The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, February 16, 1906, Page 14, Image 14

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    VOLUME G, NUMBER 5
14
The Commonei
. -
government any money Tor tlio prop
erly, and yet moro than $1,000,000
had already been paid by the govern
ment to tho bank for the rent of. the
proporty.
Tho ABHOciated Proaa In its report
on Governor Magoon's testimony
Bays: "One explanation given by
Governor Magoon f tho Interest the
United Slates had In establishing the
Panama currency was that tho use
of American monoy doubled tho price
twmti: ma mm DArwiftP
SVflllll "" ? ",?. 7! "
"UOLD COIIS lUS&WZ UIMUS"
"i nave uhcu over luupaoic
igcsof your lleavo Curo
m different horses, and it
has never flailed me yet."
-Wm. J. Wunz, St. Paul.
I Send 4c for Postage and
I mention this paper.
GoIdCoirtStocUFoodCo.
1 104 E.5thSt. St.Paul,Mlun.
Wis COLDCpW
V, I C AVI L m
SP
To Introduco our up-to-date
Jowelry wo will give away,
absolutely fVee, this liand
somo Porfumod Lucky
Charm, tho latest novelty.
Soml your naino and ad
dress to-day and wo will
forward it to yon at onco
without oxponao to you.
Wear one and bo in luck
nil tho tlmo. Address,
MIIFORD JEWELRY CO.,
Dopt. ittwo Mllford, Conn.
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Irrigation Age, mo l.oo
Kansas Farmor, wk l.oo
Missouri Valley Farmer, mo... .50
Vlck's Family Magaalno 50
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Poultry Topics, mo 25
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Reliable Poultry Journal, mo.. .50
Farm Nows, mo 50
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Kansas City World, dally 3.00
K. C. World, daily ox. Sun.... 2.00
Nebraska Independent, wk.... 1.00
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Thrlce-a-Week N. Y. World... lioo
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of everything, as tho people wanted
as many silver dollars worth 100 cents
as they had received pesoa worth fifty
cents for articles sold. Discussing
tho necessity for the coinage system
and tho agreement by which the Uni
ted States agreed to maintain parity
and tho associated oanKs agreed to
supply silver to the commission, Gov
ernor Magoon said that the new cur
rency becamo so popular that it was
almost immediately absorbed by com
merce. Senator Morgan asked if the
United States should not establish a
sub-treasury on the isthmus to furnish
tho necessary silver. Governor Ma
goon replied that that could be done,
but that as rapidly as the silver was
shipped to the treasury and paid it
would disappear ana never come
bnck; that the people liked the mon
oy because it was" stable and it drove
out all othor circulating mediums.
'That is about the most logical freo
silver plan exploited since Mr. Clevo:
land " began Senator Morgan. He
had meant to say Mr. Bryan, but after
a pause he completed his observation,
as he began, and repeated 'since Mr.
Cleveland disappeared,' "
General John Eaton, formerly Uni
tod States commissioner of education
is dead.
A bloody contest is on between the
fighting organizations of the revolu
tionists and the s6-called Black Hun
dreds in Russia. Several bombs, have
been thrown and a number of lives
lost.
Tho London Statist says that Pres
ident Roosevelt alone can save the
situation in the Alxeciras conference
"just as ho alone was able to bring
about peace between Russia and
Japan."
Reports from Venezuela say that
the people there would welcome the
overthrow of Castrtj.
Unrest is noticed among the people
of Peru and the government there
fears a revolution.
E. H. Harriman has secured val
uable concessions for the construction
of railroads in Mexico.
O. C. Ellison, one of the founders
of the national irrigation congress,
died at El Paso, Texas.
Nebraska democrats will participate
in a "dollar dinner" at Lincoln on
Maroh 6. The speakers will be Gen
eral' J. B. Weaver and' Cato Sells of
Iowa, Mayor Rose of Milwaukee, John
H. Atwood. of Kansas, G. M. Hitch
cock, A. C. Shallenbarger, George W.
Berge, W. H. Thompson and P. E.
McKellop of Nebraska.
Editorials by Commoner Readers
Reer. club
n m, Prlco Price
Cosmopolitan, mo $100 $13".
