The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, June 17, 1908, Image 7

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STRONG ON THE PROPRIETIES.
HOT ONIONS FOR PNEUMONIA.
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"A love for gamblin was born about
,the time that human nature first
opened its eyes. A disposition to
steal somethin' was born just a few
moments before, but a man may gam
ble and not be a thier. There is
such a thing as an honest gambler
that is, a gambler who is willing to
give a man a fair chance to lose his
money. The gambler wants your
money, and it ain't much trouble for
him- to accommodate his conscience as
to the way he gets it If he is sharp
er than you are be compliments him
self with the fact that he understands
bis business, and every man that has
' a trade likes to know its details better
than the other man does."
Thus spoke old Limuel to a few
friends who were gathered about the
'fireside in the Jucklin home. The
wind was bowling and the snow, like
shredded sheets, was flying past th
windows.
; "But you don't believe that all
gamblers are thieveB?" remarked old
' man Drizintine.
. "I said I didn't. But there ain't
nothin' that will strain a man's hon-
, esty more than gamblin' will."
"That's been preached on many a
time," Brizintine spoke up. "But I
never gambled in my life, and "
"And you don't know just how far
you are honest," Lim broke in.
"I don't know that I understand
you."
"Didn't think you did." replied Juck
lin. "But I can explain. The man
that gambles has more temptations to
steal than any other man. When he
has lost everything a strong resent
ment arises against life. It is almost
impossible for him to believe that ho
has been fairly beaten, aad if he is
broad enough to acknowledge this he
then questions Fate for her one
sidedness. He wants to know what
right she's got to discriminate so
against him. It has been said that all
jnen are natural gamblers, and it may
be true, for the most of us have had
to fight against it.
"Unfortunately for man. work was
put on him as a curse. The fact is.
It ennobles him, but he accepted it as
a curse. And when his brother has
. committed a crime, not grave enough
to hang him, he says: 'I will sen
tence you to work.' In the olden times
a man that worked wan't respected as
much as the highwayman. They
hanged the robber. It is true, but they
respected him more than they did
the man that handled the hoe. And
. the gambler is a sort of social high
wayman. I don't say he Is a bad fel-
:ler. In many instances he per
suades himself to believe that
his profession is right He puts up
his money, takes chances, and if he
wins he has come by the money as
honestly as if he had dug in the
ground for it he thinks. And as long
as he wins he may be honest. But
IWH-
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I1ILD Papa, what
is a New Yorker?
Papa My child, a
New Yorker is one
who lives in New
York who has his
residence there. A
New Yorker may
be a Chinaman
from Pell street,
or a Polish Jew
from Rivington
street, or a Syrian
from Washington
street, or an Ital
ian from the Ital
ian quarter, or a
Greek or Jap or
Swede or any na
tionality at all.
provided he lives
in New York city.
Child Well, sup
nose a Russian
lives in Brooklyn.
Papa He is a New Yorker.
Child Well, if a Portuguese lived in
the Bronx?
Papa He would be a New Yorker.
Of course, my child. In a large sense,
all inhabitants of the state of New
York are New Yorkers, but generally
speaking, by the term New Yorker is
meant one who lives in the city of
New York, and that is why a China
man out on Staten island is a New
Yorker.
Child Papa, does a man have to be
a foreigner in order to live in New
York?
Papa What a question, my child.
Of course not There are many living
in "New York whose native language
is English.
Child Oh. they were born there?
Papa Not necessarily. Some were
born in Great Britain and Ireland and
some in the British possessions, but
they all speak English and they live
in New York and are New Yorkers.
Child Then, if I understand you
aright, my dear father, a man who
lives in New York and who speaks
English must have been born either
in Great Britain, Ireland, or some
where in the British possessions.
Papa Net at all. There are native
Americans who speak 'English and who
live in New York.
Child And where are they from?
