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About The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1909)
""WS THE COOS BAY TIMES MARSHFIELD, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1909 EVENING EDITION COOS BAY TIMES An Indepeadent Republican news ppec published every evening except Bwday, and Weekly by Kw Coos liny Times Publishing Co. With the Toast and Tea w is !! Entered at the postofflce nt Marsh flald, Oregon, for transmission through the malls as second class mail matter. M. C. MALONEY Editor nnd Pub. DAN E. MALONEY News Editor SUBSCRII'TION HATES. In Adviince. DAILY. One year $5.00 Bis months $2.50 Less than 6 montl)3, per month .50 WEEKLY. One year $1.50 Address all communications to COOS HAY DAILY TIMES, Mlifk'id :: ;: :: :: Oregon GOOD EVENING. The world goes up and the world goes down; And the sunshine follows the rain; And yesterday's sneer and yes- terday's frown Can never come again. 4. Good Works. records of today will show that a good many white men In California are still imitating those Indians. The policy of the Coos Bay Times will be Republican In politics, with the independence of which President Roosevelt is the leading exponent. Oilicial Paper of Coos County. THAT IXTERl'RBAX' ROADWAY. LAST YEAR THE MATTER was agitated by the people of both North Dend and Marshfield which, if it had been carried out, would have resulted In opening up closer relations between the two towns and Increasing their activity greater. We refer to the waterfront highway between North Bend and Marshfield and In doing so think we are recalling the most practical mat ter which the two cities can take up nnd consider. There is no highway between the two cities at present which is worth mentioning. The time may come when Sherman ave nue will be put through and wo will have a straight and wide avenue, but that is in the distance. The waterfront road is within the pos Kibilities of the Immediate present If the people will get busy and Insist upon its being built. Marshfield has constructed her elevated road as far as its boundary line. There are about two thousand feet between the boundary of the two cities which belongs to the coun ty and is not In either city. The county court last year made provi sion for a county road over that strip but provided that it would have to be built at the expense of those who might be Interested In having it done. The fair estimate of construc tion of such a read is stated by those who know to be approximately six dollars a running foot and we presume It would not be an under estimate to say that the cost of building over the portion controlled by the county would be about twelve thousand dollars. This, no doubt could be cut down very much If the dredge Oregon could be enlisted In the' work of filling up the low places where it Is practicable. Probably the lumber could be obtained quite cheaply also for so useful an enter prise. It being evident that this road would not only shorten the distance between the two cities but enable the freight between tho two points to go on water levo' grades. This road Is tho most Important of tho minor enterprises which Coos Bay, can take up at this timo. It ought to bo pushed through. There Is no oxcuse for dolay. Even If an electric lino cannot be built to- nc conunodate tho tralllc between tho 1 two cities, an automobile lino can bo Installed and tho two cities made ono In business and social affairs. Tho morchnnts of both cities would do woll to consldor this proposition. Its accomplishment would mean thousands of dollars worth of add ed business. It would furnish n great attraction to oussiders who would thon bo made to realize how closo the two cities nre to each other. Tho social relations which nre indulged when tho work of tho dny Is ovor would bring tho people nearer together nnd make them realize tho oneness of their Intorests. If tho Chnmbers of Commorco are fltlll unoxhaustod lot thorn tako tho innttor up. If thoy aro worn out nnd wearied with woll doing let tho buslnoss mon take it up. It Is fraught with more meaning to tho business men than any ono thing thoy can coiibWo" now. THE BAIT OP SPRING. I want to go fishing; to splash through the brook, To feel the warm sun, to sit In the shade, To get a boy's fun In arbor and glade, To eat my noon lunch in some cosy nook. I want to go fishing; to tramp through the fields, To fall over rocks, get scratches and knocks; To jump on the bogs, to startle the frogs, And feel other things that trout fish ing yields. I