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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1900)
LINCOLN COUNTY LEADER CHAD. F. ADA K. SOCLE, Pubs TOLEDO OREGON When an umbrella trust can be broken up it just means that the trust will not always reign. Zangwlll insists that he finds the highest form of truth in fiction, and in this he seems to be telling some of it. W. K. Vanderbllt has given Klssam hall to the university at Nashville, but as it is a coeducational institution the boys probably had not waited for that. If this money lending by Uncle Sam goes on he will pretty soon have on hand a lot of second-hand crowns and coronets put up as collateral by mem bers of the effete monarchies as se curity. T'rlnce Inkathar of Cambodia has had to pawn his Jewels for ready money, This Indicates that the prince is already married. Otherwise he would have come over with his jewels on and mar Tied an American girl. The father of Cornelius Alvord, Jr., the ninn who stole $700,000 from a New Yorkbnnk, took $100,000 from a Syracuse bank forty-one years ago. If there Is a third Cornelius Alvord he Is likely to have more or less trouble find Ing a Jol In a bank, unless be adopts an alias. An edition de luxe, limited to 500 cop lea and offered for personal subscrip tion at 1 guinea,' will perpetuate a news paper prepared by British officers while prisoners in Pretoria. The Gram, thus edited, was produced by means of the hectograph. When the time comes for a complete and dispasslonatae history of the South African war, the Pretoria paper will be an interesting witness. Commenting on the late Mr. Hunting ton's assertion that there is great dan ger of overeducatlng the young, Abram Hewitt declares: "If I were to have the choice of one hundred million dollars or the pleasure I had in my college days and the pleasure I have had as the re sult of my education, I would quickly choose the lntter. Were I to choose the millions, I should receive, and I should expect to receive, the scorn of my fellow-men." The Earl of Chatham used to bow so low when he met a bishop that his nose could be seen between his knees. A suavity no less appalling to its sub ject murks, nevertheless, the ascent of our Indians In the social scale. A teacher In an Arizona mission school lately noticed a big boy holding a dis cussion with a little girl at the school door. He was explaining to her that girls should always "go first." She was accustomed to seeing the woman carry the load behind the man, and hung back, abashed at such gallantry. Of hundreds of young Indians the political phrase may truthfully be used, "Not dancing, but advancing." A muddy river betokens one of the greatest of national losses. It means that the rich soil, which Jack Frost and other untural agencies have been ages In forming, is washing away Imto the ocean. Tillers of the land could do much to prevent the loss by keeping the ground on hillsides covered with trees or with sod. It Is the cultivated field on a slant which washes nway most rapidly. It Is contrary to public policy, or at least to the welfare of the future, that the top-soil of such land should be sent down to the ocean when it might be yielding grass crops. Many rivers that are now muddy were clear before the coming to this continent of civilized man. What means of redress Is open to the man who is bamboozled Into buying u ticket for a bad theatrical performance? Is lie to suffer in silence or has he a rem edy? These questions are of added In terest owing to n recent decision, the learned Judge holding that, though the show be of the kind professionally known as "rank," the deluded ticket holder Is not entitled to manifest his re sentment by hissing or other evidence of disapproval. Few people will ap prove this decision. It violates natural Justice nud It conllicts with the innate Instinct of man to raise some kind of a disturbance when he finds that he has been swindled. As well say that the restaurant imtron who finds tough beef steak or dubious eggs set before hi in Is not entitled to offer n few emphatic ob servations to the entire establishment, from the proprietor dowu to the dlsh washer. Of course, It may be argued that the theatergoer who has paid good fioncy to see a bad per forma nee has his remedy at law that he may sue for and recover the amount that he paid for bis ticket. Hut even If this proceeding Mere not tedious and expensive It would still afford Inadequate relief. The outraged patron of the drama Is In equity entitled to express his resent ment of the Imposition that has beeu practiced upon him. He has a right to Tolce his Indignation so that it will be Jta&rd of all men. No objection ever is offered to the applause which