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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1910)
— Published Every Thursday by the Recorder Fwioialuxig Company. O X- KOPF, - Managing Editor Bubkrviption, SI 50 per Year ic A Ivanee. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. Job Printing a Specialty Entered a> tbe Bandon Peet office kh ¡Second Claim Matter. January 6 30 tyio THURSDAY Port Commission Again cannot expect to realize all these things in a year, but 10 years or even 25 is a short period in the de veloprnent of a country, and within that time we are sure of develop ment. his campaign for re-election. With v >1 a, ♦«*• Ns •• nee b tv«' n na in unmistakable air of piety he tural » oj » c * An«l * in u once y« u steps into the spot light and resigns firkin t> investigate monopolies himself to a close scrutiny. No n »t Vou wifi find tiie tin titer of them all •>f his past, but < f the texture, fit I land tnonoply.” ind fashion of his dinner clothes For the benefit of those desiring The railroads have enjoyed till il further particulars he has prepared share of a brisk holiday season, a few circulars, and is now pouring a Large quantities of merchandise in stream of his bard-earned gold into the form of small packages have the channels of publicity. been brought to the Northwest, Yes, it is the same Chauncey De There have also been substantial pew who figured as a beneficiary of shipments from this part of the the looting of the big New York country to the old« r sections life insurance companies, but why Postotfice receipts show substantial should that retire him from the increases over last year. The holi United States Senate? Aldrich is day travel is also above the normtl. still there ami so is Guggenheim, The 1 ailroads have carried unusual and many more of the boys. Really numbers oi Christmas ti aiders this the “interests” cannot afford to year, all of which indicate that the lose Chauncev They' need him in Northwest is enj lying prosperity . In looking over the map of the Pa cific coast, we find that the Coquille river is about the only port along th« coast, of any consequer.ee that ha- no port commission, and when we are brought face to face with this tact, it is high time that something Money in Fruit was being done, in a material wav That fruit growing pays can toward the establishment of such easily be illustrated by the accom- commission and the sooner we gel plishments of J. 11, Hale who when at it the better it will be for all con a boy, began his start in life by 1 heir business — Yakima Herald. cerned. Strelav for chickens as good carrying fruit and garden truck in The suggestion has been made, and cheaper than wheat Es! .¡brook baskets from his father's farm to the When first mine eyes beheld the warehouse. 33 tf. and it is certainly a feasable one, city of Hartford, Connecticut, a few sea, its majesty appealed to me; I that the government will not do miles distant, selling the stuff fro n stood alone upon the shore, and anything for this river until the peo i- ir-*'.’i»--- i ■ ** r ■ house to house He saved his listened to the breakers roar, a d .■ t ¿«Ji i : J » IrLUllisb ple show a disposition to do some money, and used it in planting a cried aloud: “Flow, Ocean, How! !e P,uc... i" Cleansing Them thing for themselves. In looking small orchard on land that was said You are the biggest thing I know! at H.ar.e. over the recommendations of th« A ,.« -1 si «*«! ei-U I. J.I bottle cov- to be worthless for growing any Flow on How on, ye mighty waves >r.'I smoothly with sofi .Limit 1 ami a Rivers and Harbors’ congress, held crop, His orchard gradually be o’er darkened caves and sailors’ li.ien outside is mo- 1 valuable to a girl in Washington D. C. in December, came larger as he progressed in graves, and wash the rocks of shores wli ■ lib«*.« plenty of preit.t ribbons ami we notice that the Coquile river is wln> Iris only a limited amount of years and his income went up in afar, and beat the cliffs where money to spt-ml oil tliein. tor witii not mentioned, and that is due to proportion. He had occasion to sirens are; flow on, where sunny such a bottle to dry the ribbons 011 the fact that we have done nothing tile; • is 110 ueeil of ir< ¡¡hig. and so the visit the state of Georgia, and islands lie, and moan your mes- pie s come from the buili looking like to get ourselves recognized. We while there h? noticed that certain age to the sky and wail it where I net. should have had a representative j A Hat, wide, high liotlle is best fol k nds of the land were suitable for Atlintis stood—I would not stop in that congress, and Governor Ben ihi- purpose, ami a piece of flannel peaches, and it being cheap he in you if 1 could! Your vastness rolled around it smoothly and sewed son went so far as to recognize us, vested in some of it. With the aid »hakes the human nerves! Until 1 -as 1. rely make a foundation, over by appointing R. E. L, Bedillion as whu-ll cotton must be bound so that of three of his Lusted New England watched your mighty curves, and .