Image provided by: Bandon Historical Society Museum
About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 24, 1908)
/■ ft* Rflth «tier* SWih'arfiHÍ fr. »1 iS city Mllwmik«-* f r I’.uft Jo » rib barge bulen wiiij L’T’• i-u-li-ls • wheat, tlie far ■«••f « -rib« of _■ 1 ,,n »-V» sUJp|M«d from a j rt on the great lake* DYNAMITE IN THE MAKING. f 1 R«* v. R. L. Hicks Aiman For rt-.t lv Nuv. 15, 1908 . '•i m r VA ' ■ Ar- Encircled uy Death in Gallons and Tons. •t « voi’ >»nt nut. In-, -iti ul covets Ho lli-r . . . » • i-ptlve is dynamite f i itie making IR t ..ml are apt to lav ■Ì While Hondan chickens, lutr-aliiee disappoint«->i on v viewing tin» surface 111 4Nb — i< wb g tlie feature-» ami luto this country from a proviti- «> 1 of things. You could more more reudily f I Frutice, are not particularly baudsoti >■ < I • • -k. I he fancy thiinderl-oits leaping ami » rash y ■ to look at, they are excellent lay«-' ing from tender iilue skies than that b<M»k and the and good to eat. though not quite r. < tlu- most fearful for»»-' in creation are highly prized for the table as the y< I tlie original hidden under su« li a peaceful exterior j low legged varieties. Nitroglycerin, a » upl ul of vv hi» h would i'ts. ' Bv distribute you over square miles of It is always a consoling thought f r REGISTER. " st mils 30c. One lands, ape. is diligently mixing arouixl tile fellow vv liu doesn't go fishing oft» you in hundreds ami thousands of gal ROCKfORD.IA enough to keep Ills hand in or g tie W'01 111 and ' «ns. posted as to where tlie lies! places a '* is making Itself in big iron retorts, $1 monthly in to know that his family is not real CORRESPONDENCE || -ailing down leaden gutters and de|M>ndent upon liis catch for tin SOLICITED ' <>n almanac's merrily tumbling in minute Niagaras subsistence and that the meat mark into immense vats, where tlie deli- m (piantities. Agenrs wanted. (Copyright. ttM* by F. E. Trigg Thle is within walking distance. - quest ent yi-ll-ivv peril pursues its J .ur W oki . i > N W orks P ub Co, 2201, matter must not be reprinted without ney powder«.'.rd. Out of one recep- special permission. J A very effective storm door may I I 1 taele it far»-' furiously through special I. <11 t Street, St. Louis, Mo. Every ■nude by tacking a long piece of bull- lead coils, driven only by cooling blasts citizen owes it to himself, to his Ing or tar paper on to the screen doo BEETS AND SOIL FERTILITY. of air. ami is drawn off like draft ale using narrow cleats or strips in fa fell» -vv's and to I’rof. Hicks to possess With a vlew to getting somewhat and piped 011 to the next perfecting telling it to the frame. The paper cox definite information relative to the stag«». Gar.»- with tin- nitroglycerin ex ne ‘‘li icks’ ’ forecasts,— the only amount of fertilizing elements removed ering will protect the wire screen froi I pert into one of those big caldrons. reliable. the weather, while at the approach of Tlie interior is brilliantly illuminated from the soil in tlie growing of a ton warm weather next spring it may be by electricity, tlie only illuminating of beets, the writer recently made in- removed. agency permitted in or about lite dan Coquille River Transportation qulry of the bureau of plant industry ger bouses. ut Washington ami received the desired One naturalist whose name and Co.’s Schedule Around you are other houses at uni information from A. I> McNair, expert standing are pot reported lias figured form distances apart and connected in charge of the farm management in out that the production of a pound of b.v a series of narrow gauge tracks 6:00 a m vestigations. The query was made to honey if expressed by the labor of wherein workmen an- railroading 111 Favorite leaves Bandon ascertain the correctness or incorrect one bee would require 2.r>oo,iiiH> trips. trogl.vcerin from here and pulp cotton “ *• C quille 9 :oo a m In view of these figtires it is not ness of the claim made by the pro from there to lie compounded into dy strange that the little