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About The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957 | View Entire Issue (March 14, 1913)
affwrr.; THE COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHFIELD, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1913. EVENING EDITION. 3!r ii! , -- i. AUTO FARE 20c Round Trip between Marshfield and North Bend MARSHPIELD- NORTH BEND AUTO LINE Gorst &. King, Props. Pictures &framing Walker Studio FOR QUICK WORK, FOR PROMPT WORK, FOR GOOD WORK, Telephone the old reliable Coos Bay Steam Laundry We always deliver the goods. Phone 57-J Marshfield 15, Star Transfer and Storage Co. U prepared to do all kinds of hauling on ihort notice. W moot all tralnt ind boat and wo aloo havo tbo lat03t trie Reynolds Piano Movor. W isirinteo our work. L.H.Heisier,ProP. Phnn Wt-Tt. 120-7 'O-L New and Second Hand furniture old on Uio Installment plan. IIAIUILVGTO.V, DOYLE CO., .101! Front St. TbOBt 840-L Miirnliflold, Or. Two Lots at Bunker Hi on corner ot county mad. Centrally located. Only $CGO. AUG. FRIZEEN at new location 160 Front Str. Mnrshflold PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY DEXJAMI.V OSTL1ND, Consulting Engineer ami Architect. I'hono 103-L Mnrshfleld, Ore T M. WIU011T, r coxTitAarou and p k BUILDER tetlmates furnished on request nM and specifications furnlshod . ' An honest Job guaran teed. Phonn 1!?i.T QUVIA EDMAK, rm.,.1,. si'lw"o.TIioraiist Mentlllc Swedish Mussugo, Medio Gymnastics g3 8. Sllth 8t. l'l,nnn 205-R. JOEL 0STL1ND, B. BUth Street. Phone 103-L pEIUj IHLEY DALLINGER Rum., n 1,un,st and Teacher "Hldeace-Studlo, 237 So. Broadwa, Phone 18-L. VTM. 8. TURPEN, " ARCmTEOT Marshflold. nfwn D&. w, morrow, 171 rw Dentist. U Grime Building, oyer Grand -"" umc l'hone 820. X7 Q. CHANDLER, Architect. 801 and 3027 Coke Bulldta, "-"iciu, uregon. Dtt.A.j.iIENDnr,fl We tr. M?ern DenU1 IrtorB. orkMqUlvPP8d t0 d0 h,BQ clas lowL fhort not,c at the verj Ui?JilT Ex"mnatlon free. Jndler Hotel, phone 11CJ. Jnv 'ANT A "ESSEN b!e. U d0 ' Charges reason- " MONTGOMERY 'Estate and Insurance 2 North Front Street. '! i I Coos Bay Business College You know what you are worth today. What are you going to be worth five years from today? When we build a house we have a plan. When we build a ca reer, most of us putter, dawdle, dream dreams, and wait for some favorable breeze to waft us to harbor. Lack of business training is not only a handicap it is an absolute block to your advancement. Will you con sider this a little while you are building the man or woman who later will be YOU? Start right by starting NOW For something worth while. Positions in abund ance and no trained help. DAY ANDSNIGHT SCHOOL, Telephone 402. Oflice Phono 082 Donald MacKimtosIhi K1SAL ESTATE 'Frms TNSOJJANOR Opposite Grand Theater THE MERCHANTS4 AFE AninioiLmces Hits Removal from Its former quartern on Commercial Avenue Into the larger and more commodious roonm of tho Baltimore Cafe ?dtrhoeacdr which It will occupy hereaftor. i!i' !.' Tho Merchant's popular lunch counter has boon Installed. The same good cooking, the snmo clean, sanitary and prompt service, the same rcnRonnblo prices. Come In and sco mo In my now home. TheJMeirchaolfcs9 Cafe FRANK SMALLWOOD, Prop. Taxes! Taxes! Taxes! You have but a few days in which to pay your taxes and secure the three per eout discount. Give us a list of your property and we will see that they are promptly attended to. Tho First National Bank Of Coos Bay fLANAGAN & Capital and Surplus $100,000 Oldest Bank in Coos County. Interest Paid on Time deposits. Taxes can be Paid at this Bank. Abstracts, Real Estate, Fire and Marine Insurance Title Guarantee and Abstract: Co. " HENRY SBNGSTACKEN, Mgr. Coqullle Offlco Phono 191 Platting Lands a specialty. Farms Timber