Semi-weekly Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1910-1915, March 26, 1912, Image 2

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Reputa» Mulinaste» »aye
Help Defray Oregon*
Upkeep.
........... Marr
By
c
Mr*.
MARY
HEATON
VORSE,
Mafazln«
Writer
SUPPOSED TO
BE
DWINDLING CAME
INTO
BEING FROM NO NATURAL PERVERSITY. SHE CAME INTO BEING.
AND HER TYPE WAS PRESERVED BECAUSE SHE SUITED THE
AVERAGE MAN.
When we s e our married women homeless, restless, thinking only
of dress and superficial amusements instead of acting as though this
type had develo|ied itself spontaneously from some inner taint in our
women themselves, let us face the fact that it is WIIAT OUR
YOUNG MEN WANT THAT DEVELOPS THIS TYPE OE
WOMAN.
Your young girl is as her men make her. 1 might criticise vour
men for calling into being this strange woman, who lias none of the
things in her life that make a woman’s life worth living. WOMEN
IN THIS COUNTRY LIVE TO PLEASE TIIEIR MEN, AS DO
WOMEN IN OTHER COUNTRIES.
DECORATIVE VALUE
OF STREET LIGHTING.
The Various Systems and Their Adapt­
ability to Certain Conditions.
Waterworks E.;r..cd
44
BOURNE S TAXES «2.44;
NO REAL PROPERTY
The tax roll» of Multnomah
county »how Jonathan Bourn»,
Jr., »enior senator from Oregon,
will pay $2.44 in taxes this year.
This i* on his personal proper­
ty, which consists of office fur­
niture In his office In the Cham-
of Commerce building.
This
furniture is assessed at $100.
No assessment of real property
appears no the tax books. The
registration books show the sen­
ator's home to be on the second
floor of the Portland hotel, but
the tax books do not show he
has any personal property there.
HE YOUNG GIRL WHO THINKS ONLY OF DRESS ANO
AMUSEMENT AND WHO DEVELOPS INTO THE WOMAN WHO
WILL NOT MAKE A HOME AND WHOSE MATERNAL IN.
STINCT8 ARE
,7 68
The mt':, c'puii;. i»>* i .* I •• iterc >» k*
earned fertile i*i..v <>f iitmxvi e. I i nn .
the sum of -S7o..*rl7 :s for the year r.n i
This I, ati iiu nus ■ of s|t:.t:,s!».47 over
the net eirnit.gs of tIn* ye n lttlll I hr
.intiual report of the
.ville w:
««r' s commission, that is now being
complete I. v. ill j.o into details and will
•-how an it-crcase in rniieage of pipes,
in galioits cf wa'or [' t apad. in number
of tire Iri’raitts Instnlle'l and in gen
oral imp. j.emenW of the plant. The
fi.'iuw i. g ip. ,,i*i gate figures, however,
.re taken from tlie records of tlie coin-
fission: Net earnings for 1911. $70.-
.*17 UN; net earnings for 1910, $5.3,- Í
"s.21; inctease of 1'311 over earnings
<>r
<>f 1910. $1<i.i:S9.47: miles of pipe in
I >11. 117.<>12: miles of pipe in 1910.
Ill '12: increase over 1910. 5.800; miles
of new pipe laid in 1911. 5.80.
Otte of tlie practical advantages of
the electric lamp is its ability to oper­
ate equally well in both upright and
[tendent positions, says it writer in
the American City. The cluster sys­
tem. which consists of suitable posts I
supporting a uumber of lamps, has
ucqiiired great popularity, and justly
so. tlie multiple light sburces giving a
distinctively d<"coratlve appearance A
very common arrangement and one to
be particularly recommended in small­
er cities Is the use of four lamps sup­
ported on arms, with a lamp in the
center, tlie latter being arranged on a
separate circuit so that it can be used i
for service after midnight or whatever
Debt Reduced.
hour tlie other lamps may be consider­
During the past year the debt on the
ed unnecessary.
Tlie Ventral lump city w ater and light plant in Gas City.
necessarily must lie plncefl in tlie uft- I ltd . has been reduced to the amount
riglit position, and lite globe should of $2.nOO; that is. this amount has
It has been a
be of larger diameter titan those ou been paid on the debt
the arms. Whether the lamps on the few days more than one year since the
arms should I h > |>endent or upright is water and light plant in Gas City was
principally a matter of taste, although destroyed y tire. In the time elapsed
there Is some slight gaiu in illumina­ since then the plant litis been rebuilt
tion ou tlie sidewalk by placing tlie mid lias been placed in successful
lamps pendent and thus avoiding tlie i operation, and $2.500 of the debt paid.
shadow of the arms.
