The Coos Bay times. (Marshfield, Or.) 1906-1957, January 08, 1916, EVENING EDITION, Page SIX, Image 6

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I first haptist church I
nev. II. B. FosRott, Pastor
Residence, 210 Birch Ave.
Phono 123-.T.
!A1Ico TIcltoll, church 'clerk.
B. II. Patchott, Sunt. BIblo School.
Cnlondar of Services:
BIblo School, 10 a. in.
Morning Worship, 1 1 u. m. "Tlio
Law of Klmlncsa."
Evening sermon: "Tho Parable
Stories of the Master."
Eastsldo mission at 3 p. m.
B. Y. P. U. meeting, C:30 p. m.
Peoplo's Scrvlco, 7:30 p. in.
Prayor meeting, Thursday 7:1C
P- m.
All all welcome- to theso sor
tIccs. Our Invitation is especially
urgent to strangers In the city and
to thoso who havo no church homo.
4
I TO
UNITED HRETIIHBN CHURCH
NORTH HI2ND
'Mrs. R. N. Lowls. PaBtor
Sabbath School at 10 a. m.
Christian Endeavor at 7 p. rn.
Preaching at 11 a. m. and 8 p.m.
Prayor Meotlng Wednesday ove
rling at S o'clock.
I MNRHODIST EPISCOPAL.
Joseph Knotts, Pastor.
Sunday school at 10 a. m.
Epworth Leaguo at 6.30 . m.
Morning Sormon "A Character
ization of tho Holy Spirit."
Evonlng Sermon "Joy Cometh in
tho Morning."
Special music both morning nnd
evening with Prof. Gerald Hunt direc
tor of tho choir.
Junior Leaguo Sorvicc Thursday
afternoon at 3:4G.
Prayor Meotlng Thursday ovon
Ing nt 7:30 o'clock.
All aro oordlally Invited.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH.
Fourth and Market Streots I
R. E. Browning, Roctor-
9:30 a. in. Sunday School.
11 a. m. Holy Communion nnd
Sermon.
7:30 p.
Sormon.
in. Evening Prayor and
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
Sorvlcos Sunday 11 n. m.
Wednesday, 8 p. m., Auditorium
Public Library.
Sunday morning "Sacrament."
Sunday Schoo), 12 M, In Christ
Ian Sclonco Hall.
Reading Room opon dally oxcopt
Sunday and holidays, 1 4 p. m.
Christian Sclonco Hall 237 Third
St. North.
,
HAY PARK CIIAPIMj
E. II. Campbell, Pastor. I
.
2:30 p. in. Sunday School F. A.
SaccIiI, superintendent.
Preaching 7:30 p. in.
Mld-wcok prayer meeting, Wed
nesday, 7:30 p. in.
V' A
MAR8IIFIELD PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH j
Rov. J. S. Stubbloflold, PtiBtor
Chns. H. Lowry, clone of sosslona
A. L. Rutz, Tronsuror.
Mrs. Chaa. McKulght, president
Women's Auxiliary.
Miss Mary Kruno, orgnnlBt.
J. T. Brand, Supt. Sunday School.
Sunday school, 10 a. in.
11 a. m. Sormon No. G, "Fun
damental Lions of Cod."
7:30 p. m. Sermon "Tho Be
ginning or Wludom."
Prayor meotlng 7:30 p. in. Thurs
day. ,
SWEDISH EVANGELICAL
LUTHERAN CHURCH.
4
uov. liongston
Corner Third and Commercial,
Rosldonco 291 Highland. Phono
SM-R.
9:4G a. in. Sunday Soliool.
NORWEGIAN LUTHERAN.
Rov. R. O. Thorpo
Rov. R. O. Thorpo, Pnstor I
Phono 370 J.
Realdonco 87-1 So. 7th St. I
4
Sunday Soliool 10:00 p. in.
Sormon 7: Hi p. m.
Because tlio pastor Is at
tuck Inlet Sunday morning,
will bo no mooting hi North
on Sunday.
