The Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1915-19??, January 18, 1916, Image 3

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    IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
of the State of Oregon, in and for
the County of Coos
Geo. R. Hancock, Plaintiff, vs Violet
Hancock, Defendant.
Summons
To Violet Hancock, the above named
defendant:
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF
OREGON
You ro hereby notified that you are
hereby required to appear and answer
the complaint filed against you in the
above entitled court and cause within
six weeks from the date of the first
publication of this summons, to-wit:
within six weeks from the 28th day
of December, 1915, and if you fail so
to appear and answer on or before
the first day of February, 1916,. that
date being the last d..y of the time
prescribed in tho order of publication,
the plaintiff, for want thereof will
tako judgment and decree against
you for tho relief demanded in this
complaint, a succinct statement of
which is as follows: That tho marriage
heretofore existing between you and
the plaintiff may be dissolved; that
tho plaintiff bo givn the future care
rnd custody of the parties' minor
children, namely, Vera Hancock, and
Howard Hancock, and tho defendant
be give i the future caro and custody
of Hie .nhor child Wain Hancock.
Service of this summons is made by
publication thereof, in puisuance of
and order made by Hon. John S. Coke,
Circuit Judge of the State of Oregon
for Coos County, dated the 20th day
of December, 1915, directing that ser
vice thereof bo made by publication
in the Rnndon Recorder, a weekly
newspaper published In Bnndon, Coos
County, Oregon, once a week for a
period of six weeks, commencing with
the issue of December 28th, 1915 and
ending with the issue of February 1st,
1916.
CHATBURN & GARDNER
Plaintiff's Attorneys
IN TUB CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OR OREGON, FOR THE
COUNTY OF COOS
M. G. Hamlin, Plaintiff, vs J. E. Ham
lin, Defendant:
Summons
To J. E. Hamlin, the Defondant, above
named:
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE
LOF OREGON, You are hereby re
quired to appear and answer the com
r.lalnt of plaintiff filed against you
in the ubovo entitled court and causo
on or before tho 22nd day of Feb.,
1916, the last day of the date pre
scribed in the order for publication of
summons herein, and if you fail so to
i.ppcar und answer, for want thereof,
tho Plaintiff will upply to the ubovo
court for the relief prayed for in her
complaint, a succinct statement of
which is as follows: a decree of this
court decreeing that the bonds of mat
rimony und marriage contract now ex
isting between tho plaintiff and tho
defendant be forever dissolved, and
that tho plaintiff be awarded the fu
ture, custody and ntUntenance of the
minor children, Janet Ibtmlin, and
Ella Hamlin, and for such other re
lief as to the Court may seem just in
tho premises. Service of this sum
mons is to be made upon you by publi
cation thereof for six weeks in the
Bandon Rocorder, a weekly newspapci
of general circulation, published in
Bandon, 8oos county, Oregon, pursu
ant to an order of John S. Coke, judge
of the above Court, nvado on the 12th
day of January, 1916, in which order
it is provided that tho first publica
tion of the within summons shall be
tho 18th of January, 1916 und tho last
Ulcycle Repairs Saw Kiting
and Repairing A Specialty
Plume 471
P. O. Box 174
S. D. Barrows
BANDON, ORKGON
Will tilt orilm (or Bicfrlft f ill liadi
tnJ Pope Mi0f-C)dt tho Cobin Row
bail Maian.
PURE DRUGS
Do you want pure drug
and drug sundries, fine
perfumes, hair brushes,
and toilet artioles? If
so cull oh ,
C. Y. LOWE, ltawloH
MMM Ml MM
BANDON TRANSFER CO.
Gritchi'll Jirothem, Props.
All kind of fit'Mvy mimI Wnht ilrwyliiK, Phone order
Itlvm prowj( Mllt'iillon, Jiiirii eonwr Flrxt k K4
mm, I'M J'roju'riy 'IVJiphoni! till,
publication the 22nd day of Feb. 1916.
