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About The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1908)
THE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11 1908. COOS BAY TIMES An Independent Republican news paper published ever' evening except Stantfay, and Weekly by EXao Coos Bay Times Publishing Co. Entered at the postofflae at Marsh CeTd, Oregon, for tr nsmission tHirough tho mails as second class en&il matter. f&. C. MA LONE Y. . .Kditor nnd Pub. DAN E. MALONEY News Editor OUBSCRIPTION KATES. In Advance. DAILY. One year 5.00 Elz months $2.50 Dees than 6 mon'hs per month. .50 WEEKLY. One Year $1.50 Address All Communications to COOS HAY DAILY TIMES &arsl:ilcld - Oregon The policy of the Coos Day TIjus will be Republican in politics, with die Independence of which President Roosevelt Is the leading exponent. OXE WAY OUT. "The proposition to construct and operate an electric railway from Coos Say to Roseburg and the Willamette vtalley as recently renewed in the dis cussion at the Oregon-Idaho Devel opment congress is always amenable to the best thought that Coos Bay can slvo it, and at this time is particular ly pertinent and suggestive. It offers Coos Day one way out of its present ambiguous and undeserved relation with the Harriman transportation uystem. It makes no difference who shall build the line, though there is always the inherent advantage of local ownership and control in mat ters of such Import. The main thing Is that Coos Bay needs a direct line with swift, frequent and reasonably cheap service, out of this city and touching the Willamette valley and making connection with the outer world by rail. Such a road would be self-supporting and profitable from the instant of its completion. There are practical ly several hundrel thousands of dol 3ars of money In the hands of Coos 33ay citizens and in Roseburg that could bo utilized with safety and as sured profit In this work. Francis 1H. Clark reports the sentiment at Htoseburg overwhelmingly and en taiusiastically in favor of such a pro ject. It would create a distinct commer cial field for this city; it would Eiasten the development of thousands oT -rich bottom-land acres into pay ing truck-farms; It would open up Uine after lino of local investment Xthat would redound to tho benefit of tthc -whole section as well as to the xnarkets and. businesses of this city. It would expedite the resort traffic season after season, giving the resi dents of the Interior ensy, cheap and s-apld communication with tho ideal spots nround Coos Day during the ssuperheated summer season. It Is one certain way out of a very wiubious position, and may bo well anil deeply considered for the imme diate and certain good of all con cerned. "MIE WORK OF THE NEWSPAPERS Tho newspaper in a town sas snriore good thlngB of its possibilities sand attractions every day In a way tthat is productive of greater bonoflts tthan all other agencies combined. 2Tho nowspaporman is so universally expected to boom tho town In and out of senson that if at any timo in iis judgment it appears necessary to eriticiso conditions in any respect ho is hopped onto as a knocker. Ho is auipposed to be tho town boomer and asually meets every expectation Hilling that line. In tho Echo Regist er wo find this analysis of tho nows jsaj!tr man's work in his community tnd tho reward lie gonerally reaps tSor his efforts: "Did you over think of it? Sup ?o&e ovory business man in town took aas much interest in tho upholding of Hle town and forwarding all public enterprises as tho nowspaper innn. Ele works for railroads, manufac titorles, schools and churches, good lUtTt'bts and badgers and envorts airound generally. Imagine his feol knE'ihon whon somo lame, strlnghalt nernd Itind of a fellow reproaches him Sjccauso ho doesn't boom things tenough. If tho town does boom nnd tthc- prices of real estnto advance and j-nud the owners grow rich from tho !.