greets ' good plays and competent actors. Why, then, should bad plays and incompetent actors be exempt from the reprehension which they have Incurred by their uu- worthiness? The question Is one which will not be finally settled by the pro nouncement of a judge. If merit Is en titled to praise imposture deserves pub lic rebuke. The bad actor Is going to hear sibilant testimony to his shortcom ings despite any decision that may be formulated by the courts. Among the arts which the world is wont to place in the lost column is the art of conversation, for at regular inter vals some one arises to assure people that they do not know how to use their tongues. Perhaps the injunction to children, to be seen and not heard, may have had something to do with this de cadence, for certainly It does seem as if the tongue had not kept pace with the pen. The author of a pertinent edi torial article in Scribner's questions whether the art of talking Is not dying out because of specialism, the absorp tion of each Individual In his own ca reer. "The result of devotion to a spe cialty," he says, "Is to reduce original subjects of Interest that Is, the sub jects which one has in common with other people, 'topics of conversation,' as they are called. We speak of our mod ern world as wonderfully broadened In Interests and sympathies by the tele graph and the newspaper. Yet for even a high type of Individual it may be a constantly narrowing world." One is sometimes inclined to the conviction that. conversation as wpll no onmnns! tion ought to be taught In schools. It might lead to the stilteduess and the artificiality that the author of this arti cle finds In the fine talk of the past, but it would Insure a glibness that is as good as gold at times. Tonguetiedness is worse than stilteduess and incoheren ces more pathetic than artificiality. It is this lack of the right word which Is responsible for the Imperfect sympa thies that exist between people, and conversation might perhaps help to bridge over those "estranging seas" which, as the poets have it, separate individuals. The requirements are so many and the examination is so strict that a man who Joins the regular army of the Uni ted States must be, physically, an al most perfect man. It is the govern ment's Interest, of course, to keep him so. In time of actual war he may have to bear some deprivations as well as face the ever-present risks of battle; but ordinarily he is well sheltered, clothed and fed, and if the generous army ration does not satisfy him, he can buy a great many luxuries for a very little money. The subsistence bu reau of the War Department does not often figure In print, but the enlisted man, at least, knows that It does much for the army's health and contentment. Virtually it conducts a department store for soldiers, selling everything at cost price. Private Jones of the Four teenth can buy a fine razor, for in stance, cheaper thnn his brother In New York can, and If the private has a fancy for toilet soaps and silk handkerchiefs, equally good bargains are open to him. To supplement the rations is, however, the principal business of the subsist ence bureau. It provides almost every thing that Is eatable condensed milk, Jams and Jellies, pickles, dried fish, ma ple syrup, olives, crackers and cakes, and a bewildering variety of canned foods, Including soups, ments, vegeta bles and fish. Recently candy was added to the list, and although otir boys In China are out of the latitude of choc olate creams, they can buy cake choco late and all the gunulrops, lemon tab lets and similar hnrd candies that they wish. Our army has no exact equiva lent as yet for the "field bakeries" em ployed by the French and other foreign armies, which furnish fresh bread ev ery morning to the troops in the field. But on the whole, United States sol diers are probably better cared for than those of any other country. It Is t truism that they deserve the care. The army is so small, compared to the fight ing forces of other nations, that the country has been able to set a high standard, and enlist men who are as worthy to enjoy luxuries as they aro strong to endure hardships. FASHIONS FOR WINTER. STYLES IN OUTDOOR OAKMKMTS. A Strange Tree. In the village of Millbeck, near Kes wick, England, Is II most curious freak of nature. Two trunks rlso on each side of a spring of clear water, and Join together three feet above, forming one tree. V.4t nmn nek ASP 'F7i vention It has been suggested that It would be Well for legations in barbarous regions to have a wireless telegraphic appar atus, as communication could not then be. Interrupted by hostile forces. The number of stars distinctly visible without the aid of a glass is put by Gould