ia 'HI TJ? li- "& 2 THE COOSBAVTiMESrMARSHFIELD, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1909-EVENING EDITION. W jauMJELMJI t, 4-ft ,'0t "J e .tf fe $ f 'H . EH ti i COOS BAY TIM ' Dedicated tQ the service of the'i. people, that no good cause shall lack a champion, and that evil shall not thrive unopposed. -' v. lose names are apt to be assoclat- XXXttXttttttUtttZtitUitt i"-" J l 1 with notions of butterfly existence u i t u t u c 1 i x vu I I n I n r . .a. ' . .., i i.i. .ul V T .l.uau luiuiiiui uui) nu men T ri A O T t M n T C A names and not with their habits and iwAYfr?Jfif occupations arc .Mrs. O. H. P. Bel-,$$$ An Indepeident Republican news paper published every evening except Bunday, and Weekly by TJhj Coos Bay Times Publishing Co. Entered at the postofflce at Marsh ld, Oregon, for transmission through the mails as second class mall matter. M. O. MA LONE Y Editor nnd Pub. DAN E. MALOXEY News Editor SUBSCRIPTION KATES. In Advnuco. DAILY. One year $5.00 Six months $2.60 Less than G months, per month .50 WEEKLY. One year $1.50 Address all communications to COOS BAY DAILY TIMES, Mshfleld :: :: :: :: Oregon The Coos Bay Times represents a consolidation of the Dally Coast Mall nd The Coos Bay Advertiser. The Coast Mall was the first daily estab lished on Coos Bay and The Coos Bay Times is Its immediate successor. niont and Mrs. Clarence II. M. Mac kaj , both of whom have recently add ed woman suffrage propagandism to the other activities In which they aro engaged. The New York Sun says: "Mrs. Belmont, who was brought up In a very different environment from that of a business ofllce, has since she passed Into the control of her estate, displayed executive abil ity. She s her own manager and makes that distinctly clear. Main taining fl- e or six homes all the while, and this involves such details as the continuous keeping up of the flie in the Marble house at Newport which Is necessary to preserve the marble; It has never gone out In fourteen years; building and Invest ing and keeping personal oversight of her many Interests, she yet must find time to devote to outside Inter ests. In the line of woman suffrage alone she employs three stenograph- GOOD EVENING. He who reforms himself has done more toward reforming the public than a crowd of noisy, Impotent patriots. Lavater. FINANCIAL Work! Work! Work! Work! Work! Work! 'Tis the song that the nations sing! The wheel and the spoke and the tiresome yoke, The dusts that clog and the dusts that choke, And the sparks as they upward spring. Work! Work! Work! 'Tis the song that the sing! mighty OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY OF MARSHFIELD. Official Paper of Coos County. ... 'TJln hrnu tlint'c n-nt n.lfl. Mm .Intl. ers to answer tno tetters which comoi .. ..... ,.. . uun, to her. Her days are planned to oc- sweat, cupy every minute and go according Tho back we" be"t to life's goad of to the clock, which oftentimes gives the signal for her to arise and begin work at 4:30 a. m. Mrs. Mackay does not personally control business interests, but she uses business methods in disposing of her extensive social, benevolent debt. And tho groan as the swing. ' hammers Work! Work! Work! 'Tis the song that the conquerors sing! and civic work. Mrs. Mackay is an1,lu sirengm ana tne force of tho active participant In school andj heart-deep source, church affairs, and since becoming ,Tnat marks progression's untiring THE TWENTIETH CEX- TUKY WOMAN HETTY GltEEN advances a very safe proposition when she throws out the suggestion that every woman of means will find It advantageous to learn to take care of her own business The old notion that woman possesses no talent for affairs outside of the domestic cir cles does not influence the opinion of Hetty Green. She has her own ex perience to go by "I am able," she declares, "to manage my affairs better than any man could manage them; and what woman has done, woman can do." One out of every five American women Is engaged in gainful occupa tion at tho present time, the number of self-supporting women in the TTnUn, CTi i. . l uuui-u Dimes exceeding four mil lions. This being the case, It would be a serious