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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1908)
BANDON RECORDER ItMird f u< h Werk formed that It couhl n>< I m - receive^ tie went ahead, and tlx- representations he made are helieve<l to huV** «loll» much to cheek tlie massacres. ■ ------------- :---- .~s- BANDON OREGON Ilaytl Is one of the spots on the earth that ix progressing backward». Iu regard to elections, many have been named, but few will be chosen. Tbe Czar wants to visit America. Westward the course of empire takes <ts way. A Chicago thief wears n merry wid ow. Probably because widows usually are touching. Prince Helle is as happy ns a man who has just found the coinniiitutlon meal ticket he thought he had lost. Dr. Emma Culbertson, of Boston, as serts that •‘every- woman is a human being.” More wild-eyed radicalism. Time Is money, but you can’t start a bank account with it and sit down while It draws 3 per cent Interest. Strange how proud a self-made man lx of his handiwork ; yet you never hear a self-made “lady” throwing any bou- quets at herself on that score. When it comes to Inquisitiveness and suspicion almost any woman can give a detective cards and spades and beat him out. The average woman gets i double quantity of enjoyment out of i present —the present Itself, and tryln to find out the cost thereof. Some people talk as If hot weather In summer is nothing less than a bloom Ing outrage, which tlie government ought to put a stop to. A Chicago woman was arrested and fined for wearing overalls. She com mitted tlie mistake of not having them made by a Paris dressmaker. If within the range of po'-ibillth s', a s,.r»- and spe. dy solution of. a ver.y practical problem should be foupd the probleln of labor on the farm. Is discussed year after year, but oftener treated as a joke than ax a rioua problem bearing in the umst re«'t w ay ujion th«» prosperity of th«» • country. We have succeeded in mov ing tlie hulk »>f what the harvest fields, gardens, orchards and vineyards have yield« <1 to such labor as could lx» had to gather their products. Transporta tion and money have not always been adequate, but have In the main met de mands at tin- most pressing season of the year. The record is, however, that millions of dollars’ worth of farm prod ucts have rotted In the field or been allowed to wither on trees and vines because the help to gather and market them was not to be had, even at the best prices ever offered for such serv ice. It will be recalled that during on»* harvest time the farmers of Kansas adopted th«* shotgun policy and brought the hoboes into camp, compelling them, for a time, nt least, to earn their bread by the sweat of the • brow. But this Is not a plan to be i considered, and In spit«» cf what we have lately been referring to ns our 44. ‘army of the unemployed,” the vexatious problem now seems more difficult than ever lx*- fore. The manufacturing Interests are reviving and expanding. Public works nre enlisting a larger army than ever. In consequence, the trouble of the farmer Is even more acute this season than .in previous seasons. The farmer labors under a handicap lax-ause lie wants extra men but a few months In th«» year, ixx-nuse tlie Job is a rush one, and because the demand for short hours is not conceded when there is a ques tion of saving crops, They mean the wealth of the nation, and some way will have to be found to liarvest ami market them without the heavy loss which we annually sustain. The French Academy-, when full, con tains forty “Immortals.” Two of them, Ludovlc Ilalevy and Francois Coppee, have lately proved their mortality by dying. From the capitalist's ¡M>int of view, perhaps, the north pole is not worth (50,000. It isn’t portable, and for merely the good will of it that price Is too high. dais. 4* 4* Opinions cf Great Papers on Emportent Subjects A FATAL FOOL BELIEF. SURPRISINGLY large number of other wise intelligent persons still entertain the Ix'llef that, am-ording to law, those who disisiver a presumably dead Ixxly must leave it ax they find it until the coroner arrives or authorizes its removal. It is true that In case of a murder, or even of death by accident, it is well for those who find the body to leave it and its surroundings as nearly unmo lested as is consistent with common sense. This lx in order that no clew as to the