-in.t creases in tile cover will not go a member of the congress ar.d al friends, who had helped to care for heard your voice, that nobly swells, ! into the ribbons. though tbe people of Coos Bay got The same bottle may be used for Ids orchard there, lie began planting like forty thousand college yells, years without recovering. busy and helped to pay the expen- j Il is well to wait until there are a peach trees everywhere that he and saw your wreckage drift like dozen or more narrow pieces to be ses of the delegate who were ! couid find room on his acreage, and straws, 1 never knew how small I iTe heiied. for it is no more trouble to appointed from there, nothing was 1 lea use a dozen than to wash one. now lie can count about 350,000 on was!” Thus I addressed the rag < They should be put into a bath of done here, and it could not be ex his Georgian farm, besides what lie ing sea; it seemed to pay no heed soapy warm water, lint soap is not to pected of Mr. Bedillion that he lie rublied dir«“etly upon the ribbons. 11 is in his Connecticut soil. He to me; some little sprays on me it Neither should the pie« es be rubbed in would go and spend his own money, has made over a million dollars dur- threw, and wrecked a ship and "the hands, instead they are squeezed just for the benefit of the public. under the water, put through several ing the last twenty years, simply drowned a crew. and tore a light soapy baths ami through two rinsings. But we have let these opportunities Laying them on the buttle require because he knows how to raise fruit. house from its rock, and chased a lime, ami one should consider it a task all pass, and it is too late to redeem There is room here in the Pacific whale around a blo.k. “Alas” 1 to be done carefully. Each piece « I them, but it is not too Lite to get I should be put around and Northwest for many persons like mused, “It doesn’t pay to hand the ribbon around tin* bottle. keeping th«* wind to work for future development, and Mr. Hale, the famous peach grow sea a big bouquet; I passed it quite ing flat and smooth. As fast as. one i there should be concerted action used the next is placed, the new end er. a compliment—it doesn't seem to holding down that of tin* piece prev i taken at once. care a cent; no more my praises onsly fold«*«l. Tlier«* «nay be four < r A joint meeting of the commercial five pieces, on«* on top of th«* other, and I will resound, and it can chase itself if the «piality is good tin* colors will dubs of the river towns should be j Christmas Remittances Large run. 'i he end of l lie last piece around, and clop along as best it not must lie p' med to held all s«*curely. called to discuss, and not only dis Last year the transalantic ships may; 1 pass it up; so, Sea, good ami tile bottle should then be pla id cuss, but Do S omething where drying will I««’ rapid. 1'i.c 1 bound east at about this season were day.” W ai . t M ason . sunlight may fad«* th-* colors, so tin crowded with home-going steerage cylinder should I««* put near artitiiiai heat. When not in use the bottle n usl passengers. This year their strong wrapped in pap«*r t<* pr«*vent s.dli'i- Future Possibilities of Bandon | boxes are filled with international F. V. Holman, president of the !>«• t he covering. Oregon Historical Society gives the Wiile ribbons are reueued by wn.*.!i That Bandon has *great possibili money orders and other negotiable ing, «hough in a < I- ilh ties for future development goes paper transmitting funds to the oilowing interesting bit of Co s to prevent their <■ eleo they must lx* et < county history: Coos county w IS without saying and we doubt not relatives of immigrants. it is esti ou a water ami then i sur that people who are living here 25 mated that these Christmas remit created December 22, 1853. II marble washstum a -It«« face. Th«* strand years her.ee will be in the center of tances amount in cash to between comprises parts of the western por with soapy water. r I H and Jackson Tills si-ours with ' sii. a citv of thirty thousand | eople, fifty and sixty millions to say tion of Umpqua grain. Wli 11 nil s> This may seem to be an imaginative nothing of merchandise gifts. The counties, and south of the Umpqua tin* ribbon is |if;«*«l am’ rin.