• • • c • « • •• * : • t X. "Ban do 11 ecorci.6r n of ?t,onal ,ore>ts I '. belt '1"der duties t,hedr,cti 7 supei Visors. include Published Every Tuesday and FT id. y by the Reocrdei’ Futiehmg Oompa.ny. T. H. KREAMER, Buiinrs« Manac-flt<-e hr Second Clans Matter Octolier 7. 19t■> FRIDAY A j ard doing nothing to help ourselves, while other ports are spending An editorial in the Spokesmen- money in a legitimate way and Review of Spokane, Wash., says: great results are coming from it. “Anu man who thinks that King We have the possibilities of one ol Automobile is crowding King 1 toise the best harbors on the Pacific o't the face of the earth had better coast if we get busy and do some­ study the sides of livestock Pull- thing. hut if we sit idly by ami do man horses have just sold at an nothing while all other ports are go average of $136 apiece, prices rang­ ing ahead, it will not be long until ing from $ ji to $256. a demon­ we will be one of die smallest polls stration that good hordes are in de­ instead ol one of the Inst. Horses vs. Automobiles. mand still, even at high pi ices, and that the supply does not equal rhe d-mand. It is a singular coinci deuce that the day of the sale al Pullman also saw a Vollmer farmci deliver the most valuable load ol produce ever marketed there. He brought 7143 pounds of timothy seed and a Seattle firm bought il for 7c a pound, which netted th« grower $70 an acre. Such succesr with live stock and with grasses ar< at least as valuable as those with wheat and fruits, and perhaps de­ serve greater commendation.’ For Better Roads. The State Good Road? Associa­ tion is very anxious to have tin people of Oregon thoroughly under stand petition No. 354 on the bal lot which re? ds: “No county si a create any debts or liabilities whici shall singly 01 in the aggregate c.\ ceed the sum of $5,000; excrpl t< suppress insurrection or repel in vasion or to build permanent road within the county; but debts Io permanent roads shall be incurred only on approval of a majority < I those voting on the question.’’ Those who are interested in geo» roads are woiking lor the amend ment permitting the b nding of tli< county for road work, arid sav th- passing of petition No. 354, which gives that privilege, will be one of the biggest steps toward pennant n road improvement that has be< n taken in a long time. Oregon certainly needs bettci roads, anti this fact is particularly true of Coos county, and any meth od by which the work of building better roads cctthl be accomplished, should certainly be taken 1 p. What Other Ports Are Doing. Tillamook and Bay C ity hax < taken effective steps to secure tin imprvement of their batbors. Th- port commissions of these two cit" will co operate with the nation governmt nt in the work and wil add to the fund provided for th purpose in the rivers and harlxti appropriation, It is estimated thaï the work ol improvement u ill cos about $2,000,000. Tillamook an Bay City have pledged $650,000 ol this amount. The preliminary ex amination of the Tillamook water ways has just been made by Majot Jay J. Morrow, the government cn gineer in charge of this district, am1 woik on the improvement will In­ gin as soon as feasible. This goes to show what can be ac complished by people in a seaport t >wn il they only take it into their Examination for Assis ant Forest Rangers. The Civil Service C ut mission w II hold an examination for Assisi ant Forest Rangers on October 24 25, 1910. The U. S. Department ot Agiiculture estimates that 400 eligibles will be needed during the field season of 1911. Assistant Forest Range is are paid an entrance salary of $i,ioo per annum. The examination will be held at National Forest headquarters in Alaska, Arizona. California, Colo­ rado, Florida, Idaho, Kansas, Mid igan. Minnesota, Montana. N braska, New Mexico, Nevada, O k gon, South Dakota, Washington ami Wyoming No examinations will be held in Arkansas, Oklahoma and Utah, except Kanao, Utah, the headquarters of the Kaibab National F01 est Since all of the Kaibab I orest is in Arizona, residents of Arizona will under the law, have prelerence in appointments forthi. forest. Forest Rangers must be, wlun practicable, citizens of the State or Teiritory in which the National F rest on which they arc to be ap­ pointed is situated. In I he states in which no examinations are to be held, there is a sufficient list of e-igi bles to make the h bling of another examination unnecessary. The requirements and duties of 1'oresl Rangers are thus described in “Ihe Use Book,” which con tains the regulations and instruction- lor the use of the National Forests: “A ranger of any grade must be thoroughly sound and a'>le bodied capable of enduring hardships and performing severe labor under trx ing conditions. He must be able to take care of himself and his horse.-- in regions remote from settlement and supplies. He must be able to uikl trails and cabins, ride, pack, and deal tactfully with all classes ol people, lie must know something of land surveying, estimating ano scaling timber, logging, land law.