July 11, 1895 THE WEALTH MAKERS. X printed upon the ballots used at a pri mary election in the manner as set forth in the sample ballot of the Australian ballot law, under the head of "questions 7y. suDtnittea to tne vote ol tne people. ' The elector shall express bis choice as provided in the Australian ballot law, and the votes upon the proposition so : submitted shall be counted, convassed and returned as hereinbefore set forth f for persons nominated for office. If the I ' convention of delegates shall find from v the returns from these several precincts I of this county that a majority of the . voter cast on any proposition shall be for adoption, then it shall be the duty of said convention of delegates to adopt '4 the same as a declaration of principles of our party. Published bv Request. If Jesus Christ were on earth today, doing what he did when here, he would be arrested for assault and battery by the bankers; he would be dragged into court by the doctors and State Health Commissioners on the charge of healing the sick without a license; the churches would sit in council, assembly and Holy See, and phut their doors against him for preaching dangerous heresies, and the religious and political rulers would finally convict and kill him for anarchy, for arraying classagtilnst class and making the people believe that he had a divine message of "good news" to the poor. He would becalled first a dreamer, then a demagogue, a deceiver, a socialist a blasphemer, the arch enemy of vested rights and all religions, the most danger ous popular foe of law and order. Those bearing his name today who do not get into disrepute with the bankers and other usurers, the landlords, the profit demanding capitalists, the politicians and the churches of the competitive sys tem, are not real Christians. A train dispatcher named William Maxwell, of Galveston, Texas, after look ing four weeks in vain for a job in Chi cago, entered the office of the .ticket agent of the Western Indiana railroad, at Sixty-third street, and with a coup ling pin overpowered and robbed him of thirty-three dollars. The robber had several excellent letters of recommenda tion in his pockets and had left behind him a family at Galveston. This is just one of countless examples of our present each-for-himself competitive system. J shows the pressure that in a few days or weeks converts honest efficient well re commended workers into criminals. The Kentucky Populists endorsed the Omaha platform and added a number of planks, some on local questions. Ouei im portant plank adopted by them reads as follows: "We favor a constitutional amendment fora system of direct legislation by which 20 per cent of the legal voters of the state on state matters, or the same per cent in any legal subdivision in local ipters in such subdivision, may, by petition, have submitted to all the peo p e of the state, or to the people of such subdivision, to test their sovereign will on any act of legislation. "Kim, all trusts," says the New York World. It can't 'lone. As soon ex pect the earth to turn back ou its axis. The organization oi industry to econo mize labor is a forward movement which must not be obstructed. But when an industry has become organized and is preying upon the public through mono poly power, it must be taken into the hands of the government, so that the people may be protected and t he economy of perfect organization preserved, for all. The loss of time on the one item of turning the team and tool at the ends of short furrows has been estimated in Germany, and found to be almost one half of the working hours greater on a 60 metre length lurrow, when compared with a 220 metre furrow. In a ten hour work day aud 60 metre lands only 4 hours and 27 minutes actual plowing could be put in, and with 220 metre uuds the plowing time of 8 hours aud 82 minutes could be utilized. Mb. Justice Buown, of the Supreme Court, in his address to the graduating law class of Yale college, gave utterance to the following warning: "If wealth will not respect the rules of common honesty in the use of its power, it will have no reason to expect moderation ordiscre" tion on the part of those who resist its encroachments." SeBRETARY Morton has obtained the scalp of Prof. Harrington, chief of the U.S. Weather Bureau. Personal ani mosity ou the part of Morton was what removed him. Prof. Harrington has been in every way a most