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About The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1908)
"-"f 1,1 '"wiwippuFyr- iKnwwAvi f"-- -w siL . XW" THE DAIti I:OS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1908, y 5. " " .1 m i i i bkt-' ri bA4acv&r . sWBt t fcJMtfBBFThMJBBWBlfiJjJiMfcpWBKWM llll Tv THE FOURTH The day we celebrate. The day we do honor to the patriots who signed their names to that document of Liberty, the Declaration of In dependence, It was Ben Franklin who said, when signing it, "Gentle men, if we don't hang together, we'll all hang separately," Come tonight if you want Fourth-of-July Togs We will be open until 10 o'clock, Tomorrow we close.. all.day, it The WOOLEN MILL STORE Corner A and Broadway J. L. Bowman, Prop. Geo. Rotnor, Mgr. GO J. W. Pioneer Front Street Look for Fireworks Say! We got 'em from a lady cracker to a 14-inch Cannon Q And most every other style of a noisy con traption made Look in the Window OPPOSITE P. O. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Notice is hereby given that sealed "bids will be received by the common council of tho City of Marshfield, Coos county, Oregon, up until 8 o'clock p. m., Tuesday, July 14, 1908, for tho Improvement of 'C street and 'C avenue from the west lino of Fourth street to tho east line of Da vidson street in E. B. Dean & Co.'s addition, and western addition to tho town of Marshfield, according to the plans and specifications on file in the office of the Recorder and open to tho inspection of all persons Inter ested therein. Separato bids will be received for the grading and for the planking, drain boxes, curbing side walks and cross-walks. ';? 1 ' J TO Riggs Photographer Marshfield Certified checks for five per cent of the amount of the bids must ac company each bid. The council re serves the right to reject any or all bids. Dated this 3d day of July, 1908. J. M. UPTON, Recorder. NOTICE TO HORSEMEN. Tho Myrtlo Point Percheron Horse Company will keep the full blood black Percheron horse at G. G. Swans place, threo miles bolow Dora post ofllco on river, from July 3, 1908, until April 1, 1909. Mares furnish ed pasture free until bred. Terms, $20, to insure. G. G. SWAN, Manager.1 Address Gravelford, Oregon. MORRIS' HOUSE Ten Mile Lake Now open for guests. European plan. Special ncoominodfttioiiB (or families. Good table board. Special rates to parties. Postoffico and telepbono ac commodations. Everything now and first class. Arrangements may be made in advance or call at house when you arrive A rti A iti A tf i A -Ti A it. A it. A iti A it. A it. iti A 1T1 A iti A it. A : BUILD NOW Special Inducement Offered In South Harbor For particulars, seo any real estate agent or W. J.R.UST Special Agent III 1 ! rVTVTVWTVTVTVTV Masters and McLain :: General Contractor's Building : : Materia and Beaver Hill Coal Office: Broadway & Queen S Phones 2011 -826 .Ml M t Chas. A. Stevens Coat & Suit House, Chicago Mrs. M. R. SMITH, Agt. I Cor. Firit and B Sit. Marshfield, Ore. t Electric Fans Keep the Flies Away? We Can Supply You Oregon Electrical Supply Co. FOR RENT New house of 6 rooms on Eastside, close to Smith mill. Inquire at the Finnish Cooperative Store. SITUATION WANTED by cook, 'A' No. 1. Can give Marshfield refer ence. Address 'K' care Times. NICE small riding horse for sale. Will work single or double, also saddle and bridle, a bargain. En quire 'C care of Times. LET ME locate you near Ten Mile Lake Homesteads. Stock and fruit land, also two relinquish ments for sale. Come at once. Chas. H. Easton, Templeton, Ore. FOR RENT 2-room house, $5 a month, light and water included, on Broadway. Seo Dean Flyer Dock. WANTED TO TRADE 3 vacant lots In growing town near Los Angeles, Calif., close to electric car line, valued at $800; also 1,000 shares oil stock valued at $500. Will take Marshfield, North Bend or ranch property, cows or small gas ojlno launch for passengers or freight. Address M. A. Qulgloy, Anaheim, Calif. WANTED. Laundry girls. Apply to J. B. Hibbard, Marshflold. Phone 2291. FOR RENT Seven-room house on Fourth street. Inquire Mrs. Minot. FOR RENT With bath. Five-room cottage, McPherson Ginser Co. FOR SALE Restaurant and