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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1908)
LINCOLN COUNTY LEADER R (COLLINS, Editor , r N HAYDEN, Manager TOLEDO.. ..OREGON "What" asks an Alabama paper, "is an affinity" The advance agent of trouble. The party who loudly announce that every man has his price"' can gener ally be bought pretty cheap. . It will be hHrd for the preachers to discourage the divorcees aa long as thero are Justices of the peace lu the land. An Ohio man has Invented an auto matic typewriter. We are assured that It neither chews gum nor fools with Its back hair." What has become of the old-fashioned preacher who felt that he had been "called," and praised the Lord for any kind of salary? The average small boy should be more or less Interested lu.the state ment that the State of Washington produced 10,500,000 shingles last year. Hetty Green snys American girls who marry titled foreigners are fool ish. Ilns Hetty nothing more Import ant to do than give expression to platitudes? 'The prejudice against gold 1? re markable," comments the New Orleans Picayune. Must be a peculiar feeling, but we confess we have never been troubled with It One of the contestants In the recent balloon race Is said to have taken a supply of fishing tackle with him. As he didn't win the race, there must have been files on him, too. A Cincinnati broker after making $1,000,000 closed up his accounts and quit, saying he had enough. If he de sires now to earn a little on the side he ought to be able without much trou ble to get a Job as a public curiosity. It Is shown by a recent photograph of the President and his cabinet that not one of the gentlemen wears lnut tonchop whiskers. We hope England may not hnstlly or mistakenly regard this as an Indication of unfriendliness. The skeleton of a huge animal has been discovered In Steuben County, New York. It is said that One of the teeth weighed V4 pounds. Judging by human experience, that would mean, under proper conditions, about 900 pounds of ache. In New York one of the Judges has decided that a wife has no right to throw dishes at her husband. In view of the fact that dishes are usually bought with money that husbands earn, the Judge's decision would seem to be a wise and thoughtful one. Let us have poetic Justice occasionally, even If here and there It may work a hnrd ' ship on a lady. If report be true, a most Interesting document has been found In Italy, a letter from Secretary Seward, written at the beginning of the Civil War, asking the Italian patriot. Garibaldi, to give his sword to the Union cause. At that time competent American gen erals had not revealed themselves, and the American government wns no doubt led to seek help abroad, by the tradi tion of Lafayette and other Europeans who helped this country In the It evolu tion. As It turned out, all the princi pal leaders on both sides In the Civil War wore American-born. The decline In farm values In New York was considered at a convention In Syracuse recently. The Chamber of Commerce, which called the conven tion, Is convinced that the continued prosperity of the cities of centrnl New York depends on a revival of farming. There has been a continual decrease In the value of Eastern farming land since 1880. It was notable In all New England, In New York, New Jersev, Pennsylvania and Ohio until 1S0O, while the value of the farms In the rest of the country Increased. From 1800 to 1000 the decrease In value In the New England States, except Maine, ceased, and a turn upward began. This was due to the efforts of public-spirited men to awaken an Interest In the posrl bllitles of agriculture, as well as due to the purchase for summer homes of many abandoned farms. Although the average value of the farms and their Improvement! Is not so great to-dny as In 1800, the general farming situation Is satisfactory, save In the East The present center of farm values Is near Springfield, 111. Should tie Eastern farms be restored to anything like their old worth that center would be not very distant from the center of population, near Indianapolis, Ind. How to make farming popular Is a problem that perplexes the East much mora than the West where many men have grown wealthy upon the produce' of their farms. Consequently the preparation of young men for success- mi mriuiug careers is a mailer mat deserves the serious attention of all Interested In education. The President lu a public address the other day, said that the agricultural colleges ought to be supplemented by agricultural high schools, such as have been established In Minnesota and Nebraska. The pros perity of the country rests on the farm, and It Is one of the most encouraging signs of the times that business men in New York have awakened to a sense of the Importance of reviving the agri cultural Industry of the State, Premature burial Is a Bubjeet that has no doubt aroused a vast deal of morbid Interest. Every one knows per sons who pass much of their lives In a