The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, May 26, 1909, Image 4

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Tfce more the SbaUsaiberger crowd
" abuse DaBlmaa, tie more popular he
becomes jjU hone;:
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Abusing. Omaha will not create a
sentiment in that city for Columbus
as the seat of the state government.
The man who favors government
ownership of railways, is not in a posi
tion to object to the government print
ing envelopes for business men.
Up to the present time democratic
candidates for county offices have
notanounced 'themselves. The ma
chine is a trifle behind time in making
np the slate, but it will doubtless be
handed out for 0. K. endorsement in
the near future.
The city council of Lincoln is dis
cussing the question of licensing a dis
pensary. A dispensary is ajoint where
whisky can be purchased, and the pro
fits of the establishment turned over to
the city, thus preventing an increase
in taxation. All those who favor gov
ernment ownership of railroads ought
to be in favor of the scheme.
A singed cat like Senator Bailey, of
Texas, does not have much weight
when he lifts up his voice to denounce
what is termed the "special interests."
It has not been forgotten that the
Texas wind jammer accepted money
from the Standard Oil Company for
services rendered the Rockefeller in
terests while-he was drawing pay for
his services as United States senator.
While other professions have advan
ced, the lawyer continues to remain a
"stand-patter. The decisions of judges
rendered hundreds of years ago are
cited as authority for deciding legal
questions today. A Missouri judge
has granted a St Louis boodler a new
trial because the indictment referred
to "an offense against the dignity of
state." And yet people will prate
about "dignity of the law" when a com
munity becomes exasperated and take
the law into their own hands.
'Senator Daniel, of Virginia, made
a speech in the senate last Thursday
pleading for a protective tariff on
qnenbrancho, a chestnut bark extract
used in tanning: Protection for Vir
ginia products and free entry for, art
ides and products that come in-com
petition with 'the articles and products
of other states, appears to be Senator
Daniel's idea of tariff i-eform. And
in his interpretation of the question he
does not stand aloneV Democratic
senators and members of the house
from several southern states are on re
cord for protection.
r The Women's Kansas Press Club
met in Topeka yesterday, and after
; every women had removed her hat,
gently touched her face with a chamois
ng, and patted her puffs with. her
hand, they got down to business by
reading papers. One women read a par
per on "The Phase rf. Power in Gov
ernment Arbitrary and Delegative"
and this started the trouble. Before
tke discussion ended, man in every
:-capacity "in life, business, social, hus
band, lover, father, brother; was roast
ed, turned over, put back on the coals
and roasted again.
The writer of this finds the meetings
of dub women one of the bright spots
in a newspaper; the women are so ser-
, Mas in doing nothing. Of "all "the
.women present, it never occurred to
one of them yesterday that the men, at
their press dab meetings, never say a
Iwordagaiast thewomen. They toast
the women, and- the womenr-the
'man The maioritr of thifiwrfcaViss
'the mntinr Trstr rdsrisH ssaiiiul
and it is a pretty see skm.,at the
men whan the womor shw-nnoV them
nest an ine-qi
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aoala. However
lab weenan ishmgely Sjoke, their do
ins can't be taken jssanoojlv than
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;the eayings in aaycUme joke book.
Globe.
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HERO WORSHIP.
Oar friead, Edfar Howard of the
Telegram, became aadaly excited after
reading aa item of a doaea lines ia the
Jooraal relating to the .political cow
ardice of W.J. Bryan and his flight to
Canada to escape participating in the
city election campaign at laaceln, and
charged the Journal editor with "rren
aied prejudice,"
It aatten not whether Mr. Bryan
had a legal right to vote at the city
election. The fact that be resides out
side the corporate limits of the Capital
City does not lessen his responsibility
as a man who has always, been regard
ed as a resident of the town that claims
him as its "distinguished citisen," and
whose political loyalty and assistance
was expected from the men who have
always been active in the interest of
the Matchless Orator. Bryan's de
sertion of Malone and his friend, in
the hour of political need stamps him
as an ingrate who fled at the advance
of the "wets" and the "drys" for fear
he would be compelled to take a
stand for or against, prohibition..
The Journal has always aimed to be
fair in discussing men and measurers.
