IF" ' ' mAl
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THE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFItlOOREG ON, FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1908.
r
r
tSHFIELD, OREGON
July 1st, 1908
purchased the stock of the Pioneer Hard
ipany, Marshfield, Oregon formerly owned
j O'Connell, E, K. Jones, and others, and
med management and control of same. It
earnest endeavor to please all my cus
the way of good goods, low prices and
treatment.
experience in the retail .business in your
y, as well as my late experience as sales
he road for Baker & Hamilton, of San
, combined with my vast facilities for hand-
, enables me to purchase my goods and
n in your hands at a much lower figure than
ititors.
)r to establish myself and get in touch with
I will, for the first thirty days beginning
08, make a special 10 per cent reduction on
)urchases,
, Respectfully yours,
feANK E. HAGUE, Mgr.
tiEER HARDWARE CO.
Young Folks
BJI
RECEIVED
IfE OP STAMP-SCALES, "BATES" ADDING MA-
CHINES, AND WASTE BASKETS.
(SJORTON & HANSEN
i
CANDLE EXPERIMENTS.
Some Curious Things Scientifically
Explained.
Get a largo tallow condlo with a
thick wlek, and, having lighted it, let
It burn a little while until tho wick Is
quite long. Care should bo taken to
keep tho candle shielded from the
draft, so that tho wick may remain
straight. Now blow tho light out sud
denly, and a stream of smoke will
rise from tho wick. This smoko is
the gas that makes tho candlo burn,
and to prove It touch a lighted match
to it Immediately after blowing out
tho candle, when tho gas will ignite
and tho flame will run down in a
stream and relight the wick, Just like
a Jewel dropping from the air. The
match should bo held about half an
Inch above the wick, but by experi
menting you may bo able to increase
the distance, allowing tho candle to
burn a little while before each trial.
Now make another experiment. Let
tho candle burn until tho burned wick
is quite long, as before, and then, hav
ing blown out the light suddenly, hold
a piece of wire gouze down over tho
wick so that the smoke will rise
through the meshes of the gauze. Then
hold a lighted match to tho smoke
above the gauze, and the smoke will
ignite, but the flume will not go below
tho gauze. The reason is that the wire
carries away the heat so rapidly that
the flame Is put out.
That the flame will not go up through
the wire gauze may be shown by hold
ing the gauze over the candlo while It
Is burning, when tho flame will spread
out over tho lower surface of the gauze
and not a bit of It go through. It Is
this principle on which the miner's
safety lamp Is constructed.
cur GETS .
ELI
OREGON FORESTS ARE
xt
READ 1 BREAD !
In features in good bread (ire an nppetizlng flavor, nu
Htics and being easy to digest. In our bread you And
Qualities, and besides you know that it is baked in a ba
I where euro and cleanliness are carefully exercised.
4U TIUED OUR DIAMOND (D) BREAD?
COOS BAY BAKERY
Opposite Flanagan & Bennett Bank Building
mHnKHXKXXHXmiii$KHXK
able Abstracts of Title Investments and Sale of
Real Estate
SEE
?LE GUARANTEE and ABSTRACT Co.
Henry Sengstacken, Manager
Held and Coquille City, Oregon
Marshfield Office 14J - Coquille City 191
General Agents
Eastside and Sengstacken's Addition
E ARE OFFERING
9
hoiccst meats and poultry at those close figures possible
frith a large trade. .Constant, steady, uniform and regular,
athway runs along. . Quality Heights all the time. The best
that Oregon affords is tho poorest our customers ever rc
I The lowest prices arc tho highest wo ever clinrgc. Every
tilled with an expert's selection.
TEe CITY MARKET
9. Noble
and C Streets
Phone 1941
Marshfield, Oregon
ABOUT MR. HOPTOAD.
Among Other Accomplishments He I
a Musician.
It Is very pleasant to have a family
of toads living under one's front door
step. They are very social fellows,
and their antics are so funny that It
Is amusing to watch them. Children
should never Injure or frighten toads,
as they are very useful as well as In
teresting. All day long a toad will Ho half cov
ered with sand or dirt, and Us his coat
is dust color you may look right at him
and not see him, but as soon as the
sun sets ho comes forth to get his
supper of flies and bugs.
Toads should always be encouraged
to live in the garden, for they do a
great deal of good there, says the Cir
cle. Almost any farmer will tell you
that ho would rather have a toad to
pick off the bugs and worms that de
stroy his plants than a boy.
The toad is nlso a musician, and this
you probably did not know.
When the spring song of the frogs
down in tho Bwamp Is at Its height
and all are piping away with might
and main, you may hear one song, loud
and shrill, which trembles like a whis
tle with a pea In It. It Is the loudest
and most peislstent of all the frogs
songs, with tho possible exception of
that of the piping fiog. The noisy
musician Is none other than our friend,
Sir. Hoptoad. If you can discover
him In the act. you will see that he
puffs out his throat until t looks as
though it would burst; then ho sends
forth his shrill, tremulous song.