at 5,333. Prof. Newcomb says their number Is 7,047. These are up to the sixth magnitude. Prof. Newcomb estimates the number up to the 14.5 magnitude at two hundred million. The new electric locomotive for the 6teepest portions of the Jungfrau Mountain Railway will be the most powerful electric rack-wheel locomo tive ever constructed. The two motors will each have 125-horse power, and will make 800 revolutions per minute driving the toothed wheels. A new- application of electricity comes from Portugal, where an inven tion has been taken out for facilitating fox and badger hunting. It consists of a small electric lamp fixed to the collar of a dog, which is to enter a "burrow. The effect of this light Is to frighten "Br'er Fox" and cause him to come out of his burrow. Dr. F. Larroque reports to the French Academy of Sciences that his studies of the action of sounds upon the apparatus of each ear operates inde pendently of the other. This appears to have a bearing upon the question whether the loss of hearing by one ear exercises an Injurious effect upon its mate. Orchids are famous for beauty and general attractiveness, but It Is not gen erally knuwn that they have a place In the arts that minister to the physical wants of man. But In some parts of the tropics where orchids abound, a delicate fiber Is prepared by the na tives, which they use In the preparation of the many ornaments these races pre pare for trade with the paler races of men. Lack of proper nesting places, too lit tle water, the English sparrow, boys, collectors, birds on hats and the cat are among the causes of the decrease of song birds enumerated by D. Lang. He suggests protection and encourage ment of the birds by planting trees and phrubs for them to live In, putting up nesting boxes for breeding, providing water for" feeding and bathing, and feeding. In unfavorable weather. A German physicist, G. Tammann, has recently discovered some hitherto unnoted facts concerning Ice and the freezing point of water. He finds that not only does the freezing noint varv with the pressure, but that three differ ent kinds of Ice can be produced, each possessing its own crystalline structure. Tnus water may now be said to have five known forms, namely, water vapor, water as a liquid, ordinary Ice, called by Tammann ice I., ice In Its second form, or Ice II., and Ice In Its third form, denominated as Ice III. Some non-scientific people would, in hot weather, add a sixth form generally known as Ice cream. Through the Insertion of Inductance colls into the electrical circuit. Prof Pupln, of Columbia University, has greatly Increased the efficiency of lone distance telephony through cables. The Insertion of the coils enables the cable to transmit 0,000 times as much current as It is able to transmit without them With an experimental cable thus pro vided, It lias been found possible to enrry on a conversation distinctly at a distance of 250 miles. By applying the principle to oceanic cables, It Is be lieved that telephonic messages might be sent to and fro across the Atlantic It would also greatly Increase the ra pldlty with which ordinary telegraphic signals can be transmitted by cable The principle Is likewise applicable for extending the range of telephonic com munlcation over aerial wires. KILLED BY A FLY'S BITE. Child Suffer Great Ag-ony and Expire la a London Hospital. At St. Bartholomew's hospital the other day Arthur C. Langham, deputy coroner, held an Inquest relative to the death of Lydla Maria Chamberlain, aged 0 years, the daughter of i riding Instructor, lately llvlngwlth her uncle at G8 Chelmsford road, Walthamstow Alfred Lewis Chamberlain deposed that the deceased, his niece, was play. Ing at the window on Friday wl.h tie own little girl, when she suddenly com plained of having beeu bitten by a fly, Not much notice was taken at tho time, but In the morning the spot on the nose where Bhe had been bitten became bo much Inflamed and swollen that It was thought advisable to call In a doc tor. Afterward she became very de lirious, and eventually lapsed Into tin consciousness. By this time her nose and eye had swollen to an abnormal size, and It was thought advisable to have her removed to the hospital. De spite every effort which was made by the whole of the staff of the hospital the child gradually sank and died. It waa a case of such rarity that It waa 55 watched with Intense Interest -by si! the doctors. 'You are sure it was a fly that bit her" asked Mr. Langham. "What she said was. 