,
Kon
thoro Bend
I
I
CATHOLIC CHURCH
NORTH IIIJND
Rov. Win. Hognn, Pastor.
Address Moray Hospital. Tolo
phono 201.
Sunday sorvlco First mass, C;30
a. m.; Inst mass, 9 n. in. Rosary
and benodlctlon, 7:30 p. in,
OATIIOLIO CHURCH I
MARSH Fl Kid)
Rov. II. J, McDovitt, pabtor; Rov.
M, Wallace, assistant.
Address, 342 South Sixth street.
Phono 245.
Sundny Sorvlcos First mass, 8 n
m.; htgh mass, sormon and beno
dlctlon, 10:30.
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. A. S. Hlsey. Pastor.
North Rond
Tha services Sunday will bo ai
follows;
Sunday School at 10 a. m,
11:00 a. m Sormon.
Vesper Circle and Epworth League
at 7 p. m,
THE
School Notes
MAKHIIFIHLD Hl'IIOOL NOTES
Tho second sonicBtor begins Janu
ary 24.
Classes for beginners will be start
ed in tho grades Jnnuary 2 lth.
Examinations In tho grades will
bo given Wednesday afternoon,
Thursday, and Friday of tho third
wcok in Janunry.
Tho eighth grado stato examina
tions will bo glvon Thursday nnd
Friday, January 13 and 11 tit tho
Central bcIiooI.
Tho High schools of the county bo
gan tho regular scries of basket ball
Vrlday night. Marshflohl met North
Bend on tho local floor.
Congress announces Its next pro
gram for January 11th.
Tho January Friday Morning En
tertainment will bo In charge of Mrs.
Buggo. Sho will glvo a literary ro
cltol, Janunry 28th.
Students expecting to outer tho
High school for tho second Bomcstor
should plan to lo so on January
24th.
George Graham entered tho com
mercial department as spoclal stu
dent this week.
A courso In Commercial Law con
sisting of text book work supplo
montod by lectures on Bpecial topi-;
by business men of tho city Is being
planned by Mr. Barugar. Hour of
meeting to bo nnnounccd later. Tho
courso will begin tho second senica
tcr. L. W. Turnbull of Bnmlou Is n
commlttco of ono to secure n com
mencement speaker for tho High
schools of tho county. Tho High
schools work together on this so as
to eliminate as much cxponso ns pos
sible. Mr. Turnbull lms already be
gun his correspondence.
A Grades Athletic Leaguo wltn
tests and rownrds for physical pro-
flccncy Is being worked out by tho
grado boys, Mr. Grannls and Mr.
Tledgen, Tho Leaguo will hold In
door nnd outdoor contests also dur
ing tho school year.
Contributions for tho School Mu
seum keep coming In. During his
trip homo Mr. Barngar arranged for
tho shipment of a largo pleco of pet
rified wood.
Tho school will bo pleased to re
rclvo contributions for Its musouni
from any one. It will guarantee
that every thing accepted will bo giv
er tho best of enro and protection.
Beginning with tho second Homes
ter, now chiBBos for FrcBhnion will
bo formed In History, and English.
Classes will tbngln In geometry,
trigonometry, commorclul geogra
lliy. A Qhort Lived Newspaper.
Tho first newspaper' ovor published
In America never got beyond Its first
Issue. It was called Public): Occur
rences and appeared In Boston Sept.
25, 1000. It contained a promise to
publish in Its uoxt Issue the names of
all tho liars In Boston, and the author
ities, taking cogulznnco of tho threat,
wisely forbade tho publication. The
Boston News Letter wns tho llrst Jour
nnl to bo regularly published on this
continent. It was started lu 1701 nnd
wns followed by tho American Weekly
.Mercury In 1'hllndclphln hi 1710. Eng
lish Journalism Is only thlrty-ttvo years
older than American Journalism, tlio
London Oar.ctto. an olTlcIiil publication,
having been founded In 1005.
The Onion.
The onion has been so long In culti
vation that Its original form Is not def
initely known. There aro so called
wild onions that grow lu the woods.
