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About The Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1915-19?? | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1916)
r Oo o it In f f f It I ' 1 ( ii I o I M (4 Miss Mary E. Brown, 'Nationrl Superintendent of Moral Education and Race Betterment of W. C. T. U, Comes Recommended as Lecturer of Most Wonder ful Ability i ' ' 'maaaaaaaM'i2maaaaMaaahl& .r -r'i'fw Miss Mary E. lirown, National Sup erintendent of Moral Education and Hace Betterment of the W. C. T. U. is going to be heard in Bandon next Sa turday and Sunduy nights, in the Knights of Phythias hull. Whi't the exact subjects upon which she is go ing to lecture arc, haB not yet been decided, but tho general topic will bo raco betterment. Miss Urown bears a nntion wide re putation us ono of thu most interest ing and well informed lecturers on rn 'o betterment problems in tho Unit c 1 States. Her tours havo reached ii.lo every nook and comer of tho coun t y nnd her list of recommendations ould fill a largo volume Since the closo of the Panama Pacific exposition -v horo she was director of tho World's t nd W. C. T. U. exhibit, Miss Brown has boon lecturing throughout Califor r'o and her arrival hero is proceeded 1 y the following letter of recommen Don't Give Yourself THE BANK I RECORDER 1 mW- BANDON RECORDER, BANDON, ORE. I; dation from Mrs. Sara J. Dorr, Pre sident of tho W. C. T. U. of Califor nia. "It gives me great pleasure to ex press my appreciation of the excel lent work of Miss Mary E. Urown, Na tional W. C. T. U. Superintendent of Moral Education and Kacc Betterment Miss Brown presents truths that should be heard by both old and young in a most inspiring and convincing manner which cannot fail to impress her hearers. Words cannot express the value I place upon the work this noblo women is doing. It has been our privilago to have her at several points in California and I trust that sho will return to us for further work next year." Miss Brown comes to Coos county from Eureka, Cal., and arrived in Mnrshficld, Sunday morning. Dur ing her tour of the county sho will bo accompanied by Mrs. Blnnche Fan Ids Cause To Regret It because you re'ee'ed placing your valuables in a safety de posit vault. Many have re jrxeted their tardiness inacting fires and burglars have cost them dear. Anything valu able is worth taking care of. Our vaults are fire and burglar proof. We invite your inspec tion. OF BAND ON CLUBBING COMBINATIONS The Recorder and the Evening Telegram both one year, $4.50. The Recorder and the Daily and Sunday Journal one year .$0.50. The Recorder and the Daily Journal both one year $5.25. ( The Recorder and the Sundav Journal, both one year for $3.00. The Recorder and the Semi-Weekly Journal, both one year for $2.25. The Recorder and the Weekly Orcgonian both one year for $2.50. The Recorder and tho Daily San Francisco Bulle tin both ono year $3.50. The Recorder and the Tri-Woekly New York World, both one year $2.50. of litis city who is County President of the W. ('. T. U. and who was instru mental in bringing the lecturer here. Lumber Market Continues Strong Upward Movement 0 Those who predicted that the rapid rise in the lumber market two months ago was but 'a flurry and would be fol lowed by a destructive fall within a few weeks, appears to have overlook ed a loop-holo in their calculations. Not only have the prices on nil grades jf lumber risen since the first day of the year, but tho market is glutted .villi orders that cannot bo filled, the Icmand being strong enough at prc .ent to warrant tho opening of all mills, largo and small, on the Pacific , coast, without fear of overproduction In Portland alone, last week, orders were placed for over 20,000,000 feet of Douglas fir, valued at between $".00,000 and $750,000. Tho orders lamo from nil parts of the world, ono r.ora a European government for iOO.OOO feet which because of tho sear .ity of ocean tonnage on this coast, ivill have to bo shipped by rail to the Atlantic coast. Another big order s that of the Great Northern railroad lor 1,000,000 feet, to bo used in the onstruction of freight cars. A new uso for spruce lumber, of which there is an unlimited amount in Coos county, is indicated in an or der for S0.000 feet of this material that has been -placed with ono of tho Columbia river mills. The lumber is to bo used by the allies in the con struction of aeroplanes and, besides paying ?00 to $80 a thousand for tho product, the consumer is to pay the freight charges of 2.25 per hundred pounds. DAWNS BREAKING To you, my brother slave You dwellers, of the cave. To you producers all I mike this call: Awake, arise and ponder And see your brothers yonder . Enslaved, because you will it, To you, I must instill it, All bondage, will break If you are wide awake. Ycu tre sleeping giant, Jnct try to te defiant i..r vrfcolt world will shako, jm are wide awake, For misters you will toil, In factory or on soil Awata and think thoa nr.y be Wort; for Mollic and the baby. Or can you never learn jTo keep, what you cam I .vhy snffor a reduction f-i-Yom your production I Know, a police for your master To your family, spells disaster For he couldn't live in style I If you won't feed htm nil the while . Yon create all wealth ' And you mill your health '?o hungry and be satisfied .So you pan feed a parasite ! Think oh brother, what a shame i You, that bcir.s a human name, j To be satisfied with this j Ami lot everything be his S'itistic docs declair cr each MUIom ;mm "i-ouaand tramps arc made Thousand homes made sad You have it in Your power To qtul this misscry shower On lection day Don't throw your vote uway, 1 i t. make thu .uoni vanish All hunircr you can banish ( . 