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About Western world. (Bandon, Coos County, Or.) 1912-1983 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1915)
Ma rah field have been stopping in I I -p- p • Bandon this week while Mr. Coppie LOCH! 1 it* DUSinUSS superintended the moving of the Ool den Rule store to ite new location, Mrs. C. I. Starr returned via Rose- burg Friday from a visit to the Ex- position at San Francisco, On her way back she visited Shasta Springs and Ashland, tlie two great watering '«laces of the western part of the United States. A. S. Russell, who left here in Sep- tember for a business anil pleasure visit at M'alla Walla, Wash . and oth- er parts of the Northwest, returned to Landon this week He was acconi panted here by J. L. Griffen, who is looking over tlie country. JWOF OVEfò YOUR HEAD! j ASK any bit* mess mail in town whether he has a CHECK BOOK Zi OVER HIS HEAD. CERTAINLY he lias. He couldn't go busi- ness an I he couldn't live at home unless he had. More and more these days the AVERAGE MAN is PROTECTING his FAMILY BE- NEATH the COVERS of ti BANK BOOK. Of course you want to select a RELIABLE INSTITUTION where SERVICE is PERSONAL. LET US PUT A COVER ON YOUR HOME (the JFirst NntuuiaG&uik of tLiaiiftuit Is Still llnceriain Railroad*. Mu; X. t Place tlrdi rs til After I-irM of lh"ceiiil<er — I.affaw Visits City. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. M. I.affaw turned via Roseburg Friday from Portland where they spent a day at the lion........ the former's parents, ter visiting tlie Exposition at Francisco. They They took tlie Northern •learner from San Francisco Pacific steamer to Portland, rtland, and state stale that there The were 520 passengers aboard. A Garfield today sold a second sea was very rough and in spite of hand four cylinder Studebaker to A the size of the boat it rolled and tos- Dufort and Clyde E. Stearns, who sed as much as the smaller boats do. will leave in the machine Friday Mr I.affaw also attend« d to business morning for Bend Elbert Dyer will matters in San Francisco, being par drive the car for them as far as Ash ticularly interested in the tie market. land, where he expects to spend the He states that the tie business is winter. quite uncertain at this lime and tiiat w Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Wetherbee of it will probably be the first of De Langlois arrived on tlie Kilburn a i cember before orders ari placed by few days ago from California, where the railroads. He hopes to receive hey have been visiting since the doc-"'enough orders to keep a large force tor disposed of his interests in the ct makers busy during the coming Rar ranch. They return to Curry winter, but as yet there is no assur county to obtain their personal effect ance of any great activity in that line. and will then move to Portland. Engineer C. R. Wright of the gov XORTII ernment service returned to Bandon tlie first of the week from Siuslaw It lias been asked "how is Bandon where he lias been in charge of a going to make up the $4,006 defi harbor and bar survey for several ciency for next year's revenue?" weeks, He states they are not muk- estimated expenses for carrying ing as good headway as they would tlie city government during 1910 is under better weather conditions. $14,200, while tlie revenue in sight sale imin for the L. L. «tore, lias be«*n in the Junior Engineer James Polhemus, at tlie present time will be short tlie week returning from in tlie absence of Engineer C. R. former amount. North Bend's bud in <lurry county. Wright, came over from Marshfield get calls for $24,583 to do business Frank V. t'utterlin, tlie genial Itunde of Bridge was in Saturday to look after tlie closing in 1910 witli $18,583 in sight, leav traveling sal« small Im been rrabbin latter part of the week business of the month on tlie govern ing a deficit of $0,000. Tile Harbor orders in tills section the past week visit witli her family. ment work. Dan Miller, who lias been says "Hie deficit is planued to be met Ben Itatlae returned to Bandon •d to the up river point. doing all the •figgerin "figgerin' ’ ’ " ’ during by collection of delinquent street from Bend, Oregon, for a short visit Chief Wright's absence has been assessments, back taxes, tines and li- with ills sister, Mrs. Ed. Howes. When you buy coal from us you burning the midnight oil t getting i censes, wharfage charges and tin five Floyd Barklow returned last week get