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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1910)
• • • O f • • • •„------- • • • t t -I Preferring Bible to Bridge. Published Every Thursday by the Company. CJ. ®- KOFl’i Editor • Ifalwcripiiou, Tl 50 p-*t Year m jL«>»m>«». A<ln-i iming Rub- Made Known on Application. .Jut (hinting a Specialty EnfeieJ at the lift Ld OH aft S< < oud (’¡ mbm Mailer Ma»' 12, THURSDAY tyto That “Port of Coquille” Letter wagon roadsand making a first-class In last week’s R ecorder we m ide reference to “Port cf C> quille letter which was sent out by a “Tax payer” under date of March 31, 1910. We made lhe statement at that time that we had not taken time to give the letter a thorough study, a.*- it had only fallen into our hands a couple of days prior to issuing the last week’s paper, and that we w ould give a more comprehensive review of it this week. Since then we have read it over seveial times and each reading convinced us more fully of the flimsiness of the argument of the entire letter. In fact, as was stated last week, there is no argument whatsoever, except a constant knock on the possibilities of the Coquille river as a harbor, and the insinuation that the port commissioners wculd be dishonest, domineering rascals, and that it would be impossible to get five men who would act in ac cordance with reason or justice. The only conclusions that one can d'aw from this letter, are, that the promoters and writers of it ba- e in ax to g ind or else the\ know nothingab mt business, human ity or anything else. l he attempt is made to show that in the course of 20 years a ptopert) owner will pay more than half th< total value of his property in taxes; this, of course, is on the tin ory that the highest figure allowed by the port law is used. Now, my man does not need to be more than hall sane to see the absurdity of this ar gument, and it is so weak that it is not even worthy of notice. There is n» intention on the part ot the jno- motors of the port commission to reach the high limit, and, in fact, there will never be one tom th of the limit of taxation levied, and th« writers of this letter are as well aware of that as anyone, but if they can deceive the people by making them think that they are heaping a great burden upon themselves, they have gained a point. They also try to make 11s believe that the small tax payer’s property will not be benefit I«'<1; that the far mers around Rural, Bancroft, Dora. Custer, Remote and Sitkum, would receive no benefits. This is another case of ahsurd reasoning. As this Many news items have emanated from the innermost circles of New | York society, tut we believe that, the report that a prominent so iety leader ot Gotham has proposed a -tudy ot th«* Bible as a substitute for ' bridge will attiact the widest atten O tion. More remarkable still, instead : of treating the matter as a mei fad , of feminine eccentricity, it seems destined to an extended run of pop ular endorsement. The credit for this innovation l>e- • longs to Mrs. Martin W. Littleton, wile of a distinguished lawyer. At a social function she arranged that her lady friends should assemble at her home and listen to an exposition of Biblical themes by Dr. C. L. Scofield, Secretary of the Oxford Revision Society. Many of the ladies found interesting tilings in lhe Bible, of which they had never before heard, and expressed lhe hope that a study of the book might be ex- tended under equally instructive auspices. Furthermore, seveial of the ladies present in.ide emphatic announce ment that henceforth they proposed to pay more attention to the Bible and less to bridge. The leaven of serious reflection seems to be working in New York society. Let it work until something of real benefit to humanity may en ter their empty craniums. harbor of the Coquille rivir, l«oth ol which can be «lone at a reasonable cost, bv using the proper methods. We are now spending $170,000 a year in Coos county for roads With this amount, we can build excellent roads if we use it legitimately, and with a reasonable expenditure on the river and harbor, we will soon have one of lhe greatest producing sections in the United States. The “tax payer’’says: “An) money that might be raised by the creation of a local port corporation and the bonding and taxing of the property of individuals residing therein, would be supertluo’us,’’ and that the gov eminent hid recommended enough for making every possible improve ment. Now. the government has appropriated $56,000. and $6,000 a year maintenance fund. If this will make a reasonably good harbor, then certainly another $100,000 that might be raised by bonding, in case we establish the port, and a few thousand a year added t > the main tenance fund by a port tax, would certainly not be “superfluous.