Image provided by: Bandon Historical Society Museum
About Semi-weekly Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1910-1915 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1910)
Ettryihirg good to eat—m-w, L$ Juatice Court for ihc Sixth Iroh and clean, at the Bandon Cash Grocery. t Justice Dish id, Coo» County, State of Misses Iva and Dai-v Deyot; k-lt ••Fl FIELD” —The ’ ONLY on the Elizabeth for Riverside, Cal , Oregon. WAY.” 42-tf to Spend the w nter with their par Thursday morning, at the K. of ents. A. E WHIIE. PUauf | P. hall, the Christian Science had Prof. F. F. Wood and son were *4. ■ Court Order. Thanksgiving sei vice and testi- passengers on the Elizabeth foi San 1 W. Mr EJCS.Dc-icadt-U | ti’oirals. Francisco, and will go to B**ikelev, I o i ! m > Bau Jon W oolen Mill*: W hereas, the above tumcj pU.nt*£, A. E. I Mana s 1 & Son have enlarged their C »lit, where urs. Wood and dau¿h White Iu* obuuocJ a )ud,'.-i>»ent «gaunt the de- 1 store ami have the most complete ter» are now local* <1 I mlant. T. W. Meeks, lot the amount oi $54.50 I line <4 fancy and staple groceries in Place your orders at once lor .ill iagether with costs ol the actino, which )udge- Bandon. ti kinds of grass seed, seed grains, etc. inenl u duly made, cnleted and docketed ui tae Stnir FIFIFLD. The Popular with T. W. Robison, at Central above entitled court. Whereas, lhe Bandon Woolen Mill as goat , 40-tf Pa ktt for Particular People. 54‘< Warehouse. tuchee (in an attachnnnt prix ceding ingituied in F. J. F.thv .i:<* I hanksgiving tur* Don’t forget that T. W. Robison couiMction with the aioveaction) did make an key at his home at i'.tliyvillc. is handling all kinds of hay, grain, swer which u in file in tins court that there was *■ the hancs ol said W ookn Mill he amount oi I Call on M. A. Norton at Lint s feed, etc., at 1 he verv lowest 1 wenty-Two ($22) Dollats due on and ailer i 40-tf Studio, for graining or sign p..in<- prices. June I2lh, 1910, due and owing and belong 41 d i ag. E. Morrison, who has ing to the said defendant, T. W. Meeks, which said answer is dated May 14th. 1910, J. E McCue ;nl M.s- 1* lorence Now this order is authority and lhe dilcction McCue wen- passengers on the Eliz- for San o' the Court that said arncunt ol $22.* 0 be paid al-elli for Sm Francisco. to his into this couit, <» upon its order or to C. R Wade, attorney lor plaintill herein. KOK SALE — Five room cottage Dated at Bandon, Oregon, this 22d day of and furniture, and two lots. Best --- »-— Novemlier, 1910. location in town. Close in- Inquire Rub a sore throat with BAL- GEO. P. TOPPING, of Nels Rasmussen. 29-ti Just.cQ of the Peace. LARD’S SNOW LINIMENT. 54- 5F Did you give thanks yesterday? One .»r two applications will cure it It was an ideal' day and one that completely. Price 25c. 50c and The R ecorder tor Job Woik. should make you thankful for the >1.00 per bottle. Sold by C. Y. fine Coos county climate. I .owe. W anted — To trade fine resi dence property in Mirtle Point for Administrators or Executor’s retitlence property in Bandon Ad Notice of Hearing of Fi dress Don, P. O. Box 498, Eugene, Frigid Yield From Greenland’s 41 tf ()regon. Icy Mountains. nal Account. Mrs. Ada Simpson who has been visiting her mother, Mrs. Costello, THE MAKING OF AN ICEBERG. for some time, left on the Elizabeth Notice is hereby given that the final account of Anna May Wilcox, as administratrix of the for San Francisco. estate of Henry G. Wilcox, deceased, has been Hugo Sheets of Ice a Mile Thick In Our groceries arc th«' freshest. filed in the County Court of Coos C ounty.State of Places Slide Down to the Sea. and aa the Ends Become Too Heavy consequently the best in the city. Oregon, and that on the 12th day of December, Thsy Break Off and Form Bergs. A trial ortler will demonstrate this. 1910, at the hour of 10 o’clock a. m., has been duly appointed by such court for the hearing of Al any time of the year ice may be —Bandon (.ash Grocery. ti objections to such final account and that the THE ARCTiC CROP. Frantls Thomsen, late manager of th<- Star ranch below Bandon, was in town Thursday w th his Emily on the way to Portland, where they will reside in the future. Ed Cater- Im is now in charge of the Star ranch, and will be joined by his