Image provided by: Bandon Historical Society Museum
About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1909)
r» I* . °° % • * I V > «• • ••* « • —« I LABOR IN ÛLO TINIES. Workers That Fed the People of Ancient Rome. . MANY TRADES ORGANIZED Nearly All tha Fr»edm«n of the Work ing Claasas Were Members of Unions. Broad Bakers Among the First to Organize. «P The method of making and baking bread In ancient times seems to have differed very little from our Modern methods. But the grinding of grain, which uowudays bus been relegated <o the machine process, was done in past ages by beating it into flour or meat with a pestle. This was the work of the bread bakers' union, memtiers of which were engaged in supplying the people of Home, rich and poor, with the three kinds of bread consumed In those days, it is held that the bread bakers were among the first of the ancient lowly to organize, their union dating back, according to the author itiea, TOO years before the Christian era. Nor in the Important business of feed ing the many mouths of antique Rome can the butchers be left out of ac count. The pasture lands were taken on shares from the government by cat tle breeders Eor the use of the laud they paid a stipulated sum to the Ro man taxgatherers, who were also thor oughly organized. But, strange to say, in the Inscriptions found thus far no mention is made of any other butcher'-' union than that of the suaril, or pork butchers, who prepared the meat for the poorer classes of this great capital of antiquity. Granier in his great con tribution to aociology, “Histoire des Classes Ouvrières” (History of the la boring Classes), clears this mystery away by suggesting that the pork butchers conducted the whole of the butcher business, but sufficient evi dence on this point is lacking. On the other hand, renowned archaeologists, like Gruter, Donatl and Orelil, have proved conclusively that there were un ions of men who foddered the stock ami of haymakers and mowers who prepared the fodder. It is believed that these unions worked in conjunction With tlie butchers. The labors of Orelli have brought to light the fact that a union of fishermen had many mem tiers at Rome, Ostia and Plsae, on the sea. and at the mouths of the rivers. Their business must have been extensive since fish was a deli cacy greatly relished by the Romans and is mentioned frequently by the Latin authors In their accounts of the lavish banquets of the time. Besides these ancient organized fishermen, there were union* whose function it was to pack the fish in barrels, casks and packages. GAS TANKS AND TOWN BEAUTY f SIXTY YEARS A HARPIST. Rosalia Spohr a Figure In Berlin's Mu sical and Social Life. Lott«» Heaton Pink’» View» on Their Proper Location. The ’ConsolIdafcd Gas company of New York a few years ago erected a large Vis lank iiiong Riverside drive, shadowing Grant's tomb. There was op|Misliioii from the press, liut nothing was done. Tlx- Flaibush G hs company, a subsidiary of the Brooklyn Union, recently completed a tank 191 feet In diameter and 237 feet high in Flat bush, in the Is.rough of Bro- kiytt. This is the highest structure in tin- borough. It stands in a region of homes and im mediately ,-idja<-eiit to the Kings Coun ty hospital ami other public buildings. It has taken away from many the equity in their homes and is a blot upon the landscuis- for miles around Tin* public servi>e commission was first apis-ahsl to by tlie pro|»erty own ers and civic associations of Flatbush, liut it decided that it had no jurisdic tion. Two suits for an injunction were brought, one by the pr«»|x?rty owners and one by the city of New York. The city was deh-ated at special term, and recently tlie appellate division dis missal! its appeal with scant courtesy on tlx* ground that an offense to the sight cannot be a nuisance. This is not good logic and should not be good law. If such a structure unreasonably destroys tin.