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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1906)
LIHGOLN COUNTY LEADER CHAS. P. ADA B. SOULB, Pbi. TOLEDO. .OREGON King Christian (lied poor. lie should have consulted King Leopold. The doctor will get even with Gro ver Cleveland the next time be has a twinge of rheumatism. Hecent disclosures concerning the "smart set" give Colonel Watterson in excellent excuse for saying, "I told you so." Complaint is mnde that the navy Is becoming too costly. Some way must be found to reduce the expense of the hoeing trials. A pure food law, say Its opponents,' would work a revolution in certain Industries. This, if true, only demon strates the need of a pure food law. Georgia drummers are demanding a law for clean sheets. They ought to consult with Messrs. Ilapgood and Collier, who have done something to ward getting cleaner sheets. Esperanto, the new universal lan guage, has been get to music. A great deal of operatic singing has always sounded like Esperanto, no matter wliut liie uumluul luuguuge was. The late King Christian of Den mark left a very small estate hardly a quarter of a million. The Russian grand dukes and the princes of the graft business the world over must be staggered by so gross' a neglect of opportunity. In woman's artistic dress Miss Itep pller, the clever essayist, sees a guar anty of woman's ascendency. To paraphrase an old adage: Let us wear the skirts of the country, and we care not who wields the ballot and makes the laws. "The fact that King. Christian left on estate worth only $250,000," . says the Indianapolis News, "makes It evi dent that he was Indifferent to his op portunities." Not necessarily. There may be lens rottenness In the state of Denmark than there used to be. The greatest problem of education unsolved to-day relates to girls. Here tofore their education has been a mere copy of that long ago established for boys. Some day a genius will come along and conceive thoughts whV'h shall form the basis of . an education which shall help girls to all their best possibilities without dissipating their strength on Hues of effort established for natures in some respects entirely dVTerent Andrew Carnegie doubtless obtains great satisfaction from his possession of Immense wealth, but be doubtless obtains still greater satisfaction from Ills occasional success as a speaker and wrtter. Unquestionably he would rather be numbered among the great artists, the great musicians or the greut au thors of the world than he would among the great millionaires. The ap plause which greeted his really clever little speech at the Mark Twain din ner was more grateful to him than all the power wulch his wealth confers upon him. After all there are some successes In the world that are better to be desired than the attaining- of much money. Last year there were over 0,000 homicides committed In the United States, a considerable Increase over the previous year. Undoubtedly there was also an Increase In other crimes. The statement is made that with the single exception of the Italians the American people are the most homicidal nutVm In the civilized world. The indictment against this country Is emphasized by a comparison with the criminal statis tics of other leading natVns. In Italy the homicide number 105 per 1,000,000 of Inhabitants per year; In this coun try last year the ratio was per 1,000,000. The annual aVerage ratio of homicides to population In uermuny Is 13 per 1,000,000, in France 10 per 1,000.000, and in the United Kingdom 7 per 1,000,000. The use of large sums of money In elections Is admittedly n menace to free Institutions. Heavy contributors are generally prompted by a desire for Individual gain. The Interests thus represented are enabled to dominate political organizations, centralizing power and depriving tho many of their polltV'ul rights for the benefit of the few. It Is useless to assert that prac tices of this nature can not be elimln a ted. England has demonstrated the possibilities in this direction so con clusively as to leave dissenters no ground on which to stand. The corrupt practices act In force there ploces re strictions upon candidates and their supporters which make the use of large mounts Impossible. Responsibility fixed with a certainty that leaves no room for evasion, and the result has been a complete transformation. We are getting rather tired of the north pole. It has been overdone. Time was when we were Intensely curious to know about It and thought perhaps Its discovery might have come commercial value, but now It is different We know pretty well that nothing Is to be gained by locating the pole beyond the satisfaction of a dulled curiosity, and the ambitions of the hunter. We can get on very well without the alleged "geographical and scientific facts" to be adduced by, the discovery. And we are tired of making heroes of the plalu or garden cbumpa who go In search of the pole. Every man who wants to be a hero end break Into print trots off to discover ' the north pole and comes back afterward and tells us how and why he failed, and will we make up a purse to send him again? Sure to find It this time! It's getting to be a nuisance. Let the old polo alone. Nobody wauts it anyway. There can be no question that the prevalence of tertaln diseases has in creased during the last half century. Conspicuous among these are diabetes and Insomnia, both of which are large ly due to the mental stress of a hard er struggle for existence. The in creased consumption of alcohol and the free use of narcotics are also re sponsible