Valley record. (Ashland, Jackson County, Or.) 1888-1911, November 12, 1891, Image 6

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    THE GREATER NEW YORK
7 RAUH
OUT A CHICKEirr
A'. ivì AA j>HA no«/’’ tA
* *
_______ ( ■ I
:■■■ >!«*>.
Neither will
proclamations
on dea<
..............-i : --. a h
...u.A
. _ .
walls revive languishing trade.
,
ADVERTISING
Is thp. great
a
INK-UBA TOR TH3M32Hoan^
FOR HATCHING :
OUT BUSINESS.
The RECORD is b the medium that the People Read.
’
■ i ■ ■ 1 ■ > I - hi >•> ’
TAINS OVER 3,500,000 PEOPLE.
'
Second City in the World.
,r
[Special Correspondence.]
N ew Y
jitw
Y ork , oct.
Oct. ai.
2». —
—That
rnat Mew
New
Words by TENNYSON.
ROAD BUILDING.
.
Music by DOLORES.
, y
¿_4_5
York
xorx
largest city on the western continent is
known to every one, but there are other
New York facts of which many Ameri­
cans are Ignorant. The central fact has
been stated thus: There are more New
Yorkers living outside of the city proper
than in it. This were some time a para­
dox, but the eleventh census makes it
very plain.
Another, and perhaps a better, way of
stating it would be thus: If all the people
who live in the metropolitan district and
make New York their place of business
and pleasure could be counted in it, as is
done in London, New York would rank
next to London among the world’s cities,
and not very far behind it. The circle
of cities and suburbs which are prac­
tically parts of New York is divided by
rivers, bays, ridges and “flats,” leaving
them in different counties and states,
and requiring engineering of the very
'highest order to combine them in one
municipality.
The Hudson is fully ten times as large
as the Thames at Westminster bridge,
East river is many times as large as the
Thames at its western entrance to Lon­
don and in all the London vicinity there
is no elevation to compare with Hoboken (
heights. Yet the people of Brooklyn, of
Staten Island's towns, Jersey City, New­
ark and the Orangee are every whit as
much New Yorkers as the people of
Chelsea, Kensington and Greenwich are
Londoners.
The annexed table, therefore, presents
the real population of the American me­
tropolis. The city hall in New York is
taken as a center and a circle drawn
around it with a radius of thirty miles.
Within that radius the people live on
the business done in New York city, and
about 600,000 of them are in the city
ever}’ day. Trains leave their stations
every half hour or so of mornings and
return in the same order of evenings.
Soliciting Celestial Customers
• cf L i :uess.
It is equally unwise
and imprudent to
Fly in the Face of Pedestrians a
with a cloud of 6x9 Dodgers. They only en- S-v v
cumber the earth and enrage the populace.
FLYERS IN WALL STREET,
or any other street, are not nnlv unwise but
wicked, and carry their own punishment
Time Around the World.
The time required for a journey around
the earth by a man walking day and
night without rent would be 428 days;
an express train, 40 days; sound, at a
medium temperature, 32, hours; cannon
ball, 21} hours; light, a little over one-
tenth of a second; electricity, passing
over a copper wire, a little Jess than one-
tentibof a second.—St. Louis Republic.
ALWAYS ROOM AT THE TOP!
1. With
2. I
^-3J q« l 3
F teal
curve
bout,
lawns
by
my banks I
and in
an
and grass - y
By man-
y a a
Fith V here
I sfide
by
p.ots,
bios - som
ha • zel
fai - low ;
sail - ing ;
00V- era ;
4
man - y
y trout. And
me-nots. That
move
gleam, I
snow - y
moon and
mur - mur
make
man -y
chat-ter,
draw
out
the netted
sil - ver
by my
sun - beams dance
wa - ter
break
shin - gly
bars,
them all
a-gain
a - long, and
I curve aid
may come,
and men
and mal-low.
a gray-ling,
py lov-ers.
there
hap
A - mong my skim ming
Up - on
me as I
In bram - bly wil der
flake
stars
swal-lows;
trav - el,
□ess - es;
gainst my
ovo the
o__
loi - ter ’’round
shal - lows ;
en grav - el ;
my cress
the brimming
flow, etc.,
flow, etc..
may go.
