w
o
M
A
ccy and Gir.
the
•
The Next Social Sec
retary of the * hite
11 ouse — A meruan
Champion Typist's
London Record.
The next social secretary at the
White House w ill be Mrs. Eleanor Bel-
yea. She is au expert at bridge and
has made ¡to ket money by giving les
sons in the game to fashionable Wash
ington. One of lier ¡midis was Mrs.
John It. McLean, and rumor lias It that
It was through the* good offices of Mrs.
McLean that Mrs. Kelyea secured the
apisdntmeiit referred to. Mrs. Kelyea
was appointed to a place in the war
department in 1907. She Is the widow
of Albert Itelyea. formerly a chief of
a division in the treasury department.
at at
Miss Kose Fritz, the American cham
pion typist, who accepted the chal
lenge to type lot) words in a minute
in a London newspaper office, wen!
through the ordeal triumphantly. She
accomplished the remarkable record
of typing 202 words from an article in
the newspaper before her in two min
utes twenty-six seconds, or at the rate
of 107.fi words a minute. The type
writer us<*d had been operated for two
years. Time was taken by an expert
timekeeper on a chronograph.
v.
The head fitakl of Queen Margherita
makes about
a year from the
sales of the old gowns of her mistress.
This is one of the maid's perquisites.
Tlie sales are held twice a year. Amer
ican women are the best, customers.
To quote an English journal, Ameri-
ctn women are willing to pay the
highest prices for the souvenirs of a
queen.
st r
As most women In the United States
kpow, Mrs. George Cornwallis West
was the widow of Lord Randolph
Churchill when she met her present
husband. When Churchill first saw
Hie plquatite Miss .Jennie Jerome he
resolved that he would win her for his
wife. The same evening, so It is said.
Miss Jerome told her sister that Lord
Randolph was the man she was des
tined to marry. It was some years
after Lord Randolph CJiurchJll's death
that she became Mrs. George Cornwal
lis West.
■
-a’ttr Makes an* Ideal Wife, Form
Usually a Moody Husband.,
in u household where there nre sev
eral boys or'where there are boys and
girls some one In the circle is the one
i altogether lovely. The confession does
not come from the father or mother,
but observing visiting friends to the
household realize the fact before many
calls have been made.
“
It is a common impression that the
! only child, whether boy or girl, soon
becomes aware of his or her impor
tance nt home. To adapt a common
expression, the only child Is always
spoiled, and it is not always the only’s
fault.
To return to the first statement,
does the favorite boy in a household
I of boys make a better husband than
his brothers, and does the favorite
. girl make the sort of wife that has
been predicted before she quits home?
i To put if another way, does she make
a better wife than the favorite brother
makes a tietter husband?
In a home of boys the favorite is
mother's boy. The other brothers are
not envious of his classification. Un
less the favorite is an exception to the
rule he has, in the estimation of his
.' brothers, an effeminate composition.
The opinion may not always be Just,
but the favorite carries the handicap
all his life, or at least as long as he is
under the paternal roof and under the
maternal Influence. Generally the fa
vorite brother is the first to have a
sweetheart. The other brothers charge
fids up to tlie mother. If the sweet
heart has been picked by the mother,
all the greater a favorite he with his
mother. One of the inconsistencies of
lhe situation Is that this favorite is
not alwayt the youngest boy of the
family. If the last born reflects any
of his father’s traits you may be sure
that he Is not the favorite.
Wlien comes the time for the favor
ite to stand before the altar he Is the
recipient of every attention which the
family can bestow. This is not strange,
for tlie first marriage in a family is
the event of events, especially where
the affair meets with family approba
tion. When tlie wedding is over, when
the rainbow season lias passed And the
twain enter upon that period where
better and worse mwt on the common
level, when the friends of the family
watch and wait to ascertain whether
the match was well mated, the test
comes apace.
There seems to be an unwritten law
which warrants a newly married cou
ple to eliminate their former friends.
•t K
Tin« bottom scale of prices is reached
by the poor seamstresses of Paris.
