Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1915-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1915)
Bandon Recorder Published weekly on Tuesdays ,by The Recorder Publishing Co., Inc. Entered at the Post Office at Ban don, Oregon, ns mail matter of the second class. JUCHARD 11. SWENSON, Manager .Jake, all checks payable and address ull communications to the company. ability of any blockade to starve out Germany. - 1 Mr. Hawley drew a vivid picture ot'( the valleys of 'Western Oregon us re- claimed and cultivated and found there in a commerce that would demand good shipping facilities. Closing the speaker complimented ( Bandon for its courage in lacing ui aster and predicted a bright futurc.T THE TURNING TIDE ? Subscription price, 51.50 per year Hawley on "Rural Credits" Hon. W. C. Hawley who addressed an nudience in the Orphcum theater last Tuesday night on the twin sub jects, "River and Harbor Improve ments" and "The Rural Credit Sys tem" disposed of the first topic in n very few words. The congressman ha3 been a consistent- worker for harbor improvements and in n few words he It is well said, and unfortunately true, that Wall street is the financial pulse of the natipii. We laughed three years ago when the first rumblings of financial affairs were heard. . Had the war not interfcrrcd, perhaps that trouble would have Iieen adjusted be fore the waves of financial trouble reached the coast. But the long con tinued stringency made its self felt to the remotest corners. Now comes the cheering news of a recurrence of pros perity. The stock exchange is open to unrestricted sales. Prices have reached unheard 6f murks,, Excite ment: hAs been tense, and fortunes made und lost in a night. l..o volume of any one day's busi ness has not been so large at any time before since the flurry of 1907. Tho excitement has not been greater since the sixties. The newly rich have SUtmttm-timtn U. S. flnginec Burrcll prophecies that within twenty vcarc the 'keeping of horses Vill be prohibited in largo cities and thnt the traffic of tho streets will be handled- by motor curs. That surely would (leal a muck e to ibu fly ic?f for tin srooll o pnsc'ine is njioi't ss attract !..' t tin utile smxengcr ns it is to hti'rmi! oe-ings. Tho citizens of Coquille arc relying on tho unique character of tho Ban don . beach as a scenic feature to nt tra'ct the state highway and incident ally plncc tbat community along tho course of the same. Surcy a state h'lgh way, designed to attract tourists which neglcctcfi the Bandon beach would make a most important oversight. pledged himself to keep up the work. In discussing rural credits he ox- thronged tho cafes and allnight res plained tho difference In the nature of tauranta, and the proprietors havo ox- finances pertaining to the growing and handling of crops and tho handling of stocks of merchandise. The latter can be readily turned, in tho average case whoreas the former requires time to plant, mature and disposo of. If ncc essary the merchant can hurry the process of marketing' and by putting on a special, sale nt a lessened profit can turn his goods into money. But there is no means of hastening tho farming process. Nature has to take its time nnd the man who invests time nnd money in raising a crop must take his time nnd allow the forces of nat ure tho requisite interval. For this reason, banking as applied to agricul turo and to merchandise differs radi cally. Tho nverago bank must bo ready at tiny time to call in its loans to meet the domnnds of depositors nnd can not engage in any business by which its funds may be tied up for long periods of time. A committee of twelve of which the , speaker was one, had beep nppointcd to investigate n proper system of rur al credits and report at the opening of Congress. Tho committee is to meet in . Washington a month before the opening of Congress nnd formulate a bill which is to be presented to the house early in the session. In