July 18, 1895 THE WEALTH MAKERS. 5 abundance may be a supply for their want, that their abundance may be a supply for your want; that there may be equality: as it ia written, He that had gathered much had notbiBgover; and he that had gathered little had no lack." Democratic industrial equality, com munal organization and an association of Christian communes to equalize condi tions and allow none to lack, that each ane every individual may be nourished, developed, perfected, and the power of all increased beyond present imagination in the taking hold and making use of God's forces which are waiting to serve us, is undoubtedly the Divine will aud plan for the human race. It is the method and means of individual aud social redemption. It was a long time before Christ's teach ing regarding common property, indus trial equality and community of interest became obscured. Clement, who died ia 102, said: "The use of all things in this world should be common. It is the greatest wrong to say this is mine, or that is yours. From that moment date all our troubles." Bishop Ambrose, who died in 397, said: "Nature gives all thiugs to be used by mankind, for God made those things for all to enjoy in common, and wanted the earth to be property in common to all i. : . . .3 ' . i . ' i ii. l i luauiiiiiu. iiaiuio ima vreamu luut law, and it is usurpation winch creates pn vate property." Chrysostom, the "golden mouthed,' who died in A.D. 407. said: "Nobody ever shall call anything his own; it all comes from God for common use for all mankind, and the words mine and thine are lies." But the law of God and the real meaning oi the lifelong and complete sacrifice of Christ have been long hidden beneath the formal, ceremonial-substitution rubbish of the temple. The meaning of the law has been lost, the example of Christ has been long unknown, because the inspired words in which each were revealed have been misused, by revered teachers for many generations. The command, "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself," to the great majority of church members conveys no idea of God's will. The pro fessed disciples of Christ practice unre- buked theeveryday selflstiiiessof the bust nessworld, and money seems to stand for all things. The entire commercial world is pictured as"Babylon the great,"seen in the apocalypse, and the church walks naked in the midst of it. It is true that "Babylon is fallen, and is become the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and the cage of every unclean aud hateful bird." Her rulers, hurkings.monopolistsand mighty men, in all their ranks of power have glorified self-iuterest.and gratifying lust, covetousness and pride have lived deli- ciously. Her merchandise has been every thing purchasable, including "slaves and souls of men." The slavery of the masses aud the soul destruction of the classes are her work. The fruits of un paid labor, "all things dainty and goodly, and the insatiable luit of power, have spread through the world "death, mouriiiiigand famine." "Hermerchauts are the great men ot the earth; and by their sorceries have all nations been de ceived. And in her is found the blood of prophets and saints, and of all that have been slain upon the earth. "And I heard another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of her, my peo pie, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues. For her sins have reached unto heayen and God hath remembered her iniqui ties." I believe that voice is sounding to-day: "Come out of her!" "Come out of her." How? A few families in Nebraska, Missouri and Iowa, having come to see the truth which I have tried to make plain, felt conscience driven to give up family as well as individual selfishness and serve one another as brethren. We felt that the world could never be saved by talk ing, that the most eloquent words are of no value without sacrificing deeds, and that sacrificing deeds are for the most Dart wasted without organization Sacrifice must meet sacrifice, love must meet love in a recognized bond of brotherhood. The pursuit of private property for each family by each family, arraying family against family must cease. Bunning social hos pitals and nursing some of the wounded and inutilated.while