"T-JT. fMi The Commoner. VOLUME i, NUMBER 10. 10 rT, WVSNJX liMMltfr WHrtlffll llhlMMMII jnwy er pmowijot OwujyiriysJf MlYlLLi Tho Ironworkor. (Respectfully dedicatod to tho Men at the Forge.) Brawny and grimy he works away, Hammer and unvll and drill, 'And tho fiery sparks in tho shadows gray Mark time to tho hammer's ceaseless play As it works its master's will. Cling, clang, cling! Hear tho anvil ring In musical rhyme with the hammer's swing. And stroke by stroko the yielding steel lncrtlr tfcj ninplci'V mill in finl --'v'3"D "" uiuci o trill lu iLVi, And bending, glowing beneath his bunds Soon comes to do his stern commands. Long years ago old Tubal Cain Hammered nnd beat and drilled, And tho music rang o'er hili and plain Till thoy echoed back with a glad re frain And ail tho world was filled. Clang, tling, clnng! Thus his hammer rang In fiorv rhvinn with Mm onnno i, on-, And fused and forged 'midst smoko and heat Until beneath his hammers beat Tho sturdy iron, black and still, Blushed rosy red to do his will. When Solomon said that wondrous day His temple stood with finished grace Lot him stand forth in front, I pray' Who thinks his work has paved the way To make this wondrous place." Cling, rlang, cling! And the blacksmith's spring Brought him beside the proud old king. T.min?(,lG ,th0 AooIs the wooers used," The blacksmith said. The old kinc mused. fa "Who made your tools?" The smith's faco shono As ho quick replied: "I made my BrawnsytiiruI 8rlmy th smitu iiis Hammer n?wi nn .,. i L kj i , , ""vi una nunc. $ ?ftbll,1lds mnchines to do his will the th?m wcrId. doth feel Ulng, clang, cling! Hear tho auvil ring ""swing!'1171110 Wlth th0 hammer's Alld So ' aUU laUie aDd huge 'ma' ?onaow d.handa are seen logiowal move and do each (ask The master mind of the man may a!k. FanTinga;nd mercliant nd railway Millionaire, paupor tramp, POnswing thG CCaSeleSs eat an Of hammers that make the anvils rine nnJtV? tllQ iron Its staP Beat, beat, beat! In tho foro-fire's heat TrLrd W,0rld rlnes wlfcu the music sweet. Tnf1n0rfged,and welded ino the whole I" tho sturdy will of the worker's soul to wortrhito?S W0JW IS ?mS steel workers in'jron and ., S1,ht Into"PtIon. tornho ' Said thQ o. p. oro- tectlng arms aW 2 urow 0ur ro- brothoSrinmthoso0uth0Hjhabused Mac ta- ThQ cruel treat ment he receives at the hands of the haughty southrons is a disgrace to our civilization, and we of the north should lose no opportunity to show our detestation of tho gruel and in human practice of lynching a man simply because he is black, and not give him a fair trial before" "Biff! Bang! Bang! Crash boom bang!" "Great Scott, what's that!" ex claimed the interrupted orator. "0, that's only some of the boys storming the jail to get a nigger," said a humanitarian in the audience. "Go right ahean with your . speeSh. They won't interrupt us long, 'cause the jail door is mighty frail." Chilly. "Geo, but that's a cold crowd," mut tered the front end of the knockabout vaudeville team. "Worst I ever saw," replied the rear end of the same team. "They don't catch on at all. Them jokes we sprung don't feaze 'em." "Worst lot of Rubes I ever seen, they are. What Rube convention do you ciiinic 13 in town now?" "Don't know, but there's the man ager. Ask him." "That crowd?" said the manager. "Why those fellows are members of the Press Humorists' association." And then the knockabout team grew wise. They were springing the jokes on the men who manufactured them amidst fearful mental travail. Tho G. O. P. M. C.f lie beat his breast and loudly said "I crave investigation." He said, too, "I'm quite free from crime And hold in detestation." But when a move was made to search He made duo preparation, And with a screech he made a speech Full of tergiversation. Ho Pawed the air and tore his hair With many a wild gyration. And when at last they proved the cnarco -Was based on actuality, Crawfe48?hi b? V0 1VissUIn t0 save brawled through a technicality. Growing Cold. Darling," he murmured, "you are as sweet as sugar." ' u are "Boo-hoo," she sobbed. "Your Iovp is growing cold.'- 10e iJ'iat makes you thinl that, dear" Hundred times ewoeler than sugL." Whoa Rlloy Blushod. When James Whitcomh Tn in Lincoln a fewZln!iIy was greeted with an entlml nor80' h,e was and the poet was s SiS tli a!Idihce, efforts. Of course Z a t0 lis best following the entertainoCC;e(led' but with anmbarrass ngiD aventur tie note requesting w d, a dainty M- Old SweetE 5fhMlnl2ead "Tt name signed to thl lue' and the ono of Lincoln's oQ W,as that matrons. "ncoms charming young matron, fairlv Won ent thQ young thanking him Riley and began J-w'mu'ch lfeffi vT ,"5 ,dea tt fading SJ i quested you to read." "I am happy if I nave given you pleasure," replied Mr. Riley, with his best bow. "0 they are so beautiful. I ha .re read 'them so often that they are in delibly stamped upon my memory. "You flatter me, my dear madam, said the poet. "The tender sentiment in the lines are so beautiful," gushed the matron. "They certainly were written from, the bottom of your heart. How proud one should feel in the knowledge that they had inspired such beautiful sen timents. I know' Mrs. Riley must be one of the happiest of women, and I would be so delighted to meet her. May I not hope to' have the