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BANDON RECORDER
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«MBU t*rh *••*
BANDON. ................. ORICON
Mow is the time to subscribe for the
Commoner and the Outlook.
Benator Tillman Is accused, also, of
overworking his forking privilege.
Learn a lesson in modesty by study
Ing the character of Johu R. Binns.
the young Marconi hero.
Bonsa announces that ragtime music
la dead, If so it has left a very active
(boat to continue the disturbance.
No doubt, an inventor will be along
some day with a machine that will
give us our cold waves steam heated.
A Brooklyn girl married a Chinaman
to spite her parents, which Is one phase
of the yellow peril never thought of
before.
We often wonder how President Lin
coin found time to free the slaves
when he was so busy thinking up new
stories.
Young Mr. Rockefeller Is suffering
from insomnia. Perhaps it keeps him
awake to hear It pouring into father's
coffers.
The doctors having discovered a man
Who has two hearts, the question has
been raised whether he Is now entitled
to two wives.
Aunt Carrie Nation smashed a Ix»n
don tobacconist's window and was let
off with a small fine. Aunt Carrie has
Lard work making a martyr of herself.
Another Ingenious man has sprung
Into fame by inventing an egg beater
which can also be used as an ice cream
freezer and a churn, Wonderful age.
is this.
If Roosevelt becomes the head of the
the
world's conservation congress,
problem of what to do with our ex
Presidents will be very satisfactorily
solved.
This country has made such progress
tn the way of furnishing brick and stuc
co houses that we shall probably never
have another President who was born
tn a log cabin.
A Boston woman, we are told, has
"embraced twenty-three different re
ligions." It may be that up to tile
present time she has not found any
that reciprocated.
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dent, an» tfi» «ecußA «f ft« family
bold tfte offb* There ie a •tt’-ng sen
timent In. favor uf preserving th* Vin»
■-enne* residence s» * memorial to on*
<>f the iuosi notable A meri su famille»
TKictors disagree «bout « good many
things, bat they have no differences re
specting the Immediate causes of severe
colds which develop Into pneumonia.
They agree that colds are, paradoxical
ly enough, due In most cases to beat.
The patient becomes overheated and
then goes into the open air. sits In a
draft or otherwise cools off too rapid
ly. and the mischief Is done. The des
lgnatlon "cold" is really a misnomer.
A cold Is not a cold, but a fever w hich
results from congestion, more or less
general, of the mu.-otis membrane.
When the congestion la confined to the
nasal passages and the upper throat it
is called "a cold in the head." When
ft gets farther down It becomes a
“bronchial cold" and when it reaches
the pulmonary tract it is "a cold on
the lungs." but, whatever tlie popular
designations of these colds, they orig
inate. In nine cases out of ten, in sud
den alternation of lwat and «•old. Some
people declare that limy "take cold"
only when they are bilious, and that
may be true, but that Is only another
way of »¡tying that the bilious subject
Is In a physical and mental condition
where bis resisting powers are weak.
He succumbs to changes of tempera
ture which would do him no harm If he
were in normal condition.
He takes
colil, however, not through his liver, but,
through his pores. People who are
said to lie "subject to colds” are In
the same category. They are no more
subject to colds than they ar«‘ to other
diseases. Their resisting ¡tower Is
weak and if they did not have colds
they would be suffering from some oth
er ailment. It wouhl be a mistake,
however, to assume that even the most
rugged constitution Is ¡«roof against
“catching cold" unless care and vigi
lance are exercised. The somber rec-
ords of the pneumonia scourge show
how the strongest succumb like weak-
lings once the disease obtains a foot-
hold. The man who Imagines that his
health and strength are so perfect tha t
he can defy ordinary precautions Is the
most favorable subject for a cold that
Is likely to end his life. Eternal vigi
lance is the price of health as well as
of liberty. Overheated dwellings and
offices are the brt*eding places of "bad
colds" and "bad colds" are forerunners
of our most dangerous troubles.
METHODICAL BURGLARS.
