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About The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1908)
- rr THE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, SATURDAY APRIL 25, 1908. ii BIG DANCE TODAY yjj i rrtr TTp Front street to C street, two-step around the Corner UnLlti Ul to Broadway and 'C streets. Three-stop Into GEO. GOORRUM'S, the gents furnisher. Chassez up to the Neckwear counter and your eyes will "Dance" at the stunning array of new styles there dis rlayed. Shirts, Hats, Shoes, Fancy Waistcoats and Socks that are equally as classy, will stare you in the face. ADMISSION" LADIES A smile. GENTLEMEN A glance. E5Z5H5HSE5H5E525,S5SSH5H5HS3,aSH5Z53 E5ESZSESHSHSZSESHSE3Z5HSES2SZ5S5Z!2 Are you Particular as to what you eat? I sist on having o fi 3 9 ASK YOUR DEALER. TXTJiwir.7'r?sm HERE SHE IS They're Coos Bay Oil Golden Gate L&rd M M Water Front Near "A" Street The Great. Drama CURFEW MUST NOT RING TO-NIGHT A Romance of the Days of Cromwell At the Crystal Theatre To-Night 10c - 7:30 and 8:45 p. m. - 10c Championship of the world Performances 7:30 and 8:45 II R Till? PIW opEN EVERY AfTERNNON AND EVEN 1 OIL Klim ING, 2 to 5 and 7 to 9:30 p. m. Special r as to private parties !::i) to ll::i() p. m. DANCING wry Wednesday night after 1):!M) p. in. Gents, 25c; Ladies, five. Eeellent floor. Good iniLsic. D. L. AVERY, Prop. m:::mm:mm:m:::n:::mf:m:m:m:m:mm:::mmm:m::m::m::::::nm ,. - . . . .. .- MAblLKiS & McLAIN General Contractors Crushed Rock Building Stone Concrete Pedestals Sand, BruK", Lime, Cement Wholesale mid Retail Dealers in REAVER HILL COAL Office, Broadway and Queen MARSIIKIIOLD, 88888U8K:ttn:838Um888K8UX888m8888mU8K8K88U88888888rj888 aHSHSHSESHSaSHSHSHFaSESHSHSHSESSSBHSESESHSZSaSHSEesaSHSHSZSaSESHSESZS? PnW-lsnrf Rr Cnn V "" '- -WS,J J-TM.J , J1I1W BREAKWATER Sails from Portland Wednesday at 8 p. m. Sails from Coos Bay Satu days at Service of Tide. s. s. Sails weekly for San Francisco, carrying freight and combustibles only C. F. McCoIIum, Agt. S Phone Main 34 - - - - A. St. Dock jb E3H5ZSZ5Z5SHSE5TC5?SZSZ5HSEffHSZS?a5Z5HSHaa5HS2SnSBS?.5SSZS2nSH Drink Woinards's UOTTLKl) HKKR Murdcu's Wholesale liquor House Phono 481 Orders Delivered Frco If so ACCEPT NO OTHER g "HI gij 2-CycIe Make and Break' We Also Have another called the SAMSON From 2 to 200 Horse -Power the Goods & Supply Co. Phone 33 Prize Fight To-Night p. m. Admission 10c .. . i Flair and Wood Flbro Plaster Riiilding Paper Rooting Paper Asphalt and Carbolininm Streets. Phono Main 2011 OREGON R S Q T in Steam Dye Works C Street. IjuIIcn' mid Gents' Garments Cleaned or Djvd Philip Bet kpr, Pronrirtoi. 5 Ke Your Clothes Clean ed, Pressed and repaired for $1.59 per month on con tract for 3 months The Unique Pantatoriunv VVVWAArVVWWVVWVWVV For a good Hatch use the PETALUMA INCUBATOR JOHN W. FLANAGAN, Agt. Poultry Supplies Order Your Settingi Now For Brown Leghorns Rhode Island Reds Barred PIymouthRocks All Standard Bred. Price $1.50 Per Setting Special Price on Incubator Lots. tttmuiiixtitizxutitiiivmtiximizxj''ttixii 0 IMMEDIATE VICINITY p It is the policy of this hank to comfine its Lmsiucs to the im- H mediate vicinity. In following this course, the bank not onlv it enhances its own stability, but ! promotes the highest interest of ? the community. j FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF g COOS BAY, Marshfield, Ore. H 0. B. Hinsdale V. S. McFarland t President Cashier H John Pruess R. T. Kaufman 2 Vice Pres. As.t. Cadiier fl ammjaitmimaatsamaafflnnimami HERE'S YOUR GOOD HEALTH Wclnhard's Boor . WARDEN'S LIQUOR HOUSE. Phone 181 Orders Delivered Free- :n:;::j;t:::::;:;:;j::::::::::::j::;:ti::: I ELECTRIC ij I FLAT MOMS 8 it Every residence on Coos Bay ! mat is wired tor electric ser- ; vice should have one of these $ iiiusi ueiui anu time saving tt flatironc Ask your neighbor It who ons one. Two million J American women are using them. 8 8 The Coos Ray Gas & Electric It Company l Marshfield and North Bend i . ....,,. BSEEJMmrXEmsil&SEFiimrrBMsmn MANGAN'3 Undertaking New 0'Co.incl BIdg. MARSHFIELD, OREGON Telephones: Office 2161 Residence 2171 abAIi2il!mia.JJ3fSs Transfer and Delivery Job Work Done Promptly Wood and Coal Chas. Doans - Phone 534 CLEARING, GRADING CITY LOTS and BLOWING out ST I'M PS. I am prepared to tako con tracts for this work nud do it thoroughly and satisfactorily. Estimates on work furnished. Apply to PETER SCOTT, Jr. Phono r.:w Marshneld "HIHM tHIHUlM i----- - THOMASON & HANSON -PCARRS IN 'Hay Grain and Feed' Free Delivery Phono 1751 1'W.MMA" ORDERS FOR NEIMIARR'S DEER Ry