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About The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1907)
THE DAH-Y COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1907. i"8i-, PERSONAL MENTION. M. J. Hartson and H, N. Lorcnz. Mr. Dow is golns. to build a dock manipulating securities which aro is sued without any kind of control or supervision. But there will be plenty Mrs. Isaacs of North Bend was a city visitor Friday. Mrs. Camper of Allegany was a city visitor Friday. Mrs. W. Piper was in this city shopping yesterday. Mrs. Dave Cowan was down from Coos River yesterday. Mrs. Hoeck of North Bend spent yesterday in this city. Mr. W. Beatty and wife were down from Coos River Friday. Mr. Church spent yesterday in Marshfleld with friends. Miss J. Anderson spent yesterday In Marshfleld with friends. Miss Dolly Haydon of Empire was a city visitor yesterday. Mayor L. J. Simpson of North IJend was a city visitor Friday. Mrs. L. E. Lowe returned last night to her home on North Inlet. Mrs. T. M. Collver returned to ier home on Catching Inlet last sight. Miss Etta Buntin of Beaver Hill spent yesterday in this city with irlneds. Mrs. Wm. Eickworth of Milllcoma was a business visitor to this city yesterday. Miss Lilian McCann of East Marshfleld was shopping in this city yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. It. E. Shine of Em pire were business visitors in Marsh fleld Friday. Mr. Horsfall and children left to day for their home at Lakewood and will remain until Monday. Mrs. Maggie O'Donahuo and children left this city yesterday for their home In San Francisco. Miss May Wickham of Coqulllo is visiting her sister Mrs. Nels Os mundson of this city for a fow days. Mr. Frank Layton has been very ill at the Blanco Hotel but today having greatly improved, ho is again, nblo to be out. Mr. Cifford Bayless has sold out his interest in the "Uniqub Pantor ium," and accepting a position in the electric light works. Mr. Bayless entered Into his new work last night. Mr. Norman Fairfax and Mr. J. II. Chevely returned"' to Marshfleld yesterday after having spent threo weeks along the Umpqua river, prospecting and lncidently enjoying a good hunt. Mr. James Breef of San Francisco is making a business tour of this section and will remain for a few days in' Marshfleld and North Bend thenco going to Coquille, Myrtle Point and Bandon. Miss L. Johnson left this city yes tcrdtjy for her homo in Alameda after having ppont the summer months in Marshfleld visiting and at times practicing her profession, which Is nursing. Miss Eugenia Lyster left Marsh fleld yesterday for her home m Goldfleld, Nevada, after having spent the summer on Coos Bay and vlait ing the many summer resourts In this vicinity. t Mrs. S. S. Graham is visiting with friends in this city for a few days. After leaving hero Mrs. Graham' will go to Portland and also the Sound cities from whence" she will continue lier trip north crossing Canada, thence back to Boston, her home, making in all a three months tour. Mr. II. S. Mann and wife, of Lob Angeles, have located In Marshfleld with Intentions to remaining here oven though wo do have such severe winters so they say. Tho reporter endeavored to Impress upon their minds that tho season was mild but the romark, "We henrd of tho Ore gon rains before," proved all ef forts of no avail. Miss Myra Stovons entortninod a number of friends at her home Thursday evening by having a "chaf ing dish" party. Every young lady invited was required to bring a elid ing dish, the, hostess promising to furnish supplies. Tho main fcatuio of tho evening was; each girl was compelled to eat what sho had pre pared, tho gentlemen having delicious refreshments served by the hostess. Cards wore played and a good tlmo was enjoyed by all. between his new ware house and the lof room ,ef't for nm)le legitimate re rlver to load and unload the goods ( ward for business genius, while the ho handles. A gasolene engine will chance for the man who is not a in Mm hnniinir business genius, but who Is a good, rnu ,..., r, , i r, , , ,1 thrifty, hard working citizen, will be The little son of Robert Parish of bettor i do not believe that our Myrtle Point aged 2 years, who ciforts will have anything but a wandered from his home last