i j . LINCOLN COUNTY LEADER. CHAS. F, ADA Z, SOCLE, Pubs TOLEDO. .OREGON. No man Is In b ashless for himself If lie Is married. According to the common definition, graft is high finance on a small scale. A schoolgirl never graduates until she has learned to stab pickles with a bairpln. Wise Is the young man who doesn't have his fiancee's name engraved in the ring. Opinions should be formed with great caution and changed with still greater caution. I ands. In return, the United States-pays the friars seven and a quarter million dollars. The work of the church, and, indeed, of the religious associations, will go ou as before,- so far as the spir itual and social side of it is concerned; but the orders cease to be landlords. The government, on the other baud, ac quires an opportunity of great value. The possession of four hundred thou- Bnnfl nnfoo f tha T I , -1 1 lief fl II i mftSt valuable land in the Islands gives the MiND SHOULD BE THE STANDARD IN MARRIAGE. means to carry out the plan of estab lishing a class of small landowners, se cure in their possession and devoted to the maintenance and development of American principles. Surely there must be some way to prevent railroad accidents. Isn't it time for an Improvement? The asbestos curtains in use need not be thrown away. Cut into small bundles, they might be used in kin dling In fires. After all there is no patent break fast food that is better than bacon and eggs and buckwheat cakes, although some are more extensively advertised. The average Russian peasant has a vocabulary of only ,110 words. It is surprising that a man can sneeze or clear his throat in 110 different ways. "Nowadays we read too much, as we 1 eat too much; the memory, like the digestion, is weakened by Burfelt" : These words are taken from a recent : biography of Whlttier.. The author shows how meager In quantity was the Intellectual diet of the poet in boy hood. The Bible, "Pilgrim's Progress," and a few of the volumes which form ed the Quaker library of his parents were the chief staple of his reading. The contrast between conditions of boyhood which produced such men as Whlttier and those in which the youth of our day are nurtured is frequently pointed out to the disadvantage of the present. It is the fashion to be wail the multiplication of books and magazines. Because one person or an other tries to read them all and falls, or meets with that success which turns his mind into a scrap-bag riddled with holes, it Is argued that modern condi tions are all wrong, and that . "civili zation" should turn back to earlier President Palmn has vetoed Cuba's lottery bill. It looks very much as if Cuba's first President might make a record for his descendants to be proud f. wisdom is lustlfied bv the result. There are men who have ways.. It is a plausible cry, but Is it ! gunciont force of character and enough talent, not to say quite convincing? The world is full of j gellluS t0 command success, and to be, as Napoleon said, a number of things which did not ex- tuelr ow1 ancestors. But she who hopes for this takes 1st a hundred years ago. Moreover, its heavy rlsk8. there ls 8maI1 cnance 0f more than one Abra- Bpaln has declined to make an ex hibit at the St. Louis World's Fair be cause she does not like this country, and for the further reason that she has not the price. population has enormously increased which is to say that where there was formerly one boy or girl looking for knowledge, there are now hundreds of The minister to Korea complains be cause his silk hat touches the eaves of the legation building when he stands on the steps. Evidently what the minister needs Is an opera hat. An Arizona man committed suicide a few days ago because he couldn't get his Balary raised from $9,000 to $12,000 a year. We know quite a lot of people who would be willing to take $0,000 a year each and live even In Arizona. There ls consternation among gov ernment clerks at Washington becuuse they will in future be required to work even hours a day, with only two months' leave on full pay jht annum. As a taskmaster Uncle Sain Is getting to be Just too horrid for anything. similar seekers. Therefore the ageu- Tue unequal yoke niust inevitably chafe its wearer more or cies of knowledge have inevitably be- lle8g an(1 lt ,3 not to gmlIe walk daIntny under the wHderlngly Increased. But must the j burden. Individual inevitably be bewildered? j ' That there Is no more of a cat than Its skin is a homely statement of unchang ing truth. The human mind is still the human mini. Not even a Bacon can presume in our days to take all knowledge for his province. Out of every thousand printed 'pages there may possibly be one or two for any given person. The teacher of another and of himself must learn to discrimi nate. The wise man will rejoice in every new road to learning, but, after treading the few paths proved the best by the wisdom of the ages, will enter those new roads only which are meant for him. The roof of the cathedral at Toledo In Spain, not. Ohio fell recently. The accident was due, not to skimped and hasty work by n