--osnlts of his labor, ho makes noth ing by It. Ho is like tho poor boy :at tho plcturos without tho neces wairy price of admission." SBtonmor BREAKWATER snlls Strom Coos Bay for Portland SAT URDAY, NOVEMI1KU 1 i, nt 2 P. M. A COUPON book will save you rauoney on your meat bills. Ask the J tSanltary markot about It. With the Toast and Tea &'$KriSffiffirif?&f&$Q(&irfy " GOOD EVENING. Ingratitude, I hope, will never constitute a part of my my character, nor find a place In my bosom. GEO. WASHINGTON. THOSE AUTUMN BRIDES. The red rose dreams of April, The white rose dreams of May, But In this golden autumn The Bride rose holds Its sway, Tho Junetime, unreturning, The runetlme comes reborn, And love leads down the ladles Through lanes of bridal morn! Ah, brides of springtime vanished, Take sweetheart hands again! Here comes the gold October With all her bridal train; The red leaf and the holly, The harvest and the vine, Above love's veil of orange, With dreams of June entwine! Hero come the autumn couples, Love lights thebrldal day The red rose dreams of April, The white rose dreams of May! The bride rose lias all seasons, And this her dream behold Love leads the laughing ladles, And all the world Is gold! Exchange. A heartless woman Is without a mission in this world. Tho youngest married woman that ever lived felt older in experience than Methuselah., Love of admiration and self-conceit are almost fatal defects in the character of a woman. The early bird catches the worm, but need not awaken everybody rejoicing over the fact. When a woman puts on her fluf fiest, fuzzy things It's a sign she doesn't know what might happen. The devil's red fire is only a bluff; the lights he uses most successfully are twilight, firelight, and moon light. Change of occupation has done far more toward restoring tho health of women than all the rest cures in the world. After a pretty girl has been mar ried about four years she begins to look as if she might be her sisters' mother. Hereafter no careful business man will allow Willie Hearst to enter the room In which the office letter files are kept. Evo probably thought tho unfair part of it was getting her Into a scandal where she was bound to be found out. The poetry of love begins to peter out when a nagging wife stands at a man's elbow fuming over tho. ashes from Ills pipe dreams. Somo men are bound to save them selves oven if they havo to use every dollar in sight irrespective of the lit tle matter of ownership. Get a woman to tell you tho real truth and sho'll confess that sho has had or still has ambitions for the stnge. With men It's the chicken In dustry. Tho science which will cause wo men to quit thinking of themselves and their physical defects will havo accomplished as much as tho science of modlclno. When a woman shows a man her now lint It Is exasperating tho way her mannor somohow hints how much prettier are tho stockings and ribbons that match It. In China, says Gow Why, a young man docs not see his prospective brido until after ho marries her. Maniago seems to bo as much a lot tery In Chlnn as it is In tills coun try. Tho women nro now after a uni form dlvorco law for tho country. It Is to bo uniformly easy for a woman to get a dlvorco and uniformly ex ponslvo for tho man who Is thus kicked out into tho cold world with only other mon's wives to comfort him. A man ndvortlsod recently in a London paper to forward, on receipt of postago stamps, "sound, practical 'advlco that would bo appreciable at