The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, October 18, 1901, Page 12, Image 12

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The Commoner.
12
' it
m
Admiral Schloy.
They're fighting the battle all over
again;
The big guns are booming once
more;
And Sampson today lingers far, far
'away
While Schley bears the brunt as be
fore. On the old fighter's track the entire
snarling pack
Have followed with hue and with
cry,
Till now, when he faces them all, they
slink back
From the sight of brave Admiral
Schley.
When heroes were needed, he stood on
the bridge
And met the proud navy of Spain.
He .followed it on till the battle was
won
And its vessels went down in the
main.
When heroes are honored he's slighted
and spurned,
While others are praised to the sky.
He yet is deprived of the glory he
earned,
Our gallant old Admiral Schley.
But though he's insulted by puppets
in power,
The people are slow to forget.
They only await a more fortunate hour
To crown him in victory yet.
His fame is secure. When the scroll
is unrolled
His name will be written on high
'Mid those of our gallant sea-fighters
of old,
Made brighter by Admiral Schley.
The man who is right can afford to re
pose ' ..
In the homage and love of the just;
To reckon that Time is his friend; and
his foes i -v
At last will go down in the dust.
The victim of hate with assurance can
" wait
For wrong and detraction to die.
The world holds a crown of esteem and
renown , : '
For the brow pf brave Admiral
Schley.
J. A. Edgerton, In Nebraska Inde
- pendent. -
GOOD COTF1SE MAK1SR
ISxperionco With tho Borry.
"I have gained twenty-five pounds
since I left off coffee and becan drink
ing Postum Food Coffee in its place.
I had become very thin in flesh and
suffered tortures witli heartburn, was
a nervous wreck with headache prac
tically all the time until one dreadful
day when the good doctor told me I
must quit drinking coffee, as he had
nothing left to try, to relieve me.
I could not drink tea and had tried
everything else, even Postum, but put
it by at the first trial, because it was
tasteless.
. Forced to It again, I determined to
see if it could not be made palatable
and found at once that when I followed
directions and boiled it long enough,
that I not only liked it but gave it to
my husband for several days without
his finding it out. I have the name
of making splendid coffee, and we al
ways used the best, but of late I have
given Postum to guests many times in
place of coffee and have never been
detected yet.
"Our four children have not drank
coffee for three years, and all have
gained health and flesh since using
Postum. One son, who was always
sick, has been greatly benefited by Its
use, and as above stated, I have gained
twenty-five pounds since taking up
Postum. I am healthier today than I
have been for years and give Postum
all the credit. Please do not use my
namo in public,"
This lady lives in Burlington, Iowa,
and the namo will bo furnished by the
Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek,
Mich., to those interested.
Write and Sec.
Don't Let Prejudice Keep You
from Getting Well.
No Money is Wanted
Simply write a postal for the book
that applies to your case. See what I
have to say. You can't know too much
about ways to get w.ell.
My way is not less effective because
I tell you about it. There are millions
of cases which nothing else can cure.
How can I rea'ch them save by adver
tising? I will send with the book also an or
der on your druggist for six bottles
Dr. Shoop's Restorative. I will tell
him to let you test it for a month at
my risk. If it cures you, the cost will
be $5.50. If it fails, I will pay him
myself.
Tho book 'will tell you how my
Restorative strengthens the inside
nerves. It brings back the power that
operates the vital organs. My book
will prove that no other way can make
those organs strong.
No matter what your doubts; Re
member that my method is unknown
to you, while I spent a lifetime on it.
Remember 'that only the cured need
pay. Won't you write a postal to learn
what treatment makes such an offer
possible?
Simply stato which
book you wnnfc, and
address Dr. Shoop,
Box G15, Rucino, Wi.
BOOK NO. 1 ON DT8PKP8IA.
DOOR NO. 2 ON TUB IIKART.
BOOK NO. 8 ON THE KIDNEYS.
BOOR NO. 4 FOR WOMEN.
BOOR NO. 6 FOR MEN.
BOOK NO. 0 ON UUEUMATISU
Paragraphic Punches.
Denver News: Sir Thomas Lipton
should receive that peerage anyway.
Any Englishman who can give a Yan
kee as closo a chase as that is entitled
to the best the king can give him.
New York World: With Kipling
and Richard Harding Davis both
against the British war office the Boers
can afford to raise the staggering
price.
St. Paul Globe: And now Mark
Hanna will pose as the sphinx. This is
a new role, but Mark is versatile.
When the matter of trusts is under
discussion the role of sphinx will be
come Mark well.
Pittsburg Dispatch: Furthermore,
they have not introduced any evi
dence to prove that the Spanish fleet
got away.
And This is War.
According to British official returns
just published in London, 2,345 deaths
occurred in the month of August alone
among the 137,619. Boer people held In
the "concentration camps" in South
Africa.
This is a death rate of not far from
200 per 1,000 per annum. Ten times
the normal average death rate of civ
ilized countries! Nearly one-fifth of
all Kitchener's "reconcentrados" dying
every year! And yet the same Britons
who held up their hands in horror at
Weyleiism in Cuba read with complac
ency these appalling records of the
rapid extermination of Boer non-combatants.
And of August's 2,345 victims
1,878 were children.
And this is "war! "New York
World.
Weekly News Summary.
