D Hall County Pioneers Built a :;0 Jf 1 - A 'V H i( ' :" a L ' ' HIGH SCHOOL. T HAS always Wn th happy fortune of the I'latt rlvrr to have a border population that was conxtantly uneaoy to reach a farther front. lldr lnnd and freer life. Kut when the early pioneer unyoked his oxen for the last time It was not his Intention to turn from the riatta valley, which h knew and loved. And whether he opened a farm or started a bank he had the advantage of knowing the country and Us people. Nearly all the prominent cities of Ne braska have some specialty that has con trlbuted to a greater degree than any other factor to the growth and prestige. But Grand Island has no specialty. Its re Miueaa are divrsifi4 auU wU ulgh laax- DRIVEWAT Gossip and Taft's l.ocUy Nnuiber. Jl'lt Is I'resident Taft's lucky number, relates the New York Pre He hss four lulters In Ms name, and he was bjrn In Ohio, a state of four letters. The president also is one of four He was graduated from the high school In Cincinnati In brat hers. Woodw ard 1 jTi. and w cut to Yale, which bers a four letter name. Mrs. Taft thtn lived In Pike Mreet, Cincinnati. The four letters In 'f.e raiiie of that street bote luckily upon the J resident's courtship. The wedding cere mony was performed by a preacher whose four-letter tinme was Hoe. Good luck of the number extended from then to Helen Taft, the daughter. She w.m one of four fcholarshlps at piyn Mawr and entered upon a four- ear ct ursu. In l!iH Taft ai appointed president of the United States Philippine comiulsvion. On July 4. 1U. he ban hl career as the jrl ci.il governor of those ular.ds. H.s Wcrk as governor ended on Febi uary 1, 14. Secretary of Wsr Koot had four letters In his last ncme. That augured well for Taft. He succeeded Root as secre taiy of war In 1104. Ten years before tliat. In 1W. Taft had n.sdo his famous .tfcifi n Ii:i"t Phelan In th labor strike 0 ise. Taft could not help making a record ss secretary of war. because he bad to deal chiefly with the army, which Is another ur-lettsr institution. Coming down to his election as president fr tour years, with four mora years lu h'r1 ;.4, " H ft f-' ... . r,- . ... . . I; it. F .V'- 4 UNION PACIFIC CAR 8HOF3, GRAND ISLAND. 1 GRAND ISLAND. haustlhle, and its people have the force, push and enterprise which is essential to success an are the (rifts of nature, without which It cannot be won. The wonderful richness of the soil, backed hy great natural advantages, was sufficient to form the ground work of Grand Island. These great natural advan tages attracted good men and made men Rood. Their cltiicr.s were of the rest less, energetlo type, which worked wonders wherever they located. Grand Island also has a goodly number of manufacturing In dustries' and the dinner pall brigade Is as suming Industrial proportions. The city enjoys a prestige as a commercial and financial center, which keeps pace with the grow lb oX Uie country It serves and which J t i --t...V . T f IN 6TOLLKVS PARK. GRAND ISLAND. Stories About Noted People prospect. It Is luUiestlng to note how largely the figure four and four-letter names entered Into the campalfn. On April 11, 1JOA. it was announced that 2tl delegates were pledged to Taft out of 4H selected In states entitled to 651 delegates. A month before that his manager, Vorya, said he hud 14 of 2tt delegates selected to the republican national convention, and forty-two were Instructed for olhxr candi dates In that week forty-six delegates were selected and fcrty-two contests had been noted, of which the four Oklahoma contests Involved Taft mer. Major General J. Franklin Bell, the presi dent's friend, has four letters in his name, and the rret-Ment's military ai.le is Cap tain Archibald W. Putt, another fo.u-letter man. Tin number also carries into the president's poii, as gjlf, his favorite, Indicates. lieeiUtni Dias of Mexico, who Is to meet tho prendent in Kl Paso on October 13. also belong to the four-letter fraternity. oted JSI Athlete. Midshipman Kenneth Whiting. V. S. N.. ho, according to recent cable dispatches, while attached to the dated S:ates sub marine Porpoise, now stationed at Manila, distin juifhed himself by the daring and dangerous feat of having himself ejected from one of the Porpoise's torpedo tubot while tt was submerged and reaching the surface in safety, la well remembered both for bis "nerve" and athleuu pi owes by Annapolis men. While la the naval acad emy ha played end on tiie fool bail lean. 1 1"-.' In turn serve It. The welfare and fame of Hall county Is very closely associated vlth the properity and pride of CJrand Island. With the progressive record of the city the develop ment" of the aJJacent and contributory ter