£?
cv - cr.
go
op
in which to express your wants
and proclaim the advantages of
doing business with your estab­
lishment.
Vigorous advertising in the VALLEY RECORD brings
in the shekels.
for the man who knows how
to get there.
Call and see’our new stock of display advertising cuts.
AN ABALONE’S SECRET. ; of C^oqamex ou rafes, a.:d
...
for
ev
I:-5 *?• -5
I
iu me circuit
of se> enty leagues sneountered hardships
and coqam^ed weeks. And the timber
IN AVGUST, 1890.
was brougut over by Chief Mann, an
Under the afternoon sun the restless
aborigine given to cruising on a float of
waters of San Francisco bay flung dia­
logs and tules, who alone knew the
monds and opals at such human eyes as
winds and currents of the bay. It was
chanced to look on them.
but a matter cf a day now to sail over
Two young people who strolled down
for the timber and return with it
to the Presidio beach, however, had no ;
Corporal Pedro Sanohex had made all
glances to spare for anything so com- '
the voyages with the command ante and
monplace as diamonds and opals. For
rated now as a superior navigator, his
Lieutenant Andeijson was gazing iDto
marine fame being dear to him. Don
the depths <>f the great, soft black eyes
Luis had swollen him with pride by
of Miss Pa .'lita ue Sola, and Miss Pa-
placing him in command for thia one
chita de Sola was looking up into the
trip. Hi6 enlargement became perilous
ardent blue ones of Lieutenant Ander­
when Lieutenant Echeandia suddenly
son. She seemed to like it.
proposed to Senonta Pachita that they
The tall young soldier with the fair
make the voyage, and ehe, being young
hair, broad shoulders and square, manly
and thoughtless, consented.
Saxon face, ha.I not been long released
Brave Corporal Sanchez sailed the
from tlie hard work and harder restraint
Méjico superbly as far as Angel island,
of West Point, .■•.mi in his new freedom
descanting eloquently on the art and
of army life went at things with an I
mystery of seaiuauship. Issuing to his
energy of desire that was quite irresist- 1 . crew of three soldiers sundry orders in
ible. Miss Pachita de Sola found it so, ' a commanding voice of thunder, he pre­
as had half a dozen other girls wlthip as
pared to pass the point. . ;
many months. It was a wfiolly^serious
business with the lientenaiil this time, 1 Alas, an eastern win«’, came whistling
through the treack«r>ns P.accoon striit,
though.
and iu spite of all Coriwral Pedro's sea­
. He haij. fie«^iJu California bQt.a few manship the Méjico was caught and
weeks, and- this daughter, of an ancient j whirled round and round and hu«M
though decayed Spanish -family, as with the racing tide toward the Golden
American in.education and Thought as Gate.
himself, was -ravishing in her ngvelty.
Señorita Pachita de Sola screamed,
Altogether -feminine Pachita; ~ at one but there was no help sent down from
moment ciiildfi^ce an^ clinging; the next heaven, even on the appeal of those
worldly',’ witiy5, and mocking; then, with I pretty lips, grown qqite White, or of that
the lids hMTn^'T^oSé’TovI^’^big eyes of 1
pale face, with. >ta big black eyes wild
hers, her Whole aspect suggesta<lc-»spe- With terror.
cially to a ilViile’iAi^’’(^it& ^ú^dfneans
Lieutenant Jnau de Echeandia swore
to marry—Abilities ortendertiess un­ —swore at Corporal Pedro Sanchez; bnt
speakable.
profanity, thongh frequently an adjunct
No wonder that when Miss Pachita ( to navigation, is no* of use in imparting
permitted Lieutenant Anderson to gaze knowledge thereof.
down into her eyes and returned an an­
So out to sea they drifted, far out, al­
swering look, giving a little sigh, too, most to the Farallones.
his bead went after his heart, which had
For eight days and nights they were
been lost for an eternity—that is to say, as a phip on the waves, the Raccoon
for two terrific, sleepless weeks.
guests having snapped the mast and
But the young lady was discreet, and, carried away the sail. Corporal Pedro,
gently clasping his fingers, removed them famous as a mariner, had forgotten to
from her waist, saying demurely:
bring oars.
