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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 31, 1908)
■in» KsM product, for a large chtss of psople ubo thia year find them selves tn straitened fiuancial ctrcum- etg^cea oleomargarine will goubtUaB be extensively used as a substitute for tfea genu trie dairy product, which Is tbuB early In the Mason retailing for t*t- ter than 30 cents per pound and con- sidering the high price of feed may is cloee to 40 cents before spring. Ths stack raiser has' a Job oa Ila bauds to figure oat a profit In feeding sixty cent corn to five dollar bogs or cattle. In fact, be may as well sava bls pencil, for the Job can’t be done. | 'opyright, IMS. by F E Trigg ThU ui.H ter must not be reprinted without .pedal perniiliHlon.J PAPER FROM CORNSTALKS. Following c-losely on the publication • f many articles of late pointing out r..,- rapid disappenrance of timber sup- j 'les suitable for the manufacture of j rl’it paper comes an announcement aroni the chemists of the United States «.epartnient of agriculture at Wash- 1 Ijton that a process has been dlscov- • <1 whereby the cornstalks which • nt present wastid at the rate of 1 Hllions of tons annually may be con- • ->rted into an excellent quality of <j aper The first practicable samples • f the new cornstalk paper have been ounufactured by Dr. Bristol, chief • he::.1st of the department, and bis as- • !-t nits. The experiments have been • iriled to tlie point of making five • hades of paper. One grade Is dark i r i.v. thick and heavy, like parchment, <•<1 almost ns tough as sheepskin • ae white is made from the hard out- i le shell of the stalk and the yellow 4 iilcs from the pith. The latter have .-< much lunger fiber and resemble the j a per made from linen rags or cotton, 1 la ; soft and pliable. The process of j ii ufacttiring tlie new kind of paper li said to be much simpler than that j i vol veil In reducing wood pulp to ’• aper, the stalks needing but two or Three hours' cooking, while w’ood pulp v eeds cooking four or five times as 2 >ng. The experimenters predict that hen the manufacture of the new kind of paper is started on a large « ale it will be at least 50 per cent • heaper than the paper at present >nade from wood pulp. A PRACTICAL CAMPAIGN. The Audubon Society of America, *vhose members are Intensely interest- «•«I in the protection of bird life, has «'.ecided on a plan of campaign for the . uture differing radically from that ’oliowed in the past. Heretofore the appeals of the society for assistance in I lie good work which they are try- : g to do have been largely on the ba- «Is of sentiment—humanitarian and aesthetic reasons rattier than on that -»-"pressed in terms of dollars and • puts. The campaign wldch the so- ■ lety has laid out lias In view setting before tlie farmer, orcliardist, railroad > d business man the enormous an- mal financial loss sustained through asect damage, rendered yearly more 3 ‘.reatening as a result of tile ruthless «destruction of bird life. Last year, ac • rdlng to figures compiled by the so- »-•tety, the money loss to the various 1 ierests of tlie country as a result of lasc. t damage aggregated $800,000,000 '■i connection with these figures they • He tlie fact that the federal govern ment d- les out the pitifully paltry sum • >f :?it2.0iMt to Investigate and educate the pimple on this all important topic. .'Ebe Audubon society has struck the light gait in getting on to the basis of t .,• ■ ash loss to business interests as a ■compelling motive In bird protection, and it goes without saying that It will produce results. AN IMPROVED VARIETY OF OATS. Two thousand five hundred dollars was recently refused for a Kellerst rasa Ciystal White Orpington ben named Pegg. Her owuer evidently believes in raising thoroughbred fowls as well as In keeping the best for himself. A decided point in favor of the manure spreader is that besides being a distinctly labor saving piece of ma