»IO HAT» MEAN GOOD TEETH.
VpruiMltO
»«ulnlir» fiaatl*»
fur • Pretty I'si«r«-a»lou.
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V|r„.,v«o of
V, Great
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I...,,... (UI!, Subjects.
Opinions
Papers
on Important
í
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GROWING NEW FORESTS.
HE English are known to be a phlegmatic
people. They are also noted for their pa
tient common sense. At the present time
they are going about the solution of the
problem of disappearing forests, aud In a
manner to challenge the wonder as well as
the admiration of the people of the haste
ful and wasteful country known us the United States.
Americans wouhl probably laugh at the Idea of planting
150.006 actes of forests annually for sixty years, at a
cost of $450.000 annually at the start and Increasing to
$15,000,(100 a year at the last. But the British realize
that after forty years the forests would be self-support
ing, and after eighty years would be worth nearly three
billion» of dollars, yielding In round numbers $10 an acre
annually, where they now average only 50 cents an acre
per unnum.
Americans have not the patience to look forty or sixty
or eighty years into the future on any proposition. They
spend ¡it the bri.ghole and save at the spigot. There
used to be forests which were seemingly illimitable, coal
and Iron di posits which w ere apparently Inexhaustible,
resources of all kinds which, so far as limited vision
could discern, would never give out. But they are glv
Ing out nil the time, though the people do not take the
matter seriously, and would probably rise up In angry
protest If they were taxe«l heavily to conserve the na
lion's resources. They prefer to let posterity do the wor-
rylng whlle they themselves waste the patrimony of
their ancestors. They may and should learn a great
deal from the far-sighted English cousins who realize
that such a purse is not one of Fortunatus. and who
look ahead to the time when it will be empty unless
timely measures are taken for refilling.-—Kansas City
Journal.
T
FUEL OF THE FUTURE
NDL'STRIAL development is making Im
mense drafts on the «-oal supply of tins
country. The ocean steamers, battleships,
railroads and great manufacturing plants
are eating up enormous quantities of coal
annually and the supply in time must be
come exhausted.
With the coal mines
worked out and the forests denuded, from whence is to
come the supply of fuel in the future for domestic and
Industrial use?
One scientist suggests that hydrogen may be utilized
as a substitute for wood, peat, coal and oil for fuel.
Hydrogen Is known to develop four times the heat of
coal, it makes no soot, and could be used for heating
purposes. Hydrogen is also known to be Inexhaustible,
as it la cue of the chemical elements of water, The
product of combustion is aqueous vapor, which can be
condensed and subjected to the proper treatment for
fuel.
While hydrogen presents the possibility of combustion,
Its segregation from oxygen presents a problem to be
solved by the scientists to produce It in such quantities
as shall meet domestic and commercial demand. To be
There had been a number of bur
glaries In a certain suburban neighbor
hood, and the conversation at a »mall
whist party turned naturally enough
on burglars In general and their local
performances in particular. Everybody
had expressed an opinion except a
quiet, elderly gentleman, who was ap
The Rev Mr. Carmichael made It
parently more interested in his cards
•asy for the medical fraternity to dis
cover that he was Insane. Had his than in criminology. But he was n «t
case been left to expert witnesses there to be let off so easily.
"Doesn't it make you nervous,’
would always have remained a doubt.
somebody asked him, "to think that
A scientist says the day Is coming every night when you go to bed that
When it will be possible to foretell you may be burglarized before morn
earthquakes. Good. 'That will give us Ing?"
“Oh, we don’t mind them," said tue
a chance to make use of our airship
elderly
gentleman, cheerfully, with a
and get off the earth till the trouble b
glance across the room at his wife,
ever.
"We're too well used to them, areu’
1»
Announcement Is made that women me. Mary?'
"John,” said his wife, warulngly
of fashion are about to abolish the rat,
which they have been wearing on their "don't be silly."