They toil from dawn to dark in the
making of children’s clothes. One cent
an hour is the estimated stipend, but if
tlie work is exceptionally clever they
can earn 35 cents for twelve hours’
work. Female house servants receive
about ?8 a month. Saleswomen in the
largest department stores earn about
$00 a month.
More than 0,000 patents have been
issued by the United States office to
women. Some of them are for car
couplers, night signaling, life rafts, car
wheels, machines for manufacturing
ozone, mid one Is for n typewriter for
the blind. N< trl.v all the ¡intents nre
for something ¡awtienl.
A visiting card - i> which np
t--
silhouette of lhe per <.n who offers 11
and whi Ir in-ty have a demon ;<[-p:,o
printe to tlie owner'' fallen in I'.-' i
a fail in Germany. It has lien i iti.
duced here b.t Mu:e. G.-ld.dil I'riad
has a laurel border, a>d a http nt th
bottom of the < aril Is li >r desi. n.
r «•.
Au ancient bed valued at
i i .
the property of a well known I'r n h
actress, it is In an e:.; client slo e o;
presei ration, and Its adornments car
ry out Io the full all the Iniish beauty
of the bed It.-elf. Hrtipe.l at the back
from a ring in the < < l!l:i-. are beauti
fu’ < urlain-^of antique br< a le, plu m s
of ostrich fentliers looping them up at
the corners. Tlie bed- prea I la of rf< h
eat satin, idled with valuable lace hi
exquisite design. Several old Eugli ;li
homes own antique beds which are the
envy of connoisseurs.
Aside from the custom, it nearly al
ways happens, as you may know, that
the favorite boy who has become a hus
band grows rather more exclusive than
is always agreeable to his old chums.
The more charitable attribute it to the
fact that the wife is so charming that
tlie husband does not care to have her
good qualities shared by the outside
world. Of course there are always
people
who look at the other side of
H •*
the new relationship. Maybe the wife
The only woman Jailer in tlie world. has evinced traits which the new hus
It Is believed. lives In Switzerland Iler band does not care to have placed on
name Is Jenny Port-het. She is gov
exhibition.
ernor of the prison of Alglo, In the
Nevertheless there stands out the
Rhone valley. Thirty years ago she frigid fact that the home favorite is
married the chief warden of lhe pi Is not what lie was. If the wife Is what
on and soon proved to be a valuable she ought to be tlie world never knows
helpmeet. Of strong physique and why. One of a wife's rights is to care
with proper Ideas of discipline, she fully inask the shortcomings of her
soon made herself valuable, often till;
liege. People who have the gift of
Ing her husband’s place wlum lie was looking through a stone wall and tell
absent or when he was ill. When he ing what Is on the other side of It will
dle<l the authorities offered her the ( tell you in confidence that tlie tsiy was
place mill she accepted. All the year . spoiled at home and that when he got
around the prison contains from ten ( a home of hfs own the spoiling was ac
to twelve prisoners. senten ed to terms j centuated. In fine, the fellow has
of Imprisonment ranging front three j grown more selfish. He Is not like his
months to three years, and. nlthoti' h : father, whose hospitality had become
sin* has no assistant, she has never : a proverb. Have you ever noticed that
had any trouble with her prisoners, 1 the litr lxind being treated of Is backed
except on one occasion, many years | up In his manner of living by his
ago. when a burly ruffian attacked her i blessed mot tier? If the other brothers
She taught him a lesson In good lie ' of tlie family every marry they are
bailor that Yonflned him In the Ims- 1 improvements as husbands.
pital several weeks. Many a prisoner i What about the girl who was a fa
has been set on the right path again • vorite at home before marriage? It
by her wise and kindly advice.
has never been explained and probably
1» r
never «111 lie to the exacting that
The mother of the queen of Spain. ' when a girl marries she acts as If she
Prlptess Henry of Bnttenltcrg, has i knew more about being a wife than
Just finished a history of the Isle of | her adored mother ever thought of.