ritory will keep pace. It Is Indetil the ad jacent development which city progress he speaks; and It is that upon which the city progress depends. The building up of the surrounding country Is the most Important and gratifying feature of a'l. Every family brought Into the county, every farm Improved and every Institution established, whether It be a creamery or foundry, the raising of beets or blooded stock, adds Just that much to the business resources of the county. One prosperous family on a little farm Is worth more to Grand Island and to the county than a tralnload of tourists traveling through tho county. And the factory and manufactur ing plant employing twenty-five or fifty men and using the raw material of the valley Is a growing asset, a continuous rev enue producer. Labor Is one of the prima factors In all the development, and the community that can supply intelligent and contented labor has an asset of great value. It was the Germans that discovered Hall county. And Its discovery and development came not by chance. To subdue the prairie has taken the rude surgery of the rougher fibers. Hall county has been the battle ground of strong men with nature. In the spring of 1S.'.7 as soon as there was grass for the teams the future settlers of Grand Island started from Des Moines, la. Nebraska at that time was a very new territory, with less than 20.000 peoplo scat tered along the Missouri river. This party reached Omaha on June IS, and found a little city three years old with less than 2,000 people. A few settlers had at the time gone Into the Platte valley and had cross-.l the Loup river about eighty miles west of Omaha. Every four or five milts a house was found, some with canvass roofs or otherwise unfinished. Fremont and Colum bus each consisting of about a dozn block houses. From Columbus this party Journeyed about sixty miles farther west until they came to Wood river. Just west of this point and opposite a large Island In the Platte called Grand Island, the new settlement was located July 4, Uf7. The party ton- , iVO;' I .4.."- r A. . 9 K : I t ; - V, -VL 'Uw.--,.1 and later captained It. He was also a "star" Hack athlete. Boxing was the young "middy's" favorite exercise, and la his senior year he won the championship of the academy. As a foot bsll player Midshipman Whiting was particularly noted for his quickness, fierceness of play and absolute disregard for Injury to him self or his opponents. His pla lug in Army Navy game was at times nothing less than desperate. His work for athletics at the academy was recognized by the award of the sword "for the mldsii.pman do.ng most fur athletics." W'n's Hrllllaut Career. Dr. Wu Ting-fang, the retiring Chinese minister, and one of the bett known men In the Imperial diplomatic service, born In the Hainhul district, Kwng-tung. China, about sixty-five years ago. lis w educated In the Chinese classics at Canton and studied English at Hongkong, lie ws enrolled at Lincoln's Inn, London, In 1-7 , where he studied international law and other Uil subjects fur two years, when be was admitted to practice at th Lt.iis:i bar. Returning to China In 1T7T. he passed through the United State and mad a study of national Institutions and colleges On his arrhal at Hongkong he practiced law until 1W, when he was appmiued at legal adviser and deputy for foiei.-n affairs at Tientsin by 14 Hung Chang, then vl.erov of ChllL While serving In this capacity be became Interested In railroads and built the first railway in Chins. Ht became pro moter and chief director of the Kai l'u.g Railway company, and later was appointed THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: AUGUST Kingdom 7 I slsted of thirty men, six women and one child; they had seventeen nke of oxe;i and" a span of mules. The pioneers then went to work putting un some log houses near the present dwellings of Mrnek nnl Stuhr farms, a little esst of the present city, so near together they culd protect each other In case of attack br Ind ans In the fall of I;? the flif-t tumors ca.ne from the west about gold belnjt discovered at IMkes IVak. The Immense amount of travel over this old ImmlKrant road for the next five years furn'shed this1 settler with a potil mnrkit for all ftirin p.odu.