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About The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1908)
? WWfW . fi u q 'iiHPjpiiili)M 'W .' in1 ii 'i m Vii i fin iigMufi ir""limn 4 . -- - -, to-rw c-w - gagTff "' -' THE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES. MARSHFIELD, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1908 fT"P7 -"" ft l ft H 1 .1 Vt f t i i fnf i I A CHIP OX HIS SHOULDERS. COOS BAY" TIMES An Independent Republican news- Satire has always been a kick paper published every evening except back weapon. a man will permit j Sunday, and eekly by himself to be worsted In debate who J The Coo liny Time Publishing Co. wn, not subnilt to ridicule". That i lAlITU rut llllll I'll- TOAST AND TEA X M. C. MALOXEY. . .Kditor pad Pab. PAV E. MALOXEY Xews Editor "Entered at the postoffue at Marsh- wh- some sreat leaders who look Beld, Oregon, for tr nsmlsslon to the future deal In what Matthew through the malls as second class Arnold called "sweet reasonable mall matter ness." They do not want Incurable wounds after Ae victory. The paragraph which led to the shooting of Senator Carmack might have been written moderately with equal effect. He wanted to expose Major Cooper a a straddler. But he said It with vitriolic adjectives: "To Major Duncan Brown Cooper, who wrought the great coalition; who achieved the harmonious con fluence of Incompatible elements; who welded the pewter handle to the wooden spoon; who grafted the dead bough to the living tree and made It The policy of the Coos Bay Tl.n-.-8 to bloom, and burgeon and bend with will h Kepublicau lu politics, wl'h golden fruit; who made playmates ?" Tr":2" "h7"'C" " : ,, of the lamb and the leopard. AUUGCICIL IS" ll IV.UU aB "" -" subscription' rates. In Advance. DAILY. 5.00 J2.50 Less than 6 mon'hs per month. .50 WEEKLY. J1.50 One year . Bli months One Year . nau'est An i' njt'iiiiilraiions to VOOS HAY DAILY TIMES Unrsr-ili-ld Patron FORT OF COOS BAY. and boon companions of the spider and he fly; who made soda and vinegar . dwell placidly In the same bottle, Shall Coos Bay be organized as a h taught oil and water how !... tney migm agree 10 .Major uuncan That Is the question which ' " " Cooner. the creat dinlomat the people who dwell around this of the polltlcai Zwelbund, be all bay are vitally interested in at the honor and glory forever." It is a just judgment on Senator Carmack that he always weakened port present time. The necessity for such an organization seems to be em- .u i..u,t his argument by the extravagance phatic enough to make the dullest , ., . , ., . . 1 . of his declamation. He came to be intellect understand. It suggests ranked as a slang whanger when in what Mr. C. A. Smith said at a re- fact he vras a man of decided ability cent meeting of the Chamber of with a purpose to render a real ser Coinmerce. "I was gad," he said, vice to his state, "to see that you had the dredge. The shooting was unjustifiable, Now that you have the dredge, keep however viewed. It could have oc lt." But,' how Is It possible to keep curred nowhere but In the south, the dredge? "Who will pay the mon- where the pistol habit is still con ey needed for that purpose? It is sidered manly. But It serves to 'ieing operated now by funds which punctuate the absurd license of style were extracted from the few gener- that everywhere incites men to re ous citizens who contributed, with venge. Senator Carmack was invit more or less difficulty. .Will they ing trouble every time he wrote or contribute more in the future? spoke. And he was weakening rath- The fact is that as far as Coos er than strengthening his argument Bay and its interests are concerned at the same time, the people are a mob. They are in- Matthew Arnold was right. There telligent and worthy, but they are is nothing in the long run like unorganized and their work is not "sweet reasonableness." done wisely or effectively on that ac count. No Coos Bay influence in Congress; no Coos Bay influence in the legislature ;no Coos Bay In-! Mrs. Julia A. Fletcher Carney died fluence in even the home cities, has a few days ago at her home in Gales any effect. Why? Because there Is burg, 111. Such is the substance of no Coos Bay organization which has a recent press dispatch. Who was the authority to enforce its power Mrs. Julia A. Fletcher Carney? She A GOOD EVENING. A To have joy one must share X It. Happiness was born a twin. ? BYRON. X BESIDE THE GATE OF DRE.YMS. An Idle youth one summer day Went' wandering afield Xor east or west on any quest That