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About Western world. (Bandon, Coos County, Or.) 1912-1983 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1916)
TO FOLLOW THE FEDERAL LAW MILLION DOLLARS FOR ests contain Amount» apportioned NATIONAL FOREST ROADS but unexpended within three years, We have just received a shipment of Ladies Silk Petticoats direct from Eastern manu facturer. These are the new fall styles and the latest shades. They come in strip es and plain shades of Blue, Dark Red, Green, Brown, Black and several shades of changeable combinations. PRICES:--- • $4.00, $5.50 and $6.00 The Golden Rule Big Railroad Strike Macleay Wins in All Order Is Cancelled Curry Fishing Cases Troubles of Fishermen Between Sea- Sellate l'asses Eight-Hour Bill After Bitter Fighi Along Party Lines lx>rg anil Macleay Interests .Aired —Anienilnients liefeated in Court anil Latter \\ ins. Thai Amount Allotted TLL« Ye» Plans for Work Vuder Hoad Deputy Game Warden J. M Thom Act Are Announces! as said today that he will follow the federal game law in applying the hunting regulations in Coos county this fall. That means that the duck and geese season will not open until the first of October. The I’. S. law and that of Oregon regarding the killing of ducks conflicts, but, as said. Mr. Thomas will take the national law as his guide. According to th« , national law the season will extend I until the 15th of January.— Marsh field Record. Isist Heavily on II hik I oii One of the heaviest individual los ers in the accident to the Bandon is E. W. Schetter. manager of the New Bandon Warehouse Company Mr. Schetter had about $800 worth of hay and grain aboard the boat for Port Orford all of which is ruin.'d This is the second time that the lu- j cal man lias lost In recent wrecks, the Fifield having a large Oons'gn ment of hay aboard for him. Exhibits Berkshire Hogs. J. J. Morris, one of the enterpris ing young ranchers of Dew Valley went to Myrtle Point yesterday morn ing with a fine display of registered Berkshire hogs which he placed on display and entered for prizes at the Coos and Curry County Fair. Mr Morris specializes in registered Berk shires and in Barred Plymouth rock chickens. He is a member of the American Berkshire Association City Engineer J. S. Sawyer Aeut to San Francisco on the Elizabeth Tuesday to look after business In connection with the new water sys tem that is being installed here. Mr. Sawyer has had trouble in gettin" pipe delivered according to contract George W. Sutton of Curry county has taken the examination for admin slon to the local Coast Guard service. He is applicant for the place vacated by the termination of Mr. Hancock's 1 enlistment. A Itare Ohl Nevvepaper Secretary of Agriculture Houston T. E. Fitzgerald of the National has just announced the plan to be pursued in spending the ten million hotel at Burley, Idaho, has a copy of dollars appropriated by the Federal ' the "Ulster County Gezett" published Aid Road Act for the construction in New York state January 4. 180 ». and maintenance of roads and trails ; It has two full paces devoted to the within or partly within National for- | death of George Washington which e^ts. and has tentatively allotted had just occurred. It gives the for among the various national forest j mation of the funeral procession and states the million dollars which is the names and order of the pall bearers and many other minute de expendable this fiscal year. The tentative allotments to the tails of the arangements. In the ad principal national forest states are as ver till ng columns is found the fol- follows: Alaska. $46,280; Arizona, lowing: "For Sale, A stout, healthy $59.795; Arkansas, $11,294; Califor Negro Wench." In many respects the nia, $140,763; Colorado, $62.335: items are not so different from the se Idaho, $108,010; Montana, $89,901; of today. Even the printer was gh Nevada. $19,195; New Mexico, $42,- ing cash for rags at that time 622; Oregon. $127,794; South Dako ta. $8,115; Utah, $10,982; Washing ton. $91,739; Wyoming. $40,566. “In general", said Secretary Hons i ton. “the states and counties will he required to furnish cooperation in an amount at least equal to 50 per cent of the estimated cost of the surveys and construction. However, upon a satisfactory showing by the applicant state or county that such proportion of cooperation is inequitable. It may be altered and the ratio of coopera tion fixed upon a basis equitable to both the state or county and the United States .” The method followed in apportion- | ing the money was explained by Mr. Houston as follows: Ten per cent of the amount available each year will be withheld as a contingent fund. One-half of the remainder will be allotted to the states In amounts i which will be based on the area of ’ National Forest lands in each state. The other half will be apportioned on a basis of estimated value of timber j and forage resources which the For- I Sleep, the type of death, la also, like that which It typlfle«. restricted to the earth. It flies from hell and Is excluded from heaven.