'Oh, I have just been bitten by a fly and it is painful.' " Dr. Nixon, house surgeon, deposed that when he admitted the child she wis unconscious. Having heard the history of the case, he never left he until she died. The face was so swol len trat he was unable to say at first where the bite was. He had slric made a post-mortem examination and found inside the lower lid of the right eye an ulcer. This ulcer had set up in flammation, which bad penetrated Into the skin and Into the cellular tlssuns of the orbit. So great was the Inflamma tion that the pupil of the eye was forc ed out from between the lhW, the pain being, no doubt, most terrible. Ou ex amining the lungs he found Infection, chewing that a blood stream had run from thfa head and carried the poison ous m'crobes over the body. "Have you ever heard of Bach a case before?" Mr. Langham asked. 'Yes. We have records of one or two cases of the kind, but they are extremely rare." "The bite of the Insect caused the micro-organisms, then?" "I can see no other cause, from the history of the case." Continuing, wit ness said that death was due to general blood poisoning set up by the microbes. The Jury returned a verdict of death from blood poisoning set up by the bite of an insect, the death being caused by misadventure. Pall Mall Gazette. DUTCH HAVE RICH ISLANDS. Holland, Next to England, the Greatest I-fin Owner In the Pacific The Pacific ocean, westward of Ha waii and the Marquesas, Is like a fed eration of European nations on Asiatic soil, united by the free commerce of the seas. The nations vary In size, strength and Importance, as the states of Europe or of the American Union. Great Britain commands the field with a landed area of nearly 3,250,000 square miles. Poor Spain's once magnificent empire Is shrunk to less than fifty square miles, a smaller total than be longs to black King George of the Tongas. Holland, the country from which emanated the doughty Boers, owns over 735,000 square miles, settled with nearly eight times as many people as Inhabit the larger area owned by Great Britain. Germany, the new civ lllzer among the nations,-has domi nance over more than 100,000 square miles and about as many people as there are miles. France, with less than one-tenth of Germany's land, Is at some of the most Important points of strategy and at the point of greatest travel. Several Independent states lie in the midst of this federation, as Swit zerland does in Europe; several others in the unhappy, suzeralned position of the Transvaal in South Africa. If all the Islands could be put Into a continuous body of land they would form a most heterogeneous empire. They would Include, in addition to Eu-, ropean peoples with their various pollt-' leal and social systems, a tangle of ab origines, a confusion of savages and seml-clvilized cultivators of soil and commonwealth; an emporium of pro ducts more diversified than a bazaar on a midway plalsance. a mystery of tra ditions as inexplicable as the origin of the American Indians. Profoundly for ested in the Dutch East Indies, the isl ands become in western Australia more barren thnn the lava beds of eastern Oregon and more Irredeemable than the uppermost wilds of British Colum bia.' Fertile, balmy and luxurious In the beautiful lands of New Zealand, FIJI, Samoa and Tahiti, they are trans formed into uninhabitable coral reefs or Into hot and malarial bills of strug gle In the guano-covered or copra-producing dots on the map north and east of a line drawn from the Philippines to New Guinea and through Samoa to the Society Islands. Alnslee's Magazine. A Happy Ending. A boy about 10 years old came Into the Central Tollcc Station of a Kansas city, leading a fine shepherd dog by a piece of rope. The boy's face was red and he was crying. A big policeman kindly asked what was the matter. It was quite a long time before the boy could stop crying long enough to re ply. "My mother," he sobbed, "Is too poor to pay for a license for Shep, and I brought him here to have you kill him." Then he broke out with another wall as If his heart was breaking. Shep stood mute and motionless, looking lov ingly at his young master. A police- man blew his nose very loin',-, the desk sergeant walked out Into the hall, while the captain remembered that he must telephone somebody. Then the chief of police led the boy to the door, and patting him on the head, said. gently: "There, little fellow, don't cry any more; run home with your dog. I wouldn't kill Shep for a thousand dol lars." The boy shed tears of Joy now, and ran off with Shep barking and bound ing at his side, and It was hard to tell which was the happiest Prohibitive Export Tax. The Republic of Guatemala has Im posed a tax of $70 a head on all cattle exported rroin the country. It Is In tended to be prohibitive, MUSSELS ARE GOOD FOOD." Their Use In the United States His Been Very Much Neglected. "There la one shellfish, the mussel, the