The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, September 14, 1904, Image 4

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Cotanboi, Nebr.
Eatena at the .Poetesses, Cotaaaae, Beer.. M
PUBLISHED WEDMBBDA.Y8 BT
Cflmbis Jtvid Ct.
(INOORPCMUTED.)
WXDMBBDAT. SEPT. U.11M.
fBXSniCZ B. 1M0TT,
KENEWALS-Tbe date opposite roar mm oa
jour paper, or wrapper abowa to what timm yoar
aateddpUoa paiST Tbaa JaaOS abowa tJbrt
iwyaMBt haa baca raoaivad ap to Jaa.l.lHB.
feDtoFeb.l.l906aadaooB. Wkaa panaaat
la made, the date, which aaawan aa a laaeipt,
will be chanced aooordiadjr.
DISCONTlNOANCES-BemoasJUa aabacrib
fa will ooatiaaa to racei va thia joaraal aatil taa
pabliaberaare notified by latter to diaaoatiaaa.
when all amaraicea mart be paid. If yoa do aet
wiah the Joaraal ooBtiaaed for aaotfaer year af
ter the time paid for baa expired, jroa aaoald
prenoaaly aotifjr as to dianoatiaae it.
CHANGE IN ADDRESS-Wbea omariaa; a
ehaaae in the addieaa. tmbacriben aboald be aara
to aire their old aa well as ueir
RMIlMlM" Tie.
NflllOPJnL.
President
THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
Vice-President
CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS.
OtifiKjy H. i natam ntaU.........U
.' v': Presidential Electors
" - F. A BARTON, Pawnee.
-'; A. C. SMITH, Doatias.
i "; A. C. ABBOTT, Dodge,
T. L. NORVAL, Seward.
; .'; W. P. HALL, Phelps.
M. A. BROWN, Baffalo.
H. H. WILSON, Lancaster.
X, J. C. ROBINSON, Douglas.
STATE.
United SUtes Senator
ELMER J. BURKETT.
I Governor
J. H. MICKEY.
, i-. Lieatenant Governor
.- E. G. McGILTON.
Secretary of State
.: ' A.GALUSHA. t
))'. Anditor
J.. : k- R M. SEARLE, JR.
t. . Treasurer
r PETER MORTENSEN.
y, ': Saperintendent
I X J. L. McBRIEN.
H . . Attorney General
-." NORRIS BROWN.
)' Land Commissioner
.',.",. .. H. M. EATON.
I' .", CONCRESSTOMflL
Congressman, Third District
:'."." j. j. McCarthy.
Hi A KKW VRaTITHV!-
We are glad to promise the readers
of the weekly Joaraal, still amors for
their money than they have been en
joying. Besides strengthening the
news department materially with the
aid of the Daily Joarnal, we expect
next week to add a German depart
meat consisting of two pages. This
plan has grown one of the reqaosts of
many of oar German enbacriberi,
who feel that a coaaty paper in n
ooanty where there is so large a per
centage of Germans, aboald contain
eaoagh German to interest the older
people, many of whom do not read
English, and at the same time eaongh
to give their children paction in read
iag the langaageof the Fatherland
We shall aay no more at this time
except to repeat that it is oar purpose
to make the Weekly Journal not only
the newsiest paper in Platte county,
hut the best advertising mediam for.
Judge Parker informs the 6.000,000
democrats, with whom he voted for
silver in two campaigns, that the gold
standard is irrevocably fixed, and he
tells the delegates who declared that
"protection is a robbery' that he
favors a ''reasonabls revision of the
tariaT.' There is room for overtime
in the democratic explanation depart-
It wonll be interesting to have a
list of the democratic congressmen
-who are seeking re-election in the
middle and western states on their
nrgnment that the ' gold standard is
irrevocably established. " Jndge Park
er's statemeat that the repablioan sen
ate would prevent the democrats from
doing aay damage for the next four
years was probably jast his way of
reassuring the American roters.
Tiro ELECTIONS.
Vermont and Arkansas have held
state elections. There was a oartaia
similarity in result, though not in
methods. In Vermont, all the citissna
have the privilege of voting; in Ar
hanma probably a third of them have
that privilege. In northern states the
ratio of vote to population is on what
economists might call n quantitative
basis; in the south it depends on the
color of the applicant for suffrage.
Mince the race qaestioa is one of on
ly local application, the result of the
Arkaasai election is not significant as
the national "- mira
It might be noted incidentally
the nasal democratic nmioritv
i slightly rednced this year. Bat
the Vermont -rote has been regarded
f or many years as a certain index of
the political trend of the nation. It
has been noted that the repablioan
majority in Vermont has only twiee
fallen below 25,000, and on both these
aonuaioM the national election has re
sulted in democratic victory. This
year the republican majority to more
90,000. being not only above the
rk. bat
the majority in 1900 when the
i tree silver and Bryaaiam ami the
ic ticket got only n oompli-
tte in the
whiohare north of the
It is admitted that New Yerk may
ha ssssaaratively close, in
tisnofthe fact that
Wall 8treet an supporting Mr.Parker.
Bat in the light of theraseltia Ver-
the repablioan ticket is safe in
Hon
snra-
resaltinthe mv
bsr. II
Sliws this tall
fjata ami laagariairi have mativaiaaUy
Imhls index of the
ANOTHER APOLOGY.
"A feu week sgo job publicly charg
ed that the democratic members of the
bowdotMipervkonof Platte coanty in
reoeot yean bad always ran to the fall
liautof the law in making oomnty levies.
