BANDONRECORDER
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BAMDON
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Even a remarkable arrean or g<axi
lu«< wouldn’t cura a born peeslmlat.
We notloe the statement that the
problem of aerial travel Is to be solved
■gain this year.
Evidently members of the Thaw fam
ily never dUeovered the secret of living
happily ever afterward.
Who says Hrtlsts are not practical?
A Berlin artist has just married a
Woman worth
We are rather Inclined to like the
tclratlst who says s man should lie in
bed at least twenty minute* after wak-
lug up in the morning.
After all American heiree««i have
married foreign titles there will still
be left the sensible girls to become the
happy wives of American men.
gentleman blew off another
collar with a •hotgnn. This
a rather heroic method, but If
celluloid he was justified.
Chicago la soon to have the world’s
isrgest hotel, containing 1,172 rooms.
Just imagine what a force will be need
ed to keep them all supplied with lee
water 1
Young Maxim ha» invented a "silent
firearm.” First they took away th«
■moke of battle, then the gay uniforms
■nd now the noise. War itself will
have to go next.
In the opinion of a Chicago preacher,
a girl who can’t cook shouldn’t marry.
It might also help some if the average
married man knew a little more than
he does about cooking.
The Oregon Short Line Railroad
Company Is going to distribute an
extra dividend of 75 per cent among Its
stockholders. It ought to be easy for
the officials of that road to find good
Jobs lu the East
"Mythomania" is the new scientific
name of the disease that afflicts people
who prevaricate merely because they
prefer not to tell the truth. But old
"shorter and uglier” will continue to
be used when men get angry.
A German officer I imb commented ad
versely on the standing army of the
United States. Like a good many oth
er people, he may change his views If
he ever sees our army in motion In
stead of standing around awaltlug or
ders.
In mid-ocean, during heavy weather,
a liner recently slowed down for an
hour while the ship surgeon and anoth
er physician operated on one of the
coal passers for appendicitis. The oper
ation was successful. The incident Is
pleasant to think about—a great ship
lying as steady as possible In pitching
seas while a skillful, cool-headed sur
geon makes his sure strokes.
Woman’s ingenuity with a hairpin,
and her Invincibility when armed with
a hatpin, are well known. A new Im
plement has now been added to the
feminine equipment—a pair of rubber
shoes. Four ¡>ersons were entangled
in the coils of a live wire In New York.
No one dared to help them until a
young girl came along, took off her
rubbers, and using them ns gloves,
handled the wire skilfully and safely.
When she had tied it round a telegraph
pole, she walked quietly away, after
having refusal to give her name.
The necessity, which sailors under
stand so well, of making everything
fast on shipboard, was illustrated by
• recent negfbet of the precaution on
the steamship Persian. The vessel was
coming up the const from Philadelphia
to Boston, wlieu a heavy steel safe
broke loose from Its chocks, and for
an hour fought a battle wnth the sail
ors like that which Hugo, in the fa
mous chapter of “Ninety-three,” de-
scribes as taking place on the French
man-of-war. The safe first dashed
from the captain's cabin, and plunging
through the door, started down across
the deck. Fore and aft and from side
to side it lurched and plunged, smash
ing or carrying away everything in its
path, and threatening the lives of the
men at every rush. Finally, by the aid
of r«i>As. furniture and ca|>stan-bars, it
was checked, lassoed and made fast.
Those who had a part in the battle will
rend “Ninety three" with new Insight
hereafter.
z
Education has two sides, the mate
rial and the immaterial, and of these
the immaterial is the nobler; but so
severe, apparently. Is the contest among
Individuals for wages, and •> keen
among nations the struggle for suprem
acy In commercial and industrial pur
suits and operations, that the advan-
tages of education In the intellectual
and spiritual development of mankind
are often kept out of sight. The Ihmes.
!n their people’s high schools, have bet
ter than other nations, succeeded in
combining the two shies of continuation
school work. Against the danger in
volved tn excessive utilitarianism I’rof.
Sadler utters a timely warning: "Let
us not Identify the world for which we
seek to train every child solely with
the work! of material IntereWs and of
visible things. Let us not forget, In
our educational plans, the weight that
dfeoul* be attached to the clalma of tlw
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H>lrttu«l ft-Bin», whose frontiers tran-
a« ■»•ml political fro®clers, and whose
«mamo uw «al th In In heaven.