-«*«l by h Hat under a fail* et ai.d letting tin view but all things considered there New York postotfice alone has River. Its western boundary is the ing water run tliroti .li ami down wiiln ul is every reason to believe that it will handled over seven millions, in Pacific ocean. Its name is derived permitting the surface t > wrink I«*. This done, the wet strand is again laid flat be realized. We have an excellent oreign money orders since the first from a tribe of Indians of the Kusan 1 and patted gently and thoroughly that port here and one that is capable of oi the month, while < tlier agencies family, whose principal habitat was there may be no blisters b«*m*ath the surface, for they show when the silk is being developed into a first class have done proportionately as large a at Coos Bay, in that county. The dry. harbor, that will allow vessels of business. The total record is be name of tlu tribe and of the bay The Popular Scxrf. In Lewis and twenty foot draft to come and go lieved to be about equal to the was the same. The scarf is running tlie hood a close second this winter as an evening head «asily, we have timber adjacent to highest heretofore. At all events, Clark's Journals the name is spell covering. The hood has many points Original in its favor. It is warm and nearly Bandon in almost limitless quanti it is an astonishing demonstration of ed “Cook-koo cose.” Journals, volume 6, page 117 In always becoming; but, alas, it also has ties, and with the proper method of the thrift of the immigrant, as of an unfortunate fashion of mussing the Armstrong’s Oregon, pages 68-70, reforestation which is surely coming his opportunities for gain. According to I he Postoffice he says the name of the bay is into use, there is no reason why the timber in large quantities will figures. Great Britain is the largest “Kowes,” but that it is usually beneficiary from the Christmas written “Ooose.” On page 116 he not be here for ages to come. Besides the timber we have as money which Uncle Sam has pro writes of the “Kouse Indians.” good a fruit and dairy country as vided, with Italy a close second, lays out doors, and in fact diversi though the business through ex In his little h ».»k, “Hie Garden fied farming can be successfully press companies and banks may es- Yard,” Boston Hall writes in a carried on here. Then there are I tablish the Italians in first place, simple and practical manner of in the coal fields which are only begin Doubtless some of the money will tensive cultivation. With the ning to be opened up, to say noth come back in the form of new 1111- bonanza farm of 10,000, acres has ing about the small factories that are migration.- Providence Journal. come the bonanzâ farm of three already here, and the others that acres, and Bolton Hall believes that are sure to come. there is more happiness and real Depew Steps Forward Then there comes the ever spec I wealth in the three acre farm than Whose afraid of public sentiment? in-the 10,000 acre ranch. In one ulative problem of a railroad, which A BECOMING SCARF AUKANUEMKST. is sure to come within the next few Not Chauncev Depew. I)ear old pl »ce he very pertinently says: “To coiffure, and for this reason many wo years, and prospects are good for Chauncey, pi eserver of post-pran- find the cause of most of the poverty tnen prefer to arrange a scarf artis tically over their hair rather than run more than one railroad, even as dial platitudes, hopes to retain his j and even ettme in the world, we must the risk of spoiling the new "swirl.” The illustration may suggest a be ■any as four are predicted for the Seat in the I tilted States Senate, look beyond the population statistics coming way to wear the scarf to wo «ear future, and there is foundation and, although his term does not ex to the restrictions and monopolies men who have hitherto simply thrown far the prediction, Of course we pire until <911 he has already begun that prevent population from pro-1 it over the head carelessly In wash woman strie • • Coquille River Transportation Co.’s Schedule Humor and Philosophy Arrives Leaves Coquille B.tmiou > Il (Ml a tu 8:30 a m Coqnille, Ç 1 ,Ut) p tu a.IMl p m 10:00 a tu Dikpatcb, 7 ¡00 a tn i 1 p tu 4:00 p tu Favorite. Leavt-a Arrive» Baiiilon Coquille Favorite, tO 30 a m 7a m 3Ml a m h 30 a m Coquille, ■ 4.Ü0 p tu 5.30 p ui 5.00 p ui Dispatch. i.tX) p m The Coquille connects with tbe trains at Coquille for Marshfield and Myrtle Point. Tbe op riv-r passenger«» can com to Bandon on the Favorite and have three hours here in which to «lotheir trailing an«l oilier business. »X DVJVCAA M. SMITH PERT PARAGRAPHS. person delights in see A N ing egotistical an exhibition of modesty. It brings out his own <iuulities s«> beauti fully. Th«* <mly fault that some people And with credit is that it never seems to keep well for them. It is now up to our Intrepid explor ers to fln«i out who trade with the trade winds and why. NOTICE OF EXECUTORS FINAL ACCOUNT , i Courage is a great thing, but some times it takes heavy lifting to keep it up. As a rule, the male shirk marries a woman who knows all about the big stick. Perhaps it depends