—C. C. Colton. Sleep, thou repose of all things; sleep, thou gentlest of the dei ties; thou i>eaee of the mind, from which care flics; who dost soothe the hearts of men wea tied with the tolls of the day and reflttest them for labor — Ovid. Western World the Quick Print. Dr. Masson of Myrtle Point, the veterinarian, will be In Bandon at the Garoutte stable Monday. Septem ber 11th, and at Gold Beach and other Curry county points on the fol lowing day. Bring in your sick stock or call for consultation. It V. R. Wilson. Optometrist, de tects of vision scientifically correct- ' ed. optical repairs, broken lenses du plicated. Coquille. Ore. Alt) tos28c ooooooooooooooooo« t TUTTLE * Now Location Saturday Evening Post v Ö TIMMONS BUILD J, » r First Street. Y ooooooooooo<>ooo< Magazines $ II Current Publications Y gars, Tobaccos X Rainfall for August Small what does tliat mean? It mean» that NEW quality, in a cigarette, that doc» for your smokii g exactly what a drink of cold water doc» for your thirst! To satisfy, a cigarette must do far more than just ‘‘please” you -il must Zef you know you’t u been smoking. That’s what Chesterfields do— they satisfy! And yet they’re MILD! Fcr the first time in the history of cigarettes, here’s a '•¡garette that satisfies and yet is mild! Chesterfields! Other cigart ties iniy be mild, but th y don’t satisfy. BUT, Chesterfields satisfy— yet they’re mild! This is new cnjoys::cnt for a cigarctie to give. It is something that no cigarette, except Chesterfields, can give you—regardless of price. Why? Because no c¡garette maker can copy the Chesterfield Chesterfields today! steri ie!d Uw FISH BRAND CIGARETTES REFLEX SLICKER Leases duplicated, frames and eye Gladness of heart is the life of man glass mountings furnished. Bring us i and the joyfulness of a man prolong your broken lenses and we will guar eai his days.—Ecclesiaaticua. antee an •x«'-t duplicate.— Sabro Bros , Bandon. Oregon Fleishman's yeast fresh three time« a week. Sanilo. It Try Western «sorto Want Ads. •Th« Chesterfield Blend cmi'an* '• - noat famnoo Turkish tnhoceaa —SAMS >( N for rklmeam CAVALLA f«r aroma; SMYRNA for awaetMaa; XANTHI for fratranc«« coosbiaed wills the boat ioiT Alif leal 20 for 10c | Mews Stand | lily Papers the wind Dealers everywhere. THOUGHTS ON SLEEP. We are somewhat more than ourselves in our sleeps, and the slumtier of the body seems to be but the waking of tbe soul. It Is the ligation of sense, but the liberty of reason, and our wak ing conceptions do not match the fancies of our sleeps.—Sir Thomas Browne. Veterinarian 1» Coming to Bandon Capt. O. Wlren, cooperative obser ver. Coquille river light station, re ports the following: The rainfall for the month of August was 0.23 inch es. Days rainy and cloudy 16, days I clear 15. The rainfall for the cor responding month of 1915 was 0.00 a difference of 0.23 hundreth of nil inch in excess of last year. Washington, Sept. 2—The threat The Circuit Court gtssion just fin ished in Curry county disposed of of a general railroad strike, which three case« against Roderick Macleay lias been hanging like a pall over the and each one of them turned out to country for a month, was lifted to night. Three hours after the Senate Ills favor. TOO PROUD TO LOAF On the charge of larceny wherein had passed without amendment the it was contended that Mr. Macleay Adamson eight-hour-day bill, passed We're camping on the Rio Graude allowed his siene to iiJlil in a gillnet by the house yesterday, the heads of With nothing much to do containing fish, the grand jury re tile four great railroad employes' But wash our shirts and darn our sox turned not a true bill. The second brotherhoods telegraphed 600-odl And darn the Insects too. rase in which it was claimed that code messages to their general chair We want the world to understand the Macleay seine was allowed to op men in all parts of the country can We're not too proud to light. erate live minutes before six o'clock celling the strike order issued a But draw- the line at,loafing here on Sunday night, it being illegal to week ago. to take effect Monday With things tliat sting and bite. fish before 6 p. in. on Sunday, re morning. The legislative expedient to a\eit 1 he rattiers are a friendly