g'wffll THE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST, 13, 1907. Coos Bay Times AN INDKPENnKST KEI'VJ" '",v VwSPAPKn FCBUJIIKD EVERY DAY EXCKPTI.Va MON DAY AND ALSO WEEKLY DY Tub Coos Hay Times 1'uiii.isiiino Co. BEX LARGE, Business Manager. Tho policy of Tho Coos Bay Times Till bo Republican in politics, with the independence of which President Hoose rclt is the leading cx)onent. Entorcd at the poitofllce at Mnrshfleld, Ore eon, for transmission through the malls as second class mall.mattcr. SUBSCRIPTION RATLS- Bingle copy, daily, - - 6 cents For" month, daily, - - 50 cents Thrco months, daily, - - $1 25 Bix months, daily - - $2 50 One year, daily, - - - $5 00 Weekly, per year - - ?1 00 Address all communications to COOS DAY TIMES Marshfield, Oregon. THE CITV'S SHAME. The social question is and always has been the most difficult i.nd dis heartening of all those which disturb and perplex mankind. The fallen and lost units which suffer In various degrees of depravity, are rarely re called from their waywardness, and their presence, sometimes claimed to bo necessary as an evil which cannot bo suppressed, is always an example which menaces, misleads and cor rupts. It has no excuse for existence, but Is tolerated because It is feared that the shock of Its forcible casting away may cause more serious havoc than its detcstible rotentlon. But no man or woman lives who would pre tend to claim that it should be per mitted to flaunt its folly and in decency in the most public places. Front street 13 just now tho prln- j cipal street of Marshfield and it will always be a very prominent street whatever befalls. That street is be ing planked through to North Bend and will no doubt bo henceforward forever used as a great thoroughfare extending along the entire eastern water front of the city of Coosbay. There is no excuse for longer per mitting tho existence of infamous dens or resorts of vice in that local ity. However distasteful such places may be to strangers who como to the city, it is a featuro of such vice that its presence is speodlly known. Its only attractiveness Is due to its shocking unnaturalness and the world hears tho slightest whisper of Its presence. Not long ago the pres ent location of tho Immoral quarter, was an out-of-the-way place. Now evorybody is disposed to travel past it in walking or driving to North Bond or in visiting tho scone of the notable Improvements which are go ing on in that direction. To bo seen going or coming to or from that di rection is very unpleasant and the time has, arrived for the city council to suppress tho disorderly houses lo cated In that district. For tho bene fit of the neighborhood, tho decency and reputation of tho city, the respec tability of a popular promenade, and tho protection of public morals, tho city government should act at once. ( . VALE TO NATRON. The railroad contest in Oregon Is ono which, after all, does not disclose any discouraging features. There may bo and probably Is, a temporary cessation of hostilities between tho Southern Pnclflc and tho Hill Inter ests, but there Is, beyond question, n Tcry active battle going on between tho Southern Pacific and tho North Twcstorn. "Tho stake Is central Ore gon. Tho ultimate result Is tho oc cupation of Southwestern Oregon by ,loth roads and It may bo ono or two others. Tho road from Valo to Nn-, tron is apparently tho, nctlvo concern of tho Southern Pacific, while the Northwestern is extending Its survey westward and seems to bo making a Hank movement which may disturb tho Southern Pacific much more than tho North Bunk road ovor did, for should tho Northwestern penetrate to Central Oregon and Lako country and reach tho coast in Southwestern Orogon, sho would bo equa-distant from San Francisco and tho Pugot Sound districts nnd havo a command of both. , But tho Valo-Natron road is plain ly designed to make tho Drain-Coos kjUay lino of greator Importanco than 1,.1-was at first suspecteu uy mo nuupiu "InF nminn it in tn ho a transconti nental lino which will onablo ono to take a through sleeper at Coos Bay and land at Donvor in duo time with out "passing through Portland and without change. It opons up a now country mid makes Coos Bay a transcontinental torminal