Yoar attention baa been repeatedly
called to the fact that your statement
waa antra. TTniW mTi iwwmmrtnwa
a jteatlessan mast make an apology."
The editor of the Taleirram
wholly saahU to distiswwsh bstween a
Mohargen and testimony introduced to
sopport that oharga. He also seems
amwillinffto quote the Joaraal's argn-
Tha question of whether or not Platte
otmatysaperrisorshaTe made the levy
np to the limit of the law is not an
Werefossto enter into a personal
argument through the columns of the
Journal It matters not to the tar
payers of Platte coanty whether the
editor of the Journal is a "gentleman"
or not That question is as far from be
ing at issue aa the amount of levy made
by the supervisors is and the Telegram's
argument may fall as far short of con
vincing the-taxpayers on that point as
it did of proving that there is no deficit
in Platte county's treasury.
Every siaglo statement made by the
Journal in regard to the county deficit
has been made either on the authority of
a democratic coanty official or has been
based oa the records aa kept by demo
cratic county officials, whom the Journal
regards aa honest men.
Theeditor of the Telegram insisted
that Platte county voters should vote
against republican candidates because
of the existence of a state debt which
he falsely charged was due to extrava
gant and dishonest republican officials.
We gave statistics to prove that fusion
administrations were partners of ropab
lioan adnunistrations daring the increase
of Nebraska's debtnd we explained that
neither fusionists nor republicans but a
defective revenue law was responsible
for that debt
We called attention at the same time
to n deficit in Platte county's treasury
and charged that deficit either to the
ssme defective revenue law or to the
extravagance of county supervisors.
The editor of the Telegram dared not
admit that the deficit was due to the
defective revenue law for snch an ad
mission would be an invitation to every
democrat to vote for Joseph Henggler
and against John Bender.
Then he attempted to explain the
deficit nway by charging it to floods.
We replied by showing that $9000 of
the $13000 deficit was to be found in
the general fund and not in the road
and bridge fund.
Unable to prove the absence of ex
travagance' by resorting to the flood
theory aad'not having the moral cour
age to admit that the new revenue law
was necessary to remedy the Platte
oounty deficit, he attempted to switch
the argument to an insignificant state
ment about the levy which is not vital
to the argument
A democratic oounty official, who is
honest and efficient in the administra
tioa of his offioe and whose business it
is to know the levies, told us that the
levy had been made up to the limit of
the law for the last two years. He was
mistaken. We repeated his statement
not aa a charge against the supervisors,
but merely as evidence to prove a de
fective revenue law. Everyone knows
that the supervisors have n right to
levy nil the law allows. It is no charge
of dishonesty, therefore, to say that
they made the levy np to that limit
However, aa soon as we leaned of the
mistake of the democratic official, we
oorrected it in the Journal in two issues.
The issue of September 7 contained the
following:
" Why.do not the supervisors take the
levy high enough to provide for that
amount? The Journal admits that
they could have increased it two mills.
Bat as we pointed out last week an in
crease of two mills, or in other words,
a levy up to the full limit of the law,
would have fallen abort about $8000 of
covering the present deficit That is to
ssy, the supervisors of Platte county
were powerless under the old revenue
law to provide enough money to pay
the county's expenses which have ac
crued since the levy was made."
The issue of August 24 contained the
following:
The asssssrt valuation of Platte coan
ty in 1908 was $2,754,620.
The levy for 1903 was 13 mills for
county purposes. The law permits a
levy of 15 mills.
An increase of 2 mills in the 1903 levy
would have yielded $5509. This would
have reduced the present deficit to about
$8000.
In other words, Platte county's in
come eould not have been made large
enough in 1903 to meet the county's
expenses under conditions as they were."
Now brother, who if the "gentlemen"
who owes an apology to other gentle
awn for false statements?
It you possess all the qualities you
demand in your contemporaries, please
quote the following questions from the
Journal, and answer them by "yes" or
"no."
Were not Platte county tax-payers
payiag7per cent interest on $13,225
worth of warrants when you declared
to them that "there is no county de
ficit?" Is it not true that Platte county
supervisors could not legally have made
the levy high enough in 1903 to pay
the county's expenses during the period
for which the levy was made?
la it not true that you juggled the
reoords when you gave figures to show
thstPlstteoounty's deficit was doe en
tirely to "unusual rains"?
Is it not true that the clerk's books
show that only $3768 of the present
deficit is charged to the road and bridge
fanda while more than $9000 of it is
charged to the general fund?
If nil the above statements are true,
do not the tax-payers of Platte county
need Joseph Henggler in the next leg
islature to ase to it that our new revenue
law which has provided n remedy shall
remain on the statute books?
If misrepresentation of facta on the
part of the democratic organ is neosss
ary to continue the operation of the
dwmneirstiu machine in Platte county,
hi it not time that the rank and file of
the democratic tax-payers were bolting
that marhias aad alerting man like R.
W. Hobartfor county attorney to guard
their uterests?
It is mighty oasnrorting to haven
(as they say in the
ECONOMY.
