Western world. (Bandon, Coos County, Or.) 1912-1983, August 08, 1918, Image 3

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    Lodge Directory
I a X’DON LODGE No. 130
h A. F. & A. M.
communication Friday after
th 11 muon of each month, bojourn
Her Masons cordially invited.
L W. SCHETJER. Secretary.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
$100 Reward, $100
The readers of this paper will b«
Pleased to learn that tture is at ¡east
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure in all its stages, and
that is catarrh. Catarrh beinK greatly
influenced by constitutional conditions
Kn . constnuuonal
treatment,
f^tarrh Cur.- is taken internally
and acta thru the Blood on the Mucous
Surfaces of the System thereby de­
stroying the found lion < < the disease,
nyLii Ly building
up the constitution and assisting na­
ture in doing its work. The proprie­
tors have so much faith in the curative
powers of Hall’s Catarrh Cure that
they offer One Hundred Dollars for any
case that it fails to cure. Send for list
of testimonials.
Addrees F J CHENEY A CO.. Tolsdo.
Obkx Hold bv all l>ru’ni«’«. 7fee.
CHICHESTER SPILLS
diamond
BRANO
GO»*'
LADIES f
Art ¿‘T .*’'■**»*•* for cm HIV« TFX «
MAMOND BRAND PILLS 1« K ko .nd
G old metallic boxes. sealed with Blue
•ibboa T ax « no otxm H ut of
Drua.ut .„4 a,k fur fui.cmn.ifm _
• IX Most» B ll A X i> rn IS, for twenty-flw
year, regarded a, Best.Safest, Always Rrliabl*.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
EVERYWHERE
pelphi Lodge No. 64, Knights of
.Meete every .Monday even-
’’»t Knights hall. Vbitlng KnlghO
,,ue<J to attend.
CHAS. F. PAPE, C. C.
L BREl’ER, K. of R. & s.
L n 'DON LODGE No. 133
I. O. O. F.
I
every Wednesday night at
I'I o. O. F. hall. Visiting Odd
KMs always welcome.
W. A. PANTER, N. G.
PHIL PEARSON, Sec’y
Phone 191
your orders for all kinds o[ the
CHOICEST
MEATS and SAUSAGES
Our Bicycle Delivery will take
care of youi orders promptly.
• • •
iCEAN REBEKAH LODGE
No. 126
I Meets on the second and fourth
■•jesdays of each month at the Odd
Bjllaws hall. Visiting Rebekahs al-
Ljvj welcome.
LENORE HUNT, N. G.
LEL1A FISH, Secretary.
City Meat Market
GEO. ERDMAN, Proprietor
J
Professional Cards
DR. R. V. LEEP
Physician and Surgeon
Office in Ellingson Bldg.
Phone 394.
BANDON. OREGON
F. J. CHATBURN
ATTOR N E Y-AT-1. A W
I Practice in all
courts.
Office
■in Racket Store building on Second
[blieet. Bandon, Oregon.
I. N. MILLER
Attorney and Counselor at Law
Notary Public
¡Rooms 1 and 2, First N'at’l Bank Bldg.
Bandon, Oregon
DR. FRED COVELL
CHIROPRACTOR
I Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. m.;
5 p. in.
Opp. Hotel Gallier
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 —Phonei
office in Ellingson Bldg.
BANDON. OREGON
GEO. P. TOPPING
Attorney at Law
Practices in all Courts. Office
Over Bank of Bandon.
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
Filone«: Office »51; res. »52.
Office in Ellingson Bldg.
BANDON, OREGON
MISS E. McKENZlE
I RAINED NURSE
district Nursing:
Short calls.
Emergency work
Emergency Hospital,
Oakes Bldg.
An
EASTMAN
will please
You
C. Y. Lowe
Bandon, Or.
REXALL DRUGGIST
Headquarters for
KODAKS ■ SUPPLIES
There is no better place
on earth for Kodaking
than right here. Ban­
don Beach offers uneq­
ualled opportunity for
beautiful pictures. Let
us show you our line of
Eastman Kodaks.
SAVED BY MIRAGE GENERAL KINSHIP WITH SEA
How British Army Escaped De
feat in Mesopotamia.
