The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, September 07, 1910, Image 4

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alnmbus go tmral.
Colombut. BTeVbr
Consolidated with the Columbus Times April
1. 1901; with the Platte County Argus January
1.1SM.
Knt and at Um PaatoSM. Colambes, Nebr., as
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t ocle their old a well aathatr new address.
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
For U. S. Senator
EI.MEK J.
BUKKETT
For Congressman, Third District
JOHN F. BOYD
For liorernor
C. II. ALDUICH
For Lieutenant-Governor
M. K. HOPEWELL
For Secretary of State
ADDISON WAIT
For Auditor
SILAS It. BABTON
For Attorney General
GBANT (1. MAKTIN
For Land Conimitwinner
E. 11. OOWLES
For Treasnrer
WALTEK A. GEOKOE
For Superintendent Instruction
J. W. CICABTBEE
For Railroad Commissioner
1IENKV T. CLABKE. jb
For State Senator
EDWIN' IIOABE
For Stiite HeitrraentativA
FBANK SCIIKAM
For County Attorney
C. N. McELFBESII
For Supervisor, District No. 1
C. A. PETEItSON
A CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE.
The friends of old Joe Caiinon seem
to have deserted him, whether or not
they did so to go oyer to the enemy.
Everything seems to be fair in politics,
as it has long been counted in love and
war. But is that any reason for rub
bing it in? If they have thrown the
speaker over, the best he can do is to
make a losiug fight, although surely he
is no different and no worse than those
who are deserting him. And since
they have duly stated that the speaker
is down and out, they might gracefully
let it go at that, instead of telling it to
the public every day. Only a few
fteople can atteud a vaudeville perfor
mance at one time, but in the world of
news it is different, and the continuous
performance becomes monotonous. If
the speaker is a dead issue, he should
at least be permitted to rest in peace,
while enterprising politicians look
elsewhere for something to View With
Alarm. Atchison Globe.
OUR VAUNTED CIVILIZATION.
Wealthy, prosperous, progressive
Kansas ought to be more civilized.
This is equally true of others of these
United States. And there is certainly
room for it in one particular. It con
cerns the care of fatherless, or mother
less, children who become public
charges, or rather the inhuman meth
ods with which the parents of such
unfortunate.children are treated.
Either the rules V the existing state
home for orphans, where the children
referred to are admitted ander certain
conditions, should be changed, or, if
this is not advisable, another state
institution should be established where
children with one destitute parent
living and in such cases it is gener
ally the mother can be kept until
such parent gets into a position to care
for her children. Then they should
be turned over to her.
Present methods of handling such
cases are little more than barbaric.
The Atchison Globe told the otherday
of the terrible grief displayed by a
mother as she signed away all rights
to her children after she had secured
their admission to the orphans home.
If a woman, now left in destitute cir
cumstances with a family of children,
finds it necessary to place them in the
state orphans' home, she is compelled
to sign away every vestige of right she
has to them. Either through mar
riage or work she might get into a
position to care properly for her chil
dren in two or three years. If she Is
that fortunate she cannot get them
back. When she placed them in the
home she gave them away forever.
They are lost to her for all time. She
is not even permitted to know wheie
they have been adopted out.
One of the strong arguments pre
sented against slavery in ante-bellum
days concerned the separation of the
negro children from their mothers.
But the slave mother was enabled to
keep track of her children through the
bills of sale for them. And it was
frequently the case after the slaves had
been given their freedom that the
black mothers traced their children in
this fashion and reassembled their
families again.
But the poor, the miserable mother
of today whom misfortune has frowned
upon to such an extent that she is
compelled to make her children a pub
lic charge if they are not to be per
mitted to starve to death, hasn't even
the advantages or the opportunity of
the slave mothers of a half century
ago. They could at least keep track
of their children if they could not be
with them. And civilization is report
ed to reign here these days quite ex
tensively. Topeka State Journal.
become successful. The deficit report
ed for the Chicago Telephone company
however, is found after not oaly cost
of service has been allowed, but also 5
per cent dividend on capital stock.
