Published Every Thursday by the 1 Portland Live Stack Receipt« ■__ Re.-eipls for the week have been I c.itt e 1-,88. calves 75, hogs 3707 I and -I m vp 1731 Nutmeription, $1 60 o-r Year if. A ivane»-. A<h**ii>n.u i-i«'-- M d*- A feature of the market has I een Known on Ap|*Ke»iiut>. J<>l. l*i iiiti'asr « H|<»-eiHiiy .the stiength "shown bo.h in demand Eiiicieu ai the Bandon Fostc-t'a:«- aa Second Class .'Imtw and pi ice • for slrerp. The cattit market has weaken d sl< wlv undei THURSDAY..................................................................... June . pressure and good steers were sold for 5.65 to 5 70 A choice lot sohi That South African Nation almost every county on the Pacific for 5.90, but tlie market on hav fed _____ coast. Yet even in this booming steers is about at the lesser figure quoted above. Yesterday, the world was apprised, early summer lime there aie able The cow market has Isen strong ixadied men around the towns who and high and the demand for light officially of the birth of a new say they can find nothing to do. butcher stuff was not supplied. File Nition, the Union of South Africa This is not ci edible, unless they are demand lor calves is strong at 7c for Cape Colony, Orange River Colony. very particular about the work thev topsand 6.00 to 6 50 for the heavier Natal and the Transvaal, by legisla classes. do, and in.- st that it shall be very tive union formed a single dominion 'I he sheep market r.ilhecl from the easy work. But fruit picking, at depression that has lately applied with Viscount Gladstone assuming least is not ve> y heavy or disagree and showed considerable strength. the official dignities and duties ol able labor. Prices were from to to 15c better Governor General and General Louis There remain the rai'roa 1 camps than the ,-."eek before and the move- Botha taking the actual helm of state for such as prehr that kind of labor merit was brisk. as the first Premier. Fhe hc.g marke» was fairly well ti farm work. Thousands of mtn This is the beginning of a most supplied, both with contracted de will be in demand in Oregon for liveries from Missouri river territory encouraging chapter in Anglo-Saxon many months for railroad building, and from local points. Prices have history. It possesses those features and even with all the contractors’ declined slowly until tcc can be con of which optimism should make ac exactions something can be saved sidered the high point. claim. It is really another instance ----- cjoo ---- out of one’s wages. There is also cf the amalgamation of alien races. a vast amountol street re| ailing and Careless of Life. We may well remember the sullen other improvement work going on in Bitterness of the struggle between the cilies, if one cannot endure the Boer and Briton, and we may marvel Each year there are deaths and country. injuries due to carelessness exceed that in the course of less than ten Never before were there nearly so ing those of any year in the late years peaceful association has elim many laborers at work in the Pacific bloody Civil War. It is estimated mated that bitterness, has given birth northwest as now, yet never before ■that almost 500,000 deaths and in- to a strong sentiment of nationalism, was the call for laborers so constant I juries take place each year in the and has put the reins of the new i ordinary course of business which and insistent. Nobody can be com ¡are due either to the carelessness of government in the hands of one of pelled to work, except as a punish some employe or the woise thin the champions and lea Jets of the m.’iit for crime, but if a strong, ac I carelessness of the emplover: human defeated cause. tive man really wants work he can ■ life is less safeguarded in this coun All things considered, the ferocity hear it calling for him in many direc try than in any other in the civilized of the struggle in South Africa, tl e world. It is a terrible indictment, tions.— Portland Join ml. brief period of time elapsed situ e and unfortunately, it is undeniable. —Philadelphia Inquirer. that struggle ended, and what we ———vXK>----- conceived to be the rather obstinate School Meeting June 20th and malice-bearing characteristic of Bonus Nearly Raised. th«' Boer--there is not .mother Monday, June 20th. will ie the transformation from enmity to tuiun regular annual school meeting for Marshfield, Oregon, June 7. —The al unity like it in all the record ol the purpose ot electing a member of committee having the work in charge tnnalgamation as between the con the school board and Hie tiansaction expects soon to have the $150.000 queror and conquered. of other business of importance for bonus subscribed lor Jhe Coos Bay, Oregon & Idaho Railroad. The It 0>ay