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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1910)
U / I 9 — Again Instinct of Reason BANIMIN Harness Shop Fall line of Harness, Sad dles, Bridles, Halters, Blankets and everything usually kept in a first- class harness shop. Repairing a Specialty I I I W. J. SABIN, Prop- i FURNISHED ROOMS AT cific e MBH SARAH COST ELLO Niw rle’tii »ooiiiR M5 n»”l fHki a i.it’lil ; $1.25 a k ; $5 an»*»iif’i OREGON RANOON - O’*’z ** Notice for Publication Isolated Tract Public Land Sale. Department of the Interior 05478 U. S. Land Office at Roa*bur|’. Oregon May 28. 1910 NOTICE it hereby given that, as directed by the Comn»i«»ioner of the General I .and Office, under provision« of Act of Congress approver1 June 27, 1906 04 Stat«.. 517). we will offer at public sale. Io the highest bidder, at 10 o clock A. M.t on the 12th day of July. 1910, at thi office, the following described land: Lots I, 2. Sec. II and Lot I, Sec. 14. 1. 29 S., R. 15 W. W. M. Any person« claiming adversely the above-de scribed land are advised to file their claim«, or oh lection«, on or before the time designated fcr . • Benjamin F. Jone«, Register «ale. 22-5t F. J HAYS OPTOMETER 1ST will he at Dr. Perkin’s office on the 22nd an I 23rd of each month Eyes tested free and glasses fitted. Don’t forget the date. if-tf OOO Bring your lob Work TotHE R ecorder BANDON PLANINO MILL All Kinds of Mill Work, Mouldings, Sash, Doers and Furniture. Mission Work a Specialty My experience lorm- inv opinion and th a k*ay.* tow rd the dec siiul <> I grantin', to tin* auiui »1» th«* power of jreason and a way of cxpre-. loti to Wines, Liquors a Cigars their kind In tbe summer o 1870 I was no- ' peettng in the I’toitt Water Moun St«*:«ni IU*«*r«»u DriiM^hC tains, Wyoming Eetritory, two mile« north < t All.rtitic City, on the Rock courteous treatment ( reek. I’he Hunky boys, the own ers of the Bunkv mines. had an “araslra” the Spanish name fora OREGON contrivance to reach gold beating BANDON —— . .. .... -- quartz. Opposite to this mine was MY CLOTHES ARE AT THE a high towering cliff, lhe walls of which were peipendicnl.ir. and in places were overlapping The cliff could be approached from • tie si 'e only, and then with great difficulty Two bald eagles selected one of these sheiv«?s as a place to build a nest and rear a brood of young Many times we witched their flight Where Yours Ooughl to be and their return, load'd with sticks and limbs. Prop. Finally we noticed only one eagle flying about. After many weeks the If you wish a bottle cold--- two were busy carrying nourishment Call at the Eagle. If you love the goods dial s old-- for the young ones. Onedtyone Call at the Eagle. of the men attempted to take an ob ’Taint no use to sit and blink s rvalioii tour and see if he could If you really need a drink. d «cover the young brood; I tit with Just make a sign or img a bell, all his skill in climbing lie could not And you bet they’ll treat you right teach the nest by twenty feet, but Down at the Eagle plainly saw two young eagles. None of the old eagles seemed to be close | Alvin Munck, Prop i by, at least they were nowhere to l>e seen From that day one eagle was BANDON. OREGON missing; we believed that some one h id shot tiie missing bitd, A week I so later all at once he rt turned Clarence Y. Lowe or and each of the old biids grabbed a BANDON -- Ok ECON young (me and emigrated to other Druggist und a¡¡othfcury parts, where the misshig eagle had ls,i:sD hi receipt of a now Hfock of built a new home. By following the direction of their flight, and by Drugs mid Chemicals. Pater. Hnd watching the going and c< tiling of t'rnpri ‘t>irv I’repnrhtiorm. Toilet 'teles L'rugg Sundries. I'orfiimes the bird«, the same man finally dis Hru-ief,, Sponge-. Soap, Nuts mu] Candies, Cigars, Tobaccos and Cig covered the new nest, and in time arettes, Paints, Oils, Gla-s and secured both of the voting ones, Painter's s.tppiie». raising them in a large cage They would not thrive, and one of them died soon, and then the other one BOOTS - AND SHOES was liberated. You can’t expect to get $2 worth How can we explain the action of for $1. but you can get your those birds? Was it Instinct or rea money's worth at son? If only instinct, it is a deplorable M S B RE (IE R’ fact that many human parents are Dealer in Hoots anil Shoes. lacking in this power to protect their Repairing neatly and promp children. POHL. GROSS BROS. BANDON STEAM LAUNDRY I tly done at lowest liv ing prices Doom of Newspapers. Greatly Reduced Rates on Small Mouldings Shields City Transfer Armstrong And Proprietors Home Bakcrv 1st Class,Bread,Cakes, Piesand Pastry OF ALL KINDS. