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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1909)
« o o ' c.. 'ì BANDON RECORDER aapUaatitu «f ♦luu that 4.1« p th« upwd trend of f 1-1 pric«». 1« sound He a'Tibilted ti.e troubles of th« colt- .. t r to th« scarcity of farm tack W««k labor, ami L« sees no reason to Chang's that view. Thousands of fertile acres, ORBGON BANDON he says, are lying idle in the Ur West TT because their owners cannot get If you must criticise your boss, do "hands” at any rate of pay. Amerl- can boys drift to the cities, while ft Inwardly Immigrants, even If from purely agri Time will tell—unless the gossips cultural districts, are either unable beat it under the wire. or unwilling to do farm and field work, while many of those who try Too many men try to build a sky It prove to be Incompetent owing to scraper on a one-story foundation. the different methods and the Im proved machinery employed here. A good story is better than solid Those who regard this theory as In facta—from a literary point of view. adequate and who think that monop oly is not without considerable respon "Get married,” »ays Senator De sibility for the high prices of food pew But he doesn't say how often. stuffs must admit that the scarcity of agricultural labor Is a fact, and as An astronomer can advance almost such it at least partially accounts for any theory and the average man has the phenomenon in question. Hence it nothing to say. Is highly desirable to continue and ex tend the work of the federal Informa When will automobilists learn that tion division of the bureau of immi a reckless joy ride generally means gration, which has sought to promote death to some one? the better distribution of immigration and has taken particular pains to di Dr. Eliot’s list of best books con rect the aliens to the western states tains none of the kind one would care or localities where the shortage of la to read in a hammock. bor is greatest. There has been oppo sition to the activities of this divi Five fat years are coming, says J. sion, and only the other day Secretary Ogden Armour, Let ’em come, with Nagel "turned down” a recommenda nobody yelling for anti fat tion for Its abolition. There is plenty of room for co-operation between the What would be the outcome if the federal agency and state bureaus of Black Hand operators could be col- labor and Immigration. Secretary Wil onlzed In Breathitt County, Ky.? son’s explanation also emphasizes the need of scientific and practical teach Unfortunately the crop of peach bas- ing of agriculture in state colleges ket hats has not been in the least and special schools. A good deal has ■polled by the frosts of criticism. been written on the subject of late, and ft certainly deserves all the at A man In New York ate ten pounds tention ft receives. The drift city of beefsteak at a sitting. He omitted ward can be checked by making agri potatoes, as the price w-as too high. culture profitable and attractive- as a career. The liberal professions, w? There are women In the country are constantly told, are overcrowded, who could maintain a husband and and the average earnings In them too get along nicely on an income of $36,- small to compensate for the time and 000 a year. labor spent In preparation and wait ing. Agriculture is very far from he- Fools In glad rags are often per Ing overcrowded, and the posslbllf- mitted to rush in where unlaundered ties of intensive cultivation, of econ- hobos would be knocked down and omy and Improvement, are Infinite dragged out. In this country. Beware of the people who pat you REVIVAL OF STENCILING. on the back. They may be looking for an opportunity to kick your feet Adaptation of Straw Matting to Thia from under you. Style of Decoration. The courts often seem more or less cruel. Mrs. Howard Gould will have to struggle along on $36,000 a year un til further notice. It is suspected that a heathen that ■ticks to his idols is more to be trusted than a Chinaman that Is con- verted with an eye to worldly things. The weather has again upset some of Walter Wellman's plans for reach ing the North Pole. The weather has always been a great bother to Arc tic explorers. No two papers 6eem to agree on the price of radium. One has it quoted at 19,000,000 a pound and another at |5,000 an ounce. The market is very bewildering to the poor consumer. Highwaymen in Brooklyn who robbed a drunken man of 65 cents got a sentence of seven years. No wonder, with all the modern improve ments In opportunities, that justice is disgusted when the majesty of the law Is defiled for less than a dollar. A western university professor p re- diets that the population of the United States will soon overtake the food supply. This fits in nicely with the theory of the other professor who says cannibalism is the proper thing. Food can be supplied and the popu lation kept down by the simple mode advocated, which will thus kill two birds with one stone. It is not often that the learned experts so neatly dovetail their theories. A resident of New York, who died the other day, founded in 1854 the Holy Name Society of the Roman Catholic Church, having for Its object the discouragement of profanity. Its membership of more than a million Indicates a general desire among the young men of that church to be clean of speech. It also Illustrates the fact that to call attention to the