state of continual horror lest they be burled alive and who suffer, Indeed, vastly more In anticipation thsn they ever could In fact If their worst fears should be realized. Nevertheless, so many well-authenticated cases of pre mature burial are on record and such slight precautions are sometimes taken to make sure that death really has oc curred that the subject has a very real social Importance. One investigator of this subject Dr. Franz Ilartmann, collected particulars of 700 cases of the kind. Some years ago the Paris Figaro started a discussion of the subject and within fifteen days received over 400 letters from persons who had Just es caped burial alive, or who knew of such cases. A writer In one of the cur rent British periodicals adds many casos to the list; and provides, Indeed, a chamber of horrors for those Inclin ed to read It This writer's conclu sion Is thnt there Is no true sign of death except the beginning of decom position, nnd he cites Instances to show how all the other signs usually relied on have occasionally failed, Including rigor mortis and the "diaphanous" test He also Insists thnt fits of trance and catalepsy are much more frequent than Is generally supposed. In German and Austria, cities mortuaries are maintained In which the dead must re main for a certain length of time, and no body may be burled except after a certificate has been Issued by an official Inspector, who is required to pay sev eral visits before acting. In these mor tuaries there have been numerous cases of the resuscitation of persons suppos edly dead. In England there Is now under consideration legislation for more rigid Inspection of the dead when certificates are granted for the appoint ment of death verifiers tJ whom an ap peal may be made In cases of doubt, and for the establishment where com munities desire It of official mortuaries. For our own country the discussion of the subject should certainly Influence all physicians to be exceedingly cau tious about the granting of death cer tificates, and, above all, never to grant certificates without careful Investiga tion In cases the history of which they do not personally know. THE COLLIE AND THE KING. How a IMcture Title Warn Not Inaptly Tranaferred.. The sisters of the famous artist George Frederick Watts, were all re markable and charming women a brilliant trio, whom their friends nick named "Beauty, Dash and Talent." The second, Mrs. Prlnsep, was the mother of the late Valentine Prlnsep, the artist, who Inherited from her not only his artistic temperament but much of the spirit, humor and social aptitude which had earned her her nickname. He wns a notable story-teller, and particularly fond of relating amusing criticisms of art and artists. It was he who first told, and always stoutly asserted to be true, the story, often retold nnd with many variations, of the country couple visiting the gal lery In which was exhibited Landseor's picture of a collie, fallen over a cliff while herding the flock among the craggy Highlands, and Just reached by the anxious shepherd, whose words, called up to a comrade peering over the verge, supply the title. The rustic pair had wandered on from the room where this picture hung to the next, which was dominated by n large painting of King Lear. At this they gazed for some time in awed -silence ; then the old lady Inquired what It was, and her husband looked up the name In the cntnlogue. By accident, he turned two pages at once, and rend off the number of the corresponding picture In the room they had Just left, which chanced to be the Landseer. "What's it called, Jarge, did e say?" repeated the old lady. " 'There's Life In the Old Dog yet " reod "Jarge," confidently, then with a sympathetic glance at old, mad, feeble Lear upon the desolate heath, "But not much, my girl, not much 1" They passed on, arm In arm, com fortably unaware of Incongruity or dis respect in the title so aptly transferred from a collie to a king. Youth's Com panion. If at the age of 80 a girl hasn't met her Ideal man she tries to Idealize some man she has met. iiiiaiimwi iiiUHUi CHINA'S D00E MUST BE KEPT OPEN. By Secretary Tmlt. Our merchants are being roused to the importance of the Chinese trade, and they would view with deep con cern any and all political obstacles to Its maintenance and expansion. This 'eeling Is likely to find expression In he action of the - American govern uent American manufacturers to-day do ot take the trouble to pack their un. goods properly or send them out In the sizes desired by the Chinese, but this stiff-necked lack of business sense is disappearing slowly, and our mer chants are becoming aroused to the Importance of his trade, which has grown without government encourage ment and which has a great future. There is no reason to complain of this governmental Indifference. The United States and the other powers favor the open door, and if they are wise they will en courage the empire to take long steps in administrative and governmental reform, the development of the re sources of China, and the Improvement- of the welfare of the people. . J To do this will add to China's strenugth and posi tion as a self-respecting f .