About the possibility of economical
saving in maintenance, salaries, and
the amount of bonds on which 5 per
cent is paid, or the amount of capital
stock whether inflated or not, on
which 8 per cent is paid, the official
report as published by the World to
day gives no information. Lincoln
Star.
AND STILL THEY COME.
A few weeks ago it was general
stores in New York city; now it is the
biscuit manufacturers all over the
country. The trust plan of organiza
tion continues to conquer, and it is
getting to be a question whether a
single industry is going to be left on
the old basis. In a book on Ameri
can trusts, published in 1U04. Mr.
G. H. Montague, a Harvard econo
mist, seemed y find the impulse to
ward forming such combinations
subsiding. About that time a num
ber of the newest and biggest appear
ed to be in trouble. Several of them
passed their dividends, their stocks
went down, and the investing public
got timid and distrustful. But it is
now evident that the reaction was
only temporary. The movement
seems to have set in again, stronger
than ever.
What is to be the end of it? What
jumi win inuusiry, anu society in
general, finally take as a result of the
process? Only the socialists are quite
confident that they can answer these
questions, and most of us still decline
to accept their answers, because we
can not see how their general scheme
is going to work without some radical
and inconceivable change in human
nature. But some things seem al
ready so plain that we all have to
admit them.
One thing is that attempts by con
gress and the state governments to
restore competition where it has once
yielded to the principle of combination
fail pretty generally, if not universal
ly. A great many of the combina
tions not all, perhaps, but certainly
a large number, probably the larger
number have evidently come to stay.
They have proved their case, economi
cally speaking. It would appear, there
fore, to be high time for the lawmakers
to stop legislating on the theory that
the old conditions in those industries
can be brought back, or ought to be
brought back. Harper's Weekly.
THE TELEPHONE DILEMMA
THAT PUZZLES CHICACO.
Municipal regulation of public ser
vice corporations is a principle that
has steadily gained in favor as a cure
for the various evils the public has
had to suffer. Especially a reduction
in the rates charged by such corpora
tions is the boon greatly desired. But
in Chicago a new phase appears in
the task of regulation. If it is Itest
for public interests to regulate in such
a way as to raise rates instead of low
ering them, will it approve? Henry
C. Morris, who writes on this "New
Phasevof Municipal Regulation" in
The World of Today for July, says of
the Chicago situation:
"A new condition has, however,
recently arisen in connection with the
pending revision of the ordinance af
fecting the Chicago Telephone com
pany, which contains the germs of
startling possibilities. The principle
involved is not by any means limited
to the situation in Chicago, but may
easily be of general application
throughout the country. Municipal
play and a square deal, on the one
hand for the people making use of the
service furnished by a public utility
company, and, on the other hand, for
the corporation supplying the product
or service essential for the comfort and
convenience of the community, and
for those whose capital is invested in
POOR LITTLE KID.
Aren't you sorry for Baby Vinson
McLean, heir to the McLean $100,
000,000? You must remember that newspaper
story of several months ago, telling
how an attempt was made, or thought
to have been made, to kidnap little
Vinson. Well, his folks were badly
scared and they rushed him up to Bar
Harbor, Maine, for a vacation, where
he now is.
Wherever this baby now goes he is
accompanied by a Pinkerton detective
armed to the teeth.
Little vinson is really only an ordi
nary baby. The only thing in partic
ular that is the matter with him is that
he will some day be worth, in money,
many millions of dollars.
Aren't you sorry for him? He can't
run and loll in the dirt and have fun
like other children. He must have a
big man with big pistols always with
him.
Nothing save money for the future.
Nothing save protection from being a
baby in the present Aren't you sorry
for him?
And, really, aren't you sorry for his
rich parents?
What joy, what comfort can there
be in having a baby that you must be
forever worrying about his being
stolen? The miser who worships and
sleeps with his gold must lie happier
than a mother who lives in terror of
kidnappers.
Nor does babyhood alone contain all
the evil that threatens this little oie.
The chances are largely against his
leing useful, when grown up, and it is
certain that he will be the object of
bitter envy, if not downright hatred.