'si- Humsnv sAi J. P. DeGESEN .... N. C. NILSON DIES IN SAN FRANCISCO A telegram reached Port Orford last Friday announcing the deuth of N. C. Niclson at San Francisco. Mr. Niclson wlis born in Denmark 50 years ago. He came to Port Or ford in 188G and engaged in tho black smith business, which he followed for many year3, finally going from this into the general merchandise business He conducted a store here for soverl years and in tho fall of 1910 sold his stock of goods to A. S. Johnston. After this he made a visit to his former home in the old country, returning to Port Orford for a while in 1011, and then going to California where ho has since resided. Honest loyal to his friends, public spirited land ever willing to lend a helping hand to tho needy, the dec eased won many warm friends dur ing his years of residence in Curry county. On May 9, 1887, Mr. Niclson was united in marriage to Mrs. Alice Long who now survieves him at this place. His remains are being shipped here for internment on the steamer Phoenix, which siled from San Fran cisco yesterday. Tribune. BROOKINGS SCENE RENEWED ACTIVITY Big Improvements Planned New Company Absorbs Interests of Hrookings Company and Will Spend Large Sum in Building Wharf and' I tilargin : M "-Opacity of lt'0,000. 000 Per Year Planned. Uronkinirs. the lumber town on tho I southern end of Curry county coast, is to be the scene of considerable acti vity during the coming year if the J plans now being considered by tho C. ! & C. Lumber company are carried out. .Tho company recently acquired the holdings of the Brookings Timber and Lumler company in Oregon, and 12,- 000 acres of redwood in Del Norte i . i i county, ine capitalization nus ueen increased from $1,500,000 to $5,000, 000 and they arc figuring on making improvements to the mill and logging plants that will enable them to turn out 100,000,000 per year. Hand in hand with tho improve ment to the plant will come improve ments nnd enlargements of tho town of Brookings. Two hotels, an ofHc(, store, warehouse and about 21 cottag es are to lo built and the logging road utf. !l nl; I f.i r i int the llr nml Inter into tho redwood. Active work on all of those improvements, howovor, will not hegin or two or three months. Until that timo they will muko no additions to their pro wnt working foreo of about -18 men. Brooking U on a tort of Iwy thut ojkh iiitu llw Partfi without any bur llwwtofore, the lumbor IkhiU hnvo laid iHt(ti h dbtMNM wit from ilwr mm) lutvt 1mm kMiJi by miIjU. Plum ft aw feiny tJnwH for u wburf U W. A. ACKERMAN IS OUT FOR SENATOR Seeks to RepresentftK-.Curry Experienced in Gill-Net and Seine Fishing... He will Oppose Any Le gislation to Hamper Industry in Section. Stands For Fewer Laws And Better Enforcement.. .Gradu ate of U. of O. Law School. Mr. Ackerman has -been a resident ?i Oregon for 14 years. Ho received da early education in Wisconsin and crucd his later studies in Oregon. After preliminary law offici work in iro:edure, he entered in tho Univer .ity of Oregon Law Department in ho year 1911, graduating in 1911, and .incc then has been a practicing at orney in Marshfield. The platform on which l.o will run in the coming election is clear and ex plicit, and he stands ready to listen to the wishes of the people'. He stat o; his position as follows: "If I am nominated and elected I will, during my term of office, work toward clari fying tho existing laws in order to do away with the unnccessaary part of '.he repeated and costly interpreting of what wo have in our statues. I ill work to prevent the enacting of ew "Ijiws" on subjects nnd remedies n which the pooplo are satisfied we avo sufficient law. And I will re resent Coos and Curry counties for efully and energetically so that pro isiops will be made for their needs, lencral, nnd not private, benefits vill control my actions". He will have printed after his name n the official ballot the following vords, which show tho earnestness of lurpose governing his intended ac !ons: "Careful and consistent legis. lation, only." He further says that he hasn't any political sins or blunders to apologize for; and that he is, moreover, prcpar :d to do tho work, and has no "strings' tied on. He gives tho people of Curry county the nssurance that every effort will bo made, in tho event of his nomina tion and election, to prevent any ham pering on the fishing industry of Cur ry county. Mr. Ackerman has had actual ex perience ns n gill-net nnd seine fish erman at tho mouth of tho Columbia river, having been engaged in that work for a livolihood for thrco seasons