The Wealth makers of the world. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1894-1896, March 07, 1895, Page 3, Image 3

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jtfkrch 7, 1895
THE WEALTH MAKER8
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THE ECONOMIC SITUATION
(Continued from lit pag)
If A cannot successfully compete in the
market with B, be is at liberty to with
draw t.js labor and capital from that line
of prodUvion and Keek one more remun
erative to hm.
It is in thin way that competition be
comes the regulative principle of the pres
ent system of production and exchange,
when not interfered with.
The consuming public gains all the ad
vantages of reduced cost of production.
If, at any stage, from lack of competition,
profits should rule high in a given line of
.production, then labor and capital, if
tree, will now into that business, till tne
supply of commodities in that line re
duces prices by competition to a point
at which only average profits can be
made.
Their competition is the inherent law
which regulates, automatically, the pro
duction and exchange of commodities,
uuder the system of private property and
personal liberty, ivies not interfered
with.
Competition is the law which ultimately
protects the consuming public from pay
ing extortionate profits.
Individual producers, or corporations,
in order to avoid competition in a given
line of production which is paying profits
beyond the average earnings of capital,
by reason of monopoly advantages
through patents, franchises, etc., expand
the factor capital by fictitiously increas
ing the shares of stock. Without invest
ing another dollar they may double or
quadruple the shares of capital so that
after rents and interest are distributed
to these factors, aud all legitimate cost
of production met, a surplus value of
100 per cent on the real capital may be
made to appear to be only 10 per cent on
the "watered" stock. Or, a loss may be
made to appear on the earnings of the
fictitious stock when there has really
been made a profit equal to and above
the average earnings of capital in other
lines of business. It would be interesting
reading for the people, if they all knew
the amount of "water" in the capital of
the railroads of this country; and in the
$85,000,000 of the capital of the Sugar
Trust; and in the capital of the Standard
Oil Co., and so on to the end of the
chapter.
This is a mode of defeating the opera
tion of the law of competition by mdivid-
t ual effort. Its success, of course, de
pend on a united effort of all capital
and I here include corporations as indivi
dual capitalists to secure friendly legis
lation and judicial decisions, that wiil
not disturb "business rela tions," which
in plain economic language means that
legislation and courts snail not disturb
this practice of levying and extorting
from the publicuniust and-unfair profits
. To this end they or capitalistic power
V must elect, legislators and judges. The
farmers have rendered valuable assist
ance to capitalistic power in the past.
The method issuccessful entirely on the
part of landlord and capitalist. The
laborers who vote still think they share
in the surplus value created by them, if
they get employment.
But now, under this competitive sys
tem, how does it seem to you, if the gov
ernment steps in to interfere, and compel
A to recall our illustration to sell his
commodity for 75 cents, thereby enforc
ing a loss to him of 2s cents? He would
be forced to stop production, and with
draw his capital and labor from that
line, hither that or bankruptcy.
On the other hand it would be the out
raging of justice for the government to
step in and give B, by force of law, the
power to sell his commodity, his 75 dent
commodity, for $1.00; giving him a clear
monopoly pronto! SJo cents over and
above the fair competitive price. It
would be an injustice to A, to the public,
and to the whole world.
But then this is just what B, wants,
and what he gets. He wants all compe
tition cancelled, and he gets it cancelled.
B stands for the whole class of individ
uals and corporations that seek "protec
tion from competition domestic and
foreign. They all have a common inter
esta common end, viz., to makesuyus
value the largest possible.
This they can achieve by destroying all
competition, domestic and foreign.
They cannot reduce it to zero; but they
can and do reduce its effects to such an
extent that enormous fortunes are accu
mulated in the hands of a small fraction
of the people.
Domestic competition is virtually
annuled by forming the trust, through
which the output in agiven line is limited
and the price fixed at which the product
shall be sold. Production in a given line
under the trust becomes production
'under the direction of a single will. No
competition is tolerated.
Government aid is not needed for this.
All the trusts ask i that the government
shall mind its own business as they,
through the courts presided over by
.their own election, shall define the busi
ness of government. Attorney General
Olney has been an obedient servant to
them. He has obeyed let them alone.
This course is designed to restore "confi
dence," and draw out capital, "you
know."
While they ask no assistance of the
government in the matter of controlling
domestic competition, they are exceed
ingly anxious to have it in the matter of
foreign competition. Only the govern
ment can control foreign competition.
How shall the government impede or
annul foreign competition? What is the
modus operandi?