It was a Dsmsorat, no dwubt, who
wrote to the Msw York World, sug
gesting that the collection of nil the
burnt matches tor kindling would
prove n wise eoonomy ia thia wasteful
age. There once was aa U adage
about seeing a pin aad pioh it up and
the boys of half a oautury'ago were
advised to save ail the pieces of string
they found for hi too and tops. Those
old sooaamio saws were nil right ia
their day, for pins aad strings war
at ns oheap thaa aa aow. TaMuaaa
who would go about pioUngup plat
or collecting burnt naatohes for kind
ling wouM possibly uarn fivaoeatsa
day aad and It vary unprofitable em
ploymeat Eoonomy ia not to be despised, but
there always has been two kinds of
eoonomy, one of the miserly saving
aad the other of eoonomio aad wise
expenditures of one's talents. The
Scriptures condemned the servant who
saved his talent without putting it to
use and commended the servant who
invested his aad multiplied it ten-fold.
The ontioisms of repablioaa extrav
agance by the demooratio orators an
oa par with those of taa man who lec
tured the neoole oa not earing burnt
matches. Eoonomy is a watch-word
with the demooratio party, aad for
years it has been promising to econo
mize ia expenditures if entrusted with
power. They tried it twelve yean
ago aad the result was a happy
They expended lens but it wns
than their income. Their eoonomies
compelled the people to pick up match
es or sjiy other thing and pntronine the
public soup kitchens. Taa Cleveland
Admiaistratioa expeaded more than
ito inoosae every year and sold bonds
to secure money to pay the ordinary
The republican party haa not follow
ed that eoonomio policy. It has not
despised burnt matches, but it has
not had the people to pick them up
because it has given them more profi
table employment. It has followed
business principles aad
the earning of more naoaey that
might be spent for the comforts aad
even the luxuries of life. The repub
lican party has not looked upon the
worHng asanas oae who should be
oompelled to drudge aad slave aad
save by picking up pins aad collecting
burnt matches. It has tried toaooon
duct the basiness of the government
as to enoourage enterprise us well aa
eoonomy nnd create work aad wages
that would enable the people to live
ia comfort It has been
enough to keep wages on the
aad ever gaining oa the cost of living.
The policy of protection bat shut out
the pin picking aad burnt match col
lecting labor of Europe aad enabled
our worUagmea to give their atten
tion to better things. It haa the batter
kind of economy. The last Cleveland
administration was a good example of
demooratio oonomy nnd ia four years
increased the interest-bearing debt
from $585,000,000 where Harrison left
it to $847,000,000 or more than $363,
000,000. This was ia four years of
peace. The hf cEinley administration
nnd to deal with a foreign war aad
the insular questions which followed
that war, bat it only increased the interest-bearing
debt $198,000,000 and
the Roosevelt administratioa bus made
a redaction of $181,500,000 even with
the increased cost of the army and
navy. Thia is the kind of eoonomy
which is in harmony with business
methods.
REMEMBER.
Remember 1893-1896 nnd the days
of industrial gloom.
Remember 1893-1896 and the home
comforts which were wanting.
Remember 18t3-1896 aad the wives
and children wanting clothes.
Remember 1893-1896 aad the thous
ands of capable mechanics looking ia
vain for work
Remember 181)3-1896 and the fulfilled
promises made by the republican party
in the campaign of 1896.
Remember 1893-1896 aad the deles
ive promises made by the Democratic
party in the campaign of 1894.
Remember 1893-1896 and the land
lord waiting at the door for the rent
money which could not be provided.
Remember 183-1896, when the fac
tory whistle failed to blow for another
day' work, nnother day's pay.
Remembr 1893-1896 aad the oount
less number of women nnd children
waiting, faint with hunger, for the
bread which never came.
Remember 1893-1896 aad the heart
sickness, the worry, the unpaid and
unpayable debts, and nil the many ills
that attend the asaa out of work.
Remember 1893-1896 nnd the hun
dreds of thousands of laborers walking
the streets from sunrise to saaset took
ing for the work which could not be
found.
Remember 1893-1896 and the un-
American soup houses una other fo
of charity necessary to relieve
who need ao relief when they oaa get
work.
VOTE FOR IT.
The state that has grown till it en
joys the distinction of hnving the lar
gest creamery in the world, the largest
broom factory ia the world, the largest
individual cattle feeding station in the
world and that haa the third largest
meat packing industry in the world, is
burdened by n constitution made for a
"grasbopper" state; made by men in
spired by "grasshopper" fears; made to
contain restraints on law niakera and
law uduunistrators necessary to pro
tect the pocket books of "grasshopper
beset" tax-payers.
Many a good Uw passed by a Nebraska
legislature has been nullified by this
grasshopper constitution. Every de
partment of oar state government is
hampered by it
The tax-payers of Nebraska can find
relief from thia condition by voting for
n constitutional convention thia fall.
The demand for n new constitution is
the demand of no political party, bat n
demand growiag out of the business
aad social necessities of n growing state.
Platte oounty voterajepublioansdem
oerata aad prohibitionists, should all
vote for a convention to amend Ne
braska's 'grasshopper" constitution.
The object is
T ..II . BM"1f
mmwj Kwymmmm aw jawaaeu aw - -, -y
the Roosevelt olab misting, ia taa
couaou eaamaer Tauraoaw evanuac.
in mnkn swflaaaawaweaaaa
rermg
COLUMBInTXaV
r.j.n.
Weare mots ia tavor ot anrlallaai at tasy
ingot the coal eeasea than aajr other ttaaa.
Thera ia aothiag that makes as ao tired aataeae
cheap jokes oaaaMUi'aaiaie or ariosalitr. The
Baltic Best baa sailed ail rieht, bat we shall
resist the teatptatioa to iadelce ia aay feeble
witticism oa the aaaw of Viee Ada&el What,
iathadevilakr,
A ana ia St. Joe, Miaaoari, wants to o to
aYac Bias for a zest. We aeed to ha araaad St.