whonovor tho nianngemont decides Its interests demand it. Tho Coos Bay people Jiavo no special reason.to worry ovor tho Southern Pacific Company. It win como to Coos Bay In good time, provided Coos Bay peoplo insist upon it, but the way to insist upon It Is to offer inducements to tho Northwest ern people to come. A CHEAT PLEASURE KESOKT. No city, large or small, east or west, or In any part of the wide world, has more beautiful or more summer resorts or places of natural interest than Coos Bay. Probably the most popular of these at this time is Coos Hlvor, and every day the steamers and launches which ply up and down that picturesque stream are crowded with sightseers and pleasure hunters. No visitor to this region has seen. Coos Bay properly unless he has viewed this winding river and Its banks of luxuriance and beauty. Nor is the eastern man, who has thought of this district a3 being strictly In the back woods, prepared for what he sees. While there are long stretches of country which are I hidden by dense fir and spruce, yet there are many hillside farms, orch ards, and green pastures. There are fertile bottom lands where wonderful gardens grow and aWarlety of scen ery which is not lessened in attract iveness by Its miniature form. No man or woman ever saw the banks of the winding Coos without becoming devoted to its never ending delights. It will always be the pleasure land of the Peninsular cities. On all sides building continues Its I transformation sccrie In Marshfield and North Bend. There Is no city of its size In Oregon which Is doing as well in that lino as Marshfield. On every side business blocks, and dwellings are going up and tho C. A. Smith mill and out buildings arc al ready presenting tho appearance of another city close to Marshfield. Foraker has failed to down Taft In Ohio, but the battle has not been concluded In the nation. There Is one comfort, at any rate and that Is, neither Foraker, Fairbanks, Har riman or the Rockefeller crowd will be able to defeat Taft unless they do it with another man of tho same stripe. After Roosevelt none but an anti-graft, anti-trust and anti corruption man need apply. The pace has been set and the man of mere dollars will havo to step lively to avoid collision. There is no need to question tho "quantitative theory of money" now, and we may all be satlsflod that money Is more plentiful now than It ever has been. Prosperity will not leavo us until money disappears or some mischievous clique gets to con tracting tho volume. With tho monoy of the country on tho lncroase, and ono and a quarter million people coming here in search of land, it Is hard to see how prices can diminish. But there Is always danger. THE INTELLECTUAL WIFE. No Wedding Hells For The Clever Woman. "Why Is it that some men harbor a conviction that a keen Intellect dis qualifies a woman for tho domestic sphere?" askod a promlnont woman educator. "That they do harbor It Is proved by the fact that when it is a question of marrying they deliberate ly pass over tho clover woman they onjoyed talking with and take some sweot, silly little thing for a wife. Listen to men talking when they get on this subject, and in nine cases out of ten it will be observed that tho general drift of their fading is that tho nice, satisfactory wlfo, the kind who keeps a man's slippers warm and has his dinner ready on time, seldom evolves out of the girl who reads Greek and is up in chemistry and economics. They frequently marry tho latter kind, but they expect to sacrlflco tholr dinners and are .agree ably surprised later on to find the dinners coming nloug all right. "As a matter of fact, though it will take men a long time to learn it, a comprohonslvo ignoranco and tho ability to look pretty and embroider sofa pillows do not In themselves guaranteo future domestic cfucloncy, A girl may oven know how to cook and yot turn out a lamontnbly poor housekeeper, whllo a girl who has novor had occasion to handle a sauce pan, but whoso perceptions aro quick and dovoloped by an all round mod ern education nnd who knows her chemistry, can, whon tho need comes, not only master cooking in short ordor, but bo a tactful housomlstrcss as well. As a matter of fact, house keeping calls for a