Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Semi-weekly Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1910-1915 | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1914)
gEMNWEEKLT BANDON RECORDER TUESDAY MAY 26TIP 1914. PAOEFOUR 17.' r With each 50c purchase a numheml lichet good for a chance 611 the following pnzes valued from $75.00 to $10,00 each will be given free: ; 1st Prize one $75.00 Victor-Victrola "2nd " $25 Check to apply on $75 Victor-Victrola 3rd " $20 " " " " $50 " 4th " $15 " " " $40 - " 5lh " $10 " - " " " $25 " Tickets given on "Agate Cutting;' "Repairing' "Mahujacturing,i"as well as purchases. We carry a splcndULstoek of Watches, Jewel ry, Clocks Silverware and (Hit Glass. . . SA8RO EROS. Manufacturing Jewelers Telephone 75 J fiandon, Oregon Lowe Bldg... i)itributtM .of Victor-Vii-trola and Record Good of Quality at the Right Price U TUY M. O'CON'S Skiiw for Jit, quality and loit tut prices. Sliue shop in con i.ntiiui Men's half soles sew- ij ed or nailed, 7fc. Women's hewed or nailed, GOc. i I I t-' T -- I - -W FAMOUS WINTERS IN PARIS: I For the unking you can obtain free itictct from A. McNair, O. A. Trow i bridge, E. E. Oaken, Dr. Houston, Dr. i Mann, Mr. Walib or P. II. Poole, for iho lecture at the Commercial t,iuo hall on Wednesday evening, May 27, a 8 p.. m., to be Riven y Dr. M. D. yjihw on sox and health. Lout oh Elmira Avenue two sncks .jarloy and one sack wheat. Finder pleaee notify C. -II. Chandler and receive reward. A'Zt'i A. A- PRIVATE SCHOOL WILL BE OPENED JUNE 1ST IN THE OLD SCHOOL HOUSE. CHIL DREN PROM 4 TO G YEARS WILL HE ADMITTED. WHERE NECES SAfcYtCUILDltEN WILL BE-ALL-El3"r-OR AND TAKEN HOME. ( 'HOURS FROM !) A. M. TO 12:0Q M. TERMS, " $."5.0(1 PER MONTH, ALL MATERIAL PROVIDED. For Further Information Call on or , Address i MISS Eth 32k Three years experience in Kindergarten Work. Authorized teacher in Urcgon. Finest Coal Mined or Sold in Coos County ITS 00 Sacked, at the Warehouse Bandon Warehouse Co. A Mills J Real Estate Fire Insurance Notary Public Rentals (lood Lota in Azalea Park, $25 Down and $10 nor fl month. Bargain in ttusinesii lot on First Slroei, V illMHMVr'jiXNOT BANDON TRANSFER LINE f U Mml uS lmy nd ivnyinu. Hm urdm t i jtriuniH Bi-lhnUtMi. Jtoni turner Wni Hi l'd 4 vwfMWMfMWtfteHi'H k HUMAN PERSONALITY. A Product Not of Brain or Heart, but of the Nervous System. To (Jiffen is imcrlbeif (lie belief that the brain was the Kent of the rational bouI, the iu-iirt the locution of courage mid fear, and the liver that of love. This distribution of the element of per sonality over the physleal body finds Its expression In the common speech of today, particularly In relation to the heart, which Is widely accepted by Un popular mind as the source of the more tender emotions. It' was chlelly through the anatomists and physloloslsts of the early renuis sauce that the modern movement, which has tended to limit personality to the nervous system, was seriously bcKun, a move-merit which, with thuin creaseof knowledge, has Kalucd sup port to such an extent that it can now be maintained beyond any reasonable doubt. Human personality is in no true sense the outcome of the non-nervous organs, such as the digestive or the circulatory organs, but Is the direct product of the nervous system. This" system, to be sure. Is embedded among the other or gans of the body, and the environment thus provided Influences profoundly its condition and aetioti. but acutencss or dullness of sense, quickness or slowness of action. teiu)eramental traits, sucli as a-gloomy or bright disposition, in capacity, shlftlessness. honesty, tlirlftl uess or sweetness, nre all, strictly speaking, functions of the nervous or gans. Although only the higher Ninlmals can be said to possess personality In this sense, traces of It oceur In the lower forms, and Its evolution Is In dlssolubly connected with that of the nervous system. Professor O. n. Par ker in 'Popular Science Monthly. Chivalrous. Itlobbs- Would you marry a girl for her money? Slobhs Well. I should consider It very unchlvnlrous to allow her to remain an old maid. Phlladcl phla Record. Don't be a dnb)iler. (enuliie success means simply doing the common things of life uncommonly well. John D. Rockefeller. Jr.