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About Condon globe. (Condon, Gilliam Co., Or.) 189?-1919 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1905)
Topics of I the Times Ltfe'a primrose path is pared with the long green. Some men would rather so to jail than bust! (or a living. Successful guessers are applauded by th public aa great prophets. Before taking cooking lesson It'a up to a woman to get her husband's life Insured. Some people are so dlasattsfled that they are complaining of the eagle as the national bird. "Nan" Patterson and Caleb Towers could both speak feelingly concerning "the law's delays." A London scientist has discovered radium In wheat Maybe John W. Gates put It there. A married man longs for etther some excitement to relieve the monotony or some monotony to relieve the excite ment The real Kentucky colonel who In sisted on being addressed as "mister" knew the short cut to a splendid Iso lation. Terbaps by this time Dr. Osier re grets his decision to move to a country where there will be no pension substi tute for chloroform. "Few rich men," says Dr. Gladden, "escape being despised." And fewer still seem to be lying awake at night thinking of the desplsers. A former employe of Russell Sage bas sued the multimillionaire for $800. Does he think a mere court could ex tract money from "Uncle Russell Y' "Woman la man's equal." says a feminine magazine writer. Well, that depends on who the woman Is snd who the man Is. She may be his su perior. From the way in which Mrs. Chad wlck's attorneys keep up the appeal game we conclude that the money she got was about as good as any the banks had In stock. rrofessor Felix Adler declares men and women should not marry for hap piness, but for social end. A few more like that, professor, and the Uni versity of Chicago will try to hire you. The orange crop In Italy, Spain and southern France is reported to be al most a complete failure. It la expect ed, however, that the cotton-seed olive oil yield will be as generous as ever. Dr. Gladden declares Adam never could have been a millionaire. Still, he must admit that at one time Adam was the richest man in the world and controlled about everything in sight excepting Eve. A Pittsburg millionaire was arrested and locked up in a police station Veil by mistake the other night Whenever you hear of a millionaire being ar rested and locked np you can put it down as a mistake. Passing events, as well as history, remind us that since the days of the Forerunner the name of John has been conspicuous in the church. Less than two years ago the blcentennary of John Wesley's tyrth was commemo rated. Bohemia is now erecting at Prague a costly monument to John IIuss. In '1505, four centuries ago, John Knox was born. Have you seen "The Girl and the Coachman," the latest 10, 20, 30 sue cess? The most thrilling part comes when "Uncle Andy" advances to the center of the stage and declaims In deep thrilling tones: "He Is not rich, but he is a sober, moral, well doing young man, and the family would much rather have such a husband for Nancy than a worthless duke!" Wow! Just listen to the gallery. The health committee of Birming ham has recently been visiting Liver pool to investigate the Liverpool sys tem of supplying "humanized" and sterilized milk to Indigent mothers for the benefit of their young children. One of the brightest signs of the growing realization of human brother hood is that the number of "human- Ized" officials interested to the preven tion of Infant mortality in large cities Is Increasing. The immigration problem for a se rious problem it iscannot find a so lution satisfactory to most Americans until the standards of admission to this country are raised so as to en courage the entrance of those who are likest to the national type and until some method is found for distributing Immigration over a wide territory, thus relieving the perilous ongestion of fbrt!gnrs tn our great urban centers.' Ths United States still needs and wel comes immigration of ths proper kind, but It fears ths concentration of ths wrong kind in ths big cities. j A famous French general, when ask ed how it was that he had such an erect carriage, replied that It was be came he beut over and touched the floor with his fingers thirty times every day. If he had acquired rigidity of the spine so that he could not do that he would have had with it weak ab dominal muscles, which result In por tal congestion. This portal congestion interferes with stomach dtgesMon and with the action of the liver. The pol-son-detroytng power of the liver Is lesaeued, autointoxication results and artertoscleroals and old age come on at a much earlier day. But by keep ing the spine flexible and the abdomi nal muscles strong and taut the portal circulation is kept free and old age Is held off. Enough money Is lost every year In rainbow Investments that Is, Invest ments induced by the brilliant promise of a prospectus that a pot of gold may be had if one accepts the advice it gives to pay the interest on the na tional debt Every one Is familiar with the type of Investment meant The aUeged property back of It may be a gold mine or a copper mine, an orange grove or a coffe plantation, a town lot or a mineral spring. All that is required is something on the alleged security of which to issue certificates of stock, par value ten dollars, which as a special favor will be sold for a short time at five dollars to sll those who receive the circular." The prop erty la usually a long way from