permittingthefratri cidal war to continueand forcing all into it to wound or be wounded, to kill or be killed, seemed folly. We therefore called a meeting of those who believed in the brotherhood relation and Christ's exam ple, and organized ourselves into a new kind of corporation, an unselfish or Chris tian business body. If a selfish corpora tion is wise, iu the economic sense, an un selfish corporation is wiser; and only through such a body, made up of individ ual members, can Christ's Spirit be re vealed in Bociety. Only by uniting fam ilies in a corporate Christian community can family-separating selfishness be avoided. Under the recognized divine law by which we come together the law of the social world to be created, our corpora tion is given a power of unlimited growth. We are like other corporations in want ing the earth, but unlike them iu wanting all mea with it, that ihey may all be free and equal and helpful and happy. We would unite the hitherto divided in terests of families, organizing them into industrial corporate communities, and these communities growing, multi plyingand attracting the majority about them by their love and labor economies, may become the Christian state and uni versal, world-wide Kingdom of God. Following is a statement of what we con ceive to be the universal faith and phil osophy, the necessary conclusions of all minds. It is a statement of the faith and truth which we think must, gather and organize men into a perfectly fraternal economic industrial body. OUH FAITH. "We believe in God, our infinite Father, in Christ our perfect brother, and in the law of equalizing love, expressed in the command, 'Thou shalt love thy neigh bor as thy sell.'" OUB PHILOSOPHY. "We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men created have a right to live aud to share equally the abundant natu ral provisions for a happy existence; that the earth is theirs by common in heritance, for use only, and not for specu lation; tiiat because it is the inexhaust ible source of values no equal value can be Offered for it, or a part of it, and that therefore no just title of absolute owner ship can bo acquired in it; that it must belong without possible alienation of title to all individuals of all generations. We hold that the individuals of the race are interdependent, each needing all and having the power to serve all; that each individual differs in his wants and cap a-1 bilities from all other, differs not imply in degree, aud that he ia as much needed by the body politic and indus trial, as is each member of the human body, to oonstitute a perfect whole; we hold that self-interest, thn good of ths individual, is so bound up with society interests, or the interests of all other in dividuals, that it canuot be preserved apart; that individuals cannot look out for their own interests only, as in the present commercial and political strug gle, without insecurity and immense loss; we hold that there can be no clashing of interests between members of a healthful naturally organized society, and that in proportion to its numbers, through organic uuity, will be the measure of in dividual service, benefits and en toymen ts. We hold that each member of society should be equally nourished, equally exer cised according to his ability, and receive equal honor for equal exertion. The Christian Corporation provides for equal product sharing and is obtaining land (near Lincoln, INeb.) and capital, and organizing industry that all its members may have permanent employ ment, to create wealth and provide leis ure to satisfy their needs. The land and capital is held in common. Farming, fruit-growing, market gardening, stock raising, pisciculture, manufacturing, etc., will be carried on under direction of managers selected from the membership, men of special knowledge and experience, Each adult able-bodied member will be given work at tasks be is accustomed to or educated for. In the mercantile line we shall do business on some slight modification of the Rochdale plan, which gives all profits to customers, and through this medium we shall keep in constant Christian relation with the out side world, drawing it to us. We shall be able to economize much- by buying