fellows get hot “ Bandon i :oo p m moters of a beet sugar factory to farm under (lie collar sometimes when folks natuite ami blasting gelatin. Greatest care is taken in rolling tlie pnalu-t “ Coquille 4 00 p m ers who have been raising beets for rob them of their sweet stores. from house to house. As soon as a Dispatch le »ves Bapdon the concern that a larger crop of corn 7 too a in loaded cart is ready to pass out of the can is» raised after beets—in other “ “ Coquille r 00 p tn Trees of the sapindus or soapberry nitroglycerin house, for instance, a words, that tin- growing of tlie sugar order grow in north Africa, their fruit 7 too a m Liberty leaves Coquille semaphore signals from an adjoining be lug used as a substitute for soap, beet lends to enrich tin- soil Mr. M» t too p m “ “ Bandon station, to which tlie consignment is Nair states that lie has found from while the black seeds which It contains carefully hurried. Passengers going on the Favorite liis own experience that corn does not are used by the natives in the making Around you are long storehouses at 6:45 a 111 can R'-l a train for of necklaces. The trees are very pro do well after tin IIS < l'op. ti.oligli Ile i packed v ¡th pulp in tons of innocent Marshfield. lifle, the fruit which they produce con not positive that oilier eri [H are It whiteness, Presently tins pulp will ns talnlng as high as 38 per cent of sa sume a Ian color under tlie nitrating Ju red thereby, ile adds that pre ponin, or vegetable soap element. Notice of Sale of Stock I process, ami then, suddenly be»-omlug motors of sugar beet factories some I carbonite, red cross, lierculea, Judson times hold that su. :ir beets take noth I A few counties in central Iowa prob- lug from the soil am! try to justlf. ably raise more popcorn tlian any and giant powder, forcite or what you Notice is hereby given that whe e- , order, it develops tlie quasi virtues of tlieir arguments by stating that sugar area of equal extent in the world. as on the 2d day of July 1908 the dynamite dynamite or blasting gela is made up -.f cat lam. hydrogen and Here farmers make a business of tin in which more natural forces are Bandon Farmers N Merchants Tel oxygen in vulgar parlance, "vv in 1 am growing it, as do their fellows else condensed to tlie cubic inch than exist ephone Company levied an assess- ' water"—ami ns suili it does not con where in tlu* matter of field corn. The anywhere else in creation. Death, meut up- n all subscribed shares »>f growers receive from $1 to $1.10 per tain any fertilizing Ingredient. Th!' curbed and sleeping, encircles you in the slock of said corporation of $6 Î hundredweight for it and In places statement, trim as far as it go»-s. ovei gallons ami tons. Annihilation threat per share, anti whereas the by laws are erecting large cribs in order to looks tlie important fact that the pulp ens at every turn In the form of poten ui said corporation provide that after residue or fibrous parts of tin- beet do store it for higher prices. tial pulverizing forces. Rut the man contain large »piantities of fertilizin;- an»l tlie mercury are there also, al»»rt, 60 days stock sh dl be sold for de materials. From tlu* table which fol A southern college for ladies certain responsive, reHable. Leslie's Weekly. i lin»|iient asssessments; and whereas lows, which gives the pounds of fer ly has muvli to commend it when it ¡said assess -vents have not been paid tilizing elements per ton of product, it lists as chief among its claims the fact upon the following shares owned by LIBRARY SLOW POKES will be seen that, as compared with po that no entrance examinations are re the following named persons: R. tatoes, corn, silage, cabbage ami tint quired and that a tine herd of Jersey 11. Rosa, two shares; Robert Fred In Time Killing Methods of Officials othy hay. beets »io not pull very heavily cows furnishes an abundant supply of Continental Europe. erick Jr., one- share on tlie soil, yet tlie figures disprove the milk for the institution, if more la “Aint»ri»ains who grumble a’»out hav Therefore s. id shares » ill be sold statement that tin- growing of twt « dies’ colleges had less examinations ing to wait a long time for books when enriches the soil to the highest bidder for cash, a and more Jersey milk there would tie Nitro- Phosphor- Pot fewer broken down and invalid gradu applying to a publi»- library,” said a tin-City Hall, Bandon, Oregon, at gen. ic .arid ash ates at commencement time, with a Boston literary woman, “should try to 1:3'» p. tn. Monda)’, December 28., Sugar beets........... . 