excellent pub lic servant and for public interest would not resign. The New York Mercury (daily) of June 21st, contained a valuable article show ing the condition of workers in the shoe manufacturing industry, some of the (acts of which we give iu an editorial this week. The Mercury seems to be a good friend of the oppressed and is not a gold bug sheet. The Southern Mercury of Texas, is in a position to know, aud it says: "The ad ministration, backed by Wall Street money, dominated the Kentucky conven tion aa it will every Democratic con ven ation in the South." "Mn. Harrison goes hunting' Well, what if he does? N Who cares? Let him hunt, and Grover fish. It is not possible for them to do much harm while so en guged. Society must own the machines or in individual liberty will be crushed by them. From The Coming State Editor Wealth Makers: The common interest existing between Oklahoma and Nebraska gives us a fra ternity of feeling which should dominate our efforts. Like Nebraska we stand on the border of the old east, baffled to some extent in the unfolding of our re sources, by the same fatal power. At our northern door is the wheat fields of Kansas, at our southern the Texas cot ton belt, at oureast Arkansas and to the west the cattle ranges of the desert; therefore, we feel the weight of the load which our neighbors are forced to bear. Our wheat goes down with the Kansas crop; our cotton brings the pitiful 4 cents with the Texan's; our beef and our pm duce is forced down in the same scale which has bankrupted one-half the stock raisers and husbandmen of the great south and west. We feel that to rid our selves of this barrier to prosperity, Neb raska, nor Oklahoma, nor any western or southern state or territory should hold back one jot of fellowship or unity in concentrating, invigorating and vital izing the toiling masses west of the Fat her of Waters and south of the New England border. We realize, though barred from national voice, that union is our only hope of escape; that com bined and concerted actiou through all the west is urgently demanded; that un less we lay with skillful hands in the in fancy of our state, the future will be like that of some of our stricken sisters. We need no further lesson in the old dog matic way; we are convinced to our sor row that its result is false to civilization and its promises turn to ashen apples at our famishing lips. No need of future schooling in Mammon s doleful prisons, for the crumbling fabric of our freedom on every hand proves how futile its aim and how poisonous to the principles of liberty its every branch iruitage. we must lay the rising temple nrm and steadfast, joint by joint; we must sift the threshing floor and cast to tne winds that which has been proven useless. Oklahoma extends the fraternal hand to all the west, to all the south to all oppressed wherever found. Our cause is yours; your burden is ours. We go to the same markets, yield to the same masters, pay to the same usurers, ilie blow that is aimed at your freedom falls with equal force at the root of ours; and if all men who stand in common danger could comprehend the force of that one suggestion, tne public press, tne nired orators, the cross-road guzzlers, would be astounded at the swift and sacred union that would make the toiling masses one indissoluble amalgam. If every oppressed man would give one-half the tune to honest thinking that be does to empty listening, there would be more patriots and less dummies in the land. For one, I have not lost faith in the sense and soundness of the people; I be lieve there are more brains below the millionaire rank than above it, tenfold over. All we lack is the burnishing gleam of self-reliance and the splendor of unity to give motive power and force to those heads below; they are invincible They need no leaders; they are kingly leaders, if that false dream, that wealth makesmight, were torn from before their eyes. The wand of fntellect must strike away that thrall. Bert Huffman. Woodward, Okla. Consignment sale of fine Trimmed Hats (from an overstocked milliner) of values from $1.25 to $8.00 at pricps of 48c. to f3.50. The Racket, 101(j P, St. . . Boyd County Heard From. Alfohd, Boyd Co., Neb., June 17. Editor Wealth Makers. I read with interest the letter as to whether or not we shall join a new silver party. In lioyd county we intend to in vite all silver men (in our calls) to