The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, July 06, 1904, Image 4

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WKDMKBDAY. JULY. 6 I1M.
LABSSTT, STXVAtTJ.
Mlian.
yoar paper, or wrap per shows to wtat ttaie roar
wbpSV b raid. Tho. JS Aow. 1
ptnttft hw been recemsd ap to JaBWtt.
KbtoFeU1.1903nilBOon. Wfc 7mM
ia mdc.tii date, which answew M a receipt,
will toechawsed acconliaw.
DIBCOOTINUASCESlwpejMiMBtafcgErU
r will conUnae to receive this joarBal nM the
ui..m . niaiiwd br letter to eHwwHwae.
when all arreawcw most be paid. If joa do aot
wish Uie Journal continned for aaotfaer jrear af
ter the time pnKl W naa exnn, ju -wu
nreriooaljr notify us to diacoaUaae H.
CHANGE IN ADDKESS-Whea oidenas a
chaaxc ia the arfdrees. onbecnbera ahoaldoeaare
to aire taetr out aa wen as utcir
RWMkliGan T6kt.
United States. Senator
ELMEU J. BDBKETT. .
Delefates-at-LarKe
JOHN A. PIPER, Bart
H. C. BBOME, Doaglas.
E. H. LEFLANG, Dawaon.
' C. B. DEMPSTER, Gage.
Alteraatea at-Larfje
LM. RAYMOND, Lancaster.
-SHELBY HASTINGS, Bntler.
. G. E. ADAMS, Nnckolk.
E. K. VAtENTINE, Caming.
National Comiuitteeraan
' CHAS. H. MORRILL, Lancaster.
Preaidential Electors
F. A. BARTON, Pawnee.
A. C. SMITH, Doaglas.
A. C. ABBOTT, Dodge.
Tl L. NORVAL, Seward.
tf. P. HALL, Phelpa
M. A. 'BROWN, Buffalo.
. II. H. WILSON, Lancaster.
J. C. ROBINSON, Douglas."
STATE.
Governor "
I J. H. MICKEY.
Lieutenant Governor
,' i E. G. McGILTON.
Secretary of State.
. A. GALUSHA.
Aadtter -
' HM.SEAliLE.JR
Treaflurer "
r' ' PETER MOBTENSEN.
Saperintendent
r' t J. L.McBRIEN.
AUornejr General .
NORRIS BROWN.
Laad Gommisaioner :
'. H. M. EATON.
,- OOfMREOfWlL.
Coagreaatnan, Third District
l' - j. j; McCarthy.
! c This Week in Histary.
Mn: 1 (JalyStoJulyU.) .
Srdc-First Intorhational PriaoaOoa
Kress opened; 1672. '
4th Declaration of Inaepeadoace,
5th Salyatioa Army founded by
Wra. Booth, 1SC5.
Cth Leibnitz, great mathematician,
baaB,:4GJG.i,
-v 7th Pastear first inoculated for
hydrophobia, 1885.
8th First pablio drinking foantain
set ap. 1G85.
"9th Supposed date of heroic death
of ,Wiakelrieil, 13S5.
, The democratic platform in the Third
district and Jthat platform that will be
ieaaed at St. Louis, will be about as near
theaame color as P. E. McEiliip and his
coachman.
Up to 'date no particulars haye
reached this office regarding the joint
celebration or our national heliday
by the Basso Japanese armies in the
far east, but it is safe to say that the
casaalties will not come np to the
American idea of doincr things.
'The sidewalk Reason is here and
more good sidewalks are being laid
than has so far been accredited to any
me.yar. The dangerous board walks
imve almost entirely disappeared asd
ahe newiwalks of brick and cement
shat are invading the residence, dis
tricts are 'making Oolambus one of
the neatast'eities in the state.
'Why doa't the cemetery association
firaTide.1iome "method of having the
weeds cat on the neglected graves?
There will always be some graves that
will have ad care bestowed apon them
.amleas it is doae through the govera
iacrboard of the cemetery. As it is
r, then are many gravo stones in
eemotery with,inscriptioas that
aadly eat of harmony with the
growth of weeds and geaeraly
of neglect about the craves
'irhleh they mark:
The coanty levy is this year 9 mills.'
pared with -17 mills last year.
.With the
levy more than half that of
lMtyear, and farm land sanfssed at
i
twioo as mach aa it waa
, it is vary evident that farms
wiu pay amacn aigaer tax tus
.... ..;
f armerly. On the other
will my leas aw
;ou,oatHe ami horse. Ami it their
... . -
tax is higher, it will be be-
tkttv dkithiiv nmm aiw natrmtmil
j'im ;" - -
Jaarty this year or failed formerly
tm list ali. their personal propattj.
