Image provided by: Cape Blanco Heritage Society; Port Orford, OR
About The Port Orford tribune. (Port Orford, Or.) 1892-19?? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1916)
V o lu m e XJLV. T «. lo ie is The ftU k rrp -ir at Kurt Scott was aa- toaiahed th« other night wbea a food- luukin« jo n o « e..u|,la asked fo r per mission to stay In nor of the cells t i l l morning. I t was explained th a t th e ; had Just been married u ee rin Missouri and were going into southern Kansas, whore the man had work. T h e ; ran out of money and bed no place to sleep. The M onitor any a the bride waa good looking and cheerful and teemed to re gard the m atter ka something of a joke. Out thin k of honey moon nomiuenctd in Jail. Lota; Water Front property— Port Orford’a beat city property to be placed on I he market A ugust 10 th Thia property w ill be sold at a low figure; term s to su it W HAT IS BEHIND POJiT ORFORD L U M itfl cast at m s iiu m rttr a» rimes smacmvW Past *st « usv cast nftsa at ecru rs ms n n wrtms A r e W ill sr n« vsasTt w run ran osrens.sortmsm Msvtrsa» ascssriv ov sr ran osrsss « oasis w t eosiB mts ra n » w r mts m i s csmxmts « Nine rs«T i PACIFIC OCEAN PORT ORFORD cusav essNtv oacaoN “Build me a veranda with a house attachment," said a rich Georgian to his northern archi tect, “ that's what 1 w a n t" These few words in the brusque vernac ular of the business man tersely express the wishes of most south ern house builders of the present day, says the Architects and Builders Magazine. Ten years ago the ubiquitous southern veranda, though often of great length (especially in the old- fashioned widte-eoluraued bouses when ft often became a colonnade extending around th * e e sides of a parallelogram), waa usually nar row. Home one, somewhere, built a square veranda the size of an average room. The chances are it was a woman, the architect and contractor of her own sutunier bnngalow. Women, ns designers of houses, are celebrated for their disregard of precedent; their inde pendence (if this is the proper word) In the face of it. Without the slightest compunction a worn aa will knock any architectural ....... ____ ___ rule of three into a cocked hat If air *’»**“'■ hi a «licet. I t la forced it hapjiens to be in her way. Some ia,w r,e ' u8 or carpet at a [<rea- one saw the square vernmlo. liked fcur*‘ euflldent to blow the d irt out it and copied it. In a few. years from tlie fabric. flow It was a fad. In the south j Ti.e dust passes upward through verandas are a necessity. The slot» into the hood, and is -pre idea of a square veranda, m m y , j venled from escaping into the air furnished with all the luxurious by a cloth bag which retains It. accessories of modern life, “open- Tb«- d in settles into a pan csje air parlors,” as some one has hap ' ¡•’ Hr d -signed to collect It, and i plly styled them. Supplied an ac- i clo ved l<y taking off the bag q n i tual demand. Unlike most fads, '"“'j inc Mie pmi. The i-enovat<< this ore hnd common sense behind is move I by a handle over tie it, and ns a result has been influ- door. The handle also acts as e ential in revolutionising building conduit for the compressed ai styles that have obtained forcen- ihe supply of which s regnlc.te« turies. _____________ , bv an ordinary valve. Therenorn [tor is a sublimated capet M ILE-A-M INUTE WATER RIDE « » « T * *- « . . . . ___. i , o r removing dust from uphoi £ £ ‘ 8of " and il,r BpeedL** ¡¡niture a band rorovutor may be ____ . (used. I t is constructed on lie Among