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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1909)
o --------- --- BANDON RECORDER •i--— C m » *««* ■ANDON......................... OREGON Venezuela Is said to have had the ■ulcide rate lu the world, but it may be different now. Wales Is demanding several things of the British government, but she la not demanding spelling reform. “We do not feel for a moment tbe pressure of a foreign army," say the Cubans. But they knew It was there. naturally prlz^ and try to obtain, it Is one of the things that very, very rtch people And It particularly bard, if not impossible, to command tn this land. Affably, but pertinaciously, tbe reporter says to them, “Your plai’es, Indies and gentlemen, and children also, are not In those nice seats where you can see the {tasslng show at ease, but up there, please, on the stage, and near the foot lights, where our large ami apprecia tive American audiences can find tlielr plcusiire fu observing you. For you will remember, please, that tlie audi ence has paid to come In. and that you, fair sirs and dames, draw exceedingly lllieral maintenance out of the fund* gathered in at tlie tiox office.” .-------------- ’ trumpet calls . Rana’. Itura Sonud. n W«rnt«s Not« to the Vuredeemed. Opinions of Great Papers VALUE OF THE GREAT LAKES. A81' year tbe passenger traffic °«> the Great Lakes totaled 16,000,000 persons, The freight rale by water from Duluth to Buf- falo Is one-seventh of the rate by rail, Statisticians estimate that If the total lake traffic had used tin» railroads ft would have cost $500,000,000 more than it did. These figures but roughly Indicate the tremendous value of In land waterways and faintly foreshadow the possible de velopment of our lakes and rivers. Every twelve minutes, night and day, during 1908, a steamer passed through the Detroit river, and the busiest month showed an average of forty a day arriv ing and clearing at Duluth. With such a traffic already on the lakes, what will It lie when the rivers of the Northwest are opened up. when Canada builds n deep sea waterway from Georgian bay to the Ottawa, and steamships from Chicago can reach any foreign i»ort by way of the Mississippi valley? How many know that the Canadian government Is pre paring to connect Lake Winnipeg with Lake Superior by the Rainy river route, and thus render five hundred miles of the Assinlliolne, a thousand miles of the Sas katchewan and much of the Red river eventually navi gable, bringing the great wheat belt Into touch with tide water ami steamship connection with every port of tlie seven seas? The Great Lakes freight to-day is seven times the total tonnage of the Suez canal. When tlie improve ments even now in prospect are completed tbo natural center of distribution for the United States will be the southern end of Lake Michigan, mid Chicago will be the greatest seaport of tlie world.—Chicago Journal. The girofaue man is every where the : devil goes. No tears are ever shed for the chick that dies lu the shell. The man who is willing to be carried might as well have no legs. if every man lived In the right way, on Important Subjects. no boy would live in the wrong way. Tlie devil can’t pick tlie lock that guards the treasures of the righteous. The man who Is waiting to do a big do. They are a boue of contention, and our government lot of good uil at once will never do officials tire put 1 o their wits' end to keep California any. from adopting laws against them which would offeud, The sinner on the sveai.«- is just as perhaps auger, the Japanese nation. much a sinner as U e sb.her In the The singular thing about it is that the Asiatics have slums. turned longing eyes up«n us. while, if they gaze south Some people spend so much time In ward, they will fmd countries quhe as rich as ours lu counting the mileposts they miss all which they can find homes aud perhaps a welcome— the scenery. something denied them here. Why not take to Brazil or the other South American Stat«« which are striving When the snail makes a mile it Is to attract Immigrants? lu tlie cities there are no labor a mile Ju»t the same as when made by unions to antagonize anil In the country the farmers the automobile. would not object to them, for the natives are not over- There is blessing In being rich, and industrious or ambitious. strong and gifted, but there is more This Is the solution of the Eastern Asiatic immigra in being none of these and yet doing tion problem: Overrun South America, where labor is i<etter than they. cheap and morals are of the easy sort. The Chinese Tlie man who pays his debts and and Japanese wuuld fit In with these people and have lets booze alone is helping to bring easy sailing. The soli is rich and the Industry of tlie the world to tbe place whore the lion newcomers would be well rewarded. Here they are ob and the lamb will lie dowu together. jectionable from several points of vietv; there they Tile man who looks to the laird for would harmonize with tbe dwellers, made up of Ca«> his daily bread will not be found saw casino, Indian and negro strains, mid be content.