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About The Wealth makers of the world. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1894-1896 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1895)
J - August 15, 1895 THE WEALTH MAKERS BALLOON COLLAPSED. Two Aeronaut of Jackson, Hlcfi B clv ratal lajtirle. Jackson, Mich., Aug. 6. Two aero naut were fatally injured io a balloon accident which occurred at Vander cook's lake, a resort four miles south of Jackson early yesterday morning. At the moment the retaining ropes were cast off, a (rust of wind caught the canvass and careened it to one aide, and it took fire. The monster shot into the air some distance, with both of the horrified aeronauts on the trapeze. Then it collapsed and came crashing down. Miss Peak e is a large woman, and fell heavily, breaking both legs, besides suffering internal Injuries. Elliott struck on his shoulders, and is badly crushed. Ills injuries are said to be fatal. "CASTLE" SEARCH ENDED, THEY WILL DO THE WORK. Chicago Folic Olva Cp Trying to Find Any More Bone. Chicago, Aug. (V The search' for human bones in the basement of H. H. Holmes' "castle" was abandoned to day and a small force of men was put to work smoothing up the basement floor, filling up the hole and repairing the breaks in the masonry made by the detectives in their search for clues. The house will shortly be vacated by the police and turned over to its own era. The work of the detectives here after will be confined to a hunt for witnesses who oan directly connect Holmes with some of the numerous murders with which he is charged. New York Saloon Cloned, New York, Aug. 6. The reform po lice administration enforced another dry Sunday in the metropolis yester day. Many patrolmen were on duty in citizens' clothes to watch the saloons, and they had the assistance of members of the city Vigilance league, who are opposed to violations. Al though the saloons were shut up pretty tight to all outsiders, it was apparent that many of them were doing business in a quiet way with their friends. Courtesy to Catholics. Jamestown, N. Y., Aug. G. As a re cult of the efforts on the part of the Catholics at Chautauqua, Chancellor Vincent has grunted the use of the chapel for Catholic services on Sunday mornings until such time as they may be enabled to construct a chapel of their own. Taking advantage of this opportunity, Father Gibbons of James town yesterday held the first Catholio service ever held at Chautauqua, Another Murderer Electrocuted. Sing Sing, N. Y., Aug. 6. Richard Leach was to-day punished for the murder of Mary Hope Nevvkirk, No vember 18, 1894, by cutting her throat. Seventeen hundred volts were turned into his body and the current was re duced to 800, after which it was again raised to 1,700 and reduced to 3oO. The current was turned on one minute and fifty-seven seconds before he was pro nounced dead. Shot at the Church. Baton Rouge, La., Aug. 6. A fear ful tragedy occurred last night at Gid eon church, where a protracted meet ing is being held, in which Henry and Albert O'Neill, sons of William O'Neill, agee respectively 83 and 21 years, were instantly killed by Hill Picon, Wallace Picon and Barlow Kdmonston, as the result of a quarrel about a young wo man. All the parties belong to prom inent families. Advised to Demand Gold. Tofkka, Kan., Aug. 0. This is pen sion day and checks for several hun dred thousand dollars are being paid out by United States Commissioner Click The following circular was distributed among the old soldiers of Topeka and Shawnee county who vis ited the pension office: "Comrades, halt! You are entitled to gold in payment of your checks. Demand it. Do not accept depreciated currency." So Solution of the Money Jiitlnn Will That Doe Not Include ioverumnt ltanka. The American people to escape fur ther encroachment of this money oligarchy must rise to the emergency of the occasion, and wrest from the banking power of this country the con trol of the money, by placing its con trol in