f 7 JrTt.iiii isk-- The bureau of immigration and nat uralization it doing most effective work in diverting hundreds of poor alien from the crowded centers of the coun try to fertile farm and other places where there la a demand for that clans of laborers. This bureau Is charged by an act of Congress with the great un dertaking of promoting a beneficial distribution of admitted aliens and others seeking employment, but the ac tual work of distribution is conducted by the Information branch of the immi gration service In New York City. The method employed Is to send out cards to all persons unable to secure neces sary help, Including farm laborers, common laborers and mechanics. Whnt erer kind of help Is seeded is Indicat ed by the replies on the return postal crds. About 000,000 cards have boon cattered broadcast over the country, nd It is estimated that altogether bout 4,000,000 cards will be sent out In the near future. From February 1 -last to, the close of Juno nearly 1,000 liens and others bad been sent in re sponse to applications to various parts of the country. Twenty-six nationali ties are represented in this distribu tion and the employment secured was principally farm work. When the Interstate Commerce Com mission announced that It would start thorough. Investigation of the reason ableness of any Increased freight rates, was generally taken to mean that the President was thus answering the Vr test of the shipping interests against the proposed advance. Only two days before the Receivers' and Shippers' As sociation of Cincinnati had address a public letter to the President, charg ing that the Missouri Pacific and Rock Island bad deliberately Ignored the mandate of the court and asking If there is no power in the laud "to reach railroad companies that brush aside the decrees of our courts." The statement of the Interstate Commerce Commis sion gives notice that a close check Is being kept on all Increases In rates and, while admitting that It can not legally do anything toward altering rates bo r fore they have been in effect and com plaints filed, It intimates that prelimi nary Investigation on its own nniou Is possible and that this would make action very prompt. The presumption that prosecution would follow is appar ent Secretary Taft states that n report Je has received from Governor Ms goon escribing with great detail the condii Ions In Cuba is most satisfactory, witb reference to the. turning over' of tin jUland to the Cuban authorities in Feb ruary next as proposed by the Prosl dent's proclamation. Judging from the report, the Secretary is satisfied that complete transfer of authority will accomplished without frletlom : : By direction of the President, Sec retary of War Wright has begun an Investigation of the charge made by certain New England manufacturers of clothing that the uniforms of the Amer ican army have been made in England, especially the khaki uniforms. Wright aid that no such contracts had been let under the direction of Secy. Taft : : Another Invention is about to be In troduced on the Indian reservations by Commissioner Lenpp. Its ultimate aim Is to make short hair fashionable. The commissioner proposes that official bar bers shall be stationed at all Indian agencies And reservations. Lists of liglbles for apoplntment as barbers Soon will be prepared by the civil ser Ties commission. Upon the recommendation of Sena tor Borah, of Idaho, the Fresldent has removed from office United States Dis trict Attorney Itulck, the man who pressed the land fraud prosecution K;alnst Borah, resulting In an acqult , L At the same time the resignation ot Marshal Rounds was called for, he having been tho official who co-operated With Rulck in that case. ' Postmaster General Von L. Meyer bas Issued the expected order requir ing that all papers printed in any lan guage except English shall submit translations of their contents for ex amination. The effect Is to be the vir tual exclusion of the radical foreign press which could not afford the ex pense of translation. Secretary of the treasury has decid ed to retire the 804,000,000 Issue of out standing 8 per cent bonds Issued In 1898, to supply funds for the war with Spain. lie will not redeem the bonds, but will refund them into 2 per cent bonds, which banks will probably be glad to get as a basis for new circula tion. : : The converted yacht Mayflower, which for several seasons has done duty as the special dispatch boat for the Presi dent, and which find a collision while on the trip to Newport, recently, with the