- comfortable enjoyment of profs-rty ft comes within tlie definition of nuisance. No one of the senses should be discriminated against. It is to lx* hoped that the court of appeals will have opportunity to pass upon this question. American cities were formerly con- <-ern«*d only with growth. Now t bey are placing their energies in develop ment Eyesores such as this, destruc tive of property and the beauty of o city or town* should not lie tolerated Gas tanks and all their kith and kin should be |daced not where it is most economical. but where they will do the least harm. When erected in a city or town they should be built of moderate height. The “sky sera per" tanks are unnecessarily harmful. If tile courts will uot protect municipali ties against such invasion adequate laws should l>e at once enacted. In England tanks may not be erected within film yards of a residence with out tin- consent of the owner and oc cupants. In no continental city can tanks lx* placed without regard for public welfare, Tlie location of gas works and tanks should lie subject to the approval of the public service com mission, and the consent of owners ot Imuses used exclusively for residential purposes within a prescribed distance should be required. We guard resi- dential sections against sa loons by such a law. Who would not prefer a saloon as a neighbor to a huge gas tank?—Louis Heaton I’ink in Survey. BEAUTY IN FRONT YARDS. How to Plant Shrubbery For «n Orna mental Effect. Queer Ideas About Alleviating Bodily Suffering. MAGIC CURES OF THE TURKS. The Treatment to Which Crippled Chddren Are Subjected—Bunches of Garlic and Strings of Blue Beads as Panaceas Against All Kinds of Ills. A stone strikes some part of the body of no oriental and inflicts a wound. The train of ideas that litis accident would produce iu his mind would run something like this: The stone is tbe cause of pain, the cause of the wound it is tlie principal origin of the trouble. But the essence of every origin is hid den. secret and therefore sa«-red. The stone becomes an awe Inspiring fetich. The wound is neglected. Th«* fetich has to U* propitiat«*d This simple Il lustration is borne out and supported by everyday experience which med ical men encounter In the east. Another instance may be derived from among the low«;- classes of the Greek population of Constantinople. A child falls and cuts his head. The first thought of tlie parent is to be sure not to wash and to bind up the wound, still less to cal) medical assistance, however grave the cut may turn out to be. This Is always an afterthought, which very often comes so late that the help of a surgeon can prove of no use. The first thing the father or mother of the injured child thinks of doing is to pour over the shoulder upon the place of tbe accident a libation of wine or sugared water nnd to whisper in per forming this some mysterious formula supposed to possess supernatural effi cacy against every form of evil. The Moslems are addicted to the queerest practices for purposes of heal ing or alleviating bodily pain A Turk, for instance, in distress or suffering from some disease, however severe, knows of no better remedy than to fix a pie«*«* of Ills dress, torn off with true oriental equanimity, to an iron bar of some saint's tomb or to drink water from a tumbler into which he has pre viously put a sheet of paper with writ ings from the Koran Sometimes he will take a jar. the interior of v^hich has been written all over with strange formulae and signs. He will then fill It with water, wait till these formulae and signs have been thoroughly dis solved and drink the singular solution with an absolute faith in its wonder working efficacy. Sheltered by the somber cypresses of tlx* great Mohammedan cemetery at Scutari (the ancient Chrysopolis on the Asiatic coast of the Bosporus) there stands in picturesque solitude tbe tomb of a horse. Every Friday afternoon Turkish mothers carry to ttiat tomb their crippled children to be submitted by a select "khodja" (priest) to an ex traordinary course of treatment. These children are dragged, with titeir dis eased limbs dangling over tbe hillock, from one end of th«* tomb to tbe other and then back again in the same fash ion. The occult influence emanating from this hillock is supposed to be an all efficient panacea. It is not difficult to trace in this case the crude, imperfect association of ideas. The horse has long been con sidered an emblem of vigor, typifying, as Ruskin says, “the flow and force of life.” nonce th«* belief of the ori ental. inherited, no doubt, from the Greeks, in tlie all conquering virtue and influenc«* of occult and mysterious effluvia w hich are supposed to emanate constantly from a horse's tomb. Tbe wearing of a "necklace of blue beads or of garlic as a potent means of keeping away disease or of warding off the evil eye is quite a universal matter of sincere belief in the whole of Turkey. Tills superstition is shared, as is well known, by the lower classes of many a country in civilized eastern i I Europe. Then*, iiowever. it is not so universal and flagrant as in the orient. There is scarcely 'a house in the Moslem, Greek and Armenian districts of the population of Constantinople which lias not hanging above its en trance door a collection of garlic nnd scarcely a beast of toil which has not attached to some part of it a string of blue beads Among tlie uneducated it is impossibl«* to find an individual who does not pin absolute faith to the all healing power of such charms. esp«*eia||y of blue beads, which are supposed to be an unfailing panacea against every possible 1)1. 