Coal and Marshfield Office 14-J. General Agents "EASTSIDB." C. A. Smith Lumber & Mfg. Co. RETAIL DEPARTMENT LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES, MOULDINGS, SASH AND DOORS. ROOFING PATER, ETC. CUT THE FUEL RILL IN TWO PHONE 100. "Wesidonfic phone Oil BANDON, ORE. BENNET BANK BY USING OUR .WOOD. 183 SOUTH BROADWAY II CITY UNDER F Inwiitiir Would lloimc u Million 1'crsoim on Co-Opcratlvc I'lim. (San Francisco Chronicle.) A house 1 000 nillcH long, which will be the homo of 1,000.000 peo ple, with street car service In the basement and a boulevard on tho roof. Ih the startling prophecy of Kdgnr Chnmbless, 1715 Pacific uvo ntie, who has como to this city from New York to Interest the exposi tion authorities in his pot project ltoadtown. Tho Inventor of this schome, who believes that ho has solved the so ciological problems arising from the congested condition of our larger cities, plans not only to build a section of ltoadtown on the exposi tion grounds for exhibition pur poses, but also proposes to con struct near San Francisco the nu cleus ot what he believes will be the city of tho future. Hy uniting housing and transpor tation Into one mechanism and by gradually building out on tho land Instead of up In the nlr, Chamblcss is confident that his Ideas will cul minate In a noiseless, dustlcss, smokeless, horseless, trustless, graft less city. Co-operative housekeeping, It Ie claimed, will do much to Icbbcii the cost of living for tho "ltoadtown ers," and public utilities of all sorts will lie furnished wholesale from central plants. Wnlor, lighting and Heating facilities, power and sew erage will he provided for by means of pipes niid wires tapping tho trunk lines in tho subway beneath the house. Yards and garden plots will bo available to each household and each will bo connected by prlvuto stair way with tho subway through which monorail transportation facilities will be provided. Tho Inventor claims that tho ex pi use attending tho construction of such a city would not exceed $1, imio.ooo per mile, and that the pro ject lu mechanically practicable. Havo your Job printing dono at Tho Times offlco. Don't Blame Your Over Worked Stomach When your stomach will not digest food, tho worst thins you can do U to take a lot of dlgostlvo medicines. True, they givo temporary relief, hut your stomach Is tho sufferer. Lou of p petlto. Indigestion, dypopila and head achos can only bo permanently relieved by removing tho cause. In many cues, various remedies taken to relievo these conditions result In mining tho stomach and preventng It from digesting food In a natural way. If you want your stomach to do Its own work properly, without resorting to artificial digestives or predlgeatea foods, use Jayno's Tonic Vermifuge. Take small doses regularly, preferably beforo meals. In a little tlmo your stomach will again do Its own work and you will eat heartily, keep well and enjoy living. Jayno's Tonic venal tugo Is not a digester In lUelf. hut It tones up tho stomach and Intestines, giving you all tho nutriment and strength from the food you eat. Many forms of supposed indigestion are tho result of intestinal parasites, for which Jayno's Tonic Vermifuge Is unsurpassed. Insist on Jayno's; accept no other. Millions havo praised It for more than eighty years. Sold hy drug gists everywhere. Dr. D. Jayno & Son. Philadelphia, Pa. City Auto Service Good Cars, Caroful Drivers ant reasonable chargos. Our motto 'Will go anywhoro at any time.' Stands Blanco Hotol and Blancc Cigar Storo. Day Phones 78 and it Night Phono 46.' nWtTCrcn OOnnAI.V. nrotirlMnr- W. S. BROWN J A. II. IIODGINS Marshfield Paint, (Sb Decorating Co. Estimates Furnished. I'hono 187-L Marshfield. Ore. The Sign of Good Candy Always You Auto Call Foote PHONE 144-J