6 Daily Edition (00 Oitms USE TIMES WANT ADS c Member of Associated Press. VOL. I THE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1007. No. 207 COOS BAY HONORED BY NOTABLE MEN George E. Chamberlain And Tom Richardson Leave Portland Wednesday On Alliance. HAVE ROYAL WELCOME Marshfield nnd North Bend Will Take Good Care of Their Emi nent Guests. Governor Chamberlain and Tom Richardson are due to arrive on Coos Bay Thursday or Friday of this week and the cities on the hay are making elaborate preparations for a fitting program for the reception of Ore gon's chief executive, and Its fore most advocate, Tom Richardson. It is also possible that George Steel, state treasurer, may be in the party, but nothing positive is known re garding this. A meeting of Marshfleld's Cham ber of Commerce will be held In the office of the Investment Securities company tonight, wiien detailed ar rangements will be made for the Itinerary of Tom Richardson. It is the desire of the members to thor oughly acquaint Mr. Richardson with the resources of Coos county and the Coos Bay country. With that end in view the members will endeavor to pilot Mr. Richardson over the entire county. Governor Chamberlain will be taken care of in Marshfield by Coos Tribe No. 33. Governor Chamber lain will on his visit here be initiated into the mysteries of the local Red men lodge. Sacajawea council, No. 9, the ladles auxiliary, will partici pate in a banquet and reception which will be given by the Redmen on the occasion of the initiation. It will be the event of Marshfleld's so cial season. Governor Chamberlain will De the recipient of a banquet and reception by -the North Bend Commercial club at which the ladies will be present. The importance of the visit of Rich ardson and the governor to the Coos Bay country can not be enlarged on too much. It will place this country prominently before the eyes of thousands of people, and will result in much press publicity.. From Coos Bay Governor Cham berlain will go down to the Rogue river to visit the hatcheries belong ing to R. D. Hume. In a letter to F. H. Brigham of the North Bend Chamber of Commerce he says his visit here will probably be of short duration on that account, as id com pany with a deputy state fish warden who is with him he wishes to make a thorough inspection of the fisheries. It is thought that if possible Mayor Straw and Mayor Simpson will declare half holidays In the different cities if the length of the visit per mits. George N. Farrln, one of the prom inent Redmen of Marshfield, is in re ceipt of a letter from the governor relative to his visit here. The letter follows: "George N. Farrln, Esq., Marshfield, Oregon. "My Dear Sir: I am in receipt of your favor of .the 3d instant. In re ply permit to say that I expect to leave Portland for Mctrshfleld on the 14th. It Is the present intention of Mr. George A. Steele, state treasurer, Mr. Tom Richardson, manager of the Chamber of Commerce, Portland, and possibly one of the deputies of the master fish warden, to accompany me. From Marshfield we expect to visit Wedderburn, and with Mr. Hume to inspect his feeding pond for young salmon on Rogue river, in or der that we may form some idea as to the propriety of establishing a similar pond for similar purposes on the Columbia rivei ror the propaga tion of salmon taken at the several hatcheries here. Mr. Hume advised us that he would arrange to take us from Marshfield to his hatchery, and I am writing him today advising him of the time we expect to start for Marshfield. If you see him at Marsh field, therefore, about the time the Alliance arrives, kindly advise him of the program your people have so hospitably arranged for our enter tainment. It is barely possible that those who have promised to accom- 40,000 PEOPLE Six Lines Out Of Twenty Operate In Strike Ridden San Francisco. GOVERNOR WILL STAY Informs Newspaper Men He Will Have Hcadquai Tcrs in Ferry Building All Summer. San Francisco ( May 13. One hundred cars, manned and guarded by 300 non-union strike breakers, were operated today from 4 to 7 p. m. on six of the twenty odd lines of the United Railways. There were scores of acts of individual violence, but no riot beyond the ability of the police to put down. About forty thousand passengers were carried during the day. Thousands of them, as well as the carmen, were subject ed to intolerable insults at the hands of union men and their sympathizers, who cursed foully at the passing cars and the people In them. President Calhoun in a statement to the Asso ciated Press stated that he would not take back any striker until he sur renders his union card and signs a contract to remain non-union as long as he remains in the employment of the company. Governor Gillette today Informed the newspaper men who called on him that he would maintain head quarters in the ferry building all summer. A new factor was created in the car strike today by the discussion at a meeting of the board of supervisors of the advisability of the city's tak ing over the Geary street cable line, which Is owned by the city and leased to the corporation operating it, and of operating it on a f 3 a day basis for the eight-hour day demand which precipitated the present strike on the United Railways. The super visors did not reach