lot sulted in a six to six verdict by the jury. The jury was discharged and the strike was passed in the Senate And visit us by score3, later by consentof both parties the by a vote of 43 to 28 — almost a Tarantulas, prefer our tents case was dismissed. The third case strict party vote—amid stirring To sleeping out of doors. was the decision of Judge Coke in ! scenes, after many Senators. Dem We've learned the horned toad 1 b but the injunction case started last year. I ocrats and Republicans, had fought A harmless little oaf, it was alleged that the defendant had desperately to amend the measure by We're not a bit too proud to fight; But how we hate to loaf! trespassed upon the lands of the provisions designed to prevent indus plaintiff and was guilty _of malicious trial disasters in the future. Some In napping tn our shoes and hats • Interference with the seining opera Senators, thoroughly aroused, de The scorpion persists. tions. Judge Coke made permanent clared Congress was being coerced And we did not enlist to be the injunction on two points that of into enactment of legislation that it A bunch of naturalists. trespass on the Macleay property and did not deaire and that it knew would) We're not too proud to fight the fos that of malicious interference. The return to plague it in the future. No matter w hen he comes, Judge gave a written opinion in In both Houses the measure wa But are ashamed to wait around which he sets forth the rights of the signed within a few minutes after the | And loaf, and twirl our thumbs parties concerned and in substance final vote In the Senate and it was asks that both sides concerned ob sent at once to the White House, While we are valeting for muleg serve the law. where Tiesident Wilson signed it And building fences here, Some other fellows have the jobs The judge holds that tide lands We held for many a year. owned are not public highway as WANTS WARRANTS TO BE PAR We’re not too proud to fight—in fact seems to he the opinion of sohie re We'd glory in a fray. garding tidel ands. It is held that County Judge Think« lieposit of Road But we're too busy just to sit while the right of navigation and Money Should Offset Discount And loaf our time away. right of fishery within Rogue river of All County Paper. are rights common to all, neither O! this Is not a soldier's life. carry with them the right to trespass This slugging sand and sun. Coquille. Ore , Sept 2 - County upon any lands owned along the riv Mosquitoes, fleas, and all the pests Judge Watson has asked the Coos er nor the right of malicious inter That crawl and fly and run. county banks to stop discounting ference with the rights of another. county warrants. He holds that the We're not too proud for Freedon's sake deposit of the 1374,000 front the sale AU kinds of society printing neatly To fight and bleed and die. of the special road bond* entitles the done at Western World office. But loafing will not help to keep county to have its paper at par. Old Glory In the sky. The county has issued about $140,- —Minna Irving In Colliers. 000 unpaid warrants but the county aso has about 8600,000 coming from rave deinquent taxes. Mr. Watson inti AND STORM TO WOMAN. mated that the deposit of the bond in the best wet Backward, turn backward, dear money would depend on the action of /JZw* ^aatKar togs one«. In your flight; the banks in eliminating the five per Make yourself girl «gain just for ever invented cent discount on county warrants. tonight; The entire amount is deposited Drop the sei question, suffra at the First National Dank in Marsh gette. sport; field pending a plan of distribution Blow us one kiss of tbe old fash- Inood sort. The banks will be required to pay (PATENTED}^ 00 -Life. interest on this deposit and may also be required to furnish additional surety. PROTECTOR HAT 75* B aud any balance of the euutiuaent fund which remains uuupportioned at the end of each year, will be re apportioned on the same basis as the original allotments. Gaine Wariit-u S mjs He Mill Abbie by Statute Regarding Hunting Working for Socialist I’reslih-ut Sam Wing and other members of the Socialist party fa the county arc distributing weekly bulletins boost - I ing the Socialist candidate for presi dent, Allan L. Benson. Bulletin No. 2, which was distributed this week, deals exclusively with militarism, rapping the Democratic admlnistra- . tlon for passing the big military ap propriation bill and taking a like shot at Mr. Hughes and hi* party ! r a like stand The bulletin says th.it j the Wilson appropriation till «’or 1917 is larger than that of any Euro pean nation the year before the war started. —and yet they*re MILD