THE SUNDAY OREGQNIAN, POKTLAND, JUNE 21, 1903. 35 THE BATTLE OF THE CITY BY DR. LYMAN ABBOTT, D. D. MUNICIPAL problems are only one phase of the great problem of hu man life. That life Is a struggle has long been taught by religion, and has recently been reaffirmed by science. From the cradle to the gravo we are engaged In it. A struggle In the individual be tween the higher and the lower, the ani mal and the spiritual, the sensuous and the supersensuors. "The good that I would I do not, the evil I hate to do," is a very ancient Interpretation of this struggle with which most of us are fa miliar. There are few sinners so ap parently hopelessly depraved that they never enter on this battle. There are few saints that have won the battle and have no need for further fight. The city, the modern city. Is the place where the forces of good and evil are more than every where else lined up for conflict. The city Is the heart of this great campaign. The city Is the Gettysburg of the long war. The city Is the Quarte Bras In the Water loo of the agea To a great city come both the worst forces and the best forces of the nation. Here .gather the criminals, the Ishmaelltcs, the men whose hand is against every man. Here. they come to rob and to plunder, here when they have robbed and plundered elsewhere they come to Jive. This is their camplng pround. This is where they easiest find the booty, and the most. Here gather the sensual forces. Here come the men who want eaee and Indulgence. Here come the men who like to dress In line linen and fare sumptuously every day Here are the great hotels, the res taurants, the theaters, here the great pleasure-givers of every kind, and here, therefore, come the men who are seeking pleasure. Here men come to gamble, and to drink, and to make merry. Here the men who have care for nothing while life laughs its hours away. Here. too,. come men who are" eager for wealth, who meas ure all of life by the dollar mark, who think success is measured by the money a man possesses, not by the character he develops. Here come the men and the women who are fond of display. This is the place to show ourselves off. This is the place to ride in the finest carriages with footmen and coachman. This is the place to wear the fine dresses, the glitter ing Jewels. This is the place in which to 00 to the opera not always to hear the music, but sometimes to have other peo ple look at us. Here is where we go to the horse show, and people wonder whether we have gone to see the horses or for the horses to see us. Here come the wolves that raven, the swine that fatten, the bees that hive, the peacocks that strut. B ut here also come the great forces for intelligence and for virtue. Here the no blest elements of humanity are found, here the strength, the heroism and the In telligence compacted together Here are the great commercial enterprises, not merely money-making, but humanity serving. A great railroad is something more than a corporation to pay dividends to stockholders. It is a clvillzer. Run this railroad across the Western prairie and where this road goes the village springs up, the schoolhouse and the church are built; and sending their chil dren to these schoolhouses and worship ing in these churches are men and women Irom across the sea, men and women who had no hope at home, who existed in a dull despair that men miscalled content. Now they have life, hope, activity, spurred on by the opportunity in this new land. If I were a railroad man with $50,000,003 to invest. I should not know how much to put Into a railroad and how much into a college. I am not sure that a railroad would not render the best service of the two much better than some colleges. Here are the great newspapers. I do not think 1 quite agree with Jefferson when he said that he would rather have a country without government than without news papers. But I am quite certain that we could get along without Congress for a year better than we could get along with out newspapers for a year. Wonderful enterprises they are. reaching their hands out into all the world and gathering all the news from all the world, and serving it to .us with our breakfast coffee. They are great educators. They teach us what we are, how much our civilization is. how much of solid mahogany and how much very thin veneer. Here are the great schools. To the towns and cities come the parents, bringing their children to be educated, because In the towns and cities are thegreat universities, the great industrial and professional schools. Here the public school Is seen at Its best. Here, too, are the great churches, Prot estant, Catholic, Jewish. I do not say there are not preachers as able, as de vout. In many a country village as In the metropolitan pulpits. We are too prone to measure a man by the place he stands In rather than by the work he is doing. Yet in the main the great preachers and pastors are to be found largely in the great cities. Here are the auxiliary Insti tutions, the Young Men's Christian Asso ciations, the Daughters of the King, the various missionary boards. They center here, have