y4 ., ,-.T, -i-jjiyrwl''""' GREAT HOLDIN CM Eastern Interests Will Control Entire Railroad Situation of . the Country. HARRIMAN SMALL FACTOR 1VU1 Bo Delegated to Minor Influ ences Stocks Bought During Depression. New York, Nov. 15. The railroad tanking Interests' answer to tho country's demand for regulation has heen the iormation of the greatest railroad syndicate and holding com pany this country or the world has over seen. In the new organization E. II. Harrlman has been given a minor part, and the 'principal actors aro J. P. Morgan, J. J. Hill, Kuhu, Locb &. Co., John D. Rockefeller and the Standard Oil Company, who today control every transcontinental rail road, including the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific. The first apparent result will bo immediate restoration of normal financial conditions. Only piecemeal thus far have tho facts leaked out regarding the great game that has been played in rail road finance. Roundly stated, it has been a coup in which practically all the great railroad systems have fall en into tho basket of a comparatively small group of the country's big fi nanciers, principal among whom aro Rockefeller, Morgan, Hill.Kuhn-Loeb and the Standard Oil group. They bought great bundles of stocks In1 railroads that they never had hoped to secure at tho prices that prevailed for a few brief hours. Their control now includes the fol lowing railroads, steamship lines and large industrials: Standard Oil Company, Amalgamated Copper. United States Steel. Northern Pacific. -.)U hz t Great Northern. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, Illinois Central. Rrlo. .V ff mi m 1 Chicago & Alton. 'U&U.t; iuil&Uw.Vi! JNfiW Ynrlr C'ontrnl j til Wn-i Pennsylvania Central. ' '.' .'('a. ' Baltimore & Ohio. ' Louisville & Nashville. ' Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fo, ' Southern Railway. Union Pacific and its group. Southern Pacific and its group. Pacific Mail Steamship Company. Hill's Oriental steamship line. New England Railway system. ' Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul. ' Morse Steamship lines. In fact, tho only great transcon tinental railway system left out of iho consolidation is the Gould rail roads, and these will drop into tho lap of this gigantic combination bo foro long, because it will squeeze the life out of Gould by making it impoc nible for him to get more money. HaiTlninn Eliminated. The elimination of Mr. Harrlman became a necessity, but was practi cally impossible of accomplishment so long as tho prosperous times con tinued. It was impossible by reason of Mr. Harrlman's faculty for mak ing railroads, and particularly the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific groups, profitable to their stock holders. Never in tho history of American railroads have transconti nental lines been so enormously prof itable to thoir operators as havo these systems been under Harrlman's direction. To dislodgo him from a position so strongly entrenched would havo been beyond tho power oven of tho greatest financiers with out the accompanimont of tho seml panic that has prevailed in Wall street for tho last threo weeks. This period offered the opportunity that was taken advantage of by tho Mor-gan-Rockefollor-Kuhn-I,oob organiz ation, which was providentially as sisted by the Secretary of the Trcasu ry, who came Into Now York ono critical day with 10,000,000 of Gov ernment money and unknowingly but vory materially aided tho syndicate in its operations. Financial Kuropt Looks On. All financial Europe lias been looking on, Ilko spectators at a foot ball game, and now that tho coup Is finished and financial harmony again temporarily secured hero, gold Is coming over from Europo in million dollar shipments every day, and our securities nro going" back up tho scale. But no gold was avallnblo from Europe, no foreign exchange was availablo at any price, call money wont up to 200 per cent, and stocks went down to bedrock, until tho now combination in Wall streot had completed its plans. For days it has been understood in THE DAILY COOS tho street that when tho projected holding company for various stocks, of other railroads in tho Union Pa cific Railroad Company's treasury, was promulgated it would bo a big ger surpriso than tho country ever dreamed of. That this holding com pany will be under men other than Harrlman there is no longer room for doubt. It means a realignment of all tho transcontinental railroad interests, and a harmonizing of all these interests on a very large scale. The holding company takes in not only the stocks owned by tho Union Pacific