—Utica ing off the end of his yardstick to Globo. make ft easier for tlie dollars to find his pocket. THE TRIALS OF WIRELESS. The movement against child labor Castro paid $10.6t«i! to Is» operated Is not m< rely a movement to take chil on in Berlin. Being »qiernted on In dren under a certain age out of mills Berlin Is as costly as stopping at some and factories, stores and street trades hotels. * It Is broader and more thoughtful It Oh, well. If lielng Vice President Is 1» a movement to reform tlie condi one fonn of oblivion, it isn't half laid tions of child life as well as of child to get $15,(MX) a year for being oblit labor. It aims at Insuring healthy, sound development of the mind ns well erated. ns of the body of the children. From The man who makes the most noise the larger viewpoint the speeches! of Is not always the greatest man In the Commissioner Draper and Dr. Hutch world. Think of the boilermaker, for inson at n recent conference in Chi cago, acquire a significance that ren Instance. ders them appropriate and valuable A prophet of fashion predicts that in a discussion of child lalior. Dr. in ten years women will cease to wear Hutchinson did not Intend to indict hats. There is something for men to farm life wholesale or to deny' the live for yet. physical and moral lienefits of “the country." His object was to direct at Switzerland certainly seems, about tention to the seamy side of country the worst place to hold a balloon race. and farm life, to substitute certain The Alps not only get in the way, but prosaic facts for certain sentimental IRELESS lias proved a boon to mankind. ore awfuiy hard sis>ts to fall on. fiction, to point out that In studying But wireless has its own troubles. There child needs and opportunities the is not enough air In the congested districts It Is reported that the Czar of Rus whole truth ns to farm routine should to curry all the messages. Complaint is sia can't understand why the Sultan be taken into consideration. Too made that the wireless operators in and of Turkey Ims permitted bls |ieople to much generalization is dangerous, for about New York harbor are too fond of ding to their <-onstltution so long. many farms are better for children gossip. They load the atmosphere with than any factory, and some factories A Boston paper refers to William than many farms; but recognition of confidential social gayety, which is meant to be passed the Conqueror as an early filibuster. evil without exaggeration is essential on to some “pal" ou the other side of the harbor, but wiiich “jams" with a real message carrying information Il might feel hurt if the Mayflower to right thinking and right action. Dr. THE JAPANESE were celled a little tub of tbe seven Draper, one of tlie vigorous advocates HE desire of the Asiatics to make a home of Importance, and the two become a blur of words with teenth century. in tlie United States is a mailer of fifty out ser.se. Happily the appeals of Jack Binns fell upon of educational readjustment, with the an atmosphere not too much occupied with the trivial, years' knowledge view of bringing life and Industry Into A New England gardener promises The Chinese were the earliest to seek us and heme got early attention. But even In this case close relations with the schools. em next season a cross of the orange with out, and. until the gat<s were put up. con there was trouble with amateurs, and Capt. Sealby, ad phasized the fact that to force tlie the cucumber. However, we pin our trived to come by the thousands year after verting to the fact, has declared that there should lie childrim into educational mills is not faith to the farmer who crosses the year. Tlie closed d«M«r, however, put a governmental regulation of wireless activity until the to solve the problem of their devel pike with a watermelon. cheek on this. Since prohibition was enforced tlielr nmn- process is so perfected as to remove this difficulty. opment. Schools. too. may be mate The situation indicates that there is a real demand l>ers have declined. In the decade from 1M9U to 1900 The man who started all tills “af ful anil useless; children may find they decreased from 126.778 to 119.050. and the census for rules and regulations for the use of the ether. By them dull and liecome truants and de finity" talk, and who dragged that wireless the operator with the most ¡»owerful battery of 11)10 undoubtedly will show another loss. beautiful word into the mire of slang, linquents where, under a more enlight has the nmst powerful voice. The great batteries are in the The Japanese, ou the other hand, have been Increasing. is in a sanitarium and his “affinity” ened system, they would gladly un gigantic shore towers which waft messages from shore They have multiplied six times over in the ten years dergo the discipline and training ’li.it Is getting a divorce. Next! to