chinery the fertilizer it spreads goes twice ns far and does more good than that scattered by the old pitchfork method. I from Saw telle. Cal. From tills once sticky death trap, which became the grave of numberless animals hundred« of thousands of years ago, have been taken the remains of rare prehistoric animals, including the enormous ground sloth, larger than a common ox; the bage prehistoric mammoth. a great extinct camel, a strange and un known species of deer, besides the saber toothed tiger and huge antedi luvian wolf, which were evidently lured to the death pool by the strug gles of the herbivorous animals al ready entrapped and which they in tended to devour. In addition to the larger animals, there have been dlscov- ered many remarkable and extinct spe cies of hawks, eagles and ducks which went to the pool in search of food, only to be caught and held fast an< finally Imbedded. Saloon rhe Eagle Choicest Burglary inturance F9 Fire Insurance CHILDREN The season for coughs and is now at hand and too much eaniiot be taken to protect the dren. A child is much more likely O contract diphtheria er scarlet fever when it lias a cold. The quicker you cure his cold the less the risk. Cham berlain’s Cough Remedy is the sole reliance of many mothers, and few of those who have tried it ate 'vdling to use any other. Mrs. F. F. Starcher, of Ripley. . Va., says. T have never used anythingother According to reports issued by the than Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy lepartment of agriculture at Washing for my children and it has always ton on Nov. 10, the average yield of 'iven good satisfaction.” i bis rem orn in the country for the present edy contains no opium or other m.r year is 28.2 bushels per acre, while ci die and may be given as the estimated total production is 2,642,- ienly lo^ child as to an adult, conti For <«7.000 bushels. This is a better show tale by Ci' Y. Lowe o TRANSFER CO Portland and Coos bay Steamship Line General Delivery BREAKWATER (hders cairfnlly handhd O KF. GON Sails From Coos Bay Saturdays at Service of f ide Sails From Portland Wednesday The Opera C. E. McCOLLUM, Agent, A A Street Dock Phone Main 34 WEEKLY Sienni Itceroii ■ »rniiglit TRIPS H. W. SKINNER. Agent GRAY A 1 JOLT CO.. Gen. Agenti COURTEOUS TREATMENT 728-730 Merchant! Exchange San Francisco Marshfield. Phone 441 GROSS BROS OREGON BANDON ❖ Lodges are Requested to Notify this Office on Election of Officers and on Change of Meeting Night. Cards under this Head are 50c per in., month ❖ * ❖ AT <• •> •> V The Pacific • OREGON PHYSICIAN Office over Drug Store. Honrs, It t< 1’2, ft.nt. 1 :30 to 4, pm.; 7 to 8 in the evening. Office in Laird Building^ Comer 1st and VI had Night ch II h Hiiftwered from office. Rooms in Denholm Home on Plank BANDON, EET8»vrr\ Tuesday evening nt 8 run Band» W. R. C. No. 40 Meats and Provisions A share publie patronage solicited. A Al ES, AND ALL TWROAT AMD LU8G TROUBLES. GUARANTEED S ATISFACTORY OR MONEY REFUNDED. Surgery a Specialty. OFFICE and RESIDENCE above Post Office Meet« awry ftMknnd third Saturday in encli nioiitbi in G. A It. Hall. Cordial iuv M w IH) ext< nd<'xl to nil mem- Dr. H. 1«. Perk inn l.< is Maa *. A. Youxn, President. Mna M abtbttb M obsb , Secretary. OFFICE HOURS: 10 a. tn. to 3 p i tn., 7 p. m. to 8 p. tn. M HNOfilC. I » ANDON LODGR, No. 1!», A F. A M. I > Stated comsiiinicutiiins first. Katar ri after Hie full moon of <«<'11 mouth All Master Masons cordially invited. GURLEY liOAK, W. M. Lloyd Rosa, Secretarv. Office in New Denholm Building, DR. LESTER P SORENSEN. 1. o. o. I-' | > ANDON LODGE, No. 133, I. O.- O. F Office in New Lowe-Laird Building. 