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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1909)
O o O o o O « BANDON BECÖRDEF: laaurd tacto Wack BANDON................... OREGON Railway mail cars that are built of •teel are not likely to burn. F. Augustus Heinze appears to have forgotten what happened to Jimmie Hazen Hyde. No more Venezuelan vessels will be seized by the Dutch. Sst! There are no more. If the London suffragettes get the ballot It will hiwi II all the fun; for they can't be suffragettes, then. John L. Sullivan's wife says he Is n mollycoddle. She probably says it be cause site believes be would not hit a lady. Then, again, If there are no artists outside Europe, why does King Os car ask an American to paint his por trait? Up to date President Roosevelt has been compared w(th every great man In history with the exception of St. Patrick. We feel thoroughly Justified in saying that the fellow who tried to pull the chin whiskers of the President of France was no gentleman. Should It ever become necessary for the Sultan of Turkey to do the Castro act, his $360,000,000 will make Castro's $60,000,000 look like 30 cents. They've got a press gallery in the new parliament of Turkey, so the sul tan has on hand now all the facilities needed for a first-class scrap. Will somebody kindly semi In the correct address of Richmond I'earsou Hobson? There hasn't been a decent war scare In the last 24 hours. Aeronaut Knabenshue has demon strated the possibility of bombaring a city from an airship. Laws governing the ownership and operation of airships should at once be passed. J. Pierpont Morgan's dues In the thirty-five clubs to which he belongs amount to more than $7,000 anually. What a lot of excuses he lias for re maining away from home at night! President Roosevelt says he will not be satisfied If he fails to bring down a rhinoceros or two while he Is In Africa. We expect to hear at once from the So ciety for the Protection of the Innocent Rhinoceros. A Snn Francisco man lias turned his entire estate, valued at above $4.000.- 000, over to his wife. It may lie that he wants her to be kept so busy manag ing things that she will not notice it when he happens to remain out late at — night. Dr. Hillis thinks tin m'llentum has arrived. The man who needs 14 tons of hard coal and doesu't know where he is going to get the money to pay for it Is probably convinced that a millennium doesn’t amount to much, after all. It Is alleged that the Earl of Grn- nard, whose engagement to an Ameri can heiress was recently announced, has never put out a crop of wild oats. If this is true, how did he ever gain admission to the Heiress Hunters' Home? A Kansas farmer complains that he was swindled a few days ago by a siinriMT who inducisl him to pay sev eral thousand dollars for what he rep resented to be a diamond, but which turns out to lie a stone of little value. This should serve ns a warning to other Kansas farmers. A farmer may properly invest in a grand piano or a $10,000 automobile, but he really ought not to wish to wear big diamonds. There is no quarrel with the Vene zuelan jieople. Not a country with which diplomatic relations have been broken off feels hostile toward the Venezuelans. The disputes are nil with Castro and his government, nnd much ns foreigners have to resent, they believe that Castro’s own people have more, and that they are to lie pitied more than blamed for the sorry pass to which they have been brought. If they do indeed throw off the yoke their friends, the enemies of the dictator, will gladly do what they can to make the way easy for them. When the owners of the Madison Square Garden In New York announced recently that they could no longer af ford to hold the unprofitable property, tlie people of the city suddenly began to ask themselves what they should do without it. The building covers a whole block, and Its nmphltheater will accommodate eighteen thousand per sons. It la the scene of the horse and dog shows, the automobile and sports man’s exhibitions, bicycle races and the circus. Great political meetings are also held in it ns the most capacious auditorium in the city, if the Gar den should be torn down. New York would have no adequate hall for such gatherings and exhibitions. It would also lose the tower, which was sug gested by the bell-tower of the Seville Cathedral, and Is one of the most beau- tlfui structures in America. An at tempt Is making to prevent the demoli tion of the building. Every Important •ity needs such a large gathering place. o The business men of Washington are making arrangements for such a hall In that city. The national capital lias no adequate meeting place for big con ventions. and no room suitable for the inaugural ball. Chicago, with* char acteristic enterprise, bus maintained its big hall for a long time. Denver built one last year for the National Demo cratic Convention. St. Paul has built such a hall by public subscription. Other cities are similarly equipped, for with the increased facilities of travel, exhibitions and conventions attract |>eople from so wide an urea that a hall large enough for all demands fifty years ago has become inadequate to day. But land Is so expensive In the large cities and the price of building materials Is so high that the big mod ern halls seldom pay expenses. Their Itenefit to the community at large is greater than to their owners. They are reully public institutions. 