shore, even across the Atlantic. They easily drown terminating In 1900, going from 14.599 to 85.1)86. They fitted them for business, commerce or the feeble efforts of the ship instrument to lie heard. out are free to come in. There are lOO.oOO under tlie flag, The Baltimore Sun wants to know: manufacturing industry. In short, to When these message senders get down to trivialities, more than half being In Hawaii. Their presence is es “Can a man marry on six dollars a restrict child lalsir In factories and they become the same nuisance that the talkative "cen pecially objected to by California, where they become week?” Sure, If he does It on pay shops Is necessary, but not sufficient. tral ” used to be. "Central ” lias long since had a quietus farmers, servants, laborers mid merchants of varying day. The license and the justice of The negative tusks of tlie friends of degrees of importance. They nre dimmed with resorting put upon her conversational yearnings. The wireless op childhood must Is 1 supplemented by the peace coat less than six dollars to dishonesty mid sharp practices in bargaining mid to erator Is due for a dose of regulative treatment. Wire positive ones, by educational reform, be destitute of tlie morals which Americans deem essen less has been proved to l>e too vital a factor in the serv by rational organization of play, by Pewter Is coming into fashion agnin tial for tlie civilization they have created. They can ice of the public to be made the p'nything of anyone.— for jewel lioxes and other toilet arti provision for moral culture and Indus underbid labor and undersell tlie white farmer, nnd they Minneapolis Journal. trial training, by attention to hygiene cle.«, ns lielng "less effeminate than sil ver or gold.” It lias the excellent In the home ns well as in the school. ALIVE AFTER DEATH. THE HEROINE OF A GREAT CATASTROPHE. qualification, also, of being less ex By a gradual and natural process the campaign against certain forms of pensive. child labor has become a campaign for Part« of the Body Retain tsefnlne«» A Chinese general lias been dismissed child saving and for harmonious de After Life II«« Fled. from the service liecause he Ims rhett- velopment of child mind and child In McClure's Burton J. Hendrick de • matfam in one of Ids legs. It may lie character. scribes tlie experiments In transplant a rule in ttie Chinese army that any lug animal organs conducted at the soldier who contracts rheumatism SISTER, JOHNSON’S DEFENRER. R<s'kefeller institute by Dr. Alexis Car shall have It In lxitli legs. _rel. Dr. Carrel preserves animal tis The Early Home Life of the New sues in cold storage for many weeks. World’ll Champion. Gue of the critics solemnly an “To tlie unscientific citizen it is some The mother of Champion Jack John thing of a surprise to learn that large nounces that Edgar Allan Poe could not hoj* to get any of t'-c magazine son lias been a resident of Galveston parts of the body nre alive mid useful editors to accept ids poems if lie were for forty years and Is the mother of after th«» phenomenon popularly known writing them now. Some people will nine children, three ivf whom are boys. ns death lias taken place. Few of us refuse to accept this ns proof that I’ >e Her husband, who was an honest and suspect, for example, that our kidneys respected negro, died a year ago. Mrs. and hearts, after we have «lied our couldn't write great ]xs»:ry. Johnson heard the news of her son's ■elves, can in most cases lie resuscitat Going barefoot seems to lie growing victory the other night about midnight ed, and that if by some surgical mlra less popular in tlie West Indies titan and she said it was not a surprise, for cle they «-ould lie transplanted into an it used to lie. During the last fiscal Jack had (•allied her the day before other laxly they would quh'kly resume year the United States ex|»rted more that within another day lie would lie their functions. This, however, is a than two and a half million jialrs of the world's champion and she knew well-demonstrated medical fact. Tlie slioes to the islands, one-third as that he was certain of victory, accord human heart lias l>een removed from many as the exports of the whole ing to a New York dispatch from Gal the body more than thirty hours after veston. death and made to beat again. Dr. world Tlie old lady is a very intelligent Carrel himself lias taken the heart Tlie children of tlm late Charles E. darky and Is highly respected. She from one «log and Inserted it in tlie Perkins of Boston have given to the says she Is responsible for Jack being neck of another, connecting tlie aorta city of Colorado Springs “The Garden a tighter, although she had Intended with the carotid artery of tlie new of the Gods,” one of the scenic wonders that he use Ills power only to defend heart, and the vena cava with its jugn of America. The park has long been his rights. She said Jack was a tall, lar vein. In a few moments the live i open to the public, and the formal slim