wicked ness and foolishness of profanity Is to take a decisive step toward lessen ing ft. Prof. Osler is to be congratu- lated on having reached his sixtieth birthday, not only hale and useful, but unconcerned over the weird windings of the Osler legend, from which there Is for him no escape wherever he may go. Many a good man who has said a less sensible thing than Professor Osler said, and who has had it dis torted in less maddening ways, has gone to pieces under the strain. Wild ly trying to convince the world that tie never said what he was alleged to have aald, and tilting ever at the windmills of a nation’s jesting, he has soured or weakened In the end. Not •o with Osler. For him there has not even been an effort at denial; he has laughed with the laughers. When the talk Is about chloroform at 60 he has appreciated the joke as much as anybody. If anybody wants to believe that this is the Osler advice to the world the professor Is willing Such being the case, this particular six- tleth birthday at any event may safely be said to have been passed In seren ity and ease The example Is a good one to many a serious young man who ■hows less elasticity at 30 or 40 than Osler does at 60. Secretary Wilson returned from a geceut western trip with the couvlc- Never has Japanese matting been in such popular favor for decorating and house furnishing articles as during the present season, the Boston Post says. Now that stenciling'is the favorite fad In decorating, many and beautiful are the various decorative schemes to which the matting lends Itself to sten ciling. Matting rugs decorated with a stenciled border are very attractive and useful for the porch or summer cottage. Plain white matting is used for the stencil decorating and the rug ends are finished by raveling out the matting to a depth of four or five inches and knotting the strands In bunches of six or eight, close to the last strand of matting, thus forming a pretty fringe. A conventional bor- der for the rugs is the proper style of decoration. Porch floor cushions are equally at tractive made from matting and bound together with rafia and decorated with a stencil design. Screens filled with stenciled matting always look cool and inviting. Lamp and candle shades of stenciled matting bound with rafia are also very popu- lar for summer use. Utility boxes, chair seats and tables covered with matting are also recelv- ing their share of stencil adornment. A screen of green mission filled with white matting, decorated with flights of brilliant-hued butterflies and "darn ing needles"—the wasp-like insect which our parents often threatened us would sew up our childish lips for acts of naughtiness—was recently the storm center of admiration in an ex hibit of arts and crafts. The work Is fascinating, the effect charming and the cost next to noth ing. Enough said. lm portfn nt 11 Service. One of the greatest nuisances of traveling Is tipping. A smile from a head waiter is a costly commodity, and no menial service is too small for remuneration. An unusually ingen ious plea for a tip Is that of a small Hibernian, mentioned by Mr. John Augustus O’Shea in "Roundabout Rec ollections." The author was traveling In Ireland. 1 drove down to the station on the faint chance of catching the train to Dublin. When I got out of the cab at the station a bright faced boy ac- costed me. “Ah, sure, sir. you’ve just missed the train,” he said. It was true. I booked my luggage and ascertained when the next train would leave. While I was waiting, the lad came up to me and asked me for a tip. "What for?” I asked. "Sure, sir, I told you that you were too late," he unblushingly responded. < npe Cod’« Grim Toll. On the shores of Cape Cod there were, during a period of twenty years following 1881, as many as a thousand wrecks of vessels carrying precious cargoes of human beings and of freight. Peace Preserved. "It's hardly worth while to buy a lawn mower for just twenty-five feet. I-et's get one together.” "No, thanks. Mr. Naybore. I value your friendship too much.”—Kansas Clij TUneC WßO kiKu atmauuu** kits ? ■ • ■•»«««. __ J Opinions of Great Papers on Important Subjects. THE BLACK HAND. MORE systematic method In crime, a broader organization, have been revealed In the Black Hand than police authorities have ever before been ready to believe. The type of criminal who employs the Black Hand ways, in spite of the terror he Is enabled to create, Is of a low order. Hfs Intelligence Is often seemingly more bestial than human. The discipline of a large band of workers, the secrecy necessary, and, above all, the division of spoils —these call for an understanding and a singleness of purpose that the ordinary Sicilian and Calabrian rogue does not possess. Because of the recent revelations the alarming sug gestion has been made that native American criminals, confidence men and cracksmen of superior wit and re sourcefulness have entered the field. This would ac count for the organization discovered. It would explain the apparent subservience to a leading Intelligence and It would satisfy questions the police ask as to the ex istence of a central fund and a working arrangement common to several sections of the country. The Ameri can criminals would naturally hide themselves under aliases of Italian names, and, too, they would have all arrangements so that the foreigners and not themselves should suffer In case of discovery. The Black Hand Is probably no worse than other forms of blackmail except In so far that it causes a greater fear among Its victims and a more general un easiness among the police. The methods used in the at tempt to break it up have proved of little avail. A penalty ai severe as that for kidnaping might tend to cru.h 1L It is worth trying.