Friday beneficial effect upon the permanent and was drowned, was burled on I ,BI?,ty.0.r.iho??u"tIIL 2?'" u mmim ui luti, bvuii us regiuuii uuy temporary effect, I think, that any Saturday at Norway. The editor of tht, Port Orford Tribune, H. T. Stewart, accompanied by his wife, have been visiting on the river and attending the races at Arago. Myrtle souvenir boxes, napkin rings and darners at Prentiss.' Two Greeks Killed In Collision. Sacramento, Oct. 4. A train on the Northern electric ran into two cars upon which a work crew were riding, killing two Greeks and injur lng five. -Crockery and glassware at Pren tiss.' President Talks at Cairo (Continued from page 3.) COQUILLK XKWS. Coqulllo, Ore., Oct. 2, 1907. Doc Barkor, of Fairvlow, was brought In to tho W. O. G. Hospital Tuesday to havo his leg dressed. Ho was out hunting with others, and while chopping wood at the camp cut his log near tho auklo with the nx, soverlng tho largo cord abovo tho heol. It is qulto serious as it will bo protty sure to leave his limb stiff. Elmer Tuckness was Injured In Yoakum's camp for tho third tlmo this summer, last week and was taken to tho City hospital. Ho is improving now. Tho doctors say thoro aro vory fow houses in town mat aro not be ing visited by tho measles. Arthur Elllngson has sold his largo furniture etoro to T. J. Thrift. development of the people so far as this may be done by maintaining and promoting Justice, honesty, and equal rights. Wo believe in a real, not a sham democracy. We believe in democracy as regards political rights, as regards education, and, finally, as regards industrial conditions. By democracy wo understand securing, as far as it is humanely possibly to secure It, equality of opportunity, equality of the conditions under which ench man Is to show the stuff that Is in him and to achieve the measure of success to which his own force of mind and character entitle him. Religiously this means that each man is to have the right, un hindered by tho state, to worship his Creator as his conscience dictates, granting freely to others the same freedom which he asks for himself. Politically wo can be said substan tially to have worked out our demo cratic ideals, and the same is true, thanks to the common schools, In ed ucational matters. But in Industry there has not as yet been the gov ernmental growth necessary in order to meet the tremendous changes brought about in industrial condi tions by steam and. electricity. It Is not In accordance with our principles that literally despotic power should bo put Into the hands of a few men In the affairs of the industrial world. Our effort must be for a just and ef fective plan of action which, while scrupulously safeguarding tho rights of the men of wealth, shall yet, so" far as Is humanely possible, secure, under the law to all men equality of opportunity to make a living. It is to the interest of all of us that the man of exceptional business capacity should bq amply rewarded; and there Is nothing Inconsistent with this in our insistence that he shall not bo guilty of bribery or extortion, and that tno rights of the wageworker and of the man of small means, who aro themselves honest and hard working, shall bo scrupulously safe guarded. The Instruments for the exercise of modern Industrial power aro the great corporations which, though created by tho individual states, have grown far beyond the control of those states and transact their business throughout largo sec tions of the Union. These corpora tions, like the industrial conditions which have called them into being, did not exist when the constitution was founded; but the wise fore thought of tho founders provided, iirwiro the Interstate commerce clause of the constitution, for tho very emergency which has nrlsen, if only our people as a whole- will realize what this emergency Is; for if the people thoroughly realize it, their governmental representatives will soon renllzo it also. The national government alone has sufficiently oxtenslvo power and jurisdiction to oxerciso adequate control over the great Interstate corporations. While this thorough supervision and con trol by tho national government is desirable primarily in the interest of tho peoplo, It will also, I firmly be lieve, bo to the benefit of