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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1909)
•% a . * «JO « 9 O 9 a — < fairness. The Filipino luis Bandon Recorder perfect really been the victim of uniait Published Every Thursday Evening by the Recorder F’-nToisiiing Oompa.ny. O. E. KOFF, - - - Managing Editor Subscription, SI 50 per Year in Advance. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. Job Priutiug a Specialty Entered at the llandou Poatofflce aa Second Clam Matter. THURSDAY T he Coquille Valley Sentiel in its current issue contains a long editorial about the cows running at large in side the city limits. This is a sub- ect for reflection by any city coun cil. O regon men are being recognized in diplomatic circles at the White House. Former Senator Charles Fulton was tendered the office of Ambassador to China and although he has declined to accept, yet the offer is a recognition oi his ability by the president. Harvey Scott, editor of the Oregonian has also been offered and will probably ac cept the ambassadorship to Mexico. This office carries with it the fat salary of >17,500 a year, with com paratively few social duties, so that the man holding down the job will be able to lay aside a considerable sum of his salary. T he Coquille Chamber of Com merce at a recent meeting adopted strong resolutions in favor of estab iishing a Port of Coquille River. The R ecorder has been advocating this ever since the Port Commission bill was passed by the legislature and we are glad to see other towns in the valley becoming interesed in the project. It is high time that the Bandon Chamber of Commeice was doing something in this connection, and it is believed I hat active steps will be taken by that body in the near future. Let s get busy and do something before it is everlastingly too late. I April 22, 1909 enjoy the cool sea breezes and view 1 he beautiful Bandon beach. The city needs a thorough overhauling; that is, the lawns, streets and alleys need cleaning up, sidewalks need repairing and a number of other improvements might be mentioned, but a word to the wise is sufficient. So far as natural beauty is concerned Bandon has every place along the Oregon coast bested, two to one, and we are told by men who have visited all the famous beaches, in cluding the famous Long Beach and Redondo Beach in California, that our Garden of Rocks is so far ahead of any of these that there is no com parison between them. It is certaiu that the “Beautiful Bandon Beach” cannot be surpassed by any place on the face of the earth, and our peo ple should appreciate their advan tages and come to the front with the proper improvements. S omething ought to be done to eliminate the shoal in the river just above the bend, opposite Cody’s mill, as some of the schooners have had difficulty in getting over the shoal when loaded. Up on the Co lumbia river they have greatly as sisted navigation by getting a long t >othed drag, and just at the time the tide was beginning to ebb, hitch the drag to a tug boat and drag it over the shoals, the water then washes the mud out to sea. that has been loosened, and this process is repeated at the beginning of each ebb tide until the shoals are We are completely eliminated. told, by men in position to know that the shoal in the Coquille river at the place mentioned could be deepened six feel in a week’s tune The mills along by this method. the river would no doubt gladly donate the fuel for the tug, during her operations and we are told that tariff adjustment lever since we came into possession of t he islands There has been an abundance of protest to securo. better tariff con ditions fur the Philippines; but so tar, although urged by President Roosevelt on several occasions, sup plemented by much argument on the part of Mr. Taft, this protest has failed. This recommendation and argument, backed bv public sen timent, should have been effective. Congress, however, has shown no friendly disposition toward proper Philippine tariff making. and it is now a matter of speculation if Con gress will experience a change of heart. —Telegram. N ews from Salem is that the at torney general holds that th-' Ore gon Agricultural college is not en titled to an increase in its maintain- ance until January 1910. An act pa sed by the late legislature pur ported to increase the annual al lowance from $50,000 to $80,000 per year, and it was supposed all along that it would be available for the current year. Under the new developments the la..’ will not become effective until January, 1910, at which time the first quarter’s al lowance u ill become due. That means that none of the increase will be reachable during the present college year and cannot be used un til the last term in the college yeaJ of 1910. It further means that if 1 be Ashland referendum should be consummated the only increased al- 1 >wance that will go to the college f om the’slate fcr the current two years will be $30,000. With the Institution congested in its every de- paitment by 1400 students from e\ ery part of the state, and with a certainity that even larger demands through increased student attend ance will be made upon it next year, it would be most unfortunate if the Ashland referendum against the college should succeed. The loss of the increased mainlainance that it was supposed the college was to get, mak s the case of the pro posed referendum infinitely less justifiable. If the latter should suc ceed it will result in widespread indignation throughout the state. The growth in attendance is a sign of the usefulness and the demand for the instruction at the agricul tural college, and to limit it to an increase of only $30,000 in the very midst of that growth would be little less than a public shame.