President and family on board, has been ordered to Carrlbean waters to aid In the patrol of Haytl or other dis turbed sections of the West Indies, lier first destination Is Port-uu-Prluee, Haytl, relieving tho gunboat Padu cab. : :- Trwsldent Roosevelt has appointed three commissioners to represent the United states on the Joint Internation al committee to investigate the opium question lo the far East. They are Thomas Burke, an attorney of Seattle; Dr. Hainilon Wright, of Maine, and Dr. Charles I. Tenney, Chinese secretary ef the American legation at Pekln. Having readied the uge limit for ac tive service, Rear Admiral Cowles, brother-in-law of the President, was placed upon the retired list. Boston Hebrew painters and papst lisngnrs ere spiln organising a union. There Is a movement to establish a la bor temple for Memphis (Teno.) trade unions. At Ntw Orleans, I., a permanent ar bitration board for labor dispute hs been completed The Watervllle (Me.) textile worker have applied for a charter from the Unit ed Textile Workers. Tlhe annual convention of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada will be held at Halifax in September. There is a movement under way to or ganize a building trades section of ths American Federation of Labor in Fargo, N. D. New York Typographical Union ("Big Six") has transferred $5,000 to ft special fund to be paid out to its out-of-work members. The International Brotherhood of Painters and Decorators of America has Increased Wio membership more than 0,000 since April 1. New York, New Haven and Hnrtford railroad clerks' lodgea will make a fur ther effort to have a system agreement made between the road and the clerks. The American scctioti of the boot and shoe workers' International body now has more than $100,000 in its emergency fund, the money being in banks and draw ing interest. A wage agreement for the ensuing year was adopted recently at a conference be tween representatives of the steel inter eests and of the Amalgamated Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, held at Pittsburg, Pa. Average hourly wages in the United States in 1007 were higher than in any other year of the period, 1800 to 1007, and more than 20 per cent higher than the average In any year from 1800 to 1000. The union of stationary firemen of Pittsburg, Pa., has established a night school, bold once a week, when experi enced union men lecture on topics con nected with the everyday work of the trade. The French laundries at San Francisco, Cal., have tcjjorUtl that the Japanese laundries are seriously affecting their business and have promised to support the AntJ-Japanes League morally and financially. The conciliation board of the North imberland (England) miners, at a meet ing held recently, agreed upon a 2!i per teat reduction, making a total reduction this year of 3 per cent, after a long period of continuous advances in wages. It is estimated that there are 61,100 nen idle in the building trade in New fork City. Of tlm 100,000 skilled me thauics in th city 40,000 are still idle. bor leaders express surprise that work tog conditions have not improved more rapidly. The, law limiting the work of women jnd children in factories to fifty-four ours a week was amended by the Massa ihusctts Legislature to read fifty-six tours, and was then passed with a pro viso that it should not go Into effect un til Jan. 1, 1010. The first annual report and balance sheet of the National Union ot Journal ists shows that tie union, which twelve months ago had not one formally const! tutdbranch, bas now a large number In England and Wales, which embrace a membership of over 1,000. San Francisco (Cal.) Lodge No. 08. International Association of Machinists, which has under its care Golden West Lodge of Machinists' Apprentices, has adopted a plan by which the youngsters are to be Instructed by lectures on the different branches of the trade. It bas already been decided by the leather workers that they will make a uni versal demand for the eight-tour day within the next two years, but no defi nite time has been set. Th object of their meeting at Kansas City, Mo., in September is to determine the date. Frank Feuney of Philadelphia, a proud oeirt member of the Elevator Construct ors' Union of Philadelphia, Pa., and for many terms president of the Central La bor Union at that city, has been appoint ed to the office of elevator Inspector. Ths position carries a salary of $3,000 a year. A reorganization ot the building trades unions has been brought shout in Buffalo, N. Y., after many