those cor porations themselves which desire to bo honest nnd law abiding. Only thus can wo put over these corpora tions one competent and efficient sovereign tho nation ablo both to exact justice from them and to se cure justlco for-them, so that they may not bo alternately pampered and oppressed. The proposal need be ('readed only by thoso corpora tions which do not wish to obey tho law or bo controlled In just fashion, but profcr to take their chances un der tho present lack of all system and to court tho chance of getting linpronor favors as offsetting the clinnco of being blackmniled an at titude rendered familiar in tho past by thoso corporations which had thrlvon under certain corrupt and lawless city governments. Tho first need Is to oxerciso this federal control In thoroughgoing and efficient fashion over tho railroads, which, becauso of their peculalr po sition, offer tho most immediate and urgent problem. Tho American peo plo abhor a vacuum, nnd is deter mined that this control shall bo ex ercised Bomewhoro; It Is most unwise for tho railroads not to recognize this nnd to submit to It as tho first requisite of tho situation. When this control Is exercised Th somo such fashion as It is now exercised over the national banks, there will bo no falling off In business prosperity. On tho contrary, tho chances for tho averago man to do better will be In creased, Undoubtedly thoro will bo much less opportunity than at pres ont for a very fow Individuals not of tho moBt scrupulous typo to amass great fortunes by speculating-in and I trouble is due fundamentally not to the fact that the national authorities nave mscovereu ana corrected cer tain abuses, but to the fact that those abuses wero tWere to be discovered. I think that tho excellent people who have complained of our policy as hurting business have shown much the same spirit as the child, who re gards the dentist and not the ulcer ated tooth as the real source of his woe. I am as certain as I can be of anything that the course we are pursuing will ultimately help busi ness; for the corrupt man of busi ness Is as great a foe to this coun try as the corrupt polltcian. Both stand on the same evil eminence of infamy. Against both it is necessary to war; and if, unfortunately, in either typo of warfare, a few Inno cent peoplo are hurt, the responsi bility lies not with us, but with those who have misled them to their hurt. This is a rapidly growing nation, on a new continent, and in an era of new, complex, and ever-shifting con ditions. Often it is necessary to de vise new methods of meeting these new conditions. We must regard the past, but we must not only regard the past. We must also think of the future; and while we must learn by experience, we can not afford to pay heed merely to the teachings of experience. The great preachr Channlng in his essay on "The Union" spoke with fine insight on this very point. In commenting on tno New Encland statesman Cabot, whom he greatly admired, he said that never theless "he had too much of the wis dom of experience; he wanted what may be called the wisdom or hope.' He then continued in words which have a peculiar fitness for the con ditions of today: "We apprehend that it is possible to make experience too much our guide. There are sea sons In human affairs, of inward and outward revolution, when new depths seem to be broken up in the soul, when new wants aro unfolded in mul titudes, and a new and undefined good is thirsted for. These are pe riods when the principles of exper ience need to bo modified, when hope and trust and instinct claim a share with prudence in the guidance of affairs, when in truth to dare is the highest wisdom." These sentences should bo care fully' pondered by those men, often very good men, who forget that con structive change offers the best method of avoiding destructive chance; that reform Is the antidote tD revolution; and that social reform 13 not the precursor out the preven tive of socialism. WANT Al Kates He line first time, He lino eoh succeeding Insertion Try a Times wat ad. FOR SALE Pure bred Brown Leg horn eocxreis. $2.50 each. See Jack Flanagan. FOR RENT Half a store with nice largo windows. Call at Taylor Piano House. &0&M$m?3t&'x v&mt0m&imWL LAD(ES wishing sewing done call