the part of the country where the stock Is offered for sale, and the Investors buy the stock without knowing anything about It When they receive no divi dends and begin to make the Inquiries which they should have made origin ally, they discover what experienced Investors knew from the first that st the best the enterprise was wholly speculative, and at the worst wss a swindling operation from the begin ning. The recent collapse of a com pany of this kind is a case in point. The only safe course for small invest ors to follow Is to avoid speculative Investments, and to put their money in the banks near at home, or to buy real cstaie wnere they live snd are familiar with the actual value o' things. The 120 marrlaceible young women who drew homesteads en the Rosebud Indian reservation in South Dakota are in no haste to marry. They don't have to be. They know that a woman with 160 acres can marry any time, and they are resolved to wait until the right suitors come along. They have organized and announce to the 10,000 men from whom they have re ceived proposals that the only way to get Into their favor is to work into it They are not to be won by soft words. Good clothes, white hands, a handsome face, parlor manners will not do. The girls Invite their admirers to come out and show what they can do in the plowing, sowing and harvesting Hue. Suitors who prove by one or two sea sons' work that they are not lazy and know how to tend horses, cultivate corn, and pitch to a thrashing machine will stand a chance of getting a bride and farm. These young women are wise in their day and generation. Their plan, adapted to varying cir cumstances, would be a good one for others to adopt The city young wom an can seldom put her young man through his business or professional paces to see whether he is desirable. The next best thing is to demand a look at his pay envelope, bank book, and receipted bills. They will ahow bow much he is uinking, keeping, and spending, and give a more accurate idea of his ability to support a family than the theater tickets he buys or the carriage he hires. The young man also oijght to be afforded better facili ties Zr "correctly Judging of the prac tical accomplishments of his intended When the rural wooer calls he not In frequently is allowed to sit by the kitchen fire and watch his sweetheart prepare the family dinner. He knows she can cook. All the average city man knows at marriage about the housekeeping accomplishments of his bride is what he has learned by seeing her handle the versatile chafing dish. It is no more than fair that before a man contracts to live by a woman's cookery he should be given a few samples of It Of course, people ought not to marry other people because they are workers, money makers, or good cooks. They ought to marry for love. But working, money making and cook ing play important parts in practical life, and in the long run, other tilings being equal, those who do them best will love and be loved most May Recover. "Do you know that Grabcoyne was seriously injured by an explosion?" "No. When did it happen?" "Last night Burglar blew open his af e and got about $37." Detroit Trib une. The way some people have of being good is worse than their way of being bad. THE I'ftlS OK 1UCMKH. Br tOlh O. tV "Then took Mary a pound of oint ment of spikenard, very costly, and an ointed the feet of Jesus, and wiped Ilia feet with her Imlr. And the house was filled with the odor of the oint ment" John 12 X It Is always to be remembered that Jesus did not come Into this world upon an Industrial, but upon a rellgi lous mission. He was concerned not to aecure bodily comfort for men's bodies and to establish a bread-and-butter paradise, but to secure salvation for their souls and to make them par takers of the riches of the kingdom ot God. If He has been a reformer ot society, and as the ages go on It will be seen more and mors clearly that He has been such a reformer. It li because lie has been a Saviour of the soul. Alio Christ's Idea of how to arrange the great difference between man and man la so to possess men wtth the spirit of the Father that they will treat their fellow-men as brethren. I will say a word of a law to which great Importance should be attached, and which Illustrates the grace of Je sus' teaching. It Is the law of Tjeauty, which was Illustrated in that hour when a pious and devout .woman, touched with the romance which ever clings round the person of Christ and the kingdom of heaven, took that pre cious ointment, and Instead of distrib uting It in alms at the door, poured It forth on the person of our Lord; ao that although a little later they struck Him, they put Him to shame, and they crucified Him. He died bearing the fragrance of that ointment upon His body. Waste? Ah, glorious waste, the fragrance of which has filled not that room alone, but the whole history. So that If a man, having discharged his duties to his home and to his workmen, shall hold In his hand a surplus, what magnificent and beautiful things he can do with It! He can purchase pic tures and statuary, and lovely metal- work, and specimens of the binder's art and place them where "the poorest of the people can have a vision of beau ty. He can erect some great building in hit city, whereon shall be written tn stone the thoughts of ages; and In that building can allow the poorest ot the people to hear the greatest artist in the subtlest of all arts I mean music the great players nnd Ue great singers. Tuey are to-day the monop oly of