“ but. on the other hand, would make a Billboard Nuisance. harbor here worthy the name. It is said that during a strike of In short, the whole letter is made up of absurdities, and will never the billposters of Chicago, a number cause the mind of any one who is of the theatre managers made exclu capable of doing his own thinking sive use of newspaper advertising to to waver in the least. There is ab announce their attractions, and found solutely nothing to it but flimsy the that they were drawing bigger houses orizing, knocking and insinuating, during that period than when they and the people of the Coquille water weie making free use of the bill shed will not be deceived by any boards. Our cities have had hard such nonsense. We a: e progressive times trying to abolish the billboard and are t>oing to take advantage of nuisance. Perhaps a general reali • our oppottunily to advance. We zation that billboards are unprofit 1- will incorporate lhe port, and the ble as well as unsightly, would help PEOPLE WILL REAP THE a lot in having their use discon- BENEFIT, and NOT PAY THE 1 tinned - Success. FREIGHT as the “TAXPAYER’’ would have us thi 11k. Card of Thanks. The Deathless Life. BAN ANNOUNCE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC THAT THEY HAVE SUCCEEDED A. F. Estabrook Co. In Their Hay, Grain And General Warehouse Business The Retiring Management Wishes to Thank the Community For Their Past BUSINESS AND FAVORS The New Management trusts that it will receive the same hearty patronage o that was accorded its predecessor and respectfully solicits the new business O of this entire section of the country CASH BUSINESS BANDON WAREHOUSE COMPAN\ will conduct its business on a strictly cash basis have made this decision, as such a policy cannot but prove beneficial to all, for reason that We CASH PRICES Mean LOW PRICES No firm can carry a load of slow or bail accounts and keep its prices down. That is a busines im possibility. Ready cash means that we can take advantage of local and California snaps and buy at figures ihat will permit of our selling to you at “SNAPPY PRICES. ’ Fot these reasons there will be no books kept at the Bandon Warehouse Co. RESULT:—“LOWEST PREVAILING PRICES,” “Smaller Margin of profits,” MANY SALES Watch the R ecorder for Our Prices, They Will Interest You © “BUY OF THE BANDON WAREHOUSE CO.” o Make That Your Motto—Bear it in Mind—Pass it Along — Means Money to All Be satisfied that we are here to stay, to give you a fair, square deal and always .. tiling, courteous attention. Your interests will always be ours, Let us get together and profit from the very st <rt. You will find us more liberal and broad on a cash basis than our predecessors or others cou'd be on a credit basis. You know why this is possible o o SAVING MONEY IS MAKING MONEY The banks ot Bandon would like to see your accounts with them grow. This is possible by dealing with the Bandon Warehouse Co. for cash, and saving money. Out of town patrons should not forget to use the phone, as we will cheerfully give any information that lies within our power. A Word about Your Freight And Passenger Business THE BANDON WAREHOUSE CO. will act as the freight and passenger agents of A. F. ESTA BROOK CO. You are familiar with the past efforts and services of the A. F. Estabrook Co. Our aim is to betliei if possible, an already y.ood service. We aie here to get your business, and mean to cater to your every demand whether great or small. The A. F. Estabrook Co are anx- ions to please you and toward that end will do everything consistent to an efficient ami reliable service. We shall endeavor to give due notice of all sailing dates. When you see those dales, stop and think just what it is you wish to send or receive. Recommend to your triends that they travel on the twin screw S S. FIFIELD, a ship noted for her safety speed and competent, willing and attentive crew, The Filiekl has units tally large staterooms, (and tj pical of the A b . ESTA BRO()K < ’( ).'S efloits to give you the best) is lhe only ship afloat on the P cific, having het and cold running water in each room L. L. BRANDENBURG BANDON WAREHOUSE CO. o o M o o O1 There is being conducted tn state of Wisconsin «luring the present months a cow contest, which aims to 1 discover the cbamplou butter producer of tiie state. The two animals having the highest records for ttie first month have shown a butter return ranging1 between sixty and eighty |M>unds. The dairyman who Is Interest«*«! iu bal 1 desire to thank the good ladies anced rations will note with