The Wealth makers of the world. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1894-1896, December 27, 1894, Page 5, Image 5

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

    THE WEALTH MAKERS.
5
Thk decision of Judge Woods deprive
ons them frora three to six montlis, and
they are denied the right guaranteed to
every American citizen, the right of trial
by jury for criminal offenses. The courts
of the land are destroying our liberties
and placing every citizen in jeopardy.
The new song book, now ready for de
livery, is immense. Fire in your orders.
Thirty-five cents a copy.
The Cooperatora' Conference Report.
Pursuant to call of George Howard
Gibson of 'Lincoln a company of Chris
tian co-operators gathered in the Y. M.
C. A. parlors, corner of 13th and N
streets, Dec. 15th, at 9:30 a. m., to ex
change views and take steps towards or.
ganizing themselves into a working
body. About twenty people were in at
tendance at the opening meeting. W. J.
Eyestone of Rising City, Butler county,
was chairman of the meeting, and J. Y,
M. Swigart secretary. Mr. Gibson read
letters from friends of the movement who
could not be present:
From Mr. J.N. Kellogg of Clarks; John
Bryan, Elyria; the Nationalist Society
of Belvidere; Robert F. Kingsley of Ven
ango; Judge J. W. Martin of Imperial;
August Storme of San Diego, Cal.; A. E.
Tracy of Kearney; Mrs.' Warner of Wake
field, and Rev. P. H. Drennan of.Lincoln.
The program announced in The
Wealth Makkrs was followed more or
less closely, beginning with the paper by
Brother Gibson, printed in last week's
WEALTH MAKERS.
The opinion was unanimous that co
operation as equals or brothers under the
law of love is the way out, but opinions
-jriBu Buuicmiuv, ui were uut entirely
clear, as to the plan of organization.
Six sessions of the Conference were held.
The celebrated Amana community in
Iowa was described and discussed, a let
ter from an official of that society to
Brother Eysstone being read. Brother
L. C. Humphrey said he had been trying
to reconcile the teachings of Christ with
the competitive system, but had signally
failed. All present at one of the sessions,
twenty or more, then expressed them
selves ready to join a co-operative en
terprise if the plan and articles of agree
ment were such as they could approve of.
Articles of incorporation proposed by
Brother Humphrey were read and dis
cussed, and a committee of six, namely,
Gibson, Dawes, Humphrey, Goodell,
Clark and Keene, was appointed to
prepare articles to submit to all in
terested through the columns of The
Wealth Makers. That committee will
have its report ready for next week's
issue.
A committee to look over the ground
near Lincoln, preliminary to locating,
was appointed, also a committee of one,
Brother Gibson of The Wealth Makers.
was named to receive names and partic
ular information of those who wish to
co-operate under the laws of love.
The meeting adjourned subject to call
of the chairman. The second meeting
will be called to meet in about three to
four weeks, at which time articles of in
corporation, constitution and by-laws
will be adopted and preliminary work
will be started. Among those present
were the following.
From Lincoln: G. H. Gibson and wife,
S. A. Shreve, L. C. and H. J. Humphiey,
I. N. Leonard, J. M. Reaves, 0. E. Good
ell. C. M. Clark, E. T. Huff, J. Y. M. Swi
gart and wife, E. N. Erickson, E. Le Fe
vre, Fred Lindholm, H. E. Dawes, G. W.
McDermott, Mr. Garloch, J. Finarty, C.
Ballinger, S. H. Riblett, and Mr. Flana
gan. Several others of Lincoln, whose
work made it impossible to be present,
are heartily with us in the movement.
From out of town we had W. J. Eye
stone of Rising City, D. E. Coleman ,
Byron Clark of Greenwood, S. E. Keene
of Missouri Valley, la.. Mrs. A. E. Mur
phy of Murphy, la., G. R. McCormick of
Valparaiso, John Quick of Emerald, J
G. Neff of Raymond, and Herman Erick
son, A. G. Backstrom aud S. T. Lundgren
of Ceresco. Since the Conference letters
ihm Henry C. Hansen of Gothenburg, C.
LrBullock of Bostwfck, Samuel Little of
Nebraska City, and personal calls from
quite a number of parties on the editor
of 1 he Wealth Makers to comer con
cerning the proposed organization, are
hereby acknowledged. Ihe interest is
spreading far beyond our expectation.