0 “Ï he PEOP SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY Mrs. • Margaret Zane Wieher was ■hosen county clerk in Salt Lake coun- !y. Utah, this year on tbe Republlcan ticket. The handkerchief of the French sol- per has printed on it certain sanitary rules desirable to observe during a campaign. doggedly doing the work of two men and a horse in the' GOOD TEMPER KEYSTONE OF HAPPINESS. The following is the shortest sentence same old, tutile Arcadian way. By Helen Oldfield. rontalnlng all the letters of the alpha-. But I have h’gli hopes of him and of Laban. One of No one ou earth, excepting perhaps an ill these dais the Department of AgrlAiIture will establish bet: Pack my box with live dozen liq tempi red woman, is so ditneuli to live w ith as a demonstration farm in the White Mountains a farm uor Jugs.—Home Notes. a really ill tempered man; ami the worst of only half as large as "Badger's,” yet one that will grow South Dakota is congratulating her an evil temper is that, being indulged, it two tons of hay to Asa Judd’s one, and five bushels of self on the greatest gold year tn her grows worse as its possessor grows older, Ill potatoes to ills two, and plenty of grain into the bargaiu. history. The report of tlie state mine tempered people not only poison their own And ptesently one will notice two teams in tlie old Inspector, tiled with tbe governor, lives but also those of all who are obliged to Badger burn, and two young hired men at the dining shows the state's gold production for share their lives, One never can tell when table, nnd thnt sleigh will actually materialize. .So wii! the last year to have been $7,400,000. u tempest of temper may descend, like a bolt that graphophone, and “Ma" Badger will lose her anx Missouri is the greatest tobacco pro- from the blue. Hnd life under such conditions often be- ious look and begin to feel as though her head were luelng state. The quantity of the weed comes almost unbearable. "wuth” more than the longest doctor's bill ever made I produced during the fiscal year which The rebuking of lending lawyers by When two go atsmt togcther: let them each note the out. Aud that dollar will cease rotating on its axis and ended June 30 last, was 71.212,212 a Judge for undignified [lerformances. manner of tlie other to strangers, to old people ami will be luld to test in the bank to save wear und teur. (lounds, 5,000,000 pounds more than unseemly wrangling, tlippant “asides” children in crowded ears, to beggars—nay, even tbe was produced by North Carolina, which and objectless interruptions is an un manner of a man towards a stray dog sometimes may •onies next. usual occurrence in this latitude. It be an 1'idex of character well worth observing, A man WORLD STATE LOOMS ON THE HORIZON. Is the more welcome on that account There are now 667 women students usually can see bis ladylove in her own home, where By Ada May Krecker. and the more hopeful. Certainly the In the University of Glasgow. This Is her manner towards her family and theirs to her, espe exhibitions ami scenes which have pro Prof. Stanley Jevons has been most famous said to be the largest numlier on rec cially of tlie younger children, should be noted. perhaps as a historian. Tlie Bible talks of ord. Queen Margaret College Is the voked the censure are far from being There is no more desirable trait for a companion in nil peoples dwelling together us one nation exceptional in American courts, and tlie women's hall, which Is presided over th? Journey of life than that of cheefulness, tlie yokefel Prof. Jevons believes it. He has outlined the by Miss Galloway, LL.D., and Janet Judges are, as a rule, too indulgent low of good temper. “A merry heart doeth good.” But sort of government that will rule the world Spens, M. A. and tixi long-suffering. Many Ameri cheerfulness is not merely hilarity and fun. It includes state. And he has found the names for tlie can lawyers have commented on the About 75.000 fox skins are sold out of the ability to look on the bright side, to make tbe officials, and he lias predicted a world execu Maine every year. Very few of the sly contrast that the British court atmos best of everything, to refuse to meet trouble half way. tive. the literal king of the earth. And he animals :i* shot. Many are killed by phere presents to the American. In and to do one's best bravely ami hopefully, Such a dis- believes there will be such a sovereign with the use of poisoned bait, while hun England the lawyers really act like position is inclinable, und tlie worth of its owner truly in the next eighty years. He finds the beginnings of dreds of others are killed in drives, “officers of the court;” they treat the is above rubies. him and his cabinet in the petty officials connected known as the “New Hampshire meth presiding magistrate with due respect with Tlie Hague tribunal and tlie outgrowths of The od.”