NIGnT A;D DAY Stand front of Blanco Billiard Parlor TWO NEW OAR8 After 11 P. M. Phone 5-J. Residence Phono .8-J. Careful Drivers : Good Cars NOTICE TO ELECTORS. Notice Is hereby given that a special municipal election will bo hold in tho City of Marshflold, Coos County, Oregon, on Tuesday, tho 18th day of March, 1913, be tween the hours of 8 n. m. and 7 p. in. In tho Hall over tho Palaco Restaurant, and formerly known as tho Socialist Hall, to voto on tho following questions: "Do you approvo of tho Terminal Railway dealings with tho Southern Pacific interest with a view to tho transfer to It of Its presont steam franchise In tho City of Marshflold." "Stall tho City contribute $150 monthly to tho support of the" Coos Bay Band." JOHN W. BUTLER. Rocordor, HsKirJsiiT BPTiTl fninsW DAIRYING IN Henry A. Wallace In Wallnce'n Farmer. Switzerland Is preeminently n live stock country. Dairying ranks ns one of her greatest Industries, yet In all Switzerland there Is only 9 slightly more than half ns inuny milk cows ns there are In Iowa, or horses, sheep and swine, there are only about one-tenth uh many lu Switzerland as there are In 'own. Tho secret of tho Swiss farmer's suc cess Is to bo found lu a large yield per cow. For Instance, lu 101 1, the average product of the 700,533 SwIbs cows was given at G000 pounds of milk for tho year. The average Iowa cow produces less than 4000 pounds lu a year. I will venture to say, nlthough the Swiss cow eats much more rough feed than the Iowa cow, that the Iowa cow eats more grain. But the Swiss farmers are successful, not only because their cows producu large quantities of milk, but bo causo they handle what milk Is pro duced Is an economical manner. Not quite half of It Is sold In n fresh statu to be consumed in tho hotels and cities, .Most of the rest of it Is made Into cheese, condensed milk, milk chocolate and butter. In 1010, little Switzerland export ed over $12,000,000 worth of cheese, nud $0,000,000 worth of condensed milk. Shu used at home $1,000,000 or these products. Dur ing the same year the creameries of Iowa sold outside the state over $20,000,000 worth of butter. Sev en hundred nud sixty-live tliousauu Iowa cows, almost exactly tho same number as in Switzerland, contribu ted to these creameries. When wo consider that the Iowa row only yielded about two-thirds us much as the Swiss cows, we come to con clusion that the Iowa creameries are moro profitable than Swiss cheesu factories and condensed milk plants. At any rate, the Iowa far mer gets nearly twice us much far n quart of milk as the Swiss far mer. There arc two main breeds of cattle lu Switzerland, tho SImmcn thaler and tho Brown bwlss. At the Zolllkofen dairy school near Borne, there are lino Slmmcnthal crs. Big. yellowish brown, large Horned, heavy boned, thoy uro like no cattle wo ever saw before. Some of tho cows weigh 1800 pounds nud atnnd higher than a man's shouldor. Large paunches they havo, and meat, big udders. A corn bolt dairy farmer wouldn't think much of them at first sight, but really they are good dairy cowb. Wo asked Doctor Peters, tho di rector, about the yield, and find that at tho school farm all cows must come up to 8800 pounds of milk n year or bo sold. This Is a higher standnrd than Is required of the Lincolnshire Ited herd of John Hvuns, or the milking Short horn or Jersey herd of Lord Roth schild. It is a higher standard than that required by any of our corn belt dairymen. But then you must remombor thnt one of tho Simmon thaler cows weighs almost twlco us much nud eats nearly twlco as much feed as a Jersey. On tho other hand, tho Slmmonthnler will turn largo quantities of coarse hay and grass Into milk, whereas n .lorsey require moro grnln feed. Tho Sim menthalers should be good for parts jf tho