their direction here, are mold ed and shaped here; but their Influence does not end here, and from these cities, from these homes, from these churches goes out a stream of beneficence to bless our own land and to bless other lands. I had occasion ten years ago to make in quiry as to what the churches in the City cf Brooklyn were doing. I found that In that one year they had spent $2,250,000 on religious work, and 1 1-3 millions on char itable work outside the churches. And Brooklyn Is not an exceptionally rich city, nor has it done nearly as much as New York. Thus we have these two forces standing face to face in the city, wrest ling with each other, the forces of sensu ality and vice and crime and ignorance, and the forces of virtue and intelligence and courage and moral purpose. Here they meet at close quarters. We jostle one another on the same car, we walk by one another on the same street, we live beside one another on the same block, I am, not sure that we do not sometimes kneel bj- the side of one another In the same church. . The question of political reform, there fore, is not a political question It is the battle of the ages In a microcosm. It Is not a. problem that can be solved by a political panacea, or settled In half an hour. It cannot be settled by electing one party or another to office. 'Turn the Democratic rascals out," and leave the city as it iff, and the Republican rascals will come in. "Turn the Republican ras cals out, and leave the city as It Is and the Democratic rascals will come in. I think New York City has been perhaps the worst governed city in the country under Tammany rule, unless Republican Philadelphia ha? not been a little worse governed. Political reforms, if they are simply political, do not go to the root of the matter. The problem Is more than a political question. It cannot be solved by legislation. It Involves the battle of all the ages, that began in Eden, and will not end until the great curtain of all human history drops down and the other life begins, that goes on we do not know where or how. , In this great battle of the ages the ene mies of honest government in our great cities seems to me -to be chiefly three: Ignorance, Indifference and greed. For ig norance the remedy is education. What in some sense every political .campaign fur nishes indirectly, teaching us our obliga tions, teaching us the principles by which we should be governed. Indifference Is a worse enemy than ig norance. The chief sinners are not those who live In the tenement-houses on the East Side, but those who live In the brown-stone houses in the center and heart of the city. Every voter is a trus tee. In a hotly-contested Presidential elec tion, out of 70.000.000 of Deoole about 14.- 'OOO.OOO vote. What does that mean? It means that every voter votes for five others, for the women, the children, the nonvoting population. I am their trustee If I neglect to vote I neglect my duty as a trustee. If I throw away my vote, I throw away the rights of these five people who are entrusted to me. If I sell my vote for a place or an advantage or a $5 bill, I sell the rights that have been en trusted to me. And yet I think the chlef est cause, one certainly of the chlefest causes of this corruption has been what I call the Indifference of our better class of citizens. It Is an old difficulty, very old; as old as the Book of Judges. The trees went forth on a time to anoint a king over them: and they said unto the olive tree. Reign thou over us. But the olive tree said unto them. Should I leave my fatness, wherewith by me they honor God and man, and go to wave to and fro over the trees? And the trees said to the fig tree. Come thou, and reign over us. But the fig tree said unto themShould I leave my sweetness, and my good fruit, and go to' wave .to and fro over the trees? And the trees said unto the vine. Come thou and reign over us. And the vine said unto them. Should I leave my wine, which cheereth God and man, and go to wave to and fro over the trees? Then said all the trees unto the bramble. Come thou, and reign over us. And the bramble said unto the trees. If in truth ye anoint me king over you, then come and put your trust In my shadow; and if not. let fire come out of the bramble, and devour the ce dars of Lebanon. The olive and the fig and the vine have said in America. "We do not care for politics." Then we have elected the bram ble, and when we have elected It the parable has been reversed, for fire has come out of the bramble and devoured the cedars of Lebanon. Nor can I fall to say here one word of honor to the man who surely belonged among the vines and the figs and the olives, who had a position in this city which any man might covet, a place of distinguished honor . and also congenial work, out of the quiet, pleas ant, constructive labor of a great univer sity, went forth to take up your work and my work, and to do good service for you and for me not to be praised for what he did, but to be scolded, not to say slandered, for what he was not able to do in so short a time. The third great enemy we have to fight is greed, the