H i 1 .... , lMMMMtMIIIHIIMHMH PglTY! f I IC j tY Advertising is an important feature of modern business. A merchant may have' the very thing the public needs 'but unless the latter is aware 'of this, the law of supply -and demand, will not work out.1 Newspaper advertising is the best way to accomplish u this end. The name of a t business man or firm which - appears regularly in the co ' lumns of the Recorder is naturaly most familiar to Re corder patrons and the first to be patronized when any thing is needed. "MORAL ADVERTISE IN THE i 6. j.$ANXDN RECORDER. tTT i TTTll f I J I I I AT I I I i t I I' l"H-H"M t t t t t t t t t t f Mrs.'lAmy"E.J'Barackmaii, A. M. (Amy E. von Sesselberg) INSTRUCTOR OF PIANO FORTE f Graduate of the Royal Conservatory, of Leipzig,' Germany. Pupil of Theo. Leshetizky Lessons given in Theory and Harmony. Advanced j Pupils Prepared for Teaching. Studio 7524tli Street West PHONE 1261 I'll THfiJ HARNESS MAN G oitiplete stock of har ness, shop ping bags, , truliks, Vsuit cases, valises ' .and: traveling bags. H OTELj'n ALLIER Bandon 1 U Oregon RATES $1.00 TO $2.00 PER DAY SPEOIAL RATES BY WEEK OR MONTH SAMPLE ROOM IN CONNECTION I Don't ' Give Your&If Cause iTo Regret It i-JLJitfimiiiiiur nuaatfaffl because you reg'ec'ed placing your valuables in a safety de posit vault. Many have re greted their tardiness iimcting fires and burglar have com thfin ikmr. Anything vnlu al) is worth tailing rare of, Ourvtiiilib arclirc nml lui i ;lu t proof, W iiivjiif your iiupur-iidii. THE BANK OF BANDON m H f SKA X I i : News Note&'of Interest From Neighbor Towns Resume of Happenings That May Interest Local Readers. Gossip and Sensation Condensed and' 'Abbreviated- A telephone line will be built be tween Allegheny and Loon Iakc. Lockhart and Parsonn of Marsh field will start a drujf store at Tow ers. A Rhodcndron carnival will be held at Florence on the Siuslaw, May 21st and 22nd. ' There is uncertainty as to whether the recent forgers of Marshfield arc Austrians or Servians. Pi of. J. H. Grubbo has boon re elected principal of the North Belli! high school. This will lie his sixth years of service. The tial of Roosevelt for libel in New York illustrates the fact that it is often difficult to prove that which we know to be true. The use of auto trucks in carrying the mail from Roseburg to Myrtle Point is contemplated after May 1st. This will insure a quicker service. Donald Allen, a 13 year old boy liv ing in Marshfield, was slightly injured by an explosion of a stove pipe can non, used in an attack by the allies upon German troupes. That war is a reversion to savag ery is now pretty well established. The use of medicated bombs to sicken wounded soldiers has a counterpi! rt in the poisoned arrows of the he id hunters. The state fair management ave planning enlargements and improve ments in every department. If weath er conditions are favorable the big gest and best fair ever held is ox pectod this summer. The Scandanavian American bank will open for business in Miu'shfield at 177 Front street. They have signed a 3-year lease for the propei ly at the expiration of which tncy expect (to huilil llii'ir own Imilditiir. The warrunir comes from Rogue river and Gold Reach for the unem ployed not to seek for work there. The vicinity of the canneries is swamped with people after work and many iof them are being fed by private chari ty. The run of fish on the Rogue is much better than usual. The plant of Coos Hay Manufactur ing Co. is to be dismantled it having been sold a wliil e ago to the South ern Pacific railroad for $70,000 They will not re-lease the land and the plant must be taken down which ' h taken as an indication that the coiiv pany needs the land in the near future Dr. Mattie Shaw, wife of Dr. II. M Shaw, accompanied by her two softs, arrived today in Marshfield via Flor once from Windsor and Ilerwick, No va Scotia, where she has been oil' a visit since early in November, being called there by the illness of her father who later died. Coos Ray Times. I Miss A Beatrice