Pulled States, but few have been brought over. Tho Simmon thaler Is moro nearly a triple pur pose brood than any other. After tho milking days are over. It Is THE MAN AND THE MULE. I A man Is n crcaturo; so Is a mule. Tho mulo bus all tho advantage Hu don't havo to shut off the alarm. You can traco a initio's podlgroo; you can't a man's. A mulo goctj to work because somebody drives him to It; a man works because ho don't know any hotter. When n mulo cats ho don't havo to wash tho dishes; when a man oats ho hna to bogln figuring. Some times ho don't always ilguro right. When ho pulls up to tho trough there's no food lu It. A man has to hunt hay for both tho mulo and hlmsolf. When a mule goes to bed ho sleeps whon n man goes to bed ho thinks. Ofton a man don't get much tlmo then to think. I know n marrlod man who took off his clothos to walk. Ho woro a path In threo carpets keoplng tho noise down. He did most of his thinking In his baro foot. Ho nover said, but I guossed what ho was thinking about. Whon a mulo gots ready ho stops. Whon a man stops ho backs up. If he backs up too often ho has to move. Whon a mulo wants to rest ho rests whon a matt wunts to rest ho hos to work twlco as hard tho noxt day. A initio don't havo any pay days; ho don't have to get over them. Whon n mulo quits thoy bury him; whon a man quits they talk about him. It costs only llvo dollars to bury a mulo groat advantage for tho mulo. When a mulo kicks thoy pay attontlon to him; when a ninn kicks thoy shut oft tho gas. HOW TO CLEAR STUMP LAND. CloarltiK logged-off lands Is nn expensive oporntlon when underta ken by tho individual, many rem edies are being advocated by alt classes of people where land Is being cleared for settlement. It Is proposed by tho business men of Seattlo, Wash., to bond tho stato for a sufficient sum to buy up ail tho stumi) land In tho state, clear It, and then resell nt sufficiently ad vanced prices to pay uio uciuai cost of clearing. Tins migiu re sult In having tho work quickly done, but Is open to many criti cisms, such as extravagance, poor judgmont and graft, always closely allied to public work of this nature. Tho farmers ask tho state to manu facture blasting powder and dyna mite and furnish It at actual cost SWITZERLAND easy to put fat ou the tremendous frames of the cows. Or If tho horses nro hacking, they can bo hitched to tho manure cart. Draft meat and milk -the Slmmenthalor answers tho triple requirement of Swiss farmers better than any breed I know. All tho Slmmonthalors wo saw in Sltzerland wore kept lu tho barn the year around, in the summer green crops are hauled In to them, and lu tho winter hay Is fed. Very little grain Is given. Some of us thought It might bo a good thing for tho rougher parts of tho Now England states, ns well as parts of tho middle w'ost, whoro mere is plenty of rough feed nnd not much mill feed If tho Brown Swiss nnd tho Slmmenthalor breeds wore brought In. But at prosont thoro Is no chance of such Impor tations, for there Is foot and mouth disease In Switzerland and our gov ernment will not allow Swiss cnt tlo to como to tho United States. I don't envy tho SwIbs farmer. Most of his land Is hilly, rocky, sandy or clayey. It doesn't pay him to put much of his boIi In wheat, oats, or barloy. Tho problem of tho Swiss farmor la to mako his grass land yield ns much hay and green soiling cropB as possible, bo that he may feed his Slmmonthalcr and Brown Swiss cows as nearly as possible on nome-grown rough age, nnd not havo to buy moro hay and mill feeds. Tho Swiss farmer Is learning how to tako care of his milk mid cream, and to mako but ter and cheese. Ho has learned how to combine Into co-onorntlvn organizations to sell dairy products and to buy feed, fertilizers, otc. In little Switzerland, about