Joeoosae oanalf, aad while wea
there ia eoaas argaajsat ia favor 8iag
wa etill think than ia room for aa
between Bias Siac.aad St. Joe. It ia the old
qaestioa of dlgereao in tsetse. Bias Sins is
possibly bmto raatfal. bat St Joe baa a greater
variety of attraction. The society la aboat the
tiase is approachias when rgaawBta
The
football will be ia order, aocompaaied
by statistics ebowJas the assTate aaaahar at
lata aad the approriasrte aaaiber of ribs that
have beam aaora or teas fiactaiad ia the gnat
college saia, These oatpoariags of spirit grow
very waariaoaw. bat they are iaascocdaaeiwitb
aataial law. The ataa who dossat samba
thiaka sawa-jag ia aiafal; the ana who caa't
diace thiaka daaeiBg is a wicked or at least
foolish practice; the aua who knows aothiag
aboat Basic thiaka the coltiratioa of auaical
talent aa extravagant aad aselsss practice; aad
aooa. Uwoaldaeeai that verytbiag that coa
tribatea to the eajoyaaaat of haaamaity ia coa
deemed by those meabers of the haaaaa tribe
who happea not to share, ia the enjoyaMet'.
There ie ao seed to deay that aosae people are
hart playing football, that aoaw people awoke
too much, that a good fiddler ia ao good for aay
thiagebe. Everybody eaa aee the disadvantages
ia everything, bet before yoa caa appreciate the
advantages yoahavetoaban iatheat.
epeakiag. Sobm day possibly
tarn ap who haa played football or baa watched
it aadaratandiagly aad who disapproves of it;
aad whoa each a one taraa ap hie argument will
have aoaw weight.
I like to aee some haaky cora-f ed bloke.
Whose golden hair ia baagiagdowB hia'faack.
Get all hia slats caved ia aad both legs broke
And then get ehaSed to the bottoaa of the pack.
While other BBskies swash Mat roaad
Upoa the dark aad bloody groaad.
These are the aighta I like to aee
Aad praise the Lord it iea't ase. , v
In answer to the urtiole in the Tele-
last week under the caption,
"Truth and Other Things', while I
make no complaiat against the article,
I may -suggest thnt the repnblionns
of Platte coaaty are not 'worried the
least thia fall about the need of
"dough" for the campaign. Right
minded republicans aad right minded
democrats will vote without first
looking over the gardea wall for
dough.
Besides the Telegram may be sur
prised to learn that although Mr
Hoars aad myself are pioneers of
Platte oounty nn introduction would
be neoeasary before that degree of in
timacy to established neoenmy to the
interchange of "dough".
The Telegram may toara how repab-
lioansbake bread without "dough"
this falL Joseph Henggler.
"The true welfare of the nation "to
indissolubly bound up with the wel
fare of the farmer and the wage-worker,
of the man who tills the soil, aad
of the mechanic, the hnndicraf tsman,
the laborer. If we can insure the pros
perity of these two clnatea wa aeed not
trouble ourselves about the prosperity
of the rest, for that will follow as a
matter of course."- Vice-President
Roosevelt at opening of Pnn-Anerioaa
Exposition, May 30, 1901.
"It is, of oourse, a mere truism that
we want to use everything in our
power to foster the welfare of our sa
tire body politic. Ia other words, we
need to treat the tariff us a business
proposition, from the standpoint of
the interest of the oountrys a whole,
aad aot with reference to the tempor
ary needs of aay political party."
President Roosevelt at Minneapolis,
April, 4, 1903.
' Our average f ellow-citisen to a saae
healthy man, who believes in deoeacy
aad has a wholesome mind. He there
fore feels nn equal aoorn alike for the
man of wealth guilty of the mean and
base spirit of arrogance toward-those
who are 1cm well off, and for the mnn
of small menus who in turn either
feels or seeks to excite ia others the
feeling of mean nnd base envy for those
who are better off. " Preeideat Roose
velt at Syracuse, N. Y. 8ept. 7. 1903.
"There to ao worse enemy of the
wage-worker thaa the man who oca-
dones mob violence in nny shape, or
who preaches clam hatred; aad surely
the slightest acqaaintance with onr
industrial history should tench evea
the most shortsighted that the times
of moat suffering to our people as a
whole, the times when business to
stagnant, nnd capital suffers from
shrinkage aad gets ao return from its
investments, are exactly the times of
hardship aad waat aad grim disaster
umoagtbe poor." Preeideat Rooss
velt at Syracuse, N. Y.. 7,-1903.
"It to almost as atneamry that oar
policy should be stable as that it
should be wise. A nation like ours
oould not long stand the ruinous pol
icy of re-adjusting its business to
radical changes in the tariff at short
intervals, especially when, us aow,
owing to the imoaunse sxteat aad va
riety of our products, the tariff sched
ules carry a .duty oa thousands of
different article. "President Roose
velt at Minneapolis, April 4, 1903.
"This to aa era of great oombinatioas
both of labor aad of capital. Ia nanny
wnys these combinations nave worked
for good ; bat they mast work under
the law." Preeideat Roosevelt at
Charleston. April 9..1903.