spirit that desires to get something for nothing, that puts acquisi tion above everything else; the spirit which counts honesty as something be tween man and man, but nothing between man and men; the spirit -which considers it wrong to pick the pocket of a man, but right to put the arm up to the shoulder In the public treasury. And this spirit of greed Is worse when it is seen In the highest quarters. It Is not at Its worst in the man who sells his vote for a dollar bill or a Job in the street .cleaning de partment. It Is worse In the men who swear off the taxes they ought to pay; HOW TO AVOID ERRORS XIII HOLDING TOO MUCH foreground cannot be called a very serious defect In a pic ture, but it is inartistic and objec tionable from the fact that too much un attractive material is included in the pros pect. It may be said that the superfluous foreground can be cut off and that is true but the picture would be reduced, and you would thereby lose an effect you might otherwise attain. Many things are to be considered in proportioning the fore ground. Of course the horizon must not divide the picture into two equal parts. It may appear either above or below the middle of your view. This depends wholly upon your subject But the appearance of too much foreground In any study, unless It be the ascent of a mountain or roadway, offends the critic's eye hence it should be avoided. XII Too Slnch Sky. The artist would say of such a picture as appears In Illustration No. 12, "There Is too much canvas 'to let' here." This fault Is Just as objectionable as a dis proportionate amount of foreground. There are. It is true, many pictures In which exquisite cloud effects charm the beholder. The words "too much" cannot be applied to these faithful portrayals by an appreciative and skillful photographer. You will learn to judge, after many trials, of the proportions to b? included in a land scape that will give It the most artistic value and effect. Experience and obser vation will be your teachers. In looking through the album of an amateur a short time ago I perceived that. In the majority of the photographs, three-fourths ,of the picture was occupied by sky, while The subject looked quite In significant in the remaining space. Study nature In her everyday dress, as well as in her most tnchantlng appear ances. Know why a certain scene makes an attractive picture, and you will soon become so critical that you will allow no undue proportions to enter your pictures, XIII Holding Camera Level While FocaslBgr. Pictures like that shown In illustration No. 13 are quite common with the begin ner; they are not the result, of incorrect focusing, but of sheer carelessness In re gard to the position of the camera, I have known amateurs to overcome all the early difficulties In photography and yet to fail repeatedly In their pictures, because they forgot to make sure that the camera was perfectly level while focusing. Many op erators use a small camera level glass, which can be placed permanently on the side of the instrument; but this is not necessary if proper care Is given to the worse in the men that bribe legislators to give public franchises for which they ought to be willing to pay the public a fair compensation; worse In the men that corrupt in order that they may ain by the corruption; worse in the most respect able sinners, not In thoe that are most disgraced and dishonored; worse, in the most Intelligent, not in the most Igno rant, It is a sin. a black, shameful, damn able sin, wherever It appears; in any man. whatever his learning, his rank, his wealth, his position, who counts the pub lic necessity as somthing out of which he may take for personal profit an ad vantage, without giving to the public a fair, reasonable. Just equivalent. What are -we going to do? It Is clear that this Is a battle not to be won merely by voting, nor even chiefly by voting. It is to be won by lessons taught and learned In the home. It is to be won by mothers teaching their children patriotism and purity and truth and honor. It is taught by the Influences that are more potent than political power. It Is to be won by Ideals which we hold ourselves and foster and inspire in others. It Is to be won by the work of the minister. Not by his preaching on trusts and strikes when they are being discussed by the newspapers; not by doing the work that belongs to the press: not that. But ,by recognizing tho fact that religion Is to do Justly, to love mercy, to walk humbly with God; by recognizing the fact that our prayer is not an idle one, "Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth aa it is in heaven." By oo preaching and so minis tering as to fit men and women to live noble lives In New York City. If. the ministers can do this, we can leave prob lems concerning the celestial city for a little while." We shall be ready for it when the time comes. We will be build ing a celestial city on earth. For the battle is not to be won by poli tics, which Is a mere method of life, but by life itself. It Is to be won by the rec ognition by us of the truth that we are in this world, not for