- Surprise. Little Pitchers Why. you ain't nfrald of mice, are you, .Miss (Jabbyl Nervous Caller-Of course I'm afraid of mice. Why shouldn't l luV Little Pltchers I .was wati liins to see you ketch the mouse I let out of the trap that scared you. Mamma says you're uu old cat. ttaltlmiiro American. Just Fate; "Pit. what Is fateV "Fate, my boy. Is that mysterious something which leads. you to pick out of 100 people In the ballroom the one man who has a pcrsonal'intcrcst in the homely wom:i:i you are making fool comments about." -Detroit Fre- Press A Puzzle. "Pop. If anybody rides horse chest-nnta"- "Of course nobody doe's. Why do you ask such ridiculous things?" "I was onlv going to ask If they did. could thev use larkspurs?" Baltimore American. ' You Start At Zero 4 Wo all start out in life 'from tin- Zero mark. It is uphill all the way. The Iilf.-lier we go tin- more wo are looked up In. The man who attains Mirrctm muni lnkc himself seriously, luoli lo Mm own inter xin and cuMwrvo hi Mmnelh, wnillli him) ability. Many pro pi arc VtNialHtt tjioir ttiuiM ) wilh thin iMjifc, WHK ly cfu k, mid rwtMiMg fkitlr own mimt itM-r4)' raiaiiijf UiWr Mtrli aim umt in On gaum 'f HI. .Wbp. &uB't i) tiT HIRST iNATLIJANK Once Every River In France Wa Ice . and Every Mill Idle. Recalling famous winters In France, the Paris Petit Journul says that "the fifteenth century might Justly be call ed the cold century. "In U0S the registrars of the parlia ment of Paris reported that It was Im possible to Issue any of Its resolutions because the Ink froze in the ink bottles of the clerks. Every three words they bad to thaw their pens, and tills with a tire roaring in their room. Every river In France was frozen, and not mill could work. Twelve years later. In 1420. there was a repetition of this winter. Foodstuffs gave out. and poor people died by tens of thousands. "In 1422 in less thnn three days the wine nnd the vinegar froze In Uio cel lars; cocks and liens had tbclr combs frozen: the streets were full of peo ple who danced, Jumped, wrestled nnd rnn races, anything to keep off frost bite. 1430 It froze for more than two nnd n half months, nnd the snow fell for forty days without stopping. All the birds bidden in the trunks of trees died. ""In 'the year of the great winter.' as 11KX5 was called, hundreds of persons died from cold. Everything was fro zen hard, oven the bread served at the table of Henry IV. In 1709 all the wheat, was destroyed, and a new sow ing had to be made in the spring. Buf fon relates that no bread was to be had. Even Mine, de Mnintenon had to pro without it. "In 177(1 sentinels were found fro zen to death outside Versailles, and tlic king put a stop to this service. In Paris -great bonllres were lit In the streets. Bells werb shivered Into pieces as they rang, clocks stopped nnd In the cellars wine turned Into Ice. Hares and partridges came Into the towns and hid themselves in the nooks nnd corners of houses, where they were subsequently found ns stiff as U board and quite Inedible." j. rj. ft H H- 4 1 i 4' t t . SMASH! 