The Falls City tribune. (Falls City, Neb.) 1904-191?, July 14, 1905, Page 2, Image 6

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THE FALLS CITY TRIBUNE , FRIDAY , JULY 14 1905.
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E. A. Tucker.
Hon. E. A. Tuflcqr , who has
just returned from Arizona , \vai
seen by tlie reporter of tliii
paper at tlie National liotol ii
this city. The judge was look
M r > rigf well and seems to be qnjoy
ing his work immensely , T <
the.1 reporter he said : "I an
in'Ofe than pleased with Ari
zbrih. No stale , or territory ii
theUnion has a greater futuri
bcf5r.e it. Its industries an
Only in their infancy. The min
critl wealth of the territory ii
unlimited , and it can be truth
fully 'jfsud that the people o
Arizoutt'fii'e enjoying1 their tul
share o'f the prosperity whicl
the people of the United State :
arC today enjoying ,
Phoenix is a beautiful city
and is the capital of the lerrl
lory , but Tucson is the metrop
lis. Koth are prosperous cities
n n d will compare favorabl1
with any other cities ol tin
same size anywhere. They an
peculiarly commercial cities
although both are surroundei
by ricli mints , but they are inor
remote , further removed fron
the business part than in som
other large towns.
.Nogales is a bea\UUul littl
city of about 2,000 inliabllant
in the United States , and 2,00
inhabitants in Mexico , ( locate
on the line ) and is a thriving
prosperous city , but the bustl
and stir of the territory is i
the mining camps , such as Mis
bee , Clifton and Globe.
My district consists of Grahai
and Gila counties. Graham i
especially noted for the riclmes
of its soil and its agriculture
wealth. The farmers there av
all very prosperous. I know c
no place in the world where
would rather own a farmi tha
in the Gila Valley. It is s
close to the mining camps th ;
there is always a ready tnarkt
for everything the farmer raise ;
My home is at Globe , in Gil
county , probably the riches
mining camps in the territor
and although it has only aboi
7,000 inhabitants , in its bus
ness and wealth , it wilj con
pare ( very favorably with an
city of that size in the Unite
States. I predict that withi
five years , Globe will be tl
metropolis of Arizona.
While the people of Arizor
are in favor of statehood , a vei
large majority of them are o
posed to double statehood , tin
is to being yoked up with Ne
Mexico as one state. They a
in favor of single statehood , bi
opposed to 'double slatehoo
as it is called.
I have been treated ve
kindly , indeed , by all of tl
people in the territory wi
whom I have come in contai
They are as a rule a gencroi
chivalrous a n d whole-soul
class of people , and are activ
energetic , and in ability a :
morals will compare , favorab
with any other state , or ter
tory in the Union.
No , the paper * there are n
by any means all like the 'Ti
son Citizen. ' As a rule th
are very fair , and treat a str ?
ger with the greatest courier
The people of Nebraska shov
not be prejudiced against A
zona because of the pcculi
statements made by one pap
It is a custom that paper has
saying something unkind
everyone , hut it is considei
harmless. The editor is n
under indictments for crimii
libel.
libel.We
We 1mve a splendid bar
whole souled gentlemen , whc
ability will rank favorably w
the bar of Nebraska , or ;
other eastern state. They Ii ;
treated me with uniform cc
tesy , and in iact have assis
me in my work upon the bei
so that , although almost
stranger I feel as tnuch at he
in my district in Arizona :
do in the first judicial distric
Nebraska where I have resii
for more than twenty-live ye ;
Globe offers peculiar huh
ments to men of wealth. ' .
opportunities for investment
are many , and the idle capital I
of the ISast , which is looking !
for a'chance for investment !
could not do better than to in
vestigate Globe , or many other
growing towns and cities in the
great tcrirtory of Arizona.
During ten months of the
year the climate is delighllul
and even during the months of
July and Augustwhilo the ther
mometer will register higher , it
is very questionable , indeed , if
the people suiter more from the
effects of the heat in Arizona
than in the eastern state's.
What line ol business there
is the most prosperous ? Well ,
1 hardly know. Kvery line of
business there is prosperous ,
excepting possibly the under
taking business. That is very
dull. We hardly have a death
there , except by accident , and
in a few exceptional cases where
parties from the south , or east
go thqre in search of health ,
but put oiT going until it is
'everlastingly too late'and even
then most of tnem recover. No ,
I do not advise the undertaker
to go there , but there is an ex
cellent opening for all branches
of buslnim
Yes , the territory is slightly
democractic , but the people
there are so busy making
money , extracting the rich ores
from the mines , that they have
no nine to talk politics. They
are satisfied with the present
business administration and arc
willing to let 'well enough'
alone. The } ' are peculairly im
pressed with Roosevelt's policy
of 'a square deal for every man , '
and the good people of Arizona
are so strongly impressed with
this sentiment that they are
firmly of the opinion that when
Arizona is admitted as a state
it will be the great state of
Arizona , not connected or joined
with any' other state or terri
tory , and within a very few
years thereafter will be one of
the richest and best states in
the Union. "
The Judge stated that his
leave of absence would expire
August Iftth , but that he ex
pected to return to Arizona
about the first.