manner of death may be destroyed. But to find a man hanging by tlie neck and not cut him down, or to find a man 'floating in the water and not make every effort at resuscitation—pro viding, of course, that the condition of the body does not preclude the* possibility of life—is to do that wlik-h can be called less than homicide only on the ground of ig norance. A case In point was that of Monday at Greenwich, Conn. Dominick Bond, supervisor of construction on a sea wall, fell into the water. His companions finally got hold of him, passed a rope about his body ami tied it to a pier, supposing the man to lie dead. Then they sent for the coroner. When that olllcial arrived lie found the man certainly dead, but declared that had lie been removed from the water and ordinary means employed at the time Ills companions secured the hotly lie could have lieen resuscitate«!. Strange how some of these old beliefs survive!—Utica Globe. ature -but largely to the incr«*ns«» of flies from May to A uguxt. The tradition of th«* relatlou between tilth and dis ease Is sound; ami the clean liousek«sq»er has ulwuya fought flies with screens and fly-traps. Th**se old fashioned defenses are still practical. In addition, th«.* keeper of horses should screen his manure pile and spray it with creosote or chloride of lime. To allow flies on food is to run the risk of disease; to al low flies to breed in or visit poisonous matter is to en danger one's neighbors.—Youth's Companion. THE LIFE-INSURANCE -TWISTER.” IE "Twister,” according to an Insurance re- ixirt of Illinois, is the anarchist In life In surance. We hate anarchy in any form, and are glad to see that one of the old- line companies is hard on the trail of the tw ister. Tlie tw ister, as most of our read ers doubtless know, seeks to switch policies from one company to another. He Is like tlie bee who, instead of getting honey from the flowers, robs the hive of his nelglilxirs. In tlie past twisters have been agents of other companies, but a new type lias sprung up. Ho usually calls himself an insurance expert, or an insur ance adviser, or some other name that anything but de scribes him lie writes to the policyholder and asks for the privilege of showing how tlie latter may get more insurance in some other company for tlie same rate. It is needless to say that this other company is often some company which lias no financial standing. Just at tlie present time tlie twister is Vving up to Ills name by trying to twist a wrong interpretation into tlie Armstrong law, by saying that deferred or tontine divi dends are outlawed, and by attempting to scare policy holder* in other ways. The «inly way to treat the anarchist of life insurance is to drive him out of Imsi- n«ss by having lmthlng to do w ith him.—Leslie's Weekly. FLIE3. ANKIND Is learning rapidly which of the myriad kinds of living things are friends and which are enemies. Rests that ruin crops are zealously studied and fought by the farmer, but some pests that endanger human life are tolerated because their ravages are not visible to the unscientific eye. It took brave experiment to discover that the mos PERSONAL EQUATION IN SUCCESS. quito is a deadly enemy of man, and a long cam F you stop for a moment to analyze success paign of education was necessary to prove the fact to in business you will see that it conies the public. The rat, being odious and a destroyer of through contact with people. It Is all projierty, was more easily proved to be a <lisease-bear- 1-Inped upon tlie manner of your contact. ing scourge. The International Association for the Sci On every side you are surrounded’ by a entific Destruction of Ruts, founded in Denmark, is not multitude of persons, in every one of a fantastic society, as is attested by the work In San whom there exists a potential force that Francisco and other cities against this creeping vehicle may be exerted, at one time or another, to add to your of the bubonic plague. The mosquito and the rat have "got to go.” Ami so success. The oftener you cause that force to be ex has the house fly, which, far from being only a buzzing erted, the fastei your business will grow. You can at- nuisance, causes thousands of deaths a year, During tract these Individual forces, if you choose, and get the the civil war it was found that flies carried gangrene. most from them. Or you can reiiel