SaSSS? IN THE TIMES Wiitit AHs GK1 WHAT YOU want aqs. WAlfT WHiaii YOU WANT IT. FIVE CENTS PER LINK PER DAY. E5I TIDE IN FLOODS LOW PARTS OF COT Runs Over Dike Along Railroad Addition and Inundates Territory. LITTLE DAMAGE IS DONE BY IT Old Residents Declare It Reached Highest Point In History. As a result of one of the highest tides In Coos 'Bay In the last quar ter of a century, all of Railroad ad dition and in fact all of the lowland about the bay is covered with four to six feet of water. Points that have not been innundated in the memory of even many old residents are this afternoon far underwater and for a time, many residents along South Broadway feared that they might be compelled to move out. Owiijg to the high water, the C. A. Smith mill was unable to resume operations after noon today. The pumping station of the mill was put out of commission yesterday. The mill site is practically surrounded by water but no damage has been done aside from the stopping of work for this afternoon. Today -would mark the high tide of the j ear under natural conditions and according to the tide-book would have reached 7.8 at 11:23 a. m. at the bar. Of course, the crest of the tide does not reach Marshfield for a couple of hours after it floods at the bar. Coupled with the season high tide, the elements have joined and made It much higher. The strong wind that has prevailed caused heavy swells and the constant rain h. . liuoaid a., the creeks and inlets emptying into the bay. Tho North Bend mil', old town mill and the Sash and Door Factory at North Bend were compelled to shut down early today, their fur naces being flooded. The flooding of the city south of Mills Slough attracted hundreds. The water was pouring in over the entire length of the dike, making a pretty waterfall scene. The dike made a regular basin of that section of the city back to the highlands and was all filled. Causes Much Comment. The high tide is causing much dis cussion among the older residents of Marshfield. Many recall that about 1889 or 1890, a tide submerg ed Front street and all of the city back to the Masonic Opsra House. J. W. Bennett says that today's tide was higher than that one be cause the grade of Front street has been raised several feet since then. Mr. Bennett believes that today's tide was the highest ever experienced on Coos Bay. Take Out Horses. Bob Herron's barn on lower Broadway was surrounded by water about noon and Mr. Herron made haste in having Doc Rowell, Teddy and the remainder of his string re moved to safe and dry quarters. It was feared that the bulk-heads recently put in along Broadway would be floated away but they had not been moved at a late hour. ALLIANCE SAILS. The Alliance sailed this morning for Portland with a large number of passengers and a good freight cargo. Capt. Parsons believes that he will be able to make the trip up so that they can leave there again for Coos Bay on schedule time, Saturday night. The Alliance outgoing passenger list follows: W. Olson, Mrs. W, C. Jenkins, N. A, Barrett, Chas. Dilley, Ed. Nugent, J G, Arnold, Mrs. M. L. Greenwood, M-ry Greenwood, W. C. Ward. W. P. Lvneh, Bert Hayos, Mrs. Bert Hayes and two children, H. B. Shafner, Mrs. Welnsteln, Mrs. Rose SklUln, Duncan S. Taylor, C A. Schelbrede, A AluqJiSt, II. MaMeehan, Miss Fer ry, THE COOS BAY TIMES MARSHFIELD, OREGON, YE Local Line Will Probably Be Tied Up Tomorrow As Result of Flood. The Coos Bay, Roseburg and Eastern Railway will probably be tied up tomorrow as a result of the flood. This afternoon at high tide, there was about two feet of water on the tracks near the Eagles Point boom and at other places near the depot, and it was reported that there was about three feet of water on the track on the Coquille side of the divide near the Schroeder and Johnson ranches. The train was able to get through today, but at the depot this afternoon, it was stat ed that It was probable that there would be no service tomorrow. On account of the extreme high tide, the water is not going down very rapidly in the Inlets and streams and this will be bad for the railroad. This afternoon, the break in the dike near the railroad coal bunkers had resulted in the depot being sur rounded with water within six inches of the floor. PlP iwiy iiLjeiE Congressman Hawley Enters Protest in Behalf of Marshfield. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. Repre sentative Hawley has entered com plaint with the postolDre department about the slow service alon? the route between Roseburg and Marsh field. Residents of Marshfield and intermediate territory ascert that the carrier along this route Is not del ivering mail according to schedule, and has become altogether too care less. The department has promised to make an Investigation and take steps to compel the carrier to ob serve his schedule. IOWA MAN SELLS A ROOSTER FOR $100 Said to Be Record Price For Bird In Hamilton County. WEBSTER CITY, Ia Jan. 20. I Harry Ross, barber at the J. B. Mc Collough shop in this city, has just sold a Barred Plymouth Rock roost- jer at a price which will cause poul try fanciers in thlB section of Iowa to sit up and take notice. The bird was sold to J. B. Smith of Fort Wayne, Ind., and the price received for him was $100, which is the most any central Iowa poultry fancier has ever received for an individual chicken. -loss has been breeding Barred Rocks for some years and has been a regular exhibitor at the nearby shows for several years. His birds have always scored well. The roost er, sold to Smith, was shipped on approval and the check for $100 has been received by Ross. While this is a "top notch" price, Mr. Ross feels certain he has chickens in his pen which are worth more. Prior to tho Ross sale, the record sale hereabouts was held by John E. Olmstead of this city, who got ?50 for a hen several years ago. Hamil ton county has quite a reputation over the state as being the home of several high class breeders of fancy show poultry. The Minneapolis, Chicago and Dqs Moines poultry hows always bring a good s ri g of premiums to this count. MM TRUCK UNDER HER jMQ J"Mfejfe' MEMBER OP ASSOCIATED PRESS. SQUALL HMD ON THE WIRES Long Distance Telephone Ser vice and Western Union Out of Commission. One of the wor4 3qualls that has ever struck MarsMle d and the inner bay prevailed late yesterday after noon and during the night. It was estimated by many that the wind occasionally struck an elgbrty-mlle clip. It was not a steady blow but a typical squall, fitful gusts at fre quent intervals threatening to tear things loose In general. However, It passed over without doing many par ticular damage. In consequence of the heavy wind, long distance telephone and tele graph wires are still down. The telephone company's toll lines suf fered severely, it being impossible to oven get Coquille this afternoon. It will probably take many hours to sestore the service. Manager Schet ter hasn't any Idea of when ser vice will be restored by the Western Un'on. The long distance te'ephone wire ion which service was restored about 3:30 ypsterday, went down a-jaln about fi.30. Just as soon as ser vice was restored on it yesterday. The Times through th courtesy of the Roseburg Review, was furnished with some of the principal news of the day, including the news of Cham berlain's election as senator. ALARM CLOCKS WOKE UP THIEF'S CONSCIENCE Carries His Load of Booty to Police unci Asks to He Arrested for . His Crime. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Jan. 21: It required a gross of alarm clocks to awaken the conscience of Mix Gross of G10 Kater s'reet, a salf confessed thief. Weighted down with so many alarm clocks that he could hardly walk, Gross walked into Hie police station at Third and D Lancey streets and placed the bundle on the floor. "I stole them clocks and I want to be arrested," Gross told the desk sergeant. Gross said he had stolen the clocks from the Pennsylvania Warehouse company hoping to sell them, but that his conscious had troubled him so much that he had lost his nerve. "The alarms kept ringing when I was carrying them around," said Gross, "and everytlme one sounded It gave my conscience a jolt. I de cided to have myself arrested." John Coulter, president of the Pennsylvania Warehouse Company, Identified the goods and Gross Is b ing held while his record can be In vestigated. 'Roseburg Man Fails to Estab lish Claim to Coos Bay Railway Holdings. PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 21. A Jury In the Federal court returned a ! verdict in favor of the Southern Pa cific in the suit wherein T. R. Sheri dan, of Roseburg, sought to recover from the railway company several blocks of land embraced in am addi tion to the town of Marshfield, Coos county, claimed by the defendant corppration. Counsel for plaintlf was granted 30 days by Judge Wol verton in which to move for a new trial .or file a bill of exception. MISS MAIJLH CLARE MILLI8 will sing "Sunset" at the Chamlnade concert In Masonic Hall, Wednesday evening, January 27. This will be a rare- tret for all lovers of good singing who have learned to expect something flue whenever Miss Mlllui appears. HVY your Tinware and Granite Ware AT MILNER'S. I iT n niirnmRM i. n. am LOSES SOU Ill flHHtlliCE Willi Wz THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1909 EVENING EDITION 0 HURT ON CZi Second Officer John Holland Falls Through Hatchway and Breaks Hip. John Holland, second officer of Czarina, sustained a broken hip and other injuries as a result of a fall down the hatchway of the