mHmiSSSWfWSSKi .- Jl-i ?s THE DAILY COOS BAY TIFS. MARStiFIELD. OREGON, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER &0, 1907. HILL SPEAKS OftLlADS Says Railroads Cannot Keep Up With Growth of Ship- ping Business. GREAT EXPENSE BORNE Vive Billions Spout In Five Years Increase Demands 50 1'cr Cent Additional. Kansas City, Nov. 19. James J. Hill was the principal speaker at the 13th annual dinner of the Commer cial Club in this city tonight. Hill discussed the question "Commercial development of the Mississippi Val ley," and gave a comparative history and review of the industrial con ditions as they exist today, stating that transportation facilities are at present unequal to demands. He said that unless they can be made equal to the burdens they bear, the country cannot prosper. He declared tho railroad managements have used every effort to increase shipment and efficiency in operation and have ac complished1 wonders. The problem now Is to bring construction up to the needs of our immense commerce, tho speaker noted the constant re duction in rates, until now the pas senger rate averages two cents a mile. The total dividends of all railroads in the United States In 1906 were but four per cent. On 33 per cent of tho roads, no dividends were paid. Notwithstanding this, tho rail road systems are not a failure.; on tho contrary, they are the most con spicuous success ever achieved in this country. Railroad men have tho right to feel proud of their record, but the people should realize there is a physi cal limit to the capacity of. a railroad. .Railroad men of the country strug gled for fifteen years to move the load which increases annually 10 to ' 15 per cent with engines whoso power increases about 2 per cent per year. Tho whole system, there fore, declared he, must have more lines, more double tracks and more facilities. A year ago tho speaker said he stated it would require $5,500,000,000 or $1,100,000,000 a year for five years to make the rail road facilities equal to the demands. Although the amount suggested has been collected and spent, tho rail roads havo barely held their own and the future remains to be pro vided for. In the opinion of compe tent judges, more, perhaps 50 per cent, must be spent annually for five years to come. Only two reasons, the scarcity of money and tho reluctance to invest, overshadow the outlook. The most serious factor in ,-the present situa tion is tho shock to confidence in our investments all over tho world and consequent limitations on that ac count. It Is easy to impair credit to such an extent as to take half a gen eration to rebuild it. Political cam paigns, tho speaker contends, In many states have been an issuo on tho integrity of lailroad management and property. Following these, caino a wild raid in which more than 170 acts, more or less confiscatory of railroad property, wero enacted. Tho consequences havo already mado themselves evident and tho country suffers uuder tho blow. If this policy continues thero will presently bo no power short of a pledge of credit by the government Itself that will ena ble securing tho funds necessary to provide moro tracks. Before we again realize a favoriug disposition to invost, Hill predicted, there must bo a different temper, a larger view of justice, a settled policy and rea sonably liberal treatment. Wo read, ho said, of tho conflict between "rlghtousness and businebs. Thero can bo no such conflict unless thero is fraud at tho businebs end or hypo crisy at tho rlghtousness end; if a man or corporation sins against tho laws let him bo punished, but put nn ond to wholesale proscription, de structive of all credit and repugnant to nil son3o of justice, In conclu sion, ho said, it is timo tho wholo .country sobered down and think ubout tho problems boforo it. A hearty union of all Interests, Ilioad understanding and moro cautious uttltudo In our public acts will most offectually promote success in Indus try and sanity and pornuuieneo to tho nation. WOULD EXTERMINATE. N THE REVOLUTIONISTS Prisoners ju Siberia Are Executed to Make Room for Other Unfortunates. London, Nov. 19. Compared with today's condition in