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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1910)
* BANDON RECORDER hMMrf rack W««k ■ANDON................ OREGON ▲ New York clergyman say» old a«« logins at 45. This hurts like sixty. ▲ disease called ascending paralysis ■as broken out In New York. Thue are •he dangers of aviation Increased. Even Santa Claus after thia will have to submit his observations and records to a committee of experts. Have a good look at Mars. It la now only 35,000,000 miles away, and won't be so dose again for several years. When the uplift of the farmer gets through he will probably be growing a Van Dyke beard Instead of crops. Halley’s comet will pass within 13,- 000,000 miles of the earth, but It la no! expected to stop even to take water. Better .make a careful note of this: If you are unexpectedly attacked by a polar bear, hit him with a sled run ner. The American people, weary of arc tic controversy, will please rise and sing with one accord James Montgom ery's lines: It is said that 31,000,000 is paid out In alimony every year In Chicago. This powerful lot of money constitutes the grass widows' might. One hundred and fifty-one people have been killed while trying to climb the Alps this year. We desire to en ter a plea for safe and sane Alp climb- ‘ug. Mark Twain’s daughter was lately married to Ossip Gabrllowitsch. While Mr. Gabrllowitsch Is a Russian and not a Finn, he is said to be all to the Huckleberry as a pianist, A Boston paHtor who recently be came the father of quadruplets has been asked to resign Ills charge. But he will still be permitted to sing "A Charge to Keep 1 Have.” May we ask, in an unobtrusive way, if the settlement of these rival claims to the discovery of the pole does not hinge entirely upon the answer to the question, which of the two explorers was the first 'rival there? The young Shah of Persia is unhap py and has tried several times to run away for the purpose of joining his ex iled father. His case furnishes anoth er proof of the fact that nobody likes a job which is thrust upon him. An average of eight new churches built every day In this country, as statistics show to have been the case for the past twenty years, indicates that there is little reason to be pessi mistic regarding the religious future of America. Moreover, church-mem bership is growing faster than the population. Between 1864, when the coinage of the two-cent piece was authorized, and 1873, when it was discontinued, over forty-eight million coins of that de- Dcmlnatlon were Issued, and only sev enteen million have been returned to the United States Treasury. What has become of the remaining thirty mil lion and more—for very rarely Is a two-cent piece now seen in circulation? The problem of where the pins go is not the only one of its kind. Much Interest la felt in the report of the Biblical Commission which the Pope appointed some years ago to formulate the position of the Roman Church on the question of the hfstori- cal character of the early chapters of Genesis, and the general subject of Scriptural criticism The necessity of adhering to ths established doctrines of the church is of course Insisted up on. but there are some apparent con cessions to modern interpretations of BlbMcal language For instance, it Is held that the account of the creation given tn Gen eels was Intended to be suited to the popular comprehension, and It la not by Its very nature accur ate in the scientific sense of the word. It la therefore quite permissible to think of the "days” of Genesis as a longer and indefinite period of time. On points not directly settled by the judgment of the church or the Inter pretation of the fathers, the defense of Individual opinion is lawful. The satirist has had a pleasant time nocking this age wherein men affect a leaning for clothes of dull grays and browns and blacks and yet delight to parade periodically in uniform cloth and gold lace. They joke of the staid and unassuming citizen of daylight , hours who is thrilled by night to be addressed as ' high worshipful mas- I ter" or "exalted potentate of the uni verse." The color sense is merely held in taut. The weakness for title is pandered in secret. After all there is no need for the shamefacedness over a taste for things that are bright and beautiful In this world. Life to the one who has lived rightly and health fully and with joy in his heart is a pageant. To him everything la Illu mined and interesting and he can but grieve that any one should deny the seed of color and form. How much ■tore picturesque our streets might be If at luaM some small part of the gor- prousneas in which the city or villages Indulges In in times of festivity could be a part of the daily parade. We know that, living as we do in a clean er and more comfortable period, the clothes of the ancients we copy and admire could make a braver show now For history tells us that though the last king of the house of Valois wore violet velvet he powdered and rouged. The lace of