Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910, June 17, 1909, Image 4

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franchises have been grant* ft ■rial viewpoint, while ifotu every
Bandon Recorder t-d act . at that Roseburg,
North Bend, Co­ other viewpoint what would have*
iu
. Published Every Thursday by the
Recorder Pubtahmg Company
O. 1C. KOPF,
...
Managing Editor
Subscription, fl Gt) per Year in Advanee. Advertising Rate« Made
Known on Application.
Job Printing a Specialty
Eutered nt the Bnudou l’ottoftioe ng Second Class Matter.
THURSDAY
June 17, 1909
G ardening as well as fruit grow­ lures.” Now if Mr. Harriman cares
ing and dairying is proving to be a to know the pulse of the people, let
paying proposition in this section of him build railroads where they are
Oregon and as years move on this needed and will serve the greatest
great industry will develop to a number instead of bottling up some
particular section as he is trying to
large extent.
do Oregon. If he will be fair with
T here are
many excellent ' the people the people will be fair
varieties of apples raised in the west with him
quille, and the. evidence of activity
at Boise, while sentiment is being
cultivated in central and e »stern
Oregon, all indicates that a power­
ful corporation or interest is work­
ing carefully and craftily for an en­
trance to this section of the coast.
A short and straight route between
the Orient and New Vork, and the
Noithwestern is in the best posi
tion to furn'sh that route.
It al
ready has the best pass over the
Rockies, and is aiming for the best
road between the West and East
Enterprise.
I t is announced in thecolumns of
a paper that makes a specialty of
S enator Johnathan Bourne, Jr*j sporting eventsand of the careers of
of Oregon, is Ikely to pass into noted prize-fighters and gamblers,
history as the friend of Presidents. that two of the best known sp >rts in
He likes Presidents so well that he this country are now “to the bad.”
cannot bear to see one leave the One of these is Ed Corrigan, a
White House. It was Bourne, it famous American turfman and
will be remembered, who most per- plunger; and the other is Pal
sistently kept the Roosevelt boom Sheedy, who, in a long and varied
alive after Colonel Roosevelt had career in which he is said to have
given the country to understand won and lost millions across the
that he would not be a candidate green cloth, gained the sobriquet of
Bourne was the original “second the “square gambler " Corrigan is
elective term” man and he carried poverty-stricken in Lexington, Ky.
his flag right to the doors of the with less than $2,000 in his pos­
Chicago convention, waiting for session, attending upon his dying
the sensation that was to sweep wife. Sheedy is at Chicago, dying
the delegates off their fet t and start of fatty degeneration of the heart I
the Roosevelt stampede. One day practic. Ily a pauper. Men of this
prior to the convention Senator type are often good men. That is
Bourne was at the White House, to say they are honorable as to their
F biday , April 1 Sth is the day I He was there every day, for that
engagements and obligations; gener
set apart for dedicating Bandon’s matter, but “one day is an effective
ous in their instincts; kindly and
new $30,000 school building. 1 his I beginning for a story, Well on this
sympathetic in their treatment of the
is a building of which every Ban- j one day a group of newspaper men
and companionable
j unfortunate
donian, who believes in progress is happened to be there also, talking
among their fellows. They are men
justly proud. The structure is mod shop, and one ot them was telling, I
l possessing, without a doubt, 11ore
cm in architectural design and pre­ apropos of rate regulation, how'
admirable characteristics than can
sents an appearance that will attract difficult it was to get the word “in­
be claimed by many others wii o
anyone who has an idea for the trastate” over the wires and
would denounce them as moral out- J
beautiful. Much credit i. due the ' print, because it was so much
cists, and whose lines are cast
school board for their untiring ef ! “interstate.” “I wish,” said
in perfectly proper and respectacle
fort to get such a building and the I Senator sadly, butting into the con-
channels
Furthermore, the best
contractors are also to be commend 1 versa lion, “that the newspapers had
men of this type especially the
cd for their honest work in every the same difficulty with the word
successful ones are men of nerve,
detail. A close inspection will show “raft.” But now the second elec­
which is but another name for
that everything is of the best ma­ tive termer is the golf companion of
¡shrewdness. In their ju dgment of
terial and properly and substantially President Taft, and it is said
men and affairs they are aided by a
placed. The exterior is beautiful would not be averse to being the
sort of insight and readiness of de­
and imposing, but when one has Taft mouthpiece in the upper
cision, which win high honors in
simply viewed the outside he still has branch of Congress if the Presi-
legitimate business. But, after all,
no conception of the real value anil dent desires such a functionary.