eye or thought revealed But on and on through bloom and shine And down by shady streams, Through lane and wood, until he stood Beside the Gate of Dreams What saw he there? Nay, rather ask What saw he not and heard, Hath mind perceived? Hath heart received? Hath soul been deeply stirred By radiant things, by whisperings From better lands? It seems All these he saw and heard in awe Besides the Gate- of Dreams. What brought he, back that summer day From wandering afield? Naught he can show or tell, I know, Of things on earth revealed, But more than gold, a million fold And all the world esteems He holds the day he strayed away Beside the Gate of Dreams. Clarence Ousley. I i Get Thankful i I North Front St. W I A ----- MRS. CARXEY. and there never will be until Coos 3ay Is made a port like Portland. Coos Bay people know tnis ana know it to their sorrow. Wtiythen do they not remedy the defect by organizing a port. What is a port? It is a public corporation which is given by law full -authority over the harbor and a suf ilclent power to levy taxes to raise -money to Improve or police the har bor. It is usually governed by a commission composed of five or more, .citizens who have power to levy taxes and to purchase or otherwise acquire .dredges and to operate them. They also have authority to build and maintain a dry dock,- to police the bay, to make regulations, to contract with the United States government, to issue bonds, ' to maintain a public wharf, to coKect revenue and to make improvements. One reason in fact the greatest -reason why Portland Is so success ful In getting money from the gov ernment Is because it has a port or ganization and the port and not the city keeps Portland's harbor needs always before congress. Mr. Smith and all the gentlemen who contributed to the present dredge should realize that the only way to keep the dredge; the only way to get a mile and a half wide harbor; the only way to get a light .tiouso and proper buoys at the har bor mouth; the only way to get a dry dock; the only way to get an appropriation from Congress; the only way to police the harbor; tho only wny to save It and to get more water on the bar; the only way, In -short, to have any harbor at all, is tto get the legislature to enact a gen eral law permitting ports to bo or ganized and to Incorporate Coos Bay under that law. A few hundred dollars spent now will put the matter was the one person of all others who Impressed .upon the minds of the boys and girls of a generation ago the value of little .things. She was the author of that little poem of four stanzas which is more familiar to more people than any other verse of the century: Little drops of water Little grains of sand, Make a mighty ocean And a pleasant land. So reads the first stanza. And the last, with the application of the les son though we all remember It, Is worthy of reprint Little deeds of kindness, Little words of love, Help to make earth happy Like the Heaven above. It is a simple bit of verse; a re freshing breath from the spirit of purest altruism that has been wafted to every corner of the civilized world. Its origin was humble, and entirely without the expectation of fame. Mrs. Carney was a school teacher In Boston, away back in 1845, when she wrote this simple little poem; and for the sole pur pose of impressing upon her pupils the moral worth of simple, unpreten tious, every-day acts of kindness. The labor was one of noble purpose, as clearly as that of Milton when he composed the greatest of English epics, The motive was as simple as the lesson sought to be taught and the similes which were made the vehicle of Its teaching. But simple as It was, It was the expression of a great and earnest soul and its in fluence upon children, and upon chil dren's children, has been for good beyond all calculation. BIG LAXD OPEXIXG. On January 20, 1909, at Rose burg, Oregon, 91,500 acres are to be in such form that all tho property .withdrawn from the Umpqua Forest will lie required to bear Its part of the expense of the things enumerat ed.. Instead of a few being compelled to bear tho burden, and so having nothing done well. There Is but Ut ile time before tho legislature meets, nnd If this most Important matter Is not nttendod to now It probably will never bo attended to. At nny rnte two more years will slip away without action and Coos Bay will have- nobody to blame but Itself. Steamer BREAKWATER sails from Coos Bay for Portland SAT URDAY, NOVEMBER 21, nt 8 A. M. Bought a Job lot of APPLES, for sale cheap while they