'(merries, at seveetfy-nve oaats a
an4:Pick them yaenetf." is
ahent the wprdiagaf
in the oatamas af , the
ThU weald apeak wall far the
Beyaam doaht
and
Theee Traits
Jm te kel br
"- il - . f . 1 -
te have trait off
the ,oaIlars,ammyof
W .TS5.
:$m
ZK
': ?- watk.
-erries
aherriaa hava .fea
, mattered
-mmmmTmmmmmm" ma
)J If 'i ' laaw iwws e gtoas
a 'amMttmmOBal CaMaaTammm iAsaftsmamm SVBBHkamW
iiJtin"4Voin:aa,&aT m''mmt
v - A- m- - --' - i.hJbaa aaaBt
laaammamVaimmli
U"--?J-;
Theplaaform
cfats of th Third diatrict -will try to
defeat. CocgraaVMcOarthy start.
the Kaatw City
platform. v.The-s national democratic
coaffwnibn nndonbtedly will repadi
aawiawjamlmt Gpplatform. Demo-
JWiaMl.lfi---- te calledtfixpo
tavboth forrandaainat;tisa,free
and anlimitadooinage of silver, pro-
viMaimrwant to: vote. a,Btraight
democratic ticket. Of coarse a great
many will vote the ticket straight
withoat nnv Knowledge of or con-
oera in the priaciples for which they;
are vating. Bat there is a large per
centage of the democrats in the Third
district and, in Platte ooanty, who be
Uava ia voting for principles -and not,
naerely for a party name.
Sappose a man is a sonnd money
desaocrat; he mast vote for the demo
cratic presidential nominee 'and for
Congressman McCarthy- Sappose he
is a popalist or free silver republican ;
ha mast vote for Roosevelt and Mr.
MoKiUip.
And this ia the normal condition of
the democratic party, divided in lead
ership and in party policy, united in
nothing bat opposition to the repnbli
cans and the government as it is. It
may bo interesting to observe the feats
of contortion that will be indnlged' in
by the democratic orators and editors
of this district , in 'the attempt, to
straddle from a Cleveland platform
to the pet platform. of W. J. Bryan.
A MISTAKE. K
Horn. J. M. Gondring delivered the
Independence Day oration at Platte
Center aad the speech as a review of
historical incident and aa an appeal to
patriotic sentiment is said to have
been excellent. There is consider
able qaery, however, on the part of
those who heard Mr.' Gondring, as to
whv he referred so eloquently to
Clevelaad's action in standing off the
bluff of Great Britain in th,e Venezu
elan affair, and failed when he dis
cussed the Northern Socarities merg
er to even mention the names ox Res
ident Roosevelt and Attorney-General
Knox who forced the case to an issne.
We cannot answer the question; nor
do we wish to 'do Mr. Gondring an
injustice by commenting on his utter
which reached us only second
It mav be said as a matter of
history, however, that no eulogy of
the presidents who have npheld the
Monroe doctrine ' in Veaezaela and
other Soath American states ' would
be complete withoat naming 'Roosevelt
even higher on the list than Cleveland.
And history of the Northern Se
caritles case is accurate which fails
to record that Roosevelt and Knox de
serve the credit for that decision and
that Cleveland and his attorney-general
declared the Sherman law under
which Roosevelt secured a favorable
decision, unconstitutional and 'refus
ed to try to enforce it. We prefer to
believe that Mr. Gondring's omission
of these, historical facts was due to an
oversight on his part. Can it berthat
he believes Cleveland wiU be nomin
ated for the presidency and wishes
to make somo Cleveland sentiment in
Platte county?. "' -,
McCarthy and roose velt.
Democratic editors and' orators who
hope to gain votes for their congressional
and legislative candidates next fall by a
fine discussion of platform will be doom
ed to disappointment. Roosevelt is the
republican platform and heneeds no
interpretation. The American people
know just where he stands' on 'every
public question, and .they know he stands
on the side'of their best interest. Voters
in Nebraska know that every republican
congressman will, vote in congress, for
every policy proposed by, Roosevelt
They know also that, every republican
candidate for the legislature in .Nebraska
will be bound to vote for a United States
senator pledged to support Roosevelt
and the principles of the national repub
lican platform. They will not, therefore,'
be induced by democratic platform
promises, however plausible they maybe
made, to vote for.a democratic congress
manor legislator, who will be bound by
tradition to vote against every, measure
proposed by a' republican president.