them and suffer This early discovery lias been explained by tlie later actual damage from having come In contact with them. Or you may take a middle course, as many business knowledge of disease germs. Tlie fly is attracted to all kinds of filth ; his feet are men do, and drift along in purely negative manner. Looking at business in this light, it is apparent that barbed brushes which pick up dirt; ami ills track across the food we eat is a path of pestilence when seen lab the underlying element which contributes most to the Death the microscope, ile is the “principal agent in the success of any undertaking, and to business In the aggre spread of typhoid.” Tlie lncri'aso of “summer com- gate, is the art of finding the vital ¡mints of human con plaints,” intestinal diseases, is not due to hot weather— tact that will set in motion these forces. The personal the human laxly easily adjusts Itself to mere temper- element must lie stamped upon your business.—System. 1171 -William the I.icn »lkfeat«xl at Aln wick. 13od The elwtor of Brandenburg wm npixiiiitei] hered tary nrch-dhamber- lain of the German empire by th» golden bull of Charles IV., and lu that capacity he lore th«* xcepter b«»- fore the Emperor. 1708 English ami allies under Duke of Marlborough nml Prince Eugene de feated th«* French Ix'siegi'rs nt (hi de nnrde, Belgium. 177G The xtntue of King George lr Bowling Green, New Y'ork, destroyed 1779—Stony Point taken from the Brit ixh by tin* Americans. 178G I he l'n:t»*d States nnd Morocco concluded a treaty of peace. 1799—Aboukir in J'.gypt nttneked nnd carried by assault by rhe 'ihirks un der Said Mnxtaphn Pasha. 1S(J1 1 a m.ms duel between Hamilton and Burr. 1812 Sweden conclud.sl an alliance with England. 1S29 'l'lie dir«*etors of the Bank of thn I'nited States declar«*«l a dividend of 3* j P<*r cent. 183!) Chartist riot in Birmingham, Eng land. lS4«r Treaty of London between th» Sultan nnd Mehemet Ali. 1819 Vice President Millnrd Fillmore as sumed the pr. sidency of tho United States. 18(12—Gen. Halleck npfx>int>d commander of all tho land forces of the United States. 18G3—I'nited States s-hip Wyoming sank thr»s* Jnpnnese ships in battle at Shotnonoseki. 1873—Communist rising in Spain. 1SS.3—Chilians defenteil the Peruvians with great loss at Huamachuca. 1881 Denmcratic national convention nominate»! Cleveland nml Hendricks. 1885—International park at Niagara Falls opened. 18811—diaries D. Grahnm went through the Nlngara whirlpool rapids In a barrel. 1890- The President signisl the Wyoming admission I.ill.... Wyoming territory becalm* a State. 1894 Eartlnjuake at Constantinople, with loss of 200 lives. 1895—Gen. Nicola Pierola olectcl Presi dent of Ih-ru.... Henry M. Stanley elected to the British Parliament. 1898 Admiral Cervera and other oflieers of th»* Spanish fleet reached Annap olis, ns prisoners of wnr. 1902—-Min»* disaster at Johnstown, Pa., resulted in loss of 114 lives....The Porte demntided the suppression of Cretan money with Prince George’» effigy. 1903 Cuban Senate ratified the treaty giving the Unitisl States conling and naval stations on the island. 1900 Dreyfus finally acqiiitt»xl by th» «xvurt of cassation... .The seventy fifth anniversary of Belginn inde pendence «s'lebrnteil in Brussels. 1!M>7—'i' ll persons killed by nn explosion in a turret of the battleship Georgia ....Seven ix-rsons killed by the col lapse of a building in Ixmdon, On • tario. ____________________ THE HOT WEATHER FACE. France is to have a new law which iroloiigii <■«»»» will bring divorce automatically after Wliy we grow old is a problem which married couples decide to separate. Evi dently the French lawmakers are de many scientists have tried to solve. termined to keep the population from Tlie fact that we do grow old is Incon testable, and the changes in tlie tissues dwindling any more. that come with Increasing age are “Wliat,” asks tlie Washington (Iowa) known to physiologists, but what causes Democrat, “lias become of tlie old-fash tins«» changes, and whether they are ioned man who had to have a feather tlie cause or the result of old-age, sci ■ =2L 22------2222----- . —2------------ b«*«i to sleep in?” Tlie last time we ence has been unable to show. We know that the process of aging AVV’»\'reA*AVV>VVW»VVV»V*' heard of him he was content with a Frogs nml toads were taken to a dis- CANADA HOME OF