their own hands through the agency of their government t The flsst step in this direction seems to be the free coinage of silver, of which this country can produce about one-half of the world's supply. They must take this step independently, and in defiance of all the rest of the world. No American who halts and palters, asking first the consent of foreign na tions for permission to coin our own silver into American dollars and all the silver presented for such coinage for the use of American labor, is worthy to be called a free and independent American citizen, ne is already an in dentured slave to alien masters. The next step after the mints are opened to free coinage of silver if it does not accompany that step is the rescue of the money of the country from the hands of the national bank monopoly, the American branch of the foreign gold oligarchy. The mak ing of all paper currency legal tender by the jjovernment, stopping right there and prohibiting the issue of any other currenoy, will not do it. The banks do not care so much for the privilege of issuing bills as they do for loaning their invisible currency, which they call "credit," which cannot be taxed by the government or coin de manded on presentation at their counters. That invisible thing cannot be presented, and when the banks hypothecate their credit on Uncle Sam's currency, whether metal or paper, they can fall back on him. Control of the money or circulating medium of the country, whether gold, silver or paper, or all three, cannot be left in the hands of banking corpora tions and the business and legislation of the country escape their manipula tion of the former and their influence over the latter to their own class ad vantage, and discrimination against the people. There is but one course to pursue if success is reached and vic tory for the people over this formida ble financial oligarchy which is en trenched behind the goldite's works, ami that is to flank the enemy and get in his rear by a government system of banks. That will strangle the devil of usury, make panics impossible and es tablish a uniformity of prices as near as supply and demand will admit. Midland Journal. People's Independent State Conven tlon Th Paople'a Independent elector ol tha it at I Nehrnska are hereby requeued to elect auii end delegate from their reapectlva roootle. la meet la convention In th city of Lincoln on Wd eeday, Aajinst in. at f p. m , for th parpo of nominating on candidal lor Judir ot th so prom court, two candidate lor regent ot th Stat University, and to transact ancb other boa Inese a may properly com befor th conven tion. Th basla of representation will b on del-eate-at-lsnre for ach county and on additional deleirnt fur och on honored vote or major fraction thereof; coat at th general election of 1KM for Hon. H. W. McPaddeu for secretary of ttate, which give th following representation by oan tie: Adams. ....... 1 Antlop.......M...... II Ilanner.......... ...... ...... 2 Blaln 2 Boon II Boi BatU..-.... Boyd....n.... Brown Buffalo ...... .............. 19 Bnrt Botler..................... U Cam.... ........ .............. 15 Odar. ........... 7 Chaae Cherry 7 Cheyenne............ 4 Clay If- Colfai 8 Coming ' Coster IX Link ota. ........... ......... 4 Uawea. ........... ........... B Dawson 11 Deuel 8 Dixon Dodge Douglaa 40 Dandy........... 4 Fillmore 15 Franklin U Frontier Fnrna 1- Gaure 1 Garfield 2 Gosper 7 Grant 2 Greeley iiall Hamilton Harlan Hayes Hitchcock Holt Hooker Howard efferson Johnnon................. Kearney ................... 10 Keith ... . t Keya I'aba....... 4 Kimball............-. .. 1 Knox ........... 10 Lancaster ................. M Lincoln.................... 10 I.oan.......... 1 Loup 2 Mndlnon.............. t McPberson 1 Merrick.................... Nance I Nemeha.................... IS Nuckolls................... 13 Otoe .... 14 Pawnee. ............ ....... 8 Perkins 4 Pbelps 11 Pierce 5 Platte 10 Polk 13 Bed Willow.. ltlcbardsoa 11 Hock 8 Saline, 11 Sarpy 5 Kau uiler 21 Scotts Bluff.. 