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About The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1909)
SK-.!a4Lfcii!!&JS tlMA THE COOS BAY TIMES MARSHFIELD, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY. 21, 1909 EVENING EDITION CUARAKIEED1 X 11 1 .. l iPl ALyvoI; 1 1 ill' w 111 . 1 CD J "I s i - r iuun.mn ii'iiimi iiwi ii '"" 'in 'i ii ii i miwii w ii r .tJiBTTVHir,MYyigTirTv'1.W Know What Your Clothes Are Made of You wouldn't buy jewelry without knowing whether it is plated or solid. You shouldn't buy clothes without knowing whether they are cotton or wool. , Our "MILL TO MAN" way of merchandising means a "PURE WOOL" guarantee on every gar ment in the house. When you see the suits we sell at $15.00 and $20.00 you'll see the benefit of our way very plainly for you'll find them to be $20 and $25 values right through the line. Woolen Mill MILL TO MAN MARSHFIELD FIVE CENTS PER LINE PER DAY. FOR RENT Modern house of 6 rooms at 960 South Broadway. Apply August Frlzeen. t WAITRESS wanted . immediately. Good wages. Up-to-Now restau rant, Coqullle, Ore. WANTED TO RENT A five or six-, roomed modern cottage with yard. Must bo close in. Address' H. E. M.," care Times. WANTED Good work horse. C. J. Hilstrom, 13J.4 Anderson avenue, WANTED Competent girl. Good wages. Mrs, I. S. Kaufman. Phone 556. WANTED Girl for general house work. A O. Rogers, Phon Coos 206. WANTED Girl for general house work. Mrs, w U. Douglas, West Marshfleld. WANTED Timber land in Oregon that will cruise to the 160 acres. 'rom four and a half million feet UP- Title must bo perfect, and oyer estimates serves only to con fuse. Address P. O. Box 114., Co lulUe, Oregon. ANTED Carpentering and Job W0T Corthell, phone No. 561. 3T-Bnnch of keys with identifi cation tag attached, Finder return T,me3 office and receive reward. lfCLJmm-Sm--'' f 1 4-" J LjJa irM! CLOTHIERS OREGON FIVE SHORT WORI MAKE ONE LINE. FOR RENT Furnished sleeping rooms in Pioneer Rooming house on Front street. Upder new man agement. FOR RENT Two cottages. Apply Tho Gunnery. -- FOR RENT Four-acre ranch, well Improved. Ekblad & Son. FOR SALE CHEAP bone, almost Dew. -Slide trom, Phone 119L. FOR SALE A Washburn guitar and a lady's bicycle. Call or phone 124 North Bend. FOR SALE United States silver dollar, double head, fine, $5.00. Free stiver dollar, 1798. Good, probably carried by Washington, prepaid $5.00 Address Box 708, Marshflold, Ore. FOR SALE One bed-room set and also piano for rent. Phono 1873. FOR SALE Well stabllshed deli catessen buslnoae. Apply at Cor nell's. FOR SALE Marshflold Skating Rink. Pee D. L. Avery, ownerCr FOR SALE Bandon-by-the-sea five acre tracts, $300 each,; 2 miles 'from waterfront. Run ning water. On county road. Other desirable property. C. H. Chand ler, owner, Bandon, Ore. Rood the Times' Want Ada. Store WW! WEATHER FORECAST (By Associated Press.) OREGON Fair tonight and Saturday. Expect showers In extreme east Go to Montana. Luple Carranza, the Eureka pugilist who won a couple of bouts here, Is figuring on going to Montana to locate. Make Auto Trip. M. Morse and F. S. Single and wives came over from Coqullle In their auto today to take In the field meet here. Progress Club. The Progress Club will have a called meeting with Mrs. Bradley at 7 o'clock tonight. All members are requested to be present. Hear Own Expense. In the man damus proceedings Involving City Recorder Butler and Messrs. G. W. Carleton and W R. Haines, tho bar ties to the suit must bar all ex penses. The city does not have to stand any of It, the loser having to pay all. Locates In Oklahoma. Charles Doane Is In receipt of a letter from Geo. Thurman, a former well known Coos River rancher, which lo cates him at Vinita, Oklahoma, where he has a farm and says he Is very favorably Impressed with the "ountry. Millicoma Club Social. The Ladies' Night by the Millicoma Club last evening