There is just one way for a voter to ex
press Jus favor pf Roosevelt and Roose
velt principles "and that is to vote the
republican legislative ticket, state and
national. -A vote for Roosevelt and
McCarthy in the Third district is a vote
for Roosevelt principles., A vote for
Roosevelt and McKillip is a vote against;
Roosevelt principles, for Roosevelt can
do nothing without a. republican con
gress. laaagaammw
PhOUlBlTlON.
The nomination of a national ticket
on n prohibition platform is a form of.
ament regularly- indnlged in by
of those who favor the abolish
ment of .the grog shop. The, only harm
that these honest people andrgood
ritiaeatt do themselves by each action
Is to deprive themselves of their votea
in the national election. A man who
believes in prohibition of the liquor
traffic has a perfect right to his belief
and a perfect right to try to convert
to hU belief, but that doesn't
to be a -good reason why ha
lose his vote for president.
The man who is elected in November
will be either Theodore Roosevelt or
the 'gentleman to be nominated this
weak in St. Loaia, and aeoet' avm who
will rata toe these two gentleman
vary.frohahly have aetthdoonvictlona
on n anmeer at anaislsgioal, ethical
aciantiflo and religions vqaeatiomvj
Therefore; following the example of
taeprohlhltioaiata, those who depre-
evil should
n candidate fag the presidency '; th
who oppom aaee aaioide shoald
apjoide shoald nomi-
of the hand
nai
i. . .
.viir3W-Vi
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aairliamThan aad thwasBahlaia ahonldlThe aata'attfia.
rfMaUauMt-ik.tridiRu atatT ahataMra ayary aasrisais Imsri-larta
B'nhamisasand otlmrV ahoaM have can heart. It is marked by a eaa
aaawiadividasl aaadidaaaatha aamtfag passlim aa heaajral iM he
---"-- Tv..fc.i.itn 1 n.n-ui inas. In anmaal aaB'aa:'iaanaaaad aaanc aa honorary nreaMent
hb.. .. vvtk. mm, w ( m nin-"U ;! ... v.-...r? rf; .' - fc-.
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-- - -- ahifcM-iaiha iiada-ahaAthai in war aaa ia Baaoa. it iaaal.ana aaaae nueoae aataaapaa. and never aoent
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earth k fiat sank uw .H .iget a. atargv tJteAliiiiiiMlsgrealar. is ,-Tkaamaaaria-waoam?r ??- '- - - --P.H,
i -tiriTl convention ami fairy In anl -MlaMhaaa Paaamfar aaa met the raqaireaaaam af the Doabtmg Tkssaaa Targa aad
aaam amma a camildias far the esaea mmhiiM iiilaaaaa naamwfttaV.tjaa hiaheat eaamaiasaii 1 1 i J : .aw ;-SZ5V17' "- -
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aaaai aaavaaaaa aBsaaasaa'aaaaiaH aaasaa aivv awwav aaMaaawwaa, & apv aawai jh AftOBvaHM rww-vw... ''-x
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...' ." :3t&5a3!iSMA . & -r Ssf-emssis'.. rgyssrsaoss:, ,?
..i . . L? ai cri .j. r-i-vn-r-r v t '. . - r . t -?- ! ivv.T ,.. "&rsi??'u ..--'. -.
z74SLttz&E- "i.'r?s j.-i:.fjfcj&j v:??r. s.--'Eaaar-rsii .sL.-i'.-Kr'V,. z-yfr?s-tt:-j'qvfm-'r'rk -; v-:tf....-
I wrong with eaK"pnaaammb - HUNint'witt aeearonaon with siinsaw u-jwcpg.-xgf .:giMMWii, j ii:-i 'i.'W'.jitMi wlfMm , vl nw'Tm- s mm j , W"e. afTf. 1
Wrong with
those who
candjdsjtfe
right fa
r
of a
be;
hadiawn
paUtimUpartJmu
JMaMM-JM"
'.hC-
-..'-
r
Theplain-xaot;
aha v political parttaa
whioh are awt aalllliait vThr
whooomnoaa the anhihttioai
are high-minded and haaaatnM
bat
whan they
of, the antira prahibitton a tha"
factnra.
and sale of aloohoUo beverages,''' as
they do in their aatkmal platform,
they are advomHag what every
phydoian. ohamiat and jariat
to be impossiala and
THERE ARE OTHERS.:
The etreaaoeity of RooseveJt
even the demoerstie uoafeasii
vention of the Third district. Thatoon
venthHi placed a pkhk in theii platform
pledging their candidate to vote for the
"iramediata conatraction of the Panama
oanaL" - Rooseralt has taught the Amer
ican people the aieaning of 'immediate,"
and he has ahown them how to get a
canal treaty in the face of aM4 violent
democratic opposition. Those who want
the canal completed "immediately" will
feel "tolerably" confident to leave it a
while longer in hie hands. Of course it
is . gratifying to have Mr. MoKillip
pledged to vote, if elected, aa congress ,
man McCarthy has been votiag'for two
yeaes, but there ia hardly room for Mo
Killip and McCarthy both on the Pana
ma canal plank, 'and aa McCarthy, has
the advantage of prior- poeeessioa, the
strenuous Humphrey man with the
flowing locks will hardly be permitted,
to "butt in.w .,
COI.UMBIMEI.
