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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1910)
School Credit for th« Ferfar* •'ips must be prepared lor children Tctil hourr »oru of prvparatiofi. mi ! •—. horse —-. according to age so thht th. child Kind of corti planted Variety nariht mance of Home Duties. will not be asked to d<» too much, THURSDAY JUNE 23. 1910 Seed procured from —. (By I.. R. AidertUn.) lor i must be dearly recognized that Quantity of »tolled corn used for seed chi'dren must have time lur real Number of ears tested ——. Number of V ft ft £ ft ft Vi kernels from each >—. * I phy. The required task* m is: no» That civilization is founded i n the Method of testing —. * Number of ears which proved satisfac be too arduous, yet th» y must be Lodge and Professional Directory * tory — home, all will agree. The school real tasks They inu-t not be tasks Number of hills planted ----- ; date ----- , * 19—. should lea real helper of the home that will put extra work on parents ♦ Date when first hill came up -----. Lodges are Requested to Notify this Office on Election of Officers and on How can the schoo! help the home? except in the matter of instruction Number of hills falling to come up ----- ; why ---- . Change of Meeting Night. Cards under this Head are 50c per in., mouth How can it help the»home establish and observation. They may well Date of each cultivation and implement used -----. k * ft ft *,* ft ftftÄftttft ft ft*ft *•> * ft ft ft ft * ft ft •> ♦ t e* * •> ft ft . habits in the children of systematic call for the care of animals, and A Suggestion For Juvenile Grange Total hours’ cultivation, self -----, horse periormance of heme dut’es, so that should include garden work lor both Workers. Data of hoeing crop -, 19—. Hours' Lew ah Tribe No. 48. Imp. O. R. M. work ---- . Er H. L Houston they will Le efficient and joyful home boys and girls. Credit in school for Number of stalks with two ears ----- i - hysiciax x sriAiEub EETS every Thursday evening at 8 run at helpers? One way is for the school home industrial work (with the par Form of Organization For Corn Grow Number with no ears ---- . the Bandon 'A igrnan. Sojourning chief-, Number of hills with three stalks - Office over Drugstore. ii.iura, !• to ; ing Contest Showing Outline For to take into account home industrial ents’ consent) sh >uld count as much in good standing are cordially invited to attend. two ; one ---- . a.tu. 1:30 to 4, i in. ; 7 to h in the evening. Constitution, Enrollment Record, De G E Wilson, C. S. Hubbard Date of first tassels appearing — , 19 — work anti honor it. It is my con as any one study in school. C. of R. Sachem. tails For Growing Crop and Rules ears ---- , 19—, Night calls itiisv ered from < i.iev. Date of any frosts on the crop ---- . 19—. To add interest to the work, exhi viction, based upon'careful and con For Contestants. HANIMIN. • • • OI11..O S Date of cutting and shocking -----, 19—, M a Mimic tinuous observation, that the school bilions should be given at stated Date of husking -----. 19—. ISpectal Correspondence.) g ANIKIN LODGE, No. 130 A. F. A A Date of selecting ears for exhibit ---- . can greatly increase the interest the times so that all may ltarn from each Perhaps nothing speaks more encour 19-. Dr I_i. F Sorensen M, Stated communications first Saturday child will take in home industrial other and the best be the model for agingly for the future of farm life Number of ears first selected -----; weight after the full moon of each n.onth. All Master DENTIST In pounds -----. work by making it a subject of con . <11. The School Fairs tn Yamhill, than the new interest which is lieing Care of selected ears after husking -----. Masons cordially invited. J. A. ’Vorrison, W. M. Office Over Vienna Cafe sideration at school. A teacher Polk, Benton, Lane, Wasco and Inspired in our boys and girls in those Weight of ten ears at time of exhibit G. T. Treadgold. Secretary Telephone at Office and Home. things which pertain to farm activi Was the selecting done without any talked of sewing, and the girls Crook Coi nties, together with the ties. Boys and girls’ agricultural clubs other bANDON . - OREGO 4 person present? ----- . i. 4». 4>. r sewed. She talked of ironing, ami school and home industrial work and the Juvenile granges of the Order Was all the work of production done by g ANDON LODGE. No. 133. I. O. O. F. O. T. ItiEAIit.oi II. the contestant (except plowing, weighing they wanttd to learn to iron neatly. done at Eugene, have convinced me of Patrons of llusbaudry are evidence and hauling the crop)?