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4.
e
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Roosevelt* AJdheM.
♦
Is part, Mr. Roosevelt flatd a*»T
CMhpar.igt civilization hui.it .Mid «»I
R>wur Gruturie-. ago:
‘•One ot the prune «langers » f
civilization has alw-tVM Item its ten
dcacy to qgs-e (he loss ot the virile
ftghting virtue-, ol the fighting edge
When men
too co oforiable and
lead too luxurious lives there is al
wavs danger lest the sottness eat like
an acid into their manliness ot fiber
The barbarian, because ot the very
Conditions of his l-le, is forced to i
keep and develop certain h irdy
qualities which the man of civiliza
tion tends to lose, whether he be I
clerk, factory hand, merchant, o
even a certain type of fanner. Now.
I will not assert that in modern ci\i
hzed society i I iumt tendencies have
beefl wholly overcome; but there
bus been a much more success in
effort to o-vet come the»« than was
the ewe in lire eariy civilizations.
•'Personally, 1 do n< t believe lhal
our civilization will fall.
1 think
that on the whole we have grown
better and not worse.
“We, the men of today and oi
the future, need inanv qualities if
we are to do our work we 1. We
need, first of all and most important
of all, the qualities * hicli stand at
the base of individual, ot family life
the fundamental and essential quali
ties—the homely, every-day, ali-
iinportant virtues
if the avetagi
man will not work, if he has not in
him the will and the power to be a
good husband and father; if the
avetage woman is not a good house
wife, a good mother of many healthy
children, then the State will topple,
will go down, no matter what may
be its brilliance of artistic develop
ment or material achievement
But
these homely quahties are not
enough. There must, in addition,
be that ¡rower of crganizalion, that
pjwer of working in common for a
common end, which the G.-rman
people have shown in such signal
fashion during the last hall ceflim v.
Moreover, the things of the spirit
are even more import mt 11 an th 7
things ol the body. We can Wv.i
without the hard intolerance and
arid intellectual barrenness of what
was worst
logical systen.s
ol the past, but there has never be< n
greater need of a high and fine lelig
i jus spirit than al the present time •»
■ooo-
Births and Deaths.
The record of the births and deaths
for the county foi the months o
March and April show the usual in
crease in population, and also go to
show that the death rate of Coos
c >unty is far less than that of many
oiher sections of the state, anti also
far less than that of any of the foreign
countries.
During March there
were 25 births in the county, divi led
as follows; Bandon, 3 girls; Co<'s
River. 2 boys; Coquille, 3 hoys;
East Side, 1 boy, 1 girl; Empire, 1
boy; Four Mile, 1 girl; Lamps, 1
boy; Marshfield, 5 boys, 4 girls;
North Bend, 2 gills
For the month of April there
were also 25 births recorded, dis
tributed over the county as follows:
Bandon, 1 boy, 1 girl; Coquille, 2
boys, 3 girls; Catching Inlet I bov;
Coos River, 1 boy; Gravel Ford. 1
girl; Lamps, I boy; Marshfield, 2
boys, 3 girls; Myrtle Point, 4 boys;
North Bend, 2girls; Norway, 1 boy,
Riverton, : boy, 1 girl.
. In March there were but 9
deaths in Ceos county, and ol this
number five of the deceased had
passed the ,<j»e of sixty nine years,
and one had passed the eighty-ye.ii
mark.
They were distributed as
follows: Bandon, 2; Marshfield. 2;
Coquille, 2; Myrtle Point, 1. and
Riverton. 2.
April records show it deaths and
these are marked by about the same
pro|K>rtion of aged people as was the I
month of March. Of »he 11 who -
d.ed during the month ol April 5
were over sixty five yeats at th i
tune of their death, 2 had passed
eighty, an<l one was over ninety
> ear; of age. They were distributed
as follows. Bandon, I; Coquille 2:
Lamps, 1; Marshfield, J; Myrtle
Point, 2; North Bend, i, R. v.
Slough, 1.—Coquille Sentinel.
ca.i cr
ewes .
MuU« 0 .-<•■« J a ei» the Food and Man-
•er fa
It 1» Given.
