Western world. (Bandon, Coos County, Or.) 1912-1983, April 11, 1918, Image 5

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    Lodge Directory
BANDON LODGE No. 130
A. F. & A. M.
Classified
Ads and Notices
Stated communication Friday after
the full moon of each mouth, bojourn FOR RENT—Good six room house,
Matter Mksons cordially invited.
nicely furnished and four good
E. W. SCHETJER, Secretary.
acres of land; berries of all kinds,
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
fine garden and pasture. Close in.
Call Mrs H. M. Tucker, or address
P. O. box 224.
m25tic
Delphi Ixxlge No. 04, Knlghu 01 FOR SALE—Ten 4-year old cows at
Pythiaa. Meet* every Monday even
choice of buyer out of herd of 30.
Ing at Knights hall. Visiting Knigbtr extra good grade Jerseys, $100 each
Eleven 2-year old heifers, freshet:
invited to attend.
soon. Two 3-year old colts, 14 00
CHAS. F. PAPE, C. C.
and 1500 tbs. One 3-year old regis
VIC. BREUER, K. of R. & S.
tered Jersey bull, from Ed. Carey's
famous herd. Enquire A. P. Sweet
Larupa, Oregon.
ao t2i
BANDON LODGE No. 133
I. O. O. F.
FOR
SALE— Cheap —Five
room
house; 2 lots, barn, outbuildings,
etc. Terms to suit the purchaser. J.
C. Allen, 414 Chicago Ave., Bandon,
Ore.
a6t2p
Meets every Wednesday night ai
the I. O. O. F. hall. Visiting Odd
FOUND—On Bandon Beach, a golu
Fellows always welcome.
W. A. PANTER, N. G.
PHIL W. PEARSON, Sec’y
OCEAN REBEKAH LODGE
. No. 126
watch.
Owner may have same
by calling on W. D. Griffith, E 6th
and Ohio Ave., Bandon.
a5t4i
FOR SALE—Bunch Heifers; 2 yeai
olds; fresh this spring; price $40,
up.
S.
Domenighini,
Langlois.
Oregon.
m21tfc
COMMERCIAL printing of all kinds
done quickly at the Western
Meets on the second and fourth
Tuesdays of each month at the Odd World shop. Don't give your ordei
Fellows hall. Visiting Rebekahs al­ to a traveling salesman until you
have consulted us.
ways welcome.
LENORE HUNT, N. 0.
LELIA FISH, Secretary.
Professional Cards
DR. R. V. LEEP
Physician and Surgeon
FOR RENT—Twenty acre ranch,
with all buildings and fences. Call
telephone No. 14.
M14tfc.
WANTED—We pay cash for empty
gunny sacks.—Di|>pel A Wolver
ion.
Mr3UU
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL PROP­
ERTY ON FORECLOSURE.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN;
That under and by virtue of an Exe­
cution and Order of Sale issued out
BANDON. OREGON
of the Circuit Court of the State ol
Oregon for the County of Coos on
the 9th day of February, 1918, in a
F. J. CHATBURN
certain cause in said Court pending
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
wherein Lillie M. Prewett is plain­
Practice in all
courts.
Office tiff, and Ira C. Zeh, Olive Zeh, his
in Racket Store building on Second wife, and the City of Bandon, a muni­
cipal corporation, are
defendants,
Street, Bandon, Oregon.
being case No. 4875 of the said
Court and commanding me to sell the
hereinafter described real property
I. N. MILLER .
to satisfy the sum of $690.67 with
Attorney and Counselor at Law interest at 10% from November
19th, 1917, and the further sum ol
Notary Public
Rooms 1 and 2, First Nat’l Bank Bl<$g $112.75 paid by plaintiff to Coot
County, Oregon, for delinquent taxes,
Bandon, Oregon
and attorney fee of $80.00 and coats
and disbursements $55.00, togethei
with accruing costs.
I WILL ON
DR. FRED COVELL
SATURDAY, THE 6th DAY OF
Ottice in Ellingson Bldg.
Phone 304.