The writer is not a Hero Worshiper or
a Partisan Hater, and consequently
does not regard Mr. Bryan in the
same light that the Telegram editor
does. Mr. Bryan is a human being
not a God. He is not infallible. He
has made mistakes his political car
eer is full of them, and his last blund
er in refusing to stand by his friends
in the city campaign at Lincoln was
an unpardonable one from the view
point of many democrats, but with
them the Hero Worshiper will differ.
The Journal does not assume to be
in the confidence of Mr. Bryan. Evi
dently the Telegram editor is even
to the extent of knowing all about Mr.
Bryan's business affairs as to where
he will lecture on certain dates "mon
ths in advance."
The Hero Worshiper's defense of
Mr. Bryan's Canadian trip, to escape
identifying himself with the city cam
paign, sounds very much ' like the
apologies printed in democratic papers
when the Fearless Leader resigned as
Colonel of the Third Nebraska when
the regiment was ordered to Cuba to
face a foe more dreaded than Spanish
yellow fever.
No, Mr. Bryan's flight to Canada
was not the first "get-away" trip he
made to escape from where duty call
ed him.
A MONUMENT TO HAMILTON.
The movement to erect in the dty
of Washington a monument '-to the
memory of Alexander Hamilton
should meet with the approval of every
patriotic American.
Probably no public man in the his
tory of the country was ever abused
and misrepresented to the extent that
Hamilton was. Even after the bullet
fired by Burr had snuffed out the life
of the great statesman at the age of
forty-seven, the enemies of Hamilton
continued to heap insult upon him.
He was alluded to as the agent of the
British government in America and
the enemy of his own country; he was
denounced as a scheming politician
whose aim was to turn the republic
into a monarchy and place a king on
the throne; he has been alluded to as
an infidel and a biggot Yet the last
twenty-four hours of Hamilton's life
proved the last charge to be false and
baseless. J
John Hamilton, son of Alexander
Hamilton, who. was alive, in 1873, and
who was twelve years old at the time
his father was killed in a duel with
Burr, tells how his father came to his
room at ten o'clock the night before
the duel and kneeling by the side of
his bed and prayed for a long time,
kissed his son good by and then, in the
early hours of the morning, went forth
to face Burr and meet bis death.
Much of the false conception., of
Hamilton's character was inspired by
the writings of Thomas Jefferson who
was extremely jealous of Hamilton,
owing to the latter's popularity with
Washington. Jefferson, in his "Anas,"
not only assailed Hamilt6n,bnt nearly
every other public man of prominence
of his day. Even the great Washing
ton did not escape Jefferson's criticism,
and was accused of mental incapacity
and "a willingness to let others act and
even think for him."
Time has justified the Hamilton
idea -of government, in this country.
Hamilton bdieved in "a strong cen
tral government," which is the cardi
nal prindple of the republican party
today and which has prevailed for
nearly half a century.
In a speech delivered in New York
City in 1788, Hamilton contended that
"the local interests of a state ought ia
every case to give way to the interests
of the Union; for when a sacrifice of
one or the other is necessary, the fbr
saer becomes only an apparent, partial
utereat,a&ahottld,yJeld,on the prin
dple that the small 'good oaght never
to offtoae the giesl oie.,r '
The Hamilton-idea contained in the
above quotation, that centralised pow
er was necessary-to establish a strong'
and permanent ivernment--agovern-ment
that other nations would respect
has prevailed, and the United States
ia one of the world powers today,
thanks to the, Hamilton idea of gov
ernment What would have happened
if the governmental ideas of those
opposed to the ideas of Washington,
Hamilton, Jay and Madison; prevail
ed? One thing certain, the country
now embraced in the American "Union
would have been. djvliled intoat least
two separate and distinct nations the
Confederate States jsnd the United
8tates-and' possibly these sections
would have been subdivided.
When Abraham Lincoln called for
volunteers to suppress the Rebellion,
he was upholding' the Hamilton idea
of government It took four years of
war and the sacrifice of thousands of
lives and the expenditure of $3,000,000
of dollars .to firmly establish the Ham
ilton idea of government in this coun
try and all the world has been the
gainer.
The effort now being made to erect,
a monument to the memory of the man
who has. been alluded to as "the great
est constructive statesman the country
has produced' should meet with the
approval of all classes of society. It
is not a question of politics, although
there are some men who, through
ignorance, or inherited prejudice, will
knock against the proposition.