Fondness for Salt Water Seems to Be
a Characteristic of ths Whole
Human Race.
A kind of kinship with the sea Is
In every one of us, says Boys' I.Ife. the
Bey Scouts' iiiagazlue.
Nuah built
Turkish Commander Saw What He B» the ark as a matter of religious duty,
we are told, But If old Noah could
lieved Were Re-enforcements Com­
have written I a few lines to go with
ing to Aid Enemy and Or­
i the half dozei •n paragraphs of the Bible
dered Retreat
narratlvi not for religious effect but
a« a man to man, to let us know Just
We went on toward nowhere, intend j
Ing to iuiik«4 a wide detour and come bow he felt about the Job—what a
story It w ould have been!
Into old Basra city by the Zobelr gat« I
A landsman, getting ready for his
in the south wall, Eleanor F. Egan
writes in the Saturday Evening Post.1 first voyage! Big and important re­
sponsibilities to curry, but back of all
There was no dust out there; only
the study, all the labor, and the “kW-
hard-packed sand, out of which the ding” of his friends, that ecstasy of
fierce hammering sun struck a myriad anticipation that gripe your throat and
glinting, eye-searing sparks. But it makes you want to yell for joy.
was beautiful beyond words to de­
Noah was a “regular fellow.” You
scribe. We spun along at fifty miles can tell that by the way he "carried
an hour with a cool, clean breeze in on.” You bet the fact that he was
our faces Then Just over a slight rise performing a religious duty didn’t I
in the sparkling plain I saw my first make him feel like some folks look In
mirage. It was Impossible to believe prayer meeting. You bet that when
It was a mirage and not really the he put aboard the ark one pair of
beautiful lake that It seemed—a lake worms, per order, he put In an extra
dotted with wooded islands and few for bait. You bet he had that
fringed in places with deep green for­ same hankering for the sea that you
ests.
| and I have.
I have seen mirages In other deserts
It's In the very blood of every man.
in other lands, but I have never seen Remember how. when you were a kid,
anything like the Mesopotaniian mi­ you put your finger In your mouth aft­
rage, We drove straight on and it er cutting it with your first Jack­
came so close that I was sure I could knife? Didn't the blood taste salty?
i see a ripple on Its surface. Then aud­ Ask any doctor what they put into a
denly it went away off, and where it man’s veins to fill them when he has
had been our skidproof tires were hum­ lost a lot of blood. He will tell you
ming on the hard-packed sand and I "salt water." Doesn't that prove our
saw that the wooded Islands had been kinship to the sea?
created out of nothing but patches of
Did you ever know even a grown-up
camel thorn and that the trees of the to pass a gang in swimming, or a kid
forests were tufts of dry gruss not with a string of fish, or even a picture
more than six Inches high.
of a ship, without stopping a minute
Off on the far horizon a camel car- to look? It can’t be done. We all
avan was swinging slowly along and love the water.
the camels looked like some mammoth
prehistoric beasts, while in another
Germany’s Labor Army.
direction what we took to be camels
“Our growing labor army” is the de­
turned out to be a string of diminutive scription applied by the Huns to their
donkeys under pack saddles laden with prisoners of war. According to a com­
bales of the desert grass roots that the munique In the latest Berlin papers,
Arabs use for fuel.
Germany and her vnssals between
The mirage has played an interest­ them now hold 3,575,000 prisoners. For
ing part In the Mesopotamian cam­ the first time the German military au­
paigns. In some places it Is practi­ thorities lay stress on the supreme
cally continuous the year round, and it value of their prisoners as man power
adds greatly to the difficulties of an for industry and agriculture. They are
army in action. It is seldom mistaken so numerous. It Is asserted, that they
for anything but what it is. of course, go far toward compensating Germany
but it does curious things to distance for the men she has had to withdraw
and to objects both animate and Inani­ from peaceful pursuits for active mil­
mate. Incidentally It renders the ac­ itary service. “The longer the war
curate adjustment of gun ranges al­ lasts,” the communique adds, "the
most altogether Impossible.