legislating for farm loans it was not designed to provide for anything but improvements. The idea was to loan money for long time where a 5 per cent annual payment would ac complish tho payment of the princi pal in about 35 years as well, as yield a low rate of interest during th:t time. Each year would reduce the princlpnl by nn amount growing greater as tho amount required for interest wns lessened. The idea, asserted tho speaker, was not now bu was in practice nnd had been in pructico for many years in Europe Ho instanced Germany which after tho closo of wars in the past contury had found who,lo sections do populated and agricultural lands lying in idleness. They had with a rural credit system gone to work to rebuild mined farm, buildings nnd restore neglected lands to a high state of pro ductivity. To so good an end had this been ac compiisneu mat in a land in area no larger than Washington, Oregon, and Idaho, with soil relatively poor sup ported n population of sixty million nnd produced ninety percent of its re quirements agriculturally. For this perienccd the greatest business in their history, equaled only on the festivities of a New Year's eve. The impression prevails there that tho na tion is entering on an epidemic of un precedented speculation. Let us hope that sonic of the prdspcrity reached the Pacific coast with 1910. A BANDON-. GROCER'S PRAYER The following fervid appeal hs been hamjed in with a , request for publication. Another feature that lias developed lately to give the towns of the upper valley a warmer feeling toward us. The laying off of the Breakwater has given them a chance to surmise what their freight fates would havo boon had it not been for all water compe tition. Now when tho natural tenden cy asserts itself to get what the traffic will bear there is always the prospect of water competition to bring freights to a level rate. Tho Bandon harbor is important to the people of Coquille f.s it is to Bandon and until Vo linve rail connections, they havo the host of it. A sufficient and deep entrance to the Bandon harbor is important to all the people of the valley. reason tho congressman questioned the New Stock of Hardware Just in See our display in ROYAL HOLLAND BLUE GRANITE WARE Acid Proof A general line SHELF HARDWARE or See ub before you buy Starr-Mast Hardware Company Inasmuch as we havo to the best of our humble ability, relieved the hungry discomforts of those who hnve called upon us when they could not feed themselves, may they whom wo liavc thus cared for, have a deep scat- od and absolutely incurable conviction thnt grocers at the worst are sjmpl human: May they realize that the disease known as "financial cramps" is no re ipcclor of persons; that frequent ap plication of kind words and good wisl s, while pleasant to the car, do not in any way relieve the griping sensation of n run down monetary system and while all flesh is grass, it takes real Uncle Snm's money to buy oil and prunes. ' May they whom we havo always lastcncd to feed when hungry and when they could get no more from us because-' we had barely, enough left to satisfy our own hunger, and then go about knocking us, be suddenly and se verely attacked with a softening of tho heart and n losening of the purse trings to the end that we, their gro ccrs, may bo able to hold up our heads in the presence of our creditors and to this end we most devotedly pray. Amen OLD ESTABLISHED HOUSE .MAKES ICELLENT MATTRESS Sinco 182(5, the firm of HeywooJ Brothers nnd Wakefield Company have been famous for tho baby carriages, their chairs and their reed and rattan goods. Throughout- the United Slat es they havo established 'great distri inning points irom wnicn these pro ducts are sent to tho furniture stores in every city and town. A few months ago they began to produce mattresses, and already Heywood mattresses are becoming iccognizcd as the utmost in quality at tho lowost prices. Pcoplo who, as children, learned