tba man? intsrestlng expert- same principle as the la r g e r ty pe, m a n ,, with motor hoate, aays tba fo j r- I w T it h ' the * " slots » " '! - " Bppl ' - ” v m » g ' tl «0 rrtT m Fntcaua, when Compta da Lambert, a 0 8 * ' a n *' *• p ushed over the s:ir- la conjunction n lth M ««rri. De Dion face by hand. Even billiard-Isb'e and Bouton, hruufcht out th-Jr bateau coverings are thoroughly cleaned iir tC T FA CIF C OCEAN o r t e u v. 54 F f f T OT*Hor. In freeing {I,Hours and mattresses a sirnpie j n -umatlr n e -lie is nsed. The ai; > injected with suffleient foxce to circulate “ d b ^ X ^ X m k 0 F feathers, hair or other leailyr i.uneniiva oi l . s co n stru ction . V » ih a j * u:oa t-borse power mo- tor, ts^ . o j e t a-i-io<-d j, «-.iced of 28 kilometers an hour la h it .rst sx- ♦reeie iw. ters. or 20 mi.es. is hg hour. ‘ n®' ' -T 0- *,le dtt»t that Tn» tn r-i,or cr inr* hydroplane is m^y ba ■ celfpncj. ----- ——i-------- not however content a im this, end j frfcg alr-bl ’St supplemented bv s i l l try is e day or (s o to raise the ' _ ... . , • speed to 33 or evou W W i w a s ^ w t . m ilts an hoar, or watch iNsiDC v e n e » m n c THE GOVERNMENT ANDJ>ORT ORFORD kSX.TÆg7» SUS SÄK% seÄT&rSiTKsIä SHSM a r & Ä S f ia r « 1* * » D“J““ tarsa ¡ r s á r f e n r a w LC55 THAW rtffC T OCEf ÖV ul icuMÀweup, cwot-RtmJbwwA Kisualkiwitf^ ^M uXitm tiixi o ils w b ow ^ktb-w u^i wm. <MM*rcjo|uhh^tvwv » M W M M B A lA n W flCftUCC T M psíuvíís ?1» CWT « M ffllL W W W » F IM VAL AWO F lW M C tA L CORSI Q ÍR A 7IÒNS HAKE THE IHRROVEHRT I ft » ’ 7’ INVESTIGATE PORTOREORD-DEEPWATER-NOSANOTAR W a te r fro nt blocks - Numbers I t . |2. 18, 21 and 26. ‘ ' Inside property blocks-2 8 , 63, 118, 181, 128, 139, 125, 140, 124, «9 182. H a lf Mocks -South h alf block 103, N orth h alf block M8, South h a lf Mock 83. West h alf block H l , W est fcag.btick 119. North h alf of block 113, N o rth half o f block 123, N crth h a lf o f Mock 106, South h alf o f Block 122. » Lota—Northeast quarter o f block 49, i Northw est quarter of block 68, S u b d i vision 5 o f block 29, Sub-división 6 of block 70, Southwest q uarter of block 89, Sub-division 6 of block CS, M h d iv is ie n 1 o f block 28, Sub-ulviaion « o f block 28, North fifty by one hundred and flftv fee t in block 88, South h a lf o f :beNor b h alf o f Mock 44, North we*, t corner South h a lf o f block 8X N r-h e is t cor ner Mock H l , Northeast corner block 119, Southeast corner block 119. COAL OINT Sub-division 1 o f block 51, Southwest quarter o f block 83, Southwest quarter o f block 106, Southeast quarter o f block 87, 8ub-division 3 o f block 29. Sub-divis ion 1 o f block 48, Sub-division t o f block 48. * r East h alf o f Southwest quarter of Mock 49. Southeast quarter o f Work <9. South 74 fee t o f sub-division 1 of block 7». Southeast quarter o f block 34, house and tw o lots— three years old bungalow ocean view. Sub-division « o f block 29, Sub-divis ion'4 of bfcck 68, Sub-division 4 o f Lniicli property. Timber íuk I Vjiu'rnl land. FRANK B TfCHEXOlî, P ort O r foni, Ore to n e r motor. l j i boat Itsslf Is 39 fte t long and ulna le<t wide. To iKe bottom ot the b o it srs affixed Cve planes or flns. Wh.