When the people are satisfied with the
existing conditions add are willing to
continue their prosperity, there ie ho
excitement daring the campaign. Thia
is the condition this year. Everything
ia quiet No one is talking politics bat
the people have made np their minds
that the repablioan administralien ie
good enough aad will go to the' pole
and vote to retain it Fulls City
Journal.
-
RaenkVsBaItio "fleet ana. weighed
anchor at Oronstadt aad
the war." The name af the gnu
ia coaamahd of thia fieet to
, Thia of oourse to only hia mat
It to guaranteed ia ell but the
of spelling aad proaunctation.
The Soldier's Hnaas of Grand Iaaaad
faramiagasaooemthtoyanc-.
0 acres of sjamt
600 tons of alfalfa, a nasality
of oats, a huge aardea, $50
and they have forty milk
veasky
matter
They oaa all poke faa at Pat Me-
KilMp'e "glory crown"1 but' they oaat
deny that it ia wonderfally becoming. -Humphrey
Democrat
Simmered down to n few words the
Demooratio platform is well put in the
language of Senator Daniels: "We're
f tired of being in the minority." Gen
tral City Non-PureiL
- My objection to Judge Parker ia that
ha goes before the oountry on n coward
ly and atraddliag platform that can
only appeal to cowards and etraddlere.
I object to loaded dice. W. J. Bryan.
I believe incidental protection to our
own industries is right nnd proper,"
aaid Henry G. Davis who pronounoed
as "admirable" the St Louie platform
who declares that protection is "a rob
bery of the many to enrich the few."
Seward Blade.
Don't reason that "the publisher can
get along without the small sum I owe
him." There may be five hundred argu
ing along the asm y line, and if they
back it up by neglect or refusal to pay,
the newspaper man ia "going to be in
dire distress. Fnllerton Post
When MoKillip nlui populist to
vote for him he can spring his govern
ment ownership of railroads plank for
effect but he doesn't mean it because
he knows how hard the; same plank was
turned down by the makers of his
party's platform at St' Louis. Monroe
Republican.
We are very anxiously waiting some
utterance from Judge Parker relating to
hia views upon the tariff question. He
aooepta the demooratio plutform which
calls protectionism robbery. If he
would be n little, more explicit nnd ex
plain to us who is being robbed we
would be the better nble to judge of
jast where he stands -nnd how far re
vision would go were he in n position to
advooateacbangein our present tariff
laws. Fnllerton News-Journal.
Two men by the name of MoKillip
are candidates for congress in this dis
trict There is the MoKillip who favors
the free coinage of silver, the sub-treasury
plan, flat money, government own
ership of banks, livery stables, sausage
factories and railways. Then there is
the other MoKillip who favors a state
bank currency, v the gold standard,
Wall street, the Standard Oil Monoply
and Parker. The Howell's Joarnal
offers to hire n hall if arrangements can
be made, for a joint debate between Mc
Carthy and McKillip, bnt fails to desig
nate whioh one of the MoKillips it pre
fers. Genoa Times.
Sasaa B. Anthony.
Ia the matter of dothee the dress
reformers cannot clnim her. They
thought they oould once, nnd they
almost did -not the modern dress-reformers,
but their earlier predecessors.
For oae year in the early 50's Sasaa
B. Anthony wore the bloomer "cos
tume." Then she gave it up, ntd
wrote to Lucy Stone, "Oh, I cannot
bear it aay longer." .Later she said,
"I hoped to help establish the prin
ciple of rational dress. I found it n
physical oomfort, but a mental cruel
fixion. It wns nn intellectual shivery ;
one never could get rid of thinking of
herself, and the important thing to to
forget self. The nttentioa of tne
nudience wns fixed upon my clothes
iaateadof oa my words. I learned the
lesson then thnt to be saooessful a
person most nttempt but one reform."
September Woman's Home Compan
ion. RUSSIANS SHOULD SINK PRIDE
French Cerrsspondsnt's Uncsnaorad
View ef Llao Yang Defeat,
Paris, Sept lS.--Tfie Journal'a Llao'
Yang correspondent having ridden to
Tien Tsln, aeada thence the follow
ing uncensored dispatch: "The first
part of the campaign may be consid
ered lost The Russian army has re
treated northward ia the directum of
Tie pass or further. The Russian
army's inferiority in men, guns aad
enthusiasm prevented Kouropatkin's
resisting longer at Llao Yang or
achieving at Yeatal a victory which
would have obliged the Japanese to
fall back. .The Japanese will shortly
triumphantly enter Mukden. The
Russian general staff now estimates
the Japanese forces nt from 400,009
to 500,060. The Russian army will re
concentrate Jn the north, but it needs
several months to fill the losses la a
number of corps, which must bo
doubled. Above nil, it Is essential to
restore the morale, affected by almost
unprecedented trials and difficulties.
A Russian offensive movement win
he impossible for n long time. Should
Russia be determined to continue the
effort it might still vanquish, but at a
cost wholly disproportionate to the re
sults. As an impartial witness, I am
convinced that it would be to the best
Interest of the belligerenta to sink
national pride aad by mutual conces
sions end a war which will otherwise
ruin both.
Jane Advancing Rapidly.
8t Petersburg, Sept 13. The
yiedomosti's correspondent at Tie
paaa telegraphs to his paper aa fol
lows: "The Japanese, who have been
accused of moving forward slowly, am
aow advancing very rapidly. Little
avails the Russian Increase of troops,
for the Japanese are receiving rein
forcements from New Chwang. Tho
Initiative win remain in the hands of
the Japanese and their tactics win
always be repeated."