pleasure, not for wealth, not for any subsidiary thing; that we are here as our Master was here, to love and to serve; that we are here to fight the battle so long as God shall give us life; that we are here so to live that when at last the end shall come, we can look back upon our city life and say, not, I was a millionaire; not. I had a good time; not, I was In society, but, I fought a good fight and I kept the faith. New York City. The Fat Man's Farewell to Golf. New York Sun. "No," said the fat man. as he ordered another high ball, t have given up golf. I thought I was making some progress, but never again. Last Sunday finished me. "I started out early and thought I could sneak off by myself for a little practice before the others. But a miser able little caddie boy followed me up to the tee and offered to caddie around for me for Jfl cents." " 'Never mind, son,' said I. 'I'll get along.' "With that I made a magnificent drive at the ball and missed it by three feet. The boy unlckercd and I tried to look CAMERA LEVEL WITH FOCUSING. jf?: ft Sfc Ah XI TOO MUCH FOREGROUND. sition of the camera. I There are. on the other hand, beginners ! who are so anxious to have a "straight i picture," tEat they lose sight of the char acter of their subject, and in their per sistent but mistaken efforts to have things oblivious; and then I made another grand swipe, with the same results. " 'Say, mister. said the caddie. Til go around with you for a quarter. "I declined. 'Then.I made another swing and drove the ball about ten feet. The boy laughed and retreated out of reach. "Say, mister.' he called. 'I'll go around with you for 10 cents.' , " "I was rattled by that time, and when, I tried to hit that ball I made a worse mess of it than I ever did before, and I repeated it three times more. And then that little demon got back about 30 feet and yelled: 'Say, mister. I'll go around with you for the fun of It.' "That let-me out. I told him to go to another place, packed up my things and came back home." DANGERS OF A LARGE INCOME Yw HIUIs the other night, "when we have $50,000 a year." "Or most of us," he added, heidglng a little. "Some men can stand It, but not many." Fifty thousand a year is the Income of only one minion well Invested, and we have long since lost the habit oft accounting the 51,000,003 man rich. The proportion of the $5O,0OO-a-year men to the rest of the population Is not yet large In this country, but the absolute number of them Is pretty big, and if most of them are going to the devil it Is a ser ious matter. However, Dr. HIllls was not dealing with statistics, but giving col loquial expression to an opinion. The opinion was that an Income of $50,000 a year Is unwholesome. He spoke of divorce In "high life,"' and of "the pampered sons and daughters of luxury, rotten be fore they are ripe, and drowned in the honeysucklei Juice of Indulgence." We all see enough of the evils of wealth; of lives that might have been useful blighted by It; of homes thit might have been happy devastated by It. Any industrious and observant person could get together facts enough about promising young lives that had come to no good from lack of the pressure of necessity, to make careful citizens hesitate to say whether. If they had to choose, they would prefer the risks of $50,000 a year or tuberculosis. And yet. $50,000 a. year has Its good points. Its opportunities, its privileges; and here In New York, at least, there are facts and considerations that go far towards neutralizing Its perils. Suppose it' is a mere income derived not from Investment, but- from labor or business. Its possessor. If he is prudent, will save $20,000. and perhaps he will give away $3,000. That will leave him only $25,000 a year to live on, and though, even If he has a family, he can live in comfort on that sum, that he cannot live in prlde ful luxury upon it Is so well known that there is no need of going Into details to tell why. If his $50,000 comes to him In dividend checks and coupons without trouble or anxiety to him, the situation is harder. It Is an awful thing to be rid of the struggle for existence. It is really the next thing to being dead, and yet It is what almost every one of us aspires to and reaches after all the time. The first thing the beginner usually tries to buy with his money is ease; the next Is pleasure. That's where the $50,000 gets In Its deadly work. When Its possessor buys ease and pleasure Instead of opportunity. It may raise the devil with him, as Dr. HIllls justly suggests. Harper's Weekly. IN PHOTOGRAPHY XII level present many odd and untruthful effects, such as losing sight of the true horizon, and making their hills and as cending roads appear on the level. I have In mind an example of this kind of work. It Is a photograph of a man standing upon OBADIAH OLDWAY ON COLLEGE GIRLS THE PESSIMIST FROM HOAXVTLLE RECORDS HIS OBSERVATIONS H OA7CVTLLE; Or., June 15.