—Journal. J udge Bean’s appointment to the new Federal judgeship will be satis • factory both to the bar and to the public. It was brought about, no doubt, by the general indorsement of the judge for the place by the lawyers of Portland and elsewhere, and by the necessarily favorable 'he drag would not cost over forty result of whatever inquiries the or fifty dollars. This might prove president may have made about him. a very valuable process, and it surely Judge Bean has had a long and would cost nothing to investi- honorable record on the bench in gate the situation The old tug Oregon. He is intelligent, studious, Triumph would be amply able to There will be perform the wo'rk if the Klyhiain and conscientious. no disposition in Oregon to criticise owners would net want to use the Anyway something the president’s choice-ncertainly not new vessel. among those who think that long ought to be done to get rid of the service on the bench is entitled to shoal ahd that at once. .C h i cago proposes to print its continued recognition and reward. U pon recommendation, or rather own school books. At least there is —Oregonian. As the with the recommendation of Presi discussion to that effect. matter is suggested, a board of |. “P ierp ” Morgan has peeped dent Taft, an equitable tariff measure again and said that Roosevelt is offered on behalf of the Philppines. teachers from the city schools are to would go down into history as a Whether or not Congress will fol- prepare the books and the city man who had done incalculable low the recommendations of the government itself will do the rest. harm to American business interests. President will be determined later. If Chicago tries the experiment the True he has done harm to the ”in- The appeal lor fair tariff dealing result of it will be watched by the but he has done untold toward the Philippines is one that rest of the country with peculiar terests There is not a doubt good for [business integrity and in- the average American feels to be interest. dustry. The "Old Guard” suchas, just; and upon that basis Congress that the school-book problem is a Morgan, Rockefeller, Harriman and i should act favorably upon a measure vexed one in a great many cities. others who have been plundering that appears to be fair to all parties School book publishers have ! ong A very encouraging since created conditions in their the people and doing all manner of concerned. evil things, will ever have a sore feature about the measure just trade with school boards. which in spot for Roosevelt, for it was he submitted is the initiative of the innumerable instances have been who made life miserable tor them Filipino, and the intelligent effort he detriinetal to the schools. In the and showed them up in their propei has made to consider the in old days of sharp competition be- light It has cost them millions of terest of continental America as tween rival publishing houses condi plunder money and ot course they such interest is to be considered tions were bad enough; and in later feel it keenly, besides having been in a tariff sense. The bill is a man- years, with competition more or less put into disrepute by the American iftstalion of what we might call a eliminated, they are worse rather family spirit. The colony propose.-. than better. The production of people at large. equity rather than demands it; and scoool books, vhether they are pur Now is the time for putting Ban equity that removes obnoxious fea- chased by the school authorities, as don in clean, healthful and attractive tures which in a degree have re in certain cases or whether they condition for the summer months. tarded trade with the United States. are purchased altogether by the Hundreds, yes thousands of camp It is a give-and-take arrangement parents of school childrerf, is one er* will come here this summer to prompted by an apparent desire fo that touches the public pocketbook. J o • And what is more to the purpose, it touci es the pocketbook more heavily than, it ought. It any svstein can l>e demised that will bring about a new deal in this*school book bus- iness; that will keep the price ol books within the limit of reasonable profit; that will prevent the foisting of worthless textbooks on the schools, and that will better ser.e the actual need of the pupils; that system will be of great benefit to the educational interests of the country. The very commendable feature of the Chicago proposition is the preparation of the books by a corps of city teachers. Teachers who are competent for this work should by all means understand what is needed in the schools better than anyone tlse. Their labors should produce something much more to the pur pose than what is now in use. Chicago’s proposed experiment is novel and interesting. It may re suit in material benefit to schools throughout the country.—Telegram. CODY LUMBER CO Buy While Lumber Prices are Low and Build While the Sun Shines « No city can Grow without Being properly housed BK THE COQUILLE RIVER LINE —• Str^Fifield & Bandon Twin Screw, New and Fast —WANTED—$500 on good se curity. Cali at this office for par ticuars. 12 tf For the best PHOTOGRAPHS CALL ON 1st Class Passage, Up Freight, Our interests are your interests. Fair rate* and good service our motto A. F. Estabrook Co., 245 Cal. St., San Francisco C. M. SPENCER, Agent, Bandon, Oregon GETTY Copying and Enlarging a Spec« ialty. All work guaranteed C la re nee I'. Lowe - - O regon Druggist a n d potheen ry bandon Is just in receipt of a new stock of Drugs and Chemicals, Patec. and Proprietary Preparations, Toilet Ar tides. Druggist Sundries, Perfumes. Brodies, Sponges, Soap, Nuts and Candies, Cigars, Tobaccos and Cig I arelt*»s, Paints, Oils, Glass and ; Painter’s Supplies. $7.50 3.00 > NAIR THE HARDWARE MAN BRIDGE & BEACH Stove«, Ranges'and Heaters have in them so —.my excellencies that they are now acknowledged the greatest sellers on the coast an 1 they are growing in favor every year. We have the exclusive agency in Bandon for these household and office necessities, and prices range exceedingly modest in either case. TINNING AND PLUMBING A SPECIALTY. Our Assortment of Hardware, Tinware and Edged Tools is Most Complete. Recorder $1.50 III Year