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ttUftT ETWKX
a VISSING IU TT OU
Pat tot Yanr Cwsvpfirw Yourswif sad
Finat • New Tree.
V>* Way a French Detective Forced •
Criminal to Cenfe**.
Be sure to put out your camp
fire before you abandon it ia the
morning to take up the trail. Do
not leave the task for one of your
camp servants, not even for your
guide, whose interest in keeping the
woods free of devantatin^iires, lieing
a matter of bread and butter, is
therefore the keenest of any of your
camp followers, but who, none the
less, is apt to be careless. See to it
{ourself. Leave no smoldering back-
og of the night’s “friendly fire.”
Leave no smoking coals that have
served to broil (so deliciously) the
breakfast trout, for such relics so
often are fanned into the tiny flame
which, feeding ujion nearby leaves
or moss or bush twigs, grows within
two days to a devouring blaze that
consumes acres of fori*st liefore its
withering touch is stayed. If you
are close to a brook use its water
Clentifully, and if water is scarce
nock the live ends of the larger
sticks until not a spark is left and
scrape dirt over all the coals—not
a few handfuls of dust that the
wind may scatter at its first breath,
but dirt that will bury and
smother.
No doubt my average reader
thinks 1 am writing a lot to deliver
one small message, but let him con
sider that hundreds of acres of for
est land, worth thousands, measured
by dollars, and of inestimable re
sources of the country, are annual
ly destroyed from just such insig
nificant beginnings as the campfire
which was not put out lieyond the
power of the passing breeze to re
suscitate. Therefore the warning
appeal cannot be too important
since wc as a nation are using up
from three to four times as much
wood every year as the country is
producing.
Two worthy exhibits of genuine
Americanism are, first, not to add
to forest destruction by carelessly
leaving fire around, and, second, al
ways to plant a new tree—young
tree—for every one you destroy.
And plant it where it will do the
most good.—Outing Magazine.
Proof Not Necessary.
As General Benjamin F. Butler
entered the lobby of the Boston
statehouse one morning he saw two
men whom he knew engaged in a
heated argument, “(hie moment,
general,” said one of them to him.
“Can’t you settle a dispute? We
are arguing as to who is the great
est lawyer in Massachusetts, and as
we can’t agree we will leave it to
|
you.”
“That’s easy. I am,” said Butler,
with perhaps more truth than mod
esty.
The two men were somewhat tak
en aback.
“Er-—er—but, general, of course
—you know—hut—but—how can
we prove it?” the first speaker man
aged to get out.
“Prove it? Prove it?” growled
Butler. “You don’t have to prove
it. I admit it!”
Mirrors For Invalids.
“If you have a sick friend who
can’t get out of lied for awhile and
want to provide entertainment fur
her,” saiti the woman of experience,
“give her a hand mirror. Nothing
else is quite so fascinating. Often
the bed may be placed with the head
toward the window so the patient
gets no glimpse out of it, hut if she
has a mirror it is all reflected for
her. She can catch a sunbeam in
the edge of it or count the clouds
aa they float past. She can inspect
all the furniture in the room, and if
she is alone in a hospital she can
find company in looking at herself.
It is the most entertaining and
harmless thing you could possibly
give her.”— New York Tress
Theatric indeed are some of the
methods of the Brench detectives.
COQUILLE
naans gcxxf time to you for
They look for the little clews rather
than the staring ones. Unhke the
years to conic. Time econ
English and American detectives,
omy in a time-piece lies in
they often do not wait to get irre
MI8LEK 3 MORRISON, Prop’ra.
cleanness.
The delictte parts
futable evidence before charging a
Coquille, Ort<«»n.
doing indescribable work will
man with crime, but first charge
vxin wear tlieiH'-elvcs to ruin,
him with the crime and play upon
First-Class Laundry Work
him so that if he is guilty he is lec
destroy their high finish and
of every kind doue on abort not kt ,
to confess.
perfect fit w hen running, in ac
mill nt reasonable prices.
Some time ago a woman was mur
cumulating
dirt
and
rancid
oil.
Satisfaction is Guaranteed.
dered in Paris, and from her room
It will cost you nothing to let
were stolen 750 francs in money,
14? Onlera left <><> MiHMlayH with oor Ban
her watch and jewelry. Two broth
me examine it.