-Mr, Edi tor.) I've just got home and got my blled shirt and stiff collar off and Into my old duds. I've got to rtst a. spell, so I'll write a few lines whilst .things Is quiet. As you know. I don t wear a blled. shirt and starched collar everyday and maybe you'd like to know where Ive been, and that's just what I'm a-goln' to tell you. You see, Hanners niece has been a-gola- to college, as she calls It, for nigh about three years', and nothln' would do Hanner but we must go down and see her graduate. As near as I can find out, In these here college and hlfalutln schools, as are a-rulnln the country, a young person goes and listens to what the pro fessors, as Bell calls the teachers, has to say on different subjects. That takes about four hours a day; then she goes down to a restaurant and eat3 pickles and Ice cream and thinks It over. At night she opens a book or two and studies a lit tle grammar and works a little while on. a sofa cushion or some other fandango untfl bedtime. It takes about three years for the professors to tell all they think they know, and then the girl graduates. They call the ceremony commencement. I don't know why unless it's because she commences Jo tell what she thinks she knows, and to show off a lot of new duds. Maybe It's because her daddy, as she calls him, has to commence makln his fortune all over again. I don't know, but we went down to. see the doln's any way. I tried to beg off, but Hanner, she's so sot In her way that I had to go to "keep peace In the family" ast Shake speare says. We got up early In the mornln to get reedy for the cars. Hanner had a big basket to carry, so I helpted her over to the depot with It. "Hanner," says I, "this feels awful light for dinner, and we'll be mighty hungry against noon." "That ain't dinner," says she. "What in all natur is it then?" says L "It's flowers for Bell," says she in such an uppish tone that I didn't say anything more. We had to wait half a hour for the cars, and that derned collar was just a sawln my neck off. Hanner she spent the whole time a tellln where and why wo was again and a-actin as proud as If she was the Governor of the state, while all the other women a-walting for the cars was a-3ayin, "You don't say!" "Do tell!" and so on. By and by the cars arrived, and we got on, me a carryln' that : basket ilke a posy girl at a weddln'. Every seat was full. Hanner she squeezed in alongside of another woman from Hoaxvllle and I had .to stand up. When we got about half way to where we was a-goln' the conductor come in and I says, says I. "See here, Mister, if that tarnal railroad company makes. me pay for my ride I'm a-goln to set down." "Alright," says he. "But." says I, "there ain't any seat as I can see." "Come with me, then," say3 he, with a grin. He took me out into another car, that didn't have many people In it and told me to find a seat In there. Well, I did. Several More By XIV PHOTOGRAPHING AGAINST Copyright. 1902, by George W. Jacobs & Co. TOO MUCH SKY. a wharf, while the water in the back ground runs uphill, when In truth It should be perfectly level. You can Im agine the ridiculous effect of such a. scene. I would suggest an 'easy and . simple remedy. Take a . lead pencil and draw There was a black nigger, amakln' up a ( lot of beds and stuff. He kept awatchln me and amutterln somethln' to himself, about people not knowln their places, but ! I'd paid for my seat and I was agoin to keep It. In a few minutes more we got to the place where we was agoln, and when I got out I' liked never to have found Hanner In the crowd. When I did find her we went up to Hanners sister's and brushed up a bit, and then went over to where the exercises as they call 'em was agoln' to be. You'd ought to have saw the flowers and the flags and the buntinVandI don't know what all, ahangin' on the walls and in the windows. Pretty soon a girl with about two yards of extra dress goods atrallln behind her, and some more stuff ahangin onto her elbows like remnants at a bargain sale, swept across the platform and began to drum on the piano. In come a lot ot girls awalkln as if their pretty white slippers was a lnterferln with the corn crop. Bell was amongst- 'em, but I wouldn't aknowed her 1 Hanner hadn't nudged me and whispered. "There she is-" She was a lookin as meek and gentle as a lamb, but all her folks knows she's a roarln Hon, when things don't go to suit her to home. They got up on the platform and set down so's everybody could see their fine clothes, and alookln' so happy, whilst there I was a beln murdered by that pesky collar. The head teacher made a speech, and a preacher prayed, and then another girl without any collar or sleeves on. got up and sung a song, with her mouth wide open like she was havin' a tooth filled. I reckon she was some kind of a foreigner, for I couldn't make out only one word, and that was "lost." She kept a repeatln It In such a distressed " voice that I sug gested to Hanner, "If It's her sleeves she's awantln that other woman's got enough extra on her skirt to make her a pair." "Shut up." says she. "That's the style for singers." When she got through the head teacher began to call off the girls' names and what they was" agoln' to speak, and then they commenced. Each one would come out to the front and roll her eyes and make a bow, and give us