Russia the French revolution was child's play, according to information smuggled by the St. Petersburg correspondent of a London newspaper to Eydtkuh nen, East Prussia, and thence tele graphed here. Tho outside world, says tho corre spondent, knows practically nothing of the truth. So strict is the censor ship oven Russians arc, ignorant of what does not concern them person ally. Tho government is literally attempting to exterminate the revo lutionists. The latter, it must be remembered, are not the hotheads who figure in the anti-government movements elsewhere throughout the world, but tho very flower of the rising generation. Many are of no ble blood, rich and highly educated. Tho revolutionists, on their side, are not Idle. Not a day passes with out its list of officials slain by as sassins or maimed by bursting bombs or pistol shots. There is ofllcial authority for the statement that 13,000 political ex iles are in the northern part of Tobolsk alone. It is one of the cold est inhabited regions on earth, yet the prisoners aro without sufficient Clothing or food. It Is certain that many must freeze or starve to death. Tho correspondent sends with his own story a copy of a letter written by a student in the exile prison at Riga in which a description is given of the manner In which the cells are kept from overflowing. "Every day fresh batches of prison ers are brought in and to make room for' them it is necessary to get rid of the old ones," says the letter writer. "The recently organized war courts arrango this. Through our prison windows we can see tho church yard. It Is another night. Lights are mov ing outside, a long grave is being dug. Close to the prison wall ap pear soldiers, ofllcers, prison officials and last of all the victims. "They are bound to stakes set to keep them from falling. The super intendent draws a sack over each head. Tho air is rent with the cries of the men about to die. A volley crashes. Another volley. The ofll cers advance and, with their revolv ers accomplish any work the rifle bullets left unfinished. "This sanguinary tragedy haa been onacted every night for a year and a half. Accusation, investigation and execution take about 2 1 hourc." Great reduction in Jlillinery for tho iiet ten days nt Mi's. A. G. Aiken's. luU HINDUS ARE IJARRED. Citizens of Marshfleld Refuse bcngci-s on Alliance. Pns- Ilettcr Days in Sight. A canvass of the local bankers and business men yesterday doveloped tho gonoral belief that tho president's decision to Issuo Pauama bonds and a great sum In currency will havo tho tiftect of quickly lifting the embargo nu money. Hindus aro throwing their money away if they spend it for transporta tion to Coos Bay. This was demon strated upon the arrival there a few days ago of the steamer Alliance which landed eight of the dark-hued men at Marshfleld. Their arrival there caused a mass meeting and they were promptly ordered out of tho city. The Alliance returned hero last night after tho remarkable run of 25 hours from Coos Bay bar to Port land, Including tho stops at Astoria and Goble, and tho ofllcers tell of how tho Hindus wore recolved. "There Is certainly no use of theso dark fellows trying to establish them selves in tho vicinity of Marshfleld," said ouo of tho ofllceis, "because thoy will not bo tolerated. On our last trip down wo had eight of them and they traveled first class, too but I never saw such excitement as was created when they stepped ashore. Tho citizens immediately called a mass meeting and ordered them, out of town. They explained that they had como to work and that they wero law abiding, but it helped not. To avoid trouble tho Hindus left for Co qullle, whero I presumo they wero permitted to remain temporarily." Tho Alllanco landed at Couch street at C o'clock last night. Sho brought 52 passougers and consider able freight. Efforts will bo mado to get hor away Monday night, al though she Is now two days bohlnd hor schedule. This is duo partly to being fog-bound in tho Columbia rlvor, Oregon Journal. --?