The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957, November 13, 1909, EVENING EDITION, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE COOS bFES,MARfTeLD, OREGON, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 19Q9 EVENING EDITION.
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M
COOS BAY TIMEj
Dedicated to the service of 'the' da., a.
t'fl? ways and little tempers which reference to Its substance. And one,
, .1 not anDear during the courtship .among the many causes for this ln-
people, that no good cause shall lack
a champion, and that evil shall not
thrive unopposed.
An Indepeident Republican news
paper published every evening except
Bunriay, and Weekly by
Tho Coos Uny Times Publishing Co.
H. C MALONEY Kdltor and Pnli.
SAN E. MALONEY News Editor
subscription kates.
In Advutico.
DAILY.
One year 5-00
Blx months 2-s0
L.6BB than 6 months, per month .50
WEEKLY.
One year 15
Address all communications to
COOS BAY DAILY TIMES,
Min-shflcld :: :: :: " Oregon
r
Entered at the postofllce ot Marsh
Beld, Oregon, for transmission
through the malls as second class
mall matter.
The Coos Bay Times represents a
consolidation of the Daily Coast Mail
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.
difference to the weight and value of
the oath, Is its Illimitable repetition
In mofrlnl-rn T H7I failures. tllC
distaff side of the house cannot al-jln every line of business and person-
ways be held blameless, though it is
the common custom to hold the man
mo3t guilty, but it occasionally hap
pens that Instead of being blamed
he should be pitied. Judging from
observation, the chief end and aim
al engagement. The oath Is in far
too common use; It Is appended to
nearly every documentary phase of
human mutual concern; and strnn
gelv enough, this constant employ
ment of the calh must be taken to
of the average American husband is Indicate the popular miBtrust of Its
to "hustle" for his wife and chil-j value, since it is thus thrust forward
dren and to protect them against upon the mere chance of its lmpress-
. ...it i. n itfn iiaiirnnif nnllcv I tnp snme anions the many, as a
Willll U" - ... -- i -o
when his days are ended.
Men are not angels, neither are
wnmm nmi In marrinca It Is
saving medium in the preservation
of the contract and the spirit there-
a3 of.
nim.li Hm lmrt of the wife as it is I vn nnr nnrt. wn would like to see
of the husband to charge her galtjtne oath dispensed with. It is worn
I . . - a
if need be, In order to travel in step j outi unessential; a matter or uy-
when In double harness. There paV( and has lost Its place, beauty
would be fewer mariiages declared anti meaning in the rush of modern
is no effort to assist this country in
procuring the means of development,
nor Is thore nny movement to come
In and meet with our people until
we secure the facilities which will
place us beyond the need of their
sympathy or association. Last
spring, the Portland commercial In
terests promised to send a strong
representative delegation to tile
Harney county fair, but notwith
standing the best of weather and
road conditions, not a soul from the
metropolis appeared, nor could the
secretary of the fair even get a let
ter from the fellows who promised
to come.
Once again, The News wishes to
remind Portland with sorrow that
It Is courting decided coldness on
the part of the people of Interior
Oregon toward its commercial inter
ests. Harney County News.
a
failures if both men and women
would make half the effort to bo
attractive, amiable and considerate
after marriage that they did before.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY
OF MARSHFIELD.
Official Paper of Coos County.
Saturday Evening
Thoughts
How easy It Is to make mistakes
in this world. No one realizes it
more than the newspaper man,
whose life is full of them; but does
he make any more than others? Take
the merchant, for instance, his er
rors are numerous, as the delivery
men will tell, and the lawyer, as the
records tell in black and white, and
the courts speak about, in fact every
body makes plenty of them, says an
exchange. Nevertheless how un
charitable some people are when It
is the other fellow who does it.
There is a difference In mistakes.
Some are seen only by one or two
while those of the newspaper stand
out in the limelight for everybody to
notice. Always take a look In the
glass before you criticise others.
life. Expediency, custom, the Im
perative demand for good faith, in
separable from all business relations
of the day will do as much to main
tain the exact poise of man in bust
TOPICS OF THE TIMES.
