• Friead
He Saves thing snapping bthied me pr jnpted
Your
Editor RgroauFK -By reque?4 of
some ol your rolcrs. I will give a
dncr piMMi of how I got my first
white haiis. Nowhere have I found
hospitality more freely extended than
m • to t: rn «round to M*e what w.«»
th« cause of the sr-und. There, not
m< re th«n ten steps iron me lay a
panther with a bone between his
piws. His pulling some meat from
the bone causai the noise. 1 looked
bivaclily into hw cyts, while he did
the same thing to tne. He dropped !
Heart to Heart
By EBWLN A. >A
A MODERN ST FRANCIS.
the • one and rose to his feet, his tail j Some of the newspapers take occa
sinking lirst one side then the other. sion to gibe at James Eads Hcwe and
He was ready to jump and only my | his “hobo convention.“
Howe is one of the remarkable men
fixed eyes held him back
In a
of this generation He is the grandson
moment I had the straps cut and of James Eads, the great engineer who
with a thud the meat fell tv the deviser! and built the Earls bridge nt
ground; slowly 1 stej.ped backward, St. Louis and the Mississippi river Jet-
facing the pant lier, r«ady to use the ! ties.
James Eads Howe inherited the for-
kn.le should he spring. I well re tune his fatuous grandfather
won. a
member it forced the thought into fortune of several millions.
tnv mind: Gnat God help me just
lie gave away every cent of it.
Though
he was comparatively poor
this time.
Still going backwards,
at
the
time
of bis inheritance. I; ♦re
each Step I made the beast came one
fused to touch any part of the mouey,
step toward me. he had reached the assigning it over to trustees for the
meat and stopped to smell it. The benetit of humanity.
That was several years ago.
thought then struck me: you walk
Meantime he works as a common la
into thé paws of another one b hind borer, carrying his dinner bucket to
turned from an unsuccessful elk you; around I turned to see. With and fro, associating constantly with
workingmen and seeking to aid them
bunt, the Middle Fork wasjiigh and this move all else was forgotten. I in every way.
Once a year he calls a convention.
from lhe side of the mountain back broke and ran anil nothing stopped
Some who attend are “hoboes,” at
me.
of Hoffman’s, we could see a great
tracted by the free banquet which Is a
Just
where
the
Midd'e
Fork
makes
many elk on the opposite side, but
part of Howe’s program. But many
could not get near.tliem
Naturally that sharp turn was a small myitle others are self respecting men out of
I staid over night with the intention bottom, now cultivated, but then in employment.
Howe’s motto is. “The manless Job
of calling on Abe Hoffman the next its virgin state. Here a band of elk for the Jobless man.”
He is trying to induce the govern
morning, and we three would then stood, and I ran right among them.
So. fast «lid I pasa that not one had ment to establish employment agen
go out and kill something.
cies in the large cities, after the man
Th; t night we wanted to get in moved.
ner of Germany and France; also, in
Rain and sleet had set in again. so far as possible, to colonize poor fam
formation by the aid of Betsy’s
[lower what luck we would have, so, The trail became slipjrery, and the ilies ou cheap lands.
Who can deny the worthiness of
alter supper the old chest was pulled deerskin moccasins whiçh we wore such alms?
Like Tolstoy, who labored at the
in the middle of the fl >or, we knelt then would stretch and slip thus
peasant
’s task in peasant garb that he
incieasing
the
exertion
of
the
flight.
around, placed ourh nds in proper
might teach and guide, so .lames Eads
A
big
log
lav
in
my
path;
I
wanted
position and the spirit showed that
Howe lives the workingman's life, I
he was ready to answer; so I asked, to mount it, but over exertion and does the dally task of the common la
borer. that he may lie in touch with
“What luck will I have tomorrow?’‘ the chilling rain gave me cramps and those
he yearns to help.
By counting the number oi raps wv down I fell unable to rise again for a
He is a man of culture, is modest,
and there is about him no mark of the
calculated the letters in the alphabet long lime.
When I reached Hoffmans it was crank.
and thus found the sentence. The
No one will deny his sincerity.
answer was: “You kill a friend, he «lark and they had aleady eaten sup
For years Mr. Eads has lived up to
saves your life.” At the time we per. They hardly kne.v .me, cov his ideals.