-eminent and aid her, In pre paring to resist possible foreign aggression In the seek ing of undue and exclusive proprietary privileges. Thus no foreign aid will be required to euforce the open door and the policy of equal opportunity for all. EVEEY if AN IS FOR RENT. By John A howl and. Never before in the history of the United States as a nation has It been more difficult to find recruits of first grade for those Hues of human endeavor where the love of doing and the recompenses of a simple, earnest life are stimulus and reward In one for such a life. "Whut is there in It?" has become the one set question of the young man beginning the world, and that young man asking the ques tion expects the answer to be lu dollars. No other an swer than that which carries the dollar sign with It Is considered. Efforts which are not worth the dollar meas ure are efforts not worth expending. Somebody made a million dollars In a certain line of work that Is worth while! Some one else has a salary of $100,000 a year to show for his progress what are the chances there? To him there Is no chance In life thut Is not measured by the possibilities of money above the necessities of simple living. Andrew Carnegie Is an example of the world's master of millions. Carnegie will not allow the mention of death In his presence' If he can escape it You young men who have fixed your hopes In life for the accumulation of a million dollars have you any Idea of how many mil lions this man Carnegie might give you lu exchange for your youth merely? What can it iuean""when the master of men and mil lions in his old age will not suffer a reference to death In his presence? Simply that In this old age be is con fessing to the frultlessness of his past life. It is a con fession of his failure In finding those things in life which should have ripened him, mellowed him and given the old man that old man's retrospect of a life welt spent . such as has allowed thousands the death made beautiful by Bryant: "Like one that wraps the drapery of nil couch about him and lies down to pleasant dreams." WARNING AGAINST FEDERALISM. By Alton B. Parker. The States and the people undertook by the constitution to fix the boundaries of each of the great departments of government, beyond which neither could pass. Upon the executive no legislative or Judicial power was conferred, but he was charged to "take care that the laws be faithfully executed" and to "protect and defend the constitution of the United States." By what process of reasoning the ex ecutive has reached the conclusion that for the various departments of the federal government to seize power not granted by the States awl the people is "to protect and defend the constitution" I know not With equal frankness those of us who have widely different views, who love the constitution and revere not alone the memory but the wisdom of Its framers, who believe that the powers are wisely distributed be tween the States and the federal government and deem that all past history proves it Bhould speak. Many of the people have not found time to study the history and the genesis of the constitution. If, then, there were no Immediate danger of an effective seizure of powers, no bliuuid, lo prulect liie fuliue, meet tue assault of the new federalists with an equal vigor. They are steadily at work teaching and preaching the doctrines of their sect. So those opposed to their views should sacrifice any party feeling and Interest and enter the lists as open ' champions of our constitutional system In Its integrity. The time to do it Is now. Some other year aye, even next year may be too late. THE TJNEaTTALED AMERICAN PAY ROLL. By Secretary Cortelyou. Victories of commerce call for high courage courage to plan broadly for the future, courage to stick to a plan steadfastly to the end. Pluck and per sistence are the inspiring attributes of American manhood, and they are typi fied in the American merchant No road is too hard for the Ameri can business man to travel, no ob stacle great enough to stop him so long as he sees ahead something to be done. Back of him, sharing in his successes qeo. b. cobtelyou. and not envying him his Just rewards. stand the thousands of employes the great army of American wage-earners, the best paid body of men and women in the world. We have much to show the world as evidence af Ameri ca's material greatness, but I venture to say there Is nothing In that respect thnt we should regard with as much pride as the American pay roll. It has no equal anywhere. In a large sense It has made the American home, the American school and the American savings bank the envy of the world, emptlng thousands to our shores every day, to share our prosperity and our contentment. ft 1 Discipline Is one of the spokes In the circus system wheel, says a writer