Wight. The proceeds of the sales are Students of these peculiar conditions
to go to the Iwnefits of the Isle. The will tell yon that If a new wife Im
prim ess Is the governor of the historic mures herself after her marriage ft is
little gem. Quite a long time ago she the fault of her husband. It may not
publlslnsl a translation of several falrv always be fair to thi* husband, but the
tales The prime«* fs also n inn*I al ver-'o t Is formed, and It stands until
composer and once set a lyrl • by Dis death or divorce ends tlie tie that
made one of two.
noli, then Lord Beaconsfield to r.m '■
.
SIIIRLEY BHRESE
MA BY DALE.
I
•
j The Man Who Weakened :
f •
• •
j ¡Copyright, 1908, by American Bro«« Asso
ciation.]
A HARD TASKMASTER.
OA K b
»gasili Forced Hi« Pupils to Find Out
For Themselves,
When I sat me down before my tin
pun Agassiz brought me a small fish,
placing it before me with the rather
‘ stern requirement that I should study
it, but should ou uo account talk tu
any one concerning it or rend any
thing conierning fishes until I had bls
permission so to do. To my inquiry,
“What shall 1 do?" he said in effect:
“Find out what you can without dam
aging the »¡teciinen. When I think
that you have done the work I will
question you.” In <he course of au
hour I thought I had conqiassed that
fish But Agassiz, thougli always
within call, concerned himself no fur
ther with me that day nor the next
nor for a week. At first this neglect
was distressing But I saw that it
was a game, for he was, us I discern
ed rather than saw. covertly watching
me. So I set my wits to work upon
the thing and In the course of a hun
dred hours or so thought 1 had done
much, a hundred times as much as
seemed possible at the start. I felt
full of the subject and probably ex
pressed it in my bearing. As for
words about It then, there were none
from my master, except his cheery
“Good morning.” At length on tlie
seventh day came the question,
“Well?” nnd my disgorge of learning
to him as he sat on the edge of my
table, ¡luffing his cigar. At the end of
the hour's telling he swung oft’ and
away, saying, “That is not right.”
I went at the tusk anew, discarded
my first notes, and in another week
of ten hours a day labor I had results
which astonished myself and satisfied
him. Still there was no trace of praise
in words or manner. He signified that
it would do by placing before me
about a half a peck of bones, telling
me to see what I could make of them,
with no further directions to guide
me. Two months or more went to
this task, with no other help than an
occasional looking over tnv grouping
with the stereotyped remark, “That is
not right.” Finally the task was done,
and I was again set upon alcoholic
specimens. — “Autobiography of Pro
fessor Shaler” In Atlantic.
We alt rea.ize how ham it is to bo
, good, but are ..ot often reminded of
bow hard it is to be bad. The truth
j is that our lives are like tbe gyro
■cope, that paradoxical toy which, once
Bet revolving in a certain ¡dace, resists
being turned into any other plane.
Michael Tiernan had been sent to
school when a boy, had been brought
np religiously, and his associates were
respectable ¡teople of the working
class. Mike was a good workman,
but when the commercial panic of
1907 came in, with thousands of oth
ers, he dropped out of employment.
■ Having a wife and several children,
bls heartstrings were strained by 11
terrific tension. To see bls little ones
hungry, paling every day for the want
of necessary sustenance, to he driven
with his family from ore lodging to
another, each successive r>x ftree being
more rotten and shabby tl"’.n its pred
ecessor, was erucic ii g to the poor
man's sensibilities.
Mike’s boy, I.fttlc
. e. four years
old. was the apple of his father’s eye.
Little Mike became 111, and tempta
tion came to Ills, father at tbe same
time. Little Mike's calling for food
that was not to lie had, needing med
ical attendance that was only for the
prosperous, was too much for Mike.
He was approached by two men who
were entering houses and appropriât
Ing the contents. They wanted a third
to assist them and made him a prop
osition. The question “What should
he do?” is one that has puzzled tbe
best intellects, in the eye of society
there is but one answer.
