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About Semi-weekly Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1910-1915 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1914)
frwixe a o n 0 0 CCD oo o - o O 00 SEMI-WEEKLY BANDON RECORDER, TUESDAY. APRIL. 7,. 1914 : i i itiiinf i '"" SAFETY FIRST 4 Speed, and Satisfaction A.L-W-A-Y-S tart i IK "SPEEDWELL" Marshfield ; J 25 "Fifield" sails iiO . San Francisco, Bandon Warehouse Co. Gen. Agts. , t GEO. T. MOULTON Coquillgent. UteNRY SENGSTACKEN Marshfield Agent. tIIMIIIIHI'IIIIIIHIIItllllllltl Readers of the Bandon Recorder, and Friends: Special Bargains in Farm Lands and City Property SQUARE DEIL REALTY CO. MRS. W. W. WOLFE INSTRUCTOR OF PIANO PURE DRUGS Do you want pure drug and drug sundries, fine perfumes, hair brushes, and toilet articles? If so call on C.Y. LOWE, Bandon II M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 IHMW : Hotel Bandon j A n Plan s1 00 I and $1.50 per day. t European Plan, rooms f SOc, 75c & $1 per day f E. G. CASS1DY Prop, t iMIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIlHII o o o o o o o o o o o o o' o o u 0 ANOTHER UAKGA1N ttt 5-room house, newly ro-model-ed and lot 88x1.1'.! on Jackson Avenue,4 near Cs'lf Park. Street work dono. Onjy $900; terms on part of this price. t t t A. II A II V. It I. Y OOOOOOOOOO W I C K II A M II 0 U K Gullle, Oregon Ji ugisiii opn for I'UK' imt mdiI cwllclU your puiwww whvn ttf- (JouMy wait. I? II, Hi Wl'MIMM, JVwfc 4 Comfort .Sails Fiom X Tues., Apr, 14 a.m. from Bandon for f Wed. Apr. 8, J , m. J. E. SCHILLING Myrtle Point Agent t LODGE DIRECTORY Masonic. ' Bandon Lodge, No. 130, A. F. & A. M. Stated communications .firs'. Saturday after the full moon of each month. Special communicaticms Master Masons cordially invited, j C. R. MOORE, W. M. PHIL PEARSON, Secretary. Eastern Star. Occidental Chapter, No. 45, 0. E. meets Saturday evenings before and after stated communications of Masonic lodge. Visiting members cordially invited to attend. L. KATE ROSA, W. M. ROSA BINQAMAN, Secretary. ' I .0. O. F. Bandon Lodge, No. 133, I. 0. Ot F., meets every Wednesday evening Visiting brothers in good standing cordially invited. S. E. HINES, N. G. LOGAN KAY, Secretary. Knights of Pythias. Delphi Lodge, No. 64, Hkiights ot Pythias. A Moots every Mtwh lay ov M ening trv Knights hall, knights invited to attend. Visiting M G. R. McNAIR, C. C. BN. HARRINGTON, K. of R. S. Loyal Order of Moose. Meets Thursday evenings in I. 0. O. F, hall. Transient Moose cord ially invited. Something doing ev ery Thursday. Itcbckah Ocean RcbcKah Lodge, No. 12(, I. 0. 0. F meets second and fourth TuewluyH at I. 0. O. F. hall. Trun cient mombcrs cordially invited. LENA DAVIDSON, N. G. MINERVA LEWIN, Secretary. W. O. W. "With Charity Towards All" HeuHldo Cump, No. 212, W. 0. W. meetB Tuewluys, K. of I, hull, 8 p, in. VinitMm4iri uMuml hot wc. coino, lly older of t W. A. KKf.LKK, (J. Q. VttT Jujtll i('lf'HlIIH', 1 um m ruiiilliui fur Joint Kcprc ptifitaiivf from l) iiml Hurry nm. JH hvfwv lliv H'jiulirin inlmritm uy mu. ii i, warn', t IM. , 1 I CANCER A DISEASE OF CIVILIZATION? . Experts Differ on Question and on Value of Radium. i OVERDOS KILLED BREMNER? Cornell Professor of Pathology Think So, but Believes In Efficacy of the Mineral Statistician Declares Those Reported Cured by It Never Really Had Dread Disease. Speakers who appeared before the Anericun Society For the Control of Cancer In Now York differed widely as to tlio prevalence of the disease nnd also as to the ellleucy of radium treat ment for It. The meeting whs called to start n movement to acquaint the public with the dangers of cancer and especially with the danger of allowing small cuncerous growths to become malignant and deep seated before ap plying for operation). Frederick L. Hoffman, statistician, who has made a specialty of collect ing information about cancer, asserted that 75,000 adult persons died from the disease last year in the United States nloiio. while r00.000 persons died from itSn civilized countries. Ho said that cancer wnR essentially