exquisite pleasure some time?" "I hope so, madam, ' said Riley, blushing like a schoolgirl. "And iC ever you do meet her I wish you would let me know how she looks. I have never seen her, and I often wonder whether she is blonde or brunette, short or tall, slim or" But the gushing young matron had disappeared. This little incident recalls another that has been told before. At a social function a young woman approached Mr. Riley and after gushing for a few minutes, said: "0, Mr. Riley, how fortunate you are. I understand that you get a dol lar a word for everything you write." "Yes, that's true," said Riley. But sometimes I sit for a whoie day and can't think of a blamed word." ,. Brain Leaks. As long as we cling to sin we cannot eret close to Hod. A big man can sometimes creep through a very small hole. If our plans all went right we would soon be too lazy to work at all. March is the month wnen town men do most of their gardening. Parents who allow their children to grow wild must expect to reap bitter fruit. Some philanthropy is very much like giving collars to men who have no shirts. The greatest "roundevs" are very apt to talk loudest about being square" men. The man who says the world is growing worse should do something to clear his eyesight. ,i ne,d? not share our Wessings with God, how can we expect Him to snare our sorrows? God's hand reaches down only just JfnnSnUsh f0r lls to reach il by standing on our tip-toes. When a man begins to sacrifice his S?!a intf ests r his business inter ests he should be watched. 7 wihie Pan who tries to "taper off" a bad habit would make better process by trying to wash charcoal white ofTnfhfcrit " covel's a multitude exerdsed fnrV Charlty which is PrfVrSo at Specific purllose. HfH gi:0n ls something more than sitting in a nnRhinno . ' . ,uian Measure of being anoyeyd $ a23Smtao?hSSnS t0 amm Ply by earofni.,, .S?..WS men slm- man's ways. ""'""ing some big w2S asltin r her hiffl Are We Honest I believe you are, and I am willing to let you jud-ome. I honestly b lieve I have a hook worth a dollar n you, and I believe you will think so after you see tno book. Tao book k one I published myself, and it is made up of the poems and sketches thaf have appeared ia the "Whether Com' mon or Not" department of The Coin moner, and in other publications 1 wrote them all myself. Tho book is cloth bound, sold side and back stamps, foreword by Mr W. J. Bryau and has 277 pages. The price is One Dollar. A FAIR PROPOSITION. If you say so T'U send you the book on suspicion. If you think it is worth a dollar, send me the money, if you do not think so send the bock bacic in good conditionnatural wear and tear expected nnd we'll call it square I make this offer for two reasonsone is I think the hook is worth the dol lar, and secondly, I think you will think so and send me the money. AN OPEN CONFEbSlON. Perhaps you would like to know -why I am so anxious to sell my book. I'll tell you I need the money. Now drop me a card and say you'd like to receive my hook on suspicion, ru take it for granted you are willing to pay tor it if vou like it. and think it worth the monny, and I'll send it to you by the next mail. WILL M. MAUPIN 2022 South 17lh St. LinT.!n, Neb. to show it to him. When a man burns his hand his wife knows it long before Jie can show her the blister. There are some philanthropists who imagine' that feeding the- minds of their fellows will make amends for starving their bodies. We know a man with five children and nine horses; and although he does not know the hirthday of a single child, he can tell the exact date of birth of each of his nine horses. "I'm always glad when ' we have company, because then my wife al ways has something good to eat?" Did you ever hear a man spring that? When we get to making laws for tins country the punishment for springing that chestnut will he twenty-seven years at hard labor. CR.EATED WEALTH Something from nothing a garden from a desert. Such is the histoiy of irrigated sections. Take land that sells for 50 cents an acre, put water on it, and it sells for what? There aie quarters of land in irrigated sections of Colorado that cannot be purchased for $20,000 and which earn a remunei ative interest .on that valuation. And yet you can purchase irrigated lands where the soil is perfect beyond belief, where the water supply is plen tiful and inexhaustible, where climatic conditions are healthful and exhilar ating, where fuel is abundant slid cheap, for from $15 an acre up. THE REASONS: The North Platte Valley, extending from Bridgeport, Neb., to Guernse,, Wyo., and the Big Horn Basin, Wyom ing, haye been hut recently made available for settlement by the exten sion of the .Burlington railroad into those sections." The irrigating compa nies must have settlers along their ditches and they offer substantial In ducements in the shape of lo'w-pnced water rights and lands. HOW LONG WILL TlllS CONDITION CONTINUE? None may say surely, but it won't bo for long, and the sooner you invest the cheaper will you he ahle to do so, fpr the advance is Just as sure as has heen the advance in the price of sim ilar lands in other sections. For further information wiito to J Franois, General Passenger Agent, Burlington Route, Omaha. 4$ UllMJf"'" -A-".'