A few days later the three men, I’at
Dolan, Jim Muiqiliy and Mike, broke
into a dwelling in the center of large
grounds, far enough from other houses
to enable them to work without being
heard by the neighbors. One of the
women of the family, awakened by a
bright light being 1! ished In her face,
began to scream. Dolan ordered her
to keep qtllet, meanwhile feeling for
the electric switch, and when he found
it he lighted up the whole floor. The
HE FED THE STAFF.
master of the house jumped out of bed
to see what was tl^e matter and ran
into Murphy’s arms. Dolan knocked Fine Dinner For a Hungry Crowd on a
Small Capital.
the screaming woman senseless, then,
Years ago the late Senator E. W.
placing Mike on guard over every one
on the floor, went downstairs to collect Carmack was editor of the Nashville
the valuables there, while Murphy ran Democrat, a paper that had a precarl-
ous life and fllckered out on Tltanks-
sacked the bedrooms.
Mike found himself ip a position giving day.
When the stuff came aruund on
that he had not counted on. He had
prepared himself to be brave and had Thanksgiving afternoon Carmack met
partially satisfied his conscience that them with' the announcement that the
he was doing no wrong in taking what pa^r was dead and that they were all
another did not especially need to without jobs. Thid was sadder than it
keep life in Ills darling boy. But he seems now, for the paper had not been
had not prepared himself to pose as a paying salaries for some time.
“Boys,” said Carmack, “it's all over.
burglar. The situation to the inmates
of the house was appalling. The wo The sheet is dead. But wc shall.not
man who had been stilled had fainted, want for a Thanksgiving day dinner.
anil tlie master of the house was try How much money have we?” A search
¡lockets showed .$4.70.
ing to revive lier. He turned to Mike of (4 all
•
1 lenty,” said Carmack. “Come with
and said:
“You are not even respectable bur me.”
They went to the best restaurant
glars. None but the most contempta-
and sat down, and Carmack ordered a
ble will injure a woman.”
“We’re driven to it, sir,” said Mike. sumptuous dinner, with turkey and
“We can't get work, and our families everything complete. After the dinner
was over and the diners were smoking
arc starving.”
At that moment a door opened and the best cigars tlie house had Carmack
a little boy in a white nightie, tumbled called tlie waiter in bls grandest man
curls falling over his forehead, under ner and said: “Boy, you have served
which his eyes blinked in the sudden us admirably. We are more than
pleased. Here is a small sum to com
light, came out into the hall.
“Papa,” he said, “what has Chis mffTt pensate yon for your trouble and as a
slight token of our gratification.”
a false face on for?”
“Thank yo’, boss,” grinned the wait
This was too much for Mike., He
er;
“thank yo’. But'how about this
snatched the boy in his arms, crying
yere check of $19.70 for that dinner
at the same time:
you all just had?”
“I’ve got oue like him at home.”
“Boy,” exclaimed Carinack, “what is
At the same moment Murphy came
out of one of tbe bedrooms with a bag your status here? Are you a waiter or
full of jewels. Seeing Mike caresslug are you the financial manager of this
concern?”
a child, he called to Dolan below:
“’Deed, boss, l’s only a waiter.”
“Mike’s weakening!”
«
“Well, then,” said Carmack, “don’t
Without a word Dolan rushed up
stairs. Mike beard him coining and trouble yourself about the financial
put down the child. Dolan ran up to affairs of the place. Leave that to tlie
Mike and hammered hint with tbe manager.” And he stalked out, fol
butt of his revolver. Then, having lowed by the feasted staff.
But he paid when fortune smiled
quieted, as lie supposed, the better
again.
—Cleveland Leader.
nature of his assistant, ho resumed his
pillaging. An hour after entering the
Pet Animal Cemetery.
premises the burglars left with the
Paris
has a pct animal cemetery
usual threat to kill any one giving an
where thousands of dogs, cats, parrots
alarm within a certalp time.