Papa Some were born in New Eng
land, some on the Pacific coast, some
in the middle west and some in the
south. . ''
A- V
his principles undergo a change when
he begins to lose. Then he can't
help feelin' that he is givln 'the
other feller too much show. When he
has lost all he must have money in
order to carry on his business. Sup
pose he is employed to collect money
suppose he is in a bank. If he
refrains from takia' money to gam
ble with he is honest desperately
honest, yon might .say. And he may
refrain day after day for years; but
some day be may find himself weak.
This weakness may consist of an over
confidence in self in an overabun
dance of hope, in a faith that he will
win and can pay back. Right there
he is gone. Think you are strong
enough to stand such a temptation as
that. Brother Brizintine?"
"I would not use any man's money,"
Brizintine answered. "I surely have
sense enough to know what is my
own, and knowing what is not my own
I have honesty enough not to take it"
"Yes," replied Jucklin, "and what
you have said is the answer that nine
out of ten men would make and hon
estly, too. But the fact is, you don't
know."
"What! do you mean to say I don't
know whether or not I'm honest?"
"I mean just what I say you don't
know. It is all very well for the un
tried man to believe himself strong,
but unless he has been severely tried
he does not know."
"Do you know. Brother Jucklin?"
"Well, 111 tell you just how far I
know. Many years ago I was workin'
at a mill that took in a good deal of
money. Finally they gave me charge
of it Along about that time a party
of us used to meet two or three times
a week to play a social game of poker.
It got to be so sociable that it kept
me broke. I knew that it was largely
a game of luck and that the cards
would break even after awhile, and
that may be true. In the long run,
but the run is too long. In the course
of a thousand years they might have
broke even, but as it was, they broke
with just enough promise to hold me
tied in fascination to the game. I
began to borrow money and it took
all of my wages to pay it back. One
night I went over to meet the boys.
I didn't have a cent of my own. and
I wouldn't have gone if I hadn't
thought that some one would lend me
enough to get into the game. But
everyone hemmed and hawed and
spoke of the extreme need for money,
of hard times and the like the very
men who had week after week got
all of my wages. Just then it flashed
across me that in my pocket were
more than a hundred dollars belong! n'
to the mill. With this amount as a
backin' I felt sure that I could win
back some of the money I had lost.
It was perfectly plain I could do it
At some stage of the game I had near
ly always been ahead, but wouldn't
Child Then they are the real New
Yorkers.
Papa Not necessarily. Any man
Who lives in New York for any length
of time becomes a New Yorker, no
matter where he may have been born.
When he travels he registers from
New York.
Child Is it in the air?
Papa It is In the air. The western
'er despises New York until he has
made a fortune, and then he comes to
New York to spend it. and after that
he is a New Yorker. The southerner
who has come to New York to live
may say that he was born in the
south, and if he doesn't his tongue
will do it for him. but he glories in
being a citizen of New York. The
New Englander feels that he has hon
ored New York by coming to it and
that without him New York would not
amount to much, but he, too, signs
his name in the register as from New
York.
Child How about the Jerseyman,
papa?
Papa The Jerseyman is an alto
gether different proposition. Six Jer
seymen out of ten do business in New
York, and of those six five were born
in Brooklyn when she was just Brook
lyn. The Jerseyman is not, strictly
speaking, a New Yorker. If New
York is in disgrace he thanks his
stars that he spends his nights in an
other state, but if New York wins a
point he pats himself qn the back and
says: "I'm here most of my waking
time." The Jerseyman also Is sorely
tempted to sign his name as from
New York when he is out in Chicago,
for instance, and when he is in Eu
rope he does do it
Child Well, papa, you have told
me about foreigners who were New
Yorkers, and about English-speaking
people who were New Yorkers and
about Americans who were New York
ers, but I want to know if there
couldn't be a more perfect kind of
New Yorker than any of these one
who was born in New York and who
spoke English?
Papa Why, yes, my child; there
are thousands born in New York who
speak English. They are hard and
fast New Yorkers. Their parents
were Germans and Italians and
Frenchmen and Jews and Greeks, but
they were born in New York and they
speak English.