4.4 2.0 9.6 work or study in a foreign library, par Potatoes ......... 5.8 I »908. 1 6 10.2 correspondingly greater health and ticularly In Germany. Corn silago ......... . S.4 2 6 7.8 happiness in after years. By order of Board of directors, Cabbage ................. . 7.6 "Tlie typical continental librarian 2.2 8.6 mode Nov. 2, 1908. Timothy bay .... 25 2 18.0 10 6 takes no account of time. The reader, The temperature maintained in the L). H. J ackson , henhouse Is not so important a matter worker or student must turn in his or Secretary. TOO MANY ACRES. her application for books at least a day as adjusting the ventilation so that no A ride mi tlie cars through almost direct drafts will blow on the hens in advance. The men w Im search for any section of tlie country for» ■s tlie while they are at roost. Many who th«» books applied for are aged, totter II rite b'or 1‘riees on, conclusion that the chief trouble with have studied the question and tried ing creatures w ho have been shuffling the type of farming which is being the plan recommend a burlap curtain around tlie dusty idles of books for quite generally followed Is that land at the windows instead of glass. This years, ami tlx- word hurry is not in < vvners are putting half as much labor is justified on the ground that poultry their vocabulary. as they ought to on twice ns much arc more subject to disease from "Tlie most priceless books and man land as they »an work, In nlinost breathing impure air in a poorly venti uscrlpts an- kept in places which are every section Is to lie seen the pitiful lated bouse than they are in quarters perfect lire tra|is, and disorder pre- evidence that the land Is being till»-d which are properly ventilat»-d though dominates in every department. When In a slipshod ami careless manner, evi much colder. you speak about the impossible metli- denced b.v an omnipresent growth of ods employed tlie librarians tell you weeds and nil too meager crop returns A common fault to be found with that they are too poor to introduce any Tilt* tilling < f too much land to handle the gradeil road work usually done by modern indexes or » Dialogues. This is discourages tlie most profitable kind of road supervisors is that, while suffi to some exlent so, lint as a matter of TO — stock raising ami dairying. Increases cient eartli lias been brought to the fact they would not change if they tlie problem of farm help in tlie house crown of the road, the ridge is usually hail all the money in the world at their and outside and makes a drudgery of left rough ami uneven, with the result disposal. 11 t.v pe of lite that nt Its best, with that few drivers have either the pa “They do not wisli to encourage tlx» modern conveiili-nces and machinery, tlence or patriotism to work it down. common people to use books. Tlie ought not t<> l-e oppressive or unenjoy- For this reason traffic usually follows learned are among tlie aristocracy, and Marshfield, Ore. Phone able It is patent from more points of the slopes of the highways, the crown the spread of tlie knowledge which is View than one that tin- prosperity as of the road being left until teams are hidden in those wonderful literary mu W FLANAGAN W. M. LAWLER well as til»' |>ea< e of mind and liappi- driven on to it by muddy roads in the seums is far from tlie purpose of tin* llvss <>f a large per cent of the agri fall or spring. Were the crown of tin men at tlie lu-ad of Europe's