Why thus, let the government fine
every impoiter of competing products,
an average of 50 per cent on the cost at
the port of entry. Only don't call it a
fine. Call it a "dooty." Don't call it a
tax even. Although if you have to admit
it is a tax, tell the" people the farmers
and laborers particularly that the
foreigner pays it; that in this way the
expenses of running the government are
paid by foreigners. This will catch them.
A change in the name, is a change in
the thing named with the crowd.
But how does this fining the importer
destroy or limit foreign competition?
This way. Given a Liverpool merchant
and an English manufacturer a Boston
merchant and a Massachusetts manufac
turer. The two manufacturers produce
each a yard of cloth of equal quality and
weight. They cannot become competi
tors unless their goods are offered in the
same market. The English importer
buys a yard of American cloth at a cost
to him in Liverpool of f 1. The English
government levies a tax of 25 cents on
it; not as a fine for importing it; but for
revenue only, and gets the 25 cents. At
the same time the government levies 25
cents a yard as an excise tax on the Eng
lish manufacturer, not as a line, but for
revenue only, and gets it. The Massa
chusetts manufacturer, through the im
porter, and the English manufacturer'
are treated alike. Government Interfer
ence has handicapped neither. The impor
ter puts his yard of American madecloth
on the market having paid tne govern
ment the same tax as the English made
cloth had to pay. Competition is preserv-
ed. The competition lies between tbs
English and the American manufacturer.
Whichever one by superior skill, and
advantage of free raw material. improv
ed machinery and efficient skilled labor
can make rent, interest and pront at tne
lowest price for his commodity iu the
market, will take the trade, and the con
suming public will reap the benefit.
This is a free trade tariff. The tax may
be an average of 10 per cent, 50 per cent,
or 100 per cent the highness or lowness
of the tax has nothing to do with the
principles of free trade.
to bb continued.
How They Will Learn.
. "Judge," the leading humorous and
cartoon publication of the country, last
week contained the following story:
Mr. O'Turk, an old Irishman, is taking
it easy in his chair, a pipe in his mouth
and a cane in his band. His son Patsy
is standing before him. The old gentle
men asks:
"Patsy, how many is twice Wan?"
"I can't git it troo me hid," says
Patsy.
Becoming angry the old gentleman
strikes the boy over the head with his
cane, and then asks:
"How many tonnes did it hit ye,
Patsy?"
"Wance, I think."
The old geutlcman strikes the boy
again.
"An' how many times did I hit ye thin,
Patsy7"
"Wance." says Patsy.
"Now Patsy, how many loomps have
ye on yer hidr
"Two." says Patsy.
"Now then, Patsy, how many is twice
wan?"
"It's two." says Patsy.
"Thot's roight, me bye. There's the
makin' of a foine scholar in ye."
And thus it is with the farmers and
working classes of thiscountry. By vot
ing the old-party tickets they will sooner
or later learn in the manner required in
Patsy's case. t-x.
JUSTICE THE NATION'S HOPE
Ob, trust not the dream 'twill outlast the spirit
Which thrilled It when liberty first Rave It
breath;
No "manifest destiny" ever can clear It,
When folly drives onward to breakers and
death.
When money, not character, makes legislation,
When rights are exploited to favor the few.
When Justice is exiled, Uod pity the nation,
Shipwreck for the salvage by plot of the crewl
When the city's own aldermen wait on the lobby.
The power without that's all hands and no
heart,
A slotted machine grinding unt its pet hobby,
Whose action the weightiest penny will start.
When workers are "hands," and the man we are
slighting.
When the corporate conscience is made ontO
gold,
When the canker of greed every Industry's
blighting.
When Justice grows timid and robbery bold,
When bosses defiant are snapping their fingers
At law and at order all over the land,
Then the doom that delays and all patiently
lingers
The flight back to heaven of Freedom's at
hand. '
Do I dream, of such doom in this day of our
glory?
Nay .'friends, I'm but reading you God'schangc.
less law;
Do we choose to repeat the old world's tragi,
story?
The lesson relentless we've only to draw,
Th' Eternal will change not; on one sole condi
tion Can men or can nations win life anil win peace.
The laws of life broken, in vain all petition;
Obedience only from death can release.
The star of God's promise arose o'er the nation,
And eyes dim with tears saw it gleam in the
skies;
Shall It fall from Its orbit of bright, brief dura
tion?
Then where o'er the sad earth again will It
rise? - '
The world is not old, 'tis the break of the dawn
ing; His serpents yonng Hercules crushed in his
strength;
So those that our slime of corruption is spawn
ing, Bousing np, our yonng giant will strangle at
length!
