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About The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1912)
?&&&im&i-" W&B5&Vmut&a5v&WnK?Zi THE COOS BAY TIMES, .MARSHRELQ, OREpON, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1912 EVENING EDITION. n COOS BAY TIMES H. O. HALONK Editor und Pnb. PAN K. MA LONE V New Editor Entered at the poitofflce at Mamh lld, Oregon, (or transmission through the malls at aecoad claw mail matter. Address all oommuatoatlou t COOS DAT DAILY TIMES. Manihnold :: :t st tt Orecoa JIT ,' , Dedicated to the ionic e of the people, that no good cauie ahall lack champion, and that evil ahall not Uirfre unoppoaed. ' subscription raths. DAILY. One year M.tO 'Per month CO WEEKLY. Jfla year $1.50 Whon paid strictly In advance the -subscription price of the Coos Bar Tlmei Is C.OO per year or $2. SO for Ix months. Official Papor of Oooa County An Independent Republican nowi .papor published erory oronlng except flundoy, and Weekly by The Cooe Day Tlmea Publishing Oo. nient of ono of the Important re sources of this section. t Thero Is no reason why ovory steamer leaving this port should not carry a consignment of eggs supplo mentod by shipments of pbultry. Conditions are as favorablo horo for raising poultry as anywhoro In tho Unltod States. Potoluma, Call., secures a gross revonuo of ton million dollars a year from Its poultry Industry. This sum of monoy would bo tho equivalent in wages of sovoral mills as largo as tho C. A. Smith Industry. If only a small portion of tho Idlo land In Coos County was utilized for poultry farms, In a short tlmo tho revonuo from this sdurco alono would mako this a rich and prosporoua con. munlty. Owners of Idle tracts of land should mako It a buslnoss to offer special lnducemonta to tho poultry men, sell on such oasy termB that any ono can purchase, or loaso for small nmounts, for poultry enriched the soil as well as produces rovonuc. Turkeys should tcccIvo special at tention, for local conditions aro pe culiarly adapted to tholr production, and much monoy can bo secured by raising them in small numbers as a dido Isauo to tho orchard ranch. On an aero of land, with water, an Industrious worker can ralso In this cllino not only all tho produco his family consumes, but poultry enough' to realize a good Income. 7. A. SMITH AN ECONOMIC GENIUS CA. SMITH la rapidly assum ing tho cnvlablo position of fairy godfather to Coos Day. file latest contribution of a now iappr pulp mill, as announced in Tho Tlmos'yostcrday, marks another for ward movoment In tho Industrial de Tolopmcnt of this section. ' Important as this new enterprise Is In a commercial way, howovor, It Is of still greater Import In Its eco nomic phnso. It Is further evldonco of tho undoubted economic genius Csosaod by C. A. Smith and whlcii Is applying In such a practical manner in tho dovolopment of tho re sources of Coos Hay. Back of tho baro and bald state fWont of facts lnvolvod In tho new narrative of tho commencomont of a mow commorclal and manufacturing Qalorprlso Is tho moro interesting otory, of Mr. Smith's long thought out . jitan And Us fulfillment. Ever slnco ,tho otvctlon of tho big sawmill Mi. .SnilUi lias been npplylng himself to jLUo .problem of utilizing the wastu. llo has carried tho paper mill thought with him for several years. More than two years ago Tho Times .printed a story of tho chemical ox- porlmonts with Coos liny woods be ing mndo by Dr. Frankforter of the University of Minnesota, of which Mr. Smith Is a roftont. Dr. Frank sorter visited Coos nay and made a ynimbor of tests of which ho was tiuoat cnthtiBlnntlc. Tho Doctor Is an t?Uucator and a scientist, and It Btlll ,roroainod for Mr. Smith to find tho exports In manufacture who could mnko practical application of tho now vrocessea by which tho by-products of alcohol, turpontlno nnd rosin could 1)0 socured. Ho has continued this search for two years nnd yosterday's authorized announcement marked ltd successful culmination. It has boon said that "any man who nmkoa two blndos of grass gro whoro only ono grow boforo, Is a ben efactor to tho race," and Theodoro RooBOvolt has written that "every slop of tho progross of mankind in marked