Nobody ever tastes them hut once, and
there Is about the taste no suggestion
that cultivation or anything elso could
ever mal;o them grateful to the human
palate. In all probability the onion Is
u native of western Asia and adjacent
parts of Africa xlnco It I mentioned
lu old Egyptian writings mid tlio Pen
tateuch. A Dirties Dutch City.
Rotterdam, tho city of EriiMnus, was
described by Thomas Hood as
II SOrt .
.. .. !.... ..., . . .
of utlgar onlco." A more pleasing I
tupresslon. howoier, is preserved In a
letter from Lady Mary Wortley Men.'
tngti in iiid to her frloiul tho Count-1
ess of Mar. "All the streets nro paved i
with broad stones, and before tho moan.
est urtlQcers' doors aro seats of various'
colored marbles. Tho place Is so neat. I
l.v kept that I will assuto von I u-nlu..,i I
all over tho town yesterday in mv slln. I
.. . . .1.1 .. '
jiers wiiueut receiving oue spot of dirt. ,
" '
nil you may see tho Dutch mndta
washing tho pavement of tho street
with more application than our malda
I bestow upon our bedclminbers."
Empire Service. Thoro will bo a
sirvlco In St. Luko'H Church Entplrt
tomorrow afternoon at :t:30.
CHRISTIAN CHURCH I
Cor. Sixth nnd Central.
Victor P. Morris, Pastor ,
Sorvlcos as follows at the Church, i
corner Sixth and Central:
Regular rvlces over Sunday.
10 a. m Sunday School.
1 1 u. m. Preaching and com
munion. 0:110 p. m. Chrlstlun Endeavor.
7:30 p m Evangelistic Sermon
You are cordially Invited to attend
these meetings.
CM)S BAY TIMES, MARSHFIEI.D, OREGON. SATURDAY,
CHANGED 0NE LETTER.
How a Sorloua Political Crisis In Cana
da Wno Averted.
At the period when HrlUali Columbia
wns threatening to withdraw from lhi
Dominion of Cnmulu boeauoo the Car
narvon Hi'ttlcmenl hail been ignored
by the Mackenzie administration the
Into Lord Dnrferln tool; part In it. pub
lic function In Quiihee.
Willie the procession wns moving
through the principal streets n gentle
iiuiii, breathless with excitement, hur
ried tip to Ills excellency's eairlngo to
nay a "rebel" arch hud been placed
across tho mad so as to Identify the
viceroy with the approval of the (lis
loyal Inscription thereon.
"Can you tell me what words lliero
are on the nrch?" quietly linked Dnr
ferln. "Ob, yes I" .replied his Informant.
"They tiro 'Carnarvon Tcrin.s or Sepa
ration.' "
"Send the committee to me." com
manded his excellency. "Now, gentle
men," snld he, with n stnllo to the com
mittee, "I'll go under your beautiful
nrch on one condition. I won't ask you
to -do much, nnd I beg but a trilling fa
vor. I merely nsk that yon alter one
letter In your motto. Turn the S Into
nn It ninko it 'Carnarvon Terms or
Reparation' nnd I will gladly pass un
der It."
The committee yielded, nnd eventu
ally Dufforln contrived to smooth over
the dinicultlcs and to rcconcllo the mal
contents. SENSES OF TREES.
Somolhlng Almost Human In Some of
the Plant' Actions.
Mr. James Rodwoy, who Is tho cura
tor of the British Guiana museum nnd
an eminent botanist, declares that
plants havo at least thre of our llvo
senses feeling, taste and smell nnd
that certain tropical trees smell wntcr
from n distance and will move straight
toward it.
But trees not In tho tropics enn do ns
well. A resident of nn old Scotch
'mansion, says a writer in tho Scots
man, found tho wnsto plpo from the
bouse repeatedly choked. Lifting tho
blabs lu the basement paving, he dis
covered that tho pipe wns completely
encircled by poplur roots. They be
longed to n tree that grew some thirty
yards away on tho opposite side of the
house.
