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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1906)
LIMGGLH COOT LEADER CHAS. P. & ADA E. SOULS. Pmb: TOLEDO. .OREGON By falling heir to $13.n0,000 a stone DiiiHon has laid the foundation for a comfortable future. The water of the "Immunity bath" In likely to 1 pretty badly discolored be fore the Incident Is cloned. Forto Rico wants civil and political liberty. Ah, another Held ripe for the grafter and counterfeit patriot! Sarah Bernhardt has not as yet, how ever, attempted to give "Cauillle" in three separate and distinct rings at one and the game time. A Comanche Indian has been arrest ed for trying to kill a tax collector. Still, some folks contend that the In dians ore not becoming civilized.. One of the unsatisfactory things about a battleship Is that It can hardly ever be finished before It niuRt be re garded as belonging to an obsolete type. The Supreme Court takes Jurisdiction of a Philippine divorce case. . In other words, the Filipinos are In the Union only when they try to berak out of a union. Will the spelling reformers be so good as to explain what they Intend to do with such words as "week and weak," or "pale and pall," or "pane and pain?" Caruso earns $115,000 a year singing tenor. A man who gets It In bunches as large ns that ought to be willing to do something handsome for the neighbors who had to stalid It when he was learn ing how. A happy distinction was recently made by the board of aldermen of a Massachusetts city. The fact was stated that one of the policemen, in the per formance of his duty, hod ruined the "pants" of his five-dollar uniform. The board Immediately, appropriated seven dollars to buy him a pair of trousers. Thus Is virtue ever rewarded. While corruption has been wide spread, It has not been universal. A largo and saving part of the commun ity Is honest and honorable. Social progress Is only sure and lasting when the average citizen Is rle for It That our citizens are alive to the dangers threatening our social and political life and are bravely attempting to avert those dangers Is the best guarantee we can have that, at heart, the nation Is sound, honest, self-respecting and able, to purge lteelf of corruption. Doubtless there Is such a thing as the newspaper habit which comes to be a form of mental dissipation and tends to weaken the power of close attention and prevent the sort of study and con centration which leads to Intellectual growth. That should be avoided, but no man of to-day, however much he may be absorbed In his occupation or however much he may pride himself on a culture thnt consists chiefly In knowl edge of bygone things, can afford to neglect or be Ignorant of the marvel ous dally record that Is mode In print of the time In which ho lives. Collecting Is a sort of cumulative pos 6lon. It starts with a taste for quality, It develops into a greed for quantity. Once the collector discovers he is the possessor of an article of which there ore few or no other copies, he Is lost. Thereafter he has only one concern to seize upon more rarities. It would le all very well If .the mania pertained to what may truly be called treasures, but too often these things have value only because other collectors covet them. That he may hove on example of the ceramics of every dynasty of China Is more to the collector than thnt he has beautiful specimens of one. People who know what a home Is are not so mnny as middle-aged men and women think, and they who never had one will hardly be expected to Join In the lament at Its gradual disappear once. Thnt It Is going out of fashion there Is not a doubt Every new pile of fiats, every conversion of a dwelling to a boarding-house Is elegnlc of the cir cumstance. The modern family shifts from one tenement to another, loses or damages Its goods In the transit, Is constantly making new acquaintances, but as constantly losing the old, and Is without quiet and retirement and ienee. The older people regret the change; the younger have no standards by which to measure it Of late certain of the magazines have departed from the literary standards created by their predecessors and have ngnged with the yellow press In searching for low life In high places. Their ceaseless Investigation, not of the moral state of the majority but of a hopeless, If rich and Influential, minor ity, has led to the conclusion among many renders that onr legislatures, na tional. State and city ; our railroad corporations, our manufacturers, our trusts, our political parties, are corrupt We have, It is true, a great deal to con tend with In checking the arrogance of wealth and the ruder arrogance of jxiv erty, but this nation has subsisted for l.'lO years on mutual trust and common righteousness, nor In spite of the alarm signals do we see any tokens of disintegration. Many Amerieun cities are built upon sites of which the natural beauty Is unsurpassed. Many have fine parks and boulevards and handsome streets of