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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1908)
<» • Bandon Recorder • « • • ■X. •••■** Published Every Thursday Evening by the • R.0oorcl«ur <; K KOFF, ... Company ManaclnN Settlor Bntac-zigtinn, tl'lRga« !••• in AJteaaan, Kauw* um IM m W m Ayyln—biw Advwiiwu« Mataw Mate* Jofe FrialitMf a Npeeswily *4 m B m S m ?«»*<.•* ■* «airaS Ctam Mat Me. September io, 1908 ’<MURSDA¥ and Idaao it is evident that success will crown Development League,” which was Ins efforts, as he had the advertising ci^au.xtd as a side-show of the late and the news Coos Bay’s "Oregon Liueuted "Fair,” endorses federal appropriations for Coos bay, Til Fven though there was a money lamook and the Siu slaw, but the Co- ■dringency in the country elsewhere, qmlle river aud bar are conveniently yet there is a great demand for Co looked. Bah! Specs are not quille river products as is evidenced ■ceded to see the jealousy of Marsh from the uumber of boast that have field these days. —-Sentinel. been loaded during the past week Yes Brother Dodge, we quite agree along the river. The Fifield and with you, Coos Bay is extremely Elizabeth have both gone to sea j.alous ot The Coquille River Vai with full cargoes, and the schooners, well know that if Advance, Ruby and C. T. Hill the support they get from this valley tiave done likewise. Mr. Harriman were taken away, it would be all does not know what he is missing k-y, and yet they up with them. The jealousy, how by not getting his railroad here so ever, comes from the fact that Ban as to get part of the business that don, Coquille and Myrtle Point are is to be had from the Coquille Val all growing so rapidly and are be- ley. comiug such important business oJy a matter of a few short years The towns of the Coquille a» valley can support themselves while I the Coos Bay towns cannot, and we pas’ure. will find that when the federal ap propriating are made, the govern ment will look well to the Coquille river. All it needs is a united ef fort on the part of people and towns along the river. The Stale Fair at Salem will be in Session all next week and j romises u> be the biggest show of its kind ever giyen in the Northwest. There will be exhibits from all over the state and people from every corner W1M flouk to that city to see what «¿an be pioduced m Oregon, the com- tag Kt Dorado of the United States. M. Haryiasaa says be wll build a railroad laio this country if it can be shown hint that it will pay 4 per Csnl dividend on years. ,000,000 for ten Oregon horses are winning first < hat would be $200,000 a honors at the Seattle Horse Show. year over aud above running ex- ^tuiMs. The Oregon State Fair opens next Monday, September 14th, and con- unnes through the week. The show ing of all kinds of products, as well as the livestock and industrial dis- play aud a great race program without pool selling, insures one of he best fairs Oregon has ever held. Mr J. H. McMillan, now past eighty-five years of age and tern porarily residing at Coshocton, Ohio, writes: "Having lived in Oregon sixty years and believing it to be the best country in the United States, I take pleasure in sending people there who are looking fot a home. Rheumatism has a firm grip on me, and 1 am unable to labor, but 1 can talk of Oregon and spread Oregon literature and will be glad to re ceive same from all parts oi the state. I have been able to send many people to Oregon, and they have written that they were glad they made the change.” Ore gonians shonld remember that there are thousands more to come on the colonist rates of September and October. Well we can show him that it wiH pay twice that amount il it comes to the proper places. O •nurse if he would build a-line from Diaiu to Coos Bay only, and go no tardier it would not pay him, but il fie comes on down and taps Co quille, Myrtle Point aud Bandon, w here the business for a railroad is to be had. then he would make 20 per esnt on the money invested, but 10 stop at Coos Bay would be the mistake oi his life. A road through this country should not stop short ot Lmcka, Calif., and it it were to go "Advertising Oregon” is the title of a page in “Printers’ Ink” of July 8 th, one of the most widely known of advertising journals. And it is no wonder that the State, s work along these lines has attracted this attention, for no portion of America is circulating the attractive liter ature that burdens the mail of Ore gon eve ry day in the year. Now that the colonist rates are in effect every one in the state should feel it his duty to adveitise the fact in his per sonal correspondence, to send in formation about his community to eastern acquaintances and to aid in every possible way the commercial organizations which are working to increase the State's population. on to San Francisco, it would be all the more of a dividend paper, what is the use in talking. but This is Alleged Harri The importance of accuracy in man is too wise a man io build a railroad with its terminus at Coos statement is a fact to be appreciated in ail walks of life. The editor ol Bay, if he builds al all he will come the Billville Bugle tried to impress down into the country where the the truth on the new reporter, says business is to be had and not stop the Youth’s Companion: ■at a little old one hors« place. "My boy," said he you need caution. You must learn not to state things as facts, otherwise you Orville Dodge, so well known in are very apt to get us into libel Coos couuty, is again al the helm on suits. Do not say, 'The cashier Che Coduille Valley Sentinel, and stole the funds. ’ Say 'The cashier hi* paper last week was certainly a is alleged to have stolen the funds.’ credit to his ability as a newspaper That’* all and turn in about a stick- ■saa. The news colnmns were well ill about (hat second ward social aet night ” ••d with good live matter, and an Owing to on influx of visitors, it increased advertising patronage was was late in the afternoon when the •videat. Mr. Dodge says he will editor of tne Bugle caught sight of gn a the people of Coquille a good the great family daily, HaH vay social column his eye papar il they will give him proper down the lighted on the folloving cautious •apport, and from laat week s issue I , paragraph. Q Notice .4 try«*ted ladies. of the second «•rd Mrs Smith, gossip says was the huMess, »atl the festivities are 1 •■ported to have Continued until io:jo ta the evening. It is alleged that the affair was a social function given to the lad.es of the Seconc Ward Cinch Club, aad that, with the exception of Mrs. James Bil- wilinger, who says she comes from Leavitt's Corner, none but members were served with refreshments. Mrs. Smith claims to l>e the wife of James Smith, the so called Hones’ Shoe Man,’ of 315 East Stale Street.” Shortly afterward a whirling mass, "claiming to be” a reporter, flew 15 feet into the street and with what the bystanders assert was a thud. O m Story of a Gold Coin and an Obliging Young Man. “Will somebody tell me how 1 can pay back $5 which 1 lawfully awe?” wailed the wife of a United States senator at a supper given the other night in Washington. “1 shall willingly give another $5 for a helpful suggestion. 1 had to go to the capitol last week, and so I went in a herdic. I dropped my nickel in the place assigned, and do sooner had I done so than 1 gasped, for I suddenly realized that my nickel was a five dollar gold piece which my husband had given me the year of our marriage. 1 had al ways kept it in my purse for senti ment, and then you know it is wise to have $5 on hand anyway. I told the driver, and he said he could not help it; that I would have to ride to the end of the line, where the cash box could be opened. I almost was in tears as I explained that I could not do it, that I had to meet my husband and that I was in an awful hurry. “I looked so miserable that a nice looking young man across the way told me to cheer up. He would ride to the end and collect the gold. Thereupon he handed me a new five dollar gold piece with a bow which Chesterfield might have en vied. My grateful outburst was cut short by having to scramble out of the herdic. Imagine my horror when I got home, in turning my purse upside down, to have the missing gold piece tumble in my lap. I was overcome with horror. I was mortified beyond measure by the conduct of my husband, who laugh ed brutally and said that for a new kind of skin game it was not bad. But think of that poor young man, his ideal of women shattered, out $5, for I have no more idea where to find him than I have now to lo cate a new cornet, and the cynical way he will henceforth look at all gray haired old ladies in trouble— oh, it is awful!”—New York Press. Point* d’Anglatcrr« Lac«. Louis XIV., by the advice of his minister, Colbert, encouraged lace making in France, The Venetians, who had hitherto monopolized the art, issued decrees forbidding their craftsmen to leave the republic un der heavy penalties, but in spite of this the “points de France” soon equaled the “points de Veni.se.” The origin of the name “points d’Angleterre” is curious. In 1602 the English parliament forbade the import of foreign lace, but flax grown in England was not fine enough for the best lace, for which there was a great demand at the court of Charles IL, so the mer chants “bought up the choicest laces of the Brussels market, smuggled them over to England ami sold them under the name of ‘points d’Anfle- terre? ” R«yal Golfer. King James II. was a fine golfer in the sense of fondness for the game, and in other senses too. He it was as Duke of York who, when challenged by two English noble- taen at the Scottish court to a match, the duke to take any partner whom he could find, took to nis aide an Edinburgh shoemaker named John Patersone. The duke and Pat- ereone won, and the latter, being given half tne stake, built for him- aelf a house, which is to be distin guished by the record .upon it in O*ongate tft this day.—Fry’s liag- • • to Loggers Laborers. — a and • The old Hohn s Restaurant, at the rear of the Opera Saloon has changed hands and is now known as the Louis Lunch Counter. Quick orders and fair treatment my motto. L. C. D urkee -, Prop. Land for sale in small tracts near town. A. Haberly Wool Wanted I will pay the highest cash market price for wool of all kindsat Wright s meat market Oliver Waldvogel Made=to=Order Clothes New line of neckwear lor men at Trowbridg es. Typewriter paper and supplies for ale by C. Y. Lowe. 28 tf W. The Worlds Work criticises the tine imposed upon Standard Oil by Judge Landis because it is "confi scatory. A $29 000,000 tine was im posed upon a corporation having a capital stock of $1000,000 and no one knows how much r.