Often must the picture of poor, old,
heartbroken Mrs. Thaw come before
the mind's eye of this baby's mother,
for Harry Thaw was, not long ago,
just such a hothouse flower, so choice
that he must have anything that
money could get, so precious ami cov
eted that he must le nursed by an
armed policeman and raised in some
such a thing as a steel cage, a safety
deposit vault, or a refrigerator.
Poor little McLean baby! Guarded
and caged against beiug a real baby
and threatened with 8100,000,000 that
he will not have earned! And, too,
perhaps when he is a very old man, he
will have to die and account for what
he did with all that money.
The very rich have their sorrows,
plenty of them.
Think about it! It will soften the
envy that may possibly be in your
heart Omaha News.
TAFTS PLEA TO PARTY.
The plea of President Tail to the
republicans of America that they for
get their differences and unite in a
solid front in support of the principles
for which republicanism stands, and
in rapport of a continuation of pro
gressive legislation and redemption of
the party platform of 1908, is a doc
ument that should be given heed by
every citizen of this country who has
the welfare of the nation at heart
The Taft administration is only half
finished. If the pledges made by the
republican platform of 1908 are to be
carried out in full, as the people want
ed them to be carried out when they
elected Taft; then the president must
be given a congress that will work
with him toward the redemption of
those pledges, and not one that will
block the desired legislation and even
overthrow the protective principle
that the republican party stands for
and restore the free trade of the Cleve
land day.
The administration has given a
downward revision of the tariff and
has provided a tariff board that will
still further outline reductions in the
schedules that need pruning. And if
the people want downward revision,
the one way in which they can get it
is to elect a republican congress that
will work with the administration.
The election of a democratic house
would either mean the overthrowing
of the protective principle or blocking
all legislation with a result of nothing
done, whatsoever.
President Taft points to the corpora
tion tax, the improvement of the in
terstate commerce bill so as to give
the government greater supervision,
the postal bank savings bill (which
democratic Congressman Latta of the
Third Nebraska district tried to de
feat), the conservation measure, the
statehood bill and any number of
other important measures. The re
cord is the greatest that has been
known for so short a time, under any
president in our history.
On top of that, Tail's administra
tion is saving millions of dollars in the
expenses of the government, by intro
ducing new, economical methods.
If there had lieen a democratic con
gress, none of the above program of
legislation, demanded by the people,
would have passed. The action of
Latta in opposing the postal bank bill
shows how the democrats would have
tried to block every measure that
came up.
Common business judgment would
seem to dictate, therefore, that the
achievement in the next congress
depends upon its being republican.
Norfolk News.
CHURCH TO RUN PICTURE
SHOW.
owner ashamed of himself, as the case
may be.
And when it comes to gorgeous rai
ment, Hayward will justify, at least,
the retention in our language of that
much abused phrase, "the cynosure of
all eyes." Nothing like him has been
seen in congress since James Hamil
ton Lewis betook himself and his pink
whiskers to Chicago in quest of riches
beside the cool waters of Lake Michigan.
Washington has had all too brief a
glimpse of William Hayward. As
secretary of the republican national
committee he has dropped in on us at
odd times for a few days, leaving a
dazzling streak as he departed, before
we'd really gotten accustomed to the
elegance of face, figure and garments.
Wherefore we want him to come again
when he can stay longer.
Don't ever get the idea, however,
that all there is to William Hayward
is good looks and good clothes.
Strange as it may seem, he's possessed
of real gray matter in spite of them.
He's only 34 years old, and his
father was a United States senator, but
he's got a fine, large war record and
has been chairman of the Nebraska
republican state central committee.
He lives at Nebraska City and has
views, primarily, in Cannonism, on
deep waterways, on railroad regulation
on military reform, on trusts, and on
a few other such simple little prob
lems. He's a chain lightning debater,
and his personality is such that out in
Nebraska everybody, from newsboy to
governor, calls him "Bill."
It's a cinch that his looks and
"Bill" couldn't travel together unless
he was pretty near right Washing
ton Times.
it
The Chicago Telephone company
appears to be incurring an annual loss
and the city council has to decide
whether to give authority to raise
rates. An investigation by technical
engineers and expert accountants, who
have examined the books of the tele
phone company, resulted in a report
to the city comptroller of a net annual
deficit of $908,533. This is the first
time the report of experts justified an
increase in charges of a public utility
corporation. The report is a disap
pointment to the public which had
expected further reduction.