Chaneay, of River- ton, Oregon, a 1012 graduate of the Bandon high school has been chosen queen for the May day exercises at the normal school exercises on the cain- pus May 1st. She has been ii teacher in rural schools in Coos and Benton counties and will be graduated fr6tn the Oregon normal school at Mon mouth in June. i A special election has been called at Roseburg for Juno to vote on n propo sed bond issue of ?GOO,000 with which to help Kendall Bros, build a stand ard gauge railroad from Roseburg to the Cascade forest reserve on the North Umpqua. The council meeting which authorized the special election refused to adopt n restitution rescind ing the $500,000 bonds voted for a railroad from Roseburg to Coos Bay. monfey and threw him overbourdt The water received him and he awani to o pile, where ho held on and hollcrod for help. His cries wero heard by Officer Shoup who went to tho vicinity and called several times but received no answer. Sovortson afterwards sta ed that he heard officer Shoup callling but thinking it was one of the calling but thinking it was one of the men who threw him overboard and in tended to kill him he kept still. Som time afterwards, when numbed with cold and about to sink, Sevcrtson n gain yelled for help, and Charles Jeif sen, of the fire-station went out ojft the dock, finally located him hanging to a pilo and dragged him ashore. He claimed that he was not unconscions when robbed, and also asserted thai Brewster skipped out immediately and was traced to North Bend, but has escaped arrest up to thejirosent. Hone and Rip, who had a room at the Blan co hotel called up Officer Shoup tw6 or three hours after tho occurence and related a story of tho affair, accusing Hrewfitor and offering to help in ap prehending him. News was received from Powers, formerly known iij. Wagner, yesterday evening, stating that Brewster had been arrested there Coos Bay News Robbed and Thrown Overboard A man named Guilder Sevcrtson, aged about 10, who came here from I'urcka on the dint Hitler looking for work hnil a narrow escape from death early Saturday morning. Sevcrtson, who hud about $100 in his pocket, hud been drinking Fritluy evening with Carl I lone nml E, R. Rip, with whom he bail plclit'd up an iiriiiiilntiiin' When the Milium cloved at midnight aivy nling to the atniy told by I lone nml Itip, the lliiei' went to Dm Clinton NihmIIv inntttiiriint, ami vshlli- tlieiii u limit known u IIhitv lltiwtnr Jolnul the iiuwil hiuI tMlltinl ttfViu tMin Intw VutiiK tul tui walk uii the iltwk with Mm. HrHmH Uwnvur, wiMitm Uwl nil Uim mwiujMiMj LJin, dim) IM wtwu Uwjr ftrfiVMj J Um mlt uf h futMiui Hmm, iliw4f lilt Idm I Mm mm Um kmti, wiuU mm t ilt uMmtt A$$4 Uttu M Hm tmtyik, RAILROAD NOTKS I Tito Siuslaw Pilot of the Mth print! the following concerning work on the Williamette-Pacific, which is being built between Eugene and Coos Bay. Workmen have broken through the longest and last tunnel to be finished on the Williamette Pacific. This tun nel is the first one south of the Ump, quu and is -l.HOO feet, nearly three quarters of a mile, other sight tunnels has been completed. The grading with the exception of the two stretches above Acme, has been finished. Work on the trestles on the lakes south of Florence will commence within two weeks. While here recently, Engineer C. ,R. Bronghton was making preparations for work on the large railroad bridge across the Siuslaw just above Acme A crew of men under Ed Griffith is now establishing a camp for the brid ge construction crew. Tho south trestle approach is n6w complete. It is 2,500 feet in lenght and 835 piling, averaging 85 feet lo(ig were used in its construction. An ap proach 100 feet long will be construct ed on the north approach. It will take about 00 days to finish grading between Acme and MapleUm and then .about three weeks to lay the rails. As soon as this is done, the steel for the bridge can be brought in rapidly. COQUELL AND CO KEEL Until the settlers and their dirdct descendcuts are all dead and buried the