—Fur News. and deference, and they refrain from HOPE FOR THE SMALL FARMER. Hague peace conferences. IM-rsonalltles. theatrical outbursts, dis A New York woman shopper who Is By Robert H. Sehauffler. Some international government officiais exist now. plays of cheap wit nnd the bandying fond of figures has estimated that the Evetyliere the South is already catching fire And they have existed for years, Only they work so time lost by customers each day In one of epithets and slurs. In America silently nnd unobtrusively that no one knows about with tlie new und radical idea that tlie small farce-scandals in the courtroom are so of the large department stores in wait farmer may really make money, in Virginia, them. But tbe significance of their position Is not dis ing for their change is equal to the common that most laymen and lawyers farmers, ou land valued at $4 an acre, have counted by its quiet and non-notoriety. Rather, it is average time of labor for one person take them as a matter of course. The suddenly taken to growing crops valued at glorified. new code of legul ethics adopted by the They—these bumble world officials—are the attaches for seventy days. $100 an acre. Young men are beginning to stay American Bar Association is already Tills year 12,554 women registered in of tbe international postal service with headquarters In the country in order to make money. Even a dead letter as far as dignity and Boston to vote for school committee. the young men in city sweatshops and fac at Bern, Switzerland. They supervise mid negotiate propriety in the courtroom are con tories have caught the glad tidings and are many momentous little matters which affect you and me Twenty-nine years ago. when the priv cerned, and the worst of it is that it ilege of voting at these elections was is not the shysters who are the most hurrying back to try their luck, nnd draw u good deep and which we know nothing about. And they are held first granted to women, only 900 regis by tlie zealots of the world state to he tlie first fore breath, and are taking some of tlie city’s savolr vivre pernicious offenders, for from them the tered, and for tlie following nine years with them Into the country, says Robert II. Schauftler. runners of the world government departments. Judges would hardly stand much non I lie average was only a little over 1,000. Overweening love of country is eeasifig to be a virtue sense. It is the strong nnd Influential in Success. Motorists who suffer with cold hands And If the South, why not the North? Why not among the ethically modern, among the ethical elite. lawyers whom the judges hesitate to They prefer worldlsm, cosmopolitanism. They have while driving tlieir cars may have re call to account when they permit them New England? Asa Judd was told the other day that, with the new evolved beyond the thought of the "bloody furriner.” lief by using a steering wheel provided selves scandalous breaches of decorum government methods, lie might clear a profit of at least Foreigner and native alike are desirable citizens. Some with electric heat. An English Inven and good manners. As some independ $l,M>0 next year. He merely smiled his great, whole- body has written on patriotism as a primitive ideal. tion describes.a steering wheel with a ent Judges have frankly said, the core that carries two electrically-heat souled smile, scratched bis bond a little, and went on Tlie civilized and cultured prefer the world state. State bench Is often afraid of tlie bar. ed coils Insulated one from the other since the occupants of tlie former have to think of re-election, of possible re Frank Fayant in Appleton's These IS THE HOME DISAPPEARING P ind from the outer rim. WILL BE SUBMERGED. Sir William Wallace, the British resl- tirement and return to practice. Such two dry-as-dust statements of cold fact considerations, however, do not ex Anannn Until Will Completely Cover contrast strangely with the highly col One Woninn In Every Five In Amer- lent-general of northern Nigeria, has repotted to the home government that Ica la n Wave Earner. cuse excessive weakness and lack of ored figures of speech of certain yellow the Beautiful Temple of Isis. One woman in five In tlie United cannibal tribes owning hundreds of self-respect. The bar associations It lias been decided by the govern purveyors of written misinformation, themselves would collectively uphold a ment of Egypt to raise the great dam and with the fantastic fairy tale pic States has abandoned the domestic life thousands of horses in Nigeria are be firm and dignified policy on the part of at Assuan seven meters above Its tures of the yellow cartoonists. The and has become a wage-earner. Even ing subdued by peaceful means, and the bench, a policy that should aim at present level. This means that the car-sent student of American affairs, tills does not accurately state the situ that tlieir country contains perhaps the the suiqn*ssiou of dreary and vulgar country above the dam will be inun wiio assimilates pseudo-political econ ation. In country districts only two richest tin and copper fields in the fnree scenes In court nnd Hint should dated far beyond the limits of the omy from headlines nnd cartoons, has women out of every eleven are at work, world. Booker T. Washington was born near accentuate the gravity and good faith present lake, already as large as that been led to believe thnt n few "mag but in cities—thnt is, wherever Indus of Geneva In Switzerland. While the nates” own the railroads, the industries trial opportunities are present—two Hale’s