Ml.'
(Loat ia ahatTe by naaon of 4th Jahn)
In his paper, the Conservative, pub
lished at Nebraaka City, in its iatae
pf October 17, 1801. the late J. Ster
ling Morton gave the following esti
mate of Theodore Roosevelt: "Politi
cians of the variety branded 'practical
that is men who ia the partisan
contests of the Uaited States
place, plunder aad power
of any set of political principles or
policies are not falling desperately
ia love with Theodore Rooeevalt the
president of this great republic.
He ia aa honest man. Hiaexeoative
experience at the ago of forty-three ia
greater than moat pablic men
refer to at aavaaty-three. . He
when wa tret knew aad admired
president of the Uaited 8eatea civil
service commission, ia 1801, andar the
second adariaiatratioa at- Grovar
Cleveland. He waa exceedingly
prompt, vigorous, oonaclsntioas aad
efficient ia the discharge ofaildaUes
of that tryiag poaitioB. Sabaeqaently
he waa called to Naw York city,
whereas commissioner of police he
did a- remarkably disinfecting saaitary
service for the moral aad physical
welfare of that awarsaiagamatrepolia.
Thence he waa taken aader the first
McKlniey admiaiatration into the
navy aa assistant aeoretary; where he
did good work for hia caaatry 'until
the oncoming of the war with Spain,
when he 'resigned aad aatared the
active military aerviee of hia country.
He waa heard from at Saa Jaaa hiU
where he did brave . fighting at the
head of hia men on the firing Una.
He.poteatiaUj aided ia .preveating a
retreat which had been detarmiaed
apon by General Shaf tar
The cool coaaaala of the colonel of
the roagh ridera to ragalar army
officers whose admiration for his
deliberate coarage at the cracial
momeat was expressed to their kins
folk in unmeasured praise, did mach
to prevent a disaster aad make a vic
tory. The writer will aever forget the en
thatiaam and fervor with whioh Lient.
CoL Charles Morton of the regnlar
army ia 1898 at Arbor lodge described
the valor, good Judgment aad eScieny
of Theodore Roosevelt aa a soldier1 at
SanJnan.
Returning from Caha Colonel Roose
velt waa elected govaraor of New
York aad as the executive of that
great state'did many good things to
elevate the' character of aad sake,
more effioient, the pablio -aerviee.
He waa there aa elsewhere an honest,
able, fearless patriot.
Before hia term had expired aa chief
executive of the empire atnto, he was
against his desires and in spite of hia
protestations nominated ?oe-presideat
of tlie United aatee. Aad now the
Mysteriarca of the universe whose
ways' are those of omntaraaana, gives
Theodore Rooaavelt ' the presidency
of the United States aad makes him
trustee for thepaaea, prosperity aad
happlnem of a repahUe of seventy-five
millions of leeple. i
''There nee! ho"no fear.' Thw man
who in all civil aad military saJtlsas
has ao far dhnaarged with fidelity
every daty will not fail aa now. He
will prove hlmstlfaa hsasat. eaaotaat.
jaet and rlghtamis praaiiBt. God
protect, gaide and Warn him V
If
ia really an-
'. "
shoald he not
to grief by
this time? He ana
held
axaaatiro pMat.far
2'.
JhW
They
he
left aha Maw Y
ialSBa.
Where in Mr.
the.illiaiiiataiaahT
t
are hia aaaay aeal
Im-
all la
pnhUe'a
hiaiatatlaaam.toha
far-tvaaty
-en
aw SiWJffB " "Pvr ,!, pemiM , w-w; ,wuvhu i 1 1 i saw jiiiim-. . ; "Br "' 'M . . " ' ' m &f nMa M' ??mTmm ' ' - eN i ?
I - - n iU'lt'fit i J t . " M . -? 2s " '-(' -' J Vtii --' .t'i: ! MB?-tiI . .1C'.B Bi'H - H i 1 ' H H .Bl H 7" " f v "" " B T "i. -" ' . " r -"" i i .5 .
