The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957, July 30, 1908, Page 3, Image 3

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W THE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIElW G0N, THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1908. 3
. . i .....
1 gf" - B, JURY DELAYS VERDICT TO
STRENGTH
In a bank lies, first, in the ability nnd experience of Its ofllccrs,
"The men behind the gun;" second, Its board of directors who ad
vice with and direct tho officers; and third, the Capital.
LIBERALITY In a bank Is its willingness to furnish funds to
depositors to assist them in carrying en their legitimate busi
ness. Our motto Is:
"STRONG AND LIBERAL" Look us up and If you And us de
serting, glvo us your business.
First Trust and Savings Bank
OF COOS BAY
Capital Fully Paid $100,000.00
Olllcers nnd
John S. Coko, Pres.
W. S. Chandler,
Henry Sengstacken,
L
Dorsey Kreltzcr, cashier.
M. C. Horton, Vice
CTjnfcHBxgsrrayjayaTrryjCTaijfJiixiTrgiia
K:K:m:nnrixa:y:Jm::::x:.-:HU
j IMMEDIATE VICINITY g
H It is tho policy of tliis bntik to a
:l comfiuc its business to tho ini- H
J mediate vicinity. In following H
JJ this course the bunk not only H
t: enhances its own stability, but
H promotes the highest inteiest of
t tlie community. v
Ij PIRST NATIONAL BANK OF
I COOS BAY, Marshfield, Ore.
O. B. Hinsdale W. S. McFarland
President Cashier
John PruesH R. T. Kaufman
Vice Pres. Asat. Canliicr
txoamt;tttnnttKtutat:tm;mt
STEAMERS.
TIIE
Steamer 'ML P. Plant
SAILS FOR SAN FRANCISCO, THURSDAY, JULY ;J0.
FROM MARSHFIELD.
j No reservation held after tho arrival
UOUgllt.
F. S. DOW, Agent
MARSHFIELD,
California and Oregon Coast Steamship Company
Steamer Alliance
R. W. OLSON. Master.
COOS BAY AND PORTLAND
SAILS FROM PORTLAN D SATURDAYS, 8 P. M.
SAILS FROM COOS BAY TUESDAYS. AT SERVICE OF TIDE.
F. P. Baumgartner, Agt. H. V. Skinner Agt.
Couch St. Dock, Portland, Ore. Marahflald. Ore., Phone 441.
K5H5HSrI5r!5H5rI5r!SrSHSE525i2nl5H5r
Portland & Coos Bay S S. Line
CITY OF PANAMA
Sails from Portland Wednesday at 8 p. m.
Sails from Coos Bay Satu days at Service of Tide.
S. S. CZARJNA
SAILS FOR SAN FRANCISCO, FRID AY NIGHT, JUNE 20, 1008.
CARRYING FREIGHT AND COMBUSTIBLES ONLY,
L. W. Shaw, Agt.
Phone Main 34
E5rHE5riS2SHS25r!SHEr!ni5Z5EST35E5rI5H53e5E
SUNSET BAY STAGE
Leaves North Bend stables Monday, Wed
nesday and Fridays at 8 a. m. Returning at 4
p. m. Fare $1.50 round trip For Seats Apply
NORTH BEND STABLES - Phone 111
THOMASON & HANSON f
-DEALERS IN-
'Hay Grain and Feed'
Freo Delivery Phono 17&1 T
Live Wire Talk
Wo carry a complete line of
up-to-dato electrical fixtures.
Get our prices on wiring and
installing.
THE OREGON ELECTRICAL
SUPPLY CO.
Mnrsiiflelfl rilOIlO 01
S25ESH5?E5E5E5E"2H5ESE5S2E5252
Hot Weather Drink:
WEINHARD'S BEER
Phono 481
MARSDEN'S LIQUOR nOUSE
For a Case.
Directors.
William Grimes,
8. C. Rogers,
Dr. C. W. Tower,
Judge John P. Hall.
pres. - mannger.
Flanagan & Bennett Bank
MARSHFiEI.D OREGON.
Caintat Hiibscribcd I'iU.U'X)
Capital Paid Up I0,0N
Undivided Profits ?.tt,000
Dock a general bankliiR business and lra
on the Uatik ol California. San Fraiirlm
(,'alll., First National Hank Portland Or., First
Nattonai Hank Koseburg, Or., Hanover Na
tioual Hank, New York, N. M. Kotbcb"
Son, London, EnRlond.
Also sell change on nearly all the prinu.,.
cities of Europe.
