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About Semi-weekly Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1910-1915 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 9, 1914)
C3 e-s a o o o o 0 JSamtdfoti January 9..lftl.4. SEMI-WEEKLY BAND ON Published Every Tuesday Publishing Entered af the Postollicc at Kamlon, Oregon, as Mail Matter of the Second Class C. E. KOPF Subscription $1.50 per Year in made Known OFFICIAL PAPER OF CORROSIVE ACID BURNS. If Splashed With Vitriol Plunge tntu Water at Once. A burn from milpluuic neiil vitriol, ns It la often rillli'tl-lH one of the most painful ,iiul (llsllmiriii wounds that can lo received. Sulphuric neld la the most powerful of caustic liquids. When It touches the Ussties of tho body It dioi-tnn7.vd them rapidly, ex hausting the water In them, coagulat ing their albumen and chunking the nature of their wilts, thus bringing about a destruction that Is sometimes fatal. When the burnt place heals It does so with a hideous scar. resembling that of leprosy or lupus. On boltiK splashed with vitriol there Is only one thins: to do rush for the nearest water and plunge the burnt member Into It- If the face be splash ih1 it should be Instantly Immersed lu u IioavI or pail of water, or in u lake or river if these be handy The object in to dilute the acid as quickly as pos sible and so check its rapid corrosion of the llesh, for if let alone It will eat in to a Vrcat depth. Ilnvlntf washed away the acid, cover the wound at once with some alkali. Much as lltnmvutur or milk of magne sia. If those are not obtainable suds made from pure soap will do. Then treat the wounds as ordinary burns are treated If the mouth bo burned it should Lie rinsed out with water, fol lowing this with Umewater or liillk of magnesia, which should bo kept In the mouth as long as possible. A burn from ummoula, though not nearly so serious as one from acid. Is very painful. It should be treated with n diluted acid wash made from vinegar or the Juice of a lemon or Jliuo. Afterward It should be coated with gum tragacanth or gum arable Now York' World. BROAD DAYLIGHT AT NIGHT. That's the Sight That Startles One In Alaska In Summer. Speaking from an experience of more than 100.000 miles' travel on sea nud land, It Is remarkable how many tilings you see In Alaskan waters which you have seen nowhere else In the world. It was a novel sight to have n whole school of whales spout ing at one time, with some of them cruising up near the boat and rolling over like submarines pitching in n heavy sea. And the herds of Alaskan fur seals, hoarsely bellowing as we approached, added to memory's reper toire of barking monkeys, groaning camels and trumpeting elephants. Another unusual thrill that comes to the summer traveler In Alaska springs frtttn the eternal daylight of that wonderful country. Whether you actually see the midnight sun or not depends upon the date and the latitude to which you ascend, but darkness Is a thing of the past after the second night out of Seattle. A dusky gloam ing takes its place until you get still farther north, and then you may rend n newspaper on deck at midnight with out straining your eyes. This phe nomenon Is one of the strangest In Alaska. It gives you a shock to leave the club at Dawson or Fairbanks at. 1 o'clock dn the morning and tlnd your self In broad daylight when you come out on the silent streets! Kdgar Allen Forbes In Leslie's. Meoting a Crisis. "IIow much do yoi cbargo for cut ting off a dog's tail?" said a small boy to a veterinary recently, exhibiting a quarter lu one hand nud leading a lean canine with the other. , "The operation customarily costs SI, but I will do It for you for HO cents." replied tho gentleman addressed. The boy looked at tho coin lu his hand disappointedly for n moment, but his face quickly