Image provided by: Bandon Historical Society Museum
About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1909)
9 4 * ▼ CIVIC EDUCATION. T Jpon It Depends Development of th« City Beautiful. The universal establishment of the rlty beautiful depends primarily upon Papke May Fight Langford. Why Local Merchants Cannot Do the proper educatiou and development Jim Cotfroth, the premier tight pro. of taste In the child. This phase of tnoter of California, is trying hard to Without It. civic improvement work is too often clinch a match between Billy Papke, neglected, even if thought of. for In who recently defeated Hugo Kelly, GREATLT INCREASES TRADE. our rush of American life we look for and Sam Langford, the hard hitting Immediate results and are very Impa light-heavyweight of Boston. The Cal- tient with any method that gives Pointer» an Competing With Mail promise only In the distant future. Order House»—How to Adverti»» Ef Could we train and educate the child fectively—Value of a Neat Personal in civic beautifying and betterment all the problems incident thereto would Appearance and Attractive Stores. be at once solved. Home merchants may realize the At the present but a few are either kind and quantity of advertising done educated, trained or Interested In the by the mat] order houses from the fol I work, and these are missionaries en lowing news item, which appeared re deavoring to Interest and convert the cently : indifferent masses. The great under “Chicago claims the distinction of be lying principles should first lx* Instilled Ing the mall order center of the uni into the child's receptive mind and verse, and some figures from the post- office there would seem to establish then somewhat of the details. Too- often the process is reversed, and we the right to the honor. One of the big- geat mall order houses recently broke first try to stuff or cram the child with all postal records by mailing »1,000,(100 matter of which be does not know the catalogues, each weighing two ounces, “why.” Had the matter been properly the whole weighing 450 tons. The handled when we were children we sacks holding the catalogues weighed would now all be working nt the fin sixty five tons. If these pamphlets ishing touches of the city beautiful In had been sent on one train thirty cars stead of maintaining a never ending fight against the billboards and like would have been filled.” nuisances and pleading for street trees, All these 0,000,000 catalogues repre sent advertising. They set forth the parks and other beautifying factors * goods to be had from the mail order and features. First see that the children most fully house In the most concise but alluring form. Low price is the chief argument and thoroughly understand the desira depended on to pull trade. Nothing is bility and even necessity of the work said about the poor quality of the and interest them in some phase of It goods sold, That the customer must to the extent of mental and physical effort, and you need not fear to begin find out for himself, The only wmy for the borne nier- by taking up one at a time the details chant to meet this flood of advertising of the work. If the child has the sub is by an equal or greater flood of ad ject matter called to his notice but vertising. This is fighting the devil once each week it will serve to keep with tire tft some purpose. Then let nllve his interest In the work. Do not him get a few samples of the goods attempt to crowd too much upou him sold by the order house, put them up or it will prove a task and the pleas beside his own goods and show that, ure will be largely gone. The curricu quality considered, the customer can lum of our common schools must be get better bargains nt home than by changed to include In all schools na sending his dollars to the distant city. ture study, school gardens and at least The merchant has three avenues of the principles governing the work for publicity to the order house's one. He civic beauty and betterment. The BILLY PAPKE. can send out his own catalogues or u child may be depended upon to carry j circular, which amounts to the same much of his school I raining and teach- iforniau has offered $15,000 for a for i thing, a method used effectively by fne into the home and thereby interest ty-five round contest between the pair. aome of the smaller stores In the large and stimulate parents to make ready As Ketchel has practically admitted cities. He thus Covers the one avenue for the crusade of the governing gen- i that he cannot make the middleweight open to the order house. In addition, eration to follow toward the perrna- ] limit any more. Papke has now claim be has his local paper and his store nent, universal establishment of the ( ed the title. windows. The paper commands more ideal city beautiful. Let us demand in Recent Baseball Decisions. reapect and attention than the circu our schools