Company, but also the securi ties held by tho Northern Securities Company, and embracing in these combined lists Great Northern, Burl ington, Northern Pacific, Alton,, Illi nois Central, St. Paul, Southern Pa cific, Union Pacific and all tho here tofore conflicting Interests in tho Pa cific. In the Southwest tho Rock Is land Bystem and the Gould system remain practically, unchanged at tho present time, but developments in that direction are logically certain to follow tho now alignment. Stand Against Policy. Back of all railroad reasoning lies tho purpose of the organizers to make a united stand against tho so called Roosevelt policy, under per haps a more discreet leadership than that of Mr. Harrlman. By restoring good business conditions and easing tho financial situation they hope to gain some measure of gratitltude from tho public, and start In upon an era of new railroad control that will bo less openly obnoxious but ul timately no less disastrous to the country's interests than has been tho Harrlman regime. It will bo n Pain fully thought out and quiet campaign against further encroachment of government regulation of railroads and largo Industrial corporations. That Mr. Harrlman can and does op erate a railroad with the greatest profits to tho financial syndicate backing him nobody disputes. But he has gained an unenviable reputa tion as a manipulator, and In that role has come to be regarded as a public- enemy. His removal from the forefront of the railroad forces be came necessary to the successful car rying forward of the projected move ment to regain public confidence and governmental toleration. It is freely predicted that Mr. Har rlman's actual retirement from the Presidency of the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific Railroad system Is out a matter of a short time. What effect these changes may havo upon railroad construction under way and Projected in tho Pacific Northwest it is impossible even to surmise. At tho Annual Bazaar of the Prctobvterlan Church, which is to he held next Wednesday in tho new srre in the O'Connell building, thore o bo a new attractive feature in tcihtion to the sale of useful and fancy needlework. A large number o. 'ho choicest drawings of the La (UtV Homo Journal artists hns i, weired ready for framing, which are i iom at an astpnishlngly JOw fji-uro. At tho same booth wharo these drawings may bo hni old subscriptions will bo received for that most popular journal. Tho r,t tonlion of present and prospective BJbscr'bers is respectfully called to s notice. And do not forget chicken supper. the Capt. Cornwall Will Qit Hunter. Captain Cornwnll. nf m, f.. Hunter, which is in port for Umpqua freight, will sever his connection with tho tug on tho first of Decem ber. He had intonded to milt tho sorvice on the first of November, but Captain Chrlstianson, of the Robarts, who is to succeed him, was not ablo to ieavo tho Sluslaw at that time. Captain Cornwall will depart imme diately after the first for his homo in Berkoley, where ho has not been in six years. CJOKS TO .LUL IIATIIKH THAN PAY ONE CENT Chicago Nov. 15. A dispatch to tho Record-Herald from Wa bash, Ind says: Mrs. Lucy Burls, owner of two farms and much city property, who was fined by a Wabash Cir cuit Court jury 1 cent for assault nnd battery on her farm tonant, Tom Sivets, yesterday, was taken to jnil be causo sho refused to pay tho fine. Tho jury gavo her tho least possible fine. Mrs. Burris, although wealthy, stubbornly asserted she would never pay n cent. Sho Is a widow and manages her own affairs. FiUnlly Hurt In Wreck. Marysvlllo, Cal Nov. 15. A Vorthorn electric car, bound from Marysvlllo to Yuba City, collided vlth tho engine of a freight train loro tonMit. Ono was killed and 20 njured, ono of whom, fatally. BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD. 0 YORK IS 61116 STOCKS Yesterday's Record Largest in History of Wall Street Low Prices Accountable. MILLIONS BACK TO BANKS Brighter Look to Financial Situation . Cnsli Pnid for tho Securities. New York, Nov. 15. Never In the history of Wall Street has there been such enormous purchase of securities by investors in ordered lots as the transfer books of, railroad and in dustrial companies show today, the record breaking tho number of now shareholders. Tho present low mark et values of tho standard securities Is responsible. New York Central and several other companies report that the number of their shareholders have nearly doubled in the last year. Iransfer departments aro working day and night to keep up with their work and where transfer of stock is usually effected in two