a dis ease of civilization and was practically unknown among primitive people and snvage tribes. Dr. James Ewlng, professor of pa thology of the Cornell university medi cal school, disputed Mr. noffman's as sertion. He snld tliat cancer was not only prevnlentjhroughout the whole human race, but that, far from being n disease of civilization, it was prev alent in practically nil lower animals and was even found nmong trout and codfish, which died from it in great numbers. Disputes Cures With Radium. In discussing rndlum cures for can cer Mr. Hoffman said that a careful stutly of hundreds of reported cures had convinced him that the patients affected were really not suffering from nnccr. He denied Hint any cureinuu sen effected by any meiuis other than surgeon's knife. Ith this Dr. Ewlng disagreed also. Hnld that cancerous growths had i cured by radium when. they were inmil Hnii whan thev hail been treated before "the poisonous toxins from the growth had spread 'thrsmgh the wholo body. The limit of radium treatment, he said, was confined to n depth of an luch nnd a half or two Inchon, as that was the extent of the penetrating pow er of radiiuii rays beneath the skin. He said that new ways were constant ly being discovered to apply radium so hnt It eurutlvo Dower would bo ex tended to ovou tho most mallfinunt forms of tbo disease. f1 I nV response to questions askod him after be had concluded Ms address Dr. Ewlng expressed the opinion tiint a very largo ovordoso of radium had been administered to Representative S. Rremner of New Jersey and that Mr. Brernner's death was no doubt hasten ed by this too extensive application. Ho pointed out that tho correct dosage for radium liad no't been determined definitely and thnUpmuch experiment ing must be dono in this direVtiou. "The deaths from this disease," said Mr. Hoffman, "have practically dou Wed in the last forty years. The death rate laorease at the rate of S per oent every decade. Statistics which I have gathered concerning the disease prove that no doctor operating for cancer was ever infected by It and Huit no lersou ever inherited It or passed It as nn Infection to any other person. "Cnucerous .cells are treacherous for the reason thnt they have no nerve stimulation connected with thejn. Vou do not fed any pain as a cancerous growth starts and so gain no wnrnlng. Th. ulfti nrn n filleted more than the jwor. All persons are liable to bo a"fc stacked after they rencu maturity. Jiosi often the disease appears after the'vlc tlm has reached an ago of forty years or more. "In England they eat live or six meals a day and so constantly irritate the stomach. It may bo that this has something to do with starting cancer ous growths, ns English people 'suffer heavily. Uraes Study of Localities. "In Madison county, N. Y., cancer has attained the hignesi level in me Ibilted States as a cause of deaths. We do not know why this is so. but 1 wish some special study could be un dertaken to Hud out. There are other small localities wheretliu number of cancer patients I especially large. Htudy of th.v .localities might give us much iimni llftht than seeking In lab oratories' to find' the germ Unit ciiuhch It or wlmtover the Houne of -4 ho dis ease may lc As n matter of-fact, all n'ii know about It Is (hut whim 'ell break I""1 In IuwIimm fiiNliloii and have a peculiar power in lUliiicl lit tlieiuselriM all Hid noiirltiliiiii'iil taken In!) (lie body Wm need loil away wllh Hits word "rufinf."' hu wild "mid bring into w In 1U NliMid ii ihiidIht of hn will ilKhlfnlly ili'MihU. Hid vi rion klndt "t itrnwiUf Mini iiir UUVIUH rflMfMM.rHf A wuMr of fm, he ffuv-im am W tlMeruM In ilwrnvitir. il hmv imiu uliyui Ibwu HihI iU m timM U UiflJ mmr jTwirinin l iL iwh ium in iyiw;jii Mm itif tmtlmi M' J Baseball Itch Gee, how me arm Is Hcliln'! That's n twitch In every nerve. I want tu start hi pttchlii' Thnt Woil bid ool 'em curve. I've not a drop with bruechea And a splthall that's u dream, For I'm tho guy what iiltchcs For Hucky Mullnti's team. Yes, I'm Kottln' awful eager For tujxcrclso mo wing. That