.3Km-. Columbus Journal. Oolambua. TNeVbr. Consolidated with the Columbus Times April 1. 19M; withtte Platte County Argaa January 1.18W. Cot nd at the PoatoAca. Colambaa. Nabr.. m icond clan mall amattar. rust or auaaoaiprioa: Jaa yaar, bj mall, poataja prepaid $LM Hz moataa .78 raraaawtka.. -. 40 7EDNKJt)AY. AUGUST S. 1810. 8TBOTHEB & COMPANY. Proprietors. BkNKWAI Tea data opposite your name on you paper, or wrapper ahows to what time your eabecription la paid. Tbna JanOS show that pennant Laa bean raoeWed np to Jan. 1,1906, ffabOB to Fab. 1. 1806 and ao on. When payment la made, tne data, which antwera aa a reneipt, anil be chanced aooordinsly. DldGONTlNDANCEH-Beeponaible euUcrib era will """Hum to receive thia Journal nntil the publishers are notilod by letter to discontinue, hen all anearaaaa mnat be paid. If yon do not enah the Joaraal costumed for another year af ter the time paid for baa expired, yon ahonld prerioaaly notify na to diaoontinne it. CHANGE IN ADDHKSS-When ordering a jhance la the address, subscribers ahonld be anre to ci" their old aa wall aa their new addraaa. A SENATOR. The newspapers, some months ago, printed advertisements which solicited the public to buy 40,000 shares of the stock of the Arizona Metals company at 82.50 per share (par value, So.) The advertisements set forth hopes and prospects in the manner common to such solicitations, but the larger type was reserved for the legend. "Senator Charles Dick, president, Washington, D. C." There is nothing uncommon in a senator's being an investor in a mining company witness ihe cases of Pen rose and Guggenheim. But where Dick differs from the others is this: There is no similar recent records of a senator publicly lending his name and office as a lure to small investors to buy stocks. Some of the others might do in secret things much more gravely improper, but they would hardly do what Dick has done in this case. Incidentally, a few weeks ago, the advertising agent who put out these announcements sued for the amount of his bill; as a part of the suit, the fur nit ore in the company's office was attached, whereupon it appeared that the office furniture didn't belong to the company, hut had been loaned to it. One curious episode in this history was Senator Dick's violent protects when the advertisement was placed in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. What was the reason? Was he willing to allow the use of his name outside of Ohio, but not before the eyes of his own constituents? Or did he object to the revenue going to a newspaper which is opposed to him political!)? Either would be possible and charac teristic in the case of a man of Senator Dick's caliber. Somehow the very smallness and cheapness of the things that make this senator objectionable seem the less compatible with a state like Ohio. Editorial in Collier's. IF YOU BUY WOOLEN CLOTHES. Going into a small custom tailor shop to learn the price of clothes, I was told that a suit that last year cost me S" would this year cost me $40. When I protested at the increase the tailor replied: "I must get that for wool clothes. Otherwise I ask you less and give vou cotton and shoddy." He took from his shelf some small strips of cloth. To my eyes they were of excellent texture. He frayed the edge of one, aud, drawing from it a thick thread, untwisted it. It showed a dusty, short fibre stuff which signified nothing to my untutored eyes until he explained that this was a mixture of cotton and shoddy. Shoddy is uoth- mg more nor less tban old clothes ground up. They are ground into powder and are first blown and then rolled into the "woolen" cloth. The shoddy in the strip of cloth the tailor was showing me made a kind of dust on his fingers. The test of the cotton came on touching a lighted match to the frayed part. It burned freely. A purely wool fiber shrivels up rather thin burns. "Either people pay the higher prices for woolen clothes," remarked the tailor, "or else they pay the former lower prices and get cotton and shoddy mixed with the wool. Such clothes do not wear; they turn rusty and get weak and rotten." This indicates the situation with woolen clothing throughout the coun try. As prices go up, the material deteriorates. This has been the obvi ous tendency for the past twenty years. The figures for the last decade are not accessible, but it is a plain, bald fact that our woolen mills used one-tenth less wool in 1900 than in 1SH0. while they used 2 million pounds more of cotton and 15 million pounds more of shoddy. Heaven and the protected woolen manufacturer know how much less wool and how much more cotton and shoddy are being used in "woolen" clothes in thiB year 1910 tban were used in 1900. Henry George, jr., in the New York World. A DOOMED SPORT. 