fine houses; Some have excellent public buildings and magnificent bridges. Yet as architectural con structions, no American city Is beauti ful as are Paris and some other Euro pean cities. One reason Is that the ancient cities have had time to put on the beauty of age; but their modern portions, constructed often at less ex pense thoji too many American build ers lavish on costly monstrosities, have tone, harmony, good taste unequaled in in this country. The reason Is that In European cities there Is authoritative supervision over every building. Arch itects are required, as they are not re quired In this country, to build with reference to the architectural and nat ural surroundings. The American unit of design Is the building. The Euro pean unit is the street the district, the whole city. There is a change for the better. Washington, which owes what architectural order it has to a French man, will have a consistent plan to which future buildings are to conform, and the main street to the Capitol will not always be lined with squalor to the very foot of that mighty building. The Mayor of Portland has recently Issued a pamphlet on the beautifying of his native city. A more dignified approach is being planned to the beau tiful Brooklyn Bridge, the great piers of which now rise out of rubbish heaps. Tlio American city of the future will be a work of art, not a chaos. It is not the business of the press to prescribe for the sick, but it is Its business to educate the people along the lines of health. Let's see. In or der to live we must have food, wnter, air, sun, sleep, clothes. As to food: We eat too much. Medical men say nearly all the Ills flesh Is heir to come from over-euting. Make the bulk of your eating small and leave out luxu ries. Simple food and small quantities is the rule. As to water: Not one person In a thousand drinks sufficient water. Not less than two quarts a day is necessary. The wator should be pure. Dilute your food. Give diges tion and assimilation a chance. Flush the sewers of the body; What happens when the sanitary sewers of a city are clogged? As to air: Most persons breathe with only half their lungs. Men and women go for weeks and months without taking a dozen fillings of the lungs with oxygen. Half tho cells of the lungs are unused day after day. Do you wonder at so much tuberculo sis? The chief wonder is that the "White Plague" does not have twice its victims. Take at least a dozen conse cutive fillings of the lungs every day, sending the diaphragm down as far as It will go each time. If yon will do that you will never die of consumption. As to the sun : Medical science Is Just beginning to find out the vitalizing lowers of sunshine. You must have electricity to run your dynamo of vi tality. Get It from the sun. Even if you ore delicate do not fear the sun. It Is one of your best friends. The old Persian sun worshipers did not miss it so badly. As to sleep: Sleep until you ore rested, that's all. When you cut off "nature's sweet restorer" you ore using, up vitality fnster than you make it For the normal person eight hours Is about right Napoleon got along on four, but Napoleon was an exception. And as to clothes use good common sense. Good health is easily hod unless you prefer suffering to a little self denial. If you will ent simple food sparingly, drink plenty of pure water dnlly, breathe with -all your lungs, take n sun bath at every ehnnee, sleep eight hours and wear sen sible clothing you should live barring accidents to a rich old age. The Flrnt to gee the Mikado. Admiral Lord Charles Beresford claims the distinction of being one pf the first Europeans allowed, by invi tation, to gaze on the face of the Ml kndo of Jniwin. This was In 1808. In that year Lord Chnrles was gazetted to the Galatea, which, with the Duke of Edinburgh on board, made an ex tensive tour. Among the places visited by the ship was Japan, where the British Prince was Invited by the Em peror to visit hlra at his palace. "Thus," Bays Lord Charles Beresford, "we were the first Europeans to see the Mikado, and we should have been cut down In the streets by the Japs if we had not been guarded by thirty or forty sol diers." Nonentity. "What does the initial E. stand for?" "Everlelgh." "And what does Everlelgh stand for'i" Indianapolis Star, MAP OF AKCTIC EEGI01TS SHOWING LOCATION OF TES POLE. Baold Amundsen, the Norwegian explorer who accomplished the North west Passage last year, is credited with the further achievement of having located the north magnetic pole. (See black star on left. of the map.) He has definitely fixed the position of this pole in King William Land, not far from the position ascribed to it by Sir John Ross in 1831. In commenting on Amundsen's achievement the National Geographic Magazine said : "The new knowledge which his. observations will give us of the character and Influence of the magnetic pole will prove of Immense value In the study of magnetic variations. Magnetic deviation of the