interest of Bandon for their kindness Io my the bill of fare which the two cows sister, Mrs. Rogers. I will be com have been receiving. Ttie one show ing the largest returns Is given thirty- pelled to leave here in a few days five pounds of corn silage, ten pounds probably never to see her again, so of alfalfa, four pounds of wheat bran | please continue your kindness t< het and four pounds of ground barley ' daily. The second cow is f««d thir ! by dropping in and speaking a ty-five pounds of corn silage, thirty pounds of mangel#, eight pounds of cheering word occasionally. timothy ami clover hay. eight pounds Yours very truly, of cornmeal nnd four pounds of gluten A. R P attee meal daily, it is not surprising that cows that get outside of such an Leavenworth, Kansas amount of raw materials do business ---- »>©<"*---- at milking time, In quite a real sense they are milk manufactories and are Portland Markets. rlewwl as such by the uieu who own them Victor Hugo: I feel in myself the f iture life. I am like a forest once cut down, the new shoots are strong er and livelier than ever. I am rising. 1 know, toward the sky. The sunshine is on n y head. The earth gives me its generous sap, but heaven lights me with the reflection of unknown w01 Ids You say that country develops, the property of the soul is nothing but the resultant these farmers will also enhance in of lhe bodily powers. Why, then, The receipts at the Portland Union value, but they say the farmei does is my soul more luminous w hen my Stock yards for the past week, wete not raise any better crops on high bodily powers begin to fail? Winter as follows: cattle ¡484, calves 92, Ivgs k »7 i , sheep 4096, horsand priced land than on cheap land, ami is on my head, but eternal spring is mules 52. that he is only burdened with great in my heart. 1 breathe at this hour Most of the cattle have been from the fragrance of the lilacs, the violets California and were of good quality er taxes. Let us investigate. The writer is and the roses, as at twenty years. and the prices at which they were familiar with conditions in the great The nearer I approach the end, the sold indicate that the lower prices farming sections of the Mississippi plainer I hear round me the immort looked for at this time did not apply. The run of grass cattle has not vallev, having lived there the most til symphonies of the worlds which started and while the packers un It is marvelous, ve- of his life. In that section, farmers invite me. doubtedly expect to get lower priced are making a lietter rate of interest, simple. It is a fairy tale, and it is cattle, the supply, both in quantity at the present lime, on land for which history. For half a century I have and qualitv has not warranted a re • they pay from $100 to $150 per acre, been writing my thoughts in prose duction. The sheep market has been well than they made off of the same land and in verse; history, philosophy, supplied throughout the week. 25 or 30 years ago, when it could I m drama, romance, tradition, satire, Prices indie ile a steady mat kef. bought for $ 10 to $15 per acre And ode and song. I have tried all. But There were all sorts of sheep offered, why is it? Because they have a I feel I have not said the thousandth | and the lowest prices quoted brought means of getting their products to part of what is in me. When I go all they were worth. The hog market is slowly follow market. The same condition will bt down to the grave I can say like ing the lead of the River markets, many others: “ I have finished my true in Coos county. As soon as and w hile prices at Portland are f 1.50 the farmer has an easy access to days's work.’’ But I cannot sa : l>er hundred higher than at other | market, his farm will bring him re “I have finished inv life.” Mv day’s points, tiie market is 10 per cent I turns. ten fold, over that which he is work will begin again the next morn lower than List week. mg The tomb is not a blind «Ilex ; low receiving. It closes 011 Our present opportunity for tji-t it .is a thoroughfare First class job work a specialty. Mg • market m by building gout lhe twilight; it opens on the dawn. I There Is probably no force, not ex cepting steam, that possesses the force exhibited in the expanding of freez ing water. The results of this tremen dous power are everywhere visible in nature and form a most interesting line of thought for those of an inquir ing mind. It seems to be the consensus of opin ion among breeders of experience that coutinual breeding from immature sows tends to produce a type of hog lacking in vitality and sturdiness of frame and more subJecfS’than the off spring of mature sows to diseases. In the same way the