speculative con tractor, but to old nge. The building was begun In the thirteenth century and was not finished for two hundred and sixty-live years, In the year Ameri ca was discovered. Surely it is wise for Hie giver to look a gift horse In the mouth. A western Congressman's wife made an appeal to her neighbor In nshlugton on be half of her minister at home, who had asked her for winter clothes; the poor people of the cold nortinvestern parish wore siifiorliig. One warm-h-Mrted Washington lady sent a bundle the next day. It contained two beautiful silk petticoats, a pink chiffon theater waist, and a tan-colored riding habit, War has Its episodes no less roman tic than those of peace, as a senti mental Milton might have said. One of them ls diselosed in the search of a Cuban soldier for the American nurse who cared for him In the hospital at Santiago. Mie would not give her name to him, but told him that he would hear from her ufter the war. lie bus been waiting for word from her, and Is now In this country, searching, with nothing to aid him save her pho tograph niul the kuowlodge that her family objected to her service as an army nurse. if We hear of rural counties charged wnu uie cost of keeping a consldern bio number of vagrants who are not ovep the poor of those sections. They aro able liodlcd, they go there to be supported for the winter, and yet no one uas enterprise enough to suggest the obvious course of making them work wbile they nre living at the pub lie expense. Nothing would bo easier than to provide them with work there was active and ellleleut admlnls trntlon. They could bo mndo to saw wood, shovel anow, clean streets or a down other things. It Is a nerfectlv safo assertion that If auch work were provided the tramps would speedily uuu omer placet to spend the winter, The settlement of the troublesome Question of the friars' lands in the Philippines gives to the United States the title to nearly all of the real nron. . arty of the religious orders la the lal- By Helen Oldtield. Men who marry beneath them often have. a most uncomfortable time after the knot is tied. However high may be their own social standing, they cannot compel Bociety to see the match from their point of view. True, if they are plucky and persistent, and, what ls more essen tial, if their wives have tact and certain other superior qualities which make for social popu larity, the Dalr usually wins the fight in the end, s struggle ls apt to be a long' and bard one, and society never forgets, even though lt may consent to Ignore the pit from which the newcomer was digged. When a woman takes a husband from a lower social plane than her own the case ls much more difficult. When the man ls markedly beneath his wife she can, as a rule, expect nothing but to be dropped by her own set. She turns over the most decidedly new leaf which Is possible to aa existence. She steps down from her own position in society to that of her husband, and must adjust herself to the change of circumstances as best she may, an adjust ment which Is rarely effected without regret and pain, which are likely to Increase Instead of diminish as time passes. Almost without exception, In ordinary marriages, lt is the husband who establishes the social line for the new household. If that ls higher than the one to which the bride has been accustomed she has the opportunity to rise; If lower, she m-t a!n-nt surely descend. Once In a great while, when a woman disregards socie ty and takes a husband from a plane below her own, her ham Lincoln In a century. The law of life is that people must be congenial in order to dwell in harmony with each other, and love cannot long endure utter incompatibility of tastes and tempers. I , WEAKNESS OF CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE. By T. F. O'Connor. Here ls a strange case of circumstantial evi dence at once overwhelming and misleading: In the reign of Elizabeth a man named Pridcaux was charged wlth'the murder of a neighbor. The first witness testified to finding the corpse of the victim, and beside lt the pitchfork bearing t?N Initlals of Prideaux. The next witness deposed that on the morning of the murder he saw Pri deaux pass his bouse dressed In a certain suit of tiotues. Four hours later, however, he saw Prideaux, then under arrest, wearing In court a wholly different cos tume. Then and there this witness taxed Prideaux with the change of dress, which the prisoner denied In a manner to confused unri R-mnilnir thnt- tlm injurlatratA a-f Anna m.n,if. A youth and a girl were married not ; i . warrant tn kpai-h. tha nxnn'. hm, Th long ago. They promised to love, nrenehed n uloodi were found concealed In the straw stuff cherish and obey-al the things that jtag of a bed. A thIrd wltneM te8tlfled t0 threatg uttw.e(1 nre a part of a regular marriage ser-:bv Prid,.,.,,, .mins the riore.BPfi with whm h W vice, uuu uieuii iiuieu or nine, as rne t deadly quarrel. case may ue. ino man ana woman were strangers. They met on the day of their wis n inn I tor the correspondence was the sequel to , T, " uo IUUUU lmu 11 