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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1905)
PIUU MA2AZINK SECTION. LAKE VIEW. ORF.GON, THURSDAY. OCTOKER 15). 1005. sun WITTE IN RUSSIA return of this successful diplomat not a march OF TRivmn. . Despicable Manner In Which Divine Royalty Is Wont to Accept Valu able Services of Subject. Charles E. Karn.- There li patbos ia the attitude of the cnat Ruaoiua statesman, M. Wilts, Uieely to whoa diplomacy the Cxar cues tiia favorable conclusion of the mar with Japan. In bit presentation in jM-rnou to his insjesty, of a report on the details of wboae historic meetings at Portsmouth wlilch were so managed as to "save tha faca of Russia, aa ihry mt In the far East It la dlfflcnlt for an American to understand tbs na ture of this meeting between Czar and mtijcct, and although we as a people cannot admire M. Wltte's braggadocio, we must In fact feel sorry for a man who rriarns to bis country after ac complishing so much In her behalf and finds It at once necessary to plan an intrigue In order to prevent effacement Ing upon the return of M, Wltte to his HWUIV, Would have Presidential Bee, "Tha man trtin tn.Va cn...... .-j Aslatlo history to-day can never hope w iiirusca ineir royal masters, who n many cases mere puppets, ex cept la a manner indicating tue utmort humility. The American, who wouIJ Perform such service ss that of M. Witts would return home with a straight backbone and with the presi dential bee hnzzlnv nnHor Ik. o of his bat He would accept as his I L a . m ... rigni, mxcrj on oi credit pertaining to ui PWTt-iwiui worx, ana no one would expect him to nerfnrm mi a-t r hu miliation In tbs presence of the Prea- tuenv or any one else." The fact 1. M. Witt haran Via a Of humllltr WhllA In thla onnnfrv Iln referred to the Ctar at all times as his august master and while crossing the Auauuc ocean, wnen accorded deserved hO&Or fOF hla dlnlnmar mrmm nnlnlr In , r ' ' M v uimvow ocing wonny or u least credit for his labors, stating la effect that hs was a miserable creature who ureamcd because or the goodness of his "auzust master" and that anvthlnv ha had done In connection with the peace negotiations was merely in obedience 5 L-&zS'fXifi I? WORKING GIRL'S CHANGES. CBOOSB CONGKXIAL OCCUPATION TUBS HOLD FAST TO TUB FIRST GOOD JOB, Only those who have been within the charmed circle of the court at L I'tUrsburg can liaagine the conditions luflueuclng tuls IctervUw between tbu Czar and his representative who has carried off the honors of the diplomatic name that has recently been played to deurnilue the terms on which peace could be concluded between Buasla aud Japan. The American Imagines the Russian statesman and dipto.nat returning to (be presence of the Crar with form rect and countenance beaming with Just pride in bsving performed serv ice for which be would naturally ex lect to be received with honor. But I hose wbo have Wwn at the Imperial Court of Russia know that no such Hcene is enacted upon the return of M. Witte. With Bowed Head and Humbly They know bs will return to tbs preaeuce of his royal maater, ths Csar, if ha has already reached Bt Peters burg with bowed bead, regretting that he has been unable to serve his mas ter in a mors worthy manner, and praying, with ths bunted countenance of a criminal, that bs bs fsrglven for having performed so poor a service. Hs will protest tbst if there can be found any act of bis own worthy or favorsble comment that that act U dus wholly to hsvlng obeyed the royal win snd having properly Interpreted the royal purpose. He will conclude that act of humiliation by begging forgive. dots of his august master for bis short eomlnjss. No menial in America cou d -play ths part of humility so ";8t'7 ss will tbs distinguished diplomat M. The attltuds of ttwmsn of monar. eblcal governments toward their roy masters is one tbst cannot nr stood by Americans and is to those wbo bsve been lo close tow with tLm abroad.