st4 It ttht SEMI-WEEKLY Bandon Recorder Published overy Tuesday and Frldny by The Recorder Publishing Co., Inc. Entered at the Post Office at Ban don, Oregon, as mail matter of the second class. Llake all, checks payable and address all communications to the company. Subscription price, $1.60 per year, jn advance. AN ANNOUNCEMENT The Bandon Recorder is published by a corporation, tho capital stock of which has recently" been scattered and sold, figuratively speaking, from Dan to Becrsheba, and literally speaking from Bandon to Coquille and Coos Bay. The reading public feels no con cern in the details, save that the new owners are prominent business men and for the greater part, politically, aro members of the Democratic party. Editorially this paper will repre sent as nearly as may be, tho com posite idea of its new owners a con sensus of opinion and it has thus become an institution. It is bound by no strings, wears no muzzle, and knows no master, save right, honor justice, and hence such will be our first object and policy. When we are entrenched editorially we. will surren der on demand, when confronted by the superior force of facts, logic and reason but not to fear, favor or money noverl Wo reserve our constitu tional right of freedom of speach and shall couplo with it tho intention to exercise it. We know no home but Southwestern Oregon, and our second policy shall be loyalty to it and its people. Wo shall advocate all ideas calculated for its development Lastly, when we can be, consistently with the first two policies announced, this paper will bo Democratic politi cally, not of the hide bound character, that to" tho exclusion of reason, carries partisanship to extreme absurdity and converts dogma into a fetichism, but only to a point of healhy agitation for the exchange of ideas, calculated to promote general good in a govern ment of the people, for tho people and by tho people. WHY NOT CONSOLIDATE? Curry county has constructed good roads to tho Coos county line. Road district number 19 in Coos, which in cludes Bandon, has a large assessed valuation voted and has on hand a large sum of money sufficient for the construction of a good road to the south lino of district No. 11) which is between Two Mile and Four Mile creeks. Wo havo no road tax this year. There is left a small road dis trict within which is only a compnri tively small amount of taxable prop erty to call on for tho construction of 6 or 8 miles of trunk road. That district is in need of road money. There havo been ideas advanced by some-for tho consolidation of district No. 1!) and the Four Mile district. Why not? Will some one say? OH, FIE! FIE! Last Sunday morning and it was Easter at that in broad day, walking boldly on tho public street of Bandon, was a young man with his arm, shoul der high, about a confiding young thing the two clasping hands on tho off side. Now wouldn't that make you tired? It did us ami wo sat down to rest and reflect. Muybo thoy wore married but that made no difference. Thoy should lmvo known better. Tho exumplo to their Juniors Ih not com mt'iulahlo. Most citle lmvo special ordinance for tho public gindior, miuher and upoom'r and those other wise Invpri'iodble. WHAT KINO AI.IIIIUTLOOKHLIKr. A u nuii) King Albeit U iiiugnlrt' rt'lit, Tl'fu h li" wr Hi I k'l urn) tJiuuliltir luHur limn 99 jwr nf kU wldluM Jlv MuffJ (vy ihn Intjiti )i (ml, iM lit lvi Htli'if bind luiile, Mllhwul it) signia of any kind, gives him an air of slimness, despite the immense breadth of his shoulders. This is accentuated by a pair of the longest and most ser vicable legs that I have ever seen. His feet are remarkably small, and al though the wTist is muscular the hands are not over large. At first one does not realize that he has a giant's strength even more than a giants stature. Few men, however, arc as powerful physically. The brake lev ers of all his cars have to be specially reinforced. He can bend an inch of iron bar and can lift his two eldest children off the ground, one incach hand and hold them at arm's length. One is a husky boy of fourteen and tho other a beautiful girl of ten. Now York World WHOM TO MARRY Professor Hall of the Northwestern Medical school gives the folowing ad vice in selecting a wife. Don't marry an heiress one with more than $15,000 or $20,000. You may become unhappy with her and her money. Don't marry an invalid. Don't mary into a family whore there are traces of insanity or fcoblc- .ICSS. Look up the health record of her parents and grandparents. Avoid the daughter of a confirmed ilcoholic. Don't marry a girl just because she nows Latin and Greek. It is nothing against her if she has had a college education, provided she knows how to cook meals, make clothes and care for children. A man of 21 should marry a girl between 19 and 23 years. At 25 one between 21 and 27 At 30 one between 23 and 28. At 35 one between 23 and 30. At 40 one between 25 and 33. At 45 one between 25 and 35. At 45 one between 25 and 35. At 50 one between 40 and 50. At CO one between 50 and CO. At 70 one between 50 and CO. At 80 one between GO and 70. When a man gets to bo 50 years of .ige he