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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1909)
his kicking shirts at a cozy nresidi I Port Orford Tribune. The new tug Gleaner,’ owned by Mr. Editor— As our kirmcr com the Gaidincr Mill Co., made her munications have received attention first trip to Coos Bay l.fsl week. we will try another short article this The Gleane” which, is in charge of week. Capt. N. J. Cornwall, was built at We have just been thinking about Bandon, and her machinejy installed the work of our farmers for this at San Fra.icisco.-Coos Bay News. winter. They had no fruit inspector Delmer Colegrove and w ife of to hustle them up on the necessary Mountain ranch were in town Sat spraying anti pruning of fruit trees. urday and Sunday. Mrs, Coleg.ove It seems, with all the tain and stormv weather we have been made proof on a timber claim while here. They experienced much experiencing, that the necessary trouble in getting here, owing to work would be sidetracked but if we Coos ccunty people really | high water. They came as far as think of making this a fruit country, Pistol river in a wagon, and there we must find time to put our trees | foui.d the river too high to cross, in proper condition. Have any of so they left their rig and team, you fruit growers worked the soil crossing in a small boat, and se— cured a horse on this side for Mrs. around your trees? No! Why not? Do you want to fall into the same Colegrove to ride, while Dehner walked -Gold Beach Globe. error as our dairymen do when they have no butter in a country which is heralded as a dairy country. Here they are shipping in butter from California when blitter is the highest price and when they might be making the most out of it. Every fruit grower should get busy and prune and spray his trees If you have no other spray use condensed lye, ten gallons of water to one can of lye, it will kill the in sects and fee moss, and should rain wash it down it becomes the very best fertilizer for your trees Do you know fruit trees need much more potash than any other product you raise. Lye is potash, so don’t be slo«v about getting it or else the merchants will be out by the time you get around. Let me give you further advice' When there is frost on your trees don’t attempt to prune, you will injure them and under certain con ditions may kill some. When you prune do not cut so that stubs are left, each cut should heal over with ne.v bark, a stub can not heal over, but will make dead and rotten wood, and should a self styled expert do such work for you, stop him, de does not what he is doing. It you want to hear more that will benefit the community and your self, let us have a meeting, and that soon. Let us meet in Bandon, somewhere, sometime in the near fu ture. It will not only be an advan tage to fruit men, but will help the merchants and the consumer. Be fore you can be a successful apple eater you should aid the apple grower. Let us hear from the peo ple when and where we shall meet? «55 Highest Tide in Seven Years Coos Bay is experiencing the highest tides it has known in many years. Some claim that it has been twenty-seven years or so since the present mark was reahed while others claim that abont seven years ago, the tides were just as high as at present. No particular damage has been done by the tide so far. For a while again this morning, it was run ning over the dike a’ong Railroad addition but aside from flooding the marsh, the water caused little or no inconvenience. Yesterday the North Bend saw mill was compelled to close down for a while and again this morning it was shut down, the water being too high to permit its operation. This is the season of the year for the high tides and coupled with this was the strong southwest wind which drove the sea shoreward and also the freshets in the in lets and rivers entering the bay, making a greater volume of water than is usually known.—Times. Round About Us The mails have been carried on horseliack most of the time during the past week, and the plucky riders have been in on regulation time VVe are glad to get our valley mail when it comes, and if it fails behind connecton at Myrtle Point occasion ally, the T ribune pities the mail boys and horses, and d<>es no» growl. Our sympathies are with the boys who are out in the storm, and not with the sore-head toasting ---- <xx>---- s THE LOST CHORD. RATED one day at the organ, I was weary and ill at ease; | And my fingers wandered idly Over the noisy keys I know not what I was playing Or what I was dreaming then, But I struck one chord of inuslo Like the sound of a grand amen chains ate- to the »mall euB of the sweep. To the lowtv eu<J oi one of these- a •wive! ba» clevis la at tached. To the other a very heavy snap is fastened. A piece of old twa Inch tug or a strong leather collar 1» placed on the bull’s neck, being held in place by two short flat head bolt«, which are far better than a buckla, •nd a ring is placed on this collar. When the bull is led out before liber ating him ft Nm the staff the large snap on one of the chains is snapped into this ring. The bar clevis is then screw ed into the ring in the bull's noaa, when he is ready to take his exercise. The til's t time an animal is