the chances for their ultimate suc­
convenience of the building, for as He’s a popular fellow, is Bourne,
cess are altogether against them,
you enter you begin to see the su­ an energetic friend and the champion
and for fundamental reasons. The
perb finishings of the interior, the in loyalty to the “President whit
professional gambler who makes
modern equipment for school work am.—Chicago Record-1 lerald.
betting the business of his lifetime
and in fact everything shows system
loses his grip on all that goes to
and design. The citizens of Ban­
:
build healthy morals and sound
don should turn out en masse to the I : A P ortland paper of recent date
inertality. The spiritual part of
dedication tomorrow afternoon and j published some indications concern­
him becomes extinct.
The moral
thus show their loyality and good ing the railroad survey now under
p.jrt of him is choked with greed.
will toward the cause of education. way between this place and Rose-
I burg that had been more than guess- The mental part of him eventually
I ed at by the people here, but it is atrophies in all other lines except
A C hicago dispatch says: “Ed­ supposed that outsiders were not the consideration ot chances, and
ward H. Harriman, who is abso­ informed. The Oregonian says that the exercise of those faculties which
lute master of over 54,000 miles of ! Mr Haines the chief engineer is or • liable him to decide whether his op­
rail and water transportation, has has been a Northwestern engineer ponent w ill be an “easy mark" or
decided to keep in constant touch and that he has located most of the not. That the physical part of him
with public opinion regarding him­ Northwestern lines in Nebraska, is more than apt to suffer is obvious
self, his railroads and railroads gen­ South Dakota and Wyoming. from the nature oi his occupation
erally. provided it is possible to do Furthermore, it is said that a num­ and the habits ot life incident there­
so through things which are print­ ber of the men here were with him to. It is impossible for men to
ed about them. Twice each month in the Northwestern territory work. get away from the philosophy of
each general manager telegraphs All of which suggests that it is the work; for the demand which Nature
Mr. Kruttschnitt a brief synopsis Northwestern with a terminal at makes upon men for service. Con­
of public sentiment as reflected by Thermoplis, Wyoming, which is sider the two men in question, either
the press. His report also shows now seeking a coast opening. Such of them has undoubted ability to
the number oi publications which a result would be the best possible have engaged in some legitimate
were
examined, the percentage thing that could happen to this line o. business, and with success.
favorable, the percentage unfavor­ county. The Northwestern, above; There might not have been the
able and the percentage which is all others, is the road that would choice for the acquirement of so
neutral. He quotes also from criti­ mean the most to this section, and much money as they have spent,
cisms, complaints, expressions of the road needs the Pacific terminal. and which they never earned; but
opinion and from special articles as The Northwestern has always been there is every reasonable assurance
well as giving the trend of opinion the leading road between Chicago' that they could have attained reason­
as voiced in |>olitical and com­ and the Missouri valley. It passes able competence; and. above all,
mercial centers. Mr. Harriman re­ through the zone of greatest activity honor, and a resolute, healthful,
gards the reports as valuable bids in the country, and if it gets a term robust self-respect, which they ha\ e
in detecting causes of friction be­ inal at Coos Bay will have the njver known as gamblers. It was
tween his railroads and the public shortest and straighfest route be long odds that the end would have
•nd in applying corrective meas- tween the coast and Chicago.- The j beep quite different, even from the
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such as the Spitzenberg, the Yellow
Newton, the Winesap etc, but in
all of these there are none better
than the juicy Gravenstien which
grows so prolifically in Coos
county. Most any apple country
can raise Spitzenbergs, Newtons and
Winesaps, but they cannot raise
Gravensteins. The salt air of the
Pacific coast and especially that oi
Coos county seems to have a par-
ticular attraction f ir the Gravenstien
and as it is not excelled in flavor by
any apple it promises to be a great
factor in the future development of
this county. The Gravenstien is a
prolific bearer, is uniform in size and
color and makes your mouth water
for more every time you take a bite |
from one of them
j
been the gain is clear enough. The
money they have had has tied from ’
them and the sad pail oi it to think j
upon is what they battered lor that
money.—Telegram.