- Mid S hlmcUl ef ths Stats Xvatt V,MB to the will of bis master, the Czar. Expectations That He Would Fall. wl- t 1 Wit (a tn RL Pe- tersburg also has a special Interest hvauae ss is nuiy unuemiu u inner circles of the Diplomatic Corps at Washington, bis appointment as a peace commissioner to represent the Czar was given htm not for his benefit but was brought about by bis enemies, who expected that bis failure to effect a successful peace negotiation would li .n..nt nnllflr&l undoing. It DS ma ww. r - - , was M. Witts wbo opposed tbs war and favored Its conclusion ion Bt"v waa arranged. He was detested by ths .nrf tha Intrliruea of the Russian court placed him In n un- comfortab e position oewre w -' r. ' Ja it ha could be sent on the Impossible mission of making peace when the entire court was con. . . .l. ..i...a nf la nun would vinceo uw. -J "a,,,-.- h. the 0rst Ume In his career to approvs ill contlnusncs of the war, vhlek iu ..fTi k. ,.rtla of the court dLsnl- Urles up to the Ume peace wa'a- clared. Still WorWn tor bis DownfalU .v.. (hi wwvl fortune and the artfuldlplomscy of M. Wlttt bve con fused his enemies hs Is no better loved by them thsn bs wsa when they con bind to Intrust blm with a mission thiv bellsved hs could not successfully perform It Is lesrned at Washington po-iuiu. .t,... ..ma Mtm ti are that ven ---f- .m,Br.t Sa.,wW by the of fortuns. When be appear, be- fore nis susuot ina- i, --- .f7 i.T. Af a aaa there Will Kr7Vi ;0.mle7 to endeavor " . -l kal Vat fnrmsl to persusos ms - words of depreclstlon which bs . . . .niifnrin to aoart etl- SV; U fast eaJf pi&M truth. It Is Not the Kind of Work but the Manner of Working That Brings Forth the Dollars. ssld the little t rench milliner who bad Just flnlsUcd-a beautiful beruched bat ftuv, m uuu a avo . mumw of those pretty mousacllne shoulder rucnes ; ana sue wouiu ao noiuiug clJe her sioclalty. So It Is In sll the Liar dlflMi vhar. vAmMi flock ta make a living or a name; whether In Paris, London, New Tork, Chicago, San Fran cisco, one must bare one's highly per fected specialty In order to win e?n moderate recognition. "Don't scatter" Is tbo very best ad vice to the girl worker. "On. I know how to do ever so many things, says the Istest entry on tho books of big employment agency. H'an Ton ron-V asks the manageress with breathless eagerness. ICS," is we repiy rawer suaiuw fscedly. "Good I m out Too down onaer Cooks." Itnf T AnnH nut i mnTr. T't been tTsvvintrh Atif iiiai1mv anil T'ta firrfl cili ated in all the latest accomplishments. Besides, I've come op to the city to make money a lot of money. Vnn'll mnba a lot of moueV tf TOU'Il cook, says the manageress In her take-my-advlce tone. "Why, any girl that can pretend to cook, if she don't know a souffle from a hoe cake can make in fltlB town, than a whole class of academy graduates with ten sccorapiisiimonts apiece. It Is not the. kind of work, but the manner of working that brings in the dollars. a c-irl nt twentv-thrM. thrown sud denly on her own resources, made the lives of her mends miserable oy a constant cry of "What can I do?" A vollnw atrnnlr rtf annhhlshnesa made it all the more difficult to help her. With out even facility in writing, sue Deggeu assistance in becoming a paid con tributor to a BcanuaJniongering news paper. Fortunately, sue laikccl ss much In perseverance as in literary Kintv Hop ncrt Tpntnre WU3 la trained nursing; but, being placed In the colored ward, her - southern pre judices drove her out of the hospital lint throa don Inter than her date of entry. From a spasmodic effort to ac quire a Knowieoge or sienograpny, uc set out on a quest for a place as nurs ery governess. A practical friend roi-t her Just after ber first rebuff, and much against ber will pushed her Into a situation In a fashionable mi'.llnery establishment, at $3 a week. Now it developed that trimming bats Is thut girl's girt It usually takes about three years In the workshops of the swell milliners to srrlve at the degree of proficiency which commands a salary of $25 per week, .but the girl In question made bats for her friends evenings. Her friends sent their friends, and Inside of yeur sho had saved enougn io iukb trin n Pnri dtirlmF the summer. She bought not a slnglo model but gathered Impressions, went back to New lorit, remec a coupie ti ruum In a side street between the shopping snd the residence sections, croppca p little note to each of her patrons sayln sbe bad taken a flyer abroad and t' rest waa easy. Cheese a Congenial Occupatk The secret of success Is findlnr one s neciai l-i v. -t thing that It la esslest to do, tuut ont likes best to do, is the work in which one will be able to mane greatest prorress. A very few sre favored with Inspiration along original lines. Some unfortunates commit the folly of choos