CHIROPRACTOR
APRIL, 1918, at the
Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. m.; 2 t<
5 p. in.
Opp. Hotel Galller
Office in Bandon Sanitarium.
Bandon.
Oregon
DR. F. A. VOGE
DENTIST
PYORRHEA SPECIALIST
Telephone 1222
Ellingson Bldg.
Bandon, Ore
DR. S. C. ENDICOTT
Dentist
Office 1241
—Plionea— Res.
11 Hi
Office in Ellingson Bldg.
BANDON. OREGON
GEO. P. TOPPING
Attorney at Law
C. R. BARROW,
Attorney and Counselor
at Law
Notary Public
Farmers’ Phone: Office No. 481
Residence No. 143
Office over Skeel’s Store,
Coquille, Oregon
JOHN NIELSON
Notary Public, Insurance, Real
Estate and* Book-keeping
Bandon, Oregon
DR. ARTHUR GALE
Physician and Surgeon
Phones: Office 351; res. 352.
Office tn Ellingson Bldg.
BANDON, OREGON
MISS E. McKENZiE
TRAINED NURSE
District Nursing:
Short calls;
Emergency work
Hospital.
Oakes
of
10
1918.
Practices in all Courts. Offict
Over Bank of Bandon.
Emergency
hour
o'clock in the forenoon of said day
at the County Court House in the
City of Coquille, Coos County, Ore­
gon, offer for sale and sell at public
auction to the highest and best bid
der for cash in hand all the right,
title and interest of said Defendants
in and to the following described
real property, to-wit:
Lots five (5) and six (6) Block
two (2) Belle View Addition to the
City of Bandon, Coos County, Ore
gon, according to the recorded plat
thereof filed in the office of the
County Clerk of Coos County, Ore­
gon, together with the tenements,
hereditaments and
appurtenances
thereunto belonging or in anywise ap
pertaining.
Said sale being made subject to
redemption in the manner provided
by law.
Dated this 2nd day of March,
Bldg
W. W. GAGE,
Sheriff of Coos County, Oregon.
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
School House for District No. 29
(Two Mile)
*.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN:
That sealed bids for the construction
of a school building to be built on the
school site on Township Line road
will be received by the Board of Di­
rectors of School District No. 29 of
Coo» County, Oregon,
up till
10
o’clock a m., April 6th. 1918.
The work consists of approximate­
ly 63 cubic yards of excavation, ap­
proximately 64 cubic yard» of con­
crete or rock grout and the building
to be either frame or stucco finish.
Plan» and specifications can be seen
at the office of Dippel & Wolverton,
Bandon.
A certified check to the amount of
at least 5 per cent of the bld must
accompany alt proposals. The suc­
cessful bidder must, wkhln five days'
of notification, furnish a good and
sufficient bond for the faithful per-
formance of the work. The right to
reject any or all proposals is re­
served as .deemed to the best inter-1
eats of the District.
Dated this 12th day of March, 194 8
BOARD OF DIRECTOR8 OF |
SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 29J
Chris Richert. Chairman
Attest:
J. P DeGesen. Clerk
M14t4c
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION
Potatoes are nourishing, palata­
09797
ble and well liked by all of us. The
more we eat the more w heat we can
Depart nirnt of the Interior. V. S.
ship to the boys at the front and
f Land Office at Roseburg. Oregon.
the famishing people of the Allies.
March 13. 1913.
NOTICE is hereby ghen that Man
Save a loaf of bread a week. Help (
tton E Treadgold, of Bandon, Oregon,
win the war.
who, on October 21. 1914, made
Homestead Entry. Serial, No. 09797.
for tip»
SW^4 and Lot 14 of
Sec. 2. and Lot 1 of. Section 11,
Township 30 S, Range 14 W., Wil­
lamette Meridian, has filed notice of
intention to make Final Three-year
Proof, to establish claim to the land
above described, before I N Miller.
U. S. Commissioner, at his office, at Urged That Inhuman Deporta­
Bandon, Oregon, on the 23rd day of
April. 1918.
tions Be Stopped Because of
Claimant names as witnesses:
Effect on Neutrals.
