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About Daily coast mail. (Marshfield, Or.) 1902-1906 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1904)
-n -. 1g rs Ijf f e I dJGps h gat Market Henry Holm. Prop Fresh, and Cared .Meats, Lard I and all goods usually carried in a firstclaea elmp. Courteous at tention anil fair treatment. : PhoM 181 v- Jrc dellvDiy to any part ol thft cVy istreVt, ' Marshfleld T ' IUNEXCEUE; " Til Candies. In Crrnm Beef Brolh, Hot Choco late, and all kinds of hot drinks. Hot Ta ttiales a sifpinltv. . . " p A 9 .ni n a n I. L. If U U U O 4 . H Utf II IG md & Front St, 4 doors S ot Postoffice tit ll'lj-iltlM HiHi i i UMIQN BUTGHER SHOP New Bhop. New building. Everything clean and fresli. Complete Una of the choicest Beef, Porr. Mutton and Wal. Sixth (loot South of PoBtoftko. Cius. k Ricftard Noble, Proprs. Marshfk'Id, Orefon. CALIrURHlA ANO OREGON i fifUST STflySHIP flIT peo. t. Cray & Co. Cen. Acts 21 Market Stl S F 'M!W&riti<. tit. i "Aiia S.S. ALLIANCE HARDWICK, Commanding. Only Rcjutar Line Betvvttn SAN FRANCISCO and PORTLAND via COOS BAY and EUREKA , kxxt BAiuso from MAR8HF1ELD X. oh or about Sound Notth, Oct 25 t AT SEBVJfK OT TIWbJ ,1 1. v.'SHawTacent. OfliiM in Dean Lumber Company's now wsrehomp.' Phone 441. MAP.SHFI5I.L-, OREGON j. D. SPBECKELS BFjOS. S. S. CO. FA&J EXPRESS STEAMERS brbaIwateb & kkk CARRYING PASSENGERS AND FREIGHT DIRECr TO SAN F RANCISGQ 1 Agent C. F- McCOLLUM A '-;t. Cock, MarsbQold. Wkshday is a dread to matiy a hard" working housewife. No need of this. Our ttOUQH DRV method is an in ducenient that will bo appreciated as an economical labor saver, Don'tf t)reak your backftt the wash? boaM'fthen, at small expense, our ( machifoery will do your york. ; : ' Rough Dry, 6c per pound. Try it. COOS BAY 'STEAM LAUflDKY i OOOSBAY IRON WORKS 1 F. K. WILOW;' PROPRIETOR. MANUFA'CnjRING, Casting lu Iron and Broara "for Saw MtJls, Railroads, Uinta and logins Cbjjw. , . 7T J,We iuk4 the best SbwrM SBd jr' TELEPHONE, MAIN Ojx. Entered in the Postoffice at Marsh field, as Second Class Matter. COOS BAY PUBLISHING CO. P. C. LEVAR, Editor and Manager. F. A. HUTCHINSON, City Editor G. W. WOODWARD, Foreman, Every Evening, Except Sunday daily! 40 cents per month by mail FOR ADVANCE PAVItKNT ONLT One ear - - 1.00 "'ittj months - - UX WEEKLY Subscription, ouo year - , $2.00 six month - 1.00 If paid hi advance $1 50 a year. ADVERTISING UATE3 1st page $1.50 an Inch per mouth 2nd, 3rd or 4th pages $1 2.) ' Short tlmo rates rn application Heading notice 6 cents por line Republican Jicket For President: THEODORE ROOSEVELT of New. York, For Vice-Prestdputc-. CHAHLES W. FAIRBANKS of Indiana. " Presidcntal Electors ' J. N. Hart, "f Polk. G. B Dimmick, of Clackamas A. C. Hough, of Josephine. J. A. Fee, of Umatilla. EDITORIAL A PORTLAND VIEW There will bo a railroad to Coos Bay before very long. It will come, ap parently, from the south. What next? It will cross the mountains into tho Rogue river valleV. And then? Why, then we can travel to Coos Bay in a Pullman coach, if we have tho price. That will be about all tho benefit we will get in Portland out of tho develop ment that willf-como to Uoos Bay through tho railroad' Connection will bo made with south and central Oregon ; there will bo a big belt lino of railroads scooping everything south of Eugeno, Tygh valley and Ukiah out of Portland's, commercial jurisdiction. Not only so, but tho whole coast trade up to Tillamook will bo taken south, even as most of it is now, only that trade will increase tenfold in perhaps ten or fifteen years. Such is the prospect, whiltf wo sit and dream of greatness, allow rail road corporations to run