The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957, January 28, 1908, Image 2

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    THE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 26 1908.
Coos Bay Times
CARES Mo M0$l.-
Business Directory
ith the Toast and Tea
qWOWMCLOW
Entered at the potoffice at
MarstfUeld, Oregon, for transmission
thtatifili tho ma as second class
mail nutter.
?
Doctors.
PROTECT, HlMJgQ
QX
D
It. GEORGE W. LESLIE
PREPARE
Osteopathic Physician
. SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
' Iu Advance.
DAILY.
One yjr '. $5 00
Biz months $2.50
Less than G months, per month .50
WEEKLY.
One year $1.50
Local readers. 10c per line.
THE COINAGE EXPERTS.
Graduato of American School of Osteopathy
Klrksvillc, Mo.
Office Hours: 9 u. m. to 4 p. m. Other Hours by
Appointment. Olllce In NfliburR Block
Phone 1011. Marshfleld, Ore.
DR. J. W. INGRAM j JggJ
Physician nnd Snrgcon.
Ofllce over Sengstacken's Drug Store.
Phones Ofllco 1G21; Residenco 7S3.
FOR A
RAINY DAY
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i n.u imA vxv xx x'v. aar
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HI WrlMK
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The policy of th Coos Bt.y Times
will he Republican, in politics, with
tho Independence or which President
Roosevqlt is the leading exponent.
AN I.SM'FXILNT nil UI.LUAN hKUSrAM.K I VL
LtSIIRD HTBT kVhMNQ EXCUrmaJUXDAY.AND
WE1.M.Y BT
Tim Coos By Timks Pnnr.isnixo Co.
aw
AnDRE3S All Communications to
COOS BAY DAILY TIMES
MarsrJieil Oregon
THE HSREPltlCSSIIiLE CONFLICT
Thought makes war. When two
men, f$r no very substantial reason,
suspect) one another and so think
that their interests are inimical, a
feud arises and a long bitter enmity
ensues It is the same, sometimes
with nations, Europe and America
have came to feel and think that at
no very distant date Orientals and
Caucasian nations will become invol
ved in ft anguinar.y conflict. All mil
itary mTftds aro interested in a pos
sible, ofw, probable clash in which
they plcturo the yellow and brown
races o. ono sldo and the whites on
tho otlir. William, emperor of
Germany, has foreseen and foretold
such a disaster and his followers and
Imitator have reiterated his decla
rations! until, In some quarters, tho
irropieSJible struggle between the
great: .rfttes, is regarded as near at
hand- The "Yollow peril" is still
menacing; and tho menace becomes
momentarily moro marked. Europe
thinks the initial war between tho
wcdlera; and eastern worlds will bo
precipitated by acuto commercial
competition between America and
Japan- America feels no hostility
toward the little Cherry Tree king
dom ami Japan persistently protests
that waf talk Is ubsurd. Hut America
sends a great fleet to tho Pacific
and protestations of pcaco aro loudly
proclaimed by both Japan and Ameri
ca. There is no war or cause for
war, hut thoio is still and always tho
thought! which grows in tho world's
nilnd
When will tho war between tho
racca come? Whon will Asia and tho
CaucaciMi meet In Poclflc seas? Whon
will Japan and that other and great
er or- China tho philosophical fossil
whfi'.' hns boon goaded into modern
ity v id activity, begin tno battlo? Or
wilt Christendom bo guilty of tho
firs1 overt act? Meantime, Japan
sti "i tho faco of tho earth. She
lain tho coast of America better
tho" tho Aninrlcans. Sho has maps
nn 'Inns of tho Islands and maln
liin of the western world. Sho Is
urn suspicion and preparing hcr
nr' ir a conflict which tho rest of
th oild ti'lls hor will come. And
Ja ' belloNOs It will como although
sli 'Uher knows why nor whon. She
licit "es that America Is ambitious
for iTuplro and sho knows Europo Is.
