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AKT OF LISTENING.
CROSMAM TIMMONS. President
G. 'UTREAGOLD. Secret/ry
K H. |U)SA. Vice President
A.V HA Do ALL. Treasurer
A. D. MORSE, MArtager
J(
Bandon Investment Corporation
Incorporated Day (», 1907
1&17I1 Estate» TowRsites» Promotions BANDON
n
<< fh
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A. McNair, The Hardware Man
BQQ)(»E & HE ACM Stoves, Ranges and Heaters have in them so many excellencies
that they are now acknowledged the Kreatest sellers on the coast, and they are grow
ing in favor every year. We have the exclusive agency in Bandon for these house
hold and office necessities, and prices range exceedingly modest in either «gae.
TINNING AND PLUMBING A SPECIALTY
Oar AftMrtaent of Hardware. Tinware and Edged Tools is Most Cougptcfo
CIVIL ENGIMEE» AND SURVEYOR
Chas. S.
McCulloch
High Claases of Work Solicited
Bn ad <M1
Or agon
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HOTEL CAULI ER
Special Rates
Sample Raum
Rates $1 to $2 per Day
by the Week ar Month.
«a Connection
dandori
Orejón
SHIELDS k KENNEDY,
iJJ
Blacksmiths and Waijon Makers
Wairons of All Kind» Made to Order
Horseshoeing a Specialty
JoR Work attended to promptly and all work guaranteed to give satiHfaction.
onable. Shop on Atwater Street. Bandon. Oregon.
“He looks at me as if 1 was sutlila'
Jest about half-way ciirlouH," said the
man with the dinner bucket. “N®t
anythin' wunnerful, you iinnerst.iinL
but ernuff out o’ tlw* ord’nar.v to Jes-
tify him to take a second look, Tfceu
he turns around an’ walks off. Don't
say aye, yes ner no, but Jest walks
off. Say. I bad a notion to pick up a
brick tin’ let drive at him. Who's he.
annyway? I ain't never heard o’ Mike
Brannigan bein' in the four hundred.”
“Nor me.” said the man with the
hod. “B’lieve I'd let him have the
brick If I’d 'a' been you. That’s Mike
Brannigan all over. He’s Jest got the
Idea that he’s a little better'n' most
anybody else.”
“It gits on me to see him stiekln’ hts
thumbs in the armholes of his vest an'
swaggerin' around like he owned the
earth.” said the man with the dinner
bucket, “Some o' these days I'm goin'
to call him down."
“He won’t come If you do,” said the
man with the hod. "He likes It up
there where he Is.”
“I'll climb up an' kick him down
then,” said the man with the dinner
bucket. “I won't have So Air to cliinti
neither, an' I bet when that yeller-
faced, monkey-jawed inlet hit® the
ground he’ll flrel the Jar of ft.”
“He's 0 first-class son of a gun,
there ain’t no two way*« atsiut that,”
«aid the man with the h<vS. “Other
day'I'd Jest got up to the top e’ the
first etory with the mortir when he
holler® at me from down below and
comniesuwd glvln’ me slack-' He had
his flannel mouth etrefched wide o[»n
an' I co.me within one o' droppl«' a gob
o’ mud into it.” .
“A gib!” whoed the tijafi With the
dinner bucket. "A gob wouldn't 'a' done
no good. If ywif'd dwnped the whole
hodful in lie wouldn't hardly imticed
“I look to see him »well up an’ bust
some day." wild the man with the hod.
"Ixsiks like his skin wouldn't stand
the pressure ail the time. It's eighty
pound to the square Inch common, an’
when he thinks anylssly’s tiiklu’ notice
of Mui the conceit that's In him *ud
send 1li(> gauge up to a hundred an’
fifty easy, with pounds to spare.”
Tiie man with the hoe, who had been
a silent listener, removed his pipe from
his month.
"Brannigan ain’t like Nel« Eng
strom." lie observed “You never seen
Nels actin’ 'sif he'd got the swell head.
Jest as common as mud, Nels was‘ If
anylsidy’d got anything to say to him
they'd say It an' he wouldn’t stare at
’em like he wondered at their nerve.
