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About Semi-weekly Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1910-1915 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1914)
TROWBRIDGE 'HI SALE iHHwiiti ' i " i i "'hit in'nr nr jwn'inr'frrnwft rrfirT-ifffr1"" ' FIRE I While the Sales have been heavy the reserve Stock has not been drawn on. For Saturday selling new good win De piaccu uh cic w give vuMuiiiers unauie 10 auena - - " - '4 L 4 i"eT,f TVVV YYYft ."ii'TT ta turn cumc ucii gams iu iiccivy wvercoais ; : three-quarter and full lengthmade of heavy wool!! Sale 3.50 to 7.50 lM.jMt..t..fc.MA.l...?VT..f.A. Hi4i Ml ff ( CHILDREN SHOES Large assortment of Children Shoes will be placed J on Sale Saturday at prices ranging to one half of their value. " ' . A J. 0 i I 'S HATS HALF PRICE ::A11 Hats for Mens in soft Crowns, Derby and:: . ; ; : : Telescope tops will be slaughtered at half Price. : : SUITS FOR YOUNG MEN D l l l o r r . - trices on nign graae ouics ror Doys 4 to lo years X have been reduced tar below wholesale cost. Prices 2.50 to 7.50 r.RorERiES - i I For Saturday a special disount of 10 percent in addition to our usual low f I prices will be given. Now is the time to Supply your wants for weeks to come. Go to Trowbridge's today for bargains that you may never see again and let your dollars buy two for one LOCAL ITE L. J. Itndley Bu(TcroI a severe burn about the head while closing tho hy drant in, front of the Rusmussen' building the morning of tho fire, af ter the hoso had been burned oir. IIo did not realize that ho was badly burned until the next morning, afUsr tho reaction had set in, and thon he 8u(Tored greatly for several dnys. He is getting along nicely now and his burns arc nearly healed. Carpet and rug weaving, aply to Mrs. J. L. Foster, Bandon. tf. Dr. Houston is locating In one of tho front. suites of the now First Na tional Hank building. Ho will havo a beautiful and modern office, and a most desirable location. Dr. Arthur Galo will locate in tho new Ellingsn building with u modern suito of rooms and will havo a most desirable office. Try tho Uniquo for a good, square meal and sweet bread. tf. Dr. Loop and Mann will havo of fices in tho new Ellingson building. They aro now having tho front dou blt suito of rooms prepared espec ially for their work and convenience and will have as lino an ofllec i any in tho county. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Pock Juno 24th, a fine baby girl. Dr. and Mrs. L. I. Soronson are nrc jocing over tho arrival of a fino' 10 pound girl Wednusday morning. Ev erybody is doing fine and the Doctor is about tho happiest man in (own. Coming j"Fu Ku" tho Band Lender at the Grand, July 3rd. A two-reel howler. T. C. Shanklnnil, the inguranee ad juster, closed up his work liore Wed nesday night and loft Tburaday morning for Ills homo t I'oitUnd. He stated' Dial tho popple would get their money in (ihout ton dy or two weeks. The Iterordcr now m 1U iU plionu liutulli'd ii gul n ntUtr Urn tin and pitrtlcM wuntlng itHythinff in ur llim nin get In Umh with iw by mil inir V'Jl. King mi up 'hm ywt hii item t( mnv. The Bandon Dry Goods ' Co. will oc cupy the remaidor of the first floor and Mr. Byrne, the now furniture man will ocilpy the Fahy-Morrison building jn which the Bandon Dry Goods Co, is now located. Coming, July '1th, Grand Theatre, "Tho Groat Leap" in four parts. A feature in a class by- itsolf. W. J. Brandow, of Coquillc, was in the city on business Wodncsday C. L. Stookin, of Mflrohfield, was in in Bandon Wednesday calling on friends and looking after business affairs. , A hundron foot jump on horso back over tho cliff in "Tho Great Leap." Four part. At the Grand .Tidy 4th. D. A. McLeod, Coos Bay was in. Bandon Tuesday looking after bus ness nirfrairs F, E. Nolson, of Marshfiohl was a Bandon husinoas visitor Wcdnosda.y C. II. Gillatte, of Coos Bay was in tho city on business Wour.osuay. Mrs. J. O. Stcmmlor, ofMyrtlo Point, hns boon in tho city for a couple of days. . s iMaik for "Fu Fu, Tho Band Lcad or," at the Grand July 3rd. Hank Dunham" was down from Co quillo Wednesday faking in the sights and shaking hands with his many Bandon friends. I'loane don't tear up the Beats when you see "Fu Fu, The Band Lead er," nt tho Grand Tliontro s Chris RanmuMon returned last night form a busines rip to Portland. Chaa. Uuiglnig is having an adilion built t his house on Fourth street. It. B. L. Betlillion, manager of tho Bandn Woolen Mill, returned Tuesday eveni. g from a business trip ui KlHmHtii Fulls and other points For Salo Threo anil ono-half acres good laud, fliatly ulonied and iti cul UvMtio, Alio gnnlon, ood sk room bouite, good well, partly foneuil, mile aoulkMHt of I'oatdlllce. A aunp at 98.00. Alao 10 eni 1 milaa from I"oat4jflU, MM0 good Uinlnsr, fit fiiO pr acrt. DipaJe .t Wolvarton. tf. much, but when taken in conjunction with tho building of tho Willamette Pacific from Eugene and the a nnounc ment of starting work on the Coos Bay bridge the. first of the month, it indicates something thinking p eople will not allow to get away from them. The fact is the building of the road to Eureka means the Willamette Pa cific will go on down the coast, like