The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, March 31, 1909, Image 4
"tr''-- v:-"? -Vv- - v. ' sS ' (Mimbu, If . wTOMBD AY. MAECH SI. US nOTORABTOCKWgLUBropriHU vmaalNBt?afriiaslr v DuHXHRHUJ a wIUssssiBat to netivs f April 3 is the'daie set for the Ad journment of the legislature. Where was John Weems when the Vote on county option was taken? When" law makers become law breakers it's time to impeach them. People who own land along the Loop and Platte are all in favor of a bank' guaranty. It is now in order for Mr. Bryan to deliver his Prince of Peace lecture be fore the members of the legislature. A mob divided against itself cannot stand. Possibly that's the reason the democratic legislature has proved a failure. After all the democrats in the leg islature are opposed to "home rule." They refused to pass the Lincoln charter bill. Some of the democrats in the legis lature have got their eyes open at last, but Shoemaker, of Douglas, is not one of them. Instead of a gavel the presiding officer of the lower house of the Ne braska legislature should be provided with a club. Tapping a desk with a gavel won't quiet a mob? Hie Nebraska rioters in session at Lincoln have passed a bill to keep snakes out of city water tanks, but refused to seriously consider a measure to keep snakes out of boots. The Bepublican party of Nebraska has made mistakes and almost un pardonable blunders, but the party .has never beenaccused of perpetual incompetency, criminal negligence and stupidity. The Joplin, Missouri, ministers who prayed for a high tariff on zinc made an unpardonable blunder. They should have prayed for a representa tive in congress with nerve enough to sell his vote to the house machine for "tariff concessions." People are refusing to pay taxes on their "old Kentucky home," down in Colonel Watterson's state and the governor has eent the militia into sev eral, counties to collect the amounts due the state. There never was a time when people were not protesting against paying taxes. XMN aaMlfeTJS mmii - Vi i '--- fa psl. Tkas Ana ikon that Mt has hisa ihi to J-.1.MW. OU3WE DT ADDRMBB-Wkm octet UsJIlSMtfttMwUMIhMl lllBMS. Every time a Columbus man pays C ! doUarfbr sugar he, gets about 60 j t cents' worth of sugar and the govern- urcuii hh uiuieu puues gets we d. other 40 cibts. The tariff "reform' southern Mtisaaocrats of some of the ; that this kind of- "protec tion" be reincorporated in the Payne tariff bilL With two men owning nearly all the'live pine land in the country and the lumber output of Canada practi cally controlled by a. trust, the repeal of the duty on lumber will notcheapen it to the consumer to any great extent, if at aU. The trust would simply add the present duty to the wholesale price and continue to skin the public. A new champion of the, lumber trust has made himself conspicuous in congress. His name is Fordney, of Michigan, a member of the ways and Means committee, and when charged by Bepresentative By rd of Mississippi, 'with being a member of the lumber barons trust, he retorted "the gentle ssan does not know a damned thing about it!" The Lincoln Star announces that two Omaha men haye decided to ptasent to the state university $100,000 in cash, and there is great rejoicing in the capital city. But hold! Is the ef the Omaha men "tainted?" Mr. Bryan given his consent? Than esjectioas will have to be met and ovatcpate before the university cam aaospt the money. '. That's. dirty insinuation! That's adeceitfallie! You're hM dirty in everything!" shrieked Bepresentative Shoemaker to Bepresentative Taylor. And then .Taylor rushed up and knocked Shoemaker down. No, .the scrap did not take place in a saloon, but in the hall of the house of repre sentatives at Lincoln. .The language of the Bowery and the argument of the bruiser are the weapons used by our democratic friends in their .enthusiasm to "carry out" campaign promises. This little misunderstanding between the gentleman from Douglas and the gentleman 'from Custer grew out of the discussion of Taylor's bill allowing women to vote at municipal elections. Shoemaker was opposed to the meas ure, which 'riled the Custer county statesman and he made' a coarse re mark reflecting upon the 'good name of the representative from Douglas, to which 'Shoemaker responded in the language quoted above. Both Shoe maker and Taylor are fair representa tives of the majority party in the leg islature the party that promised everything and has accomplished prac tically nothing; the party whose leader claimed for it all the political moral ity, wisdom, intelligence and true pat riotism in Nebraska; the party that never wielded power without abusing it; the party of opposition, obstruction and destruction; the party of exploded theories and inflated Ideas; the party that has never redeemed a pledge or acted in harmony except for pelf, plunder and pap. This has been the record of the democratic party of Ne braska dominated as it is by Bryanism and tinctured with socialism. The majority party of the present legisla ture is made up of men far below the average citizen intellectually, morally and socially. Some of them are mere "accidents," politically speaking, who owe their elevation to positions of trust and responsibility to the popu larity of