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

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    olnwrtms gottriwl.
lumi.. Nobr.
Consolidated with the C-olnmbns Time A;ril
1, 1904; with the i'latte County Atkus Jnnuary
1.1BM.
n'r M thr PcsUtH?f.Colnnibn. Nehr.. as
se ond-clha mail msftmr
tiui orscBHcnirrioi.
Oae j Mr, by mall, portage prepaid $1.60
Six months .71
TarMmoataa 40
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 2rt. 1311.
8TUOTIIP.K & COMPANY. Proprietors.
i
BENEWALS The data opposite yonraame on
yosr paper, or wrapper shows to what tinio your
BibecriptioB is paid. Thus Jan05 shows that
payment lias been receired op to Jan. 1, IPOS,
F'ebOS to Feb. 1, 1905 and so on. When payment
is made, the date, which answers as a receipt,
will be changed accordingly.
DIdCONTINUANCES-Reepoiirible mbtcrib-
ere will continne to receive this journal until the
publishers are notified by letter to discontinue,
when all arrearages :cst be paid. If yon do not
wish the Journal continu-J for another year af
tirthe time paid for 1-np expired, yon should
preriosaly notify oa to discontinue it.
CHANGE IN ADDIIEBS-When ordering a
c .una la the address, subscribers should be sure
to j1t their eld as well as their now address.
WHEN SHERMAN WAITED.
Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman
fought hard when he fought, but he
was no awash buckler. No man ever
had greater reverence for sacred
things, as is shown in this story, told on
the authority of an army surgcoii in
his campaign lefore Atlanta. The
Confederates occupied a position on
the line of march of the advancing
Union forces. Details from the
Twenty-second Massachusetts and
Eleventh Indiana regiments were sent
to cut an opening through the thick
trees to the summit of a hill command
iug the Confederate entrenchments,
and the cannon were laboriously
dragged up the slope to the position
at the top.
It was a sultry day in August. The
men sweltered in the heat. But the
task was finished by night, and Gen
eral Sherman had said to his officers,
"We will open fire in the morning."
The next day the guns were man
ned, minor arrangements were made,
and officers stood waiting till all was
in readiness to begin the hail of shells.
With the general stood "Fighting Joe"
Hooker, General Thomas, "The Rock
of Chickamauga," General Brannou
and others of his staff. The gunners
grasped the lanyards, waiting for the
word. All rose instinctively ou tiptoe
to lessen the jar of the concussion.
Then came, clear and sweet, over
the quiet morning air, the sound of a
church bell. Another aud auother
lent its soft music, full of forceful su--
m ft
gcstion that it was Sunday.
With his left index-finger pointing
to the sky, General Shermau removed
his hat. Turning to his staff, he said,
"Gentlemen, we will not open fire
today. u ltti murmurs of amaze
ment, the men filed down the slope.
This was the time when "Old
Tecums," as lie was called, he who
once declared that war is hell,
clamped the lid down tight. Youth's
Companion.
AS CRIME MAKES CASTE.
Types from three stratas of Ameri
can society in a city of fifty thousand,
as representative as if they had been
selected by a playwright (say, by
Galsworthy, to write "Greed" as a se
quel to "Strife"), were grouped to
gether in a courtroom in Wichita,
Kas. Levi Naftzger, rich, a church
man, a graduate of Iowa University,
and for eighteen years president of
one of the most substantial banks of
the city, sat stolid but pale near sneer
ing John Callahan, a convict, whose
house for years had been a sort of
thieves' hotel. Frank Burt, formerly
chief of police, might have taken his
place between them as the location
most appropriate for one whose busi
ness has been to serve as a middleman
between the underworld aud respect
ability. This time, however, he was
busy trading for exemption from a
sentence to the penitentiary. The
convict sold stolen stamps to the chief
of police at 50 per cent of the market
price; the chief sold them to the bank
er at an advance of 20 to :J0 per cent;
and Naftzger disposal of the goods at
a figure as close as iiossible to their
face value.
The evidence produced in court did
not suffice to convince the jury that
the banker knew exactly how the
stamps were obtained, though the
judge in his final instructions said:
"Decide whether a man of the defend
ant's intelligence could do this with
out knowing the stamps were stolen."