attend our caucuses and convention without at tempting to fuse with any party. If a call is made for us to send delegates to a state silver party convention to name a ticket for judge of the supreme court and regents, I do not think we Populists will send a delegate. Tho silver Democrats and Republicans may, perhaps; we can not help that. I fear that pucIi a ticket will give the Republicmis the election this year b,v drawing some men away from us. I expect the Republicans to work to get such a ticket in the field. Of course the silver men will say that state tickets are npcesstiry this year iu order to have an organization and a good start for the presidential year. If our men all hold fast to the party and don't go wild after silver, we may win by a slight vote here in Nebraska. How it will be in other states I do not know. I expect we shull see a struggle this year between the Pop ulist party and the silver party as to which is strongest. I donot feel likegiv iug up the Populist party and the Omaha platform ; I do not think it necessary nor wise. The Republicans and Democrats who want silver can join us and work with us until it triumphs, and then drop out, and we can go on without them. They need not fear that while they are helping silver to win they will cause the rest of the Omaha platform, now obnox ious to them, to win also. A party often fails to enforce all its platform when there is more unanimity than there will be in this case; and here where a large element would be hostile to much of it the thing will be impossible at the first. As proof of this, witness the way in which the protection democrats of theeasthave always defeated free trade and even low tariff in the democratic party. Silver men who might join us and then desert after silver was triumphant would not be branded as traitors to our party, because they did not join because they accepted all our platform, but because it came nearer to their idea of right than any other, and so it was their duty to work for it and its candidates. Many a man who went into the Republican pnrty in '56 and '60 was in favor of nothing more than the "non-extension of slave terri tory." And yet as some of those men were won over to the rest of the Republi can platform before they left their trial party, and so remained with it, so it would be unwise for Populists to aban don their platform for a single plank party. No, Mr. Editor, I say that the ground we have won must be held man fully and firmly. They can come to us, but we can not go to them. Yours, etc. N. II. B. Buckingham's Dye for the Whiskers is a popular preparation In one bottle, and colors evenly a brown or bla-'Any person can easily apply it at hot YOU ARE OUR AGENT. For a Club of Five yearly sub scribers we will give a Year's Subscription to the person send ing it. Send for Sample Copies and work among your neigh bors. Address, THE WEALTH MAKERS, J. S. HYATT, Bus. Mgr., Lincoln, Neb. CHALLENGED TO DEBATE, The American Bimetallic League Longing for a Discussion. Washington, July li. A. J. War ner, president of the American Bime tallic league, has written a letter to Hon. Charles S. Fairchild, chairman of the committee on sound currency of the Reform club, New York, in which he says: "The Bimetallic league re spectfully invites the committee on aound. currency to a discussion of the money question on distinctive propo sitions to be agreed upon and to be carried on by questions and answers. I would suggest that not more than five nor less than three on a side be se lected to conduct the discussion, the discussion to be held at such time and place as may be agreed upon. Should this suggestion meet your approval, I would suggest an early meeting to agree upon the proposition to be dis cussed and the regulations under which the discussion shall be con ducted." Simpson of Norton, Kas., has bought at sheriff sale the immense stock of clothing and furnishing goods formerly owned by S. Schwab, 1027 O street, at 26 per cent ' of manufacturers' cost and will sell you any suit or garment until August 1st, at one-half manufacturers' cost. Open for business Friday 12. s Sensation at Emporia. Emporia, Kan., July 11. Elijah Hop kins, a deacon of the First Christian church, a prominent Odd Fellow, an old soldier and for the past sixteen years a respected and esteemed citizen, was arrested, charged with making a criminal assault over two weeks ago