Gold Beach Men Subscribe
Money to Get Connection.
.With Outside World.
GOLD BEACH, Ore., July 7.
Great Interest is being taken In the
work of the local telephone stock
company, which Is constructing a line
from Gold Beach south. Much dis
satisfaction has for a long time been
felt with the old line which connects
uurry county witn outside com
munication by way of Gold Beach
north. There Is no telegraph line In
the county, and excepting by mall,
no communication can bo had con
cerning the doings of the outside
world but by this line. Tho service
Is so Irregular and the equipment so
poor that the lino almost Invariably
falls when most needed. At the time
of tho primaries It was down, and
again a few days ago, when all were
anxiously awaiting the decision of
tho Chicago Republican Convention.
Last January the Southern Curry
Telephone Company, a home enter
prise, was organized and the by-laws
were published the latter part of the
same month. The line Is to extend
from Gold Beach to connect with the
line at Crescent City, Cal. The
capital stock of the company, $4,000,
was soon sold. E. A. Bailey, County
Judge, was elected president; Dr. J.
Schllemann, secretary and treasurer,
and V. J. Ward, who is agent and
representative here of the Brooking
Lumber Company, was chosen man
ager. All are directors, acting with
W. J. Cooley and Delmer Colegrove,
of the southern part of the county.
Poles are being set from both north
and south. It is Intended to push the
work as rapidly as possible.
BEING BEDISTRICTED
NO ADDITION TO FORKST AREA
IS INVOLVED IN THE COMPRE
HENSIVE PLAN OF THE FOR
KST SERVICE FULL DETAILS
the "Cascade (S)" National Forest
(which has not been Included In the
Fremont) between tho middle fork
of the Willamette river and West
Deschuttes river and the Roguo
river and South Umpqua river divide,
also the southern portion of the old
"Umpqua" forest. It Is located In
Lane, Klamath, Jackson, Coos, and
Douglas counties. This forest will
continue to bo administered by Super
visor S. C. Bartrum with headquar
ters at Roseburg, Oregon.
The Crater National Forest will
contain 1,106,802 acres and will con
sist of the southern portion of the
change the names and boundaries of ' , "" ' ""iwa
fD . r rm. ,. '" a Portion of the "Klamath" and
Siskiyou" forests. It is located in
OF THE REARRANGEMENT
AGREED UPON.
WASHINGTON, D. C, July 10.
The second step In the comprehen
sive plan of redisricting the National
Forests In the western states has
just been made by the President In
signing executive orders which will
ENFORCE FRUIT LABEL LAW.
ds is jtfre time of year to
Cook With Gas
and use
Electric Flat Irons
ie Coos Bay Gas
Electric Company
Marshfield and North Bend, Oregon
Origin of an Old Saying.
Perhaps the oldest of familiar expres.
sions is to "cut a dido." which Is said
of a person when he plays a sharp
trick. The phrase goes back to 800
years before Christ, when Dido, queen
of Tyre, after the murder of her hus
band by her brother fled from that city
and established a colony on tho north
ern coast of Africa. She bargained for
as much land as could be surrounded
with a bull's hide, and in order to
claim as large a tract as possible she
had the hide cut into narrow strips, and
on the land thus surrounded she built
a citadel. The natives, seeing that
they were outwitted by a woman,
quietly submitted to this cutting up of
a dido.
Their Master's Voice.
ILUMBIA MACHINE WORKS
Cavanagh, Chapman ( Co. ::
Ineral Repair Work and Woodturning. Launches a Specialty
Foot of Queen Avenue, Marshfield t
Try ATimes Want Ad It Pays
&i 'Tjnri J2-8! WU&-1
His bark is woreo than his bite. St
Nicholas.
Dreams.
Whero do tho dear dreams come from,
Tho biff, big dreams and tho small.
When I go to sleep,
I When I've counted sheep,
And the last's Jumped over the wail?
Sometimes I'm a fairy princess
I With lots of beautiful things.
Sometimes I Just stand
In Faraway Land,
I And a little bird sings and sines.
f Maybe I sail on the ocean
In a ship with silken sails.
Or maybe I go
Where sold apples grow
In the loveliest, greenest dales.
JKThere do they go, I wonderT
c X never can tell, you see.
6 I wake In my cot,
K And they're halt forgot
MLiJKhea my mother comes tn to me.
mi --7outtfCasiB8&tM.
Inspector Armstrong Gives a Fair
Warning to All Growers.
