Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910, January 14, 1909, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Ejirth Quake Coos Bay?
DYNAMITE IN THE MAKING.
Workmen Who Are Enciroted by Death
In Galione and Tone.
the Coos Bay Times uf Fri­
day, January 8th says:
Did Coos Bay
experience an
earth quake tremor this morning?
This is the cause of much debate
on the streets this afternoon.
A
large numb* r declare it did and
others ridicule the idea.
W. S. Turpen who went through
the Frisco earthquake a few years
ago, declares that there were three
distinct shocks between to and
eleven d’clock this morning. He
was in his office on the floor above
the Chamber of Commerce and is
positive he w»s not mistaken. He
says others in the building noticed it.
H. W. Skinner and Otto Schetter,
Mrs. E. Mingus,
Miss Mamie
Mahoney and other declare that they
felt the tremor.
Dr. E. Mingus said that there
was blasting being done back of the
city and it was barely possible it
might have caused a tremor like a
real earthquake but he doubted if it
would be felt as far as down town.
Today was one of the days for
which the big quakes for Sicily and
Southern Italy was prophesized but
it is beyond reason that a quake
coukl be detected other than by the
seismograph at this distance.
Ow­
ing to the telegraph wires being
down, it was impossible to secure
any information from possible earth­
quakes today.
Reviewing the cattie aectiou of the
huge Minnesota state fair, »he giant
ex|s>nent of the great northwest, the
Breeder’s Gazette, Chicago, from
which the cut Is reproduced. Includes
the following In Its running comment:
The awards in the class of aged
Shorthorn bulls scattered this fair's
money and commendation from Ken­
tucky to North Dakota. A contest that
will prove memorable In Shorthorn
history was waged in this spacious
and well appointed arena.
Most of the strong herds at Iowa
moved up to Minnesota, where they
were not exactly “welcomed with
bloody hands to hospitable grave«,”
but where the breeders of the home
state gave them all the competition
they wanted and then some. But
even at that one graud championship
went to faroff Kentucky aud the other
to Missouri.
White Hail Marshal fought his way
to another championship, winning In
the aged class over the beautiful white
Bapton Favorite, which wants only
some tilling of the bottom line to give
pause to nearly any competitor.
Memory does not recall such unani­
mous favor for a cow denied as was
Preaching at the Presbyterian
Church the first and third Sundays
of each month, both morning and
evening. Su iday School and young
people’s meeting every Sunday.
Visitors and transients are cot-
dtally invited..
G eo . H. R oach , pastor,
A. H aberly , temporary supply.
Rasmussen Bros., Props.
BOOTS - AND
LIBRARY SLOW POKES.
MAKING UP FOB THE SHOW RING,
freely manifested fur the beautiful
roau three-year-old Dorothea II., which
was left down in third position. She
was the only one tit to the minute in
the ring. The others had dipped too
often in the meal tub or else had been
too long divorced from It. She stands
a tritie from the ground, and the judge
Is notably fond of the low legged
ones and hence got her wrongly In
mind. Much of the massiveness In­
heres In his first choice, the roan
Woodhill May Blossom II., but there
is a lack of finish at both ends and a
somewhat sagging top line against her.
One of the most interesting exhibits
of the company was the red Marchion­
ess IV., the Van Horne cow- that was
at the front In the Winnipeg show.
Here is such perfection of Shorthorn
type that, soft as her flesh is, we
should not have hesitated at ranking
her next tQ the top.
It need not be recalled that comment
is current to the effect that the fat
■how bulls are “no account;” that they
cannot sire calves and are so “burned
out” that they are useless and of no
value as stock getters. Not a few
people of limited observation and cross
eyed reasoning are wont to descant
Orvil Dodge Has Hopes eloquently to this effect. Among the
fourteen clinking good heifer calves In
this exhibit five out of the six places
The Coquille Valley Sentinel (all of them but the fifth place) fell to
gives the following extract from a calves sired by that very fat bull
Princeps IV., many times champion.
Presbyterian Church
The Eldorado
At the Big Buckeye.
“The ‘Ohio idea’ is one of education
-»to teach, to show, to Illustrate by
graphic example. At Columbus there
is this year, as is usual, graphic ex­
ample of how best to do the belt
things.” Thus neatly Joseph E. Wing
■urns up in the Breeder's Gazette, Chi­
cago, bls impression of the big Buck­
eye fair, but he adds, among other re­
marks:
The defect in the management of
this fair was one so familiar that men
have forgotten to see it any more, the
failure to mark or catalogue animals
so that any Intelligent study of them
could l>e made. Ohio is no worse sin­
ner in this respect than some other
states. The writer, wandering in the
horse barn searching for a particular
animal, overheard tills from a man
who, with his wife, was seeking to
learn something: “I can't tell anything
about them. There is no one around
to tell a man anything.” Turning to
the writer, he asked, "I want to see
the Belgians and to compare them
with the Percfcerons, and I wish to
find one I'ercherou especially.”