"Silly!" echoed he. and turned to th«
heads, but most of the married men
would be more deeply Interested If they others. “Now that’s her modesty.
were to hear that women were to be Those burglars have been trying to g<_
gin wearing waists that buttoned In through our house every night for two
weeks. Always get in through the din
i In
front.
Vir
ing-room window, too. But Mary hears
Among recently elected members to them. Yes, sir. no sooner do they get
new-
Phi Beta Kappa, the society of picked through th«» window than Mary hears
only
scholars. is a Harvard student named 'em and wakes me up. Fortunately for
kind
Tien Tin Cbao of Tientsin, China. Two us, Mary Is a very light sleeper.”
<-ase.
Chinese. Mr Wed and Mr. Chen, grad
“But It must be awful to wake up
uated recently from West Point, where like that!" exclaimed one of the listen
then have been, in a sense, guests of era
the United States. The students who
“Rather disturbing the
night,*’ l OKKSI KLW
are to come to America as benefl continued the speaker,
not so formed like a corkscrew, oil th«- prln
claries of the returned ■'Boxer Indem bad after one gets used to It. All I clple of which It acts. The upper eml
nity” fund will find that their country have to do, you know, is to get ut> and has an elongated eye. over which the
men have set them a high standard In lock the bedroom door, and then the guy rope slips. All that is needed In
American colleges.
burglars go right back out of the dill- putting one of those ¡«ins in place is to
screw it into the ground as you would
Ing-room window.
The South African confederation
Instead
"Very methodical they are, t«x>," add- bore a hole with a gimlet.
convention has been considering the se ed the elderly gentleman, thoughtfully, of rebounding from ston<-s and roots
lection of three capital cltira to satisfy “for they always lock the window afier of trees. It worms its way around them
tb«‘ local pride of the col<«nlt>s en them."
anil the rougher the ground the harder
tering into the new union. Cape
It is to pull tlie ¡«in out. Indeed. It can
Why Foam !■ XI hit*.
Town has been ¡igre«sl upon for the
not be ¡lulled out like an ordinary stake,
Beer is brown, but Its foam Is white, but must be unscrewed in order to be
seat of Parliament, Pretoria for the
administrative capital, and Bloemfon too. Shake up black Ink and you get removed, making ft unusually firm. As
tein as the headquarters of the judi white foam. Shake up red ink a'id 'he will be observed, no mallet is required
clary. It is nearly a thousand miles result Is the same. A body that reflects to drive this sort of ¡-In Into the earth.
from Cape Town to Pretoria, and all the light TT receives, without ab
New Corset < litsp.
Bloemfontein Is between the two. sorbing any. Is always white. All
An Invention of interest to
t women
The plan of a divided capital for uni oodles powdered Into tiny diamonds
ted colonies worked well In Rhode Isl form, so that they throw back the Is the new corset clasp here shown,
and until 1000; but that S'.xte covers light from many face s, absorb nene of which Is designed to add much to the
comfort
of
the
an area of only fifty by thirty-five It and are white by consi'quence. Pow
user. These clasps
miles. Il might work differently on a dered black marble, for Instance, Is
white. And foam Is water ¡«ow«lere<l
are so shap«*d that
continental scale.
Into these small diamonds, and heu*'e
w hen a corset pro
vide«! with them Is
Plans are making tn Indiana for the its whiteness, New York I‘re?s.
fastened
on the
purchase of the house built by William
wearer, they In
Henry Harrison at Vincennes, when he
was Governor of the old territory. It
cline slightly out
is of brick, two stories high and stands
ward, from “about
on the bank of the Wabash river, lliere
the waist line to
is an underground ¡mssage from the
the top of the cor
house to the river, built to provide a
set, and because of
this outward
way of escape In cnee of attack by In
cllnatioii
the
steels
«'«in not pres«
dians. The original Amerl«*an Harrison
The quaint Shrovetide custom of
homestead was In Virginia, where the kicking h football througli the publi«' comfortably against the wearer,
first President Harrison was born. His thoroughfares was observed In the mar some makes of corse's this fault
father was Benjamin Harrison, one of ket town of Atherstone. the old head It.war«! pressure Is so pronoun<t>d that
the signers of the Declaration of Inde quarters of tli«‘ batting Industry. of It causes real suffering and the after
effis'ts ar«‘ sometimes serious
it fp.