That all this has been done is con­
Tlie capacity or size of tlie lamps sidered an excellent achievement.
will depend on tlie distance apart of
tlie standards. In nil cases, however,
Mayors Favor Biennial Elections.
tlie conduits should have an ample
Changes in the charters of five of the
margin of safety, so that in case larger six cities of Rhode Island, which will I
lamps are desired at any time they result In biennial municipal elections,
may lie safely used.
are likely to be made by the general
Tlie width of the street must also he assembly Tile mayors of Providence,
taken into account. Tlie lower post is t Woonsocket and Pawtucket lire out­
more suitable for the narrow street, spoken in favor of municipal elections
and vice versa. Tlie usual heights are every two years instead of one, v^liile
from twelve to fourteen feet for clus­ tin- project Is also viewed favorably by
ter posts, the exact height being deter- many leaders in Cranston and Central
Falls
—Portland Journal, March 3, 1912.
Yet Senator Bourne is reputed to be
worth fifteen milions of dollars (115,-
000,000.00).
He owns extensive interests in a
large cotton goods manufacturing
plant on the Atlantic coast. Hence
his vote in the senate for a high tar
iff on cotton goods.
Senator Bourne has been in Oregon,
so far as known to the public, but
three times since he was elected sen
ator over five years ago and has spent
in this state, so far as the public
knows, less than three weeks iu the
state.
Does it seem reasonable that a man
can be familiar with the needs of a
state who gives it so little time, and
does it seem possible that a senator
can have the welfare of Oregon thor­
oughly at heart whose fortune is in
tlie east and who contributes but $2.44
to taxes in the state from which he
was elected?
BUSINESS MEN FOR SENATOR
Catholic
Sentinel Says Time
Come For Action.
Has
The time is passing—or past—when
oratory is the one essential for states­
manship. More and more the country
recognizes the need of the business
man in politics, and the value of busi-
n< :s men in office.
i'he substantial advancement of the
nation has been made very largely by
business men. And it is safe to say
that there would have been fewer halt-
ings in the progress of the republic
if the fervid policies of men who
scorned commercial pursuits had been
tempered more with the calm judg
ment and the shrewd foresight of bus
iness men.
Oregon needs business men in its
councils, Oratory la a fine thing, and
there is a joyous thrill in brilliant
pictures of imaginative statesmen.
But states and natious have to deal
with conditions, and not altogether
with theories
'
Ben Seiling is a successful business
A Story of a Scholar.
Titeodor Mommsen, the famous his­ man. For fifty years he has been
torian. had not only the appetirance. profitably engaged in commercial pur
blit the manner, of a scholar. Once ■uits. Personal interests have not en-
(luring the half hour's drive from Ber­ grossed all his time, and he has de
lin to Charlottenburg the car in which v oted much of his life to activities
tile proft*ssor rode went badly off the which make for the betterment of his
track
The rest of the passengers fellow citizens, the advancement of
alighted, the horses were removed, and the community. Never once has pub-
the stranded ear was left until help J !i: enterprise or private friend lost
could be found Mommsen remained. | by following his advice. He has beeu
reading his book. An hour passed, and I safe and sane in everything.
lite sound of levers and Jacks and the I
Development costs money, and the
plunging of horses' hoofs aroused biui I price of public improvements must be
from his reverie. With no sign of dis ' paid in cash—whether it is the Pan­
composure he arose from his seat and | ama canal, or the forestry preserves
went to tile door. ■'All." saiil hit, “we , n Oregon. And every dollar of the
seem to have come to a standstill.”
•nighty expenditure comes from the
pockets of the people. The citizens I
provide the means, after all. There­
fore, it is in the interests of the gen­
CONTRADICTING JEFFERSON.
eral public, of the average American,
TUB CLÜHTHI St STEM IN FSE ON ATLANTIC
The world was not made in
that the selection of a business man
CITY (N. J.) BOARDWALK.
six days, whatever the meaning
lor the United States Senate is urged.
of tlie first chapter of Genesis
mined by the individual conditions
Therefore, it is in the cause of every
may
lie.
and
men
arc
not
created
mentioned. The various ty|»es of arc
class that Ben Selling's election to
equal, whatever Jefferson may
lumps, being of much greater candle
the Uinted States Senate is advocated
have meant by Ills immortal .11—
power. naturally require milch higher
by his friends.
turn
I lie different cs between
posts, railing from twenty feel for
men ar birth congenital differ­
His long residence in Oregon makes
tlie inclosed arc to forty feet-or even
ences are as great as those lie-
certain his acquaintance with the need
more for the tlnming arc.