good brain. There is hardly any faculty of I tho mind that Is not called into action in running the domestic machine. "Or e of tho best women doctors in Chicago Is nn admirable housokeeper. Many women writers havo homes, managed by themselves, that aro aro Ideally comfortable. Not man years ago a party of woll known art ists and writers, old friends, wore stormbound at an Alpine Inn. Tho porson in tho kitchoa was dismayed at tha sight of so many peoplo and uppeated unequal it. Iho task 6f got- J J J J J J j J J IJIIEAT IXTEHEST IX COLONIST HATI'S TO PACIFIC COAST. People all over tho state are i hungry for more details of the colonist rates. Letters are ar- i riving from all sections of tho state asking for exact rates from different points through- out the United States to Ore- ! gon. Prom Kansas City and other Missouri river points, St. Paul, Duluth, and Winnipeg, the rate is $25; from Oklahoma City and St. Louis, $30; Chica- go, $33; Buffalo, $42.50; Cln- cinnatl and Louisville, $3S; Des Moines, $29; Indianapolis, $35.85; Boston, $49.90; New York, $50; Pittsburg, $42; Memphis, $37.50; Birmingham, Alabama, $44.50. Each ticket Is $2.50 less when bought to points east of Umatilla. The rates given above cover almost tho entire country, and are the $ same proportionately from all smaller stations. Keen In mind $ that tickets must be bought reading to your station. WWWWWSAAVMVSAAWWWA ting dinner. Whereupon these artist women turned up their cuft.i and in no time at all had a delightful dinner smoking on tho table." NOTES OF DEVELOPMENT. 'J $ $ H $ $ $ $ $ l ! ! $ t t J $ The Oregon Development League continues to gain new members. The last organizations to enter the Ore gon family group are the Deschutes Valley Development League, of Red mond, and tho Woodburn Commer cial Club. Medford occupied the center of the stage last week with a fruit carnival and the annual meeting of the State Horticultural Society. The attend ance was large. Portland expects to entertain ten thousand visitors from different parts of the state on the occasion of the visit of Secretary Taft, September 6th. A rate of a fare and a third, from Roseburg and points north, and from Pendleton and points west, has been made for this occasion. Mr. Albert Phenls, staff corre spondent of tho Manufacturers' Rec ord, of Baltimore, Maryland, will spend this week In Oregon. A. Bennett, of Irrlgon, and Judge Goo. T. Baldwin, of Klamath Falls vice presidents of the Oregon De velopment League, havo agreed upon a special state badge for all dele gates to tho National Irrigation Con gress at Sacramento, September 2 to 7. The word "Oregon" and the beaver are prominent features of the badge. The commltteo havo instruct ed Tom Richardson, secretary of tho League, to receive seventy-five cents oach from delegates desiring to wear this badge. ' AT THE HOTELS. BLANCO Geo. E. Dlx, Missoula, Mont.; F. B. White, Portland; Miss C. E. Rodine; Geo. W. Lowo and wife, Ray Westwood, Maud Bolmour, Harry Wallace, Norman Gray, Lowe Stock Company; -T. Leobook and wife; J. E. Paulson, Coquillo; O. nelson, Coqullle; H. Quitzow, Port land; A. C. Hartlo; A. C. Gartin, Co qullle ;uen uouerts anu wire, j.em- leton; W. D. Reedy. CENTRAL, Roy H. Rozell; Wal ter Elliott; T. Greenhaw and family; J. T. Hall and family; Miss C. E. Rodine, Allegany; Jay Avory; Steve Burton; G. B. Co'o; J. A. Rhodes; Honry Berawald, Coqullle; R. J. Reeves? Chris Rasmussen and wlfo, Bandon; Van Clark; John Manlng; C. Martin, Norway; H. JA McKosky; William McKay; C. M. Rhodes. $ $ J $?$& ! $ 4 J $ $ i HOSPITAL NOTES. $ $ $ 5 5 $ $ $ l J t J $ l $ Mr. George Ross, of Catching In let, was operated on yesterday. Ho Is getting along nicely. Mrs. Lyons and twin babies loft for their homo on North Inlet, Sunday. Mr. Davis, who was lately brought to tho hospital with a broken leg, Is mending well and will soon bo able to leave the hospital. Charles Rehfleld whovas operated on for appendicitis some tlmo since, wns discharged yesterday and is as woll as ever. f 44,,f4,l, 4,4' DRAIN STAGE SCHEDULE. The Drain stage boat leaves Marshlleld at 4:15 a. m.; re- turning, arrives at 12:15 p, m. I'ianos stored; good waterproof buildings. W. U. Haines Music Co. Hot Chicken nio today at Davla & Davis' Dollcatesacn. . Business Directory Doctors. I E. E. STRAW, M. D. j PHYSICIAN AND SUKHEON ' Diseafies of the Eyo, Ear, I. ode unci Ihroat n specialty. Office in Lockhart'e Building. Marshfield, Oregon. DR. HAYDON Office opposite Union Kurnttnro Store. Hnun 10 to 1 nnd 2 td A I Spec ml attention lmfd to ils(ies ot the k urinary and dlcosth e organs u. a: rensicm examine) Marshfield, Oregoi i DR. .. W. INGRAM. Physician ant" bi rgeon 8 Olflco over. Sengstacken' i Drug Store Phones Office 1621; r Isldence 783 Lawyers, p E. L. C. Farrin GfSo. N. Farr.in FARRIN & FAMRIN Attorneys nt Enw City Attorney, Dep. Dlswlct Attornej Will practice in U. . Courts and before the U. S. gand Office. Lockhart Building, Mafshflold, Ore. Phono. Main SI. J. W. BENNETT,! 1 Office over Flanaganf & Bennett Bink. I Marshfield, - - Oregon Francis H. Clarke Ipcob M. Blake Laurence AfLfficqvist CLARICE, BLAKe&LILJEQVIST, ATTORNEYS- JpLAW Times Building, tmarshfleld, Ore. United States Commiwloner's Office. c f. Mcknight, I Attorney atifraw. Upstairs, Bennett &J Walter Block Marshfield, - X - OregoD COKE & COKE, Attorney at Maw. Marshfield, - - BE - Orogon MXLEr & MAYBEE, Attorney at tfl w. Of&co over Myers. Store. Phono 701 - - Norttf Bond, Ore. URIGHAM & HELL, Architects. North Bend, - - - 1 Orogon Real Estate Agents. DIERLAND COMPANY, Real Estato Brokers. North Bend. Oregon SIR. ALBERT ABEL, Contractor for Teaming of all kinds. Phono 1884. TheCB.,R.&LR.R. and Navigation Co. TRAIN SCHEDULE NO. 2. In Effect January 1, 1007. All previous schedules aro void. Subject to change without notice. W. S. Chandler, manacor: F. A. Lalso, freight agent; general offices, Marshfield, Oregon, No. 1. I ruins. Daily . Except Sunday, j Cations. Leave 9:00 a. m. MaVsllleld. B. IhI Junction. 9:45 a. m.Cofiuilo. Arrivo 10:20 a.m.MyHjb Point. No. 2. I Daily Excopt Sunday, j Leavo 10:45 a. m.Myrtlo Point. 11:30 a. m. Coqullle. B. H. Junction. Arrivo 12:30 p. m.Marshflold. Extra trains will run on dally special ordors. Trains to and from Beaver HH1 dally. Stea Works ee6 y Uuiicw ':unlQntsfgariiiCJi olean iyivt. Philip Becker, Propriclot. UiDy y 3lfl ata nr i: 1 ! M1YS HfflfcTAl? Cures Coughs. Colds. Croun. La firing Actv., ti ' ' --- rr-i wwii, xmutu ine uenuine is in the . and Lung Troubles. Prevents Pneumonia and Consumption vellqw package Skating Rink P. L. Avery, Manager. Thursday and balance of the week "THE AMERICAN BIOSCOPE" Under the direction of Mr. G. A. linger, Will present a long scries of tho Latest and Timely Subjects MOVING ' 1 THE EXCEEDINGLY FUNNYCOMEDY FILM. "THE SLliW Ululated Songs Music by the Eminent Piano Soloist Prof. C. A. Guiidiir. Arcfined entertainment for Ladies, Children nnd Gontlc men. One performance every evening. Change of pro gram Monday and Thursday. Box oflice opens at 8 p. m. I Performance at 8:30. Admission 1 Bmrii ALL .PARTS OF THE WORLD We use the necessary facilities for " sending money to world, and withou THE FIRST NATI0NA Marshfield, l(w(NK California and Oregon Coast Steamship Company. Steamer B. W. OLSON, COOS BAY Sails from Poi Sails from Coos Bai F. F. Baumgaitiior, Agt. Couch St. Dock, Portland, Ore, mtmmnntnnmim A nice line f t Souvenir Postalyff Marshfield H N0RT0V& HANSEN- 8 rtmmmmmnmmmimtmmmmmm Portland & Coos Bay S S Line BREiSSKWATER u Sails forPortland anoLttkoria every Thursday C. F. McColIum, Agt. Phone Main 34 WHY DO PEOPLE BUY IN SENGSTACKEN ADDITION BEjCAUSp8" ( It is choice inside rlsideoB property, lots 50xJ00 with alleys, is well sh'eltlredith a good bay view and prices of lots are reasonaiaJ For particulars see TITLE GUARANTEE & ABSTRACT CO. Henry Sengstacken, Manager. TRY A, TIMES 1 in PICTURES OF PARIS" s Children 15c, Adults 25c. M. parts of the or loss, V- OP COOS BAY Oregon. Alliance 1 Mo PORTLAND turdays, 8 p. m. f? Aanctpw Icsdays, at service of tide. L. W. Shaw, Agt. Marshfield, Ore., Phone 441. smmmammmma A. St. -Dock WANT AD. CONTAINS NO HARMFUL I m?TTri3 . . 1 ! . . 3 I I 1 I i 1 A H a 11 k i. a g in nf V.i 'Nil ma i.n U ia T ,a "I .1 B .V A I) HI A ! I 14 (a 1 to nf n 0 , iETS. - Vi Ifc Jm vk. il ""85wKPrPwT JShsS -..,&. ., v.., ,jr!xi3xmxs.rT iiii;ir ii m .I i inn , . T , & ;. yhMBTfB afca aB i3' HLkMMiiHHHHHMHflHAkM Vi MPsr im , ''-iiK