-, mining and the live stock business ‘‘On some fores’s the ranger must be a specialist in one or more o these lines of work. Thorough fa miliarity with the legion in which be seeks employment, including it* geography and its forest and inelus- irial conditions, is usually demand ed, although lack of this may be supplied by experience in similai regions. “ I he examination of applicants i- dong the practical lines indicated above, and actual demonstration I y performance, is required. Individ­ uals seeking light out of door < in plovment need not apply. Experi­ ence, not education, is sought, al though ability toenake simple map* and write intelligent reports upon ordinary forest business is essential. “For duty in some parts of Ari­ zona and New Mexico the ranger must know enough Spanish to con duct forest business with’ Mexicans. “Where saddle horses or pack horses are necessary in the perform­ ance of their duty, rangers an* re­ quired to own and maintain them. The forest service furnishes no per heads to do something. Here 01 sonal or horse equipment. “Rangers execute the work of the Coquille river we re silting down divbion. I I The iNmndarv lines of Nesmith 1 patrol to prevent fire, trerfuss, esti­ have been dr twit in strict adherence mating, surveying and marking » to I the topography of the couitiv, timber, the snpert i.ii<>n oi cvltmg its natural watersheds l a i g b< - n and similar work They i--ue minor Proposed Nesmith County considered m every particular The permits, build canir.s and tiails. people ot the new county have no Merits Suppoitof Voters oversee grazing business. iiivestigat« desire ¡0 do am thing that would re claims rejtoii on applicaiiorw and suit detrimentally to either ol the report upon the arrest lor violation old counties. ol foiest laws and regulati ms The people ot Southern Lane and Jointly Lan-* and Douglas have The examination will consist o' Not the. n Douglas Counties, num 5,800,000 acres, or more than the | questions regarding the use ol tln- Bering more than eight thousand entire Willamette Valley, and of forest, supplementeel by a hcld test souls, feeling that they are qu ilified this vast area, only a i-iillion and a to show the applicant s fitness t • do to economically administet their own quarter are aske 1 by the new county the actual work of a ranger, Edu affairs from a governmental stand­ I he people within uie territory of cation and experience will be rated point, have initiated a bill for the the proposed Nesmith county are on the answers to the questions on creation of a new county to be presenting their case to the voters of these subjects in the application known as Nesmith, in honor ol the state without the slightest mis- form and f illustrious Oregoni ms The pro tion that local self government is the be i rovided L»v the forest service. posed countv would contain 1,940 ideal form of government; that the Details regarding the examination square miles, of which 1.472 would nearer home government is cheaper; including the names of the places a’, come from Lane and 4 -8 from that laws are more effectively en- which it will be held, will he sent to Douglas, leaving the former 2,908 forced ; that greater development anyone applying to the United square miles and the latter 4.393 of country is possible; that better States Civil Service Commission, square miles, a sufficient area from highways are attainable; that its Washington, D. C. which to still form several counties citizens aie convenienced by nearness the size of Multnomah, Hood River, to the seat of government; that tax­ Columbia and Washingion. The ation and representation should go Dredge Oregon tit oos Bay. total assessed valuation of Nesmith hand in hand, and that by the cre­ county would be $5.309,575, Raving ation of Nesmith county the efforts Lane $18,000,000 and Douglas of a large and progressive commun­ The Coos Bay Times savs: over $27,000,000. The country ity would be rendered more effect­ ” I he dredge Oregon will leave Grays Harbor, October 10th, for within the proposed new comity is ive in increasing population, de­ Coos Bay. according to information capable of maintaining an organiz­ veloping the resources and enhanc­ given at the engineer's office in Port­ ation that would, we believe, be to ing the greatness of Oregon. (Paid advertisement.) land,” remarked Colonel William I the best interests of the people em­ Grimes, who returned from Port- braced within the territory, and at 1 ind, where he has been a couple of the same time not deprive any othei A remarkable telescope that ena- weeks on business and pleasure. “It affected of their rights, nor increase seems that they have decided that their burdens, nor work them any bles men stationed at Fort Stevens I they can overhaul the Orego. and injuiy whatsoever. to detect the approach of an enemy Owing to the large area of while they are still more than 22 put her in seaworthy condition at Grays Harbor,’’ said Mr. Grimes, the two old counties affected miles off shore, has just been in put to stalled there. By its aid the range residents are ‘ and this will save considerable time. many They are anxious to get her here to great delay, inconvenience and ex- of the approaching fleet can be ob­ begin work and also to avoid the pense in transacting business at the tained, an I the mechanism is so ad county seats. To compel residents justed that it overcomes the effects stormy fall weather ” to travel from 20 to 60 miles over of the curvature of tire earth on an bad roads in order to pay their taxes, ordinary telescope. serve on juries, or as witnesses, is to Advance in Freight Rates inflict a a hardship upon them; yet The longest way across the state of Texas »spin Is the dlstunce from Chi­ cago to the gulf of Mexico or to the Atlantic ocean. Texas is less than half as large as Alaska. Ostrich farming, about 5.000 birds, has become a profitable Industry in Arizona, particularly adjacent to the city of Phoenix. the capital to be of the Stat* till nt least 1!'J5 New Mexico will Is* the fourth state of the Unian in area, larger than any other except Texas, California and Montana. Its area of 122.580 square miles makes it more than double the size of Illinois, which has an area of 56,630 square mile«. Air Flights. Talk nlxmt exciting life! Think of being postal clerk on an airship mall express. Harrisburg Telegraph. French aviators tell 11s air flights will soon be as safe as train travel Better make it a little safer.