“Don’t be foolish, John. Somebody
Senorita de Sola gave herself up to
may be looking.”
Mary, mother of God; as did the cor­
This, in a city of 300,000 inhabitants poral and the three men in the bow, who
and in full sight of the ever vigilant passed the hours in shuddering prayer.
garrison, struck John as being not im­
But Lieutenant Juan had a soldier’s
probable.
soul.
Instant in action, as became a soldier,
On the second day he drew his sword,
Lieutenant Anderson executed a flank and at its point the men yielded such
movement 011 a sand bank and seated food and water as the boat contained.
Miss de Sola in its lee, on a large, water These he bestowed where his body wae
whitened, sun dried log of driftwood. between them and recapture.
Then this consummate tactician repeat­
The corporal Pedro, though a fool and
ed the original attack with entire suc­ unfortunate, was loyal. With him the
cess.
lieutenant kept watch and watch, and
“Pachita, oh, my darling,” breathed through all those awful eight days and
the ecstatic lieutenant, straining her to nights (by my pen, it is true that the
his 6ide and immediately showing a dis­ I boat was gone that long, as you may
position to put a knee upon the beaoh.
read in Hittell’s “History of California”)
“Well. John?” and the 6mile of love the Senorita de Sola wanted for neither
and gratified vanity that smote his eyes food nor drink, and the delicacy of Lieu­
blinded them.
tenant Juan would have brought tears
“Name the day, oh, Pachita; I cannot of gratefulness to any woman’s eyes.
live till you dol”
He did wonders—as tradition has hand­
Pachita pursed her full, red lips, puck­ ed down—with cloaks and coats and
ered the midnight eyebrows, and con­ stray bits of rope to cabin the lady.
sidered profoundly, digging deep into
On the eighth day—sincere prayer is
the sand with his cane the while.
ever answered—a blessed wind sprang
“The day, my own love—the day,” up from the west and, tide assisting,
gasped John.
blew the Méjico back through the Gold­
“Dear me,” Miss de Sola exclaimed en Gate. The cruising chief Marin, on
suddenly, “what a beautiful shellt”
his tule float, was sent by Providence to
“Damn the shell!” cried Lieutenant tow her to the Presidio wharf, where
Anderson, reaching for what she bad the commandant and the cheering gar­
nnearthed, to cast it wrathfully out rison awaited the return of the lost to
among the unnotioed diamonds and life—the ones Baved by an unquestiona­
opals.
ble miracle. The padres bore the lesson
But he was restrained in wonder.
home in many a sermon.
As the Senorita de Sola rose In the
in august , 1825.
The same sun was enriching the danc­ stem to disembark she tottered from
ing waters of the same bay with dia­ weakness and agitation. Lieutenant
monds and opals. A young couple who Juan stretched out an arm Mid pre­
strolled down to the Presidio beach ad­ served her from a ducking. She gave a
mired the view very much, and Señorita little scream, not at the public embrace,
Pachita de Sola had no occasion to re­ but because in throwing up her small
mind the lieutenant by her side that brown hands she had broken a slender
somebody might be looking. Lieutenant gold chain that bung about her neck—
Juan de Echeandia would have liked broken it, and over into the deep water
greatly to coil his arm about that slim it went, together with a locket that had
waist, but did not dare, though there rested on her virgin bosom.
“My dears,” said Commandante Don
was only a small and sleepy garrison,
and no city at all behind them—only Luis Antonio Arguello, when they had
the padres and .Indians at the mission refreshed themselves at bis quarters and
Dolores, far over the sand hills, and a related their adventures—“my dears, I
cabin or two down at the embarcadero, think that under all the circumstances
entirely out of sight. Pachita de Sola the best thing you can do is to get mar­
was niece of Commandante Don Luis ried, and at once.”
“I'm with you,” exclaimed Lieutenant
Antonio Arguello, and though he, Lieu­
tenant Juan de Echeandia, was a nephew Juan de Echeandia in Spanish, opening
,
of Don Jose Maria, of the same name, his arms.
