'" fllSftrtart' WW - i r rs& M THE BAH-Y GOOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD. OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11,1907. V $3 IGAGO WINS SECOND GAME "Detroit Pitcher Driven from Box in Fourth Inning, Being Batted Hard. CURRY COUNTY WILL BE MINING CENTER James Conro, AVho Lately Pros pected There, Says There Is ."Much Gold. SCORE WAS FIVE TO ONE Attendance Falls to Half AA'lint Wns on the Opening Day. It Chicago, Oct. 10. Tho Detroit American League team suffered Its second successive defeat at the hands of tho Chicago Nationals today, scor ing only one run, whilo Chicago tal lied five times, four of her runs be ing the result of solid hitting. St- ever started to pitch for Detroit but tho locals took kindly to his curves and batted him out of the box In the lourth Inning. Kllllan then took up tho work and was found for three hits and another run In the fifth. Detroit vainly tried to break through tho Chicago defense. Reulbach pitched strongly In tho opening In nings and when ho showed signs of weakening In the fifth and sixth In nings his team mates came to his res cue with fast double plays. For some unexpllcable reason, tho game failed to attract the usual crowd to tho grounds. The official attendance measured a total of 13,114 and many empty spaces In the extended bleach ers made tho gathering appear smal ler than It was. FREE FERRY FOR EAST MARSHFIELD County Court AVill Install Conven ience Long Needed Mai slit It-Id to ISuild Slip. Tho county court has been In ses sion two days at Coqulllo and dur ing tho meeting a very Important matter was decided for Marshflcld and Its sister city across tho bay. A largo petition, signed by taxpayers of both Marshfield and East Marsh Hold, was presented to the court, praying that a free ferry be estab lished between the two places. Tho action was taken on Wednesday, and tho petition was granted with tho understanding that Marshfield will provide a slip and landing for tho ferry. Interested parties were pres ent who guaranteed as much, and thus the ferry is to becomo a reality. Tho county obligates itself to put in tho slip on tho East Marshfield sido, build the ferry boat, and repair the approach to tho landing at the Asso ciated Oil company building. Bids will soon bo advertised for for building tho boat which tho plans show to bo a scow with gasollno power. TKo boat will bo constructed Jargo onough to accommodate teams ns well as passengers, thus making It convenient for delivery wagons and freighters to cross to tlie other sido and deliver goods whore as now they must bo shipped across nnd re handled. This convenience will bo welcomed by both tho residents on this sido nnd tho other sido as some thing long needed. Tho Marshfield slip will likely bo put in at tho Third street dock. James Conro, who was lately In Curry county with Frank Cameron to inspect a farm they own in partnership, returned with great ideas of the territory surrounding their place. Mr. Conro says it is an entirely different climate where they are located, and it Is quit a little warmer than here. He noticed among other things that the country Is well adapted to the growing of fruit. This place ' situated 12 miles from tho coast and has a num ber of creeks, being well watered and convenient for irrigation if such were, needed. But Mr. Conro waB Interested In another matter, and though absent from Marshfield but a week he prospected tho Immediate neighbor hood qulto extensively. He found that the country Is heavily mineral ized and in his search uncovered gold bearing gravel which runs from six to 25 feot In depth, a great part of which, according to Mr. Conro's findings,, will give up as high as 50 cents per yard In coarse gold, some of It going even higher. He predicts for that country a very great future In the way of develop ing Into a mineral bearing country, and says he Is going back to look into tho matter more throughly be fore the winter, Is over. Mr. Conro spent several years in tho Alaskan territory and brought back with him the miner's pans he used on the beach at Nome. He took one of these with him to Curry county for use in prospecting. There are a number of miners who work in that vicinity during the rainy season, about four or five months when the water Is high enough to afford good sluicing. These men take out sufflcient gold in the short runs to make good wages for the year. The principal trouble which has held mining back is the lack of water in the summer months, but this is being remedied by several companies which have built flumes and dams so that they now have water the year round. It takes con siderable capital to prepare for working the gravel for big returns, but capital is constantly being in vested there and the mining is cer tain to show wonderful progress