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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1909)
• • 9 9 9 9 • « 9 8 9 0 9 O e •. * a • a 9 9 9« •« 9 I » 9 Woman’s World It ». .. Changed the F»*.t cf a Mv-.htr.i Vermont. h WAT, 9 9 Part 9 f • 9» 9 % 9 : of TOWN PARKS, Best Method» of Securing and Laying Out the Land. wou the heart of the girl 1 loved. It was essential that 1 should explain tny conduct toward her. I told her my secret. She loved me all the more, from pity, that I suffered from another's fault. Sin* reminded me that each successive decade would carry tue and mine fur liter from tin* original transgression and that my successors would fi*el it i less than tiloso of uiy own genent- | tion. I’ersuadcd by this view, I asked ; her to marry Lie. I continued to live Hypothetical Questions. "What will your mother say to you ' for n time under my nssutned name. ' but when I joined the tide of entlgrn- when you get home?" said one toy. "She’ll start in by asking me some l tion settling westward 1 resumed nty hypothetical questions,” answered pre | own. cocious Willie. Tliis is nty secret, in the Revolution ary war an officer of great merit nnd “What are they?” "Questions that she thinks she prominence on the patriot side turned knows the answers to before she starts ! traitor, attempted to deliver to the 'British nn important strategic position to talk.!’ Washington Star. nnd fled t<> the enemy. Living In Eng land. where he ' was d>-pls«>d. he Archness. Mt father, one Sally Gay What a cunning little fel brought up a family low Mr CaHi|>ers lai I tolly .Swift— of his descendants, shrinking from the «’¿inning? Why he’s dreadfully bow stain, went where lie wottM be un He mq#t .liaye* Iteen an espe- legged Sally Gay—Yes. but that give« known him sn< h an- qrch look, you know.— ’ '« tally sensUiXp man 'nisi 1 • «hjubtloss have Inherited bls disposât I1*». Truth. ons tones lie addressed the doctor: "I-ah have come to—ah-ask you ah—what wlint is—ah—the doosid mattaw with me—ah!” “I find your heart is affected,” said the physii Ian gravely. “Oh—nh- anything else—ah?” “Ycs: your lungs nre affected too.” "Any thing ah else-ah?” "Yes; your nuinners are also affect- *d."- London Answers. Great Combination Offer ’’pHE RECORDER management has made arrangements with the San Francisco Bulletin whereby we can give subscribers the advantage of a gigantic combination offer that will furnish them all the news of the country in a metropolitan daily and « all the news of Bandon and vicinity in the Recorder at a marvelous low price The Bandon Recorder, $4.50 Total, Both papers through this office if paid in advance, per year ‘»iiníly I- •( 1» <I I lie Xrw F ? £ This steamer is new, is strongly built an«I fitted with the latest improvements and will give a regular 8 day service, for pa.engers ami freight, between the Coquille river, Oregon, First-class Passenger Fare. Frei Rates. $7.50 $3 on Up Freight 4» E E. T. Kruse, managing agent, 24 California St., San f rancisco. ttttYTTttt T» ....,........ Rates $r.oo to|$2.oo per day. week or month. Special rates by Sample Room in Connection. Bandon Oregon J BANK OF BANDON it iMMiy OltEIàOK <'n pi till. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: J L. Kronmlterg, President. I. Denholm, President; F. J. Fahy, Cashier; Frank Flam, I. P. Manly. Vice A general banking business transacted and customers given every accommodation con sistent with safe and conservative banking CORRESPONDENTS: I he American National Bank, oí San F rancisco, Calif; Merchants National Bank, Portland, Oregon, ihe Chase National Bank, of New York. Bandon Brewery BRUNO * ANSELMO. Proprietors SOLE AGENTS FOR Weinhardt’s Buffalo Brewery Bohemian Acme Brewing Co.’s HOME-MADE STEAM OREGON BANDON, <’nlifornii« mid So busy am I with helping. Constructing the good of earth. That 1 cannot halt for finding fault. But have plenty of time for mirth. If there's ioy or cheer or laughter, 1 am there with all my heart. For a right euccess spells happiness, And that Is the nobler part J amis A LbpKftToN. anti Speedy Steamer •J. E. \VA LSTROM, Agent. Bandon, Oregon. From rock, from mine anti from forest I shape the cities of man. The still* that flee down the ways of the sea 1 fashion. Improve anil plan The jungle I make a garden. The illstance I dwarf with steel Till a continent wide is a few hours' ride When spa ined by the spinning wheel 1 $2.75 ELIZ A BETH J The Builder. There Is room for worX an«’ <o.