-- WOULD DIVORCE RICH HUSBAND "Wife of Wnrivii Dcrnluii't of Chicago Begins Suit in Piishudeiiu. Los Angeles, Nov. 19. Mrs. Roso L. Barnhrat, wifo of "Warren Earlo L. Danihart, wifo of Warren Eftrfe has filed suit for absolute divorce and division of hor husband's extensive We Carry The Most Complete Line of Christmas Pipes Ever Shown on Coos 'Bay. BIG DISCOUNT ON ALL GRADES Prices Ranging from 25 Cents and Up ... .. JACK DAVIS BLANCO CIGAR STORE ntnnnntttnrnnnnnnttttt 25 0 Discount On Artloom Tapestries ... TODAY ONLY ... --( property, estimated at $250,000. She charges cruelty, and her action is ,a surprise to tho couple's friends, be cause there has been every outward Indication of complete happiness In their marital life. 'They have been occupying a fine residence In Pasa dena, where Mrs. Barnhart is well known and popular in exclusive sos ciety circles. Her principal allega tion is that her husband was cruel in that ho falsely accused her of being on too friendly terms with a well known Pasadena physician whose name is not mentioned. Barnhart is well known here and in the East. He is a member of the wealthy Barnhart family of Chicago, his father being a member of the firm of Barnhart Brothers & Splndler, manufacturers of printing supplies. EXPECTS STOCKS TO RISE RAPIDLY James R. Hnggin Snys Ho Has Mort gaged Home For Money to Buy With. New York, Nov. 19. "Buy stocks for a rise," is the advise James B. Haggin, the veteran mining man, gave today. "I don't see how the market can go much lower. It is so fer down now that many stocks that bring handsome dividends are sell ing away below their Intrinsic value. While they are cheap Is the time to buy. That's why I bought them." Mr. Haggin's confidence In the com ing boom of securities is so great that he admitted having mortgaged his home at No. 587 Fifth avenue for $22,000 and his Franklyn street property for $75,000 in order to put some of the cash Into stocks. Mr. Haggin's vast mining proper ties in the west, he said, were all turning out full "crops." . ALABAMA SENATE FOR PROHIBITION Unusual Scenes Enacted In, Semite Chamber "When Bill Passes Will Go tq House. Montgomery, Ala., Nov. 19. Un precedented scenes were enacted in tho senatorial chamber today when tho statutory prohibition bill was passed. Women and children thronged tho corridors and galleries and even Invaded tho sanctity of tho floor Itself, pushing senators from tholr seats and giving vent to their that reached through tho building, enthusiasm by shouts and cheers Senators who opposed tho bill wero hissed down when they arose to speak against tho measure. The amendment will be sent to tho house and bo put on record without a fight. ADAMS SPENDS DAY ON WITNESS STAND Barrow Failed To Open Question of Confession Adams Will Re sume Stand Today. Spokane, Nov. 19. A special to the Spokesman-Review from Rath drum, says, Steve Adams was on tho stand almost the entire day, and when court adjourned, Prosecutor Hawley was not nearly through cross-examining him. Until noon, Darrow led him through tho events of his life, up to the time ho was arrested at Haines, Oregon, for al leged complicity in the Steunenberg assassination. He stood up pretty well under tho direct examination, but when Hawley took him in hand he became somewhat mixed in de tails. In the main, however, he must havo made a good impression on the jury. Hawley did not get to the confession today. He proved by Adams that the latter was always liberally supplied with money, but tho explanation as to where he got it was vague. He told Hawley ot a trip to California In 1903, to look at mines, but could not or would not say whether they were quartz or placer. Upon his return from his trip to Ogden, he wired Pettlbone at Denver for $75 to get back. He said he got $75 from Pettlbone, "I borrowed It." Harry Orchard s story details this Incident. In many instances like this Adams held to the details of his confession. A. H. Eddy for rlans and speci fications of your new home. Gus Pcderseu Will Move. Gus Pedorson, of Empire, was In Marshfleld yesterday and was seen by a reporter. Mr. Pedersen has fitted up the "Old Corner" In Empiro and will move Into It on Saturday of this week. Ho has arranged tho building for a saloon and has very line furn ishings. Gus