So Tipan Is training and teaching
Chin i and China la gottlng ready, not
to f i .ht under tho leadership of
Jap but to fight like a ti allied
ol . nt with .Tnpan on her hack,
A l)tn tint war Is ovor tho olo
pl a ill tluow ilH ildor and tianip
1q It Will thei-L. lu wai' Yos. Hut
imv . ' 'ij? lli i mux the whole
wdi' I has this war iu its thought and
no tt'ier, ind hi cause ouly Bitch a
wnr will divert Christendom from Its
own economic comploxltlos.
Try a want a.
j. 4 ...1U.
O
O GOOD EVJUG
$ When we speak of joy, we do
not speak of something wo are
after, but something that will
come to us when we are after
God and duty. It is a prize un-
bought, and is freest, purest in
its flow, when it comes un-
sought. You must carry it
with you or it is not there. It
is the rest of confidence, the
blessedness of Internal light
and overflowing benevolence.
Being tho birth of character, it
has eternity ,in it. Horace
. Bushnell.
-
- TIio Shuttles.
Lord, let mo throw them carefully
each day,
Tho spools on which tho fragile
thread is wound
Tho thread of life, nor let mo with it
play
A broken strand is not easily
bound.
And I would gladly blend tho red and
gray,
For as I weave so must my life
be crowned.
Lord, let me throw them true, day
after day,
Tho shuttles round which life's
frail thread is wound.
Beth Slater, in the Cosmopolitan.
A little boy wroto an essay on
woman: "Woman Is what men like
to marry. Man is logical; woman is
zoological. Both man and woman
sprang from monkeys, but woman
sprang tho fartherest."
"Why Is English called tho mother
tongue?" asked Bill Lawior, who was
anxious to start a discussion. "Be
cause," said Dr. Tower, tho historian
of tho club, "becauso mother never
gave father an opportunity to use it."
"Do you know," remarked Jack
Flanagan, In the Poets' Corner, "that
girl was so erobs eyed that whon she
cried tho tears ran down hor back
and sho had to go and seo a doctor
about It?"
"And ho treated her for bac-terla,"
remarked Dr. Straw as ho flecked
tho ash from his cigar.
Toll us, aro you advertising in tho
same old fashioned way that your
grandad did beforo you and persist
"it docbii't pay?" "Just a card is
all you caro for, hidden 'onsomo and
unread, llko tho slp-v upon a tomb
stouo tolling folks thiU jou nro dead
wako up man, and tako a tonic,
bunch jour hits and mako n drive,
run a page and change your copy,
advertlso and keep allvo.
Thoro wil bo a Scots meeting
at Rodman's hall Wednesday ovo
uliiK at S o'olonk.
Uso Tho Times want ads.
get a lot for a little.
You
"Convincing" advertising Is usu
ally put forth by tho "convincing
storo" tho store that has soinsthlng
worth lrhllo to offer you.
Berrymc.n in Washington Star.
SAW HIS OPPORTUNITY.
Tho Reporter Seized It and Got His
Real Start In Life.
All the city traveling public loves a
strap hanger becauso it has n fellow
feeling for him. This is why tho story
of how Frank Vnnderllp, the banker,
got his start has an almost universal
appeal. It happened when Vanderlip
was a reporter on a Chicago newspa
per and writing financial news. Tho
traction situation then, ns now, was al
most Impossible. Charles T. Yerkes
was traction dictator, and tho stock
holders and tho public never had a
word to say in tho conduct of tho
roads. Nor could they got any definite
Idea of tho financial condition of the
properties.
The time for the annual meeting of
tho stockholders of the principal road
came along. At all the meetings Mr.
Yerkes had rattled off the reports in
the usual undecipherable corporation
way, nnd no one knew what was do
ing. Bo Vanderlip planned a coup.
Ho bought a share of stock, which
admitted him to the meeting. He had
been a stenographer before ho became
a newspaper man. When Mr. Yerkes
sailed into his breezy explanation Qf
finances the young reporter took down
everything he said. Mr. Yeikcs used
one striking phrase, nnd it was this: I
"The passengers who have seats pay
tho operating expenses, but the strap i
hangers pay your dividends." I
The next day tle sontenco topped .