to know tho comfort of Heywood baby carriages arc wel coming an opportunity to buy n mat tress on which this same name nppoars True to the policy of tho institu tion, every Heywood Mattress is fully guaranteed, The newspaper announce ments state plainly that every Hoy- wood Mattress is sold under n "make ood" guarantee. Anyone who buys Heywood Mattress is sure of satis faction and services. The policy of Heywood Brothers & Wakefield Com If the Recorder had that "cusscdness column" in operation a nitch in it would bo filled this week by the act of some hoodlum who scarified the fence which Captiu Wiren has built in front of his property on tho Ocean Drive. Tho captain had put up a pick et fence, with posts with rounded tops and the whole treated to its first coat of paint. Some one with a hatchet scarified one of, the balls on one of the posts chipping cfT slabs of its rounded sides and spoiling the looks of the fence. A nimble by foot to Prosper and re turn by water one day recently dis closed to, tho Ruminntor several ways n which tho resources of tho const country are being turned into profit. Tho hike itself was an inspiration. The ferry road is one of the most picturesq of thoroughfares. Under warm sun its shaded isles were at their best. At Bullard's we wound in and- a- round the construction of tho Johnson mill end emerged upon the board walk over tho tide that lends to Prosper. The Dollar shingle mill was the first point of interest and the process of sawing up huge logs into shingles, proved very interesting. This re minds us of meeting recently a small mill lumber man who said he had never yet seen shingles in the process of making. - The big logs ar cut into discs, the eight of a shingle cr sawed until the pieces are within the capacity of a man to lift. 'Then an ingenious arrangement by which the block meets tho saw nt tho proper nglo slices off the shingles one at a time. They aro squared and the waste eliminated nnd dropped to the men be low who fit them into bundles. Into the hum and shriek of ripping nws in the Prosper mill wo went where the big fir logs slido back and forth before the saws and each trip lose a slico becoming that much near. er tho refuse pile. The 3 and feet wide slices drop with n bang on the waiting rollers nnd go sliding off to tho saws that make of each its dif feront grade of commercial lumber, Continuing its journey downward it is loaded onto trucks and goes to in crease tho size of some of the piles upon the dock which in turn arc taken to fill tho holds and beep decks of the I ocean sieumors. Tho "Hnndon was 'I)0 . GOLD BEACH GOSSIt- T0ss (From the Gold Beach Globe) The Globe has been reliably inform ed that R. L. Macleay has secured a contract for five hundred cords of tan bark of the Frank Tanning Company of San Francisco, to be pealed and de livered nqxt season. This will be good news to tho pcoplo of this section as the revival of tho tan bark industrv means the employment of many men and the distribution of thousands o dollars throughout the country. bod was broken last Friday for th Mnclcay store at Gold Beach. The building site instead of being located near the. school house as at first de cided upon, and announced in tho Globe was nearly chosen between the post ollice nnd the drug store. Material is now being hauled upon the ground and a crew of men began yesterday morning to lay the foundation. All tho men that can work to an advan tago vyll be put to work on tho build ing and rush it to completion as quick ly an possible. Tho Rustler came in last evening with a cargo of flour and e-asoline. After discharging its cargo, loaded with 4fi0 cases of salmon and several tons of wool at the Wcddorburn dock and came across to this side and look aboard the large boiler recently brought in hereby .1. R. Peters. Th boiler was found too largo for what ho wanted here, and it will be ex changed ior another one. While the people in this vicinity re gret very