more adaptable these prisoners be­ I i
One of the most curious Incidents of come to the wo. x assigned them, and
the whole war happened in connection the more useful to u«."
with a mirage and on the very spot
Huns have a majestic awe of big
over which I drove that first day out figures. Thus it Is explained for their
In the desert.
edification that the “labor army" In
The battle of Shaiba was one of the prisoner camps is numerically greater
hardest-fought battles in the whole than the whole male working-class
Mespot campaign and victory for a population of Denmark. Norway and
while was anybody's, It was going Sweden combined, "and la equivalent
very badly for the British, their losses to one-fifth the total number of work­
being heavier than they could stand ing men in Germany before the war,
for long. And though the Turks were
In overwhelmingly superior iaimbers
Cherries From Russia,
It was going very badly for them as
That the cherry world has Its bol­
well. This the British officer com­ shevlkf ls explained by Frank A.
manding did not realize and he was Waugh In the Country Gentleman.
lust on the point of giving an order for Speaking of the supremacy of cer­
retirement—which would have been tain American varieties, particularly
fatal to the British In Mesopotamia— the Morello, Montmorency and Early
when to his astonishment he discov­ Richmond, he writes:
ered that the Turks were In full re­
"Their supremacy has been often
treat 1 What a moment!
challenged. Other varieties have been
The desert was full of mirage and offered by dozens and almost by hun­
the Turkish commander—who really dreds.
night to have been more familiar with
"The greatest competition arose
local phenomena — saw approaching through the Introduction of the so-
from the southeast what looked to him called Russian cherries. These came
like heavy re-enforcements. It was along with the other Russian fruits,
nothing but a supply and ambulance mainly In the Importations of 1870 and
’rain magnified and multiplied by the 1883. and were exploited mainly In the
ieceptlve desert atmosphere! When Northwest states.
he ordered an Immediate retreat his
“Prof. J. L. Budd propagated sev­
already unnerved troops stampeded eral of these sort« and recommended
and his demoralized rear guard was them highly. In tills company were
hounded and harassed by great bands Included Vladimir, Lotovkn. Sklnnka.
of nomad Arabs all the way to Kha- Osthelm, George Glass. Double Natte,
mlsseyeh, nearly nlpety miles away. Llthauer, Brusseler, Braune, Bessa­
He learned the truth a few days later rabian. Bunte Amerelle and Spaete
Ama relie. There were some others
and committed suicide!
•Iso, bearing the same flavor of north­
east Germany and southwest Russia.”
Oliver Goldsmith Memorial.
At Auburn. County Athlone, Ire-
Pure Water for Men In Trenches.
land, the poet's birthplace, a memorial
Filtered and sterilized water for the
Is being erected to Oliver Goldsmith.
It will tnke the form of the restoration men In the trenches at all times 1s
of the church where the poet’s father being provided by water trains, the
ministered so many years. Oliver war department announced.
Under the direction of the surgeon
Goldsmith was born In 1728 nt Bally-
mahon, County Longford, and two general's office sections held by the
years later his father, Charles Gold­ American forces where permanent wa­
smith, became rector of Kilkenny terworks have not been established
West and settled in Llssoy. which Is will be fully supplied by these trains,
now known as Auburn. It Is a village which are In reality miniature water­
on the road between Athlone and Bal- works that chemically treat, filter and
lymnhon. Auburn of Goldsmiths De­ sterilize nil water used for drinking
serted Village” In some degrees repre­ purposes. Each unit carries an expert
sents Llssoy, and the story of an old chemist, bacteriologist and pumpman,
vlrtlon by General Caplet was prob­ •nd the water.tnnks are mounted on
ably in Goldsmith’s mind when he motortrucks equipped with powerful
wrote the poem, although it is Intended lights so that the work can be carried
to apply to England.
oa at night.
Died at Post of Duty.
Women for British Pulpits.
During the storms the early part
>f the year, which marines say were
•he severest known on the coast, the
United States navy suffered the loss
of the big ocean-going tug Cherokee.
This vessel was manned entirely by
■»»embers of the naval reserve. Caught
•n a terrific sea the tug founder»-’ nd
was lost. It was at this time .
n
Imfsirtant duty for the Washington
nniy yard to get guns to an Atlantic
fort.