-----. meets every Wednesday evening. Visiting ATTORNEY AND COI N>b I.. *i number of hours worked ----- . brothers in ¿o.»d standing cordially invited. She talked of working with tools, most thoroughly that these plans are of a new order of things. In the agri Total Total number of hours horse worked AT - LAW, L. J. Radley, N. G. and both girls and boys made bird practicable, and that school work cultural clubs this interest in farm Value ot own work at A, Knopp, Secretary NOTARY PUBLIC cents per houses, kites, and other things of and home work, school play and matters very often has its beginning hour. $----- . in competitive contests for prlz«»s of . Bandon, - Orfgen. I ■ Value of horse’s work at ----- cents per Rebekah Lodge No. 126. interest. A school garden was home play, and love lor parents anc one form or another, and sometimes hour. $----- . Oflieo With Bandon I hv » n ( iiihii < TS in 1.0. 0. F. hall every second and of ground rent for crop at planned in a city, and o e of the respect for teacher and fillo..-pupil, the clubs have been an outgrowth of per Value fourth Tuesdays. Practice nights 1st Tues acre. 9- day of the month; Social evening the 3d Tuesday Dr. £1- Ivi. Brown. Value of fertilizer used, t----- . boys was employed to plow the land. can besi be fostered by a more com such contests, and so it is that we Value ot salable crop at ----- cents per ot the month. A cordial invitation extended to Resident Dentist. have clubs fet corn growing, potato Seventy five children were watching plete co operation between schoo bushel, t-----. (Weigh good ears when all members in good standing. growing, fruit culture, live stock study, drawn from field and count 70 pounds to Clara Goetz, N. G. Office in Panter Building for him to come with the team. At and home, so that the whole child is the bushel.) home culture, ete. Belle A. Kolp, Secretary. Profit on the season's work. I ----- . taken into account at all times. last he came driving around the cor 1 Office Hour»: 9 to 12 M. I to 5 P. M. The first state wide movement of this RULES FOR CONTESTANTS Phone, BANDON, OREGON ner. He could manage a team ¡He ; Knlqlitis of Pythias kind began about 1898 in New York Each contestant Is allowed to make only ------- «AÄJ--------- rjELPHI LODGE, No. 64, Knight» oi drove into the lot, and a hundred under the auspices of the College of one exhibit entry each year. Each contestant must be regularly en Pythias. Meets every Monday evening Agriculture of Cornell university as a rolled In the club before beginning work. and fifty eyes looked with admiration (\ R. BARROW Another Paper Railroad at Knights hall. Visiting knights invited to Each contestant must be under ---- development from its nature study attend. Wm. N. McKay, G, C. at the boy who could unhitch front I , Attorney and Counselor-at L: w years of age lessons This work has now gone over B. N. Harrington K. oi R. S. Each contestant for corn prizes must the sled and hitch on to the pl>>w, the whole state and has taken a vari prepare his ground, test seed, plant, cul ICOQUILLE. - ORE and then as he “man fashion”—lines | The Coos Bay Times says: “The ety of forms, such as corn growing, tivate. cut and husk crop, all without as Woodmen of the World Office over Steels’ Store sistance from any other person, (He may over one shoulder and under one I Transcontinental, Atlantic & Cot s potato growing, fruit growing and have assistance in plowing, fertilizing and Office Phone. Main 335; residence. Man 346 Sleasidc Camp No. 212 meets evety Hist arc hauling crop and should have in weigh- arm—drove the big team around the Bay Railroad Company is the lates garden contests, witli special prizes to Ing It.) third Thursdays of each month. \ ¡siting contestant on essays shall write neighbors cordially invited. die . i:. w. iionmth ; field, all could leel the chi d.en’s ad-1 project launched for Coos Bay, and girls for the best work in sewing not Each more than — words, and all must R. W. Bullard, C. C . and breadmaking. The Cornell Farm carefully fill the blanks on "How the crop J. N. Hosking, Clerk. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON miration for the boy who could if the expectancies of the local par Boys and Girls’ club now has a mem was grown.” do something worth while. I have BANDON OREGON Each contestant’s record and essay bership of 75,000. lu Nebraska this must t>e Indorsed, with his exhibit, by his Olfice and residence in Panier resides«: • property seen a girl who could make good I ties who are identified with it are cluli work lias been very thoroughly district O W REA. teacher as evidence of her con next door to Bijou Thcatic bread or set a table nicely, get the attained, it will start construction organized, and nearly every county is fidence that it is all the product of hi» Attorney nd Counselor-at-Law own work. In the movement. Early in Notary Public real admiration of her schoolmates. long before any others do to Coos included All exhibits are to be the property ot DR J. D KELLEY tiie fall a local contest is held in each ----------- at the end of the exhibit. Bay. The company, it is announced, U. S. Land Contests a Specialty. Practice in The school can help make better school, the prize winning exhibits and J. W. DARROW. Physician and Surgeon all Courts home builders. It can help by in- . starts with a paid*up capital of $250,- the best three essays being then taken Office in Room No. II, l-aird-Lowe Bluilding ooo, and an authorized capital to a township show, then to a county of Oilice in Donald Charleston home, oppoa.e dustrial work done in the school, but RELIEF ASSOCIATIONS, Bandon - • Oregon exhibit and finally to the state coru $5.000,900. Presbyterian church, Bandon. Oregon as that is already receiving consider growing and corn cooking coutest at Lincoln. This meeting includes a A Good Word For Grange Fire Insur ation by the press and in a few ance Companies. grand "corn banquet,” which gathers schools, I shall not in this short arti The New York Farmer has this to from 2,000 to 3.000 boys and girls from DAMES AND DAUGHTERS. say about one of the several co-opera cle tieat of it. over the state. The plan I have in mind will cost Similar work in Ohio under the di tive features of grange work: A New York woman, the wife of The Patrons of Husbandry protec rection of the agricultural extension Martin W. Littleton, n lawyer, is mak O1IH.OX BAXIMfX no money, will take but little school tive tire relief associations seem to department of the State university has ing an effort to siilxstituie the Bible for time, and can be put into operation j bridge in society. < H|>it tl, «25.000. reached practically all the rural boys have solved easily, economically and ’ in every part of the state at once. It i Mme. Marie Kraus -Bolte tins Just and girls in tiie schools of the state, satisfactorily the problem of fire insur ance for farmers. The records show BOARD OF DIRECTORS: J. L. Kronenberg, President. J. Denholm, Vice will create a demand for expert in eidebrated at her home in New York lu Illinois this work began under the that, even in years when numerous President; F. J. Fahy, Cashier; Frank Flam, T. P. Hanly. initiative of certain county superin her fiftieth anniversary lu kindergarten struction later on. It is to give tires swell the total of loss, the asso work She was ii pupil of Frau Fah tendents of schools and the farmers’ ciations give cheaper and better Insur A general banking business transacted and customers given every accommodation con school credit for industrial work renheit. Institutes. The exhibits of these young sistent with safe and conservative banking ance than the regular insurance compa people are frequently the most inter- done at home. The mother and Miss Marjory Snyder, a student nt CORRESPONDENTS: The American National Bank, of San Francisco, Calif; esting at our county fairs and state nies. The farmers in these associations father are to be recognized as teach Wellesley college. Inis determined to fairs ns well. when they pay assessments are con Merchants National Bank, Portland, Oregon; The Chase National Bank, of New York. her living from the soil Imme The work which is being done by tributing directly to the restoration of ers, and the school teacher put into j earn diately after her graduation she will these boys and girls' agricultural clubs the burned properties. They know that the position of one who cares about buy n farm on Ixing Island, where she is Just the work that the Juvenile if they pay $20,000 for a year’s losses the habits and tastes of the whole I proposes to grow vegetables and breed granges are doing or should do, aud in $19,000 of that sum will be applied to the Juvenile grange even more can be the cost of administration. In the reg child. Then the teacher and the valuable s«o< k Lady Marjorie Manners. eldest