2 Howard 12 Sheridan 11 Sherman. 7 Sioux....- 2 Stanton 4 Thayer 11 Thomas .. 1 Thurnton a Valley 8 Washington 7 Wavne Webster 11 Wheeler 8 York 15 Total I..T88 O. WILSON, ssaws Burr's block, Lincoln, Neb. WANTED Fire and cyclone agents. OooeJ pay. i. Y. M. Swlgart, Becy, Lincoln, Neb. artf nTANTKD Geotlatnaaorladyta aU Dabto's TV AloBlanm Co (Tee Eoosomlwrj Bta ay off oti aare onctblrd th eoffea. Arthur JU Doom i Co., 211 Wabah Av Chicago, 111. We would recommend that no proxies be al lowed, but that the delegates presentcast the full rote to which their respective counties are en titled. We would also recommend that In the counties candidates for the various county offices be nom inated by the sunie convention which selects dele gates to the state convention. J. A, EnoEitToN. J. H. Edmirten, Seen tary. Chairman. SOMETHING ABOUT RATIO. NEWS NOTES, ' An important case before the court of claims is the claim of the Choctaws and Chickasaws against the 'Wichitas. The killing of the negro boy at Washington by Miss Flagler is causing great dftcontent among the negroes of the district, and a mass meeting will be held. William and Annie Keith were killed by the cars at Louisiana, Mo. ' The Illinois legislature comes in for a vigorous roast from Governor Alt geld. Thomas F. Messick of Liberty, Mo. , is said to have misused $4,000 of school funds. , Waees were advanced twentv-flve cents a ton at the Birmingham, Ala., rolling mills. The St. Joe Lead company, Bonne Terre, Mo., has advanced the wages of their men fifteen per cent Ten thousand people were present at the close of the national prohibi tion camp meeting at Decatur, 111. The Missouri State Roads associa tion will call four district conventions this fall to consider the question of good roads. Passenger fares are being reduced on all the Kew England and Eastern roads in order to meet the competition of trolley lines. At Oxford, Ala , Ivy Sanford shot and instancy killed Mrs. Alary UnSln as she eame out of church. She refused to marry Sanford and two weeks ago was wedded to Thomas Griffin, and Sanford became insamely jealous. The pope received 200 American pit grlms in the consistory Sunday. Miss Jennie W. G. Goodwin, a sten ographer at the Kansas City stock yards, has gone into the live stock commission business on her own ac count. She is the first woman in the United States to go into the coram is sion business. PierceC hiles, a base ball player was arrested at Redalia on the charge of Having criminally assaulted the 15 ' year-old daughter of a man named Davis, a prominent citizen of Coffey' viue, nan. ma .Rowland, a railroader was run over and killed at Hannibal Mo. If divert Equal rrlvlliri'S Itefore the Law the Natural Itatlo of Gold and Silver Is 10 to 1. As the ratio between gold and silver is the great stumbling block to many on the question of free coinage of both metals, it is well to take the world's production of each, and what that ratio of production is should be a rea sonable ratio in their money values. Soetbeer, the eminent German statis tician, has given an estimate of the amount produced from 1700 to 1S00. The officers of the United States mint have also given it from 1800 to 1893. Soetbecr's estimate is as 1 to 15. In the estimate of the officers of the United States mint it is as 1 to 10. I here give Soetbeer's estimate to 1800 and the mint estimate since that time: 1701 to 1800 Gold, 81,202,803,000; sil ver, $2,370,800,000, less one-sixteenth, equals $2,223,074,000. 