1x*ss general is the belief in the east in th«* baleful influence of the planets Saturn and Mars upon the constitution of the human laxly, upon its four car- | dinal humors—blood, phlegm, yellow bile and black bile. These planets are considereti by some orientals. esp«"cii*l- ly iu the far south, as the unralstak-» able causes of all sorts of ailments. Woe unto him who begins any work when Saturn or Mars is in the ascend ant—Cleveland Plain Dealer • • npHE RECORDER management has made arrangements with the San Francisco Bulletin whereby we can give subscribers the advantage of a gigantic combination otter that will furnish them all the news of the country in a metropolitian daily and all the news of ßandon and vicinity in the Recorder at a marvelous low price $3.00 per year 1.50 per year The Daily San Francisco Bulletin, The Bandon Recorder, $4.50 Total, Both papers through this office if paid in advance, per year $2.75 ! COOKING RULES Green Vegetables Should Be Dropped Into Salted Water. If vegetaides appear wilted they may be freshened by soaking them in cold water. -£*- Perfectly fresh vegetables, however, may be cooked as soon as prepared. Green vegetables should be dropped into salted boiliug water and cooked very rapidly, but such vegetables as asparagus, spinach, beans, peas and corn should be edbked in as little wa ter as possible, just enough to keep 1 them from burning. Other vegeta J. bles, such as cabbage and cauliflower, should be covered with water and a pinch of soda added. In cookiug on ious they should first be scalded nnd the water «hanged twice during the course of cooking. Spinach, if it is to be cooked immedi ately, may be washed in scalding wa ter, which will remove the sand cling ing to tbe stems much more thorough ly than cold water. Green corn should not be washed. Some people prefer to boil it with tit husks on. Cabbage and cauliflower should lx- thoroughly washed and soaked head downward so as to remove any insects lurking inside them. Every kitchen should have a scrub bing brush to be used exclusively for scrubbing vegetables. Potatoes, for in stance, should be scrubbed thoroughly before they are pared; also parsnip;, and carrots. In preparing beets do not break the skin before cooking them or all the juice will be lost. In baking potatoes first scrub them well. Then grease them with a littie butter applied on a piece of brown pa per. Bake for an hour, testing one when they seem to be done by burst ing it Slightly with the fist. If tin* po tato is soft ami mealy they are ready to be served. A little chopped parsley tied up in a small muslin bag will greatly improve the flavor of string beaus. Stewed tomatoes are Improved by adding a little finely chopped meat ami meat gravy: also a sliced onion fried in butter until brown. Stewed tomn- toes are seldom cooke«! long enough and invariably have a raw taste. They should be cooked down until quite thick. This steamer is new, is strongly built and fitted with the latest improvements and will give a regular ft day service, ior passengers and freight, IwHween the Coquille river, Oregon, .I | First-class Passenger Fare, Freight Rates, Likewise engaged in helping to vic tual the population of the Rome of old If you wish to help in making your were the fruit purveyors' unions, which home town attractive, improve tbe were of various sorts. Ward speaks of front yard with some shrubs. a curious Inscription fourni at Rome For a small front yard where it is telling that a man of the name of impracticable to plant trees there is Julius Epophra, a 'former cabinetmak nothing better for ornamental effect er, bad given up ins trade to become an than a few well placed shrubs. Once apple vender and that by the assist planted and established iu the soil ance of bls wife, Helen, be made a liv they require little attention except in ing by keeping an apple stand near the spring, when they should be pruned Roman circus. back so as to keep them symmetrical. To pass on rapidly, numerous other In planting shrubs much will de unlous, much the same kind ns those pend