M?K!ffifiJHIUllWIM WH"H"-Mir, ui yoww.o n- ."K","w,k ( .,f4,.., t .-?? i- "i .- - 1 " . ' - . ? ! 'J
ri -- mm--- w ,- M, tj A.-At.. fl.11 .a. ks :- . . - - - --- - -- - -M-am ' nr J -.---w v w j ti i ( i-j l -- r.i -r r. fr tii h ..--- . - 1 u
A T--fc . ;' - kb ,14H - .-. - ; . t-'". " - . rf- . .Arf " .-- - B -a ' ' t m - sm V " K t - . H - - - et h " "" V l.'B" 1 . t
ggfellVMhijJiM 41wmmft8rtMlM ty; totbemomriH r the gdttfamTof -tMj ohiM. who c j ,T:, . . ,.' ifii - mwv , . .,. j
fJtfiMil,be awleteniuhoocljmd 'in' America. lalwrMiM KnUtr pmrnoy-Ui Mmm- ; IBaWiMMyMMWWMfc BJ
na' priaiilptoA. okmetto, wWrehe h4e Uv t -tw ,, 5 " ' ; " ' -' - --'
aaaaiaaal ear
aUslatijy aaaa hesib had taUa a
tlBBS m " a UvHUU UHit UB iHHwn ut um awn wiw aw ouuraa m wnun -C"
- . w a S,' !.& A.mA . a.M' &LU - ... - Mia. M.aA- A . A4kAA a " .4
Is said
opposition are to nmke their campaign
oa Mr., Booasvalt's personality. His
trleade eaa ask no better fortane. 8ince
Idaeeia. ao sach pawerfal personality
lato oar politics: aad to at-
tack t is only to emphasise its at-:
tractiveness. As a Preaidential candi
date', Theodore Roosevelt can well
afford to dispaaae with ordinary poli
tical campaign methods, and leave his
ease with the American people. --From
(TheoaoreBooMveltWPreaideatial
CundjoW'TDeleg
tioaal iUmhUcan Convention, in the
Aa6aa'Mantl7 RevieW of Reviews.
for Jaly.'
-
'-'4
The leaders ia .the aati-Roosoyelt
craaade-of a few months ago were
Wail Street promoters, mainly demo-
r
crate. .Their favorite saying waa
that Mr. Roosevelt was "unsafe."
They mast have winced when, in
Mr. Root went hack, to
New York from his truly great career
in Washington, and, stood ap ia the
Union League Club thereto tell 'the
republican element of this contingent
for Wbat.Bort of people Mr. Roosevelt
was "unsafe." The burning words of
the eloquent war secretary blistered
many a weather-beaten hide in Wall
Street and oat of it. Besides beiag
''unsafe," Wall Street or the gamb
ling part of it thought Mr. Roosevelt
to be "impetuous."4 This sapient
conclusion was deduced 'from the un
doubted fact that he did not consult
them or issue "iips" before taking ad
ministrative action, or before instruct
ing the Attorney-General to. commence
salt against oae of their pet organiza
tions, when law officers of the Govern
ment reported that it existed in viola
tion of law. So interpreted, Mr.
Roosevelt's action was. undoubtedly
"impetuous." , ,
Beyond this Wall Street opposition
and that which was purchased or
otherwise stirred np by it, there has
at no time been any opposition to
Theodore Roosevelt's election inside
the republican party, and not very
mach outside of it. The democrats of
the South are necessarily left out of the
reckoning. They prefer dead political
delusions to live political principles.
Ii the Apostle Paul were to return to
earth and sit at the same table with
Booker Washington, a thousand com
munities injthe South would burn his
Epistles in the market-places and the
Southern newspapers would bo bedlam
let loose.
So it happens that Theodore Roose
velt faces the next Presidential elec
tion with his own party enthusiasti
cally behind him and the opposition
hopeless of ' his defeat, and, on the
whole, not very anxious for it. It is
rather remarkable situation. The
explanation, however, is simple. It
ia the conquest of American public
opinion by a strong, perhaps a great.
personality.- honest, fearless, sympa
thetic, aed just. Readers of American
history will find an instructive par
allel if they will study carefully the
events leading np to the re-election of
Andrew Jackson aad to that of Abra
ham Lincoln. From "Theodore
Roosevelt .as a Presidential- Candi-
date," by a delegate to the National
Republican convention, in the Ameri
can Monthly Review of Reviews for
Jnly. .
Helen Keller.
Undoubtedly the most remarkable
girl graduate of the reason is Miss
Helen Keller, who . received her
bachelor's degree from Radcliffe col
lege on Tuesday. That she has passed
the full four years'course with honor.