The Housekeeper co l's
Pearson's Magazine, mo l.'oo l'co
PllBrlm, mo i,0o I'as
Pacific Monthly 1,00 145
Success, mo i;oor l'co
Campboll's lllus. Journal 1.00 i'ok
Woman's Homo Companion, mo l.oo 145
MISCELLANEOUS
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Public Opinion (now), wk son nnn
Tho Public, wk...... , .. . 000 2-22
Windlo's Gatlinj? Gun. mo foo i'?r
NOTE -ClubbiuR Combinations or pre
mium offers In which tho Thrlce-a-wn.r
Work, World-Herald, or Kansas ik
World, or Farm, Stock and Homo papers
iro n?. op,on t0 rosldonts of the r esno
Sllsiled! ,n WhlCh th0 Pap0rs nam's1
I. D. Burdick, M. D., Ft. Gibson, I.
T. In the issue of The Commoner of
January 5, 1906, on page 5 we find
another reference to what is improp
erly styled Dr. Osier's theory of
dotage.
It occurs to tho writer that since
the press was so eager to publish an
extract from Dr. Osier's address it
should be just as eager and it should
bo deemed binding upon it that -it
should put itself to even greater
trouble to correct the erroneous im
pression which it has seen fit to give
such wide publicity, heralding to the
four quarters of the earth as literal,
what was intended, as any one enter
ing into the spirit of the address
should be able to recognize only as
burlesque.
It all follows from the eagerness,
anxiety or frenzy of the press for start
ling or sensational news. As long as
the press confines its depredations to
subjects that it is familiar with in
this breezy, windy world the public
is capable of putting a pretty fair
estimate upon its genuineness, weigh
ing its importance and sifting out the
dross to a greater or less degree and
ordinarily there is but little 'harm
done. But when it undertakes to pose
as critique and offer its internretation
on obstruse subjects as treated by pro
fessors grounded in medical lore it
is out of its domain and is as incapable
or giving a proper interpretation of
the contents of an address as the in
dividual who would assay to discuss
astronomy by glimpses .of the stars.
Dr. Osier was addressing an assem
blage of cultured people schooled in
the medical science ...and who were
capable of weighing the infent of each
thought or suggestion, advanced and
giving to each its proper import.
With such an audience he did not
hesitate to relieve the monotony of
what at best in ordinary 'hands is
a dry subject by injecting into it a
pleasantry, little realising that it
would be so shattered and torn from
its connections as to be made to an
pear different from what ho had in
tended. Had he entertained any other
belief, he, doubtless, would have aban
doned any effort at overcoming the
prosy side of his subject by levity
or ho would have put himself to the
trouble, for the benefit of those who
were incapable of "taking in" the gist
of the subject matter by diagraming
the joke. But the press .reporter Nas
there and he was there for news and
that much of the valedictory address
he could "take in" He could under
stand chloroforming and its associa
tion with old age and that made an
excellent news item for the morning
paper thrilling and startling.
fills scientific and very able analysis
of the different stages and periods of
usefulness of life as given from his
view point. And those who have
passed, or are passing, the meridian
or high-tide of life which includes
the writer recognizes the force and
accuracy of his remarks. Our men
tal energy and perspicuity essentially
depends upon the gray matter of thp
brain, and this is not independent of
but a part of the body. That may be
just as receptive, clear and lucid as
it ever was, but when the body is
wanting in vigor or vital energy,
the intellect is short in the element
of force to crowd these ideas into suc
cessful execution. There are excep
tions to all rules but ordinarily speak
ing the body is an exponent of the
, brain, and of course, the converse is
irue.
Often we see minds whose mental
energy far surpasses their vital pow
ers but their sphere of usefulness is
necessarily circumscribed by the death
of vitality. A case in point, without
seeming to be personal, is the editor
or The Commoner (but. he's in China)
The public is qulteasniuch indebted
to Mr. Bryan's -'imrifense' physique and
recuperative powers as 'to his mental
endowments and scholarly attain
ments; for had he not the constitu
tion of a battleship he could not span
continents and make rear-platform
speeches many in aday from speed
ing xoaches. Then his forensic abil
ity would be shorn of a vast amount
of its usefulness. But should he be
so fortunate as to survive the age of
sixty and the country to have him in
lieu of making flying speeches and
receiving committees on improvised
platforms it will be on his spacious
and commodious verandas.