accomplished. These Juvenile granges ular companies their paid in money parents will have much in common’ daughter of the Duke of Rutland, is a are constituted of boys and girls un would be spent in some way unknown Every home has the equipment for j very clever society actress and has der fourteen years of age whose par to them, and they would not know in industrial work and has somebody taken part In many recent charitable ents are members of the subordinate case they lost property by fire what entertainments nt the court. She they would get out of the companies who uses it with more or less skill palms. writes a little, goes racing, acts, grange, and at every meeting they until the companies had exhausted ev have their literary programs, all be BRIDGE A BEACH Stoves, Ranges and Heaters have in them so many excellencies The school has made so many de j sings ami frequently finds time lu be ing under the supervision of a matron ery trick ¡kissible in cutting down the that they are now acknowledged the greatest sellers on the coast and they are growing amount to be paid. In the Patron as appointed by the subordinate grange. mands on the home that the parents tween to play the laidy Bountiful. tn favor every year. We have the exclusive agency in Bandon for these household sociation the actual loss, promptly and Mme. Falsey-Launiennler is the first It would appear to be quite practica and office necessities, and prices range exceedingly modest in either case. have, in some cases felt that all the woman to lie appointed a mail carrier ble for these Juvenile granges to in fairly measured, is the basis of the time of the child must be given tc-1 In Prance. Her route is In the little corporate the work of a corn growing assessment, and the readjustment is TINNING AND PLUMBING A SPECIAL! Y. the school. But an important thing town of Chapelle-sur-Aveyroti. and it club or others of similar nature into short and simple, Farmers who are Our Assortment of Hardware. Tinware and Edged Tools is Must Complete. own general plan of work, adopt not in the Patron associations should that the child needs along with is said that If she performs her duties their satisfactorily other women will get ing. so far as circumstances would learn what these excellent organiza- school work is established habits of simPar places. Mme. F’aisey-l.nnmen- permit, the rules and regulations of tions are doing to tnake tire insurance home making, and these habits can tiler makes her rounds on a bicycle the boys and girls’ clubs relating to on country property safe, sane, plain, these contests. The following gen fair, square, equitable and economical. IMPROVED FAST-TIME SERVICE come only from real home making. supplied by the government eral form of organization as given in What one does depends as much farmers' bullet in No. 385 of the Uuited The Grange Institute. The Writers. States department of agriculture may As a popularizer of grange work and upon habit as upon knowledge. an excellent way to Impress upon tiie The criticism that is most ofte made In addition to Rudyard Kipling’s oth be adopted, with modifications: CONSTITUTION. community that a grange is a strong er accomplishments he is a first clnss 20 u|)on industrial work at school is gardener. Article 1. Name of club. factor in improving local farming con Article 2. Oblects of club. HOURS ditions, says State Lecturer Taber of that it is so different from kthe work ( Miss Fanny Crosby, the blind poet Article s. Membership done at home that it does not put ' and hyinn writer, has Just celebrateti Article 4. Officers. (A president. one Ohio, a grange or independent insti COLUMBIA RIVER BV DAVI.IOHT vice president, a secretary-treasurer and tute supported by the grange will f the child into that sympathetic rela her ninetieth birthday, Aside from an advisory committee.) prove effective. Where there is no Leaves Portland (Ainsworth Dock) 9am June 3-8-13-18 23-28. Coos Bay < n I d<- her blindness, Miss Crosby is still in Article 6. Duties of members. I tion with the home, which, after all, possession of all her faculties. regular institute hi the community Article 6. Duties of officers. June 5-IO-I5-2O-25-3O Section 1. The advisory committee shall the grange officials, by the expendi is for him and the home the most Albert Bigelow Pnine. himself a hu arrange for all public contests and exhib ture of a little effort and money, can Confirm Sailing Through C, M. SPENCER, Agent Bandon important thing in the