Let the men who are men, who hate meanness
and lying.
Be true to the vision that Washington saw.
Then the wrong that disgraces, no longer defy
ing. Will bow to the forces of order and law.
The fruit of the tears and the toll of past ages
We hold as in trust for the ares unborn;
Let ns write the word "Just" on our country's
fair pages,
Lest onr children reproach us with pity and
scorn.
An oath let ns swear By the God who Is o'er us,
By the thousands who've lived and who've
died for our land.
By Washington, Lincoln, the great gone before
ns,
The hope of the world, onr dear country, shall
standi
A CO-OPERATIVE EXPERIMENT.
Some Interesting Figures of First
Year's Work
The Industrial Christian Union was or
ganized on October 21st, 1893, in a farm
house near Woodbine, Harrison Co., Iowa.
It is an industrial missionary society, the
leading purpose of which is the promo
tion of tbeorganization of industrial and
agricultural villages. Its first effort at
the organization of such a village is the
Hiawatha Village Association at Hiawa
tha, Schoolcraft Co., Mich. This associa
tion was organized on the 21st day of
May, 1894.
In this village all the property, includ
ing the land, houses, shops, and stock, is
owned by an association composed of all
the workers.
It distributes no dividends on capital,
is its own landlord, pays no salaries; and
all its products are divided among the
workers, each having such a share o!
these products as corresponds to hi
share in doing the work which produced
them.
This Association now owns 1100 acres
of land, 70 head of cattle, 28 horses, has
a saw-mill, shoe-shop, printing-office, a
wood machine, and grist mill; is doing
something with tanning and knit goods,
has 150 acres.of cleared land; will add 50
acres more in time for next season's
crops. Has free access to wild grass land
affording a limitless support for cattle
and sheep without labor and without
cost.
It is preparing for a large dairy, for
the raising and manufacture of wool, for
manufacturing its bard wood timber
(which it has in great quantities) into
handles, rods and furniture, for establish
ing a large orchard and for engaging in
the raising of all manner of smalt fruits,
which are produced of the finest quality
anu may be in any quantity; besides a
canning industry, which will handle
sweet corn, vegetables, wild fruits and
orchard products.
It is providing for the best of schools
for all ages and both sexes, and these
schools as organized are formed largely
of men and women of mature years who
avail themselves of the opportunity to
study in the evening classes with an in
terest which is quite remarkable.
As to the schools for the children, they
are not excelled anywhere, covering the
kindergarten, the day school, and in
instances the evening school as well, and
probably the most interesting fact in
connection with this industrial experi
ment is that every child in the Associa
tion is a most enthusiastic colonist.
Whether they come from the crowded
districts of Chicago, or from the Dakota
frontier, it is alt the same to them. . Hia
watha is the best place in the world, and
to this there is no exception. Nothing
can be more inspiring than to hear the
little fellows on their way home from
schoolj oin in the Hiawatha yell, which
is modeled after the usual college cry, and
runs as follows:
Co-o-perativel
Sis! Boom! Bah!
Hia-wa-thal
' Rah! Rah! Rahl
The organization is itself a religious
one, not that it is sectarian, dogmatic,
or proposes any interference with any
fixed convictions of Its members, but it is
religious on the basis of the Sermon on
the Mount and a siucere purpose to ap
ply its teachings to man's whole life, in
cluding the doing of his daily tasks.
The purpose is to be inclusive of all
serious, sober minded and public spirited
people, rather thantobeexclusiveof any.
Among the members are Baptists, Pres
byterians, Methodists, Congregational-
ists, Catholics, and a much larger per
cent age who have never been members of
any particular church; but our public
gatherings havethe presence and support
of them all, and side by side Jrom every
church and no church, A. P. A.'s and
Catholics alike sit down to study the
best thing this life affords and to gather
such strength for every better purpose as
mutual suggestion and encouragement
can give. Men of all creeds are admitted,
but the tobacco habit, the opium habit,
and all forms of intoxicating beverages
are not permitted. A very large share
of the members have been extensive users
of tobacco, but most have already
abandoned it and within a short time
every evidence of its presence will have
entirely disappeared, in met, tne lorms
of heresy which are not tolerated are "in
dolence, vulgarity and self indulgence.