Herman A. DeLong, of Bandon, Ore-
gon,
Kenneth Perkins, of Bandon, Oregon,
Clifford C. Anderson, of Bandon, GERARD SUMS UP SITUATION
Oregon.
Byron J. Young, of Bandon. Oregon.
-Germans Will Stop at Nothing, anu
W H CANON.
the Only Thing They Respect la
m21 28 a4 11 18 25
Register.
-------------------------------------------- _
Force" — Huns’ Capacity for
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL PROP­
Cruelty Told by Whitlock.
ERTY ON FORECLOSURE.
SOCIALISTS SAW
GERMANY'S ERROR
Aroused by the indignation shown
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN:
That under and by virtue of an by the whole world over the ruthins
Execution and Order of Sale issued deportations of the people in Bel­
jut of the Circuit Court of the State gium and France, socialist deputies
jf Oregon for the County of Coos
>n the 1st day of March, 1918, in a in the reichstag protested against
.'ertain cause in said Court pending the continuance of the practice. Am­
wherein FIRST NATIONAL BANK, bassador Gerard's evidence shows the
x corporation, is plaintiff, and A. S. extent of the horror.
GILBERT and M. L. GILBERT, his I
In the Norddeutsehe Allgemelne
wife, are defendants, being case No. Zeltung of December 2, 1916. the fol­
1934 of the said Court and command­ lowing protests against the deporta­
tig me to sell the hereinafter des­ tion of Belgians to work In German,
cribed real property to satisfy the appeared, made, respectively, by So­
sum of $359.68 with interest at 6 cialist Deputy Haase and Deputy Dltt-
,>er cent from February 21st, 1918, mann. members of the reichstag:
¿nd costs and disbursements $25.50,
“Thousands of workmen In the oc­
.ogether with accruing costs. 1 WILL cupied territory have been compelled
ON MONDAY, THE 29TH DAY OF to forced labor; we earnestly ask the
tPRIL, 1918, at the hour of 10 government to restore to these work­
o'clock in the forenoon of said day men their liberty, especially In Bel­
at the County Court House in the gium. In truth, we (the Germans) find
City of Coquille, Coos County. Ore­ no sympathy In neutral countries: even
gon. offer tor sale and sell at pub- the pope has made a protest against
.ic auction to the highest and best this procedure, and several neutral
oidder for cash in hand all the right, states have done the same. Common
.itle and interest of the said Defend- sense Itself demands that we abandon
ints in and to the following ^es­ this procedure which moreover Is tn
cribed real property, to-wit:
opposition to the Hague convention to
Tlie Northeast *4 of the Northeast which we have agreed.’’
“In opposition to the secretary of
*4 of the Southeast % of the North­
west *4 of Section 29 Township 28 state. I must recall that when former­
South of Range 14 West of the Wil­ ly the Belgian workmen who had tied
lamette Meriilia’- in Coos County, to Holland returned to Belgium. Gov­
Oregon, containing Two and one-half ernor General von Blsslng promised
(2^s) acres, more or less, except 30 : that these Belgian workmen would un­
r'eet off from the North and 30 feet der no circumstances be deported to
jff from the East sides of this prop­ Germany. This reassuring promise
erty which is reserved for a public has not been kept.”
Ambassador Gerard’s Interesting tes­
aighway, together with all and singu­
lar the tenements, hereditaments and timony appears In his recent book:
Ambassador Gerard’s Evidence.
appurtenances «hereunto belonging,
hip president (during my visit to
all In Coos County, Oregon.
Said
«ale being made subject to redemp­ America In 1916) Impresstsl upon me
ms great Interest In the Belgians d»
tion in the manner provided by law.
Dated this 26th day of March, ported to Germany. The action of Ger­
many In thus carrying n grent part of
1918.
the tnnle population of Belgium Into
W. W. GAGE,
Sheriff of Coos County. Oregon. virtual slavery had roused great Indig­
nation In America. As the revered
M28 a4 11 18 25.
