Semi-weekly Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 1910-1915, December 02, 1913, Page Page 2, Image 2

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Sktsi-Weetcly Bandon Retarded De&miSer 2, 1913
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Santa Claus has decided to use an airship this year and he will make his headouarters at
the Peoples 5-10-1 5c Store. We have conclusively demonstrated to most of" you that we I
can save you money on your every clay wanes, out on your Amas girts and toys we will $
prove to you the value or a 5-i CM 5c store m your - midst.
Ci. PiL Kf Two or three 1 5c toys will please a child better than one $2.00 toy. Why not, then
OlOp, I IlirtK! try to cut the high cost of living.
ALWAYS SOMETHING .NEW"
Visit our 3 stores
and buy early.
re
opies
tores
Bandon, Marshfield,
Myrtle Point
CONVERTS ONE OF
THE JAMES BAND
Gok Yowpr, Famous Author,
Jolas trie Church.
WAS WOUIDED 28 TIMES,
Picture s Monster Criminal, He
Maintains That Ho Was Guilty of
but On 0fnse Hns Sorvod Twen-'y-fiv
Years In Prison His Own
9irj Cnrslsn.
St. Louis. Colt? Younger was onct n
nam vliluli lusplrod four thioiighout
Missouri. IContucky iiik! Kansas. It Is
thu nuino of n mini noted for his lion c
lighting spirit, ii man who carries tin
sciirs r twenty-eight bullet wounds
received for lighting llrst for n emist?.
later for spoils. It Is now tlie niiine of
ono of thu most recent converts to
Christianity gullied by the Itev, Orvllle
Edgar Ilimilltoii. one of thu lending
figures of the Christian Evangelists of
Auierlcn.
Tho conversion tooU place in mi Ini
provided tiibei'uuele in Lees Summit,
CO Lit YOUKotclt.
Mo., recently. Tho ovangcllst waa as
slstctl lu tho service by his wlfo nntl
Mr. nnd Mrs. Chnrles Stunft. During
tho revival meeting, when thu lnrge"au
'dleuco wHs swayed to enthusiasm by
tho words of tho preacher nmtho sing
Ins: of Mr. and .Mrs. Strtart, n Riant of
a man roue from his seat, literally lift
ed from Iter foot a llttlo woman who
stood near him, kissed her and walked
forwanl. With the last wortl of the
spoken acceptance Cole Younger, part
ner of Jesse James and oO Quautrell,
had coiuo out In ftio open and em
braced thft faith whose tenets h0 has
been quietly practicing for many years.
"There Is nothing wonderful lu iny
conversion." said Younger.
"I've letl an adventurous, turbulent
life. Tho war brought on hate nnd
strife nnd killing. They murdered my
fntiier when 1 wns a schoolboy and I
Hfla.JflujlcJyHl.inio a life of roprlsalr
and shooting nnd rough riding, wind
ing up with twcnly-fivo years In
prison.
"Now. my folks were all Christians.
1 was brought up lu a Christian home.
I am an old man. seventy years old
next .lanuary. and I have come back,
by Ood's merry, 'to the spot where 1
spent my childhood, to end my days.
"To nie. knowing my own soul, it Is
nothing. Why. forty years ago. when
witnesses have testified that I was rob
bing banks and holding up trains In
another part of the country. I wns
down in Texas teaching a Sunday
school class.
"The feeling has been growing strong
upon me these Inst years that my
mother's prayers were being nnswered
nnd that find was lending me by the
hand, nhd so I have Just given my
henrt to him, and 1 feel that tho sins
of my past life are blotted out and
that I am a child of Cod."
Although ho Is pictured In "wild
west" .tales as monstrously criminal,
he maintains Hint he was guilty of but
one offense and says .his name, along
with that of the James brothers Mid
others, wns connected with practically
every bank robbery and holdup in the
west for more than a decade. lie ad
mits that ho was a member of a bnnd
which nltempted to rob a bank at
Northfleld. Minn., of ?00.000. said to
havo been obtained by Union soldiers
during the civil war.
ITo was cnptnredjhrce dnys after the
attempt nnd "served twenty-flvo years
in prison.
BULL DERAILS A TRAIN.
Accidont Occurs as Cnttlo Herd I
Crossing the Track.
Olntlio. Kan. Ten cars of a St
Louis and Rnn Francisco freight train
was derailed when the train struck a
bull weighing 2.0W pounds near here.
Tlie engine it lid tender passed over the
animal without .being derailed, but
when the empty ears struck It .thby
were thrown from the track. .
'.A held of cattle was crossing the
track when the train approached aird
three of the animals were killed. .
Calls With Conscience Money.
Spokane. Wnsji. The Xorjhorn Vo
clllc city passenger office' receive".
$10.70 In conscience money from Ilonr.1:
Peterson "f I-os Angeles,,whp nppe'nro.d
In jiersun at the city olllco rtnd paid
It S. Skinner tho money for a ride
from Spokane to. Unite, which, ho says,
lie stole twenty years ago. '
Living Up to It.
. "We don't always do fis we should.
For one thing, wo are told to love our
enemies."
"A great many, of us live up to thnt
Dldn't you ever notice n couplo of so
ciety leaders kissing each otherS"
Louisville Courier-.! ournal.
Easily Divided.