Accounts kept subject to check, safe dcposl
lock boxes for rent at fO cents a month o
ft. a year
INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS
You can BUY or SELL through
The Times "WANTS" with ease, dis
patch and profit try them.
of tho ship unless ticket Is
OREGON
A. St. Dock
MANGAN'S NEW UNDBRTAK
PARLORS, Just moved into new build
ing ok South Broadway, two
blookfl south of 'C street,
where a fine chapel has been
fitted up.
full line of caskets, cou
ohes, robes and funeral sup
plies in general.
Licensed embalmer with
lady assistant.
Telephones: Office 2161
Residence 2171
"ALERT"
Captain O. E. Edwards.
Time-Table.
Leaves Allegany, daily at 7 a. m.
Returning Leaves Marshfield 2
P. m.
For terms of charter, towing,
transportation or freight, apply on
board.
C. H. EDWARDS, Owner.
DR. A. C. 1IURROUGHS
Homeopathic Physician
Chronic Diseases a Specialty.
Residciico and ollicc, orncr 'C mid
Second Streets, Mnrshfleld.
D
K. GEORGE W. LESLIE
Osteopathic Physician
Graduate of American School of Oiteopalh
Klrksville, Mo.
Offlco Hours: 9 a. m to 4 p. m. Othor Uouri bj
Appointment. Office In Nnsburg Bloek
Phone 1611. Marshfield, Ore
DR. GEO. E. DIX
PllVRlnlnn nnd Siiftrnv
New Flanagan & Bennett Bank Bldg
'Phono 1681.
DK. J. W. INGRAM
IMlVflfnlflt mwl Qt.rnnM
Ofilce over Sengstacken's Dug Stor
Phones Ofilce 1621; Residence 781
DR. A. L. HOUSEWORTEt
Pliysiclnn nnd Surceon.
Ofilce scond floor of Flanagan and
Bennett New Bank Building.
Residence, two blocks north ol
Crystal Theater. Ofilce Phoni
1431 Residence Phone 656.
MRS. NETTIE HOVEL
Miduifo
Obstetrical Nursing
With E. W. Kammoror Phone 174
Lawyers.
Fronds H, Clarke Jacob M. Blaki
La rencc A. Llljcquist
CIiARKE, DLAKE &
LTLJEQVIST,
ATTOR N 13 YS- A T-LA W
United States Commissioner's Office
Trust Building. ' Marshfield, Ore.
J
W. BENNETT,
Office over Flanagan & Bennett
Bank
Marshfield, - - Orego'
-0KE & COKE,
0
- Attorneys at Law.
Marshfield.
Oregon.
Miscellaneous
MARSHFIELD TURKISH BATHS
210-213 Coos Building.
Hours: Ladies, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
except Saturday Gents, 7 p.m. to
1 a.m., except Friday.
TURKISH BATH $1.00.
C. L. BUTTERFIELD, Prop.
W
S. TUBPEN
mxiiiiuci
l'irst Tru.t it Savings Bank bldg-
MAItSHPIKI-D. OHE.
OAKLEY & ARNOLD
Civil and Mechanical Engineers,
North Bend, Oregon.
Surveying. Maps.
CRIBBS & LVSON
Photographers.
Coos Bay Monthly Bldg.
.Marshfield, Oregon.
NATIONAL EAU'LOYMENT
OFFICE, Room 214 Coos Bldg.
Phone, Marshfield 814.
Rooms and offices for rent Houses
for rent. Your property cared for
while you are away.
My commission very reasonable. Call
and see me. WM. WICKENS
M
R. ALBERT ABEL,
Contractor for Teaming of all kind
Phone 1884.
MUSICAL
w
ILIIELM G. IIOLL,
RESIDENT TUNER
Pianos tuned and repaired.
All work guaranteed.
With VT. R. Haines Music Co.
M
ABLE CLARE MILLIB
Vocal Instruction.
Italian and Gornfai Diction.
Studio, Phone 511.
ELMER A. TODD, Director
Coos Bay Academy of Marie.
Voice, Piano. Pipe Organ, narmony etc., from
beginnlrgto graduation. Blngeri coached In
tyle diction and interpretation), for opera
oratorio or concert work
New O'CounoU Building. Marshfield.
DRINK
WEINHARD'S
SlAliaDEN'B ZilQXJSK SaUWa.
Cab call Bervlte at any Hour
Good Itcrso ana Vehicles
IIEISNER, MILLER & CO.
Livery, Feed and Sale Stable.
Wood for Sale.
3d and A Sta. Phone 1201 Mrfld.
NEW JERSEY JUSTICE WAITS
FIVE HOURS WHILE GAME OF
DRAW WENT ON.
NEW YORK, July 30. "Can you
open this pot?"
"You're a quarter shy there, old
man."
"This l3n't bad for bottled beer,
eh?"
"I thought you 'lad a flush, or ycu
can bet I'd have raised you."