GOLF. Morris chair, been ust* he lias a wife is a hardening process. Tlie soft and ANIMAL PSYCHOLOGY. | tnnee of three or four miles from water yielding structures, tlie arteries ami w ho snores. and turned loose. It seemed to take Firnt Club in \i»r(h America Found tlie cartilages, stiffen with age; tlie ed lit 51 »»nt real. them only a few seconds to locate the As in the case of that other great What will the women say to the ns- Juicy tissues dry up, and fibrous materi water. One old blind toml showed the Scottish sport, curling, the honor of aertlon recently made by John Biirns. als, or those containing lime, strangh The new Institute of Zoological I’sy- Instinct In tin* same degree as tlie having founded the first golf club In president of the British Imai govern- or take tlie place of the structures chology has a plant on a farm In the ot liers. The nature or source of this is not America belongs to Montreal, the Cana meat board, that the “servant problem” which are concerned in tlie vital proc- neighborlKxxl of Paris, The exact lo- yet clearly discerned. Tlie observers dian metropolis, says Recreation, Early arises not so much from the scarcity esses. cation, the New York Sun's corre- in the ’70s of the last century a Mr Some lielleve that It is simply a wear of good servants, as from the ineonqx* spondent says, Is kept secret, to avoid have named it tlie sens«* of humidity. tency of present «lay mistresses to man ing-out process, anil that tlie body is hindrance to tlie work by crowds of They believe it consists in a perception Sidney, a well-known golfer and curler age tlielr help? Whether his charge Is used up by work Just as an engine is, merely curious visitors. The property of the direction in which the atmos of hi! d ay, approached the Caledonian true or not, a girl without training for or a watch. But this is no explanation, Includes meadows and barn-yards, a phere contains most moisture. An effort society of Montreal, whose charter pro the work will find it ns difficult to run for n living machine which lias within wood of considerable size, and a large will lie made to discover whether any vides for tlie encouragement of Scot tisli sports among other things, with her house and direct her servants ns itself th«» power of regeneration, as tile pond stocked witli fish. There are men possess it. her husband would find It If he tried animal Ixxly lias, is not comparable to spacious buildings, Including modern Among tlie subjects of Investigation regard to tlie desirability of forming a to direct a business without first lenril- a machine of lifel«*ss material, which stables, a riding school, stalls for iso is the sight of birds nnd the homing golf club in Montreal. Nov. 4, 1S73, friction wears away and which cannot lating animals under special observa instinct of the carrier-pigeon, Many of saw the Montreal Golf Club founded. ’ng how. be automatically renewed. A course was laid out on tlie side of tion, an aquarium and a laboratory. the members of the institute are in- Louis Honore Frechette, who died The cause of old age in the tissues On the .roof of tlie main building Mount Royal, the eminence from wldch this a phenomenon of «•lined to consider is a recently, was the unofficial poet la ii- Is a gradual loss of tlie power of re- dove-cote. far sight. They have been taking by the city derives Its name, and a club reate of Canada, He wrote In French, generation. As tlie cells wear out with How far the desire to study the triangulation the height to which the house was built. Mount Royal is a and his work was crowned by tlie us»» they can no longer lx* replace«! by habits of living creatures under public park, but arrangements were niit- birds soar, and from that figuring out French Academy, Longfellow hailed other cells of the same sort which nre ural conditions may be carried Is illus made with the authorities for the use the radius of vision they attain. A him ns the ? “pathfinder of a new land able to do the same work, but their trate«! In the fact that a complete div bird which reaches n height of eight of the course ami over since then, year of song.”