It may not be your way of doing
could not understand the meaning, ered with mud. and n y hair had things or mine, but It is Christlike.
turned white. Abe and Daniel had St. Francis threw bls wealth on the
but the story will explain it.
also
killed an elk, and soon a good altar of St. Peter’s and took upon him
Daylight found us ready; after
piece
of meat rtfreshed me. The self the vow of poverty. James Eads
crossing the South Fork, Hoffman
Howe has laid his fortune on the altar
Wis called and soon he was ready to next morning we started out and of humanity and lives a life of pov
go with us. About one mile above found and killed the panther who erty that he may help his toiling
brethren.
on th« Middle Fork, we quite unex had made a meal on the friend I had
If al) of us lived up to our ideals as
Thus the friend saved my sincerely as this man. heaven would
pectedly met a sentinel, a large buck killed,
j
come down to earth in a day.
POHL.
elk, and the next moment he was life.
right here in (. oos county. In the
early days, however, this virtue ex
isted to a gre^ttr extent than it does
today, and the traveler was alwavs
given a welcome. The latch string
was always on the outside whethe-
there was any bo ty at home or not,
an<l you were invited to help your
self. Visitors were many after the
Baltimore colony had settled down.
One of lhe homes where I often
paid a visit and stopped over night
was Daniel Pulasky's. Mrs. Pulasky
was a very strong medium and we
often passed an hour after supper !
with what we called “spirit rapping.”
Daniel ai d (myself had just re :
I, as the youngest and swift
est, was told to catch up with the
band, and if they should take to the
WHY?
hills, to try and turn them toward
Young Mr. Knox, son of the secreta
Sugar Loaf mountain. Before I left ry of state, against the wishes of ills
parents ran away with and married
Abe asked me for some caps which a poor girl, He wns practically dis-
I earned in a small pouch on my owned.
Afterward there was a reconciliation.
belt. I gave him sotne, but in deling
and young Mrs. Knox repeated a state
so 1 neglected t<> fasten the top and ment attributed to her at the time of
then was swift after the game. They the eliqieineut— namely, that she had
had gone about one-half mile up never worked for a living.
Which was a poor boast.
stream and stopped to see whether
Certainly she was poor, and if she
they were pursued or not.
Not di<l not work who worked for her?
Iq place of being ashamed of her
more than seeing me they took to
self she is ashamed of her poverty anti
agulcli leading upwards to the ridge considers it something less than an in
I cut them off troin going down the sult that it should be said she ever was
other side, and they turned into a employed in a shop or department
store.
heavy thicket of greasewood. When
That Is one way in which class dis
I came to where their trail had tinctions arise in this country. When
crossed the ridge, everything was an honest laborer is ashamed of his
work, how can It be otherwise than
quiet; not a step could be heard.
that other persona should take the cue
A large tree which h id fallen and look down upon him and his
leaned with its top acr«rss the ridge work ?
The dignity of labor is easily lost
and projected many fe« t above the when the laborer no longer dignifies it.
greasewood bushes, 1 jump« d on it
Being ashamed of honest toil is to-
and walked toward the point Thus tally opposed to the spirit of American
teaching, which says the man who
elevated alxjve the g« easewood 1 heaves clay out of a ditch for wages
could see what was hidden among is Just as good as the- congressman
it. There a fat cow, just mooing, who is hired by the people.
He or she who does not work at
noticetl me, but before she made something Is a drone in the'soclal hive.
another step, I had sent a bullet,
After watching the procession of
well
dressed people on the streets of
Just then from some cause I lost my
one of our cities and being told that
balance, and down 1 went among the people were all workers an Eng-
the bushes, twenty feet or more llshtnan asked, “But where are your
Gathering myself up I found 1 was leisure classes?”
“Oh,” was the reply, "we call them
not much hurt, so.reloaded mv, rifle, tramps in our country.”
Do you remember the experience of
bill in falling the caps had been lost,
and I could not find one. I made that rich woman In New York who
dressed one of her maids in an expen
my way slowly up to where the elk sive gown, hung Jewels around her
had stood; yes, there she lay dead. neck and introduce«! the young girl at
I was at work cutting, off a hind a social function ns a visiting friend?
The maid, who was handsome and
quarter to take home when the re well educated, was much ndmlre«l
port of several shots seemed to come both fot; her looks and her evident re
from the opposite direction. Alter finement, and at least one young hope
ful of the smart set nearly lost bis
loading myself with lhe heavy hind heart to her on that evening.