According to Burt's story, the respect
able ibfeudaut's chief concern was to
hud whether or not it was lawful to
s 11 stamps at a discount. The prose
cutor for the government, in sum
marizing the case, remaiked: "Burt
was simply a middleman. He was be
tween the thug and the highest strata
of society." When the jury brought
in its verdict, Naftzger had been found
guilty on only one of the four counts
charged against him, and therefore
this wealthy and respected citizen was
sentenced to fifteen months in the
penitentiary with a S5.000 fine for a
transaction in which his profit was
less than SCo. The judge insisted on
imprisonment: "To a man in your
financial position the fine is not a
punishment." "I have been a fool,"
observed Mr. Naftzger to a postoffice
inspector. He had.
AND SALEM BELIEVED THEM ALL
In the Old Days of the Witchcraft Persecutions the Testimony of Chil
dren Was Taken Against Mothers, That of Husbands Against Wives
and Wives Against Husbands And Since Then Salem Has Stood Still,
With Only Its Memories Left.
A JOLLY OPTIMIST.
Mexico's new ambassador to Wash
ington, Scuor Manuel de Zamacona, is
a jolly optimist He bids fair to be
come a most delightful member of the
legation circles. He is just brief aud
breezy enough to fit finely into the
groove of our llucnt, flippant Ameri
can life. Upon his advent he announ
ces to President Tallin a slum, cheery,
formal address that the Mexican war
is now near its end, that peace is a
matter of but short time, giving such
a jocular air to the whole situation as
to make it seem that we had been in
dulging needlos worry about what
was goiug on down south. Nor were
his words without the weight of per
sonal
assurance.
spoken iu jest, but in serious earnest
uess, light aud refreshing as thev were.
It is to be hoied the senor has good
ground for his airy assurance. It is
earnestly to be hoped that he is talk
ing, as it were, by the card and not
making any promiscuous predictions.
Somehow, though, his burst of confi
dence did not seem to upset the com
posure of the president enough to
indicate that he was entirely carried
away with the assurance. The next
day after the ambassador's visit the
president proceeded with his plans of
m M ft
lumiying American interests on the
border, just as if no such herald had
come with this token of relief.
If Senor de Zamacona could, assure
President Taft that his excellency,
Senor Diaz, had decided to accede to
the demands of the rebels and resign,
then, no doubt, Mr. Taft would mani
fest more emotion over this roseate
picture painted for his edification.
Washington is not swept off its feet by
the ordinary run of rumors of peace
so long as Jjiaz holds the fort No
doubt certain important interests are
opposed to the Diaz abdication, but
the greater demands of the common
good call for the speediest possible
settlement of the war and the end of
hostilities even if this can be brought
about only by Diaz' self-sacrifice.
Omaha Bee.
A RIDICULOUS PIECE OF
TRICKERY.
"Cheap food products" continues to
be the burden of the New York papers
iu favor of Canadian reciprocity.
"Cheap food products." Are they not
behiud the times? Wheu that cry
was started oats were worth 45 cents a
bushel in Iowa aud hogs 11 cents a
pound; now oats are selling for 28 and
hogs for less than seven, almost down
to six. So far as the farmer is concern
ed, if the Kastcau cheapen these prices
through the enactment of the Canadian
pact, the farmers of this part of the
country might as well go out of busi
ness. On the farms food products are
as cheap, or cheaper than they cau be
produced.
JJut, as matter of fact, the chcaner
food products will not be brought
about. Cattle, for instance, can be
driven across the border free of duty,
under the proposed reciprocityarrange
ment, but there will remain a duty of
a cent and a quarter on the meat of
the steer. Will the beef men fix the
prices according to the cattle brought
across the Hue, or according to the
duty on Protected beef? In other
words, they will get the cattle cheaper,
but the duty will enable them to keep
up the price of the beef.
The whole reciprocity arrangement
is a ridiculous piece of trickery in
trade. It ought not to be enacted and
They were not it will not be enacted by the votes of
those who want to sacrifice the farmers
or who do not know anything about
the actual agricultural conditions.
Cedar Rapids Republican.
Lace Waistcoats.
A lace manufacturer at New Saw
ley, near Derby, is making lace-trim
med waistcoats for men. He Is using
light dress net over tinted cloth
backgrounds. A black net over a
dark purple cloth, for morning wear,
and a white net orer pale green cloth,
for evening wear, are two of the com
binations. The effect is said to be
both rich and artistic.