boy until he was about 16 years dog had two hearts rhythmically beat transfer Is In accordance with Mr. Per old. when he began to t ike on flesh and lug. one recording a pulse of 88 ami kins' wish. Tills gift is similar In develop his muscles. Up to tlie time tile other 100. spirit to Mr. Kent's gift of Muir Park, he was 14 years of age he was n “Science has yet framed no precise j California, to the nation, and to a be coward and wouldn't fight. definition of death. Tlie hitman laxly “He was eternally getting into trou teems and quivers with life, only a quest recently received by tlie city of Boston of a large sum of money to ble with his playmates.” his mother small part of which becomes a part said, "and he always got the worst of Individual consciousness. maintain the city parks. The of it. His sister was hfs chum and she healthy man hardly realizes the num The Judge In a most Important crim had to defend him and (lo all his fight erous and complex activities of Ills in inal trial in New York—a case involv ing. I had no time to be bothering ternal organs. The alimentary canal '1 lie Queen ot Italy mis establish« «1 hersell in the hearts of the Italian ing the life or death of two men—per settling the children's fights and I told is tlie abiding place of millions of people us site has never done before by her mugfiicent work at Mtssimr, where mitted the Jury to separate and go to Jack If he got licked again I would micro-organisms, the activities of wlii h she displayed in a striking manner tbe physical endurance which marks her their homes, unguarded, ev^»ry night give him another whipping, because lie only occasionally Influence our dally people. The third of tlie four daughters of Prince Nicholas of Montenegro, during the trial. He said ho saw no was getting old enough to defend him life. Bodily tissue everywhere is con she was born In Cettlnje in 1872 uml was married to tlie King of Italy (then reason why a juryman should ho more self. Sure enough he got whipped by a stantly breaking down ami constantly Prince of Naples) in 1896. She tuts three daughter*—Yolanda, Mafalda and likely to tie improperly Influenced than smaller boy and I gave him a licking building up; and yet it Is only in the Giovanna ami there was great rejoicing when a son, Humbert. Prince of Pied a judge. If his point of view can lie when he came home. last few years that even science Ims mont, was born in 1904. For a time the Qu«en did not speak Kalian very "But I never had reason to whip hint liegun to understand the Isautiful fluently, but she has now qultp mastered her adopted language. By a cu established It may serve to raise the standard of intelligence of juries. The again. He developed confidence and chemical reactions Involved in the pro rious coincidence Iter paternal house is more in the public eye lit this mo ablest men fight hard against a duty muscle and he was soon the champion cess.” ment titan it has been for years, owing to tlie antagonistic attitude tlie Mon which makes them close prisoners for of the east end and there were some tenegrins have taken up with regard to tlie annexation of Bosnia and Herze A Chance for the Better, tough boys in that neighborhood. He weeks. govina by Austria. Queen Helena visited London a year or two ago. The life-long domicile of an old ladv always said he would reach the top was situated several feet south of the The most novel detail of all novel of the boxers’ prize list. several Corots—the usual millionaire advertising processes has been the ele "I am not so proud of his being a dividing line of Virginia and Nort'i | ■ 100,000 Worth of Counterfeit«. “You think our American million assortment. vation by advertisement of the richest prizefighter, but I am proud that lie Carolina, and when that section of tlie “ ’Well,' he said, ns I studied them. American families into n sort of ptioilc stands nt the head of his profession. country was resurveyed It was dlscov-' aires buy a good many fake pictures?' "‘Some of them are well done,' I ad life. People in general being very much He was no better nor worse than the ered that the line ran a few feet south M. Rochefort laughed. "It's pitiful! interested in money, and especially tn average boy, but he Is a good son and of the property in question. They It'S shameful! But what can they ex mitted. “ 'Ah !' he purred. large collections of It. are interested he provides well for me ami for his broke the news to the old lady that ited? It's tlielr own fault for buying from then on she was to be a resident pictures as they buy lumber or steel “ 'But they're not genuine.’ lit persons who have the use of such sisters nnd brothers. “‘What! You mean you've found a collections, and like, apparently, to lie Johnson bought property in Galves of Virginia. “That's good," she ex- j rails—according to specifications. I'll kept Informed of the manner of life ton and California since entering ujwn claimed; “I've always heard that North never forget the last pictures 1 was counterfeit?' “‘My dear sir, I'm sorry, but— of such persons, and where they go Ids career and sends money home reg Carolina was an unhealthy State to naked to look at by a rich American. live in."