- , As a poet he was born, so to place is filled by fibrous material which ing apparatus has been provided in hundred yards can see objects more after year, the course has been kept speak, in two nations. One of his Is Incapable of doing tlie work neces which observers descend to the bottom” than sixty miles distant, and that they up at considerable expense, until nt the poems, “lx* Drap an Anglais,”—“Tlie sary to nutrition nnd vital action. of the potid. There they remain for nre keen-sighted enough to recognize present timi- ft Is one of the brightest English Flag"—suggests his allegiance Tills explains tin* process of growing hours, until the fish become accus them cannot be doubted. At three miles freshest and most wholesome looking to the British flag and his affection for old. but gives no hint as to tin* cause. tomed to their presence, and follow a vulture can descry tlie carcass of a stretches of Mount Royal. To perpetu that other ling, tlie tlag of France, Ont* of the most recent tlieorl«*s pro tlielr natural Impulses In playing and kid hung on a pole. ate th»* memory of tin* man who had which. 11s a French poet, he kissed on posed to account for this fatal change feeding. The student is thus enabled been mainly instrumental in the found bended knee. in tin* lxi»ly Is that of Prof. Metehni- to note their habits at first hand. ing of th»* club a hole was nanic«l after Ilia “Ilii* Time.'* koff of the Pasteur Institute In Paris. him nml when In Inter years the club Tlie other extreme of observation Is When Wilkins' family arrang'd took up fresh quarters nt Dixie, on the Freight shipped to merchants east of Ho says that tiler«* lx a constant war tlie construction of sheltered platforms To go away a month or so, shores of I.ak«* St. Louis, the same tlie Mississippi must be plainly marked fare going on between the cells of th»* In the branches of trees, where stu His facial expression changed To one of sorrow and of woe. with the name and address of the con body tin* “nobV cells, sin-h ax those dents sit through the night armed thing was done on th»» new links. In signee. according to a recent decision of th«* brain, th«» walls of the arteries, with an electric flashlight to watch He said he wished they wouldn't leave, ISSI the Montreal Golf Chib, through But they refused to lie misled. of th«' railroad companies. It has been and th«* various organs, on th«* one hand, the doings of owls, bats and noctur- the intercession of the Marquis of Lans “ O, don't pretend that you will grieve,” nnd those of lower order, the “ phago-i tlie practice of manufacturers to mark downe, the governor general of Canada * Dal insects. The family in concert said, the goods with a hieroglyphic, partly eytes" or eating cells, on the other. The nt thnt time, with her late majesty Oise of tlie conclusions reached by “For you'll be having a big time." to save time in shipments, and partly nobl«> cells are always on the defensive, the students of tlie Institute is that Queen Victoria, obtained the privilege HOT-WEATHER HINTS. to prevent spies from competitors learn nml so long as they nr«* well nourlsheil some animals possess a special sense And when at last their train had gone to assume tlie nflix “royal” nnd to be ing who their customers are. Tills they are able to resist the attacks of by which they can detect the presence known thereafter ns the Royal Mon- And he stood looking down the track Avolil bim*k clothing. It draws the practice lias made it difficult for the their enemies. But within the large of water even though they cannot see And watched it rolling swiftly on. (real Golf Club. heat. railroad companies to deliver the goods. Intestine ar«* numbers of bacteria con it. The ex[>erlments were undertaken Ami wished that it was coming back, Above all, avoid anger. Keep your Wlint It Wng. Oneeompany is said to liave.lost (1,500,- stantly creating poisons which weaken at the suggestion of David Allen, a lie turned and tnet a friend and sighed: temper. "O, John!” she exclaimed, “now • a * ' In the Inst ten years. Iiecause It has th«* resisting jxiwer of these noble cells. resident of Australia ami a corre- “They’ve gone—I don't know what to While enting less don’t forget to taka do.” that you've seen my new bonnet you plenty of exercise. had to reimburse shippers for goods Tilt* remedy Is to lessen the production sixtmllng member, who wrote to tlie him. merry eyed. His friend looked nt simply can't regret that I got it. Isn’t lost on the road. Goods In car-load lots of tiles«* poisons by attacking tin* bncilll Institute of ills experiences with slump Avolil