-e. Of th original ploneets who came hero forty years ago, not many yet remain ill the city or county. At prtsent there are living in the city of Grand Island. Christian Menek. a retired farmer, and in the county, William Stolley, William A. Hagge, Kal Ewoldt, and Hy Jochm k, sr., and two ladles, Mrs. Joelmck. wife of Hy Joehnc:; sr., and Mis. Anna Thompsen, wife of John Thompsen, sr. All these early pioneers were poor from a financial point of view. But they weru rich In courage, energy. Industry and fru gality. They were suc.es.fful from every point of view and laid the foundation of Grand Island and of Hall ccunty. Grand Island received Its name from the largest Island In the Platte river. In IS'X the orig inal town site was abandoned for one on tho railroad, about a nnlj to the north. The first tiack of the I'nion Pacific, rail road was laid Into Grand Island on July lS'Jti. This construction train was drawn by a locomotive called Os. eola. It wu captured by the Indians six miles West of Plum Creek In 1SGS. The first building erected In Grand Island was by W. Stephens on Locust and Front streets. The first mayor of the city was W. A. Piatt, elected In 1ST. Industrially the present wealth of the city has depended largely upon the farms and the farmers. And this condition is liable to continue for many years to come. In other Industries, that of the railroads is of the greatest Im portance, not only to the city, but to the entire county. The l-'riion I'uclfic Railroad company has large Khops located at Grand Island where It employes in all about U50 men. This Is one of the Important division stations of the line. Two other railroad companies also add much to the city's wealth and prosperity, the St. Joe & Grand Island and the Burlington & Missouri. The American lleet Sugar company has an extensive factory here, employing about 250 men. This factory generally begins operations in September and runs 100 days. The facti ry consumes the product fro.u about 4.000 ai res, yields about ten tons p;r acre. About one-thlid of the beets uij grown tuui.i.ii Grand lsiai.d. the balance is grown In the iir.tta ed dis.ricts further west. Th's fact ry turns out about 7.00J.0JJ pounds of K'jar per year, and furnlsliei from 12, Out) to l,",0uu tons of pulp for feeding stock. This waa the first beet Migar factory established In the United States. The I'nion Stock Yard company has in the last two years built extensive nev yaids east of the city and is doing an Im mense business in feeding slock in routtf to the limaha and othir packing houses from the stock farms of western -ebraska and the stock ranse farther west. The large canning factory usts the pro duct, mu.ily sweet corn, troin about 6.CKX) acres, and employes 2'M people through lh canning season. The larc f.our.n mill runs day and night, employing fro.u twenty-five to thirty men. The product of this plant, established twenty years ago, has won for itself an excellent reputation, and finds a market in many cities reaching to the Pacific coast. Grand Island has two excellunt laundries which give the people prompt service, de livering to any part of the city. The city also has a broom factory, a wire fence manufacturing plant, good foundry, new windmill factory, candy factory, employing forty people, and the Fairmont Creamery company has Just completed a large plant costing from $76 000 to IIOI.OCO. Among the public service corporations are the Grand Island Gas company and the Grand Island Kleeirlc company. The city also has its electric lighting plant and owns Its own water works, which are operated in connection with each other. The telephone facilities are second to none In the state. Two telephone companies' by the imperial government codirector In the railway bureau, then Interested in the construction of railways In north China. On the establl.-iiuient of the Tientsin uni versity, in 1S5. he was appointed chief di rector, and in the same year he was made first secretary of the embassy of peave missions to Japan and plenipotentiary for exchanging ratlflcati tis of Hie peace treaty effected at Chefu. He also asl'.td in nego tiating at Peking the Chiiio-Japanese treaty of commerce and navigation, which wu ratified In October, ISM. In the following year he was sent as envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to the United States, which office he held until 1:02. wlitn he was recalled to China. In 1307 he was reappointed to the same post. Dr. Wu Tlr.g-fang has contributed nu merous essays on economics and political subjects to the leading American and Urit Uh inagaxlnes and newspapers. He has lec turd upeatediy before university classes hero and abroad, and In 13UV the degree of LL. D. was conferred upon hltn by the Uni versity of Pennsylvania. He is married and has several cnlldren, all of whom are being educated In American and English universities. Tula Di.w!, r -None. F.r.gsged to one twin, but unable to marry her because the father insist that both twins shall be engaged at the same time. Is the tad predirann nt In w hich Elmer L. Brock, ssslstant attorney general of Colorado, Is placed. Mr. brock met. wooed at.d