'As a result of the general disgust over the recent uprising at Reno, in which the alleged hopes of the white race made a pitiful exhibition of senility, there is a nation-wide move ment against pugilism, and it is evi dent that the end of the ring, as an institution, ia in sight. Among those who support such a movement are many sports who were fight fans in times past, some of them as recently as a few weeks ago. That they have lost interest in the game is not entirely due to the outcome of the Reno fight, or to the fact that a black man whipped a white one. This has happened before, on several occassions. Dixon,Gans and Langford.all negroes, whipped many whites in the course of their eventful careers, and there was no race feeling about it For a couple of weeks before the fight there was a crowd of gifted writ ers at Reno, and they produced "literature" by the bushel, showing what a fine creature the trained fight ing man is; how he is at once an object lesson and an inspiration to a people who are becoming anaemic, and a great deal more flapdoodle of the same kind. That sort of stuff would have been acceptable to the early days of prize fighting, when champions fought lor "lory more than for monev. . The old time fighter would enter the ring for almost any kind of a purse, aud the winner took the purse, which was right aud proper. The Jeff'eries-Johnson mix-up was a commercial transaction. The loser left the ring with a larger fortune than the ordinary hardworking man can accumulate in a lifetime. Every body interested in the business was out for the money. There is no sport in this sort of business. When fighting cea.es to be a sport, in the proper meaning of the word, it becomes a graft, and there is no reason why peo ple should defend a graft. The fine writers at Reno gave the people such an overdose of it that the people are sick of prize rings and re ferees and abysmal brutes and the whole boiling. It is claimed that Jefieries will in sist upon meeting Johnson again, and ifhedoesit may be hoped they will tight it out in a box stall in a livery barn, with only enough witnesses pre sent to see that neither man uses an axe. A scrap of that sort might re store public confidence iu the game to some small extent. Emporia Gazette. A Place (or Theodore Roosevelt Henry Watterson in Louisville Courier-Journal. I. MAKING HASTE VERY SLOWYL. There is no unseemly haste in Wash ington to establish postal savings banks. On the contrary, the official program is oue of infinite deliberation. The board of trustees has appointed a committee to draft a plan or organi zation and adjourned until its repoit is readv. This will be some time next fall. When the plan has been thorough ly formulated a few offices are to be designated as postal savings depositor ies. There will be a dozen or so of them. All are to be located in the larger cities. Then the experiment is to be watch ed. If successful it is to be gradually extended. Otherwise, amendments to the plain will be made. After awhile however, uuless there is some revulsion in public sentiment, the country will have postal savings banks. The delay may be entirely justified. Perhaps the caution is commendable. A postal banking system is not to be formulated off hand. The blanks and other machinery for the business re quire time. It is safe, too, to try out the system before fixing it upon the country. Of the final establishment of a sound and progressive postal savings system iu this country there can be no doubt. Reforms do not move backward. At the same time, oue could wish for greater evidences of earnestness on the part of those now charged with in augurating the system, despite defects in the enabling law, which this paper has already pointed out. (Newark News. Japan's Giant Wrestlers. Japanese wrestlers are not to be con fused with Japanese exponents of jln jltsu. The wrestlers belong to the older school. In which weight is a par amount quality. It is a remarkable thing that a race which Is on the av erage four or five inches under the Eu ropean standard in point of height should have produced a special cult of wrestlers who are giants in stature and strength. The leading wrestlers of Tokyo or Osaka or Hiogo are all men at least six feet in height and weighing perhaps 300 pounds. They are a race apart. Wrestling is an oc cupation which has been handed uown from father to son for many genera tions. And the explanation of their prowess is that they have always been meat eaters, while the rest of Japan, either from choice or necessity, have been In the main vegetarians. ' Not So Absurd. "How absurd!" "What's absurd:" "Five years are supposed to have elapsed since the last act. and that man Is wearing the same overcoat." "Xothln absurd about that He's takin' the part of a married, man. Isn't In all the English language fitter words could not have been chosen than those employed by Theodore Roosevelt to express his sense of home coming. It was a wonderous reception. Noth ing like it was ever known before. The height on which it leaves him is a dizzy height. How shall he maintain his footing there? "Above Bleeker street, still in the downtown district," we quote the re port, "a man with a megaphone yell ed: " 'Who will be our next president?' "And, as though by prearranged signal the crowd answered "Teddy! in one stentorian shout." There we have the false note in the spirit of our age; the materialistic for cing its way through everything; the bird-in-hand the common aim. To get rich no matter how to get office, no matter why, represents the average point of view. As a consequence the thing we have named "graft" has be come universal. The halls of con gress, the state legislatures, the city council, the municipal boards aud commissions reek in it. Its local ha bitation is everywhere. It has no poli tics. Scarcely one, indeed, of