Thus tho roots had moved steadily
toward tho bouse and had penetrated
below tho foundation nnd across tho
basement until they reached their goal,
mo wnsio pipe, jw rcor. away, -men ,
they had pierced n cement Joining and j
had worked their way In long, taper
ing lengths Inside the plpo for n con
siderable distance beyond tho house.
Thero seems something almost hu
man In Htich unerring instinct and per
severance In surmounting obstacles.
And Yet They Say Authors Aro Poor.
Authors may nut now spurn tho of
fer of money for their work, but they
really do sometimes full to cash checks,
according to the cashier of the Century
company. "I don't know what they
do with the checks," ho said In com
plaint to u friend the other day, "un
less they ft'iimo them. Though ac
knowledgments havo proved tho re
ceipt of tho checks, I nm tilwuys carry
ing on the books corresponding ac
counts that I can't close up for mouths,
sometimes years. I remember espe
cially one check Issued to n famous
actor and author. Ho died u number
of years ago. Tho check was niado
out anew to the estate. Still it Is tin
cashed. Thoro Is more than ono au
thor I'd bless if he-it is usunlly ho
would only go and get Ids money."
Ready For tho Worst.
"A woman In a palish whero I lived,"
said an English clergyman, "used each
day to prepare herself for the worst.)
I was complliuentlni; her one day on '
tlio extreme tidiness of the house even yews before the exodus of the .Tews,
early lu the mornluc There Is also n claim, according to
" Yos.' she said; M alwayrt liken to Hone, that tho problom wiih solved by
avo my betlrooins done bearly, for, as I a discovery of Hippocrates, the geom
1 alius Hot, you never known what may j elrlclan of Chins not the phyxlclnu
'tippou. 'ow soon one of tho children w0 It. C. Now, the efforts of IIIppoc-
may tie nrniixiit 'nine lu a lit or wltn
a broken leg, anil, art 1 alius he.. It
don't mutter what 'nppcuH, so long nn
you've got u bedroom lu put 'em into.' "
Cornhlll Magazine.
Chivalry.
"Do you Know," said the particularly ,
well groomed and elaborately vlva ,
clous lady In tho full bloom of her sec-
i ond voutb. "that I havt tho most won. I
,l..rl.ll .HI..1. t. I.. tl.n .....1.1.1 .1... ......
',, III I.MIIIVIIVI III UIU , Villi IIIU H.-II'
um.Mt llLlirtt)(l ot OIlly of K,,rilomrHi
hat of men? lie bus always mado mo I
up n very special bouquet on my birth-!
day nnd presented It to me lu person,
Rut over Mueo I was thirty well, be'a
"ly given me u birthday bouquet ev
W ,1,' year."-Now York Post,
Hcroos and Villains.
s," "ro twt umo m',ws u-v ,n i)CT'
flirtllfltlMt. it t tint .l linn.dum K
..... ... ......n..., .....
llllltft lui luull ai iiir.iu, Hunt ftt iirtiirMiii.
must lie biiiw befoie they can perforin
It; fcu UieJ weie not inade villains by
tho (iiiiiiiilsMion of a crime, but were
villains before they committed It. Rus.
kin.
Is This So, Ladles?
"Thoy say that a Mnrtlan year has
over UQU days."
"PoaMlhly It Is In Martian years that
our ladles give their ayes." Hoston
Tiwuseiipt.
Solved. i
Kuini:r vvimi tvmiM i.nin.Ai. it n i
Irresistible, iowk unit no inunm'.ii.i.i
body? Itocker The mule would kick
Itself. New York Sun. '
intelligence Is the mother of good
hiek.-UenJauihi I'moUlln.
. ,
ii
I TIMES WANT ADS t
t GET RESULTS X
$?
No Lonnor n "Corn Belt."
Tho "corn belt" used to bo n strip of
country running generally from Penn
sylvania to Kansas, nnd Including Ohio,
Indiana, Illinois, .Missouri nnd tho
southern half of Iowa.