p*nden<*e, and twice Governor of his
Tori many people make the mistake quently hap|«ens that “ «¡-sets. after the«
State
John Scott Harrison, the. Son
been
■«•n worn
w..|-n only
on y sightly,
slightly. «!■•«« .¡,
•f President Harrison., was a member of ¡sitting tip their future happiness a* have 1«
and hav<>
hav«> to Is-
Is* dis. ,«r«!« «1.
Of Congress'.two terms, and Ills soil «‘ollaieral for (It* loan ut • Its *>!■ thi* fault an«!
■lit this Lew design, ou the left band
Beujamln was the twenty third A’resl 'ara
In Oregon the ten-inch hat pin is to
be the*limit, but as few mashers will
care to have even ten inches of pin
jabbed into their anatomy, the limit
will doubtless be a plenty.
rt
T
Í
u»»d hb a substitute for coal for fuel Its production must
be economical to make it possible of universal consump
tion.
Consumers of coal, wood, i>eat and oil as fuel have
used these materials because no adequate substitutes
were offered. The great Industries' and domestic con
sumption of coal Is not condoned because this material
is held by syndicates to sell as a profitable ludustry. but
rather betause science has not yet discovered an efficient
and cheaper fuel.
While consumers have protested
against the price of coal, they are always grateful that
fuel can be had. It Is one of the great economic proo-
lems to be solved for the needs of future generations, as
the present supply of fuel at current rates of consump
tion must in time become exhausted. It is time that
scientists were seeking to discover an efficient substitute
for coal, and Invention may reduce the cost of hydrogen
to a level that will admit of general consumption for
heating purposes. Nature has made adequate provisions
for the comfort of her children, and in her laboratory
probably will yet be discovered fuel for domestic and
industrial use when the present supply becomes exhaust-
JoodaH's Farmer.
SETBACKS TO WOMEN'S RIGHTS
WO terrible blows to the sacred cause of
feinal* freedom were administered the oth
er day, one In New York and the other in
St. Ixnila. That no protest followed on
the heels of such outrages 1udl<*ates either
that gentle woman has lost heart In the
great battle for her r r-rlghts or that she
Is devoting all her present energies to ward off the pro
posed taxation of tea. coffee, stockings, gloves and toys.
The management of a large New York department store,
wearied of the crowded conditions produced by monster
coiffures, has forbidden Its employes to wear rats and
puffs. A St. Ixiuis judge has decided that no wife has
any right to search the pockets of her husband. We r«»-
gurd these precedents as distinctly dangerous. If no
protest le- entered, who knows but cruel employers may
bar high heels and knee-length corsets, or some judge
may refuse to regard snoring as Just cause for divorce?
Chicago Journal.
SLOW BUT POWERFUL REVOLUTION.
HERE need not be, however, ttie slightest
doubt In the mind of any man that polltl-
cal. commercial and financial affairs in
this country are In a state of transition,
and that the machinery of the p recoiling
centuries has become antiquated und obso-
lete, no longer responsive nor sulted to
the new and more potent forces of the present time, and
must give place to forms and methods, to reforms and
betterments, that the people, who after all are the con-
trollers of politics, commerce and finance, desire and
will have. The age demands better results for the
masses and insists upon the limitation of the power of
the few in all political, commercial aud financial affairs
—Cincinnati Enquirer.
distance from the wheels where it Is
not disturbed.
Honeaty
of
the
««Spoiled**
Child
Often, writes Woods Hutchinson In
the Success Magazine, the spoiled
child Is the one really best trained for
life. Real life, that Is, not the sham
travesty upon It so caTefully played In
the nursery and the schoolroom and
termed ‘education.’ The difference be
tween a spoiled child and a well-be
haved one Is chiefly a matter of frank
ness of expression. The spoiled child
says right out Just what he happens
to think ami feel, hud you hear and
are pained by his expressions of skep
ticlAin, of resentment, even of re
bellion.