pronouuet'ution of the name of this town and river will probably be eternally bobbing up for discus sion. Whether "Coquoll" or Co keel is the product of advancing clv ponds altogether on the point of view Perhaps as good a working plait as any is this: If you have $100 or mrtn it is Cokeel; if you are broke it is Co- quell. Coquell is the Common, scrub, Indian name that the explorers found here when they found the river; Co- keel is the product of advancing ci ilzation and crept in after the coipi try had reached that stage of develop nient when aspirations of something more refined and mclifluous atid Frenchy began to make themselves felt. The early Settlers never thought of calling it anything but Coquell and up to forty years ago, or less, tho man who said Cokeel would have been look ed upon in about the same light ns the wearer of a shiny plug hat in the ear ly mining camp days. An old govern ment map is in existance on which the spelling is most aggregriously and shiimlessly "Coquell". Not long ago in article was republished in one of the county papers that had been written years ago by the late Orville Dodge, the Coos and Curry historian and he had spelled the name "Coquell" throughout the artice. How the pres- scnt spelling came to be finally ad opted docs not appear; hut it , may have been at the advice of a wise guy from the interior, who advanced the theory that the Indian got the' name from the French explorers and in that case the spelling must be Frenchified. After this opening wedgo was inserted it was e:sy for another erudite gent- lemnn to point out that the name being French r.ntl spelled "Coqulllo," it should be given a French prolinuria- Hon, r.nd "Cokeel would be the proper per. This coming at the tlma men tioned above when highbrow niipiru tioiu wero in the itlr, wiu kkuimI upmi with avidity y the building nrit(ie niry. Though not mie in m ImmlnxJ knew whether 'oiuhII or Cu iwiimM Um nwin i'uHu-hy, thoy lutew tlwt flm funnel lifttl u MwnU uriin iiimI wo "luw" vi Uwy tMtfnu the Utlti 'Jltci ftfMMMrlitflMi lut' Unni gKtaiiyr grmtml w t wv1 wHt w4l4f win Mti M llic jd H tk turn wiH Imt4 14 ' " (0)MH(b)'aMiao)4MH.rjaci)Ma-(a)4HH.(aw j UNIVERSAL TELEPHONE SERVICE j S0 w Is) A a a 8 I e 11 o a a a II -(D)H(co)-aHB-(DDa)'(a)-' The LONG DISTANCE LINKS of this company have been CON- 3 NKCTED with the exchanges of 3 Vf i the Coquille ralle'y Telephone Co. (FARMER LINES) at MYRTLE POINT and COQUILLE. Our patrons will find it ver convenient to have use of direct telephone com munication to subscribers of the Coquille Valley Company. -(0)E7ao)-aBaB-(onaaMB-a Li 0 I a S I B 1 1 11 COOS AND CURRY TELEPHONE COMPANY j E. T. WOI.VERTON H. C. DIPPEL t Coos County MennN Opporlunity See Bandon First DIPPEL & WOLVERTON ? CHOICE FARM LANDS AND CITY PROPERTY 4- FIRE INSURANCE NOTARY PUBLIC RENTALS IlOOK-KEf.PING GUY Dlppvx AUDITING ACCOUNTING J BANDON CONVEYANCES REAL ESTATE FARM LANDS INSTRUMENTS OREGON Order Your Freight Sent by the Old Reliable S. S. ELIZABETH J Large Two-Berth Outside State Rooms With Run ning Water. t Eight Day Service Between the Coquille River and San Lrancisco. FIRST CLASS PASSENGER FARE, .$7.50 FREIGHT RATES, $3 ON UP FREIGHT Reservations: J. E. Norton, Coquille; Perkins', Myrtle Point; E. B. Thrift, Langlois. J. E. WALSTROM, Agent, Bandon KQUIl'I'KI) WITH WIUKI.KSS. Steamship Breakwater I ALWAYS ON TIMIv Sails from Marshfield every Monday during April on the following days: April 5 at 12:30 p. m.; April 12, at 9 a. 111.; April 19, at 12:30 p. 111.; April 26,al 8 a. in. and from Cortland every Friday at 8 a. 111. CON1IUM SAILINGS IIIKOUGII ItANDON WAUKIIOUSK COMPANY I'ltonr 61 1 i BANDON TRANSFER CO. Gatchell Brothers, Props. All kinds of heavy and light draying. Phone orders " given prompt attention. .Barn corner First & Edi- :: son, Fish Properly. .Telephone Gil. The Motlps-K Fit'psidt All ye . I'd to complete Cit- the fa ii.'y circle is a Then ' bctM in its glow- i inj w..: .nl' . "j 1 1 D.wrs cprywlicro II 1 Stnnd td Oil Coinpnny Vr, San 1 iwl f yJzjJrWi