want to go fishing; to feel on ray hook A glorious bite that draws the line tight, That makes the blood quicker as I see the fish flicker And go dashing down the swift brook. I want to go fishing in garb that's grotesque, To get my clothes wet, to be In a sweat; Perhaps to be mired, to be Just dog tired: To know I'm not tied to this desk. I want to go fishing; the cobwebs brush out. To get some clean air, for I know It Is there; To feel nature's charm now where Is the harm If I quit and go fishing for trout. An afternoon nap is good for a man If he Is really asleep and does n't hear what his woman folks are saying about him A C003 Bay man could save his neighbors a lot of suspense If he would explain eery time he buys a hat or tie how he can afford It. A CORD That rapt, far-away look seen on the fact of a newly engaged girl Is never seen there again until her daughter Is old enough to play the piano. "Isn't It about time to forget that Edgar Allan Poe drank? asks an ex- :portant dollar-and-cents meaning UNITED STATES FORESTRY BU REAU' 'ISSUES INTERESTING BULLETIN ON WOOD MEAS UREMENTS. WASHINGTON. D. C, May 21. When Is a cord not a cord? To the farmer harvesting his (small woodlot and to the man laying In logs for the large fireplace of his country or seaside home; to the paper manufacturer buying pulp wood and to the proprietor of the ordinary city woodyard, to all of these men this question has an Im- change. Yes, and it's about time for a lot of men to remember that they ought to quit drinking. Thousands of Christians have been slaughtered In Asia Minor and thou sands more are in danger. The country, It would seem, has been pretty thoroughly Christianized. Queer to say, and contrary to the belief of most people, there are many times when a cord is les3 than a cord, and many conditions when it is more. School arithmetics say that a cord of wood is 128 cubic feet, or the contents of a p'.le eight feet long, four feet high and four feet wide. Wood Is marketed on this basis. A ' I pile whose length, breadth, and The London dqctor who says that height multlpHed t0gether gives this we should sleep in hammocks as beds number cublc feet nlls th,3 requI. rement, no matter whether the sticks round sticks. The finer tho wood Is split, the more it makes. Hence wood dealers nre often willing to sell kindlings, all sawed and split, for the same price per cord as un split wood. They get back' the cost of labor In the Increased bulk. A cord (128 cubic feet), of 4 foot hardwood usually contains about S3 cubic feet of solid wood; a cord of 3-foot wood averages S3 14 cubic feet; of 2-foot wood, S4 feet, and of 1-foot wood 85 feet. The conifers, softwoods, contain 90 to 9G cubic feet. Thus the purchaser received on an average about two hlrds of a cord of real wood and one-third of a cord of spaces. In some countries wood is bought by weight, and the buyer comes more nearly getting what he bar gains for; but even then he may miss it if he receives green wood when he wants dry. According to timber testing engineers of United States Forest Seivice, wood may lose half or more Its green weight in seasoning. Cedar for lead pencils is-bought by weight In this country. The pieces are so small and of such Irregular size that they cannot con veniently be stacked and measured as cordwood. The bulk of nearly all woods de creases ns KPnunnlnt- - " hUCS on. . hundred cords green will make l S9 to 93 cords when dry xn, ' a factor of no small Importance dealers who handle largo quantiu Woodlot owners and farmerg i. have small forest tracts from fthl 1 they expect to sell cordwood r less Interested than contractors rt Imv nnd sell lnr n ,n.,u, ' .. 'uiuiiies. 5 win biuuu mem in nana to kno whether wood Is cut long or short w.v,,.,,n -. -.., nueiner tin sticks are round or split, vhu large or small, and whether the measurements are to De made hil tne wooa is green or after It seasoned. Wheh a man has "respect" for , woman he keeps his secrets from her ns much as possible, but her tnfln. pnee does not cause him to reform. 'f he happens to meet hnr suddealt on the street, he may swallow hlij chewing tobacco, If ho knows tit dislikes the tobacco habit, but he does not quit tobacco. NOTICE to our IW1ROXS and the public: South Marshfield C0AI S !.."