won a south ern beauty, Mlts Amelia Lavlngton, some weeks ago, whlie on a trip to Kentucky, and was preparing to announce the engage ment when he was confronted by the father, Wilbur P. Lavlngton, a lawyer of the Blue Grass state, who forbade the en 22, 1909. in the Beautiful Platte Valley 1 ,- NEBRASKA SOLDIERS' lines reach from everywhere to every where, giving the city and the county ex cellent servlc. Most of the farmers now make use of the telephone, and with the rural delivery covering most of the county, they arc in close touch with the business world. The city has In the last ten years made wondorful progress as a wholesale. Jobbing and commission sales center; they have two wholesale grocery and two wholesale fruit houses. The first thing that strikes the eye of the visitor of Grand Island Is the clean, wholesome appearance of Its re tall stores, a good criterion of what can be found on the Inside. It Is very apparent to the careful observer of Industrial and com mercial knowledge that the city has never forged ahead so rapidly as In the last three years and In every legitimate branch of commerce It can lay Just claim to having representative establishments which are abundantly capablo of holding their own in any equal field with the best houses In the Platte valley. In the last election the el'y had the third largest vote In the state. The Sate Soldiers' home Is located here and Is raring for about 500 of tho old vet erans and their wives. The t -end Island Business college owns its building and has an enrollment of (500 stuli'ii s. The Grand Island Baptist college, established about twenty years ago. has an enrollment of W0. In no particular Is the rlty more per tlnently to receive Judgment from the casual visitor or the great army of travel ing men than In the character and make-up of their hotels. The city and hotels are so linked together that a prejudice against one Invariably reflects on the other. This rlty is well supplied with hotels and they are centrally located, convenient to the best shopping district. The Commercial club Is well organised with a membership of 200 wideawake cltlsens. This club has been very successful in securing for the city many new Industries and their In fluence In up-buildlng and beautifying city is seen on every hand. Dairying is proving to be the friend of the farmer. It brings In money everr month in the year and makes the farmer more Independent than he ever was before. Last year the farmers of this county shipped out 200,000 pounds of butter and 120.000 gallons of cream; they also sold and shipped out 16,000 head of beef cattle and : 1,000 tat boss and In addition to this tut THIRD STREET. gagement unless the other daughter should be betrothed at the same time. "Now what can I do?" asked Mr. Brock, in the throes of anguish. "I met Amelia while I was south on my vacation, and we were both stopping at Rock Castle Springs. "."he was alone then and I did not know that she had a twin sister until afterwards. Just before I left I lie other daughter, Anne, nearly as pretty us Amelia, appealed on the scene, and matters were compli cated. "The two were always together as chil dren and young girls and were lnseperable, the first separation being the time when I met Amelia. When I left Kentucky It was with the understanding that I should re turn, and I was happy until Mr. Lavlngton called upon me yesterday. "He made the situation very plain, and that he was wrecking my happiness never occurred to him. but he told me plainly that he and the mother, before her death, bad desired a double marriage for the twins, and that he would not give his con sent to the engagement of one until the other one be engaged too." Prudence ef Kreaeh Diplomat. An amusing little adventure happened the other day to the French premier, M. Hi land He paid an official visit to a lit tle town In the southeast of France, which is famous for Its clocks and watches. The minister opened the local exhibition, and after the speeches the local mayor pre sented him with a magnificent chronom eter made In the town. 