should not expect to raise a family. I advise such a person to marry a widow with several children When n man of GO or more marries it is only for the purpose of having a nurse during his declining years. It in unfair for him to marry anyone younger than himself. He should marry a childless widow or an old maid. .LAKE YOUNG ON THE WAR . The Russian army has been tre menduously improved by the lesson of the Russo-Jnpanese war. The army of 1914 'could simply walk over the Russian army of 1904. It is not yet an efficient army. The material is ex cellent but it has not yet been brought up to the modern standard. To which it may be added that one hears fre quently in well informed circles here the statement that Von Hindenberg is by no means the marvelous leader ho has been believed. He is simply at tho head of n group of generals whose names one never hears, is the way one man puts it. I doubt if Von Hinderburg signed a sin gle one of the orders which led to the destruction of the Russian nrmie3 nt the battle of Tannenberg. I doubt if HOW ABOUT IT, M. P.? The upper valley of the Two Mile until recently hnH been quite inncces ible by wagon, and now has only n rough wagon road, constructed lurge ly by tho residents in puUhwork sec tions, ho wo are told. There are a number of hoineKteaders there, per haps 20 or 30, with families. The wiiyn t town nml school aro but foot or Imrxn trniU through tho Umber, up 111 and down dulo. Valuable tlmLcrw tin und pole wuit Hie wagon roud to Ihi brought to niurkut. Itluli funning luml uwmIU u wagon roud, to yield iU prixlurl for Hip tiUt. Tln mm of llftt Il iinoi in lliu Mom of tlui idly Milling lliv wugun rvd l rouull Hip )wiiioUh4iIui' mtiAll. umnm ttf D4 imi (r wly it ulttti tJMuiiN' mi Hi Um M Imtit u tie Point a near cut-off to thero from Bandon. A two mill road tax was voted in road district number 19, two years ago for such a road. Later the tax collected was involved in litiga tion and the expenditure of the money enjoined. That injunction has been raised for many months and the liti gation quieted. The money is availa ble and the time for making roads at hand. The legal formalities neces sary for the completion no doubt are the only impediments yet to surmount and wo appeal to Myrtle Point to co operate from that end to construct a through road and help us to establish a public utility. Myrtlo Point, may we not hear from you? Two subscriptions receivod in the mail of one day this week from New York city, recalls to mind the value to a community, especially a new, on, that is given it by a newspaper that has had a continuous publication for a third of a century. Time gives to a publication an acquaintance, a wide circulation and an authoritative stand ing that can not be otherwise obtain ed. Among tho most loyal subscribers of tho Rccordor arc its out of town and out of the state subscribers. .They extend from Alaska ad British Colum bia to Alaska and from tho Pacific coast to tho Carolinas, Pcnsylvanla and Northern Ontario. These subscribers consist for the most part of former Bandon citizens or of one time visitors. But others are strangers who have become inter ested in in our new, wonderful and un developed country and of its large op portunities. They read tho Record er to increaso their stock of infor mation of this section before under taking a trip of personal inspection The Recorder has a number of readers in eastern Canada. Thore Spring is only beginning to bring re lease from the severity of winter. The Recorder, coming to them from a land of perpetual green verdure has a srong appeal for immigration hither. Nature has done her share for Coos and Curry counties. Our great need, as in all new countries, is more citi zens, new capital and the energy of virile men and women who emigrate and become pioneers in new lands. The advertising value of the Re corder to this vicinity is worthy of worthy of notice. It is not only a sen timental assctt but a financial one the value of which increases as the years pass. THE BALANCE OF TRADE The United States is now a creditor nation in strict sense. The worldis beginning to pay in cash for the im mense volume of products bought in this country. The nation has paid our foreign debts, or rather our enormous exports have liquidated them, and now the credit balance in its favor is begin ning to show tangible results. Gold is flowing steadily into the United States. Nearly $41,000,000 has been received since January 1. One fourth of this amount camo in last week and a continuous stream of this precious metal means ultimately the greatest era of prosperity this country has ever known. For weeks the great banks of the old world have been throwing safe guards nround their gold supplies and until recently they succeeded in pro tecting it, despite the fact that foreign exchange rutes fell to almost the lowest levels in modern history. Of tho total receipts of gold, $9, 300,000 came from Ottawa, $5,700,000 from China, $3,500,000 from Japan, $l,050,000,from Umlon dlrect,$l,000, 000 from South America and' $300,000 from Denmark, Tho Inevitable ap pear h to bo at hand. American vecuri tie helil