With the luU la military operatlona
and aa. almost entire suspension of
dispatches from the front St Peters
burg has again fallen back on rumors.
Countless stories are afloat regardlag
the Russian defeat at Llao Yang, aome
of which are abaolately absurd.
Inheritance Law la Lame.
Dea Moines, Sept 13. It is found
that the Iowa Inheritance tax law.
which has now been oa the statute
hooks about tea years aad under
which a vast amount haa been col
lected for the state from estates not
directly Inherited, to weak in that it
undertakes to discriminate against
the foreign holder of property la
Iowa. It requlrea a higher payment
from tha alien thaa from the resident
of tan state. The German' consul la
Chicago haa called taa atteatloa af
taa Iowa anthoritleo to taa fact that
under treaties with Germany thia
uaWaa aarV Wafa"awaTa j
m
vm
NO
Dragged From Street Car at
Chicago and Badir Bcatea.
ONE It STRUCK WITH A alrUCK
even Catered Man Alee Aas suited fcx
Union ymnathtosra
': Them Kicked Nearly
t Khjht Pureenn Injured.
1 Chicago. Sept 13. Two aavaga at
tacks were nsada upon nonunion worh
era at the stock yards and i tho
fights that followwd eight people warn
Injured, four of them so severely that
it was necessary to take them to hos
pitals. The first dlsturbaaca oc
curred at tho iatersectloa of Hal
stead and Root streets. Several mea
and boys, with the aid of two or three
women, boarded a street car aad
dragged two young women. Annie
Cook and Mamie Jasper, to tho street
Both were badly beaten before tho
police arrived. They were taken to
the hospital. Mamie Jasper was
struck with a brick aad her face an
forehead were badly cut Another
car which happened to pass during
the trouble wns struck by several of
tho missiles ami two of tho passen.
gen. Fremont 81oaa aad Annie Cro
done. were Injured. Aatone Ashutra,
"a driver for a brewery, tried to drive
through the crowd aad wns hit In the
back of tho head with a brick aad
knocked from hia wagon. His scalp
was badly cut Policemen' soon, ar
rived aad charged the croweJ. which
scattered. Policeman Christ Lyons
was knocked down by aatone, but waa
not badly hurt
A second riot took place in Root
street, near Princeton nvenue. where
seven colored mea employed in the
stock yards were attacked by a: large
crowd of sympathisers with the stock
yards strikers. John Sims, one of
tho colored mea, waa knocked down
and kicked aearly to 'death.
FKI6IT RATES TOO NIH
Munree Telia Raaaaa far Discrimina
tion Against Dsnvsr.
Denver, Sept 13. Judge C. C
Prouty, member of the Interstate com
merce commission, began hearing evi
dence in thia city oa charges of dis
crimination in freight tariffs against
this city, which have been made
against nil western railways. Cattle
men allege that for -years the rail
roads have been steadily advancing
live stock rates and are aow threaten
ing to put them still higher. George
J. Klndel, n manufacturer, presented
evidence showing thnt goods shipped
to Denver from both the oast and
west are booked aa first class, which
are transported to nny other state at
third and fourth class rates.
J. A. Munroe. freight traffic mana
ger of the Union Pacific, testified that
competition between the cotton mills
of New England nnd those of the
south made discrimination In freight
rates a necessity. The density of pop
ulation along tho Missouri river also
controlled rate schedule! Mr. Prouty
thought that volume of traffic rather
than density of population should rule.
He asked the railroad attorney what
the Almighty had done for tho cities
along the Missouri that they should
be given lower freight rates than Den
ver. The question was not fully an
swered when a recess was taken.
FRIEMOS 6UMD SLAYERS
Fforida Mob Defies Sheriff to Arrest
Men Charged With Homicide.
Cordele. Oa, Sept 13. A party of
about fifty friends are standing
guard with loaded Winchesters around
a house in Baxter, Fla., la which are
Charles Altman nnd Hillary Altaian,
two men who are accused of killiag n
negro nnd a white man on nn excur
aloa train near that place. These
friends of the Altmans fired upon
Deputy Sheriff Thrift, who had at
tempted to arrest the mea. The two
men killed were Jackson Duncan, a
young white man, and Jim Riley, a ne
gro. The latter was killed by a stray
bullet W. M. Duncan, the father of
the white man who was killed, waa
shot at from ambush four times today.
PACKERS TAKE IACK HEM
About Ferty-Effht Hundred Union
Men Resume Places at Chicago.
Chicago, Sept 13. It la estimated
that about 12.000 mea appUed for
work at the stock yards. About 4.800
of the applicants were taken back by
the packers.
' Many of the nonunion men failed to
report for work, but a number ap
peared on the Luke Shore nnd Mlchi
gaa Southern and other railroads, giv
ing rise to much dissatisfaction
among the union men. Few clashes,
however, were reported, chiefly fisti
cuffs between negro strike breakers
and white unionists. About 14.000
nonunion men are still at work la the
yards.
Alleged Bank Rebbcra Arrested.
' Llacola. Sept 13. Policemen ef
fected aa entrance to a room occupied
by two mea giving the names of
George Dowd aad Frank Todd, hud ar
rested them oa the charge of robbing
the nostoflce nt Swedeburg Friday
night nnd cracking the safe of tho
Bank of Palmyra early yesterday
morning. Roth men. the omcers aay.
are ex-coavlcts, and the evidence
against them, they assert, is nearly
conclusive. Ia the room they occu
pied wns found a quantity of dynamite,
caps, fuse aad burglar's tools.