A Nottingham lace manufacturer.
interviewed as to the prospect of lace
waistcoats finding favor with the pub
lic, said that while the trade would
naturally welcome any innovation
which would tend to create a demand
for lace net, men's taste in dress
would require a good deal of educat
ing up to the new garments. The
sentiment against the ornamentation
of clothing was strong in the mascu
line mind. London Daily Mail.
Children Work at Home.
Miss Mary Van Kleeck, who Is em
ployed by the Sage Foundation, said
recently in New York that the agita
tion against the child in the factory
had simply meant the transfer- of the
bulk of the work to the homes of the
poor. She says the law provides that
no work shall be turned out of a tene
ment that has not been licensed, bat it
does not seem hard to obtain the n.
I cense, and there are now more than
12.000 licensed tenerrnts
The place where a great crime has
been committed has always something
strangely fascinating about it. Most
people will go a greater distance to see
the locality of a murder than they
would take the trouble to do for any
other purpose whatever. The house
where a great man has been born is
often quite unknown and unvisited
even in its own neighborhood; the
house that is associated with a murder
or a homicide rarely is.
"We may lament, then," said Judge
Story in a centennial address at Sa
lem, "the errors of the times which led
to these prosecutions. But surely our
ancestors had no special reasons for
shame in a belief which had the uni
versal sanction of their own and all
former ages; which counted in its
train, philosophers as well as enthusi
asts; which was graced by the learn
ing of prelates as well as the counten
ance of kings; which the law supported
by its mandates, and the purest judges
felt no compunctions in enforcing.
Let Witch Hill remain forever mem
orable by this sad catastrophe, not to
perpetuate our dishonor, but as an af
fecting, enduring proof of human in
firmity a proof that perfect justice
belongs to one judgment seat only
that 'which is linked to the throne of
God."
What was this belief, then, which
had such high and legal sanction? It
was this: That the devil micht and
did personally appear to, enter into,
aud actively direct, the everyday life
of men. And he did this without the
intervention of any of those magical
arts or conjurations such as were once
thought indispensable to induce him to
put in an appearance. Fur this there
was Scripture authority, chapter and
verse. He was supposed to come
sometimes in one form, sometimes in
auother, to tempt his victims with the
promise that upon their signing a con
tract to become his, both body and
soul, they should want for nothing, and
that he would undertake to revenge
them upon all their enemies.
fhe traditional which was usually
sonic decrepit old village crone, of a
sour aud malignant temper, who was as
thoroughlyhatcd or feared; but this did
not exclude men from sharing in the
power of becoming noted wizards
though from the great number of wo
men who were accused, it would ap
pear that the Arch-Enemy usually
preferred to try his arts upou the wea
ker and more impressionable sex.
The fatal compact was consummated
by the victim registering his or her
name in' a hook or upou a scroll of
parchment, and with his own blood.
The form of these contracts is no
where preserved. Sometimes, as is in
stanced in the negotiation between
Oliver Cromwell and the Devil before
the Battle of Worcester, there was a
good deal of haggling. The bargin
being concluded, Satan delivered to
his new recruit an imp or familarspirit,
which sometimes had the form of a
cat, at others of a mole, of a bird, of a
miller fly, or of some other insect or
animal. These were to come at call,
do such mischief as they should be
commanded.
Witches, according to popular be
lief, had the iowcr to ride at will
through the air on a broomstick or a
spit, to attend distaut meetings or
Sabbaths of witches; hut for this pur
pose they must first have anoitcd them
selves with a certain magical ointment
given to them by the fiend. This is
neither more nor less than what our
forefathers believed, what was solem
nly incorporated into the laws of the
land and what was solemnly preached
from the pulpit. A perusal of the
witchcraft examinations shows how
familar even children were with all
the forms of this superstition.
In the course of the trials at Salem,
several of the accused persons, in or
der to save their lives, confessed to
having signed their names in the Dev
ils book, to having been baptized by
mm ami to having attended midnight
meetings of witches, or sacraments
held upou thegiecu near the minister's
house, to which they came filing
through the air. They admitted that
he had sometimes appeared to them
in the form of a black dog or cat,
sometimes in that of a horse and once
as "a fine, grave man," but generally
as a mack man of severe aspect.