essel. He was removed to Mercy hospital yesterday and Is getting a'ong a5 well as could be expected. Dr. Horsfall who attended him said that unless there were unexpected com plications theTe was no danger. Mr. Holland was in charge of the crew who were loading. How ho happened to fall down the hatch way, no one knows. A number of the crew were nearby and were at his side a moment after the accident occurred. He suffered intensely from the fracture. Mr. Holland was formerly second officer on the Breakwrter, later third officer and on the Alliance, and but recently was appointed second officer on the Czarina. Capt. Dug-jan of the Czarina, Is laid up at 'Frisco and the accident to Mr. Holland is a sevore handicap to Capt. Wall. However, the Czarina was able to sail today. MYRTLE POINT POINTERS. News of Interest In Valley As Told By Tho Enterprise. Mr. and Mrs. Ira M. Abbott wel- nnmflfl o firm vminn1 c?-ii fx listfn home in this city on Saturday, the 1 9th. Being a barber, Mr. Abbott will undoubtedly find use for the I little shaver. I E. Arneson raised some unusual ly fine cabbage this year on his place northeast of town, some of the heads weighing from 18 to 24 pounds. The vege'ables stood the storm finely and the big heads are still in fine condi tion. The county court this week ap pointed R. L. Weekly as road super visor of this, the 23d district. There were several applicants for the of fice before the court. Mr. Weekly succeeds S. C. Braden in the office. There have been several changes In the boundary lines of the district; but there are still thirty miles of road for the new supervisor to look after and thlF, it is thought, will keep him fairly busy. The scarlet fever situation ap pears to be thoroughly under con trol, with no new cases appearing. There are cases of diphtheria appear ing In Curry county, against which precaution against Importation of germs be observed. Myrtle Point should not desire an epidemic of diphtheria in addition to the conta gion that has already afflicted the children and preventive measures f should be adopted If such Importa tion threatens. The school officers of this district have received official notice from County Superintendent W. H. Bunch of the division of district No. 24. All of that portion of 24 lying south of the north fork' of the Coquille has been added to Myrtle Point district No. 41, the' division having been made by the district boundary board in session at Coquille this week. An agreement was made that there should be no division of the school property or money at present owned by district 24, but district 41 will gain by adding to Its taxable prop erty and Increasing the enumeration of school children. Mrs. Henrietta Barnett, nee Bry ant, wife of J. W. Barnett and daughter of Henry and Ella Bryant, died at her home in Myrtle Point, Tuesday, January 12, 1909, at 11 p, m aged 25 years, 8 months and 13 dqys. Mrs. Barnett was confined to her bed only two weeks, but suf fered intensely with typhoid fever. Mrs. Henrietta Barnett was born in YoncoKa, Douglas county, Oregon, April 29, 1883. She came to Coos county with her parents in 1894 and has lived In and around Myrtle Point for over 11 years. She was engaged for some tlmo In teaohlng In the public schools In the country districts around Myrtje Point, At tho annual meeting of tho Co quille a,ley Fruit Growers Abeo- ORIR BEND CHILD THOUGHT . TO HAVE FALLEN IHTO BATf J. W. BtlETT THRPTRI! APTTrii uhu mm Li Prominent Marshfield Attorney to Preside at Bar Associa . tion Banquet Here. J. W. Bennett has been selected las toastmaster of the banquet of the J I Coos County Bar Association which 'the Mnrshfleld nttornev will crlvo at the I. O. O. F. Hall here next Wed- North Uend' nlously 11dpiks nesday evening. The banquet will ed Ifist evenlnB and supposed to ,.,... ... , , .have bejn drowned. The child was xuuuw u, meuiiiii; ui uiu uewjy iui in ed association, the purpose being to make the temporary organization permanent. It is proposed to make the banquet one of the most e aborate evjr ec'v ed in Maishfield. Invitations have been issued to every lawyer in the county and seats will be1 laid for about forty. Messrs. J. W. Snover, L. A. Liljeqvist and Tom Hall are the committee in charge. Among those who have been in vited to respond to toasts are Messrs. Roberts and Pulford of Myr tle Point, Messrs. Topping and Trcadgold of Bandon, Messrs. Sher wood and Hammond of Coquille, Messrs. Guerry and McLeod of North Bend, and Messrs. McKnight and Goss of Marshfield. Contract Taken and Will Add Meat Sum to Mainte nance Fund. Capt. Peters of the dredgo Oregon and the committee of the Chamber of Commerce in charge of tho dredg ing'work, have taken a contract to dredge the s.lp at the C. A. Smith mill. Under the