within tho next few years. BUILDING SLIP FOR "NAN SMITH" Smith Compnny Drhcs Piles Home to Accommodate Lum ber Cairier. for The C. A. Smith Co have started driving piling for a slip near their new mill for the Nan Smith. The Nan Smith is the new boat 18 feet draught and a capacity of 2,500,000 feet of lumber now being built for that company. It will be named af ter C. A. Smith's eldest daughter. It Is refreshing to note the way the managers for the C. A. Smith Co. do business. The average Oregonlan would wait till ho heard the whistle of tho tug bringing tho boat Into the bay before he would think of hav ing a dock for her. He would also wait till there was thirty feet of water In the bay before he com menced building the boat. Not the Smith people. They order the boat built with the capacity desired and then start working for the required depth of water. In less than a year the Nan Smith will bo on Coos Bay and It is a good betting proposition there will be plenty of water for her. It means much for Coos Bay when tho truth goes out to the shipping world that a vessel of 18 feet draught onters this port at will. The small launch bought by the Smith-Powers Co. on the Coqulllo river some time ago has been remod eled and put In fine shape for tow ing, the purpose for which it was bought. It has been dignified by the name of Teddy Bear and, while the smallest of the fleet, will be the flagship. Th,e Nan Smith Is the larg est and the Mabel H. the fastest. NEW CLUB ROOMS ARE THROWN OPEN Portland Council, Knights of Co lumbus, Now Occupies Elaborate Home. Knights of Columbus, Portland council, No. C78, opened its new club building at Park and Taylor streets last evening. The property repre sents an investment of more than $50,000, which was subscribed by Portland knights. There are billiard rooms, smoking rooms, a library, palm room, an assembly hall, culin ary department, card rooms, all sub stantially furnished and in good taste. The club will be open hereaf ter to all knights and their friends, and Is Intended ns a headquarters for visiting members of the order. From time to time there will be receptions and get-together gatherings. For the inauguration last evening a well arranged program was pre pared. Addresses were mado by Archbishop Christie, Judge M. G. Munly, City Attorney J. P. Kava naugh,, Dr. Norden and others, Tom Karl, the famous tenor, director of the Californlans, rendered a number of solos. Mr. Karl Is a K. C. Re freshments, lunch and cigars were served. There were about 200 knights registered. Telegram. NEW PROJECT WILL BE STARTED SOON Deschutes Company's 31,000 Acre Knterpriie Soon To He Under AVay. ALABAMA BANDITS MURDER SHERIFF Kscape on Southern Railway Hand car AVith Monster Sum. CASSIE CHADWICK DIES IN PRISON Noted Confidence Woman, AVhoso Transactions Affected High Fi- nanclers, Passes Away. Columbus, Ohio, Oct. 10. Mrs. Cassio Chadwick, whoso financial transactions culminated in wrecking tho Oberlln bank, died In tho -woman's wnrd In tho Ohio penitcn tary at 10:05 p. m, tonight. Mrs. Chadwick had been in a coniatoso condition for sonio hours previous to her denth and tho end enmo peace fuly. No friends or relatives waited at her bedside: only tho prison phy sicians and her prison attendants. Her son, 13 mil Hoovor, has boon sum moned from Cleveland but is not expected to arrivo until tomorrow. Would Furnish Dredgers. Mr. Powoll, of Portland, is on the hay for tho purposo of consulting with tho droilglng company which re cently filed their corporation papors. Mr. Powoll is either ready to soil tho company n dredgo or build n now no. It is uudorstood ho guarantees to havo n now dredgo ready for uso In ton wookB If tho company profors to hnvo ono built. Seddon, Ala., Oct. 10. Four masked robbers looted tho First National Bank of this town last night, shot and killed Sheriff John AVllliams nnd escaped on a handcar. north-bound on the Southern rail way. It It said the amount taken is $575,250. Tho robbery and the killing of Sheriff Williams caused Intense excitement and a posse started on tho trail of the bandits noon after the crimes wero com mitted. ' Tho robbers wero discovered nt work about 10 o'clock, when a man passing tho bank happened to peer through one of tho darkened win dows, Hnstily giving the alarm ho ran to notify Sheriff AVlMams. Tho ofllclal reached tho bank just ns the robbers, ovidently scenting dlscov err, wero about to leave. The ,sheriff called upon them to halt. Uoforo ho could locate them in the darkness, they opened fire upon hlm and ho was Instantly killed. Tho crowd which had gathered was panic stilcken and In tho confu sion tho bandits escaped, running through tho street with their booty and firing as they ran. Running north to tho railway yards of the Southern railway, they procured a handcar, ran