Senator Randall has discovered that
it does not pay a man to neglect his
own business to serve thev people in an
official capacity. According to the
Lincoln Star, Senator Randall is bro
ken down in health and with his ner
ves shattered by overwork has been
compelled to dispose of his banking
interests at Newman Grove and take a
vacation. Senator Randall was one of
the progressive republicann senators
who violated the unwritten law of his
district by going before the people and
asking for a renomination, and won
out at the primaries and at the polls
on election day. He took a promin
ent part in the work of the last two ses
sions of the legislature and voted for
most of the alleged reform measures
demanded by his constituents. He
was a valuable member of the senate
and the failure of his health is regret
ted by his personal and political
friends.
Is it possible for the republicans of
Platte county to get together and unite
on candidates for county officers?
There is a fighting chance for the party
to win out this year if harmony pre
vails. Many democrats have become
weary of inarching up to the polls and
casting their ballots for the machine
candidates. 'The boss democrats have
been in the saddle so long that they
have absorbed the idea that they own
Platte county, and there is a growing
sentiment among the voters that a poli
tical change would benefit the taxpay
ers. Let the books be opened at least
once in a quarter of a century.
The charge is made that some of the
social club rooms in Lincoln are furni
shing liquor to outside parties. Yet
the club rooms are allowed to run
"wide open." One of the usual results
of prohibition.
Use for Scotch Water Power.
The growing industry of extracting
aluminum has stimulated the search
for- water-power in the. British Isles,
because the extraction of aluminum
is so expensive that only low-cost
power can be economically employed.
In this respect Scotland, with its
mountains, is coming to the front The
water power at the falls of Foyers, in
Scotland, Jias hitherto been the largest
In Great Britain; but now a still larger
plant, at Kinlochleven, utilizing the
rainfall over a tract of 55 square
miles, Is about to be put into opera
tion for the production of aluminum.
Its nine hydraulic turbines, each of
3,200 brake horsepower, are the largest
water wheels in the British Isles.
To Mark a Key.
When there are two or more keys
oa -the key ring of approximate size
aad appearance, draw a file over the
stem of the one- most in use. This
makes a nick 'which - easily distin
guishes it from the others. The little
dent- is better than a string or other
mark, the key being easily recognized
by it (in slipping It through one's fin
gers) in the dark.
Pieces Contained in Violin. ..
A violin contains .69 pieces, made np
In the following! way: Back, 'two
pieces; belly, two; coins and blocks,
six; sides, five; side linings, 12. bar
one; purflings, 24; neck, one; finger
board, one; nut, one; bridge, one; tail
board, one; button for tailboard, one;
string for tailboard, one; guard for
string, one; sound post, one; strings,
four; pegs, four.
Chances ef the Sailer Man.
The sea as a calling is certainly
not. what it once was by a long way.
The class of men who did well 40
years. ago would make, a poor show
now. It waa common enough in days
gone by for .owners to look for a suit
able man, and then build ashlp for
him, but it's the other way now.
British Nautical Magazine.
Chinese Walled Cities.
China has more than 1,600 wallet
dtlea.
Country ef Hunchbacks.
Spain has more hunchbacks than
any other country. : '"
TURKISH WOMEN TO BENEFIT
TRIM THE NEW GOVERNMENT
Women in Turkey insist upon free
dom as wdl as men, and under the
changed conditions of government due
to the triumph of the young Turk par
ty and the deposition of Sultan and Ab-'
dal Hamidll, will rapidly rise to the
status of their sisters in other European
lands, according to Reouf Ahnad Bey,
acting consul general of Turkey in
New York City and secretary of the
Turkish leglatioa in Washington.. As
quoted by the New: York Sunday
World, he said about the recent chan
gesjsnd their consequences: " ..
?As the years go by the Moslem
women will" not feel bound by the con
ventions that bind them now as part
of the old order. They will adopt the
ideas of conventional association of
men and women; receptions and social
gatherings, that are, with you, every
day affairs, lending useful recreation
to women and enlarging their know
ledge, will soon be as common in Tur
key as they are in western countries.
. '"The men of Turkey are at heart as
liberal in this regard as 7 other men.
Some of the men, like the women them
'selves, not knowing or cariug about
thewaysof the outer world that has
so long been free; may be satisfied with
the social life as it is, but they change
and follow the example of the leaders
of thought and action after a while.