hitched it may lie necessary to drive him around and to work the sweep for him in order to get him accustomed to it. The chains should lie so adjusted that the one attached to the strap on his neck will swing the sweep. It should lie long enough so be can reach the ground. Bj’ the use of this device I have kept a bull until he was four teen years old bi such condition that his muscles were hard and flrm and he was vigorous and virile. One great advantage in exercising the animals in this way is that they become ac customed to lielng handled and ara very nuch more tractable than when kept tied fn the pens or when simply led out and put in a tread power once or twice a day for half an hour. It linked all perplexing meanings Into one perfect peace. And It trembled away into allenes As If it were loath to cease. .. • V « / • INQUIRE AT OFFICE OF The BANDON STEAM LAUDRY The Eldorado WINEJ, AND The necessity of some form of exer- else for the stock bull has long been recognized, and many devices have been experimented with. Mr. F. E. Dawley in Country Gentleman pro Bounces file pole and sweep shown in the cut the most satisfactory device that he has ever used. Mr. Dawley descrllies the device ns follows, and the arrangement Is easily understood, although one of the chains alluded to is not discernible in the cut. It is made by setting a tieavy post deeply in the ground, letting It extend up about six feet. A band is placed on the top. and a section of an old steel wagon axle with the box attacb- ed Is driven into the end. Thls post should not be less than ten inches t ger Mæ BUILT MACHINES 1st Class Passage, Up Freight. Our TO on B ili Twin Screw, New and Fast & Machine Shop §7.50 3.00 are your interests. Fair good service our motto interests rates and ORDER A. F. Estabrook Co., Agents, Bandon, Oregon « in Connection BOOTS - AND SHOES Shop The Arcade Saoon You can’t expect to get $2 worth for $1, but you can get your money’» worth at he likes to grow— •nd r t Sirs. Pilickl & Bandon Foundry Pattern Not at all like proper children, which is BULL EXERCISER, 10 acres of firn» fruit and beny land for J GENERAL REPAIRING Th. funniest thing about him Is the way WEEDS AND FLOWERS. rpHE flownra are loved. the wed» are -*■ spurned, But for them both th»* suns are burned, And when, at laat, they fall the day, Tba lang night fohla them all away. —John Vance Cheney, 3J THE COQUILL RIV Turned Shafting, Cap and Set Screws. Machite Bolts. Pipe and Fittings, Brass Work I One morning, very early, before the Bun was up, I rose and found the shining dew on ev ery buttercup, But my lazy little shadow, like an arrant sleepyhead, Had stayed at home behind me and was fast asleep In bed. —Robert Louis Stevenson. 80 acres south of Bandon. Can be ent tip into 5 and 10 acre tracts. A bargain for Edward E. Oakes, Oregon Bandon SPECIAL MY SHADOW. HAVE a little shadow that goes in and out with me. And what can be the use of him is more than I can see. He Is very, very like me from the heels up to the head, And I see him jump before me when J jump into my bed. Devioe That Hardens Muscle Tones Down Temper. LIQVOR.5 SPECIALTIES It may be that death's bright angel Will speak in that chord again; It may be that only in heaven I shall hear that grand amen. —Adelaide Anne Procter. He hasn't got a notion of how children ought to play And can only make a fool of me in every sort of way. He stays so close beside me, he’s a cow ard. you can see- Id think shame to stick to nursie as that shadow sticks to me. 3,: )0 'srcjs Mill and Steamboat Work Our always very slow— For he sometimes shoots up taller, ilka an India rubber ball, And he sometimes gets so little that there'a none of him at all. 70 Hcres adjoining the town of Ban don. Suitable fur platting W h have nine loth that nioM he sol i h III,- days at $150. We have a tine list of city litui property to select from Insure yonr home or bufinoss. Your chu seven companies Rasmussen Bros., Props. I sought, but I seek It vainly, That one lost chord divine Which came from the soul of the organ And entered into mine. A -”U A. Garfield All the little Ideas shown in the new models. First of all, the shaping of th« sleeve Is new and the narrow tucks that are stitched flat add not a little tc the design. Then, too, the front 1« slightly double breasted, which at one« stamps the design with “newness," as these double breasted blouses are Just beginning to be worn. Still anothei point in its favor is the unique yoke, which may or may net be used, as on« prefers, as the front is tucked and af fords a pretty blouse without the addi tion of the yoke. The design is ex tremely modish and may be as satis factoriiy developed in twelve and a half cent percale as in silk. A Wonderful Bird, One day a wonderful bird tapped ai the window of Mrs. Nansen’s (wife o; the famous arctic explorer) home ai Christiania, Instantly the window wat opened, and in another moment sh. covered the little messenger wltl kisses and caresses. The carrier pi geon had been away from the cottag« thirty long months, but it had not for gotten the way home. It brought s not«? from Nansen, stating that all was going well with him and his expedltioi In tin* polar region. Nansen had fasten, «si a message to the bird and turned it loose. Tlie frail courier darted out Into the blDzardly air it flew like an a r row over a thousand miles of frozen w aste mid i lien sped forward over an- oi her thoiisan«) miles of ocean and plains mi«! forests and one morning «»lltered tin- window of the waiting nilstr« s aiid delivered the message will li sir- Il al !.