brother Frank about the first of the year. - Coquille Herald. settlement thereof at the County Court Room in Cojuille, Oregon, al which time and place any prison interested in such estate may appear at d file objections thereto in writing and contest the »me. ANNA MAY WILCOX. Administratrix of the Estate. G. T. TREADGOLD. Attorney for Administratrix 48-t5F encountered in the Atlautic north of the fortieth parallel of latitude, ap proximately that of New York, and between 42 and 55 degrees west longi tude. bur It is in spring, when the in creasing warmth of the sun loosens the arctic does and causes the bergs to melt and Moat from the places where they have been stranded, that there is the greatest danger to the mariner. Let us sell you your hay and grain. We've got it. and its the b- st on the market. Bandon Cash Grocery, tt R. E. I. Bedillion left on the Elizabeth (t r San Francisco, artel will take a business trip up into Califor nia. * ’ 01 ou «A The 14+«* h.ive their t+MItj «Iff* oil rtt'uiivi'iy In wrsttru QrranlHnd, at* though a few may ronli arouc4 Cape Farewell from the Rpitlbergrn era and notue front Hinkson bay. A huge sheet of Ice a mile thick tn place** <s>vers the whole of Greenland. Thia gradually slide« dowD the valley toward tb<- *.*a. into which it is thrust iu great sheets fifty miles wide. As these ends liecotue too heavy they break off amt become tiergs. The proc ess is known as "calving.'* The pieces set adrift thus may be a thousand feet out of the water aud a mile square, but as they drift about they become broken and continue to diminish in size until they fiually disappear com pletely. The process sometimes takes several years. Once set adrift k-eluigs fad their way iuto tbe Labrador current and be gin their journey. But of all bergs bo set adrift only a very small proportion ever tind their way Into the path of the transatlantic steamships. Nor do all bergs take the same course. Softie go south; others lodge against the shore or against islands. Two years may separate the time that two bergs reach a low latitude, though they were "calved" at the same mo ment. Field ice also offers an obstruction to the icebergs, though by their great size and bulk they ofteu act as plows aud aid materially lu breaking up the ice fields which obstruct the arctic ba- sin. Ice fields are more affected by the wind than are icebergs. Bergs gener ally drift with the current, so that one sometimes is seeu moving Into the wftid. Advantage is taken of this by the sealing and fishing boats when caught iu an ice field. They often moor to an iceberg and are towed miles through the ice. through which otherwise they could make uo headway. This is ac complished by sinking an anchor into the berg and using a strong towline. As the berg advances open water, with small Moating ice. is left astern. But this is indeed a dangerous thing to do. All ice is brittle, but especially icebergs. A blow of au ax bus been known to split one. while the report of a gun at times will accomplish the same end. In July and August, when the bergs are breaking up along the coast of Labrador, the noise at times Is deafening, and the noIse of one of ten causes another to break up. From their very mMure icebergs as sume an endless variety of shapes. Some resemble geometrical figures, while others carry fantastic domes, »plres aud minarets. Sometimes they appear to be veritable ice bridges, with two separate supports, in many there are great caves and indenta tions. As they drift south and begin melting cascades of water pour down their sides or run from the tips of the hundreds of icicles which depend from tint»** have ld'ii wrr*lie»l* i-lvitt It*»* Is luhiml illhiUislWitif lit*' FLs;u.’ulb Idtfe HIV »•Ull.VlUf «ptlW u’dtrf* wiihiii lid* itft'ik' tl^ir mMitli i'i I'm witter, h .- *laugeniu* to klil|>k IK fti F ¡1« Nt'Wfi tmillahii. iiirtl Htii'il enbinrty *1 re*** Fur Gils remunt vt*a rula »li< mt) UlUttj-« gtve lllelll il WM«1 ynrtP V:t»1 fttu** n*^ve Ih» alioh*« itili! Imrili. iviif h m.m lietug evuaMerrtt tin* drift xs.ttth hurt lite iMltlis of ctiiu lien text tlnlt out* limy Im appriMivlnsi tm-rve. The turtle kl‘ ntll'U lui» lived through •1 xiver:il s* venti mhimsiih stsiKoiis in I !>«■ far w ¡th Mt.ret,. Sevs-ral y«*urs tig*» the British steam- north ntid r.