—Omaha Bee. The railroads will have to sit up and take notice when the airships begin bidding for the mail carrying con tracts.—St. Paul Pioneer Press. The Interstate commerce commis­ sion may as well brace itself for th«- problems the airship will bring up in tlu* near future.—Washington Star. Political Quips. Tho presidential campaign of 1912 is yet young, but it is already extremely active.—Florida Tlmea-l’nlon. Some of the fences the politicians are trying to mend this summer are found to be made of live wire.—Hous­ ton Chronicle. The presidential booms are still play­ ing one night stand engagements, and it is impossible to decide which wtll presently settle down for long runs.— St. Louis Tinies. High Prices. One of these days an aviator will establish a world’s record by soaring six inches higher than the cost of living—Cleveland Lender. There is only one thing lacking to •lake the nuinmef of into n lifelong tnemory, and that is an ice famine.— Milwaukee (Wis.) Sentinel. While the high cost of living is not receiving much public attention Just at present, the man who pays the bills has not forgotten it.—St. Louis Post Tlispatch. . Suspended. _____ w Washington, D. C., Oct. 4 —The advances of transcontinental freight charges, varying from five to ten cents a hundred pounds, from points of eastern origin to Pacific coast points, were suspended today by the interstate commerce commission until February 6 1911, pending an in­ quiry by the commission into their reasonableness. The order of sus­ pension affects seveial hundred inter state curlers east of the Rockv Mountains. Tariffs tiled with the commission were to have become effective October 10th. They’apply to all comm 111 ity and class freight oil the westbound shipments to the Pacific coast, including lumber and furniture. Teachers’ and Patrons’ Great Combination Offer ’JpHE RECORDER management has made arrangements with the San Francisco Bulletin whereby we C ol J ames W illis N esmith Illustrious Oregonian, whose iiam< the proprosed county would perpetuate. Meeting. it is more, a matter of self govern ment for which the progressive A most cordial invitation is ex­ people of this proposed county are tended to ail parents of school chil­ contending. Taxation and repre­ dren and others interested in the sentation should go hand in hand, work of the schools to be present at but not so under present conditions t Teachers’ and Patrons' .Meeting to For instance, Cottage Grove, the be held in the High School Audito­ second city in size and iinfrortance rium this evening at 7:30. An inter­ in Lane county, has never been per esting program is being prepared, milted to name a county judge, and and the question of forming a perma­ it has been a quarter cei tury since nent organization among teachers it had representation on the county ami parent:; lor the mutual consider board of commissioners; wit le the ition of school and educational t p territory taken from Douglas comity ics will t>e presr tiled. has never had either a county judge Such organizations are cariied on or commissioner. The represents in many communities, ami when lives in the state legislatures are wisely conducted are very helpful to from the county seats— Eugene and the schools. All parents are urged Roseburg—thus leaving a large tax to interest themselves in this matter. contributing community without voice in either local or slate affairs. Ninety- two per cent, of the residents The Forest Service plans the seed* w thin the proposed Nesmith couhtv mg ot between 5000 and 6000 acres signed the petition, praying the of burned over lands at a cost ol voters -f Oregon to grant them sell approximately $26-,000. Altout 700 government by the creation of the acres, situated at the Bull Run wat- new county, while one particular ershed, file source ot Portland’swat* section immediately outside the er supply, will be reforested in this original boundary lines petitioned way. The largest amount of plant­ the N e s m i t h committee lor ing will be done in the Mt. Hebo admission to the new district, south ot Tillamook, which county, preferring to take chances was burned over in 1847 and never with the new rather t ian to remain iciorested. O11 most ot this area with the old. This shows conclus- Eastern hard < oods will be planted. ively that the sentiment of the tax­ 000----- payers of the proposed new county i The R ecorder for Job Work. ’S o o State Lines. ;rpe pracUcaMjr WMaimote in favor ol •> & 9 • • 9 t 9 *o' i®1 * 9 9 can give subscribers the advantage of a gigantic combination offer that will furnish them all the news of the country in a metropolitian daily and all the news of Bandon and vicinity in the Recorder at marvelous low price The Daily San Francisco Bulletin, The Bandon Recorder, $3.00 per year 1.50 per year Total, $4.50 Both papers through this office if paid in advance, per year $2.75 Fast and Commodious S. S. BREAKWATER Leaves Portland (Ainsworth Dock) 8 p. m. every Tuesday. Leaves Coos Bay every Saturday at service of the tide. Confirm Sailing! Through C. M. SPENCER, Agent Bandi • • . •• ••