Louis XIV. was stained. The husband whom La Grande Mademoiselle took, somewhat against his will, was described as "well-dressed and dowdy.” Men may shortly become a little more frank in the matter of their attire, admitting that the gay and airy and bizarre is not necessarily to be condemned, but rather to be presented as the public confession of a cheerful spirit From the earliest days the lure o» the unknown has been something mankind could not resist. To travel in new lands and sail uncharted seas, to go where no one had gone before, to find what others had sought in vain—this has always stirred the blood of the race, and has led its bolder spirits into the perils and the achievements of great adventures. Such things a3 the search for the Golden Fleece and the quest of the Holy Grail gave expression to this be fore the great era of discovery and ex ploration, and in more modern times there has been the splendid struggle to wrest the final secret from the froz en north. Now that this last goal has been attained, there Is little left, geographically speaking, to stir the imagination of men; but thia is far from meaning that the realm of the unknown is all explored, or that the lure of its mysteries is calling with a jess potent appeal. The field of scientific activity is constantly broad ening, and in the many new worlds which it offers for conquest the fas cination of seeking out the unknown is only equaled by the blessings and benefits which follow for humanity when the victory is won. Medical science has gone far, but the road is still long before it. The glow worm reminds man that he has yet to produce light without heat, and the electric eel hints at the unsolved prob- leh of electric power without waste In the transformation of energy. The fish mocks the efforts of the sub marine navigator, and the bird those of the aviator. Thus nature points the way to the ex;>erlmenter and the explorer. Then in the sphere of psychic phenomena how little Is known, bow much remains to be dis covered! Even if the mastery of ths earth's surface be practically com plete. the realm of the unknown looms vaster and beckons more alluringly than ever as mankind advances. CHILD WANTED TO KNOW. A SOLDIER'S LONG RIDE. f fie E ditorials : if t i, V- Opinions of Great Papers on Important Subjects. WHEN SHOULD GIRLS MARRY? GRANDMOTHER has undertaken to an swer the question in the headline in a mag azine article. Having had experience, she thinks she knows what she is talking about. It is her opinion that no girl should marry before she is 25 years old. There never has been and never can be any fixed rule for the mating of human beings. Ages ago parents were the sole arbiters of the marital des tinies of their daughters. They gave in wedlock when and where and to whom they pleased, and the daugh ters had nothing to do with the bargain. The matter is one in which there is pretty nearly Independence of thought and action on the part of American girls. Parents may try as they will to shape their daughters' love affairs to conform to their own ideas, but it is a rare case in which they succeed—and even then success on the part of the parents Is not a guarantee of the girl's happiness. It has been esti mated that a woman’s chances of marriage begin to di minlsh at the twenty-fourth year and decline rapidly to the thirtieth year, when they have almost disap peared. The period of greatest expectation is from 19 to 23. It is between these periods that the majority of women must make up their minds, and they do it from the dictates of the heart oftener than from any other consideration.—Savannah News. A MARRIAGE. AND DIVORCE. HE Department of Commerce and Labor has just Issued a comprehensive compila tion of marriage and divorce statistics from all over the world, which furnishes much information of interest. Hungary alone of civilized countries leads the United States in number of an nual marriages in proportion to marriageable popula tion, with 339 weddings to every 10,000 unmarried adults. Saxony follows closely with 350, while Ireland, laid waste and pitifully poor from British oppression, is at the foot of the list with but 126. The United States average is 357. New England and California rank about 250. Therefore, it appears that the coast States, as usual, are leaving their burden of good citizenship to the Mississippi valley. The increase of divorce is shown by the fact that in 1870 but one decree was granted for every 1,233 marr- rfed persons, while in 1900 there was one divorce to every 250 married couples. Illinois has been unde servedly accused in this respect, since the figures show the States of Washington and Delaware away in the lead, while Illinois is only twenty-fourth in respect of the number of divorces granted, and South Dakota is but twenty-second. Big cities lead the country dis tricts by a comparatively small percentage. The divorce habit in other countries is also on the in crease, although religious beliefs and the great expense T If Condnctor Called