During the seven months covered by
the first annual report there have been
employed in the agricultural department
11.798 hours of work, but the products
of this labor, counting the products of
the labor at market prices and figures, in
units of time, were worth 23,620 hours
of labor, or in other words, the Associa
tion produced by 11,798 hours of labor,
what it would have taken the wages of
23,620 hours of labor to buy. This, it
will be seen, makes working together to
produce farm products better, by two to
one, than buying them even at present
prices.
In the building department, in labor
and supplies, the department is charged
with 30,032 hours, but its product is es
timated at 40,000 hours, or an advan
tage of 25 per cent in working in an or
ganization over working singly, even in
the rudest construction of barnes and
cottages such as the Association is now
able to provide.
The repairing department is charged
for labor and materials 671 hours. This
department does not a little manufactur
ing as well as all sorts of blacksmith
work, sleighs especially, and of the very
best construction have been produced at
a very great advantage. Its products
are estimated at 3.2G3 hours showing
a surplus of 2,582 hours or showing an
advantage of equipping your own labor
and doing your own work over hiring
others to do it for you or of being hired
by others todo theirwork (notyourown)
it shows a clear advantage of four to
one in favor of our system of Product
Sharing. The saw mill is charged with 1,4 id
hours of labor and is credited with
products valued at 9,510 hours showing
an advantage under Product-Sharing of
five to one.
These illustrations are sufficient. But
it should be borne iu mind that these fig
ures are based on an admission iu favor
of the competitive system which is not
true. If in the shop and mill, on the
farm and at house building the competi
tive worker could have regular employ
ment then his returns might be from one
fifth to one half as good as ours. But
his employment is not regular, continu
ous, all-tbe-year-round work in any one
of tbem. You must at least add another
third in some and a large allowance in all
for lost time. Here no man has lost a
single day of labor because he could not
get employment. These figures have
been made with all of the time of all of
the workers employed aud accounted for
during the whole seven months of tbe
Association s existence.
There are now on tbe ground 125 men,
women and children, probably the most
hopeful, most contented, most profitably
and regularly employed of any like com
pany of workers anywhere.
It has been tne plan ot tne Association
from the start that no one should be ad
mitted to membership, nor from any one
should anything be received in the shape
of payments on capital stock or for any
other purpose, until these applicants had
first been on tbe ground and seen both
the people and the place for themselves.
It is a gratifying fact, however, that no
person has visited our Association yet
with tne expectation oi becoming a mem
ber provided he was pleased with th
place and the people, who has not re
mained. Among those who have gone.
from Chicago tbe following trades art
represented. Clerks, book-keepers,
moulders, stenograpners.carpenters, ma-
AYER'S
Cherry Pectoral
SAVED HIS LIFE
So says Mr. T. Nl. Reed, a highly
respected Merchant of Mid
dletown, III., of a Young
Man who was supposed
to be In Consumption.
"One of my customers, some o
years ago, had a son who had all 9
the symptoms of consumption, o
The usual medicines afforded him o
no relief, and he steadily failed g
until he was unable to leave his
bed. His mother applied to me o
for some remedy ana 1 recom- o
mended Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.
The young man took it according 0
to directions, and soon began to o
improve until he became well o
and strong." T. M. Heed, Mid- JJ
dletown, 111. o
"Some time ago, I caught a o
severe cold, my throat and lungs o
were badly inflamed, and I had a g
terrible cough. It was supposed g
that I was a victim of consump- o
tion. and mv friends had little o
hope of recovery. But I bought a
bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
took it, and was entirely cured, o
No doubt, it. saved mv life." O
I. Jones, Emerts Cove, Tenn.
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Received Highest Awards
AT THE WORLD'S FAIR
ooooooooooooooooooooooooi
chiuists, book-binders, and engineers; and
without exception these people have tat
en eheir part in the saw-mill, on the farm.
and in land clearing with an enthusiasm
and attachment for their work which is
not excelled by any.
I am in the city justnow for others, but
it is the purpose to limit the membership
m our Association lor the present to
fifty families, and it is quite likely before
this letter shall reach your readers that
the numbers will be complete,- It is the
purpose of our general association, the
Industrial Christian Union, however, to
organize other associations of a similar
character and to extend indefinitely, not
so much a crusade against tbe competi
tive system as to advocate and" organize
a better thing in its place. These people
do not withdraw trom the world nor for
feit their interest in any of the tasks
their fellows are carrying or any of the
problems they are striving to solve.
From the beginning they are devoting
one-tenth of all their products to a mis
sionary enterprise devoted to the study
of these problems and to creating asso
ciations like their own, and it is their pur
pose to continue this so long as their As
sociation shall exist.
Walter Thomas Mills.