brightened. Ho stuck out his hand which contained the coin and said: "That's all I've got Cut off a quarter's worth." National MonUily. Passing It Along. "What docs your mother do when things go wrong?" "She Just takes It out on pa." "And what does your sister do?" '"She hops on to pa and ma both." "And what, does your father do?" "It's different with pa. He don't dare say much to inn and sis. nnd so when ho gets mad ho Just takes it out ou the street railway company and tho' beef trust." Detroit Free Press.' How, Indeed. "I uover can belluvo a1 word tbnt woman says." "It's rather funny. She said tbo samo thing about you yesterday" "That's Just IlkJicr. How can you have confidence In any one whf? talks about another behind her back?" Chi cago Itecord-Herald. England's Royal Family. The annuity paid by the British peo ple to the klng'und queen of England la $,M0,000. O o c ooeo RECORDER and Friday by the Recorder Company. A. W. STUART Advance. Advertising rates on application THE CITY OF BANDON ATMOSPHtRICCHANGES. Vhnt It Mcar.s In Air Pressure- Whor, tho Barometer Falls, it in inti mi Uncommon thing at ccr taui rUMi.i4 of the year lor the bu iMiiictef !n shift alt Inch within tweu ty-iiir hiii-8 Sometimes the change Is ev.-i, irivafr Few persons have anv i. ii .1 i tin. tremendous changes In the at in -;,lit i c .in- indicated by iSiich o rise er fall In I he mercury column. A cubic inch ol mercury weighs half 'a pnutii! ii.n ilie mercury falls an inch a .-eight 'f one ton Is removed from every 4.IHI0 squilre Inches of surface This is a ton for every area five and a quarter feet square If your house, for instance. Is .r by -10 feet, witli an area of 1.000 square foot a loud of about thirty-six tons Is lift ed from the roof every time the bn roineter shows an Inch fall that Is. a thirty-Ms. ionjpad yquld be. lifted if the house were ulr tight. But ns air presses in every direction there Is ns much of a push upward against tin mof from below as there Is of u push ilmvitwiiiil from above. So the roof actually feels no effect ftom the 're-; uiovnl of ins, heavy loud. lu the same way a man of average size ivoilld lie relieved of n veIght;or, .ibout ,t ton anil a hair n mere were, no air chambers In the human body It has been llgnretl that n fall of nn inch in the barometer over a territory -100 miles square removes , a weight from the surface of the earth or uu. 000,000.000 tons If this Were loaded on freight cars, twenty tons to the enr. and thirty cars to tho train, more than i!:0.00 1.000 trains would be required to move It. If each train were COO feet long they would stretch out in n Hue more than 2.1,000.000 miles long. The only noise, that accompanies this great transportation feat is made by tlie wind, that does considerable roaring In the course of such violent, atmospheric changes. Kansas City Star LILIES OF THE BIBLE. They Are Wind Flowers, as No True Lilies Grow In the Hoy Land. It is a common belief, even among well Informed people, that, tho word "lily" as used in the sacred text means a real Illy in the modern sense of. the' word. This, however. Is not tho enso. No real Illy grows or ever grow with in the confines of the noly Land. (Tho white Illy (I.lllum ciindldum). which is often mistaken for the plant. of Scrip ture, Is not n native of Palestine, nor can It be tinldo to grow there, even In cultivation, without great cure It Is commonly con-cded that the plant ''heist saw about him during :the Sermon on the Mount- was the silme plant which in early spring Is still found In great abundance In' the val leys of that country namely, the orl ental wind (lower (Anemone coronarlnl The tint of Its blossoms is frinn blood red to crimson, and It Is called wind (lower, not. ns commonly supposed, be cause the slender stemmed blossom sway In the breeze, but