SATURDAY, Oct. 5. Columbia won
third and final race from Shamrock II.
Shamrock crossed lino first, but lost
race on time allo'wance. Commander
Hodgson's testimony favorable to
Schley. Miss Helen Long, second
daughter of Secretary Long, died at
Hingham, Mass., of pulmonary trouble.
MONDAY, Oct. 7. Death reported of
Ameer of Afghanistan. Schley inquiry
continued, beginning third week, Com
mander Hodgson resuming witness
stand.
TUESDAY, Oct. 8. Peabody Coal
Co. yards, Chicago, destroyed by fire;
loss $450,000. Time for ransom of Miss
Stone, the missionary captured by Bul
garian brigands, expired at noon, but
notice received of extension; ransom
money nearly raised. Triennial Epis
copal convention at San Francisco de
feats Huntington, amendment provid
ing for spiritual oversight of bishop.
WEDNESDAY, Oct. 9. National
Purity convention met in Chicago.
Trial of Caleb Powers, accused of com
plicity in murder of Governor Goebel,
resumed. George Thoron Slade and
Miss Charlotte Hill, daughter of J. J.
Hill, married at St. Paul, John D.
Rockefeller, jr., and Miss Abby Green
Aldrich, daughter of Senator Aldrlch
of Rhode Island, married at Provi
dence. THURSDAY, Oct. 10. Lorenzo
Snow, fifth president of Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, died
at Salt Lake City, aged 87. Russian
papers announce that Great Britain
will not be allowed to annex Afghan
istan. Announced in New York that
Morgan and Hill will reorganize dis
puted roads into one great system.
FRIDAY, Oct. 11. Amalgamated
Copper Co. announces that output of
copper will be limited. Duke of Corn
wall reviewed 11,000 Canadian sol
diers at Toronto. London press unites
in calling for General Buller's resigna
tion. Santos Dumont tried new flying
machine; rudder broke and trial post
poned. Fivo new bishops nominated
at San Francisco, as follows: District
of Hankow, Rev. James Addison In
gle; D. D.; District of the Philippines,
Rev. Charles H. Hrendt, D. D.; District
of Olympia, Rev. Dr. Frederick Keator,
D. D., of Dubuque; District of Porto
Rico, Rev. William Caleb Brown, D.
D.; 'District of North Dakota, Rev.
Charles Campbell Pierce, D. D.
Unnelghborly Restrictions.
In refusing to accept American di
vorces as valid Canada is discriminat
ing against a great American industry
and should be called down. Chicago
News.
How It Works.
The Globe-Democrat says: "At the
present rate of reduction the public
debt of the United States will soon bo
below the $1,000,000,000 mark again."
Yes, but as soon as the bankers have
sold back their bonds to the govern
ment at 40 per cent premium, they will
begin to demand that more bonds bo
Issued at par and if the republican
party remains in power they will have
no trouble in getting' them. That has
been the case for the last thirty years.
Nebraska Independent.
-I w
Noble to Succor Others.
It Is quite certain that, of all the
things that minister to the welfare and
good of man, of all that make the
world varied and fruitful, of all that
make society solid and interesting, of
all that make life beautiful' and glad
and worthy, by far the larger part has
reached us through the activities of
the struggle for the life of others.
Henry Drummond.
Mrs. TVinslow's Soothing Syrup.
Hns been used for over, sixty teabb by mil
LIONB of MOTHERS for thoir CHILDREN WIIILE
TEETHING, Vith PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES
tho CHILD, SOFTENS tllO GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN,
gores wind colic, and is tho boat remedy for
diarrhoea. Sold by Druprgistain ovory part of
tho world. Bo sure and nsk for "Mrs. Winslow'a
Soothing Syrup," and tako no other kind. Twen
ty-Iivo cents a bottlo. It is tho best of all.
A Good Point.
Editor Bryan makes a good point
against the hysterical republican pa
pers who are trying to fasten the re
sponsibility of the assassination of
President McKinley on the newspapers
which criticised the president and his
advisers, when he remarks that an
archy flourished best in those coun
tries where tho freedom of tho press
and speech is a thing unknown. An
archy is not the result of free criticism
but rather the result of the absence
of it. St. Paul (Minn.) Globe.
VALUABLE BOOKS.
Money, Trusts and Imperialism,
the latest book by W. H. Harvey, author of Coin's Fi
nancial School, the most entertaining and instructive
book by this author, containing a world of information.
It should be in every family library, and read and studied
by young and old alike.
184 pages, paper bound, 25 cents. In Cloth, $1.00.
Other
Books
by the
Same
Author.
d
&
Coin's Financial School,
150 pages, in cloth only, $1.00
A Tale of Two Nations,
302 pages, in cloth only $1.00
Coin's Financial School,
and Coin's Financial
School Up-to-Date,
The latter an answer to the critics of
Coin's Financial School, both bound
in one volume. In cloth only. ..$2. 00
The Great Debate,
botweon Roswell G. Hoar and Mr. Har
vey, 535 pages, in cloth only . . . . $2.00
Sent toy mail postpaid on receipt of the
price in checks, bank drafts, P. O. or ex
press orders, or in postage stamps.
Address
COIN PUBISfflNG CO., yMSlZo"
Mention Tho Commoner when sending for any of tho books advertised nhovo.
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