all we have to buy at wholesale, but our constant, study will be to directly supply as large e percentage of our wants as Dossible bv the labor of our own people. We shall do all our laundry work by ma chinery, and much of our cooking at a common bakery. Machinery and the forces of steam and electricity will be utilized as far as possible to save labor and increase wealth. Economy or in. creased effectiveness of labor aud perfec tion of products will be our Btudy and aim. To serve to the utmost, will be the one line of ambition we shall have room for. He that would be greatest, must be the greatest servant. (Luke 21 24-27.) We shall show how the common interest includes the highest interest of each, and we shall provide for increasing manual skill, mental training, and the perfection of individual culture, in order that each and every one ot us may nave greater power to give and to enjoy. We shall also show that while combination and labor fellowship is the way of salva tion from selfishness and temptation, we must work to save, that is, to combine, all men; for only as we increase our num ber organized to fraternally serve, can we decrease oppression, the power of the competitive and monopoly system, and finally completely displace it. Our Christian Corporation can work side by side with selfish enterprises and our members be ra the world, in a sense, and vet not of it. We accept members who believe in the teachings of Christ and indicate that they have the social spirit (which is the Holy Spirit), and when we have not their particular line of industry organized, so as to provide thein work we have them continuewort ing where they are, and they turn in their surplus if tlui!Suve any until we can provide work for them. There is nothing unbusinesslike, uneconomic, or that tries to tit square pegs into round holes in our Christian organization of in dustry. There is nothing unreasonable or arbitrarily unwise in our way of con ducting it. Under the present system every farmer plans as best he can with limited means, plans and worries, and not one in ten knows how and has the means to be a good, successful farmer. We shall select the very best farmers to plan and direct all farm work; and so in other industries. Industrial democracy is not, can not be, industrial despotism for the individual. It is, in fact, real Christianity, the Christian system of individual and social service. The Christian Corporation, as the fore going indicates, is not communally and selfishly ascetic, as some religious socie ties have been. Its members will not be less interested in the land, transporta tion, money and other social-poiitical-moral questions because of being organ ized to help one another. It has the breadth of vision which sees that all men must be saved from selfishness before the individual under more Christian con ditions can be fully saved. Are we perfect people? Not one of us. Neither were the disciples of Christ who gathered about him. The divine com mands were not given to angels, but to men. They were not given to be broken, but to be kept, to save us from evil. It is only necessary that we better under stand what they require and surrender ourselves to the leadings of the social Spirit, the Spirit of the whole. The rest is only a matter of labor and education. Imperfect life in the body of Christ we must expect, made up as it must be of undeveloped and imperfect individual members, but an imperfect relation and life of love is infinitely better than the separation and death of the selfish. And organized love by inter-communication will tend to strengthen, purify and per fect all parts, all members, besides hav ing power to throw off what is beyond the power of assimilation, that which is selfishly foreign and iuharmoniously alien. Brethren, if this doctrine of labor com munion, binding us to one another and to God, taught by Christ and his apos tles and practiced by the early church, be indeed the gospel, it must be both preached and practiced now. The fratrici dal commercial struggle - must cease. The idols of the market place must be not simply talked about, but thrown down. The market place itself, where love is killed and all the fires of hell are kindled, must be closed by