on Mrs. T. Nussel, Pine Street., WANTED Good building lot or oot tego. Coos Bay Auction Co. m.mmmummjmmns.tt:B: Fine Tailoring A ST. Marshfield, - Ore. I For Sole Or exchango, a skiff. Cooa Bay Auction Co. FOR BALE Billiard table. Apply Bob's Billiard Parlors. FOR RENT Elegantly furnished housekeeping and bed rooms close in. Reasonable. Cooa Bay Auc. Co. FOR RENT Largo front room, mod ern conveniences; Fourth and B. Inquire nt Times office. , m I f" HIS MASTER'S VOICE" FOR SALE Or exchango for real es tate, a. 22 foot launch. Call at Times office. FOR RENT Bluo and red room, suite of parlors and buffet kitchen in newly furnished and strictly modern Arlington House. Plumb ing of the best. Call at Times office. FOR RENT 40-acre ranch, fur nished or unfurnished, 3 miles from Marshfield; good house; phono; 3 dally boats. J. C. Doane. WANTED Girl to do general house work. Apply Mrs. John S. Coke. PARTNER WANTED In gilt edge boarding and rooming house, guar anteed Income. Coos Bay Auc. Co. FOR SALE Cheap, Bay VIow Board and Lodging House; 10 rooms furnished and all taken. E. E. Harris. WANTED Apprentice boys at Mat tress factory. Apply C003 Bay Bedding & Upholstery Co. THE Courteney Lumber company wants fireman, trhnmerman, off bearers, cog-deckman, yard and millmen. Phone 24G, or apply at mill. FOR RENT 45 acre ranch on the Coquille-Marshfleld road, 2 Ys miles from Marshfleld; good "house and good improvements. Address Chas. Sneddon, Sr., Marshfleld postofflce. FOR RENT Four room house in West Marshfield. Apply John Josephson. ?ttt GIRL WANTED Corthell's tcssen. Apply at once. Dellca- Have You Ever Thought of Buying a Victor Talking Machine? Perhaps you linvc. And did not want to spnrc the ready money' Wo aro selling Victor nnd Columbia Talking Machines on WEEKLY nnd MONTHLY installments. A few dollars down and ono dollar per week and yoy will soon own your machine. xAn Evening at Home What could please you better than a pleasant evening nt Jliouio listening to the very latest songs nnd the best singers that money can hire. This is what you get in the Victor record. We always have the largest stock nnd the latest HITS OF THE SEA SON oil hand. , ''rS Give us a call nnd get our prices and terms. I Js!? E0 Hcrase BROADWAY si rrr?r.gEvmBsgTtn!ggnCTrgTsmgt3TB mgfannramnTTTTJCTTPrm.u vm.M w Do it now, Come in and let us show you an en tire new line of the best Popular Priced Clothing, Shoes, Hats and Furnishings on the Bay. For Men North Front, St. K5fiii3f.vvK.iawrr?3?nw',VT)nmjiiMia iwjMswmHMiMmHtvfxmsttimmii AVAAVWWVVSAWVV7VA Saddle Rock Restaurant I B ILL ill b t s ' sssrsp 1 I yMtmB i I u- Km hv (Mm WHff 'oys Look Best in XtragooD Clothes AT school on Sunday anywhere and at all times you want your boys to look as well as any. And bet ter if possible. It all depends on the clothes you buy. Most kinds lack fit, shape, style, neatness and good taste: poor mate- h rials and poorer tailoring are respon sible. - xTRA-qD are entirely different; made after a higher standard, under better conditions, of superior fabrics, by smarterworkmen. In making clothes of better quality and more durability, the manufacturers produce garments that also look right. Clothing made as Xtraoood jS) lacks nothing in appear ance or wearing qualities. Let U3 tliow our styles for boys and children. Ages 2'4 to 17. Prices $5 to $12. Magnes & Magnes 3 New Tonsorial Palors AJNiJKJiw wuujj, rrop. R2 H Hnrbering Is Like Any 9",cr Hisi ,less YOU MUST KNOW HOW. Wo mnko a specialty of treating tho scalp to prevent the hair from falling out, guaranteeing to stop it with a very fow applications. Ladles specially invited to glvo us a trial. Mondays and Fridays aro ladies' days. FACE MASSAGE AM) SHAMPOO Grand nuiljling. ING is ono of onr specialties. North Ueml. Come And See What We Have To Eat j. mills - 'rop. .AAAVWVWSVVWVAAAAAVWVyAAA CorthelFs Delicatessen 2nd and C Streets Phone 561 AVo havo n Special Variety of Good Tilings to Eat. THY OUR BOSTON BAKED BEANS BROWN BREAD VEAL POT PIE von Youn Sunday dinner They Serve Lunches ::::tt::::::::::::::m:m.::nm:nanm:mumttaimn.K:J HANSEN & BRENWOLD DEALERS IN HAY, GRAIN and FEED Agents for Watkins Celebrated Remedies PHONE 691 - - COR. 4th aid QUEEN I m J i M u jtfliuaivoMvU. V r "aiaHSaiteir. .rsajgr TWn. fJ