It is uearly as bad in the cattle
bams. If not catalogues, why not sim­
ple, plain, but good sized cards an­
nouncing names of owners, name of
animal, breed and age? Would not
more men go to fairs If they could
renlly study the animals with any
comfort or understanding?
in Iowa.
Tima Killing Method« of Official«
Continental Europe.
The Town to Be Born In.
I11 the German town of Klingenberg.
near A sclt.-iff cuberg. Bavaria, in nddi-
!i i' to h i' l i t no rates to pay for the
. ’. .‘p of the town, those actually
i ri In t’
palish receive from the
tr.'i i . 1 . ' u;.i of £12 15s. a year.
Thi ■ >rn. if .1' o t‘-d regularly at, say,
3 per <evt, •• ti’d entitle the owner to
revive :tb. u! ■ l."l i> nt the nge of sixty
—n very |>nt:ds<-ine old age pension
Were ft not ue< cssary that the Inhab­
itants .should prove birth in the parish
before becoming entitled to this pay­
ment the popularity of Klingenberg as
a place of residence would doubtless
be enormous.—Westminster Gazette.
.
’ ’ 1
>tu< Mtijr. • ____________
80 acres south of Bandon. Can be cut
up iuto 5 and 10 acre tracts. A
bargain for
3,200
10 acres of fine fruit and berry land
for
300
it
we are
ensy it
use to
3 a
Porcelain Lined Bath Tuu
With all the necessary trimmings
Plumbing
Hardware
■ l
firing
The BANDON HARDWARE CO.
LAIRD & NEILSON
MANAGERS
_____________
the
New Meat Market
On Atwater Street keeps nothing but the beat inj
MEATS, PRODUCE
AND VEGETABLES
A. t>ig stools, of well chilled meats
New olean. ventilated rooms- tree
from odors
THE MERCY HOSPITAL
SMITH BROS.
At North Bend
Is now open for the re­
ception of patients. The
terms are $10 per week
and upwards. For par­
ticulars apply to : :
Me ager
But come in and see for yourself just hovv
equipped for first-class plumbing, and h
would be for us, and to such reasonabl •
you, to place in your home on short n<
Repairing neatly and prompt­
ly done at lowest liv­
ing prices
The New Laird & Lowe Building, Bandon, Ore.
F
Sisters iof Mercy
The Arcade Saloon
Bend, Or.
UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF
Clarence Y. Lowe
bandon
- -
C. A. JAMISON AN1) JACK BROWN
Handirs Only the Beat of
O regon
WINES, L1QOR8. CIGARS
Druggist and Apothecary
Is jnat in receipt of n new stock of
Drugs and Chemicals, Patent and
Proprietary Preparations, Toilet Ar
tides. Druggist Sundries, Perfumes.
Brushes, Sponges, Soap, Nuts and
Candies, Cigars, Tobaccos and Cig­
arettes, Paints, Oils, Glass aud
Painter's Supplies.
Notice for Publication
Department of the Interior.
Land Office at Roseburg, Or.
November, 19, 1908
Notice u hereby given that Jessie M. Per­
kins, of Bandon, Oregon, who, on, ,Nov. 19,
1908, made Timber Application. No. 02366,
for NE 1-4 SW 1-4, Section 22, Township
29 South. Range 14 West, Willamette Mer­
idian, has filed notice of intention to make final
Proof to establish claim to the land above de­
scribed before G. T. Treadgold, United States
Commissioner for Oregon, at Bandon, Oregon,
on the 9th day of February, 1909.
Claimant names as witnesses:
Charles Swift, Kenneth Perkins. Fred N.
Perkins and Robert Walker. Jr., all of Bandon,
Coos County, Oregon.
BENJAMIN L. EDDY,
Register.
First publication Dec. 3
Agents for the famous
Weinh.ard.’s Beer
In the New Green Building,
BANDON, OREGON
•
--------- Jg
^^JOHN L. LITZEHBERGER-------- I
PAINTER & DECORATOR I
In Oil and Water Colors
I
Also House Painting. Estimates given on all kinds of a
Job and a ntract work. All work done in the
>•
latest designs at a very low figure and posi­
tively guaranteed. Give me a trial.
