Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910, December 05, 1907, Image 5

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F ovati.
Three sheep with slight apltt tn
robabiy off Meat Crack
road.
Owner can have same by
calling at unAeatigned and paying
charg■•».
W. F. K ennedy ,
• Bandon.
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lM«.«l 'rt Jane 3 M~S
NOTKEF'iR pl BLICATION.
(Jutted 8t«t«-s Mud < Wilts-. KoaHwirir Ore..
August 7. 1*JU7.
Notice I. hereby uiven that in rouqSlKiic«
with the pro.iHlou« of •
set ol Collar«-»«
of Juue 3, 1S7H, entitled 'An act f«»r the
•ale of timber laud, in tb-i Suites of Cal­
ifornia, Oregon, Nevada, Mid Waaluii|;ton
Territory," a* eiteiided to nil the Public
Land State« by act of August 4, 1*32.
John M. leiritf, -if Bandon, flonntv of Coo«,
State lor Territory ) »t Oregon. baa thin da,
filed Hl till» office hia HWortl «llltelliellt No
«491, for ttte porcbaa* “I tbe SE‘, of NWq,
of Heetion No. 29. in I'ownaliip No. 29 s..
Ila lore No. It Weal, and will otter proof
to allow that the laud «ought la more valu­
able for its timber or atone lb an for agricut
tural purposes. and to establish hia claim to
said land before L. A. Liljeqvi«t, U.B. Com
tuiaaiouer nt Msrstitield, Oreg >n. on We<1-
ueada,, the '-th day ot November, 19W7.
He name* aa witnesses: Cliris Long,
Frank Batea, Frank Beyerls and Edward
Otiiusn, all of Bandon. U«xM County, Ore­
gon.
Anv and all peraona claiming adversely
tbe above-deacribed landa are requested to
tile their claim'! in thia office on or before
•aid titb day of November, l’.t<r7.
B mnjamin L E ddy . Register.
Notice.
——MS-
-w ii
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CMvaat Up to
proprietor *f the eaiebratad
meiiataxb inn was showing tha aev
gv««t the l»autiful surroundings.
“AIi, the.-e cliff»!” said the pro-
w-iefcr rapturously. “In an elec­
trical atomn they are awa inspiring.
Tli* next time a storm ri.-»es -«•< that
you are standing on the porch of
the inn. * \\ hy. sir, the air is always
heavily charged.”
“I don’t doubt it,” laughed the
new guest, winking at another late
arrival, “and if I d<>a’t hapjien to
be standing on the porch I can feel
assured that it will be heavily charg­
ed anyway—on my bill.”—Chi-»go
News.
Hourglaitei For Pulpits.
A French Joke.
Magistrate The plaintiff affirms
that you sold him an absolutely
rank cheese, although you told him
it was the king of cheeses when he
bought it of you.
Defendant (¿nite true, but I nev­
er said it was a good one. I simply
Baid it was the king of cheeses.
Magistrate—Well ?
Defendant—Well, in my opinion
the king of cheeses would be the
worst. Are we republicans or are
we not, sir?—I’ele Mele.
Notice 1« hereby given that Emma Mecum
SUMMONS.
has left my bed and board, and 1 will in no
way become responsible for anv debts con­
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
tracted by her from this date.
STATE OF OREGON, FOR
THE
Dated thia Itith dnv of October. 1907.
COUNTY OF COOS.
E d . M kcdm . Hr.udon. Oct Hitb.
J. W. Fetter, Plaintiff
I Suit in Equity to
vs.
Carrie William« and
Quiet Title
Carrie E. Williams,
Woti ce for Piiblicnlioa
I
Defendants.
I
SUMMONS,
Department of the Interior.
To Carrie Williams __
_____ _ E. Wil
nd Carrie
Land Office at Roaebarg, Or.
ham.:, the above named defendants:
August 21. 1907.