upon the layout of t be lot already mentioned, were In evidence at and its topography, it is easier to this remote era. But different from spoil an effect than It is to obtain a any of the others was the union of good one. it is a good plan to get huntsmen, who are supposed now to the advice of a competent landscape have furtilshi-d the tables of the nobles gardener, if you can't, study your with the products of the chase and yard and its possibilities thoroughly with fixai denied to the lowly It has before you set out a shrub, A plain been concluded from Inscriptions on greens wa rd is far more desirable from atone slabs that some of these hunters' an artistic standpoint than a lot lit- unions were formed by slaves who es tered with a miscellaneous collection caped into the wildernesses of Italy and of shrubs placed without regard to aupported themselves by the fortunes harmony in th«- general scheme. of the chase, and that still others were For a small yard among the best formed by gladiators who, weary of I shrubs, aside from the roses, are the risking their lives iu the arenas and hydrangeas, of which there are several the Amphitheaters In deadly combat vttrietie*,. slime dwarf: the honey against one another and tfie wild suckles. Japanese snowball, burberry, beasts.* sought the more friendly wil rose acacia. Irish yew. Catalpa bungii. dernesses Magnolia coriSpicua, Magnolia soulan- Other Inscriptions state that there giana, Japanese cypress and the many was a union among certain of the varieties of evergreens. Tlie ever gladiators for the purpose of under greens, however, ap|x*ar to better ad taking remote journeys, officially sanc vantage In roomy yards. tioned, to capture the great wild beast«, Then there are the white and purple —wolves, bears, tigers and leopards— lilacs. Japanese quince. Syringa grandi- that In tbe time of the emperors so flora. ,-ilthea Jeanne d'Arc, pure white; often spilhsl human blood on the sands Ileutzia gracilis and the azaleas. These of tbe arena. It must lie kept in mind shrubs are hardy, rapid growing, at- that all these unionists were freedmen, tain large size and bear beautiful flow- whose chartered organizations existed ers. The azaleas should lx* given a according to tbe law —I. K. Friedman northern exposure and be well pro- In Chicago News. tect«-d In winter. Many of these shrubs will be found Finance» of the Carpenters. growing In the park shrubberies, and The Brotherhood of Carpenters nud Joiners' international union's financial those who have friends among the park statement for June shows receipts of gardem-rs can obtain valuable advice 943.G27.23. Heath and disability pay- from them about the planting and care meats aggregating $23,374.50 were of shrubs Torn Buttonhole«. paid. Tbe balance iu the general fund Profitable Shade Tree». If a buttonhole tears out lay a piece July 1 was $351.990 72. A stranger visiting Tallahassee, Fla . of closely woven tape back of ft. is surprised at the great number of stitch firmly In place, hem the old but pecan trees found in th*' yards, gar tonhole to ft neatly and then cut and LABOR NOTES. dens and on the streets. They are work in the tape a new buttonhole of The Women's Trades Union league everywhere, and thousands upon thou the proper size An extra fine wav Is will bold a national convention In Chi sands spring up every season where If Only. to rip the band apart and take out tin* cago In September the nuts are washed by the rains or Miss Enpee (engaged to Tommy)— threads of the old buttonhole, stiten 1 The marfue engineers have a total dropped by the birds, which feast upon When yon proposed to me you snkl the tape on the inside of the back f •' membership on the coasts, lakes and them. If these trees had tx*en budded that if I would <>tily say the right of the hard, stitch up the latter In its rivera of the United States of 11,000. with merchantable varieties when word von would be the happiest man original shape and proceed as before _ When buttons have torn out It Is com Washington, D. C., will have the young they would now be producing In tbe world. Tommy - Ab! If you had only said It! paratively easy to squeeze a small eighteenth annual convention of the thousands of bushels of the finest nuts Theatrical Stage Employes of North annually, but of even these inferior — Illustrated Bits. square of good tape through the holo, varieties Tallahassee sells hundreds of America In 1910. lay it fiat In the protx*r position be Perilous. tween the two folds of tlx* band nnd The convention of the Wood. Wire dollars’ worth each year. "Wore yon ever tn a railroad disas and Metal T.atilers' international union stitch It In place. Hem down the rag Value of Advertising. ter?" will lie held In Boaton the week tie ged edges on both sides and sow the Don't forget that ever, bit of nd "Yes- 1 once kissed the wrong girl buttons to the tape. At / button or ginning Sept. 13. butt-whole that is to bear the strain The new S100.000 headquarters bulld- vertlsing you do does more than nd I while going through n tuunel.