ItKGATtmXG TREES.
ness, as the hollow form and nega-;Who speaks of "tongues In trees" is
. .. .. ... ..!
tive quality oi tne oatn as we iook wrong,
upon It today.
THE PLOT IS HEADY.
HE PLOT FOR the overthrow of
For I've hid In the woods to hark,
And though I have listened long and
long,
Not even a dogwood bark.
THE PLOT FOR the overtnrow oi
the direct primary law Is now'It a flsnng poie, so it seems to me,
.... 1-1 J At - .tt P rtl.1 . ... . .. t-l.i ("
limy mm. i.. a uieeims m um were iasluoneu exactly rigiu,
line politicians held in Portland, the And of just n cortatn kind of tree;
WAITING.
Serene I fold my arms and wait,
Nor care for wind, or tide or sea;
I rave no more 'gainst time or fate,
For lo! my own shall come to me.
I stay my haste,. I make delays,
For what avails this eager pace?
I stand amid the eternal ways,
And what Is mine shall know my
face.
Asleep, awake, by night or day,
The friends I seek are seeking me;
No wind can drive my bark astray,
Nor change the tide of destiny.
What matter if" I stand alone?
I wait with Joy the coming years;
My heart shall reap where It has
sown,
, And garner up Its fruit of tears.
The waters know their own, and
draw
The brook that springs in yonder
height;
So flows the good with equal law
Unto the soul of pure delight.
The floweret nodding In the wind
Is ready plighted to the bee;
And, maiden, why that look unkind?
For lo! thy lover soeketh thee.
The stars come nightly to tho sky;
Tho tidnl wave unto the sea;
Nor time, nor space, nor deep, nor
high
Can keep my own away from mo.
JOHN BURROUGHS.
It matters more w'hat you think of
yourself in your Innermost heart
than what others may think of you.
They see the outside only.
Have charity, have chamy
thought for everyone. You
need It yourself some day.
of
may
FILIAL AFFECTION.
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lB'' SI vjh 111 S Ht , sting out of tho hard things and
H?'' ,irl. fill !
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BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBm 'JL2JKMi-l. ' miitemr aalS-g-igffigHatejMMfc
m T DOES NO good to fret and
I whimner and complain when
things Jo not go to suit us. Prob
ably this is not u piece of startling
Information, but it is ono of the
things we have to say over and over,
and to havo said to us frequently,
in order to preserve tho equanimity
of spirit necessary to cheerful living.
Wo "Insh" oursolves needlessly so
many times, and fuss anil worry
about trifles which amount to noth
ing save in our own imaginations,
nnd nfter they aro gone, If we re
member thorn at all, wo wonder why
wo allowed ourselves to bo disturb
ed by Irritations that wero so fleet
ing.
It Is a misfortune to take things
too seriously. "Not life, nor lovo,
nor even ourselves." Tho easy-going
ones, thoso who can tako things as
thev come, havo tho best of It. To
bo able to faco II fo with a certain
Kay philosophy, helps to tako tho
sting out of tho hard things nnd
adds zest to thoso which mako happiness.
There Is one thing tho woman who
thinks sho Is disappointed in hor
husband should take Into considera
tion, and thnt is tho fact that ho may
bo equally disappointed In hor.
When tho sweetheart becomes the
ROM ONE noint of view the
H whole world Is nothing but par-
ent and child. People are born,
nourished, protected and trained that
they may in turn bear, nourish and
protect and train the next generation.
A rising standard of civilization only
means an amplification and extension
of this fundamental process. Fine
houses, education, travel, are only
better tools for tho work. Even the
charitable and altruistic impulse
which does not stop because the chil
dren are not one's own is a logical
development of the fundamental idea.