the mammoth private fortunes, of which we hear so much, could bear the light of investigation. "No man could receive such a greet ing," we quote the admirable words of Theodore Roosevelt, "without being made to feel both very proud and very humble," and then he said: "I am ready and eager to do my part so far as I am able in helping solve problems which must be solved if we, of this, the greatest democratic republic upon which the sun has ever shone, are to see its destinies rise to the high level of our hopes and its op portunities. This is the duty of every citizen, but it is peculiarly my duty; for any man who has ever been honored by being made president of the United States is thereby forever aftei rendered the debtor of the Ameri can people and is bound throughout his life to remember this as his prime obligation, and in private life, as much as iu public life, so to carry himself that the American people may never have cause to feel regret that once they placed him at their head." II. The first and greatest of all our problems is the purification of the pub lic service. We may as well admit that our two party system is on this side a failure. The grafter gets in his work with equal facility upon both our parties. As suits his purpose he is by turns a democrat, or a republi can; the alternate maker and creature of party spirit. Third-party movements, for all their good inteutious, have proved futile. Party spirit has been too much for them. They have fallen as betwixt two stools. What we need is a body of independents taken for special ser vice from each of the two parties; a middle court of arbitration; thoroughly orgauized and permanent. The refusal to seek, or to take office must be a requisite, to membership. The right to be, and to be considered, a republican, or a democrat, in gener al political walks aud ways according to individual conviction, should be conceded. The aims upright, the spirit disinterested, the brotherhood would in time grow strong enough to protect its own and to compel the re cognition and respect of both parties. Such a scheme may seem sublimat ed. It may, in truth, be in advance of the time. But, short of it, we shall have no real, or lasting reform iu the transaction of the public business. No party in possession was ever known to reform itself. Driven from power because of its shortcoming, it first sulks, then conspires and finally pretends to be good. Meanwhile, its victorious successor, scarcely warm in its seat, begins to practice the selfsame wicked arts which it condemned and on which it rose. A century of this oscillating between rank professions and broken promises has developed a class of professional politicians, many of whom are little better than public plunderers and all of whom hold to gether under the party compact and label, on either side recalling the con dotteri of the middle ages, who pillaged friend and foe alike, wearing whatever colors were most available to their ever chauged service and purpose. III. In view of this home coming, the Courier-Journal some two months ago asked the press of the country to con sider without passion or levity certain distinct propositions which it then and there submitted. The time had come as we pointed out, "for the people of the United States to consider Theodore Roosevelt as they have never consider- ously than they have even taken him; to realize that he is altogether the most startling figure who has appear ed in the world since Napoleon Bona parte, a circumstance not without significance and jKirteiit." If any reader doubted this the Sth of last April, he can not doubt it now. Everywhere and notably at New York on Saturday the ex-president showed himself, as we described him, "pre eminently a man who fits the words to the act, the act to the word, and does the thing which, however provocative of controversy, redounds to his advan tage." The man with the megaphone, on Broadway, and the answering throngs, not ouly echoed the words of the may or of Rome and the thought of all Eu ropethat Theodore Roosevelt is again to be president of the United States but he and they uttered the idea that has made its lodgment in the minds and hearts of myriads of un thinking Americans who are blinded by the concrete in hero worship to the spiritual; good aud honest people who vainly imagine that the disease of graft which ails the body politic may be cured by oue doctor, and only one doctor, using a single remedy and a remedy that never yet worked a single cure; the strong man invested with power more or less absolute and arbit rary. We venture to reproduce the fol lowing fromthe Sth of April, apropos of the ex-president's reception in the Eternal City. uc ugmiug punusupner, me mayor of Rome describes him. That flatters the vanity of human nature. We rejoice in the man of battle who is a man of thought. 