SALEM, Ore., July 8. That fruit
grqwers and shippers must obey the
law requiring the marking of boxes,
Is the determination of Fruit In
spector E. C. Armstrong, of Marion
county, and it is understood that con
certed action along this line will be
taken by horticultural officers In all
parts of the state. The purpose of
the law enacted In 1907, is to pro
vide a means by which the name of
tho grower of diseased fruit may be
ascertained. Then, too, if the name
of the packer must be placed on the
box, greater care will be taken in
sorting and packing, thus securing a
higher grade of fruit, aside from the
question of fruit pests.
Mr. Armstrong today gave to the
press the following warning to grow
ers, packers and shippers of fruit:
"Your attention is called to the
law of this state enacted In 1907, re
lating to the marking of fruit boxes.
Under the provisions of this law ev
ery person, firm, association or cor
poration engaged In growing, pack
ing or selling green fruits in Oregon
is required to mark, stamp or label
plainly on the outside of every box
or package when packed, the name
and address of the packer, and If the
packer is not the grower, the name
and address of the grower as well as
of the packer, must appear promin
ently upon the box or package. It Is
made unlawful for any merchant,
shipper or vender to represent that
any green fruits were raised, pro
duced or grown by any other person
than the one, who actually raised
them or that they were grown in any
other place or locality than that in
which they were actually grown.
Any violation of this law is punish
able by flno or Imprisonment or both
and the possession for tho purpose
of sale of any falsely or Illegally
marked box or package Is the viola
tor of the law."
FRI
,
EDMUND CLARENCE 8TEDMAN.
IEND of us all and the maker of
lyrics that touch and soften the
heart.
Heartfelt and lavish of fancy and
beauty that golden tripped ca
dence Impart,
Fallen In Azrael's shadow and borne o
the Islands unknown
Now poetry loses her lover and lotters a
knight from her throne.
A voice that could thrill and encourage,
yet winnow tho chaff from the wheat,
There Is now not another so genial, so
tenderly earnest and sweet.
Yet It leaves as a monument, greater
than stateliest marble can show.
Rare, garnered fruits of tils fancy, of
muslo and ttntfulest glow.
Last of the troubadours early, loyal to
truth and the past.
Seeing tho beauty and wonder of song
and Us crystalline cast,
We feel that a seat Is left vacant, a voice
Is made suddenly still,
And a prophet has gone from his forelook.
which no one hereafter shall All.
Sad Is this sorrow of letters and loss to
the loftiest art,
But we, who knew him In lifetime, from
something still greater muBt part,
Not merely the critic and poet, suddenly
risen above
From this weariful world's dark troubles,
but one who had dowered us with
love.
the forests In Oregon. The only
other state In which these plans have
been completed is Idaho, but It is ex
pected that the work of redisricting
In all the National Forest states will
be finished and the changes announc
ed In the next few days.
No addition to forest area is In
volved in the plans for redisricting
In any of the states of the Northwest.
The object of the work is to equalize
the areas of administrative units and
to arrange their boundaries In such
a manner as to promote the most ef
ficient and practical administration
of the forests. It will enable officers
of the Forest Service to give prompt
attention to all forest business and
further the Interests and add to the
convenience of stockmen, lumber
men, miners and all other users or
settlers In the National Forests. The
Oregon National Forests which will
be effected by this rearrangement are
as follows:
A new forest to be known as the
Umatilla will contain 550,176 acres
and will consist of all of the Hepp-
ner and of tho northwestern portion
of the Blue Mountains Forest. It is
located in Morrow, Umatilla, Grant
and Wheeler counties. This forest
will continue to be administered by
Supervisor Thomas E. ChldBey with
headquarters at Heppner, Oregon.
The forest to be known as the
Whitman will haye an area of 1,264,-
739 acres and will consist of the
northeast portion of the Blue Moun
tains Forest which Is in general the
area formerly known as the "Blue
Mountains (W) National Forest." It
Is located In Umatilla, Union, Baker,
and Grant counties and will be under
the administration of Supervisor
Henry Ireland with headquarters at
Sumpter, Oregon.
The new Malheur National Forest
Is what has been formerly known as
the "Malheur Division of the Blue
Mountains," and will embrace 1,183,
458 acres. It consists of tho south
eastern portion of the "Blue Moun
tain (W) Forest" and is located in
Umatilla, Union, Baker, and Grant
counties. This forest will continue
under the administration of Super
visor Cy. J. Bingham with head
quarters at John Day, Oregon.
The forest to be known as the Des
chutes will consist of that portion
of the Blue Mountain Forest former
ly known as "Blue Mountain (W),"
the northern portion of the Fremont,
and certain townships of the Cas
cade containing 1,475,480 acres. It
Is located in Crook, Lake, Wheeler,
Klamath, Grant, and Harney coun
ties. The forest will be administered
by Supervisor A. S. Ireland with
headquarters at Prlnevllle, Oregon.