first calf of young heifers is seldom taken as a producer of breeding types. The laws in most states make the maintenance of ttie partition fence betweeu two pinces a matter of Joint responsibility as between the respec five owners, The type of fence de sired by one proprietor, provided it is within the sco | h * of the definition of a legal fence, the other proprietor can be made to furnish through appeal to If any readers of these notes sus the trustees having these matters in tained losses last season as a result of charge. smut In their small grain the sameditfi culty may be headed off this season by White clover not only makes n most treating the seed with a formalin solu excellent pasture grass and source of tion. This fungicide is made by dilut- food supply for bees at blossom time, Ing a plnt of 40 per cent formalin in but the superintendent of one western about thirty gallons of water. The road-the O. It. and N.—is making seed. which should is» treated a few tests of It with considerable success as hours before using, should lie spread a means of preventing the washing of about six inches deep on the baru or its cuts along the Columbia river The granary floor and the solution sprin clover roots make a fibrous and com- kled over it evenly, care being taken pact mass, while there is sufficient not to put on so much that it will soak moisture from soil ami air to insure through to the floor beneath. When its vigorous growth. the sprinkling has been done the grain should be shovel«*«! over and mixed On the basis of Us value in Increas thoroughly, so that all of the seed will ing crop production fresh manure is be moistened with the solution. An ruled ns tuning a value of $2.25 per inspection will show whether enough ton. mid experiments which have |xs*n | solution has l>een added the first time. made show tluit It will low one-third i If not, the seed may t>e given a second of its value if It is allow«*d to tench sprinkling. Machines costing $•> or $7 for three months Tills Is not a large are on the market which have a tank loss on a single ton. but It menus that containing the solution, through which 100 tons of such fertilizer would be the seed is passed and given thorough worth $225 and that the loss reierrtsl treatment. Such machine could treat to would Is* $75. enough Io buy ii seed for half a dozen or more farms manure spr«*n<ier or give the I h \ v eight and might well be owned jointly. weeks at nn agricultural college. In all agricultural communities our standards of good citizenship should more and more come to give high place to the man, whether owner or tenant, who at the end of a season leaves the soil which he has tended Ju as fertile and productive a condition as when he found It. And it should class as very real traitors to the coun try’« best Interest and welfare tho very large class who despoil and rob the soil ruthlessly. The English potato crop for the year 1009 averaged 238 bushels per acre as against an average in the United States of about 105 bushels. It is well to remember, too, in this connection that the English avetage was secured on lands which have been tilled for "00 or 800 years, while here the land has not been cultivated on an average sixty or seventy years. There ought to be a suggestion in tlwse figures for the American agriculturist. The agricultural department Is con tinuing its vigorous warfare against the weevil pest, which has exacted such heavy toll from southern cotton growers, and ns a result of Its efforts parasitic enemies have been intnslueed which are greatly lessening the dam- age sustained. In some fields in Lou- isfana as high ns 77 per cent of the boll weevils have been destroyed by these Insect enemies, nnd at various points in Texas from 21 to 48 per cent of the weevils have been destroyed by the same agency. Investigations which have tieen made by the Nebraska experiment station Into the causes of sorghum ¡tolsonlng show that this result is due to the presence of prussic acid in the green leaves of young and old sorghum plants and Kaffir corn. The (sdsons seem always to lie present in minute quantities, but is developed in danger ous quantities when the plant Is nr rested In certain stages of its growth by dry weather. It is more than like ly that to this same poison is due tiie frequent death of stock which has eaten of the green r I kmi I s and suckers In a field of corn following a period of retarded development. ALFALFA—$1.75 BALE-Good Grade: Where Can You Beat it? Stock Up. Barley--$1.15 Sack. Clean and Heavy. In ton lots at $1.10 sack Midlings-$1.85 Full size sack«. Shorts $1.50 REMEMBER! IT PAYS TO PAY CASH. BANDON WAREHOUSE CO. II N I 9 à • • .« •.