Fundamental too are the deduc
tions from It. A woman who can de
sert her child Is an anomaly, a mon
strosity nnd the absence of proper
filial affection and gratitude Is no
less shocking.
The old forms of filial reverence
are disappearing along with the ster
ner attitudes of authority, but It Is
no Indication of a change of feel
ings. The modern father loves "the
kid" just as certainly as If ho wero
not on such Intlmato terms with him
and tho modem boy admires and
Imitates "tho governor" just as
truly as If he wero kowtowing be
fore tho paternal chin whiskers In
respectful silence.
There aro all sorts of failures and
all sorts of reasons for thorn but tho
father who has failed to develop the
filial spirit In his child, en, who finds
himself despised and neglected when
ho should ho cherished and reverenc
ed, has signally failed. "If I am
boreft of my chlldten, I am bereft
Indeed."
To such graceless children life
must surely bring Its condemnation.
If the old fashioned manner and
speech are not dear to them becnuso
ot old days, and If weakness Is not
eloquent to them of past service,
there is a sense of proper values
Incising In their moral make-up for
wh.lc.1 they must Inevitably pay by
the loss of life's simplest, purest
pleasures. No worthy superstructure
is posslblo without tho cornerstone
of filial tenderness.
assembly scheme was formally
adopted and It will now be submit
ted to tho politicians in other parts
of the state.
The assembly scheme, when strip
ped of all Its false coloring is sim
ply this. To take the nominating
power out of the hands of the people
and restore It to the politicians with
a little clique In Portland as the cen
ter of power and authority.
The politicians or at least the ma
chine element, have grown sick and
tired of the direct primary. It Is all
wrong, from their standpoint. It
does not provide for leadership or
in other words for bosslsm. Under
the direct primary system nn ofllco
holder Is responsible to his consti
tuents only. So he generally does
what he thinks Is right. He does not
ask the boss. Just think of it. He
no longer obeys "instructions" from
the old dictator or his henchmen. He
does not jump when the party or
factional whip Is cracked. As a re
sult all Is chaos. The boss can no
That may be a basswood bite.
' Nixon Waterman.
Work hard for Coos Bay.
Mrs. Pankhurst sas women can't
make politics any wrse, but it Is the
effect of politics on women that most
men fear.
How long will they
look wear
That's the real point when
you're buying clothes.
Don't be satisfied', just because
the suit looks well when, you first
uy it on.
If a suit isnTt pure wool
its style and its shape sinK
ply cannot: last,,
Clothcraft
All -Wool Clothes
are pure wool. Each suit or overcoat carries.a Signed Guarantu
that it is all pure wool and that it will hold its style and shape.
Clothcraft All-Wool Clothes sell at the same prices as part-
wool clothes $10 to $25.
NO OTHER line in America at these prices Guarantees you and pro.
tects you against disappointment.
And these are the handsomest, most stunning clothes jn town. Loot
at them today they are going fast.
THE WOOLEN MILL.STORE
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Mill-To-Man Clothiers.
,Marshfield, Oregon,
It Is too bad that trouble should
come upon King Alfonso just when
he Is starting out to raise an Inter
esting family.
There are many forces working
silently yei steadily for the develop-
i ment of this county and of the
towns therein.
B
61
WAS
GUI
LINF
Democrats who feel that they
would like to be elected president In
1912 have three years In which to
dream about It.
"We can trust the common sense
.... . - 0I tne Ainericun peuint:, ouja xico-
longer "deliver the goods" and hence, ,dent Taft Certainiy. Te election
1 nnnnnf rrtm YVn nH tVlO Pfl TYinniPtl . . 1.
he cannot command the campaign
funds and the prestige that goes
with the sack. Corporations and
other Interests wanting special fa
vors no lbnger to the bosses to
"fi things." They must take their
chances with officeholders' who are
free to do their duty. During the
past few years these "interests" have
not fared so well as formerly In
Oregon. They too want the direct
primary scuttled and likewise tho
Initiative and referendum. It is easy
to understand why
returns of 1908 prove It.