Child Then, papa, they are the real
New Yorkers, aren't they?
Papa WelL I believe that they are
. I I I
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y pie RJ
quit But why couldn't I quit? The
oher fellers jumped, and with my
money. Why couldn't I do the same?
I broke out In a sweat I strove to
bring up .arguments against my sit
ting in the game and couldn't. Luck
whispered that it was with me, and it
didn't seem possible that I could lose.
Never before had I felt so strongly
that it was my night I arose and
walked up and down the room. I
could hear my .blood singin. I turned
and looked at the boys, each one with
an expression of eagerness on his
face. I felt myself superior to them. I
could beat them. There they sat,
completely within the power of my
skill and my luck. I could win
enough to pay back the money that I
owed, and with my wages I could buy
clothes and I needed 'em. Sudden
ly I rushed out of the house, and I
ran ran all the way to the home of
the mill owner snatched his money
out of my pocket and gave it to him.
I told him what I had gone through
with, and be turned pale and took hold
of the mantelpiece to steady himself.
'My son,' said be, 'I have been all
along there, only I didn't rua away
until afterward. They caught me and
brought me back, and it was only by
the grace of of human nature Lhat I
didn't go to the penitentiary."
In the company there were three
young fellows. The old man's recital
had moved them. "And did you play
again. Uncle Lim?" one of them in
quired.
"No, I didn't. And although It majr
appear narrow in me, but let me say
that a playin' card shan't come into
my house. In itself a deck of cards
is innocent enough, and so is a bottle
of licker if you don't drink it It i3
true, though, so far as my experience
counts, that nearly every gambler be
gins in a social way, without any
thought of becomin' one. Very few
of them set out with the aim to make
gamblin' their profession. Takehosses,
for instance. Nearly all men like a
fine hoss like to see him run. They
develop a judgment as to the runnin'
qualities of a hoss and finally are
willln' to back it up with money.
Whose business is it? The money be
longs to them and was honestly
earned. Understand, now, I ain't a
prcachin' a moral sermon for I
ain't fitted for that I just want to
talk in a human nature sort of way
for the benefit of these boys. Don't
bet on anything. That's the safest
plan. If there's no fun in goln' to
hoss races unless you bet, don't go."
"But haven't you bet on roosters?"
old Brizintine inquired, looking wise.
"Well, I have seen the feathers fly
from the wrong chicken," Lim an
swered. "And if I have bet, and have
seen the evil of It I am all the fitter
to talk to these young chaps. Boys,
If you don't want to be on trial all
your life, don't bet on anything."
(Copyright, by Ople Read.)
attell LmoIs
considered to be the most patriotic
New Yorkers because their New
Yorkism is so new; but, my child, in
this city of which we are speaking,
this city cf nearly 4,000.000 inhabi
tants, there is a little class, without
much influence, to be sure, but still
self-respecting and respected by oth
ers, a mere handful, it is true, but a
very intelligent handful.
Child And who are they, papa?
Papa They, my child, are the na
tive American New Yorkers, whose
parents and grandparents and great
grandparents, to the third and fourth
generation, were born and brought up
in New York.
Child And who always spoke Eng
lish? Papa Well, no. They spoke Dutch
originally, but they have spoken Eng
lish longer than the majority of the
rest. Those are the real New York
ers. Child I never heard of them.
Where do they keep themselves?
Papa One of them is the president
of the United States.
Child Oh. yes. of course. So he is
a Simon-pure New Yorker?
Papa Well, no; come to think of It,
he isn't, because I believe his mother
was a southerner.
Child Well, do the Simon-pure New
Yorkers sign their names as from
New York?
Papa Yes, my boy, they do, and
they would like to be able to sign in
a special colored ink to make it more
emphatic.
Child Well, papa. I suppose that
if they could have kept out the for
eigners and the English-speaking
aliens apd the Yankees and the
southerners and the westerners, and
just left New York for the real born
and bred New Yorkers, New, York
would be even greater than it is?