Governor Shallenberger who "pulled them through" on election day. Among such a class of men harmonious and intelligent action for the common good of the people of the. state is impossible.. The only meas ures upon which the members of the dominant party have united has been for the purpose of creating official positions for the hungry horde sur rounding the state house and howling for "pie." It will be a relief to the tax payers when the. mob quits rioting. The tariff bill is now before the lower branch of congress, and when that body gets through with it the bill will .go to the senate and be referred to the finance committee of which Sen ator Aldrich, of Rhode island) is chairman, and Senators Lodge and Hale are members. Aldrich has already told the president that the senate will never agree to an inheri tance tax, and he- no doubt knows what he is talking about- New Eng land, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania will practically control tariff legislation in the senate. With Hale and Lodge and Aldrich repre senting the manufacturing interests, and hostile to. an inheritance tax, the country cannot expect any mate rial reduction on eastern made goods. With an inheritance tax it would be possible to reduce the tariff tax and still secure enough revenue to pay the expenses of the government What ever Aldrich says goes. He is in command. He is the czar that -will dictate and crush all opposition to true tariff reform. If Governor Shallenberger ever has an opportunity to appoint a state beer inspector, what an army of unterrifled applicants with lolling tongues he'll have to select from. What a'snap it would be for a good man like Elmer Thomas to travel through Nebraska and inspect (drink) beer at a salary of 43,000 a year. Shallenberger owes the Thomas faction of the Anti-Saloon League-a political debt, nd. the ap pointment of Elmer as official beer taster at a good salary nught to be sufficient compensation for his dirty work last fall. Women's Sweet Laughter. A woman has no natural grace more bewitching than a sweet laugh. It is like the sound of flutes on the water; It leaps from her heart in a clear sparkling rill, and the heart that hears It feels as If bathed In the cool ex hilarating spring. How much we owe to that sweet laugh! It tarns the prose of our life Into poetry; It flings showers of sunshine over the dark some wooden which we are traveling; it touches with light oar sleep which Is no more the Image of death, but gemmed with" dreams that are the shadow of Immortality. Exchange." Her Criticism. The five-year-old daughter . of a .Brooklyn man has had such a large experience of dolls that she feels her self to be something of a connoisseur In children, relates Lipplncott's. Re cently there-canM a real baby into the house. When It was pat into her arms the flve-yearold surveyed It with crit ical eye. Teat it a alee habyr asked "Yes, Kb alee," answered the young ster nsattatlBcr. It's alee, bat It's TRUE GENEROSITY Here is a picture of a soldier, who, like Sir Philip Sidney, k giving to another soldier the last few drops of water in his own canteen. This is an editorial on generosity, and no picture could better illustrate it; for giving to another what one needs himself is true generosity. Let us not begin with the supposi tion that generosity- is rare. Every man who remembers his mother knows better than that ' Where is the moth er who would not deny herself for her child? .Where is the mother who would not go without pretty clothes, food, drink; medicine, comfort, that her children might have all these things? Where is the mother living today who 'does not daily undergo sacrifices cheerfully to add a' little to the enjoyment of. her sons and daugh ters? ' - . . But th&Jives of the mothers of the world, while they set a beautiful ex ample for all mankind, are too often passed by with neglect . And today we ask you to consider the case of. large numbers of people who think they are generous because, from some purely selfish motive, they give away what they do not need. The man about town, coming home from the opera, sees a beggar, woman on the street corner, and tosses a dol lar bill to her. He feels a generous thrill as he does this worthy thing his chest expands, and he says' to him self: "Really, I am a pretty good fellow, after all. No appeal from the suffering is made to me in vain'." Next morning hejis informed that his brother is ill dying, perhaps in a far away town. To send money is easy. He writes his check for a couple of hundred dollars and drops it into a mail box with another glow of self satisfied pride. "It does beat the world," he murmurs to himself, "what a generous chap I am. How many brothers would be so willing to dig up instantly, too and without a thought about the money?" But strange news comes back over the telegraph wire. His brother doesn't need money; he has enough to pay for his doctor and his hospital bills. He is all alone, without friends. What he wants is, to see his brother r tothave some relative by him in his last illness. Ah! This is a different matter. To go to the sick brother's bedside would mean sacrifice sacrifice of pleasure, of business interests, of comfort The brother thinks it oyer and grows un comfortable. Then he says to him self: "It is all foolishness his wanting me. He has money, he has good doc tors, a good nurse, everything that can be done for him is being done. It is outrageous that he should ask me to leave my friends and my home and my business and go to him. I'll send him all the money he wants, but as for going no, it can't be done!" 