-rrtsloiEilly I k ton to llfteeti »hip N i -' suk re ran into au iceberg and and sonu-llines twenty feet thick. lie Move iu tier I hiws . When she was citUM- of Its eontlnuHl motion, due tv ilnekisl.a »crutch was found next tlie currents, wind, etc . gradually It I m * Kev* the full length of the ship, the comes Irrokvu up. Swells from storms plates la-mg almost cut through. The In the open s«>as cause it to raft or ship evidently struck a sulimerg*-d pile one | kiu oii another-In the arctic every piece of tiebl ice is a pan—until spur. The government report says; “It is generally best for ships to go it is covered with hummocks. Ice tils*» become* rafted by the grind to wind want of them, becaus«* dlsin tegrated fragments have a teudency to ing of a free tivbj against another drift to leeward, while open water will I frozen to the shore or by the grinding of iwo Melds against each other when be found to windward." So nicely are icebergs balanced In I one is given a tinning tnotiou by con the water that the slightest melting trary wind and tide. This rotary mo sometimes will cause the center of tion. it is said, is particularly danger gravity to shift, aud the entire berg ous to ships that get caught between will capsize or founder. Thus many fields I'tik-ago Inter Ocean NOTICE! R. W. BOYLE IS GIVING AWAY Absolutely Free i AT HIS JEWELRY STORE A $100 Diamond Ring Now on Display in the Window Inquire al the Store for particulars have a nice line of Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Diamond Rings, Gohl and Silver Novelties, Cut Glass, Hand painted China, Christinas Post Cards, Ktc. Come in and look over my ¿stock whether you buy or not. (ilad io show you the goods anyway EÆlxTIDOISr, OREGON ir Beautifully Located Residences, 15 minutes walk from Post Office $2,700 Easy terms. Yearly income from property $264 2 LOT Don’t overlook the Bar don W.i house in buying your Hay. Grain, or mill feeds. Terms strictly cash • mean lowest prices in town. Gi us a trial. 54*if Copyright, 19c/ Mrs. T. W. Robison gave a de lightful luncheon to a number of in vited guests in honor of her mother, Mrs. Denholm of Portland, on Mon day afternoon. The rooms were beautifully decorated with Japanese Pines, Cosmos anti Palms, while the centrepiece was of delicate ferns. A delicious luncheon was served con sisting of ail the delicacies the sea son affords. Those present were Mesdames McNair, Johnson, Boak. Garcutte, Rowan, Kelly, Hartranft, Baker, Topping, Pern, ilalw-rly, Denholm and Robison. 2 /^CJu/c’a.u fiand^onte tfiÍand Cov^ fjüees feïe nort. laífes in fììenefi and misee^aneouh designs ^itfi heavy Cey± and ela^ taffes in e 0(0 niai and mission deS if nS in ealfith ed A pples —Anyone w. ubi;;r winter apples of any variety can ubl.iiit them oak efii^ionieh^ in Sofid oak^ by dropping a card tb A McAtlam 1 at Coquille, Oreg. Care Fishtrap fioSS ^inished^ Ift^ee to five d^a^e^ landing. 54 «4 • On Saturday, Mrs G. P. Top- ^itfi Severed fieneh [rfate miYioh^^ ping and Mrs. J. D. Kelly gave a party at the residence of Judge Top Counfes ^itfi 6o fid oak fit antes and ping, in h >nor of the birthdays of Miss Eleanor Kirby, niece of Judge heavy steet eoif sjy\infS^ efefantfy I'* pping, and Miss Olive Kelly. Flu afternoon was delighthill)' spent ii^fioiste\edy altiaelive fitt the hontc wilh music ami games. At 5 o’clock a dainty luncheon was served, the place cards, in the shape of hearts, at the (if stobe vfilh the filtfc fyuecs. tiemg hand |*aiiited. and liearing a you\s verse appropriate to each guest. Tho*e present were tjie Misses Elea nor Kirby, Olive Kelly. Hazel Ste phenson, Esther Solve, Grace Dish- er, Winifred McNair, Rittie McNair and Lena Langlois. o Claude Wpodruff, The House House completely furnished. Best bargain on the market. Furnisher. Bandon. Oregon ONE Corner lot, cement wall and all street improve ments made. Corner Mud Flat SStahTs°bXa“sh O hf * /VI1 rd Plnf 50x100feet, well located V11C 1HUU ridl Small amount of cash to secure contract. No further payment until May 1911. $10.00 per month Easy - $5,500 - Terms McNair’s Hardware Store. Monthly income on this property certain. Acreage and residence lots within the city limits B. D. STRAUHAL Lucas & Hopson Office il