Page 2
Port Orford, Oregon, Tuesday, May 21, 1929.
PORT ORFORD NEWS
Entered at the Poatofflce at Port Orford, Oregon, aa second claas
met! m atter under Act of March 3, 117*.
Publlahed w eekly a t Port Orford, Oregon.
GEO W. BORANBON, E ditor
Fate* Proved Unkind
to Spanish Explorer
Along the Seashore
T ide T able for W eek E nd ing M »j 28, 1*21», a t P o rt O rford, Oregon.
H igh
A M P. M.
SU B SC R IP T IO N R A T E S:
Y e a r ______________ _____ |I.**
S ix Mon t h e ___________________ * 1 .M
A dvertising ratea 2 6 centa per colum n Inch
Low
A. M.
P. M
5:45
6:24
6:59
7:36
8:12
9:30
5:32
6:01
6:44
7:18
7:51
9:16
Ona
Tuesday, May 21, 1929.
Perhaps the best test of self-control is to deal
with one who is in the wrong, and knows it, and
knows you know it, and yet insists he is right.—Anon.
W ednesday, M ay 22
T hursday, May 2 3 __
l 'i iday, May 24 ........
S atu rd ay , May 2 5 __
Sunday, M ay 2 6 ____
Monday, May 27 ........
11:07
11:40
12:11
12 41
1:12
2 24
12:11
12:53
1:33
2:12
2:52
4:21
PORT ORFORD NEWS*
Mrs Sim m or.ds glanced a t the
brief headline, "B ank R obbed! Po
lice a t S e a !” an d laid down the
sheet. "Now, look a t th at, E z !”
she ejaculated, rep eatin g the h ead
line aloud.
"H ere's a big city
b ank broke into by b u rg lars and
th e police force all o ff fish in ’
som ew here! W h at a sc a n d a l!”
on receipt of *1.00. W hy not m ake
y o u r own a n d save m oney?
A
C leansing form ula th a t w ill clean
a n y th in g except a conscience *2.00
B oth se n t fo r *2.00
F. A. S C H L IE M A N N
A2tf
Gold B each, Ore.
xxx-
C. R. WADE
Capt. Cedro De Q ulros long had
I been Intrigued by tales of a vas1
continent In the Southw est Pacific
ocean and finally coaxed Phillip III
of Spain to let him go in search of
It.
On July 27, 1005, at Callao,
Peru, he drew a flourish under his
signature, commissioning the cap-
luins of his two ships, and was
A N O T H E R good w ay to im
A ttorney-at-Law.
ready to sail on “the discovery of
prove your m em ory is to lend
tiie unknown au stral regions of this
First N ational Bank Bldg.
a d o llar in stead of borrow ing
South sea by the order of the king.”
one.
One of tiie captains presented
Bandon
-
Oregon
him self, respecl fully asking De
Q alros to lay down a course for
them to follow.
♦
“Let her go as she is,” returned
h e Q ulros grimly. “God will take A COUNTY CLERK RECORDS Ç
us som ew here!”
Dental Surgeon
In the followin'; y ear they sight A A A A A A A A A A A A A f .
ed one of tiie Islands of tiie New
At Port Orford Pharm acy
lietirides group, and h e Qulros, un
W. T. W hite Sr. to C u rry Coun-
iler tiie im pression Unit II was his ty bank, sale agreem ent,
Port Orford. Ore
long sought laud named it I-a Au
Louis L. K napp, petition to pro- Phone 1»1
(ralia de I.spir. u Santo, hollowed b ate will of Louis K napp, deceased,
sickness und d scoutent, the crew ,
l .
, , , i o i . . i .,, i
. ,1 t forced i a return
.
, f iti I , C. H. H
notice of location
m utinied and
. earse,
,
Mexico. Hut not before h e Qulros 1 °* Binbad mine,
hud caught a glimpse of a long
O ra B ru m b au g h to F lorence
m ysterious coast line, that to this j B rum baugh, deed.
day some believe was the Aus
W est Ju le y Jr. to E th el Peacock. |
tralia of his dream s. A nother ex ! m arria g e license.
pedition w as organized by him In
W. M H u n te r to C u rry C ounty
Spuin, hut on reaching Panam a lie bank, assig n m en t of m ortgage.
died of a fever and there he lies
Floyd P u te r vs. B rookings Com-
buried In an unknown grave.—h e
I m ercial Co., action to collect on
Iroit News.
notes.
A. C. Snider, et al. fifing assu m
ed nam e of the P u blicity B ureau
Nest of Three Rooms
| of C u rry County.
Required for Stork
H. R. B ru b a k e r to H. and D. .
A three-rooii. tenem ent is buill I Beaulieu, c o n tra c t sale.