much to see Dr. nnd Mrs. Dunlap leave tho place they aro all glad to learn that Doctor and Mrs Robbins of Port Orford aro coming to tako tho field. Gold Beach is soon to have another hotel which will be built yet this fall The lumber for the building has been ordered from Coos Bay and is expect ed here on the next trip of the Roamer Mrs. J. G. Walker and Mrs. C. D. Lam son aro financing the deal and the building will stand on tho slightly point known locally as tho Old School house grounds. Both tho Walkers and the Lamsons are first class "hotel people, and a hotel under their man agement is sure of its full share of patronngc. A forest fire m the vicinity of Quosaten Butte called out many local men to combat the flame last week. Henry Colvm and Aco Cnrey went from hero but the firewns under con trol' by the time they reached the scene. Damo rumoj says that Mr. Clifford Suydnum and Miss Florence Sypher of Langlois were married at the home of tho bride's parents Mr. nnd Mrs. E. B. Sypher of Langloia last Sunday, Oct. tlth. The Globe joins the many friends of the young people in extend ing congratulations. Messrs Stafford & Bauer wore the successful bidders for the contract for tho Ladies Commercial CUib hall. The hall will be n building when complel- ed .'10 by 70 feet and tho foundation will be of solid concrete. The club will not attempt to erect the building this winter, but will get the found:: ion ready and early in the spring they hope to be able to finish up the build ing in nn up to dnto style. The sand and gravel for the' foundation is now on the ground nnd the mixing of the concrete will soon bo commenced. g LODGE DIRECTORY . 0 9 P1. m ' Mnsonlc- , Uandon Lodge, No. 130, A. F. & A. M. stated communications firat Friday after thu fulj pioon of each month. Special communication! Mnstr Mnsons cordially in7ited. WALTER SABIN, & C. K. BOWMAN, Sec. Eastern Star. Occidental Chapter, No: 45, O. 3. S. meets Friday evenings beforo and after stated communications or Masonic lodge. Visiting member? cordially invited to attend. ADELAIDE E. REYNOLDS, W. M. BLANCHE FAULDS. Secretary I .o. o! F. Ennoon Lodge, No. 133. i. O. F., meets every Wednesday ovenlnr Vmiting brothers in good standing cordially invited. GEO. H. SMITH, Secretary. L. I. WHEELER, T ' RchcKnrt ' '.vvan Rcbekah Lodge, No. 123, S O. O. F., meets second nnd --ur Tidnys nt I. O. O. F. hall. Trpn. tp"t members cordinlly invitee' MARY C. BARROWS. Secrctar- MARIAM WILSON, N &rs)U(i V BANDON CHURCHES w !.')'. 7 Presbyterian Chinch Srhbath Services: 10 a. m Sabbath dinoo It a. m PrenrhU.' 0:30 p. m. .. C. E. Prayer Meeting 7:30, p. m PrcntfhiiK Widnefday 8:00 p. m. Prayer tnectino- A cordial invitation is extended h nub:ic to attend theio services PP' WINFIELD 5?. SMITH. Pnctn- e , , PROFESSIONAL CARDS . Rr WADE Lawyer - ""'i DR. H. L. HOUSTON Physician & Surgeon Office in First National Bank bui ing. Hours, 9 to 12 a. in; 1:30 to 4 in; 7 to 8 in the evening. BANDON, OREGGj DR. SMITH J. MANN Physician & Surgeon Ofi'co in Elllngson Building. Hr.uJ 9 to 12 a. m; 1 to 5 p. m. BANDON. OREGO DV. L. P. SORENSEN Dentist Offit" in First National Bank bulb Inc. Tolephono nt house pnd offii BANDON. OREGO Methodist Church Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. 'Thiblic Service. 11 :00 n. m. Evening service, 8:00, p. m. TMd-Wock Service. Thursday. W AH who do not nttend church ela' whero aro invited to worship with n C. MAYNE KNIGHT, Pap- Episcopal Church Sunday School. KctiO n. m. Preachinir. 2nd. 4th nnd nth days at 11:00 a. m. nnd 3:30, p. DR. R. V. LEEP Physician & Surgeon Offien in Ellingson building, Phono T BANDON, OREGOij Dfc. ARTHUR GALE Physician & Surgeon Office In ENingson building. Office ohene, 3ti2. Residence phone, 353 BANDON. OREGON DR, 3. C. ENDICOTT Dentist Ohico In Elliiigsm building. Ofllc nhon 1241. Residence phono, 1101 BANDON. OREGON REV. WM. HORSFALL, Vicar M. E. Church South Sunday School. 10:00 n. m preachinp. 