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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1910)
• • • • fcfal. wan..— o the G quille vailty in September, 1859, it’ll settled on what Ireeame I one oi the fin«t>t l.«in>s n she county One of the br*t mills and most in later years through his labor and modern on the Pacific coast is lb« I good management. In iS’S bean- new mill of the Geo. W. Moor« cltided to come to town, which he I.unifier Co. in Bandon, and as to did, selling the him, .«nd cm >«t..td modern equipment anti c nvenien e in the hardware Inisin •&», but find 1 g of airangement and the machinery it that did not suit him, latir r tr d it all first class, ft is a single hand to prix t • lilt- it« the n« at home and band resaw null with planer and - I eri he lived to the last. Coquille all that goes to make inch a mill Het aid. complete. Th« New Mill The mill is equipped with a to foot Allis-Chalmers band, 16 inch saws, three block carriers with trail ers and Trout power sei works and 14x18 engine to drive the carriage. There is a No. 5 Simmons log tur ner, 10x72 edger, 40 toot slasher, 40 inch saw and 21 saw air lift trimmer. The main engine is 1 twin engine 22x22 made by the Ames Iron Works. The log slip is a special design anti is one of the most complete that has yet been installed on the coast. The shafting in the lower part of th • mill is so arranged that workmen can pass through the mill without danger to themselves, the shakings being all carried 5 feet 3 inches from the floor. With the machinery thus up and out of the wav, there is very little danger to the employes. Alive Under an Avalanche, Human beings occasionally through incredibly long imprisonments after their dwellings have been over whelmed by avalanches. Ou March 19, 1755, avalanches buried the village of Bergenioletto. in the Italian Alp*, and on April 25 three women were dug out alive from a stable in which they had been Immured for thirty-seven days in the dark beneath the mass of suqw which lay forty-two feet higher than the roof. With them had been buried a little boy, six goats, a donkey and some hens. The child, the donkey and the fowls soon died, but the goats helped the women to survive, their milk supple menting the thirty or fortjr cakes and the pocketful of chestnuts upon which they depended for food. Flope of find ing tile women alive had been aban doned when far in April the brother of one had a dream in which she ap pealed to him for rescue. The weather then at last made ex cavation possible, and the women were restored to the world and presently to health.—Chicago News. BATHING GIRL. 1910. A Smart Costume THURSDAY 23, JUNE 1910 That She’ll Wear This Summer. <• j Lodge a.n«zi Frcfeasional Directory » ♦ ♦ 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 ONE OF TUB LATEST BATHING SUITS. The girls are going to look more fetching than ever this summer when taking their dips in the ocean. As the small boy would say, they’ll be “peaches” tn their new butbiug suits. And the suits will not be made of al paca—that is, unless the girl esper-lal- ly likes this material. No, the up to the minute girl will select a . white The arrangement of the resaw and washable pongee I d which to brave (lie Dew as Drinking Water. sorti >g table is something new. This The English administration at Gibral breakers. And she will have it made has always been a matter of deep tar, where water is very scarce, col ou the lines of the Russian blouse, but skirt will be laced at the side from study on the coast, and much lects dew by the following very sim the ple method: A large pit is dug in the the knee to the waist line with wide thought was given to perfecting a earth and covered with dry wood or washable ribbon, and the saute ribbon plan for handling the lumber cheaply straw, which in turn is covered either will form garters to bide the really and with an economy of labor. The/ with earth or with sheet iron. The practical side supports which hold the straw or wood serves as a heat in stockings in position. succeeded in wot king out a devise sulator nnd effectually prevents the The sleeves on this dainty suit are which is different from anything else conduction of heat from the ground to short and lace up the center with rib- on the coast. The equipment takes the layer of earth or the sheet iron bons. A belt of the pongee encircles above. Consequently this earth or the waist. The sandals are black; also the lumber direct from the trimmer Iron cools after sunset much more rap- the hosiery. to the resaw anil then to the sorting idly than the ground, so that Its tem- Moving Pictures In the Church. table, and dire.t from the trimmer to perature soon falls below the dew point of the surrounding air; hence “Jane Adda ms says that on a Sun the sorting table, in other words, dew is formed upon the iron or the day night in Chicago one-sixth of the the lumber which is to go to the layer of earth in very large quantities entire population Is packed into 466 sorting table is carried direct from The water thus obtained is drained off places of entertainment,” says the Wo Into reservoirs nnd after clarification Home Companion. "Churches? the trimmer and does not go to the Is used for drinking.