days, delays of a week are now uncommon. Dis tribution of stock to people of mod erate means forcasts certain relief for tho momentary situation. Four brokerage houses state today that these purchases are made outright with cash withdrawn from safety de posit vaults of with certified checks. These sums, ranging in amounts from ?100 to $10,000 in aggregate, total many millions of dollars. Bank ers welcome the small investor, for his appearance betokens a firm con viction that tho country's industrial welfare is being maintained. WELLESLEY GIRL IN ST. LOUIS JAIL Alleged Actress Who Was Arrested for Not Paying Board. St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 15. Elvyian Dorothy Clark, a Wellesley College graduate, and one of the passengers on the Lusitania's maiden trip, who Is detained by the police, will defend her own case when she Is taken to morrow morning to the police court to answer a charge of vagrancy. The girl studied law for some time, she says. Sho was arrested at tho Laclede Hotel on complaint of detectives from the Planters' Hotel, where she ownes a bill of $2G. She was kept In a cell over night. It was found that the law allowing hotel proprie tors to prosecute criminally for non payment of board has been repealed in Missouri, and tho vagrancy charge followed. In her belongings a letter was found from "Ned," a Harvard stu dnet. He remonstrated with her for her Inconstancy. Miss Clark says she has been on tho stago, traveling all over tho world. Sho played 23 weeks In London, she says. Banker Committs Suicide. Kansas City, Nov. 15. J. B. Thomas, for nearly 30 years cashier of the bank of Albany, Albany, Mo., a prominent democratic politician and president of the state board of arbitration and meditation, and for mer grand master of the Masonic Order of Missouri, committed suicide by shooting at tho Midland hotel in this city today, leaving no explana tory message to explain his act. Thore Is no evidence that tho Bank of Albany Is Involved in the tragedy and tho directors state that they know no reason for his suicide. ANNA HELD CRITICALLY ILL OF PNEUMONIA Now York, Nov. 15. News has reached theatrical circles hero that Anna Held Is critically ill of pneu monia at the Hotel Majestic, in Phila delphia, and that tho engagements of tho Parisian Model company, in which sho is a star, have been can celled. Miss Held was taken 111 last Thursday night In her dressing room at tho opera house. Pneumonia do o:oped Saturday. Home From Portland. Jack Finnngan returned yesterday from Tortland with n stock of good? 'or his office on tho water front. He has dry batteries, and other flxturer Intended for repairs of gasollm launches. Ho said tho money situa Hon in Portland is easing no con ildorably since the Merchants Nation x failed, as nearly everybody ha money since tho run occurred whlc) cleaned tho bank of a million and r half. OREGON, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER! 6, 1907. ""JISUWU1," " ...v- . 1 j LIMIT HEIGHT OF SKYSCRAPERS New York Alms to Check tho Present Crnzo for Tail Buildings. New York, Nov. 15. Tho doom of tho modern skyscraper has probably been sounded in this city by drastic regulations which havo been adopted unanimously by tho Building Codo Commission. These regulations pro vide that after January 1, next, no new building shall bo over 250 feei In height. The new law Is aimed to Btop tho feverish race for tho construction of high buildings. That a limit must bo fixed somewhere' has been the ad vice of noted fire underwriting ex perts, and Fire Chief Croker himself has sounded tho warning. Tho fire insurance interests have feared that the 41-story Singer building might be followed next by a 50-story struc ture. That tho new regulation will be passed by the Board of Estimate and tho Aldermen before it finally be comes a law is regarded as likely, since several of the city's best-known builders aro members of the commis sion and voted for it. They all agreed it was advisable to call a halt In tho construction of tho 40-story buildings, though Theodore Starrott, who is a member of tho commission, expressed tho opinion -that a sky scraper could go 700 feet high and be perfectly safe, provided that It was of real flroproof construction. More than two score of tho ctly's best-known skyscrapers exceed the deadline fixed by the new law. Of course these buildings are not af fected by the now regulations. SIXTY MILLIONS IN GOLD FOR AMERICA New York, Nov. 14. Moro than ?G0,000,000 in gold has been en gaged abroad for import to the United States since the present move ment began. Announcements today of