It looks now as if a hundred families
would be ready to join the organization
afetr the plan is agreed upon. ,
' Notice!
J. A. Allis,
James A. Benjamins and
W. D. Lowery have sent us money for
their subscriptions, but neglected to give
us their postoflice address, so we cannot
give them credit.
Gentlemen, send us the name of your
postofflce and we will receipt you for the
money.
If von want to trade a little money and a good
bone tor a good piano, see or write to J. EL
Dolibuu. 1120 M St., Lincoln, Neb. This la a bar.
gain jron don't pick np everj da.
The Problem of Irrigation.
Paper read before the Irrigation con
vention at Kearney, Dec. IS), 1894, by
Hon. John II. Powers.
In that part of the world where the
human race first originated rain could
not be depended on to furnish sufficient
moisture for the purposes of agriculture
and horticulture. We are told, Gen. 2:5,
that "The Lord God had not caused
it to rain upon the earth and there was
not a man to till the ground." The same
conditions, so far as rain is concerned
exist in western Nebraska, Kansas, North
and South Dakota and New Mexico, and
so far as intelligent and wisely directed
effort is coucerned, it may almost be said
"There is not a man to till the ground."
Now, this is not the condition that
God intended to continue, for He created
man and placed him in a garden to till
it, that is, as we are told in the fifteenth
verse, "To dress it and to keep it." And
a river went out of Eden to water the
garden. Now, it is evident, from this
description of the existing conditions
that the tilling the ground, and the
dressing and keeping the garden in
cluded the management of the water of
4.1 e : i:
lue river lur in iauuu.
f The history of the world shows us that
he parts of the earth which have been
permaneut granaries of the world are
not those portions where the rainfall is
sufficient and seasonable, but rather
those where rain is scaree or unreliable.
Babylonia, Assyria, Chaldea, all occu
pying to an extent the same territory
described as above in the holy writ, sup
ported for many centuries a dense and
active population, and by that means
were enabled, for more than a thousand
years, to dominate over the greater part
of the civilized world. This was accom
plished by a systematic and comprehen
sive system of irrigation, as still attest
ed, we are told by travelers, by remains
of irrigating canals which gridiron the
whole country in tVe vicinity of the Eu
phrates and Tigris rivers, and produced
such a teeming fertility of the soil
that, as Herodotus has recorded, it fre
quently brought forth two hundred fold.
Egypt, also, for so long a time a rival
of the northern empire just mentioned,
wns, like it, famous for the fertility of its
soil and the productiveness of its indus
tries, depended not upon the rainfall, for
it seldom rains there, but on the annual
overflow of the Nile, supplemented by a
system of reservoirs and extensive canals
for the storing up and distributing the
water when the overflow of the river was
less than usual, and to irrigate those
portions of the valley which the natural
overfl ow did not reach.
And it has been thusenabled to hold so
large a place in the world's history while
its full extent included only about 216,.
000 square m'ileB, of which ouly the Nile
valley, containing, with its deltas, about
12,000 square miles, is capable of tillage,
and only about 10,000 have ever been
tilled.
Now, this whole arid and semi-arid re
gion lying between the foot of the Rocky
Mountains and the Missouri and lower
Mississippi rivers is in essentially the
same natural conditions as ancient
Babylonia aud differs from Egypt main
ly in the fact that it has several valleys
rivaling the Nile in extent and fertility.
I think it can be fully demonstrated
that enough water rushes through this
region every year to fully irrigate all the
land that is fit for tillage. And not only
is it allowed to run to waste, but in its
course it is continually carrying away
the most fertile constituents of our soil
and depositing them in the deltas of the
lower Mississippi and the Gulf of Mexico.
It also frequently overflows large por
tions of valuable valley lands, endanger
ing the lives of the inhabitants and de
stroying their improvements and the
products of their industry.
But can this destructive agent be thus
restrained and utilized.
Whoever has stood on the banks of
the Platte, Missouri, Arkansas and lower
Mississippi during the annual floods of
early summer would be moved to ex
claim, "It is the work of God. Man can
never control it." But it seems to me
that such a conclusion is hasty and un
warranted. The same educated ingenu
ity, skill and enterprise that has subdued
the fiercest and most powerful animals,
caused the same agencies which produce
the earthquakes to do the drudgery for
mankind and harnessed the lightning
and controlled and utilized its tremen
dous energy, can likewise control and
utilize these apparently irresistible floods
and cause them to make these western
recions a veritable Garden of Eden.