VnnderHp's account of tho meotlug.
It aroused a storm of discussion, for it
laid bare somo of tho traction methods; I
also It got Vanderlip a raise in salary I
and a promotion. Saturday Evening '
Post.
Nothing Like That In America.
"This was told mo tho oMier day,"
said a man, "by n friend who has Just
made the tour of Ireland. Ho was at
tho lakes of KiUarnoy, and a jarvey
driving one of those side seated cars
was telling him of a visitor who was
attempting to masquerade as an Amer
ican, but had all tho outward signs of
being nn Englishman.
" 'You say, borr,' said the jarvey,
'that you live in tho United States.
Wero yez iver In Dubuque, la.?'
" 'I was," said tho traveler. 'I was (
tnero ror a rortnigut.'
" 'Off wld ye!' said tho carman. 'Yo
were nlver there. Dlvll a fortnight d
they have in America.' " Indianapolis
News.
Gettlnrj It Right.
It was on a street car In tho city of
Washington. Two colored women In
cheaply gorgeous splendor were talk
ing, nnd ono chanced to mention a Mr.
Jinks In her conversation.
"Excubo me." said tho other woman,
"but his nnmo Is not Jinks. It is Mr.
Jcnks."
"Oh, I sees," said tho other woman
eouiplalsautly. "I sees that you put
do access on do pronoun." Llppln
tott's. '
A Bit of Sarcasm.
A young mau who had prolonged his
call on his sweethenrt a few nlghta
ago was surprised when a window iu
an upper story was raised as he left
tho houso and the volco of the mistress
called out, "Leave an o.tra quart this
morning, pleasol" Argonaut.
Her Fourth.
Lawyer As your husband died ln
testate, you will of coursa get a third.
Widow Oh, I hope to get my fourth.
no was my third, you kuorv Town
and Country.
BELIEVE In newspaper advertis
ing a great deal more than you ho
lievo Iu show windows your store
eau always havo show wiudows.
Uso Tho Times want ads, You
get a lot for a littlo.
DR. A. L. 1IOUSEWORTII
Pliysiclnn nnd Surgeon.
Offlco over First National Bank.
Residence, two blocks north of
Crystal Theater. Offico Phone
1431. Residence Phone 1G5C.
Lawyers.
Francis II. Clarko Jacob M. lllake
Law rence A. Llljcquist
CLARKE, I5LAKE &
L1LJEQVIST,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
Times Building, Marshfleld, Ore.
United States Commissioner's Office.
J
W. BENNETT,
Ofllce over Flanagan & Bennett
Bank.
Marshfleld, .... Oregoc
CF
f. Mcknight,
Attorney at Law.
Upstairs, Bennett & Walter Block
Marshfleld, - - Oregoc
yr-iOKE & COKE,
Attorneys at Law.
Marshfleld, .... Oregoi.
Miscellaneous
A
II. EDDY
ARCHITECT
Modern cottages a specialty. Ofllce
opposite Blanco Hotel, Ovor Tele
phone Building.
CARPENTER
Call R. A. Corthell.
For all kinds of carpenter and
cabinet work. Show cases and ofllce
furniture a specialty. Phono 561.
Cortholl's Delicatessen.
M
R. ALBERT ABEL,
Contractor for Teaming of all klndr
Phone 1884.
jIANO TUNING,
By. J. F. O'Rielly,
Resident Tuner.
Address Box 210.
Marshfleld.
ELMER A. TODD, Director
Coos Bay Academy of Music.
Voice, l'lano. ripe Organ. Hnnnonj etc., from
beginning to graduation, singers couched in
Btjlo dlotlon and interpretations, for opera,
oratorio or concert work
New O'Connell Building, Marshfleld.
Flanagan & Bennett Bank
MARSIIFIELU. OREGON.
Capital Subscribed $50,000
Capital raid Up $40,000
Undivided rrofils J35.000
Poes a general banking business and drawi
ou the Bank ot California, San Franclsc
Calif., First National Bank rortland Or., First
National Bank. Roseburg, Or., Uanover Na
tliiiHl Bank, New York, N. M. Rothchlld &
sou, Loudon, England.