for many morbid conditions unknown to our hardier forbears. But, la comparing tho present prevalence of diseases with that of the past there are several factors for which due al lowance Is often not made. One of these Is that our forefathers died, as a rule, at a considerably younger age than their descendants; if they did not perish by the sword they were mowed down from time to time by the plague and other devastating epidemics. In this way they escaped many of the diseases not only of old age, but of advanced middle life. Again, it must not be forgotten that each generation represented to a much larger extent than Is now the case the survival of the fittest. Most of the weaklings died in childhood. The. triumph of modern hygiene Is that it has preserved a large proportion of these UveB. Boys in highway robbery, girls in wine rooms and dance halls. These are the spectacles that are sending sword thrusts of pain and grief into parental hearts all over the land this winter, and every winter and every season of every year in this and every laud, and perhaps especially In this lund, where parental authority is apt to relax and filial reverence to decline ojid youthful blood run riot In tho quest for excitement, adventure, and fun. Every city is agitated over its boys, and wild girls. What Is to be said, what is to be done? In one of those powerful drawings with which John T. McCutcheon occasionally searches the secret heart of American life, the Chicago Tribune points out what it calls "the root of the boy bur glar evil." Father and mother are portrayed at home, 'reading accounts of juvenile highwaymen In the even ing paper and wondering where "Wil lie" is. The lesson Is implied, but it is plain; a boy's parents should know where he spends his evenings and know that he spends them in right and proper ways. Sociology has run to seed in the propensity to attribute ev ery individual action to the tendency of society. Not the drunkard Is cen surable, but only the saloon; not the man who gambles away his week's wages, ' but only the cards and the green table; not the girl who yields to some Insistent ruffian, but the four walls and the furniture that were the scene of her ruin; not the boy that Joins a bevy of evil companions, but the policeman on his block, or the yel low Journal, or the divorce, laws, or the straight front corset, or woman's clubs. No boy is ever caught In the meshes of the law under' the Impres sion that he was behaving himself. Xo girl Is guiltless and Innocent of heort who goes Into a private room and drinks liquor with a strange man. That sound principles are not more fully understood and practiced by our youth Is the fault of the father and mother, engrossed In business or pleas ure to the exclusion of parental duties, such as the old Jewish, German and Puritan fathers were wont to dis charge with such fidelity and good re sults. Children do not form a char acter and mold' a destiny by chance. They must be trained; and there is no more crying need of the hour than the sense of parental responsibility. Men who look after their business with sedulous exactness, and women who have studied American leads and an tique rugs and Italian marbles and Parisian modes with Infinite patience and enre, discharge the solemn obllga tlons of fatherhood and motherhood in a careless and haphazard sort of way. Out of such betrayal of the most sacred of trusts conies the awful ruin of young lives. There are girls so trained that not all the wine rooms In the world could corrupt their vir tue, and boys to whom a saloon and gambling house on every corner wwld be no temptation. "GO FORWARD." By Rev. Walter Ross Taylor, D. D. Text "And the Lord said unto Mo ses, 'Wherefore criest thou unto Me? Speak unto the children of Israel that they go forward.' " Exodus xiv :15. Go forward a summons to individ uals and to the church, to advance in Christian character. No worthy, no abiding character can be formed with out a basis of belief. But on the oth er hand, what avails a foundation if it is not built upon? What will it avail in riiv np think thnt we art nf the root u we ghow noue of the (ruIt? go the command runs: go forward, build up yourselves on your most holy faith. Stone after stone, row after row, of gracious character has to be built up with care and diligence. Add to your faith courage, and to courage knowl edge, and to knowledge temperance, and to temperance patience, and lo pa tience godliness, and to godliness broth erly kindness, and to brotherly kind ness love. As in a rich and beautiful mosaic, so each tiny element of thought and temper has to be fitted into Its place after the pattern of Christ. For the little octs of each day are the things that determine the feelings; these determine habits; these again make up character. And as to the In dividual, so to the church life the cull Is to go forward ; forward to a fuller manifestation of the Christian spirit, the spirit of brotherhood and love. We have had far too ample an expe. rience of the evil of letting the spirit of strife and division take the place of the spirit of Christ within His church, and I believe the country at large is most heartily tired of It. We have had enough and more than enough of the headstrong dogmatism which makes uniformity of opinion in regard to ev ery minor matter of more vital con cern than the unity of the Body of Christ. For now nineteen centuries the world has had before it the spectacle, not of a united Divine kingdom, stead ily promoting with one heart the one end for which it exists, but of so' muny schools of