Cardinal Farley said to tne a few days
before my departure, ‘You have to go
NOTICE TO creditor *
back to the times of the Medes and
In the Matter of the Estate )
the Persians to find n like exntnple of
of
)
a whole people carried Into bondage.'
riieodore Neuhaus, Deceased.)
“.Mr. Grew had made representations
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN:
That the Last Will and Testament about this to the chancellor and. on my
if Theodore Neuhaus was on the 5th return. I Immediately took up the
day of March, 1918, duly proven question.
“I was Informed that It wns a mili­
and admitted to probate.
That
Mary J. Neuhaus the Testatrix nam- tary measure, that I.udendorf had
ad in said Will was on the above feared that the Rrftlsh would break
named date appointed Testatrix of through and overrun Belgium and flint
¡aid Will and Letters Testamentary , the military did not propose tp have a
with the will annexed were issued to hostile population nt th<‘lr hacks who
«aid Testatrix.
All persons having might cut the rail lines of communi
claims against the above estate are eatlon. telephones nnd telegraphs, nnd
therefore notified to present
said that for tills reason the deportation
claims with the proper voucher», had been deehlitd on. I whs . howev«r.
within six months from the date of told I would he given permission to
the first publication of this notice, visit these Belgians. The passes, nev
to said Testatrix at the law office ertheless. which alone made such visit­
jf I. N. Miller at tlie First National ing possible wore not delivered until a
Bank Building. Bandon, Oregon, for few days before I left Germane.
Belgians Forced to Make Munitions.
allowance or rejection.
“Several of these Belgians w ho were
Dated March 14. 1918.
put to work in Berlin managed to get
« MARY J. NEUHAUS
Testatrix of the Last Will and away nnd come to see mo. They gave
Testament of Theodore Neuhaus, De­ tne a harrowing account of how they
hud been seized in Belgium nnd made
ceased.
to work In Germany nt making muni­
M14 21 28 A4 11
tions to he used probably against thalr
own friends.
AMNOI M< EMEN I
“I snld to the chancellor. 'There are
At tlie request oi a number of my
friends 1 hereby announce myself a* Belgluns employed In making shells
a candidate for nomination to the of­ contrary to all rules of war nnd the
fice of Representative in the Legis­ Hague convention«' Ho snld. 'I do
lative Assembly, from Coos county, not believe It.' I snld. 'My automobile
the Fifth Representative
District, Is at the door. I can take you. In four
subject to the decision of the voters minutes, to where 30 Belgians are
of the Republican Party at the Pri­ working on the manufacture of sheila.'
mary Election, to be held on the 17th But he did not find time to go.
“Americans must understand that
day of May, 1918.
the German« will stop at nothing to
tfu
C. R BARROW.
win this war. nnd that the only thing
they respect Is force.”—James W. Ge­
FOR COMMISSIONER
I hereby announce myself as a rard. My Four Yenrs In Germany, 1911.
candidate on the Republican ticket pp. 3951-52.
A similar point of view Is expressed
at the Primary Election, May 17th,
for nomination to the office of Coun In nn article entitled "Uno VfcUe''
from the Hungarian newspaper News-
ty Commissioner of Coos County.
zawa of Budapest (quoted In K G Oa-
rn28
OSO. J ARMSTRONG,
dnnnflsson. .Militarism at Work In Bel
The annual pay of the army now glum and Germany. 1917 pp 53-54.)
exceeds $300,000,000.
Mixed Hungarian Opinion.
"M echanlcal skill, nnd especially
The .March blizzard made a fitting
finale to the ground hog season for qualified mechanical skill. Is for the
moment n more Important factor than
this year
Trim your meat and melt the fat usual, and ns ft must bo obtained
Don't let a scrap get into the gar­ where It enn be obtained Belgium has
had to suffer In aecordnnce with the
bage pall
old saying which always holds good:
Our 14-inch guns weigh nearly 95 Vne vlctls (w<>e to the vanquished)
tons and are over 58 feet long, cost­ In Poland mechanical «kill and the
ing $118,000
anna which exist there are mobilized
under ‘the glorious and fortunate han-
. uers of Poland :' In Belgium under 'the
' banner of necessity.'”
