BERLIN S
DO YOU WANT
A
Do you want to buy a farm or
some city property ?
Do you want to sell your farm
or city property ?
Do you want to insure your
property in a reliable com
pany?
Do you have any wants in the
real estate or insurance line ?
A big list of property to sell.
Your choice of seven insurance
companies.
Anything else vou want.
E. E.
OA K ES
The Real Estate Man
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LA333
LURL4Ü
Municipal Insrit. ticn That
Proved a Help tc WcHtar*.
Ha*
Germany of all ■ ■ untr -s. —«-ms to
have gout f r, a rd ‘u»?v ijr to meet
the "problem < f the unemployed.” In
1907. through th«* Berlin I^tbor Ex
change. 158.09K applli ants for ixisitions
at the excliat.ge brought 119.915 em
ployers to tliat pin. e seeking h«,lp and
finding places for 95,1.73 of these ap
plicants.
If the applicant for registration were
a member of a trades union, no fee for
registration was exacted, his union
paying a lump sum of $200 for its
membership, if he were not a union-
1st. his fee was 5 cents for registre-
tton.
The exchange occupies a huge four
story building in the eastern part of
the city, with current annual expenses
of $25,000. Fifteen thousand dollars of
this sum is contributed by the city.
The remainder is supplied through
trades unions’ contributions and by the
fees paid in by applicants.
The chief feature of the exchange
building is the great assembly hall, ar
ranged with comfortable benches, I
where unskilled men. waiting for the I
call of employers, may assemble in
comfort.
Having his registration
ticket, the applicant may have free use
of the hall, and for the period of three |
months its cheap canteen, its cheap
baths and cheap bootmaking and tailor 1
ing shops are available at nominal
1
prices.
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Agencies for tlie skilled workmen are
conducted by their respective trades 1
Workmen securing employ-
unions,
mont have paid only the three months’
initial fee of 5 cents, while the em
ployer securing help pays nothing.
Altogether there are three general
divisions of the unemployed as con
gregated iu the exchange—the unskill
ed men. the skilled workmen and the
women applicants. Positions are of
fered the unemployed along the line of
strict precedence. Only those present
when the employer calls are consider
ed
At the same time preference Is
given the married men over those that
are unmarried.
The German capital considers the
municipal venture a success. as not
only Berlin employers, but employers
from the provinces, have been making
free use of the institution.
TAFT PRAISES UNIONS.
Condemns Employers Who Refuse to
Deal With Organized Labor.
AMERIt’A’S GREATEST WEEKEY
TIIE TOLEDO BLADE, toledo . ohio
The Best Known Newspaper in the United States—Circu
lation 200,000—Popular in Every State
Th« 74th year of ¡tn existence fin is the Toledo Blade more popular than
at any period of its remarkable career. It is now read each week by more
than a million people. Its field is not circumscribed by state boundaries
bn involves the length and breadth o¡ the United States, giving it an no
questionable right of claiming to be the greatest national weekly newspaper
io the country.
The Weekly Blade is distinctly a family newspaper. The one object of
its publishers lias always been to make it. tit for the American home, for the
fireside and of interest to every member of the family. To fulfill this pm
pose it is kept clean and wholesome. The news of the world is bandied in a
comprehensive manner, and the various departments of The Blade ate
edited with painstaking care. The Household page is a delight to the
women and children, current aflaiisare treated editorially without prejudice:
the aerial stones are selected with the idea of pleasing the greatest number
of fiction lovers; the Question Bureau is a scrap book of information; tin
Farmstead columns are conducted with tile purpose of giving the patrons a
medium for the exchange of ideas and information on farm topics. No de
partment is neglected, but everv feature is taken care of with the idea oj
making The Blade worth many times the price of subscription- $1.00 a year
Sample copies mailed free. Address, THE BLADE. Toledo, Ohio.
KENNEDY
SHIELDS A
RLACKNMITIIN
A.M»
Wagons of all kinds Made to Order
WAUON1HAKKRS
horseshoeing a Specialty
Job Work attended to promptly and all work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
reasonable. Shop on Atwater Street, Bandon, Oregon.
Prices
———-
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ROOMS and
LODGING
Newly furnished large light room*
Telephone
Electric Lights
Rented by single night, week or
month
INQUIRE AT OFFICE OF
The BANDON STEAM LAUNDRY
The Opera
HAS A SELECT STOCK OF
Wines. Liquors & Cigars
Nteaiu Beeron 0» rtt light
COURTEOUS TRETMEXT
GROSS BROS.
OREGON
BANDON
HJRNISHI:» WHIMS
AT
Th
• ®
P
‘f’ ^oos Co. Nursery
c i r 1 c
MRS SARAH COST ELLO
Nice dean pxmis .*!> and fifle a
Ulgbt. |1.a «ark . *.
BANDON
---
TREES,
>
BERRIES, ETC.. ETC.