$125 ,or
don agenl, A. O. TROWBRIDGE, will be
ers, George and I’aul Arnot, hat
given on refill attention and delivered lii
cleaning.
been seen near the house. The
Bandon nt the »tore Friday evening«.
night of the day after the murder
was committed M. Hamard, chief of
T
detectives of Paris, entered a wine
shop where the two brothers were
H. VAN NORDEN
drinking. To the man’s amazement F.
THE EXPERT
he arrested George, charging him
with the murder.
Jeweler
“You have changed your coat,” Watchmaker &
he said to the man, a safe guess if
Bandon Drug Co Store. Bandon
he had committed the murder. ‘It
Garfield & Von Pegert.
was gray this morning, and there
is blood on it.”
“My nose was bleeding,” replied
tin; man.
“From excitement, I suppose,”
WORK A SPECIALTY.
said Hamard, “excitement caused C. L. LAW &
by your robbery of Mme. Lucas yes
pecial
achines
terday evening.”
C. W. DYGERT
“I was nowhere near Mme. Lucas
last night,” said the man, becom
uilt to rder
ing very pale.
Paintersand
Contractors
“Y’ou lie!” roared Hamard. “Look
Turned Shafting, Cup and. Set
at. your left lioot!”
Screws,
Machine
Bolts,
Every one saw the third button It oiimp . Nign anti I'nrriage
Painting.
from the boot was missing.
Pipe and Fittings,
“Here’s the button,” said Ila-
All Work 4>iiiiraii(t‘i‘d
Brass Work.
mard, producing one. “It was found
General
Rt>|uurini;.
Pattern 8 bop in
Priera ltea<*onal»lr
in your victim’s ldooil. Confess!”
Connection.
Bandon, Oregon,
The man confessed. As Hamard
afterward said, he had guessed the
murderer. - The detection of the
missing button from tho man’s shoe
was accidental.
School For Waiter*.
XrfOdlS» unci Professional Directory
Lodges are Requested to Notify this Office on Election of Officers and au
M amiu I c .
Dr H. L Houston,
)ANDON LODUr.. N o . 115. A F. A M.
2 8tat«xl O.MUliiilulc.il um« Ursi Salii r-
rii\ SITIAS A .S7 /¿UA< L\
i I hv «Iter tbv full uioou of en.h uiouib
Office over Drug Store.
Hour«. !» to 12.
All Master Maauus cordiallv inviteli.
«.ni. I :3U to 4. p lu ; 7 to S lu the evening.
U. H. RO.sk W. M
Night culla answered from office.
I
I. O. O. P
Military Marches.
In military music the march occu
pies a prominent position and has
been employed r.<>t only to stimu-
late courage, but also from about
the middle of the seventeenth cen
tury to insure the orderly advance
of troops. One of the earliest in
stances of rhythmical march is tho
Welsh war strain, “The March of
the Men of Harlech,” which is sup
posed to have originated during the
siege of Harlech castle in 14G8. In
England the military march was of
somewhat later development. Sir
John Hawkins in his “History of
Music” tells us that its character-
istic was dignity and gravity, in
which respect it differed greatly
from the French, which was brink
and alert. And apropos of this
subject the same author notes a
witty reply of an Elizaliethan sol-
dier to the French Marshal Biron’s
remark that “the English inarch,
being beaten by the drum, was slow,
heavy and sluggish.” “That may
be true,” he said, “blit slow as it is
it has traversed your master’s coun
try from one end to the other.”—
Chambers’ Journal.
Run Them to Skin and Bone.
C.
A.
JACK
JAMISON
BROWN
<>KKG«N.
•
«J. Warren Kelly
Physician and Surgeon ■ Operative
Rebekah Lodge No. 126.
Surgery a Specialty.
Turad«y«,
EETS Every 2nd and 4tb
Praotioe mg lit first WtHlueadav of the
M mouth.
Social Evening tin. 3rd Snlurdny of
the mouth. A cordini iuvitntiou extended
lo all member« in good »lauding.
ANNA f'RAlNE, N. G.
P kaki . E kickho N, Sec’y.
OFFICE. Lowe’« Drug Store.
Residence in
the Panier Building
DR. LESTER SORENSON.
