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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1908)
On the Market to Bandon Smith’s Cheapest and Best Property in the City Streets being opened out and a Driveway to the Beach. Sheltered from the wind. Level Land, Beautiful Evergreen Grove on the whole Tract Lots $15 to $30 ON THE INSTALLMENT PLAN OR FOR CASH SEE The Bandon Investment Corporation, Bandon, Oregon, or E. N. Smith, Myrtle Point, Oregon » THE GIANT ANT EATER. Packing Butter ROOMS and LODGING •eluted a Drava of Piga. The Bandon Creamery will pay through the forest came upon a the top price for packing butter and bear who was rolling over and over will buy’it in any quant ty. on the ground and uttering the F or S ale —160 acres improved Newly furnished large light rooms farm, with two wagons, three milch Tele phone. Electric Ligh’s. cows, four yearlings, three calves, me horse, and farming implements. Rented by single night, week or Price $3.500. Inquire of Bandon month. vestment Corporation. The Steamer Favorite is making regular trips to Bandon and Co The BANDON STEAM I.AUDRV quille as follows: Leaves Bandon 6:45 am: leaves Coquille at 9:15 a C lai enee Y. Linee ¡11. Leaves Bandon 1:20 p m Leaves Coquille 4:00 p m and con 1 ANDoN O regon nects with both trains at Coquille ■>0 as to give one three hours and I5 Ih n an Apothecary minutes at Marshfield. Is just in reoeipt of a new Htock of Dings and Chemicals, Patent and !’>•<qirii’tary Preparations. Toilet Ar- I icles. Druggist Sundries. Perfumes. In unties, Sponges, Soap. Mills and < undies, t'igars.i Tobaccos slid Cig- nrettes, Paints, Oils, Glass and Painter's Supplies. i he Eagle Saloon Formerly ANCHOR BAR ALVIN MUNCK. Prop. Choir est Wines, Ijquors and Cigars till I.IAHD AN1> Pool. TABLES ( (H RII.<)l'S TREATMENT Call and See MUNCK I LRNISIILD ROOMS Maosawe. Maeaage as a remedy for insomnia MRS GERALDINE MORRIS. and other ilk is most ancient. The VOICE OXJLTTJR.H: very word “massage” cornea from the Arabic word "‘mats.** It was Artistic Singiag with Pura stolen from the Arabic doctors by Italia« MstKod the French doctors. In the “Odys Will Ke at Mra. Stavsaaaa’a Wadaaa- sey” the heroes are massaged after daya and Thursdays. a battle. The word “shampoo” ie from the Indian word “tshatnpua." Masseurs were employed in India Fresh groceries for campers at by Alexander the Great. Massage is one of the things they discovered Trowbridge’s. in ancient China Captain Cook Economy fruit jars and lids at wa* massaged fur u quarter of an Trowbridge’s. I.oar by twelve natives of Tshiti. ’ ’lie’, cured In.- rheumatism. Para- For fruit jars, caps, and rubbers <. !« is toll - lio.v the Egyptians prac ticed massage.—Chicago News. go to the Bandon Hardware Co. • Satisfaction guaranteed, prices rea sonable, at the Bandon Pantatorium. Big cuts orf (little cols, small scratclies or bruises or big ones are healed quickly by Dewitt’« H itcli Hazel Salve. It ia specially good for pile". Be sure,to -ret Dewitt’s. Sold by Bandon Drug Co. • For a first-class shave or an up- to-date hair cut call on Harry Mor rison, next door to the post office. AT McKenzie the tailor does cleaning, The Pacific altering and pressing and does it MR» SARAH (’OSTELLO promptly and right. McKenzie the tailor has M* CURE th . LUNCS King’s New Discovery mes?»* AMO ML TIMOAT ARB LUM TROUBLE». OUABANTBJED BATIBFACTOÄT OB KOMMT 1IJÜMDID. TYPE WRITING NOTARY PUBLIC B. A. KOLP Real Estate Snaps DesiredNe Lots in Rat “A” 50 X 100 feet $40 to $50 Lots in West Bandon. Fine view of the ocean BARGAINS City Lots etevea year» under cnltivatios 50 X AO feet UM to UM Acreage between Bandon and Prosper just re Any person in need of fence will ceived his fall and winter line of •do well to call on S M Rowan at samples, the finest ever displayed west end oi 4 th Street. ¿Ci tx Hu Bandon jo rf. Acreage close in Peculiar o O» e • o Creature That to $75.00 achs. One feature of the edentates is that they all have some peculiarity in the covering of the body. The armadillo, for instance, has a shell of armor, the pangolin a series of shingle-like scales, the sard vark, na tive to the Transvaal, a piglike skin, scantily covered with hair, and, last ly, the ant eater, with a bushy tail and the body plentifully covered with hair. The ant eater is in many ways un like other animals. The most strik ing dissimilarity is in its mouth, which does not open and shut with an up and down movement of the lower jaw, os that of all other quad rupeds, but it is a mere aperture, opening only enough to admit of the passage of the foot long, whip like tongue. In captivity the ant eater is fed on bread and milk. In its native haunts, the forests of South Amer ica, it feeds exclusively on termites, or, as they are commonly called, white ants. These termites abound in the wilds of tropical America, and the ant eater tears open with its sharp fore claws their conical mud nests and with its slender tongue licks up the“ inmates out of every nook and crevice. The ant cater hits a queer way of walking. It is the manner in which it uses its fore limb». The claws