TO KNOW HOW
Is the great secret in the develop­
ment of any industry. No matter
what trade or occupation you
pursue you must have the “Know
How or you won’t get the busi­
ness. In the manufacture of lum­
ber the situation is tie same as in
other industries.
The sawmill
must be handled by a crew that
KNOWS HOW to produce good
lumber. The CODY LUMBER
COMPANY has a modern plant
equipped with the latest systems
for manufacturing with practi­
cally mathematical accuracy. The
men who handle the machines
have the “Know How.” That is
why the buyer is guaranteed sat­
isfaction
ALDEN'S NAPLES STORY.
A Glass of Capri Wine and a Statue
That Nodded.
The late W. L. Alden, the humorist,
was one of the most abstemious of
men in fact, be was pretty near be-
ing a teetotaler, I don't know that I
ever saw him take wine or spirits in
all the years 1 knew him except a
glass of claret at the midday and even­
ing meals during bis last illness.
During the later years of bls life he
spent the w inter abroad, sometimes in
Genoa, sometimes in Naples and once,
1 think. In Cairo, and usually bls four
or live months' residence on the shores
of the Mediterranean would not cost
him more than £50.
Once on his return from Naples 1
remember bis telling me this story:
“L., a brother novelist, was in Na­
ples also ami asked me one night to
dine with him at one of the big hotels
on the water front Just outside Na­
ples one of those hotels along that
massive stone embankment against
which the waves of the seu often
break in showers of spray thirty or
forty feet high.
"After dinner we went for a walk
along the embankment, and we got
pretty well drenched witli the spray.
Soon we reached a statue, and, 1<>, it
nodded gravely toward us!
'Did you see that statue nod?’ said
L>. to me.
"‘I certainly did,’ said 1.
"’Well,’ said he, ’I’m going back to
the hotel ami to bed before I get run'
In It's that confounded Capri wine.’
"So, ashamed of ourselves, back we
went and sneaked up to lied. But at
breakfast table next morning both of
us seemed to be amazingly fresh con­
sidering our dissipation of the night
before, and we could not understand
why we had such good appetites until
the waiter said:
” ‘Did the gentlemen feel last
night’s slight earthquake?’ ” Pear­
son’s Weekly.
A Medal of Blood.
Garibaldi v as once presented with a
mwlal made of ills own blood- The
giver was I >r Maiilnl.of Naples, who
whs well known us a pétrifier and pre­
server of the human body. Dr. Ma­
niai in offering Ills gift to Garibaldi
said that whenever the general looked
at it it would brace him up for the last
fight, and across the medal were eu
graved the words, "The Blood of (lari
baldl Is Forever Red." The strange
medal Is preserved bv tlm general’s
descendants.
CODY LUMBER CO
r THE COQUILLE RIVER LINE
Sirs. Fifield & Bandon
Twin Screw, New and Fast
1st Class Passage,
Up Freight,
Our
are your
interests
$7.50
3.00
interests.
Fair
rates
and
good service our motto
A. F. Estabrook Co., 245
Cal. St.,
San
Francisco
C. M. SPENCER, Agent, Bandon, Oregon
■
SORE Mi’ll.ES
FURNISHED ROOMS
Any mother who Las bad expert
AT
lenee with this distressing ailmen-
will bi' pleased to know that a cure
n ay be affected by applying Cl am
berlain s Salve as soon as the child
MRS SARAH COSTELLO
is done nursing. Wipe it oft with a
soft cloth before allowing the babe
Nice clean rooms' 25 and 50c a
niyht; $1.25 a week, $5 ainontb
to nurse. Many trained nurses
this salve with best results,
BANDON
sale by C. 'i. Lowe.
OREGON
The Pacific
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