ing s profession or trade because of the results secured la it by others, rathtr than because of any personal Inclination or adaptability. Voluminous statistics show tbst a rirl need not be limited in her choice of work, for some one hundred and fifty occupations, meeting every need or do sire of existence from doctor to un dertakerhave already been exploited br wotmn. However, for the aversge girl, compsrstlvely few trades and pro fessions seem within ber scope. Out side of the enormous number wbo be come tcschers, very few women are afforded ths opportunity to acquire a profession ; consequently, certain trades required for csrrylng on of routine work ia business offices, shops and factories, bsve come to be regarded as the only money-making channels open to ths girls who srrlve at the end of their school days confronted with the Question. "What shall I do for a Ur lagr Always Room for Good Ones. Most discouraging of all the obstacles to the girl seeking ber living Is the constantly repeated falsehood that ths occupations open to the aversge remaie intelligence sre overcrowded. Thirty yesrs ago the same statement was msde to slmost every female applicant for employment as bookkeeper, clerk, agent, stenographer, saleswoman, etc. At tbst time less thsa one per cent of all the women wsge esrners were em ployed la clerical positions. Ia twenty years the percentage of women in this clsss Incressed to five per cent of the total employed, while the figures of the last: census nromlse a still more eu- coursglng advance. It Is further shown that in the last decade of the 1Mb century the number of women bookkeepers In the United ntates In creased by about &0.0OO, the number of woman clerks by over 10.000, tbs uu ru bor vt MieewoaMna by over 1X,U00, the nnmluf ttt atannirr n nhem and type writers by 6T.,0UU ; and thWIst nilgnt be continued through every profession or trade entered by women. AH show a greater or lees increase, proving that there Is always room for the com petent It is only by sdding real effort perseverance and determination to a natural talent, however, that the to;, Is reached. The woman who spendi months, even years, In acquiring skill or knowledge In some line of work that appears attractive because of the few a-si m n n In If l not because she has any special talent for it make a fatal mistake. ' Stick to Cood Job. A .n llttl niihtlf achoot teacher. worried into a state of hysteria by a long year witn a ciass oi unruiy num children, threw op her position, and. mifliArfi r f itA anrwaa or a rrieDU. uu- dertook to become a stenographer. She had Just the qualities tnat maae a goou tonliA Imf nnnii of tha filter. Desa. en- imiwM and el.ttftv nnrra flint aro in dispensable in the shorthand writer. She remembered that ber friend bad spent only three months on a course of Liiina hn tnrvnt that, at tha end of the three months bad come a position at so per wees wuu eigui uuurs ui un interrupted typewriting .each day. after which, in order to make headway to nrrii hattprnnlarr.everv evening from imif nnat apven tn eleven was snent in speed practice. The little teacher put In a hot summer in a private oiiBinew school and later, through the kindness of friends, obtained apposition in a section of the country most unhealthy The choice of the right work deter mines at the start the measure of success. - SENATOR MARTIN'S CASE. Renomlnatioh of Virginia-Statesman Cost a small rortune Sonatnr Martin of Virginia Is out Of pocket $11,500 In expenditures to se cure a renominatlon to the United States Senate. This is more than one- thlrH tf tha nnlnnr he would receive during the whole six years of his new term, t ne expenditure, it seems, wu necessary. The Senator had a popular opponent who set a hot pace and kept it up to the end. There waa nothing for Mr. Martin to do but to canvass tao State from end to end and this, with ArhD. DMpBiAr oYnpnaefl ran the total high. This fight of Senator Mar tin for renominatlon -ana toe neces? sary large expenditure, which Is looked upon as entirely legitimate and free rroin any corruption, nas arouBea oon ci 'nr.hu unniMiit imnnr politicians and prominent men at Washington, as being aa exceptional clear cut ex ample of present political methods and necessities. ' . ... "Martin's troubles are- -w practi cally over," said a prom' BRNATOa MARTIN. r, stopping at the national capital, who has all