It is only necessary to accomplish this
that there be not one man alone to till
the irround. with one helpmeet for him.
but millions of men, each thus assisted,
and all co-operating their energies and
labors under the directiou and control
of a wise and beneficent government and
success would be as sure as the recur
rence of day aud night or the succession
of the seasons.
Never, probably in the history of the
world, certainly in the history of this
nation, has there been such a grand op
portunity for a successful carrying out
of au enterprise of this character and
magnitude.
Probably from three to four millions
of men in our country are now living in
enforced idleness, depending for subsist
ence of themselves and their families on
the charity of the rest of the people or
supplied at public expense. None of
them own homes nor have they any
property. But in the main they are the
most intelligent and beBt educated class
of workingmeu that the world has ever
seen out of employment. They have yet
fresh in their memories the time when
they were earning an honest living. The
most-of them have not lost their self-respect,
but chafe under their present con
dition. Let the present congress pass a law
directing the Secretary of the Interior to
at once begin the surveys for a compre
hensive and practical plan for the irriga
tion of this whole country. Let it fur
ther provide that every man who is will
ing shall have free transportation for
himself and family to the place on said
improvement where the government su
perintendent may direct, and shall have
subsistence for himself and family for
one year, on the condition that at the
end the government shall give to him
and his heirs a perpetual lease to a par
eel of land, under the improvement of the
irrigation plan thus established, suf
ficient for a home in whatever branch of
honest industry he may choose.
Let it be further provided that those
who will continue thus to work, under
the direction of the government, for a
further period not to exceed two years,
shall be paid at the rate of two dollars
per day, legal tender labor certificates,
the same to be expended by the govern
ment in improving said homes according
to the taste and choice of the owners
thereof.
Let the plan of the system be as fol
lows;
1. A vast reservoir canal following
the trend of the foot of the mountains,
from the north line of North Dakota to
the south line of New Mexico. Let the
proper and necessary arrangements in
the way of dams, wiers, waste gates, etc.,
sufficient to divert all the waters, or as
nearly so as practicable, of the Missouri.
Yellowstone, Platte, Arkansas, and other
smaller mountain streams, into the main
reservoir canal be constructed.
2. A main lateral canal constructed
down each great divide. Each of these
lateral or divide canals shall be provided
with suitable locks so that they would
be easily navigable by canal boats and
so the current of the water could be kept
under complete control to preveut wear
of the bottom or banks and still provide
for a continuous flow. Such canals to
be each continued to intersect with some
navigable stream.
3. Such sublateral canals along each
of the divide canals as may be necessary
to place all the fertile land which can be
thus reached under full irrigation.
4. A wide belt of trees planted along
the eastern side of the reservoir canal
and a narrower belt along each Bide of
the dividyanals.
5. Such improvement of the Missou.,
and Lower MissisHipl rivers as shall ren
der their navigation safe aud renable.
By thi plan the following results
would be obtained:
1. The navigation of the main rivers
of the region would ,be easily secured be
cause the water supply would be com
paratively regular. The floods being di
verted into the canals and the continual
percolation of the water through the
saturated subsoil preventing low water
in time of drouth.
2. The lock canals would provide easy
transportation of the products of indus
try in the whole region to the markets
of the world.
concluded nfxt week.
Clarify, Condense, Co-operate.
Deb Moines, Iowa, Dec. ICth, '94.
Editor Wealth Makers: i
The Wealth Makers is to be com
mended on the outspoken stand it is
taking against the proposed commit
ment of the People's party to "tree sil
ver" as the sole issue of that party.
Concentrated effort is absolutely es
sential to success, but the effort must be
headed in the right direction, and free
silver, as every thoughtful Populist
knows, is a step backward, not forward.
As long as the production and distribu
tion of wealth is confined to the amount
of the "precious metals" that are acci
dently discovered, plus the amount of
credit those metals will sustain, it will be
an easy matter to hoodwink the major
ity of voters with such slogans as "in
trinsic value," "parity," "elasticity,"
and "money of the world," etc., etc.,
even to the point of obliterating the
very object of all industrial effort.