Town for t'SS of It, What Was the Font It was refreshing, too, when a young child traveling eastward from the far West held a conversation close beside me with an utterly pallid and exhaust ed mother, which perhaps deserves narrating more fully. I never saw a woman more utterly exhausted, while the child seemed as fresh at sunset as at dawn. It was when the through trains on the Boston and Albany still stopped at West Newton, and the con ductor had just called with vigorous confidence the name of that station. After a pause, the child exclaimed as vigorously. “Mother,” to which the mother responded, perhaps for the two hundredth time that day. in a feeble voice. “What, dear?" when the follow ing conversation ensued: “What did that man say, mother?" “He said West Newton.” A pause for reflection, then again, "Mother ” "What?" "What did that man say West Newton for, mother?" To this the mother, with an evasiveness dictated by despair, conld only murmur. "I don’t know" This was too well tried an evasion, and the unflinching answer came. "Don't you know what he said West Newton for, mother?” Thus demanded, came the vague answer. "Said It for the fun of it. I guess” By this time all the occupants of the car were listening breathlessly to the cross-examination. Then came the inevitable “Mother,” and the more and more hopeless “What?" "Did the man say West Newton for the fun of It. mother?” "Yes.” said the poor sufferer, with an ever-increasing audience listening to her vain evasion. The child paused an atom longer, and then continued, still Inexhaustible, but as if she had forced her victim Into the very last comer, as she had. "What was the fun of it, mother?”—Atlantic Monthly. First l.oce. of divorce actions keep the ratio behind that in thia country. There is no Immediate danger of the great American divorce record being exceeded or even equaled. —Chicago Journal. REASON FOR HIGH PRICES. HEN the Chicago packers raised the price of No. 1 beef loins from 19 to 21 cent» a pound they gave the shortage of cattle re ceipts as a reason, and showed that there had been a falling off of about 200,000 head of cattle in the stock yard receipts during the last year. An investigation of the market records showed that the price of the grade of cattle used for such cuts was from 25 to 35 cents a hun dred pounds higher than it was on the same day a year ago, while No. 1 loins were 2Mz cents lower a year ago than the new price fixed by the packers. Thus it will lie seen that, while the price of such cattle in creased from 25 to 35 cents a hundred during the year, the price of No. 1 loins increased $2.50 a hundred in the same interval, so it doesn't seem that the packers' theory that their increased prices are due to a decrease in the cattle receipts is fully substantiated. About all the investigations made into the subject tend to the conclusion that in these days prices are high because they are high. This merely means that we are living in an era of high prices, and while it is doubtless true that some of these prices are the effect of demand and supply, a good many of them ».re high purely as a result of sympathetic influences. Holders— 1. e., controllers of commodities—have found that by judiciously but persistently raising their prices and hold ing them firm they can get just about what they want to ask.—Indianapolis News. WOMEN POLICE. OMEN police is the latest panacea for the attainment of ideal civic conditions. The idea emanates, of course, from the facile, not to say erratic, brain of a wom an reformer. Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, pres ident of the National Woman Suffrage As sociation, who informed the students of the University of Minnesota the other day that all Min neapolis needs to become a model city is 100 women on its police force. “One hundred women specialists put on the police force of a city would make for im provement in civic conditions.” It will doubtless strike the ordinary observer that what the average criminal needs most Is fathering—ad ministered with a strong hand. The criminal has been mothered already ad nauseam. States and municipali ties vie with each other in coddling him. Large sums are spent to make his cell a boudoir and to save the poor convict from feeling the shame of his condition.