The claim -is made that it costs
more per telephone for service in a
large city than in a small city. The
larger the city grows the more tele
phone service will cost Plant instal-1
lauon is more expensive in the city
with its many trunking facilities and
.complex switchboard wiring. The
particular interest this Chicago dilem
ma presents is in the question whether
municipal regulation will work or can
THE STATE TICKETS.
The Bee has refrained up to this
time from commenting on the makeup
of the state tickets put in nomination
at the recent primary for the very
good reason that it has not been cer
tain, and is not yet certain, who will
be the opposing candidates.
On the republican side it is fully
demonstrated that the ticket will be
headed by Chester H. Aldrich, nomi
nated for governor by a plurality of
approximately 3,500 out of a total vote
greatly decreased by the defection of
the liberal republicans who went over
into the democratic primary to vote
for Dahlman.
On the democratic side Mayor Dahl
man has a small lead over Governor
Shallenberger. His margin is so nar
row that a recount or contest may yet
change the result
If Mr. Aldrich is to be pitted against
Mayor Dahlman the issue will be
sharf.ly defined between wet and dry
and will have to be fought out on
those lines. If Aldrich has Governor
Shallenberger as his opponent, both of
them committed to sign a county
option bill if passed by the legislature,
that issue will be relegated more to the
respective senatorial and legislative
districts, and the fight for the guber
natorial office will be waged around
other issues as well.
In either event victory or defeat for
Mr. Aldrich as head of the ticket must
turn on the measure of success his
campaign scores in winning back the
support of the liberal republicans and
in appealing to the democratic and
indefiendent voters dissatisfied with the
personality or record of the demo
cratic candidate. Omaha Bee.
A moving picture theatre to be con
ducted by churches and Sunday school
workers is the substance of a plan now
being pushed by Harold Trump,
superintendent of the First Congrega
tional church Sunday school, and sev
eral other Detroit men.
The plan has already received the
approval of the Wayne County Sun
day School Superintendents' associa
tion, and negotiations are now in pro
gress to raise the necessary funds to
take over a theatre already established
or build a new one.
"The new theatre will be run strict
ly on business principles and will be
just the same as any other theatre,
except that we will cut out all of the
features which make the ordinary
cheap moving picture house a place of
menace to voiincr people." said Mr.
Trump the other morning. "We may
keep open Sunday and we nay not;
we may charge 5 cents and we may
charge 10. We will use a good many
of the films that the other theatres use,
but in addition we will have special
films on biblical and semi religious
subjects.
"They are available in the eastern
film exchanges. Travel and other
educational pictures will have an im
portant part We may and we may
not have vaudeville in connection.
The details of (he plans are not yet
arranged. Most of the money has
been raised." Detroit Journal.
A SERIOUS DINER.
The Way the Great Emperor Charts
V. At His Meals.
The diary of a German gentleman,
Bartholomew Sastrow. who lived In
the time of the Emperor Charles V.,
gives us a good Idea of the gastronom
ic customs of those times. Sastrow's
description of the table habits of the
greatest ruler in bis day is very inter
esting. Young princes and counts served the
repast. There were invariably four
courses of six dishes. The emperor
had no one to carve for him. He be
gan by cutting his bread in pieces
large enough for one mouthful, then
attacked bis plate. He often used his
fingers while he held the plate under
his chin with the other hand.
When he felt thirsty be made a sign
to the "doctor standing by the table;
then they went to the sideboard for
two silver flagons and filled a goblet
which held aboit a measure and a
half. The emperor drained it to the
last drop, practically at one draft.
During the meal he never uttered a
syllable, scarcely smiled at the most
amusing sallies of the jesters behind
his chair, finally picked his teeth with
quills and, after washing his hands,
retired to a window recess, where any
body could approach him with a petition.
FURNITURE
We carry the late styles and up-to-date
designs in Furniture.
If you are going to fur
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.