needle is one of the principal uncertain ties with which mariners have to contend. Terrestrial magnetism is a mys terious force. Nearly every year we have a magnetic storm, which Interrupts our telegraph wires several hours. Whence It comes or what It is we know not The eruption of Mont Pelee was accompanied by magnetic waves, which were simultaneously recorded in Hawaii. Alaska, the United States and Europe. All this makes the magnetic work of Amundsen particularly valuable, and we must remember that was the main object of bis expedition. The banana and potato ore almost Identical in chemical composition. There are no undertakers in Japan. When a person dies his nearest rela tives put him lato a coffin and bury him. The mourning does not begin un til after burial. India rubber trees which are tapped every other day continue to yield sap for more than twenty years; and it Is a curious fact that the oldest and most frequently tapped trees produce the richest sap. The most costly leather In the world is known to the trade as the piano leather. The secret of preparing this is only known to one family of tanners In Germany, though the skins from which It is tanned come almost entirely from America. Poisoning from gas Inhalation is now added to the recognized dangers of bal looning. The hydrogen Itself non poisonous is often contaminated with arsenic, selenium, and antimony, and fourteen cases of ill effects have been reported to the French Academy of Medicine. In one of the two forms of poisoning death results In two or three days. , . New wonders may be expected In a little known field of exploration since the Invention of a young naval engi neer by the name of De Plury, of a kind of metal armor with a special chemical combination for providing res piration automatically. By means of this dress he has succeeded In sinking 330 feet, a much greater depth than has ever before been reached by any diver. To tell the points of the compass by a watch, point the hour hand ot the sun ; then south Is holfwny between the hour hnnd and the figure 12 of the dial. To measure on angle by a watch loy two straight-edged pieces of paper on the angle, crossing at the apex. Hold ing them where they overlap, lay them on the face of .the watch, with the opex at the center. Read the angle by the minutes of the dial, each minute being 0 degrees of arc. It Is easy to meos ure within 2 or 3 degrees In this way. An Indication of tho rapidly growing Interest in underground water supplies, even In States where the rainfall Is abundant and the soli naturally fer tile, is given by the program Just pre pared for the work of (lie coming sea son by the Geological Survey of Illi nois. A special department of the work will be devoted to the study of the underground water of that State, in order to determine the limits of what are called the "Artesian basins," and the various depths to which It may be necessary to penetrate in different localities to obtain good water for mu nicipal and agricultural purposes. All the waters will be .carefully analyzed and subjected to laboratory tests, and thus It is hoped that the work of de veloping new water supplies will be put upon a thoroughly scientific foot ing. A recent English traveler in China describes some remarkable examples of sounding stones, or "stone gongs," which he saw at Chufu, the birthplace ind burial place of Confucius. One of the stones, which are composed of a grayish oolitic limestone, has been shaped into a cover for an incense dish placed in front of the tomb of the grandson of Confucius. When struck with a stick, or with the knuckles, it rings like bronze, and the sound Is so distinct that it is difficult to believe, without inspection, that tho object i not really composed of metal. Sound ing stones are known in other countries. A correspondent of Nature describes a bridge at Corlck, In County Mayo, Ire land, which Is locally known as the "musical bridge," because the stones forming the coping give out a' musical note when struck. MILEAGE OF THE HUMAN BLOOD. One Little Red Corpnacle Mar Travel ION Mile, in a sliiKle Day. The speed at which the blood circu lates in the veins and arteries of a healthy man is something surprising. All day long, year in and year out, the round trips continue from the heart to the extremities ond back again. The red blood corpuscles travel like boats in a stream, going to this or that station for such service as they have to per form; and the white corpuscles, the phagocytes, dart hither and thither like potrol boots, ready to orrest any con traband cargo of disease germs. T,he mileage of the blood circulation reveals some astounding facts in our personal history. Thus it hns been cal culated that; assuming the heart to beat sixty-nine times a minute at ordi nary heart pressure, the blood goes at the rate of two hundred ond seven yards in the minute, or seven miles per hour, one hundred and sixty-eight miles per duy and six thousand three hun dred and twenty