CHATBURN & GARDNER
Attorneys for Plaintiff
The high school basket ball team
engaged the all-stars in a practice
game last Wednesday night in an en
gagement that was a rouser and fill
ed with interest On the high school
side it was an effort to give all as
pirants a chance to distinguish them
selves. John Moore and Errol McNair
were ricd out in the, first
half with Pullen, Webb and Johnson
completing the team. Opposing them
were Windsor, Chatburn, Laird, Har
vey and Armstrong. For the all
stars the plan of strategy appeared
to be to smother Johnson and Ptflen
and to let the rest be incidental; It
worked too and at the end of the 'half
the score stood 15 to 4 in favor of the
all-stars. In the second half Moore
and McNUlr gave place to Gallier and
Meyer, while for the all-stars Laird
and Harvey were succeeded by II. Mc
Nair and Bowman.
' Tho second half completely revers
ed the first. The high school boys
cnirie wt tho all-stars from behind and
evened tho score at the end to a draw
22 each.
An additional ten minuetcs was in
dulged in to play off the tie but as
each side increased its score by two
another rubber had to be played this
time the high school boys winning by
one. In the last half the all-stars
complained that the referee was hard
on them, setting them back for fouls
a number of times but in the play off
the school quintette displayed their
ginger and staying qualities and put
up a. pretty exhibition.
Ray Zumwalt of Port Orford, was
a County Seat visitor last Friday, re
turning Saturday with the necessary
documents from Johnnie Clerk to per
mit him to become a benedict. The
n'.imu of the bride to be on the docu
ment is Miss Gertrude Wagner a po
pular young lady of Elk river. Gold
Beach Globe.
CONSIDERING THE COW
O, let us cultivate the cow,
And try to educate her;
And let's by all means show her how
Culture might yet translate her
From simple bovine, crude of taste,
To quite a charming creature
With rather complex problems faced-
Surroundings quite important are;
Environment and tnainig
Just like heredity go far-
And culture knows no feigning.
A carpet, say in Boss's stall
Will make for true refinement;
The vulgar straw is, if at all,
For ordinary kine meant.
A phonograph might be installed
To play 11 Trovotore,
Or othor gems so well recalled,
Or bits of oratory.
Sonij paintings, too will lend a tone
Of culture to tho stable,
And boss will come into her own
So fur 03 she is able.
Doing Their Duly
Scores of Bandon Readers are learn
Ing the Duty of The Kidaeya
To filter the blood is the kidneys
duty,
When they fail to do this, the kid
neys aro weak.
Backache and other kidney ills ma)
follow.
Help the kidneys do their work.
Use Doan's Kidney Pills tho test
ed kidney remedy.
Proof of tho'tr worth is the follow
'ng:
U. W. Kezartco, carpenter and con
tractor, 102 N Flint St., Roseburg,
Oregon, says: "I still have confidence
in Doan's Kidney Pills. I have had no
nerious kidney complaint for a long
time, thanks to this medicine. How
ever I have taken Doan's Kidney Pills
for a slight troublo with my bladder
und have had the same fine results. 1
believe they aro tho best of all kidney
und bladder medicine.
Prlco 60c, at all dealers. Don't siin
jly ask for a kidney remedy get
Doan's Kidney Pills the same that
Mrs. Kebelbeck had. Foster-Milburn
Mr. Kozartee had. Foster-Milburn
-i- jirops., Huffalo, N. Y. adv.
RECIPE TOR CRAY HAIR.
TV luklf Uit of water aM 1 o. HUf
Hum. n wiinll box of IWrlxi CouvouuJ,
unit Vi ox. of glycerin. Atly to tlia luiir
Iwlco n wrrk until It twroniea tho iltudruJ
liud,t, Any tlruuKUt ran cut UiLn ui or
you ciui mil It at home at vnry UtUu cokt
Kull dlrndlou fur miiklmr and two com
In each boi dI lUrt4 (imHtM4 It will
Krii'luuMy lUrk.n tttrciknl, fcidixt Knt
tutlr, mik rcmovm il.iii.lrurt It la utctl
tent for ful'liitf luilr un.1 will make Uai
hulr irt uiitl tl" It nil) r. ! - lor II..
fcculli, U nut vll ur M: t , a'ul I u i. i
tub off
MM
Humttta-txam
ANOTHER WAR WHOOP
Yes, it is I, the unterrified
The ambidextrous, the musical,
I, who tread the ridge board
Of the roof and commune
With the precession of the equinoxes
Who snatch the passing comets
From the sky and pound
Their heads against the moon
And fill the air with
Sputtering sparks.