libraries. cultural population in th»- I’n'o-d “There may be some delay In our li road finished more carefully and States would be found In larger n.eni- braries. but our people In tin- lower smoothly and possibly dragged or roll ur • than is true today were there a ed, the work would be much better walks of lift- ar«- certainly abend of better and more thorough working of done and more satisfactory all around the common | <-• pie of tin- old world in At North Bend fewer acres of land. tlie matt- i - f tting books vv lien they to those who have to drive over it. .1 i generally free of Is now open for th«» re DEATH IN CORNSTALKS. I Summer Is the best time for cutting -iiarg-- " ?.« vv York Tel- gram. ception o fl liitients. The Almost every fall reports are numer timber. It dries rapidly and becomes terms are $10 per week ous of the death of cattle shortly after hard and sound. Cut and saw bass • O. Sirrt In. they have been turned into the corn wood In summer, and in a few weeks - !' Kliiigi-nlierg. anc) upwards, For par- fields. While death lu some of these it will become thoroughly seasoned riu lu nddi- ticnlar« apply to cases utay be due to the working of and will flually harden so as to al • • pay for the an active poison which is not as yet most resemble horn Cut it In winter, t!i -e actually fully understood. In a majority of and it will be so long in seasoning as ¡.e from tlie cases a postmortem examination of to become partly dwaywi before the .12 l*s a year. the affected animals would show that process can lie completed. No doubt r '.irly at. say. North Bend, Or. death resulted from impaction of the the presence of the water or sap in ■ 1 li-- owner to stomach and bowels, To guard against great abundance In winter, and espe ' • a e of sixty this contingency the cattle should be cially toward the latter part, hastens '.L.C p'-llSloll provided with an abundance of salt, this incipient decay. Rails cut and - ■ 1 : •• i'lhtlb- while they should have easy access to split in summer and the bark peeled i ' '| . fisi; nil the water they can drink and even to hasten drying have lasted twice ■' i pa.v be driven to the supply to make sure as long as winter cut rails. It is the i:' r : 'a* High Grade .f that they get It. This will furnish the practice to cut nearly all timber in NURSERY i i system sufficient liquid to handle the the comparative leisure of winter, but digested corn fodder, which Is at best It certainly would Lie better to pay a STOCK ror Dargam Day. dry and absorbs much moisture. Care higher price to have it done In sum- On Hand “She's no lad.-. !" in this matter of providing au abun tner. “Why, I dance of salt and water will often pre Address How would it do to ask your better fined.“ vent serious loss. half if that mac blue with which she “On the surfa»-»», yes. But what do has been doing the family sewing for a you tiiink of a woman who wears her H. L. Stevens, Prop., Coquille CREAMERY PROMOTERS. number of years past does not need re little boy's football siloes to the bar- M.. G. Pohl, Local Agent, Bandon, Ore Reports in the papers here and there pairing or replacing by a uew oue? She gain sales ami spikes every one who are to the effect that professional may not have got Into the habit of gets in her way Cincinnati En- creamery promoters are getting in ttieii asking for everything that she would quirer. work in some localities, with the result like, and it is barely possible that you that creamery companies just organiz have failed to mention it to her. If After Him. Ing, acting on the suggestion of tliess there is anything that is calculated ano CUÍ7E THE LU NOS to “It's hard to lose your friends," re chaps, have tsiught much equipment tax the patience and rouse the ire of marked tlie man wlm was down snd not of the best type and poorly suited an otherwise even tempered woman It out. WITH to their needs If a creamery is to l»e is a machine which is out of whack "Hard?" snorted tlie man who waa organized In a locality It would lie far and which she cannot get to respond on tlie high tide of prosperity. "It’!