—'Success Magazine. and what they do. Recognizing and ularly. He was so proml of them! So con they're all counterfeits.'”—S ucccm stimulating this interest, the American Eleven years ngo a local sporting vinced that they were masterpiece«! Magazine. Economy, newspa|iers have fed It abundantly, club brought him out .and tlie first pro “When Wltheraby's first child was There were forty in all, and they had yes. HU|H*rabundant1y, and so It Ims fessional he defeated was Toni Scan born he distributed cigars." No matter how hard a mother tries cost him 809.009 frail««. It was a bar dime atsmt that whereas a reasonable lon. who «'nine from Hot Springs to gain ail right If they had been gen to find the Uplift in every detail of) “I remember.” measure of occasional obscurity Is one tight him in 18M, Though Johnson "When Ills last child was bhrn lie uine. for there were great name* In domestic duty, she can't find any trace’ of the things that persona who can af was a Galvestonian the spectators were bad to quit smoking."—Birmingham the lot; several old masters, h Diaz, of It In the task of wiping the chil- I ford to satisfy their inclinations, might with the white man. Age-Herald. 1 a Theodor« Rousseau, a Daubigny, and drea'g noses. [T1 o Travelers lu Africa find the standard of living somewhat different from what they are accustomed to at uome. One of the latest to report ujioii tills mat ter Is Mary Hall in her book. “A Wom an's Trek from the Cape to Cairo.” The following paragraphs reflect a strong light upon the condition of mar ket and kitchen in British Central Africa: When tlie uatlve butcher proposes to kill an ox, notice to that effect Is sent round to the white people on the prev ious day. Ovce they were apprised of the fact by the following startling an nouncement : "A bule will be murdered tomorrow morning at 6 a. m.” This cold-blooded crime, so carefully premeditated—even to tlie exact hour— was, however, not committed, as the following morning a second notice was Issued, as follows: "The bule ran away this morning, so was not murdered.” But this was an exceptional case. I heard one story which is so char acteristic of tlie native that I repeat it. The man who related it told me that the incident occurred when he was on a Journey, and was suffering from a bad attack of fever. One even ing he fancied he would like some eggs, and told ills boy to get two and boil them lightly. After a time they were brought to him as hard as bullets. He told the boy he must get some more and boll them less; but alas! these were brought to him lu the same condition, and the poor fellow wished he bad never or dered them at all. Being unwilling to give in, he made another attempt, and told bls boy, "Come to me when the water boil«.” The boy did so. "Now,” said his master, “put the egga in, and when you have co unted fifty, tajee them out.” The native method of reckoning Is to count up to ten. and then b«*gin again, arriving at tlie total by the number of tens counted. Tlie sick man heard the boy start fair and get as far as four tens, when a second boy Interfered, wid questioned whether it were the third or fourth ten. This started a discussion; and a« they could not agree, it was decided to begin all over again. Meanwhile the eggs were still boiling, and getting harder and harder. This was about the last straw, aud ill as the man felt, he was compelled to get ouf of lied and put a summary end to tbe cooking op* erations. A Curioi»« Vane. One of tlie most curious vanes to be seen on any church in Great Britain 1« at Great Gonerby, a parish adjoining Grantham. It is In the form of a fiddle and a bow and is unusually large. Its his tory is curious. Many years ago a peasant resided in Great Gonerby who eked out a modest Hvelihoixl by per forming on an old violin which wa« almost a part of ills life. At last ho decided to emigrate, and out in the far west prospered and became a riel» man. One day he sent to the cl«»rgyman at Great Gonerby a sum sufficient to build a church, ami attached to the gift the curious condition that a nmtal replica of his old fiddle and bow should be on the summit of tlie edifice. The gift was accepted and the vane may be seen on the church. A Ca«e of Intent Need. It wus In the hotel of a Western mln* Ing town that tlie New England guest, registering In the office, beard a succes sion of loud yells. "What in the world is that—-a murder going ou tqietalr«?” he demanded. "No,” sal«l the clerk, as be slammed the book nnd lounged toward the stalra. "It's the spring lied up lu Number Five. That tenderfoot up there don't get the hang of it. nnd every few <|nys he get« one o’ the spiral springs screwed Into him like a shirt stud. I guess I'll here to go up. If there ain't anything more 1 can do for you for a few minute«,'*