'And so our pattern of generosity, who blithely tosses a dollar bill to a beggar woman, isn't generous, after all; only a selfish, sordid, every-day man, who will give freely and contin uously as long as it doesn't cost him anything. Aside from the miser, who has money mania, which is merely a men tal disease, the people who care for money for itself are not very plentiful. Most human beings value it for what it will buy. And if they invest it in purchasing peace of mind, or a feeling of self-satisfaction, they can lay no claim to generosity. Of course, the world usually bene fits from their liberality, and it should not be discouraged. Better give a , begger woman a dollar than to give it to a saloon keeper. Better bestow three or four millions on a university or medical college than use it to manipulate the stock market In a world that has not learned to take care of its mentally and physi cally sick which permits a condition that produces beggars, allows children to go hungry and tolerates the ravages of preventable disease liberality on the part of men who know how to make money is necessary. Mr. Rockefeller, having more mon ey than he could spend on himself if his life were to be' prolonged through centuries; endows a college in Chicago, and, better still, establishes a great institution in New York' for the pur pose of finding the causes of the dread ful diseases that lay waste the popu lation of whole tenement districts at a time. His liberality is needful. There should be no question of accepting his money or asking where he got it. Such part of it as he has given away is doing good work. MrQarnegie, having amased some hundreds of millions, chooses to spend Carrie Nation called at the White House last Tuesday to see President Taft The president was not "at home" to Carrie. it on libraries, and books to fill them, providing, thriftily, as he thinks, that the beneficiaries of his liberality shall be liberal, too. Hie libraries are useful the books ought to be read. There is no reason why any community should refuse a Carneeie library if it can afford to keep it up. But the liberality of Mr. Carnegie, like the liberality of .Mr. Rockefeller; costsjhe giver nothing. Endowing a university does not mean that there will be less meat on the Rockefeller table, fewer automo biles to carry die head of the Rocke feller 'family-to and 'from -work, a scarcity of greensward, on the Rocke feller golf course, oranJmpaired cam paiga fund at Mr. Archbold's disposal in the Standard Oil treasury:. And all the libraries that Mr. Car negie has given away 'have not im posed" upon him any self denial and self-denial is what counts, after all. ' It is not to be denied that as a nation we have a habitof looking at price marks, which very seldom tell us any thing about actual prices. The price tag of a princely gift by a millionaire may be a million dollars the actual cost of the education of a poor boy, secured, at the expense of his parents' toil and worry and self -sacrifice, is vastly greater than that ' The price mark on a boquet sent to an actress by some earnest admirer may be three hundred dollars. The actual price she pays for success in her profession is not to be measured in dollars. It means the sacrifice of home, friends, happiness, endless work, mental and nervous strain, and per haps an early grave just when the dearly bought success is at hand. It costs a rich man nothing to give a waiter a ten-dollar bill at the end of a meal. It costs the waiter real trouble to serve that meal, to -submit to the patron's exactions and too often to his incivil language. The actor or actress devoting to charity gifts made valuable by long years of toil; the doctor giving his valuable time to the poor, without hope of compensation; the clergyman working for the physical and moral welfare of his congregation on a fourth of the salary he could earn outside the church; the honest statesman sacrific ing a large income to serve his fellow countrymen such as these are truly generous. What they do ' for their fellows costs something. And so does the giving of money, when it is accom panied by thought by interest in the object for which it is given, and by a sacrifice of the time of the giver. Going down into one's pocket as a response to a call for charity is one thing. Finding for one's self a public duty that needs doing, and intelligent ly considering the best way to do it, is quite another. The first is Liberality. The second is Generosity. No man is born into the world who does not have many opportunities to be generous, and to be truly geuerous is to be great in character. Merely because one has not money to bestow upon charity, although he may feel sure that he could spend it far more wisely than those who have it, is small reason for concluding that the fates did not intend him to be of generous service to his fellow men: The man who at the expense of his own time helps another man to