fixtures. Address 'A' Times office. FOR SALE, A SNAP 12 acre-ranch on Kentuck Inlet, 2 acres plowed ready for garden, a first class fruit, vegetable and chicken ranch. , Only $1,000. Inquire of Bayside Paint Co., North Bend, Ore. FOR SALE One 40-horse-power holler in good condition, Ono 25-horse-power side crank engine nearly new. Cheap if sold soon. Address 'L' care Times. PURE WATER SUPPLY VITAli Health of a Community Is Vtry Large ly Dependent Upon It. Too many precautions cannot bo taken toward guarding tho water sup ply of a town. Along this lino Ed ward Wcgmann says In tho Metropoli tan Magazine: The health of a community depends largely upon tho purity of its water supply. Formerly it was thought that water In which chemistry failed to find any noxious elements was fit for do mestic use, but in recent years tho sci ence of bacteriology has demonstrated that such water may contain the germs of dangerous diseases. These germs in crease very rapidly in number and aro often communicated by tho con tamination of a source of wnter supply from one infected person to a whole community. Such a case occurred In 1884-5 in Plymouth, Pa. A man who had contracted typhoid fever In Phila delphia was nursed during tho winter in a house near a mountain brook which flowed into a river from which Plymouth derived Its water supply. The refuse from tho sickroom was thrown on the snow near tho house without being disinfected. As cold weather does not kill disease germs, the typhoid germs were washed In the spring by tho melting of tho snow into tho mountain stream referred to above, and as a consequence more than 1,000 cases of typhoid fever and about 100 deaths from this disease occurred in Plymouth, these cases being all con fined to persons drinking the polluted 'water. In 1892 Hamburg, Germany, was vis ited by a terrible epidemic of cholera. This city derives Its water supply from the river Elbe. At tho time of tho epidemic the river water without being filtered was used for domestic purposes. It has been proved beyond question that the germs of cholera were com municated to the city's water supply by throwing into the river the excreta of a sailor who was sick with cholera on a vessel anchored In the Elbe. Near ly 0,000 persons died of cholera In Hamburg during this epidemic, but In Altona, a suburb of Hamburg, using Elbe water that had been filtered through sand, not a case of cholera oc curred that could be traced to the drink ing of the until tered water of Ham burg. Home Trade Homilies. When your next door neighbor sella the same kind of goods that the mall order catalogue udtcitlses and at cor responding prices, you ueed a doctor', attention if you purchase by the mall route. Every tub must stand on its own bottom. So also must every town. II you knock the bottom out of prosperi ty in your town by doing a large part of jour buying from the catalogue houses, the place Is calculated to fall down pretty soon. If the farmer who does a good deal of buying from mall order concerns ex pects to continue selling his vegetables and other products in his home town. ho should remember that It Is a poor rule that won't work both ways. Folks looking for bargains need no confine their researches to the large and lurlug catalogues from tho city bouses. Sometimes local newspapers advertise bargains to be had right at home, and it might pay to look for such things In the homo papers. Then if you don't find what you want ask the merchant why he doesn't ndvertlse. The city mall order store is the real octopus. Its thousands of tentacles are sucking In money from every direc tion. Money Is the blood of n commu nity, and when it Is drunk by tho oc topus to such an extent the town is sure to become anaemic. Catalogue Deceptions. "No, thank you. I want what I ask ed for. Good day." This quotation took the grand prize in a recent con test held by a magazine In the cam paign against substitution In trade. You do not always get what you ask for when you order through a cata logue. It is very easy to make an ar ticle look better in a picture than It looks In reality, and this is done fre quently in the catalogues. But thero is a still more insidious and contempti ble way of