The war with Japan left Russia prac
tlcally without a navy. It Is not sur
prising that she should be thinking
and planning the «instruction of a new
fleet, and a reasonable naval program
would be taken everywhere as a matter
of course.
A reasonable program
would recognize accomplished facts—■
the loss of Port Arthur, the dashing of
the hojies of an ice-fn-e j>ort in the
Pacific, the blow to the whemes- of
empire In the East. But the naval pro
gram which the admiralty has prepared
and wants the duma to approve Is con
sidered wild not only by all the lite
erals but by many of the conservative
editors and writers as well. The total
to be spent In nine years Is consider
ably over a billion, and the appropria
tion# for this yeur for new construc
tion and some improvement work at
ports and naval stations amount to
143,500,000. This certainly seems far
too ambitious a program for a country
struggling with a famine in some prov-
Inces and sufferlng from poor crops
generally, Industrial and political dis-
order and staggering debt burdens. XI-
most the entire press has opposed the
schemes of the admiralty as foreshad
owed in semi-official statements, and
has pointed to the need of agrarian re
form, which will cost a good deal of
money, of universal primary education,
of public works and other things that
are essential in themselves, and, In
addition, conditions of pacification and
regeneration. But it Is reported that
the court, including the Caar himself,
is determined to force the,acceptance
of the program as it stands. Indeed,
the duma has already been told by high
bureaucrats that It would be dissolved
if it should decline to ratify the naval
budget. What the Octoberists and the
other moderates and conservatives in
that body will do remains to be seen.
The fanatical reactionaries, it Is be
lieved. will vote against the naval pro
gram in order to bring about the disso
lution threatened. They love the navy,
but their hatred of the duma and of
reform Is deeper. Perhaps, however,
the government will finally agree to
compromise on an alternative program
of more modest proportions to cover a
shorter period. The prospects of new
foreign loans will have something to
do with its attitude.
Coquille Steam Laundry
NOBLER A MORRISON.
FIRST-GLASS LAUNDRY WORK
Of Wary kind done on «hort notice
ana at reasonable pnce®.
SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED
EXPERTS TO GOVERN OUR CITIES.
By President Eliot of Harvard.
I believe that a board of five select
men'would he safer, more intelligent,
and in the end more democratic, than
an autocratic mayor or our present
system. We need men as agents of
the [jeople who are competent busi
ness men and have proved themselves
to be such. Municipal business has
become very complicated and needs
exjiert service.
We cun only get expert men into
our city business as great business
PKLS1ULNT ELIOT.
corporations get them. These corpo-
rations are governed by a small body of directors, whose
chief function Is to select experts. These directors have
to bo men capable of directing the grand policies of the
corporation.
We want In our cities men who have proved their
competence In their private business. The commonest
objection is all in the word "un-American.” So many
good things nowadays are un-American. So many I have
heard called that when first proposed have later proved
their worth and been adopted, Undemocratic is another
such word.
Whatever policy will get the work of the people well
done ought to be democratic, If It Isn't now. Those are
the very conditions of the life of democracy* But no form
of government will be good government unless there be
behind it the voting population which desires good gov
ernment.
AMERICAN CITIZENS REAL RULERS.
By Chancellor Day of Syracuse University.
The citizens always have been greater titan
the officeholders, for they create the offices and
select officeholders, who cannot select them
selves. The people are the President, the
Governor.
«
These are names for their will, their au
thority, and their power, their agents. This
Is a good reason why they should defend such
offices and those who occupy them, for they
are represented in them, and their self-respect must suf
fer by any degradation of the Instruments of their self-
government. And this Is why men chosen as represent
ative rulers can never afford to forget whom they serve.
That remark of one of our Governors that "the people
want a governor to rule them” was the opposite of the
truth. It could be reversed and be true. The people
should rule the Governor. They make the laws and the
institutions and they determine the jierson who shall lie
called Governor. And he can rule nobody. lie can
simply act for the people in carrying out their rulership
and enforcing under well-defined limitations their laws.
He has absolutely nothing that they have not given him.
And any assertion of any other authority Is u usurpation
and an Impertinence. Even his discretion is buoyed, an
unmistakable channel.