( ('ti a w aiting so anx- loUfdy. Would Let F Sou.ebod., si lit editor and lia.de ai happen« <1. Here it is 1 hey Viele olii a; a.I nil ernoon c.ir.- paly A » i util I. il.lt dropped .1 ..... i.i lip- l!-.: I "..’itili« you be so l.i <1 :l.< t .j I I !. I'p I :. . i « :' • i i, I : • ! V for me?" sin- L ■i;ire I man al li 1 1 : • •. I. “CeFtainly." 1 »!’» : woman at I • • card. "You set " ex;,...I > lie ;-ot « man apoh (ta !li I. 1 < «il .-*• . .. im I i . brand new in :y afraid I'll sir.-ii • it I I I ■ ,1 over." t<<’ the other Wo "Ilum!" co o man enviously, f I luid a fifty dol- it on the outside. lar corset i'd « I really wouls Cleveland Plain Dealer. Crazy. "We find the prisoner not guilty by reason of insanity.” "But the plea was not that of In through at the top. A hardwood sweep Is cut and the center of gravity de •aulty," remarked the court. “That’s Just the point we made,” re- termined by balancing it over a saw- Morse A hole is then bored through joined the foreman. “We decided that this «weep at the center of gravity and any man who didn't have sense enough the box aecureiy fastened into it. It L*» to know that an Insanity plea was th« then wet hack «n the ^xle, the sweep proper caper must be craxy.”—Phlla- ■winging on the axletree. Two short delpbia Ledger. •• •UNDER THE .MANAGENIEN F 1)1 ' C, A. JAMISON AM) .JACK BROWN Handles Only the Best of BREUER’S WAIST UraiGN. — •- r» • Newly furnished large light rooms l'elepkoue Elect rie Lights Rented by single night, week or month WOMAN AND FASHION Simple and Smart. LT quieted pain and sorrow Like love o'ercomlng strife; It seemed a harmonious echo From our discordant life. Oakes Reai Esta te Co CI6AR.5 For the woman who is looking foi something in shirt waist styles we ar« showing a model that is simple and «mart and decidedly worth copying. It is not only good style for cottons, but Is equally fashionable for silk, mohaii or any material that one would use 11 a shirt waist suit. The model takes 01 it flooded the crimson twilight, Like the close of angel's psalm. And it lay on my fevered spirit Like a touch of infinite calm. ROOMS and LODGING WINES. Dealer In Boots and Shoes. • »' A RS Agents for the famous Repairing neatly and prompt ly done at lowest liv ing prices “W ein.iia.rc3/is BAND In the New Green Building, OREGON NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior United States Land Office at Roseburg, Ore. JOHN L. LITZEN Jan. 5th, 1909 Notice is hereby given that Abraham Jones, of Bandon, Oregon, who, on October 6th 1908, made Timber Application, N°. 01675, for N. E. 1-4 olN.E 1-4 Section 19 Township 29 S, R., 13 W., Willamette Meiidian, has filed notice of intention to make Final Proof to establish claim to the land above described be fore the Register and Receiver, at Roseburg Oregon, on the 20th day oi March 1909. Claimant names as witnesses: Edward L. Ohman, of Bandon, Oregon Amos E. Hadsall, of Bandon, Oiegon A. C. Adams of Bandon. Oregon J. M. Adams, of Bandon, Oregon. benjamin l . eddy , I PAINTER & DECORATOR In Oil and Water Colo. > ■ ; 1 Also House Painting. Estimates given on J ir.ds of Job and contract work. All work done i the latest designs at a very low figure and posi tively guaranteed. Give me a trial. Register. Leave orders with Judge Geo. P. Topping Readvertisement. First publication Jan. 21. -‘.I I fll ■ I ufe i Notice for Publication Department of the Interior. Land (ItBce at Roseburg, Or. 'ù November, 19, I'>08 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 hnal 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. Fir*t publication Dec. 3 8 * L. A. YORK, Propriator 8 Onr Bread is always fresh. Onr Pies and < lake- i .■ i cannot be excelled. Bake.I good- <»t a I •A ■ ù > .'«• 3 JUST LIKE MOTHER USE TO VIAK V ’Ài33:-33-33-333-3 3Ì;33-à-3^-3-2i33’ 3>.- >' «Sta» SMITH BROS. & i Q. Sell meat that you like to eat Notice for Publication----- Isolated Fresh and Cured Meats. Lard and V Tract PUBLIC) LAND SALE Department of the Interior, General Land Office Roseburg, Oregon, January 2-liKW Notice is hereby given that, as di rected by the Commissioner of the General Land Office under the pro visions of the act of Congress ap proved June 27, lOtifi (3-1 State.,517), be will offer at public sale to the high est bidder, at IB o'clock s. tn. on the 2d day of February next, at this of fice, the following tract of land: — the NE J SE V Sec. 28, T. 30 S.. R. 14 VV„ W. M. Any persons claiming adversely the above described land are advised to file tlieir claims or objections ou or before the time des ignated for sale. BENJAMIN L. EDDY, Register. < J. M. LAWRENCE, Receiver i ibies Laird-Lowe Building on Atwater St. Macaxin. offers the readers of this paper the oe*t opportunity of the year REVIEW OF REVIEWS S3.00) ALL . 1.50 SUNSET MAGAZINE . WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION 1.25 ’First publication Jan 7th « a 1 : j LfIQOKS, « FOR