And Senorita Pachita de Sola crept
one, even though an aristocrat, has under
all circumstances to show proper re­ timidly into them, hiding her lovely,
spect for his commanding officer. Be­ blushing face upon his happy, weather
sides, the Señorita Pachita had twice re­ beaten breast.
fused his friendly offered hand. It was
IN AUGUST, 1890, AGAIN.
believed that her young affections were
Lieutenant John Anderton was re­
bestowed upon Ensign Tiburcio Mendez strained from throwing the abalone shell
at Monterey, though this was not known into the bay, after his indefensible lan­
to a certainty at the Presidio.
guage concerning it, because, imbedded
Lieutenant Juan de Echeandia and under a transparent, overlying, irides­
benonta Pachita de Sola walked leisure­ cent deposit, he beheld an open golden
ly to the little wharf where that won­ locket, showing the face of a handsome
derful vessel, constructed but recently young man, evidently Spanish.
by a wandering British sailor, lay pre­
MibS de Sola, excited, took it from him,
paring for a voyage to Sausalito, four scrutinized it intently, looked up with
leagues distant. It was a marvelous Sparkling eyes and pointed a slim, tri­
boat, with oars and a sail, and capable umphant, olivb finger at a name beneath
of accommodating no less than six per­ tfie miniature.
“There!” she cried; “grandmadid love
sons. Don Luis Antonio Arguello him­
self had commanded her in person on that Monterey ensign, though she always
the dozen passages which she had made denied it!”
“Bnt Pachita—Pachita darling, do
to the opposite shore for timber. Pre­
vious to the creation of thi6 extraordi­ name the day,” pleaded Lieutenant An­
nary ship, which annihilated distance derson all a-throb.
“Ou, lx ... r!” impatiently returned
and obliterated time, timber was hard to
get from Corte de Madera. Soldiers Miss de Sohi, absorbed again in tbe^iba-
were sent around by way of San Jose, Lme. “Name it yourself."—Arthur Mo-
armed with axes, who crossed the Straits Ewen in San 1 rancuco Argonaut.
When the Breeze Dies Out
Take to the Oars I
ä=S
He K uch What He Wanted.
The waiter had brought Farmer Blos­
som a particularly diminutive “pat” of
butter. The old man picked up the dish,
looked at it cloeely and observed:
“Wipe that grease spot off that plate
and bring me some bntter."— New York
¿■•«J
ì
J nJ
Í
Epoch.
The Collection Beg.
THE NEWSPAPER is the PROPER MEDltM
. The Top of the Column
is desirable. Such space is ex­
pensive, but we can furnish it
to enterprising advertisers.
There is
is the metropolis of the nation and the
I P*T “ore than twenty-five cents per
*i /i perch to break stone; one man with a
■•w «Md Highways May Be Mad« Very ring hammer, finding his own hammer,
Ck««*iy.
which costs him seventy-five cents per­
Talking to Mr. William Hotter, of haps, can break from four to six perches
Maryland, who has been building made a day and thus make his dollar or more,
between Baltimore and the upper Polo- according to his industry. They ought
*ae, be gave me the following inform*- to break the atone Bitting down; they
can do it much faster in that way than
Meat
The latest thing u a road grader drawn by standing up over it To break rook
six horses, which excavatea. fills boles on the road into large stones a ten pound
and makes in general the grade oonfor- sledge is big enough.—Gath in Cincin­
■ation of your road; it does the work of nati Enquirer.
I
eboat terty men, and men who work on
Du You Know These Things?
Mais require some competition of th»
pi»*, especially when the politicians oon
If you are a farmer read this: Do you
trol the roads. Tie beet machine of this know that every time you haul a load
kind is mad« st an obscure town in Penn over the bad roads in your vicinity that
Sylvania and costs |200 to $300. Counties your horses have to devote more than
are procaring the machines, which are I half their power to overcoming the ob-
«specially effective for regrading old 1 > stacles of sand or mud, and that only a
roads and opening new roads. Of course . , small portion of their pulling force is
they will not pull out stumps nor go j devoted to drawing the load itself? Do
through solid rock, but you can dispenne you know that your taxes would be
with many a cart and horse and wheel practically no higher than they are now
barrow with such a machine.
