuminating Company of Bos ton, are divided in opinion as to the success of the undertakings as a whole. Mr. Maltbie, is one of the membeis of the newly created Public Service Commission of Creator New York. This body has tho widest powors and the greatest responsibili ties of any commission to which the regulation of corporations has been ontrusted, up to this time, In the United States. Mr. Maltbie spent six months In Great Britain super vising the work of the expert ac countants and engineers. He sas that municipal operation of public utilities in Great Britain has passed tho experimental stago. Ho declares that the gas and electric plants oper ated by municipalities, generally give a supoilor service at a relatively low er cost, as compared with the pri vately owned companies. By far the most Interesting part of Mr. Maltbie's conclusion, however, is that actual ownership and operation is nqt neces sary for tho success of tho municipal ownership idea. He says that tho power to operate, If necessary or de sirable, In many instances, has been as effective as actual operation that tho mero fact that a city has tho pow er to step In and operate an under taking Itself often makes the exercise of this power unnecessary. "It has been found In Great Britain that no system of control or regulatldn Is complete without tho power In the hands of the municipalities to pur chase and operate," says Mr. Malt blo. "If ono company may be suc ceeded only by another or only hedgod about by restrictions, there como times when action, not repres sion, Is' wanted, and then no r'eruedy Is adequato unless It bo the power of )mj ,hn piv tof,ten,inflnd pnerato tho un dertaking Itself . But tho me'ro fact that It has the power often makes its exorcise unnecessary, and what tho Britisher deslros Is not tho universal adoption of somo method of produc ing results, but . the , results them selves. ' "In tho following analysis of tho results of public and private manage ment it should be homo in mind that such a comparison Is not a compari son of municipal with private opera tion subject to no restraining force, but with private oporation under systems of regulation which aro claimed to bo tho host which have yet boon delsod In Gieut Britain and with private management that has boon chastened and botterod by tho fear of public condemnation, bo tho rcstialnt of govornmont regulation and tho possibility of municipaliza tion. Thus tho low price at which gas Is supplied by tho Sheffield com pany Is largoly the result of tho avowod determination of tho men In control to head off municipalization. If municipal operation had not boon n posslblo alternative looming above tho horizon, It Is Ukoly'that oven now tho consumers would bo paying very much higher rates; and tho present low rate so far as the aro duo to tho dosiro to provont municipal operation should bo counted as ono of Its direct results." fho reasons that havo led to Brit ish municlpallzptlon, Mr. Maltbo finds, nro many, First among thorn although not tho most general nor the most Important, Is tho desire to secure for tho public tho financial profits of tho undertakings. Second there Is tho dosiro to keop tho city from bolng mulcted by a prlvato com pany and third, tho general demand for bottor service at lowor rates. Ho montions also, a fourth cause, which has plnyod a prominent part in tho Unltod States, and which Is not un known In Grent nr'tnln, namely, op position of privately ojiorated public utilities companies toitho welfare. q( tho city. A fifth factor has boon tho jliqMjiut, municipal operation would CqUaj to about onorquartor pf tho en- permit .tho co-ordination of public tiro capacity, whorenB.only ono prU Borvlcoa In a way that is not possible vato company has a water gas plant whoro different services are operated and It cannot produce moro than ono- by pilvate companies. Messrs. Edgar and Clark favor sonic form of regulation of private companies rather than the adoption of the municipal ownership Idea. They declare It to be plainly proven that municipal ownership is produc tive of many and serious ills with lit tle or no compensating good. They hold that the solution of present diffl is to be found, not in municipal own ership and operation of public utili ties, but in the election of municipal officers who will protect the governed against lnjustlco on tho part of Indi viduals or corporations. British (.'as Lighting. Tho gas plants examined by the Investigating Committee " " mission were those condu municipalities of Birming gow, Manchester and Lei by prjvato companies at S Newcastle and Gateshead and tho South Metropollta of London. On the Important sub ject of maintenance of plants, etc., Mr. Maltbie says that during last year every municipality set aside out of earnings a larger total to maintain or extend the plant or wipe out in debtedness than did any prlvato com pany. As to the price of gas to the consumer, Mr. Maltbie points out that tho private company at Sheffield Is able to buy good gas and coke mak ing coal at a lower price than any other company or municipality and finds a market for Its coke at its very door in which It receives more per ton than any other undertaking save ono; and that it sold its by-products for more than tho cost of Its coal, oil and other supplies, making profit thereon of 2.13d. per thousand cubic feot of gas soldi