waa "l8 a wager made by the vouth with his ! ?,c,sh 'or' w th ,d pourlnS from two wounds mue by college chum. Why will men and lc tork- PrUleaux adjured him to give the name of women trifle with matrimony? They r,la nsfll!nt- but the mere effort brought on the death rat- wouldn't Invest $HH in a gold watch -, , , , sc Ul, 1 " ue ia aeiuged without a thorough investigation. They 1 , """" " " ue uau laia " paa man down would ask for n guarantee. They luc u,Bl ""llur l i" imng, nis own would be certain that what looked pcr 1 cmr t0 nIm n'"1 hurried him from the spot in like gold was not brass. They would !U T X h'S b!d 8t,,1"ea dothos tl,ut ho took consult on expert. They would bo i vf ""!,u,,vr u,u "uiureu man s pitcnroiu, leaving his own. mire that the timepiece was Prideaux In nis defense said that as he was passing on marriage The courtship I tte mornInS of the murder through deceased's grounds he r of correspondence, and1' ?an H'!"5',? La1d.d1runl? ,as he tU0USht. 8on'e distance Sir JamLif Dyer, in his summing up, ao.mitt.ea that th. : evidence was circumstantial only, but Irresistible, called upon the Jury to return their verdict of "guilty" I once. The foreman, however, prayed his lordship to allow S the Jury to withdraw to consider at length and leisure. 'i Ills lordship rated them soundly and sent them to it room without food or drink or light or Are. Eleven who were ror an immeujun; vuit. ui tumj vci eiarv S Into surrender by tne tweirtu, we roreman, wno doggedlj declared he would die himself rather than hang the prl oner on such evidence. When they came into court nen morning at the summons of the exasperated Judge they delivered a verdict of "not guilty," which so Infuriated ! tils lomsmp tnat ue aeciureu uiui me uioou or tne mvt. dered man lay at their doors!" The prisoner, on the othet I hand, fell on his knees, and having first thanked God tat his deliverance, he turned and thus addressed the Judge; ! "You see, my lord, that God and a good conscience are thj -best of witnesses." S Sir James asked the foreman for an explanation ot his contumacy. "My lord," replied the foreman, "I can ' explain only on the understanding that my explanation It S confidential." "Certainly," rejoined Sir James. "Then, my lord, I. may tell you that I did not consent to flndluj ( Prideaux guilty of the crime because I committed It mj. self." He then explained that the deceased, upon being : remonstrated with for taking more tithe of the foreman'i corn than Mas his due, bad become first abusive and then i aggressive. He even struck at th foreman seyoroj fu- -with bis pitchfork. Inflicting serious wounds whoso scan f the foreman showed the Judge while the mortal wounds he f himself received were caused In the scuflle for possession of the fork. To secure the Innocent man's acquittal he I contrived to get himself summoned on the Jury and ap- pointed their foreman. CHRISTIANITY RESTS ON SELF PEREECTIONMENT. 0V Count Lma Tnimti I. 1 - vitftui) To live on the top of a pillar, to withdraw Into ' the desert, or to live in a community, all this can f be provisory, necessary to men; but as definite I forms lt is evident error and, unreason. To live n nnra and lintv Ufa tn n Tilling -.- 4n - munlty is Impossible, because the man ls de- ' prived of a half of life communion with the i , world. To live always thus one must deceive 11 one's self; it Is vlipnt Indeed, that lit a real bargain. And yet a man will wed a .woman of whom he knows no more than that her face ls pleasing, her fig ure well molded. Very often he ls sorry is impossible in U a little circle of p lt Is Impossible to saints. In a whole ground and cattle' musi ue uougm rented, relatlom must be entered Into with the exterior, the uou-Chrlstlan world. We cannot liberate ourselves from it, and we ought not to, except that in generul we ought to abstain from those things which we need not do. We only deceive ourselves. The whole work of a disciple of Christ con sists In establishing the most Christian relations -with this world. I think that not only there ls no possibility of illu minating and correcting others without being enlightened and corrected one's self to the Inst possible limits, but that one cannot be enlightened and Improved alone; that every time one ls enlightened aud works for the ameliora tion of one's self inevitably enlightens and Improves others, and that this means tn th nnlv ffi,ii!,ia ,i...i J v.wiuua ,CJ ML LlTUUeilUg i service to others; the fire not only brightens and heats the j object which feeds it, but inevitably brightens and heats ! the surrounding objects, and it produces this effect only when it burns itself. J Some ask: "If I become better will my neighbor be come better?" To enlighten and to improve others, as I have already said, ls done only by enlightening and im proving one's self. We all, according to our weaknesses, are removed more or less from the truth as we know lt, but lt Is Important not to deform the truth, to know that we are removed from It, ami to aspire ceaselessly toward lt, to be ready to listen to Its voice, at any moment