Nine times out of ten the
“model" child feels exactly the samr
sentiments- but refrains from express
Ing them. When the spoiled child liar
expressed himself It may la- even Im
pertinently or rebelliously the murder
Is all out, tin* subject is fairly on th«1
carpet, and you can argue the case with
him on Its merits, or If It be beyond
his grasp, assert your authority and
ask him to trust your superior experl
ence. which he usually w ill, nine cases
out of ten. If lie is nppealed to In this
way. In any case, you know- the worst
that is in him and can govern yourself
accordingly. Your model child may
submit in silence, without discussion
or remonstrance, but you may depend
upon ft that he will discuss the «pies
tlon on Its merits with the nurse, or
the cook, or the hired man, or the
bad boy In the next street; and that,
whatever feelings of resentment or In
Justice he may smother In his own lit
tie interior, so far as expressing them
toward you In concerned, he will pass
on with Interest to his puppy, his kit
ten, or his younger brothers and sis
ters, or playmates.
to turn inside
the envelope h»
just received
send his reply
In it. The envelop«
i so made that when
It is opened it
«reads out in font
flaps, gummed and
marked to show
how they should b«-
Tl’K.NB
refolded.-
W li en
gummed together it forms a clean en-
velope. ready to he addressed and
sealed and mailed to the sender. The
latter, to further insure a prompt reply
to his letter, may affix a stamp to
what will *be til«- obverse side of the
new envelope and the receiver will
have no excuse for dereliction. This
form of carrier will no doubt be large
ly used in advertising, as ft can la-
made with the name and address of the
firm si-nding It out printed on the In
Dhmal Proapect.
side. It will have all the advantages
Mcjlgger—Poor Dumley's In for It.
of the reply post card and the mili I
He married a girl who stutters, you
tlotial advantage of privacy.
know.
Suck* I p the l>u«it.
Thingumbob—Well, it shouldn't be
Among the recent automobile devices hard to outtalk a woman like that.
Mcjlgger—Yes. but with all her stut
is a system desigmsl to prevent the
cloud of dust which often makes the terIng she Is very determined; If she
-peeding automo eier starts to say anything she'll stut
bile a nuisance to ter through it If it takes all night.—
those ¡Missing in Catholic Standard and Times.
th«' vicinity. Thin
Whnt It l)oei.
apparatus consists
"Speaking of poetry, does the modern
of a paid of tubes
school make u" think?"
with
extended
“Well, it makes us hustle for the dic
mouths which trail
tionary—that Is. those of us who have
Just
above
the
any curiosity at all." I/>u1sv|lie Cou
.•round. By means
rter Journal
of a small
fan
Nag Industry Safe.
mounted on
the
The great earthquake which destroy
vehicle, a suction Is create«! and the
stream of «lust ral-ssl by the passage •d sixty villages and cities In Persia,
of the wheels over the ground, is drawn says a Kansas City paper, wllj hnrdly
«
Into a- re«s‘ptacle from which It la de- affect the Oriental rug Industry of
¡»«lted in the road nt a point some England.
Of all the apologks for tlie Merry
Widow tiat the newest Is the most
aovel. it Is advanced In Its favor that
It Is responsible for the even greater
•are women are bestowing on their
:eeth. Of course all women of the last
two generations, even those careless In
>ther respects, have b«>en ¡«articular In
regard to their dental charms, but It
» asserted that since the advent of th*
Merry Widow they have beeu more at
tentive to them than ever, the New
York Press says. A cosmetic dentist
•xplalns this by pointing out that when
a w<«man wears a large hat her hair
Is almost covered except at the skies,
where It Is puffed out; her forehead
s hidden, and her temples are merely
luggested, so that nothing stands out
,'learly save her nose and mouth, and
ts a result the teeth are not iced aa
hey never were before.