In spite of being deaf, dumb and
blind, and that she has. done her work
ander precisely the same conditions
as her more normal classmate who
became bachelors cf arts at the same
time; is proof of the extraordinary de
velopment in the so called higher edu
cation of women during tho past
quarter century.
Radcliffe, which now becomes Miss
Keller's alma mater, is the college for
women affiliated to Harvard university
and is the legal successor of the
society for the collegiate instruction
of women, known to fame, as the' Har
vard "Annex," which was organized
in 1879. Its purpose is to afford the
college girls the same systematic
instruction by the tame professors and
teachers aa their brothers aad cousins
fiad at Harvard. ' The" relationanip
between the woman's college and the
great university ia - peculiar. The
requiremeata f or admission to Bad
oliffe are the same as those for admis
sion to Harvard; its courses of in-'
sanction are ideatioal with courses ia
the larger' iastitatip; the same ex
amination papers are ased whea it is
possible, and papers of the same
standard always; the same teaching
force ia employed, and in some pi the
advanced work mea and. women meet
in the same classes. Yet the. relation
ship is in no aanse oo-aducational and
although the Radcliffe degree repre
sents exactly what a Harvard-degree
standa for and is oountersigned by
Preaidant Elliot, taegoverniag boards
of the ooUega and the university are
diesiaot. Ia other worda, the aniversity
guarantees the ataadard. of Instrnotion
to be ita own. while thecollege alone
ia rewtonainla for all matters of dis-
cipiiae aad e0- .
la the last year , kowover. the con-
the twa ineticatioaa
closer, and at the eom-
exeroises the air ia received
their daaraaa, for the first time from
aa' oflSber af the
LaBaron R. Brlggs. of the fachtty of
' !i 1 . a r
eejaaoee, wao.was
aeilxa prevideat of Radcliffe this year
to fill the yaaancy left by the retire
of
rm i- mi- k-.fc.kJ' fc
immm. -mmumm mwmf .w. '
V-' JLiA 1
blind
Maa-'
1'5'Ti
the -adnjntioa 7of raj, ohiU. who
was; then aavaa.yeara old. Viva yaara
-.later -Mis Keller Mnaey;
chasetta, where-, aha aaa Uved
since with Mim SaUlvan as a constant
companian. Ahhongh she; learned to'
speak, to, ,aear . by teach ,and to aaa
through,, the ayes of tcauk about her
put. in the hands of n special tator
ia preaariag to, eatsr eeUega, aad all
the while she has aaaa a atadeat at
Radcliffe aha depended npoWner dwa
wonderfal memory aid her 'keW' aa
dersUadia'g to a mso, greater' extent
than the average', college -girl
baa to do. Mias 8aUlvaa.,haa been,
tier ears, ao tospsak; sittiag beaide
her in the claas-roem and lecture hall,
and repenting to hot verbatim, hoar
after hour, by the.toaohrof ker fingers
on her rupU Imad everjrmordthat
was said. Ii waa Impoarilale coarse,
for eitherof tnemto takenoW; and
it has beendiffitmlt. for atadeat to
follow the disoasaion which came np
in qaeationiand-aaswerjform, while
recitations have "beeru quite ont'tt the
question for Miw Keller inv the con
ditions of jcJasa-room work, that part
of heir-work being doawin conference
with ' her instraotore daring ''a' 'few
momeata at tike end of the class !honr,
Latin aad Rnglish literature, his
tory and economics have been Mfces
Keller's leading subjects ainca he
completed the required workyoCtbe
freshman year. Moat oT bar tent .books
were to be bad in "braille;" the
raised type system: moat- commonly
used for the blind readers in this part
of the country. Bnt a good deal
of the collateral reading which forms
such an important part of modem col
legiate instruction waa not available
in this shape; it waa too lengthy to
be specially written out, and Mim
Sullivan has had little, time to synop
size such supplementary work. Never
theless, Miss Keller baa shown quite
uncommon, facility in writing her ex
amination papers.
Although her instructors have
naturally taken a special kind of in
terest in their blind pupil, the Bad-
cliff o authorities have made sure that
her work woald'be judged by precise
ly the same standard aa that of other
girls.. The regnlar examination papers
for the whole clam have been repro
duced for her benefit in "braille" oa
the morning of the teat by Mias
Spooner, formerly of the Perkins in
stitntion, who waa selected for the
work by the college aathorlties, and
Miss Keller has written her answers
just as any other student would, us
ing her own special typewriter.