It Is I, who sing
And trill and warble
The old songs of the troubadors
In the moonlight night and
Jn the murky darkness
Of the sodden, sullen, storm;
It is I, the limber;
The acrobatic, who can
Waltz across a tight rope
Or climb a lightning rod
With case and graceful agility
It 13 I, tho brave,
The valiant, the courageous;
Who snort with joy
To sniff the Btnoke of battle
Who have led the van
In many a forlorn hope
And brought victorious peans
To many an unaccustomed corner:
But I, who ca,n dodge
Anything from a brick or
A bootjack to a
Decayed turnip,
Am kept a dodging
Theso days in Bandon
When the boy who in
f he time of peace and
Good will was presented
With an air rifle, goes
Forth to make life a terror
For everything that moves.
For myself, I don't mind it,
t'm used to it
The B-Bs ratUe off of my
Tough hide, as though
They were paper pellets;
Out the poor birds
They spend their days
in one continual flutter of alarm;
Boys with 'air rifles
Jr sling shots,
Little boys, medium seized boys,
tiven the big boys take to the trail
Of tho little inoffensive warbler
Vnd chase him from cope to thicket
Until, somewhere in some dark corner
(t gets a moment's peace.
Come on Boys, if you must shoot
Hake a target of me,
I'm used to it and I can stand it
Yes, if you must hurt something
(f you feel something within you
That wont be satisfied
Unless you have a living target
Try me
And I'll grin and stand it.
I'll grin if it cracks my face
('11 be cheerful
If I wade through mud and blood
A foot deep.
Don't take the weak sister
The house cat,
Take me
Take something of your size.
There's plenty of me.
I am a million strong,
I infest the back yards and alleys
Of Bandon, and I'm game
From the points ot my whiskers
To the artistic curl
At the end of my tail.
And I can take care of myself
Believe me.
I waltz on the toombstoncs
And pranco on the chimney top3
And chew charcoal.
Come on boys, let the birds alone
If thcre'B mardcr in your hearts
Take to my trail
And I'll lead you a danco
Or die a trying.
The articltf hwadtfd "Tiring of Fad
ism" in anotlrar column, taken front
the Tax Liberator, in ihteruwting but
by io means conclusive.
Weill After the weather man got
last week out of his system, he must
have felt better.
A tmn, the otiier day, confuted the
city recorder's olllcu with Urn llundoii
Ktwmlur's Miu-tuin and tried to nuv
us his occupation tax, Of rour w
rwruiwtl o rm-ivs It. Hut don't iiuhu
llm UlliUkH of Uktnif your burk tub
n'Dl)m or H-livwul fur Din jlsiuioii
KtrMUrr to U rily hfunler W will
wiim )wu oul a riji tiny old Hum
tho high schools and colleges would
be a good thing for the boys and for
the country. It would help the stud
ents, physically, give them self re
liance, mentally; and last and most
important of all it would make them
amenable to dicipline, teach them re
spect for authority and regard for
national good faith and honor,
o
You can't keep Teddy Roosevelt off
the front page. Possibly Blaine and
Bryan have within the memory of n
generation been his nearest rivals for
continuous occupancy of the lime light
but neither has been his equal. His
enemies have been his principal boost
ers. Usually their accusations have
been so absurd that it has reacted in
his favor.