Just as the Lord is said to have hard
ened the heart of Pharoah that the chil
dren of Israel might the more clearly
realize their true condition, so it would
scom, has our enemy been led on to the
destruction of silver, and it sometimes
looks as if the forces which make for
righteousness accomplish more through
the machinations of the wicked than
otherwise. Let us not then seek to undo
that which Providence seems to have
done for us, but rather continue on with
the good work to its rational conclusion.
A Hindoo will not attempt to patch up
his broken gods, and as our silver god is
broken suppose we smash the one with a
yellow face, just to produce a parity.
Our leaders are unfortunately politi
cians with an eye single to votes, but if
free silver is all that the heart and brains
of Populism can bring forth it had bet
tf r go bury itself in some Rocky Moun
tain gulch. It will never get, to Wash
ington, for the bankers have a better
scheme (and quicker) for producing a
ficticious prosperity, one that will send
the voters to sleep for another ten years
at least the Baltimore, or treasury
plan. Who doubts the shrewdness of the
Republican leaders? Do you suppose, sir,
for one moment, that they would deny
us free silver if they had not a much
more efficacious soporific at hand? Just
watch that bill go bowling through both
houses. Prosperity at any price has
been the watchword of that party ever
since the war. We are now to have an
inflation of bankers' fiat, and a ready.
made, cut-and-dried prosperity until
the interest charges are collectible then
another panic.
This effort to concentrate is all right
and very desirable, indeed, but let us do
so thoughtfully. All reform platforms
that I have noticed from the Umaha to
the latest, the A. F. L., just announced,
or proposed, show a lamentable want of
concise, comprehensive thought, show
anything but a clear conception of the
needs of the hour. A casual perusal of
those platforms shows at once that their
constructors were suffering from severe
mental confusion, and in their efforts to
extricate themselves only succeeded in
rendering ' confusion worseconfounded."
Demands are reiterated time and time
again in sublime indifference to the ax
iom which teaches that the whole is
greater than and, therefore, inclusive of
its parts. Planks are needlessly multi
plied to the end that our enemies, and
some of our friends, pester our flanks in
the most irritating manner. I think it
is now beginning to be understood that
there are but two forms of monopoly by
which the idler and the speculator are
able to levy tribute upon the producer
and distributor, viz: land and money
monopoly, and the rings through the
nose are intiest and rent, if you will
allow me to use the metaphor. Our
planks then should be:
Freedom to produce; freedom to dis
tribute.
Few will deny that these are justclaims
and making that admission the right to
obtain proper means to secure those
ends, will not be denied by honest men.
Who in America dares to say that it is
right that a willing worker should be
compelled to beg for the privilege of work
ing, or that he should be compelled to
pay tribute (except to Caesar) in his ef
forts to exchange the products of his
toil.
Personally I do not look to legislative
action, or agitation, prayers, petitions
or sermons, for relief. The over-fed and
the under-fed who comprise the majority ,
are totally indifferent to any logic but
the logic of events. 1 here is a star in
the east upon which my gaze and hopes
are fixed. That star is co-operation. As
your readers know, quite a number of co
operations have been organized within
the last two years, but do they realize
what it means if a combination (for it is
unlikely that one alone will be able to)
succeeds in providing its members with
the opportunities for obtaining the nec
essities of life in an economical manner.
It means just this, henceforth, death to
monopoly. For working free from in
terest of rent charges, utilizing machin
ery to the full, being free from the dic
tates of the panic-breeders, free frora
that most burdensome charge upon la
bor, idleness, competition on the part of
the victim ,of monopoly will become
speedily out of the question. Co-operation
is the kind of reform that reaches
the spot, one that cannot be sent to
sleep on remedial, half-way measures.
Other reforms can be effected step by
step, not so ours, a very essential differ
ence, and one that should be noted. Fra
ternally, G.
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, if used accord
ing to directions, is a speedy cure for
colds. Ask your druggist for Ayer's Almanac.
Three Cent Column.
"For Bale," "Wantd.""ForEiPhange."and
small advenlsmenis for short time, will be
charged three cent per word (or each Inser
tion. Initial! or a number counted as one
word. Casta with the order
It yon want anything, or have anything that
anybody else "wants," make It known through
this column. It will pay.
O. WILSON, Rooms W and 81
Burr's block, Lincoln, Neb.
WANTED Fire and cyclone apents. Good
pay. J. Y. M. Swigart, Beo'y. Lincoln,
Neb. 37tf
TINQLEY BURKETT, attorneys-at-law.