of its fore limbs are so constructed that they arc incapable of sustain ing the weight of the body, but are turned backward, compelling the animal to stand and walk on tha outer surface of the wrist». When it ambles around, awkwardly, appears, it seems to ba ualgg am pa tiled fore limb». o o O» KILL th . COUCH 1 30 tf H. Manciet, sole agent for the B. B. Baum, Bon Bons. Put up in one- half |>ound and pound lanes. OREGON Take your job printing to the Re The whiskey for the most partii u C order . W’e have nothing but the lar people Stewart’s Bourbon, at host in all stock. |.unison M Brown’s. o most dismal complaints. Brum had one eye closed and was covered from head to heels with lumpenad knobs aad knots. “What cheer r gayly cried the woodman as he drew near. “Bees,” moaned the bear. “But nature gave you a eoat of fur to protect you from tho sting of bees.” “So she did,” answered the bear, “but she also made me fool enough to want honey just the same when I was shedding my coat, and every sting would lift me a foot high.” Moral.—None of us is ever sat isfied with a good thing.—Now York Sun. Most In the American Magazine a writ- I Found In Venezuela. or talks about courage. In the The giant ant eater of Venezuela course of his story he tells about a ¡H one of the most outlandish look certain respectful father he once ing creatures in all the domain of knew. Here is what he says: nature. It is an animal about two “Isn’t it time we took off our hats and a half feet high. The body and and thanked this pleasant land for tail taken together measure about tho good things it has done for us seven feet in length. The tail is by going on patiently covering up usually carried curved over the back, our blunders, rectifying our mis draping and shading the body. In takes and responding cheerfully to appearance the bushy tail may be our every intelligent effort? likened to a clump of ornamental “I knew a man who had the right prass. The head is very small, but idea about it. His father had made it is prolonged into a snout a foot a great fortune in the pork packing or more in length. The mouth ia at business The heir was not puffed the extremity of this snout. up by his millions. Long after he The ant eaters belong to that had grown accustomed to the money group of the animal kingdom known and might reasonably be expected as tne edentates, a class usually to look down on butchers, if in i toothless. If they have any teeth walking in the country with his I at all, they are very few in number, children they saw a drove of hogs of a rudimentary or simple form, on the road, he would make the lit in the back of the head. They re tle boys stand at attention and take semble in this respect birds, and off their hats. ‘I want them to re they furthermore bear a resemblance spect the sources of wealth/ he to the bird creation in the posses said.** sion of muscular, gizzard-like stom , Ha Loved Animals. Of Blackmore, the novelist, an old friend said that his kindness to ani mals and birds was nearly divine. “Dogs loved him; pigeons followed him about. A blackbird built in a hole in hia garden well one year, and he planked the well over lest tho young ones, when they became ven turesome, should be drowned. From the planks over the water he had a sort of ladder constructed for them to escape, which they all did and repaid him by bountifully devouring his strawberries. There is a picture of himself as a vine dresser in one of his Devonshire tales, ‘(Tiristo- well.’ llis love for women and girls, especially girls, was as great as Mr. Ruskin’s, but less outspoken, though evident in his books. There is al ways a Lorna or a Dariel as sweet as English air can make her. He was shy and retiring and not given to tongue.” Baachar’s Faa. On one occasion when Henry Ward Beecher was on a lecturing tour Major Pond, his manager, was sitting beside him in the railway car. Suddenly the preacher slapped his hand on the little watch pocket of his trousers and drew forth a small envelope. For a moment he looked at it in surprise, then opened it and smiled. Presently he turned to his companion. “Major,” said he, “I married a great railroad magnate a few months a^o, and as I was taking leave of him he handl'd me an envelope, which I slipped in my pocket un opened. That was the last 1 thought of it until today. Just now I opened it, and this is what I found.” The major took the envelope. Within it were five $1,000 bills. Teat of an Egg. Borne folks who were going on a ficnic once got one raw egg mixed up with the cold boiled ones and did not know how to detect it without breaking them all. A visitor wm equal to the emer gency. According to 8t. Nicholas, ne took an egg between hia fingers and hia thumb; he twirled it on the table, and it spun like a top. "That egg, ’ said he, ‘Tias been boilwd." Another was tried, with the game result, and then he found awe that he could not make spin. •That,” said he, "Is the raw egg.** And in Mie puzzle was sol red. If you want pure whiskies anil wines you can get them from (ami- son & Brown. W anted »- A fresh milk cow, Harvey James, Bandon, Oregon. 4 O