alcohol. Total sbstlnen«*« is And said: “Did man. I'm on to you— ft Just a poem?" may go marked in cipher as heretofore, which make them. best. sf>ari|ig use of liquor imperative. and cattle when being driven across And you'll lie having a big time. ” "Well, if It is," replied John, “I guess ns it is not difficult to deliver a car at This Prof. Meti'hnikoff proposes t«i l country. In a place where the pres Easy rihoea help to preserve tlie temper ♦lie point to which It Is bMled. a proper title for It would be ‘Owed and keep down th» temperature. do by Introducing harmless bacteria ence of water wax wholly unexjieeted, He ate wherever he might be to a Milliner'."—Philadelphia Press. into the Intestine to take the pla«*«* Of he says, “the leading animals would And tried to find a little fun; R<'ttx»tnbcr. ns little m»*at ns possible. Among the sincere mourners nt the th«» injurious ones. He says that among suddenly lift tlielr heads nnd draw long A show or two he went'to sye, Vegetables and cereal» ar» the best. Slow Hall. deith of tlie late Secretary of Slate. tlies«* harmless bacilli nre the Inetl» breaths. Then they would abandon the But left before the plays were done; An Inveterate foe to comfort In warm Pearl-—Down on the porch last night wi-ather John ll.iy, there were none who felt add bacilli—those which nr<* present In beaten tracks an«l start running And those who knew him nodded then— is the ice water xo universally His mood and mnnner well they read: Reggy was taken for a butglar. more keenly the loss of a friend than sour milk'; am! he advocates, therefore, through tlie brush, ” Sometimes they used. "Hix family's away again. ” Ruby — Why, I'm surprised. Reggy did the Jews. They have not forgotten, the dally drinking of buttermilk. would run a mil«» ami a half to two Persons often complain of suffering With knowing wink and smile they never stole anything in bis life. His theory Is simple, but he hlnis»*lf milts, nnd could not l>e stopped by the 'the other day. nf a convention of the from heat when an overl»xide«l stomach ia said, Pearl—No, he is even too slow to the only trouble. Independent Ord.-r B’nal B’rltli. resolu lx not xo simple ns to regard butter drivers, their course Invariably leading "And he's just having a big time." steal a kiss. tions wi-re adopted to erect In Wash milk ns the elixir of life. He maintains to a pond or spring hitherto unknown. Thin, loose, unlined garments of light ing!' n a suitable monument to Mr. only that the use of sour milk helps t«>j The experiments .were made on a Bnt Wilkin« slowly homeward went Atxiut half the jieople like personals color go far toward Insuring comfort .and liny. I iic thing for which the Jews prolong life by preventing the formation water rat. First Its eyes Were blinded And wandered through the silent rooms in the newspapers, pud tlie other half health in summer. '«■'• crate the great Secretary'll memory of poisons which shorten It.—Youth's by a bandage, nnd then It wax place»! Where memories ¡»ersistent blent If a child has any Intestinal trouble Themselves with all the hollow glooms tat* them. Betv.-eii th«- two crowiN, milk often acts as nn actual poison. Ce Is h's action at the time when th«1 Klsh- Companion. 'In a jurntable. which was whirled round the newspapers- nre always thoroughly « net massi res stirred the whole world reals should be userl instead. until all sense of direction must have He thought <>f her hear» «arming smile abused. And tiow the children used to play. to horror. '1 lie B'nal B'rith requested When all tin* neighbors units ifi say bee* obliterated. tTpon Mag retailed, a_---------- -—9 , The white stiffene»l linen or canvas Anil then hs said: "It ’ s quite a while Mr Hay to forward a petition to the ing, “What a go<sl time she lias in. wlUiAut a moment's hesitation it started Wben n girl says thnt n young man ventilate«! hat is the. proper headgear. Already since they went away— Russian government; and although Mr. life." you c»ii bet your last nut “she" on». is “Just |x rfe» tly liorrtble* she tutagi* Stanley, the explorer, said that the derby *'»r ths pond, several hundred But ain't I having a .big time7" • Uuy was definitely, but unofficially, In- is elth<* I spin or a Widow. that L* is Just too>wee4 (o.lh*. /•i u* Jisiata ens on abomination and th« atraw hat —Chicago Tribune. n<* much better. • . • i