Ford, Va., about 1859. Ills of Judicial proceedings. results may be very gratifying in the and tlie banks of the country, and that women out of every seven are at work, mother was a slave in the Burroughs economic development of tbe Nile they nre leagued together to enslave nearly one-third of the total woman family, where she was known ns Jane A Glove Secret. “The only trouble about these wash valley below Assuan, such results are "the common people.” But the cold population. IIow far the father of the Burroughs. Her husband lived on a gloves,” said tile lady, “Is that they not likely to compensate the archaeol ligures, as revealed In the stock books family has ceased to be the sole sup- neighboring plantation. Booker Wash dry. after washing, so very stiff and ogists and the cultivated public Inter of the corporations, tell a very different | port thereof is shown in the statistics ington was educated at Hampton Insti tjoardlike.” Tlie salesman wrapped tlie ested in the monuments and remains story. Tbe widespread ownership of gathered in twenty-seven cities and tab tute, Virginia, where he graduated In soft, palp yellow gloves in tissue paper. of early civilization to be burled thus the corporations Is striking evidence of ulated by the Census Bureau. Tlie to 1875. He taught there until he was se ■That is easily remedied,” he said. “I'll under many feet of water. The gov the faith tlie great body of Industrious, tai number of women at work in tlie lected head of Tuskegee Institute, iell you how to wash the gloves so ernment has foreseen this dissatis thrifty Americans have In corporate en twenty-seven cities is 904,095. Of these which lie organized. that they will dry soft and pliable tlie faction nnd has appropriated several terprise, despite all recent disclosures 173,030 are boarding or living in the Miss Harriet S. Hayward, of Brock families of their employers. Tlie re ton, Mass., Is the first woman to be siime as new. After you have rinsed maining 731,6(55 are described as fol elected by a county in Massachusetts them quite clean dip them in a final lows: bath of fresh water and rub plenty of to preside at a county teachers' associa soup into them, drying them without Woman the sole wage earner....... 98,861 tion. She Is the primary supervisor of One oither wage earner in family..218,415 schools in Brockton, and the Plymouth rinsing tills last soap out. The soap Two other wage earners in family. 188,088 County Teachers’ Association, over left In tlie gloves makes them wonder More than two other wage earners fully soft—they don’t then need, after which she was selected to preside, is in family .................................. 220,300 one of the largest in the state. The drying, to be rubbed soft with ten or Out of 731,065 women at work, 98,- meeting is said to have been the best fifteen minutes' hard labor. This soap 8(51 are supisirting tlie family, and be ever held. secret being used, wasli gloves are tween 218,415 and 532,804 are contrib quite perfect. It is no wonder they uting to the family income. Remem When the Cloughey (County Down, arc completely superseding the expen ber thnt these are city workers and Ireland) lifeboat went to the assistance sive kid gloves, for they are half as represent nearly one-third of all tlie •f the French bark Crolsette, which cheap again and their washing is so women in those cities. At last accounts had been driven ashore on a submerged easy—do them nt bedtime, toss them on the number of women in industry was reef, the men refused to leave tlie ves tlie radiator and in the morning they sel without a little half-breed fox ter increasing faster than tlie birth rate. the ready to put on.” How long will it lie before the home, rier. The animal was eventually found ind rescued amid the cheers of the Ilia Next Work. except for rich people, will lie as ob bark's crow, who wore then brought The New York Tribune reporter who solete as stagecoaches, hoopskirts and ishore In the lifeboat and hospitably had Journeyed to the home of the merry Christmas? asks Ilheta Childe housed by the villagers. rising young writer for the purpose of Dorr in Hampton's Broadway Maga Interviewing him as to Ills next novel, The Llgne Nationale Aerlenne re- zine. discovered the author in Ills garden, en Recurring periods of industrial de •entl.v receive«! from Commandant Dol- gaged in earnest conversation with a pression always bring poverty to tlie fuss the offer of a prize of £400 for the small boy, who Imd a large tojvel pinned surface. We have no permanent class first kite of French construction capa round ills neck. Is conn of unemployed in this country—as yet ble of lifting a man to the height of THE GREAT ASSUAN DAM IN THE NILE RIVER. The author received ills visitor cor —but we have a largo* population 200 meters, and of maintaining Idin in dially, but seemed rather absent-mind which barely manages to keep its head fhe air for a period of at least one hundred thousand dollars for the In- of tbe misuse of corjtorate [wwer by the above water. When tlie tide rises ever hour. It is Interesting to see that at ed. “Are you willing to tell me a little vestigatlon and conservation of the unscrupulous. This faith was shown, so little above the average this big tention Is thus again directed to the alxmt