I’d go up to him an’ talk to him aR
free as I would to Bill here. I’d make
any kind of a holler I wanted to an’
ao’d any man on the Job. He didn’t
fnlnd. He’d pass the time o' day with
you or take a drink out o’ your coffee
flask or eat a piece o’ your pie for that
matter. Never heard him bullyraggln’
the men or seen him liftin’ his* fegt
high when he walked. When yon spoke
to Nels you got a civil answer every
time."
•
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“What Nels w»® that*’ ft«ked the
man with the ‘dinner bucket. “You
don’t mean Nel® Engstrom that Was on
the Job with you an’ me at 5^th street
last April, or was It MW?” *
"That's the’ feller,” replied "the man
with the hoe.
"He wadn’f never* a
»ae iw?”
ash'd tiie man with the dinner bucket
'.‘Not Big 3els? Why, be was carryin’
plank and wheelin' n barrer therx”
“That's what he’s doin'', now , I
guess,” said the man with the hoe,
calmly. “Course he wasn’t never a
hoss. That’e what made Big Nel® «>
mighty different’ to Mike Brannigan.”
—Chicago Hally News.
ESS
Bank of Bandon
I
•OBRD OF DIRECTORS: J. L. Kronenbertf, President; J. Denholm, Vice President
F. J. Fahy, Cashier; Frank Flam. T. P. Hanley
A general hanking business transacted and customers given every accommalttion con-
•M m » h with rarie and conservative banking.
CORRESPONDENTS: The American National Rank, of San Francisco. C r I.; March«
«e» National Bank, Portland. Oregon; The Chase National Bank, of New York.
Bank is open from 9 a. m. to 12 m.. and 1 p. m. to3p. m.
<
The Naw, Clagaatt» Fitted and Speedy Steamer <
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EUIZABETM
.
. CAPT. J. OI.SEN, Master '
steamer ia new, ia strpngly bufit and fitted with the latest improvements and will
«iva a rea-u ar 8 day service, for paHMenxerH and freight, between the Coquille river, Ore<on,
«rwt Sx> Frftnciaco. E. T. XRUSE. manavlnic a^ent, 23 Market St., San FrWncisco.
California and
Oregon
Coast Steamship Co.
Now ply«**g between Portland and C«< m Bay only
WEEKLY TRJPS
GEO.
GRAY & & CO.,
CO Gen. Agents
______ D. GRAY
L. W. SHAW, Agent
421 Market Street, Sah Francisco-
Marshfield. Phone 441
Port Orford and Red Cedar Shingles
for Sale at the Shingle Mill
Al orders titled proanptly. Office it» mill. We
por hiffhe«* price for red cedar ioga and butt«
. YOUNG Ä CO
W. N. WRIGHT
Successor to HOOVER & MONDAY
BANDON AAE2AT MARKKT
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Dealer in All Kinds of
Fresb iM Produce
Silt Mtii:, Bought
Vkgetiötes, and
L»rS, ¿»old
Etc.
Firm
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Havins purchase,! this old and well establish«! business, and moved the same to the
A
II nuiltiinff. oast side Main afreet, we solicit a continuance of paat tfenfroua patronaK**
> Ru«<nteetnic honaat ffood». fair prices and courteous treatmeat to all
VARNEY & TUTTLE
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Steamer Alliance
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FIRST-CLASS LAUNDRY WORK
Of every kind done on »hort notice
and at reasonable price».
SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED
•* Orden* left on Mondays with our Bandon
aventr A. O. TROWBRIDGE, will be iriven care
ful attention and delivered in Bandon at the »tore
Friday evenings.
COQUILLE, OREGON.
BOOTS
a
SHOES
You can’t expect to get $2
worth for $1, but you can get
your moneys worth at
,
A. faU lbw erf CsitfeettDnery, Fruit, Cigars, Tobansco,
Soft
Eta.
New» Stand io ConsosetinC
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Dealer in Boote and Shout*
Repairing Neatly and Promptly Done
at Lowest Living Prices.