'Third after Wash ington and Lincoln,' said the mayor of Koine. Washington the 'creator, Liucoln the 'consolidator, Roosevelt the 'purifier.' Finally, 'We look again to see him at the head of the great republic,' said the mayor of Rome. That is the keyuote. And it will con tinue to be the keynote wherever he goes. Thus he will come back to us the Eur jpeau nominee for president of the United States. "Let uo one fancy this an unmean ing, or an idle compliment. Taken in connection with what appears to be the hopeless breakdown of the Taft admiu istratiou, it constitutes an event of the first consequence. With the Waterloo which seems certain to overtake the republicans in the fall elections, the cry for Roosevelt in 1912 as the only mau who cau save the party will come up from every side, aud it may prove irresistible. Hence the candidacy of Theodore Roosevelt for president iu 1912 may be regarded from this time onward as so probable that the people should begin seriously to consider it. "If we are to return Theodore Roose velt to power let there be no mistake about the terms of the new commission which is to be issued to him." Mark the current proceedings in fulfillment. It gives emphasis to what followed in the same article. Taking the philosophic conclusion of most of the great speculative historians and idealistic doctrinaires from Plato to Gibbon for a cue, that is that "the best of all government is a wise and benev olent despotism," we continued as follows: "If the government of the United States under our written constitution of checks and balances be a failure as many think it and if there be needed for its executive head a strong man, having the courage to take all the hulls of corruption by the horns, and, regardless of obsolete legal restraints, to shake the life out of them, then, indeed, Theodore Roosevelt would seem one fitted by temperament, edu cation and training for the work. He is a patriotic American with humani tarian proclivities. He is an incor ruptible man. He has shown himself fearless of consequences. If the people are sick and tired of the slow processes of constitutional procedure; if they want in the white house a president who, disregarding the letter of the law, will substitute his own interpretation of its spirit aud iutention; if they think that the reign of hyjocrisy and cant and graft which marks our professional politics may be ended by the absolu tism of a ruler who, as Roosevelt puts it, 'translates his words into deeds,' and who, charged with the cleansing of the Augean stablyes by an election putting the seal of the popular appro val upon conceded excesses in the use of power and bidding him to go for ward and apply the same remedies to a disease otherwise incurable, then Theodore Roosevelt fills the bill to perfection, for he comes directly from the family of kings of men and is a descendent of Caesar and Cromwell." something of an uproar. All sorts of meanings 'and motives were ascribed to them. Eveuts have verified the conclusion that great masses of the people look to Theodore Roosevelt for prodigies of performance. Our wandering Ulysses is home again. He has spoken. He has spoken like a man. He has spoken like a patriot. He has spoken like an American, We do not believe that he has the remotest thought of ever again becoming a candidate for office. What could office do for such a man except to consign him to the category of the vulgar herd and lower him in the estimation of half his countrymen? But there is a great place for him and a great future. Let him but de clare his independence of machine politics and proclaim himself chief justice of the high court of political arbitration, and he will be so accepted by the enlightened and the progressive of all parties; its purjose the purging of the public service; its jurisdiction wherever the need arises; its authori zation and authority, perfect disinter estedness and transparent procedure, master of itself, equally free and fear less of the handmade statesmen and tin-born engineries of both the demo cratic and republican parties, where they run counter to the public honor and welfare, to justice aud integrity; such as we are seeing at this moment in Mr. Roosevelt's owu state of New York aud iu the state of Illinois. ARAB MANNERS. Life In tha Tents of the Roving and Eloquent Bedouins. "By living with the Arabs, doing as they did aud moving with them in their migrations." writes Douglas Carrntbers In the Geographical Jour nal. "I obtained an insight Into their mode of life and customs. Things move slowly lu the east, and I spent fourteen days iu buying three camels. But the time was not wasted. I studied Aral) manners, learned more or less how to oat with my bands, how to wear the Arab costume with some comfort, now to drink coffee a la Arab. and. most ditlic-ult of all. how to sit still all day long doing nothing. I round this last most try ing, more especially because it was told. A Bedouin tent is a drafty place at the best, but In midwinter it is almost unbearable. On two occasions there was snow on the desert, "We used to feed out of a huse round dish, ten of us at a time. The fare was camels milk and bread in the morning, and in the evening we geuerally had meat aud rir cooked with an enormous amount ot fat. Dur ing the day we nppeasr-d our huiiger by sipping strong black cot'Vt- At night there was always a large group of men in the tent ot the sheik, and the talk was carried on far into the night. "Eloquence is a highly prized talent among the Bedouins. und not only would they recount their stories in the most beautiful manner, but on occasion, to the tune of a single stringed violin, they would sing ex tempore songs for hours ou end." KEEPING HIS RECORDS. Unusual Business