miles per year. If a man of 84 years of oge could have one single blood corpuscle floating In his blood all his life It would have traveled in that some time five million one hun dred and fifty thousand eight hundred and eight miles. Alfonao and the Llonn. No palace in Europe hns a finer or more tasteful suite of state apart ments than that in Madrid. The throne room especially Is unsurpassed both for Its proportions, decorations, equip ments and furnishings. The throne is superb. It Is guarded by four life size bronze lions, two on either side. When the king was a child to ride these Hons was his greatest delight, and on one solemn occasion, when he and his mother were receiving a' delegation of dignitaries, he slipped off the throne and bestrode one of them In the midst of the oration. The master of cere monies stepped to his side and request ed him to return to the throne, which he refused to do. Being admonished that his emlnenvlsltors might not op prove of his conduct, he replied that he did not ask them to come and that they might go any time they liked. Ills respect for his mother was then annenl- ed to, ond when told that she was deep ly grieved at his behavior he slipped off the lion quietly, returned to the gilded chair by her side, and, placing his hand In hers, remained there until the end of the ceremony. Jaat One More Chance. Judge (to prisoner Just condemned to death) You have the legal right to express a last wish and if it Is possible It will be gratified. FriBoner (a barber) I should ltkn Just once more to be allowed to shave tne aistrict attorney. Jugend. Also the bunko man loves a shining murk. To Extract a Splinter. A' splinter can be extracted without puin In this way: Nearly fill a wide-mouthed bot tle with hot water, place the injured part over the mouth and press tightly. The suction will draw the flesh down, and la a minute or two the splinter will come out Spasmodic Croup. Every mother should know how to treat tills, as the attacks come on so suddenly. The child should at once be taken up and put Into a hot bath. A teaspoonfu'l of Ipecacu anha wine repeated if necessary is often helpful ; this is to make the child sick. Spasmodic croup is of nervous origin, and the general condition of the child must be Improved. It is often associated with rickets. Wash for the Hair For hair thnt is dry an oily wash should be used about once a week or ofteuer. It should be rubbed Into the scalp with a piece of flannel, a, superfluity of oil thus being avoided, as only sufficient is used to moisten, not drown, the roots of the hair; the application of the oil must be accompanied by friction with the flannel. It Is a mistake to suppose that dry hair will be really benefited by oil being poured on to it and mere ly brushed through it To do perma nent good It is necessary that the futty preparation should be rubbed Into the skin of the head; a very small quan tity will suffice to be of benefit The Value of Salt. Half a teaspoon ful of common table salt dissolved In a little cold water will Instantly relieve heartburn or dyspepsia. If taken every morning before breakfast. Increasing tile quantity gradually to .a teaspoon ful of salt ond a tumbler of water, It will in a few days cure any ordinary case of dyspepsia, if at tho same time due attention Is paid to the diet' There is no better remedy than tiie above for constipation. As a gargle for sore throats it is equal to chlorate of pot ash, and is entirely safe. In doses of one to four teaspoonfuls in half a pint of tepid water it acts promptly ns an emetic, and In cases of iiolsoning Is al ways at hand. It Is an excellent rem edy for bites and stings of insects. It Is also a valuable astringent In hem orrhages, particularly for bleeding after the extraction of teeth. It hns both healing and cleansing properties. DRUMS AT FUNERALS. William Trambore llaa Officiated at Obaeqolea of 8U3 Soldier. William Trumbore, of Easton, Ta., has won an envlablle reputation as a drummer at the funerals of veterans of the Civil War. Up to date he has sounded "taps" at the funerals of 893 fellow comrades and twelve Sons of WILLIAM TRUMBORE. Veterans. When the Civil War hmim out, Trumbore enlisted from Boontnn, i. J., in tho fourth Reirlmeirt nf Vol. unteers, First Brigade, and served under Gen. Phil Kenrney, and later unaer uen. A. J. Smith. In 1802 he wns called out with the Thlrtr-PlcMh Pennsylvania Regiment In the emer gency call for the suppression of the labor troubles In Central PenllRvl vnnln Trumbore was honorably discharged irom tne army as sergeant drum major. He belongs to Lafavette Post. No. 217 Grand Army of the Republic, Easton, ana is one Its most prominent mem bers. He Is 03 years old. nnd uHll h..i and hearty, Wllliamsport (Pa.) Grit. The Dignity of Wealth. "They say that millionaires do not laugh enough." "Well, how would you know they were millionaires If thev lniirhv' Cleveland Plain Denier. What this world needs Is" creeds and more true churlty. fewer XmMl