These fables thow the prevalent form
of the belief among the people. It
was generally held In Ikj impossible
for a witch to say the Lord's Prayer
correctly; ami it is a matter of record
that one woman, while under examina
tion, was put to this test, when it was
noticed that in one place she substitu
ted some words of her own for those of
the prayer. Such a failure of memory
was considered, even by some learned
judges, as a decisive proof of guilt
Even the trial of throwiug a witch in
to the water, to see whether she would
sink or swim, was once made in Con
necticut. The scene of the witchcraft out
break of lb'92 is anc!cvated knoll of
no great extent, rising amoug the
shaggy hills and spongy meadows that
lie at some distance back from the
more thickly settled part of the town
of Dan vers, Mass., formerly Salem
Village. It is indeed a quiet little
neighborhood to have made so much
noise in the world. Somehow, enter
prise avoids it, leaving it, as we see it
today, cold and lifeless. The first ap
pearance of everything is so peaceful,
so divested of all hurry or excitement,
as to suggest an hereditary calm a
pastyral continued from generation to
generation. Then, as the purpose
which brought him hither comes into
his mind, the visitor looks about him
in doubt whether this can really be
the locality of that tragedy.
Yes, here are the houses that were
standing when those events took place,
still solemnly commemorating them, as
if doomed to stand eternally. This
village street is the same old highway
through which the dreadful infection
spread from house to house into the
remote corners of the ancient shire,
until, as we read, there were forty men
of Andover that could raise the Devil
as well as any astrologer. Here, too,
is the site of the old meeting house, in
which those amazing scenes, the witch
craft examinations, took place. A
little farther on we come to the spot of
ground, as yet unbuilt upon, where the
parsonage with the Ieanto chamber
stood. The sunken outlines of the
cellar are still to be seen, and even
some relics of the house itself remain
in the outbuildings attached to the
Wadswortli mansion, which overlooks
the "Witch Ground," and which was
built in the same year that the old
parsonage was pulled down. It was
in this "Ministry House," as it was
LEGAL FEES.
Surely there is room for a revision
of the fee exactions of attorneys.
When, in the settlement or litigation,
the sum of 81,000 is paid by one liti
gant, of which only a matter of $250
goes to the other, there is time for
reform and insurgency is certainly
justifiable when a committee of law
yers goes into an investigation and
professionally declares that the levy of
such fees is right and proper.
Cases are not uncommon wherein
attorneys secure contingent fees often
running as high as half the amount
recovered. While even this practice
is unprofessional, there is nothing
unfair to the client in it, for the attor
ney runs the risk of getting nothing
for his services by failing to win his
case.
It is to the public, however, that the
contingent fee is unfair, as its inevita
ble tendency is to promote litigation
that would not otherwise be instituted,
and to lead the lawyer to many times
resort to methods aud practices that
he would not otherwise stoop to if his
fee were not dependent on his wiuning.
To say that it is -right and prober
for lawyers in a suit to get $750 out
of a 81,000 settlement portion, and the
successful litigant but 8250, is to say
that our courts are operated chiefly for
the enrichment of our lawyers. Some
how the suggestion of insurgency in
protest against such practices as this
seems to strike a responsive chord.
Perhaps if the lawyers could fix up
a bond to he given by them when the
litigant applies to them, wherein they
would not take oyer 75 per cent of the
amount recovered, it might materially
reassure litigants. Lincoln Star.
IN FEAR OF HONORARY TITLE
HtiiiMe II
10WA1ll
Makes Home Baking Easy
Royal Baking Powder helps the housewife to
produce at home, quickly and economically,
fine and tasty cake, hot biscuit, puddings,
the frosted layer cake, crisp cookies, crullers,
crusts and muffins, fresh, clean, tasty and
wholesome, with which the ready-made food
found at the shop or grocery does not com
pare. Royalis the greatest of bake-day helps.
ROYAL COOK BOOK-Mt RECQF
Sati Name ami Addnsu
oval SMina rowocs ca. tw vom.
Baron Steuben Alarmed Lest He
Should Meet Mishap That Befel
Lafayette.
iuscribimr
then called, that the circle of young
girls met, whose denunciations, equiv
alent to the death warrant of the
accused person, soon overspread the
land with desolation and woe; aud it j
was here that the alleged midnight
convocations of witches met to cele
brate their unholy sacraments, and
to renew their solemn league and
covenant with Satan by
their uanies in his fatal book
Aud in Salem a child only 1 1 years
old, Abigail Williams, look away the
lives of men aud women who had
always borne unblemished reputations
among their friends and neighbors, by
identifying them as having attended
these meetings, aud of having hurt
this or that person. These poor crea
tures could scarcely understand that
they were seriously accused. Hut
their doubts were soon removed. Once
they were accused, every man's baud
was against them. Children testified
against their own parents, husbands
against their wives, wives against their
husbands, neighbor against neighbor.