The citizen Is supreme. One-half and one of the citi
zens of the State can control it absolutely by the choice
of one of their number to execute their will. And they
have said what number of the whole shall amend consti
tutions or make laws. All of the Governors and Judges
and Presidents and Cabinets combined cannot do it
The people, however humble and unlearned and ob-
acure. can do what no persons by virtue of any office or
Some think that a line set In very
large tyjie Is strong and convincing,
but all strong men are not six-footers
and a wild yell Is neither polite, elo
quent or reasoning.
In all legitimate advertising it Is
hotter to be definite. Separate one arti pnooooooooooooooooocxxxxxxi
cle from another clearly. Make each i 5 EVERYBODY LIKED HIM.
£
proposition distinct. Exhibit the feat
ures as you would a picture. Indi □oooooooo<>xiooooc<x>ooooooo
viduality Is an asset of all goods and
should be of the representation of them
At an auction hi a storage warehouse
in the advertisement. People of this the auctioneer hud but Just restored
age like facts and the really interested harmony between two females, each of
buyer likes them best of all.
[ whom believed herself to be the pur
A newspaper may boom a town chaser of two pigs in a blue china
through Its editorial columns, but a automobile, when a small voice piped
critical investor looks to the adver up, demanding to know when the kit
tising columns for substantial evidence tens were to lie put up for sale. The
of push and life. To him they are the auctioneer paid no attention, says a
thermometers measuring the Intensity writer In the New York Sun, because a
of public warmth. They are the pulse roll-top desk was in danger of going
which Indicates the healthy condition for six dollars and a half. Again the
of the collective body of the people. small voice arose, and as no one an
They tell him whether or not the com swered, it died down.
munity is up to times in business mat I The roll-top desk finally brought
twelve dollars, and In the triumphant
ters.
moment that followed, the auctioneer
A large advertiser says: When i
heard the small, persistent person say
read an advertisement that Is particu-
larly attractive to me, 1 assume that ing :
it will tie equally attractive to others. | "Please, aren't you going to put up
the kittens?"
When I read a line of argument that
"Kittens?” said the auctioneer, won-
a;ipeals to me I reason that the same
lerlng
if he had missed a lot.
line will convince others. Suppose you
|
Here
the small person was raised on
take the question of position. Do you
some one's shoulder. He proved to be
yourself read more frequently the ad
vertisements which pre at the top of a black-eyed, curly-haired little chap.
Every one smiled and asked him what
the column or pnge or those nt the kittens he meant. He was quite abashed
bottom? What display attracts you
by so much attention, but managed to
most? Then about prices. Are you lisp out:
tempted to buy a 11 article because
( "The men that
it Is marked down to 75 cents? The the kittens what drive the horses said
argument which caused you to consider going to be sold, lives in the box are
anti I want one."
it will serve you in turn when you
As a grimy fist containing four cents
write about the spwial price you »io
was held out for the auctioneer's in-
sire to make'
sjiectlon, the small person grew so In
1 popular favor that the kittens were
•
«4 Warn«.
"Father," said Tommy Bardcll of the sent for. and he was allowed to take
William Henry Harrison grammar his choice. He trotted off. having
school, "yon want to come next Sat- bought the only live stock of the morn
unlay afternoon and see us play a ing. but holding It so tightly round its
game with the Oliver Wendell Holmes fat little waist-line that it stood small
football team. We’re going to do 'em chance of lielng live stock long.
I Men smiled tolerantly after the re
up."
"Do you belong to a football tenni ?' treating little figure, and even the auc
asked ills father. "It Is news to me." tioneer was moved to momentary si
“Do I?" exclaimed Tommy, proudly. lence. all of which goes to show that
“Well, I reckon ! I'm the quarter back the simple, natural child is never real
ly out of fashion.
of the Tornadoes. »♦
‘“rhe Tornadoes? Who fire they?”
Gave lie
"That's the name of our school
The group of friends stood admiring
team."
ly before the latest picture by a well-
"H'inph! And you are going to play known Illustrator which ornamented
a game next Saturday, are you? Well, the wall of the bachelor girl. It repre
i’ll go and see it."
sented an exceedingly athletic young
The game took place according to man in the act <>f engulfing a fluffy
announcement, und the Tornadoes were rutiled young la iy and Imprinting a
beaten by a score of 2tl to 0.
passionate salute upon her upturned
"Tommy.” said bls father, overtak lips.
ing him while he was on his way home,
The young ladles gushed over It with
"what did you tell me was the name o' enthusiasm, while the men agreed that
your team?"
i '.t was very lifelike.