"That'll teach you not to bluff on
a busted flush."
Such, It is asscr.ed, was tho earn
est and dcliberato discussion between
six jurors for five hours in Justice
MIlo II. Crego's office at Belmnr N. J.
They had listened to the teitlmon) in
tlie more or less interesting case of
WMlIam Rose vs. Grandou Clayton.
Rose had bought a horse of Clay
ton for $35, paying $9 down. Sam
uel Micliaolson, a Belmnr bottler, was
to pay Clayton $2G, but, claiming
that Clayton owed him $1S, offered
him $S, which Clayton refused.
Clayton proffered to Rose tho $0 he
had paid and Rose would not take it.
Clayton seized the hor-o and Rose
sued for $35, the value they had
agreed on.
The jury retired at 10 p. m and
after talking about the horse for
awhile, one of them produced a pack
of cards. The crowd, waiting for tho
verdict, peeked in tho windows,
'harles E. Cook, Clayton's lawyer,
swears that the six jurors were seat
ed around a table on which were
dimes, quarters, halves and some
bills.
Mr. Cook even specifies that the
ante was ten cents and the limit
twenty-five cents. The game was so
ongrossing that, at 2 a. m. Justice
Crego went to the office to learn what
had become of the verdict. The jur
ors were still divided in opinion, but
only whether a man has a better
chance to fill a flush or a straight.
The justice recalled them from
hearts and diamonds to the original
suit. The game being broken up,
each juror voted in Rose's favor, but
for different amounts. Justice Cre
qo, it is said, advised them to add the
amounts and divide by six; result $17
for Rose.
Mr. Cook yesterday threatened to
lay the poker game before the Grand
Jury.
BUY a Big Lot by the Seaside for
$35.00 on level ground, near the
Beach at Beautiful Bandon. See
Bennett's land office or Stutsman &
Company.
Oh, What Joy!
"Cured at last! Oh, what Joy to
think that I have at last been cured
of that awful bowel trouble," are
the words of A. C. Butler of Cold
Springs, Texas, who suffered off and
on for twelve months with a disorder
of his bowels, and finally, after al
most giving up in despair, was cured
by Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy. No ono need
suffer from colic or diarrhoea, for
this remedy always gives prompt re
lief. For sale by JOHN PREUSS.
$$$$5iS5S5S$o?5
The Best Sight on Earth
" Wk IN
ygg
STATE LICENSED OPTICIAN OF ROSEBURG.
At Blanco Hotel, Monday and Tuesday, August 3 and 4.
At North Bend, Wednesday, August 5. (
Will mnko regular visits hereafter Work guaranteed. "
V-SO&6CO
ABSTRACTS
TITLE GUARANTEE & ABSTRACT CO.
Phone 143 Henry Sengstacken, Mgr.
PL'.T S GUI OF POKER
LEGACY LIFTS
TO
PETER GREER'S GRANDNIECE,
WORKING GIRL IN SEATTLE
INHERITS HIS MILLION DOL
LAR ESTATE.
NEW YORK, July 30. The million-dollar
estnto left by the late
Peter Greer, of New Yoik, becomes
the inheritance of Nellie Greer, his
grnndniece, who is a working girl in
Seattle. The property comprises
somo real estate in Forty-fourth
street.
Miss Greer's father was a favorite
with Peter Greer, and lie intended
to make him his heir. There were
two children in the nephow's family,
a son and a daughter who inherits
the property. The son disappeared
three years ago, and has not been
heard from since.
A year ago, Nellie was left an
orphan by the death of her father,
and was compelled to work for her
livelihood. Unless her brother, who
an heir, hears of the legacy,
hich has changed her condition
from poverty to wealth she will have
none of her own relatives with whom
to share her fortune.
Mrs. Haley Rich Only in Evperlence
After Eight Months of Ev-
pense and Worry.
WINSTED, Conn., July 30. Mrs.
Fred Haley, of Front street, who
started to get rich on hens, thus re
lates her experience:
"My husband bought $20 worth of
lumber and built the coop himself. I
Invested $5 in ten dozen eggs to set,
out of which I got seventeen pullets,
after the rats and the cats were
through with them. I spent $1.90
for corn monthly for eight months.
The hens always got their breakfast
off the neighbor's lettuce and beans.
"There was a wire enclosure six
feet h'gh. Imagine my feeling when
my neighbor's wrath was turned on
me on account of tho depredations
of those chickens.
"Oue night in his rambles a mean
marauder relieved me of the chickens
using a neighbor's sled to take them
hoii'O, leaving me sadder but wiser.
That was the extent of my profit.