theological opinions jealously competing for popular patronage ami support It Is altogether wonderful that a deafened world should have found little to attract In these sectarian wruu- gles? Can It be doubted that in the long course of these centuries the In fluence of the Man Christ Jesus would have told with Immensely greater effect than at present if thut influence had not been marred by the unworthy rep resentation of it presented by His Church? And neither can it be doubted that tho sooner the subjects of the Di vine kingdom realize that that king dom Is no sphere for self assertion and strife and schism, but for righteous ness and peace and Joy In the Holy Ghost, the sooner will the world rec ognize that It Is indeed the kingdom of heaven come down Into our sln-striek- eu world, and as such having para mount claim to men's obedience. RICHES AND RIGHTEOUSNESS. By Rev. Henry F. Cope. "How hardly shall they that have riches enter the kingdom of God." Luke 18: 24. Let no man take It, however, that this statement Involves the opposite, how easily shall they thnt have noth ing enter In. The people who have lived pulseless lives are apt to point to their poverty as the proof of their piety. But righteousness is neither a matter of riches nor of rogs. The Great Teacher glorifies neither. The qualifications for citizenship In his kingdom strike deeper than that His words have nothing to do With the bitter envy of the demagogue who denounces those who have earned that for which he would not labor. lie measures men not, by that they have but by that they are. He looks through both the fine linen and the tattered rags to the man. Money Interests him only as it affects character. The ques tion of riches and poverty Is not a mutter of housing and eating, but what a man does for himself and his world with that which he has. Riches of themselves do not bor a man from heaven ; but they full often eat Into his heart, become of absorbing Interest and so effectually and forever blind the Inner vision to the best things. It is not that heaven has shut Its gates, but that the love of money, the selfishness, born of cupidity, has paralyzed those spiritual senses by which he might have found his way therein. v The possession of wealth Is not a sin: to some it has come almost with out effort, even ngulnst their wills; but It does constitute one of the most se- vere tests that can be set before a soul. It Increases the difficulties of the right life, because It enlarges so greatly the responsibilities. The great er the wealth the greater the trust laid upon a man as the steward of the produce of the earth. The principle holds of all posses sions; all are tests of character. A man can love gold Just as ardently when he has but a grain as when he has possessions beyond computation. A single dollar, laid on the heart, can shut out the light of heaven as effec tually as can a million. The relation between riches and righteousness Is not determined by the balance in 'the bank, but by the balance that a man succeeds In maintaining in his heart between his own Interests and the trus teeship which possession places upon him. Money makes men as well as un makes them. The burdens, the tests, the responsibilities it entails, the temp tations it presents, all form part of life's great lesson. Out of the strug gle between self and the service we owe the world, out of the keen fight ing against covctousncs3, and the bat tie against the debasing tendencies tf the love for gold and the greed for gain arise the giants or fall the lost souls. The rich young ruler came to Jesus and faced his test ; the demand that he should sell all and give to the poor simply put his heart on trial; it set before him the greut choices; it decid ed as to the things which he held first To him the possession of things wasl more than the possibilities of using them In service; before the great test he fell. It Is just as easy and often fully as dangerous to set your heart on the gold you haven't got as It Is to fall Into the snare of the miser. Everything depends on the place you give to rich es In your life. One man seeks them as a prize to be won and enjoyed for his own gratification, his own glory and fame; another seeks them only as larger avenues to usefulness, and to him riches come as tools, as servants, as possibilities In making his life count for more. Some men die with their houses full of tools unused; they have made the fatal mistake of setting their hearts on the tools Instead of on the work. Others come to their accounting pos sessing as many tools, but all of them shining from hard use, and counting as their treasures not the tools but the things produced, the good accomplish ed. Wealth Is for work and the work Is for the making of the man. .They enter the kingdom who are kingly, whether they learned the royal lesson and acquired the heaVenly character through the school of poverty or that of riches. Short Meter Sermons. Self shrinks the soul. The keen eye needs the kindly heart Menial work may be noblest serv ice. There's no argument equal to a hap py smile. Imaginary evils have more than Im aginary effects. They who live off the flock are never willing to die for It Earthly prudence Is a large part of heavenly providence. Homes are often closest knit about some grave of separation. You cannot travel toward heaven with your back turned to honor. Weapons thnt fly off the handle have little effect on the walls of sin. One of the worst offenses against hu manity is the pretense of divinity. The leaders of men are not the ones who are trying to get ahead