SEMI-WEEKLY BANDON KECOBDBK, TUESDAY, MAY 19TH, 1914.. PAGE FOUR WW U I W HI I H I II Ml 1 1 1 U 1 1 1 h 1 1 MM .1 M F-R-E-E With each 50c purchase a numbered ticket good for a 'chance on the following piizes valued from $75.00 to $10.00 each will be given free: Ut Prize one $75.00 Victor-Victrola 2nd $25 Check to apply on $75 Victor-Victrola 3rd " $20 ' " " " " $50 4th " $15 " " " " $40 5th " $10 " " " " $25 Tickets given on "Agate Cutting," "Repairing,' "Manufacturing," as well as purchases. We carry a splendid stock of Watches, Jewel ry, Clocks Silverware and Cut Glass. SABRO BROS. f Manufacturing Jewelers Telephone 751 Bandon, Oregon Lowe Bldg. Distributers of Victor-Victrola and Records Goods of Quality at the Right Price You Start At Zero We all start nut in life from the Zero mark. It is uphill all the way. The higher we go the more wc are looked up to. The mnn who attains success must take himself seriously, look to liin own interests and conserve his strength, wealth and ability. Many people are depositing their money with this bank, paying by check, and furthering their own interests, thereby raising their marks high above zero in the gauge of life. .Why don't you try it? FIRST NATL BANK Open during Noon Hour and Satur day Evenings. RAISING SPUING LAMMS IN WESTERN OREGON Oregon Agricultural College, Cor vnllis, Ore., May 17. Raising sprinp lambs is well adapted to the limatc conditions of Western Oregon a does not require creat capital ot special skill, nccordinir to Prof. E L. Potter, head of the Oregon Agr cultural College Animal Husbandry department. The industry also fitf in with approved crqp rotations and is valuable in building up depleted soil Neither is it in immediate danger of being overdone. The industry may be made profit able on farms where hay, grain, clo ver, vetch and rape arc grown. MucJ the same conditions are required fo: this industry as for dairying except that it need not havo the same ac cessibility to marltet and that some range land may be used. It is just as profitable as ordinary dairying, al though it may not pay so largo a pro fit as dairying conducted in the most approved manner. No expensive equipment is needed in the way of building.s. Th? sheds necessary to shelter the floe'; may be constructed at a very small cost. A shed 18 feet wide and 00 feet long A. D. Mills Real Estate Fire Insurance Notary Public Rentals 1 Good .Lots in Azalea Park, $25 Down and $10 per month. Bargain in Business Lot on First Street. an DO YOU KNOW The City Market has the most up-to-date Sausage Kitchen in Southern Oregon Having just installed modern machinery to facilitate turning out tempting, juicy sausage. The City Meat Market Geo. HkIih.h, Prop, I'hon 193 TRY M. O' CON'S Shoes for fit, quality and low est prices. Shoe shop in con nection. Men's half soles st-v-ed or nailed, 7!c. Women's sewed or nailed, 60c. was recently constructed at the Col lego at u total cost of $25. It accomo dates about fifty sheep but does not provide storage room for hay. The most profitable time for grow ing a good, cheap lamb in Western Oregon is March, April, May and June. The best ersults arc gencrallj obtained by pasturing the lambs or sown pasturage. It Is necessary to have several fields in order that eacr kind may be utilized in its propel season. It is also necessary to have a special pasture to be used for fin ishing. Ordinarily no grain need be used but it may occasionally be fed with profit when it is very cheap or whei mutton is high. The grain should bi fed in creep so that the lambs ma get the grain while the' ewes are kep! from it. The grain should be about one halt a pound a day which by extra feed ing and care mey be increased to nearly one pound. The Big Fire Sale is Still Booming Everything going at prices that will as tonish you. Take advantage of these money-saving values while the sale lasts. LIBRARY NOTES. The people of Bandon are cordiallj invited to call at the Library and in spect the generous" donation of Prof Richards. There are books of music books about music and about compos ers and musicians, stories like "The First Violin," a metronome and mu sical games. Other friends of the Library have added to our fiction list: "The Plun derers", "Their Yesterdays," "The Net," "Otherwise Phyllis," "The Wo man in the Question," "Tlie Pur chase Price," "Two Gentlemen of Gotham," and "Mettle of the Pas ture." For the juveniles, Florence Smith has given "A Voyage at Anchor,'' and Mrs. West gave "Jack's Ward' and "Shifting for Himself," also "Cast Up By the Tide" and "Golde . Gates" for the fiction shelves. Until our new skylight is in place we are inviting readers to sit at om south windows. We shall soon havo a better light than before our cast windows were closed. LIBRARIAN. ORIGIN OF THE PEARL. Th. Ancient Thought It Wai a Drop of Dew From Heaven. No record exists or even tradition as to the discovery of the first pearl. The mystery of its origin lias doubtless con tributed In no small degree to render It the prime favorite that It has ever been in the eyes of the orientals. From time Immemorial the nations of nutlquity have tixod the pearl to decorate their persons and adorn their temples and we Unci many curious be liefs existing as to Its origin. The one most prevalent In Pliny's time was that pearls were formed from the dews of heaven, falllii; Into the open shells at breeding time, and It was In allusion to thls pretty conceit that n noble Vene tian lady named Corraro hud a gold medal struck (lieailnu the date l(!20i on the reverse side of which is an open Bhell receiving the drops of dew from heaven which form into pearls as they fall. The motto was "Roro divlno" (by the divine dew). In these more practical but less poetic days the generally nccepted theory Is that some topelgn substance, possibly oven n grain of sand, having by acci dent entered the shell of the oyster, a certain amount of irritation Is Induced which causes the exudation of a pearly secretion (known ns nacre), and this effectually covers up tho Intruder, and also that with the growth of tho oyster the pearl Increases In size. The pearl, unlike nil other gems, re quires no assistance from mnn to en banco Its value, or from art to add oqp iota to Its perfect loveliness. National Magazine. See These Bargains! $1.75 Wool Scarf ,13c $1.25 Center Pieces 49c $3.25 Walnut Mirror .: $1.75 $4.00 Hair Switches $1.98 50c Silk Hose ; ;jk $4.00 Silk Petticoats $2.40 60c Sox Caps 34c Yarns, per skein 5c 50c Veiling ; 29c GOOD BARGAINS IN LACE CURTAINS Bandon Dry Goods Company r I I 1 I Ti their presence is hardly discovered until after seeding. The chief injury of the plant is in crowding uot crop plants. Clean cultivation and liming the soil will eradicate the" plant. Tho cultivation should include plowing the stubble to throw the root stocks to tho surface, keeping the surface free from tho pest during tho sum mcr, and growing a cultivated crop the next year. Liming the soil will stimulate the crop plants making them outgrow tho sour sorrel, and thus curtail the number of weed seed matured." G. E. W I L S O N GENERAL BLACKSMITH All kinds of light and heavy work. Horses scientif ically shod. Deformities remedied. Bring in your cripples and get their feet adjusted by a man that knows a foot Carl Clifford, the scientific horse shoer. Tie checkers, splitting mauls, and all kinds of tie makers tools. All work guaranteed right. WEED PESTS OK OR EC ON AND THEIR ERADICATION. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor- vallis, Ore., May 18. Sheep sorrel is spreading rapidly over large areas and because of tho largo numebr of seeds formed on each plant bids fair to become a serious weed pest in Ore gon, writes E. P. Walls, of the Agri cultural College Ilotany and Plant Pathology department, in tho Paci fic Homestead. "Weeds mny bo oh joctionablc because of their poisonous qualittes and on account of tho crowd- ng out more valuable plants. Sorrel seed is said by eomo writers to bo poisonous when eaten in largo qunn. titles by horned, but tho plant can hardly bo called poisonous. In nihil Uon to spreading by feed tho plunt line large root (flocks that llvu In the ground from yuur to your, which purnl up fchoot uvury few Inchon. Tliu Joitvti uro MUlki'ri, huvu er-lll;u up. IIVIIIIUgUM III Hid HUUV, IU1U Al'lt DOJIUI' what nIihihhI Win un Indian urw. IimkI. IIdwmw r wf J wo hiwU, jwJ. Inn urlm Hivil hii lumrintf, am! tmte my kjiwIJ. 'fluty it dmtvi J thm m imny idM ul vum m& wlilrji 0jvy i.mmm ts mly UN , t WIRELESS Going to LOS ANGELES and SAN DIEGO via SAN FRANCISCO POPULAR TWIN SCREW S. S. FIFIELD SAILS FROM BANDON Wednesday, May 20th, at 8 o'clock p. m. FARE TO SANFRANCISCO, .$7.50; TO SAN PEDRO, $M.50; TO SAN DIEGO, $10.50. This gives you berth and meals all First Class Privileges. "The Only Way" and "The Comfortable Way." Bandon Warehouse Comply CISNKRAL OREGON AGENTtf GEO, T, MOWION IIKNRY HKWJBTACKHN Cotjulllo AkJHi Mfuvil)fl)(l ApnU J, H, SCHILLING Myiik Point Agwil V V t