The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, July 14, 1909, Image 4

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Columbus Journal
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KDNESDAY. JULY M. IMS.
fcTBOTHKK & STOCKWELL. ftoprietora.
BENKW AUt-Taa data oafwatta foar
f oar aapar. or wrapper aaowa to what tin roar
aabaoriatloa U paid. Thaa JaaM aaowa that
pajawat baa baaa caoaind ap to Jan. 1,1MB.
raMltoFab.l.lWaadaooa. Whaa payaaBt
la aaaaXtka data, which aaaaara as a naaipt,
and lia ahaad aeaorilaiir.
OidOONTIMUaliCaV-lfaapoaalBla aabaetfb
a will eoatiaaato nealfa tUa joaraal aatU taa
paBUaaanan aetUai a? lattar to dtatnattaaa,
vkaaall anaataaas avast ha paid. It yoa do aot
aiah taa Joaraal eoatiaaai toraaothar jaar af-
tertha tiaw paid for haa axplrai. j
prattoaaly aotttr aa to diaeoaMaaa it
CHAMOK III ADDKKBB-Wbaa ortarias
aaaaaja la tha addf aaa.aahaarihara ahoalrt ba
to iva thair eld aa wall aa than-
Moat of the loud talking in favor of
female suffrage comes from men.
Probably not one-third of the women
of the country desire to vote.
Governor Shallenberger has almost
completely recovered from the shock
sustained when he heard of the deci
sion as to the legality of the bank
guaranty law. But some of the other
advocates of the Oklahoma idea arc
still wailing in the sob squad.
The action of the democrats in con
gress calls to mind the almost forgot
ten fact that in 1844 the "great tariff
reform party" violated its promise and
voted, as dictated to by New England,
New York and Pennsylvania, against
downward revision. Ou May 6, 1884,
under the leadership of Raudall, forty
two democracts declared, by their vote
that they were in favor of the protect
ive tariff as advocated by the New
England representatives and senators.
The census will be taken next year
and guesses as to the number of
people in the United States are now in
order. The returns will no doubt
show that the population to be about
ninety millions. The first census was
taken in 1800. The number of inhab
itants at that time was 5,308,483 and
the center was 23 miles east of Balti
more. During the next one hundred
years the population increased to 7C,
303,387, and its center had moved to a
point six miles southeast of Columbus
Indiana.
If there ever was any serious per
sonal difference between Senators Bur
kett and Brown, the hatchet has been
interred, and they will act in harmony
in dispensing the political patronage
at their disposal. In acting in har
mony the senators have "shut out" the
republican members of the house from
Nebraska in the selection of census
enumerators. The senators have
agreed on the appointment of Jack
Hayes of Central City as superintend
ent of enumerators for the Third con
gressional district.
The members of the conference com
mittee that will consider the tariff bill,
a Washington dispatch says, have
"already been decided upon," and
from the make up of the committee the
republicans of the middle west will
have only one representative. Unless
President Taft calls Aldrich and
Payne to. the White House and gives
them to understand that he will veto
any tariff measure hostile to the re
publican platform, the interest of the
consumer will not be considered by
the conference committee.
THE NINETY AND NINE.
The other day we called attention
to the fact that, while Senator Aid
rich cannot be excused for his ruthless
disregard of public sentiment on tariff
legislation, yet he is not the only mem
ber of the United States senate who
should be held responsible for the in
iquitous bill which he is trying to
shoulder onto the country. If the bill
passes congress it must receive the af
firmative votes of a majority of the
reaabers of both houses and the sen
ators and representatives who vote for
it will be at least particeps criminis to
the disgraceful attempt to permit the
great'saaaufacturing interests to ex
tort excessive profits from the masses
of the people.
Carrying our declarations in regard
to this condition one step further we are
able today to present for public consi
deration the names of those senators
who hare helped Senator Aldrich carry
oat his outrageous program.
We have selected at random from
the Congressional Record the roll calk
oa eight tariff bill schedules, for the
purpose of showing who stands with
Aldrich and who against him. The
articles in question were sugar, lead,
eartiieaware, iroa ore, pig iron, cotton,
cattery and lumber. When these
schedules were considered mostly at
widely. ' varying dates there were 1
twenty-three Republicans in the senate I
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who voted, with Aldrich on evevy roll
call. Besides these, there were fifteen
Republicans who voted with Aldrich
most of the time, failing to do so only
when absent or paired, and never, at
any time, voting against him.