—Toledo Blade. [A] MRS. THAW’S BOOK. RS. THAW, the mother of Harry Thaw, has written and published a book in which she makes a bitter attack upon those whose duty it is to administer jus tice in the courts of Now York. Sho makes District Attorney Jerome an es pecial <arget, declaring that he has gone outside of his jurisdiction several times to persecute her son. The public will hardly be led to take any different view of the Thaw case by the publication of this book than it already entertains. It will, however, be disposed toward charity and excuse the foolish ful- mlnatlon upon the ground that it is the case of a mother fighting for her son. Money was the greatest curse which ever fell upon the Thaw family. If the mother had taken a different course when her son was young; if 6he had limited the amouunt of his spending money, and if she had insisted that he be put to work when not in school, the later years of her life might not have been clouded with this great sorrow. Because the Thaw family was rolling In wealth, It was considered ridiculous that Harry should be other than a gentleman of leisure. There was never a more tragic illustration of sowing the wind and reaping the whirlwind. To-day he Is a Chester bustled in with an air of great Importance. Taking off his hat he reached up and hung it on its hook Instead of giving it the careless twirl by means of which it customarily at tained that position. "Say, Dave," he began, "there’s a new kid cornin' to-day and we bet ter----- ■” ~- "Well, don't I know it?” Interrupted David. "Think secret?” "Aw, g’wan!” exclaimed Chester, "You never knew a tiling about it till I just told you.” "I did, too," retorted David. He add ed. chuckling: “You kin learn a lot If you git down early enough.” "Well, anyhow,” pursued Chester, “it's a good thing for the boss that he made up his mind to get in anoth er helper. I tell you I wasn't goln’ to stand for it much longer. It’s a fright, the way we had to work and me havin’ so much responsibility an' all. Just between me and you I was figurin’ on lookin' for another------ " Chester's voice died away as the office manager appeared with a red- haired boy in tow. "Good morning, boys,” said the manager. "I’ve brought you an as slstant. This is------ ” He turned ili- qulriugly to the red-haired boy. "John Fitzgerald, sir,” supplied the youth, promptly. "Well, John, hang up your hat and the boys will tell you about the work.” The manager walked away. "Well, John,” began Cheater, taking possession of the floor with an Imi tation of the manager's manner, "I might as well begin to put you wise to the job. There's a lot to learn lu this department. We have to copy all the letters and index the letter books and sort out the mail, and an swer the switchboard and run the buzzer calls and chase out on er- rands, I gen'lly run the switchboard myself becuz Mr. Selden's awful par- ticular ’bout the phone calls, and I guess David better do most of the lndexln' and copy in' for awhile and you kin run the errands and answer buzzers at £ get kinder used to the work.” A whirring of the switchboard drew Chester's attention aside for a moment. The new kid thereupon winked an Impudent green eye at David, who responded by half-closing a round blue orb. ’’Well," resumed Chester, turning again to the new kid, "let me «ee—- Tbejr're awful particular *»«*■ murderer and deserve« life imprisonment, if no greater punishment. Hs has escaped prison on the flimsy plea of mental unsoundness. He ought to be thankful, as had the members of his family, that he has made so good an escape from the electric chair. However, the family is turning heaven and earth in an effort to have him proven sane. It is hardly conceivable that the courts of New York will permit so great a travesty in the name of justice. Meanwhile Mrs. Thaw's book will take its place among the curiosities of American literature.—Des Moines Capital. HARD TIMES AND MATRIMONY, HERE is probably not more than a frao- tlon of 1 per cent of truth in that un- pleai-ant old proverb, “When poverty comes In at the door love flies out of the win- d< w,” but it is not to be denied that when poverty is the first to take possession, poor love has to sit on the doorstep and waft. All through the year 1908 the little god has been shiver ing outside many homes where he had every expectation of spending a cozy and perfectly delightful twelve month. And during the year of hard times marriages fell off 20 per cent. In Manhattan Borough alone nearly 20,000 persons are going about In single blessedness—or otherwise, as they take It—who ought, from the statistician's point of view, to have been married last year. The statistician takes a cold-blooded view of ft, mere ly marking it dewn as an Interesting fact to be "footed up” with other interesting facts. He hasn't a word to say about love’s young dream, and hope deferred, and all the furtive tears for which those 10,000 non existent marriages are responsible. You can’t make averages of such things as a young man's disappointment and a nice girl's heartache. The results of hard times are always, first of all. fewer diamonds Imported and fewer marriages record ed. Jewels and matrimony go hand In hand, as indica tions of a rising or falling In the barometer of pros perity.