suc cess, whoat the expense of his own pleasure does another a service, who at the cost of his own vanity helps an old woman across the street or to a seat in a trolley car such a man is far more generous than he who gives away millions of dollars that he does not need. Liberality should never be frowned upon. Whoever gives for a worthy cause, whether he gives generously or from a purely selfish motive, helps the world along. If he thinks that by thus giving he saves his soul, let him think so. He may save many others, if he doesn't save his own. There is much to be done in the world; few who are willing to do it The rivalry in good works among men like 'Rockefeller often brings them closer to those they help often gives them impulses that are really generous. Leave them to do with their money all the good they can. . And in the meantime generously give of what you have. Selfdenial will improve your own character. You will get far more out of every generous deed that costs you something than you will out of mere liberality which gives you temporary self-satisfaction at no expense whatever. From the Chicago Examiner. ' If Jack Johnson, the colored pugi list, is looking for a fight, why not send a challenge- to the gentleman front Custer. ' Alt NOTES EASILY. DETECTED. Ai inset lmsMibls ts Imaeea Handlers ef Meney. Upe Incidentally it is interesting to note that the skill which enables one to de tect a counterfeit conies not 'from a study of counterfeits, but from a thor ough and unconscious familiarity with the genuine. If a man were pointed oat to you and you were told that some day another who much resembled him would try to impose upon you, you would be pretty apt to fix his features in your mind; you would not spend any time looking at other people who looked something like him. would you? And the moment the impostor ap peared you would note that la this, that or the other particular he failed to meet the details of the other man's face and figure. Just so it is in the detection of counterfeits. A skillful teller in a bank, counting money rap idly, will Involuntarily throw out a note which in the slightest degree de parts from the well-known pattern which is so strongly impressed on his mental vision. That involuntary act will nearly always prove to have been justified, for the bill in 19 cases out of 20 will prove to be a counterfeit It la because of this fact that, when a re quest is received from some one to loan him a collection of counterfeits for the Instruction of his cashiers, he is advised to hare the young men study the genuine carefully, and there will be no trouble in detecting the bad notes. National Magazine. ,-- BOY ROSE TO THE SITUATION. Quick Wit andlntelligence'Displayesl by Youngster. His parents are convinced that Clar ence will be a great man; the only doubt is whether it will be as a states man or scientist He is only four years old, and their confidence is based largely on one incident. ' The boy never told of it, and it would have been lost to history if a neighbor had not been a chance witness. Clarence lives in the suburbs, and has a cat and kittens. One day he went into the yard next door with one of the little ones to play. There was a big pile of brushwood here, and he shoved his pet into a hole in this. She crawled so far back that all his ef forts to get her out were vain. Had he been a man he would have pulled the pile of brush apart, but lacking strength for this he resorted to cunning. Running home, he soon returned with the. mother cat. He shoved her into the hole after her off spring, and she soon came out with the little one between her teeth. Clar ence bore them both home in triumph. A Queen's Will. Queen Adelaide, the wife of William IV., was a woman of great piety and exceptional humility, which was showa in the directions for her funeral. '1 die in all humility." she wrote, "knowing well we are all alike before the throne of God, and request, there fore, that my mortal remains be con veyed to the grave without any pomp or ceremony. They are. to be moved to St. George's chapel, Windsor, where I request to have a quiet funeral. "I particularly desire not to be laid out in state, and the funeral to take place by daylight; no procession, the cotfin to be carried by sailors to the chapel. I die in peace, and wish to be carried to the tomb in peace, and free from the vanities and the pomp of the world." Home Notes. Hard Life ef Arctic Sealer. The Arctic sealer endures a hard life. Sealing does not consist only ol hurried scrambling over ice, and fierce breathless battling afterwards. There are many hardships to endure. The most common type of Arctic weather is a dense, lung clogging fog, with a rasp of cold that is enough to freeze' a glowing furnace. This fog .may be diversified with cruel blizzards of pelt ing snow, borne on the wings of the constant gales. Once the snow passes come sleet and rain rain that is as cold as ice. Misery prevails greatly among the crews of Arctic sealers, for the dampness and the cold soon sap the atoutest constitutions. Whistling Sign of Contempt. A Moroccan shows his contempt of anything by whistling. A conflict be tween tribesmen and a battalion of French troops ' was recently precipi tated by the whistling of a locomo tive