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Lewin’s Meat Market
All Kinds of
Meats & Provisions
Furnished at living prices. A share
of the public patronage solicited
E
LEWIN,
Proprietor
furnished Rooms
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Clarence Y. Lowe
A. B. SABirN
The Eldorado
The OPERA
Steam Beer on Draught
GROSS BROS,
o
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M. BREUER’S
• Druggist and Àpothiciij
1 «. WMSTffOM, Ag««t, B um U«, Ocgw.
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NOBLER & MORRISON. Props.
and coal it Would tak« to. move the ? WIT or Tiff YOtmSIEBS. j
earth a. foot, Mipjaisinf that It was sub
MRS. SARAH COSTELLO
jected tkroiiflaiut Its mas® to a'force
equivalent to terrestrial gravitation.
Nice clean rooms 25c and 50c a
This Is a gratuitous supposition, for in
night; $1.25 a week; $5 a month
"What is an Iceberg, Horace?’’ quer
suite of Its snormeiM niase tlw earth
weigh* nothing.
ied the {Toston teacher. “A floating BANDON
OREGON
Startlug with- ths tact that the aggregation of tangible frigidity,’’ wat
earth's mwse is aluut fi.lil) mtlllon- the reply.
uiilllon-mUlhMi too«, our «tativtictan
Johnny—WhiU'a yotir papa's busl BANDON TRANSFER CO
calculates that we should requine 70,- ne«s? Tommy—He writes poetry and
Cltiavn« of prohibition
had
C. H. PATTERSON & SON
<■<!.•««>,<m y»»p® fow a lo.itsi • hofee funny things for the papers. Johnny
preavntvd « alive« ariliv to a battle
Dray anti General Delivers
l»ower engine to inovs our globe a foot. —Ilph! That ain’t a business; it’«
ship. “»lit how
yw rwvincilv- your
The
boiler
that
should
feed
this
engine
Somethin
’
that
ails
him.
Meets
all
lioats All orders handled wjth rara
self to the punch howl?” was a«k«d .of
would 'vaporise a quantity of water
One afternoon’ three email children BANDON
oi« of the delegation. “Punch bowl!”
•'
OREGOM
ejaculated the Kanaan. “Go<a1neee! that would cover the whole face of the I wore popping corn, taking turns at the
glolw with a layer 30D feet de»n>. The popper. “Oh, mamma!" exclaimed .lit
We thought that big thing was for oat
valorization of till® water would re tie Dorothy, clapping her hands glee
meal mush.”
quire <,<■■> mlllloii-nilllion tons of coal. fully, "every one of my corns hatched
The judge kaikvd down” at the pri* This cotfl, carried in cars holding ten
on»r compassionately. The man had tons each and htfving a-total dength of out!”
BANDON, OREGOM
been charged with steeling a pie. "No thirty feet, would require HOD minion- ' Little Elsie.came home from her first
doubt,’’, hi® honor said, “It ffas” the million ears, which would reach •<>,- ! Jay at school, eagyr to show her moth
er the calisthdhic exercises sh<; had
pinch of poverty that brought ’you «Ki.ObO times around the earth,
This
heap learning. “It's called fistical cul
here?" “No. Judg*.” læ repliai, "de train, moving at the rate of
forty
ture, mamma.” she explain«!, "’onus«
p’leecvraan dat pinched me is de rich tulles an hour, would take more
lajustfn receipt bf a new and fresh stoek of
than
you do It nearly all with your fists."
est cop oq de force.”
years to travel its own
Drugs and Chemicals, Patent and Pro-
“Papa,” queried small Harold 0 on« irietary Preparations, Toilet Articles,
A colored preacteP who had only a length. It would require for storage a
small share of tills world's goods, and sited that would cover i,000 times the rainy day, "ain't there no plumbers in Jruggists Sundries, Perfumes, Brushes
heaven?” “I suppose so, Harold," an Sponges, Soap, Nuts and Candies, Cigars
whose salary wks not forthcoming on area of Europe. .
. ’
Tobaccos ana Cigarettes, Paints, Oils.
several occasion® became exasperated.
I£ we. realize that tills fantastically swered the fattier. “Why <Jo j’ou ask?’ Glass and Painters’ Supplies.