“The Tornadoes,” answered the boy,
"There Is one serious defect In the
"but we’re going to change It to Some pirture,’’ announced the bachelor girl,
thing else. We alu't avan a fog!*
after the first outburst "Ths artist
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Order* left on Monday* wùh our Random
a.-*-nt. A O TROWBRIDGE will be <iven care
ful attention and delivered in Handon at the eiura
Friday •veniiurs
position or wealth or Influence can do. And If they <?••>
not do tin sc things, and prevent things which they do
not approve. It Is because they are indifferent and un
worthy of their elli/a'iishlp. or have sold to the deu.a-
gogites the birthright of the primary and the ballot
COQUILLE, OREGON.
o
You can’t expect to get $2
worth for $1, but yen can git
' your moneys worth at
M. BREUER’S
Dealer in Boote and Shoe*
Repairing Neatly and Promptly Doua
at Lowest Living Prices.
Lewin’s Meat Market
All Kinds of
Meats 4 Provisions
Furnished at living prices. A share
of the public patronage solicited
ORDER COMES THROUGH STRUGGLES.
By Dr. Paul Carus.
Ethics teaches us all struggle must be un
dertaken in the service of a higher and
greater cause than our egotistic Helf.
He
ulone will conquer who figlitH for something
greater than his personal Interests; and even
If he is vanquished he will still have the
satisfaction that bls ideal Is not conquered
with him. He will find successors to do his
work. His Ideal, If genuine, will rise again
in bls successors, and they will accomplish a final vic
tory for his aspirations.
The Teutonic nations In many respects, it appears, are
the most successful peoples in the world, because of their
stern ethics of undaunted struggle, to which they have
adhered since prehistoric times. It was no disgrace for
the Teutonic warrior to be slain, no dishonor to be van
quished ; but it was Infamy worse than death to be a
coward. It was a disgrace to gain a victory by dishonest
means. The enemy was relentlessly combated, maybe be
was hated, yet It would have been a blot on one’s es-
cutcheon to treat him with meanness. It was not un
common among these barbarians for the victor to place
a laurel wreath upon the grave of Ills foe whom in life
he had combated with bitterest hatred.
A wonderful harmony results from the conflict of sn-
tagonlstic principles. All order proceeds from the an-
tagonlsm of factors that work in opposite directions.
has made one serious mistake, at which
I am surprised. Can any one pick it
out?"
All agreed that It seemed perfect.
"Don't you see that the girl’s eyes
are open?” said the buchelor girl.
“What girl, I ask you, ever received
a real kiss, such as Is portrayed here,
with her eyes not blissfully closed? A
woman always closes her eyes when
she Is kissed by the man she Is fond
of.”
The women all agreed that the criti
cism was true and Bald how strange It
was they hadn't noticed it, while the
men glanced at each other with looks
which admitted their own stupidity.
“Now, as to whether the man’s eyes
ought to be closed, I don’t know, as I
have never noticed."
And then the bachelor girl was snd-
denl.v overcome with confusion as a
chorus of delighted shrieks and shouts
arose from the assemblage present
E
LEWIN, Proprietor
Furnished Rooms
AT
THE PACIFIC
MRS, SARAH COSTELLO
Nice clean rooms 25c and 50c a
night; $1.25 a week; |5 a month
OREGON
BANDON
BANDON TRANSFER CO.
C. H. PATTERSON & SON
Dray and General Deliva ••
f Meets all boats. Alt order® hand It*, w h care
OREGON
BANDON
Clarence Y. Lowe
though having yet to make her first
appearance in France.
BANDON, OREGON
DINNER SERVED AT OPERA.
Druggist and Apothecary
Queen Set« Fashion of Giving Uos
Parties nt Covent Gorden.