any time and to all persons and con ditions of life." On receipt of the stamps he sent his numerous victims the following: "Never give a boy a penny to hold your shadow while you climb a tree to look into the middle of next week." I note in the society department of an exchange the write-up of a wed ding which closes with this: "The bride's traveling gown was a suit of London smoke with hat to match." Heavens! What chances the brides take nowadays. Suppose the wind should blow that smoke away and leave her bared to the cruel blasts of the November weather and the critical stare of the guests assembled to see her off at the train? During the recent presidential campaign bpth candidates were made the victims of enthusiastic lady ad mirers who seized them unawares and kissed them. Bryan was seized and kissed In New York and In some New England village a big traveling man who looked like Taft was swooped down upon and kissed by an half score of school girls. This revives the discussion of the whole subject of hero kissing. There Is a loud outcry against the fad. Of course, It comes from those who are neither gallant heroes nor fair maid ens and who are, consequently, barr red out of the game. The old bache lors who couldn't get a kiss if they wanted one, and the fond husbands who can get all the kissing they care for, naturally turn with disgust from the sight of a large crowd of girls struggling to smother one man in a prodigality of kisses. It is a silly fad. Most fads are sil ly. But there is little use In wasting time and strength in advocating and supporting a reform movement of this sort. The fad will cure itself before the refoimers get fairly start ed in their work. So long as one girl In the whole nation gained dis tinction by having kissed a hero there was naturally an eagerness on the part of other ambitious maidens to win like fame, but when the kiss ing goes through a whole crowd and every little hamlet has a score of girls who have kissed heroes the thing becomes so common that it loses its attraction. It Is the uncom mon kiss that Is sought after by lad and lassie alike (the kiss which is tho reward of cunning, coaxing and persistent pleading). The kiss which Is passed out like the free ad vertising button at the exposition soon becomes of no value. When ev ery passerby Is allowed to take one there Is no rush for them. Let the cranky old bachelor and the envious spinsters quiet down and not fret themselves over reforming a practice which will reform Itself very soon. Let the old married folks, who have at home mbre kiss ing than they know what to do with, settle down tranquilly at the fire side. Kissing will go on as long as there are loving hearts and ruby lips, but it will go on in tho good old fashioned way, and the fad of the public kissing bee will reform itself before the echoes of these loud pro tests havo died on the air. When you are gone Tho tailors' bills will still lead on, Still flutter far beyond thy ken To lure and crush thy fellowmen; The tramp of many feet shall still Como hurrying with many a bill, Pursuo thy kin forever on, When you are gone. When you are gone . And suns and systems still wheel on, That grocery bill will yet hold pace With all thy brooding, mourning race; The butcher's boy will pass your door Romemberlng his unpaid score; Your washerwoman, lingering where Tho sun glints on her rich, red hair, Will scowl and mutter and pass on When you are gone. Whon you nre gone Tho rains will still descend upon Tho just and tho unjust, as they did Upon your unpaid derby lid; Tho comets and tho stars perforce Will hold upon their wonted course; Tho gopher gnmbol through tho corn As from tho day that you wero born; And wild