Tlie hour was divided Into Rlxty min
utes because the number hlxty enn bo
oO'iily divided by two. three, four. flw.
six, ten. twelve, fifteen, twenty and
I Orty. 0
Hope Is a llntterer. hut the most up
right of all iwiraflllcs. for she freiunts
the poor man's hut as well as tho
nco of his superiors. -Shenstoue.
SEEKSffi 1
mm
j SAVE
Mrs. Wakefield Sentenced to
Be Hanged.
MAY ESCAPE THE GALLOWS.
Various Organizations and Prominent
Women In Connecticut Prrtest
Against Extreme Penalty She, With
Aid of a Man, Brought About tho
.Death of Her Husband.
Hartford, Conn. Aroused as they
never have been before, Connecticut
women of every walk in life are shoul
dering the burden of preventing the
stuto from lullictiug tlie death punish
ment upon Mrs. llesslo J. Wakelleld,
convicted ns uu accomplice in the mur
der of her husband.
From every conceivable vantage
point wives and daughters of promi
nent men, suffragists and women op
posed to their sex exercising the right
of franchise! are attacking as dlsgrace-
M 8j
is - V-
( Photo by Vmc.tlcjn Press Association.
SJJ5.S. BRSblll r,'AKl)lJKl,D.
jil and unwarranted the carrying out
of the" court edict that, Mrs. Wukelloid
shall ho hanged
From every" corner of the tjtnfj the
jiroti&ts of tho women arc Iwlng voiced
in mo mrou tfc punuciy circuiaieu pett-j
Hons lo which many (Jhousands of
names are being signed daily, in pub
licity campaigns mid ii pursounl de
mands UOng made upon members of
thV state lio:ud of pardons, loislfTtors
anil jurists. Although Mrs. Wakeiloid
etllJJs n p cjijll Iju iio .njrlson dctltb
. in
re
nouse, no word li.is I , ufi I'e.f,
by her indicating what will be the
suit of the uiriiiui! crusade.
If Mrs. Wakelleld dies for the mur
der of her husband, In the actual com
mission of which she was not accused
of having .taken a hand, she will be
the llrst woman put to death In the
state since 17K1.
Connecticut's leniency toward women
who havo been convicted of murder Is
explained in part by Its efforts to atone,
for Its unsavory record In Colonial
days, when six women were burned or
hanged iw witches. In 17ir Kll'.illieth
Shaw, a feeble minded girl, was hang
ed on her father's testimony that she
had killed her Infant child. She was
executed after she had ridden a mile
to thi' scaffold seated on her colIln and fe
crying aloud to be saved, Hut since i w
Connecticut became a slate
woman has been
within Its limits,
oniy one . u
legally put to deatli gi
Mrs. Wakelleld Is twenty-four yearfJj
old and Is one of six children of Mr T
and Mrs. Hiram Webster of Middle
bury, an uncultured, but honest, cou
ple, who for years have eked a bare
living out of a rocky farm.
The. daughter received practically no
education, and she was only seven
teen when she was married to Wake
lleld, a Urlstol farm hand. She became
housekeeper for .lames Plew. a Middle
bury fanner.
Plew and Wakelleld soon quarreled
about her. Wakelleld was found slain
last June. Plew confessed the deed,
but he and Mm. Wakelleld blamed
each other for plotting the murder s
that they could be married. Plew,
who has a wife and child, and Mix.
Wakelleld. who has two children, have
been sentenced to be hanged on March
t. 11114.
It has been stated In the Connecticut
press that the vote of Uie board must
be unanimous to commute a sentence,
but the law was changed four years
ago tii make a favorable "vote of live
mondiers effective.
Mrs. Wakefield's children are with
her parents. The boy. who IsVlx years
old. and the girl, who Is four, know
nothing of their parents' fate, and they
dally-say tf thelrgrandinother, "Mam
ma will be homo today."
The fact that many women have
been convicted of single handed and
jireino'dltutud. murder In Connecticut In
the lust half century, nnd that all have
escaped 'the death penalty, nnd ttyat
Mrs. Wiikefield Is not even charged
witli a 'art in tho actual kllllngof her
Si'islmnd, fins Incited a widespread re
volt agalnet tho decrco of tho extreme
penalty In her case.
Hope.
"There is no sweeter suffering than
hope." So runs irn old CJefman prov
erb, melancholy ti'xt for hearts that
bitter tll.sappolntment'hns cured nuU to.
whom all hope Is but memory..
.
, .An Alarming Tftle
Mr. Stnylato Tim OtHernlht I heard
n story tly.it gave me sucla a ftiart.
Miss Miichborod-I wish I know Jt.
Woman's Home Companion,,
The Attraction.
rcilaS-lMrt tho brldo smile ns mho
walkct? down tho aisle? f?il I djon'tj
know: 1 was0watchlng her Mu Ivan
Ens City Star. Q
We want you
For our customer not just today, but tomor
row and for all time to come, if
Right Goods
Right Prices
Courteous Treatment
and prompt delivery
is what you want
WE HAVE YOU
SPARK'S GROCERY
Succvsior to A. E. White
O EX E2 ESS 2S2 ESSHO
1 W.
" A
M ST10TNOFF
TJ-JJfi I TARN JOSS MAN
new
cases,
bags,
;
supply of suit ,
shopping .
trunks,
rooes
io
Got Any- Time
Spare?
Use -electric appliances for the household
work ami you wiU have time for other
things. Let us demonstrate them to you
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