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF
Notice is hereby given that Corns 1). Still­
OREGON
well,of Bandon, Oregon. huatile«l notice of
Yon are hereby required to apjiear in the
hi« intention to make final Five year proof
in aupport of hia claim, viz: Homeatead a tai vc entitled Court and Cause, and answer
Entry Nil I1.15H mnde M iv
I'.«
for the the tlniuplaint tiled «gainst you therein by
Plniiitlff ou or before the last day of
EX of NE1-4. EX <>f SEI 4 Section 27. the
Township 29 Son 111. Range 14 West, and the time prescribed tor the publication of
that «aid proof will be made liefore L. A. this siimiuons which day is six consecutive
Liljeqvmt. U. S. t'ommiHxioner at hia office w«'eks from the date of the first publication
ini Marshfield, Oregon, on Wedneaday, Oct. hereof; the date of the first publication is
tbe 31st of October, 1907, and the last pub­
30. 1907.
will tie ou the 12tb of Decemb«>r,
He name« the following witneasea to lication
prove Ina continuous residence upon, mid 1907.
And
you
are notified that if yon fail so to
cultivation of, tbe land, viz: t'aab Doyle.
Frank Barrows. Alfred Weat and T. J. Still­ appear mid answer the said complaint, the
Plaintiff will apply to the Court for the
well, all of Bandon, Oregon.
relief prayed for in Ins Complaint, to-wit:
B knjamin L. E ddy , Register.
For a decree whereby Defendants' ad­
verse claims to those certain parcels of land
descrils'd in Plaintiff s Complaint as fol­
lows, to-wiU Lots eight, nine and twelve
in Block 14. and Lots one. (our, live, eight,
nine and twelve iu Block fifteen, Woodiaup
Addition to Bandon, Coos County, Oregon,
more particularly descrilieii in Plaintiff'«
Complaint., shall be «leterinined and forever
foreclosed and Plaintiff declared and ad­
judge«! to be tbe absolute owner of tbe said
real property.
This summons is served upon von by pub
lication thensif in the Bandon Recorder, a
weekly newspa|ier of general circulation,
published in the Town ot Bandon, ill Coos
County, Oregon, pursuant to the order of
Hon. John F. Hall, County Judge of said
Coos County, made the 22ud day of Octo-
has a select stock of
lier, 1907.
G. T. TREADGOLD.
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Ope a
WINES, LIQUORS
and CIGARS.
C ourteous T reatment .
I <!•<».
<3rle<W*
Bandon,
Oiegon.
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Enroll Now
Business
ge.
c
Sortii Eolici, Oregon
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A vtumo «UTTOC
'j cap* ityot 15 h-»rs* power to be
wssession Lot Saturday.
•
tn pumping water from the
Operations on the oil w el! have
«.**a* for the pmp>>»e of washing
hecn suspended tem|a«i.trily, owing
to the present money stringency; the Uai k saud. He has al«ut 15
on that account Messis Freund and men employed. The Dr. u» a
Spenser, sup’t. and sec. resjieetnely, thorough miner, many yeara ex
have gone to th« ir homes in Port­ peneuce and wiU d< ubhess sut eecd
land but will return and resume ' m his mining project
work s<M»n.
James Ar rano? «4 R«»>ebiirg sjienf
F»o<t Curwa.
“Grayee ar* wonderful tilings,”
•4 f a »tt» giuwvt. “In Switzer­
Crianaal to C«afaaw
land tiw« hate in the autumn a
Theatric indeed are some ol th»
*ur*. Thousands of anaemic
methods of the Xrench detectives. and herynue persons are benefited
They look for the little clews rathsr by this cure. Eating a huge bunch
than the staring ones. Unlike ths of grapes every ten minutes all day
English and American detectives, long, their cheeks soon bloom, they
they often do not wait to get irr*- soon recover their health again.
futal-b- endcnce bef'-re < b.irjing
“ ------
Fruit, ------------
all fruit, , _
is .............
medicinal. _
As
man with cnine, but first charge a drink cure and as a blood purifier,
him with the crime and play upon what is there better than an apple? I M vkkii 1> Wednesday . Nov
him so that if he is guilty he is led Did you ever hear of currant leaf I at the home of th' bi ide, '
poultices for gout ? They are excel­ Houghton io Ä . ‘o berg,
to confess.