God's people for themselves at once. In its place there must be, by our labor prepared and opened, a fountain so full of all good gifts that we may say: "Ho, everyone that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that hath no money; come ye, buy and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk, withoutnioney, and without price" (Isaiah 55;' 1-13). The social democracy where all shall equally exert their energies to serve is a divine idea, but it must be realized. It must have a concrete beginning, and it must grow from some small band of brothers by attraction, by spiritual selection, till it displaces all else and be comes the Christian nation and kingdom of God. Our need now is men who will preach the gospel of labor communion in its simplicity and power, it is Uod s answer to our moral questionings; it is His remedy for all earth's evils. The Land Questloi (Continued from lit page.) Add land question gal 2 no Ce be abolished and all would have home in a once more land of the freeandhoms of the brave. Equal access to natural opportunities to produce wealth, which can alone be obtained by the single tax, is basic to equality in other things. ltead Henry George's works and learn all about this great moral question with a fiscal name, the Single Tax. Hindsboro, 111. S. C. Barnes. 1-5 off On underwear, shirt waists, wrappers, dress ginghams, lawns, challies and pon gees at Fred Schmidt & Bros., 921 0 St. PROH PUDOR! Tea, honest worth Is unrewarded now, -The fairest laurels deck the nabob's brow; No more where Lincoln lived Is manhood priced, Wealth wins Its way where patriots are despised No more on Freedom's soil is freedom found, The man with money is a king uncrowned. The favored few, In selfish biles secure, Behold, unmoved, the miseries of the poor; Nor can distressful tales disturb their ease. Or rouse to life their drowsy sympathies. Where lies the fault (It fault we wish to find)? Not D h one's self, nor wholly with mankind, Nor yet with fata. There must be want and wos While man is forced to be man's fiercest foe. The social structure needs a sober base, Unjust conditions fetter half the race, "oclety alone must bear the blame, ne child in misery is a nation's shame. John T. Bbodebick. At the Schwab mortgage sale they are selling $8, $12 and $1U Mclntoshes for 3.25 to $0.60. This stock is sure going to sell. You can buy the choice of 600 pairs of wool pants at the Schwab mort gage sale at 90 cents per pair. Oar 20 per Cent Discount Bale On shoes will be continued until Satur day, July 20th. Jb red bchmidt & iiros. The False Lawyer BY JOHN SWiNTON. In the business of subverting the liber ties of our beloved country, I do not not dread the soldier with his rifle nor the conspirator with his mask, nor the fool, fanatic, or the demagogue, nor the king in his regalia, nor the cleric with his tongue, nor the editor with his quill, nor Satan with his horns, nor yet the million aire with his millions, if they have but a fair field. The man to be dreaded in this republic is the shystering lawyer; legal machination is the thing of menace and danger. It is in this country especially that the people need,to be on the alert against legal quibblers; here they swarm as they do nowhere else on the globe, not only in the courts, but in legislatures and their lobbies and every place of power aud greatness. How olten in searching amid the ruins of popular properties in other countries that once enjoyed them, do we come up on the tracks of the false lawyerl For what oppressor has he not found n legal subterfuge? For what deed of guilt has he not been ready to erect a legal bul wark? Do we not find him with a legal defense of every usurper; with a legal justification for an invasion of every birthright of man; with a legal quibble over every great popular franchise; with a legal gloze for every clear word of free dom; with legal pettifoggery against every establishment of right; with a legal weapon for nullifying every victory of progress; with a legal jimmy, as Ma jor Haggerty lately said in the Assembly, to pry open every man's safe; with legal mechanism for tearing out every stone in the fabric of justice, and for rearing every pillar in the edifice of wrong? Not