Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1915-19?? | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1915)
tl imuuil 4 .vt iiMikrffM Aia.'f 4 T frfa J. J. J I J J ill Ji i if f A -- F. TTTT TTT 4 "I' W " V TT V " PUBLICITY! t 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. Newspaper advertising is the best way to accomplish this end. The name of a 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 t Jm- M-"M' ' BANDON RECORDER. t t I 4fr.j..fr.j..!..X News Notes of. Interest From Neighbor Towns MRS. GIBSON WON THIRD PRIZE -- Mrs. Amy E. Barackman, A. M. (Amy E. von Sesselberg) INSTRUCTOR OF PIANO FORTE Graduate of the Royal Conservatory, of Leipzig, Germany. Pupil of Theo. Leshetizky Lessons given in Theory and Harmony. Advanced - Pupils Prepared for Teaching. Studio 752 1th Street West l'HONE 1261 e. a W. M. STEINOFF Tlllfl HARNESS MAN omplete stock of har ness, shopping bags, trunks, suit cases, valises G and traveling bags. HOTELf ALLIER Banclon Orpann Oregon RATES SI. 00 TO S2.00 PER DAY SPECIAL RATES BY WICEK OR MONTH SAMPLE ROOM IN CONNECTION t-! Don't Give Yourself Cause To Regret It luvause you reg'eiel placing your valuables in a safety de posit vault. Many have re grrliMl their tanliuusK inai titig fire anil burglars have nM iliem ilear. Anything valu able i tvurili hiking rare f. Oun.mli mirfirif iihI ImjiuIui' mm, W uHif your iiinpui- OF BANDON n THE BANK Resume of Happenings Thai May Interest Local Readers. Gossip and Sensation Condensed and Abbreviated- Bishon Sumner's visit to the Epis copal churches of this county will be some lime in June. Dr. J. J. McCormick and wife of Berkley are expected to spend the summer at Coos bay. The tcamcr Alert after an all win ter's tie up has been placed on the North Coos river run again. A baby daughter was born to Mr and Mrs. Marion Clinton of Arragc Wednesday, April the 11th. J. Tom Hall of Marshfield accident allv shot himself in the throat whili trying his gun and died of the wounds Clyde Dendinger, cashier of the Breakwater oflicc in M&rshfield ha been appointed station agent at Pow ers. Claude Nosier of Bridge is heading a movement asking ball teams of Coquille and Myrtle Point not to play on Sunday. Will. Hood, chief engineer of the Southern Pacific while in Marshfield last week said there would be no building to Eureka now. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Smith and daughters Adeline and Myrtle of Marshfield have started on a six week's tour of the Sandwich islands. The supreme court has confirmed Judge Coke's decision in the Southern Oregon company tax whereby Coos county will collect ?MO,000 delinquent taxes. Anton Lang who has enacted the Savior with such great success in the Passion Play is now reported to be in charge of a machine gun which he operates with great skill and determi nation. F. M. Van Plantch, engineer foi Kendall Bros, of Pittsburg arrived at Roscburg last week. He will make two or three surveys and will occupy about a month with the work. Tlic road will have easy grades and r.tand- ard construction. The managers of the Coos and Cur ry exhibit at San Francisco have ask ed for a jar of brook trout for exhi bition purposes. The samples of Port Orford cedar have been the subject of much interest. A GO ft. fish net is also requested. L.. J. Simpson, Captain Edgar Simpson and L. G. Shepherd direc tor of the Simpson Lumber Co. and manager at Sacramento, and Stan ley Boddar accountant of the eohipa ny are in North Bend causing spec ulation as whether or not the Por ter mill will open soon. Guy Turnbow, who had been with the Schrock saloon on the night shift for several months, will leave on the Nann Smith for Tonopah, Nevada Bert Stanley, who had been with the National and Bohemian bar i.i Marsh field is taking the vcancy Mr. Turn bow's departure occasioned. Mr. Turnbow formerly lived in Ban- don where ho is well known. Shippers of fruit should know that fruit containers which are shipped in interstate commerce must be plainly mnrked under the regulations pre scribed by the federal government These marks must show tho contents either by weight, measure or numer ical count. These regulations are ex plicit and it will be well for shippers to heed them to avoid possible hind ranee and loss. The dredge Seattle completed its contract last week with the Port of Coos Bay and is to move to tho Co quille where they have a small con tract forthwith. This dredging has cost the taxpayers of this port ?