upon who utters them whether actions speak louder than words. The Big Noise. Oh, well. It never Did pretend Nor to Its friends confessed That it resembled Silence much When it was at its best! You hear It rumbling Down the street. And then You umlerstand Without a diagram or chart That football Is on hand. The rah-rah boys Are out In force And bound To make things hum. Ami if You do not Hear their chimes Your ears Are on the bum. They do not Think The quiet life Is fitted To their case. And so They open > p f. Ir iawa And noise Flows from their face. It isn't Just upon the field In kicking that They shine. It's threatening To eat alive The full Opposing line. . ’ j Notice is hereby given, that the County Court ul Coos County, Oregon, sitting ior probate matter* has appointed Monday, January 10th, 1910 al the hour of 10 o'clock a. m. said day, at the Court house tn Coquille, Oregon as the time and place ior hearing the final accounting in the Estate of J. F. Hamblock, deceased. All persons concerned will take notice, that unles* cause be shown at said time and place why such order should not be made, then the said Court will make an order directing that the said estate be closed, and dial the Executors thereof be dismissed. Dated al Parkersburg, Oregon. December 7th 1909. EUGENE H. HAMBLOCK JOHN V. HAMBLOCK ■'8-5t Executors. The Opera HAS A SELECT STOCK OF Wines. Liquors & Cigars Nteam Beer on Draught COURIaOUS TRETMENT GROSS BROS. BANDON OREGON BOOTS - AND - SHOES You can’t expect to get $2 worth for $1. but you can get your money’s worth at M. BREUER’S Dealer in Boots and Shoes. Repairing neatly and promp tly done at lowest liv ing prices Just Curious. “Doctor,” said tin* blushing young lady to the young and bashful doctor, “how can you tell by feeling tbe pulse if one is well or sick?" “We count tin* heartbeats and judge by that.” “But when you hold any woman's hand her puls«* must beat so much faster that I should think it would fool you.” The doctor blushed furiously and fixed up a mixture for that patient that wasn't very bard to take. So Languishing. The Bride—Do you think they will know we are just married by our looks? The Groom - Well, the looks you give me are enough to betray you on the ■pot. Suspicious Circumstance. “Do you think we will have a hard winter?” “All the signs point that way.” "What signs?" “Well, for one, my coal bin is emp If your Piano is worth anything it is worth Expert Tuning Any other kind will ruin it All my work guaranteed Drop a postal card and I’ll call E. B. Kausrud Bandon, Oregon FURNISHED R(M)MS AT The Pacific MRS SARAH COSTELLO Nice olean r toma 25 and 50c a night; $1.25 a week; $5 nmouth BANDON ----- OREGON ty.” Knew Him. H«* sai«l he’d be a robber. Her answer mild was this: “You wouldn't make a burglar; You couldn't steal a kiss.” In Methuselah's Day. Salesman What size suit does the little boy wear? Fond Mother Well, he's only sixty eight, but lie takes usually a seventy- tliree-year-ol«1 size. Complete. “What are your qualifications for an office boy?” "Well, sir. I can do anything from filling inkstands Io attending directors' meetings.” Suggested Improvement. Anyone sending a sketch end description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether rn Invention Is probably patentable. ( "mmunlra- tlons strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patent« sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn Si Co. receive epactal notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. \ handsomely Illustrated weekly. l argest rlr- iilation of any sclentlilc journal TerntM. a ar; four months, |L Boid by ah newsdealer«. 1UNN & Co.36,Bro-d*-> New York Branch Office. F Washington, b. C. “Hf gives great promise as a singer” “Does he. fhdeed?" “Yes; he is cultivating bls voice.” “He ought to have it filed.” . Short Cut. "Can yon square a circle?” “Yes, Indeed.” “How?” “Hit It witii a hammer." No Tempter. “He treated me with the greatest ionsideration.” "Did he?” “Yes; to water.” If You Pleaee. The Rtmpl«* Ilf«* for darling wife la suited to the sex For huiihand. though. It rather Slow, 80 pass him the complex. . IcCALL PATTEBNS < t or.ilc l l«»r style, perfect fit, 'imp I • ’ j. :i.»biiity nearly 40 years. J- i i j j t •. rv < ity and town in the (Jn u <1 S'. I C :i.nl t, or by mail direct. Ab e ( ( ; ny ot!i r make. Send for free cat..»< f.-f AL VS MAGAZINE M >rc «ubschl>ers than any other fi 1 t in ¿azme million a month. Invaiuab . J t I styles, patterns, dressmaking, D«.i.n*r , p’.un sewing, fancy needlework, hairdo s » etiquette, good stories, etc. On.» 50»« .« ycir (worth double), including a f• • i i ' r*i S , KI ' 1..V, or srr 1 I*.- | o ■/ WOXTHRFUL INDUCEMENTS tn A“rnl . Postal brings premium c.doogu< I i « w cash prize oflei s. A«ldn •.» lutLhfALLCO 238 oeMW. MSI.. BY WLI