a bit of advice. There was a lot of gush about beln not seemln. doln' your, duty, fixln' your eye on the stars, etc.. etc., and then come Bell's turn. The head teacher called out, "Oration, 'Beyond- the Alps Lies Italy,' by Mies Arabella Arosa Allison." Then she as was plain Bell Alison be fore commenced. You'd a thought the sweet critter astandiri' there clothed In such raiment as Solomon In all his glory never seen, with her No. 6 feet crammed. Into No. 4 slippers, and her face powdered until you couldn't see a freckle, would never be able to be anything but what sho looked, but Shakespeare says, "Ap pearances are deceitful." "We must lift our eyes upward," say3 she in a unrecog nizable voice, "never stoppln for the little difficulties we meet, keep a ollmbln' and you'll surely find your reward at the top. Over the Alps lies Italy! Let us not look below lest we fall. Be not discour aged but press onward and upward, with a cheerful word to the less fortunate about us, lending a 'helping hand to the needy and bringing them up to higher planes of life, etc., etc." "That's all very well," says I to' Han ner. I hope she s turned over a new Valuable Hints to Amateurs Charles M. Taylor THE SUN. . upon the ground glass of the camera a true horizontal and a true perpendicular line. Thus This will materially aid the eye of .the operator in hl3 work, and secure abso lutely correct lines in his results. XIV Photofjrapliinf? Against the San. The beginner frequently makes the mis take of photographing against the sun that Is, placing the lens In such a position as to receive, either directly or Indirectly, the rays of the sun while exposure is being made. This produces a cloudy effect and spoils the picture, as shown in plate No. 14. Protect the lens by having the sun at the back of the camera, or on one side of It while photographing, the latter posl tlon being preferable. If It la absolutely necessary to face the sun, shade the lens from above by your hand or hat I have seen amateurs recklessly disregard this rule and in consequence produce worth less pictures. ReturnlBR Slide to Holder Edgenlae. When replacing the slide In the plate holder after exposure has been made, be careful to put It in squarely not first In serting the 'edge of the slide. The reason for this Is obvious. The plate-holder Is made "with, a small spring or door,, as it were, which closes quickly, when the slide Is withdrawn, and fills the space allowed for It; thus you can readily see that If you Insert the edge of the slide first. In returning It to the holder, the door or spring Is opened . and light admitted. thereby fogging or streaking the plate, as In the illustration. It- would not matter so much were the slide not squarely Inserted In' the holder If the camera was completely, covered by the focusing cloth; but in forming a habit for correct working It Is well to practice the safe and careful way. You will thus avoid possible error and insure the moat desirable results. leaf and lends a hand to help her mother a little oftener than she used to." j When they alf 'got through a man from, away off somewheres made a speech. I 'spose they got him so's he'd say a lot of nice things about the girls as had: graduated, because, you see he'd never seen one of 'em before, and didn't know1 but what they was always just so smll in' a.nd gentle. -He give 'em each a little roll tied up with a lot of ribbons, which he said Was a diploma of graduation from the school. Then the Joins' broke un and every body began to talk to everybody else, and shakin' hands with the girls., just like they do at meetln' when somcbody gets religion. We followed the crowd, and when I' shook hands with Bell I says: That was a good speech you made. Bell, and I hope you'll practice what you preach." But she kinder sniffed, and I knowed she was the same spoiled girl as she was before she commenced to tell us what country was on the other side of the Alps. Alter dinner tney all put in to have us stay until the next' day. Bell wanted her Aunt Hanner to go to the picture gal lery with her when she had her picture took, with all her finery and flowers, and diploma and other ftxtns'. but I just made up my mind that I Wouldn't en dure It any longer, so I left Hanner there and come home on the afternoon train, and mighty glad I wa3 to get here. Now; Mr. Editor, I ain't asayln' as how them colleges ain't good for notjhln. but I do say they turn out a heap of foolishness. What's the use In a girl's gettln up there and oratln" about Alps and stars and things like that when It's all put on? They won't do nothln but build alrcastles until some good sound experience brings 'em back to earth and shows 'em that they ain't no better'n other people. xou needn t tell as how a college wom an Is better able to bring up a family of good citizens than a woman as hasn't no such fandangoes in her head. She'll Just bring 'em up to follow In her foot steps, and the time will come when there won't be anybody in the country but what's gone to college. Such people as me and you will be crowded out of tho world and the good old days will be