“. . . The question remains; for
'hat kind of work will the Germans
i-o the Belgians? . . every kind of
work in Germany is war work, wheth­
er ft la called agricultural or Indus­
trial work
Aa the deported Belgians
Art
i >-*> v ' m for Cni-CHES TEg S A
have not given their consent, their use
LlAM '.'D I'U’iD PILLS Io Uro
la contrary to International law, and
G old metal ic bo««., sealed with BluXOz
Bibbon
wo DTBsa. SarW...f\T/
the policy of the Gerrnan^ln Belgium
Braael.t ... a.k fr < III < H t »• T t R « V
and Poland la equally to be deplored
DI A HO V It RIIXII PI I. La. for twenty!!«»
yen r*«vd»l •• Be-t.Safe-t. Always Sellable.
Instead of aiming at bringing us near­
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS er peace. It aervea to embitter our op
ponents and to arouse more hatred to­
EVERYWHERE
CHIGHESTER SPILLS
ward us amongst the neutral*. Many
times and more and mure we havu
had occasion to observe that the neu­
trals show more sympathy for Bel­
gium than for any other belligerent."
Old Men and Boys Taken.
The news dispatches Indicate that
the deportation and forced labor of
Brigiau. »till continue. In a despatch
from Havre (New York Evening Post.
September 13. 1917) It is stated: "The
removal of the civilian population of
Belgium continues, according to ad­
vices received here. The town of Rou-
lers, lmmedlat«4.v behind the battle
line In Flanders, bus been evacuated
completely. Ostend is being emptied
gradually, and two thousand persons
already have been sent from Courtrai.”
In another dispatch from Havre
(Washington Post. September 24, 1917)
It Is stated that “the German military
authorities at Bruges. Belgium, are
conscripting forcibly all tlie boys am
men of that city between the ages of
fourteen and sixty to work in munition
factories and shipyards. The rich and
poor, shopkeepers nnd workmen, all
are being tnken. only the school teach­
ers. doctors, and priests escaping.”
German Officer Rebuked Men.
The following "Order of the Day"
shows how the town of Huy escaped
the fate of so many Belgium and
French towns. Drunken German sol­
diers were frightened aud began tn
shoot men and burn houses. The
commanding officer condemned this be­
cause It was not done by his order and
because two German soldiers were
wounded, It Is evident that massaerna
and arson were permitted only when
commanded by the officers.
“Last ulght a shooting affray took
place. There is no evidence that the
Inhabitants of the towns had any arms
in their houses, uor is there evidence
that the people took part in the shoot­
ing; on the contrary, It seems that the
soldiers were under the Influence of
alcohol, and began to shoot In a sense­
less fear of a hostile attack.
“The behavior of the soldiers during
the night, with very few exceptions,
makes a scandalous Impression.
“It Is highly deplorable when officers
or noncommissioned officers set houses
on fire without permission or order of
the commanding, or, as the case may
be, the senior officer, or when by their
attitude they encourage the rauk aud
file to burn and plunder.
“The miserable behavior of the men
caused a noncommissioned officer aud
a private to be seriously wounded by
German bullets.
"MAJOR VON BASSEWITZ.”
Report of Minister Whitlock.
“One Interesting result of the depor­
tations remains to be noted, a result
that once more places In relief the
German capacity for blundering, al­
most as great as the German capacity
for cruelty. Until the deportations
wer» begun there was no Intense ha
tred on the pnrt of the lower classes,
I. e., the workingmen nnd the peasants.
The old Germans of the Landsturm
had been quartered In Flemish homes;
they and the inmates »poke nearly the
same language; they got along fairly
well; they helped the women with the
work, the poor and the humble having
none of those hatreds of patriotism
thnt are among the privileges of the
tipper classes. It I» conceivable that
the Flemish population might have
existed under German rule; It wan
Teutonic In Its origin and anti French
always. But now the Germans have
changed aII that.