Some time ago a woman was mur­ lent, I assure you. And black cur-
In
dered in Paris, and from her room rant jelly in water is • remedy t»r James Ru& «> c' . >autig.
evening
the
bo
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jumped
into
throat.
were stolen 750 francs in money, •ore
i
her watch and jewelry. Two broth-j “Pineapples are good for «Hphthe- ‘•f in.! wagon ” .‘i'>ve to I he
era, George and Paul Arnot, had ria. i, strawberries for rheumatism, d- !>• e h il ••., 1’ 1 in the usual
been seen near the house. The mulberry juice for fevers, elderber- n tu bv ‘ o
er. « : • h ir:vari
night of the day after the murder rv for chills and lemon for colds,
was committed M. Hamard, chief of for headache and for bile.”—Cincin­
H. P. Hanc > I . t m ni.ig man,
detectives of Paris, entered a wine nati Enquirer.
came down In -, North li. nd last
shop where the two brothers were
week to p. \ nt certain beach
drinking. To the man’s amazement
mines; but l«arn'iv that the beaches
he arrested George, charging him
with the murder.
Glassware of all kinds, Lemonade are covered u« ; j with gray sand,
“You have changed your coat,” Sets, ete., etc., at the Bandon Hard­ he concluded to postpone his investi
he said to the man, a safe guess if ware Co.’s Store, opposite Post gations until the winter storms had
he had committed the murder. “It
was gray this morning, and there Office. A good hint for Holiday sluiced off the worthless sand; he
left Port Orford next morning in
buyers.
is blood on it.”
tending
to examine the gravel bars
“My nose was bleeding,” replied
the man.
near Mr. Divilbiss's on Sixes.
Port Orford Notes.
“From excitement, I suppose,*
Dennis Cunniff has been engaged
said Hamard, “excitement caused From The Tribune.
in
surveying some beach mines near
by your robbery of Mme. Lucas yes­
terday evening.”
Ames Johnston, our Post Master the mouth of Smith River for Dr.
“I was nowhere near Mme. Lucas
and
School Superintendent, and erst­ Theodore Heintz, of San Francisco.
last night,” said the man, becom­
while teacher, has bought the mer- We are informed that the Dr. ex­
ing very pale.
“You lie!” roared Hamard. “Look ch iodise in John R. Miller’s store, pects to establish a steam plant w ith
at your left boot!”
Every one saw the third button
from the boot was missing.
“Here’s the button,” said Ha­
mard, producing one. “It was found
in your victim’s blood. Confess!”
The man confessed. As Hamard
afterward said, he had guessed the
murderer. The detection of the
missing button from the man’s shoe
was accidental.
VW Way a S’—net 0«SM4 «• F—vW •
Our
New
; Sunday in Port Orford on his way
to North Bend, having come in fr-un
i his mine on the head of Kock ••tv«?k
near Iron mountain He liad senne
tine •'¡jeennens of quartz which as> tv
from 20 to 70 dollars per ton in gold,
besides good values in copper. Al­
though not much Work has been
done on their four claims vet, he
says the ores show up in great qu in-
tities, and he is satisfied that they
have a mine that will be very valua­
ble. Its location is on the great
Salmon mountain mineral belt,
which, in places, shows coarse gold
right up to the summits, but this belt
is virtually unprospected. The licit
lies equally in Coos and Curry the
divide being the boundary between
them. Mr. Arrance says that Geo.
Meservey ami partner have discov­
ered rich quartz from which coarse
gold is taken on the Mert Miller
claim joining his, and have jumped
the claim. Big developments are
expected next year.
Clubbing Rates
FARMERS
Military Marches.
READ THE
In military music the march occu-
Eies a prominent position and has
een employed not 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 the
Welsh war strain, “The March of
the Men of Harlech,” which is sup­
posed to have originated during the
siege of Harlech castle in 1468. In
England the military march was of
•emawhat 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 brisk
and alert. And apropos of this
subject the same author noteB a
witty reply of an Elizabethan sol-
dier to the French Marshal Biron’s
remark that “the English march,
being beaten by the drum, was slow,
heavy and sluggish.” “That may
be true,” he said, “but slow as it is
it has traversed your master’s coun­
try from one end to the other.”—
Chambers’ Journal.
WEEKEY OREGONIAN
OF PORTLAND
\ For the general newsot llie
I World also for information about
I liow io obtain the best results
re^ulis
in cultivating the soil. Stock
Raising, Fruit Growing etc -
You can secure this excellent
paper by
Clubbing with the Bandon Re­
corder. Price for each paper,
$1.50. Special price for both
for 1 year,
$2.25
Run Them to Skin and Bone.