geeso honking in the air Will honk as wildly raucous there As they havo thus honked every where ; Tho sunset glow will still sift down, Your doctor, lawyer still will frown, Tho "ton" you owe mo still lead on, Whon you are gono. Life. Steamer BREAKWATER sails from Coos Bay for Portland SAT- URDAY, NOVEMBER 14, at 2 P. M. I FINANCIAL 1 1 Fircf Trad rf Qflvififlfs Rant I: t m nx ii m m, n unu . mi w a - ,i iniiLgiii t-. n 1- $100,000 Capital, Fully Paid 1 )00 Capital, STANDS FOR CONSERVATIVE BANKING Pays Interest on Time and Savings Deposits The officers and the entire directorate are citizens of Marshfleld and vicinity who own and control the capital stock Whose every interest and success means the success of this community. Wo solicit your business and accounts. DIRECTORS. JOHN S. COKE STEPHEN C. ROGERS, HENRY SENGSTACKEN, M. C. HORTON, WILLIAM GRIMES, OFFICERS. JNO. S. COKE, President. DORSEY KREITZER, Cashier. M. C. HORTON, Vice President and Manager. H4HH'H4H-IM'W-t-H'W'Hl''M' Fkusgasi $L BeBmeifc Bank MARSHFIELD, OREGON. Paid Up Capital nnd Undivided Profits $75,000 Assets Over Half Million Dollars. Does a general banking bus'ness and draws on the Bank of, Cali fornia, San Francisco, Ca., First National Bank, Portland,- Ore., First National Bank, Roseburg Ore., Hanover National Bank, New York, N. M. Rothchlld & Son, London, England. Also sell exchange on nearly all the principal cities of Europe. Accounts kppt subject to check, safe deposit lock boxes for rent at 50 cents a month or ?5 a year. INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS j4i::.MMi'i OF COOS BAY Strictlv a Commercial Bank The Corn Exchange National Bank, Chicago, 111. Draws Wells Fargo Nevada National Bank, San Francisco, Cal. Drafts Tno United States National Bank, Portland, Ore.' The National Park Bank, New York, N. Y. 011 The Bank of Scotland, London, England. The Credit Lyonnais, Paris, France. In addition we draw drafts on all principal banking centers in Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia, China, Japan, North, Central and South America. Personal and commercial accounts kept subject to check Certi ficates of Deposits issued. Safe and Deposit Boxes for rent. STEAMERS t CALIFORNIA AND OREGON COAST STEAMSIIIP COMPANY. B. AV. OLSON, Master. SAILS FROM PORTLAND SATURDAYS, 8 P. M. SAILS FROM COOS BAY TUESDAYS, AT SERVICE OF TDDE. F. P. Baumgartner, Agt. H. W. Skinner, Agt, Couch St. Dock, Portland. Ore. Marshfleld, Ore., Phone 441 S525a5HS25H5E5E5ESH525ESE5HSE5E5Z523HSZ5HSH5 Portland & Coos Bay S S. Line S. S. BREAKWATER Sails from Portland Wednesday at 0 p. m. Sails from Coos Bay Saturdays at Service of Tide. S. S. CZARINA SAILING BETWEEN SAN FRANCISCO AND COOS BAY, CAR. ItYING FREIGHT AND COMBUSTIBLES ONLY. iL. W. Shaw, Agt. Phone Main 233 1 - - - A. St. Dock asa5a5H5E5HlSa5E5rli5Hr!SiSiS15E5ieSH5E52ESHSE5HSSSZ5E5rl5HSrl5ES15H5K EjaSHSS5H5aSa5a5ESE5asa5ZSH5E5ESSSZ5HSrlSrlBSE5Z5E3Sa5rl5asa5HSZ51SH5H THE ijj 1 Steamer M. F. Plant 1 Gj SAILS FROM SAN FRANCISCO, AT 2 P. M. EVERY TUESDAY S FROM COOS BAY EVERY FRIDAY AT SERVICE OF THE TDDE. H TIDE. D No reservation held after Iho arrival of tho ship unless ticket la Bj bought. I F. S. DOW, Ageak S MARSHFIELD, OREGON ES25HSBSHSa5ESH5HSHSE5rlSE5HSlS2Srin25HSZ5ESE5HSESH5HS3E5HSH5HSi!SHSESHSi ,i,t..iti - - 'i"ii'"i"'ii"i'ii' - it' - 't - 'i' - i' Steamer Wilhelmma. LUDVIG CTTRISTENSEN, Master." Sailing for Bandon every Monday, For full information, apply Chas Thom owner, or H. W. Skinner, agent. I-!... ! it-it-. : I I ft t "ALERT" Captain O. E. Edwards. Tlme-Table. Leaves Allegany, dally at 7 a. m. Returning Leaves Marshfleld 2 p. m. For terms of charter, towing, transportation or freight, apply on board. C. B