because the hairy seeds of some spivies are carried, and propagated by tin- wind The fact that Christ used the word Illy" when a wind ilower or anemone' was meant need not surprise ps. for the word was used as the people of his. day used it And all the ancient- peo , pies, even the Greeks, employed the word lillum or llrlon or krliion when referring to any plant with a cuplike (lower liven today, when scientists speak of common plants, they mention -water lilies." "lilies of the valley." etc.. although they know fin I well that these plants are not real lilies not even closely- related to them. Haiti more American. Qrookfield Wrote With Either Hand. Among the ninny jicconipllsiinicnts possessed by Charles Itrooklleld was the exceedingly useful art of being nble to write with either hand This he owed to the early training of his mother, who when the future dramatic censor was a baby fell a victim to writers' crump She thereupon' I earn j ed to write with the left hand anil soon j became proficient In 18uM,Mrs. Brook field published her flrst novel, which she claimed to have written through' out with her left hand As soon ns her children could use a pen they. w,erc taught to hold It In either hand Indif ferently, and this early training served Charles Ilrookfleld In good stead when lie became a prolific author. Loudon Graphic. The Other Way, Mrs. Soursplte - When 1 gnvo you tlftit solemn warning against marry ing I said that some' day you would regret It. That time will come, mark my words Mrs .Vewed-' Thautlnio has come. Mrs. Soursplte (gleefully! I thought o Then you regret your marriage? Mrs. Sowed Oh, no I re eret tlig warning you gave me It kept me from marrying for nearly n year. Fuck. . . County of Lonrlqn. Twenty-four parishes um . twenty eight l)()inug'is nre comprised In tho county of Loudon. ucyitimate. J ,CtistmerLook. here, tailor! Thii suit you made for me is too shbet Tailor-Well, mister. I told you 'that I was glvlii' you 10',pcr cerit discount Kansas City Stir. Inconsiderate. Speaker nia wife has nppllcd for n divorce. Pldgge Well, of n!l tho nervel Doesn't she know tho price of tires? 'Chicago News. No Chance to Quarrel. "Do- you think they ,aro , happy in their hnrnn life?" "No doubt of. It. They've had, thq Brtmu cook now for over, four mpuths.'J , Fortinuu Uregonlan. The. Higher. Education. Willie Pa, what are tho zones? Ta Sou. when I went to pchool they mado me learn my geography. -.ThR zones aro torrid, frigid, Panama canal zone nnd ozone. Now York Globe. After She Finished With Kim. 'Angry W'omun My husband attemDt- ed'to strike me. I want to bavo him urrcsted. Police Captain-Ail right Where will' we'lind hlm? ' Angry Woman In tho Emergency lr VlB 'CAN'T QtT ONCVV (NOVl.rlOW CAN WE RVERf I fow ,voly won'tN si NQ Doubt of It. Bandon T T - fx r- WATJiK A. M. Ft! P. M. Ft.' Saturday1, " 10, 10;'U3 9.0 '11:45 6.6 Sunday, " 11, 10;4? 9.4 " .' ,! Monday, 1-2, ,125-25' 7.0 '1-2; 00 9.6' Tuesday, " 13, 1;04 7.4 "22;',30 '9.6 -L'OW .WATER A.M. ft. ,P.JVI, ,ft: .Saturday, ",1.0, ,45-14 84.0 5;33 D.8' Sunday, " '11, 5;09. 3.8 ,6; 14 'l.'2 Monday, ".12, 5:53 3.5 6;52 1.4 Tuesday, ",I3, 6; 40 3.1 7; 30 1.0 niruci .Gre.vley once said, "il'he, way to resume Is. to resume." In this H tl. was right , Bo isunlly was. Thp wuy to: do anything la tio tbnt ,thlng For example: , THE WAY TO BOOM IS TO BOOM This does not mean running ja.ro.uitd In circles and yelling' your head oft, The only thing boomed by tljujt jnothod la (the dlppy liouse. The way to boom a town Isjto Intelligent and united effort Organize a board op inade, a commercial. club or some similar body whose chjief business it shall be to makethe little tovn grow. J Dse printer's Ink nnd Dnclo t?on'B.postofllce. : TALK-for the town. WttlTK jpttorsi for('the, fown.. cet,xthp locnl papcrs'.to ROOT' for "the town ' ' " 1 Wrfte" to' Individuals nnd flrmg flecking, o new .location fell, them what advantages tills burg has to offer, J Publicity Means Progress. Let the world know this town is on the map. D I71U O I TI A O 'Stands ffor Reliability. ,When .you buy any of the Pensular Remedies you are sure of Jf You "Have a Gold Use Pensular Childrens Cough Syrup 'Pcnsiilai4 Cherry1 Cough Syrup , To, Remove Tan ' and' keep the skin-smooth he.re is' tiothing like - Pen sular' Cticpumher and 'Almond Cream and Pensular Buttermilk Cerate. .' 