Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1913)
TRAINED TO MURDER ASSASSIN8 ONCE FORMED A VERY INFLUENTIAL SECT. Had Their Origin In the East and Spread Their Deadly Work Over Almost All Countries of the World. The assassination of King George of Greece recalls the fact that the word lteelf Is derived from a regular or der of men pledged to take life, es pecially the life of a ruler. The assassin sect was an offshoot of the Shlah form of Mohammedan ism, but its tenets comprised frag ments of magtanlsm (or sorcery), Ju daism and Christianity, as well as of the teachings of the Koran. It was in Borne respects not unlike the Druses of Mount Lebanon, with whose out breaks the name of Lord Dufferin was honorably connected long before he became governor general of Canada. Its founder, who gave it his name, was Hassan Ben Sabah, chief of the famous mountain fortress of Alamoot In Persia, about 1090. He .gathered about him a body of fearless young men, pledged to obey him and highly trained In various methods of mur der. These were dispatched, generally singly, to end wars by killing kings or generals, or to destroy rivals or personal enemies. In order to give them courage for their villainous work, they were taught to make use of haschlsh, the drug called chang In India, derived from the leaves of the common hemp plant, which is terribly intoxicating. In Ara bic they were called haschlschln from this fact. These men followed their instruc tions In every country, as Is shown by the fact that all the European nations have the word in their languages, as easslnen In German, assassin In French, aesino in Spanish, assasslno in Portuguese and Italian, etc. But they nourished especially to the east, where they also used the terror of their name for blackmailing purposes. The Knight Templars In the time of Richard Coeur de Lion, fought them openly, the leaders of the crusades having suffered seriously from their designs, and also spread the knowl edge of them and of their leader, known to them as the "Old Man of the Mountains," throughout Christendom. Not even Persia had more horrible assassinations than had France at the time of the revolution, and there was awful rightfulness In the words In which the Jyrant Robespierre ad dressed the national convention, when he was refused permission to make a defense against the fate to which he had consigned so many, and which now threatened him: "President of As sassins," said the deposed ruffian, "for the last time I ask liberty to speak," for by assassins nowadays we mean Dot members of the sect of that name, but a murderer who spills life blood for any other than a purely personal reason. ' True Hero. Many stories have been told of the heroism of the Albanians, whose country Is at the present moment be ing devastated by the war in the Bal kans. ' An Incident showing how in born is the courage of that daring people has Just been related by a British war correspondent, Captain Trapmann. , . He was cycling alone an Albanian road one day, when he came across a bright little girl of about sis and a boy of five. The girl was asking for ' bread. He got off and spoke to her, and she Immediately understood he was a foreigner, and It appeared to her that he could not be anything but a Turk. At once both children look ed terrified, and then to his surprise and admiration the little fellow caught him by the legs and shouted to his sister, "Run!" Am ta nrawilnau In Chumk. The discovery has been made by a western art professor that drowsiness In church is due not so much to the sermon as to a clashing color scheme In church decoration. "How can a person listen to an addross when the decorations of the church are Inharm onious T When the curtains are pink, the cushions red and the decorations are yellow, and blue the emotions of the audience are affected and they be come drowsy." Tet a pale pastel hue In the pulpit doubtless has a somno lent effect on the congregation. tlim UU Auj.u Master (who is trying to make a good Impression on his strait-faced aunt from whom he has expectations) "Mary, have you seen a letter any where about marked 'Private'?" Mary "You mean the one from the man what can't get 'is money out of you, sir? I put It be'ind the mirror, sir." Punch. Electiie Current and Nerves. Along human nerves the electric current travels at from 83 to 60 yards a second. BILLIONS OF HORSE POWER Enormous Amount of Electric Energy Developed In the Central Sta tions of America. Twelve billion horsepower. That la the combined electrical power output of the 7,500 central stations in the United States. Can yoa conceive what these figures actually mean? asks the Electrical News. One literal soul to whom the ques tion was recently put objected that "there aren't that many horses in the world." There are not The objection was perfectly sound. But the fact remains that the power output of this country's central stations is Just about equal to the energy of those twelve billion hy pothetical equlnes. And that is not one-half o the total electrical power produced in the United States. The twelve billion to tal Includes only public service com panies and does not include the great steam railroad and - manufacturing companies which produce and use their own power. The total power thus produced is easily double the output of the central stations. It is a little difficult for the mind to grasp what such vast amounts of pow er really mean. Take It this way. The largest standard locomotive which pull