The Nature off Friendship.
Friendship may be fostered, but can
not be forced. Two are as one, not
because it is in the will of either, but
because it is in the nature of both.
When souls of similar fiber encounter
each other the gods preside at the
meeting. 1 may not cocklly say, "I
will make this man my friend." He
either is or is not my friend without
any decision of mine or his. The ages
have been shaping the two of us, and
if we fit into each other well and good;
if not, we know it instinctively and
are worlds apart though we toas our
shins at the same fire and bandy words
till doomsday. Richard Wightman in
Metropolitan Magazine.
The Price ef Eloquence.
auctioneer held up a battered
SALT WATER.
Cancelation.
There bad been a little quarrel after
the honeymoon.
"And just look at my pretty linen
collar," sobbed the young wife: "the
tears have trickled down and wilted it
out of shape. You haven't a bit of
feeling."
"Indeed I have," laughed the big!
husband; "I'm going to fix things up."
"H-how, George?"
"Why, the next time I go downtown
I am going to buy you a waterproof
collar." Chicago News.
A Special Brand.
Mrs. Recentmnrrie I want half a
dozen red lemons. The Fruiterer Red
lemons? Mrs. Recentmarrie Yes, sir;
I want to surprise my husband by
making him some red lemonade. Chi
cago News.
The
fiddle.
"What am I offered for this antique
violin?" he pathetically inquired. "Look
it over. See the blurred finger murks
of remorseless time. Note the stains
of the hurrying years. To the merry
notes of this fine old instrument the
brocaded dames of fair France may
have danced the minuet In glittering
Versailles. Perhaps the vestal virgins
marched to its stirring rhythms in the
feasts of Lujtercalla. Ha. it tears :iu
abrasion perhais a touch of fire. Why.
this may have been the very fiddle ou
which Nero played when Rome burned."
"Thirty cents," said a red nosed man
in the front row.
"It's yours!' cried the auctioneer
cheerfully. "What next?" Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
Blessed is the man who has found
his work. Let him ask no other bless
edness. Thomas Carlyle.
IX THK DISTRICT rolIKT OF J'LATIK
COUNTY. NKHICASKA.
Id I ho matter of Out rotate of Freeman M. ('uoL--inKlmtii.
lwwisel Onler to show muse.
To all ierftoBH intsresteti in I ho ttate of
Freeman 91. (onkioKham. lnased.
Thin ranse e-iin on for hearing spun the I
tion of Kdici'BMI I. CookiBubata, atlminintrntrix
of the ratal f if Freeman M. CoohinKhaiii. '!
erased, praying for license to stjll I lit north half
of lota nvo (S) and aiz () in block eighteen l Is)
of Lorkner'a second addition to the village of
Humphrey, Nebraska, for the payment of ttfliin
allowed against said estate and cotttHof admini-
I ration and it appearing to tho court, that th
lenonaI property of said estate w insnSacient !
juiy itaiil debt and eipeneiw. It is therefore
ordeird thut all iln interested in wiid estate
appear before me at the curt lumsoin i'oiiuu
Ihjh. Nebraska, on ( he 22ud day of Octolier. i''iu.
at the hour of ten oVIoclca. m., there to how
cause, if any then lie. why n license should not
lie granted to mid iMiniuifetrntrix to m-11
much of said real eitlate as may be necessary to
pay said dehbi and expenses, and that this order
be published four succesMve weeks in the Co
lo in uuh Journal
Dated this 3rd day of September. 1UI0.
Geo. It. Thomas,
Judge of the district court of Platte county.
Nebraska. 'JJ-1
Deep Seas Are More Saline Than Those
That Are Shallow.
The density of sea water depends
upon the quantity of saline matter It
contains. The proportion is generally
about 3 or 4 per cent, though it varies
In different places. The ocean con
tains more salt In the southern than
in the northern hemisphere, and the
Atlantic contains more than the Pa
cific. The greatest proportion of salt
In tho Pacific is in the parallels of 22
degrees north latitude and IT degrees
south latitude. Near the equator it is
less, and in the polar seas it is least,
from the melting of the ice.