on a railway being constructed near Casablanca. "The giaours are laughing at us," said a chieftain, when' the construction engine gave a toot to warn the natives at work on the line to look out. The Arabs went wild, mounted their horses, and rode on the whistling enemy. They had to be calmed with the whistling of rifle balls. Bobby's Unfortunate Delay. He waa five years old. On this particular day, mother had dressed him with unusual care and was very much displeased to have him come in with clothing dirty and torn. She had so often told him he must take his own part in the boys' scraps fight should the occasion demand it This he would not do. And bow she intend ed to punish him. Bob became very Indignant and said: "Well, mamma, I just told the boy I wasn't ready to fight, and when I got ready he was settin' on me." Delineator. Sometimes More. "I see that a New York professor re forms bad boys with piano music." "I hope he bears in mind that some pianos need- reforming quite as muct aj had boys do." Why They Dont Clap. . "Have you seen the near perfect woman, Maude Odell?" she asked. "No. "You ought to see her. And If you want to be really amused, you ought to go and watch the men gazing at her wide-eyed, the men with their wives. They are taking in all her per feet points, but they are afraid to ap plaad her on account of their wives That beautiful, near perfect woman leaves the stage nearly every time 'without a handclap on account of the mvsav I "a V "V Bran ig aim's m Columbus - - Nebraska Will be held on the following dates: Monday, April 12, 1909 Monday, April 26, 1909 . I always have from 200 to 250 horses for every sale, besides, a number of good spans of mules and farm mares, anl have sold every horse' that was in condition at every sale this season. Parties selling horses in my sales should be in by 10 o'clock in order to get them listed. Anyone wishing to get their names on my mailing list can have it by sending me your name and address. THOS. BRANIGAN Columbus, Neb. A I IfcNTlUN A MOMENT, SMOKERS More or Less Authentic Facts Are Put Forward in This Story. The users of tobacco, it would ap pear, are subject to undreamed-of dan gars. A French medical journal tells an interesting tale or a man who while smoking a pipe had a serious fail Some time later a curious swelling appeared on his tongue, and this, aftei efforts bad been vainly made to re duce It by common methods, was found to contain a fragment of the pipe that had been driven into it at the time of the fall. In another case an ulcer on the soft palate of a patient persisted for three years before it was investigated and found to contain a piece of a cigar holder. How this lat ter got there we are not informed, but it appears certain that if these persons had not been users of tobacco they would have escaped much discomfort A word to the wise is sufficient! Ex change. A Borneo Parasite. A famous rarity in the vegetable world of Borneo is the raffleaia, the buah pakmah of Malays. The plant ie one of the most degraded of parasites, and so completely does it submerge itself in the tissues of its host that the only part which ever shows itself to the external world is the enormous flower. The diameter of the flower measures about two feet, the odor is repulsive and there is not one feature of beauty to recommend it to man. It appears, however, to hold an impor tsrnt nlane in the oharmacoDoeia of .SBsBbs v aBBBs '.aaaaa aaaaa BB . f t f t. 2U 7 Jr TBk- BB) kW ' ITsrsrsaTiTlllBBrsHBrsBjBLBraBKSH avaV "bTA IQjbIBbibbbbbmssj: bbbj Bsmw . --Av-'2BaBaaaajavjBaBBVr e:sca?ae3SB'saMBlanajBMnBBBr 9tcbe AWgrniel f aianrnaar?Saa7e aiobe-Wernicke "Elastic9 Bookcase a lac aetata Mj 4i sal eat ef Calasalawiter HFIIRY Rlft raiRUME & undertakins mk B Wk flBnlAB the natives, which perhaps imagine that the plant to which nature has. given so uninviting an exterior must possess some hidden virtue in the way of compensation. Various species ol ramesia are knownx in Borneo, and oddly enough their hosts are in variably species of vine (cissus). American Democracy. Privy Councillor Zuntz, on his re turn to Berlin, after a three-months-visit .to the United States, delivered a lecture before the students of the In dustrial high school of that city, in which he had much to say' in praise ol American students and of the college system under which they were trained. "Our students," he said, "can help themselves financially only by teach. ,ing. The American student has th advantage in this respect, because without losing caste or dignity, he can break stone, act as a waiter or porter, or do work at any trade. It is not an infrequent occurrence that a young man acts as a waiter at a gathering of people where he is received as ah equal as soon as "his menial duties have been performed." Safety in Eminence. "Even in case of an accident," says the Philosopher of Folly, "the man who has climbed the highest is bound to fall on top of the heap." His Hard Position. Gyer "There goes a man the weath er seldom agrees with." Myer "So? Who is he?" Gyer "He's a govern ment weather forecaster." always Us , is saasc f ef aajfei WMaJailhtWealyi w . T. St V .- "-;:- ,?sis-f" fsoit. - Js.-,4nJL. Zl. III . I Vl MM. sZE2atJS. iCM2flf&i&, tm- - ,U-. u . UmS -'f1&r 4& --&., -!....