mail or Phono Dellverod Froo MARSDEN'S LIQUOR HOUSE W Uniqoe Little Cottage Novel Exterior Appearance and Unusually Convenient Interior Cost $2,000. Copyrliht, 1907, by P. T. MacLitan, 603 Droid Street. Newark. N. J. FRONT FIRST FLOOR PLAN. I JVXr'0 TO-XfCfJ r-i Jl wiTP -MP L -J. The little cottage hero shown combines the attraction of a unique exterior with remarkab'o convenience in Interior arrangement. livery inch of space Is utilized. The dining room and pnrlor are both, fine rooms, excellently lighted. The kltcheD Is unobtrusive, but most conveniently situated with relation o the dining room. The bedrooms nre large and hae liberal closets. The treat ment of the roof gives it a very pleasing effect without depriving the bedrooms of light or space. The estimated cost of the cottage Is S2.000. P. T. MAO LAGAN. i i ii Emit and If lowers ORCHARD PRACTICE. How Expert Fruit Growers Expect to Fight Pests This Year. In a recent address before tho Now York state fruit growers Henry M. Dunlap o'f Illinois gave the following points on spraying: No person who expects to bo success ful will undertake to grow an orchard without spraying the trees from the first year of their planting. I have no ticed less damage from grasshoppers and other Insects In young orchards planted to corn than where there was no corn. It takes little time to spraj young trees, and one man can drive the team and spray such trees success fully. The leaf skeletonizer, which in our section begins Its work in the hit ter part of .Tune, Is perhaps the most serious pest of the young tree. Spray lng at the time the eggs hatch out with six ounces of purls green or Its equiv alent In arsenate of lead to fifty gal Ions of water will exterminate this worm. Progressive Methods. Our more progressive growers are talking of using during the coming spring nbout the following: Throe pounds of blue vitriol, live pounds of best lime and six ounces of parls green to fifty gallons of water. The applica tion of this spray mixture should be made at least three times. The first application Is Immediately before tho bloom opens and after the foliage aud buds have begun to show some devel opment. This spraying should be ns closo in time to the opening of the blos soms ns possible, considering tho amount of spraying to be done. Hav ing a good area of orchard to cover with spray, I sometimes start ten days ahead of the time I think the bloom will bo out, and then if there Is time I go over the part lirst sprayed the sec ond time, continuing tho work of the spraying until tho actual opening of the blossoms. In this way a consider able portion of the orchard gets a dou ble spraying. The second spray is ap plied immediately after the bloom fulls, tho third about threo weeks later. 1 regard the second spraying, tho one after the bloom falls, ns tho most im portant, all things considered. Enterprise. "Sell ye n nice air cushion cheap." Browulug's Magazine. Robbing Old Age. "She doesn't believe that children should ever be spanked." "I pity her boys when they grow up." "Think they won't amount to much?'' "I don't know as to that, but what will they have to brag about?" 'IMS ' e. ELEVATION. SECOND FLOOR PLAN. INTERESTING ARTICLES ON PRACTICAL HORTICULTURE FOR READERS OF THE COOS RAY TIMES. THE MAGNET. Promising Early Winter Apple of Rich Yellow and Crimson. This promising early winter variety is a seedling of Wlnesap which orig inated with the late Dr. J. Stayuian at Leavenworth, Kan. The first com mercial Introduction of tho variety ap pears to have been by J. W. Kerr, who catalogued it for the fall of 1S0S and spring of 1809 as "Stayman No. 1." It is evident, however, that at dif ferent times different names were used MAGNATE ArPLE, for this variety, as Red Sap, Magnet 1 aud Magnate, tho latter name being tho one now adopted Tho fruit is described by William A. Taylor as being of n rich yellow color washed with crimson over almost the entire surface and indistinctly striped with dark purple and covered with whitish bloom; dots variable In size, numerous, yellow or red. The flesh is yellowish, stained with red. fine grain ed, half tender and juicy. Tho case Is small, with numerous brown seeds; the flavor, rich subacid, with quality very good; season September to De cember In eastern Kansas, about the same ns Jonathan. Ostrich Plume Fern. Among the newer ferns is the New Ostrich Plume (Nephrolepls plersoni elegdntlssima), also known as tho Tar rytown fern. Tills Is truly a marvel ous fern nud must bo seen to bo ap preciated, says a writer In Floral Life. It is of easy