your next important work?” ancient remains to be endangered or ns it never hnd been before in our his population lias to be rescued from use of kites, which would appear to destroyed, particularly tbe early tory. In the recent disastrous financial asked the reporter. drowning. It lias no foothold but tlie have been somewhat neglected owing to panic, when hundreds of thousands of The author clicked n pair of shears cemeteries which will be flooded. the success of tbe apparatus of the aer Tbe beautiful temple of Isis on the small Investors came Into tlie market shifting sand, nnd it cannot swim. As oplane type. and patted tlie boy on the shoulder. soon ns nornini conditions prevail It "We were Just talking about It as Island of Phllne. already sadly Injured place with their savings to tnke^all- i A Daniel has come to Judgment In you came up.” he said. “Willie thinks by the Invading waters, which nt road, Industrial, and bank shares off rallies and Is able to care for its own the Vermont Legislature with a bill In I ought to do ft with a bow!, but I present rise almost to the capitals of the hands of thoroughly frightened again. But this Inst pnnlc brought some tended to guard newspapers against think I can do It without. What would the columns, will, after the raising of speculators nnd capitalists. • thing new to the surface. It brought "fakers." It makes the giving of false you advise? You see. Ills mother has the dam, be completely submerged, Tlie popular fallacy regarding the to light a force nt work in thia land news to a newspaper with Intent to de always cut It before, but she's away with the possible exception of the ownership of the corporations has been of boundless wealth nnd unlimited op ceive punishable by fine ranging from very summits of the tall pylon towers. in part due to a very natural miscon now.” portunities ; a force which if not met $5 to $20 for each offense. "We hope Such submergence year by year must, ception. The rapid growth of Indus A Heal Ullnima. will result in a wholesale wrecking of that the Vermont lawmakers will lose "Say, Mike." queried Plodding Pete, of course, result in the slow disin trial “trusts" and railroad combina homes. Already the silent force hns no time In making the bill a statute,” who was looking at the piece of a | tegration of the stone, and the ulti tions in the past ten years has central eaten fnr into the social fabric. Its says the Boston Transcript. “Its en Sunday school paper that bad come 1 mate complete destruction of what ized control, and the careless observer outward nnd visible sign Is the fact actment will fill a l<«ig felt want of with n handout, “wot does It mean hns been the loveliest building In has mistaken this for centralized own that on the shoulders of millions of Vermont editors an«l blaze the way to 'bout bein' between de devil an' de deep ' Egypt. The loss to the modern vls- ership. But the centralization of con women lias descended a monstrous dou- ■ relieve those of other states.” iior Is but the beginning; for the nu trol hns been accompanied by tile sea?" ble bnrden, under which not only they Bulgaria's flag Is so new that tbs “It's de same as bein’ told t’ take ' merous records nnd Inscriptions on the spreading out of ownership. but tlieir children nnd their homes Turkish gunners did not recognize It, walls have never been properly copied yer choice between goln' t’ work an’ i Two Side*. are slowly sinking. and with blank shots turned back a takin’ a bath," explained Meandering nnd published. The same is true of «(earner flying it. Tlie official realiza the other Ptolemaic temples, forming a She — If n man loves his wife as The Other Bnr'i Fanil Mike.—Chicago News. tion of events is often slow In coming. group extending along the river for much ns she loves him he will stop Mother—I hear you were at the foot I.oca ted. forty miles above the Assuan dam. wasting ills money on cigars If she of the dosa last week. Tommy. Tom When John Quincy Adams sought to “I believe there is a movement on asks him. He—Yes, but If his wife my—'Twrfsn't my fault. Johnny Rmltb, enter Berlin as American minister to OWNERS OF CORPORATIONS. foot to prevent our marriage.” loves him ns much ns she ought to love who’s always at the foot, was sick at Prussia he was held up at the gate ind tlie officer of the guard had doubts “I learned of It last night.” a man who loves her enough to stop if Figures Which Show W Idra prenci she asks him she won't ask him.—Puck. home.—Circle. . _____ ___ [ about letting him In, never having “Did you locate it?” Faith la < cirpc.rate Enterprise. "Yea, it's on your father's foot."— The foolish person who fools with s beard of the Lnltisl States of America, Fireman—Jump out, lady! The Two and a half million Investors own A sergeant, more Intelligent than his Houston Post. bee Is apt to get a stinging rebuke. the American corporations. Twenty bouse is on Are! Ixidy—Impossible! mperlor, knew all about the United It s a sign a girl likes to be kimed million thrifty Americans are Indirect Tlie doctor told me not to leave my It's nothing .to a man's credit if no States, and on his intercession Adams if she says she doesn't. partners in corporate ventures, ' says bed under any circumstance. one will trust him. e jwga allowed to proceed.’ • •