1 ) nieetft every Wednesday evening Telephone at Home. Visiting brothers in good standing cor Hour«: 9 a. m., to 5 p. m. By request dially invited. J. A. McCORD, N. G. It. B. D ebut bee. Rebekah Lodge No. 126. » to 8, p. m. BANDON OREGON C R WADE EETS Every 2nd mid 4th Friday*, ATTORNEY AT LAW Practice night tire* Fiidav <>f the Notary Public month. Social Evening Hie 3rd Flidsy of l lie month. A cordial invitation extended Office: Koom 3 I’miter Building to all members in good standing. B ando «, .... O u |I), , CLARA GOETZ N. O. B lanche R adlet Seo’v- M G. TKF.AIIOOI.il, T. Knights of l’ythlas ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR I XELI’Hl LODGE No. 64, Knights of AT - LAW. 1 ’ l’vthias. Meets every Monday even- .ng at Masonic hall. Visiting Knights in vited to attend. U. M. M oiiuihon , C. C. B. N. H abbinoton , K of It. 8. Moilem Wooilinen. NOTARY PUBLIC II. H. CWINlNNIONKIt. . Oregon ('ABLE HOCK CAMP, No. 9176, M. W. I of A. Met t« tlie I’d and 4H1 We .ueaday Office With Baudot) Invest meni ( <> ■ >f each month at K. P. Hall. Viftiting in ighborft coidiallv invited 10 attend. A. I BAR I MAN. H. C. Dr. H. Tvl Brown. E. E. O akes , Clerk Ko renter»* ol AiiiericM. / ’<>1 KI QUEEN OL i’llE FOREST. No. V 17. nieeta Friday night of each week, in Concrete Hall, Bandon. Oregon. A cor- bal welcome is extanded to all viftiting brother*. A. E. Il a ima Lt, Geo. E. WitaoH. Chief Ranger. Fin. Secretary. Woodmen uf the World. Bandon, Re.ident Denti«!. Office in Panter Building Office Houri: 9 io 12 M., I to 5 P. M, BANDON, OREGON Phone, Belle A- Kolp Real Estate Notary Public s’EASJDE CAMP No. S12, W O. W BANDON, OREGON • ’ meets it regular ResHion the first and O pporitb TiiownBirKirb third l litirMilav» of tach month in the Mu OFFICE ■ - - nir Indi. Visiting neighlsira are cordially invited. It. W. BULLARD, C. C. painter. Ikecuratcr and O.C. WALDVourL, Clerk. Dr. King’s New Discovery FOR CifHEi1® •¿"Æ* ilALIl Trial Bottle Free OKI* (¿ON Dr- Waren J Kelley al the l and n WitfWHm. Sojourning M cliiefa in good biandin^ are cordially invited Physician and Surgeon - Operative to attend. O.C, W aldvogbl , C. T. E if . oeh , C. of IL Sachem. I umishcd at living ptices. & SUHUEUN Lewah Tribe No. 48, Imp. O. R. M. All kinds of A. N Dr. H. I_> Houston Phone Calk Promptly Attended. Streets. Road, Lewins Meat Market of the OREGON BANDON : <• <• <• *** * * <• l»K. E. W. KOKNITER Nice clean rooms 25 and 50c a night; $1.25 a week; ^5 »month ----- <• ❖ -i •>< V PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON MKH SARAH COSTELLO BANDON Professional Directory Lodge a.iTd ••• * ❖ <• i uh \XOLDS • » «’ M. P. plying lietneen Portland and C oon Kay only Getting an “Old Man.** to o d 8 Steamer Alliance Wines. Liquors & Cigars FURNISHED ROOMS Speaking of new men,” said the boss of the skyscraper builders, with a twinkle, “comical things happen even Any upward movement In grain up here, the same as in a theater. prices which makes stock raising aud Sometimes in rush seasons there ain’t dairying unprofitable and tempts the enough hands to go round, and we farmer to sell his cereal products In have to take ’em green as the hills. I the raw state rather than In the finish- had one once, a kid from Vermont, a id form of beef, pork, mutton, butter whale of a kid. with bones like a horse and cheese can only be viewed as a and eyes awful anxious to please— misfortune from the standpoint of a eyes that made you like him. He's one permanent agricultural prosperity. of tlie best men I’ve got now, but then which from the very necessity of the he was green as>God made him.” The < ase depends ujsm au Intelligent main foreman stopped to chuckle. "‘Go up to tlie eighteenth floor.’ 1 tenance of the fertility of the soli. It is likely that many will disagree with told him one day, ’and bring down an this view, but a careful consideration old man.’ I was busy at the time, and of the points involved would seem to when I saw the kid stare I said kind of sharp tlsit If that old man wasn't verify it. here in five minutes the whole blamed So long as the average yield of corn building would probably go to smash per acre for the whole country re- This was Just my way of making him maius in the neighborhood of tweuty- hustle, but he thought 1 meant it word lx or tweuty-seveu bushels, and nu for word. He went up on the run. and merous Instances are on record where in a few minutes lie came down with . uterprisiug farmers have secured a a sputtering, clawing old feller held ■ ield of from so to 120 bushels per like a vise in Ids arms " ’He was the only old man on the .ore. It will be entirely in place to continue talking and writing about tloor.’ said the kid, 'and he wanted •<> the possibilities of agriculture in the stop and argue about it, but from United States. Had the average yield what you said I knew what It meant, tier ucre been twice what it was (26.2 so I Just grabbed him and came.’ “You see.” the foreman added kind bushels), or 52.4 bushels—a moderate .ield—the total corn production would ly, noting my puzzled expression, “an lave been 5,285,374,000 bushels, while old man happens to be the name of a it 50 cents a bushel $1,321,343,500 tool we use.” —Everybody’s Magazine a ou Id have been added to the value >f the crop. at and »»pego 11 C' oiimí Hteainsitip 4 o. Ctiliforiii» WITH For Sale by BATf) Is called to the fact that COL C. T. BI.UMEN- ROTHER oi Bandon, Oregon, will insure Saw mill men, Loggers and other kinds of workmen against sickness, accident or death at reasonable rates. It will pay you to call on him and see what he offers in that line. COURTEt >1 S TREATMENT Over and Under, o YOUR ATTENTION Wine«, Liquors and Cigars l‘() II E . -*• * OREGON C. T. Bl.UM E nroth er , Notary Public Cail and See MUNCK A fact quite generally known, yet > tmetimes overlooked, is that red lover is a biennial—that Is, its leugth ■if life is but two seasons long—which means that if the second growth is not allowed to mature seed in the autumn of the second season the crop will die out. This variety of clover as It prows along the roadside seems to have i perennial habit, but this is due to the fact that it produces seed often enough to perpetuate Itself. I p St ni cm , Ituildiiig BANDON SALT RHEUM — -USX) —— BOUGHT AND SOLD Uiioin* 2 and 3 \ew Denholm fAfARr»« HivV ALVIN MUNIR. Prop. FOR ECZEMA, 'I ETTER AND REAL ESTATE Money Loans Ntgoti.Bed on Approved Secmity. All U S land Matters a Specialty ard P.oinpt- ly Attended tc. Pens n and Ir.tiiiance Agency Mund Broke rs Trans Atlantic Steamship and Railroad Ticket Agency ARC LIGHT Bowling Alley s A number of farmers in the oats belt report exceptionally good results in both yield and weight per bushel with n t:.w variety of oats, the Kegenerated Swedish Select, Introduced two or three years ago by a firm of English seedsmen and exhibited at a number *>f state fairs during the past summer. The variety of oats tn question is short 1 rneled, remarkably plump and full All kinds of Repair*Work done uo I > berry and has been known to THIS IS WORTH READING promptly and in a workmanlike yield n■: high as 100 bushels to the File average housewife would much Leo. F. Zelinski, of t>8 Gibson St cere and I > weigh as heavy as fifty prefer to burn hard maple, oak or manner. jxm. ds to U • bushel. Excellent char hickory, as she may have done years Buffalo, New York, says: ”1 cured acter! .tics of the new variety are that ago or us her mother did. but a great t he most annoying cold sore 1 ever Horseshoeing a Specialty *t is early maturing, stiff and strong many iu sections where the hardwood had with Bucklen’s Arnica ¡Salve. I applied this salve once a day for two In straw and virtually rust proof. The supply is gone have to use Boft coal iu Location on plank r.nui one fourth mil** seed comes high, from $2 to $3 a bush its stead. With this the soot and dirt days, when every trace of the sore trom the Steamer Landing. was gone." Heals all sores, Solil el, i>ut the increased yield and quality are the chief druwhacks The former OKEGON BANDON which It guarantees would seem to Jus nuisance may tic reduced to a mini under guarantee at Lowe's drug tify the purchase of enough seed for a mum by breaking the coal Into small store. 