The Fremont National Forest will
consist of the southern portion of the
old "Fremont" and all of the "Goose
Lake" forests and Is located In Lake,
and Klamath counties. This forest
is very irregular In outline and is
composed of many segregated areas,
the total area of which will be 1,236,
960 acres. It will continue to be.
under the administration of Super-
visor Guy M. Ingram with head
quarters at Lakevlew, Oregon.
The land formerly Included in the
"Bull Run" and tho "Cascade (N)"
forest, except that portion south of
the Wlllametto Valley Cascade Moun
tain Wagon Road, covering 1,788,320
acres, will bo called the Oregon Na
tional Forest. This forest Is located
In Multnomah, Clackamas, Wasco,
Marlon, Linn, and Crook counties
and will continue under the adminis
tration of Supervisor Thos. H. Sher
rard with headquarters at Portland,
Oregon,
Cascade will continue to be the
name of that portion of the old "Cas
cade" forest (not Included in tho
Fremont) lying between tho Willa
mette Valley and Cascade Mountain
Wagon Road and the middle fork of
the Willamette river and West Des
chuttes rlcer. This forest has an
Jackson, Klamath and Curry coun
ties, Oregon, and Shasta county, Cali
fornia. Acting Supervisor C. A. Buck
will administer this forest with head
quarters at Medford, Oregon.
The Siskiyou will now consist of
the greater part of the old "Siskiyou"
all of the "Coquille" and part of tho
"Klamath," and will contain 1,305,
657 acres. It Is located In Jackson,
Curry and Coos counties. This for
est will be administered by Super
visor M. J. Anderson with headquar
ters at Grants Pass, Oregon.
All "of the old "Tillamook" and
"Umpqua" forests, except the south
ern portion of the old "Umpqua," .
embracing 1973,918 acres, will bo
known as the Sluslaw National For
est. This forest is located in Tilla
mook, Lane, Douglas, Coos, Lincoln,
Polk, and Yamhill counties. Super
visor A. E. Cohoon will administer
this forest with headquarters at Eu
gene, Oregon.
The Wallowa Is the forest former
ly known as the "Imnaha." It con
tains 1,750,240 acres and Is located
In Wallowa county. This forest will
continue to be under the administra
tion of Supervisor Howard K. O'Brien
with headquarters at Wallowa, Oregon.
The Forest Service desires to re
duce tho area ot the average ad
ministrative units to approximately
l.uOO.OOO acres. This was not 'pos
sible in all cases as is shown by tho
fact that under the plan of redisrict
ing there will be 'l44 supervisors in
the United States who will adminis
ter more than 167,000,000 acres ot
National forests.
COQUILLE CULLINGS.
News of Interest in the Valley aaTold
In The Herald.
Mrs. J. M. Nye of this city, who
was seriously ill for some time, is
very much improved of late.
Chas Dye was in town carrying hie
left arm in a sling, haying Inflicted a
severe wound in that member with
an ax.
Mrs. R. M. Weeder of, Marshfield,
accompanied by her daughter, Mrs.
Fred Tuttle of Bandon, passed
through town for Bandon.
Mrs. J. B. Dulley has , .returned
from Portland where she, went to
see her daughter who was ill, but
who was better when shp left her.
J. H, Snyder and nephew, Grant
Bunch, started Immediately after tho
4 th for Mazinna, Nevada, where they
will engage In mining for a few
months at least.
Rev. W. S. Gordon went to Ban
don Monday where ho is looking
after the construction ot an eight
room parsonage for the Methodist
church In that place.
Capt. C. H. James has closed a deal
with Captains H. W. Dunham, of
this city, and R. W. Panter of Ban
don, transferring to them his steam
er line of tho upper river.
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Rice of Marsh
field, came over the latter part of tho
week to visit with Mrs". Rice's pa
rents, Mr. and Mrs. T: A. Walker,
and celebrate tho 4th in Coquille.
Miss Nellie Falrman has returned
from California. She lately graduat
ed from the state normal at San
Diego, nnd has a good position at
Stockton where she will open school
In September. She will visit with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fair
man, at Johnsons Mill, and friends
hero till time to start school.
area of 1,845,120 acres and Is lo
cated In Lane, Linn, Crook, and Kla- A little forethought may savo you
math counties. It will bo administer- no end of trouble. Anyono who
ed by Supervisor C. R. Seltz with makes It a rule to keep Chamber
headquarters at Eugene, Oregon. Iain's Colic, Cholora and Dlar
The forest now to bo known as tho rhoea Remedy at hand knows this to
Umpqua will embrace 1,698,560
acres and will consist of that part of
bo a fact.
PREUES.
For sale by JOHN
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