tho ceneral and state governments, submit to their dictation and domination,andpay most of our attention to tbo arduous work of "rolling up" a tremensous majority for this or that party or politician. While we are busy hurrahing tho moss keeps growing without a particle of noise. Portland Journal. While the abovo will probably be regarded in Portland as an alarmist viow of the situation, there is a great deal more truth than poetry in the Journal's utterance. It is the noiselessness of tho growth bf moss that has allowed it fo get suoh a hold on the metropolis of this great and growing state of Oregon. When things fal in " to our fVba hiouths without exertion on our part, it has a soporific tendenoy, and we are inclined to Bleep away tho happy hours and let tho moss grow. It will bo a good thing for Portland when she sees her aup;renittc .Wfinniug to uctunlly slip awiy froin Jier, as it is bound td (io at some time more or less remote in the future. Sho will then find that sho hdH to wake up' and discard somo of her old notions and adopt tho methods WE REPAIR ALI kinds of Machinery, Steam' au (ias KBKines. Gum turd UleyelM, $aily Coast Mail B a .F of modern commercial centers. .Portland, may veil keep her oyo on the situation rtt Uoos Bay. The time is fust passing when Portland ia the wbolo thing of Oregon. On this peninsula enolosod. by Coos Bay will be built a city which will not only rival Portland fai n time but will far out- Btrip hor. HERE iji ,tho seaport of Oregon. Portlnud is a good inlnnd shipping yomk Sho ulways will be, but sho ia, after all, only a small plnco, not yet out of her swaddling clothes, and haviug in no way attained tho Btatnre of greatness. Sho cau not for loiig thwart tho inovitablo toudonoy which will oanse tho husiuoai center of Ore gon to bo established nt Oregon's best ano oniy groat nor nor ami seap ...... That harbor and seaport is HERE.t Portland now looks on railroad nootion with Coos Bay,as she has '. ed on steamboat connection, mighty flno thing for CoosJ Bay, incidentally, for Portland whofipjn merchants. Some of us now , . ffllfe will seo the day when tho shoo wiwM l ' on the other foot. Wo will see tho day when the question of whethor San Francisco or Portland shall extend the stronger helping hand to Coos Bay will look liko a huge joko; when San Frnh- scisco will look on Coos Bay aa her sister metropolis of tho north, and Portland will bo proud to speak of Coos Bay as her seaport. When that time comes we will try to forgot the treatment wo havo been receiving from Portland for the lost forty years, and will endeavor to re member the pleasant things Which tho Portland papers occasionally say about us now. DESIGNEDLY DEFECTIVE f AND UNFAIR The dilemma in which County Cleric Roland, of Marion County, finds hiia self is one wrilph will pcrplc-W clerks of sovorn.1 oounties. bayprev paring for tho election next month Mr. Roland must pco tho prphibitlon question upon tbi ofilpial ballot. Be finds, however, that if ho follqwa the form prescribed by law, many-'pcoplo cannot vote their opinions, while if he puts tho question on tbi ballot in suoh u form that tho people, may all express their wishes, he must violuto tho. law. It is not u very pleasant position in which to placo a public oflloinlbut it is just such a situation as was pre dicted by those wno studied the locaI option law and haw its unfairness. Tho difficulty in Murion ConqV is plain. A vote upon tho liquor ques tion has been ordered for the whole county, and fox" n subdivision com. posed of three Salem procincts. Under the provisions of thft local option law n petition for tho subtnis sion of tho question in th county is