It is well that the names of these
men be prominently displayed, that the
public may know them and resaeaiber
in the days to come that they are the
people who are responsible for the
tariff bill. The first group, compris
ing the twenty-three who were never
absent and never wavered, are as
follows:
Brandegee of Connecticut.
Brigga of New Jersey.
Bornham of New Hampshire.
Burrows of Miobigao.
Carter of Montana.
Dixon of Montana.
Flint of California.
Gallinger of New Hampshire.
Guggenheim of Colorado.
Hale of Maine.
Heyburn of Idaho'.
"Keen of New Jersey.
Lodge of Massachusetts.
Oliver of Pennsylvania.
Page of Vermont,
Penrose of California.
Perkins of California.
Piles of Washington.
Root of New York.
Scott of West Virginia.
Smoot of Utah.
Stephenson of Wisconsin.
Wettnore of Rhode Island.
The other group consists of senators
who are just as guilty as the twenty
three. They are assembled in a separ
ate list simply because circumstances
were such that they happened at dif
ferent times, to be absent or paired
when the roll was called. Had they
been present they would have voted
with Aldrich, and it is noteworthy
that when present and voting they
never cast their ballots in opposition
to the party boss. These fifteen are
the following:
Bradley of Kentucky.
Bulkeley of Connecticut.
Clark of Wyoming.
Crane of Massachusetts.
Cullom of Illinois.
Depew of New York.
Dick of Ohio.
Dillingham of Vermont.
Elkins of West Virginia.
Frye of Maine.
Nixon of Nevada.
Smith of Miohigan.
Sutherland of Utah.
Warner of Missouri.
Warren of Wyoming.
These two groups have given Aid
drich absolute control of thirty-eight
votes in the senate, which, with his
own, have made thirty-nine votes
which he could count upon positively
for every emergency. Of course, this
is not a majority, for there are ninety
two members of the senate, making
forty-seven votes necessary for a con
stitutional majority, required to pass
bills. On each roll call, however,
Senator Aldrich has been able to line
up enough Democrats and wavering in
surgents to swell his strength to the
necessary limit.
The weakness and cowardice of the
thirty eight who have followed Aid
rich blindly and oi the eight or ten in
surgents and Democrats who have
come when he called have made it pos
sible for the Rhode Island statesman
to put through the senate just the kind
of a tariff bill he wanted, without re
gard to what the people wanted. The
degree of their servility is second only
to that of his brazen autocracy. Lin
coln Star.
THE FOURTH, THEN AND NOW.
The muster roll following the "Bat
tle of the Fourth" will not be com
pleted for some days. It sometimes
requires a period of a week or so for
the te'tanus germ to fulfill its mission.
Unlike the dumbum bullets, the paper
wad and the dynamite cape, which our
Vested Interests sell by the millions
of dollars' worth, produce a lingering
death
In contrast with the casualty lists of
modern Fourth of July celebrations is
this extract from the "Western Expos
itor" of Independence, Mo., published
June 28, 1845:
"Fourth of July. At a meeting of
the citizens of Independence, held on
the evening of the 27th inst, John H.
Harper, Esq., was selected to deliver
an address on the approaching anni
versary. The following gentlemen
were appointed a committee of arrange
ments, viz : Messrs. Maxey, Slaugh
ter, Webb, Ralston,- McGill, Rees and
Matthews, who are requested to meet
this evening at the office of Messrs.
Woodson & Smith."
There is not the suggestion of a per
turbed and afflicted community in this
preparation for the Fourth. There is
not the hint of anything more deadly
than pink lemonade and a long speech.
There is the implied promise that cit
izens can hear the speech or stay away,
as they please and not have their
ears bombarded with oratory in their
homes, or in hospitals, or in the streets.
The public might hesitate to freely
reinstate the town orator in his earlier
Independence Day pre-eminence, but
he was not murderous or all pervasive,
and people could get away from him
Kansas City -Times.