contract, the dredge will receive $200 per day for thv work so that a neat sum will be added to the fund for the malnte nance of the dredge here. The cost of operating the dredge Is about $80 t per day. I In order to take the C. A. Smith contract, the consent of tho United States engineering office at Portland had to be secured. This was readily granted. The slip dredging will be gin Friday when the Nann Smith Bails as it will savo time for the dredge to pull in there and do the work before It moves to a more distant point in the bay. The dredge is now doing exce'lent work, pumping about 300 cubic yards of dirt per hour. Capt, Pe ters ls anxious to start work on the lower Broadway fill in order to re plenish the fund for the maintenance of the dredge. This contract will bring It about $3,000. elation held in this city last week, tho old board of directors was re elected and tho officers who have served tho association during tho past year were again chosen. Tho meeting was not largely attended owing in part to tho stormy weather that prevailed and prevented many members from coming in from tho country. Tho directors are: T. M. Hermann president; G. G. Swan, secretary; D. R. Lewis, treasurer; B. B. Bartlett and Georgo B, Mor Igan, Roports of. tho officers were recoived and approved, and the fi nances 'show all bills paid and mon ey on hand. DON'T FORGET tho IMHS5K DANCE at tho Knights of Fln'anl Hall, January 23d. beats ron ciuMiN,inr: coy. CERT, JANUARY 27, ON S LE VV V. J. HITLER'S OFFICE. 1 IT sum Hill e Successful IIbjA- Experience ;,css hou ,a " r largo cities attar testing nil advertising methods are now uslns the dally papers excto-shcly. No. 164. Carlo Wittick, Five Years 0T& Mysteriously Disappears Near Mill. I HAD COME DOWN TO MEET FATHER Efforts to Find Little One Or Body Futile Up to Late Hour Today. Carlo Wittick, the five-year-aUl son of Mr. and Mrs. V. WltUcfc C last seen on the wharf of the Northi Bend mill where he had cprae meet his father on the latter'n re turn from his work as a raftsiaaw. for the Simpson Lumber Company. Whether tho little fellow got near the edge and slipped In. ar , whether he was caught by a gxst cE wind that mrrked the squall pre vailing about that time' Is merely a matter of conjecture. i The child was last seon allxa about 5 o'clock. He was then. an. the wharf but a safe distance front the water and Fiank. Hunter did not pay any heed to him. Tho family's home is but a short distance from tho mill and the little fallow fre quently came down In the afternoon, to meet his father. Friends and neighbors of the lam Ily kept up an all night search last night for the little fellow, but It I was a futile one. Today many bcata- are dragging the bay near the seeme but it is feaiod that tho tide- prob ably carried the body far avray It the child was drowned as 13 general ly believed. To Use Explosives. About noon, tho high tide com- vJ"el S!fJ? ! IT0 UUUl lO ill uiiibb'i'b two utij near where the littlo fellow Is thonsht to have fallen In. It was planned to resume the search for the body about 4 oMoc5c this afternoon when powder, dyua mlte or other explosives will b probably be used in an effort to floact tho body. MADE A HULL'S EYE IN HIS GLASS KYR Walsh's Real Optic Shot Ont Wifh Air Rifle, mid Ho Is H't .agate: In tho Same Way. wmir vnnir Ton 91 wmtnm l ' ' " . . Wa,sh' age(1 teen, whoa Cattur ls caretaker of the Bayonno Ciftr ,PaTk' was walk,nB a,onB Aym mat city, on nis way nomo earor last summer, when ho was shot In tie eye with a bullet from an air rifle ra the hands of Isaac Greensteln. Tlie latter was amusing himself by fir ing from tho window of hl3 home. Walsh was removed to the City Hos pital and when the wound was heal ed ho was provided with a glas cy. Santa Clans, left an air rlfls for l Wallace McKenna, aged fifteen, oC No. G4 West Thirteenth street, an, yesterday, after he came front church, ho took the rifle out and showed It to a number of hi com panions and gave an exhibition or hU proficiency. Ho saw a boy eomlnj; along on tho opposite side and point ed the rifle toward him. The boy was William Walsh, and he crletl out in alarm; "Please don't shoot that at me! t lost an oyo last summer by belns shot with a gun like that' I McKenna flred tho gun. "Wals dropped unconscious to tho ground and McKenna and his playmates ra I homo badly frightened. Tho bullet had struck Walsh sqiiarely in his glass eyo and shattered it. At tns hospital tho doctors succeeded la removing tho fragments of glass from tho boy's aoeket and aW He would come out all right. Metewru. was looked up on a charge at -afro-. o'oub 9"B'Mt. He wild ' Vail n Idoa he waa golnt? to hit Walfn. Thu fxvin"" ni't be asked to pav an or dinance piohlbltlng tho use of air rifles in the city. 1 'J I, 1 !