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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1908)
O Volume XXIV. BANDON, OREGON, ILL «IGNI Thaw Family and Counsel o Wen Satisfied with O the Verdict * a New Y»«l :, Feb i—Harry Thaw will hale t<> spend some time in an iriwin» akylum. The jury this morn ing retut. eii a verdict of not guilty on account of insanity and commit ted th»- prisoner to Matteawan. Tin* means that Thaw will probably b» forced to remain at that institution for some weeks or months, after which he will in probability be »<■- moved to a private sanitarium, then discharged as cured. The jury re<naine<l out all night and did not arrive at a » efdict un til a great mass gg eabihits in the rase had i*een carefully gone over and as carefully discussed. ‘disposition and that the faint of in sanity can be obliterated with care ful attention to well known methods i of dealing with such patients. Littleton was greatly elated over I the verdict anil congratulated Thaw and his young wife. Mrs. Thaw. Harry’s mother, wept silently when ! she realized that her son would be sent to the bleak asylum for the criminal insane. There were a few awful moments as the jury filed in to deliver the verdict. Rumor had it that it was to be another split jury and Thaw and his wife dreaded the ordeal of another trial, and a repetition of the stories of ^both their lives. Harry looked the jurors in the eye as they vtent by but there was nothing to be learned. The,verdict seems to satisfy pub lic opinion in Neu York 'Attorney Littleton said: > “The verdict is not a surprise to me. I expected that the jury would find a verdict of not guilty, but 1 did not wholly expect a commit ment to an asylum. This, however, does not mean so much as is sup posed.’.’ District Attorney Jerome had little to say. He thought that justice had1 miscarried and that the jury had been affected by woman’s tears and and the general feeling against Standford White. OF WE PAST WEEK Improvements and Incidents Occoring throughout tha State. © 0 The enormous advance in the prices of all kinds of paper within the past few months has induced paper manufacturing companies to look for new fields for the establish men! of paper mills and this week W. E. Grout, of w ¡sconsit), rep resentative «4 • a large paper manu facturing company of that stase, is looking over the country in the vicinity of Pendleton with a view to establishing a branch, manufactory here. - o©o Enrollment for the month, 26. Daily attendance, i9. • Days present, 395. Daye absent. 64, Times late, 8. Boll of honor, 7. Grade 6, Miaa Murphy, Teacher. Enrollment for the year, 46, Enrollment for the month, 28. GOOD REPORI CONSIDERING SICKNESS Daily attendance, 26. Days present, 526. Days absent, 60. Times late, 10. Increasing Enrollment will Boll of Honor, II. Grades 7 and 8,Miss Rodme,Teacher. Necessitate Larger Enrollment for the year, 68. Enrollment for the month. 45. Structure. Daily attendance, 38. Daye present, 680. Days absent, 42. Times late, 20. Report of the Bandon Public Roll of honor, 12 Schools for the fifth school month, High School. H. C. Ostien, Principal. ending Friday, January 31: Mrs. Ostien, Assistant Grade I, Miss Wilkins, Teacher. Enrollment for the year. 19. Enrollment for the year 58 Enrollment for the mouth, 17. Enrollment for the month 32. Days attendance. 15. Daily attendance 21. Days present. 288. Days present 440. Days absent, 18. Days absent 63. Times late, 6. Times late 0. Roll of honor, 4. Roll of honor 5. SUMMARY. Grade 2, Miss Yeo, Teacher. Total enrollment for the year. 357. Enrollment for the year. 38. Total enrollment fur the month, 255 Enrollment for the month, 32. Average daily attendance, 187. Daily attendance, 16 Total days present, 3688. Days present. 326. Total days absent, 490. Days absent. 74. Times late,78. Times late,I 3. Roll of honor, 55. 9 Hull of Honor, 4. • Roll • of honor includes pupils Grade3, Mies Collier, Teacher neither absent nor tardy for the Enrollment for the year. 48. m< ntb The following students of the High School have made a stand Enrollment for the month, 37. ing of A for the month in the sub Daily attendance, 25. jects named A equals 95 to 100 per Day« present, 493 cent O • Days absent, 97. Jessie W ood, English. Latin; Lena Langlois, Algebra, General History. 