ANOTHER BANK
North Bend is to have a now bank
if rumors may be relied upon and it
will open sometime in March, it is
said. The parties who are to establish
the second business of thisnature
there are trying to keep the matter
secret for the present and the names
(ro withheld. However, party who
was on the bay recently and investi
gated the situation thoroughly in de
parting declared his intention of re
turning very soon and starting tho
bank. Record.
o
Mrs. N. A. Pitner arrived in Port
Orford last Saturday from her former
home in Iowa. Mrs. Pitner is 72 years
of age, yet she made the trip, in. the
winter time and nlone, and arrived at
her destination feeling as sprightly
as when she started. She comes here
with the intention of living in the
future with her son, E. M. Pitner.
Port Orford Tribune.
T. J. Fromm returned to Port Or
ford the first of the week from several
days spent visiting nt Rogue river.
Report has it that Mr. Fromm who
is a competent young man, will be a
democratic aspirant for the nomina
tion eis sheriff and that one of the mis
sions of his visit to tho county seat
was to build up his political fences.
Port Orford Tribune.
Tho loss of eleven head of fine dai
ry cows by Tony Canonica, who has
the Alf. Miller place on Rogue river
leased, promises to remain u mystery
The cattle after being fed, were turn
ed into a field shortly before noon
where they had been running for somo
time. At 3 o'clock in the afternoon
several of the herd were found in a
bad way and by G o'clock that evening
11' were dead.. Several had a touch
of the disease or poison and recover
ed, but only one that was sick enough
to lie down got up again.
Mr. Miller the owner of the plac.
has farmed it for many years, but is
unable to assign any reason for tho
death of the cattle. He says that it
W highly improliably that some per
son could have given the cattle poi
son, and yet they were being cared
for as usual, and so far as known
stock has never died on the place from
ammillu.
m
eating natural poison,
The contents of one of Ihe cow's
stomach has been sent to the State
Veterinary for examination in hopes
that the cause of this wholesale loss
can be ascertained. Port Orford Tri
bune. ' i
TOM SAWYER TACTICS
IN OUR CRIMINAL TRIALS
The consuming object of the trial
judge is to try to conduct tho game
according to the rules. He cannot be
concerned with anything else. With
innumerable rules and their refine
ments, and with the skilled plnyor for
the prisoner endeavoring constantly
to get into the case some error that
will enable him to ask u court of re
view to sot the whole thing aside, in
tho event that his client is convicted
how can the presiding judge regard the
merits of the trial?
His wliolen ttention must bo center
ed in one consuming purpose to make
his conduct of the case stand, upon ro
view by lhe court above him.
Many of these rules are so extra
ordinary as to strike us with wonder.
One would ordinarily think that if
a man were suspected of n crime the
practical way to get at his guilt or in
nocense would be to make him explain
all the supicious circumstances with
which he seemed to be connected. This
would bo tho direct, common sense
way of getting at the thing. But it
is not the way the game is played. A
man suspected of having committed
a crime is the one person connected
with the whole affair who is not re
quired to explain his suspicious acts!
Every innocent bystander is haled in
to the court, put on the witness stand
and grilled. The remote, intimate de
oils of his life are gone into. He is
insulted and flayed. His motives are
questioned, and every event in his life
that may be thought to affect his cre
dibility as a witness is dragged into
the open. And 0,11 this happens while
tho prisoner charged with the crime
is not required to open his mouth a
bout it.
It would be simple and direct to
question the prisoner, but that would
not be according to rules. And one
must follow tho Rules, as Tom Saw
yer explained to Huck Finn in n scene
of immortal memory. Tho direct
Huckleberry wished to effect the es
cUpe of Jim, the runaway slave, by
prying off tho staple on the cabin
door. But Tom Sawyer stood for the
regular practice.
"No, the way all the best authorities
does, is to saw the bed leg in two, and
leave it just so, and swallow the saw
dust, so it can't be found and put
some dirt and grease around the saw
ed place so the very keenest sencskal
enn't sec no sign of its being sawed,
nnd thinks tho bed leg is perfectly
sound. Then, tho night you're ready
fetch the leg a kick, down she goes,
slip off your chain, and there you uro
Nothing to do but hitch your rope
ladder to the battlements, shin down
it, break your leg in the moat be
Prince Albert is
such friendly tobacco
that it just makes a man sorry he didn't get wind of this
pipe and cigarette smoke long, long ago. He counts it lost
time, quick as the goodness of Prince Albert gets firm set
in his life! The patented process fixes that and cuts out
bite and parch I
Get on the right-smoke-track coon as you know howl
Understand .yoursef how much you'll like
Fringe Albert
the national Joy
It stands to reason, doesn't
Watch your step!