deceiving tho public which some of these concerns employ. They print both a picture and the description of a piece of furniture, for Instance. According to tho picture. It is elegant Suppose it is a dining room table. The picture will show handsome five inch table legs. Tho reader is attracted at once. Even when ho finds by perus ing the description that tho table has two inch legs bo is not altogether dis enchanted. Quito ofton a person or ders an article through the Influence of the picture A Hint to tho Wise. Tho Paris (Mo.) Appeal, referring to the business done by mall order houses throughout tho various counties in Mis souri, editorially says: "Advertising Is costing tho merchants of Monroo coun ty thousands of dollars every yoar not that our merchants actually pay out thousands of dollars each year for ad vertising, but tho great dopartment stores in the cities ndvertlso every day In the year, telling tho public Just what they have to sell and what it will cost. Tho papers carrying these advertise ments nud thousands of price lists go nil over the county, and people see what they need advertised and order it from tho city stores. Who enn blame thum? Merchants all over this county have tho same goods and often fpr less money, but tho buyer does not know It, so ho sends off for his goods. Now, if the merchants in this couuty wero to uso tho samo methods that thp city merchants use the mall order houses would get nut few orders from old Monroe," Tattle of the Town Little grains of fact sifted from tho chaff of gossip flying up and down tho town. LOCAL TEMPERATURE RE- PORT. For twenty-four hours end- ing 5 p. m., July 2, by Mrs. E. Mtngus, special government meteorological observer. Maximum , . C6 Minimum 55 At 5 p. m 00 Precipitation none Wind, Northwest; cloudy. WEATHER FORECAST. (By Associated Press.) WESTERN OREGON. Showers tonight or Saturday. COOS BAY TIDES The following tables give the hours of high and low tides for every aay this week: JULY, 1008. HIGH WATER A. M. P. M. Date. h. m. 1:11 1:47 2:22 3:07 3:52 ft. 6.4 h. m. 2:42 3:09 3:37 4:17 4:55 ft. Wednesday Thursday . . 5.5 5.C 5.7 5.9 6'.0 6.0 5.7 Friday . . Saturday . SUNDAY . 5.2 4.y JULY, 1008. LOW WATER! A. M. P. M. Date. h. m. ft. h. m. ft. Wednesday .1 8:05 0.4 8:15 3.5 Thursday . .2 8:31 0.0 8:56 3.4 Friday .. .3 9:01 0.3 9:33 3.2 Saturday 4 9:31 0.7 10:14 3.0 SUNDAY . .5 10:03 1.2 11:00 2.6 Occupy Richardson Home. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Miller have moved from the O'Connel flats Into the resi dence recently vacated by Dr. and Mrs. Richardson. Is Improving Block. Wm. Grimes is having the upper story of his building on Front street, the lower floor of which is occupied by the Chamber of Commerce, remodelled and Improved. It will also be newly decorated and papered. Big Shipment of Shingles. The Alliance on its last trip out carried a shipment of 141,000 shingles from North Bend and also 1,000 cases of condensed milk. They were two of the largest shipments of the kind that have recently been made from Coos Bay. M. F. Plant In Tomorrow. The M. F. Plant sailed from San Fran cisco yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock and will arrive here Saturday. Owing to it being a holiday, no freight will ho unloaded and the offlce will be closed. The Plant will sail from here for 'Frisco Monday. Coos Boy Products. A shower of flowers, especially roses and lilies, was sent to the Chamber of Com merce this week. A large contribu tion was sent in "by Mrs. Hazard this afternoon. Mrs. Tlbbetts of Sumner, sent down some elegant lilies. Or chard grass higher than a man's head was brought in by Robt. Rook. Many nt Show. The Margaret lies Company presented "The Fatal Wed ding" to a fair sized audience at the Masonic Theatre last evening. While the play itself did not appeal to many, the work of the cast was gen erally commended. The company will appear at the Opera House to night and tomorrow night also. Wnnts News of Relatives. Frank Ross, a well-known pioneer of Coos Bay, was In from his homo on Ross' Inlet today. He recently received a letter from parties in Illinois asking for information concerning a Mr. Maloney who lived on Coos Bay in