'If your excellency will allow." he said, "we will keep the watch for a few days and legulate It." U. Brland, who, though a socialist, has MaWpIT' Hi- X AND SAILORS' HOME, OR AND ISLAND. K Ilk' iU-t W fit s t HALL COUNTY COURT Hall county farmers sold and shipped out of the county 237,000 bushels of corn and 2S2.OO0 bushels of wheat. The sheep Industry of the county is of no small Importance. Robert Taylor has a ranch of 6.000 acres devoted largely to this Industry. Kennet McDonald also has a large sheep ranch on which are some of the best farm buildings In the county. There are over 40,000 sheep shipped out the county each year. One of the most pros perous farmers Is Martin Schlmmer, u Ger man, who came in the early days. He owns 2,500 acres of land, under a high state of cultivation and well stocked. But over and above all the attractions of the newness and swiftness of things Is the attraction of the Platte river. It is the mouth of the valley, for It Is the most expressive feature of Its landscape. It has the power of drawing attention with- J-" m J? ' 'r i - f " T .m tils ;c t. mk LOOKING WEST FROM PALMER HOL'SE. GRAND ISLAND. a sense of humor, comes from the south of France himself, and knows that prom ises there are not always kept. He knew, too, that a colleague had the same watch given to him last year, that It has been kept to be regulated, and that It had not yet reached Pails. So M. liriand, premier, shook M. le Malre warmly by the hand, told him that he was a bit of a clockmaker himself, and would enjoy put ting the watch lu order, and would think while he did so of the kindness of the town which had presented It to him. M Brland has discovered that the watch Is an excellent timekeeper. College Daily Newspapers (Continued from Page One.) they are nearer probably to being metro politan newspapers than any of the other college dailies. The llliiil last year wu made an elght-pag paper, with five columns. At the cams time the Dally .No braskan was enlarged to five columns, It already being an eight-page paper. These two papers during the last year published more local college news than any other dailies In the country. For the first semester of the coming school year the Daily Nebraskan,w ill be edited by a boy who Is not yet 17 year of age and who Is the youngest college editor In the country. He 1 a brilliant boy, with a large knowledge of newspaper work, SBd gives promise of putting out a paper that will be the best Nebraska has ever had. A prominent feature of the Dally Nebraakan. the mini and the Maroon Is the cartoon which Is run several time a week. This has become a fixed part of these papers and has made them many subscriber It Is rapidly being adopted by t J I,' , HOUSE. GRAND ISLAND. out courting It. The faculty of exciting In terest by Its graceful movements. The real way to know the Platte river is not to' glance at it here und there from the car window. You must go to Its native haunt. You must see It In Its youth and freedom; you must accommodate yourself to its pace, and give yourself to Its influence. If you are a good walker, take the Riverside path or across the open meadow. If you are business tangled, tho Platte river has Some of the best rarelillllng scenery 111 the state. The landscapes of the river' are growing more beautiful from year to year, notwithstanding the clearing, tramp ling work of civilization. All through this part of the state th old Is giving way to the new, the savage to the civilized, the prarle to the orchard, and field. Tbs dawn of a new day la breaking SiirTi- ' - t , 111 1 ' a 'MCI . W SWT- 1 fi other college papers. In the east the Yale News, the Cornell Dally Sun and the Columbia Spectator are the most progressive papers. They all pub lish a great amount of local news. They are well edited and contain several feature that are pleasing to their class of readers. The Michigan Dully, the Dally Callfor ntan, the Cornelllan and the Pacific Wave cover only s,lected departments of the work of the Institutions they represent. The Princetonlan and the Wisconsin Car dinal are apparently the plutocrats among the college dallies, for they carry a far larger proportion of advertising to reading matter than a..y of the others. The Kun san Is Issued semi-weekly at present, with prospects of being enlarged Into a dally during the coming winter. Of the weekly, monthly and other publi cations published In connection with the school of the country little need be said beyond the fact that the editors and man agers repeat In a smaller way the experi ences of the editors of the college dailies. News bus to be provided for the subscrib ers, advertisements must be procured that sxpenses may be met and all the details of the business must be carried en In much the same way as In the office of the big gest newspaper or magaslna published. W'ky lie Died. Head Keeper Snyder of the Central park loo was smiling over a newspaper aocount cf a monkey U at bad died of love. "It's a good story," said the head keeper. "This reporter has an original turn cf ( mind. He's like the western Jury. A westerner, you know, onca hanged him self to the bedpost by his suspenders, and the verdict cf the corner's Jury ran: " 'Ixceasd can to his d -ath by coming . home full and mistaking htu,seif tut his j pants.' " Nsvr Turk TUi.es. 2 -