I'm tho in.ikln's of n leaguer Is u suro and certain tlilns. And 1 hero's goln' to bo no losses. If yoiise bettln' tako a hunch From tho ku' what tosses For Uucky Mullnn's bunch. For thcy'ro Koln' to cop no bases Vllli yours truly In tho box, . But wo'll gluo 'em to their places. For mo backstop Is a fox; Mo backstop's Mickey Rugglcs, And ho's on to every sign Mado hy tho guy what juggles For. Ducky Mullnn's nlno. Minneapolis Journal. LIVE LIKE INDIANS AND BE HEALTHY-DR. EASTMAN. Advlco of Sioux Is Thftt Whito Raoo Go Back to Ntoture. I In nn Interesting speech before tho New York Antl-Vlvlsectlon society Dr. Charles A. Kastnuiu, a full blooded Sioux Indian, snld that the way every body could bo healthy was to live like the red man. lie made a plea for the white race to adopt the mode of living which kept the aborigines In such ex cellent ilhyslcal trim. Dr. Eastman, who Is a graduate of Dartmouth and who received an ndded degree from trie Boston University School of Medicine In 1S!K). appeared before the audience of more than T00 persons, mostly women, In the native oostuuie of the Sioux tribe, with the eagle feathers and beads which mark his rank among his own people. "I can recall," he said, "my grand mother strapping me on her back and carrying me across the Missouri river, Just below Iltsmarek, when she was sixty years old. How many of you who are not more than half that age could do the same with your own ehU drenV "When I wus a boy I often Heard white men ask me of us who were walking through the snow and light ing the winter winds of Dakota with our arms and chests bare, 'How do you stuiul It? Aren't you cold on your chest?' and our reply wns always, 'Are you cold on your face?' It Is all in get ting used to the conditions. "I used to take my little daughter down to White Bear Lake, Just north of St. Paul, tie her to my buck and plunge hi. At Urst she choked und screamed, but soon sho got to like It, alJiimich she was only two years old. tVOIwie delights In going In swim ming in the winter, nnd winter cold In Minnesota. .What we musculo Is bring our children and ourselves closer to nature if we "wont a healthy race. Live like the Indians." THE NEW STATE COUNSELOR. Robert Lansing Versed In International Law John&on, Folk's Successor. Itobert Lansing of New York, ap pointed as counselor to the state de partment at Washington to succeed John Hnssett Moore, Is a son-in-law ot John W. Foster, secretary of state un der President ilnrdson. Mr. Lansing, like j'ohti Hnssett Aoore, has from hla entrance Into the law specialized In International matters and has repre sented th United States as counsel before a number of arbitral tribunals und claims commissions. Ilo was bom In Watertown. N. Y on Oct 11, 1S0-1. Ho was graduated from Amherst In 1880 nnd was admitted to tho bar three years later. Couo Jdhnsou of Texas, appointed as solicitor, succeeding Joseph W. Folk, now chief counsel for tho Interstate commerce commission, Is an ardent Hrynu Democrat and a lending factor in his party In Texas. Cone Johnson was one of the origi nal Wilson men In Texas. He was a delegate to tho I'altlmoru convention. Mr. Johnson took a proudueut part In the primary light uguliwWonntor Jos eph' W. Italloy. Ho has been Identified with tho prohibition element In the Texas Democracy. ECLIPSE OF SUN APRIL 21. Partial Only and Visible North of Washington-Indianapolis Line. People In that part of the United States north of a line drawn from Washington to Iudlaimpolls will bo able to see a partial eclipse of the sun If clouds do not prevent at siiur!c on April 'Jl The path 'of totality of this eclipse will be north of 70 degrees lat itude and will pass across Hwi-dcii and southwestern lliislu- Tho UnltiHl Slates naval observatory has Issued full nilciilalioiis and maps showing all dala of the ivllpse. An tho obKervalorles at I tig" and Kiev are In the path. It Is not likely any rountry will g" In Hi" lapeiim of sending a parly in iiml olworviillwiH. Milk, HutUr, Chwc. Muds From Benns After yi'iiiM uf fixMiHiiniilliig. punt, wIh)ioiiiw milk Mi