Xa curing for breeding ewes flr.e
linzt m-e It. they flUuw any symp
toms of being affected with stomach
worms if they do. have then» drenched
With gasoline at once. After this treat
ment keep salt to which have boon add
ed some worm powders constantly be
fore them. There are a number of
different brands of medicated stock
salt find worm |s>wders iu the market,
nil doubt lews [tossessing some g<s>d
qualities, and they set us a gisxi pre
ventive. but it Is ini[H»sslble to find
any that would ex|H*l worms from
sheep after they become badly affect
ed. Tobacco mixed with salt is also
to be recommended as a preventive,
and some breeders prefer it to the
specially prepared form powders ami
so called stock salts referred to.
The sheep should also tn* examined
for ticks
It will pay to dip them
MOVING THE FLOCK HOME
The Opéra !
THE GKANGE
Conducted by
J. W. »ARROW. Chaiham, N. T„
Prtn Cumnx'tulent ¡few Fork Stott
HAS A SELECT STOCK ul-'
GranQt
Wines. Liquors & Cigars
Line Quality Bread, Cakes, Pies and Pastry.
First Class Restaurant
Private Eoxes for Private Parties
Everything Neat and Clean
The best of service guaranteed
Short orders at all hours from 5:30 a m to 10:00 p m
THE EMPIRE STATE GRANGE.
liecrnu Clrmiglit
New York Now Ha» Over Ninety Thou
sand Members of the Order.
LO’JRT ¿OUS
TREATMENT
For the information of grange mem
bers not only in New York state, but
in others as well, we publish here
with the membership by counties us
reported by State Secretary Giles for
the fiscal year ended Oct. 1, 1909. As BAXDON
four months have elapsed since these
figures were tubulated tlie grange
memlterslilp of the state may now be
placed at 90.000 in 731 granges:
Granges. Members.
Vienna Bakary Ana Cafe
GROSS BROS
Albany .............
Allegany .....
Broome ......
Cattaraugus
Cayuga ...........
Chautauqua .
Chemung ....
Chenango ...
Clinton ..........
Columbia ....
Cortland ........
Delaware ....
Dutchess ....
Erie ...................
Essex ...............
Fulton .............
Franklin ........
Genesee ...........
Greene ............
Herkimer ....
Jefferson ....
Lewis ...............
Livingston ..
Madison .........
Monroe ..........
Montgomery
Niagara' ........
Oneld r .............
Onondaga ...
Ontario ...........
Orange .............
Orleans ..........
Oswego ..........
Otsego .............
Putnam ...........
Ilensselaer
Lockland ....
t
Saratoga ........
Schenectady
Schoharie ...
Schuyler .........
Seneca .............
Steuben .. ..
St Lawrence
Suffolk .............
Sullivan ...........
Tioga ..............
Tompkins ...
Ulster ..............
Warren ..........
Washington .
Wayne
.........
Westchester .
Wyoming
...
Yates .................
New granges ..
t
4
14
11
26
18
31
8
8
11
16
29
9
25
It
11
2
11
12
6
21
33
20
7
7
19
8
IM
1.047
tn;
1,901
1,678
6.418
6U?
176
1,826
2,32.
1.S7C
295
2.648
1.23C
1.543
128
2.II:
2,411'
131
2,80.
7.201
2.453
325
604
4,794
455
176
Kit
1,731
2.1'01
2.896
747
4,803
82»
4:h
689
123
681
95
275
718
2,050
3.23.8
5,197
286
20
28
2,225
1.143
44
1.G91
5,193
168
1,249
638
42
even though the weather is cold, In
tills cone they cun be protected until
i
dry.
The method of feeding depends very
much upon local conditions, it pays
|
to feed a light ration of grain during
the winter even though the sheep are
in good condition The grain ration,
of course, depend» upon the kind and
condition of roughage to be fed. If
feeding liberally of clover or alfalfa
buy not us much protein is required as
when the hay fell is largely timoth.v
or meadow grass. With mixed hay, Total .............................................. 723
88.8t>i
clover and mixed grasses feed oats. Fully paid up membership Sept. •'M.
... 88,86*7
1909
bran and cracked corn.