- gl.irtnoxa And making the goes! prevail. Rut there is no place fot the carping race For tl>e spite and the weakling's watt There Is spa,«, for the life corvithuctiv« And for helping the world along . To create Is the sign of the. pn«<-r divine. ■ T^Mi-tni» “■■■ . . . . U • ... .‘u builder> or»4 $3.00 per year 1.50 per year The Daily San Francisco Bulletin, This Is the song of the builder: My hammer swings and rings In harmony with the vital key Of the song at the heart of things. The,chord of the Master Builder That sounds when the worlds have birth Ie the must« sweet I seek to repeat As 1 roar the homes or earth. Oregon <’»»:iMt NtcHinnhip Co. Steamer Alliance TRIPS GRAY A HOLT CO.. Gen. Agent» 72fi-7M) Merchant» Exchange San Francuco H. W SKINNER. Agent Marthfteld. Phone 441 J. E. WAI-STROM, Agent. Bandon •I The Recorder $L50 per year • • • • 9 9 9 9 9 — I Í o o • 9 • • Oue Uundri i >< . - a: -.lie sites of In towns and s(unll cities the most Sy GEORGE A. PARKER. Glover and Burbni. in northern itiqiortAnt park matter is acquisition of part of Vermont wen- mostly swamp [Copjrujht. Iju9, l . Amer: an Pre»» Asso land. l’ark development may couie ciation, j • MISS MAY MORRIS.- laud. A mill was lo»a:<-il by a brook later, ill nearly all places land values From an old mauuscript: which was fed from one of the large Daughter of William Morri» to Lecture increase rapidly, and it is necessary 1 was born and reared on the coast ponds three or four miles from what on Art Subject». is now the village of Glover. These of Norway, Until 1 was twenty years to apply all available funds to the pur Among ihe interesting ix»ople Who mountain pond.-, or lakes, two or three old 1 littd never been in a town, aud chase of land. Even if a town has w'll lecture in this country in the fall miles square, are high up in the Green then only in a small village. My as but a stretch of wild land for a few is Miss .May Morris. Miss Morris Is mountains and are among the most sociates were untutored people, aud I years it Is vastly to be desired over received but the elements of educa an Improved "public square" or small the daughter of the poet and artist attractive spots in New England. On June ti, 1810, three men went tion Nevertheless they seemed to look i area covered with closely clipped William Morris. She is a keen student of historic design and embroidery, and up the brook to see if a little more upon me tis su|x*rior to themselves. lawns. One hundred dollars per acre Whether that was because 1 tore the will plant all the fundamentals to a practical craftswoman. She learned water could be let down to the mill. They removed some earth, when sud marks of having been born of superior make in the future tlie very best of in the old way—namely, by working denly the quicksands gave way. and stock or that my name wus English I parks. The only proper methods are. from the very beginning in her father's they saw that the whole lake was lia did not know My father died when I first, get all the land you can; second, workshop, supplementing tins invalu ble to be upon them was ten years old, and 1 remembered use the next available funds in secur able training by a few years of study Frantically they questioned. “Who him as always with a sad look on his ing a plan from some couqx*tent land face, which was reflected in my moth scape designer; third, plant out the in the art schools and museum at will save the miller and his wife?" When I grew older I asked her trees provided for in the plan and then 8|x*ucer Chamberlain, the fleetest ot er's Kensington. As William Morris had no other pupil working in this way. foot, ran ns fast as possible through I why my father and she had always ap- the shrubs. Let all lawns and small She could not bring her- I plants be unknown until the public the tangle of thick woods to give warn j peared sad her knowledge of tils method is unique i self to tell tne the reason. and 1 re- can well afford them. ing while tlie other men escaped to For many years until his death Miss i maineil in ignorance. Trees and shrubs will pive them Morris had charge of the designing higher ground. He found the miller When 1 was twenty my mother died, shade and shelter for recreation and and most of tlie work in the embroid away and the miller's wife grinding at ery department at Morris & Co.’s. the mill. She became helpless with j and 1 resolved to leave the desolate picnic grounds. A place to rest in place where I had been born and seek comfort, away from the glaring arti Some of her most important pieces horror: but. breathless as her rescuer a more active field. Before going I ficialities of city life, is, after all. the