« better as well as more economical in to her attempts to regulate. Such n Iinjx-sslble.” Philadelphia Record. the end for those interested In it to machine is in the same class with a secure the advice and experience of a balky gasoline engine or a reaper that The Prompter. crenmerynian of known reliability and wou't tie bundles properly. If the ma i r Bottle free! I “T siipjrosc that Inspiration prompts w.t'ULD-'s Trial oue acquainted with the equipment chine is worn out. turn it in on a trade many of your Jokes. ” needed under similar conditions than or throw it on the Junk pile and glad AWT ALL THROAT AND LiiNQTnOUBLES 1 "A few," mliriitted the' press humor* G U A HA N 'X EEDb¡TSE AUI0H J to he imposed upon by the smooth ta'k den the good wife's heart by fetching 1st "1 >esperati->n. however, prompts of one of th-se unknown promoters. OH MONEY HKL'UNDED.______ I her a uew one the most."—Louisville l’ouri»-r Juurnal. GAMO / F.ETRIGG I * k' Gasoline. Distillate, Launch Supplies fr Just a Moment I Do you like Candy? you do. Of course Do you know the difference between Good Candy and Poor Candy? If you don’t, it would be our delight to show you, and after you had tasted one of the many kinds of assorted Chocolates you’d swear that we carry the finest line of Sweets in Bandon. A hundred different varities and everyone a Gem. Sold by the Dime’s Worth or Pound Any way to suit. Take a box of Modern Choco'xtes to the DEA.. ONE th ALLEYS6 next time LÎNG EYS The Arc Light1 the I wo Jacks S; iOon Formerly the Elk Horns Saloon Has opened up under new man agement and thf customers wi‘ be treated right. We will sen' you the best drink in the city, aw you will go away feeling tei years younge Special Attention Given to Family Or rs Jack Tupper and Jack li dson Proprietors n I City Meat Mar æt Dear* Ac. Hensley, Props. Retail dealer* in all kind* ol Fresh Meats, Hams, Bacon and L rd Logging Camps and Ship Supplies our Spec ialty at Lowest Possible Price We also carry vegetables C. M. WAII), Manager Get Your Presents Now and avoid the rush of the last day. The best line of Papeteries, Hand bags, Toilet Sets in Silver and Stag, Perfumes, Cut Glass, China, etc. ever brought to the City. Mianus . Engines Bandon Drug Co Coos Bay Oil & Supply Co The Mew, F.legnntly Kitted mid Speedy Steamer ELIZABETH THE MERCY HOSPITAL This steamer is new. is strongly built and filled with the latest improvements and will give a regular 8 day service, for passengers and freight, between the Coquille river, Oregon, and San Francisco. J. E. WALSTROM, Anent, Bandon. Oregon. BANK|OF BANDON Sisters of Mercy Coos Co. Nursery BAM1IOM BOARD OF DIRECTORS: J. L. Kronenberg, President. J. Dei President; F. J. Fahy, Cajhier; Frank Flam, T. P. Hanly A general hanking buvineu tran*a> ted and cuitomer* given every accom.. sistent with safe and connervativ* banking CORRESPONDENTS: The American National Bank, of San Fra..- m. Vice ition con co. Calif; Merchants National Bank. Portland, Oregon; The Chase National Bank, of ! - w York. NEW TWIN SCREW STEAMER FIFIELD C. P. JENSEN, Matter Will make regular trips hereafter between San Francisco and the Coquille River carrying passengers and freight. Up-freight earnestly solicited Rate Cut o $3.00 Per Ton Unexcelled passenger accommodations. A. F. ESTABROOK CO., Gen. Agent. 245 California St., San Franci: o Ul' FOR OREGON Capital, #25,000 V ì LL thc couch Ì Hew Disced ; E. T. Kruse, managing agent, 24, CaliformaSt., San Francisco. J. Howard Johnston, Agent, Bandon, Oregon Is Your Property For Sale? We are constantly receiving Inquiries form all parts of the United State* for Farms. Vineyards and Country and City Home« on the Pacific Coast. If your property is for sale we «hall be glad tn place It on our list, and pul you in direct correspondence with a large number of possible buyers. Address, town • C ountry journal pub . co . 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