There is many a maid or shopgirl
quarter Ijbegan tny trip, as 1 thought,
wh«>
would grace any man's drawing
towards Hoffman’s, but soon found
room ns mistress and queen of his
out that I was lost. Coming to a home.
I
But here is a strange thing which I
a very steep bluff, undauuted I de-
»«•ended; steeper and steeper became wish you might explain.
Most wealthy men who have gone
lhe incline, and only .vith the great up the ladder to wealth and position
est effort I r«irched the Middle Fork by means of hard struggling take
below where the school house now great pride tn the fact thnt they are
self made men. while most of the wom
stands.
en who go up from poverty desire to
Meantime the sun had reappeard conceal their early history.
Why?
, ’
’
an«l thus I found my directions, and
slowly following down sueam I had
The R ecoroeh .ÿi.jo per yea. r
just passed a large rock when some*
gone.
I rope ft wai dficlded the larger ma a
j should lower the • tun Iler one.
As u precHutlou the rope was put
„
Published Every Thurs«lay by the
at tout the lighter tuuu, aud be was
I lowered a little way to a slight shelf
■Recorder iPuloisliiiiE Company.
aud euqh time wus oaslly drawn up
C. E. KoPF. Editor
•
-
-
T. H. KREAMER. Business Manager
by the tuau ut the top.
' So fur so good.
Sut scriptluu, (1 50 per Year it; Advuuce. AdveUisiug Rat« e Mail««
Finally the full descent was made in
Known on Application. Job Printitig a Specialty
the manner agreed upon. But when
Lliteiftd Hi the Butldoli l’ovlolhee hh Second ( lass Mat’er
the small man wauted to get up again
—horrors!—the muu at the top could
j uot pull him.
THURSDAY
June 16. 1910
They had fulled to reckon on the
j weight of setgrai hundred feet of rope.
In the story is a touch of human
itiif ft ft ft *t.t « t ft ft# ft ft.’ft fti.ft ft ft-- ft ft ft Ä ft ftAl^ftJFft ft ft ft ft*' ft v v < v :• {■ *
nature.
A buoiuetis man. fairly prosperous,
o
grows discontented with his slow but *
Lodge and Professional Directory
sure progress toward Independence. *
<$•
*•*
He decides upon a coup. He buys far
>>
beyoud bis ordinary ability to pay. de fc
a Lodges are Requested to Notify this Office on Election of Officers and on »
♦
pending upon a phenomenal trade «
Change of Meeting Night. Cards under this Head are 50c per in., month ♦
which he confidently expects. The
<*
custom does uot come to his counters ft ft -? ft* ft ft ft ft'ft ft# st? ft ft.ft ft!ft ft'ft ftft'ftft ft ft ft ft g. ft# ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft
V %•
as anticifuited. Uuable to meet his
bills, the first thing be kuows be is
Lewah Tribe No. 48, Imp. O. R. M.
down iu the canyon of Debt. He can
Dr K. L Houston
not get up save as the referee iu bank
ELETS every Thursday evening at 8 run at
PHYSICIAN A SUKUE ua
lhe Bandon Wigman. Sojourning chief-,
ruptcy pulls him out.
Oflloe
over Prut Hr ore.
Honm, 9 to
in good standing are cordially invited to attend.
Too much rope.
G E Wilson,
C. S. Hubbard
n.ih.
I
to
I
in.;
7
to
8
in
th<> eve'*i p.
Another man speculates on the board
C. of R.
Sachem.
Niuht «'nilsunfettered
« ¡V.« I » .
of trade. He has made a little mouey
...
og.
In the bucket shop and decides that
MHao rile.
the old humdrum methods of business g ANDON LODGE, No, 130 A. F. A A-
are too slow for him. He wants easy
IDr La B Soron3 . i
M, Stated communications first Saturday
mouey. One day be is at the bottom after the full moon of each month. All Master
DENTIST
of the canyon of Speculation, It was Masons cordially invited.
Office
Over
Vienna Cafe
J. A. Morrison, W. M.
a sudden descent. He can't get out
G.
T.
Treadgold,
Secretary
because of—
Telephone at Office and Home.
T<x» much rope.
LANDON
OREG > 1
I. O. O. F
Still another man forms the habit of
drink. When he gets the habit be is D ANDON LODGE, No. 133, I. O. O. F.
U. T. TKKA IMiOl.ll,
meets every Wednesday evening. Visiting
In danger, but does not realize It.
