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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1906)
BANDO I i The Growing Town of Coos County The Manufacturing Town The Coming Summer ResOrt of the Oregon Coast Bandon is growing faster than any town in Oregon. Its advancement is real, not on paper. Manufacturing plants all running and several more big industries coming. Shipped more lumber since Jan. 1st than any port in Oregon except the Columbia. The Coquille valley is the garden epot of the Coast country and we have the timber and coal industries Fine openings for workers and hustlers, but grafters and hot-air artists are not wanted. BANK BANDON, •coDomy would compel the use of the bill land for fruit. Coos couoty has ooe advantage BJklSTDOlSr OREGON which we believe do other place on earth possesses. I useci and other Capital $25,000.00 Vast Amount of Land Suitable fruit pesta are practically unknown BOARD OF DIRECTORS; J. L K bonbnbbbu , President, J. D bsholm , Vice Pres. for Fruit. Condition. Different here. This is a great saving of labor F. J. F ahv , Cashier, F rank F lam , T. P. H amlt . Than in Other Localities. and expeuse. While fruit misers of n n other sections are spraying and using W ‘twF all aorta of devices and experiments That the fruit industry iu Coo* to rid their fruit of these peats the county has been sadly neglected, to Coo* county farmer goes about other the great loss of our farmers, most be work serene in the knowledge that his apparent to any one who baa given apples and hie peaches and pears will this question any thought at all. T his tie free from worms and scales and subject is so broad, and there are so blight and all other defects which so many phases of tlie qiiestiou, aud al) annoy his neighbors. This is an ad to the advantage of Coos county as vantage not to be overlooked by aoy the uatural home of so many varieties one contemplating a venture iu '.his of fruit, that to treat of the subject business. co nprehet s vely hi one article with The varieties of fruit that may be CORRESPONDENTS: American National Bank of San Francisco; Chase National the limited space our columns afford, successfully grown here are so nu Rank of New York . Merchant« National Bank of Portland; First National Bank of Coquille. presents a difficulty which is indeed merous that we shall not attempt to Accounts Solicited. Customers assured of every courtesy and accommodation hard to overcome. give more than a very few of them. possible under conservative modern banking methods. In the first place there are the wild Apples are. perhaps the most com Hank is Open from !• a in to 1'4 in., anil 1 p m. to 3 p.m. fruits which might be described with mon and the most easily and success profit to the newcomer. Then there fully grown here. From the quality are the numerous varieties of culti and quantity grown here it would vated fruits which may be grown here, seem that this climate and soil are the • each in its turn requiring much space natural home of the apple. Some 1 in which to set forth the best soil, the varieties seem to do better than varieties which thrive the best iu this others, however. Plant'a Baldwin 01 climaie, aud the manner of caring for a Greening or a Gravenstine any them here in order to bring the beet place in this country and it will results. So in an article of this kind, thrive and bring forth an abundant we can give, only in a general way, a crop iu a very few years. TbiB is not brief outliue of the whole subject. saying that the product would not be There is one tiiiug which it is nec better or the yield greater by propel essary for the easterner to learn when cultivation. be comes io this coast, aud that is Here, as elsewhere, there are the that the climate aud conditions here three principal classes as to season— are so entirely different from any the early or summer apple, the fall thing be has ever seen before, thin apple, and the winter apple. For the the methods be has learned and used early variety lhe Early Harves seems Notary Public iu the East cannot be used here, He to be the general favorite. The Grav- will have to learu all of bis lessons iu enstiue is the leader of all others as farmiug over again. Of course his a fall apple, while the Baldwin seems experience eleewhere will not be alto to be the staple as a winter apple. Fire Insurance gather useless here, but be will find Prunes, pears and plums seem to as all others have done, that different grow here almost as naturally as ap conditions of soil and climate require ples. Some varieties of cherries do different methods. But we shall uol well while others do not. Grapes and Bandon, Oregon. discuss these methods al Ibis time. peaches do not seem adapted to this The wild fruits winch thrive here climate, although many of our farm are very numerous iu variety as well ers especially back among the bills as abundant in quantity Mid excellent and away from the ocean raise quit* in quality. Of course, as the country a considerable quantity of both. Small is settled and die land cleared these funis and berries are very easily wil I fruits are dug up and supplant grown, and might be made profitable ed by tame varieties. But there are if properly bandied. thousands of acres left here yet. The We make no claim for tropica) most abundant of all these, perhaps, fruits, such as oranges lemons and are the wild blackberry aud the bananas Our climate is too damp, huckleberry In their season these there are too many cool winds and berries may be found iu our market fogs from the ocean for Buch as these. by the bushels, and the surrounding Our farmers have been entirely too hills are covered with them. During negligent iu the matter of establish the blackberry seasou people are seen ing a market for their fruit. No ¡daily going in large numbers—almost united or persistent effort has evei I a constant stream in the early morn been made along this line, and the ing—to the bills to pick this lucious result is that while their neighbors fruit; and later in tbe day may b« are receiving top-notch prices for al) seen returning, all heavily laden with the fruit they cao raise our farmers the result of their day's work. As we sell at third class rate or allow their wish to speak more especially of the fruit to rot on the trees It is only tame fruits we shall not dwell longer within the last few years (less than on this. ten), that Jackson county fruit has The first question of course is to gained the very enviable reputation select tbe land for planting to tame and demand which it now has. This fruits. J’he bottom lauds are very has been brought about by united, rich and most admirably suited to organized hu <I persienent effort on tbe fruit raising. The early settlers, ba*- part ot the fiiiii iaisers tliemseives. nz sticb abundance of laud from When the writer first came toOregon i which to choose, naturally used tbe be spent some months in Jackson [ bottom lauds for till purposes, aud county. The apples were then fed Io The most desirable Bandon property on the many of them became so accustomed | the bogs, made into cider, disposed of market at reasonable prices is in to using this land exclusively that it any way at all—too often allowed to is yet difficult to convince many of rot on the tree. Recently the Jack them that any other kiud of land i- son County Fruit growers’ Associa of any use whatever for any purpose. lion has been formed and the sam< But of late years it has been demon apples are sold at from one to two strated beyond adoubt that our bench dollars per box The other fruits are land is admirably adapted to this sold m 'he same proportion as to purpose. Again, the early settlers price, and the demand alwaysexceeds seldom if ever cultivated tbeir or the supply. chards after tbe first two or three Our fruit is just a* good, in fact years. Here, also, later experience belter than the Jackson county fruit, has proven them wrong. So that it is now claimed by many who have because we I ihvc no pests, as we men- tried it that tbe upland, when proper , tinned above, hu <I will) the proper Centrally Located. High and Dry, Close to School and Churches. ly prepared and cultivated, will ran • effort would Im in hh great demand as good a quality aud almost, if uol We also have the advantage over the quite, as large a quantity as tbe but Jackson .loiinty people in the matter tom lands. In fact many claim that Lots Sold on the Installment Plan if Desired. lhe fruit grown on the upland has a of freight rates. Our freight by water better flavor than that grown ou t ii<* costs ns less than one-foiirl'b what Call on or address bottom. theirs «lues l>y rail. Then here i* the advantage, Tl't* W ith this matter properly adjusted bottom land is very valuable for bay Coo* county will «ertamly be a verit and dairying purposes, while the bill able paiadise for th* fro|$ ratser;«- bind w tiijt. An I if tbe bill land will 1 raise as giod fruit as the bottom laud Sentinel, Fruit Raising in Coos County... of J GEO. TOPPING Attorney and Counselor at Law Fisher’s Addition Lots and Acreage Lots 53x100. Price $60 to $125. J. E. FISHER, Owner, Bandon