Among the men who met a
heroic death nt tl^s time was a lieu­
tenant (Junior grade). E. D. Newell,
U. 8 N. R. F.. commanding officer.
Woman preachers for Great Britain
are a jsiasibfllty if the government's
drafting of men between forty five and
fifty causes a much further shortage
In the crop sf clergymen.
Already three clergymen have en­
listed rather than be put In a noncom*
batant corps.
That women will make good preach­
ers la the opinion of many of the Brit­
ish clergy.
“Women can deal with many ques-
tlons that I cannot deal with," says the
Rev. Nev n of the City Temple.
Saving Wool Rage.
•'otatoex are nourishing, palata-
hlp and well liked by all of us. The
re wo eat the more wheat we can
* H' to the boys at the front and
! • famishing people of the Allies.
■'a\o a i(,af of bread a week. Help
the war.
Grand Army of Ministers.
Over flO.OOO ministers of the Gospel
of various denominations are with the
allies In France. About 20.000 are with
the Red Cross; the rest are In the
ranks.— People’s Home Journal.
«
That Tout Weather.
There are places in the world where
the weather has been better the last
few weeks than in the Amerlcau sec­
tor northwest of Toul, but the pre­
vailing dampness never even tarinshes
the American sense of humor.
The colonel of a regiment, muklng
a night tour of the trenches, was chal­
lenged by a sentry who had been stand­
ing at his post for two hours m a
driving rain.
“Who's there?” said the sentry.
“Friend !” replied his colonel.
“Welcome to our mist.” said the sen­
try. And the most serious thins the
colonel did was to laugh.—From Stars
and Stripes, France.
Who Ever Saw?
The log that people sleep like.
The chickens that the farmer's kids
have to go to bed with.
The deer that a small boy can run
like.
The horse that everybody thinks he
works like.
The dog that the pirates used to die
like.
The house and home that one Is
eaten out of.
Some One Else Got Her.
Cholly—I thought I'd try an Innova­
tion.
Molly—And did you?
“Surely. I decided to propose mar­
riage to a certain party by telephone."
“How did It work out?"
“1 was told the line was busy.”
It Wn Correct.
This teacher was having some trou­
ble with a certain pupil In grammar.
“Now, little girl, would it be proper
to say, ‘You can't learn me nothing?' ”
“Yes'm, it would,” replied the girl.
“Oh ! Perhaps you’ll tell me why I”
'Cause you can't 1”
DEDUCTION.
“There ure 14,000 oysters of full size
! b a ton.”
"Then a boarding house atew must
be one-fourteen-thousandth part of a
ton."
Biblical Lore.
Samflon was a tall, tall man,
And so waa old Gollar.
But Ananias, so they say,
Was the tallest liar.
Its Effect
“Mayme said If she had a soldier
lover she would make him carry her
picture In bls pocket and It might stop
a bullet aimed at his heart.”
“It would be n life-saver all right.
Iler picture Is enough to give a bullet
shell shock.”
A Believer.
“Do you believe in socialism?”
"Yes.”
“What do you understand by the
term?"
“I merely believe there Is snch a
word. I don’t pretend to understand
It”
In the War Garden.
Wlfle (musingly, after digging up a
potato by accident)—Well, well, ami
here we have been looking our eyes
out for the things. Won't Harry be
surprised when I tell hltn he planted
those potato seeds upside down?
No Wonder.
“That man is very exacting In ills
attachments.”
“One of the wearying kind of
friends. Is he?”
“Ob, no ; be a a sheriff's officer.'
■ xerciae.
“Ro yon think the dancing crate was
beneficial.”
“Yra,” answered Mr. Rufnek. “It
strengthened a large number of ankie«
for sewing machine work."
The answer to the question, “Why
Concentrated Attention.
should we save wool?” Is that a fully
“Does motoring help you to forget
equipped soldier uses 13 times as much your troubles?"
wool hs does a civilian. Also tbnt
"Tea,” ans wared Mr. Chuggins.
there are not enough sheep raised to “When a tire blows out I cau't tliiok
meet the needed wool supply.
uf
ale«."