Just a few more years, and we
will be treated to rumors that one
of Ruth Bryan Leavitt's children Is
thinking of running for office.
Mrs. Ruth Bryan Leavltt has de
cided not to run for congress. May
be her distinguished father suggest
ed that he could do the running for
the family.
fnlm.i Vn tm flnswl Uonnir'Q lirnflior
v.... - .-. i xiiu) nave in tfv ivjwj w wvw
But do the people want to go back off hIs job as may0r 0f Tucson, Ariz.,
Righteous letrlbution. For any man
of Tucson
ought to be fired.
to the old political sjstem?
people want to vacate the
Do the
throne ,vi,n u-nnlil he mavor
and again place the reins of power
in tne nanus oi snysierB oi me siripu , ,
that once dominated affairs in Ore- poitMDDEX SHOWS; SUICIDES.
gon? Do they want to have a set
of officeholders who will be mere u,.i,ie Takes Poison Because She
puppets for other men who will be
behind the scene and will pull tho
'I
OATH AND OBSERVANCE.
ifo sho sometimes changes Into nn
,, ..... . -
entirely different person and displays adhero to tho mero form
HIEF JUSTICE SHEPPARD of
tho District of Columbia federal
court of anneals. says that
"what Is needed. Is not a change In
the form of oath taken by witnesses,
but In the observance of tho samo
aftor it has been taken."
Tho Jurist sounded the key-noto of
ono of tho monumental evils of tho
day and the country. Wo nio, as a
poople, too glib with our oaths; wo
place but small significance upon It
Can't Sec Moving Pictures,
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 13. Be-
strlngs when they see fit? Do the cause jler husband refused to let her
people of Oregon want to have the g0 t0 picture shows as often as she
legislature composed of men who wishes. Airs. Beulah Casey drank
will bo under obligations to do two ounces of laudanum. Casey
things when told by the bosses even found his wife unconscious when he
though the action may involve a be- returned from work. She Is 20 years
trayal of their constituent Interests 0jd and was married only a few
and personal ruin to the members, If weeks ago.
they aie found out? In other words, I
do we want a government by tho TODAY'S WHEAT MARKET.
people of Oregon and for tho benefit
of the people of Oregon or a gov
ernment bv nolltical crooks who will
run things with a view, not to serv- wheat prices: Club, 95c;
Ing the people, but to furthering the stem, $1.05; Red Russian,
interest of tho "mcahlne" nnd to Turkey Red, 93c; Fortyfold,
filling the pockets of a few men with pjfe, 93c
Ill-gotten gold?
fBy Associated Press.)
PORTLAND, Nov. 13. Track
Blue
92c; 95c;
Wo shall see.
PORTLAND'S USUAL WAV.
If the Harrlman forces make good
the promise to havo tho Deschutes
road finished to Madras In June,
there ought to be n double celebra
tion up there next Fourth of July.
Portland may be depended on to
send a delegation to help out. Oro
gonlan. The foregoing editorial Is a con
clso and candid confession of the po
licy of Poitland In "assisting" East
ern Oregon. When wo secure tho
completion of a railroad and conse
quent connection with tho
(By Associated Press.)
CHICAGO, Nov. 13. Wheat clos
ed as follows: December, J1.05
7-8; May, ?1.04 G-S; July, 9G 5-Sc.
fBy Associated Press.)
TACOMA, Nov. 13. Bluestem,
?1.05 and $1.0G; Club, 95 and 9Cc;
Red Russian, 94c.
GOOD BUYS.
Restnurant on the Bay.
Business lot In Marshfleld.
Ranches all over Coos County.
AUG. FRIZEEX, 08 "C" STREET.
Chimneys were first used In Eu-
outsldei rnno in tho fourteenth centurv. Nono
" - )-.
world, tho businessmen of Portland i of tho Roman ruins shows chimneys
will come to celebrate with us in like ours. Tho wealthy Romans
other words, to open their samplo used carefully dried wood, which
cases, display their wares and cajole, would burn In the room without
without us luto patronizing them. But there soot.