it down a heavy grado and escaped. Bend, Or., Oct. 10. AVithln the next few months It is expected that work on another largo reclamation project will be in progress. The contract required by the state land board and signed by President J. E. Morrison, of the Deschutes Land company, stipulates that the com pany shall reclaim 31,000 acres of land adjoining Rosland at an es timated cost of $20 per acre, and the Hen price of the settler is $30 an acre. This land has a deep, rich soil, is very level and is al most entirely fieo from rock. This project has beon held up for some time, but it is expected that It will now go forward and Its successful completion will be of much value to this entire section. Tho lnnd to be reclaimed lies for 25 miles along Little river, its low est extremity being a short distance below Bouge's place, at Rosland, and extending into Klamath county, Rosland, 32 miles south of Bend, will be tho headquarters of this enterprise. ORKGOX KXROLLMICXT GHOAVS Registration at State UnUerslty Has Readied 7(). Homo from Conference. Row nnd Mrs. Lacy of North Bond returned on tho. Breakwater from Portland, whoro Mr. Lacy was nttond 4ng tho M. E, church conference. University of Oregon, Eugonc, Or., Oct. 10. Eniollnient In tho univer sity now stands at tho 370 mark, and a few students are registering every day. A number of old students who nro out with surveying eunvs will not return to collego until net month, and there will bo a good sized enter ing class for tho opening of tho second bomostor. Register A. R. Tif fany expects tho oniollment to go as high as -125 boforo tho end of tho collogo year. LVSITAXI.Y HEATS FIA'E DAYS Now York, Oct. 10. Tho Lusltnnla passed Fiio Island at 12:07 a. m. Sho will probably bo ahreast tho Sandy Hook light ship nt 1:25 n. ra making her tlnio for tho trip, four days, 20 hours. ARREST WRONG MAN IN OLD ST. LOUIS St. Louis, Oct . 10. Railroad ticket number 13,523 Is responsible for tho fact that Oscar Blaven, 21 years old, of Pendleton, Or., spent two uneasy nights and a day in the four courts, where he was held as a murderer suspect. Blaven wns arrested Saturday night at Union station by Detective John f-Ioward on a telegram from Sheriff Taylor of Pendleton. "Why, the sheriff was the last per son to bid me good-by boforo I de parted, said Ulaven, alter his ar rest. "There must have been some mistake I am not wanted for any thing." Tho police wired to Pendleton that they had arrested tho holder of ticket 13,523. Ask him if ho knows stock clerk for construction company and has fingers off at first joint,' read the telegram from Pendleton which reached St. Louis Monday. Blavens wns thereupon released and con tinued toward his destination, Bris tol, Teni. WILL PROSECUTE SOUTHERN PACIFIC California Shippers, Learning that Rebates Arc Given, AA'ill Seek Revenge. San Francisco, Cal., Oct. 10. Amazed by the revelations made In the Inquiry before Interstate Com missioner Lane of the seceet rebat ing practiced by the Harriman rail roads, a number of the small ship pers have organized and engaged special prosecutors to carry the matter to the courts and secure a measure of justice. For years these small shippers have been at the mercy of the railroad monopoly, and they see now a chance to get some of the benefits of the new in terstate commerce act, which makes rebating Illegal. It is possible that the state board of railroad commis sioners may be drawn into the prose cution, as it has been notoriously lax in its duty. Shippers who have been "cinched" by the railways have mado repeated demands upon tho commission for relief and have asked for the tariff sheets, which are supposed to bo in the custody of the commission. Tho answer has alwajs been that tho commission hnd not received the schedule of rates from the railways, so the shippers, wero obliged to pay what ever the railway demanded. Action looking toward legislation to abol ish the commission is contemplated by the angry shippers. V ARRIA'ED- -SEPTEJIRER, 1007- 3AILEI). Sept Sept. .Sept, Sept, Sept. Sept. 1, sch Dei tie Minor. 3, bkt. Encore. 3 0, sch. Annie Larson. 10, sch. North Bend. 14, sch. Omega. 15, sch. Esther Buhne. Sept. 1G, bkt. Arago. Sept. 18, sch. Repeat. Sept. 27, sch. C. S. Holmes. Sept. 22, bkt. Gleaner. Sept. 29, sch. Lcttltia. Sept. 30, sch. Buelah. Sept. 30, sch. Virginia. Sept. 11, sch. Hugh Hogan. Sept. 13, sch. Oakland. Sept. 13, bkt. Echo. Sept. 15, sch. Saucallto. Sept. 15, sch. as. A. Garfield. Sept. 1C, sch. Bertie Minor. Sept. 26, bkt. Encore. Sept. 2G, sch. Esther Buhne. Sept. 27, sch. Annie Larsen. Sept. 29, sch. North Bend. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. 3, str. M. F. Plant. 4, str. Breakwater. 5, str. Berwick. 5, str. Hunter. 