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About The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1908)
THE DAILY COOS BAY TIM ES. MARSHFIELD, OREGON, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1908. ---- A Peace Offering DONE BROW. D U VVL i A -i M In the furniture business, depends almost entirely upon the buyer. Buying furniture is a science, where temperament, experience and judgment form the prin cipal parts. The class of the store, the beauty of the whole and the values given for tihe money you spend. Depends Upon the Selections the Buyer Has Made We have the only buyer of furniture by profession'in this part of the country. We are the only dealers that go to the Eastern markets and ship in carload lots direct to Coos Bay. i t That's Why We Give the Best Values Come in and see for yourself. Our prices are the i lowest, and our goods want, is it not? Perry, Montgomery & Co, OF THE FIRST-CLASS BS2SH5EESH5E52S"E5i!5H525HS25ESraE5asa C. Portland & Coos Sails from Portland Wednesday at 8 p. m, Sails from Coos Bay Saturdays at Service of Tide. S. S. SAILING BETWEEN SAN FRANCISCO AND COOS RYING FREIGHT AND L. W. Shaw, Agt. Phone Main 233 1 - - - - A. St. Dock E5HSZ5HSFH5H5HSESEin,5ESHSESHSSSHKESHSE5ESESHSH52SSSHS2.l3a5a5a5HSE5E5a5; COOS BAY ELMER A. TODD, Director ACADEMY -ISIC Classes in Harmony, Counterpoint, etc. Vocal Sight Reading and UilSUJUUlU rtjijaj' iui iiiiuwt xjl 6'Connell Building, A and Second Cab Call Bervk-o at All Hours Good Hearse and vehicles nETVER, MILLER & CO. Livery, Feed nnd Sale Stablo. HAY FOR SALE Wholesale and rctnll. 3d and 'A' Sts. Phone 1201 Mrfld. (( ALERT" Captain O. E. Edwards. Tlme-Tablo. Leaves Allegany, dally at 7 a. m. Returning Leaves Marshfield 2 P. m. For terms of charter, towing, transportation or freight, apply on board. O. E EDWARDS. Owner THOMASON & HANSON -DEALERS IN- 'Hay Grain and Feed' Free Delivery Phone 1751 I the best, i hat s what you - Bay S S. Line COMBUSTIBLES ONLY -FACULTY-- Piano Hr. Elmer A.' Todd Miss Lucy Sherwood Horton Voice Miss Mable Clare Millis Violin (To be announced later. Musical Kindergarten Miss Lucy Sherwood Horton m Stieets. uiiunimuua iu wiu iiiCLiui, j.-t; 'Phone 10!i5 We Stand on Top in our profession as Fancy Bakers, making only the choicest Cakes and Pastry for the best families in this section. Everything wo put into our products Is perfectly pure and fresh, and the greatest care is taken by experienced bakers to make each article from an ordinary bun up to a brides-cake first-class in every respect. Wo solicit a trial and leave the rest to your own judgment. COOS BAY BAKERY A ?75,00 scholarship for some young man or woman getting sub scribers for Tho Times. jji BAY, CAR. CJ Si Cj ; W I If you and your best girl have had a "misunderstanding" and most en- gaged couples do have them, you know the best thing to restore her sweet temper and your own, too, will be a box of our delicious Chocolates. For where Is the girl who could res- 1 1st the charm of our Chocolates? They are pure, wholesome, and deli cious, and second to none In quality. There are more lovers' quarrels "patched up" with our Candles than ' with any other kind. I E5ESHSZSSSE7a5E5SSH5aS?5-raEHSSE: STEAMER FAVORITE Tno trips dnll between Dilution nnd Coquille connecting with all Mnrshfield trains Leaves I3nndon . ,.fl;45n.in. Lpftl'M Ttnnflnti .1:20 p. in. .0:15 n. m. .4:00 p. in. jj Leaves Coquille. ffl Leaves Coqulllo fU Travelers leaving Marshiicld In the m morning reach llandon at noon. People- J; on Coqulllo river can spend over three pi hours In Marshfield unu reach home the Q same day. S COQUILLE RIVER TRANS- S PORTATION CO. 2Sa525?SaFiad5aii2525ESSSHSB5SSa5aS3 j Do not rorget that DeWItt's Little Early Risers are the best pills made. i They are pleasant little pills that are easy to take and are prompt and gentle. We sell and recommend them. Sold by LOCKIIART & PAR- a-K-----a-a-::--::-- r;- i a a i a i a t a a a i a a i a a a a a i i a u z Grocery Delivery Schedule i FORENOON. First City 8:f(0 ,t South and West 9:15 I T Second City and Broad- I way 10:45 f AFTERXOOX. a Ferndale 12:45 T I'irsc uuy i:au & South and West 2:15 f Second City and Broad way 4 o'clock V For I C. W. WOLCOTT V THE FAMILY GROCER T PHONE 071. . Front St. Mnrsdifleld. a-a-a-a-a-a-a - a - a - a - u - a - a - !