No other under taking was so fortunate, and a com parison as regards prices and costs between Sheffield and any other plant not so well situated would be mis leading and unfair. In order to reduce 'the undertak ings to a fair basis of comparison, says Mr. Maltbie, suppose we assume that thei residuals, paid tho cqst,of gas materials in every plant. To deter mine what the, price of gas would have been under "eqiial conditions, it Is necessary to subtract the net cost of'coaltfrom tho average price at which gas was sold during the year. It has already been pointed out that certain deductions should also be made to equalize charges for maintenance, rates and taxes, con trlbutibns to the public 'funds, ptc. Making these deductions, It is' found that tho averngo price at which gas could havo been sold by the muni cipal plants would havo been lG.84d. per thousand feet and the private companies 21.31d. provided that residuals had just paid for gas ma terials, that the same amount -(7.50d. por thousand) hnd been spent by each plant for maintenance, depreci ation and taxes, that nothing had beon paid to relievo taxation, and that all plants wore on an eqnallty In theso regards. In operating -expenses there Is not much difference between the muni cipal and private plants, the differ ences In expenses being confined to Interest, dividends and credit balance, and In theso Items ho finds the muni cipalities superior In that their charges therefor average only 3.31d per thousand, while tho prlvato com panies' expenditures for tho same purpose avorago 7.5 3d., two and one third times as milch. This condition ho finds to bo duo to tho higher rato of intorest and profit, and the greator amount of liabilities of tho private plants. Character of Service. Price without regard to quality, Is a tale holf told, says Mr. Maltblo, and tho most Important oloment In qual ity Is continuity of supply. All of tho undertakings examined, ho sets forth, havo a good rocord in this re spect, and barring tho fow accidents which happen In all plants, gas has beon continuously furnished In all plants, both by tho companies and tho cities. He finds, howovor, that tho municipalities aro bottor prepared to furnish an uninterrupted supply dur ing a Btrlko than tho prlvato com panies for theso have carburettod water gas plants, with a capacity tenth of tho total output. The qual ity of the gas Itself, that is its caudle power, Mr. Maltbie finds to be super ior In the municipal plants, according to the official reports. Tho charge was made, however, that the tests wero not fair, In that the municlpll- Itles tested their own gas, while that of the companies was tested by an official examiner not connected with the companies. Mr. Maltbie de clares, however, that Investigation that so far as the Independence and reliability and 'accuracy of tho per sons making the tests of candle pow er are concerned, there is no differ ence between the companies and the municipalities, except possibly Leices ter nml there, the allowance would r. Maltbie h greater undertak- ... .... clpal gas plants, the loss due to leakage and gas used at work was 6.95 per cent, of the gas made and the companies S.17 per cent. The amount per mile of mains was 359 thousand cubic feet for all municipalities and 489 thous and feet for all companies, a still greator difference, which" Is due again to the larger number of miles of mains which the municipalities have. The difference between all the muni cipalities and all the companies is more than the difference between the four municipalities and the three companies a fact which goes to show that the municipal plants select ed for extensive examination are not the only good instances of municipal operation. Progress. Discussing progress and the Intro duction of now inventions, Mr. Malt bie's view Is that the municipal plants aro as modern, as efficient, and as fully up-to-date as tho company un dertakings. It has also been shown he declares, that the municipal plants yield good results, viewed from the standpoint" of operating efficiency. He also gives it as his opinion that the encouragoment given to the pro duction of new inventions and the discovery pf new processes by a prob able demand for them, is certainly as preat under municipal operation as under private1 management, for if municipalities are as free and eager to adopt improved methods, and In ventions as we havo seen them to bo, there will be as great a demand as whoro prlvato companies are In com plete control of public utilities. In directly, also, the municipalities have encouraged Inventive genius by tak ing the samo position that has been adopted by tho best companies. For examplo, the engineer of the Leices ter works, Mr. Colsom, who has in vented a number of dovlces and per fected soveral new processes, works under an agreement with the munlcl- parlty, whereby all royalties from his invontions and discovorlcs belong to him personally, except whon used by the Leicester undertaking, which has tho prlvllego of adopting his Inven tions and discoveries without paying the royalty ho would ordinarily re ceive. As a result of the adoption of this or a similar policy, a number of invontions havo been made by the englneors of municipal plants fully as'many ns by those In private under takings. Electricity Supply. Tho electric lighting plants Inves tigated by the Civic