last. Anona vCnbh Grocery. Reserve. This embraces some of the finest dairy and timber lands in Ben ton, Lane, Douglas and Coos coun ties. Not all of this land is subject to entry. For $2.50 wo will send you prepaid IS largo lithographic town ship maps with above vacant lands colored thereon. Also full Instruc tions ns to dates, manner of filing, etc., etc. THE DOUGLAS COUNTY AB- STRACT COMPANY, Successor to Frank E. Alley, Roseburg, Oregon. STEAMER F1FIELD SAILS FOR FRISCO TUESDAY, NOVUM 11ER 21. CARRIES PASSEN GERS. J. W. FLANAGAN, AGEXT. You will have just cause for being thankful after buying one of our suits pr Cravenettes. Suits 98.00 to $27.00 Cravenncttcs $10.00 to $25.00 A complete line of men's Shoes, Hats and Furnishings goods and prices. The Best The Lowest Business Directory Doctors. Many a true word is spoken by accident. Hope Is a good breakfast, but a bad supper. If you have a secret, you may as well tell It to fifty as to one. No man can"'' afford to say all the things he would like to say. A love affair Is like a well so easy to fall into, so difficult to get out of. A young doctor calls diseases by their Latin names; an old doctor is not so particular. We have noticed that If you think before you speak, the other fellow gets In his joke first. Marriage consists of five minutes at the head of the procession, and a lifetime in the ranks. Platonic friendship is like perpe tual motion a beautiful theory tha. nobody has ever been able to make work. The reward a man receives for go ing to bed early regularly, Is that he feels very tough if he stays up late once In a while. Of course women should marry. No home Is complete without a hus band any more than it is without a cuckoo clock or a cat. Take 30 cents worth of cotton wash goods, a rose or two, a pair of shoes and a hat, and put them on a sixteen-year-old girl, and you have a great result. Mother Is so popular In her fam ily that the only reproaches she ever gets from her children originated in their inability to comprehend why she ever married father. , You may abuse your enemy, your friend, and your kin and possibly es cape punishment, but If you abuse your stomach you will have to ac count for It. No matter how good the stomach, It will not stand for alt use. "TELLING FOLKS THAT YOU ARE ALIVE." Tell us, are you advertising In the same old foolish way That your granddad did before you. And persist, "It doesn't pay?" Think the whole world knows your address? "'Cause It hasn't changed In years" Wouldn't the path of such logic Drive a billy goat to tears? "Just a card," Is all you care for; Hidden, lonesome, and unread, Like tho sign upon a torabstono Telling folks that you are dead. Wake up, man, and take a tonic; Bunch your hits and make a drive Run a page and change your copy ADVERTISE, and keep alive! NO SIG. Steamer BREAKWATER, sails from C003 Bay for Portland SAT URDAY, NOVEMBER 21, at 8 A. 51. North Front St. -..--.---.- ------ FINANCIAL iL-. :. -zjTTT?zv-rrtr'iii? .wnm First Trust and Sayings Bank $100,000 Capital, Fully Paid STANDS FOR CONSERVATIVE BANKING Pays Interest .on Time and Savings Deposits The officers and the entire directorate are citizens of Marshfleld and vicinity who own and control the capital stock Whose every Interest and success means the success of this community. We solicit your business and accounts. DR, R. E. GOLDEN Physician and Surgeon 202-03 Coos building. Offlce hours: 10 to 12 m. 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 p.m. Phones: Omce 1031 Residence 105. DR. A. C. BURROUGHS " nomcopnthlc Physician Chronic Diseases a Specialty. Residence and ofllce, corner 'C and Second Streets, Marshfleld. D It. GEORGE W. LESLIE OsteoiMitrdc PbyxlcUa Graduate of American School of OiteoDiih. KlrknTlllc. Mc "TOPilT i mice noon:- a m io p m. other Honri ht tppolntmAiit. Office over First National Baui Phone 1611. Marshfleld. Or D R. GEO. E. DIX Physician and Sur$;eox. New Flanagan & Bennett Bank Bldi Phono Ifirfl Residence Phone 1655. DIRECTORS. JOHN S. COKE STEPHEN C. ROGERS, HENRY SENGSTACKEN, M. C. HORTON. WILLIAM GRIMES, JNO. F. HALL, W. S. CHANDLER, DR. C. W. TOWER, DORSEY KREITZER, OFFICERS. JNO. S. COKE, President. DORSEY KREITZER, Cashier. M. C. HORTON, Vice President and Manager. DR. J. W. INGRAM Physician nnd Snrgoon. Ofllce 208-209 Coos Buildinit Phones Ofllce 1621: Residence 1623 DH. A. L. nOUSEWORTH Physician and Surgeon. Offices second floor of Flanagan & Bennett Bank Building. Residence, two blocks north of Crystal Theater. .Office Pbanr 1431 Residence Phone 656. M