&tafflctid The First National Bank of Coos Bay FIRMLY established and long since past the stago of experimental venture. CALLS ATTENTION to its facilities unexcelled for the trans action of all legitimate business in banking lines. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS with effective, efficient and compre hensive management makes It beyond doubt one of the safest depository for your funds. LOANS Its funds exclusively as designated by law which embraces a less extensive, but more stable class. EXCHANGE issued on all principal cities of the world. YOUR BUSINESS respectfully solicited. - a - a - a - a - a - a - aa - a - a - a - a - a - a CALIFORNIA AND OREGON t t t $ 1 Steamer Alliance B. W. OLSON, Master. COOS BAY AND PORTLAND SAILS FROM PORTLAND SATURDAYS, 8 P. M. SAILS FROM COOS BAY TUESDAYS, AT SERVICE OF TIDE. F. P. Baumgartner, Agt. H. W. Skinner, Agt, Couch St. Dock, Portland. Ore. Marshfield, Ore., Phono 441 THE Steamer M. F. Plant SAILS FROM SAN FRANCISCO, AT 2 P. M. EVERY TUESDAY FROM COOS BAY EVERY FRIDAY AT SERVICE OF THE TIDE. TIDE. No reservation held after the arrival of tho tlilp unless ticket la bought. F. S. DOW, Agent, MARSHFIELD, OREGON fe2EHSHScESHScc3H5E5E5cc3c3Z5H53HS3HSHSHSZ5SSHSlS32SZ5HSH5ESESHSc Steamer Wilhelmma LUDVIG CHRISTENSEN, Master. Sailing for Bandon every Monday. For full information, apply Chas Thorn owner, or H. W. Skinner, agent. J 5 .A4A- - - j Pacific Tool Works PsLSSi"! Heavy Forging a Specialty. First Class Logging Tools i Give Us a Call. W. Tharp, Prop. MAHNS!rNTsrfiS0N J --- I New York Globe, jjj COQUILLE CULLINGS Coos County Seat Events As Told by The Heialil. Mrs. George Snyder, of Marshfield, returned home yesterday after a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mia. Sturtevant, of Myrtle Point. Married In Coquille, October G, 1908, Mr. Carl Tucker and Miss Mlntio Doak, Judge John F. Hall officiating. J. T. Jenkins, of near Illverton, was up to town yesterday morning to ship the last of a lot of nice hogs to Coos Bay. He has just furnished a - a - a - a - a - a - a a-a-a-a-a-a - a - a - a - a - a - a - a - a - a - a - a - a - a COAST STEAMSHIP COMPANY. 'J i 'I 1 S fr t t" 't t 'I1 fr - - 0 - A.M - A - - A - - AA - for that market 14 fine porkers which wore but b!x months old, the average weight of which were 174 pounds dressed. Who ran beat that? A. C. Van Walter, who has bpen night clerk at a North Bend hotel for some time, returned to Coquille the latter part of last week. Mrs. J. N. Jncobson, of Mat Rink Creek, sustained a brokon limb yes terday by a fall, the full particulars of which we havo not learned. Jes&o Hunter, who recently got an ankle badly bruised between two logs at Smith-Powers camp No. 1, is out on crutches and getting along nicely. Miss Nellie Brown, of Marshfield, who has been at Portland for some time for medical treatment, was a Coquille visitor on Monday. She ex tended her visit to old friends down th'o river. Glenn Barker and Fred Johnson, of Falrvlew, rceenMy succeeded in killing two black benrs on tho place of tho former which had been com mitting depredations among tho flocks of sheep In that section. One of them was a largo one. On Thursday of last week John Tawse, tho export coal miner, w,ho has been superintending tho work of the RIvorton Coal Company for some months past, Btruck a five-foot vein last Thursday which Is proving to bo of tho very finest quality ever found In this section. Wo understand that the work of development will bo prosecuted as rapidly as tho circum stances will permit. MUST PROTECT ELK. King