I by the ham m er-headed stork for the
A rth u r E. S tra in et al to H enry
housing of him self and family. He
S
train
, et ux. q u it claim deed.
Is a native of Africa, and In his
construction work utilizes enor I E ugene S tra in e t ux. to H enry
mous sticks which he fixes between S train , b arg ain an d sale deed.
the branches of a tree. Any ordi
H en ry S train, et ux to F ederal
miry hoy could creep Into tiie lower i L and bank Spokane, am ortization
com partm ent. From this a passage m ortgage.
slopes up to another flat decorated
with bright pebbles and bleached
hones. Above this is the nursery, A A A A A A A A A A A A A A
A
the w alls of which nre lined with ♦
mud to keep out drafts. A curious A PORT ORFORD AND LANG- A
nest Is the one the sw lftlet builds A
L O IS P A R IS H
A
in Borneo, and which Is known to A Rev. J. C. W hitsett, Pastor. A
commerce hs the edible nest of the A
A
Chinese gourmet. The bird builds A A A A A A A A A A A A A A
in caverns around the coasts, and
nest-seekers go w ith torches and
C alen d ar of services fo r Sunday,
tear them down and export them. May 29, 1929.
Il Is said th at edible nests to the
S unday school a t both Langlois
value of *1,900,000 nre Imported
Into China every year.
The nest an d P o rt O rford, 10 a. m.
H our of public w orship. Langlois
Is woven from a secretion the bird
produces—hence Its food value.
church, 11 a. m.
H our of public w orship, P o rt Or- 1
ford church, 8 p. m.
Old C ities in T iers
T hem e of address, “Im potency j
The Inca museum at Loma, Peru an d O m nipotence."
1 as recently come into possession
S p iritu al th o u g h t fo r th e w eek: (
of 300 mummies of aboriginal Pe
"Sir, I have no m an. w hen the I
ruvians brought back by an expedl
tlon to the Pisco region.
From w a te r is troubled, to p u t m e into i
these and other discoveries It would the pool, b u t w hile I am com ing. |
seem th a t »here, r u an advanced a n o th e r step p eth dow n before me. I
civilization in th at p a rt of the coun Je su s say eth unto him, Rise, tak e
try long before the tim e of Christ. up th y bed, and w a lk ." —Jo h n 5 7-8 I
C ities of different p erio d s* were
T he ch u rch is in y o u r com m un
found, one built over the other, the
earlier ones having been burled ity to try an d fill th e need it is j
The expeditions also returned w l'h created to fill. Its doors a re open I
great w ealth of em broidered tapes to all w ho desire to e n te r and
tries, beautifully decorated pottery, w orship. An h o u r sp en t in th e
some In the shapes of anim als and san ctu ary , fo rg e ttin g self and look
serpents.
One of a llama design ing unto Jesu s, G od's salvation
showed live toes on the forefeet
Instead of the present spilt hoof. u n to men. fo r stre n g th and pow er
Llam a skeletons showing the same fits us to b e tte r e n te r into the
PORT ORFORD, ORB.
ch aracteristics were also discov du ties of the dally life we m ust
face th ro u g h the week.
ered.
T he privilege is yours
avail
yo u rself of it.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ < » ♦ ♦ ♦ <•>
THE WOLF ANI) THE CRANE
(From Aesop’s Fables)
A wolf devoured his prey so ravenously that a
bone stuck in his throat, giving him great pain. He
ran howling up and down, and offered to rew-ard
handsomely any one who would pull it out. A crane,
moved by pity as well as by the prospect of the money,
undertook the dangerous task. Having removed the
bone, he asked for the promised reward. “Reward!”
cried the wolf; “pray, you greedy fellow, what re
ward can you possibly require? You have had your
head in my mouth, and instead of biting it off I have
let you pull it out unharmed. Get away with you,
and don’t come within reach of my paw.”
DR. L. R. PUGH
•>
A
OWEN’S RAILROAD EXTENSION
(Medford News Editorial;
The announcement forms the beginning of the
realization of a cherished dream of the people of
Rogue river valley and southern Oregon for another
CONFECTIONERY
railroad outlet for the products of this vast district
Up-to-Date Goods
and for competition in railroad transportation.
Always Fresh
The announcement does not come as a surprise
W. J. Paulman, Prop.
PORT ORFORD TO REC EIVE PUBLICITY
but that lessens the gratification of the people o
Port Orford, Ore.