Room 73, Hotel Grand Unlor., 150
Dearborn st., Chicago.
TUe world's crons nf nnfn.tr.oa Insfc
fear, according to an exhaustive in
vestigation, were no less than 37r. "urn.
000 bushels short, as compared with
the crop an 1893. In Ireland potatoes
have not been so diseased for many
years.
i
AROUND THE MAHOGANY. -
Epicures, like poets and artists, are
born, not manufactured.
To the average Bridget "a pinch of
alt" means a whole bucketful.
Spiced and pickled peaches are new
essential at fashionable dinners.
It is Southern tradition that colored
iooks are best to prepare oysters.
Gastronomic scholars hold the wing
to be the best part of the turkey.
Since colonial days the chafing dish
has never been so popular as now.
Closed baked, home made bread, in
the English way, finds favor here.
It would be a good law allowing
only hermits and sailors to eat onions.
Genuine manufacture of codfish
balls is one of the lost culinary arts.
In the matter of cornbeef and cab
bage, enough is equivalent to a feast
Cabbage and cauliflower should not
be cooked when company is expected.
Few eau recite "The Raven" back
ward; fewer can properly make Welsh
rarebit-
There is an abundance Of kerosene
where some imported sardines are
packed.
Sausages and buckwheat cakes for
breakfast are now gastronomically
eorrect '
Look not upon the wine when it is
ed; nor look upon artificially green
pickles.
The art of cooking chicken to per
fection is best understood by the
Chinese.
There must be profanity when
(hops that should have been broiled
ire served fried.
WALTER BAKER & CO.
The Largest Manufacturers of
PURE, HIGH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On Otis Costinut, am racelT
HIGHEST AWARD8
from Um fnat
ial
EXPOSITIONS
In Europe and America.
TTkKV. .1.. rtk t n
TstMed In d of their mpenttoae.
puesaa Mluhta, udxu lUaMMaciN
OLD SY PROCESS SVUVWHIM.
WALTER BAKER ft CO. DC8CHESTER.IEAS3.
i.svsf
VIA!
! J
Advantages of the Kitselman Fence.
It is the earnest wish of the publishers of Thb Wealth Makers, that after yon
have read what is said below of the Kitselman Fence, you send to the manufactur
ers For a most beautiful catalogue that we have just examined; it will sarely pay
yon to read it. Tell them where you saw their "ad." Iu this way only will they
learn to appreciate this paper as an advertising medium. Tne Publishers.
It In strong, easily handled, durable and ornamental.
It will not b. Injured by aleet, .now, heat, cold or flood,
It will turn borers, cattle, abeep, hove. dogs and poultry. . ,
It will protect flelde aa perfectly M the beet ol board fence.
It will not pull ths wool from snaep, thus saving many fleece.
It will not obstruct tbe view or mar the beauty of tbe landecape.
It Is a net-work without barb and will not Injur stock IS any way,
It will not allow wires to be pulled apart to make epace to climb t brooch. '
It will coat less to put up this fence and keep It In repair than any otber.
It can be taken down, rolled up and carried to other points without Injury.
It will make eat enclosures for the worst animals, and reliable line fence.
It will not shelter enemies to crops and will last a lifetime with very little repair.
It Is Ore-proof and cannot be blown down and will not Injure persons or clothing.
Tbs twists In th wires will not slip or permit breakages by sxpansion or contraction by beat or
cold.
It la the only general purpose wlr fence known and will not collect snow drifts or be Injured by
snow storms. v
It Is the strongest, cheapest and best fence ever mad, considering th many different style an
th Tarlety of Its uses.
It I the only combination fence In tbe world, and can be made high enough tor cemeteries or
narrow enough for lawns.
It will not cast a shadow oyer growing crops, and will permit cultivation" right op to th fence;
by this means you can keep your fence-rows clean.
It will not rust or break In tbe twists, and is made from tbs beat "Bessemer Steel Win," Gal
vaulted, thus making It proof against sue and weather.
It Is adapted to sections where wood Is scarce, as It can be put on wood or Iron posts, and Is
mad of the best material and In tbe beat possible manner.
It will cost only a small percentage of ordinary Iron fences, and It put up with baa sad top
rail, much less than picket fences, ane Is mor ornamental than either.
It will save ten feet in width of the ground now occupied by rail fences, which Is equal to tour
acres of land on every hundred acres now fenced with rail. fences.