Papa No. no. my boy. No city ever
gets to the top of the pile unaided. It
is because of all these people who
have come in to show New York how
to misgovern itself that she Is the
greatest city on the western hemis
phere and is destined to be the great
est city that the sun ever shone upon.
Child And what will become of the
real New York New Yorkers?
Papa They will disappear after a
while.
Child Why, papa?
Papa Because it is getting to be
the fashion to be born in the country.
Child Oh!
(Copj-rigkt. by James Pott Co.)
How Could She Be Expected to Ad
dress Perfect Stranger?
A traveler in the mountains of Ten
nessee had been stowed away in the
best bed the cottage afforded. Late
In the night he was awakened by the
voice of the paterfamilias addressed
to the' daughter, who was entertaining
company by the fireside
"Mandy," growled the old man, "is
that young man there yit?"
"Yep, pap."
"Is he got his arm around yer
waistr
"Yep. pap."
"You-all tell him to take't away."
"Aw, ye tell him yerself, pap," re
plied the girl, In a dull, lifeless voice.
"He air a plumb stranger to me."
Success Magazine.
INVALID'S SAD PLIGHT.
After Inflammatory Rheumatism, Hair
Came Out Skin Peeled, and Bed
Sores Developed Only Cut!-
cura Proved Successful.
"About four years ago I had a very
severe attack of inflammatory rheuma
tism. My skin peeled, and, the high
fever played havoc with my hair,
which came out in bunches. I also
had three large bed sores on my back.
I did not gain very rapidly, and my
appetite was very poor. I tried many
'sure cires' but they were of little
help, and until I tried Cuticura Re
solvent I had had no real relief. Then
my complexion cleared and soon I felt
better. The bed sores went very soon
after a few applications of Cuticura
Ointment, and when I used Cuti
cura Soap and Ointment for my hair
it began to regain its former glossy ap
pearance. Mrs. Lavina J. Henderson,
138 Broad St.. Stamford, Conn., March
6 and 12, 1907." '
"Internal Revenue" Collections.
The term "Internal revenue" has
been restricted in its meaning to such
revenues only as are collected under
the internal revenue bureau con
nected with the treasury department,
and does not include all revenues that
are, properly speaking, from internal
sources, that is, from sources other
than duties levied at the frontiers
upon foreign commodities. Thus,
moneys arising from the sale of public
lands, from patent fees, or the reve
nues of the postal service, are not gen
erally known as "internal revenues."
An Important Line.
"She is a most accomplished wo
man." "Is she?"
"Why, have 'you heard her sing?"
"Yes."
"And seen her paintings?"
"Yes."
Then how can you ask?"
"I have never tasted her pies."
Be Your Own R
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Dread Disease Robbed of Its Terrors
by Simple Remedy.
r '
Owing to the prevalence of pneu
monia and the great mortality which
attends its ravages during the winter
and spring, several boards of health
in northern New Jersey have been tak
ing measures to protect the citizens of
their towns from the disease. The
health board of Washington, N. J., has
published a remedy which Is said to
be- a sure cure for pneumonia, and
other health boards are looking into
the matter with a view of having' the
same thing published for the good of
the general public. This is the pub
lication as it has appeared in the pa
pers of Washington:
"Take six or ten onions, according
to size, and chop fine, put in a large
spider over a hot fire, then add the
same quantity of rye meal and vine
gar enough to form a thick paste. In
the meanwhile stir it thoroughly, let
ting it simmer five or tenv minutes.
Then put in a cotton bag large enough
to cover the lungs and apply to chest
as hot as patient can bear. In about
ten minutes apply another, and thus
continue by reheating the poultices,
and In a few hours the patient will be
out of danger. This simple remedy
has never failed to cure this toe-often
fatal malady. Usually three or four
applications will be sufficient, but con
tinue always until the perspiration
starts freely from the chest This rem
edy was formulated many years ago
by one of the best physicians New
England has ever known, who never
lost a patient by the disease, and won
his renown by simple remedies."