rJ'iiely upprii limllng Hie nwi 11'pilil Hint turidh'lit Ida' and iniliii)' ''hii lh iiHulu from JI. I Mnu uwuuimiHw) lu im frmn I lilt MMK I'f MkMll itiiHl fitHH mjt mm Ml'U au Urn1!) it Utf ll mrHm) m Mf swM w tMm tut imm km um mud J mM aster TThis week we are of f er- ing the newest styles in trimmed and untrim med hats at exception ally low prices. The selection embrac es some of the latest New York styles, as for col ors, yu may have your pick of Tango, New blue Bamboo, Oriol, Hazel, Rust and Vllock. In untrimmed hats all the prevailing shapes and colors can be found as well as the beautiful two tones. PRICES $1.00 MAN'S TWO MINDS. tViflko on Evenly Balanced Person Both Must Oc Used. To fJ0x pound lug a theory dial 111:111 has tvo miuas, or a uouuie ciiiisi'ioiisiii'sh objective nnd subjective Mgr. Ilenson has cmuparcd the two activities to an 1 upper and a lower room selmruted by a trapdoor. Dreams are due to the subjective consciousness working with out check from the objective conscious ness. The man who usually claims to have an eveirly .balanced mlml is the one who bus shut the trapdoor .and re mains In the upper room, and those who have closed the trapdoor and renialu In the lower rooms are commonly found In lunatic asylums. Tile man "f really even balance either remains between the two rooms or keeps the trapdoor well oiled. Napoleon, lu the lower room, con ceived Ideas for ruling Kurope and In the upper room put his Ideas Into prac tice; ltapiiael created combinations of colon and then expressed them on can vas, and lleethoven In the lower room composed his sonatas ami In the upper room reproduced the notes on paper. The events of childhood are remark ably clear lu tho recollection of very old people, though present happening) are forgotten. This may be explained by tho decay of the objective conscious ness, and It Is curious that as this de cays thu subjective consciousness bo comes more acute. Now York l'ress. SHORT CIRCUITS. Mission of the Fuse When the Wire Doeomte Croesod. "Another short circuit!" Onu of the commonest reports heard lu all electrical works. A "short circuit" means that the elec tric wires have become crossed or i connected so as to form a bypath or shunt of comparatively low resistance, through which so much of the elec trical current passes as practically to cut out that part of tho circuit through which the current originally Unwed. In I other words, a "short circuit" has re I placed the normal, circuit, wlilch tuny" I be considered it long circuit. The ctit I ting out of the resistance of the long i line permits the power to rush over tills pnUi of low resistance, and If the ! apparatus wure not protected by the fiisn or circuit breaker the electrical machinery would do Itself serlotm harm. To prevent serious cITcels from nwl dental uliort circuits of electric lighting wires In buildings a "fuse" is liiHcrtcd In the circuit Just InsKo the building. In case a mill or hoiiio other falling obJiK't short circuits the eh-clrlfl win In tho Iioiiso Ihlsf tine blows out-inline, ly, melts out-ami thrown Urn circuit often nn Unit mi electricity cull H"W IhrniiKli lb' vvlri'X In the Imusn until thu "uliort" lis tui'ii found mid wr fieiN -Nit Vmlf Wnrld. Took 0 Jel Let, "Ju-! i'i"' Mm." iniirni!in"l ii Inxik JillJIKU- ME Millinery to $5.00 I City Transfer I S. D. Kelly, Proprietor Light and Heavy haul ing promptly done. Contracting and grad ing. Transcient trade solicited. Horses boarded. Phone 1151 Office: Dufort Building Phono 1151 ...! F Mechanical Engineer Contractor 'anil Builder Bandon - Oregon Mrs. Guy Dipple J Spirclla's Corf ctcirc PIIONH 714 IIRADACIIKS CAUSKI) HV Eyestrain can not bo cured with med icine. Consultation Free I'OIIL, Opt umet riht at Kaliro Ur n. To Save Life First and prporly afterwardH i 5 I ho fn'oman'B duty. Yoiu duty Ib to boo that in ciiki n flro yjir lovifd onoH tim mudo lioniok.'H.i and jx'imi Um, Ordor a lir Jjiiiiv .iiit'o policy from iih today ICvmy ilns'h ilojny mumw Hi HhIj nl'mtUw youv fmnll wli fjout n iumw w I nwmw .in kWhk aw 1-1 i H 1 t -V 14 I V T I i f