use of which as an article of food seems to be totally neglected In "the United States," observed an English man of several years' residence in this country to a Star reporter recently. "In fact it is so seldom employed that it may be said to be practically unknown on this side of the Atlantic. It Is rare ly seen In your markets, and near the salt water bays and estuaries in which it is taken It is used, I am told, as a manure for certain crops. This lack: of recognition of mussels as an epicu rlan delicacy probably arises from the popular superstition among Americans that this shellfish possesses poisonous qualities. Such an Impression is, how ever, rather absurd, for in England they are largely consumed by the poor and middle class people, and if they contained any injurious properties their use would be promptly prohibited. "It Is well known that some persons are unable to eat of particular sorts of shell fish to some oysters, clams or lob sters are more or less poisonous, but mussels are only 'noxious' to the great er number for the reason that they de teriorate more rapidly when removed from the water than any other species. There are mussel beds within ji radius of ten miles of New York and other east ern cities of sufficient capacity to sup ply millions of people with a clean' and nutritious article of food; one that would lessen to a large degree the ex- hmistlvA rlomnnrlo niHdC UpCH the Clu2, oyster and lobster fisheries. 'To prepare mussels for the table they should be selected of medium size and care should be observed to wash them carefully and place them in a ves sel of salted water for several hours, so that they may clean themselves; that i, discharge the dirt and grit found within their shells. When this pro cess Is completed the bivalves should be placed In water and boiled or steaming Is better In the vapor generated by their own juice. When they are done they may be easily taken out of their shells and are ready to be. used in one of the many forms of which they are suscep tible." Washington Star. COSTLIEST SAUSAGES MADE. Some Made in France that Only Capi talists Can Afford to Eat. "The costliest of all sausages," said a man familiar with the trade, "is Ly ons sausages, Imported from France. Lyons sausage sells In Paris at 2 francs and more a pound. Here It Is sold at 80 cents to $1 a pound. Lyons sausage Is also produced In this country. That made here is even finer than the import ed, but sella here, however, for some what less. "Lyons Is rather a large sausage. It Is put up In the largest size hog casings and it Is made of beef and pork. The meats used in making It are of the very best, and they are prepared with the greatest care. From the beef all the sinews and veins are removed, and there Is left only the selected parts of the meat. The beef Is chopped very fine, so fine as to make of it practically a paste. The pork used Is from the back fat of hogs. This Is not chopped fine, as the beef is, but Is cut -into Ir regular shaped pieces which show In the sausage when.lt Is cut. The spices used in the seasoning are, of course, of the choicest. The Lyons sausage Is liard smoked. ; "The art of sausage-making has so improved In this country that now, as you can say without reservation, the finest sausages produced in the world are made in the United States. This Is true without exception. The Ameri can Lyons sausage, for example, Is bet ter than the Imported. Some American Lyons Is exported to France and sold there, and some of that thus exported Is reimported and sold here as Import ed Lyons. "Lyons sausage Is served In the very finest of hotels and restaurants, and It may be found on bills of fare, before the soup, served as an appetizer. For that purpose it is very excellent. I fancy that Its Increasing, use In this manner In New York In recent years Is due in great measure to calls for it from Russian visitors. The Russians have always been fond of Lyons saus age, as they are also of caviare. New York Sun. A Curious Street. Canton, China, possesses the queerest street In the world. It Is roofed In with glazed paper fastened on bamboo, and contains more signboards to the square foot than any street In any other coun try. It contains no other Bhops but those of apothecaries and dentists. Physic street Is Its appropriate name. A New WilL "Hello, Jasper," exclaimed Spenders, stopping his rich uncle's valet, "how's uucle this morning?" "Well, sir, he Bays he thinks he needs a change of heir." "So, he's sent you for the doctor, eh?" "No for his lawyer." Philadelphia Press. Ticking of a Watch. A watch will tick 100,144,000 times la a year If It Is kept continuously run ning. If hard work is creditable, how m creditable men there are