-a tbs boat is rtatlonary these flns bang vertically (n the wxtsr. They ere blared, however, and are all under control of the driver. When the mo tor Is set In mo* Ion and the boat begins to move these planes, begin ning at the bow, are gradua ly given a backward angle. The boat rises In |h s v a tc r and then firaduaily rsa.s upon it, with the «'era ot the boot only turner:c<L Tbs speed In rcaser, and the boat, following th t lacl.'natloi of the plaass. g|.de* qlc,ng the surface of the water Jusi sa s i sen pises glide- on the air, sad with not much more reg » ante. It Is conddently expsc'.ed that with sa Incrvsxed bone-power motor tbs hydroplane w ill teach a speed of W miles sa hour. During the extremely severe weather of February, 189», myriads of birds periehod from cold and stsrvntiun, both in Europe and the United States. In England this dcstmotioo tvas the more sorrowful, perhaps, aa the country where the birds w in te r ia more thickly settled than w ith us, and there were mors ».» seo th eir sufferings. Hut occa sionally the British birds found friend ly shelter. The London Flmes published, during the cold weather, this note from Ru dolph W alther, a boy o f twelve years, wbo lives a t Tanbridgc WpUs: “ I thought perhaps you would allow S schoolboy to tell you how very tome qnd fearless tho cold and h-ta.T.w have made the w ild birds around orur house. "Of, course we feed them w ith bread and sM sorts of odds and endi, and ths ground ia simply black w ith our hungry visitors. Even ths suspicious rooks some quite close to tbs houso for their “ A little blu e-tit passes Its day in our basement, heedless of sleepy pussy baking herself before tho stove “ Moat o f a ll I wish to tell you about my strange bodroorqcompanion, s llttlo robsa. which has taken np fta residence te my bedroom; and th o n /h I leave the window open, he never goes out except to take a short fly. We pass the night together, and he makes lita bud in one o f my fontball tiootx. “T h e other morning he woke me op by singing on a chair g l the side of mv bed. I suppose be thought I ought to be a t my teutons " I 1 f l" l 'w f> » P «n d W8- « sp-d tsy^a u »ter» W«»»-a rectmcile most womeu ■ H. atffLr'HJ.Liftftjf!V i^sTM' ■» « THE TRUE 8TORY OF A CAT. 'Pasasta” round Her Way Monis Alone from s Considerable BU- tsaoe Guided by last:not. A Wskeflelil family who resign in Magnolia during th e ■umni< ’ when tney removed to Mcgno1! t . last Jdcc, tcaL with flic-1 their pf-t cai, hut pci-ic did n».( like the rear :’ J 4 . rh of the o 1 o can, s:ty> tui* i ’tai, j«- Eatuipr {¡om<* Magazic-, hot s’.Jieu foi i.et ?;omo ■>y the pJd'id wutcr of “|,ako qunr.«ajowitt.” tfhtd r, j>peared, and tv,a not seen again njj sum mer. The >:tmily retnened to tl.elr IVakefleid .'lOir.c b'-./t the middle of Sej,(ember. T i^ y he : b<< » at home about tuo weeks when ooo morning,*hc daixliter of the house was in the bailm ent and heard ■ cat mew, and lo, at the window was her, darling pet cat that she Ipul long mourned as th-ad! I t could not he ; where did she come from? It most be a strapggcat closely resembling “Peaiftfts” (so called because of her fondness for the article). “W ell." slid the mother, “there Is on** si.Te test. *I)on,’ the boose dog. will know his old playmate," Don was called uni} thc> recogni- tion vrns ftrn a .il; they both seemed delight* d to meet again. It was eiident the eat had trsv- *!ed «11 the W-»e’froni Muguo ia to Wakefield, tbnrngh the woods of d ’.-'i 0 1 "I.ii. ussier, Beverly, over IJ re ily bridge, Kv’em streets, p-«body. Lynfield. found W a k e f le ’d — h o w d id . she know it to le V nk field T—and hied up to her e’d I o i .-.ir t h e h ik e . I never sew u cienlore mdelighted to find her old inistiess and tho ether members of the fum ly. W hat gni.h d her over so many miles? Wns It animal instinet? (