IWcen two tender slips just push­
Exterior lighting, like interior light
of the people of this state. His wide
ing their tops into the sunlight,
Ing. must be carried out wltti due con-
experience In commercial and social
one to become 11 primrose pale,
fditeratlon of tlie environment and the
; nd business affairs makes sure that
the other a towering sequent.
chief purpose sought. A wholly satis
he is perfectly equipped to secure the
1 here an* only a few s-spiol.is on
factory result can tie obtained only
measures that are needed for the gen­
earth
now.
Just
ss
there
are
nt
wln*n till the conditions an* carefully
ial good. And every act of his life,
any given time on’r a few really
considered and given due weight.
both public and private, gives guar-
great and strong men on earth.
Modern iliuminants have made |*ossi-
anty of good faith.
Ue Iregan to disprove Jefferson's
bl” » degree of beauty and utility in
At no time, and in no conceivable
first "self evident" truth politi­
publie lighting that was undreamed of
circumstances could the public ser
cally* when we wrote our first
even a half century ago. We are only 1
organic law
We began to dis-
vice oi business men be so necessary,
beginning to reniize what this means
prove It industrially :>« wnn as
In lite development of the city of the
ir prove so valuable.
we went •<> >ork under the Im­
twentieth eeniur.v. The mesns of pro
Oregon's contribution to the history
pulse of 11 national < onsriotts-
during light in unlimited quantities is
of the nation is glorious. The pros
ne s. ns «oon ns our < onvenftul
one of the few benefits bestowed upon
perity of the state and the perman
ditferen es felt the quickening
modern civilization by science tlist can- ‘
ence of her institutions can best be
l-ower <>f op|N>rtuntty.~Darwin
not lie pervqrted to evil purposes. It is ,
preserved by the counsel of Ben Sei
P Kingsley
one of the few good tilings of which
ling,
a practical man.— Catholic San-
there is no danger of getting too much.
J
_______
L
rrrttt rrtr pt ttt m »
A (ircat
It will be Interwtiag In th» *ttr*me
to av»ry cltlita of Oregoa at thl» par
tlcular time to know to what »it* it
th» senior United State» senator,
Jonathan Bourn», pay» In th* way of
taxes in Oregon. Her» 1» a »tateme'it
from the Portland Journal of Mar« h
3, , 1912:
American Men to Blame
For Idle, Vain Women
for «
»nd HulMcra
(•f t Tei Conlrlbtfllan.
It F.SDAY......................
,
1
F*tiK1 iMHIn tf Company
F RflFI
I odfF and
IIro h ri A Oib'um
mu to
in.dtrr
Clubbing Offer
»f can save >ou
money. Let us figure on
y< nr building.
Sésil-Work fit Ot'vton Journal, onr
W. O. W.
Kerp (hr logs rolling boy. I
SEASIDE CAMP NO. 212.
WOODMEN OF THE WORLD.
Merit I irtt and I hird Tkuradayt.
V uum
Neighbor, wekomed.
yr* ..................................................... $1 50
Seau-Wrelly Barloa Rrrnnlrr
C. M. Gar. c c.
H. E. Boak, Secretary
We are Agents for the
Masoata.
Both Papers One Year $2.00
Famous
Baldwin
The Stmi-Ueckly
Oregon Journal
new. of the
I
where the
Pianos
give, reliable
Eastern Star
0CCIDENTAL CHAPTER. N o .
an
and
If you are contemplating
interesting story (rage and a pa.’e
or more of comic each week, and it goes
Louite M. Boyle, W. M
Merta Mehl, Secretary.
buying a Piano, give us
to
I. <>. <>. r
he subscriber twice each week-—104 times a
Tl ANDON LODGE. No. 133, I. O. O. F.
a call. It costs you noth-
year.
meet, every Wednewlay evening. Viating
brother, in good standing cordially invited.
|
Wm. Lundquist, N. G.
I S. A. McAllister, Secretary.
ing to examine them.
The Semi-Weekly
Knights of Pythlaa
Bandon Recorder
at
should be in every home in this vicinity. The
you can save $ I by
1 he
sending
Bandon
your
Sunday,
Journal in connection with
or
of
C. R. Moore, C. C.
B. N. Harrington K. of R. S.
I
I
Saturdays at Hotel Gallier
also give our subscribers a good clubbing of­
fer for the Daily and
64. Knight,
subscrip­
We can
Recorder.