The
newspaper
at
Bandon,
Western
World,
is
Rogue river valley not in the least. A rail line from
soon
to
issue
a
big
illustrated
publicity
edition
in
Medford to Klamath Falls was the original plan o:!
that great empire builder, James J. Hill, and although which the various sections of Coos and Curry coun
many years have elapsed since the first stretch o:' ties and their many and varied advantages will be
the road was constructed out from Medford to the portrayed by word and picture and in which Port
heavily timbered district northeast of here, confi Orford will be prominently featured. The general
dence has always prevailed that eventually the orig public has interested itself to such an extent that a
SERVICE STATION
inal plan of Hill would be carried out and the roac widespread outside distribution is assured. The
extended to Klamath Falls. The building of a roat Bandon Chamber of Commerce will look after this
Associated Gas
by the Great Northern from Bend to Klamath Falls distribution to a great extent and our own chamber
two years ago, afforded renewed hope that the line of commerce is to be furnished with such extra copies
Kelly Springfield Tires
to Klamath Falls would become a reality in the near without cost as they may need.
Such fine publicity work which cannot help but
future, and when the Weyerhaeuser people began
pushing a standard gauge road southwestward from bring results has our hearty endorsement.
L. B. HATTON
the scene of their new mill this side of Klamath Falls
MOVIE STUDIO
Prop.
the prediction was made that soon the two roads
What has become of the movement to locate a
would be joined affording connection with the roads
large movie studio in Port Orford?
entering Klamath Falls.
Port Orford, Oregon
Whether or not the extension to be made by the
Owen-Oregon company is to join the standard gauge
— SPECIAL —
road being constructed by Weyerhaeuser is not
known, but it is sufficient to know that the former
End of, the Month
corporation intends to build the much-needed link
Sale
which will afford connection with the two transcon
tinental roads at Klamath Falls,
SATURDAY ONLY
The construction of the new road will mark the
beginning of a new era in Rogue river valley and
20 Per Cent Reduction on All
all of southwestern Oregon, and will in all probabil
ity be the signal for the construction of a road from
Medford to a point on the coast of northern Cali
fornia or southern Oregon, which will mean added
development of the vast resources of this district
Railroad construction of the past two years and
A wonderful assortment of
that proposed for the near future accord assurance
that liberation is near at hand for those rich dis
tricts of Oregon which have long been bottled up by
Tim ber From the Tropic»
a single railroad.
It Is recognized, says the Ameri
LA D IES
can T ree association, that the for
Beautifully made, distinctive in style and
est resources of tropical America
COMMON HONESTY
may be a very Im portant factor In
many of them new- this week.
I t is y o u r rig h t to be beautiful
our own domestic tim ber problem
(Editorial in Tribune)
1 Some believe that those forests will and, to keep your beauty, a good
A
| he called upon to bridge the hiatus Cold C ream is indispensable.
A bundle of hundred-dollar bills lay in the gutter
, th at Is bound to exist between the fo rm u la fo r a good Cold C ream
exhaustion of our wild tim ber crop and a Spécifie B eau ty C ream sen t
on Park Row, New York City, at the noon hour.
I and the harvest tim e of our man
Thousands of men and women passed by or stepped
■ m anaged forests.
O thers believe
' that they will form a perm anent
over those bills before a young woman clerk saw them
, source of tim ber to replace some
BANK
and, calling a policeman, took them to the station
of our own special purpose hard
“Modes of the moment”
woods.
house.
OF
All are agreed th a t. In any case,
That clerk did just what 99 out of every 100 peo
we cannot fully and completely out
line our own forestry problem with
BANDON
ple would have done. It’s the common honesty of :::i::::::::::ii::::i:::::n::ni::i:
out taking into consideration all
people generally on which business is based. They
the facto rs that may influence the
outcome.
NOTARY PUBLIC
Commercial & Savings
need money, but they do not need it badly enough
to take what does not belong to them. The credit
M ooo'i M ovem ent»
Safety Deposit Boxes
system in business is a tribute to the honesty of ev
T he aaval observatory says that j
W. T. White
for Rent
efy man and woman who buys “on time.”
the moon does not revolve In the '
plane of the e a rth 's equator, but I
There are still people w’ho will get somethii g
Port Orford, Ore.
In a plane inclined to the plane of ,
Hazel’s School of Dancing
for nothing if they can. There are people who will
the eq u ato r at an angle th at varies j
approxim ately from 18 to 29 de
obtain what they want dishonestly if they can not
grees.
In any month the moon ,
ret it honestly. But the vast majority of people are
may be seen at least 18 degrees '
Curry Chapter fro. 135
Port Orford Gymnasium
south of the celestial equator, and
ike this clerk who did not want what was not hers.
O. E. S.
a fte r tw o weeks a t least 18 de
Common honesty is the foundation of American
R egular m eetin gs, third Satur
grees north of the celestial equa
THE
BLUE
BIRD
lor.
In some years, as 1913 for
day of each m onth.
VBltore
Saturday Night. May 25
business confidence.
Loggers
Pool Hall
HATTON’S
Port Orford
HATS
Hardware Co.