-sources be sides. But this fine was not more confiscatory than a $29 fine imposed upon a petty larcenist who has only $1 of capital. HER REMORSE centers, that they realize that it is Oregon Development League until they will have to look for new "It ie rwnorsd that a card party • «• gi*m Lwt «Venieg to a number P. are not expensive when made by Chicago’s famous merchant tai lors, Ed. V. Price & Co., of whom we are exclusive local represent ative. They operate on such an immense scale and have such perfect facilities that a Fuller’s pure prepared paint for sale by C. Y. Lowe. Coquille River Transportation Co.’s Schedule 6:45 a m 9:15a in Very Reasonable B andon 1:2o p in Coquille 4:00 p m 7 :oo a in sum will purchase as fine a tail ored-to-measure suit as can be made — having high quality of cloth, beautiful shape, perfect fit and unquestioned style. Favorite leaves Bandon 4 4 < 4 Ccquille 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Dispatch leaves Bandon " " Coquille I ;oo p tn 7 :oo a m Liberty leaves Coquille " " Bandon I :oo p m Passengers going on the Favorite at 6:45 a m can get a train for Marshfield and have three hours and fifteen minutes on the bay and return same day. HOW TO GET STRONG P. J. Daly, of 1247 W. Congress St, Chicago, tells of a way to ba come strong: He says: “My mot be.' who is old and was very feeble, is deriving so much benefit from Elec tric Bitters, that I feel it is my duty to tell those who need a tonic and strengthening medicine about it. Io my mother's case a marked gain in flesh has resulted, insomnia has been overcome, and she is steadily growing stronger.” ' Electric Bitters quickly remedy stomach trouble, liver aud Ki Iney compianta < Sok under guarantee 1 at Lowe's Drug Store. 20c. Kodol will, without doubt, make your stomach strong and will al most instantly relieve yon of the symptoms of indigestion. It will do this because it is made up of the natural digestive juices of the stomach so combined that it com pletely digests the food just as Ibe stomach will do it, so you see Kodol can’t fail to I elp yon and help you promptly. It is sold here by Bandon Drug Co. ROOMS and LODGING Get something special, personally selected from the Price exclusive style plates and 500 beautiful Fall cloths. We invite your atten- tion*especially to fabrics Nos. 4657, 4734, 4755, 4848, 4920. Better goods for the same money The same goods ior less money SMITH BROS. & SIDWELL OREGON .... BANDON Allen & Davidson Allen & Davidson have moved their store into the Laird-Lowe Building aud are ready to receive their rons their patrons there with full new line of the in Groceries, Fruits and Vegetables. Everything the table. Don’t forget the changed location. new pat best for Oakes Real Estate Co Newly furnished large light rooms Telephone. Electric Lights. Agent* for Sole Agents for Rented by single night, week or Woolen month. INQUIRE AT OFFICE OF The BANDON STEAM LAUDRV MRS GERALDINE VOICE Connecticut Fire Insurance MORRIS, CULTURE Artistic Singing with Pure Italian Method. Will be at Mr*. Stevenson'* Wednes day* and Thursday*. Poison Ring«. The origin of the pretty custom of placing the wedding ring upon the finger of the bride seems to have sprung from the Egyptians, who presented the bridal ring aa a token of intrusting the wife with all the husband’s property. The custom was Adopted by tne early Christians, and tn us it has reached us in the present day, when the ring :• placed upon the bride’s finger witn the words, “With all my world- y goods I thee endow.” Rings, however, have had other associations besides those of mar rying and giving in marriage. Some toman rings were hollow and filled with poison, obviously for the pur- >oae of suicide, a crime then con sidered a virtue. A modern in stance of this carrying death upon the finger is that of Condorcet, who when arrested by the notorious con vention tore the jewel from his ring and drank the poison which Uy ia the hollow. Mill Oakes Addtion. Company. St. Paul Fire & Marine In Addition insurance Company. Breakwater Addition. Phenix Fire Insurance Co. We have the only lots within the Town Limits of Bandon sold on the instalment plan. us. If you want results list with If you want to buy improved or unimproved prop erty, business lots or business chances, come and see us we have them. The largest from, and always changing. list in Bandon to select Rents collected and interests of non-residents looked after. (»eneral information bureau and Notary Public. Edward E. Oakes, BANK OF HANIMIN Manager BANDON OKKCION Capital, «25 4MM» BOARD OF DIRECTORS: J L. Kronenberg, Pretident J. Denholm, Preaident; F. J. Fahy, Cathier; Frank Flam, T. P Hanly Vice- A general banking buaineu traniacled and cuatomeri given every accommodation con- iHtrnt with «ale and contervativ- banking CORRESPONDENTS: The American National Bank, oi San Franciaco, Calii; Merchant] National Bank. Portland, Oregon. The Chare National Bank, oi New Yota