The.educated men of Turkey know
what advantages there are in the daily
association of men and women accord
ing to the customs of modern nations,
and they will eventually establish so
ciety in its usual aspects.
"It may be a quarter of a century
before Turkey achieves prominence as
an industrial nation, but that is only
a day in her long history. I expect
that a start will be made almost im
mediately. There will be unusual ac
tivity in agricultural delevopment at
once, we nave been raising agricul
tural products barely sufficient to sup
ply our own needs, owing to the con
fiscating taxes upon men's energies,
but with these removed there will be
an impulse to work and achievement,
and men will rise from the masses of
the people, from poverty and obscurity
to riches and fame, as they do else
where when at liberty to work out
their destiny.
"In the next few yeare you will
witness such activity in the fields that
Turkey will be supplying foreign
markets with bread stuff, and in five
years from now, I venture to predict,
she will be among the first of the cotton-growing
countries. We can raise
better cotton than Egypt, which now
is supposed to raise the best, and we
can raise infinitely more of it. The
possibilities of cotton growing in Mes
opotamia are boundless, and the new
government will encourage it in every
way. A large company has been for
med in Constantinople to colonize
Mesopotamia for the purpose and the
government has issued $45,000,000 of
bonds and employed an English engi
neer to establish order.
"Turkish coflee will find a more
general morket now and it will be
raised in greater abundance. So will
Turkish tobacco. This, with our cot
ton and cereals, will be the immediate
foundation of a Turkish commerce.
Heretofore the revenues of the empire
I have gone to support the excesses of
the palace and an army of spies and
sordid officials. From now on they
will be applied to the legitimate uses
of the government and to encouraging
the people to increased effort to better
their material condition.
"The new government has come to
stay. It comes with a clear and de
finite purpose and fixed principles
worked out by the able men who suc
ceeded in winning the army and the
people to. the new thought. Those
who organized a movement for control
of an empire by. the people, and an
RIGHT TIME TO BUTTON UP.
j,
Passage in Church Service Just Fitted
Her Need of Repair to
Toilet.
Mrs. Martin and Mrs. Saunders
were discussing the merits and diffi
culties of waists that button-up -the
back, and Mrs. Martin said' definitely
that she did not like them; they are
treacherous; that one can never be
sure of them. Her friend admitted
that they are uncertain, but declared
that they are so much prettier than
the stiff, straight, buttoned-up-the-front
kind, that she rather preferred them.
"Except in church," she added, with a
little shriek of amusement
'I always take off my coat St
Thomas' is so dreadfully hot you
know, and then I sit way, way up by
the ehancel. If I didn't I wouldn't
mind, for I can stare down anything
wrong with the front of my waist a
rip,, a tear, a cascade of ink, even. I
just put my whole personality in my
glance, and people never notice. But
one's back Is so defenseless. And you
can't turn round in church."
Mrs. Martin murmured an assent.
"And the other Sunday," went on
Mrs. Saunders, "I Just felt something
army supported by the people and
proving itself so faithful to their
came that opposition was swept away,
give a guarantee of the stable govern
ment TJbe history of the revolution,
now happily, ended .with comparative
ly little bloodshed, demonstrates the
capacity of the people for constitution
government ' r
"Turkey has been unlike any other
country. It is now going 'to be like
the .best countries. You must not
think that the. Turk is different from
the -Englishman,, German, French
man or 'American. -He has; the-same
power of- reason. jTTe has the same
sources of information and similar dis
cernment and the logic of a situation
appeals to him" in the same way
What has happened in European de
velopment will be repeated in Turkey
when political conditions permit."
"TheTurkish people are progressive.
Government oppression has not dim
inished this spirit in them nor quieted
their desire for liberty. That the
masses have made no advancement is
not because they are less capable of
helping themselves thau the masses of
the people anywhere else, but because
they have had neither incentive nor
opportunity. The government gave
them nothing and took everything
from them. All they ciuld make at
their best was taken from them in tax
es to enrich the personal retainers of
the sultan. Until now Turkey has
been a government for the betterment
of palace officials only.
Suppose the masses of the people in
any European country had been sub
ject to these conditions, do you think
they would have accomplished more
in a material viay'i The Turks have
had only one general means of subsis
tence, and that is agriculture. With
this they have donejhe best the
could, which could not be much with
the' discouragements' besetting them.