Locomotive Firemen Meet.
Buffalo. Sept 13. The ninth bien
nial convention of the Brotherhood of
Locomotive Firemen wns called to or
der here. The report of Grand Mas
ter Hannahan shows that the orgaal
sntlou is ia a prosperous condition;
thnt in the last two years there haa
aot beea-a strike of flremea on aay
road on which the brotherhood to or
ganized, nil differences hnving beta
settled without delay. Aa Important
question to be considered to the re
moval of the headquarters of the order
from Peoria, I1L. to Buffalo.
ftemalne a Prevaricator.
La Junta, Colo., Sept 13. Robert
Romalae, the prisoner nt Topeka,
Kan, who has coafessed to complicity
ia tho explosion at the Independence
depot, Cripple Creek, oa Jane f, was.
it haa been dlswrered, hi La Junta
on thnt 'day. He worked in the Santa
Fo abate at La Junta for about two
It is said, going under tho
of L O. White. Bat UUte cree
ls nlaced ia hie confession, ta
which he Implicated several mialag
WW tAPTHE USSNJTH
BBBBBBaaaBB
That
of Hia Mea Are
London. Sept 13. The sanguinary
able of the RussoJaaaaeae conflict ia
aot aow la evidence, and with the
practical suspension of news from the
front the interest for the tans be
ing centered ia rumors thnt Viceroy
Alexleff hue resigned, aa reported
guaday; that General Kouropatkia la
to he replaced by Lieutenant Gen
eral Llnevltch, aow hi command of
the forces at Vladivostok, aad other
statements which cannot he traced to
authentic sources,' hut nil of which, if
true, would have a most important
hearing on tho situation. Oae Rus-
correspondent points out. thnt
the Japanese withdraw from the
Russlaa froat it la usually the pre
cursor of their appearance on the
fiaals, aad he thiaka the ladlcatloaa
aotat to n winter campaign. Interest
agnam turns to Port Arthur nnd to tho
effect Which the Russian defeat at
Llao Tang la likely to have en the
garrison there, nnd the fesr is ex
pressed thnt the siege will sooa end
in. disaster for Russian nrms.
The Morning Post says that official
Russinn dispstches received In Lon-1
don nnnounce that Lieutenant General
Bassalltch. who commander the por
tion of the. Russian rear guard south
of the Hun river bus been severely
wounded nnd cupturcl. with 3.00t but
of his 5.000 mea.
The Dally Mall's correspondent
with the Jnpaaese repeats from Tien
Tsln the report thnt General Llne
vltch. with 50.000 men. Invaded north
eastern Korea nnd cut General Ku
rokl's communlcntlons with Feng
Wnug Cheng.
THE JOURNAL FREE WALL
MAPS WILL MOT LAST LONG.
YOU WILL HAVE TO HURRY.
COLUMBUS MARKETS.
Wheat uew 92
Wheat old 9i
fiOayaa ajar
Oats V bushel 24
Rye V bushel 55
Dona fivy p asf
Hoga V ewt 5 100 5 30
Fat atoera V owt 4 00j 4 50
Stock steers yewt....... 2 65 3 55
Fat cows-V ewt 2 30 3 05
Potatoes-HP pk 35 ,
Batter V uV. 15
Eggs Vdoaen. 154J
SfecirileApOm
Excarsifi lites
From Omaha daily until Sept. 30th,
good returning Oct 31st
To Detroit and return, S2L0O.
To Buffalo aad return 326.15.
To Toronto nnd return, 27.15.
To Chautauqua Lake Points nnd re
turn, 27.15.
To Montreal aad return, S3&00.
To Quebec nnd return, $38.86.
Also cheep round trip rates to Chica
go, St Paul. Minneapolis, Duluth nnd
other Wisconsin nnd Minnesota points.
J. A Kchn,
A. O. F. A P. A.
raorasE umtitutioiwii.
flSjajawMENT.
The followiaa; proposed ameadraeBt to, aad
coBTeatioa for the revisioa of, the Coaatitutioa
of the Htateof Nebraska, aa bnreiaafter set forth,
iB fall, is sabaitted to the electora of the tttate
of Nebraska, to be voted apoa at the Keaeral
lectioa to be held laeeday, November 8, A. D.
1904
(Skkate Filk No. 111.)
A Bill for a Joist ResoIatioB recoBameadiBa;
to the electors of the state to vote at the arat
eleetioa of aMaabere of the lialatan for or
iitat a eoatreatioa to revise, ataead aad
chasm thetfeaetitatioB f the Htate of Nebraoka I
IB KI-OI-i-w w,M nraw -, . , mm
CoasUtaUoB or tbe taaie or neDraaaa.
Be it Jfesoford fry the Legislature f the State
nt Ttehrttmkil-
L That it ia dcessed aeresaanr to rail a coa
veatioa to revise, aaaead aad chaaaje the (Toa-
titntina of the Htateof Nebraska.
2. That the electors are recomawaded to vote
at the Beat eleetioa of awmbera of the becis
latare for or asainnt a eoaveBtioa to revlae,
aawad aad chaste the CoastitBtioa of the State
of Nebraska. , ,
9. That at each aext eleetioa of Btembera of
the Ltftislatare ob the ballot of each elector
votiaa; at aaea eieeuoa. anaii ne pnaira or wm
tea ia each maaarr that the elector caa iadicNf
hia prefereBce aader the law the words: "FUR
ealliBS a eoaveatioa to revise, aaaesd aad
eha&ge the CosstltatioB of the State of Nebras
ka.' sad "AGAINST calliBft- a eoaveBtioa to re-
viae, ataead aad chaace the Coaittif atioa of the
State of Nebraska": aad if a majority votiBa;
at said eleetioa shall vote for a contention, the
Lrialatare ehall. at its aext seaaioa. provide by
law for caiJiaa? ue aaaae.