a third tho size of Iowa, with about the satno numbor of fnrmors, thoro are 13 agricultural societies and 25 dairy soclotlcs. To look at tho soil, you thluk thnt tho Swiss farmers would havo a hard time of It. Nevertheless, ou what appears to us poor soil, they raise Btich good crops of hay and feed It In such a good way to their cows and market tho products of their cows through tho co-oporattvo societies In such nn economical man ner thnt the farmers as n class are qttlto prosperous, nud tho land Is valued at from $400 to $000 au acre. Swiss cheeses nro tho foremost ex port of Swiss farms. Wo visited several cheese factories (ICasorol, tho Swiss call' thorn) and saw row on row of big, flat cheeso, 100 to 300 pounds In weight. At tho dairy school of Zolllkoffon they told us thnt no girls were taught cbooso mnklng, ns In Scotland and England because these cheeses wero so heavy. At tho school factory, about I cents (20 centimes) wero paid for a quart of 3,5 cout milk. Rennet nnd heat nro added. Tnen as soon us tho curd forms, It Is separated and prossod for a day. For two days tho cheeso aro kopt In brine. Then follows curing for 12 to 14 weeks, at tho cud of which 22 cents a pound must be had, it any pro tit Is to bo made. At one place wo stopped thoy were buying groott cheeses from tho farmora. This fin ishing plant kept tho groen chooses for about throe weeks at a toinpor aturu of about 70 degrees, and thou stored them tul ripe at a tempera ture of 50 dogroes. All tho tlmo they were well snltod. AiiBtrla, Germany and Franco aro tho host customers for Swiss cheese. Tho United Stutes buys some, but a duty of six cents a pound koops out much of it. SrtSAVWVSA HERE IS SOMETHING BIG ABOUT THE MAN WHO OWNS AN AUTOMOBILE. You somehow feel that ho Is on Joying something you aro not, and Is more conversant with things In gen eral as a result. Whon ho enters your office, pulling off his gauntlets and tips buck his hat from his healthy looking face, you uncon sciously feel ho Is somebody and i treat him accordingly. At important business mooting his alertness and healthy interest protects his Intorost. His mind has not hnd to endure tho bodily Jost ling nnd crowding thnt yours had. It's tho samo In tho evening whon you hoar his Honk! Honk! outside, denoting his arrival and you opeu tho door to admit tho "BIQ" man's family all sparkling from tholr rldo nnd cagor for the Joys of tho even ing. Possibly a frlond of yours who owns a car gives you a "LIFT." You step In with alacrity, settle yourself among the ensy cushions and escape that long, tedious, tiresome, Journey home, enjoy renl rest after tho hard day's work. You broatho deop, sit up and tako notice The smooth, steady, even glide of tho car puta now llfo In you. You notice tho passing buildings tho crowds on tho sldownlk going homo. You pity them having to walk, or stand In enra after working nil day. When you draw up In front of your home, you Jump out feeling fine. You bound up tho porch stairs, grcotlne your family eagorly. Tho evening meal Is Just right. You are hun gry. Tho evening passes swiftly and you sleop nil night llko a brick. This Is a tasto of what Is really en joyed by tho "Man Who Owns a Machine." That's tho way he feels all day. Ills lntorest in llfo, whether business or pleasure Is the culmina tion of tho pleasures nud health of a man of action. Can YOU afford to ho without an AUTOMIJLKT XJnru.nJnn, to anyouo who has a farm to clear. This is ull thoy ask, and being tho rooii most deeply Interested, they know what thoy want. Tho plan will doubtless receive attention from tho state. A FRESH 8TTTPLY of FRESH OLYMPIA OYSTERS JUST RE CEIVED. Free Delivery. PHONH your ORDER to PHONE 70-J. If you have anything to sell, rent, trade, or want help, try a Want A4,