matter If the sex were devoid of capacity for business af fairs. Fortunately, when necessity arises, women are continually de monstrating their ability to adapt themselves to tho requirements of business. Hetty Green's example of a successful woman of business is but one of many. Before her recent marriage, Mrs. Weightinan Walker personally managed tho large inter ests left by her father. Her life was a ceaseless routine. Every morning sho went to her office, arriving in an electric carriage before S o'clock. Thero sho received reports fiom va rious heads of departments and Issu ed orders. Sho was always open to suggestion, but could bo persuaded to do nothing unless she saw tho rea son herself. Every business day she sat at her desk until 1 o'clock, head of an army of clerks. A New Yoik nowspaper Is author ity for tho statement that Mrs. Hosa Horrman, who pays out $2,000,000 annually in wages, had no training up to the time of her husband's death, whon ho left his lumber busi ness unconditionally In her control. Tho woman whoso life up to that period had been given over to society turned no duty ovor to any employe but herself learned eery detail of tho business. The employer of 11,000 men, rebullder and enlargor of the original business, sho has Justified her husband's trust In tho Innate buslnoss capacity of tho feminine brain. Mrs. Nolllo Upham of Colorado, Is vico-presldent and general manager of a gold mining company which conducts operations on n largo scale. Sho personally superintends opera tions conducted by 300 men, nnd this work necessitates her residence on tho crest of tho Rockies during eight months of the year. Many rich women who do not feel obliged to devoto themselves to dally labor In tho Intorest of conserving their fortunes do bo In furtherance of other objects which aro near their hearts. TIiIb Is truo of Miss Helen Gould and Mrs. Itussoll Sage, Mrs. Sago Is working as hard and as sys tematically nt giving away money as thctivorngo business man Is at mak ing it. president of the Equal Franchise so ciety has transacted an amount of campaign work dally that would alone seem sufficient to engross ono person's time. She and others manage to perform a large volume of multifarious labor only by the utmost dispatch in eve ry detail and the most rigid order in the arrangement of their daily tasks. The woman of the future, whether rich or poor, will pay much attention to the acquisition of busi ness methods, for in the complex life of the twentieth century they are becoming as necessary to woman as to men. course And heaps life's rare harvestings! Laurana W. Sheldon. SCHOOL NEEDS. I N" HIS RECENT article on the schobl system o the country, William Allen White affirms that too ninny boys are out of school be tween the ages of 13 and IS. Many of these are not out for the sake of earning money. He says that manu facturers, however, do not want 14-year-old boys about trying to learn a trade. The trouble Is that the boy does not find the school lnteiestlng. His instinct for practical education Is a right one. The growth of manu al training, giving the boy opportu nity to work with Ills hands In school, is a most Important sign of modern pi ogress. Separate manual training high schools are being es tablished all over the country. North Dakota has 10 of these, Massachu setts 23, manual work Is Introduced into 3f high schools in Maryland, Minnesota gives manual training in OS schools, many of them separate manual training high schools. Man ual tialnlng is taught In all tho schools of Ohio; Now York has threo separate manual high bchools, Georgia 22. This means to the boys work that they like and teachers that they like men who bring something of tho haulier masculine element to the dally life ot the school. Mr. Whito feels that boys seek the companionship of men In undesliable places because they en joy tho companionship, if this Is given In school and wo know how often thoio Is llttlo In the home, with modern fathers so absorbed In busi ness boys will not so often drift into had associations. The leal need Is for better pay for teachers, so that men will follow tho profession more generally. Tho pension