_
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>
,h*n °tberi
OREGON , M. G. l’OIIL AGENT
f J
Great
Combination
Offer
Rye a Good Horse Feed.
Rye is a good grain to feed horses
It is equal to oats and uliugt but it
must be ground middling tine and mix
ed with cut straw or cut hay. writes
J \V. Ingham in the American Culti
vator.
The straw or bay should be cut into
half inch lengths, moistened with wa
ter and the rye meal well mixed with
it. it is very sticky, and horses can
not get tile meal without eating tire
straw or hay with it. in feeding co.-u
to horses we always grind half rye
with the corn to make the coru sti'!;
to the cut straw. Coru and rye ground
together in equal proportions mat mix
ed with bright cut straw moistened
with water make a well balanced ra
tion. equally as good. as eagerly sought
after b) horses and a cheaper horse
feed than oats and hay.
1 have ri-d hundreds of bushels of
clear r> >• mixed with straw and also
rye and corn meal mixed with straw,
and always w ,tb excellent re lits.
This cut feed has been our usual aud
almost constant feed for working farm
horses ever since we commenced farm
ing more than fifty years ago. Clear
rye meal is uot acceptable to horses on
account of its extreme stickiness. It
sticks to the lips, tongue aud teeth so
tenaciously the horse becomes disgust
ed with it.
HE RECORDER management has
made arrangements with the
San Francisco Bulletin whereby we
can give subscribers the advantage of
a
tic combination offer that will
furnish them ail the news of the
country in a metropoiitian daily and
all the news of Bandon and vicinity in
the Recorder at a marvelous low price
Money In the Sheep Flock.
It has been shown that sheep ma-
nure is wortli as much pound for
pound as most high priced fertilizers,
writes II. E. Allen in the American Ag
riculturist It is also known that seeds
eaten by sheep do uot germinate, which
is more than can be said of seeds
eaten by other farm animals. But
probably the most practical question
in the average farmer’s mind is wheth
er sheep are a profitable proposition
on the farm Although the sheep busi
ness, like all other enterprises, has its
ups and downs, it is a very severe
time indeed when a small flock of
sheep will not pay tts way. There is
no other class of live stock that pos-
sesses so many sources of income.
They produce two harvests, lambs and
wool, not to mention the benefits given
the land in the shape of fertilizer aud
their value as weed destroyers.
Value of a Separator.
No dairyman can afford to be with
out some good separator. A separator
will remove practically all the butler
fat from the milk, while the old meth
od of skimming may leave as much as
25 per cent of all the butter fat in the
skimtnilk. Butter fat is certainly toe
expensive for hog feed. Any good
separator will leave less than live one
hundredths of 1 per cent of butter fat
in the skimtnilk and thus will effect
a saving of from $4.50 to $8 |>er month
per cow over the old fashioued grin u.>
systems of creaming, in addition to
this it is well to bear in mind that
with a hand separator a richer and
better cream can lx* skimmed and that
the skimtnilk can by this system be
fed immediately while still in a warm,
sweet condition.—J. H. Frandson, Ida
bo Experiment Station.
President Taft in his recent speech
at Chicago paid organized labor the
highest compliment, If he were a
workman he would deem it wise to
belong to the union of his craft, he
declared, lie remarked that the coun-
try owed much to organized labor’s
opposition to socialism in this country,
saying on that point, in part:
“I need not point out the deplorable
results In this country if trades union I
ism became a synonym for socialism
Those vyho are now in active control,
the Federation of Labor and all the
great railroad organizations, have set
their faces like flint against the prepa
gandism of socialistic principles. The;,
are in favor of tlie rights of property
and of our present institutions, modi
fled by such remedial legislation as t
put workingmen on an equnllt.v wait
Profit In Pure Bred Cpws.
Many farmers have exaggerated id.
their opponents in trade controvei
sies and trade contracts and t<> stamp about the cost of pure bred cows and
It
out the monopoly and the eori .-r’a’a the expense of maintaining them
abuses which are an outgrowth of our Is the same with regard to a large
present system unaccompanied by yield of milk or butter. Of course good
cows cost something, but they make
proper limitation.
“I think all of us who are In favor up for it by producing something, it
of the maintenance of our present in is better to pay a little more at t’t*
stitutions should recognize this battle start in order to make a great «li-.il
which has been carried on by the con more in the end, for that is what you
servative and Influential members of do. As to feed and care, the go . d cow
trades unionism and willingly give will pay these back altogether in a bet
credit to these men as the champions ter way than the poor cow. The latter
of a cause which should command our is not likely to return the investment,
let alone any profit, The good cow.
sympathy, respect and support."