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED A trial will convince you Opposite Trowbridge’s Store (JIAS. MERZIG. PROP. NONE M. (i. POHL BUT THE Saturday At Gallier Optoineterist BEST Bandon. Oregon Hotel WOODRUFF & GOFF THE SECOND HAND MEN Buy And Sell All Kinds of Second Hand Goods Get Our Prices Bcfoic Purchasing Elsewhere Phone BANDON 7 261 OREGON The ingenious Mr. Wells has pre dicted a time when the day's news will be fjiven to the world through the medium ol gigantic mouthed megaphones. Ths re will be no writing, no reading in those happy days. Books will have been abol ished, the gentle art of typesetting as forgotten as is today the secret of archaic Tyrian dyes. Those who lived by the pen perished by the pen (better say by the publishers). And . hat, we ask our startled reader, would be the consequence if all the libraries, Carnegian and otherwise, all the printing presses, all the paper, ink and scribblers were suddenly to vanish? Such a condition may be easier imagined than described. Say, for an example, th’it a universal benefi cent tyrant succeeded in abolishing books for a century? wouldn’t his monument in enduring marble and gold be erected by admiring and succeeding generations? Instead of mile*, of obituary notices, wouldn't his effigy in ivory and diamonds p.r-s trom hand to hand as a thing sacred? The world has for so many centuries l een dominated by the superstition of the printed word that the silencing | of ink for at least too years would bring forth nations composed of I thinkers and warriors. Oculists , «ould go out of business. Teaching in lhe open air, in the manner of , ancient Athens, would again find popular favor. The orator would t >p the novelist, and the Bryans and Roosevelts of that far away epoch— reticent, taciturn temjM*raments would cast aside tiie pen for the s | h along irmnpt'L Frabjous <l.iys, indeed. New York Sun. TREASON .. TO - YOUR TOWN Why Spsnging Your Money Elsewhere Might Be So Deacribed. H in a recent addreaa before the West ern New York Newspaper Publishers' association E. F. Bussey, pubifeitier of i the Phelps (N. Y.i Citizen. said: "The probfen» is really a serious one I and has uot received the attention it I should have bad. This in a large measure necounta for the expansion of Í the business to immense proportions. One concern in Chicago claims to have a busiuena of $53.000.1)00 per year, with an estimated protit of 14 per cent, n mounting to over $7,000.000. “One village with a population of 5.000 Is cited as un example of what the mail order business means locally. It is claimed that (luring the month of December last over $5,000 was sent in money orders from that village to one Chicago mail order bouse. A letter of inquiry brings forth the reply that there is no foundation for such a statement, although what Is consid ered a large amount of business is actually sent to the mail order bouses. The estimate given places it at about $10,000 annually. “A somewhat recent development of mail order business is the trade in ladies’ wearing appareL A nutnber of ladies patronize houses dealing in these goods without realizing that in I>ermitting thAnselvea to be ensnared by the exponent of the new fad, tbe psychology of advertising, they are laying themselves open to criticism quite as much as the man who is de luded into sending away his hard earned dollars for goods which show up beautifully i«i the catalogue, but have a decidedly different appearance when lie receives them. "The regular mail order houses at the present time have alluring advertise ments In the magazines in which