It'i eaijr to change the thape
and color of unialable brtncli
to imitate the Prince Albert
tidy red tin, but it i impottibla
to imitate the flavor of Prince
Albert tobacco 1 The
patented practn
protects that I
feril.l (III
cause n rope-ladder Is nineteen foot'
too short, you know and th'erc-s
your horses and your trusty vassals,
and they scoop you up nnd fling you
across a saddle and away you go, to
your native Langudoc, or Navarre, or
whercever it is. It's gaudy, Huck,
I wish there was n moat to this cabin.
If we get time, the night of the es
cape, we" dig one."
The prisoner can stand silent, for it
is one of theso rules that only is ho
not required to explain his suspicious
acts in the affair but that no inference
shall be drawn against him because
he refuses to explain them.
Nobody is able to see today how
one charged with a crime could be in
jured by being compelled to explain
the circumstances that seem to bring
him under suspicion. If he were in
ocent, ono would iningino thdt he
would be anxious to make this expla
nation. If he were guilty then tho
determination of his guilt would be
the quicker arrived at, and in the more
direct fasliion. Melville Davison Post
in the Saturday Evening Post.
TRANSMISSION AND REAR AX"
LE LUBRICATION IMPORTANT"
The importance of Transmission
and Rear Axle Lurication is often
overlooked by the automobile owner
nnd truck operator and considered a
minor detail. The lubrication of theso
parts is fully important as the lubri-
cation of the motor, states a recent
bulletin gotten out by the Standard Oil
Company's auomobilo experts.
The entire load of the car or truck
is taken by the two teeth in the trans
mission nnd he two teeth in he rear
axle which are in mesh. Theso teeth
should be septiruted by u film of oil,
othcrwiso the motor will fail to de
liver the power at tho rear wheels
that it should; the gears will wear
rapidly and become noisy.
In the lubrication of the ball bear
ings, it is necessary to maintain a
film of oil between the ball, come nnd
race; otherwise these parts will not
receive correct lubrication. This will
result in excessive bearing wear,
throwing the gears out of alignment,
rendering them noisy, and will cr.uso
n considerable loss of power nt this
point.
Oil is more suitable lubricant for
this purpose, stales this bulletin, than
hard grease, because of its fluidity
nnd ability to penetrate tho minuto
clearances between tho ball and race,
which is only one-ten-thousandth of
an inch. Another reason why hard
grense is not so suitable ns oil is that
tho revolving gears will cut a, path
through the hard grease and allow
the gears to run dry.
Pacific Coast refiners are claiming
that lubricants made from Asphalt
base, California crude, give best re
sults nnd aro substantiating their
claims by tho recent findings of pro
minent motor engineers nnd the Ex
position Juries, as well 6s records of
results of actual service.
mmohe
it, that if men all over the
nation, all over the world,
prefer P. A. that it must
have all tho qualities to
satisfy yourfondestdesires?
Men, get us right on Prince
Albert I We tell you this
tobacco will prove better
than you can figure out,
it's so chummy and fra
grant and inviting all the
time. Can't cost you more
than 5c or 10c to get your
bearings I
Buy Print Alktit tvryuihtrt
, fslurre talj" In loppy it J
tut it, St I HJy itJ lint, 1041
lutnJtomo fMHiitJ anj lialf'tvnJ
lln l,umlJin-unJ-in Ihtl Utiy
I rtnlut'glnn imunj kumlduf
uilh HM)ngfm4tliHtr tlt that
Afpf Iht tubutm Ih iwA Ml ft
litml
K. J, REYNOLDS
A uuj ff mJiiury ji.ilmijuu Jn