5, Btr. Robarts. STEAMERS. Sept. 4, str. Thomas L. Wand. Sept. 5, str. M. F. Plant. Sept. 6, sch. Lucy in tow of tho Hunter. Sept. 7, str. Robarts. 9, str. Oakland In tow of Sept. 8, str. Berwick. tug Rosco. Sept. 9, str. Alliance. Sept. 11, str, Breakwater. Sept. 12, str. Hunter. Sept. 13, str. Robarts. Sept. 1G, str. Johan Paulsen. Sept. 17, str. Alliance. Sept. 18, str. M. F. Plant. Sept. 18, str. Breakwater. Sept. 19, str. Hunter. Sept. 21, str. Robarts. Sept. 23, str. J. Marhoffer. Sept. 24, str. Alliance. Sept. 24, str. M. F. Plant. Sept. 25, str. Breakwater. Sept. 27, str. Hunter. Sept. 29, str. Heather. Sept. 30, str. Alliance. Sept. 30, Katie Cook. Sept. 11, str. L. Roscoe. Sept. 11, str. Alliance. , Sept. 11, str. M. F. Plant. Sept. 12, str. Breakwater. Sept. 13, str. Hunter. Sept. 15, str. Robarts. Sept. 17, str. Johan Poulsen. Sept. 17, str. F. S. Troop New. Sept. 18, str. Alliance. Sept. 18, Btr. M. F. Plant. Sept. 19, str. Breakwater. Sept. 20, str. Hunter. Sept. 25, str. Alliance. Sept. 26, Btr. Robarts. Sept. 26, str. M. F. Plant. Sept. 2G, str. Breakwater. Sept. 28, str. Hunter. AA'Inery Malinger Killed. Fresno, Oct. 10. D. J. Ellis, man ager of Lacjac winery near Redly, was today shot dead by a man named Rollins. Rollins and his wife were cooks at the winery and from Rol lins' Incoherent talk It Is presuuied the murder was the outgrowth of something said to the woman. The weapon used was a shotgun. Rol lins surrendered himself. EN ROUTE TO URGE IMPEACHMENT OF JURIS1 sa85ie22ft 5 yo 4i HIS MASTER'S VOICE" Lorrin Andrews Goes to AVnshington to Press the Charges Against Judge AVilfley. lave You Ever Thought of luying a Victor Talking ? Perhaps you have. And did not want to spare the retidy money' AVo nro selling Victor nnd Columbia Talking Machines on AVEEKLY and MONTHLY installment. A few dollars down and one dollar per neck and yoy will booh own your mchlno. An Evening at Home What coidd please you better than a pleasant evening at home listening to the very latest songs and tho best singers that money can hire. This is what you get In the A'ictor record. AAro nlnays liave the largest stock and the latest HITS OF THE SEA SOX on hand. Give us a call nnd get our prlees nnd terms. ARREST MADE IN IQLA MURDER CASE Samuel M. Whitlow Accused by Head Girl's Father Jury Called Mj story, Minder. Honolulu, Oct. 10. Lorrin An drews, representing tho American merchants of Shanghai, sailed from here on the steamship Manchuria for San Francisco en routo to AVashlng ton to urge the impeachment of L. R. AVilfley, judge of the. United States court of China, on tho charge of a violation of his oath of office. Seven grounds for impeachment are alleged. Miss Richmond for High School. Prof. Golden Informs the Times that tho school board has succeeded in engaging Miss Ruth Richmond, of California, as assistant for tho high school. Miss Richmond Is rec commeuded as an efllcient and ex perienced teacher, and sho will soon bo hero to take up her duties. The high school has been short of in structors nnd her arrival will help materially in tho work. Taylor's Piano House BROADWAY " II "' i-' ' .' - I ' ll-'l I IIJJII1IH IHUJi I 1 i i ii i. i II mnt Iola, Kans., Oct. 10. Tho coro ner's jury which has been investigat ing tho death of May Sapp, tonight roturned a veidlct that "Miss Sapp died from wounds In tho neck, caused by a sharp Instrument In tho hands of sonio person or persons other than Miss Sapp" A warrant was sworn out jonlght for Samuol M. AVhltlow Immediately after tho coroner's jury returned Its verdict. John Sapp, fa ther of tho girl, sworo to tho com plaint. .?tRt Liuotjpe for Roseburg. Tho Roseburg papers will havo tho servlco of a linotype hereaftor. D. C. Humphrey, of that city, has are located, and is quite a little ganthaoler nnd will do general work for the several nowspapers and job offices. Ho should do well in that city, as there Is much work to bo dono. 1 ADMISSION "CRYSTAL" Now Open Performance: 4. p. m., Tuesday, Thurs. and Saturday 7:30 p. m. and 9 p. m. everyday. - - - 10 cents A AVant will do It All. Steam Pipe Hursts. A steam pipe burst at the shingle mill yesterday afternoon aud dis tributed tho escaping steam prom iscuously, and to qulto a disadvan tage for a time. MMMr y sis&zms? s-radJ Xi r We must doff our caps to sunny Italy when it comes to Salad Oil. Preferred Stock Canned Goods Picked Wher.rer tb E.tt in Grown are conscientiously eood. It is imported every season from Itaiv because Italian Olhe Oil has never yet been' equalled in any country. It is light and of pureand OIUCK VJ11VC Ull 15 lUCStUl"-" delicate flat or. Preferred for imalids and used bv those who are dainiies. In three sizes, at 25. 50 and 75 irhy net tht BtitTPrtftrrtJ Stock Alki ft Lwti, Wfcclwil. Orctn.rrUui,Or.ii &gSB$Bfrt authority in matten of table cents per bottle. at jour Grocer' f A xd JfS , "V. . jnL.. - s