At his morning service he spoke to hi« huge’amount of energy Is nothing at ■‘Because,” replied the little fellow, “1
church members in this way : “Bredren all compared with what the earth pos should think”'if there was, God would
and'slatern, things is not as thsy Should sesses in virtue of its rotation about its i make .'em fix the sky so it wouldn't
be. You must not '«iiact 1 can preach a.Tis, Its revolution about the sun and leak.”
on nth to you an' boa'd in llelsfiu"
"llow much is your candy?”’asked
its legislation in space with the wlar
Manufacturer of and Dealer in
lie said: ‘Tn» the meanest ntnn in system, of which th? earth is bitt an little Joe. “Six sticks for J cents,” re
thé jvorld; 1 know 1 am. I went home Infinitesimal part of the universe, we |Hied the (jealer. “Let'me see,” mused All KiuidM .of Soddlöry
Harnea and Baddies Repaired
the other Evening and I. was feeling may g<*f «nine idea of the importance Joe. “Six sticks for 5 cents, five sticks
pretty good, yo® know. My wife didn’t of man In the universe and estimate for 4 cents, four sticks for 3 cents BANDON
OREGOM
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gay ■ word, but about 2:41 a m. I ills incommensurable pride at It* Just tiiree sticks for 2- cents, two sticks for
. •
1 cent, one stick for nothin'. Gimm«
wok« ujf and observed a ghostly figure value.
oni; ktick, please."
g<ilng through inÿ clothes. I «sored
t>
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WO ere to Begi* aoG 81.,®.
gently, in a minute or two the figure
Small Tommy was i entertaining hie
Jean
Paul
advlNed
mothers
to
id
vp
drew something from a vest- |><«ket,
sister's best beau in the parlor, Fl
linked at it in the faint mootillghf. their child a Hick of candy to su< k, nally he said : •’You i and sister are R«>
appeared to pondrr for a# short time, nicking it at a certain place and aty- Ing for a walk this evening, ain't you?”
went to a bureau, secured «umettiiiig. ing: '•‘Wlien 5’ou come to the mart “Yes. ’ Tommy.” afiswerefl the young
put It In the veat aqd came back to lay It down and don't touch it again.” nigfi. "But how "did you know it?”
Isvl. 'I «as Mill snoring. The nelt This Is a severer discipline than we are "Sister went to see the corn doctor this
Infancy today, but
RASMUSSEN BROS., Praps
morning I found a dollar bill and 40 Inclined to apply
morning," explained Tommy.
it
Is
easy
to
see,
observes Harper’s
cents In change in my vest You wee.
«lie thought 1 wartild suspect Something Weekly, what a sturdy and capable
11 umf)ed Illa Pride.
If there wasn't anything at all in iny citizen might result. To decide at what
There Is a young nirtti In Boston who
pockçts. ami when site took the ten- IMiliit one should stop sliort and iU can actually trace his family back two
dollar note »he put In the $1.40. I what hour and place one should begin, generations. His one falling is a de
would like to see her expreaslon when and having decided what to do, to <io It sire to be thought a descendant of one
some clerk hands her back that $1® or die, is the way to form a character. “of the old families," and his studio—
There is such a thing as overthluk-
Confederate note today."
he says he Is an artist—contains a
An EngllathnaTi and an Irishman loa of thinking so long aliout an a<«ion uutnlier of heirlooms. One thing In o
«-ent to the captain of a ship bound that the action evaporates Into thin air which he takes particular pride Is a
for America and asked prrtnfMlon to before it is bogn. We forgive Hamlet Continental uniform complete in every
work their passage over, The »»ptaln his Inability to act, because he was a detail, with flintlock and powder horn.
Tandon
consented, but asked tiie Irishman for tfenliiR and a king of wonderful words, He was showing this to a young lady
but
his
tendencies
were
deplorable.