I if the roads in your county were intelli-
I have recently been making a tun. , gently improved with broken stone? Do
idhs about six miles loug from a little | I you know that in every locality where
village called Downsville to Hagerstown, ■ cads have been improved land values
the usual discouragements of men of have increased from 25 per cent, to 200
public spirit came from men of that surly, p«r oent. ?
gossiping class of neighbors who would
The state of Pennsylvania has roads
rather smile at your failure than see yon
far
better than the average, and yet a
^the community. Sometimes we I
not get enough persons to under writer of a prize essay on road making
tabs to do anything; we bad too many 1 t timates that there is an annual loss,
by reason of bad thoroughfares, of $4,-
directors— twelve— and therefore were
ix'o.floo.
required to have seven for a quorum
eeven directors are plenty, and you can I lie Iron Do; and the Hungry AllJg/to
often get four men together when it
would be impossible to get seven. The
want of public spirit is painfully visible
in eld states like ours, especially in the
eld German parts, where money and
greii are the animating principles. Still,
by perseverance, we got our road through,
end en will those who work much and
wait a very little. In our part of the
country we have limestone, bnt have to
MAP OF THE METROPOLITAN DISTRICT.
■end it half a mile to a mile, and aome-
When a county is entirely within the
times longer than that, from the quarry;
metropolitan thirty mile limit it is count­
Maosstone makes a road which quickly
ed entire; if it is divided by the circumfer­
crush««, but has to be replenished more
ence of the circle the towns within the
often than harder «tone road«. The com­
circle are counted, and if a town is thus
mon mountain sandstone, or even flint,
■divided it is credited with a part of its
will make a good road in time, and it
population corresponding with the area
will wear long.
which is within the limit. Thus esti­
To make a cheap road 1 prescribe as
mated, the population of the metropolis
follows: Raise the middle of the road
on the New York side is as follows:
six inch«« above the grade level; make
1,515,301
New York county.................................
your roadbed sixteen feet wide, so that
838,547
Kings county (Brooklyn)..................
heavy teams can get past; break your
128.050
Queens county (Long Island).........
stone so that it will pass through a 24-
51.803
Richmond county (Staten Island).
inch ring; put six inches above the line
118,558
Westchester county (In limits)....
, 14,900
Rockland county (tn limits).............
In the middle and sixteen inches below
th« horizontal line, and thus the average
2,867,068
Total in New York state...............
of your broken «tone will be about 104
nr nbw jersbt .
275,126
Hudson county (Jersey City)...........
inches; this will spread three feet on
47,226
Bergen county......................................
either ride by travel, making your road
256,096
Essex county........................................
finally twenty-two feet wide. Stone
73,467
Union county.................... ...................
101,046
Passaic county (In limits).................
ought to be broken and computed by the
32,101
Morris county (in limits)....... . .........
perch or rod, namely, a pile 164 feat
7,300
Somerset county (in limits).............
long, 1 foot high and 1( feet wide; in
50,754
Middlesex county (in limits)...........
83,128
our example it has coet thirty oents to
Monmouth county (in limits).........
quarry thia «tone, fifteen cents to haul
*873,246
Total in New Jersey........,..............
and twenty-five cents to break it per
,3,543,3M
Total in met ropolis.............................
perch, or seventy cents per perch.
A very narrow strip of Connecticut,
In a rock country it ought not to cost
within the limits, and, of course, the
more than twenty-five to thirty cents to
federal employees at Sandy Hook and
get the stone on the road; 824 perches of
elsewhere, are omitted. But if any
stone will make 100 feet of road 15 feet
critic objects to the thirty mile cir­
wide and lOj inches thick. It will take,
cuit, let him describe a twenty mile
therefore, about 2,800 perchea to ths
circuit on the map and he will $nd
mite, and suppose you get much of this
all the considerable cities within it, and
at thirty cents to deliver the stone and
the aggregate still far above 8,000,000. '
twenty-five cents to break it, or fifty-five
And, contrary to popular opinion, the
cents for a road favorably situated to­
metropolitan area is gaining population
ward stone. With 2,800 perches to the
faster than any other in the world, un-1
mile, at fifty-five cents, the cost will be
less Chicago lie an exception. Here is
$1,540 to the mile. You must add to th»
the per cent, of growth of the principal
about $100 to grade the mile. This in-
Slaces in the twenty mile circuit in the
dndes taking the rooks out of the road.