Methods of a Mer chant In Western Canada. In the Bookkeeper Is recorded a case which clearly comes under the tiead of "unusual business methods." lu a thickly settled prairie district In west ern Canada, not far from Moose Jaw. a few Canadians had opened up a coal mine, the product of which they sold to the surrounding fanners. Settlers would come in wagons and sleighs aud load their own winter's fuel, which cost them from SI to S'J a ton. accord ing to the run. It was early winter when I first made the acquaintance of this mine and Its remarkable "su perintendent. and my first reception from this Individual was a fierce yell on his part, with the. frantic brandish ing of a long stick and the words: "What the devil are you doing? Can't you see? Are you stone blindV" I was literally walking through his books! Since morning and this was at 3 o'clock in the afternoon he had been keeping a record of outgoing sleighs and wagons of coal in the snow. About twenty farmers were drawing that day. With his stick he had writ ten the initials of each in a clean spot In the snow and with that same stick had registered the number of tons they had taken away. I had spoiled one half of his "books.' aud It was an hour before he became at all affable. I was still more astonished when I en tered the "superintendent's' little board office. The walls were black with pencil marks, figures and names A fire would have burned down his "book of two years past. Two months have intervened. The words above repeated occasioned Where Microbes Thrive. The alimentary canal is the most perfect culture tube known to bac teriological science. No part of the body Is so densely populated with micro-organisms. It Is estimated that in the alimentary canal of the average adult about 126.000.000.000 microbes come Into existence every day. They crowd this region so densely that sci entists originally believed that they were ludisieusable to human life. Ac cording to a writer In McClure's. Pas teur, who first discovered them, main tained this view, but recent investiga tions have rather disproved it. There are many animals that exist in perfect health without any intestinal bacteria at aiL Polar bears, seals, penguins, elder ducks, arctic reindeer these and other creatures in the arctic zone have few traces of these organisms. An Exception. Smith (dogmatically There Is no rule without an exception. Brown Ob. yes. there Is! There is no exception to the rule that a man must always be present while being shaved. ed him before; to take hiui more sen- throughout the press of the country Clap an extinguisher upon yourlroay If you art unhappily bleated with rein of tt. Lamb. FURNITURE We carry the late styles and up-to-date designs in Furniture. If you are going to iur nish a home, or just add a piece to what you already have, look over our com plete line. Need a Kitchen Cabinet? See the "Springfield.' HENRY GASS 21-21-23 West 11th St. Columbus, Neb. Got What She Wanted. "I can stand for some things, but uot for everything." said the clerk as he watched a stylishly dressed young woman leave the store. "What Is the matter?" asked th proprietor, who bad walked up unob served. "That woman who just left hustled up to the counter and asked to set) men's shirts. I showed her every style and color we carry. After In specting the entire stock she rose and thanked me sweetly, adding: l didn't wish to purchase any. You see. 1 am making my husband some shirts, and I wanted to be sure I was doing them right. .My husband I very particular about the finish of his shirts. And they say married women are so considerate." The boss smiled and walked away. Boston Traveler. Well Trained. Mr- lNc-iis- Mr Meekman Is a spk-itdid i::t!i:.lf nf what a man ought to I).- Mr i:..-vs-Xjt at all. He's a splendid example of what a wife, two sisters, a grownup daughter and a inotlter-in-lav.- think a man ought to be. Reckless. "Aw. come on!" the little boy was heard to remark. "I5e a sport. I'll bet yer any .1 mount o money up to ." cents." Harper's. True Happiness. About the happiest mau in the world should be he that, having a ftid. is abls to make a living at It. Chicago Record-Herald. The arrow that pierces the eagle" breast Is often made o his own feathers. -"Sl-yW .". .M-V -. F - ,2v- isol'-JsJi'- !ZXs!73&zea&aamn4'MWi - " 0 P'VOV'1frlkaS taaaaBT jfsf rmt3ll&'yJiBKnKBJKBBHEM Aflpt Rate Bulletin TO THE EAST: Besides every-day special tourist rates to eastern cities and resorts, as well as diverse route tours of the East, including an ocean coast voyage, there are special rates, August 4th to 7th inclusive, for the Knights Templar Conclave at Chicago, and from July 23th to the 31st for the Knights of Pythias Encampment at Milwau kee, and on September 13th to the 17th inclusive for the Grand Army Reunion at Atlantic City. ESTES PARK, COLORADO: Just north of Denver, Colora do's finest recreation region soon to be a National Park. Ask for full descriptive booklet. HOMESEEKERS EXCURSIONS: 1st and 3rd Tuesdays to West and Northwest localities. Get in touch with the undersigned and let us help you plan the most attractive and comprehensive tour at the least cost. b. F. REGTOR. Ticket Agent. Columbus. Nebr. L. W. MAK&LE.Y. Gen'l. Pjssener flfflnt. Omaha. Near. 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