by tho discovery und use of natural resources previously tin used." TIiIh then Is a splendid con tribution Hint C. A. Smith is making to civilization In utilizing a waste product and from it adding largely to tho storo of tho world's wealth Mud a new Industry for tho employ ment of labor. The now Coos liny mill will In the only ono of Its kind In the world op crated ontlroly from waste and pro ducing 30 to 40 tons of pnper pulp dally nnd then iih by-products 1G.000 gallons or alronoi, 4 40 tons of tur pentine nnd 300 tons of renin annu ally. All these Important articles iu the world of commerce aro now going to waste and would bo continue hut for tho far-seeing genius of C. A- Smith, who In IiIh almost marvol ous manner is having solved the problems of science as well as of liuslncss organization. Tho new mill will bo ns Important In Its way ns tho great lumber fac tory that preceded It. It will mark a new epoch iu the manufacture of paper In A morion nnd In this, way will be of nddltlonul value not only In advertising the resources of Coos Day but In establishing this place as tho home of a man who by his accom plishments In Industry and commerce In achieving n name nnd fame for himself as tho economic genius of his century. Coos Hay has just cause to be proud of being tho home of Mr. C, A. Smith. I WITH THE : I TOAST AND TEA J RUMORED SALE OF BIG TRACT It was reported horo today that F. A. Wnrnor, son-ln-Iaw of C. A. Smith, had purchased on olghty-acro tract near tho Blanco townslto from Claude Nnsburg and othors for 140,000. Tho tract is said to bo near a tract purchased last Bum mon by Geo. F, Murcu and J. V. Smoaton. The report could not bo con Armed today. Thoro is somo ontcrprlso la tho oastorn doalor who transports and dollvors fish by aoroplano. But somo of his customors consider It scaly buslnoss which makes IlBh como high, although thoy look for a drop soon. GOOD EVENING "Every ono has his bosottlng fault mat is no disgrace- to him, but It is a dlsgraco If ho dooa not find It out, and ovorcomo It." Dr. Livingston. THE SPUING ZEPHYR I am tho gontlo breozo That blows in spring Tho thing Concerning which tho pools sing Tholr melodies. I flip hats through tho street; I rout Tho microbes out And solid them forth to moot Tho man who falls to closo . Ills mouth or ubo his noao For breathing purposes. I mako Tho hobblo skirt Look like a pair of tights. I'm wild and froo; I break Through windows, nnd I flirt With destiny. I am tho gontlo brcezo; I scatter dust Upon tho wicked and the Just; Whon buds begin to bulgo I rip off signs and uproot trees. I causo old pooplo'a bones to nchu; I make Tho rich dopnrt for warmer cllmps, And carelessly betimes I cause tho poots to Indulgo In rhapsodies. S. E. KISEIt. Thoro Is a wldo dlfforonco botweon a driving rain nnd a driving roln. Wo do not always moot misfor tune; quite as often It overtakes us. Food for thought Is moro satisfy ing nnd fattening than is thought for food. It wns tho busy hour of 4 Whon from a city hardware storo Emerged a gentleman who boro 1 hoo 1 spado 1 largo rako. From thoro our horo promptly wont Into n sood establishment. And for theso things his monoy spont 1 pock of bulbs 1 lot of assorted shrubs 1 quart of vcgotablo floods, Ho has a garden under way And If ho's fairly lucky, say, Ho'll havo about tho last of May 1 tomato vine, 1 ogg plant. 1 radish. A Missouri woman has been award od $2 for tho loss of hor husband's affections. That's almost ns much as tho affection of a political frlond Is worth theso days. POULTItY-KEEPING .I'ltOFlTAlil.n Thoro nro somo Coos Bny husbnuds who nro such poor provldors the they can't furnish oven an excuso. Any little Elk that's a nlco llttlo Elk, Is tho right llttlo Elk for mo: Ho don't havo to look llko an Englo or a AIOOBO, H a good llttlo Elk he should l Tho girls all cry "Why, Hollo, Bill."' Whon thoy sit upon his kneo; Any llttlo Elk that's n nice llttlo Elk, Is tho right llttlo Elk for mo. E. D. McA-T-U-R. Few of us llko tho folks who find us out. A GRKAT INDUSTRY It Is more difficult to shoo n horso than It U to blioo a lion. There once wns an amorous Mr., Who on mooting n girl always kr.; nut ouo night, nt tho gato, Ho