in effect a petition submission of tho question m'wk'i dividual precinct of tho county. In each t tha Salem, precincts lWerred io tho voter finds himself confronted wUfei three separate questions: V'Do ye want proMinupn ror your own j oluot?" "Do you want it fortheii division coihposed of thTeo'preoinetM' ' "Da you want it for tho -entire county VZ But in answering theso three question a map niust make a Hingle mark tor the entire county and for tho. subdi vision composed of three precincts. If a man votes for prohibition fer his own precinct he must also vote for prohibition for tho outire oounty, awl vice versa. If he votes against prohi. union lor mo county, ne cannot vot in favor of prohibition for his home preoiuot. This incousijlenoy in what is paraded as a "local, optoln" law M "J arises from tho fact that tho liqnor question can be plaoed ujrfJH the ballot! In only ono form, thoughjthoro may,, really be a number of questions : volved. Mr. Roland intends to fol the forms prescribed by law, th1 relieving himself of responsibility unsatisfactory results. Oregoniau, The above is a very good exposition of the sort of thing this socalled "IomI .M. 9.08" ln u; Ite fr'flra? were mm jmogh la, oae we4. n moasuro wnion tuoy .ilMwacntto thopooplonsa local iiMWi ana couiu munoo tho it r a adopt as n local option law; Mfcmworo bo intent on perpetrating rrOTa'tlTot they had no time to mnko a law that would work smoothly. In fact thoy ovidontly hud no iutontion of formulating a lav under which any ouo but a fnlHlodsod prohibitionist would havo a olmuco tooxpnws his luroforenco ,; ... with full olfoot. Tho local optlouist has no placO in tho scheme of this law A "local optiou." Ho may or may not want saloons in his own preoiuot, but ho docs not desire to dlotato to Lthq,peopllb of othov proolnots, ouo way 'oth. , A believer in local option to lot iwoh prcolnat deoltlo this i.if.. n for wpfcir. wnou ne mz": "rw: . "r: (reoinoi, ne iflf148 no uimiru u lk prefereefrupou tho peoplo of ireclnct. Uo is not built tbat Does ho nave a chanCo on No- 8th tovote for his own W Iobo? Not muoh I Ho must voto against prohibition not local -for tho whole county. This distinction should be hammered into tho head ot every voter in Coos County who does not already under' stand it: and ovory man who doea understand it should constitute himself a committee of one to enlighten his neighbors, Myrtle Point Items To tho peopla of Myrtlo Point tho era of a new revolution has como. No iuoto flat, soapy tasting fluid, but a pure, clear silicate wator from tho mountains will relievo and strengthen the population, thus increasing tho health conditions of the town, dimin ishing tho froquout cases of typhoid fevers and lessening tho danger of conflagration. Tho expenso to carry out tho buildnig of tho water works is money well spent. On Sunday tho now Methodist minis ter, Rev. W. R. Browno, dollvered his first sermon. His text, "I am roady", was delivered with Bpintuni ouergy and a per foot pronunciation, maknig n deep and lasting impression on his hearers. This week Mr. Browne will organize tho first Ladies Aid Society. On Sunday tho Hermann family cele brated a rpunlon. The meeting was nt tho flno and commodious residence of T. M. Ilermann,on;the south fork of. tho Coquillo river. Tho hoHpitablo nuturo of our old friend Manuel knows how to muko his visitors fuel at homo, and tho full larder ot the hostess did tho rest to keep tho big ami little Hermanns in tho best ot humor, When tho roll was called those answoring as iiresent woras Measers and MedumoH T. M. Hermann, O. M. Horraann.jE, W. Hermann, Mr. Frank B. Hermann, Grandma Bender, in her 84th fyoar; Messrs