But, on the other hand, the fellow
who took tho fowls cleared $17 wlth-
out the expenditure of a cent."
$$$$$$$$SS$$0$$$;X
May bo impaired yes ruined
by poor or even poorly fitted
eye-glasses. What's the use or
sense of wasting one's money to
your own hurt? Come to mo
and have your eyes examined in
a skillful manner and fitted with
glasses that are the best to bo
had.
H An Examination Costs Nothing
If glasses are not absolutely needed
you are not urged to buy.
A. S. HUEY
S$$$0$a&$$$S$$SS$$$
mm
WOMAN'S sad
HEN-EXPERIENCE
RECIPE WAS 24
PINTS OF EIZZ
NORTH CAROLINA AUTHORITIES
TRIED TO MAKE TROUBLK
ABOUT DR. PRITCHARD'S PRE
SCRIPTION. ASHEVILLE, N. C, July 30. The
sons and brothers of North Carolina
judges sdo'm to be pretty good judges
too of champalgne.
Robert E. Reynolds is a highly
popular young society man and a
brother of Judge Spears Reynolds.
Mr. Reynolds Is an athlete and ho
complained to his physician, Dr. Ar
thur Pritchard, that after taking;
exercise ho suffered from such symp
toms as a peculiar dryness of tho
throat and a certain lassitude. Dr.
Pritchard, also prominent In society.
Is a son of Judge Jester C. Pritchard,
of tho Federal Court, before whom
proceedings are progressing to close,
the State dispensary In South Caro
lina. Judge Pritchard hates wine worse
than a cat hates rain. Ho opened the
Prohibition campaign In this stato
and Is now making "dry" stump
speeches. But his son, the doctor,
remembering his Ilippocratic oath,
let nothing lnterfero with his duty
to his patient and prescribed cham
palgne for young Mr. Reynolds, and.
seemingly signed the prescription
"To be taken as often as necessary."
Mr. Reynold's throat must have
been dryer than the desert of Sahara
that day. He took the prescription to
an oasis, the Ashevllle pharmacy, and
it Is reported, remarked to Drug
Clerk lUcMullen.
"I feel extreme lassitude, better fill
that prescription two dozen times;
pints, please."
Thereupon, remarkable to say,
young Mr. Reynolds gave a supper at
the hotel to somo of the prettiest
girls and gayest young men in tho
Ashevelle Four Hundred. And cham
palgne was served at tho supper
State Detective Frank M. Jordan, a
rude person with no thirst, learned
about the "fizz" supper and actually
laid his Information before the Grdfid
Jury of tho Superior Court, which
had the Impudence to Indict Dr. Prit
chard and D. H. Rosenstein, proprie
tor; H. D. Sedberry, manager, and;
John Doe McMullen, clerk of tho
pharmacy, charging them with violat
ing the Prohibition law.
The affair came before Judge
Peebles of the Superior Court and ha
promptly quashed the Indictments
without as much as asking whether
Dr. Pritchard was at the supper to
administer his prescription. Thou
the desperate authorities went to the
city police courr, and the Judge there
threw the caso out as if it was an,
empty pint bottle.
B
WALKS INTO MILLINERY STORE,
DEMANDS A BIG ONE AND WAN
DERS AWAY TO SURPRISE HER
"BUCK."
SIOUS CITY. Ia July 30. A well
known Sioux City millinery establish
ment was dumbfounded the other day
when a fat squaw from the Winne
bago reservation, acrosss the Mis
souri, came in and demanded a "Mer
ry Widow" hat for her bare head.
Tipping tho scales at nearly 200
pounds, she waddled Into the swell
emporium and gazed around aa
though looking for something sne
couldn't find.
"Wdower-kettle, posies and
grass," she oxpiainea to uio uiun.iti
Mnrk. ns she nlaced ono greasy hand
on her bare head, and with the other
shifted tho position of a chubby pa
poose on her back.
Tbn trimmer fell back against a.
.no nf fnko flowers, absolutely dumb
UTC
I
WW
founded, and motioned to the head,
milliner for assistance.
Thnt knowlne lady readily lnferrea
from the repeated statement that tho.
squaw wanted a "Merry Wiaow, an.
bin as a Btew kittle, made of straw
and trimmed with flowers.
Mm. Stew-Kettle, or whatever ner
name was. thought perhaps that they
wore afraid she was broke, so she ex
tracted a roll of Uncle Sam's good
hills from under her shawl that mado
tho milllnor think of vacations.
It didn't take long to satisfy tno
taste of the red girl, for her eyes
danced when tho first hat was placed
on her shiny head. Sho pealed off a
bill and started for tho door. Look
good like whlto girl, now," sho vocif
eratod. "Mo find buck; ho bo afraid
wuft" and sho was off vo the street,
looking very out of place, undor tha
thatched roof.
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