Also sell change on nearly all the principal
cities of Europe.
Accounts kept subject to check, safe, deposit
lock boxes far rent at 6 cents a month or
?5. a year.
INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS
Steam Dye Works
C Street,
Ladles' and Gents' Garments
Cleaned or Dyed
Philip Becker, Proprietor.
BONITA
and
NORTH BEND
FASTEST BOATS
ON THE BAY.
Half Hour Schedule.
Ruu Between Mnrshllcld sud North
Rend Made Iu 12 Minutes.
Private Lniullruis.
Fare: One wav, 15c; rouia trip, X3c.
J. A. O'KELLY, Proprietor.
111 . .-
Cab Call s-nli at Any Hour
liooil Ik-ami auiI Yt'liiclci.
11EISNER, MILLER & CO.
Livery, Feed nnd Salo Stable.
Wood for Snlo.
.hlr.lA-.Vit IMionelOl MarOifleld
es9E:
THIGH SNAG PROOF
Wnlcs Goodyear rubber
baots ?G.OO
Woonsocket Sporting
boots ?5.00
Tourist Rubber Coats. . .$4.50
RuTrtKJT Coats $3.75
Oil Coats any length $2.25
Oil Hats 3."c
Rubber Hats 85c
igiiZLWMIS
The
STEAMER PLANT
SAILS FROM MARSHF IE LD
Sails fftf San Francisco Tuesday Jan. 28th. No reservations held
after ffio arrival of the ship unless ticket Is bought.
F. S. DOW, Agent
MARSHFIELD,
nreMfn Tti arnciAHfl
K. O. BRECKENRIDGE
New Owners of tho
COOS BAY TRANSP0RTATI0NIC0MPANY
Wo do a general Transfer and Storage business. Orders taken
by Phone will receive prompt attention.
Water Front foot of A St. Phono 1031.
California and Oregon Coast Steamship Company
Steamer Alliance
B. W. OLSON, Master.
SAILS FROM P0RTLAN
SAILS FROM Q00S BAY TUES
F. P. Bwrfneartner, Agt.
Co,uch St. Dock, Portland, Ore.
WHY DO PEOPLE BUY IN
SENGSTACKEN ADDITION?
BECAUSE
ift is choice inside residence property, lots 50x100
wiffe alleys, is well sheltered with a good bay view and
pris of lots are reasonable For particulars see
TITLE GUARANTEE & ABSTRACT CO.
Henry Sengstacken, Manager.
WE MAKE GAS ENGINES AND BOATS
Speed Launchet and
All Classes of Boat and'Engine
Sbops h forth Bend Woolen Mill
II. R. B5V1SR, Mechanical Engineer
THAT NEW LEDGER
You wero going to - en this year. Wo havo it. Also a full
and complete lino oi blank books, day books, cash books, etc.
Yon fio not have to send to Portland or San Francisco. Try
thU etoro.
NORTON & HANSEN
Front Street. '
All 18 lato papers and magazines. A full lino of stationery.
"ir imnfrr-iwiwBii iHwra.w!wrc
eS25252SZnSZ5H5aSE5Z5E5H525Z5Z5Z5El
Portland & Coos
BREAKWATER
K '
Sails from Portland Wednesday at 8 p. m.
Sails from Coos Bay Satu days at Service of Tide.
C. F. McColIura, Agt.
i .
a Phono
i t !.-.,
Main 34 - -
PTRON
wlriili
aha " Mm
rip VP
UAW.
My Goods Aro Always Winners.
rfft miik
S
REPRESENTING
STYLE AND QUALITY
Steamer
OREGON
D SATURDAYS, 8 P. M.
DAYS, AT SERVICE OF TIDE.
L. W. Shaw, Agt.
Marshfleld, Ore., Phono 441.
Engine! a Specialty
Repairing PromptlrAttended to
North Bend, Oregon
C. II. ALLGER., Boat BuUder
Bay S. S. Line
- - a. St. Dock
G. L. DEAN.
A.
tfi
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