() per ton. ,1. C. DOAXE. The worst years of age. babies are over 20 Nothing Is more pitiful than to see the wife of a dead beat go Into a store and want credit. If you have a little sense, In heav en's name use It. Very few people have even a little sense. Even In "Darkest Africa" Colonel Roosevelt finds It an easy matter to let daylight through the animals. Every man who is unmarried Is not looking for a wife. The girls should get this notion out of their heads. If a boy at tho ago of 17, Isn't thinking seriously of earning his liv ing there Is trouble ahead for his father. If a man thinks he has any rights about his home, let him disapprove of tho young man his daughter has dragged In. are dangerous should be patient. The beds will be less dangerous after the spring housecleanlng Is over. As Senator Tillman appears con vinced that we now have a gentle man In the White House we may hope that he will keep his pitch fork In the barn where it belongs. are long or short, straight or 'crooked, round or split, unless there Is an understanding to the contrary. Nevertheless, a cord, thrush It comes iup to legal measurements, Is an un ' certain quantity, even when the seller is honest and the buyer satls-ified. I A lumberman may have a tract of An exchange remarks that every pulpwood which he sells to a paper dog has his day and some of them 'm at $5 a corat for as many cor(js five or six. Yes and the days are I as lt wln make- It s jn the contract generally 24 hours long; that is. that he shall cut and stack It. He where the canine has a loud and fre- cutg it ln 12-foot lengths, and when quent bark. jthe Job Is conmlcte. it measures 200 1 - .--.-. j cords, and he receives $1,000 for It. Carrie Nation has announced that Would he have made or lost by cut- I she will raise "poultry, pigeons, pigs and peas" on her new farm. If that will keep her' too busy to raise her voice several thousand people will wish her success. The Baltimore Sun has made the rem-' 'liable discovery that "Presl iiint Taft eats peanuts like a plain man cf the people." We hope The Sun has not been expecting him to make a noise like an elephant at such times. The new $1,000 government certl- 1 flcates are to be adorned with the ' portrait of Alexander Hamilton. We j don't see how that 'Is going to help very many of us Coos Bay folks to.for ,t f880 ngtead of Decome neiier acquaintea wun AieX' ander's features. Jack Flanagan, who Is at work on a poem celebrating the Institution of a B. P. O. E. lodge on Coos Bay be wails the fact that there Is no rhyme for Elks. Which again shows that people who want to worry about something can find it if they search long enough. When an angry woman begins to brush dandruff off her husband's coat collar It is a sign she Is ready to make up. "An old Spanish record," com ments the Los Angeles Times, "says tho early Indians of California did not work." Humph! No doubt the WOMEX CANNOT FISH. I 'T HAS BEEN ASCERTAINED by thoso nenrest tho subject nnd whoso deductions are worth nt- tontlon. that worn on may not fish In Oregon, owing to tho structuro of tho prosont statutes. But wo fall to see tho oxpodloncy for all this study and announcement; It sooms superfluous! to us, when wo renllze with all men who know anything of tho subject, that she cannot fish nnd never could, and wouldn't, anyway. Wo men aro so constituted as to unfit them for the sport. Primarily, they aro rigged out with such an abun dance of wavy, noisy, shadow-making skirts, that no fish with any game about him will stay within n mile of her; she is foreign-born to the supremo faculty of sllenco so essen tial to tho sport she simply will talk, fish or no fish, nnd tho fish does not sharo our delight ln her chatter, and finds his doepest hole or rerugo tho Instant ho hears her; rhe Is too dainty for tho woods and the brambles, thorns, barriers, and other arduous things that abound on tho fishing tour; ono has to bo help ed, and buoyed and encouraged and potted In her broachlngs with all these coarse things; and she'd rather bo potted than fish any old dny. No, woman can not fish, no matter tho structuro or the construction of the law. But Its nice to have her along to keep the camp ln habitable shapo for those who can and do fish. A New York scientist thinks he could communicate with Mars if he had ten million dollars with which to construct mirrors with which to flash signals. We know plenty of men right here on Coos Bay who could make a big flash with less than ten millions. From the easy and satisfactory manner In which Texas collected that one million dollar fine from the Waters Pierce Oil Co., lt would seem to suggest that Uncle Sam might d'o well to gat some of those Texas fel lows to collect the twenty-nine mil lion duo from