2- HUNTING THE CARIBOU. Curiosity Often Lures the Watchful Animal to Its Fate. In hunting (he caribou quietness Is essential. Never break n twig if you can avoid it. for a cracking branch makes a noise which carries far und may give warning of yoim approach to the very stag you particularly want. Equally Important Is It to keep a sharp lookout at all times, especially when entering a barren, where a stag may bo sleeping, for under such conditions they are hard to see. Among the nu merous gray dead stumps nnd moss eovered low trees tho color of tho cari bou is so Inconspicuous that the un trained eye will fall to detect the ani mal even at close range. The first in timation will be 11 gllmpso of 11 disap pearing patch of white as the caribou vanishes into the woods. All these things considered, the cari bou of Newfoundland Is not as nlert ns any other deer that I know of and Is therefore more readily approached. There Is. of course, great variation among them, some being extremely alert and dlllk-ult to stalk, while oth ers are so absurdly tame that they will allow a man to walk right up to within a few yards bufore taking flight. Curi osity Is often a noticeable falling with them. When once it is aroused they will go to almost any length to satisfy it. I do not, however, udvise tho hun ter to count too much on it. for the vory thing which you Imagine Will tempt this curlpslty will as likely as not frlg-hten them away. Sometimes a strange noise will make them very Inquisitive, and they will come within n few feet to find out what It is. Then, occasionally, a white handkerchief will have Uie same effect. A. Rad cllffe Dugmore In "The Romuuco of tliu Newfoundland Caribou." Misleading Bookkeeping. Even bookkeeping is not an exact sci ence. For behold! how often is it that one man will put into the expense ac count a given expenditure sny. Uie rebuilding of 11 machine thus reducing his profits by this amount, while an other will put such an item to the asset account, and each can advance weighty arguments nnd reasons as to the logic of his methods. But tho net results of operation will differ widely with the same actual occurrences, so that oven bookkeeping may be said merely to present results dependent upon the aspects of the sltuaUon us rendered by those who have the au thority or opportunity to Interpret. Benjamin A. Franklin In Engineering Magazine. Points of the Crescent Moon, Why does the moon sometimes np nonrs with points turned upward nnd at other times downward? There Is onu cause only-the rotation of the j earth, If the moon rises with points ' turned upward then, when It sot, the points must turn duwuwardthnt In. I Dm western horizon meets the points In Its apparent approach: they point toward R. apparently downward, In tho 1 wewtem Hlcy. Now Vork American, GOES THE PRICE rley 85c Ba Sack For a limited period at the Cash House I BANDON wnsE CO. G. E. WILSON GENERAL BLACKSMITH All kiwis of light and heavy work. Horses seientif- ically shod. Deformities remedied. Bring in your t cripples and get their feet adjusted by a man that $ knows a foot Carl Clifford, the scientific horse shoer. Tie checkers, splitting mauls, and all kinds of tie makers tools. All wort, antced right. f EOTITPPrcn WTTTT WTrcTCT.hlRS J S. S. BREAKWATER ALWAYS ON TIME SAILINGS From Porl land Every Tuesday at 8:00 P. M. From Cotis Bay Every Saturday at Service of the Tide. Confirm sailings through M. F. Shoemaker, Bandon PHONE 142 - -1 SAILING DATE hw s -M m r "t 11 O.O.OfJtCUWCII EXTENPED TO ( FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1 P.M. Snils From MnrshfielH You Still Have Time To Prepare For That f ESTABROOK LINE EXCURSION Any berth to t 7 CO San Francisco P tJl DO YOU KNOW Pelt the Powsr, IIIII-MiimIc Iiiih ii wonderful Inllueiico over im. JW-J know It, 'Did you H'r fuel tho jiowur of tdiiuer ori'r jour "Hund I finlt'i tmul" - Voiiknr HIuUmiiiiiii. Upward HvUlon "WllUjl 111 I I l'lllll''l '"U l will m CM if t'AJJlii mLl'i hunt, Iml ur W)l l for JW mms mr ill" mwHuim t The City Market has the most up-to-date Sausage Kitchen in Southern Oregon Having just installed modern machinery to facilitate turning out tempting, juicy imuaage. The City Meat Market 1 I I i f it V