were designed for America, notably a was from his flight, lie succeeded in made inquiries of a nelghlior concern chief end to lx* desired. To have this pair of silk curtains called the "Fruit dragging and carrying her up tlie hill ing my parents' sojourn in those parts ft is not necessary to build statues, or Garden.” During the past few years out of reach of the rushing water. The miller's horse was drowned and and was told that they had come there namental fountains, bright colored Miss Morris has produced considerable all of his hard earned property swept several years before my birth and had flower beds or any of the artificial fea jewelry. She has followed the for for a time lived as gentle folk, but sub tures of the ordinary city park. All away In a twinkling. tunes of the Arts and Crafts society The water rushed along, carrying sequently they dwelt as did their these can lie seen in city gardens, and from its foundation by her father and everything before it. digging out ra neighbors. My father had from his none should be seen in public parks his friends until tin* present day and vines. filling up hollows and making a coming appeared to have a cloud on except they are leaders in this class of is deeply interested in the movement, new surface to the land generally, his mind. My mother had told me tie- work. A “touch of nature" should be which has developed so remarkably in some of it reaching Lake Memphrema- fore her death that a sum of money the Key to all park planning and plant England of late years. She lias given gog. more than n dozed miles away. had been put in a bank for me at the ing. lectures on design and embroidery at Il brought down so much sand that it nearest town, nnd going there. I the Birmingham Municipal School of filled tin* swamps and made them fit claimed it and took passage for Eng- BEAUTIFYING OF TOWNS. Art. at Manchester, at the Society of land. for habitation. Arts in London and other centers. On my arrival in London 1 went The site of the lake is now called Necessity of Insuring Future Growth While here she will lecture on "Me Going into Runaway pond or Dry pond and the about looking for work Along Moro Symmetrical Line,. dieval Embroidery," "Pageantry and road leading to it Runaway road. The tin* office of a merchant for the pur The “city beautiful” is receiving at- tlie Masque." “Historic Costumes” ground which was once the bed of pose. he asked me yiy name. When I and "Design In Dress.” the lake is spongy and shakes when told hint he looked, U[> nt me in sur tention in a number of American mil nicipalities. In the large majority of i walked upon Hay is grown there, but prise. them little lieetl has been given to "Where were you born?" he asked. The Simpler Life. lias to be cut by hand and carried off 1 told him all 1 knew about myself. beautilicatioL*. While there are many One hears so much talk about the on pitchforks, ns a horse would sink He regarded me with compassion and beautiful towns anti cities in tne nto the soggy mass. —Boston Globe. extravagance and luxury indulg<*d in gave me employment. United States, this is-tlue mostly to by ihe people of this country that it is At intervals when introduced to a natural location and individual effort decidedly refreshing once in awhile to TIDES OF PUGET SOUND person I was regarded with a certain and not to any systematic scheme of find something that points in the op interest or curiosity—I could not tell improvement, l’ark commissioners The Swift and Turbulent Waters of which. posite direction. 1 noticed that such persons have done much for the appearance of the Narrows. were a I wiiy s of superior education, A striking illustration of the fact The waters of the narrows are No illiterate person even manifested I many cities, but they cannot do every - that In some respects Americans are thing that is desirable. treacherous It Is a place of terrible any especial interest in tne. Some learning something about the simpler in New York and Chicago there are tides. Viewed from the precipitous times these people who did would turn life, if not the simple life, may be had shores, the surging waters are mag away from uie with apparent disgust, well defined movements with a view from a comparison of the dinners serv to relieving future congestion of popu nificent. 