a decision. MARSHFIELD LOOKS LIKE NEW MADE CITY Residents Have Co-operated With Mayor nnd Result Has Been Vast Improvement. The .movoment to clean up Marsh field has been almost universal, and the city presents an entirely differ ent appearance than It has for months. There are however, some of the property holders who Jiave not cleaned up yet, and the mayor will today give them a chance by keeping the wagons going over the city. ' WEATHER FORECAST. The weather forecast for to- day follows: Oregon, eastern Washington and Idaho, fair and warmer; Washington, fair and warmer except near coast. LOCAL WEATHER. The local weather for yester- day, as reported by Dr. Mingus, the Marshfield observer, fol- lows: , - Highest 01 degrees Lowest 44 degrees O p. in 53 degrees Wind, northwest. .Clear. pany me may fall at the last moment, but it Is my purpose to go whether they do or not. "I remember with much pleasure my former visit to your section, and will be delighted to renew the hos pitable acquaintances I then made. "With kindest regards, I have the Tionor to remain, "Yours very sincerely, "GEO, E, CHAMBERLAIN." REDMEX'S GOVERNOR DAY PROGRAM. Reception committee will meet the Alliance at Empire, where the governor and his party will be taken on board and brought to Marshfield. Between the hours of 7 and 9 o'clock the same evening the chief executive will be Initiated Into Coos Tribe, No. 33, I. O. R. M. From 9 to 10 o'clock, public reception given at Masonic Tem ple In honor of the governor and party. Following the reception a banquet will be given In th&.Masonlc banquet hall. Prominent citizens of North Bend, Myrtle Point, Bandon, Co qullle and the Coquille valley will be In attendance at the ban quet and toasts will be given. GEORGE E. CHAMBERLAIN. I i IPkTOIiiill MyHfiTQPlPPiTY J. n. Auiolfi WntAB obAnUNT 111! VIQITMY ft FHT HPRF iiLLiiyii oii i id mi nine State Superintendent Of Public In struction To Deliver Address In North Bend. STAYS THREE DAYS Will Tour Through Coos Bay Country Stopping at Myrtle Point and Coquille. J. H. Ackerman, state superin tendent of public Instruction, has written to North Bend that he will be in that city on May 29. Mr. Ack erman will deliver an address at the Eckhoft hall on the evening of that date. In his honor an elaborato pro gram is being pmnned by the North Bend school. He will be on Coos Bay three days, and will also visit the Marshfield public school. Leaving the bay Su perintendent Ackerman will tour through the Coos Bay country and visit the schools at Myrtle Point and Coquille. ANOTHER ADDITION TO THE TELEPHONE Coos Bay and Umpqua Telephone Company to Extend Gardiner Line 25 Miles. The Coos Bay and Umpqua Tele phone company will start work at once on a new telephone line to bo constructed between Gardiner and Sulphur Springs, a distance of 25 miles. The lino will be completed In about six weeks. The line runs through the Smith river valley and will be a farmers' line, about 25 tanners having con nections, This new line will work the same as the one to Gardiner, In that It Is connected with the Pacific States Telephone line, which gives connection with all places that it touches, along the Pacific coast. It Is Predicted That Flour May Soar - Up Fifty Cents On The Barrel. MILLS REFUSE ORDERS China Makes 1 utile Offer of Fifty Cents Advance Over the Present Prices. The local market condition is still on the boom. Especially is this true of flour, which will in a few days take another rise of perhaps 50 cents a barrel, and perhaps it may go up $1. This rise Is directly due to the sudden rise of wheat In the east, It having gone up $2 per ton in the past few days, and flour has gone up fl a barrel in the same locality. The coast mills aie refusing orders from China for flour at an advance of 50 cents over the present price. KILBURN RELIEVES MARKET. Brings In Heavy Shipment of Cab bages. The arrival of the steamer F. A. Kllburn from Portland yesterday re lieved the condition of the local mar ket on green stuff. There was quite a heavy shipment of cabbage, of which the local market had been short for over a week. Sugar Is still going up, and shows no signs of an immediate drop, but rather will prob ably take another rise in a short time. ANNIVERSARIES. Some Iiiijiortuiit Events Everybody Doesn't Think of. 'Yesterday was the three hun dredth anniversary of the founding of Jamestown, the first English set tlement in America. Yesterday was the one hundred and twenty-fourth anniversary of the founding of the Society of the Cin cinnati, which was organized by of ficers of the revolutionary army, SON OF MURDERED GOVERNOR IN COURT RESULTS OF RAILROAD DISASTERS Head On Collision. San Jose, May 13. As a freight train was passing Santa Clara today, the crew stopped and picked up a man beside the track who proved to be Deputy Sheriff Hayfrlch of Santa Clara, who was unconscious and looked as If he had been beaten. As the engine made speed to carry the wounded man to tho San Jose depot, the locomotive crashed head-on Into a freight train and every man of both crews was injured, but not fa tally. Hayfllch has not yet recovered consciousness. Defective Equipment. San Luis Obispo, Cal., May 13. After two hours' deliberation, the coroner's jury holding the Investiga tion of the Southern Pacific