years of warfare. The new organisation is a branch of the building trades department of the Ameri can Federation of Labor. The Buffalo branch has a membership of about 10,000. Th Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers and the Western Itar Iron Association have reached a set tlement affecting 10,000 men in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Illi nois snd Missouri. The puddlers are re duced from last year's scale about 8 per sent, and the finishers accept an average rat of nearly 2 per cent. Charlue W. MJrker, organiier for the American Federation of I.nlior, recently visited an overall factory at the pro rremive little city of Somervllle, Tenn., md reports it as the finest example of the touefit of organization he has seen. Not S child is employed. In any rapacity, ev ery worker Is a union man, and not a I .article of dirt or speck of dust is visi ble from euglne room to office. It Is a tafe prediction that no casea ot consump tion will be developed In such environ ments. The Journeymen Bakers' Society of the I 'nlted Kingdom have taken a vote mod ifying their eight-hour bill, which now ,Mrmits of relays of eight hours. The !i-Ulou was carried by a very large ma jority, the vote being one of the largest ver taken In connection with the union. Serious minim? catastrophic recorded n the United Kingdom lust yenr huve -esulted in an increase in the death rate from 1.10 in l!OU to 1.32 in l!Ki7. but 'reetlom from accidents Is greater in (lie oUterics of the United Kluudoiii tlmu In Iioho of other countries, except Austria md Belgium. Printers aro greatly Interested In a noveinent to exhibit photographs and iteruture of the Union Printers' Koine tut Tuberculosis Suuitniimu Annex ur 'oloruda Sprint:. Colo., ut th coining .orlJ's tuberculin is cunress. which will v li.-M In W.isUuatou. It., t., tho latter urt if Ce:ti-u!ier. ' i New CHtai'd (.Mass.) Ye.ive:s' Union Kt I'X.il over the ri!.''M-d it :n :i lim-ct .:aliir.' it o'lIVafo l.tr ui'T.i'i to h ive :i.-:r f.n.i:';i i iim'Vd i tl..'r .nv;lv : :;': o jr-t'i' I' io-:s before li.-v i'iii v'.'.'. i' to doll un.v oil in t'. irn.ui it u te-eMt fi' ri.ii.Ti in n iy l.tVr rar.ve i ti -i" w -lTul la'.ot' L dy. 6 SHERMAN'S SPEECH Senator Burrows and Gontlemen of the Notification Committee: Your chairman, speaking for the committee, has notified rae of my nomination by the Republican national convention, held In Chicago In June, an the party's candidate for Vice President. As I chanced to lie in Chicago in June, I bad an inkling of Hhe conven tion' action, which was confirmed by a warm-hearted reception tendered me by my neighbors on the occasion of my homecoming July 2. This official notification, however, is welcome and the nomination you tender roe is accepted accepted with a gratitude commensurate with the great honor con ferred ; accepted with a full appreciation of the obligations wliich accomny that rwvnor. an honor greater because my name Is linked with that of William H. Taft, whom I respect and esteem highly and who approaches the high office of Presi dent exceirtionnlly well equipped to dis charge the duties and bear the varied and weighty responsibilities of that exalted position. Indorses Krrrr Statement of Taft. My acceptance could not be made with honor unless I were in full accord with the declaration of principles adopted by the convention. Not only am I In full and complete accord with my party's platform, but I indorse every statement made by Mr. Taft In his address of ac ceptance when notified of his nomination as the Republican candidate for Presi dent. That speech fully and comprehensively discusses the issues of this campaign as presented by the platforms of the two great parties, so that It Is appropriate that my statement should be short. Those not convinced by the presentation of Mr. Taft I could not hope to persuade. It is, however, in conformity with custom that I refer at least briefly to some of the Important Issues of the campaign. First, then, let me say that I am a protectionist. I am sufficiently practical to value the utility of a fact higher than the beauty of a theory, and I am a, pro tectionist because experience has demon strated that the application of that prin ciple has lifted ua as a nation to a plane of prosperity above that occupied by any other people. Commends Tariff Plank. I especially commend that plank of our platform which promises an early revis ion of tariff schedules. That pledge will be fulfilled in an adjustment baaed in ev ery particular upon the broad