(00,- 000 in bonds besides large sums gath ered from private individuals for fil ling in their lands. For the contract or it was one of the most remunora tive jobs let on the coast for years the Scattb earning in a single month as high us ?r3,000.00. Marsfield Sun Tho grand jury will attend to turn an indictment ngainnt Joe Coach accused of perjury in I ho Simpson-Truadgold-Coach cmbroglio. II. L. Antiunion, clmrgt'd with uh mmi 1 1 with iliingitroiiH wuroiin, (')inr Ituniigim Towttr iHTimnl of kidnap ping hi wifn and I. H. Ilutfli urvimcil of tln-Mutuiiliig with a ;un Dnm A. I .mi ir, wtu nil iiIIowki) to km fun. 'I'liuM. (iiinnl fur iHik'nny, J I it' llntw. 4r fr mhmiy mid JuIjh IUIit on m iihmmjmI Wwign, ll i'm uf rfJvMitttJ itM0 mary til iu Uhm Mm imjmUm um hiu it lUmtm Ail imwmm ilm UdMmt will im mHirwl Ut i"rt) tun U n HMMirtb imM Umm Urn mriit$, it m 4rmto4 OH Bandon Woman Successful in Scen ario Contest of Essanny Company The friends of Mrs. Roy Gibson are anxiously waiting for the appear ance of some moving picture plays of which she is the author. Word has been received by Mrs. Gibson that she was winner of the third prize in the Motion picture contest for play wright's which was conduct ed by the "Essanay" Chicago Trib une. This play will be known as one of the prize plays and Mrs. Gibson will receive credit on the screen as its author. The play is a three reel drama in which Mrs. Gibson shews marked ability as this company re ceived thousands of scenarios. The Universal Film Mfg. Co. is tho first to release a play written by Mrs. Gibson. The play was released on the twentythird of February, featur ing the beautiful Cleo Madison and Joe King. The Universal Weekly says "The many beautiful scenes contained in 'Haunted Henrts" written by Mrs. E. Gibson, were filmed by the Gold Seal company who recently took a cruise oil the Universale new ?500,000 yacht. The play was staged ntF the Honolulu islands in the Southern Pa cific ocean. This two reel Gold Seal tea drama tells an unusunl story with a smashingly fine deiioument." There are also some short magazine stories to Mrs. Gibson's credit, one of which was published in Deceml or 'Live Stories." 3 NECTED with the exchanges of 3 j UNIVERSAL TELEPHONE SERVICE j I j The LONG DISTANCE LINES j I o I of this company have been CON- I o I a I a a a II a I a a I a i!i The gold separating maciine being built at the Koontz machine shop for R. J. Long will be fthished today or Monday according to the present in Jications. Mr. Long, who is a rcla tive of Col. Rosa of Bandon and a for mer deputy sherilF .if L03 Ang'-los, ex pects then to take the machine down to the middle Elk river in Curry county, there to commence mining op orations on the headwaters of that stream and its branches. Mr. Long has a new type of machine, one witl .vhich both himself and father have hail much to do in perfecting and ho jclieves that it will bring good results Coos Bay Times. Paul Stephan was given his natur ulization papers by the County Court last week. One of the Filthiest "Mafshfield is getting to be one of the filthiest cities in Oregon" says the Record. Judging from the number and character of the crimes committed there it is not much better off morally than it is physically. Of course we anticipate the ready reply that it is not citizens but strangers who are guilty of most of the offences com mitted in that city,-but if it will clean up morally by doing away with drinking places and dives there will be a wonderful