and Mfsdames Edward Bender.Olay Dement, Edward Bohroedor, E. E. Bonder; Mesdames H. Ploeger, from Marshfllod, Carry Hermann and Hetty Hermann; Masses eta, Clara and Louisa -'Hermann, Ha and Nelly Hermann, EUa Zena Dement, Myrtle Her- ma: Nova Hermann, An- na He: illie, Ellis, Homer and Herbert ann, Thorn. Bomont, Lord Dement ere woro two of tho oiiiir nHMtiMM iiei original children rtlkMtor missing one, Hon. upw umsi1 to imltaiii IMMdtfl ie IMI HI e preparations ; and his study L Oregon and his ays his consii. Drk for, dbrevi- atedhimof iki are; the other one was, Maf'i second .daughter of tho old Doctor, she being In Arizona could not very well lie preaent. Tho gathering rwas a most pleasant aiTair & . mmmatmmiBramm JofcN BE IV- Iivry Feed and, Co! "fffeble. First-class T-i v" raddle horses j ready. li ii . ss&Se HPHF gig FU bption 11 mHIMIHMMM H IMH Title dtiarantee i'p and Abstract Co. 'MitofW.Stf . Abstracts short notice. Wc fur- 1 1 in iiMiineiwmnnwni I'll ir si r firn nisli Title Ovaraiitcc Ccr- lificatcs from the must iiwiim in mm mm iwm mi rTr- reliable houses mi the aaMt uwiii iwiniwrwinn -- Pacific Coast. Also 1111- emiemfi MaMJWMm denvriters securiiies for industrial bonds. '. ,' Honry Sengstackan,, M'gr. ! Douglas Block, Mar; lificid, Oregon. .-H-H; 8 .f KH-H-frK-WHM' Read! This! We linvc one of the finest lines of Trunks, Suit Cases, Etc. Couchrj that ate unexcelled. Wicker Rockers for nil people. GiifoYsoifs Furniture Store. For all the World we Jinve provided furuituic. The rich and the poor, can buy furniture of us at I he same price. What More Can You And the lowest prices your needs in this line. C A. Johnson, Propr. THE HAMILTO is so widely and well known that the mere mention of its name is a guaran tee of all that is best, THE HAMILTON has won recognition from the world's finest and most famous musicians wno have been enthusiastic over the excep tional tone and quality of the HAMIL TON PIANO. 'Although so widely known and acknowledged a superior instrument the HAMILTON is classed by its manufacturers as among the moderate priced instruments. The volume of sales which results more than make up for this liberal policy. E. M. FURMAN, Marshfleld f vvvvrivwf LAUNCH, S3 T. mmi ikH eMMt U- J-j Ji Msk icgsltr trip betwia MA118HFIKLD and ' NORTH BEND Weekdays, on tho following Schedule Lv Mitihlltia Lva North Btsd 8:30 a. m. 10; . m. I:a n, hi. lot , m. iso p, m, I 7,0a m, m. t.ljp. m, 4:40 p, . J!OP.'l. . ' atoo p, m. 4'oo p, mi 3:00 p. m. I g:oo , m. 4:45 p, m. 1 111 . m. SUNDAY lies p. m. g.ou , n. 3:00 p. m, 11. m. Paro road trip Sii, Daily found trip C3 par mo Opon for Charter on Sundays MiriKUld, Afrat, Notth m A(tat, II. Stntuttuktn Mn. troii Fi oat 8trt s doer o ( Haul UMLfM Yin Wlnt Rnnf R8Hj u elatekitk aoQFiNa is the nmn III, Ifrlljl nwWI ytdtt durable rooflug material koown, Itltaot anseMd by beat, oold, exnowre to any ciiwiate, aoidt or salt fogi. It secures for jeer bolllte the Mae inauraiaee rate ai metal tad (lie jvlll.. '4eJre vears. .ol 44-l-H;'MHJ 4H-i"Hfr . m IW ! fiirnislicd at -H.Vi-W-t-J'fJ"'J,M-9 - l-LU 'Ask? always, We cau supply all .,. .".jj.j-ubujt-t: rrn ivnfTVHMMinvvTi StivXlrulsen TlMB TAM.K .. ' . ) Lcavei Nortli Bund for Miirslifleld 7 a in " MarsliUold for Kmuiro H a 111 ' Marihlletd for Emlilro 2 j) in " Empire for Mnrslitlold loa nt . " Empiri fr Murihuold 4 p in " MnrsliUeld forNorth Hand 6.IC11 tu '' 1 Fare I5cta. .Round trip 25013. ire 15CIS. f, . Kouna trip 25013. North Beud'aiid Marshfield ' ' l4-,il N PIANO www s iw wht ygyyg, 'lomUSmmtikW'M fELEFHONE 48, OA4K ill MWMMMaBl I KWHBBI WfTW n lifUTOII'fH BftlUBIJ, fl CWKLD Tm imwwmM f .4 t V , i' jhM 'nwn & ' ; tii