Rockefeller. SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY Choice any suit In the window val ues to $15 for only $8.65. See what cash will do. Hub Clothing and Shoe Company. NOTICE The Old Reliable :: LIBBY COAL Ik I $4.50 PER TON ting' 4-foot lengths instead of 12? He would have lost in the first place from the additional labor re quired to cut 4-foot wood, but his principal loss would have resulted from a greatly- diminished number of cubic feet, due to the fact that short sticks He closer together than large. Measurements and experimental tests have been made to ascertain ex actly how much actual wood is In cords of different lengths, sizes, shapes, and species. Had the 200 cords of 12-foot wood been cut In 4-foot lengths, there 1 would have been only 176 cords, and the owner would have received $1,000. It was, therefore, clearly to his ad vantage to cut 12-foot lengths, but lt would have been to the buyer's advantage to have It cut ln 4-foot lengths He would have received the same actual quantity of wood for $120 less. It also makes considerable differ ence to the seller whether wood Is chopped or sawed. If chopped, the chips are lost. Where the logs are large this loss amounts to no small total. In a cord of 4-foot wood, with sticks 6 inches ln diameter, the chip loss Is from six to eight per cent; and of course, the shorter the sticks nre cut the greater the loss. If the wood is sawed, the sawdust loss is scarcely tho half of one per cent. The difference due to spaces be tween the sticks of course depends very much on the shape and size of the sticks. Straight, smooth sticks He close together, and a cord con tains more wood and less air. For given lengths, sticks of softwoods are usually straighten and smoother, and when stacked He closer together. But whatever the kind, cords of long sticks are pretty sure to contain more empty space than cords made of short pieces. Likewise, cords of split wood contain less than cords of Did You Ever Slop t. Think that QOODRUM can Supply You with Togs from Cap to Shoes Marshfield - - Oregon SYNOPSIS OF THE ANNUAL STATEMENT OF THE AETNA LIFE INSURANCE CO. of Hartford, Connecticut, on the 31st day of December, 1908, made to the 'nsurance Commissioner of the Statu of Oregon, pursuant to law: Capital. Amount of capital paid up $2,000,000.00 Income. Premiums received during the year.. . . f 15,452.927.83 Interest) dividends and rents received during . year 3,693,469.9a Income from other sources received during year . .. 133,242.58 $19,279,640.10 3,724,324.34 300,000.00 1 in ton lots, when shovel ed orr wagons Phone 721 LEWIS & CHANCE --- t . "You See, No Person has a license to eat hard-boiled eggs, except in the United States. You can get them in England if you take a chair and beat the idea into the roduced nobleman who hates to serve you, but does." Samuel Blythe conducts "A Search for a Hard-Boiled Egg" and you know him. Get the JUNE EVERYBODY'S liuy a Copy ut NORTON HANSEN'S "THE SMOKE-HOUSE" Disbursements. Paid to policy holders during the year .. . Dividends paid during the year on capital .stock , Commissions and salaries paid during the year 2,799,139.20 Taxes, licenses and fees paid during the year 457,925.09 Amount of all other expenditures. 2,972,791.92 Total expenditures Assets. Market value of real estate owned.. . . Market value of stocks and bonds owned Loans on mortgages and collateral, etc. . -$15,254,180.55 615,132.63 , 30,381,252.37 44,570,483.74 Premium notes and policy loans 7,298,023.73 Cash In banks' and on hand 6,223,961.87 Net uncollected and deferred premiums . . 1,439,160.09 Other assets (net) 1,596,010.27 $92,124,624.70 Less special deposits $388,866.80 Total admitted assets , $91,735,757.80 Liabilities. Net reserve $81,773,715.93 Total policy claims 484.645.19 All other liabilities 2,097,062.54 ? 84,355,423.66 Less liabilities secured by special deposits 388,866.80 Total liabilities ,. ...$83,966,556.86 Total Insurance In force December 31, 1908 $549,04S,724.00 Business In Oregon for tho Year. Total risks written during the year J2.692.450.00 Gross premiums received during the year 100,873.19 Premiums returned during tho year 5,030,91 Losses paid during the year 33,313.10 Losses Incurred during the year, , . . . , ... 33,912.33 total amount of risks outstanding In Oregon December 31,1908 2,710,929.00 Aetna Life Insurance Co. By J. L. ENGLISH, Vice-President. Statutory resident general agent and attorney In fact: ' C. A. McCARGAR, Portland, Oregon-" l?i$iA4RIP'WBTOwit. &.. 'Tr :" ,y.3agr:r 4