arrange ments help In this direction, as It will onable more men to devoto their lives to this work of educating and tialnlng the future citizens of the republic. A DOLLAR SAVED is a DOLLAR, MADE The habit of saving, fprined early'ln life, im the fdundation of many a fortune. Thrifty people pjyonlze the savings bank and prosper Deposits .In savings banks have proven more safe and profitable than any other 'class of InveftmeLt'-ior people who raust build up a fortune fiom dally savings. The department ot saviugs Is a special feature with this bank. Interest paid un nil Savings Deposits remaining six months or longer. A GENERAL BANKING AND TRUST BUSINESS TRANSACTED CHECKING ACCOUNTS SOLICI1ED. First Trust and Savings Bank OF COOS BAY DIRECTORS. JNO, F. HALL, W. S. CHANDLER. DR. C. W. TOWER. DORSEY KREITZER, JOHN 3. COKE STEPHEN C. ROGERS. HENRY SENGSTACKEN, M. C. HORTON, WILLIAM GRIMEB, OFFICERS. JNO. S. COKE. President. DORSEY KREITZER, Cashier. M. C. HORTON, Vice President nnd Manager. mmmnmmmmamaammmm PROFESSIONAL CARDS. '9999. W DR. J. W. INGRAM Physician and Surgeon. Office 208-200 Coos Building Phones Offlco J 621; Residence I!i TR. A. L. nOUSEWORTH - Physician and Surgeon Offlcca second floor of Flanagan A Bennett Baab Building. Office hours 2 to 4 p m.; 7 to 8 p. m Phono: Ofllco. 1431; Residence. 1411 D1 fHE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF COOS BAY STRICTLY' A COMMERCIAL BANK Wells Fargo Nevada National Bank, San Francisco, Cal. The United States National Bank, Portland, Ore. Tho National Park Bank, New York, N. Y. The Corn Evchnnge National Bank, Chicago, 111. The Bank of Scotland, London, England. Tho Credit Lyonnnis, 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. Certificates of Deposit Issaed. Safe Deposit Boxes for rent. Draws Drafts on R. R. E. GOLDEN P'lyslclnn and Surgeon Phones: Office 1051 Residence 185, 20J-03 Coos Building. Office houia: 10 to 12 m. 2 to c - cn- BENNETT, Dent' 217-21S Coos Building, marsnneld. LAWYERS T. "' BENNETT, Office over Flanacan & Bennett Bank. We become so tired of the contro- versies that go on. The dishonest man is apt, to And the people a rather suspicious lot. When puppy love has Its way, it Is apt to lead to a dog's life a little later. It is every man's 'opinion that a lot of good food is spoiled working It over lnto'salads. A I ft it A iti A J - A -" Flanagan & Bennett Bank MARSHFIELD, OREGON. Paid Up Capital and Undivided Profits 975,000 Asset Over Ilatf MllUon Dollars. Does a general banking business and draws on the Bank of Cali fornia, San Francisco, Cal., 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 kept subject to check, safe deposit lock boxes for rent at 50 cents a month or J5 a year. INTERESTPAID ON TIME DEPOSITS oe The ordinary man would state, If pressed, that he thinks his singing voice Is superb. A boy wearing his first long pants contrives to have a great manv er rands downtown. What has become of the old fash ioned woman who cut off a lock of hair of the dead? We sometimes think we devote half our time to hearing people tell how hard they work. When a man confesses he plays poker occasionally, that is a sign he quit winner the night before. If you want to see two persons agree perfictly, get them to talking about some one both hate. To make a friend Is to make a good investment, and to make an enemy is to make a bad one. The ordinary man thinks the heathen have an awful good tlmo on tho money he donates for them. We must all admire tho Intellec tual swiftness of tho chronic liar who Is able to lie out of his lies. STEAMERS (aH5HSaSHSH5HS2.5asa5H5aSESlSHSH5HSe5HSHSE5,aS2S2SHSane52SHSHSHSa5HSa5? , A a blJLAMHK M. I JTLA1N1 Sails for San Francisco, Friday, October 22. Marshfleld, Orogon. J OUN D. GOSS Attorney at Law. Marshfleld, Oregon. MISCELLANEOUS w S. TURPEN Architect City Building Inspector Over Chamber of Commerce MARSHFIELD, ORE. JV7TRS. DR. O. S. FRANKLIN, " Clairvoyant and Tst Medium. CURES CANCERS AND TUMORS FREE Phone 197-X, near cor. Broadway and Market Streets. FREIGHT RECEIVED UP TO THURSDAY NIGHT AT OCEAN DOCK. Sails everySaturday for here F. S. DOW, Agt. &S25ESBSH5SSHSES3a5EEra5HS25E5HSH5EHSH52SHSa5H5a5H52b-H5E5S5ESESSSZS