1801 to 1893 Gold, $5,833,493,000; sil ver, $4,858,050,000. The difference in the 100 years from 1700 to 1800 is $939,873,000 more sliver than gold. The difference in the 93 years from 1800 to 1893 is $970,734,000 more gold than silver, the difference in the 193 years being $10,801,000 in favor of gold. Thus it will bo noticed that nature has established the ratio of the two metals, as evidenced by the production, to be about 1 to 16. And If anyone will take his Oxford Bible he will find the Hebrew weights and measures tabulated and reduced to the American system, lie will no doubt be surprised to find a shekel of silver, when reduced to our money, quals $.5474 and a shekel of gold quals $8.79. Or, in other words, six teen shekels of silver worth only 8 4-10 mills more than a shekel of gold. Georsre II. English, in Kansas City Journal. Peoples' Independent County C on vention. The Teoples' Independent party of Land ster county are hereby called to meet In county con vention, at Hohan all's hall In the city ol Lit coin on Wednesday, July 81, IH'.'B. nt 10 a. in. The purpose of this convention will be the selection of thirty-three deletes to represent this county in the etute convention culled to meet at Lincoln on August 28, lsDj, nnd to nom inate candidates for the various Judicial ana county olllces to be tilled at the next gentral election, vli.: Three Judges for the Third judicial district. clerk of the diHtrlct court, sheriff, trn surer, county clerk, couuly Judge, superintendent of public instruction, coroner, surveyor, county commissioner. The representation in said convention win con sist of two delegates at large from each warcinud nreciuct In the county, and one delegate lor each fifteen (15) votes, or uinjor fraction thereof, cast In the Inst general election lor me noti. n. McFndden for secretary ot state, auu eucn rep reeentatlon will be as follows: First wnrd 11 Second ward 11 Third ward 17 Fourth ward 21 Fifth ward...- 14 Hixth ward 12 Seventh ward 14 lluda precinct 6 t'enterville 8 Denton 6 Elk 7 (irant 8 Garfield 6 Highland 6 Ln master 14 Little Salt 8 Middle Creek 8 Mill 7 Nemaha 10 North Bluff 7 Oak 8 Olive Branch 2 Panama ; 6 Rock Creek 8 Saltillo 8 Sonth Pass 4 Stevens Creek 6 Stockton 6 Waverly West Oak Yankee Hill 7 West Lincoln 7 Total 272 It Is recommended that the primaries for the selection of delegates in the various wards anil nrecincta be held on Thursday, July 2itn tne hour for holding; such primary to be tixed by 1 he central committeeman, and that proper notice nt sneh nr marv lie iriven to the electors. It is also recommended thnt a list of the dele gates elected, with alternates If any are clioeu lie mailed or delivered to tne secretary ot tue connty central committee as soou as possiuie after their selection. J. M. Thompson, J. C. McXkhwcv. Secretary. chairman, 14th Judicial District Call The Peonle's Independent electors of the 14th Judicial District ot the State of Nebraska are h..reliv rennested toelectand send delegates Irom their respective counties to meet in tne city oi klrrnnk. on Saturday Sentember 7. 1806, at 2 o clock p. in., for the purpose of placing; In 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 be one delegate at large Irom eacn county and one additional delegate for each one hundred voters or niaior fraction thereof cast at the general election of 1S91 for Hon. H. W. Mo Fadden for Secretary ol state, wnicn gives tne following vote by counties: Furnas 12 Dundy 4 Gosper 7 Chase 8 Hed Willow 9 Hayes 3 Frontier 9 Hit clieock ! Total S3 Would recommend that the delegates present cast fall vote of their respective couuties. J. A. Shkridan. ChnirmanUth Judicial District. ColDDin. For Bale." 'Wsntd.""ForExenanir."a mall advertisements for short time, will be barged three ceata per word for eaca inser tion. Initials or a number counted as one word. Cash with the order If von w . jjt anything, or hsvaanytniae: tnai anybody else "wants," make It known through Uis column, it win pay. St F BANK D. Street. EAGER. Attorney-at-Law, ICS O f!fjl Ct?t7Ti riVOXX M Hade. Catalog and 1 BHD OtOWEI Toorblaa, IlL POPULAR BOOKS EM THE ACME B0BSOILER at. tacbea to any plow. Sand tor circular. A. L. FUNK, state I Agent, Lincoln, Neb. FARMERS DlftLUW. iicjixxe Doble'a. Coffee Keonomlier max your eoffe laat twice a long. Fit any pot, re circular Artaar U Sobia Ce..lU Wabae Ave., Chicago, Tift. $750.00 A Year and All Expenses. We want a few more lieneral Agents, ladles or gentlemen, to travel and appoint, agent on onr new publications. Full particulars given on ap plication. If yon apply please send references, and ataie business experience, age and send pho tograph. If yon cannot travel, write ns for terms to local canvassers. Dept. Kara, 3. 