U
Leave order« with Judge Geo. P. Topping
-f
For Bargain Day.
Notice for Publication----- Isolated
“She's no lady!"
“Why, I always thought her most re­
Tract
fined.“
PUBLIC
LAND SALE
”Qp the surface, yes. But what do
Department of the Interior,
you think of a woman who wear» her
General Land Office
little buy's football shoes to the bar­
gain sales and spikes every one who
Roseburg, Oregon, January 2-1908
gets in her way?”—Cincinnati En­
Notice is hereby given that, as di­
quirer.
rected by the Commissioner of the
General Land Office under the pro­
After Him.
visions of the act of Congress, ap­
“It's hard to lose your friends," re­ proved June 27, 190(> (34 Stats., 51 i),
marked the man who was down and be will offer at public sale to I he bigb­
out.
eat bidder, at 10 o'clock a. m. on ibe
“Hard?” snorted the map who was 20 day of February next, at Ibis of­
on the high tide of prosperity. "It'S fice, the following tract of laud: —
Impossible.”—Philadelphia Record.
the NE i BE J. Sec. 29, T. 30 S„ R.
The Shorthorn show at the Iowa
•fate fair Ims been declared to be the
best ever seen on American soil. Tro
feasor Curtiss, dean of the Iowa state
college. Is quoted by an exchange a*
■aylng thflt It probably has never l>een
114 W„ . M. Any peraons claiming
•urpasse«! even In England, the home
The Prompter.
1 adversely the above described land
of the Shorthorns. Exhibitors from
“I suppose that inspiration prompts are advised to file tbeir claims or
For Sale—A complete course in Kansas. Wisconsin, Kentucky, Missou­ many of your jokes.”
i objections on or before the time des­
“A few," admitted the preM humor­ ignated for sale.
civil enginnering in the I C S wil ri. -Ohio and Iowa warmly contested
the rl I i I mvis A new •class. Iowa Spe- ist “Desperation, however, prompts
I« Mtld cheap. Inquire at (this rial*, was crowded. Thia was for low* the moat"—Louisville Courier-Journal ' . BENJAMIN L. EDDY, Register.
I
J. M. LAWRENCE, Receiver'
oÄce .
3,500
Don’t take Our Word i
Dealer in Boots and Shoes.
North
70 acres adjoining the town of Ban­
don. Suitable for platting
•
Edward E. Oakes,
BREUER’S
M.
$1,500
SHOES
You can't expect to get $2 worth
for $1, but you can get your
money’, worth at
In
“Americans who grumble about hav­
ing to wait a long time for books when
applying to a public library,” said a
Boston literary woman, “should try to
work or study in a foreign library, par­
ticularly in Germany.
“The typical continental librarian
takes no account of time. The reader,
worker or student must turn in bis or
her application for books at least a day
in advance. The men who search for
the books applied for are aged, totter­
ing creatures who have been shuffling
around the dusty piles of books for
years, and the word hurry is not in
their vocabulary.
“The most priceless books and man­
uscripts are kept in places which are
perfect fire traps, and disorder pre­
dominates in every department. When
you speak about the Impossible meth­
ods employed the librarians tell you
that they are too poor to introduce any
modern indexes or catalogues. This Is
to some extent so, but as a matter of
fact they would not change If they
had all the money In the world at their
disposal.
“They do not wish to encourage the
common people to use books. The
learned are among the aristocracy, and
the spread of the knowledge which is
bidden in those wonderful literary mu­
seums Is far from the purpose of the
men at the head of Eurojie's libraries.
“There may be some delay tn our li­
braries, but our people in the lower
walks of life are certainly ahead of
the common |>eople of the old world in
the matter of getting books when they
want them, and generally free of
charge.” New York Telegram.
-
85 acres on the Coquille river, close to
Bandon, with 14 mile river front, ■
snap for
We have nine lots that must be sold io the next 30
days al $150. We have a tine list of city and country
property to select from
Insure your home or business. Your choii
of
seven companies
& Machine Shop
Attempted Suicide
letter written by Orvil Dodge, who
is in Washington. D. C., to E. H.
Kern, of Coquille,
The letter was
dated December 27 and is in part as
follows: “I am much encouraged
in believing that my mission here
will be successful. At least I be­
lieve we shall get an appropriation
to bring the dredge ‘Oregon’ to the
Coquille and operate it. We have
succeeded in getting the Chief En­
gineer’s recommendation for it.
Congress is on holiday vacation
now, so matters in our line are dull.