engagements of $800,000 by the First National Bank of Chicago, $500,000 by the Illlnoois Trust and Savings Bank, and $1,000,000 by banks In New Orleans brought tho grand total up to $60,330,000. Gold to the amount of $8,000,000 arrived here today on the steamship Oceanic from Liverpool. Left at Seven O'clock. Tho Alliance left out for Portland yesterday at seven o'clock and will start on the downward trip on Sun day. Following are the passengers she carried: C. L. Bailey, Timothy Leavy, W. F. Klrmebein, M. Beacon, B. F. Froh- mader, Dr. Savery, A. A. Scott, Mar tha Kennedy, Axel Peterson, Christ Hanke, Mrs. E. A. Myes, Karl Ham berg, R. D. Hume, H. S. Finch, L. Walker, Ross Condt, Tom Carter. Wm. Kneale, J. Stern, S. P. Bartlett, Ed Dorge, J. T. Talvage, L, V. Mc Donald, Mrs. McDonald, Anton De thos, Leon Falongas, Andrew Mon torvea. Flying Machine Launched. Baddeck, Nova Scotia, Nov. 15. After many years of experimental work, the machine with which Pro fessor Alexander Graham Bell hopes to solve the problem of aerial navi gation was successfully launched to day. Mrs. Bell broke a bottle of champagne over the bow of tho ship, declaring its name will be "Signet." No flight of the ship was attempted. Tho ship or kite is tetrahedron, 13 meters long on top, ten meters long at tho bottom by three in depth. Walsh Wants Immunity. Chicago, Nov. 15. A long drawn out argument over what was practic ally a plea for immunity because tho books of tho defendant wero used in a grand jury investigation, consumeu tho afternoon in tho Walsh case. The question of Immunity was not settled when court adjourned. Ships First Brew. The Coos Bay Brewery mado Its first shipment of beer to Coquillc Friday. They have bjen delayed owing to a defective filter and havo ordered another to bo sent by ex press to cost $2800, also another $300 machine Cuircn Brothers Complete, Work. Curren Brothers, of North Bond, report they will havo tho grading fin ished for the gas plant today. Mr. Sa.so will havo tho building com pleted nt tho same time. VOLCANO lUtFAKS OUT IN SIGHT OF FAIRBANKS Seattle, Wash., Nov. 15. A special from Fairbanks says: A penk of the Alaskan range is in a stato of eruption and is plainly vlslblo from Fairbanks. A lurid glow surmounts tho crest of tho crat er. Volumes of smoke aro pouring; forth. I .1 ' FREE J To The Lucky Person Remember Geo. Goodrum the GentsFurnisher wil! open With a complete Line of Gents Toggery. Saturday Nov., 16 With Everything New A ticket will bo given with each WWW F R 50c purchase which entitles holder to a chnnco on tho cash pri.o, to bo given away Saturday, November 23. tJjjIl tfr tj tl? tfr Como nnrf seo th0 pretty ncw store whether you buy or not. Every body welcome. Remember the Date, Nov. 16th Northeast cor. of C'and Broadway mmmmmttmtmmttmnmmwuw88mmmtttttt8m Everything Electrical at Oregon Electrical Supply Co. Now O'Connell BIk. A Very Practical Boy's Overcoat XTRAGOop Reefer YOU'LL get two things out of a call at this store. First, an idea of what will best suit your boy's need; second, a knowl edge of the difference be tween XTRAGOOn, gniH only here, and the ordinary brands common to most stores. XTRAGOOD CLOTHES F10R.BOYS are made on the same prin ciple a good mason and carpenter put up a house. The foundation reliable fabrics, linings, trimmings. The construction skillful, honest, thorough. They've a better appearance than other clothes; and better service because they're better made. 0i THE REEFER For boys 3 to lGj short, of heavy material!, warm and serviceable. Prices $5 to $12. MAGNES & MATSON J. E. Cayou 13 building a hous0 in Bay Tark. E. C. Drews is erecting a cottago in Railroad addition. E. G. PIggot is building a home in Railroad addition. 10.00 i aarna tutmtKttmttttmamtrtmtuttmttm Home Made Bread MADE AT THE Bakery Every woman and every man has a different way of making Bread. Glvo two peo plo tho same flour, tho same yeast and tho same oven and there will bo a difference ia tho tasto of tho bread. Wo havo experimented with bread- making for years and studied tho results. Tho out come of our work and study has been our Home-Made Bread Tho Acmo of Brcadmakbig Try It For Yourself COOS BAY BAKERY A. Street, Central Hotel Block. The Celebrated Libby Cut Glass I have a good selection of the finest cuts, I am the sole agent here and these goods are to be had in no other store in Marsh field, If you want something truly fine see these goods, Opposite Odd' Fellows' Hail, T. HOWARD in MtMMMii'i - Mrs. Lund, nt.v.ast Marsbfleld. If remodelling her house and ninklnS additions. E '' - ILsl && j jHfjf ,-ifcAgymiuafc.Ai ?Jili " ,A MZ.