1. BELL ft CO.. Philadelphia, fa. Relow we give a list of twenty-five good and useful books, suited to every member of the family. Manj are by famous authors, known wherever the English language is spoken. Among them are the following DICKENS, DRUMMOND, JEROME, IIARRADEN, BRADDON, KIPLING, STEVENSON, And others almost as well known. Each number is 8 complete book, and each is bound in a separate covei with beautiful design like that shown in the illustra tion above. Boy "Direct Fiom: Factory" Best MIXED Paints. At WHOLESALE PRICF8, Delivered Free. For Houses. Barns, Hoots, ail colors, ana savis Middlemen's profits. In use 51 years. Endorsed by Grange and Farmers' Alliance. Low prices will surnrise vou. Write for samples. O. W. INUEKSULL, 258 Plymouth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. A WONDERFUL OFFER. Onr grand catalogne, over 350 illustrations, agent's latest goods and novelties, 1 writing pen, fountain attachment, 1 elegant gentleman's watch chain and. charm, guaranteed 20 years. Your nnme In agent s directory 1 year, all sent torlOcts. Postage 2 cents, EMPIRE NOVELTY CO., 1.17 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. a We want ltJ more active agents before 0 July 1st. we will gunraill.ee -u iuiu peruay No. 91. The Fatal Starring. I'y Miss M. E. Braddon. Tills is a thrilling story, in which a man marries a lovely girl for lier wealth, and ns it should always lie, he came to grief as a reward for his deception. No. 99. The Idle Thoughts or an Idle Fellow. By Jerome K. Jeromo. Mr. Jerome Is known as the "English Mark Twain." Ho ls a writer of theflneKt sort of fun, which is sure to be highly enjoyed by nil who will read this book. It is considered his host. No. 90. On Her W outline JTorii. r,v Bertha M. Clay, author of "lU;r Only Siu," "A Golden Heart," nnd other stories. This is a companion novel to "Her Only Sin." snd will be read with the Kiitno intensity if feeling, with mingled Joy nnd sadness nk t !i characters In the book have cause for tvirs or laughter. It Is n love story that must appeal to every render. No. 89. Her Only Sin. By B'rtha M.Clny. No. 58. Merry Hen. By H. h. Stevenson. A.tlmlling account of the perilous ml ven tures of a party seeking for a sunken Span ish treasure-ship . No. 61. Dr. Jekj ll and Mr. Ilj de. By R. L. Stevenson. No. 101. The Chimes. By Charles Pickens. No. 91. A Christmas Carol. By Pickens. The Haunted Man. By Pickens. Two ;lioxt Stories. By Pickens. The IlaKIe of Life. By Pickens.. Three Christmas Stories. By k .luiyiat. nu wni kuwuicc ,w iu uci y, a canbeeaailyiuiideiuuuylncality;ourgoods V Bei themselves; we furnish a large roll of L samples entirely itr.j-j ana anow ou per cent, commission on all stiles. Send to-day for full particulars, or wo will send with A same a Valuable sample of our goods In f No. flfi. No. 97. No. m. No. 98. Dickens. No. 100. Dickens. ' Cricket on the Hearth. By No. 59. The Courting or Dinah Shadd. By Itudyard Kipling, who is thought by many to he the greatest living story-writer, No. CO. A Rird of I'ntssnce. By Beatrice Iliirruilen, author of "Ships thnt Pass in the Night." The hook whicli has had such a pher lvoinen.'il sale (luring the past year. This is a charming story, told in beautiful language. No. m. Tho (irenffKt Tliinff in the World. By Henry Prunimoiid. This book is on love as tttus.lit by Christ and the dis ciples; nnd If any onedouhts thnt love isthe greatest tliiut! in the world, and if they wanf to he niatle ftronger in their love for ali' tilings, tfiey must get this hook, by all means No. Oi. Chanced Life. By Prummonfl. No. (a. IVnre he Willi You. By Drum, mond. These two hooks are fully equal to "The Greatest Thing in the World," by the same author, each treating of a different phase of Christian life. You will feel jiurerand better , after