Riverton Coal, the best and the things ready for tlie payroll, per cent coming out of street and from California, where lie lias been eheape st. Get our special prices on Two large plate glass windows ar- sewer assessments." North Bend is taking in the 1» «posit ion tins past I wo 3 and 5 ton lots. Dippel & Wolver rived on the Elizabeth and they will planning on a 10 mill levy, too, while months. ton. O28tf. be placed in tlie Ellingson building, Bandon, at the last election refused Miss Alla Willard of Mr; Robert Marsden and son re repairing the break in the Boyle to raise tlie Io mill limit. «town for a week «nd turned to liieii home at Marshfield, Jewelry company window, This will home of her parents, 5 Monday after a visit in this city. allow Boyle to remove all evidence O R. Willard Mr. Marsden Coquille to of his sign “the window is broke but we are not" which occupied tlie Deputy Sheriff W. ('. Laird was in meet them. the city Monday, servin': civil papers ('opp)e of corner for several months; it being and Mrs. superfluous to tell tlie public that lit* The County Court lias made appli isn't broke. cation to the Department of Agricul Tills week in tlie window of Dip- ture to have a road engineer sent to pel Ai Wolverton's office is being dis Coos county to make a survey. Ac played one of tlie largest heads of cording to U. S. Highway Engineer cabbage ever raised in the Bandon I I’. H. Burrell, who was recently in lection, to the best knowledge of tlie tlie county, Tt would only cost th«' World. TH«* giant head is said to county the man’s traveling expenses. weigh approximately 30 pounds or Jitney owners of Coquille who had nor«*, stripped of all surplus leaves been soliciting at the depot have and weighed about 40 pounds root been deprived of their privilege by I and all. It was grown in the east the depot agent there, They are ern part of the city on the F. J. quite "put out" about it and it is «'lesson property on Ferry creek. said expect to engage attorneys to Tlie famous Houdini, who is start fight out the matter in court. Jitneys ing Orpheum-goers at Portland this between Coquille and Myrtle Point week, has been recognized as H. O. liavo been tai ing a great deal of Houdeen, who appeared in Bandon busine* from th«* trains. Dromedary (’ocoantit, Date? ami Datenut and other cltieH of tlie county fea A scov. loaded witli two carloads' Butt' t . W<■. :• >n ( "I'kin - :tnd Salad oil. Minuet turing the young lady in the milk 1 apiiu a ami <'««Iniine. A’tii many others that of steel rails, 200 telegraph pole», can act. At Portland he is freeing are the best produced in their line. himself from a straight-jacket in midair. Houdeen after leaving this ; Just received a shipment of Get man Break county was accused of beating a | fast Cheese 2 for 25c board bill at Coquille nnd of wliitc slavery but Deputy Sheriff l.airil rimerito ( 'hwsi* 2 for 25c could not bring him back from Cal ifornia as tlie authorities of that state would not give him up. lie, no <t rip County News We Are Nationally Advertised Bungalow Grocery ENDICOTT & LEW. l.LEN Meat Prices Cut Down We keep our knife I harpencl constantly not only for our meat, but for our price*. We sell just as close to the market as we can. Long el pertence in selecting meat and cutting it enables us to set very attractive price*. Try u* CITY MEA T MARKET GEO. ERDMAN, Prop PHONE 191 Hal Stutsman, who is working witli the Portland capitalists instal ling a new mining system on Cut , creek, was In town Monday ami ; st at «*<1 that the plant would be in readiness for operation about Wed nesday of this week. Tlie Coi|uille Sentinel says the machine belongs to J. R. Peters of Gold Beach, who says It will work about 200 cubic yards of sand a day and save 80 per cent of the free gold and platinum. One of tlit* main features of the machine Is an airtight concentrator into which the san«l Is forced by a centrifugal pump. Through holes in the ccn centrator the black sand Is suppi soil to be carried into two gold separators both cone shaped, and worked witli centrifugal force on the same princi pal as a cream separator No mer cury is used. Capt. O. Wiren, co-operative ob server at tlie Coquille River light sta lion reports that the rainfall for the month of October was I 81 days rainy and cloudy amt partly cloudy. 