“They have dealt a mortal blow to
any prospect they may ever have had
of being tolerated hy the population
of Flanders; In tearing away from
nearly every humble home In the land
a husband and a father or a son and
brother they have lighted a fire of
hatred that will never go out; they
have brought home to every heart In
the land. In a way thnt will impres*
Its horror Indelibly on the memory of
three generations, a realization of
what German methods mean, not, as
with the early atrocities, in the heat
of pssslon nnd the first lust of war.
btit h.v one of those deeds thnt make
one despair of the future of the hu
man race, a deed coldly planned, sturfl
ously matured, and deliberately and
systematically executed, a deed so
cruel that German soldiers are said
to hsve wept In Its execution, nnd an
monstrous thnt even German officers
are now said to be ashamed.
•• whitlotr ."
Mr. Hoover’s Conclusions.
Mr Hoover’s mature conclusions on
the German practices In Belgium
which he wrote for the pamphlet la
sued hy the committee on public In­
formation. reinforce the detailed evi­
dence already presented :
THE CREAT WAR HAS MADE
CIGARETTES A NECESSITY.
“Our boys must have their smokes.
Send them cigarettes!” This is a
familiar appeal now to all of us.
Among those most in demand is
the now famous “toasted” cigarette—
LUCKY STRIKE. Thousands of thia
favorite brand have been shipped to
France. There is something home­
like and friendly to the boys in the
sight of the familiar green packages
with the red circle.
This homelike, appetizing quality
of the LUCKY STRIKE cigarette is
largely due to the fact that the Burley
tobacco used in making it has been
toasted. “It's toasted" was the "slo­
gan” that made a great success of
LUCKY STRIKE in less than a year.
Now the American Tobacco Co. is
making 15 million LUCKY STRIKE
Cigarettes a day.
A good part of this immense pro­
duction is making its way across the
water to cheer our boys. The Red
Cross has distributed thousands of
LUCKY STRIKE Cigarettes.
Awwntad GRAND PRIZE st tSo P. •> I. E.
M ysur dnlrr rannt* tupplr you. w« will «and ihr*,
cK*f«ea pf-es-l.
trcript <4 MW*. S1.30 M<h.
L«vi Straus* & Co* San Francisco
A HOT FRAGRANT CUI’
IV THE MORNING GET*
VOU READY FOR THE
DI TIE* OF THE DAY.
—IT'S THE CREAM OF
ALL COFFEES.
CRESCENT
CREAM
COFFEE
Your Grocer
anils It—
4Oc lt>.
September. 191T.
I have been often called upon for a
statement of my observation of Ger­
man rule In Belgium nnd northern
France.
I have neither the desire nor the
adequate pen to picture the «cetMB
which have heated my blood through
the two and a half yenrs thnt I have
spent In work for the relief of then*
lonnnonn people.
The sight of the destroyed home«
fnd cities the widowed and father­
less the destitute, the physical misery
of a people hut partially nourished at
best, the deportation of men by tens
of thousand« to slavery In German
mines and factories, the eiecutlon of
men and women for paltry effusions
of their loyalty to their country, the
sacking of every resource through
financial robbery, the battening of
armies on the slender produce of the
country, the denudation of the country
of cattle, horses and textiles: all th- ae
things we had to witness dumb So
help other than by protest and «ympn-
thy during this long and terrible titna
and still these are not the events of
battle heat, hut the effects of a grind­
ing heel of a race demanding tha inn»
tervhlp of the world.
1
to hold on th« Other for <
hie binoculars, fielseetl*
mating the enemy columa*
Soldiers meaeuro their
days, their marches, their
at tack eon the bast a or time.
A soldi*» must have the cor­
rect time, and it must be
on hia wrist where be can
see it at a glance.
Thia wrist watch mast be
built to stand bumps and It
must show time in tbedark.
Euro[»wan experience has
f>ro- * i the In ’wreoll Radio
i’e’Wrlit
beet.
The nance and figuree ere
made<>f Radiolite. contain«
Ing genuine radium, and
flow upwards from ten
fee re. Civiliaee. too. are
finding the wrist watcb
oust ooDweniaaU
OKANGi:
A