having read them. - No. ol!. Courtship of Widow Redott and Jl r. Crane. By Francis M. Whitcher. No. S7. How Widow Iledott Popped the Question. By Francis M. Whitcher. No. 70 ;oxl Manners. By Mrs. M. W. Bailies. A manual of etiquette. No. SS. Love on a I. op. By HoseaBallou. No. K2. Old Mother Hubbard. Illusi trated. No. fill. No. 78. Ontdoor Sports. Illustrated. Indoor Games. Illustrated. A FREE GIFT. i dress, 8TANiAKI 8ILVEKWAKE i V CO.. lioHtou. Mass. T tn this nansr within the next SiYvetan THIRTY DAYS will receive fiv books selected irom the above list, also . fear's subscription to tue iiaaies iiome companion, a paper ior women, uj women and its departments are edited with rare skill and attractiveness by women whose names are familiar in every household. The quality of illustrations, merit of its fiction, practicability of the articles on housekeeping, care of children, hinte on inexpensive and tasteful home adornment and fashion changes, have given thii tnnrinrri hr,m imimfl.1 t,h finnrmons circulation of 140.000 copies each issue. It ......... J . . . . .' , . 1 CO., lioHtou, Mass. iev "a f ev ej Rail and Steamship Ticket Afrency. ... .I. .... . . i , nrk i. no 1 r,a For rail and steamship tickets at lis published twice a montn, eacn issue containing o uu8o fuB, m year. JUST THINK OF IT. lowest rates to any part of the world call on A. S. Fielding, City Ticket Agent Northwestern Line, 117 S. 10th St. FROM MXCOLS I is the SHORT Line (operating its own tracks) to Marshalltown, Cedar Ilanids. Clintou. Chicago, -Milwaukee, Madison, Oshkosh, City Ch di dfDOt made to eastern ana nortnensieru cimn For tickets, etc.. call at city office 117 So. 10th St., or depot corner S and bth Bts. The price of The Wealth Makers is $1.0O per year; the price of the Ladies Home Companion is $1.00 per year. One Dollar and Twenty-five Cents sent to us now will extend your subscription to The Wealth Makers one year, pay for a year's subscription to the Ladies' Home Companion, and besides you will receive, postpaid, any nve wnicn you may aeieui, ui mc uuuno up turned above. If your subscription is already paid up to this paper, get one new subscriber for it at the regular price of $1.00 per year, put in 25 cents extra, and cet the books and the Ladies' Home Companion for yourself. Th V - ... . . . . i i r , i. 1 :U nrn riTH US? T71 J.. I U roil uu i-ui;, hiuua . .t t i ivao it li uau-Apa mnar. tin in fiv(rvnnf m irs nrtHeiiL huuhuiiucio. ouu w u , St. Paul, Minneapolis, imiut i. in " w. m,it..ir.n f)isfafiiin,9fl. Will vou help : tnnila 11 ll J A 1 K"V "to u J . . - KUU wjimetLiuiin a u " n . , . h rtf of M.nn Vnnr ohaprintinn- if vnn miisi" sno.nnCe in BOme WET, SaCrl- verging lines. In St. l'uul, l ;...u '"t ZJ"; X r tlation of The Wealth with 10 lines unsurpassed xme ," " " - v,oft 7" na;a 7I1a Makers to 50,000 and victory for '96 is assured, Kenew your subssription I Get new subscribers I Renew your subscription! Get new subscribers! SULPHO-SALINE Bath House and Sanitarium J. S.HYATT, Bus. Mgr. Address, Wealth Makers Pub. Co,, Lincoln, Neb. PURELY MUTUAL.; Corner 14th & M Sts., LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. Open at All Hours Day and Night All Forms of Baths. Turkish, Russian, Roman, Electric. With Special attention to the application of NATURAL SALT WATER BATHS. Several times stronger than eea water. We' are on tne single standard Bingle shirt, single coat, single pants, sinerle hat and single pair of shoes When these are gone, guess we U be without anv standard at all. Pro gressive Farmer. Get up a club for The Wealth Makers. Only 30c. from now until November 1st. Errors of Youth.! SUFFERERS FROM Bervois Debility, YontMal InJisciEiicis, Lost Kaihooi, BE YOUR OWN PHYSICIAN To the People's Party ol Otoe County The People's Independent party will hold their primaries on Wednesday, August the 14th at the reRUlar votlnir places. The same to he held be tween the hours of 7 and 10 o'clock in the even ing, for the purpose of electing delegates to at