Lincol Saate JoarnaL
THE BRITISH SPEAKER.
la FMltlara Is.a Har Oae,' hat la
SaleaaUaiy lewaraeA
It Is doubtless because the position
of speaker Is sb onerous that the re;
wards attached to it are so great He
Is originally a member of parliament,
like the rest, and Is selected by the
leader of the house, who Is net neces
sarily the prime minister, from among
his own followers for his personal
character and dignity and his knowl
edge of parliamentary procedure. He
Is usually elected unanimously by vote
of the bouse, and from that moment
be ceases to.be a party man, and his
constituency is divided In its feelings
between the honor of returning the
speaker and the disadvantage of be
ing for all practical purposes unrepre
sented In parliament
The speaker of the bouse of com
mons Is a person enjoying the greatest
official dignity and social considera
tion. He ia the first commoner In the
realm; hia invitations to dinner are air
most equivalent to a royal command;
court dress Is worn by members who
dine with him officially; In the house
he Is treated with extreme deference.
'and he receives a salary of 5,000 and
the use of a magnificent house, which
forms part of the palace of Westmin
ster. He retains office though the poli
tics of .the ministry may change
through successive administrations un
til his health fails or he deems him
self to have earned retirement Then
the sovereign bestows a peerage upon
him and' the country a munificent pen
sion. The house of commons has been sin
gularly fortunate In securing for speak
ers men of great dignity,, unfailing
judgment and unquestioned impartial
ity. It is a splendid position, and
though ita intellectual demands are un
ceasing aad ita .merely physical de
mands exhausting Itie splendidly re
warded. The position la aa exhausting aa it la
disfiagnisned. During a large part of
the session the speaker must be In the
chair from 2 p. m. till after midnight
except during the dinner hour, from
half past 7 to 9, and even when the
bouse Ja In committee and the chair
man of committees hi presiding he
must be In official dress in hia boose,
which communicatee directly with the
lobby behind hia chair, ready to appear
at a moment a notice If summoned.
He mast, of course, know every mem
ber by sight and be able to recall hia
name instantly. It la astounding some
times when from a back bench there
rises some member who la utterly un
known by sight to hia fellow members,
who seldom attends and hardly ever
speaks and" aaa nothing whatever dis
tinctive in his manner1 or appearance,
to hear the speaker say "Mr. Blank" aa
readily as if be were accustomed to.
mtdjwh, hta eyecy Oar-Hear, M-
T? P !
Tlaaca Hay
Once upon a time a superstition ex
feted that a lady ought to blame her
self if a man whom she did no iateaVl
fa accept proposed to her, out that,
should such an unpleasant incident tf
cur, ft waa at least not to he made a
abject of goaefa among bar aaqualat-
jarenta vaoagac it ucumDaaf
to let a man understand
in time if they r did not wish him aa a
fot-JiMaw. It fa aacdlasa.to, remark
that.eoeb boooraWe. reticence aad
Jtlodlj prodemce are qato ant, of faa-
'ft
wrvb7 eVapphaanaiwa aJmi
lva bean aaarrled tea rears
a night away
-ue t uthJitat
0
; r. .
cjasay.wawa
,w I
"I
m?&M
We have placed
Straw Hats which formerly sold at SI
I M; V.J -M .- ' - j.
;p--
We have still a nice selection of light weight hats in
Tuscan Braids "and Panamas at prices from
$L00to$6.00
s
Boys' Shirts and Overalls to match. Age . 5
to use during vacation.
r ; q&-.--j
t -.,'.
"!-'
Men's
t We. are closing out our men's and hoys' two-piece summer suits. We
I can tit you and make lile worth living. Tours at a heavy reduction.
1 Prices $3.50 to $7.50 per suit
I our line or Fingree Shoes and Oxfords are mil and complete. J
Come in and get a fit and a large amount of wear thrown in. 1
;
FRIEDHOF & C2
COLUMBUS. NEBRASKA
MaMwaaWawannanwMUunMMatnMwaMMUMMiiMiiTYTYTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTV
Jfi$ Special leta.
wBT Eicirsiii latcs
Chicaga Wartkwefttrm.
Chicago and return oae fare plus 25c
On -sale June 16-20. Good returnmg
until June 29th.
Indianapolis and return one fare plus
2.2f on sale Jnne 28-30. Good return
ing July 10th.
St Paul and return one fare plus 50c.
On sale Jnly 15-30. Good returnmg
September 15th.
Atlantic City and return one fare plus
$2.00. On sale July 9-10. Good return
ing "Jnly 23rd.
Cincinnati and return one fare plus
$2.25 on sale July 15-17. Good re
turning Angnst 18th.
Detroit and return one fare plus 25c
on sale July 5-7. Good returning Jnly
12th. ' .
Louisville and return one fare pine
$25 on sale August 12-15. Good re
taining September 15th.