It is an amazing history; but, iucredi
ble as it seems, it is yet all true.
Hundreds of innocent persons were
thrown into prison, while twenty were
executed, at the iustance of some
young girls of the village, who went
into convulsions, real or pretended, as
soon as they were confronted with the
prisoners at the bar. The convictions
were had upon "specter" evidence
that is to say, the strange antics of the
possessed girls were considered as
proof positive of the criminal power of
witchcraft in the accused shown too
in open court with which they stood
charged. The statute assumed that
this power could only proceed from a
familiarity or compact with the evil
one, and punished it with death. The
evidence, however, was of two kinds.
When interrogated by the magistrates,
the girls first gave their evidence
calmly, like ordinary witnesses to the
criminal acts, and then went into their
spasms, which all believed were caused
by the prisoners. Their incoherent
ravings and outcries were also taken
as good and valid testimony, and are
so recorded.
These remarkable proceedings are
not, however, without a precedent.
The tragical story of Urbain Graudier
develops the same characteristics. His
popularity as a preacher having excit
ed the envy of the monks, they insti
gated some nuns to play the part of
persons possessed, and in their convul
sions to charge Graudier with being
the cause of their evil visitation. This
horrible, though absurd charge was
sanctioned by Cardinal Kichelieu on
grounds of personal dislike. Graudier
was tried, condemned, aud burnt alive,
April 18, 1834, more than half a cen
tury earlier than the proceedings
occurring; t Salem. Kansas City
Star.
Some men have shunned honorary
titles almost as earnestly as others
have coveted them.
After Lafayette bad been made a
doctor of laws by a New Jersey col
lege shortly before the close of the
Revolutionary war. Baron Steuben
was In great fear lest he should meet
with a similar mishap. Having to pass
through a college town where the
marquis had been thus distinguished,
the old warrior, so the story runs,
baited his men and thus addressed
them:
"You shall have to spur the horses
well and ride through this place? like
the devil, for, if they catch you, they
will make doctors of you."
There Is another story that only a
few yars ago, when college degrees
were scattered somewhat lavishly, an
illiterate old man of great wealth, hav
ing been honored with a degreo by
a college which he bad laid under ob
ligation, made a wager that he could
obtain a similar honor for his serv
ant He won the wager and, en
couraged by bis success, made anoth
er that he could obtain a degree for
his horse. This time, however, he
lost The college authorities got wind
of his game, and in answer to bis
request for a doctorate for So-and-so
the president wrote a courteous note,
saying that though the trustees were
anxious to oblige so good a friend of
the college, they had found on exam
ination of the records that though
tnpy had once conferred a degree
upon a Jackass, there was no prece
dent for conferring one upon a horse.
MYRIAD FOES OF THE' OAK
Most Afflicted of Trees Is the Prey of
Over Fifteen Hundred Kinds
of Insects.
Along the Hudson river, from Spuy
ten Duyvil to Osslning, according to
reports of foresters, thousands of elm
trees have been saved from destruc
tion since last fall, the spraying pro
cess, more freely employed than ever
before, (having hilled the eggs of de
vastating beetles by the million. Men.
provided with machines that throw a
poisonous fluid even to the highest
branches of the threatened trees, have
been busy at this work for several
months when the weather was favor
able for such operations.
"Strange," said a workman in charge
of a spraying apparatus, "but the bee
tles never attack a maple or a horse
chestnut or any other kind of tree.
These pests always go for the elm, but
the oak has troubles of its own that
aro entirely different from those of
other trees. We've found that the oak
Is greatly afflicted. Xo less than fir
teen hundred kinds of Insects feed
upon it at one time or another during
the season of verdure. What do you
think of that? The great wonder Is
that the elm, as a species, is not ex
tinct." And the man wanted to read
tho names of tho devouring pests from
a list of them he had in his pocket
Solon on Strike.