principles of protection for all American interests, alike for labor, for capital, for producers and for consumers. The Dlngley bill, when enacted, was well adapted to the then existing conditions. The develop ments of industrial prosperity in a de cade, which in volume and-, degree have surpassed our most roseate expectations, have so altered conditions that in certain details ot schedules they no longer in every particular mete out justice to all. In tills readjustment the principle of protection must and will govern ; such duties must and will be imposed as will equalize the cost of production at home and abroad and Insure a reasonable profit to all American interests. The Repub lican Idea of such a profit embraces not alone the manufacturer, not alone the capital invested, but all engaged in American -production, the employer and employed, the artisan, the farmer, the miner and those engaged in transporta tion and trade broadly speaking, those engaged in every pursuit and calling which our tariff directly or indirectly af fects. During a statutory application of this principle prosperity has abided with as. When a revenue tariff has been the law adversity and want have been our portion. Criticises Democratic Party. Our Democratic brethren, whose mem ories are as short as their promises are frail, 'and who have always exhibited a lack of capacity to profit by experience, unmindful of the distress and destruction that arrived and departed with the last Democratic administration, declare in thnir platform that they favor such "im mediate revision of schedules as may be necessary to restore the tariff to S revenue basis." A "revenue basis," a tariff for revenue only," "ultimate free trade," all have an identical meaning, that meaning being an assault upon American industries, an attack upon the American wage scale, a lessening demand for the products of American soil and American toll; less work, less pay, less of the necessaries of and comforts of life. In the light of history, what issue of the campaign so vitally affects American citizens? Experience, that effective teach er effective save with the one-man pow er now parading ujider the title of the I'emorratic party nas taugtit the nation a valuable lesson, and the result of the coming November election once more will prove the American people to be apt scholars. What the lnlstrer of the land, skilled and unskilled, desires is the op portunity at all times to exchange his brain and brawn for good pay in good money. A protective tariff and the gold standard, both now the existing achieve ments of the Itepuhlicnii party, In spite of Democratic opposition, give the laborer that opportunity. Labor's Equality la t'nhrld. The Republican party believes in the equality ot all men before the law be lieves In grant itig IiiInm-'h every ropiest that docs not seek to accord rights to one tnau denied to another. Fair-minded 'v bor aks no more, no less, mid npprove.4 the ret out of the RepubU-i.ri party e cauxe ot that party's acts. 1 havo- leaped to make my party's record hi the eni"t menc of the eight-hour law, the employer' lU'i lity act, the statutes to minimize t'ie hazard of railroad employes, the chlld Inbor law for the District of Columbia mill other enactments designed especially t improve the conditions of labor. 1 c-ru not hoM to state my position on Injunc tions better than by a vitie Indoiw nieut of -Mr. Tuft's Cincinna'i declara tion on that subject. That inoorsemt-ut I mrd.e. As a nation our duty comels that b ever.i constitutional and reasonable means thy material and educational condition of the eoN.ied race be advanced. This we owe to ourselves as well as to them. As the result of a course of eveuts that c.tn ni-ver be reversed they are a part of our civilization; their prosierity is our pros perity; their debasement would be our misfortcne. The Republican party, there fore, Hll offer every encouragement lo the thrift. Industry and intelligence that will bullet their prospect of higher attain ment. Army and Kavjr as IVace Guaranty 1 believt in the maintenance of such an army, the upbuilding of such a navy as will be the guaranty of the protection of American citizens and American inter-4-sti eerywhere, and an oirn of peace, that at every exts)! point e may be OF ACCEPTANCE o fortified that no power on earth may be tempted to molest us. I believe in the restoration of the American merchant marine and In rendering whatever finan cial aid may be necessary to accomplish tills purpose. I spprove the movement for the con