was enjoyed by a large number, the event being one of the most successful the club has given. Music, cards ana dancing were the diversions. Punch was served dur ing the evening. Not Settled. It is announced that the Federal court at Portland has made a final order In the suit of the City of Marshfleld vs. the C. A. Smith Lumber Company and Its pre decessors over tht 'B' street lot. Last Monday, the company through Its counsel submitted a motion to final ly dispose of the matter but It Is un derstood that the court has not taken action on It. Establish Tent. Coos county lod ges of the M. W. A. are raising $250 to establish a Coos county tent at the Colorado sanitarium which Iho order is providing for tubercular members. The order recently pur chased 1,200 acres of land near Colo raod Springs and It Is planned for the various camps throughout the country to establfsh tents on It, each bearing the name of the camp that established It. The sanitarium will be maintained by a special annual per capita assessment. DANCE SELF TO DEATH. Maiden With Mania For Wnlteinff Overdoes It. CHICAGO, May 21. Marie Fron, 20 years old, danced heiself to death in a public dance hall, according to the verdict of a coroner's Jury. The girl possessed a frail constitu tion but waltzing was a mania with her. She was warned by her parents not to , exert herself, but- when the music started she forgot the warning and danced continuously until the last dance of the ovenlng, Then she was carried out of the hall and died at a hospital. Have tou something for sale? Try a Times' Want ad. -- .- - J GSjtp A GAS RANGE for $2.00 You can buy a GAS RANGE from u and have it charg ed to your account at th rate, of $2.00 PER MONTH. An instantaneous WATER HEATER can be had and your account charged at the rato of 1.00 PER MONTH until paid for. We make the same liberal arrangement on any gas or olec j ' ' trie appliances. THE Coos Bay Gas & Electric COMPANY NORTH BEND NEWS, BORN May 20, a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johnson of old North Bend, Mr. Join son Is night watchman at the old North Bend mill. Edgar Simpson Is In Coqullle on business. Mrs. Robt. Demurest Is friends at Cooston visiting J. F. Clark of Porter, will leave tomorrow for Portland on business. The Redondo Mill tow the schoon er Advent up f'om San Francisco this week. v Mrs. C. E. Ellsworth and Myrtle and Harold Ellsworth will leave soon for Portland to males their fu- turo home. Mrs. H. Smith of San Francisco, Is visiting at the homes of her sons, J R. Smith and W. J. Smith, In North Bend. Postmaster Elmer Russell and Wlllard Russell of the Coos Bay Grocery, will go o Ten Mile on a fishing trip. Tho Sumner baseball team will drive to Falrview Sunday to play the team there. A large number will ac company the Sumner team. Owing to the small attendance, the meeting of the Coos Bay Yacht Club that was to have been held Wednesday night at Dr. Bartle's of fice, was postponed until next Wed nesday night. AT THE HOTELS. The Blanco J. H. Anthony, Port land; C. Tutte, Coqullle; E. Galller, Bandon; F. Morse and wife and F. S. Slagle and wife, Coqullle; Rolla Goodman, Matt Kerrigan, Irwin Cus ter, Claude GlUlam, Frank Thrift, Owen Knowlton Marlon Custer and Herman O. Anderson, Coqullle; H. Anderson, L. A York and J. Kron berger, Bandon; Roland Leep, Harold Adams and Otto Schneider, Myrtle Point; Alvln Reed, Paul Brewer, Grover Wilson, Lester Sum merlin and Raymond E, Baker, Myr tle Point, Frank Wolf, Denmark; Fred Buehler, Chas. Lund, Fred. Gehrke, Harold Clough, Victor Bower, Thos. Laird, Carl Bowman, Guy Frederick, L. Galller, Pat Rack- left, Clark Waldvogel, Robert Black- nrby, Ennle Boak, Tom Ostlen and H. C Ostien, Bandon; R. S. Knowl ton, Coqullle; May D. Hall, Myrtle Point; R. Roberts and L. McDonald, Coos River; Mrs J. W. Mulkey, Co- qullle; Minnie McCloskey, Norway; W. S. DuPean