The Turkish masses are intelligent,
though not educated. Education was
not provided for them. It will be.
It is the first article on the new govern
ment's programme.
"From top to bottom of the social
scale all the people of Turkey, with
the few exceptions tbat it is not neces
sary for me tovnote,, are in favor, of
popular government, and understand
ing the principles of it as they do, are
ready for it The franchise Will be as
free in Turkey as it is in the United
States, and you will see that an intelli
gent use will be made of it.
"The world will see why the social
problem was not so important in Tur
key as the political one. When the
last one is worked out the other is
solved. When men are free to labor
and get the reward of their work and
the way is opened for them there is no
social problem to worry anyone. I
read in newspapers tbat the lowly
Turk, like the Turkish soldier, is a
religious fanatic, and that is taken to
mean that his comprehension is limit
ed, and it seems to be a common belief
that either soldier or peasant may
easily be led by wily men through an
appeal to his religious zeal, and that
almost any issue may be transposed for
them into the color of religion. I
assure you this is a misconception of
character and fact.
"It is like an impression here and
abroad that the Turkish people con
sider the sultan a sacred being, some
thing more than human. You possi
bly have heard it said that the Turkish
soldier fights desperately in the con
viction that he is fighting for a deity
in doing battle in the name of the
sultan. The Turk has no such illu
sions. No lack of proof of this is to
be found in the fact that seven sultans
before Abdul Hamid have been de
posed." Chicago Record Herald.
was wrong, meminuie i too vu. ..
coat the congregation's eye seemed
glued on me, and then I was certain
that those three buttons that I never
can manage had again betrayed me."
"What did you do?" asked Mrs.
Martin, with interest, for Mrs. Saun
ders was known to be resourceful.
"Oh," airily, "I just waited for an
appropriate place in the service, and
then"
"Why, what in the world do you
mean? What appropriate place?" in
terrupted Mrs. Martin, curiously.
"O goosey? Why, when we knelt
down and said, 'We have left undone
the things that we ought to have
done,' of course. Could anything be
plainer? I just buttoned them up.
then and there." Youth's Companion
Doing a Man's Work.
Mandy (scornfully) Mose Johnson,
seeln' you ain't good fer nuffln' else,
s'posint yo' go 'long down an' lee' de
new boa'd o' aldermen! Brooklyn
Life.
We All Know. Them.
"I hates," said Uncle Eben, "to see
de kind of a man dat thinks he can't
git on In de world wifout compellin'
somebody else to git off."
To fin the Greatest Value
For Ywr Momy
you will miss it, if you
don't visit this store and
look at the exceptional
values we offer in '
M'c Mini llaanl
Sack Swfs at $15 $30
They are the same
sort of suits your tailor
would charge $25 to $50
for. :We stand ready
to prove this, if you so
wish, but you will be
able to see it for your
self the moment you ex
amine these splendidly
hand-fashioned suits,
ftot a new style nor fab
ric is missing- If you
want the best there is
in ready-for-service gar
ments, then don't fail to
come here.
GREISEN BROS.
BIG GAP IN HIS KXiOaS.
Groom Serves Two Prison T.jv.is and
Then, Resumee His Interrupted
Bridal Trip.
A man whose face showed his spirit
had been broken stopped Capt. Tom
Halls of the United States secret serv
ice in the corridor of the federal
building one day last week.
l. "Don't j-ou know me, Cap?" in
quired the man.
Capt. Halls -looked at him a few
seconds and recognized a man he had
arrested and' caused to be sent to
prison in 1902. He invited him to
his office.
"I just got out day before yester
day," said the man. "I served my
time at Leavenworth, but as I was
leaving there I was arrested again and
taken to Joliet to serve out a term
there. Thanks, Cap, that's the first
orange I've had in almost seven years.
"My wife; you remember her, don't
you? She's in Louisville, waiting for
me. You know, Cap, you arrested me
while we were on our wedding trip.
I was only with her a couple of days
after our wedding and I got caught.
Well, she's waiting for me down at
'Louisville." x
The man shifted uneasily in his
chair, and the captain waited for him.
to continue.
"You see, Cap, it's just this way,"
he said. "I got here on the bumpers
last night. Haven't had a bite to eat
to-day. That's why I'm so nervous, 1
guess."