Fully paid up membership Sept. 30,
To the growing animals give some
1908 ........................................................................... 81,983
oilcake meal, always feeding the oil
meal in lump form. Sheep prefer to Net Rain for the year ................................. 6.883
paid up membership Sept. 30,
do their owu grinding, especially witli Fully
1909 ........................................................................... 88,866
tills kind of grain, which ks of u sticky Membership in arrears Sept. 30, 1909 . 416
nature. Make the grain half bran by
actual membership Sept. 30.
bulk, balance equal part corn and Total
1909 .......................................................................... 89.2Í2
oats. Silage is also very good for New granges not reporting
31J
sheep. A good way to feed the grain
ration is to scatter it on the silage, al Actual membership Jan. 1, 1910.... 89,591
70.1
Total number granges Jan. 1, 1909
though not necessary, as they will Organized
33
during year .........................
very soon eat the silage with a relish. Reorganized ...................................................
I
It is hardly necessary to say that the
733
feeding should always be done regular
Disorganized or dormnnt
b
ly, and the feeding time should be as
early in the morning and as late in
731
the evening as the length of days will
The financial standing of the grange
permit.
is excellent, as Treasurer Bean’s re
port sets forth. There was a bitlani e
Hints For Raising the Colt.
on hand Jan. 1, 1M0. of f21.124.flB
Don’t break the colt; train him. no- During the year he had received from
gin as soon as he is born and pet. the secretary the sum of $2*',. 307.54.
lead, feed and water him. in fact, Interest had accrued in tlie sum of
treat him as though he were a horse. $479.25, making a grand total of $47,
Teach him what whoa, get up. gee 911.41. lie paid tlie bills of officers,
and haw mean by gently pushing him delegates, etc., at the last meeting of
the way he Is wanted to go; then when the state grange, amounting to $6.
old enough to work he will know what 494.17
Biffs during the year were
is tvanted of him.
paid to the amount of $1,842.50, leav
Get him used to the harness by add ing a Imlance on hand Jan. 1. 1910. of
ing a strap at a time and to the shafts $24,390.35.
by fastening poles ou either side of
Good Roads In New York.
him occasionally. Tench him to draw
Frank
D. Lyons of Binghamton, N.
b.v putting on very light loads nt first
V.. deputy of <he state highway com
and heavier ns he gets used to it.
A colt handled in this way will be mission in charge of the bureau of
true and honest, ns lie will never know town highways, says there are now iu
he Is being made to work He will that state over 80,000 miles of high
Iqve tils master nml delight in doing way, <10,000 of which are passable for
what lie is told to do. while the one all kinds of vehicles. There are 8,000
miles of good roads built under the
tliat In taken from the field in a wild
town system, ile advocates a plan for
state will rear and plunge, smash
tlie construction of improved town
things and probably get loose and run highway’s at a cost of from $2,000 to
away, after which he is almost spoiled $5,000 a mile, instead of paying con
for a trusty horse. Besides, it is cruel I tractors from $0.000 to $12,000 for
the
to treat a colt thus, as he never knows same work, allowing 10 per cent for
what is wanted of him.
contractors’ profits, 10 per cent for en
gineering expenses and 5 per cent ter
shipping and caring fur the machinery
and help.
TIE DAIRYMAN
National Grange Legislative Committee
Tin* legislative committee of the na
it is not time yet to hang up the tional grange, composed of Hou. N. J.
currycomb. As long as the cows are Bac holder. master of the national
in the barn use it freely and carefully. grange; Aaron Junes, past master of
Th« Only Milk Preservative.
the national grange, and Professor T.
The best preservative for inilk is E. Atkesun, overseer of the national
cold, and it is the only one to use. The grange, met in Washington Jan. 17
two best friends of the dairyman are and spent several days looking after
ice and cleanliness.
matters of legislation which were rec
ommended by the national grange a'
Good Point When Buying a Cow.
Don’t be fooled when buying a cow its last session at Des Moines, la.
with the assertion that “she is an easy Calls were made upon the president,
keeper." You want a cow that is a cabinet officers and numerous senators
ami representative», v. 1th all of whom
hearty eater and a big drinker.
matters of legislation of Interest to
Clean Dairying Profitable.
farmers
were frunkly dis- ussed.
Clean dairying pays. It was never
othe-wi.se. There has nlways been a
Against Ship Subsidies.
big difference in price between bu»te-
This is what tlie national grange
made In a clean dairy and tlie oilier
said als mt ship subsidy at its last ses
Kind.
sloti: “With congress refusing to heed
Don't Sell the Best Cows.
the demand of the farmers for appro
Never let a buyer go In your herd priations for such manifestly public
and pick the best cow unless you are purposes ns highway improvement
going out of the dairy buslnew. Bet- and parcels post it would seem to be
ter sell the I»oor ones at a canning political suicide for the party in power
price.
to vote away part of the public rev
Value of Proper Feeding.
enue« to such a private enterprise as
To make dairying profitable the cows shipbuilding." The fight Is on again
must be of the best, and they must be at Washington, and the grange will
fed properly the whole year through. need to make its demands known to
The “feast and famine" practice is every WQflinns trom the grange
dlsaatru« to profit la a dairy.