of their fellows. , The saddest people in this world are those who are. always fighting against sorrow. It's not the man with a putty back bone who Is most truly resigned to the will of God. If you are going to fo good work for all men you will have to be against some men. When two churches find a bone of contention you may be sure the devil has the meat. Success is not in an endeavor to do a great thing, but In repeated endeavors to do greater things. Many a man thinks that taking a lease on a front pew gives him a free-, hold on a corner lot in heaven. It's not by being.agnlnst many things that you will iiave the world, but by being for a few things with all your might. In the ' European cathedrals they gather the dust of the dead, but in the American churches the great things la to get the dust of the living. THE READY WITTED MOTORMAcf Ralnea Track Blockade Quickly and Kanlly, and (ioen A Ionic. One way of getting up a horse that has fallen was illustrated on the last slippery day by a Broadway motor- muu to the delight of ull the beholders- It was the off horse of a big brew ery team that was down, and with this ua;-se down the outfit altogether block ed both car tracks. The driver, headed uorth, had attempted to cross over from the west side to the east side of Broadway, to continue on up, and that off horse had gone down while cross ing between the two tracks, falling so as to block the up track, while the wagon stood across the down. Curs began to bank up, of course, right away, on both sides of the ob struction, the first car thus held up being one on the down truck, whose motorman, without any fuss, prompt ly proved himself a man quite equal to. the emergency. The minute he had got his brake set aud his car brought to a standstill he begun operating with his foot the plunger that runs down through the car platform to work the valve of the sandbox carried underneath, from which sand Is released upon the track when the rails are slippery; and oper ating the plunger-thus he now let run out upon the track sand enough to make a nice little conical mound. Then he reached up and took down from the forward end of the hood of his car the number plate carried there- to serve now us a bbovcl. And with this handy implement he scooped up without waste the sand from the little mound and spread It around on th slippery pavement under the fallen horse's hoofs, so disposed that the horse would find it with his feet when he tried to rise. And the sharp sand served this pur pose admirably ; the horse was on his feet In a minute; and then the police- man aud the driver moved him enough to let the cars on the up track go by, and a minute later the driver had tbe horse hooked up again, and his whole outfit clear of both tracks, by whlcli time the ready, witted motorman was moving along steadily half a block down Broadway. New York Sun. ISLAND OF SOLID ORE. Deposit Almoat Inexhaustible and Could Be Worked Eaullr. The Northumberland Islands belong to Queensland and lie off the east cen tral coast of the Pacific, between the towns of Rockhampton and Mack ay. One of the smallest Islands In the Duke group of this archipelago is Iron Island. The whole island Is iron ore, except a strip from 00 to 120 feet wide on the west and a sund flut across Its northern end. The island is 1,320 feet in length, und 528 feet in greatest width, Its highest point being 120 feet above high water mark. It is estimated by the geological sur vey that the amount of ore above hlgh wuter mark Is 1,500,000 tons and that the additional ore avullable betweea ' high and low tide (twenty-three feet) amounts to 750,000 tons, making a total of 2,250,000 tons of avalluble ore. The rock on the western side of the island Is greenish, highly altered tra chyte, in which there has been great development of east and west cross quartz veins, probably formed before the Iron was introduced Into the sur rounding region. On the south side of , the island are three outcrops of pure ' white statuary marble, from ten to twenty feet across and twenty to sixty feet in length. It Is believed by some Queensland geologists that the ore nietasoniatieully replaced limestone and slate and that the formation of ore may still be going on, inasmuch as the ridge top supports figs and scrub vegetation, showing that spring water Is still reaching the sur face. The ore consists chiefly of crypto- crystulline magnetite, with massive hematite, and bus scarcely a trace of impurity. Its specific gravity Is 4.5 to 4.0. Blocks of ore up to ten feet in diam eter are plied up around the base of the lslaud. Ne work has yet been done, but there will be no difficulty In mining down to tide level. To work below that level a wall of ore will have to be left to prevent the entrance of the sea water. How the Kalner Travel. The German state railway Is much . tempted to encourage the emperor to 1 trayqj as often as possible, for each journey he takes Is a considerable sum in the pocket of the nation. Ills majesty travels in great splendor. As a rule there are two special trains, one for- the emperor and one for tho empress. These, are the property of the Prussian state, but the traveling expenses are paid by the emperor him self. The court trains are charged at the rate as ordinary special trains. Thus, the Journey from Berlin to Elbiug, near the northeast frontier, costs rather over $1,500, and the samo fee is, of course, charged for the re turn Journey, About the only time an American princess hears the truth up to the day she gets married Is when her brother talks to her, and then she never listens.