be truthfully said that in the school year. conditions are that the money shall the b:rth of this new nation the B<>< r The public sclrool is something in not be paid until after a train has rather than tire Briton has come to which every citizen of the district been run from Coos Bay to Rose his own; lire conquered rather than should have a great interest. There burg. So far the citizens have re the cooqmror has prevailed Fht is nothing of greater importance in sponded liberally, and the bonus B< >er bus wondrously adapted him any community. The schools need probably will be completed within a seif to the new order of things, and the support of the public, and the few days. Promoters ol the road the merit of his industrial and ad public needs the support of the say that it wiil be built as soon as the bonus anil terminal grounds at ninisti alive ability has won in the schools. It is an interwoven prop this end have been settled. estimation of hi« formerly trium osition that cannot be segregated. phant foe. I'he school board needs the sanc Owner of purse found near Cody’s AD this appears to us to be qui e tion and support of all the taxpay mill in road can have same by call as it should be. The Boer preceded ers. The board of this district is ing at R ecorder office and payir.g the Briton in South Africa; lie was doing good, conscientious work, and for this notice. 22 it even in Cape Town lefore the Brit die mt inliers are deserving of praise Notice for Publication-Isolated Tract ish. He is in essence the native for their untiring effort t > giv. the Public L*nd Sale. Africander; «nd the aspirations <»i district a first-class school. Department of the Interior 05478 South African natiotmlism are es-.cn Every taxpayer in the district, U. S. Land Office at Roseburg. Oregon tially his. In the composition ot >x>tli male and female, over the age May 28. 1910 NOTICE is hereby given that, as directed by this new nation there is the union of >f 21, is entitled to a vote There the ( ommissioner of the General Land Office, under provisions of Act of Congress approved strong and vital lorces which give to -hould be at least 200 or 300 in at June 27, 1906(34 Stats., 517), we will offer at it the promise of splendid growth tendance at the annual in- eting on pubiic sale, to the highest bidder, at 10 o'clock A. M . on the 12th day of July, 1910, at this office, the following described land: Lots I, 2 and permanent endurance--Pi rt- June 20th. Sec I I and Lot I, Sec. 14. T. 29 S R. 15 land Telegram. W.. W. M. Recorder JPvFjisTil.n^ Compan/ O. E. KOFF, - - - 4/ia.iiagii^fr New Agricultural Movement Great Demand For Labor Fruit growers of the Yakima val lev have organized a labor bureau and employed a salaried secretary fix the purpose of securing 5001 ialxireni, the number estimated to l>< necessary to take care of their fru>> crop this year. And the Yateim. valley is only one locality of main where fruit growers need large num bers of laborers. An item from the small town o Falls Cite, published in the I tail.. ItCClizer. says 200 men, some < tbe* with teams, are needed in that locality. Many ol the e are pie-um* tblyvnnted to work in the saw milte •nd VOOds, but cithers are wanted •¡■n fo< work in dairies, in orchafds. «id OB other farina.. These are only two ¡ten* .The comes frotp all directioi s, from 1 C* The proposed movement iff Mis souri for the formation of areas for ntensive farming on the community of-intere«t basis, through philan thropic assistance, will doubtless arouse great interest throughout ti e United States because of the existing belief that demand for food products his outrun the facilities f rr supply, ind that unless there is increased rroduction through closer settlement or by intensive farming the prices of hefoixl staples wiil.remain high ai d inssiblv .nhance to higher figure« than tho-e which arc now causing dis. on it 1 1. The Miaaotifi. idea it» to etfatiiish 40-M re tarius arc und a central farm ol 160 acre«, which will «• fve as the pitent firm m lire crpaciiv <if m «tractor f >r the tread« of the smaller surrounding farms.