the fastest passenger trains are rated at about 6,000 horsepower. It would take nearly 6,000,000 of these big lo comotives to equal the energy pro duced by American electrical power stations. Take the biggest transatlan tic liner, nearly a thousand feet long with its engines rated at 70,000 horse power. To equal the electrical power output of the United States would take 342,867 of these liners, with a combined length that would reach more than twice around the globe. The figures of the census of 1910 on the electrical Industry are astounding, and yet these statistics are admittedly Incomplete. "The growth of electrical Industries has been so rapid," recently declared Dr. Schuyler Skaats Wheeler, "that no method has yet been devised by the government census takers to clas sify Its ramifications In the census of manufactures. No matter to what ex tent the steam railroads electrify, they are still classified under steam railroads. The thousands of poles used to string wires are classified under the lumber Industry. The great cop per companies, producing practically exclusively for electrical industries, are classified under the copper Indus tries." Dr. Wheeler estimates that the to tal business in electrical machinery in the United States was in the neigh borhood of $300,000,000 for 1912. This estimate seems conservative when we realize that the last census reported the total business for 1309 at 8243,000, 000. Living With People. "I could live with anybody," said a bright young woman the other day. "If the other party to the agreement would leave me alone. Brother Jack and I get on capitally, when we run the house alone. He minds his own affairs and I mind mine. He Isn't al ways rushing Into my room to see if I remembered to sew shields in my waists, and if I remembered to put on my heavy flannels this morning because it Is colder, or to ask if I realise It Is half-past eight and I am due at school at nine o'clock. And I am not nagging him to wear rubbers every time there 1b a sprinkle nor in sisting on knowing what girl he took home from church Sunday night nor fussing at him because he talks ten minutes over the 'phone. We just take it for granted that the other thinks, and let it go at that If a person has human intelligence enough to think, surely he or she can take care of little things without being eternally nagged. Living together is very simple if you Just mind your own business. It is when someone minds it for you that you want to live on a desert island." Child's Constancy. If only we realized it, if only we cultivated It more, we could see with clear-eyed vision that all of a child's original nature breathes constancy. It Is an essential strength of the un dented child's nature to be constant Not until our own false examples have attacked the natural purity of the child does It become inconstant un reliable. Harriet Beecher Stowe. Altruistic. Mrs. Flttterby "So you are on the visiting committee of your social workers' society. I should think you'd find It dreadfully irksome making all those slum calls. Mrs. Hunter-Fadde "I'm willing to make the sacrifice for a good cause. Every visiting day I send my maid around with my cards." Judge. Considerate Wife. "I shall use the money you gave me to spend on my birthday, John," said the wife, tenderly, "in the purchase of something that will constantly remind me of your generosity. I shall have the portraits of my first three hus bands beautifully framed and hung In our sitting-room." ROLLED STEAK GOOD WITH BROWNED POTATOE8 IT IS FIT FOR EPICURES. Dainty Dressing That Should Go With the Meat Spiced Beef Relish Creamed and Baked Hash Both Fine. , Rolled Steak, Browned Potatoes. Have the bone removed from two pounds of round steak. Make a dress ing of two cups of bread crumbs dry a quarter of a pound of salt pork, chopped very fine; a dash of pepper, and a little sago, or parsley and onion juice, spread this over the steak, roll up carefully and tie in at least three places to keep the roll in shape. Put into the roasting pan with a cup of hot water and a tablespoonful of lard or bacon fat Bake In moderately hot oven; basting often; and put the po tatoes into the pan with the roll to brown, turning them when brown on one side. Make a gravy with the brown glaze In the pan, after drain ing off the fat and adding a cup of cold water. Stir over the fire and the glaze will loosen and give you a nice brown liquid for for your gravy. Spiced Beef Relish. Take two pounds of raw beef and chop very fine; add half a teaspoonful of salt; a quarter of a teaspoonful of pepper; half a teaspoonful of sage, and two tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Roll two crackers very fine, add to the mix ture and bind together with two beat en eggs. Shape into roll and bake, basting often with, melted butter and water. Slice cold. Serve with horse radish mayonnaise. Creamed Hash. Cut beef, veal or mutton In slices, then chop fine and brovn in a little fat pork or bacon drippings. Drain from the fat and in to same pan put two tablespoonfuls of flour to two of the fat and rub smooth. Then add a cup of rich milk, or cream, if you can spare it Salt and pepper to taste aad stir until it bolls up. Then add the meat and cook long enough to heat thoroughly and pour over toasted slices of bread. Baked Hash. Take one and one quarter pounds of shoulder or neck of mutton, lean as you can get It Cov er with boiling water and cook ten der. Remove the bones and gristle and chop meat