ATTORNEY
AND COUNSEL •„
Can’t he quit when he wants to? The brothers in good standing cordially invited.
AT
- LAW,
L.
J.
Radley.
N.
G.
rope will pull him out. But the coils
A, Knopp, Secretary
grow heavy, aud when be gets to the
NOTARY PUBLIC
bottom there Is—
Bandon,
-
Orco?».
Rebekah Lodge No. 126.
Too much rope.
EE IS in I. O. O. F. hall every second and |
Ollie«*
With
Bandon
Inv**Miu««'it
< ■»
A married woman indulges in flirta
fourth Tuesdays. Practice nights 1st Tues
tion. There is no danger. It is ouly day of the month; Social evening the 3d Tuesday
Dr. 1-ï- Ivl. Brown.
a harmless diversion. She does uot ot the month. A cordial invitation extended to
Resident Dentist.
mean to be untrue to her husband. It all members in good standing.
is so complimentary to find that "some
Clara Goetz, N. G.
Oihce in Panter Building
soul is twin to yours.” But there Is Belle A. Kolp, Secretary.
Office Hours: 9 to 12 M. I to 5 P. hi.
no stopping place—
Phone,
BANDON, OREGC N
Too much rope.
Knight* of Pythias
T)ELPH1
LODGE.
N
o
.
64.
Knights
of
It may be stated further that the
small man who went down in the
Pythias. Meets every Monday evening
canyon almost starved before they got at Knights hall. Visiting knights invited to
attend.
Win. N. McKay, G. C.
him out.
Attorney and Counselor-at-La
B. N. Harrington K. of R. S.
Some who go down that way never
COQU1LLK. - ORE
get out. There is too much rope.
C. IL BARROW
Woodmen of the World
A SILLY WOMAN.
A Chicago wife is trying to get a di
vorce on these grounds:
Iler husband, she says in her com
plaint. “does not measure up to the
standard of heroism so evident in the
leading male figures of novels in size,
grace or daring.”
Ehieu!
If this woman should succeed on
these allegations, when* would the rest
of married munkiud appear?
Very few average husbands are able
to measure up to the heroes in the
pages of Meredith. Nicholson and Mc
Cutcheon either as to “size, grace or
daring."
Of course the Chicago wife has
merely read herself into vapid imbe
cility, but she Is nevertheless n pro
nounced type of other women who com
pare their everyday husbands with the
armored knights who. with caparison
ed horses and nodding plumes, amble
through the pages of Booth Tarking
ton and Walter Scott.
Pitiful?
It is pitiful not only from the side of
the honest, striving busband, but piti
ful because the woman who pines for
a hero in jingling harness is not able
to recognize the real husband hero at
her side.
There is a heroism in doing one's
plain duty that Is worth more than a
library of book gallantry.
Looking for heroes?
You will not find them in the velvet
doublet and silken hose of “The Pris
oner of Zenda.” but in the ready made
garments advertised ou spacial sale in
the uewspapers.
Many an undersized, round shoulder
ed. hardworking husband is living in
dally martyrdom for the sake of his
family. And the pathetic part of ft is
nobody, least of all bls family, is able
to Bee the sacrifice.
And scarcely does the victim himself
realize, lie does not complain and
would laugh at being called a hero.
Heroism?
How is the rescue of a fair maiden
from some high castle tower to be
compared with the daily grind of a de
voted man toiling like the slnve of a
galley to give his wife position or com
forts or working himself into bls
grave to give his children such an
«•ducation as was denied him when a
boy?
Romance?
It Is the romance of reality!
Stupid and blind, the woman who
sighs for “grace and daring" In her
husband and who cannot see tn his
daily self abnegation and heroic striv
ing the beauty and the grace of true
chivalry.
OPEN YOUR WINDOWS'
Some very interesting experiments
are being made at the State Agricul
tural college of Missouri.
For instance:
There are in the whole world at
present Just seventeen cows that give
700 pounds of butter or more per year.
Five of these seventeen are at this col
lege.
How those cows must be pampered,
you say. And you have visions of
warm, sanitary stalls iu a beautiful
barn.
That is where you are mistaken. All
the winter long, except during very
severe storms, they spend the day iu
the open Helds.
Another experiment:
This one was made in fattening beef
cattle. One bunch was put into a
shed entirely open nt one end; one
bunch was put into the open; a third
bunch was kept iu a tine, warm barn
The cattle In the open fields, staying
there day and night, thrived best. Of
course they ate more food to combat
the cold, but they gave more beef per
pound of ftstl than the others.