In fact everyone is on pleasure
bound, but Mr. Hermann and my­
self are seeking every opportunity to
advance our cause. You may give
these facts to the City Council and
Chamber of Commerce if you
wish.’’
Oakes Real Estate Co.
So thoroughly deceptive Is dynamite
in the making that you are apt to be
disappointed on viewing the surface
of things. You could more readily Newly furnished large light rooms
Telephone
Electric Lights
fancy thunderbolts leaping and crash­
ing from tender blue skies than that Rented by single night, week or
the most fearful forces in creation are
rnontb
bidden under such a peaceful exterior.
INQUIRE AT OFFICE OF
Nitroglycerin, a cupful of which would
distribute you over square miles of The BANDON STEAM LAUDRV
landscape, is diligently mixing around
you in hundreds and thousands of gal­
lons.
It is making itself in big iron retorts,
cascading down leaden gutters and
merrily tumbling in minute Niagaras
into immense vats, where the deli­
quescent yellow peril pursues its jour­
ney powderward. Out of one recep­
tacle it fares furiously through special
lead colls, driven only by cooling blasts
of air. and is druwn off like draft ale
and piped on to the next perfecting
stage. Gaze with the nitroglycerin ex­
pert into one of those big caldrons. WINE5,
LIQVOR5 AND
The interior is brilliantly illuminated
by electricity, the only illuminating
CIGAR3
agency permitted in or about the dan­
ger houses.
Around you are other houses at uni­
form distances apart and connected
by a series of narrow gauge tracks
wherein workmen are railroading ni­
. .
Oregon
troglycerin from here and pulp cotton Bandon
from there to lie compounded into dy­
namite and blasting gelatin. Greatest
care is taken in rolling the product
from house to house. As soon as a
loaded cart is ready to pass out of the
nitroglycerin house, for instance, a
semaphore signals from an adjoining
station, to which the consignment is
carefully hurried.
Around you are long storehouses
A. Garfield
packed with pulp in tons of Innocent
whiteness. Presently this pulp will as­ Mill and Steamboat Work Our
sume a tan color under the nitrating
process, and then, suddenly becoming
SPECIALTIES
carbonite, red cross, hercules, Judson
and giant powder, forcite or what you SPECIAL MACHINES BUILT TO ORDER
order, It develops the quasi virtues of
dynamite—dynamite or blasting gela­
Turned Shafting, Cap and Set
tin in which more natural forces are
Screws. Machire Bolts. Pipe
condensed to the cubic inch than exist
and Fittings, Brass Work
anywhere else in creation. Death,
curbed and sleeping, encircles you in
GENERAL REPAIRING
gallons and tons. Annihilation threat­
ens at every turn in the form of poten­
Shop in Connection
tial pulverizing forces. But the man Pattern
and the mercury are there also, alert,
responsive, reliable.—Leslie’s Weekly.
Bandon Foundry
---- ooo----
Tom Maguire, a logger, attempt­
ed to commit suicide at the Central
hotel this morning by slashing his
throat with a razor He succeeded
in severing his windpipe but the
large veins escaped and in con­
sequence, he may recover.
He
was taken to the Marshfield General
hospital where Dr. Mingus dressed
his wounds.
Maguire is about forty years old
and his attempt to shuffle off the
mortal coil was the result of despon­
dency. He was workrng near Alle­
gany but came to Marshfield shortly
before the holidays to do a little
celebrating before his New Year’s
resolutions became effective. The
resolutions were evidently lost sight
of in the remorse that followed.
The following note was found by
Marshal J. W. Carter in Maguire’s
room and was evidently written af­
ter he had slashed himself as it was
not complete:
“Thomas McGuire, Tiller, Ore-
gon-I am not to blame for this
trouble and never had anything to
do with those girls.-Friday’s Coos
Bay Times.
ROOMS and
LODGING
■
1
................
i»
•ù
'If
ï»
.i
■Ù
ft ■Ù
$
ù
Vienna Bake y
L. A. YORK, Propriator
Our Bread is always fresh. Our Pies aod
cannot be excelled. Baked good, of a I
JUST LIKE MOTHER USE TO
California and Oregon Count
AH
lrt
.KE
< o.
Kiri.ii
Steamer Allianc
Sow plying between Portland and
WEEKLY
GRAY A HOLT CO., Geo. Agent.
728-730 Merchants Exchange San Francisco
a,
.
I'm»
.»
only
TRIPS
H. W. SKINNER. Agent
Marshfie d
Phone 441
—
----- ———