of the Forest Likely to Be Soon Exterminated. Tho Wedderburn Radium says: "A movement should bo started at onco towards obtaining a law at tho com ing session of the Oregon legislature for protecting elk for at least ten years. Twenty years would bo none too long. Coos and Curry counties, the homo of tho last Oregon elk, have good eyldenco to offer in support of pabslng a prohibitory elk law. The bands which a few years ago could be located and were of fair number, aro now in hiding and consist of few ani mals. Tho open senson ns now In effect finds elk meat unfit for use. In Curry county this season, flvo bull elks havo been slaughtered already, which very materially decreases the surviving bands. In Coos county tho hunters have reported no killings and therofore find tho sport of hunt ing elk Is on Its last logs. If this king of forest gamo Is not protected, flvo years will witness tho extinction of Oregon elk." Now Is tho time to get busy In Tho Tlmos' PrJzo Contest. Read tho Times' Wint Ads. SOME INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THE OYSTETU- As the arch enemy of tho oyster,, tho starilsh deserves special mention. Like tho former It Is very prolific,, a six-Inch specimen hnving been, known to deposit 30,000,000 eggs at a single laying, and 20,000,000 being", tho common average. Tho starfish possesses a very acutG' sense of smell, and apparently it rea sons in very much tho same manner as many other higher forms of ani mal life. In this respect It is infinite ly tho superior of the oyster. The prcsenco of a new food supply is. soon known to It, and by means o thousands of tiny littlo legs which mnko it capable of regular and cor taln locomotion, It marches to Its feast, much as the carnivorous vul ture In tho dessert swoops down upom its prey. Its number is legion, a may bo gained from the fact that an oyster bed, left uncared for for a. comparatively short time, has been, found covered with starfish to a uni form dopth of nearly a toot. According to tho scientific au thorities, the average female oyster" deposits at least 1C, 000, 000 eggs dur ing a single spawning season, and let Is said to be no uncommon occnrJ ronco for an Individual oyster ta havo 50,000,000 or oven. (10,000,000 to her credit. Comparatively few of thesa eggs howovor, reach the fertilization stago and of those that do few survive it for many and fatal are the dangors? that threaten. Sudden changes or temperature, cold rains, greedy Ashr all contribute to further tho ends of nature. An oyster egg has less than ono chance in 2,000,000 oF reaching maturity. .In 1S80 tho Chospeako and its; tributaries produced nearly 20,000, 000 bushels of oysters; last year notwithstanding tho enormous In crease In the use of tho oyster, not to mention tho Chespeako's favored po sition as a shipping pblnt, tho crop showed a deficit of many millions. Unquestionably the cardinal need' of both tho Virginian and Maryland" Industries Is stnto encouragemont or private enterprise, At tho present time all tho seed beds in tho juris diction of tho state are held by tho stato for the supposed bonoflt of tho pooplo nt large, with the result that these bods, which under somo com prehensive scheme of private owner ship would give permanent and re munerative omployment to thousands: of Vlrgnlla's citizens, afford a pro carious living at best to a limited number, and for a limited season. Tho oyster Industry Is costing the commonwealth of Virginia nearly $GO,000 n year In pollco protection alone, and tho Industry Is carried on at a financial loss to the government On tho other linnd, private ownership' would not only bring a laro Income Into tho state coffers; would not onlj rollovo the staff of a great part of the bur den of policing tho grounds, but would Increaso tho vnluo of tho commonwealth's Industry by at lensti $10,000,000'a year. Garnault Agas glz la National Magazine. m i fcHf ; ,1 i fe.1 I rej s K-J Hi ! I !. B i