25c. good sized breeding plot, in a great pieces before putting It into the atove The Soft Answer. majority of cases where the new va and putting on the fire only small’ He—Artists say that five feet four riety has been raised there has been quantities at a time. If the fire la fed Is the divine height for women. His nu Increase in yield of 25 per cent or in this way it will burn brightly and Darling (crossly)—You know. I nm flv“ better. _______ consume the soot and a good share of feet nine. He (quickly)—You are more A WORD ABOUT OLEOMARGARINE the black smoke, which la simply an t$an divine, my dear aggregation of aooty particles, as soon Federal laws lately passed wisely as it is formed. More than thia, there Laws catch files and let hornets go RE(i I STERE I) OPTICIAN place restriction on the sale of oleo is a decided saving in fuel in this free.—Anachnrsls margarine as a counterfeit of dairy method of stoking which should not tie Reliable Work and (ioods. butter. This is Just common decency overlooked. A DANGERJ3 OPERATION aud honesty, it should not be palmed off on the public as a dairy product. Professor John Merriam, associate a tlie removal of ttie appendix by a On the other hand, it is ouly fair to professor of geology In the University surgeon. No one who takes Dr. •av in behalf of the manufacturers and of California, has created quite a sen King's New Life Pills is ever sub retailers of oleomargarine ttiat when it sation In scientific circles and among jected to this frightful ordeal. They salts under Its own colors and is sold students of paleontology throughout work so quietly yon don’t feel them. KILL THÈ CCÙC* ' honestly for what it is—largely beef the world by the discovery of a num They cure constipation, liendacbe. and CURE THE LUNCtij fat-no serious objection «-an be urged ber of prehistoric animal species In a biliousuess and malaria. 25c at agatust it. ns It is aj-le^jind whole tar pool or asphalt bed_Jocated not far Lowe's drug store. • ALL KINDS 01 . . . . Go to the . . . . "Archie Is fairly going crazy over BANDON Experiments which have been con his new motor.” ducted show that when cheese is sold "That’s strange. Every time I’ve from the farm or milk from which seen him he has been going crazv un Dray and cheese is made a uiui b larger amount der It." .M ic I m ’ h II boats. uf fertility is taken from the soil than in the cuse of butter or cream. The trouble with many a man’s In I \NDON 1 his is to quite an extent responsible tegrity is that it ni»eds constant vlndi for the fertility and productivity of cation.—Chicago News. those farms oil which buttermaking is i he chief occupation. GOOD COUGH MEDICINE FOR ing both in yield per acre and total production than last year, when the average was 25.0 bushels and the to te I yield was 2,592,320,000 bushels. 1 lie quality of this year’s crop Is 86.9 per ceut, while In 1907 it was 82.8. BANDON REAL ESTATE AND LOAN COMPANY I ornirily ANCHOR BAR The intense itching ebaraclerisu . There Is probably no flower of the unpretentious order that will give a of,these ailments is almost instantl1 Chamberlain's Salv* larger measure of satisfaction than the allayed by fragrant English violet. A pot of vio Many severe cases have been cme lets will furnish sweet fragrance and by it. For sale by C. Y. Low bios-. ms well through the winter if placed In a sunny window in a room Just above freezing. They are hardy and do not seem to mind the cold. Do You B ow i ? <■ miner uAmff <; an tic F>tevKNr«o eiTTTRK S BLACK LEG VACC1NK C alif*«i)i.T’r favorite, the most sue icessiul easiest use.J and lowest reliable vaccine made - ___ ■ _ I’ow-kr. <trir.g full form Write 4 (.If f-pf B.,*rk ¡.Tk/ li •■■klrt L 1-THI.CUTTER LABORATORY I ■ W ’B brkblby . C al If v- ur druMWnt not stock our vaccines, order direct fiom ok* in J- A. Griffith . Jim, C. E. HOLI.OPETEM Instructor nn Mandolin, Guitar and Banjo Alio apertili attention to orobeetrn drill u pepih deRir.iog nuc L ineUuct&oa