RS , XETTIE HOVEL Midwife Obstetrical Nursing With E. W. Kammerer Phone l'V Lawyers. Francis II Clarke Jacob M. lllake Laurence A Llljequlst CLARKE, BLAKE & LILJEQVTST, TTORNEYS-AT-LAW United States Commissioner's Oflc Trust Building. Marshfi eld . Ore. f Flanagan & Bennett Bank MAKSli lfcJLU, UKEUUN. Pad Up ( apltal and Undivided Profits $73,000 Assets Over Half Million Dollars. Does a general banking business and draws on the Bank of C.l- t fornia, San Francisco, Ca!., First National Bank, Portland, Ore., First National Bank, Roseburg Ore., Hanover National Bank, New $ York, N. M. Rothchild & Spn, London, England. Also sell exchange on nearly all the principal cities of Europe. Accounts kept subject to check, safe deposit lock boxes for rent a at 50 cents a month or ?5 a year. J INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS J V 'I' "I' V " V 'X' yTTT vVvTTTVVf 'I' 'i'vy'I'f T Wl V'I'V'X'V TTTfT V'l' TTrTf Ttt THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK V OF COOS BAY ? Strictlv a Commercial Bank j ( The Corn Exchange National Bank, Chicago, 111. Draws Wells Fargo Nevada National Bank, San Francisco, Cal. y Z. " The united States National Bank. Portland, Ore. a Drafts The National Park Bank, New York, N. Y. On The Bank of Scotland, London, England. , The Credit Lyonnals, Paris, France. - 3 In addition we draw drafts on all principal banking centers In A Europe, Asia, Afric?., Australia, China, Japan, North, Central and , South America. tS Personal and commercial accounts kept subject to check CertI- jj flcates of Deposits Issued. Safe and Deposit Boxes for rent. JL j. W. BENNETT, Offlce over Flanagan & Ber.nett Bank Marshfleld, Orni JKE & COKE, Attorneys at Law. Marshfleld, Oregon. Miscellaneous w. S. TURPEN 4 nrcuucci. Over Chamber of Commerce MARSHFIELD, ORE. MARSHFIELD TURKISH B A HIS 210-213 Coos Building. Houra: Ladles, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m, except Saturday Gents, 7 p.m. to i a. m., except Friday. Phone 2141. TURKISH BATH $1.00. C. L. BUTTERFIELD, Prop f RIBBS & MASON Photographers. Coos Bay Monlhly Bldg. Telephone No. 017, MarhticlL Oregon. STEAMERS X 0ALD7ORNIA AND OREGON COAST STEAMSHIP COMPANY. Steamer Alliance B. W. OLSON, Jloster. . 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. Marshfleld, Ore., Phone 441 HOTELS The LATTIN Hotel Guy O. Lnttlu. New and modern throughout. Rates SI per day, $0 per week. Free baths, newly furnished. Phone 2005. Next to cor Sheridan and Queen Ato. Marshfleld, Ore. it. - ,i. . .i . .. - ! - i - .. - ! - - ! - - ! . -1 ! - - ! - ! - .. t .. - ; i t. I Steamer Wilhelmina LUDVIG CHRISTENSEN, Master. - jl, ouiuug lur unuuuii tsvctjr luuuunj. rur lull lUUTinuuon, apply 1 Chas Thorn owner, or H. W. Skinner, agent. A' ...1...... !... .4 4 1.... t (( ALERT" Captain C. E. Edwards. Time-Tuble. Leaves Allegany, daily at 7 a. m. Returning Leaves Marshfleld 2 p. m. For terms of cnarter, towing, transportation or freight, upply on board. O. F. EDWARDS. Owner .I...,.... .!. ,, ,!,., !. .,!.! H5H5ZS2SE5Z55525H5H525'-5Hr25H5cr STEAMER FAVORITE Two trips dallv between Bandon and Coquille connecting with all Marshfleld train. Leaves Bandon . ..6:45a.m. -W n ijj weaves nnnuon ...i:up. m. "1 " Leaves Coquille. ..0:15a.m. Dj jy Lieares uoquille ...4:00p.m. KJ rJ Traveler leaving Marshileld in the ) jn morning reach Bandon at noon. People si H on Cooutlle river can upend over three n pi hours In Marshfleld and reach home the p jQ same day. "j H COQUILLE RIVER TRANS- S JO PORTATION CO. fl :Z52E?Se5'ehi525ZJ2EcSS5ZSSEi5i!iiE3 HIGH (lRADF M PATS T1'eolo' of good roast beef however !i i it VJ,VL'1- 'f,,Lrt l, appetizing, can onlv be suggestive of . . Vii . -.--..v ....,.,. . B lulu oioij jicuo ui uicni we sen. All our meats are the choicest we can produce. ; R.H.Noble TEe CITY MARKET- C ob) Froat, Streets, Marshfidd, Oregon Phorre 1941 WH5HSi,JH52SHSH5H525HBSa5HSH52SH5 Hunting, fishing, camping, bathing the year around. Beautiful Ten Mile Lakes, the sportsmen's paradise. When you come 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. Phono local or lone distance. v - . fU R. n. REED, Prop, ,J jU LAKESIDE, ORE. M ARSHF1ELD HOTEL Corner 'A and Third street. Board and Lodging. Per day.. $1.00 Per Week..6.00. Healu 25c. R. MILLER. Proprietor. Steamer Flyer LAWHORN & McCULLOCII, Owners. j ve. Marshfleld Lve, North Bend 7:00 A. M. 7:45 A. M. 8:45 ' 10:05 " 10:45 " 11:15 " 1:00 P. XL 1:45 P. M, 2:30 " , 3:15 " 4:00 " 5:00 " Open for Chartec Nights and Sundnva The Flyer Always Leave oa Time. T?33KsEaZ