A Family Matter. -
Eph was before the high court of
justice for the usual offense.
"Now, look here, Eph," said the
judge in an admonitory way, "don't
you know it is wrong to steal chick
ens?" "'Deed I does, jedge. I's a plunged
Baptis. I is."
"Then why did you steal those
chickens?"
"Dey wuzn't chickens, jedge; dey
wuz ducks."
"That makes no difference."
"'Deed it do, jedge," Eph pleaded.
"Ducks is kinder kinfolks to us Bap
tises, an' it's all in de fam'ly, sub."
Severe Reproach.
"Charley, dear," said young Mrs.
Torkins, "I had a dream about a race
horse that won three times in succes
sion." "Great Scott," answered her hus
band, who has a touch of superstition;
"what was its name, what did it look
like?"
"I've done my best to remember, but
J can't"
'That's the way! There never was
a woman who could be relied on to
keep her head in business matters!"
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"That horse must love Lis work,
mncle."
"Why so, Egbert?"
"He's so attached to the wagon."
Nothing to Speak Of.
"You are to take these capsules,"
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after, remember."
"Oh!" said the patient "I guess it
doesn't matter much."
"But it does matter, sir!"
"You wouldn't say that; doctor, if
you had ever had a meal in our board
ing house." Catholic -Standard and
Times.
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JW7arla
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.-- i
What a Settler Can Scour In r
WESTERN CANADA
ii
20 la 40 Basket WtaaceetlM Asm.
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Tisaaar far Fimai aaJBeaMsasaFBZE.
Goad l-awa with Law Tesatfea.
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Setisfsrtary agaiaatsraraMrViliiitlm
Caw CSaaate aa rsafeet Health.
iferftwTitaUel
Soaaeof the choicest grain-producing lands la
Saskatchewan and Alberta may bow be ac
quired ita these most healthful aad prosperous
sections antler the
Itflsti iMwstcti ItfilattsRt
by which entry atay be made by proxy (on cer
tain conditions), by the father, mother, son,
daughter, brother or sister of intending home
steader. Entry fee In each caaeistiaOO. For pamphlet,
"Last BeMWest,"particu!arsastoratea.routes,
beat time to go and where to locate, apply to
W.T.KHKITT.
MlRawTetiUnlsftemg. taafca. ffelruts.
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, aaoata aad body
aatisepticaUy eleaa aad free frost aa
healthy fersflBe aad disagreeable odors,
which water, soap aad tooth preparatioas
aloae eaaaot do. A
germicidal, disia
leetiag aad deodor
ising toilet requitita
of exoeptioaal es
eelleace aad econ
omy, lavalnable
for iafeaed eyes,
throat aad aasal and
uterine catarrh. At
drug aad toilet
stores, 50 ceata, or
by Bail postpaid.
Urn Triti Sasili
WITH "MtftlTM MB BEAUTY" jfoON OIMT nttg
mPAXTONTQiLrJCO.,rlH)Hitl.
A DAISY FLY KILLER
LASTS THE EN.
TIRE SEASON
It leads every.
thin fordaMroy.
lug file, la neat,
eleaa sad oraa.
mental. Hold (wall
Beafygy
dealer or Mnl by
man pompaia ror
ceu i. nerMa
ii ii w. imma
'.. aMaljs,I.T.
IQTIIMA and HAY FEVER
MfJ I nMIl POSITIVELY CUKKO by
KINMONTH'S ASTHMA CURB
OrerJaeO patients co rt daring the pasts yean. A
S8 cent trial bottle seat to snyaddreMoa receiptor
Sets. DK.U.8.BINXONTH,AbaiyPaikN.J.
0EFM1CE STMCt-:
W onacea a.
'the package
other starebM only li pence, urns price aad
"DstFIANCr W SUPERIOR QUALITY.
any property owner or builder.
Place of Shingles
Sm the
the market which
with sand while hot.
from Tar.
reel thnml
7&&ne
HP
oofer!
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