"What's the fare to Louisville?"
asked Capt Halls.
The man told him and the captain
produced a two-dollar bill and a 50
ceut piece.
"Here," said the officer, "go buy you
a ticket to Louisville and get you a
meal with the change." Indianapolis
Star.
The Divine Sara.
Many years have passed and many
stories have been told since a critic
of Le Figaro wrote: "Last evening an
empty carriage drew up at the en
trance of the Francaise. The door
opened and Mme. Bernhardt got out."
But the latest anecdote concerning
her hails back before even that time.
One day, when Montigny. at the
Gymnase. gave her a part which she
did not like, she went away in disgust
and made up her mind to open a con
fectioner's shop. v She had taken to
this idea so seriously that she actual
ly selected a shop which was to let on
the Boulevard des Italiens, and whicb
seemed admirably placed. She in
spected the front of the shop and was
quite pleased.
If she had not gone further the
business might have been concluded
But before leaving she wished to see
the room at the back of the shop and
the basement. This was enough for
her. To spend her life in such dark
holes was impossible. No;' she would
not, and back she went, rather regret
fully at first, to the stage and its bril
liant footlights.
Old Books
Rebound
In fact, for anything in the book
binding line bring your work to
Journal Office
Phone 160
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;.
NOTHING MEA ABOUT HIM.
Willing to Save Others from Rattle
snake Even tf He Had
Leet-His Mule.
At the railway station of a certain
Alabama town a number of passen
gers, who were waiting for a train
Ions; overdue, had distributed them
selves on the platform, their feet hang
ing thereover.
Presently there came along a na
tive, a sour-faced individual, with a
rope in his hand: It subsequently
transpired tbat he, was looking for a
stray mule. He came out of the bush
opposite the station and stood for
some time looking up and down the
tracks. Then he directed his gaze to
the group of waiting passengers on
the platform, with their feet hanging
over. He regarded them listlessly for
quite awhile, then suddenly he called
out:
"Hey, there! You all!"
"What is it?" demanded some one.
startled by the sudden cry.
"H'Ist your feet!"
This injunction to "h'ist" was com
plied with by all with alacrity, for. as
they looked down over the platform,
they perceived a big rattlesnake just
colling for a strike. A handy grind
stone was dropped on the reptile, dis
patching it, of course; and one of the
men thanked the native for his time
ly warning.
The latter smiled grimly. "I don't
s'pose I deserve much thanks." said
he, 'but some men who have lost a
mule an' been huntin' for it for three
days would have been kinder onery
'bout that snake. However, gents,
there ain't nutbin' mean 'bout me!"
Feminine Intuition.
A young girl has nearly always
more sense of duty and more mental
balance than has a boy of her own
age. Her training and the disposition
of her sex both combine to steadiness
and a ripe view of marriage obliga
tions in the vast majority of cases.
Hearth and Home.
NOTICE OF INCORPORATION.
Notice ia hereby Kivea that the UBderajgaal
have formed a corporation under the laws or the
State or Nebraska.
The name of the corporation i MK nigh tit of
Colamhan Home Association." The pnaclpal
place of bauBtwa i" Colombo. Nebraska,
The Drinciml bosineaa of the corooratioa
shall tie the maintenance of lodgw and club
rooms and public hall and the acquiring of such
property and the erection and maintenance of
snch buildings an may be necessary therefor.
The capital stock of the Corporation i $25,000,
In shares of 5.00 each. Of these foar hundred
(400) are to be preferred and six hundred (00)
shares common stock. All stock to be Issued
when paid for. All subscriptions to tock to be
payable 'when the aggregate subscription
amount to two-fifths of the authorized capital.
The corporation shall commence business on
the first day of April. 1909, and continue for a
period of twenty-fire years.
The highest amount of indebtedness to which
the corporation may at any time subject itself
shall not exceed two-thirds of the paid np capi
tal tock.
The affairs of the corporation shall be man
aged by a board or six directors. TbeoSkersof
the corporation hsll baa President. Secretary.
Treasurer and Manager who will be selected by
the directors.
Htkphbn J.Ryan.
Alois Frischholz,
Mask MoMabon,
Trams Wade.
MakkBckkk.
Dated April 28. 1909. Fbask Gxaauaz.
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