'i he scene has Iteen compared while others regarded mt* compassion ed at the White House now and in with tlie Hudson above New York Htely. < tne day I asked my employer lation and making additions to ihe past generations. And in making this city The waters of that part of for an explanation of the mystery that cities more attractive and harmonious. comparison it must lie borne in mind I’uget sound which extends to Olym hung over me. After thinking some It costs a large amount of money to thut just as the customs of the royal pia. Mud bay. Shelton and Henderson time la* told me that it would lx* bet- make a "city beautiful," as in the cases households in England and European bay. a vast inland sea. within itself, ter for me not to know it. He advised of Paris ami Berlin anti Washington. countries set the fashions for those In all these cities unioltl millions have all flow in and out of the narrows. me to change my name. countries so. to a certain extent at been expended tor beautification. In the upper reaches of the sound 1 tried to be contented to remain in least, do the usages of the White some twenty five or thirty miles from ignorance, but the secret weighed upon While it is not. [Kissible for many nm- House influence the customs of this nicipalities to s|*end such enormous the narrows the tides attain a height me, and 1 longed, yet dreaded, to know country. of more than twenty feet. When the it. Finally 1 decided to try another amounts, all towns can and should do A writer who compares the presl- tides begin to fall all the accumulated something to insure future growth dent's dinners of the present day with water rushes out through the narrows country, thinking that whatever it was along more symmetrical lines.—Louis hung over me would uot be known those of former times points out the ville Courier-Journal. like a great river at flood. In like fact that, while the dinners nowadays manner when the tide sets in the di tliere. America seemed the most in viting ground, and I went to New are more frequent, they are less e’ab- rection of Olympia the narrows be USING A VACANT LOT. orate, Tliev are over In one hour and come a swift and turbulent stream York, reaching tliere shortly before the a half at the latest, and the courses Frightful whirlpools are numerous. breaking out of the second war with an are fewer and more simple. Formerly Streams running powerfully in con England. Registering at a hotel, the Good Example Set by a Church In Ohio City. clerk looked up from nty name to me no dinner was thought coninie il faut trary directions strike and the water in astonishment. The Second church ot Springfield. O.. unless the luble groaned with supplies. bolls. “Well,” 1 exclaimed, irritated, "what has a vacant lot in the central part of The courses were freighted with rich Large steamboats struck by the con- the city which it is reserving to build dishes, and the liquors were abundant. trnry currents groan and creak and is it?" "What is it? Why, nothing, Will on a little taler. Itvi tlie trustees de The dinners lasted till midnight. It sway under the strain This being so. you go to your room, sir?" wus no small labor to sit them it is no wontier Hint small craft often termined taut it was not right to let 1 found in America that more people tlie lot lie until it could lx* used ior through. Nowadays before going home overturn in the narrows. A whirlpool the ladies have time to chat In the has Iteen known to seize a rowboat and showed that dreaded interest in my buiiding, and so they provided that it name than in England, and a different parlor after the dinner and the gen twist it round and round until the interest. On being introduced to me should be tilted up as a playground tot children ot the neighborhood through tiemen to have a good smoke in the rowers ahnost despaired of coming out most persons showed a repulsion, the present t-inniiier Flower btsls were library of the president The change it live. It is a marvelously beautiful though many strove to conceal it. 1 laid out and some lawn sown, but the is surely one to be looked upon witli water with all its terrors, and linn- burned with a desire to know wbat it most of the lot was given up to favor and is not without its parallel dreds .•Hid thousands will continue to all meant; but. remembering the advice swings, slides ami other suitable temp in tin* private homes of tin* country. find pleasure there, notwithstanding of my London employer, I refrained Ten or fifteen years ago a smart din its occasional tragedies, The rumble trout asking, and no one offered to en tations to childish play. Moreover, observing that there was ner served to a company of guests of the tides when running nt full is lighten me. To occupy my mind I no public drinking place in the neigh might liave consisted of twelve or like tin* distant rumble of the ocean. went to a library to rend. Tliere I borhood. the trustees provided a < oil fourteen courses. Today a dinner of The terrors of the sea are an element stumbled on the secret. of water pipe running through a box that length wo.ild be considered to be of its charm, and so it is with the ter The wisdom of the advice given me to lx* tilled with ice and thus improvis tn poor taste, ihe modern hostess con rors of the narrows.