1028 O St., Lincoln, Neb.
TINQLEY ft BURKETT. attorneys-at-law,
1026 O Bt Lincoln, Neb. Abstracts examined.
mHK LEAPINO 92.00 Boarding Hone In the
X city le Mr. 8. I'arlsh's. 1211 N St. Every,
thing neat and clean. A trial will eonrlnce yon.
11 ROY or Ooranxtio finish at Lincoln Btoam
. Laundry. Fhone 47a. No, 1212 N St. 3714
JBLDMENTHAL, Practical Hatter. Any
J old hat marie over ai nood us new. Aleo
clothes cleaned and dyed. 1020 V St.
FOR SALE Improved Lancaster and adjoining
connty farms. Write lor my latent list kIv
Ina special prices and foil particulars on some
choice 80s, V4 sections and H sections.
t2 H. C. YOUNG, Broker. 137 So. 11th St.
YODNO HAN, attead Busmen Colt. tMi
winter and fit yourself for commercial life,
I bare a scholarship for a fall coaree In the Lm
coli Business College, which I wfll tii Chp.
, H. H. FISH. Lincoln. Neb.
Agents Wasted for "Striking for Life."
Labor's side of the labor question, by John
Swinton, the Pillar of Light of the labor move
ment. Complete agent's outfit FKKls. Quick,
large profits. Address
NATIONAL PUB. CO , Chicago. III.
DE LAVAL CREAM SEPARATORS
Address, for catalogue and particulars,
Or The Dc Laval Scmhator Co.,
Elci! H, III. 74 Cortlandt Street, New York.
WILL $1200 MEET YOUR WANTS?
If so.yon can make 11200 to 92000 this year work
Ing for ns. Ladles can do as well as gentlemen
Dept. Bare. b. I. BULL A CO., Philadelphia, l'a
DO YOU WANT IT 7r
Salesmen Wanted in every county, salary or com
mission. No experience. JNew laritt Bill fives
unlimited promt, sctive men appiy quick
rv and territory wanted, jnsiliana
P. O. BoxMUSiBettos, Mass,
if statins (
tarora, .
AGENTS WANTED I have the fastest
selling staple article In America. Costa
agents 5 cents, sells for 26 cents. If yon can't
sell the goods I take them back. I want one
good man or woman In each eonnty. Also
a few good men and women to travel and
appoint agents. If yon fail to answer this,
jon will miss the cbanct ofu lltotlma.
Address. C. H. ROWAN,
Milwaukee. Wis.
Headache butt Get Dr. Mllea' Pain Pllla.
A WONDERFUL OFFER.
Onr grand catalogue, over 850 illustrations,
agent's latest goods and novelties, 1 writing pelt
fountain attachment, 1 elegant gentleman'i
watch chain and charm, guaranteed 20 years
Your name In agent's directory 1 year, all sent
for 10 ctB. Postage 2 cents. EMPIRE NOVELTl
CO., 157 Tremont St., Boston, Mass.
$750.00 A Year and All Expenses,
We want a tew more General Agents, ladles or
gentlemen, to travel and appoint agents on our
new publications. Full particulars given on ap
plication. If you apply please send references,
aud state business experience, age and send pho
tograph. If you canuot travel, write ns for
terms to local canvaxsers. Dept. Rare, 8. 1. BELL
a uu., rnuaaeipnia, fa.
HOW
TO
GET
RICH
J 8 told In ''THE ROAD TO
WEALTH IK ADS
THROUGH THK SOUTH."
a 200 page book foil of facts
and figures concerning that
land toward which all eyes
are turning. Only 26 cents.
B. C. ROBERTSON & CO.,
Cincinnati, Ohio
Neave Building.
JUMPING They hP',8k,P' 3mP- ilWe, turn
' '"M somersaults almost incessantly
R K A Jr?m neUBt My- Wonder--aJIIiflUltl
ful product of a Foreign Tree.
Greatest curiosity to draw crowds wherever
shown, on streets, In shop windows, etc. Just
Imported. Everybody wants one Pull his
tory of Tree and sample Jumping Bean to
Agents or Streetmea S cents, postpaid. 3 80c
8, l ; 12, 11.60; 100, 110. Rush order and be first.
Sell quantities to your merchants for window
attractions and then sell to others. Quick
Sales. Try 1U0. Big Money.