on Rosa Mangold, aged 15. Hopkins is about 60 years of age and the father of a large family of grown chL-u-en. He claims there is nothing in the charge, and many of his friends believe him. He had a preliminary hearing and was placed under $300 bond. Quite a sen sation was caused by the arrest. Now Is the Time to Imv Shoes 1-5 off. Foot-Form Store' 1213'0St. Baltimore Excursion July 15th and 10 th. A very cheap excursion will be run on the above dates by the Northwestern line, account the Baptist Young People's Union, which has chosen this line as its "official route." The arrangements as made contemplate a very interesting scenic trip, For detailed information apply at 117 So. 10th St., or depot, Cor. 8th and S Sts. 5tl SHOT DEAD ON A STREET. A, Variety Actor Kills a Young Woman Be fore a New York Crowd. New York, July 11. In a fit of jeal ousy and drunken madness, James McGowan, a third-rate jig dancer and singer, fired three bullets from a re volver into the head of Eose Finn.kiU- Ing her instantly. 1 he murder was committed in -the midst of the throng that filled ' the street at Tenth avenue and Twenty- mntn street at r.w o clock tbis morn ing, but none had the courage to inter fere, and the assassin fled from the tcene and was not apprehended for nearly three Hours. The victim's mother had forbidden her to receive McOowan's attentions. The Sioux City and St Paul ltoute Is the Northwestern, the only one-line route. o transfers. No delays. Morn ing and afternoon trains to Sioux City. Reduced round trip rates to St. Paul, Duluth and other places. City office 117 So. 10th Street. tf Pay up your subscription and get a few new subscribers for The Wealth Makkk8. Only 80c. from now till No vember 1st. Creamery and Dairy Apparatus and Suppl'es. BUTTER PACKAGES of every kind. HAND SEPARATORS Every farmer having six or more milch cows should have one of f!hese ma chinesthe saving of butter alone In a single year will pay for lu For informa tion, prices, etc., address Creamery Package MT g Co., Departments. KftlTasj Olty. 3VXo Nebraska's Prosperity. Now that splendid crops in Nebraska are almost assured beyond a doubt, the publishers of The Nebraska Fanner, Lin colu, Neb., have decided to commemorate this important event, which iudicates good times once more, by publishing a large secial edition of their journal August 1st, devoted to ensilage and fod der. This issue will be used extensively in their subscription campaign at the State and County Fairs and will afford advertisers an excellent medium through which any article of merit may be brought before the best people of Ne braska and adjoining territory. All who are contemplating placing any advertis ing should begin at once, or with this special isHue, and all orders with copy for advertisements should reach their office on or before July 25, 1805. For advertising rates see first column, second page of Nebraska, Farmer, or for further particulars write the publishers. The Nebraska Farmer special alfulfa edition, April 4, '95, was most favorably com 'men ted on by the agricultural press of the country and highly appreciated by those interested in and familiar with this most popular and valuable forage plant, oud it is the intention of the publishers to make the issue of August let, if pos sible, eveu more valuable than the alfalfa special. Copies of either edition may be had, postpaid, to any address, at five centa per copy, while the large supply holds out. Nebraska Farmer, 5t2 Lincoln, Neb. One Fifth Off on all Shoes. Foot-Form Store, 1218 OSt. A bright, blooming complexion comes of the good blood made by using Ayer's Sarsaparilla. People's Independent Stats Oonven tton The People' Independent electors of the Stat ot Nebraska are hereby requested to elect aud send delegates from their respective counties, to meet In convention In the city of Lincoln on Wed nesday, Aujcust 28, at S p. m., tor the purpose ol nominating one candidate lor Judge ot the su preme court, two candidates tor regent ot the State University, and to transact snch other bus iness as may properly corns before the conven tion. The basis of representation will b one dele-gate-at-large for each county and one additional delegate for each one hundred votes or major fraction thereof; cast at the general election of 18U4 for Hon. H. W. McFadden tor secretary ot State, which gives the following: representation by counties: Adams IK Johnson 8 Kearney 10 Keith 1 Keya Paha., 4 Antelope II Banner.., Blaine..... H Boone II Kimball... Box Butte.... Knox 10 Boyd., Lancaster...... B8 Lincoln 10 Brown 4 Buffalo 19 Burt Butler 14 Cass 16 Logan.. .. 