If
reference® and let the Englishman go
the other day. “My great-grandfather
on without them. This made the Irish every one chose tx> think over all con wore this suit when he gave his life
man iiugry. and lie planned to get even, ceivable aspects of every case, and hav to his country during the brave days
one day when they were washlOR "ft ing Wiouglit it over, to liegln again and of the Revolution," he said. The young
th»' deck the Englishman leaned far think It over i«»>re curiously still, the lady Inspected the uniform carefully,
over th« rail, dropped the bucket, ami wheels of life would tie so digtged with hut could And neither bullet hole nor
was Just about to haul ft up whe i a thinking that the machine would stand salier cut. 4>he turned to him with a
Hw a Select Stock of
huge wave came sod pulled him over still. The condition of life is per- «'fiiirmlng smile. "Oh, was the poor
board. The Irishman stopped scrub I |s*tual motion, and everybody mwt is» eld gentleman drowned?" she asked.
bing. went over to the rail, and. seeing doing something without hurry and
Argonaut,
the Englishman had disapfieared, went without anxiety, each must hold up his
Force of Habit.
to til® captai» and Raid
Perhaps yer. wd of the world's work for better or
Mr Efluy—<’hwr up, Mr. Pack. If
remlmbOr
I »hipped aboard this for worse.
—J*
we must go down, let’s go cheerfully,
v«®»*l ye gsfced me for rlferenc«» «nd
Whg| bus become of the old fashion like men.
let ths BnggllShman come on widout
cd bride who would not npiiesr In pub
Mr. Peek—But. hang It all. Mr. Easy,
thirn?"« Tti® captab, said
“Tee. I
fl®n«mtH»b" "Well, ye've ticen de- lic for two weeks prior to her weddltjf ft I don't get home my wife will never
COURTEOUS TREATMENT
ctv|gl," Bal'l Hie IrlsICJan ; “he'a fona day’ Also »tit I ihs tiecome of thu let me go fishing again. — Harper'»
fellow who went to <^e his fprl every 5£eekly.
off tpld ««r pail!”
other Tuesday i%ht i^til they were
Seeking nn Baar Ednration.
engaged, and then be went regularly °
A. Ijpnw Ualealatloa.
“Most men learn only in the school
every Tueaday night?
ita'IlfiS Ämetlmes have VOer
of experience."
.
’Que A>f them amused hlmaelf
“Yea. and some of them want to take
Many a family tree has a laid branch
i Bandon
Ibj) TacftftdMtiuf bow much «nergy, water and a ahady reputation.
o * that course by mall.”—Smart Set
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Capital, »as.coj
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The ri-aWm why listening plays a
part of such paramount value on the
stage is that if an actor Is not deeply
Iptensted in what is going oil 111 the
mimic world In which lie has been east,
he cannot look for any real Interest on
tiie part cr his audience; and the only
way M which he can denote that Inter
est to everything that has any bearing
whatever on his life and actions, and
the skill with which he expresses the
fe»lings bred of what he hears, says
Janies L. oFrd, In Serlbmff's.
Listening Is an art that is not prop
erly taught In the schools In which
modern actors are trained, for wlUch
voice culture lias the place of high hon
or that it deserves in the curriculum of
«»Very acaifeiny on Broadway. If you
ask either teacher or pupil about the
still more important l>u«iuess of listen
ing, the chances are that you will re
wive no reply save a wondering shake
of the head.
So much has been mid atsiut “tem-
peran*ent,” “mentality,” “facial expres-
sion.” and “personallty" that It Is a
very easy matter for a schoolgirl to
persuade herself that she has in her
the makings of a great actress,
AU
she needs Is what she calls “a few k*s-
Rons."
• ,
One young woman. Indeed, told me
that she had been studying the art of
expressing emotions by means of a se
ries of contortions of visage, all more
or less hideous to beneftd, but that she
had not been taught anything about
listening. In short, ttlthouyh she had
learned how to make her various emo-"
tlonal grtmaces. It had never occurred
to her that unless she could show cause
for these curious expressions of Joy or
grief or rage or whatever they were
called in her “Complete Handbook of
Acting.” her audience would not under
stand what she was driving at. But
if «he had been taught to listen with
a" natural Interest and attcsJioh, the
emotions called forth by what she
heard would be certain t<> betray them
selves convincingly on her face. Like
many-another, unfortunate,, tills delud
ed young woman Had hegun to learn at
the wrong end and had been taught the
effect, not the cause of emotion.
I Short Q tories I
BANDON, OREGON
:
Coquille Steam Laundry
la «k Very Important Part of th«
Aetor'a Stutce liii^ness.
THE PACIFIC
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