DEMOCRATIC LEADERS SEE
AHEAD.
There Ss a lesson to be learned in the
Kearney dollar dinner. It is that the
liquor question is to be the paramount
issue in the next election of executive
and legislative .state officers. That
election is more .'than a year away, but
the forces are being recruited. It
would be heard in the coming election
of judges and regents if the law to
make them nonpartisan had not been
enacted.'
The dollar dinner demonstrates that
both parties are maneuvering for
position even thus early. The three
principal speakers at that feast ad
dressed themselves to the main ques
tion. Each had his own particular
remedy fix the threatened malady of
county option or prohibition.
Mayor Dahlman was militantly
eager to give battle in the open to the
cold water hosts, with home rule and
personal liberty for the party motto.
Governor Shallenberger was for main
taining the status quo and upholding
the daylight enactment of a .demo
cratic legislature. Ex-Mayor Brown,
of Lincoln, was for strict regulation as
the surest means of warding off county
option. He directed attention to the
fact that even the brewers and dis
tillers have established a bureau for
the dissemination of the gospel of the
model saloon, which seemed to be
notice to anyone contemplating a fight
for anything like wide-openness that
he would find himself deserted by his
former heaviest backers and financiers.
The utterances of the three chief
speakers at that dinner, which must
be looked upon somewhat in the light
of a council of war, were outspokenly
a warning to their party to get in out
of the wet there first. It was a com
mand to capture the breastworks be
fore the enemy came on with its artil
lery. It was a signal to get away from
the wrath to come. Only Mayor Jim
seemed uudaunted The other two
wobbled and seemed fearful that any
thing but concession meant disaster
and drought.
They preferred diplomacy to open
battle, aud an earnest desire to get
away from the main point at issue.
An unqualified fight for thesupreraacy
of the saloon foreboded evil for them,
but promised no terror for the Omaha
Lmaypr.
The lesson of it is that the daylight
saloon bill has come to stay until a
more stringent restriction shall suc
ceed it. The republican party cannot
be expected reasonably to oppose it
unless it be for something that prom
ises less of freedom to the saloon, some
such promise as is coLtained in a'
county option platform. Mayor Dahl
man might be expected to wipe out
the daylight bill if given a legislature
iu sympathy, but no such legislature
could be elected while the current
sentiment prevails, and the chance
does not seem favorable for the elec
tion of any man who holds the liberal
views of the Omaha mayor. Not even
for the nomination by his party. There
is going to be 'a lot of hedging upon
the party of candidates for governor
and legislators, and Mayor Jim is un
willing, if indeed able, to hedge. He
is too outspoken and believes too
much. He is where he could not avail
himself of the aid of clever subterfuge
and could not make a single battery.
Omaha Examiner.
, '
A BOUNTY ON GOOD CITIZEN
SHIP. Let us put a bounty on good citizen
ship by giving it great influence; by
rendering it high houor, and by hold
ing it in incomparable esteem. Nich
olas Murray Butler.
The duty of citizenship is a trite
theme, but it is a great theme the
greatest of all themes relating to pop
ular government. For the degree of
success attained under representative
rule is merely a reflection of the degree
in which that duty is performed.
"If the decent men and women of
America," said the president of Colum
bus University in another part of his
Denver address yesterday, "would be
gin tomorrow to do the things which
their private beliefs and their public
professions require, the sum total of
the world's comfort and happiness
would be marvelously increased be
fore sunset"
The mass of the people are growing
more independent, more courageous,
more intelligent in the performance of
the duty of citizenship. The gain as
reflected in the popular representation
of the people is not yet commensurate
with the gain in the mass, but it, is
nevertheless notable. An elaborate,
broadly speaking, deserves no better
representation than it chooses. The
exception lies, of course, in such in
stances as show rank betrayal of
pledges. But it is within the power of
the people to safeguard themselves
against even such' contingencies. If
they insist' that they shall have the
power of recall as well as the power of
election, -they will have free will in
choosing and also freewill in removing
public officials.
But even if the world is slow to put
THE HOSPITAL PATIENT
FrotwV'Skefcfcca by Box," by Gkarlw Dickea.