found whon too Into, He'd been kissing tho chauffeur's, black Br. He felt that It would havo boon br., To have swoonod tho first tlmo ho mr.s But the brunotto liked tho tnsto As ho clrclod hor wnlfit, And she mndo It qulto easy to gr. Wonder If somo Coos Bay girls novor Hinllo bocnuso thoy nro afraid to light up tholr faces through fear of sotting off tho powder? RECENTLY Tho Times printed a news hem to the effect that F. S. Dow had made the largest singlo shipment of eggs over mndo It consisted of one l-u.idrod and !tioniniVr,b"l!u"nrVUMrv "' "" WgA mi)- i-hm's mm was consigned iu British Columbia This shipment brought the poul- tiows Tine We offer One Hiindreil Dollar. iinur.r.1 ... ,'y,a,u'l,lrrli tlit cannot be cureil bs lUII'n Catarrh I'lirv. K. J. UHKNKY A CO., Toledo, O. WV, llu uiutenlKiint, havo known K. 1, One ney (or ilielaj, 15 yinrn. ami believe him it jei'tly honorable in a biulne irainacllon Hymen of Coos County $300. It Is Important iih marking the beginning of what Is destined to he the dovelop- NAItilM), Kinnan .1 Marvin. i, . ,. . iV.",,f,.',e HfffRl'l. Toledo, O. i. ""S ' V.Urrl Cl.,re ',,,,Vt'" Internally, all., ItiKiUreolly upon the blood and minima ure faces of the n).tim TtfitlninnlaU ent free ti'imii lSr bl"f. t",d b'u drueght. .v in riuiij - i-iii ior conMmi tlatlon, " B "iinil iim: Ii5iw r w itesiaisco. i-ssS niyjjHA .m ID I ESS FLOUR Snow Drift Flour Highest Quality Prof. Dryden AiIvIhcm Farmers to In crease Mocks nnd Got Moro Eggs. COBVALL1S, Ore, April 20. "Thoro hns boon an enormous In crcaso in tho production of eggs and poultry In tho fltnto In tho past two years, but In splto of this tho demand has far execcdod tho Bupply, and prices aro still as high ns over," said Prof. James Dryden, of tho Oregon Agricultural Collcgo, in discussing tho object of tho present tour of tho poultry demonstration, car sent out ovor tho Southern Pacific lines by tho college. "If tho farmers of Oregon would keep, on nu avorago, 100 lions in stead or about 60, it would shut out tho Imports and ndd $4,000,000 or G, 000,000 a year to the wealth of tho stato. "Tho purposo of the demonstrate, i car is to stimulate a groator pro duction of poultry and oggs. Tho Quickest and host way Is to lucreahn tho flocks of tho farmers rather than to havo poultry-kcopors start largo ogg farms. Tho domnnd cannot bo met by tho establishment of largo, (xcluslvoly poultry farms. If tho gonornl farmer goes out of tho egg producing business thoro will booh bo un ogg famine possibly a serious n nanclnl panic. "Though thoro nro opportunities for profit along special lines In pout-try-keoplng, tho mnrkot for special ties Is limited, and It would be folly to advise evoryouo to go Into special lines. I am free to confess that wo have kept moro pooplo out of tho poultry business than have gone Into it as nn exclusive buslnoss. I have received great numbers of lettois during tho past year from all pnrtB of tho stato as well as from other states. In which the writers stated that they woro going into tho poultry business on n large scale, and u Inrg majority of thorn said they know nothing of tho business. Our plain duty was to advlso caution. If every one of them had gone Into the busl-' iiees ns thoy Intonded and Invested tholr all In It, It Is safe to say that thoro would have beon thousands of dollars lost In ovory county of tho stato, and tho poultry business would havo rocolved a black oyo. "Poultry-keeping Is not a difficult buslnoss unless wo muke it so. If conducted along sane, common-sense lines, thero Is profit In It. Tho tj points on which special emphasis Is laid in tho demonstration car aro feeding for eggs and housing. Egg rations are on display, feeding charts show results of experiments, breeding chnrts show results of breeding for oggs, dlfferont grades and qualities of eggs aro oxhlbltod, marketing possibilities nro demon strated, nnd the equipment for suc cessful hatching nnd brooding of chicks Is displayed, Tho walls of tho car aro covered with signs and charts containing lossons in practical poul try-keeping. A 'knock-down' colony houso Is taken along mid set up out sldo tho enr at each stop, "While chickens may be made to