wreck at Honda Saturday afternoon, returned a verdict this afternoon that tho pas sengers came to their death by burns and Injuries received, nnd by tho evi dence of witnesses the wreck was caused by defective equipment. Death Roll Thirty-two. Santa Barbara, May 13. The lat est advices tonight from San Luis Obispo Indicate that the death roll of the Honda wreck Is complete with thirty-two victims, whose bodies are to be taken east today on a special funeral train. Twenty-one Dead. Santa Barbara, Cal., May 13. The coroner's jury summoned to Investi gate Saturday's wreck at Honda and fix the blame for the death of 21 peoplo whose bodies aro In this city, today concluded it was unable to ns slgn tho cause of tho wreck. JOHN BROWN DIES. Portland, Ore., May 18. Captain John A. Brown, of the stevedoring firm of Brown & McCahe, one of lite best known men in marine circles on the Pacific coast, died suddenly from an attack of heart disease tonight. Brown was in ordinary health until a few minutes he- foro the attack. NORTH BEND PUPILS ARE HELPING PEARY Teachers Iteport That Comfortable Sum Has Already Been Real ized From School Pupils. North Bend pupils are already be ginning to contribute to tho Peary expedition fund, and the teachers re port that quite a nice sum has been realized. All seem to understand the importance of individual co-operation in the matter. It is thought that by May 22, which will bo "Peary day" over the United States, the North Bend school will have raised Its proportion toward the fund that Is going to send tho peerless ex plorer on his north pole dash. BOW KNOT CLUB ENTERTAINS ERIENDS Jolly Crowd Passes Most Enjoyable' .,.. Sunday tit Coos Bay Life i , Saving Station. ' ' J The Bow Knot club closed its sea son Sunday by giving a launch rde and picnic to a number of tho mem bers friends. Tho party was taken to the United States Life Saving Sta tion, where an enjoyable day was passed rowing, sailing and sightsee ing. The party returned late Sunday night after an enjoyable day. Cap tain Nelson and wife and members of the crew helped in making tho day a delightful one, and extended an in vitation to the picnickers for their return to tho station. Julien Stuenberg Sits Within Few Feet Of Alleged Conspirator Against His Father's Life. TALESMAN QUALIFIES Men on Special Venire Offer Various Excuses to Avoid Serving. Boise, Idaho, May 13 Only a part of the day was given over to actual work in tho Haywood trial, and tho one step forward was tho qualifica tion of a single talesman who seems marked for peremptory challongo later. Tho rest of tho time went to tho talesmen of special venire and hearing excuses which made it im possible for them to servo the statq at this time. Judge Wood called tho case at 2 o'clock, and at onco gave attention to the 100 men summoned by Sheriff Hodgln In a special veniro issued Thursday last. Tho court asked those who had special excuses to offer to come for ward, and up surged a little mob of thirty-five. Seven were sick, several moro had sick wives, and there were a number of ploy riders who must ride hard theso days. Next tl"ro was a batch of federal grand ju'-jri who were under call to meet Juno 15, a date that would surely con flict with this trial. After them trooped a little column of county offi cials, great nnd small. There were administrators of estates that would suffer by tholr enforced absence. Two bankers had to watch and count coin of national banks. It took until 2:30 for Judge Wood to sort out those deserving excuse, and when he had finished there re mained 7G men In tho panel. In an hour devoted to examining talesmon, Ellsworth Lister, a young farmer who had vainly striven to bo excused, wont down beforo tho objection for tho prosecution for implied bias. Walter Shaw succeeded him. Shaw is a brother of a member of tho Idaho legislature, and Is now a farm er, but was formerly a meat cutter at Everett and Seattle. Ho was In definite in his answers and Is gener ally labeled for a peremptory chal lenge. Tho examination of Mr. Haw lay for tho prosecution was again brief today, and that of E. F. Rich ardson long and searching. To court this afternoon came Julien Stuenen borg, son of tho murdered governor, a tall sturdy youth strikingly like his father In face and figure. For two hours he sat with tho members of tho Boise bar, not ten feot from tho prisoner Haywood. Ho spoke to no one, and remained a quiet and unob trusive visitor. Tho Haywood group was tho same as last Thursday. They, too, were quiet and unobtrusive ob servers of the proceedings. NORTH BEND COUPLE WED IN MARSHFIELD John Anderson and Miss Johanna Johnson Are Joined in Matri mony. John Anderson and Miss Johanna Johnson, both of North Bend, wero married May 11 at tho Marshfield Lutheran parsonage by the Rev. B. F, Bongtson. Mr. Anderson Is a shipbuilder and tho couple "will rcsldo In North Bend. L. K. Wright, of Wnson, Wiscon sin, has arrived on Coos Bay and will look around tho country. FREE ROOM t DIRECTORY. The Times extends a cordial invitation to all strangers and others in want oi rooms to call at Its office. Wo have a number listed and ready for you. Any one having rooms is requested to leave them at tho Times of fice. If you can't come around drop a card or telephone. u m ii'-grntfimm i'mM