prior to his comencing his law studies above related. Ho is thoroughly con versant with the importance of this industry to tho people of Western Oro on, and more immediately to the pcpplo nt tho various fishing waters along the coast. Ho has studied it from every angle, and can be depend ed, upon to act along practical and be neficial lines only. SUPREME COURT HOLDS ROSE BUUG BOND ISSUE IS VOID Declaring contracts entered into by ihe city of Roseburg, thejRoseburg & Eastern Railroad Co, and the Ken Jail Lumber corporation void and un constitutional, tho supremo court to day enjoined the enforcement thereof and forbade the issuance of 300,000 bonds to be applied to tho building of railroad. On June 3, 1915 the voters of Ro cburg. decided in favor of a. proposi tion to issue bonds in tho sum of.$300 000 for tho construction of a railroad from Roseburg to a point on tho North Umpqua river at its intersec tion with the western boundary of tho Cascade range forest reserve. John Hunter apd others brought suit to enjoin the enrrying out of the contract and issuance of tho bonds. Journal. 'OREGON" MAY COME FOR BIG CELEBRATION W. A. Reid, of tho Marsluicld en tertainment comittec, received a joint telegram from Tom T. Bennett and L. J. Simpson, in San Francisco advis ing of tho railroad celebration for the last week in July or the first of Au gust, but keeping the same open so it can be made definite when the con struction is so well advanced the com. pany can name the dates. Messrs, Bennett and Simpson ex pect to secure an order from the gov ernment to liavo tho battleship Ore gon sent to Coos Bay during tho brid ge celebration. NOTICE All those who with to vote at the Primry election, May 19th, muit re gister U-foru April lit, with C, II, tnk or County C)rk, Hf;Mrar Zeek will bu In hi office all day earh WtHlriMulay, and Haturday and Hatur liny uvunlngn. No voter un be aivorn Ih Mt thu Primary vhcthn. No rlian; tar ft'Kl!l'i' Mr. 7mY tvill r gfclr vl nt krnj ThurJiy, Vunh U. MM 2 FOR RENT: S lots and 4 room house hp. Se tG. Ji Armatronr. for ettini: tl'.Sa'ilBr 4i W. H. wigant, Langioi, Oregon. REMOVAL SX1.Z. Will srsll my ntir rtAeV t 20 nr cent discount for lite. nextW days. Purnitur Store on Oregon Are. S-Sl-14 The place Chat pays you to investi gate is tho Square Deal, op. Grand Theater. The shoes wo sell are nb solutejy guaranteed to bo solid leather thruout and prices lowest in town. Shoo repair shop in connection. FIRST CALL for an army of people to call nt Mitchell's Furniture Store on the Hill to buy and all kinds of housohold goods at a removal sale Big 20 por cent discount. 3-21.t4 Call early and get first chance in tho big price slaughter at Mitchell's Fur nituro Store on the Hill. Anything and everything 20 per cent discount. 3-21.11 Win. Candlin, tho Coquille commer cial man, was calling on his custom ers in Bandon, last Thursday. GOOD NEWS Many Bandon Renders have Heard It And Profited Thereby "Good news travels fast and the many back sufferers in this vicinity iro glad to learn whero relief may be ''ouml. Many a weak, lame and ach ng back is bad no more, thanks to Joan's Kidney Pills. Thousands upon .housands of people are telling tho ;ood news of their experience with .his tested remedy. Here is an exam plo worth reading: Mrs. II. M. Bcckwith, 814 Oak St Grant's Pass, Ore., says: "I used Doan'a Kidney Pills in my old homo .n Montana and have also used them hero. I havo suffered much from weak kidney, brought on, I think by im pure drinking water. Doan's Kidney Pills strengthened my kidneys and im proved my health." e Price 60e, at at ealers. Don't fin. ply ask for a kilney remedy get Doan'a Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Beckwith had. Foster-Milburn T props.,, Buffalo, N.VY. adv. .wvra Position Wanted By willing and obedient worker to help in hemesand business houses U heurs every day. Will carry message and bring jn stantanMns answers. Can help merchant solicit . businoss or can do errands ,for . house, wives. Can summon persons in distant cities ns.well as at r home. Can give references from ovar, 8,000 . satisfies - em ployers in Coos, Curry and Western Douglas counties. Phono or wriU T E. Lephone, care Coos and Curry Telephone Company, City. My poor lady's foot is again beautiful" What a joy and comfort to be able to wear thoso nice, n bot without on c bit ol pin. A. trim, ntt ooHl a Joy fsftver - in xhinfi j(r inc foot it n bmlntion. Why continu to lufffr loot torturu nd Ih ditromfort rf lll-ilufxn ihni hfn "ttunlon Comfort" U guvinud to giv you H.r f..t md ta look Ilk (lilt, but h nuw war mill a Ii am gain and la happy with out pa In ur H I a 1 1 luring Kunlona, Instant Bunion Rollaf -uv4 primtnrnt tui. Ovir 7J)O0 tut4 !! y-.l inlly worki miom. "Ruiuon trnlutl fniUMly tloni all jnllmmtion n4 iluUy Mdiun ih Ixinion, lyr after Itytr. raa ijiMpiifarM. ly I today u phtiin ff0 aat If y"j art not Mififxd, Ei ynu I'uV y'Mir my o, ti r.iLd auiiiii far alhxi thar a UH lit row UfQ ihrr mm than idi.n4 n itrv rrfiqjaa w. imi wru rorin rnary Mm Had u C, Y, fOWfi, prnyKl.t 4f water. 11 U mk iml tlw mn mmf Us miiy Ur Mute Hfr mm shwi & Miik m mmm