—Scientific Amer ■uan's No; moving picture shows! The sorting table until it is finished. This lean. churches on Sunday night in Chicago and. we fear, in many other places are arrangement is a great economy o Sheep as Land Cleaners. not conspicuously crowded. The prob labor and time, and three men can In discussing the value of sheep on lem Is this: if the Chicago church«>s a country place their service as land operate the entire work of the rtsaw, i had presented an up to date moving should not be Ignored. They picture show instead of a sermon, handling an average of better than cleaners like pasture grasses, but they seem to would the crowd have followed the 30,000 feet a day by resaw. like weisls and bushes even better for films? Inasmuch as the church admis browse. They will often clean up an sion is free and the theater admission The new mill has a first class steam old field tn a year or two, so that what is from 5 to 25 cents, it Is a fair as plant and but few mills on the coast was a tangle or unsightly weeds nnd sumption tbnt the churches would are equipped in just the same way., shrubs will appear a smooth shaven have been filled. Now. if the object lawn. Angoras are simply wonders at There are six high pressure boileis! this sort of thing, but the common, of the Sunday night service Is primari ly to reach the crowd on the street and carrying 125 pounds of stetqn and everyday sheep of the ordinary breed If, as has been shown, the moving are set in concrete. The building is will do mighty good work if you con picture is a much more vivid and at fine her to her Job nnd put In enough I tractive way of reaching that crowd so constructed that it is fire proof all of her. Five years ago one small pas than is a sermon, why. tn all serious the way through. There is also ar ture of mine was a veritable chaparral ties«, don't churches give us the thrill ranged a standard fire protection of thorn bushes and solidago. 1 set Ing stories of the Old Testament, the system to use salt water, and a the ewes in it. and today it’s as pretty beautiful tales of the New Testament n bit of sward its there is on the ranch nnd its modern illustrations of Chris sprinkling system to use fresh water —bushless and weedless nnd thick tian heroism In tills nnd other lands in the up to date form—In moving pic The water tank for the standard sys turfed.—Country Life In America. turns? They may answer that they tern holds 50.000 gallons of water. cannot get hold of the films and the Soon Tired of His Bocks. The new mill was started on May The 7.000 volumes of chronicles and machine, but this answer Is not a good 17th and began at once the manufac travels from which Gibbon distilled answer. Excellent sacred pictures are “Decline nnd Fall oi the Roman shown In the present professional en ture of lumber with vety much less I the Empire” were purchased by Beckford tertalnments. nnd many Illustrations trouble than is usual with a new after the writer’s death. "I bought of modern lierotom, self sacrifice and plant. It is cutting now about 80,000 I it.” said the author of "Vatbek,” “to virtue are in every program. More have something to read when I passed over, a demand for films for church feet of lumber a day but the capacity through Lausanne.” There wore few work would enlarge the supply. Mov will soon be increase^ to 125,000 rarities In the collection, but most of ing picture machines are not expen the nuthors were in the best obtain slve and can Is* easily operated You feet a day. able editions and in perfect condition. can do It tn your own church, Why The fastidious Gibbon was Incapable don’t you?” of behaving disrespectfully to a book. A Simple French Hat. For six weeks Beckford reveled In Ills Kronenberg purchase and read himself nearly blind. He soon tired of his books, however, nnd presented the whole collection to On Sunday afternoon, the 19th a German physician named Schell. The inst., John Kronenberg, a well- recipient showed his appreciation of known citizen of the Coquille valley the treasure by promptly selling ft. passed to the great beyond. He Was In Charge, The deceased was born in Han did you do itr the army?” over, Germany, Jan. 23, 1826. At "What "Most of the rime 1 was tn charge the age of 13 he came with his par of a squad of men.” ents to America, locating at Balti “On special duty?” "No; they were taking me to more, Maryland. Later he spent guardhouse. ”—Cleveland Lender. several years in New York city. Doesn’t Feel Put Out. During the California gold excite Tess—I broke my engagement with rnent in 1849 he came to th it state, him because h«* wouldn't give up to