Yourself
Am I one of the Thousands who are
using Cleveland’s Baking Powder?
The Increasing Demand is Convinc­
ing Evidence of its Goodness. : :
Buy the 3-lb. Can with Screw Top
and Metal Handle,
SI.00
Ask your grocer for it. Take no other
With Loss of Interest.
A place to prepare yourself so that your next
opportunity to enter the business world on a
good salary will not be
Cleaver
•
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
AdminiMt rnliirv
Notlre
ot feet was a litter of littlo pigs so
thin they gave the impression of
■I earing of Finnl Account.
having but one dimension.
Notice is horeby given that the final ac­
“What happened the squealers?”
count of James F. Alunibaugh as Adminis­
trator of the ««state of 8 A. Alunibaugh, the rider asked.
deceased, has tieen tiled hi the County I’-ourl
The farmer beckoned him to come
of ('.sis County. State of Oregon, and tha
the 2nd day of Deceiulier, 1907, at tbe bou> close,then hoarsely whispered: “Lost
of 10 o'clock a.m,, has been duly appointed my voice.
Them was the fattest
bv such C-ourt for the hearing of objections
I used to come
to such final account and the settlement pigs I ever seen.
thereof, nt which tune nny p'rson inter« «led out and call ’em to me and feed ’em
in such estate may anis-sr nnd tile objec­
tions thereto in writing and contest the three times a day. Lost my voice
same.
J amks F. A lvmbaitoh .
and had to call ’em to grub by rap­
Administrator of the Estate of 8. A
ping with my stick ou the fence.
Alumbangh, deceased.
See? Now the darn woodpeckers is
'driving them pigs crazy.” — New
York Sun.
Found !
Hiller
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The twenty minute sermon is
i a
purely modern invention, as is
i»roved by the number
i
of pulpit
tourglarses that are still to be found
in many old churches. In the reg­
ister of St. Catherine’s, Aidgate, the
following entry, dated 1564, occurs:
“Paid for an hourglass that banged
by the pulpit, where the preacher
doth make a sermon, that he may
know how the hour passe th away,
1 shilling.”
A modern pulpit glass, probably
the only one of its kind, is to be
found in the Chapel Royal, Savoy.
It is an eighteen minute glass and
Net ice of Administration was placed in the chapel on its res­
Notioc is hereby Riven that bv order of toration m 1867.—Westminster Ga­
tbe County Coart of the Statu of < tregon, in zette.
and for the County of Coos, heretofore
made. Rachael N Elliott wax duly ap­
pointed Administratrix of the «-stale of t' S
Elliott, deceased, and that letter« test amen
tarv were duly Maned to llie aaid Rachel N.
Elliott on the Sth day of June. A.D., 1907.
Therefore, all peraona having claims
against the aaid estate are hereby notified
to present the aame with proper vouchers Io
the aaid Administratrix, at the office of
Geo I*. Topping at Bandon, Oregon, wiibiu
aix (l>) months from the dateof this notice
Dated thia 5th day of September. 11107.
RACHEL N ELLIOTT,
Administratrix of the ■ state of C. F
Elliott, deceased.
Geo. I*. Topping, Att'y for Estate.
9
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There is a police court magistrate
of St. Louis who frequently evinces
a pretty wit in dealing with fresh
or facetious offenders.
To one vagrant brought before
him not long ago his honor put the
question, “What occupation ?”
“Nothin’ much at present,” flip­
pantly responded the prisoner; “just
curculatin round, judge.”
“Retired from circulation for thir­
ty days,” dryly observed his honor
to the clerk of the court.—Harper’s
Weekly. ______________
Hard on th« Eyes.
Boriti : GALLIER
Rates $t,oo to $2,00 per Day,
SPECIAL N.I TES Hl* THE WEEK'OR .WO.VTH.
lABFLl 1CC1 IK CCITKICTBH.
BANDON.
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Cleveland’s Baking
Powder.
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OREGON.
“You always think of a clerk o»
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. You
see, we are obliged to look straight
ahead of us, and the blur of things
as we try unconsciously to foctis our
eyes on them makes a constant
strain. I would rather be bending '
over a set of books myself, so far as
my eyes are concerned.”—CoiuxokM |
Dispatch.
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