But tho fashion In belts Is changing,
ns all fashions arc liable to do. Tho
corn belt Is spreading Itself out. It
goes further east and further west, and
most emphatically It Is moving to the
north and south. Mlohlc.au. Wisconsin,
Minnesota and even the Dakotas and
Montana arc now In tho corn belt, Tho
southern stales aro knocking nt the
door. Oeorgla, Alabama and the Caro
Unas are showing that a hundred bush
els to tho acre is nothing to them.
Tho corn belt In the future will ex
tend from Cnnada to tho Gulf of Mex
ico, and It will reach to the Rocky
mountains, if not beyond. It Is no
longer u belt, but n section, comprising
almost: the cntlro arable portion of the
United States, nnd may even Include
the deserts nnd the mountains to u
limited extent. Farm Life.
Age of Qranlte.
It used to be thought that granite
was the oldest of nil rocks nnd that It
formed the globe's llrst crust Now,
however, geologists bellevo that gran
ite may be of any nge or epoch. Tho
granites found In Germany and the
Vosgcs mountains of Franco date from
ono period of tho world's history, thoso
found In the British Isles from nn en
tirely different period nnd those found
lu the United Stntci from still other
periods. Enormous pressure, combin
ed with heat and wntcr, must have
been necessary to produce granite.
Somo scientists declare that the gran
ites In tho highlands of Scotland must
'anvo been formed when 00,000 feet of
overlying rocks were piled above them
nnd that thoso of Cornwall required
10.0C0 feet of rock pressure. In other
localities it Is estimated that the pres
sures under which granite consolidated
must have been equal to that of an
overlying mass of rock nine miles In
thickness. Now York American.
Inveitmont and Speculation.
When any" ono Is buying n coat or n
Ashing rod or n rose tree or laying
down n cellar or setting up a library
either ho knows what he wants, whero
to get it and what to pay for It or else
ho takes earnest counsel with his
friends nnd with tlio most trustworthy
professional advisers that he can And
nnd uses all tho wits that ho and oth
ers can bring to bear on tlio subject In
order to mako suro that his purchase
Is prudently conducted. Ho attends
sales, rummages In shops and dis
cusses tho matter In his club until ho
nn(1 It nro votc(l u ,,niiec. If only
,,,f nH nincll tmp nn(1 trouble were
devoted to tho cnroful selection of In
vestments thero would bo fewer had
companies, unscrupulous promoters
nnd ornamental directors, tho world
would be very much richer, nnd its
riches would show lesn tendency to
gravltato Into questionable hands.
Cornhlll Magazine.
A Curious Wish.
I want to bo sick I I want to lie In
bed nnd bo fussed over and petted and
nursed. So far lu my life I haro had
but ono disease health. It sticks out
all over me. It runs swiftly through
me. It yanks mo up In tho morning.
It tucks me up hi ,bed at night nnd
shoves mo off into iiucxcltcd sleep not
even to dream. It stands by my chair
nt meal uutl gives inu an appetite for
Just tho right food in Just the right
quantities.
I want symptoms. I want to bo put
to bed and petted. I want to como
back to convalescence with brews and
lotions and soft cool lingers and dark
rooms nnd sweet (lowers to beguile me,
I want to lhi sick! II. S. Ilaskhm lu
Smart Set.
Squnrlnp tho Ciircle.
Tho origin of the problem squaring
the circle Is almost lost lu the mists of
antiquity, but thero Is a record of an
nttenmted nntidrature in Rir.vnt BOO
uitos were devoted toward converting!
a circle into n crescent, becnitso ho bad J
found that the area of a llgtire proi
diicod by ilrawlng two iierpendlenlar
I radiuses lu a circle Is exactly equal to I
tho ti'liuiglc formed by the line of Junc-I
1 lion. This Is the fumotis theorem of)
, the ."lunes of Hlppoerutes" nud is. like1
, glauber salt out of tho philosopher's
stone, nn example of the useful results j
j which sometimes follow a search for
the unattainable.