I
Other important statements made by too. will not eat such a great lot mom
than the poor one and sometimes not
President Trnft were:
lie proposes to recommend to con even so much. Figure up the case
gress legislation looking to a proper properly and you will decide to keep
definition of the cases in which pre only the best cows. It pays to do so.
liminary Injunctions might issue with —Farm and Home.
out notice and defining the proper pro
cedure in such matters.
Worms In Hogs.
He believes tlie employer who de
If hogs have persistent coughs and
clines to deal with organized labor and do not live in dusty houses it is pret
to recognize it as a proper element in
ty safe to say they have worms.
the settlement of wage controversies : There are many medicines, but perhaps
! the best vermifuge is copperas. One-
is behind the times.
There Is not the slightest doubt that
half pound of copperas dissolved In
if labor had remained unorganized quite warm water and mixed in the
wages would bo very much lower.
slop will be enough for 100 head of
no regards the organization of labor pigs. This dose should be given for
as one of the strong factors contrib five mornings, then wait a few days
uting to the high standard of living and repeat if necessary. For a smaller
among American laborers.
number than 100 head give a good
big dram to each one. This retried)
is cheap and safe.— Denver Field and
Aim of Trades Unionism.
I
Unionism should not be judged by its Farm.
worst features, but by its general char
acteristics It does not ask to be Judg
Testing the Well,
ed by its best qualities. There is good
Before going down into a well test
and bad in all institutions. Their real the purity of the air by lowering a
value lies In their genera! attributes. lighted candle or lantern, says the
Unionism has objectionable features, American Cultivator. If the light is
but even these when properly under
dim or goes out the poisonous carbonic
stood lose much of their objectionable acid gaa< •’damps" cun be driven out
ness.
by llgtrtlng a quantity of turpentine
The real test of an institution lies in and sawdust or kerosene and rags In
a. fettle and towering to the surface of
its helpfulness to those who need help
The union stands for the progress of the water and later pouring several
the plain people. Its word Is personal bucketfuls of water into the well from
ity Its n'lm Is to lift the standard of the top Test again with the lantern
toiling manhood and womanhood. It and note the improvement.
has done mu«b and will do more to
make the multitude happier and bet
Care For the Manure.
ter. To criticise it apart from a recog
Prof ewer E. B. Voorhees of the New
nition of this purpose Is to do ft an in York experiment station tins figured It
justice.
out that a single well fed cow will
produce in a year 107 pounds of ni
A Mighty Labor Army.
trogen. *7 pounds of phosphoric a- Id
There are more wngewnrkers In Chi »nd atmut 87 pounds of potash
At
cago than then1 are inhabitants In
this rate It is easy to see why dairy
either of the cities of Louisville, Jer cows are such a powerful factor In
sey City. Indianapolis, st. Paul. Frov- Increasing the fertility of th- irm
Idence R.«Chester Kansas City. Mo., When rhe i . ionre 1« pr< jx rlv cared
¡
and Toledo -Chicago Tribune.
for
$3.00 per year
The Daily San Francisco Bulletin,
1.50 per year
The Bandon Recorder,
$4.50
Total,
Both papers through
this office if paid in
advance, per year
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3. ’ tJBfrfTKAWMBT* XBMHW ÄIESSBaß .
ucME
xoiaOE=X’OE=no^
¿ABANDON REAL ESTATE'- 4
AND LOAN COMPANY
BOUGHT AND SOLD
ALL KINDS OF Pi AL ESTATE
»
Money z ans Negotiated on /Approved Security’.
Si nd Matt«. < Specudty and Prompt
ly*
o-iulci! t« . Pen*; >n ami Insurance Agency
1’,. -d Brokers Traits Allantic Steamship and
Aailroad Picket Agency*
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BANDON.
OREGON
C .T.’Bi.t MFXRoriiER, Notary Public
VÍM IF?
r41 ì N
AT
I ■
I ■
h
Burglary Insurance
Fire Insurance
S S. ELIZABETH
S
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NEW STATE-ROOMS INSTALLED
Eight Day Service Belw en the Coquille River and
g
San Francisco
i
$7.50
.• First-class Passenger rare.
$3 on Up Freight
Freight Rates,
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b •I E. WALS FROM. Agent, Bandon. Oregon.
T. Kruse, nian.i;! nj agent, 24 California St., San Francisco.
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BANDOI'i STEAM LAUNDRY
Family Washing a Specialty.
First Class Laundry Work Guaranteed.
attention given to fine woolen goods.
lieaning anl
Mere-
Suits anil
prompt
Special
Ladies' fine skirts given
attention
I
F. A BATES, Proprietor
H3
< aliior ni.i and
Oreg >n
Ntetiiuxliip < o.
Steamer Alliance
Now ply in
tween Portland tiinl
WEEKLY TRIPS
I m
GRAY A HOLT CO., On. Ageau
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< < m »«
H. W. SKINNER. Agent
Marrhfi. ld.
J. E. WAl-STROM. Agent. Bandon
r
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Buy only
Phone 414