'Can Be Bought At i iBandon prug Conjpany "The, Pensular ,Store" Only ' Automobile and Machine ork i Bring your work, to the Garage and Machine 'Shop. Everything done with neatness and dispatch. Agent for Buick Automobiles. M. D. SHERRARD, Bandon, Ore. I Job Theecorder is. fully dle your work, whether Jtbe jarge ,pr small. All jobs delivered when prom ised. Bring your next order here. Tides. r" - , . 99 getting the best. Pensular' White Pine- &. Spruce Balsam Pensular' Laxative Cold i Breaker Printing equipped to - han -I . I LODGE; DIRECTORY ' fl o f i 4 O MhkoiiIc. jRANDON LODGE, No,d30 AF.,tMl ,7Zr W, Slated comrnuniction'first'Stuwt Iter the full moon of each month, bpecial on municatiom tecond Batuiday thereafter. All Matter Matoiu cordially invilcd. W. E. Craine, jW. M, Phil Pcditon, Secetary Eattarn Star E. S., mecU Sa'urddV evening before an liter ilMffl f nmm.ir.tr al. An r( M-mnir AjiAom Vuiting memberi cordially invited to attend.' ' , T Iff! Alice C. Callw, W. M'UU Rota Bingaman, Secretary. I. O. O. T . t-n BANDON LODGE. No. 133. 1. O. O..F.M, ni. ...n. M,1.l.., : :..,:. . u.iuuaj VT.iiiiif. tailing j brother In good standing cordially invited. H. A. Hatfield. N. G. A D. C. Kay, Sec. ' - KnlRhtu of 1'ythlita ' 1 TELPHI LODGE, No. 64. Knight, ol ' ' Pythiai. . Meet every Monday evening 1 1 at Knights hall. Viaiting knights invited to '' attend. G. R. McNair, C. C. 0. N. i-Wrington K. ol R. S. 1 Loyal Order of, Mooie 1 ' fleets Tlniriday cvcniiiRS in I. O. O. Ii". j Hall. Transient Moose cordially invited , Sometliinp dolii(f every Thursday. v Rebekah j n, OCEAN RE0EKAH 1 ODGE. No. 126 , I, O. 0'.F., meets 2nd and 4th Tuesday at l 1 O. O. F, Hall. Trantcient members cordially! invited. Effie Macy, N. G. 1 Josephine Stoliz, Secretary. w. o. w. COJvlETHING DOING Every, Minute Every Tuesday Night. ..SEASIDE CAMP NO. 212. " , WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. ' ' Meets at K.. of P. .Hall. Vuiting Neighbors Welcome. ''I G M. Cage, C. C. "1 H. E. Boak. Cleric. . I I mi- M Professional Cards. , i THOMAS' F. HAGGEIVTY 'Attorncy-aLLaw '., Over McNair's Hardware. Store ' Phone 482 ' J1ANDON, OREGON CR.iWADE iLawyer BANDON, OREGON UR. 'H.'L. HOUSTON Physician & Surgeon Office over Drug Store. ' Hours, 9 to 12 a. m; ' 1:30 'to' 4 p. m; 7 to. 8 in the evening. BANDON, OREGON DR. SMITH J. MANN .Physieian & Surgeon Office in Panter, Building. Horns, 9 to 1 2 a, mf to j p, m. BANDON, OREGoJk D;R. L.'. P. SORENSON i . , Dentist '' t- i i 9mce over Vienna Cafe. Telephone al ofEcej ( and residence, ,,BANDON, OREGON G. T. iTREADGOLD t ,A ttomey ,and. Counselor ,! 1 1 at Law "( ', Office with Bandon Investment Company i ' Notary Public- BANDON,, OREGON ...ii.iri nn .1? v t i7i7P i iPIiysician &, Surgeon Office in Rasmussen Buildinp. ' Phone 72.' t .1 BANDON, OREGON'. DR. -ARTHUR. GALE Physician & Surgeon Office over Orange Pharmacy, Office .phone. . jji. iesiaence pnone. jjj. ' BANDON, OREGON" t , DR. S. C. ENDICOTT Dentist nil' Pl.nn 71. R DL JIT ''J BANDON, OKEQO1, DR. H: B. MOORE 1 ifj Chiropractor .Office.Hourr 9.-30 to l2 nd2 to 5. Office in 'pmrnonj Block. BANDON, ORB DR. I. L. SCOFfELD .Dentist Will occupy offices over Bandon' Dry ')lt hospital CoIcoko New. 0 loodi lq, tore alter Jan, 15, 1914f 5' ,n .Mi p o O ooo 1 1' V