1’iuii a late, 9. * ■ Bo<>kkeeping;Elisha Wilson, General Boll qf Honor, 6. • History;Nora Gibson, Algebra, Gen Grad« 4, Mias Dari«*, Taaicher. eral History; Erma Crain«, Algebra, General History,,Bookkeeping; Hazel Enroll iio>ut for th« year, 48. Stephenson, General History. Book Euroliaaent for the month, 38. keeping; Roy Corson, English Geo Daily attendance, 27. metry; Kittie *• *-- -------- • McNair. << General History; Sylvia Jiacklefl, General Day# present, 540. History; Edith Carlson, General Daya absent, 72. History ; Maud Lowe, Algebra. Gen Tnnua late, 12. eral History, Bookkeeping"; Blanche Roll of honor, 6. Radley. Algebra, English, Geology. Respectfully submitted, ■ (Dade 5. Mrs. My era. Teacher. H. C. O stien , ' Enrollment for tbe year, 34. Snperintendent.V Albany is sorely afflicted this win ter with tramps and shop-lifter-. According to the report of the mar shal, 288 arrests have been made in that city during November and De cember. Most of them were just or dinary tramps and were turned loose the morning after their arrest and told to move on, which the weary Willies diil, to be arrested the next night in some other town and thrown in jail for the night for a sleeping place. Two arrests have been made within a munth for shop-lifting anil the third was hushed up by the family paying well for all goods sup posed to have been stolen. All the shop-lifters were women. PUBLIC SCHOOL HE ------ OOO------- 0 0 Number 0 FEBRUARY 05 THURSDAY, Take one year of Curry county’s squandered interest money and use it in the interior of the court house 15 cent and what a difference, window fasteners could take the place of the rusty spikes, A few dollars would replace that abomi nation called a stqve ni the treasurer’s office. That wheezy rickety old desk at which clerk Smith toils the weary hours through could be Something inspiring and pleasing. The court room with its ragged matting and its broken seats to take on an appearance that would suggest civilization and prosperity. All sacrificed, for what? You an swer if you can.—Radium. With the extension of the Pilot Rock branch ot .the O. R. & N. into the timber belt in the south It was not long after daybreak part of the county vast quantities of when the verdict was sent out and i wood pulp would become available Notice. Lumber <$5 per M. immediately a great crowd as- , her»- and with the enormous quanti Comrades of the Socialist F*i ty sembled about the newsf»ap«r offices j We have a quantity of No. 3 lum ties ot wheat straw of the wheat.belt of tile State <W Oregon, to hear the particulars. Word was her, suitable for building shells, adjacent to thib city, ample raw ma Attention! ?ent by telephone to Thaw’s lawyers walks, etc., which we offer in lots of terial for a paper niill would be A Mass Nominating lad Regis and to members of his family, who iaoo feet and upward,.at $5 P*r M. available, tributary to Pendleton to tration Convention will be held at C ody L umber C o . immediately hurried to the Tombs supply a large plant. Coquille City, Oregon, on Friday, to await further development. Feb. «>, »908, at the bow» of a I For Sale. Myrtle Point.-r-Fires, undoubtedly o’clock, A. M. At 11:40 a. m. the jury sent for 1 • Av order of the County A'tHtral Judge iJowlingf ami the pr*i*«k» r and I •J. H. v Junes ’ fGtry Ranch for »if. incendiary migin, Jan i.y, de family wefW summon»*d. In a few sale at a bargain on easy terms if stroyed the house ami barn of j. W. Committee. Whitney, a vacant house belonging moments th»' 1 j men filed in. and si4d in thirty days. A. W. S leeper ^ Chairman, when asked if a verdict' had been to Charles Dulliboy, and the house S. I.. C urry , Secretary. Address J. H. J ones , •; "r - , 11 reached, Foreman Gfemmels replied Fourmile, Ore-. of Ernest Livermore, all in a small A fine assortment- of rings at A. that it had and the document was valley tributary to Ketching Creek, J MU. »3rd 1908. ♦« about four r^ples w hi th pest of Myrtle Rice’s. A11 prices and all designs. hantfoi to the court, who gave it to / Clerk Fenny who read alow<f “Not Rooms to Rent . guilty «»n the grot»nd of insanity.’