culture, has free or vigor ous growth and Is well adapted for house culture, for conservatory or for greenhouse. Tho beauty of this fern is very striking nud Is justly compar ed with the plumu of the ostrich. The fronds are not nearly as loug as those of the Plersoii fern and are also much broader and heavier. The small pin nae of the fronds are agalu subdivid ed, or once more than the Plersoii, and tho feathery effect is very Uno and striking. Tlieso miniature fronds keep growing; hence there is a lighter shade of green at their ends, the main por tions showing a darker shade, tho wholo effect adding greatly to tho beauty of the plaut. Wo aro now propared to store your goods Bay Side Paint Co., North Bend. '.-:lj .mSsL Icons bay in THE 6IG FLEET Northern Coast Cities Are All Getting Busy to Take A Peep. The following article from the Eii. geno Daily Guard indicates that the Oregon coast cities are all prepar. lng to get some advertising out of tho coming of the fleet. The Eiiem,. paper suggestively asks what action will bo taken by the Coos Bay cities and kindly intimates that they will not be behind the times. . How about this Commodore Cod. ding? Where is that steamer that was to be chartered to take all Coos Bay to see tho fleet? "Admiral Lyons and his mosquito fleet should also be heard from on an occasion like this. Come, come, gen tlenien, let's get busy. Here's what the other cities are doing according to tho Eugene Guard: "The city of Newport, on Yaquina Bay, does not propose to be left nut In the cold in the matter of seelm- the fleet of battleships as they pass up the coast in May, bound for Puget Sound. The city authorities are en deavoring to persuade the Navy De partment .to order tiie fleet to remain off the entrance to Yaquina Bay a few hours so that the people over that way may go out on tugs and other craft and view the big iron clad floating fighters. It Is proposed to have excursions run from the cen tral Willamette valley over there, and, altogether, tho seaside resort would rake in a few shekels by the scheme. Astoria is preparing to charter a number of sailing craft and welcome the fleet as It passes the Columbia river entrance on its north ward course. What action will be taken by tho Coos Bay cities and those on Tillamook Bay has not yet boon ascertained: but they will not behind tho times, of course." SWEET PEAS. Two Magnificent Varieties That Bloom In Profusion. Two magnllicent new varieties ol sweet peas are described in Gardening as having tho wavy and fluted stand ards of the Countess Spencer type, and the wnvy wings are so Infolded over the keel that this Is almost hidden Trials have proved that they come nb- WHITE Sl'ESCISU SWEET TEA, solutely true from tho selected seed tho one being pure white, the other a pronounced primrose or creamy yellow, holding Its own as to color with anjl St the so called yellow varieties and surpassing them all in sizo of flower length of stem and vigor. The vigorous growth Is, in fact. characteristic of these fine varieties the vines being stout with heavy folil nS0, often growing twelve feet hlgl and covered with flowers that retai: their great sizo continuously through! out tho season Small Fruits. I Open winter days afford the oppo tunity for trimming the small fruit: Among raspberries remove the de wood aud cut the laterals back to length of twelve Inches. This is su posing that they have been cut in Ju to Induce branching. But if not top third should be cut off, says Io Homestead. The same method should be follow In handling tho blackberry rows. Tb who nre growing tender vurletieq! already trimmed and laid down f winter. Rut n great number of o! readers are growing the hardy Suyd which does very well without proti tlon. a very common cause of failure w currants is to let the bushes get imcK, mm tue result Is very am rruit. in such cases half or two-thl of the old wood should be cut aw: Always select the oldest stalks to move. The bushes should bo left open r only the most thrifty of the new sbo spared to take the place a year or t later or tho present bearing wood. Follow the same plan with tho got berry. Just a hint to the amat grape grower: It Is better to trim vines now than later In tho seas Two malu steins from one root enough to leave to b trained up ehajip. I When Plants Begin to Droop. ! Whou plants begin to droop, t' have probably been inju-ed by o wateriug. too much heat or too m cold or some neglect for which tl Is a simple remedy. It will paj' find out the cause. waPipifjra I s.aawcr. I .ttJUafc ill FTE T. ZTTSBbMEfaittSL