The saltness varies with the seasons
in these regions, and the fresh water,
being lighter, is uppermost. Rain
makes the surface of the sea fresher
than the Interior parts, and the influx
of rivers renders the ocean less salt
at their estuaries.
Deep seas are more saline than those
that are shallow, and inland seas com
municating with the main arc less salt,
from the rivers that flow into them.
To this, however, the Mediterranean
Is an exception, owing to great evap
oration and the Influx of salt currents
from the Black sea and the Atlantic.
The water in the strait of Gibraltar
at the depth of 670 fathoms is four
times as salt as that at the surface.
St. James Gazette.
Special September Rates
I he Language.
"This is a pretty state of affairs, isn't
"Yes. It is a very ugly matter, be
somebody will have to nay handsomelT
for if'-New York Journal.
A good way to be happy la to try to
bo asefal and helpful
"BILL HAYWARD."
Every lover of the beautiful should
rejoice in the nomination of William
Hayward as the republican candidate
for congress in the First Nebraska
district. If he succeeds in defeating
his democratic opponent, every wor
shiper at the shrine of Apolio and
every admirer of perfection in sartor
ial art should be grateful for the good
taste of the Nebraskans who send him
hither. William Hayward is some
pumpkins in looks and dress. If he
comes he will easily wrest from Ham
ilton Fish the title of "handsomest
man in the house," for Fish, it mutt
be remembered, is handsome in a big,
broad, commanding, imperialistic way,
while Hayward is a straight out thing
of beauty a joy to the eye for as
long as the eye can train itself on hie
clastic features without making iu
Lore ef the Clever.
Any one who carries about a four
leaved clover will be lucky and will
have the power of discovering ghosts
or evil spirits. With it under the pil
low the lover may Insure dreams of
the beloved one. A fragment in the
shoe of a traveler insures a safe jour
ney. Of the five leaved clover it is de
clared that if it be worn on the left
aide of a maiden's dress or fastened
behind the hall door the Christian
name of the first man who enters will
be the same as that of the future hus
band. The power of the four leaved
shamrock for good is familiar to all
from Lover's pretty and once popular
song, the speaker in which pictures
what she would do should she find the
magic plant:
I would play the enchanter's part and
scatter bliss around.
And aot a tear or aching heart should in
the world be found.
London Globe.
TO THE EAST: Yon can make an eastern trip at reduced rates any day.
and for many eastern trips the limit has been extended to 60 days instead
of 3o days.
iu aiiwin ufuuii aiu Kb i ukin: special rates, September 13th to
17th for the Grand rny Reunion.
NEBRASKA STATE FAIR, LINCOLN: September 4th to 9lh inclusive
Special reduced rates and train service from Nebraska points.
LOW ONE WAY RATES TO THE COASTr-General basis, only $25.1)1);
Angast 25th to September 9th anil October 1st to 15th to California deati
nations, and from September 15th to October 15 to the Northwest and
Puget Sound.
CALIFORNIA EXCURSIONS:-General basis, only $50 00 roand trip, dir.et
routes. September 1st to 7th and September 24th to 30tb; $15.00 higher
includes the Shasta Route
HOMESEEKERS' EXCURSIONS:-lst and :U Tuesdays. Irrigated land
assure a crop and values will greatly increase during the immediate future.
Is. F. REGTOR. Ticket AffSMt
Columbus. Ntbr.
L. Ml. WAKfcL&Y. CM'I.
rlsjent, Omaha. Near.
And Such Is Fame.
Mrs. Bluebose Your new boarder si
literary, I am told. Mrs. Malaprop
Yes, Indeed. Why, with hla books and
paper be litters his room worse than
any boarder I ever had. Exchange.
Miner Operations.
Surgeon's Son What Is a "nUaor
OBeradoa," pa? Surgeon One for
which the fee is less than three figs
-New. York Times.
BBIBBI
LsssKilKslisH
I Magazine Binding
I Old Books I
I Rebound I
I In fact, for anything in the book I
I binding line bring your work to I
I Journal Office I
I Phone 184 I
rem, isa ns
m-
m
A
T
Hi
1
2? I
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