ihe rich; they might be glvei for the service of the poor, ne car secure open spaces In the crowdet districts of the city, hy pulling down r few houses and making there a llttl circle of quietness', where worainp women can go In the afternoons with their children, away from the noise and danger of the streets. He can give great parks, as men are giving where the people can go on Sunday, and where the young men can have their games; where public functions, can be held. Any man who gives an art gallery, or gymnasium, or mush room, or an hospital, or a school, or a university, or a park, or a playground to his fellow citizens, has given that which it honors him to give nnd which they receive without dishonor. Richer may be a sordid thing, and used basely they nre the corruption of character, and they are the nurse of revolution. Used Chrlstlnnly they are servants of peace and righteousness, and establish the kingdom of God by laying the foundation safe and strong of Innum erable homes, and brighten with the Joy of beauty the Inevitable greyness of Innumerable lives, all to the good of human souls and the glory of Jesus Christ our Lord. HOME AND WOMAN'S DUTY. By Bishop Samuel fallown. President Roosevelt has called the attention of the country to the supreme importance of motherhood. He 1b but following in tbe footsteps of Napoleon, who, when asked what Is the great need of France, answered, "Mothers." Whatever Is most excellent In the nation must begin at the fireside. Worn an Is the queen of the home. She rules there by divine right She is the anoint ed priestess to keep the sacred fire of love to God and love to man ever burn ing on the home altar. That throne she can never abdicate to another, That holy office she can never forsake. The borne is the imperium in imperlo of the State. It is the center arm source of its human beginning and au thorlty. In it is Infolded tho church in which the eternal father first speaks to the child through the mother's heart and Hps. But woman's sphere is not confined to the home. Multitudes of the gentle sex are not permitted to as cend the royal throne of motherhood For them the gates ot opportunity were opened In the nineteenth century so nnmeroualy snd so widely that Via tor Hugo might well call It "the wom an's century." It took the world thousands of years to learn that woman had soul. It required 2.000 years more before it could learn that she had mind, and this knowledge Is among the supremo gifts the century just closed gave to mankind. It la serious question whether It has ben an advantage to society or not to have several millions of women enter Into the Industrial ranks, as they have done within the last thirty years. It has important bearings tn many di rections, and especially upon marriage and the home. But we must bellevt that all things considered. It la for ths lest It la not the number of children tn a home that la of paramount Impor tance, but the quality. Reason and not recklessness must rule In settling tbe question. Parenthood must be largely determined by ability to take csre of offspring, to say nothing of the health and well-being of the mother. Former President Cleveland has crit icised women's clubs as being Inimical to the home. But I believe on the con trary that these clubs, whether for purely social, literary or philanthropic purposes or for extending the rights of woman so persistently and Insolent ly denied her through all the ages, are not a menace but a blessing to the community. From a somewhat careful examina tion of the constituency of these clubs I find that a large number ot the mem bers are women, who have done their duty faithfully at the fireside and whose children are the crown jewel of their homes. Other members are younger women who are devoting their energies to the betterment of society snd are not losing their attractiveness and doinostlclty by their relationship to such organisation. DESIRE Fun I11Q NERD. Br Or. 4. K. fMi. The lust for big things has led many men and nations far out Into the des ert to perish, forgetting tenderness and looking only to the accomplishment of the ambition for greatness. In our life, military and civic, we are cursed with an overwhelming desire for bigness. May God call us back from our fol lowing after this mirage that has led so many meu and nations far out Into the sert to perish, simply of their own hint for big things. It is still true that the victories of peaco are greater than the victories of war. In the bitter competitions and doadly strifes by which society Is beset we have come to emphasize power, might nid magnitude, forgetting that the race la not always to the swift nor tho 'mttlo to the strong. Have men come i believe that God Is always on tho .