servation of our national resources, the fostering of friendly relations, the en forcement of our civil service law and the enactment of such statutes as will more securely and more effectively preserve the public health. Our platform, as It should do. pledges adherence to the policies of President Roosevelt and promises to continue the work Inaugurated during his administra tion, to Insure to persons and property every proper safeguard, and all necessary strengthening of administrative methods will be provided to furnish efficient In spection and suMrvision, and prompt . righting of every injustice, discrimination and wrong. I have not touched upon every plank of our splendid platform, but I reiterate my full and unqualified approval of Its every promise. Onpoars Fostering; Class Hatred. I emphasize as my party's creed and my faith that in legislation and adminis tration favor should be extended to no class, no sect, no race, no section as op posed to another. To foster class hatred, to foster discontent, is un-Republlcan and un-American. Our party stands on the declaration that all men are created with equal rights, and it will have no part in the enactment or execution of any law that does not apply alike to all goo.l Americnn citizens, whatever their calling or wherever they live. It will allow no man in our land to hare advantage in law over any otiher man. It offers no safeguard to cajHtal that Is not guaran teed to labor; no protection to the work man that Is not insured to his employer. It would offer to each and to both in pursuit of health and happiness and pros perity every possible advantage. The work that has been given the Re publican party to do bas been of Immense importance. Much of that work bas been fully accomplished ; some has yet to be completed. Republican declara tions once in our platform and no longer there are omitted because they have be come accomplished facts. On the other hand, Democratic declarations have been abandoned because the voters have pro nounced them to be unwise and unsafe and unsuited to our times and our coun try. Shall People Unlet" No Issue. "Shnll the people rule?'is declared by the Democratic platform and candidate to be "the overshadowing issue now under discussion." It is no issue. Surely the people shall rule, surely the people have ruled ; surely the people do rule. No party rules. The party, com missioned by the people, is simply the instrument to execute the people's will, and from that party which does not obey their expressed will, or which lacks the wisdom to lead successfully, the people will withdraw their commission. For half a century, with but two ex ceptions, the people have commissioned the Republican party to administer the national government, because its declared principles appealed to their best judg ment ; because the common sense of the American people scented danger in Dem ocratic policies. Ours always has been, always mnta be, a government of the people. That party will, after March 4 next, execute old laws and enact new ones as in November it Is commissioned by the people to do. That commission will be from an untrammeled American elec torate. Shame on the party which, shame on ;he candidate who, insults the Ameri can people by the suggestion or declara tion that a majority of Its electorate Is venal I The American voter, with rare exception, in casting his ballot Is guided by his best Judgment, by his desire to con serve his own and the public weal. The overshadowing Issue of the cam paign rcajly is : Shall the administration of President Roosevelt be approved ; shall a party of demonstrated capacity in ad ministrative affairs be continued In pow er; shall the reins of government be plac ed In experienced hands, or do the people prefer to trust their destinies to an aggre gation of experimental malcontents and theorists, whose only claim to a history is a party name they pilfered? With a record of four decades of wise legislation, two score years of faithful administration, offering Its fulfilled pledges as a guaranty of its promises for the future, the Republican party appeals to the people and, with full confidence in their wisdom and patriotism, awaits the rendition of the November verdict. Smoke Stacks and Tariff. With glaring inconsistency some of our cMtccnicd contenipriirics clamor for "more smokestacks," and, nt the same time, vehemently denounce the protect ive tariff. This country owes Its great Industrial development to the policy of protection. Were It not for the tariff there would be but few