A Boarded Freak.
One of the earliest of tlio American
bearded freaks was Louis Jasper, wfio
lived In southern Virginia at about
the tlmo of the closo of tho Revolution
ary war. Ills beard was nine and a
half feet long and correspondingly
thick nnd henVy. He could take his
mustache between bis lingers and ex-1
tend bis arms to their full length, nnd
still tho ends of tho mustneho were
over a foot beyond bis linger tips.
uiterai.
"Pop, tell mo somo conundrums."
"Conundrums? Why, I don't know
any conundrums, my son."
"Oil, yes, you do I heard mother
tell Aunt Mary the other day that you
keep her guessing most of tho time."
i', V nor K"ess,'
""ston Journal,
Been Through Them.
Racon Do you know.
Mr. llncon Do you know. dear. I
have only two suits of clothes m mv
nnmo?
Mrs- Rncon Yes. John: I have no-
tlcei' that you have very little change
in your clothlng.-
St. Louis Post DIs-
patch.
Fretful thought has more to do with
I discontent than all rliu troubles
can assail us.
that
Times AVtuit Ads. (Jet. Results.
JANUARY 8, 1916-EVENING
Start Saving at Once
YOU htntt caving and let tho lol
liir woilc for joti, mIicii you havo
winked liiml to get It, you will
fi'nd in u hhoit tlmo that tho dol
lar will vtorlc raster than you !
If you do not begin to save when
you begin to earn you will find
it very linid to start afterward,
as jour upending ability will gmw
fu.sto,. than your, earning capacity
ami you will bo tho tool of thoso
nlm Iiiivo .saved, ns long us you llvo
First
Bank
Marshficld,
F
&
OLDEST BANK
ffr"v-E7IJ
Established 1880.
Capital, Surplus and Undivided
Profits $118,000
Interest paid on Tlmo ,
AND HAVINGS DEPOSITS , '; ,
Officers i v; k" ''
J. W. Bennett, President.
J. II. Flniingiwi, Vice-President.
It. F. Williams, Cashier.
Geo. F. Winchester, Awit. Cashier.
High Quality Groceries
Our own prompt and particular delivery service Ef
ficient clerks being out of the high rent district and
keeping our prices as low as consistent with good busi
ness makes
Conner & Hoagland
The Leading Grocers Dealers In Good Groceries
797 South Broadway. Phones 348-J and 326
GRAVEL'
We sro now proparod to furnish GRAVEL In any tuautltlea
from pile In our yard or in carload lots, nt following prices:
From pllo on ground, $2.'.Ti por yard.
oarroad lots, takon from cars, $2,00 por yard.
Retail Depart must.
C. A. Smith Lumber & Mfg. Co.
Opposite PosM)ffIco. Phone J 1)0.
Abstracts
rOK RELIAULU ABSTRACTS OV TITLH AM) IfiUMCMATlOfl
AROUTj
COOS BAY REAL ESTATE, See
TITLE GUARANTEE & ABSTRACT CO., Inc.
HARSUFIKLD AND COQUILLI3 C1T1, ORKGON
GENERAL AGENTS, EASTSIDIC AND SKNGSTACKKN'S ADDITION
AGENTS FOR CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILROAD LAND
IIKNRr 8KNGSTAOKKN, MANAGER
NORTH PACIFIC STEAMSHIP COMPANY
S. S. F. A. Kilburn
BAILS FOR
PORTLAND (Via Astoria)
JANUARY to.
FROM SMITH TKRMfNAL DOCK
For Further Information Call UUl. It, O, OUSHING, Agent.
EXPERT WELDING of METALS
Steel, brass, cast, iron and aluminum castings made
like new
DEMONSTRATIONS DAILY.
Koontz
Phone 180-J.
Puget Sound Bridge &
Dredging Co.