The nest morning Dolan read an and other animals are burled. Many of
the inscriptions on the monuments are
account of the robbery in the morning
affecting in the extreme. “O Sappho!”
papers and noted a statement that
Is recorded above the grave of a toy
hopes were entertained that the bur
terrier. “If my soul cannot join yours,
glar who had weakened If offered im
dear and noble friend. I do not wish
munity might be induced to turn
for salvation without thee! I shall
state’s evidence. Dolan paled. The
wish, like thee, to slumber forever in
three had separated before daylight,
the sleep that knows no awaking.”
and he could not reach Mike till even
Over the resting place of a King
ing. During the day he resolved to
Charles spaniel one reads: “I shall re
put his assistant where he would tell
gret thee eternally, dear little one.
no tales—under the sod-and revolved How empty henceforth shall my life
in his mind methods for doing so.
be without thee, dear little bowwow!”
Mike did not read the account of his
weakening, but bls mind was made
An Expert.
up as to his future course. Scarcely
She—How can you be so sure that
had the plundered family finished you are in love with me and with no
breakfast when It was announced that
one else? Evon I wonder at times
a man was outside with information whether there Is a ¡sissibility of abso
concerning tlie rolibery. It proved to | lute certainty in such matters. He—
be Mike, wh > then and there confessed
You lack exiierience and' tlie confi
his share In the robbery.
dence it begets. I’ve been In love forty
Mike Tiernan was not prosecuted. 1 times and know every symptom.—De
The man whose property be had been troit Free Press.
Instrumental in restoring gave him
employment, nnd i';e Tiernan family
Politene««.
Is now living tn comparative coinfort.
“Politeness costs nothing,’•/'saldf tbe
Mike has no fears till Itolan and Mur proverbiane t.
phy shall have served a twenty year
"Which may explain,” answeredlMlaa
Sentence, but tliat is a long while, In Cayenne, “why some people of osten
the meantime he Is working hard, tatious wealth have so little*use for
the only sore spot In his mind being It.”—Washington Star.
ills one connection with criminals.
Mike Tiernan was turned to crime
Lack« Tact.
through an unselfish motive, love for
Batea—That nephew of yours called
¡.Is • lilld. lie was turned away from me blackguard. Yates—Just like Ben;
< ■’line by being reminded of Ids boy no tact about the l>oy. I’ve always told
by the child he had taken In his'nrms. him that tbe truth wa» not to be spo
Surely the Inuocence of child hood is ken on all occasions.—Boston Tran
nil powerful
script. -’
THERESE a HOLT.
DEALER IN
E S T A rl
Insurance Broker
Notarj Public
:
Agent for Parker ¿ Young s Rid Cedar
Room 3 over Vienna C< e
»
Fit
. -4—J—J— 4-^-44-^
-4-
1
Tlie Xew,
<■<1 mid Speedy Steamer
E L ÍZ A 15 E T 11
4
This steamer is new, is strongly built ; d fitted with the latest improvements and will
give a regular 8 day service, for passengers d height, between lhe Coquille river, Oregon,
First-class Passenger i are,
I
Rates,
$7.50
$3 on Up Freight
•J. E. WALSTROM, Agent, Bandon, Oreg u.
E. T. Kruse, managin : agent, 24 California^ Si., San Frau i»co.
/
Hotel Gainer
Rates $1.00 to $2.00 per day.
week or month.
Special rates by
Samp'.e Room in Connection.
Bandon
THE HARDWARE MAN
BRIDGE & BEACi I Stoves, R anges and ! (eaters have in them so many exrellencier
that they are now acknowlejgixi the greatest sellers on the coast and they are growing
in favor every year.
We have the exclusive agency in Bandon for these household
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Our Assortment of Hardware, Tinware -ind Edged Tools is .Most Complete.
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Family Washing a Specialty.
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F. A BATES, Proprietor
I
BANK OF BANDON
OltKLiON
IC A X DOS
<’iipit.il. *23.000.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS-
J. L Kronenberg, President. J. Denholm, Vice
President; F. J. Fahy, Cashier; Frank Ham, T. P. Hanly.
A general banking bnsne'sj transacted and customer« given every accommodation con
sistent with safe and conservativ- banking
CORRESPONDENTS: The American National Bank, of San Francisco, Calif;
Merchants National Bank. Portland, Oregon; The Chase National Bank, of New Yo(k.
KENNEDY
ASI»
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of the year
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