very fine. Add three boiled and creamed potatoes, a table- spoonful of salt; pepper to taste; a tablespoonful of parsley minced very line, and a few dropB of onion juice. Mix all together and turn Into a bak ing dish. Pour over mixture a table spoon milk, add fine bread crumbs mixed with melted butter and bake a nice brown, about twenty minutes. Serve from the same dish. Pure Vinegar. When paring apples, peaches or apricots for canning or table use, wash thoroughly, cover parings with water, cook slightly or set in warm place twq days. Strain, sweeten with sugar, put Into jugs, bottles, crocks, tie with cloth cover. Fill one, then the next. Keep in warm place and you will have pure vinegar with very little expense, writes a contributor to Lob Angeles Express. I rinse fruit cans, jelly and jam glasses, syrup cans and all sweets for the vinegar Jug. In this was I never buy vinegar unless putting up lots of pickles. Scour Kettles With Pieces of Lemon. Never throw away pieces of lemon after they have been squeezed with the lemon squeezer, for they come in bandy for removing stains from the bands and elsewhere. Dipped into salt they will scour copper kettles nicely and remove stains from brass work. Lemon like this . will take stains, dirt and odor from pans and kettles as nothing else will. The odors of fish and onions can thus be easily removed. Fresh Pork 8tew. Two quarts water, two pounds pork, two quarts potatoes sliced, one onion, one small carrot, slice of turnip, all cut fine, salt and pepper to taste. When cooked thicken with one table spoon of flour in cup of cold water; let boll. Serve with croutons. Hard Gingerbread. One cup of butter, two cups of su gar, one-half oup of milk, one-half tea spoon of soda, two teaspoons of gin ger, flour enough to roll thin. Cut in squares and bake quickly. Pineapple Sherbet One) can grated pineapple, two cups sugar, two quarts water, juice of two lemons, two tablespoons gelatin; heat pineapple, sugar and water to boiling, pour onto gelatin which has been softened in one-half cup cold water; add lemon juice, cool and freeze. Klllarney Cocktail. Take all the pulp from grapefruit and chill. When ready to serve, place In glasses, dust with powdered sugar and garnish with green creme da-menthe cherries. JELLIED TONGUE FOR SUPPER Should Stand Twelve Hours Before Using, but Is Well Worth the Time Consumed. Jellied Tongue. This Is also a nice luncheon or cold supper dish. Boll a tongue tender, so the skin will pull off readily; cut it in thin slices and arrange In a mold lined with the slices of lemon In the bottom. Cover with jelly made of one box of gelatin dis solved In a cup of cold water. Add a quart of boiling water, less one cup, the juice of four lemons and two cups of sugar; stir until dissolved; strain into the mold, and set away to hard en. This should stand 12 hours before using. Scotch Roll. Remove the tough skin from about five pounds of flank of beef. With a sharp knife cut the meat from the thick part and lay it on the thin, mix together two table spoonfuls of salt, half a teaspoonful pepper, one-eighth of teaspoonful of cloves and a teaspoonful of summer savory. Sprinkle this over the meat and then sprinkle on three tablespoon fuls of vinegar. Roll up and tie with twine and put away in a cold place for 12 hours. Then place in a stew pan, cover with boiling water and sim mer gently for three and a half hours. Mix four heaping tablespoons flour with half a cup of cold water and stir Into the gravy. Season to taste with salt and pepper and let simmer for an hour longer. Serve hot or cold. CHINA GIVEN ESPECIAL CARE Simple Reason Why the Modern Ar ' tide Does Not Last as Long as In the Olden Days. An idea is prevalent that modern china is not as durable as the china of our grandmothers' day. This con clusion is drawn by a comparison of the fine old pieces whose color and gold is still perfect, with the compar ative short life of modern sets. But In arriving at the conclusion, we ought also to consider the difference In the care given by our grandmothers and that of the modern housewife. No careless servant was ever entrusted with that precious old china; no strong cleansers were allowed to tar nish its gold; and every slender han dle was looked upon with especial reverence. "Washing the china" was a sort of household rite, very differ ent from the ordinary washing of dishes. One dear, stately old grand mother of the old school with many servants at her command, never al lowed her finest china to leave the dining-room. After it had been used, she cheerfully tied on a big apron, had water, cloth and the towels brought in, and it was indeed a priv ilege to watch her graceful, white hands at their task of "washing the cups" as she invariably expressed it Alice Margaret Ashton, In Today's Magazine. Cherry Moss. Soak one tablespoonful of granu lated gelatin in three tablespoonfuls of cold water five minutes. Add one fourth cupful of boiling water, and as soon as gelatin is dissolved add 1 cupfuls of dark red canned cherries (stoned and cut in halveB) and one half cupful of juice drained from the canned cherries. When mixture be gins to thicken add the whites of two eggs, beaten until stiff, and a few grains of salt Turn into a mold first dipped In cold water, and chill thor oughly. Remove from mold to serving dish and surround with whipped cream sweetened and flavored with va nilla. Sprinkle with Jordan almonds, blanched, cut in shreds lengthwise, and bakd in a slow