3 Lnnp Madison McPherson ., Cedar 7 Chase- Merrick Nance S Cherry Cheyenne Clay Colfax Cuming..... Custer Nemeha 13 Nuckolls 13 Otoe 14 Fawnee 8 Perkins , Phelps 11 Dakota 4 Dawes 8 Pierce 6 Platte 10 Dawson 11 Polk 13 Bed Willow Deuel S Dixon 8 Dodge 8 Douglas 40 Richardson 11 Hock 8 Saline 11 Dundy 4 Fillmore 16 Harpy , Saunders 21 Franklin Frontier 91 Scotts Bluff. Seward 12 Furnas .... Kheriuen. .................. 11 Oage ., Garfield.... Gosper...... Orant Greeley Sherman... Hloui. ....... Stanton 4 Thayer ..................... 11 Thomas..... ............. 1 Hall Thurston.., Valley Hamilton 18 Harlan Hayes S Washington 7 Wayne..... ..... 6 Hitchcock 8 Holt 13 Hooker 1 Webster 11 Wheeler .. 8 York 15 Howard 10 efferson... 10 Total 788 We would recommend that no proxies be a). lowed, bnt that the delegates present cast the full rote to which their respective counties are en titled. We would also recommend that In the counties candidates for the various counly offices be nom Inated by the same convention which selects dele gates lo tne state convention. i. A, Edokrton, i. H. Edwistkh, Seer tary. Chairman, Peoples' Independent County C on ventlon. The Peoples' Independent party of I.nnci ster county are hereby called to meet In county con vention, at Bohaoan's hall in the city of Lit coin on Wednesday. July 81. 1816. at 10 a. m. The purpose of this convention will be the selection of thirty-three delegates to represent this county In the tnte convention called to meet at Lincoln on Angust 28, 185, and to nom inate candidates for the various Judicial and county offices to be filled at the next general election, vis : Three Judges for the Third Judicial district, clerk ot the district court, sheriff, treasurer, county clerk, county Jndge, superintendent of public instruction, coroner, surveyor, county commissioner. The representation In said convention will con sist of two delegates at large from each ware and precinct In the connty, and one delegate lor each fifteen (16) votes, or major fraction thereof, cast in tne last general election lor tne Hon. H. w. UcFadden for secretary ot state, and snch rep resentation will be ss follows: First wnrd 11 Middle Creek ... 6 Second ward 11 Mill ..... 7 Third ward .......... ..17 Nemaha 10 Fourth ward 21 North Bluff 7 Fifth ward 14 Oak 8 sixth ward 12 Olive Branch ..... 2 Seventh ward 14 Panama Buda precinct Rock Creek 8 Centerville 8 Saltillo 8 Denton t South Pass 4 Elk 7 Stevens Creek 6 Grant ........ ft Stockton Garfield 6 Waverly Highland 6 West Oak 8 Lancaster .........14 Yankee Hill 7 Little Salt 8 West Lincoln 7 Total 272 It Is recommended that the primaries for the selection of delegates In the varlons wards and precincts be held on Thursday, July 27th, the uuur mi uuhjiiik aucu primary iu ue Diva oy ine central committeeman, and that proper notice oi stu-n primar.v be given to the electors. It Is also recommended that a list of the dele gates elected, with alternates if any are choen be mailed or delivered to the secretary of the county central committee as soon as possible after their selection. J. M. Thompson, J. C. McNkrhky. Secretary. Chairman. For Small Dairy Farmers. GAnniAGES. DUSOES, HARtlESS Tl tn.i ana UM-ynee, sw nnsry rntn. wore saaimnieea aao at to en per jrr cent saved. Our goods received the highest awards at the World's ' Fair. Our 1886 Mammoth Illustrated Catalogue is free to all. It shows K all the latest styles and Improvements and reduced prices. It has 200 page and Is the largest and most complete catalogue ever Issued. "A"i bend for it. Jl'tjrtc Alliance) Cstrrte i ClswlsuaaU, Ohio. Wi -k- SrsSkiiU. Wrnt W-Sur. OARDINQ, FEED AND SALE STABLE. ( 3 J P$r JL- 'Phone 232. Why Not Live in Lincoln? I have a well-improved eight-acre (arm for sale three miles southeast from the Postoftice. It is near two colleges and between them and the city, and is adapted to fruit, garden, dairy or poultry raining. A good house, barn, plenty of water, some timber and all conveniences. Here is the farm where you ccn live near the city and enjoy all its conveniences and have a farm large enough to make your own living. I will sell for f 1,000 less than it cost me one year ago on account of wish" ing to change my occupation. No mortgages. No trade. Address, : J. GIVENS. Box 583, Lincoln, Nebr. Great Flour Sale AT 1008 P STREET. THE ALLIANCE STORE SELLS Bakers' patent ...