-Mifw .wkee Wis consin. , a ■ A. • ---------------------------------- A— lirM <lar* job Work a specialty. Any persons claiming adversely the above-dr- scribed land are advised to file their claims, or objections, on or before the time designated for sale. 22-5t Benjamin F. Jones, Register City Election Notice NOTICE IS HERF BY GIVEN. That a regular election will be held within the corpora te limits of the City of Bandon, Coos County, State of Oiegon, upon Monday, the 27th day of June, 1910, for the purpose of electing Three Councilmen. one Mayor, onr’’Municipal Judge and one Recorder, and at which election w l| also be submitted to the electors thereon quali- bed to Wrtc the question of Bonding the City of dandon for «60,000 for the l-stallati n of a municipal »«Set system, and also the question of Whether <a not livestock shall be permitted to '■sat Ury Within the corporate limits of ti«| ■ml City oi Bandon Stab «iatao'i '»Ü be held 4 the City hall on isni das. awl the poils will be ojiened at the hoar ««lit o'clock A. M., aad remain oten until one o’clock P. M., and "iH then clo e anal 2 o’daxfc P M., and then be o-jened .t lacto P M. an<4 remain open until six n'clito P M. and then be permaner.lly clore. The Board chosen by the Common Council ta cmsdwst «s I «kwrtion are: A. D. fiber, R. C. Msfcinnis and E. F.. Oakes, J jdges, and H. C, (Jaton and (... M. Bpmcer, Clerks. Tto no ice u given per ir ai to the provision-I 4 tha City Vhtpter, and" also to an order of th Cc^iaon t o*cil I herd or marie nt a regular mertieg thsteof held upon th. 31 st day of Mat .1910. Date. I at il .n-hrn. ’ Oregon this 9th day of Jwta. 1910« C. R. WADE 22- 3t Recorder and Clerk W—iumui. tW THE GRANGE FIRS! NATIONAL BANK Bandon, Conducted by J. W. DARROW, Chatham. N. Yw Prca* Comtpondeni -New Turk State Grange CAPITAL Stockholders Liability Total Responsibility WHAT ONE GRANGE HAS DONE. Magnolia Grangj, th* Hom* Grange of National Lecturor Wilson In Illinois. A Message to Farmers. Tim grange is tlie best organized, most sensibly conducted and most val uable organization tlie farmers of tills country have ever known. It is organ ized along proper lines; it rectwrnizes the home and the wife and brings such an influence into tlie deliberations of the grange as to put it on a very high level, excluding entirely what ever would not be welcome to the most delicate ears. The social features of tlie grange are admiral tie. Farmers live so far apart, whether a quarter of a mile or a half mile or a mile, that unless some or ganteation brings them together they live lonely. Isolated lives. The grange does much to overcome tills mrtui'al condition. It should be more exten sively organized. Tlie settlers of tlie western country beyond the Misslssip pi river would lie greatly benefited by an organization of this kind. Much of the progress made by agri culture in tiie lust generation Is due to the influence of tlie grange.—Hon. James Wilson, Secretary of Agricul- lure. $25,000.00 $25,000.00 $50,000.00 Deposits at End of First Months Business, $29,052.93 (Special Correspondence.] What one grange has accomplished it is (sissible for many others to do. In the grange of which I wish to speak there has beeu almost universal har mony, which 1 believe to be the foun dation of all good work in any organ ization. The grange was orgauized thirty-seven years ago. It prospered well for a |ieriod. then tile interest seemed to lax for uwhile, when new courage and determined effort again took hold of the membership to change tactics some way and Interest the members suttlciently to hate them at tend tlie sessions. For n flew years the meetings were held in a schoolhouse, a very unfit place for a meeting of this character, and ns a vacant church was available it was decided to purchase it for a permanent home. After paying sev eral hundred dollars toward the pur chase twice it was found necessary to make some special effort to complete the payment of the new home. The men agreed to rent five acres of land on which to plant ¡»otatoes to tie cared for by the membership and sell said potatoes to cancel I he indebtedness, which was done, and a neat little sum was raised in this manner. Then a grange fair was undertaken, tirst in a very small way with no premiums excepting ribbons to signify the su perior quality of exhibits. This work grew annually, and interest was mani fested by many outside tlie grange un til there were line exhibits of live stock, vegetables, fruits and every thing that goes to make up an agricul tural fair, We prohibited everything of evil tendency. No cigars, whisky and uo games of chance were allowed on the grounds. A tine floral bouse, poultry house, large stables. sheep nnd hog slieds are now visible as 1 the result of the earnest e<orts of n har- monious band of I’atrous who > wet e and are inierested In tlie uplift aud advancement of the neighboring Oil ers of the soil. This same grange was the prime mover in having erected a short dis tance from tlie hall a commodious brick consolidated school building oc cupied by three school districts, where five teachers are employed and in which twelve grades are taught, in cluding manual training and domestic science, and where tlie fourth and fifth grades are given a plot of ground 11» by 2(1 feet for gardens. Judges are ap pointed to