do woll in different houses, it may bo said Iu favor of the colony system and free range that thero Is no noted poultry district In the United States whore poultry-keeping has boon per manently successful, where the col ony houso system was not followed. Tho colony house, moreovor, wns the houso used at the Oregon Experiment Station last year for tho hens that made tho highest egg records ever made In tho unltea States so far as official or authentic record Is con cerned. Tho demonstrators on the car explain how thoso hens wore housed and cared for, and answer any questions ns to their feeding and treatment." WJb y You- Should Ride aura I VER JOHNSON BICYCLE It is just as good as a bicycle can be made. It is the standard of the world. It is the most scientifically designed. It has taken the lead for 28 years. It will run for years without a particle of wear. It rides easier than any other bicycle on the market, You pay for nothing except essential bicycle value. You take no risk we absolutely guarantee every wheel sold. Pionieer Hardware C0 .1!J() FltONT BT. Agents MAIlSIIPIIiLD, OREOOX More New Ones New Suits Every Week Wo nro still receiving latest In tho very Ready-to-wear Suits for men From $8.50 $25.00 Thoy not only have our personal gunranteo, but wo look attor them ns long as thoy last It's to our Interest ns well ns yours. FIXUP raishfield IsTorth Bend. Electric Servants Expect No Days Out Electric washing machines and vacuum clean ers arc ready to perform their work quickly and well all the time. In many small households there ib too much work for the housowife a large pnrt of it can be performed better electrically and leave much time free for more important tilings and recreation. x Any servant problqm is easily solved in the electric home. If your home is not wired, a telephone call to 178 will bring an expert to explain our proposition. OREGON POWER CO. n Ancona and Sicilian Buttercups Ilest for eggs: tho best strain; beautifully mnrked. Eccs for hatch. Ing. Salmon Fnverolles, tho winter layers, quick growors. l K. OInzler, North Ilend. Phono 299. Telephone 178 Lynn Lambeth Prod Nemlo Cadillac Auto Service Good Cars Reasonable Rates All Night Sorvlco Careful driving assured. Phono DIanco Pool Room, 231-R until 11 P. M. Aftor 11 P. M. phono Palace nestaurant. R.J, WhyNot? Pure Milk and Cream r.iY?.,nro tho on'y "B STERN M.I.NO our milk products, and wo furnish: MILK AT 23c PER GALLON". CREAM AT 20c PER PINT. CREAS1 AT 2,1c BANK STATEMENT OK CONDITION OP FLANAGAN & BENNETT MARSIIEIELI), OREGON. At (lie closo of business, April IK, 1012. HRHmrnnRS Loans nnd Discounts ''!!'!!!!! Hanking Houso '! Cash and Exchanges W'm" ' Total H',,! ..... . . . . LIABILITIES. . ., Valium niocK pam in T i siilfl Surplus and Undivided Profits Ji'J il Total IWW1 Willi' PINT. RUTTERMILK GALLON. PER AT 10c PER SNAP Three nice high dry lots In Ilank addition to North Bond. All clear and lovel. ilest lots in the addition; can be had now for $G0U. E. S. GBAR, room 22, First NntlonnH onnK. Attend Mnrshfleld Imsebull club's nenellt dance at KuiiltV Hall Sutnr. flnv nli.lit I p (,..., Deliveries 8 A. M. and 2 P. M. rnone 73. Coos Bay Ice & Cold Storage Co. Don't be surprised If you have an attack of rheumatism this sprlnir lUul lb t,ne1ectod parts freely, h Chamberlain's Liniment and It will soon d sannpnr. su .... . ! dealers. w"" "' " CONDENSED 8TATESIENT Of The First National Bank of Coos Bjj At the close of business April 18, 1012. Loans nml rilscmintn ' ' .ul --..",.---- fillip nni.o .-.... , 1.1 ''".. uuuuo, nuiiauiB nuu oeuui moo, .,,,,,,., 5 601 u. a. uonas to secure circulation -. .j mJi Real estate, furniture nnd fixtures iililll1. Cash and sight exchange L Totnl. f" A,.rt.u.iir..p. Capital stock paid In ' j.Jll'l omniuB anu unuiviuod protits j51ciir Circulation, outstanding iiMlJ' Deposits ? .. 11---' Thi-i iun , .'.,.' .'' V'l' '.'. '.' ' ' " V '..' ' '.' ".."'.''.' Mlv Of S"KIC! iu uuuiiiun 10 capital biock tuo inuiviauai " ers Is $100,000.00. IVTKIIKRT iaii rw mifd avr ctVlVGS DEP0S" , n ... .. v VkfrFi n, o, uuAtui.tju, president, M. c. iiuv'i DORSET KRHITZHIt, Cashier. iMENaSSfflSSf I ' ALL KINDS OF JOB PRINTING 00NE AT THE TIMES'