and wife, Portland; J C. Doyle and S, O. Bartges, Rltz vllle. Wash.; P. W. Culver and wife, Raymond, Wash.; E, G. Felt, Stock ton; Frank Brown and Wm. Hahn, Bandon; Robert Roberts and O. J. Seeley, Coqullle; Thos. Wilson, Myr tle Point. Tho Chandler W. H. LyonB and L. H. Hazard, Coqullle; C. P. Frid ley, C. L. Governough and E. B. Crawford, Portland; Wm. Candlln, Coqullle; Gretchen Sherwood and Emily Harlocker, Coqullle; J. C. Greene, San Francisco; J. E. Perry, Portland; Miss Oshler, Crittenden; J D. Guess, Portland; J. C. Mur ray, San Francisco; F. J. Prontls, Portland; J. S. Lyons and wife, Co qullle; Geo. A. Getty, Seattle; E. M. Eldrldge, St. Louis; C. W. Rollins, St. Louis; L"uls Stonebreaker, Grand Rapids, Mich.; A. C. Oolllg non, St. Cloud, Minn.; L. H. Fair banks, Portland; A. Miller, W. S. Gill and Jv N. Merrick, Portland; G. T. Treadgold and- wife, Bandon; L. G. Houser, Portlnnd. . ...-..--. .- NEWS OF COQUILLE. County Sent Items Taken Front the Herald. Mrs. Llnegar, mother of our townsman' nnd postmaster, who has been here visiting her son for some time, went to Bandon last week for a visit with her brother, Win. Galller, his sons, Steve and Ed and their families. Mrs. Christina Carothers' and son, William, Coos county pioneers, at present residents of Oakland, Cal., are on the lower river visiting- tho former's sister, Mrs. Adam Persh uaker, and many friends. They will probably be In this city this week or Jiext. Mrs. Sam Barrows, of Bandon, who has been In poor health for some months, passed through town yesterday on her way to the Willa mette Valley where sho wlil spend the summer with relatives and friends. She was nccompanled by Mrs. Holman and Mrs. Stltt, also of Bandon. They want to Roseburg by Joe Laird's private stage. J. D. Benham was in town tho middle of last week and was suffer ing severely from burns about the face sustained by an explosion caused by the mixing of nitric and sulphuric acids In an attempt to destroy a stump with that prepara tion, as has been recommended and published in many papers of tho state. He came very near losing ,hls sight, as tho flames struck him In he face. ROBBERY IN NORTH REND. Lumberman Nnmed McDonough Claims to Have Been "Rolled." A young lumberman giving the name of McDonough from near' Marshfleld had an inmate of a Pony Inlet resort arrested In North Bend today for "rolling him" last night. The trial Is to 'come up before City Recorder Derbyshire this afternoon. L. A. Ltljeqvlst, prosecuting attor ney, from Coqullle, is in attendance at the trial. GETS WEATHER DATA. Government Experts to Visit Coos County. ROSEBURG, Ore., May 21. N. B. Fuller of tho United States Weather Bureau, loft for Coos coun ty on the stage to establish new mountain snowfall stations, where records are to be kept regarding pre cipitation at the heads of small streams In all parts of the state. Under recommendation of President Roosevelt, after the conference ' of the governors of the states of the union, held a year ago at Washing ton, the weather bureau," geological survey, reclamation servldo and tho bureau of Indian affairs formed a working agreement to obtain this and other information regarding the undeveloped Resources of the coun try, especially in this 'western coun-1 try. The weather bureau has already established 42 stations of this class In this state. The department is desirous to have persons living at the head of small streams, at points where no reports are now furnished, communicate with tho weather bu reau with reference to co-oporating with the bureau Reports, whon made In accordance with regulations, are paid for by the government, and the only essentials aro accuracy and promptness. MOTHER IS DEAD. Aged Parent of 1 O. Horrell of Marshfleld Dies. GERVAIS, Ore.. May 21. Mrs. Teresa Horrell died here last week after an Illness of several months, from old age. Mrs. Horrell