Old FncrifiC NoW Ba' tntn w nMlr h'om oms other man In soma part of th country who is
u,w w5,os' also afraid that farmers and stockmen wouldn't take a notion to woven wlr
fences. Our reply Is, It Is only that class of men wbo do not know anything about woven wlr
fencing who say anything against it, and such old togias should not be noticed, aa their prejudices
are tbe result of Ignorance. Address for catalogue,
KITSELMAN BROS., Ridgeville, Ind.
GET A HOME
A CHOICE RESIDENCE three miles from postoffice for sals, It Is just outsids
the city limits of Lincoln, in tbe shadow of trro colleges, between them and
the city: two blocks from street car line, and in splendid neighborhood which
enjoys all the luxuries of a city without its taxes, noise and dust. It is a good Mr
den farm, new bouse, barn, windmill, best well of water, with water connections in
bath room and kitcben. A complete system of irrigation. Fifty cherry, twenty
five apple and other fruit trees, also 10,000 strawberry plants, planted in 1894
enough native firewood for cooking stove. Hers is the prettiest and most valuable
holding in real estate about the Capitol If you desire to invest where large re
turns cannot fail to come your way, investigate this offer.
The colleges afford an excellent market for garden, poultry or dairy products.
The owner wants to sell and change occupation. Mo mortgagee. If you want this
offer address,
J. II. DOBSOHT,
1120 II St., Lincoln, JNeb.
P. S. This tract consists of ten acres. - '
Irrigated Farms-$1,000!
imivir.mi.iiim an .
OUT of a thousand farms in SOUTHWEST KA.N8A8, of 160 acres each, we an
selling a limited number equipped with an independent and permanent irriga
tion plant sufficient for at least ten acres on each farm. The price at which
these 160 acre farms are selling is merely about what the ten acres and irrigation
plant are worth.
Before buying farm investigate this. Special terms made for Colonies, Call
on us or write for particulars.
THE SYNDICATE LANDS & IRRIGATING CORPORATION,
Boom 412 Sew England Life Building, 8th h Wyandotte fits-, AH8A8 OUT, 0-
TAKE NOTICE!
Book and Job Printing
In all its branches.
County Printing
Lithographing .
Book Binding
Engraving
, . Of all kinds.
Blank Books
In every style.
Legal Blanks'
other houses
Stereotyping
From superior
Printers' Rollers
' Made by an
material.
Country Printers
Having county or other work, which they cannot
themselves handle, would make money by writing
us for terms.
WEALTH MAKERS PUB. CO.
Lincoln, Neb.
TINGLEY & BUfiKETT.
Attorneys for Administrator, 1026 0
Street, Lincoln, Neb.
Notlca of 8ala of Real Estate
In tbs matter ot th Estat ot Mary A. Hoetetter,
deceased,
Notlc Is hereby given that In pnrsaane of an
order ot Samoa! Chapman, Judge of tb district
conrt of Oto county, Stat of Nebraska, made
on tbe 31st day of February, 1866, for the sal of
tb real stat hereinafter described, there will be
sold at tb premiers. No. Sill O St., Lincoln, Ne
braska, on tbe Mth day ot March, 181)6, at 100
o'clock p. m., at public sale to the hlgbeat bidder
for oasb, subject to incumbrances againet th
aame. tb following described real estate, to-wit:
Lot numbered six (), In block numbered on (1),
in Flalnvlew addition to th city of Lincoln,
anr aster county', Nebraska. Said sale will re
main open on hour.
Dated this mh day ot February, 1895.
C. Is. McGKEW.
Administrator ot th Estate of Mary A. Hoe tet
ter, deceased. tsu
1' "
IN LINCOLN!
and Supplies
From the simplest style to tbe most elaborate.
The Red Line Series, the handsomest Blank in the
country, printed on Bond Paper at less expense than
furnish them on ordinary Sat paper.
hard metal.
.
expert from the best and most durable
-TO-
CALIFORNIA
8
Is ear Sleeping; Car Rat on th PhlltiwRoek
island Ton net Bicuralons from Council Bluffs,
Omaha or Lincoln to Los Angeles or San Fran
cisco, via the flcenlo Boat and Ogden. Car
leares Omaha erery Friday.
xoo hav through sleeper, and th Phillips
management ha a special Agent accompany the
excursion each week. and yon will ears th mosey
and hav excellent accommodation, aa th ears
hav upholstered spring seata,ar FaUataa build,
and appointment perfect.
Address 1 or reservation aid foil partlealara,
CHAS. KKMMKDT, a. N. W. T, A
Oaaaha, Hah.
JOHN KBASTAIK. O. P. A.,
Cbiaaga.