11:00 a. m. iSnworth Lenguo, 0:30 p. m. Preaching, 7:30 p. m. ' Prayer Meeting. Thursday. 7:30 "Missionary Socictv. Friday. 2,nO W. B. SMITH. Past"' Haptint Church indav School. 10:00 A. M Preaching Service. 11:00 A. W ELDER A B. REES ' PORT ORFORD REPORTS tianv is thnt fllO l-lialnmnx la 1.1....... or'""" "" , .-. ... . . ,.,,,, . , i.,:.... .. ... ... , right. If you buv a Hevwnod M. H"" l'"l'iK n as wo passed . , ...i i .. , . ni.-t.a mm jr.irM irum now 811011111 IOCI thnt your Heywood Mnttresi, has not Iteon giving ypu .satisfaction, then Heywood -Brothers & Wakefiohl Com puny will bo-ridy to give you n new mattress without further cost to you. Mnny good furniture - stores have quickly grsispi'd the opportunity to bundle thin splendid Hiiq of muttroMios While it in truii that tho profits on each a quality line are not Inrg. yet the furniture trade knows that It nipsii tho .unking of iimny friends n moiig Its iutointir to retmiuiMNul u The fnrmors market has prospered stoadily since it wns started and has done u flourishing business. Ono of tho main results of their lmsinoss op orations has been the securing tho trade of many customers who former ly had boon iiccuntonu-d to order their provisions from imtiT order houses, .Many iniichers had been nociiitnniwl lo buying their supplies In Inrixe nuun Utlos nnd Inylng It In oiuio yosr. Tho mimim is securing most of their pat- ronnL'ii imur. hiifh grade, L'uiirmitiMwl miu) widely1 ' "- wiMHinwi imi wbwwi, f4NMJW Mf WMH Wit tWO Of iui.i0 piMwuism nrau utw u Ittf'Uxw mttm ml umi ml lmi sum ruNUMi if sNiMusiiuii wUWi mnwIm) mUg tm to tlx wtarf Iim tlw Mj terullMM huh all UlXnyt nut uj mi tlmpt4 lm mmIwi uuatf, tuMMjiy, ior w muh M pv.nim I'lMMMW Uwdm HUM Ut Uwt (From Port Orford Tribune. W. J. Colcbrook wns in Port Orford last Thursday on his way to Bandon fiom whence he sailed by steamer to San Francisco. Mr. Colcbrook says that lus brother, George, will run the old home place at Corbiu, and that ho is 'going away indefinitely. lie has positions in view both in San Francis co nnd at Portland, nnd has not decid cd which place he will locate although ho expects to spend tho winter in tho bay city. C. -II. Walsworth, who owns the Handy Ranch near Gold Beach, passed up tho coast yesterday, moving black sand miner nnd his machine from Wedderburn to tho Gallier ranch near Bandon. The machine whic was built at Rogue river, embodies new ideas for saving beach gold, and It is claimed it has provou n surcoss. It will be given a through trial on tho Bandon beach. Several steamers, which had boon bar bound it Bundon for somo time crossed out safely from that port lust Wcdnoxlny forenoon. Tho sti'wmtrs Piiounix nnd Acme were hound for this plsce to complete their loud with ties. Thu Aume enmuil I lie Imr about Iwlf mi hour In odvnnse of thu I'htotuix, hill Die lutUir was not tUmwiniitkl clu4M fur Um piwleiv of tying p first tit Hie 4mA, Um9 bdm u- iNiMhjliaM bwt tut Uti e I .4 (U MiuJ lb mUtw aiwi fUwt Church of the Bret here Sunday Service?: Sunday FleW a. nv 1'renchincr seriv'co at a. m. nnd at 7:00 p. m. ISverybodv fnrdinllv inv:te'! T,. B. OVERHOLSER. Panto 1 I. WHEELER, WHEELER STUDIO Fine Portraits Amateur Finishing Ffcot St. ' East of Hotel Gallier V)R. I. L. SCOFIELD Dentist Office in Elllngson iJiiildinar i rooms lately occupied bj Attorney Feeney , Phono 1141 BANDON, OREGON CHATBURN & GARDNER Attorneys at Law Juit No 3 "irst Nat Bank BIdg., BANDON -rn4 I Hotel Bandon ! AMERICAN PLAN $1.00 and $1.50 per day. I Europeah Plan, rooms 50c, 75c & $1 per day t Eaton & Rea'se, Props. i?4V Read Tho Recorder tor cold and dampness w J Peffeciion Oil Heater A sure remedy for the cold, damp days. Inexpensive to op erate easily carried from room to room. Smokeless and odorless, Dealers everywhere, ' V .rw rriullt tnt Paul Oil Standard Oil Company MVifctfsmi , JtSIKlMI AAAAAAAAAAAA mm first fnmi, 11m iw r. I'Imwh 371. HmUm mUJ an iuHtH$ turn, U Utmr M Mis?""'; imm,