early days. He wasn't able to give thorn much information but is in vestigating it. Investigate Lumber Waste. Dr. Hawley, a government expert, was recently on Coos Bay probing Into the alleged waste in converting timber into lumber. He is making a tour of all the lumber districts of tho Pacific northwest. He Is parti cularly centering his work on tho turpentine project, trying to ascer tain if tho waste pine contains suffi cient to pay for attempting to utilize It. His reports will not ho made pub lic until submitted to tho Unltod Stales Forestry Dopartment at Wash ington No Developments In Phono Deal, So far as can bo ascertained, thero aro no developments in tho reported negotiations between John W. Gllky son and R. T, Durett for tho purchaso of tho local oxchanges of tho Pacific States Telephone Company by tho latter. Mr. Gllkyson and wlfo have gono to Ten Mile with somo friends, for a fow days outing and fishing, and Mr. Durett is saying nothing. l Personal Notes F. S. DOW hns gone to Coquille on business. W. OLDLAND, a well-known rancher bn South Inlet, Is reported quite ill. SEYMOUR 11. DELL returned yester day frorn a business trip to Ta coma. MRS. MATSON and daughter, Miss Nettle of Blue Ridge, were guests of Coos Bay friends yesterday. C. K. PERRY and R. J. Montgomery and families, will spend the Fourth at the home of Guy Cham bers orr Daniels Creek. CAPT. PENDERGRAS went to Co quille yesterday for a short visit in the Valley while the Flyer is undergoing repairs at North Bend! W, H. FORD is planning to leave on the M. F. Plant for San Francisco for a visit with old friends, he having resided there prior to his coming to Coos Bay. W. J. MORROW has resigned his position in the Flanagan and Ben nett bank, effective about August 1st. He expects to engage In other, business on-Coos. Bay. WM. OLSON of Washburn, Wiscon sin, is on Coos Bay investigating its prospects and looking up some investment property. He is also visiting his friend O. O. Lund. JOHN PREUSS, Jr., who has been attending a military school in Portland, has returned home for the summer vacation which he will spend In the store and on his father's ranch at Dullards. DR. and MRS. J. T. McCORMAC, Fred. McCormac, Mrs. French, Mrs. E. Mlngus, Miss Alice Mc Cormac and Miss Miriam Van Waters returned today from a short outing at the McCormac summer home on South Coos River where they had a delightful time. MR. and MRS. GEORGE DEUBNER and children are visiting at the home of Mr. Deubner's parents in this city. Mr. Deuhuer now resides at Oakland, Cal., running out of there as a conductor on the South ern Pacific. He is greatly pleased with the marked improvements on Coos Bay since his last visit there. MRS. CHARLES LASH and four chil dren arrived today from Portland to join her husband who has been on Coos Bay for several months. Mr. Lash and Messrs McClaren and Mills and the families of the latter met Mrs. Lash and children at Em pire today and all went to Charles ton Bay to enjoy an outing over Sunday. ARCHIE WHISNANT of North Bend was here with his mother who arrived yesterday from Monta na to make a few months visit with him. She Is delighted with tho weather on Coos Bay the mild breezes and sunshine being a de light after tho terrific rains and floods which Montana has" been suffering from. M. E. EVERITT of tho Everltt Phar macy of North Bend, was in Marsh field today arranging for a trip for himself and wife to Hillsboro, Ore. First they will go to Long Beach, Wash., to attend the annual con vention of the Oregon State Phar maceutical Association which will be in session thero July 7, 8, 9 and 10, and will then proceed to their old home at Hillsboro, Ore., whero they will spend tho remainder of the month with rolativos. TENTS for rent ware Co. -Pioneer Hard- PANCY HAMMOCKS, 10 per cent off. Pioneer Hardware Company. Picnic Goods A few good tilings for your lunch basket: Veal loaf, Picnic lobsters, Deviled meat, Deviled Iiam, Lamb tonguo, Perfection shrimps, Chipped beef, Corn beef, Vienna saiibage, Bench nut bacon, Cheese, Crackers, Tnmnlcs, Pork nnd beans, Pickles and olives, Chow Chows. C. W. WOLCOTT THE GROCER. OUR PHONE 071. m i 4 ) jdjyjUfuyta - jf.. rte&iimM gggmm