nlu'ouil uro no lunger being liquidated, In fact they aro being bought by foreign Investor. Obvlou evidenced of 1 1 1 1 w weru tinted In Oio ini'urlllim inurkiU In the United riUil lukt wueli uiul without I he m'IIIiik of ok unj bond u n ffi,l'uii niui mw ay Hid ifnllud HIuIhi gidd tur imruhmtiMt hntiu(tt und twmriijtjur uiul lw lm9 luktu) Id t" Tb Unit lmiim i fur v1 Uw United States up to the close of busi ness March 27, approximates $578, 000,000. This is the amount other countries owe the United States in ex cess of imports, however the difference may be settled. When the war began in August it was variously estimated that the United States was indebted to Europe even more than tho present credit balance. Astuto bankers and economists sec in the change that is approaching an opportunity for the United States to become tho worlds bankor. Tho coun try now has billions of dollars worth of agricultural and manufactured prod ucts to sell. Other great nations, crippled by war , want these products and must pay for them. Besides du ring the war and after the war, much financing will be necessary. Foreig ners must look to tho United States for help in nearly every form. MADE HIM PAY The efficiency of tho Germans is in no wise better illustrated than in the following historical fact. Count Moltke, in common with all other soldiers, craved the norvo sol ace given by tobacco. Ho preferred to uso tobneco in the form of snuff and in tho enmpaign against the French Mar shall MacMahon in 1870 he used more snuff than the military regulations al lowed. Although ho won tho cam paign that united Germany and won from Franco a billion francs and two provinces, Germany presented him with n bill that read For one pound snuff supplied to General Von Molt ke, one thaler, which he paid. There is not much chance for graft in such a system. Roosevelt's advice, to offer a man the velvet glove and if that did not satisfy him to hit him withtho big stick, lately seems more grotesque than formerly. Wc all believe in and desire peace but how can we prevent Japan's aggression of China un'ess wo convince her that if necessary we will strike and strike hard and then if that does not suffice to maketho strike again and again. Japan is determined to dominate the Pacific ocean trade and want3 large ureas of China. If China is not al ready divided on paper between Great Britain, Russia, France and Japan, then there is nothing in symp toms and if our country is not pre paring to meet a crisis 0 that kind then those in charge of the govern ment arc blind as moles. Tho often heard assertion that the war has awakened tho people to an interest in spiritual things recallB to mind the remarks of a negro street preacher in Chicago. "If any one ever tells you that they got religion on flowery beds of case, they arc liars and the truth is not in them. For no man ever went to God uidess he was in trouble. People pick a row they could easily havo avoided then call on God to help them out of their troubles. Always beforo for years, Texas was tho banner crop state. Or the state whose agricultural products each year totaled the largest sum. In 1914 according to government report, Iowa took first rank nway from Texas, de spite it being only n fraction ns large. A writer in Motor Age says Iowa's middle numo is "prosperity" Wo are all wishing for that wave to reach Or egon. It will come. HUNTING FOR A NAME "Two Mile" ConHidera On Mutter of A More Distinctive Appellation The farmers living on Two Mile Creek, which, by tho way, l four miles from Bundnn, lmvo for uomu tlmo been trying to find n Hiiltablo imino for their locality which would iiipuh inoro Own tho preHent numo and huvu noinii MlgnlllrHiirn. An y't wo under vtund they huvo not derided on (toy numo, hut nti Ki'iittwlly favoring 0io udupOon of "Ih'w Vully". TliU tor Ibu n-uwH 0ml nt uny vunoi ot 0i yvur, I'Vt ii In lli ilryM wuihvr mh hi wu uuity Imvv or iwyjl wwhn H yim, inU uul hwl'Ury will n heavy dew and the early warefaror, I before the sun iB up, will be drenched to the knees if he fails to folio vV the beaten pathwa; s. The dew is a real asset to that locality and makes big crops and rich dairy pasture lands. If that is the name the Recorder will be glad to use it,and to endeavor to obtain for that locality a general usage of the new name. Wo are writing to hear of somo definite action being taken. And speaking of namcj the Four Mile vicinity which is lar,e and pop ulous, and is four miles from no place in particular, and is at least eight miles from Bandon, and about tho same from Langlois, might well fol low the example of the ''Dew Valley" people. ij . FA1RMOUNT FACTS S R. B. Parker has returned from Port Orford for a short visit, combining pleasure and business and also to find out if times are any better in this country than thoy are down there. Clifford Jones has returned from Port Orford and is staying with bin sister, Mrs. Buckle. Adam Storm is back from Port Or ford where he has been cutting ties. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harding gave a dance at their home Saturday even ing. A dainty supper was served at midnight to thirty-eight guests and dnncing was resumed until five o'clock in the morning. Johnny Willard had the misfortune to tumble off a stump and hurt his leg so severely that he has to use crutch es. Mr. Pesterfield is raising a herd of goats. He has bought a large piece of "the glades" and intends to fence it for a goat pasture. D. The following births occurred at Fairmount in the Prosper district last week. To Mr. and M.m. R. A. 1'Y.icr, u daughter, .ikm March 21 at. To Mr. and Mir.. Melville Uncle, a daughter, 'jorn Muih 23. Tho Fairmount Study Club met March 24th at tho homo of C. V. Hull The subject now under study is South America to which attention is now be ing attracted on account of the new trade possibilities there. Mrs. Ada Hack of Fairmount was a Bandon visitor Wednesday. She re ports that evorybody is gardening and that sho has peas now in bloom, a rather unusual occurrence even for this salubrious climate. Radishes and lettuce are now ready for use. Politicians are getting busy with the 191G campaign. Eastern papers are suggesting the following ticket: For president: Charles L. Whitman of New York, For Vice President, Jonathan Bourne, Jr., of Oregon. J. W. Coach and A. E. Hudsall were sued April 1st by S. L. Kron enberg to recover $4,000 worth of promissary notes. An attachment an Coach's property was issued in aid of the suit. A laborer in Camp 0, near Wagner, dropped dead in the bunk house lust Sunday. He was buried ut Myrtlo Point. Myrtle Point Phone Line Sold Tho Coos und Curry Telephone Co. Hold Its Myrtlo Point locul exchange to the Coqulllo Valley Telephono com pany, April JhL Tho Coos und Curry rompuny will glvo the vulley coinpuny long diktamo ronmatlonii with tho tout of tho country. In 'oiullln both rom puiilen ktill maintain their exchange but huvo ugreid on u ten cent uhurgu for MWltrli cull, Mr. KuOu ImwIo, widen t ot lliv Nul-Jiuh buembly of Ortwm jio ! l-n vliJiliiK Mx l-'t Ui Mtiiar iiv mnml in Mr Iwmv in MmbftAl tMl Official Song of the Portland Rose The beauties of Oregon so imprcssc 1 Mrs. Lynette Arnold Henderson of Sioux City, Iowa, that she recently put these impressions into words und these words nre the lyrics for tho 1915 Rose Festival song. Mrs. Henderson donat ed the lyrics and John C. Abbott, the well known railroad man and musician of Portland, wrote the music.Thc song has a fine catchy swing to it which the whole state will soon be whistling. Through the courtesy of A. H. Eilers well known music dealer of Portlund, the festival song will be given wide spread circulation. Copies will bo sent to glee clubs, orchestras, bands and singing societies of the state and ef forts will be made to make "The Whole World Knows the Portland Rose", tho cong hit of the year. Tho lyrics of the new song which Oregon's scenic wonder's climate, riv ers, streams and mountains suggested to Mrs. Henderson, are as follows: The Whole World Knows the Portland Rose Out west tho purpling huze lies close Over wondrous snow-clad peaks. Out west the gleaming waterfall In dazzling brilliance leaps. Out west the sweet pinescented breeze From the fragrant forest blows. Out west, there's a wealth of glorious bloom, Out west is the Portland rose. CHORUS The whole world knows the Portland rose! Its queenly air, its beauty, rare Within the hearts which all enshrine No other rose is half so fair. Its tint the glint of sunrise shows! Its soft blush glows! It gaily throws Its fragrance to tho passing breeze. The whole world knows the Port land rose! Out west there is wealth for all who come With a brave, undaunted will. The orchards yield their perfect fruit, The streams run many a mill. There's precious hiden ore to mine, Golden grain luxuriant grows, There's weulth in the herds of icacc ful kino, There's wealth in the Portland rose Out west the men and women stand Side by side for all that's fair. They bravely fight for civic right, The hardest tasks they dare. They greet you with their outstretch ed hands, With thespirit the west bestows. Their hearts aro so pure, and sweet and good, As the heart of the Portland rose. ATTACHMENT FOLLOWS SUIT Yesterday J. L. Kronenborg, of Bundon, began suit against J. W. Coach and A. E. Hadsall to recover $4,000 on two promissary notes of $2, 000 each. An attachment on Coach's property was issued in aid of this suit. Coquille Sentinel An insane man, by name Campbell bus been traversing the woods neirr Wagner, clothed as September Morn. He was recently taken in tow by Dep uty Sheriff Ijiird and brought to Co quillo. Ho had wandered six miles from tho place on tho South Fork wher he had left His clothes. A motion was made in the county court ut Coquille to havo Clantneo Russell removed as the executor of tho estate of Arthur Russell. Tlui wan In the intercut of thu hitter's four minor children. Tho Pythian Klhloiu enjoied u plmuunt Hoi'lul hour, following On r hunlnoM Mtklon Wwliiokdiiy ovenn , Aflor unjoylng vurioun gunwk, Ouy M-jmlitxl to 0i hiiiniimt loom, wlunt u lnpy-lui-vy luinihoon uwmted Uihi. U J0iur UllllW tmtimv M'l oNik!J IH")i HiMJllJiWl 'I' I"''" iltmW'YiUr' JM tu Uiv l'"'1 Mmlmm r A Mhj, I '!' Hii jtMJMMKN ftWJ M jUttf