No.
Pythias. Meets every Monday evening
Knights hall. Visiting knights invited to
attend.
Easy Terms
two papers make a splendid combination and
LODGE.
■0ELPHI
Prices $250 and up
Gives all the local news and^happenings and
tions to
45. O.
E. S., mr«i Saturday evening before and
alter Mated communication of Masonic Lodge
\ uiting member* cordially invited to attend.
it also has a
special matter for the farm
W. E. Crniae. W. M
-
ocrv
market news can be and is cor­
to date for each issue.
page of
home,
communication, .ecoad
Saturday
thereafter.
All Maater Mawn. cordially invited.
reports, a. it is published at Portland
market
rected
world;
M, Stated commumcatioru hrd Saturday
•iter the lull moon oi each month.
Special
Phil Peatwn, Secretary
the latest and most complete tele­
Publuhes
graphic
gANDON LODGE. No. DO A. F. & A
BANDON DRUG CO M. G. POHL, Optometerist
Sunday
lie irtni-e kly
Welt Recommended by
Patrons
Bandon Recorder.
WILSON & WALRATH
Blacksmiths and
I
Wagonmakers
Eyesight
Specialist
C. R. WADE
Attorney set Law
Agent Pacific Surety Company. Office Bank
I of Bandon Bldg. Phone 102, Bandon, Oregan
Wagons of all kinds made to order.
All kinds of Bl tcks'.niih Work, both DR SMITH J. XzUkNN
will be at the Hotel Gallier, heavy and light, will receive prompt PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
OFFICE IN PANTER BUILDING
attention. Horse Shoeing a specialty
Office Hours 9 to 12—1 to 5
March 25th and 26th and
Shop on Columbia Avenue
BANDON,
until noon on the 27th. You
are urged to call early to
avoid rushing.
RICE’S
TRANSFER LINE
R. H. RICE, Prop.
DR. R. V. DEEP
Physician and Surgeon
Office Rasmussen Bldg Phone 72
Bandon, Oregon
All kinds of light and heavy drav-
ing. Also sells and delivers mill
wood,coal,etc Office at Schumate’i S
Store. Phone orders promptly at
tended.
.
-
OREGON
Dr. M. L. Houston
PHYSICIAN
& SUHUEujy,
< litio« over Drug Store.
Hour«, ‘J to 12
i.m. 1:90 to 4, p.m. ; 7 to 9 in the sveniug.
Night osile enawered from odioe.
BANDON
OIC M.ON
Dr L. J?. Sorensen
DENTIST
Office Over Vienna Cafe
Home Hand Laundry
Telephone at Offioa and Home.
BANDON
Fourth and Spruce St«.
Family Washing a Specialty. Make a
»
Specialty of Rough Dry.
Phone 722
EARL SCHOONOVER
o.
OREGON
T.
THHADUOLII
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELC H
AT - LAW,
NOTABY PUBLIC
Oregon
Bandon,
Office With Bandon Investment < n
Dr. H- Lrl. Brown.
Resident Dentist.
Office in Panter Building
Office Hour.:
Gatchell Bros.’ Transfer Line
GATCHEl L BROS., Prop..
All kinds of heavy and light draying.
Phone orders given
prompt attention. Barn Cor. First & Spruce St., Fish Property
PIIONE <541
Phone.
9 to 12 M.. I to 5 P. M.
BANDON. OREGON
C. R. BARROW
Attorney and Connielor-at Law
COQUILLE.
-
ORE
Office over Skeelt' Store
Office Phone. Mein 335;
reeideace. Main 346
----------------------------- - ------- r
CLARK & WRIGHT
loaf in town for the money.
Lawyers
Big in quality as well as quan­ Washington, ID. Q.
tity too.
We couldn’t use bet­
ter flour if we charged twice as Public Land Matter., Final Proof, Dee-
art Land., Contati, and Mining
much for our bread.
We buy
Cat*., Script
and use the very best now.
Associate Work for Attorney.
Try a loaf and see how every­
body will go into it. A body
would think it was cake to
hear the youngsters begging
)o you want pure drugs and
for another slice.
PURE DRUGS
drug sundries, fine perfumes,
lair brushes and toilet arti-
elei?
If so, call on
C. Y. LOWE,
Bandon, Oregon.
tlanl
e