Resident Dentist
Knight« of 1‘ytliiH,
elphi lodge N o . m , Kmgbta of
Pythian. Meets every Monday even
D
ing at Masonic ball.
Visiting Knights in
Office Opposite Hotel Gallier
vited to attend.
R. E. L Bedilliou, C. C.
BANDON
B. N. H auhinuton , K. of R. 8.
-
-
OREGON
M <»<!«* r 11 Wootltueii.
p.ABLE ROCK CAMP, No. 917«, M W.
O R. WADE
L of A. Meets every fourth 8nturdny of
ATTORNEY AT LAW
each month nt Concrete Hall.
Visiting
Notary Public
ueigblxir« cordially invited to attend.
GEORGE LORENZ. H. C.
Office with Wheeler Real Estate Co.
E. E. O akes , Clerk.
B anixin ,
....
O bboon
M
O
-
-
B
Mill and Steamboat
B
BANDON,
ANDON LODGE. No. 133, I. O. O. F
inert« every Weduendav evening.
Visiting brother« in g.xxl standing cor
dially luvited .
Dr
NATHAN BAUKLOW, N. G.
L. J. R adlky . Sec.
Bandon Foundry
Machine Shop
S
Cards under this Head are 50c per in., month
Change of Meeting Night.
Steam Laundry.
A New Yorker who sometimes
varies his horseback riding by tak
ing trips through the rail fence belt
of Long Island noticed on one such
trip a farmer sitting dejectedly on
one such fence. -.At the farmer’s
feet was a litter of little pig9 so
thin they gave the impression of
having but one dimension.
“What happened the squealers?”
flic rider asked.
The farmer beckoned him to come
close, then hoarsely whispered:“Lost
my voice, Them was the fattest
pigs 1 over seen, 1 used to come
out and call ’em to me and feed ’em
three times a day. Lost mv voice
and had to call ’em to grub by rap
ping with my stick on the fence.
To Err la Hurrfan.
See? Now the darn woodpeckers ia
Robert Browning once found him driving them pigs crazy.” — New
self at a dinner nt n groat English Y’ork Sun.
house sitting next to a lady who
was connected with the highest aris
With Loss of Interest.
tocracy. She was ven graciously
There is a police court magistrate
inclined and did her utmost to make of St. Louis who frequently evinces
conversation.
a pretty wit in dealing with fresh
“Are you not a poet?” she finally 1 or facetious offenders.
asked.
To one vagrant brought before
“Well,” said Browning, “people him not long ago his honor put the
are sometimes kind enough to say question, “What occupation?”
that 1 am.”
“Nothin’ much at present,” flip
“Oh, please don’t mind my hav pantly responded the prisoner; “just
ing mentioned it,” the duchess has eurculatin’ round, judge.”
tened to say, with the kindest of
“Retired from circulation for thir
smiles. “You know Byron and Ten- ty days,” dryly observed his honor
Byson and others were poets.”— to the clerk of the court.—Harper’s
Youth’s Companion.
Weekly. _______________
It is often a matter of wonder
whv foreign waiters arc preferred
to English ones even in English ho
tel». The reason is a very simple
one. The foreigner is a far l»etter
woitet llis aim is not always to
vuwnti a waiter, hut to rise in the
Motel business to 4 higher position.
Lananne there ia a school for
Sahw. They are taught there for-
l*Mfuasts and not only to wait
Y f •vervthing el«e Connected
«Mb the wtuhuig of • hotel.—Lon-
lb* Twtk
Ttvtb.
The Bandon R ecorder wiM be
found on sale, by the copy, at Var
ney <N Tuttle’s Confectionery Store,
on Main Street.
Watch
Clean
.
Forestier« of America.
IOURT QUEEN OF THE FOREST, No.
) 17, meet« Friday night .uf each week,
in Concrete Hall, Bandon. Oregon. A cor
dial welcome is extended to all visiting
brothers.
ARTHUR RICE,
G. T yi . kh ,
Chief Ranger.
Fin. Secretary.
G.
C
TKi: ADGOI.D,
T.
ATTORNEY - AT
LAW,
NOTARY PUBLIC
Bandon,
-
Oregon.
Woodmen of the World,
easide camp No. 312,
w. 0. w.
LOUIS DOONAR,
meets in regular Seasioti the Aral and
third Thiiradava of each moutli in the Mu-
Electrician.