teachers able and anxious lar, which is liable to be thrown nsfde to impart to (lie child somewhat of In announcing two decisions on without reading. The paper Is an es taste and culture—Los Angeles Times. eases , of “free agents” the national tablished institution, is regarded as an baseball commission warns the clubs old and trusted friend In the homes it under the national agreement that UNKEMPT YARDS. enters, and therefore its Implied in they should protect their Interests by dorsement of the house it advertises Is How They Can Be Transformed •t making all players sign contracts. Jer of value. sey City sent Arthur lie Groff to Little Expense and Trouble. Success or failure depends on the in A well kept lawn with a few flow Wllkeebarre. Jersey City wanted the dividual merchant. Where one man ers repays one in a large measure for player back, but De Groff claimed be will lose out another will make a for the work expended in its care. A trim, was a free agent. The player has prov- tune. It depends on the amount of orderly lawn and yard give one a feel .ed his case, but the commission says energy and intelligence used. I have ing of self respect and satisfaction that clubs In the future should put no just been reading an item that has that help to keep the dally work from player on the payroll without making gone about the country credited to becoming the daily grind. Then, too, him sign a contract. De Groff had > “Ex.,” which, by the way. is about the where one resident of a block beauti none with ulther club. meanest credit that usn be given, but fies his surrounding, others follow the W. B. Kay. who was turned adrift which must stand In this case, since I good example, and in this way the by the Washington club some time do not know the name of the paper the movement spreads and the entire town ago, also put in a claim that he was a Item originally appeared In and will is made attractive. And attractive free agent. The commission, however, not jtlve the name of the paper that towns are what home seekers and man refused to allow his claim. Kay was was small enough to swipe It and give ufacturers are looking for these days. ordered to report to tlie Washington the credit to “Ex.” A scythe and mower, a hoe and rake club at once. Kay is at present play This item recounts how a man start «■an transform an unkempt yard into ing with the Troy (N. Y.) club, al ed a store In a certain neighborhood, a smooth, green lawn; a bed of red though he has been with several other but did not make it go and had to sell geraniums adds beauty and is easily teams since Washington sent him back In a year. His successor began to pick cared for. Bright spots of solid color to the minors. up trade, in a few months had to hire add more to the appearance of a lawn a clerk, then a second and finally a than haphazard mixtures of flowers. Pirates Win Storke on Contention. third to take care of the growing busi Golden glow Is a gopd lawn shrub. The application of Player Alan II. ness. Now, the only reason was the It is hardy and easily grown. It Storke of the Pittsburg National difference in methods. The neighbor blooms late In the fall when most of League club for reinstatement has been hood had not grown sutficlently to ac the flowers are gone. It grows very granted without the infliction of any count for the change. The first man tall and is bright yellow. Salvia, a penalty by the national baseball com waa careless of bls dress and equally shrub bearing brilliant red flowers, is mission. The player did not report to careless of his store. His wares were showy and very satisfactory. hts club this spring, having obtained not displayed to advantage, the front Dahlias are acceptable for lawn use permission to finish his studies at a of his store was not attractive, and he and can be had in a large variety of law school. The commission also an did not advertise. The result was that colors. For the small beds nustur- nounced a ruling In the case of Player people passed him by or, if they did ?ums and sweet peas are excellent, Justice, who made a claim against the call once, felt no Inducement to go be latter are t>etter used as a screen St. Louis American League club for back. The second man was clean in or boundary and can lie planted agtlnst back salary. The commission found bls personal appearance, energetic, put the fence which marks the rear at the that the player was entitled to the sal his store in order, had nn attractive lawn. The lawn should be well fenced ary due him, and the St. Louis club is display in front and strove to know to keep chickens nway from the grass, directed to pay the same, after deduct people and to please them. He adver if not, they ruin it in a short time. ing $50 advanced to him and what tised. He arranged bls goods to the They have no business near the house. ever moneys they paid out for a doetor beet advantage. He