a guilty deed has ever been perpe trated by power; not a base treason has ever been hatched against the Common wealth, not a device has ever been set for subversion of any popular right but the false lawyer has stood ready to up hold it with the armament of false lega lity. He battered the Twelve Tables of Rome, be made of no effect the Ten Com mandments of Moses, he stifled the genius of Magna Charta, and he is now scuttling the Constitution of the United States. Dyspeptics, take comfort! Ayer's garsaparilla has cured worse cases than fours. The Man Slogger Paid. Osceola, Neb., July 16. S. F. Com fort is a gentleman who gathers cream, lor the Osceola creamery, ana the other day while attending to his work at the house of a Polsnder on the val ley he was cliaiifeu by the ladv of tho house with chesting in the measuring oi me cream. ?ne came at Mr. Com fort with a c ub. They had a regular Kilkenny tight. The lady came to town with a pretty good sized scalp wouna. ana Mr. Loiriort was sent for. When he came in before Judge Hurst it was hard to determine whose head had been battered up the worst. How ever, he pleaded guilty and contributed $5 toward educating the youth. ' The mortgage sale at Schwab's old ntnnd is now in full bloom and the na tives are carrying away $22, $25 and $28 overcoats for $8.50, $9.50 and $10.50. J his is surely the greatest slaughter of lotlung our city linsever known. The Financial Chronicle of New York City is suggesting that money should be sent into tho south to secure the election of several "sound money" United States senators. It says: "The question we want to ask is, why should not the sound money candidate in each state, the one who apppars to offer the best promise of success, be furnished the meaus for con ducting his canvas.-?" Creamery and Dairy Apparatus and 5uppl'e. BUTTER PACKAGES of every kind. HAND SEPARATORS Every former having six or more milch cows should have one of these ma chines the Having of? butter alone In a single year will pay for iu For Informa tion, prices, eto., address Creamery Package M'fg Co., -- Department. ZSLAXxaBAM City, 3VXOa Make Cows Pay.1 Twenty cows and one Little Giant Separator will make more butter than 25 cows and no separa tor. Five cows will bring $200 to $300 and one separator will cost $125. Five cows will eat a lot of feed; a separator eats noth ing. Moral: Make the cow business pay by using a sep arator. Send for circulars. P. M. SHARPLE9, Elgin, IU. ray up your subscription and get a few new subscribers for The Wealth Makers. Only 30c. from now till No vember 1st. 14th Judicial District Call , The People's Independent electors of the 14th Judicial District ot ths Ktate of Nebraska are hereby requested toelect and send delegates from their respective counties to meet In the city ot MvCook, on Saturday September T. 18H5, at 3 o' clock p. m.. for the purpose of placing la nomi nation one candidate for Judge of the district court of the 14th Judicial district, and to trans act such other business as may properly come before the convention. The basis of representa tion will bs one delegate at large from each county and one additional delegate for each one hundred voter or major traction thereof cast at the general election of 1KU4 for lion. H. W. Mo Fadden for Secretury of State, which gives ths following vote by counties: Furnas... 12 GoHper 7 Hed Willow., 9 Frontier u Hitchcock h Duuily 4 Chase S li ayes ...8 Total 53 Would recommend that the delegates present cast full vote of their respective comities. J. A. Khkrioan. Chairman 14tb Jndicial District. People's Independent State Convene tion The People's Independent electors of the stats of Nebraska are hereby requested to elect aud send delegates trom their respective counties, to meet In convention In the city of Lincoln on Wed nesday, August 28, at 2 p. m., for the purpose of nominating one candidate for Judge ot the su preme court, two candidates for regent of the Stats University, and to transact such other bus iness as may properly come before the conven tion. The basis of representation will bs on dele-arate-at-large for eacn county and one additional delegate for each one hundred votes or malor fraction thereof; eust at the general election of 18114 for Hon. H. W. McFaddeu for secretary of state, which gives tne following representation by counties; Adams ll Antelope 11 Johnson 8 K earney 10 Banner VI Keith Blaine f... V; Keys Paha 4 Boone II Kimball.