was born In Porryvllle, Mo., March 28, 1828. Her maiden name was Tere sa Manning. Sho was married to Thomas Leo Horrell, In 1849, nnd In 1864 came to Oregon, settling at St. Louis, Marlon County. In 1876 thoy moved to Gervala. Her hus band died some years ago. Mrs. Horrell was tho mother of seven children and many grandchil dren, Honry Manning of St. Louis, Is a surviving brother, nndV Mrs. Marcolla Shelby of Porryvllle, MoIs her surviving sister. Tho surviving children are: Mrs, I. A. Nichols of Spokane, Wash.; Mrs. M. M. Pow ers, of Gorvals, Ore.; Mrs. Rose Adolph, of Anderson, Cal,; Mrs. II'. F. McKay, of Port Madison, Wash,; F, O. Horrell of Marshfleld, Ore.; and W. Leo Horrell of Gorvals, Ore. SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY Choice any suit In tho window val ues to $15 for only $8.65, See what cash will do. Hub Clothing and Shoo Company. I Personal Notes I J C. BEATTIE was a visitor In town today from Coos River. MRS. N. F. THRONE of Cooston, was a Marshfleld visitor today. MRS. CHAS. FENSLER returned last evening from a short trip to Portland. . ... m SHERIFF W. W. GAGE of Coqullle, was a Marshfleld business visitor yesterday. G. T. TREADGOLD and Wire of Ban don, are In Marshfleld to" take in .the field meet t -, -t i. "t CAPT. PETERS of the dredge Ore gon, has returned from a business trip to Portland. ' ' ' L. A. LILJEQVIST,' deputy prosecut Ing attorney', came over' from Co qullle today on businessf C. D. LASH has returned from a business trip td Portland. He re ports everything flourishing there. L. F. FALKENSTEIN of North Bond, passed through here this morning en route to Coquille bri business. MRS. HUGH McLAIN, who has been rather poorly' for a'couple of days, was reported" much improved to day. MISS McCLOSKEY passed through hre today en 'route to her home In the Coqlil'.'e Valley'' after a short northern trip. MRS. M. F. CAMPBELL formerly a ' resident of Marshfleld, has been called to Roseburg owing to tho severe Illness 'of her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Moffett. W. S. CHANDLER, who has been spending a few weekB on the Bay looking after business Interests hero will leave on the -Plant next week for San Francisco. H. G. HUNTLEY and' wife returned yesterday from Portland where they wore quietly married a few days ago. Mrs. Huntley was for- merly Mls3 Grco Wells taf Marsh ' field. The younc couple will reside In North Bend where Mr. Huntley Is engaged in business.1 DR. and MRS. RICHARDSON and baby and Mrs. Eugene O'Connell arrived here last evening from Portland. Mrs. Richardson and baby will spend the summer at tho O'Connell homo on Coos Riv er. Dr.. Richardson will return to Portland after1 a 'short visit hero, but? will return shortly for a more extended visit. FUEL SHORTAGE SAVES LIFE. YORK, Pa., May 21. The gaso line in a traction engine, which Adam Crumbling, 80 years old, of Lower Windsor township, was draw ing Into his barn, gave out just in tlmd to save him from doath. Crumbling ha'd heen threshing grain and was pulling the engine Into the barn by means of a snatch block, using tho ongfne's own powqr, when tho rope gave way, catching; him and dragging 'him toward tho machinery. His arm was broken and he was in danger of bolng crushed, with no way'of shutting off the p6wer, when tho gasoline gave out and the onglno stopped. mere are two? & Grocery j Specials 7 Hawaiian nine ap"ple, the tt 9' finest of table ' fruit in i 2V6-pound tins f 8 only JC n PURE MAPLE SYRUP, sold f n regularly for 76c per quart, It jjforon'ly, per Ctf OJC & quart. TiTe BAZAR. V THe Houso of Quality 7 8 Central Ave. Marshfleld J Phono 2J a -8-K-tt--8-tt-n---u-8-8-;r MATCHLESS SODAS Tho result of many years of experience. Made f'Sm the best'product obtainable and with up-to-date methods. Always fresh, palatable and crisp, A. fair supply always on hand. For sal only at P. A. SACOHI.