This state of affairs Is brought about
n a great measure by the lints with
arge round crowns and drooping brims,
Most girls, when they want to show
their teeth, think it necessary to smile
troadly, says th«“ cosmeti«« dentist, and
bus proclaim their intention in a most
patent manner. They should learn to
¡how them without making their lnten-
:lon obvious. It Is not necessary to
»mile broadly; In fact, a far more ef-
fective result is obtalned if the lips
ire only slightly part<al in the center
when tlie emotions of amusement or
iapi«in«‘ss are t<> be express«»«!.
To teach his patients to improve the
expressions of their mouths this spe
cialist tells them to think pleasant
things before going to sleep. They are
instructed to smile sweetly, with th«»
ilpB Just touching, so that when they
wake they have a happy asp«»«“! of
countenane«'. II«' considers It Is a good
plan to mak«‘ them assume the exquis-
te shape know ii as Cupid's bow. The
Ips should be pressed In th«; center
ilso and should be k«>|«t rosy of the
•Igtis of thoroughly good health.
Legal Information
'i
The manager of defendant mill In the
case of lllne-Hodge Lumber Co., 46
Southern Reporter, 685, posted notices
forbidding Its employes under penalty
of discharge to trade with other con
cerns. Plaintiff brought an action for
damages to Its business caused by these
notices. The supreme court of Lou
isiana held that as defendant had not
combined with others, and as its ob
ject was not to injure plaintiff, but to
protect and safeguard Its own Interest,
Its methods were not unlawful.
Deeds to certain lots contained the
covenant that the title to the land
should never vest In a person of African
descent or colored person. The lots
were purchased by a corporation whose
stockholders were negroes who intende«)
making a pleasure ¡«ark for their race.
In People's Pleasure Park Co., Inc., *t
al. v. Rohleder, 61 Southeastern Re
porter, TIM, an action to cancel the deed
and enjoin the sale, the supreme court
of appeals of Virginia held that the
transfer was not a breach of the coven
ant as the corporation, though composed
of colort-d persons, was nut Itself a col-
ored person.
A widow, 56 years of age, married a
man 69 years old. thus losing her pen
sion. Becoming dissatisfied, she sought
annulment of the marriage on the
ground of her husband’s physical In
capacity, which the supreme court of
New York in Hatch v. Hatch, 110 New
York Supplement, 18, declined, saying
that, because of advanced years of the
parties at the time of marriage, the
desire for support and companionship,
rather than the usual motives of mar
riage, must have actuated them, and
that th«> widow, having lost her pension
by gaining a husband, could not ex
change again.
The Kentucky statute provides that
railroad companies shall furnish sep
arate compartments for white and
negro passengers on passenger trains.
It further provides that companies op
erating roads more t.«an five mllee In
length shall run at least one passenger
train a day each way. In Southern
Ry. In Kentucky v. Commonwealth, 110
Southwestern Reporter, 872, It was coo-
tended that appellant violated the com
partment law In falling to suitably di
vide a caboose attached to a freight
train where there was no other train
run. The court of appeals of K«-ntucky
held that a freight train to which a
caboose, carrying passengers, was at
tached was still a freight train, and al
though the company may have neglect
ed to furnish the requisite number of
passenger trains it had not violated the
compartment law.
The American College Student*
Privy Councilor Zuntz, on his return
to Berlin, after a three months' visit to
the United States, delivered a lecture
before the students of the Industrial
high school of that city, In which hs
had much to say In praise of Ameri
can students and of the college ays,
tern under which they were trained,
“Our students," he said, “can help
themselves financially only by teach-
Ing The American student has the ad
vantage in this resj>ect, because, with
out losing caste or dignity, be can
break stone, act as a waiter or porter,
or do work at any trade. It Is not an
Infrequent occurrence, that a young
man nets as « wait r at a gathering
of people where hr la received as an
Kjual ae aoou as hie tueutftl duties have
V*vt> jerforujed.*
4