- Boxilutte 6 Knox ... , , 10 Lancaster 83 Lincoln 10 Boyd Brown 4 Buffalo ID Bnrt. Butler 14 Cans 15 Logan 3 Lotip MndiNon.j t Mcl'herson Oedar Merrick Chase H Cherry 7 Cheyenne.... 4 Clay 15 Colfax 8 Nance Nemeha 13 Nuckolls 13 Otoe 14 Pawnee Perkins - , Cnming f Custer IN Dakota. ...... ............. 4 Dawes.... 8 Phelps 11 Pierce 5 Platte 10 Polk 13 Dawson 11 Deuel 8 Dixon 8 Dodge 9 Douglas 40 Hed Willow Itlcnardson 11 Bock 8 Saline 11 Dnndy Harpy Fillmore .. 15 Saunders 21 Franklin ....... Srotts Bluff........... Frontier Furnas 12 Gage 16 Garfield 2 Seward It Kberlden 11 Sherman................... 7 Sioux 2 Gosper Stanton.... 4 Grant 2 Thayer..................... 11 Thomas 1 Thurston ... S Valley 8 Washington 7 Greeley Hall 13 Hamilton . 18 Harlan V Hayes.: 8 Wayne 8 Hitchcock Webster 11 Holt 13 Wheeler................. 8 York.....,..........,...,..,, U Hooker 1 Howard ., 10 enerson 10 Total.. ..788 We would recommend that no proxies be al lowed, but that the delegates present cast ths full rote to which their respective counties are en titled. We wonld also recommend that In ths counties candidates for ths various connly offices be nom inated by the same convention which selects dele gates to the state convention. tl. A, ISDQEBTON, J. a. JtDKISTKR, Sec tary. Chairman. Peoples' Independent County I on- Tent ion. The Peoples' Independent party of Lauci iter connty are nereuy called to meet in county con vention, at Bobanan s hall In the city of Lincoln on Wednesday, July 81, 18H5, at 10 a. m. The purpose ot this convention will be tbe selection ot thirty-three delegates to represent this county In tbe state convention called to meet at Lincoln on August 28, lMifi, and to nom inate candidates for the various ludicial and county offices to be filled at ths uext general lection, vis : Three Indges for ths Third ludicial district. clerk of the district court, sheriff, treasurer, county clerk, county Judge, superintendeit of public Instruction, coroner, surveyor, coonty commissioner. The representation In said convention will con sist ot two delegates at large from each warciand precinct In the connty, and one delegate for each fifteen (15) votes, or major fraction thereof, cast In the last general election for the Hon. It. W. McFadden for secretary of state, and such rep resentation will be as follows: First ward 11 Middle Creek .......... 8 Mill 7 Nemaha 10 North Bluff 7 Oak 8 Olive Branch 2 Panama 6 Rock Creek 8 Saltillo. 8 South Pass 4 Stevens Creek 6 Stockton 6 Waverly 8 West Oak 8 Yankee Hill 7 West Llucoln 7 Total 2T1 Second ward 11 Third ward 17 Fourth ward SI Fifth ward 14 Sixth ward...- ....12 Seventh ward 14 Bnda precjnet 6 Centerville 8 Denton 6 F.Ik 7 Grant 8 Garfield 6 Highland 6 Lancaster 14 Little Salt 8 It Is recommended that the primaries for the selection of delegates In the various wards and Erecincts be held on Thursday, July 27th, the onrfor holding such primary to be fixed by the central committeeman, and that proper notice or sut n primary te given to the electors. It is also recommended that a list of the dele gates elected, with alternates If any are cho'en be mailed or delivered to the secretary of the connty central committee as soon as possible aner tneir selection. 1. U. Thompson, J. C. UcN'krnkv. Secretary. Chairman. For Small Dairy Farmers. CARRIAGES, DUSSES, HARASS ST.- mna nif7rin, rwtory rrsm w org guaranteed B1 30 to 40 per cent saved. Our goods rweived the highest awards at the World's Fair. Our 1H Mammoth Illustrated Catalogue is fmitnill. Ti .hnw.t all the latest styles and Improvements and reduced prices. It has JHQ pag-s and is the largest and wl complete catalogue ever lamed. "A'BrSifct bend for lb Jftree. AUlasM tsrrtaca ., llartnauiU, Oblo. wnw li i. tins Ui. Write kwlu. BOARDING, f-CCD AND SALE STABLES. FIRST-CLASS EQUIPMENTS Jk J The Alliance Store, FLOUR Sells the Finest Low Grade , .........$ .60 per sack. Bakers' Patent.... .... .Bo " Straight Patent 90 ' Cream Patent. , 1.00 . Finest High Patent..... 