Li our rambles through the streets
of London after evening haa set in, we
often pause beneath the windows of
some- public hospital vnch picture to
ourselves 'the gloomy and mournful
scenes that are passing within. 'The
sudden moving of a taper as its feeble
ray shoots from window towindowun-
til its light gradually disappears, as if
it were carried 'father back into the
room to the beside of some suffering
patient, is enough to awaken a whole
crowd of reflections; the mere glimmer
ing of the slow burning lamps, which
when all other habitations are wrap
ped in darkness and slumber, denote
the chamber where so many forma are
writhing with pain or wasting with dis
ease, is sufficient to check the most
boisterous merriment.
About a twelvemonth ago, as we
were strolling through Covent Garden
(we had been thinking about these
things over night) were attracted by
the very prepossessing appearance of a
pickpocket, who, having declined to
take the trouble of walking to the po
lice office, on the ground that he hadn't
the slightest wish to go there at all, was
being conveyed thither in a wheel
barrow to the huge delight of the
crowd.
Somehow we never can resist joining
a crowd, so we turned back with the
mob, and entered the office, in company
with our friend the pickpocket, a cou
ple of policemen, and as many dirty
faced spectators as could squeeze their
way in.
There was a powerful, ill-looking
fellow at the bar, who was undergoing
an examination, on the very common
charge of having on the previous night,
ill-treated a women, with whom he
lived in some court hard by. Several
witnesses bore testimony to acts of the
grossest brutality; and a certificate
was read from the house surgeon of a
neighboring hospital, describing the
nature of the injuries the woman had
received, and intimating that Tier re
covery was extremely doubtful.
Some question seemed to have been
raised about the identity of the pris
oner; for when it was agreed that the
two magistrates should visit the hos
pital at 8 o'clock that evening, to take
her deposition, it was settled that the
man should be taken there also. He
turned pale at this, aud we saw him
clench the bar very hard when the or
der was given. He was removed
directly afterward, aud he spoke not
a word.
We felt an irrepressible curiosity to
witness this interview, although it is
hard to tell why, at this instant, for
it must be a painful one. It was no
, a.
very dimcuit matter lor us 10 gain
permisson and we obtained it.
The prisoner, and the officer who
had him in custody, were already at
the hospital when we reached it, and
waiting the arrival of the magistrates
in a small room below stairs. The
man was handcuffed, and his hat was
pulled forward over his eyes. It was
easy to see, though, by the whitness
of his countenance, and the constant
twitching of the muscles of his face,
that he dreaded what was to come.
After a short interval, the magistrate
and clerk were bowed in by the house
surgeon and a couple1 of young men
who smelled very strong of tobacco
they were introduced as "dressers"
nil aftop nnp mapiatrata had comolain-
B j
a bounty on good citizenship, the citi
zen himself should do himself the
honor of making himself worthy of
such a bounty. Intelligent self-esteem
is a thing to be cherished. When the
doctrine of dutiful citizenship becomes
triumphant, party adherence will not
be stronger than personal preferences;
public representatives will be judged
for what they do or fail to do; their
motives will not lie questioned so long
as they do what is obviously right, and
their errors or crimes will not be con
doned when they do what is obviously
wrong; the demagogue will have no
occupation aad the blackmailer will be
in prison; the "bad citizen" will be the
man of conscious evil only, and will
not have for company the "good man"
who deceives himself or lets himself be
deceived by partisan or factional
clamor or by the iastiacts of aggrand
isement Kansas City Star.
Judges! by Their Trousers.
A study of tfce trouser legs, as seen
In the photographs of our most noted
men, bring; the smile of contempt from
even the most disinterested; and one
wonders if anything; could be uglier
than the concertina folds of the clum
sy elephantine outlines that are there
to be seen. Breeches, knickers and
kilts are all far more artistic and
healthy. London Tailor and Cutter.
Means Much for Egypt.
OU has been struck 150 miles soute
of Suez, on the Red sea coast, tht
gusher giving increasing quantities
dally, and indicating large reserves
The possibility or a cheap supply o
fuel is' a discovery of the greatest is
portance to Egypt.
ed bitterly of the cold, and the other
of the absence of any news in the eve
ning paper, it was announced that the
patient was prepared; and we were
conducted to the "casualty ward" in
which she was lying.