“— Cleve should be stayed with tnpe when the ing of the International Brotherhood vertlse the actual goods mentioned. land I-eader garment is being made, the stay tapes of Carpenters and Joiners was recent It acts as a general advertisement of It's the fellow who mlnd< his p's for txjth buttons and buttonholes be ly dedicated at Indianapolis by Secre the store and possesses a cumulative tary Erank Morrison of the American effect that cannot he calculated bf nrtd q's that sleeps on flowery lx*de of I ing placed In the band before it. is Immediate results. •Utcfcod. Federation of Labor. • • • • •'S.— t'kiladelpbia Record • Great Combination Offer One of the most intereatiug charac ters in tlie musical life of Berlin is Rosalie Spohr, the harpist, who is a niece of the great violinist la,uis Spolir. She made her first appearance in public on Dec. 13. 1M9. at a coueert given by Jenhy Lind. She attracted attention first l>ecause of her distin guished musical descent, but after the world had once heard her her art made her famous. There are few women before the public today who play tlie harp as virtuoso, although one si-es them occa sionally in tlie opera orchestras. So it is difficult nowadays to realize that Rosalie S|xdir toured Europe in tri umph. She found in Franz I.tszt a devoted friend and enthusiastic ad mirer, and In- was proud to play with her at Weimar as well ns give her tbe benefit of his artistic advice. Her ca reer as a public performer ended after about six years. Then she became the wife of Count Sauerma, and the stage knew her no more. She still lives in Berlin, more than eighty years old. but enthusiastic in her devotion to the instrument with which she won the triumphs of her brief professional career. For three hours every day she practices tbe harp, and her tech nique has for that reason remained very complete for one of her age. Her talent was in a measure hereditary, since her aunt was a well known harp ist- in lier day. It was through her playing that Rosalie Spohr, who had begun her musical life as a pianist, turned her attention to the harp. A widow for more than twenty years, it hits b«*«'n her devotion to her art that lias made life interesting to her during al) that time. Iler education was sound in tlie first place, for she studied for two years under the harp ist Grimm, who allowed her to play in public at tlie end of that period, al though it was one of his principles that a harpist should study for ten years. Countess Rosalie has been an intimate friend of the German royal family, and both Friedrich and the empress were delighted to hear her play. Nowadays she is a unique fig ure in the musical and social life of Berlin and an inspiration to the young er students, who see what a joy and consolation an art may be to one who has acquired it faithfully. $3 on Up Freight .1. E. WALSTROM, Agent. Bandon. Oregon. . . • • «• • r Hotel Gallier 1 Rates $t.oo to*$2.oo per day. week or month. Special rates by Sample Room in Connection. Oregon Bandon I BANK OF BANDON IllMlON OltK.OO!Y Ompitnl, w‘2.,5,OOO BOARD OF DIRECTORS: J L. Kronenberg, President. J. Denholm, President; F. J. l aliy, Cashiei; Frank Flam, 1. P. Hanly. Vice A general banking business transacted and customers given every accommtxlation con sistent with safe and conservative banking CORRE.SPONDEN i b: The American National Bank, of San Francisco, Calif; Merchants National Bank, Portland, Oregon; 1 he Chase National Bank, of New York. Bandon Brewery BRUNO tk ANSELMO, Proprietor» SOLE AGENTS FOR Weinhardt’s Buffalo Brewery Bohemian Acme Brewing Co/» HOME-MADE STEAM w « ■ -q | i in J J1 Ji jlv OREGON BANDON, < 'n I i form it and Oregon (!aa«t Mt<*mn«lilp Steamer Alliance Son plying between Portland and Cena Bay only WEEKLY TRIPS GRAY A HOLT CO.. Gen Agent. 728-730 Merchant» Exchange San Francisco H. W. SKINNER. Agent Marthheld. Pho«« 441 J. E. WALSTROM, /Agent, Bandon The Recorder $1.50 per year •. * L . E. T. Kruse, managing agent, 24 California St., San Francisco. • • L _ » • • • • .* • • • •