ly via Bandon, a nd Coos Bay will bo on a water level railroad within a short time. That tho Willamette Pa cific is goin to come to Mnrshfield and stop is out of a 11 reasonable 'deduc tion and that the Nrthwestern Pacif ic is to go no further than Eureka is equally hard to believe. The South ern Pacific is going to havo a coast road and tho jining f the Eureka and Coos Bay rails will bring it .about. Mnrshfield Recrd. CHEESE FACTORY PRICES VS. CREAMERY PRICES. Creamery prices for June: 1000 His 4 per cent milk, 40 lbs. butter fat at 24c $ 9.00 800 lbs. skimmed milk at 20c per cwt 1.60 $11.20 Cheese factory prices for June: 1000 lbs. milk; 10 lbs cheese to 100 lbs cheese; 100 lbs cheese at 14c $14.00 Mfg and freight, 3c 3.60 Wuiii i liW iiutAX i'JK wJiifJi Ji is i mmi&4 H Uw Or MM I mi)M mm! m i oi w ami tiurtt wanuntf UimJ Yum mjj yii 41, i Unit ul Umd in tiw Mw Kn t Mtii) i hi I I 4 Wl T., -ii,j !, it,, i . .....I (rum ? 11.00 1000 lbs. milk 4 per cent, 40 lbs. butter fat at 35c $14.00 Mfg. and freight 7jc lb 3.00 $11.00 To Whom This May Concern: Tho article above has been circu lated and needs correction. A 4 Por cent milk will make eleven (11) lbs. of cheese to 100 pounds of milk. At M9'c per lb not F. O. II. Bandon, which has been the least this factory has sold for. Two rents a lb. for man ufacturing cliceno leaves 12 cents a pound net dun pntrns. Eleven pounds at this rate woulb bo $1.404 net or 101) llm of I per cent milk. Creamery prices as iiliovo stated would Im 21c )iii 1U.13 j.nl f. ihj jnjvi'l ' jad lou would be I'll cents, making u differ )'o f 41 IH' on M) llis, of milk III VOr (if clii'owi, Wiiey m uliuut Diie Iwlf Dm vmIiju d vhlnimed milk, but wn will ivnvo Unit to tliowi u)i( AH IJMjdJJK tjl will jilvn IIkIiI pii Ii wWtwi wJMi mm of tw diilriiiMii mi iwAm () iM' i n 'l mr, Mar- TAUGHT BY THE SWALLOWS. " How a Railway Tunnel Wan Built Through a Sand Bank. A colony of bunk Hwallows taught a joung but observing engineer how to build a tunnel that tils more learned superiors bud refused to undertake. North of Burlington. Vt., lies n broad sand pluln high above the level of Lake Chomplain, through which tho Central railroad was to bo curried by a tunnel. The sund. destitute of moist ure, would not cohere, but crumbled away as soon as an excavntion was made. After several costly trials the engineers decided thnt the tunnel was Impracticable. A young man in tho engineer's offlco sakl he could tunnel tho sand bank at a small cost. lie said he could build th tunnel for so many dollars n run ning foot, but that ho couldn't expect the railway people to act upon (its opinion when so many American and European engineers hail declared tho project Impracticable. The managers, however, gave him a contract to build fifty feet of tho tun nel. On the face of tho sand bank ho marked the Hue of nn arch larger than the proposed tunnel and on this lino drovo sharpened timbers into tho bank. Then be removed six feet of the sand and drove, In nnother arch of twelve foot timbers, removfng six feet more of sand. This process he repeated un til be had spuce enough to begin tho masonry. As fast as the mosonry was rompleted the space above it was filled, leaving the timbers In place. He pierced the bank with the cheap est tuunel ever built, which now stands as firm ns on the day It was finished. lie was nsked whether there was any suggestion of the structure adopt ed by him to bo found in the books on engineering. "Na." he said. "It came to me in thin way: I was driving by the place where the attempts were made mid saw that a colony of swnllowH had made their homes In the bank. It oc curred to me that these little engineers hod disproved the assertion that the sand had no cohesion. As every swal low's home is n self sustaining tunnel without masonry. I thought thnt by extending their method I could roii struct a larger tunnel. Tho bank awnl low U the Inventor: I am simply his Imltator.,,-Bonton Post. Dr. L. P. Sorensen DENTIST Nutr rt-Aiir fur bunlnm mi one if tin tM'w4 and ld 'jujiuj (iKiira n lilt iwii, Hwjw U-i'i Nr )')fl NtUu Html MulMliiif, Iwubiii. For Sale at a Bargain The Riverlon Saw Mill Property consistiug of the following tracts and parcels of real estate located in the Town of Riverton, Coos County, Oregon Reale Estate Parcels, two acres more or less $550.00 Lots 2,l, 1, 5, 0, 7, S, 9 and 10, Block C, 550.00 Lots 3 and 0, Block 5, and dwelling " 800.00 Lot 2, Block 1 75.00 Lot 8, Block 3 150.00 Mill Machinery and Buildings. Two boilers valued at .' 350.01) One engine, size .10x10 '. 100.00 One engine, sizo 10x20, 25.00 Ono engine, size 7x14, ........ 20.6o Ono planer '. . .' .v .".... 106.00 One carriage alid equipment ' ?, 300.00 One edger ... . ' 40.00 Four circle saws 200.00 Mill building 100.0a Misccllnnous pulleys, pipes nnd parts of machinery 400.00 Total value $3700.00 We will make a liberal discount on these prices for the next thirty days For Particulars See Dippel & Wolvertoij City Meat Market A FULL LINE OF SELECT FRESH AM) SALT MEATS ALWAYS ON II AM). MODERN METHODS AND COURTEOUS TREATMENT COM- ; IILNi; TO .MAKE YOUR TRADING ' II Hit K A PLEASURE. YOUR PA TRONAIJE HOI.ICITHD, Phone 193 Geo, Erdman, Proprietor