—Tacoma Ledge^ b.v my former employer was now ap ed a public ice water fountain. The tenting herself with seven or eight parent. Under an assumed name I public has shown great apprechition courses at most and In many cases Two Apologies For a Hat. enlisted in tin* American army to tight with five or six perfectly served A Kansas City man who had lost against England. I knew now that, of both provisions on the part oi tin* courses. his hat nt a public function in that though 1 had Ix-en born abroad, Amer trustees. The example may certainly If the woman of today could also metropolis caused the following unique ica was my native land. 1 burned to I be commended to o'tlier churches wiiieii copy the practice of the first lady of advertisement to be published in the do some important work for her. to I are holding vacant property. the land in making her entertainments local puiiers: die for Iter on the Held of battle. Railroad Gardening. more frequent and less elaborate an The undersigned will deem It a great There were no important engagements favor If the gentleman who inadvertently Nearly all of the big eastern rail other victory would be gained for the took tlie undersigned's new silk hat on except that at New Orleans, which was right sort of hospitality. the occasion of the reception of the Lo fought after peace was declared. As roads have abandoned the gaudy bill meaningless and unsatisfying carpel tos club, leaving an Inferior headpiece In I bad entered the army, a private, I stead. wilt have the goodness to return bedding so common in the past and are Girl You'd Hate to Trust. came out a private. Under my as «aid silk hat. N'ot only will the gentle She who is sugary sweet until She man receive the undersigned's warmest sumed name I went into business and substituting hardy shrubs for pernia nent effect and in some cases are ex thinks she is alone. Far better be like thanks for his kindness, but the apologies prospered. tending this work beyond the station the undersigned—the ai*ology for the an alligator pear with the roughness of Tllen 1 fel! in love. 1 had vowed trouble the undersigned may have caused on tlie outside than resemble the him and “the apology for a hat" which he I that I would never bring a child into ground along the rigtit of way. Such tempting wild plum with bitterness has conferred upon the undersigned. the world to suffer the blight under changes arc very gratifying to al! who within. w hich 1 suffered, and 1 strove to crush make a study of ami take an interest — St. Louis’Republic. the natural longing that had taken pos in the embellishment of onr steel high I The girl who is careless to return session of me. My sufferings were ways, for it is a move in the right small loans. This habit may spring All Affected. own- from heedlessness, but it bears watch- Sprlgg wont to a noted physician to tenfold what they had been before. direction and better for all, both lug. ask advice as to his health. In pomp Meanwhile it was evident that 1 had ers and travelers. e * 9 9 ------- She who flatters you while she never has a good word for any one else. The girl who o|x*nly boasts of the uiarriixl men who are in love with her. The girl who gushes over her love for her parents while she lets her over worked mother meud and launder for her and spends more than her father can afford She who dresses lavishly on n small income. Then* is a distinction between looking well on little and cutting a splurge on nothing a year. Tlie girl who says she “dotes on children." but whose small brothers and sisters shun her. She who Is prinked ont for show views - and a sight when caught un awares. The man who contemplates matrimony should make it n point to I see his Angelina off guard. The girl who Is horrified nt calling a spade by Its "right name." but whose taste in literature Is lurid. She who has great tales of her prow ess as a worker, but who never sees auy work to lx* done. The real work 4 ers of the world rarely dis. uss what ' they do and Sever seed jogs for Its du-* I Ing 9 «9 ■< I A LAKE TH-J I • 4 y €' 9 • • 9 • 9 9 9 * 9 9 . a • ♦» 9 e •9 9 9 * • 9 •