The object of the visit was lying in the
upper end of the room. She was a fine
young women of about two or three
and twenty. Her long black hair
which had been hastily cut from near
the wounds on her head, streamed
over the pillow in jagged and matted
locks. Her face bore deep marks of
the ill-usage she' had received; her
hands were pressed upon her side, as if
her chief pain were there, her breath
ing waa short and heavy, and it was
plain to see that she was dying fast.
She murmured a few words in reply
to the magistrate's inquiry whether
ahe was in great pain; aud, having
been raised on the pillow by the
nurse, looked vacantly upon the
strange countenances that surrounded
her bed. The magistrate nodded to
the officer to bring the man forward.
He did so, and stationed him at the
bedside. The girl looked on with a
wild and troubled expression of face,
but her sight was dim, and she did
not known him.
"Take off his hat," said the magis
trate. The officer did as he was de
sired, and the man's features were dis
closed. The girl started up, with an energy
quite preternatural; the fire gleamed
in her heavy eyes, and the blood rush
ed to the pale and shrunken cheeks.
It was a convulsive effort. She fell
back upon her pillow, and covering
her scarred aud bruised face with her
hands, burst into tears. The man cast
an anxious look toward her, but other
wise appeared wholly unmoved. Af
ter a brief pause the uature of their
errand was explained, aud the oath
tendered.
"Ob, no, gentlemen," said the girl,
raising herself once more, aud folding
her hands together, "no gentlemen,
for God's sake! I did it myself it
was nobody's fault it was an acci
dent. He didn't hurt me, he wouldn't
for all the world. Jack, dear Jack.
you know you wouldn't!"
Her sight was fast failing her, and
her hand gropped over the bedclothes
in search of his. Brute as the inau
was, be was not prepared for this.
He turned his face from the bed, and
sobbed. The girl's color changed,
and her breathing grew more difficult.
She was evidently dying.
"We respect the feelings which pro
mpt you to this," said the gentleman
who had spoken first, "but let me waru
you not to persist in what you known
to be untrue, until it is too late. It
cannot save him."
"Jack," murmured the girl, laying
her hand upon his arm, "they shall
not persuade me to swear your life
away. He never hurt me." She
grasped his arm tightly, and added,
in a broken whisper, "I hope God
Almighty will forgive me all the
wrong I have done, and the life I have
led. God bless you, Jack. Some
kind gentleman take my love to my
poor old father. Five years ago he
said he wished I had died a child.
Oh, I wish I had! I wish I had!"
The nurse bent over the girl for a
few seconds, and then drew the sheet
over her face. It covered a corpse.
MOVED TO RIGHTEOUS WRATH
Uncle Silas' Stern Rebuke of Youth
Who Had Stolen Miss Ellen's
Fat Pullet.
Uncle Silas had the culprit by the
scruff of the neck.
"Whaffur you steal Miss Ellen's fat
pullet?" he asked between shakes.
Uncle Silas may have had some
weaknesses, but they did not extend
to Miss Ellen's chicken yard. That
was consecrated ground to Uncle Silas.
"I didn't steal no chickens. Uncle
Silas," whimpered young Ephraim.
"Don't you lie to me, you black ras
cal," shaking him vigorously. "I done
smell urn cookln' fer supper as I come
pas' las' night"
"Dat wuxn' chicken. Uncle Silas.
Hit wux "
"Shet up, you chile' ob sin," the old
man Interrupted, with another shake;
"hit am de Lawd's pity ef I don' know
de Muvium ob chicken when bit comes
floatin' out on de evenln al' t'rough
de-kltcaeB winder -an Ungulates along
my nostrums."
He gave Ephraim another shake
and let him go. As the boy ran away
Uncle Silas chuckled to himself: "1'se
gotter he mighty pertickler wld dese
yer disresponslble niggers dat don'
lavite de right kin' of folks when dey
has chicken fer supper. 'Deed I has!"