AGENTS' Hi HALO, No. 1841, J. B PHILA, PA.
GILLILAN'S
WANT COLUMN-
TO EXCHANGE A honse and corner lot Is
Lincoln, for land.
TO EXCHANGE Eighty acres In Wheeler
county for Lincoln property. Would as
sume some Incumbrance.
FOB BALE Smooth six acre tract. In Lincoln
suburb, near school and street cars, suitable
for a good home or fruit and gardening.
FOR SALE Twenty acres adjoining Lincoln,
with good two-story house, barn, yards,
wind mill, fruit and fenced; cheap, or will rent.
FOR SALE Eight room house and full lot"
half block of street cars and paved street1
Can take equity In western land.
FOR EXCHANGE Five-room cottage home
well located. Can take equity in land or va'
cant lot.
FOB EXCH ANGE Nine room honse and three
lotafaclng University campus at Cniversity
Place. Good horn to eichnnge for farm In east
ern Nebraska. Address Ulllllan Investment Com
pany, Lincoln, Neb.
FOR SALE Eighty acres, 13 miles of Lincoln.
80 acres broke, no other Improvements; only
f 1200.00 If taken at once. No trade.
i
FOR SALE 180 acres well Improved Ave miles Of
Lincoln, at nearly half value for a short time.
WANTED Eighty acres, near Lincoln, with
imnrnvamftntr havi ft rjtah inatnmAr fni
an eighty that salts, -
WANTED All parties having land or city
property to sell or exchange to list It with
Gllai taint comer,
Ground Floor 11th & P Sts.,
Lincoln, - - - Neb.
Farm For Sale.
420 acres: 60 acres In cultivation; S-room dwelling,
good well of pure water and cistern, 800 acres
prairie. 60 acres timber: situated 2H miles from
uee Arc toe county at m-frais-saisSiM;
busy little town on the west bank of White Kivar:
cheap trausportotlon by steamer line: sood
ebareh. and school privileges. Price $2,(50. $1,600
casn. Balance in u.wrtTr -pmw mw ,
W. II. V1VION, Lonoke, Ark,
v
A . .
Nice
Line of
TOYS .
CHRISTMAS GOODS
of Every Description.
V
Candies
and
Nuts
Great
Jress
Si
rri '
fee
Our . . . .
45, 50 and 60c.
All Wool Henriettas,
Serges and
Fancy Dress Goods
at 35 Cents
Per Yard.
Our 75c.
German Silk-FinisJied
Henriettas and
Serges in all the
Leading Shades
at 55 Cents
Per Yard.
Our 85 and 90c.
German Silk-Finished
Henriettas and
Serges 46 inches toide
in colored and Hack
at 65 Cents
Per Yard.
Would make an
Appropriate
and Useful"
Christmas
Present.
v
25 Dozen
Good
Suspenders
worth 25c.
at 17c . . .
a pair.
Fred Schmidt,
921 0 St., 0pp. P.O.
LINCOLN, - NEB.
w
J
i
J
i
9
9
9
9
I
I
1,000 pairs
Sample Hose
from 20 to
30 per cent
Less than
regular
price.
i
TAKE NOTICE I
Book and Job Printing
In all its branches.
County Printing and Supplies
Lithographing ... .
Book Binding
From the simplest style to the mo6t elaborate).
Engraving
" Of all kinds.
Blank Book
In every style.
Legal Blanks
The Bed Line Series, the handsomest Blank in the
country, printed on Bond Paper at less expense thaa
other houses furnish them on ordinary flat paper.
Stereotyping
From superior hard metal.
Printers' Rollers
Mad by an expert from the best and most durable
material.
Country Printers
Having county or other work, which they cannot
themselves handle, would make money by writing
ns for terms.
WEALTH MAKERS PUB. CO,
Lincoln, Neb.
W "J
TINGLEY & BURKETT,
Attorneys-at-Law,
1026 O St., Lincoln, Neb.
Thai tMrfltisT CAnaswstArv ftf A. mstHc.
Founded by Dr. E Toure. Caul Tauten, Dircctafc
JJJttstrVrV f!ata"flHnr sriwin At It inlnrmiriAii frM
Oollsctloos msxlt and money remitted savsas day
as collect).
If onr advertisers do not treat you
right, let ns know. We want no ''fakes'
la Tas Wealth Makers. Isn't there
something in our "Three Cent Column'
that will profit you?