— Kansas City Journal. w THE TIPPING EVIL IN AMERICA. VERY EXACTING BUSINESS. It Take« Lot« of Time mid Trouble to Fi^ht Bacteria. If we are to sterilize the mouth pieces of telephones every day, to kill the bacteria and prevent infection, and must scrub the doorknobs every day for the same reason, why not be con sistent and go on scrubbing and scrub bing every thing with which we come in contact? the Memphis News-Scim- etar asks. If these bacteria must be cleaned out once a day, why not once an hour, or once a minute? The pestiferous things are apt to get in any second. Of course everybody knows that drinking water must be not only boil ed but distilled. We have all of'en enough been warned that handshaking is dangerous and kissing deadly. All of which warnings we have all duly observed of course! Now. after having long and virtu ously refrained from water as God made it and from the other entice ments, it Is hard to be informed by the bacteriologists that we still are in momentary danger from microbes unless we scrub, scrub, scrub. And when we get used to scrubbing and learn to look upon ft as a matter of course Instead of a hardship, may not the microbes steal another march upon us through the scrub brush? Maybe we shall have to sterilize the soap and then sterilize the sterilizer. Bacteriologists are insatiable. They never know where to stop. But their demands, if fully acceded to. would leave us no time to make a living It would be scrub, scrub with us all the time. The farmer, instead of plowing, would have to put in all the time killing the microbes in his plow handles; the butcher. Instead of killing beef, would never cease to scour his knife and cleaver. There would be nothing produced to eat. and while saving ourselves from death from microbes we would all die of starvation. This sort of thing may very easily be carried too far. The bacteriologists must learn to draw the line some where We may soon become as ridiculous as were the Salemites In the days of witchcraft. It Is a popular fallacy that the first love is the true one. unique in its ex cellence. »aye an exchange. As well say that the first picture of a painter Is the best of all he will paint in the course of his life; that the firstspeeeh, the first book, the first statue, the first composition, will be the best of the statesman, novelist, sculptor or musi cian, as the case may be. First works have all the imperfections of uncer tainty. of Inexperience and Ignorance. And It is rather by chance than by Stopped In Time. anything inherent In the nature of Cu "When you do tell a lie." remarked pid's ways that the first love turns Hamlett Fatt, "tell an elaborate He " out to be the great one. "I don't know about that," said Yor ick Hamm. "Following tnat policy It Was HI« Rn«l■<>••. would have lost me the job I just got.” "I see that you are a great gum "How so?” ohewer, sir. It's a fine habit." "A manager wanted to know if I "May I ask If It Is any of your had ever played Richelieu. I never business?” have, but I said yes. I was about to "Of oourse it Is; I'm the man that say that f originated the part."—Ix>u makes it"—Cleveland Plain Dealer. isville Courier-Journal. After a man weighs a hundred and , ninety pounds, he finds out at break-1 We are sorry things do not run your fast what I m is to have for dinner. 1 «ay oftener. ■ W. D. Howells, who recent’y returned from England, has given some fresh information about London’s new "no tip” hotel. Mr. Howells found tip ping in England "pretty near as bad as it is here.” He was interested in the new hotel and went there to lunch. The place was so crowded that it was almost impossible to get in. A single daily charge is made for a bed room, with lights, attendance and breakfast. Tipping is prohibited. This experiment, in the heart of London, is certainly interesting. The house is run by two of London's great cheap restaurant syndicates, which is controlled, by the way, by the British tobacco trust. So there is plenty of money behind it. Its success as a "no tip" hotel depends largely, if not entirely, on the disposition of the public to discountenance the habit of tip ping. We have been led to believe that the frequent and vociferous denun ciation of this practice by Englishmen is more or less Insincere. An Eng lishman wants comfort, and he is willing to pay an extra sixpence or so to get it, but he objects, naturally, to others doing the same thing. The sup ply of comfort is always limited. Tipping in this country is worse than in England only because the tips are larger, says the New York Times. The English sixpence tip becomes a quarter here; the threepenny tip is a dime, and is generally received with out thanks. We do not have to tip so many persons. Shopmen and police men get tips in London. But undoubtedly the habit of tip giving and tip taking is growing in this land of republican Institutions, strangely and in excusably. It Is a deplorable habit for both the giver and the recipient. Patron Saint of Aviator«. It has been stated that the Vatican had been approached with the view of selecting a patron saint for aviators and that it had been suggested that Elijah would be an appropriate per son. The originator of the story seems to have not taken Into account that Elijah was an Old Testament charac ter, and as such would be ineligible. No doubt, going to heaven in a chariot of fire would have made Elijah an appropriate patron. A Paris contem porary suggests that Saints Colom'»« should be chosen. Her name alone has much to recommend her. She suf fered martyrdom at Sens under Mar cus Aurelius — London Globe. Carried llvpurt S3- Mik« *»■ l<«ir»ehH(*k for <»en. hrarury. “Gen.. Kearney was ordered from Santa Fe across to California with the dragoons and