-' ______ • Thau was in a very downcast Rooms with good cook stove 3 frame of mind. fie seemed to for rent at corner Columbia and imagine that the caw would be d< Third, street. tf cided against him atsd when he M rs . S. C. .R ockwell . learned that the jury had been locked up for th»- night he- appeared ex- Teacher’s E »amination. trrm»4y nervous and secured little ! rest during the balance of the night. Notice is hereby given that the Evelyn Nesbit Tliaw on the con regular semi-annual examination of trary was optimiiitic and told applicant« for State and County through the Thaw attorneys that she j paperswill be held 'in- the Court believed her husband -would be I House in Coquille beginning at 9 acquitted. She did not even con a. in. Wednesday, Feb. i2t|i, 190M Sider it probable that Thaw would and continuing three days. have to go fo an asylum, maintain W H. B unch , ing that her husband's weaki^?ss Co. Su,<. wav due to his estremely nervous . -Dated this 24th day of Jan. 1908. THE COINAGE EXPERTS. I Point. The house a&d. barn of the Whitney place were about 80 yards' Opportunity for Teacher». apart, an<1 it is thought must have been tired, as none of the ranchers The Aknithem ( hegon State hior- were at home escept Mr. Dulliboy, njal School at Ashland offers who attempted to ’sayr the Whitney especial opportunities for teachers to house. He was frightened away by I review for the teacher’s examinations the explosion of shells in three rifles !’in February and August, ami to that were in the house. Two previous i take work in Pedagogy ' and in attempts have been made to bum .Special Methods of teaching in the out settlers iu die same neighbor- various grades ,4 the training school. liood by tiring slashings. Since the puldic schools of Oregon ----- OOO*—- ate calling for teachers who can Eugene, Or.—The city council teach Marniti training, irtany ate has passed an ordinance ordering Liking advantage of the .industriai the paving of eleven blocks-on East work lately installed in the school. Eleventh- street, the thoroughfare Ex-frenses id board and lodging and leading from the business section tuition nominal. to the University of Oregon. The The State Nofinal School of Ash contract will lie let as soon as is land is enjoying the largest- appro- legally possible. Eugene already ' ptiarmn <d state funds ever granted Jias nine litecks of bitulithic pave ment. and has contracted for t»n i Normal vb<»4 in the history of more. Property owner* on streets Oregon. Catalogues »«sit »»»rappli adjacent to the tiuuneis secti»M» ate cataro to the PHESIHENI talking c»t petitioning for the paring of a number of blocks, in! if is probable tliat before the uitnmo is TheRev.IrL R. Hick» 1908 over Eugene - will hive forty Iducks Almanac. completed <« contracted for is i«ady for delivery and excels — OOO ~- A GOOD HAT 15 A GOOD THING FOR THE HEAD. all former editions in beauty .»nd Recwivrt T. C. Devlin of the Ore- EVEN THOUGH A MAN’5 CLOÏHE5 LOOK GOOD, IF gpn Trust A Savings Hank ot Port value. The cover is a beautiful land, has filed a formal petition in design in colors, the entire book is H15 HAT 15 OLD OR OUT OF 5TYLE IT GOE5 WE HAVE JU5T GOT IN A 5WELL Judge Gantenbein's court asking for full/tf fine half tonrs, astronomical AGAIN5T HIM. engravings and other interesting LINE OF NOBBY HAT5 FOR MEN. WE CAN GIVE an owlet of sale of the RsfeLs of that It contains the Hicks YOU A GOOD HAT. bank to the German-American bank, matter, WE CAN FIT YOU OUT IN THE through which it is proposed to liq weather forecasts complete for the : BE5T HAT AGOING. No MATTER HOW HARD YOU The i uidate the suspended institution with whole year, finely illustrated. ARE TO PLEA5E, WE CAN PL.EA5E YOU IN A HAT a guarantee that the. creditors shall price by mail is 35 cents, on News- Stands 30 cents. Word and ' --ONE THAT WILL LOOK So WELL ON YOU THAT receive dollar for dollar. Works, the Rev. Irl. R. Hicks > IF YOU APPLY FOR A Po5ITIoN THE HAT YOU Enterprise.—By actual count, En- ■ fine monthly magazine, cont.tins all , WEAR WILL BE A RECOMMENDATION AND DON’T terprise has a population ot 803. his weather forecasts from month to FORGET, WE CAN FIT YOU OUT AL5O WITH NICE Since the last census of 1900, the month, together with a vast ammint | TIE5, 5HIRT5, COLLAR5 AND CUFF5- ANY- population <A' Enterprise has in-, of the best family reading. The | ÒUR 5VIT5, MADE E5PECI- THING YOU WEAR.. creWsed too per cgnt. price is (ft. a year and one almanac 1 ImpriWements by way M building goes with m b subscription. Ad ALLY FOR \JS, ARE AL5O TO BE REMEMBERED. • • js kiereasing in accordance ®ith th« dress, W<<4 and Works bteblislung •• • R.E5PECTFULLY, population of this place, as the esyi Co., ago4 Locust Street, St. LiAiisI o » mated cost of the buildings »pA.’tod 1 Missouri. rate on Write for u Agents 1 in Enterprise during file pp>t pear, t» aknan.<<k*s in I qu^tntitieSi •ver $100,000. -»«uteri. * « • -• •• o « 9 —^rryman in Washington Star. » O. A. Trowbridge o ° O g » o ‘•t • • • o O a. o o »0 o I O » O - b o • o o