Also special low rates good for the
season to Chicago and all points east,
also to St "Paul, Indianapolis, Dulnth
and Minnesota and Wisconsin resorts;
skw to Deadwood, Hot Springs and
The Black Hills.
For information aad circulars addres
J. A. Kuhn, AGPAPA Omaha, Nebr.
woilds rum low miTSf .
EVERY DAY
The Union Pacific will sell Round
Trip tickets to 8t Louis and return at
following low rates:
FIFTEEN DAY TICKETS
Every day to Nov. 30, good to return
15 days. $17.10.
SIXTY DAY TICKETS
Every day to Nov. 20, good to return
CO day a $19.00.
SEASON TICKETS
.Every .day to Nov. 15, good np to Deo.
15. $22.80.
Y Inquire of W. H. Benham, Agent
- Hi
COLUMBUS MARKETS.
Wheat, new C8
Corn... , t 35
Oats $ bushel ........,,; 30
Bye Vbuahel 45
JSasaavTf '
Hoga-V owt 4 GO 4 70
Pat steers-tfowt 4 004 50
Stock ateera-t0 ewt 2 5B.3 55
Fat cows-V cwt 2 30 3 05
Potatoes-V Ph.; ,-- 40
Butter Ig t. 15fjl8
Egga V doaen 120
Wasted All at It.
."A stranger,'' said an old frontiers
man; "was traveling once ia a very
cheerless section of the great West
.Having pulled up at night at n cheap
and unpromising tavern, he seated
himself at the supper table. The waiter
informed blm what the cook had la
the way of eatables. Among the
viands enumerated waa wild dock.
Waa that 'ere bird shot on the wlngr
.Inquired the stranger. 'Yea.' replied
the waiter. While trying to $7 oat
of this forsaken country? The ebug-
mg waiter thought that might hare
beea the case. Well. concluded the
arranger. 'I sympathize with tnatblnTa
misfortune, but I admire his good Jndg-
Berve me all of him." .
IrMsralarltr la tha
. fhere are two boya who nmaage ta
' le rather auruly In school, and their
teacher waa aa ezaaperatod oae day
that she ordered them to remaia after
aad write their names 1000
the watched them plana fata
the task. Some iftaea minutes later
asm of them grew uneasy and began ta
watch am eaaspanloa la omgraot. Sag.
the arat oae bnrat oat with a
of
to the
r MMCl JUt. . .t
TaIa
mu, .
hlnea
I
on sale from 250 to 300
at 56c
Union-Made Overalls
SIGNAL BRAND"
MMBM,M,MM,M,MM'MllBeam'
-
Not being able to close out
to make a change, to take place
Change
tSeptv 1st.
. l -.
'it
u jThis necessitates closieg out ALL WASH
SUMMER STUFF daring the next GO days.
-Jh '''. " '
We begin at once to slaughter prices.
s. 25 xent to 03 cent Dimities. Tissues, ete.
10 , " 12 GiaghasM end Percales;
6 " 8 - Prints,
25 Net Corsets,
35 to 75 cent Corsets,
91 Crash Skirts,
, Yalta aM&mum aw Jackets aNtaba
F. H. LAMB a Co.
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
You Run
When you huy your
GROCERIES
AND
HARDWARE
From
W.A.McWILLIAMS
4
SUMMER
Special attention is called to our new Gaso- j
line and Vavor Stoves and Ranges; also
Refrigerators that refrigerate.
glance over our new
ters and pick out
lots of things you
I Large and complete line of Staple and Fancy j
Groceries. Fresh
always on hand.
1 An inspection of my goods and prices always
makes new
Flatnoth Shift
aatawvw .
flllllllTTT-"M"TnilltllTTTTTTTIIirillJIMHJH-7
Men's and Boys'
to $2, one price
. 'i
to 1 2, just the thing
Suit
.'
of Business
our business, we have arranged
.A&
.
t?
GOODS and
atlOc to 250 .
at 54'cto')to
at 4cto 5oV
at 12c
at 25c to49o
at 50c
aeM at
--ji
1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II HI I H 1 H H
No Risk
ITEMS:
5 and 10 Cent Coun-
your bargains; there's Z
need.
Fruits and Vegetables Z
customers.
Rift 'Huts. 37
av vaswa . a
teg
- n
4
'.
. a-,:.sasa.y,;' ?-Lsi.'j8ammmaaai g-.-;i?vr : . -?5-?r"5s Jt$??e?&Y&siL;' '. ,s aeaaaB&tL r
. - - '-' -jf
'!hg&&&$&:
V&.i,&
y i-;-c.-trv!r'rt.'.
." A.?J?V -Z-
(w-..,.,.
fciWliv-s ?&.' 5-'Jafi