24. «’ays clear, 7. The rainfall f<u the corresponding month of 1914 w as 6 55, a difference of 4.74 less this year. HETHER your fancy leans toward Jewelry, Sterling Silver, fine Silver Plate or Cut Glass—-or whether you don’t just know what you want-—you will have no trouble in finding something appropriate here. Even though you may need nothing just now, come in and see the many pretty things we have recently put into stock. In all departments we are showing a splendid variety of new seasonable goods, and we want you to feel quite free to call and inspect them. W SABRO BROS. MANUFACTURING TELEPHONE 751 voOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0000000fl>00000000000000000000000000< $ 15,000, which with $15,000 that they expect to get from the Douglas county court. will make a fund of $30,000 to be used in planking the road through tlie canyon for ten miles. With a gravel or plank road the rest of the way from Roseburg already built, this will make an all seasons road to the coast, if our Circuit Court cases tiled last week county will do as well on this end of were: Edwin Bailey vs. J. C. Freich- tlie line. ter; Geo. Watkins vs. Edward A. Harris; J. L. Kronenberg vs. Bandon The Record says the Hallowe'en Construction Co., W. H. Webb, Titos. observance at Norway Saturday night Neilson ami C. W. Hilton: F. A. Spen was followed by acts of vandalism cer and G. W. Schelley vs. R. W. in the school room where scraps of Cotton and Lillian Cotton; William food left from the luncheon were Sorenson vs. Pearl Sorenson, suit for scattered ali over the room, the divorce; F. S. Bunch vs. C. Hammar teacher’s desk overturned and her loaf; W. Lee Ray vs. Horace Morris schedule and records smeared with and Annie Morris; Minnie Bamford ink. Other, disreputable things were vs. Edward Bamford, suit for done to the school room and the dis divorce. trict is aroused over the affair to a While out in the hills on tlie Mid point where an investigation will be dle Fork route last week the Coquille made and the guilty parties punished. Sentinel says J. A. Collier met people It is believed several Myrtle Point from over in the Camas valley who boys were responsible and if the told him that they were getting very guilty parties are apprehended prose much interested in the Improvement cutions are to follow. The teacher, of Hit* road from Roseburg to the Miss May Lund, had carried out a Coos county line, Wlmt the Camas line program that evening over 100 valley district proposes :s to bond for people being in attendance. 25 coils of copper wire and other equipment of the Western Union company ami the Willamette-Pacific which was being towed by the gas tug Koos, sank in lower Coos Hay about 5 o'clock Saturday night In from 15 to 20 feet of water. Mos' < f the material will be recovered. Curative Value In Food? “Recalling that 90 per cent of disease results from errors in diet, then foods properly prescribed by the physician can justly be said to have curative value.” Dr. Henry B. Hollen, in The Medical Standard One of the errors in the diet of many people is the use of foods robbed of the vital mineral salts (phosphate of potash, etc.) which are absolutely necessary for proper balance of body, brain and nerves. The result is a long list of ills, including nervous prostration, kidney trouble, constipation, rickets in children, and so on. Twenty years ago a whole wheat and barley food, containing all the nutriment of the grain, including the priceless mineral elements, was devised especially to cor rect errors in diet. That food is Grape-Nuts It fulfills its mission admirably Rather Ex|>«*nsive Husineaa Mr Hendry, representative of the Parisian of Marshfield, who brought a stock of goods over and placed them on sale at the Galller sample rooms Monday, was hailed Into Judgi* Kag rud's court the following day and in formed that he was violating a city ordinance which required a $25 a day license to operate his kind of a game. lie gave evidence that he had made only two or three sales the first day and was let off with the amount of one day's license Mr. Hendry considered It too expensive to do business that way so he packed up and went back to headquarters JEWELERS BANDON. OREGON Another physician says; ‘ Nearly half the year my breakfast consists of a dish of Grape-Nuts, one or two eggs, or fruit. I RECOM MEND IT TO MY PATIENTS CONSTANTLY, and invariably with good results.” This wholesome food not only builds sturdy health and strength, but fortifies the system against disease. Ready-to-eat, nourishing, economical, delicious— “1 here’s a Reason” for Grape-Nuts »