-tide of the Urgent navies and strongest armies? Do we, like Napoleon, see as Imiwtant only cavalry, Infantry and artillery? Tho true disciple of Christ will lenrn from his Master, who found In a cup of cold water a ministry, touder and sweet to human thirst. Sad is that heart to which want and suffering make no appeal, and sadder ia that life tlint gives out none of Itself In tender ness for the benefit of Its kind. Hie church to fulfill her true mission to men must not allow herself to be led Into the riotous assembly that thun ders In the theater at Ephesns, but must rather go to the upper room In Jerusalem, where (die may for a time be alone with her. Lord to gain power for her ministry of tenderness. Short Meter Sermon. Whining piety wins no one. Faith always goes forward. The worst sins have many aliases, Love counts Its wealth by its losses. Shortening the face lengthens the life. It Is easy to be resigned to another's woes. Weeping over your weeds only wat ers them. The .best way to keep his day is to do his deeds. The Master is always with those who seek to minister. The church that does not look for the lost is lost Itself. Only a soft man finds any pleasure in spreading himself. Salvation Is more than a sense of satisfaction with ourselves. Angels may have wings, but that does not indicate that they will wel come a man milliner. Where tbore is no faith in the possi bilities of man faith in the power of God does little good. It you know enough to help you will have too many contracts to waste any breath in criticism. NIQRO EXCELS IN 8CHNCK. Trained by a Neted Kdacelor Bad !oe Valuable Werh. John W. Widgeon, scientist Is prob ably tbe most Interesting negro tn Baltimore. He holds a position at the Maryland Academy of Sciences direct ly under the eye of Dr. Philip ft, Uhlor, which gives utin a piece of dis tinction among his race. He has ac complished a wonderful amount of work of a scientific nature without liny other training than that given htm by Dr. Uhler, whose protege be has been for many years, and he Is en gaged at present upon the arrange ment of a collection of coral which he gathered Isst summer t and near Ja mate which Is said to be the bt la that part of the country. Widgeon's life has been sack an In teresting one that at the suggestion of I. Uhler he has begun to write out the whole of It He Is the only negro In Maryland who has seriously at tracted the attention of aclentlfle men, and what he Is doing now bids fair to make him even more widely known than before. Widgeon was born of slave parents on the eastern shore of Virginia In 1H50. After the Civil War he weut to Maltlmore and got a position In the establishment of Kuhn & dimming. photographers, where Is? learned a great deal about photography. Then he went to work for Sharp & Don me where be remained for sixteen ycers. During his connection with this firm he leartmt a lot of chemistry, for he was employed In the laboratory ten years. Dr. Uhler gave htm a poltl.i as a helper on one of his scientific corps after he left the drug firm -and he showed such marked ability In this line of field work that It wsa not long before be was sent out on expeditions by himself to gather gH;!i!cl speci mens for collections or for study In the laboratory. He has been engaged upon this sort of work for eighteen years, and in tnat time he has got to gether a valuable collection of fossils, rocks, minerals, Indian relics and birds and snakes, all of which are on exhibi tion at tbe Maryland Academy of Sci ences. The coral collection is eicellent Widgeon made two trips to Jamaica to get It He did all the work himself lie stripped and dived for the speci mens he wanted, not lathering with tbe paraphernalia of regulation scien tists and divers. Dr. Uhler says that he would not dispense with the services of his col ored helper for those or a highly train ed aclentlfle man, because Widgeon, being a negro, can and Is willing to do certain kinds of work which a white man would not do. "His endurance and patience," con- tinned Dr. Uhler. "are- unlimited. It seems to me, anl his Indian blood, of which he has considerable, hU grand mother having been full blmled. glve- htm the characteristic trait of wood and field craft. He N Invaluable to mo and tho work lie dues 1 as complete and thorough us I could hardly get under other circumstances." LITTLE BOY A HERO. Bescaeil Ilrownlnc Tot end Kranarl- tutee Hint In Hclcntlflc Manner. With a record of having saved throe lives Master J. G. Ford, a newsboy only 12 years of ago, has all the mod esty of a true hero. Young Ford was In the vicinity of some abandoned clay pits, when he was attracted by the screaming of sev eral other children. One of their num ber, James MeGovern, aged 4 yenrs. had fallen Into tbe pit and was alout to drown. James' brother William, who Is only two years older, was alwwt to plnngo Into the pit when young Ford arrived. He held tho baby's brother back with one hand, unloosed his paper strap with the othqr and, retaining a firm hold on one end of tho strap, threw the buckle end to the little one in the water. Fortunately enough, his aim was gtnxl; the little fellow grasped tho strap and was drawn to tho shore in a comatose state. In one hand bo had a piece of a cigar box, which ho had graspod In a frenzy and all efforts to make him relinquish his hold on it were unavailing. Young Ford's efforts did not stop at this point He realized that tho little one's condition demanded Immediate attention and recalling, as he stated to a reporter, one of bis lotwons In physi ology, he proceeded to exert his efforts toward restoring natural respiration, doing so as nearly as he could remem ber from tho instructions contained in bis school book. In this be was successful, and after resuscitating the child by rolling him on tho ground young Ford carried him to tbe home of his aunt Mrs. J. Gov ern. Master Ford is well known In tho southern section of the city, says a Now York Herald special from Boston, where he has a paper routo, He bus twice before made rescues from the same clay pits, one being his youngor sister, Madallne, and the other Aubrey Stein, a playmate. , Asked to make a statement, the boy replied: "I guess I havon't anything to say. Most any kid wcsld do what I did if they had been in my place."