tend the county convention to be held at the opera house at Syracuse, Otoe county, Nebraska on eunesuav, Angast 2lst Ida, to elect aeie gates to the State convention, to be neld at Lin coln, Nebraska, August '.'Mh, 1M)5, and to trans act all other business which may come before tha county convention. The basis ot representation will be one dele gate for every teu votes or major traction cast tor Governor Silas A. llolconib in 1MI4. No proxies will be admitted. L. WAKD, Secretary-Treasurer, mi.nmgtiim. Kkln. Rlood and Nervous Dis- ensas, l.iver anu muhhv iruuum uuu u.u.v ilinents are treuteil successiuny. v gSea Bathing may he enjoyed at all eensons In our large SALT HWIMM1MU l'Ul)l W5HJ leei, o iu iv icon ueoy, heated to uniform temperature ot !s degrees. Drs. M. II. & J. O. Everett, Managing Physicians. m M.nv mn. feetm Cn rfiertl of voutllhll imcru. denra, have brought about a ttt of wtwknmi ( thM hu reduced the general bv item to much as to 0 induce altnovt every other diteaae; and the rel cum of th troubl. icarcely ever being impeded, . they are doctored for everything but the right one. I During our exteneira college aud hcpital practice . w. have discovered new and concentrated reme- diei. The accompanying prescription is offered at a certain and st'KSDV cms, hundreds of cases having been restored to perfect health by its ,,M .ft. .11 nthe renHNlies ftifled. Perfertiv pure ' f Ingreilientt must be used in the preparation of this 0 1 W R Errthroxylon cora, drachm. Jerubebiu, t drachm. am Oelsemln. grains. ..... , I Ext. Ignatio amarai (alcoholic), t grains. ' Kit. leptsnJra, 2 scruples. I Make 60 pills. Take 1 pill at 8 p.m.. and another on going to eea. arenir,i. . w.nu. In lt,r sv. end esueciallT in those ' eases resulting from Imprudence. The recuperative t Ki. M.nnrive jw astoiiishina. and its w use continued for a short time changes the languid, i debilitated, nerveless condition to one of renewed ' life and vigor, ..... t carefully com IWorEd s Fair Highest Awards Ion our INCUBATOR and j BROOUtR Combirred. , I'.nirl Rolinhlft", I If Touare irvtrtJ in Poultrr. It JAZ- t rt, tpu u wtid 4 cvnW ht fttaropt mr S VI pr raataJ.vw. fifing rtvlurbl po a ah IWltpft Ciillur. AtlttH 1 Retiab'e Incubator and 8rooder Co. Ouincy, l!l ainiafulaMlaMlaamiWaWIMWaWMM i UMi .fO.V"' . - ' -I a r e i t ASTHMA BMITIISIGHT'S AND HAY FEVER REMEDY- Sold under positive guaranty. Samples free. ::::::::::::: L. SMITIINIGHT, Cleveland, Ohio. remitting 1. a sealed packsge eontaing 60 pills, carefully conipoundeo, win ne sem oy ,h.xi iru.u A our private laboratory, or we will ftirniih pack ages' which will curs most cases, for5. AU Isosn I sasmUy eeajldsattai. DO YOU WANT IT? Y Salesman Wanted In every county, salary or commission, no experience, w TiriH Bill fives unlimited profits, active men ap ply quickly stating salary and territory waatatl. Aianuiaciurers, i . u, box. own Hoaton, alasa. HEW ENGLAND MEDICAL INSTITUTE. J VrA aa fTtarttTi Tnnv "HriBf Tl Mnrjaam ' All pain banished by Dr. Miles' Pain Pills. h , ' - " . V; w, J. j, . . ; .. -.us , wniWBMisasw xm'-'-'m , r i J v V fcrm 1 Mmmt IMS ' ! - i $3.00 for first $ l.OOO, $4.0O lor second $1,000 in the Cy clone Department. Same iu Fire Department. No Fire Insurance accepted from territory covered by local company. NEBRASKA Mutual Fire, Lightning and Cyclone Ins. Co. BEST LINE Names of Directors. Tims expires In 1S96. O. A. FELTON, W. J. KY :KHTUiH, J. A. SMITH, TO ST. LOUIS P. 0. An en s. Kwinit City. Cedar Kapids. Names of Directors. Time expires in 1S98. SAMUEL I.ICHTY, J. U. NEFF, WM. YOUNG. Names ot Directors. Time expires in 1897, M. DAI.Y, J. F. ANTHES, O. HULL. P. 0. Falls City. Knymond, Palmyra. P. O. Elgin. Sntton. Alma. OFFICERS: 8. LICHTY. president I. N. LEONARD, Vice-President J. Y, M. SW1QAKT, Secretary-Treasurer . Falls City Lincoln , Lincoln AND CHICAGO Over $700,000 insured. Have paid $640.00 In Losses. Have had but one assessment. 1 uc. per q uu.uu. . Agents wanted. J. Y. M. SWIGART, Secretary, LINCOLN, NEB.