for got The evenlns will be spent In readln clubs and such like Instead of parln apples and sewln carpet rags as we used to when I was young. Its a comln': I've been seeln it for a good many years now. Hanner couldn't get un and tell where Italy was, like Bell did today, but she had 26 pieced quilts when I married her. It's a plain fact that all this college education is what's aliftin' women up to tnlnk they re equals of the men and causln all this agitation about votin' and so on. If we as a nation don't want to go to destruction we've got to take a back track and get onto the old paths our forefathers trod, and not- be carried away with every wind of doctorin. Yours truly, OBADIAH EVERAT OLDWAY. P. S. I forgot it was school meetln day today, and they re-elected Abrams for director and voted a two-mllL tax for to keep more school while I was eone. That's just my derned luck. O. E. O. MECHANICAL BAIT. Wiggle By Electricity and Lures Game Pish to the Hook. Philadelphia Record. The fisherman who resorts to trickery or to machine methods of luring the fish to his hook Is always open to criticism from his fellows, but, notwithstanding this fact, there has been expended a great deal of ingenuity in devising ap paratus of this character. The first step in this direction was probably taken years ago, when Izaak Walton rigged up a device on the banks of some cool stream to permit him to take a nap while wait ing for a bite, and yet feel assured that he would not miss the coveted chance of landing his finny foe. Prom this, by a gradual evolution, fishing machines have developed into elaborate affairs, some of which are calculated to relieve the fish erman of all work except that of taking the fish from the hook, or hooks, on which it has become automatically im paled. It is a well-known fact that most fish are endowed with more keenness than one would suppose from a cursory exam ination of his physiognomy. It is diffi cult to deceive him In the matter of bait, and he has been known to unhesi tatingly pass a whole aggregation of fish temptingly strung on a line for his es pecial benefit, merely for the reason that they did not display the proper degree of freshness by an occasional squirm. It Is not always possible to keep the "hooks supplied with live bait, and It Is never convenient, so it has occurred to some inventve fisherman to make a fish for bait to which could be Imparted the squirm so necessary to tempt the dis criminating mouth of the game fish. Because of the somewhat proscribed limitations of the case, it has not been convenient to make fee of the usual mechanical means available for this pur pose, but the general Introduction of electricity to all such purposes has per mitted the design of an exceedingly life like Imitation of a fish, with all the fin and tall movements necessary- to deceive the most careful, denizen of the deep, and this, too, without making the fake fish of any abnormal size. The inventor of this device is Thomas A. Bryan, of Baltimore, Md., who asserts that It may be made In the shape of a minnow, crawfish, fly or any other body. In the interior of "which Is mounted an electro-magnet, and having movable parts, such as flna and tall, having armatures for the electro-magnet3 connected there with. By means of a small dry battery fastened to the rod or carried. In the pocket of the fisherman, and a conven ient touch-button, with the necessary wire connection between them, it Is possible to send, a current through the parts as de sired, when the tail and fins of the mimic fish will be agitated so rapidly and life like that no member of the flnny tribe could think for a minute of questioning Its genuineness. This dtceptive construction can be made of metal, although the Inventor Is of the opinion that rubber would be .preferaBle for the purpose. Where It Is desired to make them of metal the wires connecting the fish and battery may be readily insu lated, so that there will be no means of fered for the escape of the current. Rub ber, however, has advantages of construc tion, and Mr. Bryan says that the rubber can be as readily painted and colored to deceive the game fish as metal. Dovrle Defied, "by Droath. Chicago Chronicle. Followers of John Alexander Dowle who live in ZIon City have begun to feel a weakening of their faith In the self-styled "Elijah .II," and all on account of the recent rain storm which visited that part of Lake County. At every corner where gossip Is bandied about, this rain affair was the subject of discussion recently. For weeks the "healer" had been praying for rain, and lots of It, especially for Zlon. Everybody expressed confidence In the efficacy of his supplications and all seemed sure their flelds would be given plenty of moisture. Finally' the rain came, but with the precision of a Gov ernment surveyor It located the boundary lines of Zlon and not a drop fell within the city limits. All the farms far and" near were benefited, while within Zlon township vegetation Is turning brown. California produces more dollars' worth of oranges than of gold oranges ever JlS.000,000 and gold T.17,00O,CO0.