has mado considerable of a success in Empiro and this move is ono of progress. His many Marsh flold friends always recoivo a hearty wolcomo at his hands when they pass that way. HITCHCOCK IN COURT, REFUSES TO ANSWER. New York, Nov. 19. Raymond Hitchcock, actor, refused to answer questions put to him during tho trial of a criminal libel suit instituted by formor Congressman Chanler against William Hearst. Hitchcock based his refusal upon personal rights, as ho himself Is undor indictment and could not bo compelled to answer questions' wldch might tend to in criminato or dogrado him. Tho court (sustained tho witness. GERMAN-AMERICAN HOSPITAL ORGANIZED Mr. John B. Goddard, who has been on the bay for the past two months in the interests of a syndi cate, and who has successfully organ ized tho German-American Hospital Association, has resigned as secretary and general manager of the same, be cause of pressing buslnesss ho has to look after In other lines. This association has been launched for the purpose of making contracts with sawmills, logging camps, fac tories, the unions, families and indi viduals, to provido them with pro tection in tho way of medical and surgical attention, medicine, dental work, hospital, ambulance, and bur ial In case of death. Tho system is being very generally acqepted and is sure to be successful. Stiletto Pocket Knives will nl wnys hold nn edge.. M liner's. Masquerade Ball, at Sumner, November 23. Good music. AVASTEI) FISH Everybody has heard about "fish erman's luck," but this ono is a new one. It is an old saying that "It Is hard to teach an old dog new tricks" and moro especially so an old "sea dog." Jim Ellerby Is always looking after anything good In tho fish line, or "on tho fish line," for that mat ter. Coming up tho bay yesterday ho saw an old fisherman about to throw overboard a 20 pound ling. j'Hold on," says Jim, "do you want to sell that?" "Sell him! Yah. How much yqu give?" "Four bits" says Jim, "Do you want any more?" says tho fisherman. "All you can catch" says Jim. "Ach, mein gott, I shust throwed $3 in tho bay." Tho truth of the matter Is that the old fisherman did not know that the fish were good to eat. Ho supposed they wero "bull heads." To bo can- CURTAINS Regular $3.50 Regular $4.00 Regular $5.00 Regular $5.50 Regular $9.50 Sale Price $2.63 Sale Price $3.00 Sale Price $3.75 Sale Price $4.10 Sale Price $7.10 COUCH COVER.S Regular $1.75 Sale Price $1.31 Regular $2.50 Sale Price $1.88 Regular $4-00 Sale Price $3.00 Regular $5.00 Sale Price $3.75 Regular $5.50 Sale Price $4.10 Regular $6.50 Sale Price $4.88 Regular $10.00 Sale Price $7.50 Regular $12.50 Sale Price $9.45 REMEMBER TODAY ONLY . The Going & Harvey Co, n H H a H t H H H H I H f H H H f f Complete-House-Furnishers 2 WE SAVE YOU MONEY nntr4tu,nutntntnnunmii HSRDBffDnaBI In M l You Need . Of anything in the Gent's Furnishing Line? Such as Fine Shirts, Collars and Cuffs, Umbrellas, Neckwear, Hosiery and Underwear Our Coat Sweaters to Can't ,be beat as to quality or price; different colors and of excellent make. OUR SPECIALTY. is in supplying man with just what he needs SOLE TO HIS CHIN Look over our stock and wo bellevo you will say our storo is tho neatest, com- pletest and up-to-dato tho Bay. on GEO. G00DRUM Gentfs Furnisher C and Broadway did tho ling is not a beautiful bird, but it is certainly delicious when properly cooked. You will reach tho ducks if you uso Mllner's shells. Muskogee, Okla., Nov. 19. There was a largo number of delegates hero today when David U. Francis, former governor of MlBoourl, called tho 13th annual meeting of tho trans-Mississippi congress to oro. In a few woll chosen words, ho v,e' corned Oklahoma into tho Union o I the states, and declared tho jneeti fortnally opened. Maty Tiger, ow Mm hla?a !,. flvn civilized ItlM' delivered an address of greeting I tho congress. Maty Tiger bpko his native tongue. President H. 'I r.nminnii thon rtnHvered his annu address, dwelling at some- lonstn on federal improvement of ways. , water fr ' " " " ' If! 'IIIMIIHI I 'TUT " ' tt Ml I Sm't jHl ' I JfHnSSW-IKBn. - .. ., .ftv . mi i in mm imi. jKs -ALtt.'Atb.mM LJtS SffijjgggHflflH