As man begins to age he finds as
the body lags the brain lags. Ofteii
the force of habit and an indomitable
will power, which is generally backed
by a well-kept, superb or a wirey
Physique, drives men way on beyond
their time. But the old adage,
Oar Factory
to jou A
GenuineSplil$QE
HICKORY WWi
, bum to your
oraer uu
k dnva frnfl
P trial. 2rnr
catalog, 100 stylo, free.
'riicOliloCurrlnccJUff.Co.
w. tt n D1..1,.. r "
. 44. f. IIVIf9, f VS,
niBiinR 1
janclnnitl, O,
I SPLIT H
1 HICKORY
n
Tall na
what atvU
kTcnieie yon
, neea
r -PATE NTS that PROTECT
, .w.M.-u.uHuci,na8ning.on,U.U. tstab. 1869.
PORTWUTStoE Fmmmu''.
cSffiM
WK "AVIS OPENING now In ovory stuto for
if hustler. lrnTanTnt PosUtonVGood JSfSSS?
tlon. Morotock Tobacco Works, JJanvlllo, Va.
$80 k MOUTH SALARY SEW
to Introduco mr OHarantccd Poetry and "tocg
J$clc,H0,,8ond for contract; wo mean business and? ur
olBhbostroforenco. O.B.wauiRCO..X 41,BprioXu.liu
ITCHING SKIN
nMn0iZi.e,n?nn? thor .Skin Dlsoases Cured.
waitr?otni,0,l,t?na tostliuonlals sent for 0 cents.
W. Bullard, 300 Thoodoro St., Detroit, MIcb.
T
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vw i imu vu I plea of magazJnos.nowspapera,
etc., send 10c for 1 year s subscription to "Tho Wol
como Guest," tho bostorlelnal mngazlnopubllshod,
which you will rocolvo 12 longmos. & 100 samples as
promised. Ad. Tho Wolcomo Guost, Portland, Mo.
Washington Timber Lands
WIIAAPA HARBOIl TIMBERSPItUOIl
30 to 00 Inch
$15 per aero.
Wash.
vjijuivh, urn, uisaiL.uuit; diameter,
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. W. (Jhcadle, Agt., South Bond,
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iiOAiii, our macrazine of oppoitTUNrriESFitKH
uin-r ar' JACKSONVILLE DEVELOP
MENT CO., Inc., Jacksonville, Fla.
The Langworthy Spavin Cure
The cure that cures, lias made thousands of dol
lars for owners of lame horses bv making them
sound. Senb postpaid to any part of the world
pn receipt of two dollars. Guaranteed to euro
the worst cases of spavin, ringbone, splint, etc.,
or money refunded. Send for circular. Lewis
Bros.. Proprietors, Jordan, N. Y.
torrirrc
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WSU
This LEGANT Watch $3:25
Dfof t jou bur a wnob cut thli out and Mod to ut wlla
your nam and addreu, and we will itnd jou bj oipreil
wBmiuiaa-Daa!Ma WATCH ANU
CHAIN C. O..D. Sfe3,76. ??$
bunting etit.brtuurully opiTed.ittm wind tad
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OPENING OF THE
White River Division
BY THE
Missouri Pacific
iron Mountain Route
On January 21st through train service was in
auRuruted from Carthago. Mo.. to Newport,
Ark., a distance of 271 miles, via the "Whito
Rlverllne,Mmurklnrthe completion of a new
route between the Northwest and Southeast,
and oponinp to tho public a new territory la
Arkansas, rich In agricultural lands, rich in min
erals, and unsurpassed anywherelnscenio beau
tyall that a land blessed by the Generous
Hand of Naturo can offer.
Minerals, coal, 'inc. lead, onyx and marble,
oak. pine, walnut, cypress and, cedar lumber,
fruits of every possible variety, cotton and all
grains are some of the products of this marve
lous country.
Exceedingly low rates ono way and round
trip will be sold on February 6th and 20th to all
White Itiveir Points. For descriptive pamph
lets or further information, apply ut Oity Ticket
Onice, Southwest corner 12th and O Streets.
F. D. Cornell, P. & T. A
Lincoln, Nebraska.
H. C. Townsend, G. P. & T. A.
St. Louis, Mo
" A. i
I'iAdJi. ,