determine what the results have been each year. There is also a state experimental station in connec tion with this school. This grange lias been buying flour and feed direct from the mill for several years and California drl«>d fruits from the grow- ers. MltS. OLIVER WILSON. Oregon DOES .ANY OE iT BELONG TO YOU? If Nut. Bettei Start an Account T<xlay And Let i< Grow With a GROWING INSTI TUTION GEO. W. MOORE LUMBER CO. IS READY TO FILL ORDERS FOR THE LOCAL MARKET X Your Business For This Summer Is Solicited £ STOVE WOOD FOR SALE WOODRUFF & GOFF SHCONI) HANI) Buy And Sell All Kinds of Second Hand Goods Get Our Prices Before Purchasing Elsewhere Phone I 261 BANDON OREGON A FEW REAL ESTATE SNAPS « 5 ie acre tracts at $30.00 per acre close to citv 5 acres, one-half cleaned, with house and partly fenced, $300.00 down, terms on balance A lot 100x209 with alley in rear, two blocks from school grounds, $600.00 2 acres with nice new cottage, fenced and in good shape, close to school house, fot $1400 00 On sixth street, across street fiom school ground, a p'ece < f land 150x130 with nice four room house. $800.00. A snap Lots in Azalia Park $75.00 each, installments Lots in Woolen Mill add. $65.00 up Installments 9 Lots Smith's addition $175.00 Terms if wanted A Square Deal E. E. OAKES Of Course A NONE M. G. POHL Saturday Grange Extension, The extension work Is progressing well under tlie direction of the execu tive committee of the national grange. Organizers are doing continuous work in Iowa, XVisconsin. Maryland. Ken Optometerist tucky. Missouri. South Dakota and Indiana. Organizers are working in Bandon, Oregon Colorado and Idaho by direction of the committee, and extension work is be ing done in Vermont. Michigan, Ohio nnd Washington under Joint co-opera Summons Ancient Oath Taking. I tion cf the national and state grnnges. A method of taking the oath far IN THE JUSTICE COURT FOR THE During the first eleven days in Febru more hygienic than kissing the book SIXTH JUSTICE DIS7 RICT, CQO-S ary thirty-six granges were organized was that observed at the Forest of COUNTY STATE OF OREGOM In the country, which Is a good record. Dean Mine court for about NX» years, The increase in membership in exist beginning in the thirteenth century A. McNair, F’laintif, ■ ing granges is most gratifying and In It was not for any hygienic reasons, . l . -r * . SUMMONS dicates a record breaking year in but to prevent «oiling the book that J. H. I imon, Defendant ’ grange extension. — National Master I the miners before giving evidence To J. H. Timon. the ehove named defendant; Bacbelder. In The Name of The State of Oregon: touched the four gospels with a stick You are hereby required tc appear before the of holly. The witnesses wore their Grange Improves Conditions. hats to show that they were free min underxiyned, a Justice of the Peace, for the above designated District, to answer the complaint of S«ite Master Richardson of Massa ers.— London Chronicle. the plaintiff filed herein, within six weckr from chusetts recently said: "Through the the date of the first publication hereof, to-wit. on granges conditions are changing for Oniy Part of th* Truth. or before the 21st day of July, 1910 tlie lietter in rural communities. The ives—I saw Captain Deepeercs today. You will take notice that if you so fail to ap development of young men and women Beers—Well, what if you did? Ives— pear and answer, that the plaintiff will take is being nccomplishts! by the grange. }Vhat If I did? Didn't you tali me judgement again-t y u for the amount of $17.07, Next to the I would place the grange that tie was with his vessel When she and for costs and dixf.urse*cnts. 7 his iiimmoni is made perruant Io an order in «o far as ft Is helpful to the com went flown, last week with all on munity. If we are ta contitrue to drift board? Becrs—Yes, but I didn't tell i mad- and fil d June 6, 1910, and motion there- lore made ard filed .in this office by C. R cityward, as we have done in thffpaat, you his vessel, was a submarine.—Chi- YVade. plaitit.if'a attorney. It is of the utWiost importance to the caau News. Dated at Bandon, Oregon this Cth day of urban population to have the benefi June. I9|O. cial work of the grange go forward. | An Cscuptiu«. Coo, P. Topping The grange Is felt in educational af Justice of the Peace Rinks— flefe Is somebody who gays 22-6t faira. School superintendents are now that no woman Is a suffragist unless employed In all communities Instead she has a groych on sowie nah. Sinks F or S ai f ..—7 room house. 4 lots. of iu those able to pay them, as in the —That’s queer. My wife Isn't a suf past.” fragist.—CWbeland Plain Deakr. Inquire oí E M. S umner 19 tf BUT THE At Gallier BEST Hotel