Audre Lee models
E R M A ’S
Specialty Shoppe
Real
Estate
Theatrical Program
f
instance, the moon may be seen
nearly 29 degrees south of the ce
lestial equator. T he moon's rapid
northerly progress occurs about
one week la te r than Its farthest
ii south, and about one week earlier
ii i than its farth est north.
MONEY IN SCENIC ROADS
Adults 50c
Children 25c
(Columbus Dispatch Editorial)
We print elsewhere on this page an extract from
the San Francisco Chronicle with regard to the de
termination of California to protect the beauties of
her great scenic highways from defacement. Cali State Teachers Exams
Yala'» F ootb all Song
fornia is a strong lure for the automobile tourist, and The s ta te te a c h e rs ex am in atio n 1 It is n Yale tradition th s t "Bools
Bonin," the football song of U n it
her people have come to realize that beauty in a high will he held In Coquille on Ju n e 12, university,
wits Introduced to the
13. 14 an d 15 S upt M ulkey ex- I
way and its immediate surroundings is one of the pert» only a few teac h ers to tak e , class of 1D01
by Albert lim it
Mnrckwnld n ite r he hnd heard It
most potent attractions. To allow that beauty to be th e < x am ln atio n a t th a t tim e as sung
In the South Sen Islands A«
obscured by countless big billboards, or nullified by a larg e p ercen tag e of teac h ers a re : a native ditty It had hern mi>«
g certific a te s th ro u g h n o r there for centuries, and M trekw il l
squalid “hot dog” shacks and other offensive struc m g ettin
al g ia d n a tio n
T he su b jects will ’ started the class singing It sim|il>
tures, is to do the state direct material harm.
as a folksong.
A nother student
t>e given as follows
Allan Mortimer I11r«h. took It tip
Florida is learning the same lesson, and her wom W ednesday forenoon I S his-j as
a group song, then as a football
en's club organizations are striving with the legisla tor> w ritin g (p en m an sh ip ). W ed-I air, finally having It set to tnusii
ture to get the power of the law behind them in the ne»day a f t e r n o o n Physiology, ns a (Hipnlnr song. — D etroit N'e.vs
movement for highway beautification. This is not i i adlng. com position, m ethods in j
m ethods In arith m e tic .
L oyalty S u prem e Te»t
maudlin sentiment, hut sound business sense, and a reading,
Loyalty Is one of the finest vlr
T h u rsd ay forenoon A rithm etic
strong infusion of it here in Ohio would show good histo ry o f ed ucation, psychology j tnes a man can acquire. It Is a
hnll m ark of c h aracter Loyalty io
economic judgment as well ¡is good taste. The next m ethods tn geography. T h u rsd ay I yourself,
your friends, to yonr
ten years should see hundreds of thousands of beau aftern o o n G ra m m a r geography. ' job stam ps to yon
as one who Is
lite ra tu re , physics, m eth , faithful in one of the greatest test»
tiful shade trees planted along the highways of the A ods m erican
In Innguage. th esis fo r p rim ary that can come fo man - G r i t
Buckeye state.
certificate.
alw ays welcom e.
W orthy Matron,
Katie Adolphsen
Scenic Views
Secretary,
V elm a Sabin
of Curry County
N on e to L e a se
L uther C harles w as very fontLof
I nneel food cake and hnd been per
m itted liy his grandm other to go to
Itie pantry and get him self a piece,
lie returned with an enorm ous
chunk of cake in his hand and his
grandm other In q u ired :
“L uther Charles, didn’t you leave
any?”
“Leave any?” he replied with an
Innocent expression. “Why, this
was all th ere was."
Work o ( Three Year»
A fter working th ree years to
m ake a com plete set of type so that
lti.isxi Chinese ch aracters can be
printed, a lrlnting firm In Shang
hal, China announced that the task
is nearly half completed.
The
characters, which Include most of
C hina's aiphabet. will exceed by
several thousand the number of
ch aracters now being used by the
largest of S hanghai's Chinese new«
p o p .» .
PORT ORFORD
LODGE A. F. & A. M.
No. 170
Cigars
Meets second Saturday of each
month V isitin g brethern w el
come.
CRAW FORD W. SMITH,
Candv
W o r sh ip fu l
M aster.
FRANCIS W. SMITH,
Secretary.
Magazines
WOODMEN
OF THE WORLD
W. O, W. Camp 609
Refinert and ‘B uytrt o f
N ative Platinum and Gold
H ig h es t M a rk e t
Prkv»
W 1L D B E R G B R O S ,
- |i
T 'S 'd a V
f
I ><*.*: t«Muh ixn I
NG (
Mieta I r»; l i d i *
j? « q
I rr<
month
V itti yr« t • no k J M
f ou r camp.
W. J. SABIN. C. <’.
DEHN A I, FORTY, Clerk.
it