Federation Com mission wore the municipal ones at Manchester, Liverpool, Glasgow, nnd tho Borough of St. Pnncrns, London, and those operated by the Newcastle Supply Co., tho Newcastle District Company and the four London com panies the City of London, West minister, St. James and Central. Charges by tho municipal plants were moro economical, according to Mr. Maltblo, tho cities charging ,529d. por unit less than chargod by tho prl vato companies. As to efficiency of sorvlco, there was no difference be tween tho municipal and the company undertakings, ns regards tho prompt ness with which current was turned on and complaints attended to, the convenience of tho location of offices, tho testing of moters, tho restoration of paving after streets were opened, the care given td streot work gener- (Contlnued on page 5.) 1 N One-Third ff Coining WeeSs There will be a general clearance the coming weak in Men's Straw and Summer Hats. The savings offered during this sale are such that no man in need of an extra hat, during the warm weather, can thoughtlessly pass up. Among the lot are Sailors, Panamas, Crash Hats, Serges, etc. All of them are good values at the reg ular price take our word for it and when you are offered them at the discount that prevails the coming week, you are, indeed, geeting a big bargain. The entire week, all goat TAILORED MADE SUITS There is a class of men who are difficult to fit, and they require a suit made to their exact measurement. Then there is another class who, seemingly from birth, prefer a tailor-made suit to one ready made. For these two classes, we have taken the agency for two of the best tailoring houses in tha country Mark G. Harris, Chicago, and the International of New York and Berlin. The work these two houses turn out is simply beyond criticism, and the materials that go into the garments are of the very highest grade. Take the Mark G. Harris Front, Shoulder and Sleeve Head, it is one of the great est triumps in present-day tailoring. It gives your coat a shape and hang that no tailor can bring out, and, although you pay $17.50 or $40 for a Mark G. Harris tailor made suit, the same sleeve head and pains-taking work is put into it. We are now making suits for the most prominent men in North Bend, Marshfield and Coquille, and everyone of them have assured us of their permanent trade so well pleased are they with the work. The fall samples are now here. Among them are some of the prettiest and snap piest patterns evershown for Fall and Winter. Let us show them to you. SOROSIS SHOES The trade we are getting on Sorosis Shoes is something immense for a district with a population such as Coos Bay. The women have long since realized the durability of Sorosis, and for comfort they have no rival. Take the Sorosis Shoe we sell at $3.50, we will put them up against any $4.50 ladies' shoe in the country, andtif it does not give an equal service and more comfort, let us know, and we will make mou a present of a pair. Then, concerning our $4 Sorpsis Shoes. Theseshoes we will put side by side any day with Cousins, Hanan, Lairfl or any other brafid that sells around $5 and $6, and demonstrate to you conclusively that Sorosis aj?$4, is a far superior shoe, and pos sesses much more snap and true shoe comfort If these facts were not so, We could not afford to sell Sorosis shoes and give to our customers a guarantee like the above. Buwe are on Coos Bay to stay, to build up a large clientele of satisfied customers, antfif the selling of, the best and most popular brands, together with low pric attained tne honor of being Oregon. Wash There is undoubtedly a grea weeK. tvery piece of summc pronounced, that it will oav v months to come. Read the foil we cannot make mention of he is and fairi ie rename ' "M K uress woo savijKj for youin material is not ou t buv. in' mi-- -wmr - - . j Htvwhn items. re. reatment count for anvthina. we will haw. trading center of Coos Bay and Southern 4 '4i iiu .t. Savings the Wash Goods Section the nnminn OnlV reduced, but the rfiriiinti'nn..ifi n anticipation Of votir needs fnr mnnv There are many more just as good, that t mm ... rt dtjc to 45c wash l-abrics, in beautiful organdies, lawns ,ancf mercerised effects, so the cominsr wp.pM. var-H 50c Wash Fabrics in handsome mercerised effects," lawns, organdies, etc., all so, vard 65c and 75c Silk and Mercerised Cotton Fabrics", "in'plain" and fancy floral designs, yard printed1 & 35c 47c 65c Silk Pongee Suiting 30c This handsome Pongee Suiting should certainly move out with a rush the comina week. Think of buying a material like this for 30c. It makes up beautiful? Mnto summer dresses, skirts and shirt-waist suits. Colors are light utJdUl,ru,y "F blue, grey and tan. Yard . JUc Ladies' Tailored Shirts Some very pronounced savings will be given on all tailored skirts for the cominq week. These skirts are this season's styles, and represent the newest and prettiest patterns or tne season. $6 to $8 Tailored Skirts, choice ;.; 4.98. $9 to $12.50 Tailored Skirts, choice ' 7.25, $1 fuiti-5Cher! j!:1!: I" .Vi!ib! Ch!C.kS d"strip"ed 345' ll Ladies' Wrappers $1.25 Ladies' Wrappers, all sizes, choice only 95c; Short Kimonos 85c to $1 Short Kimonos, choice 50c $2 to $2.25 Short Kimonos, choice, each 1,25 ' C005,fiAVS GREATEST STORE. .-awj"jar NORTH BEND, OREGON -usxyaittjfcr J ! ' .- .-- m m lbLrk. 1 - H3 TBj 'QH Hk