wanted to get his report back to Wirshington as soon as it could be done,” relates Thomas Tobin in Outing, "and asked me if I would carry It to Fort Leavenworth. I agreed to do It and started with only a day's notice. "I carried on a blanket, a lariat, knife, Hawkins rifle, with about a hundred rounds, a dragoon pistol and about two spoonfuls of salt. I de pended on my rifle for meat and on finding Indian herds for fresh horses. I weighed about 140 pounds and wai tough as leather. I got my first re mount from St. Vraln at Mora, about eighty miles from Santa Fe and rode it two days, til) I found a camp of Utes hunting buffalo and got a fresh horse from their herd In the night. I had to be very careful about falling In with any Indians, for they would have killed a lone man for his outfit, and half a dozen times or more I hid in some draw on the prairie till night or rode miles off the trail to keep away from their hunting parties or camiw. It was very risky, too, riding Into their herds, and roping 3 fresh horse and I always led him away some distance before I tried to .change my saddle, so that if he made any noise, ft wouldn't stampede the herd and wake the camp. "I didn't dare to make a lire In the daytime but at night could cook a lit» tie meat on the coals and the little I slept was while lying on my lariat, so that my horse couldn't get away with It out of my reach. I followed the Arkans<%s as far as Big Bend and then bore off across the country to Council Grove and from there northeast, fol lowing the plain trail to Fort Leaven worth; in all, 832 miles, as measured later. I rode It in little less than elev en days and used nine horses; the last two I got from government trains which I overtook after leaving Arkan sas." ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ I WONDERS OF THE DEEP. • A ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦A♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ * For the traveler crossing the Atlan tic to fancy that his passage is to be a time of rest is a mistake, declares Alan Dale, in “The Great Wet Way.” He says that as soon as one establish es oneself comfortably, determined to get the good of the trip, this Is what happens: An excited passenger rushes up, and begins: “Come to the other side of the ship! Quick! For goodness' sake, don't miss It! Everybody’s there. Come on!” He helps me up, and drags me with him to the other side of the ship, where it Is blowing a gale, and It is hateful. All the passengers are there, in agitated groups. Emotion Is In the air, wind-tossed. Men and women are talking in all kinds of voice; they are armed with opera glasses, field glass es and telescopes. It is a busy mo ment. “Look!” cries my chaperon. "Look! See where I'm pointing? Follow my finger. There! You've got It. You must see It!” But I don't. I see nothing. There Is plenty of water, and there is plenty of sky, but not more than usual of either. There are also many clouds. I see all that, and nothing more, and I say so. "Nonsense!” he exclaims testily. “Here, take my glasses and look straight ahead of you. Now do you see?” I see a black speck on the horizon. I hate black specks. A year ago I saw go many of them that I went to a doctor, who told me that It was Indi gestion. I had to take pepsin after meals for three months. Now this idiot appears to be Intensely rejoiced because he has forced me to perceive a black speck on the horizon. “It Is a boat!” he cries, joyously. "There is no doubt about It at all. If you look carefully, take your time, old chap, you'll see the smoke. Yea, It's a boat, a boat, a boat!" If he could see a Brooklyn trolley car, a Strand omnibus, or a touring automobile, I should be able to under stand hfs excitement. But a boa»t!' One would think that a boat was the most extraordinary and dramatic thing that had ever happened. One expect« to see boats, for ours Is not the only ves eel on the Atlantic Ocean. I'nate Jewel«. A ton of coal Is worth a churchful of charity. A secret that you can't tell is aa bad as money you can’t spend. Cast your bread upon the waters—It may save your whole family from dys pepsia. There are men who would be recon ciled to death if they thought that could get their pictures tn the news paper. No man can be secretly religious. There are plenty of men who think when thev put a «penny in the collec tion plate that they ought to hear a 100-pound sermon. Ah, was he not truly brave! He walked out without a single tremor to discharge the cook. But, being a kind- hearted man, before he reached the kitchen door he reconsidered the mat ter and decided to give her another trial!—New Orleans Picayune. Disabled teachers In Munich receive Probably it Isn't necessary for a mu pensions of 75 per cent of their salar sician to be born, but It Is necessary ies, and a schoolmaster's wife who for him to have more practice than loses her husband gets three fifths of the average member of a country baud his salary, with an allowance for every gets. I child under twenty. • •