as the obstacles weaken. A GREAT FRENCH ARTIST. Leon Jerome, Instructor of Many American Painters, One of the foremost figures in Very often the home becomes I rench art was Jean Leon Gerome, the a section of hades. There Is vitupera tion and scolding; nagging that drives ii weak limn to drluk; and love why, husband and wife discover that there never was any love, even In the be ginning. And it ls worse for tho woman. When she marries she burns her bridge behind her. She gives her future to a man. She ls hehiless. sh s entitled to consideration, tender af fection, sympathy, thorough under standing. Vuu see she gives up much more than a man has to give when she marries. What chance has she when slip weds a stranger? Surely an alliance for life is of more Importance than the purchase of a watch, or a horse, or a dog, or any material thing. And when you reud of n sudden mar- (.1,1. r. l. ..-I, I.. I. .... .... nub- m nun ii nun. i nee iiim ioiiv are' mixed, you wonder al,mt th parents; why they couldn't care cmmi'li alHiut! their girl to warn her. mivise her. I prevent nor irom taking a st p spells ruin nine times in too. man who Is entitled to a go i.l should be man enough to ivimi doors of his life and court li:s i. '3 that j The i wl.'e , the I I'ildll. famous painter and sculptor, who was found dead in bis bed in Paris recent ly. Gerome was the instructor of many American . artists and bad executed many notable works for wealthy residents of this country, one of the last being an alle gorical figure of La- jtA.N l. utuuMfc. bor for Charles M. Schwab. Although 80 years of age, Gerome did not betray his years. His tall and lithe figure, with hair as white as snow, was familiar at social gatherings up to the night before he died, and bis Rparkling wit was ever a source of keen enjoyment to the guests. Gerome obtained his artistic train ing In Koine and Paris and early achieved fa mo. He became wealthy and lived in a splendid palace lu the French capital. For two-score years ue iouowea nm calling with Uie en inusinsm or youth The woman who Is uor.h havin- u I ; 11 " " youm ue was a com- also worth wlunluc tn ii... i,i.r,.i...... i """" 11 "l l.ue ",0.n 01 "onor and a It takes time, and it make. od way. happiness. Attachment. Jack I called on May Kennell the other evening. Nell Yi; she told me one of their bulldogs was very much taken to you. by the way." Jack-No; by the twin. However. I got rW of him." Philadelphia Ledger mourner or the French Institute. Among his best-known sculptures are equestrian statues of Washington and Ifayette. Ho had nearly completed a statue of Corinth, which he intended to be his masterpiece, when death over took him. FACTS ABOUT CONGRESS, j Senator Appenr to Urow More Tooth ! fnl In Their Old Act. In spite of all reports to the con i trary, the United States fln.t. Many a man's respect for old aft ' ,0 be growing more youthful. Thlr nda at boardlnx-houss poultry, tn years ago a careful computation was made, from which It appeared that LARGEST STORE IN THE WORLD. t iJh ? ?re. , .Ch holll', U,e UODor of uow bell,lf the. largest In the world 2v .' n tbeirU8 UU88lun t,,ly ''Moacow, and the Illustration will gUe a fair Idea of Its proportions. It covers twenty acres of ground and em- mehan,0, nZV wherf thousands of merchants may be seen dally disposing of their wares. It ls said that this gigantic bazaar cost $10,000,000 to construct. the average age of its members was 00 years. There were then only eight who were less than 45. To-day the average age ls 59 years and 4 months, nnd in a slightly larger Senate there nre fourteen men, instead of eight, who are less than 45. This difference Is doubtless due to the new States which have come into the Union since that time, whose political lenders were naturally younger men. The Delaware overturn has also given the Senate two youthful members. It ls almost a rule that the young States have young Sen ators. But one Senator ls more than 80 Mr. Pettus, the Junior Senator from Alabama, who was born In 1821. Four teen art between 70 and 80, twenty niaa art between 60 and TO and thirty two between 00 and 00. Tha fifteen wbo bar crossed the thraa-acortHuid-tea Una Include both Senators from Alabama and both from Connecticut, besides Messrs. Teller, Allison, Frye, Hoar, Gibson, Stewart, Piatt of New York, Quay, Hate, Proctor and Culloin. The Constitution of tho United Statci speclilea ao us the nge requirement for' the Senate, and all the States have mnde good this condition by a safe margin of ten years. Only one man in the Seuate does not give his age, Mr. Burton of Kansas, aud for the pur poses of this computation be has been rated at DO. A curious case of disguised age ap pears among the House members in the biographical sketch of Mr. Lover ing, author of the rebate bill. The di rectory which has Just come out an nounced that he waa born "about sixty years ago in Rhode Island." His Uo graphical sketch baa said tha same thing aver since he has boon In Con gress, and he waa elected for tha first time In 1896 and came hera In th prtnf 189T-New York Poat