doubling the Cape in a sailing vessel. bacco. Jess- Then he is an old flame He spent some time in San Francis of yours? Tea»—Yes. and he's co, after which he went to the mines smoking — St. Ixutis Star. to seek his fortune, and was by no Moro Important. Pwllcemnn—Do you have to take care means wholly unsuccessful. His principal mining operations were in > of the dog? Nursogirl — No. The missus says I’m too young nnd inex Eldora county, and a goodly sum o Iierienced 1 only look after the chil the yellow metal was secured by dren—Life Not Moved by Kindness. him. A stout woman entered a crowded In 18«^ he was married to Cath enr and took hold of n strap dlr««ctlv erine Beaclar, "bi Baltimore, who In front of a man seated In the corner. A b the enr started ah«* lunged against survives him. Their children are: hie newspn|»er and trod heavily on bls Mrs. Emma F. Blakeley, of Lodi, toes, As soon as he could extricate Calif., J. L. Kronenberg. of Park himself he rose and offered her his seat ersburg, F. W. Kronenberg, Den "You are very kind, sir,” she said, ver, Colo., Rachel Marsh, of Port panting for breath "Not at all. madam,” be replied. Orford, and Ida K. Owen, of St. “it’s not kindness, It’s sltnpiy sclf-de- Louis, Missouri. fense.” Mr. and Mrs. Kronenberg moved Cookery At a Stug dinner given by a young woman for her husband and brother th«- decorations were so original as to be worth re;s*atiug here. In the cen- ter of the round-table was placed a large cut glass tobacco Jar filled with loose tobacco. On top of this was a little bisque doll dressed like a ballet «lamer, with spreading skirts. A circle of small playing cards was arranged to form a centerpiece, and from this radiated a row of cards to each plate, forming a wbeeL Corncob pipes were stacked at each corner of the table, and at each cover were tiny beer steins and little sample bottles of wine as souvenirs. The nteuu was a substantial one, such as men like. It consisted of bouillon, thick sirloin steak with French fried potatoes, string beans, endive salad with Camembert cheese und wafers, a frozen pudding and black coffee. This is an easy dinner to prepare nnd serve even without a tnald. Easier to Take. The anaemic person or sbe who fears tuberculosis will rejoice to know that many eminent doctors say pure fresh cream can give (aiints to cod liver oil or its compounds In building up the system nnd helping to ward off dis- ease. Oil Lamps. Fastening n piece of flannel to the etui of the whk when It Is too «bort to reach the oil In the vessel MMWCTS the purpose equally as well as a long wick. Telephone at Office and Home. Q. - - OREGON T. TKH.l ATTORNEY AND COLNSFI a ’* AT - LAW, Rebekah Lodge No. 126. fourth Tuesdays. Practice nights 1st Tues day oi the month; Social evening the 3d Tuesday ot file month. A cordial invitation extended to all members in good standing. Clara Goetz, N. G. Belle A. Kolp, Secretary. Dr. H* Ivi. Brown. Resident Dentist. Office in Panici Building Office Hours: rjELPHI Knight* of I'ytliia* LODGE, No. 64, Knight, 9 to 12 M. I to 5 P. M, BANDON. OREGON Phone. of Pythias. Meets every Monday evening at Knights hall. Visiting knights invited to attend. Wni. N. McKay, G. C. B. N. Harrington K. of R. S. » (\ 1 : R. BA R ROW Attorney and Counselor-at-Lt. v - (’OQUILLK Woodmen of the World Sleasidr- Camp No. 212 meets ORE Office over Skeels' Store evety fits! »nJ Office Phone. Main 335; third Thursdays of each month. Visiting neighbors cordially invited. R. W. Bullard. C. C. J. N. Husking, Clerk. IIK. 11. residence. Main 346 W. KON.MTEIÏ PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON OREGON BANDON Office and residence in Panter residence pro[»erty next door to Bijou Theatre O W K.KA Attorney ' nd Counsclor-at-Law Notary Public U. S. Land Contests a DR J. D KELLEY Practice in Specialty. Physician and Surgeon all Courts Office in Room No. II, - Bandon Laird-I^swe Bluilding - Oregon Office in Donald Charleston home, opposite Presbyterian church, Bandon, Oregon BANK OF BANDON KANIHBV C'apit-il, t#2.».4MM>. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: J. L. Kronenberg, President. J. Denholm, President; F. J. Fahy, Cashier; Frank l lam, T. P. Hanly. Vice • A general banking business transacted and customers given every accommodation con sistent with safe and conservative banking CORRESPONDENTS: The American National Bank, of San Francisco, Calif; Merchants National Bank, Portland, Oregon; The Chase National Bank, of New York. l< A. Al<’ NAIR THE HARDWARE MAN BRIDGE fit BEACH Stoves. Ranges and Heaters have in them so many excellencies that they are now acknowledged the greatest sellers on the coast and they are growing in favor every year. We have the exclusive agency in Bandon for these household and office necessities, and prices range exceedingly modest in either case. TINNING AND PLUMBING A Sl’ECL’.i/IY. Our Assortment of Hardware. Tinware and Edged Tools Is Must Complete. Creamed