—New York Times. WHY CORRUPT THE CLOCKS? LL the advantages derived from the Cin cinnati "daylight” ordinance, and similar measures proposed elsewhere, could be ob tallied without making liars oi the town clock and all other public and private timepieces. The principal advantage sought 1« an increase in the number of daylight hours available for recreation. In the summer time, when the evenings are long, It Is proposed to "knock off” an hour earlier than Is now the custom, and so that this should not disorganize in dustry by reducing the number of working hours In shops and factories it would be necessary to begin work earlier in the morning. But why should the clocks be set an hour ahead? Cannot workingmen be made to acquire the habit of early rising (an excellently good habit In the hot season) without making prevaricators of our clocks?—Philadelphia Record. about bein’ respectful to the heads of department« ’round here, too, so when you speak to me you’d better just call me ‘sir.’” Chester paused reflectively, The new kid, leaning against a table, crossed his knees, thrust his hands Into his pockets and regarded Chester between partly shut eyelids. "Aw, fade away, kid," he remarked, languidly. “Don't you try to work any of your answer-the-buzzer-tlll-you- get-on-to-the-Job games on me. I in dexed more books and copied more letters than you ever seen in your life, and I kin run any old kind of a switchboard that ever was put in." lie drew one hand from his pocket and leveled a forefinger at Chester. "And, look here,” he said, "you better not come round me with any of your fresh talk 'bout me callin' you ‘sir,’ unless you want to get pasted one in the lamp. I ain’t lookin' fer no scrap, but if they's goln' to be one it ain't me they'll be carryin' out feet first when it's all over. See!" He straightened up in a leisurely manner, strolled over to the awltch- board where Chester sat and gazed calmly down upon the enraged but speechless youth. "Now,” he observed, "if you're through throwin’ bokays at yerself, an' one o' you kids'll put me wise to where you keep things In this little old joint and who belongs to the buz zers, I'll get to work."—Chicago Dally News. TERRAPIN AND FROG FARM. Scheme to ltnl»e DeHcacle» on Lon« Iftlnnd for New York Market. There is an Industry out on Long Island which is yet in the very earliest stages of infancy and about which its sponsors are exceedingly reticent. It is the rearing and marketing of terra pin and frogs, strictly according to the rules and regulations laid down by the Secretary of Agriculture. So far the names of only three men Interested in the prospective terrapin and frog farm have reached the public, l ut there Is reason to believe that a number of others are considering the whys and wherefores of lending some thing more material than merely their moral backing. Cuthbert M. Leverldge, of Boston, who Is reputed to be an expert In mat ters appertaining to the domesticating and nurturing of terrapin in the South, has succeeded In enlisting the Interest of two Brooklyn dentists. They are Dr. F. C. Royce, of 65 Greene avenue, who la not at all sure that he Is willing to be mentioned in con nection with this undertaking, and Dr. David S. Skinner, whose home la at 75. on the same street. Dr. Skinner would'have been will- 1P4 to divulge the details «f the acheme, it seemed, had it not been for two circumstances. The first was that his co-workers were anxious to keep the matter to themselves for the present, as Dr. Skinner Indicated by putting an index finger to his lips as a token that silence had been enjoined upon him. The other was a certain backwardness on his own account.— New York Sun. NEW YORK S HORSE CARS. Receiver Reports Illa Deficit on 28th nod 29th Street» Line. Joseph B. Mayer, receiver of the 28th and 29th Streets Crosstown Rail road Company, filed yesterday with the Public Service Commission the re port of the road for the quarter ended March 31, the New York Tribune says. The report show«, a deficit for the three months of $4.275 and an operat ing ratio of 230.02 per cent. In other words, It cost two and one-half as much to operate as its earnings were. The road was divorced from the Metropolitan Street Railway Com pany's system over a year ago and placed in the hands of a separate re ceiver. It has In operation three horse cars, which are run at fifteen and thirty minutes’ headway alternately. The road Is 3.3 miles long, with sin gle track and turnouts. Gross earnings from operation for the quarter were $3,174 and operating expenses were $7,019. Income from other sources was $108 and rentals were $538. The balance sheet Is amus ing, as the only Item carried on the assets side Is the quarter's deficit of $4,275. The receiver says that he Is unable to present a "general balance sheet.” He adds that no other assets exist. The figures as to the cost of the road, he says, are not available. As a sample of high traction finance the story of the road Is interesting. It received its charter In 1886, but was sold at foreclosure in 1896. It was turned over to the Metropolitan with a capital stock of $1,500,000 and a bonded Indebtedness of a like amount. This made Its capitalization $893,388 a mile, which would seem to be close to the record for street car lines. In view of these figures the inability of the road to operate three cars without a large deficit is significant. Every little while, »all • London detective re ently, the police arrest a man with a set of burglar's tools tn his possession, and one naturally won ders where they all come from. It Is easy to buy a gun of any description, and the most reputable person would not be alarmed to be seen purchasing the most wicked looking knife ever made, but who would know where to get a jimmy or a device for drilling into a safe or any of the many tools used by the professional burglar in the pursuit of his calling? There probably are places in the large cities where these things are made and sold to the user, but such places are exceedingly scarce. It may seem a little strange to learn that most of the tools used in burglaries are made by mechanics who are look ed upon as respectable men In the community. When a burglar wants any particular tool made he goes to a mechanic who can do the job, and pays hint perhaps live times what it is actually worth for making the tool and keeping quiet about It. Many de tectives can recall cases of this kind that have come to light in London. One In particular occurred some years ago, when an escaped convict named Williams went to a blacksmith In the East End and got him to make a lot of drills to be used In safe crack ing. He personally superintended the tempering of the steel, but when the job was nearly completed it leaked out, and Williams was arrested. In this Instance the blacksmith knew nothing of the use to which the tools were to be put. Most of the tools used by burglars are secured in the same way. The only regular establishment ever discovered where they were made was in the East End. This was years ago, and the place was soon pounced upon. i Legal Information The New York Building Code, sec tions 153-155, provides that, on the refusal of an owner of an unsafe building to make it safe or remove it, a report of the building shall be made to a court, which, If It finds that the building is unsafe, shall com mand the commissioner of buildings to take it down or make It safe, and that the expense thereof shall constitute a lien on the premises. Section 157 provides that if a building collapses the city may remove the debris, to be paid for out of the fund, under sec tion 158. In the case of In re Jenkins, 115 New York Supplement, 385, such provisions are construed by the New York Supreme Court, and it Is held that the city has no lien on property for expenses Incurred in removing de- brls of a collapsed building and the bodies of people burled beneath the ruins, and is directly liable to the contractor employed to do the work. The Maine Supreme Court's refer ence in a previous decision to a search warrant as "a sharp and heavy police weapon to be used most carefully lost It wound the security or liberty of the citizen,” is f*ily justified by the con duct of the officers as related In Buck- ley vs. Beaulieu, 71 Atlantic Reporter, 70. Under the authority of a warrant to search certain premises for intoxi cating liquors, and armed with axes, pickaxes and crowbars, they entered the house and made a search from attic to cellar, and even dug Into the floor of the cellar. On finding no liquors, and strongly suspecting they were somewhere concealed about the house, they broke into and tore out a strip from the interior walls of the rooms below stairs entirely round each room, and dropped the debris upon the floors and carpets. All this was done In the hope of finding, not the liquors, but some pipe or other clue leading to the liquors. The officers then de parted. leaving the occupants to re move the debris, and leaving the plain tiff, the owner, to restore his house and make It again habitable. Such conduct was declared by the court to be unlawful, and such a search en tirely unreasonable and In excess of the officers' authority. It was no de fense to an action for damages that they acted In good faith, In the full belief that the occupant was keeping liquors in the house in violation of the law. A Fitting Deduction. "Do you know what an oath is, lit- tie girl?” “Yes, sir; I must always tell th« truth." "If you always tell tho truth, wher« will you go when you die?" . "Up to heaven.” "And if you tell lies?” “To the naughty place, Rfr.” "Are you sure of that?” "Quite.” "Let her be sworn. It Is quite clear she knows a great deal more than I do.”—Modern Society. Golnif Ont. Mr. B. There, I've let my cigar go out. Do you know that It spoils a Horsemanship in Heaven. cigar, no matter how good it Is, If you Little Kenneth and his mother were allow it to go out? Mrs. B.—Yes; a cigar Is a good deal about to go for a drive. "Who was God's father?" asked the like a man in that respect. boy. Luck at Last« "He had no father,” replied th« "I’« done had de proof dat dar’a luck mother. "Then,” persisted Kenneth, thought In a rabbit’s foot,” »aid Erastua fully, "who hitched up the horse for Plnkly. "What were de proof?” God's mother?”—Success Magazine. “I doae «old de one I’« been carry What becomes of a man a respecta in’ bo long to a superstitious white bility after death* lady foh to' bit«.”—Waahtugton Star, * f 4 a • • « a > /