w jrld. Juve niorist of no small caliber, has been its. the procuring and awarding of prizes, arrange a program that will interest an the sending of letters and circulars of In nile institutions find that they must Mark Twain's Boswell for many years, formation and tho reporting of statistics and instruct By securing some out doing for him what Traubel did for and other information to the state or be careful not to institutionalize th»’ | Whitman, recording every passing ganizer. side talent to represent the grange the result will usually be strengthening to thought and comment and putting in child to the extent that he may not 1 When the constitution has been tiie membership by bringing in seven shape tile humorist's autobiography. adopted membership should be deter be contented in a real home. In my | At a recent meeting of the Society mined by the collection of sigued applicants. A grange that holds two opinion it will be a great thing furl of Authors, London, Maurice Hewlett or three one day open meetings or in blanks previously distributed showing stitutes each year reports growth in the child to want to help his parents directed attention to (be fact that data as given iu the following form: Interest mid membership. An open Thomas Hardy, recently elected, was do the task that needs 10 be done: ENROLLMENT RECORD. meeting or two with a program of gen tint the third president the society has Date ---- . 19 — . and to want to do it in the best pos I bad in its entire career. Mr. Ilardy's 1 wish to join the ----- County ----- club eral agricultural Interest will always sible way The reason that so many predecessors were Tennyson »•nd and hereby promise to follow all the prove worthy of trial by any grange. rules of membership and contests country boys are now the leading George Meredith. (Signed)----------- . A New Hampshire Grange. Age at nearest birthday Date of men of affairs is because early in life McClary grange. New Hampshire, re birth ---- . 19—. Headed Him Off. cently celebrated its twenty-fifth anni they had the responsibility of home "Sir, I have grown gray in your Township -----. 8chool district ——. versary. The records show that this thrust upon them. I am sure that service,” began the old bookkeeper pre Teacher ---- ---- . grange has had 302 members, 500 liminary to asking for a raise. My postoffice address -----, the motto “Everybody Helps’’ is a meetings and an average attendance "I was intending to speak to you HOW THE CROP WAS GROWN. of 25 There nre now 17C members. good one about that” responded the head of the Grown by ---- . Postotfice address ----- . Twenty-five couples have been mar But, one says, “How c’n it be firm. "Get a bottle of hair dye. Oth Area of pint in square rods —. (Not ried from this grange. 50 have died, erwise the Junior partner will be want less than ---- acre.) brought about? How can the school ing to replace you with a younger 30 have moved out of the state, and Kind of sol! (loam. sand, clay) ----- , give credit for industrial work done ma».”— Kansas City Journal. Kind of crop grown on it the year be- 20 of the 23 charter members are still fore ---- living. at home?” This may be accom Kind of crop grown on it the second Appropriate. before ---- . plished by printed slips asking the "I wnnt to look at some canes.” said year Echoes from Des Moines Indicate Kind and amount of fertilizer used -----. that the question of representation Cost or value of fertilizer -----. homes to take account of the work a magnificent young man to the shop Date of plowing ---- . Hours required, isn’t settled satisfactorily to all yet. that the child does at home under keeper. "and I’m In a great hurry. »• 1 self —. horse ---- . (Count double time says the National Stockman. "Yes. str; yea. air.” responded the for two horses. 1 the instruction of the home, and ex shopkeeper, Depth of plowing (In inches) -----. very much flurried. "Here, Answering a question, n master can plaining th.it credit will be given this James.” to shop assistant, “show this .Additional preparation of the ground: (a) How many times disked —. whan -----. bold that offle« until bls successor la gentleman some hurricanes. ” — London work on the school record. These (b) How many times narrowed —, whon THE GRANGE BANK OB BANKON THE HARDWARE MAN S. S. BREAKWATER PORTLAND COOS BAY The Coming 4th of July Celebration in Bandon ——. (c) How otherwise prepared —. (d) lutatisi Will Eclipse Anything of The Kind Ever Held in Coos County