Our Attitude Toward Fads.
A fad is a hobby , a freak , a
whim. Hobbies are numerous ,
man ) ' arc peculiar , some are re
ligious. Freaks abound , whims
are here , there , yonder. Fads
like the poor arc always with us.
No sooner is one dead when an
other comes to life. Religions
fads , multitudes of them , arc
dead. Keligious , and other cults
are dying and coming to birth
almost every year. Sects , poss-
sessing a religious tinge , more
or less pronounced , are born , pros
per , grow , sicken , die , are for
gotten. Our age is not more
prolific in these things than
former periods have been. TJiere
are new things under the sun ; but
religious cults , fads , hobbies ,
freaks , whims , isms , are not to
t be listed under the head of "new
things , " they are old , very old.
It the April number of "The
World ToDay" is an article by
Jamer Kowland Angell , Pro
a fessor of Psychology in the Uni
versity of Chicago , entitled :
"Christian Science from a Psy
chologist Point of View" from
which the following is quoted :
" 1 wish to emphasize , at the
outset , the fact that we are hero
dealing with no wholly novel
phenomena. The history of religion -
ligion is replete , in all countries
and in all periods , with instance !
in of similiar character. Not to gc
Hi further afield , one has but to recall >
Hiy
y call the Messianic outburst of ;
few years ago. At sundry place
ir- both in this country and ii
Europe , men suddenly appeared
: h claiming more or less divim
powers , sometimes calling them
ne selves the Messiah , working mira
cles of healing , preaching repen
of tance , and in various ways arrc
gating to themselves religion
fi. leadership. And in Chicago ii
self we find Dr. Dowieaml eve
: ie here we are not exempt from i
THE FALLS CITY MID-SUMMER CARNIVAL
PARKER AflUSEMENT CO.
JULY 24 T © 29 1905
6--DAYS AND NIGHTS OF FUN AND AMUSEflENT 6
CLEAN nORAL REFINED
No Grafts No Gambling No Followers
The darin artist who leaps 100 feet from a bi =
cycle in a tank containing three feet of water.
Champion high diver of the weald ; one of the
highest salaried artists in the country today
Mlln leaping the volcanic gay ; a desperate , devilish ,
1UI1U death defying deed performed by an iron nerv
ed and skilful artist
TIlP fiifl from lo ° PinS the loop in a ball ; a fascinating ,
IIIC UlllllUIll fearful , flitting , fugacious frolic with
fate. The absolute limit to which mortals may tempt death
BIG , CLEAN MORAL SHOWS \f\ \ \
CATERING ESPECIALLY TO LADIES AND CHILDREN 1U
All exhibiting more than advertised M
Our own Electric Light Plant
Our own Special Train of 26 cars
Free Band Concerts Daily by the ( ( lUppf ma nti Low Fxcursion Rates Will be in
Great Parker Band of 24 Soloists lfigci mc u force on all Railroads
altogether. ) Let it not be sup
posed therefore , that the raise
and spread of Christian Science
is unprecedented. "
As a matter of fact the growth
of Dowieism has been more rapid
than that of Eddyism. Mormon-
sin in the first few years grew
aster than either Dowieism or
3ddyism. The spread of spirit-
alism , following the appearance
> f the Fox Sisters in. or near ,
Rochester , N. Y. in 1848 , was
nose wonderful. Pages could be
easily filled with cults , ism , fads ,
lobbies and crazes that have ap
peared in connection with reli
gious life of the people of Chris-
ian , andother , lands. The ism we
may believe , will go the way of
lie isms of yesterday , and the day
before. What should be the at-
ituclc of the church towards
hese phenomena in human ex
perience and history ?
Tt should be that of the belli
gerent ; the church has a more
inporlanl mission than the pro
secution of a warefare on the isms
hat , for a time , appear above
the horizon. The mission of the
church is unqiue , and of trans
cendent importance. Its specific
work is , by preaching of the Gos-
; > eland the administration of the
ordinances to make bad men good
ind good men better.
They must be in sympathy
with every good thing. The
pastors of the c'.iurch in Thes-
salonica were exhorted by Paul
to "prove all things. " Titus was
told to "be ready unto every
oed work. " The church of
Christ is entitled to any and all
good that might be in any of
these isms and fads. The en
emy of metis souls and right , it
seems wants to get as much good
in with the bad , so that the peo-
will take it the more readily and
easily. "We are to "know the
truth , and the truth shall make
you free. " All the isms and fads
come from a mis-understanding
of the division and application ol
Scripture. We are saved on
this side of the cross- All salva
tion is in Christ. lie is the head ,
all and in all to His people.