ecade of 1880-90: New York, 25.62;
Which are afterward used and broken
Brooklyn, 42.30; Jersey City, 35.02; Pat­
upon it It pays to use these stones in
erson, 53.53; Passaic, 99.45; Orange,
every oase that I have found. You must
42.68; Newark, 83.20, and many smaller
grade them six inches high at the center,
places at a much greater rate.
and then you begin the stone. By pass­
One fact which astonishes even the
ing the rake over the top you can grade
New Yorkers who have not made a study
ths ground well enough, generally speak -
of it is that there is yet so very much
room for growth within the metropoli­
As to breaks in the road which are
tan district. Accustomed to think and i
used in this part of the country to run
speak of Manhattan island as a “natural
the water off without underneath drains,
land monopoly,” “an overcrowded
it Is still the cheapest to pass the water
hive,” many long residents in the city
mggeet that
across the road top. and 1 sr-
do not know that there are still on the
ut fifteen to
you make these breaks about
northern prong of the island miles on
.^rriBarpex’» .Young People.
eighteen feet long, so that your wagon
miles of timbered hills and secluded
c
A
need not be thrown violently against the
vales almost uninhabited, and similar
b'b
Uykterin and Hypnotism.
opposite bank. In some cases it is beet
regions of far greater extent on Long
to pass the water under the road, and
if
mg of
of .’tjxe
tfie French Island and in New Jersey.
the cheapest way to do this is by boards; ’
;y In Pans Dr. Beril-
If the general average for the area be
suppose you have your gutter twent illri l< >□ astonished fi;a qparers by stating that maintained for twenty years, the “Great-|
two feet wide, made of 3-inch plan oka
­ aluntst all ehirtlMiwrtld be hypnotized er New York” of 1910 will exceed London
et 24 cents a foot, it will coet you except those who were idiotic or hyster in population. New York and Brooklyn
perhaps five dollars apiece for each of teal
l'iw»idea- that there is any connect are rapidly approaching a union. That
They can be made, tioh ’ tietween hysteria and hypnotism consummated, the New York of 1910 will
these gutters,
however, out of the rongh stone at was strongly disputed One physician be as completely a unit as London is,
The trouble ' i
a little more expense
i that hr nad * ‘ hypnotized ‘ sixty with a population not far from 4,000,000.
»Ahont uhdani ■ i gmt«-rs w tout they
. nt of *eventv-tWO undei Names and numbers still have such an
i I
Vi u make them wi<Je
\ ,r jin «tiw < ’•sin a liospi Influence on the popular mind that both
. v to go tn and cleAn
i >■ i ■
• urd to tiellevr cities will no doubt find it profitable to
I
t
s , . rtiou could be by» unite—“to beat Chicago,” if for no other
s< uo L uUd ruade uQ^ul uol to U ; irai LxvUange
reason.
J. H. B eadle .
er-
------------ --
The tea trade of Japan is constantly-
increasing, while that of China is dimin­
ishing. The increase is at the rate of
more than 3,590,000 pounds yearly. Most
of the Japanese tea is consumed in the
United States and Canada.
PUBLIC
It would appear that a place at
Published through The American Press Association.
▲ t Their Present Rate of Increase New
York and Brooklyn Will Hare 4,OOO,-
ood or More in 1910— New York the
¿ft
MEWSPAPER
flap Up A Tre«
DlSTftfkY CON-
In some churches years ago the collec­
tion was taken in small, close meshed
nets with short handles. The latest thing
made for thia use, the collection bag, is
a modification of the old fashioned net
It is a cone shaped plush bag seven
inches in diameter and seven inches
deep. It is secured to a hoop to which
is attached a handle two or three feet
long, as may be desired. The collection
bag sells for four dollars. It has been in
twe about one year,—New York Sun.
REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES
When Business Lan
guishes, push it.
The best advertising
does not consist of wind
alone.
It has Strength
and Power. It will pro­
pel your craft into the
harbor of prosperity,
against adverse tides and
over dangerous shoals.