sinokeHtitcks. mills or fac tories In the United States. Those countries that had their manufacturing Interests highly dovclool and thai were paying lubor wretched wages, could hold the American market In definitely with their products, and their competition would make It unprofitable and Impossible' to develop American In dustry. Under the stimulating Influence of the tariff this country hits become the leading Industrial center of the world. The high degree of development It has attained In ttfis respect, suggests the ad visability of certain mMliiicatloiis In tariff schedules, uud a revision has been decided uisin, but this will la carried out by the friends of protection not the veiled udvoctites of free-trade. Scran ton Truth. t'ndermtalnic th Rc-venae. The tnrff schedules as arranged by the Congress which pussed the very ef fective Dingley bill produced ample revenues until, under the Influence of the unceasing pressure of the free-trade-crs, commercial treaties attacking the source of revenue were consummated and confidence was undermined by in cessant talk about tariff revision, which had n tendency to still further reduce receipts. The effej't now being witness ed is merely u repetition of former ex iKTlcnceK, which seem to jsilnt con clusively to the lnevltnbleness f de ficiencies and their attendant evils when the sources of revenue us assail ed by the odvs-utcs of free-trade. Sun Frauclscu Chronicle. Calling; on tb Farmers. Mr. Bryan Invites farmers to com forward with campaign contribution and reminds them thut many of their number would not miss $100 from their cash surplus If they gave thl amount toward a change of the na tional administration from Republican to the Bryan faith cure. Twelve years ago, lu the first and much the most promising of his efforts as a presi dential candidate, Mr. Bryan appealed to farmers as u poverty-stricken class, contending with low prices and finan cial evils thut he said were due to the gold standard, and thut ctjuld be cured only by reducing the value of the dol lar one-lmlf, regardless of what other nations might think or do about it. Many tillers of the soil thought there was truth In this theory, und certainly knew that the prices of farm product were low. The country nt thut time wus under u Democratic administration and had recently been subject to full Democratic control, but Mr. Bryan preached a new kind of Democracy, es pecially hi regard to the unicy stand aid. Several northern agricultural States west of the Mississippi gave him u majority In lsotl, but went against him four years later, because events proved him to be mistaken in views and talse lu reasoning. Prosperity came by taking the road ho declared would be fatal. Xo longer is Mr. Bryuu offering the farmers u oO-ccut dollar. He Is silent on that subject. He can smile and smile Just the same, regardless of his large collection of played-out para mount b-sttes. Ills argument now Is that. In sonic mysterious way, farmers will be benefited by his election and that, since the gold standard has re plenished their cash reserve, they should Invest n part of it in the lutest Bryan blind pool. The most powerful political microscope falls to show any fungible good for farmers lu the Bryan program. In fact, he has nothing wor thy to be called a prospective line of action. If he were elected the Senate will continue to be Republican through out his term. Ills policies, If he has any outside of free trade, could not take the form of laws during the next four years. He has had uo experience in statesmanship. Ills brief and only official service has been in the House of Representatives. He could name a new Secretary of Agriculture, but that department has been admirably well managed during the last twelve years, und Its field effectively broadened, as every live farmer knows. Farmers do not gather in cash so easily that they will send a share to political committees without sulmtan tlal reasons. Mr. Bryan, In his way, Is a farmer, but has said that he tuust make money otherwise to keep even. He received last year $,"2,000 from lec turing mid his political organ adds largely to his Income. His perpetual candidacy advertises his lectures and his weekly pnper. He can give strong personal pecuniary reasons for the course he pursues, but what Is there In It for n farmer who sends $100 to his campaign fund after digging the money out of the soil? Under the last Demo cratic turiff n sheep jrould not be sold for 50 cents. M. Bryan offers another free trade Democratic tariff with a cor rcsiMHidlng range of prices. What else he offers no prophet can tell though much can be guessed from the fact that lie Is already up to his neck In exploded fallacies, a subject on which he Is dumb In spite oJL,hls unlimited facility for speech. A farmer who sends money to the Bryan campaign fund must truly have a superfluity to throw at the birds. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Opposite Policies. , The DeiniK-racy as shown by the tar iff phi nk ndopted at Denver stands foi a tariff for revenue only with Inci dental protection if so It may happen. The two policies are diametrically op Ksed to each other. It Is not so lonj ago that this country tried this pollcj as embodied in the Wilson tariff bill that its disastrous consequences to tht worklngmen has been forgotten. II was a severe lesson, and the intelligent worklugman has since voted against I policy which produced so much wanl and misery. The tariff revision thai Republicans are demanding Is not tin kind the Democrats would give us II they got a chance. The country hai had all of that sort that It want, atU will assuredly vote for no more. Tht principle that protection means pros lerlty Is one that we cannot afford tl lose sight of lu making tariff changes The tariff will be revised by thl friends of the protective thoory. II will be revised upward In some cases downward In some other. It will b equalized In all cases. It will be madi to fit the changed conditions that hav arisen In the lust dozen years. It will remain protective, however. The present schedule will not stiff el n horizontal scaling down. It will bi taken up by Its friends and carefullj gone over, section by section, and care fully prepared so as to afford prote tlon and revenue to fit modern condl tlons. Camden l'ost-Telegrain. Free-Trade and Crime. With the raising of the standard of living during the eleven years of the Dlngley tariff act, there has been a de crease in crime lu comparison with that of the period of the Wilson tariff act a conspicuous feature of which was the long Huts of gaunt men and women waiting at the soup houses. Men who were out of employment then huddled their families Into single rooms, where as, under the prosperous period of the Dingley tariff act. many of these fami lies have bivii able to occupy homes for their own families exclusively. Th growth of crime, or Its disappearance. Is largely Influenced by modee of living. It Is one of the chief glories of protec tion that It has steadily raised the standard of living of American wage enrlers. The mutton market of London de clines, while the shipments of mutton received at that point from Australia are constantly increasing. About 170 old letters have been dis covered in a post box In the county courthouse of Belfast. 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JOHNS-MANVILLE CO. 217-231 CLYSOU RN ST. MILWAUKEE, WIS. ! COMFORT MORE AND BETTER RUEEE, STRONO. HON-HUNTING. UrjBUn.vrAZLE PARTS. ENDS AN-D EVTTON-KOl THAT WON'T EREAK OR PL'LL CUT. ENABLE U3 TO POSITIVELY GUARANTEE THAT BULL BOG SUSPENDERS OUTWEAR THREE ORDINARY KINDS mads l:ci:t and heavy ve:c::t trxTr.A long, if DESIRED), IN A VARIETY OF1 NEAT. PLEA3IN3 STYLES 5 WFffllllllROffj HEWES URGEST SUSPEKDEi, BEIT ANC CARTER MAKERS IN THE WORK). DEPT. LINCOLN ST, BOSTON. MASS. NEBRASKA STATE FAIR, LINCOLN Mnndaj, Ang 31 Linooln Day Tuesday, Sept 1 Governor's Day Wed, Sept 2 Bryan Day Tburs, Sept 3 Taft-Omaba Day Friday, Sept i Parade Day Best Agricultural, Live Stock and Machinery exhibits ever shown in Nebraska $3o,ooo.oo in Premiums $12,ooo.oo in Speed Fifteen harness and eight rnnniog raees Pain's stupendous spectacle ERUPTION OF MT. VESUVIUS AND CARNIVAL OP NAPLES 500 people. Big display of fireworks eaoh night Literati's New York Festival Military band and Grand Opera Concert oompauy of sixty persons, eighteen of whom are grand opera 1 singers of national reputation. State bands from Hebron, Beatrioe, Aurora and St Paul. Western League Base Ball Athletic Meet Wild West Show New $23,800.00 cattle barn, 174x255 to hold 636 head of cattle. New $10,000 steel frame Auditorium, to seat 4500 people, to be dedioated by Hon W J Bryan on Wednesdby, September 2. For premium list and entry blank, write W R Mel lor, Seo. Lincoln. READ The HERALD For All tHc News. Abstracts of Title A 110,000 Surety Bond Guarantee, the aeeur.ey of eyery Abstract I make -WAV 1 -a Xl .wary asuu easily npjjneu BlUlIlg ftUUWIU (I m ECONOMY CENTS & POTTER I I nSuooe,8or t0 Dakta MCt C' B nded Abstracter J. J. EINER8 rnmz A 0 t V