The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, May 31, 1908, SECOND SECTION, Page 15, Image 15

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    SUNDAY. MAY 31. 1908. THE MORNING ASTOMAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. . , IS
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WHO ARE REALLY UNHAPPY.
What are the enjoyments of the
average rich? Is there anything
more vapid, insipid, unsatisfying than
the chasing after that indefinite, mys
terious something which they call
happiness; that will-o'-the-wisp which
is always beckoning them on but ever
eluding their grasp; that rainbow
which? recedes as they approach
They may enjoy the titillation of the
nerves for a moment, the temporary
excitement, and the exhilaration
which come from even vicious pleas
ures. But what of it all? It is only
animal enjoyment. Nothing but re
gret, disappointment, and disgust fol
low. There is within every normal per
son a strong desire to do something
and to be something in the world;
and every idler knows that he is vio
lating the fundamental demand of his
nature, that he is really cheating him
self out of a very sacred prize, the
getting of which would mean more
to him than anything else in the
world.
What a pitiable thing it is to sec
the human race chasing the dollar
material things trying to extract
happi'icss, to sqeeze joy out of money
alone!
Mow little people realize that the
very thing they arc hunting lives in
themselves or nowhere, that, if they
do not take happiness with them,
they may hunt the earth over with
out finding it.
Happiness is a condition of mind.
It is a fundamental principle, and he
who does not understand the prin
ciple cannot possibly be happy.
All the misery and the crime of the
world rest upon the failure of human
beings to understand the principle
that no man can be really happy until
he harmonizes with the best thing
in him, with the divine, and not with
the brute. No one can be happy who
tries to harmonize his life with his
animal instincts. The God (the good1
in him is the only possible thing that
can make him happy. -Success Magazine.
Bad Attack of Dysentery Cured.
"An honored citizen of this town
was suffering from a severe attack of
dysentery. He told a friend if he
could obtain a bottle of Chamberlain's
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem
edy, he felt confident of being cured,
he having used this remedy in the
West. He was told that I kept it in
stock and lost no time in obtaining it,
and was promptly cured," says M. J.
Leach, druggist, of Wolcott, Vt. For
sale by Frank Hart and Leading
Druggists.
Subscribe for the Morning Astorian.
A SILENT TRAGEDY.
The National Bureau of Labor is
now making an extended investiga
tion into the condition of women and
children in our American industries.
Light is certainly needed on this
grave matter. A nation that will not
care for its working women and child
ren should have its name blotted from
the book of life.
Most piteous is the silent tragedy
of the working child the child who
is, in this era of machinery, whirled
in for the first time to slave by the
side of grown-up men. The sacri
fice of children in some sudden cat
astrophe arouses the instant compas
sion, the swift refense of the nation.
With quick accord, the people de
mand that no more forever shall there
be a Slocum, or a Boyertown, or a
Collinwood disaster. But if we could
all realize the long misery, the dis
tressful torture, the sure destruction
of the host of little ones drawn into
Child labor, little ones dying some
times as surely, though seldom so
spectacularly, as the children of the
world-watched tragedies if we could
realize it all, how long think you,
friends, would this crime of civiliza
tion stand against the cyclone blast
of an aroused public opinion? Child
Labor has come in so gradually, it is
carried on so quietly, it is defended
so skillfully by those interested in
grinding children into dividends, that
few parents of America realize that
even the deficient census of eight
years ago gives a total of nearly two
million children under fourteen at
work in wagearning labors. Success
Magazine.
Subscribe for The Morning Astorian
60 cents per month. Contains full
Associated Press reports, besides all
the news in the local field.
HE IS THE RICHEST MAX.
In whose possessions others feel
richest.
Who can enjoy a landscape with
out owning the land.
Who absorbs the best in the world
in which he lives, and who gives the
best of himself to others.
Who has a strong, robust constitu
te n.
Who has a hearty appreciation of
the beautiful in nature.
Who enjoys access to tthe master
pieces of art, science, and literature.
Who has a mind liberally stored
and contented.
Who can face poverty and mis
fortune with cheerfulness and cour
age. Who values a good name above
gold.
For whom plain living, rich thought
and grand effort constitute real riches.
Success Magazine.