Onions on Toast. Peol some Spanish onions all of a size. I’ut Into a white lined pan cov ered with water or stock. Add a small blade of mace and cook gently till tender. Drain and keep the onions hot; then add a gill of tnilk to the on ion liquid. Measure this liquid all to gether nnd to every gill add a heaped teasjiootiful of flour moistened with a little cold milk. Boil up Add a nut of butter, salt and pepper. Make a square of buttered toast for each on- Ion. Add the yolk of an egg to the sauce, lay an onion on each square of toast pour some sauce over each, then a little chopped parsley and serve hot. When Purchasing Veal. Veal should be fat, the kidney small and well covered with tlrm white fat. the lean finely grained nnd of a clear white color. Inferior real is lean. The flesh Is clammy nnd has a spotty ap pearance. The color Is either red or a dull sick ly white. Fresh veal has a clean, healthy smell, and the velu In the shoulder Is blue or red. Vaal does not keep well in hot weather owing to Its large proportion of gelatin. This charming confection Is of blue tagcl straw trimmed with bluck net and dark red roses. DENTIST Office Over Vienna Cafe 1^1*LETS in 1.0.0 F. hall every second and Coffee. Jellied Chicken. For Jellied chicken have on hand three pounds of chicken that has ticen boiled and cut from th«* bone In strips Mix a quart of rich chicken stock that has been bolhsl down and clearerl with a teaspoonful each of lemon Juice, chop ped parsley, a dasb of celery salt and a quarter teaspoonful each of salt and paprika. At the Inst stir In a teaspoon ful of granulated gelatin that has been dissolved. When the Jelly begins to thicket) add the chicken and turn tt into a mold To have the chicken scattered evenly through the Jelly stand the dish containing the Jelly In a pan of ice and turn in the Jelly layer by layer, covering each with chicken as soon as It begins to thicken. Dr L. IP Sorenscn ■g ANDON LODGE, No. 133, I. O. O. F. [fleets every Wednesday evening. Visiting brothers in good stand.ng cordially invited. L. J. Radley. N. G. A. Knopp, Secretary Otir<H>N - - hANDON I. <». O. F Honra, 9 to Night (Milla answered from olfiee. \NDON LODGE. No. 130 A F. & A- *"* M, Staled comtnunicai.ons first Sa’urday after the full moon of each month. All Master Masons cordially invited. J. A. or.ison, W. M i G. T. Treadgold, Secretary BREAKFAST. Grapefruit. Corn Flakes. Appt« Fritters. Cinnamon. Nut P.ice Pudding.—One pint boiled rice, one-half cupful of chopped wal nuts. three table-spoonfuls of vege table oil, one-half teaspoonful of salt, oue-lmlf teaspoouftil of sage, one egg (beaten) and zwiebaeb crumbs Mix the Ingredients. using sufficient crumbs to make the mixture stiff enough to form into patties. If the rice Is very dry It may be necessary to add a little milk to mtike the mixture sufficiently soft. It Is lietter to do this and use some crumbs than to omit the milk and the crumbs. Egg and crumb the patties and bake fifteen to twenty min utes in a hot oven. Brown Gravy.—One-half cupful of flour, one-quarter cupful of vegetable oil. boiling water and salt. Cook the flour In the oil. stirring to prevent scorching till the flour is lightly brown- ed. and sufficient boiling water, stirring vigorously with a batter whip to make of the proper consistency for grilvy Cook five minutes. Salt to taste. Ofltoe over l'nii» 8tor»*. a.m, l 3D to 4, i m.; 7 to 8 in the evening. KANIMIN. V| HROIliC A Day’s Menu. LUNCHEON. Nut Rice Patties. Brown Gravy. Peach Marmalade. Caraway Cookies. Chocolate. DINNER. Vegetable Soup. Hamburg Steak. Steamed Onions. Sweet Potatoes. Lettuce Salad. Stewed Celery Apple Float. RECIPES. Dr Tí. I_, Houston PHYSICIAN A SL'HGEuS Lewah Tribe No 48, Imp. O. R. M. lUTELTS every Thursday evening al 8 run at " the Bandon Wigman. Sojourning chief-, in gocxi standing are cordially invited to attend. G E Wilson, C. S. Hubbard C. of R. Sachem. Ueea For Parsley. Often pars|ey Is thrown away in stead of being dried in the oven and rubbed to powder and put away in a bottle for seasoning soups, stews and gravies. Even the stems may be saved nnd used I d this manner. Parsley will make the most delicious seasoning. Generally it Is only known as a gar nish. Nut Hash. Chop fine cold boiled potatoes and any other vegetables desired that hap pen to be on band. Put them into a buttered frying pan and heat quickly ami thoroughly. Salt to taste. Then Just before serving stir in lightly a large spoonful of nut meal for each person to be served. » IMPROVED FAST-TIME SERVICE S. S. BREAKWATER 20 HOURS PORTLAND COOS BAY COLUMBIA RIVER BY DAYLIGHT Leaves Portland (Ainsworth Dock) 9am June 3-8-13-18 23-28. June Ceos Bay on I <de 5-IO-15-2O-25-3O Confirm Sailing Through C, M. SPENCER, Agent Brinnon Hotel Gallier week or month. Sample Room in Connection. 1 Bandon The Coming 4th of July Celebration in Bandon Will Eclipse Anything of The Kind Ever Held in Coos County