his life been familiar with the practical methods of political nomina tions and elections. "Martin can draw a check or two more and then close up his book because Virginia Is not a close State; but suppose it were, and that Senator Martin was now obliged to meet a Republican antagonist, able to give him the fight for the election that Governor Montague gave blm for the nomination, so that he had to spend $11,500 additional a total of $23,000. This would lesve blm $7,000 of salary for bis full time of six years of ser vice. Night Have) Coat Thirty Thousand. "Nay, more. Virginia la a State where campaigning is rather primitive. Mon ey still has a good value in moat of the sections. There is not the holding up and bleeding or candidates at every turn that there is In some of tho more closely contested States, so that It Is entirely conceivable that Senator Mar. tin might have legitimately expended! more than bis entire $30,000 tn order to be re-elected: a man, too., or character and ability, who has served his State so well In the Senate that people might have thought he could have bad the rtnomlnation for the asking, If it was not actually forced upon him. "But the case Is typical, although it may not be usual. Politics are every where getting to be very expensive where two men want the same place I have seen the Increase In cost grow and grow. What I bear esl;ed now. among thinking men is, what is the effect upon our national legislation when It would appear thtt only wealthy men can think of running for election and where there can be no contest for the honor by any but the wealthy. Is tne situation tuning upon our public affairs T and tf so, what Is tha remedy) what out we do about Uf FORTY PIES A ME. PITTSBURG MAN INVENTS A MA CHINE TO MAKE PIES DT THE MILLION Annual Output Would Reach Half Across the Continent. wouia Drive Mother Out of Business. fi itt nwiihn. tiamt to maker Is that possible? And yet it Is learned by dispatciies rrom i'liisourg mui man there can make such appetizing delicacies at a rate of twenty-four thousand pies In ten hours, or forty In a minute turougn tne aia or a macuiuw nhinh ho ha. In at ncrfpctmL If the machine can do what is claimed for it anil turn nnt rood wholesome Dies there should be enough to go around H. Ia SONS, THE PIK MAN. to everybody even following the fiercest political campaigns. Tne statement made by the inventor from the Smoky City certainly Is a marvel when It is figured just what the ma chine's capacity for pie-making is. Suppose we have the macnine running ten hours a day, six days in the week. allowing for holidays and Dreanuowns, making the lemon meringue pies, for which the machine is specially adapted. we have, with say 300 working daya a year, the sum total of 7,200,000 pies a year. If these pies are like motner nsea to make, then of course they are each about nine inches 4n diameier and an lnrh and a nnnrter thick. Mother al- conllnf man, v States. The a of the p In fact t In tbo Instead irons r the molil chain, tfi wbkfc pp the psnn, Irons, fi ik sets of I tho ove... is release proper t mined 1 chim a bv menu dough is 1 molds af The strol lated as i of each r the cm by an a: of the n arrange. up by ti the cm!" This U . with two which col the other regulated meringue pies then burner w. merinne ' completed, the baker the Amer. A r Shah's C ful Pr Never seen- sur Which I other c" of Ier -of tho t to bi te 4 AT THE RATE OF FORTT A "v ' -snd a I Whea t 'stj rersiji u "ajii were ox .. feed 88,000,000 people, u half the population of the iiu States, or more than 100 times the Lanu uuuiuer ui people living in 1 Kisourg. By using different shifts and working the machine to its full capacity the pie line would extend nearly across the colors Jr. blendett; less. 'J i by han.L Every reader of this paper she Cutoff the coupon and mail ; Illustrated by Ernest Haskell Missot1 r The rouastio advantura of John Dtnwlddi Driaoull ( St. tba Court ot Maslmilisn ia Maslco, where his socre with Uiat of the beautiful JsoqiuUaa, The best row oast yaarv , uHutttAaltomeaftttoUutotct, (A. almolt , rajUll. paint of detail, vriumUttmit, hvmIi "A maarfcuW. fini book, of pim hrtadtk. Si rufttgly. A brilliant ttary." N. Y. Time Hatufv' "Thtr it se sionj dramatic ptriott hwfury, tory 6i m tvry nultnot tantfut asd But fttuV'.N. Y, Oiobe. OUDLEDAY, PAGE fie CO. "133-137 Eyt 16th Bt, New York. i.-.