oven. Cooking Vegetables. When cooking vegetables remem ber that all vegetables which grow above ground should be put into boil ing water, and all which grow under ground in cold water with the ex ception of new potatoes. Pressed Veal. Boil one 15-cent veal shank with one onion, one clove, one-half bay leaf and plenty of salt and pepper until the meat drops to pieces and a little liquid is left Take out all the gristle and bone and mince. Put into a bread tin lined with oiled paper, with one sliced cold hard-boiled egg and a little chopped parsley on the bottom, and press the meat down firmly. Pour over it Just enough liquid to cover. Let It stand two hours, turn out and slice. Luncheon Bread. There is no better way of using sour milk than in making a spoon bread after this recipe: Break an egg into two cupfuls of sour milk and then sift into the mixture a generous cupful of white corn meal, half a teaspoonful of salt and half a teaspoonful of soda; beat this mixture thoroughly. Grease a pan or dish holding about a quart and put it on the stove till it Is very hot; then pour the batter Into it and bake till a delicate brown In a hot oven. This will take about a quar ter of an hour. Serve immediately. KEEP THE MIND ALERT LACK OF MENTAL OCCUPATION ALWAY3 A MENACE. No One Should Leave His Mind the Sport and Prey of Evil Influ ences Through Lack of Occupation. In a somewhat unsavory divorce case a famous expert testified that the woman was suffering from a "mental vacuum." When, on leaving the stand, he was asked what he meant, he said: "A mental vacuum le a space created in a person's mind by lack of some oc cupation or condition of environment which would naturally fill It" That there can be such a thing as, at least, a partial "mental vacuum," will hardly be denied. But many will doubt whether, as was argued in this case, a vacuum can be created in the mind of one person by the action of another. Those who are familiar with their New Testament will recall the story of the soul from which the evil spirits had been driven out Here It Is: "When the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, he walketh through dry places, seeking rest; and finding none, he salth, I will return unto my house whence I came out And when he cotnet he findeth it swept and gar nished. Then goeth he, and taketh to him seven other spirits more wretched than himself; and they enter In, and dwell there; and the last state of that man Is worse than the first." Here was a "soul vacuum." created by the expulsion of evil. And evil re turned with greatly reinforced strength. It Is precisely eo with a "mental vacuum." It can be filled, and must be filled If ruin Is to be avoided. No one need leave his mind the sport and prey of evil Influences. But the only way to exclude those influences Is to keep th'e mind filled with noble thoughts and eound learning. It is the emptiness that invites and prac tically Insures Invasion. And the emp tiness is the result, not of the activity of another, but of one's own neglect Men are very largely what they are because of what they think. This was recognized by the apostle, and his words are truo, whrther applied to the Intellectual or the spiritual life. If character Is molded by thought the thought must be lofty If the character Is to be lofty. So we have this- advice from the apostle: "Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are hon est, whatsoever thlng3 are juet, what soever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; If there be any vir tue, and If there bo any praise, think on these things." Wo doubt whether there can be such a thing as an absolute "mental vac uum," that Is, a wholly tenantless mind, so empty as to be widely open to evil. It muet be filled, and with things that are true, lovely and of good re port Otherwise It will become the slave of other Influences. It Is not enough to "cease to do evil" men must "learn to do well." Virtue con sists, not In the absence of evil, but In the presence of good. That is the teaching both of Christianity and of the non-Christian philosophers. Indi anapolis News. Firm Stand. "Have you decided what appoint ment you will ask for?" "No," replied the applicant for appointment, "but I took a firm stand and let the adminis tration know that on its action de pends my decielon on the advieabllity of granting more than a single presi dential term." Washington Star. Won't Stand for That Mrs. Fitzwell (socially Inclined) "My dear, I have picked out a hus band for you." Her Daughter "Very well; but I tell you emphatically that when It comes to buying the wedding dress I'll select the material myself." Holland's Busiest Man. On a sign over a barber's shop at Stlerom, Holland: "Barent Wonters lends donkeys on hire like his father, kills pigs, smokes hams, and occupies himself with all kinds of swinish de tail work; rIbo shaves and cuts hair, except on Sundays." Contradictory. Queer things, these alleged wise saws. "Know thyself," for instance. On the other hand, "familiarity breeds contempt" How do you dope that out? Complimenting Dad. "I hear that you undertook to chas Use that precocious youngster of yours." "Yes, and I got t little re spect out of blm, too." "How do you know?" "Ho told me that If 1 would go to .the gym and train a little he thought he could make a bard hitter out of me." Where the Rhine Is Busy. The traffic on the Rhine between Strasburg and the Holland frontier amounts to the enormous total of for ty million tons annually,