EDWARDS, Ow.ner, HI(lH fiRADF MFATS The odor of good roast beef kowover . V,. V IIILMIU appetizing, can onlv be suggestive of the delicious taste and flavor that goes with every pleo of meat we sell. AH our meats are the choicest we can produce. R. H. Noblo TEe CITY MARKETPhori 1941 C and Front Streets, Marshnold, Oregon JNO. F. HALL, W. S. CHANDLER, DR. C. W. TOWER, DORSEY KREITZER, lance &t I - 'i' - 'i' - i - 'i' - 'i - - - 'i - - 'i' - 'i'"i' - .ii - .:.. j..i .t..t. j. -it,. A-. !,.,. .it,., ,.. (t ,t, BESES2Sa5HSa5E5S5H5E53Sc52SHSHSE3 STEAMER FAVORITE Two trips daily between Dandon and Coqullle connecting with all Marshfleld train;. Leaves Bnndon . . .OM5n.ni. Leaves Bnndon . . . 1 :20 n. m. ru ' - m Leaves Coqullle. ..0:15a.m. Jfl Leaves Coqullle ...4:00p.m. p Travelers'leaving Marshilcld In tho f morning reach Dandon at noon. People IS oircoqullle river can spend over three pi hours In Marshfleld and reach homo tho Q same day, m COQUILLE RIVER TRANS- 3 PORTATION CO. J r3E5E5?55HLE!5EiJ25H5c5Z5ESE525E.,)Z53 Business Directory Doctors. R. E. GOLDEN Physlcinn nnd Surgeon 202-03 Coos building, hours: 10 to 12 m. Office hours: 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 p.m. Phones: Office 1051 Residence 2351. C. BURROUGHS Homeopathic Physician Chronic Diseases a Specialty. Residence nnd ofllcc, corner '0' and Second Streets, Mnrsliflcld. D' R. GEORGE W. LESLIE Osteopathic Physician Graduate of Aaortam School of Osteopath, Phone 1611. Marshfleld, Or D" GEO. E. DIX Physician nnd Surgeon. Now Flanagan & Bennett Bank Blda 'Phono 1G81. TT K. J. W. INGRAM -' Physlcinn nnd Surgeon. Office 208-200 Coos Building Phones Office 1C21: Residence 1G23 DR. A. L. Phy HOUSEWORTn Physicinn nnd Surgeon. Offices second floor of Flanagan & Bennett Bank Building. RebMenco, two blocks north of Crystal Theater. Office Pbano 1431. Residence Phone 66C. M RS. NETTIE HOVEL Midwifo Obstetrical Nursing With E. W. Kammerer Phone 1 f 4 Lawyers. Francis H. Clarke Jacob M. Jllako Lawrence A Uljequlst CLARKE, BLAKE & LILJEQVIST, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW United States Commissioner's OfBce Trust Building. Marshfi eld . Ore. T. W. BENNETT, Office over Flanagan & Bennett Bank Marshfleld, - . . Oreitos ""OKE & COKE, " Attorneys at Law. Marshfleld, Oregon. Miscellaneous w; S. TURPEN Architect. Over Chamber of Commerce MARSHFIELD, ORE. MARSHFIELD TURKISH BATHS 210-213 Coos Building. Hours: Ladles, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m, except Saturday Gents, 7 p.m. to 1 a. m., except Friday. Phone 2141. TURKISH BATH $1.00. C. L. BUTTERFIELD, Prop. C RIBBS & MASON Photographers. Coos Bay Monthly Bldg. Telephone No. 017, Marshfleld, Oregon. HOTELS The LATTIN Hotel Guy O. Lattln. New nnd modern throughout. Rates SI per day, $0 per week. Free baths, newly furnished. Phono 2005. j Next to cor Sheridan and" Queen Ave. Marshfleld, Ore. lESZSHSTt Hunting, fishing, camping, bathing the year around. Beautiful Ten Mile Lakes, the sportsmen's paradise. When you como to Ten Mile visit the Ten Mile cafe, cot tages, tents, boats, complete camp outfits for rent at rea sonable rates. In connection with the cafe. Any size party taKen care of. Call and see us or phone your engagement. Phone local or long distance. LAKESIDE, ORE. ft .. ...., .law,,, ,-u 2Si5E5SSrl5HSE5ZSF5HSESHSESZSH5ESa5? MARSHFIELD HOTEL Corner 'A and Third street Board nnd Lodging. Per day..?1.00 Per Week.. $6.00. Meals 25c. R. MTLLER, Proprietor. Steamer Flyer LAWIIORN & McOULLOCn, Owners. Lvo. Marshfleld Lve. North Bend n.A 7:00 A.M. 7:45 A.M. 8:45 " 10:05 " 10:46 " 11:15 " 1:00 P. M, 1:45 P. M 2:30 " 3:15 " 4:00 " 6:00 " Open for Charter Nights and Sundays Tho Flyer Always Leaves on Time.