In the Cosmopolitan. In the modern cir cus no swearing Is allowed, as women and children may hear It Cards, dice and drink are prohibited. This Is not the conception which the public holds concerning circus people, but strength and steady nerves are needed for cir cus feats, and dissipation of any kind would soon leave the performers with out a profession. When a big American circus was abroad the German Emperor came one night incognito and watched them un load the flat cars. Their system so Im pressed him that he had some of the officers of the German army see It and adopt some of their methods. In landing the circus outfit the first man there Is the "layer-out" He gen erally decides In about ten minutes where his tents are to be placed. As the building of the white city proceeds, everything seems to be In confusion, a tangled mass. Men are running every way; wagons seem to be dumping their loads promiscuously; but every wagon Is lettered or numbered, so Is every box or trunk, and all have their "proper places. This great Jumble of wagons gronnlng and creaking In the soft turf and men shouting and singing la all working as one great whole to on end. But although they all work together, each man Is taught to think for him self, and when a man shows ability, he is soon noticed. One Instance of this was afforded by a young man who was studying medicine In the winter, and thought a season In the fresh air would harden him for his next winter's work. The only Job he could get was as a can vas man. But be was able to think for himself, and promotion soon came. The circus child Is not taught by blows, but by kindness and patience, and the circus management Insists that every child shall go to school In win ter. "Does dentists go to heaven, Willie?" "Sure. They lets 'era In so's they kin put gold crowns on the angels." Den ver Post ABOUT THE WEDDING BIND. Womau'a Whim to Wear It On Little Finger Raines Dlapnte. Only a woman's whim ! She wouldn't have the wedding ring on the third fin ger; she Insisted on the bridegroom placing it on her little finger. Only a whim, but it has made Mrs. John Tyler Wheelwright w-ho was mar ried In Washington the other day, one of the most talked-of women In the country. Mrs. Wheelwright's hand wns small and chubby. The narrow gold band of MRS. WHEKIAVKIQHT. bondage looked better on the fourth linger, so she asked permission to so wear It from the austere Rev. Dr. Ro land Cotton Smith, who was to perform tiie marriage ceremony. Before he would sanction the depar ture the Rev. Dr. Smith consulted with the bishop of Washington. The bishop viewed the request lightly, as a bit of feminine fancy, and acquiesced. And so It came about that Mrs. Wheelwright held up a chubby tremu lous little finger when the ceremony reached the ring-fitting stage, and Washington society gasped In astonish ment and whispered expectantly. As society was astonished the clergy was shocked. , Precident Is precedent, peculiarly so with the clergy. Wise faced gentlemen of the cloth are shak ing their beads doubtfully. Under the ritual of the English church the ring must be blessed and placed upon the third finger of the left hand. The bishop of London may be asked If this was a violation. Opponents of the little finger Idea cite Archbishop Farley's recent refusal to participate In departures from rules in regard to third-finger rings. In Europe Catholic clericals have been ordered by the Pope to permit nc more such departures. Why Scotland'! Soil la Thin. An English golfer on a Scottish links hit the turf ten times for every once that he struck the ball. Ills caddie ventured on a sarcastic remonstrance. "Ha" peety (on auld Scotland, sir," said he. "She's suffered ower eneuch at the haunds o yer countrymen In the past that ye sud treat her sae sain the day. Tit the bn man, an' let the grun "alane." "Confound Scotland!" shouted the exasperated golfer, flinging down his club In a rage. "It's Just what Dr. Johnson described it 'stone, water and a little earth.' " "Sae the docther said that, did he?" Inquired the caddie. v "He did, and he was a very wise man, let me tell you," snapped the En glishman. "I believe ye," retorted the caddie. "Nae doot the docther was a verra wise man, for there Is muckle o' stane nn' watter In Scotland oor mountains an' lochs that ye come sae far tae see an' it's a sair truth that the soil Is no verra deep. Ye see, there's sic a han tle o' English bodies conies tae Scot land tae play gawf." Glasgow Times. The Limit. Riggs You don't seem to be paying as much attention to Miss Glggleton as yon did and she's such a popular lady, too. What's the matter? ' Griggs I got enough. I didn't mind her popularity so much, but I'll bo hanged if I'll stand for mimeograph love letters with my name filled In from any female on earth ! Toledc Blade. How Ha Got In. "How did you get Into this country?" asked a reporter of a Chinaman. "Was it through the open door?" "No j through a chink," replied the Mongolian tersely. Judge.