they offer apparently wonderful bargains In ladies’ suits. Tiie psychological feature of th«* advertisements seems to be the guarantee, which is given great promi nence. Of course the reader Is not ex pected to draw the deduction that In case the goods are not right the firm has a correspondent to deal with the case who is quite as expert in his line as tin* high salaried man who writes tiie ads, In the matter of ladies’ suits It should not be a difficult matter to present a strong argument In favor of milking a personal selection from a large stock In a store known to be re liable in preference to sending to a dis tant city nnd buying, as it were, a cat in a tmg. The local houses unquestion ably have the advantage of the best arguments, and these if properly pre sented are bound to prove effective.” ii TREES THAT ADORN STREETS Care Should Be Given These Valuable Assets to Town Improvement. All planting and care of trees that adorn mid greatly help to beautify and improve the streets should be done by the town or by permanent organiza tions authorized to carry on the work Tile poorer the soil tile larger should be (tie hole for the tree If convenient add rich soil Spread the roots careful- •y. Fill in with pulverized soil and press into contact with the roots I’ro- Fine Quality Bread, Cakes, Pies and Pastry First Class Restaurant I he bei.t of service guaranteed Short orders al all hours from 5:30 a m to 1:00 p. m. M. Smith I Sirs. Fi field & Bandon Twin Screw, New and Fast 1st Class Passage, Up Freight. $10 00 & $7.50 3.00 Our interests are your interests. Fair rates and good service our motto A. F. Estabrook Co., 245 Cal. St., San Francisco L. L. BRANDENBURG, Agent, Bandon, Oregon KENNEDY WAGONN AKF.ItM Wagons of Ail kinds Made to Order Horseshoeing a Specialty Job Work attended to promptly and all work guaranteed to give aatidaelion. reasonable. Shop on Atwater Street, Bandon, Oregon. Price« S.S. ELIZABETH NEW STATE-ROOMS INSTALLED Eight Day Service Between the Coquille River and San Francisco First-class Passenger Fare. - $7.50 Freight Rates, - $3 on Up Freight J. E. WALSTROM, Agent, Bandon, Oregon. E. & E. T. Kruse, owners and manager«, 24 California St., San Francisco. I Great Combination Offer ’’J’HE RECORDER management has made arrangements with the San Francisco Bulletin whereby we can give subscribers the advantage of A NEAT rlKCE OF TREE HUKOEHr. IFrom American City, New York. | feet the tree with n line of wire net ting supported on three or four posts. It adds to the expense, but pays tn the long run. When a tree shows signs of decay tn places get busy at once and secure the servlet's of a competent tree doctor, have rhe wound dug out. scraped and a neat cement filling put In. thus pro longing the life of the tree. But in the protection of the young trees don’t forget to stir up civic pride. | Provide for the small boy and etilist him if you can. It pays better than to portult arrest or threaten with arrest Don't permit telegraph linemen to mu tilate trees or climb them with spikes. Secure the passage of ordinances fore- iii£X wirps nnd cables ch LJ ps underground 1 wherever practicable. Telegraph and telephone poles are unsightly and in terfere with all schemes of street Im- provement and tree planting. Women Paint Their Church. Women nre today playing a promt- I nont part in the improvement and beautifying of towns. In Burlington. N. J., a number of women members of the congregation of a prominent church of that place undertook the Job of painting their edifice lest a campaign of church improvement should fnll through by a lack of funds. Headed by the pastor's wife, they bravely set to work with paint pots nnd brushes and then formed a pin mon«*y fund to employ a man to decorate the top of the building. a gigantic combination offer that will furnish them ail the news of the country in a metropolitan daily and all the news of Bandon and vicinity in the Recorder at marvelous low price The Daily San Francisco Bulletin, The Bandon Recorder, Tota!, Both papers through this office if paid in advance, per year $3.00 per year 1.50 per year $4.50 $2.75 Read the Recorder I