Legislation in the Isle of Man, off
the shore of England. Is at a stand
still because the house of keys has
gone on strike. Manxmen can afford
to mark time, for their laws have long
been advanced. Every woman, widow
or spinster. In the Isle of Man, wheth
er she be owner, occupier or lodger,
enjoys the parliamentary franchise.
Every widow enjoys half her husband's
personal estate and has a life Interest
In his real estate, and she cannot be
deprived of this by will. The sale of
cigarettes and intoxicants to children
was forbidden in Man for years before
such a prohibition was enforced in
England Itself. England baa legis
lated mildly against money lenders.
The highest Interest that can be
charged for a loan In the Isle of Man
is 6 per cent, and that has been the
law for over two hundred yean. And
there are many other Instances In
which Manx lawmakers have adonted
progressive measures with entire sue- I
cess.
Blaze Had Lasted Long.
A delegation of officials of fire de-i
partments of western cities was on a
visit to Are headquarters in New York'
city a few days ago and their talk,
turned upoon big fires in their expert-!
ence.
"We had a big fire In our city a
few years ago. The blaze wasn't en-r
tirely extinguished for nearly a week,"
aid one of the visitors.
"A week may seem lour in soma-
An Admirer of Mary Queen of Scats.
Theodore Napier, who for eight
years has brought a wreath from Edin
burgh to lay on the site of Mary
Queen of Scots's execution at Fbther
Ingay, near Peterborough, attended for
the same purpose yesterday in full
Highland attire.
On this occasion, however, he waa
refused admission to the castle site
by the occupier of the farm of which
it forms part Mr. Nanier left th
cases, but wo had a fire in this city! wreath on an adjacent hedge, and will
that was not extinguished In two,
years," eald Commissioner Waldo with'
a smile.
"It was only the other day that 1
ordered a fireboat up to Hiker's Is
land in the East River to throw water
on a Are that started two years ago.
The fire was in the ground that had
been reclaimed from the water by
dumping cinders and other refuse:
from the city. In spite of the rains
and water the underground fire has
persisted. The reduction of the cin
ders and refuse to ashes has caused
the ground to sink."
abandon the pilgrimage unless the
prohibition Is withdrawn. London
Evening Stands.
NOTICE TO CONTKACTOK8.
Healed nruiMMMln will bo received by the Secre
tary of tlio Hoard of Education of the city of
Colninbus. Nebraska, on or before 7:30 p. m.,
April 2!. 1911. for tho repair and alteration of
the Columbus HiRh school bnilding.
Proposals to be considered mast be accom
panied by a certified check einal to three per
cent of the bid.
Plans and specifications for said work may be
seen at theoth'caof Wonleman & Urabe, Archi-
i.u, oiuhiodh, ieDrasau.
Tho Hoard reserves the right to reject aay and
all bids. Dr. K. H. Nauxann.
1-3 Secretary.
KiK JBYaYaYaYaYaYaSC22S9BVBB
:Mw-bbbHIbbbbbbbbbI
f . -i?" Hr"1- ' "-BaKMBBlBBBWjBJ9nBBBBBBBBBBBW99!9jBVBBB
Go Somewhere This Summer
TO THE EAST: In due season attractive touribt rates will be announced to
the Lake and St. Lawrence regions, Atlantic Coast cities and resorts. Can
we help yon plan an Eastern tour?
OR IF YOU PREFER THE WEST, tbiuk about the mountain climate and
scenery of Colorado, the Big Horn region, or tour through Ycllowotone Park;
there are circuit tours embracing Scenio Colorado, Salt Lake, Yellowstone Park
and the Vip Horn Mountains, all in one journey. Perhaps you can take this
summer that long wished for journey to the Pacific Coast, embracing by diverse
rontcs the entire West and Northwest regions. A summer tour, whether through
the East or through the West, bus become to tunny a necessity, while railroad
and hotel facilities make it a diverting ami enjoyable experience. There are no
tours in the world that offer tho traveler so much for his money.
Get in touch with us. Let us help you plan your journey and provide yon
willi free descriptive publications as Boon as received from the printer.
b. f. RECTOR, Ticket flgent
Columbus. Nebr.
W. WAKbLbY. Cen'l. Pessener fleem. Omaha. Near
KBi l-
I MQftQtfirin Biiirlinft I
I Old Books I
I Rebound I
I In fact, for anything in tbe book
I binding line bring your work to I
I Journal Office I
I Phone 184 I
V
I
k