1.10 This is the best Flour that can be made. .Equal to "Pillsbury's Besi."' Five cans Sugar Corn for ................... $ .25 Ten cans Peas .25 Ten lbs. best Rolled Oats. .25 Five lbs. fine Rice .... .... .... ............ ,25 Twenty lbs. fine Granulated Sugar.... 1.00 Twenty-eight lbs. Brown Sugar 1.00 Six lbs. Dried Peaches .25 Twine sold out Butter and Eggs Bought at all times. Fruit Jars by the dozen, cheap. 60c, 75c, and $1.00 in One Dozen Cases. 1008 P St. We Your Own Cheese. For one dollar C. E. Kittinger of Powell, South Dakota, will end 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 LINCOLN NORMAL UNIVERSITY, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. STUDENT'S CAW SSTS AT AWT TIME. WO EWTWAWCB HAKIWATXOHB. Ths best banding's and qnlpmants. Ths ablsst faonlty and ths moat satis factory work. Common sans oonraaa ot study, Zf yon art taachsr yo a will bslntsrastsd In tha following-1 Normal Course. t FIRST TEAR. PALL BEMK8TEB, 16 WSBKS. WIHTIS SIMISTIB, 1 WIKKS. IDMMBK SXHISTEE, 16 Willi, First Term, Second Term, Third Term, Fourth Term, Fifth Term, Sixth Term, 8 weeks. 8 weeks. 8 weeks. 8 weeks. 8 weeks. 8 weeks. Orthoepy. School tnangt. Geography. Geography. History. History. Arithmetic. Arithmetic Arithmetic. Arithmetic Bookkeeping. Word Analyst! Grammar. Grammar. Grammar. Physiology. Physiology. Civil GoT'm't Mental Arlth. 1'ennianehlp. Heading. Vocal Mnslo. Drawing. Drawing Debating. Debating. 'Debating. 'Debating. 'Debating. Debatlng. Phj-sical Cult. Physical Cult. Physical Colt. Physical Cult. Physical Cult. Physical Cult. SECOND TEAR. Algebra. Algebra. Algebra. Plane Geom. Plane Geom. Solid Geom'try fl.at. Lessons, tl.at. Lessons. fLat. Lessons. 'Caesar. fCaesar. fCaesar. Kbetorlc, Rhetoric. Rhetoric Physical Geog. Botany. Botany Gen'l History. Gen'l History. Oen'l History. Eng. History. Eng. History. Political Econ, Prln. of Kdo. School Mngt, Physics. Physics. Biology. Zoology. Ele. Science. 'Els. Science. Ele. Scienes. Ele. Science, Ele. Science. KI Science Literature. Literature. Literature. 'Literature. 'Literature. 'Literature.' Once a week, t Latin Is ODtlonal in this You can get in addition to the above the Business, Shorthand, Uuslc, Band, Orchestra, rva Art tuHrw. EXPEWSES. It Is cheaper to attend school her than It I to Tuition, Board, and Room for on term for........................ $ 24 00 Tuition, Board, and Koom for one year for......M.....M....,, .,....... 128 00 Write to us for catalogue and particular. Address, XiXWCOLW WOHHAX. HwtveMT'P'- BTT.f. M HET.I.. PraalrientL JOHN CARR, Vice President. Summer Mr. 0. T. flriffln, who Is well known to our student as a teacher ol Mathematics lor Ave years at tbe Lincoln Business College.untliayaar ago, has again associated himself with us. and will conduct a Summer School, devoting bis time to special Instrnction In Arithmetic and other studies taught in tbe public schools. Tuitlion, $1 per week. The tnltlon In tbe Business, shorthand, and Penmanship 1 reduced for the months of June, July and August to $15 lor ten week. Call at th College, Corner 11th A O, or address, Tfye Ixiicoli) Bsiss GHee, Why Not Live in Lincoln? I have a well-Improved eight-acre farm for sale three miles southeast from tha Postofflce. It is near two colleges and between thein and the city, and is adapted to fruit, garden, dairy or poultry raising. A good house, barn, plenty of water, some timber and all conveniences. Here Is the farm where you can live near tha city and enjoy all its conveniences and have a farm large enough to make your own living. I will sell for $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. MO SIST ATTCMVION. Tbe Windsor Stables. W. A. REESE, Proprietor. 1024 L StreeV LINCOLN, KdS Phone 232. In the City . . , : ; t J. W; MUSSETTER. All right 1 you need CHEAP power. One cent Ser Horse Power per hour Is cheap. Weber asollne Engine run mo j thing. "Eeooomj It Powaf It our motto. For CmtaJogut and tasfJ. moDtulB address Weber Uas UasoUna Eng-lna Co., 44t 8. W. Blvd. Ktatat Cltj. Mo. ' C - course. Preparatory Pedagoirie. Scl.ntifln. f ltrrv n..i Oratory, Telegraphy, Kindergarten. Fine Art, or stay at bom. Ia any of the regular course we girr i ' tincoln. Wabraska, School D. R. LILLIBRIDGE, Pres;