High School. FootbalL Team
Returns After Victory
Praise For Bandonians.
The Marshfleld high school foot
ball team reached home today from
Bandon where yesterday they defeat
ed the high school team by a score
of sixteen to nothing. All the mem
bers of the stteam and Coaches Gra
ves, Prof. HewLt and C. F. Mc
Knlght, who accompanied theni, are
loud In their praise ot the treatment
accorded them there. "They aro
clean sports and the best entertain
ers we have seen In a long time," Is
the way they put It. They were met
at Coqutlle yesterday by two Ban
don boys and escorted them down
'the river and to ( tho Galller hotel.
Last evnelng, they were entertain
ed at a play given by tho Bandon
high school under the direction of
Superintendent Ostlen. The game,
Messrs. McKrtlght" and Graves say,
was one of the snappiest they ever
witnessed.
Marshfleld played In good form
and Bnndon's weight and grit were
all that saved them from having a
large score run up on them. The
game was full of excitement from
start to finish and both teams de
serve great credit for their playing,
which was clean throughout and
was not marred by wrang ing' or
any signs of unsportsman-llke con
duct. Referee McKnight's decisions
were well received by ever one. Mr.
Fo of Bandon, was tho umpire.
The game was called at 3 o'clock,
Bandon kicking to Marshfleld. By
a series of line bucks and end runs,
Marshfleld scored a touchdown,
Stutsman crossing the line just three
minutes after the game had been
started. Marshfleld was unable to
score again in the first half. The
Bandon line was very strong and
Marshfleld made most of Its yardage
on trick plays, breaking away
frequently for gains of from ten to
forty yards. Bandon punted a great
deal being unable to make any gains
against the splendid defensive work
of the Marshfleld team. Only once
during the whole game did Bandon
make yardage.
The second half was a repetition
of the first. Marshfleld made two
touchdowns. S, Brlggs going nround
the end on trick plays for both. H.
Brlggs kicked one goal. Wieder was
hurt In this half and had to be taken
out. Clarke taking his place at half,
Goss going to end and Johnson go
ing In at guard. Bandon's punts
were good and got the Bandon boys
out of several tight holes.
You donl
9
go to a
l blacksmith
i
ii
8
shop to
Sbuya
I watch !
k IF THAT IS TRUE WHY
k GO TO A GROCERY STORE, )
k A JEWELRY STORE, A DRY
GOODS STORE, A HARNESS V
STORE OR A CLOTHING f
STORE TO BUY S.HOES? y
n
Why not go
to a Shoe J
Store?
n
i
It stands to reason that the 8
man who deals in shoes exclu- a
slvely knows moro about them jj
and can give you better values y
than the man who handles
them only as a side line. i.
THAT'S OUR BUSINESS.
ISHOES
Send that BABY CARRIAGE to S.
W. Van Zlle, the North Bend furni
ture dealer, for NEW TIRrs or any
other REPAIRS. Ho has special
equipment for doing this kind of
work. Remember the place, S, w.
VAN ZILE, Sherman avenue, NORTH
BEND.
We handle nothing but shoes
LADIES' SHOES
MEN'S.SHOES
GIRLS' SHOES
BOYS SHOES t
BABIES' SHOES
Come and see the
ONLY EXCLUSIVE
SHOE STORE
IN COOS COUNTY
Wo aro sure we can pleaso
you and also save you money.
Try It!
Clausen's
EXCLUSIVE SHOE STORE
FROXT ST., iMARSHFIELD.
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BIG FIRE v CINCINNATI.
(By Associated Press.)
CINCINATI, Ohio, Nov. 13. The
immense plant of the Union Distill
ing Company, known as the Edge
mont Springs Distillery, at Carthage,
was almost completely destroyed by
fire today. The loss is estimated at
$300,000. It Is fully insured.