Bearing Our Own Burdens.
la the moment of stress into which
a new grief or a great anxiety plunges
all human folk now and then, it is
quite natural to blab out our woeful
story to the 'nearest listener. In nine
cases oat of ten the recipients of our
coaldeaces do not care. They listen
with curiosity instead of sympathy and
consider one a bally fool for telling all
one knows. Heartaches wear out, just
as physical wounds heal. We have
but to wait. In patience and silence.
This la the stronger and better way.
Foster Bros. Piano Co.
Thurston Hotel Block
We handle such well known makes as the
Player Pianos
1 Cecilian .
Auto Player
Bush & Gerts
Baldwin
Howard
Ellington
A. B. Chase
and twenty other well known makes.
Call in and look over our complete line before buying
Foster Bros. Piano Co.
Thurston Hotel Block Columbus, Neb.
THE
CHAUTAUQUA
OUTLOOK
Everyone seems to be interested
In the coming of the Chautauqua.
As the dates draw nearer, the dav
mand grows for season tickets.
Things to Remember
More good fun and entertainment;
greater variety In musical attractions;
and more prominent men on this
program than ever before assembled
on one Chautauqua platform.
Marion Ballou Fisk
A unique attraction on this Chau
tauqua program will be this clever
Mrs Fisk. with her interesting New !
England stories and skillful crayon
creations, will please old and young.
Chas. F. Horner
Mr. Chas. P. Horner is manager of
the Western Red path Chautauqua
system, and its marvelous success
and growth are due to his excellent
business ability and fine discrimina
tion in the selection of talent.
Mr. Horner's greatest ambition Is
to give the people of this community
the greatest Chautauqua program
that years of experience can bring
together.
First-Class tawyer.
"Well." said the young solicitor, aft
er he had heard the statement of a
client who was about to bring action
for slander, "your case appears to be
good. I think you can secure a ver
dict." "That's what I told my wife,"
said the client, "and yet she insisted
at first that we ought to engage a
first-class lawyer!" Exchange.
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OVERLAND Automobiles
In addition to the Reo, we will in
in the future carry the Overland,
which has
4 Cylinders 30 H. P. Shaft Drive
Rcijy Maguti 108 in. WbHl last 32. ii Whtils
This car comes in four models, ranging
in price from $1,250 to $1,500, and stands
alone for quality.
a
Columbus Automobile Co
415 West Eleventh St
Pianos
Corl
Clarendon
Haddorff
Poole
Lawson
Price & Teeple
Krell
Would Be Valuable Knowledge.
An Austrian physician insists that'
every man has a bad day periodically
a day when everything goes wrong
for him and when his mental and
physical powers are at their worst. It
is too bad that the physician is un
able to furnish a chart whereby every
man's off days might be readily indi
cated, thus making it possible for
bis family to take steps to keep him
from buying things on margins.
A Sponge Garden.
A' beautiful effect may be obtained
by means of a damp sponge and a few
seeds. Take a large piece of coarse
sponge and cut it in any shape de
sired. Then soak it in water, squeeze
half dry and sprinkle in the openings
red clover seed, millet, barley, grass,
rice, oats any or all of these. Hang
the sponge in a window where the
sun shines at least part of the day.
Country Life in America.
The Practical Side of It.
"I likes poetry." said Uncle Eben.
"but I can't he'p remarkin' dat two
bits in de hand is worth acres of sil
ver Unln' in de clouds."
For Who Could Talk?
And yet if all those who lived in
glass houses refrained from throning
stones there would be practically no
social conversation. Puck.
Rathersome.
Some men would rather own an au
r (bile than have nothing to worry
Mi Plpcao Daily News.
HOSE
HOSE
HOSE
We carry a complete
stock of all kinds of Rub
ber Garden Hose, ranging
in price from 9 cents to 20
cents per foot.
Do not fail to examine
our Magic Endless Hose,
we will cut this hose any
length up to 500 feet in
one piece, without coup
lings or splices.
Juet the thing, if your present
' hose is not long enough th reach
where required. So get a piece of
"Magic" the desired, length. No
extra eharge for cntting or coup
lings. We also have a complete line of
Lawn Sprinklers. Hose, Nozzles,
etc.
Try a suction of our one-balf
in. Hose more quality for lees
money.
Ai Dussell & Son
Eleventh Street
Both Telephones 225
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