What 1 want to emphasize is this:
If the healthiest, thriftiest cattle are
brought up in the open fields, how can
human beings, who need oxygen Just
as much as cows do. hope to thrive by
cooping themselves up and keeping the
fresh air out?
The point of the observation Is In
the answer.
The other morning, in order to catch
an early train, I walked downtown.
In traversing the streets for nearly
two miles I kept a lookout for open
windows.
How many? Just two!
Most of these people not only kept I
their windows tightly closed during
the night, but worked all day in closed
offices or shops.
And lest they should get a breath of
pure oxygen they rode to their work
in street cars containing foul air su
perheated by a hot stove.
They know better, most of them.
One could almost wish that persons
who so deliberately violate tills re
quirement of well being might be tak
en by civilization and forced Into the
HIS BEST FRIEND
open air ns the Missouri college con
“I am going to lose all the friends
trols Its cattle.
Some wait until they get tuberculo I ever had. but Pittsburg will be clean
sis and then woo the pure air for a w hen I get through.”
cure. And Nature Is kind enough,
These words, uttered by District At
even when her free offertags of oxy-
gen have Iwn spurned, to come with torney William A. Blakely, ought to be
appropriately framed and hung in the
healing In her wings.
Is there a lesson In all this for /on. office of every public prosecutor In the
land.
misguided one?
"I shall do my duty If my best friend
Think of the experiments with the
deserts
me.” That’s the stuff of which
Missouri prize cattle, and—
strong men are made
Open your windows!
It hurts to lose one’s friends
It hurts to the core to And out that
THE WEIGHT OF THE ROFE.
your friends do not meaaure up to their
A large man and a small man want high calling of loyalty.
ed to get nt the bottom of a cauyon to
And It takes a heave sou) to go on
look for gold.
alone.
The walls were precipitous, and the
But what If the cowards of the eon»
only way down was by means of a
I
Office over Skeels' Store
■
•
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
OREGON
Office and residence in Banter residence property
next door to Bijou 1 heatre
GF W ZR.KA
Attorney 5 nd Counselor-at-Law
Notary Public
U. S. Land Contests a
DR J. ID KELLEY
Practice in
Specialty.
Physician and Surgeon
all Courts
Office in Room No. I I,
Bandon
-
Laird-Lowe Bluilding
-
Other in Donald Charleston home, opposite
Presbyterian church, Bandon, Oregon
Oregon
BANK OF BANDON
KiMIOX
OKEf.OX
CupiDil. *23.000.
BOARD OF
DIRECTORS:
J. L. Kroncnberg, President. J. Denholm,
President; F. J. Fahy, Cashier; Frank Flam, T. P. Hanly.
Vice
A general banking business transacted ar d customers given every accommodation con
sistent with safe and conservative banking
The American National Bank, of San Francisco, Calif;
CORRESPONDENTS:
Merchants National Bank. Portland, Oregon; The Chase National Bank, of New York.
THE HARDWARE MAN
BRIDGE A BEACH Stoves, Ranges and Heaters have in them so many excellencies
that they are now acknowledged the greatest sellers on the coast and they are growing
in favor every year.
We have the exclusive agency in Bandon for these household
and office necessities, and price* range exceedingly modest in either case.
TINNING AND PLUMBING A SPECIALTY.
Our Assortment of Hardware. Tinware and lodged Tools is Most Complete.
IMPROVED
FAST-TIME SERVICE
S. S. BREAKWATER
PORTLAND
20
HOURS
COOS BAY
COLUMBIA RIVER BV BAVLICiHT
Leave« Portland (Ainsworth Dock) 9 a m June 3-8-13-18-23-28.
June
Coot Bay on Tide
5-IO-I5-2O-25-3O
Confirm Sailing Through C, M. SPENCER, Agent Bandon
Hotel Gallier
Ratçs $1.00 to $2.00 per day.
week or month.
Special rates by
Sample Room in Connection.
Bandon
Oregon
•
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«
W. ItONMITEK
BANDON
••
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•
E.
muuity are wrong and you are right?
9
•
residence. Main >-ln
Office Phone, Mam 335;
Seaside Camp No. 212 meets eveiy first and
third 1 hursdays of each month. V ¡siting
neighbors cordially invited.
R. W. Bullard, C. C.
J. N. Hosking, Clerk.
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*