made friends. Ho In arranging for the summer flow lot the neighborhood know he was on ers It is better not to cut up the ex and nurses during the time he was ill earth and that be wanted trade, ne panse of grass Into too many small while with that club. got it. People were attracted by his l>eds. but have just a few S[K>ta of Ed Gaer»’ Big Stable. store front ami dropped in. They were bright color, The flowers that are As usual, Edward F. Geers, dean of pleased by their treatment and drop planted will need care, A few Is-ds ped in again They were still more well tended are preferable to many the harness turf, has a big stable this pleased and told their neighbors. In half cared for. When .making your spring at the Billings track, Memphis, other words, this merchant by ordi plans don’t map out more than you Tenn. In all (leers has forty-six ani mals in training, a record number even nary diligence took a store that had can manage. for the dud who made the Village been a failure and tn a few months farm famoun. created a flourishing business. The se Keep All Tidy. It is natural perhaps for« the “silent cret of it al) was that he knew how to Tidy parkways, gutters and vacant play up his gissls. He understood the lots go far toward making the town man" to hold the season's record. He magic of attractive appearances and of beautiful. believes in ascertaining early what a skillful advertising horse can do. so he “searches” his This same “Ex.” mentions an amus charges sooner than any other trainer Join the Band of Betterment. ing case of working up an artificial de Ob, It's get a move and hustle. In the business, When the majority Start to doing things and rustle. mand for goods, or creating a market. are working out around 2:20 (Jeers is Put a sound of life and bustle An enterprlslug Yankee found himself setting down his hopefuls in 2:10. In the aJr! tn one of the God forsaken countries Keep In sight of the procession, near the equator, where, the nntives For we're In an age and nation Early Football For Yal«. wear no shoes and scarcely any clothe«. That is bound to beat creation, A new plan of the Yale football man And to do it on the square. There was ne shoe store in the vil agement is the calling to the prelim lage, and the Tunkee concluded that Then it's up. boy«: hep. boy». inary football practice in the autumn Le.am to keep In step, boy». the natives ought to put on leather Forward In the center and bring up the of members of the Incoming freshman and be civilised So he laid in a stock rear and wings. class who are proficient in football and of shoes and then sent for a cargo of W« have need of life and movement candidates, for the freshman team. In the army of improvement. dry sand burs These he sprinkled la no room for a laggard in tte« They will be called on the 30th of Sep all through the streets In the middle There race to better things. tember. The new men will be trained of the night. The natives had never with the university football squad with Xave an object and pursue it: met the sand bur. but soon got ac the idea of giving both the university Right your goal and get next to It. quainted. Before noon the whole town Plan a worthy work and do It men and the freshmen early practice waa picking spines out of its feet. With a will. and sifting out the best men for th« Have a civic spirit glowing Then Mr. Yankee «got in his work. freshman team. For your town and keep It growing. With his feet incased in a pair of new They mii«t need» continue going shoes he walked all over those sand Who would march up Progrr»» hllL Ryan After Ketchel. bur strewn streets and never turned Tommy Ryan, the former mlddle- Then It'« rtsht. boy»; fight, boys. a hair. The result was a rush for that Strike with all your might, boy». ehoe emporium, which sold out Its» en- Join the band of betterment, th« clvSa weight champion, will again enter the ring. He has hurled a challenge at brotherhood. tire stock before night. Of course Stanley Ketchel. Ryan states that he Progre»» In united action that sort of play Is too coarse for an Find» It« magnet of attraction. will not be ready to take on a match . Ameaican town, but It merely shows join hnnds and «erve ae »oldler» fight before October, but that by that time Mat braiaa make business I ing for th« common good__ , he would be In excellent condition. J. A. EDOERTON. JAMER A. EDGERTON- IONIE Harry Leon Wilson Xi >> all the tradì cions of European society can influ enee this man from Indiana. His triumph over the aristocracy of the old world is clever, humorous and patriotic enough to thrill every of z* » X| ÎX > t, AMERICAN STORY OF TWO AMERICANS FOIL ALL AMERICANS » This excellent story will begin in the next issue of ✓ ? as a Serial If you are not already a subscriber you shouid begin now and get the full story RECORDER, per year, for Six Months, for Four Months, $1.60 .76 50 M « e » • a •