Dams, Bridges, Buildings. General Construction
COMPLETE PLANTS FOR HARBOR WORK
Our Coos Bay office has available for Oregon Coast
work the
Dredge "Seattle"
ti most powerful, hen e,uliiped anil most thoroughly modcr
twenty.lnch hydrautlo rtredg. in Pacific watert
Coos Bay office, Main office,
Marshfield, Oregon. Seattle. Washington,
T:
imes Want Ads Bring Results!
EDITION.
National
of Coos B
ay
Oregon
IN COOS COUNTY
Garage
North Front Street
BIETT
BANK
DIRECTOR I
Dr. A. L. Houseworth,
Physician mid .Surgfo, '
Office: Irving Mock, i
Office hours: 11 to 11! , m.;i
I Miiif7 to4 8 p. in.
Phonos: Office MH-.I; R(-,,( ,.
J. M. Wright """"""
i'lione i.
BUILDING CONThAOTOIl
Estimates furnished on rcquou
Dr. H. M. Shaw
Eye, Ear and Throat NperUlw
GLASSES KITTED
Phono !I!tO-.l, Rooms JJOO-aoi
Irving Block.
DR. MATT1K II. SHAW.
Physician anil riurgeon
Phono U.10-J.
H. G. Butler
CIVIL ENGINEER
Room 304 Coko Bldg. Phone HU.
Residence Phone 363-L.
W. G. Chandler
ARCHITECT
Rooms 301 and 302, Coko Culli)!
PROFESSIONAL
Marshficld, Orogon. ,( '
TIME TABLE
WILLAMETTE PACIFIC M0TO
OAK t
Leave . lmj
Mnrshfiold North B '
G:4G n.m. 7:00 4
7.45n;ra. ' 8IO0 ut'
8:4&TA.m. " T' 9:00 t
9:45 n.m. s 10:15
10:45 n.m. " 11:00 1..
11:30-n.m. ' .V 11:45 a.oi.
12:C0 p.m. ,' 1:16 piIt
1:4C p.m. ' 2:00 p.
2:4(5 p.m. 3:00 p.at.
3:4G p.m. 4:00 p.m.
C:00 p.m. C:l5 p.m.
C.40 p.m. G:5B p.m.
6: GC p.m. North city limits onlr.
7:30 p.m. 7:45 p.m.
WESTERN LOAN AND
BUILDING CG.
Assets $2,340,000.00
Pays 8 percent on savings:
X I. S. KAUFMAN & CO,
X Local Treasurer
SOUTH COOS' RIVKH ROAT
SERVICE
LAUNCH EXPRESS
loaves Marshficld every dr
8 a. in. Loaven head of river
. nt IIilB p. hi.
STEAMER RAINROW
leaves liond of river dally at 7
. m. Loaves Marshficld nt 3 p.
m. For rhnrtcr apply on hoard.
ROGERS & SMITH
Proprietors
HAVE THE ROOF FIXED
NOW '
See C0RTHELL
Phone 3171
MERCHANTS CAFE
Popular Placo for
Good Meals
Prices Reasonable
Cor. Commercial and U'dw'y.
T. J. SCAIFK KS A. n, flOIKHM'
Marchfrohl PAINT AND
Marsmiem decorating pj
EfctlniAtft Furnished
I'hnae 1-1 (Ml. .Mrsiifleld. Oreo
SAVE MONEY
by ordering tho famous '
HENRYVILLE COAL
Nut coal, per ton $L
Lump' coal, per ton ,..,, ...f3-6
Or half ton of both '
D. MUSSON, Prop.
Phone 18-J or leave orders At
Hlllyer'a Cigar Store,
WOODGOOD WOOD '
W. II. Lingo lms It nt ?1,50 H
$2 cash per load, also coal, witfj
prices reasonable. Garbage renie-Ti
oil. Phono 227-.T.
j DRY WOOD
CAMPBELL'S W00DYARD
"" North Front fit'
Plmnn 9TO.T
irrnz: i
DONGAN
UNDERTAKING
PARLORS
will bo kept
OPEN TO TUB rUBLIO
A regular stato licensed
, undertaker will bo la
charge
Phone 10JJ-J
L'JM
wfFi.l
go-fc
isivia