Electric Light rand Tele
aonic ball. Visiting neigbtxir« are cordially
invited.
R. W. BULLARD, C. C.
phone Work. Supplies
O. C. WALDVoon, Clerk.
S
Ran don,
Hr.
I». L. MTF.KI.K
Resident Dentist
The Arcade Saloon,
Oregon
O- T- Blumenrother
V. 8. roiiiini.Kloiier and Notary Public.
Filings and Final proofs innile on Home
steads. TimberClainm and other U. 8. Lands
BANDON,
-
-
OREGON.
Money Loans Negotiated on Approved
Security.
OKI), p. TOPPING,
Office in room 10 lleyerle Bnilding, Han-
ATTORNEY and COUNSELOR AT LAW don. Residence on Rutte Creek. Oregon.
OFFICE IN OLD BIIEUEH BUILDING,
Choicest of Wines, Liqours and
Real Latate bonglit and Sold.
AND
NOTARY PUBLIC.
Cigars.
l ire Insurance.
Bandon, — -
-
-
A. JI. HITCHCOCK
Orrfon,
They Handle The Famous
Contrarier
Hnilder
miti
W. E. THRESHER,
Weinhard’s
Attorney -at - Law.
Beers
Wedderburn
given on any kind of
Address Bandon, Oregon.
Estimate«
buildings.
Notary Public
Oregon
G. 11. Smith
In The New Green Building
Bandon Co-Operative Reality Co.
Real Estate and City Property
Title Guarantee
and Abstract Company
Residence and Business Lots Sold and Exchanged, A general Brok
JI nr* h tie l«l mill Coquille, Oregon.
erage Business. Timber, Farm Lands, Collections, Rents
---------------- X-----------------
i
havp completed a thorough and up to date ABSTRACT PLANT,
and are now ready to furnish CORRECT ABSTRACTS at short uo-
tice. Orders will receive careful and prompt attention.
Prosper
Marshfield Office Adjoins Flanagan & Bennett bank.
That at Coquille Adjoins Postoffice.
Marshfield Phone, 143
Coquille Phone, 191
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS
l-y*”/7»one at our Expense when ordering Abstracts
Oregon Pine, Spruce and
White Cedar Lumber.....
Title Guarantee and Abstract Co.
J. S. Barton, Abstractor
-:-
Mill Co
Henry Sengttacken, Manager
WE CUT LOCAL
L.UMHKR ORDERN
AT
ONCE.
<’.
O.
D
DEALERS IN
Have You an Edison, Victor, Columbia
(renerai Merchandise
or ZoNoPhone Talking Machine?
LOGGERS' SUPPLIES
You can get them with Recoods from us on easy payments, a
cheap as at any place in the world.
:
:
:
a Specialty.
:
Market Price Allowed for Prodnce of nil Kinds.
E. C. BARKER & CO. Coquille,
SucccMor to V. R. WILSON
II
PROSPER,
OREGON.
Hard on th. Eyes.
“You always think of n clerk or
bookkeeper as the boy with the job
that’s hard on the eyes,” remarked
an elevator man the other day.
“But this is the job that gets your
eyes, or at least it does me. Y’ou
see, we are obliged to look straight
A. Full Lilie of Confectionery, Fruit
ahead of us, and the blur of things
Cigare Tobacco, Soft Drinks. eto.
as we trv unconsciously to focus our
in
Connection.
>Tewe
Stand
eyes on them makes a constant
strauj. I would rathet l>« bending
over a set of books myself, so far a*
mv eyes are concerned.”—4Columb>B
N**t to Vienna Cafe
Dlspetch.
VARNEY
[8UCCE88OK TO HOOVBK A MONDA Y. J
NDOX MEAT MARKET.
-------- Denier In All Kinds of--------
Fresh and Salt Meats, Vegetables. Lard. Etc, Ele.
I-^“Hnving pnreh«*-d thin old and well Mlnbli-h.-dfl.nrinm«. «nd moved the?«Hnie to
Hie Mnrnhall Building, en»t side Mnin street, «e ».licit n nintinannce of prutt generoti«
patronage, gnnranteeing honest g.xxl«, fair prices snd con ri wrav treatment Io all.
Farm Produce Alwaye BowgM
Sold.