I. Geo. wTMarab, Secretary of State of the
State of Nebraska, do hereby certify that the
forecoiBjC proposed ameadaaeat to the Cnotttitn
tioa of the State of Nebraska, aad protidin for
a GoaveatioB for the reviaioa of aaid oaatitatioa
of the State of Nebraska, ia a true and correct
copy of the oriciBal enrolled bill paaeed by the
Tweaty-eiabth aesrioa of the Lejpa
State of Nebraska, aa it appears froi
sal bill, oa tie ia air onto, and th
qi me icRweiuiv in ine
rosa aaid oni
that said nro-
mmI numiliiinat aad revision of the (oaatita-
tioa of the State of Nebraska ia sabtaitted to the
qaaliaeu voters or ine outs oi nraewn, -or
their adoptioa or rejection, at the ajeneral elec
tion to be held oa Tuesday, the 8th day of No
vember. A. D. ISM. .. . .
Ia tMrtiaway whereof. I hereunto net toy hand
and aSxed the Great Seal of the State of Ne
braska. Done at Liaeohl thia 5th day of Jalr. ia the
year of oar Lord Oae Tboaaand Nine Handred
sad Voar, of the Independence of the United
States the Oae Hundred and Twenty-Ninth and
of thia State the Thirty-Kichth.
.--.. Gao. W. Mapsb.
(OBXAT BKAL.) Secretary tf State.
Low Rates
East
September 6,
13.
October 1 1, 1904.
One fare plus $2 for the round trip
to many points in Indiana and Ohio,
and to some points in Kentucky. Good
to return for thirty days. Via the
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
Railway.
Through train service to Chicago
from all points on the main line of the
Union Pacific Railroad. Ruute of the
Overland Limited. Three trains daily,
Omahn to Chicago.
For Free Book and Folders kiadly Fill Out Thia Coupon nnd mail today
to
F. A. NASH, 0. W. A., 1524 Faraaan Street, Oataaa.
Name.
'Street Address
City.
6. J. CARLO
Uwur
ft. M. POST
AwUrtiwii : at : Law
ml cms. n. ruiTZ
HOMEOPATHIC .
ttiplwJai. aiMl SMrfOwii.
P.O. Block : : Columbus
Skorapa & Valasek
-DEALERS 1N-
WtMw. LNtfwro. attar
OENTLEMEN:-
We are eellieg ss good '
goods ss anybody in town.
If you doubt our word, drop
in nnd be shown.
.xx;"v-i"i"i"i"i"i"i"--?-i"M";"i"t"i"i"
I Have Bought!
THE TAILORING
BUSINESS
?
OfS-E. Baker over Commercial
National Bank nnd am prepared
to do all hiadaof cleaning, repair
ing nnd dying of ladies aad gentle
men's clothing. I also have a full
and complete sample lie of rea
sonable wooleaa whioh is open for
your inspection.
R & PALMER
T.t..M..H..g.g.H..M. fr f 1 I '1 1 1 l 1 1 1-
in Minium illinium
DR. R. A. VALUER,
Osteopathic FfcysieiaB,
Columbus, Nebr.
Nebraska 'Phone A 111. ladepeadsat X
PaoaeNo.71. Uato. Mather block. X
He will care all voar acbea
T lwcaraawaeaaiediciaa fails.
iiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiin
A. C. OHO, A. af., IX. BL, Pre.,
Pnor. A. J. Lowrt, Prise.
ASC!
Cadanea by First Natl
tsaan aaa busiaeas i
la Roll Top Desks. Baak Fixture aad
E Typewriters.
sit
tudeatscaa work for board.
Sead for free catalogue, boaad
IB allimtnr.
one' eirr puun-tni-u ny a liusisess lollein
Read it. and you will attend the N. B. C.
ONE-WAY RATES
rmoif
(KaaaaeCity to Council Hinge, inclaxive.)
SEPT. 15th to OCT. 15th .1MM.
299 HO t San Francisco. Los An
m??.w j.g d M( maBy
other California points.
&2fa OO to Everett Fairhaven.
uvaaw.vrvr whBtcoB Vancouver, aad
Victoria.
12!. OO Portland, Astoria, Ta-
wiunt esue e.WBSY)
S2fa OO to Ashland, Rosebnrg, Eu
epoej.vrvr Albany and Salem, in
eluding branch linen in Ore
gon. SQQ RO to Spokane aad interased
??. w ute0 r. Jb N. points to
Wenatcbee and intermed
iate points.
20.00 to Sutte, Anaconda, Helena,
and all intermediate main
line points.
iOf) OO to Ogden and Salt Lnko
City, and intermediate main
line points.
For fuller information call or address
W. H. Benham, Agent Columbus.
20 and 27.
State.
iTv s- x
f -Jlr- ' XBOUeUT'
a.
.
:
.
anna) ads) as unafctivw
aPHp'uw waaBewBewma ..
it '
.&$, Ltei
nwc&M w,ii..l.irfti
-- ?t .;t ( 1 1 inal '
' ju. 3C
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