$ .So per sack Straight " 1. 00 " Cream " i.oo " High " 1.20 " ' AH warranted the best ever sold in the city. 3 Loaves of Fine Bread for - - - - lOc J. W. HARTLEY.- J. W. MUSSETTER. Make Your Ovn Cheese. For one dollar C. E. Kittinger of Powell, South Dakota, will send you ten rennets with complete instruction for making cheese at home with such simple apparatus as everyone now has. No other outlay than the dollar which will be refunded to you if you fail. Three pounds of cheese in place of one pound of butter. Which will bring the most in your market? IRRIGATE All right yon r Horse . i rower Point" I oar motto. For CMtmiogv and tftl moaiMlt addrsM Weber Uas tt Gasoline Engine IJD.I SfS a. W. B1TQ, Summer Mr. 0. D. Griffin, who Is well known to oar stndsnte as a teacher ol Mathematics for five years at tbs Lincoln Business College, until a ysar ago, has attain associated himself with ns. and will conduct a Hummer School, devoting his time to special Instruction In Arithmetic and other stadias taught In tbs public schools. Tnltllon, II per week. Tbs tuition In the Business, Mhorthand, and Penmanship Is rsdaosd for the months ot June, July and August to $li for ten weeks. Call at the College, Corner 11th A 0, or address. Ttye Iiieolii Business College CHAMBERLAIN Commercial College, la now offering special inducements to all parties wishing to study Bookkeep ing, Mathematics, Shorthand, Type writing, Penmanship, Latin, Trigonome try, Commercial and Railroad Telegra phy. Special attention given to prepara tory work for State University. OUK FACULTY. W. S. LLEWELLYN, M.A Principal Commercial Department. W. O.CHALBERLAIN, Principal Shorthand Department and Lec turer on Commercial Law, BERT E. BETTS. i Official Court Reporter. 8. M. TRUE. Principal Telegraphy and Railroad B mi ne, s Departments. J. 0-OLSON, Principal Penmanship Department N.C.ABBOTT. Latin, Trigonometry, etc Call or write for special rates during summer months. Lansing Theatre Building, LINCOLN. - - NEBRASKA. VETALead WOOD XO A I ft WORKERS' I UULU FOOT POWER .o&rs, LATHES. rORIMW, tllftUIWCDV CMCl'UBSiWg uSMHWniAl.il IS wecarrvin iocg.sjiuie I RanlMO feet J""" B.bftsll1M Harklarrr VERY LOW PRICES! eeod cents (or larre inns. UsUiuff. THE WILKINSON CO.. 83 Randolph St.f Chicago. Nebraska Pant and Suit Co. 1 2 1 7 O Street. (West halt ot Trunk Factory.) All Wool Pants Made to Order First-class and irnaranteed to lit, S3, 94, 5, SO, and upwards. Business Suits, $1S, 918, $20 and op. Popular Prices. Goods sold by the yard, and cnas tor ooy s rants, etc. Fsw uncalled for Pants and Bolts at yoar own rrtce. eni for samples ana prices. 0, R. OAKLET. 0. N. HOLCOM, Cutter. The Wealth Makkrs from now until November 1st for only 30c. Get np a clmV M ... 1 jSrU-tjy tiiai San is Wins m si. rlHST-CLASS EQUIPMENTS ANO BEST STTISJTIOSI. Ttie Windsor Stables. W. A. REESE, Proprietor. 1024 L Street, LINCOLN, NE3. ned CHEAP power. On cent per boar Is abeap. Weber ktollne Engines ran tnythlng. "EtoBomf Is JLSBSSf L1IX, MO, D. R. LILLIBRIDGE, Pres. Smith Premier Typewriter Is the most simple, most da able, the easiest to operate and therefore eapabls of most speed, lend lor catalogue and prices. Address. No. UM Farnam St., Onha. tjjX9) Biys ttyis piano LAID DOWH AT TOUR DOOR. FULL' SIZE UPRIGHT GRAND Finished In ROSE WOO 0. MAHOGANY, or FANCY WALNUT, Guaranteed for 5 Years By the Oldest and Most Reliable Mnslc House In Nebraska, For particulars write A. IIOSPE, Jr., Omaha, Neb. (Aleution this paper.) HOMES IN THE SUNNY SOUTH. No hot winds, billiards, nor crop failures. Na. tural Clorer, Timothy and Blue Grass. Fuel cheap. Coal SI per ton at bank. Dry wood 1.8 per cord delivered. All kinds ol fruit that stow In this latitude. You will And ail these advan tages in the country adjacent Calhonn, Hsnry county. Mo., 12 miles from Clinton, the county seat; population 8.000. Located on the M. K. T. K. R. 70 miles southeast Kansas City. We hare a list of good farms lor sale at from $10 to J SO per acre. Corn yields from 80 to 60 per acre, lax from S to 18 per acre and other crops Is proportion. Ws will cheerfully trlre and Informa tion required. Call on or address, UARTHOLEHKVT ALBION. Keal Estate Ag-ents, , Calhoun, Bfo. School