There is not a good thing in an } '
fad , or ism , that is not in the
teaching of Jesus and His elect
ambassadors. " All things are
yours. " How will not He give
you all things with Him.
The condition of membership
in the church of God is Supreme
devotion and obedience to the
Son of God. The true question
is this , "Dost thou believe on the
Son of God ? "
Whosever belie ves in his heart
that Jesus is the Son of God ; is
entitled to baptism and church
membership , lie may under
stand much or little. If he is
willing to commit himself to
Christ , as the prophet who will
teach him , as the priest who
will intercede for him , as the
king who will rule him , give him
the hand of Christian fellowship.
The real bond of Christian union
is a common devotion to our com
mon Lord. Not What think ye
of Mrs. Mary Baker Glover Pat
terson Simmons Eddy , White ,
Dowie. or any one else. "What
think ye of Christ ? " is the cru
cible. Put Christ in the heart ,
the temple , and what ever ought
not to be there lie bids it depart.
The gates of hades can not
prevail against the church of
Christ. Long after the isms of
our time have fallen into the
grave of obvilion , far beyond a
hope of resurrection , the church
will exist "fair as the noon ,
clear as the sun , and terrible as
an army with banners. "
EI.DKK J. CRONKNHKKGEK.
Minister Christian Church.
When We Go To Press.
It is five o'clock on Thursday
evening and time for us to go to
press. The last galley has been
proved and sent up stairs where
the corrections are made and the
type transferred to the space that
has been reserved for it in the
forms. The local reporters have
hurried in their last reports of
the round-up of the town and up
stairs is heard the sound of the
mallet as quoins are driven into
place that the closely locked type
may be safely brought down
stairs where the last operation of
getting out the issue of The
Tribune is to take place. The
first form is carried down and
placed on the bed of the press
and the three others follow
quickly. Some time ago the
generator of the gasoline engine
was ignited and now breathes
with a measured cadence as
though it were eager to attack
the task before it. The papers ,
the first side of which had been
printed on Tuesday , are placed
on the feed board of the press ,
the foreman makes one more
critical examintion of the machin
ery , the throttle of the engine i
opened , the pulley wheels over
head begin to turn and the belts
transmit the energy to drive
wheels of the big Cranston press ,
whose c } Under turns , clothed
with a. white sheet of paper
which in a moment is delivered
on a table , neatly printed , and as
other follow it , they are seized
upon and borne to long tablet
where nimble fingers fold then :
intocompact form ready for the
mails.
Addresses are affixed to each , and
as packages for each town and
rural route are completed , they
are quickly tied and placed in
waiting mail sacks to be borne tc
the post office and sent out or
the trains , or to be ready for the
local rural carriers when they
shall start on their trip the nexl
morning.
For the next few hours the Tri
bune office is a very busy place ,
and the scene of activity is made
more real and vivid by its acconv
pahment of humming wheels and
the erratic exhaust of the engine ,
But at last the task is completed ,
over two thousand paper * have
been prinicd , folded and mailed
and the tired force disperses , "
weary , perhaps , \vith the stren
uous tasks of the da- , but com
forted by the consciousness of a
task well clone. The next
morning , while subscribers all
over Richardson county are read
ing : their papers , the same force
is preparing to get out another
one and so the wheel of newspaper
life revolves a never-ending cycle.
If you delight in scenes of activ
ity and bustling industry , come
down to The Tribune office any
Thursday evening and will you
perhaps appreciate to some extent
the nature of the task involved
in getting out a first class local
paper.
Burlington Bulletin.
OK HOUND THIP KATES.
Chicago and return , on sale dally ,
S20.
S20.St.
St. Loul and return , on PHO diillv ,
310.25.
Portland , Tacoraa and Seattle and
return , one way via California , on sale
July 1-2 ; j-i 7-S-10-lM2-ii-2o-2ti-27. : Aug
0 to 14 , $50. * j
San Francisco and Los Angeles and
return , $50. On sale July 1-2-3-G-7-8-10-
11-12.J3.23 20-27. Aug. 0 to 14. On pale
Aug. 7 to ir , $ " > 0.
Denver , Colorado Springs and Pueb
lo and return , on sale dully , $17.50.
On sale August 12 , 13,15 , $15. On sale
August ItO to Sept 4 , $10.75.
Salt LaVe and Ogden and return , on
sale daily , $110 50.
Yellowstone Park , through and in
cluding hotels and stage , aud return ,
on sale daily , $75.
Cody , \Vyo. , Black Hills and Hot
Springs , S. D. , approximately half
rates all summer.
Milwaukee and southern Wisconsin
points , Michigan resorts on Lakes I
Michigan and Huron , Canada , Maine r
and New England , St. Lawrence and
Lake Camplain regions , very low tour-
1st rates dally.
If you will call or write , it will be a
pleasure to advise you about rates ,
train service , to reserve you a berth ,
and to try to make your trip a com
fortable one. ,
G. S. STEWART , *
79.5 Agent C. 13. & , Q. Ry.