By having her dinner brought from
Buckingham Palace and served in the
rear of the royal box during the Inter
val between the first and second acts
of the opera on Thursday night, the
Queen set a fashion that society be
lieves will not only become popular for
the charm of the idea, but will also
solve the practical problem of minister
ing to the appetite at early perform-
ances without missing parts of the
opera, says the London correspondent
of the New York Times. Owing to the
increasing demand for the rendition of
operas without cuts, the eating prob
lem has recently his-ome very acute nt
the long performances. The situation
becomes especially annoying when the
HAILED AS THE “NEW PATTI.” performance begins ns early as 0:30,
as was the case with "Siegfried" in
Mme. T.ulsa Tetrazzini, who scored a English at Covent Garden on Thursday.
success at her first appearance In New
During the general scamper to neigh
York, slnglnu in "i.a Traviata.
boring refreshment bars and sandwich
de|x>ts between the first and second
acts four attendants carefully carried
into the rear of the royal box a small
table, already set, and containing the
Queen's favorite dishes. The food had
been prepared at the palace and kept
warm by means of patent heat retain
ing devices.
Thus Queen Alexandra, with one or
two friends, was able to turn from the
stage tc dinner, which they had time
to enjoy heartily before the beginning'
of the next net. When the curtain
ascended the attendants disappeared
with the dinner table as silently as
they had appeared.
Many persons lielieve that box dinner
parties will be accepted as really I <
smart and sensible functions as Co
vent Garden In the future.
SHOES
BOOTS
WHAT TO READ AND HOW TO READ IT.
Hy T. P. O'Connor, M. P.
Reading is part of the great universal-“pnr-
suit of happiness.” Also it is a sea to drown
care and a sword to kill time, it Is a pastime,
like golf, only a much bet 1er one. I read be-
cause 1 enjoy reading, I try not to pretend
to like things I don't like- -and when I am
bored I try candidly to admit the fact. I
have again and again failed to get through
masterpieces, or even to jiercelve tbat inaster-
pieces are masterpieces. Therefore I no longer attempt
to read them. But at the same time.I do not make a pren
tice in my quest of enjoyment of discarding every book
that threatens to prove tedious.
The main principle which should underlie the reading
of every man is the esthetic or intellectual bliss to be
derived from reading. His perusals should fall into two
divisions the disciplinary and the purely Joyous. When
lie is beginning to form his taste in Imaginative liter
ature his disciplinary reading should consist of classical
imaginative masterpieces. As time proceeds, the inex
perienced student, growing-experienced, will discover that
his joyous reading approximates more and more to his
disciplinary reading. He will discover that the verdict
of tile ages was right, even though It did not accord
with Ills own early views. He will discover that the rea
son why the classical writers from Ilomer to whom you
please are esteemed and immortal Is not primarily be
cause they are deep and correct, and restrained, and
shapely, but primarily because they give joy, sheer joy,
to the largest number of cultivated readers.
I« just in receipt of a new and fresh stock of
Drugs and Chemicals, Patent and Pro-
prietary Preparations, Toilet Articles,
Druggists Sundries, Perfumes, Brushes
Sponges, Soap, Nutsand Candies, Cigars
Tobaccos ami Cigarettes. Paints, Oils,
Glass and Painters’ Supplies.
A. B. SABIiN
Manufacturer of and Denier in
All
Kill de* of
S*icicilcry
Harness and Saddles Repaired
OREGON
BANDON
The Eldorado
RASMUSSEN BROS., Props
Bandon
Oregon
The OPERA
Hnt< Grind OfT Tlielr Teeth.
MML TETRAZZINI.
bailed by the London critics on her
appearance in England as “the new
Patti.” She has been singing In opera
for eleven years. Mine. Tetrazzini Is
a native of Florence, and first appear
ed in opera in her native city as Inez
In “L'Africaine." She lias sung in al
most every country of the world.
A curiously marked stone has born
found at ('olebr<s>ke, Devonshire,. En
glund. In the middle of a wheat rick,
and geologists who have seen It ex
press the opinion that the markings I
on the stone were caused by rats using
It to grind their teeth, which other
wise grew to nil inordinate length.
Some rats have been known to stnrve
owing to tU»-ir teeth getting too long.
I! m a Select Stock of
Stiao Bur on Draught
COURTEOUS TREATMENT
A well known confidence operator
confesses that he can rob three wise
men while he Is becoming acquainted
with a fool.
GROSS BROS
Success Is not always plensant Thor»
Is the successful vaccination, for
stane*
Orego®
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