decrease in the num ber of its undesirable visitors. What ii city sows, it is bound to reap. Co quille Sentinel. Magnificent Myrtle Wood Desk Fox & Houck of the Myrtle wood tu'rittire fsrtory h?ro have a nng nificent specimen of their work about ready to ship to J. A. Ward who has the Coos-Curry exhibit at the Ore gon building in charge at the fair. This desk is of heroic proportions, be ing six feet long and throe and a half feet wide, but the size is by no means its most striking feature. It is built throughout of the burl or myrtle wood and so covered with picturing which will mnke it different from any other desk in the world, even should it be kept for a thousand years. For it would be impossible ever to dupli cate it as to find two human beings whose features, manners and thumb prints are exactly alike. When finish ed in the dul finish that best brings out tho natural beauty of the native grain, and without varnish, this desk is going to be wonderously beautiful. Not only are the front and sides of the picture myrtle but the back and sides and every part of it that is vis ible. The myrtle wood itself is so nov el in its coloring and fantastic vein ings as to render anything made from it strongly individual in its charac ter, but tho Great Forester never made any two of these trees at all alike so when one has a piece of such myrtle wood as is made here ho has something entirely unique. Tho value of this desk it is hard to oHtiinate, hut judging hy the price at which deskH of common wood and Just like hundred of ntliitrn, are unit), ?li00 or oviiii $H00 U not too much. JIokIiIhh thU dol, thoy have noiiiu ulitgunt I'liulm iiud (nidi limn tlmt will In tiiim 1m woitli iloulilo 11 iwl t ruble tlm W u nd f now hmIim) fut tliifni. IV tiling iJwil WtDtUs 'tkl thin f I Mill 'MttliVir It Uml iJjJ MM f Ual Uwf Ijgwe'l MMMjjlJ mwmmmI U fin 1 tmmm wtto taaau the Coquille Valley Telephone Co. (FARMER LINES) at MYRTLE POINT and COQUILLE. Our. patrons will find it very convenient to have use of direct telephone com munication to subscribers of the Coquille Valley Company. a 5 1 a a a a w W II j COOS AND CURRY TELEPHONE COMPANY j M fr'4-l'4-'I!I..:'.!' .!.A.M..M- . K. T. WOliVERTON II. C. DIPPEL I Coos County Ilcan!i Opportunity See Bandon First DIPPEL & WOLVERTON ? CHOICE FARM LANDS AND CITY PROPERTY FIRE INSURANCE NOTARY PUBLIC RENTALS nOOK-KEUPING GUV DIPPEL AUDITING ACCOUNTING I BANDON CONVEYANCES REAL ESTATE FARM LANDS INSTRUMENTS OREGON rl.M'i-'H- 4-"J'H''v t Order Your Freight Sent by the Old Reliable 1 S. S. ELIZABETH 1 Large Two-Berth Outside State Rooms With Run ning Water. i Eight Day Serviee Between the Coquille River and 7 San Francisco. i FIRST CLASS PASSENGER FARE, $7.50 "f FREIGHT RATES, .$3 ON UP FREIGHT I Reservations: J. E. Norton, Coquille; Perkins', Myrtle Point; E. B. Thrift, Langlois. J. E. WALSTROM, Agent, Bandon i KQUIIM'KI) WITH WIKEI.ESS. StfMe Br eak water ALWAYS ON TIME SAILS FROM MARSHFIELD EVERY SUNDAY DURING MAY I AT J, A. M. AND FROM PORTLAND EACH THURSDAY AT 8 A. M. , $ ii wit i i coNiTiiM sailings through bandon warehouse company l'lionc 61 1 i bAINUUIN 1 KAINor LK CU. Gatcbell Brothers, Props. f AH kinds of heavy and light draying. Phone orders I t given prompt attention. .Barn corner First & Edi- I son, Fish Property. .Telephone 641. ''I',M m 1 r At the Exposition When you visit the Panama-Pacific Exposition, look for the Exhibit of New Perfection Oil Stoves and Heat ers in the Palace of Manufactures. Let the Demonstrator show you how efficient a good oil stove really is. New Perfection Oil Cook-Steve For Dttt Raulti Use Pecrl Oil It lias abundant heat always ready like Kas It bakes, broils, roasts and toasts like a regular wood or coal range but without dirt or ashes, No rdor. Does not taint the food. Docs not overheat the kitchen. Especially good for hot summer cooking. Made in leveral styles and sizes. Ask your dealer. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (I IMmhU) JIuihImii III