* *
M. Smith
OREGON
ROOMS and
LODGING
THE COQUILLE RIVER LIN E
Strs. b ¡field & Bandon
X'fii]v furnished large light rooms
I efephotie
Electric Lights
Beliteli by single night. week or
mont l>
Twin Screw, New and Fast
1st Class Passage,
Up Freight.
INQUIRE AT OFFICE OF
The BANDON STEAM LAUNDRY
$7.50
3.00
Our interests are your interests. Fair rates and
good service our motto
If you wish a bottle cold- —
Call at the Eagle,
If you love the good, that s old--
I
Call at the Eagle.
A. F. Estabrook Co., 245 Cal. St., San Francisco
"I aint no use to sit and blink
J. H. JOHNSTON, Agent, Bandon, Oregon
7
If you really need a drink.
Just make a sign or ring a bell,
And you bet they'll treat you right
Down at the Eagle
i
I
STI1EEDS cfe KENNEDY
Alvin Munck, Prop
libACKNMITIIS
Ah||
WAl.tlXll IkLItS
Wagons of All Kinds Made to Order
BANDON, OREGON
Horseshoeing a Specialty
Job Work attended to promptly and all work guaranteed to give satisfaction,
reasonable. Shop on Atwater Street, Bandon, Oregon.
Price.
Clarence Y. Laive
.
bandon
—
O regon
Druggist and .4 path ecu ry
Is ,n»t in receipt of a new slock of
HR
S. S. ELIZABETH
Drngs and Cbemicsl». Pater. and
Propri-'tary l’i'eparatioris. l’oilet
ticles Dr.ngg
Sumirles. Perfumes
Brasiles, Spoiiges, Soup. Nnts and
Candios, < Ggars, Tobacco« aml Cig-
nrett.es, 1’ainlH, Oils,
Glass and
l’ainter’H S.ipplies.
3OOTS - AND
NEW STATE-ROOMS INSTALLED
Eight Day Service Between the Coquille River and
San Francisco
First-class Passenger Fare,
-
$7.50
Freight Rates,
-
$3 on Up Freight
SHOES
You can’t expect to get $2 worth
for $1, but you can get your
money's woith at
J. E. WALSTROM, Agent, Bandon, Oregon.
s
\1
E. & E.
T. Kruse, owners and managers, 24 California St., San Francisco.
Dealer in Boots und Shoes.
Repairing neatly and promp
I
tly done at lowest liv
I
ing prices
Great
Combination
Offer
The BANDON CABINET
WORKS
All kirdn of Cabinet -
Filterns nn< I M odela
SASH and DOORS
Job Work a Specialty
China . ;loaet a.Sideboards.’
Picture Fra tn oh an <1
Monldiups made to order
Book Caaes, in fact every
thins? tn the Cabinet Li.in
and High Class Finishing
’Y’HE RECORDER management has
made arrangements with the
W. W. BINGHAM
Rlackerby
«
San Francisco Bulletin whereby we
Building
BINDON, OREGON
can give subscribers the advantage of
BANDON
a gigantic combination offer that will
Harness Shop
furnish them all the news of the
Full line of Harness, Sad
dles, Bridles, Halters,
Blankets and everything
usually kept in a first-
class harness shop.
Repairing a Specialty
country in a metropolitian daily and
all the news of Bandon and vicinity in
the Recorder at marvelous low price
W. J. SABIN, Prop.
I
FURNISHED ROOMS
The Daily San Francisco Bulletin,
The Bandon Recorder,
AT
e
ftANDON
ci
c
$3.00 per year
1.50 per year
Total,
Both papers through
this office if paid in
advance, per year
OREGON
$4.50
$2.75
City Transfer
All kinds of draying and transler-
mg
FOR SALE—mill ^ood.
trom Cody’s mill $2.00 per Im.I
QOli sokl and delivered at lowe-t
price*
J. Jeakins, Prop.
Read the Recorder
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