Turkish Baths 210-213 Coos Building PHONE 2 14 J G. W. DUNGAN, Undertaker Telephone: Day 105-J Night 10-4 At the C. A. Johnson Undertaking Rooms, Frc ' "jeet, Mnrshflel , irfe. X CALIFORNIA AND OREGON COAST STEAMSHIP COMPANY. $ Steamer Alliance E. D. PARSONS, Master. EQUIPPED WITH WIRELESS COOS BAY AND PORTLAND SAILS FR6M PORTLAND SATURDAYS, 8 P. M. SAILS FROM COOS BAY TUESDAYS, AT SERVICE OF TDDE. C. G. Stlmson, Agent. T. B. JAMES, Agent. Couch St. Dock, Portland. Ore. Marshfleld, Ore., Phone 441 A ti A A A X .4 if A .1 F'l1 W 'I1 lIl VTVTTTVTVTTtvT 'I' V H Wo poor people abuse the rich, but wo suppose the rich abuse us just as vigorously ns we abuse them. That is good news which the vot eran railroad builder, J. J. Hill, sends out from his homo In St. Paul, llo declaies that ho will not Invade California with his railroads, but will devote his entire attention to building feedors for his lines In Oregon. In his own language his Intentions are expressed as follows; "All tho building will bo done In Oregon. There Is plenty of room for now feeders In that stnto and mile age which wo expect to add to our system will bo confined to that There is a certain typo of quiet, worthy man that any woman can catch and marry If she takes after him. Too many of us confuse our own stubbornness with .strength of char acter and makes nuisances of our- solves. If Nature Intended that men should be cut open It Is a wonder that trapdoors were not left over tho vital parts. Every man has a right to his own opinion, but that Is no reason why ho should not keep It to himself once In a while. When a man starts to toll a fun ny story and says, "I'll cut it short," It Is a sign that ho has himself been greatly bored by long stories. state. Wo havo no intention of en- Two prominent Now York women terlng California." Mr. Tnft has admitted that he can not milk a cow, and before his term expires he may reallzo that ho can not frighten progressive republicans, elthor. 52SHSHimsa5BSE5S5a5HSH5Z5aSS5HfiHSBZ5EHSSHSHSa52SSHSa5aSBSE5EJ5HHaSHS? Portland & Coos Bay S S. Line gj S. S. BREAKWATER 1 Sails from Ainsworth DockPortland, Wednesdays at 8 p.m Sails from Coos Bay Saturdays at Service of Tide. W. F. Miller, Agt. Phone Main 35-L LW5H525?,K!5HSa5KaSH5E5?J25H5ES253Z5H5Zi5?ja5 Livery, Feed and Sale Stable; Rigs at all hours and a carry-all that .we will send out with partiea wishing to go in crowds. L. R HEISNER Marshfleld, Ore. Phono 120-J . ..,., , ..,t..., I-, l,.i,..... ! - --.! l.i.... Streamer Wilhelmma LUDVIG CHRISTENSEN, Master. Balling for Bandon every Monday. For full Information, apply Chaj Thorn owner, or H. W. Skinner, agent. ... ,--.. - -!... 1.. ,..!.-..-., ., , ., . , . i.. ..., U !" ------- M WHY NOT TELEPHONE 48-J I HUGH McLAIN GENERAL CONTRACTOR Wholesale and Retail Dealer In BEAVER HILL COAL Imported Cement, Crushed Rock Saud, Brick Lime, Wood and Hair Fiber Plaster, Stone and Concrete Pedestal Blocks. Fllnt kote Roofing Paper. Estimates furnished on all clarses of contract work. Phone 2011 316 SOUTH BROADWAY', .MARSHFIELD, ORE. I To try one dozen pints or quarts Export Beer. After $j using same If you cannot agree with us that It Is the most re freshing and palatable drink ever used ask to have your ? money refunded. j X Coos Bay Liquor Co. i WHOLESALERS, RETAILERS i AND BOTTLERS. j Martlifleld, Oregon. Have that Roof Fixed Now See CORTHELL PnONE lOO-L. TRY THE Coos Bay Steam Laundry PHONE 57-J. . fjHsasEsasHsssHszsESHszsaszsusasisa STEAMER FAVORITE Two trips dally betueeu Bandjnand CoqulUecoiiuectlng with a 1 Ma.-slifleld train. Leaves Bandon . ,.0:40 a.m. Leaves Bandon ...1:20p.m. Leaves Coqullle. . .0:lKv.m. Leaves CoquUle ...4:00p.m. Travelera leaving Marshfleld In the morning reach Uandon at noon. People on Coqullle river can spend over three hours in Marshfleld and reach home the fQ same day, S COQUILLE RIVER TRANS- K PORTATION CO, H5H5?5a5TiiaSH5HS25E52mSH5ESHSn L. J. POST Contractor and Builder Elgtteen years' experience has taught us a motto "Take our time anc" i work right" Pricci Cuuunt will Ett 'Vk 612 South Sec" j TOet MARSHETELB, QRR nbe&uBiHliKW , u L if )t i S SHIM I f I f ':